There were soldiers riding down the
road, on horses two and two. That is the horses
were two and two, and the men not. Because each
man was riding one horse and leading another.
To exercise them. They came from Chatham Barracks.
We all drew up in a line outside the churchyard wall,
and saluted as they went by, though we had not read
Toady Lion then. We have since. It is the
only decent book I have ever read written by Toady
Lion’s author. The others are mere piffle.
But many people like them. In Sir Toady Lion
the officer salutes the child.
There was only a lieutenant with those
soldiers, and he did not salute me. He kissed
his hand to the girls; and a lot of the soldiers behind
kissed theirs too. We waved ours back.
Next day we made a Union Jack out
of pocket-handkerchiefs and part of a red flannel
petticoat of the White Mouse’s, which she did
not want just then, and some blue ribbon we got at
the village shop.
Then we watched for the soldiers,
and after three days they went by again, by twos and
twos as before. It was A1.
We waved our flag, and we shouted.
We gave them three cheers. Oswald can shout loudest.
So as soon as the first man was level with us (not
the advance guard, but the first of the battery) he
shouted
‘Three cheers for the Queen
and the British Army!’ And then we waved the
flag, and bellowed. Oswald stood on the wall to
bellow better, and Denny waved the flag because he
was a visitor, and so politeness made us let him enjoy
the fat of whatever there was going.
The soldiers did not cheer that day;
they only grinned and kissed their hands.
The next day we all got up as much
like soldiers as we could. H. O. and Noel had
tin swords, and we asked Albert’s uncle to let
us wear some of the real arms that are on the wall
in the dining-room.
And he said, ‘Yes’, if
we would clean them up afterwards. But we jolly
well cleaned them up first with Brooke’s soap
and brick dust and vinegar, and the knife polish (invented
by the great and immortal Duke of Wellington in his
spare time when he was not conquering Napoleon.
Three cheers for our Iron Duke!), and with emery paper
and wash leather and whitening. Oswald wore a
cavalry sabre in its sheath. Alice and the Mouse
had pistols in their belts, large old flint-locks,
with bits of red flannel behind the flints. Denny
had a naval cutlass, a very beautiful blade, and old
enough to have been at Trafalgar. I hope it was.
The others had French sword-bayonets that were used
in the Franco-German war. They are very bright
when you get them bright, but the sheaths are hard
to polish. Each sword-bayonet has the name on
the blade of the warrior who once wielded it.
I wonder where they are now. Perhaps some of
them died in the war. Poor chaps! But it
is a very long time ago.
I should like to be a soldier.
It is better than going to the best schools, and to
Oxford afterwards, even if it is Balliol you go to.
Oswald wanted to go to South Africa for a bugler, but
father would not let him. And it is true that
Oswald does not yet know how to bugle, though he can
play the infantry ‘advance’, and the ‘charge’
and the ‘halt’ on a penny whistle.
Alice taught them to him with the piano, out of the
red book Father’s cousin had when he was in the
Fighting Fifth. Oswald cannot play the ‘retire’,
and he would scorn to do so. But I suppose a
bugler has to play what he is told, no matter how galling
to the young boy’s proud spirit.
The next day, being thoroughly armed,
we put on everything red, white and blue that we could
think of night-shirts are good for white,
and you don’t know what you can do with red
socks and blue jerseys till you try and
we waited by the churchyard wall for the soldiers.
When the advance guard (or whatever you call it of
artillery it’s that for infantry,
I know) came by, we got ready, and when the first man
of the first battery was level with us Oswald played
on his penny whistle the ‘advance’ and
the ’charge’ and then shouted
‘Three cheers for the Queen
and the British Army!’ This time they had the
guns with them. And every man of the battery cheered
too. It was glorious. It made you tremble
all over. The girls said it made them want to
cry but no boy would own to this, even if
it were true. It is babyish to cry. But
it was glorious, and Oswald felt differently to what
he ever did before.
Then suddenly the officer in front
said, ‘Battery! Halt!’ and all the
soldiers pulled their horses up, and the great guns
stopped too. Then the officer said, ‘Sit
at ease,’ and something else, and the sergeant
repeated it, and some of the men got off their horses
and lit their pipes, and some sat down on the grass
edge of the road, holding their horses’ bridles.
We could see all the arms and accoutrements
as plain as plain.
Then the officer came up to us.
We were all standing on the wall that day, except
Dora, who had to sit, because her foot was bad, but
we let her have the three-edged rapier to wear, and
the blunderbuss to hold as well it has
a brass mouth and is like in Mr Caldecott’s pictures.
He was a beautiful man the officer.
Like a Viking. Very tall and fair, with moustaches
very long, and bright blue eyes. He said
‘Good morning.’
So did we.
Then he said
‘You seem to be a military lot.’
We said we wished we were.
‘And patriotic,’ said he.
Alice said she should jolly well think so.
Then he said he had noticed us there
for several days, and he had halted the battery because
he thought we might like to look at the guns.
Alas! there are but too few grown-up
people so far-seeing and thoughtful as this brave
and distinguished officer.
We said, ‘Oh, yes’, and
then we got off the wall, and that good and noble
man showed us the string that moves the detonator and
the breech-block (when you take it out and carry it
away the gun is in vain to the enemy, even if he takes
it); and he let us look down the gun to see the rifling,
all clean and shiny and he showed us the
ammunition boxes, but there was nothing in them.
He also told us how the gun was unlimbered (this means
separating the gun from the ammunition carriage),
and how quick it could be done but he did
not make the men do this then, because they were resting.
There were six guns. Each had painted on the
carriage, in white letters, 15 Pr., which the
captain told us meant fifteen-pounder.
‘I should have thought the gun
weighed more than fifteen pounds,’ Dora said.
‘It would if it was beef, but I suppose wood
and gun are lighter.’
And the officer explained to her very
kindly and patiently that 15 Pr. meant the gun
could throw a shell weighing fifteen pounds.
When we had told him how jolly it
was to see the soldiers go by so often, he said
’You won’t see us many
more times. We’re ordered to the front;
and we sail on Tuesday week; and the guns will be
painted mud-colour, and the men will wear mud-colour
too, and so shall I.’
The men looked very nice, though they
were not wearing their busbies, but only Tommy caps,
put on all sorts of ways.
We were very sorry they were going,
but Oswald, as well as others, looked with envy on
those who would soon be allowed being grown
up, and no nonsense about your education to
go and fight for their Queen and country.
Then suddenly Alice whispered to Oswald, and he said
‘All right; but tell him yourself.’
So Alice said to the captain
‘Will you stop next time you pass?’
He said, ‘I’m afraid I can’t promise
that.’
Alice said, ‘You might; there’s a particular
reason.’
He said, ‘What?’ which
was a natural remark; not rude, as it is with children.
Alice said
’We want to give the soldiers
a keepsake and will write to ask my father. He
is very well off just now. Look here if
we’re not on the wall when you come by, don’t
stop; but if we are, please, please do!’
The officer pulled his moustache and
looked as if he did not know; but at last he said
‘Yes’, and we were very glad, though but
Alice and Oswald knew the dark but pleasant scheme
at present fermenting in their youthful nuts.
The captain talked a lot to us. At last Noel
said
’I think you are like Diarmid
of the Golden Collar. But I should like to see
your sword out, and shining in the sun like burnished
silver.’
The captain laughed and grasped the
hilt of his good blade. But Oswald said hurriedly
’Don’t. Not yet.
We shan’t ever have a chance like this.
If you’d only show us the pursuing practice!
Albert’s uncle knows it; but he only does it
on an armchair, because he hasn’t a horse.’
And that brave and swagger captain
did really do it. He rode his horse right into
our gate when we opened it, and showed us all the cuts,
thrusts, and guards. There are four of each kind.
It was splendid. The morning sun shone on his
flashing blade, and his good steed stood with all
its legs far apart and stiff on the lawn.
Then we opened the paddock gate, and
he did it again, while the horse galloped as if upon
the bloody battlefield among the fierce foes of his
native land, and this was far more ripping still.
Then we thanked him very much, and
he went away, taking his men with him. And the
guns of course.
Then we wrote to my father, and he
said ‘Yes’, as we knew he would, and next
time the soldiers came by but they had no
guns this time, only the captive Arabs of the desert we
had the keepsakes ready in a wheelbarrow, and we were
on the churchyard wall.
And the bold captain called an immediate halt.
Then the girls had the splendid honour
and pleasure of giving a pipe and four whole ounces
of tobacco to each soldier.
Then we shook hands with the captain,
and the sergeant and the corporals, and the girls
kissed the captain I can’t think why
girls will kiss everybody and we all cheered
for the Queen. It was grand. And I wish
my father had been there to see how much you can do
with L12 if you order the things from the Stores.
We have never seen those brave soldiers again.
I have told you all this to show you
how we got so keen about soldiers, and why we sought
to aid and abet the poor widow at the white cottage
in her desolate and oppressedness.
Her name was Simpkins, and her cottage
was just beyond the churchyard, on the other side
from our house. On the different military occasions
which I have remarked upon this widow woman stood at
her garden gate and looked on. And after the
cheering she rubbed her eyes with her apron.
Alice noticed this slight but signifying action.
We feel quite sure Mrs Simpkins liked
soldiers, and so we felt friendly to her. But
when we tried to talk to her she would not. She
told us to go along with us, do, and not bother her.
And Oswald, with his usual delicacy and good breeding,
made the others do as she said.
But we were not to be thus repulsed
with impunity. We made complete but cautious
inquiries, and found out that the reason she cried
when she saw soldiers was that she had only one son,
a boy. He was twenty-two, and he had gone to
the War last April. So that she thought of him
when she saw the soldiers, and that was why she cried.
Because when your son is at the wars you always think
he is being killed. I don’t know why.
A great many of them are not. If I had a son
at the wars I should never think he was dead till
I heard he was, and perhaps not then, considering
everything. After we had found this out we held
a council.
Dora said, ‘We must do something
for the soldier’s widowed mother.’
We all agreed, but added ‘What?’
Alice said, ’The gift of money
might be deemed an insult by that proud, patriotic
spirit. Besides, we haven’t more than eighteenpence
among us.’
We had put what we had to father’s
L12 to buy the baccy and pipes.
The Mouse then said, ’Couldn’t
we make her a flannel petticoat and leave it without
a word upon her doorstep?’
But everyone said, ‘Flannel
petticoats in this weather?’ so that was no
go.
Noel said he would write her a poem,
but Oswald had a deep, inward feeling that Mrs Simpkins
would not understand poetry. Many people do not.
H. O. said, ’Why not sing “Rule
Britannia” under her window after she had gone
to bed, like waits,’ but no one else thought
so.
Denny thought we might get up a subscription
for her among the wealthy and affluent, but we said
again that we knew money would be no balm to the haughty
mother of a brave British soldier.
‘What we want,’ Alice
said, ’is something that will be a good deal
of trouble to us and some good to her.’
‘A little help is worth a deal of poetry,’
said Denny.
I should not have said that myself. Noel did
look sick.
‘What does she do that
we can help in?’ Dora asked. ’Besides,
she won’t let us help.’
H. O. said, ’She does nothing
but work in the garden. At least if she does
anything inside you can’t see it, because she
keeps the door shut.’
Then at once we saw. And we agreed
to get up the very next day, ere yet the rosy dawn
had flushed the east, and have a go at Mrs Simpkins’s
garden.
We got up. We really did.
But too often when you mean to, overnight, it seems
so silly to do it when you come to waking in the dewy
morn. We crept downstairs with our boots in our
hands. Denny is rather unlucky, though a most
careful boy. It was he who dropped his boot, and
it went blundering down the stairs, echoing like thunderbolts,
and waking up Albert’s uncle. But when
we explained to him that we were going to do some
gardening he let us, and went back to bed.
Everything is very pretty and different
in the early morning, before people are up. I
have been told this is because the shadows go a different
way from what they do in the awake part of the day.
But I don’t know. Noel says the fairies
have just finished tidying up then. Anyhow it
all feels quite otherwise.
We put on our boots in the porch,
and we got our gardening tools and we went down to
the white cottage. It is a nice cottage, with
a thatched roof, like in the drawing copies you get
at girls’ schools, and you do the thatch if
you can with a B.B. pencil. If you
cannot, you just leave it. It looks just as well,
somehow, when it is mounted and framed.
We looked at the garden. It was
very neat. Only one patch was coming up thick
with weeds. I could see groundsel and chickweed,
and others that I did not know. We set to work
with a will. We used all our tools spades,
forks, hoes, and rakes and Dora worked with
the trowel, sitting down, because her foot was hurt.
We cleared the weedy patch beautifully, scraping off
all the nasty weeds and leaving the nice clean brown
dirt. We worked as hard as ever we could.
And we were happy, because it was unselfish toil,
and no one thought then of putting it in the Book of
Golden Deeds, where we had agreed to write down our
virtuous actions and the good doings of each other,
when we happen to notice them.
We had just done, and we were looking
at the beautiful production of our honest labour,
when the cottage door burst open, and the soldier’s
widowed mother came out like a wild tornado, and her
eyes looked like upas trees death to the
beholder.
‘You wicked, meddlesome, nasty
children!’ she said, ain’t you got enough
of your own good ground to runch up and spoil, but
you must come into my little lot?’
Some of us were deeply alarmed, but we stood firm.
‘We have only been weeding your
garden,’ Dora said; ’we wanted to do something
to help you.’
‘Dratted little busybodies,’
she said. It was indeed hard, but everyone in
Kent says ‘dratted’ when they are cross.
‘It’s my turnips,’ she went on,
’you’ve hoed up, and my cabbages.
My turnips that my boy sowed afore he went. There,
get along with you do, afore I come at you with my
broom-handle.’
She did come at us with her broom-handle
as she spoke, and even the boldest turned and fled.
Oswald was even the boldest. ’They looked
like weeds right enough,’ he said.
And Dicky said, ‘It all comes
of trying to do golden deeds.’ This was
when we were out in the road.
As we went along, in a silence full
of gloomy remorse, we met the postman. He said
‘Here’s the letters for
the Moat,’ and passed on hastily. He was
a bit late.
When we came to look through the letters,
which were nearly all for Albert’s uncle, we
found there was a postcard that had got stuck in a
magazine wrapper. Alice pulled it out. It
was addressed to Mrs Simpkins. We honourably
only looked at the address, although it is allowed
by the rules of honourableness to read postcards that
come to your house if you like, even if they are not
for you.
After a heated discussion, Alice and
Oswald said they were not afraid, whoever was, and
they retraced their steps, Alice holding the postcard
right way up, so that we should not look at the lettery
part of it, but only the address.
With quickly-beating heart, but outwardly
unmoved, they walked up to the white cottage door.
It opened with a bang when we knocked.
‘Well?’ Mrs Simpkins said,
and I think she said it what people in books call
‘sourly’.
Oswald said, ’We are very, very
sorry we spoiled your turnips, and we will ask my
father to try and make it up to you some other way.’
She muttered something about not wanting
to be beholden to anybody.
‘We came back,’ Oswald
went on, with his always unruffled politeness, ’because
the postman gave us a postcard in mistake with our
letters, and it is addressed to you.’
‘We haven’t read it,’
Alice said quickly. I think she needn’t
have said that. Of course we hadn’t.
But perhaps girls know better than we do what women
are likely to think you capable of.
The soldier’s mother took the
postcard (she snatched it really, but ‘took’
is a kinder word, considering everything) and she looked
at the address a long time. Then she turned it
over and read what was on the back. Then she
drew her breath in as far as it would go, and caught
hold of the door-post. Her face got awful.
It was like the wax face of a dead king I saw once
at Madame Tussaud’s.
Alice understood. She caught
hold of the soldier’s mother’s hand and
said
‘Oh, no it’s not
your boy Bill!’
And the woman said nothing, but shoved
the postcard into Alice’s hand, and we both
read it and it was her boy Bill.
Alice gave her back the card.
She had held on to the woman’s hand all the
time, and now she squeezed the hand, and held it against
her face. But she could not say a word because
she was crying so. The soldier’s mother
took the card again and she pushed Alice away, but
it was not an unkind push, and she went in and shut
the door; and as Alice and Oswald went down the road
Oswald looked back, and one of the windows of the
cottage had a white blind. Afterwards the other
windows had too. There were no blinds really
to the cottage. It was aprons and things she had
pinned up.
Alice cried most of the morning, and
so did the other girls. We wanted to do something
for the soldier’s mother, but you can do nothing
when people’s sons are shot. It is the
most dreadful thing to want to do something for people
who are unhappy, and not to know what to do.
It was Noel who thought of what we COIULD do at last.
He said, ’I suppose they don’t
put up tombstones to soldiers when they die in war.
But there I mean Oswald said, ‘Of
course not.’
Noel said, ’I daresay you’ll
think it’s silly, but I don’t care.
Don’t you think she’d like it, if we put
one up to him? Not in the churchyard, of
course, because we shouldn’t be let, but in our
garden, just where it joins on to the churchyard?’
And we all thought it was a first-rate idea.
This is what we meant to put on the tombstone:
’Here
lies
BillSimpkins
Who died fighting for
Queen
and
Country.’
’A
faithful son,
A
son so dear,
A
soldier brave
Lies
buried here.’
Then we remembered that poor brave
Bill was really buried far away in the Southern hemisphere,
if at all. So we altered it to
’A
soldier brave
We
weep for here.’
Then we looked out a nice flagstone
in the stable-yard, and we got a cold chisel out of
the Dentist’s toolbox, and began.
But stone-cutting is difficult and dangerous work.
Oswald went at it a bit, but he chipped
his thumb, and it bled so he had to chuck it.
Then Dicky tried, and then Denny, but Dicky hammered
his finger, and Denny took all day over every stroke,
so that by tea-time we had only done the H, and about
half the E and the E was awfully crooked.
Oswald chipped his thumb over the H.
We looked at it the next morning,
and even the most sanguinary of us saw that it was
a hopeless task.
Then Denny said, ‘Why not wood
and paint?’ and he showed us how. We got
a board and two stumps from the carpenter’s in
the village, and we painted it all white, and when
that was dry Denny did the words on it.
It was something like this:
’Inmemory of
bill
Simpkins
Dead for queen
and country.
Honour to
his name and all
Other brave
soldiers.’
We could not get in what we meant
to at first, so we had to give up the poetry.
We fixed it up when it was dry.
We had to dig jolly deep to get the posts to stand
up, but the gardener helped us.
Then the girls made wreaths of white
flowers, roses and Canterbury bells, and lilies and
pinks, and sweet-peas and daisies, and put them over
the posts. And I think if Bill Simpkins had known
how sorry we were, he would have been glad. Oswald
only hopes if he falls on the wild battlefield, which
is his highest ambition, that somebody will be as
sorry about him as he was about Bill, that’s
all!
When all was done, and what flowers
there were over from the wreaths scattered under the
tombstone between the posts, we wrote a letter to
Mrs Simpkins, and said
DEAR MRS SIMPKINS
We are very, very sorry about the
turnips and things, and we beg your pardon humbly.
We have put up a tombstone to your brave son.
And we signed our names. Alice took the letter.
The soldier’s mother read it,
and said something about our oughting to know better
than to make fun of people’s troubles with our
tombstones and tomfoolery.
Alice told me she could not help crying.
She said
’It’s not! it’s
not! Dear, dear Mrs Simpkins, do come
with me and see! You don’t know how sorry
we are about Bill. Do come and see.
We can go through the churchyard,
and the others have all gone in, so as to leave it
quiet for you. Do come.’
And Mrs Simpkins did. And when
she read what we had put up, and Alice told her the
verse we had not had room for, she leant against the
wall by the grave I mean the tombstone and
Alice hugged her, and they both cried bitterly.
The poor soldier’s mother was very, very pleased,
and she forgave us about the turnips, and we were
friends after that, but she always liked Alice the
best. A great many people do, somehow.
After that we used to put fresh flowers
every day on Bill’s tombstone, and I do believe
his mother was pleased, though she got us to move it
away from the churchyard edge and put it in a corner
of our garden under a laburnum, where people could
not see it from the church. But you could from
the road, though I think she thought you couldn’t.
She came every day to look at the new wreaths.
When the white flowers gave out we put coloured, and
she liked it just as well.
About a fortnight after the erecting
of the tombstone the girls were putting fresh wreaths
on it when a soldier in a red coat came down the road,
and he stopped and looked at us. He walked with
a stick, and he had a bundle in a blue cotton handkerchief,
and one arm in a sling.
And he looked again, and he came nearer,
and he leaned on the wall, so that he could read the
black printing on the white paint.
And he grinned all over his face, and he said
‘Well, I am blessed!’
And he read it all out in a sort of
half whisper, and when he came to the end, where it
says, ‘and all such brave soldiers’, he
said
‘Well, I really am!’
I suppose he meant he really was blessed. Oswald
thought it was like the soldier’s cheek, so he
said
’I daresay you aren’t
so very blessed as you think. What’s it
to do with you, anyway, eh, Tommy?’
Of course Oswald knew from Kipling
that an infantry soldier is called that. The
soldier said
‘Tommy yourself, young man.
That’s me!’ and he pointed to the
tombstone.
We stood rooted to the spot. Alice spoke first.
‘Then you’re Bill, and
you’re not dead,’ she said. ’Oh,
Bill, I am so glad! Do let me tell your
mother.’
She started running, and so did we
all. Bill had to go slowly because of his leg,
but I tell you he went as fast as ever he could.
We all hammered at the soldier’s
mother’s door, and shouted
‘Come out! come out!’
and when she opened the door we were going to speak,
but she pushed us away, and went tearing down the garden
path like winking. I never saw a grown-up woman
run like it, because she saw Bill coming.
She met him at the gate, running right
into him, and caught hold of him, and she cried much
more than when she thought he was dead.
And we all shook his hand and said how glad we were.
The soldier’s mother kept hold
of him with both hands, and I couldn’t help
looking at her face. It was like wax that had
been painted on both pink cheeks, and the eyes shining
like candles. And when we had all said how glad
we were, she said
‘Thank the dear Lord for His
mercies,’ and she took her boy Bill into the
cottage and shut the door.
We went home and chopped up the tombstone
with the wood-axe and had a blazing big bonfire, and
cheered till we could hardly speak.
The postcard was a mistake; he was
only missing. There was a pipe and a whole pound
of tobacco left over from our keepsake to the other
soldiers. We gave it to Bill. Father is going
to have him for under-gardener when his wounds get
well. He’ll always be a bit lame, so he
cannot fight any more.