HOW THE RESERVES CAME UP
From a seat in the paymaster’s
office of the depot barracks at Bury one afternoon
in November, 1899, I could look either into the barrack
yard or out along the Bolton Road. A four-wheeler
clove its way through the crowd surrounding the gates,
and the sentries presented arms to it. It contained
my friend, the paymaster, who presently came upstairs
carrying a bag in which were several hundred pounds
sterling the real sinews of war. This
was the man whose business it was to call up the Reservists,
and he had a very simple way of doing it. He had
several books containing large forms divided by perforation
into four parts. The first was a counterfoil
on which was written the Reservist’s name and
the date of posting the order; the second was a railway
warrant requesting the railway company to furnish
him with a ticket available by the most direct route
from his place of residence to the depot; the third
was the order requiring him to present himself at
the barracks on or before a certain date; and the
fourth was a money-order for three shillings, officially
called an advance, but virtually a present from a considerate
Government. On the 11th of the month the paymaster
at Bury had signed about six hundred of these notices,
and had seen them posted; on Sunday and Monday they
had begun to fall like bombs on the breakfast tables
of prosperous civilians all over the country; and
soon the pieces of blue paper had made a sad disturbance
in several hundreds of cottage homes, and added several
hundred men to the strength of the 2nd Battalion of
the Lancashire Fusiliers. The business of
the pay office, or at least my friend’s part
of it a few subalterns rushing up in a hurry
to get money for their various companies; eighty pounds
for A, a hundred pounds for D, and so on was
soon over, and then he told me something of how the
Reserve system works.
All the men in the Reserve have put
in at least seven years’ service. They
go into the Reserve first for a term of five years
at sixpence a day, and then (if they wish) for a term
of four years at fourpence a day. Of course when
the Reserves are called out they receive the same
pay as regular soldiers, and their wives have separation
allowances. As everyone knows, this was the first
time that any considerable number of the Reserves
had been called up, and the system has worked admirably.
About 98 per cent, in some districts presented themselves,
the small remainder being either ill or in gaol.
A small proportion of those who came up were rejected
by the doctor, but on the whole the men were tough
and fit. In this district they were allowed eight
days in which to settle their affairs and present
themselves at the depot, but most of them did not
come until the last minute, and several not until after
the last minute of the time allowed by the order.
The crowd outside the barrack gates
was composed chiefly of women and loafers, but every
now and then it opened to admit a handful of reluctant-looking
men, who had probably stayed outside until their money
was exhausted. And many of them were hanging about
outside the gates having nothing to do and no money
to spend, but deferring to the last moment the final
step of self-submission to the iron hand of discipline.
For once the Reservist was inside the barrack yard
he could have no more liberty, probably, for many
a long month unless, indeed, he gained an
endless liberty on the battlefield. The scene
through the opposite window looking on to the barrack
yard was very different from the rather sombre picture
without. The yard was gay with the wonderful red
that has done so much to make the army popular.
For movement there were a few squads of Militia recruits
being drilled by the trumpet-voiced sergeants; and
for music there was the ring of a hundred rifle-butts
striking the ground together, the tramp and click of
many feet, and the clatter of the colonel’s
horse as he rode across the yard.
But the most interesting people were
the Reservists and their friends, who dotted the yard
in many-coloured groups. Here was a party of girls
and women taking a farewell of some engaging blade
whose course of gallantry had been suddenly interrupted.
There was a father standing with his wife and small
family grouped round him, no one saying very much,
but everyone feeling a good deal. And another
group would be laughing and singing, not quite recovered
from the means they had taken to drown regrets.
Sitting in the window, one could trace
the Reservist’s progress from his entrance at
the gate to his disappearance into quarters. The
square was filled with little processions containing
six or eight men each; first from the orderly-room
to the hospital, in all kinds of civilian raiment:
black, grey, brown, green, blue, drab anything
but red; hatless, capless, black-hatted, cloth-capped,
shabby, spruce, dirty, soiled, clean, pretty clean,
white-faced, red-faced, unkempt, well-groomed, hungry,
well-fed, thin, fat every class between
clerks and tramps; every condition between prosperity
and destitution. A procession was also constantly
flowing from the hospital to the quartermaster’s
stores the same procession, with one military
touch; for this time the men did not straggle, but
were marched single file in charge of a sergeant.
The next procession was from the stores to the men’s
quarters; but now each man had a great bundle under
his arms containing his entire kit wrapped up in an
overcoat.
The quartermaster, not without pardonable
pride, took me over the stores in which the men’s
kits are prepared. There were hundreds of racks
containing bundles so cunningly rolled that you could
see at a glance what was in each. And beside
each bundle was a valise already packed with everything
that a campaigner could need; indeed, when I read the
printed list showing what was in each my heart warmed
with the same joy that I felt when I first read Robinson
Crusoe. Government, who is rigorous and unyielding
as a disciplinarian to her soldiers, is a mother to
them in her provision for their wants. Each bag
contained a knife, fork, spoon, tin canteen, shaving
brush, soap, razor, boot brushes, clothes brush, hair
brush, pipeclay, button polisher, cleaning paste,
and a dozen other things just as interesting and as
useful. Out of curiosity I opened a housewife,
and my heart was touched with the almost feminine
consideration that it indicated; for there, cunningly
folded up, were skeins of wool and cotton in many
different shades, as well as half a dozen sizes of
needles. Surely the War Office is human, and not
the strange machine that some of us esteem it, for
how else could it provide that Tommy shall not have
to darn his socks with scarlet, nor his tunic with
grey, nor his trousers with white wool? As the
men came into the stores each one received his share
of these excellent things, and the quartermaster’s
sergeants displayed quite a genius in estimating and
fitting the various proportions of the men. And
the men’s eyes brightened at the sight of the
glorious new red cloth; I believe that, although they
wore it for a few days only, it did much to reconcile
them with the inconvenience and hardship that some
of them endured in rejoining. Khaki uniforms
were served out later.
All round the barrack square the men
stood in groups as I have described, and in one corner
were clusters of men arrayed in their new garments.
One could read pretty easily in their faces the story
of the last few days. One saw several men who
had evidently risen in the world since they had left
the army. They had an air of sleekness and delicacy
that made them seem out of place. Others had evidently
been going down in the social scale, and wore their
new clothes like fine feathers. Some were evidently
glad at the prospect of action and excitement, and
fell back into the regimental routine as a man sits
down in a comfortable chair. To others, not a
few, all this hustle was an act in a domestic tragedy.
Sometimes it was a comedy, as in the case of one man
who had built up a “nice little butchering business,”
snatching his profits from the niggard hand of competition;
and now he must go forth to kill men, leaving his
rival master in the field of domestic butchery.
But the comedies were few, or else I did not come
across them, for it was the serious side of this business
that impressed me the most. Men caught away from
new-found family joys, not for personal advancement
or glory, but to take their places as units in the
huge war-machine that is fed with human bodies.
It is so easy to speak and think of “losses”
when we count them by the hundred; it is so hard and
bitter to think of one death and all that it means
when one stands and speaks to a soldier. I found
one man standing apart by himself a young
man, with a good, clean, hardy face and
there were tears in his eyes. As I was passing
he asked me what time it was, and in a few minutes
he told me his story. He had been married two
years; he had one little child; he had left his wife
dying of pneumonia. That was all; but I think
one can hardly realise how much it meant. I should
like some civilians who do their soldiering in an
armchair, and who really seem to like a war for the
spice with which it flavours their newspaper, to have
seen that man and heard his short tale of misery.
He is, of course, one of the few on whom an admirable
system inflicts a fearful wound; but he is an example
(if one were needed) of the matchless discipline that
can teach a man to obey without question or complaint
a command that has two edges for death. I am
glad to say that I met no other man in half so dreadful
a plight as his, but there were dozens of men to whom
the order came as an ending of happiness, and of course
one knew, although the thought was not dwelt upon,
that many of the little homes of which these men had
been the centre and support would have that support
no more. Yet of one thing I am very sure.
Not one of the men to whom I spoke but was willing
and anxious to serve his country; not one but looked
proud to be wearing the old uniform again. The
sadness and trouble was all in the retrospect, not
in the outlook. Tommy Atkins, with his great,
simple, conspicuous vices and his obscure, surprising,
and enduring virtues was unconsciously putting into
practice the precept of a certain Old Buccaneer:
No regrets; they unman the heart we want for to-morrow.