TAKING PART
Section 1
There were now two chief things in
the mind of Mr. Britling. One was a large and
valiant thing, a thing of heroic and processional quality,
the idea of taking up one’s share in the great
conflict, of leaving the Dower House and its circle
of habits and activities and going out .
From that point he wasn’t quite sure where he
was to go, nor exactly what he meant to do. His
imagination inclined to the figure of a volunteer
in an improvised uniform inflicting great damage upon
a raiding invader from behind a hedge. The uniform,
one presumes, would have been something in the vein
of the costume in which he met Mr. Direck. With
a “brassard.” Or he thought of himself
as working at a telephone or in an office engaged
upon any useful quasi-administrative work that called
for intelligence rather than training. Still,
of course, with a “brassard.” A month
ago he would have had doubts about the meaning of
“brassard”; now it seemed to be the very
keyword for national organisation. He had started
for London by the early train on Monday morning with
the intention of immediate enrolment in any such service
that offered; of getting, in fact, into his brassard
at once. The morning papers he bought at the
station dashed his conviction of the inevitable fall
of Paris into hopeful doubts, but did not shake his
resolution. The effect of rout and pursuit and
retreat and retreat and retreat had disappeared from
the news. The German right was being counter-attacked,
and seemed in danger of getting pinched between Paris
and Verdun with the British on its flank. This
relieved his mind, but it did nothing to modify his
new realisation of the tremendous gravity of the war.
Even if the enemy were held and repulsed a little there
was still work for every man in the task of forcing
them back upon their own country. This war was
an immense thing, it would touch everybody....
That meant that every man must give himself. That
he had to give himself. He must let nothing stand
between him and that clear understanding. It
was utterly shameful now to hold back and not to do
one’s utmost for civilisation, for England, for
all the ease and safety one had been given against
these drilled, commanded, obsessed millions.
Mr. Britling was a flame of exalted
voluntaryism, of patriotic devotion, that day.
But behind all this bravery was the
other thing, the second thing in the mind of Mr. Britling,
a fear. He was prepared now to spread himself
like some valiant turkey-gobbler, every feather at
its utmost, against the aggressor. He was prepared
to go out and flourish bayonets, march and dig to
the limit of his power, shoot, die in a ditch if needful,
rather than permit German militarism to dominate the
world. He had no fear for himself. He was
prepared to perish upon the battlefield or cut a valiant
figure in the military hospital. But what he perceived
very clearly and did his utmost not to perceive was
this qualifying and discouraging fact, that the war
monster was not nearly so disposed to meet him as he
was to meet the war, and that its eyes were fixed on
something beside and behind him, that it was already
only too evidently stretching out a long and shadowy
arm past him towards Teddy and towards Hugh....
The young are the food of war....
Teddy wasn’t Mr. Britling’s
business anyhow. Teddy must do as he thought
proper. Mr. Britling would not even advise upon
that. And as for Hugh
Mr. Britling did his best to brazen it out.
“My eldest boy is barely seventeen,”
he said. “He’s keen to go, and I’d
be sorry if he wasn’t. He’ll get into
some cadet corps of course he’s already
done something of that kind at school. Or they’ll
take him into the Territorials. But before
he’s nineteen everything will be over, one way
or another. I’m afraid, poor chap, he’ll
feel sold....”
And having thrust Hugh safely into
the background of his mind as juvenile,
doing a juvenile share, no sort of man yet Mr.
Britling could give a free rein to his generous imaginations
of a national uprising. From the idea of a universal
participation in the struggle he passed by an easy
transition to an anticipation of all Britain armed
and gravely embattled. Across gulfs of obstinate
reality. He himself was prepared to say, and
accordingly he felt that the great mass of the British
must be prepared to say to the government: “Here
we are at your disposal. This is not a diplomatists’
war nor a War Office war; this is a war of the whole
people. We are all willing and ready to lay aside
our usual occupations and offer our property and ourselves.
Whim and individual action are for peace times.
Take us and use us as you think fit. Take all
we possess.” When he thought of the government
in this way, he forgot the governing class he knew.
The slack-trousered Raeburn, the prim, attentive Philbert,
Lady Frensham at the top of her voice, stern, preposterous
Carson, boozy Bandershoot and artful Taper, wily Asquith,
the eloquent yet unsubstantial George, and the immobile
Grey, vanished out of his mind; all those representative
exponents of the way things are done in Great Britain
faded in the glow of his imaginative effort; he forgot
the dreary debates, the floundering newspapers, the
“bluffs,” the intrigues, the sly bargains
of the week-end party, the “schoolboy honour”
of grown men, the universal weak dishonesty in thinking;
he thought simply of a simplified and ideal government
that governed. He thought vaguely of something
behind and beyond them, England, the ruling genius
of the land; something with a dignified assurance
and a stable will. He imagined this shadowy ruler
miraculously provided with schemes and statistics
against this supreme occasion which had for so many
years been the most conspicuous probability before
the country. His mind leaping forwards to the
conception of a great nation reluctantly turning its
vast resources to the prosecution of a righteous defensive
war, filled in the obvious corollaries of plan and
calculation. He thought that somewhere “up
there” there must be people who could count
and who had counted everything that we might need for
such a struggle, and organisers who had schemed and
estimated down to practicable and manageable details....
Such lapses from knowledge to faith
are perhaps necessary that human heroism may be possible....
His conception of his own share in
the great national uprising was a very modest one.
He was a writer, a footnote to reality; he had no trick
of command over men, his rôle was observation rather
than organisation, and he saw himself only as an insignificant
individual dropping from his individuality into his
place in a great machine, taking a rifle in a trench,
guarding a bridge, filling a cartridge just
with a brassard or something like that on until
the great task was done. Sunday night was full
of imaginations of order, of the countryside standing
up to its task, of roads cleared and resources marshalled,
of the petty interests of the private life altogether
set aside. And mingling with that it was still
possible for Mr. Britling, he was still young enough,
to produce such dreams of personal service, of sudden
emergencies swiftly and bravely met, of conspicuous
daring and exceptional rewards, such dreams as hover
in the brains of every imaginative recruit....
The detailed story of Mr. Britling’s
two days’ search for some easy and convenient
ladder into the service of his threatened country would
be a voluminous one. It would begin with the
figure of a neatly brushed patriot, with an intent
expression upon his intelligent face, seated in the
Londonward train, reading the war news the
first comforting war news for many days and
trying not to look as though his life was torn up
by the roots and all his being aflame with devotion;
and it would conclude after forty-eight hours of fuss,
inquiry, talk, waiting, telephoning, with the same
gentleman, a little fagged and with a kind of weary
apathy in his eyes, returning by the short cut from
the station across Claverings park to resume his connection
with his abandoned roots. The essential process
of the interval had been the correction of Mr. Britling’s
temporary delusion that the government of the British
Empire is either intelligent, instructed, or wise.
The great “Business as Usual”
phase was already passing away, and London was in
the full tide of recruiting enthusiasm. That tide
was breaking against the most miserable arrangements
for enlistment it is possible to imagine. Overtaxed
and not very competent officers, whose one idea of
being very efficient was to refuse civilian help and
be very, very slow and circumspect and very dignified
and overbearing, sat in dirty little rooms and snarled
at this unheard-of England that pressed at door and
window for enrolment. Outside every recruiting
office crowds of men and youths waited, leaning against
walls, sitting upon the pavements, waited for long
hours, waiting to the end of the day and returning
next morning, without shelter, without food, many
sick with hunger; men who had hurried up from the
country, men who had thrown up jobs of every kind,
clerks, shopmen, anxious only to serve England and
“teach those damned Germans a lesson.”
Between them and this object they had discovered a
perplexing barrier; an inattention. As Mr. Britling
made his way by St. Martin’s Church and across
Trafalgar Square and marked the weary accumulation
of this magnificently patriotic stuff, he had his
first inkling of the imaginative insufficiency of the
War Office that had been so suddenly called upon to
organise victory. He was to be more fully informed
when he reached his club.
His impression of the streets through
which he passed was an impression of great unrest.
There were noticeably fewer omnibuses and less road
traffic generally, but there was a quite unusual number
of drifting pedestrians. The current on the pavements
was irritatingly sluggish. There were more people
standing about, and fewer going upon their business.
This was particularly the case with the women he saw.
Many of them seemed to have drifted in from the suburbs
and outskirts of London in a state of vague expectation,
unable to stay in their homes.
Everywhere there were the flags of
the Allies; in shop windows, over doors, on the bonnets
of automobiles, on people’s breasts, and there
was a great quantity of recruiting posters on the
hoardings and in windows: “Your King and
Country Need You” was the chief text, and they
still called for “A Hundred Thousand Men”
although the demand of Lord Kitchener had risen to
half a million. There were also placards calling
for men on nearly all the taxicabs. The big windows
of the offices of the Norddeutscher Lloyd in Cockspur
Street were boarded up, and plastered thickly with
recruiting appeals.
At his club Mr. Britling found much
talk and belligerent stir. In the hall Wilkins
the author was displaying a dummy rifle of bent iron
rod to several interested members. It was to
be used for drilling until rifles could be got, and
it could be made for eighteen pence. This was
the first intimation Mr. Britling got that the want
of foresight of the War Office only began with its
unpreparedness for recruits. Men were talking
very freely in the club; one of the temporary effects
of the war in its earlier stages was to produce a
partial thaw in the constitutional British shyness;
and men who had glowered at Mr. Britling over their
lunches and had been glowered at by Mr. Britling in
silence for years now started conversations with him.
“What is a man of my sort to
do?” asked a clean-shaven barrister.
“Exactly what I have been asking,”
said Mr. Britling. “They are fixing the
upward age for recruits at thirty; it’s absurdly
low. A man well over forty like myself is quite
fit to line a trench or guard a bridge. I’m
not so bad a shot....”
“We’ve been discussing
home defence volunteers,” said the barrister.
“Anyhow we ought to be drilling. But the
War Office sets its face as sternly against our doing
anything of the sort as though we were going to join
the Germans. It’s absurd. Even if we
older men aren’t fit to go abroad, we could
at least release troops who could.”
“If you had the rifles,”
said a sharp-featured man in grey to the right of
Mr. Britling.
“I suppose they are to be got,” said Mr.
Britling.
The sharp-featured man indicated by
appropriate facial action and head-shaking that this
was by no means the case.
“Every dead man, many wounded
men, most prisoners,” he said, “mean each
one a rifle lost. We have lost five-and-twenty
thousand rifles alone since the war began. Quite
apart from arming new troops we have to replace those
rifles with the drafts we send out. Do you know
what is the maximum weekly output of rifles at the
present time in this country?”
Mr. Britling did not know.
“Nine thousand.”
Mr. Britling suddenly understood the
significance of Wilkins and his dummy gun.
The sharp-featured man added with
an air of concluding the matter: “It’s
the barrels are the trouble. Complicated machinery.
We haven’t got it and we can’t make it
in a hurry. And there you are!”
The sharp-featured man had a way of
speaking almost as if he was throwing bombs.
He threw one now. “Zinc,” he said.
“We’re not short of zinc?” said
the lawyer.
The sharp-featured man nodded, and then became explicit.
Zinc was necessary for cartridges;
it had to be refined zinc and very pure, or the shooting
went wrong. Well, we had let the refining business
drift away from England to Belgium and Germany.
There were just one or two British firms still left....
Unless we bucked up tremendously we should get caught
short of cartridges.... At any rate of cartridges
so made as to ensure good shooting. “And
there you are!” said the sharp-featured man.
But the sharp-featured man did not
at that time represent any considerable section of
public thought. “I suppose after all we
can get rifles from America,” said the lawyer.
“And as for zinc, if the shortage is known the
shortage will be provided for....”
The prevailing topic in the smoking-room
upstairs was the inability of the War Office to deal
with the flood of recruits that was pouring in, and
its hostility to any such volunteering as Mr. Britling
had in mind. Quite a number of members wanted
to volunteer; there was much talk of their fitness;
“I’m fifty-four,” said one, “and
I could do my twenty-five miles in marching kit far
better than half those boys of nineteen.”
Another was thirty-eight. “I must hold the
business together,” he said; “but why
anyhow shouldn’t I learn to shoot and use a
bayonet?” The personal pique of the rejected
lent force to their criticisms of the recruiting and
general organisation. “The War Office has
one incurable system,” said a big mine-owner.
“During peace time it runs all its home administration
with men who will certainly be wanted at the front
directly there is a war. Directly war comes, therefore,
there is a shift all round, and a new untried man usually
a dug-out in an advanced state of decay is
stuck into the job. Chaos follows automatically.
The War Office always has done this, and so far as
one can see it always will. It seems incapable
of realising that another man will be wanted until
the first is taken away. Its imagination doesn’t
even run to that.”
Mr. Britling found a kindred spirit in Wilkins.
Wilkins was expounding his tremendous
scheme for universal volunteering. Everybody
was to be accepted. Everybody was to be assigned
and registered and badged.
“A brassard,” said Mr. Britling.
“It doesn’t matter whether
we really produce a fighting force or not,”
said Wilkins. “Everybody now is enthusiastic and
serious. Everybody is willing to put on some
kind of uniform and submit to some sort of orders.
And the thing to do is to catch them in the willing
stage. Now is the time to get the country lined
up and organised, ready to meet the internal stresses
that are bound to come later. But there’s
no disposition whatever to welcome this universal
offering. It’s just as though this war
was a treat to which only the very select friends of
the War Office were to be admitted. And I don’t
admit that the national volunteers would be ineffective even
from a military point of view. There are plenty
of fit men of our age, and men of proper age who are
better employed at home armament workers
for example, and there are all the boys under the
age. They may not be under the age before things
are over....”
He was even prepared to plan uniforms.
“A brassard,” repeated
Mr. Britling, “and perhaps coloured strips on
the revers of a coat.”
“Colours for the counties,”
said Wilkins, “and if there isn’t coloured
cloth to be got there’s red flannel.
Anything is better than leaving the mass of people
to mob about....”
A momentary vision danced before Mr.
Britling’s eyes of red flannel petticoats being
torn up in a rapid improvisation of soldiers to resist
a sudden invasion. Passing washerwomen suddenly
requisitioned. But one must not let oneself be
laughed out of good intentions because of ridiculous
accessories. The idea at any rate was the sound
one....
The vision of what ought to be done
shone brightly while Mr. Britling and Mr. Wilkins
maintained it. But presently under discouraging
reminders that there were no rifles, no instructors,
and, above all, the open hostility of the established
authorities, it faded again....
Afterwards in other conversations
Mr. Britling reverted to more modest ambitions.
“Is there no clerical work,
no minor administrative work, a man might be used
for?” he asked.
“Any old dug-out,” said
the man with the thin face, “any old doddering
Colonel Newcome, is preferred to you in that matter....”
Mr. Britling emerged from his club
about half-past three with his mind rather dishevelled
and with his private determination to do something
promptly for his country’s needs blunted by a
perplexing “How?” His search for doors
and ways where no doors and ways existed went on with
a gathering sense of futility.
He had a ridiculous sense of pique
at being left out, like a child shut out from a room
in which a vitally interesting game is being played.
“After all, it is our war,” he
said.
He caught the phrase as it dropped
from his lips with a feeling that it said more than
he intended. He turned it over and examined it,
and the more he did so the more he was convinced of
its truth and soundness....
Section 2
By night there was a new strangeness
about London. The authorities were trying to
suppress the more brilliant illumination of the chief
thoroughfares, on account of the possibility of an
air raid. Shopkeepers were being compelled to
pull down their blinds, and many of the big standard
lights were unlit. Mr. Britling thought these
precautions were very fussy and unnecessary, and likely
to lead to accidents amidst the traffic. But
it gave a Rembrandtesque quality to the London scene,
turned it into mysterious arrangements of brown shadows
and cones and bars of light. At first many people
were recalcitrant, and here and there a restaurant
or a draper’s window still blazed out and broke
the gloom. There were also a number of insubordinate
automobiles with big head-lights. But the police
were being unusually firm....
“It will all glitter again in
a little time,” he told himself.
He heard an old lady who was projecting
from an offending automobile at Piccadilly Circus
in hot dispute with a police officer. “Zeppelins
indeed!” she said. “What nonsense!
As if they would dare to come here! Who
would let them, I should like to know?”
Probably a friend of Lady Frensham’s,
he thought. Still the idea of Zeppelins
over London did seem rather ridiculous to Mr. Britling.
He would not have liked to have been caught talking
of it himself.... There never had been Zeppelins
over London. They were gas bags....
Section 3
On Wednesday morning Mr. Britling
returned to the Dower House, and he was still a civilian
unassigned.
In the hall he found a tall figure
in khaki standing and reading The Times that
usually lay upon the hall table. The figure turned
at Mr. Britling’s entry, and revealed the aquiline
features of Mr. Lawrence Carmine. It was as if
his friend had stolen a march on him.
But Carmine’s face showed nothing
of the excitement and patriotic satisfaction that
would have seemed natural to Mr. Britling. He
was white and jaded, as if he had not slept for many
nights. “You see,” he explained almost
apologetically of the three stars upon his sleeve,
“I used to be a captain of volunteers.”
He had been put in charge of a volunteer force which
had been re-embodied and entrusted with the care of
the bridges, gasworks, factories and railway tunnels,
and with a number of other minor but necessary duties
round about Easinghampton. “I’ve
just got to shut up my house,” said Captain Carmine,
“and go into lodgings. I confess I hate
it.... But anyhow it can’t last six months....
But it’s beastly.... Ugh!...”
He seemed disposed to expand that
“Ugh,” and then thought better of it.
And presently Mr. Britling took control of the conversation.
His two days in London had filled
him with matter, and he was glad to have something
more than Hugh and Teddy and Mrs. Britling to talk
it upon. What was happening now in Great Britain,
he declared, was adjustment. It was an
attempt on the part of a great unorganised nation,
an attempt, instinctive at present rather than intelligent,
to readjust its government and particularly its military
organisation to the new scale of warfare that Germany
had imposed upon the world. For two strenuous
decades the British navy had been growing enormously
under the pressure of German naval preparations, but
the British military establishment had experienced
no corresponding expansion. It was true there
had been a futile, rather foolishly conducted agitation
for universal military service, but there had been
no accumulation of material, no preparation of armament-making
machinery, no planning and no foundations for any
sort of organisation that would have facilitated the
rapid expansion of the fighting forces of a country
in a time of crisis. Such an idea was absolutely
antagonistic to the mental habits of the British military
caste. The German method of incorporating all
the strength and resources of the country into one
national fighting machine was quite strange to the
British military mind still. Even after
a month of war. War had become the comprehensive
business of the German nation; to the British it was
an incidental adventure. In Germany the nation
was militarised, in England the army was specialised.
The nation for nearly every practical purpose got
along without it. Just as political life had
also become specialised.... Now suddenly we wanted
a government to speak for every one, and an army of
the whole people. How were we to find it?
Mr. Britling dwelt upon this idea
of the specialised character of the British army and
navy and government. It seemed to him to be the
clue to everything that was jarring in the London
spectacle. The army had been a thing aloof, for
a special end. It had developed all the characteristics
of a caste. It had very high standards along the
lines of its specialisation, but it was inadaptable
and conservative. Its exclusiveness was not so
much a deliberate culture as a consequence of its
detached function. It touched the ordinary social
body chiefly through three other specialised bodies,
the court, the church, and the stage. Apart from
that it saw the great unofficial civilian world as
something vague, something unsympathetic, something
possibly antagonistic, which it comforted itself by
snubbing when it dared and tricking when it could,
something that projected members of Parliament towards
it and was stingy about money. Directly one grasped
how apart the army lived from the ordinary life of
the community, from industrialism or from economic
necessities, directly one understood that the great
mass of Englishmen were simply “outsiders”
to the War Office mind, just as they were “outsiders”
to the political clique, one began to realise the
complete unfitness of either government or War Office
for the conduct of so great a national effort as was
now needed. These people “up there”
did not know anything of the broad mass of English
life at all, they did not know how or where things
were made; when they wanted things they just went
to a shop somewhere and got them. This was the
necessary psychology of a small army under a clique
government. Nothing else was to be expected.
But now somehow the nation had
to take hold of the government that it had neglected
so long....
“You see,” said Mr. Britling,
repeating a phrase that was becoming more and more
essential to his thoughts, “this is our
war....
“Of course,” said Mr.
Britling, “these things are not going to be done
without a conflict. We aren’t going to take
hold of our country which we have neglected so long
without a lot of internal friction. But in England
we can make these readjustments without revolution.
It is our strength....
“At present England is confused but
it’s a healthy confusion. It’s astir.
We have more things to defeat than just Germany....
“These hosts of recruits weary,
uncared for, besieging the recruiting stations.
It’s symbolical.... Our tremendous reserves
of will and manhood. Our almost incredible insufficiency
of direction....
“Those people up there have
no idea of the Will that surges up in England.
They are timid little manoeuvring people, afraid of
property, afraid of newspapers, afraid of trade-unions.
They aren’t leading us against the Germans;
they are just being shoved against the Germans by
necessity....”
From this Mr. Britling broke away
into a fresh addition to his already large collection
of contrasts between England and Germany. Germany
was a nation which has been swallowed up and incorporated
by an army and an administration; the Prussian military
system had assimilated to itself the whole German
life. It was a State in a state of repletion,
a State that had swallowed all its people. Britain
was not a State. It was an unincorporated people.
The British army, the British War Office, and the
British administration had assimilated nothing; they
were little old partial things; the British nation
lay outside them, beyond their understanding and tradition;
a formless new thing, but a great thing; and now this
British nation, this real nation, the “outsiders,”
had to take up arms. Suddenly all the underlying
ideas of that outer, greater English life beyond politics,
beyond the services, were challenged, its tolerant
good humour, its freedom, and its irresponsibility.
It was not simply English life that was threatened;
it was all the latitudes of democracy, it was every
liberal idea and every liberty. It was civilisation
in danger. The uncharted liberal system had been
taken by the throat; it had to “make good”
or perish....
“I went up to London expecting
to be told what to do. There is no one to tell
any one what to do.... Much less is there any
one to compel us what to do....
“There’s a War Office
like a college during a riot, with its doors and windows
barred; there’s a government like a cockle boat
in an Atlantic gale....
“One feels the thing ought to
have come upon us like the sound of a trumpet.
Instead, until now, it has been like a great noise,
that we just listened to, in the next house....
And now slowly the nation awakes. London is just
like a dazed sleeper waking up out of a deep sleep
to fire and danger, tumult and cries for help, near
at hand. The streets give you exactly that effect.
People are looking about and listening. One feels
that at any moment, in a pause, in a silence, there
may come, from far away, over the houses, faint and
little, the boom of guns or the small outcries of
little French or Belgian villages in agony....”
Such was the gist of Mr. Britling’s discourse.
He did most of the table talk, and
all that mattered. Teddy was an assenting voice,
Hugh was silent and apparently a little inattentive,
Mrs. Britling was thinking of the courses and the servants
and the boys, and giving her husband only half an
ear, Captain Carmine said little and seemed to be
troubled by some disagreeable preoccupation. Now
and then he would endorse or supplement the things
Mr. Britling was saying. Thrice he remarked:
“People still do not begin to understand."...
Section 4
It was only when they sat together
in the barn court out of the way of Mrs. Britling
and the children that Captain Carmine was able to explain
his listless bearing and jaded appearance. He
was suffering from a bad nervous shock. He had
hardly taken over his command before one of his men
had been killed and killed in a manner that
had left a scar upon his mind.
The man had been guarding a tunnel,
and he had been knocked down by one train when crossing
the line behind another. So it was that the bomb
of Sarajevo killed its first victim in Essex.
Captain Carmine had found the body. He had found
the body in a cloudy moonlight; he had almost fallen
over it; and his sensations and emotions had been eminently
disagreeable. He had had to drag the body it
was very dreadfully mangled off the permanent
way, the damaged, almost severed head had twisted
about very horribly in the uncertain light, and afterwards
he had found his sleeves saturated with blood.
He had not noted this at the time, and when he had
discovered it he had been sick. He had thought
the whole thing more horrible and hateful than any
nightmare, but he had succeeded in behaving with a
sufficient practicality to set an example to his men.
Since this had happened he had not had an hour of dreamless
sleep.
“One doesn’t expect to
be called upon like that,” said Captain Carmine,
“suddenly here in England.... When one is
smoking after supper....”
Mr. Britling listened to this experience
with distressed brows. All his talking and thinking
became to him like the open page of a monthly magazine.
Across it this bloody smear, this thing of red and
black, was dragged....
Section 5
The smear was still bright red in
Mr. Britling’s thoughts when Teddy came to him.
“I must go,” said Teddy, “I can’t
stop here any longer.”
“Go where?”
“Into khaki. I’ve
been thinking of it ever since the war began.
Do you remember what you said when we were bullying
off at hockey on Bank Holiday the day before
war was declared?”
Mr. Britling had forgotten completely;
he made an effort. “What did I say?”
“You said, ’What the devil
are we doing at this hockey? We ought to be drilling
or shooting against those confounded Germans!’
... I’ve never forgotten it.... I
ought to have done it before. I’ve been
a scout-master. In a little while they will want
officers. In London, I’m told, there are
a lot of officers’ training corps putting men
through the work as quickly as possible.... If
I could go....”
“What does Letty think?”
said Mr. Britling after a pause. This was right,
of course the only right thing and
yet he was surprised.
“She says if you’d let
her try to do my work for a time....”
“She wants you to go?”
“Of course she does,”
said Teddy. “She wouldn’t like me
to be a shirker.... But I can’t unless
you help.”
“I’m quite ready to do
that,” said Mr. Britling. “But somehow
I didn’t think it of you. I hadn’t
somehow thought of you ”
“What did you think of me?” asked
Teddy.
“It’s bringing the war
home to us.... Of course you ought to go if
you want to go.”
He reflected. It was odd to find
Teddy in this mood, strung up and serious and businesslike.
He felt that in the past he had done Teddy injustice;
this young man wasn’t as trivial as he had thought
him....
They fell to discussing ways and means;
there might have to be a loan for Teddy’s outfit,
if he did presently secure a commission. And there
were one or two other little matters.... Mr. Britling
dismissed a ridiculous fancy that he was paying to
send Teddy away to something that neither that young
man nor Letty understood properly....
The next day Teddy vanished Londonward
on his bicycle. He was going to lodge in London
in order to be near his training. He was zealous.
Never before had Teddy been zealous. Mrs. Teddy
came to the Dower House for the correspondence, trying
not to look self-conscious and important.
Two Mondays later a very bright-eyed,
excited little boy came running to Mr. Britling, who
was smoking after lunch in the rose garden. “Daddy!”
squealed the small boy. “Teddy! In
khaki!”
The other junior Britling danced in
front of the hero, who was walking beside Mrs. Britling
and trying not to be too aggressively a soldierly
figure. He looked a very man in khaki and more
of a boy than ever. Mrs. Teddy came behind, quietly
elated.
Mr. Britling had a recurrence of that
same disagreeable fancy that these young people didn’t
know exactly what they were going into. He wished
he was in khaki himself; then he fancied this compunction
wouldn’t trouble him quite so much.
The afternoon with them deepened his
conviction that they really didn’t in the slightest
degree understand. Life had been so good to them
hitherto, that even the idea of Teddy’s going
off to the war seemed a sort of fun to them.
It was just a thing he was doing, a serious, seriously
amusing, and very creditable thing. It involved
his dressing up in these unusual clothes, and receiving
salutes in the street.... They discussed every
possible aspect of his military outlook with the zest
of children, who recount the merits of a new game.
They were putting Teddy through his stages at a tremendous
pace. In quite a little time he thought he would
be given the chance of a commission.
“They want subalterns badly.
Already they’ve taken nearly a third of our
people,” he said, and added with the wistfulness
of one who glances at inaccessible delights:
“one or two may get out to the front quite soon.”
He spoke as a young actor might speak
of a star part. And with a touch of the quality
of one who longs to travel in strange lands....
One must be patient. Things come at last....
“If I’m killed she gets
eighty pounds a year,” Teddy explained among
many other particulars.
He smiled the smile of
a confident immortal at this amusing idea.
“He’s my little annuity,”
said Letty, also smiling, “dead or alive.”
“We’ll miss Teddy in all
sorts of ways,” said Mr. Britling.
“It’s only for the duration
of the war,” said Teddy. “And Letty’s
very intelligent. I’ve done my best to
chasten the evil in her.”
“If you think you’re going
to get back your job after the war,” said Letty,
“you’re very much mistaken. I’m
going to raise the standard.”
“You!” said Teddy,
regarding her coldly, and proceeded ostentatiously
to talk of other things.
Section 6
“Hugh’s going to be in
khaki too,” the elder junior told Teddy.
“He’s too young to go out in Kitchener’s
army, but he’s joined the Territorials.
He went off on Thursday.... I wish Gilbert and
me was older....”
Mr. Britling had known his son’s
purpose since the evening of Teddy’s announcement.
Hugh had come to his father’s
study as he was sitting musing at his writing-desk
over the important question whether he should continue
his “Examination of War” uninterruptedly,
or whether he should not put that on one side for
a time and set himself to state as clearly as possible
the not too generally recognised misfit between the
will and strength of Britain on the one hand and her
administrative and military organisation on the other.
He felt that an enormous amount of human enthusiasm
and energy was being refused and wasted; that if things
went on as they were going there would continue to
be a quite disastrous shortage of gear, and that some
broadening change was needed immediately if the swift
exemplary victory over Germany that his soul demanded
was to be ensured. Suppose he were to write some
noisy articles at once, an article, for instance,
to be called “The War of the Mechanics”
or “The War of Gear,” and another on “Without
Civil Strength there is no Victory.” If
he wrote such things would they be noted or would
they just vanish indistinguishably into the general
mental tumult? Would they be audible and helpful
shouts, or just waste of shouting?... That at
least was what he supposed himself to be thinking;
it was, at any rate, the main current of his thinking;
but all the same, just outside the circle of his attention
a number of other things were dimly apprehended, bobbing
up and down in the flood and ready at the slightest
chance to swirl into the centre of his thoughts.
There was, for instance, Captain Carmine in the moonlight
lugging up a railway embankment something horrible,
something loose and wet and warm that had very recently
been a man. There was Teddy, serious and patriotic filling
a futile penman with incredulous respect. There
was the thin-faced man at the club, and a curious
satisfaction he had betrayed in the public disarrangement.
And there was Hugh. Particularly there was Hugh,
silent but watchful. The boy never babbled.
He had his mother’s gift of deep dark silences.
Out of which she was wont to flash, a Black Princess
waving a sword. He wandered for a little while
among memories.... But Hugh didn’t come
out like that, though it always seemed possible he
might perhaps he didn’t come out
because he was a son. Revelation to his father
wasn’t his business.... What was he thinking
of it all? What was he going to do? Mr.
Britling was acutely anxious that his son should volunteer;
he was almost certain that he would volunteer, but
there was just a little shadow of doubt whether some
extraordinary subtlety of mind mightn’t have
carried the boy into a pacifist attitude. No!
that was impossible. In the face of Belgium....
But as greatly and far more deeply in the
warm flesh of his being did Mr. Britling
desire that no harm, no evil should happen to Hugh....
The door opened, and Hugh came in....
Mr. Britling glanced over his shoulder
with an affectation of indifference. “Hal-lo!”
he said. “What do you want?”
Hugh walked awkwardly to the hearthrug.
“Oh!” he said in an off-hand
tone; “I suppose I’ve got to go soldiering
for a bit. I just thought I’d
rather like to go off with a man I know to-morrow....”
Mr. Britling’s manner remained casual.
“It’s the only thing to do now, I’m
afraid,” he said.
He turned in his chair and regarded
his son. “What do you mean to do?
O.T.C.?”
“I don’t think I should
make much of an officer. I hate giving orders
to other people. We thought we’d just go
together into the Essex Regiment as privates....”
There was a little pause. Both
father and son had rehearsed this scene in their minds
several times, and now they found that they had no
use for a number of sentences that had been most effective
in these rehearsals. Mr. Britling scratched his
cheek with the end of his pen. “I’m
glad you want to go, Hugh,” he said.
“I don’t want to
go,” said Hugh with his hands deep in his pockets.
“I want to go and work with Cardinal. But
this job has to be done by every one. Haven’t
you been saying as much all day?... It’s
like turning out to chase a burglar or suppress a
mad dog. It’s like necessary sanitation....”
“You aren’t attracted by soldiering?”
“Not a bit. I won’t
pretend it, Daddy. I think the whole business
is a bore. Germany seems to me now just like
some heavy horrible dirty mass that has fallen across
Belgium and France. We’ve got to shove the
stuff back again. That’s all....”
He volunteered some further remarks
to his father’s silence.
“You know I can’t get
up a bit of tootle about this business,” he said.
“I think killing people or getting killed is
a thoroughly nasty habit.... I expect my share
will be just drilling and fatigue duties and route
marches, and loafing here in England....”
“You can’t possibly go
out for two years,” said Mr. Britling, as if
he regretted it.
A slight hesitation appeared in Hugh’s
eyes. “I suppose not,” he said.
“Things ought to be over by
then anyhow,” Mr. Britling added,
betraying his real feelings.
“So it’s really just helping
at the furthest end of the shove,” Hugh endorsed,
but still with that touch of reservation in his manner....
The pause had the effect of closing
the theoretical side of the question. “Where
do you propose to enlist?” said Mr. Britling,
coming down to practical details.
Section 7
The battle of the Marne passed into
the battle of the Aisne, and then the long lines of
the struggle streamed north-westward until the British
were back in Belgium failing to clutch Menin and then
defending Ypres. The elation of September followed
the bedazzlement and dismay of August into the chapter
of forgotten moods; and Mr. Britling’s sense
of the magnitude, the weight and duration of this
war beyond all wars, increased steadily. The
feel of it was less and less a feeling of crisis and
more and more a feeling of new conditions. It
wasn’t as it had seemed at first, the end of
one human phase and the beginning of another; it was
in itself a phase. It was a new way of living.
And still he could find no real point of contact for
himself with it all except the point of his pen.
Only at his writing-desk, and more particularly at
night, were the great presences of the conflict his.
Yet he was always desiring some more personal and
physical participation.
Hugh came along one day in October
in an ill-fitting uniform, looking already coarser
in fibre and with a nose scorched red by the autumnal
sun. He said the life was rough, but it made him
feel extraordinarily well; perhaps man was made to
toil until he dropped asleep from exhaustion, to fast
for ten or twelve hours and then eat like a wolf.
He was acquiring a taste for Woodbine cigarettes,
and a heady variety of mineral waters called Monsters.
He feared promotion; he felt he could never take the
high line with other human beings demanded of a corporal.
He was still trying to read a little chemistry and
crystallography, but it didn’t “go with
the life.” In the scanty leisure of a recruit
in training it was more agreeable to lie about and
write doggerel verses and draw caricatures of the
men in one’s platoon. Invited to choose
what he liked by his family, he demanded a large tuckbox
such as he used to have at school, only “much
larger,” and a big tin of insect powder.
It must be able to kill ticks....
When he had gone, the craving for
a personal share in the nation’s physical exertions
became overpowering in Mr. Britling. He wanted,
he felt, to “get his skin into it.”
He had decided that the volunteer movement was a hopeless
one. The War Office, after a stout resistance
to any volunteer movement at all, decided to recognise
it in such a manner as to make it ridiculous.
The volunteers were to have no officers and no uniforms
that could be remotely mistaken for those of the regulars,
so that in the event of an invasion the Germans would
be able to tell what they had to deal with miles away.
Wilkins found his conception of a whole nation, all
enrolled, all listed and badged according to capacity,
his dream of every one falling into place in one great
voluntary national effort, treated as the childish
dreaming of that most ignorant of all human types,
a “novelist.” Punch was delicately
funny about him; he was represented as wearing a preposterous
cocked hat of his own design, designing cocked hats
for every one. Wilkins was told to “shut
up” in a multitude of anonymous letters, and
publicly and privately to “leave things to Kitchener.”
To bellow in loud clear tones “leave things
to Kitchener,” and to depart for the theatre
or the river or an automobile tour, was felt very
generally at that time to be the proper conduct for
a patriot. There was a very general persuasion
that to become a volunteer when one ought to be just
modestly doing nothing at all, was in some obscure
way a form of disloyalty....
So Mr. Britling was out of conceit
with volunteering, and instead he went and was duly
sworn and entrusted with the badge of a special constable.
The duties of a special constable were chiefly not
to understand what was going on in the military sphere,
and to do what he was told in the way of watching
and warding conceivably vulnerable points. He
had also to be available in the event of civil disorder.
Mr. Britling was provided with a truncheon and sent
out to guard various culverts, bridges, and fords
in the hilly country to the north-westward of Matching’s
Easy. It was never very clear to him what he would
do if he found a motor-car full of armed enemies engaged
in undermining a culvert, or treacherously deepening
some strategic ford. He supposed he would either
engage them in conversation, or hit them with his
truncheon, or perhaps do both things simultaneously.
But as he really did not believe for a moment that
any human being was likely to tamper with the telegraphs,
telephones, ways and appliances committed to his care,
his uncertainty did not trouble him very much.
He prowled the lonely lanes and paths in the darkness,
and became better acquainted with a multitude of intriguing
little cries and noises that came from the hedges
and coverts at night. One night he rescued a young
leveret from a stoat, who seemed more than half inclined
to give him battle for its prey until he cowed and
defeated it with the glare of his electric torch....
As he prowled the countryside under
the great hemisphere of Essex sky, or leant against
fences or sat drowsily upon gates or sheltered from
wind and rain under ricks or sheds, he had much time
for meditation, and his thoughts went down and down
below his first surface impressions of the war.
He thought no longer of the rights and wrongs of this
particular conflict but of the underlying forces in
mankind that made war possible; he planned no more
ingenious treaties and conventions between the nations,
and instead he faced the deeper riddles of essential
evil and of conceivable changes in the heart of man.
And the rain assailed him and thorns tore him, and
the soaked soft meadows bogged and betrayed his wandering
feet, and the little underworld of the hedges and
ditches hissed and squealed in the darkness and pursued
and fled, and devoured or were slain.
And one night in April he was perplexed
by a commotion among the pheasants and a barking of
distant dogs, and then to his great astonishment he
heard noises like a distant firework display and saw
something like a phantom yellowish fountain-pen in
the sky far away to the east lit intermittently by
a quivering search-light and going very swiftly.
And after he had rubbed his eyes and looked again,
he realised that he was looking at a Zeppelin a
Zeppelin flying Londonward over Essex.
And all that night was wonder....
Section 8
While Mr. Britling was trying to find
his duty in the routine of a special constable, Mrs.
Britling set to work with great energy to attend various
classes and qualify herself for Red Cross work.
And early in October came the great drive of the Germans
towards Antwerp and the sea, the great drive that
was apparently designed to reach Calais, and which
swept before it multitudes of Flemish refugees.
There was an exodus of all classes from Antwerp into
Holland and England, and then a huge process of depopulation
in Flanders and the Pas de Calais. This flood
came to the eastern and southern parts of England and
particularly to London, and there hastily improvised
organisations distributed it to a number of local
committees, each of which took a share of the refugees,
hired and furnished unoccupied houses for the use of
the penniless, and assisted those who had means into
comfortable quarters. The Matching’s Easy
committee found itself with accommodation for sixty
people, and with a miscellaneous bag of thirty individuals
entrusted to its care, who had been part of the load
of a little pirate steam-boat from Ostend. There
were two Flemish peasant families, and the rest were
more or less middle-class refugees from Antwerp.
They were brought from the station to the Tithe barn
at Claverings, and there distributed, under the personal
supervision of Lady Homartyn and her agent, among those
who were prepared for their entertainment. There
was something like competition among the would-be
hosts; everybody was glad of the chance of “doing
something,” and anxious to show these Belgians
what England thought of their plucky little country.
Mr. Britling was proud to lead off a Mr. Van
der Pant, a neat little bearded man in a black
tail-coat, a black bowler hat, and a knitted muffler,
with a large rucksack and a conspicuously foreign-looking
bicycle, to the hospitalities of Dower House.
Mr. Van der Pant had escaped from Antwerp
at the eleventh hour, he had caught a severe cold
and, it would seem, lost his wife and family in the
process; he had much to tell Mr. Britling, and in his
zeal to tell it he did not at once discover that though
Mr. Britling knew French quite well he did not know
it very rapidly.
The dinner that night at the Dower
House marked a distinct fresh step in the approach
of the Great War to the old habits and securities of
Matching’s Easy. The war had indeed filled
every one’s mind to the exclusion of all other
topics since its very beginning; it had carried off
Herr Heinrich to Germany, Teddy to London, and Hugh
to Colchester, it had put a special brassard round
Mr. Britling’s arm and carried him out into
the night, given Mrs. Britling several certificates,
and interrupted the frequent visits and gossip of
Mr. Lawrence Carmine; but so far it had not established
a direct contact between the life of Matching’s
Easy and the grim business of shot, shell, and bayonet
at the front. But now here was the Dower House
accomplishing wonderful idioms in Anglo-French, and
an animated guest telling them sometimes
one understood clearly and sometimes the meaning was
clouded of men blown to pieces under his
eyes, of fragments of human beings lying about in
the streets; there was trouble over the expression
omoplate d’une femme, until one of the
youngsters got the dictionary and found out it was
the shoulder-blade of a woman; of pools of blood everywhere and
of flight in the darkness.
Mr. Van der Pant had been
in charge of the dynamos at the Antwerp Power Station,
he had been keeping the electrified wires in the entanglements
“alive,” and he had stuck to his post until
the German high explosives had shattered his wires
and rendered his dynamos useless. He gave vivid
little pictures of the noises of the bombardment, of
the dead lying casually in the open spaces, of the
failure of the German guns to hit the bridge of boats
across which the bulk of the defenders and refugees
escaped. He produced a little tourist’s
map of the city of Antwerp, and dotted at it with
a pencil-case. “The what do you
call? obus, ah, shells! fell, so
and so and so.” Across here he had fled
on his bécane, and along here and here.
He had carried off his rifle, and hid it with the
rifles of various other Belgians between floor and
ceiling of a house in Zeebrugge. He had found
the pirate steamer in the harbour, its captain resolved
to extract the uttermost fare out of every refugee
he took to London. When they were all aboard and
started they found there was no food except the hard
ration biscuits of some Belgian soldiers. They
had portioned this out like shipwrecked people on a
raft.... The mer had been calme;
thank Heaven! All night they had been pumping.
He had helped with the pumps. But Mr. Van
der Pant hoped still to get a reckoning with
the captain of that ship.
Mr. Van der Pant had had
shots at various Zeppelins. When the Zeppelins
came to Antwerp everybody turned out on the roofs and
shot at them. He was contemptuous of Zeppelins.
He made derisive gestures to express his opinion of
them. They could do nothing unless they came low,
and if they came low you could hit them. One
which ventured down had been riddled; it had had to
drop all its bombs luckily they fell in
an open field in order to make its lame
escape. It was all nonsense to say, as the English
papers did, that they took part in the final bombardment.
Not a Zeppelin.... So he talked, and the Britling
family listened and understood as much as they could,
and replied and questioned in Anglo-French. Here
was a man who but a few days ago had been steering
his bicycle in the streets of Antwerp to avoid shell
craters, pools of blood, and the torn-off arms and
shoulder-blades of women. He had seen houses
flaring, set afire by incendiary bombs, and once at
a corner he had been knocked off his bicycle by the
pouff of a bursting shell.... Not only were these
things in the same world with us, they were sitting
at our table.
He told one grim story of an invalid
woman unable to move, lying in bed in her appartement,
and of how her husband went out on the balcony to
look at the Zeppelin. There was a great noise
of shooting. Ever and again he would put his
head back into the room and tell her things, and then
after a time he was silent and looked in no more.
She called to him, and called again. Becoming
frightened, she raised herself by a great effort and
peered through the glass. At first she was too
puzzled to understand what had happened. He was
hanging over the front of the balcony, with his head
twisted oddly. Twisted and shattered. He
had been killed by shrapnel fired from the outer fortifications....
These are the things that happen in
histories and stories. They do not happen at
Matching’s Easy....
Mr. Van der Pant did not
seem to be angry with the Germans. But he manifestly
regarded them as people to be killed. He denounced
nothing that they had done; he related. They
were just an evil accident that had happened to Belgium
and mankind. They had to be destroyed. He
gave Mr. Britling an extraordinary persuasion that
knives were being sharpened in every cellar in Brussels
and Antwerp against the day of inevitable retreat,
of a resolution to exterminate the invader that was
far too deep to be vindictive.... And the man
was most amazingly unconquered. Mr. Britling
perceived the label on his habitual dinner wine with
a slight embarrassment. “Do you care,”
he asked, “to drink a German wine? This
is Berncasteler from the Moselle.” Mr. Van
der Pant reflected. “But it is a good
wine,” he said. “After the peace it
will be Belgian.... Yes, if we are to be safe
in the future from such a war as this, we must have
our boundaries right up to the Rhine.”
So he sat and talked, flushed and,
as it were, elated by the vividness of all that he
had undergone. He had no trace of tragic quality,
no hint of subjugation. But for his costume and
his trimmed beard and his language he might have been
a Dubliner or a Cockney.
He was astonishingly cut off from
all his belongings. His house in Antwerp was
abandoned to the invader; valuables and cherished objects
very skilfully buried in the garden; he had no change
of clothing except what the rucksack held. His
only footwear were the boots he came in. He could
not get on any of the slippers in the house, they were
all too small for him, until suddenly Mrs. Britling
bethought herself of Herr Heinrich’s pair, still
left unpacked upstairs. She produced them, and
they fitted exactly. It seemed only poetical justice,
a foretaste of national compensations, to annex them
to Belgium forthwith....
Also it became manifest that Mr. Van
der Pant was cut off from all his family.
And suddenly he became briskly critical of the English
way of doing things. His wife and child had preceded
him to England, crossing by Ostend and Folkestone
a fortnight ago; her parents had come in August; both
groups had been seized upon by improvised British
organisations and very thoroughly and completely lost.
He had written to the Belgian Embassy and they had
referred him to a committee in London, and the committee
had begun its services by discovering a Madame
Van der Pant hitherto unknown to him at
Camberwell, and displaying a certain suspicion and
hostility when he said she would not do. There
had been some futile telegrams. “What,”
asked Mr. Van der Pant, “ought one
to do?”
Mr. Britling temporised by saying
he would “make inquiries,” and put Mr.
Van der Pant off for two days. Then
he decided to go up to London with him and “make
inquiries on the spot.” Mr. Van der
Pant did not discover his family, but Mr. Britling
discovered the profound truth of a comment of Herr
Heinrich’s which he had hitherto considered utterly
trivial, but which had nevertheless stuck in his memory.
“The English,” Herr Heinrich had said,
“do not understanding indexing. It is the
root of all good organisation.”
Finally, Mr. Van der Pant
adopted the irregular course of asking every Belgian
he met if they had seen any one from his district in
Antwerp, if they had heard of the name of “Van
der Pant,” if they had encountered So-and-so
or So-and-so. And by obstinacy and good fortune
he really got on to the track of Madame Van
der Pant; she had been carried off into Kent,
and a day later the Dower House was the scene of a
happy reunion. Madame was a slender lady, dressed
well and plainly, with a Belgian common sense and
a Catholic reserve, and Andre was like a child of wax,
delicate and charming and unsubstantial. It seemed
incredible that he could ever grow into anything so
buoyant and incessant as his father. The Britling
boys had to be warned not to damage him. A sitting-room
was handed over to the Belgians for their private
use, and for a time the two families settled into
the Dower House side by side. Anglo-French became
the table language of the household. It hampered
Mr. Britling very considerably. And both families
set themselves to much unrecorded observation, much
unspoken mutual criticism, and the exercise of great
patience. It was tiresome for the English to be
tied to a language that crippled all spontaneous talk;
these linguistic gymnastics were fun to begin with,
but soon they became very troublesome; and the Belgians
suspected sensibilities in their hosts and a vast unwritten
code of etiquette that did not exist; at first they
were always waiting, as it were, to be invited or
told or included; they seemed always deferentially
backing out from intrusions. Moreover, they would
not at first reveal what food they liked or what they
didn’t like, or whether they wanted more or
less.... But these difficulties were soon smoothed
away, they Anglicised quickly and cleverly. Andre
grew bold and cheerful, and lost his first distrust
of his rather older English playmates. Every
day at lunch he produced a new, carefully prepared
piece of English, though for some time he retained
a marked preference for “Good morning, Saire,”
and “Thank you very mush,” over all other
locutions, and fell back upon them on all possible
and many impossible occasions. And he could do
some sleight-of-hand tricks with remarkable skill
and humour, and fold paper with quite astonishing results.
Meanwhile Mr. Van der Pant sought temporary
employment in England, went for long rides upon his
bicycle, exchanged views with Mr. Britling upon a
variety of subjects, and became a wonderful player
of hockey.
He played hockey with an extraordinary
zest and nimbleness. Always he played in the
tail coat, and the knitted muffler was never relinquished;
he treated the game entirely as an occasion for quick
tricks and personal agility; he bounded about the
field like a kitten, he pirouetted suddenly, he leapt
into the air and came down in new directions; his
fresh-coloured face was alive with delight, the coat
tails and the muffler trailed and swished about breathlessly
behind his agility. He never passed to other
players; he never realised his appointed place in
the game; he sought simply to make himself a leaping
screen about the ball as he drove it towards the goal.
But Andre he would not permit to play at all, and
Madame played like a lady, like a Madonna, like a
saint carrying the instrument of her martyrdom.
The game and its enthusiasms flowed round her and
receded from her; she remained quite valiant but tolerant,
restrained; doing her best to do the extraordinary
things required of her, but essentially a being of
passive dignities, living chiefly for them; Letty careering
by her, keen and swift, was like a creature of a different
species....
Mr. Britling cerebrated abundantly about these contrasts.
“What has been blown in among
us by these German shells,” he said, “is
essentially a Catholic family. Blown clean out
of its setting.... We who are really Neo-Europeans....
“At first you imagine there
is nothing separating us but language. Presently
you find that language is the least of our separations.
These people are people living upon fundamentally
different ideas from ours, ideas far more definite
and complete than ours. You imagine that home
in Antwerp as something much more rounded off, much
more closed in, a cell, a real social unit, a different
thing altogether from this place of meeting.
Our boys play cheerfully with all comers; little Andre
hasn’t learnt to play with any outside children
at all. We must seem incredibly open to
these Van der Pants. A house without
sides.... Last Sunday I could not find out the
names of the two girls who came on bicycles and played
so well. They came with Kitty Westropp. And
Van der Pant wanted to know how they were
related to us. Or how was it they came?...
“Look at Madame. She’s
built on a fundamentally different plan from any of
our womenkind here. Tennis, the bicycle, co-education,
the two-step, the higher education of women....
Say these things over to yourself, and think of her.
It’s like talking of a nun in riding breeches.
She’s a specialised woman, specialising in womanhood,
her sphere is the home. Soft, trailing, draping
skirts, slow movements, a veiled face; for no Oriental
veil could be more effectual than her beautiful Catholic
quiet. Catholicism invented the invisible purdah.
She is far more akin to that sweet little Indian lady
with the wonderful robes whom Carmine brought over
with her tall husband last summer, than she is to Letty
or Cissie. She, too, undertook to play hockey.
And played it very much as Madame Van der
Pant played it....
“The more I see of our hockey,”
said Mr. Britling, “the more wonderful it seems
to me as a touchstone of character and culture and
breeding....”
Mr. Manning, to whom he was delivering
this discourse, switched him on to a new track by
asking what he meant by “Neo-European.”
“It’s a bad phrase,”
said Mr. Britling. “I’ll withdraw
it. Let me try and state exactly what I have
in mind. I mean something that is coming up in
America and here and the Scandinavian countries and
Russia, a new culture, an escape from the Levantine
religion and the Catholic culture that came to us
from the Mediterranean. Let me drop Neo-European;
let me say Northern. We are Northerners.
The key, the heart, the nucleus and essence of every
culture is its conception of the relations of men and
women; and this new culture tends to diminish the specialisation
of women as women, to let them out from the cell of
the home into common citizenship with men. It’s
a new culture, still in process of development, which
will make men more social and co-operative and women
bolder, swifter, more responsible and less cloistered.
It minimises instead of exaggerating the importance
of sex....
“And,” said Mr. Britling,
in very much the tones in which a preacher might say
“Sixthly,” “it is just all this Northern
tendency that this world struggle is going to release.
This war is pounding through Europe, smashing up homes,
dispersing and mixing homes, setting Madame
Van der Pant playing hockey, and Andre climbing
trees with my young ruffians; it is killing young
men by the million, altering the proportions of the
sexes for a generation, bringing women into business
and office and industry, destroying the accumulated
wealth that kept so many of them in refined idleness,
flooding the world with strange doubts and novel ideas....”
Section 9
But the conflict of manners and customs
that followed the invasion of the English villages
by French and Belgian refugees did not always present
the immigrants as Catholics and the hosts as “Neo-European.”
In the case of Mr. Dimple it was the other way round.
He met Mr. Britling in Claverings park and told him
his troubles....
“Of course,” he said,
“we have to do our Utmost for Brave Little Belgium.
I would be the last to complain of any little inconvenience
one may experience in doing that. Still, I must
confess I think you and dear Mrs. Britling are fortunate,
exceptionally fortunate, in the Belgians you have
got. My guests it’s unfortunate the
man is some sort of journalist and quite oh!
much too much an Atheist. An open positive
one. Not simply Honest Doubt. I’m quite
prepared for honest doubt nowadays. You and I
have no quarrel over that. But he is aggressive.
He makes remarks about miracles, quite derogatory
remarks, and not always in French. Sometimes
he almost speaks English. And in front of my
sister. And he goes out, he says, looking for
a Cafe. He never finds a Cafe, but he certainly
finds every public house within a radius of miles.
And he comes back smelling dreadfully of beer.
When I drop a Little Hint, he blames the beer.
He says it is not good beer our good Essex
beer! He doesn’t understand any of our simple
ways. He’s sophisticated. The girls
about here wear Belgian flags and air their
little bits of French. And he takes it as an encouragement.
Only yesterday there was a scene. It seems he
tried to kiss the Hickson girl at the inn Maudie....
And his wife; a great big slow woman in
every way she is Ample; it’s dreadful
even to seem to criticise, but I do so wish
she would not see fit to sit down and nourish her baby
in my poor old bachelor drawing-room often
at the most unseasonable times. And so
lavishly....”
Mr. Britling attempted consolations.
“But anyhow,” said Mr.
Dimple, “I’m better off than poor dear
Mrs. Bynne. She secured two milliners. She
insisted upon them. And their clothes were certainly
beautifully made even my poor old unworldly
eye could tell that. And she thought two milliners
would be so useful with a large family like hers.
They certainly said they were milliners.
But it seems I don’t know what we
shall do about them.... My dear Mr. Britling,
those young women are anything but milliners anything
but milliners....”
A faint gleam of amusement was only
too perceptible through the good man’s horror.
“Sirens, my dear Mr. Britling. Sirens.
By profession."...
Section 10
October passed into November, and
day by day Mr. Britling was forced to apprehend new
aspects of the war, to think and rethink the war, to
have his first conclusions checked and tested, twisted
askew, replaced. His thoughts went far and wide
and deeper until all his earlier writing
seemed painfully shallow to him, seemed a mere automatic
response of obvious comments to the stimulus of the
war’s surprise. As his ideas became subtler
and profounder, they became more difficult to express;
he talked less; he became abstracted and irritable
at table. To two people in particular Mr. Britling
found his real ideas inexpressible, to Mr. Direck
and to Mr. Van der Pant.
Each of these gentlemen brought with
him the implication or the intimation of a critical
attitude towards England. It was all very well
for Mr. Britling himself to be critical of England;
that is an Englishman’s privilege. To hear
Mr. Van der Pant questioning British efficiency
or to suspect Mr. Direck of high, thin American superiorities
to war, was almost worse than to hear Mrs. Harrowdean
saying hostile things about Edith. It roused
an even acuter protective emotion.
In the case of Mr. Van der
Pant matters were complicated by the difficulty of
the language, which made anything but the crudest
statements subject to incalculable misconception.
Mr. Van der Pant had not
the extreme tactfulness of his so typically Catholic
wife; he made it only too plain that he thought the
British postal and telegraph service slow and slack,
and the management of the Great Eastern branch lines
wasteful and inefficient. He said the workmen
in the fields and the workmen he saw upon some cottages
near the junction worked slowlier and with less interest
than he had ever seen any workman display in all his
life before. He marvelled that Mr. Britling lit
his house with acetylene and not electric light.
He thought fresh eggs were insanely dear, and his
opinion of Matching’s Easy pig-keeping was uncomplimentary.
The roads, he said, were not a means of getting from
place to place, they were a dédale; he drew
derisive maps with his finger on the table-cloth of
the lane system about the Dower House. He was
astonished that there was no Cafe in Matching’s
Easy; he declared that the “public house”
to which he went with considerable expectation was
no public house at all; it was just a sly place for
drinking beer.... All these were things Mr. Britling
might have remarked himself; from a Belgian refugee
he found them intolerable.
He set himself to explain to Mr. Van
der Pant firstly that these things did not matter
in the slightest degree, the national attention, the
national interest ran in other directions; and secondly
that they were, as a matter of fact and on the whole,
merits slightly disguised. He produced a pleasant
theory that England is really not the Englishman’s
field, it is his breeding place, his resting place,
a place not for efficiency but good humour. If
Mr. Van der Pant were to make inquiries
he would find there was scarcely a home in Matching’s
Easy that had not sent some energetic representative
out of England to become one of the English of the
world. England was the last place in which English
energy was spent. These hedges, these dilatory
roads were full of associations. There was a
road that turned aside near Market Saffron to avoid
Turk’s wood; it had been called Turk’s
wood first in the fourteenth century after a man of
that name. He quoted Chesterton’s happy
verses to justify these winding lanes.
“The road turned first towards the left,
Where Perkin’s quarry made the cleft;
The path turned next towards the right,
Because the mastiff used to bite....”
And again:
“And I should say they wound about
To find the town of Roundabout,
The merry town of Roundabout
That makes the world go round.”
If our easy-going ways hampered a
hard efficiency, they did at least develop humour
and humanity. Our diplomacy at any rate had not
failed us....
He did not believe a word of this
stuff. His deep irrational love for England made
him say these things.... For years he had been
getting himself into hot water because he had been
writing and hinting just such criticisms as Mr. Van
der Pant expressed so bluntly.... But he
wasn’t going to accept foreign help in dissecting
his mother....
And another curious effect that Mr.
Van der Pant had upon Mr. Britling was to
produce an obstinate confidence about the war and the
nearness of the German collapse. He would promise
Mr. Van der Pant that he should be back
in Antwerp before May; that the Germans would be over
the Rhine by July. He knew perfectly well that
his ignorance of all the military conditions was unqualified,
but still he could not restrain himself from this
kind of thing so soon as he began to speak Entente
Cordiale Anglo-French, that is to say.
Something in his relationship to Mr. Van der
Pant obliged him to be acutely and absurdly the protecting
British.... At times he felt like a conscious
bankrupt talking off the hour of disclosure.
But indeed all that Mr. Britling was trying to say
against the difficulties of a strange language and
an alien temperament, was that the honour of England
would never be cleared until Belgium was restored
and avenged....
While Mr. Britling was patrolling
unimportant roads and entertaining Mr. Van der
Pant with discourses upon the nearness of victory and
the subtle estimableness of all that was indolent,
wasteful and evasive in English life, the war was
passing from its first swift phases into a slower,
grimmer struggle. The German retreat ended at
the Aisne, and the long outflanking manoeuvres of
both hosts towards the Channel began. The English
attempts to assist Belgium in October came too late
for the preservation of Antwerp, and after a long
and complicated struggle in Flanders the British failed
to outflank the German right, lost Ghent, Menin and
the Belgian coast, but held Ypres and beat back every
attempt of the enemy to reach Dunkirk and Calais.
Meanwhile the smaller German colonies and islands
were falling to the navy, the Australian battleship
Sydney smashed the Emden at Cocos Island,
and the British naval disaster of Coronel was wiped
out by the battle of the Falklands. The Russians
were victorious upon their left and took Lemberg, and
after some vicissitudes of fortune advanced to Przemysl,
occupying the larger part of Galicia; but the disaster
of Tannenberg had broken their progress in East Prussia,
and the Germans were pressing towards Warsaw.
Turkey had joined the war, and suffered enormous losses
in the Caucasus. The Dardanelles had been shelled
for the first time, and the British were at Basra
on the Euphrates.
Section 11
The Christmas of 1914 found England,
whose landscape had hitherto been almost as peaceful
and soldierless as Massachusetts, already far gone
along the path of transformation into a country full
of soldiers and munition makers and military supplies.
The soldiers came first, on the well-known and greatly
admired British principle of “first catch your
hare” and then build your kitchen. Always
before, Christmas had been a time of much gaiety and
dressing up and prancing and two-stepping at the Dower
House, but this year everything was too uncertain to
allow of any gathering of guests. Hugh got leave
for the day after Christmas, but Teddy was tied; and
Cissie and Letty went off with the small boy to take
lodgings near him. The Van der Pants
had hoped to see an English Christmas at Matching’s
Easy, but within three weeks of Christmas Day Mr.
Van der Pant found a job that he could do
in Nottingham, and carried off his family. The
two small boys cheered their hearts with paper decorations,
but the Christmas Tree was condemned as too German,
and it was discovered that Santa Claus had suddenly
become Old Father Christmas again. The small
boys discovered that the price of lead soldiers had
risen, and were unable to buy electric torches, on
which they had set their hearts. There was to
have been a Christmas party at Claverings, but at
the last moment Lady Homartyn had to hurry off to an
orphan nephew who had been seriously wounded near
Ypres, and the light of Claverings was darkened.
Soon after Christmas there were rumours
of an impending descent of the Headquarters staff
of the South-Eastern army upon Claverings. Then
Mr. Britling found Lady Homartyn back from France,
and very indignant because after all the Headquarters
were to go to Lady Wensleydale at Ladyholt. It
was, she felt, a reflection upon Claverings. Lady
Homartyn became still more indignant when presently
the new armies, which were gathering now all over
England like floods in a low-lying meadow, came pouring
into the parishes about Claverings to the extent of
a battalion and a Territorial battery. Mr. Britling
heard of their advent only a day or two before they
arrived; there came a bright young officer with an
orderly, billeting; he was much exercised to get, as
he expressed it several times, a quart into a pint
bottle. He was greatly pleased with the barn.
He asked the size of it and did calculations.
He could “stick twenty-five men into it easy.”
It would go far to solve his problems. He could
manage without coming into the house at all. It
was a ripping place. “No end.”
“But beds,” said Mr. Britling.
“Lord! they don’t want beds,”
said the young officer....
The whole Britling family, who were
lamenting the loss of their Belgians, welcomed the
coming of the twenty-five with great enthusiasm.
It made them feel that they were doing something useful
once more. For three days Mrs. Britling had to
feed her new lodgers the kitchen motors
had as usual gone astray and she did so
in a style that made their boastings about their billet
almost insufferable to the rest of their battery.
The billeting allowance at that time was ninepence
a head, and Mr. Britling, ashamed of making a profit
out of his country, supplied not only generous firing
and lighting, but unlimited cigarettes, cards and
games, illustrated newspapers, a cocoa supper with
such little surprises as sprats and jam roly-poly,
and a number of more incidental comforts. The
men arrived fasting under the command of two very sage
middle-aged corporals, and responded to Mrs. Britling’s
hospitalities by a number of good resolutions, many
of which they kept. They never made noises after
half-past ten, or at least only now and then when a
singsong broke out with unusual violence; they got
up and went out at five or six in the morning without
a sound; they were almost inconveniently helpful with
washing-up and tidying round.
In quite a little time Mrs. Britling’s
mind had adapted itself to the spectacle of half-a-dozen
young men in khaki breeches and shirts performing
their toilets in and about her scullery, or improvising
an unsanctioned game of football between the hockey
goals. These men were not the miscellaneous men
of the new armies; they were the earlier Territorial
type with no heroics about them; they came from the
midlands; and their two middle-aged corporals kept
them well in hand and ruled them like a band of brothers.
But they had an illegal side, that developed in directions
that set Mr. Britling theorising. They seemed,
for example, to poach by nature, as children play and
sing. They possessed a promiscuous white dog.
They began to add rabbits to their supper menu, unaccountable
rabbits. One night there was a mighty smell of
frying fish from the kitchen, and the cook reported
trout. “Trout!” said Mr. Britling
to one of the corporals; “now where did you chaps
get trout?”
The “fisherman,” they
said, had got them with a hair noose. They produced
the fisherman, of whom they were manifestly proud.
It was, he explained, a method of fishing he had learnt
when in New York Harbour. He had been a stoker.
He displayed a confidence in Mr. Britling that made
that gentleman an accessory after his offence, his
very serious offence against pre-war laws and customs.
It was plain that the trout were the trout that Mr.
Pumshock, the stock-broker and amateur gentleman,
had preserved so carefully in the Easy. Hitherto
the countryside had been forced to regard Mr. Pumshock’s
trout with an almost superstitious respect. A
year ago young Snooker had done a month for one of
those very trout. But now things were different.
“But I don’t really fancy
fresh-water fish,” said the fisherman. “It’s
just the ketchin’ of ’em I like....”
And a few weeks later the trumpeter,
an angel-faced freckled child with deep-blue eyes,
brought in a dozen partridge eggs which he wanted Mary
to cook for him....
The domesticity of the sacred birds,
it was clear, was no longer safe in England....
Then again the big guns would go swinging
down the road and into Claverings park, and perform
various exercises with commendable smartness and a
profound disregard for Lady Homartyn’s known
objection to any departure from the public footpath....
And one afternoon as Mr. Britling
took his constitutional walk, a reverie was set going
in his mind by the sight of a neglected-looking pheasant
with a white collar. The world of Matching’s
Easy was getting full now of such elderly birds.
Would that go on again after the war?
He imagined his son Hugh as a grandfather, telling
the little ones about parks and preserves and game
laws, and footmen and butlers and the marvellous game
of golf, and how, suddenly, Mars came tramping through
the land in khaki and all these things faded and vanished,
so that presently it was discovered they were gone....