Up to that time I had thought I knew
a good deal about the war. I had had much news
from my boy. I had talked, I think, to as many
returned soldiers as any man in Britain. I had
seen much of the backwash and the wretched aftermath
of war. Ah, yes, I thought I knew more than most
folk did of what war meant! But until my tour
began, as I see now, easily enough, I knew nothing literally
nothing at all!
There are towns and ports in Britain
that are military areas. One may not enter them
except upon business, the urgency of which has been
established to the satisfaction of the military authorities.
One must have a permit to live in them, even if they
be one’s home town. These towns are vital
to the war and its successful prosecution.
Until one has seen a British port
of embarkation in this war one has no real beginning,
even, of a conception of the task the war has imposed
upon Britain. It was so with me, I know, and since
then other men have told me the same thing. There
the army begins to pour into the funnel, so to speak,
that leads to France and the front. There all
sorts of lines are brought together, all sorts of scattered
activities come to a focus. There is incessant
activity, day and night.
It was from Folkestone, on the southeast
coast, that the Reverend Harry Lauder, M.P. Tour
was to embark. And we reached Folkestone on June
7, 1917.
Folkestone, in time of peace, was
one of the greatest of the Southern watering places.
It is a lovely spot. Great hotels line the Leas,
a glorious promenade, along the top of chalk cliffs,
that looks out over the Channel. In the distance
one fancies one may see the coast of France, beyond
the blue water.
There is green grass everywhere behind
the beach. Folkestone has a miniature harbor,
that in time of peace gave shelter to the fishing
fleet and to the channel steamers that plied to and
from Boulogne, in France. The harbor is guarded
by stone jetties. It has been greatly enlarged
now so has all Folkestone, for that matter.
But I am remembering the town as it was in peace!
There was no pleasanter and kindlier
resort along that coast. The beach was wonderful,
and all summer long it attracted bathers and children
at play. Bathing machines lined the beach, of
course, within the limits of the town; those queer,
old, clumsy looking wagons, with a dressing cabin
on wheels, that were drawn up and down according to
the tide, so that bathers might enter the water from
them directly. There, as in most British towns,
women bathed at one part of the beach, men at the
other, and all in the most decorous and modest of
costumes.
But at Folkestone, in the old days
of peace, about a mile from the town limits, there
was another stretch of beach where all the gay folk
bathed men and women together. And
there the costumes were such as might be seen at Deauville
or Ostend, Etretat or Trouville. Highly they
scandalized the good folk of Folkestone, to be sure but
little was said, and nothing was done, for, after
all those were the folk who spent the money!
They dressed in white tents that gleamed against the
sea, and a pretty splash of color they made on a bright
day for the soberer folk to go and watch, as they
sat on the low chalk cliffs above them!
Gone gone! Such days
have passed for Folkestone! They will no doubt
come again but when? When?
June the seventh! Folkestone
should have been gay for the beginning of the onset
of summer visitors. Sea bathing should just have
been beginning to be attractive, as the sun warmed
the sea and the beach. But when we reached the
town war was over all. Men in uniform were everywhere.
Warships lay outside the harbor. Khaki and guns,
men trudging along, bearing the burdens of war, motor
trucks, rushing ponderously along, carrying ammunition
and food, messengers on motorcycles, sounding to all
traffic that might be in the way the clamorous summons
to clear the path those were the sights
we saw!
How hopelessly confused it all seemed!
I could not believe that there was order in the chaos
that I saw. But that was because the key to all
that bewildering activity was not in my possession.
Every man had his appointed task.
He was a cog in the greatest machine the world has
ever seen. He knew just what he was to do, and
how much time had been allowed for the performance
of his task. It was assumed he would not fail.
The British army makes that assumption, and it is
warranted.
I hear praise, even from men who hate
the Hun as I hate him, for the superb military organization
of the German army. They say the Kaiser’s
people may well take pride in that. But I say
that I am prouder of what Britain and the new British
army that has come into being since this war began
have done than any German has a right to be!
They spent forty-four years in making ready for a war
they knew they meant, some day, to fight. We
had not had, that day that I first saw our machine
really functioning, as many months for preparation
as they had had years. And yet we were doing
our part.
We had had to build and prepare while
we helped our ally, France, to hold off that gray
horde that had swept down so treacherously through
Belgium from the north and east. It was as if
we had organized and trained and equipped a fire brigade
while the fire was burning, and while our first devoted
fighters sought to keep it in check with water buckets.
And they did! They did! The water buckets
served while the hose was made, and the mains were
laid, and the hydrants set in place, and the trained
firemen were made ready to take up the task.
And, now that I had come to Folkestone,
now that I was seeing the results of all the labor
that had been performed, the effect of all the prodigies
of organization, I began to know what Lord Kitchener
and those who had worked with him had done. System
ruled everything at Folkestone. Nothing, it seemed
to me, as officers explained as much as they properly
could, had been left to chance. Here was order
indeed.
In the air above us airplanes flew
to and fro. They circled about like great, watchful
hawks. They looped and whirled around, cutting
this way and that, circling always. And I knew
that, as they flew about outside the harbor the men
in them were never off their guard; that they were
peering down, watching every moment for the first
trace of a submarine that might have crept through
the more remote defenses of the Channel. Let
a submarine appear its shrift would be
short indeed!
There, above, waited the airplanes.
And on the surface of the sea sinister destroyers
darted about as watchful as the flyers above, ready
for any emergency that might arise. I have no
doubt that submarines of our own lurked below, waiting,
too, to do their part. But those, if any there
were, I did not see. And one asks no questions
at a place like Folkestone. I was glad of any
information an officer might voluntarily give me.
But it was not for me or any other loyal Briton to
put him in the position of having to refuse to answer.
Soon a great transport was pointed
out to me, lying beside the jetty. Gangplanks
were down, and up them streams of men in khaki moved
endlessly. Up they went, in an endless brown river,
to disappear into the ship. The whole ship was
a very hive of activity. Not only men were going
aboard, but supplies of every sort; boxes of ammunition,
stores, food. And I understood, and was presently
to see, that beyond her sides there was the same ordered
scene as prevailed on shore. Every man knew his
task; the stowing away of everything that was being
carried aboard was being carried out systematically
and with the utmost possible economy of time and effort.
“That’s the ship you will
cross the Channel on,” I was told. And I
regarded her with a new interest. I do not know
what part she had been wont to play in time of peace;
what useful, pleasant journeys it had been her part
to complete, I only knew that she was to carry me
to France, and to the place where my heart was and
for a long time had been. Me and two
thousand men who were to be of real use over there!
We were nearly the last to go on board.
We found the decks swarming with men. Ah, the
braw laddies! They smoked and they laughed as
they settled themselves for the trip. Never a
one looked as though he might be sorry to be there.
They were leaving behind them all the good things,
all the pleasant things, of life as, in time of peace,
every one of them had learned to live it and to know
it. Long, long since had the last illusion faded
of the old days when war had seemed a thing of pomp
and circumstance and glory.
They knew well, those boys, what it
was they faced. Hard, grinding work they could
look forward to doing; such work as few of them had
ever known in the old days. Death and wounds they
could reckon upon as the portion of just about so
many of them. There would be bitter cold, later,
in the trenches, and mud, and standing for hours in
icy mud and water. There would be hard fare,
and scanty, sometimes, when things went wrong.
There would be gas attacks, and the bursting of shells
about them with all sorts of poisons in them.
Always there would be the deadliest perils of these
perilous days.
But they sang as they set out upon
the great adventure of their lives. They smiled
and laughed. They cheered me, so that the tears
started from my eyes, when they saw me, and they called
the gayest of gay greetings, though they knew that
I was going only for a little while, and that many
of them had set foot on British soil for the last
time. The steady babble of their voices came to
our ears, and they swarmed below us like ants as they
disposed themselves about the decks, and made the
most of the scanty space that was allowed for them.
The trip was to be short, of course; there were too
few ships, and the problems of convoy were too great,
to make it possible to make the voyage a comfortable
one. It was a case of getting them over as might
best be arranged.
A word of command rang out and was
passed around by officers and non coms.
“Life belts must be put on before the ship sails!”
That simple order brought home the
grim facts of war at that moment as scarcely anything
else could have done. Here was a grim warning
of the peril that lurked outside. Everywhere
men were scurrying to obey I among the
rest. The order applied as much to us civilians
as it did to any of the soldiers. And my belt
did not fit, and was hard, extremely hard, for me
to don. I could no manage it at all by myself,
but Adam and Hogge had had an easier time with theirs,
and they came to my help. Among us we got mine
on, and Hogge stood off, and looked at me, and smiled.
“An extraordinary effect, Harry!”
he said, with a smile. “I declare
it gives you the most charming embonpoint!”
I had my doubts about his use of the
word charming. I know that I should not have
cared to have anyone judge of my looks from a picture
taken as I looked then, had one been taken.
But it was not a time for such thoughts.
For a civilian, especially, and one not used to journeys
in such times as these, there is a thrill and a solemnity
about the donning of a life preserver. I felt
that I was indeed, it might be, taking a risk in making
this journey, and it was an awesome thought that I,
too, might have seen my native land for the last time,
and said a real good-by to those whom I had left behind
me.
Now we cast off, and began to move,
and a thrill ran through me such as I had never known
before in all my life. I went to the rail as we
turned our nose toward the open sea. A destroyer
was ahead, another was beside us, others rode steadily
along on either side. It was the most reassuring
of sights to see them. They looked so business
like, so capable. I could not imagine a Hun submarine
as able to evade their watchfulness. And moreover,
there were the watchful man birds above us, the circling
airplanes, that could make out, so much better than
could any lookout on a ship, the first trace of the
presence of a tin fish. No I was not
afraid! I trusted in the British navy, which
had guarded the sea lane so well that not a man had
lost his life as the result of a Hun attack, although
many millions had gone back and forth to France since
the beginning of the war.
I did not stay with my own party.
I preferred to move about among the Soldiers.
I was deeply interested in them, as I have always been.
And I wanted to make friends among them, and see how
they felt.
“Lor’ lumme its
old ’Arry Lauder!” said one cockney.
“God bless you, ’Arry many’s
the time I’ve sung with you in the ’alls.
It’s good to see you with us!”
And so I was greeted everywhere.
Man after man crowded around me to shake hands.
It brought a lump into my throat to be greeted so,
and it made me more than ever glad that the military
authorities had been able to see their way to grant
my request. It confirmed my belief that I was
going where I might be really useful to the men who
were ready and willing to make the greatest of all
sacrifices in the cause so close to all our hearts.
When I first went aboard the transport
I picked up a little gold stripe. It was one
of those men wear who have been wounded, as a badge
of honor. I hoped I might be able to find the
man who had lost it, and return it to him. But
none of them claimed it, and I have kept it, to this
day, as a souvenir of that voyage.
It was easy for them to know me.
I wore my kilt and my cap, and my knife in my stocking,
as I have always done, on the stage, and nearly always
off it as well. And so they recognized me without
difficulty. And never a one called me anything
but Harry except when it was ’Arry!
I think I would be much affronted if ever a British
soldier called me Mr. Lauder. I don’t know because
not one of them ever did, and I hope none ever will!
They told me that there were men from
the Highlands on board, and I went looking for them,
and found them after a time, though going about that
ship, so crowded she was, was no easy matter.
They were Gordon Highlanders, mostly, I found, and
they were glad to see me, and made me welcome, and
I had a pipe with them, and a good talk.
Many of them were going back, after
having been at home, recuperating from wounds.
And they and the new men too were all eager and anxious
to be put there and at work.
“Gie us a chance at the Huns it’s
all we’re asking,” said one of a new draft.
“They’re telling us they don’t like
the sight of our kilts, Harry, and that a Hun’s
got less stomach for the cold steel of a bayonet than
for anything else on earth. Weel we’re
carrying a dose of it for them!”
And the men who had been out before,
and were taking back with them the scars they had
earned, were just as anxious as the rest. That
was the spirit of every man on board. They did
not like war as war, but they knew that this was a
war that must be fought to the finish, and never a
man of them wanted peace to come until Fritz had learned
his lesson to the bottom of Lie last grim page.
I never heard a word of the danger
of meeting a submarine. The idea that one might
send a torpedo after us popped into my mind once or
twice, but when it did I looked out at the destroyers,
guarding us, and the airplanes above, and I felt as
safe as if I had been in bed in my wee hoose at Dunoon.
It was a true highway of war that those whippets of
the sea had made the Channel crossing.
Ahm, but I was proud that day of the
British navy! It is a great task that it has
performed, and nobly it has done it. And it was
proud and glad I was again when we sighted land, as
we soon did, and I knew that I was gazing, for the
first time since war had been declared, upon the shores
of our great ally, France. It was the great day
and the proud day and the happy day for me!
I was near the realizing of an old
dream I had often had. I was with the soldiers
who had my love and my devotion, and I was coming to
France the France that every Scotchman learns
to love at his mother’s breast.
A stir ran through the men. Orders
began to fly, and I went back to my place and my party.
Soon we would be ashore, and I would be in the way
of beginning the work I had come to do.