These laid the world away; poured
out the red
Sweet wine of youth; gave up the years to be
Of work and joy ...
And those who would have been,
Their sons, they gave, their immortality.
RupertBrooke.
In deciding to publish some of the
letters written by the late Lieutenant H. P. M. Jones
during his twenty-seven months’ service with
the British Army, accompanying them with a memoir,
I was actuated by a desire, first, to enshrine the
memory of a singularly noble and attractive personality;
secondly, to describe a career which, though tragically
cut short, was yet rich in honourable achievement;
thirdly, to show the influence of the Great War on
the mind of a public-school boy of high intellectual
gifts and sensitive honour, who had shone with equal
lustre as a scholar and as an athlete.
My choice of the title of this book
was determined by the frequent allusions made by my
son in his war letters to his old school. He
spent six and a half years at Dulwich College.
His career there was gloriously happy and very distinguished.
On the scholastic side, it culminated in December,
1914, in the winning of a scholarship in History and
Modern Languages at Balliol College, Oxford; on the
athletic side, in his carrying off four silver cups
at the Athletic Sports in March, 1915, and tieing
for the “Victor Ludorum” shield.
As a merry, light-hearted boy in his
early years at Dulwich, his love for the College was
marked. It waxed with every term he spent within
its walls. After he left it, that love became
a passion, sustained, coloured and glorified by happy
memories. Everybody and everything connected
with it shared in his glowing affection. Its welfare
and reputation were infinitely precious to him.
Like a leitmotif in a musical composition,
this love of Dulwich College recurs again and again
in his war letters. Every honour won by a Dulwich
boy on the battlefield, in scholarship or in athletics
gave him exquisite pleasure. The very last letter
he wrote is irradiated with love of the old school.
When he joined the Tank Corps, stripping, as it were,
for the deadly combat, he sent to the depot at Boulogne
all his impedimenta. But among the few cherished
personal possessions that he took with him into the
zone of death were two photographs one of
the College buildings, the other of the Playing Fields,
this latter depicting the cricket matches on Founder’s
Day. In death as in life Dulwich was close to
his heart.
Paul Jones was a young man of herculean
strength tall, muscular, deep-chested and
broad-shouldered. But he had one grave physical
defect. He was extremely short-sighted, had worn
spectacles habitually from his sixth year and was
almost helpless without them. In fact, his vision
was not one-twelfth of normal. Much to his chagrin,
his myopia excluded him from the Infantry which he
tried to enter in the spring of 1915, and he had to
put up with a Commission as a subaltern in the Army
Service Corps. His first three months in the Army
were spent at a home port, one of the chief depots
of supply for the British Army in the field.
Eagerly embracing the first chance to go abroad, he
left Southampton for Havre in the last week of July,
1915. A few days after his arrival in France,
he was appointed requisitioning officer to the 9th
Cavalry Brigade a post for the duties of
which he was specially qualified by his excellent
knowledge of the French language. After 11 months
in this employment, he was appointed to a Supply Column,
and subsequently, during the protracted battles on
the Somme, was in command of an ammunition working
party. In October, 1916, he was again appointed
requisitioning officer, this time to the 2nd Cavalry
Brigade.
Though his duties were often laborious
and exacting, his relative freedom from peril and
hardship while other men were facing death every day
in the trenches sorely troubled his conscience.
Feeling that he was not pulling his weight in the
war and seeing no prospect of the Cavalry going into
action he resolved, at all hazards, to get into the
fighting line. After two abortive efforts to transfer
from the A.S.C., he succeeded on the third attempt,
and was appointed Lieutenant in the Tank Corps, which
he joined on 13th February, 1917. His elation
at the change was unbounded, and thenceforth his letters
home sang with joy. He took part as a Tank officer
in the battle of Arras in April, and when the great
offensive was planned in Flanders he was shifted to
that sector. In the battle of 31st July, when
advancing with his tank north-east of Ypres, he was
killed by a sniper’s bullet. He seemed to
have had a premonition some days before that death
might soon claim him. In a letter to his brother,
a Dulwich school boy, dated 27th July, he wrote:
Have you ever reflected on the fact
that, despite the horrors of the war, it is at
least a big thing? I mean to say that in it one
is brought face to face with realities. The
follies, selfishness, luxury and general pettiness
of the vile commercial sort of existence led
by nine-tenths of the people of the world in peace
time are replaced in war by a savagery that is
at least more honest and outspoken. Look
at it this way: in peace time one just lives
one’s own little life, engaged in trivialities,
worrying about one’s own comfort, about
money matters, and all that sort of thing just
living for one’s own self. What a sordid
life it is! In war, on the other hand, even
if you do get killed, you only anticipate the
inevitable by a few years in any case, and you
have the satisfaction of knowing that you have “pegged
out” in the attempt to help your country.
You have, in fact, realised an ideal, which,
as far as I can see, you very rarely do in ordinary
life. The reason is that ordinary life runs on
a commercial and selfish basis; if you want to
“get on,” as the saying is, you can’t
keep your hands clean.
Personally, I often rejoice that the
war has come my way. It has made me realise
what a petty thing life is. I think that the war
has given to everyone a chance to “get out
of himself,” as I might say. Of course,
the other side of the picture is bound to occur
to the imagination. But there! I have never
been one to take the more melancholy point of
view when there’s a silver lining to the
cloud.
The eagerness to subordinate self
displayed in this letter was very characteristic of
its author. He was by nature altruistic, and this
propensity was intensified by his career at Dulwich
and his experience of athletics, both influences tending
to merge the individual in the whole and to subordinate
self to the side. Death he had never feared,
and he dreaded it less than ever after his experience
of campaigning. His last letter shows with what
serenity of mind he faced the ultimate realities.
He greeted the Unseen with a cheer.
His Commanding Officer, in a letter
to us after Paul’s death, wrote:
“No officer of mine was more
popular. He was efficient, very keen, and a most
gallant gentleman. His crew loved him and would
follow him anywhere. He did not know what fear
was.”
From the crew of his Tank we received
a very sympathetic letter which among other things
said:
“We all loved your son.
He was the best officer in our company and never will
be replaced by one like him.”
A gunner who served in the same Tank
company testified his love and admiration for our
son and said that all the men would do anything for
him; even the roughest came under his spell.
A brother officer who served with
Paul in the 2nd Cavalry Brigade, in paying homage
to his character, wrote: “He was a most
interesting and lovable companion and friend.
He never seemed to think of himself at all.”
Among the many tributes that reached
us were several from the masters, old boys, and present
boys at Dulwich College. Several of the writers
express the opinion that Paul Jones would, if he had
lived, have done great things. Mr. Gilkes, late
headmaster of Dulwich, in a touching letter, spoke
of the nobility of his character and his high gifts;
Mr. Smith, the present headmaster, testified to his
intellectual power, energy and keenness; Mr. Joerg,
master of the Modern Sixth, to his sense of justice,
loyalty and truth; Mr. Hope, master of the Classical
Sixth, to his high conception of duty, “his sterling
qualities and great ability.” From the
young man who was captain of the school when Paul
was head of the Modern Side came this testimony:
“He was one of the finest characters of my time
at school; in me he inspired all the highest feelings.”
One of his contemporaries in the Modern Sixth wrote:
“I owe more than I can express to your son’s
influence over me. As long as I live I shall
never forget him. His spirit is with me always;
for it is to him that I owe my first real insight into
life.” A well-known Professor wrote:
“I felt sure he was destined to do great things;
but he has done greater things; he has done the greatest
thing of all.” Some of these letters are
set forth in full in the Epilogue.
Appended is a list of events in this
rich and strenuous, albeit brief life:
Born at 6 Cloudesdale Road, Balham, May
18th, 1896.
Entered Dulwich College, September, 1908.
Junior Scholarship, Dulwich College, June,
1909.
Senior Scholarship, Dulwich College, June,
1912.
Matriculated, with honours, London University,
1911.
Appointed Prefect at Dulwich, September,
1912.
Secretary and Treasurer of the College
Magazine, 1913-14.
Editor of The Alleynian, 1914-15.
Head of the Modern Side, 1913-15.
Member of 1st XV, 1912-13, 1913-14, 1914-15.
Hon. Secretary 1st XV, 1913-14.
Captain of Football, 1914-15.
Won a Balliol Scholarship, December, 1914.
Tied for “Victor Ludorum”
Shield, March, 1915.
Joined the Army, April, 1915.
Killed in Action, July 31st, 1917.
All that was mortal of Paul Jones
is buried at a point west of
Zonnebeke, north-east of Ypres.