It was late in the day following his
departure from New York that Pen reached his destination
in Canada. In a certain suburban town not far
from Toronto he found a great training camp. It
was here that selected units of the new Dominion armies
received their military instruction prior to being
sent abroad. It was here also that many of the
young men from the States, desirous of fighting under
the Union Jack, came to enlist with the Canadian troops
and to receive their first lessons in the science
of warfare. Canada was stirred as she had never
been stirred before in all her history. Her troops
already at the front had received their first great
baptism of fire at Langemarck. They had fought
desperately, they had won splendidly, but their losses
had been appalling. So the young men of Canada,
eager to avenge the slaughter of their countrymen,
were hastening to fill the depleted ranks, and the
young men from the States were proud to bear them company.
But life in the training camps was
no holiday. It was hard, steady, strenuous business,
carried on under the most rigid form of discipline.
Yet the men were well clothed, well fed, had comfortable
quarters, enjoyed regular periods of recreation, and
were content with their lot, save that their eagerness
to complete their training and get to the firing line
inevitably manifested itself in expressions of impatience.
To get up at 5:30 in the morning and
drill for an hour before breakfast was no great task,
nor two successive hours of fighting with tipped bayonets,
nor throwing of real bombs and hand-grenades, nor was
the back-breaking digging of trenches, nor the exhaustion
from long marches, if only by such experiences they
could fit themselves eventually to fight their enemy
not only with courage but also with that skill and
efficiency which counts for so much in modern warfare.
It was ten days after Pen’s
enlistment that, being off duty, he crossed the parade
ground one evening and went into the large reading
and recreation room of the Young Men’s Christian
Association, established and maintained there for
the benefit of the troops in training. He had
no errand except that he wished to write a letter to
his mother, and the conveniences offered made it a
favorite place for letter writing.
There were few people in the room,
for it was still early, and the writing tables were
comparatively unoccupied. But at one of them,
with his back to the entrance, sat a young man in
uniform busy with his correspondence. Pen glanced
at him casually as he sat down to write; his quarter
face only was visible. But the glance had left
an impression on his mind that the face and figure
were those of some one he had at some time known.
He selected his writing paper and took up a pen, but
the feeling within him that he must look again and
see if he could possibly recognize his comrade in
arms was too strong to be resisted. Apparently
the feeling was mutual, for when Pen did turn his
eyes in the direction of the other visitor, he found
that the young man had ceased writing, and was sitting
erect in his chair and looking squarely at him.
It needed no second glance to convince him that his
companion was none other than Aleck Sands. For
a moment there was an awkward pause. It was apparent
that the recognition was mutual, but it was apparent
also that in the shock of surprise neither boy knew
quite what to do. It was Aleck who made the first
move. He rose, crossed the room to where Pen
was sitting, and held out his hand.
“Pen,” he said, “are
you willing to shake hands with me now? You know
I was dog enough once to refuse a like offer from you.”
“I’m not only willing
but glad to, if you want to let bygones be bygones.”
“I’ll agree to that if
you will agree to forgive me for what I’ve done
against you and against the flag.”
“What you’ve done against the flag?”
Pen was staring at him in surprise.
When had the burden of that guilt been shifted?
“Yes, I,” answered Aleck.
“I did far more against the flag that day at
Chestnut Hill than you ever thought of doing.
I haven’t realized it until lately, but now
that I do know it, I’m trying in every way I
possibly can to make it right.”
“Why, you didn’t trample
on it, nor speak of it disrespectfully, nor refuse
to apologize to it; it was I who did all that.”
“I know, but I dogged you into
it. If I myself had paid proper respect to the
flag you would never have got into that trouble.
Pen, I never did a more unpatriotic, contemptible
thing in my life than I did when I wrapped that flag
around me and dared you to molest me. It was a
cowardly use to make of the Stars and Stripes.
Moreover, I did it deliberately, and you you
acted on the impulse of the moment. It was I
who committed the real fault, and it has been you who
have suffered for it.”
“Well, I gave you a pretty good punching, didn’t
I?”
“Yes, but the punching you gave
me was not a thousandth part of what I deserved; and,
if you think it would even matters up any, I’d
be perfectly willing to stand up to-night and let
you knock me down a dozen times. Since this war
came on I’ve despised myself more than I can
tell you for my treatment of the flag that day, and
for my treatment of you ever since.”
That he was in dead earnest there
could be no doubt. Phlegmatic and conservative
by nature, when he was once roused he was not easily
suppressed. Pen began to feel sorry for him.
“You’re too hard on yourself,”
he said. “I think you did make a mistake
that day, so did I. But we were both kids, and in a
way we were irresponsible.”
“Yes, I know. There’s
something in that, to be sure. But that doesn’t
excuse me for letting the thing go as I got older and
knew better, and letting you bear all the blame and
all the punishment, and never lifting a finger to
try to help you out. That was mean and contemptible.”
“Well, it’s all over now, so forget it.”
“But I haven’t been able
to forget it. I’ve thought of it night and
day for a year. A dozen times I’ve started
to hunt you up and tell you what I’m telling
you to-night, and every time I’ve backed out.
I couldn’t bear to face the music. And
when I heard that they turned you down when you tried
to enlist in the Guard at Lowbridge, on account of
the old trouble, that capped the climax. I couldn’t
stand it any longer; I felt that I had to shoulder
my part of that burden somehow, and that the very
best way for me to do it was to go and fight; and if
I couldn’t fight under my own flag, then to go
and fight under the next best flag, the Union Jack.
I felt that after I’d had my baptism of fire
I’d have the face and courage to go to you and
tell you what I’ve been telling you now.
But I’m glad it’s over. My soul!
I’m glad it’s over!”
He dropped into a chair by the table
and rested his head on his open hand as though the
recital of his story had exhausted him. Pen stood
over him and laid a comforting arm about his shoulder.
“It’s all right, old man!”
he said. “You’ve done the fair thing,
and a great lot more. Now let’s call quits
and talk about something else. When did you come
up here?”
“Five days ago. I’m just getting
into the swing.”
“Well, you’re exactly
the right sort. I’m mighty glad you’re
here. We’ll fix it so we can be in the
same company, and bunk together. What do you
say?”
“Splendid! if you’re willing.
Can it be done? I’m in company M of the th Battalion.”
“I know of the same thing having
been done since I’ve been here. We’ll
try it on, anyway.”
They did try it on, and three days
later the transfer was made. After that they
were comrades indeed, occupying the same quarters,
marching shoulder to shoulder with each other in the
ranks, sharing with each other all the comforts and
privations of life in the barracks, moved by a common
impulse of patriotism and chivalry, longing for the
day to come when they could prove their mettle under
fire.
But it was not until February 1916
that they went abroad. After three months of
intensive training they were hardened, supple, and
skillful. But their military education was not
yet complete. Commanders of armies know that
raw or semi-raw troops are worse than useless in modern
warfare. Soldiers in these days must know their
business thoroughly if they are to meet an enemy on
equal terms. They must be artisans as well as
soldiers, laborers as well as riflemen, human machines
compounded of blood and courage.
So, in a great camp not far from London,
there were three months more of drill and discipline
and drastic preparation for the firing line.
But at last, in late May, when the
young grass was green on England’s lawns, and
the wings of birds were flashing everywhere in the
sunshine, and nature was rioting in leaf and flower,
a troop-ship, laden to the gunwales with the finest
and the best of Canada’s young patriots and
many of the most stalwart youth of the States, landed
on the welcoming shore of France. In England
evidences of the great war had been marked, abundant
and harrowing. But here, in the country whose
soil had been invaded, the grim and stirring actualities
of the mighty conflict were brought home to the onlooker
with startling distinctness. At the railroad
station, where the troops entrained for the front,
every sight and sound was eloquent with the tenseness
of preparation and the tragedy of the long fight.
Soldiers were everywhere. Coats of blue, trousers
of red, jackets of green, gave color and variety to
the prevailing mass of sober khaki. Here too,
dotting the hurrying throng, were the pathetic figures
of the stricken and wounded, haggard, bandaged, limping,
maimed, on canes and crutches, back from the front,
released from the hospitals, seeking the rest and
quiet that their sacrifices and heroism had so well
earned. And here too, ministering to the needs
of the suffering and the helpless, were many of the
white-robed nurses of the Red Cross.
It was evening when the train bearing
the first section of the th Battalion
of Canadian Light Infantry to which Pen and Aleck belonged
steamed slowly out of the station. All night,
in the darkness, across the fields and through the
fine old forests of northern France the slow rumble
of the coaches, interrupted by many stops, kept up.
But in the gray of the early morning, a short distance
beyond Amiens, in the midst of a mist covered meadow,
the train pulled up for the last time. This had
been fighting ground. Here the invading hosts
of Germany had been met and driven back. Ruined
farm houses, shattered trees, lines of old trenches
scarring the surface of the meadow, all told their
eloquent tale of ruthless and devastating war.
And yonder, in the valley, the slow-moving Somme wound
its shadowy way between green banks and overhanging
foliage as peacefully and beautifully as though its
silent waters had never been flecked with the blood
of dying men. Even now, as the troops detrained
and marched to the sections of the field assigned
them, the dull and continuous roar of cannon in the
distance came to their ears with menacing distinctness.
“It’s the thunder of the
guns!” exclaimed Pen. “I hope to-morrow
finds us where they’re firing them.”
“I’m with you,”
responded Aleck. “I shall be frightened
to death when they first put me under fire, but the
sooner I’m hardened to it the better.”
“Tut! You’ll be as
brave as a lion. It’s your kind that wins
battles.”
Pen turned his face toward a horizon
lost in a haze of smoke, and the look in his eyes
showed that he at least, would be no coward when the
supreme moment came. Lieutenant Davis of their
company strolled by; impatiently waiting for further
orders. He was a strict disciplinarian indeed,
but he was very human and his men all loved him.
Pen pointed in the direction from which came the muffled
sounds of warfare.
“When shall we be there, Lieutenant?”
he asked.
“I don’t know, Butler,”
was the response. “It may be to-morrow;
it may be next month. Only those in high command
know and they’re not telling. We may camp
right here for weeks.”
But they did not camp there.
In the early evening there came marching orders, and,
under cover of darkness, the entire battalion swung
into a muddy and congested road and tramped along
it for many hours. But they got no nearer to
the fighting line. Weary, hungry and thirsty,
they stopped at last on the face of a gently sloping
hill protected from the north by a forest which had
not yet suffered destruction either at the hands of
sappers or from the violence of shells. It was
apparent that this had been a camp for a large body
of troops before the advancement of the lines.
It was deserted now, but there were many caves in
the hillside, and hundreds of little huts made of earth
and wood under the sheltering trunks and branches
of the trees. It was in one of these huts that
Pen and Aleck, together with four of their comrades,
were billeted. It was not long after their arrival
before hastily built fires were burning, and coffee,
hot and fragrant, was brewing, to refresh the tired
bodies of the men, until the arrival of the provision
trains should supply them with a more substantial
breakfast. There was plenty of straw, however,
and on that the weary troops threw themselves down
and slept.
At this camp the battalion remained
until the middle of June. There were drills,
marching and battalion maneuvers by day, such recreation
in the evenings as camp life could afford, sound sleeping
on beds of straw at night, and always, from the distance,
sometimes loud and continuous, sometimes faint and
occasional, the thunder of the guns. And always,
too, along the muddy high-road at the foot of the slope,
a never-ending procession of provision and munition
trains laboring toward the front, and the human wreckage
of the firing line, and troops released from the trenches,
passing painfully to the rear. No wonder the
men grew impatient and longed for the activities of
the front even though their ears were ever filled
with tales of horror from the lips of those who had
survived the ordeal of battle.
But, soon after the middle of June,
their desires were realized. Orders came to break
camp and prepare to march, to what point no one seemed
to know, but every one hoped and expected it would
be to the trenches. There was a day of bustle
and hurry. The men stocked up their haversacks,
filled their canteens and cartridge-boxes, put their
guns in complete readiness, and at five o’clock
in the afternoon were assembled and began their march.
The road was ankle-deep with mud, for there had been
much rain, and it was congested with endless convoys.
There were many delays. A heavy mist fell and
added to the uncertainty, the weariness and discomfort.
But no complaint escaped from any man’s lips,
for they all felt that at last they were going into
action. Four hours of marching brought them into
the neighborhood of the British heavy artillery concealed
under branches broken from trees or in mud huts, directing
their fire on the enemy’s lines by the aid of
signals from lookouts far in advance or in the air.
The noise of these big guns was terrific, but inspiring.
At nine o’clock there was a halt of sufficient
length to serve the men with coffee and bread, and
then the march was resumed. By and by shells from
the guns of the Allies began to shriek high over the
heads of the marching men, and were replied to by
the enemy shells humming and whining by, seeking out
and endeavoring to silence the Allied artillery.
Now and then one of these missiles would burst in
the rear of the column, sending up a glare of flame
and a cloud of dust and debris, but at what cost in
life no one in the line knew.
As the men advanced the mud grew deeper,
the way narrower, the congestion greater. The
passing of enemy shells was less frequent, but precautions
for safety were increased. Advantage was taken
of ravines, of fences, of fourth and fifth line trenches.
The troops ere not beyond range of the German sharpshooters,
and the swish of bullets was heard occasionally in
the air above the heads of the marchers.
It was toward morning that the destination
of the column was reached, and, in single file, the
men of Pen’s section passed down an incline
into their first communicating trench, and then past
a maze of lateral trenches to the opening into the
salients they were to supply. It was here that
the soldiers whom they were to relieve filed out by
them. Going forward, they took the places of
the retiring section. At last they were in the
first line trench, with the enemy trenches scarcely
a hundred meters in front of them. Sentries were
placed at the loop-holes made in the earth embankment,
and the remainder of the section retired to their
dug-outs. These under-ground rooms, built down
and out from the trench, and bomb-proof, were capable
of holding from eight to a dozen men. They were
carpeted with straw, some of them had shelves, and
in many of them discarded bayonets were driven into
the walls to form hooks. It was in these places
that the men who were off duty rested and ate and
slept.
In the gray light of the early June
morning, Pen, who had been posted at one of the loop-holes
as a listening sentry, looked out to see what lay
in front of him. But the most that could be seen
were the long and winding earth embankments that marked
the lines of the German entrenchments, and between,
on “no man’s land,” a maze of barbed
wire entanglements. No living human being was
in sight, but, at one place, crumpled up, partly sustained
by meshes of wire, there was a ragged heap, the sight
of which sent a chill to the boy’s heart.
It required no second glance to discover that this
was the unrescued body of a soldier who had been too
daring. Pen had seen his first war-slain corpse.
Indeed, war was becoming to him now a reality.
For, suddenly, a little of the soft earth at his side
spattered into his face. An enemy bullet had
struck there. In his eagerness to see he had exposed
too much of his head and shoulders and had become the
target for Boche sharpshooters. Other bullets
pattered down around his loop-hole, and only by seeking
the quick shelter of the trench did he escape injury
or death. It was his first lesson in self-protection
on the firing-line, but he profited by it. Two
hours later he and Aleck, who had also been doing
duty on a lookout platform, were relieved by their
comrades, and threw themselves down on the straw of
their dug-out and, wearied to the point of exhaustion,
slept soundly. With the dawning of day the noise
of cannonading increased, the whining of deadly missiles
grew more incessant, the crash of exploding shells
more frequent, but, until they were roused by their
sergeant and bidden to eat their breakfast which had
been brought by a ration-party, both boys slept.
So soon had the menacing sounds of war become familiar
to their ears. After breakfast those who were
not on sentry duty were put to work repairing trenches,
filling sand-bags, enlarging dug-outs, pumping water
from low places, cleaning rifles, performing a hundred
tasks which were necessary to make trench life endurable
and reasonably safe. The food was good and was
still abundant. There were fresh meat, bacon,
canned soups and vegetables, bread, butter, jam and
coffee. The two hours on sentry duty were by
far the most strenuous in the daily routine.
To remain in one position, with eyes glued to the narrow
slit in the embankment, gas mask at hand, hand-grenades
in readiness, rifle in position ready to be discharged
on the second, the fate of the whole army perhaps
resting on one man’s vigilance, this was no easy
task.
But there were no complaints.
The men were on the firing line, ready to obey orders,
whatever they might be; they asked only one thing
more, and that was to fight. But, in these days,
there was a lull in the actual fighting. The
“big drive” had not yet been launched.
Aside from a skirmish now and then, a fierce bombardment
for a few hours, an attempt, on one side or the other,
to rush a trench, there was little aggressive warfare
in this neighborhood, and few casualties; nor was
there any material variance in the front lines of trenches
on either side. There were six days of this kind
of duty and then the men of Pen’s company were
relieved and sent to the rear for a week’s rest,
to act as reserves, and to be called during that time
only in case of an emergency. But the following
week saw them again at the front; not in the same
trench where they had first served, but in an advanced
position farther to the south. The trenches here
were not so roomy nor so dry as had been those of
the first assignment. There was much mud, slippery
and deep, to be contended with, and the walls at the
sides were continually caving in. The duties
of the men, however, were not materially different
from those with which they were already familiar.
Clashes had been more frequent here, and the dead bodies
of soldiers, crumpled up in the trench or lying, unrescued,
on the scarred and fire-swept surface of “no
man’s land” were not an unusual sight.
But the “rookies” were becoming hardened
now to many of the horrors of war.
It was while they were in this trench
that Pen had his “baptism of fire.”
Late one afternoon the German artillery began shelling
fiercely the first line of Allied trenches. Aleck
and Pen were both on sentry duty. Just beyond
them Lieutenant Davis stood at an advanced lookout
post intent on studying the outside situation by means
of his periscope. At irregular intervals machine
guns, deftly hidden from the sight of the enemy, poked
their menacing mouths toward the Boche lines.
Now and then, finding its mark at some point in the
course of the winding trench, an enemy shell would
explode throwing clouds of dust and debris into the
air, wrecking the earthworks where it fell, taking
its toll of human lives and limbs. Twice Pen was
thrown off his feet by the shock of near-by explosions,
but he escaped injury, as did also Aleck. It
was apparent that the Germans were either making a
feint for the purpose of attacking at some unexpected
point, or else that they were preparing for a charge
on the trenches which they were bombarding. It
developed that the latter theory was the correct one,
for, after a while, they directed their fire to the
rear of the first line trenches, and set up a still
more furious bombardment. This, as every one
knew, was for the purpose of preventing the British
from bringing up reinforcements, and to give their
own troops the opportunity to charge into the Allied
front. The charge was not long delayed.
A gray wave poured over the parapet of the German first
line trench, rolled through the prepared openings
in their own barbed-wire entanglements, and advanced,
alternately running and creeping, toward the Allied
line. But when the Germans were once in the open
a terrible thing happened to them. The machine
guns from all along the British trenches met them
with a rain of bullets that mowed them down as grain
falls to the blades of the farmer’s reaper.
The rifles of the men in khaki, resting on the benches
of the parapet, spit constant and deadly fire at them.
The artillery to the rear, in constant telephone touch
with the first line, quickly found the range and dropped
shells into the charging mass with terrible effect.
A second body of gray-clad soldiers with fixed bayonets
swarmed out of the German trenches and came to the
help of their hard-beset comrades, and met a similar
fate. Then a third platoon came on, and a fourth.
The resources of the enemy in men seemed endless,
their persistence remarkable, their recklessness in
the face of sure death almost unbelievable. The
noise was terrific; the constant rattle of the machine
guns, the spitting of rifles, the booming of the artillery,
the whining and crashing of shells, the yells of the
charging troops, the shrieks of the wounded.
In the British trenches the men were assembled, ready
to pour out at the whistle and repel the assault on
open ground; but it was not necessary for them to
do so. The German ranks, unable to withstand the
fire that devoured them as they met it, a fire that
it was humanly impossible for any troops to withstand,
turned back and sought the shelter of their trenches,
leaving their dead and wounded piled and sprawled
by the hundreds on the ground they had failed to cross.
The casualties among the Canadian
troops were not large, and they had occurred mostly
before the charge had been launched, but it was in
deep sorrow that the men from across the ocean gathered
up from the shattered trenches the pierced and broken
bodies of their comrades, and sent them to the rear,
the living to be cared for in the hospitals, the dead
to be buried on the soil of France where they had
bravely fought and nobly died.