The great Somme drive began on July
1, 1916, after a week’s devastating bombardment
of the German lines. The enemy trenches had been
torn and shattered, and when the Allied armies, in
great numbers and with abundant ammunition, swept
out and down upon them, the impetus and force of the
advance were irresistible. Trenches were blotted
out. Towns were taken. The German lines melted
away over wide areas. Victory, decisive and permanent,
rested on the Allied banners. On the third of
the month the British took La Boiselle and four thousand
three hundred prisoners. But on the fourth the
enemy troops turned and fought like wild animals at
bay. This was the day on which Aleck received
his wounds. In the morning, as they lay sprawled
in a ravine which had been captured the night before,
waiting for orders to push still farther on, Aleck
had said to Pen:
“You know what day this is, comrade?”
“Indeed I do!” was the reply, “it’s
Independence Day.”
“Right you are. I wish
I could get sight of an American flag. It will
be the first time in my life that I haven’t seen
‘Old Glory’ somewhere on the Fourth of
July.”
“True. Back yonder in the
States they’ll be having parades and speeches,
and the flag will be flying from every masthead.
If only they could be made to realize that it’s
really that flag that we’re fighting for, you
and I, and drop this cloak of neutrality, and come
over here as a nation and help us, wouldn’t that
be glorious?”
Pen’s face was grimy, his uniform
was torn and stained, his hair was tousled; somewhere
he had lost his cap and the times were too strenuous
to get another; but out from his eyes there shone a
tenderness, a longing, a determination that marked
him as a true soldier of the American Legion.
The cannonading had again begun.
Shells were whining and whistling above their heads
and exploding in the enemy lines not far beyond.
Off to the right, a village in flames sent up great
clouds of smoke, and the roar of the conflagration
was joined to the noise of artillery. Back of
the lines the ground was strewn with wreckage, pitted
with shell-holes, ghastly with its harvest of bodies
of the slain. With rifles gripped, bayonets ready,
hand grenades near by, the boys lay waiting for the
word of command.
“Aleck?”
“Yes, comrade.”
“Over yonder at Chestnut Hill,
on the school-grounds, the flag will be floating from
the top of the staff to-day.”
“Yes, I know. It will be
a pretty sight. I used to be ashamed to look
at it. You know why. To-day I could stare
at it and glory in it for hours.”
“That flag at the school-house
is the most beautiful American flag in the world.
I never saw it but once, but it thrilled me then unspeakably.
I have loved it ever since. I can think of but
one other sight that would be more beautiful and thrilling.”
“And what is that?”
“To see ‘Old Glory’
waving from the top of a flag-staff here on the soil
of France, signifying that our country has taken up
the cause of the Allies and thrown herself, with all
her heart and might into this war.”
“Wait; you will see it, comrade,
you will see it. It can’t be delayed for
long now.”
Then the order came to advance.
In a storm of shrapnel, bullets and flame, the British
host swept down again upon the foe. The Germans
gave desperate and deadly resistance. They fought
hand to hand, with bayonets and clubbed muskets and
grenades. It was a death grapple, with decisive
victory on neither side. In the wild onrush and
terrific clash, Pen lost touch with his comrade.
Only once he saw him after the charge was launched.
Aleck waved to him and smiled and plunged into the
thick of the carnage. Two hours later, staggering
with shock and heat and superficial wounds, and choking
with thirst and the smoke and dust of conflict, Pen
made his way with the survivors of his section back
over the ground that had been traversed, to find rest
and refreshment at the rear. They had been relieved
by fresh troops sent in to hold the narrow strip of
territory that had been gained. Stumbling along
over the torn soil, through wreckage indescribable,
among dead bodies lying singly and in heaps, stopping
now and then to aid a dying man, or give such comfort
as he could to a wounded and helpless comrade, Pen
struggled slowly and painfully toward a resting spot.
At one place, through eyes half blinded
by sweat and smoke and trickling blood, he saw a man
partially reclining against a post to which a tangled
and broken mass of barbed wire was still clinging.
The man was evidently making weak and ineffectual
attempts to care for his own wounds. Pen stopped
to assist him if he could. Looking down into
his face he saw that it was Aleck. He was not
shocked, nor did he manifest any surprise. He
had seen too much of the actuality of war to be startled
now by any sight or sound however terrible. He
simply said:
“Well, old man, I see they got you. Here,
let me help.”
He knelt down by the side of his wounded
comrade, and, with shaking hands, endeavored to staunch
the flow of blood and to bind up two dreadful wounds,
a gaping, jagged hole in the breast beneath the shoulder,
made by the thrust and twist of a Boche bayonet, and
a torn and shattered knee.
Aleck did not at first recognize him,
but a moment later, seeing who it was that had stopped
to help him, he reached up a trembling hand and laid
it on his friend’s face. Something in his
mouth or throat had gone wrong and he could not speak.
After exhausting his comrade’s
emergency kit and his own in first aid treatment of
the wounds, Pen called for assistance to a soldier
who was staggering by, and between them, across the
torn field with its crimson and ghastly fruitage,
with fragments of shrapnel hurtling above them, and
with bodies of soldiers, dead and living, tossed into
the murky air by constantly exploding shells, they
half carried, half dragged the wounded man across
the ravine and up the hill to a captured German trench,
and turned him over to the stretcher-bearers to be
taken to the ambulances.
It was after this day’s fighting
that Pen, “for conspicuous bravery in action,”
was promoted to the rank of sergeant. He wore
his honor modestly. It gave him, perhaps, a better
opportunity to do good work for Britain and for France,
and to rehabilitate himself in the eyes of his own
countrymen; otherwise it did not matter.
So the fighting on the Somme went
on day after day, week after week, persistent, desperate,
bloody. It was early in August, after the terrific
battle by which the whole of Delville Wood passed into
British control, that Pen’s battalion was relieved
and sent far to the rear for a long rest. Even
unwounded men cannot stand the strain of continuous
battle for many weeks at a stretch. The nervous
system, delicate and complicated, must have relief,
or the physical organization will collapse, or the
mind give way, or both.
At the end of the first night’s
march from the front the battalion camped in the streets
of a little, half-wrecked village on the banks of
the Avre. Up on the hillside was a long, rambling
building which had once been a convent but was now
a hospital. Pen knew that somewhere in a hospital
back of the Somme Aleck was still lying, too ill to
be moved farther to the rear. It occurred to him
that he might find him here. So, in the hazy
moonlight of the August evening, having obtained the
necessary leave, he set out to make inquiry. He
passed up the winding walk, under a canopy of fine
old trees, and reached the entrance to the building.
From the porch, looking to the north, toward the valley
of the Somme, he could see on the horizon the dull
gleam of red that marked the battle line, and he could
hear the faint reverberations of the big guns that
told of the fighting still in progress. But here
it was very quiet, very peaceful, very beautiful.
For the first time since his entrance into the great
struggle he longed for an end of the strife, and a
return to the calm, sweet, lovely things of life.
But he did not permit this mood to remain long with
him. He knew that the war must go on until the
spirit that launched it was subdued and crushed, and
that he must go with it to whatever end God might
will.
He found Aleck there. He had
felt that he would, and while he was delighted he
was not greatly surprised. There was little emotion
manifested at the meeting of the two boys. The
horrors of war were too close and too vivid yet for
that. But the fact that they were glad to look
again into one another’s eyes admitted of no
doubt. Aleck had recovered the use of his voice,
but he was still too weak to talk at any length.
The bayonet wound in his shoulder had healed nicely,
but his shattered knee had come terribly near to costing
him his life. There had been infection.
Amputation of the leg had been imminent. The
surgeons and the nurses had struggled with the case
for weeks and had finally conquered.
“I shall still have two legs,”
said Aleck jocosely, “and I’ll be glad
of that; but I’m afraid this one will be a weak
brother for a long time. I won’t be kicking
football this fall, anyway.”
“It’s the fortune of war,” replied
Pen.
“I know. I’m not
complaining, and I’m not sorry. I’ve
had my chance. I’ve seen war. I’ve
fought for France. I’m satisfied.”
He lay back on the pillow, pale-faced,
emaciated, weak; but in his eyes was a glow of patriotic
pride in his own suffering, and pride in the knowledge
that he had entered the fight and had fought bravely
and well.
“America ought to be proud of
you,” said Pen, “and of all the other
boys from the States who have fought and suffered,
and of those who have died in this war. I told
you you’d be no coward when the time came to
fight, and, my faith! you were not. I can see
you now, with a smile and a wave of the hand plunging
into that bloody chaos.”
“Thank you, comrade! I
may never fight again, but I can go back home now
and face the flag and not be ashamed.”
“Indeed, you can! And when will you go?”
“I don’t know. They’ll
take me across the channel as soon as I’m able
to leave here, and then, when I can travel comfortably
I suppose I’ll be invalided home.”
“Well, old man, when you get
there, you say to my mother and my aunt Milly, and
my dear old grandfather Butler, that when you saw me
last I was well, and contented, and glad to be doing
my bit.”
“I will, Pen.”
“And, Aleck?”
“Yes, comrade.”
“If you should chance to go
by the school-house, and see the old flag waving there,
give it one loving glance for me, will you?”
“With all my heart!”
“So, then, good-by!”
“Good-by!”
It was in the spacious grounds of
an old French chateau not far from Beauvais on the
river Andelle that Pen’s battalion camped for
their period of rest and recuperation. There
were long, sunshiny days, nights of undisturbed and
refreshing sleep, recreation and entertainment sufficient
to divert tired brains, and a freedom from undue restraint
that was most welcome. Moreover there were letters
and parcels from home, with plenty of time to read
them and to re-read them, to dwell upon them and to
enjoy them. If the loved ones back in the quiet
cities and villages and countryside could only realize
how much letters and parcels from home mean to the
tired bodies and strained nerves of the war-worn boys
at the front, there would never be a lack of these
comforts and enjoyments that go farther than anything
else to brighten the lives and hearten the spirits
of the soldier-heroes in the trenches and the camps.
Pen had his full share of these pleasures.
His mother, his Aunt Millicent, Colonel Butler, and
even Grandpa Walker from Cobb’s Corners, kept
him supplied with news, admonition, encouragement and
affection. And these little waves of love and
commendation, rolling up to him at irregular intervals,
were like sweet and fragrant draughts of life-giving
air to one who for months had breathed only the smoke
of battle and the foulness of the trenches.
At the end of August, orders came
for the battalion to return to the front. There
were two days of bustling preparation, and then the
troops entrained and were carried back to where the
noise of the seventy-fives on the one side and the
seventy-sevens on the other, came rumbling and thundering
again to their ears, and the pall of smoke along the
horizon marked the location of the firing line.
But their destination this time was
farther to the south, on the British right wing, where
French and English soldiers touched elbows with each
other, and Canadian and Australian fraternized in a
common enterprise. Here again the old trench
life was resumed; sentinel duty, daring adventures,
wild charges, the shock and din of constant battle,
brief periods of rest and recuperation. But the
process of attrition was going on, the enemy was being
pushed back, inch by inch it seemed, but always, eventually,
back. As for Pen, he led a charmed life.
Men fell to right of him and to left of him, and were
torn into shreds at his back; but, save for superficial
wounds, for temporary strangulation from gas, for
momentary insensibility from shock, he was unharmed.
It was in October, after Lieutenant
Davis had been promoted to the captaincy, that Pen
was made second lieutenant of his company. He
well deserved the honor. There was a little celebration
of the event among his men, for his comrades all loved
him and honored him. They said it would not be
long before he would be wearing the Victoria Cross
on his breast. Yet few of them had been with
him from the beginning. Of those who had landed
with him upon French soil the preceding May only a
pitifully small percentage remained. Killed, wounded,
missing, one by one and in groups, they had dropped
out, and the depleted ranks had been filled with new
blood.
In November they were sent up into
the Arras sector, but in December they were back again
in their old quarters on the Somme. And yet it
was not their old quarters, for the British front had
been advanced over a wide area, for many miles in
length, and imperturbable Tommies were now
smoking their pipes in many a reversed trench that
had theretofore been occupied by gray-clad Boches.
But they were not pleasant trenches to occupy.
They were very narrow and very muddy, and parts of
the bodies of dead men protruded here and there from
their walls and parapets. Moreover, in December
it is very cold in northern France, and, muffle as
they would, even the boys from Canada suffered from
the severity of the weather. They asked only to
be permitted to keep their blood warm by aggressive
action against their enemy. And, just before
the Christmas holidays, the aggressive action they
had longed for came.
It was no great battle, no important
historic event, just an incident in the policy of
attrition which was constantly wearing away the German
lines. An attempt was to be made to drive a wedge
into the enemy’s front at a certain vital point,
and, in order to cover the real thrust, several feints
were to be made at other places not far away.
One of these latter expeditions had been intrusted
to a part of Pen’s battalion. At six o’clock
in the afternoon the British artillery was to bombard
the first line of enemy trenches for an hour and a
half. Then the artillery fire was to lift to the
second line, and the Canadian troops were to rush
the first line with the bayonet, carry it, and when
the artillery fire lifted to the third line they were
to pass on to the second hostile trench and take and
hold that for a sufficient length of time to divert
the enemy from the point of real attack, and then
they were to withdraw to their own lines. Permanent
occupation of the captured trenches at the point seemed
inadvisable at this time, if not wholly impossible.
It was not a welcome task that had
been assigned to these troops. Soldiers like
to hold the ground they have won in any fight; and
to retire after partial victory was not to their liking.
But it was part of the game and they were content.
So far as his section was concerned Pen assembled
his men, explained the situation to them, and told
them frankly what they were expected to do.
“It’s going to be a very
pretty fight,” he added, “probably the
hardest tussle we’ve had yet. The Boches
are well dug in over there, and they’re well
backed with artillery, and they’re not going
to give up those trenches without a protest.
Some of us will not come back; and some of us who
do come back will never fight again. You know
that. But, whatever happens, Canada and the States
will have no reason to blush for us. We’re
fighting in a splendid cause, and we’ll do our
part like the soldiers we are.”
“Aye! that we will!” “Right
you are!” “Give us the chance!” “Wherever
you lead, we follow!”
It seemed as though every man in the
section gave voice to his willingness and enthusiasm.
“Good!” exclaimed Pen.
“I knew you’d feel that way about it.
I’ve never asked a man of you to go where I
wouldn’t go myself, and I never shall.
I simply wanted to warn you that it’s going to
be a hot place over there to-night, and you must be
prepared for it.”
“We’re ready! All you’ve got
to do is to say the word.”
No undue familiarity was intended;
respect for their commander was in no degree lessened,
but they loved him and would have followed him anywhere,
and they wanted him to know it.
The unusual activity in the Allied
trenches, observed by enemy aircraft, combined with
the terrific cannonading of their lines, had evidently
convinced the enemy that some aggressive movement against
them was in contemplation, for their artillery fire
now, at seven o’clock, was directed squarely
upon the outer lines of British trenches, bringing
havoc and horror in the wake of the exploding shells.
It was under this galling bombardment
that the men of the second section adjusted their
packs, buckled the last strap of their equipment,
took firm bold of their rifles, and crouched against
the front wall of their trench, ready for the final
spring.
At seven-thirty o’clock the
order came. It was a sharp blast of a whistle,
made by the commanding officer. The next moment,
led by Lieutenant Butler, the men were up, sliding
over the parapet, worming their way through gaps in
their own wire entanglements, and forming in the semblance
of a line outside. It all took but a minute, and
then the rush toward the enemy trenches began.
It seemed as though every gun of every calibre in
the German army was let loose upon them. The
artillery shortened its range and dropped exploding
shells among them with dreadful effect. Machine
guns mowed them down in swaths. Hand-grenades
tore gaps in their ranks. Rifle bullets, hissing
like hail, took terrible toll of them. Out of
the blackness overhead, lit with the flame of explosions,
fell a constant rain of metal, of clods of earth,
of fragments of equipment, of parts of human bodies.
The experience was wild and terrible beyond description.
Pen took no note of the whining and
crashing missiles about him, nor of the men falling
on both sides of him, nor of the shrieking, gesticulating
human beings behind him. Into the face of death,
his eyes fixed on the curtain of fire before him,
heroic and inspired, he led the remnant of his brave
platoon. Through the gaps torn out of the enemy
entanglements by the preliminary bombardment, and on
into the first line of Boche entrenchments they pounded
and pushed their way. Then came fighting indeed;
hand to hand, with fixed bayonets and clubbed muskets
and death grapples in the darkness, and everywhere,
smearing and soaking the combatants, the blood of men.
But the first trench, already battered into a shapeless
and shallow ravine, was won. Canada was triumphant.
The curtain of artillery fire lifted and fell on the
enemy’s third line. So, now, forward again,
leaving the “trench cleaners” to hunt
out those of the enemy who had taken refuge in holes
and caves. Again the rain of hurtling and hissing
and crashing steel. Human fortitude and endurance
were indeed no match for this. Again the clubs
and bayonets and wild men reaching with blood-smeared
hands for each other’s throats in the darkness.
And then, to Penfield Butler, at last,
came the soldier’s destiny. It seemed as
though some mighty force had struck him in the breast,
whirled him round and round, toppled him to earth,
and left him lying there, crushed, bleeding and unconscious.
How long it was that he lay oblivious of the conflict
he did not know. But when he awakened to sensibility
the rush of battle had ceased. There was no fighting
around him. He had a sense of great suffocation.
He knew that he was spitting blood. He tried
to raise his hand, and his revolver fell from the
nerveless fingers that were still grasping it.
A little later he raised his other hand to his breast
and felt that his clothing was torn and soaked.
He lifted his head, and in the light of an enemy flare
he looked about him. He saw only the torn soil
covered with crouched and sprawling bodies of the
wounded and the dead, and with wreckage indescribable.
Bullets were humming and whistling overhead, and spattering
the ground around him. Men in the agony of their
wounds were moaning and crying near by. He lay
back and tried to think. By the light of the
next flare he saw the rough edge of a great shell-hole
a little way beyond him toward the British lines.
In the darkness he tried to crawl toward it.
It would be safer there than in this whistling cross-fire
of bullets. He did not dare try to rise.
He could not turn himself on his stomach, the pain
and sense of suffocation were too great when he attempted
it. So he pulled himself along in the darkness
on his back to the cavity, and sought shelter within
it. Bodies of others who had attempted to run
or creep to it, and had been caught by Boche bullets
on the way, were hanging over its edge. Under
its protecting shoulder were many wounded, treating
their own injuries, helping others as they could in
the darkness and by the fitful light of the German
flares. Some one, whose friendly voice was half
familiar, yet sounded strange and far away, dragged
the exhausted boy still farther into shelter, felt
of his blood-soaked chest, and endeavored, awkwardly
and crudely, for he himself was wounded, to give first
aid. And then again came unconsciousness.
So, in the black night, in the shell-made
cavern with the pall of flame-streaked battle smoke
hanging over it, and the whining, screaming missiles
from guns of friend and foe weaving a curtain of tangled
threads above it, this young soldier of the American
Legion, his breast shot half in two, his rich blood
reddening the soil of France, lay steeped in merciful
oblivion.