We saw a good many Turkish prisoners
at one time or another, and invariably fraternised
with them. They were kept inside a barbed-wire
enclosure with a guard over them; but there was no
need to prevent their escape they would
not leave if they got the chance. On one occasion
twelve of them were told to go some distance into the
scrub and bring in some firewood. No one was
sent with them, the idea being to encourage them to
go to their lines and persuade some of the Turks to
desert to us. But they were like the cat; they
all came back with the firewood.
I saw two of our men on one occasion
bringing in a prisoner. They halted on the hill
opposite us, and one of them went to headquarters
to ascertain how the prisoner was to be disposed of.
In a very short time he was surrounded by fourteen
or fifteen of our soldiers, trying to carry on a conversation,
and giving him cigarettes and in fact anything he
would accept. An hour before they had been trying
their best to shoot one another. In one of the
attacks on our left the Turks were badly beaten off
and left a lot of their dead close up to our trenches.
As it was not safe to get over and remove the bodies,
a number of boat-hooks were obtained, and with them
the bodies were pulled in to our trenches. One
of the “bodies” proved to be a live Turk
who had been unable to get back to his line for fear
of being shot by our men. He was blindfolded
and sent down to the compound with the other prisoners.
The difficulty of obtaining sufficient
exercise was very great at times. We only held
a piece of territory under a square mile in extent,
and none of it was free from shell or rifle-fire, so
that our perambulations were carried on under difficulty.
Major Meikle and I had our regular walk before breakfast.
At first we went down the beach towards Gaba Tepe,
and then sat for a while talking and trying to see
what we could see; but a sniper apparently used to
watch for us, for we were invariably saluted by the
ping of a rifle in the distance and the dust of the
bullet in close proximity to our feet. We concluded
that, if we continued to walk in this direction someone
would be getting hurt, so our walks were altered to
the road round “Pluggey’s Plateau.”
We were seated there one morning when our howitzer
in the gully was fired, and we felt that the shell
was not far from where we sat. We went down to
the Battery, and I interrogated some of the gunners.
“How far off the top of that hill does that shell
go?” said I. “About a yard, sir,”
replied the man; “one time we hit it.”
I asked him if it would be convenient for the battery
to elevate a bit if we were sitting there again.