In the Army List they still stand
as ’The Fore and Fit Princess Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen-Auspach’s
Merthyr-Tydfilshire Own Royal Loyal Light Infantry,
Regimental District 329A,’ but the Army through
all its barracks and canteens knows them now as the
‘Fore and Aft.’ They may in time
do something that shall make their new title honourable,
but at present they are bitterly ashamed, and the man
who calls them ‘Fore and Aft’ does so
at the risk of the head which is on his shoulders.
Two words breathed into the stables
of a certain Cavalry Regiment will bring the men out
into the streets with belts and mops and bad language;
but a whisper of ‘Fore and Aft’ will bring
out this regiment with rifles.
Their one excuse is that they came
again and did their best to finish the job in style.
But for a time all their world knows that they were
openly beaten, whipped, dumb-cowed, shaking, and afraid.
The men know it; their officers know it; the Horse
Guards know it, and when the next war comes the enemy
will know it also. There are two or three regiments
of the Line that have a black mark against their names
which they will then wipe out; and it will be excessively
inconvenient for the troops upon whom they do their
wiping.
The courage of the British soldier
is officially supposed to be above proof, and, as
a general rule, it is so. The exceptions are decently
shovelled out of sight, only to be referred to in the
freshest of unguarded talk that occasionally swamps
a Mess-table at midnight. Then one hears strange
and horrible stories of men not following their officers,
of orders being given by those who had no right to
give them, and of disgrace that, but for the standing
luck of the British Army, might have ended in brilliant
disaster. These are unpleasant stories to listen
to, and the Messes tell them under their breath, sitting
by the big wood fires; and the young officer bows his
head and thinks to himself, please God, his men shall
never behave unhandily.
The British soldier is not altogether
to be blamed for occasional lapses; but this verdict
he should not know. A moderately intelligent
General will waste six months in mastering the craft
of the particular war that he may be waging; a Colonel
may utterly misunderstand the capacity of his regiment
for three months after it has taken the field; and
even a Company Commander may err and be deceived as
to the temper and temperament of his own handful:
wherefore the soldier, and the soldier of to-day more
particularly, should not be blamed for falling back.
He should be shot or hanged afterwards to
encourage the others; but he should not be vilified
in newspapers, for that is want of tact and waste
of space.
He has, let us say, been in the service
of the Empress for, perhaps, four years. He will
leave in another two years. He has no inherited
morals, and four years are not sufficient to drive
toughness into his fibre, or to teach him how holy
a thing is his Regiment. He wants to drink, he
wants to enjoy himself in India he wants
to save money and he does not in the least
like getting hurt. He has received just sufficient
education to make him understand half the purport of
the orders he receives, and to speculate on the nature
of clean, incised, and shattering wounds. Thus,
if he is told to deploy under fire preparatory to
an attack, he knows that he runs a very great risk
of being killed while he is deploying, and suspects
that he is being thrown away to gain ten minutes’
time. He may either deploy with desperate swiftness,
or he may shuffle, or bunch, or break, according to
the discipline under which he has lain for four years.
Armed with imperfect knowledge, cursed
with the rudiments of an imagination, hampered by
the intense selfishness of the lower classes, and
unsupported by any regimental associations, this young
man is suddenly introduced to an enemy who in eastern
lands is always ugly, generally tall and hairy, and
frequently noisy. If he looks to the right and
the left and sees old soldiers men of twelve
years’ service, who, he knows, know what they
are about taking a charge, rush, or demonstration
without embarrassment, he is consoled and applies
his shoulder to the butt of his rifle with a stout
heart. His peace is the greater if he hears a
senior, who has taught him his soldiering and broken
his head on occasion, whispering: ’They’ll
shout and carry on like this for five minutes.
Then they’ll rush in, and then we’ve got
’em by the short hairs!’
But, on the other hand, if he sees
only men of his own term of service, turning white
and playing with their triggers and saying: ‘What
the Hell’s up now?’ while the Company Commanders
are sweating into their sword-hilts and shouting:
’Front-rank, fix bayonets. Steady there steady!
Sight for three hundred no, for five!
Lie down, all! Steady! Front-rank kneel!’
and so forth, he becomes unhappy; and grows acutely
miserable when he hears a comrade turn over with the
rattle of fire-irons falling into the fender, and
the grunt of a pole-axed ox. If he can be moved
about a little and allowed to watch the effect of
his own fire on the enemy he feels merrier, and may
be then worked up to the blind passion of fighting,
which is, contrary to general belief, controlled by
a chilly Devil and shakes men like ague. If he
is not moved about, and begins to feel cold at the
pit of the stomach, and in that crisis is badly mauled
and hears orders that were never given, he will break,
and he will break badly; and of all things under the
light of the Sun there is nothing more terrible than
a broken British regiment. When the worst comes
to the worst and the panic is really epidemic, the
men must be e’en let go, and the Company Commanders
had better escape to the enemy and stay there for safety’s
sake. If they can be made to come again they are
not pleasant men to meet; because they will not break
twice.
About thirty years from this date,
when we have succeeded in half-educating everything
that wears trousers, our Army will be a beautifully
unreliable machine. It will know too much and
it will do too little. Later still, when all
men are at the mental level of the officer of to-day,
it will sweep the earth. Speaking roughly, you
must employ either blackguards or gentlemen, or, best
of all, blackguards commanded by gentlemen, to do
butcher’s work with efficiency and despatch.
The ideal soldier should, of course, think for himself the
Pocket-book says so. Unfortunately, to
attain this virtue he has to pass through the phase
of thinking of himself, and that is misdirected genius.
A blackguard may be slow to think for himself, but
he is genuinely anxious to kill, and a little punishment
teaches him how to guard his own skin and perforate
another’s. A powerfully prayerful Highland
Regiment, officered by rank Presbyterians, is, perhaps,
one degree more terrible in action than a hard-bitten
thousand of irresponsible Irish ruffians led by most
improper young unbelievers. But these things
prove the rule which is that the midway
men are not to be trusted alone. They have ideas
about the value of life and an upbringing that has
not taught them to go on and take the chances.
They are carefully unprovided with a backing of comrades
who have been shot over, and until that backing is
re-introduced, as a great many Regimental Commanders
intend it shall be, they are more liable to disgrace
themselves than the size of the Empire or the dignity
of the Army allows. Their officers are as good
as good can be, because their training begins early,
and God has arranged that a clean-run youth of the
British middle classes shall, in the matter of backbone,
brains, and bowels, surpass all other youths.
For this reason a child of eighteen will stand up,
doing nothing, with a tin sword in his hand and joy
in his heart until he is dropped. If he dies,
he dies like a gentleman. If he lives, he writes
Home that he has been ‘potted,’ ‘sniped,’
‘chipped,’ or ‘cut over,’ and
sits down to besiege Government for a wound-gratuity
until the next little war breaks out, when he perjures
himself before a Medical Board, blarneys his Colonel,
burns incense round his Adjutant, and is allowed to
go to the Front once more.
Which homily brings me directly to
a brace of the most finished little fiends that ever
banged drum or tootled fife in the Band of a British
Regiment. They ended their sinful career by open
and flagrant mutiny and were shot for it. Their
names were Jakin and Lew Piggy Lew and
they were bold, bad drummer-boys, both of them frequently
birched by the Drum-Major of the Fore and Aft.
Jakin was a stunted child of fourteen,
and Lew was about the same age. When not looked
after, they smoked and drank. They swore habitually
after the manner of the Barrack-room, which is cold-swearing
and comes from between clinched teeth; and they fought
religiously once a week. Jakin had sprung from
some London gutter, and may or may not have passed
through Dr. Barnardo’s hands ere he arrived at
the dignity of drummer-boy. Lew could remember
nothing except the Regiment and the delight of listening
to the Band from his earliest years. He hid somewhere
in his grimy little soul a genuine love for music,
and was most mistakenly furnished with the head of
a cherub: insomuch that beautiful ladies who
watched the Regiment in church were wont to speak
of him as a ‘darling.’ They never
heard his vitriolic comments on their manners and
morals, as he walked back to barracks with the Band
and matured fresh causes of offence against Jakin.
The other drummer-boys hated both
lads on account of their illogical conduct. Jakin
might be pounding Lew, or Lew might be rubbing Jakin’s
head in the dirt, but any attempt at aggression on
the part of an outsider was met by the combined forces
of Lew and Jakin; and the consequences were painful.
The boys were the Ishmaels of the corps, but wealthy
Ishmaels, for they sold battles in alternate weeks
for the sport of the barracks when they were not pitted
against other boys; and thus amassed money.
On this particular day there was dissension
in the camp. They had just been convicted afresh
of smoking, which is bad for little boys who use plug-tobacco,
and Lew’s contention was that Jakin had ’stunk
so ’orrid bad from keepin’ the pipe in
pocket,’ that he and he alone was responsible
for the birching they were both tingling under.
’I tell you I ‘id the
pipe back o’ barracks,’ said Jakin pacifically.
‘You’re a bloomin’ liar,’
said Lew without heat.
‘You’re a bloomin’
little barstard,’ said Jakin, strong in the
knowledge that his own ancestry was unknown.
Now there is one word in the extended
vocabulary of barrack-room abuse that cannot pass
without comment. You may call a man a thief and
risk nothing. You may even call him a coward
without finding more than a boot whiz past your ear,
but you must not call a man a bastard unless you are
prepared to prove it on his front teeth.
‘You might ha’ kep’
that till I wasn’t so sore,’ said Lew sorrowfully,
dodging round Jakin’s guard.
‘I’ll make you sorer,’
said Jakin genially, and got home on Lew’s alabaster
forehead. All would have gone well and this story,
as the books say, would never have been written, had
not his evil fate prompted the Bazar-Sergeant’s
son, a long, employless man of five-and-twenty, to
put in an appearance after the first round. He
was eternally in need of money, and knew that the
boys had silver.
‘Fighting again,’ said
he. ’I’ll report you to my father,
and he’ll report you to the Colour-Sergeant.’
‘What’s that to you?’
said Jakin with an unpleasant dilation of the nostrils.
’Oh! nothing to me.
You’ll get into trouble, and you’ve been
up too often to afford that.’
‘What the Hell do you know about
what we’ve done?’ asked Lew the Seraph.
‘You aren’t in the Army, you lousy,
cadging civilian.’
He closed in on the man’s left flank.
‘Jes’ ‘cause you
find two gentlemen settlin’ their diff’rences
with their fistes you stick in your ugly nose where
you aren’t wanted. Run ’ome to your
‘arf-caste slut of a Ma or we’ll
give you what-for,’ said Jakin.
The man attempted reprisals by knocking
the boys’ heads together. The scheme would
have succeeded had not Jakin punched him vehemently
in the stomach, or had Lew refrained from kicking
his shins. They fought together, bleeding and
breathless, for half an hour, and, after heavy punishment,
triumphantly pulled down their opponent as terriers
pull down a jackal.
‘Now,’ gasped Jakin, ‘I’ll
give you what-for.’ He proceeded to pound
the man’s features while Lew stamped on the outlying
portions of his anatomy. Chivalry is not a strong
point in the composition of the average drummer-boy.
He fights, as do his betters, to make his mark.
Ghastly was the ruin that escaped,
and awful was the wrath of the Bazar-Sergeant.
Awful, too, was the scene in Orderly-room when the
two reprobates appeared to answer the charge of half-murdering
a ‘civilian.’ The Bazar-Sergeant
thirsted for a criminal action, and his son lied.
The boys stood to attention while the black clouds
of evidence accumulated.
’You little devils are more
trouble than the rest of the Regiment put together,’
said the Colonel angrily. ’One might as
well admonish thistledown, and I can’t well
put you in cells or under stoppages. You must
be birched again.’
‘Beg y’ pardon, Sir.
Can’t we say nothin’ in our own defence,
Sir?’ shrilled Jakin.
‘Hey! What? Are you
going to argue with me?’ said the Colonel.
‘No, Sir,’ said Lew.
’But if a man come to you, Sir, and said he was
going to report you, Sir, for ’aving a bit of
a turn-up with a friend, Sir, an’ wanted to
get money out o’ you, Sir ’
The Orderly-room exploded in a roar
of laughter. ‘Well?’ said the Colonel.
’That was what that measly jarnwar
there did, Sir, and ’e’d ‘a’
done it, Sir, if we ’adn’t prevented
’im. We didn’t ’it ’im
much, Sir. ’E ‘adn’t no manner
o’ right to interfere with us, Sir. I don’t
mind bein’ birched by the Drum-Major, Sir, nor
yet reported by any Corp’ral, but I’m but
I don’t think it’s fair, Sir, for a civilian
to come an’ talk over a man in the Army.’
A second shout of laughter shook the
Orderly-room, but the Colonel was grave.
‘What sort of characters have
these boys?’ he asked of the Regimental Sergeant-Major.
‘Accordin’ to the Bandmaster,
Sir,’ returned that revered official the
only soul in the regiment whom the boys feared ’they
do everything but lie, Sir.’
‘Is it like we’d go for
that man for fun, Sir?’ said Lew, pointing to
the plaintiff.
‘Oh, admonished admonished!’
said the Colonel testily, and when the boys had gone
he read the Bazar-Sergeant’s son a lecture on
the sin of unprofitable meddling, and gave orders
that the Bandmaster should keep the Drums in better
discipline.
’If either of you comes to practice
again with so much as a scratch on your two ugly little
faces,’ thundered the Bandmaster, ’I’ll
tell the Drum-Major to take the skin off your backs.
Understand that, you young devils.’
Then he repented of his speech for
just the length of time that Lew, looking like a Seraph
in red worsted embellishments, took the place of one
of the trumpets in hospital and
rendered the echo of a battle-piece. Lew certainly
was a musician, and had often in his more exalted
moments expressed a yearning to master every instrument
of the Band.
‘There’s nothing to prevent
your becoming a Bandmaster, Lew,’ said the Bandmaster,
who had composed waltzes of his own, and worked day
and night in the interests of the Band.
‘What did he say?’ demanded Jakin after
practice.
‘’Said I might be a bloomin’
Bandmaster, an’ be asked in to ’ave
a glass o’ sherry-wine on Mess-nights.’
’Ho! ‘Said you might
be a bloomin’ non-combatant, did ’e!
That’s just about wot ’e would say.
When I’ve put in my boy’s service it’s
a bloomin’ shame that doesn’t count for
pension I’ll take on as a privit.
Then I’ll be a Lance in a year knowin’
what I know about the ins an’ outs o’
things. In three years I’ll be a bloomin’
Sergeant. I won’t marry then, not I!
I’ll ‘old on and learn the orf’cers’
ways an’ apply for exchange into a reg’ment
that doesn’t know all about me. Then I’ll
be a bloomin’ orf’cer. Then I’ll
ask you to ‘ave a glass o’ sherry-wine,
Mister Lew, an’ you’ll bloomin’
well ’ave to stay in the hanty-room while
the Mess-Sergeant brings it to your dirty ‘ands.’
’’S’pose I’m
going to be a Bandmaster? Not I, quite. I’ll
be a orf’cer too. There’s nothin’
like takin’ to a thing an’ stickin’
to it, the Schoolmaster says. The reg’ment
don’t go ’ome for another seven years.
I’ll be a Lance then or near to.’
Thus the boys discussed their futures,
and conducted themselves piously for a week.
That is to say, Lew started a flirtation with the
Colour-Sergeant’s daughter, aged thirteen ’not,’
as he explained to Jakin, ‘with any intention
o’ matrimony, but by way o’ keepin’
my ’and in.’ And the black-haired
Cris Delighan enjoyed that flirtation more than previous
ones, and the other drummer-boys raged furiously together,
and Jakin preached sermons on the dangers of ‘bein’
tangled along o’ petticoats.’
But neither love nor virtue would
have held Lew long in the paths of propriety had not
the rumour gone abroad that the Regiment was to be
sent on active service, to take part in a war which,
for the sake of brevity, we will call ‘The War
of the Lost Tribes.’
The barracks had the rumour almost
before the Mess-room, and of all the nine hundred
men in barracks not ten had seen a shot fired in anger.
The Colonel had, twenty years ago, assisted at a Frontier
expedition; one of the Majors had seen service at the
Cape; a confirmed deserter in E Company had helped
to clear streets in Ireland; but that was all.
The Regiment had been put by for many years.
The overwhelming mass of its rank and file had from
three to four years’ service; the non-commissioned
officers were under thirty years old; and men and
sergeants alike had forgotten to speak of the stories
written in brief upon the Colours the New
Colours that had been formally blessed by an Archbishop
in England ere the Regiment came away.
They wanted to go to the Front they
were enthusiastically anxious to go but
they had no knowledge of what war meant, and there
was none to tell them. They were an educated
regiment, the percentage of school-certificates in
their ranks was high, and most of the men could do
more than read and write. They had been recruited
in loyal observance of the territorial idea; but they
themselves had no notion of that idea. They were
made up of drafts from an over-populated manufacturing
district. The system had put flesh and muscle
upon their small bones, but it could not put heart
into the sons of those who for generations had done
overmuch work for over-scanty pay, had sweated in
drying-rooms, stooped over looms, coughed among white-lead,
and shivered on lime-barges. The men had found
food and rest in the Army, and now they were going
to fight ’niggers’ people who
ran away if you shook a stick at them. Wherefore
they cheered lustily when the rumour ran, and the
shrewd, clerkly non-commissioned officers speculated
on the chances of batta and of saving their pay.
At Headquarters men said: ’The Fore and
Fit have never been under fire within the last generation.
Let us, therefore, break them in easily by setting
them to guard lines of communication.’
And this would have been done but for the fact that
British Regiments were wanted badly wanted at
the Front, and there were doubtful Native Regiments
that could fill the minor duties. ’Brigade
’em with two strong Regiments,’ said Headquarters.
’They may be knocked about a bit, though they’ll
learn their business before they come through.
Nothing like a night-alarm and a little cutting up
of stragglers to make a Regiment smart in the field.
Wait till they’ve had half-a-dozen sentries’
throats cut.’
The Colonel wrote with delight that
the temper of his men was excellent, that the Regiment
was all that could be wished and as sound as a bell.
The Majors smiled with a sober joy, and the subalterns
waltzed in pairs down the Mess-room after dinner, and
nearly shot themselves at revolver-practice.
But there was consternation in the hearts of Jakin
and Lew. What was to be done with the Drums?
Would the Band go to the Front? How many of the
Drums would accompany the Regiment?
They took counsel together, sitting
in a tree and smoking.
‘It’s more than a bloomin’
toss-up they’ll leave us be’ind at the
Depot with the women. You’ll like that,’
said Jakin sarcastically.
‘’Cause o’ Cris,
y’ mean? Wot’s a woman, or a ‘olé
bloomin’ depot o’ women, ‘longside
o’ the chanst of field-service? You know
I’m as keen on goin’ as you,’ said
Lew.
‘’Wish I was a bloomin’
bugler,’ said Jakin sadly. ’They’ll
take Tom Kidd along, that I can plaster a wall with,
an’ like as not they won’t take us.’
‘Then let’s go an’
make Tom Kidd so bloomin’ sick ’e can’t
bugle no more. You ’old ’is ‘ands
an’ I’ll kick him,’ said Lew, wriggling
on the branch.
‘That ain’t no good neither.
We ain’t the sort o’ characters to presoom
on our rep’tations they’re bad.
If they leave the Band at the Depot we don’t
go, and no error there. If they take the
Band we may get cast for medical unfitness. Are
you medical fit, Piggy?’ said Jakin, digging
Lew in the ribs with force.
‘Yus,’ said Lew with an
oath. ’The Doctor says your ’eart’s
weak through smokin’ on an empty stummick.
Throw a chest an’ I’ll try yer.’
Jakin threw out his chest, which Lew
smote with all his might. Jakin turned very pale,
gasped, crowed, screwed up his eyes, and said ’That’s
all right.’
‘You’ll do,’ said
Lew. ’I’ve ‘eard o’ men
dyin’ when you ’it ’em fair on the
breastbone.’
‘Don’t bring us no nearer
goin’, though,’ said Jakin. ’Do
you know where we’re ordered?’
‘Gawd knows, an’ ’E
won’t split on a pal. Somewheres up to the
Front to kill Paythans hairy big beggars
that turn you inside out if they get ‘old o’
you. They say their women are good-looking, too.’
‘Any loot?’ asked the abandoned Jakin.
‘Not a bloomin’ anna,
they say, unless you dig up the ground an’ see
what the niggers ’ave ‘id.
They’re a poor lot.’ Jakin stood upright
on the branch and gazed across the plain.
‘Lew,’ said he, ’there’s
the Colonel coming. ’Colonel’s a good
old beggar. Let’s go an’ talk to
‘im.’
Lew nearly fell out of the tree at
the audacity of the suggestion. Like Jakin he
feared not God, neither regarded he Man, but there
are limits even to the audacity of drummer-boy, and
to speak to a Colonel was
But Jakin had slid down the trunk
and doubled in the direction of the Colonel.
That officer was walking wrapped in thought and visions
of a C.B. yes, even a K.C.B., for had he
not at command one of the best Regiments of the Line the
Fore and Fit? And he was aware of two small boys
charging down upon him. Once before it had been
solemnly reported to him that ‘the Drums were
in a state of mutiny,’ Jakin and Lew being the
ringleaders. This looked like an organised conspiracy.
The boys halted at twenty yards, walked
to the regulation four paces, and saluted together,
each as well-set-up as a ramrod and little taller.
The Colonel was in a genial mood;
the boys appeared very forlorn and unprotected on
the desolate plain, and one of them was handsome.
‘Well!’ said the Colonel,
recognising them. ’Are you going to pull
me down in the open? I’m sure I never interfere
with you, even though’ he sniffed
suspiciously ’you have been smoking.’
It was time to strike while the iron
was hot. Their hearts beat tumultuously.
‘Beg y’ pardon, Sir,’
began Jakin. ’The Reg’ment’s
ordered on active service, Sir?’
‘So I believe,’ said the Colonel courteously.
‘Is the Band goin’, Sir?’
said both together. Then, without pause, ‘We’re
goin’, Sir, ain’t we?’
‘You!’ said the Colonel,
stepping back the more fully to take in the two small
figures. ‘You! You’d die in the
first march.’
’No, we wouldn’t, Sir.
We can march with the Reg’ment anywheres p’rade
an’ anywhere else,’ said Jakin.
’If Tom Kidd goes ‘e’ll
shut up like a clasp-knife,’ said Lew. ’Tom
’as very-close veins in both ‘is legs,
Sir.’
‘Very how much?’
’Very-close veins, Sir.
That’s why they swells after long p’rade,
Sir. If ‘e can go, we can go, Sir.’
Again the Colonel looked at them long and intently.
‘Yes, the Band is going,’
he said as gravely as though he had been addressing
a brother officer. ’Have you any parents,
either of you two?’
‘No, Sir,’ rejoicingly
from Lew and Jakin. ’We’re both orphans,
Sir. There’s no one to be considered of
on our account, Sir.’
’You poor little sprats,
and you want to go up to the Front with the Regiment,
do you? Why?’
‘I’ve wore the Queen’s
Uniform for two years,’ said Jakin. ’It’s
very ‘ard, Sir, that a man don’t get no
recompense for doin’ of ’is dooty, Sir.’
‘An’ an’
if I don’t go, Sir,’ interrupted Lew, ’the
Bandmaster ’e says ‘e’ll catch an’
make a bloo a blessed musician o’
me, Sir. Before I’ve seen any service,
Sir.’
The Colonel made no answer for a long
time. Then he said quietly: ’If you’re
passed by the Doctor I daresay you can go. I shouldn’t
smoke if I were you.’
The boys saluted and disappeared.
The Colonel walked home and told the story to his
wife, who nearly cried over it. The Colonel was
well pleased. If that was the temper of the children,
what would not the men do?
Jakin and Lew entered the boys’
barrack-room with great stateliness, and refused to
hold any conversation with their comrades for at least
ten minutes. Then, bursting with pride, Jakin
drawled: ’I’ve bin intervooin’
the Colonel. Good old beggar is the Colonel.
Says I to ‘im, “Colonel,” says I,
“let me go to the Front, along o’ the
Reg’ment.” “To the Front
you shall go,” says ‘e, “an’
I only wish there was more like you among the dirty
little devils that bang the bloomin’ drums.”
Kidd, if you throw your ’courtrements at me for
tellin’ you the truth to your own advantage,
your legs’ll swell.’
None the less there was a Battle-Royal
in the barrack-room, for the boys were consumed with
envy and hate, and neither Jakin nor Lew behaved in
conciliatory wise.
‘I’m goin’ out to
say adoo to my girl,’ said Lew, to cap the climax.
‘Don’t none o’ you touch my kit because
it’s wanted for active service; me bein’
specially invited to go by the Colonel.’
He strolled forth and whistled in
the clump of trees at the back of the Married Quarters
till Cris came to him, and, the preliminary kisses
being given and taken, Lew began to explain the situation.
‘I’m goin’ to the
Front with the Reg’ment,’ he said valiantly.
‘Piggy, you’re a little
liar,’ said Cris, but her heart misgave her,
for Lew was not in the habit of lying.
‘Liar yourself, Cris,’
said Lew, slipping an arm round her. ’I’m
goin’. When the Reg’ment marches out
you’ll see me with ’em, all galliant and
gay. Give us another kiss, Cris, on the strength
of it.’
‘If you’d on’y a-stayed
at the Depot where you ought to ha’
bin you could get as many of ’em as as
you dam please,’ whimpered Cris, putting up
her mouth.
’It’s ’ard, Cris.
I grant you it’s ’ard. But what’s
a man to do? If I’d a-stayed at the Depot,
you wouldn’t think anything of me.’
’Like as not, but I’d
‘ave you with me, Piggy. An’
all the thinkin’ in the world isn’t like
kissin’.’
‘An’ all the kissin’
in the world isn’t like ‘avin’ a
medal to wear on the front o’ your coat.’
‘You won’t get no medal.’
‘Oh yus, I shall though.
Me an’ Jakin are the only acting-drummers that’ll
be took along. All the rest is full men, an’
we’ll get our medals with them.’
‘They might ha’ taken
anybody but you, Piggy. You’ll get killed you’re
so venturesome. Stay with me, Piggy darlin’,
down at the Depot, an’ I’ll love you true
for ever.’
‘Ain’t you goin’
to do that now, Cris? You said you was.’
‘O’ course I am, but th’
other’s more comfortable. Wait till you’ve
growed a bit, Piggy. You aren’t no taller
than me now.’
‘I’ve bin in the Army
for two years an’ I’m not goin’ to
get out of a chanst o’ seein’ service,
an’ don’t you try to make me do so.
I’ll come back, Cris, an’ when I take
on as a man I’ll marry you marry you
when I’m a Lance.’
‘Promise, Piggy?’
Lew reflected on the future as arranged
by Jakin a short time previously, but Cris’s
mouth was very near to his own.
‘I promise, s’elp me Gawd!’ said
he.
Cris slid an arm round his neck.
’I won’t ‘old you
back no more, Piggy. Go away an’ get your
medal, an’ I’ll make you a new button-bag
as nice as I know how,’ she whispered.
‘Put some o’ your ‘air
into it, Cris, an’ I’ll keep it in my pocket
so long’s I’m alive.’
Then Cris wept anew, and the interview ended.
Public feeling among the drummer-boys
rose to fever pitch and the lives of Jakin and Lew
became unenviable. Not only had they been permitted
to enlist two years before the regulation boy’s
age fourteen but, by virtue,
it seemed, of their extreme youth, they were allowed
to go to the Front which thing had not happened
to acting-drummers within the knowledge of boy.
The Band which was to accompany the Regiment had been
cut down to the regulation twenty men, the surplus
returning to the ranks. Jakin and Lew were attached
to the Band as supernumeraries, though they would much
have preferred being Company buglers.
‘’Don’t matter much,’
said Jakin after the medical inspection. ’Be
thankful that we’re ’lowed to go at all.
The Doctor ’e said that if we could stand what
we took from the Bazar-Sergeant’s son we’d
stand pretty nigh anything.’
‘Which we will,’ said
Lew, looking tenderly at the ragged and ill-made housewife
that Cris had given him, with a lock of her hair worked
into a sprawling ‘L’ upon the cover.
‘It was the best I could,’
she sobbed. ’I wouldn’t let mother
nor the Sergeants’ tailor ‘elp me.
Keep it always, Piggy, an’ remember I love you
true.’
They marched to the railway station,
nine hundred and sixty strong, and every soul in cantonments
turned out to see them go. The drummers gnashed
their teeth at Jakin and Lew marching with the Band,
the married women wept upon the platform, and the
Regiment cheered its noble self black in the face.
‘A nice level lot,’ said
the Colonel to the Second-in-Command as they watched
the first four companies entraining.
‘Fit to do anything,’
said the Second-in-Command enthusiastically.
’But it seems to me they’re a thought too
young and tender for the work in hand. It’s
bitter cold up at the Front now.’
‘They’re sound enough,’
said the Colonel. ’We must take our chance
of sick casualties.’
So they went northward, ever northward,
past droves and droves of camels, armies of camp followers,
and legions of laden mules, the throng thickening
day by day, till with a shriek the train pulled up
at a hopelessly congested junction where six lines
of temporary track accommodated six forty-waggon trains;
where whistles blew, Babus sweated, and Commissariat
officers swore from dawn till far into the night amid
the wind-driven chaff of the fodder-bales and the lowing
of a thousand steers.
‘Hurry up you’re
badly wanted at the Front,’ was the message that
greeted the Fore and Aft, and the occupants of the
Red Cross carriages told the same tale.
‘’Tisn’t so much
the bloomin’ fightin’,’ gasped a
headbound trooper of Hussars to a knot of admiring
Fore and Afts. ’’Tisn’t so much the
bloomin’ fightin’, though there’s
enough o’ that. It’s the bloomin’
food an’ the bloomin’ climate. Frost
all night ’cept when it hails, and biling sun
all day, and the water stinks fit to knock you down.
I got my ‘ead chipped like a egg; I’ve
got pneumonia too, an’ my guts is all out o’
order. ‘Tain’t no bloomin’ picnic
in those parts, I can tell you.’
‘Wot are the niggers like?’ demanded a
private.
‘There’s some prisoners
in that train yonder. Go an’ look at ’em.
They’re the aristocracy o’ the country.
The common folk are a dashed sight uglier. If
you want to know what they fight with, reach under
my seat an’ pull out the long knife that’s
there.’
They dragged out and beheld for the
first time the grim, bone-handled, triangular Afghan
knife. It was almost as long as Lew.
‘That’s the thing to jint
ye,’ said the trooper feebly. ’It
can take off a man’s arm at the shoulder as
easy as slicing butter. I halved the beggar that
used that ’un, but there’s more of his
likes up above. They don’t understand thrustin’,
but they’re devils to slice.’
The men strolled across the tracks
to inspect the Afghan prisoners. They were unlike
any ‘niggers’ that the Fore and Aft had
ever met these huge, black-haired, scowling
sons of the Beni-Israel. As the men stared the
Afghans spat freely and muttered one to another with
lowered eyes.
‘My eyes! Wot awful swine!’
said Jakin, who was in the rear of the procession.
’Say, old man, how you got puckrowed,
eh? Kiswasti you wasn’t hanged for your
ugly face, hey?’
The tallest of the company turned,
his leg-irons clanking at the movement, and stared
at the boy. ‘See!’ he cried to his
fellows in Pushto. ’They send children
against us. What a people, and what fools!’
‘Hya!’ said Jakin,
nodding his head cheerily. ’You go down-country.
Khana get, peenikapanee get live
like a bloomin’ Raja ke marfik.
That’s a better bandobust than baynit
get it in your innards. Good-bye, olé
man. Take care o’ your beautiful figure-’ad,
an’ try to look kushy.’
The men laughed and fell in for their
first march, when they began to realise that a soldier’s
life was not all beer and skittles. They were
much impressed with the size and bestial ferocity of
the niggers whom they had now learned to call ‘Paythans,’
and more with the exceeding discomfort of their own
surroundings. Twenty old soldiers in the corps
would have taught them how to make themselves moderately
snug at night, but they had no old soldiers, and,
as the troops on the line of march said, ‘they
lived like pigs.’ They learned the heart-breaking
cussedness of camp-kitchens and camels and the depravity
of an E.P. tent and a wither-wrung mule. They
studied animalculae in water, and developed a few
cases of dysentery in their study.
At the end of their third march they
were disagreeably surprised by the arrival in their
camp of a hammered iron slug which, fired from a steady
rest at seven hundred yards, flicked out the brains
of a private seated by the fire. This robbed
them of their peace for a night, and was the beginning
of a long-range fire carefully calculated to that
end. In the daytime they saw nothing except an
unpleasant puff of smoke from a crag above the line
of march. At night there were distant spurts
of flame and occasional casualties, which set the whole
camp blazing into the gloom and, occasionally, into
opposite tents. Then they swore vehemently and
vowed that this was magnificent, but not war.
Indeed it was not. The Regiment
could not halt for reprisals against the sharpshooters
of the countryside. Its duty was to go forward
and make connection with the Scotch and Gurkha troops
with which it was brigaded. The Afghans knew
this, and knew too, after their first tentative shots,
that they were dealing with a raw regiment. Thereafter
they devoted themselves to the task of keeping the
Fore and Aft on the strain. Not for anything
would they have taken equal liberties with a seasoned
corps with the wicked little Gurkhas, whose
delight it was to lie out in the open on a dark night
and stalk their stalkers with the terrible,
big men dressed in women’s clothes, who could
be heard praying to their God in the night-watches,
and whose peace of mind no amount of ‘sniping’
could shake or with those vile Sikhs, who
marched so ostentatiously unprepared and who dealt
out such grim reward to those who tried to profit
by that unpreparedness. This white regiment was
different quite different. It slept
like a hog, and, like a hog, charged in every direction
when it was roused. Its sentries walked with
a footfall that could be heard for a quarter of a
mile, would fire at anything that moved even
a driven donkey and when they had once
fired, could be scientifically ‘rushed’
and laid out a horror and an offence against the morning
sun. Then there were camp-followers who straggled
and could be cut up without fear. Their shrieks
would disturb the white boys, and the loss of their
services would inconvenience them sorely.
Thus, at every march, the hidden enemy
became bolder and the regiment writhed and twisted
under attacks it could not avenge. The crowning
triumph was a sudden night-rush ending in the cutting
of many tent-ropes, the collapse of the sodden canvas,
and a glorious knifing of the men who struggled and
kicked below. It was a great deed, neatly carried
out, and it shook the already shaken nerves of the
Fore and Aft. All the courage that they had been
required to exercise up to this point was the ‘two
o’clock in the morning courage’; and, so
far, they had only succeeded in shooting their comrades
and losing their sleep.
Sullen, discontented, cold, savage,
sick, with their uniforms dulled and unclean, the
Fore and Aft joined their Brigade.
‘I hear you had a tough time
of it coming up,’ said the Brigadier. But
when he saw the hospital-sheets his face fell.
‘This is bad,’ said he
to himself. ‘They’re as rotten as
sheep.’ And aloud to the Colonel ’I’m
afraid we can’t spare you just yet. We want
all we have, else I should have given you ten days
to recover in.’
The Colonel winced. ‘On
my honour, Sir,’ he returned, ’there is
not the least necessity to think of sparing us.
My men have been rather mauled and upset without a
fair return. They only want to go in somewhere
where they can see what’s before them.’
‘Can’t say I think much
of the Fore and Fit,’ said the Brigadier in
confidence to his Brigade-Major. ’They’ve
lost all their soldiering, and, by the trim of them,
might have marched through the country from the other
side. A more fagged-out set of men I never put
eyes on.’
’Oh, they’ll improve as
the work goes on. The parade gloss has been rubbed
off a little, but they’ll put on field polish
before long,’ said the Brigade-Major. ’They’ve
been mauled, and they don’t quite understand
it.’
They did not. All the hitting
was on one side, and it was cruelly hard hitting with
accessories that made them sick. There was also
the real sickness that laid hold of a strong man and
dragged him howling to the grave. Worst of all,
their officers knew just as little of the country
as the men themselves, and looked as if they did.
The Fore and Aft were in a thoroughly unsatisfactory
condition, but they believed that all would be well
if they could once get a fair go-in at the enemy.
Pot-shots up and down the valleys were unsatisfactory,
and the bayonet never seemed to get a chance.
Perhaps it was as well, for a long-limbed Afghan with
a knife had a reach of eight feet, and could carry
away lead that would disable three Englishmen.
The Fore and Fit would like some rifle-practice
at the enemy all seven hundred rifles blazing
together. That wish showed the mood of the men.
The Gurkhas walked into their camp,
and in broken, barrack-room English strove to fraternise
with them; offered them pipes of tobacco and stood
them treat at the canteen. But the Fore and Aft,
not knowing much of the nature of the Gurkhas, treated
them as they would treat any other ‘niggers,’
and the little men in green trotted back to their
firm friends the Highlanders, and with many grins confided
to them: ’That dam white regiment no dam
use. Sulky ugh! Dirty ugh!
Hya, any tot for Johnny?’ Whereat the Highlanders
smote the Gurkhas as to the head, and told them not
to vilify a British Regiment, and the Gurkhas grinned
cavernously, for the Highlanders were their elder brothers
and entitled to the privileges of kinship. The
common soldier who touches a Gurkha is more than likely
to have his head sliced open.
Three days later the Brigadier arranged
a battle according to the rules of war and the peculiarity
of the Afghan temperament. The enemy were massing
in inconvenient strength among the hills, and the moving
of many green standards warned him that the tribes
were ‘up’ in aid of the Afghan regular
troops. A squadron and a half of Bengal Lancers
represented the available Cavalry, and two screw-guns
borrowed from a column thirty miles away the Artillery
at the General’s disposal.
’If they stand, as I’ve
a very strong notion that they will, I fancy we shall
see an infantry fight that will be worth watching,’
said the Brigadier. ’We’ll do it
in style. Each regiment shall be played into
action by its Band, and we’ll hold the Cavalry
in reserve.’
‘For all the reserve?’ somebody
asked.
‘For all the reserve; because
we’re going to crumple them up,’ said
the Brigadier, who was an extraordinary Brigadier,
and did not believe in the value of a reserve when
dealing with Asiatics. Indeed, when you come
to think of it, had the British Army consistently waited
for reserves in all its little affairs, the boundaries
of Our Empire would have stopped at Brighton beach.
That battle was to be a glorious battle.
The three regiments debouching from
three separate gorges, after duly crowning the heights
above, were to converge from the centre, left, and
right upon what we will call the Afghan army, then
stationed towards the lower extremity of a flat-bottomed
valley. Thus it will be seen that three sides
of the valley practically belonged to the English,
while the fourth was strictly Afghan property.
In the event of defeat the Afghans had the rocky hills
to fly to, where the fire from the guerilla tribes
in aid would cover their retreat. In the event
of victory these same tribes would rush down and lend
their weight to the rout of the British.
The screw-guns were to shell the head
of each Afghan rush that was made in close formation,
and the Cavalry, held in reserve in the right valley,
were to gently stimulate the break-up which would follow
on the combined attack. The Brigadier, sitting
upon a rock overlooking the valley, would watch the
battle unrolled at his feet. The Fore and Aft
would debouch from the central gorge, the Gurkhas from
the left, and the Highlanders from the right, for
the reason that the left flank of the enemy seemed
as though it required the most hammering. It
was not every day that an Afghan force would take ground
in the open, and the Brigadier was resolved to make
the most of it.
‘If we only had a few more men,’
he said plaintively, ’we could surround the
creatures and crumple ’em up thoroughly.
As it is, I’m afraid we can only cut them up
as they run. It’s a great pity.’
The Fore and Aft had enjoyed unbroken
peace for five days, and were beginning, in spite
of dysentery, to recover their nerve. But they
were not happy, for they did not know the work in hand,
and had they known, would not have known how to do
it. Throughout those five days in which old soldiers
might have taught them the craft of the game, they
discussed together their misadventures in the past how
such an one was alive at dawn and dead ere the dusk,
and with what shrieks and struggles such another had
given up his soul under the Afghan knife. Death
was a new and horrible thing to the sons of mechanics
who were used to die decently of zymotic disease;
and their careful conservation in barracks had done
nothing to make them look upon it with less dread.
Very early in the dawn the bugles
began to blow, and the Fore and Aft, filled with a
misguided enthusiasm, turned out without waiting for
a cup of coffee and a biscuit; and were rewarded by
being kept under arms in the cold while the other
regiments leisurely prepared for the fray. All
the world knows that it is ill taking the breeks off
a Highlander. It is much iller to try to make
him stir unless he is convinced of the necessity for
haste.
The Fore and Aft waited, leaning upon
their rifles and listening to the protests of their
empty stomachs. The Colonel did his best to remedy
the default of lining as soon as it was borne in upon
him that the affair would not begin at once, and so
well did he succeed that the coffee was just ready
when the men moved off, their Band leading.
Even then there had been a mistake in time, and the
Fore and Aft came out into the valley ten minutes
before the proper hour. Their Band wheeled to
the right after reaching the open, and retired behind
a little rocky knoll, still playing while the regiment
went past.
It was not a pleasant sight that opened
on the uninstructed view, for the lower end of the
valley appeared to be filled by an army in position real
and actual regiments attired in red coats, and of
this there was no doubt firing Martini-Henry
bullets which cut up the ground a hundred yards in
front of the leading company. Over that pock-marked
ground the regiment had to pass, and it opened the
ball with a general and profound courtesy to the piping
pickets; ducking in perfect time, as though it had
been brazed on a rod. Being half-capable of thinking
for itself, it fired a volley by the simple process
of pitching its rifle into its shoulder and pulling
the trigger. The bullets may have accounted for
some of the watchers on the hillside, but they certainly
did not affect the mass of enemy in front, while the
noise of the rifles drowned any orders that might
have been given.
‘Good God!’ said the Brigadier,
sitting on the rock high above all. ’That
regiment has spoilt the whole show. Hurry up the
others, and let the screw-guns get off.’
But the screw-guns, in working round
the heights, had stumbled upon a wasp’s nest
of a small mud fort which they incontinently shelled
at eight hundred yards, to the huge discomfort of
the occupants, who were unaccustomed to weapons of
such devilish precision.
The Fore and Aft continued to go forward,
but with shortened stride. Where were the other
regiments, and why did these niggers use Martinis?
They took open order instinctively, lying down and
firing at random, rushing a few paces forward and
lying down again, according to the regulations.
Once in this formation, each man felt himself desperately
alone, and edged in towards his fellow for comfort’s
sake.
Then the crack of his neighbour’s
rifle at his ear led him to fire as rapidly as he
could again for the sake of the comfort
of the noise. The reward was not long delayed.
Five volleys plunged the files in banked smoke impenetrable
to the eye, and the bullets began to take ground twenty
or thirty yards in front of the firers, as the weight
of the bayonet dragged down and to the right arms
wearied with holding the kick of the leaping Martini.
The Company Commanders peered helplessly through the
smoke, the more nervous mechanically trying to fan
it away with their helmets.
‘High and to the left!’
bawled a Captain till he was hoarse. ’No
good! Cease firing, and let it drift away a bit.’
Three and four times the bugles shrieked
the order, and when it was obeyed the Fore and Aft
looked that their foe should be lying before them
in mown swaths of men. A light wind drove the
smoke to leeward, and showed the enemy still in position
and apparently unaffected. A quarter of a ton
of lead had been buried a furlong in front of them,
as the ragged earth attested.
That was not demoralising to the Afghans,
who have not European nerves. They were waiting
for the mad riot to die down, and were firing quietly
into the heart of the smoke. A private of the
Fore and Aft spun up his company shrieking with agony,
another was kicking the earth and gasping, and a third,
ripped through the lower intestines by a jagged bullet,
was calling aloud on his comrades to put him out of
his pain. These were the casualties, and they
were not soothing to hear or see. The smoke cleared
to a dull haze.
Then the foe began to shout with a
great shouting, and a mass a black mass detached
itself from the main body, and rolled over the ground
at horrid speed. It was composed of, perhaps,
three hundred men, who would shout and fire and slash
if the rush of their fifty comrades who were determined
to die carried home. The fifty were Ghazis, half-maddened
with drugs and wholly mad with religious fanaticism.
When they rushed the British fire ceased, and in the
lull the order was given to close ranks and meet them
with the bayonet.
Any one who knew the business could
have told the Fore and Aft that the only way of dealing
with a Ghazi rush is by volleys at long ranges; because
a man who means to die, who desires to die, who will
gain heaven by dying, must, in nine cases out of ten,
kill a man who has a lingering prejudice in favour
of life. Where they should have closed and gone
forward, the Fore and Aft opened out and skirmished,
and where they should have opened out and fired, they
closed and waited.
A man dragged from his blankets half
awake and unfed is never in a pleasant frame of mind.
Nor does his happiness increase when he watches the
whites of the eyes of three hundred six-foot fiends
upon whose beards the foam is lying, upon whose tongues
is a roar of wrath, and in whose hands are yard-long
knives.
The Fore and Aft heard the Gurkha
bugles bringing that regiment forward at the double,
while the neighing of the Highland pipes came from
the left. They strove to stay where they were,
though the bayonets wavered down the line like the
oars of a ragged boat. Then they felt body to
body the amazing physical strength of their foes; a
shriek of pain ended the rush, and the knives fell
amid scenes not to be told. The men clubbed together
and smote blindly as often as not at their
own fellows. Their front crumpled like paper,
and the fifty Ghazis passed on; their backers, now
drunk with success, fighting as madly as they.
Then the rear-ranks were bidden to
close up, and the subalterns dashed into the stew alone.
For the rear-rank had heard the clamour in front,
the yells and the howls of pain, and had seen the dark
stale blood that makes afraid. They were not
going to stay. It was the rushing of the camps
over again. Let their officers go to Hell, if
they chose; they would get away from the knives.
‘Come on!’ shrieked the
subalterns, and their men, cursing them, drew back,
each closing into his neighbour and wheeling round.
Charteris and Devlin, subalterns of
the last company, faced their death alone in the belief
that their men would follow.
‘You’ve killed me, you
cowards,’ sobbed Devlin and dropped, cut from
the shoulder-strap to the centre of the chest, and
a fresh detachment of his men retreating, always retreating,
trampled him under foot as they made for the pass
whence they had emerged.
I kissed her in the kitchen and
I kissed her in the hall.
Child’un, child’un,
follow me!
Oh Golly, said the cook, is he gwine to kiss us
all?
Halla Halla Halla Hallelujah!
The Gurkhas were pouring through the
left gorge and over the heights at the double to the
invitation of their Regimental Quick-step. The
black rocks were crowned with dark green spiders as
the bugles gave tongue jubilantly:
In the morning! In the morning
by the bright light!
When Gabriel blows his trumpet in the morning!
The Gurkha rear-companies tripped
and blundered over loose stones. The front-files
halted for a moment to take stock of the valley and
to settle stray boot-laces. Then a happy little
sigh of contentment soughed down the ranks, and it
was as though the land smiled, for behold there below
was the enemy, and it was to meet them that the Gurkhas
had doubled so hastily. There was much enemy.
There would be amusement. The little men hitched
their kukris well to hand, and gaped expectantly
at their officers as terriers grin ere the stone is
cast for them to fetch. The Gurkhas’ ground
sloped downward to the valley, and they enjoyed a
fair view of the proceedings. They sat upon the
boulders to watch, for their officers were not going
to waste their wind in assisting to repulse a Ghazi
rush more than half a mile away. Let the white
men look to their own front.
‘Hi! yi!’ said the Subadar-Major,
who was sweating profusely. ’Dam fools
yonder, stand close-order! This is no time for
close-order, it is the time for volleys. Ugh!’
Horrified, amused, and indignant,
the Gurkhas beheld the retirement of the Fore and
Aft with a running chorus of oaths and commentaries.
’They run! The white men
run! Colonel Sahib, may we also do a little
running?’ murmured Runbir Thappa, the Senior
Jemadar.
But the Colonel would have none of
it. ’Let the beggars be cut up a little,’
said he wrathfully. ’’Serves ’em
right. They’ll be prodded into facing round
in a minute.’ He looked through his field-glasses,
and caught the glint of an officer’s sword.
’Beating ’em with the
flat damned conscripts! How the Ghazis
are walking into them!’ said he.
The Fore and Aft, heading back, bore
with them their officers. The narrowness of the
pass forced the mob into solid formation, and the
rear-rank delivered some sort of a wavering volley.
The Ghazis drew off, for they did not know what reserves
the gorge might hide. Moreover, it was never
wise to chase white men too far. They returned
as wolves return to cover, satisfied with the slaughter
that they had done, and only stopping to slash at
the wounded on the ground. A quarter of a mile
had the Fore and Aft retreated, and now, jammed in
the pass, was quivering with pain, shaken and demoralised
with fear, while the officers, maddened beyond control,
smote the men with the hilts and the flats of their
swords.
’Get back! Get back, you
cowards you women! Right about face column
of companies, form you hounds!’ shouted
the Colonel, and the subalterns swore aloud.
But the Regiment wanted to go to go anywhere
out of the range of those merciless knives. It
swayed to and fro irresolutely with shouts and outcries,
while from the right the Gurkhas dropped volley after
volley of cripple-stopper Snider bullets at long range
into the mob of the Ghazis returning to their own
troops.
The Fore and Aft Band, though protected
from direct fire by the rocky knoll under which it
had sat down, fled at the first rush. Jakin and
Lew would have fled also, but their short legs left
them fifty yards in the rear, and by the time the
Band had mixed with the regiment, they were painfully
aware that they would have to close in alone and unsupported.
‘Get back to that rock,’
gasped Jakin. ‘They won’t see us there.’
And they returned to the scattered
instruments of the Band; their hearts nearly bursting
their ribs.
‘Here’s a nice show for
us,’ said Jakin, throwing himself full
length on the ground. ‘A bloomin’
fine show for British Infantry! Oh, the devils!
They’ve gone an’ left us alone here!
Wot’ll we do?’
Lew took possession of a cast-off
water bottle, which naturally was full of canteen
rum, and drank till he coughed again.
‘Drink,’ said he shortly.’
They’ll come back in a minute or two you
see.’
Jakin drank, but there was no sign
of the Regiment’s return. They could hear
a dull clamour from the head of the valley of retreat,
and saw the Ghazis slink back, quickening their pace
as the Gurkhas fired at them.
‘We’re all that’s
left of the Band, an’ we’ll be cut up as
sure as death,’ said Jakin.
‘I’ll die game, then,’
said Lew thickly, fumbling with his tiny drummer’s
sword. The drink was working on his brain as it
was on Jakin’s.
‘’Old on! I know
something better than fightin’,’ said Jakin,
’stung by the splendour of a sudden thought’
due chiefly to rum. ’Tip our bloomin’
cowards yonder the word to come back. The Paythan
beggars are well away. Come on, Lew! We
won’t get hurt. Take the fife and give me
the drum. The Old Step for all your bloomin’
guts are worth! There’s a few of our men
coming back now. Stand up, ye drunken little defaulter.
By your right quick march!’
He slipped the drum-sling over his
shoulder, thrust the fife into Lew’s hand, and
the two boys marched out of the cover of the rock into
the open, making a hideous hash of the first bars of
the ’British Grenadiers.’
As Jakin had said, a few of the Fore
and Aft were coming back sullenly and shamefacedly
under the stimulus of blows and abuse; their red coats
shone at the head of the valley, and behind them were
wavering bayonets. But between this shattered
line and the enemy, who with Afghan suspicion feared
that the hasty retreat meant an ambush, and had not
moved therefore, lay half a mile of level ground dotted
only by the wounded.
The tune settled into full swing and
the boys kept shoulder to shoulder, Jakin banging
the drum as one possessed. The one fife made a
thin and pitiful squeaking, but the tune carried far,
even to the Gurkhas.
‘Come on, you dogs!’ muttered
Jakin to himself. ’Are we to play for hever?’
Lew was staring straight in front of him and marching
more stiffly than ever he had done on parade.
And in bitter mockery of the distant
mob, the old tune of the Old Line shrilled and rattled:
Some talk of Alexander,
And some of Hercules;
Of Hector and Lysander,
And such great
names as these!
There was a far-off clapping of hands
from the Gurkhas, and a roar from the Highlanders
in the distance, but never a shot was fired by British
or Afghan. The two little red dots moved forward
in the open parallel to the enemy’s front.
But of all the world’s
great heroes
There’s
none that can compare,
With a tow-row-row-row-row-row,
To the British
Grenadier!
The men of the Fore and Aft were gathering
thick at the entrance to the plain. The Brigadier
on the heights far above was speechless with rage.
Still no movement from the enemy. The day stayed
to watch the children.
Jakin halted and beat the long roll
of the Assembly, while the fife squealed despairingly.
‘Right about face! Hold
up, Lew, you’re drunk,’ said Jakin.
They wheeled and marched back:
Those heroes of antiquity
Ne’er saw
a cannon-ball,
Nor knew the force o’
powder,
‘Here they come!’ said Jakin. ’Go
on, Lew’:
To scare their foes withal!
The Fore and Aft were pouring out
of the valley. What officers had said to men
in that time of shame and humiliation will never be
known; for neither officers nor men speak of it now.
‘They are coming anew!’
shouted a priest among the Afghans. ’Do
not kill the boys! Take them alive and they shall
be of our faith.’
But the first volley had been fired,
and Lew dropped on his face. Jakin stood for
a minute, spun round and collapsed, as the Fore and
Aft came forward, the curses of their officers in their
ears, and in their hearts the shame of open shame.
Half the men had seen the drummers
die, and they made no sign. They did not even
shout. They doubled out straight across the plain
in open order, and they did not fire.
‘This,’ said the Colonel
of Gurkhas softly, ’is the real attack, as it
should have been delivered. Come on, my children.’
‘Ulu-lu-lu-lu!’ squealed
the Gurkhas, and came down with a joyful clicking
of kukris those vicious Gurkha knives.
On the right there was no rush.
The Highlanders, cannily commending their souls to
God (for it matters as much to a dead man whether he
has been shot in a Border scuffle or at Waterloo),
opened out and fired according to their custom, that
is to say without heat and without intervals, while
the screw-guns, having disposed of the impertinent
mud fort aforementioned, dropped shell after shell
into the clusters round the flickering green standards
on the heights.
‘Charrging is an unfortunate
necessity,’ murmured the Colour-Sergeant of
the right company of the Highlanders. ’It
makes the men sweer so, but I am thinkin’ that
it will come to a charrge if these black devils stand
much longer. Stewarrt, man, you’re firing
into the eye of the sun, and he’ll not take
any harm for Government ammuneetion. A foot lower
and a great deal slower! What are the English
doing? They’re very quiet there in the
centre. Running again?’
The English were not running.
They were hacking and hewing and stabbing, for though
one white man is seldom physically a match for an
Afghan in a sheepskin or wadded coat, yet, through
the pressure of many white men behind, and a certain
thirst for revenge in his heart, he becomes capable
of doing much with both ends of his rifle. The
Fore and Aft held their fire till one bullet could
drive through five or six men, and the front of the
Afghan force gave on the volley. They then selected
their men, and slew them with deep gasps and short
hacking coughs, and groanings of leather belts against
strained bodies, and realised for the first time that
an Afghan attacked is far less formidable than an
Afghan attacking: which fact old soldiers might
have told them.
But they had no old soldiers in their ranks.
The Gurkhas’ stall at the bazar
was the noisiest, for the men were engaged to
a nasty noise as of beef being cut on the block with
the kukri, which they preferred to the bayonet;
well knowing how the Afghan hates the half-moon blade.
As the Afghans wavered, the green
standards on the mountain moved down to assist them
in a last rally. This was unwise. The Lancers
chafing in the right gorge had thrice despatched their
only subaltern as galloper to report on the progress
of affairs. On the third occasion he returned,
with a bullet-graze on his knee, swearing strange oaths
in Hindustani, and saying that all things were ready.
So that Squadron swung round the right of the Highlanders
with a wicked whistling of wind in the pennons
of its lances, and fell upon the remnant just when,
according to all the rules of war, it should have waited
for the foe to show more signs of wavering.
But it was a dainty charge, deftly
delivered, and it ended by the Cavalry finding itself
at the head of the pass by which the Afghans intended
to retreat; and down the track that the lances had
made streamed two companies of the Highlanders, which
was never intended by the Brigadier. The new
development was successful. It detached the enemy
from his base as a sponge is torn from a rock, and
left him ringed about with fire in that pitiless plain.
And as a sponge is chased round the bath-tub by the
hand of the bather, so were the Afghans chased till
they broke into little detachments much more difficult
to dispose of than large masses.
‘See!’ quoth the Brigadier.
’Everything has come as I arranged. We’ve
cut their base, and now we’ll bucket ’em
to pieces.’
A direct hammering was all that the
Brigadier had dared to hope for, considering the size
of the force at his disposal; but men who stand or
fall by the errors of their opponents may be forgiven
for turning Chance into Design. The bucketing
went forward merrily. The Afghan forces were
upon the run the run of wearied wolves who
snarl and bite over their shoulders. The red
lances dipped by twos and threes, and, with a shriek,
up rose the lance-butt, like a spar on a stormy sea,
as the trooper cantering forward cleared his point.
The Lancers kept between their prey and the steep
hills, for all who could were trying to escape from
the valley of death. The Highlanders gave the
fugitives two hundred yards’ law, and then brought
them down, gasping and choking ere they could reach
the protection of the boulders above. The Gurkhas
followed suit; but the Fore and Aft were killing on
their own account, for they had penned a mass of men
between their bayonets and a wall of rock, and the
flash of the rifles was lighting the wadded coats.
‘We cannot hold them, Captain
Sahib!’ panted a Ressaidar of Lancers.
‘Let us try the carbine. The lance is good,
but it wastes time.’
They tried the carbine, and still
the enemy melted away fled up the hills
by hundreds when there were only twenty bullets to
stop them. On the heights the screw-guns ceased
firing they had run out of ammunition and
the Brigadier groaned, for the musketry fire could
not sufficiently smash the retreat. Long before
the last volleys were fired, the doolies were out
in force looking for the wounded. The battle
was over, and, but for want of fresh troops, the Afghans
would have been wiped off the earth. As it was
they counted their dead by hundreds, and nowhere were
the dead thicker than in the track of the Fore and
Aft.
But the Regiment did not cheer with
the Highlanders, nor did they dance uncouth dances
with the Gurkhas among the dead. They looked
under their brows at the Colonel as they leaned upon
their rifles and panted.
’Get back to camp, you.
Haven’t you disgraced yourself enough for one
day! Go and look to the wounded. It’s
all you’re fit for,’ said the Colonel.
Yet for the past hour the Fore and Aft had been doing
all that mortal commander could expect. They
had lost heavily because they did not know how to
set about their business with proper skill, but they
had borne themselves gallantly, and this was their
reward.
A young and sprightly Colour-Sergeant,
who had begun to imagine himself a hero, offered his
water-bottle to a Highlander, whose tongue was black
with thirst. ‘I drink with no cowards,’
answered the youngster huskily, and, turning to a
Gurkha, said, ’Hya, Johnny! Drink water
got it?’ The Gurkha grinned and passed his bottle.
The Fore and Aft said no word.
They went back to camp when the field
of strife had been a little mopped up and made presentable,
and the Brigadier, who saw himself a Knight in three
months, was the only soul who was complimentary to
them. The Colonel was heart-broken, and the officers
were savage and sullen.
‘Well,’ said the Brigadier,
’they are young troops of course, and it was
not unnatural that they should retire in disorder for
a bit.’
‘Oh, my only Aunt Maria!’
murmured a junior Staff Officer. ’Retire
in disorder! It was a bally run!’
‘But they came again, as we
all know,’ cooed the Brigadier, the Colonel’s
ashy-white face before him, ’and they behaved
as well as could possibly be expected. Behaved
beautifully, indeed. I was watching them.
It’s not a matter to take to heart, Colonel.
As some German General said of his men, they wanted
to be shooted over a little, that was all.’
To himself he said ’Now they’re
blooded I can give ’em responsible work.
It’s as well that they got what they did.
’Teach ’em more than half-a-dozen rifle
flirtations, that will later run
alone and bite. Poor old Colonel, though.’
All that afternoon the heliograph
winked and flickered on the hills, striving to tell
the good news to a mountain forty miles away.
And in the evening there arrived, dusty, sweating,
and sore, a misguided Correspondent, who had gone
out to assist at a trumpery village-burning, and who
had read off the message from afar, cursing his luck
the while.
’Let’s have the details
somehow as full as ever you can, please.
It’s the first time I’ve ever been left
this campaign,’ said the Correspondent to the
Brigadier; and the Brigadier, nothing loath, told
him how an Army of Communication had been crumpled
up, destroyed, and all but annihilated, by the craft,
strategy, wisdom, and foresight of the Brigadier.
But some say, and among these be the
Gurkhas who watched on the hillside, that that battle
was won by Jakin and Lew, whose little bodies were
borne up just in time to fit two gaps at the head of
the big ditch-grave for the dead under the heights
of Jagai.