by None
But though you change a man’s vocation with the stroke of a pen, you do not change his character. A dreamer he was in the beginning, and a dreamer he remained to the end. And dreaming, as I have already pointed out, was not a thing which commended itself to Company-Sergeant-Major Hayton, who in due course became one of the chief arbiters of our friend’s destinies. True it was no longer coral islands – but such details availed not with cook’s mates and other busy movers in the regimental hive. Where he’d got them from, Heaven knows, those tattered volumes of Kipling; but their matchless spirit had caught his brain and fired his soul, with the result – well, the first of them has been given.
There were more results to follow. Not three days after he was again upon the mat for the same offence, only to say much the same as before.
‘I do try, sir – I do try; but some’ow —’
And though in the bottom of his heart the officer believed him, though in a very strange way he felt interested in him, there are limits and there are rules. There comes a time, as he had said, when one can’t judge by motives, when one can only judge by results.
‘You mustn’t only try; you must succeed. Three days to barracks.’
That night in mess the officer sat next to the Colonel. ‘It’s the thrusters, the martinets, the men of action who win the VCs and DCMs, my dear fellow,’ said his CO, as he pushed along the wine. ‘But it’s the dreamers, the idealists who deserve them. They suffer so much more.’
And as Major Seymour poured himself out a glass of port, a face came into his mind – the face of a stumpy, uncouth man with deep-set eyes. ‘I wonder,’ he murmured –‘I wonder.’
The opportunities for stirring deeds of heroism in France do not occur with great frequency, whatever outsiders may think to the contrary. For months on end a battalion may live a life of peace and utter boredom, getting a few casualties now and then, occasionally bagging an unwary Hun, vegetating continuously in the same unprepossessing hole in the ground – saving only when they go to another, or retire to a town somewhere in rear to have a bath. And the battalion to which No. 8469, Private Meyrick, belonged was no exception to the general rule.
For five weeks they had lived untroubled by anything except flies – all of them, that is, save various NCOs in A company.6 To them flies were quite a secondary consideration when compared to their other worry. And that, it is perhaps superfluous to add, was Private Meyrick himself.
Every day the same scene would be enacted; every day some sergeant or corporal would dance with rage as he contemplated the Company Idiot – the title by which he was now known to all and sundry.
‘Wake up! Wake up! Lumme, didn’t I warn you–didn’tI warn yer ’arf an ’our ago over by that there tree, when you was a-staring into the branches looking for nuts or something – didn’t I warn yer that the company was parading at ten fifteen for ’ot baths?’
‘I didn’t ’ear you, Corporal – I didn’t really.’
‘Didn’t ’ear me! Wot yer mean, didn’t ’ear me? My voice ain’t like the twitter of a grass’opper, is it? It’s my belief you’re barmy, my boy, B-A-R-M-Y. Savez?7 Get a move on yer, for Gawd’s sake! You ought to ’ave a nurse. And when you gets to the bath-’ouse, for ’Eaven’s sake pull yerself together! Don’t forget to take off yer clothes before yer gets in; and when they lets the water out, don’t go stopping in the bath because you forgot to get out. I wouldn’t like another regiment to see you lying about when they come. They might say things.’
And so with slight variations the daily strafe went on. Going up to the trenches it was always Meyrick who got lost; Meyrick who fell into shell holes and lost his rifle or the jam for his section; Meyrick who forgot to lie down when a flare went up, but stood vacantly gazing at it until partially stunned by his next-door neighbour. Periodically messages would come through from the next regiment asking if they’d lost the regimental pet, and that he was being returned. It was always Meyrick…
‘I can’t do nothing with ’im, sir.’ It was the Company-Sergeant-Major speaking to Seymour. ‘’E seems soft like in the ’ead. Whenever ’e does do anything and doesn’t forget, ’e does it wrong. ’E’s always dreaming and ’alf barmy.’
‘He’s not a flier, I know, Sergeant-Major, but we’ve got to put up with all sorts nowadays,’ returned the officer diplomatically. ‘Send him to me, and let me have a talk to him.’
‘Very good, sir; but ’e’ll let us down badly one of these days.’
And so once again Meyrick stood in front of his company officer, and was encouraged to speak of his difficulties. To an amazing degree he had remembered the discourse he had listened to many months previously; to do something for the regiment was what he desired more than anything – to do something big, really big. He floundered and stopped; he could find no words…
‘But don’t you understand that it’s just as important to do the little things? If you can’t do them, you’ll never do the big ones.’
‘Yes, sir – I sees that; I do try, sir, and then I gets thinking, and some’ow – oh! I dunno – but everything goes out of my head like. I wants the regiment to be proud of me – and then they calls me the Company Idiot.’ There was something in the man’s face that touched Seymour.
‘But how can the regiment be proud of you, my lad,’ he asked gently, ‘if you’re always late on parade, and forgetting to do what you’re told? If I wasn’t certain in my own mind that it wasn’t slackness and disobedience on your part, I should ask the Colonel to send you back to England as useless.’
An appealing look came into the man’s eyes. ‘Oh! don’t do that, sir. I will try ’ard – straight I will.’
‘Yes, but as I told you once before, there comes a time when one must judge by results. Now, Meyrick, you must understand this finally. Unless you do improve, I shall do what I said. I shall tell the Colonel that you’re not fitted to be a soldier, and I shall get him to send you away. I can’t go on much longer; you’re more trouble than you’re worth. We’re going up to the trenches again to-night, and I shall watch you. That will do; you may go.’
And so it came about that the Company Idiot entered on what was destined to prove the big scene in his uneventful life under the eyes of a critical audience. To the Sergeant-Major, who was a gross materialist, failure was a foregone conclusion; to the company officer, who went a little nearer to the heart of things, the issue was doubtful. Possibly his threat would succeed; possibly he’d struck the right note. And the peculiar thing is that both proved right according to their own lights…
This particular visit to the trenches was destined to be of a very different nature to former ones. On previous occasions peace had reigned; nothing untoward had occurred to mar the quiet restful existence which trench life so often affords to its devotees. But this time…
It started about six o’clock in the morning on the second day of their arrival – a really pleasant little intensive bombardment. A succession of shells came streaming in, shattering every yard of the front line with tearing explosions. Then the Huns turned on the gas and attacked behind it. A few reached the trenches – the majority did not; and the ground outside was covered with grey-green figures, some of which were writhing and twitching and some of which were still. The attack had failed…
But that sort of thing leaves its mark on the defenders, and this was their first baptism of real fire. Seymour had passed rapidly down the trench when he realized that for the moment it was over; and though men’s faces were covered with the hideous gas masks, he saw by the twitching of their hands and by the ugly high-pitched laughter he heard that it would be well to get into touch with those behind. Moreover, in every piece of trench there lay motionless figures in khaki…
It was as he entered his dugout that the bombardment started again. Quickly he went to the telephone, and started to get on to Brigade Headquarters. It took him twenty seconds to realize that the line had been cut, and then he cursed dreadfully. The roar of the bursting shells was deafening; his cur
sing was inaudible; but in a fit of almost childish rage – he kicked the machine. Men’s nerves are jangled at times…
It was merely coincidence doubtless, but a motionless figure in a gas helmet crouching outside the dugout saw that kick, and slowly in his bemused brain there started a train of thought. Why should his company officer do such a thing; why should they all be cowering in the trench waiting for death to come to them; why…? For a space his brain refused to act; then it started again.
Why was that man lying full length at the bottom of the trench, with the great hole torn out of his back, and the red stream spreading slowly round him; why didn’t it stop instead of filling up the little holes at the bottom of the trench and then overflowing into the next one? He was the corporal who’d called him barmy; but why should he be dead? He was dead – at least the motionless watcher thought he must be. He lay so still, and his body seemed twisted and unnatural. But why should one of the regiment be dead; it was all so unexpected, so sudden? And why did his Major kick the telephone?…
For a space he lay still, thinking; trying to figure things out. He suddenly remembered tripping over a wire coming up to the trench, and being cursed by his sergeant for lurching against him. ‘You would,’ he had been told –‘you would. If it ain’t a wire you’d fall over yer own perishing feet.’
‘What’s the wire for, Sergint?’ he had asked.
‘What d’you think, softie? Drying the washing on? It’s the telephone wire to Headquarters.’
It all came back to him, and it had been over by the stunted pollard that he’d tripped up. Then he looked back at the silent, motionless figure – the red stream had almost reached him – and the Idea came. It came suddenly – like a blow. The wire must be broken, otherwise the officer wouldn’t have kicked the telephone, he’d have spoken through it.
‘I wants the regiment to be proud of me – and then they calls me the Company Idiot.’ He couldn’t do the little things – he was always forgetting, but…! What was that about ‘lifting ’em through the charge that won the day’?8 There was no charge, but there was the regiment. And the regiment was wanting him at last. Something wet touched his fingers, and when he looked at them, they were red. ‘B-A-R-M-Y. You ought to ’ave a nurse…’
Then once again coherent thought failed him – utter physical weakness gripped him – he lay comatose, shuddering, and crying softly over he knew not what. The sweat was pouring down his face from the heat of the gas helmet, but still he held the valve between his teeth, breathing in through the nose and out through the mouth as he had been told. It was automatic, involuntary; he couldn’t think, he only remembered certain things by instinct.
Suddenly a high explosive shell burst near him – quite close: and a mass of earth crashed down on his legs and back, half burying him. He whimpered feebly, and after a while dragged himself free. But the action brought him close to that silent figure, with the ripped-up back…
‘You ought to ’ave a nurse…’ Why? Gawd above – why? Wasn’t he as good a man as that there dead corporal? Wasn’t he one of the regiment too? And now the Corporal couldn’t do anything; but he – well, he hadn’t got no hole torn out of his back. It wasn’t his blood that lay stagnant, filling the little holes at the bottom of the trench…
Kipling came back to him – feebly, from another world. The dreamer was dreaming once again.
If your officer’s dead and the sergeants look white,
Remember it’s ruin to run from a fight.9
Run! Who was talking of running? He was going to save the regiment – once he could think clearly again. Everything was hazy just for the moment.
And wait for supports like a soldier.
But there weren’t no supports, and the telephone wire was broken – the wire he’d tripped over as he came up. Until it was mended there wouldn’t be any supports – until it was mended – until –
With a choking cry he lurched to his feet: and staggering, running, falling down, the dreamer crossed the open. A tearing pain through his left arm made him gasp, but he got there – got there and collapsed. He couldn’t see very well, so he tore off his gas helmet, and, peering round, at last saw the wire. And the wire was indeed cut. Why the throbbing brain should have imagined it would be cut there, I know not; perhaps he associated it particularly with the pollard – and after all he was the Company Idiot. But it was cut there, I am glad to say; let us not begrudge him his little triumph. He found one end, and some few feet off he saw the other. With infinite difficulty he dragged himself towards it. Why did he find it so terribly hard to move? He couldn’t see clearly; everything somehow was getting hazy and red. The roar of the shells seemed muffled strangely – faraway, indistinct. He pulled at the wire, and it came towards him; pulled again, and the two ends met. Then he slipped back against the pollard, the two ends grasped in his right hand…
The regiment was safe at last. The officer would not have to kick the telephone again. The Idiot had made good. And into his heart there came a wonderful peace.
There was a roaring in his ears; lights danced before his eyes; strange shapes moved in front of him. Then, of a sudden, out of the gathering darkness a great white light seared his senses, a deafening crash overwhelmed him, a sharp stabbing blow struck his head. The roaring ceased, and a limp figure slipped down and lay still, with two ends of wire grasped tight in his hand.
‘They are going to relieve us to-night, Sergeant-Major.’ The two men with tired eyes faced one another in the Major’s dugout. The bombardment was over, and the dying rays of a blood-red sun glinted through the door. ‘I think they took it well.’
‘They did, sir – very well.’
‘What are the casualties? Any idea?’
‘Somewhere about seventy or eighty, sir – but I don’t know the exact numbers.’
‘As soon as it’s dark I’m going back to Headquarters. Captain Standish will take command.’
‘That there Meyrick is reported missing, sir.’
‘Missing! He’ll turn up somewhere – if he hasn’t been hit.’
‘Probably walked into the German trenches by mistake,’ grunted the CSM dispassionately, and retired. Outside the dugout men had moved the corporal; but the red pools still remained – stagnant at the bottom of the trench…
‘Well, you’re through all right now, Major,’ said a voice in the doorway, and an officer with the white and blue brassard of the signals came in and sat down. ‘There are so many wires going back that have been laid at odd times, that it’s difficult to trace them in a hurry.’ He gave a ring on the telephone, and in a moment the thin, metallic voice of the man at the other end broke the silence.
‘All right. Just wanted to make sure we were through. Ring off.’
‘I remember kicking that damn thing this morning when I found we were cut off,’ remarked Seymour, with a weary smile. ‘Funny how childish one is at times.’
‘Aye – but natural. This war’s damnable.’ The two men fell silent. ‘I’ll have a bit of an easy here,’ went on the signal officer after a while, ‘and then go down with you.’
A few hours later the two men clambered out of the back of the trench. ‘It’s easier walking, and I know every stick,’ remarked the Major. ‘Make for that stunted pollard first.’
Dimly the tree stood outlined against the sky – a conspicuous mark and signpost. It was the signal officer who tripped over it first – that huddled quiet body – and gave a quick ejaculation. ‘Somebody caught it here, poor devil. Look out – duck.’
A flare shot up into the night, and by its light the two motionless officers close to the pollard looked at what they had found.
‘How the devil did he get here!’ muttered Seymour. ‘It’s one of my men.’
‘Was he anywhere near you when you kicked the telephone?’ asked the other, and his voice was a little hoarse.
‘He may have been – I don’t know. Why?’
‘Look at his right hand.’ From the tightly clenched fingers two brok
en ends of wire stuck out.
‘Poor lad.’ The Major bit his lip. ‘Poor lad – I wonder. They called him the Company Idiot. Do you think…?’
‘I think he came out to find the break in the wire,’ said the other quietly. ‘And in doing so he found the answer to the big riddle.’
‘I knew he’d make good – I knew it all along. He used to dream of big things – something big for the regiment.’
‘And he’s done a big thing, by Jove,’ said the signal officer gruffly, ‘for it’s the motive that counts. And he couldn’t know that he’d got the wrong wire.’
‘When ’e doesn’t forget, ’e does things wrong.’
As I said, both the Sergeant-Major and his officer proved right according to their own lights.
C. E. MONTAGUE
A TRADE REPORT ONLY
No one has said what was wrong with The Garden, nor even why it was called by that name: whether because it had apples in it, and also a devil, like Eden; or after Gethsemane and the agonies there; or, again, from Proserpine’s1 garden, because of the hush filling the foreground. All the air near you seemed like so much held breath, with the long rumble of far-away guns stretching out beyond it like some dreamful line of low hills in the distance of a landscape.
The rest of the Western Front has been well written up – much too well. The Garden alone – the Holy Terror, as some of the men used to call it – has not. It is under some sort of taboo. I think I know why. If you never were in the line there before the smash came and made it like everywhere else, you could not know how it would work on the nerves when it was still its own elfish self. And if you were there and did know, then you knew also that it was no good to try to tell people. They only said, ‘Oh, so you all had the wind up?’ We had. But who could say why? How is a horse to say what it is that be-devils one empty place more than another? He has to prick up his ears when he gets there. Then he starts sweating. That’s all he knows, and it was the same story with us in The Garden. All I can do is to tell you, just roughly, the make of the place, the way that the few honest solids and liquids were fixed that came into it. They were the least part of it, really.