Boyd Cable
First World War Front Lines
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Table of contents
FOREWORD
I
II
III
IV
V
VI
VII
VIII
IX
X
XI
XII
XIII
XIV
XV
XVI
XVII
XVIII
XIX
XX
XXI
FOREWORD
These
tales have been written over a period running from the later stages
of the Somme to the present time. For the book I have two
ambitions—the first, that to my Service readers it may bring a few
hours of interest and entertainment, may prove some sort of a picture
and a record of what they themselves have been through; the second,
that it may strike and impress and stir those people at home who even
now clearly require awakening to all that war means.I
know that a great many war workers have been, and still are, bearing
cheerfully and willingly the long strain of war work, and I very
gladly and thankfully offer my testimony to what I have seen of this
good spirit. But it would be idle to deny, since the proofs have been
too plain, that many war workers are not doing their best and utmost,
are not playing the game as they might do and ought to do, and it is
to these in particular I hope this book may speak.Surely
by now every worker might appreciate the fact that whatever good
cause they may have for “war weariness” they are at least
infinitely better off than any man in the firing line; surely they
can understand how bitter men here feel when they hear and read of
all these manifestations of labour “discontent” and “unrest.”
We know well how dependent we are on the efforts of the workers at
home, and there are times when we are forced to the belief that some
workers also know it and trade on it for their own benefit, are
either woefully ignorant still of what the failure of their fullest
effort means to us, or, worse, are indifferent to the sufferings and
endurings of their men on active service, are unpatriotic, narrow,
selfish enough to put the screw on the nation for their own
advantage.I
beg each war worker to remember that every slackening of their
efforts, every reduction of output, every day wasted, every stoppage
of work, inevitably encourages the enemy, prolongs the war, keeps men
chained to the misery of the trenches, piles up the casualties,
continues the loss of life. A strike, or the threat of a strike, may
win for the workers their 12½ per cent. increase of pay, the
“recognition” of some of their officials, their improved comfort;
but every such “victory” is only gained at the expense of the men
in the trenches, is paid for in flesh and blood in the firing line.When
men here are suffering as they must suffer, are enduring as they do
endure with good heart and courage, it comes as a profound shock and
a cruel discouragement to them to read in the papers, or go home and
discover, that any people there are apparently indifferent to their
fate, are ready to sacrifice them ruthlessly for any trivial personal
benefit, refuse to share the pinch of war, must have compensating
advantages to level up “the increased cost of living,” will even
bring a vital war industry to a standstill—it has been done—as a
“protest” against the difficulty of obtaining butter or margarine
and tea. It may be that one grows one-sided in ideas after more than
three years’ soldiering, but can you blame us if we feel contempt
for pitiful grumblers and complainers who have a good roof overhead,
a warm room and fire, a dry bed, and no real lack of food, if we feel
anger against men who have all these things and yet go on strike,
knowing that we must pay the penalty? And let me flatly deny the
claim which some strikers and agitators still make that in these
upheavals and checks on war industry they are “fighting for the
rights of their mates in the trenches.” Their “mates in the
trenches” will be ready and able to, and certainly will, fight for
their own rights when the war is won and they can do so without
endangering or delaying the winning.Meantime
can any man be fool enough honestly to believe that “mates in the
trenches” want anything more urgently than to win the war and get
out of it? If there are any such fools let them try to imagine the
feelings of the “mate” cowering and shivering over a scanty
handful of wet wood or black-smoky dust “coal ration” who hears
that coal miners at home threaten a strike; of the man crouched in a
battered trench that is being blasted to bits by German steel shells
from steel guns, who learns that our steel-makers are “out” and
if their demands were not satisfied would continue to strike
indefinitely and hold up the making of the guns and shells which
alone can protect us; of the man who is being bombed from the air
night after night in his billets and reads that 50,000 aircraft
workers are on strike, and that the Front will be poorer as a result
by hundreds of the aircraft which might bomb the enemy ’dromes out
of action and stop their raiding; the dismay of the man about to go
on a long deferred and eagerly waited leave when he is told that all
leaves may have to be stopped because a threatened strike of
“foot-plate” workers may strand him at his debarkation port. Will
it soothe or satisfy a man in any of these cases to be told the
strikes are really fights for his rights, especially when you
remember he knows that as a result of the strike he may be too dead
to have any rights to be fought for?The
best I can wish for this book is that it may do even one little bit
to make plain with what cheerfulness—cheerfulness and even at times
almost incredible humour—the Front is sticking it out, with what
complete confidence in final victory this year’s fight is being
begun; and may make yet more plain the need for every man and woman
at home to give their last ounce of energy to help win the war
speedily and conclusively.Boyd
Cable.On
the Western Front,January
7th, 1918.
I
TRENCH-MADE
ARTBy
the very nature of their job the R.A.M.C. men in the Field Ambulances
have at intervals a good deal of spare time on their hands. The
personnel has to be kept at a strength which will allow of the smooth
and rapid handling of the pouring stream of casualties which floods
back from the firing line when a big action is on; and when a period
of inactivity comes in front the stream drops to a trickle that
doesn’t give the field ambulances “enough work to keep themselves
warm.”It
was in one of these slack periods that Corporal Richard, of the
Oughth London Field Ambulance, resumed the pleasurable occupation of
his civilian days, to his own great satisfaction and the enormous
interest of his comrades. Richard in pre-war days had been a
sculptor, and the chance discovery near the ambulance camp of a
stream where a very fair substitute for modelling clay could be had
led him to experiments and a series of portrait modellings. He had no
lack of models. Every other man in his squad was most willing to be
“took,” and would sit with most praiseworthy patience for as long
as required, and for a time Richard revelled in the luxury of
unlimited (and free-of-cost) models and in turning out portraits and
caricatures in clay. He worked with such speed, apparent ease, and
complete success that before long he had half the men endeavouring to
imitate his artistic activities.Then
Richard attempted more serious work, and in the course of time turned
out a little figure study over which the more educated and artistic
of his friends waxed most enthusiastic, and which he himself,
considering it carefully and critically, admitted to be “not bad.”
On the other hand, it is true that many members of the company
regarded the masterpiece with apathy, and in some cases almost with
disapproval. “Seems a pity,” said one critic, “that the
corp’ril should ’ave wasted all this time over the one job. Spent
every minute of ’is spare time, ’e ’as, fiddlin’ an’
touchin’ up at it; could ’ave done a dozen o’ them picturs o’
us chaps in the time. An’, now it is done, ’tain’t quarter sich
a good joke as that one o’ the sergeant-major wi’ the bottle
nose. Fair scream, that was.”
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Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!