frosty nights and sunny days and beautiful coloring on the sparse foliage
that breaks here and there the wide rolling expanses of open country.
Every day, from the distance to the north, has come the booming of the cannon
around Reims and the lines along the Meuse. . . . But imagine how thrilling
it will be tomorrow and the following days, marching toward the front
with the noise of battle growing
continually" target="_blank" title="ad.不断地,频繁地">
continually louder before us.
I could tell you where we are going, but I do not want to run any risk
of having this letter stopped by the censor. The whole
regiment is going,
four battalions, about 4000 men. You have no idea how beautiful it is to see
the troops undulating along the road in front of one, in `colonnes par quatre'
as far as the eye can see, with the captains and lieutenants on horseback
at the head of their companies. . . . Tomorrow the real hardship
and privations begin. But I go into action with the lightest of light hearts.
The hard work and moments of
frightfulfatigue have not broken
but hardened me, and I am in excellent health and spirits. . . .
I am happy and full of
excitement over the wonderful days that are ahead.
It was such a comfort to receive your letter, and know that you approved
of my action.
==
In a post-card of October 20, postmarked "Vertus", he says:
==
This is the second night's halt of our march to the front. All our way
has been one
immensebattlefield. It was a
magnificentvictory for the French
that the world does not fully realize. I think we are marching
to
victory too, but
whatever we are going to we are going triumphantly.
==
On October 23, he writes from "17 kil. south-east of Reims".
==
Dear Mother. . . . I am sitting on the curbstone of a street
at the edge of the town. The houses end
abruptly and the yellow vineyards
begin here. The view is broad and uninterrupted to the crest
ten kilometers or so across the
valley. Between this and ourselves are
the lines of the two armies. A
fierce cannonading is going on
continually" target="_blank" title="ad.不断地,频繁地">
continually,
and I lift my eyes from the sheet at each report, to see the puffs of smoke
two or three miles off. The Germans have been firing salvoes of four shots
over a little village where the French batteries are stationed,
shrapnel that burst in little puffs of white smoke; the French reply
with
explosive shells that raise columns of dust over the German lines.
Half of our
regiment have left already for the
trenches. We may go tonight.
We have made a march of about 75 kilometers in four days, and are now
on the front, ready to be called on at any moment. I am feeling fine,
in my element, for I have always thirsted for this kind of thing,
to be present always where the pulsations are liveliest. Every minute here
is worth weeks of ordinary experience. How beautiful the view is here,
over the sunny vineyards! And what a curious anomaly.
On this slope the grape pickers are singing
merrily at their work,
on the other the batteries are roaring. Boom! Boom!
This will spoil one for any other kind of life. The yellow afternoon sunlight
is sloping
gloriously across this beautiful
valley of Champagne.
Aeroplanes pass
continually" target="_blank" title="ad.不断地,频繁地">
continuallyoverhead on reconnaissance. I must mail this now.
There is too much to be said and too little time to say it.
So glad to get your letter. Love and lots of it to all.
Alan.
==
Alas! the hopes of swift,
decisive action with which the Legion advanced
were destined to
disappointment. They soon settled down for the winter into
the
monotonous hardships of
trenchwarfare. Alan described this experience
in
admirably vivid letters published in the New York `Sun',
from which a few extracts must
suffice. He writes on December 8,
during his fourth period of service in the
trenches:
==
We left our camp in the woods before
daybreak this morning,
and marched up the hill in single file, under the winter stars. . . .
Through openings in the woods we could see that we were marching
along a high ridge, and on either hand vaporous depths and distances expanded,
the darkness broken sometimes by a far light or the
momentary glow
of a
magnesiumrocket sent up from the German lines.
There is something
fascinating if one is stationed on sentry-duty
immediately after
arrival, in watching the dawn slowly illumine
one of these new landscapes, from a position taken up under cover of darkness.
The other section has been relieved and departs. We are given the `consigne',
by the
precedingsentinel, and are left alone behind a mound of dirt,
facing the north and the blank,
perilous night. Slowly the mystery
that it shrouds resolves as the grey light steals over the eastern hills.
Like a photograph in the washing, its high lights and shadows
come gradually forth. The light
splash in the foreground
becomes a ruined
chateau, the grey street a demolished village.
The details come out on the
hillside opposite, where the silent
trenches
of the enemy are
hidden a few hundred metres away. We find ourselves
in a woody,
mountainous country, with broad horizons and streaks of mist
in the
valleys. Our position is excellent this time, a high crest,
with open land sloping down from the
trenches and plenty of barbed wire
strung along immediately in front. It would be a hard task
to carry such a line, and there is not much danger that the enemy will try.
With increasing
daylight the
sentinel takes a sheltered position,
and surveys his new
environment through little gaps where the mounds
have been crenellated and covered with branches. Suddenly he starts
as a
metallic bang rings out from the woods immediately behind him.
It is of the
unmistakable voice of a French 75 starting the day's
artillery duel. By the time the
sentinel is relieved, in broad
daylight,
the cannonade is general all along the line. He surrenders his post
to a comrade, and crawls down into his bombproof dugout almost reluctantly,
for the long day of
inactivewaiting has commenced.
==
Though he never expresses even a
momentary regret for the choice he has made,
he
freely admits that
trenchwarfare is "anything but romantic".
For the
artilleryman it is "doubtless very interesting"
but "the poor common soldier" has a pretty mean time of it:
==
His rule is simply to dig himself a hole in the ground
and to keep
hidden in it as
tightly as possible. Continually under
the fire of the opposing batteries, he is yet never allowed
to get a
glimpse of the enemy. Exposed to all the dangers of war,
but with none of its
enthusiasm or splendid elan, he is condemned to sit
like an animal in its
burrow, and hear the shells
whistle over his head,
and take their little daily toll from his comrades.
The winter morning dawns with grey skies and the hoar frost on the fields.
His feet are numb, his canteen
frozen, but he is not allowed to make a fire.
The winter night falls, with its
prospect of sentry-duty,
and the
continualapprehension of the
hurried call to arms; he is not
even permitted to light a candle, but must fold himself in his blanket
and lie down cramped in the dirty straw to sleep as best he may.
How different from the popular notion of the evening campfire,
the songs and good cheer.
==
Of the commissariat arrangements he gives, on the whole, a very good account;
but he admits that "to
supplement the regular rations with luxuries
such as butter,
cheese, preserves, & especially chocolate,
is a matter that occupies more of the young soldier's thoughts
than the
invisible enemy. Our
corporal told us the other day
that there wasn't a man in the squad that wouldn't exchange his rifle
for a jar of jam." But "though modern
warfare allows us to think
more about eating than fighting, still we do not
actually forget
that we are in a battle line."
==
Ever over our heads goes on the
precise and
scientific struggle
of the
artillery. Packed elbow to elbow in these obscure galleries,
one might be content to squat all day long, auditor of the
magnificentorchestra of battle, were it not that one becomes so soon habituated to it
that it is no longer
magnificent. We hear the voices of cannon
of all calibres and at all distances. We learn to read the score
&
distinguish the instruments. Near us are field batteries;
far away are siege guns. Over all there is the
unmistakable,
sharp,
metallic twang of the French 75, the
whistle of its shell