Part 18 (2/2)
”Well, I wish some one would teach the Huns how to write decently.” The speaker was Summersby of the Intelligence Corps. The Intelligence are a corps of detectives and have to estimate the strength, the location, and the composition of the enemy's forces. Everything is grist that comes to their mill and they will perform surprising feats of induction. They can reconstruct a German Army Corps out of a Landwehr man's bootlace, his diary, his underclothing, or his shoulder-strap--but the greatest of these is his diary. ”I've been studying the diaries of prisoners until I feel a Hun myself. They remind me of the diary I used to keep at school, they are all about eating and drinking. The Hun is a glutton and a wine-bibber. But I found something to-day--'Keine Gefangene' in an officer's field note-book.”
”Translate, my Hunnish friend,” said the A.P.M.
”No prisoners,” replied Summersby shortly.
”I hope you handed the swine over to the P.M.,” said the Camp Commandant.
”Well, no,” said Summersby. ”You see he had a plausible explanation--by the way, what perfect English those German officers talk; I'll bet that man has eaten our bread and salt some time. He said it was a Brigade order to the men not to make the taking of prisoners a pretext for going back to the rear in large parties but to leave them to the supports when they came up. The curious thing is that that officer belongs to the 112th and we've our eye on the 112th. One of their men, a fellow named Schmidt, who surrendered on the 19th of last month, said they'd had an order to take no prisoners but kill them all. His regiment was the 112th,” he added darkly.
”The filthy swine!” we cried in a chorus, and our talk grew sombre as we exchanged reminiscences.
”What pleases me about you fellows,” said Ponsonby, who had been listening with a languid air, and who was formerly in the F.O. where he composed florid speeches in elegant French for Hague Plenipotentiaries, ”is your habits of speech. In diplomacy we contrive to talk a lot without saying anything, whereas Army men manage to talk little and say a great deal. You've got four words in the Army which seem to be a mighty present help in trouble at H.Q. Their sustaining properties are remarkable and they seem to tide over very anxious moments. When you are in a hole you say 'd.a.m.n all,' and when you are asked for instructions you cry 'Carry on.' I suppose it's by sitting tight and using those words with discrimination that you fellows arrive at greatness and attain Brigadier rank. That seems to be the first thing a third-grade staff-officer learns.”
”The first thing a third-grade staff-officer learns is to speak respectfully of his superiors,” said the A.P.M., as he hurled a cus.h.i.+on at Ponsonby, who caught it with a bow. Ponsonby is irrepressible and, in spite of his supercilious civilian airs, much is forgiven him. He turned to the D.A.A.G. and said, ”Hooper, you've forgotten to say grace. For what we have _not_ received”--he added, with a meaning glance at a Stilton cheese which the A.A.G.'s wife has sent out from home and which remained on the sideboard--”the Lord make us truly thankful.” This was an allusion to the D.A.A.G.'s sacerdotal functions. For the Adjutant-General and his staff, who know the numbers of all the Field Ambulances, can lay hands--but not in the apostolic sense--upon every chaplain attached thereto; the A.G. is the Metropolitan of them all and can admonish, deprive, and suspend.
The D.A.A.G. ignored the plaintive benediction. ”I think we've fixed it up with those Red Cross drivers,” he said complacently. The A.G.'s department had been wrestling with the disciplinary problem presented by these birds of pa.s.sage on the lines of communication. ”We've decided that they are Army followers under section 176, sub-section 10, of the Army Act, and that you 'follow' the British Army from the moment you accept a pa.s.s to H.Q. My chief called some of them together yesterday, and being in a benevolent humour told them that they were now under military law and might be sentenced to anything from seven days'
field-punishment to the punishment of death. This was _pour encourager les autres_. They looked quite thoughtful.”
”That's a nice point,” commented Ponsonby pensively. ”Should an Army follower be hanged or is he ent.i.tled to be shot? I put it to you,” he added, turning to the Judge-Advocate. ”I want counsel's opinion.”
”I never give abstract opinions,” retorted the man of law. ”But the safest course would be to hang him first and shoot him afterwards.”
”Your counsel is as the counsel of Ahithophel,” said Ponsonby. ”I'll put you another problem. Is a carrier-pigeon an Army follower? Because Slingsby never has any appet.i.te for dinner” (this was notoriously untrue), ”and I have a strong suspicion that he converts--that's a legal expression for fraud, isn't it?--his carrier-pigeons into pigeon-pie.
What is the penalty for fraudulent conversion of an Army follower?”
Slingsby, who in virtue of his aquiline features is known as _Aquila vulgaris_, has charge of the carrier-pigeons and takes large baskets of them out to the Front every day; he is supposed to be training them by an intimate use of pigeon-English not to settle when the sh.e.l.ls explode.
Unfortunately his pigeons are usually posted as ”missing,” and go to some bourne from which no pigeon has ever been known to return. Ponsonby glances suspiciously at Slingsby's portly figure.
But the Judge-Advocate had stolen away to study a dossier of ”proceedings,” and his departure was the signal for a general dispersion. ”Come and have a drink,” said Ponsonby to the ”I” man.
”Can't, you slacker,” was the reply. ”I've got to go and make up an 'I'
summary. 'Notes of an Air Reconnaissance. Distribution of the enemy's forces. Copy of a German Divisional Circular. Notes on the German system of signalling from their trenches.' You know the usual kind of thing.
Just now we're trying to discover how many guns they've got in the batteries of their new formations. We've noticed that their 77-mm.
projectiles now arrive in groups of four, and we suspect that two guns have been withdrawn. But it may be only a blind.”
As we turned out into the darkened street to make our way to our respective offices a supply column rumbled over the _pave_, each of the seventy-two motor-lorries keeping its distance like the s.h.i.+ps of a fleet. Despatch-riders with blue and white armlets whizzed past on their motor-bicycles, and high overhead was the loud droning hum of the aeroplane going home to roost. The thunder of guns was clearly audible from the north-east. The D.A.A.G. turned to me and said, ”It's Hill 60 again. My old regiment's up there. And to-morrow the casualty returns will come in. Good G.o.d! will it never end?”
XXVI
FIAT JUSt.i.tIA
PARQUET du Tribunal de Iere Instance d'Ypres
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