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The Amateur Army
by Patrick MacGill
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"How do you know?" I inquired.

"Because I can't get any coal to-morrow—line's bunged up for the troops."

"No, he'll be going on Tuesday," said his wife, whose kindliness and splendid cooking I should miss greatly.

"Is that so?" I asked, feigning an interest which I did not feel. A sore toe eclipsed all other matters for the time being.

"The ration men have served out enough for two days, and it doesn't stand to reason that they're going to waste anything," the little lady continued with sarcastic emphasis on the last two words.

Parades went on as usual; the usual rations were doled out to billets and the usual grumbling went on in the ranks. We were weary of false alarms, waiting orders, and eternal parades. Some of us had been training for fully six months, others had joined the Army when war broke out, and we were still secure in England. "Why have we joined?" the men asked. "Is it to line the streets when the troops come home? We are a balmy regiment."

One evening, Thursday to be exact, the battalion orders were interesting. One item ran as follows: "All fees due to billets will be paid up to Friday night. If any other billet expenses are incurred by battalion the same will be paid on application to the War Office." Friday evening found more explicit expression of our future movements in orders. The following items appeared: "Mess tin covers will be issued to-morrow. No white handkerchiefs are to be taken by the battalion overseas. All deficiencies in kit must be reported to-morrow morning. Bayonets will be sharpened. Any soldiers who have not yet received a copy of the New Testament can have same on application at the Town Hall 6 p.m. on Saturday.

"Where are we going?" we asked one another. Some answered saying that we were to help in the sack of Constantinople, others suggested Egypt, but all felt that we were going off to France at no very distant date. Was not this feeling plausible when we took into account a boot parade of the day before and how we were ordered to wear two pairs of socks when trying on the boots? Two pairs of socks suggested the trenches and cold, certainly not the sun-dried gutters of Constantinople, or the burning sands of Egypt.

Saturday saw an excited battalion mustered in front of the quartermaster's stores drawing out boots, mess-tin covers, blankets, ground-sheets, entrenching tools, identity discs, new belts, water-bottles, pack-straps, trousers, tunics and the hundred and one other things required by the soldier on active service. In addition to the usual requisites, every unit received a cholera belt (they are more particular over this article of attire than over any other), two pairs of pants, a singlet and a cake of soap. The latter looked tallowy and nobody took it further than the billet; the pants were woollen, very warm and made in Canada. This reminds me of an amusing episode which took place last general inspection. While standing easy, before the brigadier-general made his appearance, the men compared razors and found that eighty per cent. of them had been made in Germany. But these were bought by the soldiers before war started. At least all affirmed that this was so.

Saturday was a long parade; some soldiers were drawing necessaries at midnight, and no ten-o'-clock-to-billets order was enforced that night. I drew my boots at eleven o'clock, and then the streets were crowded with our men, and merry and sad with sightseers and friends. Wives and sweethearts had come to take a last farewell of husbands and lovers, and were making the most of the last lingering moments in good wishes and tears.

Sunday.—No church parade; and all men stood under arms in the streets. The officers had taken off all the trumpery of war, the swords which they never learned to use, the sparkling hat-badges and the dainty wrist-watches. They now appeared in web equipment, similar to that worn by the men, and carried rifles. Dressed thus an officer will not make a special target for the sniper and is not conspicuous by his uniform.

Our captain made the announcement in a quiet voice, the announcement which had been waited for so long. "To-morrow we proceed overseas," he said. "On behalf of the colonel I've to thank you all for the way in which you have done your work up to the present, and I am certain that when we get out yonder," he raised his arm and his gesture might indicate any point of the compass, "you'll all do your work with the spirit and determination which you have shown up till now."

This was the announcement. The men received it gleefully and a hubbub of conversation broke out in the ranks. "We're going at last"; "I thought when I joined that I'd be off next morning"; "What price a free journey to Berlin!"; "It'll be some great sport!" Such were the remarks that were bandied to and fro. But some were silent, feeling, no doubt, that the serious work ahead was not the subject for idle chatter.

A little leaflet entitled "Rules for the Preservation of Health on Field Service," was given to each man, and I am at liberty to give a few quotations.

"Remember that disease attacks you from outside; it is your duty to keep it outside."

"Don't drink unboiled water if you can get boiled water."

"Never start on a march with an empty stomach."

"Remember that a dirty foot is an unsound foot. See that feet are washed if no other part of the body is. Socks should be taken off at the end of the march, be flattened out and well shaken. Put on a clean pair if possible, if not, put the left sock on the right foot, and vice versa."

"Remember, on arrival in camp, food before fatigues."

"Always rig up some kind of shelter at night for the head, if for no other part of the body."

At twelve noon on Monday the whistles blew at the bottom of the street and we all turned out in full marching order with packs, haversacks, rifles and swords. I heard the transport wagons clattering on the pavement, the merry laughter of the drivers, the noise of men falling into place and above all the voice of the sergeant-major issuing orders.

Yet this, like other days, was a "wash-out." All day we waited for orders to move, twice we paraded in full marching kit, eager for the command to entrain; but it was not forthcoming. Another day had to be spent in billets under strict instructions not to move from our quarters. The orders were posted up as usual at all street corners, a plan which is adopted for the convenience of units billeted a great distance from headquarters, and the typewritten orders had an air of momentous finality:

The battalion moves to-morrow.

Parade will be at 4.30 a.m.

Entraining and detraining and embarking must be done in absolute silence.

I rose from bed at three and set about to prepare breakfast, while my cot-mate busied himself with our equipment, putting everything into shape, buckling belts and flaps, burnishing bayonets and oiling the bolts of the rifles. Twenty-four hours' rations were stored away in our haversacks all ready, the good landlady had been at work stewing and frying meat and cooking dainty scones up to twelve o'clock the night before.

When breakfast, a good hearty meal of tea, buttered toast, fried bacon and tomatoes, was over, we went out to our places. The morning was chilly, a cold wind splashed with hail swept along the streets and whirled round the corners, causing the tails of our great coats to beat sharply against our legs. It was still very dark, only a few street-lamps were lighted and these glimmered doubtfully as if ashamed of being noticed. Men in full marching order stamped out from every billet, took their way to the main street, where the transport wagons, wheels against kerbstones, horses in shafts, and drivers at reins, stood in mathematical order, and from there on to the parade ground where sergeants, with book in one hand and electric torch in the other, were preparing to call the roll.

Ammunition was served out, one hundred and twenty rounds to each man, and this was placed in the cartridge pouches, rifles were inspected and identity discs examined by torch-light. This finished, we were allowed to stand easy and use ground-sheets for a shelter from the biting hail. Our blankets were already gone. The transport wagons had disappeared and with them our field-bags. I suppose they will await us in —— but I anticipate, and at present all we know is that our regiment is bound for some destination unknown where, when we arrive, we shall have to wear two pairs of socks at our work.

We stood by till eight o'clock. The day had cleared and the sun was shining brightly when we marched off to the station, through streets lined with people, thoughtful men who seemed to be very sad, women who wept and children who chattered and sang "Tipperary."

Three trains stood in the sidings by the station. Places were allotted to the men, eight occupied each compartment, non-commissioned officers occupied a special carriage, the officers travelled first-class.

Soon we were hurrying through England to a place unknown. Most of my comrades were merry and a little sentimental; they sang music-hall songs that told of home. There were seven with me in my compartment, the Jersey youth, whom I saw kissing a weeping sweetheart in the cold hours of the early day; Mervin, my cot-mate, who always cleaned the rifles while I cooked breakfast in the morning; Bill, the Cockney youth who never is so happy as when getting the best of an argument in the coffee-shop of which I have already spoken, and the Oxford man. The other three were almost complete strangers to me, they have just been drafted into our regiment; one was very fat and reminded me of a Dickens character in Pickwick Papers; another who soon fell asleep, his head warm in a Balaclava helmet, was a tall, strapping youth with large muscular hands, which betoken manual labour, and the last was a slightly-built boy with a budding moustache which seemed to have been waxed at one end. We noticed this, and the fat soldier said that the wax had melted from the few lonely hairs on the other side of the lip.

Stations whirled by, Mervin leant out of the window to read their names, but was never successful. Cigarettes were smoked, the carriage was full of tobacco fumes and the floor littered with "fag-ends." Rifles were lying on the racks, four in each side, and caps, papers and equipment piled on top of them. The Jersey youth made a remark:

"Where are we going to?" he asked. "France I suppose, isn't it?"

"Maybe Egypt," someone answered.

"With two pairs of socks to one boot!" Mervin muttered in sarcastic tones; and almost immediately fell asleep. He had been a great traveller and knows many countries. His age is about forty, but he owns to twenty-seven, and in his youth he was educated for the church. "But the job was not one for me," he says, "and I threw it up." He looks forward to the life of a soldier in the field.

Our train journey neared the end. Bill was at the window and said that we were in sight of our destination. All were up and fumbling with their equipment; and one, the University man, hoped that the night would be a good one for sailing to France.

If we are bound for France we shall be there to-morrow.

THE END.

* * * * *



JUST PUBLISHED

THE RAT-PIT

BY PATRICK MACGILL, AUTHOR OF "CHILDREN OF THE DEAD END." CROWN 8VO. PRICE 6/-. INLAND POSTAGE 5D. EXTRA.

"Children of the Dead End" came upon the literary world as something of a surprise; it dealt with a phase of life about which nothing was known. It was compared with the work of Borrow and Kipling. Incidentally three editions, aggregating 10,000 copies, were called for within fifteen days. In his new book Mr. MacGill still deals with the underworld he knows so well. He tells of a life woven of darkest threads, full of pity and pathos, lighted up by that rare and quaint humour that made his first book so attractive. "The Rat-Pit" tells the story of an Irish peasant girl brought up in an atmosphere of poverty, where the purity of the poor and the innocence of maidenhood stand out in simple relief against a grim and sombre background. Norah Ryan leaves her home at an early age, and is plunged into a new world where dissolute and heedless men drag her down to their own miry level. Mr. MacGill's lot has been cast in strange places, and every incident of his book is pregnant with a vivid realism that carries the conviction that it is a literal transcript from life, as in fact it is. Only last summer, just before he enlisted, Mr. MacGill spent some time in Glasgow reviving old memories of its underworld. His characters are mostly real persons, and their sufferings, the sufferings of women burdened and oppressed with wrongs which women alone bear, are a strong indictment against a dubious civilisation.

HERBERT JENKINS LD., 12 ARUNDEL PLACE, LONDON, S.W.

* * * * *



10,000 COPIES CALLED FOR IN 10 DAYS.

CHILDREN OF THE DEAD END

The Autobiography of a Navvy. By PATRICK MACGILL. Crown 8vo. Price 6/-. Inland Postage 5d. extra.

MANCHESTER GDN. "A grand book." GLOBE "A living story." D. CITIZEN "Still booming!" STANDARD "A notable book." SATURDAY REVIEW "An achievement." BOOKMAN "Something unique." OUTLOOK "A remarkable book." BYSTANDER "A human document." COUNTRY LIFE "A human document." TRUTH "Intensely interesting." EV. STANDARD "A thrilling achievement." D. TELEGRAPH "Will have a lasting value." PALL MALL GAZ. "Nothing can withstand it." SPHERE "The book has genius in it." BOOKMAN "A poignantly human book." ENGLISH REVIEW "A wonderful piece of work." GRAPHIC "An enthralling slice of life." D. SKETCH "A book that will make a stir." ATHENAEUM "We welcome such books as this." ILL. LONDON NEWS "An outstanding piece of work." D. CHRONICLE "Tremendous, absorbing, convincing." REV. OF REVIEWS "The book is not merely notable—it is remarkable." LA STAMPA "Un nuovo grande astro della litteratura inglese." D. EXPRESS "Will be one of the most talked-of books of the year." SPECTATOR "A book of unusual interest, which we cannot but praise."

HERBERT JENKINS, LD. 12 ARUNDEL PLACE, LONDON, S.W.

* * * * *



BY THE SAME AUTHOR

SONGS OF THE DEAD END

POEMS BY PATRICK MACGILL

"Remarkable."—Daily Express.

"Work of real genius."—Bookman.

"This is a remarkable book."—Graphic.

"He can do things, can our navvy poet."—The Clarion.

"This extraordinary man of the people."—Public Opinion.

"The greatest poet since Kipling."—JAMES DOUGLAS, in The Star.

"Verses of remarkable vigour, variety and ability."—Pall Mall Gazette.

"MacGill's work is taking the literary world by storm."—Morning Leader.

"His poems show a power of direct observation and of strong emotion."—Spectator.

"We are at a loss to understand what manner of youth he is."—Manchester Guardian.

"The author has a very considerable gift."—ANDREW LANG, in Illustrated London News.

"It is a life which has been an Odyssey, the picturesque life a tone poet can weather through as Mr. MacGill has done."—Book Monthly.

"The traits of an ardent, fearless personality, expressed in words of fire, are here again in all their lyrical richness.... The poet says:

'I sing my songs to you—and well, You'll maybe like them—who can tell?'

We do like them."—Daily Chronicle.

"When, in the terse vernacular of his calling, he gives voice to the sorrows and impatience, the humour and the resignation of his workmen comrades, and lets his songs find their own natural bent, then at length he attains real lyrical strength and sincerity.... For we need have no hesitation in hailing Mr. MacGill as a poet."—Sunday Times.

* * * * *



40,000 SOLD IN 14 DAYS

QUICK TRAINING FOR WAR

SOME PRACTICAL SUGGESTIONS. ILLUSTRATED BY DIAGRAMS BY LT.-GEN. SIR ROBERT BADEN-POWELL, K.C.B. Price 1/- net. Post Free by all Booksellers 1/2.

FIRST REVIEWS

Daily Mail.—"B.P. has a reputation which is second to none, and this little book is so brightly and cleverly written that it will be read with advantage by the recruit and studied with infinite pleasure and profit by the professional soldier."

Lady's Pictorial.—"Ladies who are anxious to give a practical present which not one of their soldier men-folk should disdain to accept would certainly find this acceptable."

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Sporting Chronicle.—"Great interest is being taken in Baden-Powell's book 'Quick Training for War' which is enjoying a tremendous boom."

Daily Chronicle.—"The volume is full of good things for every officer, N.C.O., and man in the British Territorial Forces, and rifle club."

Daily Telegraph.—"This little handbook should be a companion of all officers and men now training or being trained for war."

HERBERT JENKINS LD., 12 ARUNDEL PLACE, LONDON, S.W.

* * * * *



QUICK TRAINING FOR WAR

FIRST REVIEWS (CONTINUED).

Academy.—"If books were sold on intrinsic value, Sir Robert Baden-Powell's little volume would be issued at a sovereign."

Sporting Life.—"Should be studied by every man who is entering the service of his country or contemplates doing so."

Spectator.—"In heartily commending General Baden-Powell's little book to the trainers of the New Army we should like," etc.

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Truth.—"Will prove a valuable gift to those who have answered the appeal of the War Office."

Sunday Times.—"The book should be in the knapsack of every recruit in the New Army."

Daily Express.—"A copy ought to be in the pocket of every officer and man in the new armies."

Daily Sketch.—"Every young officer, N.C.O. and private should have a copy."

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Saturday Review.—"A manual of great good sense."

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Observer.—"Clear and persuasive to a degree."

HERBERT JENKINS LD., 12 ARUNDEL PLACE, LONDON, S.W.

* * * * *



SIR JOHN FRENCH

AN AUTHENTIC BIOGRAPHY BY CECIL CHISHOLM, M.A. WITH A PORTRAIT OF SIR JOHN FRENCH BY HIS SON, J.R.L. FRENCH. CR. 8VO. CLOTH. PRICE 1/- NET. POSTAGE 3D. EXTRA.

"Capital."—Globe.

"A very excellent character study."—Daily News.

"An excellent little book."—Westminster Gazette.

"An admirable story of the Field-Marshal's life."—Academy.

"A book which everyone should read at the present moment."—Field.

"A welcome and admirable little volume in every way."—Observer.

* * * * *

ATKINS AT WAR

AS TOLD IN HIS OWN LETTERS. BY J.A. KILPATRICK. WITH A COVER DESIGN BY SIR R. BADEN-POWELL, K.C.B. CLOTH. PRICE 1/- NET. POSTAGE 3D. EXTRA.

"A human document."—Globe.

"A human document."—Graphic.

"Sure of a wide circulation."—Nation.

"A veritable human document."—Bookman.

"A capital little book."—Pall Mall Gazette.

"A book that throbs with life."—Daily Call.

"Mr. Kilpatrick has performed a public service."—Evening Standard.

HERBERT JENKINS LD., 12 ARUNDEL PLACE, LONDON, S.W.

THE END

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