Hall in British Uniform |
On 25 September 1915 the British launched their largest offensive to date at
Loos. Altogether, the British Army suffered over 50,000 casualties at Loos, almost double the number of German losses. Among those who survived the failed attack was James Norman
Hall, a 1910 graduate of Grinnell College from Colfax, Iowa. He had
worked in Boston as an agent for the Society for the Prevention of
Cruelty to Children before vacationing in Britain in the summer of
1914. Swept away by the “spirit of adventure,” Hall claimed to be
Canadian so that he could enlist in the British army that August.
Trained as a machine gunner, he served with the 9th Royal Fusiliers at
Loos before being discharged in December 1915, when his true nationality was revealed. He returned to the United States, published
his memoir, Kitchener’s Mob: The Adventures of an American in the
British Army, and then went back to France, where he would fly in
the Lafayette Escadrille.
Death comes swiftly in war. One’s life hangs by a thread.
The most trivial circumstance saves or destroys. Mac came into
the half-ruined dugout where the off-duty machine gunners
were making tea over a fire of splintered logs.
“Jamie,” he said, “take my place at sentry for a few minutes,
will you? I’ve lost my water-bottle. It’s ’ere in the dugout
somew’ere. I’ll be only a minute.”
I went out to the gun position a few yards away, and immediately afterward the Germans began a bombardment of our
line. One’s ear becomes exact in distinguishing the size of
shells by the sound which they make in traveling through the
air; and it is possible to judge the direction and the probable
place of their fall. Two of us stood by the machine gun. We
heard at the same time the sound which we knew meant danger, possibly death. It was the awful whistling roar of a high
explosive. We dropped to the floor of the trench at once. The
explosion blackened our faces with lyddite and half-blinded us.
Opening Attack at Loos It Was the First Use of Gas by the British in the War |
The dugout which I had left less than a moment ago was a
mass of wreckage. Seven of our comrades were inside.
One of them crawled out, pulling himself along with one
arm. The other arm was terribly crushed and one leg was
hanging by a tendon and a few shreds of flesh.
“My God, boys! Look wot they did to me!”
He kept saying it over and over while we cut the cords from
our bandoliers, tied them about his leg and arm and twisted
them up to stop the flow of blood. He was a fine, healthy lad.
A moment before he had been telling us what he was going to
do when we went home on furlough. Now his face was the
color of ashes, his voice grew weaker and weaker, and he died
while we were working over him.
High explosive shells were bursting all along the line. Great
masses of earth and chalk were blown in on top of men seeking
protection where there was none. The ground rocked like so
much pasteboard. I heard frantic cries for “Picks and shovels!”
“Stretcher-bearers! Stretcher-bearers this way, for God’s sake!”
The voices sounded as weak and futile as the squeaking of rats
in a thunderstorm.
When the bombardment began, all off-duty men were ordered into the deepest of the shell-proof dugouts, where they
were really quite safe. But those English lads were not cowards.
Orders or no orders, they came out to the rescue of their
comrades. They worked without a thought of their own danger. I felt actually happy, for I was witnessing splendid heroic
things. It was an experience which gave one a new and unshakable faith in his fellows.
The sergeant and I rushed into the ruins of our machine-gun
dugout. The roof still held in one place. There we found Mac,
his head split in two as though it had been done with an axe.
Gardner’s head was blown completely off, and his body was so
terribly mangled that we did not know until later who he was.
Preston was lying on his back with a great jagged, blood-stained
hole through his tunic. Bert Powel was so badly hurt that we
exhausted our supply of field dressings in bandaging him. We
found little Charlie Harrison lying close to the side of the wall,
gazing at his crushed foot with a look of incredulity and horror
pitiful to see. One of the men gave him first aid with all the
deftness and tenderness of a woman.
British Troops at Loos Advancing Through the Gas |
The rest of us dug hurriedly into a great heap of earth at the
other end of the shelter. We quickly uncovered Walter, a lad
who had kept us laughing at his drollery on many a rainy
night. The earth had been heaped loosely on him and he was
still conscious.
“Good old boys,” he said weakly; “I was about done for.”
In our haste we dislodged another heap of earth which
completely buried him again, and it seemed a lifetime before
we were able to remove it. I have never seen a finer display of
pure grit than Walter’s.
“Easy now!” he said. “Can’t feel anything below me waist. I
think I’m ’urt down there.”
We worked as swiftly and as carefully as we could. We knew
that he was badly wounded, for the earth was soaked with
blood; but when we saw, we turned away sick with horror.
Fortunately, he lost consciousness while we were trying to
disentangle him from the fallen timbers, and he died on the
way to the field dressing-station. Of the seven lads in the dugout, three were killed outright, three died within half an hour,
and one escaped with a crushed foot which had to be amputated at the field hospital.
The worst of it was that we could not get away from the
sight of the mangled bodies of our comrades. Arms and legs
stuck out of the wreckage, and on every side we saw distorted
human faces, the faces of men we had known, with whom we
had lived and shared hardships and dangers for months past.
Those who have never lived through experiences of this sort
cannot possibly know the horror of them. It is not in the heat
of battle that men lose their reason. Battle frenzy is, perhaps, a
temporary madness. The real danger comes when the strain is
relaxed. Men look about them and see the bodies of their
comrades torn to pieces as though they had been hacked and
butchered by fiends. One thinks of the human body as inviolate, a beautiful and sacred thing. The sight of it dismembered
or disemboweled, trampled in the bottom of a trench, smeared
with blood and filth, is so revolting as to be hardly endurable.
And yet, we had to endure it. We could not escape it.
Whichever way we looked, there were the dead. Worse even than the sight of dead men were the groans and entreaties of
those lying wounded in the trenches waiting to be taken back
to the dressing-stations.
“I’m shot through the stomach, matey! Can’t you get me
back to the ambulance? Ain’t they some way you can get me back
out o’ this?”
“Stick it, old lad! You won’t ’ave long to wite. They’ll be
some of the Red Cross along ’ere in a jiffy now.”
“Give me a lift, boys, can’t you? Look at my leg! Do you
think it’ll ’ave to come off? Maybe they could save it if I could
get to ’ospital in time! Won’t some of you give me a lift? I can
’obble along with a little ’elp.”
“Don’t you fret, sonny! You’re a-go’n’ to ride back in a
stretcher presently. Keep yer courage up a little w’ile longer.”
Some of the men, in their suffering, forgot every one but
themselves, and it was not strange that they should. Others,
with more iron in their natures, endured fearful agony in silence. During memorable half-hours, filled with danger and
death, many of my gross misjudgments of character were made
clear to me. Men whom no one had credited with heroic qualities revealed them. Others failed rather pitiably to live up to
one’s expectations. It seemed to me that there was strength or
weakness in men, quite apart from their real selves, for which
they were in no way responsible; but doubtless it had always
been there, waiting to be called forth at just such crucial times.
During the afternoon I heard for the first time the hysterical
cry of a man whose nerve had given way. He picked up an arm
and threw it far out in front of the trenches, shouting as he did
so in a way that made one’s blood run cold. Then he sat down
and started crying and moaning. He was taken back to the
rear, one of the saddest of casualties in a war of inconceivable
horrors. I heard of many instances of nervous breakdown, but
I witnessed surprisingly few of them. Men were often badly
shaken and trembled from head to foot. Usually they pulled
themselves together under the taunts of their less susceptible
comrades.
From Kitchener’s Mob (1916), Selected in World War I and America
Interesting indeed. I'm ordering the book!
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