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The brigade had lost heavily. Of twenty-three officers of the Central Ontario Battalion who went over the parapet only three returned uninjured, the remainder being either killed, wounded, or missing!
Nor had the Yorks fared much better.
During the second day of the affair the writer was moving up a narrow communication trench with a platoon carrying ammunition to the front line when he encountered a party of about the same strength coming down the trench in defiance of a notice board marked "In only." After asking in vain for the officer in charge of the party he was told "For G.o.d's sake, sir, we aren't any party. We're all that's left of two companies!"
There was nothing left to be said!
Once again it had been proved that attacks by daylight, unless supported by ma.s.ses of supports, are bound to fail.
The 2nd Canadian Brigade relieved us, marching in by one side of the ca.n.a.l while we marched out along the other. We called across our best wishes to them as we pa.s.sed. We had, it is true, been heavily pounded, but we were far from being depressed, though we might well have been.
Instead, as we pa.s.sed an electric towing machine lying neglected along the towpath, a man in the ranks behind asked his mate what they were used for.
"Don't you know?" was the reply as he glanced at the broad-tyred wheels; "why, they use them for rolling down the water in the ca.n.a.l after a storm!"
It was in this mood we returned to billets.
[Ill.u.s.tration: APPROXIMATE LINE AFTER FESTUBERT AND GIVENCHY, 1915.]
CHAPTER XVII
NORTHWARD AGAIN
After Givenchy the Canadian Division rested for another week around the outskirts of Bethune before starting its long tramp back to the northern end of the line again.
But it was far from being a week of idleness, and hard drilling was the order of the day. Great stress was laid on bomb-throwing, and, in spite of the heavy casualties the bombing sections had suffered, there was no dearth of volunteers for the "Suicide Club," as the bombers termed themselves. The men, as well as the officers, recognised the value of this weapon, old as the use of gunpowder itself, but now reinstated to greater importance than ever before.
So we started northward, a very uneventful and tiring march, our first stop being at Neuf Berquin, where we rested a day.
The march had been very fatiguing; it was the latter end of June, and "sunny France" had been living up to her reputation, and even the nights, in which we marched for the sake of coolness and concealment, were most oppressive. And it was in weather like that that the famous "First Seven Divisions" fought and marched twenty-five or thirty miles, dug in and fought again, only to have again to retire!
And we were only averaging fifteen miles a march!
Our next halt was at Noote-Broome, a mere hamlet, where we held church service and then marched straight into the trenches.
This was a new area for us. We had grown so accustomed to s.h.i.+fting from one part of the line to another that we had already nicknamed ourselves the "Canadian Foot Cavalry."
However, we were fated to rest in that vicinity for several months, though our brigade s.h.i.+fted from one position to another along that line all summer.
We first relieved a battalion of the Middles.e.x on June 28th opposite a poisonous little spot known as "la Pet.i.te Douve." Here a small stream, dignified by the name of the Douve River, wandered lazily across the flat at the foot of the Messines Ridge and coiled like a natural moat in front of the Pet.i.te Douve Farm.
This, like all farms in Flanders, was a square of strongly-built brick buildings. In it the enemy had established concrete machine-gun positions and converted the place into a veritable fort. It projected in a salient from their average line and enfiladed the main road running from our position to Messines.
The Middles.e.x, on our relieving them, had told us a weird tale of the number of rounds of rifle ammunition they expended in a single night. We discounted this by the usual 50 per cent., but our major had an extra supply brought up in case of emergencies.
An evening or two later we found the reason for the Middles.e.x's heavy expenditure of cartridges, for the enemy, on a three-mile front, suddenly opened up rapid fire, keeping up this fusillade for nearly half an hour.
This occurred at odd intervals for some time while we occupied that front, and was known as "the Germans (or the Fritzes) getting their wind up." The Middles.e.x had been trying to beat down this fire with their own rifle fire; we contented ourselves with sitting tight and, by careful patrolling, watching for the first signs of an attack. On such a night as this poor F---- was out on patrol when the rapid fire opened up, and we nearly struck him off the company strength. Much to our surprise he and his patrol came in later, quite unhurt, having discovered, and taken shelter in, an advanced German trench near some willows.
Later it became quite the thing to take a few men out with you and bomb this trench.
We only did two "tours" in this particular piece of trench, as the next time we came in that company frontage had been allotted to the battalion on our left and we moved just around the corner, the Pet.i.te Douve Farm being almost hidden from our view by trees but continuing to annoy us with its machine-guns.
It was here that we celebrated "Dominion Day" (July 1st), a Canadian ensign that had arrived a few days before in a parcel from "home" waving gaily behind our lines.
It was here, too, that Captain Frank Tidy, of the Toronto Battalion, astonished the brigade by making a sortie from the trench in daytime and bringing in two prisoners whom he had observed moving in the tall wheat that here and there shut off our view of the German line.
Much courage is required to make a sortie of this sort, and one is not surprised that a third German had to be shot before the other two surrendered to Captain Tidy and his two comrades.
No information of importance was gained from these prisoners except that the enemy had sent them out to ascertain who the new troops occupying our line were.
Summer was now well advanced, and it was doubtful if a further "push"
would be attempted that season, and we gradually settled down to the routine of trench warfare.
During the middle of July we did one tour in the trenches in front of Wulverghem, relieving a battalion of Northumberland Fusiliers. We only stayed there a few days, but were greatly bothered with rifle-grenades, so, finding that our grenades fell short of the German line, the major and a small party took the grenade-gun out in the long gra.s.s until they were able to reach the enemy and thus secured a temporary peace.
The East Yorks then relieved us, and when next we entered the trenches it was a little to the right of our old position and in front of the celebrated Ploegsteert Wood.
Here the right battalions of the brigade had rather a strenuous time, as some mines had been exploded and there was still a struggle going on around the craters.
[Ill.u.s.tration: ENTRANCE TO PLUGSTREET WOOD.]
But on the left, ab.u.t.ting our old position near the Douve Farm, we had rather an easy time of it, there being little sh.e.l.ling and the trenches nearly two hundred yards apart.
In fact our greatest activity was at night and at dawn, conditions at the latter time being well expressed in an anonymous sonnet we found pinned up in a dug-out ent.i.tled "Stand To":--
"Early every morning, As the stars begin to tire, Without the slightest warning, Our maxim opens fire; A German gunner answers back, And one by one the rifles crack, All down the line you can hear the rattle, And then begins our morning battle; And as the dawn creeps in the sky A couple of sh.e.l.ls go whistling by.
The bullets are flying in every direction Just as the larks begin to carol, And all because the machine-gun section Wanted to warm their hands on the barrel."
CHAPTER XVIII
NIGHTS OF GLADNESS!
Our nights around Ploegsteert fully made up for the peacefulness of the days, and "No Man's Land" between the two lines of trenches became the scene of many exciting adventures.
This was particularly true of the area directly in front of us, as a large beanfield extended from the German line nearly to ours. It was a dull night indeed that our listening post did not either bomb, or get bombed by, an enemy patrol. Casualties, though, were fewer than one would expect from such combats, as bombs are very local in their action, and it was not easy to locate the enemy's position exactly by ear as he rustled his way through the beans.
Behind the lines there was less romantic work; for General Joffre, in an odd moment, had sent a circular letter to the various divisions calling attention to a new form of trench for protection against sh.e.l.l fire, and we dug these trenches till there was hardly a foot of Allied soil unturned. Later, during the rains, we drained our living trench into them on the principle that the uncomfortable sensation experienced during a heavy sh.e.l.ling would act as a distraction to the inconvenience of standing in several feet of water.
While we were in these trenches the enemy fired the dry yellow gra.s.s in "No Man's Land" a few nights after their capture of our line at Sanctuary Wood, near Hooge, with the flame projectors or "flammenwerfers." A hurried "stand-to" was ordered, as we thought a similar attack was about to be made.
But the fire died down and we saw no signs of the enemy coming over. It was, however, an anxious night, and great interest was taken in widening our wire entanglements as more and more details of the Hooge affair trickled down to us. How we longed for a supply of the iron stakers that our patrols brought in time after time from the German wire! We got them, too--later.