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Caught by the Turks.
by Francis Yeats-Brown.
This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.net
t.i.tle: Caught by the Turks
Author: Francis Yeats-Brown
Release Date: September 7, 2011 [EBook #37343]
Language: English
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CAUGHT BY THE TURKS ***
Produced by Barbara Watson, Ross Cooling, Mark Akrigg and the Online Distributed Proofreading Canada Team at http://www.pgdpcanada.net ((This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries))
CAUGHT BY THE TURKS
BY FRANCIS YEATS-BROWN
WITH PORTRAITS AND PLANS
LONDON EDWARD ARNOLD 1919 [_All rights reserved_]
To LADY PAUL
CONTENTS
CHAPTER PAGE I. CAPTURE 1 II. A SHADOWLAND OF ARABESQUES 25 III. THE TERRIBLE TURK 42 IV. "OUT OF GREAT TRIBULATION" 56 V. THE LONG DESCENT OF WASTED DAYS 75 VI. THE PSYCHOLOGY OF PRISON 95 VII. THE COMIC HOSPITAL IN CONSTANTINOPLE 102 VIII. OUR FIRST ESCAPE 122 IX. A CITY OF DISGUISES 140 X. RECAPTURED 159 XI. THE BLACK HOLE OF CONSTANTINOPLE 172 XII. OUR SECOND ESCAPE 198
LIST OF ILl.u.s.tRATIONS
PAGE
THE ARMENIAN PATRIARCHATE AT PSAMATTIA, CONSTANTINOPLE 137
THE AUTHOR AS A GERMAN GOVERNESS _facing p._ 154
THE AUTHOR AS A HUNGARIAN MECHANIC _facing p._ 170
THE SQUARE OF THE SERASKERAT, CONSTANTINOPLE 213
CAUGHT BY THE TURKS
CHAPTER I
CAPTURE
Half an hour before dawn on November the thirteenth, 1915. . . .
We were on an aerodrome by the River Tigris, below Baghdad, about to start out to cut the telegraph lines behind the Turkish position.
My pilot ran his engine to free the cylinders from the cold of night, while I stowed away in the body of the machine some necklaces of gun-cotton, some wire cutters, a rifle, Verey lights, provisions, and the specially prepared map--prepared for the eventuality of its falling into the hands of the Turks--on which nothing was traced except our intended route to the telegraph lines west and north of Baghdad. Some primers, which are the explosive charges designed to detonate the gun-cotton, I carefully stowed away in another part of the machine, and with even more care--trepidation, indeed--I put into my pockets the highly explosive pencils of fulminate of mercury, which detonate the primers which detonate the gun-cotton.
Then I climbed gingerly aboard, feeling rather highly charged with explosives and excitement.
For some time the pilot continued to run his engine and watch the revolution meter. The warmer the engine became, the colder I got, for the prelude to adventure is always a chilly business. Unlike the engine, I did not warm to my work during those waiting moments. At last, however, the pilot waved his hand to give the signal to stand clear, and we slid away on the flight that was to be our last for many a day. The exhaust gases of our engine lit the darkness behind me with a ring of fire. I looked back as we taxied down the aerodrome, and saw the mechanics melting away to their morning tea. Only one figure remained, a young pilot in a black and yellow fur coat, who had left his warm bed to wish us luck. For a moment I saw him standing there, framed in flame, looking after us regretfully. Then I saw him no more, and later they told me (but it was not true) that he had died at Ctesiphon.
We rose over the tents of our camp at Aziziah, all silver and still in the half-light, and headed for the Turkish outposts at El Kutunieh.
Their bivouac fires mounted straight to heaven. It was a calm and cloudless dawn, ideal weather for the business we had been sent out to do.
At all costs, we had been told, the telegraphic communications west and north of Baghdad must be cut that day. Von der Goltz and a German battery of quick-firing guns were hasting down from Mosul to help their stricken ally, and reinforcements of the best Anatolian troops, magnificently equipped and organised by the Germans, were on their way from Gallipoli, whence they came flushed with the confidence of success.
Our attack on Ctesiphon was imminent. It was a matter of moments whether the Turkish reinforcements would arrive in time. Delay and confusion in the Turkish rear would have helped us greatly, and the moral and material advantage of cutting communications between Nur-ed-Din, the vacillating Commander-in-Chief defending Baghdad, and Von der Goltz, the veteran of victories, was obvious and unquestionable. But could we do it in an old Maurice Farman biplane?
Desperate needs need desperate measures. The attempt to take Baghdad was desperate--futile perhaps--and contrary to the advice of the great soldier who led the attack in the glorious but unsuccessful action of Ctesiphon. And so also, in a small way, ours was a desperate mission.
Our machine could carry neither oil nor petrol enough for the journey, and special arrangements had to be made for carrying spare tins of lubricant and fuel. With these we were to refill at our first halt.
While I was destroying the telegraph line, my pilot was to replenish the tanks of his machine. According to the map this should have been feasible, for the telegraph lines at the place we had selected for our demolition ran through a blank desert, two miles from the nearest track.