was searchingly cold and every officer and man became
thoroughly drenched, there was not a sick heart in
the force. The 157th Brigade proceeded to the
ford at the mouth of the Auja, the 156th Brigade advanced
towards the river just below Muannis, and the 155th
Brigade moved up to the mill and dam at Jerisheh, where
it was to secure the crossing and then swing to the
right to capture Hadrah. The advance was slow,
but that the Scots were able to move at all is the
highest tribute to their determination. The rain-soaked
canvas of the boats had so greatly added to their
weight that the parties detailed to carry them from
the Sarona orange orchards found the task almost beyond
their powers. The bridge rafts for one of the
crossings could not be got up to the river bank because
the men were continually slipping in the mud under
the heavy load, and the attacking battalion at this
spot was ferried over in coracles. On another
route a section carrying a raft lost one of its number,
who was afterwards found sunk in mud up to his outstretched
arms. The tracks were almost impassable, and
a Lancashire pioneer battalion was called up to assist
in improving them. The men became caked with
mud from steel helmet to boots, and the field guns
which had to be hauled by double teams were so bespattered
that there was no need for camouflage. In those
strenuous hours of darkness the weather continued vile,
and the storm wind flung the frequent heavy showers
with cutting force against the struggling men.
The covering party which was to cross at the ford
found the bar had shifted under the pressure of flood
water and that the marks put down to direct the column
had been washed away. The commanding officer
reconnoitred, getting up to his neck in water, and
found the ford considerably out of position and deeper
than he had hoped, but he brought his men together
in fours and, ordering each section to link arms to
prevent the swirling waters carrying them out to sea,
led them across without a casualty. In the other
places the covering parties of brigades began to be
ferried over at eight o’clock. The first
raft-loads were paddled across with muffled oars.
A line was towed behind the boats, and this being made
fast on either side of the river the rafts crossed
and recrossed by haulage on the rope, in order that
no disturbance on the surface by oars on even such
a wild night should cause an alarm. As soon as
the covering parties were over, light bridges to carry
infantry in file were constructed by lashing the rafts
together and placing planks on them. One of these
bridges was burst by the strength of the current, but
the delay thus caused mattered little as the surprise
was complete. When the bridges of rafts had been
swung and anchored, blankets and carpets were laid
upon them to deaden the fall of marching feet, and
during that silent tramp across the rolling bridges
many a keen-witted Scot found it difficult to restrain
a laugh as he trod on carpets richer by far than any