about any possible allowance. He asked no advice,
he suggested no help. He just joined. All
he said was, “I felt I had to go, sir, and my
mother says it will be all right. She says she
will be able to manage quite well.” Let
me pay my tribute to this one young man’s mother.
There are so many like her that I pay it to thousands.
Not only did she refuse to put obstacles in the way,
but she would have no bargaining with patriotism.
“She would manage quite well.” It
meant more boarders in the little home, it meant the
breaking up of the old sweet privacy and quietude
of the household, but—she would manage
quite well. God knows the heartache and the sorrow
behind the sacrifice she and the thousands like her
have made—surely a sacrifice very acceptable
in His sight.
One Young Man in Camp
CHAPTER III
ONE YOUNG MAN IN CAMP
Within a fortnight this one young man was in camp at Crowborough. The contrast to his previous life as a city clerk, where mud was unknown and wet feet a rare occurrence, was marked indeed. The camp was sodden, the mud ankle-deep, and, what with that and the cold November weather, times were pretty stiff. He writes home:
“Our camp is about
a foot deep in mud and slosh, and every
time you go out your
boots are covered and you have to be
careful or you slip
over.
“Our huts are like Church Missions. There are sixty-one fellows in this one, and all along the sides are our mattresses which we fold up. They are made of straw and are really very comfortable. The only drawback is that in the morning you find your toes sticking out at the other end of the bed. I must tell you how these beds are made. There are three planks about six feet in length, and these are placed side by side on two trestles about ten inches high. They give us three blankets, very thick and warm, and you can roll them round yourself.
“Right down the centre of the room are long trestled tables with forms to sit on, and this is where we feast. We sleep, eat, drink, play games, write letters, and do everything in this room.
“It’s very funny to hear the bugle-calls. Everything is done by bugles. At 6.30 in the morning there is the first call and everyone gets up. If you don’t—the sergeant comes along and pulls you out. To wash we have to run down to the other end of the camp and fill our buckets. There are only two buckets for sixty chaps, so you can imagine the scramble. For a bathroom we have a large field, and we nearly break our backs bending down over the basins. For about one hour before breakfast we do physical drill with our coats off. And hard work it is. For breakfast we have streaky greasy bacon. Funny—at home, I never ate bacon, I couldn’t stick it, but here I walk into it and enjoy it. The tea