In the Field (1914-1915) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 194 pages of information about In the Field (1914-1915).

In the Field (1914-1915) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 194 pages of information about In the Field (1914-1915).

We looked at each other, without a word.  Everybody felt dejected and doubtful.  Not to understand!...  To have to obey without understanding why!  It was the first time I had really felt the grandeur of military service.  You must have a soul stoutly tempered to carry out an order—­no matter what, even if that order seems incomprehensible to you.  There must have been in that corner of France, on the edge of that frontier which we had sworn should never be violated—­there must have been thousands of officers, thousands of soldiers who would have given their lives rather than yield up one inch of ground.  Then why abandon that station?  Why say so bluntly, “To-morrow you will have no need to go so far north to bring supplies.  We shall come nearer to you; we shall withdraw ...”?

There I was again, allowing my mind to wander and to suffer.  I tried to learn by what means I could get some information about my regiment.

“Well, it’s very simple,” said the Artillery lieutenant, very kindly.  “Your commissariat officer will certainly have to come with his convoy to fetch supplies.  Try to get hold of him.  He will tell you all about it.”

I grasped his hand and went off, glad indeed at the thought of seeing my regiment’s uniform once more.  And Providence seemed to guide me, for I thought I saw the very man I was looking for in the little booking office.  But I had some difficulty in recognising him.  He looked aged and worn.  His beard had grown quite grey.  Bending over the sill of the ticket office, he was in the act of spreading the contents of a box of sardines upon a slice of bread.  Yes, it was he.  How tired and disheartened he looked!  I pushed the door open and rushed in: 

Bonjour!  Comment va?

“Ah!...  It’s you!  What have you come here for, my poor fellow?  Ah!  Things aren’t looking very rosy....”

I plied him with questions, and he answered in short incoherent sentences: 

“Charleroi?  Don’t talk of it!...  Our men?  Grand!...  A hecatomb....  Then ... the retreat ... day and night....  The Germans daren’t....  Ah! a nice business, isn’t it?  We’re retreating.”

He told me where the regiment was, in a huge farm a long way off.  He said he could take my canteen in one of his vans.  As for me, I should have to manage as best I could next day to join my comrades.  It would take some time to get my horses detrained, as the only platform was still being used for the vans not yet unloaded.  “Thanks,” said I.  “Well, it’s quite simple.  To-morrow I go straight towards the cannon.  Good-night.”  And I went off to finish my sleepless night, lying beside my horses.  With my eyes fixed on the chink of the door, I waited, hour after hour, for the daylight....

When dawn broke I had already got Wattrelot and a couple of railwaymen who were still in the station to bring my horse-box up to the platform.  The three horses were quickly saddled and ready to start.  The freshness of the morning and the joy of feeling firm ground under their feet again made them uncommonly lively.  Indeed, Wattrelot came near feeling the effects of their good spirits somewhat uncomfortably as he was getting into the saddle.

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In the Field (1914-1915) from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.