them serenely across No Man’s Land and into the
German trenches. He had been expecting us, and
led me along a duck board over the morass, to where
one of these leviathans was awaiting us. You
crawl through a greasy hole in the bottom, and the
inside is as full of machinery as the turret of the
Pennsylvania, and you grope your way to the seat in
front beside that of the captain and conductor, looking
out through a slot in the armour over a waste of water
and mud. From here you are supposed to operate
a machine gun. Behind you two mechanics have
started the engines with a deafening roar, above which
are heard the hoarse commands of the captain as he
grinds in his gears. Then you realize that the
thing is actually moving, that the bosses on the belt
have managed to find a grip on the slime—and
presently you come to the brink of what appears, to
your exaggerated sense of perception, a bottomless
chasm, with distant steep banks on the farther side
that look unattainable and insurmountable. It
is an old German trench which the rains have worn and
widened. You brace yourself, you grip desperately
a pair of brass handles in front of you, while leviathan
hesitates, seems to sit up on his haunches, and then
gently buries his nose in the pasty clay and paws
his way upward into the field beyond. It was
like sitting in a huge rocking-chair. That we
might have had a bump, and a bone-breaking one, I
was informed after I had left the scene of the adventure.
It all depends upon the skill of the driver.
The monsters are not as tractable as they seem.
That field in which the tanks manoeuvre is characteristic
of the whole of this district of levelled villages
and vanished woods. Imagine a continuous clay
vacant lot in one of our Middle Western cities on the
rainiest day you can recall; and further imagine, on
this limitless lot, a network of narrow-gauge tracks
and wagon roads, a scattering of contractors’
shanties, and you will have some idea of the daily
life and surroundings of one of oar American engineer
regiments, which is running a railroad behind the
British front. Yet one has only to see these
men and talk with them to be convinced of the truth
that human happiness and even human health thanks
to modern science—are not dependent upon
an existence in a Garden of Eden. I do not mean
exactly that these men would choose to spend the rest
of their existences in this waste, but they are happy
in the consciousness of a job well done. It was
really inspiring to encounter here the familiar conductors
and brakemen, engineers and firemen, who had voluntarily,
and for an ideal, left their homes in a remote and
peaceful republic three thousand miles away, to find
contentment and a new vitality, a wider vision, in
the difficult and dangerous task they were performing.
They were frequently under fire —when
they brought back the wounded or fetched car-loads
of munitions to the great guns on the ridiculous little
trains of flat cars with open-work wheels, which they