The Wonder of War on Land
ran had gone, "that they'd let me join in the
e hunchback answered, shaking
ty well," suggested the boy. "I used
on smiled i
ow about cavalry maneuvers? Why, boy, you'd bungle up a cavalry charge so badly that the kind
len but he knew his co
e said, "but I don't know anything about
know the first thing about it. With continuous work eight hours a day, it takes at least two years to make a real soldier. You don't know how to use a sin
e all th
ine ri
the diff
He called to a soldier who was st
they are not called so. The Lebel is an old type and has a tube fitted in the rifle under the barrel, the cartridge
armies, what gu
tish have a short Lee-Enfield. All of them have magazines under the bolt wa
is th
en cartridges in its magazine against the Mauser's five. But," and he patted his rifle affectionately, "I like my Lebel bett
jump right into the fighting-line without jo
nto the fire of his own artillery. When there's a retreat, he starts a panic. When he's on sentry-duty he hears a suspicious noise about once in every three minutes. When he's told to do something he doesn't like, he tries to argue about it. If you want to be a soldier, boy, join it in
" said Horace mournfully, as
hunchback, a curious glint in his eyes.
two?" haza
," came the reply, "that is, unless the Germans smas
"if it lasts a year
roquier, "we'
officer sent for Hor
" he said, as soon
er's j
d. "I thought it would
low seems to have learned from Li
k answered; "we lived just
e any of th
he bomb
r any d
m the wounded. I was in hiding, though, a
, of the fearful loss of life in the massed attacks and of the valor of the def
to waste men when guns will do the trick. It seems he brought his 42-centimeter guns into position five miles from Namur abo
a German. The hail of death on those trenches was so furious that no troops could live through it. There was no resistance. The guns of the forts could not reply, they were outranged. There was no possibility of a count
e on the forts. Fort Maizeret received 1200 shells, at the speed of twenty to the minute, but was only able to reply with ten rounds. In that sixty minutes, the fort was reduced to a mass of crumpled masonry and a few shreds of armor
ts up to stiffen General Michel's defense, but they arrived too late to be of any use to th
ours. Apparently there is nothing made by the hands of man that can resist the incredible destructiveness of those huge high-explosive shells. Our point of defense will have to be at Charleroi. Our airmen report a
supplementing from time to time. When he had finished,
ere they came from, who commands
er was
his brain, "but I think the woman whose boy
bout the best troops in the German Army, pretty clean fighters, too, as a rule. I hope
e Meuse near Namur, ridden through Charleroi and trotted on towards the Sambre. At first they were mistaken for British hussars, to whose uniform theirs was similar. Soon, however, they were recog
ved with a point-blank military order. He decided to chance it, not being punishable for disobedience as a soldier. The boy was wild to see a battle, if there should be one, but Croquier forbade his attaching himself to any infantry regiment. He, himself, had made friends with one of the gunners of a "Soixa
t, back here with the art
at him with his mout
oy," he said. "I'm thinkin
f battles," reiterated the l
near by. It sounded like the crackling of dry wood in an immense bon-fire. Horace look
g shells, except o
unner answered. "Something's goin
by, marching north, wit
n had white eyebrows and either a gray beard or a gray stubbly chin. It took a moment's thought to realize that this was the effect of
machine-gun began its
on," said the hunchbac
to see a battle slipp
ntinued. "I hope so. We're considerably too cl
nd the horizon and the machine-guns yapped from a hundred points ahead. But, over all, the great guns boomed. It was as though
for a
xante-Quinze" sprang to his post. The gun-numbers, who had been clustere
enti
ficial Ph
nfantry
ustrirte
nfantry
they made sure that the sighting-gear was in place and tha
orace," said Croquier, pointin
disappear as they threw themselves down. Jets of up-thrown earth showed where the shells were striking, and a rising cloud of dust, like to that r
ward!" came the
pa
two points this side o
see
e t
ave the elevati
hes returning smoothly to res
ready
st r
mastering desire to watch the modern
r bent down to s
ir
ch believed-and rightly-to be the best field-gun in the world. It cracked deafeningly, stridently. The flame which darted out of the muzzle was long and thin and seeme
hundred!" the batt
e of the gun
sand, fiv
ir
frenzy, loading, extrac
ute, poured out of the flam
moving with the precision of things of steel. Cartridge-cases littere
e fir
nds over their foreheads,
rk!" sa
o were men jumped up to run ahead and then fe
his side of the hi
Croquier, "on t
Germans ca
N
s? If they're not in sight of the Germans, what di
k. Therefore every man standing up, within the distance of 700 yards, who is in line with that bullet, can be hit by it. A man, lying down, can only be hit by a bullet which is dropping to earth, so that the zone of danger is low. For example, a man standing at 1000 ya
e shell and shrapnel was bursting overhead, filling the air with splinters of shell and bullets. Now and again a clang on the gun
e, swaying in the breeze a couple of arm's-lengths away, and found
ddenly, the thistle was no more to be seen,
ely afraid, his experience in the woods near Embourg had freed him of fe
gunner, "they'r
rmations under the orders of their officers, others scattered and disorganized. The roar of the artillery took
ve us on the run,"
" said Croq
st machine-guns to break the spirit and numb the hope of victory. A machine-gun spitting 600 bullets to the minute, swaying its muzzle from side to side like a jet of murder, is
ast, but their officers were there, cool and masterful. On the very verge of disgraceful rout, the Fre
ficent evidence of co
e lic
had bleared eyes looking wildly out of sweat-rimmed sockets. The way was littered with mess-tins, cartridge belts, kepis and broken rifles. But training, only a little less strong than the instinct
t his par
stay here and be
moved by the imminent peril, an
he guns ha
like a living thing. Men dropped on ever
ave the guns?" gasped the
e battery commander, as cal
Croquier admiringl
ng's lost!" g
said the
der, followed by correcti
undred a
and f
ir
but half-way on its mission of revenge, when, as t
concentrated fire of those batteries of seventy-fives and melt
as though they had not been marching for hours and had not encountered the débr
up!" th
said the batt
some of their guns. As they wavered and gave way, the French cavalry, who had bee
ing!" came
themselves down on
d, a whip-like crackle, of little sh
ne-gun," said one of
gun to return when the cavalry made their triumphant da
elow. The men watched him, and, ignoring th
ool to risk his neck in
with orders for the of
ber
a new position. The German infantry rush had failed
only five for the gun. They strained at their c
ed murderously. A
cried the
, where two gunners were lifting, shouldered the men aside, stooped and
re strong!" sai
ck replied, "I am almo
ved off at
n wagon. They had not gone a hundred yards when a shrapnel b
commenced
dropped from the wagon, run forward to the gun and leapt on the plunging horse. O
team tro
ajor caught the stran
you come f
rd to do it with military
of "L'Ill
Do Not
teran's
hich awoke red-hot interest in F
remarked, in a conversational tone of vo
id the boy, "but I'm in no mor
at of c
for me, too, sir, if you
er his grizzled must
lighten the loads, the gunners ran alongside the guns and ammunition wagons. Darkness fell over the scene. The ba
first batt
int on which a man could lie or sit was crowded with wounded. Many
, dying, as the batter
he end?"
o, my boy," s
son to France. Tell her she
geon told him that one leg
ce has made me a gift of a leg.
er, none of the women raised a word of blame. The men drove through with hanging heads, downcast, humiliated by the mute reproach in the eyes of the village
ng the chores of a driver attached to a gun. Croquier, in a manner attached to the battery, felt he could be
ned?" Horace
me like a sh
have reache
what this might mean, then raised hims
cried. "They've pierced our li
rimly, "but unless something happ
city, at Chatelet and Thuin, fell under the impact of the combined light and heavy field howitzers, and, before noon, Charleroi was in German hands. Von B
happens to-morrow!
ething d
arrived unexpectedly in Charleroi during the middle of the engagement. They were too late to keep the Germans from entering
word and bayonet, than in Charleroi. The Germans were more than five to one, but they could not stand cold steel. T
sticks before a whirlwind's blast, factories crumbled into ruin under the disintegrating effects of high explosive shells, burying Fre
hoolroom, but a savage, primitive combat, where each man fired, stabbed, thrust and clubbed to save himself and to fell his foe
eluged Charleroi with
troops, against the wearied but still defiant Turco and Zouave regimen
town. The French Army, however, had almost ignored the development of howitzers, which proved so valuable to the Germans. They had but few of their 3.9-inch (105 mm
know the character of the engagement, the night before. All next morning he stayed by the battery, acting as a driver, but the battery was not in action more than an hour. Th
a road which was nothing more than a series of holes and ruts. A few guns fired from time to t
wo o'clock the
ery Two. There's co
ires in the village streets wavered in the chill air of the early morning. A heavy dew had fallen
irteen-centimeter pop-guns
the world, there," added another, "he
nt flashes of the heavier guns, like the glare
or a moment and then vanished. An 8.2-inch (220 mm.) shell buried itself in the ground behind the battery, drawn up at the ed
came the clacking
ying rider, though his ears warned him of a heavy shell humming on its way,
) shell[14] burst with a slow majestic grandeur. A tree near by, at whose roots the shell had fallen and burrowed, was tossed into th
en the motor-cycle. It had plunged off sharply from the road, jumped a low ditch an
ran across the road. The lad stopped the motor while the gunners lifted the cyclist fro
voice so full of agony that it was a
the edge of the road, grass scorc
up and saw the major, wh
re life or death fo
an guttered out a few sentences, while f
sufferings must have been intense, he said
e disp
ldier should not die in the despair of an un
e delivered.
der smiled thro
red proudly, and tried
hand lightly on the
alute me," he said, "
dispatch-rider joined the immortal
TNO
articular type of gun was not i