Photo courtesy of New Zealand History online http://www.nzhistory.net.nz/media/photo/co-ordinated-attacks-western-front |
On this day in 1916, the battle of the Somme was four days old. I'd like to commemorate that terrible slaughter quite simply by transcribing a passage from the classic WW1 memoir 'Sagittarius Rising' by Cecil Lewis, first published in 1936.
All you need to know is that Lewis was twenty years old in 1916, having joined the Royal Flying Corps in February 1914, while still only seventeen and just out of school. He was sent to France with 13 hours of flying experience. At that time, the average lifespan of an RFC pilot was about three weeks.
This is his account of what happened to him and his observer, Pip, that fine summer morning exactly 98 years ago.
Dawn over the trenches, everything misty and still above,
with the prospect of heat to come; even the war seemed to pause, taking a deep,
cool morning breath before plunging into action. We were out to find the exact
position at Boiselle, for even now, on the fourth day of the offensive, the
Corps Intelligence did not seem clear on the point. We sailed over the mines
and called for flares with our Klaxon. After a minute, one solitary flare
spurted up, crimson, from the lip of a crater. It looked forlorn, that solitary
little beacon, in the immense pitted miles around. We came down to 500 feet and
sailed over it, trying to distinguish the crouching khaki figures huddled in their
improvised trenches ... when suddenly there was a crash, and the whole machine
shook, as if at the next moment it would wrench itself to pieces.
[With his engine hit by shellfire, Lewis got the plane down:]
Where to land? Five hundred feet over the front line, the earth an expanse of contiguous shell-holes! ... By now we were down to 100 feet, and the contours of the
earth below took on detailed shape. I saw – God be praised! – that the green
patch that had caught my eye was the side of a steep hill. There was no wind. I
swung the machine sideways and pulled her round to head up the slope. She zoomed grandly up the hillside. The speed lessened. Now we were just over the
ground, swooping uphill, like a seagull on a steep Devon plough. ... The hill
rose up before me, and at last she stalled, perched like a bird on the only
patch of hill free of shell-craters, hopped three yards – and stopped!
With a gasp of amazement and relief – for no one could have
hoped to have got down in such a place undamaged – we jumped out of the
machine. It was Pip’s twenty-first
birthday. Suddenly I remembered it. ‘Many
happy returns!’ I said
We stood looking at the machine - for nothing, perhaps is quite so awkward and useless as an aeroplane that can't fly. It would have to be dismantled... at that moment came the 'Wheeeeee... wheeee....whee-ow... whow...whow...whow... zonk!' of a German shell. They were evidently going to dismantle it for us. We dived for a trench... It was five o'clock.
We stood looking at the machine - for nothing, perhaps is quite so awkward and useless as an aeroplane that can't fly. It would have to be dismantled... at that moment came the 'Wheeeeee... wheeee....whee-ow... whow...whow...whow... zonk!' of a German shell. They were evidently going to dismantle it for us. We dived for a trench... It was five o'clock.
From the air we could have found out way home from any part
of the line; but the earth was a strange country. We set off along the
duckboarding at the bottom of a deep communications trench, unable to see over
the top. We turned left at a junction, right at another, They were all deserted.
We were lost. So we climbed out of the trench and walked down to a neighbouring
copse where ... a battalion of infantry was waiting to go up into the line. ...
They sat about on the fallen tree trunks, on overturned wagons, on dud shells,
silent and resigned in that blasted wood under the glory of the summer
morning. Then the thunder of the guns began,
south at the Somme, and rose and rose as the nearer batteries took it up. It
was like jungle drums beating the rhythm of tremendous news, rising, falling,
echoing, repeating, till the whole air was shaking with it. The officer looked
at his watch. The men rose, and shook themselves into order.
‘Good luck!’
‘Good luck! We’ll keep a watch out for you on patrol!’ We turned away up the hill towards Albert, he through the gully of the wood up towards the line.
‘Good luck! We’ll keep a watch out for you on patrol!’ We turned away up the hill towards Albert, he through the gully of the wood up towards the line.
We trudged along in our heavy sheepskin thigh-boots, long
leather coats, mufflers and helmets. ... How different it all looked from the
ground! It was a desolation, unimaginable from the air. The trees by the roadside
were riven and splintered, their branches blown hither and thither, flanking
the road... like a byway to hell. The farms were a mass of debris, the garden
walls heaps of rubble, the cemeteries had their crosses and their wire wreaths
blown horribly askew. Every five square yards held a crater. The earth had no
longer its smooth familiar face. It was
diseased, pocked, rancid, stinking of death in the morning sun.
Yet (Oh, the catch at the heart!), among the devastated
cottages, the tumbled, twisted trees, the desecrated cemeteries, opening,
candid, to the blue heaven, the poppies were growing! Clumps of crimson
poppies, thrusting out from the lips of the craters, straggling in drifts
between the hummocks, undaunted by the desolation, heedless of human fury and
stupidity, Flanders poppies, basking in the sun! As we stood gazing, a lark rose up from among them and
mounted, shrilling over the diapason of the guns.
We listened, watching, and then, I remember, trudged slowly on down the road without a word. That morning seems stranger than most to me now, for Pip is dead, twenty years dead, and I can still hear the lark over the guns, the flop and shuffle of our rubber-soled flying boots on the dusty road; I can remember, set it down, that here on this page it may remain a moment longer than his brief mortality. For what? To make an epitaph, a little literary tombstone, for a young forgotten man.
We listened, watching, and then, I remember, trudged slowly on down the road without a word. That morning seems stranger than most to me now, for Pip is dead, twenty years dead, and I can still hear the lark over the guns, the flop and shuffle of our rubber-soled flying boots on the dusty road; I can remember, set it down, that here on this page it may remain a moment longer than his brief mortality. For what? To make an epitaph, a little literary tombstone, for a young forgotten man.
For months we worked together daily on patrol. His life was
in my hands daily and once, at least, mine was in his. He was the darling of
the Flight, for he had a sort of gentle, smiling warmth about him that we
loved. Besides, from the old rattling piano he would coax sweet music – songs of
the day, scraps of old tunes, Chopin studies, the Liebestraum, Marche
Militaire. I believe he had talent.
Well, that does not matter now and it did not matter then. He had enough for
us, to make us sit quietly in the evening, there in the dingy room where the
oil lamp hung on a string thick with flies, and listen.
In September I went on leave; Pip carried on with another
pilot. One morning on the dawn patrol they, flying low in the arc of our own
gun fire, intercepted a passing shell. The machine and both the boys were blown
to bits.
You can see original film of 'The Somme from air and land' , and an interview with Cecil Lewis at this BBC link: http://www.bbc.co.uk/learningzone/clips/the-somme-from-the-air-and-land/12735.html
You can see original film of 'The Somme from air and land' , and an interview with Cecil Lewis at this BBC link: http://www.bbc.co.uk/learningzone/clips/the-somme-from-the-air-and-land/12735.html
Cecil Lewis
God bless the bravery of all those far-too-young men sent into that appalling war zone. Katherine, thank you for this marvellous piece of Lewis.
ReplyDeleteA beautiful piece of writing. Have just been to the Somme, staying near Albert, so this has a particular resonance.
ReplyDeleteI set my latest book for teenagers The Only Girl in the World near Albert. It is so beautiful there on the water and all the way up to the coast, isn't it, Sue?
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteThe battle of the Somme was 1916! This time 100 years ago, the Great War had not yet started....
ReplyDeleteBut a wonderful post and most interesting...a good commemoration!
Gosh, what writing, and what a moment caught.
ReplyDeleteIt is a few days over 100 years since the Battle of the Somme ended. It is some 40 years since I first 'met' Lewis in print and, as a pilot myself, this has a particular resonance for me.
ReplyDeleteKatherine, I don't wish to seem 'picky'but I'm going to be; Lewis was born in March 1898 so on the first day of the Somme battle he was 18years and 3 months old and had joined the RFC in the spring of 1915.