Tell England eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 435 pages of information about Tell England.

Tell England eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 435 pages of information about Tell England.

I thought of our unbroken partnership, and decided—­as much in rash defiance as in loyalty to my friend—­that I would ask to be relieved of my position as Ammunition Officer and allowed to return to my battalion.  The permission was granted.  And oh!  I cannot explain it, but it was good to be back with my company after the enervating experience of staff-life.  And, better still, now that Doe was no longer a platoon commander but Brigade Bombing Officer, he could live where he liked, and had arranged to share my dug-out—­that delectable villa on Fusilier Bluff known as “Seaview.”  Really, under these conditions, the Peninsula, we felt, would be quite “swish.”

CHAPTER XII

SACRED TO WHITE

Sec.1

On a certain morning Doe and I in our dug-out on Fusilier Bluff felt the pull and the fascination, coming over five miles of scrub, of the magical Cape Helles.  It was but a score of weeks since the first invaders had stormed its beaches:  and we wanted to drink again of the romance that charged the air.  So, being free for a time, we walked to the brow overlooking V Beach, and stood there, letting the breeze blow on our faces, and thinking of the British Army that blew in one day like a gale from the sea.

The damage wrought by that tornado was everywhere visible.  Near us were the ruins of a lighthouse.  In old days it had glimmered for distant mariners, who pointed to it as the Dardanelles light.  But, at the outbreak of war, the Turk had closed his Dardanelles and put out the lamp.  He would never kindle it again, for the Queen Elizabeth, or a warship of her kidney, had lain off shore and reduced the lighthouse to these white stones.  Across the amphitheatre of the bay were the village and broken forts of Seddel Bahr; and, aground at this point, the famous old hulk, the River Clyde.  You remember—­who could forget?—­how they turned this vessel into a modern Horse of Troy, cramming its belly with armed men, running it ashore, and then opening square doors in its hull-sides and letting loose the invaders—­while the plains of Old Troy looked down from over the Hellespont.  What a litter old Mother Clyde carried in her womb that day!  From where we stood we could see those square doors, cut in her sides, through which the troops and rushed into the bullet-hail:  we could see, too, the semicircular beach, where they had attempted to land, and the ribbon of blue water in which so many, weighted with their equipment, had sunk and died.

And what was that thing a few cable lengths out, a rusty iron something, rising from the water, and being lapped by the incoming ripples?  It was the keel of the old Majestic, which lay there, deck downwards, on the ocean bed.

“It’s too pathetic!” exclaimed the sensitive Doe.  “Let’s go and visit the Clyde.  Fancy, old Moles White was in that boat.”

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Tell England from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.