[Illustration: TRIALS OF A CAMOUFLAGE OFFICER.
Flapper. “OH, I’VE HEARD SUCH WONDERFUL THINGS ABOUT CAMOUFLAGE—MAKING MEN LOOK LIKE GUNS, AND GUNS LIKE COWS, AND ALL THAT SORT OF THING. COULDN’T YOU DO SOME OF YOUR TRICKS HERE?”]
* * * * *
THE INCORRIGIBLES.
HOW AN EXASPERATED ADJUTANT WOULD LIKE TO ADDRESS THE NEW GUARD.
“Guard! for I still concede to you
the title,
Though well I know that it
is not your due,
Being devoid of everything most vital
To the high charge which is
imposed on you;
Listen awhile—and, Number Two,
be dumb;
Forbear to scratch the irritable
tress;
No longer masticate the furtive gum;
And, Private Pitt, stop nibbling at your
thumb,
And for a change attend to
my address.
“Day after day I urge the old, old
thesis—
To reverence well the man
of martial note,
Nor treat as mere sartorial caprices
The mystic marks he carries
on his coat,
And how to know what everybody is,
The swords, the crowns, the
purple-stained cards,
The Brigadiers concealed in Burberries,
And render all those pomps and dignities
Which are, of course, the
raison d’etre of guards.
“With what avail? for never a guard
is mounted
That does not do some wild
abhorrent thing,
Only in hushed low tones to be recounted,
Lest haply hints of it should
reach the KING—
Dark ugly tales of sentinels who drank,
Or lost their prisoners while
imbibing tea,
Or took great pains to make their minds
a blank
Whene’er approached by gentlemen
of rank,
And, when reproved, presented
arms to me!
“There is no potentate in France
or Flanders
You will not heap with insult
if you can.
For lo! a car. It is the Corps Commander’s;
The sentries take no notice
of the man,
Or fix him with a not unkindly stare,
And slap their butts in an
engaging way,
Or else, too late, in penitent despair
Cry, ‘Guard, turn out!’ and
there is no guard there,
But they are in The Blue
Estaminet.
“Weary I am of worrying and warning;
For all my toil I get it in
the neck;
I am fed up with it; and from this morning
I shall not seek to keep your
crimes in check;
Sin as you will—I shall but
acquiesce;
Sleep on, O sentinels—I
shall not curse;
And so, maybe, from sheer contrariness
Some day a guard may be a slight success;
At any rate you cannot well
do worse.”
* * * * *
LIGHT ON THE SITUATION.
“FRONT OF CROWN PRINCE RUPPRECHT.—At night the firing engagement slackened but little, and near Hellwerden it again rose to very great intensity.”—Admiralty, per Wireless Press, July 26th.
Readers who shared the doubt of The Times as to the existence of “Hellwerden” (which doesn’t appear in the maps) will be interested to learn from one of our correspondents, who knows it well, that it exists all right, but is only visible in the very early morning. The Times of July 28th bears out this statement.


