|
Section 2 of the Anzac Book |
 |
|
GLIMPSES OF ANZAC |
IT'S the monotony we revile, not-to a like degree-hard work or hard fare. To look out on the same stretch of beach or the same patch
of trench wall and the same terraces of hostile black and grey sandbags day
after day is to be wearied. There is the same sitting in the same trench,
shelled by the same guns, manned, perhaps (though that we endeavour to avert), by the same Turks. Unhappily
it is not the same men of ours that they maim and kill daily.
And if one's dug-out lies on a seaward slope there is, every morning, the
same stretch of the lovely Aegean, with the same two islands standing over in the west.
Yet neither the islands nor the sea are the same any two successive days. The temper of the
Aegean at this time changes more suddenly and frequently than ever does that of the Pacific.

Every morning the islands of the west take on fresh colour, and are trailed by fresh shapes of mist.
To-day Imbros stands right over against you ; you see the detail of the fleet in the harbour, and the striated heights of rocky Samothrace reveal the small ravines. To-morrow, in the early morning light,
Imbros lies mysteriously afar off like an Isle of the Blest, a delicate
vapour - shape reposing on the placid sea.
Nor is there monotony in either weather or temperature. This is the late autumn. Yet it is a halting and irregular advance the late autumn is making. Fierce, biting, raw days alternate with the comfortableness of the mild late summer. This morning, to bathe is as much as your life is worth (shrapnel disregarded); to-morrow, in the gentle air, you may splash
and gloat an hour and desire more. And down from the trenches and must clear up a vermin-and-dust-infested skin at all costs.
Not infrequently Beachy Bill catches a mid-morning bathing squad. There is ducking and splashing shorewards, and scurrying by men clad only
in the garment Nature gave them. Shrapnel bursting above the water in which you are disporting raises chiefly the question: " Will it ever stop?" By this you mean: " Will the pellets ever cease to whip the water?" The interval between the murderous lightning flash aloft and the last
pellet swish seems, to the potential victim, everlasting.
The work of enemy shell behind the actual trenches is peculiarly horrible. Men are struck down suddenly and unmercifully where there is no heat of battle. A man dies more easily in the charge. Here he is wounded mortally unloading a cart, drawing water for his unit, directing a mule convoy. He may lose a limb or his life when off duty-merely returning
from a bathe or washing a shirt.
One of our number is struck by shrapnel retiring to his dug-out to read his just delivered mail.
He is off duty -is, in fact, far tip on the ridges overlooking the sea. The wound gapes in his back. There is no staunching it. Every thump of the aorta pumps out his life.
Practically he is a dead man when struck; he lives but a few minutes-with his pipe still steaming, clenched in his teeth. They lay
him aside in the hospital.
That night we stand about the grave in which he lies beneath his groundsheet. Over that wind-swept headland the moon shines fitfully through
driving cloud. A monitor bombards off shore. Under her friendly screaming shell and the singing bullets of the Turks the worn, big-hearted padre intones the beautiful Catholic intercession for the soul of the dead in his cracked voice.
At the burial of Sir John Moore was heard the distant and random gun. Here the shells sometimes burst in the midst of the burial party. Bearers are laid low. A running for cover. The grave is hastily filled in by a couple of shovel-men; the service is over; and fresh graves are to be dug forthwith for stricken members of the party. To die violently and be laid in this
shell swept area is to die lonely indeed. The day is far off (but it will come) when splendid
mausoleums will be raised over these heroic dead. And one foresees the time when steamers will bear up the
Aegean pilgrims come to do honour at the resting places of friends and
kindred, and to move over the charred battlegrounds of Turkey.

Informal parades for Divine Service are held on Sabbath afternoons for such men as are off duty. Attendances are scanty. Tile late afternoons are becoming bleak; men relieved from labour seek the warmth of their dugouts.
The chaplain stands where he can find a level area and awaits a congregation. When two or three are gathered together he announces a hymn. The voices go up in feeble unison, punctuated by the roar of artillery and the crackle of rifle fire. The prayers are offered. The address is short and shorn of cant. This is no place for canting formula. Reality is very grim all round. There is a furtive under-watchfulness against shrapnel. One almost has forgotten what it is to sit in security
of Anzac
and listen placidly to a sermon at church.
The chaplains have come out to do their work simply and laboriously. They are direct-minded,
purposeful men. One is a neighbour in a Light Horse regiment-a colonel. He flaunts it in no sandbagged palace. His dugout is indistinguishable from those of the privates between whom he is sandwiched - mere waterproof sheet aloft and bed laid on the Turkish clay; a couple of biscuit boxes with his oddments-jam, and milk, and bread; writing materials and toilet requisites. A
string line beneath the roof holds his towel and lately washed garments.
He is a simple parson, hard-worked by day and night in and about the trenches, careful for such comforts as can be got for his men in this benighted land; lying down at
nights listening to the forceful lingo of his neighbours, and confessedly admiring its graphic if
well garnished eloquence. He sees his duty with a direct gaze-a faithful Churchman at work in the throes of war.
In a land of necessarily hard fare a regimental canteen in Imbros does much to compensate. Unit representatives proceed thence weekly by trawler for stores. One feels almost in the land of the living when so near lie tinned fruit, butter, cocoa, coffee, sausages , sauces, chutneys, pipes, tobacco, and chocolate. Such a repertoire, combined with a monthly visit from the paymaster, removes one far from the commissariat hardships of the Crimea.
The visualising of unstinted civilian meals is a prevalent pastime. Men sit at the mouths of their dug-outs and relate the
minutia of the first dinner at home. Some men excel in this. They do
it with a carnal power of graphic description which makes one fairly pine. One has heard a
colonel-chaplain talk for two hours of nothing but grub and at the end convincingly
exempt himself from any charge of carnal-mindedness. Truly we are a people whose god is their belly. But
we never admitted that until this period of enforced deprivation.
Those comforts embraced by the use of
good tobacco and deliverance from vermin at night are the most desired; both
hard to procure. There is somehow a great gulf fixed between the civilian quality of any tobacco and the make-up of the same brand for the Army. Once in six months a friend in Australia dispatches a parcel of cigars. Therein lies the entrance to a fleeting paradise-fleeting indeed when one's comrades have sniffed or ferreted out the key. After all, the pipe, given reasonably good tobacco, gives the
entree to the paradise farthest removed from that of the fool.
Of the plague of nocturnal vermin little need be said explicitly. The locomotion of the day almost dissipates the evil. But it makes night hideous.
The tendency is to retire late and thus abridge the period of persecution. One's friends drop in for a yarn or a smoke after tea, and the dreaded hour of turning-in is postponed by
reminiscent chit-chat and the late preparation of supper. One renews here,
a surprising bulk of old acquaintance. Old college chums are dug out, and one talks back and lives a couple of hours in the glory of days that have passed. Believe it not that there is no deliverance possible from the hardness of active service. The retrospect, and the prospect, and the ever-present
faculty of visualisation are ministering angels sent to minister.
Mails, too, are an anodyne. Their arrival eclipses considerations of life and death-of fighting and the landing of rations. The mail-barge coming in somehow looms larger than a barge of supplies. Mails have been arriving weekly for six months, yet no one is callous to them.
Of incoming mail, letters stand inevitably first. They put a man at home for an hour.
But so does the local newspaper. Perusing that, he is back at the old matutinal habit of picking at the news over his eggs and coffee, racing against the suburban business train. Intimate associations hang about the reading of the local sheet-domestic and parochial associations almost as powerful as are brought by letters.

And what shall be said of parcels from home? The boarding-school home-hamper is at last superseded. No
son away at Grammar School, ever pursued his voyage of discovery through tarts, cakes and preserves, sweets, pies and fruit with the intensity of gloating expectation in which a
man on Gallipoli discloses the contents of his " parcel."
" 'Struth! a noo pipe, Bill!-an' some er the ole terbaccer. Blimey! Cigars,
too!-'ave one, before the mob smells 'em. . . . Dammed if there ain't choclut! Look 'ere. . . . An' 'ere's some er the dinkum* coc'nut-ice the tart uster make. . . . Hallo ! more socks! Nev' mind: winter's comin'. 'Ere, 'ow er yer orf fer socks, cobber? . . . Take these-bonzer 'and-knitted. Sling them issue-things inter the sea.
. . . I'm d----d!-soap for the voy'ge Iome. . . .
'Angkerch'fs! - orl right w'en the - blizzards come, an' a chap's
snifflin' fcr a - week on end.
Writin' paper!-well, that's the straight - tip, and no errer! The beggars er bin puttin' it in me letters
lately too. Well, I'll write ter-night on the stren'th of it. Gawd! 'ere's a shavin'
stick! - 'andv, that! I wuz clean run out - usin' carbolic soap, - it! . . . Aw, that's a dinkum - parcel, that is!"
| Dinkum-Australian for
"true." |
HECTOR DINNING, Aust. A.S.C. |
|
|
PARABLES OF ANZAC |
|
From Shell Green
From a Correspondent in Australian Field Artillery, "Sea View," Boltons Knoll, near Shell Green.
WAS looking out front the entrance of my dug-out, thinking how peaceful everything was, when Johnny Turk opened on our trenches. Shells were bursting, and fragments scattered all about Shell Green. Just at this time some new reinforcements were eagerly collecting
-spent fuses and shells as mementoes. While this fusillade was on, men were
walking about the Green just as usual, when one was hit by a falling fuse.
Out rushed one of the reinforcement chaps, and when he saw that the man was not hurt be asked: "Want the fuse, mate?"
The other looked at him calmly. What do you think I stopped it for? he asked. |
|
THE TURK IN THE PERISCOPE |
|
The same Correspondent writes :
I am sure that wherever the old 5th Light Horsemen, who put in such a warm spell at " Chatham's * some time ago, congregate after this war the following incident will be told and retold :
Bill Blankson was a real hard case, happy-go-lucky, regardless of danger. Bill was put on sapping for over a fortnight, and at the end of that time had a growth of stubble that would have brought a flush of pride to his dirty face if be had seen it. But he hadn't seen it-one does not carry a
looking glass when sapping.
At the end of the fortnight he was taken off sapping and put on observing.
Anyone who has used a periscope knows that unless the periscope is held well up before the eyes,
instead of the landscape, one sees only one's own visage reflected in the lower glass.
Bill did not hold the periscope up far enough, and what he saw in it was a dark, dirty face with a wild growth
of black stubble glaring straight back at him. He dropped the periscope, grabbed his rifle, and scrambled
up the parapet, fully intending to finish the Turk who had dared to look down the
other end of his periscope. He had mistaken his own reflection for a Turk's.
Chatham's Post at the southern end of the line
was attacked by the Turks for several days in November. |
|
THE YARNS THAT ABDUL TELLS |
0NE of the chief pastimes of the Turks who live behind the black and white sandbags
opposite (writes an officer who knows them intimately) is that of listening to stories told by the storytellers in the
cafes of the Asia Minor villages. The
hero of these stories is very often a certain Nastradi Hodja (who really existed at one time,
and made a reputation by his wit as well as through his stupidity). Here is an example of the sort of story about Nastradi which especially pleases the
Turk ;
Nastradi Hodja's wife woke up one night through hearing a noise. She got up, and going out on to the landing on the upper floor, outside her bedroom, called out :
" Nastradi, what was that noise?" Nastradi's voice came up from below.
"Don't pay any attention to it," he said. "It was only my shirt that tumbled down the stairs."
" Does a shirt make such a noise?" she asked. " No," was the reply; " but I was in it."
A. P. M. |
|
THE GRAVES OF GALLIPOLI |
 |
- The herdman wandering by the lonely
hills
- Marks where they lie on the scarred mountain's flanks,
- Remembering that wild morning when the hills
- Shook to the roar of guns and those wild ranks
- Surged upward from the sea.
- None tends them. Flowers will come again in spring,
- And the torn hills and those poor mounds be green.
- Some bird that sings in English woods may sing
- To English lads beneath-the wind will keep
- its ancient lullaby
- Some flower that blooms beside the Southern foam
- May blossom where our dead Australians lie,
- And comfort them with whispers of their home;
- And they will dream, beneath the alien sky,
- of the Pacific Sea.
- " Thrice happy they who fell beneath the walls,
- Under their father's eyes," the Trojan said,
- " Not we who die in exile where who falls
- Must lie in foreign earth." Alas! our dead
- Lie buried far away.
- Yet where the brave man lies who fell in fight
- For his dear country, there his country is.
- And we will mourn them proudly as of right-
- For meaner deaths be weeping and loud cries:
- They died pro patria!
- Oh, sweet and seemly so to die, indeed,
- In the high flush of youth and strength and pride.
- These are our martyrs, and their blood the seed
- Of nobler futures. 'Twas for us they died.
- Keep we their memory green.
- This be their epitaph. "
Traveller, south or west,
- Go, say at home we heard the trumpet call,
- And answered. Now beside the sea we rest.
- Our end was happy if our country thrives
- Much was demanded. Lo! our store was small-
- That which we bad we gave-it was our lives."
|
|
TO A LYRE-BIRD |
- Oh, Lyre-bird! tethered to the earth,
- Thou envy'st not the skylark in the sky,
- But pour'st a thousand mocking notes of mirth,
- Drowning the ravished songsters singing nigh.
- If wing'd-so pure thy
voice-thou might'st aspire
- To drown indeed the whole seraphic
choir!
- And, listening to tbee-captive in thy chains-
- I think me of a singer such as thou
- Who captured Nature's notes for lovely
swains,
- And echoed them behind a mountain plough;
- And moiled and sang, to prove to Gods above
- The charm of earthly singing and of love.
- Leave to the soaring minstrel of the sky
- Her privilege of song at heaven's gate;
- Leave to the nightingale the charms whereby
- She lights the grove and hushes strife and bate.
- As great a boon-oh, blessed bird!-is
thine,
- Gyv'd to the soiling earth, yet singing still divine!
H. J. A. 8th Batt., 2nd Infantry Brigade. |
 |
|