THE NEW OFFICER
"THE OFFICER,"
said Private Smithy, of the 1st Anchesters, "is a new officer.
It isn't the new kind of uniform, or the new Salvation Army cap, or
the new silly way of wearing his shoulder sash. He's a changed
officer, if you understand. He don't look no different, and in many
ways he's not altered a bit. He still plays polo an' bridge—what's
bridge?"
I explained.
"Well, he still does
all these things just about as much as ever he did, but I tell you
'e's an astounding blighter in many ways."
"It ain't so long
ago," reflected this monunment of the First Army Corps, "when
officers used to come on parade at 10 a.m.—commanding officers'
parade drill order—and we used to look at 'em hard to discover
whether we'd seen 'em before. They used to troop down from the
officers' mess buttoning up their brown gloves and hooking on their
swords under their patrol jackets. They'd stand about for a minute or
two yawnin' their blankey 'eads orf an' then the bugled sound
'Officers come and be blowed,' an' they'd fall in.
"Well, the
colour-sergeant was always waitin' for 'em.
"'What's on this
mornin',' says me fine captain.
"'Battalion drill,
sir,' says the flag.
"'Oh, dash battalion
drill,' sez the captain, walkin' round an' inspectin' the company.
Take this man's name, colour-sergeant, for wearing his pouoh on the
right side.'
"'Beg pardon, sir,'
sez the flag, 'they're wore on the right side.'
"'So they are,' sez
the intelligent captain, givin' a casual glance along the line.
'Well, take his name for 'aving a dirty belt.'
"'Right, sir,' sez
the colour-sergeant.DRILL—OLD
STYLE
"When the inspection
was over the officer would draw his sword and read the writin' on it,
and draw noughts and crosses with it on the ground; then fall in six
paces ahead of the centre of his company. Bimeby he'd see something
'appening to the company ahead of his.
"What's gain' on
there, "colour-sergeant'?' he'd ask.
"'Formin' fours, sir,
sez the colour-sergeant.
"'Oh, I forgot all
about, that, sez his nibs. 'Company! Form fours!' an' not a man moves
"'You 'aven't
numbered 'em, sir,' sez the colour-sergeant.
"'Hey?' sez the
captain, gettin' red. 'Then why the dickens ain't they numbered when
they fall in? Number off from the right, an' be quick about it.'
"Then comes the
battalion drill," continued Smithy, with a sad, reminiscent
smile. "The colonel shouts something.
"'Wbat's that he
saad, colour-sergeant,' sez the officer.
"'Into line, right
form, sir,' sez the flag.
"'What do I do?' sez
the captain.
"'Turn half-right,
sir, and wait for the word "march,"' whispers the flag.
"And right through
the drill it was the same. Sometimes the captain was right, sometimes
he was wrong. Sometimes he had the whole company jumbled up in horrid
confusion, and the colonel would come prancing along and say things
he was probably sorry for afterwards.
"Well, an hour of
this sort of thing went on, and then it was 'Right turn—Dismiss,'
and the officer would run away and change his sword an' uniform for a
Sunday suit an' a panamar hat, and we didn't see him again till
to-morrow."CONVERTED
OFFICERS
Smithy raised himself on
his elbow and addressed the orderly man staggering tentward with a
big kettle of steaming tea.
Would the orderly man be
so kind as to give Smithy a basin of tea and save him the trouble of
coming to the tent for it. Without checking his career, the orderly
man remarked, "Oh, yes, why not, not 'arf. Would Smithy like him
(the orderly man) to drink it for him (Smithy)? Did he want waiting
on? Should he fetch it in a feeding bottle?" and sundry other
ejaculations of a bitterly satirical character.
Whereupon Smithy,
realising that the enemy was rapidly getting out of range, delivered
a rapid feu de joie of personalities, calculated to
annoy and distress a young and ambitious orderly man.
"'Pon my word,"
said Smithy gloomily, "these blanked Brodericks are gettin'
worse an' worse; the men 'ave changed as much as the officers."
"How have the
officers changed?" I asked.
"I was going to tell
you,' said Smithy. "As I said before, it's only' an inward
change. You know soldiers, don't you?"
"I do."
"Well, you've seen
Tommy get converted—get religion, haven't you? He drops the wet
canteen, and spends his time in the library playin' bagatelle with
other bun-wallahs. The cloth is always torn, and the cues 'ave no
tips," added Smithy inconsequently. "He goes to chapel on
week nights and shows up the regiment by prayin' in public; joins the
Templars with fancy grips and passwords and sashes. Well, beyond
giving up booze and saying 'confound' instead of '——' or '——'
or '——', there ain't much difference, outwardly at least. He
still parts his hair; he still mashes the girls; he still does all
things 'uman—except swear and drink.
"So it is with the
officer—'e's changed inwardly. He plays polo and golf—which is a,
rotten game in my opinion—and motors.
"But somehow we seem
to see more of him than we used. He comes nosing around at all hours
of the day. He does colour-sergeants' work and corporal's work—in
fact, he knows as much about soldiering now as we do. He doesn't make
mistakes on parade; he turns up at the rifle range even when it ain't
his turn for duty; he'll take a dozen chaps out into the country and
teach them how to sketch; he spends a lot of his spare time learning
flag-wagging—in fact, in fact," said Smith, struggling for a
climax, "he's a more astoundin' person than ever."TACTICS
UP TO DATE
Smithy refilled and relit
his pipe and ruminated for some moments.
"Yesterday,"
said he, "the little man French had us out attackin' or
defendin'—I don't know which—a bit of a village, over there.'
Smithy pointed vaguely. "I was with a half company under Mr.
Brick-Taylor—he gets his company next month. We've got a new
colour-sergeant from the second battalion who's been used to giving
officers tips all his life.
"We were scoutin'
ahead, and we sighted the enemy outside a pub near Frinham. We could
see them, they couldu't see us.
"'Git into
that donga,' sez the officer, pointin' to a big, deep
ditch.
"'Beg pardon, sir,'
says the flag, 'I think you ought to extend the men and retire, sir.'
"'Oh, you do, do
you?' sez the orficer, 'well, I don't; get into the donga as
quick as you can.'
"'Beg pardon, sir,'
sez the flag, 'but the book sez—'
"'What book?' sez the
orficer.
"'Drill book, sir,'
sez the colour-bloke.
"'Never read it,' sez
the little man as calm as you please.
"'I'm takin' cover
and hidin', because I once got plugged in the neck by a Mauser bullet
for not doin' so. I am not retiring in open order accordin' to the
book because I tried something like it at Magersfontein and appeared
in all the London papers the next mornin' as 'dangerously.'
A bugle call rang out
sharp and clear, a, dozen tents disgorged one or two men, who
buttoned their coats as they hurried to the guard tent.
"Defaulters,"
said Smithy, shifting his position to one of greater comfort; "all
young soldiers, an' punishment's good for 'em—it's surprisin' how a
few kicks help a man in the Army."
THE CLAIRVOYANT
"DO you believe in ghosts?" asked Private Smithy.
"What kind of ghosts?" I asked cautiously.
"There's a chap in H Company," explained Smithy—"his name's Turner,
Mouldy Turner, we call him, owin' to his havin' been a moulder by
trade. You never saw such a chap in your lifo," said Smithy
enthusiastically. "Give him a pack o' cards an' a table an' he'll
tell you things about your past life wot you've never heard
before.
"He charges tuppence a time, an' it's worth it. I had twopenn'orth
myself the other day.
"'Smithy,' he sez, dealin' out the cards all over the table, you're
expectin' a letter from a dark man.'
"'No, I ain't,' I sez.
"'Well, you'll get it, he sez. 'It will bring good news.'
"An' sure enough," said Smithy, impassively, "that very afternoon
Spud Murphy paid me two shillin's he borrered on the
manoeuvres."
"But," I expostulated, "that wasn't a letter."
"It was better than a letter," s [...]