The Irish Guards in the Great War (Complete Edition: Volume 1&2). Редьярд Джозеф Киплинг

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order (“What’s a casualty compared to a soul?”) was most natural of all. Then the question would come up for discussion in the trenches and dug-outs, where everything that any one had on his mind was thrashed out through the long, quiet hours, or dropped and picked up again with the rise and fall of shell-fire. They speculated on all things in Heaven and earth as they worked in piled filth among the carcases of their fellows, lay out under the stars on the eves of open battle, or vegetated through a month’s feeding and idleness between one sacrifice and the next.

      But none have kept minutes of those incredible symposia that made for them a life apart from the mad world which was their portion; nor can any pen recreate that world’s brilliance, squalor, unreason, and heaped boredom. Recollection fades from men’s minds as common life closes over them, till even now they wonder what part they can ever have had in the shrewd, man-hunting savages who answered to their names so few years ago.

      It is for the sake of these initiated that the compiler has loaded his records with detail and seeming triviality, since in a life where Death ruled every hour, nothing was trivial, and bald references to villages, billets, camps, fatigues, and sports, as well as hints of tales that can never now fully be told, carry each their separate significance to each survivor, intimate and incommunicable as family jests.

      As regards other readers, the compiler dares no more than hope that some of those who have no care for old history, or that larger number who at present are putting away from themselves odious memories, may find a little to interest, or even comfort, in these very details and flatnesses that make up the unlovely, yet superb, life endured for their sakes.

      Mons To La Bassée

      (1914)

       Table of Contents

      At 5 P.M. on Tuesday, August 4, 1914, the 1st Battalion of the Irish Guards received orders to mobilize for war against Germany. They were then quartered at Wellington Barracks and, under the mobilization scheme, formed part of the 4th (Guards) Brigade, Second Division, First Army Corps. The Brigade consisted of:

      The 2nd Battalion Grenadier Guards.

       The 2nd Battalion Coldstream Guards.

       The 3rd Battalion Coldstream Guards.

       The 1st Battalion Irish Guards.

      Mobilization was completed on August 8. Next day, being Sunday, the Roman Catholics of the Battalion paraded under the Commanding Officer, Lieut.Colonel the Hon. G. H. Morris, and went to Westminster Cathedral where Cardinal Bourne preached; and on the morning of the 11th August Field-Marshal Lord Roberts and Lady Aileen Roberts made a farewell speech to them in Wellington Barracks. This was the last time that Lord Roberts saw the Battalion of which he was the first Commander-in-Chief.

      On the 12th August the Battalion entrained for Southampton in two trains at Nine Elms Station, each detachment being played out of barracks to the station by the band. They were short one officer, as 2nd Lieutenant St. J. R. Pigott had fallen ill, and an officer just gazetted—2nd Lieutenant Sir Gerald Burke, Bart.—could not accompany them as he had not yet got his uniform. They embarked at Southampton on a hot still day in the P.&0. S.S. Novara. This was a long and tiring operation, since every one was new to embarkation-duty, and, owing to the tide, the ship’s bulwarks stood twenty-five feet above the quay. The work was not finished till 4 P.M. when most of the men had been under arms for twelve hours. Just before leaving, Captain Sir Delves Broughton, Bart., was taken ill and had to be left behind. A telegram was sent to Headquarters, asking for Captain H. Hamilton Berners to take his place, and the Novara cleared at 7 P.M. As dusk fell, she passed H.M.S. Formidable off Ryde and exchanged signals with her. The battle ship’s last message to the Battalion was to hope that they would get “plenty of fighting.” Many of the officers at that moment were sincerely afraid that they might be late for the war!

      The following is the list of officers who went out with the Battalion that night:

      Lieut.-Col. Hon. G. H. Morris

      Commanding Officer.

      Major H. F. Crichton

      Senior Major.

      Captain Lord Desmond FitzGerald

      Adjutant.

      Lieut. E. J. F. Gough

      Transport Officer.

      Lieut. E. B. Greer

      M. Gun Officer.

      Hon. Lieut. H. Hickie

      Quartermaster.

      Lieut. H. J. S. Shields (R.A.M.C.)

      Medical. Officer.

      Lieut. Hon. Aubrey Herbert, M.P.

      Interpreter.

       No. 1 Company.

      Capt. Hon. A. E. Mulholland.

      Lieut. C. A. S. Walker.

      Capt. Lord John Hamilton.

      2nd Lieut. N. L. Woodroffe.

      Lieut. Hon. H. R. Alexander.

      2nd Lieut. J. Livingstone-Learmonth.

       No. 2 Company.

      Major H. A. Herbert Stepney.

      Lieut. J. S. N. FitzGerald.

      Lieut. W. E. Hope.

      Capt. J. N. Guthrie.

      2nd Lieut. O. Hughes-Onslow.

      Lieut. E. J. F. Gough.

       No. 3 Company.

      Capt. Sir Delves Broughton, Bart.

       (replaced by Capt. H. Hamilton Berners).

      Lieut. Hon. Hugh Gough.

      Lieut. Lord Guernsey.

      2nd Lieut. Viscount Castlerosse.

      Capt. Hon. T. E. Vesey.

       No. 4 Company.

      Capt. C. A. Tisdall.

      Lieut. Lord Robert Innes-Ker.

      Capt. A. A. Perceval.

      Lieut. W. C. N. Reynolds.

      2nd Lieut. J. T. P. Roberts.

      Lieut. R. Blacker-Douglass.

       Details at the Base.

      Capt. Lord Arthur Hay.

      2nd Lieut. Sir Gerald Burke, Bart.

      They reached Havre at 6 A.M. on August 13, a fiercely

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