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He was about to spit his disgust on an unoffending fly, but quickly changed his mind.
He was a Yank from the U.S.A. Military School at San Diego, and "hiked over the pond as there was nothing doing."
In appearance he was tall and wiry with a thin face and hooked nose that suggested the bird-man. His name on the roll was Walter Edmund Byrne, but his bony appearance won him his nickname--Nap.
We knew nicknames would shock those who stand for the rigid rule of military discipline, but aviators clear the usual wall of demarcation between officers and subordinates. A nod supplants the "heels together and touch your cap."
The Aviation Sections seemed to be communistic concerns, in the air rank being only recognised by achievement. In fact, the new arm was too new to be brought under the iron rule of military etiquette or into most Operation Orders. I told Nap as much.
"Yes," he said, "I guess we're too new. Even when cannon first came into war it was novel enough to fire as often from the wrong end and teach things 'to the man behind the gun'; but I've a bit of dope here that ought to be pasted into every book of your field service regulations, and every officer ought to repeat it before breakfast three times a week. It's the flyers' creed."
Fumbling amongst some newspaper sc.r.a.ps in his note book, he produced this bit of verse.
The snake with poisoned fang defends (And does it really very well).
The cuttle fish an inkcloud sends; The tortoise has its fort of sh.e.l.l; The tiger has its teeth and claws; The rhino has its horns and hide; The shark has rows of saw-set jaws; Man--stands alone, the whole world wide Unarmed and naked! But 'tis plain For him to fight--G.o.d gave a brain!
Far back in this world's early mists When man began to use his head; He stopped from fighting with his fists And gripped a wooden club instead.
But when the rival tribe was slain, The first tribe then to stand alone Had once again to work its brain And made an axe--an axe of stone!
The stone-axe tribe would hold first place; And ruled the rest where'er it went.
Because then--as to-day--the race Was first that had best armament.
But human brain expanding more (Its limits none can circ.u.mscribe); The stone-axe crowd went down before The more developed bronze-axe tribe.
Then s.h.i.+elds came in to quickly show Their party victors in the strife: By warding off the vicious blow And giving warriors longer life.
The tribe's wise men would urge at length, No doubt as now, for tax on tax, To keep the "Two tribe" fighting strength With "super-dreadnought" s.h.i.+eld and axe!
The bow and arrow came and won For Death came winged from far away.
Then came the cannon and the gun; And brought us where we are to-day.
And now we see the s.h.i.+eld of yore An a.r.s.enal of armour plate; With crew a thousand men or more; And guns a hundred tons in weight.
Beneath our seas dart submarines, Around the world and back again.
But every marvel only means Some greater triumph of the brain.
For while the thund'ring hammers ring; And super-dreadnoughts swarm the sea; There flits above, a birdlike thing, That claims an aerial sovereignty!
A thing of canvas, stick and wheel "The two-man fighting aeroplane."
It screams above those hulks of steel: "Oh! human brain begin again."
[Ill.u.s.tration]
Nap was busy with bad language, a size brush and some fabric remnants patching the plane, whilst I read his treasure by my pocket lamp. Then he came over.
"Mind you," he said, "I don't greatly blame folks here. It can't be worse than in America--America, where the first machine got up and made good--where the man the world had waited for for ages, Wilbur Wright (though he's been dead some years), hasn't even got a tablet up to say: 'Good on you old man, G.o.d rest your soul.'"
We were standing by our machines, waiting for the dawn light to call us aloft for our daily reconnaissance when Nap let his tongue loose.
"Five years ago, when the Wright Brothers first flew, Europe went dotty and began to offer big prizes for stunts in the air. Wright took his old 'bus across the pond and won everything. Next year our Glen Curtis went over and brought back all the scalps. Then America got tired. We live in a hurry there. We're the spoilt kids of the earth, always wanting a new toy. When we tired of straight flying, we went in for circus stunts; such as spiral turning, volplaning, upside-down flying and looping the loop. We interested the crowd for a while, as there was a chance of some of us smas.h.i.+ng up. But when flying got safe and sane and the aeroplane almost foolproof, the public got cold feet, and the only men flying when I left, were young McCormick, the Harvester chap of Chicago, occasionally hiking across Lake Michigan in his 'amphoplane,' and Beechy, dodging death in 'aeroplane versus automobile' races.
"Curtis has a factory that had been shooing the bailiff till Wanamaker came along and financed that Atlantic aeroplane that was too heavy to carry its weight; and Lieutenant Porte, who was to take it across, was in a fix till this war came along and called him over. Orville Wright is trying to make a do of his factory. It is significant that Captain Mitch.e.l.l, of the U.S. Signal Corps, the other day asked the U.S.
Government 'to help those fellows out or they'll have to quit the business.' So you see Jefson, that's why I get the huff when I see the same sort of thing over here, especially in times like these 'that try men's souls.'"
Then the dawn light streaked the eastern sky rim. We pulled the plane from under the tree screen. The propeller hummed, dragged us across a dozen yards and up into the cold air of the early New Year morn.
[Ill.u.s.tration: "When flying got safe and sane."--Chapter IV.]
CHAPTER V.
The Tired Feeling.
Our quarters were outside Epernay, about fifteen miles south of Rheims, with the Marne between us and the enemy.
To the north the horizon was fringed with the ridge-backed plateau cut by the Aisne. The enemy had been holding that fringe since October, having pushed back our almost daily attempts to get on to it. We got a particularly bad smack early in 1915, after crossing at Soissons.
To the north east was the ridge covered by the Argonne Forest; a sealed area to the man in the air.
We had been here three months, and our daily flight over the same area robbed the view of any scenic interest.
Perhaps, in the clear air of the winter morning, we would see far off silhouetted against the pale green of the brightening eastern sky, the dove-like aeroplanes of the enemy moving over the distant forest like bees above a bush.
Sometimes an "affair of aerial patrols" would result in the exchange of long shots, but seldom with any effect, for the reason that our enemy took few risks in the air and, furthermore, we could not pursue, as our orders were for speedy reconnaissance and early report. This was no easy matter over a country covered with the snowy quilt of winter, when even trees were unrecognisable, except at an angle that would show the trunks beneath: an angle that would call for low flying, bringing us within the 6000 feet range of the enemy's "air-squirts."
By day we "trimmed our s.h.i.+p," examined every screw and bolt and inspected our bombs and fuses. These "cough drops" were radish-shaped sh.e.l.ls, each weighing thirty-one pounds; and were fired from an apparatus which could be worked by the pilot and which carried a regulator showing height and speed of the machine. Fair accuracy could thus be achieved.
One evening, the commander of the battery to which we were attached came over to our quarters, the skillion of a wrecked farm house.
He brought word that another Zeppelin had been rammed by one of our machines. Both machines and their occupants had been smashed.
He spoke in French, and we understood, which explained why we were stationed so far east on the fighting line.
"Magnificent it must have been," he said, "we groundlarks always have a fighting chance, but there is no chance for you bird-men. Ah! who can now say the romance has gone out of war with the improvement in range of weapons. Time was not long since when the general headed his men with a waving sword. As your Shakespeare said it--'Once more into the breach, dear friends.' And my comrades are fighting through this campaign, banging at an enemy they may never see. But the aeroplane has brought back the romance again. Ah! it is fine."
When he strolled out Nap ventured his opinion.
"Romance in war! There's not a sc.r.a.p of it. The fool-flyer who rams a Zepp. deserves what he gets. It's wasteful for a flyer to so risk his speedy plane, when he has a better fighting chance of rising and dropping 'cough-drops' on the slow old 'bus beneath him; as Pegoud told us the other day: 'The Zeppelins! Ah, they are slow as geese, but our aeroplanes, they are swift as swallows.'
"The trouble is there's not enough opportunity here to do things. This daily 'good-morning fly' and cleaning engines the rest of the day is getting on my nerves, we've been marking time here for months. I want something to happen along 'right soon.'"
And something did happen along next morning.
CHAPTER VI.
Civilised Warfare.
Nap was in a bad humor.