Under Fire by Henri Barbusse (drm ebook reader TXT) 📕
"Austria's act is a crime," says the Austrian.
"France must win," says the Englishman.
"I hope Germany will be beaten," says the German.
They settle down again under the blankets and on the pillows,looking to heaven and the high peaks. But in spite of that vastpurity, the silence is filled with the dire disclosure of a momentbefore.
War!
Some of the invalids break the silence, and say the word again undertheir breath, reflecting that this is the greatest happening of theage, and perhaps of all ages. Even on the lucid landscape at whichthey gaze the news casts something like a vague and somber mirage.
The tranquil expanses of the valley, adorned with soft and smoothpastures and hamlets rosy as the rose,
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Now you can make out a network of long ditches where the lave of the night still lingers. It is the trench. It is carpeted at bottom with a layer of slime that liberates the foot at each step with a sticky sound; and by each dug-out it smells of the night’s excretions. The holes themselves, as you stoop to peer in, are foul of breath.
I see shadows coming from these sidelong pits and moving about, huge and misshapen lumps, bear-like, that flounder and growl. They are “us.” We are muffled like Eskimos. Fleeces and blankets and sacking wrap us up, weigh us down, magnify us strangely. Some stretch themselves, yawning profoundly. Faces appear, ruddy or leaden, dirt-disfigured, pierced by the little lamps of dull and heavy-lidded eyes, matted with uncut beards and foul with forgotten hair.
Crack! Crack! Boom!—rifle fire and cannonade. Above us and all around, it crackles and rolls, in long gusts or separate explosions. The flaming and melancholy storm never, never ends. For more than fifteen months, for five hundred days in this part of the world where we are, the rifles and the big guns have gone on from morning to night and from night to morning. We are buried deep in an everlasting battlefield; but like the ticking of the clocks at home in the days gone by—in the now almost legendary Past—you only hear the noise when you listen.
A babyish face with puffy eyelids, and cheek-bones as lurid as if lozenge-shaped bits of crimson paper had been stuck on, comes out of the ground, opens one eye, then the other. It is Paradis. The skin of his fat cheeks is scored with the marks of the folds in the tent-cloth that has served him for night-cap. The glance of his little eye wanders all round me; he sees me, nods, and says—“Another night gone, old chap.”
“Yes, sonny; how many more like it still?”
He raises his two plump arms skywards. He has managed to scrape out by the steps of the dug-out and is beside me. After stumbling over the dim obstacle of a man who sits in the shadows, fervently scratches himself and sighs hoarsely, Paradis makes off—lamely splashing like a penguin through the flooded picture.
One by one the men appear from the depths. In the corners, heavy shadows are seen forming—human clouds that move and break up. One by one they become recognizable. There is one who comes out hooded with his blanket—a savage, you would say, or rather, the tent of a savage, which walks and sways from side to side. Near by, and heavily framed in knitted wool, a square face is disclosed, yellow-brown as though iodized, and patterned with blackish patches, the nose broken, the eyes of Chinese restriction and red-circled, a little coarse and moist mustache like a greasing-brush.
“There’s Volpatte. How goes it, Firmin?”
“It goes, it goes, and it comes,” says Volpatte. His heavy and drawling voice is aggravated by hoarseness. He coughs—“My number’s up, this time. Say, did you hear it last night, the attack? My boy, talk about a bombardment—something very choice in the way of mixtures!” He sniffles and passes his sleeve under his concave nose. His hand gropes within his greatcoat and his jacket till it finds the skin, and scratches. “I’ve killed thirty of them in the candle,” he growls; “in the big dug-out by the tunnel, mon vieux, there are some like crumbs of metal bread. You can see them running about in the straw like I’m telling you.”
“Who’s been attacking? The Boches?”
“The Boches and us too—out Vimy way—a counterattack—didn’t you hear it?”
“No,” the big Lamuse, the ox-man, replies on my account; “I was snoring; but I was on fatigue all night the night before.”
“I heard it,” declares the little Breton, Biquet; “I slept badly, or rather, didn’t sleep. I’ve got a doss-house all to myself. Look, see, there it is—the damned thing.” He points to a trough on the ground level, where on a meager mattress of muck, there is just body-room for one. “Talk about home in a nutshell!” he declares, wagging the rough and rock-hard little head that looks as if it had never been finished. “I hardly snoozed. I’d just got off, but was woke up by the relief of the 129th that went by—not by the noise, but the smell. Ah, all those chaps with their feet on the level with my nose! It woke me up, it gave me nose-ache so.”
I knew it. I have often been wakened in the trench myself by the trail of heavy smell in the wake of marching men.
“It was all right, at least, if it killed the vermin,” said Tirette.
“On the contrary, it excites them,” says Lamuse; “the worse you smell, the more you have of ‘em.”
“And it’s lucky,” Biquet went on, “that their stink woke me up. As I was telling that great tub just now, I got my peepers open just in time to seize the tent-cloth that shut my hole up—one of those muck-heaps was going to pinch it off me.”
“Dirty devils, the 129th.” The human form from which the words came could now be distinguished down below at our feet, where the morning had not yet reached it. Grasping his abundant clothing by handsful, he squatted and wriggled. It was Papa Blaire. His little eyes blinked among the dust that luxuriated on his face. Above the gap of his toothless mouth, his mustache made a heavy sallow lump. His hands were horribly black, the top of them shaggy with dirt, the palms plastered in gray relief. Himself, shriveled and dirtbedight, exhaled the scent of an ancient stewpan. Though busily scratching, he chatted with big Barque, who leaned towards him from a little way off.
“I wasn’t as mucky as this when I was a civvy,” he said.
“Well, my poor friend, it’s a dirty change for the worse,” said Barque.
“Lucky for you,” says Tirette, going one better; “when it comes to kids, you’ll present madame with some little niggers!”
Blaire took offense, and gathering gloom wrinkled his brow. “What have you got to give me lip about, you? What next? It’s war-time. As for you, bean-face, you think perhaps the war hasn’t changed your phizog and your manners? Look at yourself, monkey-snout, buttock-skin! A man must be a beast to talk as you do.” He passed his hand over the dark deposit on his face, which the rains of those days had proved finally indelible, and added, “Besides, if I am as I am, it’s my own choosing. To begin with, I have no teeth. The major said to me a long time ago, ‘You haven’t a single tooth. It’s not enough. At your next rest,’ he says, ‘take a turn round to the estomalogical ambulance.’”
“The tomatological ambulance,” corrected Barque.
“Stomatological,” Bertrand amended.
“You have all the making of an army cook—you ought to have been one,” said Barque.
“My idea, too,” retorted Blaire innocently. Some one laughed. The black man got up at the insult. “You give me belly-ache,” he said with scorn. “I’m off to the latrines.”
When his doubly dark silhouette had vanished, the others scrutinized once more the great truth that down here in the earth the cooks are the dirtiest of men.
“If you see a chap with his skin and toggery so smeared and stained that you wouldn’t touch him with a barge-pole, you can say to yourself, ‘Probably he’s a cook.’ And the dirtier he is, the more likely to be a cook.”
“It’s true, and true again,” said Marthereau.
“Tiens, there’s Tirloir! Hey, Tirloir!”
He comes up busily, peering this way and that, on an eager scent. His insignificant head, pale as chlorine, hops centrally about in the cushioning collar of a greatcoat that is much too heavy and big for him. His chin is pointed, and his upper teeth protrude. A wrinkle round his mouth is so deep with dirt that it looks like a muzzle. As usual, he is angry, and as usual, he rages aloud.
“Some one cut my pouch in two last night!”
“It was the relief of the 129th. Where had you put it?”
He indicates a bayonet stuck in the wall of the trench close to the mouth of a funk-hole—“There, hanging on the toothpick there.”
“Ass!” comes the chorus. “Within reach of passing soldiers! Not dotty, are you?”
“It’s hard lines all the same,” wails Tirloir. Then suddenly a fit of rage seizes him, his face crumples, his little fists clench in fury, he tightens them like knots in string and waves them about. “Alors quoi? Ah, if I had hold of the mongrel that did it! Talk about breaking his jaw—I’d stave in his bread-pan, I’d—there was a whole Camembert in there, I’ll go and look for it.” He massages his stomach with the little sharp taps of a guitar player, and plunges into the gray of the morning, grinning yet dignified, with his awkward outlines of an invalid in a dressing-gown. We hear him grumbling until he disappears.
“Strange man, that,” says Pepin; the others chuckle. “He’s daft and crazy,” declares Marthereau, who is in the habit of fortifying the expression of his thought by using two synonyms at once.
*“Tiens, old man,” says Tulacque, as he comes up. “Look at this.”
Tulacque is magnificent. He is wearing a lemon-yellow coat made out of an oilskin sleeping-sack. He has arranged a hole in the middle to get his head through, and compelled his shoulder-straps and belt to go over it. He is tall and bony. He holds his face in advance as he walks, a forceful face, with eyes that squint. He has something in his hand. “I found this while digging last night at the end of the new gallery to change the rotten gratings. It took my fancy off-hand, that knick-knack. It’s an old pattern of hatchet.”
It was indeed an old pattern, a sharpened flint hafted with an old brown bone—quite a prehistoric tool in appearance.
“Very handy,” said Tulacque, fingering it. “Yes, not badly thought out. Better balanced than the regulation ax. That’ll be useful to me, you’ll see.” As he brandishes that ax of Post-Tertiary Man, he would himself pass for an ape-man, decked out with rags and lurking in the bowels of the earth.
One by one we gathered, we of Bertrand’s squad and the half-section, at an elbow of the trench. Just here it is a little wider than in the straight part where when you meet another and have to pass you must throw yourself against the side, rub your back in the earth and your stomach against the stomach of the other.
Our company occupies, in reserve, a second line parallel. No night watchman works here. At night we are ready for making earthworks in front, but as long as the day lasts we have nothing to do. Huddled up together and linked arm in arm, it only remains to await the evening as best we can.
Daylight has at last crept into the interminable crevices that furrow this part of the earth,
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