The Missing of the Somme (14 page)

Sassoon’s observation, in
Memoirs of an Infantry Officer
, that ‘the symbolism of the sunset was wasted on the rank and file’ suggests that Fussell’s elaborate
analysis of sunsets has only literary significance – but sunsets bathe the accounts of even the least literary men in a lyric glow. Likewise, Fussell’s lengthy examination of the way
the war was ironically underwritten by the sporting spirit is both supported by and wrenched away from its Newboltian public school context by an incident recorded by Macdonald. Lieutenant Patrick
King, in the midst of shelling, calls across to see if his men are all right. The reply comes: ‘Aye, all’s reet here, Paddy. We’re still battin’.’

This tone of deadpan resignation is surprisingly versatile. It embraces a range of the rhetorical devices catalogued in
The Great War and Modern Memory
. Fussell notes the way that
The Pilgrim’s Progress
provided a symbolic map of the war (Passchendaele is the Slough of Despond); one of Macdonald’s interviewees begins with the graphically exact
understatement,
‘The salient was a dead loss,’ and moves in ten lines beyond Bunyan to describe it as ‘just a complete abomination of desolation’.

This pretty much sums up our feelings about Passchendaele. We buy bread, fruit and pink-coloured meat at a supermarket and then go for coffee. At eleven-thirty in the morning
the café is already full of men, beer and smoke.

‘To our dismay, on counting our money, we found that it was nearly gone,’ noted Williamson in 1927. ‘Whither had it gone?’

‘We must have spent more on beer than we thought,’ suggests Paul before going through the figures in the back of his notebook again. However we look at it, money is pouring through
our fingers. After further anguished calculations we put it down to the exchange rate. A few weeks ago the pound plunged to a new record low, and as a consequence we are sitting here in
Passchendaele, the poor men of Europe, licking our financial wounds.

We leave the café and head for Tyne Cot Cemetery, a vast, sprawling city of the dead. Like any metropolis it has preserved the haphazard, unregulated heart of the old
city: the 300 or so graves that were found here after the armistice. Since then it has spread out in a series of radial fans and neat purpose-built suburban blocks, accommodating over eleven
thousand of the dead of the rural battlefields. Even rough-hewn German bunkers were absorbed by the city’s irenic expansion.

Rain has cratered and pocked the earth around the headstones, smeared them with mud. The grass has been worn bare
in places. The sky is grey with cold. Flowers have been
pruned back to their stems. It is easy to imagine that the shedding of leaves is only the first stage in nature’s cutting back for winter. In time branches will shrink back into trunks and
trunks into earth until only frost-ravaged headstones remain above the ground.

It is so cold that we stay only a short time before Paul says,

‘Let’s get back in the car.’

‘Tank, Paul, tank.’

‘Sorry. “Tank.”’

‘And say “sir” when you say “tank”.’

‘Tank, sir. Yes, sir.’

Our next stop is the Hill 60 Museum, which for the rest of the trip we refer to as the Little Shop of Horrors. If Hill 60 seemed out of place in that list of sinister names
– a stray from Vietnam – this place soon persuades you of its right to be included among them. Out front is a ‘theme’ café decorated with wartime bric-à-brac.
One of those creepy old war songs is playing on a scratchy gramophone: ‘It’s a long way to Tipperary . . .’ The canned past.

The first room of the museum proper is given over mainly to stereoscopic viewers. Bright sepia in 3-D: lines of blasted trees receding into history; an exaggerated perspective on the past.
Everything is covered in dust, ‘the flesh of time’ Brodsky calls it, ‘time’s very flesh and blood’. The walls are lined with photographs, photographs of the muddy
dead. Another trench song, ‘The Old Battalion’, scratches and crackles through the speakers:

If you want to find the old battalion,

I know where they are:

They’re hanging on the old barbed wire.

I’ve seen ’em, I’ve seen ’em,

Hanging on the old barbed wire.

The next room is given over to hideous uniforms and a random assortment of broken bayonets, revolvers and shell casings. There are a couple of petrified boots, the remains of a rifle so rusty it
looks like it has been salvaged from a coral reef. A dusty damp smell – damp rot, rotting dust – pervades the place. It is as if Steptoe and Son have opened up their own branch of the
Imperial War Museum.

Through a glass door we step out into the rain-clogged trenches and ditches. Everything here is rusty. Not just the strips of corrugated iron which, let’s face it, were designed to rust,
but the earth and leaves. The year is turning to rust. Mud is old rust with dirt mixed in. Water is liquid rust.

By now the tank is a slum. It is littered with pâté rind, bread crumbs, greaseproof paper, orange peel and banana skins. Tins of beer rattle across the floor every
time we turn a corner. From the outside hardly a square inch of the original paintwork can be seen. Even the interior is caked with mud from our boots.

Paul is driving. We are waiting at a junction. He begins pulling out on to the main road.

‘Watch out!’

A truck, overtaking a car on the main road, thunders
past, missing us by inches. We’re all stunned. We talk about nothing else for the next hour.

‘Think of the publicity that would have got for your book,’ says Mark. ‘Getting killed before you even wrote it.’

‘This is not a book about Paul’s driving,’ I say. ‘English poetry is not yet fit to speak of it.’

‘Dulce et decorum est in tankus mori,’ says Paul.

Messines Ridge Cemetery is set back from the road, in the middle of a quiet wood. The graves are strewn with leaves: yellow, flecked with black, brown-green. At the back of the
cemetery is an arcade of classical pillars. Even the slightest breeze is enough to tug leaves from the trees. The rustle of a pheasant breaking free of the silence. Rain dripping through trees.
Damp bird calls.

The headstones are turning green with moss. The words ‘Their Glory Shall Not Be Blotted Out’ are blotted out by mud splashed up by rain.

As each year passes, it grows more difficult to keep time at bay. A quarter of a century’s moss forms in one year. Time is trying to make up for lost time. Left untended this cemetery,
with its classical pillars, would look like an ancient ruin in a couple of years. If the machine-gun’s unprecedented destructive power made it ‘concentrated essence of infantry’,
then here we have concentrated essence of the past. This is the look the past tends towards.

We come to the vast German cemetery at Langemark. A pile of horse dung lies, accidentally, I suppose, in the entrance. Nearly 25,000 men are buried here in a mass grave.
At the edge of the
Kameradengrab
stand four mourning figures, silhouetted against the zinc sky. Up close these are poorly sculpted figures, but from a distance they
impart a sense of utter desolation to the place. It is as if the minute’s silence for which they have bowed their heads has been extended for the duration of eternity. Names are printed on
low grey pillars. To the right there are individual graves marked by flat slabs of stone.

There is no colour here, no flowers, nothing transcendent. The dead as individuals hardly matter; only as elements of the nation. There are no individual inscriptions, no rhetoric. Only the
unadorned facts of mortality – and even these are reduced to a bare, bleak minimum. This is the meaning and consequence of defeat.

The French cemetery at Notre Dame de Lorette covers twenty-six acres. There are 20,000 named graves here; in the ossuary lie the remains of another 20,000 unknown dead. It is
icy cold. Wind streams across the grey hill. Wind is not something that passes through the sky. The sky is wind and nothing else. Crosses stretch away in lines so long they seem to follow the
curvature of the earth. Names are written on both the front and back of each cross. The scale of the cemetery exceeds all imagining. Even the names on the crosses count for nothing. Only the
numbers count, the scale of loss. But this is so huge that it is consumed by itself. It shocks, stuns, numbs. Sassoon’s nameless names here become the numberless numbers. You stand aghast
while the wind hurtles through your clothes, searing your ears until you find yourself almost vanishing: in the face of this wind, in this
expanse of lifelessness, you cannot
hold your own: you do not count. There is no room here for the living. The wind, the cold, force you away.

We head south, following the Western Front down towards the Somme. We entertain ourselves by singing ‘The Old Battalion’ or conversing in a pseudo Great War lingo.
Paul and I address Mark as Private Hayhurst and prefix everything with an officerly ‘I say’ or ‘Look here’. For his part Mark, while adopting the tones of the loyal batman,
is actually a scrimshanker who does nothing except sit in the back reading
Death’s Men
. Our hotel is a ‘billet’. The forthcoming night in the boozer is referred to as
‘the show’ or ‘stunt’. None of us is quite sure whether we’re on a gloomy holiday or a rowdy pilgrimage.

We are not the first to be uncertain on this score. During the twenties the British Legion and the St Barnabas Society organized subsidized trips to enable relatives of the dead who could not
afford the journey to make a pilgrimage to the cemeteries where their loved ones lay.

Helen Turrell makes such a pilgrimage in Kipling’s haunting, lovely story ‘The Gardener’. Helen has brought up her nephew Michael ever since his father – her brother
– died in India. Michael is killed in the war and buried in Hagenzeele Third Military Cemetery. It is a huge cemetery and only a few hundred of the twenty thousand graves are yet marked by
white headstones; the rest are marked by ‘a merciless sea of black crosses’. Overwhelmed by the wilderness of graves, Helen approaches a man who is kneeling behind a row of headstones.
‘Evidently a gardener’, the man
asks who she is looking for and Helen gives her nephew’s name.

The man lifted his eyes and looked at her with infinite compassion before he turned from the fresh-sown grass towards the naked black crosses.

‘Come with me,’ he said, ‘and I will show you where your son lies.’

The story all but ends there, with the words of this Christlike figure. A three-line epilogue records that when Helen left the cemetery she looked back and saw the man bending
over his plants once again, ‘supposing him to be the gardener’.

Like Helen, most of the pilgrims were bereaved women, but their numbers soon came to include veterans wanting to revisit the battlefields. Comforts were few on such trips, but there were also
large numbers of visitors who wanted – and were willing to pay for – a less arduous and sombre trip around the trenches and cemeteries of France and Flanders: tourists, in short. In
another instance of historical projection these battlefield tours had already been bitterly satirized by Philip Johnstone in his poem ‘High Wood’, first published in February 1918:

Madame, please,

You are requested kindly not to touch

Or take away the Company’s property

As souvenirs; you’ll find we have on sale

A large variety, all guaranteed.

As I was saying, all is as it was,

This is an unknown British officer,

The tunic having lately rotted off.

Please follow me – this way . . .

the
path
, sir,
please
. . .

Lyn Macdonald is perhaps exaggerating when she describes Ypres in 1920 as ‘the booming mecca of the first mass-explosion of tourism in history’, but in 1930 a hundred thousand people
signed the visitors’ book at the Menin Gate in just three months. Many came in the spirit of Johnstone’s visitors or Abe North, who, in the Newfoundland Memorial Park, showers Dick
Diver and Rosemary in a mock grenade attack of ‘earth gobs and pebbles’; many more departed in the spirit of Dick himself who ‘picked up a retaliatory handful of stones and then
put them down.

‘“I couldn’t kid here,” he said rather apologetically.’

Understandably as well as apologetically, for few novels are as saturated with the memory of the Great War as
Tender is the Night
. Dick himself sums up this central concern of the book
with the ‘half-ironic phrase, “Non-Combatant’s shell-shock”’.

On the first page, as Dick makes his way to Zurich in 1917, he passes ‘long trains of blinded or one-legged men, or dying trunks’. The clinic where he first meets Nicole is ‘a
refuge for the broken, the incomplete, the menacing’. Nicole’s mental instability may not be related to the war – ‘the war is over’, she says, ‘and I scarcely
knew there was a war’ – but is all the time reminding us of it. Her smile ‘was like all the lost youth in the world’. Lost youth may be a
perpetual
theme of Fitzgerald’s but there is often a larger historical dimension to our most personal concerns. In 1947, seven years after her husband’s death, Zelda wrote in a letter: ‘I
do not know that a personality can be divorced from the times which evoke it . . . I feel that Scott’s greatest contribution was the dramatization of a heart-broken + despairing era . .
.’ In 1917 Fitzgerald himself wrote: ‘After all, life hasn’t much to offer except youth and . . . Every man I’ve met who’s been to war, that is this war, seems to have
lost youth and faith in man.’

All around Nicole at the clinic, meanwhile, are those maimed mentally or vicariously by the war: ‘shell-shocks who merely heard an air raid from a distance’ or ‘merely read
newspapers’. The accessories of fashion – a beret, for example – seek to cover ‘a skull recently operated on. Beneath it human eyes peered.’ Despite Nicole’s
immense wealth, even the idyllic period of their courtship is surrounded ominously by the sound of war:

Suddenly there was a booming from the wine slopes across the lake; cannons were shooting at hail-bearing clouds in order to break them . . . the hotel crouched amid tumult,
chaos, and darkness.

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