He wrote occasional articles, full of jokes and Latin
quotations, for the Brookfield terminal magazine. He read his Times every
morning—very thoroughly; and he also began to read detective stories
—he had been keen on them ever since the first thrills of Sherlock.
Yes, he was quite busy, and quite happy, too. A year later, in 1914, he again
attended the end-of-term dinner. There was a lot of war talk—civil war
in Ulster, and trouble between Austria and Serbia. Herr Staefel, who was
leaving for Germany the next day, told Chips he thought the Balkan business
wouldn’t come to anything.
The War years.
The first shock, and then the first optimism. The Battle of the Marne, the
Russian steam-roller, Kitchener.
“Do you think it will last long, sir?”
Chips, questioned as he watched the first trial game of the season, gave
quite a cheery answer. He was, like thousands of others, hopelessly wrong;
but, unlike thousands of others, he did not afterward conceal the fact. “We
ought to have—um—finished it—um—by Christmas. The
Germans are already beaten. But why? Are you thinking of—um
—joining up, Forrester?”
Joke—because Forrester was the smallest new boy Brookfield had ever
had—about four feet high above his muddy football boots. (But not so
much a joke, when you came to think of it afterward; for he was killed in
1918—shot down in flames over Cambrai.) But one didn’t guess what lay
ahead. It seemed tragically sensational when the first Old Brookfeldian was
killed in action—in September. Chips thought, when that news came: A
hundred years ago boys from this school were fighting AGAINST the French.
Strange, in a way, that the sacrifices of one generation should so cancel out
those of another. He tried to express this to Blades, the Head of School
House; but Blades, eighteen years old and already in training for a
cadetship, only laughed. What had all that history stuff to do with it,
anyhow? Just old Chips with one of his queer ideas, that’s all.
1915. Armies clenched in deadlock from the sea to Switzerland. The
Dardanelles. Gallipoli. Military camps springing up quite near Brookfield;
soldiers using the playing fields for sports and training; swift developments
of Brookfield O.T.C. Most of the younger masters gone or in uniform. Every
Sunday night, in the Chapel after evening service, Chatteris read out the
names of old boys killed, together with short biographies. Very moving; but
Chips, in the black pew under the gallery, thought: They are only names to
him; he doesn’t see their faces as I do…
1916… The Somme Battle. Twenty-three names read out one Sunday
evening.
Toward the close of that catastrophic July, Chatteris talked to Chips one
afternoon at Mrs. Wickett’s. He was overworked and overworried and looked
very ill. “To tell you the truth, Chipping, I’m not having too easy a time
here. I’m thirty-nine, you know, and unmarried, and lots of people seem to
think they know what I ought to do. Also, I happen to be diabetic, and
couldn’t pass the blindest M.O., but I don’t see why I should pin a medical
certificate on my front door.”
Chips hadn’t known anything about this; it was a shock to him, for he
liked Chatteris.
The latter continued: “You see how it is. Ralston filled the place up with
young men—all very good, of course—but now most of them have
joined up and the substitutes are pretty dreadful, on the whole. They poured
ink down a man’s neck in prep one night last week—silly fool— got
hysterical.
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