登陆注册
19883500000026

第26章 THE WAR LANDSCAPE(1)

1

I saw rather more of the British than of the French aviators because of the vileness of the weather when I visited the latter.

It is quite impossible for me to institute comparisons between these two services.I should think that the British organisation I saw would be hard to beat, and that none but the French could hope to beat it.On the Western front the aviation has been screwed up to a very much higher level than on the Italian line.

In Italy it has not become, as it has in France, the decisive factor.The war on the Carso front in Italy--I say nothing of the mountain warfare, which is a thing in itself--is in fact still in the stage that I have called B.It is good warfare well waged, but not such an intensity of warfare.It has not, as one says of pianos and voices, the same compass.

This is true in spite of the fact that the Italians along of all the western powers have adopted a type of aeroplane larger and much more powerful than anything except the big Russian machines.

They are not at all suitable for any present purpose upon the Italian front, but at a later stage, when the German is retiring and Archibald no longer searches the air, they would be invaluable on the western front because of their enormous bomb or machine gun carrying capacity."But sufficient for the day is the swat thereof," as the British public schoolboy says, and no doubt we shall get them when we have sufficiently felt the need for them.The big Caproni machines which the Italians possess are of 300 h.p.and will presently be of 500h.p.One gets up a gangway into them was one gets into a yacht; they wave a main deck, a forward machine gun deck and an aft machine gun; one may walk about in them; in addition to guns and men they carry a very considerable weight of bombs beneath.They cannot of course beget up with the speed nor soar to the height of our smaller aeroplanes; it is as carriers in raids behind a force of fighting machines that they should find their use.

The British establishment I visited was a very refreshing and reassuring piece of practical organisation.The air force of Great Britain has had the good fortune to develop with considerable freedom from old army tradition; many of its officers are ex-civil engineers and so forth; Headquarters is a little shy of technical direction; and all this in a service that is still necessarily experimental and plastic is to the good.

There is little doubt that, given a release from prejudice, bad associations and the equestrian tradition, British technical intelligence and energy can do just as well as the French.Our problem with our army is not to create intelligence, there is an abundance of it, but to release it from a dreary social and official pressure.The air service ransacks the army for men with technical training and sees that it gets them, there is a real keenness upon the work, and the men in these great mobile hangars talk shop readily and clearly.

I have already mentioned and the newspapers have told abundantly of the pluck, daring, and admirable work of our aviators; what is still untellable in any detail is the energy and ability of the constructive and repairing branch upon whose efficiency their feats depend.Perhaps the most interesting thing I saw in connection with the air work was the hospital for damaged machines and the dump to which those hopelessly injured are taken, in order that they may be disarticulated and all that is sound in them used for reconstruction.How excellently this work is being done may be judged from the fact that our offensive in July started with a certain number of aeroplanes, a number that would have seemed fantastic in a story a year before the war began.These aeroplanes were in constant action; they fought, they were shot down, they had their share of accidents.Not only did the repair department make good every loss, but after three weeks of the offensive the army was fighting with fifty more machines than at the outset.One goes through a vast Rembrandtesque shed opening upon a great sunny field, in whose cool shadows rest a number of interesting patients; captured and slightly damaged German machines, machines of our own with scars of battle upon them, one or two cases of bad landing.The star case came over from Peronne.It had come in two days ago.

I examined this machine and I will tell the state it was in, but I perceive that what I have to tell will read not like a sober statement of truth but like strained and silly lying.The machine had had a direct hit from an Archibald shell.The propeller had been clean blown away; so had the machine gun and all its fittings.The engines had been stripped naked and a good deal bent about.The timber stay over the aviator had been broken, so that it is marvellous the wings of the machine did not just up at once like the wings of a butterfly.The solitary aviator had been wounded in the face.He had then come down in a long glide into the British lines, and made a tolerable landing....

2

One consequence of the growing importance of the aeroplane in warfare is the development of a new military art, the art of camouflage.Camouflage is humbugging disguise, it is making things--and especially in this connection, military things--seem not what they are, but something peaceful and rural, something harmless and quite uninteresting to aeroplane observers.It is the art of making big guns look like haystacks and tents like level patches of field.

同类推荐
  • 善恶因果经

    善恶因果经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 略论安乐净土义

    略论安乐净土义

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 禽海石

    禽海石

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 顿悟入道要门论

    顿悟入道要门论

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 进旨

    进旨

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 百炼神皇

    百炼神皇

    神道,是以为主宰;修罗之道,是以为战无止境;宁天启之道,始于仇恨,源于抗争!魔界不敢留,冥界不敢收,神界不能容!此乃宁天启的孤天之道!一把断刀,让他死而复生,获得了定天刀魂,从此带着刀魂炼尽天地间的神兵鬼器,踏上洗仇与抗争之路!一统人界,血洗五行天,踏平冥魔两道,威震神界!此乃宁天启的孤天之道!
  • 武噬乾坤

    武噬乾坤

    吞噬并万物,造化夺天机。凭武魄之力,引混沌之芒。惊鸿一瞥平海内,天盟浩瀚定乾坤。承四海余烈渡天命武神,题衍天金榜奋无上雄威!
  • 绿色王国

    绿色王国

    二十年前一颗神奇的种子寄生李明宇的丹田,于是李明宇做了20十年的废柴。二十年后种子发芽,李明宇觉醒了异能!于是李明宇准备习惯做一个超能人!……什么,你还住水泥钢筋构筑的房屋?你out了,买一个别墅树吧,绿色环保诗情画意,让钢筋水泥见鬼去吧!什么,你还开汽车还烧油?你out了,买一棵能源树吧,绿色环保,让石油公司关门吧!一棵树就是一栋楼,一棵树就是一个训练场,一棵树就是一个垃圾处理场……李明宇的目标就是打造一个绿色、环保、有诗意的世外桃源!杜绝一切破坏自然的东西!
  • 假如我轻若尘埃

    假如我轻若尘埃

    她的人生和爱情,因不同的相遇,分成泾渭分明的两部分。何齐是她最美好的邂逅,他的阳光照亮她的生命,他给她陪伴,让她依靠,许她承诺……却也带给她最深重的伤痛。陈效是她最意外的相遇,他的相助拯救她的沉沦,他给她压力,助她成长,让她盛放……令她终于摆脱灰暗的过往。她以为所有的快乐都像指间沙,稍纵即逝,消失无踪。如果不曾心动,伤心就更容易痊愈。如果不曾拥有,失去就更容易接受。可独自前行的路上,终究会遇见一个人,即使你轻若尘埃,也被他置于心间……
  • 紫发妖姬

    紫发妖姬

    在一个本该懵懂无知,不谙世事的年纪,一场突如其来的空前浩劫让她命运逆转,为了一个不知是真是假的预言,不得不用她小小的身躯去扭转乾坤,用短暂的人生去赌那希望渺茫的机会。本来她想输赢不过一条命而已,但是却遇到了他。他说:“若你顾及的人太多,以至于忽略了自己,那守护你这件事就由我代劳吧。”他说:“若你是神,我便潜心修炼羽化成仙,若你是妖,我甘愿堕化为魔。“一场生命的追逐,一曲清歌的演奏,一幕爱恋的纠缠,她是否能赢?
  • 西游也

    西游也

    一个也是西游的故事。一只猴子和一只狐狸,它们有一天相遇在一片树下,然后叶子就落了。
  • 依然的碧翠空间

    依然的碧翠空间

    林依然得到了一个空间,虽然她不是很想要……得到空间后,她倒霉并快乐着,因为找到了自己的幸福。--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 无尽穿越之旅

    无尽穿越之旅

    这是一个在各种世界穿越游历的故事……ps:变身文,不喜误入
  • 诫子拾遗

    诫子拾遗

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 吐槽少女

    吐槽少女

    想害我?把你坑得连裤衩都不剩!想骂我?把你补刀补得连你妈都不认得你!想找死?呵呵呵呵呵呵呵呵呵呵呵呵······