The First World War produced a blizzard of books. Many are still read. Yet one of the best has been largely forgotten. Written with a modern voice nearly 60 years after the war ended, Eric Hiscock’s The Bells of Hell has a life and freshness that you won’t find in the classic memoirs
Ypres, September 1918 (Imperial War Museum/Harry Guy Bartholomew) |
The British literature of the First World War has an
identity of its own as a body of work – something that from the second war
lacks. It’s no mystery why. Most of those who fought for Britain did so on the
Western Front; this gives the war literature a certain cohesion, as does the
fact that many of the authors were from highly literate and privileged
backgrounds, or were men of letters, or both.
Edmund Blunden, Robert Graves, Frederic Manning, Richard Aldington and Ford Madox Ford all fit into these categories. Posh non-literary figures also got in on the act (Anthony Eden, for example, whose Another World is rather good). It’s a peer group well depicted in historian Josh Levithan’s splendid A Century Back blog, which is currently tracking the war day by day through their letters; it shows us how incestuous this world of pen and sword actually was. Yet not all of this cohesive body of work speaks to us directly now; sometimes the language can seem archaic and mannered. J.B. Priestley’s fragment Carry on! Carry On!, in his autobiographical Margin Released, is an exception (it was written much later). But much Great War writing, superb though it is, seems increasingly of its time.
Edmund Blunden, Robert Graves, Frederic Manning, Richard Aldington and Ford Madox Ford all fit into these categories. Posh non-literary figures also got in on the act (Anthony Eden, for example, whose Another World is rather good). It’s a peer group well depicted in historian Josh Levithan’s splendid A Century Back blog, which is currently tracking the war day by day through their letters; it shows us how incestuous this world of pen and sword actually was. Yet not all of this cohesive body of work speaks to us directly now; sometimes the language can seem archaic and mannered. J.B. Priestley’s fragment Carry on! Carry On!, in his autobiographical Margin Released, is an exception (it was written much later). But much Great War writing, superb though it is, seems increasingly of its time.
Eric Hiscock’s The
Bells of Hell Go Ting-A-Ling-Ling, by contrast, has sunk without trace. But
because it was written nearly 60 years after the events it describes, its
language has a freshness that is much easier for the modern reader than (say)
Blunden, who is a wonderful writer but can feel very old-fashioned. To read
Hiscock, by contrast, is like hearing about the war from a gifted raconteur in
the pub. The gap in years means he can also look at the war with modern eyes,
and be quite brutally frank.
Hiscock was born in 1900 and brought up in Oxford. His
parents had met when both in service to an aristocrat, Lord Lane-Fox, and his
father had later become a “scout” – domestic staff – in one of the Oxford
colleges. Hiscock’s home was not a wealthy one, but seems to have been secure
and cheerful. As the book begins, however, Hiscock joins the army – at the
age of just 15. The army clearly knows he is underage, and he spends the next
two years in Britain. (In this he is luckier than an old teacher of mine who
had been sent to the Somme at 15, and who started crying when I asked him about
it over 50 years later.)
The young Hiscock is shipped off to Edinburgh, where he makes the acquaintance of one Sergeant-Major Priestman. The latter is a regular who “had had a testicle shot off in the Mons retreat”, and who “bullied from Reveille at six in the morning ...to Lights Out at night, spitting venom. But at week’s-end, he was not averse to accepting hard cash for a forty-eight hour pass.” It reminds one of the famous wartime song (which Hiscock quotes):
The young Hiscock is shipped off to Edinburgh, where he makes the acquaintance of one Sergeant-Major Priestman. The latter is a regular who “had had a testicle shot off in the Mons retreat”, and who “bullied from Reveille at six in the morning ...to Lights Out at night, spitting venom. But at week’s-end, he was not averse to accepting hard cash for a forty-eight hour pass.” It reminds one of the famous wartime song (which Hiscock quotes):
When the bloody war is
over,
O how happy I shall
be...
No more crying out for
furlough,
No more bribing for a
pass,
You can tell the Sergeant-Major
To stick his passes up
his arse.
In other words, never mind the mud and the lice of Flanders;
you were bullied on a massive scale long before you got there. That’s something
you won’t find so much in Edmund Blunden or Robert Graves (though Frederick Manning,
who spent time in the ranks, hints at it more).
Hiscock does get to the front, in early 1918 when he is
still some months underage. As he and his companions file into the trench for
the first time, a sniper kills the sergeant (not Priestman) a few feet from
him. “Possibly somebody did something about him as his lifeless body fell to
the sodden duckboards ...but I think we just left him there. As [we] scrambled
into the shelter my steel helmet caught a protuberance in the muddied roof. It
was the knee of a khaki-clad corpse.” There is plenty more like this. One of
the most evocative passages in the book, for me, is Hiscock’s description of
repeated night journeys up to the trenches, on duckboards across the mud; it is
a treacherous passage and it is not unusual for an overladen man to simply lose
his footing and fall into the mud or a flooded crater below, never to be seen
again.
Yet some at least of this can be found in many books (though
perhaps not quite so vividly). What marks this book out, besides its
contemporary feel, is its frankness. Hiscock doesn’t bother with the King and
Country nonsense. Instead we hear how months of bully-beef wrecks his digestion
so that he will be seriously ill in later years. We hear how he gets his penis bitten
by a vengeful French girl after he decides, as the last minute, not to have
intercourse with her (she was, “it turned out, a diseased nymphomaniac”). It’s
played for laughs but then he quietly tells us, at the end of that passage, how
a fellow-soldier later catches a dose at the end of the war and shoots himself
rather than go home to his family.
But perhaps the most extraordinary part of this book is
Hiscock’s own court-martial for cowardice.
As he recounts it, he injures himself accidentally while cleaning his
rifle, and has been accused of doing it deliberately to get himself
repatriated. The accuser, a Lieutenant Clarke, is (according to Hiscock) a
homosexual jealous of Hiscock’s friendship with another man. It is impossible
to know if this account is correct; one could, I suppose, find the transcripts
of the court-martial if they exist, but they might not settle the case. For
what it is worth, Hiscock is acquitted and returns to combat – incredibly, he is returned to the
same unit, which must be dangerous for Clarke – and serves until his discharge
in 1919. This does not suggest cowardice. Yet a quite startling number of men
were convicted; most were not actually shot, but over 300 were, and Hiscock
would have been well aware he was on trial for his life. If one does take
Hiscock’s account at face value, it demonstrates that this war put ordinary men
at the mercy not just of the enemy, but of the very worst of their own people.
Hiscock survives the war and goes on to take part in the
postwar occupation of Germany – itself fascinating, as there are few enough
accounts of the post-WWII occupation, let alone of this one. The book ends back
in Oxford as he picks up the thread of his life. In these last parts he
describes friendships with two intellectual homosexuals in some detail. In the
book he also talks about feelings of love for other soldiers. Hiscock does not
appear to be especially prejudiced against homosexuality, and his attitudes
seem fairly liberal for 1976, let alone 1918. I have heard it suggested that
Hiscock himself had repressed feelings for men, not uncommon at that time. But
I do not see why his sensitivity towards others’ sexuality should be ascribed
to that. It may be that, having spent much time at close quarters with other
men in his youth, he was forced acknowledge the existence of diverse sexuality;
after all, he was also (if the Clarke story is true) nearly killed by its
consequences.
There is much that in The
Bells of Hell that is grim but in the end, oddly, the book itself isn’t.
Hiscock writes warmly of his parents, of his life in Oxford and of (for
example) fishing for Sunday breakfast with his father at Godstow. He seems to
have been aware of his luck in surviving the war. The book is also peppered
with character sketches, often wry and funny (I loved the forger and general
spiv, Vanner). And the various fumbling sexual adventures show a keen sense of
the ridiculous.
The Menin Road, by war artist Paul Nash (Imperial War Museum) |
I first read this book in 1991 and never forgot it, to the
extent that I decided to track it down 25 years later. I found it as startling
and vivid as I did before, and wondered why it has not had the impact of other
books about the first war. Hiscock went on to a successful career in
advertising and Fleet Street, and married Romilly Cavan, a novelist and playwright
who also wrote some early TV scripts. The
Bells of Hell was published by Desmond Elliott’s Arlington Books, a small
company but a distinguished one. It did also get a brief release as a
paperback. But its impact seems to have been small. Hiscock was not of the
officer class that still dominated publishing and criticism in the 1970s, and
it may be you still had to be an Oxbridge poet, or at least of the slaughtering
classes, before you were really allowed to write about the Great War.
If so, that is our loss, because there are things that those
classes would not have questioned, or seen in quite the same way. Wars are not
just about what a country does to its enemies; they are about what it does to
its own people in the process, and the way in which men like Clarke, or people
of a certain class, can suddenly wield huge authority over those of another. That
is something we could perhaps remember in our own times, when some would have
us believe that it’s only foreigners who are our enemies.
Mike Robbins's essay Such Little Accident: British democracy and its enemies
was published in December 2016 and is available from Amazon and other online retailers, or through bookshops
(ISBN 978-0-9978815-0-9, ebook; ISBN 978-0-9978815-1-6, paperback)
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