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Part 6
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Part 6: Meditations In The Trenches, "Over There".

Chapter 30: THE RIGHT INFANTRY WEAPONS

I KNOW scores of men who have been months in the trenches and over the top in several attacks who have never fired a shot out of their rifles. In fact, it is very, very rarely that the man in the trenches gets a chance to aim at an enemy at a greater range than a hundred yards. There are thousands of men whom I know who believe that the long-range rifles used in our army to-day are useless weapons. 

A much more serviceable gun to repel a counter-attack would be one firing buck-shot like a pump-gun. The bullets from our high-velocity rifles frequently pass through the body of a man at a close range and he is not even conscious of having been hit and continues to come on with as great fury as before. The pellets scattering from a shot-gun at a range of a hundred yards or less would do him more damage and be far more certain to stop him.

The system of barrage fighting that we now use has made warfare as much a hand-to-hand business as it was in olden times and we must go back a good deal to oldr-fashioned weapons, as we have to a great extent to old-fashioned armour. 

Index to Chapters 

Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Poem

The picked snipers or sharpshooters could be placed in points of vantage to pick off any of the enemy who exposed themselves, and a score of them in each company would get very few shots in a day. Another weapon that infantry should be armed with is a hand-bayonet, as there is no advantage whatever in the long reach that our present rifle and bayonet gives. As a matter of fact, many of our men have been killed through driving their bayonet too far into the body of their opponent, not being able to draw it out, thus being helpless When attacked by another of the enemy. 

It is no use telling men not to drive their bayonet in more than three or four inches, for in the speed and fury of a charge they will always drive it in right up to the hilt, and while we retain this out-of-date weapon we should certainly put a guard on it not further than six inches from the point. I have used a hand-bayonet which sticks out from the fist like a knuckle-duster and is about six inches long. The shock of the blow is taken on the fore-arm which also has an iron plate running down it on which to receive the thrust of one's opponent. 

This is the natural weapon for the Anglo-Saxon, as the fist and arm is used exactly as in boxing. If an enemy comes at you with a bayonet it is the natural and easy thing to throw up your arm and ward it off. The iron plate saves your arm from being cut ; you are in under his guard ; seize his rifle with your left hand, and punch with your right, driving the knife home the six inches, which is all that is necessary.

There are only two things that it is essential to remember when you go into a bayonet charge. The first is that the most determined man will min. I have known champion men-at-arms killed by a bayonet in their first charge and other little fellows who were no good in the practice combats kill their man every time. If you go into a bayonet charge with the idea of disarming your opponent and taking him prisoner you will most certainly be killed. But if you are quite sure in your own mind that you are going to kill every man who comes against you, you will do it. 

Your determination impresses itself upon the man you attack and he will be beaten before you reach him. The other thing t4tat it is wise to remember is to make your opponent attack you on your left side. Ii he attacks you on the right you have to parry him and then thrust, but for an attack on the left side the action of parrying will bring the toe of your butt into his jaw or ribs, disabling him, and it is a good thing to use your knee at the same time.

The general-staff officers who decide how an army should be weaponed never do the actual fighting, and few junior officers or men feel competent to offer their advice. I am quite confident that a majority of the fighters would agree with the foregoing opinions, and I would like the chance of taking a company armed as I have suggested into action, and would be quite satisfied of their superiority to any troops on the front.

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