MARINES SIGNALING UNDER FIRE AT GUANTANAMO. BY STEPHEN CRANE, Author of
"The Red Badge of Courage," "The Open Boat," etc.
THEY were four
Guantanamo marines, officially known for the time as signalmen, and it was
their duty to lie in the trenches of Camp McCalla, that faced the water, and,
by day, signal the "Marblehead" with a flag and, by night, signal the
"Marblehead" with lanterns. It was my good fortune--at that time I
considered it my bad fortune, indeed--to be with them on two of the nights when
a wild storm of fighting was pealing about the hill; and, of all the actions of
the war, none were so hard on the nerves, none strained courage so near the
panic point, as those swift nights in Camp McCalla. With a thousand rifles
rattling; with the field-guns booming in your ears; with the diabolic Colt
automatics clacking; with the roar of the "Marblehead" coming from
the bay, and, last, with Mauser bullets sneering always in the air a few inches
over one's head, and with this enduring from dusk to dawn, it is extremely
doubtful if any one who was there will be able to forget it easily. The noise;
the impenetrable darkness; the knowledge from the sound of the bullets that the
enemy was on three sides of the camp; the infrequent bloody stumbling and death
of some man with whom, perhaps, one had messed two hours previous; the
weariness of the body, and the more terrible weariness of the mind, at the
endlessness of the thing, made it wonderful that at least some of the men did
not come out of it with their nerves hopelessly in shreds.
But, as this
interesting ceremony proceeded in the darkness, it was necessary for the signal
squad to coolly take and send messages. Captain McCalla always participated in
the defense of the camp by raking the woods on two of its sides with the guns
of the "Marblehead." Moreover, he was the senior officer present, and
he wanted to know what was happening. All night long the crews of the ships in
the bay would stare sleeplessly into the blackness toward the roaring hill.
The signal squad had an
old cracker-box placed on top of the trench. When not signaling, they hid the
lanterns in this box; but as soon as an order to send a message was received,
it became necessary for one of the men to stand up and expose the lights. And
then--oh, my eye--how the guerrillas hidden in the gulf of night would turn
loose at those yellow gleams!
Signaling in this way
is done by letting one lantern remain stationary--on top of the cracker-box, in
this case--and moving the other over it to the left and right and so on in the
regular gestures of the wig-wagging code. It is a very simple system of night
communication, but one can see that it presents rare possibilities when used in
front of an enemy who, a few hundred yards away, is overjoyed at sighting so
definite a mark.
How, in the name of
wonders, those four men at Camp McCalla were not riddled from head to foot and
sent home more as repositories of Spanish ammunition than as marines is beyond
all comprehension. To make a confession--when one of these men stood up to wave
his lantern, I, lying in the trench, invariably rolled a little to the right or
left, in order that, when he was shot, he would not fall on me. But the squad
came off scathless, despite the best efforts of the most formidable corps in
the Spanish army--the Escuadra de Guantanamo. That it was the most formidable
corps in the Spanish army of occupation has been told me by many Spanish
officers and also by General Menocal and other insurgent officers. General
Menocal was Garcia's chief-of-staff when the latter was operating busily in
Santiago province. The regiment was composed solely of practicos, or guides,
who knew every shrub and tree on the ground over which they moved.
Whenever the adjutant,
Lieutenant Draper, came plunging along through the darkness with an order--such
as: "Ask the 'Marblehead' to please shell the woods to the left"--my
heart would come into my mouth, for I knew then that one of my pals was going
to stand up behind the lanterns and have all Spain shoot at him.
The answer was always
upon the instant: "Yes, sir." Then the bullets began to snap, snap,
snap, at his head while all the woods began to crackle like burning straw. I
could lie near and watch the face of the signalman, illumed as it was by the
yellow shine of lantern light, and the absence of excitement, fright, or any
emotion at all, on his countenance, was something to astonish all theories out
of one's mind. The face was in every instance merely that of a man intent upon
his business, the business of wig-wagging into the gulf of night where a light
on the "Marblehead" was seen to move slowly.
These times on the hill
resembled, in some days, those terrible scenes on the stage--scenes of intense
gloom, blinding lightning, with a cloaked devil or assassin or other
appropriate character muttering deeply amid the awful roll of the thunder-
drums. It was theatric beyond words; one felt like a leaf in this booming
chaos, this prolonged tragedy of the night. Amid it all one could see from time
to time the yellow light on the face of a preoccupied signalman.
Possibly no man who was
there ever before understood the true eloquence of the breaking of the day. We
would lie staring into the east, fairly ravenous for the dawn. Utterly worn to
rags, with our nerves standing on end like so many bristles, we lay and watched
the east--the unspeakably obdurate and slow east. It was a wonder that the eyes
of some of us did not turn to glass balls from the fixity of our gaze.
Then there would come
into the sky a patch of faint blue light. It was like a piece of moonshine.
Some would say it was the beginning of daybreak; others would declare it was
nothing of the kind. Men would get very disgusted with each other in these
low-toned arguments held in the trenches. For my part, this development in the
eastern sky destroyed many of my ideas and theories concerning the dawning of
the day; but then I had never before had occasion to give it such solemn
attention.
This patch widened and
whitened in about the speed of a man's accomplishment if he should be in the
way of painting Madison Square Garden with a camel's hair brush. The guerrillas
always set out to whoop it up about this time, because they knew the occasion
was approaching when it would be expedient for them to elope. I, at least,
always grew furious with this wretched sunrise. I thought I could have walked
around the world in the time required for the old thing to get up above the
horizon.
One midnight, when an
important message was to be sent to the "Marblehead," Colonel
Huntington came himself to the signal place with Adjutant Draper and Captain
McCauley, the quartermaster. When the man stood up to signal, the colonel stood
beside him. At sight of the lights, the Spaniards performed as usual. They
drove enough bullets into that immediate vicinity to kill all the marines in
the corps.
Lieutenant Draper was
agitated for his chief. "Colonel, won't you step down, sir?"
"Why, I guess
not," said the gray old veteran in his slow, sad, always-gentle way.
"I'm in no more danger than the man."
"But, sir--"
began the adjutant.
"Oh, it's all
right, Draper."
So the colonel and the
private stood side to side and took the heavy fire without either moving a
muscle.
Day was always obliged
to come at last, punctuated by a final exchange of scattering shots. And the
light shone on the marines, the dumb guns, the flag. Grimy yellow face looked
into grimy yellow face, and grinned with weary satisfaction. Coffee!
Usually it was
impossible for many of the men to sleep at once. It always took me, for instance,
some hours to get my nerves combed down. But then it was great joy to lie in
the trench with the four signalmen, and understand thoroughly that that night
was fully over at last, and that, although the future might have in store other
bad nights, that one could never escape from the prison-house which we call the
past.
At the wild little
fight at Cusco there were some splendid exhibitions of wig-wagging under fire.
Action began when an advance detachment of marines under Lieutenant Lucas with
the Cuban guides had reached the summit of a ridge overlooking a small valley
where there was a house, a well, and a thicket of some kind of shrub with great
broad, oily leaves. This thicket, which was perhaps an acre in extent,
contained the guerrillas. The valley was open to the sea. The distance from the
top of the ridge to the thicket was barely two hundred yards.
The "Dolphin"
had sailed up the coast in line with the marine advance, ready with her guns to
assist in any action. Captain Elliott, who commanded the two hundred marines in
this fight, suddenly called out for a signalman. He wanted a man to tell the
"Dolphin" to open fire on the house and the thicket. It was a
blazing, bitter hot day on top of the ridge with its shriveled chaparral and
its straight, tall cactus plants. The sky was bare and blue, and hurt like
brass. In two minutes the prostrate marines were red and sweating like so many
hull-buried stokers in the tropics.
Captain Elliott called
out:
"Where's a
signalman? Who's a signalman here?"
A red-headed
"mick"--I think his name was Clancy--at any rate, it will do to call
him Clancy--twisted his head from where he lay on his stomach pumping his Lee,
and, saluting, said that he was a signalman.
There was no regulation
flag with the expedition, so Clancy was obliged to tie his blue polka-dot
neckerchief on the end of his rifle. It did not make a very good flag. At first
Clancy moved a ways down the safe side of the ridge and wig-wagged there very
busily. But what with the flag being so poor for the purpose, and the
background of ridge being so dark, those on the "Dolphin" did not see
it. So Clancy had to return to the top of the ridge and outline himself and his
flag against the sky.
The usual thing
happened. As soon as the Spaniards caught sight of this silhouette, they let go
like mad at it. To make things more comfortable for Clancy, the situation
demanded that he face the sea and turn his back to the Spanish bullets. This
was a hard game, mark you--to stand with the small of your back to volley
firing. Clancy thought so. Everybody thought so. We all cleared out of his
neighborhood. If he wanted sole possession of any particular spot on that hill,
he could have it for all we would interfere with him.
It cannot be denied
that Clancy was in a hurry. I watched him. He was so occupied with the bullets
that snarled close to his ears that he was obliged to repeat the letters of his
message softly to himself. It seemed an intolerable time before the
"Dolphin" answered the little signal. Meanwhile, we gazed at him,
marveling every second that he had not yet pitched headlong. He swore at times.
Finally the
"Dolphin" replied to his frantic gesticulation, and he delivered his
message. As his part of the transaction was quite finished--whoop!--he dropped
like a brick into the firing line and began to shoot; began to get
"hunky" with all those people who had been plugging at him. The blue
polka-dot neckerchief still fluttered from the barrel of his rifle. I am quite
certain that he let it remain there until the end of the fight.
The shells of the
"Dolphin" began to plow up the thicket, kicking the bushes, stones,
and soil into the air as if somebody was blasting there.
Meanwhile, this force
of two hundred marines and fifty Cubans and the force of--probably--six
companies of Spanish guerrillas were making such an awful din that the distant
Camp McCalla was all alive with excitement. Colonel Huntington sent out strong
parties to critical points on the road to facilitate, if necessary, a safe
retreat, and also sent forty men under Lieutenant Magill to come up on the left
flank of the two companies in action under Captain Elliott. Lieutenant Magill
and his men had crowned a hill which covered entirely the flank of the fighting
companies, but when the "Dolphin" opened fire, it happened that
Magill was in the line of the shots. It became necessary to stop the "Dolphin"
at once. Captain Elliott was not near Clancy at this time, and he called
hurriedly for another signalman.
Sergeant Quick arose,
and announced that he was a signalman. He produced from somewhere a blue
polka-dot neckerchief as large as a quilt. He tied it on a long, crooked stick.
Then he went to the top of the ridge, and turning his back to the Spanish fire,
began to signal to the "Dolphin." Again we gave a man sole possession
of a particular part of the ridge. We didn't want it. He could have it and
welcome. If the young sergeant had had the smallpox, the cholera, and the
yellow fever, we could not have slid out with more celerity.
As men have said often,
it seemed as if there was in this war a God of Battles who held His mighty hand
before the Americans. As I looked at Sergeant Quick wig-wagging there against
the sky, I would not have given a tin tobacco-tag for his life. Escape for him
seemed impossible. It seemed absurd to hope that he would not be hit; I only
hoped that he would be hit just a little, little, in the arm, the shoulder, or
the leg.
I watched his face, and
it was as grave and serene as that of a man writing in his own library. He was
the very embodiment of tranquillity in occupation. He stood there amid the
animal-like babble of the Cubans, the crack of rifles, and the whistling snarl
of the bullets, and wig-wagged whatever he had to wig-wag without heeding
anything but his business. There was not a single trace of nervousness or
haste.
To say the least, a
fight at close range is absorbing as a spectacle. No man wants to take his eyes
from it until that time comes when he makes up his mind to run away. To
deliberately stand up and turn your back to a battle is in itself hard work. To
deliberately stand up and turn your back to a battle and hear immediate
evidences of the boundless enthusiasm with which a large company of the enemy
shoot at you from an adjacent thicket is, to my mind at least, a very great
feat. One need not dwell upon the detail of keeping the mind carefully upon a
slow spelling of an important code message.
I saw Quick betray only
one sign of emotion. As he swung his clumsy flag to and fro, an end of it once
caught on a cactus pillar, and he looked sharply over his shoulder to see what
had it. He gave the flag an impatient jerk. He looked annoyed.