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T. E. Lawrence, The Mint
PART I
7: THE NEW SKIN
Rumour has it that today we draw our kit. From breakfast-time we hang
about in excitement; hoping to lose, with these our old suits, the
instant reminder that we have been civvies: and to escape the disdain we
now read in the eyes of uniformed men.
Rumour at last turns true. In fours we march to the Q.M. Stores and
there stand up against a hail of clothing flung at us by six sweating
storemen, while the quartermaster, upright behind his counter, intoned
the list. But the list stood on its head... socks, pairs, three; it ran
like that... so nobody could know what was what.
We
shouldered the kit-bag, draped the tunics and trousers (khaki, alas!)
over one arm, hugged the blue clothes, our ambition, with the other; and
were chivied to the boot-store where we tried on as many as we could
grab of the hundreds of boots upon the floor. At last each had two
pairs, fairly fitting, but barge-heavy, and stiff as cast-iron. The
boot-man hung them round our necks by their strings, and we staggered to
the tailors who next took hold of us that they might chalk alterations
on the seams of our blue tunics. Laden with all else of the mighty kit
we steered our way back up the camp roads to the hut.
'Quick!' cried Corporal Abner. 'Into your khaki: yes, it'll fit, of
course: all khaki fits - where it touches. You're to get shot of your
civvy duds before dinner.' Straightway the staff of the reception hut
were transformed into old-clothes' merchants. Our hut swarmed with
senior airmen, fingering or looking, appraising, disparaging, bidding.
Some optimists posted their suits home for use on leave but to most of
us home looks long years away, and leave improbable. 'Puttees on,'
insisted the Corporal: 'puttees always in working hours.' We wanted to
weep while we pulled the harsh trousers as high as our knees and wound
the drab puttee from boot-top upward, till it gripped the trouser-hem
above the calf. Then we pulled the slack of the trouser dropsically down
again over the puttee to hide the join. It did more than hide the join:
it hid the reality of our legs and was hot, tight and hideous, like an
infantryman's rig. When we had finished dressing we were silenced by our
new slovenliness. The hut of normal men had gone, and barbarous drab
troops now filled it.
'Fall in' from the Corporal then, slowly, almost reluctantly. What new
thing was coming our way? Off we raggedly clopped past the butcher's and
the tailor's, to halt before the barber's door. 'First two men,' and in
they went. The hasty barber, one eye on the clock of his lunch, ran his
clippers up and over our heads. Three slashes with the scissors jagged
our top hair to match the plucked staircase of the back. 'Next two,'
yelled the barber's fatigue man. Forty before dinner-bugle. Would he do
it? Easy. Back in the sheltering hut we gazed again without comment at
the botch of bristles upon each other's pale scalps: and were reconciled
to imprisonment in the Depot for a while. It's not tempting to be a
figure of fun in the streets.
Khaki is prison garb here, the gate-sentry not letting out a man who
wears it. So we are confined till the tailors release our altered blue.
In our brief lives few of us have been locked up before, and the very
feel of it makes an uncreased wing begin to beat against the bars. One
adventurer slipped down to the tailor's, after dark, and brought word
that half a dollar will secure priority, and even a bob do something:
otherwise the tailors are so busy that it may be a fortnight before they
can deliver. A fortnight! We have been here three days and it feels like
ever.
The afternoon passes in a first effort to stow our kit after the
Corporal's manner, to black the stubbornly-brown boots and to smear
brown clay (blanco) over the web equipment with which, in marching
order, the airman is harnessed against any wanderlust that might make
him yearn to go forth without his all upon his back, like a snail. We
make a mess of each single task: and wonder despairingly what will
happen as our squad goes on square in such amateur fashion. 'Square'
snorted Corporal Abner in derision, as though the square was a privilege
of angels - 'You are for fatigues tonight.'
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