The British army is the
only one in Europe the ranks of which are replenished by voluntary
enlistment. In every other country military service is to a certain
extent compulsory, and the system of conscription more or less
prevalent. It might be inferred from this fact that we are the most
warlike of all nations, inasmuch as the military ardour of the people is
sufficient to recruit the ranks of the army. This inference, however,
would be somewhat premature: few enter the army in this country because
they prefer the profession of arms to every other kind of employment. We
have conversed with a great many recruits, and we have met with only two
or three young enthusiasts who had taken the shilling from the pure love
of defending their Queen and country. A variety of motives had induced
the others to enlist. The British army is much the same sort of
rendezvous at the present day as the cave of Adullam in the old Jewish
times; it may be said of the recruiting sergeant as of David, “Every one
that is in distress, and every one that is in debt, and every one that
is discontented, gather themselves unto him.”
Distress, or, in other
words, want ‘of employment, is the most frequent cause of enlistment.
There is an old and time-honoured joke, which we introduce merely from
the light it reflects on this part of our subject:—“It was not for want
that I took the shilling,” is often repeated with a grim smile ; “I had
enough and to spare of that before.” During a severe winter, when many
are thrown out of employment, the supply of recruits is greater than the
demand, and none but the most promising are selected. On the other hand,
when the price of labour is high both in town and country, it is
difficult to find a sufficient number: and cases of desertion become
much more frequent. The supply of recruits for the army is thus affected
by all the fluctuations of trade and agriculture. In periods of
depression the supply exceeds the demand, and the recruiting sergeant
can pick and choose; on the other hand, when the price of labour is
high, he must take what he can get. But poverty is not the only cause of
enlistment. A drunken husband quarrels with his wife, and, by way of
revenge, goes and takes the shilling (concealing, of course, the fact of
his marriage); a son grows weary of the restraints of home, and
foolishly imagines that he will enjoy a greater amount of liberty in the
army. It was only recently that a weeping mother spoke to us about her
son who had enlisted:—“You see, sir, we were a little too strict with
him. He was fond of going to the theatre, and when we found that he
would not give it up by gentle means, we told him the next time he went
out at night he would find the door shut on his return. This soon
happened; so he enlisted, and we knew nothing about it till it was too
late.” They paid 20s. to buy him off—a foolish investment, as he is
almost certain to enlist again. Those who are bought off after a few
weeks’ service almost invariably do so; it is far better to allow the
foolish youths to remain a year or two in the army. In the course of
that time they will come to know their own minds, and perhaps be more
disposed to submit to the restraints of parental authority. Debt,
dishonesty, drunkenness, immorality, and a desire to escape from its
consequences, are also frequent causes of enlistment.
There is another cause of
a more substantial character which ought not to be overlooked: We mean,
disappointment in love. How many a poor lad has thought that he would
find a cure for an aching heart in the galvanic power of the sergeant’s
shilling, or sought revenge on his inconstant or obdurate sweetheart by
donning the soldier’s tunic! We do not believe in broken hearts in the
army: the drill-sergeant’s ratan and the intricacies of the goose-step
are sufficient to prevent the most sentimental recruit from brooding too
much over his disappointment, and after a time he learns to care for
none of these things. It is among young soldiers that the tender passion
is most prevalent, and sometimes it crops out very unexpectedly. The
other day we were visiting the wards of one of our military hospitals,
and in going our rounds we observed a young soldier whose expression of
face was far more depressed than his slight illness was sufficient to
account for. We entered into conversation with him, and found that he
was from a part of the North which we knew. If you want to have a firm
gripe over a soldier’s heart, talk to him of his native village: the
whole nature of the man expands, and the hidden fountains of feeling
begin to well over at the thought of home. You may make almost anything
of such a man, and he will cleave to you with the loving trustfulness of
a child. It was so in this case; we were soon the best of friends. He
was a tall, powerful young fellow, and a skilful workman; so we felt a
desire to know the cause of his enlistment. We suggested several, but in
vain; at last a happy idea occurred to us. “Ah! John,” we said, “you
have been quarrelling with your sweetheart.” “Well, sir,” said John,
with a blush that made his face redder even than his own intensely
auburn hair, “I am thinking it was something of that sort.”
While the ranks of our army are filled up by voluntary enlistment, it
would be a mistake to suppose that the recruits come forward of their
own accord to enlist. It does, indeed, occasionally happen that a young
man, incited by some of those causes to which we have alluded, will go
in search of the recruiting sergeant, but, as a general rule, the
recruiting sergeant has to go in search of him. Employers of labour may
safely take it for granted that, without any direct effort on their
part, the supply will always be equal to the demand; but it is not so in
the army. It requires a certain amount of rhetoric to persuade a man
that it is to his advantage to allow himself to be shot at for a
shilling a day. The Government are aware of this fact, and have provided
accordingly. The whole of the United Kingdom is divided into recruiting
districts, each of which is under the charge of an inspecting field
officer, and subdivided into smaller districts, under the
superintendence of officers of inferior rank.
Each of these subalterns has parties of non-commisioned officers and men
employed under him, over whom he exercises a general control. As all the
real work of recruiting is done by the sergeants and the men under them,
the commanding officer of a regiment is always very careful in the
selection of them. It would be difficult to specify the exact qualities
desiderated in such men. There are obvious reasons why they should not
be married, and, so far as we know, none but single men are chosen. It
is not necessary that they should be good men, and a good man will not
accept such a field of labour unless it be forced upon him. It is the
most demoralizing species of military duty on which any soldier can be
employed. We have heard more than one declare, with bitter regret, that
they would have been wiser and better men if they had not been corrupted
by being employed in recruiting. We had no reason to question their
sincerity: a man cannot touch pitch without being defiled; a soldier
cannot beat up the haunts of vice for recruits without becoming to a
certain extent vicious him-self. It is not necessary that he should be a
good soldier; the commanding officer is always unwilling to scud such
men on detached duty. The great desideratum in the case of a soldier
sent to recruit is, that he should be a clever, shrewd, good-looking
fellow, gifted with that rude and ready eloquence which tells at once on
the masses. If practicable, he is usually sent to his native district:
he left it an uncouth, unshapely lout; he returns to it a smart, active,
handsome soldier, envied by all his former comrades, and admired by all
their female acquaintances. He seems to have nothing to do, and an
unlimited supply of money. While they are toiling hard, he seems to live
only for enjoyment. His bright uniform is to be seen at every country
fair and village merrymaking; his voice is law even to those who once
despised him. And he, of course, will do nothing to weaken this
favourable impression; on the contrary, he will do everything to
strengthen it. Though a private, he has usually the stripes and the
titular rank of corporal, which he has to lay aside when he rejoins his
regiment. As the additional pay of fourpence a day which he receives
while recruiting would be insufficient to meet his expenditure, he has
an intelligible motive for exertion. He usually puts up at some
publichouse, and there is a perfect understanding between him and the
landlord. They deal with one another on the principle of reciprocity.
The soldier undertakes to bring as much custom as he can to the
landlord; and if he causes a reasonable quantity of drink to be consumed
on the premises (rarely at his own expense), he usually receives his
board and lodging for nothing. There are always numbers of foolish lads
who, without any idea of enlisting, think it manly to cultivate the
society of the recruiting sergeant, and to treat him to drink. In the
long run they usually find their military friend a dangerous
acquaintance. He has constantly an eye to business, and has visions of
the more likely amongst them inarching along with him to headquarters.
He does all that in him lies to make this vision a reality. He will
drink with them, sing them his best songs, and tell them his best
stories. His glowing imagination paints the life of a soldier in its
most seductive colours ; it matters little that the groundwork of truth
is altogether wanting. The man who cannot lie without a blush will never
do for the recruiting service. In this case the end is held to justify
the means, and the recruiting sergeant will tell the most fearful lies
without a blush. It is true that he is usually warned by the adjutant or
commanding officer not to give too loose reins to his imagination; but,
with the prospect of 15s. for every sound recruit he can enlist, what is
there he will not say? Ah! if there is an Elysium on earth, it is a
barrack-room: the life the most enviable of all others is that of a
soldier. There is nothing which the heart of man can desire that is not
within his reach. Plenty to eat and drink, a handsome uniform, liberal
pay, and the disposal of your own time, who is there that would not
prefer such a life to that of the rustic clodhopper?
Nor is the sergeant the only one who indulges in this peculiar style of
eloquence while descanting on the pleasures of a soldier's life. There
arc others higher in rank, superior in education, who stoop to practise
the same kind of deception. We may insert in proof of this the following
unique production, the impudent humour of which might excite a smile, if
it were not for the unblushing effrontery of its falsehood. It is
stamped with the impress of a higher order of intellect than that of the
recruiting sergeant, and is invested with an official character by being
surmounted with the arms of England.
“Stop I—-Take notice!
“Fine young single men have now a splendid opportunity of joining the
.... They must measure 5 feet 7 inches, and be between 17 and 25 years
of age. They will all receive the same liberal Bounty of £5
“On their arrival at ---- they will be taught the art of riding,
driving, fencing, gunnery, and mechanics, whereby guns are moved with
the same facility as a penny 'whistle; the use and manufacture of
gunpowder, sky rockets, and other I beautiful fireworks. They are also
lodged in the finest barracks in the world, have light work and good pay
! the best beef and mutton that----can afford; and a comfortable place
in the barracks, called ‘the canteen,’ set apart for them to see their
friends in, and take a cheerful glass, also an excellent, “Library and
Reading Room; “A Park and Pleasure Ground, with a select number of
horses kept for their instruction, health, and amusement.
“After their education is completed, an opportunity will be equally and
without favour afforded to all to travel in foreign countries, where
they may drink their wane at two pence a bottle ! by the new tariff, and
return to their friends with money, manners and experience, with a
“Liberal Provision for Old Age.
“As the number of men required for this service will soon be completed,
young men desirous of availing themselves of these unequalled
advantages, are earnestly advised to apply without loss of time to the
recruiting party at----.
“God save the Queen.”
It is impossible to read this without a smile, but many a credulous
youth may have believed it, and found out his mistake when too late.
What a charming picture of a soldier’s life. It recalls to our memory
the words of the famous French song,
“All! quel plaisir d’etre soldat! ”
It may be said that this placard is a mere jeu de esprit, which will
deceive no one; but we doubt this; it would be difficult to set any
bounds to the all but infinite vastness of human credulity.
But to return to our friend the recruiting sergeant. On leaving the
regiment, he and his men are usually provided with a book of printed
instructions for their guidance, and also a copy of the Mutiny Act,
which contains several clauses about the mode of enlistment. As soon as
he arrives at his station, he has to report himself to the commanding
officer of the troops there, -whom he is bound to obey in all things. If
he receives any orders tending to defeat the object he has in view, he
is bound to report the case to the regiment, in order that he may obtain
redress. He must always appear in uniform, and move about his station in
a smart and soldier-like manner. By this he understands that he must
walk some ten or twenty miles every day backwards and forwards on the
sunny side of the street, flourishing his cane, and critically examining
every man or woman who passes. He has to pay all the men who are
stationed in country districts, and to inspect their kits once a month.
He receives special instructions not to enlist any recruit unless he be
straight made, upright, with broad shoulders, raised chest, good legs,
not in need, free from all appearance of sore legs, scurvy, rupture, or
any other infirmity. A cast in the eye is sufficient to cast the most
promising recruit. If any recruit is labouring under any of these
infirmities, and wilfully conceals them at the moment of enlistment, he
is liable to be tried by court-martial, but this regulation is
practically set at nought, as no recruit need confess that he has been
guilty of wilful deception. Certain classes, such as sailors, miners,
and navigators are deemed ineligible as soldiers, and any recruiting
sergeant who wilfully or carelessly enlists a married man, is liable to
be recalled and severely punished. The same rule applies also to
apprentices. No master, however, can reclaim an apprentice: the only
redress he can obtain is the payment of such part of his apprentice’s
bounty money as he may not have received.
The average height is 5 feet 4 inches for regiments of the line, and 5
feet 8 or 9 inches for the foot guards. The tall gigantic life-guardsmen
are all picked men : the enlistment of one of these is often a serious
affair. Men are rarely to be found possessing all the physical and moral
qualities requisite in this branch of the service; when one is
discovered, every effort is made to induce him to enlist. We have known
cases where the adjutant of one of these regiments has laid aside his
dignity so far as to travel several hundred miles to try the effect of
his eloquence on some young giant of whom he has heard a favourable
report. As a general rule, however, all the work is done by the
recruiting sergeant, who is better fitted for it than his superior
officers. There is an old rule of the service, that no recruit is to be
accepted unless he be provided with a certificate of moral character
from the clergyman of his parish, or some load magistrate or other
notable; but the recruiting sergeant, who can tell human nature at a
glance, has now learned to dispense with this obsolete rule. The truth
is, the test of morality must not be too strictly applied, or the ranks
of our army would soon be thinned. It was otherwise in former days, when
it was esteemed an honour to be admitted into the army, and officers
received their commissions, not for a certain sum of money, but for the
number of picked men they brought with them from their paternal estates.
We have heard the son of a Highland chief, whose forefather, about a
century ago, joined the Pretender with 500 men, say that, with all his
influence, he could only induce one of his clansmen to enlist, and he
was the greatest blackguard in the parish; so entire is the change that
has been effected of late years in the relations between landlord and
tenant in the north: the old feudal feeling thus disappeared, and the
tic that exists between them is the same as in any other commercial
transaction. We question whether the beautiful Duchess of Gordon, who
raised the 92nd Highlanders for her son, the Marquis of Huntly, and
gained many a likely recruit by placing a sovereign between her coral
lips, and inviting him to take it in the approved fashion, would be
able, if she were now alive, to raise twenty men by the adoption of a
recruiting trick which was then found to be irresistible. Landlords in
the north have higher rent-rolls and more extensive deer-parks, but
where arc the men ? True wealth docs not always consist in the abundance
of that which a man hath. Human flesh may not be such a marketable
article as venison, but perhaps it is more precious in the long run.
Deer will not defend our shores, or fight as the brave Highlanders
fought when they followed their chiefs to the field.
As a general rule, regiments have recruiting parties in the counties
where they were originally raised. In most eases, however, they are not
able thus to obtain a sufficient number of men to keep up their
strength, and arc obliged to have recourse to the large manufacturing
towns to supply the deficit. It is not unusual for the Highland
regiments to recruit in London, and Englishmen show no particular
aversion to the kilt or trews. A fair sprinkling of Scotchmen is also to
be found in the English regiments: they find more rapid promotion there
than in regiments composed chiefly of their own countrymen, and,
therefore, as highly educated as themselves. We have heard several
assign this as the cause of their preference. Irishmen are to be found
in abundance in every branch of the service except the Foot Guards, for
which natives of England and Scotland only are to be enlisted, unless
special permission is given to the contrary. Such permission, so far as
we are aware, never has been given, and yet, notwithstanding this formal
intimation that “No Irish need apply,” the brogue is occasionally to be
heard in the ranks of the Foot Guards as elsewhere. Some regiments have
only an accidental connection with the places by which they are known.
The Coldstream Guards, for example, are not and never were a Scotch
regiment; their only connection with the small village of Coldstream, in
Berwickshire, is that they marched from it under Monk to assist in the
restoration of Charles II. It is somewhat singular, however, that they
have always recruited a little there, and that there are some five or
six men in the regiment to justify the name by which it is honourably
known.
Agricultural labourers are always the most promising recruits, and
invariably make the best soldiers. They are soon licked into shape, and
have usually more strength and stamina than those who have been bred in
large towns. They are also superior to the latter in every soldierly
virtue, and are less saturated with vice. Most of the non-commissioned
officers in the army have been selected from this class. We have under
our eye at this moment a list of forty-four sergeants belonging to one
of the most distinguished regiments in the service, and we find that
forty of them were brought up in the country and engaged in agricultural
labour before their enlistment. The reader, therefore, will be prepared
to learn that the recruiting sergeant will never offer the shilling to a
town-bred lad if he can find a country one. There is less chance also of
the latter being rejected; but of this more anon. The popular belief is,
that the acceptance of a shilling from the hand of a recruiting sarjent
constitutes enlistment; but it is not so. In terms of the Mutiny Act, he
is bound to obtain from the recruit satisfactory answers to the
following questions :—“Are you an apprentice?" “Are you married?” “Do
you belong to the Militia or to the Naval Coast Volunteers, or to any
portion of her Majesty’s land or sea forces?” “Did you ever serve in the
army or navy before?” “Are you marked with the letter D?” “ Have you
ever been rejected as unfit for her Majesty’s service on any previous
enlistment?” While the recruit is answering all these questions in the
negative, the sergeant is supposed to be holding the shilling neatly
suspended between his finger and thumb, ready to drop it into his palm
as soon as the last “No” has issued from his lips, and to say, “Then I
enlist you for Her Majesty’s----Regiment of the Line.” The sergeant, we
say, is supposed to do all this, but old MacWhirter, who has enlisted
more recruits than any other man in the service, tells us, with a
knowing wink of his wicked old eye, that he has enlisted six or eight
men in one night without asking a single question or parting with a
single shilling. "But how was that?” we ask, incredulously. “Why, sir,”
says Mac, without even the semblance of a blush on his old wrinkled
face, “I made them all dead drunk over-night, and swore next morning
that they had all taken the shilling. They couldn’t prove that they had
not taken it, so they had no help for it but to pay the smart-money, or
to be attested.” Such proceedings were winked at formerly, and perhaps
even secretly encouraged ; but any sergeant guilty of such deception now
would, if detected, be recalled, and reduced to the ranks.
The period of enlistment is ten years for the Infantry and twelve for
the Cavalry or Artillery or other Ordnance Corps, if the person enlisted
is of the age of eighteen years or upwards ; but if under that age, then
the difference between his age and eighteen is to be added to such ten
or twelve years, as the case may be. At the close of ten or twelve
years’ service, the soldier is at liberty to take his discharge, unless
he should be stationed abroad, and the commanding officer require his
service, in which case he is bound to serve for a further period not
exceeding two years. He may take his discharge, but he is not entitled
to any pension unless he serves for a period of twenty-one years. By a
recent regulation, a soldier who takes his discharge after ten years’
service, is allowed a breathing time of six months : if he decides to
give up soldiering, he becomes an unpensioned civilian, but if he
reenlists before the six months have expired, his ten years’ service
count in his favour, and he may retire with a pension after eleven
years. If he foolishly allows the six months to glide away before he has
finally decided to re-elist, he loses the benefit of his previous
service, and enters the army on the same footing as any other recruit.
We are not to suppose that the whole ceremony of enlistment is over when
the magic shilling has dropped into the extended hand of the recruit.
The sergeant produces from his pocket-book the following notice, and
proceeds leisurely to fill it
“John Brown,
“Take notice, that you enlisted with me at 10 o’clock, P.M., on the 1st
of April, 1863, for the 999th Regiment, and if you do not come to Takcm
Inn at the hour here fixed, for the purpose of being taken before a
justice, either to be attested or to release yourself from your
engagement by repaying the enlisting shilling, and any pay you may have
received as a recruit, and by paying twenty shillings as smart-money,
you will be liable to be punished as a rogue and vagabond. You are
hereby also warned that you will be liable to the same punishment if you
make any wilfully false representation at the time of attestation.
“J. Kite, Sergt. 999th Regt.”
The enlistment is not legal, unless the recruit has been served with
this notice along with the shilling on some lawful day. From twelve
o'clock on Saturday night to twelve o’clock on Sunday night, Sergeant
Kite’s occupation is gone: he must rest on his oars during that
interval, however strong the temptation may be to distribute an
occasional shilling. He is reduced to the same compulsory idleness on
Christmas-day and Good Friday; no recruits are enlisted for the army on
either of these two days. Many a rascally recruit decamps on receiving
the shilling, taking what is called French leave, and nothing more is
heard of him, unless he be seized as a deserter. But wre shall suppose
that John Brown appears at the time and place indicated by Sergeant
Kite. There he has to be examined as to his physical fitness by an army
medical officer, when there is one quartered at or near the place of
enlistment, or failing that, by some local medical practitioner. This
examination is technically known as “the Primary Inspection;” the object
of it is to guard against the approval of ineligible recruits. The
external characteristics of a sound constitution and efficient limbs,
arc summarily stated for the guidance of the examiner—viz., a due
proportion between the trunk and the members of the body, a countenance
expressive, of health, with a lively eye, skin firm and elastic, lips
red, teeth sound, voice strong, chest capacious and well formed, belly
lank, limbs muscular, feet arched and of a moderate length, hands large
rather than small. A Tom Thumb or a Goliath would be equally excluded
from the British army: there is one towering form Well know’n in Rotten
Row’, and not unknown in the literary world, the owner of which has been
condemned to civil life on account of his gigantic stature. We had
recently an opportunity of witnessing one of these primary inspections.
We had called on the chief medical officer at a certain station, and
were directed to his office, where we had to wait in a small
ante-chamber where we could sec all that was passing. Suddenly tw o
young men in a state of perfect nudity, entered the room, and began
walking backward and forward at a pace which Deerfoot might have envied.
Our friend then made them halt and stand in the position of a soldier
under arms, when he examined them thoroughly from head to foot. He then
made them extend their arms at right angles with the trunks of their
bodies, touch their shoulders with their fingers, and place the backs of
their hands above their heads. While in this defenceless position, he
suddenly struck one of them a stunning blow in the chest, which sent him
reeling against the wall; then rushing up to him he applied his ear to
his chest, and listened for a minute or so with rapt attention. He gave
a nod of satisfaction, but the ordeal was not yet over; he made him hop
on one leg round and round the room till he could scarcely retain his
gravity. He was pronounced eligible, and dismissed. The other recruit
did not fare so well. Our friend looked him sternly in the face till he
quailed beneath his eye. “You scoundrel,” he said, “you enlisted six
months ago in the----Hussars, and I rejected you as blind of the right
eye.” The fellow attempted at first to deny this, but soon admitted his
guilt, and was given into custody. He was one of a numerous class, known
in the army as "bounty lifters,” who live by defrauding recruiting
parties. Occasionally they deceive the doctors, and receive the
bounty-money, with which they make off, and enlist somewhere else. We
know of one case of a man who, by his own confession, had received
forty-five bounties, and had never done a single day’s duty in the army.
Bounty lifting is as much a profession as pocket-picking, and there are
more than a thousand men in this country who have no other means of
subsistence. As the civil medical practitioner receives only a fee of
2s. 6d., his examination is seldom very strict, and thus there is an
ample door for deception. But we shall suppose that John Brown is not a
bounty lifter, but an honest young fellow, willing to serve his country.
We shall suppose, further, that he has passed the ordeal of the primary
inspection, and that it is twenty-four hours since Kite dropped the
shilling into his hand. During that interval he has made no effort to
raise a sovereign of smart-money, so he is brought into the presence of
a magistrate (who must not be an officer in the army), before whom he
swears that he will be faithful, and bear true allegiance to her
Majesty, her heirs and successors ; and that he will, as in duty bound,
honestly and faithfully defend her Majesty, her heirs and successors, in
person, crown, and dignity, against all enemies, and will observe and
obey all orders of her Majesty, her heirs and successors, and of the
generals and officers set over him. When Brown has thus been attested,
Kite begins to smile upon him and to have golden visions of 15s.
dropping into his own pocket. From that day the young recruit begins to
draw his pay, which is 15s for the line, and 4d. a day for lodging
money. In certain cases he receives 2s. 6d. as the earnest of his bounty
money, but Kite being of a supicious temperament, this is not always
done. In former days recruits were billeted on private individuals in
the town where they were enlisted. Old soldiers still speak with a sigh
of regret of those days ; an ingenious and unscrupulous recruit, acting
in concert with Kite, could always get himself bought off for something
handsome, and then report to the billet master that there was some
contagious disease in the house. This he continued to do till he found a
landlord who would pay nothing, in which case he took up his abode in
his house, and made himself generally disagreeable. All this has been
done away with now, and the recruit must rest content with his limited
allowance of lodging money, or with such limited accommodation as the
recruiting sergeant can provide for him till he joins his regiment. It
is not unusual for some twenty or thirty recruits to be huddled together
in one room, and the man of superior education is obliged to associate
with tramps, thieves, and other outcasts, who have been deemed worthy of
serving her Majesty.
Here the process of corruption begins, and as a period of six weeks
often elapses before the recruit joins his regiment, if untainted
before, he is soon initiated into vice, and has often to suffer its
consequences in hospital. In some regiments he receives the half of his
bounty money after being attested; this sum is no real boon to him, as
it is usually spent in debauchery. The bounty money varies in amount
according to the demand for men. In former days it rarely covered the
expense of the kit, and the young soldier often found himself in debt.
This cannot occur now, as he is always provided with a free kit, and a
certain sum which is entirely at his own disposal. During the Crimean
war, it rose as high as 57. or 61., a larger sum than most of the
recruits had ever possessed before. At Croydon, where some 500 recruits
for the Foot Guards were assembled, the possession of such a large sum
of money led to fearful scenes of debauchery and riot, and many
deserted, again to take the shilling, and to repeat the same scenes
elsewhere. At present the bounty money for the Guards is 17. and a free
kit; after joining his regiment, the recruit usually receives this sum
at the rate of 67. a-day. This is far better than paying him the whole
sum at once, and it were desirable that the same arrangement -were
adopted in every branch of the service. The recruiting-sergeant receives
155. for every recruit who passes the final examination ; if two have
taken part in his enlistment, the money is divided between them. The
recruit, if he be of an enterprising character, may make a little money
by inducing some comrade to enlist; he receives 75. 6d. as the reward of
his enterprise. Sometimes a whole batch of men are enlisted, though it
is well known that some of them arc unfit for the service; the sergeant
allows the smaller fry to escape through the meshes of his net, and
brings the others safely to land. He takes care never to lose sight of
them till he has brought them to the head-quarters of the regiment,
where, after passing a second medical examination and being approved of
by the colonel, they are handed over to the pay or colour-sergeant of
the company they arc posted to. Every recruit must bring with him to
head-quarters one shirt and one pair of socks or stockings, clean and
ready to be put on when he gets into barracks. For the modest sum of 85.
he is provided with a uniform which has belonged to some other man ; the
tunic costs 55., the trousers 35. After a few days the regimental tailor
hands over to him his own uniform, for which he pays nothing, and his
kit is served out to him. It consists of the knapsack and straps, two
straps for binding his greatcoat to the knapsack, three shirts, three
pairs of socks, two towels, two pairs of boots, one pair of leather
leggings, one pair of winter trousers and one pair of summer trousers, a
tunic, a shell jacket, one pair of braces, two shoe brushes, a
clothes-brush, a box of blacking, a razor and case, a comb, a
shaving-brush, a knife, a fork, and a spoon. This is a handsome outfit
for men most of whom may be safely placed in the category of the great
unwashed, and the Government takes care that if any of these articles
are lost, or destroyed, or made away with, they shall be replaced at the
expense of the soldier. We may now leave the recruit in the hands of the
drill-sergeant, comforting him with the assurance that, if he does not
carry the baton of a field-marshal in his knapsack, as every French
soldier is presumed to do, he may, by good conduct and soldierly
smartness, attain the rank of sergeant, and retire from the service with
a pension of 2s. a-day.
There are four recruiting districts in England, the head-quarters of
which are at London, Bristol, Liverpool, and York; two in Scotland,
headquarters Glasgow and Edinburgh; and three in Ireland, head-quarters
Belfast, Dublin, and Cork. In 1860, there were 27,853 recruits examined
at head-quarters, and more than one-fourth of these were rejected as
unfit for military service. As a proof of the negligence with which
recruits are passed by medical practitioners who have no connection with
the service, it may be mentioned that the proportion rejected on
secondary inspection of those approved by civilians, was exactly double
that of those who had been examined in the first instance by army
surgeons. A heavy loss was thus entailed upon the country, as these
recruits were supported at the public expense during the interval
between their enlistment and final rejection. It is somewhat singular
that in France, where the conscription comprehends all classes and the
army represents the whole community, the number of rejections in 1859
was almost exactly the same as at our primary inspections in 1860, being
at the rate of 317 per 1000. The largest number of recruits were
rejected at Glasgow and Belfast; London comes next, and Bristol stands
highest in the list. The proportion of rejections in Scotland is greater
than elsewhere ; this is owing to the fact that the great majority of
Scottish recruits belong to the large manufacturing towns. Of every 1000
men inspected. England and Wales contributed 566, Scotland 107, Ireland
321, the colonies and foreign countries six. One-half of the recruits
are returned as being between eighteen and twenty-one years of age, but
there is reason to believe that many of them antedated their births, as
service under eighteen years of age is not allowed to count for pension.
The proportion of men
above 5 ft. 8 in. is considerably greater in the Scotch recruiting
districts than in the English or Irish, while the proportion of men
under 5 ft. 5 in. is nearly one-fourth higher in Ireland than in Great
Britain. There is thus no foundation for the fallacious belief that
Irishmen are taller than the Scots or English the truth lies in the
opposite direction. The reader may perhaps wish to know something of the
occupations of our recruits, and the amount of education they had
received before entering the army. We find that 9420 were labourers,
husbandmen, and servants, 2783 manufacturing artisans, 4863 mechanics,
2051 shopmen and clerks, 108 professional men or students, and 142 boys
enlisted as drummers. Thus it appears that one-half of the recruits are
obtained from the class of labourers, husbandmen, and servants, and
one-fourth of them from the mechanical trades. Ireland furnishes much
above the average proportion of labourers; Scotland, of manufacturing
artisans and mechanics; and England, of shopmen and clerks. The highest
proportion of rejections took place among the mechanics employed in
occupations favourable to physical development, while the lowest was
among students and professional men, and next to these among shopmen and
clerks. As regards education, we find that of every 1000 English
recruits, 247 were unable to read or write, 51 could read only, and 702
could both read and write. Of every 1000 Scotch recruits, 163 could
neither read nor write, 156 could read only, and 681 could both read and
write. Of every 1000 Irish recruits, 321 could neither read nor write,
145 could read only, and 534 could both read and write. The reader will
thus perceive that the proportion of recruits wholly without education
was highest in Ireland, and lowest in Scotland, but the proportion of
those who could write was higher in England than in Scotland, —a result
scarcely to be anticipated among the natives of a land where John Knox
established a school in every parish.
We know that we are treading on delicate ground, but we cannot close
this article without expressing our conviction that our whole system of
recruiting is radically wrong. Apart from all other demoralizing
influences, we may find in it alone the cause of much of the debauchery
that prevails among our soldiers. It tends alike to corrupt the
recruiters and the recruited, by familiarising both with vice. We know
that it is far easier to point out an evil than to suggest a remedy. The
continental system will never do in this country; the nation which has
abolished the press-gang will not readily adopt the conscription. A
higher class of men should be employed in the recruiting service; the
15s. per man, which is practically an inducement to enlist the worst
men, because the worst men are always readiest to enlist, should be
abolished: and the promise of a commission given to every recruiting
sergeant who shall raise a certain fixed number of good men. Let their
goodness be tested by their after-conduct. The sergeant would thus have
no inducement to frequent the haunts of vice, or to initiate the recruit
into the mysteries of low debauchery. Again, why should the recruit be
six weeks before he joins his regiment? Why should he be condemned to
frequent low public-houses. to associate with outcasts, to occupy the
same room, perhaps to sleep in the same bed, with filthy tramps and
other unsavoury vagabonds? Why should he be subjected to this degrading
ordeal, which must strip him of all self-respect, and reduce him to the
same moral degradation as the outcasts around him? It is a false economy
which detains him in such haunts till the sergeant has completed his
batch of recruits ; how false may be learned from the statistics of our
military hospitals. And when he joins his regiment, why should he
receive his bounty money all at once? There are old scoundrels of
soldiers watching and waiting for the moment he touches it, ready to
share in the foul orgies to which they line him on : why should it not
be paid to him at a small fixed daily allowance, as in the case already
mentioned; or better still, why should we not adopt the French system?
The French conscript is credited, on joining his regiment, with forty
francs of bounty money, known as “is masse individuclle," but he never
touches it so long as he remains in the service; it is kept as a reserve
fund : if he sells or makes away with his kit, it serves to supply him
with a fresh one, and his pay of two sous a-day is stopped till “la
masse” is raised to the original amount. He receives the whole of this
sum on quitting the service, so that he is never altogether destitute;
it gives the authorities a hold over him, and tends to repress two
crimes, the two perhaps most prevalent in our army: desertion and
selling kits. The adoption of this principle would, we are convinced, be
a benefit to the soldier and the country at large : it has, in fact,
been partially recognised in the following regulations, which have been
made known in garrison orders at Woolwich, and which, we hope, will soon
be extended to every branch of the service,—viz. : That the practice of
conferring a sum of money on enlistment by way of Royal Bounty shall be
abolished: that the recruits shall be provided with thorough outfit as
heretofore, and shall be entered as of the first class on joining the
reserves. If at the termination of the first period of three years they
are returned as “of good behaviour,” they will be rewarded with a badge
entitling them to an addition of Id. per day above the ordinary pay; and
as a further inducement, at the expiration of each succeeding three
years, the same rewards will be conferred, so that during a service of
twenty-one years a well-behaved man will be entitled to seven badges and
a pay of 2s 2d. per day. |