The unrelenting hail of shot, shell and fire stopped with
the dawn. The rain that had been falling for the previous six weeks continued coursing,
a weird syncopation of dropping sounds, a drip-splash-drop-drop-drip symphony
that managed oriental quarter-tones, a lunatic cacophony through which the
drifting mist made not merely the landscape, but the immediate surroundings
take on the quality of Chinese mist paintings of the type seen on screens in
restaurants.
It was typical of the Japanese to fill the night with terror
and death, only to fall silent with the dawn leaving the enemy exhausted,
shell-shocked and desperate with the certain knowledge that the ring had grown
tighter. The fourth army corpse lay entrapped in the maze of mountain gorges,
precipices, spectacular but unseen waterfalls in probably the world's thickest
primeval tropical jungle, where only dynamite may be brought in to blast away
gigantic trees so as to clear the way for lieutenant General Frank Messervy to
remove his entrapped army from the heartland of Burma during the devastating
days of the last war. he did. And with the 7th Indian Division and the
reconstructed 4th Army Corps, he drove the Japanese Army through the Burmese
mountains to take Rangoon.
That itself is a tale worth telling. For the last three
hours, the Japanese Imperial Commander for Malaya, Sumatra, Java, Borneo and
the Dutch East Indies, General Seishiro Itagaki, had been standing at attention
with his ceremonial sword held out at arm's length, with his entire officer
corps lined up behind him. His army of 100,000 men were drawn up without arms
in parade in the open field adjacent to the city of Rangoon, now reduced to
ashes. General Frank Messervy entered the open field accompanied by the pipes
and drums of the Argyle & Sutherland Highlanders (Princess Louise's), and
the entire 4th Army Corps for the purpose of taking the surrender. Detachment
after detachment formed up and with the entire corps at present arms, General
Itagaki handed his sword to Frank Messervy. It was just over 550 years old and
had been made by Kanemoto, the most famous sword smith of his day.
Years later, I went to visit Sir Frank Messervy in his
thatch-covered, large cottage not too far from London. Tall and gangly, and an
older man by now, Frank recalled:
"In all my life, I have never seen a man so overwhelmed
by emotion as was Itagaki when he handed his sword to me. He went ashen gray,
just like a corpse, and the pupils of his eyes dwindled until there were no
pupils at all. I know, because I looked straight and hard into his eyes as he
surrendered his sword. It was as though he was surrendering his soul to me, and
I though he would drop dead at my feet."
The said sword had killed many people in its time. When the
heir of the house came of age, he would go into the family village where the tenants
were kneeling on either side of the path. To prove his manhood, he would take a
right-hand swipe and a left and so on, severing heads on his way.
Why this story? General Sir Frank Messervy, K.C.S.I.,
K.B.E., C.B., D.S.O, was the son of Myra de Boissière who married an Englishman
by the name of Walter Messervy, who had come out to Trinidad to work in the
Colonial Bank, later Barclays Bank, eventually becoming its manager. Myra was
the daughter of Poleska de Boissière, who then lived with her husband, Dr. de
Boissière, in Champs Elysées, which is now the Country Club. Frank in fact
might have been born at Bagshot House, which went to the Bank when his original
owner, Valleton de Boissière, got into financial difficulties.
After Myra and Walter had had several other children, and
Walter was posted to Jamaica to work in the bank, Frank had the good fortune of
being "adopted" by wealthy, childless relatives of his father. They
educated him at Eaton and made him their heir. From them, Frank inherited the
Twining tea estates in Sri Lanka. He had an exceptionally brilliant military
career. Graduating from Sandhurst in 1913, from where he was posted as a 2nd
Lieutenant in the Indian Army, joining the 9th Hodsonshorse in 1914. During the
First World War he served in France, Palestine, Syria and Kurdistan. His
experience in this war was, as for most of the soldiers, a horrible one. After
the Treaty of Versailles, Frank came back to his home country for prolonged visits,
staying with his beloved grandmother in Champs Elysées. His uncle Arneaud was
Lieut.-Col., the most senior
officer serving on the western front in the war, spent much time with him as
well.
Back to England, where Frank passed the staff college course
at Chamberley in 1926, going on to become a brevet major in 1929 and a brevet
lieutenant-colonel in 1933. During the Second World War, he first served in
Eritrea and then in North Africa. Captured by the Germans, he escaped. He rose
rapidly in rank, ending the war as
Lieutenant General. Appointed G.O.C. in C. and Governor of Malaysia. He
later became C. in C. of the army of independent Pakistan, and served there at
the time when India achieved her independence.
Messervy was deputy chief scout to Lord Rowallan.
In his military career, Messervy was known as the
"spearhead general". He went into battle with his men, and did not
stay behind to direct battle strategies over a map. In most pictures, he is
dirty, unshaven, and probably missed his lunch. A deeply religious man, in the
last years of his life, he went regularly to Lourdes, where he acted as stretcher-bearer
for sick pilgrims. He died in 1974 - a Trinidadian at heart and in genes, decorated
with the highest military honours of the British Empire, celebrated in many
international publications, a brave hero who our soldiers can be proud of.
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