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The Way of the Air: A Description of Modern Aviation

Chapter 2: AUTHOR’S NOTE
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About This Book

It surveys aviation's rapid wartime development, describing aircraft types, pilot training, and the physical and psychological demands on service airmen. Practical guidance and technical descriptions cover seaplanes, airships, reconnaissance and combat tactics, while a substantial diary-like section recounts frontline incidents, raids, and aerial engagements. Anecdotes illustrate hazard, courage, and everyday routines, and closing chapters consider legal, tactical, and technological issues and prospects for postwar aviation.

The idea of this little book is to give as clear and graphic a description of modern aviation as circumstances will permit; of the new, heroic race of men to which Flying has given birth; of the conditions under, and the elements in, which their work is carried out, and the difficulties and dangers they have to encounter. Flying is essentially a profession for the younger generation. The strain is too great for men of more mature years. To withstand such strain requires all the vigor, the recklessness, the iron nerve of youth. It is a profession that offers an irresistible appeal to healthy-minded, sport-loving youth, to whom adventure is the nectar of existence.

The writer’s chief endeavor in the opening chapters has been to help the young man who wishes to adopt “Flying” as a profession. Part II of the book is composed of a collection of incidents taken from the diary of an air pilot on Active Service somewhere in the North of France. They are given in their original form. I also wish to thank the editors of the Daily Mail, Daily Express, Daily Chronicle, Evening News, and Boys’ Friend for their courtesy in permitting me to use, in a few instances, material embodied in articles appearing in their journals.

E. C. M.

London, 1917.


CONTENTS

CHAP. PAGE
PART I
THE SERVICE AIRMAN IN THE MAKING
  AUTHOR’S NOTE vii
  INTRODUCTION 3
I. JOINING THE SERVICE 10
II. THE AIRMAN’S FIRST DAYS 17
III. THE INITIAL FLIGHT 23
IV. THE PERILS OF THE AIR 28
V. THE SPIRIT OF THE AIR 34
VI. SEAPLANES 40
VII. A ZEPPELIN CHASE 48
VIII. THE COMPLETE AIRMAN 53
 
PART II
ON ACTIVE SERVICE
IX. BEHIND THE FIRING LINE 61
X. THE FIRST TRIP ACROSS THE LINE 66
XI. SOME ANECDOTES 74
XII. SPORT EXTRAORDINARY 81
XIII. A BALLOON-TRIP BY NIGHT 85
XIV. THE BATTLE OF THE WOOD 92
XV. A TIGHT CORNER 97
XVI. AN AIR FIGHT WITH A HUN 108
XVII. A GREAT RAID 114
XVIII. A DAY-DREAM 123
XIX. A MID-AIR BATTLE 127
XX. A BATTLE FROM ABOVE 132
XXI. A TRUE STORY OF THE WAR 136
XXII. HEROISM IN THE AIR 144
 
PART III
OTHER CRAFT AND THE FUTURE
XXIII. THE EVOLUTION OF THE AIRSHIP 151
XXIV. LAWS OF THE AIR 161
XXV. AERIAL COMBAT 166
XXVI. THE AIR—THE WAR—AND THE FUTURE 170