15 The British Army in Training \i4th February^ 1940] Infantry ONE of England's great strengths is that when she changes her methods, she does so within the old frameworks. Thus it is that she is a democracy within a monarchy: that her physicists win the Nobel prize from mediaeval universities: that having adopted conscription, for her a revolu- tionary decision, she enlists and trains her young soldiers in the old regiments which made up the former British Army. The Guards, the Warwicks, the Gordons, the Camerons, and fifty others will each have, if need be, ten or fifteen battalions. And so the youngsters of the new army will inherit the glorious traditions of the old. There is, for instance, a training camp organized under the aegis of one of England's oldest and most famous regiments, the Queen's. Two thousand recruits are learning their jobs there. Amidst what two months ago was a vague, indeterminate countryside, comfortable, well-heated hutments have sprung up: outside them, impeccable lines of kit. All over the frozen fields, the platoons are at work. 108