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The Glory of the Trenches

The Glory of the Trenches

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Chapter 1 THE ROAD TO BLIGHTY

Word Count: 7423    |    Released on: 06/12/2017

ging door; if I listen intently in the intervals when the gramophone isn't playing, I can hear the sound of bath-water running-running in a reckless kind of f

sunlight and imagine myself back in one of those narrow dug-outs where

bed and a large white bath. For the first three hundred and sixty-five mornings after peace had been declared I was to be wakened by the sound of my bath being filled; water was to be so plentiful that I could tumble off to sleep again without even troubling to turn off the tap. In France one h

ough trees outside the window and weaves patterns on the floor. Most wonderful of all is the sound of the water so

These women who have pledged themselves to live among suffering, never allow themselves for a moment to guess what the sight of them means to us chaps in the cots. Perhaps that also is a part of their sacrifice. But we follow them with our eyes, and we wish that they would allow themselves to guess. For so many months we have not seen a woman; there have been so many hours when we expected never again to see a woman. We're Lazaruses exhum

y help but understand. They can afford to be feminine to men who are so weak. Moreover, they are near enough the Front to share in the sublime exaltation of those who march out to die. They know when a big offensive is expected, and prepare for it. They are warned the moment it has commenced by the distant thunder of the guns. Then comes the ceaseless stream of lorries and ambulances bringing that which has been broken so quickly to them to be patched up in months. They work day and night with a forgetfulness of self which equals the devotion

believes has happened: he's told that he can run away to England and pretend that there isn't any war on for ten days. For those ten days, so far as he's concerned, hostilities are suspended. He rides post-haste through ravaged villages to the point from which the train starts. Up to the very last moment until the engine pulls out, he's quite panicky lest some one shall come and snatch his warrant from him, telling him that leave has been cancelled. He makes his journey in a carriage in which all the windows are smashed. Probably it either snows or rains. During the night while he stamps his feet to keep warm, he remembers that in his hurry to escape he's left all his Hun souvenirs behind. During his time in London he visits his tailor at least twice a da

iew of the enemy. The Huns kept guns trained on this road and opened fire at the least sign of traffic. When I presented myself I didn't think that there was anything seriously the matter; my arm had swelled and was painful from a wound of three days' standing. The doctor, however, recognised that septic poisoning had set in and that to save the arm an operation was necessary without loss of time. He called a sergeant and sent him out to consu

erlatively worth while. It's odd, but it's true that in the front-line many a man experiences peace of mind for the first time and grows a little afraid of a return to normal ways of life. My second memory is of the wistful faces of the chaps whom we passed along the road. At the unaccustomed sound of a car travelling in broad daylight the Tommies poked their heads out of hiding-places like rabbits. Such d

Hun on the back, hands him chocolate and cigarettes, exchanges souvenirs and shares with him his last luxury. If any one interferes with his Fritzie he's willing to fight. When they come to the cage where the prisoner has to be handed over, the farewells of these companions whose acquaintance has been made at the bayonet-point are often as absurd as they are affecting. I suppose one only learns the value of kindness when he feels the need of it himself. The men out there have said "Good-bye" to everything they loved, but they've got to love some one-so they give their affections to captured Fritzies, stray dogs, fellows who've collected a piece of a shell-in fact to any one who's a little

arrived about nine on a summer's evening at the Casualty Clearing Station.

it would be easy for surgeons and nurses to treat mutilation and death perfunctorily. They don't. They show no em

seem to have photographed all the suffering which in three years they have witnessed. He's a tall man, but he moves softly. Over his uniform he wears a long white operating smock-he never seems to remove it. And he never seems to sleep, f

erhaps her man was killed out here. Now she's ivory-white with over-service and spends all her days in loving. Her eyes have the old frank, innocent look, but they're ringed with being weary. Only her lips hold a touch of colour; they have a childish trick of trembling when any one's wound is hurting too much. She's the first touch of home that the stretcher-cases see when they've said good-bye to the tren

instant, like a mother with a frightened child, she's bending over him; soon she has coaxed his head back on the pillow. Men do not die in vain when they evoke such women. And the men-the chaps in the cots! As a patient the first sight you have of them is a muddy stretcher. The care with which the bearers advance is only equalled by the waiters in old-established London Clubs when they

's yo

caught me i

to lo

t feel much at pr

ises himself on his el

ts his own catastrophe in his keenness for the success of the offensive. Never in all my fortnight's journey to Blighty did I hear a word of self-pity or complaining. On the contrary, the most severely wounded men would profe

his he was unaware. For the first day as he lay in bed he kept wondering aloud how long it would be before he could re-join his battalion. Perhaps he suspected his condition and wa

n't be going b

voice was a bit throa

," the doctor said, "but wi

per. "If you do, it won'

t m

nced talking with cheerfulness about returning to his family. The habit of courage had conquered-th

at a tag has been prepared, containing the entire medical history of your injury. The stretcher-bearers come in with grins on their faces, your tag is tied to the top button of your pyjamas, jocular appointments are made by the fellows you leave behind-many of whom you know are dying-to meet you in London, and you are carried out. The train is thoroughly equipped with doctors and nurses; the

exceed the self-sacrifice of the sisters you have left behind. You twist yourself so that you can

o performed miracles. He was a naturalised American cit

had been like that for two years, and looked like a leper. When he spoke he made hollow noises. His nose and lower jaw had been torn away by an explo

ed and buttons shining. They had hope, and took a pride in themselves-a splendid sign! Perhaps you ask why the face-cases should be kept in France. I was not told, but I can guess-because they dread going back to England

hour of their tragedy catch the soldier spirit. They're very quiet, very cheerful, very helpful. With passing through the ward they get to know some of the other patients and remember them when they bring their own man flowers. Sometimes when their own man is asleep, they slip ove

. Septic poisoning had set in and the leg had been amputated. It had been found necessary to operate several times owing to the poison spreading, with the result that, being far from a young man, his strength was exhausted. Men forgot their own wounds in watching this one man's fight for life. He became symbolic of what, in varying degrees

s for the comfort of his men. Sometimes he'd be proposing to go forward himself to a place where a company was having a hot time; apparently one of his offi

gain by the time the day-sister arrived. "Still here," he'd smile in

nt above the pillow. We learnt afterwards that this was what he

ith anger. "Neither God nor the Devil has anything to do with it. I'm go

at happened to him, but should not be at all surprised to meet him one day in the trenches wi

put his valuables. Hours and hours before there's any chance of starting you'll see the lucky ones lying very still, with a happy vacant look in their eyes and their absurd woollen caps stuck ready on their heads. Sometime, perhaps in the small hours of the morning, the stretcher-bearers, arrive-the stretcher-bearers

ngrudging kindness. You see new faces in the bunks beside you. After the tedium

's yo

nd off and a splinter o

o dusty. How much did yo

ese civilians in khaki it seems that the war has always been and that they will never cease to be soldiers. For them both past and future are utterly obliterated. They would not have it otherwise. Because they are doing their duty they are contented. The only time the subject is ever touched on is when some one expresses the hope that it'll last lon

longed for so many months. The trees aren't charred and blackened stumps; they're harps between the knees of the hills, played on by the wind and sun. The villages have their roofs on and children romping in their streets. The church spires haven't been knocked down; they stand up tall and stately. The roadsides aren't littered with empty shell-cases and dead horses. The fiel

ings quite ugly and things of surpassing beauty, all of which you have never hoped to see again and which in dreams you have loved. But if you could look out, you wouldn't have the time. You're getting your things together, so you won't waste a moment when they come to carry y

have any preference as to hospitals. Your girl lives in Liverpool or Glasgow or Birmingham. Good heavens, the fellow holds your destin

y young brothers from the Navy is there on leave at present. In fact he wired me to France that the Admiralty had allowed him a three-days' special extension of leave in order that he

the St. John's Ambulance for that of a naval lieutenant. They come to carry me out. What an extraordinarily funny way to enter London-on a stretcher! I've arrived on boat-trains from A

elf of a waiting ambulance; I can see nothing except what lies out at the back. I at once start explaining to the nurse who accompanies us that I've lost a very valuable brother-that he's probabl

ting cases travel in automobiles, buses and various kinds of vehicles. In my ambulance there are two leg-cases with most theatrical bandages, and one case of trench-fever. We're immensely merry-all except t

r lips. How long is it since we held roses in our hands? How did these girls of the London streets know that above all things we longed for flowers? It was worth it all, the mud and stench and beastliness, when it was to this that the road led back. And the girls-they're even better than the flowers; so many pretty faces made kind by compassion. Somewhere inside ourselves we're laughing; we're so happy. We don't need any one's pity; time enough for that when we start to pity ourselves. We feel mean, as though we were

ambulance stops. She's quite excited. Clutching me wi

ho

s standing against the pavement, gaz

other, i

d. "Not half h

d telling her that I haven't; much to my annoyance and amusement she swabs

en with draggled skirts and once gay hats are doing their Sunday shopping. We're having a kind of triumphant procession; with the

our heart in your eyes and your lips are always ready for kissing, I think of you as one of your own flower-girls-hoarse of voice, slatternly as to corsets, with a big tumbled fringe over your forehea

ilence. Only the lips move when people speak; there is scarcely any sound. As the stretchers are borne down the ward men shift their heads to gaze after them. It's past ten o'clock and patients are supposed to be sleeping now. I'm put to bed. There's no news of my brother; he hasn't 'phoned and hasn't called. I persuade one of the orderlies to ring up the hotel at which I know he was staying. The man is a long while gone. Through the dim length of the ward I watch the door into the garden, momentar

iously sacred-symbols of all the heroism and kindness that has ministered to me every step of the journey. It's a good little war I think to myself. Then, with the green smell of Engl

a fresh thermometer. Having made the round, back she comes to take possession of my hand while she counts my pulse. I try to speak, but she won't let me remove the accursed thermometer; when she has removed it herself, off she goes to the next bed. I notice that she has auburn hair, merr

d hands. She even brushes my hair. I watch her do the same for other patients, some of whom are Colonels and old enough to be her father. She's evidently i

dressing-gown, passes through the swing door at the end of the w

for a speech. I discover that he is our professional comic man and is called on to make speeches twenty times a day. They always start with, "Gentlemen, I will say this-" and end with a flourish in praise of Australia. Soon the ward is made perilous by wheel-chairs, in which unskilful

anadians, Australians, South Africans, Imperials-will have to remain only a dream, so long as life lasts. Girls don't marry fellows without arms and legs-at least they didn't in peace days before the world became heroic. As the gramopho

ittle cottage i

little mistress

oggie, a l

tep with WELCO

little trouble an

ings matter when you

happy as the

patience and a

ence and love to meet the balance of existence with sweetness and soldierly courage. It won't be so easy to be soldiers when they get back into mufti and go out into the worl

een strafed by the Hun, but the trenches of physical curtailment where self-pity will launch wave after wave of attack against them. It won't be easy not to get the "wind up." It'll be diff

LADS

s have gone

soldiers,

be back for

n't be back

sies who la

re light and l

wandering hit

they watch f

e has its

ght, when so

arns for the

arched out i

ds who've gon

l return and s

will be back

't wake up i

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