The Great Push: An Episode of the Great War. Patrick MacGill

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Название The Great Push: An Episode of the Great War
Автор произведения Patrick MacGill
Жанр Документальная литература
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Издательство Документальная литература
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isbn 4064066151874



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       Patrick MacGill

      The Great Push: An Episode of the Great War

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066151874

       CHAPTER I In the Advance Trenches

       CHAPTER II Out from Nouex-les-Mines

       CHAPTER III Preparations for Loos

       CHAPTER IV Before the Charge

       CHAPTER V Over the Top

       CHAPTER VI Across the Open

       CHAPTER VII Germans at Loos

       CHAPTER VIII How my Comrades Fared

       CHAPTER IX At Loos

       CHAPTER X A Night in Loos

       CHAPTER XI Loos

       CHAPTER XII Retreat

       CHAPTER XIII A Prisoner of War

       CHAPTER XIV The Chaplain

       CHAPTER XV A Lover at Loos

       CHAPTER XVI The Ration Party

       CHAPTER XVII Michaelmas Eve

       CHAPTER XVIII Back at Loos

       CHAPTER XIX Wounded

       CHAPTER XX For Blighty

      THE GREAT PUSH

      CHAPTER I

       In the Advance Trenches

       Table of Contents

      Now when we take the cobbled road

      We often took before,

      Our thoughts are with the hearty lads

      Who tread that way no more.

      Oh! boys upon the level fields,

      If you could call to mind

      The wine of Café Pierre le Blanc

      You wouldn't stay behind.

      But when we leave the trench at night,

      And stagger neath our load,

      Grey, silent ghosts as light as air

      Come with us down the road.

      And when we sit us down to drink

      You sit beside us too,

      And drink at Café Pierre le Blanc

      As once you used to do.

      The Company marched from the village of Les Brebis at nightfall; the moon, waning a little at one of its corners, shone brightly amidst the stars in the east, and under it, behind the German lines, a burning mine threw a flame, salmon pink and wreathed in smoke, into the air. Our Company was sadly thinned now, it had cast off many—so many of its men at Cuinchy, Givenchy, and Vermelles. At each of these places there are graves of the London Irish boys who have been killed in action.

      We marched through a world of slag heaps and chimney stacks, the moonlight flowing down the sides of the former like mist, the smoke stood up from the latter straight as the chimneys themselves. The whirr of machinery in the mine could be heard, and the creaking wagon wheels on an adjoining railway spoke out in a low, monotonous clank the half strangled message of labour.

      Our way lay up a hill, at the top we came into full view of the night of battle, the bursting shells up by Souchez, the flash of rifles by the village of Vermelles, the long white searchlights near Lens, and the star-shells, red, green and electric-white, rioting in a splendid blaze of colour over the decay, death and pity of the firing line. We could hear the dull thud of shells bursting in the fields and the sharp explosion they made amidst the masonry of deserted homes; you feel glad that the homes are deserted, and you hope that if any soldiers are billeted there they are in the safe protection of the cellars.

      The road by which we marched was lined with houses all in various stages of collapse, some with merely a few tiles shot out of the roofs, others levelled to the ground. Some of the buildings were still peopled; at one home a woman was putting up the shutters and we could see some children drinking coffee from little tin mugs inside near the door; the garret of the house was blown in, the rafters stuck up over the tiles like long, accusing fingers, charging all who passed by with the mischief which had happened. The cats were crooning love songs on the roofs, and stray dogs slunk from the roadway as we approached. In the villages, with the natives gone and the laughter dead, there are always to be found stray dogs and love-making cats. The cats raise their primordial, instinctive yowl in villages raked with artillery fire, and poor lone dogs often cry at night to the moon, and their plaint is full of longing.

      We marched down the reverse slope of the hill in silence. At the end of the road was the village; our firing trench fringed the outer row of houses. Two months before an impudent red chimney stack stood high in air here; but humbled now, it had fallen upon itself, and its own bricks lay still as sandbags at its base, a forgotten ghost with blurred outlines, it brooded, a stricken giant.

      The long road down the hill was a tedious, deceptive way; it took a deal of marching to make the village. Bill Teake growled. "One would think the place was tied to a string," he grumbled, "and some one pullin' it away!"

      We were going to dig a sap out from the front trench towards the German lines; we drew our spades and shovels for the work from the Engineers' store at the rear and made our way into the labyrinth of trenches. Men were at their posts on the fire positions, their Balaclava helmets resting on their ears, their bayonets gleaming bright in the moonshine, their hands close to their rifle barrels. Sleepers lay stretched out on the banquette with their overcoats over their heads and bodies. Out on the front the Engineers had already taped out the night's work; our battalion had to dig some two hundred and fifty yards of