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Live Rounds | Ian Hay | |
The Front Of The Front |
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Page 11 of 12 |
"No good at present. The wires are all cut to pieces. The signallers are repairing them now." "I was nearly a casualty," confessed Bobby modestly. "How?" "That first shell of ours nearly knocked my head off! I was standing up at the time, and it rather took me by surprise. It just cleared the parados. In fact, it kicked a lot of gravel into the back of my neck." "Most people get it in the neck here, sooner or later," remarked Captain Blaikie sententiously. "Personally, I don't much mind being killed, but I do bar being buried alive. That is why I dislike Minnie so." He rose, and stretched himself. "Heigho! I suppose it's about time we detailed patrols and working parties for to-night. What a lovely sky! A truly peaceful atmosphere--what? It gives one a sort of Sunday-evening feeling, somehow." "May I suggest an explanation?" said Wagstaffe. "By all means." "It is Sunday evening!" Captain Blaikie whistled gently, and said-- "By Jove, so it is." Then, after a pause: "This time last Sunday--" Last Sunday had been an off-day--a day of cloudless summer beauty. Tired men had slept; tidy men had washed their clothes; restless men had wandered at ease about the countryside, careless of the guns which grumbled everlastingly a few miles away. There had been impromptu Church Parades for each denomination, in the corner of a wood which was part of the demesne of a shell-torn chateau. |
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The First Hundred Thousand Ian Hay |
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