28th October 1917

Announcement Date: 28/10/1917

“It was bright moonlight when we passed through & I’ll never forget the sight.  It was weird & awful.  The place was quiet as death except for the hollow echo of our tramping as we straggled along the cobbley streets, everywhere there were strange shapes & shadows, and everywhere silence.  I wouldn’t have missed it for anything, & yet what a relief it was to get away from it.”

“We shifted frequently & usually at night & every time we were landed in an unspeakable quagmire & told to make ourselves comfortable, which meant digging a trench & huddling into it.  If it rained, & it nearly always did, we just had to try & coil up under our tin hats & hope for a drying day tomorrow.”

“It was just breaking day when our guns opened the bombardment & we were “over the bags” & into it.  Fritz was expecting it & his machine guns soon began to put in their protest & his bullets were singing a regular Hymn of Hate around our heads.”

“All night long we could hear our wounded calling for stretcher bearers, & a lot of them were still calling when day broke.”

“We felt suspicious at first but our anxiety for our own wounded prevented us firing on it.  His stretcherbearers soon appeared & then ours ventured out…As the day wore on we got more faith in him & our chaps were wading about all over the show.  The artilleries carried on as usual but not a shot was fired from the trenches..”

Len Shepard – Letter 68 – No.7 General, France.
Read full letter here.

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