World's War Events $v Volume 3 - Beginning with the departure of the first American destroyers for service abroad in April, 1917, and closing with the treaties of peace in 1919. by Various
page 124 of 495 (25%)
page 124 of 495 (25%)
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loose from the Mole by _Daffodil_, turn and make for home--a great black
shape, with funnels gapped and leaning out of the true, flying a vast streamer of flame as her stokers worked her up--her, the almost wreck--to a final display of seventeen knots. Her forward funnel was a sieve; her decks were a dazzle of sparks; but she brought back intact the horseshoe nailed to it, which Sir Roger Keyes had presented to her commander. [Sidenote: One destroyer, the _North Star_, is sunk.] [Sidenote: Monitors and siege guns bombard the enemy.] Meantime the destroyers _North Star_, _Phoebe_, and _Warwick_, which guarded the _Vindictive_ from action by enemy destroyers while she lay beside the Mole, had their share in the battle. _North Star_, losing her way in the smoke, emerged to the light of the star-shells, and was sunk. The German _communiqué_, which states that only a few members of the crew could be saved by them, is in this detail of an unusual accuracy, for the _Phoebe_ came up under a heavy fire in time to rescue nearly all. Throughout the operations monitors and the siege guns in Flanders, manned by the Royal Marine Artillery, heavily bombarded the enemy's batteries. [Sidenote: The attack on Ostend.] The wind that blew back the smoke-screen at Zeebrugge served us even worse off Ostend, where that and nothing else prevented the success of an operation ably directed by Commodore Hubert Lynes, C.M.G. The coastal motor boats had lit the approaches and the ends of the piers with calcium flares and made a smoke-cloud which effectually hid the fact |
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