On the King's Service - Inward Glimpses of Men at Arms by Innes Logan
page 39 of 57 (68%)
page 39 of 57 (68%)
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Stewart personally reported the danger of his position. A company of 4th
Middlesex were rushed up--all our men by this time having been used up--to the nose of the salient, but could not man it owing to terrific barrage of fire. "C" Company, completely cut off, fought its way with the bayonet back to its former front line. Colonel Duncan reorganised the firing line. Both sides spent the night in gathering in the wounded.' So ended the containing attack from the Ypres salient. But is not every sentence a spur to the imagination? Two days later, the Corps commander, in personally thanking the battalion, complimented it on 'the smart appearance of the men who _showed no signs of what they had gone through_.' It was to this famous battalion of a great Regiment that I was now attached as one of the four Presbyterian chaplains to the 'fighting Third' Division. WINTER WARFARE CHAPTER VI WINTER WARFARE |
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