Under Fire: the story of a squad by Henri Barbusse
page 146 of 450 (32%)
page 146 of 450 (32%)
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bread and bully from the spouts that flowed from every point in
space; and while we ate we put our hands and faces as much as possible under our cowls. The rain rattled and bounced and streamed on our limp woven armor, and worked with open brutality or sly secrecy into ourselves and our food. Our feet were sinking farther and farther, taking deep root in the stream that flowed along the clayey bottom of the trench. Some faces were laughing, though their mustaches dripped. Others grimaced at the spongy bread and flabby meat, or at the missiles which attacked their skin from all sides at every defect in their heavy and miry armor-plate. Barque, who was hugging his mess-tin to his heart, bawled at Volpatte: "Well then, a lot of sods, you say, that you've seen down there where you've been?" "For instance?" cried Blaire, while a redoubled squall shook and scattered his words; "what have you seen in the way of sods?" "There are--" Volpatte began, "and then--there are too many of them, nom de Dieu! There are--" He tried to say what was the matter with him, but could only repeat, "There are too many of them!" oppressed and panting. He swallowed a pulpy mouthful of bread as if there went with it the disordered and suffocating mass of his memories. "Is it the shirkers you want to talk about?" "By God!" He had thrown the rest of his beef over the parapet, and this cry, this gasp, escaped violently from his mouth as if from a |
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