October 18th, 1910
Dearest M.:
I’ve come down to the lines
to-day; to-morrow I go back again. I’m
sitting alone in a deep chalk dug-out it
is 10 p.m. and I have lit a fire by splitting wood
with a bayonet. Your letters from Montreal reached
me yesterday. They came up in the water-cart when
we’d all begun to despair of mail. It was
wonderful the silence that followed while every one
went back home for a little while, and most of them
met their best girls. We’ve fallen into
the habit of singing in parts. Jerusalem the
Golden is a great favourite as we wait for our breakfast we
go through all our favourite songs, including Poor
Old Adam Was My Father. Our greatest favourite
is one which is symbolising the hopes that are in
so many hearts on this greatest battlefield in history.
We sing it under shell-fire as a kind of prayer, we
sing it as we struggle knee-deep in the appalling
mud, we sing it as we sit by a candle in our deep captured
German dug-outs. It runs like this:
“There’s
a long, long trail a-winding
Into the land of my
dreams,
Where the nightingales
are singing
And a white moon beams:
There’s a long,
long night of waiting
Until my dreams all
come true;
Till the day when I’ll
be going down
That long, long trail
with you.”
You ought to be able to get it, and
then you will be singing it when I’m doing it.
No, I don’t know what to ask
from you for Christmas unless a plum pudding
and a general surprise box of sweets and food stuffs.
If you don’t mind my suggesting it, I wouldn’t
a bit mind a Christmas box at once a schoolboy’s
tuck box. I wear the locket, cross, and tie all
the time as kind of charms against danger they
give me the feeling of loving hands going with me
everywhere.
God bless you.
Yours ever,
con.