October 27th, 1916.
Dearest Family:
All to-day I’ve been busy registering
our guns. There is little chance of rest one
would suppose that we intended to end the war by spring.
Two new officers joined our battery
from England, which makes the work lighter. One
of them brings the news that D., one of the two officers
who crossed over from England with me and wandered
through France with me in search of our Division,
is already dead. He was a corking fellow, and
I’m very sorry. He was caught by a shell
in the head and legs.
I am still living in a sand-bagged
shell-hole eight feet beneath the level of the ground.
I have a sleeping bag with an eider-down inside it,
for my bed; it is laid on a stretcher, which is placed
in a roofed-in trench. For meals, when there
isn’t a block on the roads, we do very well;
we subscribe pretty heavily to the mess, and have an
officer back at the wagon-lines to do our purchasing.
When we move forward into a new position, however,
we go pretty short, as roads have to be built for the
throng of traffic. Most of what we eat is tinned and
I never want to see tinned salmon again when this
war is ended. I have a personal servant, a groom
and two horses but haven’t been on
a horse for seven weeks on account of being in action.
We’re all pretty fed up with continuous firing
and living so many hours in the trenches. The
way artillery is run to-day an artillery lieutenant
is more in the trenches than an infantryman the
only thing he doesn’t do is to go over the parapet
in an attack. And one of our chaps did that the
other day, charging the Huns with a bar of chocolate
in one hand and a revolver in the other. I believe
he set a fashion which will be imitated. Three
times in my experience I have seen the infantry jump
out of their trenches and go across. It’s
a sight never to be forgotten. One time there
were machine guns behind me and they sent a message
to me, asking me to lie down and take cover.
That was impossible, as I was observing for my brigade,
so I lay on the parapet till the bullets began to fall
too close for comfort, then I dodged out into a shell-hole
with the German barrage bursting all around me, and
had a most gorgeous view of a modern attack.
That was some time ago, so you needn’t be nervous.
Have I mentioned rum to you?
I never tasted it to my knowledge until I came out
here. We get it served us whenever we’re
wet. It’s the one thing which keeps a man
alive in the winter you can sleep when you’re
drenched through and never get a cold if you take it.
At night, by a fire, eight feet underground,
we sing all the dear old songs. We manage a kind
of glee Clementina, The Long, Long Trail,
Three Blind Mice, Long, Long Ago, Rock of Ages.
Hymns are quite favourites.
Don’t worry about me; your prayers
weave round me a mantle of defence.
Yours with more love than I can write,
Con.