November 4th, 1916.
My Dearest Mother:
This morning I was wakened up in the
gunpit where I was sleeping by the arrival of the
most wonderful parcel of mail. It was really a
kind of Christmas morning for me. My servant
had lit a fire in a punctured petrol can and the place
looked very cheery. First of all entered an enormous
affair, which turned out to be a stove which C. had
sent. Then there was a sand-bag containing all
your gifts. You may bet I made for that first,
and as each knot was undone remembered the loving hands
that had done it up. I am now going up to a twenty-four-hour
shift of observing, and shall take up the malted milk
and some blocks of chocolate for a hot drink.
It somehow makes you seem very near to me to receive
things packed with your hands. When I go forward
I shall also take candles and a copy of Anne Veronica
with me, so that if I get a chance I can forget time.
Always when I write to you odds and
ends come to mind, smacking of local colour.
After an attack some months ago I met a solitary private
wandering across a shell-torn field, I watched him
and thought something was wrong by the aimlessness
of his progress. When I spoke to him, he looked
at me mistily and said, “Dead men. Moonlit
road.” He kept on repeating the phrase,
and it was all that one could get out of him.
Probably the dead men and the moonlit road were the
last sights he had seen before he went insane.
Another touching thing happened two
days ago. A Major turned up who had travelled
fifty miles by motor lorries and any conveyance he
could pick up on the road. He had left his unit
to come to have a glimpse of our front-line trench
where his son was buried. The boy had died there
some days ago in going over the parapet. I persuaded
him that he ought not to go alone, and that in any
case it wasn’t a healthy spot. At last he
consented to let me take him to a point from which
he could see the ground over which his son had attacked
and led his men. The sun was sinking behind us.
He stood there very straightly, peering through my
glasses and then forgot all about me and
began speaking to his son in childish love-words.
“Gone West,” they call dying out here we
rarely say that a man is dead. I found out afterwards
that it was the boy’s mother the Major was thinking
of when he pledged himself to visit the grave in the
front-line.
But there are happier things than
that. For instance, you should hear us singing
at night in our dug-out every tune we ever
learnt, I believe. Silver Threads Among the Gold,
In the Gloaming, The Star of Bethlehem, I Hear You
Calling Me, interspersed with Everybody Works but
Father, and Poor Old Adam, etc.
I wish I could know in time when I
get my leave for you to come over and meet me.
I’m going to spend my nine days in the most glorious
ways imaginable. To start with I won’t
eat anything that’s canned and, to go on, I
won’t get out of bed till I feel inclined.
And if you’re there !
Dreams and nonsense! God bless
you all and keep us near and safe though absent.
Alive or “Gone West” I shall never be far
from you; you may depend on that and I
shall always hope to feel you brave and happy.
This is a great game cheese-mites pitting
themselves against all the splendours of Death.
Please, please write well ahead, so that I may not
miss your Christmas letters.
Yours lovingly,
CON.