December 18th, 1916.
My Dearest M.:
I always feel when I write a joint
letter to the family that I’m cheating each
one of you, but it’s so very difficult to get
time to write as often as I’d like. It’s
a week to Christmas and I picture the beginnings of
the preparations. I can look back and remember
so many such preparations, especially when we were
kiddies in London. What good times one has in
a life! I’ve been sitting with my groom
by the fire to-night while he dried my clothes.
I’ve mentioned him to you before as having lived
in Nelson, and worked at the Silver King mine.
We both grew ecstatic over British Columbia.
I am hoping all the time that the
boys may be in England at the time I get my leave I
hardly dare hope that any of you will be there.
But it would he grand if you could manage it I
long very much to see you all again. I can just
imagine my first month home again. I shan’t
let any of you work. I shall be the incurable
boy. I’ve spent the best part of to-day
out in No Man’s Land, within seventy yards of
the Huns. Quite an experience, I assure you,
and one that I wouldn’t have missed for worlds.
I’ll have heaps to write into novels one day the
vividest kind of local colour. Just at present
I have nothing to read but the Christmas number of
the Strand. It makes me remember the time
when we children raced for the latest development
of The Hound of the Baskervilles, and so many
occasions when I had one of “those sniffy colds”
and sat by the Highbury fire with a book. Good
days, those!
I’m just off to bed now, and
will finish this to-morrow. Bed is my greatest
luxury nowadays.
December 19th.
The book and chocolate just came,
and a bunch of New York papers. All were most
welcome. I was longing for something to read.
To-morrow I have to go forward to observe. Two
of our officers are on leave, so it makes the rest
of us work pretty hard. What do you think of the
Kaiser’s absurd peace proposals? The man
must be mad.
The
best of love,
CON.