The Baptism of Fire.
The most brilliant pen-pictures of battle drawn by the looker-on and the most learned articles of arm-chair strategists have, for the average man, nothing like the appeal and fascination of the simple stories told by men in the ranks who have fought under the shadow of death and with all human emotions at their highest pitch. What do the men in th% battle line feel; what are the emotions and thoughts that race through the brain-cells of the ordinary soldier as he stands, a panting unit in the swaying human line ? What expression does his face wear as he loads and fires ; wbai are his sensations as he sees the sparkling bayonet-points coming on him in fierest charge, and how does he feel when he receives his first wound ? This is what everyone wants to know, and what nouo but the men themselves can tell us. When sometime ago, the writer asked one ot the bravest men who ever won the Cross for Valour, what were his feelings at the beginning of a battle, he answered, “ I have nevf gone into action without feeling an almost irresistible temptation to turn tail and bolt ; and honestly I believe I should have done so more than once if it had not been for the shame of it. I was never in a worse funk in my life than when I won my V.C.; and if it hadn’t been for fear of disgrac ing myself before my men I almost think I should have turned back. But, curiously enough, this feeling of cowardice has always vanished after the first few minutes, and has left me.
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Huntly Press and District Gazette, Volume 4, 15 January 1915, Page 3
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276The Baptism of Fire. Huntly Press and District Gazette, Volume 4, 15 January 1915, Page 3
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