GERMANS GAME CRYING.
GUNS BREAK SPIRIT. SURRENDERED FOR FOOD. It is the spirit of the B'ritish soldier that makes him such a formidable enemy—nothing daunts him. He is ..i > ways the same cheery optimist This is vividly shown in the following letter from a gallant lad who has been through some of the worst fighting.
"We went over in grand style," writes a sergeant recalling the • assault on Montauban, "and found the place in an awful mess. Most of the houses had been knocked head over heels—the only ones I saw standing were a couple of cafes. As we came on we saw lots of Germans running out of the back of the village, but there were plenty of them monkeying about the ruins. We divided the company up in groups of six, but as we neared the village we joined up again. My five pals saw some Huns in a ground floor room, so we dropped a Mills bomb through the window and didn't wait for an answer.
"As we turned a corner Ave saw a German lying round the end of a wall. He'd got a machine-gun and had made a little emplacement with bricks. He turned the damn thing on me and gc me in the foot. I didn't wait to s what happened, but simply went at him and bayoneted -him. I couldn't go on much further, so I sat down to ?.c<: what was the damage.
"My foot was pretty bad, but when I looked at my left hand breast pec:, et I saw two holes in it. I opened nr pocket and found that two bullets had gone through my metal shaving mirror, through my pocket case, and had nosed their way into a book I was carrying. Funnily enough earlier in the morning my officer gave me the book and said I could read it when I got into the German trenches, so I put 1 in my pocket, little thinking that : should be able to read a bit of it on a hospital ship coming back. The two bullets, after piercing the mirror aiu case, had met and fused into one lump of metal.
"I saw three Germans come up to two of our fellows and throw down their rifles. So our boys chucked theirs down, too, and went for them with their fists, and they didn't half give them a dusting. The Germans seemed to be all ages from 16 to 50, I should say. Some of them came crying out that they had had no food for five days. One of our boys did wonders with the bayonet—he Avas chasing three Germans —he caught them and bayoneted two as swung round, he hit the third man down with the butt of his rifle. The spirit of our boys was splendid—they simply loved the fun. One of them got blown up a shell. He seemed pretty dazed, but he picked himself up and came along. All he said was. 'Oh, there must bo a war on after all, I suppose.' "
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Bibliographic details
Taihape Daily Times, Issue 219, 29 December 1916, Page 3
Word Count
509GERMANS GAME CRYING. Taihape Daily Times, Issue 219, 29 December 1916, Page 3
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