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Chapter 10 THE MAKING OF NO MAN'S LAND

Word Count: 1259    |    Released on: 06/12/2017

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ting through his wire, and passing through trenches inhabited by his soldiers until a day or two ago, travelling over roads and fields down which his guns and transport went, and going into streets and houses in which there are signs of his recent occupation. He has ruined all his roads, opening v

cottage walls, or where the villages begin. Thousands of coils of barbed wire lie about in heaps, for the enemy relied a great deal upon this means of defence, and in many places are piles of shells which he has not removed. Gun-pits and machine-gun emplacements, screens to hide his roads from view, observation-posts built in tall trees, remain as signs of his military life a mile or two back from his front lines, but behind the trenches are the towns and villages in which he had his rest billets, and it is in these places that one sees the spirit and temper of the men whom we are fighti

éronne, and that is true, also, of Bapaume. There is nothing but filth in those two towns; family portraits have been kicked into the gutters. I saw a picture of three children in Bapaume, and it was smeared with filth in the writing of a dirty word. The black bonnets of old women who once lived in those houses

e. I was at first rejoiced to see how the first inhabitants were liberated after being so long in hostile lines. I approached them with a queer sense of excitement, eager to speak with them, but instantly when I saw those women and children in the streets, and staring at me

e men who were killing their husbands and brothers, and that is a great horror. They had to submit to the daily moods of men who were sometimes sulky and sometimes drunk. The officers were often drunk. They had to see their children go hungry, for though the Germans gave them potatoes, sometimes they took away the hens, so that there were no eggs, and the cows, so that there was no milk, and the children suffered and were thin. On October 5, 1914, the Kaiser came to Nesle with an

his necessity. The work was to be carried out by his Oberleutnant Baarth. The people wept at the destruction of their homes, though the houses in the centre of Nesle were spared. But they were comforted by the promise of liberation. For a week previously the enemy had been withdrawing his stores. The garrison consisted of about 800 to 1000 men of the 38th Regiment of Chasseurs and Cyclists. Th

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Contents

Chapter 1 A NEW YEAR OF WAR Chapter 2 AN ATTACK NEAR LE TRANSLOY Chapter 3 THE ABANDONMENT OF GRANDCOURT Chapter 4 THE GORDONS IN THE BUTTE DE WARLENCOURT Chapter 5 THE BATTLE OF BOOM RAVINE Chapter 6 THE ENEMY WITHDRAWS Chapter 7 OUR ENTRY INTO GOMMECOURT Chapter 8 WHY THE ENEMY WITHDREW Chapter 9 THE AUSTRALIANS ENTER BAPAUME Chapter 10 THE MAKING OF NO MAN'S LAND Chapter 11 THE LETTER OF THE LAW
Chapter 12 THE ABANDONED COUNTRY
Chapter 13 THE CURé OF VOYENNES
Chapter 14 THE CHTEAU OF LIANCOURT
Chapter 15 THE OLD WOMEN OF TINCOURT
Chapter 16 THE AGONY OF WAR
Chapter 17 ARRAS AND THE VIMY RIDGE
Chapter 18 LONDONERS THROUGH THE GERMAN LINES
Chapter 19 THE STRUGGLE ROUND MONCHY
Chapter 20 THE OTHER SIDE OF VIMY
Chapter 21 THE WAY TO LENS
Chapter 22 THE SLAUGHTER AT LAGNICOURT
Chapter 23 THE TERRORS OF THE SCARPE
Chapter 24 THE BACKGROUND OF BATTLE
Chapter 25 HOW THE SCOTS TOOK GUéMAPPE
Chapter 26 THE OPPY LINE
Chapter 27 THE BATTLE OF MAY 3
Chapter 28 WYTSCHAETE AND MESSINES
Chapter 29 THE SPIRIT OF VICTORY
Chapter 30 AFTER THE EARTHQUAKE
Chapter 31 THE EFFECT OF THE BLOW
Chapter 32 LOOKING BACKWARD
Chapter 33 THE AUSTRALIANS AT MESSINES
Chapter 34 A BATTLE IN A THUNDER-STORM
Chapter 35 THE TRAGEDY AT LOMBARTZYDE
Chapter 36 BREAKING THE SALIENT
Chapter 37 FROM PILKEM RIDGE TO HOLLEBEKE
Chapter 38 THE BEGINNING OF THE RAINS
Chapter 39 PILL-BOXES AND MACHINE-GUNS
Chapter 40 THE SONG OF THE COCKCHAFERS
Chapter 41 WOODS OF ILL-FAME
Chapter 42 THE BATTLE OF LANGEMARCK
Chapter 43 CAPTURE OF HILL SEVENTY
Chapter 44 LONDONERS IN GLENCORSE WOOD
Chapter 45 SOMERSETS AT LANGEMARCK
Chapter 46 THE IRISH IN THE SWAMPS
Chapter 47 THE WAY THROUGH GLENCORSE WOOD
Chapter 48 THE SLAUGHTER-HOUSE OF LENS
Chapter 49 THE AGONY OF ARMENTIèRES
Chapter 50 THE BATTLE OF MENIN ROAD
Chapter 51 THE WAY TO PASSCHENDAELE
Chapter 52 THE BATTLE OF POLYGON WOOD
Chapter 53 ABRAHAM HEIGHTS AND BEYOND
Chapter 54 SCENES OF BATTLE
Chapter 55 THE SLOUGH OF DESPOND
Chapter 56 THE ASSAULTS ON PASSCHENDAELE
Chapter 57 ROUND POELCAPPELLE
Chapter 58 THE CANADIANS COME NORTH
Chapter 59 LONDON MEN AND ARTISTS
Chapter 60 THE CAPTURE OF PASSCHENDAELE
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