After spending a few weeks in the cook-house, he asked permission to go to the trenches when the battalion went into the line. The transfer was effected, and he made a start with real soldiering. No amount of discipline could transform him from the free-from-care, do-as-you-please individual into the polished soldier. One evening he was posted over the gas-alert in the front line trenches, when a shell exploded a few yards in front of him. The explosion caused his hat to disappear and the concussion projected him into a dug-out. Only the solidity of the wall prevented him from going further; as it was, the force with which he was hurled against the side of the dug-out made a deep impression on the damp wall. He lay in a motionless heap in the corner of the dug-out. A N.C.O. rushed along the duck-boards, thrust his head into the dug-out, and anxiously inquired of Bill as to whether he was hurt. Bill by this time had partially recovered from the shock. His small steel-grey eyes gradually opened. The N.C.O. again asked if he were hurt. Bill’s eyes rolled, his lips moved, and then he blurted out, ‘Oh, no, only my feelings!’
Bill is not a man to make a fuss about anything. He has no time for red-tape in any shape or form, it is true, but whatever work is assigned him is always done satisfactorily. Whether he is any less a soldier or his efficiency as a fighting force impaired because of his failure to meet the rigid requirements of an exacting military regulation is a matter concerning which there might be a difference of opinion; but this at least stands to his credit: he knows no fear, is the life of the unit, and the battalion to which he belongs would sustain a distinct loss by the removal of Bugler Bill, &c.
A TRAGEDY OF THE WAR
From strife they now march
back to smiling farms,
Recoiling from
the crash and smoke and roar.
Meadows, all verdant, faerie
fields, whose charms
Serve for a space
to make them as before.
And peaceful pictures
of the days of yore,
With thrilling thoughts of
those they left behind
Flash thro’
the mental vision, and a score
Of letters brightly occupy
the mind
Without a care, or woe, or
doubt of any kind.
Anon they journey from this
place of rest
By night or early
dawn back to the brink
Of that volcanic crater where
the best
Sit tight, scarce
caring if they swim or sink.
Silent they bear
it, as they quietly think
The end approaching to their
life at last,
And face each
other, with a smile or wink
Outwardly stoic, tho’
their hearts beat fast
As, thumping down, great shells
come racing in and past.