Soldier Silhouettes on our Front eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 124 pages of information about Soldier Silhouettes on our Front.

Soldier Silhouettes on our Front eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 124 pages of information about Soldier Silhouettes on our Front.

“I may look awful,” he said, “but I’m a new man inside.  What I saw out there in the woods made me different, somehow.  I saw a friend stand by his machine-gun, with a whole platoon of Germans sweeping down on him, and he never flinched.  He fired that old gun until every bullet was gone and his gun was red-hot.  I was lying in the grass where I could see it all.  I saw them bayonet him.  He fought to the last against fifty men, but, thank God, he died a man; he died an American.  I lay there and cried to see them kill him, but every time I think of that fellow it makes me want to be more of a man.  When I get back home I’m going to give up my life to some kind of Christian service.  I’m going to do it because I saw that man die so bravely.  If he can die like that, in spite of my face I can live like a man.”

The boys in the trenches live a year in a month, a month in a week, a week in a day, a day in an hour, and sometimes an eternity in a second.  No wonder it makes men of them overnight.  No wonder they come out of it all with that “high look” that John Oxenham writes about.  They have been reborn.

Another wounded boy who had gone through the fighting back of Montdidier said to me in the hospital: 

“I never thought of anybody else at home but myself.  I was selfish.  Sis and mother did everything for me.  Everything at home centred in me, and everything was arranged for my comfort.  With this leg gone I might have some right now, according to the way they think, to that attention, but I don’t want it any longer.  I can’t bear the thoughts of having people do for me.  I want to spend the rest of my life doing things for other folks.

“Back of Noyon I saw a friend sail into a crowd of six Germans with nothing but his bayonet and rifle.  They had surrounded his captain, and were rushing him back as a prisoner.  They evidently had orders to take the officers alive as prisoners.  That big top-sergeant sailed into them, and after killing two of them, knocking two more down, and giving his captain a chance to escape, the last German shot him through the head.  He gave his life for the captain.  That has changed me.  I shall never be the same again after seeing that happen.  There’s something come into my heart.  I’m going back home a Christian man.”

Yes, America must learn to see beyond the darkness, beyond the disfigured face, to the soul of the boy.  And America will do it.  America is like that.  And so back of these shaking bodies and these stuttering tongues of the shell-shocked boys I saw their wonderful souls.  And after spending that two hours with them I can never be the same man again.

I could, as Donald Hankey says, “get down on my knees and shine their boots for them any day,” and thank God for the privilege.  I think that this is the spirit of any non-combatant in France who has any immediate contact with our men on the battle-front or in the hospitals.  They are so brave and so true.

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Soldier Silhouettes on our Front from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.