He wriggled further into the bottom corner of the trench, pushing the headset tight against his ears. But it was no use. He could still hear the pathetic screams of the dying man.
He
was somewhere out in the darkness, lost, alone. He cried to his God, and
for his mother.
The
only answer he got was from the unsympathetic toms. They had listened to
him crying for the last 6 hours.
We
knew he was going to die .He knew he was going to die.
He
just wouldn’t do it quietly. Now he was getting on everybody’s tits.
We
all silently willed him to die. Darkness cloaked the battlefield; the fighting
for the moment was over. We didn’t need reminding of the previous day’s
events.
The
silence became deafening. It had been 40 minutes or so and no cries from
the Argy.
He
tried to relax and go to sleep. Though none came.
One
ear was tuned in to the radio, one for the weakened enemy’s cries.
Then
it started to snow.
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Cold.
Where
now were my comrades?
Her
tender embrace,
My
life is nearly over
May 82. © Jim Love |
Copyright
notice
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