History of the World War, Vol. 3 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 145 pages of information about History of the World War, Vol. 3.

History of the World War, Vol. 3 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 145 pages of information about History of the World War, Vol. 3.

[Illustration:  The glorious charge of the ninth lancers

An incident of the retreat from Mons to Cambrai.  A German battery of eleven guns posted in a wood, had caused havoc in the British ranks.  The Ninth Lancers rode straight at them, across the open, through a hail of shell from the other German batteries, cut down all the gunners, and put every gun out of action.]

At 7.30 range finding ended, and with a roar that shook the earth the most destructive and withering artillery action of the war up to that time was on.  Field pieces sending their shells hurtling only a few feet above the earth tore the wire emplacements of the enemy to pieces and made kindling wood of the supports.  Howitzers sent high explosive shells, containing lyddite, of 15-inch, 9.2-inch and 6-inch caliber into the doomed trenches and later into the ruined village.  It was eight o’clock in the morning, one-half hour after the beginning of the artillery action, that the village was bombarded.  During this time British soldiers were enabled to walk about in No Man’s Land behind the curtain of fire with absolute immunity.  No German rifleman or machine gunner left cover.  The scene on the German side of the line was like that upon the blasted surface of the moon, pock-marked with shell holes, and with no trace of human life to be seen above ground.

An eye witness describing the scene said: 

“The dawn, which broke reluctantly through a veil of clouds on the morning of Wednesday, March 10, 1915, seemed as any other to the Germans behind the white and blue sandbags in their long line of trenches curving in a hemi-cycle about the battered village of Neuve Chapelle.  For five months they had remained undisputed masters of the positions they had here wrested from the British in October.  Ensconced in their comfortably-arranged trenches with but a thin outpost in their fire trenches, they had watched day succeed day and night succeed night without the least variation from the monotony of trench warfare, the intermittent bark of the machine guns—­rat-tat-tat-tat-tat—­and the perpetual rattle of rifle fire, with here and there a bomb, and now and then an exploded mine.

[Illustration:  Illustrated London News.

CHARGING THROUGH BARBED WIRE ENTANGLEMENTS

In one sector at Givenchy, the wire had not been sufficiently smashed by the artillery preparation and the infantry attack was held up in the face of a murderous German fire.]

“For weeks past the German airmen had grown strangely shy.  On this Wednesday morning none were aloft to spy out the strange doings which, as dawn broke, might have been descried on the desolate roads behind the British lines.

“From ten o’clock of the preceding evening endless files of men marched silently down the roads leading towards the German positions through Laventie and Richebourg St. Vaast, poor shattered villages of the dead where months of incessant bombardment have driven away the last inhabitants and left roofless houses and rent roadways....

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
History of the World War, Vol. 3 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.