Mr. Britling Sees It Through eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 523 pages of information about Mr. Britling Sees It Through.

Mr. Britling Sees It Through eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 523 pages of information about Mr. Britling Sees It Through.

“That diary-hunting strategy is just the sort of thing that makes this war intellectually fascinating.  Everything is being thought out and then tried over that can possibly make victory.  The Germans go in for psychology much more than we do, just as they go in for war more than we do, but they don’t seem to be really clever about it.  So they set out to make all their men understand the war, while our chaps are singing ‘Tipperary.’  But what the men put down aren’t the beautiful things they ought to put down; most of them shove down lists of their meals, some of the diaries are all just lists of things eaten, and a lot of them have written the most damning stuff about outrages and looting.  Which the French are translating and publishing.  The Germans would give anything now to get back these silly diaries.  And now they have made an order that no one shall go into battle with any written papers at all....  Our people got so keen on documenting and the value of chance writings that one of the principal things to do after a German attack had failed had been to hook in the documentary dead, and find out what they had on them....  It’s a curious sport, this body fishing.  You have a sort of triple hook on a rope, and you throw it and drag.  They do the same.  The other day one body near Hooghe was hooked by both sides, and they had a tug-of-war.  With a sharpshooter or so cutting in whenever our men got too excited.  Several men were hit.  The Irish—­it was an Irish regiment—­got him—­or at least they got the better part of him....

“Now that I am a sergeant, Park talks to me again about all these things, and we have a first lieutenant too keen to resist such technical details.  They are purely technical details.  You must take them as that.  One does not think of the dead body as a man recently deceased, who had perhaps a wife and business connections and a weakness for oysters or pale brandy.  Or as something that laughed and cried and didn’t like getting hurt.  That would spoil everything.  One thinks of him merely as a uniform with marks upon it that will tell us what kind of stuff we have against us, and possibly with papers that will give us a hint of how far he and his lot are getting sick of the whole affair....

“There’s a kind of hardening not only of the body but of the mind through all this life out here.  One is living on a different level.  You know—­just before I came away—­you talked of Dower-House-land—­and outside.  This is outside.  It’s different.  Our men here are kind enough still to little things—­kittens or birds or flowers.  Behind the front, for example, everywhere there are Tommy gardens.  Some are quite bright little patches.  But it’s just nonsense to suppose we are tender to the wounded up here—­and, putting it plainly, there isn’t a scrap of pity left for the enemy.  Not a scrap.  Not a trace of such feeling.  They were tender about the wounded in the early days—­men tell me—­and reverent about the dead.  It’s all gone

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Mr. Britling Sees It Through from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.