30th Nov., 1922.

“Hear now a song—a song of broken interludes,

A song of little cunning—of a singer nothing worth,

Through the naked words and mean,

May ye see the truth between,

As the singer knew and touched it in the ends of all the earth!”

Rudyard Kipling.

A SOLDIER’S DIARY

April 23, 1918. Arrived at the R.E. Base Depot, Rouen, and was delighted to find a pile of letters waiting for me. Damn fools that we are, we are all fretting to get back into it again—the lines must be very thin nowadays. In the evening had an excellent Mess Smoking Concert, plenty of champagne, and a terrific “fug” in the ante-room. Heaven knows when we will have another night like this as we are at the last outpost of civilisation again.

April 24. Wasting time all day at the Demolitions School. God! what fools we are. Up in the line men are dying like flies for lack of reinforcements—here are thousands of troops and we cannot go because the R.T.O.’s staff is too small to cope with the railway embarkation forms!