Item 02: Thomas Alcock war narrative, 28 July 1915-1917 - Page 199

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[Page 196]

196
discovered from time to time, they were rather chary about partaking of it. I volunteered to be the taster, however, and when they saw that nothing happened to me they too, putting the bottles to their mouths drank heartily. (I may say that I myself got very little.)

at Bullecourt Stretcher bearing took up a fair proportion of my time – one could not resist doing all that was possible for men lying wounded, and so when I would see a chap left lying for dead, I would procure a stretcher and, with the aid of others, would take him down to the R.A.P. (regimental Aid Post). One little chap

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