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[Page 194]

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devotion to duty. I was one of eighteen of our chaps who were reinforcing this Ambulance the night on that particular occasion. The Sgt was helping a doctor attend to the wounded on an open road swept with machine gun bullets & shells but nothing was said of the stretcher bearers amongst whom were myself & several others of our unit who had just to wait round at the same spot to carry the wounded away as they were fixed up. However we were all congratulated that night by the M.O. on our work. The particular spot was an awful sight that night - the wounded were brought there on stretchers & put down in the mud where the doctor & his men worked on them by the aid of a couple of torches & Fritz's star shells while the stretcher bearers stood round & waited. In the mud also lay a couple of corpses which added to the ghastliness of the groans of the cases & the occasional whistle of bullets & whine of shells. However that is war & our job & one doesn't notice much of this at the time. To get the wounded back to help & safety is all one seems to think & care about. It is generally when all bombardment has ceased & the deadly work done by the raiders that our work commences. We deal with the aftermath in the grim & silent work of reparation. This is just a picture of what really

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