Cocks letter diary, 1916-1919 / Verner Cocks - Page 246
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[Page 246]
The dugout was a german one square of concrete 6 feet thick in every direction & was what we call a pill box - just like a block of concrete at a distance & well above ground. I am sure it would have taken a 12" or 15" shell direct hit to come through - so built with two entrances that the opening direct into the interior, was guarded by 6' of concrete. It originally faced the German rear but now faced their lines so that we had protected the front again by a high sandbag wall. When we arrived there it was full of machine gunners & the doctor & his staff so we had to sit in the doorways & shiver. Fritz was lobbing about 50 yards away. We shivered till1 o'clock & then got a case. Chap with a broken leg broken arm & a few other flesh wounds. Jack & I, Ray Jamieson & another took this chap - glad for a bit of exercise to get warm - & set out through the trench. He was a big chap & we had a hard tussle to get along as the trench
6.