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[Page 412]

2.

was camped on the bank of a river & we stayed with them all day swimming & resting it was a perfect day. During the day the officers gathered their men round them with maps & told them what they each had to do. Bombers, lewis gunners, runners, signalmen, & infantry each had their special jobs & we listened with interest & learned the whole nature of the country & our objectives which they call the "green line". We had to proceed to the present R.A.P. about  ¼ mile from the front line & move up to the battle R.A.P. half an hour after the barrage descended. The troops were in wonderful spirit happy & looking forward to the hop over. At 10.30 pm platoons of men started to fall in silently no commotion, few orders & moved off mysteriously. Our turn came, we moved along the tow path of the river for a while turned off across a field then across a road alive & crammed with traffic. The traffic control shouted "Hold up a mo. let these blokes across" & across went the blokes in front of a line of tanks, they were humming & throbbing & moving along at 10 to 12 miles an hour from small [indecipherable] to 40 & 50 tons - these are real monsters & put the "wind up" one in the dark - they take up nearly the whole road.

Across the road we followed A track

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