Series 03: John Brady Nash letters, January 1914-December 1915 - Page 615
Primary tabs
Transcription
[Page 615]
During the afternoon I went along to Captain Pierro Fiaschi. I found him with a Mounted Infantry regiment at the left of the Australian position. The English force prolong the position still further to the left at Sulva Bay [Suvla Bay]. With Fiaschi I tramped up to the hills visited the most advanced posts where the men are ever on the look out for Turkish heads or bodies to show themselves above the trenches about three hundred yards distant. With a periscope I looked at the trenches held by the enemy, surveyed with my eyes the positions where Turkish snipers have their posts, with watchful eyes seeking for a chance to shoot one of our people. The Turks still hold the dominating ridges in this region. The marvel of it all is how our men have managed to perch themselves upon the eminences where they are situated. Wonderful! Truly wonderful!
Manly, fearless Australians, night and day, conserve the interests of the Empire by, look fully armed, looking across the valley for an enemy to show himself, mayhap a Turk or his German mentor. The man from every section of our Island Continent who came as a light horseman does his turn on these dangerous perches.
17-10-15. Forgot 'twas Sunday morning, till I look at my calendar.
After breakfast I started to keep a 10 o'clock tryst with Captain Fiaschi, I walked along the tracks and through the saps – a sap is a trench dug along the parts of the land separating different camps or posts, and which is still exposed to fire by from the Turkish rifles – to the gallant Captains quarters. I found him busy
[Captain Piero Fiaschi, 1879-1948, medical practitioner from Sydney, embarked on HMAT A27 Southern on 23 September 1914 with the 1st Light Horse Ambulance.]