Wednesday 28th
April 1915: Yesterday we continued to pass on the story of a Londoner serving
with 1st Battalion who was wounded in the fighting at Hill 60. His account had
reached the point at which the mine below Hill 60 was blown. He continues:
After an interval, during which the Germans continued their fire, the British
guns broke out again. Then, a young chap with a wrist watch said to me,
"It's almost eight". It was eight before I understood what he meant.
It was eight before the order came to charge, with the great guns throwing
volleys of the big stuff beyond it and above us".
"And we
scrambled out of the trenches and doubled, like fellows in a sprint, for the
smoky blackness of that hill. We were nearly a thousand strong, and we dashed
up the hillside until we reached the crest".
"When we
got there we knew what we had to do. It wasn't shooting Germans. It wasn't
bayoneting. What Germans there were we had to drag out of the ground".
"What we
had to do was to fill sandbags, build up new trenches, and make some sort of
fortification against the trouble which we knew was bound to some".
"And the
boys did it, and they whistled and sang while they did the sandbagging business
and every now and again someone who was singing went down through the spit of a
German bullet that came from their other lines".
"Within
about a quarter of an hour we had dug ourselves in and firmly established
ourselves at the foot of the hill. There was little rest. In about an hour and
a quarter afterwards - about ten o'clock - the Germans came along suddenly with
their great counter-attack".
"We were
not surprised. We knew it was going to happen. On both sides the batteries were
blazing away and for half an hour the cannonade had developed all along the
opposing fronts".
"In the
flare and flash of the runs, while we sang and banked up those sandbags on the
top of the hill which had been so cheaply won, we saw masses of their troops,
looking grey and ghostly in the light, massed together and suddenly advance
from their lines of support".
"Over
3,000 of them came at us. They came up their side of the hill like ghostly
creatures. Many of them held their rifles at the shoulder, and as they came
along we had our revenge for those eight cold, hungry days in which we had
waited for them and suffered from them in the trenches before Hill 60".
"We kept
up our rifle fire and a man fell here and a man fell there. The rest of them
laughed and came on".
"But we
had, of course, anticipated the counter-attack, and in the hour's lull that followed
the capture of the crest of the hill we had brought up a score of machine
guns".
"And the
guns kept quiet. They did as they were told. They waited while our desultory
rifle fire allowed their grey-coated battalions to come on and on. And they
came on and on, plunging in the wet grass, but confident, until suddenly they
stopped".
"Behind
the ragged infantry fire of ours, the most ineffectual infantry fire that ever
tried to stop an obstinate enemy in God's world, were our machine guns. The
machine guns came up altogether".
"They
made no noise about it, and came along quietly, and took their appointed
places, while we piled up the sandbags and sang songs to each other and asked
them to shoot at impossible targets".
"As they
[the Germans] came on, more confident at every step, as the broken run grew
steadier and their front lines formed themselves to charge, so our battery -
masked batteries - spoke out. We went into them line after line".
"It was
like a great harvesting and nothing was spared. I have seen plenty of slaughter
since Mons , but
nothing like this".
"They
simply fell in heaps; hundreds and hundreds were mown down while their officers
shouted the orders to "open out" and as we drove them back on their
support trenches our artillery caught them midway. They went down like ninepins
or rabbits, or anything else that you can think of".
"But
these are figures of speech. Our officer told us they must have lost at least a
third of their attacking force in this single attempt to retake Hill 60. After
this attack they were very quiet".
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