|
|
There have been
many books written on "The War to end all Wars" and a considerable
number of trench diaries and war memoirs published by those officers
who survived the conflict.
These memoirs, from the pen of a sergeant in the infantry, give the
view-point of the professional N.C.O., the backbone of the British army.
Events meriting only a brief mention in the official military and regimental
histories, are shown to have had a very significant impact upon the
"other ranks" and N.C.O.'s., in the British county infantry
regiments who bore the brunt of the fighting. Sergeant Charles Arnold,
originally of the East Surreys and subsequently of the Border Regiment
served in Ireland, on the Western Front in Belgium and France, and eventually
in Egypt. At times he was far from the main offensives but he saw his
share of trench warfare, being wounded twice in 1914 at Mons and Le
Cateau, and again in 1916 in the battle of the Somme. In 1917 he served
at Messines and Ypres where he was badly injured by mustard gas.
He survived the war and continued his service with the colours until
1922.
Professor Stephen Royle who has researched and annotated the scrapbooks
and diaries which form the basis of this book is the grandson of Sergeant
Arnold. The illustrations, previously unpublished, come from Sergeant
Arnold's own collection.
|