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Over The Top

Chapter 9 SUICIDE ANNEX

Word Count: 505    |    Released on: 06/12/2017

ading, "Suicide Annex." One of the boys told me that this particular front trench was called "Su

gh. It was about twenty feet below the fire trench; at least there were twenty steps leading down to it. These steps were cut into the earth, but at that time were muddy and slippery. A man had to be very careful or else he would "shoot the chutes." The air was foul, and you could cut the smoke from Tommy's fags with a knife. It was cold. The walls and roof were supported with heavy square-cut timbers, while the entrance was strengthened with sandbags. Nails had been driven

ontempt, and answere

came a thin, piping voice singing one

roubles in your

Smile,

then the singe

Cough

ation of Tommy's cheerful

t him, sliding, and slipping and reached my section of the front-line trench wh

I teamed up with another fellow and went on guard with my head sticking over the top. At ten o'clock I was relieved and resumed my sittin

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“Excerpt: ...of the trench. One dead German was lying on his back, with a rifle sticking straight up in the air, the bayonet of which was buried to the hilt in his chest. Across his feet lay a dead English soldier with a bullet hole in his forehead. This Tommy must have been killed just as he ran his bayonet through the German. Rifles and equipment were scattered about, and occasionally a steel helmet could be seen sticking out of the mud. At one point, just in the entrance to a communication trench, was a stretcher. On this stretcher a German was lying with a white bandage around his knee, near to him lay one of the stretcher-bearers, the red cross on his arm covered with mud and his helmet filled with blood and brains. Close by, sitting up against the wall of the trench, with head resting on his chest, was the other stretcher-bearer. He seemed to be alive, the posture was so natural and easy, but when I got closer, I could see a large, jagged hole in, his temple. The three must have been killed by the same shell-burst. The dugouts were all smashed in and knocked about, big square-cut timbers splintered into bits, walls caved in, and entrances choked. Tommy, after taking a trench, learns to his sorrow, that the hardest part of the work is to hold it. In our case this proved to be so. The German artillery and machine guns had us taped (ranged) for fair; it was worth your life to expose yourself an instant. Don't think for a minute that the Germans were the only sufferers, we were clicking casualties so fast that you needed an adding machine to keep track of them. Did you ever see one of the steam shovels at work on the Panama Canal, well, it would look like a hen scratching alongside of a Tommy "digging in" while under fire, you couldn't see daylight through the clouds of dirt from his shovel. After losing three out of six men of our crew, we managed to set up our machine gun. One of the legs of the tripod was resting on the chest of a half-buried body. When...”
1 Chapter 1 FROM MUFTI TO KHAKI2 Chapter 2 BLIGHTY TO REST BILLETS3 Chapter 3 I GO TO CHURCH4 Chapter 4 INTO THE TRENCH 5 Chapter 5 MUD, RATS, AND SHELLS6 Chapter 6 BACK OF THE LINE 7 Chapter 7 RATIONS8 Chapter 8 THE LITTLE WOODEN CROSS9 Chapter 9 SUICIDE ANNEX10 Chapter 10 THE DAY'S WORK 11 Chapter 11 OVER THE TOP12 Chapter 12 BOMBING13 Chapter 13 MY FIRST OFFICIAL BATH14 Chapter 14 PICKS AND SHOVELS15 Chapter 15 LISTENING POST16 Chapter 16 BATTERY D 23817 Chapter 17 OUT IN FRONT18 Chapter 18 STAGED UNDER FIRE19 Chapter 19 ON HIS OWN20 Chapter 20 CHATS WITH FRITZ 21 Chapter 21 ABOUT TURN22 Chapter 22 PUNISHMENTS AND MACHINE-GUN STUNTS23 Chapter 23 GAS ATTACKS AND SPIES24 Chapter 24 THE FIRING SQUAD25 Chapter 25 PREPARING FOR THE BIG PUSH26 Chapter 26 ALL QUIET ( ) ON THE WESTERN FRONT27 Chapter 27 BLIGHTY