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War Diaries

These extracts from diaries provide Primary Source material to show what life on the front was really like.

War Diaries

Victor Silvester

We went up into the front-line near Arras, through sodden and devastated countryside. As we were moving up to the our sector along the communication trenches, a shell burst ahead of me and one of my platoon dropped. He was the first man I ever saw killed. Both his legs were blown off and the whole of his face and body was peppered with shrapnel. The sight turned my stomach. I was sick and terrified, but even more frightened of showing it.

That night I had been asleep in a dugout about three hours when I woke up feeling something biting my hip. I put my hand down and my fingers closed on a big rat. It had nibbled through my haversack, my tunic and pleated kilt to get at my flesh. With a cry of horror I threw it from me.

Captain Bellenden

I have never seen a drearier sight than the salient in front of Ypres -- churned up mud with mucky shell holes and never a tree as far as the eye could reach. It was necessary to march single file on duck walk because of the mud for a distance of five or six miles when going in for a tour. We were machine-gunned and bombed from the air and subjected to a terrific shelling on the way in and nothing like a real trench system was possible, the line being held by a series of posts in shell holes.

 

The First World War section

Causes of the First World War

Life in a Trench
Technological advances First World War Links
Statistics related to the First World War War Poems: Using Primary evidence  
         

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
Page last updated on Page last updated on 07/11/2004