Eighteen Months in the War Zone. Kate John Finze

Eighteen Months in the War Zone - Kate John Finze


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       Kate John Finze

      Eighteen Months in the War Zone

      The Record of a Woman's Work on the Western Front

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4057664576088

       FOREWORD

       LIST OF PLATES

       INTRODUCTION

       BOOK I 1914 As It Was in the Beginning

       CHAPTER I October, 1914

       CHAPTER II November, 1914

       CHAPTER III December, 1914

       BOOK II 1915 Order Out of Chaos

       CHAPTER IV January, 1915

       CHAPTER V February, 1915

       CHAPTER VI March, 1915

       CHAPTER VII April, 1915

       CHAPTER VIII May, 1915

       CHAPTER IX June, 1915

       CHAPTER X July, 1915

       CHAPTER XI August, 1915

       CHAPTER XII September, 1915

       CHAPTER XIII October, 1915

       CHAPTER XIV November, 1915

       CHAPTER XV December, 1915

       BOOK III 1916 Scrapped

       CHAPTER XVI January, 1916

       CHAPTER XVII February, 1916

       EPILOGUE

       Table of Contents

      When the great history of this almost untellable War comes to be told, historians will find themselves faced with a collection of evidence so devious, so at variance, that their task will be well-nigh stupendous. Whether, when they come to sift their data, they will have time to cast more than a passing glance at the great military bases that sprung up in an allied country, where once an invading army had stood, remains to be seen. That these bases, and in especial the largest and nearest to the firing line, Boulogne, have played a large rôle in the scheme of things cannot be denied.

      Yet, of all the many thousands who lived and passed through Boulogne, there remains not one who can tell of the gradual development of that once insignificant fishing town into one of the greatest bases in the War Zone.

      Surely, therefore, it behoves those of us who love every inch of her harassing cobblestones; to whom her picturesque squalor is a thing of everlasting joy; those of us who see in the sun-bathed masts, half-hidden in grey mists, pictures whose Turneresqueness vies with Turner; who can clasp fisherfolk, peasants and townsmen by the hand and be proud to claim them friends—it behoves us to recapture what can never be recaptured again, because there is none left to tell the tale—a picture of Anglicised Boulogne in war-time.

      True, our Boulognese coast is not riddled with fortifications like the approaches to an English naval port, nor are our fields honeycombed with trenches (though go past Calais, northward, towards Dunkirk, and you shall see what you shall see!). Yet there were days in 1914 when Boulogne promised to play a larger rôle in the history of England than she had ever played before—days when hospitals stood empty and all were prepared to evacuate the town at a moment's notice, in reply to the mayor's already printed mandates—days when, had the enemy but known how efficiently he had pierced the British lines, he might have realised his dream of devastating our island home and sweeping the coast with his long-range guns from Calais to Boulogne.

      Those days will never return. Between us at the base and our enemies are a myriad valiant lives and countless guns of every size and device, a force, in fact, which no German strategy in the world, scrupulous or unscrupulous, can overcome; and still the little temporary British city grows and grows, a city of tents and red crosses and corrugated iron huts; and still stalwart British forms, marching along the winding white roads, cast longing glances at the dim coast of distant Albion.

      But it is not for those who heard the call in the later months so much as in memory of those early heroes of Mons, who knew the bitterness of a valiant retreat, the horror of forced marches along parched roads, with only the prod of the next man's bayonet to keep him awake, and only a flap cut from the tail of his shirt between the pitiless sun and the dreaded delirium that would leave him a prey to the Huns' barbarities; in memory of these it is that I take up the pen to run the gauntlet of a thousand critical eyes on a way fraught with difficulties.

      My acknowledgments are due to Mr. A. M. James for permission to use his photograph of the cemetery, and to my brother Edgar, whose patience in putting together what is of necessity a piecy document has made the publication of this diary possible.

      "No easy hopes or lies Shall bring us to our goal, But iron sacrifice Of body, will, and soul. There is but one task for all— For each one life to give; Who stands if freedom fall? Who dies if England live?"

      —Rudyard Kipling.

       Table of Contents


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