Pushed and the Return Push. George Herbert Fosdike Nichols
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George Herbert Fosdike Nichols
Pushed and the Return Push
Published by Good Press, 2019
EAN 4064066225124
Table of Contents
II. "THE BOCHE IS THROUGH!" ToC
III. THE END OF A BATTERY. ToC
VI. BEHIND VILLEQUIER AUMONT ToC
X. THE SCRAMBLE AT VARESNES ToC
III. AN AUSTRALIAN "HAND-OVER" ToC
V. BEFORE THE GREAT ATTACK ToC
VI. THE BATTLE OF AUGUST 8 ToC
IX. DOWN THE ROAD TO COMBLES ToC
X. A MASTERLY TURNING MOVEMENT ToC
XI. ON THE HEELS OF THE BOCHE ToC
XII. THE MAJOR'S LOST PIPE ToC
XIV. THE FIGHT FOR RONSSOY ToC
XVIII. A LAST DAY AT THE O.P. ToC
PUSHED
I. BEFORE THE ATTACK.ToC
By means of a lorry lift from railhead, and a horse borrowed from the Divisional Ammunition Column, I found Brigade Headquarters in a village that the Germans had occupied before their retreat in the spring of 1917.
The huge, red-faced, grey-haired adjutant, best of ex-ranker officers, welcomed me on the farmhouse steps with a hard handshake and a bellowing "Cheerio!" followed by, "Now that you're back, I can go on leave."
In the mess the colonel gave me kindly greeting, and told me something of the Brigade's ups and downs since I had left France in August 1917, wounded at Zillebeke: how all the old and well-tried battery commanders became casualties before 1917 was out, but how, under young, keen, and patiently selected leaders, the batteries were working up towards real efficiency again. Then old "Swiffy," the veterinary officer, came in, and the new American doctor, who appeared armed with two copies of the 'Saturday Evening Post.' It was all very pleasant; and the feeling that men who had got to know you properly in the filthy turmoil and strain of Flanders were genuinely pleased to see you again, produced a glow of real happiness. I had, of course, to go out and inspect the adjutant's new charger—a big rattling chestnut, conceded to him by an A.S.C. major. A mystery gift, if ever there was one: for he was a handsome beast, and chargers are getting very rare in France. "They say he bucks," explained the adjutant. "He'll go for weeks as quiet as a lamb, and then put it across you when you don't expect it. I'm going to put him under treatment."
"Where's my groom?" he roared. Following which there was elaborate preparation of a weighted saddle—not up to the adjutant's 15 stone 5, but enough to make the horse realise he was carrying something; then an improvised lunging-rope was fashioned, and for twenty minutes the new charger had to do a circus trot and canter, with the adjutant as a critical and hopeful ringmaster. In the end the adjutant mounted and rode off, shouting that he would be back in half an hour to report on the mystery horse's preliminary behaviour.
Then the regimental sergeant-major manœuvred me towards the horse lines to look at the newly made-up telephone cart team.
"You remember the doctor's fat mare, sir—the wheeler, you used to call her? Well, she