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THE EXPLOSION

A MEMORY OF 1915.

By

Denis Ireland.

On a sunny morning in June, 1915, during a tour of duty as trench-mortar officer in the trenches opposite. Arinentieres, I was standing half in and half out of a dug-out doorway in the act of pulling the lanyard which fired my mortar when I was suddenly aware of a whistling sound and a dark shadow overhead. I looked up, and for a moment the dark shape seemed to hover motionless; then it materialised, swooped, grazed the sandbags beside my head • - touched me on the shoulder in passing . . . rolled down the steps leading .to the interior of the dug-out with a stride like an eager, bloodthirsty gnome . . . and exploded.

\\ riting a long time afterwards, it seems to me that something like this must have been the actual sequence of events. But the word exploded pales before the actuality as too coldly scientific and objective. So far as my consciousness was concerned, what actually happened was that at the light, glancing touch I turned with the firing cord still in my hand and watched that obscene, slithering descent of the dug-out steps very much a s if Death himself had touched me on the shoulder in passing, muttering, “ Excuse me, but I have business with these gentlemen below,* had pushed me unceremoniously aside, and left me standing there, powerless to help, Ihe actual space of time between th e darkening of the air overhead and the contact with the dug-out steps which detonated the charge must, of course, have been a matter of a second, or a fraction of a second, but from the first swooping rush 1 was conscious of what was about to happen . . . and there was nothing left but to watch the thing slither downwards into the darkness like a guest sure of its welcome. . . I had not long, to wait. After a pause which may have been the thirty-second part of a second 1 experienced a sensation as if I had been kicked in the stomach by an invisible elephant; the wall of my belly was driven in until for a sickening instant it almost touched my spine; I was vaguely conscious of the dug out doorway collapsing, of beams and sand-bags pinning and overpowering me ... of stifled shouting and shrieking from below/; then blackness intervened, and a merciful oblivion.

When I came to myself I was wandering like a drunken man in a communication trench about 50yds to the rear of the scene of the explosion. My trench cap was gone, blood was streaming from the side of my neck, and I was blackened from head to foot. The bombardment was still going on; in the clear sunlight I could see the “sausages” streaming over from the German lines, hovering, and descending with a succession of sickening crashes; and now. th e explosions which formerly had excited in me only a detached curiosity filled me with absolute terror. I wanted to run, to keep on running, down communication trenches, along paved roads, past railway junctions, away from men and all their devilish works, and finally to go to sleep face downwards in a green field. Only one thing kept me from running. I resented the loss of my cap. God’s curse on the man who had taken my cap! For what seemed like an eternity’ I wandered about in a kind of drunken haze, searchin" for my cap, cursing everyone who spoke to me.

Afterwards I discovered that almost an hour had elapsed before the rescue party had succeeded in releasing me from under the beams, and that onee released I had prowled about for another hour looking for my cap. apparently unhurt, but completely wandering in the mind. All this time I would let no one approach me, or do anything for me; and the regimental M.O. had recommended leaving mo alone. . . . Eventually I was persuaded to let him wash out the slight flesh wounds in my neck and give me an anti-tetanus injection. By this time I was re-discovering the use of my wrist-watch, which, protected bv a little metal grille, was still going.' To my intense surprise it was alreadv late afternoon.

Towards evening, when the bombardment had stopped under the threat of artillery retaliation, I revisted the scene of the explosion and salvaged the mortar undamaged. The dug-out was a complete wreck, and the gun team which it had sheltered wiped out<Of the three men forming it who had been below at the time of'the explosion one was either killed outright or suffocated, the second had died of wounds before the rescue party could reach him: and the third, a lance-corporal, a magnificently handsome fellow, had been saved alive by a falling beam but totally blinded. 'Gradually the recollection came hack to me that I had met him, being led away, during my period of raving in the communication trench; that his hands were outstretched piteously before him, a greatcoat thrown grotesquely over his broad shoulders, and that there were curious blue circles round his eyes. All this my brain must have recorded subconsciously’, for though they told me afterwards that I had spoken to him. and that we had said an affecting good-bye to one another, I cannot remember the interview, or what ‘was said. Only those sightless, blue-lidded eyes, and the dreadful rav-

aged look on his face while they led himi gently away

And so 1 had my first rendezvous withi death . . . ami worse than death. Death,, it is true, on this occasion only tapped! me on the shoulder and hurried on. But; some contagion remained from his pas--sage. To this day, for instance, 1 rarely sleep a night without wakening in a’. cold sweat of terror . . . switching om the light, searching the floor for the> bomb that is about to explode, or st retell--ing up my arms towards the ceiling that is about to collapse on me, buri in" ine> in ruins.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/OW19311013.2.36

Bibliographic details

Otago Witness, Issue 4048, 13 October 1931, Page 10

Word Count
993

THE EXPLOSION Otago Witness, Issue 4048, 13 October 1931, Page 10

THE EXPLOSION Otago Witness, Issue 4048, 13 October 1931, Page 10

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