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Description
Mr. Savage describes being in the trenches for the first time, and some aspects of what life in the trenches was like.
Transcription
I don’t remember too much about it, because as I said, being the freshly up the line, we were more curious than anything. And we did all the things we were supposed to, keep your head down and all this kind of stuff, you know. We did all those things, but we were in those trenches for quite a long time. I don’t remember having to go over the top … only once, while we were at that particular place. But then again, it was just a matter of going over and into the next trench, which was, for you see, it was a German trench. And then we stayed in there for a while then. I know that we had a long, long time, a long, long time there in that particular area which was the Somme. We were a long, long time in there, we were quite some time in there. There were different, there were different trenches, of course. I can recall I was put on guard in a trench, which was a, what do you call the shape now, the shape, the shape of the trenches - not straight, but zigzag. I remember at one time I was put on guard in the front line. Well now, it wouldn’t be the front line, it would be the behind. I had to travel up and down those, I think, about fifty yards. I had to cover between point A to point B, until I met the other three. We were short of manpower, you see, so they had to scatter them out. And that was about the distance between two ways to the next one. And you met him and reported to him and went back and he reported to the other. And that kept up all night until your two hours routine was done and then you went back to the other trench. I was wet most of the time. As far as that’s concerned, my heavy great coat never got dry at all, all the time I was there. We slept right in the trench, anywhere in the trench. There was no protection except the trench itself. We used to go about every two weeks. They’d take us in behind the lines to get what they called deloused. And they’d come back and you put on a nice clean shirt. And you got back to the trench and when you, when you got up the next morning or in the middle of the night, all of a sudden you started. They’d come right back. As soon as they warmed up they come out again. I don’t know how they didn’t kill them, you know. Yeah, I remember that part of it.