"Crumps": The Plain Story of a Canadian who WentHoughton Mifflin, 1917 - 155 pages |
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Page 3
... marched downtown , everybody marched in those days ; walking was abolished in its favor . One met demon- strations everywhere , large crowds of cheer- ing men with flags , victrolas at shop windows played patriotic airs , and soldiers ...
... marched downtown , everybody marched in those days ; walking was abolished in its favor . One met demon- strations everywhere , large crowds of cheer- ing men with flags , victrolas at shop windows played patriotic airs , and soldiers ...
Page 34
... marched off the ship midday and then I had to go on guard again all night . That was the first time we were allowed ashore to see the town , and I was on guard , so if I had n't slipped ashore on the two occasions mentioned , I should ...
... marched off the ship midday and then I had to go on guard again all night . That was the first time we were allowed ashore to see the town , and I was on guard , so if I had n't slipped ashore on the two occasions mentioned , I should ...
Page 73
... It makes you proud to see them marching by , dirty and wet with sweat . I watched two battalions come through ; they had marched twenty miles through the sun with new issue boots ; a few of them had fallen out , 73 Crumps.
... It makes you proud to see them marching by , dirty and wet with sweat . I watched two battalions come through ; they had marched twenty miles through the sun with new issue boots ; a few of them had fallen out , 73 Crumps.
Page 84
... marched along at a slow swing and in a mournful way sang- " Left Left — Left We - are - the tough Guys ! " ' Apparently there are no more words to this song because after a pause of a few beats they commenced again- " Left Left - Left ...
... marched along at a slow swing and in a mournful way sang- " Left Left — Left We - are - the tough Guys ! " ' Apparently there are no more words to this song because after a pause of a few beats they commenced again- " Left Left - Left ...
Page 94
... marched down to the trenches . An officer has to buy all his own equip- ment and is allowed two hundred and fifty dollars by the Government towards the cost . An officer carries a revolver , but all junior officers as soon as possible ...
... marched down to the trenches . An officer has to buy all his own equip- ment and is allowed two hundred and fifty dollars by the Government towards the cost . An officer carries a revolver , but all junior officers as soon as possible ...
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Common terms and phrases
132d Regiment aeroplane army artillery battalion battery bayonet Bedford House Belgium big shells Blighty boat Boche bomb bombardment boots British bullets camp Canada Canadian Canadian Expeditionary Force cellars chateau cruiser crumps dead deck Devonport drilling dugout emplacement enemy England English equipment feet fight fire trenches five fleet front German ground guard helmets Hooge horses hundred yards JOHNNIE CANUCK Kitchener's Army land last night lights look LOUIS KEENE machine guns Maple Leaf Forever marched miles minute Montreal morning motor cycle MOTOR MACHINE GUN o'clock officers pieces pretty rain rest rifle road sailing Salisbury Plain sandbags sentries sergeants shell holes ship shot shrapnel side sleep smashed smoke soldiers tent terrible things thousand to-day told Tommies TOMMY ATKINS town train trees trenches troops wonderful wounded yesterday Ypres
Popular passages
Page 58 - But now we have been given new black boots, magnificent things, huge, heavy "ammunition boots," and the wonderful thing is they don't let water in. They are very big and look like punts, but it's dry feet now. I can tell you I am as pleased with them as if some one had given me a present of cold cash.
Page 106 - It's all arranged for you, if there's a bit of shell or a bullet with your name on it you'll get it, so you've nothing to worry about. You are a soldier — then be one. This is the philosophy of the trenches.
Page 139 - With my forty and these you'll have to find some more." They were betting on the number they could find. I peel off my shirt myself and burn them off with a candle. I glory in the little pop they make when the heat gets to them. All the insect powder in the world has been tried out on them and they've won.
Page 113 - Everybody up here is infested with them. I have tried smearing myself with kerosene, but that does not seem to trouble them at all. Silk underwear is supposed to keep them down. I suppose their feet slip on the shiny surface.
Page 53 - Every man, on becoming a soldier, becomes a man with a number and an identification disk. My number is 45555 and my "cold meat ticket," a tag made of red fiber, is hanging round my neck on a piece of string.
Page 80 - Later in the evening from a trench we had the satisfaction of seeing another aeroplane set on fire, burn, and drop into the German lines like a shot partridge. Aeroplanes are as common as birds. Yesterday a "Pfeil" (arrow) biplane came right over our lines and was chased off by our own machines.
Page 58 - Once they become moulded to the feet they are fine. Of course they are not pretty, but they keep the wet out. We have had new tunics issued to us of the regular English pattern, much more comfortable than our other original ones, and then instead of the hard cap we now have a soft one...
Page 129 - coal boxes," and finally they were christened "crumps" on account of the sound they make, a sort of cru-ump! noise as they explode.
Page 58 - ... instead of the hard cap we now have a soft one, something like a big golf cap with the flap on to pull down over the ears. These are much more comfortable. They have one great advantage over the old kind — we can sleep in them. We can now lie down in our complete outfits even to our hats.