âblurred by dustâ¦' quoted in Bean, Vol. III, page 417
âin the air at a time', quoted in Bean, Vol. III, page 420
âwounded could be seen â¦' quoted in Bean, Vol. III, page 437
âperhaps for the last timeâ¦' quoted in Gammage, page 160
âDon't forget me, cobber', quoted in Bean, Vol. III, page 441
âStretcher-bearer!â¦' quoted in H. Williams, page 65
âin arm and legâ¦' quoted in Gammage, page 160
âwere not sufficiently trainedâ¦' quoted in Bean, Vol. III, page 444
âYesterday evening, south ofâ¦' quoted in Bean, Vol. III, page 446
âWe thought we knew somethingâ¦' quoted in Gammage, page 161
Chapter 3
âNocturne' (extract), quoted in
New Zealand at the front, 1918.
Written and illustrated by men of the New Zealand Division. Cassell & Co., 1918, page 52
âI want you to go into the lineâ¦' quoted in Bean,
Anzac to Amiens
, page 293
âhasty or ill-considered', quoted in Bean, Vol. III, page 468
âThe tension affected the menâ¦' quoted in Gammage, page 162
âHell's trenchesâ¦' quoted in Bean, Vol. III, page 522
âurgent and secret', quoted in Bean, Vol. III, page 537
âHeavy firing all morningâ¦' quoted in Gammage, page 165
â
Gottmituns
', quoted in Bean, Vol. III, page 599
âdug out and buried again', quoted in Bean, Vol. III, page 618
âmost scientific and most militaryâ¦' quoted in Bean, Vol. III, page 643
âthe strain had sent two otherâ¦' quoted in Bean, Vol. III, page 658
âI have had muchâ¦' quoted in Bean, Vol. III, pages 660â1
âHuns and Aussies wereâ¦' quoted in Bean, Vol. III, page 720
âWhen you see this I'll be deadâ¦' quoted in Bean, Vol. III, page 797
âAll we are doing is using upâ¦' quoted in Bean, Vol. III, page 876
âbook on the life of an infantrymanâ¦' quoted in Bean, Vol. III, page 872
âNothing published in the papers is worthâ¦' quoted in Bean, Vol. III, page 872
âthrough the incompetence, callousnessâ¦' quoted in Bean, Vol. III, page 872
âmarks a ridge more denselyâ¦' quoted in Bean,
Anzac to Amiens
, page 264
Chapter 4
âIn Memoriam' (extract), quoted in MacKenzie, Vol.II, page 67
âThe sights to be seen are terribleâ¦' quoted in MacDonald, page 149
âThe face was turned awayâ¦' quoted in MacDonald, page 152
âFinnigan', quoted in MacDonald, page 235
âHell on the Somme', quoted in Stewart, page 101
âsandbag kilt', quoted in Pugsley, page 122
âsimply Hell on earth', quoted in Harper, page 68
ânot war, it's absolute murder', quoted in Harper, page 66
âmass of confused memoriesâ¦' quoted in Boyack, page 74
âMy God, you are goingâ¦' quoted in H. Williams, page 86
âchurned to the consistencyâ¦' quoted in Mitchell, page 14
âmuddy rabbits', âhowled out of foggy spaceâ¦' quoted in Mitchell, page 27
âI'm not going inâI'm finished', quoted in Bean, Vol. III, page 941
âreeked so strongly of gasoline', quoted in Bean, Vol. III, page 919
âthe longer a man servedâ¦' quoted in Mitchell, page 168
âsome day there will be warmthâ¦' quoted in Mitchell, page 51
âhappy, hopeful, young faces', quoted in Wilson, page 60
âspirit of the bayonet', quoted in E. P. Williams, page 206
âbully beef stew, layered with iceâ¦' quoted in Marriot, page 33
Chapter 5
âSing me to sleep', courtesy of Les Cleveland
âOnce more from the same old placeâ¦' quoted in Boyack, page 64
âvery quiet, the only thing we heardâ¦' quoted in E. P. Williams, page 212
ânight crept slowly byâ¦', âThat shut the cow up', quoted in Mitchell, page 252
âThose damn flares constantly risingâ¦' quoted in Wilson, page 80
âsome snatches of indistinctâ¦' quoted in Malthus, page 66
âVery short of tucker yesterdayâ¦' quoted in Gammage, page 174
âlike rabbits in holesâ¦' quoted in Phillips, Boyack & Malone, page 239
âThey are tireless brutesâ¦', âsatisfaction from the popping soundâ¦' quoted in Wilson, page 89
âbest of timesâ¦' quoted in Gammage, page 152
âThe yells were really pitifulâ¦' quoted in Boyack, page 106
âexample to the rest', quoted in Pugsley, page 121
âI want to see them shoot', quoted in Pugsley, page 108
ânot a born soldierâ¦' quoted in Pugsley, page 153
âshould have been sent inâ¦' quoted in MacDonald, page 237
âto shoot a boyâ¦' quoted in Pugsley, page 211
âsomething in trench-holding that isâ¦' quoted in Mitchell, page 253
âsit crouched day and night in a wetâ¦' quoted in Pugsley, page 236
âreally brave man is he whoâ¦' quoted in Pugsley, page 272
âbeen completely destroyed', quoted in Pugsley, page 262
âA chap said to me today as we marchedâ¦' quoted in Wilson, page 79
âIt's a blighty, a good blightyâ¦' quoted in Malthus, page 120
âNo one who had actually goneâ¦' quoted in Gammage, page 214
âvastly pleased with himselfâ¦' quoted in Mitchell, page 168
âa glorious feeling', quoted in Burton, page 229
âThough fairly old, she was still quiteâ¦', âA simply ripping day, quiteâ¦' quoted in Wilson, page 162
âa pitiful sight to see women and childrenâ¦' quoted in King, page 144
âmost of the bus and tram driversâ¦' quoted in Pugsley, page 153
âamong the old familiar facesâ¦' quoted in Gammage, page 213
Chapter 6
âGLASSINGTONâDied of woundsâ¦' posted in
Sydney Morning Herald
, 5 April 1919
âThe Last Post is being playedâ¦' quoted on
www.anzacday.org.au/history/ww1/anecdotes/casualty.html
/
âas long as men are available', quoted in Stewart, page 59
âWhat use am I if I am brokenâ¦' quoted in Baxter, page 123
âWill you send another woman'sâ¦' quoted in Scott, page 43
Don't leave the boysâ¦' quoted on
http://billyhughes.moadoph.gov.au
/ conscription
âmurder (or near enough to it)â¦' quoted on
http://www.samemory.sa.gov.ausite/page.cfm?u=1022
/
âVote No, Mum, they'llâ¦' quoted on
www.awm.gov.au
(ID number: RC00336)
Chapter 7
âNITCHIEâIn loving memoryâ¦' posted in
Geelong Advertiser
, 19 July 1920
âviolence, brutality and rapidity', quoted in Holt, page 84
âgrape-like bunches of coloured lights', quoted in Mitchell, page 89
âlike a crowd from a football match', quoted in Bean, Vol. IV, page 282
âof what use would I be tonight', quoted in Bean, Vol. IV, page 290
âseemed to swarm with fireflies', quoted in Bean, Vol. IV, page 295
âkeep the position till the cowsâ¦' quoted in Bean, Vol. IV, page 317
âonly describe it as Hellâ¦' quoted in Gammge, page 183
âfight it out like Australians', quoted in Bean, Vol. IV, page 333
ârun the gauntlet back throughâ¦' quoted in Bean, Vol. IV, page 334
âYou are not going to leave us?', quoted in Mitchell, page 97
âFinish hospital', quoted in Bean, Vol. IV, page 341
âBloody April', quoted in Holt, page 85
âWhat time is zero?', quoted in Bean, Vol. IV, page 429
âPull outâretireâget back for your lives', quoted in Bean, Vol. IV, page 435
âthe old familiar “pop⦔', âevery man for himselfâ¦' quoted on
www.awm.govau/atwar/ww1_flying.asp
.
âStick it out, ladâ¦' quoted in Bean, Vol. IV, page 484
Chapter 8
âA trench, a stenchâ¦' quoted in MacKenzie, Vol. I, page 63
âmen killed alongside youâ¦' quoted in Harper,
Letters from the Battlefield
, page 99
âIt's our turnâ¦', âpoor, frightened devils', quoted in Harper,
Letters from the
Battlefield
, page 100
âAlright Sir, if it is to be takenâ¦' quoted in Bean, Vol. IV, page 673
âSomehow we get wrong ideasâ¦' quoted in Harper,
Letters from the Battlefield
, page 101
âmake our names stand outâ¦' quoted in Gammage, page 116
âa queer thrill shot through meâ¦' quoted in Gammage, page 256
âfelt little emotion, just intenseâ¦' quoted in Wilson, page 198
âfor another smack at theâ¦' quoted in Gammage, page 257
âbut one does not think tillâ¦' quoted in Gammage, page 224
âI don't think old Fritzâ¦' quoted in Boyack, page 92
âThey are dead, and for theirâ¦' quoted in Wilson, page 118
âin a rain of flowersâ¦', âin an age of securityâ¦' quoted in Jünger, page 5
âNo one can helpâ¦' quoted in Jünger, page 92
âa series of low long-drawn-outâ¦' quoted in Jünger, page 98
âpoor old Jim was laying thereâ¦' quoted in Boyack & Tolerton, page 39
âthe sour smell of new deathâ¦' quoted in Mitchell, page 143
âYou've got a decorationâ¦' quoted in Mitchell, page 147
âoccasional cry of “Stretcher-bearers!”â¦' quoted in Wilson, page 78
âI'm hitâ¦' quoted in Mitchell, pages 157â8
Chapter 9
âThoughts', quoted in MacKenzie, Vol. IV, page 203
âlike a Gippsland bushfire', quoted in Bean, Vol. IV, page 813
âOld Fritz's morale vanishesâ¦' quoted in Wilson, page 124
âIt's great sport, driving themâ¦' quoted in Wilson, page 122
âevery square yard of itâ¦' quoted in Harper,
Dark Journey
, page 40
âWe are given a damn lotâ¦' quoted in Wilson, page 126
âOf course don't forgetâ¦' quoted in Boyack & Tolerton, page 32
âWe always believed we wereâ¦' quoted in Adam-Smith, page 311
âpipe up like the Aussies', quoted in Tolerton, page 140
âstern, dour and grim', quoted in Stewart, page 616
âcrump, crump', quoted in Bean,
Anzac to Amiens
, page 370
âDear M, D and Gâ¦' quoted in Phillips, Boyack & Malone, page 127
âa pig's life, humans wereâ¦' quoted in Ingram, page 55
âthat there should be no postponementâ¦' quoted in Bean, Vol. IV, page 884
âas dry as a bone', quoted in Bean, Vol. IV, page 884
âThe official attitude is thatâ¦' quoted in Bean, Vol. IV, page 884
âflesh and bloodâ¦' quoted in Bean, Vol. IV, page 908
âStretcher bearerâ¦' quoted in Phillips, Boyack & Malone, page 148
âone pillbox to find it justâ¦' quoted in Bean, Vol. IV, page 906
âI have seen some prettyâ¦' quoted in Phillips, Boyack & Malone, page 148
âa pretty dumb beastâ¦' quoted in Boyack & Tolerton, page 32
âI do not feel as confidentâ¦' quoted in Stewart, page 292
âMost gratifyinglyâ¦' quoted in Bean, Vol. IV, page 928
âwhat am I to do?', quoted in Bean, Vol. IV, page 918
âthe stunt should never haveâ¦' quoted in Harper,
Dark Journey
, page 87
âthe bloody headsâ¦' quoted in Harper,
Letters from the Battlefield
, page 114
âcold driving rain and hail', quoted in Stewart, page 293
âthe agony was awfulâ¦' quoted in Harper,
Letters from the Battlefield
, page 120
âwe couldn't find himâ¦' quoted on
http://www.nzhistory.net.nz/media/sound
/ sidney-stanfield-remembers-passchendaele
âflew incredible distances', quoted in Jünger, page 319
Chapter 10
âBIRDâIn loving memoryâ¦' posted in
Sydney Morning Herald
, 1 September 1919
âGet out of the roadâ¦' quoted in Gammage, page 209
âget killed', quoted in Harper,
Dark Journey
, page 206
âIt was the only time I usedâ¦' quoted in Harper,
Dark Journey
, page 224
âsent another lot and he gotâ¦' quoted in Harper,
Dark Journey
, page 240
âWho are you?', quoted in Bean, Vol. V, page 172
âhold on at all costs', quoted in Bean, Vol. V, page 321
âGoodbye, boys, it's neck or nothing', quoted in Bean, Vol. V, page 340
âAustralians', quoted in Bean, Vol. V, page 397
âHere lies a brave Englishâ¦' quoted in Bean, Vol. V, page 418
âEvery position must be heldâ¦' quoted in Bean, Vol. V, page 437
âlike firing at a whole haystackâ¦' quoted in Bean, Vol. V, page 467
âfor two days companies of infantryâ¦' quoted in Bean, Vol. V, page 540
âIf it was God-Almightyâ¦' quoted in Bean, Vol. V, page 575
âKill every bloody Germanâ¦' quoted in Bean, Vol. V, page 580
âNew waves always come onâ¦' quoted in Bean, Vol. V, page 590
âIt's Anzac Dayâ¦' quoted in Downing, page 117
âThere they goâ¦' quoted in Downing, page 119
âWar hardened as I wasâ¦' quoted in Mitchell, page 211
âuntrained rabble', quoted in Mitchell, page 216
âwith a voice like a bull', quoted in Bean, Vol. V, page 650
âSurrender beââ¦' quoted in Bean, Vol. V, page 653
Chapter 11
âLINFORDâIn sad and loving memoryâ¦' posted in
The Argus
, 6 October 1919
âWe have the Australians oppositeâ¦' quoted in Bean, Vol. VI, page 59
âThey lay opposite us, exceptionallyâ¦' quoted in Bean, Vol. VI, page 60
âgood assault divisionâ¦' quoted in Stewart, page 618