【英文读物】A Surgeon in Arms.docx
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1、【英文读物】A Surgeon in ArmsFOREWORDThe greater part of A Surgeon in Arms was written before the United States entered the war in April, 1917. Therefore, the Americans are not mentioned in many paragraphs in which the soldiers of the other allies are spoken of. The Canadian soldiers on the Western front
2、have won undying fame for their marvelous feats in many actions, from the first battle of Ypres in April, 1915, to Vimy Ridge in April, 1917. As soldiers they take a place second to none. And, I believe, the American soldiers will, in the lines, show the same courage, dash, and initiative, and win t
3、he same fighting reputation and honors as the Canadians; for do not Americans and Canadians inherit the same blood, literature, history, and traditions; do they not both live in the same wide spaces, speak the same mother tongue, aspire to the same ideals, and enjoy the same free institutions?CHAPTE
4、R I LIFE IN THE TRENCHESLife out there is so strange, so unique, so full of hardship and danger, and yet so intensely interesting that it seems like another world. It is a different life from any other that is to be found in our world today. In it the most extraordinary occurrences take place and ar
5、e accepted as a matter of course.I am sitting in a dugout near Fresnoy. Heavy shelling by the enemy is taking place outside, making life in the pitch-dark trenches rather precarious. A number of soldiers of different battalions on this front are going to and fro in the trenches outside. The shelling
6、 gets a bit worse, so some of them crawl down into the entrance of my dugout to take a few minutes rest in its semi-protection. They cannot see each other in the blackness, but with that spirit of camaraderie so common out there two of the men sitting next each other begin to chat. After exchanging
7、the numbers of their battalions, which happen to be both Canadian and in the same brigade, one says,But youre not a Johnny Canuck; you talk like a Englishman.That may be; I was born in England. But I am a Canadian. Ive been out there for seventeen years, the other returned a little proudly.Hindeed!
8、I was in Canada only three years. Wered you come from in old England?Faversham, Kent.Faversham! Well, Im blowed! Thats my ome! What the ells yer name?Reggie Roberts.Wy, blime me, Im your brother Bill! Affectionate greeting followed, then explanations: The elder brother had gone out to Alberta sevent
9、een years before while the younger was still at school. Correspondence had stopped, as it so often does with men. Fourteen years later the other boy went out to Ontario. When the war broke out, they both enlisted, but in different regiments, and they meet after seventeen years separation in the dark
10、 entrance to my dugout.On the front of our division, an order came through telling us that information was reaching the enemy that should not reach him. For this reason all units were ordered to keep a sharp lookout for spies since we feared that some English-speaking Germans were visiting our lines
11、.In our battalion at that time was a very good and careful officer, Lieutenant Weston. Rather strangely, one of the men of his platoon was a Corporal Easton. Shortly after the above order had come forth, Lieutenant Weston was sent out on a reconnoitering expedition by night into No Mans Land. He too
12、k as his companion, Corporal Easton. Over the parapet they crept between flares, and proceeded to crawl cautiously about among the barbed wire entanglements, shellholes, and ghosts of bygone sins and German enemies. At each flare sent up by us or the enemy, splitting the thick darkness like a flash
13、of lightning, they pushed their faces into the mud and lay perfectly still, in order to avoid becoming the target of a German sniper, or even possibly of some over-nervous Tommy. If there is any place in this war where Napoleons dictum that a soldier travels on his stomach is lived up to in a litera
14、l and superlative degree, it is in No Mans Land by night.Their reconnaissance had lasted some two hours when they started to return to what they thought was their own battalion front. But, as sometimes happens, they had lost their bearings. While they were correct as to the direction toward the Cana
15、dian lines in general, they were really crawling to the firing line of one of the brigades to our right. Suddenly Weston, who was leading, found his chest pressing against the sharp point of a bayonet. He heard a voice hissing:Who goes there?Two Canadians, he whispered in reply.All right; crawl in h
16、ere, and no funny tricks or well fill ye full o lead. At the point of the bayonet he and his corporal crawled over the parapet. They found themselves in the enlarged end of a sap that was being used as a listening post. In the darkness they could dimly see that they were surrounded by soldiers with
17、fixed bayonets.Whats yer name? hissed the voice, for out there no one is anxious to attract a hand grenade from the enemy on the other side of the line.Lieutenant Weston.An yours? to the corporal.Corporal Easton.WestonEaston; thats too damn thin. Now you fellows march ahead of us to Headquarters, an
18、 if ye so much as turn yer head well put so many holes through ye, yell look like a sieve. Quick march! And they plowed through the deep mud of the trenches till they were well back, then they came out and proceeded overland to H.Q.headquarters. Here, after a few sharp questions, a little telephonin
19、g, and some hearty laughter, they were given a runner to show them the shortest route back to their own battalion.Trench warfare as it has been carried on during this great war is different from the warfare of the past. Here we hadand have at the time of writingon the western front alone, a fighting
20、 line five hundred miles long, with millions of the soldiers of the Allies occupying trenches, dugouts, huts, tents, and billets, on one side of the line, and the millions of the enemy in the same position on the other. For months at a time there is no move in either direction.Trenches are merely lo
21、ng, irregular ditches, usually, though not always, deep enough to hide a man from the enemy. Occasionally they are so shallow that the soldier must travel on his stomach, during which time any part of his anatomy which has too prominent a curve may be exposed to the fire of the enemy. Of course this
22、 all depends on the architectural configuration of the traveler. Except trenches far in the rear, they are always zigzag, being no more than ten to twenty feet in a straight line, to prevent any shells doing too much damage. The front trench is called the firing line; the next one, fifty yards or so
23、 behind, but running parallel, is a support trench; and other support trenches exist back to about 1000 yards.Communicating trenches run from front to rear, crossing the support trenches. Here and there a communicating trench runs right back out of the danger zone, and these long trenches are at tim
24、es divided into in trenches, and out trenches. Shorter communicating trenches run from support to firing lines. These different trenches give the ground, from above, the appearance of an irregular checker board.The front wall of the trench is called the parapet, and the rear wall, the parados. Above
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