With an Indian Field Ambulance in Flanders Last PostJ? on the Battlefield 148 THE YPRES TIMES I speak the voice of England. Hear me, France Hear, Belgium Hear me, ye. Ere sleep entrance, Who rest in soft security. Heed thine and mine, The fighting men, death-armoured, who Still man the line. For I have set a watch I do not sleep. Across the deep I call I call I call my Sons. Stars fall. Stars glow in stillness Through black night, Or Moon evokes dead day In ghostly light. Stark cold they lie and comfortless Who sleep abroad, In Earth's harsh hold, who shows no love, And knows no lord. I guard my own. The white battalions sleep Across the deep. Oh, hear Oh, hear, Oh, hear my Sons. God struck your mustered armies into stone Rigid as discipline, and orderly In ranks alone, That white austere parade fulfils Your cavalry Eternal witness challenging War's victory. A nd lest men break your peace, I vigil keep Across the deep. Sleep on Sleep on Sleep on my Sons. Beatrix Brice This article was published in The Guy's Hospital Gazette when the war was barely six months old; and it has struck me that it might be re-printed, with the veil of censorship raised, and be of interest to readers of The Ypres Times. It has not been altered in any particular, and the only additions have been names entered in italics. It is interesting to recall that we walked in the streets of Ypres in the last weeks of October, 1914, before a single stone had been displaced in that beautiful city.C. H. Reinhold, M.C., Lieut.-Colonel, I.M.S., Chief Medical Officer, Delhi. iiiTH INDIAN FIELD AMBULANCE, 3RD LAHORE DIVISION, I.E.F.A. (Continued from the October, 1930, Edition.) WE were given a few days' rest to refill our panniers and scrub down our gory stretchers, and re-opened again to receive casualties on November nth; this time in a Roman Catholic club, for we were now in a considerable town. The Division had been experiencing a pretty rough time, and our sister ambulances, which were more fortunately housed in schools, had been kept busy. The whole Division was taken out of the trenches for a rest on November 16th, and the following day we moved back into billets a few miles in rear of the fighting MervilleHere we first began to get into touch with the other Indian Division, and when next we resumed the offensive it was as an Indian Army Corps. The middle days of November are memorable for bright and frosty weather; some of the nights were intensely cold. We heard heavy and distant firing in the direction of Ypres, and learned, in due course, that it punctuated the deathless story of the 7th Division and the shattering of the Prussian Guard. On November 22nd our division began to exhibit signs of restlessness again, and on the 23rd we were

HISTORISCHE KRANTEN

The Ypres Times (1921-1936) | 1931 | | pagina 26