[The Great War As I Saw It by Frederick George Scott]@TWC D-Link book
The Great War As I Saw It

CHAPTER IV
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To our simple minds, it seemed that the war would soon come to an end when the Germans heard that such weapons were being turned against them.

We were informed too, that three other guns of the same make and calibre were being brought to France.

The gun was the invention of a retired admiral who lived in a farmhouse nearby and who, when it was loaded, fired it off by pressing an electric button.

The officer in charge of the gun was very pleasant and several times took me in his car to interesting places.

I went with him to Laventie on the day of the battle of Neuve Chapelle, and saw for the first time the effects of an attack and the wounded being brought back in ambulances.
There was one large barn not far off full of beautiful yellow straw which held several hundred men.


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