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

CHAPTER VI
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In a battle there is always the mixture of the serious and the comic.

One Turco, more gallant than his fellows, refused to leave the line and joined the 16th Battalion.

He fought so well that they decided to reward him by turning him into a Highlander.

He consented to don the kilt, but would not give up his trousers as they concealed his black legs.
The Second Battle of Ypres was the making of what grew to be the Canadian Corps.

Up to that time, Canadians were looked upon, and looked upon themselves, merely as troops that might be expected to hold the line and do useful spade work, but from then onward the men felt they could rise to any emergency, and the army knew they could be depended upon.


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