I try to keep at least one non-fiction book going at any one time, alongside a couple of fictions. In this, as in so much else, I find myself inadequately mimicking the learning habits of my late father. I have just finished Richard Holmes's Tommy: the British Soldier on the Western Front 1914-1918. I have just noticed that Dad had written a Christmas message inside the cover when he and Mum gave it to me. How he would have loved Helen's wedding last weekend.
I commend Tommy to you. It is compendious, seven-hundred plus pages, but never tedious. It is impossible to read of WW1 without wondering just how you might have responded if you had been called to arms. One-hundred-and-twenty-three of the Aston Old Edwardians who went to war would never return. To this day we play our rugby on the ground bought in their memory. My generation has been spared.Holmes quotes C.E. Montague whose war memoir was tellingly titled Disenchantment, but the power of the quoted words is not in that disaffection but rather in that agnosticism that is a necessary shield for all but the most gifted/afflicted:
But the war had to be won: that was flat. It was like putting out houses on fire, or not letting children be killed; it did not even need to be proved; that we had got to win was now the one quite certain thing left in a world of shaken certainties.
WW1- My grandfathers eldest brother fought in the trenches. Sadly I never met him, I will come back to that.
ReplyDeleteHe was many years older than my granddad “more like an uncle than a brother”.
He came back from the war a very troubled, hard man. He was more often than not brought home from the pub after he had been in another scrap. His favourite line was “I’ve shot better Germans than you!”
He then got in a spot of bother with the old bill and fled to Southampton and boarded a ship. Anyway the old bill, not to be deterred followed him and went to arrest him. At this point he jumped overboard. He wasn’t found presumed dead.
Many years later my grandfather got a letter from him. He had climbed up another ships anchor and stowed away, no idea where he was going. He ended up in Argentina made a successful life over there.
Many many years later one Sunday night we had a knock on the door at the family home. My dad said go and see who that is son. I was presented with a gentleman in a wheel chair with a carer who asked to see my grandad. I fetched dad and it turned out this was a relative of grandads brother looking to trace his relatives!
WW1 took its toll in many ways and as you can now see there is a reason as to why I never met the man. He was certainly a survivor in so many ways.