History Revealed

A DISMAL EXISTENCE

YOUR ESSENTIAL GUIDE TO LIFE IN THE TRENCHES DAILY LIFE

“Nearer and nearer creeps this terrible inferno which only ends in death. May it come quick and mercifully.” So wrote Sergeant Horace Reginald Stanley in his diary while serving at Ypres in 1915. “Some poor wretch has the side of his skull blown away and it is obvious nothing can be done for him. Oh the horror of it all.”

Sergeant Stanley's testimony remains a shocking, uncomfortable read – even from the distance of 108 years. Yet there was nothing particularly extraordinary about it. For countless soldiers – eating, sleeping, fighting and often dying at the edge of no-man's land – such horrors would have been all-too familiar. Trench warfare is surely the defining characteristic of World War I. As anyone who's watched or   will attest, when we think of the 1914-18 conflict, our minds invariably

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from History Revealed

History Revealed1 min read
Did You Know?
Florence Nightingale was so attached to her pet owl that she carried it around in her apron pocket. The bird, rescued in Athens, grew fiercely loyal, and was named ‘Athena’. They were separated when she left for the Crimean War. On 11 December 1937,
History Revealed8 min read
Ancient World
Boudica, the celebrated queen of the Iceni tribe who lived in what is now Norfolk, spearheaded a revolt against Britain’s Roman occupiers around AD 60. Her initial campaigns were successful, resulting in the devastation of London, Colchester and St A
History Revealed1 min read
Did You Know? Demanding
The Tudor royal kitchen had a huge job feeding the court. In just one year during the reign of Elizabeth I, the extensive shopping list included 8,200 sheep, 1,870 pigs, 1,240 oxen, 53 wild boar and 2,300 deer. The so-called Grand Remonstrance, a lis

Related Books & Audiobooks