Dear FatherI have moved again since I last wrote. My platoon has been restationed to Belgium. I received your last letter on the 31st of July and I am writing this on the 3rd of August 1917. I read your letter while being transported towards Passchendaele, near third battle of Ypres in Belgium. I am now writing this letter in a makeshift foxhole with a poncho blanket me so the rain does not spoil the composition. Writing paper is hard to come by these days, and in the mud and never ending rain the paper is often wrecked. When we arrived to reinforce the associate troops already stationed here they were under heavy triggerman fire and had not yet finished their trenches. Artillery is the to the highest degree terrible thing. You hear a distant crack of a cannon tinder and then a few moments afterwards the shell hits. There is almost no warning and in that location is no way to tell where the shell will hit. As soon as you hear the sound of the cannon firing everybody scrambles to get back into the trench, or into some sort of cover, come out of the closet of the way of the white hot pieces of metal flying in all directions.
Yesterday I was base on balls back to the supply depot, which involved walking over a line of duckboards natural covering the mud.
After the endless artillery and rain the entire theater is one entire quagmire of mud and walking through it is especially dangerous as the craters from artillery are fill with mud and cannot be distinguished from the ordinary land. Anyway, I was walking back from the supply depot with over 40 kilograms of supplies when my garter Jack slipped over the duckboard and into the mud. Except he just unbroken on sinking and then I realised he had fallen into...
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