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                 Jack's Life
  Douglas Gresham, author of Jack's Life and stepson 
                  to C.S. Lewis
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        		|  |  BOOK EXCERPTDaring, Duty, and DespairBy Douglas GreshamBroadman & Holman Publishers
 
 CBN.com  
          Excerpt from Jack's Life, Broadman & Holman Publishers In the holidays before Jack’s last term at Malvern College, Jack 
          had come to know a near neighbor of his in Belfast, a boy about three 
          years older than himself, named Arthur Greeves. They became friends 
          because of Jack’s good nature and good manners. Arthur was sick 
          and in bed, and his mother thought that a visit from someone might cheer 
          him up. Arthur was thought to have a weak heart (though it turned out 
          later that he didn’t at all), and his mother used to spoil him 
          and put him to bed as soon as he felt even the least bit tired or out 
          of sorts. Jack, being the good-natured and well brought up boy that 
          he was, went along to Arthur’s house to visit the lad who was 
          probably not in the least ill but merely bored silly; and much to his 
          surprise, he found that he was reading a book of Jack’s beloved 
          Norse myths. At once they were launched into a deep and lively conversation, 
          and the acorn was planted of a relationship that was to grow into a 
          giant oak tree of a friendship, a friendship that was to last for the 
          rest of Jack’s life. It is interesting to look back on because the two boys were different 
          in so many ways. Jack hated the thought of being ill and loathed having 
          to stay in bed. Arthur on the other hand enjoyed being sick and would 
          take to his bed at the slightest provocation or just not get up at all 
          if he didn’t feel like it. I suppose that being the youngest of 
          five children, it might have been his way of ensuring that he got his 
          share (and more) of attention from his busy mother. Jack loved to work, 
          while the mention of the word would almost reduce Arthur to helpless 
          weakness. The two boys became fast friends. So close were they that when they 
          were a bit older, they discussed the secret things of boyhood, girls 
          and what they felt about them. Arthur was not averse to falling in love 
          with almost every girl he met and would tell Jack all about it. Jack 
          was a little less excitable, but he too had his share of longings, and 
          he told Arthur all about his relationships—some real and some 
          imaginary. With Arthur, Jack shared many of the secrets of his heart. 
          Arthur had a fine taste in literature and was already widely read. After 
          all, he spent a great deal of time in bed before radios were invented 
          to say nothing of television; he never went to any formal school and 
          more or less educated himself at home from books until he was twenty-five 
          years old when he went to an art school. Arthur began to recommend books for Jack to read, and he had such a 
          wide experience of books that he was able to give Jack some good advice 
          in this matter. Jack read everything Arthur wrote to him about, and 
          Jack in turn advised Arthur on what to read next. In this way they both 
          encouraged each other to forge ahead in reading. Soon though, Jack was 
          reading all the great classics of Europe in their original languages, 
          and he left Arthur far behind in this regard. While he was Great Bookham, Jack did not spend all his time reading 
          and studying. He also went for long walks through the wild countryside 
          of the county and again came face-to-face with the various animals that 
          haunted the woods and fields. In England in those days, hedges were 
          used more than fences to separate fields, and then, as today, each hedge 
          was like a city for wild birds and animals. All kinds of English songbirds 
          nested in them, and among their roots foxes had their earths (which 
          is what a fox’s home is called), badgers their setts, rabbits 
          their burrows, and throughout them weasels and stoats hunted and fed. 
          Surrey was also home to huge old trees, oaks, ash trees, horse chestnuts 
          (or “conker” trees) as well as sweet chestnuts and elms. 
          Squirrels leapt and played in the branches, and the world was alive 
          with sound and movement. Surrey was a beautiful place back then, but 
          over the years since, the towns have slowly spread out and grown larger 
          and larger, many of them just joining up, swallowing little villages 
          as they did so. Now it is mostly covered with houses, towns, and motorways. 
          Jack revelled in his walks, and in his reading as well. Some of the 
          authors he read were pretty advanced for someone not yet eighteen, but 
          he also read books by people like John Buchan, H. H. Rider Haggard, 
          Mark Twain, Jules Verne, and other more popular writers; he had long 
          loved the works of E. Nesbit. --- While Jack was learning and growing, the war was also growing, though 
          nobody seemed to be learning much from it. The news from the front always 
          seemed to be bad no matter which side you were on, and it always was 
          bad with more and more young men killing and being killed. It was impossible 
          for Jack to be unaware of all this, and yet at the time it seemed distant, 
          as if it were some strange dream of which he was not a part, at least, 
          not yet. Though even in Surrey, on a still night if the wind was just 
          right, he could hear the mutter and grumble of the far distant guns 
          in France. About this time and with the encouragement of Kirkpatrick, 
          Jack began to take his own writing more seriously. He began to have 
          dreams of one day becoming a great poet and worked hard to try to learn 
          as much about poetry and all forms of writing as he could. One author 
          whom he encountered, by what seemed to be complete chance, was to change 
          his whole life. One day at Great Bookham railway station, which like 
          many stations then had a bookshop where travelers could buy something 
          to read on their journeys, he found a book called Phantastes by a GeorgeMacDonald. MacDonald had been a minister in Scotland. He had died in 
          1905, but he left behind a large number of extraordinary books, and 
          Phantastes is one of the most extraordinary. It is a fantasy that mixes 
          all sorts of characters and events and keeps the reader alert and wondering 
          all the way through. Jack read it and said later that he was never the 
          same again. In the years to come, he was to read everything that MacDonald 
          had written, and most of it delighted him.
 --- Warnie had gone off to Sandhurst to become a career soldier. Now it 
          was Jack’s turn to decide what he was to do with his life. Obviously 
          he wanted to go to university (he preferred Oxford) and study literature 
          with the hope of becoming a university teacher and a great poet at the 
          best, and a schoolteacher or a linguist at worst. However, World War 
          I was by now in full swing, and Jack would be liable to be called up 
          to join the army if he stayed in England. Kirkpatrick had no doubts 
          at all about Jack’s ability to gain success at Oxford, but if 
          he returned to Ireland, he would not have to fight in the war. Jack 
          had to make up his own mind which way to go. In the end Jack decided 
          that he would stay in England and would therefore join the British army. 
          Warnie was by this time already serving as an officer in the Royal Army 
          Service Corps, and it may be that Jack decided to follow his brother’s 
          example yet again. It is also likely that Jack regarded it as his duty 
          to fight against what he saw as an evil that needed to be defeated. 
          Jack had read so much about the history of the world’s great events 
          that he had a well-developed sense of duty. By this time he was amazingly 
          well read, and his knowledge of literature was far in advance of most 
          young men his age. To enter a college at Oxford University, Jack had 
          to sit for two separate exams. The first was a scholarship exam in order to win some assistance to 
          enable him to be at a college at all because his father really couldn’t 
          afford to support him fully. In December 1916 Jack sat for a scholarship 
          exam in classics, which is the study of ancient history and languages 
          like Latin and Greek. Jack was dismayed by the exam as it was a particularly 
          difficult one, and he was convinced that he had failed. Although his 
          first choice, New College, passed him over, University College awarded 
          him its second of three open scholarships. The second was an exam to gain entrance to Oxford University called 
          Responsions. Responsions was just a simple exam to ensure that the student 
          was capable of the sort of study that every undergraduate must perform, 
          and most students of a scholarship level would not have had to study 
          for it. For Jack though, this was not the case at all because he knew 
          almost nothing about science and was not interested in it, and his ability 
          in maths was almost a negative quantity. So after he did the scholarship 
          exam, it was back to Kirkpatrick to study for Responsions. He also studied 
          Italian at this time, when really, he should have concentrated more 
          on science and math. His idea was that if he failed to achieve a career 
          at Oxford, he might enter the government service in the Foreign Office, 
          and speaking several languages would be an advantage. At this point 
          in Jack’s life, it seems that God took a visible hand in his progress. 
          Jack sat for Responsions, and he failed the exam. He failed it because 
          he could not pass the math part of it. He was allowed to sit for it 
          again, but he failed it for the second time. Despite this double failure, 
          for some unknown reason the people in charge still invited him to join 
          University College Oxford, though if he wanted to remain there, he would 
          have to pass the Responsions exam at some stage; and so his career as 
          a scholar began almost unofficially. It is hard to imagine anything 
          good coming from something as horrible as a war, but as we shall see, 
          God had his own plans for C. S. Lewis. --- And so to Oxford, the City of Dreaming Spires, a wonderful place for 
          a romantic who wanted above all things to immerse himself in classical 
          studies. Oxford in 1917 was a quiet and almost painfully lovely place. 
          There was almost no traffic in the city streets, and the quiet so beloved 
          by those who are dedicated to study seemed to flow in and around the 
          buildings and the halls of its ancient colleges and fill the soul with 
          peace. Horses and carriages were still the most common means of transport, 
          as cars were still for the rich and thus were few and far between though 
          lorries and delivery vans had begun to appear here and there. Students 
          scurried to and fro wearing their academic gowns, and almost the whole 
          city was given over to study and learning. April, the month in which 
          Jack went up to Oxford, is a lovely month in England, as it is the month 
          that begins to hint at the first promise of spring. As spring dances on, the trees which abound in Oxford burst into bud, 
          blossoms are soon to be seen everywhere, and spring flowers splash the 
          walks, parks, and gardens with color. Daffodils, tulips, narcissus begin 
          to give back the brightness of the watery early sun and early dandelions, 
          daisies, and buttercups just start to show their delight at the warming 
          of the year, preparing for the riot of color they are soon to enjoy. 
          Greeted with the sights sounds and smells of Oxford in the springtime 
          promise of a new summer, Jack fell completely in love with the place. 
          If you go to Oxford today, you will find it choked with cars and buses 
          and trucks. Often (as my son James once remarked) the air is too thick 
          to breathe and too thin to plough. Heavy industry invaded the area of 
          Cowley with car factories and such, and the huge numbers of people who 
          came to work there so swelled the population that the place has never 
          recovered. There is a constant roar of engines and wheels all day long, 
          and it is nothing like the gracious, quiet, and lovely place that it 
          once was. But even so, when you have finally managed to put out of your 
          mind the modern-day desecration of the city, it is still a beautiful 
          place. To Jack in 1917 it was heavenly. ---  Jack was to enter University College, usually called “Univ,” 
          on April 26 for the beginning of the summer term and would start a career 
          that would see him in Oxford for the next thirty-nine years barring 
          a short time when he was a soldier in the army. Jack now entered a new world. His rooms at Univ. were reasonably large 
          and comfortable. He had a servant, employed by the college and known 
          as a “scout” to look after his housekeeping; and his meals 
          were provided. Dinner was served in a small hall or lecture room as 
          there were not many students at the college. Most of those who should 
          have been there were off fighting in the war. Other meals were brought 
          to him by the scout. Univ. was at that time more like a military base 
          than a college, as a large part of it was being used as a hospital for 
          wounded soldiers. Jack did not start formal studies, though, because 
          he was soon to be enlisted in the Officer’s Training Corps at 
          the college and would have no time for classical study. The seriousness 
          of the situation that England was in at this time of World War I can 
          be seen in the fact that there were just twelve undergraduates at Univ. 
          and of those only three, including Jack, were freshmen. Almost an entire 
          generation of young men was killed in that terrible conflict. Jack found the O.T.C. training to be physically demanding and not at 
          all what he was used to or liked, but despite that he enjoyed himself 
          immensely. Jack loved the rivers of Oxford and the trees and fields 
          that still surrounded the town in those days. He revelled in swimming 
          and walking whenever his training duties allowed him time off. He was 
          also just beginning to discover the wonderful libraries that Oxford 
          provides. Like most students with the whole world of wisdom still to 
          discover, Jack loved to sit for late hours of the night and talk about 
          all sorts of things, and he joined a variety of clubs and societies. 
          Soon though, he was moved from the comfort of Univ. to a more military 
          environment temporarily established at another college called Keble. 
          Here he met the man who was to be his roommate, a likable young man 
          called Edward (Paddy) Francis Courtenay Moore, who, like Jack, was from 
          Ireland. The two young men were soon fast friends. He and Paddy had a tiny room more like a cell than anything else and 
          furnished with two iron beds and little else. They had no sheets and 
          no pillows but slept in their pajamas under woolen blankets. This was 
          the first time in his life since Wynyard School that Jack had to rough 
          it, but with his Wynyard experiences behind him, this was not really 
          much hardship for him. Paddy’s mother had come to Oxford to be near her son and to see 
          him as much as possible before he was sent to France to the trenches. 
          She knew all too well that the chances of him ever coming back were 
          slim indeed. Thus there entered into Jack’s life a person with 
          whom he was to be associated for more than thirty years. As we have 
          seen, Jack had long ago lost his mother and had ever since been bounced 
          around from place to place, some horrible, some better, but none except 
          Great Bookham ever homelike. He was only eighteen years old, his father 
          was immovable from his Belfast security, and Jack must have been feeling 
          desperately alone and homesick. In any case he was pleased to be invited 
          by Paddy to join in with his family on occasional outings. Paddy’s 
          mother, Mrs. Janie Moore, was about the same age Jack’s mother 
          would have been had she lived and was separated from her husband. Paddy 
          also had a sister Maureen who was about eleven at that time. Jack delighted 
          in the easy and cheerful family atmosphere that he encountered in the 
          company of these three expatriate Irish folk. --- Frequently Jack and Paddy were sent out on exercises and traveled here 
          and there, sometimes billeted in homes and sometimes sleeping out beneath 
          the stars. This was supposed to toughen them up for life in the trenches, 
          but it was complete silliness, for nothing could prepare anyone for 
          the horror and filth of trench warfare. Soon enough Jack was commissioned 
          as an officer, a second lieutenant in the Somerset Light Infantry, and 
          was given a month’s leave before being called to active service. 
          During this leave Jack and Paddy made a pact between them that should 
          one or the other of them die in battle, the survivor (if there was one) 
          would care for the dependants and family of the one who had died. If 
          Jack had died, Paddy would have been committed to looking after Jack’s 
          dependent family members who at that time were nonexistent though it 
          might have meant taking care of Albert or Warnie should the need arise. 
          If Paddy were to fall, Jack would be duty bound to take care of both 
          Janie and Maureen. This was an agreement that Jack was to take seriously, 
          in keeping with both his romantic nature and his sense of honor. To this day no one really knows what was going on in Jack’s head 
          concerning the relationship he had developed with Janie Moore. Some 
          people like to believe that he had a love affair with her; others, that 
          he simply allowed her to take the place of a mother in his affections. 
          He must have longed so much for a mother at that time, for he was all 
          too well aware that he was poised, about to plunge into the midst of 
          darkness, death, and destruction, unlikely ever to return. The truth 
          is that nobody knows and probably nobody ever will. Certainly, he loved 
          her as well as the family atmosphere that he had grown accustomed to 
          with Paddy’s family and that he had missed so cruelly ever since 
          he was ten years old. Also, when his leave began, he was ill with flu or something of that 
          nature. So instead of going straight home to Ireland and his father’s 
          house, he spent the first two weeks of his leave with the Moore family 
          at their home in Bristol, where Mrs. Moore nursed him back to health, 
          and only then went on to Ireland and Little Lea. In his place most young 
          men might well make the same decision, but it was the cause of deep 
          distress to Albert Lewis who could not understand why Jack would want 
          to be anywhere rather than at home with him. Albert had tried desperately 
          hard to fill the gap left in his sons’ lives by the death of their 
          mother and had—as almost all fathers must in these circumstances—failed 
          miserably. His attempts to be a friend and companion to his sons had 
          actually driven them away from him. Albert was unaware of what his efforts 
          had cost him and was hurt by what he probably saw as Jack’s betrayal. 
          The two were never close but any hope of achieving closeness with his 
          sons died in Albert when he realized that Jack had wanted to spend time 
          with Paddy’s family instead of with him. It was foolish really, 
          for all fathers have to learn that their children move on, leave them 
          behind, and cease to be merely a part of their parents. Jack at eighteen 
          was perhaps a little early in this, but that itself was mostly Albert’s 
          own doing by projecting him out into the world by himself when he was 
          but nine years old. Now, ten years later, reaping what he himself had 
          sowed, Albert was puzzled and upset. Jack naturally enough was not prepared 
          to discuss the matter. ---  When he came back from his month’s leave, Jack was sent to a 
          camp near the coastal town of Plymouth where he was to take charge of 
          a party of men who were under training. He had virtually nothing to 
          do all day. Once he had handed his men over to an instructor, he had 
          no further duties until he took command of them again when they had 
          finished their day’s training and then simply led them back to 
          the barracks. A little over a month later, he received orders to report to Southampton 
          to catch a ship to France and the fighting. In those days as today, 
          soldiers about to be sent into battle were given a few days or in this 
          case a mere forty-eight hours of leave in which to say their good-byes 
          and tidy up any loose ends of their lives. Jack went to Bristol and 
          Mrs. Moore’s house, having first invited his father to come and 
          visit him there and see him before he left for France. His telegram 
          to Albert read in part “Report Southampton Saturday. Can you come 
          Bristol? If so meet at station. Reply Mrs. Moore’s house.” 
          Albert, who must have been dreading just such a telegram, would not, 
          could not, or simply was unwilling to allow himself to understand that 
          Jack was telling him to come at once to Bristol for what was likely 
          the last chance to see his son alive. He sent back a message that said 
          he didn’t understand Jack’s telegram. I for one do not believe 
          that, and had Albert made the effort to rush to Bristol, it is conceivable 
          the entire history of Jack’s life might have been changed. Jack 
          was as hurt by his failure to do so as Albert had been by Jack’s 
          spending two weeks of his previous leave with the Moores, and the rift 
          between them that these two events caused was to last for a long time 
          and in fact was never properly healed. The First World War was different from any other war before or since. 
          Throughout the history of man’s fighting himself, soldiers have 
          always journeyed to the battlefield, fought, killed, and died, and then 
          journeyed away again, either to fight again somewhere else or to go 
          home; but World War I was different, horrifyingly different. In this 
          war men journeyed to the battlefield and fought, killed, died, and then 
          stayed. They stayed in the filth, the destruction, the fire and the 
          blood of the battle; there they lived for days, weeks, months, and even 
          years. Their homes were holes dug into the mire of earth so churned 
          by shelling and bombing for month after month that it was a rancid mess 
          of mixed mud and blood. The very earth of their world was putrid and 
          rotting. This was the most disgusting and ghastly war of all man’s 
          ferocities. In its blood-soaked madness, ten million young men died. ---  So Jack was sent off to war after only four weeks of training. To 
          the hell of fire, explosions, waist-deep blood-soaked mud, constant 
          shelling, and mortar bomb attacks. To louse-infested clothes and rat-infested 
          shelters, which were dug out of the walls of trenches in fields so blasted 
          by high explosives that nothing living remained in the churned-up raw 
          soil. There were no trees on the battlefield, no plants, just disease, 
          fire, smoke, mud, blood, the dead, and those creatures that feed upon 
          them. He arrived at the front line and took up his duties in the trenches 
          on his nineteenth birthday, November 29, 1917. He had been in France 
          only twelve days. It is hard to understand today just how this could 
          happen: boys, straight out of school, trained for four weeks, and then 
          thrown into the terrible tortuous mess of war, but we have to remember 
          that the mismanagement of this war was such that England and Germany 
          were both simply running out of men. So many had been killed so quickly 
          that there just weren’t enough young men left to replace them, 
          so boys were given the minimum of training and sent off to kill and 
          to die. Surprisingly (and he was as surprised as anyone was), Jack was 
          a brave soldier and a good officer. Jack had no illusions about his 
          own knowledge of warfare or about his training, and he soon learned 
          that his sergeant, a Sgt. Ayers, knew far more than he ever wanted to 
          learn. This wise man told Jack things like, “The most dangerous 
          thing in the army is a lieutenant with a map,” and it was he who 
          taught Jack what he needed to know to be a reasonably good officer for 
          the five months of combat that he was to survive. It was also this man 
          whose death saved Jack’s life. Jack fought through months of experiences that he talked about only 
          rarely, and he learned some things he would rather not have known, and 
          others, which left with him a glow that lasted all his life. One of 
          these latter was the fact that no matter what background they came from, 
          there was a kind of loving friendship and comradeship that the shocking 
          and desperate conditions of their lives bred in the men who were compelled 
          to live and die together in this stinking squalor. Jack learned to live 
          in mud, to shave with arazor dipped in a cup of tea shared by half a dozen officers. He learned 
          to eat whatever food was put before him often within both the sight 
          and smell of dead men, both friend and foe. He learned how to tell the 
          nationality of a dead soldier by the smell of the body as it began to 
          rot. He learned to hurl bombs and bullets at men no older than himself 
          and against whom he held no grudge. He learned to relinquish his humanity 
          and to become a beast of prey.
 And all the while, he was writing and reading. It is perhaps surprising, 
          but books were available in the trenches, precious books brought out 
          by officers and men and passed from hand to hand and read again and 
          again until they fell completely to pieces, and a piece of rubber or 
          string was then used to hold the pages together until the mud, blood, 
          and fire finally destroyed them. They were for the most part novels, 
          and stories, and also some of the great poets. The soldiers read anything 
          that could and would take their minds far away from the war. The books 
          were read in a sort of desperation to while away the incredibly long 
          and dreary hours of inactivity between the frenzied bouts of savage 
          fighting. In the trenches Jack worked on a series of poems finally titled 
          Spirits in Bondage, which became his first published book, appearing 
          in 1918 under the name “Clive Hamilton,” and also a work 
          of poetry called Dymer, which came out in 1926 under his own name. This 
          was the beginning of his habit of writing wherever he was and no matter 
          what the circumstances of his life. In a sense it was his way of escaping 
          anything unpleasant that was happening to him. In this way the war, 
          which finished so much for so many people, also began many things in 
          Jack’s life and a career that may well have needed the kick-start 
          that only this experience could have provided. When I began, as ignorant young men will, to speak of war and warriors 
          with words of admiration and began to show that I had some idea that 
          there was something glorious about it all, Jack told me about a lot 
          of his experiences in World War I. Many of the things that happened 
          to him, and to thousands of others, were absolutely horrible, like the 
          times when he and his men would advance across the land between the 
          trenches of the two armies, “no-man’s-land” as they 
          called it; and on the way, some of the men would become bogged down 
          in waist-deep mud. Jack and the platoon couldn’t stop to pull 
          them out but had to keep on advancing according to their orders, so 
          they left the men where they were, and then after the attack was over 
          and they were returning to their own trenches, they would often find 
          these men again, physically unharmed but completely mindless, as if 
          the horrors of spending a day trapped in the vile stinking morass and 
          seeing the battle go on all around them while they were unable even 
          to move simply snapped their minds and reduced them to nothingness. Others things were amusing. Like the time that he and his platoon were 
          approaching the shell-destroyed remains of a French farmhouse. Something 
          made Jack suspicious of it, so he discussed it with his sergeant, and 
          they decided that the sergeant would take a skirmishing party of men 
          with fixed bayonets around to the back of the house and charge into 
          it, while Jack and the rest of the platoon remained under cover at the 
          front. Jack heard his men go roaring into the house and stood up to 
          see what was happening. As soon as he did, about thirty young German 
          soldiers came running out of the front of the house throwing their rifles 
          away and holding their hands high above their heads. More followed a 
          moment or so later. Jack felt so sorry for these young men who were 
          obviously completely terrified that without really thinking, he walked 
          up to the officers who were leading them and tried to talk to them. 
          It later turned out that these men had heard a rumor that the British 
          were shooting all prisoners. Jack was so excited and tense that he forgot 
          all of his German, and all of any foreign language that he knew except 
          French, and when he addressed them in French, they promptly fell to 
          their knees and began to beg for mercy. It seems that the French actually 
          were shooting prisoners. Jack finally managed to calm them down, and 
          they were getting to their feet to march off as prisoners of war when 
          the sergeant approached Jack and suggested that it might have looked 
          better had he at least drawn his pistol. Jack said that for some reason 
          it had never even crossed his mind. He also learned that there are no 
          atheists in the trenches. When the shells start to fall and explode 
          among them, everybody starts to pray. I learned from Jack and Warnie 
          that no matter what people or newspapers or politicians try to tell 
          you, there is no glory in war. Jack was soon to be hospitalized with trench fever, a severe flu-like 
          illness transmitted by lice, but was returned to the front as soon as 
          he recovered. On April 15, 1918, Jack was ordered to advance his troops 
          behind a barrage of British shells fired by big guns from far behind 
          the lines. The shells were supposed to advance before them and fall 
          and explode ahead of them as they went, the idea being to clear the 
          area into which they advanced of enemy troops. That was the plan, but 
          typical of the mismanagement of that war, something went wrong. Soon 
          the howling shells hurtled overhead to rain down with deafening explosions. 
          Jack ordered his men over the top of the trench parapet and led them 
          straight toward the enemy as the barrage of high explosives riddled 
          with shrapnel landed ahead of them, blasting the German trenches and 
          soldiers. Then suddenly, as they advanced with bayonets at the ready, 
          the barrage stopped advancing and began to come back toward them. Soon 
          Jack and his men were being bombarded by their own artillery from far 
          behind them, and to his helpless fury Jack watched his men being blown 
          to pieces in the constant roar of their own artillery support. Suddenly 
          Jack saw a blinding light, everything went completely silent, and then 
          the ground came up slowly and hit him in the face. Jack had been hit 
          by both the concussion and shrapnel from a British shell. His trusted 
          sergeant had been between Jack and the shell when it exploded and was 
          blown to bits. Apart from his own efforts to escape, Jack remembered 
          nothing more of the battle. Order your copy of 
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