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Updated: May 9, 2025


But 'Enery's own captain arrived here and interrupted the flow of admiration, cursing the grinning and sheepish private for a this, that, and the other crazy, play-acting idiot, and winding up abruptly by shaking hands with him and saying gruffly, "Good work, though. B Company's proud of you, and so'm I."

With the whistling balls all round him he stands, so brave, so noble, so fine, stands so! 'Vive la France! he cried aloud, with a tongue of trumpets; 'Vive la France! A bas les Boches!" The captain, as he declaimed "with a tongue of trumpets," leaped to his feet and struck an attitude that was really quite a good imitation of 'Enery's own mock-tragedian one.

"Well, it don't seem as you've done much 'arm as yet. But all the same, you didn't ought." "I want to know what's splendid?" the artist inquired, looking from her to the girl in the sun-bonnet, who blushed rosily. Tilda, for her part, looked at Arthur Miles and to him addressed her answer "'Enery's broke it off!" "Oh!" said the boy.

After the Germans had signified their notice of the sentiment by firing a dozen shots at it, 'Enery replaced it by a fresh one, "A baa la Bosh." This notice was left standing, but to 'Enery's annoyance the Germans displayed in return a board which said in plain English, "Good morning." "Ain't that a knock out," said 'Enery disgustedly.

"'Enery's broke it off!" he announced slowly, and his voice trembled. "I could a-told yer that." Tilda's manner was short, as she produced the letter and handed it to him. "There go to 'im," she said in a gentler voice as she slipped past the girl. "'E's good, as men go; and 'e's suffered." She walked resolutely away down the path.

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