James Wentworth Day was a writer who, in the fifties, achieved some fame through television with his racist ideas and his statements about homosexuals (who should be hanged). But he published some true ghost stories too, and in some of them he turned back to the battlefields of northern France and Flanders...
Together with a Corporal Barr he went picking up post and rations. They started back to the camp at about three-thirty. It was far from dark. On his right, Wentworth Day saw a fantastic wood of larch and birch, with thin trees, torn and twisted into grotesque shapes by shell blast: "It was a Hans Andersen wood of Arthur Rackham trees through whose sun-reddened trunks we could see cloud-masses lit with a Cuyp-like glow."
Suddenly, as they splashed through the sunset pools of that deserted road, German cavalry swept out of that "spectral wood". A dozen or more German Uhlans "in those queer high-topped hats which they had worn in the dead days of 1914" charged and up the slope to meet them, Wentworth Day saw some French dragoons in their brass cuirasses, sabres upswung, plumes dancing from their helmets. They also charged to meet the Germans with their slender lances... but then the vision passed and there was no clash of mounted men, only the empty land and a thin wood of silver in the setting sun.
"Did you see anything?" Wentworth Day glanced at Corporal Barr, who looked white and uneasy.
"Aye... something mighty queer," the Corporal said.
They reached camp, oddly shy of talking too much. The next day, at Neuve Eglise, "that skeleton of a village on the spine of the Ravelsberg", Wentworth Day asked a peasant about the wood. "Ah! M'sieu, that wood is a very sad wood, you know! It is on the frontier... a wood of dead men! In the wars of Napoleon, in the war of 1870, in this Great War... the cavalry of France and Germany have always met each other by that wood..."
And the man showed Wentworth Day the graves of the cavalry of all these wars in the tiny churchyard...
Published by Patrick Bernauw
Patrick Bernauw is a full time Flemish writer (Dutch speaking part of Belgium) of historical mysteries and faction thrillers. And he is a producer of murder and mystery games, city games, alternate reality g... View profile
- Hyperinflation in Post-World War One GermanyThe economic hardships that Germany faced after World War One led to some of the worst hyperinflation in history...
- Literature-Based Movies for World War One History ClassesReview of books and movies that explore WWI history and sociology.
- The True Cause of World War IIExamines the French and British involvement in the cause of World War Two based on the punishments they put upon the German people after The Great War.
- What Made the Experiences of a Soldier During the First World War Distinctive?An essay examining the experience of soldiers fighting in the First World War, and discussing whether or not their experience was different to soldiers involved in other conflicts.
- How World War Two was a Direct Result of World War OneA look into how the unsatisfactory end to WWI saw the beginning of WWII.
- The Origins of World War I
- Reasons for World War I
- World War 1: Assassination and Trouble on the Balkans
- Conclusion of World War I
- World War One: A Just War or Just a War? - Woodrow Wilson Vs. St. Thomas Aquinas
- Georgy Zhukov: The Hero of Russia During World War II
- The Role of the German Navy in World War I





1 Comments
Post a CommentFascinating story!