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 trenches over the Moyenneville spur in front of Adinfer Wood facing Douchy and Ayette, where "three weeks ago no man could have lived." They talked together of the far-off times when they held that line daily expecting the enemy advance; and the officers lay out luxuriously in the wood in the evening after Mess, while the men made themselves "little homes in it."

Next day they rested, for the men were very tired, and on the last of the month the whole Battalion was washed in the divisional baths that had established themselves at Adinfer. But the enemy had not forgotten them, and on the first of September their shelters and tents in the delightful wood were bombed. Six men were injured, five being buried in a trench, and of these two were suffocated before they could be dug out.

And that was all the rest allowed to the Battalion. On the 2nd September the Canadian Corps of the First Army broke that outlying spur of the Hindenburg System known as the Drocourt-Quéant Switch, with its wires, trenches, and posts; and the Fifty-seventh and Fifty-second Divisions, after hard work, equally smashed the triangle of fortifications north-west of Quéant where the Switch joined the System. The gain shook the whole of the Hindenburg Line south of Quéant and, after five days' clean-up behind the line, the Guards Division were ordered to go in again at the very breast of Hindenburg's works. No one knew what the enemy's idea might be, but there was strong presumption that, if he did not hold his defence at that point, he might crack. ("But, ye'll understand, for all that, we did not believe Jerry would crack past mendin'.")

The Battalion spent the night of the 2nd September, then, in shelters in Hamel Switch Trench on their way back from Adinfer Wood to the battle. The front had