We did go on to Rouen. B. is full to the brim. We have only unloaded at B. three times since Christmas.I’m beginning to think we waste a lot of sympathy on the poor wounded rocking in a train all night after being on it all day. One of mine with a bullet still in his chest, and some pneumonia, who seemed very ill when he was put on at Merville, said this morning he felt a lot better and had had the best night for five days! And my fidgety boy with the wound in his throat made a terrible fuss at being put off at Boulogne when he found he was the only one in his compartment to go and that I wasn’t going with him.
I had the easy watch last night because of my cold, and went to bed at 1 a.m.; got a hot bath this morning, and lay low all day till a stroll between the Seine and the floods after tea (Sotteville). There are four trains waiting here, and the C.S.’s have been skating on the floods. We move on at 1 o’clock to-night. No.— A.T. had a bomb dropped each side of their train at Bailleul, but they didn’t explode.
The French instruction books have come, and I am going to start the French class for the men on the train; they are very keen to learn, chiefly, I think, to make a little more running with the French girls at the various stopping places.
Two officers last night were awfully sick at not being taken off at B., but I think they’ll get home from Rouen. One said he must get home, if only for ten minutes, to feel he was out of France.
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