David Selzer is a writer of poetry, prose fiction, screenplays and stage plays. He embraces digital platforms to share his work of more than fifty years… READ MORE


  • AT THE ELEVENTH HOUR

    The Armistice was agreed at 5.10 –
    in Foch’s personal railway carriage
    – among the cigar and brandy fumes.
    The Chancellories of Europe knew
    thirty minutes later. Big Ben was rung
    for the first time in four years and gas lamps
    lit in Paris. There was dancing and streamers.

    Foch insisted the truce would not take effect
    until 11.00 – ostensibly
    so the news could be keyed and carried to
    each trench and dugout on the Western Front.

    Thousands of soldiers were killed that morning.
    The last to die – at 10.59 –
    was Private Henry Günther from Baltimore,
    advancing with comrades in ignorance
    through the wild woodland of the Argonne.
    The division’s history records: ‘Almost
    as he fell, the gunfire died away
    and an appalling silence prevailed’.

     

     

     



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