The Importance Of Life In The Trenches

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In World War 1 there were some horrific events that occurred. This report has just one of those events. Life in the Trenches. What was it like to live in the trenches? The smells the diggers smelt and the horrors they saw. What about emotions, feared of being bombed or worse daily boredom.

What did the trenches smell like? There were rotting carcases, they would mainly lay around in their thousands, they would often give off a dead smell, and this would have lasted throughout the war, as bodies take time to break down. Also it would have been hard to move them when there were so many. This would have been horrible for the diggers. There would also be the smell of mud as it rained often.

The diggers would have had a variety of emotions during the war but here are some of the main ones. They would have feared if they had an assignment to go into no mans land. They would fear the machine gun fire if they were spotted or heard. They would have been fear when moving around, of being assaulted and captured. Diggers would even be detained and tortured to get information, even when they didn’t have any
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But these are some of the things they saw. Diggers would have seen death, bombs, fear in their superiors and sufferers. As no one wanted to fight in World War One. As is shown when on the 25th of December 1914 there was a Christmas Truce where men on the Western Front exchanged food and souvenirs, they went into each other’s trenches to talk and exchange seasonal greetings. Prisoners were swapped and joint burial ceremonies were commenced. The diggers also played games of football against each other. But this did not occur in other parts of the war as they did little or even no agreements to stop fighting some were only able to recover the bodies of their fallen diggers. But after 1916 it stopped after the invention of poison gases. This was too deadly and increases in human losses made the enemy more