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The Red Vineyard

Chapter 29: Chapter XXVIII D I’s and S I’s
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About This Book

A military chaplain recounts his service with a battalion, describing the decision to go, the bishop's cautious reply, and preparations in training camps. He details liturgical improvisations such as a portable altar and outdoor Mass, daily camp life, sea crossings and billets in England before arrival at the Western Front. Frontline episodes include trench routine, raids into No Man's Land, and large offensives, while hospitals, evacuations, transfusions and burial duties illustrate the medical and pastoral demands. Interlaced are encounters with local clergy and civilians, refugee scenes, holiday observances at the front, and reflective moments on sacrifice, consolation, and the small mercies amid warfare.

Chapter XXVIII
D I’s and S I’s

I remember the day I arrived at No. 7. The quartermaster allotted me a burlap hut in the officers’ lines, just large enough to contain a low iron bed, a rough table, made of boards from an old packing case, a chair (which was not there) and a little stove when it was cold enough for one. I hung my trench coat on a nail and asked the two men who had brought my bed-roll to place it where the chair should have been. I gave just one look around the hut, then went out again and up to the Registrar’s office, first to No. 1, then back to No. 7.

Every morning a list was posted outside the Registrar’s offices, on which were printed the names of the D. I.’s and S. I.’s; those Dangerously Ill and Seriously Ill. For obvious reasons the Catholics of both classes were always prepared for death immediately. I found a number of Catholics in a critical condition and I administered the last sacraments to them. It was long after six o’clock when I finished my work. I was leaving No. 7 feeling a little tired, for I had covered quite a lot of ground on my visits, when I heard “Padre” called by one of the nurses, who was coming quickly behind me.

I stopped until she came to where I was standing. She asked me if I were the new R. C. chaplain. On being answered in the affirmative she told me she had a list of men of my faith who should be seen by their chaplain immediately. She passed me her list as she spoke, and in a second or two I was comparing it with the names written in the little black book that I had taken from the left upper pocket of my tunic. I had seen them all: all had been “housled and aneled,” had been prepared to meet God. I told her so, quietly, and I showed her my little book.

She compared the names: then she looked at me keenly. “My!” she said, “how you Catholic priests look after your men!” Then she was gone again.