The only dissentients from this new and harsher mood were the Indians, for whom Neuve-Chapelle marked their swansong on the Western Front. They would fight again, in the coming battles of Festubert and Loos, but not as a striking force. Losses already suffered had crippled many battalions and the sepoy, raised in a tradition of warrior honour quite different from the European, could not understand that a wound did not exempt the recipient from a return to the trenches.
”We are as grain that is flung a second time into the oven,” wrote a Sikh soldier to his father the weeks after Neuve-Chapelle, “and life does not come out of it.”
A wounded Rajput had written home a little earlier, “This is not war, it is the ending of the world.”
Source:
Keegan, John. "Stalemate." The First World War. New York: A. Knopf :, 1999. 196-97. Print.
Original Source Listed:
D. Omissi, The Sepoy and the Raj, London, 1994, pp. 117-18.
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