Excerpt from Uncensored Letters From the Dardenelles: Written to His English Wife by a French Medical Officer of Le Corps Expeditionnaire D"orient
Dardanelles: a word evocative of sacrifice, duty, glory; Salonika: a stage in the new epic of the Great War, on that historic road to Constantinople familiar to the Franks of old.
Two words that stand out radiantly in the Eastern light under the star-strewn heavens, before the azure screen on which we see Samothrace, its dim outline melting into the sonorous seas, its snow-capped peaks bathed in the brilliant sunshine - Samothrace, pedestal and fatherland of that Winged Victory which haunts our dreams.
Those who shared in the sacrifice and the glory will find it fascinating to recall memories of these in the company of Dr. Vassal, who was at once an actor in and a witness of the great deeds he records. To these survivors, the charm of the narrative will be enhanced by the greatness of the adventure, which needs but the consecration of time to rival in sublimity even that Iliad the scene of which was laid on the same soil.
On the morrow of the deadly landings at Koum Kaleh on the Asiatic coast, and afterwards at Sedd-el-Bahr, which had been assigned to the French by the British command, pluck and determination compensated for our losses and outweighed our insufficient numbers. For fifteen days and fifteen nights an uninterrupted struggle, meaning life or death, victory or defeat, was carried on along the narrow front of the Gallipoli Peninsula.
The Turkish forces were perpetually reinforced by perfectly fresh troops kept in reserve close at hand. Ours, a thousand leagues from home, wore themselves out without hope of reinforcement.
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