2559 D Coy
5th Batt Leic Regt
B.E.F.
France.
Sun May 16/15.
Dear Sir,
I am writing this letter to you hoping to find you are all in the best of health as it leaves me the same at the present time of writing to you. I am writing this letter to you before I have had an answer to my last one but as you have kindly sent me a Magazine I know you will not be long before you are sending me a letter so I thought I would write to you while I had the chance as we are due in the trenches again tonight and we are away Blacked out days it makes it along while before you get a letter through if you wait till you come out. Well thank you very much for the Magazine that you have been so good as to send me as I have something to tell you that will interest you as it deals with a subject in your Magazine. Well on Friday night we fell in at five o’clock and had to go out trench digging and we went to our destination in motor busses so you see we can still go bin the bus even out here and we were riding for nearly two hours and during our journey we passed the place were Blacked out is as stated in your paper but as we went at night we could not see much of the place but we had a little marching to do next morning to reach the Busses as it was not safe for them to remain where we got off as we were not far from the firing line so on the road back we could see the place I mean as it was then daylight but as it was on our right it was not a very good view as we had no time to stop looking about us as we had a long way to go but it will give you some idea where we are without letting anything out as I do not think the Censor will object to it but I think it is Blacked out as there are shelling every day and often at night we can see it on fire or rather some parts of it. Well we got back to our huts about 5.30 on Saturday morning and after we had our breakfast we all lay down and though it was on hard boards we all slept till 2 o’clock so you can see how we all felt but we can go to sleep anywhere now. Well I had to do a quick shift then as I was due at a meeting which our Brigade Chaplain as been holding and he his going to have a confirmation out here and I am very pleased to tell I am going to me confirmed and I know that will please you as well and we are going to be confirmed today at half past two by the Bishop but I could not tell you which Bishop it is but will tell you more about it in my next letter. Well since I wrote my last letter to you I have been in the trenches again and had have come out safe and sound thanks to the Lord who watches over us and we were relieved a day earlier than usal and we were only in three days but they were the most exciting times of the lot we went in on the Sat night and then on Sunday afternoon we seen a sight that was good for sore eyes as the saying is. There was a German airship flying just over our lines and taking observations of our trenches then all at once out of the clouds it seemed to come a British aeroplane and soon as the German airman seen him he made off but he was not half fast enough as the Englishman mounted over him and then the next we seen was the German making a head first dive to the ground so we are all over there in the air and it did not seem hardly a minute from us seeing that the Englishman had fetched him to the ground and then we gave him a cheer for it but we had to go through it later as they started to shell us with their big guns and some of the chaps in the fourth were wounded and one or two killed as they nearly landed in there trench but none came near enough to ours to do any damage and then on Monday night and early on Tuesday morning we were attacked by a party of German Bomb throwers and things were a bit exciting for a while but we drove them back and then all was quite again. We were then relieved on Tuesday night and got back to our huts for a good sleep. Well I think I shall have to close as I have told you about all there is to be told this time and it time to get ready for our service as we always have a short service before we go in the trenches and it is very nice for us as we have the Band to play the Music for us. Well I shall now have to close my letter as I have nothing else to say give my Best Wishes to All the Friends at Whitwick hoping this letter finds them all in the Best of Health.
I remain
Your friend
W. Cooke.
Sunday May 16
P.S. The Preacher at our service this morning was the Bishop of Pretoria South Africa.
In envelope addressed to The Rev T.W. Walters, The Vicarage, Leicester Road, Whitwick, Leicestershire. England.
Letter postmarked FIELD POST OFFICE I.M 17 MY 15
PASSED BY CENSOR 405 triangular cachet in red.