“This is one of the few photographs which shows the
moment of an attack. It shows an officer
of the Scottish Rifles leading his men out of a trench for a raid on German
trenches near Arras on 24 March 1917.”
I found this image on the
Grafton Galleries website, the link which was provided on angel. I chose this image
because of how rare it is; capturing the powerful, overwhelming moment of men
leaving the trenches to go into battle.
During the war, soldiers
lived in the trenches. Life in the trenches was described as “one of the most
sustained onslaughts of the human sensorium. It thrust man’s fragile body
between the ooze of primordial slime on the one hand and the terrors of
shellfire on the other…” (Das). I found this poignant because it gives me the
sense that soldiers lived in fear day to day. They never knew what to expect
and as this photo captures, even crawling out of the trenches they do not know
what to expect. They do not know what is on the surface, and as a viewer of the
image, neither do we. This image would have made the civilian at home use their
imagination as to the terror present beyond what is shown. Something else I
notice about this picture is how they soldiers are in a line, just waiting to
crawl out of the trench and fight. This may present a somewhat negative
connotation that the soldiers were made to live in these narrow, obviously unexplainably
dirty trenches, to be filtered out one by one to fight. I don’t believe that
this is the intent however, it is a thought that came to mind.
I believe civilians
living at home who would have seen this image would have been filled with
grief, horror, and worry. The soldiers in this image are brothers, sons,
fathers, husbands; loved ones. The lack of identity being shown leaves the
viewer wondering if this is someone they know? Is this my loved one? Not having
that answer I can only imagine as one of the worst feelings. However, during
World War I being able to stay in touch with family while on the front was a
priority. Soldiers were able to write home to their families and give them a
sense of what the war was like however frequently they wanted. Therefore, the
worrying of family members was able to be subsided eventually. They were not
left wondering if their loved one was dead or alive for an extreme extended
amount of time.
The strongest message I take
from this image is the lack of identity. None of the soldiers faces are shown
which, as already discussed, leaves you curious as to who these men were. It also
makes the connection between all civilians being soldiers and fighting the war.
Just because civilians were not on the front, they were making great efforts at
home to support the cause.

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