- Contributed by听
- People of the Nothe Fort and Weymouth Museum
- People in story:听
- Eric Edeward Alley
- Location of story:听
- At sea
- Background to story:听
- Royal Navy
- Article ID:听
- A5287511
- Contributed on:听
- 24 August 2005
In the early stages of the war, we had very little clothing. We had duffle coats and outside them we wore oilskins, two pairs of socks on our hands and towels around our necks.
I think it is this cold that we remember most: either the damp misery of the bulkheads running with condensation, the chill miasma penetrating every nook and cranny of the ship or the bitter Arctic cold that froze the same condensation solid and turned exhaled breath to rime and spray to ice.
Tobacco and hot sweet cocoa. 鈥淜ye鈥, sustained the body while a rather grim humour sustained the spirit.
鈥淲ho the hell are you?鈥 asked a destroyer skipper, when coming on the bridge one black night and bumping into someone.
鈥淚鈥檓 the port lookout sir, and there鈥檚 nothing to report鈥.
The captain, being of a poetic turn of mind, recognised the first line and went on:
鈥淚鈥檓 the port lookout and there鈥檚 nothing to report, unless I spoke the truth sir and told you what I thought. It鈥檚 an awful night sir and my nose is running cruel; and its my confirmed belief sir that you鈥檙e a bloody fool鈥.
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