Melançon Enterprises > Maurice Institute Library > Book reviews and excerpts > Ernie Pyle, Here is your War

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Producing at home, hardening overseas

What I have seen in North Africa has altered my own feelings in one respect.  There were days when I sat in my tent alone and gloomed with the desperate belief that it was actually possible for us to lose this war.  I don’t feel that way any more.  Despite our strikes and bickering and confusion back home, America is producing and no one can deny that.  Even here at the far end of just one line the trickle has grown into an impressive stream.

We are producing at home and we are hardening overseas.  Apparently it takes a country like America about two years to become wholly at war.  We had to go through that transition period of letting loose of life as it was, and then live the new war life so long that it finally became the normal life to us.  It was a form of growth, and we couldn’t press it.  Only time can produce that change.  We have survived that long passage of time, and if I am at all correct we have about changed our character and become a war nation.  I can’t yet see when we shall win, or over what route geographically, or by which of the many means of warfare.  But no longer do I have any doubts at all that we shall win.

The men over here have changed too.  They are too close to themselves to sense the change, perhaps.  And I am too close to them to grasp it fully.  But since I am older and a little apart, I have been able to notice it more.

For a year, everywhere I went, soldiers inevitably asked me two questions: “When do you think we’ll get to go home?” and “When will the war be over?”  The home-going desire was once so dominant that I believe our soldiers over here would have voted—if the question had been put—to go home immediately, even if it meant peace on terms of something less than unconditional surrender by the enemy.

That isn’t true now.  Sure, they all still want to go home. So do I.  But there is something deeper than that, which didn’t exist six months ago.  I can’t quite put it into words—it isn’t any theatrical proclamation that the enemy must be destroyed in the name of freedom; it’s just a vague but growing individual acceptance of the bitter fact that we must win the war or else, and that it can’t be won by running excursion boats back and forth across the Atlantic carrying homesick vacationers.

A year is a long time to be away from home, especially if a person has never been away before, as was true of the bulk of our troops.  At first homesickness can almost kill a man.  But time takes care of that.  It isn’t normal to moon in the past forever.  Home gradually grows less vivid; the separation from it less agonizing.  There finally comes a day—not suddenly but gradually, as a sunset-touched cloud changes its color—when a man is living almost wholly wherever he is.  His life has caught up with his body, and his days become full war days, instead of American days simply transplanted to Africa.

That’s the stage our soldiers are in now—the ones who have been over since the beginning, I mean.  It seems to take about that long.  It’s only in the last few weeks that I’ve begun to hear frequent remarks, said enthusiastically and sincerely, about the thrill it will be to see Paris and to march down the streets of Berlin.  The immediate goal used to be the Statue of Liberty; more and more it is becoming Unter den Linden.  When all of our army has bridged that gap we shall be in the home stretch.

Our men can’t make this change from normal civilians into warriors and remain the same people.  Even if they were away from you this long under normal circumstances, the mere process of maturing would change them, and they would not come home just as you knew them.  Add to that the abnormal world they have been plunged into, the new philosophies they have had to assume or perish inwardly, the horrors and delights and strange wonderful things they have experienced, and they are bound to be different people from those you sent away.

They are rougher than when you knew them.  Killing is a rough business.  Their basic language has changed from mere profanity to obscenity.  More than anything else, they miss women.  Their expressed longings, their conversation, their whole conduct show their need for female companionship, and the gentling effect of femininity upon man is conspicuous here where it has been so long absent.

Our men have less regard for property than you raised them to have.  Money value means nothing to them, either personally or in the aggregate; they are fundamentally generous, with strangers and with each other.  They give or throw away their own money, and it is natural that they are even less thoughtful of bulk property than of their own hard-earned possessions.  It is often necessary to abandon equipment they can’t take with them; the urgency of war prohibits normal caution in the handling of vehicles and supplies.  One of the most striking things to me about war is the appalling waste that is necessary.  At the front there just isn’t time to be economical.  Also, in war areas where things are scarce and red tape still rears its delaying head, a man learns to get what he needs simply by “requisitioning.”  It isn’t stealing, it’s the only way to acquire certain things.  The stress of war puts old virtues in a changed light.  We shall have to relearn a simple fundamental or two when things get back to normal.  But what’s wrong with a small case of “requisitioning” when murder is the classic goal?

Ernie Pyle, Here Is Your War (New York: Henry Holt and Company, 1943).  Pages around 297 and 298.
Scanned in.


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