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Title

Major Manton's dug out, Hill 60, August 1917

Artist

Will Dyson

Australia

03 Sep 1880 – 21 Jan 1938

  • Details

    Media category
    Print
    Materials used
    lithograph, black ink on white laid Arnold paper
    Dimensions
    41.8 x 53.7 cm image; 52.2 x 65.5 cm sheet
    Signature & date

    Signed l.r. corner, pencil "Will. Dyson." Not dated.

    Credit
    Gift of the High Commissioner for Australia (London) 1919
    Location
    Not on display
    Accession number
    4837
    Copyright

    Reproduction requests

    Artist information
    Will Dyson

    Works in the collection

    39

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  • Bibliography

    Referenced in 1 publication

    • Will Dyson., Australia at war: a winter record, 'Tunnellers under German Territory.', London, 1918, 28. Published as an excerpt that Dyson retrieved from his notes: "In the Tunnel–Hill 60. “. . . . the companies staging in the tunnels were resting in every conceivable attitude of weariness in slush that was everywhere, and everywhere rising higher. The circumstances were bearable to what they would be in the line, but fatigue even here, to the unlucky forced to spend a night in the bad spots of the tunnels, is a circumstance the aching misery of which cannot be judged by any standard with which our average civilian is conversant. Fatigue at its worst is to the most articulate of our generation the least familiar of humanity’s woes, but here in this world it is about us again with the torturing insistence of the troglodyte past – one of the commonplaces of the Stone Age with which war and the wonders of science have familiarised us. . . . The brutish weariness of our earliest hairy forbear, trembling in the savage morasses of an unfamiliar planet, is the daily lot of men like these – shopmen, men from the forge and factory and mine – heirs to all the amenities of the ages. It is part of the supremacy in suffering of the inarticulate infantry. Fatigue, actual brutish and insensate, is borne by them to a pitch at which mules might be heart-broken. Dull, undecorative heroism it is – that of these men of the ‘S ––’. “But the poor fabric of military glory is woven of such – of trials that seem to break down the proud partitions which separate our lot from that of the animals. . . . These heroes of ours, alas, are unsupported by a helpful consciousness of their heroism. That joy is only for the onlooker. The tragic fact is that the incomparable heroisms of this winter warfare bring no compensations to the heroes – no element of dramatic exaltation in the performance of them. They are less swift dramatic acts than long states of siege with exhaustion as the besieger.” "

Other works by Will Dyson

See all 39 works