Friday, 7 May 2010

BoB #14

Lipton felt that "when men are in combat, the inevitability of it takes over. They are there, there is nothing they can do to change that, so they accept it. They immediately become callused to the smell of death, the bodies, the destruction, the killing, the danger. Enemy bodies and wounded don't affect them. Their own wounded and the bodies of their dead friends make only a brief impression, and in that impression is a fleeting feeling of triumph or accomplishment that it was not them."
- Chapter 7: "Healing Wounds and Scrubbed Missions!", "Band of Brothers" by Stephen E. Ambrose.

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