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© Bob Cavill
C Company & Assault Pioneers |
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In
my early teens I used to buy an
excursion ticket at Padstow Railway
Station. A return ticket to Sydney
Central cost one shilling (ten cents).
Saturday morning I would go to a world
of high adventure, the aptly named
'Forum Theatre' on Broadway. I had
always been an avid reader of history
and this place was as close as one could
get to living history. 'Quo Vardis,'
'Ben Hur,' 'Spartacus,' 'The Fall of the
Roman Empire,' 'The Vikings,' and 'Henry
the Fifth' were just a few. Hollywood
history it is true, but oh! The sound
and colour of Panavision! These films
could take me to a different world than
the one I inhabited.... out and away
from the struggle. That cauldron of
emotional distress that was my mother's
life with my five siblings at Starr
Street Padstow. I think watching all
those wonderful scenes of wars and
adventures of long ago, planted the
seeds of my wanting to join the Army; to
be a warrior in distant lands. It was
more than just a way of escape that
suited the times, for the idea had been
growing in my mind since about 12 years
of age, and within days of my 18th
birthday, I enlisted.
When I think back now, I realise, that
though it was but a short time in my
life, I did follow a road taken by
generations of my forefathers before me.
I wanted to 'Go a Viking', and I did ...
in a way.
The Army was the defining experience of
my life; like the water that tempers
steel. It quenched the willful spirit of
my nature, and was responsible for
defining my self image. With discipline
it achieved what the public school
system could not. It inoculated with
self-esteem and added like tungsten to
my character, an iron self-confidence
that I possess to this day. The Army
was, (and probably still is) one of the
few organizations that still believed in
elitism. It gave me something that had
been denied me all my life to that
point. Pride!...pride in myself.
I found myself belonging to, what
I felt, to be an elite organization --
The 5th Battalion of the Royal
Australian Regiment. My self-esteem went
from being almost non-existent to, by
the time of my discharge, an arrogance
born of a feeling of superiority. There
is something intoxicating about the
crash of boots on pavement, to the beat
of trumpets and drums, and the skirl of
bagpipes echoing around the city
streets. Building self-confidence ...
nine months of physically and mentally
intense combat training; a searing
experience that changes attitudes of
anyone who endures it to, "get up, get
over or get out! and march or die!" Many
failed. It taught me what could be
achieved, and more particularly what 'I'
could achieve.
On leaving the service, after twelve
months as a combat infantryman in
Vietnam, I can remember looking at the
completely disorganised shower of
civilians in the streets of Sydney, with
feelings of contempt ... for I now knew,
in common with others who have gone
through this defining experience of war,
knowledge that is given only to those
few; and an amazing truth! That the
whole of our society is a thin veneer
that can be swept away in an instant of
time and space by war. That those masses
of people lived from day to day on the
brink of chaos, and never knew it. But
also in common with combat veterans, I
possessed a sort of unbreakable
confidence that life could only be an
anticlimax from here on. I left the Army
like an Albatross that had spent 17
years in a cage. The world looked so
different now, compared to just three
years before. When I think back now, I
realise that although it was only a
short time in my life, like many young
men before me, I did follow a road taken
by generations of my forefathers.
I wanted to 'Go a Viking', and I did ...
in a way.
Echo of our Forefathers
We peered in deathly silence, down
steep green highland valleys,
patrolled the homeland valleys ...
of primitive men.
We looked to find 'the
Others, those 'solders belong em
Indon'
on the borders of New Guinea ...
near Marprik in '65.
We leapt from steel prow'd
longships, like Harald 'Finehair's'
Vikings,
in eager warlike fury, battled
constant ... brave foreign men.
We drank on beer hall benches like
Bearwolf's Saxon warriors,
our weapons racked, war wearied,
closer ... than brothers then.
We hurried back to the whale-road,
left behind the fallen,
who had stood with us in the shield
wall to escape ... Our Stamford
Bridge.
We heard the voice of battle, the
Roman Legions footfall,
and drums and trumpets echo on city
streets, returned ... from foreign
lands. |
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