You would wear puttees on your legs.
A sports man
Puttees were long strips of cloth (typically some kind of durable fabric) worn by the soldiers of some nations from roughly 1900-1950. Notable users included the American Expeditionary Force and the British Army during World War II and the Chinese Nationalists Puttees helped to keep mud, dirt, and water from entering the shoes of soldiers. They were eventually replaced in favor of gaiters, military leggings, and combat boots
Puttees were worn to protect the legs from superficial damage from brambles, spent ammunition and hidden obstacles. They were worn so as to keep the trouser bottoms contained so as not to cause tripping. They also kept sand and pebbles out of the boots. They replaced gaiters which were leather versions of the same item. Unfortunately, leather gaiters were stiff and restricted mobility. Puttees on the other hand were cheaper and provided the kind of protection that foot soldiers required. To this day, modern soldiers wear a type of puttee modeled after the short puttees of the 2nd world war. They are worn with KD shorts and worn for looks to transition the boot to the knee sock.
They are not his boots and helmet. When a soldier dies, his helmet, boots and tags are put on his gun for a memorial for that soldier
Any soldier job tier... Someone put "Any soldier job tier...", but I located the rat in the Museum Break-in on the Soldier Job tier. ...
The soldier got a wound from the battle
put the person on leave
About 8 minutes
You don't. Won't fit.
The soldier would be put on a charge and could be court martialed.
The Four Seasons put out a single called 'Toy Soldier' in 1965.