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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Joy in the Morning, by Mary Raymond Shipman
+Andrews
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: Joy in the Morning
+ The Ditch; Her Country Too; The Swallow; Only One of Them; The V.C.; He That Loseth His Life Shall Find It; The Silver Stirrup; The Russian; Robina's Doll; Dundonald's Destroyer
+
+
+Author: Mary Raymond Shipman Andrews
+
+Release Date: May 8, 2005 [eBook #15796]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK JOY IN THE MORNING***
+
+
+E-text prepared by David Garcia, Josephine Paolucci, Joshua Hutchinson,
+and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team from page
+images generously made available by the Kentuckiana Digital Library
+
+
+
+Note: Images of the original pages are available through the Kentuckiana
+ Digital Library. See
+ http://kdl.kyvl.org/cgi/t/text/
+ text-idx?c=kyetexts;cc=kyetexts;xc=1&idno=B92-171-30119788&view=toc
+
+
+
+
+
+JOY IN THE MORNING
+
+by
+
+MARY RAYMOND SHIPMAN ANDREWS
+
+New York
+Charles Scribner's Sons
+
+
+1919
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: He pinned the thing men die for on the shabby coat of
+the guide. [_Page_ 135]]
+
+
+
+ * * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+By MARY R.S. ANDREWS
+
+
+ JOY IN THE MORNING
+ THE ETERNAL FEMININE
+ AUGUST FIRST
+ THE ETERNAL MASCULINE
+ THE MILITANTS
+ BOB AND THE GUIDES
+ CROSSES OF WAR
+ HER COUNTRY
+ OLD GLORY
+ THE COUNSEL ASSIGNED
+ THE COURAGE OF THE COMMONPLACE
+ THE LIFTED BANDAGE
+ THE PERFECT TRIBUTE
+
+ Charles Scribner's Sons
+
+
+
+
+ * * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+DEDICATION
+
+
+To the two stars of a service flag, to a brother and a son who served in
+France, this book is dedicated. No book, to my thinking, were one
+Shakespere and Isaiah rolled together, might fittingly answer the honor
+which they, with four million more American soldiers, have brought to
+their own. So that the stories march out very proudly, headed by the
+names of
+
+ CHAPLAIN HERBERT SHIPMAN
+
+ AND
+
+ CAPTAIN PAUL SHIPMAN ANDREWS
+
+
+
+
+NOTE
+
+
+Now that the tide of Khaki has set toward our shores instead of away;
+now that the streets are filled with splendid boys with gold chevrons of
+foreign service or no less honorable silver chevrons of service here;
+now that the dear lads who sleep in France know that the "torch was
+caught" from their hands, and that faith with them was kept; now
+that--thank God, who, after all, rules--the war is over, there is an old
+word close to the thought of the nation. "Heaviness may endure for a
+night, but joy cometh in the morning." A whole country is so thinking.
+For possibly ten centuries the Great War will be a background for
+fiction. To us, who have lived those years, any tale of them is a
+personal affair. Every-day women and men whom one meets in the street
+may well say to us: "My boy was in the Argonne," or: "My brother fought
+at St. Mihiel." Over and over, unphrased, our minds echo lines of that
+verse found in the pocket of the soldier dead at Gallipoli:
+
+ "_We_ saw the powers of darkness put to flight,
+ _We_ saw the morning break."
+
+Crushed and glorified beyond all generations of the planet, war stories
+prick this generation like family records. It is from us of to-day that
+the load is lifted. We have weathered the heaviness of the night; to us
+"Joy cometh in the morning."
+
+M.R.S.A.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ I. The Ditch
+
+ II. Her Country Too
+
+ III. The Swallow
+
+ IV. Only One of Them
+
+ V. The V.C.
+
+ VI. He That Loseth His Life Shall Find It
+
+ VII. The Silver Stirrup
+
+ VIII. The Russian
+
+ IX. Robina's Doll
+
+ X. Dundonald's Destroyer
+
+
+
+
+THE DITCH
+
+ PERSONS
+
+ THE BOY an American soldier
+
+ THE BOY'S DREAM OF HIS MOTHER
+
+ ANGÉLIQUE }
+ } French children
+ JEAN-BAPTISTE }
+
+ THE TEACHER
+
+ THE ONE SCHOOLGIRL WITH IMAGINATION
+
+ THE THREE SCHOOLGIRLS WITHOUT IMAGINATION
+
+ HE
+
+ SHE
+
+ THE AMERICAN GENERAL
+
+ THE ENGLISH STATESMAN
+
+The Time.--A summer day in 1918 and a summer day in 2018
+
+
+
+
+FIRST ACT
+
+
+_The time is a summer day in 1918. The scene is the first-line trench of
+the Germans--held lately by the Prussian Imperial Guard--half an hour
+after it had been taken by a charge of men from the Blank_th _Regiment,
+United States Army. There has been a mistake and the charge was not
+preceded by artillery preparation as usual. However, the Americans have
+taken the trench by the unexpectedness of their attack, and the Prussian
+Guard has been routed in confusion. But the German artillery has at once
+opened fire on the Americans, and also a German machine gun has
+enfiladed the trench. Ninety-nine Americans have been killed in the
+trench. One is alive, but dying. He speaks, being part of the time
+delirious._
+
+_The Boy_. Why can't I stand? What--is it? I'm wounded. The sand-bags
+roll when I try--to hold to them. I'm--badly wounded. (_Sinks down.
+Silence._) How still it is! We--we took the trench. Glory be! We took
+it! (_Shouts weakly as he lies in the trench._) (_Sits up and stares,
+shading his eyes_.) It's horrid still. Why--they're here! Jack--you!
+What makes you--lie there? You beggar--oh, my God! They're dead.
+Jack Arnold, and Martin and--Cram and Bennett and Emmet
+and--Dragamore--Oh--God, God! All the boys! Good American boys. The
+whole blamed bunch--dead in a ditch. Only me. Dying, in a ditch filled
+with dead men. What's the sense? (_Silence_.) This damned silly war.
+This devilish--killing. When we ought to be home, doing man's work--and
+play. Getting some tennis, maybe, this hot afternoon; coming in sweaty
+and dirty--and happy--to a tub--and dinner--with mother. (_Groans_.) It
+begins to hurt--oh, it hurts confoundedly. (_Becomes delirious_.)
+Canoeing on the river. With little Jim. See that trout jump, Jimmie?
+Cast now. Under the log at the edge of the trees. That's it! Good--oh!
+(_Groans_.) It hurts--badly. Why, how can I stand it? How can anybody?
+I'm badly wounded. Jimmie--tell mother. Oh--good boy--you've hooked him.
+Now play him; lead him away from the lily-pads. (_Groans_.) Oh, mother!
+Won't you come? I'm wounded. You never failed me before. I need you--if
+I die. You went away down--to the gate of life, to bring me inside.
+Now--it's the gate of death--you won't fail? You'll bring me through to
+that other life? You and I, mother--and I won't be scared. You're the
+first--and the last. (_Puts out his arm searching and folds a hand,
+still warm, of a dead soldier_.) Ah--mother, my dear. I knew--you'd
+come. Your hand is warm--comforting. You always--are there when I need
+you. All my life. Things are getting--hazy. (_He laughs_.) When I was a
+kid and came down in an elevator--I was all right, I didn't mind the
+drop if I might hang on to your hand. Remember? (_Pats dead soldier's
+hand, then clutches it again tightly_.) You come with me when I go
+across and let me--hang on--to your hand. And I won't be scared.
+(_Silence_.) This damned--damned--silly war! All the good American boys.
+We charged the Fritzes. How they ran! But--there was a mistake. No
+artillery preparation. There ought to be crosses and medals going for
+that charge, for the boys--(_Laughs_.) Why, they're all dead. And
+me--I'm dying, in a ditch. Twenty years old. Done out of sixty years
+by--by the silly war. What's it for? Mother, what's it about? I'm ill a
+bit. I can't think what good it is. Slaughtering boys--all the nations'
+boys--honest, hard-working boys mostly. Junk. Fine chaps an hour ago.
+What's the good? I'm dying--for the flag. But--what's the good? It'll go
+on--wars. Again. Peace sometimes, but nothing gained. And all of
+us--dead. Cheated out of our lives. Wouldn't the world have done as well
+if this long ditch of good fellows had been let live? Mother?
+
+_The Boy's Dream of His Mother_. (_Seems to speak_.) My very
+dearest--no. It takes this great burnt-offering to free the world. The
+world will be free. This is the crisis of humanity; you are bending the
+lever that lifts the race. Be glad, dearest life of the world, to be
+part of that glory. Think back to your school-days, to a sentence you
+learned. Lincoln spoke it. "These dead shall not have died in vain, and
+government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not
+perish from the earth."
+
+_The Boy_. (_Whispers_.) I remember. It's good. "Shall not have died in
+vain"--"The people--shall not perish"--where's your hand, mother? It's
+taps for me. The lights are going out. Come with me--mother. (_Dies_.)
+
+
+
+
+SECOND ACT
+
+
+_The scene it the same trench one hundred years later, in the year 2018.
+It is ten o'clock of a summer morning. Two French children have come to
+the trench to pick flowers. The little girl of seven is gentle and
+soft-hearted; her older brother is a man of nearly ten years, and feels
+his patriotism and his responsibilities_.
+
+_Angélique_. (_The little French girl_.) Here's where they grow,
+Jean-B'tiste.
+
+_Jean-Baptiste_. (_The little French boy_.) I know. They bloom bigger
+blooms in the American ditch.
+
+_Angélique_. (_Climbs into the ditch and picks flowers busily_.) Why do
+people call it the 'Merican ditch, Jean-B'tiste? What's 'Merican?
+
+_Jean-Baptiste_. (_Ripples laughter_.) One's little sister doesn't know
+much! Never mind. One is so young--three years younger than I am. I'm
+ten, you know.
+
+_Angélique. Tiens_, Jean-B'tiste. Not ten till next month.
+
+Jean-Baptiste. Oh, but--but--next month!
+
+_Angélique_. What's 'Merican?
+
+_Jean-Baptiste_. Droll _p'tite_. Why, everybody in all France knows that
+name. Of American.
+
+_Angélique_. (_Unashamed_.) Do they? What is it?
+
+_Jean-Baptiste_. It's the people that live in the so large country
+across the ocean. They came over and saved all our lives, and France.
+
+_Angélique_. (_Surprised_.) Did they save my life, Jean-B'tiste?
+
+_Jean-Baptiste_. Little _drôle_. You weren't born.
+
+_Angélique_. Oh! Whose life did they then save? Maman's?
+
+_Jean-Baptiste_. But no. She was not born either.
+
+_Angélique_. Whose life, then--the grandfather's?
+
+_Jean-Baptiste_. But--even he was not born. (_Disconcerted by
+Angélique's direct tactics_.) One sees they could not save the lives of
+people who were not here. But--they were brave--but yes--and friends to
+France. And they came across the ocean to fight for France. Big, strong
+young soldiers in brown uniforms--the grandfather told me about it
+yesterday. I know it all. His father told him, and he was here. In this
+field. (_Jean-Baptiste looks about the meadow, where the wind blows
+flowers and wheat._) There was a large battle--a fight very immense. It
+was not like this then. It was digged over with ditches and the soldiers
+stood in the ditches and shot at the wicked Germans in the other
+ditches. Lots and lots of soldiers died.
+
+_Angélique_. (_Lips trembling_.) Died--in ditches?
+
+_Jean-Baptiste_. (_Grimly._) Yes, it is true.
+
+_Angélique_. (_Breaks into sobs._) I can't bear you to tell me that. I
+can't bear the soldiers to--die--in ditches.
+
+_Jean-Baptiste_. (_Pats her shoulder._) I'm sorry I told you if it makes
+you cry. You are so little. But it was one hundred years ago. They're
+dead now.
+
+_Angélique_. (_Rubs her eyes with her dress and smiles_.) Yes, they're
+quite dead now. So--tell me some more.
+
+_Jean-Baptiste_. But I don't want to make you cry more, _p'tite_. You're
+so little.
+
+_Angélique._ I'm not _very_ little. I'm bigger than Anne-Marie Dupont,
+and she's eight.
+
+_Jean-Baptiste_. But no. She's not eight till next month. She told me.
+
+_Angélique_. Oh, well--next month. Me, I want to hear about the brave
+'Mericans. Did they make this ditch to stand in and shoot the wicked
+Germans?
+
+_Jean-Baptiste_. They didn't make it, but they fought the wicked Germans
+in a brave, wonderful charge, the bravest sort, the grandfather said.
+And they took the ditch away from the wicked Germans, and then--maybe
+you'll cry.
+
+_Angélique_. I won't. I promise you I won't.
+
+_Jean-Baptiste_. Then, when the ditch--only they called it a trench--was
+well full of American soldiers, the wicked Germans got a machine gun at
+the end of it and fired all the way along--the grandfather called it
+enfiladed--and killed every American in the whole long ditch.
+
+_Angélique_. (_Bursts into tears again; buries her face in her skirt_.)
+I--I'm sorry I cry, but the 'Mericans were so brave and fought--for
+France--and it was cruel of the wicked Germans to--to shoot them.
+
+_Jean-Baptiste_. The wicked Germans were always cruel. But the
+grandfather says it's quite right now, and as it should be, for they are
+now a small and weak nation, and scorned and watched by other nations,
+so that they shall never be strong again. For the grandfather says they
+are not such as can be trusted--no, never the wicked Germans. The world
+will not believe their word again. They speak not the truth. Once they
+nearly smashed the world, when they had power. So it is looked to by all
+nations that never again shall Germany be powerful. For they are sly,
+and cruel as wolves, and only intelligent to be wicked. That is what the
+grandfather says.
+
+_Angélique_. Me, I'm sorry for the poor wicked Germans that they are so
+bad. It is not nice to be bad. One is punished.
+
+_Jean-Baptiste_. (_Sternly_.) It is the truth. One is always punished.
+As long as the world lasts it will be a punishment to be a German. But
+as long as France lasts there will be a nation to love the name of
+America, one sees. For the Americans were generous and brave. They left
+their dear land and came and died for us, to keep us free in France from
+the wicked Germans.
+
+_Angélique_. (_Lip trembles_.) I'm sorry--they died.
+
+_Jean-Baptiste_. But, _p'tite!_ That was one hundred years ago. It is
+necessary that they would have been dead by now in every case. It was
+more glorious to die fighting for freedom and France than just to
+die--fifty years later. Me, I'd enjoy very much to die fighting. But
+look! You pulled up the roots. And what is that thing hanging to the
+roots--not a rock?
+
+_Angélique_. No, I think not a rock. (She takes the object in her hands
+and knocks dirt from it.) But what is it, Jean-B'tiste?
+
+_Jean-Baptiste_. It's--but never mind. I can't always know everything,
+don't you see, Angélique? It's just something of one of the Americans
+who died in the ditch. One is always finding something in these old
+battle-fields.
+
+_Angélique_. (_Rubs the object with her dress. Takes a handful of sand
+and rubs it on the object. Spits on it and rubs the sand_.) _V'là_,
+Jean-B'tiste--it shines.
+
+_Jean-Baptiste_. (_Loftily_.) Yes. It is nothing, that. One finds such
+things.
+
+_Angélique._ (_Rubbing more_.) And there are letters on it.
+
+_Jean-Baptiste_. Yes. It is nothing, that. One has flowers _en masse_
+now, and it is time to go home. Come then, _p'tite_, drop the dirty bit
+of brass and pick up your pretty flowers. _Tiens!_ Give me your hand.
+I'll pull you up the side of the ditch. (_Jean-Baptiste turns as they
+start_.) I forgot the thing which the grandfather told me I must do
+always. (_He stands at attention_.) _Au revoir_, brave Americans. One
+salutes your immortal glory. (_Exit Jean-Baptiste and Angélique_.)
+
+
+
+
+THIRD ACT
+
+
+_The scene is the same trench in the year 2018. It is eleven o'clock of
+the same summer morning. Four American schoolgirls, of from fifteen to
+seventeen years, have been brought to see the trench, a relic of the
+Great War, in charge of their teacher. The teacher, a worn and elderly
+person, has imagination, and is stirred, as far as her tired nerves may
+be, by the heroic story of the old ditch. One of the schoolgirls also
+has imagination and is also stirred. The other three are "young
+barbarians at play." Two out of five is possibly a large proportion to
+be blessed with imagination, but the American race has improved in a
+hundred years_.
+
+_Teacher_. This, girls, is an important bit of our sight-seeing. It is
+the last of the old trenches of the Great War to remain intact in all
+northern France. It was left untouched out of the reverence of the
+people of the country for one hundred Americans of the Blank_th_
+Regiment, who died here--in this old ditch. The regiment had charged too
+soon, by a mistaken order, across what was called No-Man's Land, from
+their own front trench, about (_consults guide-book_)--about thirty-five
+yards away--that would be near where you see the red poppies so thick in
+the wheat. They took the trench from the Germans, and were then wiped
+out partly by artillery fire, partly by a German machine gun which was
+placed, disguised, at the end of the trench and enfiladed the entire
+length. Three-quarters of the regiment, over two thousand men, were
+killed in this battle. Since then the regiment has been known as the
+"Charging Blank_th_."
+
+_First Schoolgirl_. Wouldn't those poppies be lovely on a yellow hat?
+
+_Second Schoolgirl_. Ssh! The Eye is on you. How awful, Miss Hadley! And
+were they all killed? Quite a tragedy!
+
+_Third Schoolgirl_. Not a yellow hat! Stupid! A corn-colored one--just
+the shade of the grain with the sun on it. Wouldn't it be lovely! When
+we get back to Paris--
+
+_Fourth Schoolgirl (the one with imagination_). You idiots! You poor
+kittens!
+
+_First Schoolgirl_. If we ever do get back to Paris!
+
+_Teacher_. (_Wearily_.) Please pay attention. This is one of the world's
+most sacred spots. It is the scene of a great heroism. It is the place
+where many of our fellow countrymen laid down their lives. How can you
+stand on this solemn ground and chatter about hats?
+
+_Third Schoolgirl_. Well, you see, Miss Hadley, we're fed up with solemn
+grounds. You can't expect us to go into raptures at this stage over an
+old ditch. And, to be serious, wouldn't some of those field flowers make
+a lovely combination for hats? With the French touch, don't you know?
+You'd be darling in one--so _ingénue!_
+
+_Second Schoolgirl_. Ssh! She'll kill you. (_Three girls turn their
+backs and stifle a giggle_.)
+
+_Teacher_. Girls, you may be past your youth yourselves one day.
+
+_First Schoolgirl_. (_Airily._) But we're well preserved so far, Miss
+Hadley.
+
+_Fourth Schoolgirl_. (_Has wandered away a few yards. She bends and
+picks a flower from the ditch. She speaks to herself_.) The flag
+floated here. There were shells bursting and guns thundering and groans
+and blood--here. American boys were dying where I stand safe. That's
+what they did. They made me safe. They kept America free. They made the
+"world safe for freedom," (_She bends and speaks into the ditch_.) Boy,
+you who lay just there in suffering and gave your good life away that
+long-ago summer day--thank you. You died for us. America remembers.
+Because of you there will be no more wars, and girls such as we are may
+wander across battle-fields, and nations are happy and well governed,
+and kings and masters are gone. You did that, you boys. You lost fifty
+years of life, but you gained our love forever. Your deaths were not in
+rain. Good-by, dear, dead boys.
+
+_Teacher_. (_Calls_). Child, come! We must catch the train.
+
+
+
+
+FOURTH ACT
+
+
+_The scene is the same trench in the year 2018. It is three o'clock of
+the afternoon, of the same summer day. A newly married couple have come
+to see the trench. He is journeying as to a shrine; she has allowed
+impersonal interests, such as history, to lapse under the influence of
+love and a trousseau. She is, however, amenable to patriotism, and, her
+husband applying the match, she takes fire--she also, from the story of
+the trench_.
+
+_He_. This must be the place.
+
+_She_. It is nothing but a ditch filled with flowers.
+
+_He_. The old trench. (_Takes off his hat_.)
+
+_She_. Was it--it was--in the Great War?
+
+_He_. My dear!
+
+_She_. You're horrified. But I really--don't know.
+
+_He_. Don't know? You must.
+
+_She_. You've gone and married a person who hasn't a glimmer of history.
+What will you do about it?
+
+_He_. I'll be brave and stick to my bargain. Do you mean that you've
+forgotten the charge of the Blank_th_ Americans against the Prussian
+Guard? The charge that practically ended the war?
+
+_She_. Ended the war? How could one charge end the war?
+
+_He_. There was fighting after. But the last critical battle was here
+(_looks about_) in these meadows, and for miles along. And it was just
+here that the Blank_th_ United States Regiment made its historic dash.
+In that ditch--filled with flowers--a hundred of our lads were mown down
+in three minutes. About two thousand more followed them to death.
+
+_She_. Oh--I do know. It was _that_ charge. I learned about it in
+school; it thrilled me always.
+
+_He_. Certainly. Every American child knows the story. I memorized the
+list of the one hundred soldiers' names of my own free will when I was
+ten. I can say them now. "Arnold--Ashe--Bennett--Emmet--Dragmore--"
+
+_She_. Don't say the rest, Ted--tell me about it as it happened. (_She
+slips her hand into his_.) We two, standing here young and happy,
+looking forward to a, lifetime together, will do honor, that way, to
+those soldiers who gave up their happy youth and their lives for
+America.
+
+_He_. (_Puts his arm around her_.) We will. We'll make a little memorial
+service and I'll preach a sermon about how gloriously they fell and how,
+unknowingly, they won the war--and so much more!
+
+_She_. Tell me.
+
+_He_. It was a hundred years ago about now--summer. A critical battle
+raged along a stretch of many miles. About the centre of the
+line--here--the Prussian Imperial Guards, the crack soldiers of the
+German army, held the first trench--this ditch. American forces faced
+them, but in weeks of fighting had not been able to make much
+impression. Then, on a day, the order came down the lines that the
+Blank_th_ United States Regiment, opposed to the Guard, was to charge
+and take the German front trench. Of course the artillery was to prepare
+for their charge as usual, but there was some mistake. There was no
+curtain of fire before them, no artillery preparation to help them. And
+the order to charge came. So, right into the German guns, in the face of
+those terrible Prussian Guards, our lads went "over the top" with a
+great shout, and poured like a flame, like a catapult, across the space
+between them--No-Man's Land, they called it then--it was only
+thirty-five yards--to the German trench. So fast they rushed, and so
+unexpected was their coming, with no curtain of artillery to shield
+them, that the Germans were for a moment taken aback. Not a shot was
+fired for a space of time almost long enough to let the Americans reach
+the trench, and then the rifles broke out and the brown uniforms fell
+like leaves in autumn. But not all. They rushed on pell-mell, cutting
+wire, pouring irresistibly into the German trench. And the Guards, such
+as were not mown down, lost courage at the astounding impetus of the
+dash, and scrambled and ran from their trench. They took it--our boys
+took that trench--this old ditch. But then the big German guns opened a
+fire like hail and a machine gun at the end--down there it must have
+been--enfiladed the trench, and every man in it was killed. But the
+charge ended the war. Other Americans, mad with the glory of it, poured
+in a sea after their comrades and held the trench, and poured on and on,
+and wiped out that day the Prussian Guard. The German morale was broken
+from then; within four months the war was over.
+
+_She_. (_Turns and hides her face on his shoulder and shakes with
+sobs_.) I'm not--crying for sorrow--for them. I'm crying--for the glory
+of it. Because--I'm so proud and glad--that it's too much for me. To
+belong to such a nation--to such men. I'm crying for knowing, it was my
+nation--my men. And America is--the same today. I know it. If she needed
+you today, Ted, you would fight like that. You would go over the top
+with the charging Blank_th_, with a shout, if the order came--wouldn't
+you, my own man?
+
+_He_. (_Looking into the old ditch with his head bent reverently_.) I
+hope so.
+
+_She_. And I hope I would send you with all my heart. Death like that is
+more than life.
+
+_He_. I've made you cry.
+
+_She_. Not you. What they did--those boys.
+
+_He_. It's fitting that Americans should come here, as they do come, as
+to a Mecca, a holy place. For it was here that America was saved. That's
+what they did, the boys who made that charge. They saved America from
+the most savage and barbarous enemy of all time. As sure as France and
+England were at the end of their rope--and they were--so surely Germany,
+the victor, would have invaded America, and Belgium would have happened
+in our country. A hundred years wouldn't have been enough to free us
+again, if that had happened. You and I, dearest, owe it to those
+soldiers that we are here together, free, prosperous citizens of an ever
+greater country.
+
+_She_. (_Drops on her knees by the ditch_.) It's a shrine. Men of my
+land, I own my debt. I thank you for all I have and am. God bless you in
+your heaven. (_Silence_.)
+
+_He_. (_Tears in his eyes. His arm around her neck as he bends to her_.)
+You'll not forget the story of the Charging Blank_th_?
+
+_She_. Never again. In my life. (_Rising_.) I think their spirits must
+be here often. Perhaps they're happy when Americans are here. It's a
+holy place, as you said. Come away now. I love to leave it in sunshine
+and flowers with the dear ghosts of the boys. (_Exit He and She_.)
+
+
+
+
+FIFTH ACT
+
+
+_The scene it the same trench in the year 2018. It is five o'clock of
+the same summer afternoon. An officer of the American Army and an
+English cabinet member come, together, to visit the old trench. The
+American has a particular reason for his interest; the Englishman
+accompanies the distinguished American. The two review the story of the
+trench and speak of other things connected, and it is hoped that they
+set forth the far-reaching work of the soldiers who died, not realizing
+their work, in the great fight of the Charging Blank_th.
+
+_Englishman_. It's a peaceful scene.
+
+_American_. (_Advances to the side of the ditch. Looks down. Takes off
+his cap_.) I came across the ocean to see it. (_He looks over the
+fields_.) It's quiet.
+
+_Englishman_. The trenches were filled in all over the invaded territory
+within twenty-five years after the war. Except a very few kept as a
+manner of monument. Object-lessons, don't you know, in what the thing
+meant. Even those are getting obliterated. They say this is quite the
+best specimen in all France.
+
+_American_. It doesn't look warlike. What a lot of flowers!
+
+_Englishman_. Yes. The folk about here have a tradition, don't you know,
+that poppies mark the places where blood flowed most.
+
+_American_. Ah! (_Gazes into the ditch_.) Poppies there. A hundred of
+our soldiers died at once down there. Mere lads mostly. Their names and
+ages are on a tablet in the capitol at Washington, and underneath is a
+sentence from Lincoln's Gettysburg speech: "These dead shall not have
+died in vain, and government of the people, by the people, for the
+people shall not perish from the earth."
+
+_Englishman_. Those are undying words.
+
+_American_. And undying names--the lads' names.
+
+_Englishman_. What they and the other Americans did can never die. Not
+while the planet endures. No nation at that time realized how vital was
+your country's entrance into the war. Three months later it would have
+been too late. Your young, untried forces lifted worn-out France and
+England and swept us to-victory. It was America's victory at the last.
+It is our glory to confess that, for from then on America has been our
+kin.
+
+_American_. (_Smiles_.) England is our well-beloved elder sister for all
+time now.
+
+_Englishman_. The soldiers who died there (_gestures to the ditch_) and
+their like did that also. They tied the nations together with a bond of
+common gratitude, common suffering, common glory.
+
+_American_. You say well that there was common gratitude. England and
+France had fought our battle for three years at the time we entered the
+war. We had nestled behind the English fleet. Those grim gray ships of
+yours stood between us and the barbarians very literally.
+
+_Englishman_. Without doubt Germany would have been happy to invade the
+only country on earth rich enough to pay her war debt. And you were
+astonishingly open to invasion. It is one of the historical facts that a
+student of history of this twenty-first century finds difficult to
+realize.
+
+_American_. The Great War made revolutionary changes. That condition of
+unpreparedness was one. That there will never be another war is the
+belief of all governments. But if all governments should be mistaken,
+not again would my country, or yours, be caught unprepared. A general
+staff built of soldiers and free of civilians hampering is one advantage
+we have drawn from our ordeal of 1917.
+
+_Englishman_. Your army is magnificently efficient.
+
+_American_. And yours. Heaven grant neither may ever be needed! Our
+military efficiency is the pride of an unmilitary nation. One Congress,
+since the Great War and its lessons, has vied with another to keep our
+high place.
+
+_Englishman_. Ah! Your Congress. That has changed since the old
+days--since La Follette.
+
+_American_. The name is a shame and a warning to us. Our children are
+taught to remember it so. The "little group of wilful men," the eleven
+who came near to shipwrecking the country, were equally bad, perhaps,
+but they are forgotten. La Follette stands for them and bears the curses
+of his countrymen, which they all earned.
+
+_Englishman_. Their ignominy served America; it roused the country to
+clean its Augean stables.
+
+_American_. The war purified with fire the legislative soul.
+
+_Englishman_. Exactly. Men are human still, certainly, yet genuine
+patriotism appears to be a _sine qua non_ now, where bombast answered in
+the old day. Corruption is no longer accepted. Public men then were
+surprisingly simple, surprisingly cheap and limited in their methods.
+There were two rules for public and private life. It was thought
+quixotic, I gather from studying the documents of the time, to expect
+anything different. And how easily the change came!
+
+_American_. The nation rose and demanded honesty, and honesty was there.
+The enormous majority of decent people woke from a discontented apathy
+and took charge. Men sprang into place naturally and served the nation.
+The old log-rolling, brainless, greedy public officials were thrown
+into the junk-heap. As if by magic the stress of the war wrung out the
+rinsings and the scourings and left the fabric clean.
+
+_Englishman_. The stress of the war affected more than internal
+politics. You and I, General, are used to a standard of conduct between
+responsible nations as high as that taken for granted between
+responsible persons. But, if one considers, that was far from the case a
+hundred years ago. It was in 1914, that von Bethmann-Hollweg spoke of "a
+scrap of paper."
+
+_American_. Ah--Germans!
+
+_Englishman_. Certainly one does not expect honor or sincerity from
+German psychology. Even the little Teutonic Republic of to-day is
+tricky, scheming always to get a foothold for power, a beginning for the
+army they will never again be allowed to have. Even after the Kaiser and
+the Crown Prince and the other rascals were punished they tried to cheat
+us, if you remember. Yet it is not that which I had in mind. The point I
+was making was that today it would be out of drawing for a government
+even of charlatans, like the Prussians, to advance the sort of claims
+which they did. In commonplace words, it was expected then that
+governments, as against each other, would be self-seeking. To-day
+decency demands that they should be, as men must be, unselfish.
+
+_America_. (_Musingly_.) It's odd how long it took the
+world--governments--human beings--to find the truth of the very old
+phrase that "he who findeth his life must lose it."
+
+_Englishman_. The simple fact of that phrase before the Great War was
+not commonly grasped. People thought it purely religious and reserved
+for saints and church services. As a working hypothesis it was not
+generally known. The every-day ideals of our generation, the friendships
+and brotherhoods of nations as we know them would have been thought
+Utopian.
+
+_American_. Utopian? Perhaps our civilization is better than Utopian.
+The race has grown with a bound since we all went through hell together.
+How far the civilization of 1914 stood above that of 1614! The
+difference between galley-slaves and able-bodied seamen, of your and
+our navy! Greater yet than the change in that three hundred years is the
+change in the last one hundred. I look at it with a soldier's somewhat
+direct view. Humanity went helpless and alone into a fiery furnace and
+came through holding on to God's hand. We have clung closely to that
+powerful grasp since.
+
+_Englishman_. Certainly the race has emerged from an epoch of intellect
+to an epoch of spirituality--which comprehends and extends intellect.
+There have never been inventions such as those of our era. And the
+inventors have been, as it were, men inspired. Something beyond
+themselves has worked through them for the world. A force like that was
+known only sporadically before our time.
+
+_American_. (_Looks into old ditch_.) It would be strange to the lads
+who charged through horror across this flowery field to hear our talk
+and to know that to them and their deeds we owe the happiness and the
+greatness of the world we now live in.
+
+_Englishman_. Their short, Homeric episode of life admitted few
+generalizations, I fancy. To be ready and strong and brave--there was
+scant time for more than that in those strenuous days. Yet under that
+simple formula lay a sea of patriotism and self-sacrifice, from which
+sprang their soldiers' force. "Greater love hath no man than this, that
+a man lay down his life for his friends." It was their love--love of
+country, of humanity, of freedom--which silenced in the end the great
+engine of evil--Prussianism. The motive power of life is proved, through
+those dead soldiers, to be not hate, as the Prussians taught, but love.
+
+_American_. Do you see something shining among the flowers at the bottom
+of the ditch?
+
+_Englishman_. Why, yes. Is it--a leaf which catches the light?
+
+_American_. (_Stepping down_.) I'll see. (_He picks up a metal
+identification disk worn by a soldier. Angélique has rubbed it so that
+the letters may mostly be read_.) This is rather wonderful. (_He reads
+aloud_.) "R.V.H. Randolph--Blank_th_ Regiment--U.S." I can't make out
+the rest.
+
+_Englishman_. (_Takes the disk_.) Extraordinary! The name and regiment
+are plain. The identification disk, evidently, of a soldier who died in
+the trench here. Your own man, General.
+
+_American_. (_Much stirred_.) And--my own regiment. Two years ago I was
+the colonel of "The Charging Blank_th_."
+
+
+
+
+HER COUNTRY TOO
+
+
+David Lance sat wondering. He was not due at the office till ten this
+Saturday night and he was putting in a long and thorough wonder. About
+the service in all its branches; about finance; about the new Liberty
+Loan. First, how was he to stop being a peaceful reporter on the
+_Daybreak_ and get into uniform; that wonder covered a class including
+the army, navy and air-service, for he had been refused by all three; he
+wondered how a small limp from apple-tree acrobatics at ten might be so
+explained away that he might pass; reluctantly he wondered also about
+the Y.M.C.A. But he was a fighting man _par excellence_. For him it
+would feel like slacking to go into any but fighting service. Six feet
+two and weighing a hundred and ninety, every ounce possible to be muscle
+was muscle; easy, joyful twenty-four-year-old muscle which knew nothing
+of fatigue. He was certain he would make a fit soldier for Uncle Sam,
+and how, how he wanted to be Uncle Sam's soldier!
+
+He was getting desperate. Every man he knew in the twenties and many a
+one under and over, was in uniform; bitterly he envied the proud peace
+in their eyes when he met them. He could not bear to explain things once
+more as he had explained today to Tom Arnold and "Beef" Johnson, and
+"Seraph" Olcott, home on leave before sailing for France. He had
+suffered while they listened courteously and hurried to say that they
+understood, that it was a shame, and that: "You'll make it yet, old
+son." And they had then turned to each other comparing notes of camps.
+It made little impression that he had toiled and sweated early and late
+in this struggle to get in somewhere--army, navy, air-service--anything
+to follow the flag. He wasn't allowed. He was still a reporter on the
+_Daybreak_ while the biggest doings of humanity were getting done, and
+every young son of America had his chance to help. With a strong,
+tireless body aching for soldier's work, America, his mother, refused
+him work. He wasn't allowed.
+
+Lance groaned, sitting in his one big chair in his one small room. There
+were other problems. A Liberty Loan drive was on, and where could he lay
+hands on money for bonds? He had plunged on the last loan and there was
+yet something to pay on the $200 subscription. And there was no one and
+nothing to fall back on except his salary as reporter for the
+_Daybreak._ His father had died when he was six, and his mother eight
+years ago; his small capital had gone for his four years, at Yale. There
+was no one--except a legend of cousins in the South. Never was any one
+poorer or more alone. Yet he must take a bond or two. How might he hold
+up his head not to fight and not to buy bonds. A knock at the door.
+
+"Come in," growled Lance.
+
+The door opened, and a picture out of a storybook stood framed and
+smiling. One seldom sees today in the North the genuine old-fashioned
+negro-woman. A sample was here in Lance's doorway. A bandanna of red and
+yellow made a turban for her head; a clean brownish calico dress stood
+crisply about a solid and waistless figure, and a fresh white apron
+covered it voluminously in front; a folded white handkerchief lay,
+fichu-wise, around the creases of a fat black neck; a basket covered
+with a cloth was on her arm. She stood and smiled as if to give the
+treat time to have its effect on Lance. "Look who's here!" was in large
+print all over her. And she radiated peace and good-will.
+
+Lance was on his feet with a shout. "Bless your fat heart, Aunt
+Basha--I'm glad to see you," he flung at her, and seized the basket and
+slung it half across the room to a sofa with a casualness, alarming to
+Aunt Basha--christened Bathsheba seventy-five years ago, but "rightly
+known," she had so instructed Lance, as "Aunt Basha."
+
+"Young marse, don' you ruinate the washin', please sir," she adjured in
+liquid tones.
+
+"Never you mind. It's the last one you'll do for me," retorted Lance.
+"Did I tell you you couldn't have the honor of washing for me anymore,
+Aunt Basha?"
+
+Aunt Basha was wreathed in smiles.
+
+"Yassir, young marse. You tole me dat mo'n tree times befo', a'ready,
+sir."
+
+"Well--it's final this time. Can't stand your prices. I _can't_ stand
+your exorbitant prices. Now what do you have the heart to charge for
+dusting off those three old shirts and two and a half collars? Hey?"
+
+Aunt Basha, entirely serene, was enjoying the game. "What does I
+charges, sir? Fo' dat wash, which you slung 'round acrost de room, sir?
+Well, sir, young marse, I charges fo' dollars 'n sev'nty fo' cents, sir,
+dis week. Fo' dat wash."
+
+Lance let loose a howl and flung himself into his chair as if
+prostrated, long legs out and arms hanging to the floor. Aunt Basha
+shook with laughter. This was a splendid joke and she never, never tired
+of it. "You see!" he threw out, between gasps. "Look at that! _Fo'_
+dollars 'n sev'nty _fo'_ cents." He sat up suddenly and pointed a big
+finger, "Aunt Basha," he whispered, "somebody's been kidding you.
+Somebody's lied. This palatial apartment, much as it looks like it, is
+not the home of John D. Rockefeller." He sprung up, drew an imaginary
+mantle about him, grasped one elbow with the other hand, dropped his
+head into the free palm and was Cassius or Hamlet or Faust--all one to
+Aunt Basha. His left eyebrow screwed up and his right down, and he
+glowered. "List to her," he began, and shot out a hand, immediately to
+replace it where it was most needed, under his elbow. "But list, ye
+Heavens and protect the lamb from this ravening wolf. She chargeth--oh
+high Heavens above!--she expecteth me to pay"--he gulped sobs--"the
+extortioner, the she-wolf--expecteth me to pay her--_fo_' dollars 'n
+sev'nty _fo_' cents!"
+
+Aunt Basha, entranced with this drama, quaked silently like a large
+coffee jelly, and with that there happened a high, rich, protracted
+sound which was laughter, but laughter not to be imitated of any vocal
+chords of a white race. The delicious note soared higher, higher it
+seemed than the scale of humanity, and was riotous velvet and cream,
+with no effort or uncertainty. Lance dropped his Mephistopheles pose and
+grinned.
+
+"It's Q sharp!" he commented. "However does she do it!"
+
+"Naw, sir, young marse," Aunt Basha began, descending to speech. "De
+she-wolf, she don' expecteth you to pay no fo' dollars 'n sev'nty fo'
+cents, sir. Dat's thes what I _charges_. Dat ain' what you _pay_. You
+thes pay me sev'nty fo' cents sir. Dat's all."
+
+"Oh!" Lance let it out like a ten-year-old. It was hard to say which
+enjoyed this weekly interview more, the boy or the old woman. The boy
+was lonely and the humanity unashamed of her race and personality made
+an atmosphere which delighted him. "Oh!" gasped Lance. "That's a relief.
+I thought it was goodbye to my Sunday trousers."
+
+Aunt Basha, comfortable and efficient, was unpacking the basket and
+putting away the wash in the few bureau drawers which easily held the
+boy's belongings. "Dey's all mended nice," she announced. "Young marse,
+sir, you better wa' out dese yer ole' undercloses right now, endurin' de
+warm weather, 'caze dey ain' gwine do you fo' de col'. You 'bleeged to
+buy some new ones sir, when it comes off right cool."
+
+Lance smiled, for there was no one but this old black woman to take care
+of him and advise his haphazard housekeeping, and he liked it. "Can't
+buy new ones," he made answer. "There you go again, mixing me up with
+Rockefeller. I'm not even the Duke of Westminster, do you see. I haven't
+got any money. Only sev'nty fo' cents for the she-wolf."
+
+Aunt Basha chuckled. Long ago there had been a household of young people
+in the South whose clothes she, a very young woman then, had mended;
+there had been a boy who talked nonsense to her much as this boy--Marse
+Pendleton. But trouble had come; everything had broken like a card-house
+under an ocean wave. "De fambly" was lost, and she and her young
+husband, old Uncle Jeems of today, had drifted by devious ways to this
+Northern city. "Ef you ain't got de money handy dis week, young marse,
+you kin pay me nex' week thes as well," suggested the she-wolf.
+
+Then the big boy was standing over her, and she was being patted on the
+shoulder with a touch that all but brought tears to the black, dim eyes.
+"Don't you dare pay attention to my drool, or I'll never talk to you
+again," Lance ordered. "Your sev'nty fo' cents is all right, and lots
+more. I've got heaps of cash that size, Aunt Basha. But I want to buy
+Liberty Bonds, and I don't know how in hell I'm going to get big money."
+The boy was thinking aloud. "How am I to raise two hundred for a couple
+of bonds, Aunt Basha? Tell me that?" He scratched into his thatch of
+hair and made a puzzled face.
+
+"What fo' you want big money, young marse?"
+
+"Bonds. Liberty Bonds. You know what that is?"
+
+"Naw, sir."
+
+"You don't? Well you ought to," said Lance. "There isn't a soul in this
+country who oughtn't to have a bond. It's this way. You know we're
+fighting a war?"
+
+"Yassir. Young Ananias Johnson, he's Sist' Amanda's boy, he done tole
+his Unk Jeems 'bout dat war. And Jeems, he done tole me."
+
+Lance regarded her. Was it possible that the ocean upheaval had stirred
+even the quietest backwater so little? "Well, anyhow, it's the biggest
+war that ever was on earth."
+
+Aunt Basha shook her head. "You ain't never seed de War of de
+Rebullium," she stated with superiority. "You's too young. Well, I
+reckon dis yer war ain't much on to dat war. Naw, sir! Dat ar was a sure
+'nough war--yas, sir!"
+
+Lance considered. He decided not to contest the point. "Anyhow Aunt
+Basha, this is an awfully big war. And if we don't win it the Germans
+will come over here and murder the most of us, and make you and Uncle
+Jeems work in the fields from daylight till dark."
+
+"Dem low down white trash!" commented Aunt Basha.
+
+"Yes, and worse. And Uncle Sam can't beat the Germans unless we all
+help. He needs money to buy guns for the soldiers, and food and clothes.
+So he's asking everybody--just everybody--to lend him money--every cent
+they can raise to buy things to win the war. He gives each person who
+lends him any, a piece of paper which is a promise to pay it back, and
+that piece of paper is called a bond--Uncle Sam's promise to pay.
+Everybody ought to help by giving up every cent they have. The soldiers
+are giving their lives to save us from the horrible Germans. They're
+going over there to live in mud and water and sleep in holes of the
+earth, to be shot and wounded and tortured and killed. They're facing
+that for our sakes, to save us from worse than death, for you and Uncle
+Jeems and me, Aunt Basha. Now, oughtn't we to give all we've got to take
+care of those boys--our soldiers?"
+
+Lance had forgotten his audience, except that he was wording his speech
+carefully in the simplest English. It went home.
+
+"Oh, my Lawd!" moaned Aunt Basha, sitting down and rocking hard. "Does
+dey sleep in de col' yeth? Oh, my Lawd have mercy!" It was the first
+realization she had had of the details of the war. "You ain't gwine over
+dar, is you young marse, honey?" she asked anxiously.
+
+"I wish to God I was," spoke Lance through set teeth. "No, Aunt Basha,
+they won't take me. Because I'm lame. I'd give my life to go. And
+because I can't fight I _must_ buy bonds. Do you see? I must. I'd sell
+my soul to get money for Liberty Bonds. Oh, God!" Lance was as if alone,
+with only that anxious old black face gazing up at him. "Oh, God--it's
+my country!"
+
+Suddenly the rich flowing voice spoke. "Young marse, it's my country
+too, sir," said Aunt Basha.
+
+Lance turned and stared. How much did the words mean to the old woman?
+In a moment he knew.
+
+"Yas, my young marseter, dis yer America's de ole black 'oman's country,
+thes like it's fine young white man's, like you, sir. I gwine give my
+las' cent, like you say. Yas, I gwine do dat. I got two hun'erd dollars,
+sir; I b'en a-savin' and a-savin' for Jeems 'n me 'ginst when we git
+ole, but I gwine give dat to my country. I want Unc' Sam to buy good
+food for dem boys in the muddy water. Bacon 'n hominy, sir--'n corn
+bread, what's nourishin'. 'N I want you to git de--de Liberty
+what-je-call-'ems. Yassir. 'Caze you ain't got no ma to he'ep you out,
+'n de ole black 'oman's gwine to be de bes' ma she know how to her young
+marse. I got de money tied up--" she leaned forward and whispered--"in a
+stockin' in de bottom draw' ob de chist unner Jeem's good coat. Tomorrow
+I gwine fetch it, 'n you go buy yo' what-je-calls-'ems."
+
+Lance went across and knelt on the floor beside her and put his arms
+around the stout figure. He had been brought up with a colored mammy and
+this affection seemed natural and homelike. "Aunt Basha, you're one of
+the saints," he said. "And I love you for it. But I wouldn't take your
+blessed two hundred, not for anything on earth. I'd be a hound to take
+it. If you want some bonds"--it flashed to him that the money would be
+safer so than in the stocking under Jeem's coat--"why, I'll get them for
+you. Come into the _Daybreak_ office and ask for me, say--Monday. And
+I'll go with you to the bank and get bonds. Here's my card. Show anybody
+that at the office." And he gave directions.
+
+Five minutes later the old woman went off down the street talking half
+aloud to herself in fragments of sentences about "Liberty
+what-je-call-'ems" and "my country too." In the little shack uptown that
+was home for her and her husband she began at once to set forth her new
+light. Jeems, who added to the family income by taking care of furnaces
+and doing odd jobs, was grizzled and hobbling of body, but argumentative
+of soul.
+
+"'Oman," he addressed Aunt Basha, "Unc' Sam got lots o' money. What use
+he gwine have, great big rich man lak Unc' Sam, fo' yo' two hun'erd? But
+we got mighty lot o' use fo' dat money, we'uns. An' you gwine gib dat
+away? Thes lak a 'oman!" which, in other forms, is an argument used by
+male people of many classes.
+
+Aunt Basha suggested that Young Marse David said something about a piece
+of paper and Uncle Sam paying back, but Jeems pooh-poohed that.
+
+"Naw, sir. When big rich folks goes round collectin' po' folkses money,
+is dey liable to pay back? What good piece o' paper gwine do you? Is dey
+aimin' to let you see de color ob dat money agin? Naw, sir. Dey am not."
+He proceeded to another branch of the subject. "War ain' gwine las'
+long, nohow. Young Ananias he gwine to Franch right soon, an' de yether
+colored brothers. De Germans dey ain't gwine las' long, once ef dey see
+us Anglo-Saxons in de scrablin'. Naw, sir.
+
+"White man what come hyer yether day, he say how dey ain't gwine 'low de
+colored sojers to fight," suggested Aunt Basha. German propaganda
+reaches far and takes strange shapes.
+
+"Don' jer go to b'lieve dat white man, 'oman," thundered Jeems, thumping
+with his fist. "He dunno nawthin', an' I reckon he's a liar. Unc' Sam he
+say we kin fight an' we _gwine_ fight. An' de war ain't las' long atter
+we git to fightin' good."
+
+Aunt Basha, her hands folded on the rounded volume of apron considered
+deeply. After a time she arrived at a decision.
+
+"Jeems," she began, "yo' cert'nly is a strong reasoner. Yassir. But I
+got it bo'ne in upon me powerful dat I gotter give dese yer savin's to
+Unc' Sam. It's my country too, Jeems, same as dem sojers what's
+fightin', dem boys in de mud what ain' got a soul to wash fo' 'em. An'
+lak as not dey mas not dere. Dem boys is fightin', and gittin' wet and
+hunted up lak young marse say, fo' Aunt Basha and--bress dere
+hearts"--Aunt Basha broke down, and the upshot was that Jeems washed his
+hands of an obstinate female and--the savings not being his in any
+case--gave unwilling consent.
+
+Youth of the sterner set is apt to be casual in making appointments. It
+had not entered Lance's head to arrange in case he was not at the
+office. As for Aunt Basha, her theory was that he reigned there over an
+army of subordinates from morning till evening. So that she was taken
+aback when told that Mr. Lance was out and no one could say when he
+would be in. She had risen at dawn and done her housework and much of
+the fine washing which she "took in," and had then arrayed herself in
+her best calico dress and newest turban and apron for the great occasion
+and had reported at the _Daybreak_ office at nine-thirty. And young
+marse wasn't there.
+
+"I'll set and rest ontwell he comes in," she announced, and retired to
+a chair against the wall.
+
+There she folded her hands statelily and sat erect, motionless, an image
+of fine old dignity. But much thinking was going on inside the calm
+exterior. What was she going to do if young marse did not come back? She
+had the $200 with her, carefully pinned and double pinned into a pocket
+in her purple alpaca petticoat. She did not want to take it home. Jeems
+had submitted this morning, but with mutterings, and a second time there
+might be trouble. The savings were indeed hers, but a rebellious husband
+in high finance is an embarrassment. Deeply Aunt Basha considered, and
+memory whispered something about a bank. Young marse was going to the
+bank with her to give her money to Uncle Sam. She had just passed a
+bank. Why could she not go alone? Somebody certainly would tell her what
+to do. Possibly Uncle Sam was there himself--for Aunt Basha's conception
+of our national myth was half mystical, half practical--as a child with
+Santa Claus. In any case banks were responsible places, and somebody
+would look after her. She crossed to the desk where two or three young
+men appeared to be doing most of the world's business.
+
+"Marsters!"
+
+The three looked up.
+
+"Good mawnin', young marsters. I'm 'bleeged to go now. I cert'nly thank
+you-all fo' lettin' me set in de cheer. I won't wait fo' marse David
+Lance no mo', sir. Good mawnin', marsters."
+
+A smiling courtesy dropped, and she was gone.
+
+"I'll be darned!" remarked reporter number one.
+
+"Where did that blow in from?" added reporter number two.
+
+But reporter number three had imagination. "The dearest old soul I've
+seen in a blue moon," said he.
+
+Aunt Basha proceeded down the street and more than one in the crowd
+glanced twice at the erect, stout figure swinging, like a quaint and
+stately ship in full sail, among the steam-tuggery of up-to-date
+humanity. There were high steps leading to the bank entrance, impressive
+and alarming to Aunt Basha. She paused to take breath for this
+adventure. Was a humble old colored woman permitted to walk freely in at
+those grand doors, open iron-work and enormous of size? She did not
+know. She stood a moment, suddenly frightened and helpless, not daring
+to go on, looking about for a friendly face. And behold! there it
+was--the friendliest face in the world, it seemed to the lost old
+soul--a vision of loveliness. It was the face of a beautiful young white
+lady in beautiful clothes who had stepped from a huge limousine. She was
+coming up the steps, straight to Aunt Basha. She saw the old woman, saw
+her anxious hesitation, and halted. The next event was a heavenly smile.
+Aunt Basha knew the repartee to that, and the smile that shone in answer
+was as heavenly in its way as the girl's.
+
+"Is there anything I can do for you?" spoke a voice of gentleness.
+
+And the world had turned over and come up right side on top. "Mawnin',
+Miss. Yas'm, I was fixin' to go in dat big do' yander, but I dunno as
+I'm 'lowed. Is I 'lowed, young miss, to go in dar an' gib my two hun'erd
+to Unc' Sam?"
+
+"What?" The tone was kindness itself, but bewildered.
+
+Aunt Basha elucidated. "I got two hun'erd, young miss, and I cert'nly
+want to gib it to Unc' Sam to buy clo'se for dem boys what's fightin'
+for us in Franch."
+
+"I wonder," spoke the girl, gazing thoughtfully, "if you want to get a
+Liberty Bond?"
+
+"Yas'm--yas, miss. Dat's sho' it, a whatjer-ma-call-'em. I know'd 'twas
+some cu'is name lak dat." The vision nodded her head.
+
+"I'm going in to do that very thing myself," she said. "Come with me.
+I'll help you get yours."
+
+Aunt Basha followed joyfully in the wake, and behold, everything was
+easy. Ready attention met them and shortly they sat in a private office
+carpeted in velvet and upholstered in grandeur. A personage gave grave
+attention to what the vision was saying.
+
+"I met--I don't know your name," she interrupted herself, turning to the
+old negro woman.
+
+Aunt Basha rose and curtsied. "Dey christened me Bathsheba Jeptha,
+young miss," she stated. "But I'se rightly known as Aunt Basha. Jes'
+Aunt Basha, young miss. And marster."
+
+A surname was disinterred by the efforts of the personage which appeared
+to startle the vision.
+
+"Why, it's our name, Mr. Davidson," she exclaimed. "She said Cabell."
+
+Aunt Basha turned inquiring, vague eyes. "Is it, honey? Is yo' a
+Cabell?"
+
+And then the personage, who was, after all, cashier of the Ninth
+National Bank and very busy, cut in. "Ah, yes! A well known Southern
+name. Doubtless a large connection. And now Mrs.--ah--Cabell--"
+
+"I'd be 'bleeged ef yo' jis' name me Aunt Basha, marster."
+
+And marster, rather _intrigué_ because he, being a New Englander, had
+never in his life addressed as "aunt" a person who was not sister to his
+mother or his father, nevertheless became human and smiled. "Well, then,
+Aunt Basha."
+
+At a point a bit later he was again jolted when he asked the amount
+which his newly adopted "aunt" wanted to invest. For an answer she
+hauled high the folds of her frock, unconscious of his gasp or of the
+vision's repressed laughter, and went on to attack the clean purple
+alpaca petticoat which was next in rank, Mr. Davidson thought it wise at
+this point to make an errand across the room. He need not have bothered
+as far as Aunt Basha was concerned. When he came back she was again _à
+la mode_ and held an ancient beaded purse at which she gazed. Out of a
+less remote pocket she drew steel spectacles, which were put on. Mr.
+Davidson repeated his question of how much.
+
+"It's all hyer, marster. It's two hun'erd dollars, sir. I ben savin' up
+fo' twenty years an' mo', and me'n Jeems, we ben countin' it every mont,
+so I reckon I knows."
+
+The man and the girl regarded the old woman a moment. "It's a large sum
+for you to invest," Mr. Davidson said.
+
+"Yassir. Yas, marster. It's right smart money. But I sho' am glad to gib
+dis hyer to Unc' Sam for dem boys."
+
+The cashier of the Ninth National Bank lifted his eyes from the blank he
+was filling out and looked at Aunt Basha thoughtfully. "You understand,
+of course, that the Government--Uncle Sam--is only borrowing your money.
+That you may have it back any time you wish."
+
+Aunt Basha drew herself up. "I don' wish it, sir. I'm gibin' dis hyer
+gif,' a free gif' to my country. Yassir. It's de onliest country I got,
+an' I reckon I got a right to gib dis hyer what I earned doin' fine
+washin' and i'nin. I gibs it to my country. I don't wan' to hyer any
+talk 'bout payin' back. Naw, sir."
+
+It took Mr. Davidson and the vision at least ten minutes to make clear
+to Aunt Basha the character and habits of a Liberty Bond, and then,
+though gratified with the ownership of what seemed a brand new $200 and
+a valuable slip of paper--which meandered, shamelessly into the purple
+alpaca petticoat--yet she was disappointed.
+
+"White folks sho' am cu'is," she reflected, "Now who'd 'a thought 'bout
+dat way ob raisin' money! Not me--no, Lawd! It do beat me." With that
+she threw an earnest glance at Mr. Davidson, lean and tall and gray,
+with a clipped pointed beard. "'Scuse me, marster," said Aunt Basha,
+"mout I ask a quexshun?"
+
+"Surely," agreed Mr. Davidson blandly.
+
+"Is you'--'scuse de ole 'oman, sir--is you' Unc' Sam?"
+
+The "quexshun" left the personage too staggered to laugh. But the girl
+filled the staid place with gay peals. Then she leaned over and patted
+the wrinkled and bony worn black knuckles. "Bless your dear heart," she
+said; "no, he isn't, Aunt Basha. He's awfully important and good to us
+all, and he knows everything. But he's not Uncle Sam."
+
+The bewilderment of the old face melted to smiles. "Dar, now," she
+brought out; "I mout 'a know'd, becaze he didn't have no red striped
+pants. An' de whiskers is diff'ent, too. 'Scuse me, sir, and thank you
+kindly, marster. Thank you, young miss. De Lawd bress you fo' helpin' de
+ole 'oman." She had risen and she dropped her old time curtsey at this
+point. "Mawnin' to yo', marster and young miss."
+
+But the girl sprang up. "You can't go," she said. "I'm going to take you
+to my house to see my grandmother. She's Southern, and our name is
+Cabell, and likely--maybe--she knew your people down South."
+
+"Maybe, young miss. Dar's lots o' Cabells," agreed Aunt Basha, and in
+three minutes found herself where she had never thought to be, inside a
+fine private car.
+
+She was dumb with rapture and excitement, and quite unable to answer the
+girl's friendly words except with smiles and nods. The girl saw how it
+was and let her be, only patting the calico arm once and again
+reassuringly. "I wonder if she didn't want to come. I wonder if I've
+frightened her," thought Eleanor Cabell. When into the silence broke
+suddenly the rich, high, irresistible music which was Aunt Basha's
+laugh, and which David Lance had said was pitched on "Q sharp." The girl
+joined the infectious sound and a moment after that the car stopped.
+
+"This is home," said Eleanor.
+
+Aunt Basha observed, with the liking for magnificence of a servant
+trained in a large house, the fine façade and the huge size of "home."
+In a moment she was inside, and "young miss" was carefully escorting her
+into a sunshiny big room, where a wood fire burned, and a bird sang, and
+there were books and flowers.
+
+"Wait here, Aunt Basha, dear," Eleanor said, "and I'll get Grandmother."
+It was exactly like the loveliest of dreams, Aunt Basha told Jeems an
+hour later. It could not possibly have been true, except that it was.
+When "Grandmother" came in, slender and white-haired and a bit
+breathless with this last surprise of a surprising granddaughter, Aunt
+Basha stood and curtsied her stateliest.
+
+Then suddenly she cried out, "Fo' God! Oh, my Miss Jinny!" and fell on
+her knees.
+
+Mrs. Cabell gazed down, startled. "Who is it? Oh, whom have you brought
+me, Eleanor?" She bent to look more closely at Aunt Basha, kneeling,
+speechless, tears streaming from the brave old eyes, holding up clasped
+hand imploring. "It isn't--Oh, my dear, I believe it _is_ our own old
+nurse, Basha, who took care of your father!"
+
+"Yas'm. Yas, Miss Jinny," endorsed Aunt Basha, climbing to her feet.
+"Yas, my Miss Jinny, bress de Lawd. It's Basha." She turned to the girl.
+"Dis yer chile ain't nebber my young Marse Pendleton's chile!"
+
+But it was; and there was explanation and laughter and tears, too, but
+tears of happiness. Then it was told how, after that crash of disaster
+was over; the family had tried in vain to find Basha and Jeems; had
+tried always. It was told how a great fortune had come to them in the
+turn of a hand by the discovery of an unsuspected salt mine on the old
+estate; how "young Marse Pendleton," a famous surgeon now, had by that
+time made for himself a career and a home in this Northern state; how
+his wife had died young, and his mother, "Miss Jinny," had come to live
+with him and take care of his one child, the vision. And then the simple
+annals of Aunt Basha and Uncle Jeems were also told, the long struggle
+to keep respectable, only respectable; the years of toil and frugality
+and saving--saving the two hundred dollars which she had offered this
+morning as a "free gif" to her country. In these annals loomed large for
+some time past the figure of a "young marse" who had been good to her
+and helped her much and often in spite of his own "_res augusta
+domi_,"--which was not Aunt Basha's expression. The story was
+told of his oration in the little hall bedroom about Liberty
+"whatjer-m'-call-'ems," and of how the boy had stirred the soul of the
+old woman with his picture of the soldiers in the trenches.
+
+"So it come to me, Miss Jinny, how ez me'n Jeems was thes two wuthless
+ole niggers, an' hadn't fur to trabble on de road anyways, an' de Lawd
+would pervide, an' ef He didn't we could scratch grabble some ways. An'
+dat boy, dat young Marse David, he tole me everbody ought to gib dey
+las' cent fo' Unc' Sam an' de sojers. So"--Aunt Basha's high,
+inexpressibly sweet laughter of pure glee filled the room--"so I thes
+up'n handed over my two hun'erd."
+
+"It was the most beautiful and wonderful thing that's been done in all
+wonderful America," pronounced Eleanor Cabell as one having authority.
+She went on. "But that young man, your young Marse David, why doesn't he
+fight if he's such a patriot?"
+
+"Bress gracious, honey," Aunt Basha hurried to explain, "he's a-honin'
+to fight. But he cayn't. He's lame. He goes a-limpin'. Dey won't took
+him."
+
+"Oh!" retracted Eleanor. Then: "What's his name? Maybe father could cure
+him."
+
+"He name Lance. Marse David Lance."
+
+Why should Miss Jinny jump? "David Lance? It can't be, Aunt Basha."
+
+With no words Aunt Basha began hauling up her skirts and Eleanor,
+remembering Mr. Davidson's face, went into gales of laughter. Aunt Basha
+baited, looked at her with an inquiring gaze of adoration. "Yas'm, my
+young miss. He name dat. I done put the cyard in my ridicule. Yas'm,
+it's here." The antique bead purse was opened and Lance's card was
+presented to Miss Jinny.
+
+"Eleanor! This is too wonderful--look!"
+
+Eleanor looked, and read: "Mr. David Pendleton Lance." "Why,
+Grandmother, it's Dad's name--David Pendleton Cabell. And the Lance--"
+
+Mrs. Cabell, stronger on genealogy than the younger generation, took up
+the wandering thread. "The 'Lance' is my mother's maiden name--Virginia
+Lance she was. And her brother was David Pendleton Lance. I named your
+father for him because he was born on the day my young uncle was killed,
+in the battle of Shiloh."
+
+"Well, then--who's this sailing around with our family name?"
+
+"Who is he? But he must be our close kin, Eleanor. My Uncle David
+left--that's it. His wife came from California and she went out there
+again to live with her baby. I hadn't heard of them for years. Why,
+Eleanor, this boy's father must have been--my first cousin. My young
+Uncle David's baby. Those years of trouble after we left home wiped out
+so much. I lost track--but that doesn't matter now. Aunt Basha," spoke
+Miss Jinny in a quick, efficient voice, which suddenly recalled the
+blooming and businesslike mother of the young brood of years ago, "Aunt
+Basha, where can I find your young Marse David?"
+
+Aunt Basha smiled radiantly and shook her head. "Cayn't fin' him, honey?
+I done tried, and he warn't dar."
+
+"Wasn't where?"
+
+"At de orfice, Miss Jinny."
+
+"At what office?"
+
+"Why, de _Daybreak_ orfice, cose, Miss Jinny. What yether orfice he
+gwine be at?"
+
+"Oh!" Miss Jinny followed with ease the windings of the African mind.
+"He's a reporter on the _Daybreak_ then."
+
+"'Cose he is, Miss Jinny, ma'am. Whatjer reckon?"
+
+Miss Jinny reflected. Then: "Eleanor, call up the _Daybreak_ office and
+ask if Mr. Lance is there and if he will speak to me."
+
+But Aunt Basha was right. Mr. Lance was not at the _Daybreak_ office.
+Mrs. Cabell was as grieved as a child.
+
+"We'll find him, Grandmother," Eleanor asserted. "Why, of course--it's a
+morning paper. He's home sleeping. I'll get his number." She caught up
+the telephone book.
+
+Aunt Basha chuckled musically. "He ain't got no tullaphome, honey chile.
+No, my Lawd! Whar dat boy gwine git money for tullaphome and
+contraptions? No, my Lawd!"
+
+"How will we get him?" despaired Mrs. Cabell. The end of the council was
+a cryptic note in the hand of Jackson, the chauffeur, and orders to
+bring back the addressee at any cost.
+
+Meanwhile, as Jackson stood in his smart dark livery taking orders with
+the calmness of efficiency, feeling himself capable of getting that
+young man, howsoever hidden, the young man himself was wasting valuable
+hours off in day-dreams. In the one shabby big chair of the hall bedroom
+he sat and smoked a pipe, and stared at a microscopic fire in a toy
+grate. It was extravagant of David Lance to have a fire at all, but as
+long as he gave up meals to do it likely it was his own affair. The
+luxuries mean more than the necessities to plenty of us. With comfort in
+this, his small luxury, he watched the play of light and shadow, and the
+pulsing of the live scarlet and orange in the heart of the coals. He
+needed comfort today, the lonely boy. Two men of the office force who
+had gotten their commissions lately at an officer's training-camp had
+come in last night before leaving for Camp Devens; everybody had crowded
+about and praised them and envied them. They had been joked about the
+sweaters, and socks made by mothers and sweethearts, and about the
+trouble Uncle Sam would have with their mass of mail. The men in the
+office had joined to give each a goodbye present. Pride in them, the
+honor of them to all the force was shown at every turn; and beyond it
+all there was the look of grave contentment in their eyes which is the
+mark of the men who have counted the cost and given up everything for
+their country. Most of all soldiers, perhaps, in this great war, the
+American fights for an ideal. Also he knows it; down to the most
+ignorant drafted man, that inspiration has lifted the army and given it
+a star in the East to follow. The American fights for an ideal; the sign
+of it is in the faces of the men in uniform whom one meets everywhere in
+the street.
+
+David Lance, splendidly powerful and fit except for the small limp which
+was his undoing, suffered as he joined, whole-hearted, in the glory of
+those who were going. Back in his room alone, smoking, staring into his
+dying fire, he was dreaming how it would feel if he were the one who was
+to march off in uniform to take his man's share of the hardship and
+comradeship and adventure and suffering, and of the salvation of the
+world. With that, he took his pipe from his mouth and grinned broadly
+into the fire as another phase of the question appeared. How would it
+feel if he was somebody's special soldier, like both of those boys, sent
+off by a mother or a sweetheart, by both possibly, overstocked with
+things knitted for him, with all the necessities and luxuries of a
+soldier's outfit that could be thought of. He remembered how Jarvis,
+the artillery captain, had showed them, proud and modest, his field
+glass.
+
+"It's a good one," he had said. "My mother gave it to me. It has the
+Mills scale."
+
+And Annesley, the kid, who had made his lieutenant's commission so
+unexpectedly, had broken in: "That's no shakes to the socks I've got on.
+If somebody'll pull off my boots I'll show you. Made in Poughkeepsie. A
+dozen pairs. _Not_ my mother."
+
+Lance smiled wistfully. Since his own mother died, eight years ago, he
+had drifted about unanchored, and though women had inevitably held out
+hands to the tall and beautiful lad, they were not the sort he cared
+for, and there had been none of his own sort in his life. Fate might so
+easily have given him a chance to serve his country, with also, maybe,
+just the common sweet things added which utmost every fellow had, and a
+woman or two to give him a sendoff and to write him letters over there
+sometimes. To be a soldier--and to be somebody's soldier! Why, these two
+things would mean Heaven! And hundreds of thousands of American boys
+had these and thought nothing of it. Fate certainly had been a bit
+stingy with a chap, considered David Lance, smiling into his little fire
+with a touch of wistful self-pity.
+
+At this moment Fate, in smart, dark livery, knocked at his door. "Come
+in," shouted Lance cheerfully.
+
+The door opened and he stared. Somebody had lost the way. Chauffeurs in
+expensive livery did not come to his hall bedroom. "Is dis yer Mr.
+Lance?" inquired Jackson.
+
+Lance admitted it and got the note and read it while Jackson, knowing
+his Family intimately, knew that something pleasant and surprising was
+afoot and assisted with a discreet regard. When he saw that the note was
+finished, Jackson confidently put in his word. "Cyar's waitin', sir.
+Orders is I was to tote you to de house."
+
+Lance's eyes glowered as he looked up. "Tell me one thing," he demanded.
+
+"Yes, sir," grinned Jackson, pleased with this young gentleman from a
+very poor neighborhood, who quite evidently was, all the same,
+"quality."
+
+"Are you," inquired Lance, "are you any relation to Aunt Basha?"
+
+Jackson, for all his efficiency a friendly soul, forgot the dignity of
+his livery and broke into chuckles. "Naw, sir; naw, sir. I dunno de
+lady, sir; I reckon I ain't, sir," answered Jackson.
+
+"All right, then, but it's the mistake of your life not to be. She's the
+best on earth. Wait till I brush my hair," said Lance, and did it.
+
+Inside three minutes he was in the big Pierce-Arrow, almost as
+unfamiliar, almost as delightful to him as to Aunt Basha, and speeding
+gloriously through the streets. The note had said that some kinspeople
+had just discovered him, and would he come straight to them for lunch.
+
+Mrs. Cabell and Eleanor crowded frankly to the window when the car
+stopped.
+
+"I can't wait to see David's boy," cried Mrs. Cabell, and Eleanor, wise
+of her generation, followed with:
+
+"Now, don't expect much; he may be deadly."
+
+And out of the limousine stepped, unconscious, the beautiful David, and
+handed Jackson a dollar.
+
+"Oh!" gasped Mrs. Cabell.
+
+"It was silly, but I love it," added Eleanor; and David limped swiftly
+up the steps, and one heard Ebenezer, the butler, opening the door with
+suspicious promptness. Everyone in the house knew, mysteriously, that
+uncommon things were doing.
+
+"Pendleton," spoke Mrs. Cabell, lying in wait for her son, the great
+doctor, as he came from his office at lunch time, "Pen, dear, let me
+tell you something extraordinary." She told, him, condensing as might
+be, and ended with; "And oh, Pen, he's the most adorable boy I ever saw.
+And so lonely and so poor and so plucky. Heartbroken because he's lame
+and can't serve. You'll cure him. Pen, dear, won't you, for his
+country?"
+
+The tall, tired man bent down and kissed his mother. "Mummy, I'm not God
+Almighty. But I'll do my damdest for anything you want. Show me the
+paragon."
+
+The paragon shot up, with the small unevenness which was his limp, and
+faced the big doctor on a level. The two pairs of eyes from their
+uncommon height, looked inquiringly into each other.
+
+"I hear you have my name," spoke Dr. Cabell tersely.
+
+"Yes, sir," said David, "And I'm glad." And the doctor knew that he also
+liked the paragon.
+
+Lunch was an epic meal above and below stairs. Jeems had been fetched by
+that black Mercury Jackson, messenger today of the gods of joy. And the
+two old souls had been told by Mrs. Cabell that never again should they
+work hard or be anxious or want for anything. The sensation-loving
+colored servants rejoiced in the events as a personal jubilee, and made
+much of Aunt Basha and Unc' Jeems till their old heads reeled. Above
+stairs the scroll unrolled more or loss decorously, yet in magic colors
+unbelievable. Somehow David had told about Annesley and Jarvis last
+night.
+
+"Somebody knitted him a whole dozen pairs of socks!" he commented,
+"Really she did. He said so. Think of a girl being as good to a chap as
+that."
+
+"I'll knit you a dozen," Miss Eleanor Cabell capped his sentence, like
+the Amen at the end of a High Church prayer. "I'll begin this
+afternoon."
+
+"And, David," said Mrs. Cabell--for it had got to be "David" and "Cousin
+Virginia" by now--"David, when you get your commission, I'll have your
+field glass ready, and a few other things."
+
+Dr. Cabell lifted his eyes from his chop. "You'll spoil that boy," he
+stated. "And, mother, I pointed out that I'm not the Almighty, even on
+joints, I haven't looked at that game leg yet. I said it _might_ be
+curable."
+
+"That boy" looked up, smiling, with long years of loneliness and
+lameness written in the back of his glance. "Please don't make 'em stop,
+doctor," he begged. "I won't spoil easily. I haven't any start. And this
+is a fairy-story to me--wonderful people like you letting me--letting me
+belong. I can't believe I won't wake up. Don't you imagine it will go
+to my head. It won't. I'm just so blamed--grateful."
+
+The deep young voice trailed, and the doctor made haste to answer.
+"You're all right, my lad," he said, "As soon as lunch is over you come
+into the surgery and I'll have a glance at the leg." Which was done.
+
+After half an hour David came out, limping, pale and radiant. "I can't
+believe it," he spoke breathless. "He says--it's a simple--operation.
+I'll walk--like other men. I'll be right for--the service." He choked.
+
+At that Mrs. Cabell sped across the room and put up hands either side of
+the young face and drew it down and kissed the lad whom she did not,
+this morning, know to be in existence. "You blessed boy," she whispered,
+"you shall fight for America, and you'll be our soldier, and we'll be
+your people." And David, kissing her again, looked over her head and saw
+Eleanor glowing like a rose, and with a swift, unphrased shock of
+happiness felt in his soul the wonder of a heaven that might happen.
+Then they were all about the fire, half-crying, laughing, as people do
+on top of strong feelings.
+
+"Aunt Basha did it all," said David. "If Aunt Basha hadn't been the most
+magnificent old black woman who ever carried a snow-white soul, if she
+hadn't been the truest patriot in all America, if she hadn't given
+everything for her country--I'd likely never have--found you." His eyes
+went to the two kind and smiling faces, and his last word was a whisper.
+It was so much to have found. All he had dreamed, people of his own, a
+straight leg--and--his heart's desire--service to America.
+
+Mrs. Cabell spoke softly, "I've lived a long time and I've seen over and
+over that a good deed spreads happiness like a pebble thrown into water,
+more than a bad one spreads evil, for good is stronger and more
+contagious. We've gained this dear kinsman today because of the nobility
+of an old negro woman."
+
+David Lance lifted his head quickly. "It was no small nobility," he
+said. "As Miss Cabell was saying--"
+
+"I'm your cousin Eleanor," interrupted Miss Cabell.
+
+David lingered over the name. "Thank you, my cousin Eleanor. It's as you
+said, nothing more beautiful and wonderful has been done in wonderful
+America than this thing Aunt Basha did. It was as gallant as a soldier
+at the front, for she offered what meant possibly her life."
+
+"Her little two hundred," Eleanor spoke gently. "And so cross at the
+idea of being paid back! She wanted to _give_ it."
+
+David's face gleamed with a thought as he stared into the firelight,
+"You see," he worked out his idea, "by the standards of the angels a
+gift must be big not according to its size but according to what's left.
+If you have millions and give a few thousand you practically give
+nothing, for you have millions left. But Aunt Basha had nothing left.
+The angels must have beaten drums and blown trumpets and raised Cain all
+over Paradise while you sat in the bank, my cousin Eleanor, for the
+glory of that record gift. No plutocrat in the land has touched what
+Aunt Basha did for her country."
+
+Eleanor's eyes, sending out not only clear vision but a brown light as
+of the light of stars, shone on the boy. She bent forward, and her
+slender arms were about her knee. She gazed at David, marveling. How
+could it be that a human being might have all that David appeared to her
+to have--clear brain, crystal simplicity, manliness, charm of
+personality, and such strength and beauty besides!
+
+"Yes," she said, "Aunt Basha gave the most. She has more right than any
+of us to say that it's her country." She was silent a moment and then
+spoke softly a single word. "America!" said Eleanor reverently.
+
+America! Her sound has gone out into all lands and her words into the
+end of the world. America, who in a year took four million of sons
+untried, untrained, and made them into a mighty army; who adjusted a
+nation of a hundred million souls in a turn of the hand to unknown and
+unheard of conditions. America, whose greatest glory yet is not these
+things. America, of whom scholars and statesmen and generals and
+multi-millionaires say with throbbing pride today: "This is my country,"
+but of whom the least in the land, having brought what they may, however
+small, to lay on that flaming altar of the world's safety--of whom the
+least in the land may say as truly as the greatest, "This is my country,
+too."
+
+
+
+
+THE SWALLOW
+
+
+The Château Frontenac at Quebec is a turreted pile of masonry wandering
+down a cliff over the very cellars of the ancient Castle of St. Louis. A
+twentieth-century hotel, it simulates well a mediæval fortress and lifts
+against the cold blue northern sky an atmosphere of history. Old voices
+whisper about its towers and above the clanging hoofs in its paved
+court; deathless names are in the wind which blows from the "fleuve,"
+the great St. Lawrence River far below. Jacques Cartier's voice was
+heard hereabouts away back in 1539, and after him others, Champlain and
+Frontenac, and Father Jogues and Mother Marie of the Conception and
+Montcalm--upstanding fighting men and heroic women and hardy discoverers
+of New France walked about here once, on the "Rock" of Quebec; there is
+romance here if anywhere on earth. Today a new knighthood hails that
+past. Uniforms are thick in steep streets; men are wearing them with
+empty sleeves, on crutches, or maybe whole of body yet with racked faces
+which register a hell lived through. Canada guards heroism of many
+vintages, from four hundred years back through the years to Wolfe's
+time, and now a new harvest. Centuries from now children will be told,
+with the story of Cartier, the tale of Vimy Ridge, and while the Rock
+stands the records of Frenchmen in Canada, of Canadians in France will
+not die.
+
+Always when I go to the Château I get a table, if I can, in the smaller
+dining-room. There the illusion of antiquity holds through modern
+luxury; there they have hung about the walls portraits of the worthies
+of old Quebec; there Samuel Champlain himself, made into bronze and
+heroic of size, aloft on his pedestal on the terrace outside, lifts his
+plumed hat and stares in at the narrow windows, turning his back on
+river and lower city. One disregards waiters in evening clothes and
+up-to-date table appointments, and one looks at Champlain and the
+"fleuve," and the Isle d'Orléans lying long and low, and one thinks of
+little ships, storm-beaten, creeping up to this grim bigness ignorant
+of continental events trailing in their wake.
+
+I was on my way to camp in a club a hundred miles north of the
+gray-walled town when I drifted into the little dining-room for dinner
+one night in early September in 1918. The head-waiter was an old friend;
+he came to meet me and piloted me past a tableful of military color,
+four men in service uniforms.
+
+"Some high officers, sir," spoke the head waiter. "In conference here, I
+believe. There's a French officer, and an English, and our Canadian
+General Sampson, and one of your generals, sir."
+
+I gave my order and sat back to study the group. The waiter had it
+straight; there was the horizon blue of France; there was the Englishman
+tall and lean and ruddy and expressionless and handsome; there was the
+Canadian, more of our own cut, with a mobile, alert face. The American
+had his back to me and all I could see was an erect carriage, a brown
+head going to gray, and the one star of a brigadier-general on his
+shoulders. The beginnings of my dinner went fast, but after soup there
+was a lull before greater food, and I paid attention again to my
+neighbors. They were talking in English.
+
+"A Huron of Lorette--does that mean a full-blooded Indian of the Huron
+tribe, such as one reads of in Parkman?" It was the Englishman who
+asked, responding to something I had not heard.
+
+"There's no such animal as a full-blooded Huron," stated the Canadian.
+"They're all French-Indian half-breeds now. Lorette's an interesting
+scrap of history, just the same. You know your Parkman? You remember how
+the Iroquois followed the defeated Hurons as far as the Isle d'Orléans,
+out there?" He nodded toward where the big island lay in the darkness of
+the St. Lawrence. "Well, what was left after that chase took refuge
+fifteen miles north of Quebec, and founded what became and has stayed
+the village of Indian Lorette. There are now about five or six hundred
+people, and it's a nation. Under its own laws, dealing by treaty with
+Canada, not subject to draft, for instance. Queer, isn't it? They guard
+their identity vigilantly. Every one, man or woman, who marries into the
+tribe, as they religiously call it, is from then on a Huron. And only
+those who have Huron blood may own land in Lorette. The Hurons were, as
+Parkman put it, 'the gentlemen of the savages,' and the tradition lasts.
+The half-breed of today is a good sort, self-respecting and brave, not
+progressive, but intelligent, with pride in his inheritance, his
+courage, and his woodscraft."
+
+The Canadian, facing me, spoke distinctly and much as Americans speak; I
+caught every word. But I missed what the French general threw back
+rapidly. I wondered why the Frenchman should be excited. I myself was
+interested because my guides, due to meet me at the club station
+tomorrow, were all half-breed Hurons. But why the French officer? What
+should a Frenchman of France know about backwaters of Canadian history?
+And with that he suddenly spoke slowly, and I caught several sentences
+of incisive if halting English.
+
+"Zey are to astonish, ze Indian Hurong. For ze sort of work
+special-ment, as like scouting on a stomach. Qu-vick, ver' qu-vick, and
+ver' quiet. By dark places of danger. One sees zat nozzing at all
+af-frightens zose Hurong. Also zey are alike snakes, one cannot catch
+zem--zey slide; zey are slippy. To me it is to admire zat courage
+most--personnel--selfeesh--because an Hurong safe my life dere is six
+mont', when ze Boches make ze drive of ze mont' of March."
+
+At this moment food arrived in a flurry, and I lost what came after. But
+I had forgotten the Château Frontenac; I had forgotten the group of
+officers, serious and responsible, who sat on at the next table. I had
+forgotten even the war. A word had sent my mind roaming. "Huron!" Memory
+and hope at that repeated word rose and flew away with me. Hope first.
+Tomorrow I was due to drop civilization and its tethers.
+
+"Allah does not count the days spent out of doors." In Walter Pater's
+story of "Marius the Epicurean" one reads of a Roman country-seat called
+"Ad Vigilias Albas," "White Nights." A sense of dreamless sleep distils
+from the name. One remembers such nights, and the fresh world of the
+awakening in the morning. There are such days. There are days which
+ripple past as a night of sleep and leave a worn brain at the end with
+the same satisfaction of renewal; white days. Crystal they are, like the
+water of streams, as musical and eventless; as elusive of description as
+the ripple over rocks or brown pools foaming.
+
+The days and months and years of a life race with accelerating pace and
+youth goes and age comes as the days race, but one is not older for the
+white days. The clock stops, the blood runs faster, furrows in gray
+matter smooth out, time forgets to put in tiny crow's-feet and the extra
+gray hair a week, or to withdraw by the hundredth of an ounce the oxygen
+from the veins; one grows no older for the days spent out of doors.
+Allah does not count them.
+
+It was days like these which hope held ahead as I paid earnest attention
+to the good food set before me. And behold, beside the pleasant vision
+of hope rose a happy-minded sister called memory. She took the word
+"Huron," this kindly spirit, and played magic with it, and the walls of
+the Château rolled into rustling trees and running water.
+
+I was sitting, in my vision, in flannel shirt and knickerbockers, on a
+log by a little river, putting together fishing tackle and casting an
+eye, off and on, where rapids broke cold over rocks and whirled into
+foam-flecked, shadowy pools. There should be trout in those shadows.
+
+"Take the butt, Rafael, while I string the line."
+
+Rafael slipped across--still in my vision of memory--and was holding my
+rod as a rod should be held, not too high or too low, or too far or too
+near--right. He was an old Huron, a chief of Indian Lorette, and woods
+craft was to him as breathing.
+
+"A varry light rod," commented Rafael in his low voice which held no
+tones out of harmony with water in streams or wind in trees. "A varry
+light, good rod," paying meanwhile strict attention to his job. "M'sieu
+go haf a luck today. I t'ink M'sieu go catch a beeg fish on dat river.
+Water high enough--not too high. And cold." He shivered a little. "Cold
+last night--varry cold nights begin now. Good hun-ting wedder."
+
+"Have you got a moose ready for me on the little lake, Rafael? It's the
+1st of September next week and I expect you to give me a shot before the
+3d."
+
+Rafael nodded. "Oui, m'sieur. First day." The keen-eyed, aquiline old
+face was as of a prophet. "We go get moose first day. I show you." With
+that the laughter-loving Frenchman in him flooded over the Indian
+hunter; for a second the two inheritances played like colors in shot
+silk, producing an elusive fabric, Rafael's charm. "If nights get so
+colder, m'sieur go need moose skin kip him warm."
+
+I was looking over my flies now, the book open before me, its
+fascinating pages of color more brilliant than an old missal, and maybe
+as filled with religion--the peace of God, charity which endureth, love
+to one's neighbor. I chose a Parmachene Belle for hand-fly, always good
+in Canadian waters. "A moose-skin hasn't much warmth, has it, Rafael?"
+
+The hunter was back, hawk-eyed. "But yes, m'sieu. Moose skin one time
+safe me so I don' freeze to death. But it hol' me so tight so I nearly
+don' get loose in de morning."
+
+"What do you mean?" I was only half listening, for a brown hackle and a
+Montreal were competing for the middle place on my cast, and it was a
+vital point. But Rafael liked to tell a story, and had come by now to a
+confidence in my liking to hear him. He flashed a glance to gather up my
+attention, and cleared his throat and began: "Dat was one time--I go on
+de woods--hunt wid my fader-in-law--_mon beau-père_. It was mont' of
+March--and col'--but ver' col' and wet. So it happen we separate, my
+fador-in-law and me, to hunt on both side of large enough river. And I
+kill moose. What, m'sieur? What sort of gun? Yes. It was rifle--what one
+call flint-lock. Large round bore. I cast dat beeg ball myself, what I
+kill dat moose. Also it was col'. And so it happen my matches got wet,
+but yes, ev-very one. So I couldn' buil' fire. I was tired, yes, and
+much col'. I t'ink in my head to hurry and skin dat moose and wrap
+myself in dat skin and go sleep on de snow because if not I would die, I
+was so col' and so tired. I do dat. I skin heem--_je le plumait_--de
+beeg moose--beeg skin. Skin all warm off moose; I wrap all aroun' me and
+dig hole and lie down on deep snow and draw skin over head and over
+feet, and fol' arms, so"--Rafael illustrated--"and I hol' it aroun' wid
+my hands. And I get warm right away, warm, as bread toast. So I been
+slippy, and heavy wid tired, and I got comfortable in dat moose skin and
+I go aslip quick. I wake early on morning, and dat skin got froze tight,
+like box made on wood, and I hol' in dat wid my arms fol' so, and my
+head down so"--illustrations again--"and I can't move, not one inch. No.
+What, m'sieur? Yes, I was enough warm, me. But I lie lak dat and can't
+move, and I t'ink somet'ing. I t'ink I got die lak dat, in moose-skin.
+If no sun come, I did got die. But dat day sun come and be warm, and
+moose skin melt lil' bit, slow, and I push lil' bit wid shoulder, and
+after while I got ice broke, on moose skin, and I crawl out. Yes. I
+don' die yet."
+
+Rafael's chuckle was an amen to his saga, and at once, with one of his
+lightning-changes, he was austere.
+
+"M'sieur go need beeg trout tonight; not go need moose skin till nex'
+wik. Ze rod is ready take feesh, I see feesh jump by ole log. Not much
+room to cast, but m'sieur can do it. Shall I carry rod down to river for
+m'sieur?"
+
+In not so many words as I have written, but in clear pictures which
+comprehended the words, Memory, that temperamental goddess of moods,
+had, at the prick of the word "Huron," shaken out this soft-colored
+tapestry of the forest, and held it before my eyes. And as she withdrew
+this one, others took its place and at length I was musing profoundly,
+as I put more of something on my plate and tucked it away into my
+anatomy. I mused about Rafael, the guide of sixty, who had begun a life
+of continued labor at eight years; I considered the undying Indian in
+him; how with the father who was "French of Picardy"--the white blood
+being a pride to Rafael--he himself, yes, and the father also, for he
+had married a "_sauvagess_," a Huron woman--had belonged to the tribe
+and were accounted Hurons; I considered Rafael's proud carriage, his
+classic head and carved features, his Indian austerity and his French
+mirth weaving in and out of each other; I considered the fineness and
+the fearlessness of his spirit, which long hardship had not blunted; I
+reflected on the tales he had told me of a youth forced to fight the
+world. "_On a vu de le misère_," Rafael had said: "One has seen
+trouble"--shaking his head, with lines of old suffering emerging from
+the reserve of his face like writing in sympathetic ink under heat. And
+I marvelled that through such fire, out of such neglect, out of lack of
+opportunity and bitter pressure, the steel of a character should have
+been tempered to gentleness and bravery and honor.
+
+For it was a very splendid old boy who was cooking for me and greasing
+my boots and going off with me after moose; putting his keen ancestral
+instincts of three thousand years at my service for three dollars a
+day. With my chances would not Rafael have been a bigger man than I? At
+least never could I achieve that grand air, that austere repose of
+manner which he had got with no trouble at all from a line of unwashed
+but courageous old bucks, thinking highly of themselves for untold
+generations, and killing everything which thought otherwise. I laughed
+all but aloud at this spot in my meditations, as a special vision of
+Rafael rose suddenly, when he had stated, on a day, his views of the
+great war. He talked plain language about the Germans. He specified why
+he considered the nation a disgrace to humanity--most people, not
+German, agree on the thesis and its specifications. Then the fire of his
+ancient fighting blood blazed through restraint of manner. He drew up
+his tall figure, slim-waisted, deep-shouldered, every inch sliding
+muscle. "I am too old to go on first call to army," said Rafael. "Zey
+will not take me. Yes, and on second call. Maybe zird time. But if time
+come when army take me--I go. If I may kill four Germans I will be
+content," stated Rafael concisely. And his warrior forebears would have
+been proud of him as he stated it.
+
+My reflections were disturbed here by the American general at the next
+table. He was spoken to by his waiter and shot up and left the room,
+carrying, however, his napkin in his hand, so that I knew he was due to
+come back. A half sentence suggested a telephone. I watched the
+soldierly back with plenty of patriotic pride; this was the sort of
+warrior my country turned out now by tens of thousands. With that he
+returned, and as I looked up into his face, behold it was Fitzhugh.
+
+My chair went banging as I sprang toward him. "Jim!"
+
+And the general's calm dignity suddenly was the radiant grin of the boy
+who had played and gone to school and stolen apples with me for a long
+bright childhood--the boy lost sight of these last years of his in the
+army. "Dave!" he cried out. "Old Davy Cram!" And his arm went around my
+shoulder regardless of the public. "My word, but I'm glad!" he
+sputtered. And then: "Come and have dinner--finish having it. Come to
+our table." He slewed me about and presented me to the three others.
+
+In a minute I was installed, to the pride of my friend the head waiter,
+at military headquarters, next to Fitzhugh and the Frenchman. A campact
+résumé of personal history between Fitzhugh and myself over, I turned to
+the blue figure on my left hand, Colonel Raffré, of the French, army. On
+his broad chest hung thrilling bits of color, not only the bronze war
+cross, with its green watered ribbon striped with red, but the blood-red
+ribbon of the "Great Cross" itself--the cross of the Legion of Honor. I
+spoke to him in French, which happens to be my second mother tongue, and
+he met the sound with a beaming welcome.
+
+"I don't do English as one should," he explained in beautiful Parisian.
+"No gift of tongues in my kit, I fear; also I'm a bit embarrassed at
+practising on my friends. It's a relief to meet some one who speaks
+perfectly French, as m'sieur."
+
+M'sieur was gratified not to have lost his facility. "But my ear is
+getting slower," I said. "For instance, I eavesdropped a while ago when
+you were talking about your Huron soldiers, and I got most of what you
+said because you spoke English. I doubt if I could if you'd been
+speaking French."
+
+The colonel shrugged massive shoulders. "My English is defective but
+distinct," he explained. "One is forced to speak slowly when one speaks
+badly. Also the Colonel Chichely"--the Britisher--"it is he at whom I
+talk carefully. The English ear, it is not imaginative. One must make
+things clear. You know the Hurons, then?"
+
+I specified how.
+
+"Ah!" he breathed out. "The men in my command had been, some of them,
+what you call guides. They got across to France in charge of troop
+horses on the ships; then they stayed and enlisted. Fine soldier stuff.
+Hardy, and of resource and of finesse. Quick and fearless as wildcats.
+They fit into one niche of the war better than any other material. You
+heard the story of my rescue?"
+
+I had not. At that point food had interfered, and I asked if it was too
+much that the colonel should repeat.
+
+"By no means," agreed the polite colonel, ready, moreover, I guessed,
+for any amount of talk in his native tongue. He launched an epic
+episode. "I was hit leading, in a charge, two battalions. I need not
+have done that," another shrug--"but what will you? It was snowing; it
+was going to be bad work; one could perhaps put courage into the men by
+being at their head. It is often the duty of an officer to do more than,
+his duty--_n'est-ce-pas?_ So that I was hit in the right knee and the
+left shoulder _par exemple_, and fell about six yards from the German
+trenches. A place unhealthy, and one sees I could not run away, being
+shot on the bias. I shammed dead. An alive French officer would have
+been too interesting in that scenery. I assure m'sieur that the
+_entr'actes_ are far too long in No Man's Land. I became more and more
+displeased with the management of that play as I lay, very badly amused
+with my wounds, and afraid to blink an eye, being a corpse. The Huns
+demand a high state of immobility in corpses. But I fell happily
+sidewise, and out of the extreme corner of the left eye I caught a
+glimpse of our sand-bags. One blessed that twist, though it became
+enough _ennuyant_, and one would have given a year of good life to turn
+over. Merely to turn over. Am I fatiguing m'sieur?" the colonel broke
+in.
+
+I prodded him back eagerly into his tale.
+
+"M'sieur is amiable. The long and short of it is that when it became
+dark my good lads began to try to rescue my body. Four or five times
+that one-twentieth of eye saw a wriggling form work through sand-bags
+and start slowly, flat to the earth, toward me. But the ground was
+snow-covered and the Germans saw too the dark uniform. Each time a
+fusillade of shots broke out, and the moving figure dropped hastily
+behind the sand-bags. And each time--" the colonel stopped to light a
+cigarette, his face ruddy in the glare of the match. "Each time I
+was--disappointed. I became disgusted with the management of that
+theatre, till at last the affair seemed beyond hope, and I had about
+determined to turn over and draw up my bad leg with my good hand for a
+bit of easement and be shot comfortably, when I was aware that the
+surface of the ground near by was heaving--the white, snowy ground
+heaving. I was close enough to madness between cold and pain, and I
+regarded the phenomenon as a dream. But with that hands came out of the
+heaving ground, eyes gleamed. A rope was lashed about my middle and I
+was drawn toward our trenches." The cigarette puffed vigorously at this
+point. "M'sieur sees?"
+
+I did not.
+
+The colonel laughed. "One of my Hurons had the inspiration to run to a
+farmhouse not far away and requisition a sheet. He wrapped himself in
+it, head and all, and, being Indian, it was a bagatelle to him to crawl
+out on his stomach. They were pleased enough, my good fellows, when they
+found they had got not only my body but also me in it."
+
+"I can imagine, knowing Hurons, how that Huron enjoyed his success," I
+said. "It's in their blood to be swift and silent and adventurous. But
+they're superstitious; they're afraid of anything supernatural." I
+hesitated, with a laugh in my mind at a memory. "It's not fitting that I
+should swap stories with a hero of the Great War, yet--I believe you
+might be amused with an adventure of one of my guides." The Frenchman,
+all civil interest, disclaimed his heroism with hands and shoulders, but
+smiling too--for he had small chance at disclaiming with those two
+crosses on his breast.
+
+"I shall be enchanted to hear m'sieur's tale of his guide. For the rest
+I am myself quite mad over the 'sport.' I love to insanity the out of
+doors and shooting and fishing. It is a regret that the service has
+given me no opportunity these four years for a breathing spell in the
+woods. M'sieur will tell me the tale of his guide's superstition?"
+
+A scheme began to form in my brain at that instant too delightful, it
+seemed, to come true. I put it aside and went on with my story. "I have
+one guide, a Huron half-breed," I said, "whom I particularly like. He's
+an old fellow--sixty--but light and quick and powerful as a boy. More
+interesting than a boy, because he's full of experiences. Two years ago
+a bear swam across the lake where my camp is, and I went out in a canoe
+with this Rafael and got him."
+
+Colonel Raffré made of this fact an event larger than--I am sure--he
+would have made of his winning of the war cross.
+
+"You shame me, colonel," I said, and went on hurriedly. "Rafael, the
+guide, was pleased about the bear. 'When gentlemens kill t'ings, guides
+is more happy,' he explained to me, and he proceeded to tell an
+anecdote. He prefaced it by informing me that one time he hunt bear and
+he see devil. He had been hunting, it seemed, two or three winters
+before with his brother-in-law at the headwaters of the St. Maurice
+River, up north there," I elucidated, pointing through the window toward
+the "long white street of Beauport," across the St. Lawrence. "It's very
+lonely country, entirely wild, Indian hunting-ground yet. These two
+Hurons, Rafael and his brother-in-law, were on a two months' trip to
+hunt and trap, having their meagre belongings and provisions on sleds
+which they dragged across the snow. They depended for food mostly on
+what they could trap or shoot--moose, caribou, beaver, and small
+animals. But they had bad luck. They set many traps but caught nothing,
+and they saw no game to shoot. So that in a month they were hard
+pressed. One cold day they went two miles to visit a beaver trap, where
+they had seen signs. They hoped to find an animal caught and to feast on
+beaver tail, which is good eating."
+
+Here I had to stop and explain much about beaver tails, and the rest of
+beavers, to the Frenchman, who was interested like a boy in this new,
+almost unheard-of beast. At length:
+
+"Rafael and his brother-in-law were disappointed. A beaver had been
+close and eaten the bark off a birch stick which the men had left, but
+nothing was in the trap. They turned and began a weary walk through the
+desolate country back to their little tent. Small comfort waited for
+them there, as their provisions were low, only flour and bacon left.
+And they dared not expend much of that. They were down-hearted, and to
+add to it a snow-storm came on and they lost their way. Almost a
+hopeless situation--an uninhabited country, winter, snow, hunger. And
+they were lost. '_Egaré. Perdu_,' Rafael said. But the Huron was far
+from giving up. He peered through the falling snow, not thick yet, and
+spied a mountain across a valley. He knew that mountain. He had worked
+near it for two years, logging--the '_chantier_,' they call it. He knew
+there was a good camp on a river near the mountain, and he knew there
+would be a stove in the camp and, as Rafael said, 'Mebbe we haf a luck
+and somebody done gone and lef' somet'ing to eat,' Rafael prefers to
+talk English to me. He told me all this in broken English.
+
+"It was three miles to the hypothetical camp, but the two tired, hungry
+men in their rather wretched clothes started hopefully. And after a hard
+tramp through unbroken forest they came in sight of a log shanty and
+their spirits rose. 'Pretty tired work,' Rafael said it was. When they
+got close to the shanty they hoard a noise inside. They halted and
+looked at each other. Rafael knew there were no loggers in these parts
+now, and you'll remember it was absolutely wild country. Then something
+came to the window and looked out."
+
+"_Something_?" repeated the Frenchman in italics. His eyes were wide and
+he was as intent on Rafael's story as heart could desire.
+
+"They couldn't tell what it was," I went on. "A formless apparition, not
+exactly white or black, and huge and unknown of likeness. The Indians
+were frightened by a manner of unearthliness about the thing, and the
+brother-in-law fell on his knees and began to pray. 'It is the devil,'
+he murmured to Rafael. 'He will eat us, or carry us to hell.' And he
+prayed more.
+
+"But old Rafael, scared to death, too, because the thing seemed not to
+be of this world, yet had his courage with him. 'Mebbe it devil,' he
+said--such was his report to me--'anyhow I'm cold and hungry, me. I want
+dat camp. I go shoot dat devil.'
+
+"He crept up to the camp alone, the brother still praying in the bush.
+Rafael was rather convinced, mind you, that he was going to face the
+powers of darkness, but he had his rifle loaded and was ready for
+business. The door was open and he stepped inside. Something--'great
+beeg somet'ing' he put it--rose up and came at him, and he fired. And
+down fell the devil."
+
+"In the name of a sacred pig, what was it?" demanded my Frenchman.
+
+"That was what I asked. It was a bear. The men who had been logging in
+the camp two months back had left a keg of maple-syrup and a half barrel
+of flour, and the bear broke into both--successively--and alternately.
+He probably thought he was in bear-heaven for a while, but it must have
+gotten irksome. For his head was eighteen inches wide when they found
+him, white, with black touches. They soaked him in the river two days,
+and sold his skin for twenty dollars. 'Pretty good for devil skin,'
+Rafael said."
+
+The Frenchman stared at me a moment and then leaned back in his chair
+and shouted laughter. The greedy bear's finish had hit his funny-bone.
+And the three others stopped talking and demanded the story told over,
+which I did, condensing.
+
+"I like zat Hurong for my soldier," Colonel Raffré stated heartily. "Ze
+man what are not afraid of man _or_ of devil--zat is ze man to fight ze
+Boches." He was talking English now because Colonel Chichely was
+listening. He went on. "Zere is human devils--oh, but plentee--what we
+fight in France. I haf not heard of ozzers. But I believe well ze man
+who pull me out in sheet would be as your guide Rafael--he also would
+crip up wiz his rifle on real devil out of hell. But yes. I haf not told
+you how my Indian soldier bring in prisoners--no?"
+
+We all agreed no, and put in a request.
+
+"He brings zem in not one by one always--not always." The colonel
+grinned. He went on to tell this tale, which I shift into the vernacular
+from his laborious English.
+
+It appears that he had discerned the aptitude of his Hurons for
+reconnaissance work. If he needed information out of the dangerous
+country lying in front, if he needed a prisoner to question, these men
+were eager to go and get either, get anything. The more hazardous the
+job the better, and for a long time they came out of it
+untouched. In the group one man--nicknamed by the poilus, his
+comrades--Hirondelle--the Swallow--supposedly because of his lightness
+and swiftness, was easily chief. He had a fault, however, his dislike to
+bring in prisoners alive. Four times he had haled a German corpse before
+the colonel, seeming not rightly to understand that a dead enemy was
+useless for information.
+
+"The Boches are good killing," he had elucidated to his officer. And
+finally: "It is well, m'sieur, the colonel. One failed to understand
+that the colonel prefers a live Boche to a dead one. Me, I am otherwise.
+It appears a pity to let live such vermin. Has the colonel, by chance,
+heard the things these savages did in Belgium? Yes? But then--Yet I will
+bring to m'sieur, the colonel, all there is to be desired of German
+prisoners alive--_en vie_; fat ones; _en masse_."
+
+That night Hirondelle was sent out with four of his fellow Hurons to
+get, if possible, a prisoner. Pretty soon he was separated from the
+others; all but himself returning empty-handed in a couple of hours. No
+Germans seemed to be abroad. But Hirondelle did not return.
+
+"He risks too far," grumbled his captain. "He has been captured at last.
+I always knew they would get him, one night."
+
+But that was not the night. At one o'clock there was suddenly a sound of
+lamentation in the front trench of the French on that sector. The
+soldiers who were sleeping crawled out of their holes in the sides of
+the trench walls, and crowded around the zigzag, narrow way and rubbed
+their eyes and listened to the laughter of officers and soldiers on
+duty. There was Hirondelle, solemn as a church, yet with a dancing light
+in his eyes. There, around him, crowded as sheep to a shepherd, twenty
+figures in German uniform stood with hands up and wet tears running down
+pasty cheeks. And they were fat, it was noticeable that all of them were
+bulging of figure beyond even the German average. They wailed "Kamerad!
+Gut Kamerad!" in a chorus that was sickening to the plucky poilu
+make-up. Hirondelle, interrogated of many, kept his lips shut till the
+first excitement quieted. Then: "I report to my colonel," he stated, and
+finally he and his twenty were led back to the winding trench and the
+colonel was waked to receive them. This was what had happened:
+Hirondelle had wandered about, mostly on his stomach, through the
+darkness and peril of No Man's Land, enjoying himself heartily; when
+suddenly he missed his companions and realized that he had had no sign
+of them for some time. That did not trouble him. He explained to the
+colonel that he felt "more free." Also that if he pulled off a success
+he would have "more glory." After two hours of this midnight amusement,
+in deadly danger every second, Hirondelle heard steps. He froze to the
+earth, as he had learned from wild things in North American forests. The
+steps came nearer. A star-shell away down the line lighted the scene so
+that Hirondelle, motionless on the ground, all keen eyes, saw two
+Germans coming toward him. Instantly he had a scheme. In a subdued
+growl, yet distinctly, he threw over his shoulder an order that eight
+men should go to the right and eight to the left. Then, on his feet, he
+sent into the darkness a stern "Halt!" Instantly there was a sputter,
+arms thrown up, the inevitable "Kamerad!" and Hirondelle ordered the
+first German to pass him, then a second. Out of the darkness emerged a
+third. Hirondelle waved him on, and with that there was a fourth. And a
+fifth. Behold a sixth. About then Hirondelle judged it wise to give more
+orders to his imaginary squad of sixteen. But such a panic had seized
+this German mob; that little acting was necessary. Dark figure followed
+dark figure out of the darker night--arms up. They whimpered as they
+came, and on and on they came out of shadows. Hirondelle stated that he
+began to think the Crown Prince's army was surrendering to him. At last,
+when the procession stopped, he--and his mythical sixteen--marched the
+entire covey, without any objection from them, only abject obedience, to
+the French trenches.
+
+The colonel, with this whining crowd weeping about him, with
+Hirondelle's erect figure confronting him, his black eyes regarding the
+cowards with scorn as he made his report--the colonel simply could not
+understand the situation. All these men! "What are you--soldiers?" he
+flung at the wretched group. And one answered, "No, my officer. We are
+not soldiers, we are the cooks." At that there was a wail. "Ach! Who,
+then, will the breakfast cook for my general? He will _schrecklich_
+angry be for his sausage and his sauerkraut."
+
+By degrees the colonel got the story. A number of cooks had combined to
+protest against new regulations, and the general, to punish this
+astounding insubordination, had sent them out unarmed, petrified with,
+terror, into No Man's Land for an hour. They had there encountered
+Hirondelle. Hirondelle drew the attention of the colonel to the fact
+that he had promised prisoners, fat ones. "Will my colonel regard the
+shape of these pigs," suggested Hirondelle. "And also that they are
+twenty in number. Enough _en masse_ for one man to take, is it not, my
+colonel?"
+
+The little dinner-party at the Frontenac discussed this episode. "Almost
+too good to be true, colonel," I objected. "You're sure it _is_ true?
+Bring out your Hirondelle. He ought to be home wounded, with a war cross
+on his breast, by now."
+
+The colonel smiled and shook his head. "It is that which I cannot
+do--show you my Hirondelle. Not here, and not in France, by _malheur_.
+For he ventured once too often and too far, as the captain prophesied,
+and he is dead. God rest the brave! Also a Croix de Guerre is indeed
+his, but no Hirondelle is there to claim it."
+
+The silence of a moment was a salute to the soul of a warrior passed to
+the happy hunting-grounds. And then I began on another story of my
+Rafael's adventures which something in the colonel's tale suggested.
+
+The colonel, his winning face all a smile, interrupted. "Does one
+believe, then, in this Rafael of m'sieur who caps me each time my tales
+of my Huron Hirondelle? It appears to me that m'sieur has the brain, of
+a story-teller and hangs good stories on a figure which he has built and
+named so--Rafael. Me, I cannot believe there exists this Rafael. I
+believe there is only one such gallant d'Artagnan of the Hurons, and it
+is--it was--my Hirondelle. Show me your Rafael, then!" demanded the
+colonel.
+
+At that challenge the scheme which had flashed into my mind an hour ago
+gathered shape and power. "I will show him to you, colonel," I took up
+the challenge, "if you will allow me." I turned to include the others.
+"Isn't it possible for you all to call a truce and come up tomorrow to
+my club to be my guests for as long or as short a time as you will? I
+can't say how much pleasure it would give me, and I believe I could give
+you something also--great fishing, shooting, a moose, likely, or at
+least a caribou--and Rafael. I promise Rafael. It's not unlikely,
+colonel, that he may have known the Hirondelle. The Hurons are few. Do
+come," I threw at them.
+
+They took it after their kind. The Englishman stared and murmured:
+"Awfully kind, I'm sure, but quite impossible." The Canadian, our next
+of kin, smiled, shaking his head like a brother. Fitzhugh put his arm of
+brawn about me again till that glorious star gleamed almost on my own
+shoulder, and patted me lovingly as he said: "Old son, I'd give my eyes
+to go, if I wasn't up to my ears in job."
+
+But the Frenchman's face shone, and he lifted a finger that was a
+sentence. It embodied reflection and eagerness and suspense. The rest of
+us gazed at that finger as if it were about to address us. And the
+colonel spoke. "I t'ink," brought out the colonel emphatically, "I t'ink
+I damn go."
+
+And I snatched the finger and the hand of steel to which it grew, and
+wrung both. This was a delightful Frenchman. "Good!" I cried out.
+"Glorious! I want you all, but I'm mightily pleased to get one. Colonel,
+you're a sport."
+
+"But, yes," agreed the colonel happily, "I am sport. Why not? I haf four
+days to wait till my sheep sail. Why not kip--how you say?--kip in my
+hand for shooting--go kill moose? I may talk immensely of zat moose in
+France--hein? Much more _chic_ as to kill Germans, _n'est çe pas_?
+Everybody kill Germans."
+
+At one o'clock next day the out-of-breath little train which had gasped
+up mountains for five hours from Quebec uttered a relieved shriek and
+stopped at a doll-house club station sitting by itself in the
+wilderness. Four or five men in worn but clean clothes--they always
+start clean--waited on the platform, and there was a rapid fire of "_Bon
+jour_, m'sieur," as we alighted. Then ten quick eyes took in my colonel
+in his horizon-blue uniform. I was aware of a throb of interest. At once
+there was a scurry for luggage because the train must be held till it
+was off, and the guides ran forward to the baggage-car to help. I
+bundled the colonel down a sharp, short hill to the river, while
+smiling, observant Hurons, missing not a line of braid or a glitter of
+button, passed with bags and _pacquetons_ as we descended. The blue and
+black and gold was loaded into a canoe with an Indian at bow and stern
+for the three-mile paddle to the club-house. He was already a schoolboy
+on a holiday with unashamed enthusiasm.
+
+"But it is fun--fun, zis," he shouted to me from his canoe. "And
+_lequel_, m'sieur, which is Rafael?"
+
+Rafael, in the bow of my boat, missed a beat of his paddle. It seemed to
+me he looked older than two years back, when I last saw him. His
+shoulders were bent, and his merry and stately personality was less in
+evidence. He appeared subdued. He did not turn with a smile or a grave
+glance of inquiry at the question, as I had expected. I nodded toward
+him.
+
+"_Mais oui_," cried out the colonel. "One has heard of you, _mon ami_.
+One will talk to you later of shooting."
+
+Rafael, not lifting his head, answered quietly, "_C'est bien, m'sieur._"
+
+Just then the canoes slipped past a sandy bar decorated with a fresh
+moose track; the excitement of the colonel set us laughing. This man was
+certainly a joy! And with that, after a long paddle down the winding
+river and across two breezy lakes, we were at the club-house. We
+lunched, and in short order--for we wanted to make camp that night--I
+dug into my _pacquetons_ and transformed my officer into a sportsman,
+his huge delight in Abernethy & Flitch's creations being a part of the
+game. Then we were off.
+
+One has small chance for associating with guides while travelling in the
+woods. One sits in a canoe between two, but if there is a wind and the
+boat is _chargé_ their hands are full with the small craft and its heavy
+load; when the landing is made and the "messieurs" are _débarqués_,
+instantly the men are busy lifting canoes on their heads and packs on
+their backs in bizarre, piled-up masses to be carried from a leather
+tump-line, a strap of two inches wide going around the forehead. The
+whole length of the spine helps in the carrying. My colonel watched
+Delphise, a husky specimen, load. With a grunt he swung up a canvas U.S.
+mailbag stuffed with _butin_, which includes clothes and books and shoes
+and tobacco and cartridges and more. With a half-syllable Delphise
+indicated to Laurent a bag of potatoes weighing eighty pounds, a box of
+tinned biscuit, a wooden package of cans of condensed milk, a rod case,
+and a raincoat. These Laurent added to the spine of Delphise.
+
+"How many pounds?" I asked, as the dark head bent forward to equalize
+the strain.
+
+Delphise shifted weight with another grunt to gauge the pull. "About a
+hundred and eighty pounds, m'sieur--quite heavy--_assez pesant_." Off he
+trotted uphill, head bent forward.
+
+The colonel was entranced. "Hardy fellows--the making of fine soldiers,"
+he commented, tossing his cigarette away to stare.
+
+That night after dinner--but it was called supper--the colonel and I
+went into the big, airy log kitchen with the lake looking in at three
+windows and the forest at two doors. We gunned over with the men plans
+for the next day, for the most must be made of every minute of this
+precious military holiday. I explained how precious it was, and then I
+spoke a few words about the honor of having as our guest a soldier who
+had come from the front, and who was going back to the front. For the
+life of me I could not resist a sentence more about the two crosses
+they had seen on his uniform that day. The Cross of War, the Legion of
+Honor! I could not let my men miss that! Rafael had been quiet and
+colorless, and I was disappointed in the show qualities of my show
+guide. But the colonel beamed with satisfaction, in everything and
+everybody, and received my small introduction with a bow and a flourish
+worthy of Carnegie Hall.
+
+"I am happy to be in this so charming camp, in this forest magnificent,
+on these ancient mountains," orated the colonel floridly. "I am most
+pleased of all to have Huron Indians as my guides, because between
+Hurons and me there are memories." The men were listening spell-bound.
+"But yes. I had Huron soldiers serving in my regiment, just now at the
+western front, of whom I thought highly. They were all that there is,
+those Hurons of mine, of most fearless, most skilful. One among them was
+pre-eminent. Some of you may have known him. I regret to say that I
+never knew his real name, but among his comrades he went by the name of
+l'Hirondelle. From that name one guesses his qualities--swift as a
+swallow, untamable, gay, brave to foolishness, moving in dashes not to
+be followed--such was my Hirondelle. And yet this swift bird was in the
+end shot down."
+
+At this point in the colonel's speech. I happened to look at Rafael,
+back in the shadows of the half-lighted big room. His eyes glittered out
+of the dimness like disks of fire, his face was strained, and his figure
+bent forward. "He must have known this chap, the Swallow," I thought to
+myself. "Just possibly a son or brother or nephew of his." The colonel
+was going on, telling in fluent, beautiful French the story of how
+Hirondelle, wrapped in a sheet, had rescued him. The men drank it in.
+"When those guides are old, old fellows, they'll talk about this night
+and the colonel's speech to their great-grandchildren," I considered,
+and again the colonel went on.
+
+"Have I m'sieur's permission to _raconter_ a short story of the most
+amusing which was the last escapade of my Hirondelle before he was
+killed?"
+
+M'sieur gave permission eagerly, and the low murmur of the voices of the
+hypnotized guides, standing in a group before the colonel, added to its
+force and set him smiling.
+
+"It was like this," he stated. "My Hirondelle was out in No Man's Land
+of a night, strictly charged to behave in a manner _comme il faut_, for
+he was of a rashness, and we did not wish to lose him. He was valuable
+to us, and beyond that the regiment had an affection for him. For such
+reasons his captain tried--but, yes--to keep him within bounds. As I
+say, on this night he had received particular orders to be _sage_. So
+that the first thing the fellow does is to lose his comrades, for which
+he had a _penchant_, one knows. After that he crawls over that accursed
+country, in and out of shellholes, rifle in his teeth likely--the good
+God knows where else, for one need be all hands and feet for such
+crawling. He crawled in that fashion till at last he lost himself. And
+then he was concerned to find out where might be our lines till in time
+he heard a sound of snoring and was well content. Home at last. He
+tumbled into a dark trench, remarking only that it was filled with men
+since he left, and so tired he was with his adventure that he pushed
+away the man next, who was at the end, to gain space, and he rolled over
+to sleep. But that troublesome man next took too much room. Our
+Hirondelle planted him a kick in the middle of the back. At which the
+man half waked and swore at him--in German. And dropped off to sleep
+again with his leg of a pig slung across Hirondelle's chest. At that
+second a star-shell lighted up the affair, and Hirondelle, staring with
+much interest, believe me, saw a trench filled with sleeping Boches. To
+get out of that as quietly as might be was the game--_n'est-ce-pas, mes
+amis_? But not for Hirondelle.
+
+"'My colonel has a liking for prisoners,' he reported later. 'My
+captain's orders were to conduct oneself _très comme il faut_. It is
+always _comme il faut_ to please the colonel. Therefore it seemed _en
+regle_ to take a prisoner. I took him. _Le v'la_.'
+
+"What the fellow did was to wait till the Boche next door was well
+asleep, then slowly remove his rifle, then fasten on his throat with a
+grip which Hirondelle understood, and finally to overpower the Boche
+till he was ready enough to crawl out at the muzzle of Hirondelle's
+rifle."
+
+There was a stir in the little group of guides, and from the shadows
+Rafael's voice spoke.
+
+"Mon colonel--pardon!"
+
+The colonel turned sharply. "Who is that?"
+
+"There were two Germans," spoke the voice out of the shadows.
+
+The colonel, too astonished to answer, stared. The voice, trembling,
+old, went on. "The second man waked and one was obliged to strangle him
+also. One brought the brace to the captain at the end of the
+carabine--rifle."
+
+"In heaven's name who are you?" demanded the colonel.
+
+From where old Rafael had been, bowed and limp in his humble, worn
+clothes, stepped at a stride a soldier, head up, shoulders squared,
+glittering eyes forward, and stood at attention. It was like magic. One
+hand snapped up in a smart salute.
+
+"Who are you?" whispered the colonel.
+
+"If the colonel pleases--l'Hirondelle."
+
+I heard the colonel's breath come and go as he peered, leaning forward
+to the soldierly figure. "_Nom de Ciel_," he murmured, "I believe it
+is." Then in sharp sentences: "You were reported killed. Are you a
+deserter?"
+
+The steady image of a soldier dropped back a step.
+
+"My colonel--no."
+
+"Explain this."
+
+Rafael--l'Hirondelle--explained. He had not been killed, but captured
+and sent to a German prison-camp.
+
+"You escaped?" the colonel threw in.
+
+"But yes, my colonel."
+
+The colonel laughed. "One would know it. The clumsy Boches could not
+hold the Swallow."
+
+"But no, my colonel."
+
+"Go on."
+
+"One went to work before light, my colonel, in that accursed
+prison-camp. One was out of sight from the guard for a moment, turning a
+corner, so that on a morning I slipped into some bushes and hid in a
+dugout--for it was an old camp--all day. That night I walked. I walked
+for seven nights and lay hid for seven days, eating, my colonel, very
+little. Then, _v'la_, I was in front of the French lines."
+
+"You ran across to our lines?"
+
+"But not exactly. One sees that I was yet in dirty German prison
+clothes, and looked like an infantryman of the Boches, so that a poilu
+rushed at me with a bayonet. I believed, then, that I had come upon a
+German patrol. Each thought the other a Hun. I managed to wrest from the
+poilu his rifle with the bayonet, but as we fought another shot me--in
+the side."
+
+"You were wounded?"
+
+"Yes, my colonel."
+
+"In hospital?"
+
+"Yes, my colonel."
+
+"How long?"
+
+"Three months, my colonel."
+
+"Why are you not again in the army?"
+
+The face of the erect soldier, Hirondelle, the dare-devil, was suddenly
+the face of a man grown old, ill, and broken-hearted. He stared at the
+stalwart French officer, gathering himself with an effort. "I--was
+discharged, my colonel, as--unfit." His head in its old felt hat dropped
+into his hands suddenly, and he broke beyond control into sobs that
+shook not only him but every man there.
+
+The colonel stepped forward and put an arm around the bent shoulders.
+"_Mon héros!_" said the colonel.
+
+With that Rafael found words, never a hard task for him. Yet they came
+with gasps between. "To be cast out as an old horse--at the moment of
+glory! I had dreamed all my life--of fighting. And I had it--oh, my
+colonel--I had it! The glory came when I was old and knew how to be
+happy in it. Not as a boy who laughs and takes all as his right. I was
+old, yes, but I was good to kill the vermin. I avenged the children and
+the women whom those savages--My people, the savages of the wood, knew
+no better, yet they have not done things as bad as these vile ones who
+were educated, who knew. Therefore I killed them. I was old, but I was
+strong, my colonel knows. Not for nothing have I lived a hard life. _On
+a vu de la misère_. I have hunted moose and bear and kept my muscles of
+steel and my eyes of a hawk. It is in my blood to be a fighting man. I
+fought with pleasure, and I was troubled with no fear. I was old, but I
+could have killed many devils more. And so I was shot down by my own
+friend after seven days of hard life. And the young soldier doctor
+discharged me as unfit to fight. And so I am come home very fast to hide
+myself, for I am ashamed. I am finished. The fighting and the glory are
+for me no more."
+
+The colonel stepped back a bit and his face flamed. "Glory!" he
+whispered. "Glory no more for the Hirondelle? What of the Croix de
+Guerre?"
+
+Rafael shook his head. "I haf heard my colonel who said they would have
+given me--me, the Hirondelle--the war cross. That now is lost too."
+
+"Lost!" The colonel's deep tone was full of the vibration which only a
+French voice carries. With a quick movement he unfastened the catch that
+held the green ribbon, red-striped, of his own cross of war. He turned
+and pinned the thing which men die for on the shabby coat of the guide.
+Then he kissed him on either cheek. "My comrade," he said, "your glory
+will never be old."
+
+There was deep silence in the camp kitchen. The crackling of wood that
+fell apart, the splashing of the waves of the lake on the pebbles by the
+shore were the only sounds on earth. For a long minute the men stood as
+if rooted; the colonel, poised and dramatic, and, I stirred to the
+depths of my soul by this great ceremony which had come out of the skies
+to its humble setting in the forest--the men and the colonel and I, we
+all watched Rafael.
+
+And Rafael slowly, yet with the iron tenacity of his race, got back his
+control. "My colonel," he began, and then failed. The Swallow did not
+dare trust his broken wings. It could not be done--to speak his thanks.
+He looked up with black eyes shining through tears which spoke
+everything.
+
+"Tomorrow," he stated brokenly, "if we haf a luck, my colonel and I go
+kill a moose."
+
+They had a luck.
+
+
+
+
+ONLY ONE OF THEM
+
+
+It was noon on a Saturday. Out of the many buildings of the great
+electrical manufacturing plant at Schenectady poured employees by
+hundreds. Thirty trolley-cars were run on special tracks to the place
+and stood ready to receive the sea streaming towards them. Massed
+motor-cars waited beyond the trolleys for their owners, officials of the
+works. The girl in blue serge, standing at a special door of a special
+building counted, keeping watch meantime of the crowd, the cars. A
+hundred and twenty-five she made it; it came to her mind that State
+Street in Albany on a day of some giant parade was not unlike this, not
+less a throng. The girl, who was secretary to an assistant manager, was
+used to the sight, but it was an impressive sight and she was
+impressionable and found each Saturday's pageant a wonder. The pageant
+was more interesting it may be because it focussed always on one
+figure--and here he was.
+
+"Did you wait, long?" he asked as he came up, broad-shouldered and
+athletic of build, boyish and honest of face, as good looking a young
+American as one may see in any crowd.
+
+"I was early." She smiled up at him as they swung off towards the
+trolleys; her eyes flashed a glance which said frankly that she found
+him satisfactory to look upon.
+
+They sped past others, many others, and made a trolley car and a seat
+together, which was the goal. They always made it, every Saturday, yet
+it was always a game. Exhilarated by the winning of the game they
+settled into the scat for the three-quarters of an hour run; it was
+quite a worth-while world, the smiling glances said one to the other.
+
+The girl gazed, not seeing them particularly, at the slower people
+filling the seats and the passage of the car. Then: "Oh," she spoke,
+"what was it you were going to tell me?"
+
+The man's face grew sober, a bit troubled. "Well," he said, "I've
+decided. I'm going to enlist."
+
+She was still for a second. Then: "I think that's splendid," she brought
+out. "Splendid. Of course, I knew you'd do it. It's the only thing that
+could be. I'm glad."
+
+"Yes," the man spoke slowly. "It's the only thing that could be. There's
+nothing to keep me. My mother's dead. My father's husky and not old and
+my sisters are with him. There's nobody to suffer by my going."
+
+"N-no," the girl agreed. "But--it's the fine thing to do just the same.
+You're thirty-two you see, and couldn't be drafted. That makes it rather
+great of you to go."
+
+"Well," the man answered, "not so very great, I suppose, as it's what
+all young Americans are doing. I rather think it's one of those things,
+like spelling, which are no particular credit if you do them, but a
+disgrace if you don't."
+
+"What a gray way of looking at it!" the girl objected. "As if all the
+country wasn't glorying in the boys who go! As if we didn't all stand
+back of you and crowd the side lines to watch you, bursting with pride.
+You know we all love you."
+
+"Do you love me, Mary? Enough to marry me before I go?" His voice was
+low, but the girl missed no syllable. She had heard those words or some
+like them in his voice before.
+
+"Oh, Jim," she begged, "don't ask me now. I'm not certain--yet. I--I
+couldn't get along very well without you. I care a lot. But--I'm not
+just sure it's--the way I ought to care to marry you."
+
+As alone in the packed car as in a wood, the little drama went on and no
+one noticed. "I'm sorry, Mary." The tone was dispirited. "I could go
+with a lot lighter heart if we belonged to each other."
+
+"Don't say that, Jim," she pleaded. "You make me out--a slacker. You
+don't want me to marry you as a duty?"
+
+"Good Lord, no!"
+
+"I know that. And I--do care. There's nobody like you. I admire you so
+for going--but you're not afraid of anything. It's easy for you, that
+part. I suppose a good many are really--afraid. Of the guns and the
+horror--all that. You're lucky, Jim. You don't give that a thought."
+
+The man flashed an odd look, and then regarded his hands joined on his
+knee.
+
+"I do appreciate your courage. I admire that a lot. But somehow Jim
+there's a doubt that holds me back. I can't be sure I--love you enough;
+that it's the right way--for that."
+
+The man sighed. "Yes," he said. "I see. Maybe some time. Heavens knows I
+wouldn't want you unless it was whole-hearted. I wouldn't risk your
+regretting it, not if I wanted you ten times more. Which is impossible."
+He put out his big hand with a swift touch on hers. "Maybe some time.
+Don't worry," he said. "I'm yours." And went on in a commonplace tone,
+"I think I'll show up at the recruiting office this afternoon, and I'll
+come to your house in the evening as usual. Is that all right?"
+
+The car sped into Albany and the man went to her door with the girl and
+left her with few words more and those about commonplace subjects. As
+he swung down the street he went over the episode in his mind, and
+dissected it and dwelt on words and phrases and glances, and drew
+conclusions as lovers have done before, each detail, each conclusion
+mightily important, outweighing weeks of conversation of the rest of the
+world together. At last he shook his head and set his lips.
+
+"It's not honest." He formed the words with his lips now, a summing up
+of many thoughts in his brain. The brain went on elaborating the text.
+"She thinks I'm brave; she thinks it's easy for me to face enlisting,
+and the rest. She thinks I'm the makeup which can meet horror and
+suffering light-heartedly. And I'm not. She admires me for that--she
+said so. I'm not it. I'm fooling her; it's not honest. Yet"--he groaned
+aloud. "Yet I may lose her if I tell her the truth. I'm afraid. I am. I
+hate it. I can't bear--I can't bear to leave my job and my future, just
+when it's opening out. But I could do that. Only I'm--Oh, damnation--I'm
+afraid. Horror and danger, agony of men and horses, myself wounded
+maybe, out on No Man's Land--left there--hours. To die like a dog. Oh,
+my God--must I? If I tell it will break the little hold I have on her.
+Must I go to this devil's dance that I hate--and give up her love
+besides? But yet--it isn't honest to fool her. Oh, God, what will I do?"
+People walking up State Street, meeting a sober-faced young man, glanced
+at him with no particular interest. A woman waiting on a doorstep
+regarded him idly.
+
+"Why isn't he in uniform?" she wondered as one does wonder in these days
+at a strong chap in mufti. Then she rebuked her thought. "Undoubtedly
+there's a good reason; American boys are not slackers."
+
+His slow steps carried him beyond her vision and casual thought. The
+people in the street and the woman on the doorstep did not think or care
+that what they saw was a man fighting his way through the crisis of his
+life, fighting alone "per aspera ad astra--" through thorns to the
+stars.
+
+He lunched with a man at a club and after that took his way to the
+building on Broadway where were the recruiting headquarters. He had told
+her that he was going to enlist. As he walked he stared at the people in
+the streets as a man might stare going to his execution. These people
+went about their affairs, he considered, as if he--who was about to
+die--did not, in passing their friendly commonplace, salute them. He did
+salute them. Out of his troubled soul he sent a silent greeting to each
+ordinary American hurrying along, each standing to him for pleasant and
+peaceful America, America of all his days up to now. Was he to toss away
+this comfortable comradeship, his life to be, everything he cared for on
+earth, to go into hell, and likely never come back? Why? Why must he?
+There seemed to be plenty who wanted to fight--why not let them? It was
+the old slacker's argument; the man was ashamed as he caught himself
+using it; he had the grace to see its selfishness and cowardice. Yet his
+soul was in revolt as he drove his body to the recruiting office, and
+the thoughts that filled him were not of the joy of giving but of the
+pain of giving up. With that he stood on the steps of the building and
+here was Charlie Thurston hurrying by on the sidewalk.
+
+"Hello, Jim! Going in to enlist? So long till you come back with one leg
+and an eye out."
+
+It was Thurston's idea of a joke. He would have been startled if he had
+known into what a trembling balance his sledge-hummer wit cast its
+unlucky weight. The balance quivered at the blow, shook back and forth
+an instant and fell heavily. Jim Barlow wheeled, sprang down the stone
+steps and bolted up the street, panting as one who has escaped a wild
+beast. Thurston had said it. That was what was due to happen. It was now
+three o'clock; Barlow fled up State Street to the big hotel and took a
+room and locked his door and threw himself on the bed. What was he to
+do? After weeks of hesitation he had come to the decision that he would
+offer himself to his country. He saw--none plainer--the reasons why it
+was fit and right so to do. Other men were giving up homes and careers
+and the whole bright and easy side of life--why not he? It was the
+greatest cause to fight for in the world's history--should he not fight
+for it? How, after the war, might he meet friends, his own people, his
+children to come, if he alone of his sort had no honorable record to
+show? Such arguments, known to all, he repeated, even aloud he repeated
+them, tossing miserably about the bed in his hotel room. And his mind at
+once accepted them, but that was all. His spirit failed to spring to his
+mind's support with the throb of emotion which is the spark that makes
+the engine go. The wheels went around over and over but the connection
+was not made. The human mind is useful machinery, but it is only the
+machine's master, the soul, which can use it. Over and over he got to
+his feet and spoke aloud: "Now I will go." Over and over a repulsion
+seized him so strongly that his knees gave way and he fell back on the
+bed. If he had a mother, he thought, she might have helped, but there
+was no one. Mary--but he could not risk Mary's belief in his courage.
+Only a mother would have understood entirely.
+
+With that, sick at heart, the hideous sea of counter arguments,
+arguments of a slacker, surged upon him. What would it all matter a
+hundred years from now? Wasn't he more useful in his place keeping up
+the industries of the nation? Wasn't he a bigger asset to America as an
+alive engineer, an expert in his work, than as mere cannon fodder, one
+of thousands to be shot into junk in a morning's "activity"--just one of
+them? Because the Germans were devils why should he let them reach over
+here, away over here, and drag him out of a decent and happy life and
+throw him like dirt into the horrible mess they had made, and leave him
+dead or worse--mangled and useless. Then, again--there were plenty of
+men mad to fight; why not let them? Through a long afternoon he fought
+with the beasts, and dinner-time came and he did not notice, and at last
+he rose and, telephoning first to Mary a terse message that he would not
+be able to come this evening, he went out, hardly knowing what he did,
+and wandered up town.
+
+There was a humble church in a quiet street where a service flag hung,
+thick with dark stars, and the congregation were passing out from a
+special service for its boys who were going off to camp. The boys were
+there on the steps, surrounded by people eager to touch their hands, a
+little group of eight or ten with serious bright faces, and a look in
+their eyes which stabbed into Barlow. One may see that look any day in
+any town, meeting the erect stalwart lads in khaki who are about our
+streets. It is the look of those who have made a vital sacrifice and
+know the price, and whose minds are at peace. Barlow, lingering on the
+corner across the way, stared hungrily. How had they got that look, that
+peace? If only he might talk to one of them! Yet he knew how dumb an
+animal is a boy, and how helpless these would be to give him the master
+word.
+
+The master-word, he needed that; he needed it desperately. He must go;
+he must. Life would be unendurable without self-respect; no amount of
+explaining could cover the stain on his soul if he failed in the answer
+to the call of honor. That was it, it was in a nut-shell, the call. Yet
+he could not hear it as his call. He wandered unhappily away and left
+the church and its dissolving congregation, and the boys, the pride of
+the church, the boys who were now, they also, separating and going back
+each to his home for the last evening perhaps, to be loved and made much
+of. Barlow vaguely pictured the scenes in those little homes--eyes
+bright with unshed tears, love and laughter and courage, patriotism as
+fine as in any great house in America, determination that in giving to
+America what was dearest it should be given with high spirit--that the
+boys should have smiling faces to remember, over there. And then
+again--love and tender words. He was missing all that. He, too, might go
+back to his father's house an enlisted man, and meet his father's eyes
+of pride and see his sisters gaze at him with a new respect, feel their
+new honor of him in the touch of arms about his neck. All these things
+were for him too, if he would but take them. With that there was the
+sound of singing, shrill, fresh voices singing down the street. He
+wheeled about. A company of little girls were marching towards him and
+he smiled, looking at them, thinking the sight as pretty as a garden of
+flowers. They were from eight to ten or eleven years old and in the
+bravery of fresh white dresses; each had a big butterfly of pink or blue
+or yellow or white ribbon perched on each little fair or dark head, and
+each carried over her shoulder a flag. Quite evidently they were coming
+from the celebration at the church, where in some capacity they had
+figured. Not millionaires children these; the little sisters likely of
+the boys who were going to be soldiers; just dear things that bloom all
+over America, the flowering of the land, common to rich and poor. As
+they sprang along two by two, in unmartial ranks, they sang with all
+their might "The Long, Long Trail."
+
+ "There's a long, long trail that's leading
+ To No Man's Land in France
+ Where the shrapnel shells are bursting
+ And we must advance."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+And then:
+
+ We're going to show old Kaiser Bill
+ What our Yankee boys can do.
+
+Jim Barlow, his hands in his pockets, backed up against a house and
+listened to the clear, high, little voices. "No Man's Land in France--We
+must advance--What our Yankee boys can do."
+
+As if his throat were gripped by a quick hand, a storm of emotion swept
+him. The little girls--little girls who were the joy, each one, of some
+home! Such little things as the Germans--in Belgium--"Oh, my God!" The
+words burst aloud from his lips. These were trusting--innocent,
+ignorant--to "What our Yankee boys can do." Without that, without the
+Yankee boys, such as these would be in the power of wild beasts. It was
+his affair. Suddenly he felt that stab through him.
+
+"God," he prayed, whispering it as the little girls passed on singing,
+"help me to protect them; help me to forget myself." And the miracle
+that sends an answer sometimes, even in this twentieth century, to true
+prayer happened to Jim Barlow. Behold he had forgotten himself. With his
+head up and peace in his breast, and the look in his face already,
+though he did not know it, that our soldier boys wear, he turned and
+started at a great pace down the street to the recruiting office.
+
+"Why, you did come."
+
+It was nine o'clock and he stood with lighted face in the middle of the
+little library. And she came in; it was an event to which he never got
+used, Mary's coming into a room. The room changed always into such an
+astonishing place.
+
+"Mary, I've done it. I'm--" his voice choked a bit--"I'm a soldier." He
+laughed at that. "Well not so you'd notice it, yet. But I've taken the
+first step."
+
+"I knew, Jim. You said you were going to enlist. Why did you telephone
+you couldn't come?"
+
+He stared down at her, holding her hands yet. He felt, unphrased,
+strong, the overwhelming conviction that she was the most desirable
+thing on earth. And directly on top of that conviction another, that he
+would be doing her desirableness, her loveliness less than the highest
+honor if he posed before her in false colors. At whatever cost to
+himself he must be honest with her. Also--he was something more now
+than his own man; he was a soldier of America, and inside and out he
+would be, for America's sake, the best that was in him to be.
+
+"Mary, I've got a thing to tell you."
+
+"Yes?" The sure way in which she smiled up at him made the effort
+harder.
+
+"I fooled you. You think I'm a hero. And I'm not. I'm a--" for the life
+of him he could not get out the word "coward." He went on: "I'm a blamed
+baby." And he told her in a few words, yet plainly enough what he had
+gone through in the long afternoon. "It was the kiddies who clinched it,
+with their flags and their hair ribbons--and their Yankee boys. I
+couldn't stand for--not playing square with them."
+
+Suddenly he gripped her hands so that it hurt. "Mary, God help me, I'll
+try to fight the devils over there so that kiddies like that, and--you,
+and all the blessed people, the whole dear shooting-match will be safe
+over here. I'm glad--I'm so glad I'm going to have a hand in it. Mary,
+it's queer, but I'm happier than I've been in months. Only"--his brows
+drew anxiously. "Only I'm scared stiff for fear you think me--a coward."
+
+He had the word out now. Thee taste wasn't so bad after all; it seemed
+oddly to have nothing to do with himself. "Mary, dear, couldn't
+you--forget that in time? When I've been over there and behaved
+decently--and I think I will. Somehow I'm not afraid of being afraid
+now. It feels like a thing that couldn't be done--by a soldier of Uncle
+Sam's. I'll just look at the other chaps--all heroes, you know--and be
+so proud I'm with them and so keen to finish our job that I
+know--somehow I _know_ I'll never think about my blooming self at all.
+It's queer to say it, Mary, but the way it looks now I'm in it, it's not
+just country even. It's religion. See, Mary?"
+
+There was no sound, no glance from Mary. But he went on, unaware, so
+rapt was he in his new illumination.
+
+"And when I come back, Mary, with a decent record--just possibly with a
+war-cross--oh, my word! Think of me! Then, couldn't you forget this
+business I've been telling you? Do you think you could marry me then?"
+
+What was the matter? Why did she stand so still with her head bending
+lower and lower, the color deepening on the bit of cheek that his
+anxious eyes could see.
+
+"Mary!"
+
+Suddenly she was clutching his collar as if in deadly fear.
+
+"Mary, what's the matter? I'm such a fool, but--oh, Mary, dear!"
+
+With that Mary-dear straightened and, slipping her clutch to the lapel
+of his old coat, spoke. She looked into his eyes with a smile that was
+sweeter--oh, much sweeter!--for tears that dimmed it, and she choked
+most awfully between words. "Jim"--and a choke. "Jim, I'm terrified to
+think I nearly let you get away. You. And me not worthy to lace your
+shoes--" ("Oh, gracious, Mary--don't!") "me--the idiot, backing and
+filling when I had the chance of my life at--at a hero. Oh, Jim!"
+
+"Here! Mary, don't you understand? I've been telling you I was scared
+blue. I hated to tell you Mary, and it's the devil to tell you twice--"
+
+What was this? Did Heaven then sometimes come down unawares on the head
+of an every-day citizen with great lapses of character? Jim Barlow,
+entranced, doubted his senses yet could not doubt the touch of soft
+hands clasped in his neck. He held his head back a little to be sure
+that they were real. Yes, they were there, the hands--Barlow's next
+remark was long, but untranslatable. Minutes later. "Mary, tell me what
+you mean. Not that I care much if--if this." Language grows elliptical
+under stress. "But--did you get me? I'm--a coward." A hand flashed
+across his mouth.
+
+"Don't you dare, Jim, you're the bravest--bravest--"
+
+The words died in a sharp break. "Why, Jim it was a hundred thousand
+times pluckier to be afraid and then go. Can't you see that, you big
+stupid?"
+
+"But, Mary, you said you admired it when--when you thought I was a lion
+of courage."
+
+"Of course. I admired you. Now I adore you."
+
+"Well," summed up, Barlow bewildered, "if women aren't the blamedest!"
+
+And Mary squealed laughter. She put hands each side of his face.
+"Jim--listen. I'll try to explain because you have a right to
+understand."
+
+"Well, yes," agreed Jim.
+
+"It's like this. I thought you'd enlist and I never dreamed you were
+balky. I didn't know you hated it so. Why didn't you tell me?"
+
+"Go on," urged Jim.
+
+"I thought you were mad to be going, like--like these light-headed boys.
+That you didn't mind leaving me compared to the adventure. That you
+didn't care for danger. But now--now." She covered his eyes with her
+fingers, "Now Jim, you need me. A woman can't love a man her best unless
+she can help him. Against everything--sorrow, mosquitoes, bad
+food--drink--any old bother. That's the alluring side of tipplers. Women
+want to help them. So, now I know you need me," the soft, unsteady voice
+wandered on, and Jim, anchored between, the hands, drank in her look
+with his eyes and her tones with his ears and prayed that the situation
+might last a week. "You need me so, to tell you how much finer you are
+than if you'd gone off without a quiver."
+
+Barlow sighed in contentment. "And me thinking I was the solitary
+'fraid-cat of America!"
+
+"Solitary! Why, Jim, there must be at least ten hundred thousand men
+going through this same battle. All the ones old enough to think,
+probably. Why Jim--you're only one of them. In that speech the other
+night the man said this war was giving men their souls. I think it's
+your kind he meant, the kind that realizes the bad things over there and
+the good things over here and goes just the same. The kind--you are."
+
+"I'm a hero from Hero-ville," murmured Barlow. "But little Mary, when I
+come back mangled will you feel the same? Will you marry me then, Mary?"
+
+"I'll marry you any minute," stated Mary, "and when you come back I'll
+love you one extra for every mangle."
+
+"Any minute," repeated Barlow dramatically. "Tomorrow?"
+
+And summed up again the heaven that he could not understand and did not
+want to, "Search me," he adjured the skies in good Americanese, "if
+girls aren't the blamedest."
+
+
+
+
+THE V.C.
+
+
+I had forgotten that I ordered frogs' legs. When mine were placed before
+me I laughed. I always laugh at the sight of frogs' legs because of the
+person and the day of which they remind me. Nobody noticed that I
+laughed or asked the reason why, though it was an audible chuckle, and
+though I sat at the head of my own dinner-party at the Cosmic Club.
+
+The man for whom the dinner was given, Colonel Robert Thornton, my
+cousin, a Canadian, who got his leg shot off at Vimy Ridge, was making
+oration about the German Crown Prince's tactics at Verdun, and that was
+the reason that ten men were not paying attention to me and that I was
+not paying attention to Bobby. When the good chap talks human talk,
+tells what happened to people and what their psychological processes
+seemed to be, he is entertaining. He has a genuine gift of sympathy and
+a power to lead others in the path he treads; in short, he tells a good
+story. But like most people who do one thing particularly well he is
+always priding himself on the way he does something else. He likes to
+look at Colonel Thornton as a student of the war, and he has the time of
+his life when he can get people to listen to what he knows Joffre and
+Foch and Haig and Hindenberg ought to have done. So at this moment he
+was enjoying his evening, for the men I had asked to meet him, all
+strangers to him, ignorant of his real powers, were hanging on his
+words, partly because no one can help liking him whatever he talks
+about, and partly because, with that pathetic empty trouser-leg and the
+crutch hooked over his chair, he was an undoubted hero. So I heard the
+sentences ambling, and reflected that Hilaire Belloc with maps and a
+quiet evening would do my tactical education more good than Bobby
+Thornton's discursions. And about then I chuckled unnoticed, over the
+silly frogs' legs.
+
+"Tell me, Colonel Thornton, do you consider that the French made a
+mistake in concentrating so much of their reserve--" It was the
+Governor himself who was demanding this earnestly of Bobby. And I saw
+that the Governor and the rest were hypnotized, and did not need me.
+
+So I sat at the head of the table, and waiters brooded over us, and
+cucumbers and the usual trash happened, and Bobby held forth while the
+ten who were bidden listened as to one sent from heaven. And, being
+superfluous, I withdrew mentally to a canoe in a lonely lake and went
+frogging.
+
+Vicariously. I do not like frogging in person. The creature smiles. Also
+he appeals because he is ugly and complacent. But for the grace of God I
+might have looked so. He sits in supreme hideousness frozen to the end
+of a wet log, with his desirable hind legs spread in view, and smiles
+his bronze smile of confidence in his own charm and my friendship. It is
+more than I can do to betray that smile. So, hating to destroy the beast
+yet liking to eat the leg, about once in my summer vacation in camp I go
+frogging, and make the guides do it.
+
+It would not be etiquette to send them out alone, for in our club guides
+are supposed to do no fishing or shooting--no sport. Therefore, I sit in
+a canoe and pretend to take a frog in a landing-net and miss two or
+three and shortly hand over the net to Josef. We have decided on
+landing-nets as our tackle. I once shot the animals with a .22 Flobert
+rifle, but almost invariably they dropped, like a larger bullet, off the
+log and into the mud, and that was the end. We never could retrieve
+them. Also at one time we fished them with a many-pronged hook and a bit
+of red flannel. But that seemed too bitter a return for the bronze
+smile, and I disliked the method, besides being bad at it. We took to
+the landing-net.
+
+To see Josef, enraptured with the delicate sport, approach a net
+carefully till within an inch of the smile, and then give the old graven
+image a smart rap on the legs in question to make him leap headlong into
+the snare--to see that and Josef's black Indian eyes glitter with joy at
+the chase is amusing. I make him slaughter the game instantly, which
+appears supererogatory to Josef who would exactly as soon have a
+collection of slimy ones leaping around the canoe. But I have them dead
+and done for promptly, and piled under the stern seat. And on we paddle
+to the next.
+
+The day to which I had retired from my dinner-party and the tactical
+lecture of my distinguished cousin was a late August day of two years
+before. The frogging fleet included two canoes, that of young John
+Dudley who was doing his vacation with me, and my own. In each canoe, as
+is Hoyle for canoeing in Canada, were two guides and a "m'sieur." The
+other boat, John's, was somewhere on the opposite shore of Lac des
+Passes, the Lake of the Passes, crawling along edges of bays and
+specializing in old logs and submerged rocks, after frogs with a
+landing-net, the same as us. But John--to my mind coarser--was doing his
+own frogging. The other boat was nothing to us except for an occasional
+yell when geography brought us near enough, of "How many?" and envy and
+malice and all uncharitableness if the count was more, and hoots of
+triumph if less.
+
+In my craft sailed, besides Josef and myself, as bow paddler, The Tin
+Lizzie. We called him that except when he could hear us, and I think it
+would have done small harm to call him so then, as he had the brain of a
+jack-rabbit and managed not to know any English, even when soaked in it
+daily. John Dudley had named him because of the plebeian and reliable
+way in which he plugged along Canadian trails. He set forth the queerest
+walk I have ever seen--a human Ford, John said. He was also quite mad
+about John. There had been a week in which Dudley, much of a doctor, had
+treated, with cheerful patience and skill, an infected and painful hand
+of the guide's, and this had won for him the love eternal of our Tin
+Lizzie. Little John Dudley thought, as he made jokes to distract the
+boy, and worked over his big throbbing fist, the fist which meant daily
+bread--little John thought where the plant of love springing from that
+seed of gratitude would at last blossom. Little he thought as the two
+sat on the gallery of the camp, and the placid lake broke in silver on
+pebbles below, through what hell of fire and smoke and danger the
+kindliness he gave to the stupid young guide would be given back to him.
+Which is getting ahead of the story.
+
+I suggested that the Lizzie might like a turn at frogging, and Josef,
+with Indian wordlessness, handed the net to him. Whereupon, with his
+flabby mouth wide and his large gray eyes gleaming, he proceeded to miss
+four easy ones in succession. And with that Josef, in a gibberish which
+is French-Canadian patois of the inner circles, addressed the Tin Lizzie
+and took away the net from him, asking no orders from me. The Lizzie,
+pipe in mouth as always, smiled just as pleasantly under this punishment
+as in the hour of his opportunities. He would have been a very handsome
+boy, with his huge eyes and brilliant brown and red color and his
+splendid shoulders and slim waist of an athlete if only he had possessed
+a ray of sense. Yet he was a good enough guide to fill in, for he was
+strong and willing and took orders amiably from anybody and did his
+routine of work, such as chopping wood and filling lamps and bringing
+water and carrying boats, with entire efficiency. That he had no
+initiative at all and by no chance did anything he was not told to, even
+when most obvious, that he was lacking in any characteristic of
+interest, that he was moreover a supreme coward, afraid to be left alone
+in the woods--these things were after all immaterial, for, as John
+pointed out, we didn't really need to love our guides.
+
+John also pointed out that the Lizzie--his name was, incidentally,
+Aristophe--had one nice quality. Of course, it was a quality which
+appealed most to the beneficiary, yet it seemed well to me also to have
+my guests surrounded with mercy and loving kindness. John had but to
+suggest building a fire or greasing his boots or carrying a canoe over
+any portage to any lake, and the Lizzie at once leaped with a bright
+smile as who should say that this was indeed a pleasure. "C'est bien,
+M'sieur," was his formula. He would gaze at John for sections of an
+hour, with his flabby mouth open in speechless surprise as if at the
+unbelievable glory and magnificence of M'sieur. A nice lad, John Dudley
+was, but no subtle enchanter; a stocky and well-set-up young man with a
+whole-souled, garrulous and breezy way, and a gift of slang and a
+brilliant grin. What called forth hero-worship towards him I never
+understood; but no more had I understood why Mildred Thornton, Colonel
+Thornton's young sister, my very beautiful cousin, should have selected
+him, from a large assortment of suitors, to marry. Indeed I did not
+entirely understand why I liked having John in camp better than anyone
+else; probably it was essentially the same charm which impelled Mildred
+to want to live with him, and the Tin Lizzie to fall down and worship.
+In any case the Lizzie worshipped with a primitive and unashamed and
+enduring adoration, which stood even the test of fear. That was the
+supreme test for the Tin Lizzie, who was a coward of cowards. Rather
+cruelly I bet John on a day that his satellite did not love him enough
+to go out to the club-house alone for him, and the next day John was in
+sore need of tobacco, not to be got nearer than the club.
+
+"Aristophe will go out and get it for me," he announced as
+Aristophe--the Lizzie--trotted about the table at lunch-time purveying
+us flapjacks.
+
+The Tin Lizzie stood rooted a second, petrified at the revolutionary
+scheme of his going to the club, companions unmentioned. There one saw
+as if through glass an idea seeking a road through his smooth gray
+matter. One had always gone to the club with Josef, or Maxime or
+Pierre--certainly M'sieur meant that; one would of course be glad to
+go--with Josef or Maxime or Pierre--to get tobacco for M'sieur John. Of
+course, the idea slid through the old road in the almost unwrinkled gray
+matter, and came safely to headquarters.
+
+"C'est bien, M'sieur," answered the Lizzie smiling brightly.
+
+And with that I knocked the silly little smile into a cocked hat. "You
+may start early tomorrow, Aristophe," I said, "and get back by dark,
+going light, I can't spare any other men to go with you. But you will
+certainly not mind going alone--to get tobacco for M'sieur John."
+
+The poor Tin Lizzie turned red and then white, and his weak mouth fell
+open and his eyebrows lifted till the whites of his eyes showed above
+the gray irises. And one saw again, through the crystal of his
+unexercised brain, the operation of a painful and new thought. M'sieur
+John--a day alone in the woods--love, versus fear--which would win. John
+and I watched the struggle a bit mercilessly. A grown man gets small
+sympathy for being a coward. And yet few forms of suffering are keener.
+We watched; and the Tin Lizzie stood and gasped in the play of his
+emotions. Nobody had ever given this son of the soil ideals to hold to
+through sudden danger; no sense of inherited honor to be guarded came to
+help the Lizzie; he had been taught to work hard and save his
+skin--little else. The great adoration for John which had swept him off
+his commonplace feet--was it going to make good against life-long
+selfish caution? We wondered. It was curious to watch the new big
+feeling fight the long-established petty one. And it was with a glow of
+triumph quite out of drawing that we saw the generous instinct win the
+battle.
+
+"Oui, M'sieur," spoke Aristophe, unconscious of subtleties or watching.
+"I go tomorrow--alone. _C'est bien, M'sieur_."
+
+It was about the only remark I ever heard him make, that gracious:
+"_C'est bien, M'sieur_!" But he made it remarkably well. Almost he
+persuaded me to respect him with that hearty response to the call of
+duty, that humble and high gift of graciousness. One remembers him as
+his dolly face lighted at John's order to go and clean trout or carry in
+logs, and one does not forget the absurd, queer little fast trot at
+which his powerful young legs would instantaneously swing off to obey
+the behest. Such was the Tin Lizzie, the guide who paddled bow in my
+canvas canoe on the day of the celebrated frog hunt.
+
+That the frog hunt was celebrated was owing to the Lizzie. He should
+have been in John's boat, as one of John's guides, but at the last
+moment, there was a confusion of tongues and Lizzie was shipped aboard
+my canoe. In the excitement of the chase Josef, stern man, had faced
+about to manipulate his landing-net; Aristophe also slewed around and,
+sitting on the gunwale, became stern paddler. I was in the middle
+screwed anyhow, watching the frog fishing and enjoying the enjoyment of
+the men. Poor chaps, it was the only bit of personal play they got out
+of our month of play. Aristophe, the Tin Lizzie, was quite mad with the
+excitement even from his very second fiddle standpoint of paddler to
+Josef's frogging. His enormous gray eyes snapped, his teeth showed white
+and gold around his pipe--which he nearly bit off--and he even used
+language.
+
+"_Tiens! Encore un!_" hissed the Lizzie in a blood-curdling whisper as a
+new pair of pop eyes lifted from the edge of a rotten log.
+
+And Josef, who had always seen the frog first, fired a guttural
+sentence, full of contempt, full of friendliness, for he sized up the
+Lizzie, his virtues and his limitations, accurately. And then the boat
+was pushed and pulled in the shallow water till Josef and the net were
+within range. With, that came the slow approach of the net to the smile,
+the swift tap on the eatable legs, and headlong into his finish leaped
+M. Crapaud. Which is rot his correct name, Josef tells me, in these
+parts, but M. Guarron. And that, being translated, means Mr.
+Very-Big-Bull-Frog.
+
+Business had prospered to fourteen or fifteen head of frogs, and we
+calculated that the other boat might have a dozen when, facing towards
+Aristophe, I saw his dull, fresh face suddenly change. My pulse missed a
+beat at that expression. It was adequate to an earthquake or sudden
+death. How the fatuous doll-like features could have been made to
+register that stare of a soul in horror I can't guess. But they did. The
+whites of his eyes showed an eighth of an inch above the irises and his
+black eyebrows were shot up to the roots of his glossy black hair. In
+the gleaming white and gold of his teeth the pipe was still gripped. And
+while I gazed, astonished, his unfitting deep voice issued from that
+mask of fear:
+
+"_Tiens! Encore un!_" And I screwed about and saw that the Lizzie was
+running the boat on top of an enormous frog which he had not spied till
+the last second. With that Josef exploded throaty language and leaning
+sidewise made a dive at the frog. Aristophe, unbalanced with emotion and
+Josef's swift movement shot from his poise at the end of the little
+craft, and landed, in a foot of water, flat on his buck, and the frog
+seized that second to jump on his stomach.
+
+I never heard an Indian really laugh before that day. The hills
+resounded with Josef's shouts. We laughed, Josef and I, till we were
+weak, and for a good minute Aristophe sprawled in the lake, with the
+frog anchored as if till Kingdom come on his middle, and howled lusty
+howls while we laughed. Then Josef fished the frog and got him off the
+Tin Lizzie's lungs. And Aristophe, weeping, scrambled into the boat. And
+as we went home in the cool forest twilight, up the portage by the
+rushing, noisy rapids, Josef, walking before us, carrying the
+landing-net full of frogs' legs, shook with laughter every little while
+again, as Aristophe, his wet strong young legs, the only section of him
+showing, toiled ahead up the winding thread of a trail, carrying the
+inverted canoe on his head.
+
+It was this adventure which came to me and seized me and carried me a
+thousand miles northward into Canadian forest as I looked at the frogs'
+legs on my plate at the Cosmic Club, and did not listen to my cousin,
+the Colonel, talking military tactics.
+
+The mental review took an eighth of the time it has taken me to tell it.
+But as I shook off my dream of the woods, I realized that, while
+Thornton still talked, he had got out of his uninteresting rut into his
+interesting one. Without hearing what he said I knew that from the look
+of the men's faces. Each man's eyes were bright, through a manner of
+mistiness, and there was a sudden silence which was perhaps what had
+recalled me.
+
+"It's a war which is making a new standard of courage," spoke the young
+Governor in the gentle tone which goes so oddly and so pleasantly with
+his bull-dog jaw. "It looks as if we were going to be left with a world
+where heroism is the normal thing," spoke the Governor.
+
+"Heroism--yes," said Bobby, and I knew with satisfaction that he was off
+on his own line, the line he does not fancy, the line where few can
+distance him. "Heroism!" repeated Bobby, "It's all around out there. And
+it crops out--" he begun to smile--"in unsuspected places, from varied
+impulses."
+
+He was working his way to an anecdote. The men at the table, their
+chairs twisted towards him, sat very still.
+
+"What I mean to say is," Bobby began, "that this war, horrible as it is,
+is making over human, nature for the better. It's burning out
+selfishness and cowardice and a lot of faults from millions of men, and
+it's holding up the nobility of what some of them do to the entire
+world. It takes a character, this débâcle, and smashes out the
+littleness. Another thing is curious. If a small character has one good
+point on which to hang heroism, the battle-spirit searches out that
+point and plants on it the heroism. There was a stupid young private in
+my command who--but I'm afraid I'm telling too many war stories," Bobby
+appealed, interrupting himself. "I'm full of it, you see, and when
+people are so good, and listen--" He stopped, in a confusion which is
+not his least attractive manner.
+
+From down the table came a quick murmur of voices. I saw more than one
+glance halt at the crutch on the back of the soldier's chair.
+
+"Thank you. I'd really like to tell about this man. It's interesting,
+psychologically to me," he went on, smiling contentedly. He is a lovable
+chap, my cousin Robert Thornton. "The lad whom I speak of, a
+French-Canadian from Quebec Province, was my servant, my batman, as the
+Indian army called them and as we refer to them often now. He was so
+brainless that I just missed firing him the first day I had him. But
+John Dudley, my brother-in-law and lieutenant, wanted me to give him a
+chance, and also there was something in his manner when I gave him
+orders which attracted me. He appeared to have a pleasure in serving,
+and an ideal of duty. Dudley had used him as a guide, and the man had a
+dog-like devotion to 'the lieutenant' which counted with me. Also he
+didn't talk. I think he knew only four words. I flung orders at him and
+there would be first a shock of excitement, then a second of tense
+anxiety, then a radiant smile and the four words: '_C'est bien, Mon
+Capitaine_.' I was captain then."
+
+At that point I dropped my knife and fork and stared at my cousin. He
+went on.
+
+"'_C'est bien, Mon Capitaine_.' That was the slogan. And when the
+process was accomplished, off he would trot, eager to do my will. He was
+powerful and well-built, but he had the oddest manner of locomotion ever
+I saw, a trot like--like a Ford car. I discovered pretty soon that the
+poor wretch was a born coward. I've seen him start at the distant sound
+of guns long before we got near the front, and he was nervous at going
+out alone at night about the camp. The men ragged him, but he was such
+a friendly rascal and so willing to take over others' work that he got
+along with a fraction of the persecution most of his sort would have
+had. I wondered sometimes what would happen to the poor little devil
+when actual fighting came. Would it be '_C'est bien, Mon Capitaine_,' at
+the order to go over the top, or would the terrible force of fear be too
+much for him and land him at last with his back to a wall and a firing
+squad in front--a deserter? Meantime he improved and I got dependent on
+his radiant good will. Being John Dudley's brother-in-law sanctified me
+with him, and nothing was too much trouble if I'd give him a chance
+sometimes to clean John's boots. I have a man now who shows no ecstacy
+at being ordered to do my jobs, and I don't like him.
+
+"We were moved up towards the front, and, though Mr. Winston Churchill
+has made a row about the O.S.--the officers' servants who are removed
+from the firing line, I know that a large proportion of them do their
+share in the trenches. I saw to it that mine did.
+
+"One night there was a digging expedition. An advance trench was to be
+made in No Man's Land about a hundred and fifty yards from the Germans.
+I was in command of the covering party of thirty-five men; I was a
+captain. We, of course, went out ahead. Beauramé was in the party. It
+was his first fighting. We had rifles, with bayonets, and bombs, and a
+couple of Lewis guns. We came up to the trenches by a road, then went
+into the zigzag communication trenches up to the front, the fire-trench.
+Then, very cautiously, over the top into No Man's Land. It was nervous
+work, for at any second they might discover us and open fire. It suited
+us all to be as quiet as human men could be, and when once in a while a
+star-shell, a Very light, was sent up from the German lines we froze in
+our tracks till the white glare died out.
+
+"The party had been digging for perhaps an hour when hell broke loose.
+They'd seen us. All about was a storm of machine-gun and rifle bullets,
+and we dropped on our faces, the diggers in their trench--pretty shallow
+it was. As for the covering party, we simply took our medicine. And
+then the shrapnel joined the music. Word was passed to get back to the
+trenches, and we started promptly. We stooped low as we ran over No
+Man's Land, but there were plenty of casualties. I got mine in the foot,
+but not the wound which rung in this--" Thornton nodded his head at the
+crutches with a smile. "It was from a bit of shrapnel just as I made the
+trench, and as I fell in I caught at the sand bags and whirled about
+facing out over No Man's Land; as I whirled I saw, close by, Beauramé's
+face in a shaft of light. I don't know why I made conversation at that
+moment--I did. I said:
+
+"When did you get back?"
+
+And his answer came as if clicked on a typewriter. "Me, I stayed, _Mon
+Capitaine_. It had an air too dangerous, out there."
+
+I stared in a white rage. You'll imagine--one of my men to dare tell me
+that! And at that second, simultaneously, came the flare of a shell star
+and a shout of a man struck down, and I knew the voice--John Dudley. He
+was out there, the tail end of the party, wounded. I saw him as he
+fell, on the farther side of the new trench. Of course, one's instinct
+was to dash back and bring him in, and I started. And I found my foot
+gone--I couldn't walk. Quicker than I can tell it I turned to Beauramé,
+the coward, who'd been afraid to go over the top, and I said in French,
+because, though I hadn't time to think it out, I yet realized that it
+would get to him faster so--I said:
+
+"Get over there, you deserter. Save the lieutenant--Lieutenant Dudley.
+Go."
+
+For one instant I thought it was no good and I was due to have him shot,
+if we both lived through the night. And then--I never in my life saw
+such a face of abject fear as the one he turned first to me and then
+across that horror of No Man's Land. The whites of his eyes showed, it
+seemed, an eighth of an inch above the irises; his black eyebrows were
+half way up his forehead, and his teeth, luxuriously upholstered with
+fillings, shone white and gold in the unearthly light. It was such a mad
+terror as I'd never seen before, and never since. And into it I, mad
+too with the thought of my sister if I let young John Dudley die before
+my eyes--I bombed again the order to go out and bring in Dudley. I
+remember the fading and coming expressions on that Frenchman's face like
+the changes on a moving picture film. I suppose it was half a minute.
+And here was the coward face gazing into mine, transfigured into the
+face of a man who cared about another man more than himself--a common
+man whose one high quality was love.
+
+"_C'est bien, Mon Capitaine_," Beauramé spoke, through still clicking
+teeth, and with his regulation smile of good will he had sprung over the
+parapet in one lithe movement, and I saw him crouching, trotting that
+absurd, powerful fast trot through the lane in our barbed wire, like
+lightning, to the shallow new trench, to Dudley. I saw him--for the
+Germans had the stretch lighted--I saw the man pick up my brother-in-law
+and toss him over his shoulders and start trotting back. Then I saw him
+fall, both of them fall, and I knew that he'd stopped a bullet. And
+then, as I groaned, somehow Beauramé was on his feet again. I expected,
+that he'd bolt for cover, but he didn't. He bent over deliberately as if
+he had been a fearless hero--and maybe he was--and he picked up Dudley
+again and started on, laboring, this time in walking. He was hit badly.
+But he made the trench; he brought in Dudley.
+
+Then such a howl of hurrahs greeted him from the men who watched the
+rescue as poor little Aristophe Beauramé--"
+
+"Ah!" I interjected, and Bobby turned and stared--"as the poor little
+scared rat had not dreamed, or had any right to dream would ever greet
+his conduct on earth. He dropped Dudley at my feet and turned with his
+flabby mouth open and his great stupid eyes like saucers, towards the
+men who rushed to shake his hand and throw at him words of admiration
+that choked them to get out. And then he keeled over. So you see. It was
+an equal chance at one second, whether a man should be shot for a
+deserter or--win the Victoria Cross."
+
+"What!" I shouted at my guest. "What! Not the Victoria Cross! Not
+Aristophe!"
+
+Bobby looked at me in surprise. "You're a great claque for me," he said.
+"You seem to take an interest in my hero. Yes, he got it. He was badly
+hurt. One hand nearly gone and a wound in his side. I was lucky enough
+to be in London on a day three months later, and to be present at the
+ceremony, when the young French-Canadian, spoiled for a soldier, but
+splendid stuff now for a hero, stood out in the open before the troops
+in front of Buckingham Palace and King George pinned the V.C. on his
+breast. They say that he's back in his village, and the whole show. I
+hear that he tells over and over the story of his heroism and the rescue
+of '_Mon Lieutenant_.' to never failing audiences. Of course, John is
+looking after him, for the hand which John saved was the hand that was
+shot to pieces in saving John, and the Tin Lizzie can never make his
+living with that hand again. A deserter, a coward--decorated by the King
+with the Victoria Cross! Queer things happen in war!" There was a stir,
+a murmur as of voices, of questions beginning, but Bobby was not quite
+through.
+
+"War takes the best of the best men, and the best of the cheapest, and
+transfigures both. War doesn't need heroes for heroism. She pins it on
+anywhere if there's one spot of greatness in a character. War does
+strange things with humanity," said Bobby.
+
+And I, gasping, broke out crudely in three words: "Our Tin Lizzie!" I
+said, and nobody knew in the least what I meant, or with what memories I
+said it.
+
+
+
+
+HE THAT LOSETH HIS LIFE SHALL FIND IT
+
+
+The Red Cross women had gone home. Half an hour before, the large
+library had been filled with white-clad, white-veiled figures. Two long
+tables full, forty of them today, had been working; three thousand
+surgical dressings had been cut and folded and put away in large boxes
+on shelves behind glass doors where the most valuable books had held
+their stately existence for years. The books were stowed now in trunks
+in the attic. These were war days; luxuries such as first editions must
+wait their time. The great living-room itself, the center of home for
+this family since the two boys were born and ever this family had been,
+the dear big room with its dark carved oak, and tapestries, and stained
+glass, and books, and memories was given over now to war relief work.
+
+Sometimes, as the mistress walked into the spacious, low-ceilinged,
+bright place, presences long past seemed to fill it intolerably. Brock
+and Hugh, little chaps, roared in untidy and tumultuous from football,
+or came, decorous and groomed, handsome, smart little lads, to be
+presented to guests. Her own Hugh, her husband, proud of the beautiful
+new house, smiled from the hearth to her as he had smiled twenty-six
+years back, the night they came in, a young Hugh, younger than Brock was
+now. Her father and mother, long gone over "to the majority," and the
+exquisite old ivory beauty of a beautiful grandmother--such ghosts rose
+and faced the woman as she stepped into the room where they had moved in
+life, the room with its loveliness marred by two long tables covered
+with green oilcloth, by four rows of cheap chairs, by rows and rows of
+boxes on shelves where soft and bright and dark colors of books had
+glowed. She felt often that she should explain matters to the room,
+should tell the walls which had sheltered peace and hospitality that she
+had consecrated them to yet higher service. Never for one instant,
+while her soul ached for the familiar setting, had she regretted its
+sacrifice. That her soul did ache made it worth while.
+
+And the women gathered for this branch Red Cross organization, her
+neighbors on the edge of the great city, wives and daughters and mothers
+of clerks, and delivery-wagon drivers, and icemen, and night-watchmen,
+women who had not known how to take their part in the war work in the
+city or had found it too far to go, these came to her house gladly and
+all found pleasure in her beautiful room. That made it a joy to give it
+up to them. She stood in the doorway, feeling an emphasis in the quiet
+of the July afternoon because of the forty voices which had lately gone
+out of the sunshiny silence, of the forty busy figures in long, white
+aprons and white, sweeping veils, the tiny red cross gleaming over the
+forehead of each one, each face lovely in the uniform of service, all
+oddly equalized and alike under their veils and crosses. She spoke aloud
+as she tossed out her hands to the room:
+
+"War will be over some day, and you will be our own again, but forever
+holy because of this. You will be a room of history when you go to
+Brock--"
+
+Brock! Would Brock ever come home to the room, to this place which he
+loved? Brock, in France! She turned sharply and went out through the
+long hall and across the terrace, and sat down where the steps dropped
+to the garden, on the broad top step, with her head against the pillar
+of the balustrade. Above her the smell of box in a stone vase on the
+pillar punctured the mild air with its definite, reminiscent fragrance.
+Box is a plant of antecedents of sentiment, of memories. The woman
+inhaling its delicate sharpness, was caught back into days past. She
+considered, in rapid jumps of thought, events, episodes, epochs. The day
+Brock was born, on her own twentieth birthday, up-stairs where the rosy
+chintz curtains blew now out of the window; the first day she had come
+down to the terrace--it was June--and the baby lay in his bassinet by
+the balustrade in that spot--she looked at the spot--the baby, her big
+Brock, a bundle of flannel and fine, white stuff in lacy frills of the
+bassinet. And she loved him; she remembered how she had loved that baby,
+how, laughing at herself, she had whispered silly words over the stolid,
+pink head; how the girl's heart of her had all but burst with the
+astonishing new tide of a feeling which seemed the greatest of which she
+was capable. Yet it was a small thing to the way she loved Brock now. A
+vision came of little Hugh, three years younger, and the two toddling
+about the terrace together, Hugh always Brock's satellite and adorer, as
+was fitting; less sturdy, less daring than Brock, yet ready to go
+anywhere if only the older baby led. She thought of the day when Hugh,
+four years old, had taken fright at a black log among the bushes under
+the trees.
+
+"It's a bear!" little Hugh had whispered, shaking, and Brock, brave but
+not too certain, had looked at her, inquiring.
+
+"No, love, it's not a bear; it's an old log of wood. Go and put your
+hand on it, Hughie."
+
+Little Hugh had cried out and shrunk back. "I'm afraid!" cried little
+Hugh.
+
+And Brock, not entirely clear as to the no-bear theory, had yet bluffed
+manfully. "Come on, Hughie; let's go and bang 'um," said Brock.
+
+Which invitation Hugh accepted reluctantly with a condition, "If you'll
+hold my hand, B'ocky."
+
+The woman turned her head to see the place where the black log had lain,
+there in the old high bushes. And behold! Two strong little figures in
+white marched along--she could all but see them today--and the bigger
+little figure was dragging the other a bit, holding a hand with
+masterful grip. She could hear little Hugh's laughter as they arrived at
+the terrible log and found it truly a log. Even now Hugh's laugh was
+music.
+
+"Why, it's nuffin but an old log o' wood!" little Hugh had squealed, as
+brave as a lion.
+
+As she sat seeing visions, old Mavourneen, Brock's Irish wolf-hound,
+came and laid her muzzle on the woman's shoulder, crying a bit, as was
+Mavourneen's Irish way, for pleasure at finding the mistress. And with
+that there was a brown ripple and a patter of many soft feet, and a
+broken wave of dogs came around the corner, seven little cairn-terriers.
+Sticky and Sandy and their offspring. The woman let Sticky settle in her
+lap and drew Sandy under her arm, and the puppies looked up at her from
+the step below with ten serious, anxious eyes and then fell to chasing
+quite imaginary game up and down the stone steps. Mavourneen sighed
+deeply and dropped with a heavy thud, a great paw on the edge of the
+white dress and her beautiful head resting on her paws, the topaz,
+watchful eyes gazing over the city. The woman put her free hand back and
+touched the rough head.
+
+"Dear dog!" she spoke.
+
+Another memory came: how they had bought Mavourneen, she and Hugh and
+the boys, at the kennels in Ireland, eight years ago; how the huge baby
+had been sent to them at Liverpool in a hamper; the uproarious drive the
+four of them--Hugh, the two boys, and herself--and Mavourneen had taken
+in a taxi across the city. The puppy, astonished and investigating
+throughout the whole proceeding, had mounted all of them, separately and
+together, and insisted on lying in big Hugh's lap, crying
+broken-heartedly at not being allowed. How they had shouted laughter,
+the four and the boy taxi-driver, all the journey, till they ached! What
+good times they had always had together, the young father and mother and
+the two big sons! She reflected how she had not been at all the
+conventional mother of sons. She had not been satisfied to be gentle and
+benevolent and look after their clothes and morals. She had lived their
+lives with them, she had ridden and gone swimming with them, and played
+tennis and golf, and fished and shot and skated and walked with them,
+yes, and studied and read with them, all their lives.
+
+"I haven't any respect for my mother," young Hugh told her one day. "I
+like her like a sister."
+
+She was deeply pleased at this attitude; she did not wish their respect
+as a visible quality. Vision after vision came of the old times and
+care-free days while the four, as happy and normal a family as lived in
+the world, passed their alert, full days together before the war. Memory
+after memory took form in the brain of the woman, the center of that
+light-hearted life so lately changed, so entirely now a memory. War had
+come.
+
+At first, in 1914, there had been excitement, astonishment. Then the
+horror of Belgium. One refused to believe that at first; it was a lurid
+slander on the kindly German people; then one believed with the brain;
+one's spirit could not grasp it. Unspeakable deeds such as the Germans'
+deeds--it was like a statement made concerning a fourth dimension of
+space; civilized modern folk were not so organized as to realize the
+facts of that bestiality.
+
+"Aren't you thankful we're Americans?" the woman had said over and over.
+
+One day her husband, answering usually with a shake of the head,
+answered in words. "We may be in it yet," he said. "I'm not sure but we
+ought to be."
+
+Brock, twenty-one then, had flashed at her: "I want to be in it. I may
+just have to be, mother."
+
+Young Hugh yawned a bit at that, and stretching his long arm, he patted
+his brother's shoulder. "Good old hero, Brock! I'll beat you a set of
+tennis. Come on."
+
+That sudden speech of Brock's had startled her, had brought the war, in
+a jump which was like a stab, close. The war and Lindow--their
+place--how was it possible that this nightmare in Europe could touch the
+peace of the garden, the sunlit view of the river, the trees with birds
+singing in them, the scampering of the dogs down the drive? The distant
+hint of any connection between the great horror and her own was pain;
+she put the thought away.
+
+Then the _Lusitania_ was sunk. All America shouted shame through sobs of
+rage. The President wrote a beautiful and entirely satisfactory note.
+
+"It should be war--war. It should be war today," Hugh had said, her
+husband. "We only waste time. We'll have to fight sooner or later. The
+sooner we begin, the sooner we'll finish."
+
+"Fight!" young Hugh threw at him. "What with? We can just about make
+faces at 'em, father."
+
+The boy's father did not laugh. "We had better get ready to do more than
+make faces; we've got to get ready." He hammered his hand on the stone
+balustrade. "I'm going to Plattsburg this summer, Evelyn."
+
+"I'm going with you." Brock's voice was low and his mouth set, and the
+woman, looking at him, saw suddenly that her boy was a man.
+
+"Well, then, as man power is getting low at Lindow, I'll stay and take
+care of Mummy. Won't I? We'll do awfully well without them, won't we,
+Mum? You can drive Dad's Rolls-Royce roadster, and if you leave on the
+handbrake up-hill, I'll never tell."
+
+Father and son had gone off for the month in camp, and, glad as she was
+to have the younger boy with her, there was yet an uneasy, an almost
+subconscious feeling about him, which she indignantly denied each time
+that it raised its head. It never quite phrased itself, this fear, this
+wonder if Hugh were altogether as American as his father and brother.
+Question the courage and patriotism of her own boy? She flung the
+thought from her as again and yet again it came. People of the same
+blood were widely different. To Brock and his father it had come easily
+to do the obvious thing, to go to Plattsburg. It had not so come to
+young Hugh, but that in good time he would see his duty and do it she
+would not for an instant doubt. She would not break faith with the lad
+in thought. With a perfect delicacy she avoided any word that would
+influence him. He knew. All his life he had breathed loyalty. It was she
+herself, reading to them night after night through years, who had taught
+the boys hero worship--above all, worship of American heroes,
+Washington, Paul Jones, Perry, Farragut, Lee; how Dewey had said, "You
+may fire now, Gridley, if you are ready"; how Clark had brought the
+_Oregon_ around the continent; how Scott had gone alone among angry
+Indians. She had taught them such names, names which will not die while
+America lives. It was she who had told the little lads, listening
+wide-eyed, that as these men had held life lightly for the glory of
+America, so her sons, if need came, must be ready to offer their lives
+for their country. She remembered how Brock, his round face suddenly
+scarlet, had stammered out:
+
+"I _am_ ready, Mummy. I'd die this minute for--for America. Wouldn't
+you, Hughie?"
+
+And young Hugh, a slim, blond angel of a boy, of curly, golden hair and
+unexpected answers, had ducked beneath the hero, upsetting him into a
+hedge to his infinite anger. "I wouldn't die right now, Brocky," said
+Hugh. "There's going to be chocolate cake for lunch."
+
+One could never count on Hugh's ways of doing things, but Brock was a
+stone wall of reliability. She smiled, thinking of his youth and beauty
+and entire boyishness, to think yet of the saying from the Bible which
+always suggested Brock, "Thou shalt keep him in perfect peace whose mind
+is stayed on Thee." It was so with the lad; through the gay heart and
+eager interest in life pulsed an atmosphere of deep religiousness. He
+was always "in perfect peace," and his mother, less balanced, had stayed
+her mind on that quiet and right young mind from its very babyhood. The
+lad had seen his responsibilities and lifted them all his life. It came
+to her how, when her own mother, very dear to Brock, had died, she had
+not let the lads go with her to the house of death for fear of saddening
+their youth, and how, when she and their father came home from the hard,
+terrible business of the funeral, they met little Hugh on the drive,
+rapturous at seeing them again, rather absorbed in his new dog. But
+Brock, then fourteen, was in the house alone, quiet, his fresh, dear
+face red with tears, and a black necktie of his father's, too large for
+him, tied under his collar. Of all the memories of her boys, that
+grotesque black tie was the most poignant and most precious. It said
+much. It said: "I also, O, my mother, am of my people. I have a right to
+their sorrows as well as to their joys, and if you do not give me my
+place in trouble, I shall do what I can alone, being but a boy. I shall
+give up play, and I shall wear mourning as I can, not knowing how very
+well, but pushed by all my being to be with my own in their mourning."
+
+Quickly affection for the other lad asserted itself. Brock and Hugh were
+different, but Hugh was a dear boy, too--undeveloped, that was all. He
+had never taken life seriously, little Hugh, and now that this war-cloud
+hung over the world, he simply refused to look at it; he turned away his
+face. That was all, a temperament which loved harmony and shrank from
+ugliness; these things were young Hugh's limitations, and no ignoble
+quality.
+
+In a long dream, yet much faster than the words have told it, in
+comprehensive flashes of memory, her elbows on her knees and her face,
+in her slender hands, looking out over the garden with its arched way of
+roses, with its high hedge, looking past the loveliness that was home to
+the city pulsing in summer heat, to the shining zigzag of river beyond
+the city, the woman reviewed her boys' lives. Boys were not now merely
+one phase of humanity; they had suddenly become the nation. They stood
+in the foreground of a world crisis; back of them America was ranged,
+orderly, living and moving to feed, clothe, and keep happy these
+millions of lads holding in their hands the fate of the earth. Her boys
+were but two, yet necessary. She owed them to the country, as other
+mothers of men.
+
+There was a whistle under the archway, a flying step, and young Hugh
+shot from beneath the rosiness of Dorothy Perkins vines and took the
+stone steps in four bounds. All the dogs fell into a community chorus of
+barks and whines and patterings about, and Hugh's hands were on this one
+and that as he bent over the woman.
+
+"A _good_ kiss, Mummy; that's cold baked potato," he complained, and she
+laughed and hugged him.
+
+"Not cold; I was just thinking. Your knee, Hughie? You came up like a
+bird."
+
+Hugh made a face. "Bad break, that," he grinned, and limped across the
+terrace and back. "Mummy, it doesn't hurt much now, and I do forget,"
+he explained, and his color deepened. With that: "Tom Arthur is waiting
+for me in town. We're going to pick up Whitney, the tennis champion, at
+the Crossroads Club. May I take Dad's roadster?"
+
+"Yes, Hughie. And, Hugh, meet the train, the seven-five. Dad's coming
+to-night, you know."
+
+The boy took her hand, looked at her uneasily. "Mummy, dear, don't be
+thinking sinful thoughts about me. And don't let Dad. Hold your fire,
+Mummy."
+
+She lifted her face, and her eyes were the eyes of faith he had known
+all his life. "You blessed boy of mine, I will hold my fire." And then
+Hugh had all but knocked her over with a violent kiss again, and he
+slammed happily through the screen doors and was leaping up the stairs.
+Ten minutes later she heard the car purring down the drive.
+
+The dogs settled about her with long dog-sighs again. She looked at her
+wrist--only five-thirty. She went back with a new unrest to her
+thoughts. Hugh's knee--it was odd; it had lasted a long time, ever
+since--she shuddered a bit, so that old Mavourneen lifted her head and
+objected softly--ever since war was declared. Over a year! To be sure,
+he had hurt it again badly, slipping on the ice in December, just as it
+was getting strong. She wished that his father would not be so grim when
+Hugh's bad knee was mentioned. What did he mean? Did he dare to think
+her boy--the word was difficult even mentally--a slacker? With that her
+mind raced back to the days just before Hugh had hurt this knee. It was
+in February that Germany had proclaimed the oceans closed except along
+German paths, at German times. "This is war at last," her husband had
+said, and she knew the inevitable had come.
+
+Night after night she had lain awake facing it, sometimes breaking down
+utterly and shaking her soul out in sobs, sometimes trying to see ways
+around the horror, trying to believe that war must end before our troops
+could get ready, often with higher courage glorying that she might give
+so much for country and humanity. Then, in the nights, things that she
+had read far back, unrealizing, rose and confronted her with
+awful reality. Brutalities, atrocities, wounds, barbarous
+captivity--nightmares which the Germans had dug out of the grave of
+savagery and sent stalking over the earth--such rose and stood before
+the woman lying awake night after night. At first her soul hid its face
+in terror at the gruesome thoughts; at first her mind turned and fled
+and refused to believe. Her boys, Brock and Hugh! It was not credible,
+it was not reasonable, it was out of drawing that her good boys, her
+precious boys trained to be happy and help the world, to live useful,
+peaceful lives, should be snatched from home, here in America, and
+pitched into the ghastly struggle of Europe. Push back the ocean as she
+might, the ocean surged every day nearer.
+
+Daytimes she was as brave as the best. She could say: "If we had done it
+the day after the _Lusitania_, that would have been right. It would have
+been all over now." She could say: "My boys? They will do their duty
+like other women's boys." But nights, when she crept into bed and the
+things she had read of Belgium, of Serbia, came and stood about her, she
+knew that hers were the only boys in the world who could not, _could_
+not be spared. Brock and Hugh! It seemed as if it would be apparent to
+the dullest that Brock and Hugh were different from all others. She
+could suffer; she could have gone over there light-hearted and faced any
+danger to save _them_. Of course! That was natural! But--Brock and Hugh!
+The little heads that had lain in the hollow of her arm; the noisy
+little boys who had muddied their white clothes, and broken furniture,
+and spilled ink; the tall, beautiful lads who had been her pride and her
+everlasting joy, her playmates, her lovers--Brock and Hugh! Why, there
+had never been on earth love and friendship in any family close and
+unfailing like that of the four.
+
+Night after night, nearer and nearer, the ghosts from Belgium and Serbia
+and Poland stood about her bed, and she fought with them as one had
+fought with the beasts at Ephesus. Day after day she cheered Brock and
+the two Hughs and filled them with fresh patriotism. Of course, she
+would not have her own fail in a hair's breadth of eager service to
+their flag. Of course! And as she lifted up, for their sakes, her
+heart, behold a miracle, for her heart grew high! She began to feel the
+words she said. It came to her in very truth that to have the world as
+one wanted it was not now the point; the point was a greater goal which
+she had never in her happy life even visualized. It began to rise before
+her, a distant picture glorious through a mist of suffering, something
+built of the sacrifice, and the honor, and the deathless bravery of
+millions of soldiers in battle, of millions of mothers at home. The
+education of a nation to higher ideals was reaching the quiet backwater
+of this one woman's soul. There were lovelier things than life; there
+were harder things than death. Service is the measure of living. If the
+boys were to compress years of good living into a flame of serving
+humanity for six months, who was she, what was life here, that she
+should be reluctant? To play the game, for herself and her sons, this
+was the one thing worth while. More and more entirely, as the stress of
+the strange, hard vision crowded out selfishness, this woman, as
+thousands and tens of thousands all over America, lifted up her
+heart--the dear things that filled and were her heart--unto the Lord.
+
+And with that she was aware of a recurring unrest. She was aware that
+there was something her husband did not say to her about the boys, about
+young Hugh. Brock had been hard to hold for nearly two years now, but
+his father had thought for reasons, that he should not serve until his
+own flag called him. Now it would soon be calling, and Brock would go
+instantly. But young Hugh? What did the boy's attitude mean?
+
+"I can't make out Hughie," his father had said to her in March, 1917,
+when it was certain that war was coming. "What does this devil-may-care
+pose about the war mean?"
+
+And she answered: "Let Hughie work it out, Hugh. He's in trouble in his
+mind, but he'll come through. We'll give him time."
+
+"Oh, very well," Hugh the elder had agreed, "but young Americans will
+have to take their stand shortly. I couldn't bear it if a son of mine
+were a slacker."
+
+She tossed out her hands. "Slacker! Don't dare say it of my boy!"
+
+The hideous word followed her. That night, when she lay in bed and
+looked out into the moonlit wood, and saw the pines swaying like giant
+fans across a pulsing, pale sky, and listened to the summer wind blowing
+through the tall heads of them, again through the peace of it the word
+stabbed. A slacker! She set to work to fancy how it would be if Brock
+and Hugh both went to war and were both killed. She faced the thought.
+Life--years of it--without Brock and Hugh! She registered that steadily
+in her mind. Then she painted to herself another picture, Brock and Hugh
+not going to war, at home ignominiously safe. Other women's sons
+marching out into the danger--men, heroes! Brock and Hugh explaining,
+steadily explaining why they had not gone! Brock and Hugh after the war,
+mature men, meeting returning soldiers, old friends who had borne the
+burden and heat, themselves with no memories of hideous, infinitely
+precious days, of hardships, and squalid trench life, and deadly
+pain--for America! Brock and Hugh going on through life into old age
+ashamed to hold up their heads and look their comrades in the eye! Or
+else--it might be--Brock and Hugh lying next year, this year, in
+unknown, honored graves in France! Which was worse? And the aching heart
+of the woman did not wait to answer. Better a thousand times brave death
+than a coward's life. She would choose so if she knew certainly that she
+sent them both to death. The education of the war, the new glory of
+patriotism, had already gone far in this one woman.
+
+And then the thought stabbed again--a slacker--Hugh! How did his father
+dare say it? A poisonous terror, colder than the fear of death, crawled
+into her soul and hid there. Was it possible that Hugh, brilliant,
+buoyant, temperamental Hugh was--that? The days went on, and the cold,
+vile thing stayed coiled in her soul. It was on the very day war was
+declared that young Hugh injured his knee, a bad injury. When he was
+carried home, when the doctor cut away his clothes and bent over the
+swollen leg and said wise things about the "bursa," the boy's eyes were
+hard to meet. They constantly sought hers with a look questioning and
+anxious. Words were impossible, but she tried to make her glance and
+manner say: "I trust you. Not for worlds would I believe you did it on
+purpose."
+
+And finally the lad caught her hand and with his mouth against it spoke.
+"_You_ know I didn't do it on purpose, Mummy."
+
+And the cold horror fled out of her heart, and a great relief flooded
+her.
+
+On a day after that Brock came home from camp, and, though he might not
+tell it in words, she knew that he would sail shortly for France. She
+kept the house full of brightness and movement for the three days he had
+at home, yet the four--young Hugh on crutches now--clung to each other,
+and on the last afternoon she and Brock were alone for an hour. They had
+sat just here after tennis, in the hazy October weather, and pink-brown
+leaves had floated down with a thin, pungent fragrance and lay on the
+stone steps in vague patterns. Scarlet geraniums bloomed back of Brock's
+head and made a satisfying harmony with the copper of his tanned face.
+They fell to silence after much talking, and finally she got out
+something which had been in her mind but which it had been hard to say.
+
+"Brocky," she began, and jabbed the end of her racket into her foot so
+that it hurt, because physical pain will distract and steady a mind.
+"Brocky, I want to ask you to do something."
+
+"Yes'm," answered Brock.
+
+"It's this. Of course, I know you're going soon, over there."
+
+Brock looked at her gravely.
+
+"Yes, I know, I want to ask you if--if _it_ happens--will you come and
+tell me yourself? If it's allowed."
+
+Brock did not even touch her hand; he knew well she could not bear it.
+He answered quietly, with a sweet, commonplace manner as if that other
+world to which he might be going was a place too familiar in his
+thoughts for any great strain in speaking of it. "Yes, Mummy," he said.
+"Of course I will. I'd have wanted to anyway, even if you hadn't said
+it. It seems to me--" He lifted his young face, square-jawed,
+fresh-colored, and there was a vision-seeing look in his eyes which his
+mother had known at times before. He looked across the city lying at
+their feet, and the river, and the blue hills beyond, and he spoke
+slowly, as if shaping a thought. "So many fellows have 'gone west'
+lately that there must he some way. It seems as if all that mass of love
+and--and desire to reach back and touch--the ones left--as if all that
+must have built a sort of bridge over the river--so that a fellow might
+probably come back and--and tell his mother--"
+
+Brock's voice stopped, and suddenly she was in his arms, his face was
+against hers, and hot tears not her own were on her cheek. Then he was
+shaking his head as if to shake off the strong emotion.
+
+"It's not likely to happen, dear. The casualties in this war are
+tremendously lower than in--"
+
+"I know," she interrupted. "Of course, they are. Of course, you're
+coming home without a scratch, and likely a general, and conceited
+beyond words. How will we stand you!"
+
+Brock laughed delightedly. "You're a peach," he stated. "That's the
+sort. Laughing mothers to send us off--it makes a whale of a
+difference."
+
+That October afternoon had now dropped eight months back, and still the
+house seemed lost without Brock, especially on this June twentieth, the
+day that was his and hers, the day when there had always been "doings"
+second only to Christmas at Lindow. But she gathered up her courage like
+a woman. Hugh the elder was coming tonight from his dollar-a-year work
+in Washington, her man who had moved heaven and earth to get into active
+service, and who, when finally refused because of his forty-nine years
+and a defective eye, had left his great business as if it were a joke,
+and had put his whole time, and strength, and experience, and fortune at
+the service of the Government--as plenty of other American men were
+doing. Hugh was coming in time for her birthday dinner, and young Hugh
+was with them--Her heart shrank as if a sharp thing touched it. How
+would it be when they rose to drink Brock's health? She knew pretty well
+what her cousin, the judge, would say:
+
+"The soldier in France! God bring him home well and glorious!"
+
+How would it be for her other boy then, the boy who was not in France?
+Unphrased, a thought flashed, "I hope, I do hope Hughie will be very
+lame tonight."
+
+The little dog slipped from her and barked in remonstrance as she threw
+out her hands and stood up. Old Mavourneen pulled herself to her feet,
+too, a huge, beautiful beast, and the woman stooped and put her arm
+lovingly about the furry neck. "Mavourneen, you know a lot. You know our
+Brock's away." At the name the big dog whined and looked up anxious,
+inquiring. "And you know--do you know, dear dog, that Hughie ought to
+go? Do you? Mavourneen, it's like the prayer-book says, 'The burden of
+it is intolerable.' I can't bear to lose him, and I can't, O God! I
+can't bear to keep him." She straightened. "As you say, Mavourneen,
+it's time to dress for dinner."
+
+The birthday party went better than one could have hoped. Nobody broke
+down at Brock's name; everybody exulted in the splendid episode of his
+heroism, months back, which had won him the war cross. The letter from
+Jim Colledge and his own birthday letter, garrulous and gay, were read.
+Brock had known well that the day would be hard to get through and had
+made that letter out of brutal cheerfulness. Yet every one felt his
+longing to be at the celebration, missed for the first time in his life,
+pulsing through the words. Young Hugh read it and made it sweet with a
+lovely devotion to and pride in his brother. A heart of stone could not
+have resisted Hugh that night. And then the party was over, and the
+woman and her man, seeing each other seldom now, talked over things for
+an hour. After, through her open door, she saw a bar of light under the
+door of the den, Brock's and Hugh's den.
+
+"Hughie," she spoke, and on the instant the dark panel flashed into
+light.
+
+"Come in, Mummy, I've been waiting to talk to you."
+
+"Waiting, my lamb?"
+
+Hugh pushed her, as a boy shoves a sister, into the end of the sofa.
+There was a wood fire on the hearth in front of her, for the June
+evening was cool, and luxurious Hugh liked a fire. A reading lamp was
+lighted above Brock's deep chair, and there were papers on the floor by
+it, and more low lights. There were magazines about, and etchings on the
+walls, and bits of university plunder, and the glow of rugs and of
+books. It was as fascinating a place as there was in all the beautiful
+house. In the midst of the bright peace Hugh stood haggard.
+
+"Hughie! What is it?"
+
+"Mother," he whispered, "help me!"
+
+"With my last drop of blood, Hugh."
+
+"I can't go on--alone--mother." His eyes were wild, and his words
+labored into utterance. "I--I don't know what to do--mother."
+
+"The war, Hughie?"
+
+"Of course! What else is there?" he flung at her.
+
+"But your knee?"
+
+"Oh, Mummy, you know as well as I that my knee is well enough. Dad knows
+it, too. The way he looks at me--or dodges looking! Mummy--I've got to
+tell you--you'll have to know--and maybe you'll stop loving me. I'm--"
+He threw out his arms with a gesture of despair. "I'm--afraid to go."
+With that he was on his knees beside her, and his arms gripped her, and
+his head was hidden in her lap. For a long minute there was only
+silence, and the woman held the young head tight.
+
+Hugh lifted his face and stared from blurred eyes. "A man might better
+be dead than a coward--you're thinking that? That's it." A sob stopped
+his voice, the young, dear voice. His face, drawn into lines of age,
+hurt her unbearably. She caught him against her and hid the beloved,
+impossible face.
+
+"Hugh--I--judging you--I? Why, Hughie, I _love_ you--I only love you. I
+don't stand off and think, when it's you and Brock. I'm inside your
+hearts, feeling it with you. I don't know if it's good or bad. It's--my
+own. Coward--Hughie! I don't think such things of my darling."
+
+"'There's no--friend like a mother,'" stammered young Hugh, and tears
+fell unashamed. His mother had not seen the boy cry since he was ten
+years old. He went on. "Dad didn't say a word, because he wouldn't spoil
+your birthday, but the way he dodged--my knee--" He laughed miserably
+and swabbed away tears with the corner of his pajama coat. "I wish I had
+a hanky," he complained. The woman dried the tear-stained cheeks hastily
+with her own. "Dad's got it in for me," said Hugh. "I can tell. He'll
+make me go--now. He--he suspects I went skating that day hoping I'd
+fall--and--I know it wasn't so darned unlikely. Yes--I did--not the first
+time--when I smashed it; that was entirely--luck." He laughed again, a
+laugh that was a sob. "And now--oh, Mummy, have I _got_ to go into that
+nightmare? I hate it so. I am--I _am_--afraid. If--if I should be there
+and--and sent into some terrible job--shell-fire--dirt--smells--dead men
+and horses--filth--torture--mother, I might run. I don't feel sure. I
+can't trust Hugh Langdon--he might run. Anyhow"--the lad sprang to his
+feet and stood before her--"anyhow--why am _I_ bound to get into this? I
+didn't start it. My Government didn't. And I've everything, _everything_
+before me here. I didn't tell you, but that editor said--he said I'd be
+one of the great writers of the time. And I love it, I love that job. I
+can do it. I can be useful, and successful, and an honor to you--and
+happy, oh, so happy! If only I may do as Arnold said, be one of
+America's big writers! I've everything to gain here; I've everything to
+lose there." He stopped and stood before her like a flame.
+
+And from the woman's mouth came words which she had not thought, as if
+other than herself spoke them. "'What shall it profit a man,'" she
+spoke, "'if he gain the whole world and lose his own soul?'"
+
+At that the boy plunged on his knees in collapse and sobbed miserably.
+"Mother, mother! Don't be merciless."
+
+"Merciless! My own laddie!" There seemed no words possible as she
+stroked the blond head with shaking hand. "Hughie," she spoke when his
+sobs quieted. "Hughie, it's not how you feel; it's what you do. I
+believe thousands and thousands of boys in this unwarlike country have
+gone--are going--through suffering like yours."
+
+Hugh lifted wet eyes. "Do you think so, Mummy?"
+
+"Indeed I do. Indeed I do. And I pray that the women who love them
+are--faithful. For I know, I _know_ that if a woman lets her men, if a
+mother let her sons fail their country now, those sons will never
+forgive her. It's your honor I'm holding to, Hughie, against human
+instinct. After this war, those to be pitied won't be the sonless
+mothers or the crippled soldiers--it will be the men of fighting age who
+have not fought. Even if they could not, even at the best, they will
+spend the rest of their lives explaining why."
+
+Hugh sat on the sofa now, close to her, and his head dropped on her
+shoulder. "Mummy, that's some comfort, that dope about other fellows
+taking it as I do. I felt lonely. I thought I was the only coward in
+America. Dad's condemning me; he can't speak to me naturally. I felt as
+if"--his voice faltered--"as if I couldn't stand it if you hated me,
+too."
+
+The woman laughed a little. "Hughie, you know well that not anything to
+be imagined could stop my loving you."
+
+He went on, breathing heavily but calmed. "You think that even if I am a
+blamed fool, if I went anyhow--that I'd rank as a decent white man? In
+your eyes--Dad's--my own?"
+
+"I know it, Hughie. It's what you do, not how you feel doing it."
+
+"If Brock would hold my hand!" The eyes of the two met with a dim smile
+and a memory of the childhood so near, so utterly gone. "I'd like Dad to
+respect me again," the boy spoke in a wistful, uncertain voice. "It's
+darned wretched to have your father despise you." He looked at her
+then. "Mummy, you're tired out; your face is gray. I'm a beast to keep
+you up. Go to bed, dear."
+
+He kissed her, and with his arm around her waist led her through the
+dark hall to the door of her room, and kissed her again. And again, as
+she stood and watched there, he turned on the threshold of the den and
+threw one more kiss across the darkness, and his face shone with a smile
+that sent her to bed, smiling through her tears. She lay in the
+darkness, fragrant of honeysuckle outside, and her sore heart was full
+of the boys--of Hugh struggling in his crisis; still more, perhaps, of
+Brock whose birthday it was, Brock in France, in the midst of "many and
+great dangers," yet--she knew--serene and buoyant among them because his
+mind was "stayed." Not long these thoughts held her; for she was so
+deadened with the stress of many emotions that nature asserted itself
+and shortly she feel asleep.
+
+It may have been two or three hours she slept. She knew afterward that
+it must have been at about three of the summer morning when a dream
+came which, detailed and vivid as it was, probably filled in time only
+the last minute or so before awakening. It seemed to her that glory
+suddenly flooded the troubled world; the infinite, intimate joy,
+impossible to put into words, was yet a defined and long first chapter
+of her dream. After that she stood on the bank of a river, a river
+perhaps miles wide, and with the new light-heartedness filling her she
+looked and saw a mighty bridge which ran brilliant with many-colored
+lights, from her to the misty further shore of the river. Over the
+bridge passed a throng of radiant young men, boys, all in uniform. "How
+glorious!" she seemed to cry out in delight, and with that she saw
+Brock.
+
+Very far off, among the crowd of others, she saw him, threading his way
+through the throng. He came, unhurried yet swift, and on his face was an
+amused, loving smile which was perhaps the look of him which she
+remembered best. By his side walked old Mavourneen, the wolf-hound,
+Brock's hand on the shaggy head. The two swung steadily toward her,
+Brock smiling into her eyes, holding her eyes with his, and as they
+were closer, she heard Mavourneen crying in wordless dumb joy, crying as
+she had not done since the day when Brock came home the last time. Above
+the sound Brock's voice spoke, every trick of inflection so familiar, so
+sweet, that the joy of it was sharp, like pain.
+
+"Mother, I'm coming to take Hughie's hand--to take Hughie's hand," he
+repeated.
+
+And with that Mavourneen's great cry rose above his voice. And suddenly
+she was awake. Somewhere outside the house, yet near, the dog was
+loudly, joyfully crying. Out of the deep stillness of the night burst
+the sound of the joyful crying.
+
+The woman shot from her bed and ran barefooted, her heart beating madly,
+into the darkness of the hall to the landing on the stairway. Something
+halted her. There was a broad, uncurtained pane of glass in the front
+door of the house. From the landing one might look down the stone steps
+outside and see clearly in the bright moonlight as far as the beginning
+of the rose archway. As she stood gasping, from beneath the flowers
+Brock stepped into the moonlight and began, unhurried, buoyant, as she
+had but now seen him in her dream, to mount the steps. Mavourneen
+pressed at his side, and his hand was on the dog's head. As he came, he
+lifted his face to his mother with the accustomed, every-day smile which
+she knew, as if he were coming home, as he had come home on many a
+moonlit evening from a dance in town to talk the day over with her. As
+she stared, standing in the dark on the landing, her pulse racing, yet
+still with the stillness of infinity, an arm came around her, a hand
+gripped her shoulder, and young Hugh's voice spoke.
+
+"Mother! It's Brock!" he whispered.
+
+At the words she fled headlong down to the door and caught at the
+handle. It was fastened, and for a moment she could not think of the
+bolt. Brock stood close outside; she saw the light on his brown head and
+the bend in the long, strong fingers that caressed Mavourneen's fur. He
+smiled at her happily--Brock--three feet away. Just as the bolt
+loosened, with an inexplicable, swift impulse she was cold with terror.
+For the half of a second, perhaps, she halted, possessed by some
+formless fear stronger than herself--humanity dreading something not
+human, something unknown, overwhelming. She halted not a whole
+second--for it was Brock. Brock! Wide open she flung the door and sprang
+out.
+
+There was no one there. Only Mavourneen stood in the cold moonlight, and
+cried, and looked up, puzzled, at empty air.
+
+"Oh, Brock, Brock! Oh, dear Brock!" the woman called and flung out her
+arms. "Brock--Brock--don't leave me. Don't go!"
+
+Mavourneen sniffed about the dark hall, investigating to find the master
+who had come home and gone away so swiftly. With that young Hugh was
+lifting her in his arms, carrying her up the broad stairs into his room.
+"You're barefooted," he spoke brokenly.
+
+She caught his hand as he wrapped her in a rug on the sofa. "Hugh--you
+saw--it was Brock?"
+
+"Yes, dearest, it was our Brock," answered Hugh stumblingly.
+
+"You saw--and I--and Mavourneen."
+
+"Mavonrneen is Irish," young Hugh said. "She has the second sight," and
+the big old dog laid her nose on the woman's knee and lifted topaz eyes,
+asking questions, and whimpered broken-heartedly.
+
+"Dear dog," murmured the woman and drew the lovely head to her. "You saw
+him." And then; "Hughie--he came to tell us. He is--dead."
+
+"I think so," whispered young Hugh with bent head.
+
+Then, fighting for breath, she told what had happened--the dream, the
+intense happiness of it, how Brock had come smiling. "And Hugh, the only
+thing he said, two or three times over, was, 'I'm coming to take
+Hughie's hand.'"
+
+The lad turned upon her a shining look. "I know, mother. I didn't hear,
+of course, but I knew, when I saw him, it was for me, too. And I'm
+ready. I see my way now. Mother, get Dad."
+
+Hugh, the elder, still sleeping in his room at the far side of the
+house, opened heavy eyes. Then he sprang up. "Evelyn! What is it?"
+
+"Oh, Hugh--come! Oh, Hugh! Brock--Brock--" She could not say the words;
+there was no need. Brock's father caught her hands. In bare words then
+she told him.
+
+"My dear," urged the man, "you've had a vivid dream. That's all. You
+were thinking about the boys; you were only half awake; Mavourneen began
+to cry--the dog means Brock. It was easy--" his voice faltered--"to--to
+believe the rest."
+
+"Hugh, I _know_, dear. Brock came to tell me. He said he would." Later,
+that day, when a telegram arrived from the War Office there was no new
+shock, no added certainty to her assurance. She went on: "Hughie saw
+him. And Mavourneen. But I can't argue. We still have a boy, Hugh, and
+he needs us--he's waiting. Oh, my dear, Hughie is going to France!"
+
+"Thank God!" spoke Hugh's father.
+
+Hand tight in hand like young lovers the two came across to the room
+where their boy waited, tense. "Father--Dad--you'll give me back your
+respect, won't you?" The strong young hand held out was shaking.
+"Because I'm going, Dad. But you have to know that I was--a coward."
+
+"_No_, Hugh."
+
+"Yes. And Dad, I'm afraid--now. But I've got the hang of things, and
+nothing could keep me. Will you, do you despise me--now--that I still
+hate it--if--if I go just the same?"
+
+The big young chap shook so that his mother, his tall mother, put her
+arms about him to steady him. He clutched her hand hard and repeated,
+through quivering lips, "Would you despise me still, Dad?"
+
+For a moment the father could not answer. Then difficult tears of
+manhood and maturity forced their way from his eyes and unheeded rolled
+down his cheeks. With a step he put his arms about the boy as if the boy
+were a child, and the boy threw his about his father's shoulders.
+
+For a long second the two tall men stood so. The woman, standing apart,
+through the shipwreck of her earthly life was aware only of happiness
+safe where sorrow and loss could not touch it. What was separation,
+death itself, when love stronger than death held people together as it
+held Hugh and her boys and herself? Then the older Hugh stood away,
+still clutching the lad's hand, smiling through unashamed tears.
+
+"Hugh," he said, "in all America there's not a man prouder of his son
+than I am of you. There's not a braver soldier in our armies than the
+soldier who's to take my name into France." He stopped and steadied
+himself; he went on: "It would have broken my heart, boy, if you had
+failed--failed America. And your mother--and Brock and me. Failed your
+own honor. It would have meant for us shame and would have bowed our
+heads; it would have meant for you disaster. Don't fear for your
+courage, Hugh; the Lord won't forsake the man who carries the Lord's
+colors."
+
+Young Hugh turned suddenly to his mother. "I'm at peace now. You and
+Dad--honor me. I'll deserve respect from--my country. It will be a wall
+around me--And--" he caught her to him and crushed his mouth to
+hers--"dearest--Brock will hold my hand."
+
+
+
+
+THE SILVER STIRRUP
+
+
+In the most unexpected spots vital sparks of history blaze out. Time
+seems, once in a while, powerless to kill a great memory. Romance blooms
+sometimes untarnished across centuries of commonplace. In a new world
+old France lives.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It is computed that about one-seventh of the French-Canadian population
+of Canada enlisted in the great war. The stampede of heroism seems to
+have left them cold. A Gospel of the Province first congealed the none
+too fiery blood of the _habitants_, small farmers, very poor, thinking
+in terms of narrowest economy, of one pig and ten children, of
+painstaking thrift and a bare margin to subsistence. Such conditions
+stifle world interests. The earthquake which threatened civilization
+disturbed the _habitant_ merely because it hazarded his critical balance
+on the edge of want. The cataclysm over the ocean was none of his
+affair. And his affairs pressed. What about the pig if one went to war?
+And could Alphonse, who is fourteen, manage the farm so that there would
+be vegetables for winter? Tell me that.
+
+When in September, 1914, I went to Canada for two weeks of camping I had
+heard of this point of view. Dick Lindsley and I were met at the Club
+Station on the casual railway which climbs the mountains through Quebec
+Province, by four guides, men from twenty to thirty-five, powerfully
+built chaps, deep-shouldered and slim-waisted, lithe as wild-cats. It
+was a treat to see their muscles, like machines in the pink of order,
+adjust to the heavy _pacquetons_, send a canoe whipping through the
+water. There was one exception to the general physical perfection; one
+of Dick's men, a youngster of perhaps twenty-two, limped. He covered
+ground as well as the others, for all of that; he picked the heaviest
+load and portaged it at an uneven trot, faster than his comrades; he was
+what the _habitants_ call "ambitionné." Dick's canoe was loaded first,
+owing to the fellow's efficiency, and I waited while it got away and
+watched the lame boy. He had an interesting face, aquiline and dark, set
+with vivid light-blue eyes, shooting restless fire. I registered an
+intention to get at this lad's personality. The chance came two days
+later. My men were off chopping on a day, and I suddenly needed to go
+fishing.
+
+"Take Philippe," offered Dick. "He handles a boat better than any of
+them."
+
+Philippe and I shortly slipped into the Guardian's Pool, at the lower
+end of the long lake of the Passes. "It is here, M'sieur," Philippe
+announced, "that it is the custom to take large ones."
+
+By which statement the responsibility of landing record trout was on my
+shoulders. I thought I would have a return whack. My hands in the snarly
+flies and my back to Philippe I spoke around my pipe, yet spoke
+distinctly.
+
+"Why aren't you in France fighting?"
+
+The canoe shivered down its length as if the man at its stern had
+jumped. There was a silence. Then Philippe's deep, boyish voice
+answered.
+
+"As M'sieur sees, one is lame."
+
+I felt a hotness emerging from my flannel collar and rushing up my face
+as I bent over that damned Silver Doctor that wouldn't loose its grip on
+the Black Hackle. I didn't see the Black Hackle or the Silver Doctor for
+a moment. "Beg pardon," I growled. "I forgot." I mumbled platitudes.
+
+"M'sieur le Docteur has right," Philippe announced unruffled. "One
+should fight for France. I have tried to enlist, there are three times,
+explaining that I am '_capable_' though I walk not evenly. But one will
+not have me. Therefore I have shame, me. I have, naturally, more shame
+than another because of Jeanne."
+
+"Because of Jeanne?" I repeated. "Who is Jeanne?"
+
+There was a pause; a queer feeling made me slew around. Philippe's old
+felt hat was being pulled off as if he were entering a church.
+
+"But--Jeanne, M'sieur," he stated as if I must understand. "Jeanne
+d'Arc. _Tiens_--the Maid of France."
+
+"The Maid of France!" I was puzzled. "What has she to do with it?"
+
+"But everything, M'sieur." The vivid eyes flamed. "M'sieur does not
+know, perhaps, that my grandfather fought under Jeanne?"
+
+"Your grandfather!" I flung it at him in scorn. The man was a poor
+lunatic.
+
+"But yes, M'sieur. My grandfather, lui-même."
+
+"But, Philippe, the Maid of Orleans died in 1431." I remembered that
+date. The Maid is one of my heroic figures.
+
+Philippe shrugged his shoulders. "Oh--as for a _grandpère_! But not the
+_grandpère à present_, he who keeps the grocery shop in St. Raymond.
+Certainly not that grandfather. It is to say the _grandpère_ of that
+_grandpère_. Perhaps another yet, or even two or three more. What does
+it matter? One goes back a few times of grandfathers and behold one
+arrives at him who was armorer for the Maid--to whom she gave the silver
+stirrup."
+
+"The silver stirrup." My Leonard rod bumped along the bow; my flies
+tangled again in the current. I squirmed about till I faced the guide
+in the stern. "Philippe, what in hell do you mean by this drool of
+grandfathers and silver stirrups?"
+
+The boy, perfectly respectful, not forgetting for a second his affair of
+keeping the canoe away from the fish-hole, looked at me squarely, and
+his uncommon light eyes gleamed out of his face like the eyes of a
+prophet. "M'sieur, it is a tale doubtless which seems strange to you,
+but to us others it is not strange. M'sieur lives in New York, and there
+are automobiles and trolley-cars and large buildings _en masse_, and to
+M'sieur the world is made of such things. But there are other things. We
+who live in quiet places, know. One has not too much of excitement, we
+others, so that one remembers a great event which has happened to one's
+family many years. Yes, indeed, M'sieur, centuries. If one has not much
+one guards as a souvenir the tale of the silver stirrup of Jeanne. Yes,
+for several generations."
+
+The boy was apparently unconscious that his remarks were peculiar.
+"Philippe, will you tell me what you mean by a silver stirrup which
+Jeanne d'Arc gave to your ancestors?"
+
+"But with pleasure, M'sieur," he answered readily, with the gracious
+French politeness which one meets among the _habitants_ side by side
+with sad lapses of etiquette. "It is all-simple that the old
+grandfather, the ancient, he who lived in France when the Maid fought
+her wars, was an armorer. '_Ça fait que_'--_sa fak_, Philippe pronounced
+it--'so it happened that on a day the stirrup of the Maid broke as her
+horse plunged, and my grandfather, the ancient, he ran quickly and
+caught the horse's head. And so it happened--_çe fait que_--that my
+grandfather was working at that moment on a fine stirrup of gold for her
+harness, for though they burned her afterwards, they gave her then all
+that there was of magnificence. And the old follow--_le vieux_--whipped
+out the golden stirrup from his pocket, quite prepared for use, so it
+happened--and he put it quickly in the place of the silver one which she
+had been using. And Jeanne smiled. 'You are ready to serve France,
+Armorer.'
+
+"She bent then and looked _le vieux_ in the face--but he was young at
+the time.
+
+"'Are you not Baptiste's son, of Doremy?' asked the Maid.
+
+"'Yes, Jeanne,' said my _grandpère_.
+
+"'Then keep the silver stirrup to remember our village, and God's
+servant Jeanne,' she said, and gave it to him with her hand."
+
+If a square of Gobelin tapestry had emerged from the woods and hung
+itself across the gunwale of my canvas canoe it would not have been more
+surprising. I got my breath. "And the stirrup, what became of it?"
+
+The boy shrugged his shoulders. "_Sais pas_," he answered with French
+nonchalance. "One does not know that. It is a long time, M'sieur le
+Docteur. It was lost, that stirrup, some years ago. It may be a hundred
+years. It may be two hundred. My grandfather, he who keeps the grocery
+shop, has told me that there is a saying that a Martel must go to France
+to find the silver stirrup. In every case I do not know. It is my wish
+to fight for France, but as for the stirrup or Jeanne--_sais pas_."
+Another shrug. With that he was making oration, his light eyes flashing,
+his dark face working with feeling, about the bitterness of being a
+cripple, and unable to go into the army.
+
+"It is not _comme il faut_, M'sieur le Docteur, that a man whose very
+grandfather fought for Jeanne should fail France now in her need.
+Jeanne, one knows, was the saviour of France. Is it not?" I agreed. "It
+is my inheritance, therefore, to fight as my ancient grandfather
+fought." I looked at the lame boy, not knowing the repartee. He began
+again. "Also I am the only one of the family proper to go, except
+Adolphe, who is not very proper, having had a tree to fall on the lungs
+and leave him liable to fits; and also Jacques and Louis are too young,
+and Jean Baptiste he is blind of one eye, God knows. So it is I who
+fail! I fail! Jesus Christ! To stay at home like a coward when France
+needs men!"
+
+"But you are Canadian, Philippe. Your people have been here two hundred
+years."
+
+"M'sieur, I am of France. I belong there with the fighting men." His
+look was a flame, and suddenly I know why he was firing off hot shot at
+me. I am a surgeon.
+
+"What's the matter with your leg?" I asked.
+
+The brilliant eyes flashed. "Ah!" he brought out, "One hoped--If M'sieur
+le Docteur would but see. I may be cured. To be straight--to march!" He
+was trembling.
+
+Later, in the shifting sunshine at the camp door, with the odors of
+hemlocks and balsams about us, the lake rippling below, I had an
+examination. I found that the lad's lameness was a trouble to be cured
+easily by an operation. I hesitated. Was it my affair to root this
+youngster out of safety and send him to death in the _débâcle_ over
+there? Yet what right had I to set limits? He wanted to offer his life;
+how could I know what I might be blocking if I withheld the cure? My job
+was to give strength to all I could reach.
+
+"Philippe," I said, "if you'll come to New York next month I'll set you
+up with a good leg."
+
+In September, 1915, Dick and I came up for our yearly trip, but Philippe
+was not with us. Philippe, after drilling at Valcartier, was drilling
+in England. I had lurid post cards off and on; after a while I knew that
+he was "somewhere in France." A grim gray card came with no post-mark,
+no writing but the address and Philippe's labored signature; for the
+rest there were printed sentences: "I am well. I am wounded. I am in
+hospital. I have had no letter from you lately." All of which was struck
+out but the welcome words, "I am well." So far then I had not cured the
+lad to be killed. Then for weeks nothing. It came to be time again to go
+to Canada for the hunting. I wrote the steward to get us four men, as
+usual, and Lindsley and I alighted from the rattling train at the club
+station in September, 1916, with a mild curiosity to see what Fate had
+provided as guides, philosophers and friends to us for two weeks. Paul
+Sioui--that was nice--a good fellow Paul; and Josef--I shook hands with
+Josef; the next face was a new one--ah, Pierre Beauramé--one calls one's
+self that--_on s'appelle comme ça. Bon jour!_ I turned, and got a shock.
+The fourth face, at which I looked, was the face of Philippe Martel. I
+looked, speechless. And with that the boy laughed. "It is that M'sieur
+cannot again cure my leg," answered Philippe, and tapped proudly on a
+calf which echoed with a wooden sound.
+
+"You young cuss," I addressed him savagely. "Do you mean to say you have
+gone and got shot in that very leg I fixed up for you?"
+
+Philippe rippled more laughter--of pure joy--of satisfaction. "But, yes,
+M'sieur le Docteur, that leg _même_. Itself. In a battle, M'sieur le
+Docteur gave me the good leg for a long enough time to serve France. It
+was all that there was of necessary. As for now I may not fight again,
+but I can walk and portage _comme il faut_. I am _capable_ as a guide.
+Is it not, Josef?" He appealed, and the men crowded around to back him
+up with deep, serious voices.
+
+"Ah, yes, M'sieur."
+
+"_B'en capable!_"
+
+"He can walk like us others--the same!" they assured me impressively.
+
+Philippe was my guide this year. It was the morning after we reached
+camp. "Would M'sieur le Docteur be too busy to look at something?"
+
+I was not. Philippe stood in the camp doorway in the patch of sunlight
+where he had sat two years before when I looked over his leg. He sat
+down again, in the shifting sunshine, the wooden leg sticking out
+straight and pathetic, and began to take the covers off a package. There
+were many covers; the package was apparently valuable. As he worked at
+it the odors of hemlock and balsam, distilled by hot sunlight, rose
+sweet and strong, and the lake splashed on pebbles, and peace that
+passes understanding was about us.
+
+"It was in a bad battle in Lorraine," spoke Philippe into the sunshiny
+peace, "that I lost M'sieur le Docteur's leg. One was in the front
+trench and there was word passed to have the wire cutters ready, and
+also bayonets, for we were to charge across the open towards the
+trenches of the Germans--perhaps one hundred and fifty yards, eight
+_arpents_--acres--as we say in Canada. Our big guns back did the
+preparation, making what M'sieur le Docteur well knows is called a
+_rideau_--a fire curtain. We climbed out of our trench with a shout and
+followed the fire curtain; so closely we followed that it seemed we
+should be killed by our own guns. And then it stopped--too soon, M'sieur
+le Docteur. Very many Boches were left alive in that trench in front,
+and they fired as we came, so that some of us were hit, and so terrible
+was the fire that the rest were forced back to our own trench which we
+had left. It is so sometimes in a fight, M'sieur le Docteur. The big
+guns make a little mistake, and many men have to die. Yet it is for
+France. And as I ran with the others for the shelter of the trench, and
+as the Boches streamed out of their trench to make a counter attack with
+hand-grenades I tripped on something. It was little Réné Dumont, whom
+M'sieur le Docteur remembers. He guided for our camp when Josef was ill
+in the hand two years ago. In any case he lay there, and I could not let
+him lie to be shot to pieces. So I caught up the child and ran with him
+across my shoulders and threw him in the trench, and as he went in there
+was a cry behind me, 'Philippe!'
+
+"I turned, and one waved arms at me--a comrade whom I did not know very
+well--but he lay in the open and cried for help. So I thought of Jeanne
+d'Arc, and how she had no fear, and was kind, and with that, back I
+trotted to get the comrade. But at that second--pouf!--a big noise, and
+I fell down and could not get up. It was the good new leg of M'sieur le
+Docteur which those _sacrés_ Boches had blown off with a hand-grenade.
+So that I lay dead enough. And when I came alive it was dark, and also
+the leg hurt--but yes! I was annoyed to have ruined that leg which you
+gave me--M'sieur le Docteur."
+
+I grinned, and something ached inside of me.
+
+Philippe went on. "It was then, when I was without much hope and weak
+and in pain and also thirsty, that a thing happened. It is a business
+without pleasure, M'sieur le Docteur, that--to lie on a battle-field
+with a leg shot off, and around one men dead, piled up--yes, and some
+not dead yet, which is worse. They groan. One feels unable to bear it.
+It grows cold also, and the searchlights of the Boches play so as to
+prevent rescue by comrades. They seem quite horrible, those lights. One
+lives, but one wishes much to die. So it happened that, as I lay there,
+I heard a step coming, not crawling along as the rescuers crawl and
+stopping when the lights flare, but a steady step coming freely. And
+with that I was lifted and carried quickly into a wood. There was a hole
+in the ground there, torn by a shell deeply, and the friend laid me
+there and put a flask to my lips, and I was warm and comforted. I looked
+up and I saw a figure in soldier's clothing of an old time, such as one
+sees in books--armor of white. And the face smiled down at me. 'You will
+be saved,' a voice said; and the words sounded homely, almost like the
+words of my grandfather who keeps the grocery shop. 'You will be saved.'
+It seemed to me that the voice was young and gentle and like a woman's.
+
+"'Who are you?' I asked, and I had a strange feeling, afraid a little
+M'sieur, yet glad to a marvel. I got no answer to my question, but I
+felt something pressed into my hand, and then I spoke, but I suppose I
+was a little delirious, M'sieur, for I heard myself say a thing I had
+not been thinking. 'A Martel must return to France to find the silver
+stirrup'--I said that, M'sieur. Why I do not know. They were the words I
+had heard my grandfather speak. Perhaps the hard feeling in my hand--but
+I cannot explain, M'sieur le Docteur. In any case, there was all at once
+a great thrill through my body, such as I have never known. I sat up
+quickly and stared at the figure. It stood there. M'sieur will probably
+not believe me--the figure stood there in white armor, with a sword--and
+I knew it for Jeanne--the Maid. With that I knew no more. When I woke it
+was day. I was still lying in the crater of the shell which had torn up
+the earth of a very old battle-field, but in my hand I held
+tight--this."
+
+Philippe drew off the last cover with a dramatic flourish and opened the
+box which had been wrapped so carefully. I bent over him. In the box,
+before my eyes, lay an ancient worn and battered silver stirrup. There
+were no words to say. I stared at the boy. And with that suddenly he had
+slewed around clumsily--because of his poor wooden leg--and was on his
+knees at my feet. He held out the stirrup.
+
+"M'sieur le Docteur, you gave me a man's chance and honor, and the joy
+of fighting for France. I can never tell my thanks. I have nothing to
+give you--but this. Take it, M'sieur le Docteur. It is not much, yet to
+me the earth holds nothing so valuable. It is the silver stirrup of
+Jeanne d'Arc. It is yours."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In a glass case on the wall of my library hangs an antique bit of
+harness which is my most precious piece of property. How its story came
+about I do not even try to guess. As Philippe said the action of that
+day took place on a very old battle-field. The shell which made the
+sheltering crater doubtless dug up earth untouched for hundreds of
+years. That it should have dug up the very object which was a tradition
+in the Martel family and should have laid it in the grasp of a Martel
+fighting for France with that tradition at the bottom of his mind seems
+incredible. The story of the apparition of the Maid is incredible to
+laughter, or tears. No farther light is to be got from the boy, because
+he believes his story. I do not try to explain, I place the episode in
+my mind alongside other things incredible, things lovely and spiritual,
+and, to our viewpoint of five years ago, things mad. Many such have
+risen luminous, undesirable, unexplained, out of these last horrible
+years, and wait human thought, it may be human development, to be
+classified. I accept and treasure the silver stirrup as a pledge of
+beautiful human gratitude. I hold it as a visible sign that French blood
+keeps a loyalty to France which ages and oceans may not weaken.
+
+
+
+
+THE RUSSIAN
+
+
+The little dinner-party of grizzled men strayed from the dining-room and
+across the hall into the vast library, arguing mightily.
+
+"The great war didn't do it. World democracy was on the way. The war
+held it back."
+
+It was the United States Senator, garrulous and incisive, who issued
+that statement. The Judge, the host, wasted not a moment in
+contradicting. "You're mad, Joe," he threw at him with a hand on the
+shoulder of the man who was still to him that promising youngster,
+little Joe Burden of The School. "Held back democracy! The war! Quite
+mad, my son."
+
+The guest of the evening, a Russian General who had just finished five
+strenuous years in the Cabinet of the Slav Republic, dropped back a step
+to watch, with amused eyes, strolling through the doorway, the two
+splendid old boys, the Judge's arm around the Senator's shoulders,
+fighting, sputtering, arguing with each other as they had fought and
+argued forty odd years up to date.
+
+Two minutes more and the party of six had settled into deep chairs, into
+a mammoth davenport, before a blazing fire of spruce and birch. Cigars,
+liqueurs, coffee, the things men love after dinner, were there; one had
+the vaguest impression of two vanishing Japanese persons who might or
+might not have brought trays and touched the fire and placed tiny tables
+at each right hand; an atmosphere of completeness was present, one did
+not notice how. One settled with a sigh of satisfaction into comfort,
+and chose a cigar. One laughed to hear the Judge pound away at the
+Senator.
+
+"It's all a game." Dr. Rutherford turned to the Russian. "They're
+devoted old friends, not violent enemies, General. The Senator stirs up
+the Judge by taking impossible positions and defending them savagely.
+The Judge invariably falls into the trap. Then a battle. Their battles
+are the joy of the Century Club. The Senator doesn't believe for an
+instant that the war held back democracy."
+
+At that the Senator whirled. "I don't? But I do.--Don't _smoke_ that
+cigar, Rutherford, on your life. Peter will have these atrocities.
+Here--Kaki, bring the doctor the other box.--That's better.--I don't
+believe what I said? Now listen. How could the fact that the world was
+turned into a military camp, officers commanding, privates obeying,
+rank, rank, rank everywhere throughout mankind, how could that fail to
+hinder democracy, which is in its essence the leveling of ranks? Tell me
+that!"
+
+The doctor grinned at the Russian. "What about it, General? What do you
+think?"
+
+The General answered slowly, with a small accent but in the wonderfully
+good English of an educated Russian. "I do not agree with the
+Sena-torr," he stated, and five heads turned to listen. There was a
+quality of large personality in the burr of the voice, in the poise and
+soldierly bearing, in the very silence of the man, which made his slow
+words of importance. "I believe indeed that the Sena-torr is
+partly--shall I say speaking for argument?"
+
+The Senator laughed.
+
+"The great war, in which all of us here had the honor to bear arms--that
+death grapple of tyranny against freedom--it did not hold back the cause
+of humanity, of democracy, that war. Else thousands upon thousands of
+good lives were given in vain."
+
+There was a hushed moment. Each of the men, men now from fifty to sixty
+years old, had been a young soldier in that Homeric struggle. Each was
+caught back at the words of the Russian to a vision of terrible places,
+of thundering of great guns, of young, generous blood flowing like
+water. The deep, assured tones of the Russian spoke into the solemn
+pause.
+
+"There is an episode of the war which I remember. It goes to show, so
+far as one incident may, where every hour was crowded with drama, how
+forces worked together for democracy. It is the story of a common man of
+my country who was a private in the army of your country, and who was
+lifted by an American gentleman to hope and opportunity, and, as God
+willed it, to honor. My old friend the Judge can tell that episode
+better than I. My active part in it was small. If you like"--the dark
+foreign eyes flashed about the group--"if you like I should much enjoy
+hearing my old friend review that little story of democracy."
+
+There was a murmur of approval. One man spoke, a fighting parson he had
+been. "It argues democracy in itself, General, that a Russian
+aristocrat, the brother of a Duke, should remember so well the
+adventures of a common soldier."
+
+The smouldering eyes of the Slav turned to the speaker and regarded him
+gravely. "I remember those adventures well," he answered.
+
+The Judge, flung back in a corner of the davenport, his knees crossed
+and rings from his cigar ascending, stared at the ceiling, "Come along,
+Peter. You're due to entertain us," the Senator adjured him, and the
+Judge, staring upwards, began.
+
+"This is the year 1947. It was in 1917 that the United States went into
+war--thirty years ago. The fifth of June, 1917, was set, as you
+remember, for the registration of all men in the country over
+twenty-one and under thirty-one for the draft. I was twenty-three,
+living in this house with my father and mother, both dead before the war
+ended. Being outside of the city, the polling place where I was due to
+register was three miles off, at Hiawatha. I registered in the morning;
+the polls were open from seven A.M. to nine P.M. My mother drove me
+over, and the road was being mended, and, as happened in those days in
+the country, half a mile of it was almost impassable. There were no
+adjustable lift-roads invented then. We got through the ruts and
+stonework, but it was hard going, and we came home by a detour through
+the city rather than pass again that beastly half mile. That night was
+dark and stormy, with rain at intervals, and as we sat in this room,
+reading, the three of us--" The Judge paused and gazed a moment at the
+faces in the lamplight, at the chairs where his guests sat. It was as if
+he called back to their old environment for a moment the two familiar
+figures which had belonged here, which had gone out of his life. "We sat
+in this room, the three of us," he repeated, "and the butler came in.
+
+"'If you please, sir, there's a young man here who wants to register,'
+he said.
+
+"'Wants to register!' my father threw at him. 'What do you mean?'
+
+"We all went outside, and there we found not one, but five boys,
+Russians. There was a munitions plant a mile back of us and the lads
+worked there, and had wakened to the necessity of registering at the
+last moment, being new in the country and with little English. They had
+directions to go to the same polling place as mint, Hiawatha, but had
+gotten lost, and, seeing our lights, brought up here. Hiawatha, as I
+said, is three miles away. It was eight-thirty and the polls closed at
+nine. We brought the youngsters inside, and I dashed to the garage for
+the car and piled the delighted lads into it and drove them across.
+
+"At least I tried to. But when we came to the bad half mile the car
+rebelled at going the bit twice in a day, and the motor stalled. There
+we were--eight-forty-five P.M.--polls due to close at nine--a year's
+imprisonment for five well-meaning boys for neglecting to register. I
+was in despair. Then suddenly one of the boys saw a small red light
+ahead, the tail light of an automobile. We ran along and found a big car
+standing in front of a house. As we got there, out from the car stepped
+a woman with a lantern, and as the light swung upward I saw that she was
+tall and fair and young and very lovely. She stopped as the six of us
+loomed out of the darkness. I knew that a professor from the University
+in town had taken this house for the summer, but I don't know the people
+or their name. It was no time to be shy. I gave my name and stated the
+case.
+
+"The girl looked at me. 'I've seen you,' she said. 'I know you are Mr.
+McLane. I'll drive you across. One moment, till I tell my mother.'
+
+"She was in the house and out again without wasting a second, and as she
+flashed into the car I heard a gasp, and I turned and saw in the glare
+of the headlights as they sprang on one of my Russians, a gigantic
+youngster of six feet four or so, standing with his cap off and his head
+bent, as he might have stood before a shrine, staring at the spot where
+the girl had disappeared into the car. Then the engine purred and my
+squad tumbled in.
+
+"We made the polls on the tap of nine. Afterwards we drove back to my
+car and among us, with the lantern, we got the motor running again, the
+girl helping efficiently. The big fellow, when we told her good-night,
+astonished me by dropping on his knees and kissing the edge of her
+skirt. But I put it down to Slavic temperament and took it casually.
+I've learned since what Russian depth of feeling means--and tenacity of
+purpose. There was one more incident. When I finally drove the lads up
+to their village the big chap, who spoke rather good English when he
+spoke at all, which was seldom, invited me to have some beer. I was
+tired and wanted to get home, so I didn't. Then the young giant
+excavated in his pocket and brought out a dollar bill.
+
+"'You get beer tomorrow.' And when I laughed and shoved it back he
+flushed. 'Excuse--Mr. Sir,' he said. 'I make mistake.' Suddenly he drew
+himself up--about to the treetops, it looked, for he was a huge, a
+magnificent lad. He tossed out his arm to me. 'Some day,' he stated
+dramatically, 'I do two things. Some day I give Mr. Sir somethings more
+than dollar--and he will take. And--some day I marry--Miss Angel!'
+
+"You may believe I was staggered. But I simply stuck out my fist and
+shook his and said: 'Good. No reason on earth why a fellow with the
+right stuff shouldn't get anywhere. It's a free country.' And the giant
+drew his black brows together and remarked slowly: 'All
+countries--world--is to be free. War will sweep up kings--and
+other--rubbish. I--shall be--a man.'
+
+"Besides his impressive build, the boy had--had--" the Judge glanced at
+the Russian General, whose eyes glowed at the fire. "The boy had a
+remarkable face. It was cut like a granite hill, in sweeping masses. All
+strength. His eyes were coals. I went home thoughtful, and the Russian
+boy's intense face was in my mind for days, and I told myself many times
+that he not only would be, but already was, a man.
+
+"Events quickstepped after that. I got to France within the year, and,
+as you remember, work was ready. It was perhaps eighteen months after
+that registration day, June fifth, which we keep so rightly now as one
+of our sacred days, that one morning I was in a fight. Our artillery had
+demoralized the enemy at a point and sent them running. There was one
+machine gun left working in the Hun trenches--doing a lot of damage.
+Suddenly it jammed. I was commanding my company, and I saw the chance,
+but also I saw a horrid mess of barbed wire. So I just ran forward a bit
+and up to the wire and started clipping, while that machine gun stayed
+jammed. Out of the corner of an eye I could see men rushing towards it
+in the German trench, and I knew I had only a moment before they got it
+firing again. Then, as I leaped far forward to reach a bit of
+entanglement, my foot slipped in a puddle and as I sprawled I saw our
+uniform and a dead American boy's face under me, and I fell headlong in
+his blood over him and into a bunch of wire. And couldn't get up. The
+wire held like the devil. I got more tied up at every pull. And my
+clippers had fallen from my hand and landed out of reach.
+
+"'It's good night for me,' I thought, and was aware of a sharp regret.
+To be killed because of a nasty bit of wire! I had wanted to do a lot of
+things yet. With that something leaped, and I saw clippers flashing
+close by. A big man was cutting me loose, dragging me out, setting me on
+my feet. Then the roar of an exploding shell; the man fell--fell into
+the wire from which he had just saved me. There was no time to consider
+that; somehow I was back and leading my men--and then we had the
+trenches.
+
+"The rest of that day was confusion, but we won a mile of earthworks,
+and at night I remembered the incident of the wire and the man who
+rescued me. By a miracle I found him in the field hospital. His head was
+bandaged, for the bit of shell had scraped his cheek and jaw, but his
+eyes were safe, and something in the glance out of them was familiar.
+Yet I didn't know him till he drew me over and whispered painfully, for
+it hurt him to talk:
+
+"'Yester--day I did--give Mr. Sir somethings more than dollar. And he
+did--take it.'
+
+"Then I know the big young Russian of registration day who had tried to
+tip me. Bless him! I got him transferred to my command and--" the Judge
+hesitated a bit and glanced at his distinguished guest. One surmised
+embarrassment in telling the story of the General's humble compatriot.
+
+The General rose to his feet and stood before the fire facing the
+handful of men. "I can continue this anecdote from the point that is
+more easily than my friend the Judge," spoke the General. "I was in the
+confidence of that countryman of mine. I know. It was so that after he
+had been thus slightly useful to my friend the Judge, who was the
+Captain McLane at that time--"
+
+The Judge broke in with a shout of deep laughter worthy of a boy of
+eighteen. "He 'slightly obliged me by saving my life." The American,
+threw that into the Russian's smooth sentences. "I put that fact before
+the jury."
+
+The four men listening laughed also, but the Russian held up a hand and
+went on gravely: "It was quite simple, that episode, and the man's
+pleasure. I knew him well. But what followed was not ordinary. The
+Captain McLane saw to it that the soldier had his chance. He became an
+officer. He went alive through the war, and at the end the Captain
+McLane made it possible that he should be educated. His career was a
+gift from the Captain McLane--from my friend the Judge to that man, who
+is now--" the finished sentence halted a mere second--"who is now a
+responsible person of Russia.
+
+"And it is the incident of that sort, it is that incident itself which I
+know, which leads me to combat--" he turned with a deep bow--"the
+position of the Sena-torr that the great war did not make for democracy.
+Gentlemen, my compatriot was a peasant, a person of ignorance, yet with
+a desire of fulfilling his possibilities. He had been born in social
+chains and tied to most sordid life, beyond hope, in old Russia. To try
+to shake free he had gone to America. But it was that caldron of fire,
+the war, which freed him, which fused his life and the life of the
+Captain McLane, so different in opportunity, and burned from them all
+trivialities and put them, stark-naked of advantages and of drawbacks
+artificial, side by side, as two lives merely. It made them--brothers.
+One gave and the other took as brothers without thought of false pride.
+They came from the furnace men. Both. Which is democracy--a chance for a
+tree to grow, for a flame to burn, for a river to flow; a chance for a
+man to become a man and not rest a vegetable anchored to the earth
+as--Oh, God!--for many centuries the Russian mujiks have rested. It is
+that which I understand by democracy. Freedom of development for
+everything which wants to develop. It was the earthquake of war which
+broke chains, loosened dams, cleared the land for young forests. It was
+war which made Russia a republic, which threw down the kingships, which
+joined common men and princes as comrades. God bless that liberating
+war! God grant that never in all centuries may this poor planet have
+another! God save democracy--humanity! Does the Sena-torr yet believe
+that the great war retarded democracy?" The Russian's brilliant,
+smouldering eyes swept about, inquiring.
+
+There was a hush in the peaceful, firelit, lamp-lit room. And with that,
+as of one impulse, led by the Senator, the five men broke into
+handclapping. Tears stood in eyes, faces were twisted with emotion; each
+of these men had seen what the thing was--war; each knew what a price
+humanity had paid for freedom. Out of the stirring of emotion, out of
+the visions of trenches and charges and blood and agony and heroism and
+unselfishness and steadfastness, the fighting parson, he who had bent,
+under fire, many a day over dying men who waited his voice to help them
+across the border--the parson led the little company from the intense
+moment to commonplace.
+
+"You haven't quite finished the story, General. The boy promised to do
+two things. He did the first; he gave the Judge 'something more than a
+dollar,' and the Judge took it--his life. But he said also he was going
+to marry--what did he call her?--Miss Angel. How about that?"
+
+The Russian General, standing on the hearthrug, appeared to draw himself
+up suddenly with an access of dignity, and the Judge's boyish big laugh
+broke into the silence, "Tell them, Michael," said the Judge. "You've
+gone so far with the fairy story that they have a right to know the
+crowning glory of it. Tell them."
+
+And suddenly the men sitting about noticed with one accord what,
+listening to the General's voice, they had not thought about--that the
+Russian was uncommonly tall--six feet four perhaps; that his face was
+carved in sweeping lines like a granite hillside, and that an old, long
+scar stretched from the vivid eyes to the mouth. The men stared,
+startled with a sudden simultaneous thought. The Judge, watching,
+smiled. Slowly the General put his hand into the breast pocket of his
+evening coat; slowly he drew out a case of dark leather, tooled
+wonderfully, set with stones. He opened the case and looked down; the
+strong face changed as if a breeze and sunshine passed over a mountain.
+He glanced up at the men waiting.
+
+"I am no Duke's brother," he said, smiling, suddenly radiant. "That is a
+mistake of the likeness of a name, which all the world makes. I am born
+a mujik of Russia. But you, sir," and he turned to the parson, "you wish
+an answer of 'Miss Angel,' as the big peasant boy called that lovely
+spirit, so far above him in that night, so far above him still, and yet,
+God be thanked, so close today! Yes? Then this is my answer." He held
+out the miniature set with jewels.
+
+
+
+
+ROBINA'S DOLL
+
+
+Massive, sprawling, uncertain writing, two sentences to the page; a
+violent slant in the second line, down right, balanced by a drastic
+lessening of the letters, up right, in the line underneath; spelling not
+as advised in the Century Dictionary--a letter from Robina, aged eight.
+Robina's Aunt Evelyn, sitting in her dress and cap of a Red Cross nurse
+in the big base hospital in Paris, read the wandering, painstaking, very
+unsuccessful literary effort, laughing, half-crying, and kissed it
+enthusiastically.
+
+"The darling baby! She shall have her doll if it takes--" Aunt Evelyn
+stopped thoughtfully.
+
+It would take something serious to buy and equip the doll that Robina,
+with eight-year-old definiteness, had specified. The girl in the Red
+Cross dress read the letter over.
+
+"Dear Aunt Evelyn," began Robina and struck no snags so far. "I liked
+your postcard so much." (The facilis descensus to an averni of
+literature began with a swoop down here.) "Mother is wel. Fother is wel.
+The baby is wel. The dog has sevven kitens." (Robina robbed Peter to pay
+Paul habitually in her spelling.) "Fother sais they lukk like choklit
+eclares. I miss you, dere Aunt Evelyn, because I lov you sew. I hope
+Santa Claus wil bring me a doll. I want a very bigg bride doll with a
+vale and flours an a trunk of close, and all her under-close to buton
+and unboton and to have pink ribons run into. I don't want anythig sode
+on. Come home, Aunt Evelyn, becaus I miss you. But if the poor wundead
+soljers ned you then don't come. But as soone as you can come to yure
+loving own girl--ROBINA."
+
+The dear angel! Every affectionate, labored word was from the warm
+little heart; Evelyn Bruce knew that. She sat, smiling, holding the
+paper against her, seeing a vision of the faraway, beloved child who
+wrote it. She saw the dancing, happy brown eyes and the shining, cropped
+head of pale golden brown, and the straight, strong little figure; she
+heard the merry, ready giggle and the soft, slow tones that were always
+full of love to her. Robina, her sister's child, her own god-daughter
+had been her close friend from babyhood, and between them there was a
+bond of understanding which made nothing of the difference in years.
+Darling little Robina! Such a good, unspoiled little girl, for all of
+the luxury and devotion that surrounded her!
+
+But--there was a difficulty just there. Robina was unspoiled indeed,
+yet, as the children of the very rich, she was, even at eight,
+sophisticated in a baby way. She had been given too many grand dolls not
+to know just the sort she wanted. She did not know that what she wanted
+cost money, but she knew the points desired--and they did cost money.
+Aunt Evelyn had not much money.
+
+"This one extravagant thing I will do," said Evelyn Bruce, "and I'll
+give up my trip to England next week, and I'll do it in style. Robina
+won't want dolls much longer and this time she's got to have her heart's
+desire."
+
+Which was doubtless foolish, yet when one is separated by an ocean and a
+war from one's own, it is perhaps easier to be foolish for a child's
+face and a child's voice, and love sent across the sea. So Evelyn Bruce
+wrote a letter to her cousin in England saying that she could not come
+to her till after Christmas. Then she went out into Paris and ordered
+the doll, and reveled in the ordering, for a very gorgeous person indeed
+it was, and worthy to journey from Paris to a little American. It was to
+be ready in just two weeks, and Miss Bruce was to come in and look over
+the fine lady and her equipment as often as desired, before she started
+on her ocean voyage.
+
+"It would simply break my heart if she were torpedoed."
+
+Evelyn confided that, childlike, to the black-browed, stout Frenchwoman
+who took a personal interest in every "buton," and then she opened her
+bag and brought out Robina's photograph, standing, in a ruffled bonnet,
+her solemn West Highland White terrier dog in her arms, on the garden
+path of "Graystones" between tall foxgloves. And the Frenchwoman tossed
+up enraptured hands at the beauty of the little girl who was to get the
+doll, and did not miss the great, splendid house in the background, or
+the fact that the dog was of a "_chic_" variety.
+
+The two weeks fled, every day full of the breathless life--and death--of
+a hospital in war-torn France. Every day the girl saw sights and heard
+sounds which it seemed difficult to see and hear and go on living, but
+she moved serene through such an environment, because she could help.
+Every day she gave all that was in her to the suffering boys who were
+carried, in a never-ending stream of stretchers, into the hospital. And
+the strength she gave flowed back to her endlessly from, she could not
+but believe it, the underlying source of all strength, which stretches
+beneath and about us all, and from which those who give greatly know how
+to draw.
+
+Two or three times, during the two weeks, Evelyn had gone in to inspect
+the progress of Robina's doll, and spent a happy and light-hearted
+quarter of an hour with friendly Madame of the shop, deciding the color
+of the lady's party coat, and of the ribbons in her minute underclothes,
+and packing and repacking the trunk with enchanting fairy
+foolishnesses. Again and again she smiled to herself, in bed at night,
+going about her work in the long days, as she thought of the little
+girl's rapture over the many and carefully planned details. For, with
+all the presents showered on her, Robina's aunt knew that Robina had
+never had anything as perfect as this exquisite Paris doll and her
+trousseau.
+
+The day came on which Evelyn was to make her final visit to "La
+Marquise," as Madame called the doll, and the nurse was needed in the
+hospital and could not go. But she telephoned Madame and made an
+appointment for tomorrow.
+
+"'La Marquise' finds herself quite ready for the voyage," Madame spoke
+over the telephone. "She is all which there is of most lovely; Paris
+itself has never seen a so ravishing doll. I say it. We wait anxiously
+to greet Mademoiselle, I and La Marquise," Madame assured her. Evelyn,
+laughing with sheer pleasure, made an engagement for the next day,
+without fail, and went back to her work.
+
+There was a badly wounded _poilu_ in her ward, whom the girl had come to
+know well. He was young, perhaps twenty-seven, and his warm brown eyes
+were full of a quality of gentleness which endeared him to everyone who
+came near him. He was very grateful, very uncomplaining, a
+simple-minded, honest, common, young peasant, with a charm uncommon. The
+unending bright courage with which he made light of cruel pain, was
+almost more than Evelyn, used as she was to brave men's pain, could
+bear. He could not get well--the doctors said that--and it seemed that
+he could not die.
+
+"If Corporal Duplessis might die," Evelyn spoke to the surgeon.
+
+He answered, considering: "I don't see what keeps him alive."
+
+"I believe," said Evelyn, "there's something on his mind. He sighs
+constantly. Broken-heartedly. I believe he can't die until his mind is
+relieved."
+
+"It may be that," agreed Dr. Norton. "You could help him if you could
+get him to tell you." And moved on to the next shattered thing that had
+been, so lately, a strong, buoyant boy.
+
+Evelyn went back to Duplessis and bent over him and spoke cheerful
+words; he smiled up at her with quick French responsiveness, and then
+sighed the heavy, anxious sigh which had come to be part of him. With
+that the girl took his one good hand and stroked it. "If you could tell
+the American Sister what it is," she spoke softly, "that troubles your
+mind, perhaps I might help you. We Americans, you know," and she smiled
+at him, "we are wonderful people. We can do all sorts of magic--and I
+want to help you to rest, so much. I'd do anything to help you. Won't
+you tell me what it is that bothers?" Evelyn Bruce's voice was winning,
+and Duplessis' eyes rested on her affectionately.
+
+"But how the Sister understands one!" he said. "It is true that there is
+a trouble. It hinders me to die"--and the heavy sigh swept out again.
+"It would be a luxury for me--dying. The pain is bad, at times. Yet the
+Sister knows I am glad to have it, for France. Ah, yes! But--if I might
+be released. Yet the thought of what I said to her keeps me from dying
+always."
+
+"What you said 'to her,' corporal?" repeated Evelyn. "Can't you tell me
+what it was? I would try so hard to help you. I might perhaps."
+
+"Who knows?" smiled the corporal, "It is true that Americans work magic.
+And the Sister is of a goodness! But yes. Yet the Sister may laugh at
+me, for it is a thing entirely childish, my trouble."
+
+"I will not laugh at you, Corporal," said Evelyn, gravely, and felt
+something wring her heart.
+
+"If--then--if the Sister will not think it foolish--I will tell." The
+Sister's answer was to stroke his fingers. "It is my child, my little
+girl," Duplessis began in his deep, weak tones. "It was to her I made
+the promise."
+
+"What promise?" prompted Evelyn softly, as he stopped.
+
+"One sees," the deep voice began again, "that when I told them goodbye,
+the mother and Marie my wife, and the _petite_, who has five years,
+then I started away, and would not look back, because I could not well
+bear it, Sister. And suddenly, as I strode to the street from our
+cottage, down the brick walk, where there are roses and also other
+flowers, on both sides--suddenly I heard a cry. And it was the voice of
+little Jeanne, the _petite_. I turned at that sound, for I could not
+help it, Sister, and between the flowers the little one came running,
+and as I bent she threw her arms about my neck and held me so tight,
+tight that I could not loosen the little hands, not without hurting her.
+'I will not let you go--I will not let you go.' She cried that again and
+again. Till my heart was broken. But all the same, one had to go. One
+was due to join the comrades at the station, and the time was short. So
+that, immediately, I had a thought. 'My most dear,' I spoke to her. 'If
+thou wilt let me go, then I promise to send thee a great, beautiful
+doll, all in white, as a bride, like the cousin Annette at her wedding
+last week.' And then the clinging little hands loosened, and she said,
+wondering--for she is but a baby--'Wilt thou promise, my father?' And I
+said, 'Yes,' and kissed her quickly, and went away. So that now that I
+am wounded and am to die, that promise which I cannot keep to my
+_petite_, that promise hinders me to die."
+
+The deep, sad voice stopped and the honest eyes of the peasant boy
+looked up at Evelyn, burning with the pain of his body and of his soul.
+And as Evelyn looked back, holding his hand and stroking it, it was as
+if the furnace of the soldier's pain melted together all the things she
+had ever cared to do. Yet it was a minute before she spoke.
+
+"Corporal," she said, "your little girl shall have her doll, I will take
+it to her and tell her that her father sent it. Will you lie very still
+while I go and get the doll?"
+
+The brown eyes looked up at her astounded, radiant, and the man caught
+the hem of her white veil and kissed it. "But the Americans--they do
+magic. You shall see, Sister, if I shall be still. I will not die before
+the Sister returns. It is a joy unheard of."
+
+The girl ran out of the hospital and away into Paris, and burst upon
+Madame. Somehow she told the story in a few words, and Madame was crying
+as she laid "La Marquise" in a box.
+
+"It is Mademoiselle who is an angel of the good God," she whispered, and
+kissed Evelyn unexpectedly on both cheeks.
+
+Corporal Duplessis lay, waxen, starry-eyed, as the American Sister came
+back into the ward. His look was on her as she entered the far-away
+door, and he saw the box in her arms. The girl knelt and drew out the
+gorgeous plaything and stood it by the side of the still, bandaged
+figure. An expression as of amazed radiance came into the fast-dimming
+eyes--into those large, brown, childlike eyes which had seen so little
+of the gorgeousness of earth. His hand stirred a very little--enough,
+for Evelyn quickly moved the gleaming satin train of the doll under the
+groping fingers. The eyes lifted to Evelyn's face and the smile in them
+was that of a prisoner who suddenly sees the gate of his prison opened
+and the fields of home beyond. It mattered little, one may believe, to
+the welcoming hosts of heaven that the angel at the gate of release for
+the child-soul of Corporal Duplessis, the poilu, was only Robina's doll!
+
+
+
+
+DUNDONALD'S DESTROYER
+
+
+This is the year 1977. It will be objected that the episode I am going
+to tell, having happened in 1917, having been witnessed by twenty-odd
+thousand people, must have been, if true, for sixty years common
+property and an old tale. But when General Cochrane--who saved England
+at the end of the great war--told me the Kitchener incident of the story
+last year, sitting in the rose-garden of the White Hart Inn at
+Sonning-on-Thames, I had never heard of it.
+
+I wonder why he told me. Probably, as is the case in most things which
+most people do, from a mixture of impulses. For one thing I am an
+American girl, with a fresher zest to hear tales of those titanic days
+than the people or the children of the people who lived through them.
+Also the great war of 1914 has stirred me since I was old enough to know
+about it, and I have read everything concerning it which I could lay
+hands on, and talked to everyone who had knowledge of it. Also, General
+Cochrane and I made friends from the first minute. I was a quite
+unimportant person of twenty-four years, he a magnificent hero of
+eighty, one of the proud figures of England; it made me a bit dizzy when
+I saw that he liked me. One feels, once in a long time, an unmistakable
+double pull, and knows that oneself and another are friends, and not
+age, color, race nor previous condition of servitude makes the slightest
+difference. To have that happen with a celebrity, a celebrity whom it
+would have been honor enough simply to meet, is quite dizzying. This was
+the way of it.
+
+I was staying with my cousin Mildred Ward, an Atlanta girl who married
+Sir Cecil Ward, an English baronet of Oxfordshire. I reached
+Martin-Goring on a day in July just in time to dress for dinner. When I
+came down, a bit early, Milly looked me over and pronounced favorably.
+
+"You're not so hard to look at," she pronounced. "It takes an American
+really to wear French clothes. I'm glad you're looking well tonight,
+because one of your heroes--Oh!"
+
+She had floated inconsequently against a bookcase in a voyage along the
+big room, and a spray of wild roses from a vase on the shelf caught in
+her pretty gold hair.
+
+"Oh--why does Middleton stick those catchy things up there?" she
+complained, separating the flowers from her hair, and I followed her
+eyes above the shelf.
+
+"Why, that's a portrait of Kitchener--the old great Kitchener, isn't
+it?" I asked. "Did he belong to Cecil's people?"
+
+"No," answered Milly, "only Cecil's grandfather and General Cochrane--or
+something--" her voice trailed. And then, "I've got somebody you'll be
+crazy about tonight, General Cochrane."
+
+"General Cochrane?"
+
+"Oh! You pretend to know about the great war and don't know General
+Cochrane, who saved England when the fleet was wrecked. Don't know him!"
+
+"Oh!" I said again. "Know him? Know him! I know every breath, he drew.
+Only I couldn't believe my ears. The boy Donald Cochrane? It isn't true
+is it? How did you ever, ever--?"
+
+"He lives five miles from us," said Milly, unconcernedly. "We see a lot
+of him. His wife was Cecil's great-aunt. She's dead now. His daughter is
+my best friend. 'The boy Donald Cochrane'!" She smiled a little. "He's
+no boy now. He's old. Even heroes do that--get old."
+
+And with that the footman at the door announced "General Cochrane."
+
+I stared away up at a very tall, soldierly old man with a jagged scar
+across his forehead. His wide-open, black-lashed gray eyes flashed a
+glance like a menace, like a sword, and then suddenly smiled as if the
+sun had jumped from a bank of storm-clouds. And I looked into those
+wonderful eyes and we were friends. As fast as that. Most people would
+think it nonsense, but it happened so. A few people will understand. He
+took me out to dinner, and it was as if no one else was at the table. I
+was aware only of the one heroic personality. At first I dared not speak
+of his history, and then, without planning or intention, my own voice
+astonished my own ears. I announced to him:
+
+"You have been my hero since I was ten years old."
+
+It was a marvelous thing he did, the lad of twenty, even considering
+that the secret was there at his hand, ready for him to use. The
+histories say that--that no matter if he did not invent the device, it
+was his ready wit which remembered it, and his persistence which forced
+the war department to use it. Yes, and his heroism which led the ship
+and all but gave his life. And when he had fulfilled his mission he
+stepped back into the place of a subaltern; he was modest, even
+embarrassed, at the great people who thronged to him. England was saved;
+that was all his affair; nothing, so the books say, could prod him into
+prominence--though he rose to be a General later--after that, after
+being the first man in England for those days. It was this personage
+with whom I had gone out to dinner, and to whom I dared make that sudden
+speech: "You have been my hero, General Cochrane, since I was ten years
+old."
+
+He slued about with the menacing, shrapnel look, and it seemed that
+there might be an explosion of sharp-pointed small bullets over the
+dinner-table.
+
+"Don't!" I begged. The sun came out; the artillery attack was over; he
+looked at me with boyish shyness.
+
+"D'you know, when people say things like that I feel as if I were
+stealing," he told me confidentially. "Anybody else could have done all
+I did. In fact, it wasn't I at all," he finished.
+
+"Not you? Who then? Weren't you the boy Donald Cochrane?"
+
+"Yes," he said, and stopped as if he were considering it. "Yes," he said
+quietly in the clean-cut, terse English manner of speaking, "I suppose I
+was the boy Donald Cochrane." He gazed across the white lilacs and pink
+roses on the table as if dreaming a bit. Then he turned with a long
+breath. "My child," he said, "there is something about you which gives
+me back my youth, and--the freshness of a great experience. I thank
+you."
+
+I gazed into those compelling eyes, gasping like a fish with too much
+oxygen, I felt myself, Virginia Fox, meshed in the fringes of historic
+days, stirred by the rushing mighty wind of that Great Experience. I was
+awestruck into silence. Just then Milly got up, and eight women flocked
+into the library.
+
+I was good for nothing there, simply good for nothing at all. I tried to
+talk to the nice, sensible English women, and I could not. I knew Milly
+was displeased with me for not keeping up my end, but I was sodden with
+thrills. I had sat through a dinner next to General Cochrane, the Donald
+Cochrane who was the most dramatic figure of the world war of sixty
+years ago. It has always moved me to meet persons who even existed at
+that time. I look at them and think what intense living it must have
+meant to pick up a paper and read--as the news of the day, mind
+you--that Germany had entered Belgium, that King Albert was fighting in
+the trenches, that Von Kluck was within seventeen miles of Paris, that
+Von Kluck was retreating--think of the rapture of that--Paris
+saved!--that the Germans had taken Antwerp; that the _Lusitania_ was
+sunk; that Kitchener was drowned at sea! I wonder if the people who
+lived and went about their business in America in those days realized
+that they were having a stage-box for the greatest drama of history? I
+wonder. Terror and heroism and cruelty find self-sacrifice on a scale
+which had never been dreamed, which will never, God grant, need to be
+dreamed on this poor little racked planet again. Of course, there are
+plenty of those people alive yet, and I've talked to many and they
+remember it, all of them remember well, even those who were quite small.
+And it has stirred me simply to look into the eyes of such an one and
+consider that those eyes read such things as morning news. The great war
+has had a hold on me since I first heard of it, and I distinctly
+remember the day, from my father, at the age of seven.
+
+"Can you remember when it happened, father?" I asked him. And then: "Can
+you remember when they drove old people out of their houses--and killed
+them?"
+
+"Yes," said my father. And I burst into tears. And when I was not much
+older he told me about Donald Cochrane, the boy who saved England.
+
+It was not strange to my own mind that I could not talk commonplaces
+now, when I had just spent an hour tailing to the man who had been that
+historic boy--the very Donald Cochrane. I could not talk commonplaces.
+
+Milly's leisurely voice broke my meditation. "I'm sorry that my cousin,
+Virginia Fox, should have such bad manners, Lady Andover," she was
+drawling. "She was brought up to speak when spoken to, but I think it's
+the General who has hypnotized her. Virginia, did you know that Lady
+Andover asked you--" And I came to life.
+
+"It was Miss Fox who hypnotized the General, I fancy," said Lady Andover
+most graciously, considering I had overlooked her existence a second
+before. "He had a word for no one else during dinner." I felt myself go
+scarlet; it had pleased the Marvelous Person, then, to like me a
+little, perhaps for the youth and enthusiasm in me.
+
+With that the men straggled into the room and the tall grizzled head of
+my hero, his lined face conspicuous for the jagged, glorious scar,
+towered over the rest. I saw the vivid eyes flash about, and they met
+mine; I was staring at him, as I must, and my heart all but jumped out
+of me when he came straight to where I stood, my back against the
+bookcase.
+
+"I was looking for you," he said simply.
+
+Then he glanced over my head and his hand shot up in a manner of salute;
+I turned to see why. I was in front of the portrait of Lord Kitchener.
+
+"Did you know him, General Cochrane?" I asked.
+
+"Know him?" he demanded, and the gray glance plunged out at me from
+under the thick lashes.
+
+"Don't do it," I pleaded, putting my hands over my eyes. "When you look
+at me so it's--bombs and bullets." The look softened, but the lean,
+wrinkled face did not smile.
+
+"You asked if I knew Kitchener," he stated.
+
+I spoke haltingly. "I didn't know. Ought I to have known?"
+
+General Cochrane gazed down, all at once dreamy, as if he looked through
+me at something miles and æons away.
+
+"No," he said. "There's no reason why you should. You have an uncommon
+knowledge of events of that time, an astonishing knowledge for a young
+thing, so that I forget you can't know--all of it." He stopped, as if
+considering. "It is because I am old that I have fancies," he went on
+slowly. "And you have understanding eyes. I have had a fancy this
+evening that you and I were meant to be friends; that a similarity of
+interests, a--a likeness--oh, hang it all!" burst out the General like a
+college boy. "I never could talk except straight and hot. I mean I've a
+feeling of a bond between us--you'll think me most presuming--"
+
+I interrupted, breathless. "It's so," I whispered. "I felt it, only I'd
+not have dared--" and I choked.
+
+Old General Cochrane frowned thoughtfully. "Curious," was what he said.
+"It's psychology of course, but I'm hanged if I know the explanation.
+However, since it's so, my child, I'm glad. A man as old as I makes few
+new friends. And a beautiful young woman--with a brain--and charm--and
+innocent eyes--and French clothes!"
+
+One may guess if I tried to stop this description. I could have listened
+all night. With that:
+
+"'Did I know Kitchener!' the child asked," reflected the General, and
+threw back his splendid head and laughed. I stared up, my heart pumping.
+Then, "Well, rather. Why, little Miss Fox--" and he stopped. "I've a
+mind to tell the child a fairy-story," he said. "A true fairy-story
+which is so extraordinary that few have been found to believe it, even
+of those who saw it happen."
+
+He halted again.
+
+"Tell me!"
+
+General Coehrane looked about the roomful of people and tossed out his
+hand. "In this mob?" he objected. "It's too long a story in any case.
+But why shouldn't you and I have a séance, to let a garrulous old fellow
+talk about his youth?" he demanded in his lordly way. "Why not come out
+on the river in my boat? They'll let you play about with an
+octogenarian, won't they?"
+
+"I'll come," I answered the General eagerly.
+
+"Very good. Tomorrow. Oh, by George, no. That confounded Prime Minister
+comes down to me tomorrow. I detest old men," said General Cochrane.
+"Well, then, the day after?"
+
+The Thames was a picture-book river that day, gay with row-boats and
+punts and launches, yet serene for all its gaiety; slipping between
+grassy banks under immemorial trees with the air of a private stream
+wandering, protected, through an estate. The English have the gift above
+other nations of producing an atmosphere of leisure and seclusion, and
+surely there is no little river on earth so used and so unabused as the
+Thames. Of all the craft abroad that bright afternoon, General
+Cochrane's white launch with its gold line above the water and its
+gleaming brass trimmings was far and away the prettiest, and I was
+bursting with pride as we passed the rank and file on the stream and
+they looked at us admiringly. To be alive on such a day in England was
+something; to be afloat on the silvery Thames was enchantment; to be in
+that lovely boat with General Cochrane, the boy Donald Cochrane, was a
+rapture not to be believed without one's head reeling. Yet here it was
+happening, the thing I should look back upon fifty, sixty years from
+now, an old gray woman, and tell my grandchildren as the most
+interesting event of my life. It was happening, and I was enjoying every
+second, and not in the least awed into misery, as is often the case with
+great moments. For the old officer was as perfect a playmate as any
+good-for-nothing young subaltern in England, and that is putting it
+strongly.
+
+"Wouldn't it be nicer to land at Sonning and have our tea there?" he
+suggested. We were dropping through the lock just higher than the
+village; the wet, mossy walls were rising above us on both sides and the
+tops of the lock-keeper's gorgeous pink snapdragons were rapidly going
+out of sight. My host went on: "There's rather a nice rose-garden, and
+it's on the river, and the plum-cake's good. What do you think, that or
+on board?"
+
+"The rose-garden," I decided.
+
+Sonning is a village cut out of a book and pasted on the earth. It can't
+be true, it's so pretty. And the little White Hart Inn is adorable.
+
+"Is it really three hundred years old?" I asked. "The standard roses
+look like an illustration out of 'Alice in Wonderland.' Yes, please--tea
+in the White Hart garden."
+
+The old General heaved a sigh. "Thank Heaven," he said. "I was most
+awfully anxious for fear you'd say on the boat, and I didn't order any."
+
+We slipped under an arch of the ancient red bridge and were at the
+landing. I remember the scene as we stood on shore and looked down the
+shining way of the river, the tall grasses bending on either side like
+green fur stroked by the breeze; I remember the trim sea-wall and velvet
+lawn, and the low, long house with leaded windows of the place next the
+inn. A house-boat was moored to the shore below, white, with scarlet
+geraniums flowing the length of the upper deck, and willow chairs and
+tables; people were having tea up there; muslin curtains blew from the
+portholes below. Some Americans went past with two enormous Scotch
+deer-hound puppies on leash. "Be quiet, Jock," one of them said, and the
+big, gentle-faced beast turned on her with a giant, caressing bound, the
+last touch of beauty in the beautiful, quiet scene.
+
+It was early, so that we took the table which pleased us, one set a bit
+aside against a ten-foot hedge, and guarded by a tall bush of tea-roses.
+A plump maid hurried across the lawn and spread a cloth on our table and
+waited, smiling, as if seeing us had simply made her day perfect. And
+the General gave the orders.
+
+"The plum-cake is going to be wonderful," I said then, "and I'm hungry
+as a bear for tea. But the best thing I've been promised this afternoon
+is a fairy-story."
+
+The shrapnel look flashed, keen and bright and afire, but I looked back
+steadily, not afraid. I knew what sunlight was going to break; and it
+broke.
+
+"D'you know," said he, "I'm really quite mad to talk about myself. Men
+always are. You've heard the little tale of the man who said, 'Let's
+have a garden-party. Let's go out on the lawn and talk about me'? One
+becomes a frightful bore quite easily. So that I've made rules--I don't
+hector people about--about things I've been concerned with. As to the
+incident I said I'd tell you, that would be quite impossible to tell
+to--well, practically anyone."
+
+My circulatory system did a prance; he could tell it practically to no
+one, yet he was going to tell it to me! I instantly said that. "But
+you're going to tell it to me?" I was anxious.
+
+"Child, you flatter well," said the Marvelous Person, who had brought me
+picnicking. "It's the American touch; there's a way with American women
+quite irresistible."
+
+"Oh--American women!" I remonstrated.
+
+"Yes, indeed. They're delightful--you're witches, every mother's
+daughter of you. But you--ah--that's different, now. You and I, as we
+decided long ago, on day before yesterday, have a bond. I can't help the
+conviction that you're the hundred-thousandth person. You have
+understanding eyes. If I were a young man--And yet it's not just that;
+it's something a bit rarer. Moreover, they tell me there's a chap back
+in America."
+
+"Yes," I owned. "There is a chap." And I persisted: "I'm to have a
+fairy-story?"
+
+The black-lashed gaze narrowed as it traveled across the velvet turf and
+the tall roses, down the path of the quiet river. He had a fine head,
+thick-thatched and grizzled, not white; his nose was of the straight,
+short English type, slightly chopped up at the end--a good-looking nose;
+his mouth was wide and not chiseled, yet sensitive as well as strong;
+the jaw was powerful and the chin square with a marked dimple in it;
+there was also color, the claret and honey of English tanned
+complexions. Of course his eyes, with the exaggeratedly thick and long
+black lashes, were the wonderful part of him, but there is no
+describing the eyes. It was the look from them, probably, which made
+General Cochrane's face remarkable. I suppose it was partly that
+compelling look which had brought about his career. He was six feet
+four, lean and military, full of presence, altogether a conspicuously
+beautiful old lion in a land where every third man is beautiful.
+
+"What are you looking munitions-of-war at, General, down the innocent
+little Thames River? You must be seeing around corners, past Wargrave,
+as far as Henley."
+
+"I didn't see the Thames River," he shot at me in his masterful way. "I
+was looking at things past, and people dead and gone. We ancients do
+that. I saw London streets and crowds; I read the posters which told
+that Kitchener was drowned at sea, and then I saw, a year later, England
+in panic; I saw an almighty meeting in Trafalgar Square and I heard
+speeches which burned my ears--men urging Englishmen to surrender
+England and make terms with the Huns. Good God!" His fist came down on
+the rattling little iron table.
+
+"My blood boils now when I remember. Child," he demanded, "I can't see
+why your alluring ways should have set me talking. Fancy, I've never
+told this tale but twice, and I'm holding forth to a little alien whom I
+haven't known two days, a young ne'er-do-well not born till forty years
+after the tale happened!"
+
+"What difference does that make?" I asked. "Age means nothing to real
+people. And we've known each other since--since we hunted pterodactyls
+together, pre-historically. Only--I hate bats," I objected to my own
+arrangement. I went on: "If you knew how I want to hear! It's the most
+wonderful thing in my life, this afternoon--you."
+
+"I know you are honest," he said. "Different from the ruck. I knew that
+the moment I saw you."
+
+"Then," I prodded, "do begin with the posters about Lord Kitchener."
+
+"But that's not the beginning," he protested. "You'll spoil it all," he
+said.
+
+"Oh, no, then! Begin at the beginning. I didn't know. I wanted to get
+you started."
+
+The gray eyes dreamed down the placid river water.
+
+"The beginning was before I was born. It began when Kitchener, a young
+general, picked up a marauding party of black rascals on his way to
+Khartoum. They had a captive, a white girl, a lady. They had murdered
+her father and mother and young brother. The father was newly appointed
+Colonel of a regiment, traveling to his post with his family. The Arabs
+were saving the girl for their devilish head chieftain. Kitchener had
+the lot executed, and sent for the girl. She was--"
+
+The old man's hand lifted to his head and he took off his hat and laid
+it on the ground.
+
+"I cannot speak of that girl without uncovering," he said, quietly. "She
+was my mother." There was an electrical silence. I knew enough to know
+that no words fitted here. The old officer went on: "She was one of the
+wonderful people. What she seemed to think of, after the horrors she had
+gone through, was not herself or her suffering, but only to show her
+gratitude. It was a long journey--weeks--through that land of hell,
+while she was in Kitchener's hands, and not once did she lose courage.
+The Sirdar told me that it was having an angel in camp--she held that
+rough soldiery in the hollow of her hand. She told Kitchener her story,
+and after that she would not talk of herself. You've heard that he never
+had a love affair? That's wrong. He was in love then, and for the rest
+of his life, with my mother."
+
+I gasped. The shrapnel eyes menaced me.
+
+"She could not speak of herself, d'you see? It was salvation to think
+only of others, so that she'd not told him that she was engaged to my
+father. Love from any other was the last thing she was thinking of.
+After what had happened she was living from one breath to another and
+she dared not consider her own affairs. The night before they reached
+Cairo, Kitchener asked her to marry him. He was over forty then; she was
+nineteen. She told him of her engagement, of course--told him also that
+it might be she would never marry at all; a life of her own and
+happiness seemed impossible now. She might go into a sisterhood. Work
+for others was what she must have. Then, unexpectedly, my father was at
+Cairo to meet her, and Kitchener went to him and told him. From that on
+the two men were close friends. My people were not married till five
+years later, and when I came to be baptized General Kitchener was
+godfather. All my young days I was used to seeing him about the house at
+intervals, as if he belonged to us. I remember his eyes following my
+mother. Tall and slight she was, with a haunted look, from what she'd
+seen; she moved softly, spoke softly. It was no secret from the two, my
+father and mother, that he loved her always. Yet, so loyal, so crystal
+he was that my father had never one moment of jealousy. On the contrary
+they were like brothers. Then they died--my father and mother. The two
+almost together. I came into Kitchener's hands, Lord Kitchener by then.
+When he met me in London, a long lad of seventeen, he held my fingers a
+second and looked hard at me.
+
+"'You're very like her, Donald,' he said. And held on. And said it
+again. 'Your mother's double. I'd know you for her boy if I caught one
+look of your eyes, anywhere,' he said. 'Her boy.'--Well--what? Do I want
+more tea? Of course, I do."
+
+For the smiling plump maid had long ago brought the steaming stuff, the
+bread and butter and jam and plum cake, I had officiated and General
+Cochrane had been absorbing his tea as an Englishman does,
+automatically, while he talked.
+
+About us the tables were filling up, all over the rose-garden. The
+Americans were there with the beautiful long-legged giant deer-hound
+puppy, Jock, and were having trouble with his table manners. People came
+in by twos and threes and more, from the river, with the glow of
+exercise on their faces; an elderly country parson sat near,
+black-coated, white-collared, with his elderly daughter and their dog, a
+well-behaved Scottie this one, big-headed, with an age-old, wise, black
+face. And a group of three pretty girls with their pretty pink-cheeked
+mother and a young man or so were having a gay time with soft-voiced
+laughter and jokes, not far away. The breeze lifted the long purple and
+rose-colored motor veils of mother and daughters. The whole place was
+full of bright colors and low-toned cheerful talk, yet so English was
+the atmosphere, that it was as if the General and I were shut into an
+enchanted forest. No one looked at us, no one seemed to know we were
+there. The General began to talk again, unconscious as the rest of
+anything or anybody not his affair.
+
+"I got my commission in 1915 in K-1, Kitchener's first hundred thousand,
+and I went off to the front in the second year of the war. I had a
+scratch and was slightly gassed once, but nothing much happened for a
+long time. And in 1916, in May, came the news that my godfather, the
+person closest to me on earth, was drowned at sea. I was in London, just
+out of the hospital and about to go back to France."
+
+The old General stopped and stared down at the graveled path with its
+trim turf border lying at his feet.
+
+"It was to me as if the world, seething in its troubles, was suddenly
+empty--with that man gone. I drifted with the crowd about London town,
+and the crowd appeared to be like myself, dazed. The streets were full
+and there was continually a profound, sorrowful sound, like the groan of
+a nation; faces were blank and gray. Those surging, mournful London
+streets, and the look of the posters with great letters on them--his
+name--that memory isn't likely to leave me till I die. Of course, I got
+hold of every detail and tried to picture the manner of it to myself,
+but I couldn't get it that he was dead. Kitchener, the heart of the
+nation; I couldn't comprehend that he had stopped breathing. I couldn't
+get myself satisfied that I wasn't to see him again. It seemed there
+must be some way out. You'll remember, perhaps, that four boats were
+seen to put off from the _Hampshire_ as she sank? I tried to trace those
+boats. I traveled up there and interviewed people who had seen them. I
+got no good from it. But it kept coming to me that it was not a mine
+that had sunk the ship, that it was a torpedo from a German submarine,
+and that Kitchener was on one of the boats that put off and that he had
+been taken prisoner by the enemy. God knows why that thought
+persisted--there were reasons against it--it was a boy's theory. But it
+persisted; I couldn't get it out of my head. I was in St. Paul's at the
+Memorial Service; I heard the 'Last Post' played for him, and I saw the
+King and Queen in tears; all that didn't settle my mind. I went back to
+the front, heavy-hearted, and tried to behave myself as I believed he'd
+have had me--the Sirdar. My people had called him the Sirdar always.
+Luck was with me in France; I had chances, and did a bit of work, and
+got advancement."
+
+"I know," I nodded. "I've read history. A few trifles like the rescue of
+the rifles and holding that trench and--"
+
+The old soldier interrupted, looking thunderous. "It has a bearing on
+the episode I'm about to tell you. That's why I refer to it."
+
+I didn't mind his haughtiness. It was given me to see the boy's shyness
+within that grim old hero.
+
+"So that when I landed in London in 1917, having been stupid enough to
+get my right arm potted, it happened that my name was known. They picked
+me out to make a doing over. I was most uncommonly conspicuous for
+nothing more than thousands of other lads had done. They'd given their
+lives like water, thousands of them--it made me sick with shame, when I
+thought of those others, to have my name ringing through the land. But
+so it was, and it served a purpose, right enough, I saw later.
+
+"Then, as I began to crawl about, came the crisis of the war. Ill news
+piled on ill news; the army in France was down with an epidemic; each
+day's news was worse than the last; to top all, the Germans found the
+fleet. It was in letters a foot long about London--newsboys crying awful
+words:
+
+"'Fleet discovered--German submarines and Zeppelins approaching.'
+
+"A bit later, still worse. 'The _Bellerophon_ sunk by German
+torpedo--ten dreadnoughts sunk--' There were the names of the big ships,
+the _Queen Elizabeth_, the _Warspite_, the _Thunderer_, the
+_Agamemnon_, the _King Edward_--a lot more, battle cruisers, too--then
+ten more dreadnoughts--and more and worse every hour. The German navy
+was said to be coming into the North Sea and advancing to our coast. And
+our navy was going--gone--nothing to stand between us and the fate of
+Belgium.
+
+"Then England went mad! I thank God I'll not live through such days
+again. The land went mad with fear. You'll remember that there had been
+a three-year strain which human nerves were not meant to bear. Well,
+there was a faction who urged that the only sane act now possible was to
+surrender to Germany quickly and hope for a mercy which we couldn't get
+if we struggled. The government, under enormous pressure, weakened. It's
+easy to cry 'Shame!' now, but how could it stand firm with the country
+stampeding back of it?
+
+"So things were the day of the mass meeting in Trafalgar Square. I was
+tall, and so thin and gaunt that, with my uniform and my arm in its
+sling, it was easy to get close to the front, straight under the
+speakers. And no sooner had I got there than I was seized with a
+restlessness, an uncontrollable desire to see my godfather--Kitchener.
+Only to see him, to lay eyes on him. I wish I might express to you the
+push of that feeling. It was thirst in a desert. With that spell on me I
+stood down in front of the stone lions and stared up at Nelson on his
+column, and listened to the speakers. They were mad, quite, those
+speakers. The crowd was mad, too. It overflowed that great space, and
+there were few steady heads in the lot. You'll realize it looked a bit
+of a close shave, with the German navy coming and our fleet being
+destroyed, no one knew how fast, and the army in France, and struck down
+by illness. At that moment it looked a matter of three or four days
+before the Huns would be landing. Never before in a thousand years was
+England as near the finish. As I stood there fidgeting, with the
+starvation on me for my godfather, it flashed to me that there's a
+legend in every nation about some one of its heroes, how in the hour of
+need he will come back to save the people--Charlemagne in France, don't
+you know, and Barbarossa and King Arthur and--oh, a number. And I spoke
+aloud, so that the chap next prodded me in the ribs and said: 'Stop
+that, will you? I can't hear'--I spoke aloud and said:
+
+"'This is the hour. Come back and save us.'
+
+"The speakers had been ranting along, urging on the people to force the
+government to give in and make terms with those devils who'd crushed
+Belgium. Of course there were plenty there ready to die in the last
+ditch for honor and the country, but the mob was with the speakers.
+Quite insane with terror the mob was. And I spoke aloud to Kitchener,
+like a madman of a sort also, begging him to come from another world and
+save his people.
+
+"'This is the hour; come and save us,' said I, and said it as if my
+words could get through to Kitchener in eternity.
+
+"With that a taxicab forced through the crowd, close to the platform,
+and it stopped and somebody got out. I could see an officer's cap and
+the crowd pressing. My eyes were riveted on that brown cap; my breath
+came queerly; there was a murmur, a hush and a murmur together, where
+that tall officer with the cap over his face pushed toward the speakers.
+I felt I should choke if I didn't see him--and I couldn't see him. Then
+he made the platform, and before my eyes, before the eyes of twenty
+thousand people, he stood there--Kitchener!"
+
+General Cochrane stared defiantly at me. "I'm not asking you to believe
+this," he said. "I'm merely telling you--what happened."
+
+"Go on," I whispered.
+
+He went on: "A silence like death fell on that vast crowd. The voice of
+the speaker screaming out wild cowardice about mercy from the Germans
+kept on for a few words, and then the man caught the electrical
+atmosphere and was aware that something was happening. He halted
+half-way in a word, and turned and faced the grim, motionless
+figure--Kitchener. The man stared a half minute and shot his hands up
+and howled, and ran into the throng. All over the great place, by then,
+was a whisper swelling into a bass murmur, into a roar, his name.
+
+"'Kitchener--Kitchener!' and 'K. of K.!' and 'Kitchener of Khartoum!'
+
+"Never in my life have I heard a volume of sound like London shouting
+that day the name of Kitchener. After a time he lifted his hand and
+stood, deep-eyed and haggard, as the mass quieted. He spoke. I can't
+tell you what he said. I couldn't have told you the next hour. But he
+quieted us and lifted us, that crowd, fearstruck, sobbing, into courage.
+He put his own steady dignity into those cheap, frightened little
+Johnnies. He gave us strength even if the worst came, and he held up
+English pluck and doggedness for us to look at and to live by. As his
+voice stopped, as I stood down in front just under him, I flung up my
+arms, and I suppose I cried out something; I was but a lad of twenty,
+and half crazed with the joy of seeing him. And he swung forward a step
+to me as if he had seen me all the time--and I think he had. 'Do the
+turn, Donald,' he said, 'The time has come for a Cochrane to save
+England.'
+
+"And with that he wheeled and without a look to right or left, in his
+own swift, silent, shy way he was gone.
+
+"Nobody saw where he went. I all but killed myself for an hour trying to
+find him, but it was of no use. And with that, as I sat at my lunch, too
+feverish and stirred to eat food, demanding over and over what he meant,
+what the 'turn' was which I was to do, why a Cochrane should have a
+chance to save England--with that, suddenly I knew."
+
+General Cochrane halted again, and again he gazed down the little river,
+the river of England, the river which he, more than any other, had kept
+for English folk and their peaceful play-times. I knew I must not hurry
+him; I waited.
+
+"The thing came to me like lightning," he went on, "and I had only to go
+from one simple step to another; it seemed all thought out for me. It
+was something, don't you see, which I'd known all my lifetime, but
+hadn't once thought of since the war began. I went direct to my bankers
+and got a box out of the safe and fetched it home in a cab. There I
+opened it and took out papers and went over them.... This part of the
+tale is mostly in print," General Cochrane interrupted himself. "Have
+you read it? I don't want to bore you with repetitions."
+
+I answered hurriedly, trembling for fear I might say the wrong thing:
+"I've read what's in print, but your telling it puts it in another
+world. Please go on. Please don't shorten anything."
+
+The shadow of a smile played. "I rather like telling you a story, d'you
+know," he spoke, half absent-mindedly--his real thoughts were with that
+huge past. He swept back to it. "You know, of course, about Dundonald's
+Destroyer--the invention of my great-grandfather's kinsman, Thomas
+Cochrane, tenth Earl of Dundonald? He was a good bit of an old chap in
+various ways. He did things to the French fleet that put him as a naval
+officer in the class with Nelson and Drake. But he's remembered in
+history by his invention. It was a secret, of course, one of the puzzles
+of the time and of years after, up to 1917. It was known there was
+something. He offered it to the government in 1811, and the government
+appointed a committee to examine into it. The chairman was the Duke of
+York, commander-in-chief of the army, said to be the ablest
+administrator of military affairs of that time. Also there were Admirals
+Lord Keith and Exmouth and the Congreve brothers of the ordnance
+department. A more competent committee of five could not have been
+gathered in the world. This board would not recommend the adoption of
+the scheme. Why? They reported that there was no question that the
+invention would do all which Dundonald claimed, but it was so
+unspeakably dreadful as to be impossible for civilized men.
+
+"There was not a shadow of doubt, the committee reported, that
+Dundonald's device would not merely defeat but annihilate and sweep out
+of existence any hostile force, whole armies and navies. 'No power on
+earth could stand against it,' said the old fellow, and the five experts
+backed him up. But they considered that the devastation would be inhuman
+beyond permissible warfare. Not war, annihilation. In fact, they shelved
+it because it was too efficient. There was great need of means for
+fighting Napoleon just then, so they gave it up reluctantly, but it was
+a bit too shocking.
+
+"The weak point of the business was, as Dundonald himself declared, that
+it was so simple--as everybody knows now--that its first use would tell
+the secret and put it in the hands of other nations. Therefore the
+committee recommended that this incipient destruction should be stowed
+away and kept secret, so that no power more unscrupulous than England
+should get it and use it for the annihilation of England and the
+conquest of the world. Also the committee persuaded the Earl before he
+went on his South American adventure to swear formally that he would
+never disclose his device except in the service of England. He kept that
+oath.
+
+"Well, the formula for this affair was, of course, in pigeonholes or
+vaults in the British Admiralty ever since the committee in 1811 had
+examined and refused it. But there was also, unknown to the public,
+another copy. The Earl was with my great-grandfather, his kinsman and
+lifelong friend, shortly before his death, and he gave this copy to him
+with certain conditions. The old chap had an ungovernable temper,
+quarreled right and left, don't you know, his life long, and at this
+time and until he died he was not on speaking terms with his son Thomas,
+who succeeded him as Earl, or indeed with any of the three other sons.
+Which accounts for his trusting to my great-grandfather the future of
+his invention. I found a quaint note with the papers. He said in effect
+that he had come to believe with the committee that it was quite too
+shocking for decent folk. Yet, he suggested, the time might come when
+England was in straits and only a sweeping blow could serve her. If that
+time should come it would be a joy to him in heaven or in hell--he
+said--to think that a man of his name had used the work of his brains to
+save England.
+
+"Therefore, the Earl asked my grandfather to guard this gigantic secret
+and to see to it that one man in each generation of Cochranes should
+know it and have it at hand for use in an emergency. My grandfather came
+into the papers when he came of age, and after him my father; I was due
+to read them when I should be twenty-one. I was only twenty in 1917. But
+the papers were mine, and from the moment it flashed to me what
+Kitchener meant I didn't hesitate. It was this enormous power which was
+placed suddenly in the hands of a lad of twenty. The Sirdar placed it
+there.
+
+"I went over the business in an hour--it was simple, like most big
+things. You know what it was, of course; everybody knows now. Wasn't it
+extraordinary that in five thousand years of fighting no one ever hit on
+it before? I rushed to the War Office.
+
+"Well, the thing came off. At first they pooh-poohed me as an unbalanced
+boy, but they looked up the documents in the Admiralty and there was no
+question. It isn't often a youngster is called into the councils of the
+government, and I've wondered since how I held my own. I've come to
+believe that I was merely a body for Kitchener's spirit. I was conscious
+of no fatigue, no uncertainty. I did things as the Sirdar might have
+done them, and it appears to me only decent to realize that he did do
+them, and not I. You probably know the details."
+
+I waited, hoping that he would not stop. Then I said: "I know that the
+government asked for twenty-five volunteers for a service which would
+destroy the German fleet, but which would mean almost certain death to
+the volunteers. I know that you headed the list and that thousands
+offered." My voice shook and I spoke with difficulty as I realized to
+whom I was speaking. "I know that you were the only one who came back
+alive, and that you were barely saved."
+
+General Cochrane seemed not to hear me. He was living over enormous
+events.
+
+"It was a bright morning in the North Sea," he talked on, but not to me
+now. "Nobody but ourselves knew just what was to be done, but everybody
+hoped--they didn't know what. It was a desperate England from which we
+sailed away. We hadn't long to wait--the second morning. There were
+their ships, the triumphant long lines of the invader. There were their
+crowded transports, the soldiers coming to crucify England as they had
+crucified Belgium--thousands and tens of thousands of them. Then--we
+did it. German power was wiped off the face of the earth. German
+arrogance was ended for all time. And that was the last I knew," said
+General Cochrane. "I was conscious till it was known that the trick had
+worked. Of course it couldn't be otherwise, yet it was so beyond
+anything which mankind had dreamed that I couldn't believe it till I
+knew. Then, naturally, I didn't much care if I lived or died. I'd done
+the turn as the Sirdar told me, and one life was a small thing to pay. I
+dropped into blackness quite happily, and when I woke up to this good
+earth I was glad. England was right. The Sirdar had saved her."
+
+"And the Sirdar?" I asked him. "Was it--himself?"
+
+"Himself? Most certainly."
+
+"I mean--well--" I stammered. And then I plunged in. "I must know," I
+said. "Was it Lord Kitchener in flesh and blood? Had he been a prisoner
+in Germany and escaped? Or was it--his ghost?"
+
+The old lion rubbed his cheek consideringly. "Ah, there you have me,"
+and he smiled. "Didn't I tell you this was a tale which could be told to
+few people?" he demanded. "'Flesh and blood'--ah, that's what I can't
+tell you. But--himself? Those people, the immense crowd which saw him
+and recognized him, they knew. Afterwards they begged the question. The
+papers were full of a remarkable speech made by an unknown officer who
+strikingly resembled Kitchener. That's the way they got out of it. But
+those people knew, that day. There wasn't any doubt in their minds when
+that roar of his name went up. They knew! But people are ashamed to own
+to the supernatural. And yet it's all around us," mused General
+Cochrane.
+
+"Could it have been--did you ever think--" I began, and dared not go on.
+
+"Did I ever think what, child?" repeated the old officer, with his
+autocratic friendliness. "Out with it. You and I are having a
+truth-feast."
+
+"Well, then," I said, "if you won't be angry--"
+
+"I won't. Come along."
+
+"Did you ever think that it might have been that--you were only a boy,
+and wounded and weak and overstrained--and full of longing for your
+godfather. Did you ever think that you might have mistaken the likeness
+of the officer for Kitchener himself? That the thought of Dundonald's
+Destroyer was working in your mind before, and that it materialized at
+that moment and you--imagined the words he said. Perhaps imagined them
+afterwards, as you searched for him over London. The two things might
+have suggested each other in your feverish boy's brain."
+
+I stopped, frightened, fearful that he might think me not appreciative
+of the honor he had done me in telling this intimate experience. But
+General Cochrane was in no wise disturbed.
+
+"Yes, I've thought that," he answered dispassionately. "It may be that
+was the case. And yet--I can't see it. That thing happened to me. I've
+not been able to explain it away to my own satisfaction. I've not been
+able to believe otherwise than that the Sirdar, England's hero, came to
+save England in her peril, and that he did it by breathing his thought
+into me. His spirit got across somehow from over there--to me. I was the
+only available person alive. The copy in the archives was buried, dead
+and buried and forgotten for seventy years. So he did it--that way. And
+if your explanation is the right one it isn't so much less wonderful, is
+it?" he demanded. "In these days psychology dares say more than in 1917.
+One knows that ghost stories, as they called them in those ignorant
+times, are not all superstition and imagination. One knows that a soul
+lives beyond the present, that a soul sometimes struggles back from what
+we call the hereafter to this little earth--makes the difficult
+connection between an unseen world of spirit, unconditioned by matter,
+and our present world of spirit, conditioned by matter. When the pull is
+strong enough. And what pull could be stronger than England's danger? To
+Kitchener?" The black-lashed, gray eyes flamed at me, unblinking the
+rift of light through the curtain of eternal silences.
+
+When I spoke again: "It's a story the world ought to own some day," I
+said. "Love of country, faithfulness that death could not hinder."
+
+"Well," said old General Cochrane, "when I'm gone you may write it for
+the world if you like, little American. And what I'll do will be to find
+the Sirdar, the very first instant I'm over the border, and say to him,
+'I've known it was your work all along, sir, and however did you get it
+across?'"
+
+A month ago my cousin sent me some marked newspapers. General Cochrane
+has gone over the border, and I make no doubt that before now he has
+found the Sirdar and that the two sons and saviors of a beloved little
+land on a little planet have talked over that moment, in the leisures
+and simplicities of eternity, and have wondered perhaps that anyone
+could wonder how he got it across.
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK JOY IN THE MORNING***
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+<h1 class="pg">The Project Gutenberg eBook, Joy in the Morning, by Mary Raymond Shipman
+Andrews</h1>
+<pre>
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at <a href = "https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a></pre>
+<p>Title: Joy in the Morning</p>
+<p> The Ditch; Her Country Too; The Swallow; Only One of Them; The V.C.; He That Loseth His Life Shall Find It; The Silver Stirrup; The Russian; Robina's Doll; Dundonald's Destroyer</p>
+<p>Author: Mary Raymond Shipman Andrews</p>
+<p>Release Date: May 8, 2005 [eBook #15796]</p>
+<p>Language: English</p>
+<p>Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1</p>
+<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK JOY IN THE MORNING***</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h4 class="pg">E-text prepared by David Garcia, Josephine Paolucci, Joshua Hutchinson,<br />
+ and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
+ from page images generously made available by<br />
+ the Kentuckiana Digital Library</h4>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<table border="0" style="background-color: #ccccff;" cellpadding="10">
+ <tr>
+ <td valign="top">
+ Note:
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ Images of the original pages are available through the Kentuckiana
+ Digital Library. See
+ <a href="http://kdl.kyvl.org/cgi/t/text/text-idx?c=kyetexts;cc=kyetexts;xc=1&amp;idno=B92-171-30119788&amp;view=toc">
+ http://kdl.kyvl.org/cgi/t/text/text-idx?c=kyetexts;cc=kyetexts;xc=1&amp;idno=B92-171-30119788&amp;view=toc</a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<div class="tei tei-text">
+<div class="tei tei-front">
+<div class="tei tei-div">
+<h1 class="tei tei-head">Joy In The Morning</h1>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">By</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">MARY RAYMOND SHIPMAN ANDREWS</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">NEW YORK<br />
+CHARLES SCRIBNER&#39;S SONS<br />
+<br />
+1919</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page" />
+
+<div class="tei tei-div">
+<p class="tei tei-p"><span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">By MARY R.S. ANDREWS</span></p>
+<p class="tei tei-p">JOY IN THE MORNING<br />
+THE ETERNAL FEMININE<br />
+AUGUST FIRST<br />
+THE ETERNAL MASCULINE<br />
+THE MILITANTS<br />
+BOB AND THE GUIDES<br />
+CROSSES OF WAR<br />
+HER COUNTRY<br />
+OLD GLORY<br />
+THE COUNSEL ASSIGNED<br />
+THE COURAGE OF THE COMMONPLACE<br />
+THE LIFTED BANDAGE<br />
+THE PERFECT TRIBUTE</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p"><span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">CHARLES SCRIBNER&#39;S SONS</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page" />
+
+<div class="tei tei-div">
+<p style="text-align: center" class="tei tei-p">
+<img src="images/image01.png" width="480" height="639" alt="He pinned the thing men die for on the shabby coat of the guide." class="tei tei-figure" /></p>
+<p style="text-align: center" class="tei tei-p">He pinned the thing men die for on the shabby coat of the
+guide.</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page" />
+
+<div class="tei tei-div">
+<a name="toc_1" id="toc_1"></a>
+<h1 class="tei tei-head">DEDICATION</h1>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">To the two stars of a service flag, to a brother
+and a son who served in France, this book is dedicated.
+No book, to my thinking, were one Shakespere
+and Isaiah rolled together, might fittingly
+answer the honor which they, with four million
+more American soldiers, have brought to their
+own. So that the stories march out very proudly,
+headed by the names of</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: center" class="tei tei-p">CHAPLAIN HERBERT SHIPMAN<br />
+AND<br />
+CAPTAIN PAUL SHIPMAN ANDREWS</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page" />
+
+<div class="tei tei-div">
+<a name="toc_2" id="toc_2"></a>
+<h1 class="tei tei-head">NOTE</h1>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Now that the tide of Khaki has set toward our
+shores instead of away; now that the streets are
+filled with splendid boys with gold chevrons of foreign
+service or no less honorable silver chevrons
+of service here; now that the dear lads who sleep
+in France know that the "torch was caught" from
+their hands, and that faith with them was kept;
+now that&mdash;thank God, who, after all, rules&mdash;the
+war is over, there is an old word close to the
+thought of the nation. "Heaviness may endure
+for a night, but joy cometh in the morning." A
+whole country is so thinking. For possibly ten
+centuries the Great War will be a background for
+fiction. To us, who have lived those years, any
+tale of them is a personal affair. Every-day
+women and men whom one meets in the street may
+well say to us: "My boy was in the Argonne," or:
+"My brother fought at St. Mihiel." Over and
+over, unphrased, our minds echo lines of that verse
+found in the pocket of the soldier dead at Gallipoli:</p>
+
+<div style="text-align: left" class="tei tei-lg">
+<p class="tei tei-l">"<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">We</span> saw the powers of darkness put to flight,</p>
+<p class="tei tei-l"><span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">We</span> saw the morning break."</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Crushed and glorified beyond all generations of
+the planet, war stories prick this generation like
+family records. It is from us of to-day that the
+load is lifted. We have weathered the heaviness
+of the night; to us "Joy cometh in the morning."</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: right" class="tei tei-p">M.R.S.A.</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page" />
+
+<div id="toc" class="tei tei-div"><a name="toc_3" id="toc_3"></a><h1 class="tei tei-head">Contents</h1><ul class="toc">
+<li style="margin: 0em 0em;"><a href="#toc_1">DEDICATION</a></li>
+<li style="margin: 0em 0em;"><a href="#toc_2">NOTE</a></li>
+<li style="margin: 0em 0em;"><a href="#toc_3">Contents</a></li>
+<li style="margin: 0em 0em;"><a href="#toc_4">THE DITCH</a></li>
+<li style="margin: 0em 2em;"><a href="#toc_5">FIRST ACT</a></li>
+<li style="margin: 0em 2em;"><a href="#toc_6">SECOND ACT</a></li>
+<li style="margin: 0em 2em;"><a href="#toc_7">THIRD ACT</a></li>
+<li style="margin: 0em 2em;"><a href="#toc_8">FOURTH ACT</a></li>
+<li style="margin: 0em 2em;"><a href="#toc_9">FIFTH ACT</a></li>
+<li style="margin: 0em 0em;"><a href="#toc_10">HER COUNTRY TOO</a></li>
+<li style="margin: 0em 0em;"><a href="#toc_11">THE SWALLOW</a></li>
+<li style="margin: 0em 0em;"><a href="#toc_12">ONLY ONE OF THEM</a></li>
+<li style="margin: 0em 0em;"><a href="#toc_13">THE V.C.</a></li>
+<li style="margin: 0em 0em;"><a href="#toc_14">HE THAT LOSETH HIS LIFE SHALL FIND IT</a></li>
+<li style="margin: 0em 0em;"><a href="#toc_15">THE SILVER STIRRUP</a></li>
+<li style="margin: 0em 0em;"><a href="#toc_16">THE RUSSIAN</a></li>
+<li style="margin: 0em 0em;"><a href="#toc_17">ROBINA&#39;S DOLL</a></li>
+<li style="margin: 0em 0em;"><a href="#toc_18">DUNDONALD&#39;S DESTROYER</a></li>
+</ul></div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-body">
+<hr class="page" />
+
+<div class="tei tei-div">
+<a name="toc_4" id="toc_4"></a>
+<h1 class="tei tei-head">THE DITCH</h1>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">
+</p><table cellspacing="0" class="tei tei-table"><colgroup span="2"></colgroup><tbody><tr><th colspan="2" style="text-align: center" class="tei tei-head">Persons</th></tr><tr class="tei tei-row">
+<td class="tei tei-cell">THE BOY</td><td class="tei tei-cell"><span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">an American soldier</span></td>
+</tr><tr class="tei tei-row">
+<td class="tei tei-cell">THE BOY&#39;S DREAM OF HIS MOTHER</td><td class="tei tei-cell"></td>
+</tr><tr class="tei tei-row">
+<td class="tei tei-cell">ANG&Eacute;LIQUE</td><td class="tei tei-cell"><span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">French children</span></td>
+</tr><tr class="tei tei-row">
+<td class="tei tei-cell">JEAN-BAPTISTE</td><td class="tei tei-cell"><span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">French children</span></td>
+</tr><tr class="tei tei-row">
+<td class="tei tei-cell">THE TEACHER</td><td class="tei tei-cell"></td>
+</tr><tr class="tei tei-row">
+<td class="tei tei-cell">THE ONE SCHOOLGIRL WITH IMAGINATION</td><td class="tei tei-cell"></td>
+</tr><tr class="tei tei-row">
+<td class="tei tei-cell">THE THREE SCHOOLGIRLS WITHOUT IMAGINATION</td><td class="tei tei-cell"></td>
+</tr><tr class="tei tei-row">
+<td class="tei tei-cell">HE</td><td class="tei tei-cell"></td>
+</tr><tr class="tei tei-row">
+<td class="tei tei-cell">SHE</td><td class="tei tei-cell"></td>
+</tr><tr class="tei tei-row">
+<td class="tei tei-cell">THE AMERICAN GENERAL</td><td class="tei tei-cell"></td>
+</tr><tr class="tei tei-row">
+<td class="tei tei-cell">THE ENGLISH STATESMAN</td><td class="tei tei-cell"></td>
+</tr></tbody></table><p class="tei tei-p">
+</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: center" class="tei tei-p"><span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">The Time</span>.&mdash;A summer day in 1918 and a summer
+day in 2018</p>
+
+<hr class="page" />
+
+<div class="tei tei-div">
+<a name="toc_5" id="toc_5"></a>
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page003">[pg 003]</span>
+<a name="Pg003" id="Pg003" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h2 class="tei tei-head">FIRST ACT</h2>
+
+ <p style="margin: 2em 4em" class="tei tei-p"><span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">The time is a summer day in 1918. The scene is
+ the first-line trench of the Germans&mdash;held lately by the
+ Prussian Imperial Guard&mdash;half an hour after it had been taken
+ by a charge of men from the Blank</span>th <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Regiment, United States Army.
+ There has been a mistake and the charge was not preceded by
+ artillery preparation as usual. However, the Americans have taken
+ the trench by the unexpectedness of their attack, and the Prussian
+ Guard has been routed in confusion. But the German artillery has at
+ once opened fire on the Americans, and also a German machine gun
+ has enfiladed the trench. Ninety-nine Americans have been killed in
+ the trench. One is alive, but dying. He speaks, being part of the
+ time delirious.</span></p>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">The Boy</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Why can&#39;t I stand? What&mdash;is it?
+I&#39;m wounded. The sand-bags roll when I try&mdash;to
+hold to them. I&#39;m&mdash;badly wounded. (<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Sinks
+down. Silence.</span>) How still it is! We&mdash;we took
+the trench. Glory be! We took it! (<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Shouts
+weakly as he lies in the trench.</span>) (<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Sits up and
+stares, shading his eyes</span>.) It&#39;s horrid still. Why&mdash;they&#39;re
+here! Jack&mdash;you! What makes you&mdash;lie
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page004">[pg 004]</span>
+<a name="Pg004" id="Pg004" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>there? You beggar&mdash;oh, my God! They&#39;re
+dead. Jack Arnold, and Martin and&mdash;Cram and
+Bennett and Emmet and&mdash;Dragamore&mdash;Oh&mdash;God,
+God! All the boys! Good American boys.
+The whole blamed bunch&mdash;dead in a ditch. Only
+me. Dying, in a ditch filled with dead men.
+What&#39;s the sense? (<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Silence</span>.) This damned silly
+war. This devilish&mdash;killing. When we ought to
+be home, doing man&#39;s work&mdash;and play. Getting
+some tennis, maybe, this hot afternoon; coming in
+sweaty and dirty&mdash;and happy&mdash;to a tub&mdash;and
+dinner&mdash;with mother. (<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Groans</span>.) It begins to
+hurt&mdash;oh, it hurts confoundedly. (<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Becomes delirious</span>.)
+Canoeing on the river. With little Jim.
+See that trout jump, Jimmie? Cast now. Under
+the log at the edge of the trees. That&#39;s it!
+Good&mdash;oh! (<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Groans</span>.) It hurts&mdash;badly. Why,
+how can I stand it? How can anybody? I&#39;m
+badly wounded. Jimmie&mdash;tell mother. Oh&mdash;good
+boy&mdash;you&#39;ve hooked him. Now play him;
+lead him away from the lily-pads. (<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Groans</span>.) Oh,
+mother! Won&#39;t you come? I&#39;m wounded. You
+never failed me before. I need you&mdash;if I die. You
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page005">[pg 005]</span>
+<a name="Pg005" id="Pg005" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>went away down&mdash;to the gate of life, to bring me
+inside. Now&mdash;it&#39;s the gate of death&mdash;you won&#39;t
+fail? You&#39;ll bring me through to that other
+life? You and I, mother&mdash;and I won&#39;t be scared.
+You&#39;re the first&mdash;and the last. (<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Puts out his
+arm searching and folds a hand, still warm, of
+a dead soldier</span>.) Ah&mdash;mother, my dear. I knew&mdash;you&#39;d
+come. Your hand is warm&mdash;comforting.
+You always&mdash;are there when I need you. All my
+life. Things are getting&mdash;hazy. (<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">He laughs</span>.)
+When I was a kid and came down in an elevator&mdash;I
+was all right, I didn&#39;t mind the drop if I
+might hang on to your hand. Remember? (<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Pats
+dead soldier&#39;s hand, then clutches it again
+tightly</span>.) You come with me when I go across and
+let me&mdash;hang on&mdash;to your hand. And I won&#39;t
+be scared. (<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Silence</span>.) This damned&mdash;damned&mdash;silly
+war! All the good American boys. We
+charged the Fritzes. How they ran! But&mdash;there
+was a mistake. No artillery preparation.
+There ought to be crosses and medals going for
+that charge, for the boys&mdash;(<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Laughs</span>.) Why,
+they&#39;re all dead. And me&mdash;I&#39;m dying, in a ditch.
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page006">[pg 006]</span>
+<a name="Pg006" id="Pg006" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>Twenty years old. Done out of sixty years by&mdash;by
+the silly war. What&#39;s it for? Mother, what&#39;s
+it about? I&#39;m ill a bit. I can&#39;t think what good
+it is. Slaughtering boys&mdash;all the nations&#39; boys&mdash;honest,
+hard-working boys mostly. Junk. Fine
+chaps an hour ago. What&#39;s the good? I&#39;m dying&mdash;for
+the flag. But&mdash;what&#39;s the good? It&#39;ll
+go on&mdash;wars. Again. Peace sometimes, but nothing
+gained. And all of us&mdash;dead. Cheated out of
+our lives. Wouldn&#39;t the world have done as well
+if this long ditch of good fellows had been let
+live? Mother?</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">The Boy&#39;s Dream of His Mother</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">(<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Seems to
+speak</span>.) My very dearest&mdash;no. It takes this great
+burnt-offering to free the world. The world will
+be free. This is the crisis of humanity; you are
+bending the lever that lifts the race. Be glad,
+dearest life of the world, to be part of that glory.
+Think back to your school-days, to a sentence you
+learned. Lincoln spoke it. "These dead shall not
+have died in vain, and government of the people,
+by the people, for the people, shall not perish from
+the earth."
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page007">[pg 007]</span>
+<a name="Pg007" id="Pg007" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">The Boy</span>. (<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Whispers</span>.) I remember. It&#39;s
+good. "Shall not have died in vain"&mdash;"The
+people&mdash;shall not perish"&mdash;where&#39;s your hand,
+mother? It&#39;s taps for me. The lights are going
+out. Come with me&mdash;mother. (<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Dies</span>.)
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page008">[pg 008]</span>
+<a name="Pg008" id="Pg008" class="tei tei-anchor"></a></p></div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page" />
+
+<div class="tei tei-div">
+<a name="toc_6" id="toc_6"></a>
+<h2 class="tei tei-head">SECOND ACT</h2>
+
+ <p style="margin: 2em 4em" class="tei tei-p"><span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">The scene it the same trench one hundred years
+ later, in the year 2018. It is ten o&#39;clock of a summer morning. Two
+ French children have come to the trench to pick flowers. The little
+ girl of seven is gentle and soft-hearted; her older brother is a
+ man of nearly ten years, and feels his patriotism and his
+ responsibilities</span>.</p>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Ang&eacute;lique</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">(<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">The little French girl</span>.) Here&#39;s
+where they grow, Jean-B&#39;tiste.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Jean-Baptiste</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">(<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">The little French boy</span>.) I
+know. They bloom bigger blooms in the American
+ditch.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Ang&eacute;lique</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">(<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Climbs into the ditch and picks
+flowers busily</span>.) Why do people call it the &#39;Merican
+ditch, Jean-B&#39;tiste? What&#39;s &#39;Merican?</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Jean-Baptiste</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">(<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Ripples laughter</span>.) One&#39;s
+little sister doesn&#39;t know much! Never mind.
+One is so young&mdash;three years younger than I am.
+I&#39;m ten, you know.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Ang&eacute;lique</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p"><span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Tiens</span>, Jean-B&#39;tiste. Not ten till
+next month.</p></div>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page009">[pg 009]</span>
+<a name="Pg009" id="Pg009" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Jean-Baptiste</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Oh, but&mdash;but&mdash;next month!</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Ang&eacute;lique</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">What&#39;s &#39;Merican?</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Jean-Baptiste</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Droll <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">p&#39;tite</span>. Why, everybody
+in all France knows that name. Of American.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Ang&eacute;lique</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">(<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Unashamed</span>.) Do they? What
+is it?</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Jean-Baptiste</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">It&#39;s the people that live in the
+so large country across the ocean. They came
+over and saved all our lives, and France.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Ang&eacute;lique</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">(<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Surprised</span>.) Did they save my
+life, Jean-B&#39;tiste?</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Jean-Baptiste</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Little <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">drôle</span>. You weren&#39;t
+born.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Ang&eacute;lique</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Oh! Whose life did they then
+save? Maman&#39;s?</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Jean-Baptiste</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">But no. She was not born
+either.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Ang&eacute;lique</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Whose life, then&mdash;the grandfather&#39;s?</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Jean-Baptiste</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">But&mdash;even he was not born.
+(<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Disconcerted by Ang&eacute;lique&#39;s direct tactics</span>.)
+One sees they could not save the lives of people
+who were not here. But&mdash;they were brave&mdash;but
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page010">[pg 010]</span>
+<a name="Pg010" id="Pg010" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>yes&mdash;and friends to France. And they came
+across the ocean to fight for France. Big, strong
+young soldiers in brown uniforms&mdash;the grandfather
+told me about it yesterday. I know it all.
+His father told him, and he was here. In this
+field. (<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Jean-Baptiste looks about the meadow,
+where the wind blows flowers and wheat.</span>) There
+was a large battle&mdash;a fight very immense. It was
+not like this then. It was digged over with ditches
+and the soldiers stood in the ditches and shot at
+the wicked Germans in the other ditches. Lots
+and lots of soldiers died.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Ang&eacute;lique</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">(<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Lips trembling</span>.) Died&mdash;in
+ditches?</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Jean-Baptiste</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">(<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Grimly.</span>) Yes, it is true.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Ang&eacute;lique</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">(<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Breaks into sobs.</span>) I can&#39;t bear
+you to tell me that. I can&#39;t bear the soldiers to&mdash;die&mdash;in
+ditches.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Jean-Baptiste</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">(<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Pats her shoulder.</span>) I&#39;m sorry
+I told you if it makes you cry. You are so little.
+But it was one hundred years ago. They&#39;re dead
+now.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Ang&eacute;lique</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">(<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Rubs her eyes with her dress and
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page011">[pg 011]</span>
+<a name="Pg011" id="Pg011" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>smiles</span>.) Yes, they&#39;re quite dead now. So&mdash;tell
+me some more.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Jean-Baptiste</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">But I don&#39;t want to make you
+cry more, <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">p&#39;tite</span>. You&#39;re so little.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Ang&eacute;lique</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">I&#39;m not <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">very</span> little. I&#39;m bigger than
+Anne-Marie Dupont, and she&#39;s eight.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Jean-Baptiste</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">But no. She&#39;s not eight till
+next month. She told me.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Ang&eacute;lique</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Oh, well&mdash;next month. Me, I want
+to hear about the brave &#39;Mericans. Did they make
+this ditch to stand in and shoot the wicked
+Germans?</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Jean-Baptiste</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">They didn&#39;t make it, but they
+fought the wicked Germans in a brave, wonderful
+charge, the bravest sort, the grandfather said.
+And they took the ditch away from the wicked
+Germans, and then&mdash;maybe you&#39;ll cry.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Ang&eacute;lique</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">I won&#39;t. I promise you I won&#39;t.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Jean-Baptiste</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Then, when the ditch&mdash;only
+they called it a trench&mdash;was well full of American
+soldiers, the wicked Germans got a machine gun
+at the end of it and fired all the way along&mdash;the
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page012">[pg 012]</span>
+<a name="Pg012" id="Pg012" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>grandfather called it enfiladed&mdash;and killed every
+American in the whole long ditch.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Ang&eacute;lique</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">(<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Bursts into tears again; buries
+her face in her skirt</span>.) I&mdash;I&#39;m sorry I cry, but
+the &#39;Mericans were so brave and fought&mdash;for
+France&mdash;and it was cruel of the wicked Germans
+to&mdash;to shoot them.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Jean-Baptiste</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The wicked Germans were always
+cruel. But the grandfather says it&#39;s quite
+right now, and as it should be, for they are now a
+small and weak nation, and scorned and watched
+by other nations, so that they shall never
+be strong again. For the grandfather says they
+are not such as can be trusted&mdash;no, never the
+wicked Germans. The world will not believe their
+word again. They speak not the truth. Once they
+nearly smashed the world, when they had power.
+So it is looked to by all nations that never again
+shall Germany be powerful. For they are sly, and
+cruel as wolves, and only intelligent to be wicked.
+That is what the grandfather says.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Ang&eacute;lique</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Me, I&#39;m sorry for the poor wicked
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page013">[pg 013]</span>
+<a name="Pg013" id="Pg013" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>Germans that they are so bad. It is not nice to
+be bad. One is punished.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Jean-Baptiste</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">(<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Sternly</span>.) It is the truth.
+One is always punished. As long as the world
+lasts it will be a punishment to be a German. But
+as long as France lasts there will be a nation to
+love the name of America, one sees. For the Americans
+were generous and brave. They left their
+dear land and came and died for us, to keep us free
+in France from the wicked Germans.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Ang&eacute;lique</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">(<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Lip trembles</span>.) I&#39;m sorry&mdash;they
+died.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Jean-Baptiste</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">But, <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">p&#39;tite!</span> That was one hundred
+years ago. It is necessary that they would
+have been dead by now in every case. It was more
+glorious to die fighting for freedom and France
+than just to die&mdash;fifty years later. Me, I&#39;d enjoy
+very much to die fighting. But look! You pulled
+up the roots. And what is that thing hanging to
+the roots&mdash;not a rock?</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Ang&eacute;lique</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">No, I think not a rock. (She takes
+the object in her hands and knocks dirt from it.)
+But what is it, Jean-B&#39;tiste?</p></div>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page014">[pg 014]</span>
+<a name="Pg014" id="Pg014" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Jean-Baptiste</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">It&#39;s&mdash;but never mind. I can&#39;t
+always know everything, don&#39;t you see, Ang&eacute;lique?
+It&#39;s just something of one of the Americans who
+died in the ditch. One is always finding something
+in these old battle-fields.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Ang&eacute;lique</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">(<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Rubs the object with her dress.
+Takes a handful of sand and rubs it on the object.
+Spits on it and rubs the sand</span>.) <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">V&#39;là</span>, Jean-B&#39;tiste&mdash;it
+shines.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Jean-Baptiste</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">(<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Loftily</span>.) Yes. It is nothing,
+that. One finds such things.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Ang&eacute;lique</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">(<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Rubbing more</span>.) And there are
+letters on it.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Jean-Baptiste</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Yes. It is nothing, that. One
+has flowers <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">en masse</span> now, and it is time to go home.
+Come then, <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">p&#39;tite</span>, drop the dirty bit of brass and
+pick up your pretty flowers. <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Tiens!</span> Give me
+your hand. I&#39;ll pull you up the side of the ditch.
+(<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Jean-Baptiste turns as they start</span>.) I forgot
+the thing which the grandfather told me I must do
+always. (<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">He stands at attention</span>.) <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Au revoir</span>,
+brave Americans. One salutes your immortal
+glory. (<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Exit Jean-Baptiste and Ang&eacute;lique</span>.)</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page" />
+
+<div class="tei tei-div">
+<a name="toc_7" id="toc_7"></a>
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page015">[pg 015]</span>
+<a name="Pg015" id="Pg015" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h2 class="tei tei-head">THIRD ACT</h2>
+
+
+ <p style="margin: 2em 4em" class="tei tei-p"><span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">The scene is the same trench in the year 2018.
+ It is eleven o&#39;clock of the same summer morning. Four American
+ schoolgirls, of from fifteen to seventeen years, have been brought
+ to see the trench, a relic of the Great War, in charge of their
+ teacher. The teacher, a worn and elderly person, has imagination,
+ and is stirred, as far as her tired nerves may be, by the heroic
+ story of the old ditch. One of the schoolgirls also has imagination
+ and is also stirred. The other three are "young barbarians at
+ play." Two out of five is possibly a large proportion to be blessed
+ with imagination, but the American race has improved in a hundred
+ years</span>.</p>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Teacher</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">This, girls, is an important bit of our
+sight-seeing. It is the last of the old trenches of
+the Great War to remain intact in all northern
+France. It was left untouched out of the reverence
+of the people of the country for one hundred
+Americans of the Blank<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">th</span> Regiment, who died here&mdash;in
+this old ditch. The regiment had charged too
+soon, by a mistaken order, across what was called
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page016">[pg 016]</span>
+<a name="Pg016" id="Pg016" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>No-Man&#39;s Land, from their own front trench,
+about (<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">consults guide-book</span>)&mdash;about thirty-five
+yards away&mdash;that would be near where you see
+the red poppies so thick in the wheat. They took
+the trench from the Germans, and were then wiped
+out partly by artillery fire, partly by a German
+machine gun which was placed, disguised, at the
+end of the trench and enfiladed the entire length.
+Three-quarters of the regiment, over two thousand
+men, were killed in this battle. Since then
+the regiment has been known as the "Charging
+Blank<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">th</span>."</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">First Schoolgirl</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Wouldn&#39;t those poppies be
+lovely on a yellow hat?</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Second Schoolgirl</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Ssh! The Eye is on you.
+How awful, Miss Hadley! And were they all
+killed? Quite a tragedy!</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Third Schoolgirl</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Not a yellow hat! Stupid!
+A corn-colored one&mdash;just the shade of the grain
+with the sun on it. Wouldn&#39;t it be lovely! When
+we get back to Paris&mdash;</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Fourth Schoolgirl (the one with imagination)</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">You idiots! You poor kittens!</p></div>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page017">[pg 017]</span>
+<a name="Pg017" id="Pg017" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">First Schoolgirl</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">If we ever do get back to
+Paris!</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Teacher</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">(<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Wearily</span>.) Please pay attention.
+This is one of the world&#39;s most sacred spots. It
+is the scene of a great heroism. It is the place
+where many of our fellow countrymen laid down
+their lives. How can you stand on this solemn
+ground and chatter about hats?</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Third Schoolgirl</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Well, you see, Miss Hadley,
+we&#39;re fed up with solemn grounds. You can&#39;t
+expect us to go into raptures at this stage over
+an old ditch. And, to be serious, wouldn&#39;t some
+of those field flowers make a lovely combination
+for hats? With the French touch, don&#39;t you
+know? You&#39;d be darling in one&mdash;so <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">ing&eacute;nue!</span></p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Second Schoolgirl</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Ssh! She&#39;ll kill you.
+(<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Three girls turn their backs and stifle a giggle</span>.)</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Teacher</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Girls, you may be past your youth
+yourselves one day.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">First Schoolgirl</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">(<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Airily.</span>) But we&#39;re well
+preserved so far, Miss Hadley.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Fourth Schoolgirl</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">(<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Has wandered away a
+few yards. She bends and picks a flower from the
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page018">[pg 018]</span>
+<a name="Pg018" id="Pg018" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>ditch. She speaks to herself</span>.) The flag floated
+here. There were shells bursting and guns thundering
+and groans and blood&mdash;here. American
+boys were dying where I stand safe. That&#39;s what
+they did. They made me safe. They kept America
+free. They made the "world safe for freedom,"
+(<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">She bends and speaks into the ditch</span>.)
+Boy, you who lay just there in suffering and gave
+your good life away that long-ago summer day&mdash;thank
+you. You died for us. America remembers.
+Because of you there will be no more wars,
+and girls such as we are may wander across battle-fields,
+and nations are happy and well governed,
+and kings and masters are gone. You did that,
+you boys. You lost fifty years of life, but you
+gained our love forever. Your deaths were not in
+rain. Good-by, dear, dead boys.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Teacher</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">(<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Calls</span>). Child, come! We must
+catch the train.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page" />
+
+<div class="tei tei-div">
+<a name="toc_8" id="toc_8"></a>
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page019">[pg 019]</span>
+<a name="Pg019" id="Pg019" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h2 class="tei tei-head">FOURTH ACT</h2>
+
+ <p style="margin: 2em 4em" class="tei tei-p"><span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">The scene is the same trench in the year 2018.
+ It is three o&#39;clock of the afternoon, of the same summer day. A
+ newly married couple have come to see the trench. He is journeying
+ as to a shrine; she has allowed impersonal interests, such as
+ history, to lapse under the influence of love and a trousseau. She
+ is, however, amenable to patriotism, and, her husband applying the
+ match, she takes fire&mdash;she also, from the story of the
+ trench</span>.</p>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">He</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">This must be the place.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">She</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">It is nothing but a ditch filled with
+flowers.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">He</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The old trench. (<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Takes off his hat</span>.)</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">She</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Was it&mdash;it was&mdash;in the Great War?</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">He</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">My dear!</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">She</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">You&#39;re horrified. But I really&mdash;don&#39;t
+know.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">He</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Don&#39;t know? You must.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">She</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">You&#39;ve gone and married a person who
+hasn&#39;t a glimmer of history. What will you do
+about it?</p></div>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page020">[pg 020]</span>
+<a name="Pg020" id="Pg020" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">He</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">I&#39;ll be brave and stick to my bargain. Do
+you mean that you&#39;ve forgotten the charge of the
+Blank<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">th</span> Americans against the Prussian Guard?
+The charge that practically ended the war?</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">She</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Ended the war? How could one charge
+end the war?</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">He</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">There was fighting after. But the last
+critical battle was here (<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">looks about</span>) in these
+meadows, and for miles along. And it was just
+here that the Blank<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">th</span> United States Regiment
+made its historic dash. In that ditch&mdash;filled with
+flowers&mdash;a hundred of our lads were mown down
+in three minutes. About two thousand more followed
+them to death.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">She</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Oh&mdash;I do know. It was <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">that</span> charge. I
+learned about it in school; it thrilled me always.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">He</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Certainly. Every American child knows
+the story. I memorized the list of the one hundred
+soldiers&#39; names of my own free will when I was
+ten. I can say them now. "Arnold&mdash;Ashe&mdash;Bennett&mdash;Emmet&mdash;Dragmore&mdash;"</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">She</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Don&#39;t say the rest, Ted&mdash;tell me about it
+as it happened. (<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">She slips her hand into his</span>.)
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page021">[pg 021]</span>
+<a name="Pg021" id="Pg021" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>We two, standing here young and happy, looking
+forward to a, lifetime together, will do honor, that
+way, to those soldiers who gave up their happy
+youth and their lives for America.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">He</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">(<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Puts his arm around her</span>.) We will.
+We&#39;ll make a little memorial service and I&#39;ll
+preach a sermon about how gloriously they fell
+and how, unknowingly, they won the war&mdash;and so
+much more!</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">She</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Tell me.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">He</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">It was a hundred years ago about now&mdash;summer.
+A critical battle raged along a stretch
+of many miles. About the centre of the line&mdash;here&mdash;the
+Prussian Imperial Guards, the crack
+soldiers of the German army, held the first trench&mdash;this
+ditch. American forces faced them, but
+in weeks of fighting had not been able to make
+much impression. Then, on a day, the order came
+down the lines that the Blank<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">th</span> United States
+Regiment, opposed to the Guard, was to charge
+and take the German front trench. Of course the
+artillery was to prepare for their charge as usual,
+but there was some mistake. There was no curtain
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page022">[pg 022]</span>
+<a name="Pg022" id="Pg022" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>of fire before them, no artillery preparation to
+help them. And the order to charge came. So,
+right into the German guns, in the face of those
+terrible Prussian Guards, our lads went "over the
+top" with a great shout, and poured like a flame,
+like a catapult, across the space between them&mdash;No-Man&#39;s
+Land, they called it then&mdash;it was only
+thirty-five yards&mdash;to the German trench. So fast
+they rushed, and so unexpected was their coming,
+with no curtain of artillery to shield them, that the
+Germans were for a moment taken aback. Not
+a shot was fired for a space of time almost long
+enough to let the Americans reach the trench, and
+then the rifles broke out and the brown uniforms
+fell like leaves in autumn. But not all. They
+rushed on pell-mell, cutting wire, pouring irresistibly
+into the German trench. And the Guards,
+such as were not mown down, lost courage at the
+astounding impetus of the dash, and scrambled and
+ran from their trench. They took it&mdash;our boys
+took that trench&mdash;this old ditch. But then the
+big German guns opened a fire like hail and a
+machine gun at the end&mdash;down there it must have
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page023">[pg 023]</span>
+<a name="Pg023" id="Pg023" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>been&mdash;enfiladed the trench, and every man in it
+was killed. But the charge ended the war. Other
+Americans, mad with the glory of it, poured in a
+sea after their comrades and held the trench, and
+poured on and on, and wiped out that day the
+Prussian Guard. The German morale was broken
+from then; within four months the war was over.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">She</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">(<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Turns and hides her face on his shoulder
+and shakes with sobs</span>.) I&#39;m not&mdash;crying for
+sorrow&mdash;for them. I&#39;m crying&mdash;for the glory of
+it. Because&mdash;I&#39;m so proud and glad&mdash;that it&#39;s
+too much for me. To belong to such a nation&mdash;to
+such men. I&#39;m crying for knowing, it was my
+nation&mdash;my men. And America is&mdash;the same today.
+I know it. If she needed you today, Ted,
+you would fight like that. You would go over
+the top with the charging Blank <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">th</span>, with a shout,
+if the order came&mdash;wouldn&#39;t you, my own man?</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">He</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">(<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Looking into the old ditch with his head
+bent reverently</span>.) I hope so.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">She</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">And I hope I would send you with all my
+heart. Death like that is more than life.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">He</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">I&#39;ve made you cry.</p></div>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page024">[pg 024]</span>
+<a name="Pg024" id="Pg024" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">She</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Not you. What they did&mdash;those boys.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">He</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">It&#39;s fitting that Americans should come
+here, as they do come, as to a Mecca, a holy place.
+For it was here that America was saved. That&#39;s
+what they did, the boys who made that charge.
+They saved America from the most savage and
+barbarous enemy of all time. As sure as France
+and England were at the end of their rope&mdash;and
+they were&mdash;so surely Germany, the victor, would
+have invaded America, and Belgium would have
+happened in our country. A hundred years
+wouldn&#39;t have been enough to free us again, if
+that had happened. You and I, dearest, owe it to
+those soldiers that we are here together, free,
+prosperous citizens of an ever greater country.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">She</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">(<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Drops on her knees by the ditch</span>.) It&#39;s
+a shrine. Men of my land, I own my debt. I
+thank you for all I have and am. God bless you
+in your heaven. (<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Silence</span>.)</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">He</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">(<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Tears in his eyes. His arm around her
+neck as he bends to her</span>.) You&#39;ll not forget the
+story of the Charging Blank <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">th</span>?</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">She</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Never again. In my life. (<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Rising</span>.) I
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page025">[pg 025]</span>
+<a name="Pg025" id="Pg025" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>think their spirits must be here often. Perhaps
+they&#39;re happy when Americans are here. It&#39;s a
+holy place, as you said. Come away now. I love
+to leave it in sunshine and flowers with the dear
+ghosts of the boys. (<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Exit He and She</span>.)</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page" />
+
+<div class="tei tei-div">
+<a name="toc_9" id="toc_9"></a>
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page026">[pg 026]</span>
+<a name="Pg026" id="Pg026" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h2 class="tei tei-head">FIFTH ACT</h2>
+
+
+ <p style="margin: 2em 4em" class="tei tei-p"><span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">The scene it the same trench in the year 2018.
+ It is five o&#39;clock of the same summer afternoon. An officer of the
+ American Army and an English cabinet member come, together, to
+ visit the old trench. The American has a particular reason for his
+ interest; the Englishman accompanies the distinguished American.
+ The two review the story of the trench and speak of other things
+ connected, and it is hoped that they set forth the far-reaching
+ work of the soldiers who died, not realizing their work, in the
+ great fight of the Charging Blank</span> th.</p>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Englishman</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">It&#39;s a peaceful scene.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">American</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">(<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Advances to the side of the ditch.
+Looks down. Takes off his cap</span>.) I came across
+the ocean to see it. (<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">He looks over the fields</span>.)
+It&#39;s quiet.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Englishman</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The trenches were filled in all
+over the invaded territory within twenty-five
+years after the war. Except a very few kept as
+a manner of monument. Object-lessons, don&#39;t
+you know, in what the thing meant. Even those
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page027">[pg 027]</span>
+<a name="Pg027" id="Pg027" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>are getting obliterated. They say this is quite
+the best specimen in all France.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">American</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">It doesn&#39;t look warlike. What a
+lot of flowers!</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Englishman</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Yes. The folk about here have
+a tradition, don&#39;t you know, that poppies mark
+the places where blood flowed most.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">American</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Ah! (<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Gazes into the ditch</span>.) Poppies
+there. A hundred of our soldiers died at
+once down there. Mere lads mostly. Their names
+and ages are on a tablet in the capitol at Washington,
+and underneath is a sentence from Lincoln&#39;s
+Gettysburg speech: "These dead shall not
+have died in vain, and government of the people,
+by the people, for the people shall not perish from
+the earth."</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Englishman</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Those are undying words.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">American</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">And undying names&mdash;the lads&#39;
+names.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Englishman</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">What they and the other Americans
+did can never die. Not while the planet endures.
+No nation at that time realized how vital
+was your country&#39;s entrance into the war. Three
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page028">[pg 028]</span>
+<a name="Pg028" id="Pg028" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>months later it would have been too late. Your
+young, untried forces lifted worn-out France and
+England and swept us to-victory. It was America&#39;s
+victory at the last. It is our glory to confess
+that, for from then on America has been our kin.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">American</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">(<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Smiles</span>.) England is our well-beloved
+elder sister for all time now.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Englishman</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The soldiers who died there (<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">gestures
+to the ditch</span>) and their like did that also.
+They tied the nations together with a bond of
+common gratitude, common suffering, common
+glory.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">American</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">You say well that there was common
+gratitude. England and France had fought
+our battle for three years at the time we entered
+the war. We had nestled behind the English fleet.
+Those grim gray ships of yours stood between us
+and the barbarians very literally.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Englishman</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Without doubt Germany would
+have been happy to invade the only country on
+earth rich enough to pay her war debt. And you
+were astonishingly open to invasion. It is one of
+the historical facts that a student of history of
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page029">[pg 029]</span>
+<a name="Pg029" id="Pg029" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>this twenty-first century finds difficult to realize.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">American</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The Great War made revolutionary
+changes. That condition of unpreparedness was
+one. That there will never be another war is the
+belief of all governments. But if all governments
+should be mistaken, not again would my country,
+or yours, be caught unprepared. A general staff
+built of soldiers and free of civilians hampering is
+one advantage we have drawn from our ordeal of
+1917.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Englishman</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Your army is magnificently efficient.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">American</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">And yours. Heaven grant neither
+may ever be needed! Our military efficiency is the
+pride of an unmilitary nation. One Congress,
+since the Great War and its lessons, has vied with
+another to keep our high place.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Englishman</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Ah! Your Congress. That has
+changed since the old days&mdash;since La Follette.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">American</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The name is a shame and a warning
+to us. Our children are taught to remember it so.
+The "little group of wilful men," the eleven who
+came near to shipwrecking the country, were
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page030">[pg 030]</span>
+<a name="Pg030" id="Pg030" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>equally bad, perhaps, but they are forgotten. La
+Follette stands for them and bears the curses of
+his countrymen, which they all earned.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Englishman</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Their ignominy served America;
+it roused the country to clean its Augean stables.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">American</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The war purified with fire the legislative
+soul.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Englishman</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Exactly. Men are human still,
+certainly, yet genuine patriotism appears to be
+a <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">sine qua non</span> now, where bombast answered in
+the old day. Corruption is no longer accepted.
+Public men then were surprisingly simple, surprisingly
+cheap and limited in their methods. There
+were two rules for public and private life. It was
+thought quixotic, I gather from studying the documents
+of the time, to expect anything different.
+And how easily the change came!</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">American</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The nation rose and demanded honesty,
+and honesty was there. The enormous
+majority of decent people woke from a discontented
+apathy and took charge. Men sprang into
+place naturally and served the nation. The old
+log-rolling, brainless, greedy public officials were
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page031">[pg 031]</span>
+<a name="Pg031" id="Pg031" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>thrown into the junk-heap. As if by magic the
+stress of the war wrung out the rinsings and the
+scourings and left the fabric clean.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Englishman</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The stress of the war affected
+more than internal politics. You and I, General,
+are used to a standard of conduct between responsible
+nations as high as that taken for granted
+between responsible persons. But, if one considers,
+that was far from the case a hundred years
+ago. It was in 1914, that von Bethmann-Hollweg
+spoke of "a scrap of paper."</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">American</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Ah&mdash;Germans!</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Englishman</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Certainly one does not expect
+honor or sincerity from German psychology.
+Even the little Teutonic Republic of to-day is
+tricky, scheming always to get a foothold for
+power, a beginning for the army they will never
+again be allowed to have. Even after the Kaiser
+and the Crown Prince and the other rascals were
+punished they tried to cheat us, if you remember.
+Yet it is not that which I had in mind. The
+point I was making was that today it would be
+out of drawing for a government even of charlatans,
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page032">[pg 032]</span>
+<a name="Pg032" id="Pg032" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>like the Prussians, to advance the sort of
+claims which they did. In commonplace words, it
+was expected then that governments, as against
+each other, would be self-seeking. To-day decency
+demands that they should be, as men must be,
+unselfish.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">America</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">(<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Musingly</span>.) It&#39;s odd how long
+it took the world&mdash;governments&mdash;human beings&mdash;to
+find the truth of the very old phrase that "he
+who findeth his life must lose it."</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Englishman</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The simple fact of that phrase
+before the Great War was not commonly grasped.
+People thought it purely religious and reserved
+for saints and church services. As a working
+hypothesis it was not generally known. The
+every-day ideals of our generation, the friendships
+and brotherhoods of nations as we know them
+would have been thought Utopian.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">American</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Utopian? Perhaps our civilization
+is better than Utopian. The race has grown with
+a bound since we all went through hell together.
+How far the civilization of 1914 stood above that
+of 1614! The difference between galley-slaves and
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page033">[pg 033]</span>
+<a name="Pg033" id="Pg033" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>able-bodied seamen, of your and our navy!
+Greater yet than the change in that three hundred
+years is the change in the last one hundred.
+I look at it with a soldier&#39;s somewhat direct view.
+Humanity went helpless and alone into a fiery
+furnace and came through holding on to God&#39;s
+hand. We have clung closely to that powerful
+grasp since.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Englishman</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Certainly the race has emerged
+from an epoch of intellect to an epoch of spirituality&mdash;which
+comprehends and extends intellect.
+There have never been inventions such as those of
+our era. And the inventors have been, as it were,
+men inspired. Something beyond themselves has
+worked through them for the world. A force like
+that was known only sporadically before our time.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">American</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">(<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Looks into old ditch</span>.) It would
+be strange to the lads who charged through horror
+across this flowery field to hear our talk and
+to know that to them and their deeds we owe the
+happiness and the greatness of the world we now
+live in.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Englishman</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Their short, Homeric episode of
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page034">[pg 034]</span>
+<a name="Pg034" id="Pg034" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>life admitted few generalizations, I fancy. To be
+ready and strong and brave&mdash;there was scant
+time for more than that in those strenuous days.
+Yet under that simple formula lay a sea of patriotism
+and self-sacrifice, from which sprang their
+soldiers&#39; force. "Greater love hath no man than
+this, that a man lay down his life for his friends."
+It was their love&mdash;love of country, of humanity,
+of freedom&mdash;which silenced in the end the great
+engine of evil&mdash;Prussianism. The motive power of
+life is proved, through those dead soldiers, to be
+not hate, as the Prussians taught, but love.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">American</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Do you see something shining
+among the flowers at the bottom of the ditch?</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Englishman</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Why, yes. Is it&mdash;a leaf which
+catches the light?</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">American</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">(<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Stepping down</span>.) I&#39;ll see. (<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">He
+picks up a metal identification disk worn by a
+soldier. Ang&eacute;lique has rubbed it so that the
+letters may mostly be read</span>.) This is rather wonderful.
+(<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">He reads aloud</span>.) "R.V.H. Randolph&mdash;Blank<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">th</span>
+Regiment&mdash;U.S." I can&#39;t make out
+the rest.</p></div>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page035">[pg 035]</span>
+<a name="Pg035" id="Pg035" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">Englishman</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">(<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Takes the disk</span>.) Extraordinary!
+The name and regiment are plain. The
+identification disk, evidently, of a soldier who died
+in the trench here. Your own man, General.</p></div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 2em" class="tei tei-sp">
+<div style="font-weight: 700; margin-left: -2em" class="tei tei-speaker">American</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">(<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Much stirred</span>.) And&mdash;my own
+regiment. Two years ago I was the colonel of
+"The Charging Blank<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">th</span>."</p></div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page" />
+
+<div class="tei tei-div">
+<a name="toc_10" id="toc_10"></a>
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page039">[pg 039]</span>
+<a name="Pg039" id="Pg039" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h1 class="tei tei-head">HER COUNTRY TOO</h1>
+
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">David Lance sat wondering. He was not
+due at the office till ten this Saturday night and
+he was putting in a long and thorough wonder.
+About the service in all its branches; about
+finance; about the new Liberty Loan. First, how
+was he to stop being a peaceful reporter on the
+<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Daybreak</span> and get into uniform; that wonder
+covered a class including the army, navy and air-service,
+for he had been refused by all three; he
+wondered how a small limp from apple-tree acrobatics
+at ten might be so explained away that he
+might pass; reluctantly he wondered also about
+the Y.M.C.A. But he was a fighting man <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">par
+excellence</span>. For him it would feel like slacking to
+go into any but fighting service. Six feet two
+and weighing a hundred and ninety, every ounce
+possible to be muscle was muscle; easy, joyful
+twenty-four-year-old muscle which knew nothing
+of fatigue. He was certain he would make a fit
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page040">[pg 040]</span>
+<a name="Pg040" id="Pg040" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>soldier for Uncle Sam, and how, how he wanted to
+be Uncle Sam&#39;s soldier!</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">He was getting desperate. Every man he knew
+in the twenties and many a one under and over,
+was in uniform; bitterly he envied the proud peace
+in their eyes when he met them. He could not
+bear to explain things once more as he had explained
+today to Tom Arnold and "Beef" Johnson,
+and "Seraph" Olcott, home on leave before sailing
+for France. He had suffered while they listened
+courteously and hurried to say that they understood,
+that it was a shame, and that: "You&#39;ll
+make it yet, old son." And they had then turned
+to each other comparing notes of camps. It made
+little impression that he had toiled and sweated
+early and late in this struggle to get in somewhere&mdash;army,
+navy, air-service&mdash;anything to follow the
+flag. He wasn&#39;t allowed. He was still a reporter
+on the <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Daybreak</span> while the biggest doings of humanity
+were getting done, and every young son of
+America had his chance to help. With a strong,
+tireless body aching for soldier&#39;s work, America,
+his mother, refused him work. He wasn&#39;t allowed.</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page041">[pg 041]</span>
+<a name="Pg041" id="Pg041" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Lance groaned, sitting in his one big chair in
+his one small room. There were other problems.
+A Liberty Loan drive was on, and where could he
+lay hands on money for bonds? He had plunged
+on the last loan and there was yet something to
+pay on the $200 subscription. And there was no
+one and nothing to fall back on except his salary
+as reporter for the <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Daybreak.</span> His father had
+died when he was six, and his mother eight years
+ago; his small capital had gone for his four years,
+at Yale. There was no one&mdash;except a legend of
+cousins in the South. Never was any one poorer
+or more alone. Yet he must take a bond or two.
+How might he hold up his head not to fight and
+not to buy bonds. A knock at the door.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Come in," growled Lance.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The door opened, and a picture out of a storybook
+stood framed and smiling. One seldom sees
+today in the North the genuine old-fashioned negro-woman.
+A sample was here in Lance&#39;s doorway.
+A bandanna of red and yellow made a
+turban for her head; a clean brownish calico dress
+stood crisply about a solid and waistless figure,
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page042">[pg 042]</span>
+<a name="Pg042" id="Pg042" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>and a fresh white apron covered it voluminously
+in front; a folded white handkerchief lay, fichu-wise,
+around the creases of a fat black neck; a
+basket covered with a cloth was on her arm. She
+stood and smiled as if to give the treat time to
+have its effect on Lance. "Look who&#39;s here!" was
+in large print all over her. And she radiated
+peace and good-will.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Lance was on his feet with a shout. "Bless
+your fat heart, Aunt Basha&mdash;I&#39;m glad to see you,"
+he flung at her, and seized the basket and slung it
+half across the room to a sofa with a casualness,
+alarming to Aunt Basha&mdash;christened Bathsheba
+seventy-five years ago, but "rightly known," she
+had so instructed Lance, as "Aunt Basha."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Young marse, don&#39; you ruinate the washin&#39;,
+please sir," she adjured in liquid tones.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Never you mind. It&#39;s the last one you&#39;ll do
+for me," retorted Lance. "Did I tell you you
+couldn&#39;t have the honor of washing for me anymore,
+Aunt Basha?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Aunt Basha was wreathed in smiles.</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page043">[pg 043]</span>
+<a name="Pg043" id="Pg043" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Yassir, young marse. You tole me dat mo&#39;n
+tree times befo&#39;, a&#39;ready, sir."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Well&mdash;it&#39;s final this time. Can&#39;t stand your
+prices. I <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">can&#39;t</span> stand your exorbitant prices.
+Now what do you have the heart to charge for
+dusting off those three old shirts and two and a
+half collars? Hey?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Aunt Basha, entirely serene, was enjoying the
+game. "What does I charges, sir? Fo&#39; dat wash,
+which you slung &#39;round acrost de room, sir?
+Well, sir, young marse, I charges fo&#39; dollars &#39;n
+sev&#39;nty fo&#39; cents, sir, dis week. Fo&#39; dat wash."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Lance let loose a howl and flung himself into
+his chair as if prostrated, long legs out and arms
+hanging to the floor. Aunt Basha shook with
+laughter. This was a splendid joke and she never,
+never tired of it. "You see!" he threw out, between
+gasps. "Look at that! <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Fo&#39;</span> dollars &#39;n sev&#39;nty <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">fo&#39;</span>
+cents." He sat up suddenly and pointed a big
+finger, "Aunt Basha," he whispered, "somebody&#39;s
+been kidding you. Somebody&#39;s lied. This palatial
+apartment, much as it looks like it, is not the home
+of John D. Rockefeller." He sprung up, drew
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page044">[pg 044]</span>
+<a name="Pg044" id="Pg044" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>an imaginary mantle about him, grasped one elbow
+with the other hand, dropped his head into the free
+palm and was Cassius or Hamlet or Faust&mdash;all
+one to Aunt Basha. His left eyebrow screwed up
+and his right down, and he glowered. "List to
+her," he began, and shot out a hand, immediately
+to replace it where it was most needed, under his
+elbow. "But list, ye Heavens and protect the
+lamb from this ravening wolf. She chargeth&mdash;oh
+high Heavens above!&mdash;she expecteth me to pay"&mdash;he
+gulped sobs&mdash;"the extortioner, the she-wolf&mdash;expecteth
+me to pay her&mdash;<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">fo</span>&#39; dollars &#39;n sev&#39;nty
+<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">fo</span>&#39; cents!"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Aunt Basha, entranced with this drama, quaked
+silently like a large coffee jelly, and with that
+there happened a high, rich, protracted sound
+which was laughter, but laughter not to be imitated
+of any vocal chords of a white race. The
+delicious note soared higher, higher it seemed than
+the scale of humanity, and was riotous velvet and
+cream, with no effort or uncertainty. Lance
+dropped his Mephistopheles pose and grinned.</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page045">[pg 045]</span>
+<a name="Pg045" id="Pg045" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"It&#39;s Q sharp!" he commented. "However does
+she do it!"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Naw, sir, young marse," Aunt Basha began,
+descending to speech. "De she-wolf, she don&#39;
+expecteth you to pay no fo&#39; dollars &#39;n sev&#39;nty fo&#39;
+cents, sir. Dat&#39;s thes what I <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">charges</span>. Dat ain&#39;
+what you <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">pay</span>. You thes pay me sev&#39;nty fo&#39; cents
+sir. Dat&#39;s all."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Oh!" Lance let it out like a ten-year-old. It
+was hard to say which enjoyed this weekly interview
+more, the boy or the old woman. The boy
+was lonely and the humanity unashamed of her
+race and personality made an atmosphere which
+delighted him. "Oh!" gasped Lance. "That&#39;s a
+relief. I thought it was goodbye to my Sunday
+trousers."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Aunt Basha, comfortable and efficient, was unpacking
+the basket and putting away the wash
+in the few bureau drawers which easily held the
+boy&#39;s belongings. "Dey&#39;s all mended nice," she
+announced. "Young marse, sir, you better wa&#39;
+out dese yer ole&#39; undercloses right now, endurin&#39;
+de warm weather, &#39;caze dey ain&#39; gwine do you fo&#39;
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page046">[pg 046]</span>
+<a name="Pg046" id="Pg046" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>de col&#39;. You &#39;bleeged to buy some new ones sir,
+when it comes off right cool."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Lance smiled, for there was no one but this old
+black woman to take care of him and advise his
+haphazard housekeeping, and he liked it. "Can&#39;t
+buy new ones," he made answer. "There you go
+again, mixing me up with Rockefeller. I&#39;m not
+even the Duke of Westminster, do you see. I
+haven&#39;t got any money. Only sev&#39;nty fo&#39; cents
+for the she-wolf."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Aunt Basha chuckled. Long ago there had
+been a household of young people in the South
+whose clothes she, a very young woman then, had
+mended; there had been a boy who talked nonsense
+to her much as this boy&mdash;Marse Pendleton. But
+trouble had come; everything had broken like a
+card-house under an ocean wave. "De fambly"
+was lost, and she and her young husband, old Uncle
+Jeems of today, had drifted by devious ways to
+this Northern city. "Ef you ain&#39;t got de money
+handy dis week, young marse, you kin pay me nex&#39;
+week thes as well," suggested the she-wolf.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Then the big boy was standing over her, and she
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page047">[pg 047]</span>
+<a name="Pg047" id="Pg047" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>was being patted on the shoulder with a touch that
+all but brought tears to the black, dim eyes.
+"Don&#39;t you dare pay attention to my drool, or
+I&#39;ll never talk to you again," Lance ordered.
+"Your sev&#39;nty fo&#39; cents is all right, and lots more.
+I&#39;ve got heaps of cash that size, Aunt Basha. But
+I want to buy Liberty Bonds, and I don&#39;t know
+how in hell I&#39;m going to get big money." The
+boy was thinking aloud. "How am I to raise
+two hundred for a couple of bonds, Aunt Basha?
+Tell me that?" He scratched into his thatch of
+hair and made a puzzled face.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"What fo&#39; you want big money, young marse?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Bonds. Liberty Bonds. You know what that
+is?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Naw, sir."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"You don&#39;t? Well you ought to," said Lance.
+"There isn&#39;t a soul in this country who oughtn&#39;t
+to have a bond. It&#39;s this way. You know we&#39;re
+fighting a war?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Yassir. Young Ananias Johnson, he&#39;s Sist&#39;
+Amanda&#39;s boy, he done tole his Unk Jeems &#39;bout
+dat war. And Jeems, he done tole me."</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page048">[pg 048]</span>
+<a name="Pg048" id="Pg048" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Lance regarded her. Was it possible that the
+ocean upheaval had stirred even the quietest backwater
+so little? "Well, anyhow, it&#39;s the biggest
+war that ever was on earth."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Aunt Basha shook her head. "You ain&#39;t never
+seed de War of de Rebullium," she stated with
+superiority. "You&#39;s too young. Well, I reckon
+dis yer war ain&#39;t much on to dat war. Naw, sir!
+Dat ar was a sure &#39;nough war&mdash;yas, sir!"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Lance considered. He decided not to contest
+the point. "Anyhow Aunt Basha, this is an awfully
+big war. And if we don&#39;t win it the Germans
+will come over here and murder the most of us,
+and make you and Uncle Jeems work in the fields
+from daylight till dark."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Dem low down white trash!" commented Aunt
+Basha.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Yes, and worse. And Uncle Sam can&#39;t beat
+the Germans unless we all help. He needs money
+to buy guns for the soldiers, and food and clothes.
+So he&#39;s asking everybody&mdash;just everybody&mdash;to
+lend him money&mdash;every cent they can raise to buy
+things to win the war. He gives each person who
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page049">[pg 049]</span>
+<a name="Pg049" id="Pg049" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>lends him any, a piece of paper which is a promise
+to pay it back, and that piece of paper is called
+a bond&mdash;Uncle Sam&#39;s promise to pay. Everybody
+ought to help by giving up every cent they
+have. The soldiers are giving their lives to save
+us from the horrible Germans. They&#39;re going
+over there to live in mud and water and sleep in
+holes of the earth, to be shot and wounded and
+tortured and killed. They&#39;re facing that for our
+sakes, to save us from worse than death, for you
+and Uncle Jeems and me, Aunt Basha. Now,
+oughtn&#39;t we to give all we&#39;ve got to take care of
+those boys&mdash;our soldiers?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Lance had forgotten his audience, except that
+he was wording his speech carefully in the simplest
+English. It went home.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Oh, my Lawd!" moaned Aunt Basha, sitting
+down and rocking hard. "Does dey sleep in de
+col&#39; yeth? Oh, my Lawd have mercy!" It was
+the first realization she had had of the details of
+the war. "You ain&#39;t gwine over dar, is you
+young marse, honey?" she asked anxiously.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"I wish to God I was," spoke Lance through set
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page050">[pg 050]</span>
+<a name="Pg050" id="Pg050" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>teeth. "No, Aunt Basha, they won&#39;t take me.
+Because I&#39;m lame. I&#39;d give my life to go. And
+because I can&#39;t fight I <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">must</span> buy bonds. Do you
+see? I must. I&#39;d sell my soul to get money for
+Liberty Bonds. Oh, God!" Lance was as if
+alone, with only that anxious old black face gazing
+up at him. "Oh, God&mdash;it&#39;s my country!"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Suddenly the rich flowing voice spoke. "Young
+marse, it&#39;s my country too, sir," said Aunt Basha.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Lance turned and stared. How much did the
+words mean to the old woman? In a moment he
+knew.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Yas, my young marseter, dis yer America&#39;s
+de ole black &#39;oman&#39;s country, thes like it&#39;s fine
+young white man&#39;s, like you, sir. I gwine give my
+las&#39; cent, like you say. Yas, I gwine do dat. I
+got two hun&#39;erd dollars, sir; I b&#39;en a-savin&#39; and
+a-savin&#39; for Jeems &#39;n me &#39;ginst when we git ole,
+but I gwine give dat to my country. I want Unc&#39;
+Sam to buy good food for dem boys in the muddy
+water. Bacon &#39;n hominy, sir&mdash;&#39;n corn bread, what&#39;s
+nourishin&#39;. &#39;N I want you to git de&mdash;de Liberty
+what-je-call-&#39;ems. Yassir. &#39;Caze you ain&#39;t got
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page051">[pg 051]</span>
+<a name="Pg051" id="Pg051" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>no ma to he&#39;ep you out, &#39;n de ole black &#39;oman&#39;s
+gwine to be de bes&#39; ma she know how to her young
+marse. I got de money tied up&mdash;" she leaned
+forward and whispered&mdash;"in a stockin&#39; in de bottom
+draw&#39; ob de chist unner Jeem&#39;s good coat.
+Tomorrow I gwine fetch it, &#39;n you go buy yo&#39;
+what-je-calls-&#39;ems."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Lance went across and knelt on the floor beside
+her and put his arms around the stout figure. He
+had been brought up with a colored mammy and
+this affection seemed natural and homelike. "Aunt
+Basha, you&#39;re one of the saints," he said. "And
+I love you for it. But I wouldn&#39;t take your
+blessed two hundred, not for anything on earth.
+I&#39;d be a hound to take it. If you want some
+bonds"&mdash;it flashed to him that the money would
+be safer so than in the stocking under Jeem&#39;s coat&mdash;"why,
+I&#39;ll get them for you. Come into the
+<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Daybreak</span> office and ask for me, say&mdash;Monday.
+And I&#39;ll go with you to the bank and get bonds.
+Here&#39;s my card. Show anybody that at the
+office." And he gave directions.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Five minutes later the old woman went off
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page052">[pg 052]</span>
+<a name="Pg052" id="Pg052" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>down the street talking half aloud to herself in
+fragments of sentences about "Liberty what-je-call-&#39;ems"
+and "my country too." In the little
+shack uptown that was home for her and her husband
+she began at once to set forth her new light.
+Jeems, who added to the family income by taking
+care of furnaces and doing odd jobs, was grizzled
+and hobbling of body, but argumentative of soul.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"&#39;Oman," he addressed Aunt Basha, "Unc&#39; Sam
+got lots o&#39; money. What use he gwine have, great
+big rich man lak Unc&#39; Sam, fo&#39; yo&#39; two hun&#39;erd?
+But we got mighty lot o&#39; use fo&#39; dat money,
+we&#39;uns. An&#39; you gwine gib dat away? Thes lak
+a &#39;oman!" which, in other forms, is an argument
+used by male people of many classes.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Aunt Basha suggested that Young Marse David
+said something about a piece of paper and Uncle
+Sam paying back, but Jeems pooh-poohed that.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Naw, sir. When big rich folks goes round
+collectin&#39; po&#39; folkses money, is dey liable to pay
+back? What good piece o&#39; paper gwine do you?
+Is dey aimin&#39; to let you see de color ob dat money
+agin? Naw, sir. Dey am not." He proceeded
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page053">[pg 053]</span>
+<a name="Pg053" id="Pg053" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>to another branch of the subject. "War ain&#39;
+gwine las&#39; long, nohow. Young Ananias he gwine
+to Franch right soon, an&#39; de yether colored
+brothers. De Germans dey ain&#39;t gwine las&#39; long,
+once ef dey see us Anglo-Saxons in de scrablin&#39;.
+Naw, sir.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"White man what come hyer yether day, he say
+how dey ain&#39;t gwine &#39;low de colored sojers to
+fight," suggested Aunt Basha. German propaganda
+reaches far and takes strange shapes.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Don&#39; jer go to b&#39;lieve dat white man, &#39;oman,"
+thundered Jeems, thumping with his fist. "He
+dunno nawthin&#39;, an&#39; I reckon he&#39;s a liar. Unc&#39;
+Sam he say we kin fight an&#39; we <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">gwine</span> fight. An&#39;
+de war ain&#39;t las&#39; long atter we git to fightin&#39; good."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Aunt Basha, her hands folded on the rounded
+volume of apron considered deeply. After a time
+she arrived at a decision.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Jeems," she began, "yo&#39; cert&#39;nly is a strong
+reasoner. Yassir. But I got it bo&#39;ne in upon me
+powerful dat I gotter give dese yer savin&#39;s to Unc&#39;
+Sam. It&#39;s my country too, Jeems, same as dem
+sojers what&#39;s fightin&#39;, dem boys in de mud what
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page054">[pg 054]</span>
+<a name="Pg054" id="Pg054" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>ain&#39; got a soul to wash fo&#39; &#39;em. An&#39; lak as not
+dey mas not dere. Dem boys is fightin&#39;, and gittin&#39;
+wet and hunted up lak young marse say, fo&#39;
+Aunt Basha and&mdash;bress dere hearts"&mdash;Aunt Basha
+broke down, and the upshot was that Jeems
+washed his hands of an obstinate female and&mdash;the
+savings not being his in any case&mdash;gave unwilling
+consent.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Youth of the sterner set is apt to be casual
+in making appointments. It had not entered
+Lance&#39;s head to arrange in case he was not at the
+office. As for Aunt Basha, her theory was that
+he reigned there over an army of subordinates
+from morning till evening. So that she was taken
+aback when told that Mr. Lance was out and no
+one could say when he would be in. She had risen
+at dawn and done her housework and much of the
+fine washing which she "took in," and had then
+arrayed herself in her best calico dress and newest
+turban and apron for the great occasion and had
+reported at the <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Daybreak</span> office at nine-thirty.
+And young marse wasn&#39;t there.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"I&#39;ll set and rest ontwell he comes in," she announced,
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page055">[pg 055]</span>
+<a name="Pg055" id="Pg055" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>and retired to a chair against the wall.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">There she folded her hands statelily and sat
+erect, motionless, an image of fine old dignity.
+But much thinking was going on inside the calm
+exterior. What was she going to do if young
+marse did not come back? She had the $200
+with her, carefully pinned and double pinned into
+a pocket in her purple alpaca petticoat. She
+did not want to take it home. Jeems had submitted
+this morning, but with mutterings, and a
+second time there might be trouble. The savings
+were indeed hers, but a rebellious husband in high
+finance is an embarrassment. Deeply Aunt Basha
+considered, and memory whispered something
+about a bank. Young marse was going to the
+bank with her to give her money to Uncle Sam.
+She had just passed a bank. Why could she not
+go alone? Somebody certainly would tell her what
+to do. Possibly Uncle Sam was there himself&mdash;for
+Aunt Basha&#39;s conception of our national myth
+was half mystical, half practical&mdash;as a child with
+Santa Claus. In any case banks were responsible
+places, and somebody would look after her. She
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page056">[pg 056]</span>
+<a name="Pg056" id="Pg056" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>crossed to the desk where two or three young men
+appeared to be doing most of the world&#39;s business.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Marsters!"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The three looked up.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Good mawnin&#39;, young marsters. I&#39;m &#39;bleeged
+to go now. I cert&#39;nly thank you-all fo&#39; lettin&#39; me
+set in de cheer. I won&#39;t wait fo&#39; marse David
+Lance no mo&#39;, sir. Good mawnin&#39;, marsters."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">A smiling courtesy dropped, and she was gone.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"I&#39;ll be darned!" remarked reporter number
+one.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Where did that blow in from?" added reporter
+number two.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">But reporter number three had imagination.
+"The dearest old soul I&#39;ve seen in a blue moon,"
+said he.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Aunt Basha proceeded down the street and
+more than one in the crowd glanced twice at the
+erect, stout figure swinging, like a quaint and
+stately ship in full sail, among the steam-tuggery
+of up-to-date humanity. There were high steps
+leading to the bank entrance, impressive and
+alarming to Aunt Basha. She paused to take
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page057">[pg 057]</span>
+<a name="Pg057" id="Pg057" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>breath for this adventure. Was a humble old colored
+woman permitted to walk freely in at those
+grand doors, open iron-work and enormous of
+size? She did not know. She stood a moment,
+suddenly frightened and helpless, not daring to go
+on, looking about for a friendly face. And behold!
+there it was&mdash;the friendliest face in the world, it
+seemed to the lost old soul&mdash;a vision of loveliness.
+It was the face of a beautiful young white lady in
+beautiful clothes who had stepped from a huge
+limousine. She was coming up the steps, straight
+to Aunt Basha. She saw the old woman, saw her
+anxious hesitation, and halted. The next event
+was a heavenly smile. Aunt Basha knew the repartee
+to that, and the smile that shone in answer
+was as heavenly in its way as the girl&#39;s.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Is there anything I can do for you?" spoke
+a voice of gentleness.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">And the world had turned over and come up
+right side on top. "Mawnin&#39;, Miss. Yas&#39;m, I was
+fixin&#39; to go in dat big do&#39; yander, but I dunno as
+I&#39;m &#39;lowed. Is I &#39;lowed, young miss, to go in dar
+an&#39; gib my two hun&#39;erd to Unc&#39; Sam?"</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page058">[pg 058]</span>
+<a name="Pg058" id="Pg058" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"What?" The tone was kindness itself, but
+bewildered.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Aunt Basha elucidated. "I got two hun&#39;erd,
+young miss, and I cert&#39;nly want to gib it to Unc&#39;
+Sam to buy clo&#39;se for dem boys what&#39;s fightin&#39; for
+us in Franch."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"I wonder," spoke the girl, gazing thoughtfully,
+"if you want to get a Liberty Bond?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Yas&#39;m&mdash;yas, miss. Dat&#39;s sho&#39; it, a whatjer-ma-call-&#39;em.
+I know&#39;d &#39;twas some cu&#39;is name lak
+dat." The vision nodded her head.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"I&#39;m going in to do that very thing myself,"
+she said. "Come with me. I&#39;ll help you get
+yours."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Aunt Basha followed joyfully in the wake, and
+behold, everything was easy. Ready attention
+met them and shortly they sat in a private office
+carpeted in velvet and upholstered in grandeur. A
+personage gave grave attention to what the vision
+was saying.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"I met&mdash;I don&#39;t know your name," she interrupted
+herself, turning to the old negro woman.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Aunt Basha rose and curtsied. "Dey christened
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page059">[pg 059]</span>
+<a name="Pg059" id="Pg059" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>me Bathsheba Jeptha, young miss," she stated.
+"But I&#39;se rightly known as Aunt Basha. Jes&#39;
+Aunt Basha, young miss. And marster."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">A surname was disinterred by the efforts of the
+personage which appeared to startle the vision.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Why, it&#39;s our name, Mr. Davidson," she exclaimed.
+"She said Cabell."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Aunt Basha turned inquiring, vague eyes. "Is
+it, honey? Is yo&#39; a Cabell?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">And then the personage, who was, after all,
+cashier of the Ninth National Bank and very busy,
+cut in. "Ah, yes! A well known Southern name.
+Doubtless a large connection. And now Mrs.&mdash;ah&mdash;Cabell&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"I&#39;d be &#39;bleeged ef yo&#39; jis&#39; name me Aunt Basha,
+marster."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">And marster, rather <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">intrigu&eacute;</span> because he, being
+a New Englander, had never in his life addressed
+as "aunt" a person who was not sister to his
+mother or his father, nevertheless became human
+and smiled. "Well, then, Aunt Basha."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">At a point a bit later he was again jolted when
+he asked the amount which his newly adopted
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page060">[pg 060]</span>
+<a name="Pg060" id="Pg060" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>"aunt" wanted to invest. For an answer she
+hauled high the folds of her frock, unconscious of
+his gasp or of the vision&#39;s repressed laughter, and
+went on to attack the clean purple alpaca petticoat
+which was next in rank, Mr. Davidson
+thought it wise at this point to make an errand
+across the room. He need not have bothered as
+far as Aunt Basha was concerned. When he came
+back she was again <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">à la mode</span> and held an ancient
+beaded purse at which she gazed. Out of a less
+remote pocket she drew steel spectacles, which
+were put on. Mr. Davidson repeated his question
+of how much.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"It&#39;s all hyer, marster. It&#39;s two hun&#39;erd dollars,
+sir. I ben savin&#39; up fo&#39; twenty years an&#39;
+mo&#39;, and me&#39;n Jeems, we ben countin&#39; it every
+mont, so I reckon I knows."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The man and the girl regarded the old woman
+a moment. "It&#39;s a large sum for you to invest,"
+Mr. Davidson said.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Yassir. Yas, marster. It&#39;s right smart
+money. But I sho&#39; am glad to gib dis hyer to
+Unc&#39; Sam for dem boys."</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page061">[pg 061]</span>
+<a name="Pg061" id="Pg061" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The cashier of the Ninth National Bank lifted
+his eyes from the blank he was filling out and
+looked at Aunt Basha thoughtfully. "You understand,
+of course, that the Government&mdash;Uncle
+Sam&mdash;is only borrowing your money. That you
+may have it back any time you wish."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Aunt Basha drew herself up. "I don&#39; wish it,
+sir. I&#39;m gibin&#39; dis hyer gif,&#39; a free gif&#39; to my
+country. Yassir. It&#39;s de onliest country I got,
+an&#39; I reckon I got a right to gib dis hyer what I
+earned doin&#39; fine washin&#39; and i&#39;nin. I gibs it to my
+country. I don&#39;t wan&#39; to hyer any talk &#39;bout
+payin&#39; back. Naw, sir."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">It took Mr. Davidson and the vision at least
+ten minutes to make clear to Aunt Basha the character
+and habits of a Liberty Bond, and then,
+though gratified with the ownership of what
+seemed a brand new $200 and a valuable slip of
+paper&mdash;which meandered, shamelessly into the
+purple alpaca petticoat&mdash;yet she was disappointed.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"White folks sho&#39; am cu&#39;is," she reflected,
+"Now who&#39;d &#39;a thought &#39;bout dat way ob raisin&#39;
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page062">[pg 062]</span>
+<a name="Pg062" id="Pg062" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>money! Not me&mdash;no, Lawd! It do beat me."
+With that she threw an earnest glance at Mr.
+Davidson, lean and tall and gray, with a clipped
+pointed beard. "&#39;Scuse me, marster," said Aunt
+Basha, "mout I ask a quexshun?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Surely," agreed Mr. Davidson blandly.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Is you&#39;&mdash;&#39;scuse de ole &#39;oman, sir&mdash;is you&#39; Unc&#39;
+Sam?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The "quexshun" left the personage too staggered
+to laugh. But the girl filled the staid place
+with gay peals. Then she leaned over and patted
+the wrinkled and bony worn black knuckles.
+"Bless your dear heart," she said; "no, he isn&#39;t,
+Aunt Basha. He&#39;s awfully important and good
+to us all, and he knows everything. But he&#39;s not
+Uncle Sam."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The bewilderment of the old face melted to
+smiles. "Dar, now," she brought out; "I mout
+&#39;a know&#39;d, becaze he didn&#39;t have no red striped
+pants. An&#39; de whiskers is diff&#39;ent, too. &#39;Scuse
+me, sir, and thank you kindly, marster. Thank
+you, young miss. De Lawd bress you fo&#39; helpin&#39;
+de ole &#39;oman." She had risen and she dropped her
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page063">[pg 063]</span>
+<a name="Pg063" id="Pg063" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>old time curtsey at this point. "Mawnin&#39; to yo&#39;,
+marster and young miss."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">But the girl sprang up. "You can&#39;t go," she
+said. "I&#39;m going to take you to my house to see
+my grandmother. She&#39;s Southern, and our name
+is Cabell, and likely&mdash;maybe&mdash;she knew your
+people down South."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Maybe, young miss. Dar&#39;s lots o&#39; Cabells,"
+agreed Aunt Basha, and in three minutes found
+herself where she had never thought to be, inside
+a fine private car.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">She was dumb with rapture and excitement,
+and quite unable to answer the girl&#39;s friendly
+words except with smiles and nods. The girl saw
+how it was and let her be, only patting the calico
+arm once and again reassuringly. "I wonder if
+she didn&#39;t want to come. I wonder if I&#39;ve frightened
+her," thought Eleanor Cabell. When into
+the silence broke suddenly the rich, high, irresistible
+music which was Aunt Basha&#39;s laugh, and
+which David Lance had said was pitched on "Q
+sharp." The girl joined the infectious sound and
+a moment after that the car stopped.</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page064">[pg 064]</span>
+<a name="Pg064" id="Pg064" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"This is home," said Eleanor.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Aunt Basha observed, with the liking for magnificence
+of a servant trained in a large house, the
+fine façade and the huge size of "home." In a
+moment she was inside, and "young miss" was
+carefully escorting her into a sunshiny big room,
+where a wood fire burned, and a bird sang, and
+there were books and flowers.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Wait here, Aunt Basha, dear," Eleanor said,
+"and I&#39;ll get Grandmother." It was exactly like
+the loveliest of dreams, Aunt Basha told Jeems
+an hour later. It could not possibly have been
+true, except that it was. When "Grandmother"
+came in, slender and white-haired and a bit breathless
+with this last surprise of a surprising granddaughter,
+Aunt Basha stood and curtsied her
+stateliest.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Then suddenly she cried out, "Fo&#39; God! Oh,
+my Miss Jinny!" and fell on her knees.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Mrs. Cabell gazed down, startled. "Who is it?
+Oh, whom have you brought me, Eleanor?" She
+bent to look more closely at Aunt Basha, kneeling,
+speechless, tears streaming from the brave old
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page065">[pg 065]</span>
+<a name="Pg065" id="Pg065" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>eyes, holding up clasped hand imploring. "It
+isn&#39;t&mdash;Oh, my dear, I believe it <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">is</span> our own old
+nurse, Basha, who took care of your father!"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Yas&#39;m. Yas, Miss Jinny," endorsed Aunt
+Basha, climbing to her feet. "Yas, my Miss
+Jinny, bress de Lawd. It&#39;s Basha." She turned
+to the girl. "Dis yer chile ain&#39;t nebber my young
+Marse Pendleton&#39;s chile!"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">But it was; and there was explanation and
+laughter and tears, too, but tears of happiness.
+Then it was told how, after that crash of disaster
+was over; the family had tried in vain to find
+Basha and Jeems; had tried always. It was told
+how a great fortune had come to them in the turn
+of a hand by the discovery of an unsuspected salt
+mine on the old estate; how "young Marse Pendleton,"
+a famous surgeon now, had by that time
+made for himself a career and a home in this
+Northern state; how his wife had died young,
+and his mother, "Miss Jinny," had come to live
+with him and take care of his one child, the vision.
+And then the simple annals of Aunt Basha and
+Uncle Jeems were also told, the long struggle to
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page066">[pg 066]</span>
+<a name="Pg066" id="Pg066" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>keep respectable, only respectable; the years of
+toil and frugality and saving&mdash;saving the two
+hundred dollars which she had offered this morning
+as a "free gif" to her country. In these
+annals loomed large for some time past the figure
+of a "young marse" who had been good to her
+and helped her much and often in spite of his own
+"<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">res augusta domi</span>,"&mdash;which was not Aunt Basha&#39;s
+expression. The story was told of his oration in
+the little hall bedroom about Liberty "whatjer-m&#39;-call-&#39;ems,"
+and of how the boy had stirred the
+soul of the old woman with his picture of the soldiers
+in the trenches.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"So it come to me, Miss Jinny, how ez me&#39;n
+Jeems was thes two wuthless ole niggers, an&#39;
+hadn&#39;t fur to trabble on de road anyways, an&#39; de
+Lawd would pervide, an&#39; ef He didn&#39;t we could
+scratch grabble some ways. An&#39; dat boy, dat
+young Marse David, he tole me everbody ought
+to gib dey las&#39; cent fo&#39; Unc&#39; Sam an&#39; de sojers.
+So"&mdash;Aunt Basha&#39;s high, inexpressibly sweet
+laughter of pure glee filled the room&mdash;"so I thes
+up&#39;n handed over my two hun&#39;erd."</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page067">[pg 067]</span>
+<a name="Pg067" id="Pg067" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"It was the most beautiful and wonderful thing
+that&#39;s been done in all wonderful America," pronounced
+Eleanor Cabell as one having authority.
+She went on. "But that young man, your young
+Marse David, why doesn&#39;t he fight if he&#39;s such
+a patriot?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Bress gracious, honey," Aunt Basha hurried
+to explain, "he&#39;s a-honin&#39; to fight. But he cayn&#39;t.
+He&#39;s lame. He goes a-limpin&#39;. Dey won&#39;t took
+him."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Oh!" retracted Eleanor. Then: "What&#39;s his
+name? Maybe father could cure him."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"He name Lance. Marse David Lance."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Why should Miss Jinny jump? "David Lance?
+It can&#39;t be, Aunt Basha."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">With no words Aunt Basha began hauling up
+her skirts and Eleanor, remembering Mr. Davidson&#39;s
+face, went into gales of laughter. Aunt
+Basha baited, looked at her with an inquiring gaze
+of adoration. "Yas&#39;m, my young miss. He name
+dat. I done put the cyard in my ridicule. Yas&#39;m,
+it&#39;s here." The antique bead purse was opened
+and Lance&#39;s card was presented to Miss Jinny.</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page068">[pg 068]</span>
+<a name="Pg068" id="Pg068" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Eleanor! This is too wonderful&mdash;look!"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Eleanor looked, and read: "Mr. David Pendleton
+Lance." "Why, Grandmother, it&#39;s Dad&#39;s
+name&mdash;David Pendleton Cabell. And the
+Lance&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Mrs. Cabell, stronger on genealogy than the
+younger generation, took up the wandering
+thread. "The &#39;Lance&#39; is my mother&#39;s maiden
+name&mdash;Virginia Lance she was. And her brother
+was David Pendleton Lance. I named your father
+for him because he was born on the day my
+young uncle was killed, in the battle of Shiloh."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Well, then&mdash;who&#39;s this sailing around with
+our family name?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Who is he? But he must be our close kin,
+Eleanor. My Uncle David left&mdash;that&#39;s it. His
+wife came from California and she went out there
+again to live with her baby. I hadn&#39;t heard of
+them for years. Why, Eleanor, this boy&#39;s father
+must have been&mdash;my first cousin. My young
+Uncle David&#39;s baby. Those years of trouble after
+we left home wiped out so much. I lost track&mdash;but
+that doesn&#39;t matter now. Aunt Basha," spoke
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page069">[pg 069]</span>
+<a name="Pg069" id="Pg069" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>Miss Jinny in a quick, efficient voice, which suddenly
+recalled the blooming and businesslike
+mother of the young brood of years ago, "Aunt
+Basha, where can I find your young Marse
+David?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Aunt Basha smiled radiantly and shook her
+head. "Cayn&#39;t fin&#39; him, honey? I done tried, and
+he warn&#39;t dar."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Wasn&#39;t where?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"At de orfice, Miss Jinny."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"At what office?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Why, de <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Daybreak</span> orfice, cose, Miss Jinny.
+What yether orfice he gwine be at?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Oh!" Miss Jinny followed with ease the
+windings of the African mind. "He&#39;s a reporter
+on the <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Daybreak</span> then."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"&#39;Cose he is, Miss Jinny, ma&#39;am. Whatjer
+reckon?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Miss Jinny reflected. Then: "Eleanor, call up
+the <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Daybreak</span> office and ask if Mr. Lance is there
+and if he will speak to me."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">But Aunt Basha was right. Mr. Lance was not
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page070">[pg 070]</span>
+<a name="Pg070" id="Pg070" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>at the <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Daybreak</span> office. Mrs. Cabell was as
+grieved as a child.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"We&#39;ll find him, Grandmother," Eleanor asserted.
+"Why, of course&mdash;it&#39;s a morning paper.
+He&#39;s home sleeping. I&#39;ll get his number." She
+caught up the telephone book.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Aunt Basha chuckled musically. "He ain&#39;t got
+no tullaphome, honey chile. No, my Lawd! Whar
+dat boy gwine git money for tullaphome and contraptions?
+No, my Lawd!"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"How will we get him?" despaired Mrs. Cabell.
+The end of the council was a cryptic note in the
+hand of Jackson, the chauffeur, and orders to
+bring back the addressee at any cost.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Meanwhile, as Jackson stood in his smart dark
+livery taking orders with the calmness of efficiency,
+feeling himself capable of getting that
+young man, howsoever hidden, the young man himself
+was wasting valuable hours off in day-dreams.
+In the one shabby big chair of the hall bedroom
+he sat and smoked a pipe, and stared at a microscopic
+fire in a toy grate. It was extravagant of
+David Lance to have a fire at all, but as long as
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page071">[pg 071]</span>
+<a name="Pg071" id="Pg071" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>he gave up meals to do it likely it was his own
+affair. The luxuries mean more than the necessities
+to plenty of us. With comfort in this, his
+small luxury, he watched the play of light and
+shadow, and the pulsing of the live scarlet and
+orange in the heart of the coals. He needed comfort
+today, the lonely boy. Two men of the office
+force who had gotten their commissions lately at
+an officer&#39;s training-camp had come in last night
+before leaving for Camp Devens; everybody had
+crowded about and praised them and envied them.
+They had been joked about the sweaters, and
+socks made by mothers and sweethearts, and about
+the trouble Uncle Sam would have with their mass
+of mail. The men in the office had joined to give
+each a goodbye present. Pride in them, the honor
+of them to all the force was shown at every turn;
+and beyond it all there was the look of grave contentment
+in their eyes which is the mark of the
+men who have counted the cost and given up
+everything for their country. Most of all soldiers,
+perhaps, in this great war, the American
+fights for an ideal. Also he knows it; down to
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page072">[pg 072]</span>
+<a name="Pg072" id="Pg072" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>the most ignorant drafted man, that inspiration
+has lifted the army and given it a star in the East
+to follow. The American fights for an ideal; the
+sign of it is in the faces of the men in uniform
+whom one meets everywhere in the street.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">David Lance, splendidly powerful and fit except
+for the small limp which was his undoing, suffered
+as he joined, whole-hearted, in the glory of
+those who were going. Back in his room alone,
+smoking, staring into his dying fire, he was dreaming
+how it would feel if he were the one who was to
+march off in uniform to take his man&#39;s share of
+the hardship and comradeship and adventure and
+suffering, and of the salvation of the world. With
+that, he took his pipe from his mouth and grinned
+broadly into the fire as another phase of the question
+appeared. How would it feel if he was somebody&#39;s
+special soldier, like both of those boys, sent
+off by a mother or a sweetheart, by both possibly,
+overstocked with things knitted for him, with all
+the necessities and luxuries of a soldier&#39;s outfit
+that could be thought of. He remembered how
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page073">[pg 073]</span>
+<a name="Pg073" id="Pg073" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>Jarvis, the artillery captain, had showed them,
+proud and modest, his field glass.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"It&#39;s a good one," he had said. "My mother
+gave it to me. It has the Mills scale."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">And Annesley, the kid, who had made his lieutenant&#39;s
+commission so unexpectedly, had broken
+in: "That&#39;s no shakes to the socks I&#39;ve got on.
+If somebody&#39;ll pull off my boots I&#39;ll show you.
+Made in Poughkeepsie. A dozen pairs. <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Not</span> my
+mother."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Lance smiled wistfully. Since his own mother
+died, eight years ago, he had drifted about unanchored,
+and though women had inevitably held out
+hands to the tall and beautiful lad, they were not
+the sort he cared for, and there had been none of
+his own sort in his life. Fate might so easily have
+given him a chance to serve his country, with also,
+maybe, just the common sweet things added which
+utmost every fellow had, and a woman or two to
+give him a sendoff and to write him letters over
+there sometimes. To be a soldier&mdash;and to be somebody&#39;s
+soldier! Why, these two things would mean
+Heaven! And hundreds of thousands of American
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page074">[pg 074]</span>
+<a name="Pg074" id="Pg074" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>boys had these and thought nothing of it.
+Fate certainly had been a bit stingy with a chap,
+considered David Lance, smiling into his little fire
+with a touch of wistful self-pity.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">At this moment Fate, in smart, dark livery,
+knocked at his door. "Come in," shouted Lance
+cheerfully.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The door opened and he stared. Somebody had
+lost the way. Chauffeurs in expensive livery did
+not come to his hall bedroom. "Is dis yer Mr.
+Lance?" inquired Jackson.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Lance admitted it and got the note and read it
+while Jackson, knowing his Family intimately,
+knew that something pleasant and surprising was
+afoot and assisted with a discreet regard. When
+he saw that the note was finished, Jackson confidently
+put in his word. "Cyar&#39;s waitin&#39;, sir. Orders
+is I was to tote you to de house."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Lance&#39;s eyes glowered as he looked up. "Tell
+me one thing," he demanded.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Yes, sir," grinned Jackson, pleased with this
+young gentleman from a very poor neighborhood,
+who quite evidently was, all the same, "quality."</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page075">[pg 075]</span>
+<a name="Pg075" id="Pg075" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Are you," inquired Lance, "are you any relation
+to Aunt Basha?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Jackson, for all his efficiency a friendly soul,
+forgot the dignity of his livery and broke into
+chuckles. "Naw, sir; naw, sir. I dunno de lady,
+sir; I reckon I ain&#39;t, sir," answered Jackson.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"All right, then, but it&#39;s the mistake of your
+life not to be. She&#39;s the best on earth. Wait till
+I brush my hair," said Lance, and did it.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Inside three minutes he was in the big Pierce-Arrow,
+almost as unfamiliar, almost as delightful
+to him as to Aunt Basha, and speeding gloriously
+through the streets. The note had said that some
+kinspeople had just discovered him, and would he
+come straight to them for lunch.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Mrs. Cabell and Eleanor crowded frankly to
+the window when the car stopped.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"I can&#39;t wait to see David&#39;s boy," cried Mrs.
+Cabell, and Eleanor, wise of her generation, followed
+with:</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Now, don&#39;t expect much; he may be deadly."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">And out of the limousine stepped, unconscious,
+the beautiful David, and handed Jackson a dollar.</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page076">[pg 076]</span>
+<a name="Pg076" id="Pg076" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Oh!" gasped Mrs. Cabell.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"It was silly, but I love it," added Eleanor; and
+David limped swiftly up the steps, and one heard
+Ebenezer, the butler, opening the door with
+suspicious promptness. Everyone in the house
+knew, mysteriously, that uncommon things were
+doing.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Pendleton," spoke Mrs. Cabell, lying in wait
+for her son, the great doctor, as he came from his
+office at lunch time, "Pen, dear, let me tell you
+something extraordinary." She told, him, condensing
+as might be, and ended with; "And oh, Pen,
+he&#39;s the most adorable boy I ever saw. And so
+lonely and so poor and so plucky. Heartbroken
+because he&#39;s lame and can&#39;t serve. You&#39;ll cure
+him. Pen, dear, won&#39;t you, for his country?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The tall, tired man bent down and kissed his
+mother. "Mummy, I&#39;m not God Almighty. But
+I&#39;ll do my damdest for anything you want. Show
+me the paragon."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The paragon shot up, with the small unevenness
+which was his limp, and faced the big doctor
+on a level. The two pairs of eyes from their uncommon
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page077">[pg 077]</span>
+<a name="Pg077" id="Pg077" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>height, looked inquiringly into each
+other.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"I hear you have my name," spoke Dr. Cabell
+tersely.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Yes, sir," said David, "And I&#39;m glad."
+And the doctor knew that he also liked the
+paragon.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Lunch was an epic meal above and below stairs.
+Jeems had been fetched by that black Mercury
+Jackson, messenger today of the gods of joy. And
+the two old souls had been told by Mrs. Cabell
+that never again should they work hard or be
+anxious or want for anything. The sensation-loving
+colored servants rejoiced in the events as
+a personal jubilee, and made much of Aunt Basha
+and Unc&#39; Jeems till their old heads reeled. Above
+stairs the scroll unrolled more or loss decorously,
+yet in magic colors unbelievable. Somehow
+David had told about Annesley and Jarvis last
+night.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Somebody knitted him a whole dozen pairs of
+socks!" he commented, "Really she did. He said
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page078">[pg 078]</span>
+<a name="Pg078" id="Pg078" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>so. Think of a girl being as good to a chap as
+that."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"I&#39;ll knit you a dozen," Miss Eleanor Cabell
+capped his sentence, like the Amen at the end of
+a High Church prayer. "I&#39;ll begin this afternoon."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"And, David," said Mrs. Cabell&mdash;for it had got
+to be "David" and "Cousin Virginia" by now&mdash;"David,
+when you get your commission, I&#39;ll
+have your field glass ready, and a few other
+things."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Dr. Cabell lifted his eyes from his chop.
+"You&#39;ll spoil that boy," he stated. "And, mother,
+I pointed out that I&#39;m not the Almighty, even on
+joints, I haven&#39;t looked at that game leg yet. I
+said it <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">might</span> be curable."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"That boy" looked up, smiling, with long years
+of loneliness and lameness written in the back of
+his glance. "Please don&#39;t make &#39;em stop, doctor,"
+he begged. "I won&#39;t spoil easily. I haven&#39;t
+any start. And this is a fairy-story to me&mdash;wonderful
+people like you letting me&mdash;letting me
+belong. I can&#39;t believe I won&#39;t wake up. Don&#39;t
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page079">[pg 079]</span>
+<a name="Pg079" id="Pg079" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>you imagine it will go to my head. It won&#39;t. I&#39;m
+just so blamed&mdash;grateful."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The deep young voice trailed, and the doctor
+made haste to answer. "You&#39;re all right, my lad,"
+he said, "As soon as lunch is over you come into
+the surgery and I&#39;ll have a glance at the leg."
+Which was done.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">After half an hour David came out, limping,
+pale and radiant. "I can&#39;t believe it," he spoke
+breathless. "He says&mdash;it&#39;s a simple&mdash;operation.
+I&#39;ll walk&mdash;like other men. I&#39;ll be right for&mdash;the
+service." He choked.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">At that Mrs. Cabell sped across the room and
+put up hands either side of the young face and
+drew it down and kissed the lad whom she did not,
+this morning, know to be in existence. "You
+blessed boy," she whispered, "you shall fight for
+America, and you&#39;ll be our soldier, and we&#39;ll be
+your people." And David, kissing her again,
+looked over her head and saw Eleanor glowing like
+a rose, and with a swift, unphrased shock of happiness
+felt in his soul the wonder of a heaven that
+might happen. Then they were all about the fire,
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page080">[pg 080]</span>
+<a name="Pg080" id="Pg080" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>half-crying, laughing, as people do on top of
+strong feelings.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Aunt Basha did it all," said David. "If Aunt
+Basha hadn&#39;t been the most magnificent old black
+woman who ever carried a snow-white soul, if she
+hadn&#39;t been the truest patriot in all America, if
+she hadn&#39;t given everything for her country&mdash;I&#39;d
+likely never have&mdash;found you." His eyes went to
+the two kind and smiling faces, and his last word
+was a whisper. It was so much to have found.
+All he had dreamed, people of his own, a straight
+leg&mdash;and&mdash;his heart&#39;s desire&mdash;service to America.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Mrs. Cabell spoke softly, "I&#39;ve lived a long
+time and I&#39;ve seen over and over that a good deed
+spreads happiness like a pebble thrown into water,
+more than a bad one spreads evil, for good is
+stronger and more contagious. We&#39;ve gained this
+dear kinsman today because of the nobility of an
+old negro woman."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">David Lance lifted his head quickly. "It was
+no small nobility," he said. "As Miss Cabell was
+saying&mdash;"</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page081">[pg 081]</span>
+<a name="Pg081" id="Pg081" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"I&#39;m your cousin Eleanor," interrupted Miss
+Cabell.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">David lingered over the name. "Thank you,
+my cousin Eleanor. It&#39;s as you said, nothing
+more beautiful and wonderful has been done in
+wonderful America than this thing Aunt Basha
+did. It was as gallant as a soldier at the front,
+for she offered what meant possibly her life."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Her little two hundred," Eleanor spoke
+gently. "And so cross at the idea of being paid
+back! She wanted to <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">give</span> it."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">David&#39;s face gleamed with a thought as he
+stared into the firelight, "You see," he worked
+out his idea, "by the standards of the angels a
+gift must be big not according to its size but
+according to what&#39;s left. If you have millions
+and give a few thousand you practically give
+nothing, for you have millions left. But Aunt
+Basha had nothing left. The angels must have
+beaten drums and blown trumpets and raised Cain
+all over Paradise while you sat in the bank, my
+cousin Eleanor, for the glory of that record gift.
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page082">[pg 082]</span>
+<a name="Pg082" id="Pg082" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>No plutocrat in the land has touched what Aunt
+Basha did for her country."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Eleanor&#39;s eyes, sending out not only clear vision
+but a brown light as of the light of stars, shone
+on the boy. She bent forward, and her slender
+arms were about her knee. She gazed at David,
+marveling. How could it be that a human being
+might have all that David appeared to her to have&mdash;clear
+brain, crystal simplicity, manliness, charm
+of personality, and such strength and beauty besides!</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Yes," she said, "Aunt Basha gave the most.
+She has more right than any of us to say that it&#39;s
+her country." She was silent a moment and then
+spoke softly a single word. "America!" said
+Eleanor reverently.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">America! Her sound has gone out into all
+lands and her words into the end of the world.
+America, who in a year took four million of sons
+untried, untrained, and made them into a mighty
+army; who adjusted a nation of a hundred million
+souls in a turn of the hand to unknown and
+unheard of conditions. America, whose greatest
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page083">[pg 083]</span>
+<a name="Pg083" id="Pg083" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>glory yet is not these things. America, of whom
+scholars and statesmen and generals and multi-millionaires
+say with throbbing pride today:
+"This is my country," but of whom the least in
+the land, having brought what they may, however
+small, to lay on that flaming altar of the world&#39;s
+safety&mdash;of whom the least in the land may say
+as truly as the greatest, "This is my country,
+too."</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page" />
+
+<div class="tei tei-div">
+<a name="toc_11" id="toc_11"></a>
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page087">[pg 087]</span>
+<a name="Pg087" id="Pg087" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h1 class="tei tei-head">THE SWALLOW</h1>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The Château Frontenac at Quebec is a turreted
+pile of masonry wandering down a cliff over the
+very cellars of the ancient Castle of St. Louis. A
+twentieth-century hotel, it simulates well a mediæval
+fortress and lifts against the cold blue
+northern sky an atmosphere of history. Old
+voices whisper about its towers and above the
+clanging hoofs in its paved court; deathless names
+are in the wind which blows from the "fleuve," the
+great St. Lawrence River far below. Jacques
+Cartier&#39;s voice was heard hereabouts away back
+in 1539, and after him others, Champlain and
+Frontenac, and Father Jogues and Mother Marie
+of the Conception and Montcalm&mdash;upstanding
+fighting men and heroic women and hardy discoverers
+of New France walked about here once, on
+the "Rock" of Quebec; there is romance here if
+anywhere on earth. Today a new knighthood hails
+that past. Uniforms are thick in steep streets;
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page088">[pg 088]</span>
+<a name="Pg088" id="Pg088" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>men are wearing them with empty sleeves, on
+crutches, or maybe whole of body yet with racked
+faces which register a hell lived through. Canada
+guards heroism of many vintages, from four
+hundred years back through the years to Wolfe&#39;s
+time, and now a new harvest. Centuries from now
+children will be told, with the story of Cartier,
+the tale of Vimy Ridge, and while the Rock stands
+the records of Frenchmen in Canada, of Canadians
+in France will not die.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Always when I go to the Château I get a table,
+if I can, in the smaller dining-room. There the
+illusion of antiquity holds through modern luxury;
+there they have hung about the walls portraits
+of the worthies of old Quebec; there Samuel
+Champlain himself, made into bronze and heroic
+of size, aloft on his pedestal on the terrace outside,
+lifts his plumed hat and stares in at the narrow
+windows, turning his back on river and lower city.
+One disregards waiters in evening clothes and
+up-to-date table appointments, and one looks at
+Champlain and the "fleuve," and the Isle d&#39;Orl&eacute;ans
+lying long and low, and one thinks of little ships,
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page089">[pg 089]</span>
+<a name="Pg089" id="Pg089" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>storm-beaten, creeping up to this grim bigness
+ignorant of continental events trailing in their
+wake.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">I was on my way to camp in a club a hundred
+miles north of the gray-walled town when I drifted
+into the little dining-room for dinner one night in
+early September in 1918. The head-waiter was
+an old friend; he came to meet me and piloted me
+past a tableful of military color, four men in
+service uniforms.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Some high officers, sir," spoke the head waiter.
+"In conference here, I believe. There&#39;s a French
+officer, and an English, and our Canadian General
+Sampson, and one of your generals, sir."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">I gave my order and sat back to study the
+group. The waiter had it straight; there was the
+horizon blue of France; there was the Englishman
+tall and lean and ruddy and expressionless and
+handsome; there was the Canadian, more of our
+own cut, with a mobile, alert face. The American
+had his back to me and all I could see was an erect
+carriage, a brown head going to gray, and the
+one star of a brigadier-general on his shoulders.
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page090">[pg 090]</span>
+<a name="Pg090" id="Pg090" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>The beginnings of my dinner went fast, but after
+soup there was a lull before greater food, and I
+paid attention again to my neighbors. They were
+talking in English.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"A Huron of Lorette&mdash;does that mean a full-blooded
+Indian of the Huron tribe, such as one
+reads of in Parkman?" It was the Englishman
+who asked, responding to something I had not
+heard.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"There&#39;s no such animal as a full-blooded
+Huron," stated the Canadian. "They&#39;re all
+French-Indian half-breeds now. Lorette&#39;s an interesting
+scrap of history, just the same. You
+know your Parkman? You remember how the
+Iroquois followed the defeated Hurons as far as
+the Isle d&#39;Orl&eacute;ans, out there?" He nodded toward
+where the big island lay in the darkness of the St.
+Lawrence. "Well, what was left after that chase
+took refuge fifteen miles north of Quebec, and
+founded what became and has stayed the village
+of Indian Lorette. There are now about five or
+six hundred people, and it&#39;s a nation. Under its
+own laws, dealing by treaty with Canada, not subject
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page091">[pg 091]</span>
+<a name="Pg091" id="Pg091" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>to draft, for instance. Queer, isn&#39;t it? They
+guard their identity vigilantly. Every one, man
+or woman, who marries into the tribe, as they
+religiously call it, is from then on a Huron. And
+only those who have Huron blood may own land
+in Lorette. The Hurons were, as Parkman put
+it, &#39;the gentlemen of the savages,&#39; and the tradition
+lasts. The half-breed of today is a good sort,
+self-respecting and brave, not progressive, but intelligent,
+with pride in his inheritance, his courage,
+and his woodscraft."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The Canadian, facing me, spoke distinctly and
+much as Americans speak; I caught every word.
+But I missed what the French general threw back
+rapidly. I wondered why the Frenchman should
+be excited. I myself was interested because my
+guides, due to meet me at the club station tomorrow,
+were all half-breed Hurons. But why the
+French officer? What should a Frenchman of
+France know about backwaters of Canadian history?
+And with that he suddenly spoke slowly,
+and I caught several sentences of incisive if halting
+English.</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page092">[pg 092]</span>
+<a name="Pg092" id="Pg092" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Zey are to astonish, ze Indian Hurong. For
+ze sort of work special-ment, as like scouting on a
+stomach. Qu-vick, ver&#39; qu-vick, and ver&#39; quiet.
+By dark places of danger. One sees zat nozzing
+at all af-frightens zose Hurong. Also zey are alike
+snakes, one cannot catch zem&mdash;zey slide; zey are
+slippy. To me it is to admire zat courage
+most&mdash;personnel&mdash;selfeesh&mdash;because an Hurong safe
+my life dere is six mont&#39;, when ze Boches make ze
+drive of ze mont&#39; of March."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">At this moment food arrived in a flurry, and I
+lost what came after. But I had forgotten the
+Château Frontenac; I had forgotten the group of
+officers, serious and responsible, who sat on at the
+next table. I had forgotten even the war. A
+word had sent my mind roaming. "Huron!"
+Memory and hope at that repeated word rose and
+flew away with me. Hope first. Tomorrow I was
+due to drop civilization and its tethers.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Allah does not count the days spent out of
+doors." In Walter Pater&#39;s story of "Marius the
+Epicurean" one reads of a Roman country-seat
+called "Ad Vigilias Albas," "White Nights." A
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page093">[pg 093]</span>
+<a name="Pg093" id="Pg093" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>sense of dreamless sleep distils from the name.
+One remembers such nights, and the fresh world of
+the awakening in the morning. There are such
+days. There are days which ripple past as a night
+of sleep and leave a worn brain at the end with the
+same satisfaction of renewal; white days. Crystal
+they are, like the water of streams, as musical and
+eventless; as elusive of description as the ripple
+over rocks or brown pools foaming.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The days and months and years of a life race
+with accelerating pace and youth goes and age
+comes as the days race, but one is not older for
+the white days. The clock stops, the blood runs
+faster, furrows in gray matter smooth out, time
+forgets to put in tiny crow&#39;s-feet and the extra
+gray hair a week, or to withdraw by the hundredth
+of an ounce the oxygen from the veins; one grows
+no older for the days spent out of doors. Allah
+does not count them.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">It was days like these which hope held ahead as
+I paid earnest attention to the good food set before
+me. And behold, beside the pleasant vision
+of hope rose a happy-minded sister called memory.
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page094">[pg 094]</span>
+<a name="Pg094" id="Pg094" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>She took the word "Huron," this kindly spirit,
+and played magic with it, and the walls of the
+Château rolled into rustling trees and running
+water.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">I was sitting, in my vision, in flannel shirt and
+knickerbockers, on a log by a little river, putting
+together fishing tackle and casting an eye, off and
+on, where rapids broke cold over rocks and whirled
+into foam-flecked, shadowy pools. There should
+be trout in those shadows.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Take the butt, Rafael, while I string the line."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Rafael slipped across&mdash;still in my vision of
+memory&mdash;and was holding my rod as a rod should
+be held, not too high or too low, or too far or too
+near&mdash;right. He was an old Huron, a chief of
+Indian Lorette, and woods craft was to him as
+breathing.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"A varry light rod," commented Rafael in his
+low voice which held no tones out of harmony with
+water in streams or wind in trees. "A varry light,
+good rod," paying meanwhile strict attention to
+his job. "M&#39;sieu go haf a luck today. I t&#39;ink
+M&#39;sieu go catch a beeg fish on dat river. Water
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page095">[pg 095]</span>
+<a name="Pg095" id="Pg095" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>high enough&mdash;not too high. And cold." He shivered
+a little. "Cold last night&mdash;varry cold nights
+begin now. Good hun-ting wedder."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Have you got a moose ready for me on the
+little lake, Rafael? It&#39;s the 1st of September next
+week and I expect you to give me a shot before
+the 3d."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Rafael nodded. "Oui, m&#39;sieur. First day." The
+keen-eyed, aquiline old face was as of a prophet.
+"We go get moose first day. I show you." With
+that the laughter-loving Frenchman in him flooded
+over the Indian hunter; for a second the two inheritances
+played like colors in shot silk, producing
+an elusive fabric, Rafael&#39;s charm. "If nights
+get so colder, m&#39;sieur go need moose skin kip him
+warm."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">I was looking over my flies now, the book
+open before me, its fascinating pages of color
+more brilliant than an old missal, and maybe as
+filled with religion&mdash;the peace of God, charity
+which endureth, love to one&#39;s neighbor. I chose
+a Parmachene Belle for hand-fly, always good in
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page096">[pg 096]</span>
+<a name="Pg096" id="Pg096" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>Canadian waters. "A moose-skin hasn&#39;t much
+warmth, has it, Rafael?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The hunter was back, hawk-eyed. "But yes,
+m&#39;sieu. Moose skin one time safe me so I don&#39;
+freeze to death. But it hol&#39; me so tight so I
+nearly don&#39; get loose in de morning."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"What do you mean?" I was only half listening,
+for a brown hackle and a Montreal were competing
+for the middle place on my cast, and it was
+a vital point. But Rafael liked to tell a story, and
+had come by now to a confidence in my liking to
+hear him. He flashed a glance to gather up my
+attention, and cleared his throat and began: "Dat
+was one time&mdash;I go on de woods&mdash;hunt wid my
+fader-in-law&mdash;<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">mon beau-père</span>. It was mont&#39; of
+March&mdash;and col&#39;&mdash;but ver&#39; col&#39; and wet. So it
+happen we separate, my fador-in-law and me, to
+hunt on both side of large enough river. And I
+kill moose. What, m&#39;sieur? What sort of gun?
+Yes. It was rifle&mdash;what one call flint-lock. Large
+round bore. I cast dat beeg ball myself, what I
+kill dat moose. Also it was col&#39;. And so it happen
+my matches got wet, but yes, ev-very one.
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page097">[pg 097]</span>
+<a name="Pg097" id="Pg097" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>So I couldn&#39; buil&#39; fire. I was tired, yes, and much
+col&#39;. I t&#39;ink in my head to hurry and skin dat
+moose and wrap myself in dat skin and go sleep
+on de snow because if not I would die, I was so col&#39;
+and so tired. I do dat. I skin heem&mdash;<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">je le plumait</span>&mdash;de
+beeg moose&mdash;beeg skin. Skin all warm
+off moose; I wrap all aroun&#39; me and dig hole and
+lie down on deep snow and draw skin over head
+and over feet, and fol&#39; arms, so"&mdash;Rafael illustrated&mdash;"and
+I hol&#39; it aroun&#39; wid my hands. And
+I get warm right away, warm, as bread toast. So
+I been slippy, and heavy wid tired, and I got comfortable
+in dat moose skin and I go aslip quick.
+I wake early on morning, and dat skin got froze
+tight, like box made on wood, and I hol&#39; in dat wid
+my arms fol&#39; so, and my head down so"&mdash;illustrations
+again&mdash;"and I can&#39;t move, not one inch.
+No. What, m&#39;sieur? Yes, I was enough warm,
+me. But I lie lak dat and can&#39;t move, and I t&#39;ink
+somet&#39;ing. I t&#39;ink I got die lak dat, in moose-skin.
+If no sun come, I did got die. But dat day sun
+come and be warm, and moose skin melt lil&#39; bit,
+slow, and I push lil&#39; bit wid shoulder, and after
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page098">[pg 098]</span>
+<a name="Pg098" id="Pg098" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>while I got ice broke, on moose skin, and I crawl
+out. Yes. I don&#39; die yet."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Rafael&#39;s chuckle was an amen to his saga, and
+at once, with one of his lightning-changes, he was
+austere.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"M&#39;sieur go need beeg trout tonight; not go
+need moose skin till nex&#39; wik. Ze rod is ready take
+feesh, I see feesh jump by ole log. Not much
+room to cast, but m&#39;sieur can do it. Shall I carry
+rod down to river for m&#39;sieur?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">In not so many words as I have written, but
+in clear pictures which comprehended the words,
+Memory, that temperamental goddess of moods,
+had, at the prick of the word "Huron," shaken
+out this soft-colored tapestry of the forest, and
+held it before my eyes. And as she withdrew this
+one, others took its place and at length I was
+musing profoundly, as I put more of something
+on my plate and tucked it away into my anatomy.
+I mused about Rafael, the guide of sixty, who had
+begun a life of continued labor at eight years; I
+considered the undying Indian in him; how with
+the father who was "French of Picardy"&mdash;the
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page099">[pg 099]</span>
+<a name="Pg099" id="Pg099" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>white blood being a pride to Rafael&mdash;he himself,
+yes, and the father also, for he had married a
+"<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">sauvagess</span>," a Huron woman&mdash;had belonged to
+the tribe and were accounted Hurons; I considered
+Rafael&#39;s proud carriage, his classic head and
+carved features, his Indian austerity and his
+French mirth weaving in and out of each other; I
+considered the fineness and the fearlessness of his
+spirit, which long hardship had not blunted; I
+reflected on the tales he had told me of a youth
+forced to fight the world. "<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">On a vu de le misère</span>,"
+Rafael had said: "One has seen trouble"&mdash;shaking
+his head, with lines of old suffering emerging from
+the reserve of his face like writing in sympathetic
+ink under heat. And I marvelled that through
+such fire, out of such neglect, out of lack of opportunity
+and bitter pressure, the steel of a character
+should have been tempered to gentleness and
+bravery and honor.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">For it was a very splendid old boy who was
+cooking for me and greasing my boots and going
+off with me after moose; putting his keen ancestral
+instincts of three thousand years at my service
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page100">[pg 100]</span>
+<a name="Pg100" id="Pg100" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>for three dollars a day. With my chances
+would not Rafael have been a bigger man than I?
+At least never could I achieve that grand air,
+that austere repose of manner which he had got
+with no trouble at all from a line of unwashed
+but courageous old bucks, thinking highly of
+themselves for untold generations, and killing
+everything which thought otherwise. I laughed
+all but aloud at this spot in my meditations, as a
+special vision of Rafael rose suddenly, when he
+had stated, on a day, his views of the great war.
+He talked plain language about the Germans. He
+specified why he considered the nation a disgrace
+to humanity&mdash;most people, not German, agree on
+the thesis and its specifications. Then the fire of
+his ancient fighting blood blazed through restraint
+of manner. He drew up his tall figure, slim-waisted,
+deep-shouldered, every inch sliding muscle.
+"I am too old to go on first call to army,"
+said Rafael. "Zey will not take me. Yes, and on
+second call. Maybe zird time. But if time come
+when army take me&mdash;I go. If I may kill four
+Germans I will be content," stated Rafael concisely.
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page101">[pg 101]</span>
+<a name="Pg101" id="Pg101" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>And his warrior forebears would have
+been proud of him as he stated it.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">My reflections were disturbed here by the
+American general at the next table. He was
+spoken to by his waiter and shot up and left the
+room, carrying, however, his napkin in his hand,
+so that I knew he was due to come back. A half
+sentence suggested a telephone. I watched the
+soldierly back with plenty of patriotic pride; this
+was the sort of warrior my country turned out
+now by tens of thousands. With that he returned,
+and as I looked up into his face, behold it was
+Fitzhugh.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">My chair went banging as I sprang toward him.
+"Jim!"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">And the general&#39;s calm dignity suddenly was the
+radiant grin of the boy who had played and gone
+to school and stolen apples with me for a long
+bright childhood&mdash;the boy lost sight of these last
+years of his in the army. "Dave!" he cried out.
+"Old Davy Cram!" And his arm went around my
+shoulder regardless of the public. "My word, but
+I&#39;m glad!" he sputtered. And then: "Come and
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page102">[pg 102]</span>
+<a name="Pg102" id="Pg102" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>have dinner&mdash;finish having it. Come to our
+table." He slewed me about and presented me to
+the three others.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">In a minute I was installed, to the pride of
+my friend the head waiter, at military headquarters,
+next to Fitzhugh and the Frenchman. A
+campact r&eacute;sum&eacute; of personal history between Fitzhugh
+and myself over, I turned to the blue figure
+on my left hand, Colonel Raffr&eacute;, of the French,
+army. On his broad chest hung thrilling bits of
+color, not only the bronze war cross, with its
+green watered ribbon striped with red, but the
+blood-red ribbon of the "Great Cross" itself&mdash;the
+cross of the Legion of Honor. I spoke to him in
+French, which happens to be my second mother
+tongue, and he met the sound with a beaming
+welcome.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"I don&#39;t do English as one should," he explained
+in beautiful Parisian. "No gift of tongues in my
+kit, I fear; also I&#39;m a bit embarrassed at practising
+on my friends. It&#39;s a relief to meet some one
+who speaks perfectly French, as m&#39;sieur."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">M&#39;sieur was gratified not to have lost his facility.
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page103">[pg 103]</span>
+<a name="Pg103" id="Pg103" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>"But my ear is getting slower," I said.
+"For instance, I eavesdropped a while ago when
+you were talking about your Huron soldiers, and
+I got most of what you said because you spoke
+English. I doubt if I could if you&#39;d been speaking
+French."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The colonel shrugged massive shoulders. "My
+English is defective but distinct," he explained.
+"One is forced to speak slowly when one speaks
+badly. Also the Colonel Chichely"&mdash;the Britisher&mdash;"it
+is he at whom I talk carefully. The
+English ear, it is not imaginative. One must
+make things clear. You know the Hurons, then?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">I specified how.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Ah!" he breathed out. "The men in my command
+had been, some of them, what you call
+guides. They got across to France in charge of
+troop horses on the ships; then they stayed and
+enlisted. Fine soldier stuff. Hardy, and of resource
+and of finesse. Quick and fearless as
+wildcats. They fit into one niche of the war better
+than any other material. You heard the
+story of my rescue?"</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page104">[pg 104]</span>
+<a name="Pg104" id="Pg104" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">I had not. At that point food had interfered,
+and I asked if it was too much that the colonel
+should repeat.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"By no means," agreed the polite colonel, ready,
+moreover, I guessed, for any amount of talk in his
+native tongue. He launched an epic episode. "I
+was hit leading, in a charge, two battalions. I
+need not have done that," another shrug&mdash;"but
+what will you? It was snowing; it was going to
+be bad work; one could perhaps put courage into
+the men by being at their head. It is often the
+duty of an officer to do more than, his
+duty&mdash;<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">n&#39;est-ce-pas?</span> So that I was hit in the right knee
+and the left shoulder <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">par exemple</span>, and fell about
+six yards from the German trenches. A place unhealthy,
+and one sees I could not run away, being
+shot on the bias. I shammed dead. An alive
+French officer would have been too interesting in
+that scenery. I assure m&#39;sieur that the <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">entr&#39;actes</span>
+are far too long in No Man&#39;s Land. I became
+more and more displeased with the management of
+that play as I lay, very badly amused with my
+wounds, and afraid to blink an eye, being a corpse.
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page105">[pg 105]</span>
+<a name="Pg105" id="Pg105" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>The Huns demand a high state of immobility in
+corpses. But I fell happily sidewise, and out of
+the extreme corner of the left eye I caught a
+glimpse of our sand-bags. One blessed that
+twist, though it became enough <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">ennuyant</span>, and one
+would have given a year of good life to turn over.
+Merely to turn over. Am I fatiguing m&#39;sieur?"
+the colonel broke in.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">I prodded him back eagerly into his tale.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"M&#39;sieur is amiable. The long and short of it
+is that when it became dark my good lads began
+to try to rescue my body. Four or five times
+that one-twentieth of eye saw a wriggling form
+work through sand-bags and start slowly, flat to
+the earth, toward me. But the ground was snow-covered
+and the Germans saw too the dark uniform.
+Each time a fusillade of shots broke out,
+and the moving figure dropped hastily behind the
+sand-bags. And each time&mdash;" the colonel stopped
+to light a cigarette, his face ruddy in the glare of
+the match. "Each time I was&mdash;disappointed. I
+became disgusted with the management of that
+theatre, till at last the affair seemed beyond hope,
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page106">[pg 106]</span>
+<a name="Pg106" id="Pg106" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>and I had about determined to turn over and draw
+up my bad leg with my good hand for a bit of
+easement and be shot comfortably, when I was
+aware that the surface of the ground near by was
+heaving&mdash;the white, snowy ground heaving. I
+was close enough to madness between cold and
+pain, and I regarded the phenomenon as a dream.
+But with that hands came out of the heaving
+ground, eyes gleamed. A rope was lashed about
+my middle and I was drawn toward our trenches."
+The cigarette puffed vigorously at this point.
+"M&#39;sieur sees?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">I did not.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The colonel laughed. "One of my Hurons had
+the inspiration to run to a farmhouse not far
+away and requisition a sheet. He wrapped himself
+in it, head and all, and, being Indian, it was
+a bagatelle to him to crawl out on his stomach.
+They were pleased enough, my good fellows, when
+they found they had got not only my body but
+also me in it."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"I can imagine, knowing Hurons, how that
+Huron enjoyed his success," I said. "It&#39;s in their
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page107">[pg 107]</span>
+<a name="Pg107" id="Pg107" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>blood to be swift and silent and adventurous. But
+they&#39;re superstitious; they&#39;re afraid of anything
+supernatural." I hesitated, with a laugh in my
+mind at a memory. "It&#39;s not fitting that I
+should swap stories with a hero of the Great
+War, yet&mdash;I believe you might be amused with
+an adventure of one of my guides." The Frenchman,
+all civil interest, disclaimed his heroism with
+hands and shoulders, but smiling too&mdash;for he had
+small chance at disclaiming with those two crosses
+on his breast.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"I shall be enchanted to hear m&#39;sieur&#39;s tale of
+his guide. For the rest I am myself quite mad
+over the &#39;sport.&#39; I love to insanity the out of
+doors and shooting and fishing. It is a regret
+that the service has given me no opportunity these
+four years for a breathing spell in the woods.
+M&#39;sieur will tell me the tale of his guide&#39;s superstition?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">A scheme began to form in my brain at that
+instant too delightful, it seemed, to come true. I
+put it aside and went on with my story. "I have
+one guide, a Huron half-breed," I said, "whom I
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page108">[pg 108]</span>
+<a name="Pg108" id="Pg108" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>particularly like. He&#39;s an old fellow&mdash;sixty&mdash;but
+light and quick and powerful as a boy. More interesting
+than a boy, because he&#39;s full of experiences.
+Two years ago a bear swam across the
+lake where my camp is, and I went out in a canoe
+with this Rafael and got him."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Colonel Raffr&eacute; made of this fact an event larger
+than&mdash;I am sure&mdash;he would have made of his winning
+of the war cross.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"You shame me, colonel," I said, and went on
+hurriedly. "Rafael, the guide, was pleased about
+the bear. 'When gentlemens kill t&#39;ings, guides is
+more happy,' he explained to me, and he proceeded
+to tell an anecdote. He prefaced it by informing
+me that one time he hunt bear and he see
+devil. He had been hunting, it seemed, two or
+three winters before with his brother-in-law at the
+headwaters of the St. Maurice River, up north
+there," I elucidated, pointing through the window
+toward the "long white street of Beauport," across
+the St. Lawrence. "It&#39;s very lonely country, entirely
+wild, Indian hunting-ground yet. These two
+Hurons, Rafael and his brother-in-law, were on a
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page109">[pg 109]</span>
+<a name="Pg109" id="Pg109" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>two months&#39; trip to hunt and trap, having their
+meagre belongings and provisions on sleds which
+they dragged across the snow. They depended
+for food mostly on what they could trap or shoot&mdash;moose,
+caribou, beaver, and small animals. But
+they had bad luck. They set many traps but
+caught nothing, and they saw no game to shoot.
+So that in a month they were hard pressed. One
+cold day they went two miles to visit a beaver
+trap, where they had seen signs. They hoped to
+find an animal caught and to feast on beaver tail,
+which is good eating."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Here I had to stop and explain much about
+beaver tails, and the rest of beavers, to the Frenchman,
+who was interested like a boy in this new,
+almost unheard-of beast. At length:</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Rafael and his brother-in-law were disappointed.
+A beaver had been close and eaten the bark
+off a birch stick which the men had left, but nothing
+was in the trap. They turned and began a
+weary walk through the desolate country back to
+their little tent. Small comfort waited for them
+there, as their provisions were low, only flour and
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page110">[pg 110]</span>
+<a name="Pg110" id="Pg110" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>bacon left. And they dared not expend much of
+that. They were down-hearted, and to add to it a
+snow-storm came on and they lost their way. Almost
+a hopeless situation&mdash;an uninhabited country,
+winter, snow, hunger. And they were lost.
+&#39;<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Egar&eacute;. Perdu</span>,&#39; Rafael said. But the Huron was
+far from giving up. He peered through the falling
+snow, not thick yet, and spied a mountain
+across a valley. He knew that mountain. He had
+worked near it for two years, logging&mdash;the &#39;<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">chantier</span>,&#39;
+they call it. He knew there was a good
+camp on a river near the mountain, and he knew
+there would be a stove in the camp and, as Rafael
+said, &#39;Mebbe we haf a luck and somebody done
+gone and lef&#39; somet&#39;ing to eat,&#39; Rafael prefers
+to talk English to me. He told me all this in
+broken English.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"It was three miles to the hypothetical camp,
+but the two tired, hungry men in their rather
+wretched clothes started hopefully. And after
+a hard tramp through unbroken forest they came
+in sight of a log shanty and their spirits rose.
+&#39;Pretty tired work,&#39; Rafael said it was. When
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page111">[pg 111]</span>
+<a name="Pg111" id="Pg111" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>they got close to the shanty they hoard a noise
+inside. They halted and looked at each other.
+Rafael knew there were no loggers in these parts
+now, and you&#39;ll remember it was absolutely wild
+country. Then something came to the window
+and looked out."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Something</span>?" repeated the Frenchman in italics.
+His eyes were wide and he was as intent on
+Rafael&#39;s story as heart could desire.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"They couldn&#39;t tell what it was," I went on.
+"A formless apparition, not exactly white or
+black, and huge and unknown of likeness. The
+Indians were frightened by a manner of unearthliness
+about the thing, and the brother-in-law fell
+on his knees and began to pray. &#39;It is the devil,&#39;
+he murmured to Rafael. &#39;He will eat us, or carry
+us to hell.&#39; And he prayed more.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"But old Rafael, scared to death, too, because
+the thing seemed not to be of this world, yet had
+his courage with him. &#39;Mebbe it devil,&#39; he said&mdash;such
+was his report to me&mdash;&#39;anyhow I&#39;m cold and
+hungry, me. I want dat camp. I go shoot dat
+devil.&#39;</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page112">[pg 112]</span>
+<a name="Pg112" id="Pg112" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"He crept up to the camp alone, the brother
+still praying in the bush. Rafael was rather convinced,
+mind you, that he was going to face the
+powers of darkness, but he had his rifle loaded
+and was ready for business. The door was open
+and he stepped inside. Something&mdash;&#39;great beeg
+somet&#39;ing&#39; he put it&mdash;rose up and came at him,
+and he fired. And down fell the devil."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"In the name of a sacred pig, what was it?"
+demanded my Frenchman.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"That was what I asked. It was a bear. The
+men who had been logging in the camp two months
+back had left a keg of maple-syrup and a half barrel
+of flour, and the bear broke into both&mdash;successively&mdash;and
+alternately. He probably thought
+he was in bear-heaven for a while, but it must have
+gotten irksome. For his head was eighteen inches
+wide when they found him, white, with black
+touches. They soaked him in the river two days,
+and sold his skin for twenty dollars. &#39;Pretty
+good for devil skin,&#39; Rafael said."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The Frenchman stared at me a moment and
+then leaned back in his chair and shouted laughter.
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page113">[pg 113]</span>
+<a name="Pg113" id="Pg113" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>The greedy bear&#39;s finish had hit his funny-bone.
+And the three others stopped talking and demanded
+the story told over, which I did, condensing.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"I like zat Hurong for my soldier," Colonel
+Raffr&eacute; stated heartily. "Ze man what are not
+afraid of man <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">or</span> of devil&mdash;zat is ze man to fight ze
+Boches." He was talking English now because
+Colonel Chichely was listening. He went on.
+"Zere is human devils&mdash;oh, but plentee&mdash;what we
+fight in France. I haf not heard of ozzers. But
+I believe well ze man who pull me out in sheet
+would be as your guide Rafael&mdash;he also would
+crip up wiz his rifle on real devil out of hell. But
+yes. I haf not told you how my Indian soldier
+bring in prisoners&mdash;no?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">We all agreed no, and put in a request.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"He brings zem in not one by one always&mdash;not
+always." The colonel grinned. He went on to
+tell this tale, which I shift into the vernacular
+from his laborious English.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">It appears that he had discerned the aptitude
+of his Hurons for reconnaissance work. If he
+needed information out of the dangerous country
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page114">[pg 114]</span>
+<a name="Pg114" id="Pg114" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>lying in front, if he needed a prisoner to question,
+these men were eager to go and get either, get
+anything. The more hazardous the job the better,
+and for a long time they came out of it untouched.
+In the group one man&mdash;nicknamed by the poilus,
+his comrades&mdash;Hirondelle&mdash;the Swallow&mdash;supposedly
+because of his lightness and swiftness,
+was easily chief. He had a fault, however, his
+dislike to bring in prisoners alive. Four times
+he had haled a German corpse before the colonel,
+seeming not rightly to understand that a dead
+enemy was useless for information.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"The Boches are good killing," he had elucidated
+to his officer. And finally: "It is well,
+m&#39;sieur, the colonel. One failed to understand
+that the colonel prefers a live Boche to a dead
+one. Me, I am otherwise. It appears a pity to
+let live such vermin. Has the colonel, by chance,
+heard the things these savages did in Belgium?
+Yes? But then&mdash;Yet I will bring to m&#39;sieur,
+the colonel, all there is to be desired of German
+prisoners alive&mdash;<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">en vie</span>; fat ones; <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">en masse</span>."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">That night Hirondelle was sent out with four
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page115">[pg 115]</span>
+<a name="Pg115" id="Pg115" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>of his fellow Hurons to get, if possible, a prisoner.
+Pretty soon he was separated from the others;
+all but himself returning empty-handed in a couple
+of hours. No Germans seemed to be abroad.
+But Hirondelle did not return.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"He risks too far," grumbled his captain. "He
+has been captured at last. I always knew they
+would get him, one night."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">But that was not the night. At one o&#39;clock
+there was suddenly a sound of lamentation in the
+front trench of the French on that sector. The
+soldiers who were sleeping crawled out of their
+holes in the sides of the trench walls, and crowded
+around the zigzag, narrow way and rubbed their
+eyes and listened to the laughter of officers and
+soldiers on duty. There was Hirondelle, solemn
+as a church, yet with a dancing light in his eyes.
+There, around him, crowded as sheep to a shepherd,
+twenty figures in German uniform stood
+with hands up and wet tears running down pasty
+cheeks. And they were fat, it was noticeable that
+all of them were bulging of figure beyond even the
+German average. They wailed "Kamerad! Gut
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page116">[pg 116]</span>
+<a name="Pg116" id="Pg116" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>Kamerad!" in a chorus that was sickening to the
+plucky poilu make-up. Hirondelle, interrogated
+of many, kept his lips shut till the first excitement
+quieted. Then: "I report to my colonel," he
+stated, and finally he and his twenty were led back
+to the winding trench and the colonel was
+waked to receive them. This was what had happened:
+Hirondelle had wandered about, mostly
+on his stomach, through the darkness and peril
+of No Man&#39;s Land, enjoying himself heartily;
+when suddenly he missed his companions and realized
+that he had had no sign of them for some
+time. That did not trouble him. He explained
+to the colonel that he felt "more free." Also
+that if he pulled off a success he would have
+"more glory." After two hours of this midnight
+amusement, in deadly danger every second, Hirondelle
+heard steps. He froze to the earth, as he
+had learned from wild things in North American
+forests. The steps came nearer. A star-shell
+away down the line lighted the scene so that
+Hirondelle, motionless on the ground, all keen
+eyes, saw two Germans coming toward him. Instantly
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page117">[pg 117]</span>
+<a name="Pg117" id="Pg117" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>he had a scheme. In a subdued growl, yet
+distinctly, he threw over his shoulder an order
+that eight men should go to the right and eight
+to the left. Then, on his feet, he sent into the
+darkness a stern "Halt!" Instantly there was
+a sputter, arms thrown up, the inevitable "Kamerad!"
+and Hirondelle ordered the first German to
+pass him, then a second. Out of the darkness
+emerged a third. Hirondelle waved him on, and
+with that there was a fourth. And a fifth. Behold
+a sixth. About then Hirondelle judged it
+wise to give more orders to his imaginary squad
+of sixteen. But such a panic had seized this
+German mob; that little acting was necessary.
+Dark figure followed dark figure out of the darker
+night&mdash;arms up. They whimpered as they came,
+and on and on they came out of shadows. Hirondelle
+stated that he began to think the Crown
+Prince&#39;s army was surrendering to him. At last,
+when the procession stopped, he&mdash;and his mythical
+sixteen&mdash;marched the entire covey, without
+any objection from them, only abject obedience,
+to the French trenches.</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page118">[pg 118]</span>
+<a name="Pg118" id="Pg118" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The colonel, with this whining crowd weeping
+about him, with Hirondelle&#39;s erect figure confronting
+him, his black eyes regarding the cowards
+with scorn as he made his report&mdash;the colonel
+simply could not understand the situation. All
+these men! "What are you&mdash;soldiers?" he flung
+at the wretched group. And one answered, "No,
+my officer. We are not soldiers, we are the
+cooks." At that there was a wail. "Ach! Who,
+then, will the breakfast cook for my general? He
+will <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">schrecklich</span> angry be for his sausage and his
+sauerkraut."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">By degrees the colonel got the story. A number
+of cooks had combined to protest against new
+regulations, and the general, to punish this
+astounding insubordination, had sent them out
+unarmed, petrified with, terror, into No Man&#39;s
+Land for an hour. They had there encountered
+Hirondelle. Hirondelle drew the attention of the
+colonel to the fact that he had promised prisoners,
+fat ones. "Will my colonel regard the shape of
+these pigs," suggested Hirondelle. "And also
+that they are twenty in number. Enough <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">en
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page119">[pg 119]</span>
+<a name="Pg119" id="Pg119" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>masse</span> for one man to take, is it not, my colonel?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The little dinner-party at the Frontenac discussed
+this episode. "Almost too good to be
+true, colonel," I objected. "You&#39;re sure it <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">is</span>
+true? Bring out your Hirondelle. He ought to
+be home wounded, with a war cross on his breast,
+by now."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The colonel smiled and shook his head. "It is
+that which I cannot do&mdash;show you my Hirondelle.
+Not here, and not in France, by <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">malheur</span>. For he
+ventured once too often and too far, as the captain
+prophesied, and he is dead. God rest the
+brave! Also a Croix de Guerre is indeed his, but
+no Hirondelle is there to claim it."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The silence of a moment was a salute to the
+soul of a warrior passed to the happy hunting-grounds.
+And then I began on another story of
+my Rafael&#39;s adventures which something in the
+colonel&#39;s tale suggested.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The colonel, his winning face all a smile, interrupted.
+"Does one believe, then, in this Rafael of
+m&#39;sieur who caps me each time my tales of my
+Huron Hirondelle? It appears to me that m&#39;sieur
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page120">[pg 120]</span>
+<a name="Pg120" id="Pg120" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>has the brain, of a story-teller and hangs good
+stories on a figure which he has built and named
+so&mdash;Rafael. Me, I cannot believe there exists
+this Rafael. I believe there is only one such gallant
+d&#39;Artagnan of the Hurons, and it is&mdash;it was&mdash;my
+Hirondelle. Show me your Rafael, then!"
+demanded the colonel.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">At that challenge the scheme which had flashed
+into my mind an hour ago gathered shape and
+power. "I will show him to you, colonel," I took
+up the challenge, "if you will allow me." I turned
+to include the others. "Isn&#39;t it possible for you
+all to call a truce and come up tomorrow to my
+club to be my guests for as long or as short a
+time as you will? I can&#39;t say how much pleasure
+it would give me, and I believe I could give you
+something also&mdash;great fishing, shooting, a moose,
+likely, or at least a caribou&mdash;and Rafael. I
+promise Rafael. It&#39;s not unlikely, colonel, that he
+may have known the Hirondelle. The Hurons are
+few. Do come," I threw at them.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">They took it after their kind. The Englishman
+stared and murmured: "Awfully kind, I&#39;m sure,
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page121">[pg 121]</span>
+<a name="Pg121" id="Pg121" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>but quite impossible." The Canadian, our next of
+kin, smiled, shaking his head like a brother. Fitzhugh
+put his arm of brawn about me again till
+that glorious star gleamed almost on my own
+shoulder, and patted me lovingly as he said: "Old
+son, I&#39;d give my eyes to go, if I wasn&#39;t up to my
+ears in job."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">But the Frenchman&#39;s face shone, and he lifted
+a finger that was a sentence. It embodied reflection
+and eagerness and suspense. The rest of us
+gazed at that finger as if it were about to address
+us. And the colonel spoke. "I t&#39;ink," brought
+out the colonel emphatically, "I t&#39;ink I damn
+go."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">And I snatched the finger and the hand of steel
+to which it grew, and wrung both. This was a
+delightful Frenchman. "Good!" I cried out.
+"Glorious! I want you all, but I&#39;m mightily
+pleased to get one. Colonel, you&#39;re a sport."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"But, yes," agreed the colonel happily, "I am
+sport. Why not? I haf four days to wait till my
+sheep sail. Why not kip&mdash;how you say?&mdash;kip
+in my hand for shooting&mdash;go kill moose? I may
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page122">[pg 122]</span>
+<a name="Pg122" id="Pg122" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>talk immensely of zat moose in France&mdash;hein?
+Much more <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">chic</span> as to kill Germans, <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">n&#39;est çe pas</span>?
+Everybody kill Germans."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">At one o&#39;clock next day the out-of-breath little
+train which had gasped up mountains for five
+hours from Quebec uttered a relieved shriek and
+stopped at a doll-house club station sitting by
+itself in the wilderness. Four or five men in worn
+but clean clothes&mdash;they always start clean&mdash;waited
+on the platform, and there was a rapid
+fire of "<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Bon jour</span>, m&#39;sieur," as we alighted. Then
+ten quick eyes took in my colonel in his horizon-blue
+uniform. I was aware of a throb of interest.
+At once there was a scurry for luggage because
+the train must be held till it was off, and the
+guides ran forward to the baggage-car to help.
+I bundled the colonel down a sharp, short hill to
+the river, while smiling, observant Hurons, missing
+not a line of braid or a glitter of button,
+passed with bags and <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">pacquetons</span> as we descended.
+The blue and black and gold was loaded into a
+canoe with an Indian at bow and stern for the
+three-mile paddle to the club-house. He was already
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page123">[pg 123]</span>
+<a name="Pg123" id="Pg123" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>a schoolboy on a holiday with unashamed
+enthusiasm.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"But it is fun&mdash;fun, zis," he shouted to me from
+his canoe. "And <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">lequel</span>, m&#39;sieur, which is Rafael?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Rafael, in the bow of my boat, missed a beat
+of his paddle. It seemed to me he looked older
+than two years back, when I last saw him. His
+shoulders were bent, and his merry and stately
+personality was less in evidence. He appeared
+subdued. He did not turn with a smile or a
+grave glance of inquiry at the question, as I had
+expected. I nodded toward him.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Mais oui</span>," cried out the colonel. "One has
+heard of you, <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">mon ami</span>. One will talk to you later
+of shooting."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Rafael, not lifting his head, answered quietly,
+"<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">C&#39;est bien, m&#39;sieur.</span>"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Just then the canoes slipped past a sandy bar
+decorated with a fresh moose track; the excitement
+of the colonel set us laughing. This man
+was certainly a joy! And with that, after a long
+paddle down the winding river and across two
+breezy lakes, we were at the club-house. We
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page124">[pg 124]</span>
+<a name="Pg124" id="Pg124" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>lunched, and in short order&mdash;for we wanted to
+make camp that night&mdash;I dug into my <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">pacquetons</span>
+and transformed my officer into a sportsman, his
+huge delight in Abernethy &amp; Flitch&#39;s creations
+being a part of the game. Then we were off.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">One has small chance for associating with
+guides while travelling in the woods. One sits in
+a canoe between two, but if there is a wind and
+the boat is <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">charg&eacute;</span> their hands are full with the
+small craft and its heavy load; when the landing
+is made and the "messieurs" are <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">d&eacute;barqu&eacute;s</span>, instantly
+the men are busy lifting canoes on their
+heads and packs on their backs in bizarre, piled-up
+masses to be carried from a leather tump-line,
+a strap of two inches wide going around the forehead.
+The whole length of the spine helps in the
+carrying. My colonel watched Delphise, a husky
+specimen, load. With a grunt he swung up a
+canvas U.S. mailbag stuffed with <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">butin</span>, which
+includes clothes and books and shoes and tobacco
+and cartridges and more. With a half-syllable
+Delphise indicated to Laurent a bag of potatoes
+weighing eighty pounds, a box of tinned biscuit,
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page125">[pg 125]</span>
+<a name="Pg125" id="Pg125" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>a wooden package of cans of condensed milk, a
+rod case, and a raincoat. These Laurent added
+to the spine of Delphise.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"How many pounds?" I asked, as the dark head
+bent forward to equalize the strain.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Delphise shifted weight with another grunt to
+gauge the pull. "About a hundred and eighty
+pounds, m&#39;sieur&mdash;quite heavy&mdash;<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">assez pesant</span>." Off
+he trotted uphill, head bent forward.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The colonel was entranced. "Hardy fellows&mdash;the
+making of fine soldiers," he commented, tossing
+his cigarette away to stare.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">That night after dinner&mdash;but it was called supper&mdash;the
+colonel and I went into the big, airy log
+kitchen with the lake looking in at three windows
+and the forest at two doors. We gunned over
+with the men plans for the next day, for the most
+must be made of every minute of this precious
+military holiday. I explained how precious it
+was, and then I spoke a few words about the
+honor of having as our guest a soldier who had
+come from the front, and who was going back to
+the front. For the life of me I could not resist
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page126">[pg 126]</span>
+<a name="Pg126" id="Pg126" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>a sentence more about the two crosses they had
+seen on his uniform that day. The Cross of War,
+the Legion of Honor! I could not let my men
+miss that! Rafael had been quiet and colorless,
+and I was disappointed in the show qualities of
+my show guide. But the colonel beamed with satisfaction,
+in everything and everybody, and received
+my small introduction with a bow and a
+flourish worthy of Carnegie Hall.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"I am happy to be in this so charming camp,
+in this forest magnificent, on these ancient mountains,"
+orated the colonel floridly. "I am most
+pleased of all to have Huron Indians as my guides,
+because between Hurons and me there are memories."
+The men were listening spell-bound. "But
+yes. I had Huron soldiers serving in my regiment,
+just now at the western front, of whom I
+thought highly. They were all that there is, those
+Hurons of mine, of most fearless, most skilful.
+One among them was pre-eminent. Some of you
+may have known him. I regret to say that I
+never knew his real name, but among his comrades
+he went by the name of l&#39;Hirondelle. From that
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page127">[pg 127]</span>
+<a name="Pg127" id="Pg127" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>name one guesses his qualities&mdash;swift as a swallow,
+untamable, gay, brave to foolishness, moving in
+dashes not to be followed&mdash;such was my Hirondelle.
+And yet this swift bird was in the end
+shot down."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">At this point in the colonel&#39;s speech. I happened
+to look at Rafael, back in the shadows of the
+half-lighted big room. His eyes glittered out of
+the dimness like disks of fire, his face was strained,
+and his figure bent forward. "He must have
+known this chap, the Swallow," I thought to myself.
+"Just possibly a son or brother or nephew
+of his." The colonel was going on, telling in fluent,
+beautiful French the story of how Hirondelle,
+wrapped in a sheet, had rescued him. The men
+drank it in. "When those guides are old, old
+fellows, they&#39;ll talk about this night and the
+colonel&#39;s speech to their great-grandchildren," I
+considered, and again the colonel went on.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Have I m&#39;sieur&#39;s permission to <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">raconter</span> a
+short story of the most amusing which was the
+last escapade of my Hirondelle before he was
+killed?"</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page128">[pg 128]</span>
+<a name="Pg128" id="Pg128" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">M&#39;sieur gave permission eagerly, and the low
+murmur of the voices of the hypnotized guides,
+standing in a group before the colonel, added to
+its force and set him smiling.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"It was like this," he stated. "My Hirondelle
+was out in No Man&#39;s Land of a night, strictly
+charged to behave in a manner <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">comme il faut</span>, for
+he was of a rashness, and we did not wish to lose
+him. He was valuable to us, and beyond that the
+regiment had an affection for him. For such
+reasons his captain tried&mdash;but, yes&mdash;to keep him
+within bounds. As I say, on this night he had
+received particular orders to be <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">sage</span>. So that
+the first thing the fellow does is to lose his comrades,
+for which he had a <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">penchant</span>, one knows.
+After that he crawls over that accursed country,
+in and out of shellholes, rifle in his teeth likely&mdash;the
+good God knows where else, for one need be
+all hands and feet for such crawling. He crawled
+in that fashion till at last he lost himself. And
+then he was concerned to find out where might be
+our lines till in time he heard a sound of snoring
+and was well content. Home at last. He tumbled
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page129">[pg 129]</span>
+<a name="Pg129" id="Pg129" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>into a dark trench, remarking only that it was
+filled with men since he left, and so tired he was
+with his adventure that he pushed away the man
+next, who was at the end, to gain space, and he
+rolled over to sleep. But that troublesome man
+next took too much room. Our Hirondelle
+planted him a kick in the middle of the back. At
+which the man half waked and swore at him&mdash;in
+German. And dropped off to sleep again with his
+leg of a pig slung across Hirondelle&#39;s chest. At
+that second a star-shell lighted up the affair, and
+Hirondelle, staring with much interest, believe me,
+saw a trench filled with sleeping Boches. To get
+out of that as quietly as might be was the
+game&mdash;<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">n&#39;est-ce-pas, mes amis</span>? But not for Hirondelle.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"&#39;My colonel has a liking for prisoners,&#39; he
+reported later. &#39;My captain&#39;s orders were to conduct
+oneself <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">très comme il faut</span>. It is always
+<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">comme il faut</span> to please the colonel. Therefore
+it seemed <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">en regle</span> to take a prisoner. I took him.
+<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Le v&#39;la</span>.&#39;</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"What the fellow did was to wait till the Boche
+next door was well asleep, then slowly remove his
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page130">[pg 130]</span>
+<a name="Pg130" id="Pg130" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>rifle, then fasten on his throat with a grip which
+Hirondelle understood, and finally to overpower
+the Boche till he was ready enough to crawl out
+at the muzzle of Hirondelle&#39;s rifle."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">There was a stir in the little group of guides,
+and from the shadows Rafael&#39;s voice spoke.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Mon colonel&mdash;pardon!"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The colonel turned sharply. "Who is that?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"There were two Germans," spoke the voice out
+of the shadows.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The colonel, too astonished to answer, stared.
+The voice, trembling, old, went on. "The second
+man waked and one was obliged to strangle him
+also. One brought the brace to the captain at
+the end of the carabine&mdash;rifle."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"In heaven&#39;s name who are you?" demanded
+the colonel.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">From where old Rafael had been, bowed and
+limp in his humble, worn clothes, stepped at a
+stride a soldier, head up, shoulders squared, glittering
+eyes forward, and stood at attention. It
+was like magic. One hand snapped up in a smart
+salute.</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page131">[pg 131]</span>
+<a name="Pg131" id="Pg131" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Who are you?" whispered the colonel.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"If the colonel pleases&mdash;l&#39;Hirondelle."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">I heard the colonel&#39;s breath come and go as he
+peered, leaning forward to the soldierly figure.
+"<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Nom de Ciel</span>," he murmured, "I believe it is."
+Then in sharp sentences: "You were reported
+killed. Are you a deserter?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The steady image of a soldier dropped back a
+step.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"My colonel&mdash;no."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Explain this."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Rafael&mdash;l&#39;Hirondelle&mdash;explained. He had not
+been killed, but captured and sent to a German
+prison-camp.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"You escaped?" the colonel threw in.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"But yes, my colonel."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The colonel laughed. "One would know it.
+The clumsy Boches could not hold the Swallow."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"But no, my colonel."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Go on."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"One went to work before light, my colonel, in
+that accursed prison-camp. One was out of sight
+from the guard for a moment, turning a corner, so
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page132">[pg 132]</span>
+<a name="Pg132" id="Pg132" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>that on a morning I slipped into some bushes and
+hid in a dugout&mdash;for it was an old camp&mdash;all day.
+That night I walked. I walked for seven nights
+and lay hid for seven days, eating, my colonel,
+very little. Then, <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">v&#39;la</span>, I was in front of the
+French lines."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"You ran across to our lines?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"But not exactly. One sees that I was yet in
+dirty German prison clothes, and looked like an
+infantryman of the Boches, so that a poilu rushed
+at me with a bayonet. I believed, then, that I
+had come upon a German patrol. Each thought
+the other a Hun. I managed to wrest from the
+poilu his rifle with the bayonet, but as we fought
+another shot me&mdash;in the side."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"You were wounded?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Yes, my colonel."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"In hospital?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Yes, my colonel."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"How long?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Three months, my colonel."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Why are you not again in the army?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The face of the erect soldier, Hirondelle, the
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page133">[pg 133]</span>
+<a name="Pg133" id="Pg133" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>dare-devil, was suddenly the face of a man grown
+old, ill, and broken-hearted. He stared at the
+stalwart French officer, gathering himself with an
+effort. "I&mdash;was discharged, my colonel, as&mdash;unfit."
+His head in its old felt hat dropped into
+his hands suddenly, and he broke beyond control
+into sobs that shook not only him but every man
+there.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The colonel stepped forward and put an arm
+around the bent shoulders. "<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Mon h&eacute;ros!</span>" said
+the colonel.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">With that Rafael found words, never a hard
+task for him. Yet they came with gasps between.
+"To be cast out as an old horse&mdash;at the moment
+of glory! I had dreamed all my life&mdash;of
+fighting. And I had it&mdash;oh, my colonel&mdash;I had
+it! The glory came when I was old and knew how
+to be happy in it. Not as a boy who laughs and
+takes all as his right. I was old, yes, but I was
+good to kill the vermin. I avenged the children
+and the women whom those savages&mdash;My people,
+the savages of the wood, knew no better, yet they
+have not done things as bad as these vile ones who
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page134">[pg 134]</span>
+<a name="Pg134" id="Pg134" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>were educated, who knew. Therefore I killed
+them. I was old, but I was strong, my colonel
+knows. Not for nothing have I lived a hard life.
+<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">On a vu de la misère</span>. I have hunted moose and
+bear and kept my muscles of steel and my eyes of
+a hawk. It is in my blood to be a fighting man.
+I fought with pleasure, and I was troubled with
+no fear. I was old, but I could have killed many
+devils more. And so I was shot down by my own
+friend after seven days of hard life. And the
+young soldier doctor discharged me as unfit to
+fight. And so I am come home very fast to hide
+myself, for I am ashamed. I am finished. The
+fighting and the glory are for me no more."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The colonel stepped back a bit and his face
+flamed. "Glory!" he whispered. "Glory no more
+for the Hirondelle? What of the Croix de
+Guerre?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Rafael shook his head. "I haf heard my colonel
+who said they would have given me&mdash;me, the
+Hirondelle&mdash;the war cross. That now is lost
+too."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Lost!" The colonel&#39;s deep tone was full of
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page135">[pg 135]</span>
+<a name="Pg135" id="Pg135" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>the vibration which only a French voice carries.
+With a quick movement he unfastened the catch
+that held the green ribbon, red-striped, of his own
+cross of war. He turned and pinned the thing
+which men die for on the shabby coat of the
+guide. Then he kissed him on either cheek.
+"My comrade," he said, "your glory will never
+be old."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">There was deep silence in the camp kitchen.
+The crackling of wood that fell apart, the splashing
+of the waves of the lake on the pebbles by the
+shore were the only sounds on earth. For a long
+minute the men stood as if rooted; the colonel,
+poised and dramatic, and, I stirred to the depths
+of my soul by this great ceremony which had
+come out of the skies to its humble setting in the
+forest&mdash;the men and the colonel and I, we all
+watched Rafael.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">And Rafael slowly, yet with the iron tenacity
+of his race, got back his control. "My colonel,"
+he began, and then failed. The Swallow did not
+dare trust his broken wings. It could not be
+done&mdash;to speak his thanks. He looked up with
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page136">[pg 136]</span>
+<a name="Pg136" id="Pg136" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>black eyes shining through tears which spoke
+everything.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Tomorrow," he stated brokenly, "if we haf
+a luck, my colonel and I go kill a moose."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">They had a luck.</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page" />
+
+<div class="tei tei-div">
+<a name="toc_12" id="toc_12"></a>
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page139">[pg 139]</span>
+<a name="Pg139" id="Pg139" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<h1 class="tei tei-head">ONLY ONE OF THEM</h1>
+
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">It was noon on a Saturday. Out of the many
+buildings of the great electrical manufacturing
+plant at Schenectady poured employees by hundreds.
+Thirty trolley-cars were run on special
+tracks to the place and stood ready to receive the
+sea streaming towards them. Massed motor-cars
+waited beyond the trolleys for their owners, officials
+of the works. The girl in blue serge, standing
+at a special door of a special building counted,
+keeping watch meantime of the crowd, the cars.
+A hundred and twenty-five she made it; it came
+to her mind that State Street in Albany on a day
+of some giant parade was not unlike this, not less
+a throng. The girl, who was secretary to an assistant
+manager, was used to the sight, but it
+was an impressive sight and she was impressionable
+and found each Saturday&#39;s pageant a wonder.
+The pageant was more interesting it may be because
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page140">[pg 140]</span>
+<a name="Pg140" id="Pg140" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>it focussed always on one figure&mdash;and here
+he was.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Did you wait, long?" he asked as he came up,
+broad-shouldered and athletic of build, boyish and
+honest of face, as good looking a young American
+as one may see in any crowd.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"I was early." She smiled up at him as they
+swung off towards the trolleys; her eyes flashed
+a glance which said frankly that she found him
+satisfactory to look upon.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">They sped past others, many others, and made
+a trolley car and a seat together, which was the
+goal. They always made it, every Saturday, yet
+it was always a game. Exhilarated by the winning
+of the game they settled into the scat for
+the three-quarters of an hour run; it was quite
+a worth-while world, the smiling glances said one
+to the other.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The girl gazed, not seeing them particularly,
+at the slower people filling the seats and the passage
+of the car. Then: "Oh," she spoke, "what
+was it you were going to tell me?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The man&#39;s face grew sober, a bit troubled.
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page141">[pg 141]</span>
+<a name="Pg141" id="Pg141" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>"Well," he said, "I&#39;ve decided. I&#39;m going to
+enlist."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">She was still for a second. Then: "I think
+that&#39;s splendid," she brought out. "Splendid.
+Of course, I knew you&#39;d do it. It&#39;s the only
+thing that could be. I&#39;m glad."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Yes," the man spoke slowly. "It&#39;s the only
+thing that could be. There&#39;s nothing to keep me.
+My mother&#39;s dead. My father&#39;s husky and not
+old and my sisters are with him. There&#39;s nobody
+to suffer by my going."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"N-no," the girl agreed. "But&mdash;it&#39;s the fine
+thing to do just the same. You&#39;re thirty-two you
+see, and couldn&#39;t be drafted. That makes it
+rather great of you to go."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Well," the man answered, "not so very great,
+I suppose, as it&#39;s what all young Americans are
+doing. I rather think it&#39;s one of those things,
+like spelling, which are no particular credit if you
+do them, but a disgrace if you don&#39;t."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"What a gray way of looking at it!" the girl
+objected. "As if all the country wasn&#39;t glorying
+in the boys who go! As if we didn&#39;t all stand
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page142">[pg 142]</span>
+<a name="Pg142" id="Pg142" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>back of you and crowd the side lines to watch you,
+bursting with pride. You know we all love you."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Do you love me, Mary? Enough to marry me
+before I go?" His voice was low, but the girl
+missed no syllable. She had heard those words
+or some like them in his voice before.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Oh, Jim," she begged, "don&#39;t ask me now.
+I&#39;m not certain&mdash;yet. I&mdash;I couldn&#39;t get along
+very well without you. I care a lot. But&mdash;I&#39;m
+not just sure it&#39;s&mdash;the way I ought to care to
+marry you."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">As alone in the packed car as in a wood, the
+little drama went on and no one noticed. "I&#39;m
+sorry, Mary." The tone was dispirited. "I
+could go with a lot lighter heart if we belonged
+to each other."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Don&#39;t say that, Jim," she pleaded. "You
+make me out&mdash;a slacker. You don&#39;t want me to
+marry you as a duty?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Good Lord, no!"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"I know that. And I&mdash;do care. There&#39;s nobody
+like you. I admire you so for going&mdash;but
+you&#39;re not afraid of anything. It&#39;s easy for you,
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page143">[pg 143]</span>
+<a name="Pg143" id="Pg143" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>that part. I suppose a good many are really&mdash;afraid.
+Of the guns and the horror&mdash;all that.
+You&#39;re lucky, Jim. You don&#39;t give that a
+thought."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The man flashed an odd look, and then regarded
+his hands joined on his knee.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"I do appreciate your courage. I admire that
+a lot. But somehow Jim there&#39;s a doubt that
+holds me back. I can&#39;t be sure I&mdash;love you
+enough; that it&#39;s the right way&mdash;for that."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The man sighed. "Yes," he said. "I see.
+Maybe some time. Heavens knows I wouldn&#39;t
+want you unless it was whole-hearted. I wouldn&#39;t
+risk your regretting it, not if I wanted you ten
+times more. Which is impossible." He put out
+his big hand with a swift touch on hers. "Maybe
+some time. Don&#39;t worry," he said. "I&#39;m yours."
+And went on in a commonplace tone, "I think
+I&#39;ll show up at the recruiting office this afternoon,
+and I&#39;ll come to your house in the evening as
+usual. Is that all right?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The car sped into Albany and the man went
+to her door with the girl and left her with few
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page144">[pg 144]</span>
+<a name="Pg144" id="Pg144" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>words more and those about commonplace subjects.
+As he swung down the street he went over
+the episode in his mind, and dissected it and
+dwelt on words and phrases and glances, and
+drew conclusions as lovers have done before, each
+detail, each conclusion mightily important, outweighing
+weeks of conversation of the rest of the
+world together. At last he shook his head and set
+his lips.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"It&#39;s not honest." He formed the words with
+his lips now, a summing up of many thoughts in
+his brain. The brain went on elaborating the
+text. "She thinks I&#39;m brave; she thinks it&#39;s easy
+for me to face enlisting, and the rest. She thinks
+I&#39;m the makeup which can meet horror and suffering
+light-heartedly. And I&#39;m not. She admires
+me for that&mdash;she said so. I&#39;m not it. I&#39;m fooling
+her; it&#39;s not honest. Yet"&mdash;he groaned aloud.
+"Yet I may lose her if I tell her the truth. I&#39;m
+afraid. I am. I hate it. I can&#39;t bear&mdash;I can&#39;t
+bear to leave my job and my future, just when it&#39;s
+opening out. But I could do that. Only I&#39;m&mdash;Oh,
+damnation&mdash;I&#39;m afraid. Horror and danger,
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page145">[pg 145]</span>
+<a name="Pg145" id="Pg145" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>agony of men and horses, myself wounded maybe,
+out on No Man&#39;s Land&mdash;left there&mdash;hours. To
+die like a dog. Oh, my God&mdash;must I? If I tell it
+will break the little hold I have on her. Must I go
+to this devil&#39;s dance that I hate&mdash;and give up her
+love besides? But yet&mdash;it isn&#39;t honest to fool
+her. Oh, God, what will I do?" People walking
+up State Street, meeting a sober-faced young
+man, glanced at him with no particular interest.
+A woman waiting on a doorstep regarded him
+idly.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Why isn&#39;t he in uniform?" she wondered as
+one does wonder in these days at a strong chap
+in mufti. Then she rebuked her thought. "Undoubtedly
+there&#39;s a good reason; American boys
+are not slackers."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">His slow steps carried him beyond her vision
+and casual thought. The people in the street
+and the woman on the doorstep did not think or
+care that what they saw was a man fighting his
+way through the crisis of his life, fighting alone
+"per aspera ad astra&mdash;" through thorns to the
+stars.</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page146">[pg 146]</span>
+<a name="Pg146" id="Pg146" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">He lunched with a man at a club and after that
+took his way to the building on Broadway where
+were the recruiting headquarters. He had told
+her that he was going to enlist. As he walked
+he stared at the people in the streets as a man
+might stare going to his execution. These people
+went about their affairs, he considered, as if he&mdash;who
+was about to die&mdash;did not, in passing their
+friendly commonplace, salute them. He did salute
+them. Out of his troubled soul he sent a silent
+greeting to each ordinary American hurrying
+along, each standing to him for pleasant and
+peaceful America, America of all his days up to
+now. Was he to toss away this comfortable
+comradeship, his life to be, everything he cared
+for on earth, to go into hell, and likely never come
+back? Why? Why must he? There seemed to
+be plenty who wanted to fight&mdash;why not let them?
+It was the old slacker&#39;s argument; the man was
+ashamed as he caught himself using it; he had the
+grace to see its selfishness and cowardice. Yet his
+soul was in revolt as he drove his body to the
+recruiting office, and the thoughts that filled him
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page147">[pg 147]</span>
+<a name="Pg147" id="Pg147" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>were not of the joy of giving but of the pain of
+giving up. With that he stood on the steps of
+the building and here was Charlie Thurston
+hurrying by on the sidewalk.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Hello, Jim! Going in to enlist? So long till
+you come back with one leg and an eye out."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">It was Thurston&#39;s idea of a joke. He would
+have been startled if he had known into what a
+trembling balance his sledge-hummer wit cast its
+unlucky weight. The balance quivered at the
+blow, shook back and forth an instant and fell
+heavily. Jim Barlow wheeled, sprang down the
+stone steps and bolted up the street, panting as
+one who has escaped a wild beast. Thurston had
+said it. That was what was due to happen. It
+was now three o&#39;clock; Barlow fled up State
+Street to the big hotel and took a room and locked
+his door and threw himself on the bed. What was
+he to do? After weeks of hesitation he had come
+to the decision that he would offer himself to his
+country. He saw&mdash;none plainer&mdash;the reasons
+why it was fit and right so to do. Other men were
+giving up homes and careers and the whole bright
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page148">[pg 148]</span>
+<a name="Pg148" id="Pg148" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>and easy side of life&mdash;why not he? It was the
+greatest cause to fight for in the world&#39;s history&mdash;should
+he not fight for it? How, after the war,
+might he meet friends, his own people, his children
+to come, if he alone of his sort had no honorable
+record to show? Such arguments, known to all,
+he repeated, even aloud he repeated them, tossing
+miserably about the bed in his hotel room. And
+his mind at once accepted them, but that was all.
+His spirit failed to spring to his mind&#39;s support
+with the throb of emotion which is the spark that
+makes the engine go. The wheels went around
+over and over but the connection was not made.
+The human mind is useful machinery, but it is
+only the machine&#39;s master, the soul, which can
+use it. Over and over he got to his feet and spoke
+aloud: "Now I will go." Over and over a repulsion
+seized him so strongly that his knees
+gave way and he fell back on the bed. If he had
+a mother, he thought, she might have helped, but
+there was no one. Mary&mdash;but he could not risk
+Mary&#39;s belief in his courage. Only a mother
+would have understood entirely.</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page149">[pg 149]</span>
+<a name="Pg149" id="Pg149" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">With that, sick at heart, the hideous sea of
+counter arguments, arguments of a slacker,
+surged upon him. What would it all matter a
+hundred years from now? Wasn&#39;t he more useful
+in his place keeping up the industries of the
+nation? Wasn&#39;t he a bigger asset to America as
+an alive engineer, an expert in his work, than as
+mere cannon fodder, one of thousands to be shot
+into junk in a morning&#39;s "activity"&mdash;just one
+of them? Because the Germans were devils why
+should he let them reach over here, away over
+here, and drag him out of a decent and happy life
+and throw him like dirt into the horrible mess
+they had made, and leave him dead or worse&mdash;mangled
+and useless. Then, again&mdash;there were
+plenty of men mad to fight; why not let them?
+Through a long afternoon he fought with the
+beasts, and dinner-time came and he did not notice,
+and at last he rose and, telephoning first to Mary
+a terse message that he would not be able to come
+this evening, he went out, hardly knowing what he
+did, and wandered up town.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">There was a humble church in a quiet street
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page150">[pg 150]</span>
+<a name="Pg150" id="Pg150" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>where a service flag hung, thick with dark stars,
+and the congregation were passing out from a
+special service for its boys who were going off to
+camp. The boys were there on the steps, surrounded
+by people eager to touch their hands, a
+little group of eight or ten with serious bright
+faces, and a look in their eyes which stabbed into
+Barlow. One may see that look any day in any
+town, meeting the erect stalwart lads in khaki
+who are about our streets. It is the look of
+those who have made a vital sacrifice and know
+the price, and whose minds are at peace. Barlow,
+lingering on the corner across the way, stared
+hungrily. How had they got that look, that
+peace? If only he might talk to one of them!
+Yet he knew how dumb an animal is a boy, and
+how helpless these would be to give him the master
+word.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The master-word, he needed that; he needed it
+desperately. He must go; he must. Life would
+be unendurable without self-respect; no amount of
+explaining could cover the stain on his soul if
+he failed in the answer to the call of honor. That
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page151">[pg 151]</span>
+<a name="Pg151" id="Pg151" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>was it, it was in a nut-shell, the call. Yet he
+could not hear it as his call. He wandered unhappily
+away and left the church and its dissolving
+congregation, and the boys, the pride of the
+church, the boys who were now, they also, separating
+and going back each to his home for the last
+evening perhaps, to be loved and made much of.
+Barlow vaguely pictured the scenes in those little
+homes&mdash;eyes bright with unshed tears, love and
+laughter and courage, patriotism as fine as in any
+great house in America, determination that in giving
+to America what was dearest it should be
+given with high spirit&mdash;that the boys should have
+smiling faces to remember, over there. And then
+again&mdash;love and tender words. He was missing
+all that. He, too, might go back to his father&#39;s
+house an enlisted man, and meet his father&#39;s eyes
+of pride and see his sisters gaze at him with a new
+respect, feel their new honor of him in the touch
+of arms about his neck. All these things were for
+him too, if he would but take them. With that
+there was the sound of singing, shrill, fresh voices
+singing down the street. He wheeled about. A
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page152">[pg 152]</span>
+<a name="Pg152" id="Pg152" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>company of little girls were marching towards
+him and he smiled, looking at them, thinking the
+sight as pretty as a garden of flowers. They
+were from eight to ten or eleven years old and
+in the bravery of fresh white dresses; each had
+a big butterfly of pink or blue or yellow or white
+ribbon perched on each little fair or dark head, and
+each carried over her shoulder a flag. Quite evidently
+they were coming from the celebration at
+the church, where in some capacity they had figured.
+Not millionaires children these; the little
+sisters likely of the boys who were going to be
+soldiers; just dear things that bloom all over
+America, the flowering of the land, common to
+rich and poor. As they sprang along two by
+two, in unmartial ranks, they sang with all their
+might "The Long, Long Trail."</p>
+
+<div style="text-align: left" class="tei tei-lg">
+<p class="tei tei-l">"There&#39;s a long, long trail that&#39;s leading</p>
+<p style="margin-left: 6em" class="tei tei-l">To No Man&#39;s Land in France</p>
+<p class="tei tei-l">Where the shrapnel shells are bursting</p>
+<p style="margin-left: 6em" class="tei tei-l">And we must advance."</p>
+</div>
+
+<p style="text-align: center" class="tei tei-p"> * * * * *</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">And then:</p>
+
+<div style="text-align: left" class="tei tei-lg">
+<p class="tei tei-l">We&#39;re going to show old Kaiser Bill</p>
+<p class="tei tei-l">What our Yankee boys can do.</p>
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page153">[pg 153]</span>
+<a name="Pg153" id="Pg153" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Jim Barlow, his hands in his pockets, backed
+up against a house and listened to the clear, high,
+little voices. "No Man&#39;s Land in France&mdash;We
+must advance&mdash;What our Yankee boys can do."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">As if his throat were gripped by a quick hand,
+a storm of emotion swept him. The little girls&mdash;little
+girls who were the joy, each one, of some
+home! Such little things as the Germans&mdash;in
+Belgium&mdash;"Oh, my God!" The words burst aloud
+from his lips. These were trusting&mdash;innocent,
+ignorant&mdash;to "What our Yankee boys can do."
+Without that, without the Yankee boys, such as
+these would be in the power of wild beasts. It
+was his affair. Suddenly he felt that stab through
+him.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"God," he prayed, whispering it as the little
+girls passed on singing, "help me to protect them;
+help me to forget myself." And the miracle that
+sends an answer sometimes, even in this twentieth
+century, to true prayer happened to Jim Barlow.
+Behold he had forgotten himself. With his head
+up and peace in his breast, and the look in his
+face already, though he did not know it, that our
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page154">[pg 154]</span>
+<a name="Pg154" id="Pg154" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>soldier boys wear, he turned and started at a great
+pace down the street to the recruiting office.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Why, you did come."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">It was nine o&#39;clock and he stood with lighted
+face in the middle of the little library. And she
+came in; it was an event to which he never got
+used, Mary&#39;s coming into a room. The room
+changed always into such an astonishing place.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Mary, I&#39;ve done it. I&#39;m&mdash;" his voice choked
+a bit&mdash;"I&#39;m a soldier." He laughed at that.
+"Well not so you&#39;d notice it, yet. But I&#39;ve taken
+the first step."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"I knew, Jim. You said you were going to
+enlist. Why did you telephone you couldn&#39;t
+come?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">He stared down at her, holding her hands yet.
+He felt, unphrased, strong, the overwhelming conviction
+that she was the most desirable thing on
+earth. And directly on top of that conviction
+another, that he would be doing her desirableness,
+her loveliness less than the highest honor if he
+posed before her in false colors. At whatever cost
+to himself he must be honest with her. Also&mdash;he
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page155">[pg 155]</span>
+<a name="Pg155" id="Pg155" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>was something more now than his own man; he
+was a soldier of America, and inside and out he
+would be, for America&#39;s sake, the best that was in
+him to be.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Mary, I&#39;ve got a thing to tell you."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Yes?" The sure way in which she smiled up
+at him made the effort harder.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"I fooled you. You think I&#39;m a hero. And I&#39;m
+not. I&#39;m a&mdash;" for the life of him he could not get
+out the word "coward." He went on: "I&#39;m a
+blamed baby." And he told her in a few words,
+yet plainly enough what he had gone through in
+the long afternoon. "It was the kiddies who
+clinched it, with their flags and their hair ribbons&mdash;and
+their Yankee boys. I couldn&#39;t stand
+for&mdash;not playing square with them."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Suddenly he gripped her hands so that it hurt.
+"Mary, God help me, I&#39;ll try to fight the devils
+over there so that kiddies like that, and&mdash;you,
+and all the blessed people, the whole dear shooting-match
+will be safe over here. I&#39;m glad&mdash;I&#39;m
+so glad I&#39;m going to have a hand in it. Mary,
+it&#39;s queer, but I&#39;m happier than I&#39;ve been in
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page156">[pg 156]</span>
+<a name="Pg156" id="Pg156" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>months. Only"&mdash;his brows drew anxiously.
+"Only I&#39;m scared stiff for fear you think me&mdash;a
+coward."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">He had the word out now. Thee taste wasn&#39;t
+so bad after all; it seemed oddly to have nothing
+to do with himself. "Mary, dear, couldn&#39;t you&mdash;forget
+that in time? When I&#39;ve been over there
+and behaved decently&mdash;and I think I will. Somehow
+I&#39;m not afraid of being afraid now. It feels
+like a thing that couldn&#39;t be done&mdash;by a soldier of
+Uncle Sam&#39;s. I&#39;ll just look at the other chaps&mdash;all
+heroes, you know&mdash;and be so proud I&#39;m with
+them and so keen to finish our job that I know&mdash;somehow
+I <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">know</span> I&#39;ll never think about my blooming
+self at all. It&#39;s queer to say it, Mary, but
+the way it looks now I&#39;m in it, it&#39;s not just country
+even. It&#39;s religion. See, Mary?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">There was no sound, no glance from Mary.
+But he went on, unaware, so rapt was he in his
+new illumination.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"And when I come back, Mary, with a decent
+record&mdash;just possibly with a war-cross&mdash;oh, my
+word! Think of me! Then, couldn&#39;t you forget
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page157">[pg 157]</span>
+<a name="Pg157" id="Pg157" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>this business I&#39;ve been telling you? Do you
+think you could marry me then?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">What was the matter? Why did she stand so
+still with her head bending lower and lower, the
+color deepening on the bit of cheek that his anxious
+eyes could see.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Mary!"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Suddenly she was clutching his collar as if in
+deadly fear.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Mary, what&#39;s the matter? I&#39;m such a fool,
+but&mdash;oh, Mary, dear!"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">With that Mary-dear straightened and, slipping
+her clutch to the lapel of his old coat, spoke.
+She looked into his eyes with a smile that was
+sweeter&mdash;oh, much sweeter!&mdash;for tears that
+dimmed it, and she choked most awfully between
+words. "Jim"&mdash;and a choke. "Jim, I&#39;m terrified
+to think I nearly let you get away. You.
+And me not worthy to lace your shoes&mdash;" ("Oh,
+gracious, Mary&mdash;don&#39;t!") "me&mdash;the idiot, backing
+and filling when I had the chance of my life at&mdash;at
+a hero. Oh, Jim!"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Here! Mary, don&#39;t you understand? I&#39;ve
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page158">[pg 158]</span>
+<a name="Pg158" id="Pg158" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>been telling you I was scared blue. I hated to tell
+you Mary, and it&#39;s the devil to tell you twice&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">What was this? Did Heaven then sometimes
+come down unawares on the head of an every-day
+citizen with great lapses of character? Jim Barlow,
+entranced, doubted his senses yet could not
+doubt the touch of soft hands clasped in his
+neck. He held his head back a little to be sure
+that they were real. Yes, they were there, the
+hands&mdash;Barlow&#39;s next remark was long, but untranslatable.
+Minutes later. "Mary, tell me what
+you mean. Not that I care much if&mdash;if this."
+Language grows elliptical under stress. "But&mdash;did
+you get me? I&#39;m&mdash;a coward." A hand
+flashed across his mouth.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Don&#39;t you dare, Jim, you&#39;re the bravest&mdash;bravest&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The words died in a sharp break. "Why, Jim
+it was a hundred thousand times pluckier to be
+afraid and then go. Can&#39;t you see that, you big
+stupid?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"But, Mary, you said you admired it when&mdash;when
+you thought I was a lion of courage."</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page159">[pg 159]</span>
+<a name="Pg159" id="Pg159" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Of course. I admired you. Now I adore
+you."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Well," summed up, Barlow bewildered, "if
+women aren&#39;t the blamedest!"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">And Mary squealed laughter. She put hands
+each side of his face. "Jim&mdash;listen. I&#39;ll try to
+explain because you have a right to understand."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Well, yes," agreed Jim.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"It&#39;s like this. I thought you&#39;d enlist and I
+never dreamed you were balky. I didn&#39;t know
+you hated it so. Why didn&#39;t you tell me?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Go on," urged Jim.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"I thought you were mad to be going, like&mdash;like
+these light-headed boys. That you didn&#39;t mind
+leaving me compared to the adventure. That
+you didn&#39;t care for danger. But now&mdash;now."
+She covered his eyes with her fingers, "Now Jim,
+you need me. A woman can&#39;t love a man her
+best unless she can help him. Against everything&mdash;sorrow,
+mosquitoes, bad food&mdash;drink&mdash;any old
+bother. That&#39;s the alluring side of tipplers.
+Women want to help them. So, now I know you
+need me," the soft, unsteady voice wandered on,
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page160">[pg 160]</span>
+<a name="Pg160" id="Pg160" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>and Jim, anchored between, the hands, drank in
+her look with his eyes and her tones with his ears
+and prayed that the situation might last a week.
+"You need me so, to tell you how much finer you
+are than if you&#39;d gone off without a quiver."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Barlow sighed in contentment. "And me thinking
+I was the solitary &#39;fraid-cat of America!"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Solitary! Why, Jim, there must be at least
+ten hundred thousand men going through this
+same battle. All the ones old enough to think,
+probably. Why Jim&mdash;you&#39;re only one of them.
+In that speech the other night the man said this
+war was giving men their souls. I think it&#39;s your
+kind he meant, the kind that realizes the bad
+things over there and the good things over here
+and goes just the same. The kind&mdash;you are."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"I&#39;m a hero from Hero-ville," murmured Barlow.
+"But little Mary, when I come back mangled
+will you feel the same? Will you marry me
+then, Mary?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"I&#39;ll marry you any minute," stated Mary,
+"and when you come back I&#39;ll love you one extra
+for every mangle."</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page161">[pg 161]</span>
+<a name="Pg161" id="Pg161" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Any minute," repeated Barlow dramatically.
+"Tomorrow?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">And summed up again the heaven that he could
+not understand and did not want to, "Search
+me," he adjured the skies in good Americanese,
+"if girls aren&#39;t the blamedest."</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page" />
+
+<div class="tei tei-div">
+<a name="toc_13" id="toc_13"></a>
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page165">[pg 165]</span>
+<a name="Pg165" id="Pg165" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<h1 class="tei tei-head">THE V.C.</h1>
+
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">I had forgotten that I ordered frogs&#39; legs.
+When mine were placed before me I laughed. I
+always laugh at the sight of frogs&#39; legs because of
+the person and the day of which they remind me.
+Nobody noticed that I laughed or asked the
+reason why, though it was an audible chuckle,
+and though I sat at the head of my own dinner-party
+at the Cosmic Club.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The man for whom the dinner was given, Colonel
+Robert Thornton, my cousin, a Canadian, who
+got his leg shot off at Vimy Ridge, was making
+oration about the German Crown Prince&#39;s tactics
+at Verdun, and that was the reason that ten men
+were not paying attention to me and that I was
+not paying attention to Bobby. When the good
+chap talks human talk, tells what happened to
+people and what their psychological processes
+seemed to be, he is entertaining. He has a genuine
+gift of sympathy and a power to lead others
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page166">[pg 166]</span>
+<a name="Pg166" id="Pg166" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>in the path he treads; in short, he tells a good
+story. But like most people who do one thing
+particularly well he is always priding himself on
+the way he does something else. He likes to look
+at Colonel Thornton as a student of the war, and
+he has the time of his life when he can get people
+to listen to what he knows Joffre and Foch and
+Haig and Hindenberg ought to have done. So
+at this moment he was enjoying his evening, for
+the men I had asked to meet him, all strangers to
+him, ignorant of his real powers, were hanging
+on his words, partly because no one can help
+liking him whatever he talks about, and partly
+because, with that pathetic empty trouser-leg and
+the crutch hooked over his chair, he was an undoubted
+hero. So I heard the sentences ambling,
+and reflected that Hilaire Belloc with maps and
+a quiet evening would do my tactical education
+more good than Bobby Thornton&#39;s discursions.
+And about then I chuckled unnoticed, over the
+silly frogs&#39; legs.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Tell me, Colonel Thornton, do you consider
+that the French made a mistake in concentrating
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page167">[pg 167]</span>
+<a name="Pg167" id="Pg167" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>so much of their reserve&mdash;" It was the Governor
+himself who was demanding this earnestly of
+Bobby. And I saw that the Governor and the
+rest were hypnotized, and did not need me.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">So I sat at the head of the table, and waiters
+brooded over us, and cucumbers and the usual
+trash happened, and Bobby held forth while the
+ten who were bidden listened as to one sent from
+heaven. And, being superfluous, I withdrew mentally
+to a canoe in a lonely lake and went
+frogging.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Vicariously. I do not like frogging in person.
+The creature smiles. Also he appeals because he
+is ugly and complacent. But for the grace of
+God I might have looked so. He sits in supreme
+hideousness frozen to the end of a wet log, with
+his desirable hind legs spread in view, and smiles
+his bronze smile of confidence in his own charm
+and my friendship. It is more than I can do to
+betray that smile. So, hating to destroy the
+beast yet liking to eat the leg, about once in my
+summer vacation in camp I go frogging, and make
+the guides do it.</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page168">[pg 168]</span>
+<a name="Pg168" id="Pg168" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">It would not be etiquette to send them out
+alone, for in our club guides are supposed to do
+no fishing or shooting&mdash;no sport. Therefore, I
+sit in a canoe and pretend to take a frog in a
+landing-net and miss two or three and shortly
+hand over the net to Josef. We have decided on
+landing-nets as our tackle. I once shot the animals
+with a .22 Flobert rifle, but almost invariably they
+dropped, like a larger bullet, off the log and into
+the mud, and that was the end. We never could
+retrieve them. Also at one time we fished them
+with a many-pronged hook and a bit of red
+flannel. But that seemed too bitter a return for
+the bronze smile, and I disliked the method, besides
+being bad at it. We took to the landing-net.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">To see Josef, enraptured with the delicate
+sport, approach a net carefully till within an
+inch of the smile, and then give the old graven
+image a smart rap on the legs in question to
+make him leap headlong into the snare&mdash;to see
+that and Josef&#39;s black Indian eyes glitter with joy
+at the chase is amusing. I make him slaughter
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page169">[pg 169]</span>
+<a name="Pg169" id="Pg169" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>the game instantly, which appears supererogatory
+to Josef who would exactly as soon have a collection
+of slimy ones leaping around the canoe. But
+I have them dead and done for promptly, and
+piled under the stern seat. And on we paddle to
+the next.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The day to which I had retired from my dinner-party
+and the tactical lecture of my distinguished
+cousin was a late August day of two years before.
+The frogging fleet included two canoes, that of
+young John Dudley who was doing his vacation
+with me, and my own. In each canoe, as is Hoyle
+for canoeing in Canada, were two guides and a
+"m&#39;sieur." The other boat, John&#39;s, was somewhere
+on the opposite shore of Lac des Passes,
+the Lake of the Passes, crawling along edges of
+bays and specializing in old logs and submerged
+rocks, after frogs with a landing-net, the same
+as us. But John&mdash;to my mind coarser&mdash;was
+doing his own frogging. The other boat was
+nothing to us except for an occasional yell when
+geography brought us near enough, of "How
+many?" and envy and malice and all uncharitableness
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page170">[pg 170]</span>
+<a name="Pg170" id="Pg170" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>if the count was more, and hoots of triumph
+if less.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">In my craft sailed, besides Josef and myself, as
+bow paddler, The Tin Lizzie. We called him that
+except when he could hear us, and I think it would
+have done small harm to call him so then, as he
+had the brain of a jack-rabbit and managed not
+to know any English, even when soaked in it
+daily. John Dudley had named him because of
+the plebeian and reliable way in which he plugged
+along Canadian trails. He set forth the queerest
+walk I have ever seen&mdash;a human Ford, John said.
+He was also quite mad about John. There had
+been a week in which Dudley, much of a doctor,
+had treated, with cheerful patience and skill, an infected
+and painful hand of the guide&#39;s, and this
+had won for him the love eternal of our Tin Lizzie.
+Little John Dudley thought, as he made jokes to
+distract the boy, and worked over his big throbbing
+fist, the fist which meant daily bread&mdash;little
+John thought where the plant of love springing
+from that seed of gratitude would at last blossom.
+Little he thought as the two sat on the gallery of
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page171">[pg 171]</span>
+<a name="Pg171" id="Pg171" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>the camp, and the placid lake broke in silver
+on pebbles below, through what hell of fire and
+smoke and danger the kindliness he gave to the
+stupid young guide would be given back to him.
+Which is getting ahead of the story.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">I suggested that the Lizzie might like a turn
+at frogging, and Josef, with Indian wordlessness,
+handed the net to him. Whereupon, with his
+flabby mouth wide and his large gray eyes gleaming,
+he proceeded to miss four easy ones in succession.
+And with that Josef, in a gibberish
+which is French-Canadian patois of the inner circles,
+addressed the Tin Lizzie and took away the
+net from him, asking no orders from me. The
+Lizzie, pipe in mouth as always, smiled just as
+pleasantly under this punishment as in the hour
+of his opportunities. He would have been a very
+handsome boy, with his huge eyes and brilliant
+brown and red color and his splendid shoulders
+and slim waist of an athlete if only he had possessed
+a ray of sense. Yet he was a good enough
+guide to fill in, for he was strong and willing and
+took orders amiably from anybody and did his
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page172">[pg 172]</span>
+<a name="Pg172" id="Pg172" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>routine of work, such as chopping wood and filling
+lamps and bringing water and carrying boats,
+with entire efficiency. That he had no initiative
+at all and by no chance did anything he was not
+told to, even when most obvious, that he was lacking
+in any characteristic of interest, that he was
+moreover a supreme coward, afraid to be left
+alone in the woods&mdash;these things were after all
+immaterial, for, as John pointed out, we didn&#39;t
+really need to love our guides.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">John also pointed out that the Lizzie&mdash;his name
+was, incidentally, Aristophe&mdash;had one nice quality.
+Of course, it was a quality which appealed most
+to the beneficiary, yet it seemed well to me also to
+have my guests surrounded with mercy and loving
+kindness. John had but to suggest building a
+fire or greasing his boots or carrying a canoe over
+any portage to any lake, and the Lizzie at once
+leaped with a bright smile as who should say that
+this was indeed a pleasure. "C&#39;est bien, M&#39;sieur,"
+was his formula. He would gaze at John for sections
+of an hour, with his flabby mouth open in
+speechless surprise as if at the unbelievable glory
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page173">[pg 173]</span>
+<a name="Pg173" id="Pg173" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>and magnificence of M&#39;sieur. A nice lad, John
+Dudley was, but no subtle enchanter; a stocky
+and well-set-up young man with a whole-souled,
+garrulous and breezy way, and a gift of slang and
+a brilliant grin. What called forth hero-worship
+towards him I never understood; but no more
+had I understood why Mildred Thornton, Colonel
+Thornton&#39;s young sister, my very beautiful
+cousin, should have selected him, from a large assortment
+of suitors, to marry. Indeed I did not
+entirely understand why I liked having John in
+camp better than anyone else; probably it was
+essentially the same charm which impelled Mildred
+to want to live with him, and the Tin Lizzie to fall
+down and worship. In any case the Lizzie worshipped
+with a primitive and unashamed and enduring
+adoration, which stood even the test of
+fear. That was the supreme test for the Tin
+Lizzie, who was a coward of cowards. Rather
+cruelly I bet John on a day that his satellite did
+not love him enough to go out to the club-house
+alone for him, and the next day John was in sore
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page174">[pg 174]</span>
+<a name="Pg174" id="Pg174" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>need of tobacco, not to be got nearer than the
+club.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Aristophe will go out and get it for me,"
+he announced as Aristophe&mdash;the Lizzie&mdash;trotted
+about the table at lunch-time purveying us flapjacks.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The Tin Lizzie stood rooted a second, petrified
+at the revolutionary scheme of his going to the
+club, companions unmentioned. There one saw
+as if through glass an idea seeking a road through
+his smooth gray matter. One had always gone
+to the club with Josef, or Maxime or Pierre&mdash;certainly
+M&#39;sieur meant that; one would of
+course be glad to go&mdash;with Josef or Maxime or
+Pierre&mdash;to get tobacco for M&#39;sieur John. Of
+course, the idea slid through the old road in the
+almost unwrinkled gray matter, and came safely
+to headquarters.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"C&#39;est bien, M&#39;sieur," answered the Lizzie
+smiling brightly.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">And with that I knocked the silly little smile
+into a cocked hat. "You may start early tomorrow,
+Aristophe," I said, "and get back by dark,
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page175">[pg 175]</span>
+<a name="Pg175" id="Pg175" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>going light, I can&#39;t spare any other men to go
+with you. But you will certainly not mind going
+alone&mdash;to get tobacco for M&#39;sieur John."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The poor Tin Lizzie turned red and then white,
+and his weak mouth fell open and his eyebrows
+lifted till the whites of his eyes showed above the
+gray irises. And one saw again, through the
+crystal of his unexercised brain, the operation
+of a painful and new thought. M&#39;sieur John&mdash;a
+day alone in the woods&mdash;love, versus fear&mdash;which
+would win. John and I watched the struggle
+a bit mercilessly. A grown man gets small
+sympathy for being a coward. And yet few
+forms of suffering are keener. We watched;
+and the Tin Lizzie stood and gasped in the play
+of his emotions. Nobody had ever given this son
+of the soil ideals to hold to through sudden danger;
+no sense of inherited honor to be guarded
+came to help the Lizzie; he had been taught to
+work hard and save his skin&mdash;little else. The
+great adoration for John which had swept him off
+his commonplace feet&mdash;was it going to make
+good against life-long selfish caution? We wondered.
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page176">[pg 176]</span>
+<a name="Pg176" id="Pg176" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>It was curious to watch the new big feeling
+fight the long-established petty one. And it
+was with a glow of triumph quite out of drawing
+that we saw the generous instinct win the
+battle.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Oui, M&#39;sieur," spoke Aristophe, unconscious
+of subtleties or watching. "I go tomorrow&mdash;alone.
+<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">C&#39;est bien, M&#39;sieur</span>."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">It was about the only remark I ever heard him
+make, that gracious: "<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">C&#39;est bien, M&#39;sieur</span>!" But
+he made it remarkably well. Almost he persuaded
+me to respect him with that hearty response to
+the call of duty, that humble and high gift of
+graciousness. One remembers him as his dolly
+face lighted at John&#39;s order to go and clean trout
+or carry in logs, and one does not forget the absurd,
+queer little fast trot at which his powerful
+young legs would instantaneously swing off to
+obey the behest. Such was the Tin Lizzie, the
+guide who paddled bow in my canvas canoe on the
+day of the celebrated frog hunt.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">That the frog hunt was celebrated was owing
+to the Lizzie. He should have been in John&#39;s
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page177">[pg 177]</span>
+<a name="Pg177" id="Pg177" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>boat, as one of John&#39;s guides, but at the last
+moment, there was a confusion of tongues and
+Lizzie was shipped aboard my canoe. In the excitement
+of the chase Josef, stern man, had faced
+about to manipulate his landing-net; Aristophe
+also slewed around and, sitting on the gunwale,
+became stern paddler. I was in the middle screwed
+anyhow, watching the frog fishing and enjoying
+the enjoyment of the men. Poor chaps, it was
+the only bit of personal play they got out of our
+month of play. Aristophe, the Tin Lizzie, was
+quite mad with the excitement even from his very
+second fiddle standpoint of paddler to Josef&#39;s
+frogging. His enormous gray eyes snapped, his
+teeth showed white and gold around his pipe&mdash;which
+he nearly bit off&mdash;and he even used
+language.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Tiens! Encore un!</span>" hissed the Lizzie in a
+blood-curdling whisper as a new pair of pop eyes
+lifted from the edge of a rotten log.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">And Josef, who had always seen the frog first,
+fired a guttural sentence, full of contempt, full of
+friendliness, for he sized up the Lizzie, his virtues
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page178">[pg 178]</span>
+<a name="Pg178" id="Pg178" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>and his limitations, accurately. And then the
+boat was pushed and pulled in the shallow water
+till Josef and the net were within range. With,
+that came the slow approach of the net to the
+smile, the swift tap on the eatable legs, and headlong
+into his finish leaped M. Crapaud. Which
+is rot his correct name, Josef tells me, in these
+parts, but M. Guarron. And that, being translated,
+means Mr. Very-Big-Bull-Frog.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Business had prospered to fourteen or fifteen
+head of frogs, and we calculated that the other
+boat might have a dozen when, facing towards
+Aristophe, I saw his dull, fresh face suddenly
+change. My pulse missed a beat at that expression.
+It was adequate to an earthquake or sudden
+death. How the fatuous doll-like features could
+have been made to register that stare of a soul in
+horror I can&#39;t guess. But they did. The whites
+of his eyes showed an eighth of an inch above
+the irises and his black eyebrows were shot up
+to the roots of his glossy black hair. In the
+gleaming white and gold of his teeth the pipe was
+still gripped. And while I gazed, astonished, his
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page179">[pg 179]</span>
+<a name="Pg179" id="Pg179" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>unfitting deep voice issued from that mask of
+fear:</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Tiens! Encore un!</span>" And I screwed about
+and saw that the Lizzie was running the boat on
+top of an enormous frog which he had not spied
+till the last second. With that Josef exploded
+throaty language and leaning sidewise made a
+dive at the frog. Aristophe, unbalanced with
+emotion and Josef&#39;s swift movement shot from
+his poise at the end of the little craft, and landed,
+in a foot of water, flat on his buck, and the frog
+seized that second to jump on his stomach.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">I never heard an Indian really laugh before
+that day. The hills resounded with Josef&#39;s
+shouts. We laughed, Josef and I, till we were
+weak, and for a good minute Aristophe sprawled
+in the lake, with the frog anchored as if till Kingdom
+come on his middle, and howled lusty howls
+while we laughed. Then Josef fished the frog
+and got him off the Tin Lizzie&#39;s lungs. And
+Aristophe, weeping, scrambled into the boat. And
+as we went home in the cool forest twilight, up
+the portage by the rushing, noisy rapids, Josef,
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page180">[pg 180]</span>
+<a name="Pg180" id="Pg180" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>walking before us, carrying the landing-net full
+of frogs&#39; legs, shook with laughter every little
+while again, as Aristophe, his wet strong young
+legs, the only section of him showing, toiled ahead
+up the winding thread of a trail, carrying the
+inverted canoe on his head.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">It was this adventure which came to me and
+seized me and carried me a thousand miles northward
+into Canadian forest as I looked at the
+frogs&#39; legs on my plate at the Cosmic Club, and
+did not listen to my cousin, the Colonel, talking
+military tactics.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The mental review took an eighth of the time
+it has taken me to tell it. But as I shook off my
+dream of the woods, I realized that, while Thornton
+still talked, he had got out of his uninteresting
+rut into his interesting one. Without hearing
+what he said I knew that from the look of
+the men&#39;s faces. Each man&#39;s eyes were bright,
+through a manner of mistiness, and there was a
+sudden silence which was perhaps what had recalled
+me.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"It&#39;s a war which is making a new standard of
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page181">[pg 181]</span>
+<a name="Pg181" id="Pg181" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>courage," spoke the young Governor in the gentle
+tone which goes so oddly and so pleasantly with
+his bull-dog jaw. "It looks as if we were going
+to be left with a world where heroism is the normal
+thing," spoke the Governor.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Heroism&mdash;yes," said Bobby, and I knew with
+satisfaction that he was off on his own line, the
+line he does not fancy, the line where few can
+distance him. "Heroism!" repeated Bobby, "It&#39;s
+all around out there. And it crops out&mdash;" he
+begun to smile&mdash;"in unsuspected places, from
+varied impulses."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">He was working his way to an anecdote. The
+men at the table, their chairs twisted towards him,
+sat very still.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"What I mean to say is," Bobby began, "that
+this war, horrible as it is, is making over human,
+nature for the better. It&#39;s burning out selfishness
+and cowardice and a lot of faults from millions
+of men, and it&#39;s holding up the nobility of
+what some of them do to the entire world. It
+takes a character, this d&eacute;bâcle, and smashes out
+the littleness. Another thing is curious. If a
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page182">[pg 182]</span>
+<a name="Pg182" id="Pg182" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>small character has one good point on which to
+hang heroism, the battle-spirit searches out that
+point and plants on it the heroism. There was
+a stupid young private in my command who&mdash;but
+I&#39;m afraid I&#39;m telling too many war stories,"
+Bobby appealed, interrupting himself. "I&#39;m full
+of it, you see, and when people are so good, and
+listen&mdash;" He stopped, in a confusion which is
+not his least attractive manner.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">From down the table came a quick murmur of
+voices. I saw more than one glance halt at the
+crutch on the back of the soldier&#39;s chair.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Thank you. I&#39;d really like to tell about this
+man. It&#39;s interesting, psychologically to me," he
+went on, smiling contentedly. He is a lovable
+chap, my cousin Robert Thornton. "The lad
+whom I speak of, a French-Canadian from Quebec
+Province, was my servant, my batman, as the
+Indian army called them and as we refer to them
+often now. He was so brainless that I just missed
+firing him the first day I had him. But John
+Dudley, my brother-in-law and lieutenant,
+wanted me to give him a chance, and also there
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page183">[pg 183]</span>
+<a name="Pg183" id="Pg183" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>was something in his manner when I gave him
+orders which attracted me. He appeared to have
+a pleasure in serving, and an ideal of duty. Dudley
+had used him as a guide, and the man had
+a dog-like devotion to 'the lieutenant' which
+counted with me. Also he didn&#39;t talk. I think
+he knew only four words. I flung orders at him
+and there would be first a shock of excitement,
+then a second of tense anxiety, then a radiant
+smile and the four words: '<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">C&#39;est bien, Mon Capitaine</span>.'
+I was captain then."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">At that point I dropped my knife and fork and
+stared at my cousin. He went on.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"&#39;<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">C&#39;est bien, Mon Capitaine</span>.&#39; That was the
+slogan. And when the process was accomplished,
+off he would trot, eager to do my will. He was
+powerful and well-built, but he had the oddest
+manner of locomotion ever I saw, a trot like&mdash;like
+a Ford car. I discovered pretty soon that the poor
+wretch was a born coward. I&#39;ve seen him start
+at the distant sound of guns long before we got
+near the front, and he was nervous at going out
+alone at night about the camp. The men ragged
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page184">[pg 184]</span>
+<a name="Pg184" id="Pg184" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>him, but he was such a friendly rascal and so willing
+to take over others&#39; work that he got along
+with a fraction of the persecution most of his
+sort would have had. I wondered sometimes what
+would happen to the poor little devil when actual
+fighting came. Would it be &#39;<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">C&#39;est bien, Mon
+Capitaine</span>,&#39; at the order to go over the top, or
+would the terrible force of fear be too much for
+him and land him at last with his back to a wall
+and a firing squad in front&mdash;a deserter? Meantime
+he improved and I got dependent on his
+radiant good will. Being John Dudley&#39;s brother-in-law
+sanctified me with him, and nothing was
+too much trouble if I&#39;d give him a chance sometimes
+to clean John&#39;s boots. I have a man now
+who shows no ecstacy at being ordered to do my
+jobs, and I don&#39;t like him.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"We were moved up towards the front, and,
+though Mr. Winston Churchill has made a row
+about the O.S.&mdash;the officers&#39; servants who are removed
+from the firing line, I know that a large
+proportion of them do their share in the trenches.
+I saw to it that mine did.</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page185">[pg 185]</span>
+<a name="Pg185" id="Pg185" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"One night there was a digging expedition. An
+advance trench was to be made in No Man&#39;s Land
+about a hundred and fifty yards from the Germans.
+I was in command of the covering party
+of thirty-five men; I was a captain. We, of
+course, went out ahead. Beauram&eacute; was in the
+party. It was his first fighting. We had rifles,
+with bayonets, and bombs, and a couple of Lewis
+guns. We came up to the trenches by a road,
+then went into the zigzag communication trenches
+up to the front, the fire-trench. Then, very cautiously,
+over the top into No Man&#39;s Land. It
+was nervous work, for at any second they might
+discover us and open fire. It suited us all to be
+as quiet as human men could be, and when once
+in a while a star-shell, a Very light, was sent up
+from the German lines we froze in our tracks till
+the white glare died out.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"The party had been digging for perhaps an
+hour when hell broke loose. They&#39;d seen us. All
+about was a storm of machine-gun and rifle bullets,
+and we dropped on our faces, the diggers
+in their trench&mdash;pretty shallow it was. As for
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page186">[pg 186]</span>
+<a name="Pg186" id="Pg186" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>the covering party, we simply took our medicine.
+And then the shrapnel joined the music. Word
+was passed to get back to the trenches, and we
+started promptly. We stooped low as we ran
+over No Man&#39;s Land, but there were plenty of
+casualties. I got mine in the foot, but not the
+wound which rung in this&mdash;" Thornton nodded
+his head at the crutches with a smile. "It was
+from a bit of shrapnel just as I made the trench,
+and as I fell in I caught at the sand bags and
+whirled about facing out over No Man&#39;s Land; as
+I whirled I saw, close by, Beauram&eacute;&#39;s face in a
+shaft of light. I don&#39;t know why I made conversation
+at that moment&mdash;I did. I said:</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"When did you get back?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">And his answer came as if clicked on a typewriter.
+"Me, I stayed, <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Mon Capitaine</span>. It had
+an air too dangerous, out there."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">I stared in a white rage. You&#39;ll imagine&mdash;one
+of my men to dare tell me that! And at that
+second, simultaneously, came the flare of a shell
+star and a shout of a man struck down, and I
+knew the voice&mdash;John Dudley. He was out there,
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page187">[pg 187]</span>
+<a name="Pg187" id="Pg187" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>the tail end of the party, wounded. I saw him as
+he fell, on the farther side of the new trench. Of
+course, one&#39;s instinct was to dash back and bring
+him in, and I started. And I found my foot
+gone&mdash;I couldn&#39;t walk. Quicker than I can tell
+it I turned to Beauram&eacute;, the coward, who&#39;d been
+afraid to go over the top, and I said in French,
+because, though I hadn&#39;t time to think it out,
+I yet realized that it would get to him faster so&mdash;I
+said:</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Get over there, you deserter. Save the lieutenant&mdash;Lieutenant
+Dudley. Go."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">For one instant I thought it was no good and
+I was due to have him shot, if we both lived
+through the night. And then&mdash;I never in my
+life saw such a face of abject fear as the one he
+turned first to me and then across that horror of
+No Man&#39;s Land. The whites of his eyes showed,
+it seemed, an eighth of an inch above the irises;
+his black eyebrows were half way up his forehead,
+and his teeth, luxuriously upholstered with
+fillings, shone white and gold in the unearthly
+light. It was such a mad terror as I&#39;d never
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page188">[pg 188]</span>
+<a name="Pg188" id="Pg188" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>seen before, and never since. And into it I, mad
+too with the thought of my sister if I let young
+John Dudley die before my eyes&mdash;I bombed again
+the order to go out and bring in Dudley. I remember
+the fading and coming expressions on that
+Frenchman&#39;s face like the changes on a moving
+picture film. I suppose it was half a minute. And
+here was the coward face gazing into mine, transfigured
+into the face of a man who cared about
+another man more than himself&mdash;a common man
+whose one high quality was love.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">C&#39;est bien, Mon Capitaine</span>," Beauram&eacute; spoke,
+through still clicking teeth, and with his regulation
+smile of good will he had sprung over the
+parapet in one lithe movement, and I saw him
+crouching, trotting that absurd, powerful fast
+trot through the lane in our barbed wire, like
+lightning, to the shallow new trench, to Dudley.
+I saw him&mdash;for the Germans had the stretch
+lighted&mdash;I saw the man pick up my brother-in-law
+and toss him over his shoulders and start
+trotting back. Then I saw him fall, both of them
+fall, and I knew that he&#39;d stopped a bullet. And
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page189">[pg 189]</span>
+<a name="Pg189" id="Pg189" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>then, as I groaned, somehow Beauram&eacute; was on
+his feet again. I expected, that he&#39;d bolt for
+cover, but he didn&#39;t. He bent over deliberately as
+if he had been a fearless hero&mdash;and maybe he was&mdash;and
+he picked up Dudley again and started
+on, laboring, this time in walking. He was hit
+badly. But he made the trench; he brought in
+Dudley.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Then such a howl of hurrahs greeted him from
+the men who watched the rescue as poor little
+Aristophe Beauram&eacute;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Ah!" I interjected, and Bobby turned and
+stared&mdash;"as the poor little scared rat had not
+dreamed, or had any right to dream would ever
+greet his conduct on earth. He dropped Dudley
+at my feet and turned with his flabby mouth open
+and his great stupid eyes like saucers, towards
+the men who rushed to shake his hand and throw
+at him words of admiration that choked them to
+get out. And then he keeled over. So you see.
+It was an equal chance at one second, whether a
+man should be shot for a deserter or&mdash;win the
+Victoria Cross."</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page190">[pg 190]</span>
+<a name="Pg190" id="Pg190" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"What!" I shouted at my guest. "What! Not
+the Victoria Cross! Not Aristophe!"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Bobby looked at me in surprise. "You&#39;re a
+great claque for me," he said. "You seem to take
+an interest in my hero. Yes, he got it. He was
+badly hurt. One hand nearly gone and a wound
+in his side. I was lucky enough to be in London
+on a day three months later, and to be present at
+the ceremony, when the young French-Canadian,
+spoiled for a soldier, but splendid stuff now for
+a hero, stood out in the open before the troops
+in front of Buckingham Palace and King George
+pinned the V.C. on his breast. They say that
+he&#39;s back in his village, and the whole show. I
+hear that he tells over and over the story of
+his heroism and the rescue of &#39;<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Mon Lieutenant</span>.&#39;
+to never failing audiences. Of course, John is
+looking after him, for the hand which John saved
+was the hand that was shot to pieces in saving
+John, and the Tin Lizzie can never make his living
+with that hand again. A deserter, a coward&mdash;decorated
+by the King with the Victoria Cross!
+Queer things happen in war!"
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page191">[pg 191]</span>
+<a name="Pg191" id="Pg191" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>There was a stir, a murmur as of voices, of
+questions beginning, but Bobby was not quite
+through.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"War takes the best of the best men, and the
+best of the cheapest, and transfigures both. War
+doesn&#39;t need heroes for heroism. She pins it on
+anywhere if there&#39;s one spot of greatness in a
+character. War does strange things with humanity,"
+said Bobby.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">And I, gasping, broke out crudely in three
+words: "Our Tin Lizzie!" I said, and nobody
+knew in the least what I meant, or with what
+memories I said it.</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page" />
+
+<div class="tei tei-div">
+<a name="toc_14" id="toc_14"></a>
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page195">[pg 195]</span>
+<a name="Pg195" id="Pg195" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<h1 class="tei tei-head">HE THAT LOSETH HIS LIFE SHALL FIND IT</h1>
+
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The Red Cross women had gone home. Half
+an hour before, the large library had been filled
+with white-clad, white-veiled figures. Two long
+tables full, forty of them today, had been working;
+three thousand surgical dressings had been
+cut and folded and put away in large boxes on
+shelves behind glass doors where the most valuable
+books had held their stately existence for years.
+The books were stowed now in trunks in the attic.
+These were war days; luxuries such as first editions
+must wait their time. The great living-room
+itself, the center of home for this family
+since the two boys were born and ever this family
+had been, the dear big room with its dark carved
+oak, and tapestries, and stained glass, and books,
+and memories was given over now to war relief
+work.</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page196">[pg 196]</span>
+<a name="Pg196" id="Pg196" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Sometimes, as the mistress walked into the spacious,
+low-ceilinged, bright place, presences long
+past seemed to fill it intolerably. Brock and
+Hugh, little chaps, roared in untidy and tumultuous
+from football, or came, decorous and groomed,
+handsome, smart little lads, to be presented to
+guests. Her own Hugh, her husband, proud of
+the beautiful new house, smiled from the hearth
+to her as he had smiled twenty-six years back, the
+night they came in, a young Hugh, younger than
+Brock was now. Her father and mother, long
+gone over "to the majority," and the exquisite
+old ivory beauty of a beautiful grandmother&mdash;such
+ghosts rose and faced the woman as she
+stepped into the room where they had moved in
+life, the room with its loveliness marred by two
+long tables covered with green oilcloth, by four
+rows of cheap chairs, by rows and rows of boxes
+on shelves where soft and bright and dark colors
+of books had glowed. She felt often that she
+should explain matters to the room, should tell the
+walls which had sheltered peace and hospitality
+that she had consecrated them to yet higher service.
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page197">[pg 197]</span>
+<a name="Pg197" id="Pg197" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>Never for one instant, while her soul ached
+for the familiar setting, had she regretted its sacrifice.
+That her soul did ache made it worth
+while.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">And the women gathered for this branch Red
+Cross organization, her neighbors on the edge of
+the great city, wives and daughters and mothers of
+clerks, and delivery-wagon drivers, and icemen, and
+night-watchmen, women who had not known how
+to take their part in the war work in the city or
+had found it too far to go, these came to her house
+gladly and all found pleasure in her beautiful room.
+That made it a joy to give it up to them. She
+stood in the doorway, feeling an emphasis in the
+quiet of the July afternoon because of the forty
+voices which had lately gone out of the sunshiny
+silence, of the forty busy figures in long, white
+aprons and white, sweeping veils, the tiny red
+cross gleaming over the forehead of each one, each
+face lovely in the uniform of service, all oddly
+equalized and alike under their veils and crosses.
+She spoke aloud as she tossed out her hands to the
+room:</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page198">[pg 198]</span>
+<a name="Pg198" id="Pg198" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"War will be over some day, and you will be
+our own again, but forever holy because of this.
+You will be a room of history when you go to
+Brock&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Brock! Would Brock ever come home to the
+room, to this place which he loved? Brock, in
+France! She turned sharply and went out through
+the long hall and across the terrace, and sat down
+where the steps dropped to the garden, on the
+broad top step, with her head against the pillar
+of the balustrade. Above her the smell of
+box in a stone vase on the pillar punctured
+the mild air with its definite, reminiscent fragrance.
+Box is a plant of antecedents of sentiment,
+of memories. The woman inhaling its
+delicate sharpness, was caught back into days
+past. She considered, in rapid jumps of thought,
+events, episodes, epochs. The day Brock was
+born, on her own twentieth birthday, up-stairs
+where the rosy chintz curtains blew now out of
+the window; the first day she had come down to
+the terrace&mdash;it was June&mdash;and the baby lay in
+his bassinet by the balustrade in that spot&mdash;she
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page199">[pg 199]</span>
+<a name="Pg199" id="Pg199" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>looked at the spot&mdash;the baby, her big Brock,
+a bundle of flannel and fine, white stuff in
+lacy frills of the bassinet. And she loved him;
+she remembered how she had loved that baby, how,
+laughing at herself, she had whispered silly words
+over the stolid, pink head; how the girl&#39;s heart
+of her had all but burst with the astonishing new
+tide of a feeling which seemed the greatest of
+which she was capable. Yet it was a small thing
+to the way she loved Brock now. A vision came
+of little Hugh, three years younger, and the two
+toddling about the terrace together, Hugh always
+Brock&#39;s satellite and adorer, as was fitting; less
+sturdy, less daring than Brock, yet ready to go
+anywhere if only the older baby led. She thought
+of the day when Hugh, four years old, had taken
+fright at a black log among the bushes under the
+trees.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"It&#39;s a bear!" little Hugh had whispered, shaking,
+and Brock, brave but not too certain, had
+looked at her, inquiring.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"No, love, it&#39;s not a bear; it&#39;s an old log of
+wood. Go and put your hand on it, Hughie."</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page200">[pg 200]</span>
+<a name="Pg200" id="Pg200" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Little Hugh had cried out and shrunk back.
+"I&#39;m afraid!" cried little Hugh.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">And Brock, not entirely clear as to the no-bear
+theory, had yet bluffed manfully. "Come on,
+Hughie; let&#39;s go and bang &#39;um," said Brock.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Which invitation Hugh accepted reluctantly
+with a condition, "If you&#39;ll hold my hand, B&#39;ocky."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The woman turned her head to see the place
+where the black log had lain, there in the old high
+bushes. And behold! Two strong little figures
+in white marched along&mdash;she could all but see
+them today&mdash;and the bigger little figure was
+dragging the other a bit, holding a hand with
+masterful grip. She could hear little Hugh&#39;s
+laughter as they arrived at the terrible log and
+found it truly a log. Even now Hugh&#39;s laugh
+was music.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Why, it&#39;s nuffin but an old log o&#39; wood!" little
+Hugh had squealed, as brave as a lion.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">As she sat seeing visions, old Mavourneen,
+Brock&#39;s Irish wolf-hound, came and laid her muzzle
+on the woman&#39;s shoulder, crying a bit, as
+was Mavourneen&#39;s Irish way, for pleasure at finding
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page201">[pg 201]</span>
+<a name="Pg201" id="Pg201" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>the mistress. And with that there was a
+brown ripple and a patter of many soft feet, and
+a broken wave of dogs came around the corner,
+seven little cairn-terriers. Sticky and Sandy
+and their offspring. The woman let Sticky
+settle in her lap and drew Sandy under her arm,
+and the puppies looked up at her from the step
+below with ten serious, anxious eyes and then
+fell to chasing quite imaginary game up and down
+the stone steps. Mavourneen sighed deeply and
+dropped with a heavy thud, a great paw on the
+edge of the white dress and her beautiful head
+resting on her paws, the topaz, watchful eyes gazing
+over the city. The woman put her free hand
+back and touched the rough head.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Dear dog!" she spoke.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Another memory came: how they had bought
+Mavourneen, she and Hugh and the boys, at the
+kennels in Ireland, eight years ago; how the huge
+baby had been sent to them at Liverpool in a
+hamper; the uproarious drive the four of them&mdash;Hugh,
+the two boys, and herself&mdash;and Mavourneen
+had taken in a taxi across the city. The
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page202">[pg 202]</span>
+<a name="Pg202" id="Pg202" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>puppy, astonished and investigating throughout
+the whole proceeding, had mounted all of them,
+separately and together, and insisted on lying
+in big Hugh&#39;s lap, crying broken-heartedly at
+not being allowed. How they had shouted laughter,
+the four and the boy taxi-driver, all the
+journey, till they ached! What good times they
+had always had together, the young father and
+mother and the two big sons! She reflected how
+she had not been at all the conventional mother
+of sons. She had not been satisfied to be gentle
+and benevolent and look after their clothes and
+morals. She had lived their lives with them, she
+had ridden and gone swimming with them, and
+played tennis and golf, and fished and shot and
+skated and walked with them, yes, and studied
+and read with them, all their lives.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"I haven&#39;t any respect for my mother," young
+Hugh told her one day. "I like her like a
+sister."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">She was deeply pleased at this attitude; she did
+not wish their respect as a visible quality. Vision
+after vision came of the old times and care-free
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page203">[pg 203]</span>
+<a name="Pg203" id="Pg203" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>days while the four, as happy and normal a family
+as lived in the world, passed their alert, full days
+together before the war. Memory after memory
+took form in the brain of the woman, the center
+of that light-hearted life so lately changed, so
+entirely now a memory. War had come.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">At first, in 1914, there had been excitement,
+astonishment. Then the horror of Belgium. One
+refused to believe that at first; it was a lurid
+slander on the kindly German people; then one
+believed with the brain; one&#39;s spirit could not
+grasp it. Unspeakable deeds such as the Germans&#39;
+deeds&mdash;it was like a statement made concerning
+a fourth dimension of space; civilized
+modern folk were not so organized as to realize
+the facts of that bestiality.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Aren&#39;t you thankful we&#39;re Americans?" the
+woman had said over and over.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">One day her husband, answering usually with
+a shake of the head, answered in words. "We
+may be in it yet," he said. "I&#39;m not sure but we
+ought to be."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Brock, twenty-one then, had flashed at her:
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page204">[pg 204]</span>
+<a name="Pg204" id="Pg204" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>"I want to be in it. I may just have to be,
+mother."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Young Hugh yawned a bit at that, and stretching
+his long arm, he patted his brother&#39;s shoulder.
+"Good old hero, Brock! I&#39;ll beat you a set of
+tennis. Come on."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">That sudden speech of Brock&#39;s had startled her,
+had brought the war, in a jump which was like
+a stab, close. The war and Lindow&mdash;their place&mdash;how
+was it possible that this nightmare in
+Europe could touch the peace of the garden, the
+sunlit view of the river, the trees with birds singing
+in them, the scampering of the dogs down
+the drive? The distant hint of any connection
+between the great horror and her own was pain;
+she put the thought away.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Then the <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Lusitania</span> was sunk. All America
+shouted shame through sobs of rage. The President
+wrote a beautiful and entirely satisfactory
+note.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"It should be war&mdash;war. It should be war
+today," Hugh had said, her husband. "We only
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page205">[pg 205]</span>
+<a name="Pg205" id="Pg205" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>waste time. We&#39;ll have to fight sooner or later.
+The sooner we begin, the sooner we&#39;ll finish."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Fight!" young Hugh threw at him. "What
+with? We can just about make faces at &#39;em,
+father."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The boy&#39;s father did not laugh. "We had
+better get ready to do more than make faces;
+we&#39;ve got to get ready." He hammered his hand
+on the stone balustrade. "I&#39;m going to Plattsburg
+this summer, Evelyn."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"I&#39;m going with you." Brock&#39;s voice was low
+and his mouth set, and the woman, looking at him,
+saw suddenly that her boy was a man.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Well, then, as man power is getting low at
+Lindow, I&#39;ll stay and take care of Mummy.
+Won&#39;t I? We&#39;ll do awfully well without them,
+won&#39;t we, Mum? You can drive Dad&#39;s Rolls-Royce
+roadster, and if you leave on the handbrake
+up-hill, I&#39;ll never tell."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Father and son had gone off for the month in
+camp, and, glad as she was to have the younger
+boy with her, there was yet an uneasy, an almost
+subconscious feeling about him, which she indignantly
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page206">[pg 206]</span>
+<a name="Pg206" id="Pg206" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>denied each time that it raised its head.
+It never quite phrased itself, this fear, this wonder
+if Hugh were altogether as American as his father
+and brother. Question the courage and patriotism
+of her own boy? She flung the thought from
+her as again and yet again it came. People of
+the same blood were widely different. To Brock
+and his father it had come easily to do the obvious
+thing, to go to Plattsburg. It had not so
+come to young Hugh, but that in good time he
+would see his duty and do it she would not for an
+instant doubt. She would not break faith with
+the lad in thought. With a perfect delicacy she
+avoided any word that would influence him. He
+knew. All his life he had breathed loyalty. It
+was she herself, reading to them night after night
+through years, who had taught the boys hero
+worship&mdash;above all, worship of American heroes,
+Washington, Paul Jones, Perry, Farragut, Lee;
+how Dewey had said, "You may fire now, Gridley,
+if you are ready"; how Clark had brought the
+<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Oregon</span> around the continent; how Scott had gone
+alone among angry Indians. She had taught
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page207">[pg 207]</span>
+<a name="Pg207" id="Pg207" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>them such names, names which will not die while
+America lives. It was she who had told the little
+lads, listening wide-eyed, that as these men had
+held life lightly for the glory of America, so her
+sons, if need came, must be ready to offer their
+lives for their country. She remembered how
+Brock, his round face suddenly scarlet, had stammered
+out:</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"I <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">am</span> ready, Mummy. I&#39;d die this minute for&mdash;for
+America. Wouldn&#39;t you, Hughie?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">And young Hugh, a slim, blond angel of a boy,
+of curly, golden hair and unexpected answers, had
+ducked beneath the hero, upsetting him into a
+hedge to his infinite anger. "I wouldn&#39;t die right
+now, Brocky," said Hugh. "There&#39;s going to be
+chocolate cake for lunch."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">One could never count on Hugh&#39;s ways of doing
+things, but Brock was a stone wall of reliability.
+She smiled, thinking of his youth and beauty and
+entire boyishness, to think yet of the saying from
+the Bible which always suggested Brock, "Thou
+shalt keep him in perfect peace whose mind is
+stayed on Thee." It was so with the lad; through
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page208">[pg 208]</span>
+<a name="Pg208" id="Pg208" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>the gay heart and eager interest in life pulsed an
+atmosphere of deep religiousness. He was always
+"in perfect peace," and his mother, less balanced,
+had stayed her mind on that quiet and right
+young mind from its very babyhood. The lad
+had seen his responsibilities and lifted them all
+his life. It came to her how, when her own mother,
+very dear to Brock, had died, she had not let the
+lads go with her to the house of death for fear
+of saddening their youth, and how, when she and
+their father came home from the hard, terrible
+business of the funeral, they met little Hugh on
+the drive, rapturous at seeing them again, rather
+absorbed in his new dog. But Brock, then fourteen,
+was in the house alone, quiet, his fresh, dear
+face red with tears, and a black necktie of his
+father&#39;s, too large for him, tied under his collar.
+Of all the memories of her boys, that grotesque
+black tie was the most poignant and most precious.
+It said much. It said: "I also, O, my
+mother, am of my people. I have a right to their
+sorrows as well as to their joys, and if you do
+not give me my place in trouble, I shall do what
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page209">[pg 209]</span>
+<a name="Pg209" id="Pg209" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>I can alone, being but a boy. I shall give up
+play, and I shall wear mourning as I can, not
+knowing how very well, but pushed by all my being
+to be with my own in their mourning."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Quickly affection for the other lad asserted itself.
+Brock and Hugh were different, but Hugh
+was a dear boy, too&mdash;undeveloped, that was all.
+He had never taken life seriously, little Hugh, and
+now that this war-cloud hung over the world, he
+simply refused to look at it; he turned away his
+face. That was all, a temperament which loved
+harmony and shrank from ugliness; these things
+were young Hugh&#39;s limitations, and no ignoble
+quality.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">In a long dream, yet much faster than the
+words have told it, in comprehensive flashes of
+memory, her elbows on her knees and her face,
+in her slender hands, looking out over the garden
+with its arched way of roses, with its high
+hedge, looking past the loveliness that was
+home to the city pulsing in summer heat, to
+the shining zigzag of river beyond the city, the
+woman reviewed her boys&#39; lives. Boys were
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page210">[pg 210]</span>
+<a name="Pg210" id="Pg210" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>not now merely one phase of humanity; they had
+suddenly become the nation. They stood in the
+foreground of a world crisis; back of them America
+was ranged, orderly, living and moving to
+feed, clothe, and keep happy these millions of lads
+holding in their hands the fate of the earth. Her
+boys were but two, yet necessary. She owed them
+to the country, as other mothers of men.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">There was a whistle under the archway, a flying
+step, and young Hugh shot from beneath the
+rosiness of Dorothy Perkins vines and took the
+stone steps in four bounds. All the dogs fell into
+a community chorus of barks and whines and
+patterings about, and Hugh&#39;s hands were on this
+one and that as he bent over the woman.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"A <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">good</span> kiss, Mummy; that&#39;s cold baked potato,"
+he complained, and she laughed and hugged
+him.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Not cold; I was just thinking. Your knee,
+Hughie? You came up like a bird."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Hugh made a face. "Bad break, that," he
+grinned, and limped across the terrace and back.
+"Mummy, it doesn&#39;t hurt much now, and I do
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page211">[pg 211]</span>
+<a name="Pg211" id="Pg211" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>forget," he explained, and his color deepened.
+With that: "Tom Arthur is waiting for me in
+town. We&#39;re going to pick up Whitney, the tennis
+champion, at the Crossroads Club. May I
+take Dad&#39;s roadster?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Yes, Hughie. And, Hugh, meet the train, the
+seven-five. Dad&#39;s coming to-night, you know."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The boy took her hand, looked at her uneasily.
+"Mummy, dear, don&#39;t be thinking sinful thoughts
+about me. And don&#39;t let Dad. Hold your fire,
+Mummy."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">She lifted her face, and her eyes were the eyes
+of faith he had known all his life. "You blessed
+boy of mine, I will hold my fire." And then Hugh
+had all but knocked her over with a violent kiss
+again, and he slammed happily through the screen
+doors and was leaping up the stairs. Ten minutes
+later she heard the car purring down the drive.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The dogs settled about her with long dog-sighs
+again. She looked at her wrist&mdash;only five-thirty.
+She went back with a new unrest to her thoughts.
+Hugh&#39;s knee&mdash;it was odd; it had lasted a long
+time, ever since&mdash;she shuddered a bit, so that old
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page212">[pg 212]</span>
+<a name="Pg212" id="Pg212" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>Mavourneen lifted her head and objected softly&mdash;ever
+since war was declared. Over a year! To be
+sure, he had hurt it again badly, slipping on the
+ice in December, just as it was getting strong.
+She wished that his father would not be so grim
+when Hugh&#39;s bad knee was mentioned. What did
+he mean? Did he dare to think her boy&mdash;the word
+was difficult even mentally&mdash;a slacker? With that
+her mind raced back to the days just before Hugh
+had hurt this knee. It was in February that
+Germany had proclaimed the oceans closed except
+along German paths, at German times. "This is
+war at last," her husband had said, and she knew
+the inevitable had come.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Night after night she had lain awake facing
+it, sometimes breaking down utterly and shaking
+her soul out in sobs, sometimes trying to see ways
+around the horror, trying to believe that war
+must end before our troops could get ready, often
+with higher courage glorying that she might give
+so much for country and humanity. Then, in the
+nights, things that she had read far back, unrealizing,
+rose and confronted her with awful reality.
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page213">[pg 213]</span>
+<a name="Pg213" id="Pg213" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>Brutalities, atrocities, wounds, barbarous captivity&mdash;nightmares
+which the Germans had dug out
+of the grave of savagery and sent stalking over
+the earth&mdash;such rose and stood before the
+woman lying awake night after night. At first
+her soul hid its face in terror at the gruesome
+thoughts; at first her mind turned and fled and
+refused to believe. Her boys, Brock and Hugh!
+It was not credible, it was not reasonable, it was
+out of drawing that her good boys, her precious
+boys trained to be happy and help the world, to
+live useful, peaceful lives, should be snatched
+from home, here in America, and pitched into the
+ghastly struggle of Europe. Push back the ocean
+as she might, the ocean surged every day nearer.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Daytimes she was as brave as the best. She
+could say: "If we had done it the day after the
+<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Lusitania</span>, that would have been right. It would
+have been all over now." She could say: "My
+boys? They will do their duty like other women&#39;s
+boys." But nights, when she crept into bed and
+the things she had read of Belgium, of Serbia,
+came and stood about her, she knew that hers
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page214">[pg 214]</span>
+<a name="Pg214" id="Pg214" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>were the only boys in the world who could not,
+<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">could</span> not be spared. Brock and Hugh! It seemed
+as if it would be apparent to the dullest that
+Brock and Hugh were different from all others.
+She could suffer; she could have gone over there
+light-hearted and faced any danger to save <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">them</span>.
+Of course! That was natural! But&mdash;Brock and
+Hugh! The little heads that had lain in the hollow
+of her arm; the noisy little boys who had
+muddied their white clothes, and broken furniture,
+and spilled ink; the tall, beautiful lads who had
+been her pride and her everlasting joy, her playmates,
+her lovers&mdash;Brock and Hugh! Why, there
+had never been on earth love and friendship in any
+family close and unfailing like that of the four.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Night after night, nearer and nearer, the
+ghosts from Belgium and Serbia and Poland stood
+about her bed, and she fought with them as one
+had fought with the beasts at Ephesus. Day
+after day she cheered Brock and the two Hughs
+and filled them with fresh patriotism. Of course,
+she would not have her own fail in a hair&#39;s breadth
+of eager service to their flag. Of course! And as
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page215">[pg 215]</span>
+<a name="Pg215" id="Pg215" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>she lifted up, for their sakes, her heart, behold
+a miracle, for her heart grew high! She began
+to feel the words she said. It came to her in very
+truth that to have the world as one wanted it
+was not now the point; the point was a greater
+goal which she had never in her happy life even
+visualized. It began to rise before her, a distant
+picture glorious through a mist of suffering,
+something built of the sacrifice, and the honor, and
+the deathless bravery of millions of soldiers in
+battle, of millions of mothers at home. The education
+of a nation to higher ideals was reaching
+the quiet backwater of this one woman&#39;s soul.
+There were lovelier things than life; there were
+harder things than death. Service is the measure
+of living. If the boys were to compress years
+of good living into a flame of serving humanity
+for six months, who was she, what was life
+here, that she should be reluctant? To play
+the game, for herself and her sons, this was
+the one thing worth while. More and more entirely,
+as the stress of the strange, hard vision
+crowded out selfishness, this woman, as thousands
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page216">[pg 216]</span>
+<a name="Pg216" id="Pg216" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>and tens of thousands all over America, lifted up
+her heart&mdash;the dear things that filled and were
+her heart&mdash;unto the Lord.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">And with that she was aware of a recurring
+unrest. She was aware that there was something
+her husband did not say to her about the boys,
+about young Hugh. Brock had been hard to hold
+for nearly two years now, but his father had
+thought for reasons, that he should not serve
+until his own flag called him. Now it would soon
+be calling, and Brock would go instantly. But
+young Hugh? What did the boy&#39;s attitude
+mean?</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"I can&#39;t make out Hughie," his father had
+said to her in March, 1917, when it was certain
+that war was coming. "What does this devil-may-care
+pose about the war mean?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">And she answered: "Let Hughie work it out,
+Hugh. He&#39;s in trouble in his mind, but he&#39;ll
+come through. We&#39;ll give him time."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Oh, very well," Hugh the elder had agreed,
+"but young Americans will have to take their
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page217">[pg 217]</span>
+<a name="Pg217" id="Pg217" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>stand shortly. I couldn&#39;t bear it if a son of mine
+were a slacker."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">She tossed out her hands. "Slacker! Don&#39;t
+dare say it of my boy!"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The hideous word followed her. That night,
+when she lay in bed and looked out into the
+moonlit wood, and saw the pines swaying like
+giant fans across a pulsing, pale sky, and listened
+to the summer wind blowing through the tall heads
+of them, again through the peace of it the
+word stabbed. A slacker! She set to work to
+fancy how it would be if Brock and Hugh both
+went to war and were both killed. She faced the
+thought. Life&mdash;years of it&mdash;without Brock and
+Hugh! She registered that steadily in her mind.
+Then she painted to herself another picture,
+Brock and Hugh not going to war, at home ignominiously
+safe. Other women&#39;s sons marching
+out into the danger&mdash;men, heroes! Brock and
+Hugh explaining, steadily explaining why they
+had not gone! Brock and Hugh after the war,
+mature men, meeting returning soldiers, old
+friends who had borne the burden and heat, themselves
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page218">[pg 218]</span>
+<a name="Pg218" id="Pg218" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>with no memories of hideous, infinitely precious
+days, of hardships, and squalid trench life,
+and deadly pain&mdash;for America! Brock and Hugh
+going on through life into old age ashamed to
+hold up their heads and look their comrades in
+the eye! Or else&mdash;it might be&mdash;Brock and Hugh
+lying next year, this year, in unknown, honored
+graves in France! Which was worse? And the
+aching heart of the woman did not wait to answer.
+Better a thousand times brave death than a
+coward&#39;s life. She would choose so if she knew
+certainly that she sent them both to death. The
+education of the war, the new glory of patriotism,
+had already gone far in this one woman.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">And then the thought stabbed again&mdash;a slacker&mdash;Hugh!
+How did his father dare say it? A
+poisonous terror, colder than the fear of death,
+crawled into her soul and hid there. Was it possible
+that Hugh, brilliant, buoyant, temperamental
+Hugh was&mdash;that? The days went on, and the
+cold, vile thing stayed coiled in her soul. It was
+on the very day war was declared that young
+Hugh injured his knee, a bad injury. When he
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page219">[pg 219]</span>
+<a name="Pg219" id="Pg219" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>was carried home, when the doctor cut away his
+clothes and bent over the swollen leg and said wise
+things about the "bursa," the boy&#39;s eyes were
+hard to meet. They constantly sought hers with
+a look questioning and anxious. Words were impossible,
+but she tried to make her glance and
+manner say: "I trust you. Not for worlds would
+I believe you did it on purpose."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">And finally the lad caught her hand and with
+his mouth against it spoke. "<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">You</span> know I didn&#39;t
+do it on purpose, Mummy."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">And the cold horror fled out of her heart, and
+a great relief flooded her.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">On a day after that Brock came home from
+camp, and, though he might not tell it in words,
+she knew that he would sail shortly for France.
+She kept the house full of brightness and movement
+for the three days he had at home, yet the
+four&mdash;young Hugh on crutches now&mdash;clung to
+each other, and on the last afternoon she and
+Brock were alone for an hour. They had sat just
+here after tennis, in the hazy October weather,
+and pink-brown leaves had floated down with a
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page220">[pg 220]</span>
+<a name="Pg220" id="Pg220" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>thin, pungent fragrance and lay on the stone steps
+in vague patterns. Scarlet geraniums bloomed
+back of Brock&#39;s head and made a satisfying harmony
+with the copper of his tanned face. They
+fell to silence after much talking, and finally she
+got out something which had been in her mind
+but which it had been hard to say.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Brocky," she began, and jabbed the end of
+her racket into her foot so that it hurt, because
+physical pain will distract and steady a mind.
+"Brocky, I want to ask you to do something."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Yes&#39;m," answered Brock.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"It&#39;s this. Of course, I know you&#39;re going
+soon, over there."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Brock looked at her gravely.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Yes, I know, I want to ask you if&mdash;if <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">it</span>
+happens&mdash;will you come and tell me yourself? If
+it&#39;s allowed."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Brock did not even touch her hand; he knew
+well she could not bear it. He answered quietly,
+with a sweet, commonplace manner as if that other
+world to which he might be going was a place
+too familiar in his thoughts for any great strain
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page221">[pg 221]</span>
+<a name="Pg221" id="Pg221" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>in speaking of it. "Yes, Mummy," he said. "Of
+course I will. I&#39;d have wanted to anyway, even
+if you hadn&#39;t said it. It seems to me&mdash;" He
+lifted his young face, square-jawed, fresh-colored,
+and there was a vision-seeing look in his eyes
+which his mother had known at times before. He
+looked across the city lying at their feet, and the
+river, and the blue hills beyond, and he spoke
+slowly, as if shaping a thought. "So many fellows
+have &#39;gone west&#39; lately that there must he
+some way. It seems as if all that mass of love
+and&mdash;and desire to reach back and touch&mdash;the
+ones left&mdash;as if all that must have built a sort
+of bridge over the river&mdash;so that a fellow might
+probably come back and&mdash;and tell his mother&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Brock&#39;s voice stopped, and suddenly she was
+in his arms, his face was against hers, and hot
+tears not her own were on her cheek. Then he
+was shaking his head as if to shake off the strong
+emotion.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"It&#39;s not likely to happen, dear. The casualties
+in this war are tremendously lower than in&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"I know," she interrupted. "Of course, they
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page222">[pg 222]</span>
+<a name="Pg222" id="Pg222" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>are. Of course, you&#39;re coming home without a
+scratch, and likely a general, and conceited beyond
+words. How will we stand you!"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Brock laughed delightedly. "You&#39;re a peach,"
+he stated. "That&#39;s the sort. Laughing mothers
+to send us off&mdash;it makes a whale of a difference."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">That October afternoon had now dropped eight
+months back, and still the house seemed lost without
+Brock, especially on this June twentieth, the
+day that was his and hers, the day when there had
+always been "doings" second only to Christmas
+at Lindow. But she gathered up her courage like
+a woman. Hugh the elder was coming tonight
+from his dollar-a-year work in Washington, her
+man who had moved heaven and earth to get into
+active service, and who, when finally refused because
+of his forty-nine years and a defective eye,
+had left his great business as if it were a joke, and
+had put his whole time, and strength, and experience,
+and fortune at the service of the Government&mdash;as
+plenty of other American men were doing.
+Hugh was coming in time for her birthday
+dinner, and young Hugh was with them&mdash;Her
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page223">[pg 223]</span>
+<a name="Pg223" id="Pg223" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>heart shrank as if a sharp thing touched it. How
+would it be when they rose to drink Brock&#39;s
+health? She knew pretty well what her cousin,
+the judge, would say:</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"The soldier in France! God bring him home
+well and glorious!"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">How would it be for her other boy then, the
+boy who was not in France? Unphrased, a
+thought flashed, "I hope, I do hope Hughie will
+be very lame tonight."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The little dog slipped from her and barked in
+remonstrance as she threw out her hands and
+stood up. Old Mavourneen pulled herself to her
+feet, too, a huge, beautiful beast, and the woman
+stooped and put her arm lovingly about the furry
+neck. "Mavourneen, you know a lot. You know
+our Brock&#39;s away." At the name the big dog
+whined and looked up anxious, inquiring. "And
+you know&mdash;do you know, dear dog, that Hughie
+ought to go? Do you? Mavourneen, it&#39;s like the
+prayer-book says, &#39;The burden of it is intolerable.&#39;
+I can&#39;t bear to lose him, and I can&#39;t, O God!
+I can&#39;t bear to keep him." She straightened. "As
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page224">[pg 224]</span>
+<a name="Pg224" id="Pg224" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>you say, Mavourneen, it&#39;s time to dress for
+dinner."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The birthday party went better than one could
+have hoped. Nobody broke down at Brock&#39;s
+name; everybody exulted in the splendid episode
+of his heroism, months back, which had won him
+the war cross. The letter from Jim Colledge and
+his own birthday letter, garrulous and gay, were
+read. Brock had known well that the day would
+be hard to get through and had made that letter
+out of brutal cheerfulness. Yet every one felt his
+longing to be at the celebration, missed for the
+first time in his life, pulsing through the words.
+Young Hugh read it and made it sweet with a
+lovely devotion to and pride in his brother. A
+heart of stone could not have resisted Hugh that
+night. And then the party was over, and the
+woman and her man, seeing each other seldom
+now, talked over things for an hour. After,
+through her open door, she saw a bar of light
+under the door of the den, Brock&#39;s and Hugh&#39;s
+den.</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page225">[pg 225]</span>
+<a name="Pg225" id="Pg225" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Hughie," she spoke, and on the instant the
+dark panel flashed into light.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Come in, Mummy, I&#39;ve been waiting to talk
+to you."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Waiting, my lamb?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Hugh pushed her, as a boy shoves a sister, into
+the end of the sofa. There was a wood fire on the
+hearth in front of her, for the June evening was
+cool, and luxurious Hugh liked a fire. A reading
+lamp was lighted above Brock&#39;s deep chair, and
+there were papers on the floor by it, and more low
+lights. There were magazines about, and etchings
+on the walls, and bits of university plunder,
+and the glow of rugs and of books. It was as
+fascinating a place as there was in all the beautiful
+house. In the midst of the bright peace Hugh
+stood haggard.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Hughie! What is it?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Mother," he whispered, "help me!"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"With my last drop of blood, Hugh."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"I can&#39;t go on&mdash;alone&mdash;mother." His eyes
+were wild, and his words labored into utterance.
+"I&mdash;I don&#39;t know what to do&mdash;mother."</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page226">[pg 226]</span>
+<a name="Pg226" id="Pg226" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"The war, Hughie?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Of course! What else is there?" he flung at
+her.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"But your knee?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Oh, Mummy, you know as well as I that my
+knee is well enough. Dad knows it, too. The
+way he looks at me&mdash;or dodges looking! Mummy&mdash;I&#39;ve
+got to tell you&mdash;you&#39;ll have to know&mdash;and
+maybe you&#39;ll stop loving me. I&#39;m&mdash;" He
+threw out his arms with a gesture of despair.
+"I&#39;m&mdash;afraid to go." With that he was on his
+knees beside her, and his arms gripped her, and
+his head was hidden in her lap. For a long minute
+there was only silence, and the woman held
+the young head tight.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Hugh lifted his face and stared from blurred
+eyes. "A man might better be dead than a coward&mdash;you&#39;re
+thinking that? That&#39;s it." A sob
+stopped his voice, the young, dear voice. His face,
+drawn into lines of age, hurt her unbearably. She
+caught him against her and hid the beloved, impossible
+face.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Hugh&mdash;I&mdash;judging you&mdash;I? Why, Hughie,
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page227">[pg 227]</span>
+<a name="Pg227" id="Pg227" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>I <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">love</span> you&mdash;I only love you. I don&#39;t stand off
+and think, when it&#39;s you and Brock. I&#39;m inside
+your hearts, feeling it with you. I don&#39;t know if
+it&#39;s good or bad. It&#39;s&mdash;my own. Coward&mdash;Hughie!
+I don&#39;t think such things of my
+darling."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"&#39;There&#39;s no&mdash;friend like a mother,&#39;" stammered
+young Hugh, and tears fell unashamed. His
+mother had not seen the boy cry since he was ten
+years old. He went on. "Dad didn&#39;t say a
+word, because he wouldn&#39;t spoil your birthday, but
+the way he dodged&mdash;my knee&mdash;" He laughed
+miserably and swabbed away tears with the corner
+of his pajama coat. "I wish I had a hanky,"
+he complained. The woman dried the tear-stained
+cheeks hastily with her own. "Dad&#39;s got it in
+for me," said Hugh. "I can tell. He&#39;ll make me
+go&mdash;now. He&mdash;he suspects I went skating that
+day hoping I&#39;d fall&mdash;and&mdash;I know it wasn&#39;t so
+darned unlikely. Yes&mdash;I did&mdash;not the first time&mdash;when
+I smashed it; that was entirely&mdash;luck."
+He laughed again, a laugh that was a sob. "And
+now&mdash;oh, Mummy, have I <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">got</span> to go into that
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page228">[pg 228]</span>
+<a name="Pg228" id="Pg228" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>nightmare? I hate it so. I am&mdash;I <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">am</span>&mdash;afraid.
+If&mdash;if I should be there and&mdash;and sent into some
+terrible job&mdash;shell-fire&mdash;dirt&mdash;smells&mdash;dead men
+and horses&mdash;filth&mdash;torture&mdash;mother, I might run.
+I don&#39;t feel sure. I can&#39;t trust Hugh Langdon&mdash;he
+might run. Anyhow"&mdash;the lad sprang to his
+feet and stood before her&mdash;"anyhow&mdash;why am <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">I</span>
+bound to get into this? I didn&#39;t start it. My
+Government didn&#39;t. And I&#39;ve everything, <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">everything</span>
+before me here. I didn&#39;t tell you, but that
+editor said&mdash;he said I&#39;d be one of the great writers
+of the time. And I love it, I love that job. I
+can do it. I can be useful, and successful, and an
+honor to you&mdash;and happy, oh, so happy! If only
+I may do as Arnold said, be one of America&#39;s
+big writers! I&#39;ve everything to gain here; I&#39;ve
+everything to lose there." He stopped and stood
+before her like a flame.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">And from the woman&#39;s mouth came words which
+she had not thought, as if other than herself
+spoke them. "&#39;What shall it profit a man,&#39;"
+she spoke, "&#39;if he gain the whole world and lose
+his own soul?&#39;"</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page229">[pg 229]</span>
+<a name="Pg229" id="Pg229" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">At that the boy plunged on his knees in collapse
+and sobbed miserably. "Mother, mother!
+Don&#39;t be merciless."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Merciless! My own laddie!" There seemed
+no words possible as she stroked the blond head
+with shaking hand. "Hughie," she spoke when
+his sobs quieted. "Hughie, it&#39;s not how you feel;
+it&#39;s what you do. I believe thousands and thousands
+of boys in this unwarlike country have
+gone&mdash;are going&mdash;through suffering like yours."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Hugh lifted wet eyes. "Do you think so,
+Mummy?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Indeed I do. Indeed I do. And I pray that
+the women who love them are&mdash;faithful. For I
+know, I <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">know</span> that if a woman lets her men, if a
+mother let her sons fail their country now, those
+sons will never forgive her. It&#39;s your honor I&#39;m
+holding to, Hughie, against human instinct.
+After this war, those to be pitied won&#39;t be the
+sonless mothers or the crippled soldiers&mdash;it will be
+the men of fighting age who have not fought.
+Even if they could not, even at the best, they will
+spend the rest of their lives explaining why."</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page230">[pg 230]</span>
+<a name="Pg230" id="Pg230" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Hugh sat on the sofa now, close to her, and his
+head dropped on her shoulder. "Mummy, that&#39;s
+some comfort, that dope about other fellows taking
+it as I do. I felt lonely. I thought I was the
+only coward in America. Dad&#39;s condemning me;
+he can&#39;t speak to me naturally. I felt as if"&mdash;his
+voice faltered&mdash;"as if I couldn&#39;t stand it if
+you hated me, too."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The woman laughed a little. "Hughie, you
+know well that not anything to be imagined could
+stop my loving you."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">He went on, breathing heavily but calmed.
+"You think that even if I am a blamed fool, if
+I went anyhow&mdash;that I&#39;d rank as a decent white
+man? In your eyes&mdash;Dad&#39;s&mdash;my own?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"I know it, Hughie. It&#39;s what you do, not how
+you feel doing it."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"If Brock would hold my hand!" The eyes of
+the two met with a dim smile and a memory of
+the childhood so near, so utterly gone. "I&#39;d like
+Dad to respect me again," the boy spoke in a
+wistful, uncertain voice. "It&#39;s darned wretched
+to have your father despise you." He looked at
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page231">[pg 231]</span>
+<a name="Pg231" id="Pg231" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>her then. "Mummy, you&#39;re tired out; your face
+is gray. I&#39;m a beast to keep you up. Go to bed,
+dear."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">He kissed her, and with his arm around her
+waist led her through the dark hall to the door
+of her room, and kissed her again. And again,
+as she stood and watched there, he turned on the
+threshold of the den and threw one more kiss
+across the darkness, and his face shone with a
+smile that sent her to bed, smiling through her
+tears. She lay in the darkness, fragrant of honeysuckle
+outside, and her sore heart was full of the
+boys&mdash;of Hugh struggling in his crisis; still more,
+perhaps, of Brock whose birthday it was, Brock
+in France, in the midst of "many and great dangers,"
+yet&mdash;she knew&mdash;serene and buoyant among
+them because his mind was "stayed." Not long
+these thoughts held her; for she was so deadened
+with the stress of many emotions that nature asserted
+itself and shortly she feel asleep.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">It may have been two or three hours she slept.
+She knew afterward that it must have been at
+about three of the summer morning when a dream
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page232">[pg 232]</span>
+<a name="Pg232" id="Pg232" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>came which, detailed and vivid as it was, probably
+filled in time only the last minute or so before
+awakening. It seemed to her that glory suddenly
+flooded the troubled world; the infinite, intimate
+joy, impossible to put into words, was yet a defined
+and long first chapter of her dream. After
+that she stood on the bank of a river, a river
+perhaps miles wide, and with the new light-heartedness
+filling her she looked and saw a mighty
+bridge which ran brilliant with many-colored
+lights, from her to the misty further shore of the
+river. Over the bridge passed a throng of radiant
+young men, boys, all in uniform. "How glorious!"
+she seemed to cry out in delight, and with
+that she saw Brock.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Very far off, among the crowd of others, she
+saw him, threading his way through the throng.
+He came, unhurried yet swift, and on his face
+was an amused, loving smile which was perhaps
+the look of him which she remembered best. By
+his side walked old Mavourneen, the wolf-hound,
+Brock&#39;s hand on the shaggy head. The two
+swung steadily toward her, Brock smiling into
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page233">[pg 233]</span>
+<a name="Pg233" id="Pg233" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>her eyes, holding her eyes with his, and as they
+were closer, she heard Mavourneen crying in wordless
+dumb joy, crying as she had not done since
+the day when Brock came home the last time.
+Above the sound Brock&#39;s voice spoke, every trick
+of inflection so familiar, so sweet, that the joy of
+it was sharp, like pain.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Mother, I&#39;m coming to take Hughie&#39;s hand&mdash;to
+take Hughie&#39;s hand," he repeated.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">And with that Mavourneen&#39;s great cry rose
+above his voice. And suddenly she was awake.
+Somewhere outside the house, yet near, the dog
+was loudly, joyfully crying. Out of the deep
+stillness of the night burst the sound of the joyful
+crying.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The woman shot from her bed and ran barefooted,
+her heart beating madly, into the darkness
+of the hall to the landing on the stairway.
+Something halted her. There was a broad, uncurtained
+pane of glass in the front door of the
+house. From the landing one might look down
+the stone steps outside and see clearly in the
+bright moonlight as far as the beginning of the
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page234">[pg 234]</span>
+<a name="Pg234" id="Pg234" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>rose archway. As she stood gasping, from beneath
+the flowers Brock stepped into the moonlight
+and began, unhurried, buoyant, as she had
+but now seen him in her dream, to mount the steps.
+Mavourneen pressed at his side, and his hand was
+on the dog&#39;s head. As he came, he lifted his face
+to his mother with the accustomed, every-day
+smile which she knew, as if he were coming home,
+as he had come home on many a moonlit evening
+from a dance in town to talk the day over with
+her. As she stared, standing in the dark on the
+landing, her pulse racing, yet still with the stillness
+of infinity, an arm came around her, a hand
+gripped her shoulder, and young Hugh&#39;s voice
+spoke.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Mother! It&#39;s Brock!" he whispered.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">At the words she fled headlong down to the door
+and caught at the handle. It was fastened, and for
+a moment she could not think of the bolt. Brock
+stood close outside; she saw the light on his brown
+head and the bend in the long, strong fingers that
+caressed Mavourneen&#39;s fur. He smiled at her
+happily&mdash;Brock&mdash;three feet away. Just as the
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page235">[pg 235]</span>
+<a name="Pg235" id="Pg235" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>bolt loosened, with an inexplicable, swift impulse
+she was cold with terror. For the half of a second,
+perhaps, she halted, possessed by some formless
+fear stronger than herself&mdash;humanity dreading
+something not human, something unknown, overwhelming.
+She halted not a whole second&mdash;for it
+was Brock. Brock! Wide open she flung the
+door and sprang out.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">There was no one there. Only Mavourneen
+stood in the cold moonlight, and cried, and looked
+up, puzzled, at empty air.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Oh, Brock, Brock! Oh, dear Brock!" the
+woman called and flung out her arms. "Brock&mdash;Brock&mdash;don&#39;t
+leave me. Don&#39;t go!"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Mavourneen sniffed about the dark hall, investigating
+to find the master who had come home
+and gone away so swiftly. With that young
+Hugh was lifting her in his arms, carrying her
+up the broad stairs into his room. "You&#39;re barefooted,"
+he spoke brokenly.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">She caught his hand as he wrapped her in a
+rug on the sofa. "Hugh&mdash;you saw&mdash;it was
+Brock?"</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page236">[pg 236]</span>
+<a name="Pg236" id="Pg236" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Yes, dearest, it was our Brock," answered
+Hugh stumblingly.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"You saw&mdash;and I&mdash;and Mavourneen."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Mavonrneen is Irish," young Hugh said.
+"She has the second sight," and the big old dog
+laid her nose on the woman&#39;s knee and lifted topaz
+eyes, asking questions, and whimpered broken-heartedly.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Dear dog," murmured the woman and drew
+the lovely head to her. "You saw him." And
+then; "Hughie&mdash;he came to tell us. He is&mdash;dead."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"I think so," whispered young Hugh with bent
+head.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Then, fighting for breath, she told what had
+happened&mdash;the dream, the intense happiness of it,
+how Brock had come smiling. "And Hugh, the
+only thing he said, two or three times over, was,
+&#39;I&#39;m coming to take Hughie&#39;s hand.&#39;"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The lad turned upon her a shining look. "I
+know, mother. I didn&#39;t hear, of course, but I
+knew, when I saw him, it was for me, too. And
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page237">[pg 237]</span>
+<a name="Pg237" id="Pg237" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>I&#39;m ready. I see my way now. Mother, get
+Dad."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Hugh, the elder, still sleeping in his room at
+the far side of the house, opened heavy eyes. Then
+he sprang up. "Evelyn! What is it?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Oh, Hugh&mdash;come! Oh, Hugh! Brock&mdash;Brock&mdash;"
+She could not say the words; there
+was no need. Brock&#39;s father caught her hands.
+In bare words then she told him.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"My dear," urged the man, "you&#39;ve had a vivid
+dream. That&#39;s all. You were thinking about the
+boys; you were only half awake; Mavourneen
+began to cry&mdash;the dog means Brock. It was
+easy&mdash;" his voice faltered&mdash;"to&mdash;to believe the
+rest."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Hugh, I <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">know</span>, dear. Brock came to tell me.
+He said he would." Later, that day, when a telegram
+arrived from the War Office there was no
+new shock, no added certainty to her assurance.
+She went on: "Hughie saw him. And Mavourneen.
+But I can&#39;t argue. We still have a boy, Hugh,
+and he needs us&mdash;he&#39;s waiting. Oh, my dear,
+Hughie is going to France!"</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page238">[pg 238]</span>
+<a name="Pg238" id="Pg238" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Thank God!" spoke Hugh&#39;s father.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Hand tight in hand like young lovers the two
+came across to the room where their boy waited,
+tense. "Father&mdash;Dad&mdash;you&#39;ll give me back your
+respect, won&#39;t you?" The strong young hand held
+out was shaking. "Because I&#39;m going, Dad.
+But you have to know that I was&mdash;a coward."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">No</span>, Hugh."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Yes. And Dad, I&#39;m afraid&mdash;now. But I&#39;ve
+got the hang of things, and nothing could keep
+me. Will you, do you despise me&mdash;now&mdash;that I
+still hate it&mdash;if&mdash;if I go just the same?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The big young chap shook so that his mother,
+his tall mother, put her arms about him to steady
+him. He clutched her hand hard and repeated,
+through quivering lips, "Would you despise me
+still, Dad?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">For a moment the father could not answer.
+Then difficult tears of manhood and maturity
+forced their way from his eyes and unheeded rolled
+down his cheeks. With a step he put his arms
+about the boy as if the boy were a child, and the
+boy threw his about his father&#39;s shoulders.</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page239">[pg 239]</span>
+<a name="Pg239" id="Pg239" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">For a long second the two tall men stood so.
+The woman, standing apart, through the shipwreck
+of her earthly life was aware only of happiness
+safe where sorrow and loss could not touch
+it. What was separation, death itself, when love
+stronger than death held people together as it
+held Hugh and her boys and herself? Then the
+older Hugh stood away, still clutching the lad&#39;s
+hand, smiling through unashamed tears.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Hugh," he said, "in all America there&#39;s not
+a man prouder of his son than I am of you.
+There&#39;s not a braver soldier in our armies than
+the soldier who&#39;s to take my name into France."
+He stopped and steadied himself; he went on: "It
+would have broken my heart, boy, if you had
+failed&mdash;failed America. And your mother&mdash;and
+Brock and me. Failed your own honor. It would
+have meant for us shame and would have bowed
+our heads; it would have meant for you disaster.
+Don&#39;t fear for your courage, Hugh; the Lord
+won&#39;t forsake the man who carries the Lord&#39;s
+colors."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Young Hugh turned suddenly to his mother.
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page240">[pg 240]</span>
+<a name="Pg240" id="Pg240" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>"I&#39;m at peace now. You and Dad&mdash;honor me.
+I&#39;ll deserve respect from&mdash;my country. It will
+be a wall around me&mdash;And&mdash;" he caught her to
+him and crushed his mouth to hers&mdash;"dearest&mdash;Brock
+will hold my hand."</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page" />
+
+<div class="tei tei-div">
+<a name="toc_15" id="toc_15"></a>
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page243">[pg 243]</span>
+<a name="Pg243" id="Pg243" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<h1 class="tei tei-head">THE SILVER STIRRUP</h1>
+
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">In the most unexpected spots vital sparks of
+history blaze out. Time seems, once in a while,
+powerless to kill a great memory. Romance
+blooms sometimes untarnished across centuries of
+commonplace. In a new world old France lives.</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: center" class="tei tei-p"> * * * * *</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">It is computed that about one-seventh of the
+French-Canadian population of Canada enlisted
+in the great war. The stampede of heroism seems
+to have left them cold. A Gospel of the Province
+first congealed the none too fiery blood of the
+<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">habitants</span>, small farmers, very poor, thinking in
+terms of narrowest economy, of one pig and ten
+children, of painstaking thrift and a bare margin
+to subsistence. Such conditions stifle world interests.
+The earthquake which threatened civilization
+disturbed the <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">habitant</span> merely because it
+hazarded his critical balance on the edge of want.
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page244">[pg 244]</span>
+<a name="Pg244" id="Pg244" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>The cataclysm over the ocean was none of his
+affair. And his affairs pressed. What about the
+pig if one went to war? And could Alphonse, who
+is fourteen, manage the farm so that there would
+be vegetables for winter? Tell me that.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">When in September, 1914, I went to Canada
+for two weeks of camping I had heard of this
+point of view. Dick Lindsley and I were met at
+the Club Station on the casual railway which
+climbs the mountains through Quebec Province,
+by four guides, men from twenty to thirty-five,
+powerfully built chaps, deep-shouldered and slim-waisted,
+lithe as wild-cats. It was a treat to see
+their muscles, like machines in the pink of order,
+adjust to the heavy <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">pacquetons</span>, send a canoe
+whipping through the water. There was one exception
+to the general physical perfection; one of
+Dick&#39;s men, a youngster of perhaps twenty-two,
+limped. He covered ground as well as the others,
+for all of that; he picked the heaviest load and
+portaged it at an uneven trot, faster than his comrades;
+he was what the <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">habitants</span> call "ambitionn&eacute;."
+Dick&#39;s canoe was loaded first, owing to
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page245">[pg 245]</span>
+<a name="Pg245" id="Pg245" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>the fellow&#39;s efficiency, and I waited while it got
+away and watched the lame boy. He had an interesting
+face, aquiline and dark, set with vivid light-blue
+eyes, shooting restless fire. I registered an
+intention to get at this lad&#39;s personality. The
+chance came two days later. My men were off
+chopping on a day, and I suddenly needed to go
+fishing.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Take Philippe," offered Dick. "He handles
+a boat better than any of them."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Philippe and I shortly slipped into the Guardian&#39;s
+Pool, at the lower end of the long lake of the
+Passes. "It is here, M&#39;sieur," Philippe announced,
+"that it is the custom to take large ones."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">By which statement the responsibility of landing
+record trout was on my shoulders. I thought
+I would have a return whack. My hands in the
+snarly flies and my back to Philippe I spoke
+around my pipe, yet spoke distinctly.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Why aren&#39;t you in France fighting?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The canoe shivered down its length as if the
+man at its stern had jumped. There was a silence.
+Then Philippe&#39;s deep, boyish voice answered.</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page246">[pg 246]</span>
+<a name="Pg246" id="Pg246" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"As M&#39;sieur sees, one is lame."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">I felt a hotness emerging from my flannel collar
+and rushing up my face as I bent over that
+damned Silver Doctor that wouldn&#39;t loose its grip
+on the Black Hackle. I didn&#39;t see the Black
+Hackle or the Silver Doctor for a moment. "Beg
+pardon," I growled. "I forgot." I mumbled
+platitudes.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"M&#39;sieur le Docteur has right," Philippe announced
+unruffled. "One should fight for France.
+I have tried to enlist, there are three times, explaining
+that I am &#39;<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">capable</span>&#39; though I walk not
+evenly. But one will not have me. Therefore I
+have shame, me. I have, naturally, more shame
+than another because of Jeanne."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Because of Jeanne?" I repeated. "Who is
+Jeanne?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">There was a pause; a queer feeling made me
+slew around. Philippe&#39;s old felt hat was being
+pulled off as if he were entering a church.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"But&mdash;Jeanne, M&#39;sieur," he stated as if I
+must understand. "Jeanne d&#39;Arc. <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Tiens</span>&mdash;the
+Maid of France."</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page247">[pg 247]</span>
+<a name="Pg247" id="Pg247" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"The Maid of France!" I was puzzled. "What
+has she to do with it?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"But everything, M&#39;sieur." The vivid eyes
+flamed. "M&#39;sieur does not know, perhaps, that
+my grandfather fought under Jeanne?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Your grandfather!" I flung it at him in scorn.
+The man was a poor lunatic.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"But yes, M&#39;sieur. My grandfather, lui-même."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"But, Philippe, the Maid of Orleans died in
+1431." I remembered that date. The Maid is
+one of my heroic figures.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Philippe shrugged his shoulders. "Oh&mdash;as for
+a <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">grandpère</span>! But not the <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">grandpère à present</span>,
+he who keeps the grocery shop in St. Raymond.
+Certainly not that grandfather. It is to say the
+<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">grandpère</span> of that <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">grandpère</span>. Perhaps another
+yet, or even two or three more. What does it matter?
+One goes back a few times of grandfathers
+and behold one arrives at him who was armorer
+for the Maid&mdash;to whom she gave the silver stirrup."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"The silver stirrup." My Leonard rod bumped
+along the bow; my flies tangled again in the current.
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page248">[pg 248]</span>
+<a name="Pg248" id="Pg248" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>I squirmed about till I faced the guide in
+the stern. "Philippe, what in hell do you mean
+by this drool of grandfathers and silver stirrups?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The boy, perfectly respectful, not forgetting
+for a second his affair of keeping the canoe away
+from the fish-hole, looked at me squarely, and his
+uncommon light eyes gleamed out of his face like
+the eyes of a prophet. "M&#39;sieur, it is a tale
+doubtless which seems strange to you, but to us
+others it is not strange. M&#39;sieur lives in New
+York, and there are automobiles and trolley-cars
+and large buildings <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">en masse</span>, and to M&#39;sieur the
+world is made of such things. But there are
+other things. We who live in quiet places, know.
+One has not too much of excitement, we others,
+so that one remembers a great event which has
+happened to one&#39;s family many years. Yes, indeed,
+M&#39;sieur, centuries. If one has not much
+one guards as a souvenir the tale of the silver
+stirrup of Jeanne. Yes, for several generations."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The boy was apparently unconscious that his
+remarks were peculiar. "Philippe, will you tell
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page249">[pg 249]</span>
+<a name="Pg249" id="Pg249" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>me what you mean by a silver stirrup which
+Jeanne d&#39;Arc gave to your ancestors?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"But with pleasure, M&#39;sieur," he answered readily,
+with the gracious French politeness which one
+meets among the <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">habitants</span> side by side with sad
+lapses of etiquette. "It is all-simple that the old
+grandfather, the ancient, he who lived in France
+when the Maid fought her wars, was an armorer.
+'<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">&Ccedil;a fait que</span>'&mdash;<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">sa fak</span>, Philippe pronounced it&mdash;'so
+it happened that on a day the stirrup of the
+Maid broke as her horse plunged, and my grandfather,
+the ancient, he ran quickly and caught the
+horse&#39;s head. And so it happened&mdash;<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">çe fait que</span>&mdash;that
+my grandfather was working at that moment
+on a fine stirrup of gold for her harness, for
+though they burned her afterwards, they gave her
+then all that there was of magnificence. And the
+old follow&mdash;<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">le vieux</span>&mdash;whipped out the golden stirrup
+from his pocket, quite prepared for use, so it
+happened&mdash;and he put it quickly in the place of
+the silver one which she had been using. And
+Jeanne smiled. &#39;You are ready to serve France,
+Armorer.&#39;</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page250">[pg 250]</span>
+<a name="Pg250" id="Pg250" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"She bent then and looked <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">le vieux</span> in the face&mdash;but
+he was young at the time.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"&#39;Are you not Baptiste&#39;s son, of Doremy?&#39;
+asked the Maid.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"&#39;Yes, Jeanne,&#39; said my <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">grandpère</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"&#39;Then keep the silver stirrup to remember our
+village, and God&#39;s servant Jeanne,&#39; she said, and
+gave it to him with her hand."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">If a square of Gobelin tapestry had emerged
+from the woods and hung itself across the gunwale
+of my canvas canoe it would not have been
+more surprising. I got my breath. "And the
+stirrup, what became of it?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The boy shrugged his shoulders. "<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Sais pas</span>,"
+he answered with French nonchalance. "One does
+not know that. It is a long time, M&#39;sieur le Docteur.
+It was lost, that stirrup, some years ago.
+It may be a hundred years. It may be two hundred.
+My grandfather, he who keeps the grocery
+shop, has told me that there is a saying that a
+Martel must go to France to find the silver stirrup.
+In every case I do not know. It is my wish
+to fight for France, but as for the stirrup or
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page251">[pg 251]</span>
+<a name="Pg251" id="Pg251" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>Jeanne&mdash;<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">sais pas</span>." Another shrug. With that he
+was making oration, his light eyes flashing, his
+dark face working with feeling, about the bitterness
+of being a cripple, and unable to go into the
+army.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"It is not <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">comme il faut</span>, M&#39;sieur le Docteur,
+that a man whose very grandfather fought for
+Jeanne should fail France now in her need. Jeanne,
+one knows, was the saviour of France. Is it not?"
+I agreed. "It is my inheritance, therefore, to fight
+as my ancient grandfather fought." I looked at
+the lame boy, not knowing the repartee. He began
+again. "Also I am the only one of the family
+proper to go, except Adolphe, who is not very
+proper, having had a tree to fall on the lungs and
+leave him liable to fits; and also Jacques and Louis
+are too young, and Jean Baptiste he is blind of
+one eye, God knows. So it is I who fail! I fail!
+Jesus Christ! To stay at home like a coward when
+France needs men!"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"But you are Canadian, Philippe. Your people
+have been here two hundred years."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"M&#39;sieur, I am of France. I belong there with
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page252">[pg 252]</span>
+<a name="Pg252" id="Pg252" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>the fighting men." His look was a flame, and suddenly
+I know why he was firing off hot shot at me.
+I am a surgeon.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"What&#39;s the matter with your leg?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The brilliant eyes flashed. "Ah!" he brought
+out, "One hoped&mdash;If M&#39;sieur le Docteur would
+but see. I may be cured. To be straight&mdash;to
+march!" He was trembling.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Later, in the shifting sunshine at the camp door,
+with the odors of hemlocks and balsams about us,
+the lake rippling below, I had an examination. I
+found that the lad&#39;s lameness was a trouble to be
+cured easily by an operation. I hesitated. Was
+it my affair to root this youngster out of safety
+and send him to death in the <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">d&eacute;bâcle</span> over there?
+Yet what right had I to set limits? He wanted to
+offer his life; how could I know what I might be
+blocking if I withheld the cure? My job was to
+give strength to all I could reach.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Philippe," I said, "if you&#39;ll come to New York
+next month I&#39;ll set you up with a good leg."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">In September, 1915, Dick and I came up for
+our yearly trip, but Philippe was not with us.
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page253">[pg 253]</span>
+<a name="Pg253" id="Pg253" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>Philippe, after drilling at Valcartier, was drilling
+in England. I had lurid post cards off and on;
+after a while I knew that he was "somewhere in
+France." A grim gray card came with no post-mark,
+no writing but the address and Philippe&#39;s
+labored signature; for the rest there were printed
+sentences: "I am well. I am wounded. I am in
+hospital. I have had no letter from you lately."
+All of which was struck out but the welcome words,
+"I am well." So far then I had not cured the lad
+to be killed. Then for weeks nothing. It came
+to be time again to go to Canada for the hunting.
+I wrote the steward to get us four men, as usual,
+and Lindsley and I alighted from the rattling
+train at the club station in September, 1916, with
+a mild curiosity to see what Fate had provided as
+guides, philosophers and friends to us for two
+weeks. Paul Sioui&mdash;that was nice&mdash;a good fellow
+Paul; and Josef&mdash;I shook hands with Josef;
+the next face was a new one&mdash;ah, Pierre Beauram&eacute;&mdash;one
+calls one&#39;s self that&mdash;<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">on s&#39;appelle comme
+ça. Bon jour!</span> I turned, and got a shock. The
+fourth face, at which I looked, was the face of
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page254">[pg 254]</span>
+<a name="Pg254" id="Pg254" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>Philippe Martel. I looked, speechless. And with
+that the boy laughed. "It is that M&#39;sieur cannot
+again cure my leg," answered Philippe, and tapped
+proudly on a calf which echoed with a wooden
+sound.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"You young cuss," I addressed him savagely.
+"Do you mean to say you have gone and got shot
+in that very leg I fixed up for you?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Philippe rippled more laughter&mdash;of pure joy&mdash;of
+satisfaction. "But, yes, M&#39;sieur le Docteur,
+that leg <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">même</span>. Itself. In a battle, M&#39;sieur le
+Docteur gave me the good leg for a long enough
+time to serve France. It was all that there was
+of necessary. As for now I may not fight again,
+but I can walk and portage <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">comme il faut</span>. I am
+<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">capable</span> as a guide. Is it not, Josef?" He appealed,
+and the men crowded around to back him
+up with deep, serious voices.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Ah, yes, M&#39;sieur."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">B&#39;en capable!</span>"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"He can walk like us others&mdash;the same!" they
+assured me impressively.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Philippe was my guide this year. It was the
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page255">[pg 255]</span>
+<a name="Pg255" id="Pg255" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>morning after we reached camp. "Would M&#39;sieur
+le Docteur be too busy to look at something?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">I was not. Philippe stood in the camp doorway
+in the patch of sunlight where he had sat two years
+before when I looked over his leg. He sat down
+again, in the shifting sunshine, the wooden leg
+sticking out straight and pathetic, and began to
+take the covers off a package. There were many
+covers; the package was apparently valuable. As
+he worked at it the odors of hemlock and balsam,
+distilled by hot sunlight, rose sweet and strong,
+and the lake splashed on pebbles, and peace that
+passes understanding was about us.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"It was in a bad battle in Lorraine," spoke
+Philippe into the sunshiny peace, "that I lost
+M&#39;sieur le Docteur&#39;s leg. One was in the front
+trench and there was word passed to have the wire
+cutters ready, and also bayonets, for we were to
+charge across the open towards the trenches of the
+Germans&mdash;perhaps one hundred and fifty yards,
+eight <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">arpents</span>&mdash;acres&mdash;as we say in Canada. Our
+big guns back did the preparation, making what
+M&#39;sieur le Docteur well knows is called a <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">rideau</span>&mdash;a
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page256">[pg 256]</span>
+<a name="Pg256" id="Pg256" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>fire curtain. We climbed out of our trench with
+a shout and followed the fire curtain; so closely
+we followed that it seemed we should be killed by
+our own guns. And then it stopped&mdash;too soon,
+M&#39;sieur le Docteur. Very many Boches were left
+alive in that trench in front, and they fired as we
+came, so that some of us were hit, and so terrible
+was the fire that the rest were forced back to our
+own trench which we had left. It is so sometimes
+in a fight, M&#39;sieur le Docteur. The big guns make
+a little mistake, and many men have to die. Yet
+it is for France. And as I ran with the others
+for the shelter of the trench, and as the Boches
+streamed out of their trench to make a counter
+attack with hand-grenades I tripped on something.
+It was little R&eacute;n&eacute; Dumont, whom M&#39;sieur le Docteur
+remembers. He guided for our camp when
+Josef was ill in the hand two years ago. In any
+case he lay there, and I could not let him lie to
+be shot to pieces. So I caught up the child and
+ran with him across my shoulders and threw him
+in the trench, and as he went in there was a cry
+behind me, &#39;Philippe!&#39;</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page257">[pg 257]</span>
+<a name="Pg257" id="Pg257" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"I turned, and one waved arms at me&mdash;a comrade
+whom I did not know very well&mdash;but he lay
+in the open and cried for help. So I thought of
+Jeanne d&#39;Arc, and how she had no fear, and was
+kind, and with that, back I trotted to get the comrade.
+But at that second&mdash;pouf!&mdash;a big noise,
+and I fell down and could not get up. It was the
+good new leg of M&#39;sieur le Docteur which those
+<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">sacr&eacute;s</span> Boches had blown off with a hand-grenade.
+So that I lay dead enough. And when I came
+alive it was dark, and also the leg hurt&mdash;but yes!
+I was annoyed to have ruined that leg which you
+gave me&mdash;M&#39;sieur le Docteur."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">I grinned, and something ached inside of me.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Philippe went on. "It was then, when I was
+without much hope and weak and in pain and also
+thirsty, that a thing happened. It is a business
+without pleasure, M&#39;sieur le Docteur, that&mdash;to lie
+on a battle-field with a leg shot off, and around one
+men dead, piled up&mdash;yes, and some not dead yet,
+which is worse. They groan. One feels unable to
+bear it. It grows cold also, and the searchlights
+of the Boches play so as to prevent rescue by comrades.
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page258">[pg 258]</span>
+<a name="Pg258" id="Pg258" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>They seem quite horrible, those lights.
+One lives, but one wishes much to die. So it happened
+that, as I lay there, I heard a step coming,
+not crawling along as the rescuers crawl and stopping
+when the lights flare, but a steady step coming
+freely. And with that I was lifted and carried
+quickly into a wood. There was a hole in the
+ground there, torn by a shell deeply, and the friend
+laid me there and put a flask to my lips, and I was
+warm and comforted. I looked up and I saw a
+figure in soldier&#39;s clothing of an old time, such
+as one sees in books&mdash;armor of white. And the
+face smiled down at me. &#39;You will be saved,&#39; a
+voice said; and the words sounded homely, almost
+like the words of my grandfather who keeps the
+grocery shop. &#39;You will be saved.&#39; It seemed to
+me that the voice was young and gentle and like a
+woman&#39;s.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"&#39;Who are you?&#39; I asked, and I had a strange
+feeling, afraid a little M&#39;sieur, yet glad to a marvel.
+I got no answer to my question, but I felt
+something pressed into my hand, and then I spoke,
+but I suppose I was a little delirious, M&#39;sieur, for
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page259">[pg 259]</span>
+<a name="Pg259" id="Pg259" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>I heard myself say a thing I had not been thinking.
+&#39;A Martel must return to France to find the
+silver stirrup&#39;&mdash;I said that, M&#39;sieur. Why I do
+not know. They were the words I had heard my
+grandfather speak. Perhaps the hard feeling in
+my hand&mdash;but I cannot explain, M&#39;sieur le Docteur.
+In any case, there was all at once a great
+thrill through my body, such as I have never
+known. I sat up quickly and stared at the figure.
+It stood there. M&#39;sieur will probably not believe
+me&mdash;the figure stood there in white armor, with
+a sword&mdash;and I knew it for Jeanne&mdash;the Maid.
+With that I knew no more. When I woke it was
+day. I was still lying in the crater of the shell
+which had torn up the earth of a very old battle-field,
+but in my hand I held tight&mdash;this."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Philippe drew off the last cover with a dramatic
+flourish and opened the box which had been
+wrapped so carefully. I bent over him. In the
+box, before my eyes, lay an ancient worn and battered
+silver stirrup. There were no words to say.
+I stared at the boy. And with that suddenly he
+had slewed around clumsily&mdash;because of his poor
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page260">[pg 260]</span>
+<a name="Pg260" id="Pg260" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>wooden leg&mdash;and was on his knees at my feet. He
+held out the stirrup.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"M&#39;sieur le Docteur, you gave me a man&#39;s
+chance and honor, and the joy of fighting for
+France. I can never tell my thanks. I have nothing
+to give you&mdash;but this. Take it, M&#39;sieur le
+Docteur. It is not much, yet to me the earth
+holds nothing so valuable. It is the silver stirrup
+of Jeanne d&#39;Arc. It is yours."</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: center" class="tei tei-p"> * * * * *</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">In a glass case on the wall of my library hangs
+an antique bit of harness which is my most precious
+piece of property. How its story came
+about I do not even try to guess. As Philippe
+said the action of that day took place on a very
+old battle-field. The shell which made the sheltering
+crater doubtless dug up earth untouched for
+hundreds of years. That it should have dug up
+the very object which was a tradition in the Martel
+family and should have laid it in the grasp of a
+Martel fighting for France with that tradition at
+the bottom of his mind seems incredible. The story
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page261">[pg 261]</span>
+<a name="Pg261" id="Pg261" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>of the apparition of the Maid is incredible to
+laughter, or tears. No farther light is to be got
+from the boy, because he believes his story. I do
+not try to explain, I place the episode in my
+mind alongside other things incredible, things
+lovely and spiritual, and, to our viewpoint of five
+years ago, things mad. Many such have risen
+luminous, undesirable, unexplained, out of these
+last horrible years, and wait human thought, it
+may be human development, to be classified. I
+accept and treasure the silver stirrup as a pledge
+of beautiful human gratitude. I hold it as a
+visible sign that French blood keeps a loyalty to
+France which ages and oceans may not weaken.</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page" />
+
+<div class="tei tei-div">
+<a name="toc_16" id="toc_16"></a>
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page265">[pg 265]</span>
+<a name="Pg265" id="Pg265" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<h1 class="tei tei-head">THE RUSSIAN</h1>
+
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The little dinner-party of grizzled men strayed
+from the dining-room and across the hall into the
+vast library, arguing mightily.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"The great war didn&#39;t do it. World democracy
+was on the way. The war held it back."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">It was the United States Senator, garrulous
+and incisive, who issued that statement. The
+Judge, the host, wasted not a moment in contradicting.
+"You&#39;re mad, Joe," he threw at him with
+a hand on the shoulder of the man who was still
+to him that promising youngster, little Joe Burden
+of The School. "Held back democracy! The
+war! Quite mad, my son."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The guest of the evening, a Russian General
+who had just finished five strenuous years in the
+Cabinet of the Slav Republic, dropped back a step
+to watch, with amused eyes, strolling through the
+doorway, the two splendid old boys, the Judge&#39;s
+arm around the Senator&#39;s shoulders, fighting, sputtering,
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page266">[pg 266]</span>
+<a name="Pg266" id="Pg266" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>arguing with each other as they had fought
+and argued forty odd years up to date.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Two minutes more and the party of six had settled
+into deep chairs, into a mammoth davenport,
+before a blazing fire of spruce and birch. Cigars,
+liqueurs, coffee, the things men love after dinner,
+were there; one had the vaguest impression of two
+vanishing Japanese persons who might or might
+not have brought trays and touched the fire and
+placed tiny tables at each right hand; an atmosphere
+of completeness was present, one did not
+notice how. One settled with a sigh of satisfaction
+into comfort, and chose a cigar. One laughed to
+hear the Judge pound away at the Senator.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"It&#39;s all a game." Dr. Rutherford turned to
+the Russian. "They&#39;re devoted old friends, not
+violent enemies, General. The Senator stirs up
+the Judge by taking impossible positions and defending
+them savagely. The Judge invariably
+falls into the trap. Then a battle. Their battles
+are the joy of the Century Club. The Senator
+doesn&#39;t believe for an instant that the war held
+back democracy."</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page267">[pg 267]</span>
+<a name="Pg267" id="Pg267" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">At that the Senator whirled. "I don&#39;t? But
+I do.&mdash;Don&#39;t <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">smoke</span> that cigar, Rutherford, on
+your life. Peter will have these atrocities. Here&mdash;Kaki,
+bring the doctor the other box.&mdash;That&#39;s
+better.&mdash;I don&#39;t believe what I said? Now listen.
+How could the fact that the world was turned into
+a military camp, officers commanding, privates
+obeying, rank, rank, rank everywhere throughout
+mankind, how could that fail to hinder democracy,
+which is in its essence the leveling of ranks? Tell
+me that!"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The doctor grinned at the Russian. "What
+about it, General? What do you think?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The General answered slowly, with a small accent
+but in the wonderfully good English of an
+educated Russian. "I do not agree with the Sena-torr,"
+he stated, and five heads turned to listen.
+There was a quality of large personality in the
+burr of the voice, in the poise and soldierly bearing,
+in the very silence of the man, which made his
+slow words of importance. "I believe indeed that
+the Sena-torr is partly&mdash;shall I say speaking for
+argument?"</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page268">[pg 268]</span>
+<a name="Pg268" id="Pg268" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The Senator laughed.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"The great war, in which all of us here had
+the honor to bear arms&mdash;that death grapple of
+tyranny against freedom&mdash;it did not hold back
+the cause of humanity, of democracy, that war.
+Else thousands upon thousands of good lives were
+given in vain."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">There was a hushed moment. Each of the men,
+men now from fifty to sixty years old, had been
+a young soldier in that Homeric struggle. Each
+was caught back at the words of the Russian to a
+vision of terrible places, of thundering of great
+guns, of young, generous blood flowing like water.
+The deep, assured tones of the Russian spoke into
+the solemn pause.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"There is an episode of the war which I remember.
+It goes to show, so far as one incident may,
+where every hour was crowded with drama, how
+forces worked together for democracy. It is the
+story of a common man of my country who was
+a private in the army of your country, and who
+was lifted by an American gentleman to hope and
+opportunity, and, as God willed it, to honor. My
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page269">[pg 269]</span>
+<a name="Pg269" id="Pg269" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>old friend the Judge can tell that episode better
+than I. My active part in it was small. If you
+like"&mdash;the dark foreign eyes flashed about the
+group&mdash;"if you like I should much enjoy hearing
+my old friend review that little story of democracy."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">There was a murmur of approval. One man
+spoke, a fighting parson he had been. "It argues
+democracy in itself, General, that a Russian aristocrat,
+the brother of a Duke, should remember
+so well the adventures of a common soldier."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The smouldering eyes of the Slav turned to the
+speaker and regarded him gravely. "I remember
+those adventures well," he answered.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The Judge, flung back in a corner of the davenport,
+his knees crossed and rings from his cigar
+ascending, stared at the ceiling, "Come along,
+Peter. You&#39;re due to entertain us," the Senator
+adjured him, and the Judge, staring upwards,
+began.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"This is the year 1947. It was in 1917 that the
+United States went into war&mdash;thirty years ago.
+The fifth of June, 1917, was set, as you remember,
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page270">[pg 270]</span>
+<a name="Pg270" id="Pg270" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>for the registration of all men in the country over
+twenty-one and under thirty-one for the draft. I
+was twenty-three, living in this house with my
+father and mother, both dead before the war ended.
+Being outside of the city, the polling place where
+I was due to register was three miles off, at Hiawatha.
+I registered in the morning; the polls were
+open from seven A.M. to nine P.M. My mother
+drove me over, and the road was being mended,
+and, as happened in those days in the country,
+half a mile of it was almost impassable. There
+were no adjustable lift-roads invented then. We
+got through the ruts and stonework, but it was
+hard going, and we came home by a detour through
+the city rather than pass again that beastly half
+mile. That night was dark and stormy, with rain
+at intervals, and as we sat in this room, reading,
+the three of us&mdash;" The Judge paused and gazed
+a moment at the faces in the lamplight, at the
+chairs where his guests sat. It was as if he called
+back to their old environment for a moment the
+two familiar figures which had belonged here,
+which had gone out of his life. "We sat in this
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page271">[pg 271]</span>
+<a name="Pg271" id="Pg271" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>room, the three of us," he repeated, "and the
+butler came in.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"&#39;If you please, sir, there&#39;s a young man here
+who wants to register,&#39; he said.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"&#39;Wants to register!&#39; my father threw at him.
+&#39;What do you mean?&#39;</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"We all went outside, and there we found not
+one, but five boys, Russians. There was a munitions
+plant a mile back of us and the lads worked
+there, and had wakened to the necessity of registering
+at the last moment, being new in the country
+and with little English. They had directions
+to go to the same polling place as mint, Hiawatha,
+but had gotten lost, and, seeing our lights, brought
+up here. Hiawatha, as I said, is three miles away.
+It was eight-thirty and the polls closed at nine.
+We brought the youngsters inside, and I dashed
+to the garage for the car and piled the delighted
+lads into it and drove them across.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"At least I tried to. But when we came to the
+bad half mile the car rebelled at going the bit
+twice in a day, and the motor stalled. There we
+were&mdash;eight-forty-five P.M.&mdash;polls due to close
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page272">[pg 272]</span>
+<a name="Pg272" id="Pg272" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>at nine&mdash;a year&#39;s imprisonment for five well-meaning
+boys for neglecting to register. I was in despair.
+Then suddenly one of the boys saw a small
+red light ahead, the tail light of an automobile.
+We ran along and found a big car standing in
+front of a house. As we got there, out from the
+car stepped a woman with a lantern, and as the
+light swung upward I saw that she was tall and
+fair and young and very lovely. She stopped as
+the six of us loomed out of the darkness. I knew
+that a professor from the University in town had
+taken this house for the summer, but I don&#39;t know
+the people or their name. It was no time to be
+shy. I gave my name and stated the case.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"The girl looked at me. &#39;I&#39;ve seen you,&#39; she
+said. &#39;I know you are Mr. McLane. I&#39;ll drive
+you across. One moment, till I tell my mother.&#39;</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"She was in the house and out again without
+wasting a second, and as she flashed into the car I
+heard a gasp, and I turned and saw in the glare
+of the headlights as they sprang on one of my
+Russians, a gigantic youngster of six feet four or
+so, standing with his cap off and his head bent, as
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page273">[pg 273]</span>
+<a name="Pg273" id="Pg273" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>he might have stood before a shrine, staring at the
+spot where the girl had disappeared into the car.
+Then the engine purred and my squad tumbled in.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"We made the polls on the tap of nine. Afterwards
+we drove back to my car and among us,
+with the lantern, we got the motor running again,
+the girl helping efficiently. The big fellow, when
+we told her good-night, astonished me by dropping
+on his knees and kissing the edge of her skirt. But
+I put it down to Slavic temperament and took it
+casually. I&#39;ve learned since what Russian depth
+of feeling means&mdash;and tenacity of purpose. There
+was one more incident. When I finally drove the
+lads up to their village the big chap, who spoke
+rather good English when he spoke at all, which
+was seldom, invited me to have some beer. I was
+tired and wanted to get home, so I didn&#39;t. Then
+the young giant excavated in his pocket and
+brought out a dollar bill.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"&#39;You get beer tomorrow.&#39; And when I laughed
+and shoved it back he flushed. &#39;Excuse&mdash;Mr. Sir,&#39;
+he said. &#39;I make mistake.&#39; Suddenly he drew himself
+up&mdash;about to the treetops, it looked, for he
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page274">[pg 274]</span>
+<a name="Pg274" id="Pg274" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>was a huge, a magnificent lad. He tossed out his
+arm to me. &#39;Some day,&#39; he stated dramatically,
+&#39;I do two things. Some day I give Mr. Sir somethings
+more than dollar&mdash;and he will take. And&mdash;some
+day I marry&mdash;Miss Angel!&#39;</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"You may believe I was staggered. But I simply
+stuck out my fist and shook his and said:
+&#39;Good. No reason on earth why a fellow with the
+right stuff shouldn&#39;t get anywhere. It&#39;s a free
+country.&#39; And the giant drew his black brows
+together and remarked slowly: &#39;All countries&mdash;world&mdash;is
+to be free. War will sweep up kings&mdash;and
+other&mdash;rubbish. I&mdash;shall be&mdash;a man.&#39;</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Besides his impressive build, the boy had&mdash;had&mdash;"
+the Judge glanced at the Russian General,
+whose eyes glowed at the fire. "The boy had a remarkable
+face. It was cut like a granite hill, in
+sweeping masses. All strength. His eyes were
+coals. I went home thoughtful, and the Russian
+boy&#39;s intense face was in my mind for days, and I
+told myself many times that he not only would
+be, but already was, a man.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Events quickstepped after that. I got to
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page275">[pg 275]</span>
+<a name="Pg275" id="Pg275" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>France within the year, and, as you remember,
+work was ready. It was perhaps eighteen months
+after that registration day, June fifth, which we
+keep so rightly now as one of our sacred days,
+that one morning I was in a fight. Our artillery
+had demoralized the enemy at a point and sent
+them running. There was one machine gun left
+working in the Hun trenches&mdash;doing a lot of damage.
+Suddenly it jammed. I was commanding
+my company, and I saw the chance, but also I saw
+a horrid mess of barbed wire. So I just ran forward
+a bit and up to the wire and started clipping,
+while that machine gun stayed jammed. Out of
+the corner of an eye I could see men rushing towards
+it in the German trench, and I knew I had
+only a moment before they got it firing again.
+Then, as I leaped far forward to reach a bit of
+entanglement, my foot slipped in a puddle and as
+I sprawled I saw our uniform and a dead American
+boy&#39;s face under me, and I fell headlong in his
+blood over him and into a bunch of wire. And
+couldn&#39;t get up. The wire held like the devil. I
+got more tied up at every pull. And my clippers
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page276">[pg 276]</span>
+<a name="Pg276" id="Pg276" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>had fallen from my hand and landed out of
+reach.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"&#39;It&#39;s good night for me,&#39; I thought, and was
+aware of a sharp regret. To be killed because of
+a nasty bit of wire! I had wanted to do a lot of
+things yet. With that something leaped, and I
+saw clippers flashing close by. A big man was
+cutting me loose, dragging me out, setting me on
+my feet. Then the roar of an exploding shell; the
+man fell&mdash;fell into the wire from which he had just
+saved me. There was no time to consider that;
+somehow I was back and leading my men&mdash;and
+then we had the trenches.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"The rest of that day was confusion, but we
+won a mile of earthworks, and at night I remembered
+the incident of the wire and the man who
+rescued me. By a miracle I found him in the field
+hospital. His head was bandaged, for the bit of
+shell had scraped his cheek and jaw, but his eyes
+were safe, and something in the glance out of
+them was familiar. Yet I didn&#39;t know him till he
+drew me over and whispered painfully, for it hurt
+him to talk:</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page277">[pg 277]</span>
+<a name="Pg277" id="Pg277" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"&#39;Yester&mdash;day I did&mdash;give Mr. Sir somethings
+more than dollar. And he did&mdash;take it.&#39;</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Then I know the big young Russian of registration
+day who had tried to tip me. Bless him!
+I got him transferred to my command and&mdash;" the
+Judge hesitated a bit and glanced at his distinguished
+guest. One surmised embarrassment in
+telling the story of the General&#39;s humble compatriot.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The General rose to his feet and stood before
+the fire facing the handful of men. "I can continue
+this anecdote from the point that is more
+easily than my friend the Judge," spoke the General.
+"I was in the confidence of that countryman
+of mine. I know. It was so that after he had been
+thus slightly useful to my friend the Judge, who
+was the Captain McLane at that time&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The Judge broke in with a shout of deep laughter
+worthy of a boy of eighteen. "He &#39;slightly
+obliged me by saving my life." The American,
+threw that into the Russian&#39;s smooth sentences.
+"I put that fact before the jury."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The four men listening laughed also, but the
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page278">[pg 278]</span>
+<a name="Pg278" id="Pg278" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>Russian held up a hand and went on gravely: "It
+was quite simple, that episode, and the man&#39;s
+pleasure. I knew him well. But what followed was
+not ordinary. The Captain McLane saw to it
+that the soldier had his chance. He became an officer.
+He went alive through the war, and at the
+end the Captain McLane made it possible that he
+should be educated. His career was a gift from
+the Captain McLane&mdash;from my friend the Judge
+to that man, who is now&mdash;" the finished sentence
+halted a mere second&mdash;"who is now a responsible
+person of Russia.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"And it is the incident of that sort, it is that
+incident itself which I know, which leads me to
+combat&mdash;" he turned with a deep bow&mdash;"the position
+of the Sena-torr that the great war did not
+make for democracy. Gentlemen, my compatriot
+was a peasant, a person of ignorance, yet with
+a desire of fulfilling his possibilities. He had
+been born in social chains and tied to most sordid
+life, beyond hope, in old Russia. To try to shake
+free he had gone to America. But it was that caldron
+of fire, the war, which freed him, which fused
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page279">[pg 279]</span>
+<a name="Pg279" id="Pg279" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>his life and the life of the Captain McLane, so
+different in opportunity, and burned from them
+all trivialities and put them, stark-naked of advantages
+and of drawbacks artificial, side by side,
+as two lives merely. It made them&mdash;brothers.
+One gave and the other took as brothers without
+thought of false pride. They came from the furnace
+men. Both. Which is democracy&mdash;a chance
+for a tree to grow, for a flame to burn, for a river
+to flow; a chance for a man to become a man and
+not rest a vegetable anchored to the earth as&mdash;Oh,
+God!&mdash;for many centuries the Russian mujiks
+have rested. It is that which I understand by
+democracy. Freedom of development for everything
+which wants to develop. It was the earthquake
+of war which broke chains, loosened dams,
+cleared the land for young forests. It was war
+which made Russia a republic, which threw down
+the kingships, which joined common men and
+princes as comrades. God bless that liberating
+war! God grant that never in all centuries may
+this poor planet have another! God save democracy&mdash;humanity!
+Does the Sena-torr yet believe
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page280">[pg 280]</span>
+<a name="Pg280" id="Pg280" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>that the great war retarded democracy?" The
+Russian&#39;s brilliant, smouldering eyes swept about,
+inquiring.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">There was a hush in the peaceful, firelit, lamp-lit
+room. And with that, as of one impulse, led
+by the Senator, the five men broke into handclapping.
+Tears stood in eyes, faces were twisted with
+emotion; each of these men had seen what the thing
+was&mdash;war; each knew what a price humanity had
+paid for freedom. Out of the stirring of emotion,
+out of the visions of trenches and charges and
+blood and agony and heroism and unselfishness
+and steadfastness, the fighting parson, he who had
+bent, under fire, many a day over dying men who
+waited his voice to help them across the border&mdash;the
+parson led the little company from the intense
+moment to commonplace.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"You haven&#39;t quite finished the story, General.
+The boy promised to do two things. He did the
+first; he gave the Judge &#39;something more than a
+dollar,&#39; and the Judge took it&mdash;his life. But he
+said also he was going to marry&mdash;what did he call
+her?&mdash;Miss Angel. How about that?"</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page281">[pg 281]</span>
+<a name="Pg281" id="Pg281" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The Russian General, standing on the hearthrug,
+appeared to draw himself up suddenly with
+an access of dignity, and the Judge&#39;s boyish big
+laugh broke into the silence, "Tell them, Michael,"
+said the Judge. "You&#39;ve gone so far with
+the fairy story that they have a right to know the
+crowning glory of it. Tell them."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">And suddenly the men sitting about noticed
+with one accord what, listening to the General&#39;s
+voice, they had not thought about&mdash;that the Russian
+was uncommonly tall&mdash;six feet four perhaps;
+that his face was carved in sweeping lines like
+a granite hillside, and that an old, long scar
+stretched from the vivid eyes to the mouth. The
+men stared, startled with a sudden simultaneous
+thought. The Judge, watching, smiled. Slowly
+the General put his hand into the breast pocket
+of his evening coat; slowly he drew out a case of
+dark leather, tooled wonderfully, set with stones.
+He opened the case and looked down; the strong
+face changed as if a breeze and sunshine passed
+over a mountain. He glanced up at the men
+waiting.</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page282">[pg 282]</span>
+<a name="Pg282" id="Pg282" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"I am no Duke&#39;s brother," he said, smiling, suddenly
+radiant. "That is a mistake of the likeness
+of a name, which all the world makes. I am born
+a mujik of Russia. But you, sir," and he turned
+to the parson, "you wish an answer of &#39;Miss
+Angel,&#39; as the big peasant boy called that lovely
+spirit, so far above him in that night, so far above
+him still, and yet, God be thanked, so close today!
+Yes? Then this is my answer." He held out the
+miniature set with jewels.</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page" />
+
+<div class="tei tei-div">
+<a name="toc_17" id="toc_17"></a>
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page285">[pg 285]</span>
+<a name="Pg285" id="Pg285" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<h1 class="tei tei-head">ROBINA&#39;S DOLL</h1>
+
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Massive, sprawling, uncertain writing, two
+sentences to the page; a violent slant in the second
+line, down right, balanced by a drastic lessening
+of the letters, up right, in the line underneath;
+spelling not as advised in the Century Dictionary&mdash;a
+letter from Robina, aged eight. Robina&#39;s Aunt
+Evelyn, sitting in her dress and cap of a Red
+Cross nurse in the big base hospital in Paris, read
+the wandering, painstaking, very unsuccessful literary
+effort, laughing, half-crying, and kissed it
+enthusiastically.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"The darling baby! She shall have her doll if
+it takes&mdash;" Aunt Evelyn stopped thoughtfully.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">It would take something serious to buy and
+equip the doll that Robina, with eight-year-old
+definiteness, had specified. The girl in the Red
+Cross dress read the letter over.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Dear Aunt Evelyn," began Robina and struck
+no snags so far. "I liked your postcard so much."
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page286">[pg 286]</span>
+<a name="Pg286" id="Pg286" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>(The facilis descensus to an averni of literature
+began with a swoop down here.) "Mother is wel.
+Fother is wel. The baby is wel. The dog has sevven
+kitens." (Robina robbed Peter to pay Paul
+habitually in her spelling.) "Fother sais they
+lukk like choklit eclares. I miss you, dere Aunt
+Evelyn, because I lov you sew. I hope Santa
+Claus wil bring me a doll. I want a very bigg
+bride doll with a vale and flours an a trunk of
+close, and all her under-close to buton and unboton
+and to have pink ribons run into. I don&#39;t
+want anythig sode on. Come home, Aunt Evelyn,
+becaus I miss you. But if the poor wundead soljers
+ned you then don&#39;t come. But as soone as you
+can come to yure loving own girl&mdash;ROBINA."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The dear angel! Every affectionate, labored
+word was from the warm little heart; Evelyn
+Bruce knew that. She sat, smiling, holding the
+paper against her, seeing a vision of the faraway,
+beloved child who wrote it. She saw the dancing,
+happy brown eyes and the shining, cropped head
+of pale golden brown, and the straight, strong
+little figure; she heard the merry, ready giggle and
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page287">[pg 287]</span>
+<a name="Pg287" id="Pg287" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>the soft, slow tones that were always full of love
+to her. Robina, her sister&#39;s child, her own god-daughter
+had been her close friend from babyhood,
+and between them there was a bond of understanding
+which made nothing of the difference in years.
+Darling little Robina! Such a good, unspoiled
+little girl, for all of the luxury and devotion that
+surrounded her!</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">But&mdash;there was a difficulty just there. Robina
+was unspoiled indeed, yet, as the children of the
+very rich, she was, even at eight, sophisticated in
+a baby way. She had been given too many grand
+dolls not to know just the sort she wanted. She
+did not know that what she wanted cost money,
+but she knew the points desired&mdash;and they did cost
+money. Aunt Evelyn had not much money.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"This one extravagant thing I will do," said
+Evelyn Bruce, "and I&#39;ll give up my trip to England
+next week, and I&#39;ll do it in style. Robina
+won&#39;t want dolls much longer and this time she&#39;s
+got to have her heart&#39;s desire."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Which was doubtless foolish, yet when one is
+separated by an ocean and a war from one&#39;s own,
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page288">[pg 288]</span>
+<a name="Pg288" id="Pg288" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>it is perhaps easier to be foolish for a child&#39;s face
+and a child&#39;s voice, and love sent across the sea.
+So Evelyn Bruce wrote a letter to her cousin in
+England saying that she could not come to her
+till after Christmas. Then she went out into
+Paris and ordered the doll, and reveled in the
+ordering, for a very gorgeous person indeed it
+was, and worthy to journey from Paris to a little
+American. It was to be ready in just two weeks,
+and Miss Bruce was to come in and look over the
+fine lady and her equipment as often as desired,
+before she started on her ocean voyage.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"It would simply break my heart if she were
+torpedoed."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Evelyn confided that, childlike, to the black-browed,
+stout Frenchwoman who took a personal
+interest in every "buton," and then she opened
+her bag and brought out Robina&#39;s photograph,
+standing, in a ruffled bonnet, her solemn West
+Highland White terrier dog in her arms, on the
+garden path of "Graystones" between tall foxgloves.
+And the Frenchwoman tossed up enraptured
+hands at the beauty of the little girl who
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page289">[pg 289]</span>
+<a name="Pg289" id="Pg289" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>was to get the doll, and did not miss the great,
+splendid house in the background, or the fact that
+the dog was of a "<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">chic</span>" variety.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The two weeks fled, every day full of the
+breathless life&mdash;and death&mdash;of a hospital in war-torn
+France. Every day the girl saw sights and
+heard sounds which it seemed difficult to see and
+hear and go on living, but she moved serene
+through such an environment, because she could
+help. Every day she gave all that was in her to
+the suffering boys who were carried, in a never-ending
+stream of stretchers, into the hospital.
+And the strength she gave flowed back to her
+endlessly from, she could not but believe it, the
+underlying source of all strength, which stretches
+beneath and about us all, and from which those
+who give greatly know how to draw.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Two or three times, during the two weeks,
+Evelyn had gone in to inspect the progress of
+Robina&#39;s doll, and spent a happy and light-hearted
+quarter of an hour with friendly Madame of the
+shop, deciding the color of the lady&#39;s party
+coat, and of the ribbons in her minute underclothes,
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page290">[pg 290]</span>
+<a name="Pg290" id="Pg290" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>and packing and repacking the trunk
+with enchanting fairy foolishnesses. Again and
+again she smiled to herself, in bed at night, going
+about her work in the long days, as she thought
+of the little girl&#39;s rapture over the many and carefully
+planned details. For, with all the presents
+showered on her, Robina&#39;s aunt knew that Robina
+had never had anything as perfect as this exquisite
+Paris doll and her trousseau.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The day came on which Evelyn was to make
+her final visit to "La Marquise," as Madame
+called the doll, and the nurse was needed in the
+hospital and could not go. But she telephoned
+Madame and made an appointment for tomorrow.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"&#39;La Marquise&#39; finds herself quite ready for
+the voyage," Madame spoke over the telephone.
+"She is all which there is of most lovely; Paris
+itself has never seen a so ravishing doll. I say
+it. We wait anxiously to greet Mademoiselle, I
+and La Marquise," Madame assured her. Evelyn,
+laughing with sheer pleasure, made an engagement
+for the next day, without fail, and went
+back to her work.</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page291">[pg 291]</span>
+<a name="Pg291" id="Pg291" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">There was a badly wounded <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">poilu</span> in her ward,
+whom the girl had come to know well. He was
+young, perhaps twenty-seven, and his warm
+brown eyes were full of a quality of gentleness
+which endeared him to everyone who came near
+him. He was very grateful, very uncomplaining,
+a simple-minded, honest, common, young peasant,
+with a charm uncommon. The unending bright
+courage with which he made light of cruel pain,
+was almost more than Evelyn, used as she was
+to brave men&#39;s pain, could bear. He could not
+get well&mdash;the doctors said that&mdash;and it seemed
+that he could not die.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"If Corporal Duplessis might die," Evelyn
+spoke to the surgeon.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">He answered, considering: "I don&#39;t see what
+keeps him alive."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"I believe," said Evelyn, "there&#39;s something
+on his mind. He sighs constantly. Broken-heartedly.
+I believe he can&#39;t die until his mind is
+relieved."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"It may be that," agreed Dr. Norton. "You
+could help him if you could get him to tell you."
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page292">[pg 292]</span>
+<a name="Pg292" id="Pg292" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>And moved on to the next shattered thing that
+had been, so lately, a strong, buoyant boy.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Evelyn went back to Duplessis and bent over
+him and spoke cheerful words; he smiled up at her
+with quick French responsiveness, and then sighed
+the heavy, anxious sigh which had come to be
+part of him. With that the girl took his one
+good hand and stroked it. "If you could tell the
+American Sister what it is," she spoke softly,
+"that troubles your mind, perhaps I might help
+you. We Americans, you know," and she smiled
+at him, "we are wonderful people. We can do
+all sorts of magic&mdash;and I want to help you to
+rest, so much. I&#39;d do anything to help you.
+Won&#39;t you tell me what it is that bothers?"
+Evelyn Bruce&#39;s voice was winning, and Duplessis&#39;
+eyes rested on her affectionately.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"But how the Sister understands one!" he said.
+"It is true that there is a trouble. It hinders me
+to die"&mdash;and the heavy sigh swept out again. "It
+would be a luxury for me&mdash;dying. The pain is
+bad, at times. Yet the Sister knows I am glad to
+have it, for France. Ah, yes! But&mdash;if I might
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page293">[pg 293]</span>
+<a name="Pg293" id="Pg293" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>be released. Yet the thought of what I said to
+her keeps me from dying always."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"What you said &#39;to her,&#39; corporal?" repeated
+Evelyn. "Can&#39;t you tell me what it was? I
+would try so hard to help you. I might perhaps."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Who knows?" smiled the corporal, "It is
+true that Americans work magic. And the Sister
+is of a goodness! But yes. Yet the Sister may
+laugh at me, for it is a thing entirely childish,
+my trouble."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"I will not laugh at you, Corporal," said
+Evelyn, gravely, and felt something wring her
+heart.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"If&mdash;then&mdash;if the Sister will not think it foolish&mdash;I
+will tell." The Sister&#39;s answer was to
+stroke his fingers. "It is my child, my little girl,"
+Duplessis began in his deep, weak tones. "It was
+to her I made the promise."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"What promise?" prompted Evelyn softly, as
+he stopped.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"One sees," the deep voice began again, "that
+when I told them goodbye, the mother and Marie
+my wife, and the <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">petite</span>, who has five years, then
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page294">[pg 294]</span>
+<a name="Pg294" id="Pg294" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>I started away, and would not look back, because
+I could not well bear it, Sister. And suddenly,
+as I strode to the street from our cottage, down
+the brick walk, where there are roses and also
+other flowers, on both sides&mdash;suddenly I heard a
+cry. And it was the voice of little Jeanne, the
+<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">petite</span>. I turned at that sound, for I could not
+help it, Sister, and between the flowers the little
+one came running, and as I bent she threw her
+arms about my neck and held me so tight, tight
+that I could not loosen the little hands, not without
+hurting her. &#39;I will not let you go&mdash;I will
+not let you go.&#39; She cried that again and again.
+Till my heart was broken. But all the same, one
+had to go. One was due to join the comrades at
+the station, and the time was short. So that,
+immediately, I had a thought. &#39;My most dear,&#39;
+I spoke to her. &#39;If thou wilt let me go, then I
+promise to send thee a great, beautiful doll, all
+in white, as a bride, like the cousin Annette at
+her wedding last week.&#39; And then the clinging
+little hands loosened, and she said, wondering&mdash;for
+she is but a baby&mdash;&#39;Wilt thou promise, my
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page295">[pg 295]</span>
+<a name="Pg295" id="Pg295" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>father?&#39; And I said, &#39;Yes,&#39; and kissed her quickly,
+and went away. So that now that I am wounded
+and am to die, that promise which I cannot keep
+to my <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">petite</span>, that promise hinders me to die."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The deep, sad voice stopped and the honest
+eyes of the peasant boy looked up at Evelyn,
+burning with the pain of his body and of his soul.
+And as Evelyn looked back, holding his hand and
+stroking it, it was as if the furnace of the soldier&#39;s
+pain melted together all the things she had ever
+cared to do. Yet it was a minute before she
+spoke.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Corporal," she said, "your little girl shall
+have her doll, I will take it to her and tell her
+that her father sent it. Will you lie very still
+while I go and get the doll?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The brown eyes looked up at her astounded,
+radiant, and the man caught the hem of her white
+veil and kissed it. "But the Americans&mdash;they do
+magic. You shall see, Sister, if I shall be still.
+I will not die before the Sister returns. It is a
+joy unheard of."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The girl ran out of the hospital and away into
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page296">[pg 296]</span>
+<a name="Pg296" id="Pg296" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>Paris, and burst upon Madame. Somehow she
+told the story in a few words, and Madame was
+crying as she laid "La Marquise" in a box.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"It is Mademoiselle who is an angel of the good
+God," she whispered, and kissed Evelyn unexpectedly
+on both cheeks.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Corporal Duplessis lay, waxen, starry-eyed, as
+the American Sister came back into the ward.
+His look was on her as she entered the far-away
+door, and he saw the box in her arms. The girl
+knelt and drew out the gorgeous plaything and
+stood it by the side of the still, bandaged figure.
+An expression as of amazed radiance came into
+the fast-dimming eyes&mdash;into those large, brown,
+childlike eyes which had seen so little of the
+gorgeousness of earth. His hand stirred a very
+little&mdash;enough, for Evelyn quickly moved the
+gleaming satin train of the doll under the groping
+fingers. The eyes lifted to Evelyn&#39;s face
+and the smile in them was that of a prisoner who
+suddenly sees the gate of his prison opened and
+the fields of home beyond. It mattered little, one
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page297">[pg 297]</span>
+<a name="Pg297" id="Pg297" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>may believe, to the welcoming hosts of heaven
+that the angel at the gate of release for the
+child-soul of Corporal Duplessis, the poilu, was
+only Robina&#39;s doll!</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="page" />
+
+<div class="tei tei-div">
+<a name="toc_18" id="toc_18"></a>
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page301">[pg 301]</span>
+<a name="Pg301" id="Pg301" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<h1 class="tei tei-head">DUNDONALD&#39;S DESTROYER</h1>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">This is the year 1977. It will be objected that
+the episode I am going to tell, having happened
+in 1917, having been witnessed by twenty-odd
+thousand people, must have been, if true, for sixty
+years common property and an old tale. But
+when General Cochrane&mdash;who saved England at
+the end of the great war&mdash;told me the Kitchener
+incident of the story last year, sitting in the rose-garden
+of the White Hart Inn at Sonning-on-Thames,
+I had never heard of it.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">I wonder why he told me. Probably, as is the
+case in most things which most people do, from
+a mixture of impulses. For one thing I am an
+American girl, with a fresher zest to hear tales
+of those titanic days than the people or the children
+of the people who lived through them. Also
+the great war of 1914 has stirred me since I was
+old enough to know about it, and I have read
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page302">[pg 302]</span>
+<a name="Pg302" id="Pg302" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>everything concerning it which I could lay hands
+on, and talked to everyone who had knowledge
+of it. Also, General Cochrane and I made friends
+from the first minute. I was a quite unimportant
+person of twenty-four years, he a magnificent
+hero of eighty, one of the proud figures of England;
+it made me a bit dizzy when I saw that he
+liked me. One feels, once in a long time, an unmistakable
+double pull, and knows that oneself
+and another are friends, and not age, color, race
+nor previous condition of servitude makes the
+slightest difference. To have that happen with
+a celebrity, a celebrity whom it would have been
+honor enough simply to meet, is quite dizzying.
+This was the way of it.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">I was staying with my cousin Mildred Ward,
+an Atlanta girl who married Sir Cecil Ward, an
+English baronet of Oxfordshire. I reached
+Martin-Goring on a day in July just in time to
+dress for dinner. When I came down, a bit early,
+Milly looked me over and pronounced favorably.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"You&#39;re not so hard to look at," she pronounced.
+"It takes an American really to wear
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page303">[pg 303]</span>
+<a name="Pg303" id="Pg303" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>French clothes. I&#39;m glad you&#39;re looking well tonight,
+because one of your heroes&mdash;Oh!"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">She had floated inconsequently against a bookcase
+in a voyage along the big room, and a spray
+of wild roses from a vase on the shelf caught in
+her pretty gold hair.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Oh&mdash;why does Middleton stick those catchy
+things up there?" she complained, separating the
+flowers from her hair, and I followed her eyes
+above the shelf.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Why, that&#39;s a portrait of Kitchener&mdash;the old
+great Kitchener, isn&#39;t it?" I asked. "Did he
+belong to Cecil&#39;s people?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"No," answered Milly, "only Cecil&#39;s grandfather
+and General Cochrane&mdash;or something&mdash;"
+her voice trailed. And then, "I&#39;ve got somebody
+you&#39;ll be crazy about tonight, General Cochrane."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"General Cochrane?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Oh! You pretend to know about the great
+war and don&#39;t know General Cochrane, who saved
+England when the fleet was wrecked. Don&#39;t know
+him!"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Oh!" I said again. "Know him? Know him!
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page304">[pg 304]</span>
+<a name="Pg304" id="Pg304" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>I know every breath, he drew. Only I couldn&#39;t
+believe my ears. The boy Donald Cochrane? It
+isn&#39;t true is it? How did you ever, ever&mdash;?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"He lives five miles from us," said Milly, unconcernedly.
+"We see a lot of him. His wife
+was Cecil&#39;s great-aunt. She&#39;s dead now. His
+daughter is my best friend. &#39;The boy Donald
+Cochrane&#39;!" She smiled a little. "He&#39;s no boy
+now. He&#39;s old. Even heroes do that&mdash;get old."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">And with that the footman at the door announced
+"General Cochrane."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">I stared away up at a very tall, soldierly old
+man with a jagged scar across his forehead. His
+wide-open, black-lashed gray eyes flashed a glance
+like a menace, like a sword, and then suddenly
+smiled as if the sun had jumped from a bank of
+storm-clouds. And I looked into those wonderful
+eyes and we were friends. As fast as that. Most
+people would think it nonsense, but it happened
+so. A few people will understand. He took me
+out to dinner, and it was as if no one else was at
+the table. I was aware only of the one heroic
+personality. At first I dared not speak of his
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page305">[pg 305]</span>
+<a name="Pg305" id="Pg305" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>history, and then, without planning or intention,
+my own voice astonished my own ears. I announced
+to him:</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"You have been my hero since I was ten years
+old."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">It was a marvelous thing he did, the lad of
+twenty, even considering that the secret was there
+at his hand, ready for him to use. The histories
+say that&mdash;that no matter if he did not invent the
+device, it was his ready wit which remembered
+it, and his persistence which forced the war department
+to use it. Yes, and his heroism which
+led the ship and all but gave his life. And when
+he had fulfilled his mission he stepped back into
+the place of a subaltern; he was modest, even
+embarrassed, at the great people who thronged
+to him. England was saved; that was all his
+affair; nothing, so the books say, could prod him
+into prominence&mdash;though he rose to be a General
+later&mdash;after that, after being the first man in
+England for those days. It was this personage
+with whom I had gone out to dinner, and to whom
+I dared make that sudden speech: "You have
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page306">[pg 306]</span>
+<a name="Pg306" id="Pg306" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>been my hero, General Cochrane, since I was ten
+years old."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">He slued about with the menacing, shrapnel
+look, and it seemed that there might be an explosion
+of sharp-pointed small bullets over the
+dinner-table.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Don&#39;t!" I begged. The sun came out; the
+artillery attack was over; he looked at me with
+boyish shyness.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"D&#39;you know, when people say things like that
+I feel as if I were stealing," he told me confidentially.
+"Anybody else could have done all I did.
+In fact, it wasn&#39;t I at all," he finished.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Not you? Who then? Weren&#39;t you the boy
+Donald Cochrane?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Yes," he said, and stopped as if he were considering
+it. "Yes," he said quietly in the clean-cut,
+terse English manner of speaking, "I suppose
+I was the boy Donald Cochrane." He gazed
+across the white lilacs and pink roses on the
+table as if dreaming a bit. Then he turned with
+a long breath. "My child," he said, "there is
+something about you which gives me back my
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page307">[pg 307]</span>
+<a name="Pg307" id="Pg307" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>youth, and&mdash;the freshness of a great experience.
+I thank you."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">I gazed into those compelling eyes, gasping like
+a fish with too much oxygen, I felt myself,
+Virginia Fox, meshed in the fringes of historic
+days, stirred by the rushing mighty wind of that
+Great Experience. I was awestruck into silence.
+Just then Milly got up, and eight women flocked
+into the library.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">I was good for nothing there, simply good for
+nothing at all. I tried to talk to the nice, sensible
+English women, and I could not. I knew Milly
+was displeased with me for not keeping up my
+end, but I was sodden with thrills. I had sat
+through a dinner next to General Cochrane, the
+Donald Cochrane who was the most dramatic
+figure of the world war of sixty years ago. It has
+always moved me to meet persons who even existed
+at that time. I look at them and think what
+intense living it must have meant to pick up
+a paper and read&mdash;as the news of the day, mind
+you&mdash;that Germany had entered Belgium, that
+King Albert was fighting in the trenches, that Von
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page308">[pg 308]</span>
+<a name="Pg308" id="Pg308" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>Kluck was within seventeen miles of Paris, that
+Von Kluck was retreating&mdash;think of the rapture
+of that&mdash;Paris saved!&mdash;that the Germans had
+taken Antwerp; that the <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Lusitania</span> was sunk; that
+Kitchener was drowned at sea! I wonder if the
+people who lived and went about their business in
+America in those days realized that they were
+having a stage-box for the greatest drama of history?
+I wonder. Terror and heroism and cruelty
+find self-sacrifice on a scale which had never been
+dreamed, which will never, God grant, need to be
+dreamed on this poor little racked planet again.
+Of course, there are plenty of those people alive
+yet, and I&#39;ve talked to many and they remember
+it, all of them remember well, even those who
+were quite small. And it has stirred me simply
+to look into the eyes of such an one and consider
+that those eyes read such things as morning news.
+The great war has had a hold on me since I first
+heard of it, and I distinctly remember the day,
+from my father, at the age of seven.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Can you remember when it happened, father?"
+I asked him. And then: "Can you remember
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page309">[pg 309]</span>
+<a name="Pg309" id="Pg309" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>when they drove old people out of their houses&mdash;and
+killed them?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Yes," said my father. And I burst into tears.
+And when I was not much older he told me about
+Donald Cochrane, the boy who saved England.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">It was not strange to my own mind that I could
+not talk commonplaces now, when I had just spent
+an hour tailing to the man who had been that
+historic boy&mdash;the very Donald Cochrane. I
+could not talk commonplaces.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Milly&#39;s leisurely voice broke my meditation.
+"I&#39;m sorry that my cousin, Virginia Fox, should
+have such bad manners, Lady Andover," she was
+drawling. "She was brought up to speak when
+spoken to, but I think it&#39;s the General who has
+hypnotized her. Virginia, did you know that
+Lady Andover asked you&mdash;" And I came to life.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"It was Miss Fox who hypnotized the General,
+I fancy," said Lady Andover most graciously,
+considering I had overlooked her existence a second
+before. "He had a word for no one else during
+dinner." I felt myself go scarlet; it had
+pleased the Marvelous Person, then, to like me a
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page310">[pg 310]</span>
+<a name="Pg310" id="Pg310" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>little, perhaps for the youth and enthusiasm in
+me.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">With that the men straggled into the room and
+the tall grizzled head of my hero, his lined face
+conspicuous for the jagged, glorious scar, towered
+over the rest. I saw the vivid eyes flash
+about, and they met mine; I was staring at him,
+as I must, and my heart all but jumped out of
+me when he came straight to where I stood, my
+back against the bookcase.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"I was looking for you," he said simply.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Then he glanced over my head and his hand
+shot up in a manner of salute; I turned to see
+why. I was in front of the portrait of Lord
+Kitchener.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Did you know him, General Cochrane?" I
+asked.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Know him?" he demanded, and the gray glance
+plunged out at me from under the thick lashes.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Don&#39;t do it," I pleaded, putting my hands
+over my eyes. "When you look at me so it&#39;s&mdash;bombs
+and bullets." The look softened, but the
+lean, wrinkled face did not smile.</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page311">[pg 311]</span>
+<a name="Pg311" id="Pg311" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"You asked if I knew Kitchener," he stated.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">I spoke haltingly. "I didn&#39;t know. Ought I
+to have known?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">General Cochrane gazed down, all at once
+dreamy, as if he looked through me at something
+miles and æons away.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"No," he said. "There&#39;s no reason why you
+should. You have an uncommon knowledge of
+events of that time, an astonishing knowledge for
+a young thing, so that I forget you can&#39;t know&mdash;all
+of it." He stopped, as if considering. "It is
+because I am old that I have fancies," he went on
+slowly. "And you have understanding eyes. I
+have had a fancy this evening that you and I were
+meant to be friends; that a similarity of interests,
+a&mdash;a likeness&mdash;oh, hang it all!" burst out the
+General like a college boy. "I never could talk
+except straight and hot. I mean I&#39;ve a feeling
+of a bond between us&mdash;you&#39;ll think me most presuming&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">I interrupted, breathless. "It&#39;s so," I whispered.
+"I felt it, only I&#39;d not have dared&mdash;"
+and I choked.</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page312">[pg 312]</span>
+<a name="Pg312" id="Pg312" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Old General Cochrane frowned thoughtfully.
+"Curious," was what he said. "It&#39;s psychology of
+course, but I&#39;m hanged if I know the explanation.
+However, since it&#39;s so, my child, I&#39;m glad. A
+man as old as I makes few new friends. And a
+beautiful young woman&mdash;with a brain&mdash;and
+charm&mdash;and innocent eyes&mdash;and French clothes!"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">One may guess if I tried to stop this description.
+I could have listened all night. With that:</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"&#39;Did I know Kitchener!&#39; the child asked," reflected
+the General, and threw back his splendid
+head and laughed. I stared up, my heart pumping.
+Then, "Well, rather. Why, little Miss Fox&mdash;"
+and he stopped. "I&#39;ve a mind to tell the child
+a fairy-story," he said. "A true fairy-story
+which is so extraordinary that few have been
+found to believe it, even of those who saw it
+happen."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">He halted again.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Tell me!"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">General Coehrane looked about the roomful of
+people and tossed out his hand. "In this mob?"
+he objected. "It&#39;s too long a story in any case.
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page313">[pg 313]</span>
+<a name="Pg313" id="Pg313" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>But why shouldn&#39;t you and I have a s&eacute;ance, to
+let a garrulous old fellow talk about his youth?"
+he demanded in his lordly way. "Why not come
+out on the river in my boat? They&#39;ll let you
+play about with an octogenarian, won&#39;t they?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"I&#39;ll come," I answered the General eagerly.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Very good. Tomorrow. Oh, by George, no.
+That confounded Prime Minister comes down to
+me tomorrow. I detest old men," said General
+Cochrane. "Well, then, the day after?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The Thames was a picture-book river that day,
+gay with row-boats and punts and launches, yet
+serene for all its gaiety; slipping between grassy
+banks under immemorial trees with the air of a
+private stream wandering, protected, through an
+estate. The English have the gift above other
+nations of producing an atmosphere of leisure
+and seclusion, and surely there is no little river
+on earth so used and so unabused as the Thames.
+Of all the craft abroad that bright afternoon,
+General Cochrane&#39;s white launch with its gold line
+above the water and its gleaming brass trimmings
+was far and away the prettiest, and I was bursting
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page314">[pg 314]</span>
+<a name="Pg314" id="Pg314" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>with pride as we passed the rank and file on the
+stream and they looked at us admiringly. To be
+alive on such a day in England was something;
+to be afloat on the silvery Thames was enchantment;
+to be in that lovely boat with General
+Cochrane, the boy Donald Cochrane, was a rapture
+not to be believed without one&#39;s head reeling.
+Yet here it was happening, the thing I should look
+back upon fifty, sixty years from now, an old
+gray woman, and tell my grandchildren as the
+most interesting event of my life. It was happening,
+and I was enjoying every second, and not in
+the least awed into misery, as is often the case
+with great moments. For the old officer was as
+perfect a playmate as any good-for-nothing
+young subaltern in England, and that is putting
+it strongly.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Wouldn&#39;t it be nicer to land at Sonning and
+have our tea there?" he suggested. We were
+dropping through the lock just higher than the
+village; the wet, mossy walls were rising above us
+on both sides and the tops of the lock-keeper&#39;s
+gorgeous pink snapdragons were rapidly going
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page315">[pg 315]</span>
+<a name="Pg315" id="Pg315" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>out of sight. My host went on: "There&#39;s rather
+a nice rose-garden, and it&#39;s on the river, and the
+plum-cake&#39;s good. What do you think, that or
+on board?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"The rose-garden," I decided.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">Sonning is a village cut out of a book and pasted
+on the earth. It can&#39;t be true, it&#39;s so pretty.
+And the little White Hart Inn is adorable.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Is it really three hundred years old?" I asked.
+"The standard roses look like an illustration out
+of &#39;Alice in Wonderland.&#39; Yes, please&mdash;tea in
+the White Hart garden."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The old General heaved a sigh. "Thank
+Heaven," he said. "I was most awfully anxious
+for fear you&#39;d say on the boat, and I didn&#39;t
+order any."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">We slipped under an arch of the ancient red
+bridge and were at the landing. I remember the
+scene as we stood on shore and looked down the
+shining way of the river, the tall grasses bending
+on either side like green fur stroked by the breeze;
+I remember the trim sea-wall and velvet lawn, and
+the low, long house with leaded windows of the
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page316">[pg 316]</span>
+<a name="Pg316" id="Pg316" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>place next the inn. A house-boat was moored
+to the shore below, white, with scarlet geraniums
+flowing the length of the upper deck, and willow
+chairs and tables; people were having tea up
+there; muslin curtains blew from the portholes
+below. Some Americans went past with two
+enormous Scotch deer-hound puppies on leash.
+"Be quiet, Jock," one of them said, and the big,
+gentle-faced beast turned on her with a giant,
+caressing bound, the last touch of beauty in the
+beautiful, quiet scene.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">It was early, so that we took the table which
+pleased us, one set a bit aside against a ten-foot
+hedge, and guarded by a tall bush of tea-roses.
+A plump maid hurried across the lawn and spread
+a cloth on our table and waited, smiling, as if
+seeing us had simply made her day perfect. And
+the General gave the orders.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"The plum-cake is going to be wonderful," I
+said then, "and I&#39;m hungry as a bear for tea.
+But the best thing I&#39;ve been promised this afternoon
+is a fairy-story."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The shrapnel look flashed, keen and bright and
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page317">[pg 317]</span>
+<a name="Pg317" id="Pg317" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>afire, but I looked back steadily, not afraid. I
+knew what sunlight was going to break; and it
+broke.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"D&#39;you know," said he, "I&#39;m really quite mad
+to talk about myself. Men always are. You&#39;ve
+heard the little tale of the man who said, &#39;Let&#39;s
+have a garden-party. Let&#39;s go out on the lawn
+and talk about me&#39;? One becomes a frightful bore
+quite easily. So that I&#39;ve made rules&mdash;I don&#39;t
+hector people about&mdash;about things I&#39;ve been concerned
+with. As to the incident I said I&#39;d tell
+you, that would be quite impossible to tell to&mdash;well,
+practically anyone."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">My circulatory system did a prance; he could
+tell it practically to no one, yet he was going
+to tell it to me! I instantly said that. "But
+you&#39;re going to tell it to me?" I was anxious.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Child, you flatter well," said the Marvelous
+Person, who had brought me picnicking. "It&#39;s
+the American touch; there&#39;s a way with American
+women quite irresistible."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Oh&mdash;American women!" I remonstrated.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Yes, indeed. They&#39;re delightful&mdash;you&#39;re
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page318">[pg 318]</span>
+<a name="Pg318" id="Pg318" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>witches, every mother&#39;s daughter of you. But
+you&mdash;ah&mdash;that&#39;s different, now. You and I, as
+we decided long ago, on day before yesterday,
+have a bond. I can&#39;t help the conviction that
+you&#39;re the hundred-thousandth person. You have
+understanding eyes. If I were a young man&mdash;And
+yet it&#39;s not just that; it&#39;s something a bit
+rarer. Moreover, they tell me there&#39;s a chap
+back in America."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Yes," I owned. "There is a chap." And I
+persisted: "I&#39;m to have a fairy-story?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The black-lashed gaze narrowed as it traveled
+across the velvet turf and the tall roses, down the
+path of the quiet river. He had a fine head, thick-thatched
+and grizzled, not white; his nose was of
+the straight, short English type, slightly chopped
+up at the end&mdash;a good-looking nose; his mouth
+was wide and not chiseled, yet sensitive as well as
+strong; the jaw was powerful and the chin square
+with a marked dimple in it; there was also color,
+the claret and honey of English tanned complexions.
+Of course his eyes, with the exaggeratedly
+thick and long black lashes, were the wonderful
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page319">[pg 319]</span>
+<a name="Pg319" id="Pg319" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>part of him, but there is no describing the eyes.
+It was the look from them, probably, which made
+General Cochrane&#39;s face remarkable. I suppose
+it was partly that compelling look which had
+brought about his career. He was six feet four,
+lean and military, full of presence, altogether a
+conspicuously beautiful old lion in a land where
+every third man is beautiful.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"What are you looking munitions-of-war at,
+General, down the innocent little Thames River?
+You must be seeing around corners, past Wargrave,
+as far as Henley."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"I didn&#39;t see the Thames River," he shot at
+me in his masterful way. "I was looking at things
+past, and people dead and gone. We ancients do
+that. I saw London streets and crowds; I read
+the posters which told that Kitchener was drowned
+at sea, and then I saw, a year later, England in
+panic; I saw an almighty meeting in Trafalgar
+Square and I heard speeches which burned my
+ears&mdash;men urging Englishmen to surrender England
+and make terms with the Huns. Good God!"
+His fist came down on the rattling little iron table.</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page320">[pg 320]</span>
+<a name="Pg320" id="Pg320" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"My blood boils now when I remember. Child,"
+he demanded, "I can&#39;t see why your alluring ways
+should have set me talking. Fancy, I&#39;ve never
+told this tale but twice, and I&#39;m holding forth to
+a little alien whom I haven&#39;t known two days, a
+young ne&#39;er-do-well not born till forty years after
+the tale happened!"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"What difference does that make?" I asked.
+"Age means nothing to real people. And we&#39;ve
+known each other since&mdash;since we hunted pterodactyls
+together, pre-historically. Only&mdash;I hate
+bats," I objected to my own arrangement. I went
+on: "If you knew how I want to hear! It&#39;s the
+most wonderful thing in my life, this afternoon&mdash;you."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"I know you are honest," he said. "Different
+from the ruck. I knew that the moment I saw you."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Then," I prodded, "do begin with the posters
+about Lord Kitchener."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"But that&#39;s not the beginning," he protested.
+"You&#39;ll spoil it all," he said.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Oh, no, then! Begin at the beginning. I
+didn&#39;t know. I wanted to get you started."</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page321">[pg 321]</span>
+<a name="Pg321" id="Pg321" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The gray eyes dreamed down the placid river
+water.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"The beginning was before I was born. It
+began when Kitchener, a young general, picked
+up a marauding party of black rascals on his
+way to Khartoum. They had a captive, a white
+girl, a lady. They had murdered her father and
+mother and young brother. The father was
+newly appointed Colonel of a regiment, traveling
+to his post with his family. The Arabs were
+saving the girl for their devilish head chieftain.
+Kitchener had the lot executed, and sent for the
+girl. She was&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The old man&#39;s hand lifted to his head and he
+took off his hat and laid it on the ground.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"I cannot speak of that girl without uncovering,"
+he said, quietly. "She was my mother."
+There was an electrical silence. I knew enough
+to know that no words fitted here. The old officer
+went on: "She was one of the wonderful people.
+What she seemed to think of, after the horrors
+she had gone through, was not herself or her
+suffering, but only to show her gratitude. It was
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page322">[pg 322]</span>
+<a name="Pg322" id="Pg322" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>a long journey&mdash;weeks&mdash;through that land of
+hell, while she was in Kitchener&#39;s hands, and not
+once did she lose courage. The Sirdar told me
+that it was having an angel in camp&mdash;she held
+that rough soldiery in the hollow of her hand.
+She told Kitchener her story, and after that she
+would not talk of herself. You&#39;ve heard that he
+never had a love affair? That&#39;s wrong. He was
+in love then, and for the rest of his life, with my
+mother."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">I gasped. The shrapnel eyes menaced me.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"She could not speak of herself, d&#39;you see?
+It was salvation to think only of others, so that
+she&#39;d not told him that she was engaged to my
+father. Love from any other was the last thing
+she was thinking of. After what had happened
+she was living from one breath to another and she
+dared not consider her own affairs. The night
+before they reached Cairo, Kitchener asked her
+to marry him. He was over forty then; she was
+nineteen. She told him of her engagement, of
+course&mdash;told him also that it might be she would
+never marry at all; a life of her own and happiness
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page323">[pg 323]</span>
+<a name="Pg323" id="Pg323" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>seemed impossible now. She might go into a
+sisterhood. Work for others was what she must
+have. Then, unexpectedly, my father was at
+Cairo to meet her, and Kitchener went to him and
+told him. From that on the two men were close
+friends. My people were not married till five
+years later, and when I came to be baptized
+General Kitchener was godfather. All my young
+days I was used to seeing him about the house at
+intervals, as if he belonged to us. I remember his
+eyes following my mother. Tall and slight she
+was, with a haunted look, from what she&#39;d seen;
+she moved softly, spoke softly. It was no secret
+from the two, my father and mother, that he
+loved her always. Yet, so loyal, so crystal he
+was that my father had never one moment of
+jealousy. On the contrary they were like
+brothers. Then they died&mdash;my father and mother.
+The two almost together. I came into Kitchener&#39;s
+hands, Lord Kitchener by then. When he met
+me in London, a long lad of seventeen, he held
+my fingers a second and looked hard at me.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"&#39;You&#39;re very like her, Donald,&#39; he said. And
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page324">[pg 324]</span>
+<a name="Pg324" id="Pg324" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>held on. And said it again. &#39;Your mother&#39;s
+double. I&#39;d know you for her boy if I caught
+one look of your eyes, anywhere,&#39; he said. &#39;Her
+boy.&#39;&mdash;Well&mdash;what? Do I want more tea? Of
+course, I do."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">For the smiling plump maid had long ago
+brought the steaming stuff, the bread and butter
+and jam and plum cake, I had officiated and
+General Cochrane had been absorbing his tea as
+an Englishman does, automatically, while he
+talked.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">About us the tables were filling up, all over the
+rose-garden. The Americans were there with the
+beautiful long-legged giant deer-hound puppy,
+Jock, and were having trouble with his table
+manners. People came in by twos and threes and
+more, from the river, with the glow of exercise on
+their faces; an elderly country parson sat near,
+black-coated, white-collared, with his elderly
+daughter and their dog, a well-behaved Scottie
+this one, big-headed, with an age-old, wise, black
+face. And a group of three pretty girls with
+their pretty pink-cheeked mother and a young
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page325">[pg 325]</span>
+<a name="Pg325" id="Pg325" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>man or so were having a gay time with soft-voiced
+laughter and jokes, not far away. The breeze
+lifted the long purple and rose-colored motor veils
+of mother and daughters. The whole place was
+full of bright colors and low-toned cheerful talk,
+yet so English was the atmosphere, that it was as
+if the General and I were shut into an enchanted
+forest. No one looked at us, no one seemed to
+know we were there. The General began to talk
+again, unconscious as the rest of anything or anybody
+not his affair.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"I got my commission in 1915 in K-1, Kitchener&#39;s
+first hundred thousand, and I went off to
+the front in the second year of the war. I had a
+scratch and was slightly gassed once, but nothing
+much happened for a long time. And in 1916,
+in May, came the news that my godfather, the
+person closest to me on earth, was drowned at
+sea. I was in London, just out of the hospital
+and about to go back to France."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The old General stopped and stared down at
+the graveled path with its trim turf border lying
+at his feet.</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page326">[pg 326]</span>
+<a name="Pg326" id="Pg326" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"It was to me as if the world, seething in its
+troubles, was suddenly empty&mdash;with that man
+gone. I drifted with the crowd about London
+town, and the crowd appeared to be like myself,
+dazed. The streets were full and there was continually
+a profound, sorrowful sound, like the
+groan of a nation; faces were blank and gray.
+Those surging, mournful London streets, and the
+look of the posters with great letters on them&mdash;his
+name&mdash;that memory isn&#39;t likely to leave me
+till I die. Of course, I got hold of every detail
+and tried to picture the manner of it to myself,
+but I couldn&#39;t get it that he was dead. Kitchener,
+the heart of the nation; I couldn&#39;t comprehend
+that he had stopped breathing. I couldn&#39;t get
+myself satisfied that I wasn&#39;t to see him again.
+It seemed there must be some way out. You&#39;ll
+remember, perhaps, that four boats were seen to
+put off from the <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Hampshire</span> as she sank? I tried
+to trace those boats. I traveled up there and
+interviewed people who had seen them. I got no
+good from it. But it kept coming to me that it
+was not a mine that had sunk the ship, that it
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page327">[pg 327]</span>
+<a name="Pg327" id="Pg327" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>was a torpedo from a German submarine, and
+that Kitchener was on one of the boats that put
+off and that he had been taken prisoner by the
+enemy. God knows why that thought persisted&mdash;there
+were reasons against it&mdash;it was a boy&#39;s
+theory. But it persisted; I couldn&#39;t get it out of
+my head. I was in St. Paul&#39;s at the Memorial
+Service; I heard the &#39;Last Post&#39; played for him,
+and I saw the King and Queen in tears; all that
+didn&#39;t settle my mind. I went back to the front,
+heavy-hearted, and tried to behave myself as I believed
+he&#39;d have had me&mdash;the Sirdar. My people
+had called him the Sirdar always. Luck was with
+me in France; I had chances, and did a bit of
+work, and got advancement."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"I know," I nodded. "I&#39;ve read history. A few
+trifles like the rescue of the rifles and holding that
+trench and&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The old soldier interrupted, looking thunderous.
+"It has a bearing on the episode I&#39;m about
+to tell you. That&#39;s why I refer to it."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">I didn&#39;t mind his haughtiness. It was given me
+to see the boy&#39;s shyness within that grim old hero.</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page328">[pg 328]</span>
+<a name="Pg328" id="Pg328" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"So that when I landed in London in 1917,
+having been stupid enough to get my right arm
+potted, it happened that my name was known.
+They picked me out to make a doing over. I was
+most uncommonly conspicuous for nothing more
+than thousands of other lads had done. They&#39;d
+given their lives like water, thousands of them&mdash;it
+made me sick with shame, when I thought of those
+others, to have my name ringing through the land.
+But so it was, and it served a purpose, right
+enough, I saw later.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Then, as I began to crawl about, came the
+crisis of the war. Ill news piled on ill news; the
+army in France was down with an epidemic; each
+day&#39;s news was worse than the last; to top all, the
+Germans found the fleet. It was in letters a foot
+long about London&mdash;newsboys crying awful
+words:</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"&#39;Fleet discovered&mdash;German submarines and
+Zeppelins approaching.&#39;</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"A bit later, still worse. &#39;The <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Bellerophon</span> sunk
+by German torpedo&mdash;ten dreadnoughts sunk&mdash;&#39;
+There were the names of the big ships, the
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page329">[pg 329]</span>
+<a name="Pg329" id="Pg329" class="tei tei-anchor"></a><span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Queen Elizabeth</span>, the <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Warspite</span>, the <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Thunderer</span>, the
+<span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">Agamemnon</span>, the <span style="font-style: italic" class="tei tei-hi">King Edward</span>&mdash;a lot more, battle
+cruisers, too&mdash;then ten more dreadnoughts&mdash;and
+more and worse every hour. The German navy
+was said to be coming into the North Sea and advancing
+to our coast. And our navy was going&mdash;gone&mdash;nothing
+to stand between us and the fate of
+Belgium.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Then England went mad! I thank God I&#39;ll
+not live through such days again. The land went
+mad with fear. You&#39;ll remember that there had
+been a three-year strain which human nerves were
+not meant to bear. Well, there was a faction who
+urged that the only sane act now possible was to
+surrender to Germany quickly and hope for a
+mercy which we couldn&#39;t get if we struggled. The
+government, under enormous pressure, weakened.
+It&#39;s easy to cry &#39;Shame!&#39; now, but how could it
+stand firm with the country stampeding back
+of it?</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"So things were the day of the mass meeting in
+Trafalgar Square. I was tall, and so thin and
+gaunt that, with my uniform and my arm in its
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page330">[pg 330]</span>
+<a name="Pg330" id="Pg330" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>sling, it was easy to get close to the front, straight
+under the speakers. And no sooner had I got
+there than I was seized with a restlessness, an uncontrollable
+desire to see my godfather&mdash;Kitchener.
+Only to see him, to lay eyes on him. I wish
+I might express to you the push of that feeling.
+It was thirst in a desert. With that spell on me
+I stood down in front of the stone lions and stared
+up at Nelson on his column, and listened to the
+speakers. They were mad, quite, those speakers.
+The crowd was mad, too. It overflowed that great
+space, and there were few steady heads in the lot.
+You&#39;ll realize it looked a bit of a close shave, with
+the German navy coming and our fleet being destroyed,
+no one knew how fast, and the army in
+France, and struck down by illness. At that moment
+it looked a matter of three or four days before
+the Huns would be landing. Never before in
+a thousand years was England as near the finish.
+As I stood there fidgeting, with the starvation on
+me for my godfather, it flashed to me that there&#39;s
+a legend in every nation about some one of its heroes,
+how in the hour of need he will come back to
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page331">[pg 331]</span>
+<a name="Pg331" id="Pg331" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>save the people&mdash;Charlemagne in France, don&#39;t you
+know, and Barbarossa and King Arthur and&mdash;oh,
+a number. And I spoke aloud, so that the chap
+next prodded me in the ribs and said: &#39;Stop that,
+will you? I can&#39;t hear&#39;&mdash;I spoke aloud and
+said:</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"&#39;This is the hour. Come back and save us.&#39;</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"The speakers had been ranting along, urging
+on the people to force the government to give in
+and make terms with those devils who&#39;d crushed
+Belgium. Of course there were plenty there ready
+to die in the last ditch for honor and the country,
+but the mob was with the speakers. Quite insane
+with terror the mob was. And I spoke aloud to
+Kitchener, like a madman of a sort also, begging
+him to come from another world and save his
+people.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"&#39;This is the hour; come and save us,&#39; said I,
+and said it as if my words could get through to
+Kitchener in eternity.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"With that a taxicab forced through the crowd,
+close to the platform, and it stopped and somebody
+got out. I could see an officer&#39;s cap and the crowd
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page332">[pg 332]</span>
+<a name="Pg332" id="Pg332" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>pressing. My eyes were riveted on that brown
+cap; my breath came queerly; there was a murmur,
+a hush and a murmur together, where
+that tall officer with the cap over his face pushed
+toward the speakers. I felt I should choke if I
+didn&#39;t see him&mdash;and I couldn&#39;t see him. Then he
+made the platform, and before my eyes, before the
+eyes of twenty thousand people, he stood there&mdash;Kitchener!"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">General Cochrane stared defiantly at me. "I&#39;m
+not asking you to believe this," he said. "I&#39;m
+merely telling you&mdash;what happened."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Go on," I whispered.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">He went on: "A silence like death fell on that
+vast crowd. The voice of the speaker screaming
+out wild cowardice about mercy from the Germans
+kept on for a few words, and then the man caught
+the electrical atmosphere and was aware that
+something was happening. He halted half-way in
+a word, and turned and faced the grim, motionless
+figure&mdash;Kitchener. The man stared a half minute
+and shot his hands up and howled, and ran into
+the throng. All over the great place, by then, was
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page333">[pg 333]</span>
+<a name="Pg333" id="Pg333" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>a whisper swelling into a bass murmur, into a roar,
+his name.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"&#39;Kitchener&mdash;Kitchener!&#39; and &#39;K. of K.!&#39; and
+&#39;Kitchener of Khartoum!&#39;</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Never in my life have I heard a volume of sound
+like London shouting that day the name of Kitchener.
+After a time he lifted his hand and stood,
+deep-eyed and haggard, as the mass quieted. He
+spoke. I can&#39;t tell you what he said. I couldn&#39;t
+have told you the next hour. But he quieted us
+and lifted us, that crowd, fearstruck, sobbing,
+into courage. He put his own steady dignity into
+those cheap, frightened little Johnnies. He gave
+us strength even if the worst came, and he held up
+English pluck and doggedness for us to look at
+and to live by. As his voice stopped, as I stood
+down in front just under him, I flung up my arms,
+and I suppose I cried out something; I was but a
+lad of twenty, and half crazed with the joy of seeing
+him. And he swung forward a step to me as
+if he had seen me all the time&mdash;and I think he had.
+&#39;Do the turn, Donald,&#39; he said, &#39;The time has come
+for a Cochrane to save England.&#39;</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page334">[pg 334]</span>
+<a name="Pg334" id="Pg334" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"And with that he wheeled and without a look
+to right or left, in his own swift, silent, shy way
+he was gone.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Nobody saw where he went. I all but killed
+myself for an hour trying to find him, but it was
+of no use. And with that, as I sat at my lunch,
+too feverish and stirred to eat food, demanding
+over and over what he meant, what the &#39;turn&#39; was
+which I was to do, why a Cochrane should have a
+chance to save England&mdash;with that, suddenly I
+knew."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">General Cochrane halted again, and again he
+gazed down the little river, the river of England,
+the river which he, more than any other, had kept
+for English folk and their peaceful play-times. I
+knew I must not hurry him; I waited.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"The thing came to me like lightning," he went
+on, "and I had only to go from one simple step to
+another; it seemed all thought out for me. It was
+something, don&#39;t you see, which I&#39;d known all my
+lifetime, but hadn&#39;t once thought of since the war
+began. I went direct to my bankers and got a box
+out of the safe and fetched it home in a cab. There
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page335">[pg 335]</span>
+<a name="Pg335" id="Pg335" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>I opened it and took out papers and went over
+them.... This part of the tale is mostly in
+print," General Cochrane interrupted himself.
+"Have you read it? I don&#39;t want to bore you with
+repetitions."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">I answered hurriedly, trembling for fear I might
+say the wrong thing: "I&#39;ve read what&#39;s in print,
+but your telling it puts it in another world. Please
+go on. Please don&#39;t shorten anything."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The shadow of a smile played. "I rather like
+telling you a story, d&#39;you know," he spoke, half
+absent-mindedly&mdash;his real thoughts were with that
+huge past. He swept back to it. "You know, of
+course, about Dundonald&#39;s Destroyer&mdash;the invention
+of my great-grandfather&#39;s kinsman, Thomas
+Cochrane, tenth Earl of Dundonald? He was a
+good bit of an old chap in various ways. He did
+things to the French fleet that put him as a naval
+officer in the class with Nelson and Drake. But he&#39;s
+remembered in history by his invention. It was a
+secret, of course, one of the puzzles of the time
+and of years after, up to 1917. It was known
+there was something. He offered it to the government
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page336">[pg 336]</span>
+<a name="Pg336" id="Pg336" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>in 1811, and the government appointed a
+committee to examine into it. The chairman was
+the Duke of York, commander-in-chief of the
+army, said to be the ablest administrator of military
+affairs of that time. Also there were Admirals
+Lord Keith and Exmouth and the Congreve
+brothers of the ordnance department. A more
+competent committee of five could not have been
+gathered in the world. This board would not recommend
+the adoption of the scheme. Why? They
+reported that there was no question that the invention
+would do all which Dundonald claimed, but it
+was so unspeakably dreadful as to be impossible
+for civilized men.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"There was not a shadow of doubt, the committee
+reported, that Dundonald&#39;s device would not
+merely defeat but annihilate and sweep out of existence
+any hostile force, whole armies and navies.
+&#39;No power on earth could stand against it,&#39; said
+the old fellow, and the five experts backed him up.
+But they considered that the devastation would be
+inhuman beyond permissible warfare. Not war,
+annihilation. In fact, they shelved it because it
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page337">[pg 337]</span>
+<a name="Pg337" id="Pg337" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>was too efficient. There was great need of means
+for fighting Napoleon just then, so they gave it up
+reluctantly, but it was a bit too shocking.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"The weak point of the business was, as Dundonald
+himself declared, that it was so simple&mdash;as
+everybody knows now&mdash;that its first use would tell
+the secret and put it in the hands of other nations.
+Therefore the committee recommended that this
+incipient destruction should be stowed away and
+kept secret, so that no power more unscrupulous
+than England should get it and use it for the annihilation
+of England and the conquest of the
+world. Also the committee persuaded the Earl before
+he went on his South American adventure to
+swear formally that he would never disclose his
+device except in the service of England. He kept
+that oath.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Well, the formula for this affair was, of course,
+in pigeonholes or vaults in the British Admiralty
+ever since the committee in 1811 had examined
+and refused it. But there was also, unknown to
+the public, another copy. The Earl was with my
+great-grandfather, his kinsman and lifelong friend,
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page338">[pg 338]</span>
+<a name="Pg338" id="Pg338" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>shortly before his death, and he gave this copy to
+him with certain conditions. The old chap had an
+ungovernable temper, quarreled right and left,
+don&#39;t you know, his life long, and at this time and
+until he died he was not on speaking terms with
+his son Thomas, who succeeded him as Earl, or indeed
+with any of the three other sons. Which accounts
+for his trusting to my great-grandfather
+the future of his invention. I found a quaint note
+with the papers. He said in effect that he had
+come to believe with the committee that it was
+quite too shocking for decent folk. Yet, he suggested,
+the time might come when England was in
+straits and only a sweeping blow could serve
+her. If that time should come it would be a joy
+to him in heaven or in hell&mdash;he said&mdash;to think that
+a man of his name had used the work of his brains
+to save England.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Therefore, the Earl asked my grandfather to
+guard this gigantic secret and to see to it that one
+man in each generation of Cochranes should know
+it and have it at hand for use in an emergency.
+My grandfather came into the papers when he
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page339">[pg 339]</span>
+<a name="Pg339" id="Pg339" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>came of age, and after him my father; I was due
+to read them when I should be twenty-one. I was
+only twenty in 1917. But the papers were mine,
+and from the moment it flashed to me what Kitchener
+meant I didn&#39;t hesitate. It was this enormous
+power which was placed suddenly in the hands of
+a lad of twenty. The Sirdar placed it there.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"I went over the business in an hour&mdash;it was
+simple, like most big things. You know what it
+was, of course; everybody knows now. Wasn&#39;t it
+extraordinary that in five thousand years of fighting
+no one ever hit on it before? I rushed to the
+War Office.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Well, the thing came off. At first they pooh-poohed
+me as an unbalanced boy, but they looked
+up the documents in the Admiralty and there was
+no question. It isn&#39;t often a youngster is called
+into the councils of the government, and I&#39;ve wondered
+since how I held my own. I&#39;ve come to believe
+that I was merely a body for Kitchener&#39;s
+spirit. I was conscious of no fatigue, no uncertainty.
+I did things as the Sirdar might have done
+them, and it appears to me only decent to realize
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page340">[pg 340]</span>
+<a name="Pg340" id="Pg340" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>that he did do them, and not I. You probably
+know the details."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">I waited, hoping that he would not stop. Then
+I said: "I know that the government asked for
+twenty-five volunteers for a service which would
+destroy the German fleet, but which would mean
+almost certain death to the volunteers. I know
+that you headed the list and that thousands offered."
+My voice shook and I spoke with difficulty
+as I realized to whom I was speaking. "I
+know that you were the only one who came back
+alive, and that you were barely saved."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">General Cochrane seemed not to hear me. He
+was living over enormous events.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"It was a bright morning in the North Sea," he
+talked on, but not to me now. "Nobody but ourselves
+knew just what was to be done, but everybody
+hoped&mdash;they didn&#39;t know what. It was a
+desperate England from which we sailed away. We
+hadn&#39;t long to wait&mdash;the second morning. There
+were their ships, the triumphant long lines of the
+invader. There were their crowded transports, the
+soldiers coming to crucify England as they had
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page341">[pg 341]</span>
+<a name="Pg341" id="Pg341" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>crucified Belgium&mdash;thousands and tens of thousands
+of them. Then&mdash;we did it. German power
+was wiped off the face of the earth. German arrogance
+was ended for all time. And that was the
+last I knew," said General Cochrane. "I was conscious
+till it was known that the trick had worked.
+Of course it couldn&#39;t be otherwise, yet it was so
+beyond anything which mankind had dreamed that
+I couldn&#39;t believe it till I knew. Then, naturally, I
+didn&#39;t much care if I lived or died. I&#39;d done the
+turn as the Sirdar told me, and one life was a small
+thing to pay. I dropped into blackness quite happily,
+and when I woke up to this good earth I was
+glad. England was right. The Sirdar had saved
+her."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"And the Sirdar?" I asked him. "Was it&mdash;himself?"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Himself? Most certainly."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"I mean&mdash;well&mdash;" I stammered. And then I
+plunged in. "I must know," I said. "Was it
+Lord Kitchener in flesh and blood? Had he been
+a prisoner in Germany and escaped? Or was it&mdash;his
+ghost?"</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page342">[pg 342]</span>
+<a name="Pg342" id="Pg342" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">The old lion rubbed his cheek consideringly.
+"Ah, there you have me," and he smiled. "Didn&#39;t
+I tell you this was a tale which could be told to
+few people?" he demanded. "&#39;Flesh and blood&#39;&mdash;ah,
+that&#39;s what I can&#39;t tell you. But&mdash;himself?
+Those people, the immense crowd which saw him
+and recognized him, they knew. Afterwards they
+begged the question. The papers were full of a
+remarkable speech made by an unknown officer who
+strikingly resembled Kitchener. That&#39;s the way
+they got out of it. But those people knew, that
+day. There wasn&#39;t any doubt in their minds when
+that roar of his name went up. They knew! But
+people are ashamed to own to the supernatural.
+And yet it&#39;s all around us," mused General Cochrane.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Could it have been&mdash;did you ever think&mdash;" I
+began, and dared not go on.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Did I ever think what, child?" repeated the old
+officer, with his autocratic friendliness. "Out with
+it. You and I are having a truth-feast."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Well, then," I said, "if you won&#39;t be angry&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"I won&#39;t. Come along."</p>
+
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page343">[pg 343]</span>
+<a name="Pg343" id="Pg343" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Did you ever think that it might have been that&mdash;you
+were only a boy, and wounded and weak
+and overstrained&mdash;and full of longing for your
+godfather. Did you ever think that you might
+have mistaken the likeness of the officer for
+Kitchener himself? That the thought of Dundonald&#39;s
+Destroyer was working in your mind before,
+and that it materialized at that moment and you&mdash;imagined
+the words he said. Perhaps imagined
+them afterwards, as you searched for him over
+London. The two things might have suggested
+each other in your feverish boy&#39;s brain."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">I stopped, frightened, fearful that he might
+think me not appreciative of the honor he had done
+me in telling this intimate experience. But General
+Cochrane was in no wise disturbed.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Yes, I&#39;ve thought that," he answered dispassionately.
+"It may be that was the case. And
+yet&mdash;I can&#39;t see it. That thing happened to me.
+I&#39;ve not been able to explain it away to my own
+satisfaction. I&#39;ve not been able to believe otherwise
+than that the Sirdar, England&#39;s hero, came to
+save England in her peril, and that he did it by
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page344">[pg 344]</span>
+<a name="Pg344" id="Pg344" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>breathing his thought into me. His spirit got
+across somehow from over there&mdash;to me. I was
+the only available person alive. The copy in the
+archives was buried, dead and buried and forgotten
+for seventy years. So he did it&mdash;that way.
+And if your explanation is the right one it isn&#39;t
+so much less wonderful, is it?" he demanded. "In
+these days psychology dares say more than in
+1917. One knows that ghost stories, as they called
+them in those ignorant times, are not all superstition
+and imagination. One knows that a soul
+lives beyond the present, that a soul sometimes
+struggles back from what we call the hereafter to
+this little earth&mdash;makes the difficult connection
+between an unseen world of spirit, unconditioned
+by matter, and our present world of spirit, conditioned
+by matter. When the pull is strong
+enough. And what pull could be stronger than
+England&#39;s danger? To Kitchener?" The black-lashed,
+gray eyes flamed at me, unblinking the rift
+of light through the curtain of eternal silences.</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">When I spoke again: "It&#39;s a story the world
+<span class="tei-pb" id="page345">[pg 345]</span>
+<a name="Pg345" id="Pg345" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>ought to own some day," I said. "Love of country,
+faithfulness that death could not hinder."</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">"Well," said old General Cochrane, "when I&#39;m
+gone you may write it for the world if you like,
+little American. And what I&#39;ll do will be to find
+the Sirdar, the very first instant I&#39;m over the border,
+and say to him, &#39;I&#39;ve known it was your work
+all along, sir, and however did you get it across?&#39;"</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p">A month ago my cousin sent me some marked
+newspapers. General Cochrane has gone over the
+border, and I make no doubt that before now he
+has found the Sirdar and that the two sons and
+saviors of a beloved little land on a little planet
+have talked over that moment, in the leisures and
+simplicities of eternity, and have wondered perhaps
+that anyone could wonder how he got it across.</p>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+ <div class="tei tei-back">
+ </div>
+</div>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK JOY IN THE MORNING***</p>
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Joy in the Morning, by Mary Raymond Shipman
+Andrews
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: Joy in the Morning
+ The Ditch; Her Country Too; The Swallow; Only One of Them; The V.C.; He That Loseth His Life Shall Find It; The Silver Stirrup; The Russian; Robina's Doll; Dundonald's Destroyer
+
+
+Author: Mary Raymond Shipman Andrews
+
+Release Date: May 8, 2005 [eBook #15796]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK JOY IN THE MORNING***
+
+
+E-text prepared by David Garcia, Josephine Paolucci, Joshua Hutchinson,
+and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team from page
+images generously made available by the Kentuckiana Digital Library
+
+
+
+Note: Images of the original pages are available through the Kentuckiana
+ Digital Library. See
+ http://kdl.kyvl.org/cgi/t/text/
+ text-idx?c=kyetexts;cc=kyetexts;xc=1&idno=B92-171-30119788&view=toc
+
+
+
+
+
+JOY IN THE MORNING
+
+by
+
+MARY RAYMOND SHIPMAN ANDREWS
+
+New York
+Charles Scribner's Sons
+
+
+1919
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: He pinned the thing men die for on the shabby coat of
+the guide. [_Page_ 135]]
+
+
+
+ * * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+By MARY R.S. ANDREWS
+
+
+ JOY IN THE MORNING
+ THE ETERNAL FEMININE
+ AUGUST FIRST
+ THE ETERNAL MASCULINE
+ THE MILITANTS
+ BOB AND THE GUIDES
+ CROSSES OF WAR
+ HER COUNTRY
+ OLD GLORY
+ THE COUNSEL ASSIGNED
+ THE COURAGE OF THE COMMONPLACE
+ THE LIFTED BANDAGE
+ THE PERFECT TRIBUTE
+
+ Charles Scribner's Sons
+
+
+
+
+ * * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+DEDICATION
+
+
+To the two stars of a service flag, to a brother and a son who served in
+France, this book is dedicated. No book, to my thinking, were one
+Shakespere and Isaiah rolled together, might fittingly answer the honor
+which they, with four million more American soldiers, have brought to
+their own. So that the stories march out very proudly, headed by the
+names of
+
+ CHAPLAIN HERBERT SHIPMAN
+
+ AND
+
+ CAPTAIN PAUL SHIPMAN ANDREWS
+
+
+
+
+NOTE
+
+
+Now that the tide of Khaki has set toward our shores instead of away;
+now that the streets are filled with splendid boys with gold chevrons of
+foreign service or no less honorable silver chevrons of service here;
+now that the dear lads who sleep in France know that the "torch was
+caught" from their hands, and that faith with them was kept; now
+that--thank God, who, after all, rules--the war is over, there is an old
+word close to the thought of the nation. "Heaviness may endure for a
+night, but joy cometh in the morning." A whole country is so thinking.
+For possibly ten centuries the Great War will be a background for
+fiction. To us, who have lived those years, any tale of them is a
+personal affair. Every-day women and men whom one meets in the street
+may well say to us: "My boy was in the Argonne," or: "My brother fought
+at St. Mihiel." Over and over, unphrased, our minds echo lines of that
+verse found in the pocket of the soldier dead at Gallipoli:
+
+ "_We_ saw the powers of darkness put to flight,
+ _We_ saw the morning break."
+
+Crushed and glorified beyond all generations of the planet, war stories
+prick this generation like family records. It is from us of to-day that
+the load is lifted. We have weathered the heaviness of the night; to us
+"Joy cometh in the morning."
+
+M.R.S.A.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ I. The Ditch
+
+ II. Her Country Too
+
+ III. The Swallow
+
+ IV. Only One of Them
+
+ V. The V.C.
+
+ VI. He That Loseth His Life Shall Find It
+
+ VII. The Silver Stirrup
+
+ VIII. The Russian
+
+ IX. Robina's Doll
+
+ X. Dundonald's Destroyer
+
+
+
+
+THE DITCH
+
+ PERSONS
+
+ THE BOY an American soldier
+
+ THE BOY'S DREAM OF HIS MOTHER
+
+ ANGELIQUE }
+ } French children
+ JEAN-BAPTISTE }
+
+ THE TEACHER
+
+ THE ONE SCHOOLGIRL WITH IMAGINATION
+
+ THE THREE SCHOOLGIRLS WITHOUT IMAGINATION
+
+ HE
+
+ SHE
+
+ THE AMERICAN GENERAL
+
+ THE ENGLISH STATESMAN
+
+The Time.--A summer day in 1918 and a summer day in 2018
+
+
+
+
+FIRST ACT
+
+
+_The time is a summer day in 1918. The scene is the first-line trench of
+the Germans--held lately by the Prussian Imperial Guard--half an hour
+after it had been taken by a charge of men from the Blank_th _Regiment,
+United States Army. There has been a mistake and the charge was not
+preceded by artillery preparation as usual. However, the Americans have
+taken the trench by the unexpectedness of their attack, and the Prussian
+Guard has been routed in confusion. But the German artillery has at once
+opened fire on the Americans, and also a German machine gun has
+enfiladed the trench. Ninety-nine Americans have been killed in the
+trench. One is alive, but dying. He speaks, being part of the time
+delirious._
+
+_The Boy_. Why can't I stand? What--is it? I'm wounded. The sand-bags
+roll when I try--to hold to them. I'm--badly wounded. (_Sinks down.
+Silence._) How still it is! We--we took the trench. Glory be! We took
+it! (_Shouts weakly as he lies in the trench._) (_Sits up and stares,
+shading his eyes_.) It's horrid still. Why--they're here! Jack--you!
+What makes you--lie there? You beggar--oh, my God! They're dead.
+Jack Arnold, and Martin and--Cram and Bennett and Emmet
+and--Dragamore--Oh--God, God! All the boys! Good American boys. The
+whole blamed bunch--dead in a ditch. Only me. Dying, in a ditch filled
+with dead men. What's the sense? (_Silence_.) This damned silly war.
+This devilish--killing. When we ought to be home, doing man's work--and
+play. Getting some tennis, maybe, this hot afternoon; coming in sweaty
+and dirty--and happy--to a tub--and dinner--with mother. (_Groans_.) It
+begins to hurt--oh, it hurts confoundedly. (_Becomes delirious_.)
+Canoeing on the river. With little Jim. See that trout jump, Jimmie?
+Cast now. Under the log at the edge of the trees. That's it! Good--oh!
+(_Groans_.) It hurts--badly. Why, how can I stand it? How can anybody?
+I'm badly wounded. Jimmie--tell mother. Oh--good boy--you've hooked him.
+Now play him; lead him away from the lily-pads. (_Groans_.) Oh, mother!
+Won't you come? I'm wounded. You never failed me before. I need you--if
+I die. You went away down--to the gate of life, to bring me inside.
+Now--it's the gate of death--you won't fail? You'll bring me through to
+that other life? You and I, mother--and I won't be scared. You're the
+first--and the last. (_Puts out his arm searching and folds a hand,
+still warm, of a dead soldier_.) Ah--mother, my dear. I knew--you'd
+come. Your hand is warm--comforting. You always--are there when I need
+you. All my life. Things are getting--hazy. (_He laughs_.) When I was a
+kid and came down in an elevator--I was all right, I didn't mind the
+drop if I might hang on to your hand. Remember? (_Pats dead soldier's
+hand, then clutches it again tightly_.) You come with me when I go
+across and let me--hang on--to your hand. And I won't be scared.
+(_Silence_.) This damned--damned--silly war! All the good American boys.
+We charged the Fritzes. How they ran! But--there was a mistake. No
+artillery preparation. There ought to be crosses and medals going for
+that charge, for the boys--(_Laughs_.) Why, they're all dead. And
+me--I'm dying, in a ditch. Twenty years old. Done out of sixty years
+by--by the silly war. What's it for? Mother, what's it about? I'm ill a
+bit. I can't think what good it is. Slaughtering boys--all the nations'
+boys--honest, hard-working boys mostly. Junk. Fine chaps an hour ago.
+What's the good? I'm dying--for the flag. But--what's the good? It'll go
+on--wars. Again. Peace sometimes, but nothing gained. And all of
+us--dead. Cheated out of our lives. Wouldn't the world have done as well
+if this long ditch of good fellows had been let live? Mother?
+
+_The Boy's Dream of His Mother_. (_Seems to speak_.) My very
+dearest--no. It takes this great burnt-offering to free the world. The
+world will be free. This is the crisis of humanity; you are bending the
+lever that lifts the race. Be glad, dearest life of the world, to be
+part of that glory. Think back to your school-days, to a sentence you
+learned. Lincoln spoke it. "These dead shall not have died in vain, and
+government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not
+perish from the earth."
+
+_The Boy_. (_Whispers_.) I remember. It's good. "Shall not have died in
+vain"--"The people--shall not perish"--where's your hand, mother? It's
+taps for me. The lights are going out. Come with me--mother. (_Dies_.)
+
+
+
+
+SECOND ACT
+
+
+_The scene it the same trench one hundred years later, in the year 2018.
+It is ten o'clock of a summer morning. Two French children have come to
+the trench to pick flowers. The little girl of seven is gentle and
+soft-hearted; her older brother is a man of nearly ten years, and feels
+his patriotism and his responsibilities_.
+
+_Angelique_. (_The little French girl_.) Here's where they grow,
+Jean-B'tiste.
+
+_Jean-Baptiste_. (_The little French boy_.) I know. They bloom bigger
+blooms in the American ditch.
+
+_Angelique_. (_Climbs into the ditch and picks flowers busily_.) Why do
+people call it the 'Merican ditch, Jean-B'tiste? What's 'Merican?
+
+_Jean-Baptiste_. (_Ripples laughter_.) One's little sister doesn't know
+much! Never mind. One is so young--three years younger than I am. I'm
+ten, you know.
+
+_Angelique. Tiens_, Jean-B'tiste. Not ten till next month.
+
+Jean-Baptiste. Oh, but--but--next month!
+
+_Angelique_. What's 'Merican?
+
+_Jean-Baptiste_. Droll _p'tite_. Why, everybody in all France knows that
+name. Of American.
+
+_Angelique_. (_Unashamed_.) Do they? What is it?
+
+_Jean-Baptiste_. It's the people that live in the so large country
+across the ocean. They came over and saved all our lives, and France.
+
+_Angelique_. (_Surprised_.) Did they save my life, Jean-B'tiste?
+
+_Jean-Baptiste_. Little _drole_. You weren't born.
+
+_Angelique_. Oh! Whose life did they then save? Maman's?
+
+_Jean-Baptiste_. But no. She was not born either.
+
+_Angelique_. Whose life, then--the grandfather's?
+
+_Jean-Baptiste_. But--even he was not born. (_Disconcerted by
+Angelique's direct tactics_.) One sees they could not save the lives of
+people who were not here. But--they were brave--but yes--and friends to
+France. And they came across the ocean to fight for France. Big, strong
+young soldiers in brown uniforms--the grandfather told me about it
+yesterday. I know it all. His father told him, and he was here. In this
+field. (_Jean-Baptiste looks about the meadow, where the wind blows
+flowers and wheat._) There was a large battle--a fight very immense. It
+was not like this then. It was digged over with ditches and the soldiers
+stood in the ditches and shot at the wicked Germans in the other
+ditches. Lots and lots of soldiers died.
+
+_Angelique_. (_Lips trembling_.) Died--in ditches?
+
+_Jean-Baptiste_. (_Grimly._) Yes, it is true.
+
+_Angelique_. (_Breaks into sobs._) I can't bear you to tell me that. I
+can't bear the soldiers to--die--in ditches.
+
+_Jean-Baptiste_. (_Pats her shoulder._) I'm sorry I told you if it makes
+you cry. You are so little. But it was one hundred years ago. They're
+dead now.
+
+_Angelique_. (_Rubs her eyes with her dress and smiles_.) Yes, they're
+quite dead now. So--tell me some more.
+
+_Jean-Baptiste_. But I don't want to make you cry more, _p'tite_. You're
+so little.
+
+_Angelique._ I'm not _very_ little. I'm bigger than Anne-Marie Dupont,
+and she's eight.
+
+_Jean-Baptiste_. But no. She's not eight till next month. She told me.
+
+_Angelique_. Oh, well--next month. Me, I want to hear about the brave
+'Mericans. Did they make this ditch to stand in and shoot the wicked
+Germans?
+
+_Jean-Baptiste_. They didn't make it, but they fought the wicked Germans
+in a brave, wonderful charge, the bravest sort, the grandfather said.
+And they took the ditch away from the wicked Germans, and then--maybe
+you'll cry.
+
+_Angelique_. I won't. I promise you I won't.
+
+_Jean-Baptiste_. Then, when the ditch--only they called it a trench--was
+well full of American soldiers, the wicked Germans got a machine gun at
+the end of it and fired all the way along--the grandfather called it
+enfiladed--and killed every American in the whole long ditch.
+
+_Angelique_. (_Bursts into tears again; buries her face in her skirt_.)
+I--I'm sorry I cry, but the 'Mericans were so brave and fought--for
+France--and it was cruel of the wicked Germans to--to shoot them.
+
+_Jean-Baptiste_. The wicked Germans were always cruel. But the
+grandfather says it's quite right now, and as it should be, for they are
+now a small and weak nation, and scorned and watched by other nations,
+so that they shall never be strong again. For the grandfather says they
+are not such as can be trusted--no, never the wicked Germans. The world
+will not believe their word again. They speak not the truth. Once they
+nearly smashed the world, when they had power. So it is looked to by all
+nations that never again shall Germany be powerful. For they are sly,
+and cruel as wolves, and only intelligent to be wicked. That is what the
+grandfather says.
+
+_Angelique_. Me, I'm sorry for the poor wicked Germans that they are so
+bad. It is not nice to be bad. One is punished.
+
+_Jean-Baptiste_. (_Sternly_.) It is the truth. One is always punished.
+As long as the world lasts it will be a punishment to be a German. But
+as long as France lasts there will be a nation to love the name of
+America, one sees. For the Americans were generous and brave. They left
+their dear land and came and died for us, to keep us free in France from
+the wicked Germans.
+
+_Angelique_. (_Lip trembles_.) I'm sorry--they died.
+
+_Jean-Baptiste_. But, _p'tite!_ That was one hundred years ago. It is
+necessary that they would have been dead by now in every case. It was
+more glorious to die fighting for freedom and France than just to
+die--fifty years later. Me, I'd enjoy very much to die fighting. But
+look! You pulled up the roots. And what is that thing hanging to the
+roots--not a rock?
+
+_Angelique_. No, I think not a rock. (She takes the object in her hands
+and knocks dirt from it.) But what is it, Jean-B'tiste?
+
+_Jean-Baptiste_. It's--but never mind. I can't always know everything,
+don't you see, Angelique? It's just something of one of the Americans
+who died in the ditch. One is always finding something in these old
+battle-fields.
+
+_Angelique_. (_Rubs the object with her dress. Takes a handful of sand
+and rubs it on the object. Spits on it and rubs the sand_.) _V'la_,
+Jean-B'tiste--it shines.
+
+_Jean-Baptiste_. (_Loftily_.) Yes. It is nothing, that. One finds such
+things.
+
+_Angelique._ (_Rubbing more_.) And there are letters on it.
+
+_Jean-Baptiste_. Yes. It is nothing, that. One has flowers _en masse_
+now, and it is time to go home. Come then, _p'tite_, drop the dirty bit
+of brass and pick up your pretty flowers. _Tiens!_ Give me your hand.
+I'll pull you up the side of the ditch. (_Jean-Baptiste turns as they
+start_.) I forgot the thing which the grandfather told me I must do
+always. (_He stands at attention_.) _Au revoir_, brave Americans. One
+salutes your immortal glory. (_Exit Jean-Baptiste and Angelique_.)
+
+
+
+
+THIRD ACT
+
+
+_The scene is the same trench in the year 2018. It is eleven o'clock of
+the same summer morning. Four American schoolgirls, of from fifteen to
+seventeen years, have been brought to see the trench, a relic of the
+Great War, in charge of their teacher. The teacher, a worn and elderly
+person, has imagination, and is stirred, as far as her tired nerves may
+be, by the heroic story of the old ditch. One of the schoolgirls also
+has imagination and is also stirred. The other three are "young
+barbarians at play." Two out of five is possibly a large proportion to
+be blessed with imagination, but the American race has improved in a
+hundred years_.
+
+_Teacher_. This, girls, is an important bit of our sight-seeing. It is
+the last of the old trenches of the Great War to remain intact in all
+northern France. It was left untouched out of the reverence of the
+people of the country for one hundred Americans of the Blank_th_
+Regiment, who died here--in this old ditch. The regiment had charged too
+soon, by a mistaken order, across what was called No-Man's Land, from
+their own front trench, about (_consults guide-book_)--about thirty-five
+yards away--that would be near where you see the red poppies so thick in
+the wheat. They took the trench from the Germans, and were then wiped
+out partly by artillery fire, partly by a German machine gun which was
+placed, disguised, at the end of the trench and enfiladed the entire
+length. Three-quarters of the regiment, over two thousand men, were
+killed in this battle. Since then the regiment has been known as the
+"Charging Blank_th_."
+
+_First Schoolgirl_. Wouldn't those poppies be lovely on a yellow hat?
+
+_Second Schoolgirl_. Ssh! The Eye is on you. How awful, Miss Hadley! And
+were they all killed? Quite a tragedy!
+
+_Third Schoolgirl_. Not a yellow hat! Stupid! A corn-colored one--just
+the shade of the grain with the sun on it. Wouldn't it be lovely! When
+we get back to Paris--
+
+_Fourth Schoolgirl (the one with imagination_). You idiots! You poor
+kittens!
+
+_First Schoolgirl_. If we ever do get back to Paris!
+
+_Teacher_. (_Wearily_.) Please pay attention. This is one of the world's
+most sacred spots. It is the scene of a great heroism. It is the place
+where many of our fellow countrymen laid down their lives. How can you
+stand on this solemn ground and chatter about hats?
+
+_Third Schoolgirl_. Well, you see, Miss Hadley, we're fed up with solemn
+grounds. You can't expect us to go into raptures at this stage over an
+old ditch. And, to be serious, wouldn't some of those field flowers make
+a lovely combination for hats? With the French touch, don't you know?
+You'd be darling in one--so _ingenue!_
+
+_Second Schoolgirl_. Ssh! She'll kill you. (_Three girls turn their
+backs and stifle a giggle_.)
+
+_Teacher_. Girls, you may be past your youth yourselves one day.
+
+_First Schoolgirl_. (_Airily._) But we're well preserved so far, Miss
+Hadley.
+
+_Fourth Schoolgirl_. (_Has wandered away a few yards. She bends and
+picks a flower from the ditch. She speaks to herself_.) The flag
+floated here. There were shells bursting and guns thundering and groans
+and blood--here. American boys were dying where I stand safe. That's
+what they did. They made me safe. They kept America free. They made the
+"world safe for freedom," (_She bends and speaks into the ditch_.) Boy,
+you who lay just there in suffering and gave your good life away that
+long-ago summer day--thank you. You died for us. America remembers.
+Because of you there will be no more wars, and girls such as we are may
+wander across battle-fields, and nations are happy and well governed,
+and kings and masters are gone. You did that, you boys. You lost fifty
+years of life, but you gained our love forever. Your deaths were not in
+rain. Good-by, dear, dead boys.
+
+_Teacher_. (_Calls_). Child, come! We must catch the train.
+
+
+
+
+FOURTH ACT
+
+
+_The scene is the same trench in the year 2018. It is three o'clock of
+the afternoon, of the same summer day. A newly married couple have come
+to see the trench. He is journeying as to a shrine; she has allowed
+impersonal interests, such as history, to lapse under the influence of
+love and a trousseau. She is, however, amenable to patriotism, and, her
+husband applying the match, she takes fire--she also, from the story of
+the trench_.
+
+_He_. This must be the place.
+
+_She_. It is nothing but a ditch filled with flowers.
+
+_He_. The old trench. (_Takes off his hat_.)
+
+_She_. Was it--it was--in the Great War?
+
+_He_. My dear!
+
+_She_. You're horrified. But I really--don't know.
+
+_He_. Don't know? You must.
+
+_She_. You've gone and married a person who hasn't a glimmer of history.
+What will you do about it?
+
+_He_. I'll be brave and stick to my bargain. Do you mean that you've
+forgotten the charge of the Blank_th_ Americans against the Prussian
+Guard? The charge that practically ended the war?
+
+_She_. Ended the war? How could one charge end the war?
+
+_He_. There was fighting after. But the last critical battle was here
+(_looks about_) in these meadows, and for miles along. And it was just
+here that the Blank_th_ United States Regiment made its historic dash.
+In that ditch--filled with flowers--a hundred of our lads were mown down
+in three minutes. About two thousand more followed them to death.
+
+_She_. Oh--I do know. It was _that_ charge. I learned about it in
+school; it thrilled me always.
+
+_He_. Certainly. Every American child knows the story. I memorized the
+list of the one hundred soldiers' names of my own free will when I was
+ten. I can say them now. "Arnold--Ashe--Bennett--Emmet--Dragmore--"
+
+_She_. Don't say the rest, Ted--tell me about it as it happened. (_She
+slips her hand into his_.) We two, standing here young and happy,
+looking forward to a, lifetime together, will do honor, that way, to
+those soldiers who gave up their happy youth and their lives for
+America.
+
+_He_. (_Puts his arm around her_.) We will. We'll make a little memorial
+service and I'll preach a sermon about how gloriously they fell and how,
+unknowingly, they won the war--and so much more!
+
+_She_. Tell me.
+
+_He_. It was a hundred years ago about now--summer. A critical battle
+raged along a stretch of many miles. About the centre of the
+line--here--the Prussian Imperial Guards, the crack soldiers of the
+German army, held the first trench--this ditch. American forces faced
+them, but in weeks of fighting had not been able to make much
+impression. Then, on a day, the order came down the lines that the
+Blank_th_ United States Regiment, opposed to the Guard, was to charge
+and take the German front trench. Of course the artillery was to prepare
+for their charge as usual, but there was some mistake. There was no
+curtain of fire before them, no artillery preparation to help them. And
+the order to charge came. So, right into the German guns, in the face of
+those terrible Prussian Guards, our lads went "over the top" with a
+great shout, and poured like a flame, like a catapult, across the space
+between them--No-Man's Land, they called it then--it was only
+thirty-five yards--to the German trench. So fast they rushed, and so
+unexpected was their coming, with no curtain of artillery to shield
+them, that the Germans were for a moment taken aback. Not a shot was
+fired for a space of time almost long enough to let the Americans reach
+the trench, and then the rifles broke out and the brown uniforms fell
+like leaves in autumn. But not all. They rushed on pell-mell, cutting
+wire, pouring irresistibly into the German trench. And the Guards, such
+as were not mown down, lost courage at the astounding impetus of the
+dash, and scrambled and ran from their trench. They took it--our boys
+took that trench--this old ditch. But then the big German guns opened a
+fire like hail and a machine gun at the end--down there it must have
+been--enfiladed the trench, and every man in it was killed. But the
+charge ended the war. Other Americans, mad with the glory of it, poured
+in a sea after their comrades and held the trench, and poured on and on,
+and wiped out that day the Prussian Guard. The German morale was broken
+from then; within four months the war was over.
+
+_She_. (_Turns and hides her face on his shoulder and shakes with
+sobs_.) I'm not--crying for sorrow--for them. I'm crying--for the glory
+of it. Because--I'm so proud and glad--that it's too much for me. To
+belong to such a nation--to such men. I'm crying for knowing, it was my
+nation--my men. And America is--the same today. I know it. If she needed
+you today, Ted, you would fight like that. You would go over the top
+with the charging Blank_th_, with a shout, if the order came--wouldn't
+you, my own man?
+
+_He_. (_Looking into the old ditch with his head bent reverently_.) I
+hope so.
+
+_She_. And I hope I would send you with all my heart. Death like that is
+more than life.
+
+_He_. I've made you cry.
+
+_She_. Not you. What they did--those boys.
+
+_He_. It's fitting that Americans should come here, as they do come, as
+to a Mecca, a holy place. For it was here that America was saved. That's
+what they did, the boys who made that charge. They saved America from
+the most savage and barbarous enemy of all time. As sure as France and
+England were at the end of their rope--and they were--so surely Germany,
+the victor, would have invaded America, and Belgium would have happened
+in our country. A hundred years wouldn't have been enough to free us
+again, if that had happened. You and I, dearest, owe it to those
+soldiers that we are here together, free, prosperous citizens of an ever
+greater country.
+
+_She_. (_Drops on her knees by the ditch_.) It's a shrine. Men of my
+land, I own my debt. I thank you for all I have and am. God bless you in
+your heaven. (_Silence_.)
+
+_He_. (_Tears in his eyes. His arm around her neck as he bends to her_.)
+You'll not forget the story of the Charging Blank_th_?
+
+_She_. Never again. In my life. (_Rising_.) I think their spirits must
+be here often. Perhaps they're happy when Americans are here. It's a
+holy place, as you said. Come away now. I love to leave it in sunshine
+and flowers with the dear ghosts of the boys. (_Exit He and She_.)
+
+
+
+
+FIFTH ACT
+
+
+_The scene it the same trench in the year 2018. It is five o'clock of
+the same summer afternoon. An officer of the American Army and an
+English cabinet member come, together, to visit the old trench. The
+American has a particular reason for his interest; the Englishman
+accompanies the distinguished American. The two review the story of the
+trench and speak of other things connected, and it is hoped that they
+set forth the far-reaching work of the soldiers who died, not realizing
+their work, in the great fight of the Charging Blank_th.
+
+_Englishman_. It's a peaceful scene.
+
+_American_. (_Advances to the side of the ditch. Looks down. Takes off
+his cap_.) I came across the ocean to see it. (_He looks over the
+fields_.) It's quiet.
+
+_Englishman_. The trenches were filled in all over the invaded territory
+within twenty-five years after the war. Except a very few kept as a
+manner of monument. Object-lessons, don't you know, in what the thing
+meant. Even those are getting obliterated. They say this is quite the
+best specimen in all France.
+
+_American_. It doesn't look warlike. What a lot of flowers!
+
+_Englishman_. Yes. The folk about here have a tradition, don't you know,
+that poppies mark the places where blood flowed most.
+
+_American_. Ah! (_Gazes into the ditch_.) Poppies there. A hundred of
+our soldiers died at once down there. Mere lads mostly. Their names and
+ages are on a tablet in the capitol at Washington, and underneath is a
+sentence from Lincoln's Gettysburg speech: "These dead shall not have
+died in vain, and government of the people, by the people, for the
+people shall not perish from the earth."
+
+_Englishman_. Those are undying words.
+
+_American_. And undying names--the lads' names.
+
+_Englishman_. What they and the other Americans did can never die. Not
+while the planet endures. No nation at that time realized how vital was
+your country's entrance into the war. Three months later it would have
+been too late. Your young, untried forces lifted worn-out France and
+England and swept us to-victory. It was America's victory at the last.
+It is our glory to confess that, for from then on America has been our
+kin.
+
+_American_. (_Smiles_.) England is our well-beloved elder sister for all
+time now.
+
+_Englishman_. The soldiers who died there (_gestures to the ditch_) and
+their like did that also. They tied the nations together with a bond of
+common gratitude, common suffering, common glory.
+
+_American_. You say well that there was common gratitude. England and
+France had fought our battle for three years at the time we entered the
+war. We had nestled behind the English fleet. Those grim gray ships of
+yours stood between us and the barbarians very literally.
+
+_Englishman_. Without doubt Germany would have been happy to invade the
+only country on earth rich enough to pay her war debt. And you were
+astonishingly open to invasion. It is one of the historical facts that a
+student of history of this twenty-first century finds difficult to
+realize.
+
+_American_. The Great War made revolutionary changes. That condition of
+unpreparedness was one. That there will never be another war is the
+belief of all governments. But if all governments should be mistaken,
+not again would my country, or yours, be caught unprepared. A general
+staff built of soldiers and free of civilians hampering is one advantage
+we have drawn from our ordeal of 1917.
+
+_Englishman_. Your army is magnificently efficient.
+
+_American_. And yours. Heaven grant neither may ever be needed! Our
+military efficiency is the pride of an unmilitary nation. One Congress,
+since the Great War and its lessons, has vied with another to keep our
+high place.
+
+_Englishman_. Ah! Your Congress. That has changed since the old
+days--since La Follette.
+
+_American_. The name is a shame and a warning to us. Our children are
+taught to remember it so. The "little group of wilful men," the eleven
+who came near to shipwrecking the country, were equally bad, perhaps,
+but they are forgotten. La Follette stands for them and bears the curses
+of his countrymen, which they all earned.
+
+_Englishman_. Their ignominy served America; it roused the country to
+clean its Augean stables.
+
+_American_. The war purified with fire the legislative soul.
+
+_Englishman_. Exactly. Men are human still, certainly, yet genuine
+patriotism appears to be a _sine qua non_ now, where bombast answered in
+the old day. Corruption is no longer accepted. Public men then were
+surprisingly simple, surprisingly cheap and limited in their methods.
+There were two rules for public and private life. It was thought
+quixotic, I gather from studying the documents of the time, to expect
+anything different. And how easily the change came!
+
+_American_. The nation rose and demanded honesty, and honesty was there.
+The enormous majority of decent people woke from a discontented apathy
+and took charge. Men sprang into place naturally and served the nation.
+The old log-rolling, brainless, greedy public officials were thrown
+into the junk-heap. As if by magic the stress of the war wrung out the
+rinsings and the scourings and left the fabric clean.
+
+_Englishman_. The stress of the war affected more than internal
+politics. You and I, General, are used to a standard of conduct between
+responsible nations as high as that taken for granted between
+responsible persons. But, if one considers, that was far from the case a
+hundred years ago. It was in 1914, that von Bethmann-Hollweg spoke of "a
+scrap of paper."
+
+_American_. Ah--Germans!
+
+_Englishman_. Certainly one does not expect honor or sincerity from
+German psychology. Even the little Teutonic Republic of to-day is
+tricky, scheming always to get a foothold for power, a beginning for the
+army they will never again be allowed to have. Even after the Kaiser and
+the Crown Prince and the other rascals were punished they tried to cheat
+us, if you remember. Yet it is not that which I had in mind. The point I
+was making was that today it would be out of drawing for a government
+even of charlatans, like the Prussians, to advance the sort of claims
+which they did. In commonplace words, it was expected then that
+governments, as against each other, would be self-seeking. To-day
+decency demands that they should be, as men must be, unselfish.
+
+_America_. (_Musingly_.) It's odd how long it took the
+world--governments--human beings--to find the truth of the very old
+phrase that "he who findeth his life must lose it."
+
+_Englishman_. The simple fact of that phrase before the Great War was
+not commonly grasped. People thought it purely religious and reserved
+for saints and church services. As a working hypothesis it was not
+generally known. The every-day ideals of our generation, the friendships
+and brotherhoods of nations as we know them would have been thought
+Utopian.
+
+_American_. Utopian? Perhaps our civilization is better than Utopian.
+The race has grown with a bound since we all went through hell together.
+How far the civilization of 1914 stood above that of 1614! The
+difference between galley-slaves and able-bodied seamen, of your and
+our navy! Greater yet than the change in that three hundred years is the
+change in the last one hundred. I look at it with a soldier's somewhat
+direct view. Humanity went helpless and alone into a fiery furnace and
+came through holding on to God's hand. We have clung closely to that
+powerful grasp since.
+
+_Englishman_. Certainly the race has emerged from an epoch of intellect
+to an epoch of spirituality--which comprehends and extends intellect.
+There have never been inventions such as those of our era. And the
+inventors have been, as it were, men inspired. Something beyond
+themselves has worked through them for the world. A force like that was
+known only sporadically before our time.
+
+_American_. (_Looks into old ditch_.) It would be strange to the lads
+who charged through horror across this flowery field to hear our talk
+and to know that to them and their deeds we owe the happiness and the
+greatness of the world we now live in.
+
+_Englishman_. Their short, Homeric episode of life admitted few
+generalizations, I fancy. To be ready and strong and brave--there was
+scant time for more than that in those strenuous days. Yet under that
+simple formula lay a sea of patriotism and self-sacrifice, from which
+sprang their soldiers' force. "Greater love hath no man than this, that
+a man lay down his life for his friends." It was their love--love of
+country, of humanity, of freedom--which silenced in the end the great
+engine of evil--Prussianism. The motive power of life is proved, through
+those dead soldiers, to be not hate, as the Prussians taught, but love.
+
+_American_. Do you see something shining among the flowers at the bottom
+of the ditch?
+
+_Englishman_. Why, yes. Is it--a leaf which catches the light?
+
+_American_. (_Stepping down_.) I'll see. (_He picks up a metal
+identification disk worn by a soldier. Angelique has rubbed it so that
+the letters may mostly be read_.) This is rather wonderful. (_He reads
+aloud_.) "R.V.H. Randolph--Blank_th_ Regiment--U.S." I can't make out
+the rest.
+
+_Englishman_. (_Takes the disk_.) Extraordinary! The name and regiment
+are plain. The identification disk, evidently, of a soldier who died in
+the trench here. Your own man, General.
+
+_American_. (_Much stirred_.) And--my own regiment. Two years ago I was
+the colonel of "The Charging Blank_th_."
+
+
+
+
+HER COUNTRY TOO
+
+
+David Lance sat wondering. He was not due at the office till ten this
+Saturday night and he was putting in a long and thorough wonder. About
+the service in all its branches; about finance; about the new Liberty
+Loan. First, how was he to stop being a peaceful reporter on the
+_Daybreak_ and get into uniform; that wonder covered a class including
+the army, navy and air-service, for he had been refused by all three; he
+wondered how a small limp from apple-tree acrobatics at ten might be so
+explained away that he might pass; reluctantly he wondered also about
+the Y.M.C.A. But he was a fighting man _par excellence_. For him it
+would feel like slacking to go into any but fighting service. Six feet
+two and weighing a hundred and ninety, every ounce possible to be muscle
+was muscle; easy, joyful twenty-four-year-old muscle which knew nothing
+of fatigue. He was certain he would make a fit soldier for Uncle Sam,
+and how, how he wanted to be Uncle Sam's soldier!
+
+He was getting desperate. Every man he knew in the twenties and many a
+one under and over, was in uniform; bitterly he envied the proud peace
+in their eyes when he met them. He could not bear to explain things once
+more as he had explained today to Tom Arnold and "Beef" Johnson, and
+"Seraph" Olcott, home on leave before sailing for France. He had
+suffered while they listened courteously and hurried to say that they
+understood, that it was a shame, and that: "You'll make it yet, old
+son." And they had then turned to each other comparing notes of camps.
+It made little impression that he had toiled and sweated early and late
+in this struggle to get in somewhere--army, navy, air-service--anything
+to follow the flag. He wasn't allowed. He was still a reporter on the
+_Daybreak_ while the biggest doings of humanity were getting done, and
+every young son of America had his chance to help. With a strong,
+tireless body aching for soldier's work, America, his mother, refused
+him work. He wasn't allowed.
+
+Lance groaned, sitting in his one big chair in his one small room. There
+were other problems. A Liberty Loan drive was on, and where could he lay
+hands on money for bonds? He had plunged on the last loan and there was
+yet something to pay on the $200 subscription. And there was no one and
+nothing to fall back on except his salary as reporter for the
+_Daybreak._ His father had died when he was six, and his mother eight
+years ago; his small capital had gone for his four years, at Yale. There
+was no one--except a legend of cousins in the South. Never was any one
+poorer or more alone. Yet he must take a bond or two. How might he hold
+up his head not to fight and not to buy bonds. A knock at the door.
+
+"Come in," growled Lance.
+
+The door opened, and a picture out of a storybook stood framed and
+smiling. One seldom sees today in the North the genuine old-fashioned
+negro-woman. A sample was here in Lance's doorway. A bandanna of red and
+yellow made a turban for her head; a clean brownish calico dress stood
+crisply about a solid and waistless figure, and a fresh white apron
+covered it voluminously in front; a folded white handkerchief lay,
+fichu-wise, around the creases of a fat black neck; a basket covered
+with a cloth was on her arm. She stood and smiled as if to give the
+treat time to have its effect on Lance. "Look who's here!" was in large
+print all over her. And she radiated peace and good-will.
+
+Lance was on his feet with a shout. "Bless your fat heart, Aunt
+Basha--I'm glad to see you," he flung at her, and seized the basket and
+slung it half across the room to a sofa with a casualness, alarming to
+Aunt Basha--christened Bathsheba seventy-five years ago, but "rightly
+known," she had so instructed Lance, as "Aunt Basha."
+
+"Young marse, don' you ruinate the washin', please sir," she adjured in
+liquid tones.
+
+"Never you mind. It's the last one you'll do for me," retorted Lance.
+"Did I tell you you couldn't have the honor of washing for me anymore,
+Aunt Basha?"
+
+Aunt Basha was wreathed in smiles.
+
+"Yassir, young marse. You tole me dat mo'n tree times befo', a'ready,
+sir."
+
+"Well--it's final this time. Can't stand your prices. I _can't_ stand
+your exorbitant prices. Now what do you have the heart to charge for
+dusting off those three old shirts and two and a half collars? Hey?"
+
+Aunt Basha, entirely serene, was enjoying the game. "What does I
+charges, sir? Fo' dat wash, which you slung 'round acrost de room, sir?
+Well, sir, young marse, I charges fo' dollars 'n sev'nty fo' cents, sir,
+dis week. Fo' dat wash."
+
+Lance let loose a howl and flung himself into his chair as if
+prostrated, long legs out and arms hanging to the floor. Aunt Basha
+shook with laughter. This was a splendid joke and she never, never tired
+of it. "You see!" he threw out, between gasps. "Look at that! _Fo'_
+dollars 'n sev'nty _fo'_ cents." He sat up suddenly and pointed a big
+finger, "Aunt Basha," he whispered, "somebody's been kidding you.
+Somebody's lied. This palatial apartment, much as it looks like it, is
+not the home of John D. Rockefeller." He sprung up, drew an imaginary
+mantle about him, grasped one elbow with the other hand, dropped his
+head into the free palm and was Cassius or Hamlet or Faust--all one to
+Aunt Basha. His left eyebrow screwed up and his right down, and he
+glowered. "List to her," he began, and shot out a hand, immediately to
+replace it where it was most needed, under his elbow. "But list, ye
+Heavens and protect the lamb from this ravening wolf. She chargeth--oh
+high Heavens above!--she expecteth me to pay"--he gulped sobs--"the
+extortioner, the she-wolf--expecteth me to pay her--_fo_' dollars 'n
+sev'nty _fo_' cents!"
+
+Aunt Basha, entranced with this drama, quaked silently like a large
+coffee jelly, and with that there happened a high, rich, protracted
+sound which was laughter, but laughter not to be imitated of any vocal
+chords of a white race. The delicious note soared higher, higher it
+seemed than the scale of humanity, and was riotous velvet and cream,
+with no effort or uncertainty. Lance dropped his Mephistopheles pose and
+grinned.
+
+"It's Q sharp!" he commented. "However does she do it!"
+
+"Naw, sir, young marse," Aunt Basha began, descending to speech. "De
+she-wolf, she don' expecteth you to pay no fo' dollars 'n sev'nty fo'
+cents, sir. Dat's thes what I _charges_. Dat ain' what you _pay_. You
+thes pay me sev'nty fo' cents sir. Dat's all."
+
+"Oh!" Lance let it out like a ten-year-old. It was hard to say which
+enjoyed this weekly interview more, the boy or the old woman. The boy
+was lonely and the humanity unashamed of her race and personality made
+an atmosphere which delighted him. "Oh!" gasped Lance. "That's a relief.
+I thought it was goodbye to my Sunday trousers."
+
+Aunt Basha, comfortable and efficient, was unpacking the basket and
+putting away the wash in the few bureau drawers which easily held the
+boy's belongings. "Dey's all mended nice," she announced. "Young marse,
+sir, you better wa' out dese yer ole' undercloses right now, endurin' de
+warm weather, 'caze dey ain' gwine do you fo' de col'. You 'bleeged to
+buy some new ones sir, when it comes off right cool."
+
+Lance smiled, for there was no one but this old black woman to take care
+of him and advise his haphazard housekeeping, and he liked it. "Can't
+buy new ones," he made answer. "There you go again, mixing me up with
+Rockefeller. I'm not even the Duke of Westminster, do you see. I haven't
+got any money. Only sev'nty fo' cents for the she-wolf."
+
+Aunt Basha chuckled. Long ago there had been a household of young people
+in the South whose clothes she, a very young woman then, had mended;
+there had been a boy who talked nonsense to her much as this boy--Marse
+Pendleton. But trouble had come; everything had broken like a card-house
+under an ocean wave. "De fambly" was lost, and she and her young
+husband, old Uncle Jeems of today, had drifted by devious ways to this
+Northern city. "Ef you ain't got de money handy dis week, young marse,
+you kin pay me nex' week thes as well," suggested the she-wolf.
+
+Then the big boy was standing over her, and she was being patted on the
+shoulder with a touch that all but brought tears to the black, dim eyes.
+"Don't you dare pay attention to my drool, or I'll never talk to you
+again," Lance ordered. "Your sev'nty fo' cents is all right, and lots
+more. I've got heaps of cash that size, Aunt Basha. But I want to buy
+Liberty Bonds, and I don't know how in hell I'm going to get big money."
+The boy was thinking aloud. "How am I to raise two hundred for a couple
+of bonds, Aunt Basha? Tell me that?" He scratched into his thatch of
+hair and made a puzzled face.
+
+"What fo' you want big money, young marse?"
+
+"Bonds. Liberty Bonds. You know what that is?"
+
+"Naw, sir."
+
+"You don't? Well you ought to," said Lance. "There isn't a soul in this
+country who oughtn't to have a bond. It's this way. You know we're
+fighting a war?"
+
+"Yassir. Young Ananias Johnson, he's Sist' Amanda's boy, he done tole
+his Unk Jeems 'bout dat war. And Jeems, he done tole me."
+
+Lance regarded her. Was it possible that the ocean upheaval had stirred
+even the quietest backwater so little? "Well, anyhow, it's the biggest
+war that ever was on earth."
+
+Aunt Basha shook her head. "You ain't never seed de War of de
+Rebullium," she stated with superiority. "You's too young. Well, I
+reckon dis yer war ain't much on to dat war. Naw, sir! Dat ar was a sure
+'nough war--yas, sir!"
+
+Lance considered. He decided not to contest the point. "Anyhow Aunt
+Basha, this is an awfully big war. And if we don't win it the Germans
+will come over here and murder the most of us, and make you and Uncle
+Jeems work in the fields from daylight till dark."
+
+"Dem low down white trash!" commented Aunt Basha.
+
+"Yes, and worse. And Uncle Sam can't beat the Germans unless we all
+help. He needs money to buy guns for the soldiers, and food and clothes.
+So he's asking everybody--just everybody--to lend him money--every cent
+they can raise to buy things to win the war. He gives each person who
+lends him any, a piece of paper which is a promise to pay it back, and
+that piece of paper is called a bond--Uncle Sam's promise to pay.
+Everybody ought to help by giving up every cent they have. The soldiers
+are giving their lives to save us from the horrible Germans. They're
+going over there to live in mud and water and sleep in holes of the
+earth, to be shot and wounded and tortured and killed. They're facing
+that for our sakes, to save us from worse than death, for you and Uncle
+Jeems and me, Aunt Basha. Now, oughtn't we to give all we've got to take
+care of those boys--our soldiers?"
+
+Lance had forgotten his audience, except that he was wording his speech
+carefully in the simplest English. It went home.
+
+"Oh, my Lawd!" moaned Aunt Basha, sitting down and rocking hard. "Does
+dey sleep in de col' yeth? Oh, my Lawd have mercy!" It was the first
+realization she had had of the details of the war. "You ain't gwine over
+dar, is you young marse, honey?" she asked anxiously.
+
+"I wish to God I was," spoke Lance through set teeth. "No, Aunt Basha,
+they won't take me. Because I'm lame. I'd give my life to go. And
+because I can't fight I _must_ buy bonds. Do you see? I must. I'd sell
+my soul to get money for Liberty Bonds. Oh, God!" Lance was as if alone,
+with only that anxious old black face gazing up at him. "Oh, God--it's
+my country!"
+
+Suddenly the rich flowing voice spoke. "Young marse, it's my country
+too, sir," said Aunt Basha.
+
+Lance turned and stared. How much did the words mean to the old woman?
+In a moment he knew.
+
+"Yas, my young marseter, dis yer America's de ole black 'oman's country,
+thes like it's fine young white man's, like you, sir. I gwine give my
+las' cent, like you say. Yas, I gwine do dat. I got two hun'erd dollars,
+sir; I b'en a-savin' and a-savin' for Jeems 'n me 'ginst when we git
+ole, but I gwine give dat to my country. I want Unc' Sam to buy good
+food for dem boys in the muddy water. Bacon 'n hominy, sir--'n corn
+bread, what's nourishin'. 'N I want you to git de--de Liberty
+what-je-call-'ems. Yassir. 'Caze you ain't got no ma to he'ep you out,
+'n de ole black 'oman's gwine to be de bes' ma she know how to her young
+marse. I got de money tied up--" she leaned forward and whispered--"in a
+stockin' in de bottom draw' ob de chist unner Jeem's good coat. Tomorrow
+I gwine fetch it, 'n you go buy yo' what-je-calls-'ems."
+
+Lance went across and knelt on the floor beside her and put his arms
+around the stout figure. He had been brought up with a colored mammy and
+this affection seemed natural and homelike. "Aunt Basha, you're one of
+the saints," he said. "And I love you for it. But I wouldn't take your
+blessed two hundred, not for anything on earth. I'd be a hound to take
+it. If you want some bonds"--it flashed to him that the money would be
+safer so than in the stocking under Jeem's coat--"why, I'll get them for
+you. Come into the _Daybreak_ office and ask for me, say--Monday. And
+I'll go with you to the bank and get bonds. Here's my card. Show anybody
+that at the office." And he gave directions.
+
+Five minutes later the old woman went off down the street talking half
+aloud to herself in fragments of sentences about "Liberty
+what-je-call-'ems" and "my country too." In the little shack uptown that
+was home for her and her husband she began at once to set forth her new
+light. Jeems, who added to the family income by taking care of furnaces
+and doing odd jobs, was grizzled and hobbling of body, but argumentative
+of soul.
+
+"'Oman," he addressed Aunt Basha, "Unc' Sam got lots o' money. What use
+he gwine have, great big rich man lak Unc' Sam, fo' yo' two hun'erd? But
+we got mighty lot o' use fo' dat money, we'uns. An' you gwine gib dat
+away? Thes lak a 'oman!" which, in other forms, is an argument used by
+male people of many classes.
+
+Aunt Basha suggested that Young Marse David said something about a piece
+of paper and Uncle Sam paying back, but Jeems pooh-poohed that.
+
+"Naw, sir. When big rich folks goes round collectin' po' folkses money,
+is dey liable to pay back? What good piece o' paper gwine do you? Is dey
+aimin' to let you see de color ob dat money agin? Naw, sir. Dey am not."
+He proceeded to another branch of the subject. "War ain' gwine las'
+long, nohow. Young Ananias he gwine to Franch right soon, an' de yether
+colored brothers. De Germans dey ain't gwine las' long, once ef dey see
+us Anglo-Saxons in de scrablin'. Naw, sir.
+
+"White man what come hyer yether day, he say how dey ain't gwine 'low de
+colored sojers to fight," suggested Aunt Basha. German propaganda
+reaches far and takes strange shapes.
+
+"Don' jer go to b'lieve dat white man, 'oman," thundered Jeems, thumping
+with his fist. "He dunno nawthin', an' I reckon he's a liar. Unc' Sam he
+say we kin fight an' we _gwine_ fight. An' de war ain't las' long atter
+we git to fightin' good."
+
+Aunt Basha, her hands folded on the rounded volume of apron considered
+deeply. After a time she arrived at a decision.
+
+"Jeems," she began, "yo' cert'nly is a strong reasoner. Yassir. But I
+got it bo'ne in upon me powerful dat I gotter give dese yer savin's to
+Unc' Sam. It's my country too, Jeems, same as dem sojers what's
+fightin', dem boys in de mud what ain' got a soul to wash fo' 'em. An'
+lak as not dey mas not dere. Dem boys is fightin', and gittin' wet and
+hunted up lak young marse say, fo' Aunt Basha and--bress dere
+hearts"--Aunt Basha broke down, and the upshot was that Jeems washed his
+hands of an obstinate female and--the savings not being his in any
+case--gave unwilling consent.
+
+Youth of the sterner set is apt to be casual in making appointments. It
+had not entered Lance's head to arrange in case he was not at the
+office. As for Aunt Basha, her theory was that he reigned there over an
+army of subordinates from morning till evening. So that she was taken
+aback when told that Mr. Lance was out and no one could say when he
+would be in. She had risen at dawn and done her housework and much of
+the fine washing which she "took in," and had then arrayed herself in
+her best calico dress and newest turban and apron for the great occasion
+and had reported at the _Daybreak_ office at nine-thirty. And young
+marse wasn't there.
+
+"I'll set and rest ontwell he comes in," she announced, and retired to
+a chair against the wall.
+
+There she folded her hands statelily and sat erect, motionless, an image
+of fine old dignity. But much thinking was going on inside the calm
+exterior. What was she going to do if young marse did not come back? She
+had the $200 with her, carefully pinned and double pinned into a pocket
+in her purple alpaca petticoat. She did not want to take it home. Jeems
+had submitted this morning, but with mutterings, and a second time there
+might be trouble. The savings were indeed hers, but a rebellious husband
+in high finance is an embarrassment. Deeply Aunt Basha considered, and
+memory whispered something about a bank. Young marse was going to the
+bank with her to give her money to Uncle Sam. She had just passed a
+bank. Why could she not go alone? Somebody certainly would tell her what
+to do. Possibly Uncle Sam was there himself--for Aunt Basha's conception
+of our national myth was half mystical, half practical--as a child with
+Santa Claus. In any case banks were responsible places, and somebody
+would look after her. She crossed to the desk where two or three young
+men appeared to be doing most of the world's business.
+
+"Marsters!"
+
+The three looked up.
+
+"Good mawnin', young marsters. I'm 'bleeged to go now. I cert'nly thank
+you-all fo' lettin' me set in de cheer. I won't wait fo' marse David
+Lance no mo', sir. Good mawnin', marsters."
+
+A smiling courtesy dropped, and she was gone.
+
+"I'll be darned!" remarked reporter number one.
+
+"Where did that blow in from?" added reporter number two.
+
+But reporter number three had imagination. "The dearest old soul I've
+seen in a blue moon," said he.
+
+Aunt Basha proceeded down the street and more than one in the crowd
+glanced twice at the erect, stout figure swinging, like a quaint and
+stately ship in full sail, among the steam-tuggery of up-to-date
+humanity. There were high steps leading to the bank entrance, impressive
+and alarming to Aunt Basha. She paused to take breath for this
+adventure. Was a humble old colored woman permitted to walk freely in at
+those grand doors, open iron-work and enormous of size? She did not
+know. She stood a moment, suddenly frightened and helpless, not daring
+to go on, looking about for a friendly face. And behold! there it
+was--the friendliest face in the world, it seemed to the lost old
+soul--a vision of loveliness. It was the face of a beautiful young white
+lady in beautiful clothes who had stepped from a huge limousine. She was
+coming up the steps, straight to Aunt Basha. She saw the old woman, saw
+her anxious hesitation, and halted. The next event was a heavenly smile.
+Aunt Basha knew the repartee to that, and the smile that shone in answer
+was as heavenly in its way as the girl's.
+
+"Is there anything I can do for you?" spoke a voice of gentleness.
+
+And the world had turned over and come up right side on top. "Mawnin',
+Miss. Yas'm, I was fixin' to go in dat big do' yander, but I dunno as
+I'm 'lowed. Is I 'lowed, young miss, to go in dar an' gib my two hun'erd
+to Unc' Sam?"
+
+"What?" The tone was kindness itself, but bewildered.
+
+Aunt Basha elucidated. "I got two hun'erd, young miss, and I cert'nly
+want to gib it to Unc' Sam to buy clo'se for dem boys what's fightin'
+for us in Franch."
+
+"I wonder," spoke the girl, gazing thoughtfully, "if you want to get a
+Liberty Bond?"
+
+"Yas'm--yas, miss. Dat's sho' it, a whatjer-ma-call-'em. I know'd 'twas
+some cu'is name lak dat." The vision nodded her head.
+
+"I'm going in to do that very thing myself," she said. "Come with me.
+I'll help you get yours."
+
+Aunt Basha followed joyfully in the wake, and behold, everything was
+easy. Ready attention met them and shortly they sat in a private office
+carpeted in velvet and upholstered in grandeur. A personage gave grave
+attention to what the vision was saying.
+
+"I met--I don't know your name," she interrupted herself, turning to the
+old negro woman.
+
+Aunt Basha rose and curtsied. "Dey christened me Bathsheba Jeptha,
+young miss," she stated. "But I'se rightly known as Aunt Basha. Jes'
+Aunt Basha, young miss. And marster."
+
+A surname was disinterred by the efforts of the personage which appeared
+to startle the vision.
+
+"Why, it's our name, Mr. Davidson," she exclaimed. "She said Cabell."
+
+Aunt Basha turned inquiring, vague eyes. "Is it, honey? Is yo' a
+Cabell?"
+
+And then the personage, who was, after all, cashier of the Ninth
+National Bank and very busy, cut in. "Ah, yes! A well known Southern
+name. Doubtless a large connection. And now Mrs.--ah--Cabell--"
+
+"I'd be 'bleeged ef yo' jis' name me Aunt Basha, marster."
+
+And marster, rather _intrigue_ because he, being a New Englander, had
+never in his life addressed as "aunt" a person who was not sister to his
+mother or his father, nevertheless became human and smiled. "Well, then,
+Aunt Basha."
+
+At a point a bit later he was again jolted when he asked the amount
+which his newly adopted "aunt" wanted to invest. For an answer she
+hauled high the folds of her frock, unconscious of his gasp or of the
+vision's repressed laughter, and went on to attack the clean purple
+alpaca petticoat which was next in rank, Mr. Davidson thought it wise at
+this point to make an errand across the room. He need not have bothered
+as far as Aunt Basha was concerned. When he came back she was again _a
+la mode_ and held an ancient beaded purse at which she gazed. Out of a
+less remote pocket she drew steel spectacles, which were put on. Mr.
+Davidson repeated his question of how much.
+
+"It's all hyer, marster. It's two hun'erd dollars, sir. I ben savin' up
+fo' twenty years an' mo', and me'n Jeems, we ben countin' it every mont,
+so I reckon I knows."
+
+The man and the girl regarded the old woman a moment. "It's a large sum
+for you to invest," Mr. Davidson said.
+
+"Yassir. Yas, marster. It's right smart money. But I sho' am glad to gib
+dis hyer to Unc' Sam for dem boys."
+
+The cashier of the Ninth National Bank lifted his eyes from the blank he
+was filling out and looked at Aunt Basha thoughtfully. "You understand,
+of course, that the Government--Uncle Sam--is only borrowing your money.
+That you may have it back any time you wish."
+
+Aunt Basha drew herself up. "I don' wish it, sir. I'm gibin' dis hyer
+gif,' a free gif' to my country. Yassir. It's de onliest country I got,
+an' I reckon I got a right to gib dis hyer what I earned doin' fine
+washin' and i'nin. I gibs it to my country. I don't wan' to hyer any
+talk 'bout payin' back. Naw, sir."
+
+It took Mr. Davidson and the vision at least ten minutes to make clear
+to Aunt Basha the character and habits of a Liberty Bond, and then,
+though gratified with the ownership of what seemed a brand new $200 and
+a valuable slip of paper--which meandered, shamelessly into the purple
+alpaca petticoat--yet she was disappointed.
+
+"White folks sho' am cu'is," she reflected, "Now who'd 'a thought 'bout
+dat way ob raisin' money! Not me--no, Lawd! It do beat me." With that
+she threw an earnest glance at Mr. Davidson, lean and tall and gray,
+with a clipped pointed beard. "'Scuse me, marster," said Aunt Basha,
+"mout I ask a quexshun?"
+
+"Surely," agreed Mr. Davidson blandly.
+
+"Is you'--'scuse de ole 'oman, sir--is you' Unc' Sam?"
+
+The "quexshun" left the personage too staggered to laugh. But the girl
+filled the staid place with gay peals. Then she leaned over and patted
+the wrinkled and bony worn black knuckles. "Bless your dear heart," she
+said; "no, he isn't, Aunt Basha. He's awfully important and good to us
+all, and he knows everything. But he's not Uncle Sam."
+
+The bewilderment of the old face melted to smiles. "Dar, now," she
+brought out; "I mout 'a know'd, becaze he didn't have no red striped
+pants. An' de whiskers is diff'ent, too. 'Scuse me, sir, and thank you
+kindly, marster. Thank you, young miss. De Lawd bress you fo' helpin' de
+ole 'oman." She had risen and she dropped her old time curtsey at this
+point. "Mawnin' to yo', marster and young miss."
+
+But the girl sprang up. "You can't go," she said. "I'm going to take you
+to my house to see my grandmother. She's Southern, and our name is
+Cabell, and likely--maybe--she knew your people down South."
+
+"Maybe, young miss. Dar's lots o' Cabells," agreed Aunt Basha, and in
+three minutes found herself where she had never thought to be, inside a
+fine private car.
+
+She was dumb with rapture and excitement, and quite unable to answer the
+girl's friendly words except with smiles and nods. The girl saw how it
+was and let her be, only patting the calico arm once and again
+reassuringly. "I wonder if she didn't want to come. I wonder if I've
+frightened her," thought Eleanor Cabell. When into the silence broke
+suddenly the rich, high, irresistible music which was Aunt Basha's
+laugh, and which David Lance had said was pitched on "Q sharp." The girl
+joined the infectious sound and a moment after that the car stopped.
+
+"This is home," said Eleanor.
+
+Aunt Basha observed, with the liking for magnificence of a servant
+trained in a large house, the fine facade and the huge size of "home."
+In a moment she was inside, and "young miss" was carefully escorting her
+into a sunshiny big room, where a wood fire burned, and a bird sang, and
+there were books and flowers.
+
+"Wait here, Aunt Basha, dear," Eleanor said, "and I'll get Grandmother."
+It was exactly like the loveliest of dreams, Aunt Basha told Jeems an
+hour later. It could not possibly have been true, except that it was.
+When "Grandmother" came in, slender and white-haired and a bit
+breathless with this last surprise of a surprising granddaughter, Aunt
+Basha stood and curtsied her stateliest.
+
+Then suddenly she cried out, "Fo' God! Oh, my Miss Jinny!" and fell on
+her knees.
+
+Mrs. Cabell gazed down, startled. "Who is it? Oh, whom have you brought
+me, Eleanor?" She bent to look more closely at Aunt Basha, kneeling,
+speechless, tears streaming from the brave old eyes, holding up clasped
+hand imploring. "It isn't--Oh, my dear, I believe it _is_ our own old
+nurse, Basha, who took care of your father!"
+
+"Yas'm. Yas, Miss Jinny," endorsed Aunt Basha, climbing to her feet.
+"Yas, my Miss Jinny, bress de Lawd. It's Basha." She turned to the girl.
+"Dis yer chile ain't nebber my young Marse Pendleton's chile!"
+
+But it was; and there was explanation and laughter and tears, too, but
+tears of happiness. Then it was told how, after that crash of disaster
+was over; the family had tried in vain to find Basha and Jeems; had
+tried always. It was told how a great fortune had come to them in the
+turn of a hand by the discovery of an unsuspected salt mine on the old
+estate; how "young Marse Pendleton," a famous surgeon now, had by that
+time made for himself a career and a home in this Northern state; how
+his wife had died young, and his mother, "Miss Jinny," had come to live
+with him and take care of his one child, the vision. And then the simple
+annals of Aunt Basha and Uncle Jeems were also told, the long struggle
+to keep respectable, only respectable; the years of toil and frugality
+and saving--saving the two hundred dollars which she had offered this
+morning as a "free gif" to her country. In these annals loomed large for
+some time past the figure of a "young marse" who had been good to her
+and helped her much and often in spite of his own "_res augusta
+domi_,"--which was not Aunt Basha's expression. The story was
+told of his oration in the little hall bedroom about Liberty
+"whatjer-m'-call-'ems," and of how the boy had stirred the soul of the
+old woman with his picture of the soldiers in the trenches.
+
+"So it come to me, Miss Jinny, how ez me'n Jeems was thes two wuthless
+ole niggers, an' hadn't fur to trabble on de road anyways, an' de Lawd
+would pervide, an' ef He didn't we could scratch grabble some ways. An'
+dat boy, dat young Marse David, he tole me everbody ought to gib dey
+las' cent fo' Unc' Sam an' de sojers. So"--Aunt Basha's high,
+inexpressibly sweet laughter of pure glee filled the room--"so I thes
+up'n handed over my two hun'erd."
+
+"It was the most beautiful and wonderful thing that's been done in all
+wonderful America," pronounced Eleanor Cabell as one having authority.
+She went on. "But that young man, your young Marse David, why doesn't he
+fight if he's such a patriot?"
+
+"Bress gracious, honey," Aunt Basha hurried to explain, "he's a-honin'
+to fight. But he cayn't. He's lame. He goes a-limpin'. Dey won't took
+him."
+
+"Oh!" retracted Eleanor. Then: "What's his name? Maybe father could cure
+him."
+
+"He name Lance. Marse David Lance."
+
+Why should Miss Jinny jump? "David Lance? It can't be, Aunt Basha."
+
+With no words Aunt Basha began hauling up her skirts and Eleanor,
+remembering Mr. Davidson's face, went into gales of laughter. Aunt Basha
+baited, looked at her with an inquiring gaze of adoration. "Yas'm, my
+young miss. He name dat. I done put the cyard in my ridicule. Yas'm,
+it's here." The antique bead purse was opened and Lance's card was
+presented to Miss Jinny.
+
+"Eleanor! This is too wonderful--look!"
+
+Eleanor looked, and read: "Mr. David Pendleton Lance." "Why,
+Grandmother, it's Dad's name--David Pendleton Cabell. And the Lance--"
+
+Mrs. Cabell, stronger on genealogy than the younger generation, took up
+the wandering thread. "The 'Lance' is my mother's maiden name--Virginia
+Lance she was. And her brother was David Pendleton Lance. I named your
+father for him because he was born on the day my young uncle was killed,
+in the battle of Shiloh."
+
+"Well, then--who's this sailing around with our family name?"
+
+"Who is he? But he must be our close kin, Eleanor. My Uncle David
+left--that's it. His wife came from California and she went out there
+again to live with her baby. I hadn't heard of them for years. Why,
+Eleanor, this boy's father must have been--my first cousin. My young
+Uncle David's baby. Those years of trouble after we left home wiped out
+so much. I lost track--but that doesn't matter now. Aunt Basha," spoke
+Miss Jinny in a quick, efficient voice, which suddenly recalled the
+blooming and businesslike mother of the young brood of years ago, "Aunt
+Basha, where can I find your young Marse David?"
+
+Aunt Basha smiled radiantly and shook her head. "Cayn't fin' him, honey?
+I done tried, and he warn't dar."
+
+"Wasn't where?"
+
+"At de orfice, Miss Jinny."
+
+"At what office?"
+
+"Why, de _Daybreak_ orfice, cose, Miss Jinny. What yether orfice he
+gwine be at?"
+
+"Oh!" Miss Jinny followed with ease the windings of the African mind.
+"He's a reporter on the _Daybreak_ then."
+
+"'Cose he is, Miss Jinny, ma'am. Whatjer reckon?"
+
+Miss Jinny reflected. Then: "Eleanor, call up the _Daybreak_ office and
+ask if Mr. Lance is there and if he will speak to me."
+
+But Aunt Basha was right. Mr. Lance was not at the _Daybreak_ office.
+Mrs. Cabell was as grieved as a child.
+
+"We'll find him, Grandmother," Eleanor asserted. "Why, of course--it's a
+morning paper. He's home sleeping. I'll get his number." She caught up
+the telephone book.
+
+Aunt Basha chuckled musically. "He ain't got no tullaphome, honey chile.
+No, my Lawd! Whar dat boy gwine git money for tullaphome and
+contraptions? No, my Lawd!"
+
+"How will we get him?" despaired Mrs. Cabell. The end of the council was
+a cryptic note in the hand of Jackson, the chauffeur, and orders to
+bring back the addressee at any cost.
+
+Meanwhile, as Jackson stood in his smart dark livery taking orders with
+the calmness of efficiency, feeling himself capable of getting that
+young man, howsoever hidden, the young man himself was wasting valuable
+hours off in day-dreams. In the one shabby big chair of the hall bedroom
+he sat and smoked a pipe, and stared at a microscopic fire in a toy
+grate. It was extravagant of David Lance to have a fire at all, but as
+long as he gave up meals to do it likely it was his own affair. The
+luxuries mean more than the necessities to plenty of us. With comfort in
+this, his small luxury, he watched the play of light and shadow, and the
+pulsing of the live scarlet and orange in the heart of the coals. He
+needed comfort today, the lonely boy. Two men of the office force who
+had gotten their commissions lately at an officer's training-camp had
+come in last night before leaving for Camp Devens; everybody had crowded
+about and praised them and envied them. They had been joked about the
+sweaters, and socks made by mothers and sweethearts, and about the
+trouble Uncle Sam would have with their mass of mail. The men in the
+office had joined to give each a goodbye present. Pride in them, the
+honor of them to all the force was shown at every turn; and beyond it
+all there was the look of grave contentment in their eyes which is the
+mark of the men who have counted the cost and given up everything for
+their country. Most of all soldiers, perhaps, in this great war, the
+American fights for an ideal. Also he knows it; down to the most
+ignorant drafted man, that inspiration has lifted the army and given it
+a star in the East to follow. The American fights for an ideal; the sign
+of it is in the faces of the men in uniform whom one meets everywhere in
+the street.
+
+David Lance, splendidly powerful and fit except for the small limp which
+was his undoing, suffered as he joined, whole-hearted, in the glory of
+those who were going. Back in his room alone, smoking, staring into his
+dying fire, he was dreaming how it would feel if he were the one who was
+to march off in uniform to take his man's share of the hardship and
+comradeship and adventure and suffering, and of the salvation of the
+world. With that, he took his pipe from his mouth and grinned broadly
+into the fire as another phase of the question appeared. How would it
+feel if he was somebody's special soldier, like both of those boys, sent
+off by a mother or a sweetheart, by both possibly, overstocked with
+things knitted for him, with all the necessities and luxuries of a
+soldier's outfit that could be thought of. He remembered how Jarvis,
+the artillery captain, had showed them, proud and modest, his field
+glass.
+
+"It's a good one," he had said. "My mother gave it to me. It has the
+Mills scale."
+
+And Annesley, the kid, who had made his lieutenant's commission so
+unexpectedly, had broken in: "That's no shakes to the socks I've got on.
+If somebody'll pull off my boots I'll show you. Made in Poughkeepsie. A
+dozen pairs. _Not_ my mother."
+
+Lance smiled wistfully. Since his own mother died, eight years ago, he
+had drifted about unanchored, and though women had inevitably held out
+hands to the tall and beautiful lad, they were not the sort he cared
+for, and there had been none of his own sort in his life. Fate might so
+easily have given him a chance to serve his country, with also, maybe,
+just the common sweet things added which utmost every fellow had, and a
+woman or two to give him a sendoff and to write him letters over there
+sometimes. To be a soldier--and to be somebody's soldier! Why, these two
+things would mean Heaven! And hundreds of thousands of American boys
+had these and thought nothing of it. Fate certainly had been a bit
+stingy with a chap, considered David Lance, smiling into his little fire
+with a touch of wistful self-pity.
+
+At this moment Fate, in smart, dark livery, knocked at his door. "Come
+in," shouted Lance cheerfully.
+
+The door opened and he stared. Somebody had lost the way. Chauffeurs in
+expensive livery did not come to his hall bedroom. "Is dis yer Mr.
+Lance?" inquired Jackson.
+
+Lance admitted it and got the note and read it while Jackson, knowing
+his Family intimately, knew that something pleasant and surprising was
+afoot and assisted with a discreet regard. When he saw that the note was
+finished, Jackson confidently put in his word. "Cyar's waitin', sir.
+Orders is I was to tote you to de house."
+
+Lance's eyes glowered as he looked up. "Tell me one thing," he demanded.
+
+"Yes, sir," grinned Jackson, pleased with this young gentleman from a
+very poor neighborhood, who quite evidently was, all the same,
+"quality."
+
+"Are you," inquired Lance, "are you any relation to Aunt Basha?"
+
+Jackson, for all his efficiency a friendly soul, forgot the dignity of
+his livery and broke into chuckles. "Naw, sir; naw, sir. I dunno de
+lady, sir; I reckon I ain't, sir," answered Jackson.
+
+"All right, then, but it's the mistake of your life not to be. She's the
+best on earth. Wait till I brush my hair," said Lance, and did it.
+
+Inside three minutes he was in the big Pierce-Arrow, almost as
+unfamiliar, almost as delightful to him as to Aunt Basha, and speeding
+gloriously through the streets. The note had said that some kinspeople
+had just discovered him, and would he come straight to them for lunch.
+
+Mrs. Cabell and Eleanor crowded frankly to the window when the car
+stopped.
+
+"I can't wait to see David's boy," cried Mrs. Cabell, and Eleanor, wise
+of her generation, followed with:
+
+"Now, don't expect much; he may be deadly."
+
+And out of the limousine stepped, unconscious, the beautiful David, and
+handed Jackson a dollar.
+
+"Oh!" gasped Mrs. Cabell.
+
+"It was silly, but I love it," added Eleanor; and David limped swiftly
+up the steps, and one heard Ebenezer, the butler, opening the door with
+suspicious promptness. Everyone in the house knew, mysteriously, that
+uncommon things were doing.
+
+"Pendleton," spoke Mrs. Cabell, lying in wait for her son, the great
+doctor, as he came from his office at lunch time, "Pen, dear, let me
+tell you something extraordinary." She told, him, condensing as might
+be, and ended with; "And oh, Pen, he's the most adorable boy I ever saw.
+And so lonely and so poor and so plucky. Heartbroken because he's lame
+and can't serve. You'll cure him. Pen, dear, won't you, for his
+country?"
+
+The tall, tired man bent down and kissed his mother. "Mummy, I'm not God
+Almighty. But I'll do my damdest for anything you want. Show me the
+paragon."
+
+The paragon shot up, with the small unevenness which was his limp, and
+faced the big doctor on a level. The two pairs of eyes from their
+uncommon height, looked inquiringly into each other.
+
+"I hear you have my name," spoke Dr. Cabell tersely.
+
+"Yes, sir," said David, "And I'm glad." And the doctor knew that he also
+liked the paragon.
+
+Lunch was an epic meal above and below stairs. Jeems had been fetched by
+that black Mercury Jackson, messenger today of the gods of joy. And the
+two old souls had been told by Mrs. Cabell that never again should they
+work hard or be anxious or want for anything. The sensation-loving
+colored servants rejoiced in the events as a personal jubilee, and made
+much of Aunt Basha and Unc' Jeems till their old heads reeled. Above
+stairs the scroll unrolled more or loss decorously, yet in magic colors
+unbelievable. Somehow David had told about Annesley and Jarvis last
+night.
+
+"Somebody knitted him a whole dozen pairs of socks!" he commented,
+"Really she did. He said so. Think of a girl being as good to a chap as
+that."
+
+"I'll knit you a dozen," Miss Eleanor Cabell capped his sentence, like
+the Amen at the end of a High Church prayer. "I'll begin this
+afternoon."
+
+"And, David," said Mrs. Cabell--for it had got to be "David" and "Cousin
+Virginia" by now--"David, when you get your commission, I'll have your
+field glass ready, and a few other things."
+
+Dr. Cabell lifted his eyes from his chop. "You'll spoil that boy," he
+stated. "And, mother, I pointed out that I'm not the Almighty, even on
+joints, I haven't looked at that game leg yet. I said it _might_ be
+curable."
+
+"That boy" looked up, smiling, with long years of loneliness and
+lameness written in the back of his glance. "Please don't make 'em stop,
+doctor," he begged. "I won't spoil easily. I haven't any start. And this
+is a fairy-story to me--wonderful people like you letting me--letting me
+belong. I can't believe I won't wake up. Don't you imagine it will go
+to my head. It won't. I'm just so blamed--grateful."
+
+The deep young voice trailed, and the doctor made haste to answer.
+"You're all right, my lad," he said, "As soon as lunch is over you come
+into the surgery and I'll have a glance at the leg." Which was done.
+
+After half an hour David came out, limping, pale and radiant. "I can't
+believe it," he spoke breathless. "He says--it's a simple--operation.
+I'll walk--like other men. I'll be right for--the service." He choked.
+
+At that Mrs. Cabell sped across the room and put up hands either side of
+the young face and drew it down and kissed the lad whom she did not,
+this morning, know to be in existence. "You blessed boy," she whispered,
+"you shall fight for America, and you'll be our soldier, and we'll be
+your people." And David, kissing her again, looked over her head and saw
+Eleanor glowing like a rose, and with a swift, unphrased shock of
+happiness felt in his soul the wonder of a heaven that might happen.
+Then they were all about the fire, half-crying, laughing, as people do
+on top of strong feelings.
+
+"Aunt Basha did it all," said David. "If Aunt Basha hadn't been the most
+magnificent old black woman who ever carried a snow-white soul, if she
+hadn't been the truest patriot in all America, if she hadn't given
+everything for her country--I'd likely never have--found you." His eyes
+went to the two kind and smiling faces, and his last word was a whisper.
+It was so much to have found. All he had dreamed, people of his own, a
+straight leg--and--his heart's desire--service to America.
+
+Mrs. Cabell spoke softly, "I've lived a long time and I've seen over and
+over that a good deed spreads happiness like a pebble thrown into water,
+more than a bad one spreads evil, for good is stronger and more
+contagious. We've gained this dear kinsman today because of the nobility
+of an old negro woman."
+
+David Lance lifted his head quickly. "It was no small nobility," he
+said. "As Miss Cabell was saying--"
+
+"I'm your cousin Eleanor," interrupted Miss Cabell.
+
+David lingered over the name. "Thank you, my cousin Eleanor. It's as you
+said, nothing more beautiful and wonderful has been done in wonderful
+America than this thing Aunt Basha did. It was as gallant as a soldier
+at the front, for she offered what meant possibly her life."
+
+"Her little two hundred," Eleanor spoke gently. "And so cross at the
+idea of being paid back! She wanted to _give_ it."
+
+David's face gleamed with a thought as he stared into the firelight,
+"You see," he worked out his idea, "by the standards of the angels a
+gift must be big not according to its size but according to what's left.
+If you have millions and give a few thousand you practically give
+nothing, for you have millions left. But Aunt Basha had nothing left.
+The angels must have beaten drums and blown trumpets and raised Cain all
+over Paradise while you sat in the bank, my cousin Eleanor, for the
+glory of that record gift. No plutocrat in the land has touched what
+Aunt Basha did for her country."
+
+Eleanor's eyes, sending out not only clear vision but a brown light as
+of the light of stars, shone on the boy. She bent forward, and her
+slender arms were about her knee. She gazed at David, marveling. How
+could it be that a human being might have all that David appeared to her
+to have--clear brain, crystal simplicity, manliness, charm of
+personality, and such strength and beauty besides!
+
+"Yes," she said, "Aunt Basha gave the most. She has more right than any
+of us to say that it's her country." She was silent a moment and then
+spoke softly a single word. "America!" said Eleanor reverently.
+
+America! Her sound has gone out into all lands and her words into the
+end of the world. America, who in a year took four million of sons
+untried, untrained, and made them into a mighty army; who adjusted a
+nation of a hundred million souls in a turn of the hand to unknown and
+unheard of conditions. America, whose greatest glory yet is not these
+things. America, of whom scholars and statesmen and generals and
+multi-millionaires say with throbbing pride today: "This is my country,"
+but of whom the least in the land, having brought what they may, however
+small, to lay on that flaming altar of the world's safety--of whom the
+least in the land may say as truly as the greatest, "This is my country,
+too."
+
+
+
+
+THE SWALLOW
+
+
+The Chateau Frontenac at Quebec is a turreted pile of masonry wandering
+down a cliff over the very cellars of the ancient Castle of St. Louis. A
+twentieth-century hotel, it simulates well a mediaeval fortress and lifts
+against the cold blue northern sky an atmosphere of history. Old voices
+whisper about its towers and above the clanging hoofs in its paved
+court; deathless names are in the wind which blows from the "fleuve,"
+the great St. Lawrence River far below. Jacques Cartier's voice was
+heard hereabouts away back in 1539, and after him others, Champlain and
+Frontenac, and Father Jogues and Mother Marie of the Conception and
+Montcalm--upstanding fighting men and heroic women and hardy discoverers
+of New France walked about here once, on the "Rock" of Quebec; there is
+romance here if anywhere on earth. Today a new knighthood hails that
+past. Uniforms are thick in steep streets; men are wearing them with
+empty sleeves, on crutches, or maybe whole of body yet with racked faces
+which register a hell lived through. Canada guards heroism of many
+vintages, from four hundred years back through the years to Wolfe's
+time, and now a new harvest. Centuries from now children will be told,
+with the story of Cartier, the tale of Vimy Ridge, and while the Rock
+stands the records of Frenchmen in Canada, of Canadians in France will
+not die.
+
+Always when I go to the Chateau I get a table, if I can, in the smaller
+dining-room. There the illusion of antiquity holds through modern
+luxury; there they have hung about the walls portraits of the worthies
+of old Quebec; there Samuel Champlain himself, made into bronze and
+heroic of size, aloft on his pedestal on the terrace outside, lifts his
+plumed hat and stares in at the narrow windows, turning his back on
+river and lower city. One disregards waiters in evening clothes and
+up-to-date table appointments, and one looks at Champlain and the
+"fleuve," and the Isle d'Orleans lying long and low, and one thinks of
+little ships, storm-beaten, creeping up to this grim bigness ignorant
+of continental events trailing in their wake.
+
+I was on my way to camp in a club a hundred miles north of the
+gray-walled town when I drifted into the little dining-room for dinner
+one night in early September in 1918. The head-waiter was an old friend;
+he came to meet me and piloted me past a tableful of military color,
+four men in service uniforms.
+
+"Some high officers, sir," spoke the head waiter. "In conference here, I
+believe. There's a French officer, and an English, and our Canadian
+General Sampson, and one of your generals, sir."
+
+I gave my order and sat back to study the group. The waiter had it
+straight; there was the horizon blue of France; there was the Englishman
+tall and lean and ruddy and expressionless and handsome; there was the
+Canadian, more of our own cut, with a mobile, alert face. The American
+had his back to me and all I could see was an erect carriage, a brown
+head going to gray, and the one star of a brigadier-general on his
+shoulders. The beginnings of my dinner went fast, but after soup there
+was a lull before greater food, and I paid attention again to my
+neighbors. They were talking in English.
+
+"A Huron of Lorette--does that mean a full-blooded Indian of the Huron
+tribe, such as one reads of in Parkman?" It was the Englishman who
+asked, responding to something I had not heard.
+
+"There's no such animal as a full-blooded Huron," stated the Canadian.
+"They're all French-Indian half-breeds now. Lorette's an interesting
+scrap of history, just the same. You know your Parkman? You remember how
+the Iroquois followed the defeated Hurons as far as the Isle d'Orleans,
+out there?" He nodded toward where the big island lay in the darkness of
+the St. Lawrence. "Well, what was left after that chase took refuge
+fifteen miles north of Quebec, and founded what became and has stayed
+the village of Indian Lorette. There are now about five or six hundred
+people, and it's a nation. Under its own laws, dealing by treaty with
+Canada, not subject to draft, for instance. Queer, isn't it? They guard
+their identity vigilantly. Every one, man or woman, who marries into the
+tribe, as they religiously call it, is from then on a Huron. And only
+those who have Huron blood may own land in Lorette. The Hurons were, as
+Parkman put it, 'the gentlemen of the savages,' and the tradition lasts.
+The half-breed of today is a good sort, self-respecting and brave, not
+progressive, but intelligent, with pride in his inheritance, his
+courage, and his woodscraft."
+
+The Canadian, facing me, spoke distinctly and much as Americans speak; I
+caught every word. But I missed what the French general threw back
+rapidly. I wondered why the Frenchman should be excited. I myself was
+interested because my guides, due to meet me at the club station
+tomorrow, were all half-breed Hurons. But why the French officer? What
+should a Frenchman of France know about backwaters of Canadian history?
+And with that he suddenly spoke slowly, and I caught several sentences
+of incisive if halting English.
+
+"Zey are to astonish, ze Indian Hurong. For ze sort of work
+special-ment, as like scouting on a stomach. Qu-vick, ver' qu-vick, and
+ver' quiet. By dark places of danger. One sees zat nozzing at all
+af-frightens zose Hurong. Also zey are alike snakes, one cannot catch
+zem--zey slide; zey are slippy. To me it is to admire zat courage
+most--personnel--selfeesh--because an Hurong safe my life dere is six
+mont', when ze Boches make ze drive of ze mont' of March."
+
+At this moment food arrived in a flurry, and I lost what came after. But
+I had forgotten the Chateau Frontenac; I had forgotten the group of
+officers, serious and responsible, who sat on at the next table. I had
+forgotten even the war. A word had sent my mind roaming. "Huron!" Memory
+and hope at that repeated word rose and flew away with me. Hope first.
+Tomorrow I was due to drop civilization and its tethers.
+
+"Allah does not count the days spent out of doors." In Walter Pater's
+story of "Marius the Epicurean" one reads of a Roman country-seat called
+"Ad Vigilias Albas," "White Nights." A sense of dreamless sleep distils
+from the name. One remembers such nights, and the fresh world of the
+awakening in the morning. There are such days. There are days which
+ripple past as a night of sleep and leave a worn brain at the end with
+the same satisfaction of renewal; white days. Crystal they are, like the
+water of streams, as musical and eventless; as elusive of description as
+the ripple over rocks or brown pools foaming.
+
+The days and months and years of a life race with accelerating pace and
+youth goes and age comes as the days race, but one is not older for the
+white days. The clock stops, the blood runs faster, furrows in gray
+matter smooth out, time forgets to put in tiny crow's-feet and the extra
+gray hair a week, or to withdraw by the hundredth of an ounce the oxygen
+from the veins; one grows no older for the days spent out of doors.
+Allah does not count them.
+
+It was days like these which hope held ahead as I paid earnest attention
+to the good food set before me. And behold, beside the pleasant vision
+of hope rose a happy-minded sister called memory. She took the word
+"Huron," this kindly spirit, and played magic with it, and the walls of
+the Chateau rolled into rustling trees and running water.
+
+I was sitting, in my vision, in flannel shirt and knickerbockers, on a
+log by a little river, putting together fishing tackle and casting an
+eye, off and on, where rapids broke cold over rocks and whirled into
+foam-flecked, shadowy pools. There should be trout in those shadows.
+
+"Take the butt, Rafael, while I string the line."
+
+Rafael slipped across--still in my vision of memory--and was holding my
+rod as a rod should be held, not too high or too low, or too far or too
+near--right. He was an old Huron, a chief of Indian Lorette, and woods
+craft was to him as breathing.
+
+"A varry light rod," commented Rafael in his low voice which held no
+tones out of harmony with water in streams or wind in trees. "A varry
+light, good rod," paying meanwhile strict attention to his job. "M'sieu
+go haf a luck today. I t'ink M'sieu go catch a beeg fish on dat river.
+Water high enough--not too high. And cold." He shivered a little. "Cold
+last night--varry cold nights begin now. Good hun-ting wedder."
+
+"Have you got a moose ready for me on the little lake, Rafael? It's the
+1st of September next week and I expect you to give me a shot before the
+3d."
+
+Rafael nodded. "Oui, m'sieur. First day." The keen-eyed, aquiline old
+face was as of a prophet. "We go get moose first day. I show you." With
+that the laughter-loving Frenchman in him flooded over the Indian
+hunter; for a second the two inheritances played like colors in shot
+silk, producing an elusive fabric, Rafael's charm. "If nights get so
+colder, m'sieur go need moose skin kip him warm."
+
+I was looking over my flies now, the book open before me, its
+fascinating pages of color more brilliant than an old missal, and maybe
+as filled with religion--the peace of God, charity which endureth, love
+to one's neighbor. I chose a Parmachene Belle for hand-fly, always good
+in Canadian waters. "A moose-skin hasn't much warmth, has it, Rafael?"
+
+The hunter was back, hawk-eyed. "But yes, m'sieu. Moose skin one time
+safe me so I don' freeze to death. But it hol' me so tight so I nearly
+don' get loose in de morning."
+
+"What do you mean?" I was only half listening, for a brown hackle and a
+Montreal were competing for the middle place on my cast, and it was a
+vital point. But Rafael liked to tell a story, and had come by now to a
+confidence in my liking to hear him. He flashed a glance to gather up my
+attention, and cleared his throat and began: "Dat was one time--I go on
+de woods--hunt wid my fader-in-law--_mon beau-pere_. It was mont' of
+March--and col'--but ver' col' and wet. So it happen we separate, my
+fador-in-law and me, to hunt on both side of large enough river. And I
+kill moose. What, m'sieur? What sort of gun? Yes. It was rifle--what one
+call flint-lock. Large round bore. I cast dat beeg ball myself, what I
+kill dat moose. Also it was col'. And so it happen my matches got wet,
+but yes, ev-very one. So I couldn' buil' fire. I was tired, yes, and
+much col'. I t'ink in my head to hurry and skin dat moose and wrap
+myself in dat skin and go sleep on de snow because if not I would die, I
+was so col' and so tired. I do dat. I skin heem--_je le plumait_--de
+beeg moose--beeg skin. Skin all warm off moose; I wrap all aroun' me and
+dig hole and lie down on deep snow and draw skin over head and over
+feet, and fol' arms, so"--Rafael illustrated--"and I hol' it aroun' wid
+my hands. And I get warm right away, warm, as bread toast. So I been
+slippy, and heavy wid tired, and I got comfortable in dat moose skin and
+I go aslip quick. I wake early on morning, and dat skin got froze tight,
+like box made on wood, and I hol' in dat wid my arms fol' so, and my
+head down so"--illustrations again--"and I can't move, not one inch. No.
+What, m'sieur? Yes, I was enough warm, me. But I lie lak dat and can't
+move, and I t'ink somet'ing. I t'ink I got die lak dat, in moose-skin.
+If no sun come, I did got die. But dat day sun come and be warm, and
+moose skin melt lil' bit, slow, and I push lil' bit wid shoulder, and
+after while I got ice broke, on moose skin, and I crawl out. Yes. I
+don' die yet."
+
+Rafael's chuckle was an amen to his saga, and at once, with one of his
+lightning-changes, he was austere.
+
+"M'sieur go need beeg trout tonight; not go need moose skin till nex'
+wik. Ze rod is ready take feesh, I see feesh jump by ole log. Not much
+room to cast, but m'sieur can do it. Shall I carry rod down to river for
+m'sieur?"
+
+In not so many words as I have written, but in clear pictures which
+comprehended the words, Memory, that temperamental goddess of moods,
+had, at the prick of the word "Huron," shaken out this soft-colored
+tapestry of the forest, and held it before my eyes. And as she withdrew
+this one, others took its place and at length I was musing profoundly,
+as I put more of something on my plate and tucked it away into my
+anatomy. I mused about Rafael, the guide of sixty, who had begun a life
+of continued labor at eight years; I considered the undying Indian in
+him; how with the father who was "French of Picardy"--the white blood
+being a pride to Rafael--he himself, yes, and the father also, for he
+had married a "_sauvagess_," a Huron woman--had belonged to the tribe
+and were accounted Hurons; I considered Rafael's proud carriage, his
+classic head and carved features, his Indian austerity and his French
+mirth weaving in and out of each other; I considered the fineness and
+the fearlessness of his spirit, which long hardship had not blunted; I
+reflected on the tales he had told me of a youth forced to fight the
+world. "_On a vu de le misere_," Rafael had said: "One has seen
+trouble"--shaking his head, with lines of old suffering emerging from
+the reserve of his face like writing in sympathetic ink under heat. And
+I marvelled that through such fire, out of such neglect, out of lack of
+opportunity and bitter pressure, the steel of a character should have
+been tempered to gentleness and bravery and honor.
+
+For it was a very splendid old boy who was cooking for me and greasing
+my boots and going off with me after moose; putting his keen ancestral
+instincts of three thousand years at my service for three dollars a
+day. With my chances would not Rafael have been a bigger man than I? At
+least never could I achieve that grand air, that austere repose of
+manner which he had got with no trouble at all from a line of unwashed
+but courageous old bucks, thinking highly of themselves for untold
+generations, and killing everything which thought otherwise. I laughed
+all but aloud at this spot in my meditations, as a special vision of
+Rafael rose suddenly, when he had stated, on a day, his views of the
+great war. He talked plain language about the Germans. He specified why
+he considered the nation a disgrace to humanity--most people, not
+German, agree on the thesis and its specifications. Then the fire of his
+ancient fighting blood blazed through restraint of manner. He drew up
+his tall figure, slim-waisted, deep-shouldered, every inch sliding
+muscle. "I am too old to go on first call to army," said Rafael. "Zey
+will not take me. Yes, and on second call. Maybe zird time. But if time
+come when army take me--I go. If I may kill four Germans I will be
+content," stated Rafael concisely. And his warrior forebears would have
+been proud of him as he stated it.
+
+My reflections were disturbed here by the American general at the next
+table. He was spoken to by his waiter and shot up and left the room,
+carrying, however, his napkin in his hand, so that I knew he was due to
+come back. A half sentence suggested a telephone. I watched the
+soldierly back with plenty of patriotic pride; this was the sort of
+warrior my country turned out now by tens of thousands. With that he
+returned, and as I looked up into his face, behold it was Fitzhugh.
+
+My chair went banging as I sprang toward him. "Jim!"
+
+And the general's calm dignity suddenly was the radiant grin of the boy
+who had played and gone to school and stolen apples with me for a long
+bright childhood--the boy lost sight of these last years of his in the
+army. "Dave!" he cried out. "Old Davy Cram!" And his arm went around my
+shoulder regardless of the public. "My word, but I'm glad!" he
+sputtered. And then: "Come and have dinner--finish having it. Come to
+our table." He slewed me about and presented me to the three others.
+
+In a minute I was installed, to the pride of my friend the head waiter,
+at military headquarters, next to Fitzhugh and the Frenchman. A campact
+resume of personal history between Fitzhugh and myself over, I turned to
+the blue figure on my left hand, Colonel Raffre, of the French, army. On
+his broad chest hung thrilling bits of color, not only the bronze war
+cross, with its green watered ribbon striped with red, but the blood-red
+ribbon of the "Great Cross" itself--the cross of the Legion of Honor. I
+spoke to him in French, which happens to be my second mother tongue, and
+he met the sound with a beaming welcome.
+
+"I don't do English as one should," he explained in beautiful Parisian.
+"No gift of tongues in my kit, I fear; also I'm a bit embarrassed at
+practising on my friends. It's a relief to meet some one who speaks
+perfectly French, as m'sieur."
+
+M'sieur was gratified not to have lost his facility. "But my ear is
+getting slower," I said. "For instance, I eavesdropped a while ago when
+you were talking about your Huron soldiers, and I got most of what you
+said because you spoke English. I doubt if I could if you'd been
+speaking French."
+
+The colonel shrugged massive shoulders. "My English is defective but
+distinct," he explained. "One is forced to speak slowly when one speaks
+badly. Also the Colonel Chichely"--the Britisher--"it is he at whom I
+talk carefully. The English ear, it is not imaginative. One must make
+things clear. You know the Hurons, then?"
+
+I specified how.
+
+"Ah!" he breathed out. "The men in my command had been, some of them,
+what you call guides. They got across to France in charge of troop
+horses on the ships; then they stayed and enlisted. Fine soldier stuff.
+Hardy, and of resource and of finesse. Quick and fearless as wildcats.
+They fit into one niche of the war better than any other material. You
+heard the story of my rescue?"
+
+I had not. At that point food had interfered, and I asked if it was too
+much that the colonel should repeat.
+
+"By no means," agreed the polite colonel, ready, moreover, I guessed,
+for any amount of talk in his native tongue. He launched an epic
+episode. "I was hit leading, in a charge, two battalions. I need not
+have done that," another shrug--"but what will you? It was snowing; it
+was going to be bad work; one could perhaps put courage into the men by
+being at their head. It is often the duty of an officer to do more than,
+his duty--_n'est-ce-pas?_ So that I was hit in the right knee and the
+left shoulder _par exemple_, and fell about six yards from the German
+trenches. A place unhealthy, and one sees I could not run away, being
+shot on the bias. I shammed dead. An alive French officer would have
+been too interesting in that scenery. I assure m'sieur that the
+_entr'actes_ are far too long in No Man's Land. I became more and more
+displeased with the management of that play as I lay, very badly amused
+with my wounds, and afraid to blink an eye, being a corpse. The Huns
+demand a high state of immobility in corpses. But I fell happily
+sidewise, and out of the extreme corner of the left eye I caught a
+glimpse of our sand-bags. One blessed that twist, though it became
+enough _ennuyant_, and one would have given a year of good life to turn
+over. Merely to turn over. Am I fatiguing m'sieur?" the colonel broke
+in.
+
+I prodded him back eagerly into his tale.
+
+"M'sieur is amiable. The long and short of it is that when it became
+dark my good lads began to try to rescue my body. Four or five times
+that one-twentieth of eye saw a wriggling form work through sand-bags
+and start slowly, flat to the earth, toward me. But the ground was
+snow-covered and the Germans saw too the dark uniform. Each time a
+fusillade of shots broke out, and the moving figure dropped hastily
+behind the sand-bags. And each time--" the colonel stopped to light a
+cigarette, his face ruddy in the glare of the match. "Each time I
+was--disappointed. I became disgusted with the management of that
+theatre, till at last the affair seemed beyond hope, and I had about
+determined to turn over and draw up my bad leg with my good hand for a
+bit of easement and be shot comfortably, when I was aware that the
+surface of the ground near by was heaving--the white, snowy ground
+heaving. I was close enough to madness between cold and pain, and I
+regarded the phenomenon as a dream. But with that hands came out of the
+heaving ground, eyes gleamed. A rope was lashed about my middle and I
+was drawn toward our trenches." The cigarette puffed vigorously at this
+point. "M'sieur sees?"
+
+I did not.
+
+The colonel laughed. "One of my Hurons had the inspiration to run to a
+farmhouse not far away and requisition a sheet. He wrapped himself in
+it, head and all, and, being Indian, it was a bagatelle to him to crawl
+out on his stomach. They were pleased enough, my good fellows, when they
+found they had got not only my body but also me in it."
+
+"I can imagine, knowing Hurons, how that Huron enjoyed his success," I
+said. "It's in their blood to be swift and silent and adventurous. But
+they're superstitious; they're afraid of anything supernatural." I
+hesitated, with a laugh in my mind at a memory. "It's not fitting that I
+should swap stories with a hero of the Great War, yet--I believe you
+might be amused with an adventure of one of my guides." The Frenchman,
+all civil interest, disclaimed his heroism with hands and shoulders, but
+smiling too--for he had small chance at disclaiming with those two
+crosses on his breast.
+
+"I shall be enchanted to hear m'sieur's tale of his guide. For the rest
+I am myself quite mad over the 'sport.' I love to insanity the out of
+doors and shooting and fishing. It is a regret that the service has
+given me no opportunity these four years for a breathing spell in the
+woods. M'sieur will tell me the tale of his guide's superstition?"
+
+A scheme began to form in my brain at that instant too delightful, it
+seemed, to come true. I put it aside and went on with my story. "I have
+one guide, a Huron half-breed," I said, "whom I particularly like. He's
+an old fellow--sixty--but light and quick and powerful as a boy. More
+interesting than a boy, because he's full of experiences. Two years ago
+a bear swam across the lake where my camp is, and I went out in a canoe
+with this Rafael and got him."
+
+Colonel Raffre made of this fact an event larger than--I am sure--he
+would have made of his winning of the war cross.
+
+"You shame me, colonel," I said, and went on hurriedly. "Rafael, the
+guide, was pleased about the bear. 'When gentlemens kill t'ings, guides
+is more happy,' he explained to me, and he proceeded to tell an
+anecdote. He prefaced it by informing me that one time he hunt bear and
+he see devil. He had been hunting, it seemed, two or three winters
+before with his brother-in-law at the headwaters of the St. Maurice
+River, up north there," I elucidated, pointing through the window toward
+the "long white street of Beauport," across the St. Lawrence. "It's very
+lonely country, entirely wild, Indian hunting-ground yet. These two
+Hurons, Rafael and his brother-in-law, were on a two months' trip to
+hunt and trap, having their meagre belongings and provisions on sleds
+which they dragged across the snow. They depended for food mostly on
+what they could trap or shoot--moose, caribou, beaver, and small
+animals. But they had bad luck. They set many traps but caught nothing,
+and they saw no game to shoot. So that in a month they were hard
+pressed. One cold day they went two miles to visit a beaver trap, where
+they had seen signs. They hoped to find an animal caught and to feast on
+beaver tail, which is good eating."
+
+Here I had to stop and explain much about beaver tails, and the rest of
+beavers, to the Frenchman, who was interested like a boy in this new,
+almost unheard-of beast. At length:
+
+"Rafael and his brother-in-law were disappointed. A beaver had been
+close and eaten the bark off a birch stick which the men had left, but
+nothing was in the trap. They turned and began a weary walk through the
+desolate country back to their little tent. Small comfort waited for
+them there, as their provisions were low, only flour and bacon left.
+And they dared not expend much of that. They were down-hearted, and to
+add to it a snow-storm came on and they lost their way. Almost a
+hopeless situation--an uninhabited country, winter, snow, hunger. And
+they were lost. '_Egare. Perdu_,' Rafael said. But the Huron was far
+from giving up. He peered through the falling snow, not thick yet, and
+spied a mountain across a valley. He knew that mountain. He had worked
+near it for two years, logging--the '_chantier_,' they call it. He knew
+there was a good camp on a river near the mountain, and he knew there
+would be a stove in the camp and, as Rafael said, 'Mebbe we haf a luck
+and somebody done gone and lef' somet'ing to eat,' Rafael prefers to
+talk English to me. He told me all this in broken English.
+
+"It was three miles to the hypothetical camp, but the two tired, hungry
+men in their rather wretched clothes started hopefully. And after a hard
+tramp through unbroken forest they came in sight of a log shanty and
+their spirits rose. 'Pretty tired work,' Rafael said it was. When they
+got close to the shanty they hoard a noise inside. They halted and
+looked at each other. Rafael knew there were no loggers in these parts
+now, and you'll remember it was absolutely wild country. Then something
+came to the window and looked out."
+
+"_Something_?" repeated the Frenchman in italics. His eyes were wide and
+he was as intent on Rafael's story as heart could desire.
+
+"They couldn't tell what it was," I went on. "A formless apparition, not
+exactly white or black, and huge and unknown of likeness. The Indians
+were frightened by a manner of unearthliness about the thing, and the
+brother-in-law fell on his knees and began to pray. 'It is the devil,'
+he murmured to Rafael. 'He will eat us, or carry us to hell.' And he
+prayed more.
+
+"But old Rafael, scared to death, too, because the thing seemed not to
+be of this world, yet had his courage with him. 'Mebbe it devil,' he
+said--such was his report to me--'anyhow I'm cold and hungry, me. I want
+dat camp. I go shoot dat devil.'
+
+"He crept up to the camp alone, the brother still praying in the bush.
+Rafael was rather convinced, mind you, that he was going to face the
+powers of darkness, but he had his rifle loaded and was ready for
+business. The door was open and he stepped inside. Something--'great
+beeg somet'ing' he put it--rose up and came at him, and he fired. And
+down fell the devil."
+
+"In the name of a sacred pig, what was it?" demanded my Frenchman.
+
+"That was what I asked. It was a bear. The men who had been logging in
+the camp two months back had left a keg of maple-syrup and a half barrel
+of flour, and the bear broke into both--successively--and alternately.
+He probably thought he was in bear-heaven for a while, but it must have
+gotten irksome. For his head was eighteen inches wide when they found
+him, white, with black touches. They soaked him in the river two days,
+and sold his skin for twenty dollars. 'Pretty good for devil skin,'
+Rafael said."
+
+The Frenchman stared at me a moment and then leaned back in his chair
+and shouted laughter. The greedy bear's finish had hit his funny-bone.
+And the three others stopped talking and demanded the story told over,
+which I did, condensing.
+
+"I like zat Hurong for my soldier," Colonel Raffre stated heartily. "Ze
+man what are not afraid of man _or_ of devil--zat is ze man to fight ze
+Boches." He was talking English now because Colonel Chichely was
+listening. He went on. "Zere is human devils--oh, but plentee--what we
+fight in France. I haf not heard of ozzers. But I believe well ze man
+who pull me out in sheet would be as your guide Rafael--he also would
+crip up wiz his rifle on real devil out of hell. But yes. I haf not told
+you how my Indian soldier bring in prisoners--no?"
+
+We all agreed no, and put in a request.
+
+"He brings zem in not one by one always--not always." The colonel
+grinned. He went on to tell this tale, which I shift into the vernacular
+from his laborious English.
+
+It appears that he had discerned the aptitude of his Hurons for
+reconnaissance work. If he needed information out of the dangerous
+country lying in front, if he needed a prisoner to question, these men
+were eager to go and get either, get anything. The more hazardous the
+job the better, and for a long time they came out of it
+untouched. In the group one man--nicknamed by the poilus, his
+comrades--Hirondelle--the Swallow--supposedly because of his lightness
+and swiftness, was easily chief. He had a fault, however, his dislike to
+bring in prisoners alive. Four times he had haled a German corpse before
+the colonel, seeming not rightly to understand that a dead enemy was
+useless for information.
+
+"The Boches are good killing," he had elucidated to his officer. And
+finally: "It is well, m'sieur, the colonel. One failed to understand
+that the colonel prefers a live Boche to a dead one. Me, I am otherwise.
+It appears a pity to let live such vermin. Has the colonel, by chance,
+heard the things these savages did in Belgium? Yes? But then--Yet I will
+bring to m'sieur, the colonel, all there is to be desired of German
+prisoners alive--_en vie_; fat ones; _en masse_."
+
+That night Hirondelle was sent out with four of his fellow Hurons to
+get, if possible, a prisoner. Pretty soon he was separated from the
+others; all but himself returning empty-handed in a couple of hours. No
+Germans seemed to be abroad. But Hirondelle did not return.
+
+"He risks too far," grumbled his captain. "He has been captured at last.
+I always knew they would get him, one night."
+
+But that was not the night. At one o'clock there was suddenly a sound of
+lamentation in the front trench of the French on that sector. The
+soldiers who were sleeping crawled out of their holes in the sides of
+the trench walls, and crowded around the zigzag, narrow way and rubbed
+their eyes and listened to the laughter of officers and soldiers on
+duty. There was Hirondelle, solemn as a church, yet with a dancing light
+in his eyes. There, around him, crowded as sheep to a shepherd, twenty
+figures in German uniform stood with hands up and wet tears running down
+pasty cheeks. And they were fat, it was noticeable that all of them were
+bulging of figure beyond even the German average. They wailed "Kamerad!
+Gut Kamerad!" in a chorus that was sickening to the plucky poilu
+make-up. Hirondelle, interrogated of many, kept his lips shut till the
+first excitement quieted. Then: "I report to my colonel," he stated, and
+finally he and his twenty were led back to the winding trench and the
+colonel was waked to receive them. This was what had happened:
+Hirondelle had wandered about, mostly on his stomach, through the
+darkness and peril of No Man's Land, enjoying himself heartily; when
+suddenly he missed his companions and realized that he had had no sign
+of them for some time. That did not trouble him. He explained to the
+colonel that he felt "more free." Also that if he pulled off a success
+he would have "more glory." After two hours of this midnight amusement,
+in deadly danger every second, Hirondelle heard steps. He froze to the
+earth, as he had learned from wild things in North American forests. The
+steps came nearer. A star-shell away down the line lighted the scene so
+that Hirondelle, motionless on the ground, all keen eyes, saw two
+Germans coming toward him. Instantly he had a scheme. In a subdued
+growl, yet distinctly, he threw over his shoulder an order that eight
+men should go to the right and eight to the left. Then, on his feet, he
+sent into the darkness a stern "Halt!" Instantly there was a sputter,
+arms thrown up, the inevitable "Kamerad!" and Hirondelle ordered the
+first German to pass him, then a second. Out of the darkness emerged a
+third. Hirondelle waved him on, and with that there was a fourth. And a
+fifth. Behold a sixth. About then Hirondelle judged it wise to give more
+orders to his imaginary squad of sixteen. But such a panic had seized
+this German mob; that little acting was necessary. Dark figure followed
+dark figure out of the darker night--arms up. They whimpered as they
+came, and on and on they came out of shadows. Hirondelle stated that he
+began to think the Crown Prince's army was surrendering to him. At last,
+when the procession stopped, he--and his mythical sixteen--marched the
+entire covey, without any objection from them, only abject obedience, to
+the French trenches.
+
+The colonel, with this whining crowd weeping about him, with
+Hirondelle's erect figure confronting him, his black eyes regarding the
+cowards with scorn as he made his report--the colonel simply could not
+understand the situation. All these men! "What are you--soldiers?" he
+flung at the wretched group. And one answered, "No, my officer. We are
+not soldiers, we are the cooks." At that there was a wail. "Ach! Who,
+then, will the breakfast cook for my general? He will _schrecklich_
+angry be for his sausage and his sauerkraut."
+
+By degrees the colonel got the story. A number of cooks had combined to
+protest against new regulations, and the general, to punish this
+astounding insubordination, had sent them out unarmed, petrified with,
+terror, into No Man's Land for an hour. They had there encountered
+Hirondelle. Hirondelle drew the attention of the colonel to the fact
+that he had promised prisoners, fat ones. "Will my colonel regard the
+shape of these pigs," suggested Hirondelle. "And also that they are
+twenty in number. Enough _en masse_ for one man to take, is it not, my
+colonel?"
+
+The little dinner-party at the Frontenac discussed this episode. "Almost
+too good to be true, colonel," I objected. "You're sure it _is_ true?
+Bring out your Hirondelle. He ought to be home wounded, with a war cross
+on his breast, by now."
+
+The colonel smiled and shook his head. "It is that which I cannot
+do--show you my Hirondelle. Not here, and not in France, by _malheur_.
+For he ventured once too often and too far, as the captain prophesied,
+and he is dead. God rest the brave! Also a Croix de Guerre is indeed
+his, but no Hirondelle is there to claim it."
+
+The silence of a moment was a salute to the soul of a warrior passed to
+the happy hunting-grounds. And then I began on another story of my
+Rafael's adventures which something in the colonel's tale suggested.
+
+The colonel, his winning face all a smile, interrupted. "Does one
+believe, then, in this Rafael of m'sieur who caps me each time my tales
+of my Huron Hirondelle? It appears to me that m'sieur has the brain, of
+a story-teller and hangs good stories on a figure which he has built and
+named so--Rafael. Me, I cannot believe there exists this Rafael. I
+believe there is only one such gallant d'Artagnan of the Hurons, and it
+is--it was--my Hirondelle. Show me your Rafael, then!" demanded the
+colonel.
+
+At that challenge the scheme which had flashed into my mind an hour ago
+gathered shape and power. "I will show him to you, colonel," I took up
+the challenge, "if you will allow me." I turned to include the others.
+"Isn't it possible for you all to call a truce and come up tomorrow to
+my club to be my guests for as long or as short a time as you will? I
+can't say how much pleasure it would give me, and I believe I could give
+you something also--great fishing, shooting, a moose, likely, or at
+least a caribou--and Rafael. I promise Rafael. It's not unlikely,
+colonel, that he may have known the Hirondelle. The Hurons are few. Do
+come," I threw at them.
+
+They took it after their kind. The Englishman stared and murmured:
+"Awfully kind, I'm sure, but quite impossible." The Canadian, our next
+of kin, smiled, shaking his head like a brother. Fitzhugh put his arm of
+brawn about me again till that glorious star gleamed almost on my own
+shoulder, and patted me lovingly as he said: "Old son, I'd give my eyes
+to go, if I wasn't up to my ears in job."
+
+But the Frenchman's face shone, and he lifted a finger that was a
+sentence. It embodied reflection and eagerness and suspense. The rest of
+us gazed at that finger as if it were about to address us. And the
+colonel spoke. "I t'ink," brought out the colonel emphatically, "I t'ink
+I damn go."
+
+And I snatched the finger and the hand of steel to which it grew, and
+wrung both. This was a delightful Frenchman. "Good!" I cried out.
+"Glorious! I want you all, but I'm mightily pleased to get one. Colonel,
+you're a sport."
+
+"But, yes," agreed the colonel happily, "I am sport. Why not? I haf four
+days to wait till my sheep sail. Why not kip--how you say?--kip in my
+hand for shooting--go kill moose? I may talk immensely of zat moose in
+France--hein? Much more _chic_ as to kill Germans, _n'est ce pas_?
+Everybody kill Germans."
+
+At one o'clock next day the out-of-breath little train which had gasped
+up mountains for five hours from Quebec uttered a relieved shriek and
+stopped at a doll-house club station sitting by itself in the
+wilderness. Four or five men in worn but clean clothes--they always
+start clean--waited on the platform, and there was a rapid fire of "_Bon
+jour_, m'sieur," as we alighted. Then ten quick eyes took in my colonel
+in his horizon-blue uniform. I was aware of a throb of interest. At once
+there was a scurry for luggage because the train must be held till it
+was off, and the guides ran forward to the baggage-car to help. I
+bundled the colonel down a sharp, short hill to the river, while
+smiling, observant Hurons, missing not a line of braid or a glitter of
+button, passed with bags and _pacquetons_ as we descended. The blue and
+black and gold was loaded into a canoe with an Indian at bow and stern
+for the three-mile paddle to the club-house. He was already a schoolboy
+on a holiday with unashamed enthusiasm.
+
+"But it is fun--fun, zis," he shouted to me from his canoe. "And
+_lequel_, m'sieur, which is Rafael?"
+
+Rafael, in the bow of my boat, missed a beat of his paddle. It seemed to
+me he looked older than two years back, when I last saw him. His
+shoulders were bent, and his merry and stately personality was less in
+evidence. He appeared subdued. He did not turn with a smile or a grave
+glance of inquiry at the question, as I had expected. I nodded toward
+him.
+
+"_Mais oui_," cried out the colonel. "One has heard of you, _mon ami_.
+One will talk to you later of shooting."
+
+Rafael, not lifting his head, answered quietly, "_C'est bien, m'sieur._"
+
+Just then the canoes slipped past a sandy bar decorated with a fresh
+moose track; the excitement of the colonel set us laughing. This man was
+certainly a joy! And with that, after a long paddle down the winding
+river and across two breezy lakes, we were at the club-house. We
+lunched, and in short order--for we wanted to make camp that night--I
+dug into my _pacquetons_ and transformed my officer into a sportsman,
+his huge delight in Abernethy & Flitch's creations being a part of the
+game. Then we were off.
+
+One has small chance for associating with guides while travelling in the
+woods. One sits in a canoe between two, but if there is a wind and the
+boat is _charge_ their hands are full with the small craft and its heavy
+load; when the landing is made and the "messieurs" are _debarques_,
+instantly the men are busy lifting canoes on their heads and packs on
+their backs in bizarre, piled-up masses to be carried from a leather
+tump-line, a strap of two inches wide going around the forehead. The
+whole length of the spine helps in the carrying. My colonel watched
+Delphise, a husky specimen, load. With a grunt he swung up a canvas U.S.
+mailbag stuffed with _butin_, which includes clothes and books and shoes
+and tobacco and cartridges and more. With a half-syllable Delphise
+indicated to Laurent a bag of potatoes weighing eighty pounds, a box of
+tinned biscuit, a wooden package of cans of condensed milk, a rod case,
+and a raincoat. These Laurent added to the spine of Delphise.
+
+"How many pounds?" I asked, as the dark head bent forward to equalize
+the strain.
+
+Delphise shifted weight with another grunt to gauge the pull. "About a
+hundred and eighty pounds, m'sieur--quite heavy--_assez pesant_." Off he
+trotted uphill, head bent forward.
+
+The colonel was entranced. "Hardy fellows--the making of fine soldiers,"
+he commented, tossing his cigarette away to stare.
+
+That night after dinner--but it was called supper--the colonel and I
+went into the big, airy log kitchen with the lake looking in at three
+windows and the forest at two doors. We gunned over with the men plans
+for the next day, for the most must be made of every minute of this
+precious military holiday. I explained how precious it was, and then I
+spoke a few words about the honor of having as our guest a soldier who
+had come from the front, and who was going back to the front. For the
+life of me I could not resist a sentence more about the two crosses
+they had seen on his uniform that day. The Cross of War, the Legion of
+Honor! I could not let my men miss that! Rafael had been quiet and
+colorless, and I was disappointed in the show qualities of my show
+guide. But the colonel beamed with satisfaction, in everything and
+everybody, and received my small introduction with a bow and a flourish
+worthy of Carnegie Hall.
+
+"I am happy to be in this so charming camp, in this forest magnificent,
+on these ancient mountains," orated the colonel floridly. "I am most
+pleased of all to have Huron Indians as my guides, because between
+Hurons and me there are memories." The men were listening spell-bound.
+"But yes. I had Huron soldiers serving in my regiment, just now at the
+western front, of whom I thought highly. They were all that there is,
+those Hurons of mine, of most fearless, most skilful. One among them was
+pre-eminent. Some of you may have known him. I regret to say that I
+never knew his real name, but among his comrades he went by the name of
+l'Hirondelle. From that name one guesses his qualities--swift as a
+swallow, untamable, gay, brave to foolishness, moving in dashes not to
+be followed--such was my Hirondelle. And yet this swift bird was in the
+end shot down."
+
+At this point in the colonel's speech. I happened to look at Rafael,
+back in the shadows of the half-lighted big room. His eyes glittered out
+of the dimness like disks of fire, his face was strained, and his figure
+bent forward. "He must have known this chap, the Swallow," I thought to
+myself. "Just possibly a son or brother or nephew of his." The colonel
+was going on, telling in fluent, beautiful French the story of how
+Hirondelle, wrapped in a sheet, had rescued him. The men drank it in.
+"When those guides are old, old fellows, they'll talk about this night
+and the colonel's speech to their great-grandchildren," I considered,
+and again the colonel went on.
+
+"Have I m'sieur's permission to _raconter_ a short story of the most
+amusing which was the last escapade of my Hirondelle before he was
+killed?"
+
+M'sieur gave permission eagerly, and the low murmur of the voices of the
+hypnotized guides, standing in a group before the colonel, added to its
+force and set him smiling.
+
+"It was like this," he stated. "My Hirondelle was out in No Man's Land
+of a night, strictly charged to behave in a manner _comme il faut_, for
+he was of a rashness, and we did not wish to lose him. He was valuable
+to us, and beyond that the regiment had an affection for him. For such
+reasons his captain tried--but, yes--to keep him within bounds. As I
+say, on this night he had received particular orders to be _sage_. So
+that the first thing the fellow does is to lose his comrades, for which
+he had a _penchant_, one knows. After that he crawls over that accursed
+country, in and out of shellholes, rifle in his teeth likely--the good
+God knows where else, for one need be all hands and feet for such
+crawling. He crawled in that fashion till at last he lost himself. And
+then he was concerned to find out where might be our lines till in time
+he heard a sound of snoring and was well content. Home at last. He
+tumbled into a dark trench, remarking only that it was filled with men
+since he left, and so tired he was with his adventure that he pushed
+away the man next, who was at the end, to gain space, and he rolled over
+to sleep. But that troublesome man next took too much room. Our
+Hirondelle planted him a kick in the middle of the back. At which the
+man half waked and swore at him--in German. And dropped off to sleep
+again with his leg of a pig slung across Hirondelle's chest. At that
+second a star-shell lighted up the affair, and Hirondelle, staring with
+much interest, believe me, saw a trench filled with sleeping Boches. To
+get out of that as quietly as might be was the game--_n'est-ce-pas, mes
+amis_? But not for Hirondelle.
+
+"'My colonel has a liking for prisoners,' he reported later. 'My
+captain's orders were to conduct oneself _tres comme il faut_. It is
+always _comme il faut_ to please the colonel. Therefore it seemed _en
+regle_ to take a prisoner. I took him. _Le v'la_.'
+
+"What the fellow did was to wait till the Boche next door was well
+asleep, then slowly remove his rifle, then fasten on his throat with a
+grip which Hirondelle understood, and finally to overpower the Boche
+till he was ready enough to crawl out at the muzzle of Hirondelle's
+rifle."
+
+There was a stir in the little group of guides, and from the shadows
+Rafael's voice spoke.
+
+"Mon colonel--pardon!"
+
+The colonel turned sharply. "Who is that?"
+
+"There were two Germans," spoke the voice out of the shadows.
+
+The colonel, too astonished to answer, stared. The voice, trembling,
+old, went on. "The second man waked and one was obliged to strangle him
+also. One brought the brace to the captain at the end of the
+carabine--rifle."
+
+"In heaven's name who are you?" demanded the colonel.
+
+From where old Rafael had been, bowed and limp in his humble, worn
+clothes, stepped at a stride a soldier, head up, shoulders squared,
+glittering eyes forward, and stood at attention. It was like magic. One
+hand snapped up in a smart salute.
+
+"Who are you?" whispered the colonel.
+
+"If the colonel pleases--l'Hirondelle."
+
+I heard the colonel's breath come and go as he peered, leaning forward
+to the soldierly figure. "_Nom de Ciel_," he murmured, "I believe it
+is." Then in sharp sentences: "You were reported killed. Are you a
+deserter?"
+
+The steady image of a soldier dropped back a step.
+
+"My colonel--no."
+
+"Explain this."
+
+Rafael--l'Hirondelle--explained. He had not been killed, but captured
+and sent to a German prison-camp.
+
+"You escaped?" the colonel threw in.
+
+"But yes, my colonel."
+
+The colonel laughed. "One would know it. The clumsy Boches could not
+hold the Swallow."
+
+"But no, my colonel."
+
+"Go on."
+
+"One went to work before light, my colonel, in that accursed
+prison-camp. One was out of sight from the guard for a moment, turning a
+corner, so that on a morning I slipped into some bushes and hid in a
+dugout--for it was an old camp--all day. That night I walked. I walked
+for seven nights and lay hid for seven days, eating, my colonel, very
+little. Then, _v'la_, I was in front of the French lines."
+
+"You ran across to our lines?"
+
+"But not exactly. One sees that I was yet in dirty German prison
+clothes, and looked like an infantryman of the Boches, so that a poilu
+rushed at me with a bayonet. I believed, then, that I had come upon a
+German patrol. Each thought the other a Hun. I managed to wrest from the
+poilu his rifle with the bayonet, but as we fought another shot me--in
+the side."
+
+"You were wounded?"
+
+"Yes, my colonel."
+
+"In hospital?"
+
+"Yes, my colonel."
+
+"How long?"
+
+"Three months, my colonel."
+
+"Why are you not again in the army?"
+
+The face of the erect soldier, Hirondelle, the dare-devil, was suddenly
+the face of a man grown old, ill, and broken-hearted. He stared at the
+stalwart French officer, gathering himself with an effort. "I--was
+discharged, my colonel, as--unfit." His head in its old felt hat dropped
+into his hands suddenly, and he broke beyond control into sobs that
+shook not only him but every man there.
+
+The colonel stepped forward and put an arm around the bent shoulders.
+"_Mon heros!_" said the colonel.
+
+With that Rafael found words, never a hard task for him. Yet they came
+with gasps between. "To be cast out as an old horse--at the moment of
+glory! I had dreamed all my life--of fighting. And I had it--oh, my
+colonel--I had it! The glory came when I was old and knew how to be
+happy in it. Not as a boy who laughs and takes all as his right. I was
+old, yes, but I was good to kill the vermin. I avenged the children and
+the women whom those savages--My people, the savages of the wood, knew
+no better, yet they have not done things as bad as these vile ones who
+were educated, who knew. Therefore I killed them. I was old, but I was
+strong, my colonel knows. Not for nothing have I lived a hard life. _On
+a vu de la misere_. I have hunted moose and bear and kept my muscles of
+steel and my eyes of a hawk. It is in my blood to be a fighting man. I
+fought with pleasure, and I was troubled with no fear. I was old, but I
+could have killed many devils more. And so I was shot down by my own
+friend after seven days of hard life. And the young soldier doctor
+discharged me as unfit to fight. And so I am come home very fast to hide
+myself, for I am ashamed. I am finished. The fighting and the glory are
+for me no more."
+
+The colonel stepped back a bit and his face flamed. "Glory!" he
+whispered. "Glory no more for the Hirondelle? What of the Croix de
+Guerre?"
+
+Rafael shook his head. "I haf heard my colonel who said they would have
+given me--me, the Hirondelle--the war cross. That now is lost too."
+
+"Lost!" The colonel's deep tone was full of the vibration which only a
+French voice carries. With a quick movement he unfastened the catch that
+held the green ribbon, red-striped, of his own cross of war. He turned
+and pinned the thing which men die for on the shabby coat of the guide.
+Then he kissed him on either cheek. "My comrade," he said, "your glory
+will never be old."
+
+There was deep silence in the camp kitchen. The crackling of wood that
+fell apart, the splashing of the waves of the lake on the pebbles by the
+shore were the only sounds on earth. For a long minute the men stood as
+if rooted; the colonel, poised and dramatic, and, I stirred to the
+depths of my soul by this great ceremony which had come out of the skies
+to its humble setting in the forest--the men and the colonel and I, we
+all watched Rafael.
+
+And Rafael slowly, yet with the iron tenacity of his race, got back his
+control. "My colonel," he began, and then failed. The Swallow did not
+dare trust his broken wings. It could not be done--to speak his thanks.
+He looked up with black eyes shining through tears which spoke
+everything.
+
+"Tomorrow," he stated brokenly, "if we haf a luck, my colonel and I go
+kill a moose."
+
+They had a luck.
+
+
+
+
+ONLY ONE OF THEM
+
+
+It was noon on a Saturday. Out of the many buildings of the great
+electrical manufacturing plant at Schenectady poured employees by
+hundreds. Thirty trolley-cars were run on special tracks to the place
+and stood ready to receive the sea streaming towards them. Massed
+motor-cars waited beyond the trolleys for their owners, officials of the
+works. The girl in blue serge, standing at a special door of a special
+building counted, keeping watch meantime of the crowd, the cars. A
+hundred and twenty-five she made it; it came to her mind that State
+Street in Albany on a day of some giant parade was not unlike this, not
+less a throng. The girl, who was secretary to an assistant manager, was
+used to the sight, but it was an impressive sight and she was
+impressionable and found each Saturday's pageant a wonder. The pageant
+was more interesting it may be because it focussed always on one
+figure--and here he was.
+
+"Did you wait, long?" he asked as he came up, broad-shouldered and
+athletic of build, boyish and honest of face, as good looking a young
+American as one may see in any crowd.
+
+"I was early." She smiled up at him as they swung off towards the
+trolleys; her eyes flashed a glance which said frankly that she found
+him satisfactory to look upon.
+
+They sped past others, many others, and made a trolley car and a seat
+together, which was the goal. They always made it, every Saturday, yet
+it was always a game. Exhilarated by the winning of the game they
+settled into the scat for the three-quarters of an hour run; it was
+quite a worth-while world, the smiling glances said one to the other.
+
+The girl gazed, not seeing them particularly, at the slower people
+filling the seats and the passage of the car. Then: "Oh," she spoke,
+"what was it you were going to tell me?"
+
+The man's face grew sober, a bit troubled. "Well," he said, "I've
+decided. I'm going to enlist."
+
+She was still for a second. Then: "I think that's splendid," she brought
+out. "Splendid. Of course, I knew you'd do it. It's the only thing that
+could be. I'm glad."
+
+"Yes," the man spoke slowly. "It's the only thing that could be. There's
+nothing to keep me. My mother's dead. My father's husky and not old and
+my sisters are with him. There's nobody to suffer by my going."
+
+"N-no," the girl agreed. "But--it's the fine thing to do just the same.
+You're thirty-two you see, and couldn't be drafted. That makes it rather
+great of you to go."
+
+"Well," the man answered, "not so very great, I suppose, as it's what
+all young Americans are doing. I rather think it's one of those things,
+like spelling, which are no particular credit if you do them, but a
+disgrace if you don't."
+
+"What a gray way of looking at it!" the girl objected. "As if all the
+country wasn't glorying in the boys who go! As if we didn't all stand
+back of you and crowd the side lines to watch you, bursting with pride.
+You know we all love you."
+
+"Do you love me, Mary? Enough to marry me before I go?" His voice was
+low, but the girl missed no syllable. She had heard those words or some
+like them in his voice before.
+
+"Oh, Jim," she begged, "don't ask me now. I'm not certain--yet. I--I
+couldn't get along very well without you. I care a lot. But--I'm not
+just sure it's--the way I ought to care to marry you."
+
+As alone in the packed car as in a wood, the little drama went on and no
+one noticed. "I'm sorry, Mary." The tone was dispirited. "I could go
+with a lot lighter heart if we belonged to each other."
+
+"Don't say that, Jim," she pleaded. "You make me out--a slacker. You
+don't want me to marry you as a duty?"
+
+"Good Lord, no!"
+
+"I know that. And I--do care. There's nobody like you. I admire you so
+for going--but you're not afraid of anything. It's easy for you, that
+part. I suppose a good many are really--afraid. Of the guns and the
+horror--all that. You're lucky, Jim. You don't give that a thought."
+
+The man flashed an odd look, and then regarded his hands joined on his
+knee.
+
+"I do appreciate your courage. I admire that a lot. But somehow Jim
+there's a doubt that holds me back. I can't be sure I--love you enough;
+that it's the right way--for that."
+
+The man sighed. "Yes," he said. "I see. Maybe some time. Heavens knows I
+wouldn't want you unless it was whole-hearted. I wouldn't risk your
+regretting it, not if I wanted you ten times more. Which is impossible."
+He put out his big hand with a swift touch on hers. "Maybe some time.
+Don't worry," he said. "I'm yours." And went on in a commonplace tone,
+"I think I'll show up at the recruiting office this afternoon, and I'll
+come to your house in the evening as usual. Is that all right?"
+
+The car sped into Albany and the man went to her door with the girl and
+left her with few words more and those about commonplace subjects. As
+he swung down the street he went over the episode in his mind, and
+dissected it and dwelt on words and phrases and glances, and drew
+conclusions as lovers have done before, each detail, each conclusion
+mightily important, outweighing weeks of conversation of the rest of the
+world together. At last he shook his head and set his lips.
+
+"It's not honest." He formed the words with his lips now, a summing up
+of many thoughts in his brain. The brain went on elaborating the text.
+"She thinks I'm brave; she thinks it's easy for me to face enlisting,
+and the rest. She thinks I'm the makeup which can meet horror and
+suffering light-heartedly. And I'm not. She admires me for that--she
+said so. I'm not it. I'm fooling her; it's not honest. Yet"--he groaned
+aloud. "Yet I may lose her if I tell her the truth. I'm afraid. I am. I
+hate it. I can't bear--I can't bear to leave my job and my future, just
+when it's opening out. But I could do that. Only I'm--Oh, damnation--I'm
+afraid. Horror and danger, agony of men and horses, myself wounded
+maybe, out on No Man's Land--left there--hours. To die like a dog. Oh,
+my God--must I? If I tell it will break the little hold I have on her.
+Must I go to this devil's dance that I hate--and give up her love
+besides? But yet--it isn't honest to fool her. Oh, God, what will I do?"
+People walking up State Street, meeting a sober-faced young man, glanced
+at him with no particular interest. A woman waiting on a doorstep
+regarded him idly.
+
+"Why isn't he in uniform?" she wondered as one does wonder in these days
+at a strong chap in mufti. Then she rebuked her thought. "Undoubtedly
+there's a good reason; American boys are not slackers."
+
+His slow steps carried him beyond her vision and casual thought. The
+people in the street and the woman on the doorstep did not think or care
+that what they saw was a man fighting his way through the crisis of his
+life, fighting alone "per aspera ad astra--" through thorns to the
+stars.
+
+He lunched with a man at a club and after that took his way to the
+building on Broadway where were the recruiting headquarters. He had told
+her that he was going to enlist. As he walked he stared at the people in
+the streets as a man might stare going to his execution. These people
+went about their affairs, he considered, as if he--who was about to
+die--did not, in passing their friendly commonplace, salute them. He did
+salute them. Out of his troubled soul he sent a silent greeting to each
+ordinary American hurrying along, each standing to him for pleasant and
+peaceful America, America of all his days up to now. Was he to toss away
+this comfortable comradeship, his life to be, everything he cared for on
+earth, to go into hell, and likely never come back? Why? Why must he?
+There seemed to be plenty who wanted to fight--why not let them? It was
+the old slacker's argument; the man was ashamed as he caught himself
+using it; he had the grace to see its selfishness and cowardice. Yet his
+soul was in revolt as he drove his body to the recruiting office, and
+the thoughts that filled him were not of the joy of giving but of the
+pain of giving up. With that he stood on the steps of the building and
+here was Charlie Thurston hurrying by on the sidewalk.
+
+"Hello, Jim! Going in to enlist? So long till you come back with one leg
+and an eye out."
+
+It was Thurston's idea of a joke. He would have been startled if he had
+known into what a trembling balance his sledge-hummer wit cast its
+unlucky weight. The balance quivered at the blow, shook back and forth
+an instant and fell heavily. Jim Barlow wheeled, sprang down the stone
+steps and bolted up the street, panting as one who has escaped a wild
+beast. Thurston had said it. That was what was due to happen. It was now
+three o'clock; Barlow fled up State Street to the big hotel and took a
+room and locked his door and threw himself on the bed. What was he to
+do? After weeks of hesitation he had come to the decision that he would
+offer himself to his country. He saw--none plainer--the reasons why it
+was fit and right so to do. Other men were giving up homes and careers
+and the whole bright and easy side of life--why not he? It was the
+greatest cause to fight for in the world's history--should he not fight
+for it? How, after the war, might he meet friends, his own people, his
+children to come, if he alone of his sort had no honorable record to
+show? Such arguments, known to all, he repeated, even aloud he repeated
+them, tossing miserably about the bed in his hotel room. And his mind at
+once accepted them, but that was all. His spirit failed to spring to his
+mind's support with the throb of emotion which is the spark that makes
+the engine go. The wheels went around over and over but the connection
+was not made. The human mind is useful machinery, but it is only the
+machine's master, the soul, which can use it. Over and over he got to
+his feet and spoke aloud: "Now I will go." Over and over a repulsion
+seized him so strongly that his knees gave way and he fell back on the
+bed. If he had a mother, he thought, she might have helped, but there
+was no one. Mary--but he could not risk Mary's belief in his courage.
+Only a mother would have understood entirely.
+
+With that, sick at heart, the hideous sea of counter arguments,
+arguments of a slacker, surged upon him. What would it all matter a
+hundred years from now? Wasn't he more useful in his place keeping up
+the industries of the nation? Wasn't he a bigger asset to America as an
+alive engineer, an expert in his work, than as mere cannon fodder, one
+of thousands to be shot into junk in a morning's "activity"--just one of
+them? Because the Germans were devils why should he let them reach over
+here, away over here, and drag him out of a decent and happy life and
+throw him like dirt into the horrible mess they had made, and leave him
+dead or worse--mangled and useless. Then, again--there were plenty of
+men mad to fight; why not let them? Through a long afternoon he fought
+with the beasts, and dinner-time came and he did not notice, and at last
+he rose and, telephoning first to Mary a terse message that he would not
+be able to come this evening, he went out, hardly knowing what he did,
+and wandered up town.
+
+There was a humble church in a quiet street where a service flag hung,
+thick with dark stars, and the congregation were passing out from a
+special service for its boys who were going off to camp. The boys were
+there on the steps, surrounded by people eager to touch their hands, a
+little group of eight or ten with serious bright faces, and a look in
+their eyes which stabbed into Barlow. One may see that look any day in
+any town, meeting the erect stalwart lads in khaki who are about our
+streets. It is the look of those who have made a vital sacrifice and
+know the price, and whose minds are at peace. Barlow, lingering on the
+corner across the way, stared hungrily. How had they got that look, that
+peace? If only he might talk to one of them! Yet he knew how dumb an
+animal is a boy, and how helpless these would be to give him the master
+word.
+
+The master-word, he needed that; he needed it desperately. He must go;
+he must. Life would be unendurable without self-respect; no amount of
+explaining could cover the stain on his soul if he failed in the answer
+to the call of honor. That was it, it was in a nut-shell, the call. Yet
+he could not hear it as his call. He wandered unhappily away and left
+the church and its dissolving congregation, and the boys, the pride of
+the church, the boys who were now, they also, separating and going back
+each to his home for the last evening perhaps, to be loved and made much
+of. Barlow vaguely pictured the scenes in those little homes--eyes
+bright with unshed tears, love and laughter and courage, patriotism as
+fine as in any great house in America, determination that in giving to
+America what was dearest it should be given with high spirit--that the
+boys should have smiling faces to remember, over there. And then
+again--love and tender words. He was missing all that. He, too, might go
+back to his father's house an enlisted man, and meet his father's eyes
+of pride and see his sisters gaze at him with a new respect, feel their
+new honor of him in the touch of arms about his neck. All these things
+were for him too, if he would but take them. With that there was the
+sound of singing, shrill, fresh voices singing down the street. He
+wheeled about. A company of little girls were marching towards him and
+he smiled, looking at them, thinking the sight as pretty as a garden of
+flowers. They were from eight to ten or eleven years old and in the
+bravery of fresh white dresses; each had a big butterfly of pink or blue
+or yellow or white ribbon perched on each little fair or dark head, and
+each carried over her shoulder a flag. Quite evidently they were coming
+from the celebration at the church, where in some capacity they had
+figured. Not millionaires children these; the little sisters likely of
+the boys who were going to be soldiers; just dear things that bloom all
+over America, the flowering of the land, common to rich and poor. As
+they sprang along two by two, in unmartial ranks, they sang with all
+their might "The Long, Long Trail."
+
+ "There's a long, long trail that's leading
+ To No Man's Land in France
+ Where the shrapnel shells are bursting
+ And we must advance."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+And then:
+
+ We're going to show old Kaiser Bill
+ What our Yankee boys can do.
+
+Jim Barlow, his hands in his pockets, backed up against a house and
+listened to the clear, high, little voices. "No Man's Land in France--We
+must advance--What our Yankee boys can do."
+
+As if his throat were gripped by a quick hand, a storm of emotion swept
+him. The little girls--little girls who were the joy, each one, of some
+home! Such little things as the Germans--in Belgium--"Oh, my God!" The
+words burst aloud from his lips. These were trusting--innocent,
+ignorant--to "What our Yankee boys can do." Without that, without the
+Yankee boys, such as these would be in the power of wild beasts. It was
+his affair. Suddenly he felt that stab through him.
+
+"God," he prayed, whispering it as the little girls passed on singing,
+"help me to protect them; help me to forget myself." And the miracle
+that sends an answer sometimes, even in this twentieth century, to true
+prayer happened to Jim Barlow. Behold he had forgotten himself. With his
+head up and peace in his breast, and the look in his face already,
+though he did not know it, that our soldier boys wear, he turned and
+started at a great pace down the street to the recruiting office.
+
+"Why, you did come."
+
+It was nine o'clock and he stood with lighted face in the middle of the
+little library. And she came in; it was an event to which he never got
+used, Mary's coming into a room. The room changed always into such an
+astonishing place.
+
+"Mary, I've done it. I'm--" his voice choked a bit--"I'm a soldier." He
+laughed at that. "Well not so you'd notice it, yet. But I've taken the
+first step."
+
+"I knew, Jim. You said you were going to enlist. Why did you telephone
+you couldn't come?"
+
+He stared down at her, holding her hands yet. He felt, unphrased,
+strong, the overwhelming conviction that she was the most desirable
+thing on earth. And directly on top of that conviction another, that he
+would be doing her desirableness, her loveliness less than the highest
+honor if he posed before her in false colors. At whatever cost to
+himself he must be honest with her. Also--he was something more now
+than his own man; he was a soldier of America, and inside and out he
+would be, for America's sake, the best that was in him to be.
+
+"Mary, I've got a thing to tell you."
+
+"Yes?" The sure way in which she smiled up at him made the effort
+harder.
+
+"I fooled you. You think I'm a hero. And I'm not. I'm a--" for the life
+of him he could not get out the word "coward." He went on: "I'm a blamed
+baby." And he told her in a few words, yet plainly enough what he had
+gone through in the long afternoon. "It was the kiddies who clinched it,
+with their flags and their hair ribbons--and their Yankee boys. I
+couldn't stand for--not playing square with them."
+
+Suddenly he gripped her hands so that it hurt. "Mary, God help me, I'll
+try to fight the devils over there so that kiddies like that, and--you,
+and all the blessed people, the whole dear shooting-match will be safe
+over here. I'm glad--I'm so glad I'm going to have a hand in it. Mary,
+it's queer, but I'm happier than I've been in months. Only"--his brows
+drew anxiously. "Only I'm scared stiff for fear you think me--a coward."
+
+He had the word out now. Thee taste wasn't so bad after all; it seemed
+oddly to have nothing to do with himself. "Mary, dear, couldn't
+you--forget that in time? When I've been over there and behaved
+decently--and I think I will. Somehow I'm not afraid of being afraid
+now. It feels like a thing that couldn't be done--by a soldier of Uncle
+Sam's. I'll just look at the other chaps--all heroes, you know--and be
+so proud I'm with them and so keen to finish our job that I
+know--somehow I _know_ I'll never think about my blooming self at all.
+It's queer to say it, Mary, but the way it looks now I'm in it, it's not
+just country even. It's religion. See, Mary?"
+
+There was no sound, no glance from Mary. But he went on, unaware, so
+rapt was he in his new illumination.
+
+"And when I come back, Mary, with a decent record--just possibly with a
+war-cross--oh, my word! Think of me! Then, couldn't you forget this
+business I've been telling you? Do you think you could marry me then?"
+
+What was the matter? Why did she stand so still with her head bending
+lower and lower, the color deepening on the bit of cheek that his
+anxious eyes could see.
+
+"Mary!"
+
+Suddenly she was clutching his collar as if in deadly fear.
+
+"Mary, what's the matter? I'm such a fool, but--oh, Mary, dear!"
+
+With that Mary-dear straightened and, slipping her clutch to the lapel
+of his old coat, spoke. She looked into his eyes with a smile that was
+sweeter--oh, much sweeter!--for tears that dimmed it, and she choked
+most awfully between words. "Jim"--and a choke. "Jim, I'm terrified to
+think I nearly let you get away. You. And me not worthy to lace your
+shoes--" ("Oh, gracious, Mary--don't!") "me--the idiot, backing and
+filling when I had the chance of my life at--at a hero. Oh, Jim!"
+
+"Here! Mary, don't you understand? I've been telling you I was scared
+blue. I hated to tell you Mary, and it's the devil to tell you twice--"
+
+What was this? Did Heaven then sometimes come down unawares on the head
+of an every-day citizen with great lapses of character? Jim Barlow,
+entranced, doubted his senses yet could not doubt the touch of soft
+hands clasped in his neck. He held his head back a little to be sure
+that they were real. Yes, they were there, the hands--Barlow's next
+remark was long, but untranslatable. Minutes later. "Mary, tell me what
+you mean. Not that I care much if--if this." Language grows elliptical
+under stress. "But--did you get me? I'm--a coward." A hand flashed
+across his mouth.
+
+"Don't you dare, Jim, you're the bravest--bravest--"
+
+The words died in a sharp break. "Why, Jim it was a hundred thousand
+times pluckier to be afraid and then go. Can't you see that, you big
+stupid?"
+
+"But, Mary, you said you admired it when--when you thought I was a lion
+of courage."
+
+"Of course. I admired you. Now I adore you."
+
+"Well," summed up, Barlow bewildered, "if women aren't the blamedest!"
+
+And Mary squealed laughter. She put hands each side of his face.
+"Jim--listen. I'll try to explain because you have a right to
+understand."
+
+"Well, yes," agreed Jim.
+
+"It's like this. I thought you'd enlist and I never dreamed you were
+balky. I didn't know you hated it so. Why didn't you tell me?"
+
+"Go on," urged Jim.
+
+"I thought you were mad to be going, like--like these light-headed boys.
+That you didn't mind leaving me compared to the adventure. That you
+didn't care for danger. But now--now." She covered his eyes with her
+fingers, "Now Jim, you need me. A woman can't love a man her best unless
+she can help him. Against everything--sorrow, mosquitoes, bad
+food--drink--any old bother. That's the alluring side of tipplers. Women
+want to help them. So, now I know you need me," the soft, unsteady voice
+wandered on, and Jim, anchored between, the hands, drank in her look
+with his eyes and her tones with his ears and prayed that the situation
+might last a week. "You need me so, to tell you how much finer you are
+than if you'd gone off without a quiver."
+
+Barlow sighed in contentment. "And me thinking I was the solitary
+'fraid-cat of America!"
+
+"Solitary! Why, Jim, there must be at least ten hundred thousand men
+going through this same battle. All the ones old enough to think,
+probably. Why Jim--you're only one of them. In that speech the other
+night the man said this war was giving men their souls. I think it's
+your kind he meant, the kind that realizes the bad things over there and
+the good things over here and goes just the same. The kind--you are."
+
+"I'm a hero from Hero-ville," murmured Barlow. "But little Mary, when I
+come back mangled will you feel the same? Will you marry me then, Mary?"
+
+"I'll marry you any minute," stated Mary, "and when you come back I'll
+love you one extra for every mangle."
+
+"Any minute," repeated Barlow dramatically. "Tomorrow?"
+
+And summed up again the heaven that he could not understand and did not
+want to, "Search me," he adjured the skies in good Americanese, "if
+girls aren't the blamedest."
+
+
+
+
+THE V.C.
+
+
+I had forgotten that I ordered frogs' legs. When mine were placed before
+me I laughed. I always laugh at the sight of frogs' legs because of the
+person and the day of which they remind me. Nobody noticed that I
+laughed or asked the reason why, though it was an audible chuckle, and
+though I sat at the head of my own dinner-party at the Cosmic Club.
+
+The man for whom the dinner was given, Colonel Robert Thornton, my
+cousin, a Canadian, who got his leg shot off at Vimy Ridge, was making
+oration about the German Crown Prince's tactics at Verdun, and that was
+the reason that ten men were not paying attention to me and that I was
+not paying attention to Bobby. When the good chap talks human talk,
+tells what happened to people and what their psychological processes
+seemed to be, he is entertaining. He has a genuine gift of sympathy and
+a power to lead others in the path he treads; in short, he tells a good
+story. But like most people who do one thing particularly well he is
+always priding himself on the way he does something else. He likes to
+look at Colonel Thornton as a student of the war, and he has the time of
+his life when he can get people to listen to what he knows Joffre and
+Foch and Haig and Hindenberg ought to have done. So at this moment he
+was enjoying his evening, for the men I had asked to meet him, all
+strangers to him, ignorant of his real powers, were hanging on his
+words, partly because no one can help liking him whatever he talks
+about, and partly because, with that pathetic empty trouser-leg and the
+crutch hooked over his chair, he was an undoubted hero. So I heard the
+sentences ambling, and reflected that Hilaire Belloc with maps and a
+quiet evening would do my tactical education more good than Bobby
+Thornton's discursions. And about then I chuckled unnoticed, over the
+silly frogs' legs.
+
+"Tell me, Colonel Thornton, do you consider that the French made a
+mistake in concentrating so much of their reserve--" It was the
+Governor himself who was demanding this earnestly of Bobby. And I saw
+that the Governor and the rest were hypnotized, and did not need me.
+
+So I sat at the head of the table, and waiters brooded over us, and
+cucumbers and the usual trash happened, and Bobby held forth while the
+ten who were bidden listened as to one sent from heaven. And, being
+superfluous, I withdrew mentally to a canoe in a lonely lake and went
+frogging.
+
+Vicariously. I do not like frogging in person. The creature smiles. Also
+he appeals because he is ugly and complacent. But for the grace of God I
+might have looked so. He sits in supreme hideousness frozen to the end
+of a wet log, with his desirable hind legs spread in view, and smiles
+his bronze smile of confidence in his own charm and my friendship. It is
+more than I can do to betray that smile. So, hating to destroy the beast
+yet liking to eat the leg, about once in my summer vacation in camp I go
+frogging, and make the guides do it.
+
+It would not be etiquette to send them out alone, for in our club guides
+are supposed to do no fishing or shooting--no sport. Therefore, I sit in
+a canoe and pretend to take a frog in a landing-net and miss two or
+three and shortly hand over the net to Josef. We have decided on
+landing-nets as our tackle. I once shot the animals with a .22 Flobert
+rifle, but almost invariably they dropped, like a larger bullet, off the
+log and into the mud, and that was the end. We never could retrieve
+them. Also at one time we fished them with a many-pronged hook and a bit
+of red flannel. But that seemed too bitter a return for the bronze
+smile, and I disliked the method, besides being bad at it. We took to
+the landing-net.
+
+To see Josef, enraptured with the delicate sport, approach a net
+carefully till within an inch of the smile, and then give the old graven
+image a smart rap on the legs in question to make him leap headlong into
+the snare--to see that and Josef's black Indian eyes glitter with joy at
+the chase is amusing. I make him slaughter the game instantly, which
+appears supererogatory to Josef who would exactly as soon have a
+collection of slimy ones leaping around the canoe. But I have them dead
+and done for promptly, and piled under the stern seat. And on we paddle
+to the next.
+
+The day to which I had retired from my dinner-party and the tactical
+lecture of my distinguished cousin was a late August day of two years
+before. The frogging fleet included two canoes, that of young John
+Dudley who was doing his vacation with me, and my own. In each canoe, as
+is Hoyle for canoeing in Canada, were two guides and a "m'sieur." The
+other boat, John's, was somewhere on the opposite shore of Lac des
+Passes, the Lake of the Passes, crawling along edges of bays and
+specializing in old logs and submerged rocks, after frogs with a
+landing-net, the same as us. But John--to my mind coarser--was doing his
+own frogging. The other boat was nothing to us except for an occasional
+yell when geography brought us near enough, of "How many?" and envy and
+malice and all uncharitableness if the count was more, and hoots of
+triumph if less.
+
+In my craft sailed, besides Josef and myself, as bow paddler, The Tin
+Lizzie. We called him that except when he could hear us, and I think it
+would have done small harm to call him so then, as he had the brain of a
+jack-rabbit and managed not to know any English, even when soaked in it
+daily. John Dudley had named him because of the plebeian and reliable
+way in which he plugged along Canadian trails. He set forth the queerest
+walk I have ever seen--a human Ford, John said. He was also quite mad
+about John. There had been a week in which Dudley, much of a doctor, had
+treated, with cheerful patience and skill, an infected and painful hand
+of the guide's, and this had won for him the love eternal of our Tin
+Lizzie. Little John Dudley thought, as he made jokes to distract the
+boy, and worked over his big throbbing fist, the fist which meant daily
+bread--little John thought where the plant of love springing from that
+seed of gratitude would at last blossom. Little he thought as the two
+sat on the gallery of the camp, and the placid lake broke in silver on
+pebbles below, through what hell of fire and smoke and danger the
+kindliness he gave to the stupid young guide would be given back to him.
+Which is getting ahead of the story.
+
+I suggested that the Lizzie might like a turn at frogging, and Josef,
+with Indian wordlessness, handed the net to him. Whereupon, with his
+flabby mouth wide and his large gray eyes gleaming, he proceeded to miss
+four easy ones in succession. And with that Josef, in a gibberish which
+is French-Canadian patois of the inner circles, addressed the Tin Lizzie
+and took away the net from him, asking no orders from me. The Lizzie,
+pipe in mouth as always, smiled just as pleasantly under this punishment
+as in the hour of his opportunities. He would have been a very handsome
+boy, with his huge eyes and brilliant brown and red color and his
+splendid shoulders and slim waist of an athlete if only he had possessed
+a ray of sense. Yet he was a good enough guide to fill in, for he was
+strong and willing and took orders amiably from anybody and did his
+routine of work, such as chopping wood and filling lamps and bringing
+water and carrying boats, with entire efficiency. That he had no
+initiative at all and by no chance did anything he was not told to, even
+when most obvious, that he was lacking in any characteristic of
+interest, that he was moreover a supreme coward, afraid to be left alone
+in the woods--these things were after all immaterial, for, as John
+pointed out, we didn't really need to love our guides.
+
+John also pointed out that the Lizzie--his name was, incidentally,
+Aristophe--had one nice quality. Of course, it was a quality which
+appealed most to the beneficiary, yet it seemed well to me also to have
+my guests surrounded with mercy and loving kindness. John had but to
+suggest building a fire or greasing his boots or carrying a canoe over
+any portage to any lake, and the Lizzie at once leaped with a bright
+smile as who should say that this was indeed a pleasure. "C'est bien,
+M'sieur," was his formula. He would gaze at John for sections of an
+hour, with his flabby mouth open in speechless surprise as if at the
+unbelievable glory and magnificence of M'sieur. A nice lad, John Dudley
+was, but no subtle enchanter; a stocky and well-set-up young man with a
+whole-souled, garrulous and breezy way, and a gift of slang and a
+brilliant grin. What called forth hero-worship towards him I never
+understood; but no more had I understood why Mildred Thornton, Colonel
+Thornton's young sister, my very beautiful cousin, should have selected
+him, from a large assortment of suitors, to marry. Indeed I did not
+entirely understand why I liked having John in camp better than anyone
+else; probably it was essentially the same charm which impelled Mildred
+to want to live with him, and the Tin Lizzie to fall down and worship.
+In any case the Lizzie worshipped with a primitive and unashamed and
+enduring adoration, which stood even the test of fear. That was the
+supreme test for the Tin Lizzie, who was a coward of cowards. Rather
+cruelly I bet John on a day that his satellite did not love him enough
+to go out to the club-house alone for him, and the next day John was in
+sore need of tobacco, not to be got nearer than the club.
+
+"Aristophe will go out and get it for me," he announced as
+Aristophe--the Lizzie--trotted about the table at lunch-time purveying
+us flapjacks.
+
+The Tin Lizzie stood rooted a second, petrified at the revolutionary
+scheme of his going to the club, companions unmentioned. There one saw
+as if through glass an idea seeking a road through his smooth gray
+matter. One had always gone to the club with Josef, or Maxime or
+Pierre--certainly M'sieur meant that; one would of course be glad to
+go--with Josef or Maxime or Pierre--to get tobacco for M'sieur John. Of
+course, the idea slid through the old road in the almost unwrinkled gray
+matter, and came safely to headquarters.
+
+"C'est bien, M'sieur," answered the Lizzie smiling brightly.
+
+And with that I knocked the silly little smile into a cocked hat. "You
+may start early tomorrow, Aristophe," I said, "and get back by dark,
+going light, I can't spare any other men to go with you. But you will
+certainly not mind going alone--to get tobacco for M'sieur John."
+
+The poor Tin Lizzie turned red and then white, and his weak mouth fell
+open and his eyebrows lifted till the whites of his eyes showed above
+the gray irises. And one saw again, through the crystal of his
+unexercised brain, the operation of a painful and new thought. M'sieur
+John--a day alone in the woods--love, versus fear--which would win. John
+and I watched the struggle a bit mercilessly. A grown man gets small
+sympathy for being a coward. And yet few forms of suffering are keener.
+We watched; and the Tin Lizzie stood and gasped in the play of his
+emotions. Nobody had ever given this son of the soil ideals to hold to
+through sudden danger; no sense of inherited honor to be guarded came to
+help the Lizzie; he had been taught to work hard and save his
+skin--little else. The great adoration for John which had swept him off
+his commonplace feet--was it going to make good against life-long
+selfish caution? We wondered. It was curious to watch the new big
+feeling fight the long-established petty one. And it was with a glow of
+triumph quite out of drawing that we saw the generous instinct win the
+battle.
+
+"Oui, M'sieur," spoke Aristophe, unconscious of subtleties or watching.
+"I go tomorrow--alone. _C'est bien, M'sieur_."
+
+It was about the only remark I ever heard him make, that gracious:
+"_C'est bien, M'sieur_!" But he made it remarkably well. Almost he
+persuaded me to respect him with that hearty response to the call of
+duty, that humble and high gift of graciousness. One remembers him as
+his dolly face lighted at John's order to go and clean trout or carry in
+logs, and one does not forget the absurd, queer little fast trot at
+which his powerful young legs would instantaneously swing off to obey
+the behest. Such was the Tin Lizzie, the guide who paddled bow in my
+canvas canoe on the day of the celebrated frog hunt.
+
+That the frog hunt was celebrated was owing to the Lizzie. He should
+have been in John's boat, as one of John's guides, but at the last
+moment, there was a confusion of tongues and Lizzie was shipped aboard
+my canoe. In the excitement of the chase Josef, stern man, had faced
+about to manipulate his landing-net; Aristophe also slewed around and,
+sitting on the gunwale, became stern paddler. I was in the middle
+screwed anyhow, watching the frog fishing and enjoying the enjoyment of
+the men. Poor chaps, it was the only bit of personal play they got out
+of our month of play. Aristophe, the Tin Lizzie, was quite mad with the
+excitement even from his very second fiddle standpoint of paddler to
+Josef's frogging. His enormous gray eyes snapped, his teeth showed white
+and gold around his pipe--which he nearly bit off--and he even used
+language.
+
+"_Tiens! Encore un!_" hissed the Lizzie in a blood-curdling whisper as a
+new pair of pop eyes lifted from the edge of a rotten log.
+
+And Josef, who had always seen the frog first, fired a guttural
+sentence, full of contempt, full of friendliness, for he sized up the
+Lizzie, his virtues and his limitations, accurately. And then the boat
+was pushed and pulled in the shallow water till Josef and the net were
+within range. With, that came the slow approach of the net to the smile,
+the swift tap on the eatable legs, and headlong into his finish leaped
+M. Crapaud. Which is rot his correct name, Josef tells me, in these
+parts, but M. Guarron. And that, being translated, means Mr.
+Very-Big-Bull-Frog.
+
+Business had prospered to fourteen or fifteen head of frogs, and we
+calculated that the other boat might have a dozen when, facing towards
+Aristophe, I saw his dull, fresh face suddenly change. My pulse missed a
+beat at that expression. It was adequate to an earthquake or sudden
+death. How the fatuous doll-like features could have been made to
+register that stare of a soul in horror I can't guess. But they did. The
+whites of his eyes showed an eighth of an inch above the irises and his
+black eyebrows were shot up to the roots of his glossy black hair. In
+the gleaming white and gold of his teeth the pipe was still gripped. And
+while I gazed, astonished, his unfitting deep voice issued from that
+mask of fear:
+
+"_Tiens! Encore un!_" And I screwed about and saw that the Lizzie was
+running the boat on top of an enormous frog which he had not spied till
+the last second. With that Josef exploded throaty language and leaning
+sidewise made a dive at the frog. Aristophe, unbalanced with emotion and
+Josef's swift movement shot from his poise at the end of the little
+craft, and landed, in a foot of water, flat on his buck, and the frog
+seized that second to jump on his stomach.
+
+I never heard an Indian really laugh before that day. The hills
+resounded with Josef's shouts. We laughed, Josef and I, till we were
+weak, and for a good minute Aristophe sprawled in the lake, with the
+frog anchored as if till Kingdom come on his middle, and howled lusty
+howls while we laughed. Then Josef fished the frog and got him off the
+Tin Lizzie's lungs. And Aristophe, weeping, scrambled into the boat. And
+as we went home in the cool forest twilight, up the portage by the
+rushing, noisy rapids, Josef, walking before us, carrying the
+landing-net full of frogs' legs, shook with laughter every little while
+again, as Aristophe, his wet strong young legs, the only section of him
+showing, toiled ahead up the winding thread of a trail, carrying the
+inverted canoe on his head.
+
+It was this adventure which came to me and seized me and carried me a
+thousand miles northward into Canadian forest as I looked at the frogs'
+legs on my plate at the Cosmic Club, and did not listen to my cousin,
+the Colonel, talking military tactics.
+
+The mental review took an eighth of the time it has taken me to tell it.
+But as I shook off my dream of the woods, I realized that, while
+Thornton still talked, he had got out of his uninteresting rut into his
+interesting one. Without hearing what he said I knew that from the look
+of the men's faces. Each man's eyes were bright, through a manner of
+mistiness, and there was a sudden silence which was perhaps what had
+recalled me.
+
+"It's a war which is making a new standard of courage," spoke the young
+Governor in the gentle tone which goes so oddly and so pleasantly with
+his bull-dog jaw. "It looks as if we were going to be left with a world
+where heroism is the normal thing," spoke the Governor.
+
+"Heroism--yes," said Bobby, and I knew with satisfaction that he was off
+on his own line, the line he does not fancy, the line where few can
+distance him. "Heroism!" repeated Bobby, "It's all around out there. And
+it crops out--" he begun to smile--"in unsuspected places, from varied
+impulses."
+
+He was working his way to an anecdote. The men at the table, their
+chairs twisted towards him, sat very still.
+
+"What I mean to say is," Bobby began, "that this war, horrible as it is,
+is making over human, nature for the better. It's burning out
+selfishness and cowardice and a lot of faults from millions of men, and
+it's holding up the nobility of what some of them do to the entire
+world. It takes a character, this debacle, and smashes out the
+littleness. Another thing is curious. If a small character has one good
+point on which to hang heroism, the battle-spirit searches out that
+point and plants on it the heroism. There was a stupid young private in
+my command who--but I'm afraid I'm telling too many war stories," Bobby
+appealed, interrupting himself. "I'm full of it, you see, and when
+people are so good, and listen--" He stopped, in a confusion which is
+not his least attractive manner.
+
+From down the table came a quick murmur of voices. I saw more than one
+glance halt at the crutch on the back of the soldier's chair.
+
+"Thank you. I'd really like to tell about this man. It's interesting,
+psychologically to me," he went on, smiling contentedly. He is a lovable
+chap, my cousin Robert Thornton. "The lad whom I speak of, a
+French-Canadian from Quebec Province, was my servant, my batman, as the
+Indian army called them and as we refer to them often now. He was so
+brainless that I just missed firing him the first day I had him. But
+John Dudley, my brother-in-law and lieutenant, wanted me to give him a
+chance, and also there was something in his manner when I gave him
+orders which attracted me. He appeared to have a pleasure in serving,
+and an ideal of duty. Dudley had used him as a guide, and the man had a
+dog-like devotion to 'the lieutenant' which counted with me. Also he
+didn't talk. I think he knew only four words. I flung orders at him and
+there would be first a shock of excitement, then a second of tense
+anxiety, then a radiant smile and the four words: '_C'est bien, Mon
+Capitaine_.' I was captain then."
+
+At that point I dropped my knife and fork and stared at my cousin. He
+went on.
+
+"'_C'est bien, Mon Capitaine_.' That was the slogan. And when the
+process was accomplished, off he would trot, eager to do my will. He was
+powerful and well-built, but he had the oddest manner of locomotion ever
+I saw, a trot like--like a Ford car. I discovered pretty soon that the
+poor wretch was a born coward. I've seen him start at the distant sound
+of guns long before we got near the front, and he was nervous at going
+out alone at night about the camp. The men ragged him, but he was such
+a friendly rascal and so willing to take over others' work that he got
+along with a fraction of the persecution most of his sort would have
+had. I wondered sometimes what would happen to the poor little devil
+when actual fighting came. Would it be '_C'est bien, Mon Capitaine_,' at
+the order to go over the top, or would the terrible force of fear be too
+much for him and land him at last with his back to a wall and a firing
+squad in front--a deserter? Meantime he improved and I got dependent on
+his radiant good will. Being John Dudley's brother-in-law sanctified me
+with him, and nothing was too much trouble if I'd give him a chance
+sometimes to clean John's boots. I have a man now who shows no ecstacy
+at being ordered to do my jobs, and I don't like him.
+
+"We were moved up towards the front, and, though Mr. Winston Churchill
+has made a row about the O.S.--the officers' servants who are removed
+from the firing line, I know that a large proportion of them do their
+share in the trenches. I saw to it that mine did.
+
+"One night there was a digging expedition. An advance trench was to be
+made in No Man's Land about a hundred and fifty yards from the Germans.
+I was in command of the covering party of thirty-five men; I was a
+captain. We, of course, went out ahead. Beaurame was in the party. It
+was his first fighting. We had rifles, with bayonets, and bombs, and a
+couple of Lewis guns. We came up to the trenches by a road, then went
+into the zigzag communication trenches up to the front, the fire-trench.
+Then, very cautiously, over the top into No Man's Land. It was nervous
+work, for at any second they might discover us and open fire. It suited
+us all to be as quiet as human men could be, and when once in a while a
+star-shell, a Very light, was sent up from the German lines we froze in
+our tracks till the white glare died out.
+
+"The party had been digging for perhaps an hour when hell broke loose.
+They'd seen us. All about was a storm of machine-gun and rifle bullets,
+and we dropped on our faces, the diggers in their trench--pretty shallow
+it was. As for the covering party, we simply took our medicine. And
+then the shrapnel joined the music. Word was passed to get back to the
+trenches, and we started promptly. We stooped low as we ran over No
+Man's Land, but there were plenty of casualties. I got mine in the foot,
+but not the wound which rung in this--" Thornton nodded his head at the
+crutches with a smile. "It was from a bit of shrapnel just as I made the
+trench, and as I fell in I caught at the sand bags and whirled about
+facing out over No Man's Land; as I whirled I saw, close by, Beaurame's
+face in a shaft of light. I don't know why I made conversation at that
+moment--I did. I said:
+
+"When did you get back?"
+
+And his answer came as if clicked on a typewriter. "Me, I stayed, _Mon
+Capitaine_. It had an air too dangerous, out there."
+
+I stared in a white rage. You'll imagine--one of my men to dare tell me
+that! And at that second, simultaneously, came the flare of a shell star
+and a shout of a man struck down, and I knew the voice--John Dudley. He
+was out there, the tail end of the party, wounded. I saw him as he
+fell, on the farther side of the new trench. Of course, one's instinct
+was to dash back and bring him in, and I started. And I found my foot
+gone--I couldn't walk. Quicker than I can tell it I turned to Beaurame,
+the coward, who'd been afraid to go over the top, and I said in French,
+because, though I hadn't time to think it out, I yet realized that it
+would get to him faster so--I said:
+
+"Get over there, you deserter. Save the lieutenant--Lieutenant Dudley.
+Go."
+
+For one instant I thought it was no good and I was due to have him shot,
+if we both lived through the night. And then--I never in my life saw
+such a face of abject fear as the one he turned first to me and then
+across that horror of No Man's Land. The whites of his eyes showed, it
+seemed, an eighth of an inch above the irises; his black eyebrows were
+half way up his forehead, and his teeth, luxuriously upholstered with
+fillings, shone white and gold in the unearthly light. It was such a mad
+terror as I'd never seen before, and never since. And into it I, mad
+too with the thought of my sister if I let young John Dudley die before
+my eyes--I bombed again the order to go out and bring in Dudley. I
+remember the fading and coming expressions on that Frenchman's face like
+the changes on a moving picture film. I suppose it was half a minute.
+And here was the coward face gazing into mine, transfigured into the
+face of a man who cared about another man more than himself--a common
+man whose one high quality was love.
+
+"_C'est bien, Mon Capitaine_," Beaurame spoke, through still clicking
+teeth, and with his regulation smile of good will he had sprung over the
+parapet in one lithe movement, and I saw him crouching, trotting that
+absurd, powerful fast trot through the lane in our barbed wire, like
+lightning, to the shallow new trench, to Dudley. I saw him--for the
+Germans had the stretch lighted--I saw the man pick up my brother-in-law
+and toss him over his shoulders and start trotting back. Then I saw him
+fall, both of them fall, and I knew that he'd stopped a bullet. And
+then, as I groaned, somehow Beaurame was on his feet again. I expected,
+that he'd bolt for cover, but he didn't. He bent over deliberately as if
+he had been a fearless hero--and maybe he was--and he picked up Dudley
+again and started on, laboring, this time in walking. He was hit badly.
+But he made the trench; he brought in Dudley.
+
+Then such a howl of hurrahs greeted him from the men who watched the
+rescue as poor little Aristophe Beaurame--"
+
+"Ah!" I interjected, and Bobby turned and stared--"as the poor little
+scared rat had not dreamed, or had any right to dream would ever greet
+his conduct on earth. He dropped Dudley at my feet and turned with his
+flabby mouth open and his great stupid eyes like saucers, towards the
+men who rushed to shake his hand and throw at him words of admiration
+that choked them to get out. And then he keeled over. So you see. It was
+an equal chance at one second, whether a man should be shot for a
+deserter or--win the Victoria Cross."
+
+"What!" I shouted at my guest. "What! Not the Victoria Cross! Not
+Aristophe!"
+
+Bobby looked at me in surprise. "You're a great claque for me," he said.
+"You seem to take an interest in my hero. Yes, he got it. He was badly
+hurt. One hand nearly gone and a wound in his side. I was lucky enough
+to be in London on a day three months later, and to be present at the
+ceremony, when the young French-Canadian, spoiled for a soldier, but
+splendid stuff now for a hero, stood out in the open before the troops
+in front of Buckingham Palace and King George pinned the V.C. on his
+breast. They say that he's back in his village, and the whole show. I
+hear that he tells over and over the story of his heroism and the rescue
+of '_Mon Lieutenant_.' to never failing audiences. Of course, John is
+looking after him, for the hand which John saved was the hand that was
+shot to pieces in saving John, and the Tin Lizzie can never make his
+living with that hand again. A deserter, a coward--decorated by the King
+with the Victoria Cross! Queer things happen in war!" There was a stir,
+a murmur as of voices, of questions beginning, but Bobby was not quite
+through.
+
+"War takes the best of the best men, and the best of the cheapest, and
+transfigures both. War doesn't need heroes for heroism. She pins it on
+anywhere if there's one spot of greatness in a character. War does
+strange things with humanity," said Bobby.
+
+And I, gasping, broke out crudely in three words: "Our Tin Lizzie!" I
+said, and nobody knew in the least what I meant, or with what memories I
+said it.
+
+
+
+
+HE THAT LOSETH HIS LIFE SHALL FIND IT
+
+
+The Red Cross women had gone home. Half an hour before, the large
+library had been filled with white-clad, white-veiled figures. Two long
+tables full, forty of them today, had been working; three thousand
+surgical dressings had been cut and folded and put away in large boxes
+on shelves behind glass doors where the most valuable books had held
+their stately existence for years. The books were stowed now in trunks
+in the attic. These were war days; luxuries such as first editions must
+wait their time. The great living-room itself, the center of home for
+this family since the two boys were born and ever this family had been,
+the dear big room with its dark carved oak, and tapestries, and stained
+glass, and books, and memories was given over now to war relief work.
+
+Sometimes, as the mistress walked into the spacious, low-ceilinged,
+bright place, presences long past seemed to fill it intolerably. Brock
+and Hugh, little chaps, roared in untidy and tumultuous from football,
+or came, decorous and groomed, handsome, smart little lads, to be
+presented to guests. Her own Hugh, her husband, proud of the beautiful
+new house, smiled from the hearth to her as he had smiled twenty-six
+years back, the night they came in, a young Hugh, younger than Brock was
+now. Her father and mother, long gone over "to the majority," and the
+exquisite old ivory beauty of a beautiful grandmother--such ghosts rose
+and faced the woman as she stepped into the room where they had moved in
+life, the room with its loveliness marred by two long tables covered
+with green oilcloth, by four rows of cheap chairs, by rows and rows of
+boxes on shelves where soft and bright and dark colors of books had
+glowed. She felt often that she should explain matters to the room,
+should tell the walls which had sheltered peace and hospitality that she
+had consecrated them to yet higher service. Never for one instant,
+while her soul ached for the familiar setting, had she regretted its
+sacrifice. That her soul did ache made it worth while.
+
+And the women gathered for this branch Red Cross organization, her
+neighbors on the edge of the great city, wives and daughters and mothers
+of clerks, and delivery-wagon drivers, and icemen, and night-watchmen,
+women who had not known how to take their part in the war work in the
+city or had found it too far to go, these came to her house gladly and
+all found pleasure in her beautiful room. That made it a joy to give it
+up to them. She stood in the doorway, feeling an emphasis in the quiet
+of the July afternoon because of the forty voices which had lately gone
+out of the sunshiny silence, of the forty busy figures in long, white
+aprons and white, sweeping veils, the tiny red cross gleaming over the
+forehead of each one, each face lovely in the uniform of service, all
+oddly equalized and alike under their veils and crosses. She spoke aloud
+as she tossed out her hands to the room:
+
+"War will be over some day, and you will be our own again, but forever
+holy because of this. You will be a room of history when you go to
+Brock--"
+
+Brock! Would Brock ever come home to the room, to this place which he
+loved? Brock, in France! She turned sharply and went out through the
+long hall and across the terrace, and sat down where the steps dropped
+to the garden, on the broad top step, with her head against the pillar
+of the balustrade. Above her the smell of box in a stone vase on the
+pillar punctured the mild air with its definite, reminiscent fragrance.
+Box is a plant of antecedents of sentiment, of memories. The woman
+inhaling its delicate sharpness, was caught back into days past. She
+considered, in rapid jumps of thought, events, episodes, epochs. The day
+Brock was born, on her own twentieth birthday, up-stairs where the rosy
+chintz curtains blew now out of the window; the first day she had come
+down to the terrace--it was June--and the baby lay in his bassinet by
+the balustrade in that spot--she looked at the spot--the baby, her big
+Brock, a bundle of flannel and fine, white stuff in lacy frills of the
+bassinet. And she loved him; she remembered how she had loved that baby,
+how, laughing at herself, she had whispered silly words over the stolid,
+pink head; how the girl's heart of her had all but burst with the
+astonishing new tide of a feeling which seemed the greatest of which she
+was capable. Yet it was a small thing to the way she loved Brock now. A
+vision came of little Hugh, three years younger, and the two toddling
+about the terrace together, Hugh always Brock's satellite and adorer, as
+was fitting; less sturdy, less daring than Brock, yet ready to go
+anywhere if only the older baby led. She thought of the day when Hugh,
+four years old, had taken fright at a black log among the bushes under
+the trees.
+
+"It's a bear!" little Hugh had whispered, shaking, and Brock, brave but
+not too certain, had looked at her, inquiring.
+
+"No, love, it's not a bear; it's an old log of wood. Go and put your
+hand on it, Hughie."
+
+Little Hugh had cried out and shrunk back. "I'm afraid!" cried little
+Hugh.
+
+And Brock, not entirely clear as to the no-bear theory, had yet bluffed
+manfully. "Come on, Hughie; let's go and bang 'um," said Brock.
+
+Which invitation Hugh accepted reluctantly with a condition, "If you'll
+hold my hand, B'ocky."
+
+The woman turned her head to see the place where the black log had lain,
+there in the old high bushes. And behold! Two strong little figures in
+white marched along--she could all but see them today--and the bigger
+little figure was dragging the other a bit, holding a hand with
+masterful grip. She could hear little Hugh's laughter as they arrived at
+the terrible log and found it truly a log. Even now Hugh's laugh was
+music.
+
+"Why, it's nuffin but an old log o' wood!" little Hugh had squealed, as
+brave as a lion.
+
+As she sat seeing visions, old Mavourneen, Brock's Irish wolf-hound,
+came and laid her muzzle on the woman's shoulder, crying a bit, as was
+Mavourneen's Irish way, for pleasure at finding the mistress. And with
+that there was a brown ripple and a patter of many soft feet, and a
+broken wave of dogs came around the corner, seven little cairn-terriers.
+Sticky and Sandy and their offspring. The woman let Sticky settle in her
+lap and drew Sandy under her arm, and the puppies looked up at her from
+the step below with ten serious, anxious eyes and then fell to chasing
+quite imaginary game up and down the stone steps. Mavourneen sighed
+deeply and dropped with a heavy thud, a great paw on the edge of the
+white dress and her beautiful head resting on her paws, the topaz,
+watchful eyes gazing over the city. The woman put her free hand back and
+touched the rough head.
+
+"Dear dog!" she spoke.
+
+Another memory came: how they had bought Mavourneen, she and Hugh and
+the boys, at the kennels in Ireland, eight years ago; how the huge baby
+had been sent to them at Liverpool in a hamper; the uproarious drive the
+four of them--Hugh, the two boys, and herself--and Mavourneen had taken
+in a taxi across the city. The puppy, astonished and investigating
+throughout the whole proceeding, had mounted all of them, separately and
+together, and insisted on lying in big Hugh's lap, crying
+broken-heartedly at not being allowed. How they had shouted laughter,
+the four and the boy taxi-driver, all the journey, till they ached! What
+good times they had always had together, the young father and mother and
+the two big sons! She reflected how she had not been at all the
+conventional mother of sons. She had not been satisfied to be gentle and
+benevolent and look after their clothes and morals. She had lived their
+lives with them, she had ridden and gone swimming with them, and played
+tennis and golf, and fished and shot and skated and walked with them,
+yes, and studied and read with them, all their lives.
+
+"I haven't any respect for my mother," young Hugh told her one day. "I
+like her like a sister."
+
+She was deeply pleased at this attitude; she did not wish their respect
+as a visible quality. Vision after vision came of the old times and
+care-free days while the four, as happy and normal a family as lived in
+the world, passed their alert, full days together before the war. Memory
+after memory took form in the brain of the woman, the center of that
+light-hearted life so lately changed, so entirely now a memory. War had
+come.
+
+At first, in 1914, there had been excitement, astonishment. Then the
+horror of Belgium. One refused to believe that at first; it was a lurid
+slander on the kindly German people; then one believed with the brain;
+one's spirit could not grasp it. Unspeakable deeds such as the Germans'
+deeds--it was like a statement made concerning a fourth dimension of
+space; civilized modern folk were not so organized as to realize the
+facts of that bestiality.
+
+"Aren't you thankful we're Americans?" the woman had said over and over.
+
+One day her husband, answering usually with a shake of the head,
+answered in words. "We may be in it yet," he said. "I'm not sure but we
+ought to be."
+
+Brock, twenty-one then, had flashed at her: "I want to be in it. I may
+just have to be, mother."
+
+Young Hugh yawned a bit at that, and stretching his long arm, he patted
+his brother's shoulder. "Good old hero, Brock! I'll beat you a set of
+tennis. Come on."
+
+That sudden speech of Brock's had startled her, had brought the war, in
+a jump which was like a stab, close. The war and Lindow--their
+place--how was it possible that this nightmare in Europe could touch the
+peace of the garden, the sunlit view of the river, the trees with birds
+singing in them, the scampering of the dogs down the drive? The distant
+hint of any connection between the great horror and her own was pain;
+she put the thought away.
+
+Then the _Lusitania_ was sunk. All America shouted shame through sobs of
+rage. The President wrote a beautiful and entirely satisfactory note.
+
+"It should be war--war. It should be war today," Hugh had said, her
+husband. "We only waste time. We'll have to fight sooner or later. The
+sooner we begin, the sooner we'll finish."
+
+"Fight!" young Hugh threw at him. "What with? We can just about make
+faces at 'em, father."
+
+The boy's father did not laugh. "We had better get ready to do more than
+make faces; we've got to get ready." He hammered his hand on the stone
+balustrade. "I'm going to Plattsburg this summer, Evelyn."
+
+"I'm going with you." Brock's voice was low and his mouth set, and the
+woman, looking at him, saw suddenly that her boy was a man.
+
+"Well, then, as man power is getting low at Lindow, I'll stay and take
+care of Mummy. Won't I? We'll do awfully well without them, won't we,
+Mum? You can drive Dad's Rolls-Royce roadster, and if you leave on the
+handbrake up-hill, I'll never tell."
+
+Father and son had gone off for the month in camp, and, glad as she was
+to have the younger boy with her, there was yet an uneasy, an almost
+subconscious feeling about him, which she indignantly denied each time
+that it raised its head. It never quite phrased itself, this fear, this
+wonder if Hugh were altogether as American as his father and brother.
+Question the courage and patriotism of her own boy? She flung the
+thought from her as again and yet again it came. People of the same
+blood were widely different. To Brock and his father it had come easily
+to do the obvious thing, to go to Plattsburg. It had not so come to
+young Hugh, but that in good time he would see his duty and do it she
+would not for an instant doubt. She would not break faith with the lad
+in thought. With a perfect delicacy she avoided any word that would
+influence him. He knew. All his life he had breathed loyalty. It was she
+herself, reading to them night after night through years, who had taught
+the boys hero worship--above all, worship of American heroes,
+Washington, Paul Jones, Perry, Farragut, Lee; how Dewey had said, "You
+may fire now, Gridley, if you are ready"; how Clark had brought the
+_Oregon_ around the continent; how Scott had gone alone among angry
+Indians. She had taught them such names, names which will not die while
+America lives. It was she who had told the little lads, listening
+wide-eyed, that as these men had held life lightly for the glory of
+America, so her sons, if need came, must be ready to offer their lives
+for their country. She remembered how Brock, his round face suddenly
+scarlet, had stammered out:
+
+"I _am_ ready, Mummy. I'd die this minute for--for America. Wouldn't
+you, Hughie?"
+
+And young Hugh, a slim, blond angel of a boy, of curly, golden hair and
+unexpected answers, had ducked beneath the hero, upsetting him into a
+hedge to his infinite anger. "I wouldn't die right now, Brocky," said
+Hugh. "There's going to be chocolate cake for lunch."
+
+One could never count on Hugh's ways of doing things, but Brock was a
+stone wall of reliability. She smiled, thinking of his youth and beauty
+and entire boyishness, to think yet of the saying from the Bible which
+always suggested Brock, "Thou shalt keep him in perfect peace whose mind
+is stayed on Thee." It was so with the lad; through the gay heart and
+eager interest in life pulsed an atmosphere of deep religiousness. He
+was always "in perfect peace," and his mother, less balanced, had stayed
+her mind on that quiet and right young mind from its very babyhood. The
+lad had seen his responsibilities and lifted them all his life. It came
+to her how, when her own mother, very dear to Brock, had died, she had
+not let the lads go with her to the house of death for fear of saddening
+their youth, and how, when she and their father came home from the hard,
+terrible business of the funeral, they met little Hugh on the drive,
+rapturous at seeing them again, rather absorbed in his new dog. But
+Brock, then fourteen, was in the house alone, quiet, his fresh, dear
+face red with tears, and a black necktie of his father's, too large for
+him, tied under his collar. Of all the memories of her boys, that
+grotesque black tie was the most poignant and most precious. It said
+much. It said: "I also, O, my mother, am of my people. I have a right to
+their sorrows as well as to their joys, and if you do not give me my
+place in trouble, I shall do what I can alone, being but a boy. I shall
+give up play, and I shall wear mourning as I can, not knowing how very
+well, but pushed by all my being to be with my own in their mourning."
+
+Quickly affection for the other lad asserted itself. Brock and Hugh were
+different, but Hugh was a dear boy, too--undeveloped, that was all. He
+had never taken life seriously, little Hugh, and now that this war-cloud
+hung over the world, he simply refused to look at it; he turned away his
+face. That was all, a temperament which loved harmony and shrank from
+ugliness; these things were young Hugh's limitations, and no ignoble
+quality.
+
+In a long dream, yet much faster than the words have told it, in
+comprehensive flashes of memory, her elbows on her knees and her face,
+in her slender hands, looking out over the garden with its arched way of
+roses, with its high hedge, looking past the loveliness that was home to
+the city pulsing in summer heat, to the shining zigzag of river beyond
+the city, the woman reviewed her boys' lives. Boys were not now merely
+one phase of humanity; they had suddenly become the nation. They stood
+in the foreground of a world crisis; back of them America was ranged,
+orderly, living and moving to feed, clothe, and keep happy these
+millions of lads holding in their hands the fate of the earth. Her boys
+were but two, yet necessary. She owed them to the country, as other
+mothers of men.
+
+There was a whistle under the archway, a flying step, and young Hugh
+shot from beneath the rosiness of Dorothy Perkins vines and took the
+stone steps in four bounds. All the dogs fell into a community chorus of
+barks and whines and patterings about, and Hugh's hands were on this one
+and that as he bent over the woman.
+
+"A _good_ kiss, Mummy; that's cold baked potato," he complained, and she
+laughed and hugged him.
+
+"Not cold; I was just thinking. Your knee, Hughie? You came up like a
+bird."
+
+Hugh made a face. "Bad break, that," he grinned, and limped across the
+terrace and back. "Mummy, it doesn't hurt much now, and I do forget,"
+he explained, and his color deepened. With that: "Tom Arthur is waiting
+for me in town. We're going to pick up Whitney, the tennis champion, at
+the Crossroads Club. May I take Dad's roadster?"
+
+"Yes, Hughie. And, Hugh, meet the train, the seven-five. Dad's coming
+to-night, you know."
+
+The boy took her hand, looked at her uneasily. "Mummy, dear, don't be
+thinking sinful thoughts about me. And don't let Dad. Hold your fire,
+Mummy."
+
+She lifted her face, and her eyes were the eyes of faith he had known
+all his life. "You blessed boy of mine, I will hold my fire." And then
+Hugh had all but knocked her over with a violent kiss again, and he
+slammed happily through the screen doors and was leaping up the stairs.
+Ten minutes later she heard the car purring down the drive.
+
+The dogs settled about her with long dog-sighs again. She looked at her
+wrist--only five-thirty. She went back with a new unrest to her
+thoughts. Hugh's knee--it was odd; it had lasted a long time, ever
+since--she shuddered a bit, so that old Mavourneen lifted her head and
+objected softly--ever since war was declared. Over a year! To be sure,
+he had hurt it again badly, slipping on the ice in December, just as it
+was getting strong. She wished that his father would not be so grim when
+Hugh's bad knee was mentioned. What did he mean? Did he dare to think
+her boy--the word was difficult even mentally--a slacker? With that her
+mind raced back to the days just before Hugh had hurt this knee. It was
+in February that Germany had proclaimed the oceans closed except along
+German paths, at German times. "This is war at last," her husband had
+said, and she knew the inevitable had come.
+
+Night after night she had lain awake facing it, sometimes breaking down
+utterly and shaking her soul out in sobs, sometimes trying to see ways
+around the horror, trying to believe that war must end before our troops
+could get ready, often with higher courage glorying that she might give
+so much for country and humanity. Then, in the nights, things that she
+had read far back, unrealizing, rose and confronted her with
+awful reality. Brutalities, atrocities, wounds, barbarous
+captivity--nightmares which the Germans had dug out of the grave of
+savagery and sent stalking over the earth--such rose and stood before
+the woman lying awake night after night. At first her soul hid its face
+in terror at the gruesome thoughts; at first her mind turned and fled
+and refused to believe. Her boys, Brock and Hugh! It was not credible,
+it was not reasonable, it was out of drawing that her good boys, her
+precious boys trained to be happy and help the world, to live useful,
+peaceful lives, should be snatched from home, here in America, and
+pitched into the ghastly struggle of Europe. Push back the ocean as she
+might, the ocean surged every day nearer.
+
+Daytimes she was as brave as the best. She could say: "If we had done it
+the day after the _Lusitania_, that would have been right. It would have
+been all over now." She could say: "My boys? They will do their duty
+like other women's boys." But nights, when she crept into bed and the
+things she had read of Belgium, of Serbia, came and stood about her, she
+knew that hers were the only boys in the world who could not, _could_
+not be spared. Brock and Hugh! It seemed as if it would be apparent to
+the dullest that Brock and Hugh were different from all others. She
+could suffer; she could have gone over there light-hearted and faced any
+danger to save _them_. Of course! That was natural! But--Brock and Hugh!
+The little heads that had lain in the hollow of her arm; the noisy
+little boys who had muddied their white clothes, and broken furniture,
+and spilled ink; the tall, beautiful lads who had been her pride and her
+everlasting joy, her playmates, her lovers--Brock and Hugh! Why, there
+had never been on earth love and friendship in any family close and
+unfailing like that of the four.
+
+Night after night, nearer and nearer, the ghosts from Belgium and Serbia
+and Poland stood about her bed, and she fought with them as one had
+fought with the beasts at Ephesus. Day after day she cheered Brock and
+the two Hughs and filled them with fresh patriotism. Of course, she
+would not have her own fail in a hair's breadth of eager service to
+their flag. Of course! And as she lifted up, for their sakes, her
+heart, behold a miracle, for her heart grew high! She began to feel the
+words she said. It came to her in very truth that to have the world as
+one wanted it was not now the point; the point was a greater goal which
+she had never in her happy life even visualized. It began to rise before
+her, a distant picture glorious through a mist of suffering, something
+built of the sacrifice, and the honor, and the deathless bravery of
+millions of soldiers in battle, of millions of mothers at home. The
+education of a nation to higher ideals was reaching the quiet backwater
+of this one woman's soul. There were lovelier things than life; there
+were harder things than death. Service is the measure of living. If the
+boys were to compress years of good living into a flame of serving
+humanity for six months, who was she, what was life here, that she
+should be reluctant? To play the game, for herself and her sons, this
+was the one thing worth while. More and more entirely, as the stress of
+the strange, hard vision crowded out selfishness, this woman, as
+thousands and tens of thousands all over America, lifted up her
+heart--the dear things that filled and were her heart--unto the Lord.
+
+And with that she was aware of a recurring unrest. She was aware that
+there was something her husband did not say to her about the boys, about
+young Hugh. Brock had been hard to hold for nearly two years now, but
+his father had thought for reasons, that he should not serve until his
+own flag called him. Now it would soon be calling, and Brock would go
+instantly. But young Hugh? What did the boy's attitude mean?
+
+"I can't make out Hughie," his father had said to her in March, 1917,
+when it was certain that war was coming. "What does this devil-may-care
+pose about the war mean?"
+
+And she answered: "Let Hughie work it out, Hugh. He's in trouble in his
+mind, but he'll come through. We'll give him time."
+
+"Oh, very well," Hugh the elder had agreed, "but young Americans will
+have to take their stand shortly. I couldn't bear it if a son of mine
+were a slacker."
+
+She tossed out her hands. "Slacker! Don't dare say it of my boy!"
+
+The hideous word followed her. That night, when she lay in bed and
+looked out into the moonlit wood, and saw the pines swaying like giant
+fans across a pulsing, pale sky, and listened to the summer wind blowing
+through the tall heads of them, again through the peace of it the word
+stabbed. A slacker! She set to work to fancy how it would be if Brock
+and Hugh both went to war and were both killed. She faced the thought.
+Life--years of it--without Brock and Hugh! She registered that steadily
+in her mind. Then she painted to herself another picture, Brock and Hugh
+not going to war, at home ignominiously safe. Other women's sons
+marching out into the danger--men, heroes! Brock and Hugh explaining,
+steadily explaining why they had not gone! Brock and Hugh after the war,
+mature men, meeting returning soldiers, old friends who had borne the
+burden and heat, themselves with no memories of hideous, infinitely
+precious days, of hardships, and squalid trench life, and deadly
+pain--for America! Brock and Hugh going on through life into old age
+ashamed to hold up their heads and look their comrades in the eye! Or
+else--it might be--Brock and Hugh lying next year, this year, in
+unknown, honored graves in France! Which was worse? And the aching heart
+of the woman did not wait to answer. Better a thousand times brave death
+than a coward's life. She would choose so if she knew certainly that she
+sent them both to death. The education of the war, the new glory of
+patriotism, had already gone far in this one woman.
+
+And then the thought stabbed again--a slacker--Hugh! How did his father
+dare say it? A poisonous terror, colder than the fear of death, crawled
+into her soul and hid there. Was it possible that Hugh, brilliant,
+buoyant, temperamental Hugh was--that? The days went on, and the cold,
+vile thing stayed coiled in her soul. It was on the very day war was
+declared that young Hugh injured his knee, a bad injury. When he was
+carried home, when the doctor cut away his clothes and bent over the
+swollen leg and said wise things about the "bursa," the boy's eyes were
+hard to meet. They constantly sought hers with a look questioning and
+anxious. Words were impossible, but she tried to make her glance and
+manner say: "I trust you. Not for worlds would I believe you did it on
+purpose."
+
+And finally the lad caught her hand and with his mouth against it spoke.
+"_You_ know I didn't do it on purpose, Mummy."
+
+And the cold horror fled out of her heart, and a great relief flooded
+her.
+
+On a day after that Brock came home from camp, and, though he might not
+tell it in words, she knew that he would sail shortly for France. She
+kept the house full of brightness and movement for the three days he had
+at home, yet the four--young Hugh on crutches now--clung to each other,
+and on the last afternoon she and Brock were alone for an hour. They had
+sat just here after tennis, in the hazy October weather, and pink-brown
+leaves had floated down with a thin, pungent fragrance and lay on the
+stone steps in vague patterns. Scarlet geraniums bloomed back of Brock's
+head and made a satisfying harmony with the copper of his tanned face.
+They fell to silence after much talking, and finally she got out
+something which had been in her mind but which it had been hard to say.
+
+"Brocky," she began, and jabbed the end of her racket into her foot so
+that it hurt, because physical pain will distract and steady a mind.
+"Brocky, I want to ask you to do something."
+
+"Yes'm," answered Brock.
+
+"It's this. Of course, I know you're going soon, over there."
+
+Brock looked at her gravely.
+
+"Yes, I know, I want to ask you if--if _it_ happens--will you come and
+tell me yourself? If it's allowed."
+
+Brock did not even touch her hand; he knew well she could not bear it.
+He answered quietly, with a sweet, commonplace manner as if that other
+world to which he might be going was a place too familiar in his
+thoughts for any great strain in speaking of it. "Yes, Mummy," he said.
+"Of course I will. I'd have wanted to anyway, even if you hadn't said
+it. It seems to me--" He lifted his young face, square-jawed,
+fresh-colored, and there was a vision-seeing look in his eyes which his
+mother had known at times before. He looked across the city lying at
+their feet, and the river, and the blue hills beyond, and he spoke
+slowly, as if shaping a thought. "So many fellows have 'gone west'
+lately that there must he some way. It seems as if all that mass of love
+and--and desire to reach back and touch--the ones left--as if all that
+must have built a sort of bridge over the river--so that a fellow might
+probably come back and--and tell his mother--"
+
+Brock's voice stopped, and suddenly she was in his arms, his face was
+against hers, and hot tears not her own were on her cheek. Then he was
+shaking his head as if to shake off the strong emotion.
+
+"It's not likely to happen, dear. The casualties in this war are
+tremendously lower than in--"
+
+"I know," she interrupted. "Of course, they are. Of course, you're
+coming home without a scratch, and likely a general, and conceited
+beyond words. How will we stand you!"
+
+Brock laughed delightedly. "You're a peach," he stated. "That's the
+sort. Laughing mothers to send us off--it makes a whale of a
+difference."
+
+That October afternoon had now dropped eight months back, and still the
+house seemed lost without Brock, especially on this June twentieth, the
+day that was his and hers, the day when there had always been "doings"
+second only to Christmas at Lindow. But she gathered up her courage like
+a woman. Hugh the elder was coming tonight from his dollar-a-year work
+in Washington, her man who had moved heaven and earth to get into active
+service, and who, when finally refused because of his forty-nine years
+and a defective eye, had left his great business as if it were a joke,
+and had put his whole time, and strength, and experience, and fortune at
+the service of the Government--as plenty of other American men were
+doing. Hugh was coming in time for her birthday dinner, and young Hugh
+was with them--Her heart shrank as if a sharp thing touched it. How
+would it be when they rose to drink Brock's health? She knew pretty well
+what her cousin, the judge, would say:
+
+"The soldier in France! God bring him home well and glorious!"
+
+How would it be for her other boy then, the boy who was not in France?
+Unphrased, a thought flashed, "I hope, I do hope Hughie will be very
+lame tonight."
+
+The little dog slipped from her and barked in remonstrance as she threw
+out her hands and stood up. Old Mavourneen pulled herself to her feet,
+too, a huge, beautiful beast, and the woman stooped and put her arm
+lovingly about the furry neck. "Mavourneen, you know a lot. You know our
+Brock's away." At the name the big dog whined and looked up anxious,
+inquiring. "And you know--do you know, dear dog, that Hughie ought to
+go? Do you? Mavourneen, it's like the prayer-book says, 'The burden of
+it is intolerable.' I can't bear to lose him, and I can't, O God! I
+can't bear to keep him." She straightened. "As you say, Mavourneen,
+it's time to dress for dinner."
+
+The birthday party went better than one could have hoped. Nobody broke
+down at Brock's name; everybody exulted in the splendid episode of his
+heroism, months back, which had won him the war cross. The letter from
+Jim Colledge and his own birthday letter, garrulous and gay, were read.
+Brock had known well that the day would be hard to get through and had
+made that letter out of brutal cheerfulness. Yet every one felt his
+longing to be at the celebration, missed for the first time in his life,
+pulsing through the words. Young Hugh read it and made it sweet with a
+lovely devotion to and pride in his brother. A heart of stone could not
+have resisted Hugh that night. And then the party was over, and the
+woman and her man, seeing each other seldom now, talked over things for
+an hour. After, through her open door, she saw a bar of light under the
+door of the den, Brock's and Hugh's den.
+
+"Hughie," she spoke, and on the instant the dark panel flashed into
+light.
+
+"Come in, Mummy, I've been waiting to talk to you."
+
+"Waiting, my lamb?"
+
+Hugh pushed her, as a boy shoves a sister, into the end of the sofa.
+There was a wood fire on the hearth in front of her, for the June
+evening was cool, and luxurious Hugh liked a fire. A reading lamp was
+lighted above Brock's deep chair, and there were papers on the floor by
+it, and more low lights. There were magazines about, and etchings on the
+walls, and bits of university plunder, and the glow of rugs and of
+books. It was as fascinating a place as there was in all the beautiful
+house. In the midst of the bright peace Hugh stood haggard.
+
+"Hughie! What is it?"
+
+"Mother," he whispered, "help me!"
+
+"With my last drop of blood, Hugh."
+
+"I can't go on--alone--mother." His eyes were wild, and his words
+labored into utterance. "I--I don't know what to do--mother."
+
+"The war, Hughie?"
+
+"Of course! What else is there?" he flung at her.
+
+"But your knee?"
+
+"Oh, Mummy, you know as well as I that my knee is well enough. Dad knows
+it, too. The way he looks at me--or dodges looking! Mummy--I've got to
+tell you--you'll have to know--and maybe you'll stop loving me. I'm--"
+He threw out his arms with a gesture of despair. "I'm--afraid to go."
+With that he was on his knees beside her, and his arms gripped her, and
+his head was hidden in her lap. For a long minute there was only
+silence, and the woman held the young head tight.
+
+Hugh lifted his face and stared from blurred eyes. "A man might better
+be dead than a coward--you're thinking that? That's it." A sob stopped
+his voice, the young, dear voice. His face, drawn into lines of age,
+hurt her unbearably. She caught him against her and hid the beloved,
+impossible face.
+
+"Hugh--I--judging you--I? Why, Hughie, I _love_ you--I only love you. I
+don't stand off and think, when it's you and Brock. I'm inside your
+hearts, feeling it with you. I don't know if it's good or bad. It's--my
+own. Coward--Hughie! I don't think such things of my darling."
+
+"'There's no--friend like a mother,'" stammered young Hugh, and tears
+fell unashamed. His mother had not seen the boy cry since he was ten
+years old. He went on. "Dad didn't say a word, because he wouldn't spoil
+your birthday, but the way he dodged--my knee--" He laughed miserably
+and swabbed away tears with the corner of his pajama coat. "I wish I had
+a hanky," he complained. The woman dried the tear-stained cheeks hastily
+with her own. "Dad's got it in for me," said Hugh. "I can tell. He'll
+make me go--now. He--he suspects I went skating that day hoping I'd
+fall--and--I know it wasn't so darned unlikely. Yes--I did--not the first
+time--when I smashed it; that was entirely--luck." He laughed again, a
+laugh that was a sob. "And now--oh, Mummy, have I _got_ to go into that
+nightmare? I hate it so. I am--I _am_--afraid. If--if I should be there
+and--and sent into some terrible job--shell-fire--dirt--smells--dead men
+and horses--filth--torture--mother, I might run. I don't feel sure. I
+can't trust Hugh Langdon--he might run. Anyhow"--the lad sprang to his
+feet and stood before her--"anyhow--why am _I_ bound to get into this? I
+didn't start it. My Government didn't. And I've everything, _everything_
+before me here. I didn't tell you, but that editor said--he said I'd be
+one of the great writers of the time. And I love it, I love that job. I
+can do it. I can be useful, and successful, and an honor to you--and
+happy, oh, so happy! If only I may do as Arnold said, be one of
+America's big writers! I've everything to gain here; I've everything to
+lose there." He stopped and stood before her like a flame.
+
+And from the woman's mouth came words which she had not thought, as if
+other than herself spoke them. "'What shall it profit a man,'" she
+spoke, "'if he gain the whole world and lose his own soul?'"
+
+At that the boy plunged on his knees in collapse and sobbed miserably.
+"Mother, mother! Don't be merciless."
+
+"Merciless! My own laddie!" There seemed no words possible as she
+stroked the blond head with shaking hand. "Hughie," she spoke when his
+sobs quieted. "Hughie, it's not how you feel; it's what you do. I
+believe thousands and thousands of boys in this unwarlike country have
+gone--are going--through suffering like yours."
+
+Hugh lifted wet eyes. "Do you think so, Mummy?"
+
+"Indeed I do. Indeed I do. And I pray that the women who love them
+are--faithful. For I know, I _know_ that if a woman lets her men, if a
+mother let her sons fail their country now, those sons will never
+forgive her. It's your honor I'm holding to, Hughie, against human
+instinct. After this war, those to be pitied won't be the sonless
+mothers or the crippled soldiers--it will be the men of fighting age who
+have not fought. Even if they could not, even at the best, they will
+spend the rest of their lives explaining why."
+
+Hugh sat on the sofa now, close to her, and his head dropped on her
+shoulder. "Mummy, that's some comfort, that dope about other fellows
+taking it as I do. I felt lonely. I thought I was the only coward in
+America. Dad's condemning me; he can't speak to me naturally. I felt as
+if"--his voice faltered--"as if I couldn't stand it if you hated me,
+too."
+
+The woman laughed a little. "Hughie, you know well that not anything to
+be imagined could stop my loving you."
+
+He went on, breathing heavily but calmed. "You think that even if I am a
+blamed fool, if I went anyhow--that I'd rank as a decent white man? In
+your eyes--Dad's--my own?"
+
+"I know it, Hughie. It's what you do, not how you feel doing it."
+
+"If Brock would hold my hand!" The eyes of the two met with a dim smile
+and a memory of the childhood so near, so utterly gone. "I'd like Dad to
+respect me again," the boy spoke in a wistful, uncertain voice. "It's
+darned wretched to have your father despise you." He looked at her
+then. "Mummy, you're tired out; your face is gray. I'm a beast to keep
+you up. Go to bed, dear."
+
+He kissed her, and with his arm around her waist led her through the
+dark hall to the door of her room, and kissed her again. And again, as
+she stood and watched there, he turned on the threshold of the den and
+threw one more kiss across the darkness, and his face shone with a smile
+that sent her to bed, smiling through her tears. She lay in the
+darkness, fragrant of honeysuckle outside, and her sore heart was full
+of the boys--of Hugh struggling in his crisis; still more, perhaps, of
+Brock whose birthday it was, Brock in France, in the midst of "many and
+great dangers," yet--she knew--serene and buoyant among them because his
+mind was "stayed." Not long these thoughts held her; for she was so
+deadened with the stress of many emotions that nature asserted itself
+and shortly she feel asleep.
+
+It may have been two or three hours she slept. She knew afterward that
+it must have been at about three of the summer morning when a dream
+came which, detailed and vivid as it was, probably filled in time only
+the last minute or so before awakening. It seemed to her that glory
+suddenly flooded the troubled world; the infinite, intimate joy,
+impossible to put into words, was yet a defined and long first chapter
+of her dream. After that she stood on the bank of a river, a river
+perhaps miles wide, and with the new light-heartedness filling her she
+looked and saw a mighty bridge which ran brilliant with many-colored
+lights, from her to the misty further shore of the river. Over the
+bridge passed a throng of radiant young men, boys, all in uniform. "How
+glorious!" she seemed to cry out in delight, and with that she saw
+Brock.
+
+Very far off, among the crowd of others, she saw him, threading his way
+through the throng. He came, unhurried yet swift, and on his face was an
+amused, loving smile which was perhaps the look of him which she
+remembered best. By his side walked old Mavourneen, the wolf-hound,
+Brock's hand on the shaggy head. The two swung steadily toward her,
+Brock smiling into her eyes, holding her eyes with his, and as they
+were closer, she heard Mavourneen crying in wordless dumb joy, crying as
+she had not done since the day when Brock came home the last time. Above
+the sound Brock's voice spoke, every trick of inflection so familiar, so
+sweet, that the joy of it was sharp, like pain.
+
+"Mother, I'm coming to take Hughie's hand--to take Hughie's hand," he
+repeated.
+
+And with that Mavourneen's great cry rose above his voice. And suddenly
+she was awake. Somewhere outside the house, yet near, the dog was
+loudly, joyfully crying. Out of the deep stillness of the night burst
+the sound of the joyful crying.
+
+The woman shot from her bed and ran barefooted, her heart beating madly,
+into the darkness of the hall to the landing on the stairway. Something
+halted her. There was a broad, uncurtained pane of glass in the front
+door of the house. From the landing one might look down the stone steps
+outside and see clearly in the bright moonlight as far as the beginning
+of the rose archway. As she stood gasping, from beneath the flowers
+Brock stepped into the moonlight and began, unhurried, buoyant, as she
+had but now seen him in her dream, to mount the steps. Mavourneen
+pressed at his side, and his hand was on the dog's head. As he came, he
+lifted his face to his mother with the accustomed, every-day smile which
+she knew, as if he were coming home, as he had come home on many a
+moonlit evening from a dance in town to talk the day over with her. As
+she stared, standing in the dark on the landing, her pulse racing, yet
+still with the stillness of infinity, an arm came around her, a hand
+gripped her shoulder, and young Hugh's voice spoke.
+
+"Mother! It's Brock!" he whispered.
+
+At the words she fled headlong down to the door and caught at the
+handle. It was fastened, and for a moment she could not think of the
+bolt. Brock stood close outside; she saw the light on his brown head and
+the bend in the long, strong fingers that caressed Mavourneen's fur. He
+smiled at her happily--Brock--three feet away. Just as the bolt
+loosened, with an inexplicable, swift impulse she was cold with terror.
+For the half of a second, perhaps, she halted, possessed by some
+formless fear stronger than herself--humanity dreading something not
+human, something unknown, overwhelming. She halted not a whole
+second--for it was Brock. Brock! Wide open she flung the door and sprang
+out.
+
+There was no one there. Only Mavourneen stood in the cold moonlight, and
+cried, and looked up, puzzled, at empty air.
+
+"Oh, Brock, Brock! Oh, dear Brock!" the woman called and flung out her
+arms. "Brock--Brock--don't leave me. Don't go!"
+
+Mavourneen sniffed about the dark hall, investigating to find the master
+who had come home and gone away so swiftly. With that young Hugh was
+lifting her in his arms, carrying her up the broad stairs into his room.
+"You're barefooted," he spoke brokenly.
+
+She caught his hand as he wrapped her in a rug on the sofa. "Hugh--you
+saw--it was Brock?"
+
+"Yes, dearest, it was our Brock," answered Hugh stumblingly.
+
+"You saw--and I--and Mavourneen."
+
+"Mavonrneen is Irish," young Hugh said. "She has the second sight," and
+the big old dog laid her nose on the woman's knee and lifted topaz eyes,
+asking questions, and whimpered broken-heartedly.
+
+"Dear dog," murmured the woman and drew the lovely head to her. "You saw
+him." And then; "Hughie--he came to tell us. He is--dead."
+
+"I think so," whispered young Hugh with bent head.
+
+Then, fighting for breath, she told what had happened--the dream, the
+intense happiness of it, how Brock had come smiling. "And Hugh, the only
+thing he said, two or three times over, was, 'I'm coming to take
+Hughie's hand.'"
+
+The lad turned upon her a shining look. "I know, mother. I didn't hear,
+of course, but I knew, when I saw him, it was for me, too. And I'm
+ready. I see my way now. Mother, get Dad."
+
+Hugh, the elder, still sleeping in his room at the far side of the
+house, opened heavy eyes. Then he sprang up. "Evelyn! What is it?"
+
+"Oh, Hugh--come! Oh, Hugh! Brock--Brock--" She could not say the words;
+there was no need. Brock's father caught her hands. In bare words then
+she told him.
+
+"My dear," urged the man, "you've had a vivid dream. That's all. You
+were thinking about the boys; you were only half awake; Mavourneen began
+to cry--the dog means Brock. It was easy--" his voice faltered--"to--to
+believe the rest."
+
+"Hugh, I _know_, dear. Brock came to tell me. He said he would." Later,
+that day, when a telegram arrived from the War Office there was no new
+shock, no added certainty to her assurance. She went on: "Hughie saw
+him. And Mavourneen. But I can't argue. We still have a boy, Hugh, and
+he needs us--he's waiting. Oh, my dear, Hughie is going to France!"
+
+"Thank God!" spoke Hugh's father.
+
+Hand tight in hand like young lovers the two came across to the room
+where their boy waited, tense. "Father--Dad--you'll give me back your
+respect, won't you?" The strong young hand held out was shaking.
+"Because I'm going, Dad. But you have to know that I was--a coward."
+
+"_No_, Hugh."
+
+"Yes. And Dad, I'm afraid--now. But I've got the hang of things, and
+nothing could keep me. Will you, do you despise me--now--that I still
+hate it--if--if I go just the same?"
+
+The big young chap shook so that his mother, his tall mother, put her
+arms about him to steady him. He clutched her hand hard and repeated,
+through quivering lips, "Would you despise me still, Dad?"
+
+For a moment the father could not answer. Then difficult tears of
+manhood and maturity forced their way from his eyes and unheeded rolled
+down his cheeks. With a step he put his arms about the boy as if the boy
+were a child, and the boy threw his about his father's shoulders.
+
+For a long second the two tall men stood so. The woman, standing apart,
+through the shipwreck of her earthly life was aware only of happiness
+safe where sorrow and loss could not touch it. What was separation,
+death itself, when love stronger than death held people together as it
+held Hugh and her boys and herself? Then the older Hugh stood away,
+still clutching the lad's hand, smiling through unashamed tears.
+
+"Hugh," he said, "in all America there's not a man prouder of his son
+than I am of you. There's not a braver soldier in our armies than the
+soldier who's to take my name into France." He stopped and steadied
+himself; he went on: "It would have broken my heart, boy, if you had
+failed--failed America. And your mother--and Brock and me. Failed your
+own honor. It would have meant for us shame and would have bowed our
+heads; it would have meant for you disaster. Don't fear for your
+courage, Hugh; the Lord won't forsake the man who carries the Lord's
+colors."
+
+Young Hugh turned suddenly to his mother. "I'm at peace now. You and
+Dad--honor me. I'll deserve respect from--my country. It will be a wall
+around me--And--" he caught her to him and crushed his mouth to
+hers--"dearest--Brock will hold my hand."
+
+
+
+
+THE SILVER STIRRUP
+
+
+In the most unexpected spots vital sparks of history blaze out. Time
+seems, once in a while, powerless to kill a great memory. Romance blooms
+sometimes untarnished across centuries of commonplace. In a new world
+old France lives.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It is computed that about one-seventh of the French-Canadian population
+of Canada enlisted in the great war. The stampede of heroism seems to
+have left them cold. A Gospel of the Province first congealed the none
+too fiery blood of the _habitants_, small farmers, very poor, thinking
+in terms of narrowest economy, of one pig and ten children, of
+painstaking thrift and a bare margin to subsistence. Such conditions
+stifle world interests. The earthquake which threatened civilization
+disturbed the _habitant_ merely because it hazarded his critical balance
+on the edge of want. The cataclysm over the ocean was none of his
+affair. And his affairs pressed. What about the pig if one went to war?
+And could Alphonse, who is fourteen, manage the farm so that there would
+be vegetables for winter? Tell me that.
+
+When in September, 1914, I went to Canada for two weeks of camping I had
+heard of this point of view. Dick Lindsley and I were met at the Club
+Station on the casual railway which climbs the mountains through Quebec
+Province, by four guides, men from twenty to thirty-five, powerfully
+built chaps, deep-shouldered and slim-waisted, lithe as wild-cats. It
+was a treat to see their muscles, like machines in the pink of order,
+adjust to the heavy _pacquetons_, send a canoe whipping through the
+water. There was one exception to the general physical perfection; one
+of Dick's men, a youngster of perhaps twenty-two, limped. He covered
+ground as well as the others, for all of that; he picked the heaviest
+load and portaged it at an uneven trot, faster than his comrades; he was
+what the _habitants_ call "ambitionne." Dick's canoe was loaded first,
+owing to the fellow's efficiency, and I waited while it got away and
+watched the lame boy. He had an interesting face, aquiline and dark, set
+with vivid light-blue eyes, shooting restless fire. I registered an
+intention to get at this lad's personality. The chance came two days
+later. My men were off chopping on a day, and I suddenly needed to go
+fishing.
+
+"Take Philippe," offered Dick. "He handles a boat better than any of
+them."
+
+Philippe and I shortly slipped into the Guardian's Pool, at the lower
+end of the long lake of the Passes. "It is here, M'sieur," Philippe
+announced, "that it is the custom to take large ones."
+
+By which statement the responsibility of landing record trout was on my
+shoulders. I thought I would have a return whack. My hands in the snarly
+flies and my back to Philippe I spoke around my pipe, yet spoke
+distinctly.
+
+"Why aren't you in France fighting?"
+
+The canoe shivered down its length as if the man at its stern had
+jumped. There was a silence. Then Philippe's deep, boyish voice
+answered.
+
+"As M'sieur sees, one is lame."
+
+I felt a hotness emerging from my flannel collar and rushing up my face
+as I bent over that damned Silver Doctor that wouldn't loose its grip on
+the Black Hackle. I didn't see the Black Hackle or the Silver Doctor for
+a moment. "Beg pardon," I growled. "I forgot." I mumbled platitudes.
+
+"M'sieur le Docteur has right," Philippe announced unruffled. "One
+should fight for France. I have tried to enlist, there are three times,
+explaining that I am '_capable_' though I walk not evenly. But one will
+not have me. Therefore I have shame, me. I have, naturally, more shame
+than another because of Jeanne."
+
+"Because of Jeanne?" I repeated. "Who is Jeanne?"
+
+There was a pause; a queer feeling made me slew around. Philippe's old
+felt hat was being pulled off as if he were entering a church.
+
+"But--Jeanne, M'sieur," he stated as if I must understand. "Jeanne
+d'Arc. _Tiens_--the Maid of France."
+
+"The Maid of France!" I was puzzled. "What has she to do with it?"
+
+"But everything, M'sieur." The vivid eyes flamed. "M'sieur does not
+know, perhaps, that my grandfather fought under Jeanne?"
+
+"Your grandfather!" I flung it at him in scorn. The man was a poor
+lunatic.
+
+"But yes, M'sieur. My grandfather, lui-meme."
+
+"But, Philippe, the Maid of Orleans died in 1431." I remembered that
+date. The Maid is one of my heroic figures.
+
+Philippe shrugged his shoulders. "Oh--as for a _grandpere_! But not the
+_grandpere a present_, he who keeps the grocery shop in St. Raymond.
+Certainly not that grandfather. It is to say the _grandpere_ of that
+_grandpere_. Perhaps another yet, or even two or three more. What does
+it matter? One goes back a few times of grandfathers and behold one
+arrives at him who was armorer for the Maid--to whom she gave the silver
+stirrup."
+
+"The silver stirrup." My Leonard rod bumped along the bow; my flies
+tangled again in the current. I squirmed about till I faced the guide
+in the stern. "Philippe, what in hell do you mean by this drool of
+grandfathers and silver stirrups?"
+
+The boy, perfectly respectful, not forgetting for a second his affair of
+keeping the canoe away from the fish-hole, looked at me squarely, and
+his uncommon light eyes gleamed out of his face like the eyes of a
+prophet. "M'sieur, it is a tale doubtless which seems strange to you,
+but to us others it is not strange. M'sieur lives in New York, and there
+are automobiles and trolley-cars and large buildings _en masse_, and to
+M'sieur the world is made of such things. But there are other things. We
+who live in quiet places, know. One has not too much of excitement, we
+others, so that one remembers a great event which has happened to one's
+family many years. Yes, indeed, M'sieur, centuries. If one has not much
+one guards as a souvenir the tale of the silver stirrup of Jeanne. Yes,
+for several generations."
+
+The boy was apparently unconscious that his remarks were peculiar.
+"Philippe, will you tell me what you mean by a silver stirrup which
+Jeanne d'Arc gave to your ancestors?"
+
+"But with pleasure, M'sieur," he answered readily, with the gracious
+French politeness which one meets among the _habitants_ side by side
+with sad lapses of etiquette. "It is all-simple that the old
+grandfather, the ancient, he who lived in France when the Maid fought
+her wars, was an armorer. '_Ca fait que_'--_sa fak_, Philippe pronounced
+it--'so it happened that on a day the stirrup of the Maid broke as her
+horse plunged, and my grandfather, the ancient, he ran quickly and
+caught the horse's head. And so it happened--_ce fait que_--that my
+grandfather was working at that moment on a fine stirrup of gold for her
+harness, for though they burned her afterwards, they gave her then all
+that there was of magnificence. And the old follow--_le vieux_--whipped
+out the golden stirrup from his pocket, quite prepared for use, so it
+happened--and he put it quickly in the place of the silver one which she
+had been using. And Jeanne smiled. 'You are ready to serve France,
+Armorer.'
+
+"She bent then and looked _le vieux_ in the face--but he was young at
+the time.
+
+"'Are you not Baptiste's son, of Doremy?' asked the Maid.
+
+"'Yes, Jeanne,' said my _grandpere_.
+
+"'Then keep the silver stirrup to remember our village, and God's
+servant Jeanne,' she said, and gave it to him with her hand."
+
+If a square of Gobelin tapestry had emerged from the woods and hung
+itself across the gunwale of my canvas canoe it would not have been more
+surprising. I got my breath. "And the stirrup, what became of it?"
+
+The boy shrugged his shoulders. "_Sais pas_," he answered with French
+nonchalance. "One does not know that. It is a long time, M'sieur le
+Docteur. It was lost, that stirrup, some years ago. It may be a hundred
+years. It may be two hundred. My grandfather, he who keeps the grocery
+shop, has told me that there is a saying that a Martel must go to France
+to find the silver stirrup. In every case I do not know. It is my wish
+to fight for France, but as for the stirrup or Jeanne--_sais pas_."
+Another shrug. With that he was making oration, his light eyes flashing,
+his dark face working with feeling, about the bitterness of being a
+cripple, and unable to go into the army.
+
+"It is not _comme il faut_, M'sieur le Docteur, that a man whose very
+grandfather fought for Jeanne should fail France now in her need.
+Jeanne, one knows, was the saviour of France. Is it not?" I agreed. "It
+is my inheritance, therefore, to fight as my ancient grandfather
+fought." I looked at the lame boy, not knowing the repartee. He began
+again. "Also I am the only one of the family proper to go, except
+Adolphe, who is not very proper, having had a tree to fall on the lungs
+and leave him liable to fits; and also Jacques and Louis are too young,
+and Jean Baptiste he is blind of one eye, God knows. So it is I who
+fail! I fail! Jesus Christ! To stay at home like a coward when France
+needs men!"
+
+"But you are Canadian, Philippe. Your people have been here two hundred
+years."
+
+"M'sieur, I am of France. I belong there with the fighting men." His
+look was a flame, and suddenly I know why he was firing off hot shot at
+me. I am a surgeon.
+
+"What's the matter with your leg?" I asked.
+
+The brilliant eyes flashed. "Ah!" he brought out, "One hoped--If M'sieur
+le Docteur would but see. I may be cured. To be straight--to march!" He
+was trembling.
+
+Later, in the shifting sunshine at the camp door, with the odors of
+hemlocks and balsams about us, the lake rippling below, I had an
+examination. I found that the lad's lameness was a trouble to be cured
+easily by an operation. I hesitated. Was it my affair to root this
+youngster out of safety and send him to death in the _debacle_ over
+there? Yet what right had I to set limits? He wanted to offer his life;
+how could I know what I might be blocking if I withheld the cure? My job
+was to give strength to all I could reach.
+
+"Philippe," I said, "if you'll come to New York next month I'll set you
+up with a good leg."
+
+In September, 1915, Dick and I came up for our yearly trip, but Philippe
+was not with us. Philippe, after drilling at Valcartier, was drilling
+in England. I had lurid post cards off and on; after a while I knew that
+he was "somewhere in France." A grim gray card came with no post-mark,
+no writing but the address and Philippe's labored signature; for the
+rest there were printed sentences: "I am well. I am wounded. I am in
+hospital. I have had no letter from you lately." All of which was struck
+out but the welcome words, "I am well." So far then I had not cured the
+lad to be killed. Then for weeks nothing. It came to be time again to go
+to Canada for the hunting. I wrote the steward to get us four men, as
+usual, and Lindsley and I alighted from the rattling train at the club
+station in September, 1916, with a mild curiosity to see what Fate had
+provided as guides, philosophers and friends to us for two weeks. Paul
+Sioui--that was nice--a good fellow Paul; and Josef--I shook hands with
+Josef; the next face was a new one--ah, Pierre Beaurame--one calls one's
+self that--_on s'appelle comme ca. Bon jour!_ I turned, and got a shock.
+The fourth face, at which I looked, was the face of Philippe Martel. I
+looked, speechless. And with that the boy laughed. "It is that M'sieur
+cannot again cure my leg," answered Philippe, and tapped proudly on a
+calf which echoed with a wooden sound.
+
+"You young cuss," I addressed him savagely. "Do you mean to say you have
+gone and got shot in that very leg I fixed up for you?"
+
+Philippe rippled more laughter--of pure joy--of satisfaction. "But, yes,
+M'sieur le Docteur, that leg _meme_. Itself. In a battle, M'sieur le
+Docteur gave me the good leg for a long enough time to serve France. It
+was all that there was of necessary. As for now I may not fight again,
+but I can walk and portage _comme il faut_. I am _capable_ as a guide.
+Is it not, Josef?" He appealed, and the men crowded around to back him
+up with deep, serious voices.
+
+"Ah, yes, M'sieur."
+
+"_B'en capable!_"
+
+"He can walk like us others--the same!" they assured me impressively.
+
+Philippe was my guide this year. It was the morning after we reached
+camp. "Would M'sieur le Docteur be too busy to look at something?"
+
+I was not. Philippe stood in the camp doorway in the patch of sunlight
+where he had sat two years before when I looked over his leg. He sat
+down again, in the shifting sunshine, the wooden leg sticking out
+straight and pathetic, and began to take the covers off a package. There
+were many covers; the package was apparently valuable. As he worked at
+it the odors of hemlock and balsam, distilled by hot sunlight, rose
+sweet and strong, and the lake splashed on pebbles, and peace that
+passes understanding was about us.
+
+"It was in a bad battle in Lorraine," spoke Philippe into the sunshiny
+peace, "that I lost M'sieur le Docteur's leg. One was in the front
+trench and there was word passed to have the wire cutters ready, and
+also bayonets, for we were to charge across the open towards the
+trenches of the Germans--perhaps one hundred and fifty yards, eight
+_arpents_--acres--as we say in Canada. Our big guns back did the
+preparation, making what M'sieur le Docteur well knows is called a
+_rideau_--a fire curtain. We climbed out of our trench with a shout and
+followed the fire curtain; so closely we followed that it seemed we
+should be killed by our own guns. And then it stopped--too soon, M'sieur
+le Docteur. Very many Boches were left alive in that trench in front,
+and they fired as we came, so that some of us were hit, and so terrible
+was the fire that the rest were forced back to our own trench which we
+had left. It is so sometimes in a fight, M'sieur le Docteur. The big
+guns make a little mistake, and many men have to die. Yet it is for
+France. And as I ran with the others for the shelter of the trench, and
+as the Boches streamed out of their trench to make a counter attack with
+hand-grenades I tripped on something. It was little Rene Dumont, whom
+M'sieur le Docteur remembers. He guided for our camp when Josef was ill
+in the hand two years ago. In any case he lay there, and I could not let
+him lie to be shot to pieces. So I caught up the child and ran with him
+across my shoulders and threw him in the trench, and as he went in there
+was a cry behind me, 'Philippe!'
+
+"I turned, and one waved arms at me--a comrade whom I did not know very
+well--but he lay in the open and cried for help. So I thought of Jeanne
+d'Arc, and how she had no fear, and was kind, and with that, back I
+trotted to get the comrade. But at that second--pouf!--a big noise, and
+I fell down and could not get up. It was the good new leg of M'sieur le
+Docteur which those _sacres_ Boches had blown off with a hand-grenade.
+So that I lay dead enough. And when I came alive it was dark, and also
+the leg hurt--but yes! I was annoyed to have ruined that leg which you
+gave me--M'sieur le Docteur."
+
+I grinned, and something ached inside of me.
+
+Philippe went on. "It was then, when I was without much hope and weak
+and in pain and also thirsty, that a thing happened. It is a business
+without pleasure, M'sieur le Docteur, that--to lie on a battle-field
+with a leg shot off, and around one men dead, piled up--yes, and some
+not dead yet, which is worse. They groan. One feels unable to bear it.
+It grows cold also, and the searchlights of the Boches play so as to
+prevent rescue by comrades. They seem quite horrible, those lights. One
+lives, but one wishes much to die. So it happened that, as I lay there,
+I heard a step coming, not crawling along as the rescuers crawl and
+stopping when the lights flare, but a steady step coming freely. And
+with that I was lifted and carried quickly into a wood. There was a hole
+in the ground there, torn by a shell deeply, and the friend laid me
+there and put a flask to my lips, and I was warm and comforted. I looked
+up and I saw a figure in soldier's clothing of an old time, such as one
+sees in books--armor of white. And the face smiled down at me. 'You will
+be saved,' a voice said; and the words sounded homely, almost like the
+words of my grandfather who keeps the grocery shop. 'You will be saved.'
+It seemed to me that the voice was young and gentle and like a woman's.
+
+"'Who are you?' I asked, and I had a strange feeling, afraid a little
+M'sieur, yet glad to a marvel. I got no answer to my question, but I
+felt something pressed into my hand, and then I spoke, but I suppose I
+was a little delirious, M'sieur, for I heard myself say a thing I had
+not been thinking. 'A Martel must return to France to find the silver
+stirrup'--I said that, M'sieur. Why I do not know. They were the words I
+had heard my grandfather speak. Perhaps the hard feeling in my hand--but
+I cannot explain, M'sieur le Docteur. In any case, there was all at once
+a great thrill through my body, such as I have never known. I sat up
+quickly and stared at the figure. It stood there. M'sieur will probably
+not believe me--the figure stood there in white armor, with a sword--and
+I knew it for Jeanne--the Maid. With that I knew no more. When I woke it
+was day. I was still lying in the crater of the shell which had torn up
+the earth of a very old battle-field, but in my hand I held
+tight--this."
+
+Philippe drew off the last cover with a dramatic flourish and opened the
+box which had been wrapped so carefully. I bent over him. In the box,
+before my eyes, lay an ancient worn and battered silver stirrup. There
+were no words to say. I stared at the boy. And with that suddenly he had
+slewed around clumsily--because of his poor wooden leg--and was on his
+knees at my feet. He held out the stirrup.
+
+"M'sieur le Docteur, you gave me a man's chance and honor, and the joy
+of fighting for France. I can never tell my thanks. I have nothing to
+give you--but this. Take it, M'sieur le Docteur. It is not much, yet to
+me the earth holds nothing so valuable. It is the silver stirrup of
+Jeanne d'Arc. It is yours."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In a glass case on the wall of my library hangs an antique bit of
+harness which is my most precious piece of property. How its story came
+about I do not even try to guess. As Philippe said the action of that
+day took place on a very old battle-field. The shell which made the
+sheltering crater doubtless dug up earth untouched for hundreds of
+years. That it should have dug up the very object which was a tradition
+in the Martel family and should have laid it in the grasp of a Martel
+fighting for France with that tradition at the bottom of his mind seems
+incredible. The story of the apparition of the Maid is incredible to
+laughter, or tears. No farther light is to be got from the boy, because
+he believes his story. I do not try to explain, I place the episode in
+my mind alongside other things incredible, things lovely and spiritual,
+and, to our viewpoint of five years ago, things mad. Many such have
+risen luminous, undesirable, unexplained, out of these last horrible
+years, and wait human thought, it may be human development, to be
+classified. I accept and treasure the silver stirrup as a pledge of
+beautiful human gratitude. I hold it as a visible sign that French blood
+keeps a loyalty to France which ages and oceans may not weaken.
+
+
+
+
+THE RUSSIAN
+
+
+The little dinner-party of grizzled men strayed from the dining-room and
+across the hall into the vast library, arguing mightily.
+
+"The great war didn't do it. World democracy was on the way. The war
+held it back."
+
+It was the United States Senator, garrulous and incisive, who issued
+that statement. The Judge, the host, wasted not a moment in
+contradicting. "You're mad, Joe," he threw at him with a hand on the
+shoulder of the man who was still to him that promising youngster,
+little Joe Burden of The School. "Held back democracy! The war! Quite
+mad, my son."
+
+The guest of the evening, a Russian General who had just finished five
+strenuous years in the Cabinet of the Slav Republic, dropped back a step
+to watch, with amused eyes, strolling through the doorway, the two
+splendid old boys, the Judge's arm around the Senator's shoulders,
+fighting, sputtering, arguing with each other as they had fought and
+argued forty odd years up to date.
+
+Two minutes more and the party of six had settled into deep chairs, into
+a mammoth davenport, before a blazing fire of spruce and birch. Cigars,
+liqueurs, coffee, the things men love after dinner, were there; one had
+the vaguest impression of two vanishing Japanese persons who might or
+might not have brought trays and touched the fire and placed tiny tables
+at each right hand; an atmosphere of completeness was present, one did
+not notice how. One settled with a sigh of satisfaction into comfort,
+and chose a cigar. One laughed to hear the Judge pound away at the
+Senator.
+
+"It's all a game." Dr. Rutherford turned to the Russian. "They're
+devoted old friends, not violent enemies, General. The Senator stirs up
+the Judge by taking impossible positions and defending them savagely.
+The Judge invariably falls into the trap. Then a battle. Their battles
+are the joy of the Century Club. The Senator doesn't believe for an
+instant that the war held back democracy."
+
+At that the Senator whirled. "I don't? But I do.--Don't _smoke_ that
+cigar, Rutherford, on your life. Peter will have these atrocities.
+Here--Kaki, bring the doctor the other box.--That's better.--I don't
+believe what I said? Now listen. How could the fact that the world was
+turned into a military camp, officers commanding, privates obeying,
+rank, rank, rank everywhere throughout mankind, how could that fail to
+hinder democracy, which is in its essence the leveling of ranks? Tell me
+that!"
+
+The doctor grinned at the Russian. "What about it, General? What do you
+think?"
+
+The General answered slowly, with a small accent but in the wonderfully
+good English of an educated Russian. "I do not agree with the
+Sena-torr," he stated, and five heads turned to listen. There was a
+quality of large personality in the burr of the voice, in the poise and
+soldierly bearing, in the very silence of the man, which made his slow
+words of importance. "I believe indeed that the Sena-torr is
+partly--shall I say speaking for argument?"
+
+The Senator laughed.
+
+"The great war, in which all of us here had the honor to bear arms--that
+death grapple of tyranny against freedom--it did not hold back the cause
+of humanity, of democracy, that war. Else thousands upon thousands of
+good lives were given in vain."
+
+There was a hushed moment. Each of the men, men now from fifty to sixty
+years old, had been a young soldier in that Homeric struggle. Each was
+caught back at the words of the Russian to a vision of terrible places,
+of thundering of great guns, of young, generous blood flowing like
+water. The deep, assured tones of the Russian spoke into the solemn
+pause.
+
+"There is an episode of the war which I remember. It goes to show, so
+far as one incident may, where every hour was crowded with drama, how
+forces worked together for democracy. It is the story of a common man of
+my country who was a private in the army of your country, and who was
+lifted by an American gentleman to hope and opportunity, and, as God
+willed it, to honor. My old friend the Judge can tell that episode
+better than I. My active part in it was small. If you like"--the dark
+foreign eyes flashed about the group--"if you like I should much enjoy
+hearing my old friend review that little story of democracy."
+
+There was a murmur of approval. One man spoke, a fighting parson he had
+been. "It argues democracy in itself, General, that a Russian
+aristocrat, the brother of a Duke, should remember so well the
+adventures of a common soldier."
+
+The smouldering eyes of the Slav turned to the speaker and regarded him
+gravely. "I remember those adventures well," he answered.
+
+The Judge, flung back in a corner of the davenport, his knees crossed
+and rings from his cigar ascending, stared at the ceiling, "Come along,
+Peter. You're due to entertain us," the Senator adjured him, and the
+Judge, staring upwards, began.
+
+"This is the year 1947. It was in 1917 that the United States went into
+war--thirty years ago. The fifth of June, 1917, was set, as you
+remember, for the registration of all men in the country over
+twenty-one and under thirty-one for the draft. I was twenty-three,
+living in this house with my father and mother, both dead before the war
+ended. Being outside of the city, the polling place where I was due to
+register was three miles off, at Hiawatha. I registered in the morning;
+the polls were open from seven A.M. to nine P.M. My mother drove me
+over, and the road was being mended, and, as happened in those days in
+the country, half a mile of it was almost impassable. There were no
+adjustable lift-roads invented then. We got through the ruts and
+stonework, but it was hard going, and we came home by a detour through
+the city rather than pass again that beastly half mile. That night was
+dark and stormy, with rain at intervals, and as we sat in this room,
+reading, the three of us--" The Judge paused and gazed a moment at the
+faces in the lamplight, at the chairs where his guests sat. It was as if
+he called back to their old environment for a moment the two familiar
+figures which had belonged here, which had gone out of his life. "We sat
+in this room, the three of us," he repeated, "and the butler came in.
+
+"'If you please, sir, there's a young man here who wants to register,'
+he said.
+
+"'Wants to register!' my father threw at him. 'What do you mean?'
+
+"We all went outside, and there we found not one, but five boys,
+Russians. There was a munitions plant a mile back of us and the lads
+worked there, and had wakened to the necessity of registering at the
+last moment, being new in the country and with little English. They had
+directions to go to the same polling place as mint, Hiawatha, but had
+gotten lost, and, seeing our lights, brought up here. Hiawatha, as I
+said, is three miles away. It was eight-thirty and the polls closed at
+nine. We brought the youngsters inside, and I dashed to the garage for
+the car and piled the delighted lads into it and drove them across.
+
+"At least I tried to. But when we came to the bad half mile the car
+rebelled at going the bit twice in a day, and the motor stalled. There
+we were--eight-forty-five P.M.--polls due to close at nine--a year's
+imprisonment for five well-meaning boys for neglecting to register. I
+was in despair. Then suddenly one of the boys saw a small red light
+ahead, the tail light of an automobile. We ran along and found a big car
+standing in front of a house. As we got there, out from the car stepped
+a woman with a lantern, and as the light swung upward I saw that she was
+tall and fair and young and very lovely. She stopped as the six of us
+loomed out of the darkness. I knew that a professor from the University
+in town had taken this house for the summer, but I don't know the people
+or their name. It was no time to be shy. I gave my name and stated the
+case.
+
+"The girl looked at me. 'I've seen you,' she said. 'I know you are Mr.
+McLane. I'll drive you across. One moment, till I tell my mother.'
+
+"She was in the house and out again without wasting a second, and as she
+flashed into the car I heard a gasp, and I turned and saw in the glare
+of the headlights as they sprang on one of my Russians, a gigantic
+youngster of six feet four or so, standing with his cap off and his head
+bent, as he might have stood before a shrine, staring at the spot where
+the girl had disappeared into the car. Then the engine purred and my
+squad tumbled in.
+
+"We made the polls on the tap of nine. Afterwards we drove back to my
+car and among us, with the lantern, we got the motor running again, the
+girl helping efficiently. The big fellow, when we told her good-night,
+astonished me by dropping on his knees and kissing the edge of her
+skirt. But I put it down to Slavic temperament and took it casually.
+I've learned since what Russian depth of feeling means--and tenacity of
+purpose. There was one more incident. When I finally drove the lads up
+to their village the big chap, who spoke rather good English when he
+spoke at all, which was seldom, invited me to have some beer. I was
+tired and wanted to get home, so I didn't. Then the young giant
+excavated in his pocket and brought out a dollar bill.
+
+"'You get beer tomorrow.' And when I laughed and shoved it back he
+flushed. 'Excuse--Mr. Sir,' he said. 'I make mistake.' Suddenly he drew
+himself up--about to the treetops, it looked, for he was a huge, a
+magnificent lad. He tossed out his arm to me. 'Some day,' he stated
+dramatically, 'I do two things. Some day I give Mr. Sir somethings more
+than dollar--and he will take. And--some day I marry--Miss Angel!'
+
+"You may believe I was staggered. But I simply stuck out my fist and
+shook his and said: 'Good. No reason on earth why a fellow with the
+right stuff shouldn't get anywhere. It's a free country.' And the giant
+drew his black brows together and remarked slowly: 'All
+countries--world--is to be free. War will sweep up kings--and
+other--rubbish. I--shall be--a man.'
+
+"Besides his impressive build, the boy had--had--" the Judge glanced at
+the Russian General, whose eyes glowed at the fire. "The boy had a
+remarkable face. It was cut like a granite hill, in sweeping masses. All
+strength. His eyes were coals. I went home thoughtful, and the Russian
+boy's intense face was in my mind for days, and I told myself many times
+that he not only would be, but already was, a man.
+
+"Events quickstepped after that. I got to France within the year, and,
+as you remember, work was ready. It was perhaps eighteen months after
+that registration day, June fifth, which we keep so rightly now as one
+of our sacred days, that one morning I was in a fight. Our artillery had
+demoralized the enemy at a point and sent them running. There was one
+machine gun left working in the Hun trenches--doing a lot of damage.
+Suddenly it jammed. I was commanding my company, and I saw the chance,
+but also I saw a horrid mess of barbed wire. So I just ran forward a bit
+and up to the wire and started clipping, while that machine gun stayed
+jammed. Out of the corner of an eye I could see men rushing towards it
+in the German trench, and I knew I had only a moment before they got it
+firing again. Then, as I leaped far forward to reach a bit of
+entanglement, my foot slipped in a puddle and as I sprawled I saw our
+uniform and a dead American boy's face under me, and I fell headlong in
+his blood over him and into a bunch of wire. And couldn't get up. The
+wire held like the devil. I got more tied up at every pull. And my
+clippers had fallen from my hand and landed out of reach.
+
+"'It's good night for me,' I thought, and was aware of a sharp regret.
+To be killed because of a nasty bit of wire! I had wanted to do a lot of
+things yet. With that something leaped, and I saw clippers flashing
+close by. A big man was cutting me loose, dragging me out, setting me on
+my feet. Then the roar of an exploding shell; the man fell--fell into
+the wire from which he had just saved me. There was no time to consider
+that; somehow I was back and leading my men--and then we had the
+trenches.
+
+"The rest of that day was confusion, but we won a mile of earthworks,
+and at night I remembered the incident of the wire and the man who
+rescued me. By a miracle I found him in the field hospital. His head was
+bandaged, for the bit of shell had scraped his cheek and jaw, but his
+eyes were safe, and something in the glance out of them was familiar.
+Yet I didn't know him till he drew me over and whispered painfully, for
+it hurt him to talk:
+
+"'Yester--day I did--give Mr. Sir somethings more than dollar. And he
+did--take it.'
+
+"Then I know the big young Russian of registration day who had tried to
+tip me. Bless him! I got him transferred to my command and--" the Judge
+hesitated a bit and glanced at his distinguished guest. One surmised
+embarrassment in telling the story of the General's humble compatriot.
+
+The General rose to his feet and stood before the fire facing the
+handful of men. "I can continue this anecdote from the point that is
+more easily than my friend the Judge," spoke the General. "I was in the
+confidence of that countryman of mine. I know. It was so that after he
+had been thus slightly useful to my friend the Judge, who was the
+Captain McLane at that time--"
+
+The Judge broke in with a shout of deep laughter worthy of a boy of
+eighteen. "He 'slightly obliged me by saving my life." The American,
+threw that into the Russian's smooth sentences. "I put that fact before
+the jury."
+
+The four men listening laughed also, but the Russian held up a hand and
+went on gravely: "It was quite simple, that episode, and the man's
+pleasure. I knew him well. But what followed was not ordinary. The
+Captain McLane saw to it that the soldier had his chance. He became an
+officer. He went alive through the war, and at the end the Captain
+McLane made it possible that he should be educated. His career was a
+gift from the Captain McLane--from my friend the Judge to that man, who
+is now--" the finished sentence halted a mere second--"who is now a
+responsible person of Russia.
+
+"And it is the incident of that sort, it is that incident itself which I
+know, which leads me to combat--" he turned with a deep bow--"the
+position of the Sena-torr that the great war did not make for democracy.
+Gentlemen, my compatriot was a peasant, a person of ignorance, yet with
+a desire of fulfilling his possibilities. He had been born in social
+chains and tied to most sordid life, beyond hope, in old Russia. To try
+to shake free he had gone to America. But it was that caldron of fire,
+the war, which freed him, which fused his life and the life of the
+Captain McLane, so different in opportunity, and burned from them all
+trivialities and put them, stark-naked of advantages and of drawbacks
+artificial, side by side, as two lives merely. It made them--brothers.
+One gave and the other took as brothers without thought of false pride.
+They came from the furnace men. Both. Which is democracy--a chance for a
+tree to grow, for a flame to burn, for a river to flow; a chance for a
+man to become a man and not rest a vegetable anchored to the earth
+as--Oh, God!--for many centuries the Russian mujiks have rested. It is
+that which I understand by democracy. Freedom of development for
+everything which wants to develop. It was the earthquake of war which
+broke chains, loosened dams, cleared the land for young forests. It was
+war which made Russia a republic, which threw down the kingships, which
+joined common men and princes as comrades. God bless that liberating
+war! God grant that never in all centuries may this poor planet have
+another! God save democracy--humanity! Does the Sena-torr yet believe
+that the great war retarded democracy?" The Russian's brilliant,
+smouldering eyes swept about, inquiring.
+
+There was a hush in the peaceful, firelit, lamp-lit room. And with that,
+as of one impulse, led by the Senator, the five men broke into
+handclapping. Tears stood in eyes, faces were twisted with emotion; each
+of these men had seen what the thing was--war; each knew what a price
+humanity had paid for freedom. Out of the stirring of emotion, out of
+the visions of trenches and charges and blood and agony and heroism and
+unselfishness and steadfastness, the fighting parson, he who had bent,
+under fire, many a day over dying men who waited his voice to help them
+across the border--the parson led the little company from the intense
+moment to commonplace.
+
+"You haven't quite finished the story, General. The boy promised to do
+two things. He did the first; he gave the Judge 'something more than a
+dollar,' and the Judge took it--his life. But he said also he was going
+to marry--what did he call her?--Miss Angel. How about that?"
+
+The Russian General, standing on the hearthrug, appeared to draw himself
+up suddenly with an access of dignity, and the Judge's boyish big laugh
+broke into the silence, "Tell them, Michael," said the Judge. "You've
+gone so far with the fairy story that they have a right to know the
+crowning glory of it. Tell them."
+
+And suddenly the men sitting about noticed with one accord what,
+listening to the General's voice, they had not thought about--that the
+Russian was uncommonly tall--six feet four perhaps; that his face was
+carved in sweeping lines like a granite hillside, and that an old, long
+scar stretched from the vivid eyes to the mouth. The men stared,
+startled with a sudden simultaneous thought. The Judge, watching,
+smiled. Slowly the General put his hand into the breast pocket of his
+evening coat; slowly he drew out a case of dark leather, tooled
+wonderfully, set with stones. He opened the case and looked down; the
+strong face changed as if a breeze and sunshine passed over a mountain.
+He glanced up at the men waiting.
+
+"I am no Duke's brother," he said, smiling, suddenly radiant. "That is a
+mistake of the likeness of a name, which all the world makes. I am born
+a mujik of Russia. But you, sir," and he turned to the parson, "you wish
+an answer of 'Miss Angel,' as the big peasant boy called that lovely
+spirit, so far above him in that night, so far above him still, and yet,
+God be thanked, so close today! Yes? Then this is my answer." He held
+out the miniature set with jewels.
+
+
+
+
+ROBINA'S DOLL
+
+
+Massive, sprawling, uncertain writing, two sentences to the page; a
+violent slant in the second line, down right, balanced by a drastic
+lessening of the letters, up right, in the line underneath; spelling not
+as advised in the Century Dictionary--a letter from Robina, aged eight.
+Robina's Aunt Evelyn, sitting in her dress and cap of a Red Cross nurse
+in the big base hospital in Paris, read the wandering, painstaking, very
+unsuccessful literary effort, laughing, half-crying, and kissed it
+enthusiastically.
+
+"The darling baby! She shall have her doll if it takes--" Aunt Evelyn
+stopped thoughtfully.
+
+It would take something serious to buy and equip the doll that Robina,
+with eight-year-old definiteness, had specified. The girl in the Red
+Cross dress read the letter over.
+
+"Dear Aunt Evelyn," began Robina and struck no snags so far. "I liked
+your postcard so much." (The facilis descensus to an averni of
+literature began with a swoop down here.) "Mother is wel. Fother is wel.
+The baby is wel. The dog has sevven kitens." (Robina robbed Peter to pay
+Paul habitually in her spelling.) "Fother sais they lukk like choklit
+eclares. I miss you, dere Aunt Evelyn, because I lov you sew. I hope
+Santa Claus wil bring me a doll. I want a very bigg bride doll with a
+vale and flours an a trunk of close, and all her under-close to buton
+and unboton and to have pink ribons run into. I don't want anythig sode
+on. Come home, Aunt Evelyn, becaus I miss you. But if the poor wundead
+soljers ned you then don't come. But as soone as you can come to yure
+loving own girl--ROBINA."
+
+The dear angel! Every affectionate, labored word was from the warm
+little heart; Evelyn Bruce knew that. She sat, smiling, holding the
+paper against her, seeing a vision of the faraway, beloved child who
+wrote it. She saw the dancing, happy brown eyes and the shining, cropped
+head of pale golden brown, and the straight, strong little figure; she
+heard the merry, ready giggle and the soft, slow tones that were always
+full of love to her. Robina, her sister's child, her own god-daughter
+had been her close friend from babyhood, and between them there was a
+bond of understanding which made nothing of the difference in years.
+Darling little Robina! Such a good, unspoiled little girl, for all of
+the luxury and devotion that surrounded her!
+
+But--there was a difficulty just there. Robina was unspoiled indeed,
+yet, as the children of the very rich, she was, even at eight,
+sophisticated in a baby way. She had been given too many grand dolls not
+to know just the sort she wanted. She did not know that what she wanted
+cost money, but she knew the points desired--and they did cost money.
+Aunt Evelyn had not much money.
+
+"This one extravagant thing I will do," said Evelyn Bruce, "and I'll
+give up my trip to England next week, and I'll do it in style. Robina
+won't want dolls much longer and this time she's got to have her heart's
+desire."
+
+Which was doubtless foolish, yet when one is separated by an ocean and a
+war from one's own, it is perhaps easier to be foolish for a child's
+face and a child's voice, and love sent across the sea. So Evelyn Bruce
+wrote a letter to her cousin in England saying that she could not come
+to her till after Christmas. Then she went out into Paris and ordered
+the doll, and reveled in the ordering, for a very gorgeous person indeed
+it was, and worthy to journey from Paris to a little American. It was to
+be ready in just two weeks, and Miss Bruce was to come in and look over
+the fine lady and her equipment as often as desired, before she started
+on her ocean voyage.
+
+"It would simply break my heart if she were torpedoed."
+
+Evelyn confided that, childlike, to the black-browed, stout Frenchwoman
+who took a personal interest in every "buton," and then she opened her
+bag and brought out Robina's photograph, standing, in a ruffled bonnet,
+her solemn West Highland White terrier dog in her arms, on the garden
+path of "Graystones" between tall foxgloves. And the Frenchwoman tossed
+up enraptured hands at the beauty of the little girl who was to get the
+doll, and did not miss the great, splendid house in the background, or
+the fact that the dog was of a "_chic_" variety.
+
+The two weeks fled, every day full of the breathless life--and death--of
+a hospital in war-torn France. Every day the girl saw sights and heard
+sounds which it seemed difficult to see and hear and go on living, but
+she moved serene through such an environment, because she could help.
+Every day she gave all that was in her to the suffering boys who were
+carried, in a never-ending stream of stretchers, into the hospital. And
+the strength she gave flowed back to her endlessly from, she could not
+but believe it, the underlying source of all strength, which stretches
+beneath and about us all, and from which those who give greatly know how
+to draw.
+
+Two or three times, during the two weeks, Evelyn had gone in to inspect
+the progress of Robina's doll, and spent a happy and light-hearted
+quarter of an hour with friendly Madame of the shop, deciding the color
+of the lady's party coat, and of the ribbons in her minute underclothes,
+and packing and repacking the trunk with enchanting fairy
+foolishnesses. Again and again she smiled to herself, in bed at night,
+going about her work in the long days, as she thought of the little
+girl's rapture over the many and carefully planned details. For, with
+all the presents showered on her, Robina's aunt knew that Robina had
+never had anything as perfect as this exquisite Paris doll and her
+trousseau.
+
+The day came on which Evelyn was to make her final visit to "La
+Marquise," as Madame called the doll, and the nurse was needed in the
+hospital and could not go. But she telephoned Madame and made an
+appointment for tomorrow.
+
+"'La Marquise' finds herself quite ready for the voyage," Madame spoke
+over the telephone. "She is all which there is of most lovely; Paris
+itself has never seen a so ravishing doll. I say it. We wait anxiously
+to greet Mademoiselle, I and La Marquise," Madame assured her. Evelyn,
+laughing with sheer pleasure, made an engagement for the next day,
+without fail, and went back to her work.
+
+There was a badly wounded _poilu_ in her ward, whom the girl had come to
+know well. He was young, perhaps twenty-seven, and his warm brown eyes
+were full of a quality of gentleness which endeared him to everyone who
+came near him. He was very grateful, very uncomplaining, a
+simple-minded, honest, common, young peasant, with a charm uncommon. The
+unending bright courage with which he made light of cruel pain, was
+almost more than Evelyn, used as she was to brave men's pain, could
+bear. He could not get well--the doctors said that--and it seemed that
+he could not die.
+
+"If Corporal Duplessis might die," Evelyn spoke to the surgeon.
+
+He answered, considering: "I don't see what keeps him alive."
+
+"I believe," said Evelyn, "there's something on his mind. He sighs
+constantly. Broken-heartedly. I believe he can't die until his mind is
+relieved."
+
+"It may be that," agreed Dr. Norton. "You could help him if you could
+get him to tell you." And moved on to the next shattered thing that had
+been, so lately, a strong, buoyant boy.
+
+Evelyn went back to Duplessis and bent over him and spoke cheerful
+words; he smiled up at her with quick French responsiveness, and then
+sighed the heavy, anxious sigh which had come to be part of him. With
+that the girl took his one good hand and stroked it. "If you could tell
+the American Sister what it is," she spoke softly, "that troubles your
+mind, perhaps I might help you. We Americans, you know," and she smiled
+at him, "we are wonderful people. We can do all sorts of magic--and I
+want to help you to rest, so much. I'd do anything to help you. Won't
+you tell me what it is that bothers?" Evelyn Bruce's voice was winning,
+and Duplessis' eyes rested on her affectionately.
+
+"But how the Sister understands one!" he said. "It is true that there is
+a trouble. It hinders me to die"--and the heavy sigh swept out again.
+"It would be a luxury for me--dying. The pain is bad, at times. Yet the
+Sister knows I am glad to have it, for France. Ah, yes! But--if I might
+be released. Yet the thought of what I said to her keeps me from dying
+always."
+
+"What you said 'to her,' corporal?" repeated Evelyn. "Can't you tell me
+what it was? I would try so hard to help you. I might perhaps."
+
+"Who knows?" smiled the corporal, "It is true that Americans work magic.
+And the Sister is of a goodness! But yes. Yet the Sister may laugh at
+me, for it is a thing entirely childish, my trouble."
+
+"I will not laugh at you, Corporal," said Evelyn, gravely, and felt
+something wring her heart.
+
+"If--then--if the Sister will not think it foolish--I will tell." The
+Sister's answer was to stroke his fingers. "It is my child, my little
+girl," Duplessis began in his deep, weak tones. "It was to her I made
+the promise."
+
+"What promise?" prompted Evelyn softly, as he stopped.
+
+"One sees," the deep voice began again, "that when I told them goodbye,
+the mother and Marie my wife, and the _petite_, who has five years,
+then I started away, and would not look back, because I could not well
+bear it, Sister. And suddenly, as I strode to the street from our
+cottage, down the brick walk, where there are roses and also other
+flowers, on both sides--suddenly I heard a cry. And it was the voice of
+little Jeanne, the _petite_. I turned at that sound, for I could not
+help it, Sister, and between the flowers the little one came running,
+and as I bent she threw her arms about my neck and held me so tight,
+tight that I could not loosen the little hands, not without hurting her.
+'I will not let you go--I will not let you go.' She cried that again and
+again. Till my heart was broken. But all the same, one had to go. One
+was due to join the comrades at the station, and the time was short. So
+that, immediately, I had a thought. 'My most dear,' I spoke to her. 'If
+thou wilt let me go, then I promise to send thee a great, beautiful
+doll, all in white, as a bride, like the cousin Annette at her wedding
+last week.' And then the clinging little hands loosened, and she said,
+wondering--for she is but a baby--'Wilt thou promise, my father?' And I
+said, 'Yes,' and kissed her quickly, and went away. So that now that I
+am wounded and am to die, that promise which I cannot keep to my
+_petite_, that promise hinders me to die."
+
+The deep, sad voice stopped and the honest eyes of the peasant boy
+looked up at Evelyn, burning with the pain of his body and of his soul.
+And as Evelyn looked back, holding his hand and stroking it, it was as
+if the furnace of the soldier's pain melted together all the things she
+had ever cared to do. Yet it was a minute before she spoke.
+
+"Corporal," she said, "your little girl shall have her doll, I will take
+it to her and tell her that her father sent it. Will you lie very still
+while I go and get the doll?"
+
+The brown eyes looked up at her astounded, radiant, and the man caught
+the hem of her white veil and kissed it. "But the Americans--they do
+magic. You shall see, Sister, if I shall be still. I will not die before
+the Sister returns. It is a joy unheard of."
+
+The girl ran out of the hospital and away into Paris, and burst upon
+Madame. Somehow she told the story in a few words, and Madame was crying
+as she laid "La Marquise" in a box.
+
+"It is Mademoiselle who is an angel of the good God," she whispered, and
+kissed Evelyn unexpectedly on both cheeks.
+
+Corporal Duplessis lay, waxen, starry-eyed, as the American Sister came
+back into the ward. His look was on her as she entered the far-away
+door, and he saw the box in her arms. The girl knelt and drew out the
+gorgeous plaything and stood it by the side of the still, bandaged
+figure. An expression as of amazed radiance came into the fast-dimming
+eyes--into those large, brown, childlike eyes which had seen so little
+of the gorgeousness of earth. His hand stirred a very little--enough,
+for Evelyn quickly moved the gleaming satin train of the doll under the
+groping fingers. The eyes lifted to Evelyn's face and the smile in them
+was that of a prisoner who suddenly sees the gate of his prison opened
+and the fields of home beyond. It mattered little, one may believe, to
+the welcoming hosts of heaven that the angel at the gate of release for
+the child-soul of Corporal Duplessis, the poilu, was only Robina's doll!
+
+
+
+
+DUNDONALD'S DESTROYER
+
+
+This is the year 1977. It will be objected that the episode I am going
+to tell, having happened in 1917, having been witnessed by twenty-odd
+thousand people, must have been, if true, for sixty years common
+property and an old tale. But when General Cochrane--who saved England
+at the end of the great war--told me the Kitchener incident of the story
+last year, sitting in the rose-garden of the White Hart Inn at
+Sonning-on-Thames, I had never heard of it.
+
+I wonder why he told me. Probably, as is the case in most things which
+most people do, from a mixture of impulses. For one thing I am an
+American girl, with a fresher zest to hear tales of those titanic days
+than the people or the children of the people who lived through them.
+Also the great war of 1914 has stirred me since I was old enough to know
+about it, and I have read everything concerning it which I could lay
+hands on, and talked to everyone who had knowledge of it. Also, General
+Cochrane and I made friends from the first minute. I was a quite
+unimportant person of twenty-four years, he a magnificent hero of
+eighty, one of the proud figures of England; it made me a bit dizzy when
+I saw that he liked me. One feels, once in a long time, an unmistakable
+double pull, and knows that oneself and another are friends, and not
+age, color, race nor previous condition of servitude makes the slightest
+difference. To have that happen with a celebrity, a celebrity whom it
+would have been honor enough simply to meet, is quite dizzying. This was
+the way of it.
+
+I was staying with my cousin Mildred Ward, an Atlanta girl who married
+Sir Cecil Ward, an English baronet of Oxfordshire. I reached
+Martin-Goring on a day in July just in time to dress for dinner. When I
+came down, a bit early, Milly looked me over and pronounced favorably.
+
+"You're not so hard to look at," she pronounced. "It takes an American
+really to wear French clothes. I'm glad you're looking well tonight,
+because one of your heroes--Oh!"
+
+She had floated inconsequently against a bookcase in a voyage along the
+big room, and a spray of wild roses from a vase on the shelf caught in
+her pretty gold hair.
+
+"Oh--why does Middleton stick those catchy things up there?" she
+complained, separating the flowers from her hair, and I followed her
+eyes above the shelf.
+
+"Why, that's a portrait of Kitchener--the old great Kitchener, isn't
+it?" I asked. "Did he belong to Cecil's people?"
+
+"No," answered Milly, "only Cecil's grandfather and General Cochrane--or
+something--" her voice trailed. And then, "I've got somebody you'll be
+crazy about tonight, General Cochrane."
+
+"General Cochrane?"
+
+"Oh! You pretend to know about the great war and don't know General
+Cochrane, who saved England when the fleet was wrecked. Don't know him!"
+
+"Oh!" I said again. "Know him? Know him! I know every breath, he drew.
+Only I couldn't believe my ears. The boy Donald Cochrane? It isn't true
+is it? How did you ever, ever--?"
+
+"He lives five miles from us," said Milly, unconcernedly. "We see a lot
+of him. His wife was Cecil's great-aunt. She's dead now. His daughter is
+my best friend. 'The boy Donald Cochrane'!" She smiled a little. "He's
+no boy now. He's old. Even heroes do that--get old."
+
+And with that the footman at the door announced "General Cochrane."
+
+I stared away up at a very tall, soldierly old man with a jagged scar
+across his forehead. His wide-open, black-lashed gray eyes flashed a
+glance like a menace, like a sword, and then suddenly smiled as if the
+sun had jumped from a bank of storm-clouds. And I looked into those
+wonderful eyes and we were friends. As fast as that. Most people would
+think it nonsense, but it happened so. A few people will understand. He
+took me out to dinner, and it was as if no one else was at the table. I
+was aware only of the one heroic personality. At first I dared not speak
+of his history, and then, without planning or intention, my own voice
+astonished my own ears. I announced to him:
+
+"You have been my hero since I was ten years old."
+
+It was a marvelous thing he did, the lad of twenty, even considering
+that the secret was there at his hand, ready for him to use. The
+histories say that--that no matter if he did not invent the device, it
+was his ready wit which remembered it, and his persistence which forced
+the war department to use it. Yes, and his heroism which led the ship
+and all but gave his life. And when he had fulfilled his mission he
+stepped back into the place of a subaltern; he was modest, even
+embarrassed, at the great people who thronged to him. England was saved;
+that was all his affair; nothing, so the books say, could prod him into
+prominence--though he rose to be a General later--after that, after
+being the first man in England for those days. It was this personage
+with whom I had gone out to dinner, and to whom I dared make that sudden
+speech: "You have been my hero, General Cochrane, since I was ten years
+old."
+
+He slued about with the menacing, shrapnel look, and it seemed that
+there might be an explosion of sharp-pointed small bullets over the
+dinner-table.
+
+"Don't!" I begged. The sun came out; the artillery attack was over; he
+looked at me with boyish shyness.
+
+"D'you know, when people say things like that I feel as if I were
+stealing," he told me confidentially. "Anybody else could have done all
+I did. In fact, it wasn't I at all," he finished.
+
+"Not you? Who then? Weren't you the boy Donald Cochrane?"
+
+"Yes," he said, and stopped as if he were considering it. "Yes," he said
+quietly in the clean-cut, terse English manner of speaking, "I suppose I
+was the boy Donald Cochrane." He gazed across the white lilacs and pink
+roses on the table as if dreaming a bit. Then he turned with a long
+breath. "My child," he said, "there is something about you which gives
+me back my youth, and--the freshness of a great experience. I thank
+you."
+
+I gazed into those compelling eyes, gasping like a fish with too much
+oxygen, I felt myself, Virginia Fox, meshed in the fringes of historic
+days, stirred by the rushing mighty wind of that Great Experience. I was
+awestruck into silence. Just then Milly got up, and eight women flocked
+into the library.
+
+I was good for nothing there, simply good for nothing at all. I tried to
+talk to the nice, sensible English women, and I could not. I knew Milly
+was displeased with me for not keeping up my end, but I was sodden with
+thrills. I had sat through a dinner next to General Cochrane, the Donald
+Cochrane who was the most dramatic figure of the world war of sixty
+years ago. It has always moved me to meet persons who even existed at
+that time. I look at them and think what intense living it must have
+meant to pick up a paper and read--as the news of the day, mind
+you--that Germany had entered Belgium, that King Albert was fighting in
+the trenches, that Von Kluck was within seventeen miles of Paris, that
+Von Kluck was retreating--think of the rapture of that--Paris
+saved!--that the Germans had taken Antwerp; that the _Lusitania_ was
+sunk; that Kitchener was drowned at sea! I wonder if the people who
+lived and went about their business in America in those days realized
+that they were having a stage-box for the greatest drama of history? I
+wonder. Terror and heroism and cruelty find self-sacrifice on a scale
+which had never been dreamed, which will never, God grant, need to be
+dreamed on this poor little racked planet again. Of course, there are
+plenty of those people alive yet, and I've talked to many and they
+remember it, all of them remember well, even those who were quite small.
+And it has stirred me simply to look into the eyes of such an one and
+consider that those eyes read such things as morning news. The great war
+has had a hold on me since I first heard of it, and I distinctly
+remember the day, from my father, at the age of seven.
+
+"Can you remember when it happened, father?" I asked him. And then: "Can
+you remember when they drove old people out of their houses--and killed
+them?"
+
+"Yes," said my father. And I burst into tears. And when I was not much
+older he told me about Donald Cochrane, the boy who saved England.
+
+It was not strange to my own mind that I could not talk commonplaces
+now, when I had just spent an hour tailing to the man who had been that
+historic boy--the very Donald Cochrane. I could not talk commonplaces.
+
+Milly's leisurely voice broke my meditation. "I'm sorry that my cousin,
+Virginia Fox, should have such bad manners, Lady Andover," she was
+drawling. "She was brought up to speak when spoken to, but I think it's
+the General who has hypnotized her. Virginia, did you know that Lady
+Andover asked you--" And I came to life.
+
+"It was Miss Fox who hypnotized the General, I fancy," said Lady Andover
+most graciously, considering I had overlooked her existence a second
+before. "He had a word for no one else during dinner." I felt myself go
+scarlet; it had pleased the Marvelous Person, then, to like me a
+little, perhaps for the youth and enthusiasm in me.
+
+With that the men straggled into the room and the tall grizzled head of
+my hero, his lined face conspicuous for the jagged, glorious scar,
+towered over the rest. I saw the vivid eyes flash about, and they met
+mine; I was staring at him, as I must, and my heart all but jumped out
+of me when he came straight to where I stood, my back against the
+bookcase.
+
+"I was looking for you," he said simply.
+
+Then he glanced over my head and his hand shot up in a manner of salute;
+I turned to see why. I was in front of the portrait of Lord Kitchener.
+
+"Did you know him, General Cochrane?" I asked.
+
+"Know him?" he demanded, and the gray glance plunged out at me from
+under the thick lashes.
+
+"Don't do it," I pleaded, putting my hands over my eyes. "When you look
+at me so it's--bombs and bullets." The look softened, but the lean,
+wrinkled face did not smile.
+
+"You asked if I knew Kitchener," he stated.
+
+I spoke haltingly. "I didn't know. Ought I to have known?"
+
+General Cochrane gazed down, all at once dreamy, as if he looked through
+me at something miles and aeons away.
+
+"No," he said. "There's no reason why you should. You have an uncommon
+knowledge of events of that time, an astonishing knowledge for a young
+thing, so that I forget you can't know--all of it." He stopped, as if
+considering. "It is because I am old that I have fancies," he went on
+slowly. "And you have understanding eyes. I have had a fancy this
+evening that you and I were meant to be friends; that a similarity of
+interests, a--a likeness--oh, hang it all!" burst out the General like a
+college boy. "I never could talk except straight and hot. I mean I've a
+feeling of a bond between us--you'll think me most presuming--"
+
+I interrupted, breathless. "It's so," I whispered. "I felt it, only I'd
+not have dared--" and I choked.
+
+Old General Cochrane frowned thoughtfully. "Curious," was what he said.
+"It's psychology of course, but I'm hanged if I know the explanation.
+However, since it's so, my child, I'm glad. A man as old as I makes few
+new friends. And a beautiful young woman--with a brain--and charm--and
+innocent eyes--and French clothes!"
+
+One may guess if I tried to stop this description. I could have listened
+all night. With that:
+
+"'Did I know Kitchener!' the child asked," reflected the General, and
+threw back his splendid head and laughed. I stared up, my heart pumping.
+Then, "Well, rather. Why, little Miss Fox--" and he stopped. "I've a
+mind to tell the child a fairy-story," he said. "A true fairy-story
+which is so extraordinary that few have been found to believe it, even
+of those who saw it happen."
+
+He halted again.
+
+"Tell me!"
+
+General Coehrane looked about the roomful of people and tossed out his
+hand. "In this mob?" he objected. "It's too long a story in any case.
+But why shouldn't you and I have a seance, to let a garrulous old fellow
+talk about his youth?" he demanded in his lordly way. "Why not come out
+on the river in my boat? They'll let you play about with an
+octogenarian, won't they?"
+
+"I'll come," I answered the General eagerly.
+
+"Very good. Tomorrow. Oh, by George, no. That confounded Prime Minister
+comes down to me tomorrow. I detest old men," said General Cochrane.
+"Well, then, the day after?"
+
+The Thames was a picture-book river that day, gay with row-boats and
+punts and launches, yet serene for all its gaiety; slipping between
+grassy banks under immemorial trees with the air of a private stream
+wandering, protected, through an estate. The English have the gift above
+other nations of producing an atmosphere of leisure and seclusion, and
+surely there is no little river on earth so used and so unabused as the
+Thames. Of all the craft abroad that bright afternoon, General
+Cochrane's white launch with its gold line above the water and its
+gleaming brass trimmings was far and away the prettiest, and I was
+bursting with pride as we passed the rank and file on the stream and
+they looked at us admiringly. To be alive on such a day in England was
+something; to be afloat on the silvery Thames was enchantment; to be in
+that lovely boat with General Cochrane, the boy Donald Cochrane, was a
+rapture not to be believed without one's head reeling. Yet here it was
+happening, the thing I should look back upon fifty, sixty years from
+now, an old gray woman, and tell my grandchildren as the most
+interesting event of my life. It was happening, and I was enjoying every
+second, and not in the least awed into misery, as is often the case with
+great moments. For the old officer was as perfect a playmate as any
+good-for-nothing young subaltern in England, and that is putting it
+strongly.
+
+"Wouldn't it be nicer to land at Sonning and have our tea there?" he
+suggested. We were dropping through the lock just higher than the
+village; the wet, mossy walls were rising above us on both sides and the
+tops of the lock-keeper's gorgeous pink snapdragons were rapidly going
+out of sight. My host went on: "There's rather a nice rose-garden, and
+it's on the river, and the plum-cake's good. What do you think, that or
+on board?"
+
+"The rose-garden," I decided.
+
+Sonning is a village cut out of a book and pasted on the earth. It can't
+be true, it's so pretty. And the little White Hart Inn is adorable.
+
+"Is it really three hundred years old?" I asked. "The standard roses
+look like an illustration out of 'Alice in Wonderland.' Yes, please--tea
+in the White Hart garden."
+
+The old General heaved a sigh. "Thank Heaven," he said. "I was most
+awfully anxious for fear you'd say on the boat, and I didn't order any."
+
+We slipped under an arch of the ancient red bridge and were at the
+landing. I remember the scene as we stood on shore and looked down the
+shining way of the river, the tall grasses bending on either side like
+green fur stroked by the breeze; I remember the trim sea-wall and velvet
+lawn, and the low, long house with leaded windows of the place next the
+inn. A house-boat was moored to the shore below, white, with scarlet
+geraniums flowing the length of the upper deck, and willow chairs and
+tables; people were having tea up there; muslin curtains blew from the
+portholes below. Some Americans went past with two enormous Scotch
+deer-hound puppies on leash. "Be quiet, Jock," one of them said, and the
+big, gentle-faced beast turned on her with a giant, caressing bound, the
+last touch of beauty in the beautiful, quiet scene.
+
+It was early, so that we took the table which pleased us, one set a bit
+aside against a ten-foot hedge, and guarded by a tall bush of tea-roses.
+A plump maid hurried across the lawn and spread a cloth on our table and
+waited, smiling, as if seeing us had simply made her day perfect. And
+the General gave the orders.
+
+"The plum-cake is going to be wonderful," I said then, "and I'm hungry
+as a bear for tea. But the best thing I've been promised this afternoon
+is a fairy-story."
+
+The shrapnel look flashed, keen and bright and afire, but I looked back
+steadily, not afraid. I knew what sunlight was going to break; and it
+broke.
+
+"D'you know," said he, "I'm really quite mad to talk about myself. Men
+always are. You've heard the little tale of the man who said, 'Let's
+have a garden-party. Let's go out on the lawn and talk about me'? One
+becomes a frightful bore quite easily. So that I've made rules--I don't
+hector people about--about things I've been concerned with. As to the
+incident I said I'd tell you, that would be quite impossible to tell
+to--well, practically anyone."
+
+My circulatory system did a prance; he could tell it practically to no
+one, yet he was going to tell it to me! I instantly said that. "But
+you're going to tell it to me?" I was anxious.
+
+"Child, you flatter well," said the Marvelous Person, who had brought me
+picnicking. "It's the American touch; there's a way with American women
+quite irresistible."
+
+"Oh--American women!" I remonstrated.
+
+"Yes, indeed. They're delightful--you're witches, every mother's
+daughter of you. But you--ah--that's different, now. You and I, as we
+decided long ago, on day before yesterday, have a bond. I can't help the
+conviction that you're the hundred-thousandth person. You have
+understanding eyes. If I were a young man--And yet it's not just that;
+it's something a bit rarer. Moreover, they tell me there's a chap back
+in America."
+
+"Yes," I owned. "There is a chap." And I persisted: "I'm to have a
+fairy-story?"
+
+The black-lashed gaze narrowed as it traveled across the velvet turf and
+the tall roses, down the path of the quiet river. He had a fine head,
+thick-thatched and grizzled, not white; his nose was of the straight,
+short English type, slightly chopped up at the end--a good-looking nose;
+his mouth was wide and not chiseled, yet sensitive as well as strong;
+the jaw was powerful and the chin square with a marked dimple in it;
+there was also color, the claret and honey of English tanned
+complexions. Of course his eyes, with the exaggeratedly thick and long
+black lashes, were the wonderful part of him, but there is no
+describing the eyes. It was the look from them, probably, which made
+General Cochrane's face remarkable. I suppose it was partly that
+compelling look which had brought about his career. He was six feet
+four, lean and military, full of presence, altogether a conspicuously
+beautiful old lion in a land where every third man is beautiful.
+
+"What are you looking munitions-of-war at, General, down the innocent
+little Thames River? You must be seeing around corners, past Wargrave,
+as far as Henley."
+
+"I didn't see the Thames River," he shot at me in his masterful way. "I
+was looking at things past, and people dead and gone. We ancients do
+that. I saw London streets and crowds; I read the posters which told
+that Kitchener was drowned at sea, and then I saw, a year later, England
+in panic; I saw an almighty meeting in Trafalgar Square and I heard
+speeches which burned my ears--men urging Englishmen to surrender
+England and make terms with the Huns. Good God!" His fist came down on
+the rattling little iron table.
+
+"My blood boils now when I remember. Child," he demanded, "I can't see
+why your alluring ways should have set me talking. Fancy, I've never
+told this tale but twice, and I'm holding forth to a little alien whom I
+haven't known two days, a young ne'er-do-well not born till forty years
+after the tale happened!"
+
+"What difference does that make?" I asked. "Age means nothing to real
+people. And we've known each other since--since we hunted pterodactyls
+together, pre-historically. Only--I hate bats," I objected to my own
+arrangement. I went on: "If you knew how I want to hear! It's the most
+wonderful thing in my life, this afternoon--you."
+
+"I know you are honest," he said. "Different from the ruck. I knew that
+the moment I saw you."
+
+"Then," I prodded, "do begin with the posters about Lord Kitchener."
+
+"But that's not the beginning," he protested. "You'll spoil it all," he
+said.
+
+"Oh, no, then! Begin at the beginning. I didn't know. I wanted to get
+you started."
+
+The gray eyes dreamed down the placid river water.
+
+"The beginning was before I was born. It began when Kitchener, a young
+general, picked up a marauding party of black rascals on his way to
+Khartoum. They had a captive, a white girl, a lady. They had murdered
+her father and mother and young brother. The father was newly appointed
+Colonel of a regiment, traveling to his post with his family. The Arabs
+were saving the girl for their devilish head chieftain. Kitchener had
+the lot executed, and sent for the girl. She was--"
+
+The old man's hand lifted to his head and he took off his hat and laid
+it on the ground.
+
+"I cannot speak of that girl without uncovering," he said, quietly. "She
+was my mother." There was an electrical silence. I knew enough to know
+that no words fitted here. The old officer went on: "She was one of the
+wonderful people. What she seemed to think of, after the horrors she had
+gone through, was not herself or her suffering, but only to show her
+gratitude. It was a long journey--weeks--through that land of hell,
+while she was in Kitchener's hands, and not once did she lose courage.
+The Sirdar told me that it was having an angel in camp--she held that
+rough soldiery in the hollow of her hand. She told Kitchener her story,
+and after that she would not talk of herself. You've heard that he never
+had a love affair? That's wrong. He was in love then, and for the rest
+of his life, with my mother."
+
+I gasped. The shrapnel eyes menaced me.
+
+"She could not speak of herself, d'you see? It was salvation to think
+only of others, so that she'd not told him that she was engaged to my
+father. Love from any other was the last thing she was thinking of.
+After what had happened she was living from one breath to another and
+she dared not consider her own affairs. The night before they reached
+Cairo, Kitchener asked her to marry him. He was over forty then; she was
+nineteen. She told him of her engagement, of course--told him also that
+it might be she would never marry at all; a life of her own and
+happiness seemed impossible now. She might go into a sisterhood. Work
+for others was what she must have. Then, unexpectedly, my father was at
+Cairo to meet her, and Kitchener went to him and told him. From that on
+the two men were close friends. My people were not married till five
+years later, and when I came to be baptized General Kitchener was
+godfather. All my young days I was used to seeing him about the house at
+intervals, as if he belonged to us. I remember his eyes following my
+mother. Tall and slight she was, with a haunted look, from what she'd
+seen; she moved softly, spoke softly. It was no secret from the two, my
+father and mother, that he loved her always. Yet, so loyal, so crystal
+he was that my father had never one moment of jealousy. On the contrary
+they were like brothers. Then they died--my father and mother. The two
+almost together. I came into Kitchener's hands, Lord Kitchener by then.
+When he met me in London, a long lad of seventeen, he held my fingers a
+second and looked hard at me.
+
+"'You're very like her, Donald,' he said. And held on. And said it
+again. 'Your mother's double. I'd know you for her boy if I caught one
+look of your eyes, anywhere,' he said. 'Her boy.'--Well--what? Do I want
+more tea? Of course, I do."
+
+For the smiling plump maid had long ago brought the steaming stuff, the
+bread and butter and jam and plum cake, I had officiated and General
+Cochrane had been absorbing his tea as an Englishman does,
+automatically, while he talked.
+
+About us the tables were filling up, all over the rose-garden. The
+Americans were there with the beautiful long-legged giant deer-hound
+puppy, Jock, and were having trouble with his table manners. People came
+in by twos and threes and more, from the river, with the glow of
+exercise on their faces; an elderly country parson sat near,
+black-coated, white-collared, with his elderly daughter and their dog, a
+well-behaved Scottie this one, big-headed, with an age-old, wise, black
+face. And a group of three pretty girls with their pretty pink-cheeked
+mother and a young man or so were having a gay time with soft-voiced
+laughter and jokes, not far away. The breeze lifted the long purple and
+rose-colored motor veils of mother and daughters. The whole place was
+full of bright colors and low-toned cheerful talk, yet so English was
+the atmosphere, that it was as if the General and I were shut into an
+enchanted forest. No one looked at us, no one seemed to know we were
+there. The General began to talk again, unconscious as the rest of
+anything or anybody not his affair.
+
+"I got my commission in 1915 in K-1, Kitchener's first hundred thousand,
+and I went off to the front in the second year of the war. I had a
+scratch and was slightly gassed once, but nothing much happened for a
+long time. And in 1916, in May, came the news that my godfather, the
+person closest to me on earth, was drowned at sea. I was in London, just
+out of the hospital and about to go back to France."
+
+The old General stopped and stared down at the graveled path with its
+trim turf border lying at his feet.
+
+"It was to me as if the world, seething in its troubles, was suddenly
+empty--with that man gone. I drifted with the crowd about London town,
+and the crowd appeared to be like myself, dazed. The streets were full
+and there was continually a profound, sorrowful sound, like the groan of
+a nation; faces were blank and gray. Those surging, mournful London
+streets, and the look of the posters with great letters on them--his
+name--that memory isn't likely to leave me till I die. Of course, I got
+hold of every detail and tried to picture the manner of it to myself,
+but I couldn't get it that he was dead. Kitchener, the heart of the
+nation; I couldn't comprehend that he had stopped breathing. I couldn't
+get myself satisfied that I wasn't to see him again. It seemed there
+must be some way out. You'll remember, perhaps, that four boats were
+seen to put off from the _Hampshire_ as she sank? I tried to trace those
+boats. I traveled up there and interviewed people who had seen them. I
+got no good from it. But it kept coming to me that it was not a mine
+that had sunk the ship, that it was a torpedo from a German submarine,
+and that Kitchener was on one of the boats that put off and that he had
+been taken prisoner by the enemy. God knows why that thought
+persisted--there were reasons against it--it was a boy's theory. But it
+persisted; I couldn't get it out of my head. I was in St. Paul's at the
+Memorial Service; I heard the 'Last Post' played for him, and I saw the
+King and Queen in tears; all that didn't settle my mind. I went back to
+the front, heavy-hearted, and tried to behave myself as I believed he'd
+have had me--the Sirdar. My people had called him the Sirdar always.
+Luck was with me in France; I had chances, and did a bit of work, and
+got advancement."
+
+"I know," I nodded. "I've read history. A few trifles like the rescue of
+the rifles and holding that trench and--"
+
+The old soldier interrupted, looking thunderous. "It has a bearing on
+the episode I'm about to tell you. That's why I refer to it."
+
+I didn't mind his haughtiness. It was given me to see the boy's shyness
+within that grim old hero.
+
+"So that when I landed in London in 1917, having been stupid enough to
+get my right arm potted, it happened that my name was known. They picked
+me out to make a doing over. I was most uncommonly conspicuous for
+nothing more than thousands of other lads had done. They'd given their
+lives like water, thousands of them--it made me sick with shame, when I
+thought of those others, to have my name ringing through the land. But
+so it was, and it served a purpose, right enough, I saw later.
+
+"Then, as I began to crawl about, came the crisis of the war. Ill news
+piled on ill news; the army in France was down with an epidemic; each
+day's news was worse than the last; to top all, the Germans found the
+fleet. It was in letters a foot long about London--newsboys crying awful
+words:
+
+"'Fleet discovered--German submarines and Zeppelins approaching.'
+
+"A bit later, still worse. 'The _Bellerophon_ sunk by German
+torpedo--ten dreadnoughts sunk--' There were the names of the big ships,
+the _Queen Elizabeth_, the _Warspite_, the _Thunderer_, the
+_Agamemnon_, the _King Edward_--a lot more, battle cruisers, too--then
+ten more dreadnoughts--and more and worse every hour. The German navy
+was said to be coming into the North Sea and advancing to our coast. And
+our navy was going--gone--nothing to stand between us and the fate of
+Belgium.
+
+"Then England went mad! I thank God I'll not live through such days
+again. The land went mad with fear. You'll remember that there had been
+a three-year strain which human nerves were not meant to bear. Well,
+there was a faction who urged that the only sane act now possible was to
+surrender to Germany quickly and hope for a mercy which we couldn't get
+if we struggled. The government, under enormous pressure, weakened. It's
+easy to cry 'Shame!' now, but how could it stand firm with the country
+stampeding back of it?
+
+"So things were the day of the mass meeting in Trafalgar Square. I was
+tall, and so thin and gaunt that, with my uniform and my arm in its
+sling, it was easy to get close to the front, straight under the
+speakers. And no sooner had I got there than I was seized with a
+restlessness, an uncontrollable desire to see my godfather--Kitchener.
+Only to see him, to lay eyes on him. I wish I might express to you the
+push of that feeling. It was thirst in a desert. With that spell on me I
+stood down in front of the stone lions and stared up at Nelson on his
+column, and listened to the speakers. They were mad, quite, those
+speakers. The crowd was mad, too. It overflowed that great space, and
+there were few steady heads in the lot. You'll realize it looked a bit
+of a close shave, with the German navy coming and our fleet being
+destroyed, no one knew how fast, and the army in France, and struck down
+by illness. At that moment it looked a matter of three or four days
+before the Huns would be landing. Never before in a thousand years was
+England as near the finish. As I stood there fidgeting, with the
+starvation on me for my godfather, it flashed to me that there's a
+legend in every nation about some one of its heroes, how in the hour of
+need he will come back to save the people--Charlemagne in France, don't
+you know, and Barbarossa and King Arthur and--oh, a number. And I spoke
+aloud, so that the chap next prodded me in the ribs and said: 'Stop
+that, will you? I can't hear'--I spoke aloud and said:
+
+"'This is the hour. Come back and save us.'
+
+"The speakers had been ranting along, urging on the people to force the
+government to give in and make terms with those devils who'd crushed
+Belgium. Of course there were plenty there ready to die in the last
+ditch for honor and the country, but the mob was with the speakers.
+Quite insane with terror the mob was. And I spoke aloud to Kitchener,
+like a madman of a sort also, begging him to come from another world and
+save his people.
+
+"'This is the hour; come and save us,' said I, and said it as if my
+words could get through to Kitchener in eternity.
+
+"With that a taxicab forced through the crowd, close to the platform,
+and it stopped and somebody got out. I could see an officer's cap and
+the crowd pressing. My eyes were riveted on that brown cap; my breath
+came queerly; there was a murmur, a hush and a murmur together, where
+that tall officer with the cap over his face pushed toward the speakers.
+I felt I should choke if I didn't see him--and I couldn't see him. Then
+he made the platform, and before my eyes, before the eyes of twenty
+thousand people, he stood there--Kitchener!"
+
+General Cochrane stared defiantly at me. "I'm not asking you to believe
+this," he said. "I'm merely telling you--what happened."
+
+"Go on," I whispered.
+
+He went on: "A silence like death fell on that vast crowd. The voice of
+the speaker screaming out wild cowardice about mercy from the Germans
+kept on for a few words, and then the man caught the electrical
+atmosphere and was aware that something was happening. He halted
+half-way in a word, and turned and faced the grim, motionless
+figure--Kitchener. The man stared a half minute and shot his hands up
+and howled, and ran into the throng. All over the great place, by then,
+was a whisper swelling into a bass murmur, into a roar, his name.
+
+"'Kitchener--Kitchener!' and 'K. of K.!' and 'Kitchener of Khartoum!'
+
+"Never in my life have I heard a volume of sound like London shouting
+that day the name of Kitchener. After a time he lifted his hand and
+stood, deep-eyed and haggard, as the mass quieted. He spoke. I can't
+tell you what he said. I couldn't have told you the next hour. But he
+quieted us and lifted us, that crowd, fearstruck, sobbing, into courage.
+He put his own steady dignity into those cheap, frightened little
+Johnnies. He gave us strength even if the worst came, and he held up
+English pluck and doggedness for us to look at and to live by. As his
+voice stopped, as I stood down in front just under him, I flung up my
+arms, and I suppose I cried out something; I was but a lad of twenty,
+and half crazed with the joy of seeing him. And he swung forward a step
+to me as if he had seen me all the time--and I think he had. 'Do the
+turn, Donald,' he said, 'The time has come for a Cochrane to save
+England.'
+
+"And with that he wheeled and without a look to right or left, in his
+own swift, silent, shy way he was gone.
+
+"Nobody saw where he went. I all but killed myself for an hour trying to
+find him, but it was of no use. And with that, as I sat at my lunch, too
+feverish and stirred to eat food, demanding over and over what he meant,
+what the 'turn' was which I was to do, why a Cochrane should have a
+chance to save England--with that, suddenly I knew."
+
+General Cochrane halted again, and again he gazed down the little river,
+the river of England, the river which he, more than any other, had kept
+for English folk and their peaceful play-times. I knew I must not hurry
+him; I waited.
+
+"The thing came to me like lightning," he went on, "and I had only to go
+from one simple step to another; it seemed all thought out for me. It
+was something, don't you see, which I'd known all my lifetime, but
+hadn't once thought of since the war began. I went direct to my bankers
+and got a box out of the safe and fetched it home in a cab. There I
+opened it and took out papers and went over them.... This part of the
+tale is mostly in print," General Cochrane interrupted himself. "Have
+you read it? I don't want to bore you with repetitions."
+
+I answered hurriedly, trembling for fear I might say the wrong thing:
+"I've read what's in print, but your telling it puts it in another
+world. Please go on. Please don't shorten anything."
+
+The shadow of a smile played. "I rather like telling you a story, d'you
+know," he spoke, half absent-mindedly--his real thoughts were with that
+huge past. He swept back to it. "You know, of course, about Dundonald's
+Destroyer--the invention of my great-grandfather's kinsman, Thomas
+Cochrane, tenth Earl of Dundonald? He was a good bit of an old chap in
+various ways. He did things to the French fleet that put him as a naval
+officer in the class with Nelson and Drake. But he's remembered in
+history by his invention. It was a secret, of course, one of the puzzles
+of the time and of years after, up to 1917. It was known there was
+something. He offered it to the government in 1811, and the government
+appointed a committee to examine into it. The chairman was the Duke of
+York, commander-in-chief of the army, said to be the ablest
+administrator of military affairs of that time. Also there were Admirals
+Lord Keith and Exmouth and the Congreve brothers of the ordnance
+department. A more competent committee of five could not have been
+gathered in the world. This board would not recommend the adoption of
+the scheme. Why? They reported that there was no question that the
+invention would do all which Dundonald claimed, but it was so
+unspeakably dreadful as to be impossible for civilized men.
+
+"There was not a shadow of doubt, the committee reported, that
+Dundonald's device would not merely defeat but annihilate and sweep out
+of existence any hostile force, whole armies and navies. 'No power on
+earth could stand against it,' said the old fellow, and the five experts
+backed him up. But they considered that the devastation would be inhuman
+beyond permissible warfare. Not war, annihilation. In fact, they shelved
+it because it was too efficient. There was great need of means for
+fighting Napoleon just then, so they gave it up reluctantly, but it was
+a bit too shocking.
+
+"The weak point of the business was, as Dundonald himself declared, that
+it was so simple--as everybody knows now--that its first use would tell
+the secret and put it in the hands of other nations. Therefore the
+committee recommended that this incipient destruction should be stowed
+away and kept secret, so that no power more unscrupulous than England
+should get it and use it for the annihilation of England and the
+conquest of the world. Also the committee persuaded the Earl before he
+went on his South American adventure to swear formally that he would
+never disclose his device except in the service of England. He kept that
+oath.
+
+"Well, the formula for this affair was, of course, in pigeonholes or
+vaults in the British Admiralty ever since the committee in 1811 had
+examined and refused it. But there was also, unknown to the public,
+another copy. The Earl was with my great-grandfather, his kinsman and
+lifelong friend, shortly before his death, and he gave this copy to him
+with certain conditions. The old chap had an ungovernable temper,
+quarreled right and left, don't you know, his life long, and at this
+time and until he died he was not on speaking terms with his son Thomas,
+who succeeded him as Earl, or indeed with any of the three other sons.
+Which accounts for his trusting to my great-grandfather the future of
+his invention. I found a quaint note with the papers. He said in effect
+that he had come to believe with the committee that it was quite too
+shocking for decent folk. Yet, he suggested, the time might come when
+England was in straits and only a sweeping blow could serve her. If that
+time should come it would be a joy to him in heaven or in hell--he
+said--to think that a man of his name had used the work of his brains to
+save England.
+
+"Therefore, the Earl asked my grandfather to guard this gigantic secret
+and to see to it that one man in each generation of Cochranes should
+know it and have it at hand for use in an emergency. My grandfather came
+into the papers when he came of age, and after him my father; I was due
+to read them when I should be twenty-one. I was only twenty in 1917. But
+the papers were mine, and from the moment it flashed to me what
+Kitchener meant I didn't hesitate. It was this enormous power which was
+placed suddenly in the hands of a lad of twenty. The Sirdar placed it
+there.
+
+"I went over the business in an hour--it was simple, like most big
+things. You know what it was, of course; everybody knows now. Wasn't it
+extraordinary that in five thousand years of fighting no one ever hit on
+it before? I rushed to the War Office.
+
+"Well, the thing came off. At first they pooh-poohed me as an unbalanced
+boy, but they looked up the documents in the Admiralty and there was no
+question. It isn't often a youngster is called into the councils of the
+government, and I've wondered since how I held my own. I've come to
+believe that I was merely a body for Kitchener's spirit. I was conscious
+of no fatigue, no uncertainty. I did things as the Sirdar might have
+done them, and it appears to me only decent to realize that he did do
+them, and not I. You probably know the details."
+
+I waited, hoping that he would not stop. Then I said: "I know that the
+government asked for twenty-five volunteers for a service which would
+destroy the German fleet, but which would mean almost certain death to
+the volunteers. I know that you headed the list and that thousands
+offered." My voice shook and I spoke with difficulty as I realized to
+whom I was speaking. "I know that you were the only one who came back
+alive, and that you were barely saved."
+
+General Cochrane seemed not to hear me. He was living over enormous
+events.
+
+"It was a bright morning in the North Sea," he talked on, but not to me
+now. "Nobody but ourselves knew just what was to be done, but everybody
+hoped--they didn't know what. It was a desperate England from which we
+sailed away. We hadn't long to wait--the second morning. There were
+their ships, the triumphant long lines of the invader. There were their
+crowded transports, the soldiers coming to crucify England as they had
+crucified Belgium--thousands and tens of thousands of them. Then--we
+did it. German power was wiped off the face of the earth. German
+arrogance was ended for all time. And that was the last I knew," said
+General Cochrane. "I was conscious till it was known that the trick had
+worked. Of course it couldn't be otherwise, yet it was so beyond
+anything which mankind had dreamed that I couldn't believe it till I
+knew. Then, naturally, I didn't much care if I lived or died. I'd done
+the turn as the Sirdar told me, and one life was a small thing to pay. I
+dropped into blackness quite happily, and when I woke up to this good
+earth I was glad. England was right. The Sirdar had saved her."
+
+"And the Sirdar?" I asked him. "Was it--himself?"
+
+"Himself? Most certainly."
+
+"I mean--well--" I stammered. And then I plunged in. "I must know," I
+said. "Was it Lord Kitchener in flesh and blood? Had he been a prisoner
+in Germany and escaped? Or was it--his ghost?"
+
+The old lion rubbed his cheek consideringly. "Ah, there you have me,"
+and he smiled. "Didn't I tell you this was a tale which could be told to
+few people?" he demanded. "'Flesh and blood'--ah, that's what I can't
+tell you. But--himself? Those people, the immense crowd which saw him
+and recognized him, they knew. Afterwards they begged the question. The
+papers were full of a remarkable speech made by an unknown officer who
+strikingly resembled Kitchener. That's the way they got out of it. But
+those people knew, that day. There wasn't any doubt in their minds when
+that roar of his name went up. They knew! But people are ashamed to own
+to the supernatural. And yet it's all around us," mused General
+Cochrane.
+
+"Could it have been--did you ever think--" I began, and dared not go on.
+
+"Did I ever think what, child?" repeated the old officer, with his
+autocratic friendliness. "Out with it. You and I are having a
+truth-feast."
+
+"Well, then," I said, "if you won't be angry--"
+
+"I won't. Come along."
+
+"Did you ever think that it might have been that--you were only a boy,
+and wounded and weak and overstrained--and full of longing for your
+godfather. Did you ever think that you might have mistaken the likeness
+of the officer for Kitchener himself? That the thought of Dundonald's
+Destroyer was working in your mind before, and that it materialized at
+that moment and you--imagined the words he said. Perhaps imagined them
+afterwards, as you searched for him over London. The two things might
+have suggested each other in your feverish boy's brain."
+
+I stopped, frightened, fearful that he might think me not appreciative
+of the honor he had done me in telling this intimate experience. But
+General Cochrane was in no wise disturbed.
+
+"Yes, I've thought that," he answered dispassionately. "It may be that
+was the case. And yet--I can't see it. That thing happened to me. I've
+not been able to explain it away to my own satisfaction. I've not been
+able to believe otherwise than that the Sirdar, England's hero, came to
+save England in her peril, and that he did it by breathing his thought
+into me. His spirit got across somehow from over there--to me. I was the
+only available person alive. The copy in the archives was buried, dead
+and buried and forgotten for seventy years. So he did it--that way. And
+if your explanation is the right one it isn't so much less wonderful, is
+it?" he demanded. "In these days psychology dares say more than in 1917.
+One knows that ghost stories, as they called them in those ignorant
+times, are not all superstition and imagination. One knows that a soul
+lives beyond the present, that a soul sometimes struggles back from what
+we call the hereafter to this little earth--makes the difficult
+connection between an unseen world of spirit, unconditioned by matter,
+and our present world of spirit, conditioned by matter. When the pull is
+strong enough. And what pull could be stronger than England's danger? To
+Kitchener?" The black-lashed, gray eyes flamed at me, unblinking the
+rift of light through the curtain of eternal silences.
+
+When I spoke again: "It's a story the world ought to own some day," I
+said. "Love of country, faithfulness that death could not hinder."
+
+"Well," said old General Cochrane, "when I'm gone you may write it for
+the world if you like, little American. And what I'll do will be to find
+the Sirdar, the very first instant I'm over the border, and say to him,
+'I've known it was your work all along, sir, and however did you get it
+across?'"
+
+A month ago my cousin sent me some marked newspapers. General Cochrane
+has gone over the border, and I make no doubt that before now he has
+found the Sirdar and that the two sons and saviors of a beloved little
+land on a little planet have talked over that moment, in the leisures
+and simplicities of eternity, and have wondered perhaps that anyone
+could wonder how he got it across.
+
+
+
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