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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, My War Experiences in Two Continents, by
+Sarah Macnaughtan, Edited by Betty Keays-Young
+
+
+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: My War Experiences in Two Continents
+
+
+Author: Sarah Macnaughtan
+
+Editor: Betty Keays-Young
+
+Release Date: May 10, 2006 [eBook #18364]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MY WAR EXPERIENCES IN TWO
+CONTINENTS***
+
+
+E-text prepared by David Clarke, gvb, and the Project Gutenberg Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net/) from page images
+generously made available by Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries
+(http://www.archive.org/details/toronto)
+
+
+
+Note: Images of the original pages are available through
+ Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries. See
+ http://www.archive.org/details/wartwocontinents00macnuoft
+
+
+Transcriber's note:
+
+ The unique headers on the odd numbered pages in the original
+ book have been reproduced with [Page Heading: ] tags. They
+ have been inserted in front of the paragraph or letter to
+ which the heading refers.
+
+ There are several inconsistencies in spelling and punctuation
+ in the original. A few corrections have been made for obvious
+ typographical errors; these, as well as some doubtful spellings
+ of names, have been marked individually in the text. All
+ changes made by the transcriber are enumerated in braces, for
+ example {1}; details of corrections and comments are listed at
+ the end of the text.
+
+ Text in italics in the original is shown between _underlines_.
+
+
+
+
+
+MY WAR EXPERIENCES IN TWO CONTINENTS
+
+by
+
+S. MACNAUGHTAN
+
+Edited by Her Niece, Mrs. Lionel Salmon (Betty Keays-Young)
+
+With a Portrait
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: Camera Portrait by E. O. Hoppé.]
+
+
+
+
+London
+John Murray, Albemarle Street, W.
+1919
+
+
+
+
+THIS BOOK IS DEDICATED,
+IN ACCORDANCE WITH A WISH EXPRESSED BY
+MISS MACNAUGHTAN BEFORE HER DEATH,
+
+TO
+
+THOSE WHO ARE FIGHTING AND
+THOSE WHO HAVE FALLEN,
+
+WITH ADMIRATION AND RESPECT,
+AND TO
+
+HER NEPHEWS,
+
+CAPTAIN LIONEL SALMON, 1st Bn. the Welch Regt.
+CAPTAIN HELIER PERCIVAL, M.C., 9th Bn. the Welch Regt.
+CAPTAIN ALAN YOUNG, 2nd Bn. the Welch Regt.
+CAPTAIN COLIN MACNAUGHTAN, 2nd Dragoon Guards.
+LIEUTENANT RICHARD YOUNG, 9th Bn. the Welch Regt.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ PAGE
+ PREFACE ix
+
+
+ PART I
+ BELGIUM
+
+ CHAPTER I
+ ANTWERP 1
+
+ CHAPTER II
+ WITH DR. HECTOR MUNRO'S FLYING AMBULANCE CORPS 24
+
+ CHAPTER III
+ AT FURNES RAILWAY-STATION 60
+
+ CHAPTER IV
+ WORKING UNDER DIFFICULTIES 85
+
+ CHAPTER V
+ THE SPRING OFFENSIVE 111
+
+ CHAPTER VI
+ LAST DAYS IN FLANDERS 135
+
+
+ PART II
+ AT HOME
+
+ HOW THE MESSAGE WAS DELIVERED 159
+
+
+ PART III
+ RUSSIA AND THE PERSIAN FRONT
+
+ CHAPTER I
+ PETROGRAD 179
+
+ CHAPTER II
+ WAITING FOR WORK 204
+
+ CHAPTER III
+ SOME IMPRESSIONS OF TIFLIS AND ARMENIA 219
+
+ CHAPTER IV
+ ON THE PERSIAN FRONT 237
+
+ CHAPTER V
+ THE LAST JOURNEY 258
+
+
+ CONCLUSION 272
+
+ INDEX 281
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+
+In presenting these extracts from the diaries of my aunt, the late Miss
+Macnaughtan, I feel it necessary to explain how they come to be
+published, and the circumstances under which I have undertaken to edit
+them.
+
+After Miss Macnaughtan's death, her executors found among her papers a
+great number of diaries. There were twenty-five closely written volumes,
+which extended over a period of as many years, and formed an almost
+complete record of every incident of her life during that time.
+
+It is amazing that the journal was kept so regularly, as Miss
+Macnaughtan suffered from writer's cramp, and the entries could only
+have been written with great difficulty. Frequently a passage is begun
+in the writing of her right, and finished in that of her left hand, and
+I have seen her obliged to grasp her pencil in her clenched fist before
+she was able to indite a line. In only one volume, however, do we find
+that she availed herself of the services of her secretary to dictate the
+entries and have them typed.
+
+The executors found it extremely difficult to know how to deal with such
+a vast mass of material. Miss Macnaughtan was a very reserved woman.{1}
+She lived much alone, and the diary was her only confidante. In one of
+her books she says that expression is the most insistent of human needs,
+and that the inarticulate man or woman who finds no outlet in speech or
+in the affections, will often keep a little locked volume in which self
+can be safely revealed. Her diary occupied just such a place in her own
+inner life, and for that reason one hesitates to submit its pages even
+to the most loving and sympathetic scrutiny.
+
+But Miss Macnaughtan's diary fulfilled a double purpose. She used it
+largely as material for her books. Ideas for stories, fragments of plays
+and novels, are sketched in on spare sheets, and the pages are full of
+the original theories and ideas of a woman who never allowed anyone else
+to do her thinking for her. A striking sermon or book may be criticised
+or discussed, the pros and cons of some measure of social reform weighed
+in the balance; and the actual daily chronicle of her busy life, of her
+travels, her various experiences and adventures, makes a most
+interesting and fascinating tale.
+
+So much of the material was obviously intended to form the basis for an
+autobiography that the executors came to the conclusion that it would be
+a thousand pities to withhold it from the public, and at some future
+date it is very much hoped to produce a complete life of Miss
+Macnaughtan as narrated in her diaries. Meanwhile, however, the
+publisher considers that Miss Macnaughtan's war experiences are of
+immediate interest to her many friends and admirers, and I have been
+asked to edit those volumes which refer to her work in Belgium, at
+home, in Russia, and on the Persian front.
+
+Except for an occasional word where the meaning was obscure, I have
+added nothing to the diaries. I have, of course, omitted such passages
+as appeared to be private or of family interest only; but otherwise I
+have contented myself with a slight rearrangement of some of the
+paragraphs, and I have inserted a few letters and extracts from letters,
+which give a more interesting or detailed account of some incident than
+is found in the corresponding entry in the diary. With these exceptions
+the book is published as Miss Macnaughtan wrote it. I feel sure that her
+own story of her experiences would lose much of its charm if I
+interfered with it, and for this reason I have preserved the actual
+diary form in which it was written.
+
+To many readers of Miss Macnaughtan's books her diaries of the war may
+come as a slight surprise. There is a note of depression and sadness,
+and perhaps even of criticism, running through them, which is lacking in
+all her earlier writings. I would remind people that this book is the
+work of a dying woman; during the whole of the period covered by it, the
+author was seriously ill, and the horror and misery of the war, and the
+burden of a great deal of personal sorrow, have left their mark on her
+account of her experiences.
+
+I should like to thank those relations and friends of Miss Macnaughtan
+who have allowed me to read and publish the letters incorporated in this
+book, and I gratefully acknowledge the help and advice I have received
+in my task from my mother, from my husband, and from Miss Hilda Powell,
+Mr. Stenning, and Mr. R. Sommerville. I desire also to express my
+gratitude to Mr. John Murray for many valuable hints and suggestions
+about the book, and for the trouble he has so kindly taken to help me to
+prepare it for the press.
+
+BETTY SALMON.
+
+ZILLEBEKE, WALTHAM ST. LAWRENCE,
+TWYFORD, BERKSHIRE,
+_October, 1918._
+
+
+
+
+MY WAR EXPERIENCES IN TWO CONTINENTS
+
+
+PART I
+
+BELGIUM
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+ANTWERP
+
+
+On September 20th, 1914, I left London for Antwerp. At the station I
+found I had forgotten my passport and Mary had to tear back for it.
+Great perturbation, but kept this dark from the rest of the staff, for
+they are all rather serious and I am head of the orderlies. We got under
+way at 4 a.m. next morning. All instantly began to be sick. I think I
+was the worst and alarmed everybody within hearing distance. One more
+voyage I hope--home--then dry land for me.
+
+We arrived at Antwerp on the 22nd, twenty-four hours late. The British
+Consul sent carriages, etc., to meet us. Drove to the large Philharmonic
+Hall, which has been given us as a hospital. Immediately after breakfast
+we began to unpack beds, etc., and our enormous store of medical things;
+all feeling remarkably empty and queer, but put on heroic smiles and
+worked like mad. Some of the staff is housed in a convent and the rest
+in rooms over the Philharmonic Hall.
+
+_23 September._--Began to get things into order and to allot each person
+her task. Our unit consists of Mrs. St. Clair Stobart, its head; Doctors
+Rose Turner, F. Stoney, Watts, Morris, Hanson and Ramsey (all women);
+orderlies--me, Miss Randell (interpreter), Miss Perry, Dick, Stanley,
+Benjamin, Godfrey,{2} Donnisthorpe, Cunliffe, and Mr. Glade. Everyone
+very zealous and inclined to do anybody's work except their own. Keen
+competition for everyone else's tools, brooms, dusters, etc. Great
+roaming about. All mean well.
+
+_25 September._--Forty wounded men were brought into our hospital
+yesterday. Fortunately we had everything ready, but it took a bit of
+doing. We are all dead tired, and not so keen as we were about doing
+other people's work.
+
+The wounded are not very bad, and have been sent on here from another
+hospital. They are enchanted with their quarters, which indeed do look
+uncommonly nice. One hundred and thirty beds are ranged in rows, and we
+have a bright counterpane on each and clean sheets. The floor is
+scrubbed, and the bathrooms, store, office, kitchens, and
+receiving-rooms have been made out of nothing, and look splendid. I
+never saw a hospital spring up like magic in this way before. There is a
+wide verandah where the men play cards, and a garden to stump about in.
+
+The gratitude of our patients is boundless, and they have presented Mrs.
+Stobart with a beautiful basket of growing flowers. I do not think
+Englishmen would have thought of such a thing. They say they never
+tasted such cooking as ours outside Paris, and they are rioting in good
+food, papers, nice beds, etc. Nearly all of them are able to get out a
+little, so it is quite cheery nursing them. There is a lot to do, and we
+all fly about in white caps. The keenest competition is for sweeping out
+the ward with a long-handled hair brush!
+
+[Page Heading: THE DEFENCES OF THE TOWN]
+
+I went into the town to-day. It is very like every other foreign town,
+with broad streets and tram-lines and shops and squares, but to-day I
+had an interesting drive. I took a car and went out to the second line
+of forts. The whole place was a mass of wire entanglements, mined at
+every point, and the fields were studded with strong wooden spikes.
+There were guns everywhere, and in one place a whole wood and a village
+had been laid level with the ground to prevent the enemy taking cover.
+We heard the sound of firing last night!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_To Mrs. Keays-Young._
+
+RUE DE L'HARMONIE 68, ANTWERP,
+_25 September._
+
+DEAREST BABE,
+
+It was delightful getting your letter. Our wounded are all French or
+Belgians, but there is a bureau of enquiry in the town where I will go
+to try to hear tidings of your poor friends.
+
+We heard the guns firing last night, and fifty wounded were sent in
+during the afternoon. In one day 2,500 wounded reached Antwerp. I can
+write this sort of thing to-day as I know my letter will be all right.
+To show you that the fighting is pretty near, two doctors went for a
+short motor drive to-day and they found two wounded men. One was just
+dying, the other they brought back in the car, but he died also. In the
+town itself everything seems much as usual except for crowds of
+refugees. Do not believe people when they say German barbarity is
+exaggerated. It is hideously true.
+
+We are fearfully busy, and it seems a queer side of war to cook and race
+around and make doctors as comfortable as possible. We have a capital
+staff, who are made up of zeal and muscle. I do not know how long it can
+last. We breakfast at 7.30, which means that most of the orderlies are
+up at 5.45 to prepare and do everything. The fare is very plain and
+terribly wholesome, but hardly anyone grumbles. I am trying to get girls
+to take two hours off duty in the day, but they won't do it.
+
+Have you any friends who would send us a good big lot of nice jam? It is
+for the staff. If you could send some cases of it at once to Miss Stear,
+39, St. James's Street, London, and put my name on it, and say it is for
+our hospital, she will bring it here herself with some other things.
+Some of your country friends might like to help in a definite little way
+like this.
+
+Your loving
+SARAH.
+
+---- is going to England to-night and will take this.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_27 September._--Yesterday, when we were in the town, a German airship
+flew overhead and dropped bombs. A lot of guns fired at it, but it was
+too high up to hit. The incident caused some excitement in the streets.
+
+[Page Heading: ARRIVAL OF WOUNDED]
+
+Last night we heard that more wounded were coming in from the
+fighting-line near Ghent. We got sixty more beds ready, and sat up late,
+boiling water, sterilising instruments, preparing operating-tables and
+beds, etc., etc. As it got later all the lights in the huge ward were
+put out, and we went about with little torches amongst the sleeping men,
+putting things in order and moving on tip-toe in the dark. Later we
+heard that the wounded might not get in till Monday.
+
+The work of this place goes on unceasingly. We all get on well, but I
+have not got the communal spirit, and the fact of being a unit of women
+is not the side of it that I find most interesting. The communal food is
+my despair. I can _not_ eat it. All the same this is a fine experience,
+and I hope we'll come well out of it. There is boundless opportunity,
+and we are in luck to have a chance of doing our darndest.
+
+_28 September._--Last night I and two orderlies slept over at the
+hospital as more wounded were expected. At 11 p.m. word came that "les
+blessés" were at the gate. Men were on duty with stretchers, and we went
+out to the tram-way cars in which the wounded are brought from the
+station, twelve patients in each. The transit is as little painful as
+possible, and the stretchers are placed in iron brackets, and are
+simply unhooked when the men arrive. Each stretcher was brought in and
+laid on a bed in the ward, and the nurses and doctors undressed the men.
+We orderlies took their names, their "matricule" or regimental number,
+and the number of their bed. Then we gathered up their clothes and put
+corresponding numbers on labels attached to them--first turning out the
+pockets, which are filled with all manner of things, from tins of
+sardines to loaded revolvers. They are all very pockety, but have to be
+turned out before the clothes are sent to be baked.
+
+We arranged everything, and then got Oxo for the men, many of whom had
+had nothing to eat for two days. They are a nice-looking lot of men and
+boys, with rather handsome faces and clear eyes. Their absolute
+exhaustion is the most pathetic thing about them. They fall asleep even
+when their wounds are being dressed. When all was made straight and
+comfortable for them, the nurses turned the lights low again, and
+stepped softly about the ward with their little torches.
+
+A hundred beds all filled with men in pain give one plenty to think
+about, and it is during sleep that their attitudes of suffering strike
+one most. Some of them bury their heads in their pillows as shot
+partridges seek to bury theirs amongst autumn leaves. Others lie very
+stiff and straight, and all look very thin and haggard. I was struck by
+the contrast between the pillared concert-hall where they lie, with its
+platform of white paint and decorations, and the tragedy of suffering
+which now fills it.
+
+At 2 a.m. more soldiers were brought in from the battlefield, all caked
+with dirt, and we began to work again. These last blinked oddly at the
+concert-hall and nurses and doctors, but I think they do not question
+anything much. They only want to go to sleep.
+
+[Page Heading: A VISIT FROM SOME DESERTERS]
+
+I suppose that women would always be tender-hearted towards deserters.
+Three of them arrived at the hospital to-day with some absurd story
+about having been told to report themselves. We got them supper and a
+hot bath and put them to bed. One can't regret it. I never saw men sleep
+as they did. All through the noise of the wounded being brought in, all
+through the turned-up lights and bustle they never even stirred, but a
+sergeant discovered them, and at 3 a.m. they were marched away again. We
+got them breakfast and hot tea, and at least they had had a few hours
+between clean sheets. These men seem to carry so much, and the roads are
+heavy.
+
+At 5 o'clock I went to bed and slept till 8. Mrs. Stobart never rests. I
+think she must be made of some substance that the rest of us have not
+discovered. At 5 a.m. I discovered her curled up on a bench in her
+office, the doors wide open and the dawn breaking.
+
+_2 October._--Here is a short account of one whole day. Firing went on
+all night, sometimes it came so near that the vibration of it was rather
+startling. In the early morning we heard that the forts had been heavily
+fired on. One of them remained silent for a long time, and then the
+garrison lighted cart-loads of straw in order to deceive the Germans,
+who fell into the trap, thinking the fort was disabled and on fire, and
+rushed in to take it. They were met with a furious cannonade. But one of
+the other forts has fallen.
+
+At 7 a.m. the men's bread had not arrived for their 6 o'clock breakfast,
+so I went into the town to get it. The difficulty was to convey home
+twenty-eight large loaves, so I went to the barracks and begged a
+motor-car from the Belgian officer and came back triumphant. The
+military cars simply rip through the streets, blowing their horns all
+the time. Antwerp was thronged with these cars, and each one contained
+soldiers. Sometimes one saw wounded in them lying on sacks stuffed with
+straw.
+
+I came down to breakfast half-an-hour late (8 o'clock) and we had our
+usual fare--porridge, bread and margarine, and tea with tinned
+milk--amazingly nasty, but quite wholesome and filling at the price. We
+have reduced our housekeeping to ninepence per head per day. After
+breakfast I cleaned the two houses, as I do every morning, made nine
+beds, swept floors and dusted stairs, etc. When my rooms were done and
+jugs filled, our nice little cook gave me a cup of soup in the kitchen,
+as she generally does, and I went over to the hospital to help prepare
+the men's dinner, my task to-day being to open bottles and pour out beer
+for a hundred and twenty men; then, when the meat was served, to procure
+from the kitchen and serve out gravy. Our own dinner is at 12.30.
+
+Afterwards I went across to the hospital again and arranged a few
+things with Mrs. Stobart. I began to correct the men's diagnosis sheets,
+but was called off to help with wounded arriving, and to label and sort
+their clothes. Just then the British Minister, Sir Francis Villiers, and
+the Surgeon-General, Sir Cecil Herslet, came in to see the hospital, and
+we proceeded to show them round, when the sound of firing began quite
+close to us and we rushed out into the garden.
+
+[Page Heading: A TAUBE OVERHEAD]
+
+From out the blue, clear autumn sky came a great grey dove flying
+serenely overhead. This was a German aeroplane of the class called the
+Taube (dove). These aeroplanes are quite beautiful in design, and fly
+with amazing rapidity. This one wafted over our hospital with all the
+grace of a living creature "calm in the consciousness of wings," and
+then, of course, we let fly at it. From all round us shells were sent up
+into the vast blue of the sky, and still the grey dove went on in its
+gentle-looking flight. Whoever was in it must have been a brave man! All
+round him shells were flying--one touch and he must have dropped. The
+smoke from the burst shells looked like little white clouds in the sky
+as the dove sailed away into the blue again and was seen no more.
+
+We returned to our work in hospital. The men's supper is at six o'clock,
+and we began cutting up their bread-and-butter and cheese and filling
+their bowls of beer. When that was over and visitors were going, an
+order came for thirty patients to proceed to Ostend and make room for
+worse cases. We were sorry to say good-bye to them, especially to a nice
+fellow whom we call Alfred because he can speak English, and to Sunny
+Jim, who positively refused to leave.
+
+Poor boys! With each batch of the wounded, disabled creatures who are
+carried in, one feels inclined to repeat in wonder, "Can one man be
+responsible for all this? Is it for one man's lunatic vanity that men
+are putting lumps of lead into each other's hearts and lungs, and boys
+are lying with their heads blown off, or with their insides beside them
+on the ground?" Yet there is a splendid freedom about being in the midst
+of death--a certain glory in it, which one can't explain.
+
+A piece of shell fell through the roof of the hospital to-day--evidently
+a part of one that had been fired at the Taube. It fell close beside the
+bed of one of our wounded, and he went as white as a ghost. It must be
+pretty bad to be powerless and have shells falling around. The doctors
+tell me that nothing moves them so much as the terror of the men. Their
+nerves are simply shattered, and everything frightens them. Rather late
+a man was brought in from the forts, terribly wounded. He was the only
+survivor of twelve comrades who stood together, and a shell fell amongst
+them, killing all but this man.
+
+At seven o'clock we moved all the furniture from Mrs. Stobart's office
+to the dispensary, where she will have more room, and the day's work was
+then over and night work began for some. The Germans have destroyed the
+reservoir and the water-supply has been cut off, so we have to go and
+fetch all the water in buckets from a well. After supper we go with our
+pails and carry it home. The shortage for washing, cleaning, etc., is
+rather inconvenient, and adds to the danger in a large hospital, and to
+the risk of typhoid.
+
+[Page Heading: ORDERS TO EVACUATE THE HOSPITAL]
+
+_4 October._--Yesterday our work was hardly over when Mrs. Stobart sent
+a summons to all of us "heads" to come to her bureau. She had grave news
+for us. The British Consul had just been to say that all the English
+must leave Antwerp; two forts had fallen, and the Germans were hourly
+expected to begin shelling the town. We were told that all the wounded
+who could travel were to go to Ostend, and the worst cases were to be
+transferred to the Military Hospital.
+
+I do not think it would be easy to describe the confusion that followed.
+All the men's clothes had to be found, and they had to be got into them,
+and woe betide if a little cap or old candle was missing! All wanted
+serving at once; all wanted food before starting. In the midst of the
+general mêlée I shall always remember one girl, silently, quickly, and
+ceaselessly slicing bread with a loaf pressed to her waist, and handing
+it across the counter to the men.
+
+With one or two exceptions the staff all wanted to remain in Antwerp. I
+myself decided to abandon the unit and stay on here as an individual or
+go to Ostend with the men. Mrs. Stobart, being responsible, had to take
+the unit home. It was a case of leaving immediately; we packed what
+stores we could, but the beds and X-ray apparatus and all our material
+equipment would have to be left to the Germans. I think all felt as
+though they were running away, but it was a military order, and the
+Consul, the British Minister, and the King and Queen were leaving. We
+went to eat lunch together, and as we were doing so Mrs. Stobart brought
+the news that the Consul had come to say that reinforcements had come
+up, the situation changed for the better, and for the present we might
+remain. Anyone who wanted to leave might do so, but only four did.
+
+We have since heard what happened. The British Minister cabled home to
+say that Antwerp was the key to the whole situation and must not fall,
+as once in here the Germans would be strongly entrenched, supplied with
+provisions, ammunition, and everything they want. A Cabinet Council was
+held at 3 a.m. in London, and reinforcements were ordered up. Winston
+Churchill is here with Marines. They say Colonel Kitchener is at the
+forts.
+
+The firing sounds very near. Dr. Hector Munro and Miss St. Clair and
+Lady Dorothy Fielding came over to-day from Ghent, where all is quiet.
+They wanted me to return with them to take a rest, which was absurd, of
+course.
+
+Some fearful cases were brought in to us to-day. My God, the horror of
+it! One has heard of men whom their mothers would not recognise. Some of
+the wounded to-day were amongst these. All the morning we did what we
+could for them. One man was riddled with bullets, and died very soon.
+
+It is awful work. The great bell rings, and we say, "More wounded," and
+the men get stretchers. We go down the long, cold covered way to the
+gate and number the men for their different beds. The stretchers are
+stiff with blood, and the clothes have to be cut off the men. They cry
+out terribly, and their _horror_ is so painful to witness. They are so
+young, and they have seen right into hell. The first dressings are
+removed by the doctors--sometimes there is only a lump of cotton-wool to
+fill up a hole--and the men lie there with their tragic eyes fixed upon
+one. All day a nurse has sat by a man who has been shot through the
+lungs. Each breath is painful; it does not bear writing about. The pity
+of it all just breaks one's heart. But I suppose we do not see nearly
+the worst of the wounded.
+
+The lights are all off at eight o'clock now, and we do our work in the
+dark, while the orderlies hold little torches to enable the doctors to
+dress the wounds. There are not _half_ enough nurses or doctors out
+here. In one hospital there are 400 beds and only two trained nurses.
+
+[Page Heading: ARRIVAL OF BRITISH TROOPS]
+
+Some of our own troops came through the town in London omnibuses to-day.
+It was quite a Moment, and we felt that all was well. We went to the
+gate and shook hands with them as they passed, and they made jokes and
+did us all good. We cheered and waved handkerchiefs.
+
+_5-6 October._--I think the last two days have been the most ghastly I
+ever remember. Every day seems to bring news of defeat. It is awful, and
+the Germans are quite close now. As I write the house shakes with the
+firing. Our troops are falling back, and the forts have fallen. Last
+night we took provisions and water to the cellars, and made plans to get
+the wounded taken there.
+
+They say the town will be shelled to-morrow. All these last two days
+bleeding men have been brought in. To-day three of them died, and I
+suppose none of them was more than 23. We have to keep up all the time
+and show a good face, and meals are quite cheery. To-day, Tuesday, was
+our last chance of leaving, and only two went.
+
+The guns boom by day as well as by night, and as each one is heard one
+thinks of more bleeding, shattered men. It is calm, nice autumn weather;
+the trees are yellow in the garden and the sky is blue, yet all the time
+one listens to the cries of men in pain. To-night I meant to go out for
+a little, but a nurse stopped me and asked me to sit by a dying man.
+Poor fellow, he was twenty-one, and looked like some brigand chief, and
+he smiled as he was dying. The horror of these two days will last
+always, and there are many more such days to come. Everyone is behaving
+well, and that is all I care about.
+
+_7 October._--It is a glorious morning: they will see well to kill each
+other to-day.
+
+The guns go all day and all night. They are so close that the earth
+shakes with them. Last night in the infernal darkness we were turning
+wounded men away from the door. There was no room for them even on the
+floor. The Belgians scream terribly. Our own men suffer quite quietly.
+One of them died to-day.
+
+Day and night a stream of vehicles passes the gate. It never ceases.
+Nearly all are motors, driven at a furious pace, and they sound horns
+all the time. These are met by a stream of carts and old-fashioned
+vehicles bringing in country people, who are flying to the coast. In
+Antwerp to-day it was "sauve qui peut"! Nearly all the men are
+going--Mr. ----, who has helped us, and Mr. ----, they are going to
+bicycle into Holland. A surgeon (Belgian) has fled from his hospital,
+leaving seven hundred beds, and there seem to be a great many deserters
+from the trenches.
+
+[Page Heading: THE SITUATION GETS WORSE]
+
+The news is still the same--"very bad"; sometimes I walk to the gate and
+ask returning soldiers how the battle goes, but the answer never varies.
+At lunch-time to-day firing ceased, and I heard it was because the
+German guns were coming up. We got orders to send away all the wounded
+who could possibly go, and we prepared beds in the cellars for those who
+cannot be moved. The military authorities beg us to remain as so many
+hospitals have been evacuated.
+
+The wounded continue to come in. One sees one car in the endless stream
+moving slowly (most of them _fly_ with their officers sitting upright,
+or with aeroplanes on long carriages), and one knows by the pace that
+more wounded are coming. Inside one sees the horrible six shelves behind
+the canvas curtain, and here and there a bound-up limb or head. One of
+our men had his leg taken off to-day, and is doing well. Nothing goes on
+much behind the scenes. The yells of the men are plainly heard, and
+to-day, as I sat beside the lung man who was taking so long to die,
+someone brought a sack to me, and said, "This is for the leg." All the
+orderlies are on duty in the hospital now. We can spare no one for
+rougher work. We can all bandage and wash patients. There are wounded
+everywhere, even on straw beds on the platform of the hall.
+
+Darkness seems to fall early, and it is the darkness that is so
+baffling. At 5 p.m. we have to feed everyone while there is a little
+light, then the groping about begins, and everyone falls over things.
+There is a clatter of basins on the floor or an over-turned chair. Any
+sudden noise is rather trying at present because of the booming of the
+guns. At 7 last night they were much louder than before, with a sort of
+strange double sound, and we were told that these were our "Long Toms,"
+so we hope that our Naval Brigade has come up.
+
+We know very little of what is going on except when we run out and ask
+some returning English soldiers for news. Yesterday it was always the
+same reply "Very bad." One of the Marines told me that Winston Churchill
+was "up and down the road amongst the shells," and I was also told that
+he had given orders that Antwerp was not to be taken till the last man
+in it was dead.
+
+The Marines are getting horribly knocked about. Yesterday Mrs. O'Gormon
+went out in her own motor-car and picked wounded out of the trenches.
+She said that no one knew why they were in the trenches or where they
+were to fire--they just lay there and were shot and then left.
+
+[Page Heading: HOW WE KEPT UP OUR COURAGE]
+
+I think I have seen too much pain lately. At Walworth one saw women
+every day in utter pain, and now one lives in an atmosphere of bandages
+and blood. I asked some of the orderlies to-day what it was that
+supported them most at a crisis of this sort. The answers varied, and
+were interesting. I myself am surprised to find that religion is not my
+best support. When I go into the little chapel to pray it is all too
+tender, the divine Mother and the Child and the holy atmosphere. I begin
+to feel rather sorry for myself, I don't know why; then I go and move
+beds and feel better; but I have found that just to behave like a
+well-bred woman is what keeps me up best. I had thought that the Flag or
+Religion would have been stronger incentives to me.
+
+Our own soldiers seem to find self-respect their best asset. It is
+amazing to see the difference between them and the Belgians, who are
+terribly poor hands at bearing pain, and beg for morphia all the time.
+An officer to-day had to have a loose tooth out. He insisted on having
+cocaine, and then begged the doctor to be careful!
+
+The firing now is furious--sometimes there are five or six explosions
+almost simultaneously. I suppose we shall read in the _Times_ that "all
+is quiet," and in _Le Matin_ that "pour le reste tout est calme."
+
+The staff are doing well. They are generally too busy to be frightened,
+but one has to speak once or twice to them before they hear.
+
+On Wednesday night, the 7th October, we heard that one more ship was
+going to England, and a last chance was given to us all to leave. Only
+two did so; the rest stayed on. Mrs. Stobart went out to see what was to
+be done. The ---- Consul said that we were under his protection, and
+that if the Germans entered the town he would see that we were treated
+properly. We had a deliberately cheerful supper, and afterwards a man
+called Smits came in and told us that the Germans had been driven back
+fifteen kilometres. I myself did not believe this, but we went to bed,
+and even took off our clothes.
+
+At midnight the first shell came over us with a shriek, and I went down
+and woke the orderlies and nurses and doctors. We dressed and went over
+to help move the wounded at the hospital. The shells began to scream
+overhead; it was a bright moonlight night, and we walked without
+haste--a small body of women--across the road to the hospital. Here we
+found the wounded all yelling like mad things, thinking they were going
+to be left behind. The lung man has died.
+
+Nearly all the moving to the cellars had already been done--only three
+stretchers remained to be moved. One wounded English sergeant helped us.
+Otherwise everything was done by women. We laid the men on mattresses
+which we fetched from the hospital overhead, and then Mrs. Stobart's
+mild, quiet voice said, "Everything is to go on as usual. The night
+nurses and orderlies will take their places. Breakfast will be at the
+usual hour." She and the other ladies whose night it was to sleep at the
+convent then returned to sleep in the basement with a Sister.
+
+[Page Heading: THE BOMBARDMENT]
+
+We came in for some most severe shelling at first, either because we
+flew the Red Cross flag or because we were in the line of fire with a
+powder magazine which the Germans wished to destroy. We sat in the
+cellars with one night-light burning in each, and with seventy wounded
+men to take care of. Two of them were dying. There was only one line of
+bricks between us and the shells. One shell fell into the garden, making
+a hole six feet deep; the next crashed through a house on the opposite
+side of the road and set it on fire. The danger was two-fold, for we
+knew our hospital, which was a cardboard sort of thing, would ignite
+like matchwood, and if it fell we should not be able to get out of the
+cellars. Some people on our staff were much against our making use of a
+cellar at all for this reason. I myself felt it was the safest place,
+and as long as we stayed with the wounded they minded nothing. We sat
+there all night.
+
+The English sergeant said that at daybreak the firing would probably
+cease, as the German guns stopped when daylight came in order to conceal
+the guns. We just waited for daybreak. When it came the firing grew
+worse. The sergeant said, "It is always worse just before they stop,"
+but the firing did not stop. Two hundred guns were turned on Antwerp,
+and the shells came over at the rate of four a minute. They have a
+horrid screaming sound as they come. We heard each one coming and
+wondered if it would hit us, and then we heard the crashing somewhere
+else and knew another shell was coming.
+
+The worst cases among the wounded lay on the floor, and these wanted
+constant attention. The others were in their great-coats, and stood
+about the cellar leaning on crutches and sticks. We wrapped blankets
+round the rheumatism cases and sat through the long night. Sometimes
+when we heard a crash near by we asked "Is that the convent?" but
+nothing else was said. All spoke cheerfully, and there was some laughter
+in the further cellar. One little red-haired nurse enjoyed the whole
+thing. I saw her carry three wounded men in succession on her back down
+to the cellar. I found myself wishing that for me a shot would come and
+finish the horrible night. Still we all chatted and smiled and made
+little jokes. Once during that long night in the cellar I heard one
+wounded man say to another as he rolled himself round on his mattress,
+"Que les anglais sont comme il faut."
+
+At six o'clock the convent party came over and began to prepare
+breakfast. The least wounded of the men began to steal away, and we were
+left with between thirty and forty of them. The difficulty was to know
+how to get away and how to remove the wounded, two of whom were nearly
+dead. Miss Benjamin went and stood at the gate, while the shells still
+flew, and picked up an ambulance. In this we got away six men, including
+the two dying ones. Mrs. Stobart was walking about for three hours
+trying to find anything on wheels to remove us and the wounded. At last
+we got a motor ambulance, and packed in twenty men--that was all it
+would hold. We told them to go as far as the bridge and send it back for
+us. It never came. Nothing seemed to come.
+
+The ---- Vice-Consul had told us we were under his protection, and he
+would, as a neutral, march out to meet the Germans and give us
+protection. But when we enquired we heard he had bolted without telling
+us. The next to give us protection was the ---- Field Hospital, who said
+they had a ship in the river and would not move without us. But they
+also left and said nothing.
+
+We got dinner for the men, and then the strain began to be much worse.
+We had seven wounded and ourselves and not a thing in which to get out
+of Antwerp. I told Mrs. Stobart we must leave the wounded at the convent
+in charge of the Sisters, and this we did, telling them where to take
+them in the morning. The gay young nurses fetched them across on
+stretchers.
+
+[Page Heading: FLIGHT]
+
+About 5 o'clock the shelling became more violent, and three shells came
+with only an instant between each. Presently we heard Mrs. Stobart say,
+"Come at once," and we went out and found three English buses with
+English drivers at the door. They were carrying ammunition, and were the
+last vehicles to leave Antwerp. We got into them and lay on the top of
+the ammunition, and the girls began to light cigarettes! The noise of
+the buses prevented our hearing for a time the infernal sound of shells
+and our cannons' answering roar.
+
+As we drove to the bridge many houses and sometimes a whole street was
+burning. No one seemed to care. No one was there to try and save
+anything. We drove through the empty streets and saw the burning houses,
+and great holes where shells had fallen, and then we got to the bridge
+and out of the line of fire.
+
+We set out to walk towards Holland, but a Belgian officer got us some
+Red Cross ambulances, and into these we got, and were taken to a
+convent at St. Gilles, where we slept on the floor till 3 a.m. At 3 a
+message was brought, "Get up at once--things are worse." Everyone seemed
+to be leaving, and we got into the Red Cross ambulances and went to the
+station.
+
+_9 October._--We have been all day in the train in very hard third-class
+carriages with the R.M.L.I. The journey of fifty miles took from 5
+o'clock in the morning, when we got away, till 12 o'clock at night, when
+we reached Ostend. The train hardly crawled. It was the longest I have
+ever seen. All Ostend was in darkness when we arrived--a German airship
+having been seen overhead. We always seem to be tumbling about in the
+dark. We went from one hotel to another trying to get accommodation, and
+at last (at the St. James's) they allowed us to lie on the floor of the
+restaurant. The only food they had for us was ten eggs for twenty-five
+hungry people and some brown bread, but they had champagne at the house,
+and I ordered it for everybody, and we made little speeches and tried to
+end on a good note.
+
+_10 October._--Mrs. Stobart took the unit back to England to-day. The
+wounded were found in a little house which the Red Cross had made over
+to them, and Dr. Ramsey, Sister Bailey, and the two nurses had much to
+say about their perilous journey. One man had died on the road, but the
+others all looked well. Their joy at seeing us was pathetic, and there
+was a great deal of handshaking over our meeting.
+
+[Page Heading: THE UNIT RETURNS TO ENGLAND]
+
+Miss Donnisthorpe and I got decent rooms at the Littoral Hotel, and
+brought our luggage there, and had baths, which we much needed. Dr.
+Hanson had got out of the train at Bruges to bandage a wounded man, and
+she was left behind, and is still lost. I suppose she has gone home. She
+is the doctor I like best, and she is one of the few whose nerves are
+not shattered. It was a sorry little party which Mrs. Stobart took back
+to England.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+WITH DR. HECTOR MUNRO'S FLYING AMBULANCE CORPS
+
+
+_12 October._--Everyone has gone back to England except Sister Bailey
+and me. She is waiting to hand over the wounded to the proper
+department, and I am waiting to see if I can get on anywhere. It does
+seem so hard that when men are most in need of us we should all run home
+and leave them.
+
+The noises and racket in Ostend are deafening, and there is panic
+everywhere. The boats go to England packed every time. I called on the
+Villiers yesterday, and heard that she is leaving on Tuesday. But they
+say that the British Minister dare not leave or the whole place would go
+wild with fear. Some ships lie close to us on the grey misty water, and
+the troops are passing along all day.
+
+_Later._--We heard to-night that the Germans are coming into Ostend
+to-morrow, so once more we fly like dust before a broom. It is horrible
+having to clear out for them.
+
+I am trying to discover what courage really consists in. It isn't only a
+lack of imagination. In some people it is transcendent, in others it is
+only a sort of stupidity. If proper precautions were taken the need for
+courage would be much reduced--the "tight place" is so often the result
+of sheer muddle.
+
+This evening Dr. Hector Munro came in from Ghent with his oddly-dressed
+ladies, and at first one was inclined to call them masqueraders in their
+knickerbockers and puttees and caps, but I believe they have done
+excellent work. It is a queer side of war to see young, pretty English
+girls in khaki and thick boots, coming in from the trenches, where they
+have been picking up wounded men within a hundred yards of the enemy's
+lines, and carrying them away on stretchers. Wonderful little Walküres
+in knickerbockers, I lift my hat to you!
+
+Dr. Munro asked me to come on to his convoy, and I gladly did so: he
+sent home a lady whose nerves were gone, and I was put in her place.
+
+[Page Heading: ON THE ROAD TO DUNKIRK]
+
+_13 October._--We had an early muddly breakfast, at which everyone spoke
+in a high voice and urged others to hurry, and then we collected luggage
+and went round to see the General. Afterwards we all got into our motor
+ambulances _en route_ for Dunkirk. The road was filled with flying
+inhabitants, and down at the dock wounded and well struggled to get on
+to the steamer. People were begging us for a seat in our ambulance, and
+well-dressed women were setting out to walk twenty miles to Dunkirk. The
+rain was falling heavily, and it was a dripping day when we and a lot of
+English soldiers found ourselves in the square in Dunkirk, where the
+few hotels are. We had an expensive lunch at a greasy restaurant, and
+then tried to find rooms.
+
+I began to make out of whom our party consists. There is Lady Dorothy
+Fielding--probably 22, but capable of taking command of a ship, and
+speaking French like a native; Mrs. Decker, an Australian, plucky and
+efficient; Miss Chisholm, a blue-eyed Scottish girl, with a thick coat
+strapped around her waist and a haversack slung from her shoulder; a
+tall American, whose name I do not yet know, whose husband is a
+journalist; three young surgeons, and Dr. Munro. It is all so quaint.
+The girls rule the company, carry maps and find roads, see about
+provisions and carry wounded.
+
+We could not get rooms at Dunkirk and so came on to St. Malo les Bains,
+a small bathing-place which had been shut up for the winter. The owner
+of an hotel there opened up some rooms for us and got us some ham and
+eggs, and the evening ended very cheerily. Our party seems, to me,
+amazingly young and unprotected.
+
+_St. Malo les Bains. 14 October._--To-day I took a car into Dunkirk and
+bought some things, as I have lost nearly all I possess at Antwerp. In
+the afternoon I went to the dock to get some letters posted, and tramped
+about there for a long time. War is such a disorganizer. Nothing starts.
+No one is able to move because of wounded arms and legs; it seems to
+make the world helpless and painful. In minor matters one lives nearly
+always with damp feet and rather dirty and hungry. Drains are all
+choked, and one does not get much sleep. These are trifles, of course.
+
+[Page Heading: WOMEN AT THE FRONT]
+
+To-night, as we sat at dinner, a message was brought that a woman
+outside had been run over and was going to have a baby immediately in a
+tram-way shelter, so out we went and got one of our ambulances, and a
+young doctor with his fiancée went off with her. There was a lot of
+argument about where the woman lived, until one young man said, "Well,
+get in somehow, or the baby will have arrived." There is a simplicity
+about these tragic times, and nothing matters but to save people.
+
+_15 October._--To-day we went down to the docks to get a passage for Dr.
+Munro, who is going home for money. A German Taube flew overhead and men
+were firing rifles at it. An Englishman hit it, and down it came like a
+shot bird, so that was the end of a brave man, whoever he was, and it
+was a long drop, too, through the still autumn air. Guns have begun to
+fire again, so I suppose we shall have to move on once more. One does
+not unpack, and it is dangerous to part with one's linen to be washed.
+
+Yesterday I heard a man--a man in a responsible position--say to a girl,
+"Tell me, please, how far we are from the firing-line." It was one of
+the most remarkable speeches I ever heard. I go to these girls for all
+my news. Lady Dorothy Fielding is our real commander, and everyone knows
+it. One hears on all sides, "Lady Dorothy, can you get us tyres for the
+ambulances? Where is the petrol?" "Do you know if the General will let
+us through?" "Have you been able to get us any stores?" "Ought we to
+have 'laissez-passer's' or not?" She goes to all the heads of
+departments, is the only good speaker of French, and has the only
+reliable information about anything. All the men acknowledge her
+position, and they say to me, "It's very odd being run by a woman; but
+she is the only person who can do anything." In the firing-line she is
+quite cool, and so are the other women. They seem to be interested, not
+dismayed, by shots and shrapnel.
+
+_16 October._--To-day I have been reading of the "splendid retreat" of
+the Marines from Antwerp and their "unprecedented reception" at Deal.
+Everyone appears to have been in a state of wild enthusiasm about them,
+and it seems almost like Mafeking over again.
+
+What struck me most about these men was the way in which they blew their
+own trumpets in full retreat and while flying from the enemy. We
+travelled all day in the train with them, and had long conversations
+with them all. They were all saying, "We will bring you the Kaiser's
+head, miss"; to which I replied, "Well, you had better turn round and go
+the other way." Some people like this "English" spirit. I find the
+conceit of it most trying. Belgium is in the hands of the enemy, and we
+flee before him singing our own praises loudly as we do so. The Marines
+lost their kit, spent one night in Antwerp, and went back to England,
+where they had an amazing reception amid scenes of unprecedented
+enthusiasm! The Government will give them a fresh kit, and the public
+will cheer itself hoarse!
+
+[Page Heading: MEN'S ATTITUDE TOWARDS WOMEN]
+
+I could not help thinking, when I read the papers to-day, of our tired
+little body of nurses and doctors and orderlies going back quietly and
+unproclaimed to England to rest at Folkestone for three days and then to
+come out here again. They had been for eighteen hours under heavy shell
+fire without so much as a rifle to protect them, and with the immediate
+chance of a burning building falling about them. The nurses sat in the
+cellars tending wounded men, whom they refused to leave, and then hopped
+on to the outside of an ammunition bus "to see the fun," and came home
+to buy their little caps and aprons out of their own slender purses and
+start work again.
+
+I shall believe in Britishers to the day of my death, and I hope I shall
+die before I cease to believe in them, but I do get some disillusions.
+At Antwerp not a man remained with us, and the worst of it was they made
+elaborate excuses for leaving. Even our sergeant, who helped during the
+night, took a comrade off in the morning and disappeared. Both were
+wounded, but not badly, and two young English Tommies, very slightly
+wounded, left us as soon as the firing began. We saw them afterwards at
+the bridge, and they looked pretty mean.
+
+To-night at dinner some officers came in when the food was pretty well
+finished, and only some drumsticks of chicken and bits of ham were left.
+I am always slow at beginning to eat, and I had a large wing of chicken
+still on my plate. I offered this to an officer, who accepted it and
+ate it, although he asked me to have a little bit of it. I do hope I
+shall meet some cases of chivalry soon.
+
+Firing ceased about 5 o'clock this afternoon, but we are short of news.
+The English papers rather annoy one with their continual victories, of
+which we see nothing. Everyone talks of the German big guns as if they
+were some happy chance. But the Germans were drilling and preparing
+while we were making speeches at Hyde Park Corner. Everything had been
+thought out by them. People talk of the difficulty they must have had in
+preparing concrete floors for their guns. Not a bit of it. There were
+innocent dwelling-houses, built long ago, with floors in just the right
+position and of just the right stuff, and when they were wanted the top
+stories were blown off and the concrete gun-floors were ready. There
+were local exhibitions, too, to which firms sent exhibition guns, which
+they "forgot" to remove! While we were going on strike they were making
+an army, and as we have sown so must we reap.
+
+One almost wonders whether it might not be possible to eliminate the
+personal element in war, so constant is the talk about victorious guns.
+If guns decide everything, then let them be trained on other guns. Let
+the gun that drives farthest and goes surest win. If every siege is
+decided by the German 16-inch howitzers, then let us put up brick and
+mortar or steel against them, but not men. The day for the bleeding
+human body seems to be over now that men are mown down by shells fired
+eight miles away. War used to be splendid because it made men strong and
+brave, but now a little German in spectacles can stand behind a Krupp
+gun and wipe out a regiment.
+
+[Page Heading: PROTECTION OF LIFE OR PROPERTY]
+
+I suppose women will always try to protect life because they know what
+it costs to produce it, and men will always try to protect property
+because that is what they themselves produce. At Antwerp our wounded men
+were begging us to go up to the hospital to fetch their purses from
+under their pillows! At present women are only repairers, darning socks,
+cleaning, washing up after men, bringing up reinforcements in the way of
+fresh life, and patching up wounded men, but some day they must and will
+have to say, "The life I produce has as much right to protection as the
+property you produce, and I claim my right to protect it."
+
+There seems to me a lack of connection between one man's desire to
+extend the area he occupies and young men in their teens lying with
+their lungs shot through or backs blown off.
+
+_19 October._--Our time is now spent in waiting and preparing for work
+which will probably come soon, as there has been fighting near us again.
+One hears the boom of guns a long way off, and always there is the sound
+of death in it. One has been too near it not to know now what it means.
+
+Yesterday I went to church in an empty little building, but a few of our
+hospital men turned up and made a small congregation. In the afternoon
+one or two people came to tea in my bedroom as we could not make our
+usual expedition to de Poorter's bunshop. The pastry habit is growing
+on us all.
+
+We went to the arsenal to-day to see about some repairs to our
+ambulances. I saw a German omnibus which had been captured, and the
+eagles on it had been painted out with stripes of red paint and the
+French colours put in their place. The omnibus was one mass of
+bullet-holes. I have seen waggons at Paardeberg, but I never saw
+anything so knocked about as that grey motor-bus. The engines and sides
+were shattered and the chauffeur, of course, had been killed. We went on
+by motor to the "Champs des Aviateurs." We saw one naval aeroplane man,
+who told us that he had been hit in his machine when it was 4,000 feet
+up in the air. His jacket was torn by a bullet and his machine dropped,
+but he was uninjured, and got away on a bicycle.
+
+The more I see of war the more I am amazed at the courage and nerve
+which are shown. Death or the chance of death is everywhere, and we meet
+it not as fatalists do or those who believe they can earn eternal glory
+with a sacrifice, but lightly and with a song. An English girl at
+Antwerp was horribly ashamed of some Belgians who skulked behind a wall
+when the firing was hottest. She herself remained in the open.
+
+It has been a great comfort to me that I have had a room to myself so
+far on this campaign. I find the communal spirit is not in me. The noisy
+meals, the heavy bowls of soup, the piles of labelled dinner-napkins,
+give me an unexpected feeling of oppressive seclusion and solitude, and
+only when I get away by myself do I feel that my soul is restored.
+
+Mr. Gleeson, an American, joined his wife here a couple of days ago: it
+was odd to have a book talk again.
+
+_21 October._--A still grey day with a level sea and a few fishing-boats
+going out with the tide. On the long grey shore shrimpers are wading
+with their nets. The only colour in the soft grey dawn is the little
+wink of white that the breaking waves make on the sand. This small empty
+seaside place, with its row of bathing-machines drawn up on the beach,
+has a look about it as of a theatre seen by daylight. All the seats are
+empty and the players have gone away, and the theatre begins to whisper
+as empty buildings do. I think I know quite well some of the people who
+come to St. Malo les Bains, just by listening to what the empty little
+place is saying.
+
+Firing has begun again. We hear that our ships are shelling Ostend from
+the sea. The news that reaches us is meagre, but I prefer that to the
+false reports that are circulated at home.
+
+[Page Heading: WE GO TO FURNES]
+
+This afternoon we came out in motors and ambulances to establish
+ourselves at Furnes in an empty Ecclesiastical College. Nothing was
+ready, and everything was in confusion. The wounded from the fighting
+near by had not begun to come in, but the infernal sound of the guns was
+quite close to us, and gave one the sensation of a blow on the ear.
+Night was falling as we came back to Dunkirk to sleep (for no beds were
+ready at Furnes), and we passed many motor vehicles of every
+description going out to Furnes. Some of them were filled with bread,
+and one saw stacks of loaves filling to the roof some once beautifully
+appointed motor. Now all was dust and dirt.
+
+All my previous ideas of men marching to war have had a touch of
+heroism, crudely expressed by quick-step and smart uniforms. To-day I
+see tired dusty men, very hungry looking and unshaved, slogging along,
+silent and tired, and ready to lie down whenever chance offers. They
+keep as near their convoy as they can, and are keen to stop and cook
+something. God! what is heroism? It baffles me.
+
+_22 October. Furnes._--The bulk of our party did not return from Furnes
+yesterday, so we gathered that the wounded must be coming in, and we
+left Dunkirk early and came here. As I packed my things and rolled my
+rugs at 5 a.m. I thought of Mary, and "Charles to fetch down the
+luggage," and the fuss at home over my delicate health!
+
+A French officer called Gilbert took us out to Furnes in his Brooklands
+racing-car, so that was a bit of an experience too, for we sat curled up
+on some luggage, and were told to hang on by something. The roads were
+empty and level, the little seats of the car were merely an appendage to
+its long big engines. When we got our breath back we asked Gilbert what
+his speed had been, and he told us 75 miles an hour.
+
+There was a crowd of motors in the yard of the Ecclesiastical College at
+Furnes, engines throbbing and clutches being jerked, and we were told
+that all last night the fighting had gone on and the wounded had been
+coming in. There are three wards already fairly full, nothing quite
+ready, and the inevitable and reiterated "where" heard on every side.
+
+"Where are the stretchers?" "Where are my forceps?" "Where are we to
+dine?" "Where are the dead to be put?" "Where are the Germans?"
+
+No one stops to answer. People ask everybody ten times over to do the
+same thing, and use anything that is lying about.
+
+[Page Heading: THE FIGHTING AT DIXMUDE]
+
+There are two war correspondents here--Mr. Gibbs and Mr. Ashmead
+Bartlett--and they told me about the fighting at Dixmude last night. I
+must try to get Mr. Gibbs's newspaper account of it, but nothing will
+ever be so simple and so dramatic as his own description. He and Mr.
+Bartlett, Mr. Gleeson and Dr. Munro, with young Mr. Brockville, the War
+Minister's son, went to the town, which was being heavily shelled.
+Dixmude was full of wounded, and the church and the houses were falling.
+The roar of things was awful, and the bursting shells overhead sent
+shrapnel pattering on the buildings, the pavements, and the cars.
+
+Young Brockville went into a house, where he heard wounded were lying,
+and found a pile of dead Frenchmen stacked against a wall. A bursting
+shell scattered them. He went on to a cellar and found some living men,
+got the stretchers, loaded the cars and bade them drive on. In the
+darkness, and with the deafening noises, no one heard his orders
+aright, the two motor ambulances moved on and left him behind amongst
+the burning houses and flying shells. It was only after going a few
+miles that the rest of the party found that he was not with them.
+
+Mr. Gleeson and Mr. Bartlett went back for him. Nothing need be said
+except that. They went back to hell for him, and the other two waited in
+the road with the wounded men. After an hour of waiting these two also
+went back.
+
+I asked Mr. Gibbs if he shared the contempt that some people expressed
+for bullets. He and Mr. Gleeson both said, "Anyone who talks of contempt
+for bullets is talking nonsense. Bullets mean death at every corner of
+the street, and death overhead and flying limbs and unspeakable sights."
+All these men went back. All of them behaved quietly and like gentlemen,
+but one man asked a friend of his over and over again if he was a
+Belgian refugee, and another said that a town steeple falling looked so
+strange that they could only stand about and light cigarettes. In the
+end they gave up Mr. Brockville for lost and came home with the
+ambulances. But he turned up in the middle of the night, to everyone's
+huge delight.
+
+_23 October._--A crisp autumn morning, a courtyard filled with motors
+and brancardiers and men in uniform, and women in knickerbockers and
+puttees, all lighting cigarettes and talking about repairs and gears and
+a box of bandages. The mornings always start happily enough. The guns
+are nearer to-day or more distant, the battle sways backwards and
+forwards, and there is no such thing as a real "base" for a hospital.
+We must just stay as long as we can and fly when we must.
+
+About 10 a.m. the ambulances that have been out all night begin to come
+in, the wounded on their pitiful shelves.
+
+"Take care. There are two awful cases. Step this way. The man on the top
+shelf is dead. Lift them down. Steady. Lift the others out first. Now
+carry them across the yard to the overcrowded ward, and lay them on the
+floor if there are no beds, but lay them down and go for others. Take
+the worst to the theatre: get the shattered limbs amputated and then
+bring them back, for there is a man just dead whose place can be filled;
+and these two must be shipped off to Calais; and this one can sit up."
+
+[Page Heading: A WOUNDED GERMAN]
+
+I found one young German with both hands smashed. He was not ill enough
+to have a bed, of course, but sat with his head fallen forward trying to
+sleep on a chair. I fed him with porridge and milk out of a little bowl,
+and when he had finished half of it he said, "I won't have any more. I
+am afraid there will be none for the others." I got a few cushions for
+him and laid him in a corner of the room. Nothing disturbs the deep
+sleep of these men. They seem not so much exhausted as dead with
+fatigue.
+
+A French boy of sixteen is a favourite of mine. He is such a beautiful
+child, and there is no hope for him; shot through the abdomen; he can
+retain nothing, and is sick all day, and every day he is weaker.
+
+I do not find that the men want to send letters or write messages.
+Their pain is too awful even for that, and I believe they can think of
+nothing else.
+
+All day the stretchers are brought in and the work goes on. It is about
+5 o'clock that the weird tired hour begins when the dim lamps are
+lighted, and people fall over things, and nearly everything is mislaid,
+and the wounded cry out, and one steps over forms on the floor. From
+then till one goes to bed it is difficult to be just what one ought to
+be, the tragedy of it is too pitiful. There is a boy with his eyes shot
+out, and there is a row of men all with head wounds from the cruel
+shrapnel overhead. Blood-stained mattresses and pillows are carried out
+into the courtyard. Two ladies help to move the corpses. There is always
+a pile of bandages and rags being burnt, and a youth stirs the horrible
+pile with a stick. A queer smell permeates everything, and the guns
+never cease. The wounded are coming in at the rate of a hundred a day.
+
+The Queen of the Belgians called to see the hospital to-day. Poor little
+Queen, coming to see the remnants of an army and the remnants of a
+kingdom! She was kind to each wounded man, and we were glad of her
+visit, if for no other reason than that some sort of cleaning and
+tidying was done in her honour. To-night Mr. Nevinson arrived, and we
+went round the wards together after supper. The beds were all full--so
+was the floor. I was glad that so many of the wounded were dying.
+
+The doctors said, "These men are not wounded, they are mashed."
+
+I am rather surprised to find how little the quite young girls seem to
+mind the sight of wounds and suffering. They are bright and witty about
+amputations, and do not shudder at anything. I am feeling rather
+out-of-date amongst them.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Page Heading: THE TRAGEDY OF PAIN]
+
+_Letter to Miss Macnaughtan's Sisters._
+
+DR. HECTOR MUNRO'S AMBULANCE,
+FURNES, BELGIUM,
+_23 October._
+
+MY DEAR PEOPLE,
+
+I think I may get this posted by a war correspondent who is going home,
+but I never know whether my letters reach you or not, for yours, if you
+write them, never reach me. I can't begin to tell you all that is
+happening, and it is really beyond what one is able to describe. The
+tragedy of pain is the thing that is most evident, and there is the roar
+and the racket of it and the everlasting sound of guns. The war seems to
+me now to mean nothing but torn limbs and stretchers. All the doctors
+say that never have they seen men so wounded.
+
+The day that we got here was the day that Dixmude was bombarded, and our
+ten ambulances (motor) went out to fetch in wounded. These were shoved
+in anywhere, dying and dead, and our men went among the shells with
+buildings falling about them and took out all they could. Except where
+the fire is hottest one women goes with each car. So far I have been
+doing ward work, but one of the doctors is taking me on an ambulance
+this afternoon. Most of the women who go are very good chauffeurs
+themselves, so they are chosen before a person who can't drive. They
+are splendid creatures, and funk nothing, and they are there to do a
+little dressing if it is needed.
+
+The firing is awfully heavy to-day. They say it is the big French guns
+that have got up. Two of our ambulances have had miraculous escapes
+after being hit. Things happen too quickly to know how to describe them.
+To-day when I went out to breakfast an old village woman aged about 70
+was brought in wounded in two places. I am not fond of horrors.
+
+We have been given an empty house for the staff, the owners having
+quitted it in a panic and left everything, children's toys on the
+carpet, and beds unmade. The hospital is a college for priests, all of
+whom have fled. Into this building the wounded are carried day and
+night, and the surgeons are working in shifts and can't get the work
+done. We are losing, alas! so many patients. Nothing can be done for
+them, and I always feel so glad when they are gone. I don't think anyone
+can realise what it is to be just behind the line of battle, and I fear
+there would not be much recruiting if people at home could see our
+wards. One can only be thankful for a hospital like this in the thick of
+things, for we are saving lives, and not only so, but saving the lives
+of men who perhaps have lain three days in a trench or a turnip-field
+undiscovered and forgotten.
+
+As soon as a wounded man has been attended to and is able to be put on a
+stretcher again he is sent to Calais. We have to keep emptying the wards
+for other patients to come in, and besides, if the fighting comes this
+way, we shall have to fall back a little further.
+
+We have a river between us and the Germans, so we shall always know when
+they are coming and get a start and be all right.
+
+Your loving
+S. MACNAUGHTAN.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_25 October._--A glorious day. Up in the blue even Taubes--those birds
+of prey--look beautiful, like eagles wheeling in their flight. It is all
+far too lovely to leave, yet men are killing each other painfully with
+every day that dawns.
+
+I had a tiresome day in spite of the weather, because the hospital was
+evacuated suddenly owing to the nearness of the Germans, and I missed
+going with the ambulance, so I hung about all day.
+
+_26 October. My birthday._--This morning several women were brought in
+horribly wounded. One girl of sixteen had both legs smashed. I was
+taking one old woman to the civil hospital and I had to pass eighteen
+dead men; they were laid out beside some women who were washing clothes,
+and I noticed how tired even in death their poor dirty feet looked.
+
+[Page Heading: TO THE EDGE OF THE FIGHTING LINE]
+
+We started early in the ambulance to-day, and went to pick up the
+wounded. It was a wild gusty morning, one of those days when the sky
+takes up nearly all the picture and the world looks small. The mud was
+deep on the road, and a cyclist corps plunged heavily along through it.
+The car steered badly and we drove to the edge of the fighting-line.
+
+First one comes to a row of ammunition vans, with men cooking breakfast
+behind them. Then come the long grey guns, tilted at various angles, and
+beyond are the shells bursting and leaving little clouds of black or
+white in the sky. We signalled to a gun not to fire down the road in
+much the same way as a bobby signals to a hansom. When we got beyond the
+guns they fired over us with a long streaky sort of sound. We came back
+to the road and picked up the wounded wherever we could find them.
+
+The churches are nearly all filled with straw, the chairs piled
+anywhere, and the sacrament removed from the altar. In cottages and
+little inns it is the same thing--a litter of straw, and men lying on it
+in the chilly weather. Here and there through some little window one
+sees surgeons in their white coats dressing wounds. Half the world seems
+to be wounded and inefficient. We filled our ambulance, and stood about
+in curious groups of English men and women who looked as if they were on
+some shooting-party. When our load was complete we drove home.
+
+Dr. Munro told me that last night he met a German prisoner quite naked
+being marched in, proudly holding his head up. Lots of the men fight
+naked in the trenches. In hospital we meet delightful German youths.
+
+Amongst others who were brought in to-day was Mr. "Dick" Reading, the
+editor of a sporting paper. He was serving in the Belgian army, and was
+behind a gun-carriage when it was fired upon and started. Reading clung
+on behind with both his legs broken, and he stuck to it till the
+gun-carriage was pulled up! He came in on a stretcher as bright as a
+button, smoking a cigar and laughing.
+
+[Page Heading: POPERINGHE]
+
+Late this afternoon we had to turn out of Furnes and fly to Poperinghe.
+The drive was intensely interesting, through crowds of troops of every
+nationality, and the town seemed large and well lighted. It was crowded
+with people to see all our ambulances arrive. We went to a café, where
+there was a fire but nothing to eat, so some of the party went out and
+bought chops, and I cooked them in a stuffy little room which smelt of
+burnt fat.
+
+After supper we went to a convent where the Queen of the Belgians had
+made arrangements for us to sleep. It was delightful. Each of us had a
+snowy white bed with white curtains in a long corridor, and there was a
+basin of water, cold but clean, and a towel for each of us. We
+thoroughly enjoyed our luxuries.
+
+_28 October._--The tide of battle seems to have swung away from us again
+and we were recalled to Furnes to-day. The hospital looked very bare and
+empty as all the patients had been evacuated, and there was nothing to
+do till fresh ones should come in. Three shells came over to-day and
+landed in a field near us. Some people say they were sent by our own
+naval guns firing wide. The souvenir grafters went out and got pieces of
+them.
+
+[Page Heading: DUNKIRK]
+
+_2 November._--I have been spending a couple of nights in Dunkirk, where
+I went to meet Miss Fyfe. The _Invicta_ got in late because the _Hermes_
+had been torpedoed and they had gone to her assistance. No doubt the
+torpedo was intended for the _Invicta_, which carries ammunition, and is
+becoming an unpopular boat in consequence. Forty of the _Hermes_ men
+were lost.
+
+Dunkirk is full of people, and one meets friends at every turn. I had
+tea at the Consulate one afternoon, and was rather glad to get away from
+the talk of shells and wounds, which is what one hears most of at
+Furnes.
+
+I saw Lord Kitchener in the town one day; he had come to confer with
+Joffre, Sir John French, Monsieur Poincaré, and Mr. Churchill, at a
+meeting held at the Chapeau Rouge Hotel. Rather too many valuable men in
+one room, I thought--especially with so many spies about! Three men in
+English officers' uniforms were found to be Germans the other day and
+taken out and shot.
+
+The Duchess of Sutherland has a hospital at our old Casino at Malo les
+Bains, and has made it very nice. I had a long chat with a Coldstream
+man who was there. He told me he was carried to a barn after being shot
+in the leg and the bone shattered. He lay there for six days before he
+was found, with nothing to eat but a few biscuits. He dressed his own
+wound.
+
+"But," he said, "the string of my puttee had been driven in so far by
+the shot I couldn't find it to get the thing off, so I had to bandage
+over it."
+
+I went down to the station one day to see if anything could be done for
+the wounded there. They are coming in at the rate of seven hundred a
+day, and are laid on straw in an immense goods-shed. They get nothing to
+eat, and the atmosphere is so bad that their wounds can't be dressed.
+They are all patient, as usual, only the groans are heartbreaking
+sometimes. We are arranging to have soup given to them, and a number of
+ambulance men arrived who will remove them to hospital ships and trains.
+But the goods-shed is a shambles, and let us leave it at that.[1]
+
+ [1] It must not be thought that in this and in subsequent
+ passages referring to the sufferings of the wounded Miss Macnaughtan
+ alludes to any hardships endured by British troops. Her time in
+ Flanders was all spent behind the French and Belgian lines.--ED.
+
+Mrs. Knocker came into Dunkirk for a night's rest while I was staying
+there. She had been out all the previous day in a storm of wind and rain
+driving an ambulance. It was heavy with wounded, and shells were
+dropping very near. She--the most courageous woman that ever lived--was
+quite unnerved at last. The glass of the car she was driving was dim
+with rain and she could carry no lights, and with this swaying load of
+injured men behind her on the rutty road she had to stick to her wheel
+and go on.
+
+Some one said to her, "There is a doctor in such-and-such a farmhouse,
+and he has no dressings. You must take him these."
+
+She demurred (a most unusual thing for her), but men do not protect
+women in this war, and they said she had to take them. She asked one of
+the least wounded of the men to get down and see what was in front of
+her, and he disappeared altogether. The dark mass she had seen in the
+road was a huge hole made by a shell! After steering into dead horses
+and going over awful roads Mrs. Knocker came bumping into the yard,
+steering so badly that they ran to see what was wrong, and they found
+her fainting, and she was carried into the house. At Dunkirk she got a
+good dinner and a night's rest.
+
+_Furnes. 5 November._--The hospital is beginning to fill up again, and
+the nurses are depressed because only those cases which are nearly
+hopeless are allowed to stay, so it is death on all sides and just a
+hell of suffering. One man yelled to me to-night to kill him. I wish I
+might have done so. The tragedy of war presses with a fearful weight
+after being in a hospital, and wherever one is one hears the infernal
+sound of the guns. On Sunday about forty shells came into Furnes, but I
+was at Dunkirk. This morning about five dropped on to the station.
+
+[Page Heading: NIEUPORT]
+
+To-day I went out to Nieuport. It is like some town one sees in a
+horrible nightmare. Hardly a house is left standing, but that does not
+describe the scene. Nothing can fitly describe it except perhaps such a
+pen as Victor Hugo's. The cathedral at Nieuport has two outer walls left
+standing. The front leans forward helplessly, the aisles are gone. The
+trees round about are burnt up and shot away. In the roadway are great
+holes which shells have made. The very cobbles of the street are
+scattered by them. Not a window remains in the place; all are shattered
+and many hang from their frames. The fronts of the houses have fallen
+out, and one sees glimpses of wretched domestic life: a baby's cradle
+hangs in mid-air, some tin boxes have fallen through from the box-room
+in the attic to the ground floor. Shops are shivered and their contents
+strewn on all sides; the interiors of other houses have been hollowed
+out by fire. There is a toy-shop with dolls grinning vacantly at the
+ruins or bobbing brightly on elastic strings.
+
+In a wretched cottage some soldiers are having breakfast at a
+fine-carved table. In one house, surrounded by a very devastation of
+wreckage, some cheap ornaments stand intact on a mantelpiece. From
+another a little ginger-coloured cat strolls out unconcernedly! The
+bedsteads hanging midway between floors look twisted and thrawn--nothing
+stands up straight. Like the wounded, the town has been rendered
+inefficient by war.
+
+_6 November._--Furnes always seems to me a weird tragic place. I cannot
+think why this is so, but its influence is to me rather curious. I feel
+as if all the time I was living in some blood-curdling ghost story or a
+horrid dream. Every day I try to overcome the feeling, but I can't
+succeed. This afternoon I made up my mind to return to our villa and
+write my diary. The day was lovely, and I meant to enjoy a rest and a
+scribble, but so strong was the horrid influence of the place that I
+couldn't settle to anything. I can't describe it, but it seemed to
+stifle me, and I can only compare it to some second sight in which one
+sees death. I sat as long as I could doing my writing, but I had to give
+in at last, and I tucked my book under my arm and walked back to the
+hospital, where at least I was with human beings and not ghosts.
+
+Our life here is made up of many elements and many people, all rather
+incongruous, but the average of human nature is good. A villa belonging
+to a Dr. Joos was given to our staff. It is a pretty little house, with
+three beds in it, and we are eighteen people, so most of us sleep on the
+floor. It wouldn't be a bad little place (except for the drains) if only
+there wasn't this horrid influence about it all. I always particularly
+dislike toddling after people like a little lost dog, but here I find
+that unless I am with somebody the ghosts get the better of me.
+
+The villa is being ruined by us I fear, but I have a woman to clean it,
+and I am trying to keep it in order. It is a cold little place for we
+have no fires. We can, by pumping, get a little very cold water, and
+there is a tap in the bath-room and one basin at which everyone tries to
+wash and shave at the same time. We get our meals at a butcher's shop,
+where there is a large room which we more than fill. The lights of the
+town are all out by 6 o'clock, so we grope about, but there is a lamp in
+our dining-room. When we come out we have to pass through the butcher's
+shop, and one may find oneself running into the interior of a sheep.
+
+We get up about 7 o'clock and fight for the basin. Then we walk round to
+the butcher's shop and have breakfast at 7.30. Most people think they
+start off for the day's work at 8, but it is generally quite 10 o'clock
+before all the brown-hooded ambulances with their red crosses have moved
+out of the yard. We do not as a rule meet again till dinner-time, and
+even then many of the party are absent. They come in at all times, very
+dirty and hungry, and the greeting is always the same, "Did you get
+many?"--_i.e._, "Have you picked up many wounded?"
+
+One night Dr. Munro got bowled over by the actual air force created by a
+shell, which however did not hit him. Yesterday Mr. Secher was shot in
+the leg. I am amazed that not more get hit. They are all very cheery
+about it.
+
+To-day we heard that a jolly French boy with white teeth, who has been
+very good at making coffee at our picnic lunches, was put up against a
+tree and shot at daybreak. Someone had made him drunk the night before,
+and he had threatened an officer with a revolver.
+
+[Page Heading: A DRAMATIC INCIDENT]
+
+_7 November. St. Malo les Bains._--Lady Bagot turned up here to-day, and
+I lunched with her at the Hôtel des Arcades. Just before lunch a bomb
+was dropped from a Taube overhead, and hardly had we sat down to lunch
+when a revolver shot rang through the room. A French officer had
+discharged his pistol by mistake, and he lay on the floor in his scarlet
+trews. The scene was really the Adelphi, and as the man had only
+slightly hurt himself one was able to appreciate the scenic effect and
+to notice how well staged it was. A waiter ran for me. I ran for
+dressings to one of our ambulances, and we knelt in the right attitude
+beside the hero in his scarlet clothes, while the "lady of the bureau"
+begged for the bullet!
+
+In the evening Lady Bagot and I worked at the railway-sheds till 3 a.m.
+One immense shed had 700 wounded in it. The night scene, with its
+inevitable accompaniment of low-turned lamps and gloom, was one I shall
+not forget. The railway-lines on each side of the covered platform were
+spread with straw, and on this wounded men, bedded down like cattle,
+slept. There were rows of them sleeping feet to feet, with straw over
+them to make a covering. I didn't hear a grumble, and hardly a groan.
+Most of them slept heavily.
+
+Near the door was a row of Senegalese, their black faces and gleaming
+eyes looking strange above the straw; and further on were some Germans,
+whom the French authorities would not allow our men to touch; then rows
+of men of every colour and blood; Zouaves, with their picturesque dress
+all grimed and colourless; Turcos, French, and Belgians. Nearly all had
+their heads and hands bound up in filthy dressings. We went into the
+dressing-station at the far end of the great shed and dressed wounds
+till about 3 o'clock, then we passed through the long long lines of
+sleeping wounded men again and went home.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_To Lady Clémentine Waring._
+
+_8 November._
+MY DEAREST CLEMMIE,
+
+I have a big job for you. Will you do it? I know you are the person for
+it, and you will be prompt and interested.
+
+The wounded are suffering from hunger as much as from their wounds. In
+most places, such as dressing-stations and railway-stations, nothing is
+provided for them at all, and many men are left for two or three days
+without food.
+
+I wish I could describe it all to you! These wounded men are picked up
+after a fight and taken anywhere--very often to some farmhouse or inn,
+where a Belgian surgeon claps something on to the wounds or ties on a
+splint, and then our (Dr. Munro's) ambulances come along and bring the
+men into the Field Hospital if they are very bad, or if not they are
+taken direct to a station and left there. They may, and often do, have
+to wait for hours till a train loads up and starts. Even those who are
+brought to the Field Hospital have to turn out long before they can walk
+or sit, and they are carried to the local station and put into covered
+horse-boxes on straw, and have to wait till the train loads up and
+starts. You see everything has to be done with a view to sudden
+evacuation. We are so near to the firing-line that the Germans may sweep
+on our way at any time, and then every man has to be cleared out somehow
+(we have a heap of ambulances), and the staff is moved off to some safer
+place. We did a bolt of this sort to Poperinghe one day, but after being
+there two days the fighting swayed the other way and we were able to
+come back.
+
+[Page Heading: HUNGER OF THE WOUNDED]
+
+Well, during all these shiftings and waitings the wounded get nothing to
+eat. I want some travelling-kitchens, and I want you to see about the
+whole thing. You may have to come from Scotland, because I have opened
+the subject with Mr. Burbidge, of Harrods' Stores. A Harrods' man is
+over here. He takes back this letter. I particularly want you to see
+him. Mr. Burbidge has, or can obtain, old horse-vans which can be fitted
+up as travelling-kitchens. He is doing one now for Millicent, Duchess of
+Sutherland; it is to cost £15, which I call very cheap. I wish you
+could see it, for I know you could improve upon it. It is fitted, I
+understand, with a copper for boiling soup, and a chimney. There is also
+a place for fuel, and I should like a strong box that would hold
+vegetables, dried peas, etc., whose top would serve as a table. Then
+there must be plenty of hooks and shelves where possible, and I believe
+Burbidge makes some sort of protection against fire in the way of lining
+to the van. Harrods' man says that he doesn't know if they have any more
+vans or not.
+
+I want someone with push and energy to see the thing right through and
+get the vans off. The _Invicta_, from the Admiralty Pier, Dover, sailing
+daily, brings Red Cross things free.
+
+[Page Heading: PROPOSED TRAVELLING-KITCHENS]
+
+The vans would have to have the Red Cross painted on them, and in
+_small_ letters, somewhere inconspicuous, "Miss Macnaughtan's
+Travelling-Kitchens." This is only for identification. I thought we
+might begin with _three_, and get them sent out _at once_, and go on as
+they are required. I must have a capable person and a helper in charge
+of each, so that limits my number. The Germans have beautiful little
+kitchens at each station, but I can't be sure what money I can raise, so
+must go slow.
+
+I want also two little trollies, just to hold a tin jug and some tin
+cups hung round, with one oil-lamp to keep the jug hot. The weather will
+be bitter soon, and only "special" cases have blankets.
+
+Clemmie, if only we could see this thing through without too much red
+tape!... No permission need be given for the work of these kitchens, as
+we are under the Belgian Minister of War and act for Belgium.
+
+I thought of coming over to London for a day or two, and I can still do
+so, only I know you will be able to do this thing better than anyone,
+and will think of things that no one else thinks of. I can get voluntary
+workers, but meat and vegetables are dreadfully dear, so I shan't be
+able to spend a great deal on the vans. However, any day they may be
+taken by the Germans, so the only thing that really matters is to get
+the wounded _a_ mug of hot soup.
+
+Last night I was dressing wounds and bandaging at Dunkirk station till 3
+a.m. The men are brought there in _heaps_, all helpless, all suffering.
+Sometimes there are fifteen hundred in one day. Last night seven hundred
+lay on straw in a huge railway-shed, with straw to cover them--bedded
+down like cattle, and all in pain. Still, it is better than the trenches
+and shrapnel overhead!
+
+At the Field Hospital the wounds are ghastly, and we are losing so many
+patients! Mere boys of sixteen come in sometimes mortally wounded, and
+there are a good many cases of wounded women. You see, no one is safe;
+and, oh, my dear, have you ever seen a town that has been thoroughly
+shelled? At Furnes we have a good many shells dropping in, but no real
+bombardment yet. After Antwerp I don't seem to care about these
+visitors. We were under fire there for eighteen hours, and it was a bit
+of a strain as our hospital was in a line with the Arsenal, which they
+were trying to destroy, so we got more than our share of attention. The
+noise was horrible, and the shells came in at the rate of four a minute.
+There was something quite hellish about it.
+
+Do you remember that great bit of writing in Job, when Wisdom speaks and
+says: "Destruction and Death say, it is not in me"?
+
+The wantonness and sort of rage of it all appalled one. Our women
+behaved splendidly.
+
+I'll come over to England if you think I had better, but I am sure you
+are the person I want.... If anything should prevent your helping,
+please wire to me: otherwise I shall know things are going forward.
+
+Your loving,
+S. MACNAUGHTAN.
+
+The vans should be strong as they may have rough usage; also, to take
+them to their destination they may have to be hitched on to a
+motor-ambulance.
+
+One or two strong trays in each kitchen would be useful. The little
+trollies would be for railway-station work. As we go on I hope to have
+one kitchen for each dressing-station as well.
+
+SALLY.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_8 November._--This afternoon I went down to the Hôtel des Arcades,
+which is the general meeting ground for everyone. The drawing-room was
+full and so was the Place Jean Bart, on which it looks. Suddenly we saw
+people beginning to fly! Soldiers, old men, children in their Sunday
+clothes, all running to cover. I asked what was up, and heard that a
+Taube was at that moment flying over our hotel. These are the sort of
+pleasant things one hears out here! Then Lady Decies came running in to
+say that two bombs had fallen and twenty people were wounded.
+
+Once more we got bandages and lint and hurried off in a motor-car, but
+the civilian doctors were looking after everyone. The bomb by good luck
+had fallen in a little garden, and had done the least damage imaginable,
+but every window in the neighbourhood was smashed.
+
+[Page Heading: NIGHT WORK AT RAILWAY SHEDS]
+
+At night we went to the railway-sheds and dressed wounds. I made them do
+the Germans; but it was too late for one of them--a handsome young
+fellow with both his feet deep blue with frost-bite, his leg broken, and
+a great wound in his thigh. He had not been touched for eight days.
+Another man had a great hole right through his arm and shoulder. The
+dressing was rough and ready. The surgeons clapped a great wad of lint
+into the hole and we bound it up. There is no hot water, no sterilising,
+no cyanide gauze even, but iodine saves many lives, and we have plenty
+of it. The German boy was dying when we left. His eyes above the straw
+began to look glazed and dim. Death, at least, is merciful.
+
+We work so late at the railway-sheds that I lie in bed till lunch time.
+Lady Bagot and I go to the sheds in the evening and stay there till 1
+a.m.
+
+_11 November. Boulogne._--I got a letter from Julia yesterday, telling
+me that Alan is wounded and in hospital at Boulogne, and asking me to
+go and see him.
+
+I came here this morning and had to run about for a long time before I
+started getting a "laissez-passer" for the road, as spies are being shot
+almost at sight now. By good chance I got a motor-car which brought me
+all the way; trains are uncertain, and filled with troops, and one never
+knows when they will arrive.
+
+[Page Heading: STORIES OF THE BRITISH FRONT]
+
+I found poor old Alan at the Base Hospital, in terrible pain, poor boy,
+but not dangerously wounded. He has been through an awful time, and
+nearly all the officers of his regiment have been killed or wounded. For
+my part, in spite of his pain, I can thank God that he is out of the
+firing-line for a bit. The horror of the war has got right into him, and
+he has seen things which few boys of eighteen can have witnessed. Eight
+days in the trenches at Ypres under heavy fire day and night is a pretty
+severe test, and Alan has behaved splendidly. He told me the most awful
+tales of what he had seen, but I believe it did him good to get things
+off his chest, so I listened. The thing he found the most ghastly was
+the fact that when a trench has been taken or lost the wounded and dying
+and dead are left out in the open. He says that firing never ceases, and
+it is impossible to reach these men, who die of starvation within sight
+of their comrades.
+
+"Sometimes," Alan said, "we see them raise themselves on an arm for an
+instant, and they yell to us to come to them, but we can't."
+
+His own wound was received when the Germans "got their range to an
+inch" and began shelling their trenches. A whole company next to Alan
+was wiped out, and he started to go back to tell his Colonel the trench
+could not be held. The communication trench by which he went was not
+quite finished, and he had to get out into the open and race across to
+where the unfinished trench began again. Poor child, running for his
+life! He was badly hit in the groin, but managed just to tumble into the
+next bit of the trench, where he found two men who carried him, pouring
+with blood, to his Colonel. He was hastily bound up and carried four
+miles on crossed rifles to the hospital at Ypres, where his wound was
+properly dressed, and after an hour he was put on the train for
+Boulogne.
+
+Alan had one story of how he was told to wait at a certain spot with 130
+men. "So I waited," he said, "but the fire was awful." His regiment had,
+it seems, gone round another way. "I got thirty of the men away," Alan
+said, "the rest were killed." It means something to be an officer and a
+gentleman.
+
+Every day the list of casualties grows longer, and I wonder who will be
+left.
+
+_19 November. Furnes._--Early on Monday, the 16th, I left Boulogne in
+Lady Bagot's car and came to Dunkirk, where I was laid up with a cold
+for two or three days. It was singularly uncomfortable, as no one ever
+answered my bell, etc.; but I had a bed, which is always such a comfort,
+and the room was heated, so I got my things dry. Very often I find the
+only way to do this or to get dry clothing is to take things to bed with
+one--it is rather chilly, but better than putting on wet things in the
+morning.
+
+The usual number of unexpected people keep coming and going. At Boulogne
+I met Lady Eileen Elliot, Ian Malcolm, Lord Francis Scott, and various
+others--all very English and clean and well fed. It was quite different
+from Furnes, to which I returned on Wednesday. Most of us sleep on
+mattresses on the floor at Furnes, but even these were all occupied, so
+I hopped about getting in where I could. The cold weather "set in in
+earnest" as newspapers say, and when it does that in Furnes it seems to
+be particularly in earnest.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_To Lady Clémentine Waring._
+
+HÔTEL DES ARCADES,
+DUNKERQUE,
+_18 November, 1914._
+
+DEAREST CLEMMIE,
+
+Forgive the delay in writing again. I was too sick about it all at
+first, then I was sent for to go to Boulogne to see my nephew, who is
+badly wounded. I can't explain the present situation to you because it
+would only be censored, but I hope to write about it later.
+
+I shall manage the soup-kitchens soon, I hope, but next week will decide
+that and many things. The objection to the _pattern_ is that those vans
+would overturn going round corners when hitched on behind ambulances.
+Some wealthy people are giving a regular motor kitchen to run about to
+various "dressing"-stations--this will be most useful, but it doesn't do
+away with the need of something to eat during those interminable waits
+at the _railway_-stations.
+
+[Page Heading: CHANGES IN THE SITUATION]
+
+To-morrow I begin my own little soup-kitchen at Furnes. I have a room
+but no van, and this is most unsatisfactory, as any day the room (so
+near the station) may be commandeered. A van would make me quite
+independent, but I must feel my way. The situation changes very often,
+as you will of course see, and when one is quite close to the Front one
+has to be always changing with it.
+
+I want helpers and I want vans, but rules are becoming stricter than
+ever. Even Adeline, Duchess of Bedford, whose good work everyone knows,
+has waited for a permit for a week at Boulogne, and has now gone home.
+When all the useful women have been expelled there will follow the usual
+tale of soldiers' suffering and privations: when women are about they
+don't let them suffer.
+
+The only plan (if you know of any man who wants to come out) is to know
+how to drive a motor-car and then to offer it and his services to the
+Red Cross Society. I have set my heart on station soup-kitchens because
+I see the men put into horse-boxes on straw straight off the field, and
+there they lie without water or light or food while the train jolts on
+for hours. I wish I had you here to back me up! We could do anything
+together.
+
+As ever, yours gratefully,
+SALLY.
+
+The motor kitchens cost £600 fitted, but the maker is giving the one I
+speak of for £300. Everyone has given so much to the war I don't feel
+sure I could collect this amount. I might try America, but it takes a
+long time.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+AT FURNES RAILWAY-STATION
+
+
+_21 November._--I am up to my eyes in soup! I have started my
+soup-kitchen at the station, and it gives me a lot to do. Bad luck to
+it, my cold and cough are pretty bad!
+
+It is odd to wake in the morning in a frozen room, with every pane of
+glass green and thick with frost, and one does not dare to think of Mary
+and morning tea! When I can summon enough moral courage to put a foot
+out of bed I jump into my clothes at once; half dressed, I go to a
+little tap of cold water to wash, and then, and for ever, I forgive
+entirely those sections of society who do not tub. We brush our own
+boots here, and put on all the clothes we possess, and then descend to a
+breakfast of Quaker oat porridge with bread and margarine. I wouldn't
+have it different, really, till our men are out of the trenches; but I
+am hoping most fervently that I shan't break down, as I am so "full with
+soup."
+
+[Page Heading: WORK IN THE SOUP-KITCHEN]
+
+Our kitchen at the railway-station is a little bit of a passage, which
+measures eight feet by eight feet. In it are two small stoves. One is a
+little round iron thing which burns, and the other is a sort of little
+"kitchener" which doesn't! With this equipment, and various huge
+"marmites," we make coffee and soup for hundreds of men every day. The
+first convoy gets into the station about 9.30 a.m., all the men frozen,
+the black troops nearly dead with cold. As soon as the train arrives I
+carry out one of my boiling "marmites" to the middle of the stone
+entrance and ladle out the soup, while a Belgian Sister takes round
+coffee and bread.
+
+These Belgians (three of them) deserve much of the credit for the
+soup-kitchen, if any credit is going about, as they started with coffee
+before I came, and did wonders on nothing. Now that I have bought my
+pots and pans and stoves we are able to do soup, and much more. The
+Sisters do the coffee on one side of eight feet by eight, while I and my
+vegetables and the stove which goes out are on the other. We can't ask
+people to help because there is no room in the kitchen; besides, alas!
+there are so many people who like raising a man's head and giving him
+soup, but who do not like cutting up vegetables.
+
+After the first convoy of wounded has been served, other wounded men
+come in from time to time, then about 4 o'clock there is another
+train-load. At ten p.m. the largest convoy arrives. The men seem too
+stiff to move, and many are carried in on soldiers' backs. The
+stretchers are laid on the floor, those who can "s'asseoir" sit on
+benches, and every man produces a "quart" or tin cup. One and all they
+come out of the darkness and never look about them, but rouse themselves
+to get fed, and stretch out poor grimy hands for bread and steaming
+drinks. There is very little light--only one oil-lamp, which hangs from
+the roof, and burns dimly. Under this we place the "marmites," and all
+that I can see is one brown or black or wounded hand stretched out into
+the dim ring of light under the lamp, with a little tin mug held out for
+soup. Wet and ragged, and covered with sticky mud, the wounded lie in
+the salle of the station, and, except under the lamp, it is all quite
+dark. There are dim forms and frosty breaths, and a door which bangs
+continually, and then the train loads up, the wounded depart, and a
+heavy smell and an empty pot are all that remain. We clean up the
+kitchen, and go home about 1 a.m. I do the night work alone.
+
+_24 November._--We are beginning to get into our stride, and the small
+kitchen turns out its gallons and buckets of liquid. Mrs. ---- has been
+helping me with my work. It is good to see anyone so beautiful in the
+tiny kitchen, and it is quaint to see anyone so absolutely ignorant of
+how a pot is washed or a vegetable peeled.
+
+I have a little electric lamp, which is a great comfort to me, as I have
+to walk home alone at midnight. When I get up in the morning I have to
+remember all I shall want during the day, as the villa is a mile from
+the station, so I take my lantern out at 9.30 a.m.!
+
+I saw a Belgian regiment march back to the trenches to-day. They had a
+poor little band and some foggy instruments, and a bugler flourished a
+trumpet. I stood by the roadside and cried till I couldn't see.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Page Heading: A LETTER HOME]
+
+_To Miss Mary King._
+
+FURNES, BELGIUM,
+_27 November._
+
+DEAR MARY,
+
+You will like to know that I have a soup-kitchen at the station here,
+and I am up to my neck in soup. I make it all day and a good bit of the
+night too, for the wounded are coming in all the time, and they are half
+frozen--especially the black troops. People are being so kind about the
+work I am doing, and they are all saying what a comfort the soup is to
+the men. Sometimes I feed several hundreds in a day.
+
+I am sure everyone will grieve to hear of the death of Lord Roberts, but
+I think he died just as he would wish to have died--amongst his old
+troops, who loved him, and in the service of the King. He was a fine
+soldier and a Christian gentleman, and you can't say better of a man
+than that.
+
+I feel as if I had been out here for years, and it seems quite odd to
+think that one used to wear evening dress and have a fire in one's room.
+I am promising myself, if all goes well, to get home about
+Christmas-time. I wish I could think that the war would be over by then,
+but it doesn't look very like it.
+
+Remember me to Gwennie, and to all your people. Take care of your old
+self.
+
+Yours truly,
+S. MACNAUGHTAN.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_1 December._--Mrs. Knocker and Miss Chisholm and Lady Dorothy went out
+to Pervyse a few days ago to make soup, etc., for Belgians in the
+trenches. They live in the cellar of a house which has been blown inside
+out by guns, and take out buckets of soup to men on outpost duty. Not a
+glimpse of fire is allowed on the outposts. Fortunately the weather has
+been milder lately, but soaking wet. Our three ladies walk about the
+trenches at night, and I come home at 1 a.m. from the station. The men
+of our party meanwhile do some house-work. They sit over the fire a good
+deal, clear away the tea-things, and when we come home at night we find
+they have put hot-water bottles in our beds and trimmed some lamps. I
+feel like Alice in Wonderland or some other upside-down world. We live
+in much discomfort, which is a little unnecessary; but no one seems to
+want to undertake housekeeping.
+
+I make soup all day, and there is not much else to write about. All
+along the Yser the Allies and the Germans confront each other, but
+things have been quieter lately. The piteous list of casualties is not
+so long as it has been. A wounded German was brought in to-day. Both his
+legs were broken and his feet frost-bitten. He had been for four days in
+water with nothing to eat, and his legs unset. He is doing well.
+
+[Page Heading: PERVYSE]
+
+On Sunday I drove out to Pervyse with a kind friend, Mr. Tapp. At the
+end of the long avenue by which one approaches the village, Pervyse
+church stands, like a sentinel with both eyes shot out. Nothing is left
+but a blind stare. Hardly any of the church remains, and the churchyard
+is as if some devil had stalked through it, tearing up crosses and
+kicking down graves. Even the dead are not left undisturbed in this
+awful war. The village (like many other villages) is just a mass of
+gaping ruins--roofs blown off, streets full of holes, not a window left
+unshattered, and the guns still booming.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_To Mrs. Charles Percival._
+
+FURNES, BELGIUM,
+_5 December._
+
+DARLING TAB,
+
+I have a chance of sending this to England to be posted, so I must send
+you a line to wish you many happy returns of the day. I wish we could
+have our yearly kiss. I will think of you a lot, my dear, on the 8th,
+and drink your health if I can raise the wherewithal. We are not famous
+for our comforts, and it would amaze you to see how very nasty food can
+be, and how very little one can get of it.
+
+I have an interesting job now, and it is my own, which is rather a
+mercy, as I never know which is most common, dirt or muddle. I can have
+things as clean as I like, and my soup is getting quite a name for
+itself. The first convoy of wounded generally comes into the station
+about 11 a.m. It may number anything. Then the men are put into the
+train, and there begins a weary wait for the poor fellows till more
+wounded arrive and the train is loaded up, and sometimes they are kept
+there all day. The stretcher cases are in a long corridor, and the
+sitting-up cases in ordinary third-class carriages. The sitters are
+worn, limping men, with bandaged heads, and hands bound up, who are yet
+capable of sitting up in a train.
+
+The transport is well done, I think (_far_ better than in South Africa),
+but more women are wanted to look after details. To give you one
+instance: all stretchers are made of different sizes, so that if a man
+arrives on an ambulance, the stretchers belonging to it cannot go into
+the train, and the poor wounded man has to be lifted and "transferred,"
+which causes him (in the case of broken legs or internal injuries
+especially) untold suffering. It also takes up much room, and gives
+endless trouble for the sake of an _inch and a half_ of space, which is
+the usual difference in the size of the stretchers, but that prevents
+them slipping into the sockets on the train.
+
+Another thing I have noticed is, that no man, even lying down in the
+train, ever gets his boots taken off. The men's feet are always soaked
+through, as they have been standing up to their knees in water in the
+trenches; but, of course, slippers are unheard of. I do wonder if ladies
+could be persuaded to make any sort of list or felt or even flannel
+slippers? I saw quite a good pattern the other day, and will try to send
+you one, in case Eastbourne should rise to the occasion. Of course,
+there must be _hundreds_ of pairs, and heaps would get lost. I do
+believe other centres would join, and the cost of material for slippers
+would be quite trifling. A priest goes in each corridor train, and there
+is always a stove where the boots could be dried. I believe slippers can
+be bought for about a shilling a pair. The men's feet are _enormous_.
+Cases should be marked with a red cross, and sent per S.S. _Invicta_,
+Admiralty Pier, Dover.
+
+[Page Heading: THE SHELLING OF LAMPERNESSE]
+
+The fighting has had a sort of lull here for some time, but there are
+always horrible things happening. The other day at Lampernesse, 500
+soldiers were sleeping on straw in a church. A spy informed the Germans,
+who were twelve miles off, but they got the range to an inch, and sent
+shells straight into the church, killing and wounding nearly everyone in
+it, and leaving men under the ruins. We had some terrible cases that
+day. The church was shelled at 6 a.m., and by 11 a.m. all the wounded
+were having soup and coffee at the station. I thought their faces were
+more full of horror than any I had seen.
+
+The parson belonging to our convoy is a particularly nice young fellow.
+I have had a bad cold lately, and every night he puts a hot-water bottle
+in my bed. When he can raise any food he lays a little supper for me, so
+that when I come in between 12 and 1 o'clock I can have something to
+eat, a lump of cheese, plum jam, and perhaps a piece of bully beef,
+always three pieces of ginger from a paper bag he has of them. Last
+night when I got back I found I couldn't open the door leading into a
+sort of garage through which we have to enter this house. I pushed as
+hard as I could, and then found I was pushing against horses, and that a
+whole squad of troop horses had been shoved in there for the night, so I
+had to make my entry under their noses and behind their heels. Pinned to
+the table inside the house was a note from the parson, "I can't get you
+any food, but I have put a bottle of port-wine in your room. Stick to
+it."
+
+I had meant to go early to church to-day, but I was really too tired, so
+I am writing to you instead. Now I must be getting up, for "business
+must be attended to."
+
+Well, good-bye, my dear. I am always too busy to write now, so would you
+mind sending this letter on to the family?
+
+Your loving sister,
+S. MACNAUGHTAN.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_December._--Unexpected people continue to arrive at Furnes. Mme. Curie
+and her daughter are in charge of the X-ray apparatus at the hospital.
+Sir Bartle Frere is there as a guest. Miss Vaughan, of the _Nursing
+Times_, came in out of the dark one evening. To-day the King has been
+here. God bless him! he always does the right thing.
+
+_6 December._--My horizon is bounded by soup and the men who drink it.
+There is a stir outside the kitchen, and someone says, "Convoi." So then
+we begin to fill pots and take steaming "marmites" off the fire. The
+"sitting cases" come in first, hobbling, or carried on their comrades'
+backs--heads and feet bandaged or poor hands maimed. When they have been
+carried or have stiffly and slowly marched through the entrance to the
+train, the "brancard" cases are brought in and laid on the floor. They
+are hastily examined, and a doctor goes round reading the labels
+attached to them which describe their wounds. An English ambulance and
+a French one wait to take serious cases to their respective hospitals.
+The others are lifted on to train-stretchers and carried to the train.
+
+[Page Heading: A QUESTION OF STRETCHERS]
+
+Two doctors came out from England on inspection duty to-day. They asked
+if I had anything to report, and I made them come to the station to go
+into this matter of the different-sized stretchers. It is agony to the
+men to be shifted. Dr. Wilson has promised to take up the question. The
+transport service is now much improved. The trains are heated and
+lighted, and priests travel with the lying-down cases.
+
+_8 December._--I have a little "charette" for my soup. It is painted
+red, and gives a lot of amusement to the wounded. The trains are very
+long, and my small carriage is useful for cups and basins, bread, soup,
+coffee, etc. Clemmie Waring designed and sent it to me.
+
+To-day I was giving out my soup on the train and three shells came in in
+quick succession. One came just over my head and lodged in a haystall on
+the other side of the platform. The wall of the store has an enormous
+hole in it, but the thickly packed hay prevented the shrapnel
+scattering. The station-master was hit, and his watch saved him, but it
+was crumpled up like a rag. Two men were wounded, and one of them died.
+A whole crowd of refugees came in from Coxide, which is being heavily
+shelled. There was not a scrap of food for them, so I made soup in great
+quantities, and distributed it to them in a crowded room whose
+atmosphere was thick. Ladling out the soup is great fun.
+
+_12 December._--The days are very short now, and darkness falls early.
+All the streets are dark, so are the houses, so is the station. Two
+candles are a rare treat, and oil is difficult to get.
+
+Such a nice boy died to-night. We brought him to the hospital from the
+station, and learned that he had lain for eight days wounded and
+untended. Strangely enough he was naked, and had only a blanket over him
+on the stretcher. I do not know why he was still alive. Everything was
+done for him that could be done, but as I passed through one of the
+wards this evening the nurses were doing their last kindly duty to him.
+Poor fellow! He was one of those who had "given even their names." No
+one knew who he was. He had a woman's portrait tattooed on his breast.
+
+_19 December._--Not much to record this week. The days have become more
+stereotyped, and their variety consists in the number of wounded who
+come in. One day we had 280 extra men to feed--a batch of soldiers
+returning hungry to the trenches, and some refugees. So far we have
+never refused anyone a cup of soup; or coffee and bread.
+
+I haven't been fit lately, and get fearful bad headaches. I go to the
+station at 10 a.m. every morning, and work till 1 o'clock. Then to the
+hospital for lunch. I like the staff there very much. The surgeons are
+not only skilful, but they are men of education. We all get on well
+together, in spite of that curious form of temper which war always seems
+to bring. No one is affable here, except those who have just come out
+from home, and it is quite common to hear a request made and refused,
+or granted with, "Please do not ask again." Newcomers are looked upon as
+aliens, and there is a queer sort of jealousy about all the work.
+
+[Page Heading: WAR WORKERS' DIFFICULTIES]
+
+Oddly enough, few persons seem to show at their best at a time when the
+best should be apparent. No doubt, it is a form of nerves, which is
+quite pardonable. Nurses and surgeons do not suffer from it. They are
+accustomed to work and to seeing suffering, but amateur workers are a
+bit headlong at times. I think the expectation of excitement (which is
+often frustrated) has a good deal to do with it. Those who "come out for
+thrills" often have a long waiting time, and energies unexpended in one
+direction often show themselves unexpectedly and a little unpleasantly
+in another.
+
+In my own department I always let Zeal spend itself unchecked, and I
+find that people who have claimed work or a job ferociously are the
+first to complain of over-work if left to themselves. Afterwards, if
+there is any good in them, they settle down into their stride. They are
+only like young horses, pulling too hard at first and sweating off their
+strength--jibbing one moment and shying the next--when it comes to
+"'ammer, 'ammer, 'ammer on the 'ard 'igh road," one finds who is going
+to stick it and who is not.
+
+There has been some heavy firing round about Nieuport and south of the
+Yser lately, and an unusual number of wounded have been coming in, many
+of them "gravement blessés."
+
+One evening a young French officer came to the kitchen for soup. It was
+on Wednesday, December 16th, the day the Allies assumed the offensive,
+and all night cases were being brought in. He was quite a boy, and
+utterly shaken by what he had been through. He could only repeat, "It
+was horrible, horrible!" These are the men who tell brave tales when
+they get home, but we see them dirty and worn, when they have left the
+trenches only an hour before, and have the horror of battle in their
+eyes.
+
+There are scores of "pieds gelés" at present, and I now have bags of
+socks for these. So many men come in with bare feet, and I hope in time
+to get carpet slippers and socks for them all. One night no one came to
+help, and I had a great business getting down a long train, so Mrs.
+Logette has promised to come every evening. The kitchen is much nicer
+now, as we are in a larger passage, and we have three stoves, lamps,
+etc. Many things are being "straightened out" besides, my poor little
+corner and war seems better understood. There is hardly a thing which is
+not thought of and done for the sick and wounded, and I should say a
+grievance was impossible.
+
+I still lodge at the Villa Joos, and am beginning to enjoy a study of
+middle-class provincial life. The ladies do all the house-work. We have
+breakfast (a bite) in the kitchen at 8.30 a.m., then I go to make soup,
+and when I come back after lunch for a rest, "the family" are dressed
+and sitting round a stove, and this they continue to do till a meal has
+to be prepared. There is one lamp and one table, and one stove, and
+unless papa plays the pianola there is nothing to do but talk. No one
+reads, and only one woman does a little embroidery, while the small
+girl of the party cuts out scraps from a fashion paper.
+
+The poor convoy! it is becoming very squabbly and tiresome, and there is
+a good deal of "talking over," which is one of the weakest sides of
+"communal life." It is petty and ridiculous to quarrel when Death is so
+near, and things are so big and often so tragic. Yet human nature has
+strict limitations. Mr. Ramsay MacDonald came out from the committee to
+see what all the complaints were about. So there were strange
+interviews, in store-rooms, etc. (no one has a place to call their
+own!), and everyone "explained" and "gave evidence" and tried to "put
+matters straight."
+
+It rains every day. This may be a "providence," as the floods are
+keeping the Germans away. The sound of constant rain on the window-panes
+is a little melancholy. Let us pray that in singleness and cheerfulness
+of heart we may do our little bit of work.
+
+[Page Heading: EXPEDITION TO DUNKIRK]
+
+_23 December._--Yesterday I motored into Dunkirk, and did a lot of
+shopping. By accident our motor-car went back to Furnes without me, and
+there was not a bed to be had in Dunkirk! After many vicissitudes I met
+Captain Whiting, who gave up his room in his own house to me, and slept
+at the club. I was in clover for once, and nearly wept when I found my
+boots brushed and hot water at my door. It was so like home again.
+
+I was leaving the station to-day when shelling began again. One shell
+dropped not far behind the bridge, which I had just crossed, and
+wrecked a house. Another fell into a boat on the canal and wounded the
+occupants badly. I went to tell the Belgian Sisters not to go down to
+the station, and I lunched at their house, and then went home till the
+evening work began. People are always telling one that danger is now
+over--a hidden gun has been discovered and captured, and there will be
+no more shelling. Quel blague! The shelling goes on just the same
+whether hidden guns are captured or not.
+
+I can't say at present when I shall get home, because no one ever knows
+what is going to happen. I don't quite know who would take my place at
+the soup-kitchen if I were to leave.
+
+_25 December._--My Christmas Day began at midnight, when I walked home
+through the moonlit empty streets of Furnes. At 2 a.m. the guns began to
+roar, and roared all night. They say the Allies are making an attack.
+
+I got up early and went to church in the untidy school-room at the
+hospital, which is called the nurses' sitting-room. Mr. Streatfield had
+arranged a little altar, which was quite nice, and had set some chairs
+in an orderly row. As much as in him lay--from the altar linen to the
+white artificial flowers in the vases--all was as decent as could be and
+there were candles and a cross. We were quite a small congregation, but
+another service had been held earlier, and the wounded heard Mass in
+their ward at 6 a.m. The priests put up an altar there, and I believe
+the singing was excellent. Inside we prayed for peace, and outside the
+guns went on firing. Prince Alexander of Teck came to our service--a
+big soldierly figure in the bare room.
+
+[Page Heading: CHRISTMAS IN BELGIUM]
+
+After breakfast I went to the soup-kitchen at the station, as usual,
+then home--_i.e._, to the hospital to lunch. At 3.15 came a sort of
+evensong with hymns, and then we went to the civil hospital, where there
+was a Christmas-tree for all the Belgian refugee children. Anything more
+touching I never saw, and to be with them made one blind with tears. One
+tiny mite, with her head in bandages, and a little black shawl on, was
+introduced to me as "une blessée, madame." Another little boy in the
+hospital is always spoken of gravely as "the civilian."
+
+Every man, woman, and child got a treat or a present or a good dinner.
+The wounded had turkey, and all they could eat, and the children got
+toys and sweets off the tree. I suppose these children are not much
+accustomed to presents, for their delight was almost too much for them.
+I have never seen such excitement! Poor mites! without homes or money,
+and with their relations often lost--yet little boys were gibbering over
+their toys, and little girls clung to big parcels, and squeaked dolls or
+blew trumpets. The bigger children had rather good voices, and all sang
+our National Anthem in English. "God save our nobbler King"--the accent
+was quaint, but the children sang lustily.
+
+We had finished, and were waiting for our own Christmas dinner when
+shells began to fly. One came whizzing past Mr. Streatfield's store-room
+as I stood there with him. The next minute a little child in floods of
+tears came in, grasping her mother's bag, to say "Maman" had had her arm
+blown off. The child herself was covered with dust and dirt, and in the
+streets people were sheltering in doorways, and taking little runs for
+safety as soon as a shell had finished bursting. The bombardment lasted
+about an hour, and we all waited in the kitchen and listened to it. At
+such times, when everyone is rather strung up, someone always and
+continually lets things fall. A nun clattered down a pail, and Maurice
+the cook seemed to fling saucepan-lids on the floor.
+
+About 8.15 the bombardment ceased, and we went in to a cheery
+dinner--soup, turkey, and plum-pudding, with crackers and speeches. I
+believe no one would have guessed we had been a bit "on the stretch."
+
+At 9.30 I went to the station. It was very melancholy. No one was there
+but myself. The fires were out, or smoking badly. Everyone had been
+scared to death by the shells, and talked of nothing else, whereas
+shells should be forgotten directly. I got things in order as soon as I
+could and the wounded in the train got their hot soup and coffee as
+usual, which was a satisfaction. Then I came home alone at
+midnight--keeping as near the houses as I could because of possible
+shells--and so to bed, very cold, and rather too inclined to think about
+home.
+
+_26 December._--Went to the station. Oddly enough, very few wounded were
+there, so I came away, and had my first day at home. I got a little
+oil-stove put in my room, wrote letters, tidied up, and thoroughly
+enjoyed myself.
+
+A Taube came over and hovered above Furnes, and dropped bombs. I was at
+the Villa, and the family of Joos and I stood and watched it, and a
+nasty dangerous moth it looked away up in the sky. Presently it came
+over our house, so we went down to the kitchen. A few shots were fired,
+but the Taube was far too high up to be hit. Max, the Joos' cousin, went
+out and "tirait," to the admiration of the women-kind, and then, of
+course, "Papa" had to have a try. The two men, with their little gun and
+their talk and gesticulations, lent a queer touch of comic opera to the
+scene. The garden was so small, the men in their little hats were so
+suggestive of the "broken English" scene on the stage, that one could
+only stand and laugh.
+
+[Page Heading: A BELGIAN DINNER-PARTY]
+
+The Joos family are quite a study, and so kind. On Christmas Eve I dined
+with them, and they gave me the best of all they had. There was a
+pheasant, which someone had given the doctor (I fancy he is a very small
+practitioner amongst the poor people); surely, never did a bird give
+more pleasure. I had known of its arrival days before by seeing
+Fernande, the little girl, decorated with feathers from its tail. Then
+the good papa must be decorated also, and these small jokes delighted
+the whole family to the point of ecstasy.
+
+On Christmas Eve Monsieur Max conceived the splendid joke, carefully
+arranged, of presenting Madame Joos--who is young and pretty--and the
+doctor with two parcels, which on being opened contained the child's
+umbrella and a toy gun. There wasn't even a comic address on the
+parcels; but Yrma, the servant, carefully trained for the part, brought
+them in in fits of delight, and all the family laughed with joy till the
+tears ran down their cheeks. As they wiped their eyes, they admitted
+they were sick with laughter. After supper we had the pianola, played by
+papa; and I must say that, when one can get nothing else, this
+instrument gives a great deal of pleasure. One gets a sort of ache for
+music which is just as bad as being hungry.
+
+_27 December._--Bad, bad weather again. It has rained almost
+continuously for five weeks. Yesterday it snowed. Always the wind blows,
+and _something_ lashes itself against the panes. One can't leave the
+windows open, as the rooms get flooded. It is amazingly cold o' nights,
+I can't sleep for the cold.
+
+We have some funny incidents at the station sometimes. A particularly
+amusing one occurred the other day, when three ladies in knickerbockers
+and khaki and badges appeared at our soup-kitchen door and announced
+they were "on duty" there till 6 o'clock. I was not there, but the scene
+that followed has been described to me, and has often made me laugh.
+
+It seems the ladies never got further than the door!
+Some people might have been firm in the "Too sorry!
+Come-some-other-day-when-we-are-not-so-busy" sort of way. Not so Miss
+----. In more primitive times she would probably have gone for the
+visitors with a broom, but her tongue is just as rough as the hardest
+besom, and from their dress ("skipping over soldiers' faces with
+breeches on, indeed!") to their corps there was very little left of
+them.
+
+[Page Heading: OUR TROUBLE WITH SPIES]
+
+It wasn't really from the dog-in-the-manger spirit that the little woman
+acted. The fact is that Belgians and French run the station together,
+and they are all agreed on one thing, which is, that no one but an
+authorised and registered person is to come within its doors. Heaven
+knows the trouble there has been with spies, and this rule is absolutely
+necessary.
+
+Two Red Cross khaki-clad men have been driving everywhere in Furnes, and
+have been found to be Germans. Had we permitted itinerant workers, the
+authorities gave notice that the kitchen would have to close.
+
+In the evening, when I went to the station, another knickerbockered lady
+sat there! I told her our difficulties, but allowed her to do a little
+work rather than hurt her feelings. The following day Miss ---- engaged
+in deadly conflict with the lady who had sent our unwelcome visitors.
+Over the scene we will draw a veil, but we never saw the knickerbockered
+ladies again!
+
+_31 December, 1914._--The last day of this bad old year. I feel quite
+thankful for the summer I had at the Grange. It has been something to
+look back upon all the time I have been here; the pergolas of pink
+roses, the sleepy fields, the dear people who used to come and stay with
+me, and all the fun and pleasure of it, help one a good deal now.
+
+Yesterday was a fine day in the middle of weeks of rain. When I came
+down to breakfast in the Joos' little kitchen I remarked, of course, on
+the beauty of the weather. "What a day for Taubes!" said Monsieur Max,
+looking up at the clear blue sky. Before I had left home there was a
+shell in a street close by, and one heard that already these horrible
+birds of prey had been at work, and had thrown two bombs, which
+destroyed two houses in the Rue des Trèfles. The pigeons that circle
+round the old buildings in Furnes always seem to see the Taubes first,
+as if they knew by sight their hateful brothers. They flutter disturbed
+from roof and turret, and then, with a flash of white wings, they fly
+far away. I often wish I had wings when I see them.
+
+I went to the station, and then to the hospital for slippers for some
+wounded men. Five aeroplanes were overhead--Allies' and German--and
+there was a good deal of firing. I was struck by the fact that the night
+before I had seen _exactly_ this scene in a dream. Second sight always
+gives me much to think about. The inevitableness of things seems much
+accentuated by it. In my dream I stood by the other people in the yard
+looking at the war in the air, and watching the circling aeroplanes and
+the bursts of smoke.
+
+At the station there was a nasty feeling that something was going to
+happen. The Taubes wheeled about and hovered in the blue. I went to the
+hospital for lunch, and afterwards I asked Mr. Bevan to come to the
+station to look at some wounded whose dressings had not been touched for
+too long. He said he would come in half an hour, so I said I wouldn't
+wait, as he knew exactly where to find the men, and I came back to the
+Villa for my rest. As I walked home I heard that the station had been
+shelled, and I met one of the Belgian Sisters and told her not to go on
+duty till after dark, but I had no idea till evening came of what had
+happened. Ten shells burst in or round the station. Men, women, and
+children were killed. They tell me that limbs were flying, and a French
+chauffeur, who came on here, picked up a man's leg in the street. Mr.
+Bevan sent up word to say none of us was to go to the station for the
+present.
+
+At Dunkirk seven Taubes flew overhead and dropped bombs, killing
+twenty-eight people. At Pervyse shells are coming in every day. I can't
+help wondering when we shall clear out of this. If the bridges are
+destroyed it will be difficult to get away. The weather has turned very
+wet again this evening. We have only had two or three fine days in as
+many months. The wind howls day and night, and the place is so well
+known for it that "vent de Furnes" is a byword. No doubt the floods
+protect us, so one mustn't grumble at a sore throat.
+
+[Page Heading: SHELLS AT FURNES]
+
+_1 January._--The station was shelled again to-day. Three houses were
+destroyed, and there was one person killed and a good many more were
+wounded. A rumour got about that the Germans had promised 500 shells in
+Furnes on New Year's Day.
+
+In the evening I went down to the station, and I was evidently not
+expected. Not a thing was ready for the wounded. The man in charge had
+let all three fires out, and he and about seven soldiers (mostly drunk)
+were making merry in the kitchen. None of them would budge, and I was
+glad I had young Mr. Findlay with me, as he was in uniform, and helped
+to get things straight. But these French seem to have very little
+discipline, and even when the military doctors came in the men did
+nothing but argue with them. It was amazing to hear them. One night a
+soldier, who is always drunk, was lying on a brancard in the doctor's
+own room, and no one seemed to mind.
+
+_3 January, Sunday._--I have had my usual rest and hot bath. I find I
+never want a holiday if I may have my Sundays. I spent a lazy afternoon
+in Miss Scott's room, she being ill, then went to Mr. Streatfield's
+service, dinner, and the station. A new officer was on duty there, and
+was introduced to the kitchen. He said, "Les anglais, of course. No one
+else ever does anything for anybody."
+
+I believe this is very nearly the case. God knows, we are full of
+faults, but the superiority of the British race to any other that I know
+is a matter of deep conviction with me, and it is founded, I think, on
+wide experience.
+
+_6 January._--I went to Adinkerke two days ago to establish a
+soup-kitchen there, as they say that Furnes station is too dangerous. We
+have been given a nice little waiting-room and a stove. We heard to-day
+that the station-master at Furnes has been signalling to the enemy, so
+that is why we have been shelled so punctually. His daughter is engaged
+to a German. Two of our hospital people noticed that before each
+bombardment a blue light appeared to flash on the sky. They reported
+the matter, with the result that the signals were discovered.
+
+[Page Heading: THE SHELLING GETS WORSE]
+
+There has been a lot of shelling again to-day, and several houses are
+destroyed. A child of two years is in our hospital with one leg blown
+off and the other broken. One only hears people spoken of as, "the man
+with the abdominal trouble," or "the one shot through the lungs."
+
+Children know the different aeroplanes by sight, and one little girl,
+when I ask her for news, gives me a list of the "obus" that have
+arrived, and which have "s'éclaté," and which have not. One can see that
+she despises those which "ne s'éclatent pas." One says "Bon soir, pas
+des obus," as in English one says, "Good-night, sleep well."
+
+_10 January._--Prince Alexander of Teck dined at the hospital last
+night, and we had a great spread. Madame Sindici did wonders, and there
+were hired plates and finger-bowls, and food galore! We felt real
+swells. An old General--the head of the Army Medical Corps--gave me the
+most grateful thanks for serving the soldiers. It was gracefully and
+delightfully done.
+
+I am going home for a week's holiday.
+
+_14 January._--I went home _via_ Calais. Mr. Bevan and Mr. Morgan took
+me there. It was a fine day and I felt happy for once, that is, for once
+out here.
+
+Some people enjoy this war. I think it is far the worst time, except
+one, I ever spent. Perhaps I have seen more suffering than most people.
+A doctor sees a hospital, and a nurse sees a ward of sick and wounded,
+but I see them by the hundred passing before me in an endless train all
+day. I can make none of them really better. I feed them, and they pass
+on.
+
+One reviews one's life a little as one departs. Always I shall remember
+Furnes as a place of wet streets and long dark evenings, with gales
+blowing, and as a place where I have been always alone. I have not once
+all this time exchanged a thought with anyone. I have lived in a very
+damp attic, and talked French to some kind middle-class people, and I
+have walked a mile for every meal I have had. So I shall always think of
+Furnes as a wet, dark place, and of myself with a lantern trudging about
+its mean streets.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+WORKING UNDER DIFFICULTIES
+
+
+I have not written my diary for some weeks. I went home to England and
+stayed at Rayleigh House. On my way home I met Mr. F. Ware, who told me
+submarines were about. As I had but just left a much-shelled town, I
+think he might have held his peace. The usual warm welcome at Rayleigh
+House, with Mary there to meet me, and Emily Strutt.
+
+I wasn't very tired when I first arrived, but fatigue came out on me
+like a rash afterwards. I got more tired every day, and ended by having
+a sort of breakdown. This rather spoilt my holiday, but it was very nice
+seeing people again. It was difficult, I found, to accommodate myself to
+small things, and one was amazed to find people still driving serenely
+in closed broughams. It was like going back to live on earth again after
+being in rather a horrible other world. I went to my own house and
+enjoyed the very smell of the place. My little library and an hour or
+two spent there made my happiest time. Different people asked me to
+things, but I wasn't up to going out, and the weather was amazingly
+bad.
+
+I was to have gone back to work on the Thursday week after I arrived
+home, but I got a telegram from Madame Sindici saying Furnes was being
+shelled, and the hospital, etc., was to be evacuated. Dr. Perrin, who
+was to have taken me back, had to start immediately without me. It was
+difficult to get news, and hearing nothing I went over on Saturday,
+January 23rd, as I had left Mrs. Clitheroe in charge of my soup-kitchen,
+and thought I had better do the burning deck act and get back to it.
+
+Mr. Bevan and Mr. Morgan met me at Calais, and told me to wait at
+Dunkirk, as everyone was quitting Furnes. One of our poor nurses was
+killed, and the Joos' little house was much damaged. I stopped at Mrs.
+Clitheroe's flat, very glad to be ill in peace after my seedy condition
+in London and a bad crossing. Rested quietly all Sunday in the flat by
+myself. It is an empty, bare little place, with neither carpets nor
+curtains, but there is something home-like about it, the result, I
+think, of having an open fire in one room.
+
+On Monday, the 25th, I went back to work at Adinkerke station, to which
+place our soup-kitchen has been moved. I got a warm welcome from the
+Belgian Sisters. It is very difficult doing the station work from
+Dunkirk, as it is 16 kilometres from Adinkerke; but the place itself is
+nice, and I just have to trust to lifts. I fill my pockets with
+cigarettes and go to the "sortie de la ville," and just wait for
+something to pass--and some queer, bumpy rides I get. Still, the
+soldiers who drive me are delightful, and the cigarettes are always
+taken as good pay.
+
+One day I went and spent the night at Hoogstadt, where the hospital now
+is, and that I much enjoyed. Dr. Perrin gave up his little room to me,
+and the nurses and staff were all so full of welcome and pleasant
+speeches.
+
+On Monday, February 8th, I went out to La Panne to start living in the
+hotel there; but I was really dreadfully seedy, and suffered so much
+that I had to return to the flat at Dunkirk again to be nursed. My day
+at La Panne was therefore very sad, as I nearly perished with cold, and
+felt so ill. Not a soul came near me, and I wished I could be a Belgian
+refugee, when I might have had a little attention from somebody.
+
+On Tuesday, February 9th, a Belgian officer came into Adinkerke station,
+claimed our kitchen as a bureau, and turned us out on to the platform. I
+am trying to get General Millis to interfere; but, indeed, the rudeness
+of this man's act makes one furious.
+
+[Page Heading: ILLNESS AT DUNKIRK]
+
+_14 February._--I have been laid up for some days at the flat at
+Dunkirk. It is amazing to realise that this place should be one's
+present idea of comfort. It has no carpets, no curtains, not a blind
+that will pull up or down, and rather dirty floors, yet it is so much
+more comfortable than anything I have had yet that I am too thankful to
+be here. There is a gas-ring in the kitchen, on which it is possible to
+cook our food, and there are shops where things can be got.
+
+Mr. Strickland and I are both laid up here, and Miss Logan nurses us
+devotedly. Our joy is having a sitting-room with a fire in it. Was
+there ever anything half so good as that fire, or half so homely, half
+so warm or so much one's own? I lie on three chairs in front of it, and
+headache and cold and throat are almost forgotten. The wind howls, the
+sea roars, and aeroplanes fly overhead, but at least we have our fire
+and are at home.
+
+_17 February._--Another cold, wet day. I am alone in the flat with a
+"femme de ménage" to look after me. A doctor comes to see me sometimes.
+Miss Logan and Mr. Strickland left this morning. There was a tempest of
+rain, and I couldn't think of being moved. They were sweet and kind, and
+felt bad about leaving me; but I am just loving being left alone with
+some books and my fire.
+
+I have been lying in bed correcting proofs. Oh, the joy of being at
+one's own work again! Just to see print is a pleasure. I believe I have
+forgotten all I ever knew before the war began. A magazine article comes
+to me like a language I have almost forgotten.
+
+_18 February._--This is the day that German "piracy" is supposed to
+begin. We heard a great explosion early this morning, but it was only a
+mine that had been found on the shore being blown up. The sailors'
+aeroplane corps is opposite us, and we see Commander Samson and others
+flying off in the morning and whirling back at night, and then we hear
+there has been a raid somewhere. When a Taube comes over here the
+sailors fire at it with a gun just opposite us, and then tell us they
+only do it to give us flower-vases--_i.e._, empty shell-cases!
+
+[Page Heading: SOME STORIES OF THE WAR]
+
+Mr. Holland came here to-day, and told me some humorous sides of his
+experiences with ambulances. One man from the Church Army marched in,
+and said: "I am a Christian and you are not. I come here for petrol, and
+I ask it, not for the Red Cross, but in the name of Christ." Another man
+came dashing in, and said: "I want to go to Poperinghe. I was once there
+before, and the mud was beastly. Send someone with me."
+
+My own latest experience was with an American woman of awful vulgarity.
+I asked her if she was busy, like everyone else in this place, and she
+said:
+
+"No. I was suffering from a nervous breakdown, so I came out here. What
+is your _war_ is my _peace_, and I now sleep like a baby."
+
+I want adjectives! How is one to describe the people who come for
+one brief visit to the station or hospital with an intense
+conviction that they and they only feel the suffering or even notice
+the wants of the men. Some are good workers. Others I call
+"This-poor-fellow-has-had-none." Nurses may have been up all night,
+doctors may be worked off their feet, seven hundred men may have passed
+through the station, all wounded and all fed, but when our visitors
+arrive they discover that "This poor fellow has had none," and firmly,
+and with a high sense of duty and of their own efficiency, they make the
+thing known.
+
+No one else has heard a man shouting for water; no one else knows that a
+man wants soup. The man may have appendicitis, or colitis, or
+pancreatitis, or he may have been shot through the lungs or the abdomen.
+It doesn't matter. The casual visitor knows he has been neglected, and
+she says so, and quite indiscriminately she fills everyone up with
+soup. Only she is tender-hearted. Only she could never really be
+hardened by being a nurse. She seizes a little cup, stoops over a man
+gracefully, and raises his head. Then she wants things passed to her,
+and someone must help her, and someone must listen to what she has to
+say. She feeds one man in half an hour, and goes away horrified at the
+way things are done. Fortunately these people never stay for long.
+
+Then there is another. She can't understand why our ships should be
+blown up or why trenches should be taken. In her own mind she proves
+herself of good sound intelligence and a member of the Empire who won't
+be bamboozled, when she says firmly and with heat, "Why don't we _do_
+something?" She would like to scold a few Generals and Admirals, and she
+says she believes the Germans are much cleverer than ourselves. This
+last taunt she hopes will make people "_do_ something." It stings, she
+thinks.
+
+I could write a good deal about this "solitary winter," but I have not
+had time either to write or to read. I think something inside me has
+stood still or died during this war.
+
+_21 February, Sunday._--The Munro corps has swooped down in its usual
+hurry to distribute letters, and to say that someone is waiting down
+below and they can't stop. They eat a hasty sardine, drink a cup of
+coffee, and are off!
+
+To-day I have made this flat tidy at last, and have had it cleaned and
+scrubbed. I have thrown away old papers and empty boxes, and can sit
+down and sniff contentedly. No convoy-ite sees the difference!
+
+[Page Heading: THE COMMUNAL LIFE]
+
+I think I have learnt every phase of muddle and makeshift this winter,
+but chiefly have I learnt the value of the Biblical recommendation to
+put candles on candlesticks. In the "convoi Munro" I find them in
+bottles, on the lids of mustard-tins, in metal cups, or in the necks of
+bedroom carafes. Never is the wax removed. Where it drips there it
+remains. Where matches fall there they lie. The stumps of cigarettes
+grace even the insides of flower-pots, knives are wiped on bread,
+and overcoats of enormous weight (khaki in colour, with a red cross
+on the arm) are hung on inefficient loose nails, and fall down.
+Towels are always scarce; but then, they serve as dinner-napkins,
+pocket-handkerchiefs, and even as pillow-cases, so no wonder we are a
+little short of them. There is no necessity for muddle. There never is
+any necessity for it.
+
+The communal life is a mistake. I wonder if Christ got bored with it.
+
+On Sundays I always want to rest, and something always makes me write.
+The attack comes on quite early. It is irresistible. At last I am a
+little happy after these dreary months, and it is only because I can
+think a little, and because the days are not quite so dark. I think the
+nights have been longer here than I ever knew them. No doubt it is the
+bad weather and the small amount of light indoors that make the days
+seem so short.
+
+I am going back to-morrow to the station, with its train-loads of
+wounded men. I _want_ to go, and to give them soup and comforts and
+cigarettes, but just ten days' illness and idleness have "balmed my
+soul."
+
+_22 February._--Waited all day for a car to come and fetch me away. It
+was dull work as I could never leave the flat, and all my things were
+packed up, and there was no coal.
+
+_23 February._--Waited again all day. I got very tired of standing by
+the window looking out on a strip of beach at the bottom of the street,
+and on the people passing to and fro. Then I went down to the dock to
+try and get a car there, but the new police regulations made it
+impossible to cross the bridge. I went to the airmen opposite. No luck.
+
+There is a peculiar brutality which seems to possess everyone out here
+during the war. I find it nearly everywhere, and it entails a good deal
+of unnecessary suffering. Always I am reminded of birds on a small ledge
+pushing each other into the sea. The big bird that pushes another one
+over goes to sleep comfortably.
+
+I remember one evening at Dunkirk when we couldn't get rooms or food
+because the landlady of the hotel had lost all her servants. The staff
+at the ---- gave me a meal, but there was a queer want of courtesy about
+it. I said that anything would do for my supper, and I went to help get
+it myself. I spied a roll of cold veal on a shelf, and said helpfully
+that that would do splendidly, but the answer was: "Yes, but I believe
+that is for our next meal." However, in the end I got a scrap,
+consisting mostly of green stuffing.
+
+"But when thou art bidden, go and sit down in the lowest room"--ah, my
+dear Lord, in this world one may certainly take the lowest place, and
+keep it. It is only the great men who say, "Friend, come up higher."
+
+"You can't have it," is on everyone's lips, and a general sense of
+bustle goes with the brutality. "You can't come here," "We won't have
+her," are quite common phrases. God help us, how nasty we all are!
+
+I find one can score pretty heavily nowadays by being a "psychologist."
+All the most disagreeable people I know are psychologists, notably ----,
+who breaks his promises and throws all his friends to the wolves, but
+who can still explain everything in his sapient way by saying he is a
+psychologist.
+
+One thing I hope--that no one will ever call me "highly strung." I wish
+good old-fashioned bad temper was still the word for highly strung and
+nervy people.
+
+... I am longing for beautiful things, music, flowers, fine thoughts....
+
+[Page Heading: LA PANNE]
+
+_La Panne. 25 February._--At last I have succeeded in getting away from
+Dunkirk! The Duchess of Sutherland brought me here in her car. Last
+night I dined with Mrs. Clitheroe. She was less bustled than usual, and
+I enjoyed a chat with her as we walked home through the cold white mist
+which enshrouded La Panne.
+
+This long war has settled down to a long wait. Little goes on except
+desultory shelling, with its occasional quite useless victims. At the
+station we have mostly "malades" and "éclopés"; in the trenches the
+soldiers stand in the bitter cold, and occasionally are moved out by
+shells falling by chance amongst them. The men who are capable of big
+things wait and do nothing.
+
+If it was not for the wounded how would one stand the life here? A man
+looks up patiently, dumbly, out of brown eyes, and one is able to go on
+again.
+
+_La Panne. 27 February_.--I have been staying for three nights at the
+Kursaal Hotel, but my room was wanted and I had to turn out, so I packed
+my things and came down to the Villa les Chrysanthèmes, and shared Mrs.
+Clitheroe's room for a night. In the morning all our party packed up and
+left to go to Furnes, and I took on these rooms. I may be turned out any
+minute for "le militaire," but meanwhile I am very comfortable.
+
+The heroic element (a real thing among us) takes queer forms sometimes.
+"No sheets, of course," is what one hears on every side, and to eat a
+meal standing and with dirty hands is to "play the game." Maxine Elliott
+said, "The nervous exhaustion attendant upon discomfort hinders work,"
+and she "does herself" very well, as also do all the men of the regular
+forces. But volunteer corps--especially women--are heroically bent on
+being uncomfortable. In a way they like it, and they eat strange meals
+in large quantities, and feel that this is war.
+
+Lord Leigh took me into Dunkirk in his car to-day, and I managed to get
+lots of vegetables for the soup-kitchen, and several other things I
+wanted. A lift is everything at this time, when one can "command"
+nothing. If one might for once feel that by paying a fare, however high,
+one could ensure having something--a railway journey, a motor-car, or
+even a bed! My work isn't so heavy at the kitchen now, and the hours are
+not so long, so I hope to do some work of a literary nature.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Page Heading: LA PANNE]
+
+_To Miss Macnaughtan's Sisters._
+
+VILLA LES CHRYSANTHÈMES
+LA PANNE, BELGIUM,
+_Sunday, 28 February._
+
+MY DEAR FAMILY,
+
+It is so long since I wrote a decently long letter that I think I must
+write to you all, to thank you for yours, and to give you what news
+there is of myself.
+
+Of war news there is none. The long war is now a long wait, and the huge
+expense still goes on, while we lock horns with our foes and just sway
+backwards and forwards a little, and this, as you know, we have done for
+weeks past. Every day at the station there is a little stream of men
+with heads or limbs bandaged, and our work goes on as before, although
+it is not on quite the same lines now. I used to make every drop of the
+soup myself, and give it out all down the train. Now we have a
+receiving-room for the wounded, where they stay all day, and we feed
+them four times, and then they are sent away. The whole thing is more
+military than it used to be, the result, I think, of officers not having
+much to do, and with a passion for writing out rules and regulations
+with a nice broad pen. Two orderlies help in the kitchen, the soup is
+"inspected," and what used to be "la cuisine de la dame écossaise" is
+not so much a charitable institution as it was.
+
+One sees a good deal of that sort of thing during this war. Women have
+been seeing what is wanted, and have done the work themselves at really
+enormous difficulty, and in the face of opposition, and when it is a
+going concern it is taken over and, in many cases, the women are turned
+out. This was the case at Dunkirk station, which was known everywhere as
+"the shambles." I myself tried to get the wounded attended to, and I
+went there with a naval doctor, who told me that he couldn't uncover a
+single wound because of the awful atmosphere (it was quite common to see
+15,000 men lying on straw). One woman took this matter in hand, purged
+the place, got mattresses, clean straw, stoves, etc., and when all was
+in order the voice of authority turned her out.
+
+This long waiting is being much more trying for people than actual
+fighting. In every corps the old heroic outlook is a little bit fogged
+by petty things. One sees the result of it in some wrangling and
+jealousy, but this will soon be forgotten when fighting with all its
+realities begins again.
+
+I think Britain on the subject of "piracy" is about as fine as anything
+in her history. Her determination to ignore ultimatums and threats is
+really quite funny, and English people still put out in boats as they
+have always done, and are quite undismayed. Our own people here continue
+to travel by sea, as if submarines were rather a joke, and when going
+over to England on some small and useless little job they say
+apologetically, "Of course, I wouldn't go if I hadn't got to." The fact
+is, if there is any danger about they have to be in it.
+
+Some of our own corps have gone back to Furnes--I believe because it is
+being shelled. The rest of us are at La Panne, a cold seaside place
+amongst the dunes. In summer-time I fancy it is fashionable, but now it
+contains nothing but soldiers. They are quartered everywhere, and one
+never knows how long one will be able to keep a room. The station is at
+Adinkerke, where I have my kitchen. It is about two miles from La Panne,
+and it also is crammed with soldiers. There seems to be no attempt at
+sanitation anywhere.
+
+I wish I had more interesting news to tell you, but I am at my station
+all day, and if there is anything to hear (which I doubt) I do not hear
+it.
+
+There is a barge on the canal at Adinkerke which is our only excitement.
+It is the property of Maxine Elliott, Lady Drogheda, and Miss Close, and
+to go to tea with them is everyone's ambition. The barge is crammed with
+things for Belgian refugees, and Maxine told me that the cargo
+represents "nearer £10,000 than £5,000." It is piled with flour in
+sacks, clothing, medical comforts, etc. The work is good.
+
+I am sending home some long pins like nails. They are called "Silent
+Death," and are dropped from German aeroplanes. Boys pick them up and
+give them to us in exchange for cigarettes.
+
+[Page Heading: MRS. PERCIVAL'S SLIPPERS]
+
+I want to tell Tabby how immensely pleased everyone is with her
+slippers. The men who have stood long in the trenches are in agonies of
+frost-bite and rheumatism, and now that I can give them these slippers
+when they arrive at the station, they are able to take off their wet
+boots caked with mud.
+
+If J. would send me another little packet of groceries I should love it.
+Just what can come by post. That Benger's Food of hers nearly saved my
+life when I was ill at Dunkirk. What I should like better than anything
+is a few good magazines and books. I get _Punch_ and the _Spectator_,
+but I want the _English Review_ and the _National_, and perhaps a
+_Hibbert_. I enclose ten shillings for these. What is being read?
+Stephen Coleridge seems to have brought out an interesting collection,
+but I can't remember its name. I wonder if any notice will be taken of
+"They who Question." The reviews speak well of the Canadian book.
+
+Love to you all, and tell Alan how much I think of him. Bless you, my
+dears. Write often.
+
+Yours as ever,
+SARAH.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_1 March._--Woe betide the person who owns anything out here: he is
+instantly deprived of it. "Pinching" is proverbial, and people have
+taken to carrying as many of their possessions as possible on their
+person, with the result that they are the strangest shapes and sizes.
+Still, one hopes the goods are valuable until one discovers that they
+generally consist of the following items: a watch that doesn't go, a
+fountain-pen that is never filled, an electric torch that won't light, a
+much-used hanky, an empty iodine bottle, and a scarf.
+
+_5 March._--I went as usual to-day to the muddy station and distributed
+soup, which I no longer make now that the station has become
+militarised. My hours are from 12 noon to 5 o'clock. This includes the
+men's dinner-hour and the washing of the kitchen. They eat and smoke
+when I am there, and loll on the little bench. They are Belgians and I
+am English, and one is always being warned that the English can't be too
+careful! We are entertaining 40,000 Belgians in England, but it must be
+done "carefully."
+
+[Page Heading: THIEVING AND GIVING]
+
+It is a great bore out here that everything is stolen. One can hardly
+lay a thing down for an instant that it isn't taken. To-day my Thermos
+flask in a leather case, in which I carry my lunch, was prigged from the
+kitchen. Things like metal cups are stolen by the score, and everyone
+begs! Even well-to-do people are always asking for something, and they
+simply whine for tobacco. The fact is, I think, the English are giving
+things away with their usual generosity and want of discrimination,
+and--it is a horrid word--they are already pauperising a nice lot of
+people. I can't help thinking that the thing is being run on wrong
+lines. We should have given or lent what was necessary to the Belgian
+Government, and let them undertake to provide for soldiers and refugees
+through the proper channels. No lasting good ever came of gifts--every
+child begs for cigarettes, and they begin smoking at five years old.
+
+I often think of our poor at home, and wish I had a few sacks full of
+things for them! I have not myself come across any instances of poverty
+nearly as bad as I have seen in England. I understand from Dr. Joos and
+other Belgians who know about these things that there is still a good
+deal of money tucked away in this country. I hope there is, and we all
+want to help the Belgians over a bad time, but it would be better and
+more dignified for them to get it through their own Government.
+
+I had tea with Lady Bagot the other day, and afterwards I had a chat
+with Prince Francis at the English Mission. Another afternoon I went
+down to the Kursaal Hotel for tea. The stuffy sitting-room there is
+always filled with knickerbockered, leather-coated ladies and with
+officers in dark blue uniform, who talk loudly and pat the barmaid's
+cheeks. She seems to expect it; it is almost etiquette. A cup of bad
+tea, some German trophies examined and discussed, and then I came away
+with a "British" longing for skirts for my ladies, and for something
+graceful and (odious word) dainty about them. Yesterday evening Lady
+Bagot dined with me. This Villa is the only comfortable place I have
+been in since the war began: it makes an amazing difference to my
+health.
+
+It is odd to have to admit that one has hardly ever been unhappy for a
+long time before this war. The year my brother died, the year one went
+through a tragedy, the year of deadly dullness in the country--but now
+it isn't so much a personal matter. War and the sound of guns, and the
+sense of destruction and death abroad, the solitude of it, and the
+disappointing people! Oh, and the poor wounded--the poor, smelly, dirty
+wounded, whom one sees all day, and for whom one just sticks this out.
+
+I have only twice been for a drive out here, and I have not seen a
+single place of interest, nor, indeed, a single interesting person
+connected with the war. That, I suppose, is the result of being a
+"cuisinière!" It is rather strange to me, because for a very long time I
+always seem to have had the best of things. To-day I hear of this
+General or that Secretary, or this great personage or that important
+functionary, but the only people whom I see are three little Sisters and
+two Belgian cooks.
+
+To give up work seems to me a little like divorcing a husband. There is
+a feeling of failure about it, and the sense that one is giving up what
+one has undertaken to do. So, however dull or tiresome husband or work
+may be, one mustn't give them up.
+
+[Page Heading: THE POWER OF THE BIBLE]
+
+_6 March._--To-day I have been thinking, as I have often thought, that
+the real power of the Bible is that it is a Universal Human Document.
+The world is based upon sentiment--_i.e._, the personality of man and
+his feelings brought to bear upon facts. It is also the world's dynamic
+force. Now, the books of the Bible--especially, perhaps, the magical,
+beautiful Psalms--are the most tender and sentimental (the word has been
+misused, of course) that were ever written. They express the thoughts
+and feelings of generations of men who always did express their thoughts
+and feelings, and thought no shame of it. And so we northern people,
+with our passionate inarticulateness, love to find ourselves expressed
+in the old pages.
+
+I find in the Gospels one of the few complaints of Christ. "Have I been
+so long time with you and yet hast thou not known me, Philip?" All one
+has ever felt is said for one in a phrase, all that one finds most
+isolating in the world is put into one sentence. There is a wan feeling
+of wonder in it; "so long," and yet you think that of me! "so long," and
+yet such absolute inability to read my character! "so long," and yet
+still quite unaware of my message! The humour of it (to us) lies in the
+little side of it! The dear people who "thought you would like this or
+dislike that"--the kind givers of presents even--the little people who
+shop for one! The friends who invite one to their queer, soulless, thin
+entertainments, with their garish lights; the people who choose a book
+for one, who counsel one, even with importunity, to go to some play
+which they are "sure we shall like." "So long"--they are old friends,
+and yet they thought we should like that play or that book! "So
+long"--and yet they think one capable of certain acts or feelings which
+do not remotely seem to belong to one! "So long"--and yet they can't
+even touch one chord that responds!
+
+We are always quite alone. The communal life is the loneliest of all,
+because "yet thou hast not known me." The world comes next in
+loneliness, but it is _big_, and with a big soul of its own. The family
+life is almost naïve in its misunderstanding--no one listens, they just
+wait for pauses....
+
+... The worship of the "sane mind" has been a little overdone, I think.
+The men who are prone to say of everyone that they "exaggerate a
+little," or "are morbid," are like weights in a scale--just, but oh,
+how heavy!...
+
+... This war is fine, _fine_, FINE! I know it, and yet I don't get near
+the fineness except in the pages of _Punch_! I see streams of men whose
+language (Flemish) I don't speak, holding up protecting hands to keep
+people from jostling a poor wounded limb, and I watch them sleeping
+heavily, or eating oranges and smoking cigarettes down to the last hot
+stump, but I don't hear of the heroic stands which I know are made, or
+catch the volition of it all. Perhaps only in a voluntary army is such a
+thing possible. Our own boys make one's heart beat, but these poor,
+dumb, sodden little men, coming in caked with mud--to be patched up and
+sent into a hole in the ground again, are simply tragic.
+
+[Page Heading: "THE WOMAN'S TOUCH"]
+
+_7 March._--"The woman's touch." When a woman has been down on her knees
+scrubbing for a week, and washing for another week, a man, returning and
+finding his house in order, and vaguely conscious of a newer and fresher
+smell about it, talks quite tenderly of "a woman's touch."...
+
+... There are some people who never care to enter a door unless it has
+"passage interdite" upon it....
+
+... The guns are booming heavily this morning. Nothing seems to
+correspond. Are men really falling and dying in agonies quite close to
+us? I believe we ought to see less or more--be nearer the front or
+further from it. Or is it that nothing really changes us? Only war
+pictures and war letters remain as a fixed blazing standard. The
+soldiers in the trenches are quite as keen about sugar in their coffee
+as we are about tea. No wonder men have decided that one day we must put
+off flesh. It is far too obstrusive....
+
+... To comfort myself I try to remember that Wellington took his old
+nurse with him on all his campaigns because she was the only person who
+washed his stocks properly....
+
+... Surely the expense of the thing will one day put a stop to war. We
+are spending two million sterling per day, the French certainly as much,
+the Germans probably more, and Austria and Russia much more, in order to
+keep men most uncomfortably in unroofed graves, and to send high
+explosives into the air, most of which don't hit anything. Surely, if
+fighting was (as it is) impossible in this flooded country in winter, we
+might have called a truce and gone home for three months, and trained
+and drilled like Christians on Salisbury Plain!...
+
+... Health--_i.e._, bad health--obtrudes itself tiresomely. I am ill
+again, and, fortunately, few people notice it, so I am able to keep on.
+A festered hand makes me awkward; and as I wind a bandage round it and
+tie it with my teeth, I once more wish I was a Belgian refugee, as I am
+sure I would be interesting, and would get things done for me!
+
+A sick Belgian artist, M. Rotsartz{3}, is doing a drawing of me. I go to
+Lady Bagot's hospital, where he is laid up, and sit to him in the
+intervals of soup. That little wooden hospital is the best place I have
+known so far. Lady Bagot is never bustled or fussy, nor even "busy," and
+her staff are excellent men, with the "Mark of the Lamb" on them.
+
+I gave away a lot of things to-day to a regiment going into the
+trenches. The soldiers were delighted with them.
+
+_11 March._--There was a lot of firing near La Panne to-day, and a
+British warship was repeatedly shelled by the Germans from Nieuport. I
+went into Dunkirk with Mr. Clegg, and got the usual hasty shopping done.
+No one can ever wait a minute. If one has time to buy a newspaper one is
+lucky. The difficulty of communicating with anyone is great--no
+telephone--no letters--no motor-car. I am stranded.
+
+[Page Heading: FRENCH MARINES]
+
+I generally go in the train to Adinkerke with the French Marines, nice
+little fellows, with labels attached to them stating their "case"--not
+knowing where they are going or anything else--just human lives battered
+about and carted off. I don't even know where they get the little bit of
+money which they always seem able to spend on loud-smelling oranges and
+cigarettes. The place is littered with orange-skins--to-day I saw a long
+piece lying in the form of an "S" amid the mud; and, like a story of a
+century old, I thought of ourselves as children throwing orange-skins
+round our heads and on to the floor to read the initial of our future
+husband, and I seemed to hear mother say, "'S' for Sammy--Sammy C----,"
+a boy with thick legs whom we secretly despised!
+
+I have found a whole new household of "éclopés" at Adinkerke, who want
+cigarettes, socks, and shoes all the time. They are a pitiful lot, with
+earache, toothache, and all the minor complaints which I myself find so
+trying, and they lie about on straw till they are able to go back to the
+trenches again.
+
+The pollard willows between here and Adinkerke are all being cut down to
+build trenches. They were big with buds and the promise of spring.
+
+_14 March._--I went to the station yesterday, as usual. Suddenly I
+couldn't stand it any more. Everyone was cleaning. I was getting swept
+up with straw and mopped up with dirty cloths. The kitchen work was
+done. I ate my lunch in a filthy little out-building and then I fled. I
+had to get into the open air, and I hopped on to an ambulance and drove
+to Dunkirk. I had a good deal to do there getting vegetables,
+cigarettes, etc., and we got back late to the station, where I heard the
+Queen had paid a visit. Rather bad luck on almost the only day I have
+been away.
+
+I am waiting anxiously to hear if the report of the new British advance
+yesterday is true. When fighting really begins we are going to be in for
+a big thing; one dreads it for the sake of the boys we are going to
+lose. I want things to start now just to get them over, but I rather
+envy the people who died before this unspeakable war began.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_To Mrs. Keays-Young._
+
+CARE OF FIELD POST OFFICE, DUNKIRK,
+_17 March._
+
+MY DEAREST BABY,
+
+[Page Heading: CAPTAIN L. M. B. SALMON]
+
+I have (of course) been getting letters and parcels very badly lately. I
+am sending this home by hand, which is not allowed except on Red Cross
+business, but this is to ask how Lionel is, so I think I may send it. My
+poor Bet! What anxiety for her! This spring weather is making me long to
+be at home, and when people tell me the crocuses are up in the
+park!--well, you know London and the park belong to me! Are the catkins
+out? We can get flowers at Dunkirk, but not here.
+
+Not a word of war news, because that wouldn't be fair. A shilling wire
+about Lionel would satisfy me--just "Better, and Bet well," or something
+of that sort.
+
+Always, my dear,
+Your loving,
+S. MACNAUGHTAN.
+
+P.S.--Your two letters and Bet's have just come. To be in touch with you
+again is _very_ pleasant. I can't tell you what it was like to sit down
+to a pretty, clean breakfast to-day with my letters beside me. Someone
+brought them here early.
+
+I heard to-day that I am going to be decorated by the King of the
+Belgians, but don't spread this broadcast, as anything might happen in
+war.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_20 March._--I met an Englishman belonging to an armoured car in Dunkirk
+a couple of days ago. He told me that the last four days' fighting at La
+Bassée has cost the British 13,000 casualties. Three lines of holes in
+the ground, and fighting only just beginning again! Bet's fiancé has
+been shot through the head, but is still alive. My God, the horror of it
+all! And England is still cheerful, I hear, and is going to hold
+race-meetings as usual.
+
+At the station to-day I saw a mad man, who fought and struggled. I
+thought madmen raved. This one fought silently, like a man one sees in a
+dream. Another soldier shook all over like an old man. Many were blind.
+
+"On the whole," someone said to me in England, "I suppose you are having
+a good time."
+
+There is a snowstorm to-day, and it is bitterly cold. It is very odd how
+many small "complaints" seem to attack one. I can't remember the day out
+here when I felt well all over.
+
+Last night some Belgians came in to dinner. It was like old times trying
+to get things nice. I had some flowers and a tablecloth. I believe in
+making a contrast with the discomfort I see out here. We forced open a
+piano, and had some perfect music.
+
+_21 March._--The weather is brighter to-day; the sound of firing is more
+distant; it is possible to think of other things besides the war.
+
+Mrs. ---- came to the station this morning. I think she has the most
+untidy mind I have ever met with.
+
+With all our faults, I often wish that there were more Macnaughtans in
+the world. Their simple and plain intelligence gives one something to
+work upon. Mrs. ---- came and told me to-day that last night "they
+laughed till they cried" over her attempt at making a pudding. I should
+have cried, only, over a woman of fifty who wasn't able to make a
+pudding. She and ---- are twin nebulæ who think themselves
+constellations.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_To Miss Mary King._
+
+CARE OF FIELD POST OFFICE, DUNKIRK,
+_22 March._
+
+DEAR MARY,
+
+My plans, like those of everybody else, are undecided because of the
+war. If it is going to stop in May I should like to stay till the end,
+but if it is likely to go on for a long time, I shall come home. I don't
+think hot soup (which is my business) can be wanted much longer, as the
+warm weather will be coming.
+
+I have been asked to take over full charge of a hospital here. It is a
+great compliment, but I have almost decided to refuse. I have other
+duties, and I have some important writing to do, as I am busy with a
+book on the war. I begin work as early as ever, and then go to my
+kitchen.
+
+[Page Heading: LONGING FOR HOME]
+
+When I do come home I want to be in my own house, and I am longing to be
+back. Many of my friends go backwards and forwards to England all the
+time, but when I return, I should like to stay.
+
+I am in wonderfully comfortable rooms at present, and the landlady is
+most kind and attentive. She gives me a morning cup of tea, and the care
+and comfort are making me much better. I get some soup before I go off
+to my station, and last night I was really a fine lady. When I came in
+tired, the landlady, who is a Belgian, took off my boots for me!
+
+When I come home I think I'll lie in bed all day, and poor old Mary
+will get quite thin again nursing me. The things you will have to do for
+me, and all the pretty things I shall see and have, are a great pleasure
+to think about!
+
+Yours truly,
+S. MACNAUGHTAN.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+THE SPRING OFFENSIVE
+
+
+_Villa les Chrysanthèmes, La Panne._--I have been to London for a few
+days to see about the publication of my little war book. I got frightful
+neuralgia there, and find that as soon as I begin to rest I get ill.
+
+I went to a daffodil show, and found myself in the very hall where the
+military bazaar was held last year. I saw the place where the Welch had
+their stall. What fun we had! How many of the regiment are left? Only
+one officer not killed or wounded. Lord Roberts, who opened the bazaar,
+is gone too. All the soldiers whom I knew best have been taken, and only
+a few tough women seem to weather the storm of life.
+
+I had to see publishers in London, and do a lot of business, and just
+when I was beginning to love it all again my holiday was over. There had
+been heavy fighting out here, and I felt I must come back. My dear
+people didn't want me to return, and were very severe on the subject,
+and Mary scolded me most of the time. It was all affection on their
+part, although it made "duty" rather a criminal affair!
+
+There was endless difficulty about my passport when I returned. The
+French Consulate was besieged by people, and I had to go there at 8.30
+a.m. and wait till the doors were opened, and was then told I must first
+go to the Foreign Office to get an order from Colonel Walker. I went
+down to Whitehall from Bedford Square, and was told I must get a letter
+from Mr. Coventry. I went to Pall Mall and Mr. Coventry said it was
+quite impossible to do anything for me without instructions from Mr.
+Sawyer. Mr. Sawyer said the only thing he could do (if I could establish
+my identity) was to send me to a matron who would make every enquiry
+about me, and perhaps in three days I might get an Anglo-French
+certificate, through which Mr. Coventry might be induced to give me a
+letter to give to Colonel Walker, who might then sign the passport,
+which I could then take to Bedford Square to be visé{4}.
+
+I got Sir John Furley to identify me, and then began a dogged going from
+place to place and from official to official till at last I got the
+thing through. I felt just like a Russian being "broken." There is a
+regular system, I believe, in Russia of wearing people out by this sort
+of official tyranny. I do not know anything more tiring or more
+discouraging! I had all my papers in order--my passport{5}, my "laissez
+passer," a letter from Mr. Bevan, explaining who I was and asking for
+"every facility" for me, and my photograph, properly stamped. I am now
+so loaded with papers that I feel as if I were carrying a library about
+with me. Oh, give me intelligent women to do things for me! The best-run
+things I have seen since the war began have been our women's unit at
+Antwerp and Lady Bagot's hospital at Adinkerke.
+
+[Page Heading: QUARRELLING]
+
+I came back refreshed. I think everyone (every woman) out here has
+noticed how indifferent and really "nasty" people are to each other at
+the front. It is one of the singular things about the war, because one
+always hears it said that it is deepening people's characters, purifying
+them, and so on. As far as my experience goes, it has shown me the
+reverse. I have seldom known so much quarrelling, and there is a sort of
+queer unhappiness which has nothing to do with the actual war or loss of
+friends. I can't be mistaken about it, because I see it on all sides.
+
+At the ---- hospital men and women alike are quarrelling all the time.
+Resignations are frequent. So-and-so has got So-and-so turned out;
+someone has written to the committee in London to report on someone
+else; a nice doctor is dismissed. Every nurse has given notice at
+different times. Most people are hurt and sore about something. Love
+seems quite at a discount, and one can't help wondering if Hate can be
+infectious! It is all frightfully disappointing, for surely one's heart
+beat high when one made up one's mind to do what one could for suffering
+Belgium and for the sake of the English name.
+
+Those two poor girls at ----! I know they meant well, and had high ideas
+of what they were going to do. Now they "use langwidge" to each other
+(although I know a very strong affection binds them), and very, very
+strong that language is.
+
+Poor souls, the people here aren't a bit happy. I wonder if the work is
+sufficiently "sanctified." One never knows. Lady Bagot's is the happiest
+and most serene place here; her men are Church Army people, and they
+have evening prayers in the ward. It _does_ make a difference.
+
+Scandals also exist out here, but they are merely silly, I think, and
+very unnecessary, though a little conventionality wouldn't hurt anyone.
+Sometimes I think it would be better if we were all at home, for
+Belgians are particular, and I hate breeches and gaiters for girls, and
+a silly way of going on. I do wish people could sometimes leave sex at
+home, but they never seem to. I wonder if Crusaders came back with
+scandals attached to their names!
+
+I got back here in one of those rushes of work that come in war time
+when fighting is near. At first no car could be spared to meet me at
+Boulogne, so I had to wait at the Hôtel Maurice for two or three days. I
+didn't mind much as I met such a lot of English friends, and also
+visited some interesting hospitals; but I knew by the thousands of
+wounded coming in that things must be busy at the front, and this made
+one champ one's bit.
+
+The Canadians and English who poured in from Ypres were terribly
+damaged, and the asphyxiating gas seems to have been simply diabolical.
+It was awful to see human beings so mangled, and I never get one bit
+accustomed to it. The streets were full of British soldiers, and the
+hospitals swarmed with wounded. I went to visit the Casino one. The
+bright sun streamed through lowered blinds on hundreds of beds, and on
+stretchers lying between them. Many Canadians were there, and rows of
+British. God! how they were knocked about! The vast rooms echoed to the
+cries of pain. The men were vowing they could never face shells and hand
+grenades any more. They were so newly wounded, poor boys; but they come
+up smiling when their country calls again.
+
+But it _isn't right_. This damage to human life is horrible. It is
+madness to slaughter these thousands of young men. Almost at last, in a
+rage, one feels inclined to cry out against the sheer imbecility of it.
+Why bring lives into the world and shell them out of it with jagged
+pieces of iron, and knives thrust through their quivering flesh? The
+pain of it is all too much. I am _sick_ with seeing suffering.
+
+[Page Heading: DUNKIRK SHELLED]
+
+On Thursday, April 29th, Mr. Cooper, and another man came for us, and we
+left Boulogne. At Dunkirk we could hardly credit our eyes--the place had
+been shelled that very afternoon! I never saw such a look of
+bewilderment and horror as there was on all faces. No one had ever
+dreamed that the place could be hit by a German gun, yet here were
+houses falling as if by magic, and no one knew for a moment where on
+earth or in heaven the shells were coming from. Some people said they
+came from the sea, but the houses I saw hadn't been hit from the sea,
+which lies north, but from the east. Others talked of an armoured train,
+but armoured trains don't carry 15-inch shells. So all anyone could do
+was to _gape_ with sheer astonishment.
+
+Dunkirk, that safest of places, the haven to which we were all to fly
+when Furnes or La Panne were bombarded! Everybody contradicted one, of
+course, when one declared that no naval gun had been at work, but the
+fact remains that a long-range field-piece had been hidden at Leke, and
+Dunkirk was shelled for three days, and, as far as I know, may be
+shelled again. The inhabitants have all fled. The shops are not even
+shut; one could help oneself to anything! The "état major" has left, and
+so have all the officials; 23,000 tickets have been taken at the railway
+station, and the road to Calais is{6} blocked with fleeing refugees.
+
+It was rather odd that the day I left here and passed through Furnes it
+was being shelled, and we had to wait a little while before we could get
+through; and when I arrived at Dunkirk the bombardment was just over,
+and a huge shell-hole prevented us passing down a certain road.
+
+Well, I got back to my work at Adinkerke in the midst of the fighting,
+and reached it just as the sun was setting. What a scene at the station,
+where I stopped before reaching home to leave the chairs and things I
+had bought for the hospital there! They were bringing in civilians
+wounded at Ypres and Poperinghe, which place also has been shelled (and
+yet we say we are advancing!), and there were natives also from
+Nieuport.
+
+[Page Heading: WOUNDED WOMEN AND CHILDREN]
+
+One whole ambulance was filled with wounded children. I think King Herod
+himself might have been sorry for them. Wee things in splints, or with
+their curly heads bandaged; tiny mites, looking with wonder at their
+hands swathed in linen; babies with their tender flesh torn, and older
+children crying with terror. There were two tiny things seated opposite
+each other on a big stretcher playing with dolls, and a little
+Christmas-card sort of baby in a red hood had had its mother and father
+killed beside it. Another little mite belonged to no one at all. Who
+could tell whether its parents had been killed or not? I am afraid many
+of them will never find their relations again. In the general scrimmage
+everyone gets lost. If this isn't frightfulness enough, God in heaven
+help us!
+
+On the platform was a row of women lying on stretchers. They were
+decent-looking brown-haired matrons for the most part, and it looked
+unnatural and ghastly to see them lying there. One big railway
+compartment was slung with their stretchers, and some young men in
+uniform nursed the babies. I shall never forget that railway compartment
+as long as I live. A man in khaki appeared, thoughtful, as our people
+always are, and brought a box of groceries with him, and sweet biscuits
+for the children, and other things. Thank Heaven for the English!
+
+At the hospital it was really awful, and the doctors were working in
+shifts of twenty-four hours at a time.
+
+I left my tables, chairs, trays, etc., for the hospital at the station,
+and returned early the next day, for numbers of wounded were still
+coming in. I wanted slippers for everyone, but my Belgian helpers had
+given a hundred pairs of mine away in my absence. They were overworked a
+little, I think, so I overlooked the fact that they lost their tempers
+rather badly. Besides, I will _not_ quarrel. In a small kitchen it
+would be too ridiculous. The three little people fight among themselves,
+but I don't fancy I was made for that sort of thing.
+
+There was nothing but work for some time. My "éclopés" had been entirely
+neglected, and no one had even bothered to buy vegetables for the men.
+
+On Sunday, May 2nd, I went to see Dr. de Page's hospital. I saw a baby
+three weeks old with both his feet wounded. His mother came in one mass
+of wounds, and died on the operating table--a young mother, and a pretty
+one. A young man with tears in his eyes looked at the baby, and then
+said, "A jolly good shot at fifteen miles."
+
+They can't help making jokes.
+
+There were two Scots lying in a little room--both gunners, who had been
+hit at Nieuport. One, Ochterlony from Arbroath, had an eye shot away,
+and some other wounds; the other, McDonald, had seven bad injuries.
+Ochterlony talked a good deal about his eyes, till McDonald rolled his
+head round on the pillow, and remarked briefly, "I'd swop my stomach for
+your eyes."
+
+Sunday wasn't such a nasty day as I usually have--in fact, Sunday never
+is. But that station, with its glaring hot platform, its hotter kitchen,
+and its smells, takes a bit of sticking. I have discovered one thing
+about Belgium. Everything smells exactly alike. To-day there have been
+presented to my nose four different things purporting to have different
+odours, drains, some cheese, tobacco, and a bunch of lilac. There was no
+difference at all in the smells!
+
+[Page Heading: WAR WEARINESS]
+
+I am much struck by the feeling of sheer weariness and disgust at the
+war which prevails at present. People are "soul sick" of it. A man told
+me last night that he longed to be wounded so that he might go home
+honourably. Amongst all the volunteer corps I notice the same thing.
+"Fed up" is the expression they all use, fed up with the suffering they
+see, fed up even with red crosses and khaki.
+
+When one thinks of primrose woods at home, and birds singing, and
+apple-blossom against blue sky, and the park with its flower-beds newly
+planted, and the fresh-watered streets, and women in pretty dresses--but
+one mustn't!
+
+_6 May._--Mrs. Guest arrived here to stay yesterday, and her chauffeur,
+Mr. Wood, dined here. It is nice to be no longer quite alone. Last night
+we were talking about how horrible war is. Mrs. Guest told me of a sight
+she had herself seen. Some men, horribly wounded, were being sent away
+by rail in a covered waggon ("fourgon"). One man had only his mouth left
+in his face. He was raving mad, and raged up and down the van, trampling
+on other men's wounded and broken limbs.
+
+Certainly war is a pretty game, and we must go on singing "Tipperary,"
+and saying what fun it is. A young friend of mine at home gave me a
+pamphlet (price 2d.) written by a spinster friend of hers who had never
+left England, proving what a good thing this war was for us all. When I
+said I saw another aspect of it, the kind, soothing suggestion was that
+I must be a little over-tired.
+
+_7 May._--They say La Panne is to be bombarded to-day. The Queen has
+left. Some people fussed a good deal, but if one bothered one's poor
+head about every rumour of this sort (mostly "dropped from a German
+aeroplane") where would one be?
+
+I was much touched when some people at home clubbed together and sent me
+out a little car a short time ago. But, alas! it had not been chosen
+with judgment, and is no use. It has been rather a bother to me, and now
+it must go back. Mr. Carlile drove it up from Dunkirk, and it broke down
+six times, and then had to be left in a ditch while he got another car
+to tow it home. Since then it has lain at the station.
+
+I can't get anyone to come and inspect it. The extraordinary habit which
+prevails here of saying "No" to every request makes things difficult,
+for no privileges can be bought. Sometimes, when I hear people ask for
+the salt, I fancy the answer will be, "Certainly not." Two of our own
+chauffeurs live quite close to the station: they say they are busy, and
+can't look at my car. One smiles, and says: "When you _have_ time I
+shall be _so_ grateful, etc." Inwardly one is feeling that if one could
+_roar_ just for once it would be a relief.
+
+Sometimes at home I have felt a little embarrassed by the love people
+have shown me--as if I have somehow deceived them into thinking I was
+nicer than I really am. Out here I have to try to remember that I have a
+few friends! In London I couldn't understand it when people praised me
+or said kind things.
+
+There is only one straight tip for Belgium--have a car, and understand
+it yourself. Never did I feel so helpless without one. But the roads are
+too bad and too crowded to begin to learn to drive, and there are
+difficulties about a garage.
+
+[Page Heading: MY CAR]
+
+This evening Mr. Wood and I went to Hoogstadt, and towed that
+_corpse_--my car--up to La Panne for ---- to inspect. The whole Belgian
+army seemed to gather round us as we proceeded on our toilsome journey,
+with breaking tow-ropes (for the "corpse" is heavy) and defective
+steering-gear. _They_ were amused. I was just cracking with fatigue.
+Needless to say, ---- didn't come. As the car was a present I can't send
+it back without the authority of a chauffeur. If I keep it any longer
+they will say I used it and broke it....
+
+There were some fearful bad cases at Hoogstadt to-day, and we were
+touched to see an old man sitting beside his unconscious son and keeping
+the flies off him, while he sobbed in great gusts. One Belgian officer
+told us that the hardest thing he had to do in the war was to give the
+order to fire on a German regiment which was advancing with Belgian
+women and children in front of it. He gave the order, and saw these
+helpless creatures shot down before his eyes.
+
+At the Yser the other night two German regiments got across the river
+and found themselves surrounded. One regiment surrendered, and the men
+of the other coolly turned their guns on it and shot their comrades
+down.
+
+Some of our corps were evacuating women and children the other day. One
+man, seeing his wife and daughter stretched out on the ground, went
+mad, and ran up and down the field screaming. We see a lot of madness.
+
+_8 May._--The guns sound rather near this morning, and the windows
+shake. One never knows what is happening till the wounded come in. I sat
+with my watch in my hand and counted the sound of bursting shells. There
+were 32 in one minute. The firing is continuous, and very loud, and
+living men are under this fire at this moment, "mown down," "wiped out,"
+as the horrible terms go. I loathe even the sound of a bugle now. This
+carnage is too horrible. If people can't "realise" let them come near
+the guns.
+
+They were shelling Furnes again when I was at Steenkerke the other day,
+and it was a strange sound to hear the shells whizzing over the peaceful
+fields. One heard them coming, and they passed overhead to fall on the
+old town. Under them the brown cattle fed unheeding, and old women hoed
+undisturbed, and the sinking sun threw long shadows on the grass. And
+then a busy ambulance would fly past on the road; one caught a glimpse
+of blood-covered forms. "Yes, a few wounded, and two or three killed."
+
+Old women are the most courageous creatures on this earth. When everyone
+else has fled from a place you can see them sitting by their cottage
+doors or hoeing turnips in the line of fire.
+
+It was touching to see a little family of terrified children sheltering
+with their mother in a roadside Calvary when the shells were coming
+over. The poor young mother was holding up her baby to Christ on His
+cross.
+
+[Page Heading: THE CRUCIFIX UNDAMAGED]
+
+There is a matter which seems almost more than a coincidence, and one
+which has been too often remarked to be ignored, and that is, that in
+the midst of ruins which are almost totally destroyed the figure of
+Christ in some niche often remains untouched. I have seen it myself, and
+many writers have commented on the fact. Sometimes it is only a crucifix
+on some humble wall, or it may be a shrine in a church. The solitary
+figure remains and stands--often with arms raised to bless. At Neuve
+Chapelle one learns that, although the havoc is like that wrought by an
+earthquake, and the very dead have been uprooted there, a crucifix
+stands at the cross-roads at the north end of the village, and the
+pitiful Christ still stretches out His hands. At His feet lie the dead
+bodies of young soldiers. At Nieuport I noticed a shrine over a doorway
+in the church standing peacefully among the ruins, and at Pervyse also
+one remained, until the tower reeled and fell with an explosion from
+beneath, which was deliberately ordered to prevent accidents from
+falling masonry.
+
+I had to go to Dunkirk this afternoon and while I was there I heard that
+the _Lusitania_ had been torpedoed and sunk with 1,600 souls on board
+her. What change will this make in the situation? Is America any use to
+us except in the matter of supplies, and are we not getting these
+through as it is? A nation like that ought to have an army or a navy.
+
+Dunkirk was nearly deserted owing to the bombardment, and it was
+difficult to find a shop open to buy vegetables for my soup-kitchen.
+Still, I enjoyed my afternoon. There was a chance that shelling might
+begin again at any time, and a bitter wind blew up clouds of prickly
+dust and sand; but it was a great relief to be out in the open and away
+from smells, and to have one's view no longer bounded by a line of
+rails. God help us! What a year this has been! It tires me even to think
+of being happy again, cheerfulness has become such an effort.
+
+_10 May._--I went to see my Scottish gunner at the hospital to-day. He
+said, "I can't forget that night," and burst out crying. "That night" he
+had been wounded in seven places, and then had to crawl to a "dug-out"
+by himself for shelter.
+
+Strong healthy men lie inert in these hospitals. Many of them have face
+and head wounds. I saw one splendid young fellow, with a beautiful face,
+and straight clear eyes of a sort of forget-me-not blue. He won't be
+able to speak again, as his jaw is shot away. The man next him was being
+fed through the nose.
+
+The matron told me to-day that last night a man came in from Nieuport
+with the base of a shell ("the bit they make into ash trays," she said)
+embedded in him. His clothing had been carried in with it. He died, of
+course.
+
+One of our friends has been helping with stretcher work, removing
+civilians. He was carrying away a girl shot to pieces, and with her
+clothing in rags. He took her head, and a young Belgian took her feet,
+and the Belgian looked round and said quietly, "This is my fiancée."
+
+[Page Heading: THE "LUSITANIA"]
+
+_11 May._--To-day being madame's washing day--we ring the changes on
+the "nettoyage," "le grand nettoyage," and "le lavage"--everything was
+late. The newspaper came in, and was full of such words as "horror,"
+"resentment," "indignation," about the _Lusitania_, but that won't give
+us back our ship or our men. I wish we could do more and say less, but
+the Press must talk, and always does so "with its mouth." M. Rotsartz
+came to breakfast. The guns had been going all night long, there was a
+sense of something in the air, and I fretted against platitudes in
+French and madame's washing. At last I got away, and went to the sea
+front, for the sound of bursting shells had become tremendous.
+
+It was a sort of British morning, with a fresh British breeze blowing
+our own blessed waves, and there, in its grey grandeur, stood off a
+British man-of-war, blazing away at the coast. The Germans answered by
+shells, which fell a bit wide, and must have startled the fishes (but no
+one else) by the splash they made. There were long, swift torpedo-boats,
+with two great white wings of cloven foam at their bows, and a great
+flourish of it in their wake, moving along under a canopy of their own
+black smoke. It was the smoke of good British coal, from pits where
+grimy workmen dwell in the black country, and British sweat has to get
+it out of the ground. Our grey lady was burning plenty of it, and when
+she had done her work, she put up a banner of smoke, and steamed away
+with a splendid air of dignity across the white-flecked sea. One knew
+the men on board her! Probably not a heart beat quicker by a second for
+all the German shells, probably dinner was served as usual, and men got
+their tubs and had their clothes brushed when it was all over.
+
+I went down to my kitchen a little late, but I had seen something that
+Drake never saw--a bit of modern sea-fighting. And in the evening, when
+I returned, my grey mistress had come back again. The sun was westering
+now, and the sea had turned to gold, and the grey lady looked black
+against the glare, but the fire of her guns was brighter than the
+evening sunset, and she was a spit-fire, after all, this dignified
+queen, and she, "let 'em have it," too, while the long, lean
+torpedo-boats looked on.
+
+I went to the kitchen; I gave out jam, I distributed socks, I heard the
+fussy importance of minor officials, but I had something to work on
+since I had seen the grey lady at work.
+
+In the evening I dined quietly on the barge with Miss Close and Maxine
+Elliott. We had a game of bridge--a thing I had not seen for a year and
+more (the last time I played was down in Surrey at the Grange!), and the
+little gathering on the old timbered barge was pleasant.
+
+Some terrible stories of the war are coming through from the front. An
+officer told us that when they take a trench, the only thing which
+describes what the place is like is strawberry jam. Another said that in
+one trench the sides were falling, and the Germans used corpses to make
+a wall, and kept them in with piles fixed into the ground. Hundreds of
+men remain unburied.
+
+[Page Heading: GERMAN PRISONERS]
+
+Some people say that the German gunners are chained to their guns. There
+were six Germans at the station to-day, two wounded and four prisoners.
+Individually I always like them, and it is useless to say I don't. They
+are all polite and grateful, and I thought to-day, when the prisoners
+were surrounded by a gaping crowd, that they bore themselves very well.
+After all, one can't expect a whole nation of mad dogs. A Scotchman
+said, "The ones opposite us (_i.e._, in the trenches) were a very
+respectable lot of men."
+
+The German prisoners' letters contain news that battalions of British
+suffragettes have arrived at the front, and they warn officers not to be
+captured by these!
+
+_12 May._--To-day, when I got to the station, I was asked to remove an
+old couple who sat there hand in hand, covered with blood. The old woman
+had her arm blown off, and the man's hand was badly injured. We took
+them to de Page's hospital.
+
+The firing has been continuous for the last few days, and men coming in
+from Ypres and Dixmude and Nieuport say that the losses on both sides
+have been enormous. There were four Belgian officers who lived opposite
+my villa, whom one used to see going in and out. Last night all were
+killed.
+
+At Dixmude the other day the Duke of Westminster went to the French
+bureau to get his passport visé. The clerks were just leaving, but he
+begged them to remain a minute or two and to do his little business.
+They did so, and came to the door to see him off, but a shell came
+hurtling in and killed them both, and of a woman who stood near there
+was literally nothing left.
+
+Last night ---- and I were talking about the _gossip_, which would fill
+ten unpublishable volumes out here.... Why do these people come out to
+the front? Give me men for war, and no one else except nuns. Things may
+be all right, but the Belgians are horrified, and I hate them to "say
+things" of the English. The grim part of it is that I don't believe I
+personally hear one half of what goes on and what is being said. They
+are afraid of shocking me, I believe.
+
+The craze for men baffles me. I see women, _dead tired_, perk up and
+begin to be sparkling as soon as a man appears; and when they are alone
+they just seem to sink back into apathy and fatigue. Why won't these mad
+creatures stop at home? They _are_ the exception, but war seems to bring
+them out. It really is intolerable, and I hate it for women's sake, and
+for England's.
+
+The other day I heard some ladies having a rather forced discussion on
+moral questions, loud and frank.... Shades of my modest ancestresses! Is
+this war time, and in a room filled with men and smoke and drink, are
+women in knickerbockers discussing such things? I know I have got to
+"let out tucks," but surely not quite so far!
+
+Beautiful women and fast women should be chained up. Let men meet their
+God with their conscience clear. Most of them will be killed before the
+war is over. Surely the least we can do is not to offer them temptation.
+Death and destruction, and horror and wonderful heroism, seem so near
+and so transcendent, and then, quite close at hand, one finds evil
+doings.
+
+[Page Heading: A TREASURE]
+
+_14 May._--I heard two little stories to-day, one of a British soldier
+limping painfully through Poperinghe with a horrid wound in his arm and
+thigh.
+
+"You seem badly wounded," a friend of mine said to him.
+
+"Yus," said the soldier; "there were a German, and he wounded me in
+three places, but"--he drew from under his arm a treasure, and his poor
+dirty face was transformed by a delighted grin--"I got his bloody
+helmet."
+
+Another story was of an English officer telephoning from a church-tower.
+He gave all his directions clearly and distinctly, and never even hinted
+that the Germans had taken the town and were approaching the church. He
+just went on talking, till at last, as the tramp of footsteps sounded on
+the belfry stairs, he said, "Don't take any notice of any further
+information. I am going." He went--all the brave ones seem to go--and
+those were the last words he spoke.
+
+Rhodes Moorhouse flew low over the German lines the other day, in order
+to bombard the German station at Courtrai. He planed down to 300 feet,
+and became the target for a hundred guns. In the murderous fire he was
+wounded, and might have descended, but he was determined not to let the
+Germans have his machine. He planed down to 100 feet in order to gather
+speed. At this elevation he was hit again, and mortally wounded, but he
+flew on alone to the British lines--like a shot bird heading for its own
+nest. He didn't even stop at the first aerodrome he came to, but sailed
+on--always alone--to his base, made a good landing, handed over his
+machine, and died.
+
+In the hospitals what heroism one finds! One splendid fellow of 6 feet 2
+inches had both his legs and both his arms amputated. He turned round to
+the doctor and said, smiling, "I shan't have to complain of beds being
+too short now!" And when someone came and sat with him in his deadly
+pain, he remarked in his gentle way, "I am afraid I am taking up all
+your time." His old father and mother arrived after he was dead.
+
+Ah! if one could hear more, surely one would do more! But this
+hole-and-corner way of doing warfare damps all enthusiasm and stifles
+recruiting. Why are we allowed to know nothing until the news is stale?
+Yesterday I heard at first hand of the treatment of some civilians by
+Germans, and I visited a village to hear from the _people themselves_
+what had happened.
+
+My work isn't so heavy now, and, much as I want to be here when the
+"forward movement" comes, I believe I ought to use the small amount of
+kick I have left in me to go to give lectures on the war to men in
+ammunition works at home. They all seem to be slacking and drinking, and
+I believe one might rouse them if one went oneself, and told stories of
+heroism, and tales of the front. The British authorities out here seem
+to think I ought to go home and give lectures at various centres, and I
+have heard from Vickers-Maxim's people that they want me to come.
+
+I think I'll arrive in London about the 1st of June, as there is a good
+deal to arrange, and I have to see heads of departments. One has to
+forget all about _parties_ in politics, and get help from Lloyd George
+himself. I only hope the lectures may be of some use.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Page Heading: TO MRS. FFOLLIOTT]
+
+_To Mrs. ffolliott._
+
+VILLA LES CHRYSANTHÈMES,
+LA PANNE, BELGIUM,
+_16 May._
+
+DARLING OLD POOT,
+
+One line, to wish you with all my heart a happy birthday. I shan't
+forget you on the 22nd. Will you buy yourself some little thing with the
+enclosed cheque?
+
+This war becomes a terrible strain. I don't know what we shall do when
+four nephews, a brother-in-law, and a nephew to be are in the field.
+
+I get quite sick with the loss of life that is going on; the whole land
+seems under the shadow of death. I shall always think it an idiotic way
+of settling disputes to plug pieces of iron and steel into innocent boys
+and men. But the bravery is simply wonderful. I could tell you stories
+which are almost unbelievable of British courage and fortitude.
+
+I am coming home soon to give some lectures, and then I hope to come out
+here again.
+
+Bless you, dear Poot,
+
+Your loving
+SARAH.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_17 May._--I saw a most curious thing to-day. A soldier in the Pavilion
+St. Vincent showed me five 5-franc pieces which he had had in his
+pocket when he was shot. A piece of shrapnel had bent the whole five
+until they were welded together. The shrapnel fitted into the silver
+exactly, and actually it was silvered by the scrape it had made against
+the coin. I should like to have had it, but the man valued his souvenir,
+so one didn't like to offer him money for it.
+
+A young Canadian found a comrade of his nailed to a door, and stone
+dead, of course. When did he die?
+
+A Belgian doctor told Mrs. Wynne that in looking through a German
+officer's knapsack he found a quantity of children's hands--a pretty
+souvenir! I write these things down because they must be known, and if I
+go home to lecture to munition-workers I suppose I must tell them of
+these barbarities.
+
+Meanwhile, the German prisoners in England are getting country houses
+placed at their service, electric light, baths, etc., and they say girls
+are allowed to come and play lawn tennis with them. The ships where they
+are interned are costing us £86,000 a month. Our own men imprisoned in
+Germany are starved, and beaten, and spat upon. They sleep on mouldy
+straw, have no sanitation, and in winter weather their coats, and
+sometimes even their tunics, were taken from them.
+
+Fortunately, reprisals need not come from us. Talk to Zouaves and Turcos
+and the French. God help Germany if they ever penetrate to the Rhine.
+
+A young man--Mr. Shoppe--is occupied in flying low over the gun that is
+bombarding Dunkirk in order to take a photograph of it.
+
+It seems to me a great deal to ask of young men to give their lives when
+life must be so sweet, but no one seems to grudge their all. Of some one
+hears touching and splendid stories; others, one knows, die all alone,
+gasping out their last breath painfully, with no one at hand to give
+them even a cup of water. No one has a tale to tell of them. God,
+perhaps, heard a last prayer or a last groan before Death came with its
+merciful hand and put an end to the intolerable pain.
+
+How much can a man endure? A Frenchman at the Zouave Poste au Secours
+looked calmly on while the remains of his arm were cut away the other
+night. Many operations are performed without chloroform (because they
+take a shorter time) at the French hospital.
+
+[Page Heading: A HEAVENLY HOST]
+
+I heard from R. to-day. He says the story about Mons is true. The
+English were retreating, and Kluck was following hard after them. He
+wired to the Kaiser that he had "got the English," but this is what men
+say happened. A cloud came out of a clear day and stood between the two
+armies, and in the cloud men saw the chariots and horses of a heavenly
+host. Kluck turned back from pursuing, and the English went on unharmed.
+
+This may be true, or it may be the result of men's fancy or of their
+imagination. But there is one vision which no one can deny, and which
+each man who cares to look may see for himself. It is the vision of what
+lies beyond sacrifice; and in that bright and heavenly atmosphere we
+shall see--we may, indeed, see to-day--the forms of those who have
+fallen. They fight still for England, unharmed now and for ever more,
+warriors on the side of right, captains of the host which no man can
+number, champions of all that we hold good. They are marching on ahead,
+and we hope to follow; and when we all meet, and the roll is called, we
+shall find them still cheery, I think, still unwavering, and answering
+to their good English names, which they carried unstained through a
+score of fights, at what price God and a few comrades know.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+LAST DAYS IN FLANDERS
+
+
+_19 May._--In order to get material for my lecture to munition-workers I
+was very anxious to see more of the war for myself than is possible at a
+soup-kitchen, and I asked at the British Mission if I might be given
+permission to go into the British lines. Major ---- in giving me a flat
+refusal, was a little pompous and important I thought, and he said it
+was _impossible_ to get near the British.
+
+To-day I lunched on the barge with Miss Close, and we took her car and
+drove to Poperinghe. I hardly like to write this even in a diary, I am
+so seldom naughty! But I really did something very wrong for once. And
+the amusing part of it was that military orders made going to Poperinghe
+so impossible that no one molested us! We passed all the sentries with a
+flourish of our green papers, and drove on to the typhoid hospital with
+only a few Tommies gaping at us.
+
+I was amazed at the pleasure that wrong-doing gives, and regretted my
+desperately strict past life! Oh, the freedom of that day in the open
+air! the joy of seeing trees after looking at one wretched line of rails
+for nine months! Lilacs were abloom in every garden, and buttercups
+made the fields look yellow. The air was misty--one could hardly have
+gone to Poperinghe except in a mist, as it was being so constantly
+shelled--but in the mist the trees had a queer light on them which made
+the early green look a deeper and stronger colour than I have ever seen
+it. There appeared to be a sort of glare under the mist, and the fresh
+wet landscape, with its top-heavy sky, radiated with some light of its
+own. Oh, the intoxication of that damp, wet drive, with a fine rain in
+our faces, and the car bounding under us on the "pavé"! If I am interned
+till the end of the war I don't care a bit! I have had some fresh air,
+and I have been away for one whole day from the smell of soup and
+drains.
+
+How describe it all? The dear sense of guilt first, and then the still
+dearer British soldiers, all ready with some cheery, cheeky remark as
+they sat in carts under the wet trees. They were our brethren--blue-eyed
+and fair-haired, and with their old clumsy ways, which one seemed to be
+seeing plainly for the first time, or, rather, recognising for the first
+time. It was all part of England, and a day out. The officers were
+taking exercise, of course, with dogs, and in the rain. We are never
+less than English! To-morrow we may be killed, but to-day we will put on
+thick boots, and take the dogs for a run in the rain.
+
+[Page Heading: AT POPERINGHE]
+
+Poperinghe was deserted, of course. Its busy cobbled streets were quite
+empty except for a few strolling soldiers in khaki, and just here and
+there the same toothless old woman who is always the last to leave a
+doomed city. At the typhoid hospital we gravely offered the cases of
+milk which we had brought with us as an earnest of our good conduct, but
+even the hospital was nearly empty. However, a secretary offered us a
+cup of tea, and in the dining-room we found Madame van den Steen, who
+had just returned to take up her noble work again. She was at Dinant, at
+her own château, when war broke out, and she was most interesting, and
+able to tell me things at first hand. The German methods are pretty well
+known now, but she told me a great deal which only women talking
+together could discuss. When a village or town was taken, the women
+inhabitants were quite at the mercy of the Germans.
+
+Continuing, Madame van den Steen said that all the filthiness that could
+be thought of was committed--the furniture, cupboards, flowerpots, and
+even bridge-tables, being sullied by these brutes. Children had their
+hands cut off, and one woman, at least, at Dinant was crucified. One's
+pen won't write more. The horrors upset one too much. All the babies
+born about that time died; their mothers had been so shocked and
+frightened....
+
+Of Ypres Madame said, "It smells of lilac and death." Some Englishmen
+were looking for the body of a comrade there, and failed to find it
+amongst the ruins of the burning and devastated town. By seeming chance
+they opened the door of a house which still stood, and found in a room
+within an old man of eighty-six, sitting placidly in a chair. He said,
+"How do you do?" and bade them be seated, and when they exclaimed,
+aghast at his being still in Ypres, he replied that he was paralysed
+and couldn't move, but that he knew God would send someone to take him
+away; and he smiled gently at them, and was taken away in their
+ambulance.
+
+Madame gave me a shell-case, and asked Mr. Thompson if he would bring in
+his large piece to show us. He wheeled it across the hall, as no one
+could lift it, and this was only the _base_ of a 15-inch shell. It was
+picked up in the garden of the hospital, and had travelled fifteen
+miles!
+
+The other day I went to see for myself some of the poor refugees at
+Coxide. There were twenty-five people in one small cottage. Some were
+sleeping in a cart. One weeping woman, wearing the little black woollen
+cap which all the women wear, told me that she and her family had to fly
+from their little farm at Lombaertzyde because it was being shelled by
+the Germans, but afterwards, when all seemed quiet, they went back to
+their home to save the cows. Alas, the Germans were there! They made
+this woman (who was expecting a baby) and all her family stand in a row,
+and one girl of twenty, the eldest daughter, was shot before their eyes.
+When the poor mother begged for the body of her child it was refused
+her.
+
+The _Times_ list of atrocities is too frightful, and all the evidence
+has been sifted and proved to be true.
+
+_20 May._--Yesterday I arranged with Major du Pont about leaving the
+station to go home and give lectures in England. Then I had a good deal
+to do, so I abandoned my plan of visiting refugees with Etta Close, and
+stayed on at the station. At 5.30 I came back to La Panne to see
+Countess de Caraman Chimay, the dame d'honneur of the Queen of the
+Belgians; then I went on to dine with the nurses at the "Ocean." Here I
+heard that Adinkerke, which I had just left, was being shelled.
+Fortunately, the station being there, I hope the inhabitants got away;
+but it was unpleasant to hear the sound of guns so near. I knew the
+three Belgian Sisters would be all right, as they have a good cellar at
+their house, and I could trust Lady Bagot's staff to look after her. All
+the same, it was a horrible night, full of anxiety, and there seems
+little doubt that La Panne will be shelled any day. My one wish
+is--let's all behave well.
+
+I watched the sunset over the sea, and longed to be in England; but,
+naturally, one means to stick it, and not leave at a nasty time.
+
+[Page Heading: SOCKS]
+
+_21 May._--Yesterday, at the station, there was a poor fellow lying on a
+stretcher, battered and wounded, as they all are, an eye gone, and a
+foot bandaged. His toes were exposed, and I went and got him rather a
+gay pair of socks to pull on over his "pansement." He gave me a twinkle
+out of his remaining eye, and said, "Madame, in those socks I could take
+Constantinople!"
+
+The work is slack for the moment, but a great attack is expected at
+Nieuport, and they say the Kaiser is behind the lines there. His
+presence hasn't brought luck so far, and I hope it won't this time.
+
+I went to tea with Miss Close on the barge, and afterwards we picked up
+M. de la Haye, and went to see an old farm, which filled me with joy.
+The buildings here, except at the larger towns, are not interesting or
+beautiful, but this lovely old house was evidently once a summer palace
+of the bishops (perhaps of Bruges). It is called "Beau Garde," and lies
+off the Coxide road. One enters what must once have been a splendid
+courtyard, but it is now filled indiscriminately with soldiers and pigs.
+The chapel still stands, with the Bishops' Arms on the wall; and there
+are Spanish windows in the old house, and a curious dog-kennel built
+into the wall. Over the gateway some massive beams have been roughly
+painted in dark blue, and these, covered in ivy, and with the old
+dim-toned bricks above, make a scheme of colour which is simply
+enchanting. Some wind-torn trees and the sand-dunes, piled in miniature
+mountains, form a delicious background to the old place.
+
+I also went with Etta Close to visit some of the refugees for whom she
+has done so much, and in the sweet spring sunshine I took a little walk
+in the fields with M. de la Haye, so altogether it was a real nice day.
+There were so few wounded that I was able to have a chat with each of
+them, and the poor "éclopés" were happy gambling for ha'pence in the
+garden of the St. Vincent.
+
+In the evening I went up to the Kursaal to dine with Mrs. Wynne. Our two
+new warriors who have come out with ambulances have stood this
+_absolutely_ quiet time for three days, and are now leaving because it
+is too dangerous! The shells at Adinkerke never came near them, as they
+were deputed to drive to Nieuport only. (N.B.--Mrs. Wynne continues to
+drive there every night!) Eight men of our corps have funked, no women.
+
+I am going to take a week's rest before going home, in the hope that I
+won't arrive looking as ill as I usually do. I hardly know how to
+celebrate my holiday, as it is the first time since I came out here that
+I haven't gone to the station except on Sundays.
+
+[Page Heading: SUNDAY]
+
+_23 May, Sunday._--I went to Morning Service at the "Ocean" to-day, then
+walked back with Prince Alexander. In the evening we drove to the
+Hoogstadt hospital. The King of the Belgians was just saying good-bye to
+the staff, after paying a surprise visit. He has a splendid face, and
+the simplicity of his plain dark uniform makes the strength and goodness
+of it all the more striking.
+
+As I was waiting at the hospital the Germans began firing at a little
+village a mile off. It is always strange to hear the shells whizzing
+over the fields. We drove out to see the Yser and the floods, which have
+protected us all the winter. With glasses one could have seen the German
+lines.
+
+Spring is coming late, and with a marvel of green. A wind blows in from
+the sea, and the lilacs nod from over the hedge. The tender corn rustles
+its soft little chimes, and all across it the wind sends arpeggio chords
+of delicate music, like a harp played on silver strings. A great big
+horse-chestnut tree, carrying its flowers proudly like a bouquet,
+showers the road with petals, and the shy hedges put up a screen all
+laced and decorated with white may. It just seems as if Mother Earth
+had become young again, and was tossing her babies up to the summer sky,
+and the wind played hide-and-seek, or peep-bo, or some other ridiculous
+game, with them, and made the summer babies as glad and as mischievous
+as himself. Only the guns boom all the time, and my poor little French
+Marines, who drink far too much, and have the manners of princes, come
+in on ambulances in the evening, or at the "poste" a hole is dug for
+them in the ground, and they are laid down gently in their dirty coats.
+
+Mother Earth, with her new-born babies, stops laughing for a moment, and
+says to me, "It's all right, my dear; they have to come back to me, as
+all my children and all their works must do. Why make any complaint? For
+a time they are happy, playing and building their little castles, and
+making their little books, and weaving stories and wreaths of flowers;
+but the stories, the castles, the flowers I gave them, and they
+themselves, all come back to me at last--the leaves next autumn, and the
+boy you love perhaps to-morrow."
+
+Oh, Father God, Mother Earth, as it was in the beginning will it be in
+the end? Will you give us and them a good time again, and will the
+spring burst into singing in some other country? I don't know. I don't
+know.
+
+Only I do know this--I am sure of it now for the first time, and it is
+worth while spending a long, long winter within the sound of guns in
+order to know it--that death brings release, not release from mere
+suffering or pain, but in some strange and unknown way it brings
+freedom. Soldiers realise it: they have been more terrified than their
+own mothers will ever know, and their very spines have melted under the
+shrieking sound of shells, and then comes the day when they "don't
+mind." Death stalks just as near as ever, but his face is suddenly quite
+kind. A stray bullet or a piece of shell may come, but what does it
+matter? This is the day when the soldier learns to stroll when the
+shrapnel is falling, and to look up and laugh when the murderous bullet
+pings close by.
+
+[Page Heading: SOUVENIRS]
+
+War souvenirs! There are heaps of them, and I hate them all; pieces of
+jagged shell, helmets with bullets through them, pieces of burnt
+aeroplanes, scraps of clothing rent by a bayonet. Yesterday, at the
+station, I saw a sick Zouave nursing a German summer casquette. He said
+quietly, being very sick: "The burgomaster chez moi wanted one. Yes, I
+had to kill a German officer for it--ce n'est rien de quoi--I got a ball
+in my leg too, mais mon burgomaster sera très content d'avoir une
+casquette d'un boche." Our own men leave their trenches and go out into
+the open to get these horrible things, with their battered exterior and
+the suggestion of pomade inside.
+
+Yesterday, by chance, I went to the "Ierlinck" to see Mr. Clegg. I met
+Mr. Hubert Walter, lately arrived from England, and asked him to dine,
+so both he and Mr. Clegg came, and Madame van der Gienst. It was _so_
+like England to talk to Mr. Walter again, and to learn news of everyone,
+and we actually sat up till 10.30, and had a great pow-wow.
+
+Mr. Walter attaches great importance to the fact that the Germans are
+courageous in victory, but their spirits go down at once under defeat,
+and he thinks that even one decisive defeat would do wonders in the way
+of bringing the war to an end. The Russians are preparing for a winter
+campaign. I look at all my "woollies," and wonder if I had better save
+some for 1916. What new horrors will have been invented by that time? I
+hear the Germans are throwing vitriol now! In their results I hate hand
+grenades more than anything. The poor burnt faces which have been
+wounded by them are hardly human sometimes, and in their bandages they
+have a suggestion of something tragically grotesque.
+
+_26 May._--We had a great day--rather, a glorious day--at the station
+yesterday. In the morning I heard that "les anglais" were arriving
+there, and, although the news was a little startling, I couldn't go
+early to Adinkerke because I felt so seedy. However, I got off at last
+in a "camion," and when I arrived I found the little station hospital
+and salle and Lady Bagot's hospital crowded with men in khaki.
+
+We don't know yet all that it means. The fighting has been fierce and
+awful at Ypres. Are the hospitals at the base all crowded? Is there no
+more room for our men? What numbers of them have fallen? Who is killed,
+and who is left?
+
+All questions are idle for the moment. Only I have a postcard to say
+that Colin is at the front, so I suppose until the war is over I shall
+go on being very sick with anxiety. At night I say to myself, as the
+guns boom on, "Is he lying out in the open with a bullet through his
+heart?" and in the morning I say, "Is he safe in hospital, and wounded,
+or is he still with his men, making them follow him (in the way he has)
+wherever he likes to lead them?" God knows, and the War Office, and
+neither tells us much.
+
+[Page Heading: GAS-POISONING]
+
+The men at the station were nearly all cases of asphyxiation by gas.
+Unless one had actually seen the immediate results one could hardly have
+credited it. In a day or two the soldiers may leave off twitching and
+shuddering as they breathe, and may be able to draw a breath fairly, but
+an hour or two after they have inhaled the deadly German gas is an awful
+time to see one's men. Most of them yesterday were in bed, but a few sat
+on canvas chairs round the empty stove in the salle, and all slept, even
+those in deadly pain. Sleep comes to these tired soldiers like a death.
+They succumb to it. They are difficult to rouse. They are oblivious, and
+want nothing else. They are able to sleep anywhere and in any position,
+but even in sleep they twitch and shudder, and their sides heave like
+those of spent horses.
+
+It struck me very forcibly that what was immediately wanted was a long
+draught for each of them of some clean, simple stimulant. I went and
+bought them red wine, and I could see that this seemed to do good, and I
+went to the barge and got bottles of whisky and a quantity of distilled
+water, and we dosed the men. It seemed to do them a wonderful lot of
+good, and in some way acted as an antidote to the poison. Also, it
+pulled them together, and they got some quieter sleep afterwards.
+
+Towards the afternoon, indeed, all but one Irishman seemed to be better,
+and then we began to be cheery, and the scene at the station took colour
+and became intensely alive. The khaki-clad forms roused themselves, and
+(of course) wanted a wash. Also, they sat on their beds and produced
+pocket-combs, and ran them through their hair. In their dirt and rags
+these poor battered, breathless men began to try to be smart again. It
+was a tragedy and a comedy all in one. A Highlander, in a shrunk kilt
+and with long bare legs, had his head bound about with bandages till it
+looked like a great melon, and his sleeve dangled empty from his
+great-coat. Others of the Seaforths, and mere boys of the Highland
+Territorials, wore khaki shirts over their tartan, and these were
+bullet-torn and hanging in great rents. And some boys still wore their
+caps with the wee dambrod pattern jauntily, and some had no caps to
+wear, and some were all daubed about with white bandages stained
+crimson, and none had hose, and few had brogues. They had breathed
+poison and received shrapnel, and none of them had slept since Sunday
+night. They had had an "awful doing," and no one knew how the battle at
+Ypres had gone, but these were men yet--walking upright when they could,
+always civil, undismayed, intelligent, and about as like giving in as a
+piece of granite.
+
+Only the young Scottish boys--the children of seventeen who had sworn in
+as nineteen--were longing for Loch Lomond's side and the falls of
+Inversnaid. I believe the Loch Lomond lads believed that the white burn
+that falls over the rocks near the pier has no rival (although they have
+heard of Niagara and the Victoria Falls), and it's "oor glen" and "oor
+country" wi' them all. And one boy wanted his mother badly, and said so.
+But oh, how ready they were to be cheery! how they enjoyed their day!
+And, indeed, we did our best for them.
+
+[Page Heading: A GARDEN-PARTY]
+
+Lady Bagot's hospital was full, and we called it her garden-party when
+we all had tea in the open air there. We fed them, we got them
+handkerchiefs, our good du Pont got them tubs, the cook heaped more coal
+on the fire, although it was very hot, and made soup in buckets, and
+then began a curious stage scene which I shall never forget. It was on
+the platform of the station. A band appeared from somewhere, and, out of
+compliment to the English, played "God Save the King." All the dirty
+bandaged men stood at attention. As they did so an armoured train backed
+slowly into the station and an aeroplane swooped overhead. At Drury Lane
+one would have said that the staging had been overdone, that the clothes
+were too ragged, the men too gaunt and too much wounded, and that by no
+stretch of imagination could a band be playing "God save the King" while
+a square painted train called "Lou-lou" steamed in, looking like a
+child's giant gaudy toy, and an aeroplane fussed overhead.
+
+Everyone had stories to tell, but I think the best of them concerns the
+arrival of the wounded last night. All the beds in Lady Bagot's little
+hospital were full, and the Belgians who occupied them insisted on
+getting up and giving their places to the English. They lay on the floor
+or stood on their feet all night, and someone told me that even very
+sick men leapt from their beds to give them to their Allies.
+
+God help us, what a mixture it all is! Here were men talking of the very
+_sound_ of bayonets on human flesh; here were men not only asphyxiated
+by gas, but blinded by the pepper that the Germans mix with it; and here
+were men determined to give no quarter--yet they were babbling of Loch
+Lomond's side and their mothers, and fighting as to who should give up
+their beds to each other.
+
+Of course the day ended with the exchange of souvenirs, and the soldiers
+pulled buttons off their coats and badges out of their caps. And when it
+was all over, every mother's son of them rolled round and went to sleep.
+Most of them, I thought, had a curious air of innocence about them as
+they slept.
+
+_27 May._--I took a great bundle of newspapers and magazines to the
+"Jellicoe" men to-day. English current literature isn't a waste out
+here, and I often wonder why people don't buy more. They all fall upon
+my tableful, and generally bear away much of it.
+
+The war news, even in the ever optimistic English press, is _not_ good,
+but not nearly as bad as what seems to me the real condition of affairs.
+The shortage of high explosives is very great. At Nieuport yesterday
+Mrs. Wynne said to a French officer, "Things seem quiet here to-day," at
+which he laughed, and said, "I suppose even Germans will stop firing
+when they know you have no ammunition."
+
+[Page Heading: SLACKERS IN GLASGOW]
+
+In France the armament works are going night and day, and the men work
+in shifts of 24 hours--even the women only get one day off in a
+week--while in Glasgow the men are sticking out for strict labour
+conditions, and are "slacking" from Friday night till late on Tuesday
+morning, and then demanding extra pay for overtime. And this in face of
+the bare facts that since October the Allies have lost ground in Russia;
+in Belgium they remain as they were; and in France they have advanced a
+few kilometres. At Ypres the Germans are now within a mile of us, and
+the losses there are terrible. Whom shall we ever see again?
+
+Men come out to die now, not to fight. One order from a sergeant was,
+"You've got to take that trench. You can't do it. Get on!"
+
+A captain was heard saying to a gunner subaltern: "We must go back and
+get that gun." The subaltern said, "We shall be killed, but it doesn't
+matter." The captain echoed heavily, "No, it doesn't matter," and they
+went back.
+
+Sir William Ramsay, speaking about the war, says that half the adult
+male population of Europe will be killed before it is over. Those who
+are left will be the feeble ones, the slackers, the unfit, and the
+cowards. It is good to be left to breed from such stock!
+
+It is odd to me how confusing is the want of difference that has come to
+pass between the living and the not living. Cottages and little towns
+seem to be part of nature. One regrets their destruction almost as one
+regrets the loss of life. They have a tragic look, with their
+dishevelled windows and stripped roofs and skeleton frames. Life has
+become so cheap that cottages seem almost as valuable. "It doesn't
+matter"--nothing matters. I rather dread going back to London, because
+there things may begin to seem important and one will be in bondage
+again. Here our men are going to their death laughing because it doesn't
+matter.
+
+There is a proud humility about my countrymen which few people have yet
+realised. It is the outcome of nursery days and public schools. No one
+is allowed to think much of himself in either place, so when he dies,
+"It doesn't matter."
+
+God help the boys! If they only knew how much it mattered to _us_! Life
+is over for them. We don't even know for certain that they will live
+again. But their _spirit_, as I know it, can never die. I am not sure
+about the survival of personality. I care, but I do not know. But I do
+know that by these simple, glorious, uncomplaining deaths, some higher,
+purer, more splendid place is reached, some release is found from the
+heavy weight of foolish, sticky, burdensome, contemptible things. These
+heroes do "rise," and we "rise" with them. Could Christ himself desire a
+better resurrection?
+
+[Page Heading: LARKS]
+
+_28 May._--I am busy getting things prepared for going home--my lecture,
+two articles, etc. I did not go to the station to-day, but worked till 3
+o'clock, and then walked over to St. Idesbald. How I wish I could have
+been out-of-doors more since I came here. It is such a wonderful
+country, all sky. No wonder there are painters in Belgium. During the
+winter it was too wet to see much, and I was always in the kitchen, but
+now I could kiss the very ground with the little roses on it amongst the
+Dunes. Larks sing at St. Idesbald, and nightingales. Some fine night I
+mean to walk out there and listen.
+
+_29 May._--To-day, according to promise, Mr. Bevan took me into
+Nieuport. It was very difficult to get permission to go there, but Mr.
+Bevan got it from the British Mission on the plea that I was going to
+give lectures at home.
+
+"The worst of going to Nieuport," said Major Tyrell, "is that you won't
+be likely to see home again."
+
+Mr. Bevan called at 10 o'clock with the faithful MacEwan, and we went
+first to the Cabour hospital, which I always like so much, and where the
+large pleasure-grounds make things healthy and quiet for the patients.
+Then we had a tyre out of order, so had to go on to Dunkirk, where I met
+Mr. Sarrel and his friend Mr. Hanson--Vice-Consul at Constantinople--and
+they lunched with us while the car was being doctored.
+
+At last we started towards Nieuport, but before we got there we found a
+motor-car in a ditch, and its owner with a cut on his head and his arm
+broken, so we had to pick him up and take him to Coxide. It was a clear,
+bright day, with all the trees swishing the sky, and Mr. Bevan and
+MacEwan did nothing all the time but tell me how dangerous it was, and
+they pointed out every place on the road where they had picked up dead
+men or found people blown to pieces. This was lively for me, and the
+amusing part of it was that I think they did it from a belated sense of
+responsibility.
+
+It is as difficult to find words to describe Nieuport as it is to talk
+of metaphysics in slang. The words don't seem invented that will convey
+that haunting sense of desolation, that supreme quiet under the shock of
+continually firing guns. Hardly anything is left now of the little
+homely bits that, when I saw the place last autumn, reminded one that
+this was once a city of living human beings. _Then_ one saw a few
+interiors--exposed, it is true, and damaged, but still of this world.
+Now it is one big grave, the grave of a city, and the grave of many of
+its inhabitants. Here, at a corner house, nine ladies lie under the
+piled-up débris that once made their home. There some soldiers met their
+death, and some crumbling bricks are heaped over them too. The houses
+are all fallen--some outer walls remain, but I hardly saw a roof
+left--and everywhere there are empty window-frames and skeleton rafters.
+
+[Page Heading: NIEUPORT]
+
+I never knew so surely that a town can live and can die, and it set one
+wondering whether Life means a thing as a whole and Death simply
+disintegration. A perfect crystal, chemists tell us, has the elements of
+life in it and may be said to live. Destruction and decay mean death;
+separation and disintegration mean death. In this way we die, a crystal
+dies, a flower or a city dies. Nieuport is dead. There isn't a
+heart-beat left to throb in it. Thousands and thousands of shells have
+fallen into it, and at night the nightingale sings there, and by day
+the river flows gently under the ruined bridge. Every tree in a wood
+near by is torn and beheaded; hardly one has the top remaining. The new
+green pushes out amongst the blackened trunks.
+
+One speaks low in Nieuport, the place is so horribly dead.
+
+Mr. Bevan showed me a shell-hole 42 feet across, made by one single
+"soixante-quinze" shell. Every field is pitted with holes, and where
+there are stretches of pale-coloured mud the round pits dotted all over
+it give one the impression of an immense Gruyère cheese. The streets,
+heaped with débris, and with houses fallen helplessly forward into their
+midst, were full of sunshine. From ruined cottages--whose insecure walls
+tottered--one saw here and there some Zouaves or a little French "marin"
+appear. Most of these ran out with letters in their hands for us to
+post. Heaven knows what they can have to write about from that grave!
+
+Some beautiful pillars of the cathedral still stand, and the tower, full
+of holes, has not yet bent its head. Lieutenant Shoppe, R.N., sits up
+there all day, and takes observations, with the shells knocking gaily
+against the walls. One day the tower will fall or its stones will be
+pierced, and then Lieutenant Shoppe, R.N., will be killed, as the
+Belgian "observateur" was killed at Oostkerke the other day. He still
+hangs there across a beam for all the world to see. His arms are
+stretched out, and his body lies head downwards, and no one can go near
+the dead Belgian because the tower is too unsafe now. One day perhaps
+it will fall altogether and bury him.
+
+Meanwhile, in the tower of the ruined cathedral at Nieuport Shoppe sits
+in his shirt-sleeves, with his telephone beside him and his observation
+instruments. His small staff are with him. They are immensely interested
+in the range of a gun and the accuracy of a hit. I believe they do not
+think of anything else. No doubt the tower shakes a great deal when a
+shell hits it, and no doubt the number of holes in its sides is daily
+becoming more numerous. Each morning that Shoppe leaves home to spend
+his day in the tower he runs an excellent chance of being killed, and in
+the evening he returns and eats a good dinner in rather an uncomfortable
+hotel.
+
+In the cathedral, and amongst its crumbling battered aisles, a strange
+peace rests. The pitiful columns of the church stand here and there--the
+roof has long since gone. On its most sheltered side is the little
+graveyard, filled with crosses, where the dead lie. Here and there a
+shell has entered and torn a corpse from its resting-place, and bones
+lie scattered. On other graves a few simple flowers are laid.
+
+We went to see the dim cellars which form the two "postes au secours."
+In the inner recess of one a doctor has a bed, in the outer cave some
+soldiers were eating food. There is no light even during the day except
+from the doorway. At Nieuport the Germans put in 3,000 shells in one
+day. Nothing is left. If there ever was anything to loot, it has been
+looted. One doesn't know what lies under the débris. Here one sees the
+inside of a piano and a few twisted strings, and there a metal
+umbrella-stand. I saw one wrought-iron sign hanging from the falling
+walls of an inn.
+
+Mr. Bevan and I wandered about in the unearthly quiet, which persisted
+even when the guns began to blaze away close by us, whizzing shells over
+our heads, and we walked down to the river, and saw the few boards which
+are all that remain of the bridge. Afterwards a German shell landed with
+its unpleasant noise in the middle of the street; but we had wandered up
+a by-way, and so escaped it by a minute or less.
+
+In a little burned house, where only a piece of blackened wall remained,
+I found a little crucifix which impressed me very much--it stood out
+against the smoke-stained walls with a sort of grandeur of pity about
+it. The legs had been shot away or burned, but "the hands were stretched
+out still."
+
+As we came away firing began all round about, and we saw the toss of
+smoke as the shells fell.
+
+[Page Heading: STEENKERKE]
+
+_31 May._--We went to Steenkerke yesterday and called on Mrs. Knocker,
+and saw a terrible infirmary, which must be put right. It isn't fit for
+dogs.
+
+At the station to-day our poor Irishman died. Ah, it was terrible! His
+lungs never recovered from the gas, and he breathed his last difficult
+breath at 5 o'clock.
+
+In the evening a Zeppelin flew overhead on its way to England.
+
+[Page Heading: NIGHTINGALES]
+
+There is a nightingale in a wood near here. He seems to sing louder and
+more purely the heavier the fighting that is going on. When men are
+murdering each other he loses himself in a rapture, of song, recalling
+all the old joyous things which one used to know.
+
+The poetry of life seems to be over. The war songs are forced and
+foolish. There is no time for reading, and no one looks at pictures, but
+the nightingale sings on, and the long-ago spirit of youth looks out
+through Time's strong bars, and speaks of evenings in old, dim woods at
+home, and of girlish, splendid drives home from some dance where "he"
+was, when we watched the dawn break, and saw our mother sleeping in the
+carriage, and wondered what it would be like not to "thrill" all the
+time, and to sleep when the nightingale was singing.
+
+Later there came the time when the song of the throbbing nightingale
+made one impatient, because it sang in intolerable silence, and one
+ached for the roar of things, and for the clash of endeavour and for the
+strain of purpose. Peace was at a discount then, and struggle seemed to
+be the eternal good. The silent woods had no word for one, the
+nightingale was only a mate singing a love-song, and one wanted
+something more than that.
+
+And afterwards, when the struggle and the strain were given one in
+abundant measure, the song of the nightingale came in the lulls that
+occurred in one's busy life. One grew to connect it with coffee out on
+the lawn in some houses of surpassing comfort, where (years and years
+ago) one dressed for dinner, and a crinkly housemaid brought hot water
+to one's room. The song went on above the smug comfort of things, and
+the amusing conversation, and the smell of good cigars. Within, we saw
+some pleasant drawing-room, with lamps and a big table set with candles
+and cards, and we felt that the nightingale provided a very charming
+orchestra. We listened to it as we listened to amusing conversation,
+with a sense of comfortable enjoyment and rest. Why talk of the time
+when it sang of breaking hearts and high endeavour never satisfied, and
+things which no one ever knew or guessed except oneself?
+
+It sings now above the sound of death and of tears. Sometimes I think to
+myself that God has sent his angel to open the prison doors when I hear
+that bird in the little wood close beside the tram-way line.
+
+On Thursday, June 3rd, I drove in the "bug" to Boulogne, and took the
+steamer to England. I went through a nasty time in Belgium, but now a
+good deal of queer affection is shown me, and I believe they all rather
+like me in the corps.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The following brief impression of Miss Macnaughtan's work at the
+soup-kitchen forms the most appropriate conclusion to her story of her
+experiences in Belgium. She cut it out of some paper, and sent it home
+to a friend in England, and we seem to learn from it--more than from any
+words of her own--how much she did to help our Allies in their hour of
+need:
+
+ "It was dark when my car stopped at the little station of
+ Adinkerke, where I had been invited to visit a soup-kitchen
+ established there by a Scotchwoman. In peace she is a
+ distinguished author; in war she is being a mother to such of the
+ Belgian Army as are lucky enough to pass her way. I can see her
+ now, against a background of big soup-boilers and cooking-stoves,
+ handing out woollen gloves and mufflers to the men who were to be
+ on sentry duty along the line that night. It was bitterly cold, and
+ the comforts were gratefully received.
+
+ "For a long time this most versatile lady made every drop of the
+ soup that was prepared for the men herself, and she has, so a
+ Belgian military doctor says, saved more lives than he has with her
+ timely cups of hot, nourishing food. It is only the most seriously
+ wounded men who are taken to the field hospital, the others are
+ carried straight to the railway-station, and have to wait there,
+ sometimes for many hours, till a train can take them on. Even then
+ trains carrying the wounded have constantly to be shunted to let
+ troop trains through. But, thanks to the enterprise and hard work
+ of this clever little lady, there is always a plentiful supply of
+ hot food ready for the men who, weak from loss of blood, are often
+ besides faint with hunger."
+
+
+
+
+PART II
+
+AT HOME
+
+HOW THE MESSAGE WAS DELIVERED
+
+
+_October, 1915._--So much has happened since I came home from Flanders
+in June, and I have not had one moment in which to write of it. I found
+my house occupied when I returned, so I went to the Petrograd Hotel and
+stayed there, going out of London for Sundays.
+
+Everyone I met in England seemed absorbed in pale children with
+adenoids. No one cared much about the war. Children in houses nowadays
+require food at weird hours, not roast mutton and a good plain Christian
+pudding, but, "You will excuse our beginning, I know, dear, Jane has to
+have her massage after lunch, and Tom has to do his exercises, and baby
+has to learn to breathe." This one has its ears strapped, and that one
+is "nervous" and must be "understood," and nothing is talked of but
+children. My mother would never have a doctor in the house;
+"nervousness" was called bad temper, and was dosed, and stooping was
+called "a trick," and was smacked. The children I now see eat far too
+much, and when they finish off lunch with gravy drunk out of tumblers
+it makes me feel very unwell.
+
+I went to the Breitmeyers, at Rushton Hall, Kettering; it's a fine
+place, but I was too tired to enjoy anything but a bed. The next Sunday
+I stayed at Chenies, with the Duchess of Bedford--always a favourite
+resort of mine--and another week I went to Welwyn.
+
+I met a few old men at these places, but no one else. Everyone is at the
+front. The houses generally have wounded soldiers in them, and these
+play croquet with a nurse on the lawn, or smoke in the sun. None of them
+want to go back to fight. They seem tired, and talk of the trenches as
+"proper 'ell."
+
+There is always a little too much walking about at a "week-end." One
+feels tired and stiff on Monday. I well remember last summer having to
+take people three times to a distant water garden--talking all the time,
+too! People are so kind in making it pleasant that they wear one out.
+
+[Page Heading: ERITH]
+
+All the time I was in London I was preparing my campaign of lecturing. I
+began with Vickers-Maxim works at Erith, on Wednesday, 9th June, and on
+the 8th I went to stay with the Cameron Heads. There was great bustle
+and preparation for my lecture, Press people in the house at all hours
+of the day, and so on. A great bore for my poor friends; but they were
+so good about it, and I loved being with them.
+
+The lecture was rather a red-letter occasion for me, everyone praising,
+the Press very attentive, etc., etc. The audience promised well for
+future things, and the emotion that was stirred nearly bowled myself
+over. In some of the hushes that came one could hear men crying. The
+Scott Gattys and a few of my own friends came to "stand by," and we all
+drove down to Erith in motor-cars, and returned to supper with the
+Vickers at 10.30.
+
+The next day old Vickers sent for me and asked me to name my own price
+for my lectures, but I couldn't mix money up with the message, so I
+refused all pay, and feel happy that I did so. I can't, and won't,
+profit by this war. I'd rather lose--I am losing--but that doesn't
+matter. Nothing matters much now. The former things are swept away, and
+all the old barriers are disappearing. Our old gods of possession and
+wealth are crumbling, and class distinctions don't count, and even life
+and death are pretty much the same thing.
+
+The Jews say the Messiah will come after the war. I think He is here
+already--but on a cross as of yore!
+
+I went up to Glasgow to make arrangements there, and my task wasn't an
+easy one. Somehow I knew that I must speak, that I must arouse slackers,
+and tell rotters about what is going on. One goes forth (led in a way),
+and only then does one realise that one is going in unasked to
+ship-building yards and munition sheds and docks, and that one is quite
+a small woman, alone, and up against a big thing.
+
+Always the answer I got was the same: "The men are not working; forty
+per cent. are slackers. The output of shells is not what it ought to be,
+but they _won't_ listen!"
+
+In the face of this I arranged seven meetings in seven days, to take
+place early in August, and then I went back to give my lecture in the
+Queen's Hall, London. I took the large Hall, because if one has a
+message to deliver one had better deliver it to as many people as
+possible. It was rather a breathless undertaking, but people turned up
+splendidly, and I had a full house. Sir F. Lloyd gave me the band of the
+Coldstream Guards, and things went with a good swing.
+
+I am still wondering how I did it. The whole "campaign" has already got
+rather an unreal atmosphere about it, and often, after crowded meetings,
+I have come home and lain in the dark and have seen nothing but a sea of
+faces, and eyes all turned my way. It has been a most curious and
+unexpected experience, but England did not realise the war, and she did
+not realise the wave of heroism that is sweeping over the world, and I
+had to tell about it.
+
+Well, my lectures went on--Erith, Queen's Hall, Sheffield (a splendid
+meeting, 3,000 people inside the hall and 300 turned away at the door!),
+Barrow-in-Furness. I gave two lectures at Barrow, at 3 and 7.30. They
+seemed very popular. In the evening quite a demonstration--pipe band
+playing "Auld lang syne," and much cheering. After that Newcastle, and
+back to the south again to speak there. Everywhere I took my
+magic-lantern and showed my pictures, and I told "good stories" to
+attract people to the meetings, although my heart was, and is, nearly
+breaking all the time.
+
+[Page Heading: GLASGOW]
+
+Then I began the Glasgow campaign--Parkhead, Whiteinch, Rose-Bank,
+Dumbarton, Greenock, Beardmore's, Denny's, Armour's, etc., etc.
+Everywhere there were big audiences, and although I would have spoken to
+two listeners gladly, I was still more glad to see the halls filled. The
+cheers of horny-handed workmen when they are really roused just get me
+by the throat till I can't speak for a minute or two!
+
+At one place I spoke from a lorry in the dinner-hour. All the men, with
+blackened faces, crowded round the car, and others swung from the iron
+girders, while some perched, like queer bronze images, on pieces of
+machinery. They were all very intent, and very polite and courteous, no
+interruptions at any of the meetings. A keen interest was shown in the
+war pictures, and the cheers were deafening sometimes.
+
+After Glasgow I went to dear Clemmie Waring's, at Lennel, and found her
+house full of convalescent officers, and she herself very happy with
+them and her new baby. I really wanted to rest, and meant to enjoy five
+days of repose; but I gave a lecture the first night, and then had a
+sort of breakdown and took to my bed. However, that had to be got over,
+and I went down to Wales at the end of the week. The Butes gave me their
+own rooms at Cardiff Castle, and a nice housekeeper looked after me.
+
+[Page Heading: CARDIFF]
+
+There followed a strange fortnight in that ugly old fortress, with its
+fine stone-work and the execrable decorations covering every inch of it.
+The days passed oddly. I did a little writing, and I saw my committee,
+whom I like. Colonel Dennis is an excellent fellow, and so are Mr.
+Needle, Mr. Vivian Reece{7}, and Mr. Harrison. A Mr. Howse acted as
+secretary.
+
+The first day I gave a dock-gate meeting, and spoke from a lorry, and
+that night I had my great meeting at Cardiff. Sir Frank Younghusband
+came down for it, and the Mayor took the chair. The audience was
+enthusiastic, and every place was filled. At one moment they all rose to
+their feet, and holding up their hands swore to fight for the right till
+right was won. It was one of the scenes I shall always remember.
+
+Every day after that I used to have tea and an egg at 5 o'clock, and a
+motor would come with one of my committee to take me to different places
+of meeting. It was generally up the Rhondda Valley that we went, and I
+came to know well that westward drive, with the sun setting behind the
+hills and turning the Taff river to gold. Every night we went a little
+further and a little higher--Aberdare, Aberystwyth, Toney Pandy,
+Tonepentre, etc., etc. I gave fourteen lectures in thirteen days.
+Generally, I spoke in chapels, and from the pulpit, and this seemed to
+give me the chance I wanted to speak all my mind to these people, and to
+ask them and teach them what Power, and Possession, and Freedom really
+meant. Oh, it was wonderful! The rapt faces of the miners, the hush of
+the big buildings, and then the sudden burst of cheering!
+
+At one meeting there was a bumptious-looking man, with a bald head, whom
+I remember. He took up his position just over the clock in the gallery.
+He listened critically, talked a good deal, and made remarks. I began to
+speak straight at him, without looking at him, and quite suddenly I saw
+him, as I spoke of our men at the war, cover his face and burst into
+tears.
+
+The children were the only drawback. They were attracted by the idea of
+the magic-lantern, and used to come to the meetings and keep older
+people out. My lectures were not meant for children, and I had to adopt
+the plan of showing the pictures first and then telling the youngsters
+to go, and settling down to a talk with the older ones, who always
+remained behind voluntarily.
+
+We had some times which I can never forget; nor can I forget those dark
+drives from far up in the hills, and the mists in the valley, and my own
+aching fatigue as I got back about midnight. From 5 till 12.30 every
+night I was on the stretch.
+
+In the day-time I used to wander round the garden. One always meets
+someone whom one knows. I had lunch with the Tylers one day, and tea
+with the Plymouths. It was still, bright autumn weather, and the trees
+were gold in the ugly garden with the black river running through it. I
+got a few lessons in motor driving, and I spoke at the hospital one
+afternoon. I took the opportunity of getting a dress made at rather a
+good tailor's, and time passed in a manner quite solitary till the
+evenings.
+
+Never before have I spent a year of so much solitude, and yet I have
+been with people during my work. I think I know now what thousands of
+men and women living alone and working are feeling. I wish I could help
+them. There won't be many young marriages now. What are we to do for
+girls all alone?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_To Mrs. Keays-Young._
+
+CARDIFF CASTLE, CARDIFF,
+_31 August, 1915._
+
+DEAREST BABY,
+
+Many thanks for your letter, which I got on my way through London. I
+spent one night there to see about some work I am having done in the
+house.
+
+I have a drawer quite full of press-cuttings, and I do not know what is
+in any of them. It is difficult to choose anything of interest, as they
+are all a good deal alike, and all sound my trumpet very loudly; but I
+enclose one specimen.
+
+We had meetings every night in Glasgow. They were mostly badly organised
+and well attended. Here I have an agent arranging everything, and two of
+my meetings have been enormous. The first was at the dock-gates in the
+open air, and the second in the Town Hall. The band of the Welch
+Regiment played, and Mr. Glover conducted, but nothing is the same, of
+course. Alan is at Porthcawl, and came to see me this morning.
+
+The war news could hardly be worse, and yet I am told by men who get
+sealed information from the Foreign Office that worse is coming.
+
+Poor Russia! She wants help more than anyone. Her wounded are quite
+untended. I go there next month.
+
+The King of the Belgians has made me Chevalier de l'Ordre de Léopold.
+
+Love to all.
+Yours ever,
+S.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Press-cutting enclosed in Miss Macnaughtan's letter:
+
+ "STORIES OF THE WAR."
+
+ CARDIFF LECTURE BY MISS MACNAUGHTAN.
+
+ AUTHORESS'S APPEAL.
+
+ TESTING-TIME OF NATIONAL CHARACTER.
+
+[Page Heading: A CROWDED MEETING]
+
+ A large and enthusiastic audience assembled at the Park-hall,
+ Cardiff, on Monday evening, to hear and see Miss Macnaughtan's
+ "Stories and Pictures of the War." Miss Macnaughtan is a well-known
+ authoress, whose works have attained a world-wide reputation, and,
+ in addition to her travels in almost every corner of the globe, she
+ has had actual experience of warfare at the bombardment of Rio, in
+ the Balkans, the South African War, and, since September last, in
+ Belgium and Flanders. In her capacity as ministrant to wounded
+ soldiers she has gained a unique experience of the horrors of war,
+ and in order to bring home the realities of the situation, at the
+ instigation of Lady Bute, she consented to address a number of
+ meetings in South Wales.
+
+ At the meeting on Monday night the Lord Mayor (Alderman J. T.
+ Richards) presided, and in introducing Miss Macnaughtan to the
+ audience announced that for her services in Belgium the honour of
+ the Order of Leopold had been conferred upon her. (Applause.) We
+ were engaged, he said, in fighting a war of right. We were not
+ fighting only for the interests of England and our Empire, but we
+ were fighting for the interests of humanity at large. ("Hear,
+ hear.")
+
+ Miss Macnaughtan, in the course of her address, referred to the
+ origin of the war, and how suddenly it came upon the people of this
+ nation, who were, for the most part, engaged in summer holidays at
+ the time. She knew what was going on at the front, and knew what
+ the Welch Regiment had been doing, and "I must tell you," she
+ added, "of the splendid way in which your regiment has behaved, and
+ how proud Cardiff must be of it." We knew very well now that this
+ war had been arranged by Germany for many years. The Germans used
+ to profess exceeding kindness to us, and were received on excellent
+ terms by our Royal House, but the veil was drawn away from that
+ nation's face, and we had it revealed as an implacable foe. The
+ Germans had spoken for years in their own country about "The Day,"
+ and now "The Day" had arrived, and it was for everyone a day of
+ judgment, because it was a test of character. We had to put
+ ourselves to the test. We knew that for some time England had not
+ been at her best. Her great heart was beating true all the time,
+ but there had crept into England a sort of national coldness and
+ selfishness, and a great deal too much seriousness in the matter of
+ money and money-getting. Although this was discounted in great
+ measure by her generosity, we appeared to the world at large as a
+ greedy and money-getting nation.
+
+ However this might be, in all parts of the world the word of an
+ Englishman was still as good as his bond. ("Hear, hear.") Yet
+ England, with its strikes and quarrels and class hatred, and one
+ thing and another, was not at its best. It was well to admit that,
+ just as they admitted the faults of those they loved best.
+
+ Had any one of them failed to rally round the flag? Had they kept
+ anything back in this great war? She hoped not. The war had tested
+ us more than anything else, and we had responded greatly to it; and
+ the young manhood had come out in a way that was remarkable. We
+ knew very well that when the war was begun we were quite unprepared
+ for it; but she would tell them this, that our army, although
+ small, was the finest army that ever took the field. (Applause.)
+
+ Miss Macnaughtan then related a number of interesting incidents,
+ one of which was, that when a party of wounded Englishmen came to a
+ station where she was tending the Belgian wounded, every wounded
+ Belgian gave up his bed to accommodate an English soldier. The idea
+ of a German occupation of English soil, she said, was the idea of a
+ catastrophe that was unspeakable. People read things in the papers
+ and thought they were exaggerated, but she had seen them, and she
+ would show photographs of ruined Belgium which would convince them
+ of what the Germans were now doing in the name of God. However
+ unprepared we were for war, the wounded had been well cared for,
+ and she thought there never was a war in which the care of the
+ wounded had been so well managed or so efficient. (Applause.) They
+ had to be thankful that there had been no terrible epidemic, and
+ she could not speak too highly of the work of the nurses and
+ doctors in the performance of their duties. This was the time for
+ every man to do his duty, and strain every nerve and muscle to
+ bring the war to an end and get the boys home again. (Applause.)
+
+[Page Heading: SIR FRANCIS YOUNGHUSBAND, K.C.I.E.]
+
+ Sir Francis Younghusband, K.C.I.E., spoke of Miss Macnaughtan as a
+ very old friend, whom he had met in many parts of the Empire. In
+ this crisis she might well have stayed at home in her comfortable
+ residence in London, but she had sacrificed her own personal
+ comforts in order to assist others. They must realise that this war
+ was something much more than a war of defence of their homes. It
+ was a fight on behalf of the whole of humanity. A staggering blow
+ had been dealt by our relentless enemy at Belgium, which had been
+ knocked down and trampled upon, and Germany had also dealt blow
+ after blow at humanity by the use of poison-gas, the bombardment of
+ seaside towns, and bombs thrown on defenceless places by Zeppelins.
+ She had thrust aside all those rights of humanity which we had
+ cherished as a nation as most dear to our hearts. What we were now
+ fighting for was right, and he would put to them a resolution that
+ we would fight for right till right had won. In response to an
+ appeal for the endorsement of his sentiments the audience stood en
+ masse, and with upraised hands shouted "Aye." It was a stirring
+ moment, and must have been gratifying to the authoress, who has
+ devoted so much of her time and energy to the comfort of the
+ wounded soldiers.
+
+ The Lord Mayor then proposed a vote of thanks to Miss Macnaughtan
+ for her address, and this was carried by acclamation.
+
+ Miss Macnaughtan briefly responded, and then proceeded to
+ illustrate many of the scenes she had witnessed by lantern-slides,
+ showing the results of bombardments and the ruin of some of the
+ fairest domains of Belgium and France.
+
+ The provision of stewards was arranged by the Cardiff Chamber of
+ Trade, under the direction of the President (Mr. G. Clarry). During
+ the evening the band of the 3rd Welch Regiment, under the
+ conductorship of Bandmaster K. S. Glover, gave selections.
+
+[Page Heading: POISON-GAS]
+
+ A statement having been made that Miss Macnaughtan was the first to
+ discover a remedy for the poison-gas used by the Germans, a
+ _Western Mail_ reporter interviewed the lady before the lecture on
+ her experiences in this direction. She replied, that when the first
+ batch of men came in from the trenches suffering from the effects
+ of the gas, the first thing they asked was for something to drink,
+ to take the horrible taste out of their mouths. She obtained a
+ couple of bottles of whisky from the barge of an American lady, and
+ some distilled water, and gave this to the soldiers, who appeared
+ to be greatly relieved. Whenever possible, she had adopted the same
+ course, but she was unaware that the remedy had been applied by the
+ military authorities. Even this method of relieving their
+ sufferings, however, was rejected by a large number of young
+ soldiers, on the ground that they were teetotallers, but the
+ Belgian doctors had permitted its use amongst their men.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ SHOULD THE GERMANS COME.
+
+ FORETASTE OF HORRORS FURNISHED BY BELGIUM.
+
+ During the dinner-hour Miss Macnaughtan gave an address to workmen
+ at the Bute Docks. An improvised platform was arranged at the back
+ of the Seamen's Institute, and some hundreds of men gathered to
+ hear the story that Miss Macnaughtan had to give of the war.
+ Colonel C. S. Denniss presided, and amongst those present were
+ Messrs. T. Vivian Rees, John Andrews, W. Cocks, A. Hope, S. Fisher,
+ and Robinson Smith.
+
+ Colonel Denniss, in a few introductory remarks, referred to Miss
+ Macnaughtan's reputation as a writer, and stated that since the
+ outbreak of war she had devoted herself to the noble work of
+ helping the wounded soldiers in Belgium and France. She had come
+ to Cardiff to tell the working-men what she had seen, with the
+ object, if possible, of stimulating them to help forward the great
+ cause we were fighting for.
+
+ Miss Macnaughtan said she had been speaking in many parts of the
+ country, but she was especially proud to address a meeting of Welsh
+ working-men. Besides coming of a long line of Welsh ancestors, her
+ brother-in-law, Colonel Young, was in command of the 9th Welch
+ Battalion at the front, and she had also four nephews serving in
+ the Welch Regiment. Only the day before Colonel Young had written
+ to her: "The Welshman is the most intensely patriotic man that I
+ know, and it is always the same thing, 'Stick it, Welch.' His
+ patriotism is splendid, and I do not want to fight with a better
+ man." Miss Macnaughtan then explained that she was not asking for
+ funds, and was not speaking for employers or owners. She simply
+ wished to tell them her experiences of the war as she had seen it,
+ and to describe the heroism which was going on at the front. If
+ they looked at the war from the point of view of men going out to
+ kill each other they had a wrong conception of what was going on.
+ She had been asked to speak of the conditions which might prevail
+ should the Germans reach this country. She did not feel competent
+ to speak on that subject, as the whole idea of Germans in this
+ country seemed absolutely inconceivable. If the Germans were to
+ land on our shores all the waters which surrounded this isle would
+ not wash the land clean. She knew what the Germans were, and had
+ seen the wreck they had made of Belgium and part of France. She
+ knew what the women and children had suffered, and how the churches
+ had been desecrated and demolished. It was said that this was a war
+ of humanity, but she believed it was a war of right against wrong;
+ and if she were asked when the war would finish, she could only say
+ that we would fight it right on to the end until we were
+ victorious.
+
+ The Germans were beaten already, and had been beaten from the day
+ they gave up their honour. She spoke of the heroism of the troops,
+ and stated that since September last she had been running a
+ soup-kitchen for the wounded. In this humble vocation she had had
+ an opportunity of gauging the spirit of the soldiers. She had seen
+ them sick, wounded, and dying, but had never known them give in.
+ Why should humble villages in France without soldiers in them be
+ shelled? That was Germany, and that was what they saw. The thing
+ was almost inconceivable, but she had seen helpless women and
+ children brought to the hospitals, maimed and wounded by the cruel
+ German shells. After this war England was going to be a better
+ country than before. Up to now there had been a national
+ selfishness which was growing very strong, and there was a terrible
+ love of money, which, after all, was of very little account unless
+ it was used in the proper direction. She could tell them stories of
+ Belgians who had had to fire upon their own women and children who
+ were being marched in front of German troops. The power of Germany
+ had to be crushed. The spirit of England and Wales was one in this
+ great war, and they would not falter until they had emerged
+ triumphant. (Applause.)
+
+[Page Heading: A CLARION CALL]
+
+ Mr. Robinson Smith said the clarion call had been sounded, and they
+ were prepared, if necessary, to give their last shilling, their
+ last drop of blood, and their very selves, body, soul, and spirit,
+ to fight for right till right had won. (Applause.)
+
+ Cheers were given for the distinguished authoress, and the
+ proceedings terminated.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+After Cardiff (and a most cordial send-off from my committee) I came
+back to London, and lectured at Eton, at the Polytechnic, and various
+other places, while all the time I was preparing to go to Russia, and I
+was also writing.
+
+In the year that has passed my time has been fully occupied. To begin
+with, when the war broke out I studied district-nursing in Walworth for
+a month. I attended committees, and arranged to go to Belgium, got my
+kit, and had a good deal of business to arrange in the way of
+house-letting, etc., etc. Afterwards, I went to Antwerp, till the siege
+and the bombardment; then followed the flight to Ostend; after that a
+further flight to Furnes. Then came the winter of my work, day and night
+at the soup-kitchen for the wounded, a few days at home in January, then
+back again and to work at Adinkerke till June, when I came home to
+lecture.
+
+During the year I have brought out four books, I have given thirty-five
+lectures, and written both stories and articles. I have gone from town
+to town in England, Scotland, and Wales, and I have had a good deal of
+anxiety and much business at home. I have paid a few visits, but not
+restful ones, and I have written all my own correspondence, as I have
+not had a secretary. I have collected funds for my work, and sent off
+scores of begging letters. Often I have begun work at 5.30 a.m., and I
+have not rested all day. As I am not very young this seems to me a
+pretty strenuous time!
+
+[Page Heading: THE DEATH OF YOUTH]
+
+Now I have let my house again, and am off "into the unknown" in Russia!
+I shouldn't really mind a few days' rest before we begin any definite
+work. Behind everyone I suppose at this time lurks the horror of war,
+the deadly fear for one's dearest; and, above all, one feels--at least I
+do--that one is always, and quite palpably, in the shadow of the death
+of youth--beautiful youth, happy and healthy and free. Always I seem to
+see the white faces of boys turned up to the sky, and I hear their cries
+and see the agony which joyous youth was never meant to bear. They are
+too young for it, far too young; but they lie out on the field between
+the trenches, and bite the mud in their frenzy of pain; and they call
+for their mothers, and no one comes, and they call to their friends, but
+no one hears. There is a roar of battle and of bursting shells, and who
+can listen to a boy's groans and his shrieks of pain? This is war.
+
+A nation or a people want more sea-board or more trade, so they begin to
+kill youth, and to torture and to burn, and God himself may ask, "Where
+is my beautiful flock?" No one answers. It is war. We must expect a
+"list of casualties." "The Germans have lost more than we have done;"
+"We must go on, even if the war lasts ten years;" "A million more men
+are needed"--thus the fools called men talk! But Youth looks up with
+haggard eyes, and Youth, grown old, learns that Death alone is merciful.
+
+One sees even in soldiers' jokes that the thought of death is not far
+off. I said to one man, "You have had a narrow squeak," and he replied,
+"I don't mind if I get there first so long as I can stoke up for those
+Germans." Another, clasping the hand of his dead Captain, said, "Put
+plenty of sandbags round heaven, sir, and don't let a German through."
+
+The other day, when the forward movement was made in France and Belgium,
+Charles's Regiment, the 9th Welch, was told to attack at a certain
+point, which could only be reached across an open space raked by
+machine-gun fire. They were not given the order to move for twelve days,
+during which time the men hardly slept. When the charge had to be made
+the roar of guns made speaking quite impossible, so directions were
+given by sending up rockets. When the rockets appeared, not a single man
+delayed an instant in making the attack. One young officer, in the
+trench where Charles was, had a football, and this he flung over the
+parapet, and shouting, "Come on, boys!" he and the men of the regiment
+played football in the open and in front of the guns. Right across the
+gun-raked level they kicked the ball, and when they reached the enemy's
+lines only a few of them were left.
+
+Charles wrote, "I am too old to see boys killed."
+
+Colonel Walton, with a handful of his regiment, was the only officer to
+get through the three lines of the enemy's trenches, and he and his men
+dug themselves in. Just in front of them where they paused, he saw a
+fine young officer come along the road on a motor bicycle, carrying
+despatches. The next minute a high-explosive shell burst, and, to use
+his own words, "There was not enough of the young officer to put on a
+threepenny bit." Always men tell me there is nothing left to bury. One
+minute there is a splendid piece of upstanding, vigorous manhood, and
+the next there is no finding one piece of him to lay in the sod.
+
+[Page Heading: A LESSON FOR TURKS]
+
+The Turks seem to have forsaken their first horrible and devilish
+cruelties towards English prisoners. They have been taught a lesson by
+the Australians, who took some prisoners up to the top of a ridge and
+rolled them down into the Turks' trenches like balls, firing on them as
+they rolled. Horrible! but after that Turkish cruelties ceased.
+
+Our own men see red since the Canadians were crucified, and I fancy no
+prisoners were taken for a long time after. We "censor" this or that in
+the newspapers, but nothing will censor men's tongues, and there is a
+terrible and awful tale of suffering and death and savagery going on
+now. Like a ghastly dream we hear of trenches taken, and the cries of
+men go up, "Mercy, comrade, mercy!" Sometimes they plead, poor caught
+and trapped and pitiful human beings, that they have wives and children
+who love them. The slaughter goes on, the bayonet rends open the poor
+body that someone loved, then comes the internal gush of blood, and
+another carcase is flung into the burying trench, with some lime on the
+top of it to prevent a smell of rotting flesh.
+
+My God, what does it all mean? Are men so mad? And why are they killing
+all our best and bravest? Our first army is gone, and surely such a
+company never before took the field! Outmatched by twenty to one, they
+stuck it at Mons and on the Aisne, and saved Paris by a miracle. All my
+old friends fell then--men near my own age, whom I have known in many
+climes--Eustace Crawley, Victor Brooke, the Goughs, and other splendid
+men. Now the sons of my friends are falling fast--Duncan Sim's boy,
+young Wilson, Neville Strutt, and scores of others. I know one case in
+which four brothers have fallen; another, where twins of nineteen died
+side by side; and this one has his eyes blown out, and that one has his
+leg torn off, and another goes mad; and boys, creeping back to the base
+holding an arm on, or bewildered by a bullet through the brain, wander
+out of their way till a piece of shrapnel or torn edge of shell finds
+them, and they fall again, with their poor boyish faces buried in the
+mud!
+
+Mr. ---- dined with us last night. He had been talking of his brother
+who was killed, and he said: "I think it makes a difference if you
+belong to a family which has always given its lives to the country. We
+are accustomed to make these sacrifices."
+
+Thus bravely in the light of day, but when evening came and we sat
+together, then we knew just what the life of the boy had cost him. They
+tell us--these defrauded broken-hearted ones--just how tall the lad was,
+and how good to look at! That seems to me so sad--as if one reckoned
+one's love by inches! And yet it is the beauty of youth that I mourn
+also, and its horribly lonely death.
+
+"They never got him further than the dressing-station," Mr. ---- said;
+"but--he would always put up a fight, you know--he lived for four days.
+No, there was never any hope. Half the back of his head was shattered.
+But he put up a fight. My brother would always do that."
+
+
+
+
+PART III
+
+RUSSIA AND THE PERSIAN FRONT
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+PETROGRAD
+
+
+Mrs. Wynne, Mr. Bevan, and I left London for Russia on October 16, 1915.
+We are attached provisionally to the Anglo-Russian hospital, with a
+stipulation that we are at liberty to proceed to the front with our
+ambulances as soon as we can get permission to do so. We understand that
+the Russian wounded are suffering terribly, and getting no doctors,
+nurses, or field ambulances. We crossed from Newcastle to Christiania in
+a Norwegian boat, the _Bessheim_. It was supposed that in this ship
+there was less chance of being stopped, torpedoed, or otherwise
+inconvenienced.
+
+We reached Christiania after a wonderfully calm crossing, and went to
+the Grand Hotel at 1 a.m. No rooms to be had, so we went on to the
+Victoria--a good old house, not fashionable, but with a nice air about
+it, and some solid comforts. We left on Wednesday, the 20th, at 7 a.m.
+This was something of a feat, as we have twenty-four boxes with us. I
+only claim four, and feel as if I might have brought more, but everyone
+has a different way of travelling, and luggage is often objected to.
+
+Indeed, I think this matter of travelling is one of the most curious in
+the world. I cannot understand why it is that to get into a train or a
+boat causes men and women to leave off restraint and to act in a
+primitive way. Why should the companionship of the open road be the
+supreme test of friendship? and why should one feel a certain fear of
+getting to know people too well on a journey? The last friends I
+travelled with were very careful indeed, and we used to reckon up
+accounts and divide the price of a bottle of "vin ordinaire" equally. My
+friends to-day seem inclined to do themselves very well, and to scatter
+largesse everywhere.
+
+[Page Heading: STOCKHOLM]
+
+_Stockholm. 21 October._--After a long day in the train we reached
+Stockholm yesterday evening, and went to the usual "Grand Hotel." This
+time it is very "grand," and very expensive. Mr. Bevan has a terrible
+pink boudoir-bedroom, which costs £3 per night, and I have a small room
+on the fourth floor, which costs 17s. 6d. without a bath. There is
+rather a nice court in the middle of the house, with flowers and a band
+and tables for dinner, but the sight of everyone "doing himself well"
+always makes me feel a little sick. The wines and liqueurs, and the big
+cigars at two shillings each, and the look of repletion on men's faces
+as they listen to the band after being fed, somewhat disgust me.
+
+One's instinct is to dislike luxury, but in war-time it seems horrible.
+We ourselves will probably have to rough it badly soon, so I don't
+mind, but it's a side of life that seems to me as beastly as anything I
+know. Fortunately, the luxury of an hotel is minimised by the fact that
+there are no "necessaries," and one lives in an atmosphere of open
+trunks and bags, with things pulled out of them, which counterbalances
+crystal electric fittings and marble floors.
+
+We rested all this morning, lunched out, and in the afternoon went to
+have tea with the Crown Prince and Princess of Sweden. They were very
+delightful. The British Minister's wife, Lady Isobel Howard, went with
+us. The Princess had just finished reading my "Diary of the War," and
+was very nice about it. The children, who came in to tea, were the
+prettiest little creatures I have ever seen, with curly hair, and faces
+like the water-colour pictures of a hundred years ago. The Princess
+herself is most attractive, and reminds one of the pictures of Queen
+Victoria as a young woman. Her sensitive face is full of expression, and
+her colour comes and goes as she speaks of things that move her.
+
+This afternoon we went to tea at the Legation with the Howards. The
+House is charmingly situated on the Lake, with lovely trees all about
+it. It isn't quite finished yet, but will be very delightful.
+
+_22 October._--It is very strange to find oneself in a country where war
+is not going on. The absence of guns and Zeppelins, the well-lighted
+streets, and the peace of it all, are quite striking. But the country is
+pro-German almost to a man! And it has been a narrow squeak to prevent
+war. Even now I suppose one wrong move may lead to an outbreak of
+hostilities, and the recent German victories may yet bring in other
+countries on her side. Bulgaria has been a glaring instance of siding
+with the one she considers the winning side (Gott strafe her!), and
+Greece is still wondering what to do! Thank God, I belong to a race that
+is full of primitive instincts! Poor old England still barges in
+whenever there is a fight going on, and gets her head knocked, and goes
+on fighting just the same, and never knows that she is heroic, but
+blunders on--simple-hearted, stupid, sublime!
+
+_24 October._--I went to the English church this morning with Mr.
+Lancelot Smith, but there was no service as the chaplain had
+chicken-pox! So I came home and packed, and then lunched with Mr. Eric
+Hambro, Mr. Lancelot Smith, and Mr. ----, all rather interesting men at
+this crisis, when four nations at least are undecided what to do in the
+matter of the war.
+
+About 6 o'clock we and our boxes got away from Stockholm. Our expenses
+for the few days we spent there were £60, although we had very few meals
+in the hotel. We had a long journey to Haparanda, where we stopped for a
+day. The cold was terrible and we spent the day (my birthday) on a sort
+of luggage barge on the river. On my last birthday we were bolting from
+Furnes in front of the Germans, and the birthday before that I was on
+the top of the Rocky Mountains.
+
+Talking of the Rockies reminds me (did I need reminding) of Elsie
+Northcote, my dear friend, who married and went to live there. The
+other night some friends of mine gave me a little "send-off" before I
+left London--dinner and the Palace Theatre, where I felt like a ghost
+returned to earth. All the old lot were there as of yore--Viola Tree,
+Lady Diana Manners, Harry Lindsay, the Raymond Asquiths, etc., etc. I
+saw them all from quite far away. Lord Stanmore was in the box with us,
+and he it was who told me of Elsie Northcote's sudden death. It wasn't
+the right place to hear about it. Too many are gone or are going. My own
+losses are almost stupefying; and something dead within myself looks
+with sightless eyes on death; with groping hands I touch it sometimes,
+and then I know that I am dead also.
+
+[Page Heading: LOVE AND PAIN]
+
+There is only one thing that one can never renounce, and that is love.
+Love is part of one, and can't be given up. Love can't be separated from
+one, even by death. It comes once and remains always. It is never
+fulfilled; the fulfilment of love is its crucifixion; but it lives on
+for ever in a passion-week of pain until pain itself grows dull; and
+then one wishes one had been born quite a common little soul, when one
+would probably have been very happy.
+
+_28 October._--We arrived at midnight last night at Petrograd. Ian
+Malcolm was at the hotel, and had remained up to welcome us. To-day we
+have been unpacking, and settling down into rather comfortable, very
+expensive rooms. My little box of a place costs twenty-six shillings a
+night. We lunched with two Russian officers and Mr. Ian Malcolm, and
+then I went to the British Embassy, where the other two joined me. Sir
+George Buchanan, our Ambassador, looks overworked and tired. Lady
+Georgina and I got on well together....
+
+The day wasn't quite satisfactory, but one must remember that a queer
+spirit is evoked in war-time which is very difficult of analysis.
+Primarily there is "a right spirit renewed" in every one of us. We want
+to be one in the great sacrifice which war involves, and we offer and
+present ourselves, our souls and bodies in great causes, only to find
+that there is some strange unexplained quality of resistance meeting us
+everywhere.
+
+Mary once said to me in her quaint way, "Your duty is to give to the
+Queen's Fund as becomes your position, and to get properly thanked."
+
+This lady-like behaviour, combined with cheque-writing on a large scale,
+is always popular. It can be repeated and again repeated till
+cheque-writing becomes automatic. Then from nowhere there springs a
+curious class of persons whom one has never heard of before, with skins
+of invulnerable thickness and with wonderful self-confidence. They claim
+almost occult powers in the matter of "organisation," and they generally
+require pity for being overworked. For a time their names are in great
+circulation, and afterwards one doesn't hear very much about them.
+Florence Nightingale would have had no distinction nowadays. It is
+doubtful if she would have been allowed to work. Some quite inept person
+in a high position would have effectually prevented it. Most people are
+on the offensive against "high-souled work," and prepared to put their
+foot down heavily on anything so presumptuous as heroism except of the
+orthodox kind, and even the right kind is often not understood.
+
+There is a story I try to tell, but something gets into my throat, and I
+tell it in jerks when I can.
+
+[Page Heading: FOOTBALL UNDER FIRE]
+
+It is the story of the men who played football across the open between
+the enemy's line of trenches and our own when it was raked by fire. When
+I had finished, a friend of mine, evidently waiting for the end of a
+pointless story, said, "What did they do that for?" (Oh, ye gods, have
+pity on men and women who suffer from fatty degeneration of the soul!)
+
+Still, in spite of it all, the Voice comes, and has to be obeyed.
+
+_30 October._--We lunched at the Embassy yesterday to meet the Grand
+Duchess Victoria. She is a striking-looking woman, tall and strong, and
+she wore a plain dark blue cloth dress and a funny little blue silk cap,
+and one splendid string of pearls. At the front she does very fine work,
+and we offered our services to her. I have begun to write a little, but
+after my crowded life the days feel curiously empty. Lady Heron Maxwell
+came to call.
+
+We were telling each other spy stories the other night. Some of them
+were very interesting. The Germans have lately adopted the plan of
+writing letters in English to English prisoners of war in Germany.
+These, of course, are quite simple, and pass the Censor in England, but,
+once on the other side, they go straight to Government officials, and
+whereas "Dear Bill" may mean nothing to us, it is part of a German code
+and conveys some important information. Mr. Philpotts at Stockholm
+discovered this trick.
+
+On the Russian front a soldier was found with his jaw tied up,
+speechless and bleeding. A doctor tried to persuade him to take cover
+and get attention; but he shook his head, and signified by actions that
+he was unable to speak owing to his damaged jaw. The doctor shoved him
+into a dug-out, and said kindly, "Just let me have a look at you." On
+stripping the bandages off there was no wound at all, and the German in
+Russian uniform was given a cigarette and shot through the head.
+
+In Flanders we used to see companies of spies led out to be shot--first
+a party of soldiers, then the spies, after them the burying-party, and
+then the firing-party--marching stolidly to some place of execution.
+
+How awful shell-fire must be for those who really can't stand it! I
+heard of a Colonel the other day--a man who rode to hounds, and seemed
+quite a sound sort of fellow--and when the first shell came over, he
+leapt from his horse and lay on the ground shrieking with fear, and with
+every shell that came over he yelled and screamed. He had to be sent
+home, of course. Some people say this sort of thing is purely physical.
+That is never my view of the matter.
+
+[Page Heading: MISS CAVELL]
+
+Miss Cavell's execution has stirred us all to the bottom of our hearts.
+The mean trickiness of her trial, the refusal to let facts be known, and
+then the cold-blooded murder of a brave English woman at 2 a.m. on a
+Sunday morning in a prison yard!
+
+It is too awful to think about. She was not even technically a spy, but
+had merely assisted some soldiers to get away because she thought they
+were going to be shot. A rumour reached the American and Spanish
+Legations that she had been condemned and was to be shot at once, and
+they instantly rang up on the telephone to know if this was true. They
+were informed by the Military Court which had tried and condemned her
+that the verdict would not be pronounced till three days later. But the
+two Legations, still not satisfied, protested that they must be allowed
+to visit the prisoner. This was refused.
+
+The English chaplain was at last permitted to enter the prison, and he
+saw Miss Cavell, and gave her the Sacrament. She said she was happy to
+die for her country. They led her out into the prison yard to stand
+before a firing-party of soldiers, but on her way there she fainted, and
+an officer took out his revolver and shot her through the head.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Petrograd! the stage of romance, and the subject of dazzling pictures,
+is one of the most commonplace towns I have ever been in. It has its one
+big street--the Nevski Prospect--where people walk and shop as they do
+in Oxford Street, and it has a few cathedrals and churches, which are
+not very wonderful. The roadways are a mass of slush and are seldom
+swept; and there are tramways, always crowded and hot, and many rickety
+little victorias with damp cushions, in which one goes everywhere. Even
+in the evening we go out in these; and the colds in the head which
+follow are chronic.
+
+The English colony seems to me as provincial as the rest of Petrograd.
+The town and its people disappoint me greatly. The Hôtel Astoria is a
+would-be fashionable place, and there is a queer crowd of people
+listening to the band and eating, as surely only in Russia they can eat.
+It is all wrong in war-time, and I hate being one of the people here.
+
+N.B.--Write "Miss Wilbraham" as soon as possible, and write it in gusts.
+Call one chapter "The Diners," and try to convey the awful solemnity of
+meals--the grave young men with their goblets of brandy, in which they
+slowly rotate ice, the waiter who hands the bowl where the ice is thrown
+when the brandy is cool enough, and then the final gulp, with a nose
+inside the large goblet. Shade of Heliogabalus! If the human tummy must
+indeed be distended four times in twenty-four hours, need it be done so
+solemnly, and with such a pig-like love of the trough? If they would
+even eat what there is with joy one wouldn't mind, but the talk about
+food, the once-enjoyed food, the favourite food, is really too tiresome.
+"Where to dine" becomes a sort of test of true worth. Grave young men
+give the names of four or five favoured places in London. Others, hailed
+and acknowledged as really good judges, name half-a-dozen more in Paris
+where they "do you well." The real toff knows that Russia is the place
+to dine. We earnestly discuss blue-point oysters and caviare, which, if
+you "know the man," you can get sent fresh on the Vienna Express from
+Moscow.
+
+[Page Heading: BERNARD SHAW]
+
+I once asked Bernard Shaw to dinner, and he replied on a postcard:
+"Never! I decline to sit in a hot room and eat dead animals, even with
+you to amuse me!"
+
+I always seem to be sitting in hot rooms and eating dead animals, and
+then paying amazing high prices for them.
+
+_4 November._--I dined with the ----s the other night. Either the hot
+rooms, or the fact that I am anæmic at present, causes me to be so
+sleepy in the evenings that I dislike dining out. I sway with sleep even
+when people are talking to me. It was a middle-class little party, such
+as I often enjoy. One's friends would fain only have one see a few fine
+blooms, but I love common flowers.
+
+We have been to see "Peter's little house." There was a tiny shrine,
+crowded with people in wraps and shawls, who crossed themselves
+ceaselessly, to the danger of their neighbours' faces, for so fervid
+were their gesticulations that their hands flew in every direction! They
+shoved with their elbows to get near the wax candles that dripped before
+the pictures of the black-faced Virgin and Child, who were "allowing"
+soldiers to be painfully slaughtered by the million.
+
+Ye gods, what a faith! What an acrobatic performance to try and
+reconcile a Father's personal care for His poor little sparrows and His
+indifference at seeing so many of them stretched bleeding on the ground!
+
+Religion so far has been a success where martyrs are concerned, but we
+must go on with courage to something that teaches men to _live_ for the
+best and the highest. This should come from ourselves, and lead up to
+God. It should not require teaching, or priests, or even prayer.
+Humanity is big enough for this. It should shake off cords and chains
+and old Bible stories of carnage and killing, and get to work to find a
+new, responsible, clean, sensible, practical scheme of life, in which
+each man will have to get away from silly old idols and step out by
+himself.
+
+There is nothing very difficult about it, but we are so beset by bogies,
+and so full of fears and fancies that we are half the time either in a
+state of funk, or in its antithesis, a state of cheekiness.
+Schoolmaster-ridden, we are behaving still like silly children, and our
+highest endeavour is (school-boy-like) to resemble our fellows as nearly
+as possible. The result is stagnation, crippled forms, wasted energy,
+people waiting for years by some healing pool and longing for someone to
+dip them in. All the release that Christ preached to men is being
+smothered in something worse than Judaism. We love chains, and when they
+are removed we either turn and put them on again, or else caper like mad
+things because we have cast them off. Freedom is still as distant as the
+stars.
+
+_5 November._--Yesterday we lunched with the English chaplain, Mr.
+Lombard. He and I had a great talk walking home on a dark afternoon
+through the slush after we had been to call on the Maxwells. I think he
+is one of the "exiles" whom one meets all the world over, one of those
+who don't transplant well. I am one myself! And Mr. Lombard and I nearly
+wept when we found ourselves in a street that recalled the Marylebone
+Road. We pretended we were in sight of Euston Station, and talked of
+taking a Baker Street bus till our voices grew choky.
+
+How absurd we islanders are! London is a poky place, but we adore it.
+St. James's Street is about the length of a good big ship, yet we don't
+feel we have lived till we get back to it! And as for Piccadilly and St.
+Paul's, well, we see them in our dreams.
+
+Our little unit has not found work yet. I was told before I joined it
+that it had been accepted by the Russian Red Cross Society.
+
+[Page Heading: "CHARITY" AND WAR]
+
+I have been hearing many things out here, and thinking many things.
+There is only one way of directing Red Cross work. Everything should
+be--and must be in future--put under military authority and used by
+military authority. "Charity" and war should be separate. It is absurd
+that the Belgians in England should be housed and fed by a Government
+grant, and our own soldiers are dependent on private charity for the
+very socks they wear and the cigarettes they smoke. Aeroplanes had to be
+instituted and prizes offered for them by a newspaper, and ammunition
+wasn't provided till a newspaper took up the matter. To be mob-ridden is
+bad enough, but to be press-ridden is worse!
+
+Now, war is a military matter, and should be controlled by military
+authorities. Mrs. Wynne, Mr. Bevan, and I should not be out here waiting
+for work. We ought to be sent where we are needed, and so ought all Red
+Cross people. This would put an end, one hopes, to the horrid business
+of getting "soft jobs."
+
+_7 November._--Whenever I am away from England I rejoice in the passing
+of each week that brings me nearer to my return. I had hardly realised
+to-day was the 7th, but I am thankful I am one week nearer the grey
+little island and all the nice people in it.
+
+Yesterday I went to Lady Georgina Buchanan's soup-kitchen, and helped to
+feed Polish refugees. They strike me as being very like animals, but not
+so interesting. In the barracks where they lodge everyone crowds in.
+There is no division of the sexes, babies are yelling, and families are
+sleeping on wooden boards. The places are heated but not aired, and the
+smell is horrid; but they seem to revel in "frowst." All the women are
+dandling babies or trying to cook things on little oil-stoves. At
+night-time things are awful, I believe, and the British Ambassador has
+been asked to protect the girls who are there.
+
+_8 November._--This afternoon I went to see Mrs. Bray, and then I had an
+unexpected pleasure, for I met Johnnie{8} Parsons, who is Naval Attaché
+to Admiral Phillimore, and we had a long chat. When one is in a strange
+land, or with people who know one but little, these encounters are
+wonderfully nice.
+
+The other night I dined with the Heron Maxwells, and had a nice evening
+and a game of bridge. Some Americans, called de Velter, were there. I
+think most people from the States regret the neutrality of their
+country.
+
+[Page Heading: VISIONS OF PEACE]
+
+Everyone brings in different stories of the war. Some say Germany is
+exhausted and beaten, others say she is flushed with victory, and with
+enormous reserves of men, food, and ammunition. I try to believe all the
+good I hear, and when even children or fools tell me the war will soon
+be over, I want to embrace them--I don't care whether they are talking
+nonsense or not. Sometimes I seem to see a great hushed cathedral, and
+ourselves returning thanks for Peace and Victory, and the vision is too
+much for me. I must either work or be chloroformed till that time comes.
+
+_9 November._--I think there is only one thing I dislike more than
+sitting in an hotel bedroom and learning a new language, and that is
+sitting in an hotel bedroom and nursing a cold in my head. Lately I have
+been learning Russian--and now I am sniffing. My own fault. I would
+sleep with my window open in this unhealthiest of cities, and smells and
+marsh produced a feverish cold.
+
+Out in the square the soldiers drill all the time in the snow, lying in
+it, standing in it, and dressed for the most part in cotton clothing.
+Wool can't be bought, so a close cotton web is made, with the inside
+teased out like flannelette, and this is all they have. The necessaries
+of life are being "cornered" right and left, mostly by the commercial
+houses and the banks. The other day 163 railway trucks of sugar were
+discovered in a siding, where the owners had placed it to wait for a
+rise. Meanwhile, sugar has been almost unprocurable.
+
+Everyone from the front describes the condition of the refugees as being
+most wretched. They are camping in the snow by the thousand, and are
+still tramping from Poland.
+
+And here we are in the Astoria Hotel, and there is one pane of glass
+between us and the weather; one pane of glass between us and the
+peasants of Poland; one pane of glass dividing us from poverty, and
+keeping us in the horrid atmosphere of this place, with its evil women
+and its squeaky band! How I hate money!
+
+I hope soon to join a train going to Dvinsk with food and supplies.
+
+_13 November._--I have felt very brainless since I came here. It is the
+result, I believe, of the Petrograd climate. Nearly everyone feels it. I
+had a little book in my head which I thought I could "dash off," and
+that writing it would fill up these waiting days, but I can't write a
+word.
+
+The war news is not good, but the more territory that Germany takes, the
+more the British rub their hands and cry victory. Their courage and
+optimism are wonderful.
+
+To-day I spent with the Maxwells, and met a nurse, newly returned from
+Galicia, who had interesting tales to tell. One about some Russian
+airmen touched me. There had been a fierce fight overhead, when suddenly
+the German aeroplane began to wheel round and round like a leaf, when it
+was found that the machine was on fire. One of the airmen had been shot
+and the other burnt to death. The Russians refused to come and look at
+the remains even of the aeroplane, and said sadly, "All we men of the
+air are brothers." They gave the dead Germans a military funeral, and
+then sailed over the enemy's lines to drop a note to say that all
+honour had been done to the brave dead.
+
+[Page Heading: BULGARIA]
+
+I met Monsieur Jecquier, who was full of the political situation--said
+Bulgaria would have joined us any day if we had promised to give her
+Bukowina; and blamed Bark, the Russian Finance Minister, for the terms
+of England's loan (the loan is for thirty millions, and repayment is
+promised in a year, which is manifestly impossible, and the situation
+may be strained). He said also that Motono, the Japanese Ambassador, is
+far the finest politician here; and he told me that while Russia ought
+to have been protecting the road to Constantinople she was quarrelling
+about what its new name was to be, and had decided to call it
+"Czareska." Now, I suppose, the Germans are already there. Lloyds has
+been giving £100 at a premium of £5 that King Ferdinand won't be on his
+throne next June. The premium has gone to £10, which is good news. If
+Ferdie is assassinated the world will be rid of an evil fellow who has
+played a mean and degraded part in this war.
+
+We dined at the British Embassy last night. I was taken in to dinner by
+Mr. George Lloyd, who was full of interesting news. I had a nice chat
+with Lady Georgina.
+
+_20 November._--It has been rather a "hang-on" ever since I wrote last,
+nothing settled and nothing to do. No one ever seems at their best in
+Petrograd. It is a cross place and a common place. I never understood
+Tolstoi till I came here. On all sides one sees the same insane love of
+money and love of food.
+
+A restaurant here disgusts me as nothing else ever did. From a menu a
+foot long no one seems able to choose a meal, but something fresh must
+be ordered. The prices are quite silly, and, oddly enough, people seem
+to revel in them. They still eat caviare at ten shillings a head; the
+larger the bill the better they are pleased.
+
+Joseph, the Napoleon of the restaurant, keeps an eye on everyone. He is
+yellow, and pigeon-breasted, but his voice is like grease, and he speaks
+caressingly of food, pencils entries in his pocket-book, and stimulates
+jaded appetites by signalling the "voiture aux hors d'oeuvres" to
+approach. The rooms are far too hot for anyone to feel hungry, the band
+plays, and the leader of it grins all the time, and capers about on his
+little platform like a monkey on an organ.
+
+Always in this life of restaurants and gilt and roubles I am reminded of
+the fact that the only authentic picture we have of hell is of a man
+there who all his life had eaten good dinners.
+
+[Page Heading: STAGNATION]
+
+I have been busy seeing all manner of people in order to try and get
+work to do. I hear of suffering, but I am never able to locate it or to
+do anything for it. No distinct information is forthcoming; and when I
+go to one high official he gives me his card and sends me to another.
+Nothing is even decided about Mrs. Wynne's cars, although she is
+offering a gift worth some thousands of pounds. I go to Lady Georgina's
+work-party on Mondays and meet the English colony, and on Wednesdays and
+Saturdays I distribute soup; but it is an unsatisfactory business, and
+the days go by and one gets nothing done. One isn't even storing up
+health, because this is rather an unhealthy place, so altogether we are
+feeling a bit low. I can never again be surprised at Russian "laissez
+faire," or want of push and energy. It is all the result of the place
+itself. I feel in a dream, and wish with all my heart I could wake up in
+my own bed.
+
+_21 November._--Sunday, and I have slept late. At home I begin work at 6
+a.m. Here, like everyone else, I only wake up at night, and the "best
+hours of the day," as we call them, are wasted, à la Watts' hymn, in
+slumber. If it was possible one would organise one's time a bit, but
+hotel life is the very mischief for that sort of thing. There are no
+facilities for anything. One must telephone in Russian or spend roubles
+on messengers if one wants to get into touch with anyone. I took a taxi
+out to lunch one day. It cost 16 roubles--_i.e._, 32s.
+
+Dear old Lord Radstock used to say in the spring, "The Lord is calling
+me to Italy," and a testy parson once remarked, "The Lord always calls
+you at very convenient times, Radstock." I don't feel as if the Lord had
+called me here at a very convenient time.
+
+I called on Princess Hélène Scherbatoff yesterday, and found her and her
+people at home. The mother runs a hospital-train for the wounded in the
+intervals of hunting wolves. Her son has been dead for some months, and
+she says she hasn't had time to bury him yet! One assumes he is
+embalmed! Yet I can't help saying they were charming people to meet, so
+we must suppose they are somewhat cracked. The daughter is lovely, and
+they were all in deep mourning for the unburied relative.
+
+_24 November._--This long wait is trying us a bit high. There is
+literally nothing to do. We arrange pathetic little programmes for
+ourselves. To-day I shall lunch with Mr. Cunard, and see the lace he has
+bought: yesterday I did some shopping with Captain Smith: one day I sew
+at Lady Georgina's work-party.
+
+Heavens, what a life! I realise that for years I have not drawn rein,
+and I am sure I don't require holidays. Moses was a wise man, and he
+knew that one day in seven is rest enough for most humans. I always
+"keep the Sabbath," and it is all the rest I want. Even here I might
+write and get on with something, but there is something paralysing about
+the place, and my brain won't work. I can't even write a diary! Everyone
+is depressed and everyone longs to be out of Petrograd. To-day we hear
+that the Swedes have closed the Haparanda line, and Archangel is frozen,
+so here we are.
+
+Now I have got to work at the hospital. There are 25,000 amputation
+cases in Petrograd. The men at my hospital are mostly convalescent, but,
+of course, their wounds require dressing. This is never done in their
+beds, as the English plan is, but each man is carried in turn to the
+"salle des pansements," and is laid on an operating-table and has his
+fresh dressings put on, and is then carried back to bed again. It is a
+good plan, I think. The hospital keeps me busy all the morning. Once
+more I begin to see severed limbs and gashed flesh, and the old
+question arises, "Why, what evil hath he done?" This war is the
+crucifixion of the youth of the world.
+
+[Page Heading: "SPEAKING ONE'S MIND"]
+
+In a way I am learning something here. For instance, I have always
+disliked "explanations" and "speaking one's mind," etc., etc., more than
+I can say. I dare say I have chosen the path of least resistance in
+these matters. Here one must speak out sometimes, and speak firmly. It
+isn't all "being pleasant." One girl has been consistently rude to me.
+To-day, poor soul, I gave her a second sermon on our way back from
+church; but, indeed she has numerous opportunities in this war, and she
+is wasting them all on gossip, and prejudices, and petty jealousies. So
+we had a straight talk, and I hope she didn't hate it. At any rate, she
+has promised amendment of life. One hears of men that "this war gives
+them a chance to distinguish themselves." Women ought to distinguish
+themselves, too.
+
+ "Hesper! Venus! were we native to their splendour, or in Mars,
+ We should see this world we live in, fairest of their evening stars.
+ Who could dream of wars and tumults, hate and envy, sin and spite,
+ Roaring London, raving Paris, in that spot of peaceful light?
+ Might we not, in looking heavenward on a star so silver fair,
+ Yearn and clasp our hands and murmur, 'Would to God that
+ we were there!'"
+
+Always when I see war, and boys with their poor dead faces turned up to
+the sky, and their hands so small in death, and when I see wounded men,
+and hear of soldiers going out of the trenches with a laugh and a joke
+to cut wire entanglements, knowing they will not come back, then I am
+ashamed of meanness and petty spite. So my poor young woman got a "fair
+dose of it" this morning, and when she had gulped once or twice I think
+she felt better.
+
+Yesterday one saw enough to stir one profoundly, and enough to make
+small things seem small indeed! It was a fine day at last, after weeks
+of black weather and skies heavy with snow, and although the cold was
+intense the sun was shining. I got into one of the horrid little
+droshkys, in which one sits on very damp cushions, and an "izvoztchik"
+in a heavy coat takes one to the wrong address always!
+
+The weather has been so thick, the rain and snow so constant, that I had
+not yet seen Petrograd. Yesterday, out of the mists appeared golden
+spires, and beyond the Neva, all sullen and heavy with ice, I saw towers
+and domes which I hadn't seen before. I stamped my feet on the shaky
+little carriage and begged the izvoztchik to drive a little quicker. We
+had to be at the Finnish station at 10 a.m., and my horse, with a long
+tail that embraced the reins every time that the driver urged speed,
+seemed incapable of doing more than potter over the frozen roads. I
+picked up Mme. Takmakoff, who was taking me to the station, and we went
+on together.
+
+[Page Heading: BLIND]
+
+At the station there was a long wooden building and, outside, a
+platform, all frozen and white, where we waited for the train to come
+in. Mme. Sazonoff, a fine well-bred woman, the wife of the Minister for
+Foreign Affairs, was there, and "many others," as the press notices say.
+The train was late. We went inside the long wooden building to shelter
+from the bitter cold beside the hot-water pipes, and as we waited we
+heard that the train was coming in. It came slowly and carefully
+alongside the platform with its crunching snow, almost with the creeping
+movement of a woman who carries something tenderly. Then it stopped. Its
+windows were frozen and dark, so that one could see nothing. I heard a
+voice behind me say, "The blind are coming first," and from the train
+there came groping one by one young men with their eyes shot out. They
+felt for the step of the train, and waited bewildered till someone came
+to lead them; then, with their sightless eyes looking upwards more than
+ours do, they moved stumbling along. Poor fellows, they'll never _see_
+home; but they turned with smiles of delight when the band, in its grey
+uniforms and fur caps, began to play the National Anthem.
+
+These were the first wounded prisoners from Germany, sent home because
+they could never fight again--quite useless men, too sorely hurt to
+stand once more under raining bullets and hurtling shell-fire--so back
+they came, and like dazed creatures they got out of the train, carrying
+their little bundles, limping, groping, but home.
+
+After the blind came those who had lost limbs--one-legged men, men still
+in bandages, men hobbling with sticks or with an arm round a comrade's
+neck, and then the stretcher cases. There was one man carrying his
+crutches like a cross. Others lay twisted sideways. Some never moved
+their heads from their pillows. All seemed to me to have about them a
+splendid dignity which made the long, battered, suffering company into
+some great pageant. I have never seen men so lean as they were. I have
+never seen men's cheek-bones seem to cut through the flesh just where
+the close-cropped hair on their temples ends. I had never seen such
+hollow eyes; but they were Russian soldiers, Russian gentlemen, and they
+were home again!
+
+In the great hall we greeted them with tables laid with food, and spread
+with wine and little presents beside each place. They know how to do
+this, the princely Russians, so each man got a welcome to make him
+proud. The band was there, and the long tables, the hot soup and the
+cigarettes. All the men had washed at Torneo, and all of them wore clean
+cotton waistcoats. Their hair was cut, too, but their faces hadn't
+recovered. One knew they would never be young again. The Germans had
+done their work. Semi-starvation and wounds had made old men of these
+poor Russian soldiers. All was done that could be done to welcome them
+back, but no one could take it in for a time. A sister in black
+distributed some little Testaments, each with a cross on it, and the
+soldiers kissed the symbol of suffering passionately.
+
+They filed into their places at the tables, and the stretchers were
+placed in a row two deep up the whole length of the room. In the middle
+of it stood an altar, covered with silver tinsel, and two priests in
+tinsel and gold stood beside it. Upon it was the sacred ikon, and the
+everlasting Mother and Child smiled down at the men laid in helplessness
+and weakness at their feet.
+
+A General welcomed the soldiers back; and when they were thanked in the
+name of the Emperor for what they had done, the tears coursed down their
+thin cheeks. It was too pitiful and touching to be borne. I remember
+thinking how quietly and sweetly a sister of mercy went from one group
+of soldiers to another, silently giving them handkerchiefs to dry their
+tears. We are all mothers now, and our sons are so helpless, so much in
+need of us.
+
+[Page Heading: WOUNDED RUSSIANS]
+
+Down the middle of the room were low tables for the men who lay down all
+the time. They saluted the ikon, as all the soldiers did, and some
+service began which I was unable to follow. I can't tell what the
+soldiers said, or of what they were thinking. About their comrades they
+said to Mme. Takmakoff that 25,000 of them had died in two days from
+neglect. We shall never hear the worst perhaps.
+
+There were three officers at a table. One of them was shot through the
+throat, and was bandaged. I saw him put all his food on one side, unable
+to swallow it. Then a high official came and sat down and drank his
+health. The officer raised his glass gallantly, and put his lips to the
+wine, but his throat was shot through, he made a face of agony, bowed to
+the great man opposite, and put down his glass.
+
+Some surgeons in white began to go about, taking names and particulars
+of the men's condition. Everyone was kind to the returned soldiers, but
+they had borne too much. Some day they will smile perhaps, but yesterday
+they were silent men returned from the dead, and not yet certain that
+their feet touched Russia again.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+WAITING FOR WORK
+
+
+We paid our heavy bills and left Petrograd on Monday, the 29th November.
+Great fuss at the station, as our luggage and the guide had disappeared
+together. A comfortable, slow journey, and Colonel Malcolm met us at
+Moscow station and took us to the Hôtel de Luxe--a shocking bad pub, but
+the only one where we could get rooms. We went out to lunch, and I had a
+plate of soup, two faens (little wheat cakes), and the fifth part of a
+bottle of Graves. This modest repast cost sixteen shillings per head. We
+turned out of the Luxe Hotel the following day, and came to the
+National, where four hundred people were waiting to get in. But our
+guide Grundy had influence, and managed to get us rooms. It is quite
+comfortable.
+
+None of us was sorry to leave Petrograd, and that is putting the case
+mildly. People there are very depressed, and it was a case of "she said"
+and "he said" all the time. Everyone was trying to snuff everyone else
+out. "I don't know them"--and the lips pursed up finished many a
+reputation, and I heard more about money and position than I ever heard
+in my life before. "Bunty" and I used to say that the world was
+inhabited by "nice people and very nice people," and once she added a
+third class, "fearfully nice people." That is a world one used to
+inhabit. I suppose one must make the best of this one!
+
+[Page Heading: MOSCOW]
+
+_Moscow. 2 December._--Hilda Wynne was rather feverish to-day, and lay
+in bed, so I had a solitary walk about the Kremlin, and saw a fine view
+from its splendid position. But, somehow, I am getting tired of
+solitude. I suppose the war gives us the feeling that we must hold
+together, and yet I have never been more alone than during this last
+eighteen months.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_To Miss Macnaughtan's Sisters._
+
+CRÉDIT LYONNAIS, MOSCOW,
+_3 December._
+
+MY DEARS,
+
+I have just heard that there is a man going up to Petrograd to-night who
+will put our letters in the Embassy bag, so there is some hope of this
+reaching you. It is really my Christmas letter to you all, so may it be
+passed round, please, although there won't be much in it.
+
+We are now at Moscow, _en route_ for the Caucasus _via_ Tiflis, and our
+base will probably be Julfa. We have been chosen to go there by the
+Grand Duchess Cyril, but the reports about the roads are so conflicting
+that we are going to see for ourselves. When we get there it will be
+difficult to send letters home, but the banks will always be in
+communication with each other, so I shall get all you send to Crédit
+Lyonnais, Petrograd.
+
+So far we have been waiting for our cars all this time. They had to
+come by Archangel, and they left long before we did, but they have not
+arrived yet. There are six ambulance cars, on board three different
+ships (for safety), and no news of any of them yet.
+
+Now, at least, _we_ have got a move on, and, barring accidents, we shall
+be in Tiflis next week. It's rather a fearsome journey, as the train
+only takes us to the foot of the mountains in four days, and then we
+must ride or drive across the passes, which they say are too cold for
+anything. You must imagine us like Napoleon in the "Retreat from Moscow"
+picture.
+
+Petrograd is a singularly unpleasant town, where the sun never shines,
+and it rains or snows every day. The river is full of ice, but it looks
+sullen and sad in the perpetual mist. There are a good many English
+people there; but one is supposed to know the Russians, which means
+speaking French all the time. Moscow is a far superior place, and is
+really most interesting and beautiful, and very Eastern, while Petrograd
+might be Liverpool. I filled up my time there in the hospital and
+soup-kitchen.
+
+The price of everything gets worse, I do believe! Even a glass of
+filtered water costs one shilling and threepence! I have just left an
+hotel for which my bill was £3 for one night, and I was sick nearly all
+the time!
+
+[Page Heading: "WHEN WILL THE WAR END?"]
+
+Now, my dears, I wish you all the best Christmas you can have this year.
+I am just longing for news of you, but I never knew such a cut-off place
+as this for letters. Tell me about every one of the family. Write
+lengthy letters. When do people say the war will end?
+
+Your loving
+SARAH BROOM.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Tiflis. 12 December._--It is evening, and I have only just remembered
+it is Sunday, a thing I can't recollect ever having happened before. I
+have been ill in my room all day, which no doubt accounts for it.
+
+We stayed at Moscow for a few days, and my recollection of it is of a
+great deal of snow and frequent shopping expeditions in cold little
+sleighs. I liked the place, and it was infinitely preferable to
+Petrograd. Mr. Cazalet took us to the theatre one night, and there was
+rather a good ballet. These poor dancers! They, like others, have lost
+their nearest and dearest in the war, but they still have to dance. Of
+course they call themselves "The Allies," and one saw rather a stale
+ballet-girl in very sketchy clothes dancing with a red, yellow, and
+black flag draped across her. Poor Belgium! It was such a travesty of
+her sufferings.
+
+Mr. Cazalet came to see us off at the station, and we began our long
+journey to Tiflis, but we changed our minds, and took the local train
+from ---- to Vladikavkas, where we stayed one night rather enjoyably at
+a smelly hotel, and the following day we got a motor-car and started at
+7 a.m. for the pass. The drive did us all good. The great snow peaks
+were so unlike Petrograd and gossip! I had been rather ill on the train,
+and I got worse at the hotel and during the drive, so I was quite a
+poor Sarah when I reached Tiflis. Still, the scenery had been lovely
+all the time, and we had funny little meals at rest houses.
+
+When we got to Tiflis I went on being seedy for a while. I finished
+Stephen Graham's book on Russia which he gave me before I left home. It
+is charmingly written. The line he chooses is mine also, but his is a
+more important book than mine.
+
+_Batoum. 22 December._--We have had a really delightful time since I
+last wrote up the old diary! (A dull book so far.) We saw a good many
+important people at Tiflis--Gorlebeff, the head of the Russian Red
+Cross, Prince Orloff, Prince Galitzin (a charming man), General Bernoff,
+etc., etc.
+
+Mrs. Wynne's and Mr. Bevan's cars are definitely accepted for the Tehran
+district. My own plans are not yet settled, but I hope they may be soon.
+People seem to think I look so delicate that they are a little bit
+afraid of giving me hard work, and yet I suppose there are not many
+women who get through more work than I do; but I believe I am looking
+rather a poor specimen, and my hair has fallen out. I think I am rather
+like those pictures on the covers of "appeals"--pictures of small
+children, underneath which is written, "This is Johnny Smith, or Eliza
+Jones, who was found in a cellar by one of our officers;
+weight--age--etc., etc."
+
+If I could have a small hospital north of Tehran it would be a good
+centre for the wounded, and it would also be a good place for the others
+to come to. Mr. Hills and Dr. Gordon (American missionaries) seem to
+think they would like me to join them in their work for the Armenians.
+These unfortunate people have been nearly exterminated by massacres, and
+it has been officially stated that 75 per cent. of the whole race has
+been put to the sword. This sounds awful enough, but when we consider
+that there is no refinement of torture that has not been practised upon
+them, then something within one gets up and shouts for revenge.
+
+The photographs which General Bernoff has are proof of the devildom of
+the Turks, only that the devil could not have been so beastly, and a
+beast could not have been so devilish. The Kaiser has convinced the
+Turks that he is now converted from Christianity to Mahomedanism. In
+every mosque he is prayed for under the title of "Hájed Mahomet
+Wilhelm," and photographs of burned and ruined cathedrals in France and
+Belgium are displayed to prove that he is now anti-Christian. Heaven
+knows it doesn't want much proving!
+
+[Page Heading: RASPUTIN]
+
+There are rumours of peace offers from Germany, but we must go on
+fighting now, if only for the sake of the soldiers, who will be the ones
+to suffer, but who _can't_ be asked to give in. The Russians are
+terribly out of spirits, and very depressed about the war. The German
+influence at Court scares them, and there is, besides, the mysterious
+Rasputin to contend with! This extraordinary man seems to exercise a
+malign influence over everyone, and people are powerless to resist him.
+Nothing seems too strange or too mad to recount of this man and his
+dupes. He is by birth a moujik, or peasant, and is illiterate, a
+drunkard, and an immoral wretch. Yet there is hardly a great lady at
+Court who has not come under his influence, and he is supposed by this
+set of persons to be a reincarnation of Christ. Rasputin's figure is one
+of those mysterious ones round which every sort of rumour gathers.
+
+We left Tiflis on Friday, 17th December, and had rather a panic at the
+station, as our passports had been left at the hotel, and our tickets
+had gone off to Baku. However, the unpunctuality of the train helped us,
+and we got off all right, an hour late. The train was about a thousand
+years old, and went at the rate of ten miles an hour, and we could only
+get second-class ordinary carriages to sleep in! But morning showed us
+such lovely scenery that nothing else mattered. One found oneself in a
+semi-tropical country, with soft skies and blue sea, and palms and
+flowers, and with tea-gardens on all the hillsides. When will people
+discover Caucasia? It is one of the countries of the world.
+
+We had letters to Count Groholski, a most charming young fellow, who
+arranged a delightful journey for us into the mountains, and as we had
+brought no riding things we began to search the small shops for
+riding-boots and the like. Then, in the evening we dined with Count
+Oulieheff, and had an interesting pleasant time. Two Japanese were at
+dinner, and, although they couldn't speak any tongue but their own,
+Japanese always manage to look interesting. No doubt much of that
+depends upon being able to say nothing.
+
+[Page Heading: GEORGIA]
+
+Early next day we motored out to the Count's Red Cross camp at ----.
+Here everyone was sleeping under tents or in little wooden huts, and we
+met some good-mannered, nice soldier men, most of them Poles. The
+scenery was grand, and we were actually in the little known and
+wonderful old kingdom of Georgia. Very little of it is left.{9} There
+are ruins all along the river of castles and fortresses and old
+stone bridges now crumbling into decay, but of the country, once so
+proud, only one small dirty city remains, and that is Artvin, on the
+mountain-side. It was too full of an infectious sort of typhus for us to
+go there, but we drove out to the hospital on the opposite side of the
+valley, and the doctor in charge there gave us beds for the night.
+
+On Sunday, December 19th, I wandered about the hillside, found some
+well-made trenches, and saw some houses which had been shelled. The
+Turks were in possession of Artvin only a year ago, and there was a lot
+of fighting in the mountains. It seems to me that the population of the
+place is pretty Turkish still; and there are Turkish houses with small
+Moorish doorways, and little windows looking out on the glorious view.
+In all the mountains round here the shooting is fine, and consists of
+toor (goats), leopards, bears, wolves, and on the Persian front, tigers
+also. Land can be had for nothing if one is a Russian.
+
+On Sunday afternoon we drove in a most painful little carriage to a
+village which seemed to be inhabited by good-looking cut-throats, but
+there was not much to see except the picturesque, smelly, old brown
+houses. We met a handsome Cossack carrying a man down to the military
+hospital. He was holding him upright, as children carry each other; the
+man was moaning with fever, and had been stricken with the virulent
+typhus, which nearly always kills. But what did the handsome Cossack
+care about infection? He was a mountaineer, and had eyes with a little
+flame in them, and a fierce moustache. Perhaps to-morrow he will be
+gone. People die like flies in these unhealthy towns, and the Russians
+are supremely careless.
+
+We went back to the hospital for dinner, and then went out into crisp,
+beautiful moonlight, and motored back to the Red Cross camp. I had a
+little hut to sleep in, which had just been built. It contained a bed
+and two chairs, upon one of which was a tin basin! The cold in the
+morning was about as sharp as anything I have known, but everyone was
+jolly and pleasant, and we had a charming time.
+
+The Count told us of the old proud Georgians when there was a famine in
+the country and a Russian Governor came to offer relief to the starving
+inhabitants. Their great men went out to receive him, and said
+courteously, "We have not been here, Gracious One, one hundred or two
+hundred years, but much more than a thousand years, and during that time
+we have not had a visit from the Russian Government. We are pleased to
+see you, and the honour you have done us is sufficient in itself--for
+the rest we think we will not require anything at your hands."
+
+On Monday I motored with the others out to the ferry; then I had to
+leave them, as they were going to ride forty miles, and that was thought
+too much for me. Age has _no_ compensations, and it is not much use
+fighting it. One only ends by being "a wonderful old woman of eighty":
+reminiscent, perhaps a little obstinate, and in the world to
+come--always eighty?
+
+Came back to Batoum with Count Stanislas Constant, and went for a drive
+with him to see the tea-gardens.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Page Heading: TIFLIS]
+
+Christmas Eve at Tiflis, and here we are with cars still stuck in the
+ice thirty miles from Archangel, and ourselves just holding on and
+trying not to worry. But what a waste of time! Also, fighting is going
+on now in Persia, and we might be a lot of use. We came back from Batoum
+in the hottest and slowest train I have ever been in. Still, Georgia
+delighted me, and I am glad to have seen it. They have a curious custom
+there (the result of generations of fighting). Instead of saying
+"Good-morning," they say "Victory"; and the answer is, "May the victory
+be yours." The language is Georgian, of course; and then there is
+Tartar, and Polish, and Russian, and I can't help thinking that the
+Tower of Babel was the poorest joke that was ever played on mankind.
+Nothing stops work so completely.
+
+What will Christmas Day be like at home? I think of all the village
+churches, with the holly and evergreens, and in almost every one the
+little new brass plates to the memory of beautiful youth, dead and
+mangled, and left in the mud to await another trumpet than that which
+called it from the trenches. There is nothing like a boy, and all the
+life of England and the prayers of mothers have centred round them.
+One's older friends died first, and now the boys are falling, and from
+every little vicarage, from school-houses and colleges, the endless
+stream goes, all with their heads up, fussing over their little bits of
+packing, and then away to stand exploding shells and gas and bombs. No
+one except those who have seen knows the ghastly tale of human suffering
+that this war involves every day. Down here 550,000 Armenians have been
+butchered in cold blood. The women are either massacred or driven into
+Turkish harems.
+
+Yesterday we heard some news at last in this most benighted corner of
+the world! England has raised four million volunteers. Hurrah! Over one
+million men volunteered in one week. French takes command at home and
+Haig at the front.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_To Mrs. Charles Young._
+
+HOTEL ORIENT, TIFLIS,
+_26 December._
+
+DARLING J.,
+
+It seems almost useless to write letters, or even to wire! Letters
+sometimes take forty-nine days to get to England, and telegrams are
+_always_ kept a fortnight before being sent. We have had great
+difficulty about the ambulance cars, as they all got frozen into the
+river at Archangel; however, as you will see from the newspapers, there
+isn't a great deal going on yet.
+
+I do hope you and all the family are safe and sound. I wired to ---- for
+her birthday to ask news of you all, and I prepaid the reply, but, of
+course, none came, so I am sure she never got the wire. I have wired
+twice to ----, but no reply. At last one gives up expecting any. I got
+some newspapers nearly a month old to-day, and I have been devouring
+them.
+
+This is rather a curious place, and the climate is quite good; no snow,
+and a good deal of pleasant sun, but the hills all round are very bare
+and rugged.
+
+I have had a cough, which I think equals your best efforts in that line.
+How it does shake one up! I had some queer travelling when it was at its
+worst: for the first night we were given a shakedown in a little
+mountain hospital, which was fearfully cold; and the next night I was
+put into a newly-built little place, made of planks roughly nailed
+together, and with just a bed and a basin in it.
+
+The cold was wonderful, and since then--as you may imagine--the
+Macnaughtan cough has been heard in the land!
+
+[Page Heading: GRAND DUKE NICHOLAS]
+
+Yesterday (Christmas Day) we were invited to breakfast with the Grand
+Duke Nicholas. A Court function in Russia is the most royal that you can
+imagine--no half measures about it! The Grand Duke is an adorably
+handsome man, quite extraordinarily and obviously a Grand Duke. He
+measures 6 feet 5 inches, and is worshipped by every soldier in the
+Army.
+
+We went first into a huge anteroom, where a lady-in-waiting received us,
+and presented us to "Son Altesse Impériale," and then to the Grand Duke
+and to his brother, the Grand Duke Peter. Some scenes seem to move as
+in a play. I had a vision of a great polished floor, and many tall men
+in Cossack dress, with daggers and swords, most of them different grades
+of Princes and Imperial Highnesses.
+
+A great party of Generals, and ladies, and members of the Household,
+then went into a big dining-room, where every imaginable hors d'oeuvre
+was laid out on dishes--dozens of different kinds--and we each ate
+caviare or something. Afterwards, with a great tramp and clank of spurs
+and swords, everyone moved on to a larger dining-room, where there were
+a lot of servants, who waited excellently.
+
+In the middle of the déjeuner the Grand Duke Nicholas got up, and
+everyone else did the same, and they toasted us! The Grand Duke made a
+speech about our "gallantry," etc., etc., and everyone raised glasses
+and bowed to one. Nothing in a play could have been more of a real fine
+sort of scene. And certainly S. Macnaughtan in her wildest dreams hadn't
+thought of anything so wonderful as being toasted in Russia by the
+Imperial Staff.
+
+It's quite a thing to be tiresome about when one grows old!
+
+In the evening we tried to be merry, and failed. The Grand Duchess sent
+us mistletoe and plum-pudding by the hand of M. Boulderoff. He took us
+shopping, but the bazaars are not interesting.
+
+Good-bye, and bless you, my dear,
+Yours as ever,
+S. MACNAUGHTAN.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_To Miss Julia Keays-Young._
+
+HOTEL D'ORIENT, TIFLIS,
+CAUCASUS, RUSSIA,
+_27 December._
+
+DARLING JENNY,
+
+I can't tell you what a pleasure your letters are. I only wish I could
+get some more from anybody, but not a line gets through! I want so much
+to hear about Bet and her marriage, and to know if the nephews and
+Charles are safe.
+
+There seems to be the usual winter pause over the greater part of the
+war area, but round about here, there are the most awful massacres;
+550,000 Armenians have been slaughtered in cold blood by the Turks, and
+with cruelties that pass all telling. One is quite impotent.
+
+I expect to be sent into Persia soon, and meanwhile I hope to join some
+American missionaries who are helping the refugees. Our ambulances are
+at last out of the ice at Archangel, and will be here in a fortnight;
+but we are not to go to Persia for a month. "The Front" is always
+altering, and we never have any idea where our work will be wanted.
+
+[Page Heading: HOMESICK]
+
+We are still asking when the war will end, but, of course, no one knows.
+One gets pretty homesick out here at times, and there was a chance I
+might have to go back to England for equipment, but that seems off at
+present.
+
+Your always loving
+A. S.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_29 December._--I have still got a horrid bad cough, and my big, dull
+room is depressing. We are all depressed, I am afraid. Being accustomed
+to have plenty to do, this long wait is maddening.
+
+Whatever Russia may have in store for us in the way of useful work,
+nothing can exceed the boredom of our first seven weeks here. We are
+just spoiling for work. I believe it is as bad as an illness to feel
+like this, and we won't be normal again for some time. Oddly enough, it
+does affect one's health, and Hilda Wynne and I are both seedy. We are
+always trying to wire for things, but not a word gets through.
+
+We were summoned to dine at the palace last night. Everyone very
+charming.
+
+_31 December._.--Prince Murat came to dine and play bridge. Count
+Groholski turned up for a few days. My doctor vetted me for my cold.
+Business done--none. No sailor ever longed for port as I do for home.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+SOME IMPRESSIONS OF TIFLIS AND ARMENIA
+
+
+_Tiflis. 1 January, 1916._--Kind wishes from the Grand Duke and
+everybody. Not such an aimless day as usual. I got into a new
+sitting-room and put it straight, and in the evening we went to Prince
+Orloff's box for a performance of "Carmen." It was very Russian and
+wealthy. At the back of the box were two anterooms, where we sat and
+talked between the acts, and where tea, chocolates, etc., were served.
+They say the Prince has £200,000 a year. He is gigantically fat, with a
+real Cossack face.
+
+Scandal is so rife here that it hardly seems to mean scandal. They don't
+appear to be so much immoral as non-moral. Everyone sits up late; then
+most of them, I am told, get drunk, and then the evening orgies begin.
+No one is ostracised, everyone is called upon and "known" whatever they
+have done. I suppose English respectability would simply make them
+smile--if, indeed, they believed in it.
+
+_2 January._--I don't suppose I shall ever write an article on war
+charities, but I believe I ought to. A good many facts about them have
+come my way, and I consider that the public at home should be told how
+the finances are being administered.
+
+I know of one hospital in Russia which has, I believe, cost England
+£100,000. The staff consists of nurses and doctors, dressers, etc., all
+fully paid. The expenses of those in charge of it are met out of the
+funds. They live in good hotels, and have "entertaining allowances" for
+entertaining their friends, and yet one of them herself volunteered the
+information that the hospital is not required. The staff arrived weeks
+ago, but not the stores. Probably the building won't be opened for some
+time to come, and when it is opened there will be difficulty in getting
+patients to fill it.
+
+In many parts of Russia hospitals are _not_ wanted. In Petrograd there
+are five hundred of them run by Russians alone.
+
+Then there is a fund for relief of the Poles, which is administered by
+Princess ----. The ambulance-car which the fund possesses is used by the
+Princess to take her to the theatre every night.
+
+A great deal of money has been subscribed for the benefit of the
+Armenians. Who knows how much this has cost the givers? yet the
+distribution of this large sum seems to be conducted on most haphazard
+lines. An open letter arrived the other day for the Mayor of Tiflis.
+There is no Mayor of Tiflis, so the letter was brought to Major ----. It
+said: "Have you received two cheques already sent? We have had no
+acknowledgment." There seems to be no check on the expenditure, and
+there is no local organisation for dispensing the relief. I don't say
+that it is cheating: I only say as much as I know.
+
+[Page Heading: ILL-BESTOWED CHARITY]
+
+A number of motor-ambulances were sent to Russia by some generous people
+in England the other day. They were inspected by Royalty before being
+despatched, and arrived in the care of Mr. ----. When their engines were
+examined it was found that they were tied together with bits of
+copper-wire, and even with string. None of them could be made to go, and
+they were returned to England.
+
+We are desperately hard up at home just now, and we are denying
+ourselves in order to send these charitable contributions to the richest
+country in the world. Gorlebeff himself (head of the Russian Red Cross
+Society) has £30,000 a year. Armenians are literally rolling in money,
+and it is common to find Armenian ladies buying hats at 250 Rs. (£25) in
+Tiflis. The Poles are not ruined, nor do they seem to object to German
+rule, which is doing more for them than Russia ever did. Tiflis people
+are now sending money for relief to Mesopotamia. Of the 300,000 Rs. sent
+by England, 70,000 Rs. have stuck to someone's fingers.
+
+In Flanders there were many people living in comfort such as they had
+probably never seen before, at the expense of the charitable public, and
+doing very little indeed all the time: cars to go about in, chauffeurs
+at their disposal, petrol without stint, and even their clothes (called
+uniforms for the nonce!) paid for.
+
+And the little half-crowns that come in to run these shows, "how hardly
+they are earned sometimes! with what sacrifices they are given!" A man
+in Flanders said to me one day: "We could lie down and roll in tobacco,
+and we all help ourselves to every blooming thing we want; and here is a
+note I found in a poor little parcel of things to-night: 'We are so
+sorry not to be able to send more, but money is very scarce this week.'"
+
+My own cousin brought four cars over to France, and he told me he was
+simply an unpaid chauffeur at the command of young officers coming in to
+shop at Dunkirk.
+
+I am thankful to say that Mrs. Wynne and Mr. Bevan and I have paid our
+own expenses ever since the war began, and given things too. And I think
+a good many of our own corps in Flanders used to contribute liberally
+and pay for all they had. People here tell us that their cars have all
+been commandeered, and they are used for the wives of Generals, who
+never had entered one before, and who proudly do their shopping in them.
+
+War must be a military matter, and these things must end, unless money
+is to find its way into the possession of the vultures who are always at
+hand when there is any carcase about.
+
+_5 January._--Absolutely nothing to write about. I saw Gorlebeff,
+Domerchekoff, and Count Tysczkievcz{10} of the Croix Rouge about my
+plans. They suggest my going to Urumiyah in Persia, where workers seem
+to be needed. The only other opening seems to be to go to Count
+Groholski's new little hospital on the top of the mountains. Mr. Hills,
+the American missionary, wants me first to go with him to see the
+Armenian refugees at Erivan, but we can't get transports for his gifts
+of clothing for them.
+
+[Page Heading: A PRESENTIMENT]
+
+Before I left England I had a very strange, almost an overwhelming
+presentiment that I had better not come to Russia. I had by that time
+promised Mrs. Wynne that I would come, and I couldn't see that it would
+be the right thing to chuck her. I thought the work would suffer if I
+stayed at home, as she might find it impossible to get any other woman
+who would pay her own way and consent to be away for so long a time. Our
+prayers are always such childish things--prayer itself is only a
+cry--and I remember praying that if I was "meant to stay at home" some
+substitute might be found for me. This all seems too absurd when one
+views it in the light of what afterwards happened. My vision of "honour"
+and "work" seem for the moment ridiculous, and yet I know that I was not
+so foolish as I seem, for I got a written statement from Mr. Hume
+Williams (Mrs. Wynne's trustee), saying, "A unit has been formed,
+consisting of Mrs. Wynne, Miss Macnaughtan, etc., and it has been
+accepted by the Russian Red Cross." The idea of being in Russia and
+having to look for work never in my wildest moments entered my head--and
+this is the end of the "vision," I suppose.
+
+_Russian Christmas Day._--Took a car and went for a short run into the
+country. Weather fine and bright.
+
+There is severe fighting in Galicia, and the rumour is that
+Urumiyah--the place to which I am going--has been evacuated.
+
+My impression of Russia deepens--that it is run by beautiful women and
+rich men; and yet how charming everyone is to meet! Hardly anyone is
+uninteresting, and half the men are good-looking. The Cossack-dress is
+very handsome, and nearly everyone wears it. When the colour is dark red
+and the ornaments are of silver the effect is unusually good. They all
+walk well. One is amongst a primitive people, but a remarkably fine one!
+
+_10 January._--I am taking French lessons. This would appear to be a
+simple matter, even in Russia, but it has taken me three weeks to get a
+teacher. The first to come required a rest, and must decline; the second
+was recalled by an old employer; the third had too many engagements; the
+fourth came and then holidays began, as they always do! First our
+Christmas, then the Russian Christmas, then the Armenian Christmas,
+leading on to three New Year Days! After that the Baptism, with its
+holidays and its vigils.
+
+There is only one sort of breakfast-roll in this hotel which is soft
+enough to eat; it is not made on festivals, nor on the day after a
+festival. I can honestly say we hardly ever see one.
+
+With much fear and trembling I have bought a motor-car. No work seems
+possible without it. The price is heavy, but everyone says I shall be
+able to get it back when I leave. All the same I shake in my shoes--a
+chauffeur, tyres, petrol, mean money all the time. One can't stop
+spending out here. It is like some fate from which one can't escape.
+Still the car is bought, and I suppose now I shall get work.
+
+[Page Heading: DIFFICULTIES]
+
+We are all in the same boat. Mrs. Wynne has waited for her ambulances
+for three months, and I hear that even the Anglo-Russian hospital, with
+every name from Queen Alexandra's downwards on the list of its patrons,
+is in "one long difficulty." It is Russia, and nothing but Russia, that
+breaks us all. Everything is promised, nothing is done. The only _hope_
+of getting a move on is by bribery, and one may bribe the wrong people
+till one finds one's way about.
+
+_13 January._--The car took us up the Kajour road, and behaved well; but
+the chauffeur drove us into a bridge on the way down, and had to be
+dismissed. Tried to go to Erivan, but the new chauffeur mistook the
+road, so we had to return to Tiflis. N.B.--Another holiday was coming
+on, and he wanted to be at home. _I actually used to like difficulties!_
+
+_15 January._--Started again for Erivan. All went well, and we had a
+lovely drive till about 6 p.m. The dusk was gathering and we were up in
+the hills, when "bang!" went something, and nothing on earth would make
+the car move. We unscrewed nuts, we lighted matches, we got out the
+"jack," but we could not discover what was wrong. So where were we to
+spend the night?
+
+In a fold of the grey hills was a little grey village--just a few huts
+belonging to Mahomedan shepherds, but there was nothing for it but to
+ask them for shelter. Fortunately, Dr. Wilson knew the language, and he
+persuaded the "head man" to turn out for us. His family consisted of
+about sixteen persons, all sleeping on the floor. They gave us the
+clay-daubed little place, and fortunately it contained a stove, but
+nothing else. The snow was all round us, but we made up the fire and got
+some tea, which we carried with us, and finally slept in the little
+place while the chauffeur guarded the car.
+
+In the morning nothing would make the car budge an inch, and, seeing our
+difficulty, the Mahomedans made us pay a good deal for horses to tow the
+thing to the next village, where we heard there was a blacksmith. We
+followed in a hay-cart. We got to a Malokand settlement about 5 o'clock,
+and found ourselves in an extraordinarily pretty little village, and
+were given shelter in the very cleanest house I ever saw. The woman was
+a perfect treasure, and made us soup and gave us clean beds, and honey
+for breakfast. The chauffeur found that our shaft was broken, and the
+whole piece had to go back to Tiflis.
+
+It was a real blow, our trip knocked on the head again, and now how were
+we to get on? The railway was 48 versts away, and the railway had to be
+reached. We hired one of those painful little carts, which are made of
+rough poles on wheels, and, clinging on by our eyelids, we drove as far
+as an Armenian village, where a snowstorm came on, and we took shelter
+with a "well-to-do" Armenian family, who gave us lunch and displayed
+their wool-work and were very friendly. From there we got into another
+"deelyjahns" of the painful variety, and jolted off for about 25 miles,
+till, as night fell, we struck the railway, and were given two wooden
+benches to sleep on in a small waiting-room. People came and went all
+night, and we slept with one eye open till 2 a.m., when the chauffeur
+took a train to Tiflis. We sat up till 6 a.m., when the train, two hours
+late, started for Erivan, where we arrived pretty well "cooked" at 11
+p.m.
+
+[Page Heading: ERIVAN]
+
+_Erivan. 20 January._--Last night's experiences were certainly very
+"Russian." We had wired for rooms, but although the message had been
+received nothing was prepared. The miserable rooms were an inch thick in
+dust, there were no fires, and no sheets on the beds! We went to a
+restaurant--fortunately no Russian goes to bed early--and found the
+queerest place, empty save for a band and a lady. The lady and the band
+were having supper. She, poor soul, was painted and dyed, but she
+offered her services to translate my French for me when the waiters
+could understand nothing but Russian. I was thankful to eat something
+and go to bed under my fur coat.
+
+To-day we have been busy seeing the Armenian refugees. There are 17,000
+of them in this city of 30,000 inhabitants. We went from one place to
+another, and always one saw the same things and heard the same tales.
+
+Since the war broke out I think I have seen the actual breaking of the
+wave of anguish which has swept over the world (I often wonder if I can
+"feel" much more!). There was Dunkirk and its shambles, there was ruined
+Belgium, and there was, above all, the field hospital at Furnes, with
+its horrible courtyard, the burning heap of bandages, and the mattresses
+set on edge to drip the blood off them and then laid on some bed again.
+I can never forget it. I was helping a nurse once, and all the time I
+was sitting on a dead man and never knew it!
+
+And now I am hearing of one million Armenians slaughtered in cold blood.
+The pitiful women in the shelters were saying, "We are safe because we
+are old and ugly; all the young ones went to the harems." Nearly all the
+men were massacred. The surplus children and unwanted women were put
+into houses and burned alive. Everywhere one heard, "We were 4,000 in
+one village, and only 143 escaped;" "There were 30 of us, and now only a
+few children remain;" "All the men are killed." These were things one
+saw for oneself, heard for oneself. There was nothing sensational in the
+way the women told their stories.
+
+Russia does what she can in the way of "relief." She gives 4-1/2 Rs. per
+month to each person. This gives them bread, and there might be fires,
+for stoves are there, but no one seems to have the gumption to put them
+up. Here and there men and women are sleeping on valuable rugs, which
+look strange in the bare shelters. Most of the women knitted, and some
+wove on little "fegir" looms. The dullness of their existence matches
+the tragedy of it. The food is so plain that it doesn't want
+cooking--being mostly bread and water; but sometimes a few rags are
+washed, and there is an attempt to try and keep warm. Yet I have heard
+an English officer say that nothing pleases a Russian more than to ask,
+"When is there to be another Armenian massacre?"
+
+The Armenians are hated. I wonder Christ doesn't do more for them
+considering they were the first nation in the world to embrace
+Christianity; but then, one wonders about so many things during this
+war. Oh, if we could stamp out the madness that seems to accompany
+religion, and just live sober, kind, sensible lives, how good it would
+be; but the Turks must burn women and children, alive, because, poor
+souls, they think one thing and the Turks think another! And men and
+women are hating and killing each other because Christ, says one, had a
+nature both human and divine, and, says another, the two were merged in
+one. And a third says that Christ was equal to the Father, while a whole
+Church separated itself on the question of Sabellianism, or "The
+Procession of the Son."
+
+Poor Christ, once crucified, and now dismembered by your own disciples,
+are you glad you came to earth, or do you still think God forsook you,
+and did you, too, die an unbeliever? The crucifixion will never be
+understood until men know that its worst agony consisted in the
+disbelief which first of all doubts God and then must, by all reason,
+doubt itself. The resurrection comes when we discover that we are God
+and He is us.
+
+[Page Heading: ETCHMIADZIN]
+
+_21 January._--To-day, I drove out to Etchmiadzin with Mr. Lazarienne,
+an Armenian, to see that curious little place. It is the ecclesiastical
+city of Armenia--its little Rome, where the Catholicus lives. He was
+ill, but a charming Bishop--Wardepett by name--with a flowing brown
+beard and long black silk hood, made us welcome and gave us lunch, and
+then showed us the hospital--which had no open windows, and smelt
+horrible--and the lovely little third-century "temple." Then he took us
+round the strange, quiet little place, with its peaceful park and its
+three old brown churches, which mark what must once have been a great
+city and the first seat of a national Christianity. Now there are
+perhaps 300 inhabitants, but Mount Ararat dominates it, and Mount Ararat
+is not a hill. It is a great white jewel set up against a sheet of
+dazzling blue.
+
+Hills and ships always seem to me to be alive, and I think they have a
+personality of their own. Ararat stands for the unassailable. It is like
+some great fact, such as that what is beautiful must be true. It is
+grand and pure and lovely, and when the sun sets it is more than this,
+for then its top is one sheet of rose, and it melts into a mystic hill,
+and one knows that whatever else may "go to Heaven" Ararat goes there
+every night.
+
+We visited the old Persian palace built on the river's cliff, and looked
+out over the gardens to the hills beyond, and saw the mosque, with its
+blue roof against the blue sky, and its wonderful covering of old tiles,
+which drop like leaves and are left to crumble.
+
+_Tiflis. 24 January._--I left Erivan on Sunday, January 23rd. It was
+cold and sharp, and the train was crowded. People were standing all down
+the corridors, as usual. Nothing goes quicker than eight miles an hour,
+nothing is punctual, nothing arrives. The stations are filthy, and the
+food is quite uneatable. I often despair of this country, and if the
+Russians were not our Allies I should feel inclined to say that nothing
+would do them so much good as a year or two of German conquest. No one,
+after the first six months, has been enthusiastic over the war, and the
+soldiers want to get home. One young officer, 26 years old, has been
+loafing in Tiflis for six months, and has at last been arrested. Another
+took his ticket on eight successive nights to leave the place and never
+moved. At last he was locked in his room, and a motor-car ordered to
+take him to the station. He got into it, and was not heard of for three
+days, when his wife appeared, and found her husband somewhere in the
+town.
+
+Mrs. Wynne and Mr. Bevan have gone on ahead to Baku, but I must wait for
+my damaged car. A young officer in this hotel shot himself dead this
+morning. No one seems to mind much.
+
+[Page Heading: RUSSIAN SOCIETY]
+
+_25 January._--Last night I was invited to play bridge by one of the
+richest women in Russia. Her room was just a converted bedroom, with a
+dirty wall-paper. The packs of cards were such as one might see
+railway-men playing with in a lamp-room. Our stakes were a few kopeks,
+and the refreshments consisted of one tepid cup of tea, without either
+milk or lemon, and not a biscuit to eat. We all sat with shawls on, as
+our hostess said it wasn't worth while to light a fire so late at night.
+A nice little Princess Musaloff and Prince Napoleon Murat played with
+me. We were rich in titles, but our shoulders were cold.
+
+I have not seen a single nice or even comfortable room since I left
+England, and although some women dress well, and have pretty
+cigarette-boxes from the renowned Faberjé, other things about them are
+all wrong. The furniture in their rooms is covered with plush, and the
+ornaments (to me) suggest a head-gardener's house at home with "an
+enlargement of mother" over the mantelpiece; or a Clapham drawing-room,
+furnished during some happy year when cotton rose, or copper was
+cornered. In this hotel the carpets are in holes in the passages, and
+there are few servants; but I don't fancy that the people here notice
+things very much.
+
+I went to see Mme. ---- one day in her new house. The rooms were large
+and handsome. There was a picture of a cow at one end of the
+drawing-room, and a mirror framed in plush at the other!
+
+I must draw a "character" one day of the very charming woman who is
+absolutely indifferent to people's feelings. The fact that some humble
+soul has prepared something for her, or that a sacrifice has been made,
+or that one kind speech would satisfy, does not occur to her. These are
+the people who chuck engagements when they get better invitations, and
+always I seem to see them with expensive little bags and chains and
+Faberjé enamels. Men will slave for such women--will carry things for
+them, and serve them. They have "success" until they are quite old, and
+after they have taken to rouge and paint. A tired woman hardly ever gets
+anything carried for her.
+
+_26 January._--A day's march nearer home! This is the Feast of St. Nina.
+There is always a feast or a fête here. People walk about the streets,
+they give each other rich cakes, and work a little less than usual.
+
+This hotel still keeps its cripples. Prince Murat sits on his little
+chair on the landing. Prince Tschelikoff has his heart all wrong; there
+is the man with one leg.
+
+Now Mlle. Lepnakoff, the singer, Musaloff, in his red coat, and some
+heavy Generals are here. We have the same food every day.
+
+[Page Heading: ENFORCED IDLENESS]
+
+Perhaps I was pretty near having a breakdown when I came abroad, and the
+enforced idleness of this life may have been Providential (all my hair
+was falling out, and my eyes were very bad, and the war was wearing me
+down rather); but to sit in an hotel bedroom or to potter over trifles
+in sitting-rooms seems a poor sort of way of passing one's time. To rest
+has always seemed to me very hard work. I can't even go to bed without a
+pile of papers beside me to work at during the night or in the early
+morning!
+
+When the power of writing leaves me, as it does fitfully and without
+warning, I have a feeling of loneliness, which helps to convince me of
+what I have always felt, that this power comes from outside, and can
+only be explained psychically. I asked a great writer once if he ever
+experienced the feeling I had of being "left," and he told me that
+sometimes during the time of desolation he had seriously contemplated
+suicide.
+
+_30 January._--I got a telephone message from Mr. Bevan last night. He
+says Baku is too horrible, and there is no news of the cars. People are
+telling me now that if instead of cars we had given money, we should
+have been fêted and decorated and extolled to the skies; but then, where
+would the money have gone? Last week the two richest Armenian merchants
+in this town were arrested for cheating the soldiers out of thousands of
+yards of stuff for their coats. A Government official could easily be
+found to say that the cloth had been received, and meanwhile what has
+the soldier to cover him in the trenches?
+
+Armenians are certainly an odious set of people, and their ingratitude
+is equalled by their meanness and greed. Mr. Hills, who is doing the
+Armenian relief work here, pays all his own expenses, and he can't get a
+truck to take his things to the refugees without paying for it, while he
+is often asked the question, "Why can't you leave these things alone?"
+Now that Mrs. Wynne has left I am asked the same question about her.
+Russia can "break" one very successfully.
+
+The weather has turned cold, and there is tearing wind and snow.
+
+_1 February._--"No," says I to myself, in a supremely virtuous manner,
+"I shall not be beaten by this enervating existence here. I'll do
+_something_--if it's only sewing a seam."
+
+So out came needles and cotton and mending and hemming, but, would it be
+believed, I am afflicted with two "doigts blancs" (festered fingers),
+and have to wear bandages, which prevent my doing even the mildest seam.
+Oddly enough, this "maladie" is a sort of epidemic here. The fact is,
+the dust is full of microbes, and no one is too well nourished.
+
+[Page Heading: SOME "MALADES IMAGINAIRES"]
+
+I am rather amused by those brave strong people who "don't make a fuss
+about their health." One hears from them almost daily that their
+temperature has gone up to 103°; "but it's nothing," they say
+heroically, "or if it is, it's only typhoid, and who cares for a little
+typhoid?" Does a head ache, there is "something very queer about it,
+but"--pushing back hair from hot brow--"no one is to worry about it. It
+will be better to-morrow; or if it really is going to be fever, we must
+just try to make the best of it." A sty in the eye is cataract, "but
+lots of blind people are very happy;" and a bilious attack is generally
+that mysterious, oft-recurring and interesting complaint "camp fever."
+Cheer up, no one is to be discouraged if the worst happens! A
+thermometer is produced and shaken and applied. The temperature is too
+low now; it is probably only typhus, and we mean to be brave and get up.
+
+_3 February._--Last night we played bridge. All the princes and
+princesses moistened their thumbs before dealing, and no one is above
+using a "crachoir" on the staircase! Oh for one hour of England! In all
+my travels I have only found one foreign race which seemed to me to be
+well-bred (as I understand it), and that is the native of India. The
+very best French people come next; and the Spaniard knows how to bow,
+but he clears his throat in an objectionable manner. None of them have
+been licked! That is the trouble. An Eton boy of fifteen could give them
+all points, and beat them with his hands in his pockets.
+
+I am quite sure that the British nation is really superior to all
+others. Ours is the only well-bred race, and the only generous or
+hospitable nation. Fancy a foreigner keeping "open house"! Here the
+entertainment is a glass of thickened tea, and the stove is frequently
+not lighted even on a chilly evening. Since I have been in Russia I have
+had nothing better or more substantial given to me (by the Russians)
+than a piece of cake, except by the Grand Duke. We brought heaps of
+letters of introduction, and people called, but that is all, or else
+they gave an "evening" with the very lightest refreshments I have ever
+seen. Someone plays badly on the piano, there is a little bridge, and a
+samovar!
+
+_6 February._--The queer epidemic of "gathered fingers" continues here.
+Having two I am in the fashion. They make one awkward, and more idle
+than ever. A lot of people come in and out of my sitting-room to "cheer
+me up," and everyone wants me to tell their fortune. Mrs. Wynne and Mr.
+Bevan are still at Baku.
+
+Last night I went to Prince Orloff's box to hear Lipkofskaya in "Faust."
+
+My car has come back, and is running well, but the weather has been cold
+and stormy, with snow drifting in from the hills. I took Mme. Derfelden
+and her husband to Kajura to-day. Now that I have the car everyone wants
+me to work with them. The difficulty of transport is indescribable.
+Without a car is like being without a leg. One simply can't get about.
+In order to get a seat on a train people walk up the line and bribe the
+officials at the place where it is standing to allow them to get on
+board.{11}
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+ON THE PERSIAN FRONT
+
+
+_8 February._--A "platteforme" having been found for my car, I and M.
+Ignatieff of the Red Cross started for Baku to-day. We found our little
+party at the Métropole Hotel. Went to the MacDonell's to lunch. He is
+Consul. They are quite charming people, and their little flat was open
+to us all the time we were at Baku.
+
+The place itself is wind-blown and fly-blown and brown, but the harbour
+is very pretty, with its crowds of shipping, painted with red hulls,
+which make a nice bit of colour in the general drab of the hills and the
+town. There are no gardens and no trees, and all enterprise in the way
+of town-planning and the like is impossible owing to the Russian habit
+of cheating. They have tried for sixteen years to start electric trams,
+but everyone wants too much for his own pocket. The morals become
+dingier and dingier as one gets nearer Tartar influence, and no shame is
+thought of it. Most of the stories one hears would blister the pages of
+a diary. When a house of ill-fame is opened it is publicly blessed by
+the priest!
+
+_Kasvin. 18 February._.--We spent a week at Baku and grumbled all the
+time, although really we were not at all unhappy. The MacDonells were
+always with us, and we had good games of bridge with Ignatieff in the
+evenings. We went to see the oil city at Baku, and one day we motored to
+the far larger one further out. One of the directors, an Armenian, went
+with us, and gave us at his house the very largest lunch I have ever
+seen. It began with many plates of zakouska (hors d'oeuvres), and went
+on to a cold entrée of cream and chickens' livers; then grilled salmon,
+with some excellent sauce, and a salad of beetroot and cranberries. This
+was followed by an entrée of kidneys, and then we came to soup, the best
+I have ever eaten; after soup, roast turkey, followed by chicken pilau,
+sweets and cheese. It was impossible even to taste all the things, but
+the Georgian cook must have been a "cordon bleu."
+
+On February 16th one of the long-delayed cars arrived, and we were in
+ecstasies, and took our places on the steamer for Persia; but the
+radiator had been broken on the way down, and Mrs. Wynne was delayed
+again. I started, as my car was arranged for, and had to go on board.
+Also, I found I could be of use to Mr. Scott of the Tehran Legation, who
+was going there. We travelled on the boat together, and had an excellent
+crossing to Enzeli, a lovely little port, and then we took my car and
+drove to Resht, where Mr. and Mrs. McLaren, the Consul and his wife,
+kindly put us up. Their garden is quiet and damp; the house is damp too,
+and very ugly. There are only two other English people (at the bank) to
+form the society of the place, and it must be a bit lonely for a young
+woman. I found the situation a little tragic.
+
+[Page Heading: KASVIN]
+
+We drove on next day to this place (Kasvin), and Mr. and Mrs. Goodwin
+were good enough to ask us to stay with them. The big fires in the house
+were very cheering after our cold drive in the snow. The moonlight was
+marvellous, and the mountain passes were beyond words picturesque. We
+passed a string of 150 camels pacing along in the moonlight and the
+snow. All of them wore bells which jingled softly. Around us were the
+weird white hills, with a smear of mist over them. The radiant moon, the
+snow, and the chiming camels I shall never forget.
+
+Captain Rhys Williams was also at the Goodwins; and as he was in very
+great anxiety to get to Hamadan, I offered to take him in my car, and
+let Mr. Scott do the last stage of the journey in the Legation car to
+Tehran. We were delayed one day at Kasvin, which was passed very
+pleasantly in the sheltered sunny compound of the house. My little white
+bedroom was part of the "women's quarters" of old days, and with its
+bright fire at night and the sun by day it was a very comfortable place
+in which to perch.
+
+_Hamadan. 24 February._--Captain Williams and I left Kasvin at 8 a.m. on
+February 19th.
+
+I had always had an idea that Persia was in the tropics. _Where_ I got
+this notion I can't say. As soon as we left sheltered Kasvin and got out
+on to the plains the cold was as sharp as anything I have known. Snow
+lay deep on every side, and the icy wind nearly cut one in two. We
+stopped at a little "tschinaya" (tea-house), and ate some sandwiches
+which we carried with us. I also had a flask of Sandeman's port, given
+me last Christmas by Sir Ivor Maxwell. I think a glass of this just
+prevented me from being frozen solid. We drove on to the top of the
+pass, and arrived there about 3 o'clock. We found some Russian officers
+having an excellent lunch, and we shared ours and had some of theirs. We
+saw a lot of game in the snow--great coveys of fat partridges, hares by
+the score, a jackal, two wolves, and many birds. The hares were very
+odd, for after twilight fell, and we lit our lamps, they seemed quite
+paralysed by the glare, and used to sit down in front of the car.
+
+We passed a regiment of Cossacks, extended in a long line, and coming
+over the snow on their strong horses. We began to get near war once
+more, and to see transport and guns. General Baratoff wants us up here
+to remove wounded men when the advance begins towards Bagdad.
+
+The cold was really as bad as they make after the sun had sunk, and an
+icy mist enveloped the hills. We got within sight of the clay-built,
+flat Persian town of Hamadan about 10 p.m., but the car couldn't make
+any way on the awful roads, so I left Captain Williams at the barracks,
+and came on to the Red Cross hospital with two Russian officers, one a
+little the worse for drink.
+
+[Page Heading: ARRIVAL AT HAMADAN]
+
+With the genius for muddling which the Russians possess in a remarkable
+degree no preparations had been made for me. Rather an unpleasant Jew
+doctor came to the gateway with two nurses, and the officers began to
+flirt with the girls, and to pay them compliments. Some young
+Englishmen, one of whom was the British Consul, then appeared on the
+scene, so we began to get forward a little (although it seemed to me
+that we stood about in the snow for a terrible long time and I got quite
+frozen!). As it was then past midnight I felt I had had enough, so I
+made for the American missionary's house, which was pointed out to me,
+and he and his wife hopped out of bed, and, clad in curious grey
+dressing-gowns, they came downstairs and got me a cup of hot tea, which
+I had wanted badly for many hours. There was no fireplace in my room,
+and the other fires of the house were all out, but the old couple were
+kindness and goodness itself, and in the end I rolled myself up in my
+faithful plaid and slept at their house.
+
+The next day--Sunday, the 20th--Mr. Cowan, the young Consul, and a Mr.
+Lightfoot, came round and bore me off to the Consulate. On Monday I
+began to settle in, but even now I find it difficult to take my
+bearings, as we have been in a heavy mountain fog ever since I got here.
+There is a little English colony, the bank manager, Mr. MacMurray, and
+his wife--a capable, energetic woman, and an excellent working
+partner--Mr. McLean, a Scottish clerk, a Mr. McDowal, also a Scot, and a
+few other good folk; whom in Scotland one would reckon the farmer class,
+but none the worse for that, and never vulgar however humbly born.
+
+On Monday, the 21st, I called on the Russian element--Mme. Kirsanoff,
+General Baratoff, etc. They were all cordial, but nothing will convince
+me that Russians take this war seriously. They do the thing as
+comfortably as possible. "My country" is a word one never hears from
+their lips, and they indulge in masterly retreats too often for my
+liking. The fire of the French, the dogged pluck of the British, seem
+quite unknown to them. Literally, no one seems much interested. There is
+a good deal of fuss about a "forward movement" on this front; but I
+fancy that at Kermanshah and at ---- there will be very little
+resistance, and the troops there are only Persian gendarmerie. No doubt
+the most will be made of the Russian "victory," but compared with the
+western front, this is simply not war. I often think of the guns firing
+day and night, and the Taubes overhead, and the burning towns of
+Flanders, and then I find myself living a peaceful life, with an
+occasional glimpse of a regiment passing by.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_To Mrs. Charles Percival._
+
+BRITISH VICE-CONSULATE,
+HAMADAN.
+_23 February, 1916._
+
+MY DEAREST TABBY,
+
+We are buried in snow, and every road is a dug-out, with parapets of
+snow on either side. All journeys have to be made by road, and generally
+over mountain passes, where you may or may not get through the snow. One
+sees "breakdowns" all along the routes, and everywhere we go we have to
+take food and blankets in case of a camp out. I have had to buy a
+motor-car, and I got a very good one in Tiflis, but they are so scarce
+one has to pay a ransom for them. I am hoping it won't be quite smashed
+up, and that I shall be able to sell it for something when I leave.
+
+[Page Heading: THE DIFFICULTY OF TRANSPORT]
+
+Transport is the difficulty everywhere in these vast countries, with
+their persistent want of railways; so that the most necessary way of
+helping the wounded is to remove them as painlessly and expeditiously as
+possible, and this can only be done by motor-cars. Only one of Mrs.
+Wynne's ambulances has yet arrived, and in the end I came on here
+without her and Mr. Bevan. I was wanted to give a member of the Legation
+at Tehran a lift; and, still more important, I had to bring a soldier of
+consequence here. So long as one can offer a motor-car one is
+everybody's friend.
+
+Yesterday I was in request to go up to a pass and fetch two doctors, who
+had broken down in the snow. The wind is often a hurricane, and I am
+told there will be no warm weather till May. I look at a light silk
+dressing-gown and gauze underclothing, and wonder why it is that no one
+seems able to tell one what a climate will be like. I have warm things
+too, I am glad to say, although our luggage is now of the lightest, and
+is only what we can take in a car. The great thing is to be quite
+independent. No one would dream of bringing on heavy luggage or anything
+of that sort, except, of course, Legation people, who have their own
+transport and servants.
+
+On journeys one is kindly treated by the few Scottish people (they all
+seem to be Scots) scattered here and there. Everywhere I go I find the
+usual Scottish couple trying to "have things nice," and longing for
+mails from home. One woman was newly married, and had only one wish in
+life, and that was for acid drops. Poor soul, she wasn't well, and I
+mean to make her the best imitation I can and send them to her. They
+make their houses wonderfully comfortable; _but_ the difficulty of
+getting things! Another woman had written home for her child's frock in
+August, and got it by post on February 15th. Cases of things coming by
+boat or train take far longer, or never arrive at all.
+
+I shall be working with the Russian hospital here till our next move.
+There are 25 beds and 120 patients. Of course we are only waiting to
+push on further. The political situation is most interesting, but I must
+not write about it, of course. It is rather wonderful to have seen the
+war from so many quarters.
+
+The long wait for the cars was quite maddening, but I believe it did me
+good. I was just about "through." Now I am in a bachelor's little house,
+full of terrier dogs and tobacco smoke; and when I am not at the
+hospital I darn socks and play bridge.
+
+Now that really is all my news, I think. Empire is not made for nothing,
+and one sees some plucky lives in these out-of-the-way parts. I did not
+take a fancy to my host at one house where we stayed, and something made
+me think his wife was bullied and not very happy. A husband would have
+to be quite all right to compensate for exile, mud, and solitude. Always
+my feeling is that we want far more people--especially educated people,
+of course--to run the world; yet we continue to shoot down our best and
+noblest, and when shall we ever see their like again?
+
+Always, my dear,
+Your loving
+S. MACNAUGHTAN.
+
+I hope to get over to Tehran on my "transport service," and there I may
+find a mail. Some people called ----, living near Glasgow, had nine
+sons, eight of whom have been killed in the war. The ninth is delicate,
+and is doing Red Cross work.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_26 February._--On Tuesday a Jew doctor took my motor-car by fraud, so
+there had to be an enquiry, and I don't feel happy about it yet. With
+Russians _anything_ may happen. I have begun to suffer from my chillsome
+time getting here, and also my mouth and chin are very bad; so I have
+had to lie doggo, and see an ancient Persian doctor, who prescribed and
+talked of the mission-field at the same time.
+
+[Page Heading: MISSIONARIES AND RELIGION]
+
+I am struck by one thing, which is so naïvely expressed out here that it
+is very humorous, and that is the firm and formidable front which the
+best sort of men show towards religion. To all of them it means
+missionaries and pious talk, and to hear them speak one would imagine it
+was something between a dangerous disease and a disgrace. The best they
+can say of any clergyman (whom they loathe) or missionary, is, "He never
+tried the Gospel on with me." A religious young man means a sneak, and
+one who swears freely is generally rather a good fellow. When one lives
+in the wilds I am afraid that one often finds that this view is the
+right one, although it isn't very orthodox; but the pi-jaw which passes
+for religion seems deliberately calculated to disgust the natural man,
+who shows his contempt for the thing wholesomely as becomes him. He
+means to smoke, he means to have a whisky-peg when he can get it, and a
+game of cards when that is possible. His smoke is harmless, he seldom
+drinks too much, and he plays fair at all games, but when he finds that
+these harmless amusements preclude him from a place in the Kingdom of
+Heaven he naturally--if he has the spirit of a mouse--says, "All right.
+Leave me out. I am not on in this show."
+
+_27 February._--On Sunday one always thinks of home. I am rather
+inclined to wonder what my family imagine I am actually doing on the
+Persian front. No doubt some of my dear contemporaries saddle me with
+noble deeds, but I still seem unable to strike the "noble" tack. Even my
+work in hospital has been stopped by a telegram from the Red Cross,
+saying, "Don't let Miss Macnaughtan work yet." A typhus scare, I fancy.
+Such rot. But I am used now to hearing all the British out here murmur,
+"What _can_ be the good of this long delay?"
+
+[Page Heading: HOW NEWS TRAVELS IN PERSIA]
+
+I am still staying at the British Consulate. The Consul, Mr. Cowan, is a
+good fellow, and Mr. Lightfoot, his chum, is a real backwoodsman, full
+of histories of adventures, fights, "natives," and wars in many lands.
+He seems to me one of those headstrong, straight, fine fellows whom one
+only meets in the wilds. England doesn't agree with them; they haven't
+always a suit of evening clothes; but in a tight place one knows how
+cool he would be, and for yarns there is no one better. He tells one a
+lot about this country, and he knows the Arabs like brothers. Their
+system of communicating with each other is as puzzling to him as it is
+to everyone else. News travels faster among them than any messenger or
+post can take it. At Bagdad they heard from these strange people of the
+fall of Basra, which is 230 miles away, within 25 hours of its having
+been taken. Mr. Lightfoot says that even if he travels by car Arab news
+is always ahead of him, and where he arrives with news it is known
+already. Telegraphy is unknown in the places he speaks of, except in
+Bagdad, of course, and Persia owns exactly one line of railway, eight
+miles long, which leads to a tomb!
+
+More important than any man here are the dogs--Smudge, Jimmy, and the
+puppy. Most of the conversation is addressed to them. All of it is about
+them.
+
+_28 February. A day on the Persian front._--I wake early because it is
+always so cold at 4 a.m., and I generally boil up water for my hot-water
+bottle and go to sleep again. Then at 8 comes the usual Resident Sahib's
+servant, whom I have known in many countries and in many climes. He is
+always exactly alike, and the Empire depends upon him! He is thin, he is
+mysterious. He is faithful, and allows no one to rob his master but
+himself. He believes in the British. He worships British rule, and he
+speaks no language but his own, though he probably knows English
+perfectly, and listens to it at every meal without even the cock of an
+ear! He is never hurried, never surprised. What he thinks his private
+idol may know--no one else does. His master's boots--especially the
+brown sort--are part of his religion. He understands an Englishman, and
+is unmoved by his behaviour, whatever it may be. I have met him in
+India, in Kashmir, at Embassies, in Consulates, on steamers, and I have
+never known his conduct alter by a hair's breadth. He is piped in red,
+and let that explain him, as it explains much else that is British. Just
+a thin red line down the length of a trouser or round a coat, and the
+man thus adorned is part of the Empire.
+
+The man piped in red lights my fire every morning in Persia, and
+arranges my tub, and we breakfast very late because there is nothing to
+do on three days of the week--_i.e._, Friday, the Persian Sabbath,
+Saturday, the Jewish Sabbath, and Sunday, the Armenian Sunday. On these
+three days neither bazaars nor offices are open. Business is at a
+standstill. The Consulate smokes pipes, develops photographs, and reads
+old novels. On the four busy days we breakfast at 10 o'clock, and during
+the meal we learn what the dogs have done during the night--whether
+Jimmy has barked, or Smudge has lain on someone's bed, or the puppy
+"coolly put his head on my pillow."
+
+About 11 o'clock I, who am acting as wardrobe-mender to some very untidy
+clothes and socks, get to work, and the young men go to the town and
+appear at lunch-time. We hear what the local news is, and what Mr.
+MacMurray has said and Mr. McLean thought, and sometimes one of the
+people from the Russian hospital comes in. About 3 we put on goloshes
+and take exercise single-file on the pathways cut in the snow. At 5 the
+samovar appears and tea and cake, and we talk to the dogs and to each
+other. We dress for dinner, because that is our creed; and we burn a
+good deal of wood, and go to bed early.
+
+Travel really means movement. Otherwise, it is far better to stay at
+home. I am beginning to sympathise with the Americans who insist upon
+doing two cities a day. We got some papers to-day dated October 26th,
+and also a few letters of the same date.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Page Heading: UNFINISHED ARTICLE ON PERSIA]
+
+_Unfinished Article on Persia found among Miss Macnaughtan's papers._
+
+Persia is a difficult country to write about, for unless one colours the
+picture too highly to be recognisable, it is apt to be uninteresting
+even under the haze of the summer sun, while in wintertime the country
+disappears under a blanket of white snow. Of course, most of us thought
+that Persia was somewhere in the tropics, and it gives us a little shock
+when we find ourselves living in a temperature of 8 degrees below zero.
+The rays of the sun are popularly supposed to minimise the effect of
+this cold, and a fortnight's fog on the Persian highlands has still left
+one a believer in this phenomenon, for when the sun does shine, it does
+it handsomely, and, according to the inhabitants, it is only when
+strangers are here that it turns sulky. Be that as it may, the most
+loyal lover of Persia will have to admit that Persian mud is the deepest
+and blackest in the world, and that snow and mud in equal proportions to
+a depth of 8 inches make anything but agreeable travelling. Snow is
+indiscriminately shovelled down off the roofs of houses on to the heads
+of passers-by, and great holes in the road are accepted as the
+inevitable accompaniment to winter traffic.
+
+In the bazaars--narrow, and filled with small booths, where Manchester
+cotton is stacked upon shelves--the merchants sit huddled up on their
+counters, each with a cotton lahaf (quilt) over him, under which is a
+small brazier of ougol (charcoal). In this way he manages to remain in a
+thawed condition, while a pipe consoles him for his little trade and the
+horrible weather. Before him, in the narrow alleys of the bazaar,
+Persians walk with their umbrellas unfurled, and Russians have put the
+convenient bashluk (a sort of woollen hood) over their heads and ears.
+The Arab, in his long camel-skin coat, looks impervious to the weather,
+and women with veiled faces and long black cloaks pick their way through
+the mire. Throngs of donkeys, melancholy and overladen, their small feet
+sinking in the slush, may be with the foot-passengers. Some pariah dogs
+make a dirty patch in the snow, and a troop of Cossacks, their long
+cloaks spotted with huge snow-flakes, trot heavily through the narrow
+lanes.
+
+But it is not only, nor principally, of climate that one speaks in
+Persia at the present time.
+
+Persia has been stirring, if not with great events, at least with
+important ones, and at the risk of telling stale news, one must take a
+glance at the recent history of the country and its people. It is
+proverbial to say that Persia has been misgoverned for years. It is a
+country and the Persians are people who seem fated by circumstances and
+by temperament to endure ill-government. A ruler is either a despot or a
+knave, and frequently both. Any system of policy is liable to change at
+any moment. Property is held in the uneasy tenure of those who have
+stolen it, and a long string of names of rulers and politicians reveals
+the fact that most of them have made what they could for themselves by
+any means, and that perhaps, on the whole, violence has been less
+detrimental to the country than weakness.
+
+[Page Heading: THE YOUNG PERSIAN MOVEMENT]
+
+The worst of it is that no one seems particularly to want the
+Deliverer--the great and single-minded leader who might free and uplift
+the country. Persia does not crave the ideal ruler; he might make it
+very unpleasant for those who are content and rich in their own way. It
+is this thing, amongst many others, which helps to make the situation in
+Persia not only difficult but almost impossible to follow or describe,
+and it is, above all, the temperament of the Persians themselves which
+is the baffling thing in the way of Persian reform. Yet reform has been
+spoken of loudly, and again and again in the last few years, and the
+reformation is generally known as the Nationalist or Young Persian
+Movement. To follow this Movement through its various ramifications
+would require a clue as plain and as clear as a golden thread, and the
+best we can do in our present obscurity is to give a few of the leading
+features.
+
+The important and critical situation evident in Persia to-day owes its
+beginning to the disturbances in 1909, when the Constitutional Party
+came into power, forcibly, and with guns ready to train on Tehran, and
+when, almost without an effort, they obtained their rights, and lost
+them again with even less effort....
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_29 February._--The last day of a long month. The snow falls without
+ceasing, blotting out everything that there may be to be seen. To-day,
+for the first time, I realised that there are hills near. Mr. Lightfoot
+and I walked to the old stone lion which marks the gateway of
+Ekmadan--_i.e._, ancient Hamadan. I think the snow was rather thicker
+than usual to-day. Mr. Lightfoot and I went to Hamadan, plodding our way
+through little tramped-down paths, with snow three feet deep on either
+side. By way of being cheerful we went to see two tombs. One was an old,
+old place, where slept "the first great physician" who ever lived. In it
+a dervish kept watch in the bitter cold, and some slabs of dung kept a
+smouldering fire not burning but smoking. These dervishes have been
+carrying messages for Germans. Mysterious, like all religious men, they
+travel through the country and distribute their whispers and messages.
+The other tomb is called Queen Esther's, though why they should bury her
+at Ekmadan when she lived down at Shushan I don't know.
+
+We went to see Miss Montgomerie the other day. She is an American
+missionary, who has lived at Hamadan for thirty-three years. She has
+schools, etc., and she lives in the Armenian quarter, and devotes her
+life to her neighbours. Her language is entirely Biblical, and it sounds
+almost racy as she says it.
+
+There is nothing to record. Yesterday I cleaned out my room for
+something to do, and in the evening a smoky lamp laid it an inch thick
+in blacks. The pass here is quite blocked, and no one can come or go.
+The snow falls steadily in fine small flakes. My car has disappeared,
+with the chauffeur, at Kasvin. I hear of it being sent to Enzeli; but
+the whole thing is a mystery, and is making me very anxious. There are
+no answers to any of my telegrams, and I am completely in the dark.
+
+_3 March._--I think that to be on a frozen hill-top, with fever, some
+boils, three dogs, and a blizzard, is about as near wearing down one's
+spirits as anything I know.
+
+_5 March, Sunday._--In bed all day, with the ancient Persian in
+attendance.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Page Heading: THE RETURN OF THE PILGRIM]
+
+_The Return of the Pilgrim._
+
+This is not a story for Sunday afternoon. It is true for one thing, and
+Sunday afternoon stories are not, as a rule, true. They nearly all tell
+of the return of the Prodigals, but they leave out the return of the
+Pilgrims, and that is why this parable is not for Sunday afternoon. I
+write it because I never knew a true thing yet that was not of use to
+someone.
+
+Most of us leave home when we are grown up. The people who never grow up
+stop at home. The journey and the outward-bound vision are the signs of
+an active mind stirring wholesomely or unwholesomely as the case may be.
+The Prodigal is generally accounted one of those whose sane mind demands
+an outlet; but he lands in trouble, and gets hungry, and comes back
+penitent, as we have heard a thousand million times. The Far Country is
+always barren, the husks of swine are the only food to be had, and
+bankruptcy is inevitable.
+
+The story has been accepted by many generations of men as a picture of
+the world, with its temptations, its sins, its moral bankruptcy, and its
+illusionary and unsatisfying pleasures. Preachers have always been fond
+of allusions to the husks and swine, and the desperate hunger which
+there is nothing to satisfy in the Far Country. The story is true, God
+wot; it gives many a man a wholesome fright, and keeps him at home, and
+its note of forgiveness for a wasted life has proved the salvation of
+many Prodigals.
+
+But there is another journey, far more often undertaken by the young and
+by all those who needs must seek--the brave, the energetic, the good. It
+is towards a country distant yet ever near, and it lies much removed
+from the Far Country where swine feed. Its minarets stand up against a
+clear and cloudless sky, its radiancy shines from afar off. It is set on
+a hill, and the road thither is very steep and very long, but the
+Pilgrims start out bravely. They know the way! They carry torches! They
+have the Light within and without, and "watchwords" for every night, and
+songs for the morning. Some walk painfully, with bleeding feet, on the
+path that leads to the beautiful country, and some run joyously with
+eager feet. Whatever anyone likes to say, it is a much more crowded path
+than the old trail towards the pigsty. At the first step of the journey
+stand Faith and Hope and Charity, and beyond are more wondrous things by
+far--Glory, Praise, Vision, Sacrifice, Heroism, sublime Trust, the
+Need-to-Give, and the Love that runs to help. And some of the
+Pilgrims--most of them--get there.
+
+[Page Heading: DISAPPOINTMENT]
+
+But there is a little stream of Pilgrims sometimes to be met with going
+the other way. They are returning, like the Prodigal, but there is no
+one to welcome them. Some are very tragic figures, and for them the sun
+is for ever obscured. But there are others--quite plain, sober men and
+women, some humorists, and some sages. They have honestly sought the
+Country, and they, too, have unfurled banners and marched on; but they
+have met with many things on the road which do not match the watchwords,
+and they have heard many wonderful things which, truthfully considered,
+do not always appear to them to be facts. They have called Poverty
+beautiful, and they have found it very ugly; and they have called Money
+naught, and they have found it to be Power. They have found Sacrifice
+accepted, and then claimed by the selfish and mean, and even Love has
+not been all that was expected. The Pilgrims return. Their poor tummies,
+too, are empty, but no calf is killed for them, there is no feasting
+and no joy. They stay at home, but neither Elder Son nor Prodigal has
+any use for them. In the end they turn out the light and go to sleep,
+regretting--if they have any humour--their many virtues, which for so
+long prevented them enjoying the pleasant things of life.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_March._--I lie in bed all day up here amongst these horrible snows. The
+engineer comes in sometimes and makes me a cup of Benger's Food. For the
+rest, I lean up on my elbow when I can, and cook some little
+thing--Bovril or hot milk--on my Etna stove. Then I am too tired to eat
+it, and the sickness begins all over again. Oh, if I could leave this
+place! If only someone would send back my car, which has been taken
+away, or if I could hear where Mrs. Wynne and Mr. Bevan are! But no, the
+door of this odious place is locked, and the key is thrown away.
+
+I have lost count of time. I just wait from day to day, hoping someone
+will come and take me away, though I am now getting so weak I don't
+suppose I can travel.
+
+One wonders whether there can be a Providence in all this
+disappointment. I think not. I just made a great mistake coming out
+here, and I have suffered for it. Ye gods, what a winter it has
+been--disillusioning, dull, hideously and achingly disappointing!
+
+[Page Heading: MEMORIES OF HOME]
+
+It is too odd to think that until the war came I was the happiest woman
+in the world. It is too funny to think of my house in London, which
+people say is the only "salon"--a small "salon," indeed! But I can
+hardly believe now in my crowds of friends, my devoted servants, my
+pleasant work, the daily budget of letters and invitations, and the
+press notices in their pink slips. Then the big lectures and the
+applause--the shouts when I come in. The joy, almost the intoxication of
+life, has been mine.
+
+Of course, I ought to have turned back at Petrograd! But I thought all
+my work was before me, and in Russia one can't go about alone without
+knowing the way and the language of the people. Permits are difficult,
+nothing is possible unless one is attached to a body. And now I have
+reached the end--_Persia! And there is no earthly use for us, and there
+are no roads._
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+THE LAST JOURNEY
+
+
+My car turned up at Hamadan on March 9th, and on the 13th I said
+good-bye to my friends at the Consulate, and left the place with a
+Tartar prince, who cleared his throat from the bottom of his soul, and
+spat luxuriously all the time. The mud was beyond anything that one
+could imagine. There was a sea of it everywhere, and men waded knee-deep
+in slush. My poor car floundered bravely and bumped heavily, till at
+last it could move no more. Two wheels were sunk far past the hubs, and
+the step of the car was under mud.
+
+The Tartar prince hailed a horse from some men and flung himself across
+it, and then rode off through the thick sea of mud to find help to move
+the car. His methods were simple. He came up behind men, and clouted
+them over the head, or beat them with a stick, and drove them in front
+of him. Sometimes he took out a revolver and fired over the men's heads,
+making them jump; but nothing makes them really work. We pushed on for a
+mile or two, and then stuck again. This time there were no men near, and
+the prince walked on to collect some soldiers at the next station. It
+was a wicked, blowy day, and I crept into a wrecked "camion" and
+sheltered there, and ate some lunch and slept a little. I wasn't feeling
+a bit well.
+
+That night we only made twenty miles, and then we put up at a little
+rest-house, where the woman had ten children. They all had colds, and
+coughed all the time. She promised supper at 8 o'clock, but kept us
+waiting till 10 p.m., and then a terrible repast of batter appeared in a
+big tin dish, and everyone except me ate it, and everyone drank my wine.
+Then six children and their parents lay in one tiny room, and I and a
+nurse occupied the hot supper-room, and thus we lay until the cold
+morning came, and I felt very ill.
+
+So the day began, and it did not improve. I was sick all the time until
+I could neither think nor see. The poor prince could do nothing, of
+course.
+
+[Page Heading: ILLNESS AT KASVIN]
+
+At last we came to a rest-house, and I felt I could go no further. I was
+quite unconscious for a time. Then they told me it was only two hours to
+Kasvin, and somehow they got me on board the motor-car, and the horrible
+journey began again. Every time the car bumped I was sick. Of course we
+punctured a tyre, which delayed us, and when we got into Kasvin it was 9
+o'clock. The Tartar lifted me out of the car, and I had been told that I
+might put up at a room belonging to Dr. Smitkin, but where it was I had
+no idea, and I knew there would be no one there. So I plucked up courage
+to go to the only English people in the place--the Goodwins, with whom I
+had stayed on my way up--and ask for a bed. This I did, and they let me
+spread my camp-bed in his little sitting-room. I was ill indeed, and
+aching in every bone.
+
+The next day I had to go to Smitkin's room. It was an absolutely bare
+apartment, but someone spread my bed for me, and there were some Red
+Cross nurses who all offered to do things. The one thing I wanted was
+food, and this they could only get at the soldiers' mess two miles away.
+So all I had was one tin of sweet Swiss milk. The day after this I
+decided I must quit, whatever happened, and get to Tehran, where there
+are hotels. After one night there I was taken to a hospital. I was alone
+in Persia, in a Russian hospital, where few people even spoke French!
+
+On March 19th an English doctor rescued me. He heard I was ill, and came
+to see me, and took me off to be with his wife at his own home at the
+Legation. I shall never forget it as long as I live--the blessed change
+from dirty glasses and tin basins and a rocky bed! What does illness
+matter with a pretty room, and kindness showered on one, and everything
+clean and fragrant? I have a little sitting-room, where my meals are
+served, and I have a fire, a bath, and a garden to sit in.
+
+God bless these good people!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Page Heading: A LETTER FROM TEHRAN]
+
+_To Lady Clémentine Waring._
+
+BRITISH LEGATION, TEHRAN,
+_22 March._
+
+DARLING CLEMMIE,
+
+I am coming home, having fallen sick. Do you know, I was thinking about
+you so much the other night, for you told me that if ever I was really
+"down and out" you would know. So I wondered if, about a week ago, you
+saw a poor small person (who has shrunk to about half her size!) in an
+empty room, feeling worth nothing at all, and getting nothing to eat and
+no attention! Persia isn't the country to be ill in. I was taken to the
+Russian hospital--which is an experience I don't want to repeat!--but
+now I am in the hands of the Legation doctor, and he is going to nurse
+me till I am well enough to go home.
+
+There are no railways in this country, except one of eight miles to a
+tomb! Hence we all have to flounder about on awful roads in motor-cars,
+which break down and have to be dug out, and always collapse at the
+wrong moment, so we have to stay out all night.
+
+You thought Persia was in the tropics? So did I! I have been in deep
+snow all the time till I came here.
+
+I think the campaign here is nearly over. It might have been a lot
+bigger, for the Germans were bribing like mad, but you can't make a
+Persian wake up.
+
+Ever, dear Clemmie,
+Your loving
+S. MACNAUGHTAN.
+
+So nice to know you think of me, as I know you do.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_26 March._--I am getting stronger, and the days are bright. As a great
+treat I have been allowed to go to church this morning, the first I have
+been to since Petrograd.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_To Miss Julia Keays-Young._
+
+BRITISH LEGATION, TEHRAN.
+_1 April._
+
+DARLING JENNY,
+
+In case you want to make plans about leave, etc., will you come and stop
+with me when first I get home, say about the 5th or 6th May, I can't say
+to a day? It will be nice to see you all and have a holiday, and then I
+hope to come out to Russia again. Did I tell you I have been ill, but am
+now being nursed by a delightful English doctor and his wife, and
+getting the most ideal attention, and medicines changed at every change
+in the health of the patient.
+
+I've missed everything here. I was to be presented to the Shah, etc.,
+etc., and to have gone to the reception on his birthday. All the time
+I've lain in bed or in the garden, but as I haven't felt up to anything
+else I haven't fashed, and the Shah must do wanting me for the present.
+
+The flowers here are just like England, primroses and violets and Lent
+lilies, but I'm sure the trees are further out at home.
+
+Your most loving
+AUNT SALLY.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_To Mrs. Keays-Young._
+
+BRITISH LEGATION, TEHRAN,
+_8 April._
+
+DEAREST BABY,
+
+I don't think I'll get home till quite the end of April, as I am not
+supposed to be strong enough to travel yet. My journey begins with a
+motor drive of 300 miles over fearful roads and a chain of mountains
+always under snow. Then I have to cross the lumpy Caspian Sea, and I
+shall rest at Baku two nights before beginning the four days journey to
+Petrograd. After that the fun really begins, as one always loses all
+one's luggage in Finland, and one finishes up with the North Sea. What
+do you think of that, my cat?
+
+[Page Heading: CONVALESCENCE]
+
+Dr. Neligan is still looking after me quite splendidly, and I never
+drank so much medicine in my life. No fees or money can repay the dear
+man.
+
+Tehran is _the_ most primitive place! You can't, for instance, get one
+scrap of flannel, and if a bit of bacon comes into the town there is a
+stampede for it. People get their wine from England in two-bottle
+parcels.
+
+Yours as ever,
+S.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Tehran. April._--The days pass peacefully and even quickly, which is
+odd, for they are singularly idle. I get up about 11 a.m., and am pretty
+tired when dressing is finished. Then I sit in the garden and have my
+lunch there, and after lunch I lie down for an hour. Presently tea
+comes; I watch the Neligans start for their ride, and already I wonder
+if I was ever strong and rode!
+
+It is such an odd jump I have taken. At home I drifted on, never feeling
+older, hardly counting birthdays--always brisk, and getting through a
+heap of work--beginning my day early and ending it late. And now there
+is a great gulf dividing me from youth and old times, and it is filled
+with dead people whom I can't forget.
+
+In the matter of dying one doesn't interfere with Providence, but it
+seems to me that _now_ would be rather an appropriate time to depart. I
+wish I could give my life for some boy who would like to live very much,
+and to whom all things are joyous. But alas! one can't swop lives like
+this--at least, I don't see the chance of doing so.
+
+I should like to have "left the party"--quitted the feast of life--when
+all was gay and amusing. I should have been sorry to come away, but it
+would have been far better than being left till all the lights are out.
+I could have said truly to the Giver of the feast, "Thanks for an
+excellent time." But now so many of the guests have left, and the fires
+are going out, and I am tired.
+
+END OF THE DIARY.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The rest of the story is soon told.
+
+Miss Macnaughtan left Tehran about the middle of April. The Persian hot
+weather was approaching, and it would have been impossible for her to
+travel any later in the season. The long journey seemed a sufficiently
+hazardous undertaking for a person in her weak state of health, but in
+Dr. Neligan's opinion she would have run an even greater risk by
+remaining in Persia during the hot weather.
+
+[Page Heading: STARTING FOR HOME]
+
+Dr. Neligan's goodness and kindness to Miss Macnaughtan will always be
+remembered by her family, and he seems to have taken an enormous amount
+of trouble to make arrangements for her journey home. He found an escort
+for her in the shape of an English missionary who was going to
+Petrograd, and gave her a pass which enabled her to travel as
+expeditiously as possible. The authorities were not allowed to delay or
+hinder her. She was much too ill to stop for anything, and drove night
+and day--even through a cholera village--to the shores of the Caspian
+Sea.
+
+We know very few details concerning the journey home, and I think my
+aunt herself did not remember much about it. One can hardly bear to
+think of the suffering it caused her. A few incidents stood out in her
+memory from the indeterminate recollection of pain and discomfort in
+which most of the expedition was mercifully veiled, and we learnt them
+after she returned.
+
+There was the occasion when she reached the port on the Caspian Sea one
+hour after the English boat had sailed. She called it the "English"
+boat, but whether it could have belonged to an English company, or was
+merely the usual boat run in connection with the train service to
+England, I do not know. A "Russian" vessel was due to leave in a couple
+of hours' time, but for some reason Miss Macnaughtan was obliged to walk
+three-quarters of a mile to get permission to go by it. We can never
+forget her piteous description of how she staggered and crawled to the
+office and back, so ill that only her iron strength of will could force
+her tired body to accomplish the distance. She obtained the necessary
+sanction, and started forth once more upon her way.
+
+She stayed for a week at the British Embassy in Petrograd, where her
+escort was obliged to leave her, so the rest of the journey was
+undertaken alone.
+
+We know nothing of how she got to Helsingfors, but I believe it was at
+that place that she had to walk some considerable distance over a frozen
+lake to reach the ship. She was hobbling along, leaning heavily on two
+sticks, and just as she stumbled and almost fell, a young Englishman
+came up and offered her his arm.
+
+In an old diary, written years before in the Argentine, during a time
+when Miss Macnaughtan was faced with what seemed overwhelming
+difficulties, and when she had in her charge a very sick man, a kind
+stranger came to the rescue. Her diary entry for that day is one of
+heartfelt gratitude, and ends with the words: "God always sends
+someone."
+
+Certainly at Helsingfors some Protecting Power sent help in a big
+extremity, and this young fellow--Mr. Seymour--devoted himself to her
+for the rest of the journey in a marvellously unselfish manner. He could
+not have been kinder to her if she had been his mother, and he actually
+altered all his plans on arriving in England, and brought her to the
+very door of her house in Norfolk Street. Without his help I sometimes
+wonder whether my aunt would have succeeded in reaching home, and her
+own gratitude to him knew no bounds. She used to say that in her
+experience if people were in a difficulty and wanted help they ought to
+go to a young man for it. She said that young men were the kindest
+members of the human race.
+
+[Page Heading: ARRIVAL IN ENGLAND]
+
+It was on the 8th of May that Miss Macnaughtan reached home, and her
+travels were over for good and all. One is only thankful that the last
+weeks of her life were not spent in a foreign land but among her own
+people, surrounded by all the care and comfort that love could supply.
+Two of her sisters were with her always, and her house was thronged with
+visitors, who had to wait their turn of a few minutes by her bedside,
+which, alas! were all that her strength allowed.
+
+She was nursed night and day by her devoted maid, Mary King, as she did
+not wish to have a professional nurse; but no skill or care could save
+her. The seeds of her illness had probably been sown some years before,
+during a shooting trip in Kashmir, and the hard work and strain of the
+first year of the war had weakened her powers of resistance. But it was
+Russia that killed her.
+
+Before she went there many of her friends urged her to give up the
+expedition. Her maid had a premonition that the enterprise would end in
+disaster, and had begged her mistress to stay at home.
+
+"I feel sure you will never return alive ma'am," she had urged, and Miss
+Macnaughtan's first words to her old servant on her return were: "You
+were right, Mary. Russia has killed me."
+
+Miss Macnaughtan rallied a little in June, and was occasionally carried
+down to her library for a few hours in the afternoon, but even that
+amount of exertion was too much for her. For the last weeks of her life
+she never left her room.
+
+Surely there never was a sweeter or more adorable invalid! I can see her
+now, propped up on pillows in a room filled with masses of most
+exquisite flowers. She always had things dainty and fragrant about her,
+and one had a vision of pale blue ribbons, and soft laces, and lovely
+flowers, and then one forgot everything else as one looked at the dear
+face framed in such soft grey hair. She looked so fragile that one
+fancied she might be wafted away by a summer breeze, and I have never
+seen anyone so pale. There was not a tinge of colour in face or hands,
+and one kissed her gently for fear that even a caress might be too much
+for her waning strength.
+
+Her patience never failed. She never grumbled or made complaint, and
+even in the smallest things her interest and sympathy were as fresh as
+ever. A new dress worn by one of her sisters was a pleasure, and she
+would plan it, and suggest and admire.
+
+It was a supreme joy to Miss Macnaughtan to hear, some time in June,
+that she had received the honour of being chosen to be a Lady of Grace
+of the Order of St. John of Jerusalem. Any recognition of her good work
+was an unfailing source of gratification to her sensitive nature,
+sensitive alike to praise or blame.
+
+She was so wonderfully strong in her mind and will that it seemed
+impossible in those long June days to believe that she had such a little
+time to live. She managed all her own business affairs, personally
+dictated or wrote answers to her correspondence, and was full of schemes
+for the redecoration of her house and of plans for the future.
+
+I have only been able to procure three of my aunt's letters written
+after her return to England. They were addressed to her eldest sister,
+Mrs. ffolliott. I insert them here:
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Page Heading: MISS MACNAUGHTAN'S LAST LETTERS]
+
+1, NORFOLK STREET,
+PARK LANE, W.
+_Tuesday._
+
+MY DEAREST OLD POOT,
+
+How good of you to write. I was awfully pleased to see a letter from
+you. I have been a fearful crock since I got home, and I have to lie in
+bed for six weeks and live on milk diet for eight weeks. The illness is
+of a tropical nature, and one of the symptoms is that one can't eat, so
+one gets fearfully thin. I am something over six stone now, but I was
+very much less.
+
+We were right up on the Persian front, and I went on to Tehran. One saw
+some most interesting phases of the war, and met all the distinguished
+Generals and such-like people.
+
+The notice you sent me of my little book is charming.
+
+Your loving
+S. B .M.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+1, NORFOLK STREET,
+PARK LANE, W.,
+_9 June._
+
+DARLING POOT,
+
+I must thank you myself for the lovely flowers and your kind letters. I
+am sure that people's good wishes and prayers do one good. I so nearly
+died!
+
+Your loving
+S. M.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_17th June_
+
+Still getting on pretty well, but it is slow work. Baby and Julia both
+in town, so they are constantly here. I am to get up for a little bit
+to-morrow.
+
+Kindest love. It _was_ naughty of you to send more flowers.
+
+As ever fondly,
+SARAH.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As the hot weather advanced it was hoped to move Miss Macnaughtan to the
+country. Her friends showered invitations on "dear Sally" to come and
+convalesce with them, but the plans fell through. It became increasingly
+clear that the traveller was about to embark on that last journey from
+which there is no return, and, indeed, towards the end her sufferings
+were so great that those who loved her best could only pray that she
+might not have long to wait. She passed away in the afternoon of Monday,
+July 24th, 1916.
+
+A few days later the body of Sarah Broom Macnaughtan was laid to rest in
+the plot of ground reserved for her kinsfolk in the churchyard at Chart
+Sutton, in Kent. It is very quiet there up on the hill, the great Weald
+stretches away to the south, and fruit-trees surround the Hallowed Acre.
+But even as they laid earth to earth and dust to dust in this peaceful
+spot the booming of the guns in Flanders broke the quiet of the sunny
+afternoon, and reminded the little funeral party that they were indeed
+burying one whose life had been sacrificed in the Great War.
+
+[Page Heading: THE GRAVE IN CHART SUTTON]
+
+Surely those who pass through the old churchyard will pause by the
+grave, with its beautiful grey cross, and the children growing up in the
+parish will come there sometimes, and will read and remember the simple
+inscription on it:
+
+ "In the Great War, by Word and Deed, at Home and Abroad,
+ She served her Country even unto Death."
+
+And if any ghosts hover round the little place, they will be the ghosts
+of a purity, a kindness, and of a love for humanity which are not often
+met with in this workaday world.
+
+
+
+
+CONCLUSION
+
+
+Perhaps a review of her war work by an onlooker, and a slight sketch of
+Miss Macnaughtan's character, may form an appropriate conclusion to this
+book.
+
+I stayed with my aunt for one night, on August 7th, 1914. One may be
+pardoned for saying that during the previous three days one had scarcely
+begun to realise the war, but I was recalled by telegram from
+Northamptonshire to the headquarters of my Voluntary Aid Detachment in
+Kent, and spent a night in town en route, to get uniform, etc. Certainly
+at my aunt's house my eyes were opened to a little of what lay before
+us. She was on fire with patriotism and a burning wish to help her
+country, and I immediately caught some of her enthusiasm.
+
+Every hour we rushed out to buy papers, every minute seemed consecrated
+to preparation for what we could do. There were uniforms to buy, notes
+of Red Cross lectures to "rub up," and, in my aunt's case, she was busy
+offering her services in every direction in which they could be of use.
+
+[Page Heading: VOLUNTARY RATIONING]
+
+Miss Macnaughtan must surely have been one of the first people to begin
+voluntary rationing. We had the simplest possible meals during my visit,
+and although she was proud of her housekeeping, and usually gave one
+rather perfect food, on this occasion she said how impossible it was for
+her to indulge in anything but necessaries, when our soldiers would so
+soon have to endure hardships of every kind. She said that we ought to
+be particularly careful to eat very little meat, because there would
+certainly be a shortage of it later on.
+
+I recollect that there was some hitch about my departure from Norfolk
+Street on August 8th. It did not seem clear whether my Voluntary Aid
+Detachment was going to provide billets for all recalled members, and I
+remember my aunt's absolute scorn of difficulties at such a time.
+
+"Of course, go straight to Kent and obey orders," she cried. "If you
+can't get a bed, come back here; but at least go and see what you can
+do."
+
+That was typical of Miss Macnaughtan. Difficulties did not exist for
+her. When quite a young girl she made up her mind that no lack of money,
+time, or strength should ever prevent her doing anything she wanted to
+do. It certainly never prevented her doing anything she felt she _ought_
+to do.
+
+The war provided her with a supreme opportunity for service, and she did
+not fail to take advantage of it. Of her work in Belgium, especially at
+the soup-kitchen, I believe it is impossible to say too much. According
+to _The Times_, "The lady with the soup was everything to thousands of
+stricken men, who would otherwise have gone on their way fasting."
+
+Among individual cases, too, there were many men who benefited by some
+special care bestowed on them by her. There was one wounded Belgian to
+whom my aunt gave my address before she left for Russia that he might
+have someone with whom he might correspond. I used to hear from him
+regularly, and every letter breathed gratitude to "la dame écossaise."
+He said she had saved his life.
+
+Miss Macnaughtan's lectures to munition-workers were, perhaps, the best
+work that she did during the war. She was a charming speaker, and I
+never heard one who got more quickly into touch with an audience. As I
+saw it expressed in one of the papers "Stiffness and depression vanished
+from any company when she took the platform." Her enunciation was
+extraordinarily distinct, and she had an arresting delivery which
+compelled attention from the first word to the last.
+
+She never minced the truth about the war, but showed people at home how
+far removed it was from being a "merry picnic."
+
+"They say recruiting will stop if people know what is going on at the
+Front," she used to tell them. "I am a woman, but I know what I would do
+if I were a man when I heard of these things. _I would do my durndest._"
+
+All through her life the idea of personal service appealed to Miss
+Macnaughtan. She never sent a message of sympathy or a gift of help
+unless it was quite impossible to go herself to the sufferer.
+
+She was only a girl when she heard of what proved to be the fatal
+accident to her eldest brother in the Argentine. She went to him by the
+next ship, alone, save for the escort of his old yacht's skipper, and a
+journey to the Argentine in those days was a big undertaking for a
+delicate young girl. On another occasion she was in Switzerland when
+she heard of the death, in Northamptonshire, of a little niece. She left
+for England the same day, to go and offer her sympathy, and try to
+comfort the child's mother.
+
+"When I hear of trouble I always go at once," she used to say.
+
+I have known her drive in her brougham to the most horrible slum in the
+East End to see what she could do for a woman who had begged from her in
+the street--yes, and go there again and again until she had done all
+that was possible to help the sad case.
+
+[Page Heading: ZEAL TO HELP OTHERS]
+
+It was this burning zeal to help which sent her to Belgium and carried
+her through the long dark winter there, and it was, perhaps, the same
+feeling which obscured her judgment when her expedition to Russia was
+contemplated. She was a delicate woman, and there did not seem to be
+much scope for her services in Russia. She was not a qualified nurse,
+and the distance from home, and the handicap of her ignorance of the
+Russian language, would probably have prevented her organising anything
+like comforts for the soldiers there as she had done in Belgium. To
+those of us who loved her the very uselessness of her efforts in Russia
+adds to the poignancy of the tragedy of the death which resulted from
+them.
+
+The old question arises: "To what purpose is this waste?" And the old
+answer comes still to teach us the underlying meaning and beauty of what
+seems to be unnecessary sacrifice: "She hath done what she could."
+
+Indeed, that epitaph might fitly describe Miss Macnaughtan's war work.
+She grudged nothing, she gave her strength, her money, her very life.
+The precious ointment was poured out in the service of her King and
+Country and for the Master she served so faithfully.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I have been looking through some notices which appeared in the press
+after Miss Macnaughtan's death. Some of them allude to her wit, her
+energy and vivacity, the humour which was "without a touch of cynicism";
+others, to her inexhaustible spirit, her geniality, and the "powers of
+sarcasm, which she used with strong reserve." Others, again, see through
+to the faith and philosophy which lay behind her humour, "Scottish in
+its penetrating tenderness."
+
+In my opinion my aunt's strongest characteristic was a dazzling purity
+of soul, mind, and body. She was a person whose very presence lifted the
+tone of the conversation. It was impossible to think of telling her a
+nasty story, a "double entendre" fell flat when she was there. She was
+the least priggish person in the world, but no one who knew her could
+doubt for an instant her transparent goodness. I have read every word of
+her diary; there is not in it the record of an ugly thought, or of one
+action that would not bear the full light of day. About her books she
+used to say that she had tried never to publish one word which her
+father would not like her to have written.
+
+She had a tremendous capacity for affection, and when she once loved
+she loved most faithfully. Her devotion to her father and to her eldest
+brother influenced her whole life, and it would have been impossible for
+those she loved to make too heavy claims on her kindness.
+
+[Page Heading: SOCIAL CHARM]
+
+Miss Macnaughtan had great social charm. She was friendly and easy to
+know, and she had a wonderful power of finding out the interesting side
+of people and of seeing their good points. Her popularity was
+extraordinary, although hers was too strong a personality to command
+universal affection. Among her friends were people of the most varied
+dispositions and circumstances. Distinction of birth, position, or
+intellect appealed to her, and she was always glad to meet a celebrity,
+but distinction was no passport to her favour unless it was accompanied
+by character. To her poorer and humbler friends she was kindness itself,
+and she was extraordinarily staunch in her friendships. Nothing would
+make her "drop" a person with whom she had once been intimate.
+
+In attempting to give a character-sketch of a person whose nature was as
+complex as Miss Macnaughtan's, one admits defeat from the start. She had
+so many interests, so many sides to her character, that it seems
+impossible to present them all fairly. Her love of music, literature,
+and art was coupled with an enthusiasm for sport, big-game shooting,
+riding, travel, and adventure of every kind. She was an ambitious woman,
+and a brilliantly clever one, and her clearness of perception and
+wonderful intuition gave her a quick grasp of a subject or idea. She had
+a thirst for knowledge which made learning easy, but hers was the brain
+of the poet and philosopher, not of the mathematician. Accuracy of
+thought or information was often lacking. Her imagination led the way,
+and left her with a picture of a situation or a subject, but she was
+very vague about facts and statistics. As a woman of business she was
+shrewd, with all a Scotchwoman's power of looking at both sides of a
+bawbee before she spent it, but she was also extraordinarily generous in
+a very simple and unostentatious way, and her hospitality was boundless.
+
+Miss Macnaughtan was almost hypersensitive to criticism. Her intense
+desire to do right and to serve her fellow-beings animated her whole
+life, and it seemed to her rather hard to be found fault with. Indeed,
+she had not many faults, and the defects of her character were mostly
+temperamental.
+
+As a girl she was unpunctual, and subject to fits of indecision when it
+seemed impossible for her to make up her mind one way or the other. The
+inconvenience caused by her frequent changes of times and plans was
+probably not realised by her. Later in life, when she lived so much
+alone, she did not always see that difficulties which appeared nothing
+to her might be almost insuperable to other people, and that in houses
+where there are several members of a family to be considered, no
+individual can be quite as free to carry out his own plans as a person
+who is independent of family ties. But when one remembered how
+splendidly she always responded to any claim on her own kindness one
+forgave her for being a little exacting.
+
+Perhaps Miss Macnaughtan's greatest handicap in life was her immense
+capacity for suffering--suffering poignantly, unbearably, not only for
+her own sorrows but for the sorrows of others. Only those who appealed
+to her in trouble knew the depth of her sympathy, and how absolutely she
+shared the burden of the grief. But perhaps they did not always know how
+she agonised over their misfortunes, and at what price her sympathy was
+given.
+
+[Page Heading: RELIGIOUS VIEWS]
+
+My aunt was a passionately religious woman. Her faith was the
+inspiration of her whole life, and it is safe to say that from the
+smallest to the greatest things there was never a struggle between
+conscience and inclination in which conscience was not victorious. As
+she grew older, I fancy that she became a less orthodox member of the
+Church of England, to which she belonged, but her love for Christ and
+for His people never wavered.
+
+As each Sunday came round during her last illness, when she could not go
+to church, she used to say to a very dear sister, "Now, J., we must have
+our little service." Then the bedroom door was left ajar, and her sister
+would go down to the drawing-room and play the simple hymns they had
+sung together in childhood. And on the last Sunday, the day before her
+death, when the invalid lay in a stupor and seemed scarcely conscious,
+that same dear sister played the old hymns once more, and as the sound
+floated up to the room above those who watched there saw a gleam of
+pleasure on the dying woman's face.
+
+My aunt had no fear of death. There had been a time, some weeks before
+the end, when her feet had wandered very close to the waters which
+divide us from the unknown shore, and she told her sisters afterwards
+that she had almost seemed to see over to the "other side," and that so
+many of those she loved were waiting for her, and saying, "Come over to
+us, Sally. We are all here to welcome you."
+
+Perhaps just at the last, when her body had grown weak, the journey
+seemed rather far, and she clung to earth more closely, but such
+weakness was purely physical. The brave spirit was ready to go, and as
+the music of her favourite hymn pierced her consciousness when she lay
+dying, so surely the words summed up all that she felt or wished to say,
+and formed her last prayer in death, as they had been her constant
+prayer in life:
+
+ "In death's dark vale I fear no ill
+ With Thee, dear Lord, beside me;
+ Thy rod and staff my comfort still,
+ Thy Cross before to guide me.
+
+ "And so through all the length of days
+ Thy goodness faileth never;
+ Good Shepherd, may I sing Thy praise
+ Within Thy house for ever."
+
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+
+Aberdare, 164
+
+Aberystwyth, 164
+
+Adinkerke, 116;
+ soup-kitchen, 82, 86, 157;
+ bombardment, 139
+
+Airships, German, over Antwerp, 5, 9;
+ Dunkirk, 81;
+ Furnes, 80;
+ St. Malo-les-Bains, 55;
+ destroyed, 27, 194
+
+Andrews, John, 171
+
+Antwerp, 1;
+ Hospital, 2;
+ arrival of wounded, 2, 3, 5, 12;
+ siege, 3-21;
+ reinforcements, 12, 16;
+ shelled, 18-21;
+ retreat of the Marines, 28
+
+Arabs, rapid system of communication, 247
+
+Ararat, Mount, 230
+
+Armenians, massacres of, 209, 214, 217, 228;
+ refugees, 227;
+ character, 234
+
+Artvin, 211
+
+Asquith, Raymond, 183
+
+Australians, treatment of the Turks, 177
+
+
+Bagdad, 247
+
+Bagot, Lady, 100;
+ at St. Malo-les-Bains, 49, 55;
+ hospital, 104, 113, 114;
+ arrival of wounded, 144;
+ entertains them, 147
+
+Bailey, Sister, 22, 24
+
+Baku, 233, 237
+
+Baratoff, General, 240, 241
+
+Bark, M., Russian Finance Minister, 195
+
+Barrow-in-Furness, lectures by Miss Macnaughtan, 162
+
+Bartlett, Ashmead, war correspondent, at Furnes, 35
+
+Batoum, 208, 213
+
+"Beau Garde," farm, 140
+
+Bedford, Adeline, Duchess of, 59
+
+Belgians, King of the, 141
+
+Belgians, Queen of the, visits the Hospital at Furnes, 38
+
+Benjamin, Miss, 2, 20
+
+Bernoff, General, 208, 209
+
+_Bessheim_, the, 179
+
+Bevan, Mr., at Furnes, 80, 83;
+ Calais, 86;
+ Nieuport, 151;
+ Christiania, 179;
+ Stockholm, 180;
+ Baku, 231, 233
+
+Bible, the, a Universal Human Document, 101
+
+Boulderoff, M., 216
+
+Boulogne, 55;
+ wounded at, 114
+
+Bray, Mrs., 192
+
+British man-of-war, 125
+
+Brockville, Mr., at Dixmude, 35
+
+Brooke, Victor, 178
+
+Buchanan, Sir George, Ambassador at Petrograd, 184
+
+Buchanan, Lady Georgina, at Petrograd, 184;
+ soup-kitchen, 192;
+ work-party, 196
+
+Bute Docks, 171
+
+
+Cabour hospital, 151
+
+Calais, 83, 86
+
+Cardiff, lecture by Miss Macnaughtan, 164, 167-171
+
+Cardiff Castle, 163
+
+Carlile, Mr., 120
+
+Caspian Sea, 265
+
+Caucasia, 210
+
+Cavell, Miss, execution, 186
+
+Cazalet, Mr., 207
+
+Chart Sutton, churchyard at, 270
+
+Chenies, 160
+
+Children wounded, 116, 118
+
+Chimay, Countess de Caraman, dame d'honneur of the Queen of the
+ Belgians, 139
+
+Chisholm, Miss, 26, 63
+
+Christiania, 179
+
+Churchill, Winston, at Antwerp, 12, 16;
+ Dunkirk, 44
+
+Clarry, Mr. G., President of the Cardiff Chamber of Trade, 170
+
+Clegg, Mr., 105, 143
+
+Clitheroe, Mrs., 86, 93
+
+Close, Miss Etta, barge, 97, 126, 135;
+ work for the refugees, 140
+
+Cocks, W., 171
+
+Constant, Count Stanislas, 213
+
+Cooper, Mr., 115
+
+Courage, definition of, 24
+
+Coventry, Mr., 112
+
+Cowan{12}, Mr., Consul at Hamadan, 241, 246
+
+Coxide, bombardment of, 69;
+ refugees at, 138
+
+Crawley, Eustace, 178
+
+Cunard, Mr., 198
+
+Cunliffe, Miss, 2
+
+Curie, Mme., at Furnes, 68
+
+Cyril, Grand Duchess, 205
+
+
+Decies, Lady, 55
+
+Decker, Mrs., 26
+
+Denniss, Colonel, 164;
+ speech at the Bute Docks, 171
+
+Derfelden, Mme., 236
+
+Dick, Miss, 2
+
+Dinant, atrocities of the Germans at, 137
+
+Dixmude, 127;
+ bombardment, 35, 39
+
+Donnisthorpe, Miss, 2, 22
+
+Drogheda, Lady, 97
+
+Dunkirk, 25, 43, 57, 73, 86, 87, 94, 123, 151;
+ arrival of wounded, 44;
+ bombs on, 81;
+ condition of the station, 96;
+ shelled by the Germans, 115
+
+
+Elliot, Lady Eileen, at Boulogne, 58
+
+Elliott, Maxine, 94, 97, 126
+
+Enzeli, 238
+
+Erivan, 225, 227
+
+Etchmiadzin, 229
+
+
+Ferdinand, King of Bulgaria, 195
+
+ffolliott, Mrs., letters from Miss Macnaughtan, 131, 269, 270
+
+Fielding, Lady Dorothy, 12, 26, 63
+
+Findlay, Mr., 82
+
+Fisher, S., 171
+
+France, armament works, 149
+
+French, Sir John, at Dunkirk, 44
+
+Frere, Sir Bartle, at Furnes, 68
+
+Furley, Sir John, 112
+
+Furnes hospital, 33;
+ arrival of wounded, 37, 68;
+ evacuated, 41, 43;
+ hopeless cases, 46;
+ soup-kitchen, 60;
+ shelled by the Germans, 75, 86, 122;
+ bombs on, 80, 81
+
+Fyfe, Miss, 43
+
+
+Galicia, fighting in, 223
+
+Galitzin, Prince, 208
+
+Gas, asphyxiating, cases of, 114, 145, 171
+
+Georgia, 211;
+ custom at, 213
+
+German army, siege of Antwerp, 3-21;
+ driven back, 18{13};
+ two regiments surrounded, 121;
+ atrocities, 126, 132, 137, 138;
+ throw vitriol, 144
+
+Germany, preparations for war, 30;
+ treatment of prisoners, 132
+
+Ghent, 12
+
+Gibbs, Mr., war correspondent, at Furnes, 35
+
+Gienst, Mme. van der, 143
+
+Gilbert, 34
+
+Glade, Mr., 2
+
+Glasgow, munition works, output, 149, 161;
+ lectures by Miss Macnaughtan, 163
+
+Gleeson, Mr., 33, 35
+
+Glover, Bandmaster, K. S., 170
+
+Godfrey, Miss, 2
+
+Goodwin, Mr. and Mrs., 239
+
+Gordon, Dr., American Missionary, 208
+
+Gorlebeff, head of the Russian Red Cross, 208, 221, 222
+
+Graham, Stephen, book on Russia, 208
+
+Groholski, Count, 210, 218
+
+Guest, Mrs., at Adinkerke, 119
+
+
+Hamadan, 240;
+ climate, 243, 247;
+ tombs, 252
+
+Hambro, Mr. Eric, 182
+
+Hanson, Dr., 2, 23
+
+Hanson, Mr., Vice-Consul at Constantinople, at Dunkirk, 151
+
+Haparanda, 182
+
+Harrison, Mr., 164
+
+Haye, M. de la, 139, 140
+
+Helsingfors, 266
+
+_Hermes_, the, torpedoed, 43
+
+Herslet, Sir Cecil, Surgeon-General, at Antwerp, 9
+
+Hills, Mr., American missionary, 208, 222
+
+Holland, Mr., 88
+
+Hoogstadt, 87;
+ wounded at, 121
+
+Hope, A., 171
+
+Howard, Lady Isobel, 181
+
+Howse, Mr., 164
+
+
+Ignatieff, M., 237
+
+_Invicta_, the, 43, 52
+
+
+Jecquier, M., 195
+
+Joffre, Marshal, at Dunkirk, 44
+
+Joos, Dr., 77;
+ villa at Furnes, 48, 79
+
+Joos, Mme., 77
+
+
+Kajura, 236
+
+Kasvin, 239, 259
+
+Keays-Young, Mrs., letters from Miss Macnaughtan, 3, 106, 166, 262
+
+Keays-Young, Miss Julia, letters from Miss Macnaughtan, 217, 262
+
+King, Mary, 267;
+ letters from Miss Macnaughtan, 63, 109
+
+Kirsanoff, Mme., 241
+
+Kitchener, Lord, at Dunkirk, 44
+
+Kluck, General von, at Mons, 133
+
+Knocker, Mrs., 45, 63, 155
+
+
+La Bassée, British casualties at, 107
+
+Lampernesse, church shelled, 67
+
+La Panne, 87, 93, 97
+
+Lazarienne, Mr., 229
+
+Leigh, Lord, 94
+
+Lennel, 163
+
+Lepnakoff{14}, Mlle., 233
+
+Lightfoot, Mr., at Hamadan, 241, 246, 252
+
+Lindsay, Harry, 183
+
+Lloyd, Sir F., 162
+
+Lloyd, George, 195
+
+Logan, Miss, 87
+
+Logette, Mrs., 72
+
+Lombaertzyde, farm at, 138
+
+Lombard, Mr., 190
+
+_Lusitania_ torpedoed, 123
+
+
+McDonald, gunner, wounded, 118, 124
+
+MacDonald{15}, Mr. Ramsay, 73
+
+MacDonell, Consul, at Baku, 237
+
+McDowal, Mr., 241
+
+McLaren, Mr. and Mrs., 238
+
+McLean, Mr., 241, 248
+
+MacMurray, Mr., 241, 248
+
+Macnaughtan, Lieut. Colin, 144
+
+Macnaughtan, Sarah, at Antwerp 1;
+ work in the Hospital, 8;
+ incentive to keep up, 17;
+ leaves Antwerp, 21;
+ at Ostend, 22;
+ joins Dr. Munro's convoy, 25;
+ at Dunkirk, 25, 43, 57, 73, 86;
+ St. Malo-les-Bains, 26, 49;
+ Furnes, 34-43, 46, 57;
+ flight to Poperinghe, 43;
+ description of the ruins of Nieuport, 46, 152-155;
+ request for travelling-kitchens, 51, 58;
+ visits her nephew at Boulogne, 55-57;
+ starts a soup-kitchen, 59-61;
+ feeding the wounded, 61, 69;
+ "charette," 69;
+ at the Villa Joos, 72, 77;
+ attends a Church service, 74;
+ return to England, 83, 111, 157, 267;
+ at Rayleigh House, 85;
+ soup-kitchen at Adinkerke, 86, 116, 157;
+ illness, 87, 104, 207, 245, 256, 259-264, 267-270;
+ at La Panne, 93, 111;
+ publication of war book, 111;
+ difficulties in getting her passport, 112;
+ at Boulogne, 114;
+ presented with a car, 120;
+ at Poperinghe, 135;
+ method of relieving cases of poison gas, 145, 171;
+ lectures on the war, 160-174, 274;
+ at Lennel, 163;
+ Cardiff Castle, 163;
+ Chevalier de l'Ordre de Léopold conferred, 167;
+ journey to Russia, 179-183;
+ at Christiania, 179;
+ Stockholm, 180;
+ Petrograd, 183-204, 265;
+ waiting for work, 191-198, 218;
+ studies Russian, 193;
+ works in a hospital, 198;
+ at Moscow, 204;
+ Tiflis, 208-210, 214, 230;
+ delicate appearance, 208;
+ at Caucasia, 210;
+ entertained by the Grand Duke Nicholas, 215;
+ on the administration of war charities, 219-222;
+ lessons in French, 224;
+ buys a motor-car, 224;
+ journey to Erivan, 225-227;
+ car breaks down, 225;
+ festered fingers, 234;
+ at Baku, 237;
+ Resht, 238;
+ Kasvin, 239, 259;
+ Hamadan, 240-257;
+ a day on the Persian front, 247-249;
+ unfinished article on Persia, 249-252;
+ _Return of the Pilgrim_, 253-256;
+ Tehran, 260-264;
+ journey home, 264-266;
+ at Helsingfors, 266;
+ appearance, 268;
+ appointed Lady of Grace of the Order of St. John of Jerusalem, 268;
+ death, 270, 280;
+ funeral, 270;
+ review of her war work, 272-276;
+ ideal of personal service, 274;
+ sketch of her character, 276-279;
+ religious views, 279
+
+Malcolm, Colonel Ian, at Boulogne, 58;
+ Petrograd, 183;
+ at Moscow, 204
+
+Malokand settlement, 226
+
+Manners, Lady Diana, 183
+
+Marines, British, at Antwerp, 12, 16;
+ retreat from, 28
+
+Marines, French, 105{16}
+
+Maxwell, Lady Heron, 185
+
+Millis, General, 87
+
+Mons, retreat from, 133;
+ vision at, 133
+
+Montgomerie, Miss, American missionary at Hamadan, 252
+
+Moorhouse, Rhodes, heroism, 129
+
+Morgan, Mr., 83, 86
+
+Morris, Dr., 2
+
+Moscow, 204
+
+Motono, M., at Petrograd, 195
+
+Munitions, shortage of, 148
+
+Munro, Dr. Hector, 12;
+ convoy, 25, 90;
+ at Dixmude, 35;
+ knocked over by a shell, 49
+
+Murat, Prince Napoleon, 218, 231, 233
+
+Murray, Mr. John, xii
+
+Musaloff, Princess, 231
+
+
+Needle, Mr., 164
+
+Neligan, Dr., care of Miss Macnaughtan, 260, 263, 264
+
+Neuve Chapelle, ruins of, 123
+
+Neva, the, 200
+
+Nevinson, Mr., at Furnes, 38
+
+Nicholas, Grand Duke, 215
+
+Nieuport, 71, 151;
+ ruins of, 46, 123, 152-155
+
+Nightingale, song of the, 155-157
+
+Nightingale, Florence, 184
+
+Northcote, Elsie, 182;
+ death, 183
+
+
+Ochterlony, gunner, wounded, 118
+
+O'Gormon, Mrs., 16
+
+Oostkerke, Belgian "observateur" killed at, 153
+
+Orloff, Prince, 208;
+ appearance, 219
+
+Ostend, 22, 24
+
+Oulieheff, Count, 210
+
+
+Page, Dr. de, 118
+
+Parsons, Johnny{17}, 192
+
+Passport, difficulties, 112
+
+Percival, Mrs. Charles, letters from Miss Macnaughtan, 65, 242-245
+
+Perrin, Dr., 86, 87
+
+Perry, Miss, 2
+
+Persia, climate, 239, 249;
+ railway, 247;
+ system of administration, 251;
+ unfinished article on, 249-252
+
+Pervyse, 63, 64;
+ bombardment, 81;
+ ruins of, 123
+
+Peter, Grand Duke, 215
+
+Petrograd, 183, 187, 206, 265;
+ climate, 194;
+ number of amputation cases, 198;
+ return of wounded prisoners, 201-203;
+ number of hospitals, 220
+
+Philpotts, Mr., 186
+
+_Pilgrim, Return of the_, 253-256
+
+"Pinching," habit of, 98
+
+Poincaré, M., at Dunkirk, 44
+
+Polish refugees, at Petrograd, 192, 193
+
+Pont, Major du, 138
+
+Poperinghe, 43, 135-137;
+ shelled, 116
+
+Powell, Miss Hilda, xii
+
+Prisoners, German, treatment in England, 132
+
+
+Queen's Hall, London, lecture by Miss Macnaughtan, 162
+
+
+Radstock, Lord, anecdote of, 197
+
+Ramsay, Sir William, on the result of the war, 149
+
+Ramsey, Dr., 2, 22
+
+Randell, Miss, 2
+
+Rasputin, malign influence, 209
+
+Rayleigh House, 85
+
+Reading, Mr. "Dick," 42
+
+Rees{18}, T. Vivian, 164, 171
+
+Resht, 238
+
+Rhondda Valley, 164
+
+Richards, Alderman J. T., speech at Cardiff, 167
+
+Roberts, Lord, death, 63, 111
+
+Rocky Mountains, 182
+
+Rotsartz, M., 125;
+ portrait of Miss Macnaughtan, 104
+
+Rushton Hall, Kettering, 160
+
+Russian army, return of wounded prisoners to Petrograd, 201-203
+
+
+St. Clair, Miss, 12
+
+St. Gilles, convent at, 22
+
+St. Idesbald, 150
+
+St. Malo-les-Bains, 26, 49;
+ wounded at, 50
+
+Samson, Commander, 88
+
+Sarrel, Mr., 151
+
+Sawyer, Mr., 112
+
+Sazonoff, Mme., 200
+
+Scherbatoff, Princess Hélène, 197
+
+Scott, Lord Francis, at Boulogne, 58
+
+Scott, Mr., 238
+
+Scott, Miss, 82
+
+Secher, Mr., wounded, 49
+
+Seymour, Mr., kindness to Miss Macnaughtan, 266
+
+Shaw, Bernard, 189
+
+Sheffield, lecture by Miss Macnaughtan, 162
+
+Shoppe, Lieutenant, 132;
+ at Nieuport, 153
+
+"Should the Germans come," lecture on, 171-173
+
+Sim, 178
+
+Sindici, Mme.{19}, 83, 86
+
+Slippers for the wounded, 66, 98
+
+Smith, Captain, 198
+
+Smith, Mr. Lancelot, 182
+
+Smith, Mr. Robinson, 171, 173
+
+Smitkin, Dr., 259
+
+Sommerville, Mr. R., xii
+
+Soup-kitchen at Adinkerke, 82, 97, 157;
+ Furnes, 60
+
+Spies, German, shot, 44, 186
+
+Stanley, Miss, 2
+
+Stanmore, Lord, 183
+
+Stear, Miss, 4
+
+Steen, Mme. van den, 137
+
+Steenkerke, 122, 155
+
+Stenning, Mr., xii
+
+Stobart, Mrs. St. Clair, head of the hospital unit at Antwerp, 2;
+ office, 7, 10;
+ issues orders, 18;
+ leaves Antwerp, 21;
+ return to England, 22
+
+Stockholm, 180
+
+Stoney, Dr. F., 2
+
+"Stories and Pictures of the War," lecture on, 167
+
+Streatfield, Mr., 74
+
+Stretchers, size of, 66, 69
+
+Strickland, Mr., 87
+
+Strutt, Emily, 85
+
+Strutt, Neville, 178
+
+Sutherland, Duchess of, 93;
+ hospital at St. Malo-les-Bains, 44
+
+Sweden, Crown Prince of, 181
+
+Sweden, Crown Princess of, appearance, 181
+
+
+Taff river, 164
+
+Takmakoff, Mme., 200, 203
+
+Tapp, Mr., 64
+
+Teck, Prince Alexander of, 141;
+ at Furnes, 75, 83
+
+Tehran, 260
+
+Thompson, Mr., 138
+
+Tiflis, 208, 214, 230
+
+Tonepentre, 164
+
+Toney Pandy, 164
+
+Travelling-kitchens, 51
+
+Tree, Viola, 183
+
+Tschelikoff, Prince, 233{20}
+
+Turks, cruelties, 177, 209
+
+Turner, Dr. Rose, 2
+
+Tyrell, Major, 151
+
+Tysczkievez{21}, Count, 222
+
+
+Urumiyah, evacuated, 223
+
+
+Vaughan, Miss, at Furnes, 68
+
+Vickers-Maxim works, Erith, lecture by Miss Macnaughtan, 160
+
+Victoria, Grand Duchess, 185
+
+Villiers, Sir Francis, British Minister at Antwerp, 9
+
+Vladikavkas, 207
+
+
+Wales, 163
+
+Walker, Colonel, 112
+
+Walter, Mr. Hubert, 143
+
+Walton, Colonel, 176
+
+War,{22} charities, administration, 219-222;
+ cost of the, 104;
+ cruelties, 175-178;
+ result, 115;
+ souvenirs, 143
+
+Wardepett, Bishop, 229
+
+Ware, Mr. F., 85
+
+Waring, Lady Clémentine, letters from Miss Macnaughtan, 50-52, 58, 260;
+ at Lennel, 163
+
+Warship, British, shelled by the Germans, 105
+
+Watts, Dr., 2
+
+Welwyn, 160
+
+Westminster{23}, Duke of, at Dixmude, 127
+
+Whiting, Captain, 73
+
+William II., Emperor of Germany, supposed conversion to
+Mahomedanism{24}, 209
+
+William, Capt. Rhys, 239
+
+Williams, Mr. Hume, 223
+
+Wilson, Dr., 69, 225
+
+Wilson, 178
+
+Wood, Mr., 119, 121
+
+Wynne, Mrs., 132, 140;
+ at Christiania, 179;
+ Moscow, 205;
+ Baku, 231
+
+
+Young, Capt. Alan, at Boulogne, 55;
+ experiences in the war, 56;
+ wounded, 57
+
+Young, Mrs. Charles, letter from Miss Macnaughtan, 214
+
+Younghusband, Sir Frank, 164;
+ speech at Cardiff, 169
+
+Ypres, 114, 137;
+ battle at, 144, 146
+
+Yser, the, 64, 71, 121, 141
+
+
+Billing and Sons, Ltd., Printers, Guildford, England
+
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+Transcriber's corrections and comments:
+
+ 1. Added period missing in original.
+
+ 2. Added comma missing in original.
+
+ 3. Original had "Rotsarzt"; changed to "Rotsartz" to be consistent
+ with later occurrences.
+
+ 4. Original had "vise"; changed to "visé".
+
+ 5. Original had "pasport"; changed to "passport".
+
+ 6. Original had "...road to Calais s blocked..."; changed to
+ "...road to Calais is blocked...".
+
+ 7. Note inconsistency in spelling: text has "Reece", index has
+ "Rees".
+
+ 8. Note inconsistency in spelling: text has "Johnnie", index has
+ "Johnny".
+
+ 9. Changed from comma in original to period.
+
+ 10. Note inconsistency in spelling: text has "Tysczkievcz", index has
+ "Tysczkievez"; most likely meant to be the Polish name
+ "Tyszkiewicz".
+
+ 11. Added period missing in original.
+
+ 12. Original had "Cowen"; changed to "Cowan", which is the spelling
+ used in both instances in the text.
+
+ 13. Original reference to page 10; changed to page 18, as this
+ contains the actual reference to the German army being driven
+ back.
+
+ 14. Original had "Lipnakoff"; changed to "Lepnakoff" as the more
+ likely spelling and to be consistent with the text.
+
+ 15. Original had "Macdonald"; changed to "MacDonald".
+
+ 16. Original reference to page 165; changed to page 105, as this
+ contains the actual reference to the French Marines.
+
+ 17. Note inconsistency in spelling: text has "Johnnie", index has
+ "Johnny".
+
+ 18. Note inconsistency in spelling: text has "Reece", index has
+ "Rees".
+
+ 19. Added period missing in original.
+
+ 20. Removed comma that was superfluous in the original.
+
+ 21. Note inconsistency in spelling: text has "Tysczkievcz", index has
+ "Tysczkievez"; most likely meant to be the Polish name
+ "Tyszkiewicz".
+
+ 22. Added comma missing in original.
+
+ 23. Original had "Westminister"; changed to "Westminster".
+
+ 24. Original had "Mahommedanism"; changed to "Mahomedanism" to be
+ consistent with the text.
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MY WAR EXPERIENCES IN TWO
+CONTINENTS***
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+<h1>The Project Gutenberg eBook, My War Experiences in Two Continents, by
+Sarah Macnaughtan, Edited by Betty Keays-Young</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 = "http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a></pre>
+<p>Title: My War Experiences in Two Continents</p>
+<p>Author: Sarah Macnaughtan</p>
+<p>Editor: Betty Keays-Young</p>
+<p>Release Date: May 10, 2006 [eBook #18364]</p>
+<p>Language: English</p>
+<p>Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1</p>
+<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MY WAR EXPERIENCES IN TWO CONTINENTS***</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h4>E-text prepared by David Clarke, gvb,<br />
+ and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
+ (<a href="http://www.pgdp.net/">http://www.pgdp.net/</a>)<br />
+ from page images generously made available by<br />
+ Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries<br />
+ (<a href="http://www.archive.org/details/toronto">http://www.archive.org/details/toronto</a>)</h4>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<table border="0" style="background-color: #eeeeff;" cellpadding="10">
+ <tr>
+ <td valign="top">
+ <b>Note:</b>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ <b>Images of the original pages are available through
+ Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries. See</b>
+ <a href="http://www.archive.org/details/wartwocontinents00macnuoft">
+ <b>http://www.archive.org/details/wartwocontinents00macnuoft</b></a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<div class="tn">
+<h3>Transcriber&rsquo;s note:</h3>
+
+<p>The unique headers on the odd numbered pages in the original book have
+been reproduced as sidenotes. They have been inserted into
+the paragraph or letter to which the heading refers.</p>
+
+<p>There are several inconsistencies in spelling and punctuation in the original.
+A few corrections have been made for obvious typographical errors;
+these, as well as some doubtful spellings of names, have been <a class="correction" title="like this">noted</a>
+individually in the text.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="pg" />
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+
+<h1>MY WAR EXPERIENCES</h1>
+<h1>IN TWO CONTINENTS</h1>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 40%;">
+<a href="images/frontis.jpg">
+<img src="images/frontis-th.jpg" width="100%"
+alt="Camera Portrait by E. O. Hopp&eacute;."/>
+</a>
+<p class="right">Camera Portrait by E. O. Hopp&eacute;.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 40%;">
+<a href="images/sig.jpg">
+<img src="images/sig-th.jpg" width="100%"
+alt="Signature: S. Macnaughton."/>
+</a>
+</div>
+<hr class="full" />
+
+
+<h1>MY WAR EXPERIENCES<br />
+IN TWO CONTINENTS</h1>
+
+
+<h2 style="margin-top: 2em; margin-bottom: 2em;"><span class="smcap">By</span> S. MACNAUGHTAN</h2>
+
+
+<h3>EDITED BY HER NIECE, MRS. LIONEL SALMON<br />
+(BETTY KEAYS-YOUNG)</h3>
+
+
+
+
+<h4 style="margin-top: 8em; margin-bottom: 10em;">WITH A PORTRAIT</h4>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<h2>LONDON<br />
+JOHN MURRAY, ALBEMARLE STREET, W.<br />
+1919</h2>
+
+
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<h4>THIS BOOK IS DEDICATED,<br />
+IN ACCORDANCE WITH A WISH EXPRESSED BY<br />
+MISS MACNAUGHTAN BEFORE HER DEATH,<br />
+
+TO</h4>
+
+<h2>THOSE WHO ARE FIGHTING AND<br />
+THOSE WHO HAVE FALLEN,</h2>
+
+<h4>WITH ADMIRATION AND RESPECT,<br />
+AND TO</h4>
+
+<h2>HER NEPHEWS,</h2>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 27%;">
+<p><span class="smcap">Captain Lionel Salmon</span>, 1st Bn. the Welch Regt.</p>
+<p><span class="smcap">Captain Helier Percival</span>, M.C., 9th Bn. the Welch Regt.</p>
+<p><span class="smcap">Captain Alan Young</span>, 2nd Bn. the Welch Regt.</p>
+<p><span class="smcap">Captain Colin Macnaughtan</span>, 2nd Dragoon Guards.</p>
+<p><span class="smcap">Lieutenant Richard Young</span>, 9th Bn. the Welch Regt.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">[Pg vii]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CONTENTS" id="CONTENTS"></a>CONTENTS</h2>
+
+<div class="center">
+<table summary="Table of Contents" border="0">
+ <tbody>
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="tdr"><span style="font-size: 90%">PAGE</span></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><a href="#PREFACE">PREFACE</a></td>
+ <td class="tdr">ix</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><p class="part">PART I<br />BELGIUM</p></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><p class="chap">CHAPTER I</p></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_I_I">ANTWERP</a></td>
+ <td class="tdr">1</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><p class="chap">CHAPTER II</p></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_I_II">WITH DR. HECTOR MUNRO'S FLYING AMBULANCE CORPS</a></td>
+ <td class="tdr">24</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><p class="chap">CHAPTER III</p></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_I_III">AT FURNES RAILWAY-STATION</a></td>
+ <td class="tdr">60</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><p class="chap">CHAPTER IV</p></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_I_IV">WORKING UNDER DIFFICULTIES</a></td>
+ <td class="tdr">85</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><p class="chap">CHAPTER V</p></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_I_V">THE SPRING OFFENSIVE</a></td>
+ <td class="tdr">111</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><p class="chap">CHAPTER VI</p></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_I_VI">LAST DAYS IN FLANDERS</a></td>
+ <td class="tdr">135</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><p class="part"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_viii" id="Page_viii">[Pg viii]</a></span>PART II<br />AT HOME</p></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><a href="#AT_HOME">HOW THE MESSAGE WAS DELIVERED</a></td>
+ <td class="tdr">159</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><p class="part">PART III<br />RUSSIA AND THE PERSIAN FRONT</p></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><p class="chap">CHAPTER I</p></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_III_I">PETROGRAD</a></td>
+ <td class="tdr">179</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><p class="chap">CHAPTER II</p></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_III_II">WAITING FOR WORK</a></td>
+ <td class="tdr">204</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><p class="chap">CHAPTER III</p></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_III_III">SOME IMPRESSIONS OF TIFLIS AND ARMENIA</a></td>
+ <td class="tdr">219</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><p class="chap">CHAPTER IV</p></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_III_IV">ON THE PERSIAN FRONT</a></td>
+ <td class="tdr">237</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><p class="chap">CHAPTER V</p></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_III_V">THE LAST JOURNEY</a></td>
+ <td class="tdr">258</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><p class="part"><a href="#CONCLUSION">CONCLUSION</a></p></td>
+ <td class="tdr">272</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><a href="#INDEX">INDEX</a></td>
+ <td class="tdr">258</td>
+ </tr>
+ </tbody>
+</table>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<h2><a name="PREFACE" id="PREFACE"></a>PREFACE
+<span class="totoc"><a href="#CONTENTS">ToC</a></span></h2>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">[Pg ix]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p>In presenting these extracts from the diaries of
+my aunt, the late Miss Macnaughtan, I feel it
+necessary to explain how they come to be published,
+and the circumstances under which I have undertaken
+to edit them.</p>
+
+<p>After Miss Macnaughtan's death, her executors
+found among her papers a great number of diaries.
+There were twenty-five closely written volumes,
+which extended over a period of as many years,
+and formed an almost complete record of every
+incident of her life during that time.</p>
+
+<p>It is amazing that the journal was kept so regularly,
+as Miss Macnaughtan suffered from writer's
+cramp, and the entries could only have been written
+with great difficulty. Frequently a passage is
+begun in the writing of her right, and finished in
+that of her left hand, and I have seen her obliged
+to grasp her pencil in her clenched fist before she
+was able to indite a line. In only one volume,
+however, do we find that she availed herself of the
+services of her secretary to dictate the entries and
+have them typed.</p>
+
+<p>The executors found it extremely difficult to
+know how to deal with such a vast mass of material.
+Miss Macnaughtan was a very reserved <a class="correction" title="missing period in original">woman.</a>
+She<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_x" id="Page_x">[Pg x]</a></span> lived much alone, and the diary was her only
+confidante. In one of her books she says that expression
+is the most insistent of human needs, and
+that the inarticulate man or woman who finds no
+outlet in speech or in the affections, will often keep
+a little locked volume in which self can be safely
+revealed. Her diary occupied just such a place in
+her own inner life, and for that reason one hesitates
+to submit its pages even to the most loving and
+sympathetic scrutiny.</p>
+
+<p>But Miss Macnaughtan's diary fulfilled a double
+purpose. She used it largely as material for her
+books. Ideas for stories, fragments of plays and
+novels, are sketched in on spare sheets, and the
+pages are full of the original theories and ideas of
+a woman who never allowed anyone else to do her
+thinking for her. A striking sermon or book may
+be criticised or discussed, the pros and cons of
+some measure of social reform weighed in the
+balance; and the actual daily chronicle of her busy
+life, of her travels, her various experiences and
+adventures, makes a most interesting and fascinating
+tale.</p>
+
+<p>So much of the material was obviously intended
+to form the basis for an autobiography that the
+executors came to the conclusion that it would be
+a thousand pities to withhold it from the public,
+and at some future date it is very much hoped to
+produce a complete life of Miss Macnaughtan as
+narrated in her diaries. Meanwhile, however, the
+publisher considers that Miss Macnaughtan's war
+experiences are of immediate interest to her many
+friends and admirers, and I have been asked to edit
+those<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xi" id="Page_xi">[Pg xi]</a></span> volumes which refer to her work in Belgium,
+at home, in Russia, and on the Persian front.</p>
+
+<p>Except for an occasional word where the meaning
+was obscure, I have added nothing to the diaries.
+I have, of course, omitted such passages as appeared
+to be private or of family interest only; but otherwise
+I have contented myself with a slight rearrangement
+of some of the paragraphs, and I have
+inserted a few letters and extracts from letters,
+which give a more interesting or detailed account
+of some incident than is found in the corresponding
+entry in the diary. With these exceptions the
+book is published as Miss Macnaughtan wrote it.
+I feel sure that her own story of her experiences
+would lose much of its charm if I interfered with
+it, and for this reason I have preserved the actual
+diary form in which it was written.</p>
+
+<p>To many readers of Miss Macnaughtan's books
+her diaries of the war may come as a slight surprise.
+There is a note of depression and sadness, and
+perhaps even of criticism, running through them,
+which is lacking in all her earlier writings. I would
+remind people that this book is the work of a dying
+woman; during the whole of the period covered by
+it, the author was seriously ill, and the horror and
+misery of the war, and the burden of a great deal
+of personal sorrow, have left their mark on her
+account of her experiences.</p>
+
+<p>I should like to thank those relations and friends
+of Miss Macnaughtan who have allowed me to read
+and publish the letters incorporated in this book,
+and I gratefully acknowledge the help and advice I
+have received in my task from my mother, from
+my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xii" id="Page_xii">[Pg xii]</a></span> husband, and from Miss Hilda Powell, Mr.
+Stenning, and Mr. R. Sommerville. I desire also to
+express my gratitude to Mr. John Murray for many
+valuable hints and suggestions about the book, and
+for the trouble he has so kindly taken to help me
+to prepare it for the press.</p>
+
+<p class="lf_sig">BETTY SALMON.</p>
+<p style="margin-right: 40%; text-align: center;"><span class="smcap">Zillebeke, Waltham St. Lawrence,<br />
+Twyford, Berkshire,</span><br />
+<i>October, 1918.</i><br /></p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span></p>
+<h1>MY WAR EXPERIENCES IN<br />
+TWO CONTINENTS</h1>
+
+
+<h2>PART I</h2>
+
+<h3>BELGIUM</h3>
+
+
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_I_I" id="CHAPTER_I_I"></a>CHAPTER I
+<span class="totoc"><a href="#CONTENTS">ToC</a></span></h2>
+
+<h3>ANTWERP</h3>
+
+
+<p>On September 20th, 1914, I left London for
+Antwerp. At the station I found I had forgotten
+my passport and Mary had to tear back for it.
+Great perturbation, but kept this dark from the
+rest of the staff, for they are all rather serious
+and I am head of the orderlies. We got under
+way at 4 a.m. next morning. All instantly began
+to be sick. I think I was the worst and alarmed
+everybody within hearing distance. One more
+voyage I hope&mdash;home&mdash;then dry land for me.</p>
+
+<p>We arrived at Antwerp on the 22nd, twenty-four
+hours late. The British Consul sent carriages, etc.,
+to meet us. Drove to the large Philharmonic Hall,
+which has been given us as a hospital. Immediately
+after breakfast we began to unpack beds, etc., and
+our enormous store of medical things; all feeling
+remarkably empty and queer, but put on heroic
+smiles<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span> and worked like mad. Some of the staff
+is housed in a convent and the rest in rooms over
+the Philharmonic Hall.</p>
+
+<p><i>23 September.</i>&mdash;Began to get things into order
+and to allot each person her task. Our unit
+consists of Mrs. St. Clair Stobart, its head; Doctors
+Rose Turner, F. Stoney, Watts, Morris, Hanson
+and Ramsey (all women); orderlies&mdash;me, Miss
+Randell (interpreter), Miss Perry, Dick, Stanley,
+Benjamin, <a class="correction" title="missing comma in original">Godfrey,</a> Donnisthorpe, Cunliffe, and
+Mr. Glade. Everyone very zealous and inclined to
+do anybody's work except their own. Keen competition
+for everyone else's tools, brooms, dusters,
+etc. Great roaming about. All mean well.</p>
+
+<p><i>25 September.</i>&mdash;Forty wounded men were
+brought into our hospital yesterday. Fortunately
+we had everything ready, but it took a bit of doing.
+We are all dead tired, and not so keen as we were
+about doing other people's work.</p>
+
+<p>The wounded are not very bad, and have been
+sent on here from another hospital. They are
+enchanted with their quarters, which indeed do
+look uncommonly nice. One hundred and thirty
+beds are ranged in rows, and we have a bright
+counterpane on each and clean sheets. The floor is
+scrubbed, and the bathrooms, store, office, kitchens,
+and receiving-rooms have been made out of nothing,
+and look splendid. I never saw a hospital spring
+up like magic in this way before. There is a wide
+verandah where the men play cards, and a garden
+to stump about in.</p>
+
+<p>The gratitude of our patients is boundless, and
+they have presented Mrs. Stobart with a beautiful
+basket<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span> of growing flowers. I do not think Englishmen
+would have thought of such a thing. They
+say they never tasted such cooking as ours outside
+Paris, and they are rioting in good food, papers,
+nice beds, etc. Nearly all of them are able to get
+out a little, so it is quite cheery nursing them.
+There is a lot to do, and we all fly about in white
+caps. The keenest competition is for sweeping out
+the ward with a long-handled hair brush!</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE DEFENCES OF THE TOWN</div>
+
+<p>I went into the town to-day. It is very like
+every other foreign town, with broad streets and
+tram-lines and shops and squares, but to-day I had
+an interesting drive. I took a car and went out to
+the second line of forts. The whole place was a
+mass of wire entanglements, mined at every point,
+and the fields were studded with strong wooden
+spikes. There were guns everywhere, and in one
+place a whole wood and a village had been laid
+level with the ground to prevent the enemy taking
+cover. We heard the sound of firing last night!</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="center"><i>To Mrs. Keays-Young.</i></p>
+
+<p class="lh_ind0"><span class="smcap">Rue de l'Harmonie 68, Antwerp,</span></p>
+<p class="lh_ind4"><i>25 September.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Dearest Babe,</span></p>
+
+<p>It was delightful getting your letter. Our
+wounded are all French or Belgians, but there is a
+bureau of enquiry in the town where I will go to
+try to hear tidings of your poor friends.</p>
+
+<p>We heard the guns firing last night, and fifty
+wounded were sent in during the afternoon. In one
+day 2,500 wounded reached Antwerp. I can write
+this sort of thing to-day as I know my letter will
+be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span> all right. To show you that the fighting is
+pretty near, two doctors went for a short motor
+drive to-day and they found two wounded men.
+One was just dying, the other they brought back
+in the car, but he died also. In the town itself
+everything seems much as usual except for crowds
+of refugees. Do not believe people when they say
+German barbarity is exaggerated. It is hideously
+true.</p>
+
+<p>We are fearfully busy, and it seems a queer side
+of war to cook and race around and make doctors
+as comfortable as possible. We have a capital
+staff, who are made up of zeal and muscle. I do
+not know how long it can last. We breakfast at
+7.30, which means that most of the orderlies are up
+at 5.45 to prepare and do everything. The fare is
+very plain and terribly wholesome, but hardly anyone
+grumbles. I am trying to get girls to take
+two hours off duty in the day, but they won't
+do it.</p>
+
+<p>Have you any friends who would send us a good
+big lot of nice jam? It is for the staff. If you
+could send some cases of it at once to Miss Stear,
+39, St. James's Street, London, and put my name
+on it, and say it is for our hospital, she will bring it
+here herself with some other things. Some of your
+country friends might like to help in a definite
+little way like this.</p>
+
+<p class="lf_sal">Your loving</p>
+<p class="lf_sig"><span class="smcap">Sarah.</span></p>
+
+<p>---- is going to England to-night and will take
+this.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span>
+<i>27 September.</i>&mdash;Yesterday, when we were in the
+town, a German airship flew overhead and dropped
+bombs. A lot of guns fired at it, but it was too
+high up to hit. The incident caused some excitement
+in the streets.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">ARRIVAL OF WOUNDED</div>
+
+<p>Last night we heard that more wounded were
+coming in from the fighting-line near Ghent. We
+got sixty more beds ready, and sat up late, boiling
+water, sterilising instruments, preparing operating-tables
+and beds, etc., etc. As it got later all the
+lights in the huge ward were put out, and we went
+about with little torches amongst the sleeping
+men, putting things in order and moving on tip-toe
+in the dark. Later we heard that the wounded
+might not get in till Monday.</p>
+
+<p>The work of this place goes on unceasingly.
+We all get on well, but I have not got the
+communal spirit, and the fact of being a unit of
+women is not the side of it that I find most
+interesting. The communal food is my despair.
+I can <i>not</i> eat it. All the same this is a fine
+experience, and I hope we'll come well out of it.
+There is boundless opportunity, and we are in luck
+to have a chance of doing our darndest.</p>
+
+<p><i>28 September.</i>&mdash;Last night I and two orderlies
+slept over at the hospital as more wounded were
+expected. At 11 p.m. word came that "les
+bless&eacute;s" were at the gate. Men were on duty
+with stretchers, and we went out to the tram-way
+cars in which the wounded are brought from the
+station, twelve patients in each. The transit is
+as little painful as possible, and the stretchers
+are placed in iron brackets, and are simply
+unhooked<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span> when the men arrive. Each stretcher
+was brought in and laid on a bed in the
+ward, and the nurses and doctors undressed the
+men. We orderlies took their names, their
+"matricule" or regimental number, and the
+number of their bed. Then we gathered up their
+clothes and put corresponding numbers on labels
+attached to them&mdash;first turning out the pockets,
+which are filled with all manner of things, from tins
+of sardines to loaded revolvers. They are all very
+pockety, but have to be turned out before the
+clothes are sent to be baked.</p>
+
+<p>We arranged everything, and then got Oxo for
+the men, many of whom had had nothing to eat for
+two days. They are a nice-looking lot of men and
+boys, with rather handsome faces and clear eyes.
+Their absolute exhaustion is the most pathetic thing
+about them. They fall asleep even when their
+wounds are being dressed. When all was made
+straight and comfortable for them, the nurses turned
+the lights low again, and stepped softly about the
+ward with their little torches.</p>
+
+<p>A hundred beds all filled with men in pain give
+one plenty to think about, and it is during sleep
+that their attitudes of suffering strike one most.
+Some of them bury their heads in their pillows as
+shot partridges seek to bury theirs amongst autumn
+leaves. Others lie very stiff and straight, and all
+look very thin and haggard. I was struck by the
+contrast between the pillared concert-hall where
+they lie, with its platform of white paint and
+decorations, and the tragedy of suffering which now
+fills it.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span>
+At 2 a.m. more soldiers were brought in from
+the battlefield, all caked with dirt, and we began to
+work again. These last blinked oddly at the
+concert-hall and nurses and doctors, but I think
+they do not question anything much. They only
+want to go to sleep.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">A VISIT FROM SOME DESERTERS</div>
+
+<p>I suppose that women would always be tender-hearted
+towards deserters. Three of them arrived
+at the hospital to-day with some absurd story about
+having been told to report themselves. We got
+them supper and a hot bath and put them to bed.
+One can't regret it. I never saw men sleep as
+they did. All through the noise of the wounded
+being brought in, all through the turned-up
+lights and bustle they never even stirred, but a
+sergeant discovered them, and at 3 a.m. they were
+marched away again. We got them breakfast and
+hot tea, and at least they had had a few hours
+between clean sheets. These men seem to carry
+so much, and the roads are heavy.</p>
+
+<p>At 5 o'clock I went to bed and slept till 8.
+Mrs. Stobart never rests. I think she must be
+made of some substance that the rest of us have
+not discovered. At 5 a.m. I discovered her curled
+up on a bench in her office, the doors wide open
+and the dawn breaking.</p>
+
+<p><i>2 October.</i>&mdash;Here is a short account of one
+whole day. Firing went on all night, sometimes it
+came so near that the vibration of it was rather
+startling. In the early morning we heard that the
+forts had been heavily fired on. One of them
+remained silent for a long time, and then the
+garrison lighted cart-loads of straw in order to
+deceive<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span> the Germans, who fell into the trap,
+thinking the fort was disabled and on fire, and
+rushed in to take it. They were met with a
+furious cannonade. But one of the other forts has
+fallen.</p>
+
+<p>At 7 a.m. the men's bread had not arrived for
+their 6 o'clock breakfast, so I went into the town
+to get it. The difficulty was to convey home
+twenty-eight large loaves, so I went to the barracks
+and begged a motor-car from the Belgian officer
+and came back triumphant. The military cars
+simply rip through the streets, blowing their horns
+all the time. Antwerp was thronged with these
+cars, and each one contained soldiers. Sometimes
+one saw wounded in them lying on sacks stuffed
+with straw.</p>
+
+<p>I came down to breakfast half-an-hour late
+(8 o'clock) and we had our usual fare&mdash;porridge,
+bread and margarine, and tea with tinned milk&mdash;amazingly
+nasty, but quite wholesome and filling
+at the price. We have reduced our housekeeping
+to ninepence per head per day. After breakfast I
+cleaned the two houses, as I do every morning,
+made nine beds, swept floors and dusted stairs, etc.
+When my rooms were done and jugs filled, our
+nice little cook gave me a cup of soup in the
+kitchen, as she generally does, and I went over to
+the hospital to help prepare the men's dinner, my
+task to-day being to open bottles and pour out
+beer for a hundred and twenty men; then, when
+the meat was served, to procure from the kitchen
+and serve out gravy. Our own dinner is at 12.30.</p>
+
+<p>Afterwards I went across to the hospital again
+and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span> arranged a few things with Mrs. Stobart. I
+began to correct the men's diagnosis sheets, but
+was called off to help with wounded arriving, and
+to label and sort their clothes. Just then the
+British Minister, Sir Francis Villiers, and the
+Surgeon-General, Sir Cecil Herslet, came in to see
+the hospital, and we proceeded to show them round,
+when the sound of firing began quite close to us
+and we rushed out into the garden.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">A TAUBE OVERHEAD</div>
+
+<p>From out the blue, clear autumn sky came a
+great grey dove flying serenely overhead. This
+was a German aeroplane of the class called the
+Taube (dove). These aeroplanes are quite beautiful
+in design, and fly with amazing rapidity. This one
+wafted over our hospital with all the grace of a
+living creature "calm in the consciousness of
+wings," and then, of course, we let fly at it. From
+all round us shells were sent up into the vast blue
+of the sky, and still the grey dove went on in its
+gentle-looking flight. Whoever was in it must
+have been a brave man! All round him shells
+were flying&mdash;one touch and he must have dropped.
+The smoke from the burst shells looked like little
+white clouds in the sky as the dove sailed away
+into the blue again and was seen no more.</p>
+
+<p>We returned to our work in hospital. The
+men's supper is at six o'clock, and we began cutting
+up their bread-and-butter and cheese and filling
+their bowls of beer. When that was over and
+visitors were going, an order came for thirty patients
+to proceed to Ostend and make room for worse
+cases. We were sorry to say good-bye to them,
+especially to a nice fellow whom we call Alfred
+because<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span> he can speak English, and to Sunny Jim,
+who positively refused to leave.</p>
+
+<p>Poor boys! With each batch of the wounded,
+disabled creatures who are carried in, one feels inclined
+to repeat in wonder, "Can one man be
+responsible for all this? Is it for one man's lunatic
+vanity that men are putting lumps of lead into
+each other's hearts and lungs, and boys are lying
+with their heads blown off, or with their insides
+beside them on the ground?" Yet there is a
+splendid freedom about being in the midst of death&mdash;a
+certain glory in it, which one can't explain.</p>
+
+<p>A piece of shell fell through the roof of the
+hospital to-day&mdash;evidently a part of one that had
+been fired at the Taube. It fell close beside the
+bed of one of our wounded, and he went as white
+as a ghost. It must be pretty bad to be powerless
+and have shells falling around. The doctors tell
+me that nothing moves them so much as the terror
+of the men. Their nerves are simply shattered,
+and everything frightens them. Rather late a man
+was brought in from the forts, terribly wounded.
+He was the only survivor of twelve comrades who
+stood together, and a shell fell amongst them,
+killing all but this man.</p>
+
+<p>At seven o'clock we moved all the furniture from
+Mrs. Stobart's office to the dispensary, where she
+will have more room, and the day's work was then
+over and night work began for some. The Germans
+have destroyed the reservoir and the water-supply
+has been cut off, so we have to go and fetch all the
+water in buckets from a well. After supper we go
+with our pails and carry it home. The shortage
+for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span> washing, cleaning, etc., is rather inconvenient,
+and adds to the danger in a large hospital, and to
+the risk of typhoid.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">ORDERS TO EVACUATE THE HOSPITAL</div>
+
+<p><i>4 October.</i>&mdash;Yesterday our work was hardly over
+when Mrs. Stobart sent a summons to all of us
+"heads" to come to her bureau. She had grave
+news for us. The British Consul had just been to
+say that all the English must leave Antwerp; two
+forts had fallen, and the Germans were hourly
+expected to begin shelling the town. We were
+told that all the wounded who could travel were to
+go to Ostend, and the worst cases were to be transferred
+to the Military Hospital.</p>
+
+<p>I do not think it would be easy to describe the
+confusion that followed. All the men's clothes
+had to be found, and they had to be got into them,
+and woe betide if a little cap or old candle was
+missing! All wanted serving at once; all wanted
+food before starting. In the midst of the general
+m&ecirc;l&eacute;e I shall always remember one girl, silently,
+quickly, and ceaselessly slicing bread with a loaf
+pressed to her waist, and handing it across the
+counter to the men.</p>
+
+<p>With one or two exceptions the staff all wanted
+to remain in Antwerp. I myself decided to abandon
+the unit and stay on here as an individual or go to
+Ostend with the men. Mrs. Stobart, being responsible,
+had to take the unit home. It was a case
+of leaving immediately; we packed what stores we
+could, but the beds and X-ray apparatus and all
+our material equipment would have to be left to
+the Germans. I think all felt as though they were
+running away, but it was a military order, and the
+Consul<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span>, the British Minister, and the King and
+Queen were leaving. We went to eat lunch
+together, and as we were doing so Mrs. Stobart
+brought the news that the Consul had come to say
+that reinforcements had come up, the situation
+changed for the better, and for the present we
+might remain. Anyone who wanted to leave
+might do so, but only four did.</p>
+
+<p>We have since heard what happened. The
+British Minister cabled home to say that Antwerp
+was the key to the whole situation and must not
+fall, as once in here the Germans would be strongly
+entrenched, supplied with provisions, ammunition,
+and everything they want. A Cabinet Council
+was held at 3 a.m. in London, and reinforcements
+were ordered up. Winston Churchill is here with
+Marines. They say Colonel Kitchener is at the
+forts.</p>
+
+<p>The firing sounds very near. Dr. Hector Munro
+and Miss St. Clair and Lady Dorothy Fielding
+came over to-day from Ghent, where all is quiet.
+They wanted me to return with them to take a
+rest, which was absurd, of course.</p>
+
+<p>Some fearful cases were brought in to us to-day.
+My God, the horror of it! One has heard of men
+whom their mothers would not recognise. Some
+of the wounded to-day were amongst these. All
+the morning we did what we could for them. One
+man was riddled with bullets, and died very soon.</p>
+
+<p>It is awful work. The great bell rings, and we
+say, "More wounded," and the men get stretchers.
+We go down the long, cold covered way to the
+gate and number the men for their different beds.
+The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span> stretchers are stiff with blood, and the clothes
+have to be cut off the men. They cry out terribly,
+and their <i>horror</i> is so painful to witness. They are
+so young, and they have seen right into hell. The
+first dressings are removed by the doctors&mdash;sometimes
+there is only a lump of cotton-wool to fill up
+a hole&mdash;and the men lie there with their tragic
+eyes fixed upon one. All day a nurse has sat by a
+man who has been shot through the lungs. Each
+breath is painful; it does not bear writing about.
+The pity of it all just breaks one's heart. But I
+suppose we do not see nearly the worst of the
+wounded.</p>
+
+<p>The lights are all off at eight o'clock now, and we
+do our work in the dark, while the orderlies hold
+little torches to enable the doctors to dress the
+wounds. There are not <i>half</i> enough nurses or
+doctors out here. In one hospital there are 400
+beds and only two trained nurses.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">ARRIVAL OF BRITISH TROOPS</div>
+
+<p>Some of our own troops came through the town
+in London omnibuses to-day. It was quite a
+Moment, and we felt that all was well. We went
+to the gate and shook hands with them as they
+passed, and they made jokes and did us all good.
+We cheered and waved handkerchiefs.</p>
+
+<p><i>5-6 October.</i>&mdash;I think the last two days have
+been the most ghastly I ever remember. Every
+day seems to bring news of defeat. It is awful,
+and the Germans are quite close now. As I write
+the house shakes with the firing. Our troops are
+falling back, and the forts have fallen. Last night
+we took provisions and water to the cellars, and
+made plans to get the wounded taken there.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span>
+They say the town will be shelled to-morrow.
+All these last two days bleeding men have been
+brought in. To-day three of them died, and I
+suppose none of them was more than 23. We
+have to keep up all the time and show a good
+face, and meals are quite cheery. To-day, Tuesday,
+was our last chance of leaving, and only two went.</p>
+
+<p>The guns boom by day as well as by night, and
+as each one is heard one thinks of more bleeding,
+shattered men. It is calm, nice autumn weather;
+the trees are yellow in the garden and the sky is
+blue, yet all the time one listens to the cries of men
+in pain. To-night I meant to go out for a little,
+but a nurse stopped me and asked me to sit by a
+dying man. Poor fellow, he was twenty-one, and
+looked like some brigand chief, and he smiled as
+he was dying. The horror of these two days will
+last always, and there are many more such days to
+come. Everyone is behaving well, and that is all
+I care about.</p>
+
+<p><i>7 October.</i>&mdash;It is a glorious morning: they will
+see well to kill each other to-day.</p>
+
+<p>The guns go all day and all night. They are so
+close that the earth shakes with them. Last night
+in the infernal darkness we were turning wounded
+men away from the door. There was no room for
+them even on the floor. The Belgians scream
+terribly. Our own men suffer quite quietly. One
+of them died to-day.</p>
+
+<p>Day and night a stream of vehicles passes the
+gate. It never ceases. Nearly all are motors,
+driven at a furious pace, and they sound horns all
+the time. These are met by a stream of carts and
+old-fashioned<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span> vehicles bringing in country people,
+who are flying to the coast. In Antwerp to-day
+it was "sauve qui peut"! Nearly all the men are
+going&mdash;Mr. &mdash;&mdash;, who has helped us, and Mr. &mdash;&mdash;,
+they are going to bicycle into Holland. A
+surgeon (Belgian) has fled from his hospital, leaving
+seven hundred beds, and there seem to be a great
+many deserters from the trenches.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE SITUATION GETS WORSE</div>
+
+<p>The news is still the same&mdash;"very bad"; sometimes
+I walk to the gate and ask returning soldiers
+how the battle goes, but the answer never varies.
+At lunch-time to-day firing ceased, and I heard it
+was because the German guns were coming up.
+We got orders to send away all the wounded who
+could possibly go, and we prepared beds in the
+cellars for those who cannot be moved. The
+military authorities beg us to remain as so many
+hospitals have been evacuated.</p>
+
+<p>The wounded continue to come in. One sees
+one car in the endless stream moving slowly (most
+of them <i>fly</i> with their officers sitting upright, or
+with aeroplanes on long carriages), and one knows
+by the pace that more wounded are coming.
+Inside one sees the horrible six shelves behind the
+canvas curtain, and here and there a bound-up
+limb or head. One of our men had his leg taken
+off to-day, and is doing well. Nothing goes on
+much behind the scenes. The yells of the men are
+plainly heard, and to-day, as I sat beside the lung
+man who was taking so long to die, someone
+brought a sack to me, and said, "This is for the
+leg." All the orderlies are on duty in the hospital
+now. We can spare no one for rougher work.
+We<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span> can all bandage and wash patients. There
+are wounded everywhere, even on straw beds on
+the platform of the hall.</p>
+
+<p>Darkness seems to fall early, and it is the
+darkness that is so baffling. At 5 p.m. we have
+to feed everyone while there is a little light, then
+the groping about begins, and everyone falls over
+things. There is a clatter of basins on the floor or
+an over-turned chair. Any sudden noise is rather
+trying at present because of the booming of the
+guns. At 7 last night they were much louder than
+before, with a sort of strange double sound, and we
+were told that these were our "Long Toms," so
+we hope that our Naval Brigade has come up.</p>
+
+<p>We know very little of what is going on except
+when we run out and ask some returning English
+soldiers for news. Yesterday it was always the
+same reply "Very bad." One of the Marines told
+me that Winston Churchill was "up and down the
+road amongst the shells," and I was also told that
+he had given orders that Antwerp was not to be
+taken till the last man in it was dead.</p>
+
+<p>The Marines are getting horribly knocked about.
+Yesterday Mrs. O'Gormon went out in her own
+motor-car and picked wounded out of the trenches.
+She said that no one knew why they were in the
+trenches or where they were to fire&mdash;they just lay
+there and were shot and then left.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">HOW WE KEPT UP OUR COURAGE</div>
+
+<p>I think I have seen too much pain lately. At
+Walworth one saw women every day in utter pain,
+and now one lives in an atmosphere of bandages
+and blood. I asked some of the orderlies to-day
+what it was that supported them most at a crisis
+of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span> this sort. The answers varied, and were
+interesting. I myself am surprised to find that
+religion is not my best support. When I go
+into the little chapel to pray it is all too tender,
+the divine Mother and the Child and the holy
+atmosphere. I begin to feel rather sorry for
+myself, I don't know why; then I go and move
+beds and feel better; but I have found that just
+to behave like a well-bred woman is what keeps
+me up best. I had thought that the Flag or
+Religion would have been stronger incentives
+to me.</p>
+
+<p>Our own soldiers seem to find self-respect their
+best asset. It is amazing to see the difference
+between them and the Belgians, who are terribly
+poor hands at bearing pain, and beg for morphia
+all the time. An officer to-day had to have a loose
+tooth out. He insisted on having cocaine, and
+then begged the doctor to be careful!</p>
+
+<p>The firing now is furious&mdash;sometimes there are
+five or six explosions almost simultaneously. I
+suppose we shall read in the <i>Times</i> that "all is
+quiet," and in <i>Le Matin</i> that "pour le reste tout
+est calme."</p>
+
+<p>The staff are doing well. They are generally too
+busy to be frightened, but one has to speak once
+or twice to them before they hear.</p>
+
+<p>On Wednesday night, the 7th October, we heard
+that one more ship was going to England, and a
+last chance was given to us all to leave. Only two
+did so; the rest stayed on. Mrs. Stobart went out
+to see what was to be done. The &mdash;&mdash; Consul
+said that we were under his protection, and that if
+the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span> Germans entered the town he would see that
+we were treated properly. We had a deliberately
+cheerful supper, and afterwards a man called Smits
+came in and told us that the Germans had been
+driven back fifteen kilometres. I myself did not
+believe this, but we went to bed, and even took off
+our clothes.</p>
+
+<p>At midnight the first shell came over us with a
+shriek, and I went down and woke the orderlies
+and nurses and doctors. We dressed and went
+over to help move the wounded at the hospital.
+The shells began to scream overhead; it was a
+bright moonlight night, and we walked without
+haste&mdash;a small body of women&mdash;across the road to
+the hospital. Here we found the wounded all
+yelling like mad things, thinking they were going
+to be left behind. The lung man has died.</p>
+
+<p>Nearly all the moving to the cellars had already
+been done&mdash;only three stretchers remained to be
+moved. One wounded English sergeant helped us.
+Otherwise everything was done by women. We
+laid the men on mattresses which we fetched from
+the hospital overhead, and then Mrs. Stobart's mild,
+quiet voice said, "Everything is to go on as usual.
+The night nurses and orderlies will take their places.
+Breakfast will be at the usual hour." She and the
+other ladies whose night it was to sleep at the
+convent then returned to sleep in the basement
+with a Sister.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE BOMBARDMENT</div>
+
+<p>We came in for some most severe shelling at
+first, either because we flew the Red Cross flag or
+because we were in the line of fire with a powder
+magazine which the Germans wished to destroy.
+We<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span> sat in the cellars with one night-light burning
+in each, and with seventy wounded men to take
+care of. Two of them were dying. There was
+only one line of bricks between us and the shells.
+One shell fell into the garden, making a hole six
+feet deep; the next crashed through a house on the
+opposite side of the road and set it on fire. The
+danger was two-fold, for we knew our hospital,
+which was a cardboard sort of thing, would ignite
+like matchwood, and if it fell we should not be able
+to get out of the cellars. Some people on our staff
+were much against our making use of a cellar at
+all for this reason. I myself felt it was the safest
+place, and as long as we stayed with the wounded
+they minded nothing. We sat there all night.</p>
+
+<p>The English sergeant said that at daybreak the
+firing would probably cease, as the German guns
+stopped when daylight came in order to conceal the
+guns. We just waited for daybreak. When it
+came the firing grew worse. The sergeant said,
+"It is always worse just before they stop," but the
+firing did not stop. Two hundred guns were
+turned on Antwerp, and the shells came over at the
+rate of four a minute. They have a horrid screaming
+sound as they come. We heard each one
+coming and wondered if it would hit us, and then
+we heard the crashing somewhere else and knew
+another shell was coming.</p>
+
+<p>The worst cases among the wounded lay on the
+floor, and these wanted constant attention. The
+others were in their great-coats, and stood about
+the cellar leaning on crutches and sticks. We
+wrapped blankets round the rheumatism cases
+and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span> sat through the long night. Sometimes
+when we heard a crash near by we asked "Is that
+the convent?" but nothing else was said. All
+spoke cheerfully, and there was some laughter in
+the further cellar. One little red-haired nurse
+enjoyed the whole thing. I saw her carry three
+wounded men in succession on her back down to
+the cellar. I found myself wishing that for
+me a shot would come and finish the horrible
+night. Still we all chatted and smiled and made
+little jokes. Once during that long night in the
+cellar I heard one wounded man say to another as
+he rolled himself round on his mattress, "Que les
+anglais sont comme il faut."</p>
+
+<p>At six o'clock the convent party came over and
+began to prepare breakfast. The least wounded of
+the men began to steal away, and we were left with
+between thirty and forty of them. The difficulty
+was to know how to get away and how to remove
+the wounded, two of whom were nearly dead.
+Miss Benjamin went and stood at the gate, while
+the shells still flew, and picked up an ambulance.
+In this we got away six men, including the two dying
+ones. Mrs. Stobart was walking about for three
+hours trying to find anything on wheels to remove
+us and the wounded. At last we got a motor
+ambulance, and packed in twenty men&mdash;that was
+all it would hold. We told them to go as far as
+the bridge and send it back for us. It never came.
+Nothing seemed to come.</p>
+
+<p>The &mdash;&mdash; Vice-Consul had told us we were under
+his protection, and he would, as a neutral, march
+out to meet the Germans and give us protection.
+But<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span> when we enquired we heard he had bolted
+without telling us. The next to give us protection
+was the &mdash;&mdash; Field Hospital, who said they had a
+ship in the river and would not move without us.
+But they also left and said nothing.</p>
+
+<p>We got dinner for the men, and then the strain
+began to be much worse. We had seven wounded
+and ourselves and not a thing in which to get out
+of Antwerp. I told Mrs. Stobart we must leave
+the wounded at the convent in charge of the
+Sisters, and this we did, telling them where to take
+them in the morning. The gay young nurses
+fetched them across on stretchers.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">FLIGHT</div>
+
+<p>About 5 o'clock the shelling became more violent,
+and three shells came with only an instant between
+each. Presently we heard Mrs. Stobart say,
+"Come at once," and we went out and found three
+English buses with English drivers at the door.
+They were carrying ammunition, and were the last
+vehicles to leave Antwerp. We got into them and
+lay on the top of the ammunition, and the girls
+began to light cigarettes! The noise of the buses
+prevented our hearing for a time the infernal sound
+of shells and our cannons' answering roar.</p>
+
+<p>As we drove to the bridge many houses and
+sometimes a whole street was burning. No one
+seemed to care. No one was there to try and save
+anything. We drove through the empty streets
+and saw the burning houses, and great holes where
+shells had fallen, and then we got to the bridge and
+out of the line of fire.</p>
+
+<p>We set out to walk towards Holland, but a
+Belgian officer got us some Red Cross ambulances,
+and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span> into these we got, and were taken to a convent
+at St. Gilles, where we slept on the floor till 3 a.m.
+At 3 a message was brought, "Get up at once&mdash;things
+are worse." Everyone seemed to be leaving,
+and we got into the Red Cross ambulances and
+went to the station.</p>
+
+<p><i>9 October.</i>&mdash;We have been all day in the train
+in very hard third-class carriages with the R.M.L.I.
+The journey of fifty miles took from 5 o'clock in
+the morning, when we got away, till 12 o'clock at
+night, when we reached Ostend. The train hardly
+crawled. It was the longest I have ever seen.
+All Ostend was in darkness when we arrived&mdash;a
+German airship having been seen overhead. We
+always seem to be tumbling about in the dark.
+We went from one hotel to another trying to get
+accommodation, and at last (at the St. James's)
+they allowed us to lie on the floor of the restaurant.
+The only food they had for us was ten eggs for
+twenty-five hungry people and some brown bread,
+but they had champagne at the house, and I
+ordered it for everybody, and we made little
+speeches and tried to end on a good note.</p>
+
+<p><i>10 October.</i>&mdash;Mrs. Stobart took the unit back to
+England to-day. The wounded were found in a
+little house which the Red Cross had made over to
+them, and Dr. Ramsey, Sister Bailey, and the two
+nurses had much to say about their perilous journey.
+One man had died on the road, but the others all
+looked well. Their joy at seeing us was pathetic,
+and there was a great deal of handshaking over our
+meeting.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE UNIT RETURNS TO ENGLAND</div>
+
+<p>Miss Donnisthorpe and I got decent rooms at the
+Littoral<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span> Hotel, and brought our luggage there, and
+had baths, which we much needed. Dr. Hanson
+had got out of the train at Bruges to bandage a
+wounded man, and she was left behind, and is still
+lost. I suppose she has gone home. She is the
+doctor I like best, and she is one of the few whose
+nerves are not shattered. It was a sorry little
+party which Mrs. Stobart took back to England.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_I_II" id="CHAPTER_I_II"></a>CHAPTER II
+<span class="totoc"><a href="#CONTENTS">ToC</a></span></h2>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span></p>
+<h3>WITH DR. HECTOR MUNRO'S FLYING AMBULANCE
+CORPS</h3>
+
+
+<p><i>12 October.</i>&mdash;Everyone has gone back to
+England except Sister Bailey and me. She is
+waiting to hand over the wounded to the proper
+department, and I am waiting to see if I can get on
+anywhere. It does seem so hard that when men
+are most in need of us we should all run home and
+leave them.</p>
+
+<p>The noises and racket in Ostend are deafening,
+and there is panic everywhere. The boats go to
+England packed every time. I called on the
+Villiers yesterday, and heard that she is leaving on
+Tuesday. But they say that the British Minister
+dare not leave or the whole place would go wild
+with fear. Some ships lie close to us on the grey
+misty water, and the troops are passing along all
+day.</p>
+
+<p><i>Later.</i>&mdash;We heard to-night that the Germans
+are coming into Ostend to-morrow, so once more
+we fly like dust before a broom. It is horrible
+having to clear out for them.</p>
+
+<p>I am trying to discover what courage really
+consists in. It isn't only a lack of imagination. In
+some<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span> people it is transcendent, in others it is only
+a sort of stupidity. If proper precautions were
+taken the need for courage would be much
+reduced&mdash;the "tight place" is so often the result
+of sheer muddle.</p>
+
+<p>This evening Dr. Hector Munro came in from
+Ghent with his oddly-dressed ladies, and at first
+one was inclined to call them masqueraders in
+their knickerbockers and puttees and caps, but I
+believe they have done excellent work. It is a
+queer side of war to see young, pretty English girls
+in khaki and thick boots, coming in from the
+trenches, where they have been picking up wounded
+men within a hundred yards of the enemy's lines,
+and carrying them away on stretchers. Wonderful
+little Walk&uuml;res in knickerbockers, I lift my hat to
+you!</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Munro asked me to come on to his convoy,
+and I gladly did so: he sent home a lady whose
+nerves were gone, and I was put in her place.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">ON THE ROAD TO DUNKIRK</div>
+
+<p><i>13 October.</i>&mdash;We had an early muddly breakfast,
+at which everyone spoke in a high voice and urged
+others to hurry, and then we collected luggage and
+went round to see the General. Afterwards we
+all got into our motor ambulances <i>en route</i> for
+Dunkirk. The road was filled with flying inhabitants,
+and down at the dock wounded and well
+struggled to get on to the steamer. People were
+begging us for a seat in our ambulance, and well-dressed
+women were setting out to walk twenty
+miles to Dunkirk. The rain was falling heavily,
+and it was a dripping day when we and a lot of
+English soldiers found ourselves in the square in
+Dunkirk,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span> where the few hotels are. We had an
+expensive lunch at a greasy restaurant, and then
+tried to find rooms.</p>
+
+<p>I began to make out of whom our party consists.
+There is Lady Dorothy Fielding&mdash;probably 22,
+but capable of taking command of a ship, and
+speaking French like a native; Mrs. Decker, an
+Australian, plucky and efficient; Miss Chisholm, a
+blue-eyed Scottish girl, with a thick coat strapped
+around her waist and a haversack slung from her
+shoulder; a tall American, whose name I do not
+yet know, whose husband is a journalist; three
+young surgeons, and Dr. Munro. It is all so
+quaint. The girls rule the company, carry maps
+and find roads, see about provisions and carry
+wounded.</p>
+
+<p>We could not get rooms at Dunkirk and so came
+on to St. Malo les Bains, a small bathing-place
+which had been shut up for the winter. The
+owner of an hotel there opened up some rooms for
+us and got us some ham and eggs, and the evening
+ended very cheerily. Our party seems, to me,
+amazingly young and unprotected.</p>
+
+<p><i>St. Malo les Bains. 14 October.</i>&mdash;To-day I
+took a car into Dunkirk and bought some things,
+as I have lost nearly all I possess at Antwerp.
+In the afternoon I went to the dock to get some
+letters posted, and tramped about there for a long
+time. War is such a disorganizer. Nothing
+starts. No one is able to move because of wounded
+arms and legs; it seems to make the world helpless
+and painful. In minor matters one lives nearly
+always with damp feet and rather dirty and
+hungry.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span> Drains are all choked, and one does not
+get much sleep. These are trifles, of course.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">WOMEN AT THE FRONT</div>
+
+<p>To-night, as we sat at dinner, a message was
+brought that a woman outside had been run over
+and was going to have a baby immediately in a
+tram-way shelter, so out we went and got one of
+our ambulances, and a young doctor with his
+fianc&eacute;e went off with her. There was a lot of
+argument about where the woman lived, until one
+young man said, "Well, get in somehow, or the
+baby will have arrived." There is a simplicity
+about these tragic times, and nothing matters but
+to save people.</p>
+
+<p><i>15 October.</i>&mdash;To-day we went down to the
+docks to get a passage for Dr. Munro, who is
+going home for money. A German Taube flew
+overhead and men were firing rifles at it. An
+Englishman hit it, and down it came like a shot
+bird, so that was the end of a brave man, whoever
+he was, and it was a long drop, too, through the
+still autumn air. Guns have begun to fire again,
+so I suppose we shall have to move on once more.
+One does not unpack, and it is dangerous to part
+with one's linen to be washed.</p>
+
+<p>Yesterday I heard a man&mdash;a man in a responsible
+position&mdash;say to a girl, "Tell me, please, how far
+we are from the firing-line." It was one of the
+most remarkable speeches I ever heard. I go to
+these girls for all my news. Lady Dorothy
+Fielding is our real commander, and everyone
+knows it. One hears on all sides, "Lady Dorothy,
+can you get us tyres for the ambulances? Where
+is the petrol?" "Do you know if the General
+will<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span> let us through?" "Have you been able to
+get us any stores?" "Ought we to have 'laissez-passer's'
+or not?" She goes to all the heads of
+departments, is the only good speaker of French,
+and has the only reliable information about anything.
+All the men acknowledge her position, and
+they say to me, "It's very odd being run by a
+woman; but she is the only person who can do
+anything." In the firing-line she is quite cool, and
+so are the other women. They seem to be
+interested, not dismayed, by shots and shrapnel.</p>
+
+<p><i>16 October.</i>&mdash;To-day I have been reading of the
+"splendid retreat" of the Marines from Antwerp
+and their "unprecedented reception" at Deal.
+Everyone appears to have been in a state of wild
+enthusiasm about them, and it seems almost like
+Mafeking over again.</p>
+
+<p>What struck me most about these men was the
+way in which they blew their own trumpets in full
+retreat and while flying from the enemy. We
+travelled all day in the train with them, and had
+long conversations with them all. They were all
+saying, "We will bring you the Kaiser's head,
+miss"; to which I replied, "Well, you had better
+turn round and go the other way." Some people
+like this "English" spirit. I find the conceit of it
+most trying. Belgium is in the hands of the enemy,
+and we flee before him singing our own praises
+loudly as we do so. The Marines lost their kit,
+spent one night in Antwerp, and went back to
+England, where they had an amazing reception
+amid scenes of unprecedented enthusiasm! The
+Government<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span> will give them a fresh kit, and the
+public will cheer itself hoarse!</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">MEN'S ATTITUDE TOWARDS WOMEN</div>
+
+<p>I could not help thinking, when I read the
+papers to-day, of our tired little body of nurses and
+doctors and orderlies going back quietly and unproclaimed
+to England to rest at Folkestone for
+three days and then to come out here again. They
+had been for eighteen hours under heavy shell fire
+without so much as a rifle to protect them, and
+with the immediate chance of a burning building
+falling about them. The nurses sat in the cellars
+tending wounded men, whom they refused to
+leave, and then hopped on to the outside of an
+ammunition bus "to see the fun," and came home
+to buy their little caps and aprons out of their own
+slender purses and start work again.</p>
+
+<p>I shall believe in Britishers to the day of my
+death, and I hope I shall die before I cease to
+believe in them, but I do get some disillusions.
+At Antwerp not a man remained with us, and the
+worst of it was they made elaborate excuses for
+leaving. Even our sergeant, who helped during
+the night, took a comrade off in the morning and
+disappeared. Both were wounded, but not badly,
+and two young English Tommies, very slightly
+wounded, left us as soon as the firing began. We
+saw them afterwards at the bridge, and they looked
+pretty mean.</p>
+
+<p>To-night at dinner some officers came in when
+the food was pretty well finished, and only some
+drumsticks of chicken and bits of ham were left.
+I am always slow at beginning to eat, and I had a
+large wing of chicken still on my plate. I offered
+this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span> to an officer, who accepted it and ate it,
+although he asked me to have a little bit of it.
+I do hope I shall meet some cases of chivalry
+soon.</p>
+
+<p>Firing ceased about 5 o'clock this afternoon, but
+we are short of news. The English papers rather
+annoy one with their continual victories, of which
+we see nothing. Everyone talks of the German
+big guns as if they were some happy chance. But
+the Germans were drilling and preparing while we
+were making speeches at Hyde Park Corner.
+Everything had been thought out by them.
+People talk of the difficulty they must have had in
+preparing concrete floors for their guns. Not a bit
+of it. There were innocent dwelling-houses, built
+long ago, with floors in just the right position and
+of just the right stuff, and when they were wanted
+the top stories were blown off and the concrete
+gun-floors were ready. There were local exhibitions,
+too, to which firms sent exhibition guns,
+which they "forgot" to remove! While we
+were going on strike they were making an army,
+and as we have sown so must we reap.</p>
+
+<p>One almost wonders whether it might not be
+possible to eliminate the personal element in war,
+so constant is the talk about victorious guns. If
+guns decide everything, then let them be trained
+on other guns. Let the gun that drives farthest
+and goes surest win. If every siege is decided by
+the German 16-inch howitzers, then let us put up
+brick and mortar or steel against them, but not
+men. The day for the bleeding human body seems
+to be over now that men are mown down by shells
+fired<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span> eight miles away. War used to be splendid
+because it made men strong and brave, but now a
+little German in spectacles can stand behind a
+Krupp gun and wipe out a regiment.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">PROTECTION OF LIFE OR PROPERTY</div>
+
+<p>I suppose women will always try to protect life
+because they know what it costs to produce it, and
+men will always try to protect property because
+that is what they themselves produce. At Antwerp
+our wounded men were begging us to go up to the
+hospital to fetch their purses from under their
+pillows! At present women are only repairers,
+darning socks, cleaning, washing up after men,
+bringing up reinforcements in the way of fresh life,
+and patching up wounded men, but some day they
+must and will have to say, "The life I produce
+has as much right to protection as the property you
+produce, and I claim my right to protect it."</p>
+
+<p>There seems to me a lack of connection between
+one man's desire to extend the area he occupies
+and young men in their teens lying with their
+lungs shot through or backs blown off.</p>
+
+<p><i>19 October.</i>&mdash;Our time is now spent in waiting
+and preparing for work which will probably come
+soon, as there has been fighting near us again.
+One hears the boom of guns a long way off, and
+always there is the sound of death in it. One
+has been too near it not to know now what it
+means.</p>
+
+<p>Yesterday I went to church in an empty little
+building, but a few of our hospital men turned up
+and made a small congregation. In the afternoon
+one or two people came to tea in my bedroom as
+we could not make our usual expedition to de
+Poorter's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span> bunshop. The pastry habit is growing
+on us all.</p>
+
+<p>We went to the arsenal to-day to see about
+some repairs to our ambulances. I saw a German
+omnibus which had been captured, and the eagles
+on it had been painted out with stripes of red paint
+and the French colours put in their place. The
+omnibus was one mass of bullet-holes. I have seen
+waggons at Paardeberg, but I never saw anything
+so knocked about as that grey motor-bus. The
+engines and sides were shattered and the chauffeur,
+of course, had been killed. We went on by motor
+to the "Champs des Aviateurs." We saw one
+naval aeroplane man, who told us that he had been
+hit in his machine when it was 4,000 feet up in the
+air. His jacket was torn by a bullet and his
+machine dropped, but he was uninjured, and got
+away on a bicycle.</p>
+
+<p>The more I see of war the more I am amazed at
+the courage and nerve which are shown. Death or
+the chance of death is everywhere, and we meet it
+not as fatalists do or those who believe they can
+earn eternal glory with a sacrifice, but lightly and
+with a song. An English girl at Antwerp was
+horribly ashamed of some Belgians who skulked
+behind a wall when the firing was hottest. She
+herself remained in the open.</p>
+
+<p>It has been a great comfort to me that I have
+had a room to myself so far on this campaign. I
+find the communal spirit is not in me. The noisy
+meals, the heavy bowls of soup, the piles of labelled
+dinner-napkins, give me an unexpected feeling of
+oppressive seclusion and solitude, and only when I
+get<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span> away by myself do I feel that my soul is
+restored.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Gleeson, an American, joined his wife here
+a couple of days ago: it was odd to have a book
+talk again.</p>
+
+<p><i>21 October.</i>&mdash;A still grey day with a level sea
+and a few fishing-boats going out with the tide.
+On the long grey shore shrimpers are wading with
+their nets. The only colour in the soft grey dawn
+is the little wink of white that the breaking waves
+make on the sand. This small empty seaside place,
+with its row of bathing-machines drawn up on the
+beach, has a look about it as of a theatre seen by
+daylight. All the seats are empty and the players
+have gone away, and the theatre begins to whisper
+as empty buildings do. I think I know quite well
+some of the people who come to St. Malo les Bains,
+just by listening to what the empty little place is
+saying.</p>
+
+<p>Firing has begun again. We hear that our
+ships are shelling Ostend from the sea. The news
+that reaches us is meagre, but I prefer that to the
+false reports that are circulated at home.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">WE GO TO FURNES</div>
+
+<p>This afternoon we came out in motors and
+ambulances to establish ourselves at Furnes in an
+empty Ecclesiastical College. Nothing was ready,
+and everything was in confusion. The wounded
+from the fighting near by had not begun to come
+in, but the infernal sound of the guns was quite
+close to us, and gave one the sensation of a blow on
+the ear. Night was falling as we came back to
+Dunkirk to sleep (for no beds were ready at Furnes),
+and we passed many motor vehicles of every
+description<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span> going out to Furnes. Some of them
+were filled with bread, and one saw stacks of
+loaves filling to the roof some once beautifully
+appointed motor. Now all was dust and dirt.</p>
+
+<p>All my previous ideas of men marching to war
+have had a touch of heroism, crudely expressed by
+quick-step and smart uniforms. To-day I see tired
+dusty men, very hungry looking and unshaved,
+slogging along, silent and tired, and ready to lie
+down whenever chance offers. They keep as near
+their convoy as they can, and are keen to stop and
+cook something. God! what is heroism? It
+baffles me.</p>
+
+<p><i>22 October. Furnes.</i>&mdash;The bulk of our party
+did not return from Furnes yesterday, so we
+gathered that the wounded must be coming in, and
+we left Dunkirk early and came here. As I
+packed my things and rolled my rugs at 5 a.m. I
+thought of Mary, and "Charles to fetch down the
+luggage," and the fuss at home over my delicate
+health!</p>
+
+<p>A French officer called Gilbert took us out to
+Furnes in his Brooklands racing-car, so that was a
+bit of an experience too, for we sat curled up on
+some luggage, and were told to hang on by something.
+The roads were empty and level, the little
+seats of the car were merely an appendage to its
+long big engines. When we got our breath back
+we asked Gilbert what his speed had been, and he
+told us 75 miles an hour.</p>
+
+<p>There was a crowd of motors in the yard of the
+Ecclesiastical College at Furnes, engines throbbing
+and clutches being jerked, and we were told that
+all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span> last night the fighting had gone on and the
+wounded had been coming in. There are three
+wards already fairly full, nothing quite ready, and
+the inevitable and reiterated "where" heard on
+every side.</p>
+
+<p>"Where are the stretchers?" "Where are my
+forceps?" "Where are we to dine?" "Where
+are the dead to be put?" "Where are the
+Germans?"</p>
+
+<p>No one stops to answer. People ask everybody
+ten times over to do the same thing, and use anything
+that is lying about.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE FIGHTING AT DIXMUDE</div>
+
+<p>There are two war correspondents here&mdash;Mr.
+Gibbs and Mr. Ashmead Bartlett&mdash;and they told
+me about the fighting at Dixmude last night. I
+must try to get Mr. Gibbs's newspaper account of
+it, but nothing will ever be so simple and so
+dramatic as his own description. He and Mr.
+Bartlett, Mr. Gleeson and Dr. Munro, with young
+Mr. Brockville, the War Minister's son, went to
+the town, which was being heavily shelled. Dixmude
+was full of wounded, and the church and the
+houses were falling. The roar of things was awful,
+and the bursting shells overhead sent shrapnel
+pattering on the buildings, the pavements, and the
+cars.</p>
+
+<p>Young Brockville went into a house, where he
+heard wounded were lying, and found a pile of
+dead Frenchmen stacked against a wall. A bursting
+shell scattered them. He went on to a cellar
+and found some living men, got the stretchers,
+loaded the cars and bade them drive on. In the
+darkness, and with the deafening noises, no one
+heard<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span> his orders aright, the two motor ambulances
+moved on and left him behind amongst the burning
+houses and flying shells. It was only after going a
+few miles that the rest of the party found that he
+was not with them.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Gleeson and Mr. Bartlett went back for him.
+Nothing need be said except that. They went
+back to hell for him, and the other two waited in
+the road with the wounded men. After an hour
+of waiting these two also went back.</p>
+
+<p>I asked Mr. Gibbs if he shared the contempt that
+some people expressed for bullets. He and Mr.
+Gleeson both said, "Anyone who talks of contempt
+for bullets is talking nonsense. Bullets mean
+death at every corner of the street, and death overhead
+and flying limbs and unspeakable sights." All
+these men went back. All of them behaved quietly
+and like gentlemen, but one man asked a friend of
+his over and over again if he was a Belgian refugee,
+and another said that a town steeple falling looked
+so strange that they could only stand about and
+light cigarettes. In the end they gave up Mr.
+Brockville for lost and came home with the ambulances.
+But he turned up in the middle of the
+night, to everyone's huge delight.</p>
+
+<p><i>23 October.</i>&mdash;A crisp autumn morning, a courtyard
+filled with motors and brancardiers and men
+in uniform, and women in knickerbockers and
+puttees, all lighting cigarettes and talking about
+repairs and gears and a box of bandages. The
+mornings always start happily enough. The guns
+are nearer to-day or more distant, the battle sways
+backwards and forwards, and there is no such thing
+as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span> a real "base" for a hospital. We must just
+stay as long as we can and fly when we must.</p>
+
+<p>About 10 a.m. the ambulances that have been
+out all night begin to come in, the wounded on
+their pitiful shelves.</p>
+
+<p>"Take care. There are two awful cases. Step
+this way. The man on the top shelf is dead. Lift
+them down. Steady. Lift the others out first.
+Now carry them across the yard to the overcrowded
+ward, and lay them on the floor if there are no
+beds, but lay them down and go for others. Take
+the worst to the theatre: get the shattered limbs
+amputated and then bring them back, for there is
+a man just dead whose place can be filled; and
+these two must be shipped off to Calais; and this
+one can sit up."</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">A WOUNDED GERMAN</div>
+
+<p>I found one young German with both hands
+smashed. He was not ill enough to have a bed, of
+course, but sat with his head fallen forward trying
+to sleep on a chair. I fed him with porridge and
+milk out of a little bowl, and when he had finished
+half of it he said, "I won't have any more. I am
+afraid there will be none for the others." I got a
+few cushions for him and laid him in a corner of
+the room. Nothing disturbs the deep sleep of these
+men. They seem not so much exhausted as dead
+with fatigue.</p>
+
+<p>A French boy of sixteen is a favourite of mine.
+He is such a beautiful child, and there is no hope
+for him; shot through the abdomen; he can retain
+nothing, and is sick all day, and every day he is
+weaker.</p>
+
+<p>I do not find that the men want to send letters
+or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span> write messages. Their pain is too awful even for
+that, and I believe they can think of nothing else.</p>
+
+<p>All day the stretchers are brought in and the
+work goes on. It is about 5 o'clock that the weird
+tired hour begins when the dim lamps are lighted,
+and people fall over things, and nearly everything
+is mislaid, and the wounded cry out, and one steps
+over forms on the floor. From then till one goes
+to bed it is difficult to be just what one ought to
+be, the tragedy of it is too pitiful. There is a boy
+with his eyes shot out, and there is a row of men
+all with head wounds from the cruel shrapnel overhead.
+Blood-stained mattresses and pillows are
+carried out into the courtyard. Two ladies help
+to move the corpses. There is always a pile of
+bandages and rags being burnt, and a youth stirs
+the horrible pile with a stick. A queer smell permeates
+everything, and the guns never cease. The
+wounded are coming in at the rate of a hundred
+a day.</p>
+
+<p>The Queen of the Belgians called to see the
+hospital to-day. Poor little Queen, coming to see
+the remnants of an army and the remnants of a
+kingdom! She was kind to each wounded man,
+and we were glad of her visit, if for no other reason
+than that some sort of cleaning and tidying was
+done in her honour. To-night Mr. Nevinson
+arrived, and we went round the wards together after
+supper. The beds were all full&mdash;so was the floor.
+I was glad that so many of the wounded were
+dying.</p>
+
+<p>The doctors said, "These men are not wounded,
+they are mashed."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span>
+I am rather surprised to find how little the quite
+young girls seem to mind the sight of wounds and
+suffering. They are bright and witty about
+amputations, and do not shudder at anything. I
+am feeling rather out-of-date amongst them.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="center"><i>Letter to Miss Macnaughtan's Sisters.</i></p>
+
+<p class="lh_ind0"><span class="smcap">Dr. Hector Munro's Ambulance,</span></p>
+<p class="lh_ind4"><span class="smcap">Furnes, Belgium,</span></p>
+<p class="lh_ind2"><i>23 October.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">My dear People,</span></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE TRAGEDY OF PAIN</div>
+
+<p>I think I may get this posted by a war
+correspondent who is going home, but I never know
+whether my letters reach you or not, for yours, if
+you write them, never reach me. I can't begin
+to tell you all that is happening, and it is really
+beyond what one is able to describe. The tragedy
+of pain is the thing that is most evident, and there
+is the roar and the racket of it and the everlasting
+sound of guns. The war seems to me now to mean
+nothing but torn limbs and stretchers. All the
+doctors say that never have they seen men so
+wounded.</p>
+
+<p>The day that we got here was the day that
+Dixmude was bombarded, and our ten ambulances
+(motor) went out to fetch in wounded. These
+were shoved in anywhere, dying and dead, and our
+men went among the shells with buildings falling
+about them and took out all they could. Except
+where the fire is hottest one women goes with each
+car. So far I have been doing ward work, but one
+of the doctors is taking me on an ambulance this
+afternoon. Most of the women who go are very
+good chauffeurs themselves, so they are chosen
+before<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span> a person who can't drive. They are splendid
+creatures, and funk nothing, and they are there to
+do a little dressing if it is needed.</p>
+
+<p>The firing is awfully heavy to-day. They say it
+is the big French guns that have got up. Two of
+our ambulances have had miraculous escapes after
+being hit. Things happen too quickly to know
+how to describe them. To-day when I went out to
+breakfast an old village woman aged about 70
+was brought in wounded in two places. I am not
+fond of horrors.</p>
+
+<p>We have been given an empty house for the
+staff, the owners having quitted it in a panic and
+left everything, children's toys on the carpet,
+and beds unmade. The hospital is a college
+for priests, all of whom have fled. Into this
+building the wounded are carried day and night,
+and the surgeons are working in shifts and can't
+get the work done. We are losing, alas! so many
+patients. Nothing can be done for them, and I
+always feel so glad when they are gone. I don't
+think anyone can realise what it is to be just behind
+the line of battle, and I fear there would not be
+much recruiting if people at home could see our
+wards. One can only be thankful for a hospital
+like this in the thick of things, for we are saving
+lives, and not only so, but saving the lives of men
+who perhaps have lain three days in a trench or a
+turnip-field undiscovered and forgotten.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as a wounded man has been attended to
+and is able to be put on a stretcher again he is
+sent to Calais. We have to keep emptying the
+wards for other patients to come in, and besides, if
+the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span> fighting comes this way, we shall have to fall
+back a little further.</p>
+
+<p>We have a river between us and the Germans, so
+we shall always know when they are coming and
+get a start and be all right.</p>
+
+<p class="lf_sal">Your loving</p>
+<p class="lf_sig"><span class="smcap">S. Macnaughtan.</span></p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><i>25 October.</i>&mdash;A glorious day. Up in the blue
+even Taubes&mdash;those birds of prey&mdash;look beautiful,
+like eagles wheeling in their flight. It is all far too
+lovely to leave, yet men are killing each other painfully
+with every day that dawns.</p>
+
+<p>I had a tiresome day in spite of the weather,
+because the hospital was evacuated suddenly owing
+to the nearness of the Germans, and I missed going
+with the ambulance, so I hung about all day.</p>
+
+<p><i>26 October. My birthday.</i>&mdash;This morning several
+women were brought in horribly wounded. One
+girl of sixteen had both legs smashed. I was
+taking one old woman to the civil hospital and I
+had to pass eighteen dead men; they were laid out
+beside some women who were washing clothes, and
+I noticed how tired even in death their poor dirty
+feet looked.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">TO THE EDGE OF THE FIGHTING LINE</div>
+
+<p>We started early in the ambulance to-day, and
+went to pick up the wounded. It was a wild gusty
+morning, one of those days when the sky takes up
+nearly all the picture and the world looks small.
+The mud was deep on the road, and a cyclist corps
+plunged heavily along through it. The car steered
+badly and we drove to the edge of the fighting-line.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span>
+First one comes to a row of ammunition vans,
+with men cooking breakfast behind them. Then
+come the long grey guns, tilted at various angles,
+and beyond are the shells bursting and leaving
+little clouds of black or white in the sky. We
+signalled to a gun not to fire down the road in
+much the same way as a bobby signals to a hansom.
+When we got beyond the guns they fired over us
+with a long streaky sort of sound. We came back
+to the road and picked up the wounded wherever
+we could find them.</p>
+
+<p>The churches are nearly all filled with straw, the
+chairs piled anywhere, and the sacrament removed
+from the altar. In cottages and little inns it is the
+same thing&mdash;a litter of straw, and men lying on it
+in the chilly weather. Here and there through
+some little window one sees surgeons in their white
+coats dressing wounds. Half the world seems to be
+wounded and inefficient. We filled our ambulance,
+and stood about in curious groups of English men
+and women who looked as if they were on some
+shooting-party. When our load was complete we
+drove home.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Munro told me that last night he met a
+German prisoner quite naked being marched in,
+proudly holding his head up. Lots of the men
+fight naked in the trenches. In hospital we meet
+delightful German youths.</p>
+
+<p>Amongst others who were brought in to-day was
+Mr. "Dick" Reading, the editor of a sporting
+paper. He was serving in the Belgian army, and
+was behind a gun-carriage when it was fired upon
+and started. Reading clung on behind with both
+his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span> legs broken, and he stuck to it till the gun-carriage
+was pulled up! He came in on a stretcher
+as bright as a button, smoking a cigar and laughing.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">POPERINGHE</div>
+
+<p>Late this afternoon we had to turn out of Furnes
+and fly to Poperinghe. The drive was intensely
+interesting, through crowds of troops of every
+nationality, and the town seemed large and well
+lighted. It was crowded with people to see all our
+ambulances arrive. We went to a caf&eacute;, where
+there was a fire but nothing to eat, so some of the
+party went out and bought chops, and I cooked
+them in a stuffy little room which smelt of burnt
+fat.</p>
+
+<p>After supper we went to a convent where the
+Queen of the Belgians had made arrangements for
+us to sleep. It was delightful. Each of us had a
+snowy white bed with white curtains in a long
+corridor, and there was a basin of water, cold but
+clean, and a towel for each of us. We thoroughly
+enjoyed our luxuries.</p>
+
+<p><i>28 October.</i>&mdash;The tide of battle seems to have
+swung away from us again and we were recalled to
+Furnes to-day. The hospital looked very bare
+and empty as all the patients had been evacuated,
+and there was nothing to do till fresh ones should
+come in. Three shells came over to-day and landed
+in a field near us. Some people say they were sent
+by our own naval guns firing wide. The souvenir
+grafters went out and got pieces of them.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">DUNKIRK</div>
+
+<p><i>2 November.</i>&mdash;I have been spending a couple of
+nights in Dunkirk, where I went to meet Miss Fyfe.
+The <i>Invicta</i> got in late because the <i>Hermes</i> had
+been torpedoed and they had gone to her assistance.
+No<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span> doubt the torpedo was intended for the <i>Invicta</i>,
+which carries ammunition, and is becoming an
+unpopular boat in consequence. Forty of the
+<i>Hermes</i> men were lost.</p>
+
+<p>Dunkirk is full of people, and one meets friends
+at every turn. I had tea at the Consulate one
+afternoon, and was rather glad to get away from
+the talk of shells and wounds, which is what one
+hears most of at Furnes.</p>
+
+<p>I saw Lord Kitchener in the town one day; he
+had come to confer with Joffre, Sir John French,
+Monsieur Poincar&eacute;, and Mr. Churchill, at a meeting
+held at the Chapeau Rouge Hotel. Rather too
+many valuable men in one room, I thought&mdash;especially
+with so many spies about! Three men
+in English officers' uniforms were found to be
+Germans the other day and taken out and shot.</p>
+
+<p>The Duchess of Sutherland has a hospital at our
+old Casino at Malo les Bains, and has made it very
+nice. I had a long chat with a Coldstream man who
+was there. He told me he was carried to a barn
+after being shot in the leg and the bone shattered.
+He lay there for six days before he was found, with
+nothing to eat but a few biscuits. He dressed his
+own wound.</p>
+
+<p>"But," he said, "the string of my puttee had
+been driven in so far by the shot I couldn't find it
+to get the thing off, so I had to bandage over it."</p>
+
+<p>I went down to the station one day to see if anything
+could be done for the wounded there. They
+are coming in at the rate of seven hundred a day,
+and are laid on straw in an immense goods-shed.
+They get nothing to eat, and the atmosphere is so
+bad<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span> that their wounds can't be dressed. They are
+all patient, as usual, only the groans are heartbreaking
+sometimes. We are arranging to have
+soup given to them, and a number of ambulance
+men arrived who will remove them to hospital ships
+and trains. But the goods-shed is a shambles, and
+let us leave it at that.<a name="FNanchor_A_1" id="FNanchor_A_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a></p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_A_1" id="Footnote_A_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_A_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> It must not be thought that in this and in subsequent
+passages referring to the sufferings of the wounded Miss Macnaughtan
+alludes to any hardships endured by British troops.
+Her time in Flanders was all spent behind the French and
+Belgian lines.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Ed.</span></p></div>
+
+<p>Mrs. Knocker came into Dunkirk for a night's
+rest while I was staying there. She had been out
+all the previous day in a storm of wind and rain
+driving an ambulance. It was heavy with wounded,
+and shells were dropping very near. She&mdash;the most
+courageous woman that ever lived&mdash;was quite
+unnerved at last. The glass of the car she was
+driving was dim with rain and she could carry
+no lights, and with this swaying load of injured men
+behind her on the rutty road she had to stick to her
+wheel and go on.</p>
+
+<p>Some one said to her, "There is a doctor in such-and-such
+a farmhouse, and he has no dressings.
+You must take him these."</p>
+
+<p>She demurred (a most unusual thing for her),
+but men do not protect women in this war, and
+they said she had to take them. She asked one of
+the least wounded of the men to get down and see
+what was in front of her, and he disappeared
+altogether. The dark mass she had seen in the
+road was a huge hole made by a shell! After
+steering into dead horses and going over awful
+roads<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span> Mrs. Knocker came bumping into the yard,
+steering so badly that they ran to see what was
+wrong, and they found her fainting, and she was
+carried into the house. At Dunkirk she got a good
+dinner and a night's rest.</p>
+
+<p><i>Furnes. 5 November.</i>&mdash;The hospital is beginning
+to fill up again, and the nurses are depressed because
+only those cases which are nearly hopeless are
+allowed to stay, so it is death on all sides and just a
+hell of suffering. One man yelled to me to-night
+to kill him. I wish I might have done so. The
+tragedy of war presses with a fearful weight after
+being in a hospital, and wherever one is one hears
+the infernal sound of the guns. On Sunday about
+forty shells came into Furnes, but I was at Dunkirk.
+This morning about five dropped on to the
+station.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">NIEUPORT</div>
+
+<p>To-day I went out to Nieuport. It is like some
+town one sees in a horrible nightmare. Hardly a
+house is left standing, but that does not describe the
+scene. Nothing can fitly describe it except perhaps
+such a pen as Victor Hugo's. The cathedral at
+Nieuport has two outer walls left standing. The
+front leans forward helplessly, the aisles are gone.
+The trees round about are burnt up and shot
+away. In the roadway are great holes which shells
+have made. The very cobbles of the street are scattered
+by them. Not a window remains in the place;
+all are shattered and many hang from their frames.
+The fronts of the houses have fallen out, and one
+sees glimpses of wretched domestic life: a baby's
+cradle hangs in mid-air, some tin boxes have fallen
+through from the box-room in the attic to the
+ground<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span> floor. Shops are shivered and their contents
+strewn on all sides; the interiors of other
+houses have been hollowed out by fire. There is
+a toy-shop with dolls grinning vacantly at the ruins
+or bobbing brightly on elastic strings.</p>
+
+<p>In a wretched cottage some soldiers are having
+breakfast at a fine-carved table. In one house,
+surrounded by a very devastation of wreckage, some
+cheap ornaments stand intact on a mantelpiece.
+From another a little ginger-coloured cat strolls
+out unconcernedly! The bedsteads hanging midway
+between floors look twisted and thrawn&mdash;nothing
+stands up straight. Like the wounded, the
+town has been rendered inefficient by war.</p>
+
+<p><i>6 November.</i>&mdash;Furnes always seems to me a
+weird tragic place. I cannot think why this is so,
+but its influence is to me rather curious. I feel as
+if all the time I was living in some blood-curdling
+ghost story or a horrid dream. Every day I try to
+overcome the feeling, but I can't succeed. This
+afternoon I made up my mind to return to our
+villa and write my diary. The day was lovely, and
+I meant to enjoy a rest and a scribble, but so
+strong was the horrid influence of the place that I
+couldn't settle to anything. I can't describe it, but
+it seemed to stifle me, and I can only compare it to
+some second sight in which one sees death. I sat
+as long as I could doing my writing, but I had to
+give in at last, and I tucked my book under my
+arm and walked back to the hospital, where at least
+I was with human beings and not ghosts.</p>
+
+<p>Our life here is made up of many elements and
+many people, all rather incongruous, but the
+average<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span> of human nature is good. A villa belonging
+to a Dr. Joos was given to our staff. It is a
+pretty little house, with three beds in it, and we
+are eighteen people, so most of us sleep on the floor.
+It wouldn't be a bad little place (except for the
+drains) if only there wasn't this horrid influence
+about it all. I always particularly dislike toddling
+after people like a little lost dog, but here I find
+that unless I am with somebody the ghosts get the
+better of me.</p>
+
+<p>The villa is being ruined by us I fear, but I have
+a woman to clean it, and I am trying to keep it in
+order. It is a cold little place for we have no
+fires. We can, by pumping, get a little very cold
+water, and there is a tap in the bath-room and one
+basin at which everyone tries to wash and shave at
+the same time. We get our meals at a butcher's
+shop, where there is a large room which we more
+than fill. The lights of the town are all out by
+6 o'clock, so we grope about, but there is a lamp in
+our dining-room. When we come out we have to
+pass through the butcher's shop, and one may find
+oneself running into the interior of a sheep.</p>
+
+<p>We get up about 7 o'clock and fight for the
+basin. Then we walk round to the butcher's shop
+and have breakfast at 7.30. Most people think
+they start off for the day's work at 8, but it is
+generally quite 10 o'clock before all the brown-hooded
+ambulances with their red crosses have
+moved out of the yard. We do not as a rule meet
+again till dinner-time, and even then many of the
+party are absent. They come in at all times, very
+dirty and hungry, and the greeting is always the
+same,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span> "Did you get many?"&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>, "Have you
+picked up many wounded?"</p>
+
+<p>One night Dr. Munro got bowled over by
+the actual air force created by a shell, which however
+did not hit him. Yesterday Mr. Secher was
+shot in the leg. I am amazed that not more get
+hit. They are all very cheery about it.</p>
+
+<p>To-day we heard that a jolly French boy with
+white teeth, who has been very good at making
+coffee at our picnic lunches, was put up against a
+tree and shot at daybreak. Someone had made him
+drunk the night before, and he had threatened an
+officer with a revolver.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">A DRAMATIC INCIDENT</div>
+
+<p><i>7 November. St. Malo les Bains.</i>&mdash;Lady Bagot
+turned up here to-day, and I lunched with her at
+the H&ocirc;tel des Arcades. Just before lunch a bomb
+was dropped from a Taube overhead, and hardly
+had we sat down to lunch when a revolver shot
+rang through the room. A French officer had
+discharged his pistol by mistake, and he lay on the
+floor in his scarlet trews. The scene was really the
+Adelphi, and as the man had only slightly hurt himself
+one was able to appreciate the scenic effect and
+to notice how well staged it was. A waiter ran for
+me. I ran for dressings to one of our ambulances,
+and we knelt in the right attitude beside the hero
+in his scarlet clothes, while the "lady of the
+bureau" begged for the bullet!</p>
+
+<p>In the evening Lady Bagot and I worked at the
+railway-sheds till 3 a.m. One immense shed had
+700 wounded in it. The night scene, with its
+inevitable accompaniment of low-turned lamps and
+gloom, was one I shall not forget. The railway-lines<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span>
+on each side of the covered platform were
+spread with straw, and on this wounded men,
+bedded down like cattle, slept. There were rows
+of them sleeping feet to feet, with straw over them
+to make a covering. I didn't hear a grumble, and
+hardly a groan. Most of them slept heavily.</p>
+
+<p>Near the door was a row of Senegalese, their
+black faces and gleaming eyes looking strange
+above the straw; and further on were some
+Germans, whom the French authorities would not
+allow our men to touch; then rows of men of every
+colour and blood; Zouaves, with their picturesque
+dress all grimed and colourless; Turcos, French,
+and Belgians. Nearly all had their heads and hands
+bound up in filthy dressings. We went into the
+dressing-station at the far end of the great shed
+and dressed wounds till about 3 o'clock, then we
+passed through the long long lines of sleeping
+wounded men again and went home.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="center"><i>To Lady Cl&eacute;mentine Wearing.</i></p>
+
+<p class="lh_ind2"><i>8 November.</i></p>
+<p><span class="smcap">My dearest Clemmie,</span></p>
+
+<p>I have a big job for you. Will you do it?
+I know you are the person for it, and you will be
+prompt and interested.</p>
+
+<p>The wounded are suffering from hunger as much
+as from their wounds. In most places, such as
+dressing-stations and railway-stations, nothing is
+provided for them at all, and many men are left for
+two or three days without food.</p>
+
+<p>I wish I could describe it all to you! These
+wounded men are picked up after a fight and taken
+anywhere&mdash;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span>very often to some farmhouse or inn,
+where a Belgian surgeon claps something on to the
+wounds or ties on a splint, and then our (Dr.
+Munro's) ambulances come along and bring the men
+into the Field Hospital if they are very bad, or if
+not they are taken direct to a station and left there.
+They may, and often do, have to wait for hours till
+a train loads up and starts. Even those who are
+brought to the Field Hospital have to turn out
+long before they can walk or sit, and they are
+carried to the local station and put into covered
+horse-boxes on straw, and have to wait till the
+train loads up and starts. You see everything has
+to be done with a view to sudden evacuation. We
+are so near to the firing-line that the Germans may
+sweep on our way at any time, and then every man
+has to be cleared out somehow (we have a heap of
+ambulances), and the staff is moved off to some
+safer place. We did a bolt of this sort to Poperinghe
+one day, but after being there two days the
+fighting swayed the other way and we were able to
+come back.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">HUNGER OF THE WOUNDED</div>
+
+<p>Well, during all these shiftings and waitings
+the wounded get nothing to eat. I want some
+travelling-kitchens, and I want you to see about
+the whole thing. You may have to come from
+Scotland, because I have opened the subject with
+Mr. Burbidge, of Harrods' Stores. A Harrods'
+man is over here. He takes back this letter. I
+particularly want you to see him. Mr. Burbidge
+has, or can obtain, old horse-vans which can be
+fitted up as travelling-kitchens. He is doing one
+now for Millicent, Duchess of Sutherland; it is to
+cost<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span> &pound;15, which I call very cheap. I wish you
+could see it, for I know you could improve upon
+it. It is fitted, I understand, with a copper for
+boiling soup, and a chimney. There is also a place
+for fuel, and I should like a strong box that would
+hold vegetables, dried peas, etc., whose top would
+serve as a table. Then there must be plenty of
+hooks and shelves where possible, and I believe
+Burbidge makes some sort of protection against
+fire in the way of lining to the van. Harrods' man
+says that he doesn't know if they have any more vans
+or not.</p>
+
+<p>I want someone with push and energy to see the
+thing right through and get the vans off. The
+<i>Invicta</i>, from the Admiralty Pier, Dover, sailing
+daily, brings Red Cross things free.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">PROPOSED TRAVELLING-KITCHENS</div>
+
+<p>The vans would have to have the Red Cross
+painted on them, and in <i>small</i> letters, somewhere
+inconspicuous, "Miss Macnaughtan's Travelling-Kitchens."
+This is only for identification. I
+thought we might begin with <i>three</i>, and get them
+sent out <i>at once</i>, and go on as they are required.
+I must have a capable person and a helper in
+charge of each, so that limits my number. The
+Germans have beautiful little kitchens at each
+station, but I can't be sure what money I can raise,
+so must go slow.</p>
+
+<p>I want also two little trollies, just to hold a tin
+jug and some tin cups hung round, with one oil-lamp
+to keep the jug hot. The weather will be
+bitter soon, and only "special" cases have
+blankets.</p>
+
+<p>Clemmie, if only we could see this thing through
+without<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span> too much red tape!... No permission
+need be given for the work of these kitchens, as we
+are under the Belgian Minister of War and act for
+Belgium.</p>
+
+<p>I thought of coming over to London for a day
+or two, and I can still do so, only I know you will
+be able to do this thing better than anyone, and
+will think of things that no one else thinks of. I
+can get voluntary workers, but meat and vegetables
+are dreadfully dear, so I shan't be able to spend a
+great deal on the vans. However, any day they
+may be taken by the Germans, so the only thing
+that really matters is to get the wounded <i>a</i> mug of
+hot soup.</p>
+
+<p>Last night I was dressing wounds and bandaging
+at Dunkirk station till 3 a.m. The men are
+brought there in <i>heaps</i>, all helpless, all suffering.
+Sometimes there are fifteen hundred in one day.
+Last night seven hundred lay on straw in a huge
+railway-shed, with straw to cover them&mdash;bedded
+down like cattle, and all in pain. Still, it is better
+than the trenches and shrapnel overhead!</p>
+
+<p>At the Field Hospital the wounds are ghastly,
+and we are losing so many patients! Mere boys of
+sixteen come in sometimes mortally wounded, and
+there are a good many cases of wounded women.
+You see, no one is safe; and, oh, my dear, have
+you ever seen a town that has been thoroughly
+shelled? At Furnes we have a good many shells
+dropping in, but no real bombardment yet. After
+Antwerp I don't seem to care about these visitors.
+We were under fire there for eighteen hours, and it
+was a bit of a strain as our hospital was in a line
+with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span> the Arsenal, which they were trying to
+destroy, so we got more than our share of attention.
+The noise was horrible, and the shells came
+in at the rate of four a minute. There was something
+quite hellish about it.</p>
+
+<p>Do you remember that great bit of writing in
+Job, when Wisdom speaks and says: "Destruction
+and Death say, it is not in me"?</p>
+
+<p>The wantonness and sort of rage of it all appalled
+one. Our women behaved splendidly.</p>
+
+<p>I'll come over to England if you think I had
+better, but I am sure you are the person I
+want.... If anything should prevent your
+helping, please wire to me: otherwise I shall know
+things are going forward.</p>
+
+<p class="lf_sal">Your loving,</p>
+<p class="lf_sig"><span class="smcap">S. Macnaughtan.</span></p>
+
+<p>The vans should be strong as they may have
+rough usage; also, to take them to their destination
+they may have to be hitched on to a motor-ambulance.</p>
+
+<p>One or two strong trays in each kitchen would
+be useful. The little trollies would be for railway-station
+work. As we go on I hope to have one
+kitchen for each dressing-station as well.</p>
+
+<p class="lf_sig"><span class="smcap">Sally.</span></p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><i>8 November.</i>&mdash;This afternoon I went down to
+the H&ocirc;tel des Arcades, which is the general meeting
+ground for everyone. The drawing-room was full
+and so was the Place Jean Bart, on which it looks.
+Suddenly we saw people beginning to fly! Soldiers,
+old<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span> men, children in their Sunday clothes, all
+running to cover. I asked what was up, and
+heard that a Taube was at that moment flying
+over our hotel. These are the sort of pleasant
+things one hears out here! Then Lady Decies
+came running in to say that two bombs had fallen
+and twenty people were wounded.</p>
+
+<p>Once more we got bandages and lint and
+hurried off in a motor-car, but the civilian doctors
+were looking after everyone. The bomb by good
+luck had fallen in a little garden, and had done the
+least damage imaginable, but every window in the
+neighbourhood was smashed.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">NIGHT WORK AT RAILWAY SHEDS</div>
+
+<p>At night we went to the railway-sheds and
+dressed wounds. I made them do the Germans;
+but it was too late for one of them&mdash;a handsome
+young fellow with both his feet deep blue with
+frost-bite, his leg broken, and a great wound in his
+thigh. He had not been touched for eight days.
+Another man had a great hole right through his
+arm and shoulder. The dressing was rough and
+ready. The surgeons clapped a great wad of lint
+into the hole and we bound it up. There is no hot
+water, no sterilising, no cyanide gauze even, but
+iodine saves many lives, and we have plenty of it.
+The German boy was dying when we left. His
+eyes above the straw began to look glazed and dim.
+Death, at least, is merciful.</p>
+
+<p>We work so late at the railway-sheds that I lie
+in bed till lunch time. Lady Bagot and I go to the
+sheds in the evening and stay there till 1 a.m.</p>
+
+<p><i>11 November. Boulogne.</i>&mdash;I got a letter from
+Julia yesterday, telling me that Alan is wounded
+and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span> in hospital at Boulogne, and asking me to go
+and see him.</p>
+
+<p>I came here this morning and had to run about
+for a long time before I started getting a "laissez-passer"
+for the road, as spies are being shot almost
+at sight now. By good chance I got a motor-car
+which brought me all the way; trains are uncertain,
+and filled with troops, and one never knows when
+they will arrive.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">STORIES OF THE BRITISH FRONT</div>
+
+<p>I found poor old Alan at the Base Hospital, in
+terrible pain, poor boy, but not dangerously
+wounded. He has been through an awful time,
+and nearly all the officers of his regiment have been
+killed or wounded. For my part, in spite of his
+pain, I can thank God that he is out of the firing-line
+for a bit. The horror of the war has got
+right into him, and he has seen things which few
+boys of eighteen can have witnessed. Eight days
+in the trenches at Ypres under heavy fire day and
+night is a pretty severe test, and Alan has behaved
+splendidly. He told me the most awful tales of
+what he had seen, but I believe it did him good to
+get things off his chest, so I listened. The thing
+he found the most ghastly was the fact that when a
+trench has been taken or lost the wounded and
+dying and dead are left out in the open. He says that
+firing never ceases, and it is impossible to reach these
+men, who die of starvation within sight of their
+comrades.</p>
+
+<p>"Sometimes," Alan said, "we see them raise
+themselves on an arm for an instant, and they yell
+to us to come to them, but we can't."</p>
+
+<p>His own wound was received when the Germans
+"got<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span> their range to an inch" and began shelling
+their trenches. A whole company next to Alan
+was wiped out, and he started to go back to tell
+his Colonel the trench could not be held. The
+communication trench by which he went was not
+quite finished, and he had to get out into the open
+and race across to where the unfinished trench
+began again. Poor child, running for his life!
+He was badly hit in the groin, but managed just
+to tumble into the next bit of the trench, where
+he found two men who carried him, pouring with
+blood, to his Colonel. He was hastily bound up
+and carried four miles on crossed rifles to the hospital
+at Ypres, where his wound was properly dressed, and
+after an hour he was put on the train for Boulogne.</p>
+
+<p>Alan had one story of how he was told to wait
+at a certain spot with 130 men. "So I waited,"
+he said, "but the fire was awful." His regiment
+had, it seems, gone round another way. "I got
+thirty of the men away," Alan said, "the rest were
+killed." It means something to be an officer and a
+gentleman.</p>
+
+<p>Every day the list of casualties grows longer, and
+I wonder who will be left.</p>
+
+<p><i>19 November. Furnes.</i>&mdash;Early on Monday, the
+16th, I left Boulogne in Lady Bagot's car and came
+to Dunkirk, where I was laid up with a cold for
+two or three days. It was singularly uncomfortable,
+as no one ever answered my bell, etc.; but I
+had a bed, which is always such a comfort, and the
+room was heated, so I got my things dry. Very
+often I find the only way to do this or to get dry
+clothing is to take things to bed with one&mdash;it is
+rather<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span> chilly, but better than putting on wet things
+in the morning.</p>
+
+<p>The usual number of unexpected people keep
+coming and going. At Boulogne I met Lady
+Eileen Elliot, Ian Malcolm, Lord Francis Scott, and
+various others&mdash;all very English and clean and well
+fed. It was quite different from Furnes, to which
+I returned on Wednesday. Most of us sleep on
+mattresses on the floor at Furnes, but even these
+were all occupied, so I hopped about getting in
+where I could. The cold weather "set in in
+earnest" as newspapers say, and when it does that
+in Furnes it seems to be particularly in earnest.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="center"><i>To Lady Cl&eacute;mentine Waring.</i></p>
+
+<p class="lh_ind0"><span class="smcap">H&ocirc;tel des Arcades,</span></p>
+<p class="lh_ind4"><span class="smcap">Dunkerque,</span></p>
+<p class="lh_ind2"><i>18 November, 1914.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Dearest Clemmie,</span></p>
+
+<p>Forgive the delay in writing again. I was
+too sick about it all at first, then I was sent for to
+go to Boulogne to see my nephew, who is badly
+wounded. I can't explain the present situation to
+you because it would only be censored, but I hope
+to write about it later.</p>
+
+<p>I shall manage the soup-kitchens soon, I hope, but
+next week will decide that and many things. The objection
+to the <i>pattern</i> is that those vans would overturn
+going round corners when hitched on behind
+ambulances. Some wealthy people are giving a
+regular motor kitchen to run about to various "dressing"-stations&mdash;this
+will be most useful, but it doesn't
+do away with the need of something to eat during
+those interminable waits at the <i>railway</i>-stations.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">CHANGES IN THE SITUATION</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span>
+To-morrow I begin my own little soup-kitchen
+at Furnes. I have a room but no van, and this is
+most unsatisfactory, as any day the room (so near
+the station) may be commandeered. A van would
+make me quite independent, but I must feel my
+way. The situation changes very often, as you will
+of course see, and when one is quite close to the
+Front one has to be always changing with it.</p>
+
+<p>I want helpers and I want vans, but rules are
+becoming stricter than ever. Even Adeline,
+Duchess of Bedford, whose good work everyone
+knows, has waited for a permit for a week at
+Boulogne, and has now gone home. When all the
+useful women have been expelled there will follow
+the usual tale of soldiers' suffering and privations:
+when women are about they don't let them suffer.</p>
+
+<p>The only plan (if you know of any man who
+wants to come out) is to know how to drive a
+motor-car and then to offer it and his services to
+the Red Cross Society. I have set my heart on
+station soup-kitchens because I see the men put
+into horse-boxes on straw straight off the field, and
+there they lie without water or light or food while
+the train jolts on for hours. I wish I had you here
+to back me up! We could do anything together.</p>
+
+<p class="lf_sal">As ever, yours gratefully,</p>
+<p class="lf_sig"><span class="smcap">Sally.</span></p>
+
+<p>The motor kitchens cost &pound;600 fitted, but the
+maker is giving the one I speak of for &pound;300. Everyone
+has given so much to the war I don't feel sure
+I could collect this amount. I might try America,
+but it takes a long time.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_I_III" id="CHAPTER_I_III"></a>CHAPTER III
+<span class="totoc"><a href="#CONTENTS">ToC</a></span></h2>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span></p>
+<h3>AT FURNES RAILWAY-STATION</h3>
+
+<p><i>21 November.</i>&mdash;I am up to my eyes in soup! I
+have started my soup-kitchen at the station, and it
+gives me a lot to do. Bad luck to it, my cold and
+cough are pretty bad!</p>
+
+<p>It is odd to wake in the morning in a frozen
+room, with every pane of glass green and thick
+with frost, and one does not dare to think of Mary
+and morning tea! When I can summon enough
+moral courage to put a foot out of bed I jump into
+my clothes at once; half dressed, I go to a little
+tap of cold water to wash, and then, and for ever, I
+forgive entirely those sections of society who do
+not tub. We brush our own boots here, and put
+on all the clothes we possess, and then descend to a
+breakfast of Quaker oat porridge with bread and
+margarine. I wouldn't have it different, really,
+till our men are out of the trenches; but I am
+hoping most fervently that I shan't break down,
+as I am so "full with soup."</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">WORK IN THE SOUP-KITCHEN</div>
+
+<p>Our kitchen at the railway-station is a little bit
+of a passage, which measures eight feet by eight
+feet. In it are two small stoves. One is a little
+round iron thing which burns, and the other is a
+sort of little "kitchener" which doesn't! With
+this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span> equipment, and various huge "marmites," we
+make coffee and soup for hundreds of men every
+day. The first convoy gets into the station about
+9.30 a.m., all the men frozen, the black troops
+nearly dead with cold. As soon as the train
+arrives I carry out one of my boiling "marmites"
+to the middle of the stone entrance and ladle out
+the soup, while a Belgian Sister takes round coffee
+and bread.</p>
+
+<p>These Belgians (three of them) deserve much of
+the credit for the soup-kitchen, if any credit is
+going about, as they started with coffee before I
+came, and did wonders on nothing. Now that I
+have bought my pots and pans and stoves we are
+able to do soup, and much more. The Sisters
+do the coffee on one side of eight feet by eight,
+while I and my vegetables and the stove which
+goes out are on the other. We can't ask people to
+help because there is no room in the kitchen;
+besides, alas! there are so many people who like
+raising a man's head and giving him soup, but who
+do not like cutting up vegetables.</p>
+
+<p>After the first convoy of wounded has been
+served, other wounded men come in from time to
+time, then about 4 o'clock there is another train-load.
+At ten p.m. the largest convoy arrives.
+The men seem too stiff to move, and many are
+carried in on soldiers' backs. The stretchers are
+laid on the floor, those who can "s'asseoir" sit on
+benches, and every man produces a "quart" or tin
+cup. One and all they come out of the darkness
+and never look about them, but rouse themselves to
+get fed, and stretch out poor grimy hands for bread
+and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span> steaming drinks. There is very little light&mdash;only
+one oil-lamp, which hangs from the roof, and
+burns dimly. Under this we place the "marmites,"
+and all that I can see is one brown or black or
+wounded hand stretched out into the dim ring of
+light under the lamp, with a little tin mug held out
+for soup. Wet and ragged, and covered with sticky
+mud, the wounded lie in the salle of the station,
+and, except under the lamp, it is all quite dark.
+There are dim forms and frosty breaths, and a door
+which bangs continually, and then the train loads
+up, the wounded depart, and a heavy smell and an
+empty pot are all that remain. We clean up the
+kitchen, and go home about 1 a.m. I do the night
+work alone.</p>
+
+<p><i>24 November.</i>&mdash;We are beginning to get into
+our stride, and the small kitchen turns out its
+gallons and buckets of liquid. Mrs. &mdash;&mdash; has been
+helping me with my work. It is good to see anyone
+so beautiful in the tiny kitchen, and it is quaint
+to see anyone so absolutely ignorant of how a pot
+is washed or a vegetable peeled.</p>
+
+<p>I have a little electric lamp, which is a great
+comfort to me, as I have to walk home alone at
+midnight. When I get up in the morning I have
+to remember all I shall want during the day, as the
+villa is a mile from the station, so I take my lantern
+out at 9.30 a.m.!</p>
+
+<p>I saw a Belgian regiment march back to the
+trenches to-day. They had a poor little band and
+some foggy instruments, and a bugler flourished a
+trumpet. I stood by the roadside and cried till I
+couldn't see.</p>
+
+<hr />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><i>To Miss Mary King.</i></p>
+
+<p class="lh_ind2"><span class="smcap">Furnes, Belgium,</span></p>
+<p class="lh_ind0"><i>27 November.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Dear Mary,</span></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">A LETTER HOME</div>
+
+<p>You will like to know that I have a soup-kitchen
+at the station here, and I am up to my
+neck in soup. I make it all day and a good bit of
+the night too, for the wounded are coming in all
+the time, and they are half frozen&mdash;especially the
+black troops. People are being so kind about the
+work I am doing, and they are all saying what a
+comfort the soup is to the men. Sometimes I feed
+several hundreds in a day.</p>
+
+<p>I am sure everyone will grieve to hear of the
+death of Lord Roberts, but I think he died just as
+he would wish to have died&mdash;amongst his old troops,
+who loved him, and in the service of the King.
+He was a fine soldier and a Christian gentleman,
+and you can't say better of a man than that.</p>
+
+<p>I feel as if I had been out here for years, and it
+seems quite odd to think that one used to wear
+evening dress and have a fire in one's room. I am
+promising myself, if all goes well, to get home
+about Christmas-time. I wish I could think
+that the war would be over by then, but it doesn't
+look very like it.</p>
+
+<p>Remember me to Gwennie, and to all your
+people. Take care of your old self.</p>
+
+<p class="lf_sal">Yours truly,</p>
+<p class="lf_sig"><span class="smcap">S. Macnaughtan.</span></p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><i>1 December.</i>&mdash;Mrs. Knocker and Miss Chisholm
+and Lady Dorothy went out to Pervyse a few days
+ago<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span> to make soup, etc., for Belgians in the trenches.
+They live in the cellar of a house which has been
+blown inside out by guns, and take out buckets of
+soup to men on outpost duty. Not a glimpse of
+fire is allowed on the outposts. Fortunately the
+weather has been milder lately, but soaking wet.
+Our three ladies walk about the trenches at night,
+and I come home at 1 a.m. from the station. The
+men of our party meanwhile do some house-work.
+They sit over the fire a good deal, clear away the
+tea-things, and when we come home at night we
+find they have put hot-water bottles in our beds
+and trimmed some lamps. I feel like Alice in
+Wonderland or some other upside-down world.
+We live in much discomfort, which is a little unnecessary;
+but no one seems to want to undertake
+housekeeping.</p>
+
+<p>I make soup all day, and there is not much else
+to write about. All along the Yser the Allies and
+the Germans confront each other, but things have
+been quieter lately. The piteous list of casualties
+is not so long as it has been. A wounded German
+was brought in to-day. Both his legs were broken
+and his feet frost-bitten. He had been for four
+days in water with nothing to eat, and his legs
+unset. He is doing well.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">PERVYSE</div>
+
+<p>On Sunday I drove out to Pervyse with a kind
+friend, Mr. Tapp. At the end of the long avenue
+by which one approaches the village, Pervyse
+church stands, like a sentinel with both eyes shot
+out. Nothing is left but a blind stare. Hardly
+any of the church remains, and the churchyard is
+as if some devil had stalked through it, tearing up
+crosses<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span> and kicking down graves. Even the dead
+are not left undisturbed in this awful war. The
+village (like many other villages) is just a mass of
+gaping ruins&mdash;roofs blown off, streets full of holes,
+not a window left unshattered, and the guns still
+booming.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="center"><i>To Mrs. Charles Percival.</i></p>
+
+<p class="lh_ind4"><span class="smcap">Furnes, Belgium,</span></p>
+<p class="lh_ind2"><i>5 December.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Darling Tab,</span></p>
+
+<p>I have a chance of sending this to England
+to be posted, so I must send you a line to wish you
+many happy returns of the day. I wish we could
+have our yearly kiss. I will think of you a lot, my
+dear, on the 8th, and drink your health if I can
+raise the wherewithal. We are not famous for our
+comforts, and it would amaze you to see how very
+nasty food can be, and how very little one can get
+of it.</p>
+
+<p>I have an interesting job now, and it is my own,
+which is rather a mercy, as I never know which is
+most common, dirt or muddle. I can have things
+as clean as I like, and my soup is getting quite a
+name for itself. The first convoy of wounded
+generally comes into the station about 11 a.m. It
+may number anything. Then the men are put
+into the train, and there begins a weary wait for
+the poor fellows till more wounded arrive and the
+train is loaded up, and sometimes they are kept
+there all day. The stretcher cases are in a long
+corridor, and the sitting-up cases in ordinary third-class
+carriages. The sitters are worn, limping men,
+with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span> bandaged heads, and hands bound up, who
+are yet capable of sitting up in a train.</p>
+
+<p>The transport is well done, I think (<i>far</i> better
+than in South Africa), but more women are wanted
+to look after details. To give you one instance:
+all stretchers are made of different sizes, so that if
+a man arrives on an ambulance, the stretchers
+belonging to it cannot go into the train, and the
+poor wounded man has to be lifted and "transferred,"
+which causes him (in the case of broken
+legs or internal injuries especially) untold suffering.
+It also takes up much room, and gives endless
+trouble for the sake of an <i>inch and a half</i> of space,
+which is the usual difference in the size of the
+stretchers, but that prevents them slipping into
+the sockets on the train.</p>
+
+<p>Another thing I have noticed is, that no man,
+even lying down in the train, ever gets his boots
+taken off. The men's feet are always soaked
+through, as they have been standing up to their
+knees in water in the trenches; but, of course,
+slippers are unheard of. I do wonder if ladies
+could be persuaded to make any sort of list or felt
+or even flannel slippers? I saw quite a good
+pattern the other day, and will try to send you one,
+in case Eastbourne should rise to the occasion.
+Of course, there must be <i>hundreds</i> of pairs, and
+heaps would get lost. I do believe other centres
+would join, and the cost of material for slippers
+would be quite trifling. A priest goes in each
+corridor train, and there is always a stove where
+the boots could be dried. I believe slippers can be
+bought for about a shilling a pair. The men's feet
+are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span> <i>enormous</i>. Cases should be marked with a red
+cross, and sent per <span class="smcap">s.s.</span> <i>Invicta</i>, Admiralty Pier,
+Dover.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE SHELLING OF LAMPERNESSE</div>
+
+<p>The fighting has had a sort of lull here for some
+time, but there are always horrible things happening.
+The other day at Lampernesse, 500 soldiers
+were sleeping on straw in a church. A spy informed
+the Germans, who were twelve miles off, but they
+got the range to an inch, and sent shells straight
+into the church, killing and wounding nearly everyone
+in it, and leaving men under the ruins. We
+had some terrible cases that day. The church was
+shelled at 6 a.m., and by 11 a.m. all the wounded
+were having soup and coffee at the station. I
+thought their faces were more full of horror than
+any I had seen.</p>
+
+<p>The parson belonging to our convoy is a particularly
+nice young fellow. I have had a bad cold
+lately, and every night he puts a hot-water bottle
+in my bed. When he can raise any food he lays a
+little supper for me, so that when I come in between
+12 and 1 o'clock I can have something to eat, a
+lump of cheese, plum jam, and perhaps a piece of
+bully beef, always three pieces of ginger from a
+paper bag he has of them. Last night when I got
+back I found I couldn't open the door leading into
+a sort of garage through which we have to enter
+this house. I pushed as hard as I could, and then
+found I was pushing against horses, and that a
+whole squad of troop horses had been shoved in
+there for the night, so I had to make my entry
+under their noses and behind their heels. Pinned
+to the table inside the house was a note from the
+parson,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span> "I can't get you any food, but I have put
+a bottle of port-wine in your room. Stick to it."</p>
+
+<p>I had meant to go early to church to-day, but I
+was really too tired, so I am writing to you instead.
+Now I must be getting up, for "business must be
+attended to."</p>
+
+<p>Well, good-bye, my dear. I am always too busy
+to write now, so would you mind sending this
+letter on to the family?</p>
+
+<p class="lf_sal">Your loving sister,</p>
+<p class="lf_sig"><span class="smcap">S. Macnaughtan.</span></p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><i>December.</i>&mdash;Unexpected people continue to
+arrive at Furnes. Mme. Curie and her daughter
+are in charge of the X-ray apparatus at the
+hospital. Sir Bartle Frere is there as a guest.
+Miss Vaughan, of the <i>Nursing Times</i>, came in out
+of the dark one evening. To-day the King has
+been here. God bless him! he always does the
+right thing.</p>
+
+<p><i>6 December.</i>&mdash;My horizon is bounded by soup
+and the men who drink it. There is a stir outside
+the kitchen, and someone says, "Convoi." So then
+we begin to fill pots and take steaming "marmites"
+off the fire. The "sitting cases" come in first,
+hobbling, or carried on their comrades' backs&mdash;heads
+and feet bandaged or poor hands maimed.
+When they have been carried or have stiffly and
+slowly marched through the entrance to the train,
+the "brancard" cases are brought in and laid on
+the floor. They are hastily examined, and a doctor
+goes round reading the labels attached to them
+which describe their wounds. An English ambulance<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span>
+and a French one wait to take serious
+cases to their respective hospitals. The others are
+lifted on to train-stretchers and carried to the train.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">A QUESTION OF STRETCHERS</div>
+
+<p>Two doctors came out from England on inspection
+duty to-day. They asked if I had anything to
+report, and I made them come to the station to go
+into this matter of the different-sized stretchers.
+It is agony to the men to be shifted. Dr. Wilson
+has promised to take up the question. The transport
+service is now much improved. The trains
+are heated and lighted, and priests travel with the
+lying-down cases.</p>
+
+<p><i>8 December.</i>&mdash;I have a little "charette" for my
+soup. It is painted red, and gives a lot of amusement
+to the wounded. The trains are very long,
+and my small carriage is useful for cups and basins,
+bread, soup, coffee, etc. Clemmie Waring designed
+and sent it to me.</p>
+
+<p>To-day I was giving out my soup on the train
+and three shells came in in quick succession. One
+came just over my head and lodged in a haystall
+on the other side of the platform. The wall of the
+store has an enormous hole in it, but the thickly
+packed hay prevented the shrapnel scattering.
+The station-master was hit, and his watch saved
+him, but it was crumpled up like a rag. Two men
+were wounded, and one of them died. A whole
+crowd of refugees came in from Coxide, which is
+being heavily shelled. There was not a scrap of
+food for them, so I made soup in great quantities,
+and distributed it to them in a crowded room whose
+atmosphere was thick. Ladling out the soup is
+great fun.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span>
+<i>12 December.</i>&mdash;The days are very short now, and
+darkness falls early. All the streets are dark, so are
+the houses, so is the station. Two candles are
+a rare treat, and oil is difficult to get.</p>
+
+<p>Such a nice boy died to-night. We brought him
+to the hospital from the station, and learned that he
+had lain for eight days wounded and untended.
+Strangely enough he was naked, and had only
+a blanket over him on the stretcher. I do not
+know why he was still alive. Everything was done
+for him that could be done, but as I passed through
+one of the wards this evening the nurses were doing
+their last kindly duty to him. Poor fellow! He
+was one of those who had "given even their names."
+No one knew who he was. He had a woman's
+portrait tattooed on his breast.</p>
+
+<p><i>19 December.</i>&mdash;Not much to record this week.
+The days have become more stereotyped, and their
+variety consists in the number of wounded who
+come in. One day we had 280 extra men to feed&mdash;a
+batch of soldiers returning hungry to the
+trenches, and some refugees. So far we have never
+refused anyone a cup of soup; or coffee and bread.</p>
+
+<p>I haven't been fit lately, and get fearful bad
+headaches. I go to the station at 10 a.m. every
+morning, and work till 1 o'clock. Then to the
+hospital for lunch. I like the staff there very
+much. The surgeons are not only skilful, but
+they are men of education. We all get on well
+together, in spite of that curious form of temper
+which war always seems to bring. No one is affable
+here, except those who have just come out from
+home, and it is quite common to hear a request
+made<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span> and refused, or granted with, "Please do not
+ask again." Newcomers are looked upon as aliens,
+and there is a queer sort of jealousy about all the
+work.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">WAR WORKERS' DIFFICULTIES</div>
+
+<p>Oddly enough, few persons seem to show at their
+best at a time when the best should be apparent.
+No doubt, it is a form of nerves, which is quite
+pardonable. Nurses and surgeons do not suffer
+from it. They are accustomed to work and to
+seeing suffering, but amateur workers are a bit
+headlong at times. I think the expectation of
+excitement (which is often frustrated) has a good
+deal to do with it. Those who "come out for
+thrills" often have a long waiting time, and energies
+unexpended in one direction often show themselves
+unexpectedly and a little unpleasantly in another.</p>
+
+<p>In my own department I always let Zeal spend
+itself unchecked, and I find that people who have
+claimed work or a job ferociously are the first to
+complain of over-work if left to themselves. Afterwards,
+if there is any good in them, they settle
+down into their stride. They are only like young
+horses, pulling too hard at first and sweating off
+their strength&mdash;jibbing one moment and shying
+the next&mdash;when it comes to "'ammer, 'ammer,
+'ammer on the 'ard 'igh road," one finds who is going
+to stick it and who is not.</p>
+
+<p>There has been some heavy firing round about
+Nieuport and south of the Yser lately, and an
+unusual number of wounded have been coming in,
+many of them "gravement bless&eacute;s."</p>
+
+<p>One evening a young French officer came to the
+kitchen for soup. It was on Wednesday, December<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span>
+16th, the day the Allies assumed the offensive,
+and all night cases were being brought in. He was
+quite a boy, and utterly shaken by what he had been
+through. He could only repeat, "It was horrible,
+horrible!" These are the men who tell brave tales
+when they get home, but we see them dirty and
+worn, when they have left the trenches only an
+hour before, and have the horror of battle in their
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>There are scores of "pieds gel&eacute;s" at present, and
+I now have bags of socks for these. So many men
+come in with bare feet, and I hope in time to get
+carpet slippers and socks for them all. One night
+no one came to help, and I had a great business
+getting down a long train, so Mrs. Logette has
+promised to come every evening. The kitchen is
+much nicer now, as we are in a larger passage, and
+we have three stoves, lamps, etc. Many things
+are being "straightened out" besides, my poor
+little corner and war seems better understood.
+There is hardly a thing which is not thought of
+and done for the sick and wounded, and I should
+say a grievance was impossible.</p>
+
+<p>I still lodge at the Villa Joos, and am beginning
+to enjoy a study of middle-class provincial life. The
+ladies do all the house-work. We have breakfast
+(a bite) in the kitchen at 8.30 a.m., then I go to
+make soup, and when I come back after lunch for
+a rest, "the family" are dressed and sitting round
+a stove, and this they continue to do till a meal has
+to be prepared. There is one lamp and one table,
+and one stove, and unless papa plays the pianola
+there is nothing to do but talk. No one reads, and
+only<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span> one woman does a little embroidery, while the
+small girl of the party cuts out scraps from a
+fashion paper.</p>
+
+<p>The poor convoy! it is becoming very squabbly
+and tiresome, and there is a good deal of "talking
+over," which is one of the weakest sides of "communal
+life." It is petty and ridiculous to quarrel
+when Death is so near, and things are so big and
+often so tragic. Yet human nature has strict
+limitations. Mr. Ramsay MacDonald came out
+from the committee to see what all the complaints
+were about. So there were strange interviews, in
+store-rooms, etc. (no one has a place to call their
+own!), and everyone "explained" and "gave
+evidence" and tried to "put matters straight."</p>
+
+<p>It rains every day. This may be a "providence,"
+as the floods are keeping the Germans away. The
+sound of constant rain on the window-panes is a
+little melancholy. Let us pray that in singleness
+and cheerfulness of heart we may do our little bit
+of work.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">EXPEDITION TO DUNKIRK</div>
+
+<p><i>23 December.</i>&mdash;Yesterday I motored into Dunkirk,
+and did a lot of shopping. By accident our
+motor-car went back to Furnes without me, and
+there was not a bed to be had in Dunkirk! After
+many vicissitudes I met Captain Whiting, who
+gave up his room in his own house to me, and
+slept at the club. I was in clover for once, and
+nearly wept when I found my boots brushed
+and hot water at my door. It was so like home
+again.</p>
+
+<p>I was leaving the station to-day when shelling
+began again. One shell dropped not far behind
+the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span> bridge, which I had just crossed, and wrecked
+a house. Another fell into a boat on the canal and
+wounded the occupants badly. I went to tell the
+Belgian Sisters not to go down to the station, and
+I lunched at their house, and then went home till
+the evening work began. People are always telling
+one that danger is now over&mdash;a hidden gun has
+been discovered and captured, and there will
+be no more shelling. Quel blague! The shelling
+goes on just the same whether hidden guns are
+captured or not.</p>
+
+<p>I can't say at present when I shall get home,
+because no one ever knows what is going to happen.
+I don't quite know who would take my place at the
+soup-kitchen if I were to leave.</p>
+
+<p><i>25 December.</i>&mdash;My Christmas Day began at
+midnight, when I walked home through the
+moonlit empty streets of Furnes. At 2 a.m. the
+guns began to roar, and roared all night. They
+say the Allies are making an attack.</p>
+
+<p>I got up early and went to church in the untidy
+school-room at the hospital, which is called the
+nurses' sitting-room. Mr. Streatfield had arranged
+a little altar, which was quite nice, and had set
+some chairs in an orderly row. As much as in him
+lay&mdash;from the altar linen to the white artificial
+flowers in the vases&mdash;all was as decent as could be
+and there were candles and a cross. We were
+quite a small congregation, but another service had
+been held earlier, and the wounded heard Mass in
+their ward at 6 a.m. The priests put up an
+altar there, and I believe the singing was excellent.
+Inside we prayed for peace, and outside the guns
+went<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span> on firing. Prince Alexander of Teck came to
+our service&mdash;a big soldierly figure in the bare
+room.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">CHRISTMAS IN BELGIUM</div>
+
+<p>After breakfast I went to the soup-kitchen at
+the station, as usual, then home&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>, to the
+hospital to lunch. At 3.15 came a sort of evensong
+with hymns, and then we went to the civil
+hospital, where there was a Christmas-tree for all
+the Belgian refugee children. Anything more
+touching I never saw, and to be with them made
+one blind with tears. One tiny mite, with her
+head in bandages, and a little black shawl on, was
+introduced to me as "une bless&eacute;e, madame."
+Another little boy in the hospital is always spoken
+of gravely as "the civilian."</p>
+
+<p>Every man, woman, and child got a treat or a
+present or a good dinner. The wounded had
+turkey, and all they could eat, and the children got
+toys and sweets off the tree. I suppose these
+children are not much accustomed to presents, for
+their delight was almost too much for them. I
+have never seen such excitement! Poor mites!
+without homes or money, and with their relations
+often lost&mdash;yet little boys were gibbering over
+their toys, and little girls clung to big parcels, and
+squeaked dolls or blew trumpets. The bigger
+children had rather good voices, and all sang our
+National Anthem in English. "God save our
+nobbler King"&mdash;the accent was quaint, but the
+children sang lustily.</p>
+
+<p>We had finished, and were waiting for our own
+Christmas dinner when shells began to fly. One
+came whizzing past Mr. Streatfield's store-room as
+I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span> stood there with him. The next minute a little
+child in floods of tears came in, grasping her
+mother's bag, to say "Maman" had had her arm
+blown off. The child herself was covered with dust
+and dirt, and in the streets people were sheltering
+in doorways, and taking little runs for safety as
+soon as a shell had finished bursting. The bombardment
+lasted about an hour, and we all waited in
+the kitchen and listened to it. At such times,
+when everyone is rather strung up, someone always
+and continually lets things fall. A nun clattered
+down a pail, and Maurice the cook seemed to fling
+saucepan-lids on the floor.</p>
+
+<p>About 8.15 the bombardment ceased, and we
+went in to a cheery dinner&mdash;soup, turkey, and
+plum-pudding, with crackers and speeches. I
+believe no one would have guessed we had been a
+bit "on the stretch."</p>
+
+<p>At 9.30 I went to the station. It was very
+melancholy. No one was there but myself. The
+fires were out, or smoking badly. Everyone had
+been scared to death by the shells, and talked of
+nothing else, whereas shells should be forgotten
+directly. I got things in order as soon as I could
+and the wounded in the train got their hot soup
+and coffee as usual, which was a satisfaction. Then
+I came home alone at midnight&mdash;keeping as near
+the houses as I could because of possible shells&mdash;and
+so to bed, very cold, and rather too inclined to
+think about home.</p>
+
+<p><i>26 December.</i>&mdash;Went to the station. Oddly
+enough, very few wounded were there, so I came
+away, and had my first day at home. I got a little
+oil-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span>stove put in my room, wrote letters, tidied up,
+and thoroughly enjoyed myself.</p>
+
+<p>A Taube came over and hovered above Furnes,
+and dropped bombs. I was at the Villa, and the
+family of Joos and I stood and watched it, and a
+nasty dangerous moth it looked away up in the sky.
+Presently it came over our house, so we went down
+to the kitchen. A few shots were fired, but the
+Taube was far too high up to be hit. Max, the
+Joos' cousin, went out and "tirait," to the admiration
+of the women-kind, and then, of course,
+"Papa" had to have a try. The two men, with
+their little gun and their talk and gesticulations, lent
+a queer touch of comic opera to the scene. The
+garden was so small, the men in their little hats
+were so suggestive of the "broken English" scene
+on the stage, that one could only stand and laugh.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">A BELGIAN DINNER PARTY</div>
+
+<p>The Joos family are quite a study, and so kind.
+On Christmas Eve I dined with them, and they
+gave me the best of all they had. There was
+a pheasant, which someone had given the doctor (I
+fancy he is a very small practitioner amongst the
+poor people); surely, never did a bird give more
+pleasure. I had known of its arrival days before
+by seeing Fernande, the little girl, decorated with
+feathers from its tail. Then the good papa must
+be decorated also, and these small jokes delighted
+the whole family to the point of ecstasy.</p>
+
+<p>On Christmas Eve Monsieur Max conceived the
+splendid joke, carefully arranged, of presenting
+Madame Joos&mdash;who is young and pretty&mdash;and the
+doctor with two parcels, which on being opened
+contained the child's umbrella and a toy gun.
+There<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span> wasn't even a comic address on the parcels;
+but Yrma, the servant, carefully trained for the
+part, brought them in in fits of delight, and all the
+family laughed with joy till the tears ran down
+their cheeks. As they wiped their eyes, they admitted
+they were sick with laughter. After supper
+we had the pianola, played by papa; and I must say
+that, when one can get nothing else, this instrument
+gives a great deal of pleasure. One gets a sort of
+ache for music which is just as bad as being hungry.</p>
+
+<p><i>27 December.</i>&mdash;Bad, bad weather again. It has
+rained almost continuously for five weeks. Yesterday
+it snowed. Always the wind blows, and <i>something</i>
+lashes itself against the panes. One can't
+leave the windows open, as the rooms get flooded.
+It is amazingly cold o' nights, I can't sleep for
+the cold.</p>
+
+<p>We have some funny incidents at the station
+sometimes. A particularly amusing one occurred
+the other day, when three ladies in knickerbockers
+and khaki and badges appeared at our soup-kitchen
+door and announced they were "on duty" there till
+6 o'clock. I was not there, but the scene that
+followed has been described to me, and has often
+made me laugh.</p>
+
+<p>It seems the ladies never got further than the
+door! Some people might have been firm in the
+"Too sorry! Come-some-other-day-when-we-are-not-so-busy"
+sort of way. Not so Miss &mdash;&mdash;. In
+more primitive times she would probably have gone
+for the visitors with a broom, but her tongue is just
+as rough as the hardest besom, and from their dress
+("skipping over soldiers' faces with breeches on,
+indeed!")<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span> to their corps there was very little left of
+them.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">OUR TROUBLE WITH SPIES</div>
+
+<p>It wasn't really from the dog-in-the-manger
+spirit that the little woman acted. The fact is that
+Belgians and French run the station together, and
+they are all agreed on one thing, which is, that no
+one but an authorised and registered person is to
+come within its doors. Heaven knows the trouble
+there has been with spies, and this rule is absolutely
+necessary.</p>
+
+<p>Two Red Cross khaki-clad men have been driving
+everywhere in Furnes, and have been found to
+be Germans. Had we permitted itinerant workers,
+the authorities gave notice that the kitchen would
+have to close.</p>
+
+<p>In the evening, when I went to the station,
+another knickerbockered lady sat there! I told her
+our difficulties, but allowed her to do a little work
+rather than hurt her feelings. The following day
+Miss &mdash;&mdash; engaged in deadly conflict with the lady
+who had sent our unwelcome visitors. Over the
+scene we will draw a veil, but we never saw the
+knickerbockered ladies again!</p>
+
+<p><i>31 December, 1914.</i>&mdash;The last day of this bad
+old year. I feel quite thankful for the summer I
+had at the Grange. It has been something to look
+back upon all the time I have been here; the
+pergolas of pink roses, the sleepy fields, the dear
+people who used to come and stay with me, and all
+the fun and pleasure of it, help one a good deal now.</p>
+
+<p>Yesterday was a fine day in the middle of weeks
+of rain. When I came down to breakfast in the
+Joos' little kitchen I remarked, of course, on the
+beauty<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span> of the weather. "What a day for Taubes!"
+said Monsieur Max, looking up at the clear blue
+sky. Before I had left home there was a shell
+in a street close by, and one heard that already
+these horrible birds of prey had been at work, and
+had thrown two bombs, which destroyed two houses
+in the Rue des Tr&egrave;fles. The pigeons that circle
+round the old buildings in Furnes always seem to
+see the Taubes first, as if they knew by sight their
+hateful brothers. They flutter disturbed from roof
+and turret, and then, with a flash of white wings,
+they fly far away. I often wish I had wings when
+I see them.</p>
+
+<p>I went to the station, and then to the hospital for
+slippers for some wounded men. Five aeroplanes
+were overhead&mdash;Allies' and German&mdash;and there was
+a good deal of firing. I was struck by the fact that
+the night before I had seen <i>exactly</i> this scene in a
+dream. Second sight always gives me much to
+think about. The inevitableness of things seems
+much accentuated by it. In my dream I stood by
+the other people in the yard looking at the war in
+the air, and watching the circling aeroplanes and the
+bursts of smoke.</p>
+
+<p>At the station there was a nasty feeling that
+something was going to happen. The Taubes
+wheeled about and hovered in the blue. I went to
+the hospital for lunch, and afterwards I asked Mr.
+Bevan to come to the station to look at some
+wounded whose dressings had not been touched for
+too long. He said he would come in half an hour,
+so I said I wouldn't wait, as he knew exactly where
+to find the men, and I came back to the Villa for
+my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span> rest. As I walked home I heard that the station
+had been shelled, and I met one of the Belgian
+Sisters and told her not to go on duty till after
+dark, but I had no idea till evening came of what
+had happened. Ten shells burst in or round the
+station. Men, women, and children were killed.
+They tell me that limbs were flying, and a French
+chauffeur, who came on here, picked up a man's
+leg in the street. Mr. Bevan sent up word to
+say none of us was to go to the station for the
+present.</p>
+
+<p>At Dunkirk seven Taubes flew overhead and
+dropped bombs, killing twenty-eight people. At
+Pervyse shells are coming in every day. I can't help
+wondering when we shall clear out of this. If the
+bridges are destroyed it will be difficult to get away.
+The weather has turned very wet again this evening.
+We have only had two or three fine days in as many
+months. The wind howls day and night, and the
+place is so well known for it that "vent de Furnes"
+is a byword. No doubt the floods protect us, so one
+mustn't grumble at a sore throat.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">SHELLS AT FURNES</div>
+
+<p><i>1 January.</i>&mdash;The station was shelled again to-day.
+Three houses were destroyed, and there was
+one person killed and a good many more were
+wounded. A rumour got about that the
+Germans had promised 500 shells in Furnes on
+New Year's Day.</p>
+
+<p>In the evening I went down to the station, and I
+was evidently not expected. Not a thing was ready
+for the wounded. The man in charge had let all
+three fires out, and he and about seven soldiers
+(mostly drunk) were making merry in the kitchen.
+None<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span> of them would budge, and I was glad I had
+young Mr. Findlay with me, as he was in uniform,
+and helped to get things straight. But these
+French seem to have very little discipline, and even
+when the military doctors came in the men did
+nothing but argue with them. It was amazing to
+hear them. One night a soldier, who is always drunk,
+was lying on a brancard in the doctor's own room,
+and no one seemed to mind.</p>
+
+<p><i>3 January, Sunday.</i>&mdash;I have had my usual rest
+and hot bath. I find I never want a holiday if I
+may have my Sundays. I spent a lazy afternoon in
+Miss Scott's room, she being ill, then went to
+Mr. Streatfield's service, dinner, and the station.
+A new officer was on duty there, and was introduced
+to the kitchen. He said, "Les anglais, of
+course. No one else ever does anything for anybody."</p>
+
+<p>I believe this is very nearly the case. God
+knows, we are full of faults, but the superiority of
+the British race to any other that I know is a
+matter of deep conviction with me, and it is founded,
+I think, on wide experience.</p>
+
+<p><i>6 January.</i>&mdash;I went to Adinkerke two days ago
+to establish a soup-kitchen there, as they say that
+Furnes station is too dangerous. We have been
+given a nice little waiting-room and a stove. We
+heard to-day that the station-master at Furnes has
+been signalling to the enemy, so that is why we
+have been shelled so punctually. His daughter is
+engaged to a German. Two of our hospital people
+noticed that before each bombardment a blue light
+appeared to flash on the sky. They reported the
+matter,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span> with the result that the signals were discovered.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE SHELLING GETS WORSE</div>
+
+<p>There has been a lot of shelling again to-day, and
+several houses are destroyed. A child of two years
+is in our hospital with one leg blown off and the
+other broken. One only hears people spoken of
+as, "the man with the abdominal trouble," or "the
+one shot through the lungs."</p>
+
+<p>Children know the different aeroplanes by sight,
+and one little girl, when I ask her for news, gives
+me a list of the "obus" that have arrived, and which
+have "s'&eacute;clat&eacute;," and which have not. One can see
+that she despises those which "ne s'&eacute;clatent pas."
+One says "Bon soir, pas des obus," as in English
+one says, "Good-night, sleep well."</p>
+
+<p><i>10 January.</i>&mdash;Prince Alexander of Teck dined
+at the hospital last night, and we had a great spread.
+Madame Sindici did wonders, and there were hired
+plates and finger-bowls, and food galore! We felt
+real swells. An old General&mdash;the head of the
+Army Medical Corps&mdash;gave me the most grateful
+thanks for serving the soldiers. It was gracefully
+and delightfully done.</p>
+
+<p>I am going home for a week's holiday.</p>
+
+<p><i>14 January.</i>&mdash;I went home <i>via</i> Calais. Mr. Bevan
+and Mr. Morgan took me there. It was a fine day
+and I felt happy for once, that is, for once out here.</p>
+
+<p>Some people enjoy this war. I think it is far the
+worst time, except one, I ever spent. Perhaps I
+have seen more suffering than most people. A
+doctor sees a hospital, and a nurse sees a ward of
+sick and wounded, but I see them by the hundred
+passing before me in an endless train all day. I
+can<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span> make none of them really better. I feed
+them, and they pass on.</p>
+
+<p>One reviews one's life a little as one departs.
+Always I shall remember Furnes as a place of wet
+streets and long dark evenings, with gales blowing,
+and as a place where I have been always alone. I
+have not once all this time exchanged a thought
+with anyone. I have lived in a very damp attic,
+and talked French to some kind middle-class people,
+and I have walked a mile for every meal I have
+had. So I shall always think of Furnes as a wet,
+dark place, and of myself with a lantern trudging
+about its mean streets.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_I_IV" id="CHAPTER_I_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV
+<span class="totoc"><a href="#CONTENTS">ToC</a></span></h2>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3>WORKING UNDER DIFFICULTIES</h3>
+
+<p>I have not written my diary for some weeks. I
+went home to England and stayed at Rayleigh
+House. On my way home I met Mr. F. Ware,
+who told me submarines were about. As I had
+but just left a much-shelled town, I think he might
+have held his peace. The usual warm welcome at
+Rayleigh House, with Mary there to meet me, and
+Emily Strutt.</p>
+
+<p>I wasn't very tired when I first arrived, but
+fatigue came out on me like a rash afterwards. I
+got more tired every day, and ended by having a
+sort of breakdown. This rather spoilt my holiday,
+but it was very nice seeing people again. It was
+difficult, I found, to accommodate myself to small
+things, and one was amazed to find people still
+driving serenely in closed broughams. It was like
+going back to live on earth again after being in
+rather a horrible other world. I went to my own
+house and enjoyed the very smell of the place.
+My little library and an hour or two spent there
+made my happiest time. Different people asked
+me to things, but I wasn't up to going out, and the
+weather was amazingly bad.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span>
+I was to have gone back to work on the Thursday
+week after I arrived home, but I got a telegram
+from Madame Sindici saying Furnes was being
+shelled, and the hospital, etc., was to be evacuated.
+Dr. Perrin, who was to have taken me back, had to
+start immediately without me. It was difficult to
+get news, and hearing nothing I went over on
+Saturday, January 23rd, as I had left Mrs. Clitheroe
+in charge of my soup-kitchen, and thought I had
+better do the burning deck act and get back to it.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Bevan and Mr. Morgan met me at Calais,
+and told me to wait at Dunkirk, as everyone was
+quitting Furnes. One of our poor nurses was
+killed, and the Joos' little house was much damaged.
+I stopped at Mrs. Clitheroe's flat, very glad to be
+ill in peace after my seedy condition in London and
+a bad crossing. Rested quietly all Sunday in the
+flat by myself. It is an empty, bare little place,
+with neither carpets nor curtains, but there is
+something home-like about it, the result, I think,
+of having an open fire in one room.</p>
+
+<p>On Monday, the 25th, I went back to work at
+Adinkerke station, to which place our soup-kitchen
+has been moved. I got a warm welcome from the
+Belgian Sisters. It is very difficult doing the
+station work from Dunkirk, as it is 16 kilometres
+from Adinkerke; but the place itself is nice, and I
+just have to trust to lifts. I fill my pockets with
+cigarettes and go to the "sortie de la ville," and
+just wait for something to pass&mdash;and some queer,
+bumpy rides I get. Still, the soldiers who drive me
+are delightful, and the cigarettes are always taken
+as good pay.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span>
+One day I went and spent the night at
+Hoogstadt, where the hospital now is, and that I
+much enjoyed. Dr. Perrin gave up his little room
+to me, and the nurses and staff were all so full of
+welcome and pleasant speeches.</p>
+
+<p>On Monday, February 8th, I went out to La
+Panne to start living in the hotel there; but I was
+really dreadfully seedy, and suffered so much that
+I had to return to the flat at Dunkirk again to be
+nursed. My day at La Panne was therefore very
+sad, as I nearly perished with cold, and felt so ill.
+Not a soul came near me, and I wished I could be
+a Belgian refugee, when I might have had a little
+attention from somebody.</p>
+
+<p>On Tuesday, February 9th, a Belgian officer
+came into Adinkerke station, claimed our kitchen
+as a bureau, and turned us out on to the platform.
+I am trying to get General Millis to interfere;
+but, indeed, the rudeness of this man's act makes
+one furious.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">ILLNESS AT DUNKIRK</div>
+
+<p><i>14 February.</i>&mdash;I have been laid up for some
+days at the flat at Dunkirk. It is amazing to
+realise that this place should be one's present idea
+of comfort. It has no carpets, no curtains, not a
+blind that will pull up or down, and rather dirty
+floors, yet it is so much more comfortable than
+anything I have had yet that I am too thankful to
+be here. There is a gas-ring in the kitchen, on
+which it is possible to cook our food, and there are
+shops where things can be got.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Strickland and I are both laid up here, and
+Miss Logan nurses us devotedly. Our joy is
+having a sitting-room with a fire in it. Was there
+ever<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span> anything half so good as that fire, or half so
+homely, half so warm or so much one's own? I lie
+on three chairs in front of it, and headache and
+cold and throat are almost forgotten. The wind
+howls, the sea roars, and aeroplanes fly overhead,
+but at least we have our fire and are at home.</p>
+
+<p><i>17 February.</i>&mdash;Another cold, wet day. I am
+alone in the flat with a "femme de m&eacute;nage" to look
+after me. A doctor comes to see me sometimes.
+Miss Logan and Mr. Strickland left this morning.
+There was a tempest of rain, and I couldn't think
+of being moved. They were sweet and kind, and
+felt bad about leaving me; but I am just loving
+being left alone with some books and my fire.</p>
+
+<p>I have been lying in bed correcting proofs. Oh,
+the joy of being at one's own work again! Just to
+see print is a pleasure. I believe I have forgotten
+all I ever knew before the war began. A magazine
+article comes to me like a language I have almost
+forgotten.</p>
+
+<p><i>18 February.</i>&mdash;This is the day that German
+"piracy" is supposed to begin. We heard a great
+explosion early this morning, but it was only a
+mine that had been found on the shore being blown
+up. The sailors' aeroplane corps is opposite us,
+and we see Commander Samson and others flying
+off in the morning and whirling back at night, and
+then we hear there has been a raid somewhere.
+When a Taube comes over here the sailors fire at
+it with a gun just opposite us, and then tell us they
+only do it to give us flower-vases&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>, empty shell-cases!</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">SOME STORIES OF THE WAR</div>
+
+<p>Mr. Holland came here to-day, and told me
+some<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span> humorous sides of his experiences with
+ambulances. One man from the Church Army
+marched in, and said: "I am a Christian and you
+are not. I come here for petrol, and I ask it, not
+for the Red Cross, but in the name of Christ."
+Another man came dashing in, and said: "I want
+to go to Poperinghe. I was once there before, and
+the mud was beastly. Send someone with me."</p>
+
+<p>My own latest experience was with an American
+woman of awful vulgarity. I asked her if she was
+busy, like everyone else in this place, and she said:</p>
+
+<p>"No. I was suffering from a nervous breakdown,
+so I came out here. What is your <i>war</i> is
+my <i>peace</i>, and I now sleep like a baby."</p>
+
+<p>I want adjectives! How is one to describe the
+people who come for one brief visit to the station
+or hospital with an intense conviction that they and
+they only feel the suffering or even notice the
+wants of the men. Some are good workers.
+Others I call "This-poor-fellow-has-had-none."
+Nurses may have been up all night, doctors may be
+worked off their feet, seven hundred men may have
+passed through the station, all wounded and all
+fed, but when our visitors arrive they discover that
+"This poor fellow has had none," and firmly, and
+with a high sense of duty and of their own
+efficiency, they make the thing known.</p>
+
+<p>No one else has heard a man shouting for water;
+no one else knows that a man wants soup. The
+man may have appendicitis, or colitis, or pancreatitis,
+or he may have been shot through the lungs
+or the abdomen. It doesn't matter. The casual
+visitor knows he has been neglected, and she says
+so,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span> and quite indiscriminately she fills everyone up
+with soup. Only she is tender-hearted. Only she
+could never really be hardened by being a nurse.
+She seizes a little cup, stoops over a man gracefully,
+and raises his head. Then she wants things passed
+to her, and someone must help her, and someone
+must listen to what she has to say. She feeds one
+man in half an hour, and goes away horrified at the
+way things are done. Fortunately these people
+never stay for long.</p>
+
+<p>Then there is another. She can't understand
+why our ships should be blown up or why trenches
+should be taken. In her own mind she proves
+herself of good sound intelligence and a member of
+the Empire who won't be bamboozled, when she
+says firmly and with heat, "Why don't we <i>do</i>
+something?" She would like to scold a few
+Generals and Admirals, and she says she believes
+the Germans are much cleverer than ourselves.
+This last taunt she hopes will make people "<i>do</i>
+something." It stings, she thinks.</p>
+
+<p>I could write a good deal about this "solitary
+winter," but I have not had time either to write
+or to read. I think something inside me has stood
+still or died during this war.</p>
+
+<p><i>21 February, Sunday.</i>&mdash;The Munro corps has
+swooped down in its usual hurry to distribute
+letters, and to say that someone is waiting down
+below and they can't stop. They eat a hasty
+sardine, drink a cup of coffee, and are off!</p>
+
+<p>To-day I have made this flat tidy at last, and
+have had it cleaned and scrubbed. I have thrown
+away old papers and empty boxes, and can sit
+down<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span> and sniff contentedly. No convoy-ite sees
+the difference!</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE COMMUNAL LIFE</div>
+
+<p>I think I have learnt every phase of muddle and
+makeshift this winter, but chiefly have I learnt the
+value of the Biblical recommendation to put
+candles on candlesticks. In the "convoi Munro"
+I find them in bottles, on the lids of mustard-tins,
+in metal cups, or in the necks of bedroom carafes.
+Never is the wax removed. Where it drips there
+it remains. Where matches fall there they lie.
+The stumps of cigarettes grace even the insides of
+flower-pots, knives are wiped on bread, and overcoats
+of enormous weight (khaki in colour, with a
+red cross on the arm) are hung on inefficient loose
+nails, and fall down. Towels are always scarce;
+but then, they serve as dinner-napkins, pocket-handkerchiefs,
+and even as pillow-cases, so no
+wonder we are a little short of them. There is no
+necessity for muddle. There never is any necessity
+for it.</p>
+
+<p>The communal life is a mistake. I wonder if
+Christ got bored with it.</p>
+
+<p>On Sundays I always want to rest, and something
+always makes me write. The attack comes on
+quite early. It is irresistible. At last I am a little
+happy after these dreary months, and it is only
+because I can think a little, and because the days
+are not quite so dark. I think the nights have
+been longer here than I ever knew them. No
+doubt it is the bad weather and the small amount
+of light indoors that make the days seem so short.</p>
+
+<p>I am going back to-morrow to the station, with
+its train-loads of wounded men. I <i>want</i> to go, and
+to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span> give them soup and comforts and cigarettes,
+but just ten days' illness and idleness have "balmed
+my soul."</p>
+
+<p><i>22 February.</i>&mdash;Waited all day for a car to come
+and fetch me away. It was dull work as I could
+never leave the flat, and all my things were packed
+up, and there was no coal.</p>
+
+<p><i>23 February.</i>&mdash;Waited again all day. I got
+very tired of standing by the window looking out
+on a strip of beach at the bottom of the street, and
+on the people passing to and fro. Then I went
+down to the dock to try and get a car there, but
+the new police regulations made it impossible to
+cross the bridge. I went to the airmen opposite.
+No luck.</p>
+
+<p>There is a peculiar brutality which seems to
+possess everyone out here during the war. I find
+it nearly everywhere, and it entails a good deal of
+unnecessary suffering. Always I am reminded of
+birds on a small ledge pushing each other into the
+sea. The big bird that pushes another one over
+goes to sleep comfortably.</p>
+
+<p>I remember one evening at Dunkirk when we
+couldn't get rooms or food because the landlady of
+the hotel had lost all her servants. The staff at the
+---- gave me a meal, but there was a queer want
+of courtesy about it. I said that anything would
+do for my supper, and I went to help get it myself.
+I spied a roll of cold veal on a shelf, and said
+helpfully that that would do splendidly, but the
+answer was: "Yes, but I believe that is for our
+next meal." However, in the end I got a scrap,
+consisting mostly of green stuffing.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span>
+"But when thou art bidden, go and sit down in
+the lowest room"&mdash;ah, my dear Lord, in this world
+one may certainly take the lowest place, and keep
+it. It is only the great men who say, "Friend,
+come up higher."</p>
+
+<p>"You can't have it," is on everyone's lips, and a
+general sense of bustle goes with the brutality.
+"You can't come here," "We won't have her," are
+quite common phrases. God help us, how nasty
+we all are!</p>
+
+<p>I find one can score pretty heavily nowadays by
+being a "psychologist." All the most disagreeable
+people I know are psychologists, notably &mdash;&mdash;, who
+breaks his promises and throws all his friends to
+the wolves, but who can still explain everything
+in his sapient way by saying he is a psychologist.</p>
+
+<p>One thing I hope&mdash;that no one will ever call me
+"highly strung." I wish good old-fashioned bad
+temper was still the word for highly strung and
+nervy people.</p>
+
+<p>... I am longing for beautiful things, music,
+flowers, fine thoughts....</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">LA PANNE</div>
+
+<p><i>La Panne. 25 February.</i>&mdash;At last I have
+succeeded in getting away from Dunkirk! The
+Duchess of Sutherland brought me here in her car.
+Last night I dined with Mrs. Clitheroe. She was
+less bustled than usual, and I enjoyed a chat with
+her as we walked home through the cold white mist
+which enshrouded La Panne.</p>
+
+<p>This long war has settled down to a long wait.
+Little goes on except desultory shelling, with its
+occasional quite useless victims. At the station we
+have mostly "malades" and "&eacute;clop&eacute;s"; in the
+trenches<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span> the soldiers stand in the bitter cold, and
+occasionally are moved out by shells falling by
+chance amongst them. The men who are capable
+of big things wait and do nothing.</p>
+
+<p>If it was not for the wounded how would one
+stand the life here? A man looks up patiently,
+dumbly, out of brown eyes, and one is able to go on
+again.</p>
+
+<p><i>La Panne. 27 February</i>.&mdash;I have been staying
+for three nights at the Kursaal Hotel, but my room
+was wanted and I had to turn out, so I packed my
+things and came down to the Villa les Chrysanth&egrave;mes,
+and shared Mrs. Clitheroe's room for a
+night. In the morning all our party packed up and
+left to go to Furnes, and I took on these rooms.
+I may be turned out any minute for "le militaire,"
+but meanwhile I am very comfortable.</p>
+
+<p>The heroic element (a real thing among us) takes
+queer forms sometimes. "No sheets, of course," is
+what one hears on every side, and to eat a meal
+standing and with dirty hands is to "play the
+game." Maxine Elliott said, "The nervous exhaustion
+attendant upon discomfort hinders work,"
+and she "does herself" very well, as also do all the
+men of the regular forces. But volunteer corps&mdash;especially
+women&mdash;are heroically bent on being
+uncomfortable. In a way they like it, and they
+eat strange meals in large quantities, and feel that
+this is war.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Leigh took me into Dunkirk in his
+car to-day, and I managed to get lots of vegetables
+for the soup-kitchen, and several other
+things I wanted. A lift is everything at this time,
+when<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span> one can "command" nothing. If one might
+for once feel that by paying a fare, however high,
+one could ensure having something&mdash;a railway
+journey, a motor-car, or even a bed! My work
+isn't so heavy at the kitchen now, and the hours
+are not so long, so I hope to do some work of a
+literary nature.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="center"><i>To Miss Macnaughtan's Sisters.</i></p>
+
+<p class="lh_ind6"><span class="smcap">Villa les Chrysanth&egrave;mes</span></p>
+<p class="lh_ind4"><span class="smcap">La Panne, Belgium,</span></p>
+<p class="lh_ind2"><i>Sunday, 28 February.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">My dear Family,</span></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">LA PANNE</div>
+
+<p>It is so long since I wrote a decently long
+letter that I think I must write to you all, to thank
+you for yours, and to give you what news there is
+of myself.</p>
+
+<p>Of war news there is none. The long war is
+now a long wait, and the huge expense still goes
+on, while we lock horns with our foes and just
+sway backwards and forwards a little, and this, as
+you know, we have done for weeks past. Every
+day at the station there is a little stream of men
+with heads or limbs bandaged, and our work goes
+on as before, although it is not on quite the same
+lines now. I used to make every drop of the soup
+myself, and give it out all down the train. Now
+we have a receiving-room for the wounded, where
+they stay all day, and we feed them four times, and
+then they are sent away. The whole thing is more
+military than it used to be, the result, I think, of
+officers not having much to do, and with a passion
+for writing out rules and regulations with a nice
+broad pen. Two orderlies help in the kitchen, the
+soup<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span> is "inspected," and what used to be "la
+cuisine de la dame &eacute;cossaise" is not so much a
+charitable institution as it was.</p>
+
+<p>One sees a good deal of that sort of thing during
+this war. Women have been seeing what is
+wanted, and have done the work themselves at
+really enormous difficulty, and in the face of
+opposition, and when it is a going concern it is
+taken over and, in many cases, the women are
+turned out. This was the case at Dunkirk station,
+which was known everywhere as "the shambles."
+I myself tried to get the wounded attended to, and
+I went there with a naval doctor, who told me that
+he couldn't uncover a single wound because of the
+awful atmosphere (it was quite common to see
+15,000 men lying on straw). One woman took
+this matter in hand, purged the place, got mattresses,
+clean straw, stoves, etc., and when all was in order
+the voice of authority turned her out.</p>
+
+<p>This long waiting is being much more trying for
+people than actual fighting. In every corps the
+old heroic outlook is a little bit fogged by petty
+things. One sees the result of it in some wrangling
+and jealousy, but this will soon be forgotten when
+fighting with all its realities begins again.</p>
+
+<p>I think Britain on the subject of "piracy" is
+about as fine as anything in her history. Her
+determination to ignore ultimatums and threats is
+really quite funny, and English people still put out
+in boats as they have always done, and are quite
+undismayed. Our own people here continue to travel
+by sea, as if submarines were rather a joke, and
+when going over to England on some small and
+useless<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span> little job they say apologetically, "Of
+course, I wouldn't go if I hadn't got to." The
+fact is, if there is any danger about they have to
+be in it.</p>
+
+<p>Some of our own corps have gone back to
+Furnes&mdash;I believe because it is being shelled. The
+rest of us are at La Panne, a cold seaside place
+amongst the dunes. In summer-time I fancy it is
+fashionable, but now it contains nothing but
+soldiers. They are quartered everywhere, and one
+never knows how long one will be able to keep a
+room. The station is at Adinkerke, where I have
+my kitchen. It is about two miles from La
+Panne, and it also is crammed with soldiers. There
+seems to be no attempt at sanitation anywhere.</p>
+
+<p>I wish I had more interesting news to tell you,
+but I am at my station all day, and if there is
+anything to hear (which I doubt) I do not hear it.</p>
+
+<p>There is a barge on the canal at Adinkerke which
+is our only excitement. It is the property of
+Maxine Elliott, Lady Drogheda, and Miss Close,
+and to go to tea with them is everyone's ambition.
+The barge is crammed with things for Belgian
+refugees, and Maxine told me that the cargo
+represents "nearer &pound;10,000 than &pound;5,000." It is
+piled with flour in sacks, clothing, medical comforts,
+etc. The work is good.</p>
+
+<p>I am sending home some long pins like nails.
+They are called "Silent Death," and are dropped
+from German aeroplanes. Boys pick them up and
+give them to us in exchange for cigarettes.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">MRS. PERCIVAL'S SLIPPERS</div>
+
+<p>I want to tell Tabby how immensely pleased
+everyone is with her slippers. The men who have
+stood<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span> long in the trenches are in agonies of frost-bite
+and rheumatism, and now that I can give them
+these slippers when they arrive at the station, they
+are able to take off their wet boots caked with mud.</p>
+
+<p>If J. would send me another little packet of
+groceries I should love it. Just what can come by
+post. That Benger's Food of hers nearly saved
+my life when I was ill at Dunkirk. What I should
+like better than anything is a few good magazines
+and books. I get <i>Punch</i> and the <i>Spectator</i>, but I
+want the <i>English Review</i> and the <i>National</i>, and
+perhaps a <i>Hibbert</i>. I enclose ten shillings for
+these. What is being read? Stephen Coleridge
+seems to have brought out an interesting collection,
+but I can't remember its name. I wonder if any
+notice will be taken of "They who Question."
+The reviews speak well of the Canadian book.</p>
+
+<p>Love to you all, and tell Alan how much I
+think of him. Bless you, my dears. Write often.</p>
+
+<p class="lf_sal">Yours as ever,</p>
+<p class="lf_sig"><span class="smcap">Sarah.</span></p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><i>1 March.</i>&mdash;Woe betide the person who owns
+anything out here: he is instantly deprived of it.
+"Pinching" is proverbial, and people have taken
+to carrying as many of their possessions as possible
+on their person, with the result that they are the
+strangest shapes and sizes. Still, one hopes the
+goods are valuable until one discovers that they
+generally consist of the following items: a watch
+that doesn't go, a fountain-pen that is never filled,
+an electric torch that won't light, a much-used
+hanky, an empty iodine bottle, and a scarf.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span>
+<i>5 March.</i>&mdash;I went as usual to-day to the muddy
+station and distributed soup, which I no longer
+make now that the station has become militarised.
+My hours are from 12 noon to 5 o'clock. This
+includes the men's dinner-hour and the washing of
+the kitchen. They eat and smoke when I am
+there, and loll on the little bench. They are
+Belgians and I am English, and one is always being
+warned that the English can't be too careful! We
+are entertaining 40,000 Belgians in England, but it
+must be done "carefully."</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THIEVING AND GIVING</div>
+
+<p>It is a great bore out here that everything is
+stolen. One can hardly lay a thing down for an
+instant that it isn't taken. To-day my Thermos
+flask in a leather case, in which I carry my lunch,
+was prigged from the kitchen. Things like metal
+cups are stolen by the score, and everyone begs!
+Even well-to-do people are always asking for something,
+and they simply whine for tobacco. The
+fact is, I think, the English are giving things away
+with their usual generosity and want of discrimination,
+and&mdash;it is a horrid word&mdash;they are already
+pauperising a nice lot of people. I can't help
+thinking that the thing is being run on wrong
+lines. We should have given or lent what was
+necessary to the Belgian Government, and let them
+undertake to provide for soldiers and refugees
+through the proper channels. No lasting good ever
+came of gifts&mdash;every child begs for cigarettes, and
+they begin smoking at five years old.</p>
+
+<p>I often think of our poor at home, and wish I
+had a few sacks full of things for them! I have
+not myself come across any instances of poverty
+nearly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span> as bad as I have seen in England. I understand
+from Dr. Joos and other Belgians who know
+about these things that there is still a good deal of
+money tucked away in this country. I hope there
+is, and we all want to help the Belgians over a bad
+time, but it would be better and more dignified for
+them to get it through their own Government.</p>
+
+<p>I had tea with Lady Bagot the other day, and
+afterwards I had a chat with Prince Francis at the
+English Mission. Another afternoon I went down
+to the Kursaal Hotel for tea. The stuffy sitting-room
+there is always filled with knickerbockered,
+leather-coated ladies and with officers in dark blue
+uniform, who talk loudly and pat the barmaid's
+cheeks. She seems to expect it; it is almost
+etiquette. A cup of bad tea, some German trophies
+examined and discussed, and then I came away
+with a "British" longing for skirts for my ladies,
+and for something graceful and (odious word)
+dainty about them. Yesterday evening Lady
+Bagot dined with me. This Villa is the only
+comfortable place I have been in since the war
+began: it makes an amazing difference to my
+health.</p>
+
+<p>It is odd to have to admit that one has hardly
+ever been unhappy for a long time before this war.
+The year my brother died, the year one went
+through a tragedy, the year of deadly dullness in
+the country&mdash;but now it isn't so much a personal
+matter. War and the sound of guns, and the sense
+of destruction and death abroad, the solitude of it,
+and the disappointing people! Oh, and the poor
+wounded&mdash;the poor, smelly, dirty wounded, whom
+one<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span> sees all day, and for whom one just sticks this
+out.</p>
+
+<p>I have only twice been for a drive out here, and
+I have not seen a single place of interest, nor,
+indeed, a single interesting person connected with
+the war. That, I suppose, is the result of being a
+"cuisini&egrave;re!" It is rather strange to me, because
+for a very long time I always seem to have had the
+best of things. To-day I hear of this General or
+that Secretary, or this great personage or that
+important functionary, but the only people whom
+I see are three little Sisters and two Belgian cooks.</p>
+
+<p>To give up work seems to me a little like
+divorcing a husband. There is a feeling of failure
+about it, and the sense that one is giving up what
+one has undertaken to do. So, however dull or
+tiresome husband or work may be, one mustn't give
+them up.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE POWER OF THE BIBLE</div>
+
+<p><i>6 March.</i>&mdash;To-day I have been thinking, as I
+have often thought, that the real power of the
+Bible is that it is a Universal Human Document.
+The world is based upon sentiment&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>, the
+personality of man and his feelings brought to bear
+upon facts. It is also the world's dynamic force.
+Now, the books of the Bible&mdash;especially, perhaps,
+the magical, beautiful Psalms&mdash;are the most tender
+and sentimental (the word has been misused, of
+course) that were ever written. They express the
+thoughts and feelings of generations of men who
+always did express their thoughts and feelings, and
+thought no shame of it. And so we northern
+people, with our passionate inarticulateness, love to
+find ourselves expressed in the old pages.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span>
+I find in the Gospels one of the few complaints
+of Christ. "Have I been so long time with you
+and yet hast thou not known me, Philip?" All
+one has ever felt is said for one in a phrase, all that
+one finds most isolating in the world is put into
+one sentence. There is a wan feeling of wonder in
+it; "so long," and yet you think that of me! "so
+long," and yet such absolute inability to read my
+character! "so long," and yet still quite unaware
+of my message! The humour of it (to us) lies in
+the little side of it! The dear people who "thought
+you would like this or dislike that"&mdash;the kind
+givers of presents even&mdash;the little people who shop
+for one! The friends who invite one to their queer,
+soulless, thin entertainments, with their garish
+lights; the people who choose a book for one, who
+counsel one, even with importunity, to go to some
+play which they are "sure we shall like." "So
+long"&mdash;they are old friends, and yet they thought
+we should like that play or that book! "So long"&mdash;and
+yet they think one capable of certain acts or
+feelings which do not remotely seem to belong to
+one! "So long"&mdash;and yet they can't even touch
+one chord that responds!</p>
+
+<p>We are always quite alone. The communal life
+is the loneliest of all, because "yet thou hast not
+known me." The world comes next in loneliness,
+but it is <i>big</i>, and with a big soul of its own. The
+family life is almost na&iuml;ve in its misunderstanding&mdash;no
+one listens, they just wait for pauses....</p>
+
+<p>... The worship of the "sane mind" has been
+a little overdone, I think. The men who are prone
+to say of everyone that they "exaggerate a little,"
+or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span> "are morbid," are like weights in a scale&mdash;just,
+but oh, how heavy!...</p>
+
+<p>... This war is fine, <i>fine</i>, <span class="smcap">fine</span>! I know it, and
+yet I don't get near the fineness except in the pages
+of <i>Punch</i>! I see streams of men whose language
+(Flemish) I don't speak, holding up protecting
+hands to keep people from jostling a poor wounded
+limb, and I watch them sleeping heavily, or eating
+oranges and smoking cigarettes down to the last
+hot stump, but I don't hear of the heroic stands
+which I know are made, or catch the volition of it
+all. Perhaps only in a voluntary army is such a
+thing possible. Our own boys make one's heart
+beat, but these poor, dumb, sodden little men,
+coming in caked with mud&mdash;to be patched up and
+sent into a hole in the ground again, are simply
+tragic.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">"THE WOMAN'S TOUCH"</div>
+
+<p><i>7 March.</i>&mdash;"The woman's touch." When a
+woman has been down on her knees scrubbing for a
+week, and washing for another week, a man, returning
+and finding his house in order, and vaguely
+conscious of a newer and fresher smell about it,
+talks quite tenderly of "a woman's touch."...</p>
+
+<p>... There are some people who never care to
+enter a door unless it has "passage interdite" upon
+it....</p>
+
+<p>... The guns are booming heavily this morning.
+Nothing seems to correspond. Are men really
+falling and dying in agonies quite close to us?
+I believe we ought to see less or more&mdash;be nearer
+the front or further from it. Or is it that nothing
+really changes us? Only war pictures and war
+letters remain as a fixed blazing standard. The
+soldiers<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span> in the trenches are quite as keen about
+sugar in their coffee as we are about tea. No
+wonder men have decided that one day we must
+put off flesh. It is far too obstrusive....</p>
+
+<p>... To comfort myself I try to remember that
+Wellington took his old nurse with him on all his
+campaigns because she was the only person who
+washed his stocks properly....</p>
+
+<p>... Surely the expense of the thing will one day
+put a stop to war. We are spending two million
+sterling per day, the French certainly as much, the
+Germans probably more, and Austria and Russia
+much more, in order to keep men most uncomfortably
+in unroofed graves, and to send high explosives
+into the air, most of which don't hit anything.
+Surely, if fighting was (as it is) impossible in this
+flooded country in winter, we might have called a
+truce and gone home for three months, and trained
+and drilled like Christians on Salisbury Plain!...</p>
+
+<p>... Health&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>, bad health&mdash;obtrudes itself
+tiresomely. I am ill again, and, fortunately, few
+people notice it, so I am able to keep on. A
+festered hand makes me awkward; and as I wind a
+bandage round it and tie it with my teeth, I once
+more wish I was a Belgian refugee, as I am sure I
+would be interesting, and would get things done
+for me!</p>
+
+<p>A sick Belgian artist, <a class="correction" title="original had &quot;Rotsarzt&quot;; changed to be consistent with later occurrences">M. Rotsartz</a>, is doing a
+drawing of me. I go to Lady Bagot's hospital,
+where he is laid up, and sit to him in the intervals
+of soup. That little wooden hospital is the best
+place I have known so far. Lady Bagot is never
+bustled or fussy, nor even "busy," and her staff are
+excellent<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span> men, with the "Mark of the Lamb" on
+them.</p>
+
+<p>I gave away a lot of things to-day to a regiment
+going into the trenches. The soldiers were delighted
+with them.</p>
+
+<p><i>11 March.</i>&mdash;There was a lot of firing near
+La Panne to-day, and a British warship was repeatedly
+shelled by the Germans from Nieuport.
+I went into Dunkirk with Mr. Clegg, and got the
+usual hasty shopping done. No one can ever wait
+a minute. If one has time to buy a newspaper one
+is lucky. The difficulty of communicating with
+anyone is great&mdash;no telephone&mdash;no letters&mdash;no
+motor-car. I am stranded.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">FRENCH MARINES</div>
+
+<p>I generally go in the train to Adinkerke with
+the French Marines, nice little fellows, with labels
+attached to them stating their "case"&mdash;not knowing
+where they are going or anything else&mdash;just
+human lives battered about and carted off. I don't
+even know where they get the little bit of money
+which they always seem able to spend on loud-smelling
+oranges and cigarettes. The place is
+littered with orange-skins&mdash;to-day I saw a long
+piece lying in the form of an "S" amid the mud;
+and, like a story of a century old, I thought of
+ourselves as children throwing orange-skins round
+our heads and on to the floor to read the initial of
+our future husband, and I seemed to hear mother
+say, "'S' for Sammy&mdash;Sammy C&mdash;&mdash;," a boy with
+thick legs whom we secretly despised!</p>
+
+<p>I have found a whole new household of "&eacute;clop&eacute;s"
+at Adinkerke, who want cigarettes, socks, and shoes
+all the time. They are a pitiful lot, with earache,
+toothache,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span> and all the minor complaints which I
+myself find so trying, and they lie about on straw
+till they are able to go back to the trenches again.</p>
+
+<p>The pollard willows between here and Adinkerke
+are all being cut down to build trenches. They
+were big with buds and the promise of spring.</p>
+
+<p><i>14 March.</i>&mdash;I went to the station yesterday, as
+usual. Suddenly I couldn't stand it any more.
+Everyone was cleaning. I was getting swept up
+with straw and mopped up with dirty cloths. The
+kitchen work was done. I ate my lunch in a filthy
+little out-building and then I fled. I had to get
+into the open air, and I hopped on to an ambulance
+and drove to Dunkirk. I had a good deal to do
+there getting vegetables, cigarettes, etc., and we
+got back late to the station, where I heard the
+Queen had paid a visit. Rather bad luck on almost
+the only day I have been away.</p>
+
+<p>I am waiting anxiously to hear if the report of
+the new British advance yesterday is true. When
+fighting really begins we are going to be in for a
+big thing; one dreads it for the sake of the boys
+we are going to lose. I want things to start now
+just to get them over, but I rather envy the people
+who died before this unspeakable war began.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="center"><i>To Mrs. Keays-Young.</i></p>
+
+<p class="lh_ind0"><span class="smcap">Care of Field Post Office, Dunkirk,</span></p>
+<p class="lh_ind6"><i>17 March.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">My Dearest Baby,</span></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">CAPTAIN L. M. B. SALMON</div>
+
+<p>I have (of course) been getting letters and
+parcels very badly lately. I am sending this home
+by hand, which is not allowed except on Red Cross
+business,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span> but this is to ask how Lionel is, so I think
+I may send it. My poor Bet! What anxiety for
+her! This spring weather is making me long to
+be at home, and when people tell me the crocuses
+are up in the park!&mdash;well, you know London and
+the park belong to me! Are the catkins out? We
+can get flowers at Dunkirk, but not here.</p>
+
+<p>Not a word of war news, because that wouldn't
+be fair. A shilling wire about Lionel would satisfy
+me&mdash;just "Better, and Bet well," or something of
+that sort.</p>
+
+<p class="lf_ind6">Always, my dear,</p>
+<p class="lf_sal">Your loving,</p>
+<p class="lf_sig"><span class="smcap">S. Macnaughtan.</span></p>
+
+<p>P.S.&mdash;Your two letters and Bet's have just come.
+To be in touch with you again is <i>very</i> pleasant. I
+can't tell you what it was like to sit down to a
+pretty, clean breakfast to-day with my letters
+beside me. Someone brought them here early.</p>
+
+<p>I heard to-day that I am going to be decorated
+by the King of the Belgians, but don't spread this
+broadcast, as anything might happen in war.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><i>20 March.</i>&mdash;I met an Englishman belonging to
+an armoured car in Dunkirk a couple of days ago.
+He told me that the last four days' fighting at La
+Bass&eacute;e has cost the British 13,000 casualties. Three
+lines of holes in the ground, and fighting only just
+beginning again! Bet's fianc&eacute; has been shot through
+the head, but is still alive. My God, the horror of
+it all! And England is still cheerful, I hear, and
+is going to hold race-meetings as usual.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span>
+At the station to-day I saw a mad man, who
+fought and struggled. I thought madmen raved.
+This one fought silently, like a man one sees in a
+dream. Another soldier shook all over like an old
+man. Many were blind.</p>
+
+<p>"On the whole," someone said to me in England,
+"I suppose you are having a good time."</p>
+
+<p>There is a snowstorm to-day, and it is bitterly
+cold. It is very odd how many small "complaints"
+seem to attack one. I can't remember the day
+out here when I felt well all over.</p>
+
+<p>Last night some Belgians came in to dinner. It
+was like old times trying to get things nice. I
+had some flowers and a tablecloth. I believe in
+making a contrast with the discomfort I see out
+here. We forced open a piano, and had some
+perfect music.</p>
+
+<p><i>21 March.</i>&mdash;The weather is brighter to-day; the
+sound of firing is more distant; it is possible to think
+of other things besides the war.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. &mdash;&mdash; came to the station this morning. I
+think she has the most untidy mind I have ever met
+with.</p>
+
+<p>With all our faults, I often wish that there were
+more Macnaughtans in the world. Their simple and
+plain intelligence gives one something to work upon.
+Mrs. &mdash;&mdash; came and told me to-day that last night
+"they laughed till they cried" over her attempt at
+making a pudding. I should have cried, only, over
+a woman of fifty who wasn't able to make a pudding.
+She and &mdash;&mdash; are twin nebul&aelig; who think themselves
+constellations.</p>
+
+<hr />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><i>To Miss Mary King.</i></p>
+
+<p class="lh_ind0"><span class="smcap">Care of Field Post Office, Dunkirk,</span></p>
+<p class="lh_ind6"><i>22 March.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Dear Mary,</span></p>
+
+<p>My plans, like those of everybody else, are
+undecided because of the war. If it is going to stop
+in May I should like to stay till the end, but if it
+is likely to go on for a long time, I shall come home.
+I don't think hot soup (which is my business) can
+be wanted much longer, as the warm weather will
+be coming.</p>
+
+<p>I have been asked to take over full charge of a
+hospital here. It is a great compliment, but I have
+almost decided to refuse. I have other duties, and
+I have some important writing to do, as I am busy
+with a book on the war. I begin work as early as
+ever, and then go to my kitchen.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">LONGING FOR HOME</div>
+
+<p>When I do come home I want to be in my own
+house, and I am longing to be back. Many of my
+friends go backwards and forwards to England all
+the time, but when I return, I should like to
+stay.</p>
+
+<p>I am in wonderfully comfortable rooms at
+present, and the landlady is most kind and attentive.
+She gives me a morning cup of tea, and the care and
+comfort are making me much better. I get some
+soup before I go off to my station, and last night I
+was really a fine lady. When I came in tired, the
+landlady, who is a Belgian, took off my boots for
+me!</p>
+
+<p>When I come home I think I'll lie in bed all
+day,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span> and poor old Mary will get quite thin again
+nursing me. The things you will have to do for
+me, and all the pretty things I shall see and have,
+are a great pleasure to think about!</p>
+
+<p class="lf_sal">Yours truly,</p>
+<p class="lf_sig"><span class="smcap">S. Macnaughtan.</span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_I_V" id="CHAPTER_I_V"></a>CHAPTER V
+<span class="totoc"><a href="#CONTENTS">ToC</a></span></h2>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3>THE SPRING OFFENSIVE</h3>
+
+
+<p><i>Villa les Chrysanth&egrave;mes, La Panne.</i>&mdash;I have been
+to London for a few days to see about the publication
+of my little war book. I got frightful
+neuralgia there, and find that as soon as I begin to
+rest I get ill.</p>
+
+<p>I went to a daffodil show, and found myself in
+the very hall where the military bazaar was held
+last year. I saw the place where the Welch had
+their stall. What fun we had! How many of the
+regiment are left? Only one officer not killed or
+wounded. Lord Roberts, who opened the bazaar,
+is gone too. All the soldiers whom I knew best
+have been taken, and only a few tough women
+seem to weather the storm of life.</p>
+
+<p>I had to see publishers in London, and do a lot
+of business, and just when I was beginning to love
+it all again my holiday was over. There had been
+heavy fighting out here, and I felt I must come
+back. My dear people didn't want me to return,
+and were very severe on the subject, and Mary
+scolded me most of the time. It was all affection
+on their part, although it made "duty" rather a
+criminal affair!</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span>
+There was endless difficulty about my passport
+when I returned. The French Consulate was
+besieged by people, and I had to go there at
+8.30 a.m. and wait till the doors were opened, and
+was then told I must first go to the Foreign Office
+to get an order from Colonel Walker. I went
+down to Whitehall from Bedford Square, and was
+told I must get a letter from Mr. Coventry. I went
+to Pall Mall and Mr. Coventry said it was quite
+impossible to do anything for me without instructions
+from Mr. Sawyer. Mr. Sawyer said the only
+thing he could do (if I could establish my identity)
+was to send me to a matron who would make every
+enquiry about me, and perhaps in three days I
+might get an Anglo-French certificate, through
+which Mr. Coventry might be induced to give me
+a letter to give to Colonel Walker, who might then
+sign the passport, which I could then take to
+Bedford Square to be <a class="correction" title="original had &quot;vise&quot;">vis&eacute;</a>.</p>
+
+<p>I got Sir John Furley to identify me, and then
+began a dogged going from place to place and
+from official to official till at last I got the thing
+through. I felt just like a Russian being "broken."
+There is a regular system, I believe, in Russia of
+wearing people out by this sort of official tyranny.
+I do not know anything more tiring or more
+discouraging! I had all my papers in order&mdash;my
+<a class="correction" title="original had &quot;pasport&quot;">passport</a>, my "laissez passer," a letter from Mr.
+Bevan, explaining who I was and asking for "every
+facility" for me, and my photograph, properly
+stamped. I am now so loaded with papers that I
+feel as if I were carrying a library about with me.
+Oh, give me intelligent women to do things for
+me!<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span> The best-run things I have seen since the
+war began have been our women's unit at Antwerp
+and Lady Bagot's hospital at Adinkerke.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">QUARRELLING</div>
+
+<p>I came back refreshed. I think everyone (every
+woman) out here has noticed how indifferent and
+really "nasty" people are to each other at the
+front. It is one of the singular things about the
+war, because one always hears it said that it is
+deepening people's characters, purifying them, and
+so on. As far as my experience goes, it has shown
+me the reverse. I have seldom known so much
+quarrelling, and there is a sort of queer unhappiness
+which has nothing to do with the actual war or loss
+of friends. I can't be mistaken about it, because I
+see it on all sides.</p>
+
+<p>At the &mdash;&mdash; hospital men and women alike are
+quarrelling all the time. Resignations are frequent.
+So-and-so has got So-and-so turned out; someone
+has written to the committee in London to report
+on someone else; a nice doctor is dismissed.
+Every nurse has given notice at different times.
+Most people are hurt and sore about something.
+Love seems quite at a discount, and one can't help
+wondering if Hate can be infectious! It is all
+frightfully disappointing, for surely one's heart beat
+high when one made up one's mind to do what one
+could for suffering Belgium and for the sake of the
+English name.</p>
+
+<p>Those two poor girls at &mdash;&mdash;! I know they
+meant well, and had high ideas of what they were
+going to do. Now they "use langwidge" to each
+other (although I know a very strong affection
+binds them), and very, very strong that language is.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span>
+Poor souls, the people here aren't a bit happy.
+I wonder if the work is sufficiently "sanctified."
+One never knows. Lady Bagot's is the happiest
+and most serene place here; her men are Church
+Army people, and they have evening prayers in the
+ward. It <i>does</i> make a difference.</p>
+
+<p>Scandals also exist out here, but they are
+merely silly, I think, and very unnecessary, though
+a little conventionality wouldn't hurt anyone.
+Sometimes I think it would be better if we were
+all at home, for Belgians are particular, and I hate
+breeches and gaiters for girls, and a silly way of
+going on. I do wish people could sometimes leave
+sex at home, but they never seem to. I wonder if
+Crusaders came back with scandals attached to
+their names!</p>
+
+<p>I got back here in one of those rushes of work
+that come in war time when fighting is near. At
+first no car could be spared to meet me at Boulogne,
+so I had to wait at the H&ocirc;tel Maurice for two
+or three days. I didn't mind much as I met such
+a lot of English friends, and also visited some
+interesting hospitals; but I knew by the thousands
+of wounded coming in that things must be busy at
+the front, and this made one champ one's bit.</p>
+
+<p>The Canadians and English who poured in from
+Ypres were terribly damaged, and the asphyxiating
+gas seems to have been simply diabolical. It was
+awful to see human beings so mangled, and I never
+get one bit accustomed to it. The streets were
+full of British soldiers, and the hospitals swarmed
+with wounded. I went to visit the Casino one.
+The bright sun streamed through lowered blinds on
+hundreds<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span> of beds, and on stretchers lying between
+them. Many Canadians were there, and rows of
+British. God! how they were knocked about! The
+vast rooms echoed to the cries of pain. The men
+were vowing they could never face shells and hand
+grenades any more. They were so newly wounded,
+poor boys; but they come up smiling when their
+country calls again.</p>
+
+<p>But it <i>isn't right</i>. This damage to human life is
+horrible. It is madness to slaughter these thousands
+of young men. Almost at last, in a rage, one
+feels inclined to cry out against the sheer imbecility
+of it. Why bring lives into the world and
+shell them out of it with jagged pieces of iron,
+and knives thrust through their quivering flesh?
+The pain of it is all too much. I am <i>sick</i> with
+seeing suffering.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">DUNKIRK SHELLED</div>
+
+<p>On Thursday, April 29th, Mr. Cooper, and
+another man came for us, and we left Boulogne.
+At Dunkirk we could hardly credit our eyes&mdash;the
+place had been shelled that very afternoon! I
+never saw such a look of bewilderment and horror
+as there was on all faces. No one had ever dreamed
+that the place could be hit by a German gun, yet
+here were houses falling as if by magic, and no one
+knew for a moment where on earth or in heaven
+the shells were coming from. Some people said
+they came from the sea, but the houses I saw hadn't
+been hit from the sea, which lies north, but from
+the east. Others talked of an armoured train, but
+armoured trains don't carry 15-inch shells. So all
+anyone could do was to <i>gape</i> with sheer astonishment.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span>Dunkirk, that safest of places, the haven to which
+we were all to fly when Furnes or La Panne were
+bombarded! Everybody contradicted one, of course,
+when one declared that no naval gun had been at
+work, but the fact remains that a long-range field-piece
+had been hidden at Leke, and Dunkirk was
+shelled for three days, and, as far as I know, may
+be shelled again. The inhabitants have all fled.
+The shops are not even shut; one could help oneself
+to anything! The "&eacute;tat major" has left, and so
+have all the officials; 23,000 tickets have been
+taken at the railway station, and the road to Calais
+<a class="correction" title="original had &quot;s&quot;">is</a> blocked with fleeing refugees.</p>
+
+<p>It was rather odd that the day I left here and
+passed through Furnes it was being shelled, and we
+had to wait a little while before we could get
+through; and when I arrived at Dunkirk the bombardment
+was just over, and a huge shell-hole
+prevented us passing down a certain road.</p>
+
+<p>Well, I got back to my work at Adinkerke in
+the midst of the fighting, and reached it just as the
+sun was setting. What a scene at the station,
+where I stopped before reaching home to leave the
+chairs and things I had bought for the hospital
+there! They were bringing in civilians wounded at
+Ypres and Poperinghe, which place also has been
+shelled (and yet we say we are advancing!), and
+there were natives also from Nieuport.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">WOUNDED WOMEN AND CHILDREN</div>
+
+<p>One whole ambulance was filled with wounded
+children. I think King Herod himself might have
+been sorry for them. Wee things in splints, or
+with their curly heads bandaged; tiny mites, looking
+with wonder at their hands swathed in linen;
+babies<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span> with their tender flesh torn, and older children
+crying with terror. There were two tiny things
+seated opposite each other on a big stretcher playing
+with dolls, and a little Christmas-card sort of
+baby in a red hood had had its mother and father
+killed beside it. Another little mite belonged to
+no one at all. Who could tell whether its parents
+had been killed or not? I am afraid many of them
+will never find their relations again. In the general
+scrimmage everyone gets lost. If this isn't frightfulness
+enough, God in heaven help us!</p>
+
+<p>On the platform was a row of women lying on
+stretchers. They were decent-looking brown-haired
+matrons for the most part, and it looked
+unnatural and ghastly to see them lying there.
+One big railway compartment was slung with their
+stretchers, and some young men in uniform nursed
+the babies. I shall never forget that railway compartment
+as long as I live. A man in khaki
+appeared, thoughtful, as our people always are, and
+brought a box of groceries with him, and sweet
+biscuits for the children, and other things. Thank
+Heaven for the English!</p>
+
+<p>At the hospital it was really awful, and the
+doctors were working in shifts of twenty-four hours
+at a time.</p>
+
+<p>I left my tables, chairs, trays, etc., for the hospital
+at the station, and returned early the next day, for
+numbers of wounded were still coming in. I wanted
+slippers for everyone, but my Belgian helpers had
+given a hundred pairs of mine away in my absence.
+They were overworked a little, I think, so I overlooked
+the fact that they lost their tempers rather
+badly.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span> Besides, I will <i>not</i> quarrel. In a small
+kitchen it would be too ridiculous. The three little
+people fight among themselves, but I don't fancy I
+was made for that sort of thing.</p>
+
+<p>There was nothing but work for some time. My
+"&eacute;clop&eacute;s" had been entirely neglected, and no one
+had even bothered to buy vegetables for the men.</p>
+
+<p>On Sunday, May 2nd, I went to see Dr. de Page's
+hospital. I saw a baby three weeks old with both
+his feet wounded. His mother came in one mass of
+wounds, and died on the operating table&mdash;a young
+mother, and a pretty one. A young man with
+tears in his eyes looked at the baby, and then said,
+"A jolly good shot at fifteen miles."</p>
+
+<p>They can't help making jokes.</p>
+
+<p>There were two Scots lying in a little room&mdash;both
+gunners, who had been hit at Nieuport. One,
+Ochterlony from Arbroath, had an eye shot away,
+and some other wounds; the other, McDonald, had
+seven bad injuries. Ochterlony talked a good deal
+about his eyes, till McDonald rolled his head
+round on the pillow, and remarked briefly, "I'd
+swop my stomach for your eyes."</p>
+
+<p>Sunday wasn't such a nasty day as I usually
+have&mdash;in fact, Sunday never is. But that station,
+with its glaring hot platform, its hotter kitchen, and
+its smells, takes a bit of sticking. I have discovered
+one thing about Belgium. Everything smells
+exactly alike. To-day there have been presented
+to my nose four different things purporting to have
+different odours, drains, some cheese, tobacco, and
+a bunch of lilac. There was no difference at all in
+the smells!</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">WAR WEARINESS</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span>
+I am much struck by the feeling of sheer weariness
+and disgust at the war which prevails at present.
+People are "soul sick" of it. A man told me last
+night that he longed to be wounded so that he
+might go home honourably. Amongst all the
+volunteer corps I notice the same thing. "Fed
+up" is the expression they all use, fed up with the
+suffering they see, fed up even with red crosses and
+khaki.</p>
+
+<p>When one thinks of primrose woods at home, and
+birds singing, and apple-blossom against blue sky,
+and the park with its flower-beds newly planted,
+and the fresh-watered streets, and women in pretty
+dresses&mdash;but one mustn't!</p>
+
+<p><i>6 May.</i>&mdash;Mrs. Guest arrived here to stay yesterday,
+and her chauffeur, Mr. Wood, dined here. It
+is nice to be no longer quite alone. Last night we
+were talking about how horrible war is. Mrs. Guest
+told me of a sight she had herself seen. Some men,
+horribly wounded, were being sent away by rail in
+a covered waggon ("fourgon"). One man had
+only his mouth left in his face. He was raving
+mad, and raged up and down the van, trampling on
+other men's wounded and broken limbs.</p>
+
+<p>Certainly war is a pretty game, and we must go
+on singing "Tipperary," and saying what fun it is.
+A young friend of mine at home gave me a pamphlet
+(price 2d.) written by a spinster friend of hers
+who had never left England, proving what a good
+thing this war was for us all. When I said I saw
+another aspect of it, the kind, soothing suggestion
+was that I must be a little over-tired.</p>
+
+<p><i>7 May.</i>&mdash;They say La Panne is to be bombarded
+to-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span>day. The Queen has left. Some people fussed
+a good deal, but if one bothered one's poor head
+about every rumour of this sort (mostly "dropped
+from a German aeroplane") where would one
+be?</p>
+
+<p>I was much touched when some people at home
+clubbed together and sent me out a little car a
+short time ago. But, alas! it had not been chosen
+with judgment, and is no use. It has been rather
+a bother to me, and now it must go back. Mr.
+Carlile drove it up from Dunkirk, and it broke
+down six times, and then had to be left in a ditch
+while he got another car to tow it home. Since
+then it has lain at the station.</p>
+
+<p>I can't get anyone to come and inspect it. The
+extraordinary habit which prevails here of saying
+"No" to every request makes things difficult, for
+no privileges can be bought. Sometimes, when I
+hear people ask for the salt, I fancy the answer will
+be, "Certainly not." Two of our own chauffeurs
+live quite close to the station: they say they are
+busy, and can't look at my car. One smiles, and
+says: "When you <i>have</i> time I shall be <i>so</i> grateful,
+etc." Inwardly one is feeling that if one could <i>roar</i>
+just for once it would be a relief.</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes at home I have felt a little embarrassed
+by the love people have shown me&mdash;as if I have
+somehow deceived them into thinking I was nicer
+than I really am. Out here I have to try to
+remember that I have a few friends! In London
+I couldn't understand it when people praised me or
+said kind things.</p>
+
+<p>There is only one straight tip for Belgium&mdash;have
+a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span> car, and understand it yourself. Never did I feel
+so helpless without one. But the roads are too
+bad and too crowded to begin to learn to drive, and
+there are difficulties about a garage.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">MY CAR</div>
+
+<p>This evening Mr. Wood and I went to Hoogstadt,
+and towed that <i>corpse</i>&mdash;my car&mdash;up to La
+Panne for &mdash;&mdash; to inspect. The whole Belgian army
+seemed to gather round us as we proceeded on our
+toilsome journey, with breaking tow-ropes (for the
+"corpse" is heavy) and defective steering-gear.
+<i>They</i> were amused. I was just cracking with fatigue.
+Needless to say, &mdash;&mdash; didn't come. As the car was
+a present I can't send it back without the authority
+of a chauffeur. If I keep it any longer they will say
+I used it and broke it....</p>
+
+<p>There were some fearful bad cases at Hoogstadt
+to-day, and we were touched to see an old man
+sitting beside his unconscious son and keeping the
+flies off him, while he sobbed in great gusts. One
+Belgian officer told us that the hardest thing he
+had to do in the war was to give the order to fire
+on a German regiment which was advancing with
+Belgian women and children in front of it. He
+gave the order, and saw these helpless creatures
+shot down before his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>At the Yser the other night two German regiments
+got across the river and found themselves
+surrounded. One regiment surrendered, and the
+men of the other coolly turned their guns on it and
+shot their comrades down.</p>
+
+<p>Some of our corps were evacuating women and
+children the other day. One man, seeing his wife
+and daughter stretched out on the ground, went
+mad,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span> and ran up and down the field screaming.
+We see a lot of madness.</p>
+
+<p><i>8 May.</i>&mdash;The guns sound rather near this morning,
+and the windows shake. One never knows
+what is happening till the wounded come in. I
+sat with my watch in my hand and counted the
+sound of bursting shells. There were 32 in one
+minute. The firing is continuous, and very loud,
+and living men are under this fire at this moment,
+"mown down," "wiped out," as the horrible terms
+go. I loathe even the sound of a bugle now. This
+carnage is too horrible. If people can't "realise"
+let them come near the guns.</p>
+
+<p>They were shelling Furnes again when I was at
+Steenkerke the other day, and it was a strange
+sound to hear the shells whizzing over the peaceful
+fields. One heard them coming, and they passed
+overhead to fall on the old town. Under them
+the brown cattle fed unheeding, and old women
+hoed undisturbed, and the sinking sun threw long
+shadows on the grass. And then a busy ambulance
+would fly past on the road; one caught a glimpse
+of blood-covered forms. "Yes, a few wounded,
+and two or three killed."</p>
+
+<p>Old women are the most courageous creatures
+on this earth. When everyone else has fled from a
+place you can see them sitting by their cottage
+doors or hoeing turnips in the line of fire.</p>
+
+<p>It was touching to see a little family of terrified
+children sheltering with their mother in a roadside
+Calvary when the shells were coming over. The
+poor young mother was holding up her baby to
+Christ on His cross.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE CRUCIFIX UNDAMAGED</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span>
+There is a matter which seems almost more than
+a coincidence, and one which has been too often
+remarked to be ignored, and that is, that in the
+midst of ruins which are almost totally destroyed
+the figure of Christ in some niche often remains
+untouched. I have seen it myself, and many
+writers have commented on the fact. Sometimes
+it is only a crucifix on some humble wall, or it may
+be a shrine in a church. The solitary figure remains
+and stands&mdash;often with arms raised to bless. At
+Neuve Chapelle one learns that, although the havoc
+is like that wrought by an earthquake, and the very
+dead have been uprooted there, a crucifix stands at
+the cross-roads at the north end of the village, and
+the pitiful Christ still stretches out His hands. At
+His feet lie the dead bodies of young soldiers. At
+Nieuport I noticed a shrine over a doorway in the
+church standing peacefully among the ruins, and
+at Pervyse also one remained, until the tower reeled
+and fell with an explosion from beneath, which was
+deliberately ordered to prevent accidents from
+falling masonry.</p>
+
+<p>I had to go to Dunkirk this afternoon and while
+I was there I heard that the <i>Lusitania</i> had been
+torpedoed and sunk with 1,600 souls on board her.
+What change will this make in the situation? Is
+America any use to us except in the matter of
+supplies, and are we not getting these through as it
+is? A nation like that ought to have an army or
+a navy.</p>
+
+<p>Dunkirk was nearly deserted owing to the bombardment,
+and it was difficult to find a shop open
+to buy vegetables for my soup-kitchen. Still, I
+enjoyed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span> my afternoon. There was a chance that
+shelling might begin again at any time, and a bitter
+wind blew up clouds of prickly dust and sand; but
+it was a great relief to be out in the open and away
+from smells, and to have one's view no longer
+bounded by a line of rails. God help us! What
+a year this has been! It tires me even to think of
+being happy again, cheerfulness has become such an
+effort.</p>
+
+<p><i>10 May.</i>&mdash;I went to see my Scottish gunner at
+the hospital to-day. He said, "I can't forget that
+night," and burst out crying. "That night" he had
+been wounded in seven places, and then had to
+crawl to a "dug-out" by himself for shelter.</p>
+
+<p>Strong healthy men lie inert in these hospitals.
+Many of them have face and head wounds. I saw
+one splendid young fellow, with a beautiful face,
+and straight clear eyes of a sort of forget-me-not
+blue. He won't be able to speak again, as his jaw
+is shot away. The man next him was being fed
+through the nose.</p>
+
+<p>The matron told me to-day that last night a man
+came in from Nieuport with the base of a shell
+("the bit they make into ash trays," she said) embedded
+in him. His clothing had been carried in
+with it. He died, of course.</p>
+
+<p>One of our friends has been helping with stretcher
+work, removing civilians. He was carrying away
+a girl shot to pieces, and with her clothing in rags.
+He took her head, and a young Belgian took her
+feet, and the Belgian looked round and said quietly,
+"This is my fianc&eacute;e."</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE "LUSITANIA"</div>
+
+<p><i>11 May.</i>&mdash;To-day being madame's washing day&mdash;we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span>
+ring the changes on the "nettoyage," "le
+grand nettoyage," and "le lavage"&mdash;everything was
+late. The newspaper came in, and was full of such
+words as "horror," "resentment," "indignation,"
+about the <i>Lusitania</i>, but that won't give us back
+our ship or our men. I wish we could do more
+and say less, but the Press must talk, and always
+does so "with its mouth." M. Rotsartz came to
+breakfast. The guns had been going all night long,
+there was a sense of something in the air, and I
+fretted against platitudes in French and madame's
+washing. At last I got away, and went to the sea
+front, for the sound of bursting shells had become
+tremendous.</p>
+
+<p>It was a sort of British morning, with a fresh
+British breeze blowing our own blessed waves, and
+there, in its grey grandeur, stood off a British man-of-war,
+blazing away at the coast. The Germans
+answered by shells, which fell a bit wide, and must
+have startled the fishes (but no one else) by the
+splash they made. There were long, swift torpedo-boats,
+with two great white wings of cloven foam
+at their bows, and a great flourish of it in their
+wake, moving along under a canopy of their own
+black smoke. It was the smoke of good British
+coal, from pits where grimy workmen dwell in the
+black country, and British sweat has to get it out
+of the ground. Our grey lady was burning plenty
+of it, and when she had done her work, she put up
+a banner of smoke, and steamed away with a
+splendid air of dignity across the white-flecked sea.
+One knew the men on board her! Probably not a
+heart beat quicker by a second for all the German
+shells,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span> probably dinner was served as usual, and
+men got their tubs and had their clothes brushed
+when it was all over.</p>
+
+<p>I went down to my kitchen a little late, but I
+had seen something that Drake never saw&mdash;a bit of
+modern sea-fighting. And in the evening, when I
+returned, my grey mistress had come back again.
+The sun was westering now, and the sea had turned
+to gold, and the grey lady looked black against the
+glare, but the fire of her guns was brighter than the
+evening sunset, and she was a spit-fire, after all, this
+dignified queen, and she, "let 'em have it," too,
+while the long, lean torpedo-boats looked on.</p>
+
+<p>I went to the kitchen; I gave out jam, I distributed
+socks, I heard the fussy importance of
+minor officials, but I had something to work on
+since I had seen the grey lady at work.</p>
+
+<p>In the evening I dined quietly on the barge with
+Miss Close and Maxine Elliott. We had a game of
+bridge&mdash;a thing I had not seen for a year and more
+(the last time I played was down in Surrey at the
+Grange!), and the little gathering on the old
+timbered barge was pleasant.</p>
+
+<p>Some terrible stories of the war are coming
+through from the front. An officer told us that
+when they take a trench, the only thing which
+describes what the place is like is strawberry jam.
+Another said that in one trench the sides were
+falling, and the Germans used corpses to make a
+wall, and kept them in with piles fixed into the
+ground. Hundreds of men remain unburied.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">GERMAN PRISONERS</div>
+
+<p>Some people say that the German gunners are
+chained to their guns. There were six Germans at
+the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span> station to-day, two wounded and four prisoners.
+Individually I always like them, and it is useless to
+say I don't. They are all polite and grateful, and
+I thought to-day, when the prisoners were surrounded
+by a gaping crowd, that they bore themselves
+very well. After all, one can't expect a
+whole nation of mad dogs. A Scotchman said,
+"The ones opposite us (<i>i.e.</i>, in the trenches) were a
+very respectable lot of men."</p>
+
+<p>The German prisoners' letters contain news that
+battalions of British suffragettes have arrived at
+the front, and they warn officers not to be captured
+by these!</p>
+
+<p><i>12 May.</i>&mdash;To-day, when I got to the station, I
+was asked to remove an old couple who sat there
+hand in hand, covered with blood. The old woman
+had her arm blown off, and the man's hand was
+badly injured. We took them to de Page's
+hospital.</p>
+
+<p>The firing has been continuous for the last few
+days, and men coming in from Ypres and Dixmude
+and Nieuport say that the losses on both sides have
+been enormous. There were four Belgian officers
+who lived opposite my villa, whom one used to see
+going in and out. Last night all were killed.</p>
+
+<p>At Dixmude the other day the Duke of Westminster
+went to the French bureau to get his
+passport vis&eacute;. The clerks were just leaving, but
+he begged them to remain a minute or two and to
+do his little business. They did so, and came to
+the door to see him off, but a shell came hurtling
+in and killed them both, and of a woman who stood
+near there was literally nothing left.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span>
+Last night &mdash;&mdash; and I were talking about the
+<i>gossip</i>, which would fill ten unpublishable volumes
+out here.... Why do these people come out to
+the front? Give me men for war, and no one else
+except nuns. Things may be all right, but the
+Belgians are horrified, and I hate them to "say
+things" of the English. The grim part of it is that
+I don't believe I personally hear one half of what
+goes on and what is being said. They are afraid of
+shocking me, I believe.</p>
+
+<p>The craze for men baffles me. I see women,
+<i>dead tired</i>, perk up and begin to be sparkling as
+soon as a man appears; and when they are alone
+they just seem to sink back into apathy and fatigue.
+Why won't these mad creatures stop at home?
+They <i>are</i> the exception, but war seems to bring
+them out. It really is intolerable, and I hate it for
+women's sake, and for England's.</p>
+
+<p>The other day I heard some ladies having a
+rather forced discussion on moral questions, loud
+and frank.... Shades of my modest ancestresses!
+Is this war time, and in a room filled with men and
+smoke and drink, are women in knickerbockers discussing
+such things? I know I have got to "let
+out tucks," but surely not quite so far!</p>
+
+<p>Beautiful women and fast women should be
+chained up. Let men meet their God with their
+conscience clear. Most of them will be killed
+before the war is over. Surely the least we can do
+is not to offer them temptation. Death and
+destruction, and horror and wonderful heroism,
+seem so near and so transcendent, and then, quite
+close at hand, one finds evil doings.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">A TREASURE</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span>
+<i>14 May.</i>&mdash;I heard two little stories to-day, one
+of a British soldier limping painfully through
+Poperinghe with a horrid wound in his arm and
+thigh.</p>
+
+<p>"You seem badly wounded," a friend of mine
+said to him.</p>
+
+<p>"Yus," said the soldier; "there were a German,
+and he wounded me in three places, but"&mdash;he drew
+from under his arm a treasure, and his poor dirty
+face was transformed by a delighted grin&mdash;"I got
+his bloody helmet."</p>
+
+<p>Another story was of an English officer telephoning
+from a church-tower. He gave all his directions
+clearly and distinctly, and never even hinted that
+the Germans had taken the town and were
+approaching the church. He just went on talking,
+till at last, as the tramp of footsteps sounded on
+the belfry stairs, he said, "Don't take any notice of
+any further information. I am going." He went&mdash;all
+the brave ones seem to go&mdash;and those were the
+last words he spoke.</p>
+
+<p>Rhodes Moorhouse flew low over the German lines
+the other day, in order to bombard the German
+station at Courtrai. He planed down to 300 feet,
+and became the target for a hundred guns. In the
+murderous fire he was wounded, and might have
+descended, but he was determined not to let the
+Germans have his machine. He planed down to
+100 feet in order to gather speed. At this elevation
+he was hit again, and mortally wounded, but
+he flew on alone to the British lines&mdash;like a shot
+bird heading for its own nest. He didn't even stop
+at the first aerodrome he came to, but sailed on&mdash;always<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span>
+alone&mdash;to his base, made a good landing,
+handed over his machine, and died.</p>
+
+<p>In the hospitals what heroism one finds! One
+splendid fellow of 6 feet 2 inches had both his legs
+and both his arms amputated. He turned round to
+the doctor and said, smiling, "I shan't have to
+complain of beds being too short now!" And when
+someone came and sat with him in his deadly pain,
+he remarked in his gentle way, "I am afraid I am
+taking up all your time." His old father and
+mother arrived after he was dead.</p>
+
+<p>Ah! if one could hear more, surely one would do
+more! But this hole-and-corner way of doing warfare
+damps all enthusiasm and stifles recruiting.
+Why are we allowed to know nothing until the news
+is stale? Yesterday I heard at first hand of the
+treatment of some civilians by Germans, and I
+visited a village to hear from the <i>people themselves</i>
+what had happened.</p>
+
+<p>My work isn't so heavy now, and, much as I
+want to be here when the "forward movement"
+comes, I believe I ought to use the small
+amount of kick I have left in me to go to
+give lectures on the war to men in ammunition
+works at home. They all seem to be slacking and
+drinking, and I believe one might rouse them if
+one went oneself, and told stories of heroism, and
+tales of the front. The British authorities out
+here seem to think I ought to go home and give
+lectures at various centres, and I have heard from
+Vickers-Maxim's people that they want me to
+come.</p>
+
+<p>I think I'll arrive in London about the 1st of
+June,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span> as there is a good deal to arrange, and I have
+to see heads of departments. One has to forget all
+about <i>parties</i> in politics, and get help from Lloyd
+George himself. I only hope the lectures may be
+of some use.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="center"><i>To Mrs. ffolliott.</i></p>
+
+<p class="lh_ind0"><span class="smcap">Villa les Chrysanth&egrave;mes,</span></p>
+<p class="lh_ind2"><span class="smcap">La Panne, Belgium,</span></p>
+<p class="lh_ind4"><i>16 May.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Darling old Poot,</span></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">TO MRS. FFOLLIOTT</div>
+
+<p>One line, to wish you with all my heart
+a happy birthday. I shan't forget you on the 22nd.
+Will you buy yourself some little thing with the
+enclosed cheque?</p>
+
+<p>This war becomes a terrible strain. I don't
+know what we shall do when four nephews, a
+brother-in-law, and a nephew to be are in the field.</p>
+
+<p>I get quite sick with the loss of life that is going
+on; the whole land seems under the shadow of death.
+I shall always think it an idiotic way of settling
+disputes to plug pieces of iron and steel into
+innocent boys and men. But the bravery is simply
+wonderful. I could tell you stories which are
+almost unbelievable of British courage and fortitude.</p>
+
+<p>I am coming home soon to give some lectures,
+and then I hope to come out here again.</p>
+
+<p>Bless you, dear Poot,</p>
+
+<p class="lf_sal">Your loving</p>
+<p class="lf_sig"><span class="smcap">Sarah.</span></p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><i>17 May.</i>&mdash;I saw a most curious thing to-day.
+A soldier in the Pavilion St. Vincent showed me
+five 5-franc pieces which he had had in his pocket
+when<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span> he was shot. A piece of shrapnel had bent
+the whole five until they were welded together. The
+shrapnel fitted into the silver exactly, and actually
+it was silvered by the scrape it had made against
+the coin. I should like to have had it, but the
+man valued his souvenir, so one didn't like to offer
+him money for it.</p>
+
+<p>A young Canadian found a comrade of his nailed
+to a door, and stone dead, of course. When did he
+die?</p>
+
+<p>A Belgian doctor told Mrs. Wynne that in
+looking through a German officer's knapsack he
+found a quantity of children's hands&mdash;a pretty
+souvenir! I write these things down because they
+must be known, and if I go home to lecture to
+munition-workers I suppose I must tell them of
+these barbarities.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, the German prisoners in England are
+getting country houses placed at their service,
+electric light, baths, etc., and they say girls are
+allowed to come and play lawn tennis with them.
+The ships where they are interned are costing us
+&pound;86,000 a month. Our own men imprisoned in
+Germany are starved, and beaten, and spat upon.
+They sleep on mouldy straw, have no sanitation, and
+in winter weather their coats, and sometimes even
+their tunics, were taken from them.</p>
+
+<p>Fortunately, reprisals need not come from us.
+Talk to Zouaves and Turcos and the French. God
+help Germany if they ever penetrate to the Rhine.</p>
+
+<p>A young man&mdash;Mr. Shoppe&mdash;is occupied in
+flying low over the gun that is bombarding Dunkirk
+in order to take a photograph of it.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span>
+It seems to me a great deal to ask of young men
+to give their lives when life must be so sweet, but
+no one seems to grudge their all. Of some one
+hears touching and splendid stories; others, one
+knows, die all alone, gasping out their last breath
+painfully, with no one at hand to give them even a
+cup of water. No one has a tale to tell of them.
+God, perhaps, heard a last prayer or a last groan
+before Death came with its merciful hand and put
+an end to the intolerable pain.</p>
+
+<p>How much can a man endure? A Frenchman
+at the Zouave Poste au Secours looked calmly on
+while the remains of his arm were cut away the
+other night. Many operations are performed without
+chloroform (because they take a shorter time) at
+the French hospital.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">A HEAVENLY HOST</div>
+
+<p>I heard from R. to-day. He says the story about
+Mons is true. The English were retreating, and
+Kluck was following hard after them. He wired
+to the Kaiser that he had "got the English," but
+this is what men say happened. A cloud came out
+of a clear day and stood between the two armies,
+and in the cloud men saw the chariots and horses
+of a heavenly host. Kluck turned back from pursuing,
+and the English went on unharmed.</p>
+
+<p>This may be true, or it may be the result of
+men's fancy or of their imagination. But there is
+one vision which no one can deny, and which each
+man who cares to look may see for himself. It is
+the vision of what lies beyond sacrifice; and in that
+bright and heavenly atmosphere we shall see&mdash;we
+may, indeed, see to-day&mdash;the forms of those who
+have fallen. They fight still for England, unharmed
+now<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span> and for ever more, warriors on the side of right,
+captains of the host which no man can number,
+champions of all that we hold good. They are
+marching on ahead, and we hope to follow; and
+when we all meet, and the roll is called, we shall
+find them still cheery, I think, still unwavering, and
+answering to their good English names, which they
+carried unstained through a score of fights, at what
+price God and a few comrades know.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_I_VI" id="CHAPTER_I_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI
+<span class="totoc"><a href="#CONTENTS">ToC</a></span></h2>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3>LAST DAYS IN FLANDERS</h3>
+
+
+<p><i>19 May.</i>&mdash;In order to get material for my lecture
+to munition-workers I was very anxious to see more
+of the war for myself than is possible at a soup-kitchen,
+and I asked at the British Mission if I
+might be given permission to go into the British
+lines. Major &mdash;&mdash; in giving me a flat refusal, was
+a little pompous and important I thought, and he
+said it was <i>impossible</i> to get near the British.</p>
+
+<p>To-day I lunched on the barge with Miss Close,
+and we took her car and drove to Poperinghe. I
+hardly like to write this even in a diary, I am so
+seldom naughty! But I really did something very
+wrong for once. And the amusing part of it was
+that military orders made going to Poperinghe so
+impossible that no one molested us! We passed
+all the sentries with a flourish of our green papers,
+and drove on to the typhoid hospital with only a few
+Tommies gaping at us.</p>
+
+<p>I was amazed at the pleasure that wrong-doing
+gives, and regretted my desperately strict past life!
+Oh, the freedom of that day in the open air! the
+joy of seeing trees after looking at one wretched line
+of rails for nine months! Lilacs were abloom in
+every<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span> garden, and buttercups made the fields look
+yellow. The air was misty&mdash;one could hardly have
+gone to Poperinghe except in a mist, as it was being
+so constantly shelled&mdash;but in the mist the trees had
+a queer light on them which made the early green
+look a deeper and stronger colour than I have ever
+seen it. There appeared to be a sort of glare under
+the mist, and the fresh wet landscape, with its top-heavy
+sky, radiated with some light of its own.
+Oh, the intoxication of that damp, wet drive, with a
+fine rain in our faces, and the car bounding under us
+on the "pav&eacute;"! If I am interned till the end of the
+war I don't care a bit! I have had some fresh air,
+and I have been away for one whole day from the
+smell of soup and drains.</p>
+
+<p>How describe it all? The dear sense of guilt first,
+and then the still dearer British soldiers, all ready
+with some cheery, cheeky remark as they sat in
+carts under the wet trees. They were our brethren&mdash;blue-eyed
+and fair-haired, and with their old
+clumsy ways, which one seemed to be seeing plainly
+for the first time, or, rather, recognising for the first
+time. It was all part of England, and a day out.
+The officers were taking exercise, of course, with
+dogs, and in the rain. We are never less than
+English! To-morrow we may be killed, but to-day
+we will put on thick boots, and take the dogs for a
+run in the rain.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">AT POPERINGHE</div>
+
+<p>Poperinghe was deserted, of course. Its busy
+cobbled streets were quite empty except for a few
+strolling soldiers in khaki, and just here and there
+the same toothless old woman who is always the last
+to leave a doomed city. At the typhoid hospital we
+gravely<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span> offered the cases of milk which we had
+brought with us as an earnest of our good conduct,
+but even the hospital was nearly empty. However, a
+secretary offered us a cup of tea, and in the dining-room
+we found Madame van den Steen, who had just
+returned to take up her noble work again. She
+was at Dinant, at her own ch&acirc;teau, when war broke
+out, and she was most interesting, and able to tell
+me things at first hand. The German methods
+are pretty well known now, but she told me a great
+deal which only women talking together could
+discuss. When a village or town was taken, the
+women inhabitants were quite at the mercy of the
+Germans.</p>
+
+<p>Continuing, Madame van den Steen said that all
+the filthiness that could be thought of was committed&mdash;the
+furniture, cupboards, flowerpots, and even
+bridge-tables, being sullied by these brutes. Children
+had their hands cut off, and one woman, at least,
+at Dinant was crucified. One's pen won't write
+more. The horrors upset one too much. All the
+babies born about that time died; their mothers
+had been so shocked and frightened....</p>
+
+<p>Of Ypres Madame said, "It smells of lilac and
+death." Some Englishmen were looking for the
+body of a comrade there, and failed to find it
+amongst the ruins of the burning and devastated
+town. By seeming chance they opened the door of
+a house which still stood, and found in a room
+within an old man of eighty-six, sitting placidly in
+a chair. He said, "How do you do?" and bade
+them be seated, and when they exclaimed, aghast
+at his being still in Ypres, he replied that he was
+paralysed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span> and couldn't move, but that he knew God
+would send someone to take him away; and he
+smiled gently at them, and was taken away in their
+ambulance.</p>
+
+<p>Madame gave me a shell-case, and asked Mr.
+Thompson if he would bring in his large piece to
+show us. He wheeled it across the hall, as no one
+could lift it, and this was only the <i>base</i> of a 15-inch
+shell. It was picked up in the garden of the hospital,
+and had travelled fifteen miles!</p>
+
+<p>The other day I went to see for myself some of
+the poor refugees at Coxide. There were twenty-five
+people in one small cottage. Some were sleeping
+in a cart. One weeping woman, wearing the little
+black woollen cap which all the women wear, told
+me that she and her family had to fly from their
+little farm at Lombaertzyde because it was being
+shelled by the Germans, but afterwards, when
+all seemed quiet, they went back to their home to
+save the cows. Alas, the Germans were there!
+They made this woman (who was expecting a
+baby) and all her family stand in a row, and one
+girl of twenty, the eldest daughter, was shot before
+their eyes. When the poor mother begged for the
+body of her child it was refused her.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Times</i> list of atrocities is too frightful, and
+all the evidence has been sifted and proved to
+be true.</p>
+
+<p><i>20 May.</i>&mdash;Yesterday I arranged with Major du
+Pont about leaving the station to go home and
+give lectures in England. Then I had a good deal
+to do, so I abandoned my plan of visiting refugees
+with Etta Close, and stayed on at the station. At
+5.30<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span> I came back to La Panne to see Countess de
+Caraman Chimay, the dame d'honneur of the Queen
+of the Belgians; then I went on to dine with
+the nurses at the "Ocean." Here I heard that
+Adinkerke, which I had just left, was being shelled.
+Fortunately, the station being there, I hope the
+inhabitants got away; but it was unpleasant to
+hear the sound of guns so near. I knew the three
+Belgian Sisters would be all right, as they have
+a good cellar at their house, and I could trust Lady
+Bagot's staff to look after her. All the same,
+it was a horrible night, full of anxiety, and there
+seems little doubt that La Panne will be shelled
+any day. My one wish is&mdash;let's all behave well.</p>
+
+<p>I watched the sunset over the sea, and longed to
+be in England; but, naturally, one means to stick
+it, and not leave at a nasty time.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">SOCKS</div>
+
+<p><i>21 May.</i>&mdash;Yesterday, at the station, there was a
+poor fellow lying on a stretcher, battered and
+wounded, as they all are, an eye gone, and a foot
+bandaged. His toes were exposed, and I went and
+got him rather a gay pair of socks to pull on over
+his "pansement." He gave me a twinkle out of
+his remaining eye, and said, "Madame, in those
+socks I could take Constantinople!"</p>
+
+<p>The work is slack for the moment, but a great
+attack is expected at Nieuport, and they say the
+Kaiser is behind the lines there. His presence
+hasn't brought luck so far, and I hope it won't this
+time.</p>
+
+<p>I went to tea with Miss Close on the barge, and
+afterwards we picked up M. de la Haye, and went
+to see an old farm, which filled me with joy. The
+buildings<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span> here, except at the larger towns, are not
+interesting or beautiful, but this lovely old house
+was evidently once a summer palace of the bishops
+(perhaps of Bruges). It is called "Beau Garde,"
+and lies off the Coxide road. One enters what
+must once have been a splendid courtyard, but it is
+now filled indiscriminately with soldiers and pigs.
+The chapel still stands, with the Bishops' Arms on
+the wall; and there are Spanish windows in the old
+house, and a curious dog-kennel built into the wall.
+Over the gateway some massive beams have been
+roughly painted in dark blue, and these, covered in
+ivy, and with the old dim-toned bricks above, make
+a scheme of colour which is simply enchanting.
+Some wind-torn trees and the sand-dunes, piled in
+miniature mountains, form a delicious background
+to the old place.</p>
+
+<p>I also went with Etta Close to visit some of the
+refugees for whom she has done so much, and in
+the sweet spring sunshine I took a little walk in
+the fields with M. de la Haye, so altogether it was
+a real nice day. There were so few wounded that
+I was able to have a chat with each of them, and
+the poor "&eacute;clop&eacute;s" were happy gambling for
+ha'pence in the garden of the St. Vincent.</p>
+
+<p>In the evening I went up to the Kursaal to dine
+with Mrs. Wynne. Our two new warriors who
+have come out with ambulances have stood this
+<i>absolutely</i> quiet time for three days, and are now
+leaving because it is too dangerous! The shells at
+Adinkerke never came near them, as they were
+deputed to drive to Nieuport only. (N.B.&mdash;Mrs.
+Wynne<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span> continues to drive there every night!)
+Eight men of our corps have funked, no women.</p>
+
+<p>I am going to take a week's rest before going
+home, in the hope that I won't arrive looking as
+ill as I usually do. I hardly know how to celebrate
+my holiday, as it is the first time since I came out
+here that I haven't gone to the station except on
+Sundays.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">SUNDAY</div>
+
+<p><i>23 May, Sunday.</i>&mdash;I went to Morning Service
+at the "Ocean" to-day, then walked back with
+Prince Alexander. In the evening we drove to
+the Hoogstadt hospital. The King of the Belgians
+was just saying good-bye to the staff, after paying a
+surprise visit. He has a splendid face, and the
+simplicity of his plain dark uniform makes the
+strength and goodness of it all the more striking.</p>
+
+<p>As I was waiting at the hospital the Germans
+began firing at a little village a mile off. It is
+always strange to hear the shells whizzing over the
+fields. We drove out to see the Yser and the
+floods, which have protected us all the winter.
+With glasses one could have seen the German
+lines.</p>
+
+<p>Spring is coming late, and with a marvel of
+green. A wind blows in from the sea, and the
+lilacs nod from over the hedge. The tender corn
+rustles its soft little chimes, and all across it the
+wind sends arpeggio chords of delicate music, like
+a harp played on silver strings. A great big horse-chestnut
+tree, carrying its flowers proudly like a
+bouquet, showers the road with petals, and the shy
+hedges put up a screen all laced and decorated
+with white may. It just seems as if Mother Earth
+had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span> become young again, and was tossing her
+babies up to the summer sky, and the wind played
+hide-and-seek, or peep-bo, or some other ridiculous
+game, with them, and made the summer babies as
+glad and as mischievous as himself. Only the guns
+boom all the time, and my poor little French
+Marines, who drink far too much, and have the
+manners of princes, come in on ambulances in the
+evening, or at the "poste" a hole is dug for them
+in the ground, and they are laid down gently in
+their dirty coats.</p>
+
+<p>Mother Earth, with her new-born babies, stops
+laughing for a moment, and says to me, "It's all
+right, my dear; they have to come back to me, as
+all my children and all their works must do. Why
+make any complaint? For a time they are happy,
+playing and building their little castles, and making
+their little books, and weaving stories and wreaths
+of flowers; but the stories, the castles, the flowers
+I gave them, and they themselves, all come back to
+me at last&mdash;the leaves next autumn, and the boy
+you love perhaps to-morrow."</p>
+
+<p>Oh, Father God, Mother Earth, as it was in the
+beginning will it be in the end? Will you give us
+and them a good time again, and will the spring
+burst into singing in some other country? I don't
+know. I don't know.</p>
+
+<p>Only I do know this&mdash;I am sure of it now for the
+first time, and it is worth while spending a long, long
+winter within the sound of guns in order to know
+it&mdash;that death brings release, not release from mere
+suffering or pain, but in some strange and unknown
+way it brings freedom. Soldiers realise it: they
+have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span> been more terrified than their own mothers
+will ever know, and their very spines have melted
+under the shrieking sound of shells, and then comes
+the day when they "don't mind." Death stalks
+just as near as ever, but his face is suddenly quite
+kind. A stray bullet or a piece of shell may come,
+but what does it matter? This is the day when
+the soldier learns to stroll when the shrapnel is
+falling, and to look up and laugh when the
+murderous bullet pings close by.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">SOUVENIRS</div>
+
+<p>War souvenirs! There are heaps of them, and
+I hate them all; pieces of jagged shell, helmets
+with bullets through them, pieces of burnt
+aeroplanes, scraps of clothing rent by a bayonet.
+Yesterday, at the station, I saw a sick Zouave
+nursing a German summer casquette. He said
+quietly, being very sick: "The burgomaster chez
+moi wanted one. Yes, I had to kill a German
+officer for it&mdash;ce n'est rien de quoi&mdash;I got a ball in
+my leg too, mais mon burgomaster sera tr&egrave;s content
+d'avoir une casquette d'un boche." Our own men
+leave their trenches and go out into the open to get
+these horrible things, with their battered exterior
+and the suggestion of pomade inside.</p>
+
+<p>Yesterday, by chance, I went to the "Ierlinck"
+to see Mr. Clegg. I met Mr. Hubert Walter,
+lately arrived from England, and asked him to
+dine, so both he and Mr. Clegg came, and Madame
+van der Gienst. It was <i>so</i> like England to talk to
+Mr. Walter again, and to learn news of everyone,
+and we actually sat up till 10.30, and had a great
+pow-wow.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Walter attaches great importance to the
+fact<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span> that the Germans are courageous in victory,
+but their spirits go down at once under defeat, and
+he thinks that even one decisive defeat would do
+wonders in the way of bringing the war to an end.
+The Russians are preparing for a winter campaign.
+I look at all my "woollies," and wonder if I had
+better save some for 1916. What new horrors will
+have been invented by that time? I hear the
+Germans are throwing vitriol now! In their
+results I hate hand grenades more than anything.
+The poor burnt faces which have been wounded by
+them are hardly human sometimes, and in their
+bandages they have a suggestion of something
+tragically grotesque.</p>
+
+<p><i>26 May.</i>&mdash;We had a great day&mdash;rather, a glorious
+day&mdash;at the station yesterday. In the morning I
+heard that "les anglais" were arriving there, and,
+although the news was a little startling, I couldn't
+go early to Adinkerke because I felt so seedy.
+However, I got off at last in a "camion," and
+when I arrived I found the little station hospital
+and salle and Lady Bagot's hospital crowded with
+men in khaki.</p>
+
+<p>We don't know yet all that it means. The
+fighting has been fierce and awful at Ypres. Are
+the hospitals at the base all crowded? Is there
+no more room for our men? What numbers of
+them have fallen? Who is killed, and who is
+left?</p>
+
+<p>All questions are idle for the moment. Only I
+have a postcard to say that Colin is at the front, so
+I suppose until the war is over I shall go on being
+very sick with anxiety. At night I say to myself,
+as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span> the guns boom on, "Is he lying out in the open
+with a bullet through his heart?" and in the
+morning I say, "Is he safe in hospital, and
+wounded, or is he still with his men, making them
+follow him (in the way he has) wherever he likes to
+lead them?" God knows, and the War Office, and
+neither tells us much.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">GAS-POISONING</div>
+
+<p>The men at the station were nearly all cases of
+asphyxiation by gas. Unless one had actually
+seen the immediate results one could hardly have
+credited it. In a day or two the soldiers may leave
+off twitching and shuddering as they breathe, and
+may be able to draw a breath fairly, but an hour or
+two after they have inhaled the deadly German gas
+is an awful time to see one's men. Most of them
+yesterday were in bed, but a few sat on canvas
+chairs round the empty stove in the salle, and all
+slept, even those in deadly pain. Sleep comes to
+these tired soldiers like a death. They succumb to
+it. They are difficult to rouse. They are oblivious,
+and want nothing else. They are able to sleep
+anywhere and in any position, but even in sleep
+they twitch and shudder, and their sides heave like
+those of spent horses.</p>
+
+<p>It struck me very forcibly that what was
+immediately wanted was a long draught for each of
+them of some clean, simple stimulant. I went and
+bought them red wine, and I could see that this
+seemed to do good, and I went to the barge and
+got bottles of whisky and a quantity of distilled
+water, and we dosed the men. It seemed to do
+them a wonderful lot of good, and in some way
+acted as an antidote to the poison. Also, it pulled
+them<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span> together, and they got some quieter sleep
+afterwards.</p>
+
+<p>Towards the afternoon, indeed, all but one Irishman
+seemed to be better, and then we began to be
+cheery, and the scene at the station took colour
+and became intensely alive. The khaki-clad forms
+roused themselves, and (of course) wanted a wash.
+Also, they sat on their beds and produced pocket-combs,
+and ran them through their hair. In
+their dirt and rags these poor battered, breathless
+men began to try to be smart again. It was a
+tragedy and a comedy all in one. A Highlander,
+in a shrunk kilt and with long bare legs, had his
+head bound about with bandages till it looked like
+a great melon, and his sleeve dangled empty from
+his great-coat. Others of the Seaforths, and mere
+boys of the Highland Territorials, wore khaki shirts
+over their tartan, and these were bullet-torn and
+hanging in great rents. And some boys still wore
+their caps with the wee dambrod pattern jauntily,
+and some had no caps to wear, and some were all
+daubed about with white bandages stained crimson,
+and none had hose, and few had brogues. They
+had breathed poison and received shrapnel, and
+none of them had slept since Sunday night. They
+had had an "awful doing," and no one knew how
+the battle at Ypres had gone, but these were men
+yet&mdash;walking upright when they could, always
+civil, undismayed, intelligent, and about as like
+giving in as a piece of granite.</p>
+
+<p>Only the young Scottish boys&mdash;the children of
+seventeen who had sworn in as nineteen&mdash;were
+longing for Loch Lomond's side and the falls of
+Inversnaid.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span> I believe the Loch Lomond lads
+believed that the white burn that falls over the
+rocks near the pier has no rival (although they
+have heard of Niagara and the Victoria Falls), and
+it's "oor glen" and "oor country" wi' them all.
+And one boy wanted his mother badly, and said
+so. But oh, how ready they were to be cheery!
+how they enjoyed their day! And, indeed, we did
+our best for them.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">A GARDEN-PARTY</div>
+
+<p>Lady Bagot's hospital was full, and we called it
+her garden-party when we all had tea in the open
+air there. We fed them, we got them handkerchiefs,
+our good du Pont got them tubs, the cook
+heaped more coal on the fire, although it was very
+hot, and made soup in buckets, and then began
+a curious stage scene which I shall never forget.
+It was on the platform of the station. A band
+appeared from somewhere, and, out of compliment
+to the English, played "God Save the King." All
+the dirty bandaged men stood at attention. As
+they did so an armoured train backed slowly into
+the station and an aeroplane swooped overhead.
+At Drury Lane one would have said that the
+staging had been overdone, that the clothes were
+too ragged, the men too gaunt and too much
+wounded, and that by no stretch of imagination
+could a band be playing "God save the King"
+while a square painted train called "Lou-lou"
+steamed in, looking like a child's giant gaudy toy,
+and an aeroplane fussed overhead.</p>
+
+<p>Everyone had stories to tell, but I think the best
+of them concerns the arrival of the wounded last
+night. All the beds in Lady Bagot's little hospital
+were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span> full, and the Belgians who occupied them
+insisted on getting up and giving their places to
+the English. They lay on the floor or stood on
+their feet all night, and someone told me that even
+very sick men leapt from their beds to give them to
+their Allies.</p>
+
+<p>God help us, what a mixture it all is! Here
+were men talking of the very <i>sound</i> of bayonets on
+human flesh; here were men not only asphyxiated
+by gas, but blinded by the pepper that the Germans
+mix with it; and here were men determined to
+give no quarter&mdash;yet they were babbling of Loch
+Lomond's side and their mothers, and fighting as
+to who should give up their beds to each other.</p>
+
+<p>Of course the day ended with the exchange of
+souvenirs, and the soldiers pulled buttons off their
+coats and badges out of their caps. And when it
+was all over, every mother's son of them rolled
+round and went to sleep. Most of them, I thought,
+had a curious air of innocence about them as they
+slept.</p>
+
+<p><i>27 May.</i>&mdash;I took a great bundle of newspapers
+and magazines to the "Jellicoe" men to-day.
+English current literature isn't a waste out here,
+and I often wonder why people don't buy more.
+They all fall upon my tableful, and generally bear
+away much of it.</p>
+
+<p>The war news, even in the ever optimistic English
+press, is <i>not</i> good, but not nearly as bad as what
+seems to me the real condition of affairs. The
+shortage of high explosives is very great. At
+Nieuport yesterday Mrs. Wynne said to a French
+officer, "Things seem quiet here to-day," at which
+he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span> laughed, and said, "I suppose even Germans
+will stop firing when they know you have no
+ammunition."</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">SLACKERS IN GLASGOW</div>
+
+<p>In France the armament works are going night
+and day, and the men work in shifts of 24 hours&mdash;even
+the women only get one day off in a week&mdash;while
+in Glasgow the men are sticking out for strict
+labour conditions, and are "slacking" from Friday
+night till late on Tuesday morning, and then
+demanding extra pay for overtime. And this in
+face of the bare facts that since October the Allies
+have lost ground in Russia; in Belgium they remain
+as they were; and in France they have advanced a
+few kilometres. At Ypres the Germans are now
+within a mile of us, and the losses there are terrible.
+Whom shall we ever see again?</p>
+
+<p>Men come out to die now, not to fight. One
+order from a sergeant was, "You've got to take
+that trench. You can't do it. Get on!"</p>
+
+<p>A captain was heard saying to a gunner subaltern:
+"We must go back and get that gun." The
+subaltern said, "We shall be killed, but it doesn't
+matter." The captain echoed heavily, "No, it
+doesn't matter," and they went back.</p>
+
+<p>Sir William Ramsay, speaking about the war,
+says that half the adult male population of Europe
+will be killed before it is over. Those who are left
+will be the feeble ones, the slackers, the unfit, and
+the cowards. It is good to be left to breed from
+such stock!</p>
+
+<p>It is odd to me how confusing is the want of
+difference that has come to pass between the living
+and the not living. Cottages and little towns seem
+to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span> be part of nature. One regrets their destruction
+almost as one regrets the loss of life. They have a
+tragic look, with their dishevelled windows and
+stripped roofs and skeleton frames. Life has
+become so cheap that cottages seem almost as
+valuable. "It doesn't matter"&mdash;nothing matters.
+I rather dread going back to London, because
+there things may begin to seem important and one
+will be in bondage again. Here our men are going
+to their death laughing because it doesn't matter.</p>
+
+<p>There is a proud humility about my countrymen
+which few people have yet realised. It is the outcome
+of nursery days and public schools. No one
+is allowed to think much of himself in either place,
+so when he dies, "It doesn't matter."</p>
+
+<p>God help the boys! If they only knew how
+much it mattered to <i>us</i>! Life is over for them.
+We don't even know for certain that they will live
+again. But their <i>spirit</i>, as I know it, can never
+die. I am not sure about the survival of personality.
+I care, but I do not know. But I do know
+that by these simple, glorious, uncomplaining
+deaths, some higher, purer, more splendid place is
+reached, some release is found from the heavy
+weight of foolish, sticky, burdensome, contemptible
+things. These heroes do "rise," and we "rise"
+with them. Could Christ himself desire a better
+resurrection?</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">LARKS</div>
+
+<p><i>28 May.</i>&mdash;I am busy getting things prepared for
+going home&mdash;my lecture, two articles, etc. I did
+not go to the station to-day, but worked till
+3 o'clock, and then walked over to St. Idesbald.
+How I wish I could have been out-of-doors more
+since<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span> I came here. It is such a wonderful country,
+all sky. No wonder there are painters in Belgium.
+During the winter it was too wet to see much, and
+I was always in the kitchen, but now I could kiss
+the very ground with the little roses on it amongst
+the Dunes. Larks sing at St. Idesbald, and
+nightingales. Some fine night I mean to walk out
+there and listen.</p>
+
+<p><i>29 May.</i>&mdash;To-day, according to promise, Mr.
+Bevan took me into Nieuport. It was very difficult
+to get permission to go there, but Mr. Bevan got
+it from the British Mission on the plea that I was
+going to give lectures at home.</p>
+
+<p>"The worst of going to Nieuport," said Major
+Tyrell, "is that you won't be likely to see home
+again."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Bevan called at 10 o'clock with the faithful
+MacEwan, and we went first to the Cabour hospital,
+which I always like so much, and where the large
+pleasure-grounds make things healthy and quiet for
+the patients. Then we had a tyre out of order, so
+had to go on to Dunkirk, where I met Mr. Sarrel
+and his friend Mr. Hanson&mdash;Vice-Consul at Constantinople&mdash;and
+they lunched with us while the
+car was being doctored.</p>
+
+<p>At last we started towards Nieuport, but before
+we got there we found a motor-car in a ditch, and
+its owner with a cut on his head and his arm broken,
+so we had to pick him up and take him to Coxide.
+It was a clear, bright day, with all the trees swishing
+the sky, and Mr. Bevan and MacEwan did nothing
+all the time but tell me how dangerous it was, and
+they pointed out every place on the road where
+they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span> had picked up dead men or found people
+blown to pieces. This was lively for me, and the
+amusing part of it was that I think they did it from
+a belated sense of responsibility.</p>
+
+<p>It is as difficult to find words to describe
+Nieuport as it is to talk of metaphysics in slang.
+The words don't seem invented that will convey
+that haunting sense of desolation, that supreme
+quiet under the shock of continually firing guns.
+Hardly anything is left now of the little homely
+bits that, when I saw the place last autumn,
+reminded one that this was once a city of living
+human beings. <i>Then</i> one saw a few interiors&mdash;exposed,
+it is true, and damaged, but still of this
+world. Now it is one big grave, the grave of a
+city, and the grave of many of its inhabitants.
+Here, at a corner house, nine ladies lie under the
+piled-up d&eacute;bris that once made their home. There
+some soldiers met their death, and some crumbling
+bricks are heaped over them too. The houses are
+all fallen&mdash;some outer walls remain, but I hardly
+saw a roof left&mdash;and everywhere there are empty
+window-frames and skeleton rafters.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">NIEUPORT</div>
+
+<p>I never knew so surely that a town can live and
+can die, and it set one wondering whether Life
+means a thing as a whole and Death simply disintegration.
+A perfect crystal, chemists tell us, has
+the elements of life in it and may be said to live.
+Destruction and decay mean death; separation and
+disintegration mean death. In this way we die, a
+crystal dies, a flower or a city dies. Nieuport is
+dead. There isn't a heart-beat left to throb in it.
+Thousands and thousands of shells have fallen into
+it,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span> and at night the nightingale sings there, and by
+day the river flows gently under the ruined bridge.
+Every tree in a wood near by is torn and beheaded;
+hardly one has the top remaining. The new green
+pushes out amongst the blackened trunks.</p>
+
+<p>One speaks low in Nieuport, the place is so
+horribly dead.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Bevan showed me a shell-hole 42 feet across,
+made by one single "soixante-quinze" shell.
+Every field is pitted with holes, and where there
+are stretches of pale-coloured mud the round pits
+dotted all over it give one the impression of an
+immense Gruy&egrave;re cheese. The streets, heaped
+with d&eacute;bris, and with houses fallen helplessly forward
+into their midst, were full of sunshine. From
+ruined cottages&mdash;whose insecure walls tottered&mdash;one
+saw here and there some Zouaves or a little
+French "marin" appear. Most of these ran out
+with letters in their hands for us to post. Heaven
+knows what they can have to write about from
+that grave!</p>
+
+<p>Some beautiful pillars of the cathedral still stand,
+and the tower, full of holes, has not yet bent its
+head. Lieutenant Shoppe, R.N., sits up there all
+day, and takes observations, with the shells knocking
+gaily against the walls. One day the tower
+will fall or its stones will be pierced, and then Lieutenant
+Shoppe, R.N., will be killed, as the Belgian
+"observateur" was killed at Oostkerke the other
+day. He still hangs there across a beam for all the
+world to see. His arms are stretched out, and his
+body lies head downwards, and no one can go near
+the dead Belgian because the tower is too unsafe
+now.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span> One day perhaps it will fall altogether and
+bury him.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, in the tower of the ruined cathedral
+at Nieuport Shoppe sits in his shirt-sleeves, with his
+telephone beside him and his observation instruments.
+His small staff are with him. They are
+immensely interested in the range of a gun and the
+accuracy of a hit. I believe they do not think of
+anything else. No doubt the tower shakes a great
+deal when a shell hits it, and no doubt the number
+of holes in its sides is daily becoming more
+numerous. Each morning that Shoppe leaves
+home to spend his day in the tower he runs an
+excellent chance of being killed, and in the evening
+he returns and eats a good dinner in rather an uncomfortable
+hotel.</p>
+
+<p>In the cathedral, and amongst its crumbling
+battered aisles, a strange peace rests. The pitiful
+columns of the church stand here and there&mdash;the
+roof has long since gone. On its most sheltered
+side is the little graveyard, filled with crosses,
+where the dead lie. Here and there a shell has
+entered and torn a corpse from its resting-place,
+and bones lie scattered. On other graves a few
+simple flowers are laid.</p>
+
+<p>We went to see the dim cellars which form the
+two "postes au secours." In the inner recess of
+one a doctor has a bed, in the outer cave some
+soldiers were eating food. There is no light even
+during the day except from the doorway. At
+Nieuport the Germans put in 3,000 shells in one
+day. Nothing is left. If there ever was anything
+to loot, it has been looted. One doesn't know what
+lies<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span> under the d&eacute;bris. Here one sees the inside of
+a piano and a few twisted strings, and there a metal
+umbrella-stand. I saw one wrought-iron sign
+hanging from the falling walls of an inn.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Bevan and I wandered about in the unearthly
+quiet, which persisted even when the guns began to
+blaze away close by us, whizzing shells over our
+heads, and we walked down to the river, and saw
+the few boards which are all that remain of the
+bridge. Afterwards a German shell landed with
+its unpleasant noise in the middle of the street;
+but we had wandered up a by-way, and so escaped
+it by a minute or less.</p>
+
+<p>In a little burned house, where only a piece of
+blackened wall remained, I found a little crucifix
+which impressed me very much&mdash;it stood out
+against the smoke-stained walls with a sort of
+grandeur of pity about it. The legs had been shot
+away or burned, but "the hands were stretched out
+still."</p>
+
+<p>As we came away firing began all round about,
+and we saw the toss of smoke as the shells fell.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">STEENKERKE</div>
+
+<p><i>31 May.</i>&mdash;We went to Steenkerke yesterday and
+called on Mrs. Knocker, and saw a terrible infirmary,
+which must be put right. It isn't fit for dogs.</p>
+
+<p>At the station to-day our poor Irishman died.
+Ah, it was terrible! His lungs never recovered
+from the gas, and he breathed his last difficult
+breath at 5 o'clock.</p>
+
+<p>In the evening a Zeppelin flew overhead on its
+way to England.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">NIGHTINGALES</div>
+
+<p>There is a nightingale in a wood near here. He
+seems to sing louder and more purely the heavier
+the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a></span> fighting that is going on. When men are
+murdering each other he loses himself in a rapture,
+of song, recalling all the old joyous things which
+one used to know.</p>
+
+<p>The poetry of life seems to be over. The war
+songs are forced and foolish. There is no time for
+reading, and no one looks at pictures, but the
+nightingale sings on, and the long-ago spirit of
+youth looks out through Time's strong bars, and
+speaks of evenings in old, dim woods at home, and
+of girlish, splendid drives home from some dance
+where "he" was, when we watched the dawn
+break, and saw our mother sleeping in the carriage,
+and wondered what it would be like not to "thrill"
+all the time, and to sleep when the nightingale was
+singing.</p>
+
+<p>Later there came the time when the song of the
+throbbing nightingale made one impatient, because
+it sang in intolerable silence, and one ached for the
+roar of things, and for the clash of endeavour and
+for the strain of purpose. Peace was at a discount
+then, and struggle seemed to be the eternal good.
+The silent woods had no word for one, the nightingale
+was only a mate singing a love-song, and one
+wanted something more than that.</p>
+
+<p>And afterwards, when the struggle and the strain
+were given one in abundant measure, the song of
+the nightingale came in the lulls that occurred in
+one's busy life. One grew to connect it with coffee
+out on the lawn in some houses of surpassing comfort,
+where (years and years ago) one dressed for
+dinner, and a crinkly housemaid brought hot water
+to one's room. The song went on above the smug
+comfort<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span> of things, and the amusing conversation,
+and the smell of good cigars. Within, we saw
+some pleasant drawing-room, with lamps and a big
+table set with candles and cards, and we felt that
+the nightingale provided a very charming orchestra.
+We listened to it as we listened to amusing conversation,
+with a sense of comfortable enjoyment and
+rest. Why talk of the time when it sang of breaking
+hearts and high endeavour never satisfied, and
+things which no one ever knew or guessed except
+oneself?</p>
+
+<p>It sings now above the sound of death and of
+tears. Sometimes I think to myself that God has
+sent his angel to open the prison doors when I hear
+that bird in the little wood close beside the tram-way
+line.</p>
+
+<p>On Thursday, June 3rd, I drove in the "bug"
+to Boulogne, and took the steamer to England.
+I went through a nasty time in Belgium, but now
+a good deal of queer affection is shown me, and I
+believe they all rather like me in the corps.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<p>The following brief impression of Miss Macnaughtan's
+work at the soup-kitchen forms the most
+appropriate conclusion to her story of her experiences
+in Belgium. She cut it out of some paper, and
+sent it home to a friend in England, and we seem
+to learn from it&mdash;more than from any words of her
+own&mdash;how much she did to help our Allies in their
+hour of need:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"It was dark when my car stopped at the little
+station of Adinkerke, where I had been invited to
+visit a soup-kitchen established there by a Scotchwoman.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span>
+In peace she is a distinguished author;
+in war she is being a mother to such of the Belgian
+Army as are lucky enough to pass her way. I can
+see her now, against a background of big soup-boilers
+and cooking-stoves, handing out woollen
+gloves and mufflers to the men who were to be on
+sentry duty along the line that night. It was
+bitterly cold, and the comforts were gratefully
+received.</p>
+
+<p>"For a long time this most versatile lady made
+every drop of the soup that was prepared for the
+men herself, and she has, so a Belgian military
+doctor says, saved more lives than he has with her
+timely cups of hot, nourishing food. It is only the
+most seriously wounded men who are taken to the
+field hospital, the others are carried straight to the
+railway-station, and have to wait there, sometimes
+for many hours, till a train can take them on.
+Even then trains carrying the wounded have constantly
+to be shunted to let troop trains through.
+But, thanks to the enterprise and hard work of this
+clever little lady, there is always a plentiful supply
+of hot food ready for the men who, weak from loss
+of blood, are often besides faint with hunger."</p></div>
+
+
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<h2>PART II</h2>
+
+<h2><a name="AT_HOME" id="AT_HOME"></a>AT HOME
+<span class="totoc"><a href="#CONTENTS">ToC</a></span></h2>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3>HOW THE MESSAGE WAS DELIVERED</h3>
+
+
+<p><i>October, 1915.</i>&mdash;So much has happened since I
+came home from Flanders in June, and I have not
+had one moment in which to write of it. I found
+my house occupied when I returned, so I went to
+the Petrograd Hotel and stayed there, going out
+of London for Sundays.</p>
+
+<p>Everyone I met in England seemed absorbed in
+pale children with adenoids. No one cared much
+about the war. Children in houses nowadays
+require food at weird hours, not roast mutton and
+a good plain Christian pudding, but, "You will
+excuse our beginning, I know, dear, Jane has to
+have her massage after lunch, and Tom has to do
+his exercises, and baby has to learn to breathe."
+This one has its ears strapped, and that one is
+"nervous" and must be "understood," and nothing
+is talked of but children. My mother would never
+have a doctor in the house; "nervousness" was
+called bad temper, and was dosed, and stooping
+was called "a trick," and was smacked. The
+children I now see eat far too much, and when they
+finish<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span> off lunch with gravy drunk out of tumblers
+it makes me feel very unwell.</p>
+
+<p>I went to the Breitmeyers, at Rushton Hall,
+Kettering; it's a fine place, but I was too tired to
+enjoy anything but a bed. The next Sunday I
+stayed at Chenies, with the Duchess of Bedford&mdash;always
+a favourite resort of mine&mdash;and another
+week I went to Welwyn.</p>
+
+<p>I met a few old men at these places, but no one
+else. Everyone is at the front. The houses
+generally have wounded soldiers in them, and these
+play croquet with a nurse on the lawn, or smoke in
+the sun. None of them want to go back to fight.
+They seem tired, and talk of the trenches as "proper
+'ell."</p>
+
+<p>There is always a little too much walking about
+at a "week-end." One feels tired and stiff on
+Monday. I well remember last summer having
+to take people three times to a distant water
+garden&mdash;talking all the time, too! People are
+so kind in making it pleasant that they wear
+one out.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">ERITH</div>
+
+<p>All the time I was in London I was preparing
+my campaign of lecturing. I began with Vickers-Maxim
+works at Erith, on Wednesday, 9th June,
+and on the 8th I went to stay with the Cameron
+Heads. There was great bustle and preparation
+for my lecture, Press people in the house at all
+hours of the day, and so on. A great bore for my
+poor friends; but they were so good about it, and
+I loved being with them.</p>
+
+<p>The lecture was rather a red-letter occasion for
+me, everyone praising, the Press very attentive,
+etc.,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span> etc. The audience promised well for future
+things, and the emotion that was stirred nearly
+bowled myself over. In some of the hushes that
+came one could hear men crying. The Scott
+Gattys and a few of my own friends came to
+"stand by," and we all drove down to Erith in
+motor-cars, and returned to supper with the Vickers
+at 10.30.</p>
+
+<p>The next day old Vickers sent for me and asked
+me to name my own price for my lectures, but I
+couldn't mix money up with the message, so I
+refused all pay, and feel happy that I did so. I
+can't, and won't, profit by this war. I'd rather
+lose&mdash;I am losing&mdash;but that doesn't matter.
+Nothing matters much now. The former things
+are swept away, and all the old barriers are disappearing.
+Our old gods of possession and wealth
+are crumbling, and class distinctions don't count,
+and even life and death are pretty much the same
+thing.</p>
+
+<p>The Jews say the Messiah will come after the
+war. I think He is here already&mdash;but on a cross
+as of yore!</p>
+
+<p>I went up to Glasgow to make arrangements
+there, and my task wasn't an easy one. Somehow
+I knew that I must speak, that I must arouse
+slackers, and tell rotters about what is going on.
+One goes forth (led in a way), and only then does
+one realise that one is going in unasked to ship-building
+yards and munition sheds and docks, and
+that one is quite a small woman, alone, and up
+against a big thing.</p>
+
+<p>Always the answer I got was the same: "The
+men<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span> are not working; forty per cent. are slackers.
+The output of shells is not what it ought to be, but
+they <i>won't</i> listen!"</p>
+
+<p>In the face of this I arranged seven meetings in
+seven days, to take place early in August, and then
+I went back to give my lecture in the Queen's Hall,
+London. I took the large Hall, because if one has
+a message to deliver one had better deliver it to as
+many people as possible. It was rather a breathless
+undertaking, but people turned up splendidly,
+and I had a full house. Sir F. Lloyd gave me the
+band of the Coldstream Guards, and things went
+with a good swing.</p>
+
+<p>I am still wondering how I did it. The whole
+"campaign" has already got rather an unreal atmosphere
+about it, and often, after crowded meetings,
+I have come home and lain in the dark and have
+seen nothing but a sea of faces, and eyes all turned
+my way. It has been a most curious and unexpected
+experience, but England did not realise the
+war, and she did not realise the wave of heroism
+that is sweeping over the world, and I had to tell
+about it.</p>
+
+<p>Well, my lectures went on&mdash;Erith, Queen's Hall,
+Sheffield (a splendid meeting, 3,000 people inside
+the hall and 300 turned away at the door!), Barrow-in-Furness.
+I gave two lectures at Barrow, at 3 and
+7.30. They seemed very popular. In the evening
+quite a demonstration&mdash;pipe band playing "Auld
+lang syne," and much cheering. After that Newcastle,
+and back to the south again to speak there.
+Everywhere I took my magic-lantern and showed
+my pictures, and I told "good stories" to attract
+people<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span> to the meetings, although my heart was,
+and is, nearly breaking all the time.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">GLASGOW</div>
+
+<p>Then I began the Glasgow campaign&mdash;Parkhead,
+Whiteinch, Rose-Bank, Dumbarton, Greenock,
+Beardmore's, Denny's, Armour's, etc., etc. Everywhere
+there were big audiences, and although I
+would have spoken to two listeners gladly, I was
+still more glad to see the halls filled. The cheers
+of horny-handed workmen when they are really
+roused just get me by the throat till I can't speak
+for a minute or two!</p>
+
+<p>At one place I spoke from a lorry in the dinner-hour.
+All the men, with blackened faces, crowded
+round the car, and others swung from the iron
+girders, while some perched, like queer bronze
+images, on pieces of machinery. They were all
+very intent, and very polite and courteous, no
+interruptions at any of the meetings. A keen
+interest was shown in the war pictures, and the
+cheers were deafening sometimes.</p>
+
+<p>After Glasgow I went to dear Clemmie Waring's,
+at Lennel, and found her house full of convalescent
+officers, and she herself very happy with them and
+her new baby. I really wanted to rest, and meant
+to enjoy five days of repose; but I gave a lecture
+the first night, and then had a sort of breakdown
+and took to my bed. However, that had to be got
+over, and I went down to Wales at the end of the
+week. The Butes gave me their own rooms at
+Cardiff Castle, and a nice housekeeper looked
+after me.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">CARDIFF</div>
+
+<p>There followed a strange fortnight in that ugly
+old fortress, with its fine stone-work and the
+execrable<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span> decorations covering every inch of it.
+The days passed oddly. I did a little writing,
+and I saw my committee, whom I like. Colonel
+Dennis is an excellent fellow, and so are Mr.
+Needle, Mr. Vivian <a class="correction" title="index has &quot;Rees&quot;">Reece</a>, and Mr. Harrison. A
+Mr. Howse acted as secretary.</p>
+
+<p>The first day I gave a dock-gate meeting, and
+spoke from a lorry, and that night I had my great
+meeting at Cardiff. Sir Frank Younghusband
+came down for it, and the Mayor took the chair.
+The audience was enthusiastic, and every place was
+filled. At one moment they all rose to their feet,
+and holding up their hands swore to fight for the
+right till right was won. It was one of the scenes
+I shall always remember.</p>
+
+<p>Every day after that I used to have tea and an
+egg at 5 o'clock, and a motor would come with one
+of my committee to take me to different places of
+meeting. It was generally up the Rhondda Valley
+that we went, and I came to know well that westward
+drive, with the sun setting behind the hills
+and turning the Taff river to gold. Every night
+we went a little further and a little higher&mdash;Aberdare,
+Aberystwyth, Toney Pandy, Tonepentre,
+etc., etc. I gave fourteen lectures in thirteen days.
+Generally, I spoke in chapels, and from the pulpit,
+and this seemed to give me the chance I wanted to
+speak all my mind to these people, and to ask them
+and teach them what Power, and Possession, and
+Freedom really meant. Oh, it was wonderful!
+The rapt faces of the miners, the hush of the
+big buildings, and then the sudden burst of
+cheering!</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span>
+At one meeting there was a bumptious-looking
+man, with a bald head, whom I remember. He
+took up his position just over the clock in the
+gallery. He listened critically, talked a good deal,
+and made remarks. I began to speak straight at
+him, without looking at him, and quite suddenly I
+saw him, as I spoke of our men at the war, cover
+his face and burst into tears.</p>
+
+<p>The children were the only drawback. They
+were attracted by the idea of the magic-lantern, and
+used to come to the meetings and keep older
+people out. My lectures were not meant for
+children, and I had to adopt the plan of showing
+the pictures first and then telling the youngsters
+to go, and settling down to a talk with the older
+ones, who always remained behind voluntarily.</p>
+
+<p>We had some times which I can never forget;
+nor can I forget those dark drives from far up in
+the hills, and the mists in the valley, and my own
+aching fatigue as I got back about midnight. From
+5 till 12.30 every night I was on the stretch.</p>
+
+<p>In the day-time I used to wander round the
+garden. One always meets someone whom one
+knows. I had lunch with the Tylers one day, and
+tea with the Plymouths. It was still, bright autumn
+weather, and the trees were gold in the ugly garden
+with the black river running through it. I got
+a few lessons in motor driving, and I spoke at the
+hospital one afternoon. I took the opportunity of
+getting a dress made at rather a good tailor's, and
+time passed in a manner quite solitary till the
+evenings.</p>
+
+<p>Never before have I spent a year of so much
+solitude,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span> and yet I have been with people during
+my work. I think I know now what thousands of
+men and women living alone and working are
+feeling. I wish I could help them. There won't
+be many young marriages now. What are we to
+do for girls all alone?</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="center"><i>To Mrs. Keays-Young.</i></p>
+
+<p class="lh_ind0"><span class="smcap">Cardiff Castle, Cardiff,</span></p>
+<p class="lh_ind2"><i>31 August, 1915.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Dearest Baby,</span></p>
+
+<p>Many thanks for your letter, which I got on
+my way through London. I spent one night there
+to see about some work I am having done in the
+house.</p>
+
+<p>I have a drawer quite full of press-cuttings, and
+I do not know what is in any of them. It is
+difficult to choose anything of interest, as they are
+all a good deal alike, and all sound my trumpet
+very loudly; but I enclose one specimen.</p>
+
+<p>We had meetings every night in Glasgow.
+They were mostly badly organised and well
+attended. Here I have an agent arranging everything,
+and two of my meetings have been enormous.
+The first was at the dock-gates in the open air, and
+the second in the Town Hall. The band of the
+Welch Regiment played, and Mr. Glover conducted,
+but nothing is the same, of course. Alan
+is at Porthcawl, and came to see me this morning.</p>
+
+<p>The war news could hardly be worse, and yet I
+am told by men who get sealed information from
+the Foreign Office that worse is coming.</p>
+
+<p>Poor Russia! She wants help more than anyone.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span>
+Her wounded are quite untended. I go there
+next month.</p>
+
+<p>The King of the Belgians has made me Chevalier
+de l'Ordre de L&eacute;opold.</p>
+
+<p class="lf_ind6">Love to all.</p>
+<p class="lf_sal">Yours ever,</p>
+<p class="lf_sig">S.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>Press-cutting enclosed in Miss Macnaughtan's
+letter:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><h2>"STORIES OF THE WAR."</h2>
+
+<h3>CARDIFF LECTURE BY MISS MACNAUGHTAN.</h3>
+
+<h3>AUTHORESS'S APPEAL.</h3>
+
+<p>TESTING-TIME OF NATIONAL CHARACTER.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">A CROWDED MEETING</div>
+
+<p>A large and enthusiastic audience assembled at
+the Park-hall, Cardiff, on Monday evening, to hear
+and see Miss Macnaughtan's "Stories and Pictures
+of the War." Miss Macnaughtan is a well-known
+authoress, whose works have attained a world-wide
+reputation, and, in addition to her travels in
+almost every corner of the globe, she has had actual
+experience of warfare at the bombardment of Rio,
+in the Balkans, the South African War, and, since
+September last, in Belgium and Flanders. In her
+capacity as ministrant to wounded soldiers she has
+gained a unique experience of the horrors of war,
+and in order to bring home the realities of the situation,
+at the instigation of Lady Bute, she consented
+to address a number of meetings in South Wales.</p>
+
+<p>At the meeting on Monday night the Lord Mayor
+(Alderman J. T. Richards) presided, and in introducing
+Miss Macnaughtan to the audience announced
+that for her services in Belgium the
+honour of the Order of Leopold had been conferred
+upon<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></span> her. (Applause.) We were engaged, he said,
+in fighting a war of right. We were not fighting
+only for the interests of England and our Empire,
+but we were fighting for the interests of humanity
+at large. ("Hear, hear.")</p>
+
+<p>Miss Macnaughtan, in the course of her address,
+referred to the origin of the war, and how suddenly
+it came upon the people of this nation, who were,
+for the most part, engaged in summer holidays at
+the time. She knew what was going on at the
+front, and knew what the Welch Regiment had been
+doing, and "I must tell you," she added, "of the
+splendid way in which your regiment has behaved,
+and how proud Cardiff must be of it." We knew
+very well now that this war had been arranged by
+Germany for many years. The Germans used to
+profess exceeding kindness to us, and were received
+on excellent terms by our Royal House, but the
+veil was drawn away from that nation's face, and
+we had it revealed as an implacable foe. The
+Germans had spoken for years in their own country
+about "The Day," and now "The Day" had
+arrived, and it was for everyone a day of judgment,
+because it was a test of character. We had to put
+ourselves to the test. We knew that for some
+time England had not been at her best. Her great
+heart was beating true all the time, but there
+had crept into England a sort of national coldness
+and selfishness, and a great deal too much seriousness
+in the matter of money and money-getting.
+Although this was discounted in great measure by
+her generosity, we appeared to the world at large
+as a greedy and money-getting nation.</p>
+
+<p>However this might be, in all parts of the world
+the word of an Englishman was still as good as his
+bond. ("Hear, hear.") Yet England, with its
+strikes and quarrels and class hatred, and one thing
+and another, was not at its best. It was well to
+admit<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span> that, just as they admitted the faults of those
+they loved best.</p>
+
+<p>Had any one of them failed to rally round the
+flag? Had they kept anything back in this great
+war? She hoped not. The war had tested us more
+than anything else, and we had responded greatly
+to it; and the young manhood had come out in a
+way that was remarkable. We knew very well that
+when the war was begun we were quite unprepared
+for it; but she would tell them this, that our army,
+although small, was the finest army that ever took
+the field. (Applause.)</p>
+
+<p>Miss Macnaughtan then related a number of
+interesting incidents, one of which was, that when
+a party of wounded Englishmen came to a station
+where she was tending the Belgian wounded, every
+wounded Belgian gave up his bed to accommodate
+an English soldier. The idea of a German occupation
+of English soil, she said, was the idea of a catastrophe
+that was unspeakable. People read things in
+the papers and thought they were exaggerated, but
+she had seen them, and she would show photographs
+of ruined Belgium which would convince them of
+what the Germans were now doing in the name of
+God. However unprepared we were for war, the
+wounded had been well cared for, and she thought
+there never was a war in which the care of the
+wounded had been so well managed or so efficient.
+(Applause.) They had to be thankful that there had
+been no terrible epidemic, and she could not speak
+too highly of the work of the nurses and doctors in
+the performance of their duties. This was the time
+for every man to do his duty, and strain every nerve
+and muscle to bring the war to an end and get the
+boys home again. (Applause.)</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">SIR FRANCIS YOUNGHUSBAND, K.C.I.E.</div>
+
+<p>Sir Francis Younghusband, K.C.I.E., spoke of
+Miss Macnaughtan as a very old friend, whom he
+had met in many parts of the Empire. In this
+crisis<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span> she might well have stayed at home in her
+comfortable residence in London, but she had
+sacrificed her own personal comforts in order to
+assist others. They must realise that this war was
+something much more than a war of defence of
+their homes. It was a fight on behalf of the whole
+of humanity. A staggering blow had been dealt by
+our relentless enemy at Belgium, which had been
+knocked down and trampled upon, and Germany
+had also dealt blow after blow at humanity by the
+use of poison-gas, the bombardment of seaside towns,
+and bombs thrown on defenceless places by
+Zeppelins. She had thrust aside all those rights of
+humanity which we had cherished as a nation as
+most dear to our hearts. What we were now
+fighting for was right, and he would put to them a
+resolution that we would fight for right till right
+had won. In response to an appeal for the endorsement
+of his sentiments the audience stood en masse,
+and with upraised hands shouted "Aye." It was a
+stirring moment, and must have been gratifying to
+the authoress, who has devoted so much of her time
+and energy to the comfort of the wounded
+soldiers.</p>
+
+<p>The Lord Mayor then proposed a vote of thanks
+to Miss Macnaughtan for her address, and this was
+carried by acclamation.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Macnaughtan briefly responded, and then
+proceeded to illustrate many of the scenes she had
+witnessed by lantern-slides, showing the results of
+bombardments and the ruin of some of the fairest
+domains of Belgium and France.</p>
+
+<p>The provision of stewards was arranged by the
+Cardiff Chamber of Trade, under the direction
+of the President (Mr. G. Clarry). During the
+evening the band of the 3rd Welch Regiment,
+under the conductorship of Bandmaster K. S.
+Glover, gave selections.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">POISON-GAS</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span>
+A statement having been made that Miss Macnaughtan
+was the first to discover a remedy for the
+poison-gas used by the Germans, a <i>Western Mail</i>
+reporter interviewed the lady before the lecture on
+her experiences in this direction. She replied, that
+when the first batch of men came in from the
+trenches suffering from the effects of the gas, the
+first thing they asked was for something to drink, to
+take the horrible taste out of their mouths. She
+obtained a couple of bottles of whisky from the
+barge of an American lady, and some distilled
+water, and gave this to the soldiers, who appeared
+to be greatly relieved. Whenever possible, she had
+adopted the same course, but she was unaware that
+the remedy had been applied by the military authorities.
+Even this method of relieving their sufferings,
+however, was rejected by a large number of young
+soldiers, on the ground that they were teetotallers,
+but the Belgian doctors had permitted its use
+amongst their men.</p></div>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<div class="blockquot"><h3>SHOULD THE GERMANS COME.</h3>
+
+<p>FORETASTE OF HORRORS FURNISHED BY BELGIUM.</p>
+
+<p>During the dinner-hour Miss Macnaughtan gave
+an address to workmen at the Bute Docks. An
+improvised platform was arranged at the back of
+the Seamen's Institute, and some hundreds of men
+gathered to hear the story that Miss Macnaughtan
+had to give of the war. Colonel C. S. Denniss
+presided, and amongst those present were Messrs.
+T. Vivian Rees, John Andrews, W. Cocks, A.
+Hope, S. Fisher, and Robinson Smith.</p>
+
+<p>Colonel Denniss, in a few introductory remarks,
+referred to Miss Macnaughtan's reputation as a
+writer, and stated that since the outbreak of war
+she had devoted herself to the noble work of helping
+the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span> wounded soldiers in Belgium and France. She
+had come to Cardiff to tell the working-men what
+she had seen, with the object, if possible, of stimulating
+them to help forward the great cause we were
+fighting for.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Macnaughtan said she had been speaking in
+many parts of the country, but she was especially
+proud to address a meeting of Welsh working-men.
+Besides coming of a long line of Welsh ancestors,
+her brother-in-law, Colonel Young, was in command
+of the 9th Welch Battalion at the front, and she
+had also four nephews serving in the Welch Regiment.
+Only the day before Colonel Young had
+written to her: "The Welshman is the most
+intensely patriotic man that I know, and it is
+always the same thing, 'Stick it, Welch.' His
+patriotism is splendid, and I do not want to fight
+with a better man." Miss Macnaughtan then
+explained that she was not asking for funds, and
+was not speaking for employers or owners. She
+simply wished to tell them her experiences of the
+war as she had seen it, and to describe the heroism
+which was going on at the front. If they looked
+at the war from the point of view of men going out to
+kill each other they had a wrong conception of what
+was going on. She had been asked to speak of the
+conditions which might prevail should the Germans
+reach this country. She did not feel competent to
+speak on that subject, as the whole idea of Germans
+in this country seemed absolutely inconceivable.
+If the Germans were to land on our shores all
+the waters which surrounded this isle would not
+wash the land clean. She knew what the Germans
+were, and had seen the wreck they had made of
+Belgium and part of France. She knew what the
+women and children had suffered, and how the
+churches had been desecrated and demolished. It
+was said that this was a war of humanity, but she
+believed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span> it was a war of right against wrong; and
+if she were asked when the war would finish, she
+could only say that we would fight it right on to the
+end until we were victorious.</p>
+
+<p>The Germans were beaten already, and had been
+beaten from the day they gave up their honour.
+She spoke of the heroism of the troops, and stated
+that since September last she had been running
+a soup-kitchen for the wounded. In this humble
+vocation she had had an opportunity of gauging the
+spirit of the soldiers. She had seen them sick,
+wounded, and dying, but had never known
+them give in. Why should humble villages in
+France without soldiers in them be shelled? That
+was Germany, and that was what they saw. The
+thing was almost inconceivable, but she had seen
+helpless women and children brought to the
+hospitals, maimed and wounded by the cruel
+German shells. After this war England was going
+to be a better country than before. Up to now
+there had been a national selfishness which was
+growing very strong, and there was a terrible love
+of money, which, after all, was of very little account
+unless it was used in the proper direction. She
+could tell them stories of Belgians who had had to
+fire upon their own women and children who were
+being marched in front of German troops. The
+power of Germany had to be crushed. The spirit
+of England and Wales was one in this great war,
+and they would not falter until they had emerged
+triumphant. (Applause.)</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">A CLARION CALL</div>
+
+<p>Mr. Robinson Smith said the clarion call had
+been sounded, and they were prepared, if necessary,
+to give their last shilling, their last drop of blood,
+and their very selves, body, soul, and spirit, to
+fight for right till right had won. (Applause.)</p>
+
+<p>Cheers were given for the distinguished authoress,
+and the proceedings terminated.</p></div>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span>
+After Cardiff (and a most cordial send-off from
+my committee) I came back to London, and lectured
+at Eton, at the Polytechnic, and various other
+places, while all the time I was preparing to go to
+Russia, and I was also writing.</p>
+
+<p>In the year that has passed my time has been
+fully occupied. To begin with, when the war
+broke out I studied district-nursing in Walworth
+for a month. I attended committees, and arranged
+to go to Belgium, got my kit, and had a good deal
+of business to arrange in the way of house-letting,
+etc., etc. Afterwards, I went to Antwerp, till the
+siege and the bombardment; then followed the
+flight to Ostend; after that a further flight to
+Furnes. Then came the winter of my work, day
+and night at the soup-kitchen for the wounded,
+a few days at home in January, then back again
+and to work at Adinkerke till June, when I came
+home to lecture.</p>
+
+<p>During the year I have brought out four books,
+I have given thirty-five lectures, and written both
+stories and articles. I have gone from town to
+town in England, Scotland, and Wales, and I have
+had a good deal of anxiety and much business
+at home. I have paid a few visits, but not restful
+ones, and I have written all my own correspondence,
+as I have not had a secretary. I have collected
+funds for my work, and sent off scores of
+begging letters. Often I have begun work at 5.30
+a.m., and I have not rested all day. As I am not
+very young this seems to me a pretty strenuous
+time!</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE DEATH OF YOUTH</div>
+
+<p>Now I have let my house again, and am off "into
+the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span> unknown" in Russia! I shouldn't really mind
+a few days' rest before we begin any definite work.
+Behind everyone I suppose at this time lurks the
+horror of war, the deadly fear for one's dearest;
+and, above all, one feels&mdash;at least I do&mdash;that one is
+always, and quite palpably, in the shadow of the
+death of youth&mdash;beautiful youth, happy and healthy
+and free. Always I seem to see the white faces of
+boys turned up to the sky, and I hear their cries
+and see the agony which joyous youth was never
+meant to bear. They are too young for it, far too
+young; but they lie out on the field between the
+trenches, and bite the mud in their frenzy of pain;
+and they call for their mothers, and no one comes,
+and they call to their friends, but no one hears.
+There is a roar of battle and of bursting shells, and
+who can listen to a boy's groans and his shrieks of
+pain? This is war.</p>
+
+<p>A nation or a people want more sea-board or
+more trade, so they begin to kill youth, and to
+torture and to burn, and God himself may ask,
+"Where is my beautiful flock?" No one answers.
+It is war. We must expect a "list of casualties."
+"The Germans have lost more than we have done;"
+"We must go on, even if the war lasts ten years;"
+"A million more men are needed"&mdash;thus the fools
+called men talk! But Youth looks up with
+haggard eyes, and Youth, grown old, learns that
+Death alone is merciful.</p>
+
+<p>One sees even in soldiers' jokes that the thought
+of death is not far off. I said to one man, "You
+have had a narrow squeak," and he replied, "I
+don't mind if I get there first so long as I can stoke
+up<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span> for those Germans." Another, clasping the hand
+of his dead Captain, said, "Put plenty of sandbags
+round heaven, sir, and don't let a German through."</p>
+
+<p>The other day, when the forward movement was
+made in France and Belgium, Charles's Regiment,
+the 9th Welch, was told to attack at a certain
+point, which could only be reached across an open
+space raked by machine-gun fire. They were not
+given the order to move for twelve days, during
+which time the men hardly slept. When the
+charge had to be made the roar of guns made
+speaking quite impossible, so directions were given
+by sending up rockets. When the rockets appeared,
+not a single man delayed an instant in making the
+attack. One young officer, in the trench where
+Charles was, had a football, and this he flung over
+the parapet, and shouting, "Come on, boys!" he
+and the men of the regiment played football in the
+open and in front of the guns. Right across the
+gun-raked level they kicked the ball, and when
+they reached the enemy's lines only a few of them
+were left.</p>
+
+<p>Charles wrote, "I am too old to see boys killed."</p>
+
+<p>Colonel Walton, with a handful of his regiment,
+was the only officer to get through the three lines
+of the enemy's trenches, and he and his men dug
+themselves in. Just in front of them where they
+paused, he saw a fine young officer come along the
+road on a motor bicycle, carrying despatches. The
+next minute a high-explosive shell burst, and, to
+use his own words, "There was not enough of the
+young officer to put on a threepenny bit." Always
+men tell me there is nothing left to bury. One
+minute<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span> there is a splendid piece of upstanding,
+vigorous manhood, and the next there is no finding
+one piece of him to lay in the sod.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">A LESSON FOR TURKS</div>
+
+<p>The Turks seem to have forsaken their first
+horrible and devilish cruelties towards English
+prisoners. They have been taught a lesson by the
+Australians, who took some prisoners up to the top
+of a ridge and rolled them down into the Turks'
+trenches like balls, firing on them as they rolled.
+Horrible! but after that Turkish cruelties ceased.</p>
+
+<p>Our own men see red since the Canadians were
+crucified, and I fancy no prisoners were taken for a
+long time after. We "censor" this or that in the
+newspapers, but nothing will censor men's tongues,
+and there is a terrible and awful tale of suffering
+and death and savagery going on now. Like a
+ghastly dream we hear of trenches taken, and the
+cries of men go up, "Mercy, comrade, mercy!"
+Sometimes they plead, poor caught and trapped
+and pitiful human beings, that they have wives and
+children who love them. The slaughter goes on,
+the bayonet rends open the poor body that someone
+loved, then comes the internal gush of blood, and
+another carcase is flung into the burying trench,
+with some lime on the top of it to prevent a smell
+of rotting flesh.</p>
+
+<p>My God, what does it all mean? Are men so
+mad? And why are they killing all our best and
+bravest? Our first army is gone, and surely such
+a company never before took the field! Outmatched
+by twenty to one, they stuck it at Mons
+and on the Aisne, and saved Paris by a miracle.
+All my old friends fell then&mdash;men near my own
+age,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span> whom I have known in many climes&mdash;Eustace
+Crawley, Victor Brooke, the Goughs, and other
+splendid men. Now the sons of my friends are
+falling fast&mdash;Duncan Sim's boy, young Wilson,
+Neville Strutt, and scores of others. I know one
+case in which four brothers have fallen; another,
+where twins of nineteen died side by side; and this
+one has his eyes blown out, and that one has his leg
+torn off, and another goes mad; and boys, creeping
+back to the base holding an arm on, or bewildered
+by a bullet through the brain, wander out of their
+way till a piece of shrapnel or torn edge of shell
+finds them, and they fall again, with their poor
+boyish faces buried in the mud!</p>
+
+<p>Mr. &mdash;&mdash; dined with us last night. He had been
+talking of his brother who was killed, and he said: "I
+think it makes a difference if you belong to a family
+which has always given its lives to the country.
+We are accustomed to make these sacrifices."</p>
+
+<p>Thus bravely in the light of day, but when evening
+came and we sat together, then we knew just
+what the life of the boy had cost him. They tell
+us&mdash;these defrauded broken-hearted ones&mdash;just how
+tall the lad was, and how good to look at! That
+seems to me so sad&mdash;as if one reckoned one's love
+by inches! And yet it is the beauty of youth that
+I mourn also, and its horribly lonely death.</p>
+
+<p>"They never got him further than the dressing-station,"
+Mr. &mdash;&mdash; said; "but&mdash;he would always put
+up a fight, you know&mdash;he lived for four days. No,
+there was never any hope. Half the back of his
+head was shattered. But he put up a fight. My
+brother would always do that."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span></p>
+<h2>PART III</h2>
+
+<h2>RUSSIA AND THE PERSIAN FRONT</h2>
+
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_III_I" id="CHAPTER_III_I"></a>CHAPTER I
+<span class="totoc"><a href="#CONTENTS">ToC</a></span></h2>
+
+<h3>PETROGRAD</h3>
+
+
+<p>Mrs. Wynne, Mr. Bevan, and I left London for
+Russia on October 16, 1915. We are attached provisionally
+to the Anglo-Russian hospital, with a stipulation
+that we are at liberty to proceed to the front
+with our ambulances as soon as we can get permission
+to do so. We understand that the Russian wounded
+are suffering terribly, and getting no doctors, nurses,
+or field ambulances. We crossed from Newcastle
+to Christiania in a Norwegian boat, the <i>Bessheim</i>.
+It was supposed that in this ship there was less
+chance of being stopped, torpedoed, or otherwise
+inconvenienced.</p>
+
+<p>We reached Christiania after a wonderfully calm
+crossing, and went to the Grand Hotel at 1 a.m.
+No rooms to be had, so we went on to the Victoria&mdash;a
+good old house, not fashionable, but with a
+nice air about it, and some solid comforts. We
+left on Wednesday, the 20th, at 7 a.m. This was
+something of a feat, as we have twenty-four boxes
+with us. I only claim four, and feel as if I might
+have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a></span> brought more, but everyone has a different
+way of travelling, and luggage is often objected to.</p>
+
+<p>Indeed, I think this matter of travelling is one of
+the most curious in the world. I cannot understand
+why it is that to get into a train or a boat
+causes men and women to leave off restraint and to
+act in a primitive way. Why should the companionship
+of the open road be the supreme test of
+friendship? and why should one feel a certain fear
+of getting to know people too well on a journey?
+The last friends I travelled with were very careful
+indeed, and we used to reckon up accounts and
+divide the price of a bottle of "vin ordinaire"
+equally. My friends to-day seem inclined to do
+themselves very well, and to scatter largesse
+everywhere.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">STOCKHOLM</div>
+
+<p><i>Stockholm. 21 October.</i>&mdash;After a long day in
+the train we reached Stockholm yesterday evening,
+and went to the usual "Grand Hotel." This time
+it is very "grand," and very expensive. Mr. Bevan
+has a terrible pink boudoir-bedroom, which costs
+&pound;3 per night, and I have a small room on the
+fourth floor, which costs 17s. 6d. without a bath.
+There is rather a nice court in the middle of the
+house, with flowers and a band and tables for dinner,
+but the sight of everyone "doing himself well"
+always makes me feel a little sick. The wines and
+liqueurs, and the big cigars at two shillings each,
+and the look of repletion on men's faces as they
+listen to the band after being fed, somewhat disgust
+me.</p>
+
+<p>One's instinct is to dislike luxury, but in war-time
+it seems horrible. We ourselves will probably
+have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</a></span> to rough it badly soon, so I don't mind, but
+it's a side of life that seems to me as beastly as
+anything I know. Fortunately, the luxury of an
+hotel is minimised by the fact that there are no
+"necessaries," and one lives in an atmosphere of
+open trunks and bags, with things pulled out of
+them, which counterbalances crystal electric fittings
+and marble floors.</p>
+
+<p>We rested all this morning, lunched out, and in
+the afternoon went to have tea with the Crown
+Prince and Princess of Sweden. They were very
+delightful. The British Minister's wife, Lady
+Isobel Howard, went with us. The Princess had
+just finished reading my "Diary of the War," and
+was very nice about it. The children, who came
+in to tea, were the prettiest little creatures I have
+ever seen, with curly hair, and faces like the water-colour
+pictures of a hundred years ago. The
+Princess herself is most attractive, and reminds one
+of the pictures of Queen Victoria as a young
+woman. Her sensitive face is full of expression,
+and her colour comes and goes as she speaks of
+things that move her.</p>
+
+<p>This afternoon we went to tea at the Legation
+with the Howards. The House is charmingly
+situated on the Lake, with lovely trees all about it.
+It isn't quite finished yet, but will be very
+delightful.</p>
+
+<p><i>22 October.</i>&mdash;It is very strange to find oneself
+in a country where war is not going on. The
+absence of guns and Zeppelins, the well-lighted
+streets, and the peace of it all, are quite striking.
+But the country is pro-German almost to a man!
+And<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</a></span> it has been a narrow squeak to prevent war.
+Even now I suppose one wrong move may lead to
+an outbreak of hostilities, and the recent German
+victories may yet bring in other countries on her
+side. Bulgaria has been a glaring instance of siding
+with the one she considers the winning side (Gott
+strafe her!), and Greece is still wondering what to
+do! Thank God, I belong to a race that is full of
+primitive instincts! Poor old England still barges
+in whenever there is a fight going on, and gets her
+head knocked, and goes on fighting just the same,
+and never knows that she is heroic, but blunders
+on&mdash;simple-hearted, stupid, sublime!</p>
+
+<p><i>24 October.</i>&mdash;I went to the English church this
+morning with Mr. Lancelot Smith, but there was
+no service as the chaplain had chicken-pox! So I
+came home and packed, and then lunched with
+Mr. Eric Hambro, Mr. Lancelot Smith, and
+Mr. &mdash;&mdash;, all rather interesting men at this crisis,
+when four nations at least are undecided what to do
+in the matter of the war.</p>
+
+<p>About 6 o'clock we and our boxes got away from
+Stockholm. Our expenses for the few days we
+spent there were &pound;60, although we had very few
+meals in the hotel. We had a long journey to
+Haparanda, where we stopped for a day. The cold
+was terrible and we spent the day (my birthday) on
+a sort of luggage barge on the river. On my last
+birthday we were bolting from Furnes in front of
+the Germans, and the birthday before that I was
+on the top of the Rocky Mountains.</p>
+
+<p>Talking of the Rockies reminds me (did I need
+reminding) of Elsie Northcote, my dear friend, who
+married<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</a></span> and went to live there. The other night
+some friends of mine gave me a little "send-off"
+before I left London&mdash;dinner and the Palace
+Theatre, where I felt like a ghost returned to earth.
+All the old lot were there as of yore&mdash;Viola Tree,
+Lady Diana Manners, Harry Lindsay, the Raymond
+Asquiths, etc., etc. I saw them all from quite far
+away. Lord Stanmore was in the box with us,
+and he it was who told me of Elsie Northcote's
+sudden death. It wasn't the right place to hear
+about it. Too many are gone or are going. My own
+losses are almost stupefying; and something dead
+within myself looks with sightless eyes on death;
+with groping hands I touch it sometimes, and then I
+know that I am dead also.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">LOVE AND PAIN</div>
+
+<p>There is only one thing that one can never
+renounce, and that is love. Love is part of one,
+and can't be given up. Love can't be separated
+from one, even by death. It comes once and
+remains always. It is never fulfilled; the fulfilment
+of love is its crucifixion; but it lives on for
+ever in a passion-week of pain until pain itself grows
+dull; and then one wishes one had been born quite
+a common little soul, when one would probably
+have been very happy.</p>
+
+<p><i>28 October.</i>&mdash;We arrived at midnight last night
+at Petrograd. Ian Malcolm was at the hotel, and
+had remained up to welcome us. To-day we have
+been unpacking, and settling down into rather
+comfortable, very expensive rooms. My little box
+of a place costs twenty-six shillings a night. We
+lunched with two Russian officers and Mr. Ian
+Malcolm, and then I went to the British Embassy,
+where<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</a></span> the other two joined me. Sir George
+Buchanan, our Ambassador, looks overworked and
+tired. Lady Georgina and I got on well together....</p>
+
+<p>The day wasn't quite satisfactory, but one must
+remember that a queer spirit is evoked in war-time
+which is very difficult of analysis. Primarily there
+is "a right spirit renewed" in every one of us.
+We want to be one in the great sacrifice which war
+involves, and we offer and present ourselves, our
+souls and bodies in great causes, only to find that
+there is some strange unexplained quality of resistance
+meeting us everywhere.</p>
+
+<p>Mary once said to me in her quaint way, "Your
+duty is to give to the Queen's Fund as becomes
+your position, and to get properly thanked."</p>
+
+<p>This lady-like behaviour, combined with cheque-writing
+on a large scale, is always popular. It can
+be repeated and again repeated till cheque-writing
+becomes automatic. Then from nowhere there
+springs a curious class of persons whom one has
+never heard of before, with skins of invulnerable
+thickness and with wonderful self-confidence.
+They claim almost occult powers in the matter of
+"organisation," and they generally require pity for
+being overworked. For a time their names are in
+great circulation, and afterwards one doesn't hear
+very much about them. Florence Nightingale
+would have had no distinction nowadays. It is
+doubtful if she would have been allowed to work.
+Some quite inept person in a high position would
+have effectually prevented it. Most people are
+on the offensive against "high-souled work," and
+prepared<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</a></span> to put their foot down heavily on anything
+so presumptuous as heroism except of the
+orthodox kind, and even the right kind is often not
+understood.</p>
+
+<p>There is a story I try to tell, but something gets
+into my throat, and I tell it in jerks when I can.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">FOOTBALL UNDER FIRE</div>
+
+<p>It is the story of the men who played football
+across the open between the enemy's line of trenches
+and our own when it was raked by fire. When I
+had finished, a friend of mine, evidently waiting for
+the end of a pointless story, said, "What did they
+do that for?" (Oh, ye gods, have pity on men and
+women who suffer from fatty degeneration of the
+soul!)</p>
+
+<p>Still, in spite of it all, the Voice comes, and has
+to be obeyed.</p>
+
+<p><i>30 October.</i>&mdash;We lunched at the Embassy yesterday
+to meet the Grand Duchess Victoria. She is a
+striking-looking woman, tall and strong, and she
+wore a plain dark blue cloth dress and a funny
+little blue silk cap, and one splendid string of pearls.
+At the front she does very fine work, and we offered
+our services to her. I have begun to write a little,
+but after my crowded life the days feel curiously
+empty. Lady Heron Maxwell came to call.</p>
+
+<p>We were telling each other spy stories the other
+night. Some of them were very interesting. The
+Germans have lately adopted the plan of writing
+letters in English to English prisoners of war in
+Germany. These, of course, are quite simple, and
+pass the Censor in England, but, once on the other
+side, they go straight to Government officials, and
+whereas "Dear Bill" may mean nothing to us, it is
+part<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</a></span> of a German code and conveys some important
+information. Mr. Philpotts at Stockholm
+discovered this trick.</p>
+
+<p>On the Russian front a soldier was found with
+his jaw tied up, speechless and bleeding. A doctor
+tried to persuade him to take cover and get attention;
+but he shook his head, and signified by actions
+that he was unable to speak owing to his damaged
+jaw. The doctor shoved him into a dug-out, and
+said kindly, "Just let me have a look at you."
+On stripping the bandages off there was no wound
+at all, and the German in Russian uniform was
+given a cigarette and shot through the head.</p>
+
+<p>In Flanders we used to see companies of spies led
+out to be shot&mdash;first a party of soldiers, then the
+spies, after them the burying-party, and then the
+firing-party&mdash;marching stolidly to some place of
+execution.</p>
+
+<p>How awful shell-fire must be for those who
+really can't stand it! I heard of a Colonel the other
+day&mdash;a man who rode to hounds, and seemed quite
+a sound sort of fellow&mdash;and when the first shell
+came over, he leapt from his horse and lay on the
+ground shrieking with fear, and with every shell
+that came over he yelled and screamed. He had
+to be sent home, of course. Some people say this
+sort of thing is purely physical. That is never my
+view of the matter.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">MISS CAVELL</div>
+
+<p>Miss Cavell's execution has stirred us all to the
+bottom of our hearts. The mean trickiness of her
+trial, the refusal to let facts be known, and then
+the cold-blooded murder of a brave English woman
+at 2 a.m. on a Sunday morning in a prison yard!</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</a></span>
+It is too awful to think about. She was not
+even technically a spy, but had merely assisted
+some soldiers to get away because she thought they
+were going to be shot. A rumour reached the
+American and Spanish Legations that she had been
+condemned and was to be shot at once, and they instantly
+rang up on the telephone to know if this was
+true. They were informed by the Military Court
+which had tried and condemned her that the verdict
+would not be pronounced till three days later. But
+the two Legations, still not satisfied, protested that
+they must be allowed to visit the prisoner. This
+was refused.</p>
+
+<p>The English chaplain was at last permitted to
+enter the prison, and he saw Miss Cavell, and gave
+her the Sacrament. She said she was happy to die
+for her country. They led her out into the prison
+yard to stand before a firing-party of soldiers, but
+on her way there she fainted, and an officer took
+out his revolver and shot her through the head.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<p>Petrograd! the stage of romance, and the subject
+of dazzling pictures, is one of the most commonplace
+towns I have ever been in. It has its one big
+street&mdash;the Nevski Prospect&mdash;where people walk
+and shop as they do in Oxford Street, and it has a
+few cathedrals and churches, which are not very
+wonderful. The roadways are a mass of slush and
+are seldom swept; and there are tramways, always
+crowded and hot, and many rickety little victorias
+with damp cushions, in which one goes everywhere.
+Even in the evening we go out in these; and the
+colds in the head which follow are chronic.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</a></span>
+The English colony seems to me as provincial as
+the rest of Petrograd. The town and its people
+disappoint me greatly. The H&ocirc;tel Astoria is a
+would-be fashionable place, and there is a queer
+crowd of people listening to the band and eating, as
+surely only in Russia they can eat. It is all wrong
+in war-time, and I hate being one of the people
+here.</p>
+
+<p>N.B.&mdash;Write "Miss Wilbraham" as soon as
+possible, and write it in gusts. Call one chapter
+"The Diners," and try to convey the awful
+solemnity of meals&mdash;the grave young men with
+their goblets of brandy, in which they slowly
+rotate ice, the waiter who hands the bowl where
+the ice is thrown when the brandy is cool enough,
+and then the final gulp, with a nose inside the large
+goblet. Shade of Heliogabalus! If the human
+tummy must indeed be distended four times in
+twenty-four hours, need it be done so solemnly,
+and with such a pig-like love of the trough? If
+they would even eat what there is with joy one
+wouldn't mind, but the talk about food, the once-enjoyed
+food, the favourite food, is really too
+tiresome. "Where to dine" becomes a sort of test
+of true worth. Grave young men give the names
+of four or five favoured places in London. Others,
+hailed and acknowledged as really good judges,
+name half-a-dozen more in Paris where they "do
+you well." The real toff knows that Russia is the
+place to dine. We earnestly discuss blue-point
+oysters and caviare, which, if you "know the man,"
+you can get sent fresh on the Vienna Express from
+Moscow.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">BERNARD SHAW</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</a></span>
+I once asked Bernard Shaw to dinner, and he
+replied on a postcard: "Never! I decline to sit
+in a hot room and eat dead animals, even with you
+to amuse me!"</p>
+
+<p>I always seem to be sitting in hot rooms and
+eating dead animals, and then paying amazing high
+prices for them.</p>
+
+<p><i>4 November.</i>&mdash;I dined with the &mdash;&mdash;s the other
+night. Either the hot rooms, or the fact that I am
+an&aelig;mic at present, causes me to be so sleepy in the
+evenings that I dislike dining out. I sway with
+sleep even when people are talking to me. It was
+a middle-class little party, such as I often enjoy.
+One's friends would fain only have one see a few
+fine blooms, but I love common flowers.</p>
+
+<p>We have been to see "Peter's little house." There
+was a tiny shrine, crowded with people in wraps
+and shawls, who crossed themselves ceaselessly, to
+the danger of their neighbours' faces, for so fervid
+were their gesticulations that their hands flew in
+every direction! They shoved with their elbows to
+get near the wax candles that dripped before the
+pictures of the black-faced Virgin and Child, who
+were "allowing" soldiers to be painfully slaughtered
+by the million.</p>
+
+<p>Ye gods, what a faith! What an acrobatic
+performance to try and reconcile a Father's personal
+care for His poor little sparrows and His indifference
+at seeing so many of them stretched bleeding on
+the ground!</p>
+
+<p>Religion so far has been a success where martyrs
+are concerned, but we must go on with courage to
+something that teaches men to <i>live</i> for the best and
+the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</a></span> highest. This should come from ourselves, and
+lead up to God. It should not require teaching, or
+priests, or even prayer. Humanity is big enough
+for this. It should shake off cords and chains and
+old Bible stories of carnage and killing, and get to
+work to find a new, responsible, clean, sensible,
+practical scheme of life, in which each man will
+have to get away from silly old idols and step out
+by himself.</p>
+
+<p>There is nothing very difficult about it, but we
+are so beset by bogies, and so full of fears and
+fancies that we are half the time either in a state of
+funk, or in its antithesis, a state of cheekiness.
+Schoolmaster-ridden, we are behaving still like
+silly children, and our highest endeavour is (school-boy-like)
+to resemble our fellows as nearly as
+possible. The result is stagnation, crippled forms,
+wasted energy, people waiting for years by some
+healing pool and longing for someone to dip
+them in. All the release that Christ preached
+to men is being smothered in something worse
+than Judaism. We love chains, and when they
+are removed we either turn and put them on again,
+or else caper like mad things because we have cast
+them off. Freedom is still as distant as the stars.</p>
+
+<p><i>5 November.</i>&mdash;Yesterday we lunched with the
+English chaplain, Mr. Lombard. He and I had a
+great talk walking home on a dark afternoon
+through the slush after we had been to call on the
+Maxwells. I think he is one of the "exiles" whom
+one meets all the world over, one of those who
+don't transplant well. I am one myself! And
+Mr. Lombard and I nearly wept when we found
+ourselves<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</a></span> in a street that recalled the Marylebone
+Road. We pretended we were in sight of Euston
+Station, and talked of taking a Baker Street bus
+till our voices grew choky.</p>
+
+<p>How absurd we islanders are! London is a
+poky place, but we adore it. St. James's Street is
+about the length of a good big ship, yet we don't
+feel we have lived till we get back to it! And as
+for Piccadilly and St. Paul's, well, we see them in
+our dreams.</p>
+
+<p>Our little unit has not found work yet. I was
+told before I joined it that it had been accepted
+by the Russian Red Cross Society.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">"CHARITY" AND WAR</div>
+
+<p>I have been hearing many things out here, and
+thinking many things. There is only one way of
+directing Red Cross work. Everything should be&mdash;and
+must be in future&mdash;put under military
+authority and used by military authority.
+"Charity" and war should be separate. It is
+absurd that the Belgians in England should be
+housed and fed by a Government grant, and our
+own soldiers are dependent on private charity for
+the very socks they wear and the cigarettes they
+smoke. Aeroplanes had to be instituted and prizes
+offered for them by a newspaper, and ammunition
+wasn't provided till a newspaper took up the
+matter. To be mob-ridden is bad enough, but to
+be press-ridden is worse!</p>
+
+<p>Now, war is a military matter, and should be
+controlled by military authorities. Mrs. Wynne,
+Mr. Bevan, and I should not be out here waiting
+for work. We ought to be sent where we are
+needed, and so ought all Red Cross people. This
+would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</a></span> put an end, one hopes, to the horrid business
+of getting "soft jobs."</p>
+
+<p><i>7 November.</i>&mdash;Whenever I am away from
+England I rejoice in the passing of each week that
+brings me nearer to my return. I had hardly
+realised to-day was the 7th, but I am thankful I
+am one week nearer the grey little island and all
+the nice people in it.</p>
+
+<p>Yesterday I went to Lady Georgina Buchanan's
+soup-kitchen, and helped to feed Polish refugees.
+They strike me as being very like animals, but not
+so interesting. In the barracks where they lodge
+everyone crowds in. There is no division of the
+sexes, babies are yelling, and families are sleeping
+on wooden boards. The places are heated but not
+aired, and the smell is horrid; but they seem to
+revel in "frowst." All the women are dandling
+babies or trying to cook things on little oil-stoves.
+At night-time things are awful, I believe, and the
+British Ambassador has been asked to protect the
+girls who are there.</p>
+
+<p><i>8 November.</i>&mdash;This afternoon I went to see
+Mrs. Bray, and then I had an unexpected pleasure,
+for I met <a class="correction" title="index has &quot;Johnny&quot;">Johnnie</a> Parsons, who is Naval Attach&eacute;
+to Admiral Phillimore, and we had a long chat.
+When one is in a strange land, or with people who
+know one but little, these encounters are wonderfully
+nice.</p>
+
+<p>The other night I dined with the Heron Maxwells,
+and had a nice evening and a game of bridge.
+Some Americans, called de Velter, were there. I
+think most people from the States regret the
+neutrality of their country.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">VISIONS OF PEACE</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</a></span>
+Everyone brings in different stories of the war.
+Some say Germany is exhausted and beaten, others
+say she is flushed with victory, and with enormous
+reserves of men, food, and ammunition. I try to
+believe all the good I hear, and when even children
+or fools tell me the war will soon be over, I want
+to embrace them&mdash;I don't care whether they are
+talking nonsense or not. Sometimes I seem to see
+a great hushed cathedral, and ourselves returning
+thanks for Peace and Victory, and the vision is too
+much for me. I must either work or be chloroformed
+till that time comes.</p>
+
+<p><i>9 November.</i>&mdash;I think there is only one thing I
+dislike more than sitting in an hotel bedroom and
+learning a new language, and that is sitting in an
+hotel bedroom and nursing a cold in my head.
+Lately I have been learning Russian&mdash;and now I
+am sniffing. My own fault. I would sleep with
+my window open in this unhealthiest of cities, and
+smells and marsh produced a feverish cold.</p>
+
+<p>Out in the square the soldiers drill all the time
+in the snow, lying in it, standing in it, and dressed
+for the most part in cotton clothing. Wool can't
+be bought, so a close cotton web is made, with the
+inside teased out like flannelette, and this is all
+they have. The necessaries of life are being
+"cornered" right and left, mostly by the commercial
+houses and the banks. The other day 163
+railway trucks of sugar were discovered in a siding,
+where the owners had placed it to wait for a rise.
+Meanwhile, sugar has been almost unprocurable.</p>
+
+<p>Everyone from the front describes the condition
+of the refugees as being most wretched. They are
+camping<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</a></span> in the snow by the thousand, and are still
+tramping from Poland.</p>
+
+<p>And here we are in the Astoria Hotel, and there
+is one pane of glass between us and the weather;
+one pane of glass between us and the peasants of
+Poland; one pane of glass dividing us from poverty,
+and keeping us in the horrid atmosphere of this
+place, with its evil women and its squeaky band!
+How I hate money!</p>
+
+<p>I hope soon to join a train going to Dvinsk with
+food and supplies.</p>
+
+<p><i>13 November.</i>&mdash;I have felt very brainless since I
+came here. It is the result, I believe, of the Petrograd
+climate. Nearly everyone feels it. I had a
+little book in my head which I thought I could
+"dash off," and that writing it would fill up these
+waiting days, but I can't write a word.</p>
+
+<p>The war news is not good, but the more territory
+that Germany takes, the more the British rub their
+hands and cry victory. Their courage and optimism
+are wonderful.</p>
+
+<p>To-day I spent with the Maxwells, and met a
+nurse, newly returned from Galicia, who had
+interesting tales to tell. One about some Russian
+airmen touched me. There had been a fierce fight
+overhead, when suddenly the German aeroplane
+began to wheel round and round like a leaf, when
+it was found that the machine was on fire. One of
+the airmen had been shot and the other burnt to
+death. The Russians refused to come and look at
+the remains even of the aeroplane, and said sadly,
+"All we men of the air are brothers." They gave
+the dead Germans a military funeral, and then
+sailed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</a></span> over the enemy's lines to drop a note to say
+that all honour had been done to the brave dead.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">BULGARIA</div>
+
+<p>I met Monsieur Jecquier, who was full of the
+political situation&mdash;said Bulgaria would have joined
+us any day if we had promised to give her Bukowina;
+and blamed Bark, the Russian Finance Minister, for
+the terms of England's loan (the loan is for thirty
+millions, and repayment is promised in a year, which
+is manifestly impossible, and the situation may be
+strained). He said also that Motono, the Japanese
+Ambassador, is far the finest politician here; and
+he told me that while Russia ought to have been
+protecting the road to Constantinople she was
+quarrelling about what its new name was to be,
+and had decided to call it "Czareska." Now, I
+suppose, the Germans are already there. Lloyds
+has been giving &pound;100 at a premium of &pound;5 that King
+Ferdinand won't be on his throne next June.
+The premium has gone to &pound;10, which is good news.
+If Ferdie is assassinated the world will be rid of an
+evil fellow who has played a mean and degraded part
+in this war.</p>
+
+<p>We dined at the British Embassy last night. I
+was taken in to dinner by Mr. George Lloyd, who
+was full of interesting news. I had a nice chat
+with Lady Georgina.</p>
+
+<p><i>20 November.</i>&mdash;It has been rather a "hang-on"
+ever since I wrote last, nothing settled and nothing
+to do. No one ever seems at their best in Petrograd.
+It is a cross place and a common place. I never
+understood Tolstoi till I came here. On all sides one
+sees the same insane love of money and love of food.</p>
+
+<p>A restaurant here disgusts me as nothing else
+ever<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</a></span> did. From a menu a foot long no one seems
+able to choose a meal, but something fresh must be
+ordered. The prices are quite silly, and, oddly
+enough, people seem to revel in them. They still
+eat caviare at ten shillings a head; the larger the
+bill the better they are pleased.</p>
+
+<p>Joseph, the Napoleon of the restaurant, keeps an
+eye on everyone. He is yellow, and pigeon-breasted,
+but his voice is like grease, and he speaks caressingly
+of food, pencils entries in his pocket-book,
+and stimulates jaded appetites by signalling the
+"voiture aux hors d'&oelig;uvres" to approach. The
+rooms are far too hot for anyone to feel hungry, the
+band plays, and the leader of it grins all the time,
+and capers about on his little platform like a monkey
+on an organ.</p>
+
+<p>Always in this life of restaurants and gilt and
+roubles I am reminded of the fact that the only
+authentic picture we have of hell is of a man there
+who all his life had eaten good dinners.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">STAGNATION</div>
+
+<p>I have been busy seeing all manner of people in
+order to try and get work to do. I hear of suffering,
+but I am never able to locate it or to do anything for
+it. No distinct information is forthcoming; and
+when I go to one high official he gives me his card
+and sends me to another. Nothing is even decided
+about Mrs. Wynne's cars, although she is offering
+a gift worth some thousands of pounds. I go to
+Lady Georgina's work-party on Mondays and meet
+the English colony, and on Wednesdays and
+Saturdays I distribute soup; but it is an unsatisfactory
+business, and the days go by and one gets
+nothing done. One isn't even storing up health, because<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</a></span>
+this is rather an unhealthy place, so altogether
+we are feeling a bit low. I can never again be surprised
+at Russian "laissez faire," or want of push and
+energy. It is all the result of the place itself. I
+feel in a dream, and wish with all my heart I could
+wake up in my own bed.</p>
+
+<p><i>21 November.</i>&mdash;Sunday, and I have slept late. At
+home I begin work at 6 a.m. Here, like everyone
+else, I only wake up at night, and the "best hours
+of the day," as we call them, are wasted, &agrave; la Watts'
+hymn, in slumber. If it was possible one would
+organise one's time a bit, but hotel life is the very
+mischief for that sort of thing. There are no
+facilities for anything. One must telephone in
+Russian or spend roubles on messengers if one
+wants to get into touch with anyone. I took a
+taxi out to lunch one day. It cost 16 roubles&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>,
+32s.</p>
+
+<p>Dear old Lord Radstock used to say in the
+spring, "The Lord is calling me to Italy," and a
+testy parson once remarked, "The Lord always
+calls you at very convenient times, Radstock." I
+don't feel as if the Lord had called me here at a
+very convenient time.</p>
+
+<p>I called on Princess H&eacute;l&egrave;ne Scherbatoff yesterday,
+and found her and her people at home. The
+mother runs a hospital-train for the wounded in the
+intervals of hunting wolves. Her son has been
+dead for some months, and she says she hasn't had
+time to bury him yet! One assumes he is
+embalmed! Yet I can't help saying they were
+charming people to meet, so we must suppose they
+are somewhat cracked. The daughter is lovely, and
+they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</a></span> were all in deep mourning for the unburied
+relative.</p>
+
+<p><i>24 November.</i>&mdash;This long wait is trying us a bit
+high. There is literally nothing to do. We arrange
+pathetic little programmes for ourselves. To-day I
+shall lunch with Mr. Cunard, and see the lace he
+has bought: yesterday I did some shopping with
+Captain Smith: one day I sew at Lady Georgina's
+work-party.</p>
+
+<p>Heavens, what a life! I realise that for years I
+have not drawn rein, and I am sure I don't require
+holidays. Moses was a wise man, and he knew
+that one day in seven is rest enough for most
+humans. I always "keep the Sabbath," and it is
+all the rest I want. Even here I might write and
+get on with something, but there is something
+paralysing about the place, and my brain won't work.
+I can't even write a diary! Everyone is depressed
+and everyone longs to be out of Petrograd. To-day
+we hear that the Swedes have closed the
+Haparanda line, and Archangel is frozen, so here
+we are.</p>
+
+<p>Now I have got to work at the hospital. There
+are 25,000 amputation cases in Petrograd. The
+men at my hospital are mostly convalescent, but, of
+course, their wounds require dressing. This is never
+done in their beds, as the English plan is, but each
+man is carried in turn to the "salle des pansements,"
+and is laid on an operating-table and has his fresh
+dressings put on, and is then carried back to bed
+again. It is a good plan, I think. The hospital
+keeps me busy all the morning. Once more I
+begin to see severed limbs and gashed flesh, and
+the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</a></span> old question arises, "Why, what evil hath he
+done?" This war is the crucifixion of the youth
+of the world.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">"SPEAKING ONE'S MIND"</div>
+
+<p>In a way I am learning something here. For
+instance, I have always disliked "explanations" and
+"speaking one's mind," etc., etc., more than I can
+say. I dare say I have chosen the path of least
+resistance in these matters. Here one must speak
+out sometimes, and speak firmly. It isn't all
+"being pleasant." One girl has been consistently
+rude to me. To-day, poor soul, I gave her a second
+sermon on our way back from church; but, indeed
+she has numerous opportunities in this war, and she
+is wasting them all on gossip, and prejudices, and
+petty jealousies. So we had a straight talk, and I
+hope she didn't hate it. At any rate, she has
+promised amendment of life. One hears of men
+that "this war gives them a chance to distinguish
+themselves." Women ought to distinguish themselves,
+too.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Hesper! Venus! were we native to their splendour, or in Mars,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">We should see this world we live in, fairest of their evening stars.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Who could dream of wars and tumults, hate and envy, sin and spite,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Roaring London, raving Paris, in that spot of peaceful light?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Might we not, in looking heavenward on a star so silver fair,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Yearn and clasp our hands and murmur, 'Would to God that we were there!'"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Always when I see war, and boys with their poor
+dead faces turned up to the sky, and their hands so
+small in death, and when I see wounded men, and
+hear of soldiers going out of the trenches with a
+laugh and a joke to cut wire entanglements, knowing
+they will not come back, then I am ashamed of
+meanness<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</a></span> and petty spite. So my poor young
+woman got a "fair dose of it" this morning, and
+when she had gulped once or twice I think she felt
+better.</p>
+
+<p>Yesterday one saw enough to stir one profoundly,
+and enough to make small things seem small indeed!
+It was a fine day at last, after weeks of black
+weather and skies heavy with snow, and although
+the cold was intense the sun was shining. I got
+into one of the horrid little droshkys, in which one
+sits on very damp cushions, and an "izvoztchik" in
+a heavy coat takes one to the wrong address always!</p>
+
+<p>The weather has been so thick, the rain and
+snow so constant, that I had not yet seen Petrograd.
+Yesterday, out of the mists appeared golden spires,
+and beyond the Neva, all sullen and heavy with
+ice, I saw towers and domes which I hadn't seen
+before. I stamped my feet on the shaky little
+carriage and begged the izvoztchik to drive a little
+quicker. We had to be at the Finnish station at
+10 a.m., and my horse, with a long tail that
+embraced the reins every time that the driver
+urged speed, seemed incapable of doing more than
+potter over the frozen roads. I picked up Mme.
+Takmakoff, who was taking me to the station, and
+we went on together.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">BLIND</div>
+
+<p>At the station there was a long wooden building
+and, outside, a platform, all frozen and white, where
+we waited for the train to come in. Mme. Sazonoff,
+a fine well-bred woman, the wife of the Minister for
+Foreign Affairs, was there, and "many others," as
+the press notices say. The train was late. We
+went inside the long wooden building to shelter
+from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</a></span> the bitter cold beside the hot-water pipes, and
+as we waited we heard that the train was coming
+in. It came slowly and carefully alongside the
+platform with its crunching snow, almost with the
+creeping movement of a woman who carries something
+tenderly. Then it stopped. Its windows
+were frozen and dark, so that one could see
+nothing. I heard a voice behind me say, "The
+blind are coming first," and from the train there
+came groping one by one young men with their
+eyes shot out. They felt for the step of the
+train, and waited bewildered till someone came to
+lead them; then, with their sightless eyes looking
+upwards more than ours do, they moved stumbling
+along. Poor fellows, they'll never <i>see</i> home; but
+they turned with smiles of delight when the band,
+in its grey uniforms and fur caps, began to play the
+National Anthem.</p>
+
+<p>These were the first wounded prisoners from
+Germany, sent home because they could never fight
+again&mdash;quite useless men, too sorely hurt to stand
+once more under raining bullets and hurtling shell-fire&mdash;so
+back they came, and like dazed creatures
+they got out of the train, carrying their little
+bundles, limping, groping, but home.</p>
+
+<p>After the blind came those who had lost limbs&mdash;one-legged
+men, men still in bandages, men hobbling
+with sticks or with an arm round a comrade's neck,
+and then the stretcher cases. There was one man
+carrying his crutches like a cross. Others lay
+twisted sideways. Some never moved their heads
+from their pillows. All seemed to me to have about
+them a splendid dignity which made the long,
+battered,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</a></span> suffering company into some great
+pageant. I have never seen men so lean as they
+were. I have never seen men's cheek-bones seem to
+cut through the flesh just where the close-cropped
+hair on their temples ends. I had never seen such
+hollow eyes; but they were Russian soldiers,
+Russian gentlemen, and they were home again!</p>
+
+<p>In the great hall we greeted them with tables
+laid with food, and spread with wine and little
+presents beside each place. They know how to do
+this, the princely Russians, so each man got a
+welcome to make him proud. The band was there,
+and the long tables, the hot soup and the cigarettes.
+All the men had washed at Torneo, and all of them
+wore clean cotton waistcoats. Their hair was cut,
+too, but their faces hadn't recovered. One knew
+they would never be young again. The Germans
+had done their work. Semi-starvation and wounds
+had made old men of these poor Russian soldiers.
+All was done that could be done to welcome them
+back, but no one could take it in for a time. A
+sister in black distributed some little Testaments,
+each with a cross on it, and the soldiers kissed the
+symbol of suffering passionately.</p>
+
+<p>They filed into their places at the tables, and the
+stretchers were placed in a row two deep up the
+whole length of the room. In the middle of it
+stood an altar, covered with silver tinsel, and two
+priests in tinsel and gold stood beside it. Upon it
+was the sacred ikon, and the everlasting Mother
+and Child smiled down at the men laid in helplessness
+and weakness at their feet.</p>
+
+<p>A General welcomed the soldiers back; and
+when<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</a></span> they were thanked in the name of the
+Emperor for what they had done, the tears coursed
+down their thin cheeks. It was too pitiful and
+touching to be borne. I remember thinking how
+quietly and sweetly a sister of mercy went from
+one group of soldiers to another, silently giving
+them handkerchiefs to dry their tears. We are all
+mothers now, and our sons are so helpless, so much
+in need of us.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">WOUNDED RUSSIANS</div>
+
+<p>Down the middle of the room were low tables
+for the men who lay down all the time. They
+saluted the ikon, as all the soldiers did, and some
+service began which I was unable to follow. I
+can't tell what the soldiers said, or of what they
+were thinking. About their comrades they said to
+Mme. Takmakoff that 25,000 of them had died in
+two days from neglect. We shall never hear the
+worst perhaps.</p>
+
+<p>There were three officers at a table. One of
+them was shot through the throat, and was
+bandaged. I saw him put all his food on one side,
+unable to swallow it. Then a high official came and
+sat down and drank his health. The officer raised
+his glass gallantly, and put his lips to the wine, but
+his throat was shot through, he made a face of
+agony, bowed to the great man opposite, and put
+down his glass.</p>
+
+<p>Some surgeons in white began to go about,
+taking names and particulars of the men's condition.
+Everyone was kind to the returned soldiers, but
+they had borne too much. Some day they will
+smile perhaps, but yesterday they were silent men
+returned from the dead, and not yet certain that
+their feet touched Russia again.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_III_II" id="CHAPTER_III_II"></a>CHAPTER II
+<span class="totoc"><a href="#CONTENTS">ToC</a></span></h2>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3>WAITING FOR WORK</h3>
+
+<p>We paid our heavy bills and left Petrograd on
+Monday, the 29th November. Great fuss at the
+station, as our luggage and the guide had disappeared
+together. A comfortable, slow journey, and Colonel
+Malcolm met us at Moscow station and took us to
+the H&ocirc;tel de Luxe&mdash;a shocking bad pub, but the
+only one where we could get rooms. We went out
+to lunch, and I had a plate of soup, two faens (little
+wheat cakes), and the fifth part of a bottle of Graves.
+This modest repast cost sixteen shillings per head.
+We turned out of the Luxe Hotel the following
+day, and came to the National, where four hundred
+people were waiting to get in. But our guide
+Grundy had influence, and managed to get us
+rooms. It is quite comfortable.</p>
+
+<p>None of us was sorry to leave Petrograd, and
+that is putting the case mildly. People there are
+very depressed, and it was a case of "she said" and
+"he said" all the time. Everyone was trying to
+snuff everyone else out. "I don't know them"&mdash;and
+the lips pursed up finished many a reputation,
+and I heard more about money and position than I
+ever heard in my life before. "Bunty" and I used
+to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</a></span> say that the world was inhabited by "nice
+people and very nice people," and once she added
+a third class, "fearfully nice people." That is a
+world one used to inhabit. I suppose one must
+make the best of this one!</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">MOSCOW</div>
+
+<p><i>Moscow. 2 December.</i>&mdash;Hilda Wynne was rather
+feverish to-day, and lay in bed, so I had a solitary
+walk about the Kremlin, and saw a fine view from
+its splendid position. But, somehow, I am getting
+tired of solitude. I suppose the war gives us the
+feeling that we must hold together, and yet I have
+never been more alone than during this last eighteen
+months.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="center"><i>To Miss Macnaughtan's Sisters.</i></p>
+
+<p class="lh_ind0"><span class="smcap">Cr&eacute;dit Lyonnais, Moscow,</span></p>
+<p class="lh_ind2"><i>3 December.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">My Dears,</span></p>
+
+<p>I have just heard that there is a man going up
+to Petrograd to-night who will put our letters in the
+Embassy bag, so there is some hope of this reaching
+you. It is really my Christmas letter to you all,
+so may it be passed round, please, although there
+won't be much in it.</p>
+
+<p>We are now at Moscow, <i>en route</i> for the Caucasus
+<i>via</i> Tiflis, and our base will probably be Julfa. We
+have been chosen to go there by the Grand Duchess
+Cyril, but the reports about the roads are so
+conflicting that we are going to see for ourselves.
+When we get there it will be difficult to send
+letters home, but the banks will always be in
+communication with each other, so I shall get all
+you send to Cr&eacute;dit Lyonnais, Petrograd.</p>
+
+<p>So far we have been waiting for our cars all this
+time.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</a></span> They had to come by Archangel, and they
+left long before we did, but they have not arrived
+yet. There are six ambulance cars, on board three
+different ships (for safety), and no news of any of
+them yet.</p>
+
+<p>Now, at least, <i>we</i> have got a move on, and,
+barring accidents, we shall be in Tiflis next week.
+It's rather a fearsome journey, as the train only
+takes us to the foot of the mountains in four days,
+and then we must ride or drive across the passes,
+which they say are too cold for anything. You
+must imagine us like Napoleon in the "Retreat
+from Moscow" picture.</p>
+
+<p>Petrograd is a singularly unpleasant town, where
+the sun never shines, and it rains or snows every
+day. The river is full of ice, but it looks sullen
+and sad in the perpetual mist. There are a good
+many English people there; but one is supposed to
+know the Russians, which means speaking French
+all the time. Moscow is a far superior place, and
+is really most interesting and beautiful, and very
+Eastern, while Petrograd might be Liverpool. I
+filled up my time there in the hospital and soup-kitchen.</p>
+
+<p>The price of everything gets worse, I do believe!
+Even a glass of filtered water costs one shilling and
+threepence! I have just left an hotel for which
+my bill was &pound;3 for one night, and I was sick nearly
+all the time!</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">"WHEN WILL THE WAR END?"</div>
+
+<p>Now, my dears, I wish you all the best Christmas
+you can have this year. I am just longing for
+news of you, but I never knew such a cut-off place
+as this for letters. Tell me about every one of the
+family.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</a></span> Write lengthy letters. When do people
+say the war will end?</p>
+
+<p class="lf_sal">Your loving</p>
+<p class="lf_sig"><span class="smcap">Sarah Broom.</span></p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><i>Tiflis. 12 December.</i>&mdash;It is evening, and I have
+only just remembered it is Sunday, a thing I can't
+recollect ever having happened before. I have been
+ill in my room all day, which no doubt accounts
+for it.</p>
+
+<p>We stayed at Moscow for a few days, and my
+recollection of it is of a great deal of snow and
+frequent shopping expeditions in cold little sleighs.
+I liked the place, and it was infinitely preferable to
+Petrograd. Mr. Cazalet took us to the theatre one
+night, and there was rather a good ballet. These
+poor dancers! They, like others, have lost their
+nearest and dearest in the war, but they still have
+to dance. Of course they call themselves "The
+Allies," and one saw rather a stale ballet-girl in very
+sketchy clothes dancing with a red, yellow, and
+black flag draped across her. Poor Belgium! It
+was such a travesty of her sufferings.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Cazalet came to see us off at the station, and
+we began our long journey to Tiflis, but we changed
+our minds, and took the local train from &mdash;&mdash; to
+Vladikavkas, where we stayed one night rather
+enjoyably at a smelly hotel, and the following day
+we got a motor-car and started at 7 a.m. for the
+pass. The drive did us all good. The great snow
+peaks were so unlike Petrograd and gossip! I had
+been rather ill on the train, and I got worse at the
+hotel and during the drive, so I was quite a poor
+Sarah<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</a></span> when I reached Tiflis. Still, the scenery had
+been lovely all the time, and we had funny little
+meals at rest houses.</p>
+
+<p>When we got to Tiflis I went on being seedy for
+a while. I finished Stephen Graham's book on
+Russia which he gave me before I left home. It is
+charmingly written. The line he chooses is mine
+also, but his is a more important book than mine.</p>
+
+<p><i>Batoum. 22 December.</i>&mdash;We have had a really
+delightful time since I last wrote up the old diary!
+(A dull book so far.) We saw a good many important
+people at Tiflis&mdash;Gorlebeff, the head of the
+Russian Red Cross, Prince Orloff, Prince Galitzin
+(a charming man), General Bernoff, etc., etc.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Wynne's and Mr. Bevan's cars are definitely
+accepted for the Tehran district. My own plans
+are not yet settled, but I hope they may be soon.
+People seem to think I look so delicate that they
+are a little bit afraid of giving me hard work, and
+yet I suppose there are not many women who get
+through more work than I do; but I believe I am
+looking rather a poor specimen, and my hair has
+fallen out. I think I am rather like those pictures
+on the covers of "appeals"&mdash;pictures of small
+children, underneath which is written, "This is
+Johnny Smith, or Eliza Jones, who was found in
+a cellar by one of our officers; weight&mdash;age&mdash;etc.,
+etc."</p>
+
+<p>If I could have a small hospital north of Tehran
+it would be a good centre for the wounded, and it
+would also be a good place for the others to come
+to. Mr. Hills and Dr. Gordon (American missionaries)
+seem to think they would like me to join
+them<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</a></span> in their work for the Armenians. These unfortunate
+people have been nearly exterminated by
+massacres, and it has been officially stated that
+75 per cent. of the whole race has been put to
+the sword. This sounds awful enough, but when
+we consider that there is no refinement of torture
+that has not been practised upon them, then something
+within one gets up and shouts for revenge.</p>
+
+<p>The photographs which General Bernoff has are
+proof of the devildom of the Turks, only that the
+devil could not have been so beastly, and a beast
+could not have been so devilish. The Kaiser has
+convinced the Turks that he is now converted from
+Christianity to Mahomedanism. In every mosque
+he is prayed for under the title of "H&aacute;jed Mahomet
+Wilhelm," and photographs of burned and ruined
+cathedrals in France and Belgium are displayed to
+prove that he is now anti-Christian. Heaven knows
+it doesn't want much proving!</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">RASPUTIN</div>
+
+<p>There are rumours of peace offers from Germany,
+but we must go on fighting now, if only for the sake
+of the soldiers, who will be the ones to suffer, but who
+<i>can't</i> be asked to give in. The Russians are terribly
+out of spirits, and very depressed about the war.
+The German influence at Court scares them,
+and there is, besides, the mysterious Rasputin to
+contend with! This extraordinary man seems to
+exercise a malign influence over everyone, and
+people are powerless to resist him. Nothing seems
+too strange or too mad to recount of this man and
+his dupes. He is by birth a moujik, or peasant, and
+is illiterate, a drunkard, and an immoral wretch.
+Yet there is hardly a great lady at Court who has
+not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</a></span> come under his influence, and he is supposed
+by this set of persons to be a reincarnation of
+Christ. Rasputin's figure is one of those mysterious
+ones round which every sort of rumour gathers.</p>
+
+<p>We left Tiflis on Friday, 17th December, and
+had rather a panic at the station, as our passports
+had been left at the hotel, and our tickets had gone
+off to Baku. However, the unpunctuality of the
+train helped us, and we got off all right, an hour
+late. The train was about a thousand years old,
+and went at the rate of ten miles an hour, and we
+could only get second-class ordinary carriages to
+sleep in! But morning showed us such lovely
+scenery that nothing else mattered. One found
+oneself in a semi-tropical country, with soft skies
+and blue sea, and palms and flowers, and with tea-gardens
+on all the hillsides. When will people discover
+Caucasia? It is one of the countries of the
+world.</p>
+
+<p>We had letters to Count Groholski, a most
+charming young fellow, who arranged a delightful
+journey for us into the mountains, and as we had
+brought no riding things we began to search the
+small shops for riding-boots and the like. Then, in
+the evening we dined with Count Oulieheff, and
+had an interesting pleasant time. Two Japanese
+were at dinner, and, although they couldn't speak
+any tongue but their own, Japanese always manage
+to look interesting. No doubt much of that
+depends upon being able to say nothing.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">GEORGIA</div>
+
+<p>Early next day we motored out to the Count's
+Red Cross camp at &mdash;&mdash;. Here everyone was
+sleeping under tents or in little wooden huts, and
+we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</a></span> met some good-mannered, nice soldier men,
+most of them Poles. The scenery was grand, and
+we were actually in the little known and wonderful
+old kingdom of Georgia. Very little of it is <a class="correction" title="original had comma">left.</a>
+There are ruins all along the river of castles and
+fortresses and old stone bridges now crumbling into
+decay, but of the country, once so proud, only one
+small dirty city remains, and that is Artvin, on the
+mountain-side. It was too full of an infectious sort
+of typhus for us to go there, but we drove out to
+the hospital on the opposite side of the valley, and
+the doctor in charge there gave us beds for the
+night.</p>
+
+<p>On Sunday, December 19th, I wandered about
+the hillside, found some well-made trenches,
+and saw some houses which had been shelled.
+The Turks were in possession of Artvin only a
+year ago, and there was a lot of fighting in the
+mountains. It seems to me that the population of
+the place is pretty Turkish still; and there are
+Turkish houses with small Moorish doorways, and
+little windows looking out on the glorious view.
+In all the mountains round here the shooting is
+fine, and consists of toor (goats), leopards, bears,
+wolves, and on the Persian front, tigers also. Land
+can be had for nothing if one is a Russian.</p>
+
+<p>On Sunday afternoon we drove in a most painful
+little carriage to a village which seemed to be inhabited
+by good-looking cut-throats, but there was
+not much to see except the picturesque, smelly, old
+brown houses. We met a handsome Cossack
+carrying a man down to the military hospital. He
+was holding him upright, as children carry each
+other;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</a></span> the man was moaning with fever, and had
+been stricken with the virulent typhus, which
+nearly always kills. But what did the handsome
+Cossack care about infection? He was a mountaineer,
+and had eyes with a little flame in them,
+and a fierce moustache. Perhaps to-morrow he
+will be gone. People die like flies in these unhealthy
+towns, and the Russians are supremely
+careless.</p>
+
+<p>We went back to the hospital for dinner, and
+then went out into crisp, beautiful moonlight, and
+motored back to the Red Cross camp. I had a
+little hut to sleep in, which had just been built.
+It contained a bed and two chairs, upon one of
+which was a tin basin! The cold in the morning
+was about as sharp as anything I have known, but
+everyone was jolly and pleasant, and we had a
+charming time.</p>
+
+<p>The Count told us of the old proud Georgians
+when there was a famine in the country and a
+Russian Governor came to offer relief to the starving
+inhabitants. Their great men went out to
+receive him, and said courteously, "We have not
+been here, Gracious One, one hundred or two
+hundred years, but much more than a thousand
+years, and during that time we have not had a visit
+from the Russian Government. We are pleased
+to see you, and the honour you have done us is
+sufficient in itself&mdash;for the rest we think we will
+not require anything at your hands."</p>
+
+<p>On Monday I motored with the others out to the
+ferry; then I had to leave them, as they were
+going to ride forty miles, and that was thought too
+much<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</a></span> for me. Age has <i>no</i> compensations, and it is
+not much use fighting it. One only ends by being
+"a wonderful old woman of eighty": reminiscent,
+perhaps a little obstinate, and in the world to come&mdash;always
+eighty?</p>
+
+<p>Came back to Batoum with Count Stanislas
+Constant, and went for a drive with him to see the
+tea-gardens.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<div class="sidenote">TIFLIS</div>
+
+<p>Christmas Eve at Tiflis, and here we are with
+cars still stuck in the ice thirty miles from Archangel,
+and ourselves just holding on and trying not
+to worry. But what a waste of time! Also,
+fighting is going on now in Persia, and we might
+be a lot of use. We came back from Batoum in
+the hottest and slowest train I have ever been in.
+Still, Georgia delighted me, and I am glad to have
+seen it. They have a curious custom there (the
+result of generations of fighting). Instead of saying
+"Good-morning," they say "Victory"; and the
+answer is, "May the victory be yours." The
+language is Georgian, of course; and then there is
+Tartar, and Polish, and Russian, and I can't help
+thinking that the Tower of Babel was the poorest
+joke that was ever played on mankind. Nothing
+stops work so completely.</p>
+
+<p>What will Christmas Day be like at home? I
+think of all the village churches, with the holly and
+evergreens, and in almost every one the little new
+brass plates to the memory of beautiful youth, dead
+and mangled, and left in the mud to await another
+trumpet than that which called it from the trenches.
+There is nothing like a boy, and all the life of
+England<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</a></span> and the prayers of mothers have centred
+round them. One's older friends died first, and
+now the boys are falling, and from every little
+vicarage, from school-houses and colleges, the
+endless stream goes, all with their heads up, fussing
+over their little bits of packing, and then away to
+stand exploding shells and gas and bombs. No one
+except those who have seen knows the ghastly tale
+of human suffering that this war involves every
+day. Down here 550,000 Armenians have been
+butchered in cold blood. The women are either
+massacred or driven into Turkish harems.</p>
+
+<p>Yesterday we heard some news at last in this
+most benighted corner of the world! England has
+raised four million volunteers. Hurrah! Over
+one million men volunteered in one week. French
+takes command at home and Haig at the front.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="center"><i>To Mrs. Charles Young.</i></p>
+
+<p class="lh_ind0"><span class="smcap">Hotel Orient, Tiflis,</span></p>
+<p class="lh_ind2"><i>26 December.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Darling J.,</span></p>
+
+<p>It seems almost useless to write letters, or
+even to wire! Letters sometimes take forty-nine
+days to get to England, and telegrams are <i>always</i>
+kept a fortnight before being sent. We have had
+great difficulty about the ambulance cars, as they all
+got frozen into the river at Archangel; however, as
+you will see from the newspapers, there isn't a great
+deal going on yet.</p>
+
+<p>I do hope you and all the family are safe and
+sound. I wired to &mdash;&mdash; for her birthday to ask
+news of you all, and I prepaid the reply, but, of
+course,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</a></span> none came, so I am sure she never got the
+wire. I have wired twice to &mdash;&mdash;, but no reply.
+At last one gives up expecting any. I got some
+newspapers nearly a month old to-day, and I have
+been devouring them.</p>
+
+<p>This is rather a curious place, and the climate is
+quite good; no snow, and a good deal of pleasant
+sun, but the hills all round are very bare and
+rugged.</p>
+
+<p>I have had a cough, which I think equals your
+best efforts in that line. How it does shake one
+up! I had some queer travelling when it was at
+its worst: for the first night we were given a shakedown
+in a little mountain hospital, which was fearfully
+cold; and the next night I was put into a
+newly-built little place, made of planks roughly
+nailed together, and with just a bed and a basin
+in it.</p>
+
+<p>The cold was wonderful, and since then&mdash;as you
+may imagine&mdash;the Macnaughtan cough has been
+heard in the land!</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">GRAND DUKE NICHOLAS</div>
+
+<p>Yesterday (Christmas Day) we were invited to
+breakfast with the Grand Duke Nicholas. A Court
+function in Russia is the most royal that you can
+imagine&mdash;no half measures about it! The Grand
+Duke is an adorably handsome man, quite extraordinarily
+and obviously a Grand Duke. He
+measures 6 feet 5 inches, and is worshipped by
+every soldier in the Army.</p>
+
+<p>We went first into a huge anteroom, where a
+lady-in-waiting received us, and presented us to
+"Son Altesse Imp&eacute;riale," and then to the Grand
+Duke and to his brother, the Grand Duke Peter.
+Some<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</a></span> scenes seem to move as in a play. I had a
+vision of a great polished floor, and many tall men
+in Cossack dress, with daggers and swords, most of
+them different grades of Princes and Imperial
+Highnesses.</p>
+
+<p>A great party of Generals, and ladies, and
+members of the Household, then went into a big
+dining-room, where every imaginable hors d'&oelig;uvre
+was laid out on dishes&mdash;dozens of different kinds&mdash;and
+we each ate caviare or something. Afterwards,
+with a great tramp and clank of spurs and swords,
+everyone moved on to a larger dining-room, where
+there were a lot of servants, who waited excellently.</p>
+
+<p>In the middle of the d&eacute;jeuner the Grand Duke
+Nicholas got up, and everyone else did the same,
+and they toasted us! The Grand Duke made a
+speech about our "gallantry," etc., etc., and everyone
+raised glasses and bowed to one. Nothing in
+a play could have been more of a real fine sort of
+scene. And certainly S. Macnaughtan in her
+wildest dreams hadn't thought of anything so
+wonderful as being toasted in Russia by the
+Imperial Staff.</p>
+
+<p>It's quite a thing to be tiresome about when one
+grows old!</p>
+
+<p>In the evening we tried to be merry, and failed.
+The Grand Duchess sent us mistletoe and plum-pudding
+by the hand of M. Boulderoff. He took
+us shopping, but the bazaars are not interesting.</p>
+
+<p class="lf_ind3">Good-bye, and bless you, my dear,</p>
+<p class="lf_sal">Yours as ever,</p>
+<p class="lf_sig"><span class="smcap">S. Macnaughtan.</span></p>
+
+<hr />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><i>To Miss Julia Keays-Young.</i></p>
+
+<p class="lh_ind6"><span class="smcap">Hotel d'Orient, Tiflis,</span></p>
+<p class="lh_ind4"><span class="smcap">Caucasus, Russia,</span></p>
+<p class="lh_ind2"><i>27 December.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Darling Jenny,</span></p>
+
+<p>I can't tell you what a pleasure your letters
+are. I only wish I could get some more from anybody,
+but not a line gets through! I want so much
+to hear about Bet and her marriage, and to know if
+the nephews and Charles are safe.</p>
+
+<p>There seems to be the usual winter pause over
+the greater part of the war area, but round about
+here, there are the most awful massacres; 550,000
+Armenians have been slaughtered in cold blood by
+the Turks, and with cruelties that pass all telling.
+One is quite impotent.</p>
+
+<p>I expect to be sent into Persia soon, and meanwhile
+I hope to join some American missionaries
+who are helping the refugees. Our ambulances are
+at last out of the ice at Archangel, and will be here
+in a fortnight; but we are not to go to Persia for a
+month. "The Front" is always altering, and we
+never have any idea where our work will be wanted.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">HOMESICK</div>
+
+<p>We are still asking when the war will end, but,
+of course, no one knows. One gets pretty homesick
+out here at times, and there was a chance I
+might have to go back to England for equipment,
+but that seems off at present.</p>
+
+<p class="lf_sal">Your always loving</p>
+<p class="lf_sig">A. S.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><i>29 December.</i>&mdash;I have still got a horrid bad
+cough, and my big, dull room is depressing. We
+are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</a></span> all depressed, I am afraid. Being accustomed
+to have plenty to do, this long wait is maddening.</p>
+
+<p>Whatever Russia may have in store for us in the
+way of useful work, nothing can exceed the boredom
+of our first seven weeks here. We are just spoiling
+for work. I believe it is as bad as an illness to feel
+like this, and we won't be normal again for some
+time. Oddly enough, it does affect one's health, and
+Hilda Wynne and I are both seedy. We are
+always trying to wire for things, but not a word gets
+through.</p>
+
+<p>We were summoned to dine at the palace last
+night. Everyone very charming.</p>
+
+<p><i>31 December.</i>.&mdash;Prince Murat came to dine and
+play bridge. Count Groholski turned up for a few
+days. My doctor vetted me for my cold. Business
+done&mdash;none. No sailor ever longed for port as I do
+for home.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_III_III" id="CHAPTER_III_III"></a>CHAPTER III
+<span class="totoc"><a href="#CONTENTS">ToC</a></span></h2>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3>SOME IMPRESSIONS OF TIFLIS AND ARMENIA</h3>
+
+<p><i>Tiflis. 1 January, 1916.</i>&mdash;Kind wishes from the
+Grand Duke and everybody. Not such an aimless
+day as usual. I got into a new sitting-room and
+put it straight, and in the evening we went to
+Prince Orloff's box for a performance of "Carmen."
+It was very Russian and wealthy. At the back of
+the box were two anterooms, where we sat and
+talked between the acts, and where tea, chocolates,
+etc., were served. They say the Prince has &pound;200,000
+a year. He is gigantically fat, with a real Cossack
+face.</p>
+
+<p>Scandal is so rife here that it hardly seems to
+mean scandal. They don't appear to be so much
+immoral as non-moral. Everyone sits up late;
+then most of them, I am told, get drunk, and then
+the evening orgies begin. No one is ostracised,
+everyone is called upon and "known" whatever
+they have done. I suppose English respectability
+would simply make them smile&mdash;if, indeed, they
+believed in it.</p>
+
+<p><i>2 January.</i>&mdash;I don't suppose I shall ever write an
+article on war charities, but I believe I ought to.
+A good many facts about them have come my way,
+and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</a></span> I consider that the public at home should
+be told how the finances are being administered.</p>
+
+<p>I know of one hospital in Russia which has,
+I believe, cost England &pound;100,000. The staff consists
+of nurses and doctors, dressers, etc., all fully paid.
+The expenses of those in charge of it are met out of
+the funds. They live in good hotels, and have
+"entertaining allowances" for entertaining their
+friends, and yet one of them herself volunteered the
+information that the hospital is not required. The
+staff arrived weeks ago, but not the stores.
+Probably the building won't be opened for some
+time to come, and when it is opened there will
+be difficulty in getting patients to fill it.</p>
+
+<p>In many parts of Russia hospitals are <i>not</i> wanted.
+In Petrograd there are five hundred of them run by
+Russians alone.</p>
+
+<p>Then there is a fund for relief of the Poles, which
+is administered by Princess &mdash;&mdash;. The ambulance-car
+which the fund possesses is used by the Princess
+to take her to the theatre every night.</p>
+
+<p>A great deal of money has been subscribed for
+the benefit of the Armenians. Who knows how
+much this has cost the givers? yet the distribution
+of this large sum seems to be conducted on most
+haphazard lines. An open letter arrived the other
+day for the Mayor of Tiflis. There is no Mayor of
+Tiflis, so the letter was brought to Major &mdash;&mdash;. It
+said: "Have you received two cheques already sent?
+We have had no acknowledgment." There seems to
+be no check on the expenditure, and there is no local
+organisation for dispensing the relief. I don't say
+that it is cheating: I only say as much as I know.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">ILL-BESTOWED CHARITY</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</a></span>
+A number of motor-ambulances were sent to
+Russia by some generous people in England the
+other day. They were inspected by Royalty before
+being despatched, and arrived in the care of Mr.
+----. When their engines were examined it was
+found that they were tied together with bits of
+copper-wire, and even with string. None of them
+could be made to go, and they were returned to
+England.</p>
+
+<p>We are desperately hard up at home just now,
+and we are denying ourselves in order to send these
+charitable contributions to the richest country in
+the world. Gorlebeff himself (head of the Russian
+Red Cross Society) has &pound;30,000 a year. Armenians
+are literally rolling in money, and it is common to
+find Armenian ladies buying hats at 250 Rs. (&pound;25)
+in Tiflis. The Poles are not ruined, nor do they
+seem to object to German rule, which is doing
+more for them than Russia ever did. Tiflis people
+are now sending money for relief to Mesopotamia.
+Of the 300,000 Rs. sent by England, 70,000 Rs.
+have stuck to someone's fingers.</p>
+
+<p>In Flanders there were many people living
+in comfort such as they had probably never seen
+before, at the expense of the charitable public, and
+doing very little indeed all the time: cars to go
+about in, chauffeurs at their disposal, petrol without
+stint, and even their clothes (called uniforms
+for the nonce!) paid for.</p>
+
+<p>And the little half-crowns that come in to run
+these shows, "how hardly they are earned sometimes!
+with what sacrifices they are given!" A man
+in Flanders said to me one day: "We could lie down
+and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</a></span> roll in tobacco, and we all help ourselves to
+every blooming thing we want; and here is a note
+I found in a poor little parcel of things to-night:
+'We are so sorry not to be able to send more, but
+money is very scarce this week.'"</p>
+
+<p>My own cousin brought four cars over to France,
+and he told me he was simply an unpaid chauffeur at
+the command of young officers coming in to shop
+at Dunkirk.</p>
+
+<p>I am thankful to say that Mrs. Wynne and Mr.
+Bevan and I have paid our own expenses ever since
+the war began, and given things too. And I think
+a good many of our own corps in Flanders used to
+contribute liberally and pay for all they had.
+People here tell us that their cars have all been
+commandeered, and they are used for the wives of
+Generals, who never had entered one before, and
+who proudly do their shopping in them.</p>
+
+<p>War must be a military matter, and these things
+must end, unless money is to find its way into the
+possession of the vultures who are always at hand
+when there is any carcase about.</p>
+
+<p><i>5 January.</i>&mdash;Absolutely nothing to write about.
+I saw Gorlebeff, Domerchekoff, and Count
+<a class="correction" title="index has &quot;Tysczkievez&quot;; most likely meant to be the Polish name &quot;Tyszkiewicz&quot;">Tysczkievcz</a> of the Croix Rouge about my plans.
+They suggest my going to Urumiyah in Persia,
+where workers seem to be needed. The only other
+opening seems to be to go to Count Groholski's
+new little hospital on the top of the mountains.
+Mr. Hills, the American missionary, wants me first
+to go with him to see the Armenian refugees at
+Erivan, but we can't get transports for his gifts of
+clothing for them.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">A PRESENTIMENT</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</a></span>
+Before I left England I had a very strange,
+almost an overwhelming presentiment that I had
+better not come to Russia. I had by that time
+promised Mrs. Wynne that I would come, and
+I couldn't see that it would be the right thing
+to chuck her. I thought the work would
+suffer if I stayed at home, as she might find it
+impossible to get any other woman who would pay
+her own way and consent to be away for so long a
+time. Our prayers are always such childish things&mdash;prayer
+itself is only a cry&mdash;and I remember
+praying that if I was "meant to stay at home"
+some substitute might be found for me. This
+all seems too absurd when one views it in the
+light of what afterwards happened. My vision
+of "honour" and "work" seem for the moment
+ridiculous, and yet I know that I was not so
+foolish as I seem, for I got a written statement
+from Mr. Hume Williams (Mrs. Wynne's trustee),
+saying, "A unit has been formed, consisting of
+Mrs. Wynne, Miss Macnaughtan, etc., and it has
+been accepted by the Russian Red Cross." The
+idea of being in Russia and having to look for
+work never in my wildest moments entered my
+head&mdash;and this is the end of the "vision," I suppose.</p>
+
+<p><i>Russian Christmas Day.</i>&mdash;Took a car and went
+for a short run into the country. Weather fine and
+bright.</p>
+
+<p>There is severe fighting in Galicia, and the
+rumour is that Urumiyah&mdash;the place to which I am
+going&mdash;has been evacuated.</p>
+
+<p>My impression of Russia deepens&mdash;that it is run
+by beautiful women and rich men; and yet how
+charming<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</a></span> everyone is to meet! Hardly anyone is
+uninteresting, and half the men are good-looking.
+The Cossack-dress is very handsome, and nearly
+everyone wears it. When the colour is dark red
+and the ornaments are of silver the effect is
+unusually good. They all walk well. One is
+amongst a primitive people, but a remarkably fine
+one!</p>
+
+<p><i>10 January.</i>&mdash;I am taking French lessons. This
+would appear to be a simple matter, even in Russia,
+but it has taken me three weeks to get a teacher.
+The first to come required a rest, and must decline;
+the second was recalled by an old employer; the
+third had too many engagements; the fourth came
+and then holidays began, as they always do! First
+our Christmas, then the Russian Christmas, then
+the Armenian Christmas, leading on to three New
+Year Days! After that the Baptism, with its
+holidays and its vigils.</p>
+
+<p>There is only one sort of breakfast-roll in this
+hotel which is soft enough to eat; it is not made
+on festivals, nor on the day after a festival. I can
+honestly say we hardly ever see one.</p>
+
+<p>With much fear and trembling I have bought a
+motor-car. No work seems possible without it.
+The price is heavy, but everyone says I shall be
+able to get it back when I leave. All the same I
+shake in my shoes&mdash;a chauffeur, tyres, petrol, mean
+money all the time. One can't stop spending out
+here. It is like some fate from which one can't
+escape. Still the car is bought, and I suppose now
+I shall get work.</p>
+
+
+<div class="sidenote">DIFFICULTIES</div>
+
+<p>We are all in the same boat. Mrs. Wynne has
+waited<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</a></span> for her ambulances for three months, and I
+hear that even the Anglo-Russian hospital, with
+every name from Queen Alexandra's downwards on
+the list of its patrons, is in "one long difficulty." It
+is Russia, and nothing but Russia, that breaks us all.
+Everything is promised, nothing is done. The
+only <i>hope</i> of getting a move on is by bribery, and
+one may bribe the wrong people till one finds one's
+way about.</p>
+
+<p><i>13 January.</i>&mdash;The car took us up the Kajour
+road, and behaved well; but the chauffeur drove
+us into a bridge on the way down, and had to be
+dismissed. Tried to go to Erivan, but the new
+chauffeur mistook the road, so we had to return to
+Tiflis. N.B.&mdash;Another holiday was coming on,
+and he wanted to be at home. <i>I actually used to
+like difficulties!</i></p>
+
+<p><i>15 January.</i>&mdash;Started again for Erivan. All
+went well, and we had a lovely drive till about
+6 p.m. The dusk was gathering and we were up
+in the hills, when "bang!" went something, and
+nothing on earth would make the car move. We
+unscrewed nuts, we lighted matches, we got out
+the "jack," but we could not discover what was
+wrong. So where were we to spend the night?</p>
+
+<p>In a fold of the grey hills was a little grey village&mdash;just
+a few huts belonging to Mahomedan
+shepherds, but there was nothing for it but to ask
+them for shelter. Fortunately, Dr. Wilson knew
+the language, and he persuaded the "head man"
+to turn out for us. His family consisted of about
+sixteen persons, all sleeping on the floor. They gave
+us the clay-daubed little place, and fortunately it
+contained<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</a></span> a stove, but nothing else. The snow
+was all round us, but we made up the fire and got
+some tea, which we carried with us, and finally slept
+in the little place while the chauffeur guarded
+the car.</p>
+
+<p>In the morning nothing would make the car
+budge an inch, and, seeing our difficulty, the
+Mahomedans made us pay a good deal for horses
+to tow the thing to the next village, where we
+heard there was a blacksmith. We followed in a
+hay-cart. We got to a Malokand settlement
+about 5 o'clock, and found ourselves in an extraordinarily
+pretty little village, and were given
+shelter in the very cleanest house I ever saw.
+The woman was a perfect treasure, and made us
+soup and gave us clean beds, and honey for
+breakfast. The chauffeur found that our shaft was
+broken, and the whole piece had to go back to
+Tiflis.</p>
+
+<p>It was a real blow, our trip knocked on the head
+again, and now how were we to get on? The
+railway was 48 versts away, and the railway had
+to be reached. We hired one of those painful
+little carts, which are made of rough poles on
+wheels, and, clinging on by our eyelids, we drove as
+far as an Armenian village, where a snowstorm
+came on, and we took shelter with a "well-to-do"
+Armenian family, who gave us lunch and displayed
+their wool-work and were very friendly. From
+there we got into another "deelyjahns" of the
+painful variety, and jolted off for about 25 miles,
+till, as night fell, we struck the railway, and were
+given two wooden benches to sleep on in a small
+waiting-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</a></span>room. People came and went all night,
+and we slept with one eye open till 2 a.m., when
+the chauffeur took a train to Tiflis. We sat up till
+6 a.m., when the train, two hours late, started for
+Erivan, where we arrived pretty well "cooked"
+at 11 p.m.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">ERIVAN</div>
+
+<p><i>Erivan. 20 January.</i>&mdash;Last night's experiences
+were certainly very "Russian." We had wired for
+rooms, but although the message had been received
+nothing was prepared. The miserable rooms were
+an inch thick in dust, there were no fires, and no
+sheets on the beds! We went to a restaurant&mdash;fortunately
+no Russian goes to bed early&mdash;and
+found the queerest place, empty save for a band
+and a lady. The lady and the band were having
+supper. She, poor soul, was painted and dyed,
+but she offered her services to translate my French
+for me when the waiters could understand nothing
+but Russian. I was thankful to eat something and
+go to bed under my fur coat.</p>
+
+<p>To-day we have been busy seeing the Armenian
+refugees. There are 17,000 of them in this city of
+30,000 inhabitants. We went from one place to
+another, and always one saw the same things and
+heard the same tales.</p>
+
+<p>Since the war broke out I think I have seen the
+actual breaking of the wave of anguish which has
+swept over the world (I often wonder if I can "feel"
+much more!). There was Dunkirk and its
+shambles, there was ruined Belgium, and there was,
+above all, the field hospital at Furnes, with its
+horrible courtyard, the burning heap of bandages,
+and the mattresses set on edge to drip the blood off
+them<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</a></span> and then laid on some bed again. I can
+never forget it. I was helping a nurse once, and
+all the time I was sitting on a dead man and never
+knew it!</p>
+
+<p>And now I am hearing of one million Armenians
+slaughtered in cold blood. The pitiful women in
+the shelters were saying, "We are safe because we
+are old and ugly; all the young ones went to the
+harems." Nearly all the men were massacred.
+The surplus children and unwanted women were
+put into houses and burned alive. Everywhere
+one heard, "We were 4,000 in one village, and
+only 143 escaped;" "There were 30 of us, and
+now only a few children remain;" "All the men
+are killed." These were things one saw for
+oneself, heard for oneself. There was nothing
+sensational in the way the women told their stories.</p>
+
+<p>Russia does what she can in the way of "relief."
+She gives 4-1/2 Rs. per month to each person. This
+gives them bread, and there might be fires, for
+stoves are there, but no one seems to have the
+gumption to put them up. Here and there men and
+women are sleeping on valuable rugs, which look
+strange in the bare shelters. Most of the women
+knitted, and some wove on little "fegir" looms.
+The dullness of their existence matches the tragedy
+of it. The food is so plain that it doesn't want
+cooking&mdash;being mostly bread and water; but
+sometimes a few rags are washed, and there is an
+attempt to try and keep warm. Yet I have heard
+an English officer say that nothing pleases a
+Russian more than to ask, "When is there to be
+another Armenian massacre?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</a></span>
+The Armenians are hated. I wonder Christ
+doesn't do more for them considering they were the
+first nation in the world to embrace Christianity;
+but then, one wonders about so many things during
+this war. Oh, if we could stamp out the madness
+that seems to accompany religion, and just live
+sober, kind, sensible lives, how good it would be; but
+the Turks must burn women and children, alive,
+because, poor souls, they think one thing and the
+Turks think another! And men and women are
+hating and killing each other because Christ, says
+one, had a nature both human and divine, and, says
+another, the two were merged in one. And a
+third says that Christ was equal to the Father,
+while a whole Church separated itself on the
+question of Sabellianism, or "The Procession of
+the Son."</p>
+
+<p>Poor Christ, once crucified, and now dismembered
+by your own disciples, are you glad you came to
+earth, or do you still think God forsook you, and
+did you, too, die an unbeliever? The crucifixion
+will never be understood until men know that its
+worst agony consisted in the disbelief which first of
+all doubts God and then must, by all reason, doubt
+itself. The resurrection comes when we discover
+that we are God and He is us.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">ETCHMIADZIN</div>
+
+<p><i>21 January.</i>&mdash;To-day, I drove out to Etchmiadzin
+with Mr. Lazarienne, an Armenian, to see that
+curious little place. It is the ecclesiastical city of
+Armenia&mdash;its little Rome, where the Catholicus
+lives. He was ill, but a charming Bishop&mdash;Wardepett
+by name&mdash;with a flowing brown beard and
+long black silk hood, made us welcome and gave us
+lunch,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</a></span> and then showed us the hospital&mdash;which had
+no open windows, and smelt horrible&mdash;and the
+lovely little third-century "temple." Then he took
+us round the strange, quiet little place, with its
+peaceful park and its three old brown churches,
+which mark what must once have been a great city
+and the first seat of a national Christianity. Now
+there are perhaps 300 inhabitants, but Mount Ararat
+dominates it, and Mount Ararat is not a hill. It is a
+great white jewel set up against a sheet of dazzling
+blue.</p>
+
+<p>Hills and ships always seem to me to be alive,
+and I think they have a personality of their own.
+Ararat stands for the unassailable. It is like some
+great fact, such as that what is beautiful must be
+true. It is grand and pure and lovely, and when
+the sun sets it is more than this, for then its top is
+one sheet of rose, and it melts into a mystic hill,
+and one knows that whatever else may "go to
+Heaven" Ararat goes there every night.</p>
+
+<p>We visited the old Persian palace built on the
+river's cliff, and looked out over the gardens to the
+hills beyond, and saw the mosque, with its blue
+roof against the blue sky, and its wonderful covering
+of old tiles, which drop like leaves and are left
+to crumble.</p>
+
+<p><i>Tiflis. 24 January.</i>&mdash;I left Erivan on Sunday,
+January 23rd. It was cold and sharp, and the
+train was crowded. People were standing all down
+the corridors, as usual. Nothing goes quicker than
+eight miles an hour, nothing is punctual, nothing
+arrives. The stations are filthy, and the food is
+quite uneatable. I often despair of this country,
+and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</a></span> if the Russians were not our Allies I should
+feel inclined to say that nothing would do them so
+much good as a year or two of German conquest.
+No one, after the first six months, has been enthusiastic
+over the war, and the soldiers want to get
+home. One young officer, 26 years old, has been
+loafing in Tiflis for six months, and has at last been
+arrested. Another took his ticket on eight successive
+nights to leave the place and never moved. At
+last he was locked in his room, and a motor-car
+ordered to take him to the station. He got into it,
+and was not heard of for three days, when his wife
+appeared, and found her husband somewhere in the
+town.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Wynne and Mr. Bevan have gone on ahead
+to Baku, but I must wait for my damaged car. A
+young officer in this hotel shot himself dead this
+morning. No one seems to mind much.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">RUSSIAN SOCIETY</div>
+
+<p><i>25 January.</i>&mdash;Last night I was invited to play
+bridge by one of the richest women in Russia. Her
+room was just a converted bedroom, with a dirty
+wall-paper. The packs of cards were such as one
+might see railway-men playing with in a lamp-room.
+Our stakes were a few kopeks, and the refreshments
+consisted of one tepid cup of tea, without either milk
+or lemon, and not a biscuit to eat. We all sat with
+shawls on, as our hostess said it wasn't worth while
+to light a fire so late at night. A nice little Princess
+Musaloff and Prince Napoleon Murat played with
+me. We were rich in titles, but our shoulders
+were cold.</p>
+
+<p>I have not seen a single nice or even comfortable
+room since I left England, and although some
+women<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</a></span> dress well, and have pretty cigarette-boxes
+from the renowned Faberj&eacute;, other things about
+them are all wrong. The furniture in their rooms
+is covered with plush, and the ornaments (to me)
+suggest a head-gardener's house at home with "an
+enlargement of mother" over the mantelpiece; or
+a Clapham drawing-room, furnished during some
+happy year when cotton rose, or copper was
+cornered. In this hotel the carpets are in holes in
+the passages, and there are few servants; but I don't
+fancy that the people here notice things very much.</p>
+
+<p>I went to see Mme. &mdash;&mdash; one day in her new
+house. The rooms were large and handsome.
+There was a picture of a cow at one end of the
+drawing-room, and a mirror framed in plush at the
+other!</p>
+
+<p>I must draw a "character" one day of the very
+charming woman who is absolutely indifferent to
+people's feelings. The fact that some humble soul
+has prepared something for her, or that a sacrifice
+has been made, or that one kind speech would
+satisfy, does not occur to her. These are the people
+who chuck engagements when they get better invitations,
+and always I seem to see them with expensive
+little bags and chains and Faberj&eacute; enamels. Men
+will slave for such women&mdash;will carry things for
+them, and serve them. They have "success" until
+they are quite old, and after they have taken to
+rouge and paint. A tired woman hardly ever gets
+anything carried for her.</p>
+
+<p><i>26 January.</i>&mdash;A day's march nearer home! This
+is the Feast of St. Nina. There is always a feast
+or a f&ecirc;te here. People walk about the streets, they
+give<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</a></span> each other rich cakes, and work a little less
+than usual.</p>
+
+<p>This hotel still keeps its cripples. Prince Murat
+sits on his little chair on the landing. Prince
+Tschelikoff has his heart all wrong; there is the
+man with one leg.</p>
+
+<p>Now Mlle. Lepnakoff, the singer, Musaloff, in
+his red coat, and some heavy Generals are here.
+We have the same food every day.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">ENFORCED IDLENESS</div>
+
+<p>Perhaps I was pretty near having a breakdown
+when I came abroad, and the enforced idleness of
+this life may have been Providential (all my hair
+was falling out, and my eyes were very bad, and
+the war was wearing me down rather); but to sit
+in an hotel bedroom or to potter over trifles in
+sitting-rooms seems a poor sort of way of passing
+one's time. To rest has always seemed to me very
+hard work. I can't even go to bed without a pile
+of papers beside me to work at during the night or
+in the early morning!</p>
+
+<p>When the power of writing leaves me, as it does
+fitfully and without warning, I have a feeling of
+loneliness, which helps to convince me of what I
+have always felt, that this power comes from outside,
+and can only be explained psychically. I asked a
+great writer once if he ever experienced the feeling
+I had of being "left," and he told me that sometimes
+during the time of desolation he had seriously
+contemplated suicide.</p>
+
+<p><i>30 January.</i>&mdash;I got a telephone message from
+Mr. Bevan last night. He says Baku is too horrible,
+and there is no news of the cars. People are telling
+me now that if instead of cars we had given money,
+we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</a></span> should have been f&ecirc;ted and decorated and
+extolled to the skies; but then, where would the
+money have gone? Last week the two richest
+Armenian merchants in this town were arrested for
+cheating the soldiers out of thousands of yards of
+stuff for their coats. A Government official could
+easily be found to say that the cloth had been
+received, and meanwhile what has the soldier to
+cover him in the trenches?</p>
+
+<p>Armenians are certainly an odious set of people,
+and their ingratitude is equalled by their meanness
+and greed. Mr. Hills, who is doing the Armenian
+relief work here, pays all his own expenses, and
+he can't get a truck to take his things to the
+refugees without paying for it, while he is often
+asked the question, "Why can't you leave these
+things alone?" Now that Mrs. Wynne has left I
+am asked the same question about her. Russia
+can "break" one very successfully.</p>
+
+<p>The weather has turned cold, and there is tearing
+wind and snow.</p>
+
+<p><i>1 February.</i>&mdash;"No," says I to myself, in a
+supremely virtuous manner, "I shall not be beaten
+by this enervating existence here. I'll do <i>something</i>&mdash;if
+it's only sewing a seam."</p>
+
+<p>So out came needles and cotton and mending
+and hemming, but, would it be believed, I am
+afflicted with two "doigts blancs" (festered fingers),
+and have to wear bandages, which prevent my
+doing even the mildest seam. Oddly enough, this
+"maladie" is a sort of epidemic here. The fact is,
+the dust is full of microbes, and no one is too well
+nourished.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">SOME "MALADES IMAGINAIRES"</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</a></span>
+I am rather amused by those brave strong people
+who "don't make a fuss about their health." One
+hears from them almost daily that their temperature
+has gone up to 103&deg;; "but it's nothing," they say
+heroically, "or if it is, it's only typhoid, and who
+cares for a little typhoid?" Does a head ache, there
+is "something very queer about it, but"&mdash;pushing
+back hair from hot brow&mdash;"no one is to worry about
+it. It will be better to-morrow; or if it really is
+going to be fever, we must just try to make the
+best of it." A sty in the eye is cataract, "but lots
+of blind people are very happy;" and a bilious
+attack is generally that mysterious, oft-recurring
+and interesting complaint "camp fever." Cheer up,
+no one is to be discouraged if the worst happens! A
+thermometer is produced and shaken and applied.
+The temperature is too low now; it is probably
+only typhus, and we mean to be brave and get up.</p>
+
+<p><i>3 February.</i>&mdash;Last night we played bridge. All
+the princes and princesses moistened their thumbs
+before dealing, and no one is above using a
+"crachoir" on the staircase! Oh for one hour of
+England! In all my travels I have only found one
+foreign race which seemed to me to be well-bred
+(as I understand it), and that is the native of India.
+The very best French people come next; and the
+Spaniard knows how to bow, but he clears his throat
+in an objectionable manner. None of them have
+been licked! That is the trouble. An Eton
+boy of fifteen could give them all points, and beat
+them with his hands in his pockets.</p>
+
+<p>I am quite sure that the British nation is really
+superior to all others. Ours is the only well-bred
+race,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</a></span> and the only generous or hospitable nation.
+Fancy a foreigner keeping "open house"! Here
+the entertainment is a glass of thickened tea, and
+the stove is frequently not lighted even on a chilly
+evening. Since I have been in Russia I have had
+nothing better or more substantial given to me
+(by the Russians) than a piece of cake, except by
+the Grand Duke. We brought heaps of letters of
+introduction, and people called, but that is all, or
+else they gave an "evening" with the very lightest
+refreshments I have ever seen. Someone plays
+badly on the piano, there is a little bridge, and a
+samovar!</p>
+
+<p><i>6 February.</i>&mdash;The queer epidemic of "gathered
+fingers" continues here. Having two I am in the
+fashion. They make one awkward, and more idle
+than ever. A lot of people come in and out of my
+sitting-room to "cheer me up," and everyone wants
+me to tell their fortune. Mrs. Wynne and Mr.
+Bevan are still at Baku.</p>
+
+<p>Last night I went to Prince Orloff's box to hear
+Lipkofskaya in "Faust."</p>
+
+<p>My car has come back, and is running well, but
+the weather has been cold and stormy, with snow
+drifting in from the hills. I took Mme. Derfelden
+and her husband to Kajura to-day. Now that I
+have the car everyone wants me to work with them.
+The difficulty of transport is indescribable. Without
+a car is like being without a leg. One simply can't
+get about. In order to get a seat on a train people
+walk up the line and bribe the officials at the place
+where it is standing to allow them to get on <a class="correction" title="missing period in original">board.</a></p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_III_IV" id="CHAPTER_III_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV
+<span class="totoc"><a href="#CONTENTS">ToC</a></span></h2>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3>ON THE PERSIAN FRONT</h3>
+
+
+<p><i>8 February.</i>&mdash;A "platteforme" having been found
+for my car, I and M. Ignatieff of the Red Cross
+started for Baku to-day. We found our little party
+at the M&eacute;tropole Hotel. Went to the MacDonell's
+to lunch. He is Consul. They are quite charming
+people, and their little flat was open to us all the
+time we were at Baku.</p>
+
+<p>The place itself is wind-blown and fly-blown
+and brown, but the harbour is very pretty, with its
+crowds of shipping, painted with red hulls, which
+make a nice bit of colour in the general drab of the
+hills and the town. There are no gardens and no
+trees, and all enterprise in the way of town-planning
+and the like is impossible owing to the Russian
+habit of cheating. They have tried for sixteen
+years to start electric trams, but everyone wants too
+much for his own pocket. The morals become
+dingier and dingier as one gets nearer Tartar
+influence, and no shame is thought of it. Most of
+the stories one hears would blister the pages of
+a diary. When a house of ill-fame is opened it is
+publicly blessed by the priest!</p>
+
+<p><i>Kasvin. 18 February.</i>.&mdash;We spent a week at
+Baku and grumbled all the time, although really
+we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</a></span> were not at all unhappy. The MacDonells
+were always with us, and we had good games
+of bridge with Ignatieff in the evenings. We went
+to see the oil city at Baku, and one day we motored
+to the far larger one further out. One of the
+directors, an Armenian, went with us, and gave us
+at his house the very largest lunch I have ever seen.
+It began with many plates of zakouska (hors
+d'&oelig;uvres), and went on to a cold entr&eacute;e of cream
+and chickens' livers; then grilled salmon, with some
+excellent sauce, and a salad of beetroot and cranberries.
+This was followed by an entr&eacute;e of kidneys,
+and then we came to soup, the best I have ever
+eaten; after soup, roast turkey, followed by chicken
+pilau, sweets and cheese. It was impossible even to
+taste all the things, but the Georgian cook must
+have been a "cordon bleu."</p>
+
+<p>On February 16th one of the long-delayed cars
+arrived, and we were in ecstasies, and took our
+places on the steamer for Persia; but the radiator
+had been broken on the way down, and Mrs. Wynne
+was delayed again. I started, as my car was
+arranged for, and had to go on board. Also,
+I found I could be of use to Mr. Scott of the
+Tehran Legation, who was going there. We
+travelled on the boat together, and had an excellent
+crossing to Enzeli, a lovely little port, and then we
+took my car and drove to Resht, where Mr. and
+Mrs. McLaren, the Consul and his wife, kindly put
+us up. Their garden is quiet and damp; the house
+is damp too, and very ugly. There are only two
+other English people (at the bank) to form the
+society of the place, and it must be a bit lonely for
+a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</a></span> young woman. I found the situation a little
+tragic.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">KASVIN</div>
+
+<p>We drove on next day to this place (Kasvin), and
+Mr. and Mrs. Goodwin were good enough to ask us
+to stay with them. The big fires in the house
+were very cheering after our cold drive in the snow.
+The moonlight was marvellous, and the mountain
+passes were beyond words picturesque. We passed
+a string of 150 camels pacing along in the moonlight
+and the snow. All of them wore bells which jingled
+softly. Around us were the weird white hills, with
+a smear of mist over them. The radiant moon, the
+snow, and the chiming camels I shall never forget.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Rhys Williams was also at the Goodwins;
+and as he was in very great anxiety to get to
+Hamadan, I offered to take him in my car, and let
+Mr. Scott do the last stage of the journey in the
+Legation car to Tehran. We were delayed one
+day at Kasvin, which was passed very pleasantly in
+the sheltered sunny compound of the house. My
+little white bedroom was part of the "women's
+quarters" of old days, and with its bright fire
+at night and the sun by day it was a very comfortable
+place in which to perch.</p>
+
+<p><i>Hamadan. 24 February.</i>&mdash;Captain Williams and
+I left Kasvin at 8 a.m. on February 19th.</p>
+
+<p>I had always had an idea that Persia was in the
+tropics. <i>Where</i> I got this notion I can't say. As
+soon as we left sheltered Kasvin and got out on to
+the plains the cold was as sharp as anything I have
+known. Snow lay deep on every side, and the icy
+wind nearly cut one in two. We stopped at a little
+"tschinaya" (tea-house), and ate some sandwiches
+which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</a></span> we carried with us. I also had a flask of
+Sandeman's port, given me last Christmas by Sir
+Ivor Maxwell. I think a glass of this just prevented
+me from being frozen solid. We drove on to the
+top of the pass, and arrived there about 3 o'clock.
+We found some Russian officers having an excellent
+lunch, and we shared ours and had some of theirs.
+We saw a lot of game in the snow&mdash;great coveys
+of fat partridges, hares by the score, a jackal, two
+wolves, and many birds. The hares were very odd,
+for after twilight fell, and we lit our lamps, they
+seemed quite paralysed by the glare, and used to sit
+down in front of the car.</p>
+
+<p>We passed a regiment of Cossacks, extended in a
+long line, and coming over the snow on their strong
+horses. We began to get near war once more, and
+to see transport and guns. General Baratoff wants
+us up here to remove wounded men when the
+advance begins towards Bagdad.</p>
+
+<p>The cold was really as bad as they make after the
+sun had sunk, and an icy mist enveloped the hills.
+We got within sight of the clay-built, flat Persian
+town of Hamadan about 10 p.m., but the car
+couldn't make any way on the awful roads, so I left
+Captain Williams at the barracks, and came on to
+the Red Cross hospital with two Russian officers,
+one a little the worse for drink.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">ARRIVAL AT HAMADAN</div>
+
+<p>With the genius for muddling which the Russians
+possess in a remarkable degree no preparations had
+been made for me. Rather an unpleasant Jew
+doctor came to the gateway with two nurses, and
+the officers began to flirt with the girls, and to pay
+them compliments. Some young Englishmen, one
+of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</a></span> whom was the British Consul, then appeared on
+the scene, so we began to get forward a little
+(although it seemed to me that we stood about in
+the snow for a terrible long time and I got quite
+frozen!). As it was then past midnight I felt I had
+had enough, so I made for the American missionary's
+house, which was pointed out to me, and he and his
+wife hopped out of bed, and, clad in curious grey
+dressing-gowns, they came downstairs and got me a
+cup of hot tea, which I had wanted badly for many
+hours. There was no fireplace in my room, and
+the other fires of the house were all out, but the old
+couple were kindness and goodness itself, and in the
+end I rolled myself up in my faithful plaid and
+slept at their house.</p>
+
+<p>The next day&mdash;Sunday, the 20th&mdash;Mr. Cowan,
+the young Consul, and a Mr. Lightfoot, came round
+and bore me off to the Consulate. On Monday I
+began to settle in, but even now I find it difficult
+to take my bearings, as we have been in a heavy
+mountain fog ever since I got here. There is
+a little English colony, the bank manager, Mr.
+MacMurray, and his wife&mdash;a capable, energetic
+woman, and an excellent working partner&mdash;Mr.
+McLean, a Scottish clerk, a Mr. McDowal, also a
+Scot, and a few other good folk; whom in Scotland
+one would reckon the farmer class, but none the
+worse for that, and never vulgar however humbly
+born.</p>
+
+<p>On Monday, the 21st, I called on the Russian
+element&mdash;Mme. Kirsanoff, General Baratoff, etc.
+They were all cordial, but nothing will convince me
+that Russians take this war seriously. They do
+the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</a></span> thing as comfortably as possible. "My
+country" is a word one never hears from their lips,
+and they indulge in masterly retreats too often for
+my liking. The fire of the French, the dogged
+pluck of the British, seem quite unknown to them.
+Literally, no one seems much interested. There is
+a good deal of fuss about a "forward movement"
+on this front; but I fancy that at Kermanshah and
+at &mdash;&mdash; there will be very little resistance, and the
+troops there are only Persian gendarmerie. No
+doubt the most will be made of the Russian
+"victory," but compared with the western front,
+this is simply not war. I often think of the guns
+firing day and night, and the Taubes overhead, and
+the burning towns of Flanders, and then I find
+myself living a peaceful life, with an occasional
+glimpse of a regiment passing by.</p>
+
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="center"><i>To Mrs. Charles Percival.</i></p>
+
+<p class="lh_ind2"><span class="smcap">British Vice-Consulate,</span></p>
+<p class="lh_ind4"><span class="smcap">Hamadan.</span></p>
+<p class="lh_ind0"><i>23 February, 1916.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">My dearest Tabby,</span></p>
+
+<p>We are buried in snow, and every road is a
+dug-out, with parapets of snow on either side.
+All journeys have to be made by road, and generally
+over mountain passes, where you may or may not
+get through the snow. One sees "breakdowns" all
+along the routes, and everywhere we go we have
+to take food and blankets in case of a camp out.
+I have had to buy a motor-car, and I got a very
+good one in Tiflis, but they are so scarce one has to
+pay a ransom for them. I am hoping it won't be
+quite<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</a></span> smashed up, and that I shall be able to sell it
+for something when I leave.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE DIFFICULTY OF TRANSPORT</div>
+
+<p>Transport is the difficulty everywhere in these
+vast countries, with their persistent want of railways;
+so that the most necessary way of helping
+the wounded is to remove them as painlessly and
+expeditiously as possible, and this can only be done
+by motor-cars. Only one of Mrs. Wynne's ambulances
+has yet arrived, and in the end I came
+on here without her and Mr. Bevan. I was
+wanted to give a member of the Legation at Tehran
+a lift; and, still more important, I had to bring a
+soldier of consequence here. So long as one can
+offer a motor-car one is everybody's friend.</p>
+
+<p>Yesterday I was in request to go up to a pass
+and fetch two doctors, who had broken down in the
+snow. The wind is often a hurricane, and I am
+told there will be no warm weather till May. I
+look at a light silk dressing-gown and gauze
+underclothing, and wonder why it is that no one
+seems able to tell one what a climate will be like.
+I have warm things too, I am glad to say, although
+our luggage is now of the lightest, and is only what
+we can take in a car. The great thing is to be quite
+independent. No one would dream of bringing on
+heavy luggage or anything of that sort, except, of
+course, Legation people, who have their own transport
+and servants.</p>
+
+<p>On journeys one is kindly treated by the few
+Scottish people (they all seem to be Scots) scattered
+here and there. Everywhere I go I find the
+usual Scottish couple trying to "have things nice,"
+and longing for mails from home. One woman
+was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</a></span> newly married, and had only one wish in
+life, and that was for acid drops. Poor soul, she
+wasn't well, and I mean to make her the best
+imitation I can and send them to her. They make
+their houses wonderfully comfortable; <i>but</i> the
+difficulty of getting things! Another woman had
+written home for her child's frock in August, and
+got it by post on February 15th. Cases of things
+coming by boat or train take far longer, or never
+arrive at all.</p>
+
+<p>I shall be working with the Russian hospital here
+till our next move. There are 25 beds and 120
+patients. Of course we are only waiting to push on
+further. The political situation is most interesting,
+but I must not write about it, of course. It is
+rather wonderful to have seen the war from so
+many quarters.</p>
+
+<p>The long wait for the cars was quite maddening,
+but I believe it did me good. I was just about
+"through." Now I am in a bachelor's little house,
+full of terrier dogs and tobacco smoke; and when I
+am not at the hospital I darn socks and play
+bridge.</p>
+
+<p>Now that really is all my news, I think. Empire
+is not made for nothing, and one sees some plucky
+lives in these out-of-the-way parts. I did not take
+a fancy to my host at one house where we stayed,
+and something made me think his wife was bullied
+and not very happy. A husband would have to be
+quite all right to compensate for exile, mud, and
+solitude. Always my feeling is that we want far
+more people&mdash;especially educated people, of course&mdash;to
+run the world; yet we continue to shoot down
+our<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</a></span> best and noblest, and when shall we ever see
+their like again?</p>
+
+<p class="lf_ind6">Always, my dear,</p>
+<p class="lf_sal">Your loving</p>
+<p class="lf_sig"><span class="smcap">S. Macnaughtan.</span></p>
+
+<p>I hope to get over to Tehran on my "transport
+service," and there I may find a mail. Some
+people called &mdash;&mdash;, living near Glasgow, had nine
+sons, eight of whom have been killed in the war.
+The ninth is delicate, and is doing Red Cross
+work.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><i>26 February.</i>&mdash;On Tuesday a Jew doctor took my
+motor-car by fraud, so there had to be an enquiry,
+and I don't feel happy about it yet. With Russians
+<i>anything</i> may happen. I have begun to suffer from
+my chillsome time getting here, and also my mouth
+and chin are very bad; so I have had to lie doggo,
+and see an ancient Persian doctor, who prescribed
+and talked of the mission-field at the same time.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">MISSIONARIES AND RELIGION</div>
+
+<p>I am struck by one thing, which is so na&iuml;vely
+expressed out here that it is very humorous, and
+that is the firm and formidable front which the
+best sort of men show towards religion. To all of
+them it means missionaries and pious talk, and to
+hear them speak one would imagine it was something
+between a dangerous disease and a disgrace.
+The best they can say of any clergyman (whom they
+loathe) or missionary, is, "He never tried the
+Gospel on with me." A religious young man means
+a sneak, and one who swears freely is generally
+rather a good fellow. When one lives in the
+wilds<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</a></span> I am afraid that one often finds that this view
+is the right one, although it isn't very orthodox;
+but the pi-jaw which passes for religion seems
+deliberately calculated to disgust the natural man,
+who shows his contempt for the thing wholesomely
+as becomes him. He means to smoke, he means to
+have a whisky-peg when he can get it, and a game
+of cards when that is possible. His smoke is
+harmless, he seldom drinks too much, and he plays
+fair at all games, but when he finds that these harmless
+amusements preclude him from a place in the
+Kingdom of Heaven he naturally&mdash;if he has the
+spirit of a mouse&mdash;says, "All right. Leave me
+out. I am not on in this show."</p>
+
+<p><i>27 February.</i>&mdash;On Sunday one always thinks of
+home. I am rather inclined to wonder what my
+family imagine I am actually doing on the Persian
+front. No doubt some of my dear contemporaries
+saddle me with noble deeds, but I still seem unable
+to strike the "noble" tack. Even my work in
+hospital has been stopped by a telegram from the
+Red Cross, saying, "Don't let Miss Macnaughtan
+work yet." A typhus scare, I fancy. Such rot.
+But I am used now to hearing all the British out
+here murmur, "What <i>can</i> be the good of this long
+delay?"</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">HOW NEWS TRAVELS IN PERSIA</div>
+
+<p>I am still staying at the British Consulate. The
+Consul, Mr. Cowan, is a good fellow, and Mr.
+Lightfoot, his chum, is a real backwoodsman, full
+of histories of adventures, fights, "natives," and
+wars in many lands. He seems to me one of those
+headstrong, straight, fine fellows whom one only
+meets in the wilds. England doesn't agree with
+them;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</a></span> they haven't always a suit of evening
+clothes; but in a tight place one knows how cool he
+would be, and for yarns there is no one better. He
+tells one a lot about this country, and he knows
+the Arabs like brothers. Their system of communicating
+with each other is as puzzling to him as it is
+to everyone else. News travels faster among them
+than any messenger or post can take it. At Bagdad
+they heard from these strange people of the fall of
+Basra, which is 230 miles away, within 25 hours of
+its having been taken. Mr. Lightfoot says that
+even if he travels by car Arab news is always
+ahead of him, and where he arrives with news it is
+known already. Telegraphy is unknown in the
+places he speaks of, except in Bagdad, of course,
+and Persia owns exactly one line of railway, eight
+miles long, which leads to a tomb!</p>
+
+<p>More important than any man here are the dogs&mdash;Smudge,
+Jimmy, and the puppy. Most of the
+conversation is addressed to them. All of it is
+about them.</p>
+
+<p><i>28 February. A day on the Persian front.</i>&mdash;I
+wake early because it is always so cold at
+4 a.m., and I generally boil up water for my hot-water
+bottle and go to sleep again. Then at 8
+comes the usual Resident Sahib's servant, whom I
+have known in many countries and in many climes.
+He is always exactly alike, and the Empire depends
+upon him! He is thin, he is mysterious. He is
+faithful, and allows no one to rob his master but
+himself. He believes in the British. He worships
+British rule, and he speaks no language but his
+own, though he probably knows English perfectly,
+and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</a></span> listens to it at every meal without even the
+cock of an ear! He is never hurried, never
+surprised. What he thinks his private idol may
+know&mdash;no one else does. His master's boots&mdash;especially
+the brown sort&mdash;are part of his religion.
+He understands an Englishman, and is unmoved by
+his behaviour, whatever it may be. I have met
+him in India, in Kashmir, at Embassies, in Consulates,
+on steamers, and I have never known his
+conduct alter by a hair's breadth. He is piped in
+red, and let that explain him, as it explains much
+else that is British. Just a thin red line down the
+length of a trouser or round a coat, and the man
+thus adorned is part of the Empire.</p>
+
+<p>The man piped in red lights my fire every
+morning in Persia, and arranges my tub, and we
+breakfast very late because there is nothing to do
+on three days of the week&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>, Friday, the Persian
+Sabbath, Saturday, the Jewish Sabbath, and
+Sunday, the Armenian Sunday. On these three
+days neither bazaars nor offices are open. Business
+is at a standstill. The Consulate smokes pipes,
+develops photographs, and reads old novels. On
+the four busy days we breakfast at 10 o'clock, and
+during the meal we learn what the dogs have done
+during the night&mdash;whether Jimmy has barked, or
+Smudge has lain on someone's bed, or the puppy
+"coolly put his head on my pillow."</p>
+
+<p>About 11 o'clock I, who am acting as wardrobe-mender
+to some very untidy clothes and socks, get to
+work, and the young men go to the town and appear
+at lunch-time. We hear what the local news is, and
+what Mr. MacMurray has said and Mr. McLean
+thought,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</a></span> and sometimes one of the people from
+the Russian hospital comes in. About 3 we put
+on goloshes and take exercise single-file on the
+pathways cut in the snow. At 5 the samovar
+appears and tea and cake, and we talk to the dogs
+and to each other. We dress for dinner, because
+that is our creed; and we burn a good deal of wood,
+and go to bed early.</p>
+
+<p>Travel really means movement. Otherwise, it is
+far better to stay at home. I am beginning to
+sympathise with the Americans who insist upon
+doing two cities a day. We got some papers
+to-day dated October 26th, and also a few letters of
+the same date.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<p class="center"><i>Unfinished Article on Persia found among Miss
+Macnaughtan's papers.</i></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">UNFINISHED ARTICLE ON PERSIA</div>
+
+<p>Persia is a difficult country to write about, for
+unless one colours the picture too highly to be
+recognisable, it is apt to be uninteresting even
+under the haze of the summer sun, while in wintertime
+the country disappears under a blanket of
+white snow. Of course, most of us thought that
+Persia was somewhere in the tropics, and it gives
+us a little shock when we find ourselves living in
+a temperature of 8 degrees below zero. The rays
+of the sun are popularly supposed to minimise the
+effect of this cold, and a fortnight's fog on the
+Persian highlands has still left one a believer in this
+phenomenon, for when the sun does shine, it does
+it handsomely, and, according to the inhabitants, it
+is only when strangers are here that it turns sulky.
+Be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</a></span> that as it may, the most loyal lover of Persia
+will have to admit that Persian mud is the deepest
+and blackest in the world, and that snow and mud
+in equal proportions to a depth of 8 inches make
+anything but agreeable travelling. Snow is
+indiscriminately shovelled down off the roofs of
+houses on to the heads of passers-by, and great holes
+in the road are accepted as the inevitable accompaniment
+to winter traffic.</p>
+
+<p>In the bazaars&mdash;narrow, and filled with small
+booths, where Manchester cotton is stacked upon
+shelves&mdash;the merchants sit huddled up on their
+counters, each with a cotton lahaf (quilt) over him,
+under which is a small brazier of ougol (charcoal).
+In this way he manages to remain in a thawed
+condition, while a pipe consoles him for his little
+trade and the horrible weather. Before him, in the
+narrow alleys of the bazaar, Persians walk with
+their umbrellas unfurled, and Russians have put
+the convenient bashluk (a sort of woollen hood)
+over their heads and ears. The Arab, in his long
+camel-skin coat, looks impervious to the weather,
+and women with veiled faces and long black cloaks
+pick their way through the mire. Throngs of
+donkeys, melancholy and overladen, their small
+feet sinking in the slush, may be with the foot-passengers.
+Some pariah dogs make a dirty patch
+in the snow, and a troop of Cossacks, their long
+cloaks spotted with huge snow-flakes, trot heavily
+through the narrow lanes.</p>
+
+<p>But it is not only, nor principally, of climate that
+one speaks in Persia at the present time.</p>
+
+<p>Persia has been stirring, if not with great events,
+at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</a></span> least with important ones, and at the risk of
+telling stale news, one must take a glance at the
+recent history of the country and its people. It is
+proverbial to say that Persia has been misgoverned
+for years. It is a country and the Persians are
+people who seem fated by circumstances and by
+temperament to endure ill-government. A ruler is
+either a despot or a knave, and frequently both.
+Any system of policy is liable to change at any
+moment. Property is held in the uneasy tenure of
+those who have stolen it, and a long string of names
+of rulers and politicians reveals the fact that most
+of them have made what they could for themselves
+by any means, and that perhaps, on the whole,
+violence has been less detrimental to the country
+than weakness.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE YOUNG PERSIAN MOVEMENT</div>
+
+<p>The worst of it is that no one seems particularly
+to want the Deliverer&mdash;the great and single-minded
+leader who might free and uplift the country.
+Persia does not crave the ideal ruler; he might
+make it very unpleasant for those who are content
+and rich in their own way. It is this thing,
+amongst many others, which helps to make the
+situation in Persia not only difficult but almost
+impossible to follow or describe, and it is, above all,
+the temperament of the Persians themselves which
+is the baffling thing in the way of Persian reform.
+Yet reform has been spoken of loudly, and again
+and again in the last few years, and the reformation
+is generally known as the Nationalist or Young
+Persian Movement. To follow this Movement
+through its various ramifications would require a
+clue as plain and as clear as a golden thread, and
+the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</a></span> best we can do in our present obscurity is to
+give a few of the leading features.</p>
+
+<p>The important and critical situation evident in
+Persia to-day owes its beginning to the disturbances
+in 1909, when the Constitutional Party came
+into power, forcibly, and with guns ready to train
+on Tehran, and when, almost without an effort,
+they obtained their rights, and lost them again with
+even less effort....</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<p><i>29 February.</i>&mdash;The last day of a long month.
+The snow falls without ceasing, blotting out everything
+that there may be to be seen. To-day, for
+the first time, I realised that there are hills near.
+Mr. Lightfoot and I walked to the old stone lion
+which marks the gateway of Ekmadan&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>, ancient
+Hamadan. I think the snow was rather thicker
+than usual to-day. Mr. Lightfoot and I went to
+Hamadan, plodding our way through little tramped-down
+paths, with snow three feet deep on either
+side. By way of being cheerful we went to see
+two tombs. One was an old, old place, where slept
+"the first great physician" who ever lived. In it
+a dervish kept watch in the bitter cold, and some
+slabs of dung kept a smouldering fire not burning
+but smoking. These dervishes have been carrying
+messages for Germans. Mysterious, like all religious
+men, they travel through the country and distribute
+their whispers and messages. The other tomb is
+called Queen Esther's, though why they should
+bury her at Ekmadan when she lived down at
+Shushan I don't know.</p>
+
+<p>We went to see Miss Montgomerie the other day.
+She<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</a></span> is an American missionary, who has lived at
+Hamadan for thirty-three years. She has schools,
+etc., and she lives in the Armenian quarter, and
+devotes her life to her neighbours. Her language
+is entirely Biblical, and it sounds almost racy as
+she says it.</p>
+
+<p>There is nothing to record. Yesterday I cleaned
+out my room for something to do, and in the
+evening a smoky lamp laid it an inch thick in
+blacks. The pass here is quite blocked, and no
+one can come or go. The snow falls steadily in
+fine small flakes. My car has disappeared, with
+the chauffeur, at Kasvin. I hear of it being sent
+to Enzeli; but the whole thing is a mystery, and is
+making me very anxious. There are no answers to
+any of my telegrams, and I am completely in the
+dark.</p>
+
+<p><i>3 March.</i>&mdash;I think that to be on a frozen hill-top,
+with fever, some boils, three dogs, and a blizzard, is
+about as near wearing down one's spirits as anything
+I know.</p>
+
+<p><i>5 March, Sunday.</i>&mdash;In bed all day, with the
+ancient Persian in attendance.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<p class="center"><i>The Return of the Pilgrim.</i></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE RETURN OF THE PILGRIM</div>
+
+<p>This is not a story for Sunday afternoon. It is
+true for one thing, and Sunday afternoon stories
+are not, as a rule, true. They nearly all tell of the
+return of the Prodigals, but they leave out the
+return of the Pilgrims, and that is why this parable
+is not for Sunday afternoon. I write it because I
+never knew a true thing yet that was not of use to
+someone.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</a></span>
+Most of us leave home when we are grown up.
+The people who never grow up stop at home. The
+journey and the outward-bound vision are the
+signs of an active mind stirring wholesomely or
+unwholesomely as the case may be. The Prodigal
+is generally accounted one of those whose sane
+mind demands an outlet; but he lands in trouble,
+and gets hungry, and comes back penitent, as we
+have heard a thousand million times. The Far
+Country is always barren, the husks of swine are
+the only food to be had, and bankruptcy is
+inevitable.</p>
+
+<p>The story has been accepted by many generations
+of men as a picture of the world, with its temptations,
+its sins, its moral bankruptcy, and its
+illusionary and unsatisfying pleasures. Preachers
+have always been fond of allusions to the husks and
+swine, and the desperate hunger which there is
+nothing to satisfy in the Far Country. The story
+is true, God wot; it gives many a man a wholesome
+fright, and keeps him at home, and its note of
+forgiveness for a wasted life has proved the salvation
+of many Prodigals.</p>
+
+<p>But there is another journey, far more often
+undertaken by the young and by all those who
+needs must seek&mdash;the brave, the energetic, the
+good. It is towards a country distant yet ever
+near, and it lies much removed from the Far
+Country where swine feed. Its minarets stand
+up against a clear and cloudless sky, its radiancy
+shines from afar off. It is set on a hill, and the road
+thither is very steep and very long, but the Pilgrims
+start out bravely. They know the way! They
+carry<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</a></span> torches! They have the Light within and
+without, and "watchwords" for every night, and
+songs for the morning. Some walk painfully, with
+bleeding feet, on the path that leads to the beautiful
+country, and some run joyously with eager feet.
+Whatever anyone likes to say, it is a much more
+crowded path than the old trail towards the pigsty.
+At the first step of the journey stand Faith and
+Hope and Charity, and beyond are more wondrous
+things by far&mdash;Glory, Praise, Vision, Sacrifice,
+Heroism, sublime Trust, the Need-to-Give, and the
+Love that runs to help. And some of the Pilgrims&mdash;most
+of them&mdash;get there.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">DISAPPOINTMENT</div>
+
+<p>But there is a little stream of Pilgrims sometimes
+to be met with going the other way. They
+are returning, like the Prodigal, but there is no one
+to welcome them. Some are very tragic figures,
+and for them the sun is for ever obscured. But there
+are others&mdash;quite plain, sober men and women,
+some humorists, and some sages. They have
+honestly sought the Country, and they, too, have
+unfurled banners and marched on; but they have
+met with many things on the road which do not
+match the watchwords, and they have heard many
+wonderful things which, truthfully considered, do
+not always appear to them to be facts. They have
+called Poverty beautiful, and they have found it
+very ugly; and they have called Money naught,
+and they have found it to be Power. They have
+found Sacrifice accepted, and then claimed by the
+selfish and mean, and even Love has not been all
+that was expected. The Pilgrims return. Their
+poor tummies, too, are empty, but no calf is killed
+for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</a></span> them, there is no feasting and no joy. They
+stay at home, but neither Elder Son nor Prodigal
+has any use for them. In the end they turn out
+the light and go to sleep, regretting&mdash;if they have
+any humour&mdash;their many virtues, which for so long
+prevented them enjoying the pleasant things of
+life.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<p><i>March.</i>&mdash;I lie in bed all day up here amongst
+these horrible snows. The engineer comes in sometimes
+and makes me a cup of Benger's Food. For
+the rest, I lean up on my elbow when I can, and cook
+some little thing&mdash;Bovril or hot milk&mdash;on my Etna
+stove. Then I am too tired to eat it, and the
+sickness begins all over again. Oh, if I could leave
+this place! If only someone would send back my
+car, which has been taken away, or if I could hear
+where Mrs. Wynne and Mr. Bevan are! But no,
+the door of this odious place is locked, and the key
+is thrown away.</p>
+
+<p>I have lost count of time. I just wait from day
+to day, hoping someone will come and take me
+away, though I am now getting so weak I don't
+suppose I can travel.</p>
+
+<p>One wonders whether there can be a Providence in
+all this disappointment. I think not. I just made a
+great mistake coming out here, and I have suffered
+for it. Ye gods, what a winter it has been&mdash;disillusioning,
+dull, hideously and achingly disappointing!</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">MEMORIES OF HOME</div>
+
+<p>It is too odd to think that until the war came I
+was the happiest woman in the world. It is too
+funny to think of my house in London, which
+people<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</a></span> say is the only "salon"&mdash;a small "salon,"
+indeed! But I can hardly believe now in my
+crowds of friends, my devoted servants, my pleasant
+work, the daily budget of letters and invitations,
+and the press notices in their pink slips. Then the
+big lectures and the applause&mdash;the shouts when I
+come in. The joy, almost the intoxication of life,
+has been mine.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, I ought to have turned back at
+Petrograd! But I thought all my work was
+before me, and in Russia one can't go about alone
+without knowing the way and the language of the
+people. Permits are difficult, nothing is possible
+unless one is attached to a body. And now I have
+reached the end&mdash;<i>Persia! And there is no earthly
+use for us, and there are no roads.</i></p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_III_V" id="CHAPTER_III_V"></a>CHAPTER V
+<span class="totoc"><a href="#CONTENTS">ToC</a></span></h2>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3>THE LAST JOURNEY</h3>
+
+<p>My car turned up at Hamadan on March 9th, and
+on the 13th I said good-bye to my friends at the
+Consulate, and left the place with a Tartar prince,
+who cleared his throat from the bottom of his soul,
+and spat luxuriously all the time. The mud was
+beyond anything that one could imagine. There
+was a sea of it everywhere, and men waded knee-deep
+in slush. My poor car floundered bravely and
+bumped heavily, till at last it could move no more.
+Two wheels were sunk far past the hubs, and the
+step of the car was under mud.</p>
+
+<p>The Tartar prince hailed a horse from some men
+and flung himself across it, and then rode off
+through the thick sea of mud to find help to move
+the car. His methods were simple. He came
+up behind men, and clouted them over the head, or
+beat them with a stick, and drove them in front of
+him. Sometimes he took out a revolver and fired
+over the men's heads, making them jump; but
+nothing makes them really work. We pushed on
+for a mile or two, and then stuck again. This
+time there were no men near, and the prince walked
+on to collect some soldiers at the next station. It
+was a wicked, blowy day, and I crept into a wrecked
+"camion"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</a></span> and sheltered there, and ate some lunch
+and slept a little. I wasn't feeling a bit well.</p>
+
+<p>That night we only made twenty miles, and then
+we put up at a little rest-house, where the woman
+had ten children. They all had colds, and coughed
+all the time. She promised supper at 8 o'clock, but
+kept us waiting till 10 p.m., and then a terrible
+repast of batter appeared in a big tin dish, and
+everyone except me ate it, and everyone drank my
+wine. Then six children and their parents lay in one
+tiny room, and I and a nurse occupied the hot
+supper-room, and thus we lay until the cold morning
+came, and I felt very ill.</p>
+
+<p>So the day began, and it did not improve. I was
+sick all the time until I could neither think nor see.
+The poor prince could do nothing, of course.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">ILLNESS AT KASVIN</div>
+
+<p>At last we came to a rest-house, and I felt I
+could go no further. I was quite unconscious for a
+time. Then they told me it was only two hours to
+Kasvin, and somehow they got me on board the
+motor-car, and the horrible journey began again.
+Every time the car bumped I was sick. Of course
+we punctured a tyre, which delayed us, and when we
+got into Kasvin it was 9 o'clock. The Tartar lifted
+me out of the car, and I had been told that I might
+put up at a room belonging to Dr. Smitkin, but
+where it was I had no idea, and I knew there would
+be no one there. So I plucked up courage to go to
+the only English people in the place&mdash;the Goodwins,
+with whom I had stayed on my way up&mdash;and ask
+for a bed. This I did, and they let me spread
+my camp-bed in his little sitting-room. I was
+ill indeed, and aching in every bone.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</a></span>
+The next day I had to go to Smitkin's room. It
+was an absolutely bare apartment, but someone
+spread my bed for me, and there were some Red
+Cross nurses who all offered to do things. The one
+thing I wanted was food, and this they could only
+get at the soldiers' mess two miles away. So all I
+had was one tin of sweet Swiss milk. The day
+after this I decided I must quit, whatever happened,
+and get to Tehran, where there are hotels. After
+one night there I was taken to a hospital. I was
+alone in Persia, in a Russian hospital, where few
+people even spoke French!</p>
+
+<p>On March 19th an English doctor rescued me.
+He heard I was ill, and came to see me, and took
+me off to be with his wife at his own home at
+the Legation. I shall never forget it as long
+as I live&mdash;the blessed change from dirty glasses and
+tin basins and a rocky bed! What does illness
+matter with a pretty room, and kindness showered
+on one, and everything clean and fragrant? I have
+a little sitting-room, where my meals are served,
+and I have a fire, a bath, and a garden to sit in.</p>
+
+<p>God bless these good people!</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="center"><i>To Lady Cl&eacute;mentine Waring.</i></p>
+
+<p class="lh_ind0"><span class="smcap">British Legation, Tehran,</span></p>
+<p class="lh_ind4"><i>22 March.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Darling Clemmie,</span></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">A LETTER FROM TEHRAN</div>
+
+<p>I am coming home, having fallen sick. Do
+you know, I was thinking about you so much the
+other night, for you told me that if ever I was really
+"down and out" you would know. So I wondered
+if, about a week ago, you saw a poor small person
+(who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</a></span> has shrunk to about half her size!) in an empty
+room, feeling worth nothing at all, and getting
+nothing to eat and no attention! Persia isn't the
+country to be ill in. I was taken to the Russian
+hospital&mdash;which is an experience I don't want
+to repeat!&mdash;but now I am in the hands of the
+Legation doctor, and he is going to nurse me till I
+am well enough to go home.</p>
+
+<p>There are no railways in this country, except one
+of eight miles to a tomb! Hence we all have
+to flounder about on awful roads in motor-cars,
+which break down and have to be dug out, and
+always collapse at the wrong moment, so we have
+to stay out all night.</p>
+
+<p>You thought Persia was in the tropics? So did
+I! I have been in deep snow all the time till
+I came here.</p>
+
+<p>I think the campaign here is nearly over. It
+might have been a lot bigger, for the Germans
+were bribing like mad, but you can't make a
+Persian wake up.</p>
+
+<p class="lf_ind6">Ever, dear Clemmie,</p>
+<p class="lf_sal">Your loving</p>
+<p class="lf_sig"><span class="smcap">S. Macnaughtan.</span></p>
+
+<p>So nice to know you think of me, as I know you
+do.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><i>26 March.</i>&mdash;I am getting stronger, and the days
+are bright. As a great treat I have been allowed
+to go to church this morning, the first I have been
+to since Petrograd.</p>
+
+<hr />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><i>To Miss Julia Keays-Young.</i></p>
+
+<p class="lh_ind0"><span class="smcap">British Legation, Tehran.</span></p>
+<p class="lh_ind4"><i>1 April.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Darling Jenny,</span></p>
+
+<p>In case you want to make plans about
+leave, etc., will you come and stop with me when
+first I get home, say about the 5th or 6th May, I
+can't say to a day? It will be nice to see you all
+and have a holiday, and then I hope to come out to
+Russia again. Did I tell you I have been ill, but
+am now being nursed by a delightful English
+doctor and his wife, and getting the most ideal
+attention, and medicines changed at every change
+in the health of the patient.</p>
+
+<p>I've missed everything here. I was to be
+presented to the Shah, etc., etc., and to have gone
+to the reception on his birthday. All the time I've
+lain in bed or in the garden, but as I haven't felt
+up to anything else I haven't fashed, and the Shah
+must do wanting me for the present.</p>
+
+<p>The flowers here are just like England, primroses
+and violets and Lent lilies, but I'm sure the trees
+are further out at home.</p>
+
+<p class="lf_sal">Your most loving</p>
+<p class="lf_sal"><span class="smcap">Aunt Sally.</span></p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="center"><i>To Mrs. Keays-Young.</i></p>
+
+<p class="lh_ind0"><span class="smcap">British Legation, Tehran,</span></p>
+<p class="lh_ind4"><i>8 April.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Dearest Baby,</span></p>
+
+<p>I don't think I'll get home till quite the end
+of April, as I am not supposed to be strong enough
+to travel yet. My journey begins with a motor
+drive<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</a></span> of 300 miles over fearful roads and a chain of
+mountains always under snow. Then I have to
+cross the lumpy Caspian Sea, and I shall rest at
+Baku two nights before beginning the four days
+journey to Petrograd. After that the fun really
+begins, as one always loses all one's luggage in
+Finland, and one finishes up with the North Sea.
+What do you think of that, my cat?</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">CONVALESCENCE</div>
+
+<p>Dr. Neligan is still looking after me quite
+splendidly, and I never drank so much medicine in
+my life. No fees or money can repay the dear man.</p>
+
+<p>Tehran is <i>the</i> most primitive place! You can't,
+for instance, get one scrap of flannel, and if a bit of
+bacon comes into the town there is a stampede for
+it. People get their wine from England in two-bottle
+parcels.</p>
+
+<p class="lf_sal">Yours as ever,</p>
+<p class="lf_sig">S.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><i>Tehran. April.</i>&mdash;The days pass peacefully and
+even quickly, which is odd, for they are singularly
+idle. I get up about 11 a.m., and am pretty tired
+when dressing is finished. Then I sit in the garden
+and have my lunch there, and after lunch I lie down
+for an hour. Presently tea comes; I watch the
+Neligans start for their ride, and already I wonder
+if <span class="smcap">I</span> was ever strong and rode!</p>
+
+<p>It is such an odd jump I have taken. At home
+I drifted on, never feeling older, hardly counting
+birthdays&mdash;always brisk, and getting through a heap
+of work&mdash;beginning my day early and ending it
+late. And now there is a great gulf dividing me
+from youth and old times, and it is filled with dead
+people whom I can't forget.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</a></span>
+In the matter of dying one doesn't interfere with
+Providence, but it seems to me that <i>now</i> would be
+rather an appropriate time to depart. I wish I
+could give my life for some boy who would like to
+live very much, and to whom all things are joyous.
+But alas! one can't swop lives like this&mdash;at least, I
+don't see the chance of doing so.</p>
+
+<p>I should like to have "left the party"&mdash;quitted
+the feast of life&mdash;when all was gay and amusing.
+I should have been sorry to come away, but it
+would have been far better than being left till all
+the lights are out. I could have said truly to the
+Giver of the feast, "Thanks for an excellent time."
+But now so many of the guests have left, and the
+fires are going out, and I am tired.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">end of the diary.</span></p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<p>The rest of the story is soon told.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Macnaughtan left Tehran about the middle
+of April. The Persian hot weather was approaching,
+and it would have been impossible for her to
+travel any later in the season. The long journey
+seemed a sufficiently hazardous undertaking for a
+person in her weak state of health, but in Dr.
+Neligan's opinion she would have run an even
+greater risk by remaining in Persia during the hot
+weather.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">STARTING FOR HOME</div>
+
+<p>Dr. Neligan's goodness and kindness to Miss
+Macnaughtan will always be remembered by her
+family, and he seems to have taken an enormous
+amount of trouble to make arrangements for her
+journey home. He found an escort for her in the
+shape<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</a></span> of an English missionary who was going to
+Petrograd, and gave her a pass which enabled her
+to travel as expeditiously as possible. The authorities
+were not allowed to delay or hinder her. She
+was much too ill to stop for anything, and drove
+night and day&mdash;even through a cholera village&mdash;to
+the shores of the Caspian Sea.</p>
+
+<p>We know very few details concerning the journey
+home, and I think my aunt herself did not remember
+much about it. One can hardly bear to think of
+the suffering it caused her. A few incidents stood
+out in her memory from the indeterminate recollection
+of pain and discomfort in which most of the
+expedition was mercifully veiled, and we learnt
+them after she returned.</p>
+
+<p>There was the occasion when she reached the
+port on the Caspian Sea one hour after the English
+boat had sailed. She called it the "English" boat,
+but whether it could have belonged to an English
+company, or was merely the usual boat run in
+connection with the train service to England, I do
+not know. A "Russian" vessel was due to leave
+in a couple of hours' time, but for some reason Miss
+Macnaughtan was obliged to walk three-quarters
+of a mile to get permission to go by it. We can
+never forget her piteous description of how she
+staggered and crawled to the office and back, so ill
+that only her iron strength of will could force her
+tired body to accomplish the distance. She
+obtained the necessary sanction, and started forth
+once more upon her way.</p>
+
+<p>She stayed for a week at the British Embassy in
+Petrograd, where her escort was obliged to leave
+her,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</a></span> so the rest of the journey was undertaken
+alone.</p>
+
+<p>We know nothing of how she got to Helsingfors,
+but I believe it was at that place that she had to
+walk some considerable distance over a frozen lake
+to reach the ship. She was hobbling along, leaning
+heavily on two sticks, and just as she stumbled and
+almost fell, a young Englishman came up and
+offered her his arm.</p>
+
+<p>In an old diary, written years before in the
+Argentine, during a time when Miss Macnaughtan
+was faced with what seemed overwhelming difficulties,
+and when she had in her charge a very sick
+man, a kind stranger came to the rescue. Her
+diary entry for that day is one of heartfelt gratitude,
+and ends with the words: "God always sends
+someone."</p>
+
+<p>Certainly at Helsingfors some Protecting Power
+sent help in a big extremity, and this young fellow&mdash;Mr.
+Seymour&mdash;devoted himself to her for the
+rest of the journey in a marvellously unselfish
+manner. He could not have been kinder to her if
+she had been his mother, and he actually altered
+all his plans on arriving in England, and brought
+her to the very door of her house in Norfolk Street.
+Without his help I sometimes wonder whether my
+aunt would have succeeded in reaching home, and
+her own gratitude to him knew no bounds. She
+used to say that in her experience if people were in
+a difficulty and wanted help they ought to go to a
+young man for it. She said that young men were
+the kindest members of the human race.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">ARRIVAL IN ENGLAND</div>
+
+<p>It was on the 8th of May that Miss Macnaughtan
+reached<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</a></span> home, and her travels were over for good
+and all. One is only thankful that the last weeks
+of her life were not spent in a foreign land but
+among her own people, surrounded by all the
+care and comfort that love could supply. Two of
+her sisters were with her always, and her house was
+thronged with visitors, who had to wait their turn
+of a few minutes by her bedside, which, alas! were
+all that her strength allowed.</p>
+
+<p>She was nursed night and day by her devoted
+maid, Mary King, as she did not wish to have a
+professional nurse; but no skill or care could save
+her. The seeds of her illness had probably been
+sown some years before, during a shooting trip in
+Kashmir, and the hard work and strain of the first
+year of the war had weakened her powers of
+resistance. But it was Russia that killed her.</p>
+
+<p>Before she went there many of her friends urged
+her to give up the expedition. Her maid had a premonition
+that the enterprise would end in disaster,
+and had begged her mistress to stay at home.</p>
+
+<p>"I feel sure you will never return alive ma'am,"
+she had urged, and Miss Macnaughtan's first words
+to her old servant on her return were: "You were
+right, Mary. Russia has killed me."</p>
+
+<p>Miss Macnaughtan rallied a little in June, and was
+occasionally carried down to her library for a few
+hours in the afternoon, but even that amount of
+exertion was too much for her. For the last weeks
+of her life she never left her room.</p>
+
+<p>Surely there never was a sweeter or more adorable
+invalid! I can see her now, propped up on pillows
+in a room filled with masses of most exquisite
+flowers.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</a></span> She always had things dainty and fragrant
+about her, and one had a vision of pale blue
+ribbons, and soft laces, and lovely flowers, and
+then one forgot everything else as one looked at
+the dear face framed in such soft grey hair. She
+looked so fragile that one fancied she might be
+wafted away by a summer breeze, and I have never
+seen anyone so pale. There was not a tinge of
+colour in face or hands, and one kissed her gently
+for fear that even a caress might be too much for
+her waning strength.</p>
+
+<p>Her patience never failed. She never grumbled
+or made complaint, and even in the smallest things
+her interest and sympathy were as fresh as ever.
+A new dress worn by one of her sisters was a
+pleasure, and she would plan it, and suggest and
+admire.</p>
+
+<p>It was a supreme joy to Miss Macnaughtan to
+hear, some time in June, that she had received the
+honour of being chosen to be a Lady of Grace of
+the Order of St. John of Jerusalem. Any recognition
+of her good work was an unfailing source of
+gratification to her sensitive nature, sensitive alike
+to praise or blame.</p>
+
+<p>She was so wonderfully strong in her mind and
+will that it seemed impossible in those long June
+days to believe that she had such a little time to
+live. She managed all her own business affairs,
+personally dictated or wrote answers to her correspondence,
+and was full of schemes for the redecoration
+of her house and of plans for the future.</p>
+
+<p>I have only been able to procure three of my
+aunt's letters written after her return to England.
+They<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</a></span> were addressed to her eldest sister, Mrs.
+ffolliott. I insert them here:</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">MISS MACNAUGHTAN'S LAST LETTERS</div>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="lh_ind6"><span class="smcap">1, Norfolk Street,</span></p>
+<p class="lh_ind4"><span class="smcap">Park Lane, W.</span></p>
+<p class="lh_ind2"><i>Tuesday.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">My dearest old Poot,</span></p>
+
+<p>How good of you to write. I was awfully
+pleased to see a letter from you. I have been a
+fearful crock since I got home, and I have to
+lie in bed for six weeks and live on milk diet for
+eight weeks. The illness is of a tropical nature,
+and one of the symptoms is that one can't eat, so
+one gets fearfully thin. I am something over six
+stone now, but I was very much less.</p>
+
+<p>We were right up on the Persian front, and I
+went on to Tehran. One saw some most interesting
+phases of the war, and met all the distinguished
+Generals and such-like people.</p>
+
+<p>The notice you sent me of my little book is
+charming.</p>
+
+<p class="lf_sal">Your loving</p>
+<p class="lf_sig">S. B .M.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="lh_ind6"><span class="smcap">1, Norfolk Street,</span></p>
+<p class="lh_ind4"><span class="smcap">Park Lane, W.,</span></p>
+<p class="lh_ind2"><i>9 June.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Darling Poot,</span></p>
+
+<p>I must thank you myself for the lovely
+flowers and your kind letters. I am sure that
+people's good wishes and prayers do one good. I
+so nearly died!</p>
+
+<p class="lf_sal">Your loving</p>
+<p class="lf_sig">S. M.</p>
+
+<hr />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="lh_ind2"><i>17th June</i></p>
+
+<p>Still getting on pretty well, but it is slow work.
+Baby and Julia both in town, so they are constantly
+here. I am to get up for a little bit to-morrow.</p>
+
+<p>Kindest love. It <i>was</i> naughty of you to send
+more flowers.</p>
+
+<p class="lf_sal">As ever fondly,</p>
+<p class="lf_sig"><span class="smcap">Sarah.</span></p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>As the hot weather advanced it was hoped to
+move Miss Macnaughtan to the country. Her
+friends showered invitations on "dear Sally" to
+come and convalesce with them, but the plans fell
+through. It became increasingly clear that the
+traveller was about to embark on that last journey
+from which there is no return, and, indeed, towards
+the end her sufferings were so great that those who
+loved her best could only pray that she might not
+have long to wait. She passed away in the afternoon
+of Monday, July 24th, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>A few days later the body of Sarah Broom
+Macnaughtan was laid to rest in the plot of ground
+reserved for her kinsfolk in the churchyard at
+Chart Sutton, in Kent. It is very quiet there up
+on the hill, the great Weald stretches away to the
+south, and fruit-trees surround the Hallowed Acre.
+But even as they laid earth to earth and dust to
+dust in this peaceful spot the booming of the guns in
+Flanders broke the quiet of the sunny afternoon,
+and reminded the little funeral party that they
+were indeed burying one whose life had been
+sacrificed in the Great War.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE GRAVE IN CHART SUTTON</div>
+
+<p>Surely those who pass through the old churchyard
+will<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</a></span> pause by the grave, with its beautiful grey cross,
+and the children growing up in the parish will come
+there sometimes, and will read and remember the
+simple inscription on it:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"In the Great War, by Word and Deed, at Home and Abroad,<br />
+She served her Country even unto Death."</p></div>
+
+<p>And if any ghosts hover round the little place, they
+will be the ghosts of a purity, a kindness, and of a
+love for humanity which are not often met with in
+this workaday world.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<h2><a name="CONCLUSION" id="CONCLUSION"></a>CONCLUSION
+<span class="totoc"><a href="#CONTENTS">ToC</a></span></h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</a></span>
+Perhaps a review of her war work by an onlooker,
+and a slight sketch of Miss Macnaughtan's character,
+may form an appropriate conclusion to this book.</p>
+
+<p>I stayed with my aunt for one night, on August
+7th, 1914. One may be pardoned for saying that
+during the previous three days one had scarcely
+begun to realise the war, but I was recalled
+by telegram from Northamptonshire to the headquarters
+of my Voluntary Aid Detachment in
+Kent, and spent a night in town en route, to get
+uniform, etc. Certainly at my aunt's house my
+eyes were opened to a little of what lay before us.
+She was on fire with patriotism and a burning wish
+to help her country, and I immediately caught some
+of her enthusiasm.</p>
+
+<p>Every hour we rushed out to buy papers, every
+minute seemed consecrated to preparation for what
+we could do. There were uniforms to buy, notes
+of Red Cross lectures to "rub up," and, in my aunt's
+case, she was busy offering her services in every
+direction in which they could be of use.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">VOLUNTARY RATIONING</div>
+
+<p>Miss Macnaughtan must surely have been one of
+the first people to begin voluntary rationing. We
+had the simplest possible meals during my visit, and
+although<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</a></span> she was proud of her housekeeping, and
+usually gave one rather perfect food, on this occasion
+she said how impossible it was for her to indulge in
+anything but necessaries, when our soldiers would
+so soon have to endure hardships of every kind.
+She said that we ought to be particularly careful to
+eat very little meat, because there would certainly
+be a shortage of it later on.</p>
+
+<p>I recollect that there was some hitch about my
+departure from Norfolk Street on August 8th. It
+did not seem clear whether my Voluntary Aid
+Detachment was going to provide billets for all
+recalled members, and I remember my aunt's
+absolute scorn of difficulties at such a time.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course, go straight to Kent and obey orders,"
+she cried. "If you can't get a bed, come back here;
+but at least go and see what you can do."</p>
+
+<p>That was typical of Miss Macnaughtan. Difficulties
+did not exist for her. When quite a young
+girl she made up her mind that no lack of money,
+time, or strength should ever prevent her doing
+anything she wanted to do. It certainly never prevented
+her doing anything she felt she <i>ought</i> to do.</p>
+
+<p>The war provided her with a supreme opportunity
+for service, and she did not fail to take advantage of
+it. Of her work in Belgium, especially at the soup-kitchen,
+I believe it is impossible to say too much.
+According to <i>The Times</i>, "The lady with the soup
+was everything to thousands of stricken men, who
+would otherwise have gone on their way fasting."</p>
+
+<p>Among individual cases, too, there were many
+men who benefited by some special care bestowed
+on them by her. There was one wounded Belgian to
+whom<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</a></span> my aunt gave my address before she left for
+Russia that he might have someone with whom
+he might correspond. I used to hear from him
+regularly, and every letter breathed gratitude to
+"la dame &eacute;cossaise." He said she had saved his life.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Macnaughtan's lectures to munition-workers
+were, perhaps, the best work that she did during the
+war. She was a charming speaker, and I never
+heard one who got more quickly into touch with an
+audience. As I saw it expressed in one of the
+papers "Stiffness and depression vanished from any
+company when she took the platform." Her
+enunciation was extraordinarily distinct, and she
+had an arresting delivery which compelled attention
+from the first word to the last.</p>
+
+<p>She never minced the truth about the war, but
+showed people at home how far removed it was
+from being a "merry picnic."</p>
+
+<p>"They say recruiting will stop if people know
+what is going on at the Front," she used to tell them.
+"I am a woman, but I know what I would do if I
+were a man when I heard of these things. <i>I would
+do my durndest.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>All through her life the idea of personal service
+appealed to Miss Macnaughtan. She never sent a
+message of sympathy or a gift of help unless it was
+quite impossible to go herself to the sufferer.</p>
+
+<p>She was only a girl when she heard of what
+proved to be the fatal accident to her eldest
+brother in the Argentine. She went to him by the
+next ship, alone, save for the escort of his old yacht's
+skipper, and a journey to the Argentine in those
+days was a big undertaking for a delicate young
+girl.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</a></span> On another occasion she was in Switzerland
+when she heard of the death, in Northamptonshire,
+of a little niece. She left for England the same
+day, to go and offer her sympathy, and try to
+comfort the child's mother.</p>
+
+<p>"When I hear of trouble I always go at once,"
+she used to say.</p>
+
+<p>I have known her drive in her brougham to the
+most horrible slum in the East End to see what she
+could do for a woman who had begged from her in
+the street&mdash;yes, and go there again and again until
+she had done all that was possible to help the sad
+case.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">ZEAL TO HELP OTHERS</div>
+
+<p>It was this burning zeal to help which sent her to
+Belgium and carried her through the long dark
+winter there, and it was, perhaps, the same feeling
+which obscured her judgment when her expedition
+to Russia was contemplated. She was a delicate
+woman, and there did not seem to be much scope
+for her services in Russia. She was not a qualified
+nurse, and the distance from home, and the handicap
+of her ignorance of the Russian language,
+would probably have prevented her organising
+anything like comforts for the soldiers there as she
+had done in Belgium. To those of us who loved
+her the very uselessness of her efforts in Russia
+adds to the poignancy of the tragedy of the death
+which resulted from them.</p>
+
+<p>The old question arises: "To what purpose is
+this waste?" And the old answer comes still to
+teach us the underlying meaning and beauty of
+what seems to be unnecessary sacrifice: "She hath
+done what she could."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</a></span>
+Indeed, that epitaph might fitly describe Miss
+Macnaughtan's war work. She grudged nothing,
+she gave her strength, her money, her very life.
+The precious ointment was poured out in the service
+of her King and Country and for the Master she
+served so faithfully.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<p>I have been looking through some notices which
+appeared in the press after Miss Macnaughtan's
+death. Some of them allude to her wit, her
+energy and vivacity, the humour which was "without
+a touch of cynicism"; others, to her inexhaustible
+spirit, her geniality, and the "powers of
+sarcasm, which she used with strong reserve."
+Others, again, see through to the faith and philosophy
+which lay behind her humour, "Scottish in its
+penetrating tenderness."</p>
+
+<p>In my opinion my aunt's strongest characteristic
+was a dazzling purity of soul, mind, and body.
+She was a person whose very presence lifted the
+tone of the conversation. It was impossible to
+think of telling her a nasty story, a "double
+entendre" fell flat when she was there. She was
+the least priggish person in the world, but no one
+who knew her could doubt for an instant her
+transparent goodness. I have read every word of
+her diary; there is not in it the record of an ugly
+thought, or of one action that would not bear the
+full light of day. About her books she used
+to say that she had tried never to publish one word
+which her father would not like her to have
+written.</p>
+
+<p>She had a tremendous capacity for affection, and
+when<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</a></span> she once loved she loved most faithfully.
+Her devotion to her father and to her eldest brother
+influenced her whole life, and it would have been
+impossible for those she loved to make too heavy
+claims on her kindness.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">SOCIAL CHARM</div>
+
+<p>Miss Macnaughtan had great social charm. She
+was friendly and easy to know, and she had a
+wonderful power of finding out the interesting side
+of people and of seeing their good points. Her
+popularity was extraordinary, although hers was
+too strong a personality to command universal
+affection. Among her friends were people of the
+most varied dispositions and circumstances. Distinction
+of birth, position, or intellect appealed to
+her, and she was always glad to meet a celebrity,
+but distinction was no passport to her favour unless
+it was accompanied by character. To her poorer and
+humbler friends she was kindness itself, and she was
+extraordinarily staunch in her friendships. Nothing
+would make her "drop" a person with whom she
+had once been intimate.</p>
+
+<p>In attempting to give a character-sketch of a
+person whose nature was as complex as Miss
+Macnaughtan's, one admits defeat from the start.
+She had so many interests, so many sides to her
+character, that it seems impossible to present them
+all fairly. Her love of music, literature, and art
+was coupled with an enthusiasm for sport, big-game
+shooting, riding, travel, and adventure of
+every kind. She was an ambitious woman, and
+a brilliantly clever one, and her clearness of perception
+and wonderful intuition gave her a quick grasp
+of a subject or idea. She had a thirst for knowledge
+which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</a></span> made learning easy, but hers was the brain of
+the poet and philosopher, not of the mathematician.
+Accuracy of thought or information was often
+lacking. Her imagination led the way, and left her
+with a picture of a situation or a subject, but she
+was very vague about facts and statistics. As a
+woman of business she was shrewd, with all a
+Scotchwoman's power of looking at both sides
+of a bawbee before she spent it, but she was
+also extraordinarily generous in a very simple
+and unostentatious way, and her hospitality was
+boundless.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Macnaughtan was almost hypersensitive to
+criticism. Her intense desire to do right and to
+serve her fellow-beings animated her whole life, and
+it seemed to her rather hard to be found fault with.
+Indeed, she had not many faults, and the defects of
+her character were mostly temperamental.</p>
+
+<p>As a girl she was unpunctual, and subject to fits
+of indecision when it seemed impossible for her to
+make up her mind one way or the other. The
+inconvenience caused by her frequent changes of
+times and plans was probably not realised by her.
+Later in life, when she lived so much alone, she did
+not always see that difficulties which appeared
+nothing to her might be almost insuperable to other
+people, and that in houses where there are several
+members of a family to be considered, no individual
+can be quite as free to carry out his own plans as a
+person who is independent of family ties. But
+when one remembered how splendidly she always
+responded to any claim on her own kindness one
+forgave her for being a little exacting.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</a></span>
+Perhaps Miss Macnaughtan's greatest handicap
+in life was her immense capacity for suffering&mdash;suffering
+poignantly, unbearably, not only for her
+own sorrows but for the sorrows of others. Only
+those who appealed to her in trouble knew the
+depth of her sympathy, and how absolutely she
+shared the burden of the grief. But perhaps they
+did not always know how she agonised over their
+misfortunes, and at what price her sympathy was
+given.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">RELIGIOUS VIEWS</div>
+
+<p>My aunt was a passionately religious woman.
+Her faith was the inspiration of her whole life, and
+it is safe to say that from the smallest to the greatest
+things there was never a struggle between conscience
+and inclination in which conscience was not
+victorious. As she grew older, I fancy that she
+became a less orthodox member of the Church
+of England, to which she belonged, but her love
+for Christ and for His people never wavered.</p>
+
+<p>As each Sunday came round during her last illness,
+when she could not go to church, she used to say to
+a very dear sister, "Now, J., we must have our
+little service." Then the bedroom door was left
+ajar, and her sister would go down to the drawing-room
+and play the simple hymns they had sung
+together in childhood. And on the last Sunday,
+the day before her death, when the invalid lay in a
+stupor and seemed scarcely conscious, that same
+dear sister played the old hymns once more, and as
+the sound floated up to the room above those who
+watched there saw a gleam of pleasure on the
+dying woman's face.</p>
+
+<p>My aunt had no fear of death. There had been
+a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</a></span> time, some weeks before the end, when her feet
+had wandered very close to the waters which divide
+us from the unknown shore, and she told her sisters
+afterwards that she had almost seemed to see over
+to the "other side," and that so many of those she
+loved were waiting for her, and saying, "Come over
+to us, Sally. We are all here to welcome you."</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps just at the last, when her body had
+grown weak, the journey seemed rather far, and she
+clung to earth more closely, but such weakness was
+purely physical. The brave spirit was ready to go,
+and as the music of her favourite hymn pierced her
+consciousness when she lay dying, so surely the
+words summed up all that she felt or wished to say,
+and formed her last prayer in death, as they had
+been her constant prayer in life:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"In death's dark vale I fear no ill<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With Thee, dear Lord, beside me;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Thy rod and staff my comfort still,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Thy Cross before to guide me.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"And so through all the length of days<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Thy goodness faileth never;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Good Shepherd, may I sing Thy praise<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Within Thy house for ever."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<h2><a name="INDEX" id="INDEX"></a>INDEX
+<span class="totoc"><a href="#CONTENTS">ToC</a></span></h2>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</a></span></p>
+
+<ul>
+<li>Aberdare, <a href="#Page_164">164</a></li>
+<li>Aberystwyth, <a href="#Page_164">164</a></li>
+<li>Adinkerke, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>;
+<ul>
+<li>soup-kitchen, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>;</li>
+<li>bombardment, <a href="#Page_139">139</a></li>
+</ul></li>
+<li>Airships, German, over Antwerp, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>;
+<ul>
+<li>Dunkirk, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>;</li>
+<li>Furnes, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>;</li>
+<li>St. Malo-les-Bains, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>;</li>
+<li>destroyed, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_194">194</a></li>
+</ul></li>
+<li>Andrews, John, <a href="#Page_171">171</a></li>
+<li>Antwerp, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>
+<ul>
+<li>Hospital, <a href="#Page_2">2</a></li>
+<li>arrival of wounded, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>;</li>
+<li>siege, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>-<a href="#Page_21">21</a>;</li>
+<li>reinforcements, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>;</li>
+<li>shelled, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>-<a href="#Page_21">21</a>;</li>
+<li>retreat of the Marines, <a href="#Page_28">28</a></li>
+</ul></li>
+<li>Arabs, rapid system of communication, <a href="#Page_247">247</a></li>
+<li>Ararat, Mount, <a href="#Page_230">230</a></li>
+<li>Armenians, massacres of, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>;
+<ul>
+<li>refugees, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>;</li>
+<li>character, <a href="#Page_234">234</a></li>
+</ul></li>
+<li>Artvin, <a href="#Page_211">211</a></li>
+<li>Asquith, Raymond, <a href="#Page_183">183</a></li>
+<li>Australians, treatment of the Turks, <a href="#Page_177">177</a><br /><br /></li>
+
+<li>Bagdad, <a href="#Page_247">247</a></li>
+<li>Bagot, Lady, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>;
+<ul>
+<li>at St. Malo-les-Bains, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>;</li>
+<li>hospital, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>;</li>
+<li>arrival of wounded, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>;</li>
+<li>entertains them, <a href="#Page_147">147</a></li>
+</ul></li>
+<li>Bailey, Sister, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a></li>
+<li>Baku, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a></li>
+<li>Baratoff, General, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>, <a href="#Page_241">241</a></li>
+<li>Bark, M., Russian Finance Minister, <a href="#Page_195">195</a></li>
+<li>Barrow-in-Furness, lectures by Miss Macnaughtan, <a href="#Page_162">162</a></li>
+<li>Bartlett, Ashmead, war correspondent, at Furnes, <a href="#Page_35">35</a></li>
+<li>Batoum, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a></li>
+<li>"Beau Garde," farm, <a href="#Page_140">140</a></li>
+<li>Bedford, Adeline, Duchess of, <a href="#Page_59">59</a></li>
+<li>Belgians, King of the, <a href="#Page_141">141</a></li>
+<li>Belgians, Queen of the, visits the Hospital at Furnes, <a href="#Page_38">38</a></li>
+<li>Benjamin, Miss, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a></li>
+<li>Bernoff, General, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a></li>
+<li><i>Bessheim</i>, the, <a href="#Page_179">179</a></li>
+<li>Bevan, Mr., at Furnes, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>;
+<ul>
+<li>Calais, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>;</li>
+<li>Nieuport, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>;</li>
+<li>Christiania, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>;</li>
+<li>Stockholm, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>;</li>
+<li>Baku, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>, <a href="#Page_233">233</a></li>
+</ul></li>
+<li>Bible, the, a Universal Human Document, <a href="#Page_101">101</a></li>
+<li>Boulderoff, M., <a href="#Page_216">216</a></li>
+<li>Boulogne, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>;
+<ul>
+<li>wounded at, <a href="#Page_114">114</a></li>
+</ul></li>
+<li>Bray, Mrs., <a href="#Page_192">192</a></li>
+<li>British man-of-war, <a href="#Page_125">125</a></li>
+<li>Brockville, Mr., at Dixmude, <a href="#Page_35">35</a></li>
+<li>Brooke, Victor, <a href="#Page_178">178</a></li>
+<li>Buchanan, Sir George, Ambassador at Petrograd, <a href="#Page_184">184</a></li>
+<li>Buchanan, Lady Georgina, at Petrograd, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>;
+<ul>
+<li>soup-kitchen, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>;</li>
+<li>work-party, <a href="#Page_196">196</a></li>
+</ul></li>
+<li>Bute Docks, <a href="#Page_171">171</a><br /><br /></li>
+
+<li>Cabour hospital, <a href="#Page_151">151</a></li>
+<li>Calais, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></li>
+<li>Cardiff, lecture by Miss Macnaughtan, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>-<a href="#Page_171">171</a></li>
+<li>Cardiff Castle, <a href="#Page_163">163</a></li>
+<li>Carlile, Mr., <a href="#Page_120">120</a></li>
+<li>Caspian Sea, <a href="#Page_265">265</a></li>
+<li>Caucasia, <a href="#Page_210">210</a></li>
+<li>Cavell, Miss, execution, <a href="#Page_186">186</a></li>
+<li>Cazalet, Mr., <a href="#Page_207">207</a></li>
+<li>Chart Sutton, churchyard at, <a href="#Page_270">270</a></li>
+<li>Chenies, <a href="#Page_160">160</a></li>
+<li>Children wounded, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>, <a href="#Page_118">118</a></li>
+<li>Chimay, Countess de Caraman, dame d'honneur of the Queen of the Belgians, <a href="#Page_139">139</a></li>
+<li>Chisholm, Miss, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a></li>
+<li><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</a></span>Christiania, <a href="#Page_179">179</a></li>
+<li>Churchill, Winston, at Antwerp, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>;
+<ul>
+<li>Dunkirk, <a href="#Page_44">44</a></li>
+</ul></li>
+<li>Clarry, Mr. G., President of the Cardiff Chamber of Trade, <a href="#Page_170">170</a></li>
+<li>Clegg, Mr., <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a></li>
+<li>Clitheroe, Mrs., <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_93">93</a></li>
+<li>Close, Miss Etta, barge, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>;
+<ul>
+<li>work for the refugees, <a href="#Page_140">140</a></li>
+</ul></li>
+<li>Cocks, W., <a href="#Page_171">171</a></li>
+<li>Constant, Count Stanislas, <a href="#Page_213">213</a></li>
+<li>Cooper, Mr., <a href="#Page_115">115</a></li>
+<li>Courage, definition of, <a href="#Page_24">24</a></li>
+<li>Coventry, Mr., <a href="#Page_112">112</a></li>
+<li><a class="correction" title="original had &quot;Cowen&quot;">Cowan</a>, Mr., Consul at Hamadan, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>, <a href="#Page_246">246</a></li>
+<li>Coxide, bombardment of, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>;
+<ul>
+<li>refugees at, <a href="#Page_138">138</a></li>
+</ul></li>
+<li>Crawley, Eustace, <a href="#Page_178">178</a></li>
+<li>Cunard, Mr., <a href="#Page_198">198</a></li>
+<li>Cunliffe, Miss, <a href="#Page_2">2</a></li>
+<li>Curie, Mme., at Furnes, <a href="#Page_68">68</a></li>
+<li>Cyril, Grand Duchess, <a href="#Page_205">205</a><br /><br /></li>
+
+<li>Decies, Lady, <a href="#Page_55">55</a></li>
+<li>Decker, Mrs., <a href="#Page_26">26</a></li>
+<li>Denniss, Colonel, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>;
+<ul>
+<li>speech at the Bute Docks, <a href="#Page_171">171</a></li>
+</ul></li>
+<li>Derfelden, Mme., <a href="#Page_236">236</a></li>
+<li>Dick, Miss, <a href="#Page_2">2</a></li>
+<li>Dinant, atrocities of the Germans at, <a href="#Page_137">137</a></li>
+<li>Dixmude, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>;
+<ul>
+<li>bombardment, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_39">39</a></li>
+</ul></li>
+<li>Donnisthorpe, Miss, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_22">22</a></li>
+<li>Drogheda, Lady, <a href="#Page_97">97</a></li>
+<li>Dunkirk, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>;
+<ul>
+<li>arrival of wounded, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>;</li>
+<li>bombs on, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>;</li>
+<li>condition of the station, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>;</li>
+<li>shelled by the Germans, <a href="#Page_115">115</a><br /><br /></li>
+</ul></li>
+
+<li>Elliot, Lady Eileen, at Boulogne, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></li>
+<li>Elliott, Maxine, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a></li>
+<li>Enzeli, <a href="#Page_238">238</a></li>
+<li>Erivan, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>, <a href="#Page_227">227</a></li>
+<li>Etchmiadzin, <a href="#Page_229">229</a><br /><br /></li>
+
+<li>Ferdinand, King of Bulgaria, <a href="#Page_195">195</a></li>
+<li>ffolliott, Mrs., letters from Miss Macnaughtan, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>, <a href="#Page_270">270</a></li>
+<li>Fielding, Lady Dorothy, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a></li>
+<li>Findlay, Mr., <a href="#Page_82">82</a></li>
+<li>Fisher, S., <a href="#Page_171">171</a></li>
+<li>France, armament works, <a href="#Page_149">149</a></li>
+<li>French, Sir John, at Dunkirk, <a href="#Page_44">44</a></li>
+<li>Frere, Sir Bartle, at Furnes, <a href="#Page_68">68</a></li>
+<li>Furley, Sir John, <a href="#Page_112">112</a></li>
+<li>Furnes hospital, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>;
+<ul>
+<li>arrival of wounded, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>;</li>
+<li>evacuated, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>;</li>
+<li>hopeless cases, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>;</li>
+<li>soup-kitchen, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>;</li>
+<li>shelled by the Germans, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>;</li>
+<li>bombs on, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a></li>
+</ul></li>
+<li>Fyfe, Miss, <a href="#Page_43">43</a><br /><br /></li>
+
+<li>Galicia, fighting in, <a href="#Page_223">223</a></li>
+<li>Galitzin, Prince, <a href="#Page_208">208</a></li>
+<li>Gas, asphyxiating, cases of, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a></li>
+<li>Georgia, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>;
+<ul>
+<li>custom at, <a href="#Page_213">213</a></li>
+</ul></li>
+<li>German army, siege of Antwerp, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>-<a href="#Page_21">21</a>;
+<ul>
+<li>driven back, <a href="#Page_18" class="correction" title="original reference to page 10">18</a>;</li>
+<li>two regiments surrounded, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>;</li>
+<li>atrocities, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>;</li>
+<li>throw vitriol, <a href="#Page_144">144</a></li>
+</ul></li>
+<li>Germany, preparations for war, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>;
+<ul>
+<li>treatment of prisoners, <a href="#Page_132">132</a></li>
+</ul></li>
+<li>Ghent, <a href="#Page_12">12</a></li>
+<li>Gibbs, Mr., war correspondent, at Furnes, <a href="#Page_35">35</a></li>
+<li>Gienst, Mme. van der, <a href="#Page_143">143</a></li>
+<li>Gilbert, <a href="#Page_34">34</a></li>
+<li>Glade, Mr., <a href="#Page_2">2</a></li>
+<li>Glasgow, munition works, output, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>;
+<ul>
+<li>lectures by Miss Macnaughtan, <a href="#Page_163">163</a></li>
+</ul></li>
+<li>Gleeson, Mr., <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a></li>
+<li>Glover, Bandmaster, K. S., <a href="#Page_170">170</a></li>
+<li>Godfrey, Miss, <a href="#Page_2">2</a></li>
+<li>Goodwin, Mr. and Mrs., <a href="#Page_239">239</a></li>
+<li>Gordon, Dr., American Missionary, <a href="#Page_208">208</a></li>
+<li>Gorlebeff, head of the Russian Red Cross, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a></li>
+<li>Graham, Stephen, book on Russia, <a href="#Page_208">208</a></li>
+<li>Groholski, Count, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a></li>
+<li>Guest, Mrs., at Adinkerke, <a href="#Page_119">119</a><br /><br /></li>
+
+<li>Hamadan, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>;
+<ul>
+<li>climate, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>;</li>
+<li>tombs, <a href="#Page_252">252</a></li>
+</ul></li>
+<li>Hambro, Mr. Eric, <a href="#Page_182">182</a></li>
+<li>Hanson, Dr., <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_23">23</a></li>
+<li>Hanson, Mr., Vice-Consul at Constantinople, at Dunkirk, <a href="#Page_151">151</a></li>
+<li>Haparanda, <a href="#Page_182">182</a></li>
+<li>Harrison, Mr., <a href="#Page_164">164</a></li>
+<li><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</a></span>Haye, M. de la, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a></li>
+<li>Helsingfors, <a href="#Page_266">266</a></li>
+<li><i>Hermes</i>, the, torpedoed, <a href="#Page_43">43</a></li>
+<li>Herslet, Sir Cecil, Surgeon-General, at Antwerp, <a href="#Page_9">9</a></li>
+<li>Hills, Mr., American missionary, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a></li>
+<li>Holland, Mr., <a href="#Page_88">88</a></li>
+<li>Hoogstadt, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>;
+<ul>
+<li>wounded at, <a href="#Page_121">121</a></li>
+</ul></li>
+<li>Hope, A., <a href="#Page_171">171</a></li>
+<li>Howard, Lady Isobel, <a href="#Page_181">181</a></li>
+<li>Howse, Mr., <a href="#Page_164">164</a><br /><br /></li>
+
+<li>Ignatieff, M., <a href="#Page_237">237</a></li>
+<li><i>Invicta</i>, the, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_52">52</a><br /><br /></li>
+
+<li>Jecquier, M., <a href="#Page_195">195</a></li>
+<li>Joffre, Marshal, at Dunkirk, <a href="#Page_44">44</a></li>
+<li>Joos, Dr., <a href="#Page_77">77</a>;
+<ul>
+<li>villa at Furnes, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a></li>
+</ul></li>
+<li>Joos, Mme., <a href="#Page_77">77</a><br /><br /></li>
+
+<li>Kajura, <a href="#Page_236">236</a></li>
+<li>Kasvin, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a></li>
+<li>Keays-Young, Mrs., letters from Miss Macnaughtan, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>, <a href="#Page_262">262</a></li>
+<li>Keays-Young, Miss Julia, letters from Miss Macnaughtan, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>, <a href="#Page_262">262</a></li>
+<li>King, Mary, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>;
+<ul>
+<li>letters from Miss Macnaughtan, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_109">109</a></li>
+</ul></li>
+<li>Kirsanoff, Mme., <a href="#Page_241">241</a></li>
+<li>Kitchener, Lord, at Dunkirk, <a href="#Page_44">44</a></li>
+<li>Kluck, General von, at Mons, <a href="#Page_133">133</a></li>
+<li>Knocker, Mrs., <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a><br /><br /></li>
+
+<li>La Bass&eacute;e, British casualties at, <a href="#Page_107">107</a></li>
+<li>Lampernesse, church shelled, <a href="#Page_67">67</a></li>
+<li>La Panne, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_97">97</a></li>
+<li>Lazarienne, Mr., <a href="#Page_229">229</a></li>
+<li>Leigh, Lord, <a href="#Page_94">94</a></li>
+<li>Lennel, <a href="#Page_163">163</a></li>
+<li><a class="correction" title="original had &quot;Lipnakoff&quot;">Lepnakoff</a>, Mlle., <a href="#Page_233">233</a></li>
+<li>Lightfoot, Mr., at Hamadan, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>, <a href="#Page_252">252</a></li>
+<li>Lindsay, Harry, <a href="#Page_183">183</a></li>
+<li>Lloyd, Sir F., <a href="#Page_162">162</a></li>
+<li>Lloyd, George, <a href="#Page_195">195</a></li>
+<li>Logan, Miss, <a href="#Page_87">87</a></li>
+<li>Logette, Mrs., <a href="#Page_72">72</a></li>
+<li>Lombaertzyde, farm at, <a href="#Page_138">138</a></li>
+<li>Lombard, Mr., <a href="#Page_190">190</a></li>
+<li><i>Lusitania</i> torpedoed, <a href="#Page_123">123</a><br /><br /></li>
+
+<li>McDonald, gunner, wounded, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a></li>
+<li><a class="correction" title="original had &quot;Macdonald&quot;">MacDonald</a>, Mr. Ramsay, <a href="#Page_73">73</a></li>
+<li>MacDonell, Consul, at Baku, <a href="#Page_237">237</a></li>
+<li>McDowal, Mr., <a href="#Page_241">241</a></li>
+<li>McLaren, Mr. and Mrs., <a href="#Page_238">238</a></li>
+<li>McLean, Mr., <a href="#Page_241">241</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a></li>
+<li>MacMurray, Mr., <a href="#Page_241">241</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a></li>
+<li>Macnaughtan, Lieut. Colin, <a href="#Page_144">144</a></li>
+<li>Macnaughtan, Sarah, at Antwerp <a href="#Page_1">1</a>;
+<ul>
+<li>work in the Hospital, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>;</li>
+<li>incentive to keep up, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>;</li>
+<li>leaves Antwerp, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>;</li>
+<li>at Ostend, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>;</li>
+<li>joins Dr. Munro's convoy, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>;</li>
+<li>at Dunkirk, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>;</li>
+<li>St. Malo-les-Bains, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>;</li>
+<li>Furnes, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>-<a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>;</li>
+<li>flight to Poperinghe, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>;</li>
+<li>description of the ruins of Nieuport, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>-<a href="#Page_155">155</a>;</li>
+<li>request for travelling-kitchens, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>;</li>
+<li>visits her nephew at Boulogne, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>-<a href="#Page_57">57</a>;</li>
+<li>starts a soup-kitchen, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>-<a href="#Page_61">61</a>;</li>
+<li>feeding the wounded, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>;</li>
+<li>"charette," <a href="#Page_69">69</a>;</li>
+<li>at the Villa Joos, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>;</li>
+<li>attends a Church service, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>;</li>
+<li>return to England, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>;</li>
+<li>at Rayleigh House, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>;</li>
+<li>soup-kitchen at Adinkerke, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>;</li>
+<li>illness, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>-<a href="#Page_264">264</a>, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>-<a href="#Page_270">270</a>;</li>
+<li>at La Panne, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>;</li>
+<li>publication of war book, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>;</li>
+<li>difficulties in getting her passport, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>;</li>
+<li>at Boulogne, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>;</li>
+<li>presented with a car, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>;</li>
+<li>at Poperinghe, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>;</li>
+<li>method of relieving cases of poison gas, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>;</li>
+<li>lectures on the war, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>-<a href="#Page_174">174</a>, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>;</li>
+<li>at Lennel, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>;</li>
+<li>Cardiff Castle, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>;</li>
+<li>Chevalier de l'Ordre de L&eacute;opold conferred, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>;</li>
+<li>journey to Russia, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>-<a href="#Page_183">183</a>;</li>
+<li>at Christiania, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>;</li>
+<li>Stockholm, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>;</li>
+<li>Petrograd, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>-<a href="#Page_204">204</a>, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>;</li>
+<li>waiting for work, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>-<a href="#Page_198">198</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>;</li>
+<li>studies Russian, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>;</li>
+<li>works in a hospital, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>;</li>
+<li>at Moscow, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>;</li>
+<li>Tiflis, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>-<a href="#Page_210">210</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>;</li>
+<li>delicate appearance, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>;</li>
+<li>at Caucasia, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>;</li>
+<li>entertained by the Grand Duke Nicholas, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>;</li>
+<li>on the administration of war charities, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>-<a href="#Page_222">222</a>;</li>
+<li>lessons in French, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>;</li>
+<li><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</a></span>buys a motor-car, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>;</li>
+<li>journey to Erivan, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>-<a href="#Page_227">227</a>;</li>
+<li>car breaks down, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>;</li>
+<li>festered fingers, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>;</li>
+<li>at Baku, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>;</li>
+<li>Resht, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>;</li>
+<li>Kasvin, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>;</li>
+<li>Hamadan, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>-<a href="#Page_257">257</a>;</li>
+<li>a day on the Persian front, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>-<a href="#Page_249">249</a>;</li>
+<li>unfinished article on Persia, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>-<a href="#Page_252">252</a>;</li>
+<li><i>Return of the Pilgrim</i>, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>-<a href="#Page_256">256</a>;</li>
+<li>Tehran, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>-<a href="#Page_264">264</a>;</li>
+<li>journey home, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>-<a href="#Page_266">266</a>;</li>
+<li>at Helsingfors, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>;</li>
+<li>appearance, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>;</li>
+<li>appointed Lady of Grace of the Order of St. John of Jerusalem, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>;</li>
+<li>death, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>;</li>
+<li>funeral, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>;</li>
+<li>review of her war work, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>-<a href="#Page_276">276</a>;</li>
+<li>ideal of personal service, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>;</li>
+<li>sketch of her character, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>-<a href="#Page_279">279</a>;</li>
+<li>religious views, <a href="#Page_279">279</a></li>
+</ul></li>
+<li>Malcolm, Colonel Ian, at Boulogne, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>;
+<ul>
+<li>Petrograd, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>;</li>
+<li>at Moscow, <a href="#Page_204">204</a></li>
+</ul></li>
+<li>Malokand settlement, <a href="#Page_226">226</a></li>
+<li>Manners, Lady Diana, <a href="#Page_183">183</a></li>
+<li>Marines, British, at Antwerp, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>;
+<ul>
+<li>retreat from, <a href="#Page_28">28</a></li>
+</ul></li>
+<li>Marines, French, <a href="#Page_105" class="correction" title="original reference to page 165">105</a></li>
+<li>Maxwell, Lady Heron, <a href="#Page_185">185</a></li>
+<li>Millis, General, <a href="#Page_87">87</a></li>
+<li>Mons, retreat from, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>;
+<ul>
+<li>vision at, <a href="#Page_133">133</a></li>
+</ul></li>
+<li>Montgomerie, Miss, American missionary at Hamadan, <a href="#Page_252">252</a></li>
+<li>Moorhouse, Rhodes, heroism, <a href="#Page_129">129</a></li>
+<li>Morgan, Mr., <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></li>
+<li>Morris, Dr., <a href="#Page_2">2</a></li>
+<li>Moscow, <a href="#Page_204">204</a></li>
+<li>Motono, M., at Petrograd, <a href="#Page_195">195</a></li>
+<li>Munitions, shortage of, <a href="#Page_148">148</a></li>
+<li>Munro, Dr. Hector, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>;
+<ul>
+<li>convoy, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>;</li>
+<li>at Dixmude, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>;</li>
+<li>knocked over by a shell, <a href="#Page_49">49</a></li>
+</ul></li>
+<li>Murat, Prince Napoleon, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>, <a href="#Page_233">233</a></li>
+<li>Murray, Mr. John, <a href="#Page_xii">xii</a></li>
+<li>Musaloff, Princess, <a href="#Page_231">231</a><br /><br /></li>
+
+<li>Needle, Mr., <a href="#Page_164">164</a></li>
+<li>Neligan, Dr., care of Miss Macnaughtan, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>, <a href="#Page_264">264</a></li>
+<li>Neuve Chapelle, ruins of, <a href="#Page_123">123</a></li>
+<li>Neva, the, <a href="#Page_200">200</a></li>
+<li>Nevinson, Mr., at Furnes, <a href="#Page_38">38</a></li>
+<li>Nicholas, Grand Duke, <a href="#Page_215">215</a></li>
+<li>Nieuport, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>;
+<ul>
+<li>ruins of, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>-<a href="#Page_155">155</a></li>
+</ul></li>
+<li>Nightingale, song of the, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>-<a href="#Page_157">157</a></li>
+<li>Nightingale, Florence, <a href="#Page_184">184</a></li>
+<li>Northcote, Elsie, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>;
+<ul>
+<li>death, <a href="#Page_183">183</a><br /><br /></li>
+</ul></li>
+
+<li>Ochterlony, gunner, wounded, <a href="#Page_118">118</a></li>
+<li>O'Gormon, Mrs., <a href="#Page_16">16</a></li>
+<li>Oostkerke, Belgian "observateur" killed at, <a href="#Page_153">153</a></li>
+<li>Orloff, Prince, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>;
+<ul>
+<li>appearance, <a href="#Page_219">219</a></li>
+</ul></li>
+<li>Ostend, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a></li>
+<li>Oulieheff, Count, <a href="#Page_210">210</a><br /><br /></li>
+
+<li>Page, Dr. de, <a href="#Page_118">118</a></li>
+<li>Parsons, <a class="correction" title="text has &quot;Johnnie&quot;">Johnny</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a></li>
+<li>Passport, difficulties, <a href="#Page_112">112</a></li>
+<li>Percival, Mrs. Charles, letters from Miss Macnaughtan, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>-<a href="#Page_245">245</a></li>
+<li>Perrin, Dr., <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a></li>
+<li>Perry, Miss, <a href="#Page_2">2</a></li>
+<li>Persia, climate, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>;
+<ul>
+<li>railway, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>;</li>
+<li>system of administration, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>;</li>
+<li>unfinished article on, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>-<a href="#Page_252">252</a></li>
+</ul></li>
+<li>Pervyse, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>;
+<ul>
+<li>bombardment, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>;</li>
+<li>ruins of, <a href="#Page_123">123</a></li>
+</ul></li>
+<li>Peter, Grand Duke, <a href="#Page_215">215</a></li>
+<li>Petrograd, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>;
+<ul>
+<li>climate, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>;</li>
+<li>number of amputation cases, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>;</li>
+<li>return of wounded prisoners, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>-<a href="#Page_203">203</a>;</li>
+<li>number of hospitals, <a href="#Page_220">220</a></li>
+</ul></li>
+<li>Philpotts, Mr., <a href="#Page_186">186</a></li>
+<li><i>Pilgrim, Return of the</i>, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>-<a href="#Page_256">256</a></li>
+<li>"Pinching," habit of, <a href="#Page_98">98</a></li>
+<li>Poincar&eacute;, M., at Dunkirk, <a href="#Page_44">44</a></li>
+<li>Polish refugees, at Petrograd, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>, <a href="#Page_193">193</a></li>
+<li>Pont, Major du, <a href="#Page_138">138</a></li>
+<li>Poperinghe, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>-<a href="#Page_137">137</a>;
+<ul>
+<li>shelled, <a href="#Page_116">116</a></li>
+</ul></li>
+<li>Powell, Miss Hilda, <a href="#Page_xii">xii</a></li>
+<li>Prisoners, German, treatment in England, <a href="#Page_132">132</a><br /><br /></li>
+
+<li>Queen's Hall, London, lecture by Miss Macnaughtan, <a href="#Page_162">162</a><br /><br /></li>
+
+<li>Radstock, Lord, anecdote of, <a href="#Page_197">197</a></li>
+<li>Ramsay, Sir William, on the result of the war, <a href="#Page_149">149</a></li>
+<li><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</a></span>Ramsey, Dr., <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_22">22</a></li>
+<li>Randell, Miss, <a href="#Page_2">2</a></li>
+<li>Rasputin, malign influence, <a href="#Page_209">209</a></li>
+<li>Rayleigh House, <a href="#Page_85">85</a></li>
+<li>Reading, Mr. "Dick," <a href="#Page_42">42</a></li>
+<li><a class="correction" title="text on page 164 has &quot;Reece&quot;">Rees</a>, T. Vivian, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a></li>
+<li>Resht, <a href="#Page_238">238</a></li>
+<li>Rhondda Valley, <a href="#Page_164">164</a></li>
+<li>Richards, Alderman J. T., speech at Cardiff, <a href="#Page_167">167</a></li>
+<li>Roberts, Lord, death, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_111">111</a></li>
+<li>Rocky Mountains, <a href="#Page_182">182</a></li>
+<li>Rotsartz, M., <a href="#Page_125">125</a>;
+<ul>
+<li>portrait of Miss Macnaughtan, <a href="#Page_104">104</a></li>
+</ul></li>
+<li>Rushton Hall, Kettering, <a href="#Page_160">160</a></li>
+<li>Russian army, return of wounded prisoners to Petrograd, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>-<a href="#Page_203">203</a><br /><br /></li>
+
+<li>St. Clair, Miss, <a href="#Page_12">12</a></li>
+<li>St. Gilles, convent at, <a href="#Page_22">22</a></li>
+<li>St. Idesbald, <a href="#Page_150">150</a></li>
+<li>St. Malo-les-Bains, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>;
+<ul>
+<li>wounded at, <a href="#Page_50">50</a></li>
+</ul></li>
+<li>Samson, Commander, <a href="#Page_88">88</a></li>
+<li>Sarrel, Mr., <a href="#Page_151">151</a></li>
+<li>Sawyer, Mr., <a href="#Page_112">112</a></li>
+<li>Sazonoff, Mme., <a href="#Page_200">200</a></li>
+<li>Scherbatoff, Princess H&eacute;l&egrave;ne, <a href="#Page_197">197</a></li>
+<li>Scott, Lord Francis, at Boulogne, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></li>
+<li>Scott, Mr., <a href="#Page_238">238</a></li>
+<li>Scott, Miss, <a href="#Page_82">82</a></li>
+<li>Secher, Mr., wounded, <a href="#Page_49">49</a></li>
+<li>Seymour, Mr., kindness to Miss Macnaughtan, <a href="#Page_266">266</a></li>
+<li>Shaw, Bernard, <a href="#Page_189">189</a></li>
+<li>Sheffield, lecture by Miss Macnaughtan, <a href="#Page_162">162</a></li>
+<li>Shoppe, Lieutenant, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>;
+<ul>
+<li>at Nieuport, <a href="#Page_153">153</a></li>
+</ul></li>
+<li>"Should the Germans come," lecture on, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>-<a href="#Page_173">173</a></li>
+<li>Sim, <a href="#Page_178">178</a></li>
+<li>Sindici, <a class="correction" title="missing period in original">Mme.</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></li>
+<li>Slippers for the wounded, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a></li>
+<li>Smith, Captain, <a href="#Page_198">198</a></li>
+<li>Smith, Mr. Lancelot, <a href="#Page_182">182</a></li>
+<li>Smith, Mr. Robinson, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a></li>
+<li>Smitkin, Dr., <a href="#Page_259">259</a></li>
+<li>Sommerville, Mr. R., <a href="#Page_xii">xii</a></li>
+<li>Soup-kitchen at Adinkerke, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>;
+<ul>
+<li>Furnes, <a href="#Page_60">60</a></li>
+</ul></li>
+<li>Spies, German, shot, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a></li>
+<li>Stanley, Miss, <a href="#Page_2">2</a></li>
+<li>Stanmore, Lord, <a href="#Page_183">183</a></li>
+<li>Stear, Miss, <a href="#Page_4">4</a></li>
+<li>Steen, Mme. van den, <a href="#Page_137">137</a></li>
+<li>Steenkerke, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a></li>
+<li>Stenning, Mr., <a href="#Page_xii">xii</a></li>
+<li>Stobart, Mrs. St. Clair, head of the hospital unit at Antwerp, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>;
+<ul>
+<li>office, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>;</li>
+<li>issues orders, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>;</li>
+<li>leaves Antwerp, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>;</li>
+<li>return to England, <a href="#Page_22">22</a></li>
+</ul></li>
+<li>Stockholm, <a href="#Page_180">180</a></li>
+<li>Stoney, Dr. F., <a href="#Page_2">2</a></li>
+<li>"Stories and Pictures of the War," lecture on, <a href="#Page_167">167</a></li>
+<li>Streatfield, Mr., <a href="#Page_74">74</a></li>
+<li>Stretchers, size of, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a></li>
+<li>Strickland, Mr., <a href="#Page_87">87</a></li>
+<li>Strutt, Emily, <a href="#Page_85">85</a></li>
+<li>Strutt, Neville, <a href="#Page_178">178</a></li>
+<li>Sutherland, Duchess of, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>;
+<ul>
+<li>hospital at St. Malo-les-Bains, <a href="#Page_44">44</a></li>
+</ul></li>
+<li>Sweden, Crown Prince of, <a href="#Page_181">181</a></li>
+<li>Sweden, Crown Princess of, appearance, <a href="#Page_181">181</a><br /><br /></li>
+
+<li>Taff river, <a href="#Page_164">164</a></li>
+<li>Takmakoff, Mme., <a href="#Page_200">200</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a></li>
+<li>Tapp, Mr., <a href="#Page_64">64</a></li>
+<li>Teck, Prince Alexander of, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>;
+<ul>
+<li>at Furnes, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a></li>
+</ul></li>
+<li>Tehran, <a href="#Page_260">260</a></li>
+<li>Thompson, Mr., <a href="#Page_138">138</a></li>
+<li>Tiflis, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_230">230</a></li>
+<li>Tonepentre, <a href="#Page_164">164</a></li>
+<li>Toney Pandy, <a href="#Page_164">164</a></li>
+<li>Travelling-kitchens, <a href="#Page_51">51</a></li>
+<li>Tree, Viola, <a href="#Page_183">183</a></li>
+<li>Tschelikoff, Prince, <a href="#Page_233" class="correction" title="superfluous comma in original">233</a></li>
+<li>Turks, cruelties, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a></li>
+<li>Turner, Dr. Rose, <a href="#Page_2">2</a></li>
+<li>Tyrell, Major, <a href="#Page_151">151</a></li>
+<li><a class="correction" title="text has &quot;Tysczkievcz&quot;; most likely meant to be the Polish name &quot;Tyszkiewicz&quot;">Tysczkievez</a>, Count, <a href="#Page_222">222</a><br /><br /></li>
+
+<li>Urumiyah, evacuated, <a href="#Page_223">223</a><br /><br /></li>
+
+<li>Vaughan, Miss, at Furnes, <a href="#Page_68">68</a></li>
+<li>Vickers-Maxim works, Erith, lecture by Miss Macnaughtan, <a href="#Page_160">160</a></li>
+<li>Victoria, Grand Duchess, <a href="#Page_185">185</a></li>
+<li>Villiers, Sir Francis, British Minister at Antwerp, <a href="#Page_9">9</a></li>
+<li>Vladikavkas, <a href="#Page_207">207</a><br /><br /></li>
+
+<li>Wales, <a href="#Page_163">163</a></li>
+<li><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</a></span>Walker, Colonel, <a href="#Page_112">112</a></li>
+<li>Walter, Mr. Hubert, <a href="#Page_143">143</a></li>
+<li>Walton, Colonel, <a href="#Page_176">176</a></li>
+<li><a class="correction" title="missing comma in original">War,</a> charities, administration, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>-<a href="#Page_222">222</a>;
+<ul>
+<li>cost of the, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>;</li>
+<li>cruelties, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>-<a href="#Page_178">178</a>;</li>
+<li>result, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>;</li>
+<li>souvenirs, <a href="#Page_143">143</a></li>
+</ul></li>
+<li>Wardepett, Bishop, <a href="#Page_229">229</a></li>
+<li>Ware, Mr. F., <a href="#Page_85">85</a></li>
+<li>Waring, Lady Cl&eacute;mentine, letters from Miss Macnaughtan, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>-<a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>;
+<ul>
+<li>at Lennel, <a href="#Page_163">163</a></li>
+</ul></li>
+<li>Warship, British, shelled by the Germans, <a href="#Page_105">105</a></li>
+<li>Watts, Dr., <a href="#Page_2">2</a></li>
+<li>Welwyn, <a href="#Page_160">160</a></li>
+<li><a class="correction" title="original had &quot;Westminister&quot;">Westminster</a>, Duke of, at Dixmude, <a href="#Page_127">127</a></li>
+<li>Whiting, Captain, <a href="#Page_73">73</a></li>
+<li>William II., Emperor of Germany, supposed conversion to <a class="correction" title="original had &quot;Mahommedanism&quot;">Mahomedanism</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a></li>
+<li>William, Capt. Rhys, <a href="#Page_239">239</a></li>
+<li>Williams, Mr. Hume, <a href="#Page_223">223</a></li>
+<li>Wilson, Dr., <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_225">225</a></li>
+<li>Wilson, <a href="#Page_178">178</a></li>
+<li>Wood, Mr., <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_121">121</a></li>
+<li>Wynne, Mrs., <a href="#Page_132">132</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>;
+<ul>
+<li>at Christiania, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>;</li>
+<li>Moscow, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>;</li>
+<li>Baku, <a href="#Page_231">231</a><br /><br /></li>
+</ul></li>
+
+<li>Young, Capt. Alan, at Boulogne, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>;
+<ul>
+<li>experiences in the war, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>;</li>
+<li>wounded, <a href="#Page_57">57</a></li>
+</ul></li>
+<li>Young, Mrs. Charles, letter from Miss Macnaughtan, <a href="#Page_214">214</a></li>
+<li>Younghusband, Sir Frank, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>;
+<ul>
+<li>speech at Cardiff, <a href="#Page_169">169</a></li>
+</ul></li>
+<li>Ypres, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>;
+<ul>
+<li>battle at, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a></li>
+</ul></li>
+<li>Yser, the, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>BILLING AND SONS, LTD., PRINTERS, GUILDFORD, ENGLAND</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, My War Experiences in Two Continents, by
+Sarah Macnaughtan, Edited by Betty Keays-Young
+
+
+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: My War Experiences in Two Continents
+
+
+Author: Sarah Macnaughtan
+
+Editor: Betty Keays-Young
+
+Release Date: May 10, 2006 [eBook #18364]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MY WAR EXPERIENCES IN TWO
+CONTINENTS***
+
+
+E-text prepared by David Clarke, gvb, and the Project Gutenberg Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net/) from page images
+generously made available by Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries
+(http://www.archive.org/details/toronto)
+
+
+
+Note: Images of the original pages are available through
+ Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries. See
+ http://www.archive.org/details/wartwocontinents00macnuoft
+
+
+Transcriber's note:
+
+ The unique headers on the odd numbered pages in the original
+ book have been reproduced with [Page Heading: ] tags. They
+ have been inserted in front of the paragraph or letter to
+ which the heading refers.
+
+ There are several inconsistencies in spelling and punctuation
+ in the original. A few corrections have been made for obvious
+ typographical errors; these, as well as some doubtful spellings
+ of names, have been marked individually in the text. All
+ changes made by the transcriber are enumerated in braces, for
+ example {1}; details of corrections and comments are listed at
+ the end of the text.
+
+ Text in italics in the original is shown between _underlines_.
+
+
+
+
+
+MY WAR EXPERIENCES IN TWO CONTINENTS
+
+by
+
+S. MACNAUGHTAN
+
+Edited by Her Niece, Mrs. Lionel Salmon (Betty Keays-Young)
+
+With a Portrait
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: Camera Portrait by E. O. Hoppe.]
+
+
+
+
+London
+John Murray, Albemarle Street, W.
+1919
+
+
+
+
+THIS BOOK IS DEDICATED,
+IN ACCORDANCE WITH A WISH EXPRESSED BY
+MISS MACNAUGHTAN BEFORE HER DEATH,
+
+TO
+
+THOSE WHO ARE FIGHTING AND
+THOSE WHO HAVE FALLEN,
+
+WITH ADMIRATION AND RESPECT,
+AND TO
+
+HER NEPHEWS,
+
+CAPTAIN LIONEL SALMON, 1st Bn. the Welch Regt.
+CAPTAIN HELIER PERCIVAL, M.C., 9th Bn. the Welch Regt.
+CAPTAIN ALAN YOUNG, 2nd Bn. the Welch Regt.
+CAPTAIN COLIN MACNAUGHTAN, 2nd Dragoon Guards.
+LIEUTENANT RICHARD YOUNG, 9th Bn. the Welch Regt.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ PAGE
+ PREFACE ix
+
+
+ PART I
+ BELGIUM
+
+ CHAPTER I
+ ANTWERP 1
+
+ CHAPTER II
+ WITH DR. HECTOR MUNRO'S FLYING AMBULANCE CORPS 24
+
+ CHAPTER III
+ AT FURNES RAILWAY-STATION 60
+
+ CHAPTER IV
+ WORKING UNDER DIFFICULTIES 85
+
+ CHAPTER V
+ THE SPRING OFFENSIVE 111
+
+ CHAPTER VI
+ LAST DAYS IN FLANDERS 135
+
+
+ PART II
+ AT HOME
+
+ HOW THE MESSAGE WAS DELIVERED 159
+
+
+ PART III
+ RUSSIA AND THE PERSIAN FRONT
+
+ CHAPTER I
+ PETROGRAD 179
+
+ CHAPTER II
+ WAITING FOR WORK 204
+
+ CHAPTER III
+ SOME IMPRESSIONS OF TIFLIS AND ARMENIA 219
+
+ CHAPTER IV
+ ON THE PERSIAN FRONT 237
+
+ CHAPTER V
+ THE LAST JOURNEY 258
+
+
+ CONCLUSION 272
+
+ INDEX 281
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+
+In presenting these extracts from the diaries of my aunt, the late Miss
+Macnaughtan, I feel it necessary to explain how they come to be
+published, and the circumstances under which I have undertaken to edit
+them.
+
+After Miss Macnaughtan's death, her executors found among her papers a
+great number of diaries. There were twenty-five closely written volumes,
+which extended over a period of as many years, and formed an almost
+complete record of every incident of her life during that time.
+
+It is amazing that the journal was kept so regularly, as Miss
+Macnaughtan suffered from writer's cramp, and the entries could only
+have been written with great difficulty. Frequently a passage is begun
+in the writing of her right, and finished in that of her left hand, and
+I have seen her obliged to grasp her pencil in her clenched fist before
+she was able to indite a line. In only one volume, however, do we find
+that she availed herself of the services of her secretary to dictate the
+entries and have them typed.
+
+The executors found it extremely difficult to know how to deal with such
+a vast mass of material. Miss Macnaughtan was a very reserved woman.{1}
+She lived much alone, and the diary was her only confidante. In one of
+her books she says that expression is the most insistent of human needs,
+and that the inarticulate man or woman who finds no outlet in speech or
+in the affections, will often keep a little locked volume in which self
+can be safely revealed. Her diary occupied just such a place in her own
+inner life, and for that reason one hesitates to submit its pages even
+to the most loving and sympathetic scrutiny.
+
+But Miss Macnaughtan's diary fulfilled a double purpose. She used it
+largely as material for her books. Ideas for stories, fragments of plays
+and novels, are sketched in on spare sheets, and the pages are full of
+the original theories and ideas of a woman who never allowed anyone else
+to do her thinking for her. A striking sermon or book may be criticised
+or discussed, the pros and cons of some measure of social reform weighed
+in the balance; and the actual daily chronicle of her busy life, of her
+travels, her various experiences and adventures, makes a most
+interesting and fascinating tale.
+
+So much of the material was obviously intended to form the basis for an
+autobiography that the executors came to the conclusion that it would be
+a thousand pities to withhold it from the public, and at some future
+date it is very much hoped to produce a complete life of Miss
+Macnaughtan as narrated in her diaries. Meanwhile, however, the
+publisher considers that Miss Macnaughtan's war experiences are of
+immediate interest to her many friends and admirers, and I have been
+asked to edit those volumes which refer to her work in Belgium, at
+home, in Russia, and on the Persian front.
+
+Except for an occasional word where the meaning was obscure, I have
+added nothing to the diaries. I have, of course, omitted such passages
+as appeared to be private or of family interest only; but otherwise I
+have contented myself with a slight rearrangement of some of the
+paragraphs, and I have inserted a few letters and extracts from letters,
+which give a more interesting or detailed account of some incident than
+is found in the corresponding entry in the diary. With these exceptions
+the book is published as Miss Macnaughtan wrote it. I feel sure that her
+own story of her experiences would lose much of its charm if I
+interfered with it, and for this reason I have preserved the actual
+diary form in which it was written.
+
+To many readers of Miss Macnaughtan's books her diaries of the war may
+come as a slight surprise. There is a note of depression and sadness,
+and perhaps even of criticism, running through them, which is lacking in
+all her earlier writings. I would remind people that this book is the
+work of a dying woman; during the whole of the period covered by it, the
+author was seriously ill, and the horror and misery of the war, and the
+burden of a great deal of personal sorrow, have left their mark on her
+account of her experiences.
+
+I should like to thank those relations and friends of Miss Macnaughtan
+who have allowed me to read and publish the letters incorporated in this
+book, and I gratefully acknowledge the help and advice I have received
+in my task from my mother, from my husband, and from Miss Hilda Powell,
+Mr. Stenning, and Mr. R. Sommerville. I desire also to express my
+gratitude to Mr. John Murray for many valuable hints and suggestions
+about the book, and for the trouble he has so kindly taken to help me to
+prepare it for the press.
+
+BETTY SALMON.
+
+ZILLEBEKE, WALTHAM ST. LAWRENCE,
+TWYFORD, BERKSHIRE,
+_October, 1918._
+
+
+
+
+MY WAR EXPERIENCES IN TWO CONTINENTS
+
+
+PART I
+
+BELGIUM
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+ANTWERP
+
+
+On September 20th, 1914, I left London for Antwerp. At the station I
+found I had forgotten my passport and Mary had to tear back for it.
+Great perturbation, but kept this dark from the rest of the staff, for
+they are all rather serious and I am head of the orderlies. We got under
+way at 4 a.m. next morning. All instantly began to be sick. I think I
+was the worst and alarmed everybody within hearing distance. One more
+voyage I hope--home--then dry land for me.
+
+We arrived at Antwerp on the 22nd, twenty-four hours late. The British
+Consul sent carriages, etc., to meet us. Drove to the large Philharmonic
+Hall, which has been given us as a hospital. Immediately after breakfast
+we began to unpack beds, etc., and our enormous store of medical things;
+all feeling remarkably empty and queer, but put on heroic smiles and
+worked like mad. Some of the staff is housed in a convent and the rest
+in rooms over the Philharmonic Hall.
+
+_23 September._--Began to get things into order and to allot each person
+her task. Our unit consists of Mrs. St. Clair Stobart, its head; Doctors
+Rose Turner, F. Stoney, Watts, Morris, Hanson and Ramsey (all women);
+orderlies--me, Miss Randell (interpreter), Miss Perry, Dick, Stanley,
+Benjamin, Godfrey,{2} Donnisthorpe, Cunliffe, and Mr. Glade. Everyone
+very zealous and inclined to do anybody's work except their own. Keen
+competition for everyone else's tools, brooms, dusters, etc. Great
+roaming about. All mean well.
+
+_25 September._--Forty wounded men were brought into our hospital
+yesterday. Fortunately we had everything ready, but it took a bit of
+doing. We are all dead tired, and not so keen as we were about doing
+other people's work.
+
+The wounded are not very bad, and have been sent on here from another
+hospital. They are enchanted with their quarters, which indeed do look
+uncommonly nice. One hundred and thirty beds are ranged in rows, and we
+have a bright counterpane on each and clean sheets. The floor is
+scrubbed, and the bathrooms, store, office, kitchens, and
+receiving-rooms have been made out of nothing, and look splendid. I
+never saw a hospital spring up like magic in this way before. There is a
+wide verandah where the men play cards, and a garden to stump about in.
+
+The gratitude of our patients is boundless, and they have presented Mrs.
+Stobart with a beautiful basket of growing flowers. I do not think
+Englishmen would have thought of such a thing. They say they never
+tasted such cooking as ours outside Paris, and they are rioting in good
+food, papers, nice beds, etc. Nearly all of them are able to get out a
+little, so it is quite cheery nursing them. There is a lot to do, and we
+all fly about in white caps. The keenest competition is for sweeping out
+the ward with a long-handled hair brush!
+
+[Page Heading: THE DEFENCES OF THE TOWN]
+
+I went into the town to-day. It is very like every other foreign town,
+with broad streets and tram-lines and shops and squares, but to-day I
+had an interesting drive. I took a car and went out to the second line
+of forts. The whole place was a mass of wire entanglements, mined at
+every point, and the fields were studded with strong wooden spikes.
+There were guns everywhere, and in one place a whole wood and a village
+had been laid level with the ground to prevent the enemy taking cover.
+We heard the sound of firing last night!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_To Mrs. Keays-Young._
+
+RUE DE L'HARMONIE 68, ANTWERP,
+_25 September._
+
+DEAREST BABE,
+
+It was delightful getting your letter. Our wounded are all French or
+Belgians, but there is a bureau of enquiry in the town where I will go
+to try to hear tidings of your poor friends.
+
+We heard the guns firing last night, and fifty wounded were sent in
+during the afternoon. In one day 2,500 wounded reached Antwerp. I can
+write this sort of thing to-day as I know my letter will be all right.
+To show you that the fighting is pretty near, two doctors went for a
+short motor drive to-day and they found two wounded men. One was just
+dying, the other they brought back in the car, but he died also. In the
+town itself everything seems much as usual except for crowds of
+refugees. Do not believe people when they say German barbarity is
+exaggerated. It is hideously true.
+
+We are fearfully busy, and it seems a queer side of war to cook and race
+around and make doctors as comfortable as possible. We have a capital
+staff, who are made up of zeal and muscle. I do not know how long it can
+last. We breakfast at 7.30, which means that most of the orderlies are
+up at 5.45 to prepare and do everything. The fare is very plain and
+terribly wholesome, but hardly anyone grumbles. I am trying to get girls
+to take two hours off duty in the day, but they won't do it.
+
+Have you any friends who would send us a good big lot of nice jam? It is
+for the staff. If you could send some cases of it at once to Miss Stear,
+39, St. James's Street, London, and put my name on it, and say it is for
+our hospital, she will bring it here herself with some other things.
+Some of your country friends might like to help in a definite little way
+like this.
+
+Your loving
+SARAH.
+
+---- is going to England to-night and will take this.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_27 September._--Yesterday, when we were in the town, a German airship
+flew overhead and dropped bombs. A lot of guns fired at it, but it was
+too high up to hit. The incident caused some excitement in the streets.
+
+[Page Heading: ARRIVAL OF WOUNDED]
+
+Last night we heard that more wounded were coming in from the
+fighting-line near Ghent. We got sixty more beds ready, and sat up late,
+boiling water, sterilising instruments, preparing operating-tables and
+beds, etc., etc. As it got later all the lights in the huge ward were
+put out, and we went about with little torches amongst the sleeping men,
+putting things in order and moving on tip-toe in the dark. Later we
+heard that the wounded might not get in till Monday.
+
+The work of this place goes on unceasingly. We all get on well, but I
+have not got the communal spirit, and the fact of being a unit of women
+is not the side of it that I find most interesting. The communal food is
+my despair. I can _not_ eat it. All the same this is a fine experience,
+and I hope we'll come well out of it. There is boundless opportunity,
+and we are in luck to have a chance of doing our darndest.
+
+_28 September._--Last night I and two orderlies slept over at the
+hospital as more wounded were expected. At 11 p.m. word came that "les
+blesses" were at the gate. Men were on duty with stretchers, and we went
+out to the tram-way cars in which the wounded are brought from the
+station, twelve patients in each. The transit is as little painful as
+possible, and the stretchers are placed in iron brackets, and are
+simply unhooked when the men arrive. Each stretcher was brought in and
+laid on a bed in the ward, and the nurses and doctors undressed the men.
+We orderlies took their names, their "matricule" or regimental number,
+and the number of their bed. Then we gathered up their clothes and put
+corresponding numbers on labels attached to them--first turning out the
+pockets, which are filled with all manner of things, from tins of
+sardines to loaded revolvers. They are all very pockety, but have to be
+turned out before the clothes are sent to be baked.
+
+We arranged everything, and then got Oxo for the men, many of whom had
+had nothing to eat for two days. They are a nice-looking lot of men and
+boys, with rather handsome faces and clear eyes. Their absolute
+exhaustion is the most pathetic thing about them. They fall asleep even
+when their wounds are being dressed. When all was made straight and
+comfortable for them, the nurses turned the lights low again, and
+stepped softly about the ward with their little torches.
+
+A hundred beds all filled with men in pain give one plenty to think
+about, and it is during sleep that their attitudes of suffering strike
+one most. Some of them bury their heads in their pillows as shot
+partridges seek to bury theirs amongst autumn leaves. Others lie very
+stiff and straight, and all look very thin and haggard. I was struck by
+the contrast between the pillared concert-hall where they lie, with its
+platform of white paint and decorations, and the tragedy of suffering
+which now fills it.
+
+At 2 a.m. more soldiers were brought in from the battlefield, all caked
+with dirt, and we began to work again. These last blinked oddly at the
+concert-hall and nurses and doctors, but I think they do not question
+anything much. They only want to go to sleep.
+
+[Page Heading: A VISIT FROM SOME DESERTERS]
+
+I suppose that women would always be tender-hearted towards deserters.
+Three of them arrived at the hospital to-day with some absurd story
+about having been told to report themselves. We got them supper and a
+hot bath and put them to bed. One can't regret it. I never saw men sleep
+as they did. All through the noise of the wounded being brought in, all
+through the turned-up lights and bustle they never even stirred, but a
+sergeant discovered them, and at 3 a.m. they were marched away again. We
+got them breakfast and hot tea, and at least they had had a few hours
+between clean sheets. These men seem to carry so much, and the roads are
+heavy.
+
+At 5 o'clock I went to bed and slept till 8. Mrs. Stobart never rests. I
+think she must be made of some substance that the rest of us have not
+discovered. At 5 a.m. I discovered her curled up on a bench in her
+office, the doors wide open and the dawn breaking.
+
+_2 October._--Here is a short account of one whole day. Firing went on
+all night, sometimes it came so near that the vibration of it was rather
+startling. In the early morning we heard that the forts had been heavily
+fired on. One of them remained silent for a long time, and then the
+garrison lighted cart-loads of straw in order to deceive the Germans,
+who fell into the trap, thinking the fort was disabled and on fire, and
+rushed in to take it. They were met with a furious cannonade. But one of
+the other forts has fallen.
+
+At 7 a.m. the men's bread had not arrived for their 6 o'clock breakfast,
+so I went into the town to get it. The difficulty was to convey home
+twenty-eight large loaves, so I went to the barracks and begged a
+motor-car from the Belgian officer and came back triumphant. The
+military cars simply rip through the streets, blowing their horns all
+the time. Antwerp was thronged with these cars, and each one contained
+soldiers. Sometimes one saw wounded in them lying on sacks stuffed with
+straw.
+
+I came down to breakfast half-an-hour late (8 o'clock) and we had our
+usual fare--porridge, bread and margarine, and tea with tinned
+milk--amazingly nasty, but quite wholesome and filling at the price. We
+have reduced our housekeeping to ninepence per head per day. After
+breakfast I cleaned the two houses, as I do every morning, made nine
+beds, swept floors and dusted stairs, etc. When my rooms were done and
+jugs filled, our nice little cook gave me a cup of soup in the kitchen,
+as she generally does, and I went over to the hospital to help prepare
+the men's dinner, my task to-day being to open bottles and pour out beer
+for a hundred and twenty men; then, when the meat was served, to procure
+from the kitchen and serve out gravy. Our own dinner is at 12.30.
+
+Afterwards I went across to the hospital again and arranged a few
+things with Mrs. Stobart. I began to correct the men's diagnosis sheets,
+but was called off to help with wounded arriving, and to label and sort
+their clothes. Just then the British Minister, Sir Francis Villiers, and
+the Surgeon-General, Sir Cecil Herslet, came in to see the hospital, and
+we proceeded to show them round, when the sound of firing began quite
+close to us and we rushed out into the garden.
+
+[Page Heading: A TAUBE OVERHEAD]
+
+From out the blue, clear autumn sky came a great grey dove flying
+serenely overhead. This was a German aeroplane of the class called the
+Taube (dove). These aeroplanes are quite beautiful in design, and fly
+with amazing rapidity. This one wafted over our hospital with all the
+grace of a living creature "calm in the consciousness of wings," and
+then, of course, we let fly at it. From all round us shells were sent up
+into the vast blue of the sky, and still the grey dove went on in its
+gentle-looking flight. Whoever was in it must have been a brave man! All
+round him shells were flying--one touch and he must have dropped. The
+smoke from the burst shells looked like little white clouds in the sky
+as the dove sailed away into the blue again and was seen no more.
+
+We returned to our work in hospital. The men's supper is at six o'clock,
+and we began cutting up their bread-and-butter and cheese and filling
+their bowls of beer. When that was over and visitors were going, an
+order came for thirty patients to proceed to Ostend and make room for
+worse cases. We were sorry to say good-bye to them, especially to a nice
+fellow whom we call Alfred because he can speak English, and to Sunny
+Jim, who positively refused to leave.
+
+Poor boys! With each batch of the wounded, disabled creatures who are
+carried in, one feels inclined to repeat in wonder, "Can one man be
+responsible for all this? Is it for one man's lunatic vanity that men
+are putting lumps of lead into each other's hearts and lungs, and boys
+are lying with their heads blown off, or with their insides beside them
+on the ground?" Yet there is a splendid freedom about being in the midst
+of death--a certain glory in it, which one can't explain.
+
+A piece of shell fell through the roof of the hospital to-day--evidently
+a part of one that had been fired at the Taube. It fell close beside the
+bed of one of our wounded, and he went as white as a ghost. It must be
+pretty bad to be powerless and have shells falling around. The doctors
+tell me that nothing moves them so much as the terror of the men. Their
+nerves are simply shattered, and everything frightens them. Rather late
+a man was brought in from the forts, terribly wounded. He was the only
+survivor of twelve comrades who stood together, and a shell fell amongst
+them, killing all but this man.
+
+At seven o'clock we moved all the furniture from Mrs. Stobart's office
+to the dispensary, where she will have more room, and the day's work was
+then over and night work began for some. The Germans have destroyed the
+reservoir and the water-supply has been cut off, so we have to go and
+fetch all the water in buckets from a well. After supper we go with our
+pails and carry it home. The shortage for washing, cleaning, etc., is
+rather inconvenient, and adds to the danger in a large hospital, and to
+the risk of typhoid.
+
+[Page Heading: ORDERS TO EVACUATE THE HOSPITAL]
+
+_4 October._--Yesterday our work was hardly over when Mrs. Stobart sent
+a summons to all of us "heads" to come to her bureau. She had grave news
+for us. The British Consul had just been to say that all the English
+must leave Antwerp; two forts had fallen, and the Germans were hourly
+expected to begin shelling the town. We were told that all the wounded
+who could travel were to go to Ostend, and the worst cases were to be
+transferred to the Military Hospital.
+
+I do not think it would be easy to describe the confusion that followed.
+All the men's clothes had to be found, and they had to be got into them,
+and woe betide if a little cap or old candle was missing! All wanted
+serving at once; all wanted food before starting. In the midst of the
+general melee I shall always remember one girl, silently, quickly, and
+ceaselessly slicing bread with a loaf pressed to her waist, and handing
+it across the counter to the men.
+
+With one or two exceptions the staff all wanted to remain in Antwerp. I
+myself decided to abandon the unit and stay on here as an individual or
+go to Ostend with the men. Mrs. Stobart, being responsible, had to take
+the unit home. It was a case of leaving immediately; we packed what
+stores we could, but the beds and X-ray apparatus and all our material
+equipment would have to be left to the Germans. I think all felt as
+though they were running away, but it was a military order, and the
+Consul, the British Minister, and the King and Queen were leaving. We
+went to eat lunch together, and as we were doing so Mrs. Stobart brought
+the news that the Consul had come to say that reinforcements had come
+up, the situation changed for the better, and for the present we might
+remain. Anyone who wanted to leave might do so, but only four did.
+
+We have since heard what happened. The British Minister cabled home to
+say that Antwerp was the key to the whole situation and must not fall,
+as once in here the Germans would be strongly entrenched, supplied with
+provisions, ammunition, and everything they want. A Cabinet Council was
+held at 3 a.m. in London, and reinforcements were ordered up. Winston
+Churchill is here with Marines. They say Colonel Kitchener is at the
+forts.
+
+The firing sounds very near. Dr. Hector Munro and Miss St. Clair and
+Lady Dorothy Fielding came over to-day from Ghent, where all is quiet.
+They wanted me to return with them to take a rest, which was absurd, of
+course.
+
+Some fearful cases were brought in to us to-day. My God, the horror of
+it! One has heard of men whom their mothers would not recognise. Some of
+the wounded to-day were amongst these. All the morning we did what we
+could for them. One man was riddled with bullets, and died very soon.
+
+It is awful work. The great bell rings, and we say, "More wounded," and
+the men get stretchers. We go down the long, cold covered way to the
+gate and number the men for their different beds. The stretchers are
+stiff with blood, and the clothes have to be cut off the men. They cry
+out terribly, and their _horror_ is so painful to witness. They are so
+young, and they have seen right into hell. The first dressings are
+removed by the doctors--sometimes there is only a lump of cotton-wool to
+fill up a hole--and the men lie there with their tragic eyes fixed upon
+one. All day a nurse has sat by a man who has been shot through the
+lungs. Each breath is painful; it does not bear writing about. The pity
+of it all just breaks one's heart. But I suppose we do not see nearly
+the worst of the wounded.
+
+The lights are all off at eight o'clock now, and we do our work in the
+dark, while the orderlies hold little torches to enable the doctors to
+dress the wounds. There are not _half_ enough nurses or doctors out
+here. In one hospital there are 400 beds and only two trained nurses.
+
+[Page Heading: ARRIVAL OF BRITISH TROOPS]
+
+Some of our own troops came through the town in London omnibuses to-day.
+It was quite a Moment, and we felt that all was well. We went to the
+gate and shook hands with them as they passed, and they made jokes and
+did us all good. We cheered and waved handkerchiefs.
+
+_5-6 October._--I think the last two days have been the most ghastly I
+ever remember. Every day seems to bring news of defeat. It is awful, and
+the Germans are quite close now. As I write the house shakes with the
+firing. Our troops are falling back, and the forts have fallen. Last
+night we took provisions and water to the cellars, and made plans to get
+the wounded taken there.
+
+They say the town will be shelled to-morrow. All these last two days
+bleeding men have been brought in. To-day three of them died, and I
+suppose none of them was more than 23. We have to keep up all the time
+and show a good face, and meals are quite cheery. To-day, Tuesday, was
+our last chance of leaving, and only two went.
+
+The guns boom by day as well as by night, and as each one is heard one
+thinks of more bleeding, shattered men. It is calm, nice autumn weather;
+the trees are yellow in the garden and the sky is blue, yet all the time
+one listens to the cries of men in pain. To-night I meant to go out for
+a little, but a nurse stopped me and asked me to sit by a dying man.
+Poor fellow, he was twenty-one, and looked like some brigand chief, and
+he smiled as he was dying. The horror of these two days will last
+always, and there are many more such days to come. Everyone is behaving
+well, and that is all I care about.
+
+_7 October._--It is a glorious morning: they will see well to kill each
+other to-day.
+
+The guns go all day and all night. They are so close that the earth
+shakes with them. Last night in the infernal darkness we were turning
+wounded men away from the door. There was no room for them even on the
+floor. The Belgians scream terribly. Our own men suffer quite quietly.
+One of them died to-day.
+
+Day and night a stream of vehicles passes the gate. It never ceases.
+Nearly all are motors, driven at a furious pace, and they sound horns
+all the time. These are met by a stream of carts and old-fashioned
+vehicles bringing in country people, who are flying to the coast. In
+Antwerp to-day it was "sauve qui peut"! Nearly all the men are
+going--Mr. ----, who has helped us, and Mr. ----, they are going to
+bicycle into Holland. A surgeon (Belgian) has fled from his hospital,
+leaving seven hundred beds, and there seem to be a great many deserters
+from the trenches.
+
+[Page Heading: THE SITUATION GETS WORSE]
+
+The news is still the same--"very bad"; sometimes I walk to the gate and
+ask returning soldiers how the battle goes, but the answer never varies.
+At lunch-time to-day firing ceased, and I heard it was because the
+German guns were coming up. We got orders to send away all the wounded
+who could possibly go, and we prepared beds in the cellars for those who
+cannot be moved. The military authorities beg us to remain as so many
+hospitals have been evacuated.
+
+The wounded continue to come in. One sees one car in the endless stream
+moving slowly (most of them _fly_ with their officers sitting upright,
+or with aeroplanes on long carriages), and one knows by the pace that
+more wounded are coming. Inside one sees the horrible six shelves behind
+the canvas curtain, and here and there a bound-up limb or head. One of
+our men had his leg taken off to-day, and is doing well. Nothing goes on
+much behind the scenes. The yells of the men are plainly heard, and
+to-day, as I sat beside the lung man who was taking so long to die,
+someone brought a sack to me, and said, "This is for the leg." All the
+orderlies are on duty in the hospital now. We can spare no one for
+rougher work. We can all bandage and wash patients. There are wounded
+everywhere, even on straw beds on the platform of the hall.
+
+Darkness seems to fall early, and it is the darkness that is so
+baffling. At 5 p.m. we have to feed everyone while there is a little
+light, then the groping about begins, and everyone falls over things.
+There is a clatter of basins on the floor or an over-turned chair. Any
+sudden noise is rather trying at present because of the booming of the
+guns. At 7 last night they were much louder than before, with a sort of
+strange double sound, and we were told that these were our "Long Toms,"
+so we hope that our Naval Brigade has come up.
+
+We know very little of what is going on except when we run out and ask
+some returning English soldiers for news. Yesterday it was always the
+same reply "Very bad." One of the Marines told me that Winston Churchill
+was "up and down the road amongst the shells," and I was also told that
+he had given orders that Antwerp was not to be taken till the last man
+in it was dead.
+
+The Marines are getting horribly knocked about. Yesterday Mrs. O'Gormon
+went out in her own motor-car and picked wounded out of the trenches.
+She said that no one knew why they were in the trenches or where they
+were to fire--they just lay there and were shot and then left.
+
+[Page Heading: HOW WE KEPT UP OUR COURAGE]
+
+I think I have seen too much pain lately. At Walworth one saw women
+every day in utter pain, and now one lives in an atmosphere of bandages
+and blood. I asked some of the orderlies to-day what it was that
+supported them most at a crisis of this sort. The answers varied, and
+were interesting. I myself am surprised to find that religion is not my
+best support. When I go into the little chapel to pray it is all too
+tender, the divine Mother and the Child and the holy atmosphere. I begin
+to feel rather sorry for myself, I don't know why; then I go and move
+beds and feel better; but I have found that just to behave like a
+well-bred woman is what keeps me up best. I had thought that the Flag or
+Religion would have been stronger incentives to me.
+
+Our own soldiers seem to find self-respect their best asset. It is
+amazing to see the difference between them and the Belgians, who are
+terribly poor hands at bearing pain, and beg for morphia all the time.
+An officer to-day had to have a loose tooth out. He insisted on having
+cocaine, and then begged the doctor to be careful!
+
+The firing now is furious--sometimes there are five or six explosions
+almost simultaneously. I suppose we shall read in the _Times_ that "all
+is quiet," and in _Le Matin_ that "pour le reste tout est calme."
+
+The staff are doing well. They are generally too busy to be frightened,
+but one has to speak once or twice to them before they hear.
+
+On Wednesday night, the 7th October, we heard that one more ship was
+going to England, and a last chance was given to us all to leave. Only
+two did so; the rest stayed on. Mrs. Stobart went out to see what was to
+be done. The ---- Consul said that we were under his protection, and
+that if the Germans entered the town he would see that we were treated
+properly. We had a deliberately cheerful supper, and afterwards a man
+called Smits came in and told us that the Germans had been driven back
+fifteen kilometres. I myself did not believe this, but we went to bed,
+and even took off our clothes.
+
+At midnight the first shell came over us with a shriek, and I went down
+and woke the orderlies and nurses and doctors. We dressed and went over
+to help move the wounded at the hospital. The shells began to scream
+overhead; it was a bright moonlight night, and we walked without
+haste--a small body of women--across the road to the hospital. Here we
+found the wounded all yelling like mad things, thinking they were going
+to be left behind. The lung man has died.
+
+Nearly all the moving to the cellars had already been done--only three
+stretchers remained to be moved. One wounded English sergeant helped us.
+Otherwise everything was done by women. We laid the men on mattresses
+which we fetched from the hospital overhead, and then Mrs. Stobart's
+mild, quiet voice said, "Everything is to go on as usual. The night
+nurses and orderlies will take their places. Breakfast will be at the
+usual hour." She and the other ladies whose night it was to sleep at the
+convent then returned to sleep in the basement with a Sister.
+
+[Page Heading: THE BOMBARDMENT]
+
+We came in for some most severe shelling at first, either because we
+flew the Red Cross flag or because we were in the line of fire with a
+powder magazine which the Germans wished to destroy. We sat in the
+cellars with one night-light burning in each, and with seventy wounded
+men to take care of. Two of them were dying. There was only one line of
+bricks between us and the shells. One shell fell into the garden, making
+a hole six feet deep; the next crashed through a house on the opposite
+side of the road and set it on fire. The danger was two-fold, for we
+knew our hospital, which was a cardboard sort of thing, would ignite
+like matchwood, and if it fell we should not be able to get out of the
+cellars. Some people on our staff were much against our making use of a
+cellar at all for this reason. I myself felt it was the safest place,
+and as long as we stayed with the wounded they minded nothing. We sat
+there all night.
+
+The English sergeant said that at daybreak the firing would probably
+cease, as the German guns stopped when daylight came in order to conceal
+the guns. We just waited for daybreak. When it came the firing grew
+worse. The sergeant said, "It is always worse just before they stop,"
+but the firing did not stop. Two hundred guns were turned on Antwerp,
+and the shells came over at the rate of four a minute. They have a
+horrid screaming sound as they come. We heard each one coming and
+wondered if it would hit us, and then we heard the crashing somewhere
+else and knew another shell was coming.
+
+The worst cases among the wounded lay on the floor, and these wanted
+constant attention. The others were in their great-coats, and stood
+about the cellar leaning on crutches and sticks. We wrapped blankets
+round the rheumatism cases and sat through the long night. Sometimes
+when we heard a crash near by we asked "Is that the convent?" but
+nothing else was said. All spoke cheerfully, and there was some laughter
+in the further cellar. One little red-haired nurse enjoyed the whole
+thing. I saw her carry three wounded men in succession on her back down
+to the cellar. I found myself wishing that for me a shot would come and
+finish the horrible night. Still we all chatted and smiled and made
+little jokes. Once during that long night in the cellar I heard one
+wounded man say to another as he rolled himself round on his mattress,
+"Que les anglais sont comme il faut."
+
+At six o'clock the convent party came over and began to prepare
+breakfast. The least wounded of the men began to steal away, and we were
+left with between thirty and forty of them. The difficulty was to know
+how to get away and how to remove the wounded, two of whom were nearly
+dead. Miss Benjamin went and stood at the gate, while the shells still
+flew, and picked up an ambulance. In this we got away six men, including
+the two dying ones. Mrs. Stobart was walking about for three hours
+trying to find anything on wheels to remove us and the wounded. At last
+we got a motor ambulance, and packed in twenty men--that was all it
+would hold. We told them to go as far as the bridge and send it back for
+us. It never came. Nothing seemed to come.
+
+The ---- Vice-Consul had told us we were under his protection, and he
+would, as a neutral, march out to meet the Germans and give us
+protection. But when we enquired we heard he had bolted without telling
+us. The next to give us protection was the ---- Field Hospital, who said
+they had a ship in the river and would not move without us. But they
+also left and said nothing.
+
+We got dinner for the men, and then the strain began to be much worse.
+We had seven wounded and ourselves and not a thing in which to get out
+of Antwerp. I told Mrs. Stobart we must leave the wounded at the convent
+in charge of the Sisters, and this we did, telling them where to take
+them in the morning. The gay young nurses fetched them across on
+stretchers.
+
+[Page Heading: FLIGHT]
+
+About 5 o'clock the shelling became more violent, and three shells came
+with only an instant between each. Presently we heard Mrs. Stobart say,
+"Come at once," and we went out and found three English buses with
+English drivers at the door. They were carrying ammunition, and were the
+last vehicles to leave Antwerp. We got into them and lay on the top of
+the ammunition, and the girls began to light cigarettes! The noise of
+the buses prevented our hearing for a time the infernal sound of shells
+and our cannons' answering roar.
+
+As we drove to the bridge many houses and sometimes a whole street was
+burning. No one seemed to care. No one was there to try and save
+anything. We drove through the empty streets and saw the burning houses,
+and great holes where shells had fallen, and then we got to the bridge
+and out of the line of fire.
+
+We set out to walk towards Holland, but a Belgian officer got us some
+Red Cross ambulances, and into these we got, and were taken to a
+convent at St. Gilles, where we slept on the floor till 3 a.m. At 3 a
+message was brought, "Get up at once--things are worse." Everyone seemed
+to be leaving, and we got into the Red Cross ambulances and went to the
+station.
+
+_9 October._--We have been all day in the train in very hard third-class
+carriages with the R.M.L.I. The journey of fifty miles took from 5
+o'clock in the morning, when we got away, till 12 o'clock at night, when
+we reached Ostend. The train hardly crawled. It was the longest I have
+ever seen. All Ostend was in darkness when we arrived--a German airship
+having been seen overhead. We always seem to be tumbling about in the
+dark. We went from one hotel to another trying to get accommodation, and
+at last (at the St. James's) they allowed us to lie on the floor of the
+restaurant. The only food they had for us was ten eggs for twenty-five
+hungry people and some brown bread, but they had champagne at the house,
+and I ordered it for everybody, and we made little speeches and tried to
+end on a good note.
+
+_10 October._--Mrs. Stobart took the unit back to England to-day. The
+wounded were found in a little house which the Red Cross had made over
+to them, and Dr. Ramsey, Sister Bailey, and the two nurses had much to
+say about their perilous journey. One man had died on the road, but the
+others all looked well. Their joy at seeing us was pathetic, and there
+was a great deal of handshaking over our meeting.
+
+[Page Heading: THE UNIT RETURNS TO ENGLAND]
+
+Miss Donnisthorpe and I got decent rooms at the Littoral Hotel, and
+brought our luggage there, and had baths, which we much needed. Dr.
+Hanson had got out of the train at Bruges to bandage a wounded man, and
+she was left behind, and is still lost. I suppose she has gone home. She
+is the doctor I like best, and she is one of the few whose nerves are
+not shattered. It was a sorry little party which Mrs. Stobart took back
+to England.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+WITH DR. HECTOR MUNRO'S FLYING AMBULANCE CORPS
+
+
+_12 October._--Everyone has gone back to England except Sister Bailey
+and me. She is waiting to hand over the wounded to the proper
+department, and I am waiting to see if I can get on anywhere. It does
+seem so hard that when men are most in need of us we should all run home
+and leave them.
+
+The noises and racket in Ostend are deafening, and there is panic
+everywhere. The boats go to England packed every time. I called on the
+Villiers yesterday, and heard that she is leaving on Tuesday. But they
+say that the British Minister dare not leave or the whole place would go
+wild with fear. Some ships lie close to us on the grey misty water, and
+the troops are passing along all day.
+
+_Later._--We heard to-night that the Germans are coming into Ostend
+to-morrow, so once more we fly like dust before a broom. It is horrible
+having to clear out for them.
+
+I am trying to discover what courage really consists in. It isn't only a
+lack of imagination. In some people it is transcendent, in others it is
+only a sort of stupidity. If proper precautions were taken the need for
+courage would be much reduced--the "tight place" is so often the result
+of sheer muddle.
+
+This evening Dr. Hector Munro came in from Ghent with his oddly-dressed
+ladies, and at first one was inclined to call them masqueraders in their
+knickerbockers and puttees and caps, but I believe they have done
+excellent work. It is a queer side of war to see young, pretty English
+girls in khaki and thick boots, coming in from the trenches, where they
+have been picking up wounded men within a hundred yards of the enemy's
+lines, and carrying them away on stretchers. Wonderful little Walkueres
+in knickerbockers, I lift my hat to you!
+
+Dr. Munro asked me to come on to his convoy, and I gladly did so: he
+sent home a lady whose nerves were gone, and I was put in her place.
+
+[Page Heading: ON THE ROAD TO DUNKIRK]
+
+_13 October._--We had an early muddly breakfast, at which everyone spoke
+in a high voice and urged others to hurry, and then we collected luggage
+and went round to see the General. Afterwards we all got into our motor
+ambulances _en route_ for Dunkirk. The road was filled with flying
+inhabitants, and down at the dock wounded and well struggled to get on
+to the steamer. People were begging us for a seat in our ambulance, and
+well-dressed women were setting out to walk twenty miles to Dunkirk. The
+rain was falling heavily, and it was a dripping day when we and a lot of
+English soldiers found ourselves in the square in Dunkirk, where the
+few hotels are. We had an expensive lunch at a greasy restaurant, and
+then tried to find rooms.
+
+I began to make out of whom our party consists. There is Lady Dorothy
+Fielding--probably 22, but capable of taking command of a ship, and
+speaking French like a native; Mrs. Decker, an Australian, plucky and
+efficient; Miss Chisholm, a blue-eyed Scottish girl, with a thick coat
+strapped around her waist and a haversack slung from her shoulder; a
+tall American, whose name I do not yet know, whose husband is a
+journalist; three young surgeons, and Dr. Munro. It is all so quaint.
+The girls rule the company, carry maps and find roads, see about
+provisions and carry wounded.
+
+We could not get rooms at Dunkirk and so came on to St. Malo les Bains,
+a small bathing-place which had been shut up for the winter. The owner
+of an hotel there opened up some rooms for us and got us some ham and
+eggs, and the evening ended very cheerily. Our party seems, to me,
+amazingly young and unprotected.
+
+_St. Malo les Bains. 14 October._--To-day I took a car into Dunkirk and
+bought some things, as I have lost nearly all I possess at Antwerp. In
+the afternoon I went to the dock to get some letters posted, and tramped
+about there for a long time. War is such a disorganizer. Nothing starts.
+No one is able to move because of wounded arms and legs; it seems to
+make the world helpless and painful. In minor matters one lives nearly
+always with damp feet and rather dirty and hungry. Drains are all
+choked, and one does not get much sleep. These are trifles, of course.
+
+[Page Heading: WOMEN AT THE FRONT]
+
+To-night, as we sat at dinner, a message was brought that a woman
+outside had been run over and was going to have a baby immediately in a
+tram-way shelter, so out we went and got one of our ambulances, and a
+young doctor with his fiancee went off with her. There was a lot of
+argument about where the woman lived, until one young man said, "Well,
+get in somehow, or the baby will have arrived." There is a simplicity
+about these tragic times, and nothing matters but to save people.
+
+_15 October._--To-day we went down to the docks to get a passage for Dr.
+Munro, who is going home for money. A German Taube flew overhead and men
+were firing rifles at it. An Englishman hit it, and down it came like a
+shot bird, so that was the end of a brave man, whoever he was, and it
+was a long drop, too, through the still autumn air. Guns have begun to
+fire again, so I suppose we shall have to move on once more. One does
+not unpack, and it is dangerous to part with one's linen to be washed.
+
+Yesterday I heard a man--a man in a responsible position--say to a girl,
+"Tell me, please, how far we are from the firing-line." It was one of
+the most remarkable speeches I ever heard. I go to these girls for all
+my news. Lady Dorothy Fielding is our real commander, and everyone knows
+it. One hears on all sides, "Lady Dorothy, can you get us tyres for the
+ambulances? Where is the petrol?" "Do you know if the General will let
+us through?" "Have you been able to get us any stores?" "Ought we to
+have 'laissez-passer's' or not?" She goes to all the heads of
+departments, is the only good speaker of French, and has the only
+reliable information about anything. All the men acknowledge her
+position, and they say to me, "It's very odd being run by a woman; but
+she is the only person who can do anything." In the firing-line she is
+quite cool, and so are the other women. They seem to be interested, not
+dismayed, by shots and shrapnel.
+
+_16 October._--To-day I have been reading of the "splendid retreat" of
+the Marines from Antwerp and their "unprecedented reception" at Deal.
+Everyone appears to have been in a state of wild enthusiasm about them,
+and it seems almost like Mafeking over again.
+
+What struck me most about these men was the way in which they blew their
+own trumpets in full retreat and while flying from the enemy. We
+travelled all day in the train with them, and had long conversations
+with them all. They were all saying, "We will bring you the Kaiser's
+head, miss"; to which I replied, "Well, you had better turn round and go
+the other way." Some people like this "English" spirit. I find the
+conceit of it most trying. Belgium is in the hands of the enemy, and we
+flee before him singing our own praises loudly as we do so. The Marines
+lost their kit, spent one night in Antwerp, and went back to England,
+where they had an amazing reception amid scenes of unprecedented
+enthusiasm! The Government will give them a fresh kit, and the public
+will cheer itself hoarse!
+
+[Page Heading: MEN'S ATTITUDE TOWARDS WOMEN]
+
+I could not help thinking, when I read the papers to-day, of our tired
+little body of nurses and doctors and orderlies going back quietly and
+unproclaimed to England to rest at Folkestone for three days and then to
+come out here again. They had been for eighteen hours under heavy shell
+fire without so much as a rifle to protect them, and with the immediate
+chance of a burning building falling about them. The nurses sat in the
+cellars tending wounded men, whom they refused to leave, and then hopped
+on to the outside of an ammunition bus "to see the fun," and came home
+to buy their little caps and aprons out of their own slender purses and
+start work again.
+
+I shall believe in Britishers to the day of my death, and I hope I shall
+die before I cease to believe in them, but I do get some disillusions.
+At Antwerp not a man remained with us, and the worst of it was they made
+elaborate excuses for leaving. Even our sergeant, who helped during the
+night, took a comrade off in the morning and disappeared. Both were
+wounded, but not badly, and two young English Tommies, very slightly
+wounded, left us as soon as the firing began. We saw them afterwards at
+the bridge, and they looked pretty mean.
+
+To-night at dinner some officers came in when the food was pretty well
+finished, and only some drumsticks of chicken and bits of ham were left.
+I am always slow at beginning to eat, and I had a large wing of chicken
+still on my plate. I offered this to an officer, who accepted it and
+ate it, although he asked me to have a little bit of it. I do hope I
+shall meet some cases of chivalry soon.
+
+Firing ceased about 5 o'clock this afternoon, but we are short of news.
+The English papers rather annoy one with their continual victories, of
+which we see nothing. Everyone talks of the German big guns as if they
+were some happy chance. But the Germans were drilling and preparing
+while we were making speeches at Hyde Park Corner. Everything had been
+thought out by them. People talk of the difficulty they must have had in
+preparing concrete floors for their guns. Not a bit of it. There were
+innocent dwelling-houses, built long ago, with floors in just the right
+position and of just the right stuff, and when they were wanted the top
+stories were blown off and the concrete gun-floors were ready. There
+were local exhibitions, too, to which firms sent exhibition guns, which
+they "forgot" to remove! While we were going on strike they were making
+an army, and as we have sown so must we reap.
+
+One almost wonders whether it might not be possible to eliminate the
+personal element in war, so constant is the talk about victorious guns.
+If guns decide everything, then let them be trained on other guns. Let
+the gun that drives farthest and goes surest win. If every siege is
+decided by the German 16-inch howitzers, then let us put up brick and
+mortar or steel against them, but not men. The day for the bleeding
+human body seems to be over now that men are mown down by shells fired
+eight miles away. War used to be splendid because it made men strong and
+brave, but now a little German in spectacles can stand behind a Krupp
+gun and wipe out a regiment.
+
+[Page Heading: PROTECTION OF LIFE OR PROPERTY]
+
+I suppose women will always try to protect life because they know what
+it costs to produce it, and men will always try to protect property
+because that is what they themselves produce. At Antwerp our wounded men
+were begging us to go up to the hospital to fetch their purses from
+under their pillows! At present women are only repairers, darning socks,
+cleaning, washing up after men, bringing up reinforcements in the way of
+fresh life, and patching up wounded men, but some day they must and will
+have to say, "The life I produce has as much right to protection as the
+property you produce, and I claim my right to protect it."
+
+There seems to me a lack of connection between one man's desire to
+extend the area he occupies and young men in their teens lying with
+their lungs shot through or backs blown off.
+
+_19 October._--Our time is now spent in waiting and preparing for work
+which will probably come soon, as there has been fighting near us again.
+One hears the boom of guns a long way off, and always there is the sound
+of death in it. One has been too near it not to know now what it means.
+
+Yesterday I went to church in an empty little building, but a few of our
+hospital men turned up and made a small congregation. In the afternoon
+one or two people came to tea in my bedroom as we could not make our
+usual expedition to de Poorter's bunshop. The pastry habit is growing
+on us all.
+
+We went to the arsenal to-day to see about some repairs to our
+ambulances. I saw a German omnibus which had been captured, and the
+eagles on it had been painted out with stripes of red paint and the
+French colours put in their place. The omnibus was one mass of
+bullet-holes. I have seen waggons at Paardeberg, but I never saw
+anything so knocked about as that grey motor-bus. The engines and sides
+were shattered and the chauffeur, of course, had been killed. We went on
+by motor to the "Champs des Aviateurs." We saw one naval aeroplane man,
+who told us that he had been hit in his machine when it was 4,000 feet
+up in the air. His jacket was torn by a bullet and his machine dropped,
+but he was uninjured, and got away on a bicycle.
+
+The more I see of war the more I am amazed at the courage and nerve
+which are shown. Death or the chance of death is everywhere, and we meet
+it not as fatalists do or those who believe they can earn eternal glory
+with a sacrifice, but lightly and with a song. An English girl at
+Antwerp was horribly ashamed of some Belgians who skulked behind a wall
+when the firing was hottest. She herself remained in the open.
+
+It has been a great comfort to me that I have had a room to myself so
+far on this campaign. I find the communal spirit is not in me. The noisy
+meals, the heavy bowls of soup, the piles of labelled dinner-napkins,
+give me an unexpected feeling of oppressive seclusion and solitude, and
+only when I get away by myself do I feel that my soul is restored.
+
+Mr. Gleeson, an American, joined his wife here a couple of days ago: it
+was odd to have a book talk again.
+
+_21 October._--A still grey day with a level sea and a few fishing-boats
+going out with the tide. On the long grey shore shrimpers are wading
+with their nets. The only colour in the soft grey dawn is the little
+wink of white that the breaking waves make on the sand. This small empty
+seaside place, with its row of bathing-machines drawn up on the beach,
+has a look about it as of a theatre seen by daylight. All the seats are
+empty and the players have gone away, and the theatre begins to whisper
+as empty buildings do. I think I know quite well some of the people who
+come to St. Malo les Bains, just by listening to what the empty little
+place is saying.
+
+Firing has begun again. We hear that our ships are shelling Ostend from
+the sea. The news that reaches us is meagre, but I prefer that to the
+false reports that are circulated at home.
+
+[Page Heading: WE GO TO FURNES]
+
+This afternoon we came out in motors and ambulances to establish
+ourselves at Furnes in an empty Ecclesiastical College. Nothing was
+ready, and everything was in confusion. The wounded from the fighting
+near by had not begun to come in, but the infernal sound of the guns was
+quite close to us, and gave one the sensation of a blow on the ear.
+Night was falling as we came back to Dunkirk to sleep (for no beds were
+ready at Furnes), and we passed many motor vehicles of every
+description going out to Furnes. Some of them were filled with bread,
+and one saw stacks of loaves filling to the roof some once beautifully
+appointed motor. Now all was dust and dirt.
+
+All my previous ideas of men marching to war have had a touch of
+heroism, crudely expressed by quick-step and smart uniforms. To-day I
+see tired dusty men, very hungry looking and unshaved, slogging along,
+silent and tired, and ready to lie down whenever chance offers. They
+keep as near their convoy as they can, and are keen to stop and cook
+something. God! what is heroism? It baffles me.
+
+_22 October. Furnes._--The bulk of our party did not return from Furnes
+yesterday, so we gathered that the wounded must be coming in, and we
+left Dunkirk early and came here. As I packed my things and rolled my
+rugs at 5 a.m. I thought of Mary, and "Charles to fetch down the
+luggage," and the fuss at home over my delicate health!
+
+A French officer called Gilbert took us out to Furnes in his Brooklands
+racing-car, so that was a bit of an experience too, for we sat curled up
+on some luggage, and were told to hang on by something. The roads were
+empty and level, the little seats of the car were merely an appendage to
+its long big engines. When we got our breath back we asked Gilbert what
+his speed had been, and he told us 75 miles an hour.
+
+There was a crowd of motors in the yard of the Ecclesiastical College at
+Furnes, engines throbbing and clutches being jerked, and we were told
+that all last night the fighting had gone on and the wounded had been
+coming in. There are three wards already fairly full, nothing quite
+ready, and the inevitable and reiterated "where" heard on every side.
+
+"Where are the stretchers?" "Where are my forceps?" "Where are we to
+dine?" "Where are the dead to be put?" "Where are the Germans?"
+
+No one stops to answer. People ask everybody ten times over to do the
+same thing, and use anything that is lying about.
+
+[Page Heading: THE FIGHTING AT DIXMUDE]
+
+There are two war correspondents here--Mr. Gibbs and Mr. Ashmead
+Bartlett--and they told me about the fighting at Dixmude last night. I
+must try to get Mr. Gibbs's newspaper account of it, but nothing will
+ever be so simple and so dramatic as his own description. He and Mr.
+Bartlett, Mr. Gleeson and Dr. Munro, with young Mr. Brockville, the War
+Minister's son, went to the town, which was being heavily shelled.
+Dixmude was full of wounded, and the church and the houses were falling.
+The roar of things was awful, and the bursting shells overhead sent
+shrapnel pattering on the buildings, the pavements, and the cars.
+
+Young Brockville went into a house, where he heard wounded were lying,
+and found a pile of dead Frenchmen stacked against a wall. A bursting
+shell scattered them. He went on to a cellar and found some living men,
+got the stretchers, loaded the cars and bade them drive on. In the
+darkness, and with the deafening noises, no one heard his orders
+aright, the two motor ambulances moved on and left him behind amongst
+the burning houses and flying shells. It was only after going a few
+miles that the rest of the party found that he was not with them.
+
+Mr. Gleeson and Mr. Bartlett went back for him. Nothing need be said
+except that. They went back to hell for him, and the other two waited in
+the road with the wounded men. After an hour of waiting these two also
+went back.
+
+I asked Mr. Gibbs if he shared the contempt that some people expressed
+for bullets. He and Mr. Gleeson both said, "Anyone who talks of contempt
+for bullets is talking nonsense. Bullets mean death at every corner of
+the street, and death overhead and flying limbs and unspeakable sights."
+All these men went back. All of them behaved quietly and like gentlemen,
+but one man asked a friend of his over and over again if he was a
+Belgian refugee, and another said that a town steeple falling looked so
+strange that they could only stand about and light cigarettes. In the
+end they gave up Mr. Brockville for lost and came home with the
+ambulances. But he turned up in the middle of the night, to everyone's
+huge delight.
+
+_23 October._--A crisp autumn morning, a courtyard filled with motors
+and brancardiers and men in uniform, and women in knickerbockers and
+puttees, all lighting cigarettes and talking about repairs and gears and
+a box of bandages. The mornings always start happily enough. The guns
+are nearer to-day or more distant, the battle sways backwards and
+forwards, and there is no such thing as a real "base" for a hospital.
+We must just stay as long as we can and fly when we must.
+
+About 10 a.m. the ambulances that have been out all night begin to come
+in, the wounded on their pitiful shelves.
+
+"Take care. There are two awful cases. Step this way. The man on the top
+shelf is dead. Lift them down. Steady. Lift the others out first. Now
+carry them across the yard to the overcrowded ward, and lay them on the
+floor if there are no beds, but lay them down and go for others. Take
+the worst to the theatre: get the shattered limbs amputated and then
+bring them back, for there is a man just dead whose place can be filled;
+and these two must be shipped off to Calais; and this one can sit up."
+
+[Page Heading: A WOUNDED GERMAN]
+
+I found one young German with both hands smashed. He was not ill enough
+to have a bed, of course, but sat with his head fallen forward trying to
+sleep on a chair. I fed him with porridge and milk out of a little bowl,
+and when he had finished half of it he said, "I won't have any more. I
+am afraid there will be none for the others." I got a few cushions for
+him and laid him in a corner of the room. Nothing disturbs the deep
+sleep of these men. They seem not so much exhausted as dead with
+fatigue.
+
+A French boy of sixteen is a favourite of mine. He is such a beautiful
+child, and there is no hope for him; shot through the abdomen; he can
+retain nothing, and is sick all day, and every day he is weaker.
+
+I do not find that the men want to send letters or write messages.
+Their pain is too awful even for that, and I believe they can think of
+nothing else.
+
+All day the stretchers are brought in and the work goes on. It is about
+5 o'clock that the weird tired hour begins when the dim lamps are
+lighted, and people fall over things, and nearly everything is mislaid,
+and the wounded cry out, and one steps over forms on the floor. From
+then till one goes to bed it is difficult to be just what one ought to
+be, the tragedy of it is too pitiful. There is a boy with his eyes shot
+out, and there is a row of men all with head wounds from the cruel
+shrapnel overhead. Blood-stained mattresses and pillows are carried out
+into the courtyard. Two ladies help to move the corpses. There is always
+a pile of bandages and rags being burnt, and a youth stirs the horrible
+pile with a stick. A queer smell permeates everything, and the guns
+never cease. The wounded are coming in at the rate of a hundred a day.
+
+The Queen of the Belgians called to see the hospital to-day. Poor little
+Queen, coming to see the remnants of an army and the remnants of a
+kingdom! She was kind to each wounded man, and we were glad of her
+visit, if for no other reason than that some sort of cleaning and
+tidying was done in her honour. To-night Mr. Nevinson arrived, and we
+went round the wards together after supper. The beds were all full--so
+was the floor. I was glad that so many of the wounded were dying.
+
+The doctors said, "These men are not wounded, they are mashed."
+
+I am rather surprised to find how little the quite young girls seem to
+mind the sight of wounds and suffering. They are bright and witty about
+amputations, and do not shudder at anything. I am feeling rather
+out-of-date amongst them.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Page Heading: THE TRAGEDY OF PAIN]
+
+_Letter to Miss Macnaughtan's Sisters._
+
+DR. HECTOR MUNRO'S AMBULANCE,
+FURNES, BELGIUM,
+_23 October._
+
+MY DEAR PEOPLE,
+
+I think I may get this posted by a war correspondent who is going home,
+but I never know whether my letters reach you or not, for yours, if you
+write them, never reach me. I can't begin to tell you all that is
+happening, and it is really beyond what one is able to describe. The
+tragedy of pain is the thing that is most evident, and there is the roar
+and the racket of it and the everlasting sound of guns. The war seems to
+me now to mean nothing but torn limbs and stretchers. All the doctors
+say that never have they seen men so wounded.
+
+The day that we got here was the day that Dixmude was bombarded, and our
+ten ambulances (motor) went out to fetch in wounded. These were shoved
+in anywhere, dying and dead, and our men went among the shells with
+buildings falling about them and took out all they could. Except where
+the fire is hottest one women goes with each car. So far I have been
+doing ward work, but one of the doctors is taking me on an ambulance
+this afternoon. Most of the women who go are very good chauffeurs
+themselves, so they are chosen before a person who can't drive. They
+are splendid creatures, and funk nothing, and they are there to do a
+little dressing if it is needed.
+
+The firing is awfully heavy to-day. They say it is the big French guns
+that have got up. Two of our ambulances have had miraculous escapes
+after being hit. Things happen too quickly to know how to describe them.
+To-day when I went out to breakfast an old village woman aged about 70
+was brought in wounded in two places. I am not fond of horrors.
+
+We have been given an empty house for the staff, the owners having
+quitted it in a panic and left everything, children's toys on the
+carpet, and beds unmade. The hospital is a college for priests, all of
+whom have fled. Into this building the wounded are carried day and
+night, and the surgeons are working in shifts and can't get the work
+done. We are losing, alas! so many patients. Nothing can be done for
+them, and I always feel so glad when they are gone. I don't think anyone
+can realise what it is to be just behind the line of battle, and I fear
+there would not be much recruiting if people at home could see our
+wards. One can only be thankful for a hospital like this in the thick of
+things, for we are saving lives, and not only so, but saving the lives
+of men who perhaps have lain three days in a trench or a turnip-field
+undiscovered and forgotten.
+
+As soon as a wounded man has been attended to and is able to be put on a
+stretcher again he is sent to Calais. We have to keep emptying the wards
+for other patients to come in, and besides, if the fighting comes this
+way, we shall have to fall back a little further.
+
+We have a river between us and the Germans, so we shall always know when
+they are coming and get a start and be all right.
+
+Your loving
+S. MACNAUGHTAN.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_25 October._--A glorious day. Up in the blue even Taubes--those birds
+of prey--look beautiful, like eagles wheeling in their flight. It is all
+far too lovely to leave, yet men are killing each other painfully with
+every day that dawns.
+
+I had a tiresome day in spite of the weather, because the hospital was
+evacuated suddenly owing to the nearness of the Germans, and I missed
+going with the ambulance, so I hung about all day.
+
+_26 October. My birthday._--This morning several women were brought in
+horribly wounded. One girl of sixteen had both legs smashed. I was
+taking one old woman to the civil hospital and I had to pass eighteen
+dead men; they were laid out beside some women who were washing clothes,
+and I noticed how tired even in death their poor dirty feet looked.
+
+[Page Heading: TO THE EDGE OF THE FIGHTING LINE]
+
+We started early in the ambulance to-day, and went to pick up the
+wounded. It was a wild gusty morning, one of those days when the sky
+takes up nearly all the picture and the world looks small. The mud was
+deep on the road, and a cyclist corps plunged heavily along through it.
+The car steered badly and we drove to the edge of the fighting-line.
+
+First one comes to a row of ammunition vans, with men cooking breakfast
+behind them. Then come the long grey guns, tilted at various angles, and
+beyond are the shells bursting and leaving little clouds of black or
+white in the sky. We signalled to a gun not to fire down the road in
+much the same way as a bobby signals to a hansom. When we got beyond the
+guns they fired over us with a long streaky sort of sound. We came back
+to the road and picked up the wounded wherever we could find them.
+
+The churches are nearly all filled with straw, the chairs piled
+anywhere, and the sacrament removed from the altar. In cottages and
+little inns it is the same thing--a litter of straw, and men lying on it
+in the chilly weather. Here and there through some little window one
+sees surgeons in their white coats dressing wounds. Half the world seems
+to be wounded and inefficient. We filled our ambulance, and stood about
+in curious groups of English men and women who looked as if they were on
+some shooting-party. When our load was complete we drove home.
+
+Dr. Munro told me that last night he met a German prisoner quite naked
+being marched in, proudly holding his head up. Lots of the men fight
+naked in the trenches. In hospital we meet delightful German youths.
+
+Amongst others who were brought in to-day was Mr. "Dick" Reading, the
+editor of a sporting paper. He was serving in the Belgian army, and was
+behind a gun-carriage when it was fired upon and started. Reading clung
+on behind with both his legs broken, and he stuck to it till the
+gun-carriage was pulled up! He came in on a stretcher as bright as a
+button, smoking a cigar and laughing.
+
+[Page Heading: POPERINGHE]
+
+Late this afternoon we had to turn out of Furnes and fly to Poperinghe.
+The drive was intensely interesting, through crowds of troops of every
+nationality, and the town seemed large and well lighted. It was crowded
+with people to see all our ambulances arrive. We went to a cafe, where
+there was a fire but nothing to eat, so some of the party went out and
+bought chops, and I cooked them in a stuffy little room which smelt of
+burnt fat.
+
+After supper we went to a convent where the Queen of the Belgians had
+made arrangements for us to sleep. It was delightful. Each of us had a
+snowy white bed with white curtains in a long corridor, and there was a
+basin of water, cold but clean, and a towel for each of us. We
+thoroughly enjoyed our luxuries.
+
+_28 October._--The tide of battle seems to have swung away from us again
+and we were recalled to Furnes to-day. The hospital looked very bare and
+empty as all the patients had been evacuated, and there was nothing to
+do till fresh ones should come in. Three shells came over to-day and
+landed in a field near us. Some people say they were sent by our own
+naval guns firing wide. The souvenir grafters went out and got pieces of
+them.
+
+[Page Heading: DUNKIRK]
+
+_2 November._--I have been spending a couple of nights in Dunkirk, where
+I went to meet Miss Fyfe. The _Invicta_ got in late because the _Hermes_
+had been torpedoed and they had gone to her assistance. No doubt the
+torpedo was intended for the _Invicta_, which carries ammunition, and is
+becoming an unpopular boat in consequence. Forty of the _Hermes_ men
+were lost.
+
+Dunkirk is full of people, and one meets friends at every turn. I had
+tea at the Consulate one afternoon, and was rather glad to get away from
+the talk of shells and wounds, which is what one hears most of at
+Furnes.
+
+I saw Lord Kitchener in the town one day; he had come to confer with
+Joffre, Sir John French, Monsieur Poincare, and Mr. Churchill, at a
+meeting held at the Chapeau Rouge Hotel. Rather too many valuable men in
+one room, I thought--especially with so many spies about! Three men in
+English officers' uniforms were found to be Germans the other day and
+taken out and shot.
+
+The Duchess of Sutherland has a hospital at our old Casino at Malo les
+Bains, and has made it very nice. I had a long chat with a Coldstream
+man who was there. He told me he was carried to a barn after being shot
+in the leg and the bone shattered. He lay there for six days before he
+was found, with nothing to eat but a few biscuits. He dressed his own
+wound.
+
+"But," he said, "the string of my puttee had been driven in so far by
+the shot I couldn't find it to get the thing off, so I had to bandage
+over it."
+
+I went down to the station one day to see if anything could be done for
+the wounded there. They are coming in at the rate of seven hundred a
+day, and are laid on straw in an immense goods-shed. They get nothing to
+eat, and the atmosphere is so bad that their wounds can't be dressed.
+They are all patient, as usual, only the groans are heartbreaking
+sometimes. We are arranging to have soup given to them, and a number of
+ambulance men arrived who will remove them to hospital ships and trains.
+But the goods-shed is a shambles, and let us leave it at that.[1]
+
+ [1] It must not be thought that in this and in subsequent
+ passages referring to the sufferings of the wounded Miss Macnaughtan
+ alludes to any hardships endured by British troops. Her time in
+ Flanders was all spent behind the French and Belgian lines.--ED.
+
+Mrs. Knocker came into Dunkirk for a night's rest while I was staying
+there. She had been out all the previous day in a storm of wind and rain
+driving an ambulance. It was heavy with wounded, and shells were
+dropping very near. She--the most courageous woman that ever lived--was
+quite unnerved at last. The glass of the car she was driving was dim
+with rain and she could carry no lights, and with this swaying load of
+injured men behind her on the rutty road she had to stick to her wheel
+and go on.
+
+Some one said to her, "There is a doctor in such-and-such a farmhouse,
+and he has no dressings. You must take him these."
+
+She demurred (a most unusual thing for her), but men do not protect
+women in this war, and they said she had to take them. She asked one of
+the least wounded of the men to get down and see what was in front of
+her, and he disappeared altogether. The dark mass she had seen in the
+road was a huge hole made by a shell! After steering into dead horses
+and going over awful roads Mrs. Knocker came bumping into the yard,
+steering so badly that they ran to see what was wrong, and they found
+her fainting, and she was carried into the house. At Dunkirk she got a
+good dinner and a night's rest.
+
+_Furnes. 5 November._--The hospital is beginning to fill up again, and
+the nurses are depressed because only those cases which are nearly
+hopeless are allowed to stay, so it is death on all sides and just a
+hell of suffering. One man yelled to me to-night to kill him. I wish I
+might have done so. The tragedy of war presses with a fearful weight
+after being in a hospital, and wherever one is one hears the infernal
+sound of the guns. On Sunday about forty shells came into Furnes, but I
+was at Dunkirk. This morning about five dropped on to the station.
+
+[Page Heading: NIEUPORT]
+
+To-day I went out to Nieuport. It is like some town one sees in a
+horrible nightmare. Hardly a house is left standing, but that does not
+describe the scene. Nothing can fitly describe it except perhaps such a
+pen as Victor Hugo's. The cathedral at Nieuport has two outer walls left
+standing. The front leans forward helplessly, the aisles are gone. The
+trees round about are burnt up and shot away. In the roadway are great
+holes which shells have made. The very cobbles of the street are
+scattered by them. Not a window remains in the place; all are shattered
+and many hang from their frames. The fronts of the houses have fallen
+out, and one sees glimpses of wretched domestic life: a baby's cradle
+hangs in mid-air, some tin boxes have fallen through from the box-room
+in the attic to the ground floor. Shops are shivered and their contents
+strewn on all sides; the interiors of other houses have been hollowed
+out by fire. There is a toy-shop with dolls grinning vacantly at the
+ruins or bobbing brightly on elastic strings.
+
+In a wretched cottage some soldiers are having breakfast at a
+fine-carved table. In one house, surrounded by a very devastation of
+wreckage, some cheap ornaments stand intact on a mantelpiece. From
+another a little ginger-coloured cat strolls out unconcernedly! The
+bedsteads hanging midway between floors look twisted and thrawn--nothing
+stands up straight. Like the wounded, the town has been rendered
+inefficient by war.
+
+_6 November._--Furnes always seems to me a weird tragic place. I cannot
+think why this is so, but its influence is to me rather curious. I feel
+as if all the time I was living in some blood-curdling ghost story or a
+horrid dream. Every day I try to overcome the feeling, but I can't
+succeed. This afternoon I made up my mind to return to our villa and
+write my diary. The day was lovely, and I meant to enjoy a rest and a
+scribble, but so strong was the horrid influence of the place that I
+couldn't settle to anything. I can't describe it, but it seemed to
+stifle me, and I can only compare it to some second sight in which one
+sees death. I sat as long as I could doing my writing, but I had to give
+in at last, and I tucked my book under my arm and walked back to the
+hospital, where at least I was with human beings and not ghosts.
+
+Our life here is made up of many elements and many people, all rather
+incongruous, but the average of human nature is good. A villa belonging
+to a Dr. Joos was given to our staff. It is a pretty little house, with
+three beds in it, and we are eighteen people, so most of us sleep on the
+floor. It wouldn't be a bad little place (except for the drains) if only
+there wasn't this horrid influence about it all. I always particularly
+dislike toddling after people like a little lost dog, but here I find
+that unless I am with somebody the ghosts get the better of me.
+
+The villa is being ruined by us I fear, but I have a woman to clean it,
+and I am trying to keep it in order. It is a cold little place for we
+have no fires. We can, by pumping, get a little very cold water, and
+there is a tap in the bath-room and one basin at which everyone tries to
+wash and shave at the same time. We get our meals at a butcher's shop,
+where there is a large room which we more than fill. The lights of the
+town are all out by 6 o'clock, so we grope about, but there is a lamp in
+our dining-room. When we come out we have to pass through the butcher's
+shop, and one may find oneself running into the interior of a sheep.
+
+We get up about 7 o'clock and fight for the basin. Then we walk round to
+the butcher's shop and have breakfast at 7.30. Most people think they
+start off for the day's work at 8, but it is generally quite 10 o'clock
+before all the brown-hooded ambulances with their red crosses have moved
+out of the yard. We do not as a rule meet again till dinner-time, and
+even then many of the party are absent. They come in at all times, very
+dirty and hungry, and the greeting is always the same, "Did you get
+many?"--_i.e._, "Have you picked up many wounded?"
+
+One night Dr. Munro got bowled over by the actual air force created by a
+shell, which however did not hit him. Yesterday Mr. Secher was shot in
+the leg. I am amazed that not more get hit. They are all very cheery
+about it.
+
+To-day we heard that a jolly French boy with white teeth, who has been
+very good at making coffee at our picnic lunches, was put up against a
+tree and shot at daybreak. Someone had made him drunk the night before,
+and he had threatened an officer with a revolver.
+
+[Page Heading: A DRAMATIC INCIDENT]
+
+_7 November. St. Malo les Bains._--Lady Bagot turned up here to-day, and
+I lunched with her at the Hotel des Arcades. Just before lunch a bomb
+was dropped from a Taube overhead, and hardly had we sat down to lunch
+when a revolver shot rang through the room. A French officer had
+discharged his pistol by mistake, and he lay on the floor in his scarlet
+trews. The scene was really the Adelphi, and as the man had only
+slightly hurt himself one was able to appreciate the scenic effect and
+to notice how well staged it was. A waiter ran for me. I ran for
+dressings to one of our ambulances, and we knelt in the right attitude
+beside the hero in his scarlet clothes, while the "lady of the bureau"
+begged for the bullet!
+
+In the evening Lady Bagot and I worked at the railway-sheds till 3 a.m.
+One immense shed had 700 wounded in it. The night scene, with its
+inevitable accompaniment of low-turned lamps and gloom, was one I shall
+not forget. The railway-lines on each side of the covered platform were
+spread with straw, and on this wounded men, bedded down like cattle,
+slept. There were rows of them sleeping feet to feet, with straw over
+them to make a covering. I didn't hear a grumble, and hardly a groan.
+Most of them slept heavily.
+
+Near the door was a row of Senegalese, their black faces and gleaming
+eyes looking strange above the straw; and further on were some Germans,
+whom the French authorities would not allow our men to touch; then rows
+of men of every colour and blood; Zouaves, with their picturesque dress
+all grimed and colourless; Turcos, French, and Belgians. Nearly all had
+their heads and hands bound up in filthy dressings. We went into the
+dressing-station at the far end of the great shed and dressed wounds
+till about 3 o'clock, then we passed through the long long lines of
+sleeping wounded men again and went home.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_To Lady Clementine Waring._
+
+_8 November._
+MY DEAREST CLEMMIE,
+
+I have a big job for you. Will you do it? I know you are the person for
+it, and you will be prompt and interested.
+
+The wounded are suffering from hunger as much as from their wounds. In
+most places, such as dressing-stations and railway-stations, nothing is
+provided for them at all, and many men are left for two or three days
+without food.
+
+I wish I could describe it all to you! These wounded men are picked up
+after a fight and taken anywhere--very often to some farmhouse or inn,
+where a Belgian surgeon claps something on to the wounds or ties on a
+splint, and then our (Dr. Munro's) ambulances come along and bring the
+men into the Field Hospital if they are very bad, or if not they are
+taken direct to a station and left there. They may, and often do, have
+to wait for hours till a train loads up and starts. Even those who are
+brought to the Field Hospital have to turn out long before they can walk
+or sit, and they are carried to the local station and put into covered
+horse-boxes on straw, and have to wait till the train loads up and
+starts. You see everything has to be done with a view to sudden
+evacuation. We are so near to the firing-line that the Germans may sweep
+on our way at any time, and then every man has to be cleared out somehow
+(we have a heap of ambulances), and the staff is moved off to some safer
+place. We did a bolt of this sort to Poperinghe one day, but after being
+there two days the fighting swayed the other way and we were able to
+come back.
+
+[Page Heading: HUNGER OF THE WOUNDED]
+
+Well, during all these shiftings and waitings the wounded get nothing to
+eat. I want some travelling-kitchens, and I want you to see about the
+whole thing. You may have to come from Scotland, because I have opened
+the subject with Mr. Burbidge, of Harrods' Stores. A Harrods' man is
+over here. He takes back this letter. I particularly want you to see
+him. Mr. Burbidge has, or can obtain, old horse-vans which can be fitted
+up as travelling-kitchens. He is doing one now for Millicent, Duchess of
+Sutherland; it is to cost L15, which I call very cheap. I wish you
+could see it, for I know you could improve upon it. It is fitted, I
+understand, with a copper for boiling soup, and a chimney. There is also
+a place for fuel, and I should like a strong box that would hold
+vegetables, dried peas, etc., whose top would serve as a table. Then
+there must be plenty of hooks and shelves where possible, and I believe
+Burbidge makes some sort of protection against fire in the way of lining
+to the van. Harrods' man says that he doesn't know if they have any more
+vans or not.
+
+I want someone with push and energy to see the thing right through and
+get the vans off. The _Invicta_, from the Admiralty Pier, Dover, sailing
+daily, brings Red Cross things free.
+
+[Page Heading: PROPOSED TRAVELLING-KITCHENS]
+
+The vans would have to have the Red Cross painted on them, and in
+_small_ letters, somewhere inconspicuous, "Miss Macnaughtan's
+Travelling-Kitchens." This is only for identification. I thought we
+might begin with _three_, and get them sent out _at once_, and go on as
+they are required. I must have a capable person and a helper in charge
+of each, so that limits my number. The Germans have beautiful little
+kitchens at each station, but I can't be sure what money I can raise, so
+must go slow.
+
+I want also two little trollies, just to hold a tin jug and some tin
+cups hung round, with one oil-lamp to keep the jug hot. The weather will
+be bitter soon, and only "special" cases have blankets.
+
+Clemmie, if only we could see this thing through without too much red
+tape!... No permission need be given for the work of these kitchens, as
+we are under the Belgian Minister of War and act for Belgium.
+
+I thought of coming over to London for a day or two, and I can still do
+so, only I know you will be able to do this thing better than anyone,
+and will think of things that no one else thinks of. I can get voluntary
+workers, but meat and vegetables are dreadfully dear, so I shan't be
+able to spend a great deal on the vans. However, any day they may be
+taken by the Germans, so the only thing that really matters is to get
+the wounded _a_ mug of hot soup.
+
+Last night I was dressing wounds and bandaging at Dunkirk station till 3
+a.m. The men are brought there in _heaps_, all helpless, all suffering.
+Sometimes there are fifteen hundred in one day. Last night seven hundred
+lay on straw in a huge railway-shed, with straw to cover them--bedded
+down like cattle, and all in pain. Still, it is better than the trenches
+and shrapnel overhead!
+
+At the Field Hospital the wounds are ghastly, and we are losing so many
+patients! Mere boys of sixteen come in sometimes mortally wounded, and
+there are a good many cases of wounded women. You see, no one is safe;
+and, oh, my dear, have you ever seen a town that has been thoroughly
+shelled? At Furnes we have a good many shells dropping in, but no real
+bombardment yet. After Antwerp I don't seem to care about these
+visitors. We were under fire there for eighteen hours, and it was a bit
+of a strain as our hospital was in a line with the Arsenal, which they
+were trying to destroy, so we got more than our share of attention. The
+noise was horrible, and the shells came in at the rate of four a minute.
+There was something quite hellish about it.
+
+Do you remember that great bit of writing in Job, when Wisdom speaks and
+says: "Destruction and Death say, it is not in me"?
+
+The wantonness and sort of rage of it all appalled one. Our women
+behaved splendidly.
+
+I'll come over to England if you think I had better, but I am sure you
+are the person I want.... If anything should prevent your helping,
+please wire to me: otherwise I shall know things are going forward.
+
+Your loving,
+S. MACNAUGHTAN.
+
+The vans should be strong as they may have rough usage; also, to take
+them to their destination they may have to be hitched on to a
+motor-ambulance.
+
+One or two strong trays in each kitchen would be useful. The little
+trollies would be for railway-station work. As we go on I hope to have
+one kitchen for each dressing-station as well.
+
+SALLY.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_8 November._--This afternoon I went down to the Hotel des Arcades,
+which is the general meeting ground for everyone. The drawing-room was
+full and so was the Place Jean Bart, on which it looks. Suddenly we saw
+people beginning to fly! Soldiers, old men, children in their Sunday
+clothes, all running to cover. I asked what was up, and heard that a
+Taube was at that moment flying over our hotel. These are the sort of
+pleasant things one hears out here! Then Lady Decies came running in to
+say that two bombs had fallen and twenty people were wounded.
+
+Once more we got bandages and lint and hurried off in a motor-car, but
+the civilian doctors were looking after everyone. The bomb by good luck
+had fallen in a little garden, and had done the least damage imaginable,
+but every window in the neighbourhood was smashed.
+
+[Page Heading: NIGHT WORK AT RAILWAY SHEDS]
+
+At night we went to the railway-sheds and dressed wounds. I made them do
+the Germans; but it was too late for one of them--a handsome young
+fellow with both his feet deep blue with frost-bite, his leg broken, and
+a great wound in his thigh. He had not been touched for eight days.
+Another man had a great hole right through his arm and shoulder. The
+dressing was rough and ready. The surgeons clapped a great wad of lint
+into the hole and we bound it up. There is no hot water, no sterilising,
+no cyanide gauze even, but iodine saves many lives, and we have plenty
+of it. The German boy was dying when we left. His eyes above the straw
+began to look glazed and dim. Death, at least, is merciful.
+
+We work so late at the railway-sheds that I lie in bed till lunch time.
+Lady Bagot and I go to the sheds in the evening and stay there till 1
+a.m.
+
+_11 November. Boulogne._--I got a letter from Julia yesterday, telling
+me that Alan is wounded and in hospital at Boulogne, and asking me to
+go and see him.
+
+I came here this morning and had to run about for a long time before I
+started getting a "laissez-passer" for the road, as spies are being shot
+almost at sight now. By good chance I got a motor-car which brought me
+all the way; trains are uncertain, and filled with troops, and one never
+knows when they will arrive.
+
+[Page Heading: STORIES OF THE BRITISH FRONT]
+
+I found poor old Alan at the Base Hospital, in terrible pain, poor boy,
+but not dangerously wounded. He has been through an awful time, and
+nearly all the officers of his regiment have been killed or wounded. For
+my part, in spite of his pain, I can thank God that he is out of the
+firing-line for a bit. The horror of the war has got right into him, and
+he has seen things which few boys of eighteen can have witnessed. Eight
+days in the trenches at Ypres under heavy fire day and night is a pretty
+severe test, and Alan has behaved splendidly. He told me the most awful
+tales of what he had seen, but I believe it did him good to get things
+off his chest, so I listened. The thing he found the most ghastly was
+the fact that when a trench has been taken or lost the wounded and dying
+and dead are left out in the open. He says that firing never ceases, and
+it is impossible to reach these men, who die of starvation within sight
+of their comrades.
+
+"Sometimes," Alan said, "we see them raise themselves on an arm for an
+instant, and they yell to us to come to them, but we can't."
+
+His own wound was received when the Germans "got their range to an
+inch" and began shelling their trenches. A whole company next to Alan
+was wiped out, and he started to go back to tell his Colonel the trench
+could not be held. The communication trench by which he went was not
+quite finished, and he had to get out into the open and race across to
+where the unfinished trench began again. Poor child, running for his
+life! He was badly hit in the groin, but managed just to tumble into the
+next bit of the trench, where he found two men who carried him, pouring
+with blood, to his Colonel. He was hastily bound up and carried four
+miles on crossed rifles to the hospital at Ypres, where his wound was
+properly dressed, and after an hour he was put on the train for
+Boulogne.
+
+Alan had one story of how he was told to wait at a certain spot with 130
+men. "So I waited," he said, "but the fire was awful." His regiment had,
+it seems, gone round another way. "I got thirty of the men away," Alan
+said, "the rest were killed." It means something to be an officer and a
+gentleman.
+
+Every day the list of casualties grows longer, and I wonder who will be
+left.
+
+_19 November. Furnes._--Early on Monday, the 16th, I left Boulogne in
+Lady Bagot's car and came to Dunkirk, where I was laid up with a cold
+for two or three days. It was singularly uncomfortable, as no one ever
+answered my bell, etc.; but I had a bed, which is always such a comfort,
+and the room was heated, so I got my things dry. Very often I find the
+only way to do this or to get dry clothing is to take things to bed with
+one--it is rather chilly, but better than putting on wet things in the
+morning.
+
+The usual number of unexpected people keep coming and going. At Boulogne
+I met Lady Eileen Elliot, Ian Malcolm, Lord Francis Scott, and various
+others--all very English and clean and well fed. It was quite different
+from Furnes, to which I returned on Wednesday. Most of us sleep on
+mattresses on the floor at Furnes, but even these were all occupied, so
+I hopped about getting in where I could. The cold weather "set in in
+earnest" as newspapers say, and when it does that in Furnes it seems to
+be particularly in earnest.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_To Lady Clementine Waring._
+
+HOTEL DES ARCADES,
+DUNKERQUE,
+_18 November, 1914._
+
+DEAREST CLEMMIE,
+
+Forgive the delay in writing again. I was too sick about it all at
+first, then I was sent for to go to Boulogne to see my nephew, who is
+badly wounded. I can't explain the present situation to you because it
+would only be censored, but I hope to write about it later.
+
+I shall manage the soup-kitchens soon, I hope, but next week will decide
+that and many things. The objection to the _pattern_ is that those vans
+would overturn going round corners when hitched on behind ambulances.
+Some wealthy people are giving a regular motor kitchen to run about to
+various "dressing"-stations--this will be most useful, but it doesn't do
+away with the need of something to eat during those interminable waits
+at the _railway_-stations.
+
+[Page Heading: CHANGES IN THE SITUATION]
+
+To-morrow I begin my own little soup-kitchen at Furnes. I have a room
+but no van, and this is most unsatisfactory, as any day the room (so
+near the station) may be commandeered. A van would make me quite
+independent, but I must feel my way. The situation changes very often,
+as you will of course see, and when one is quite close to the Front one
+has to be always changing with it.
+
+I want helpers and I want vans, but rules are becoming stricter than
+ever. Even Adeline, Duchess of Bedford, whose good work everyone knows,
+has waited for a permit for a week at Boulogne, and has now gone home.
+When all the useful women have been expelled there will follow the usual
+tale of soldiers' suffering and privations: when women are about they
+don't let them suffer.
+
+The only plan (if you know of any man who wants to come out) is to know
+how to drive a motor-car and then to offer it and his services to the
+Red Cross Society. I have set my heart on station soup-kitchens because
+I see the men put into horse-boxes on straw straight off the field, and
+there they lie without water or light or food while the train jolts on
+for hours. I wish I had you here to back me up! We could do anything
+together.
+
+As ever, yours gratefully,
+SALLY.
+
+The motor kitchens cost L600 fitted, but the maker is giving the one I
+speak of for L300. Everyone has given so much to the war I don't feel
+sure I could collect this amount. I might try America, but it takes a
+long time.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+AT FURNES RAILWAY-STATION
+
+
+_21 November._--I am up to my eyes in soup! I have started my
+soup-kitchen at the station, and it gives me a lot to do. Bad luck to
+it, my cold and cough are pretty bad!
+
+It is odd to wake in the morning in a frozen room, with every pane of
+glass green and thick with frost, and one does not dare to think of Mary
+and morning tea! When I can summon enough moral courage to put a foot
+out of bed I jump into my clothes at once; half dressed, I go to a
+little tap of cold water to wash, and then, and for ever, I forgive
+entirely those sections of society who do not tub. We brush our own
+boots here, and put on all the clothes we possess, and then descend to a
+breakfast of Quaker oat porridge with bread and margarine. I wouldn't
+have it different, really, till our men are out of the trenches; but I
+am hoping most fervently that I shan't break down, as I am so "full with
+soup."
+
+[Page Heading: WORK IN THE SOUP-KITCHEN]
+
+Our kitchen at the railway-station is a little bit of a passage, which
+measures eight feet by eight feet. In it are two small stoves. One is a
+little round iron thing which burns, and the other is a sort of little
+"kitchener" which doesn't! With this equipment, and various huge
+"marmites," we make coffee and soup for hundreds of men every day. The
+first convoy gets into the station about 9.30 a.m., all the men frozen,
+the black troops nearly dead with cold. As soon as the train arrives I
+carry out one of my boiling "marmites" to the middle of the stone
+entrance and ladle out the soup, while a Belgian Sister takes round
+coffee and bread.
+
+These Belgians (three of them) deserve much of the credit for the
+soup-kitchen, if any credit is going about, as they started with coffee
+before I came, and did wonders on nothing. Now that I have bought my
+pots and pans and stoves we are able to do soup, and much more. The
+Sisters do the coffee on one side of eight feet by eight, while I and my
+vegetables and the stove which goes out are on the other. We can't ask
+people to help because there is no room in the kitchen; besides, alas!
+there are so many people who like raising a man's head and giving him
+soup, but who do not like cutting up vegetables.
+
+After the first convoy of wounded has been served, other wounded men
+come in from time to time, then about 4 o'clock there is another
+train-load. At ten p.m. the largest convoy arrives. The men seem too
+stiff to move, and many are carried in on soldiers' backs. The
+stretchers are laid on the floor, those who can "s'asseoir" sit on
+benches, and every man produces a "quart" or tin cup. One and all they
+come out of the darkness and never look about them, but rouse themselves
+to get fed, and stretch out poor grimy hands for bread and steaming
+drinks. There is very little light--only one oil-lamp, which hangs from
+the roof, and burns dimly. Under this we place the "marmites," and all
+that I can see is one brown or black or wounded hand stretched out into
+the dim ring of light under the lamp, with a little tin mug held out for
+soup. Wet and ragged, and covered with sticky mud, the wounded lie in
+the salle of the station, and, except under the lamp, it is all quite
+dark. There are dim forms and frosty breaths, and a door which bangs
+continually, and then the train loads up, the wounded depart, and a
+heavy smell and an empty pot are all that remain. We clean up the
+kitchen, and go home about 1 a.m. I do the night work alone.
+
+_24 November._--We are beginning to get into our stride, and the small
+kitchen turns out its gallons and buckets of liquid. Mrs. ---- has been
+helping me with my work. It is good to see anyone so beautiful in the
+tiny kitchen, and it is quaint to see anyone so absolutely ignorant of
+how a pot is washed or a vegetable peeled.
+
+I have a little electric lamp, which is a great comfort to me, as I have
+to walk home alone at midnight. When I get up in the morning I have to
+remember all I shall want during the day, as the villa is a mile from
+the station, so I take my lantern out at 9.30 a.m.!
+
+I saw a Belgian regiment march back to the trenches to-day. They had a
+poor little band and some foggy instruments, and a bugler flourished a
+trumpet. I stood by the roadside and cried till I couldn't see.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Page Heading: A LETTER HOME]
+
+_To Miss Mary King._
+
+FURNES, BELGIUM,
+_27 November._
+
+DEAR MARY,
+
+You will like to know that I have a soup-kitchen at the station here,
+and I am up to my neck in soup. I make it all day and a good bit of the
+night too, for the wounded are coming in all the time, and they are half
+frozen--especially the black troops. People are being so kind about the
+work I am doing, and they are all saying what a comfort the soup is to
+the men. Sometimes I feed several hundreds in a day.
+
+I am sure everyone will grieve to hear of the death of Lord Roberts, but
+I think he died just as he would wish to have died--amongst his old
+troops, who loved him, and in the service of the King. He was a fine
+soldier and a Christian gentleman, and you can't say better of a man
+than that.
+
+I feel as if I had been out here for years, and it seems quite odd to
+think that one used to wear evening dress and have a fire in one's room.
+I am promising myself, if all goes well, to get home about
+Christmas-time. I wish I could think that the war would be over by then,
+but it doesn't look very like it.
+
+Remember me to Gwennie, and to all your people. Take care of your old
+self.
+
+Yours truly,
+S. MACNAUGHTAN.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_1 December._--Mrs. Knocker and Miss Chisholm and Lady Dorothy went out
+to Pervyse a few days ago to make soup, etc., for Belgians in the
+trenches. They live in the cellar of a house which has been blown inside
+out by guns, and take out buckets of soup to men on outpost duty. Not a
+glimpse of fire is allowed on the outposts. Fortunately the weather has
+been milder lately, but soaking wet. Our three ladies walk about the
+trenches at night, and I come home at 1 a.m. from the station. The men
+of our party meanwhile do some house-work. They sit over the fire a good
+deal, clear away the tea-things, and when we come home at night we find
+they have put hot-water bottles in our beds and trimmed some lamps. I
+feel like Alice in Wonderland or some other upside-down world. We live
+in much discomfort, which is a little unnecessary; but no one seems to
+want to undertake housekeeping.
+
+I make soup all day, and there is not much else to write about. All
+along the Yser the Allies and the Germans confront each other, but
+things have been quieter lately. The piteous list of casualties is not
+so long as it has been. A wounded German was brought in to-day. Both his
+legs were broken and his feet frost-bitten. He had been for four days in
+water with nothing to eat, and his legs unset. He is doing well.
+
+[Page Heading: PERVYSE]
+
+On Sunday I drove out to Pervyse with a kind friend, Mr. Tapp. At the
+end of the long avenue by which one approaches the village, Pervyse
+church stands, like a sentinel with both eyes shot out. Nothing is left
+but a blind stare. Hardly any of the church remains, and the churchyard
+is as if some devil had stalked through it, tearing up crosses and
+kicking down graves. Even the dead are not left undisturbed in this
+awful war. The village (like many other villages) is just a mass of
+gaping ruins--roofs blown off, streets full of holes, not a window left
+unshattered, and the guns still booming.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_To Mrs. Charles Percival._
+
+FURNES, BELGIUM,
+_5 December._
+
+DARLING TAB,
+
+I have a chance of sending this to England to be posted, so I must send
+you a line to wish you many happy returns of the day. I wish we could
+have our yearly kiss. I will think of you a lot, my dear, on the 8th,
+and drink your health if I can raise the wherewithal. We are not famous
+for our comforts, and it would amaze you to see how very nasty food can
+be, and how very little one can get of it.
+
+I have an interesting job now, and it is my own, which is rather a
+mercy, as I never know which is most common, dirt or muddle. I can have
+things as clean as I like, and my soup is getting quite a name for
+itself. The first convoy of wounded generally comes into the station
+about 11 a.m. It may number anything. Then the men are put into the
+train, and there begins a weary wait for the poor fellows till more
+wounded arrive and the train is loaded up, and sometimes they are kept
+there all day. The stretcher cases are in a long corridor, and the
+sitting-up cases in ordinary third-class carriages. The sitters are
+worn, limping men, with bandaged heads, and hands bound up, who are yet
+capable of sitting up in a train.
+
+The transport is well done, I think (_far_ better than in South Africa),
+but more women are wanted to look after details. To give you one
+instance: all stretchers are made of different sizes, so that if a man
+arrives on an ambulance, the stretchers belonging to it cannot go into
+the train, and the poor wounded man has to be lifted and "transferred,"
+which causes him (in the case of broken legs or internal injuries
+especially) untold suffering. It also takes up much room, and gives
+endless trouble for the sake of an _inch and a half_ of space, which is
+the usual difference in the size of the stretchers, but that prevents
+them slipping into the sockets on the train.
+
+Another thing I have noticed is, that no man, even lying down in the
+train, ever gets his boots taken off. The men's feet are always soaked
+through, as they have been standing up to their knees in water in the
+trenches; but, of course, slippers are unheard of. I do wonder if ladies
+could be persuaded to make any sort of list or felt or even flannel
+slippers? I saw quite a good pattern the other day, and will try to send
+you one, in case Eastbourne should rise to the occasion. Of course,
+there must be _hundreds_ of pairs, and heaps would get lost. I do
+believe other centres would join, and the cost of material for slippers
+would be quite trifling. A priest goes in each corridor train, and there
+is always a stove where the boots could be dried. I believe slippers can
+be bought for about a shilling a pair. The men's feet are _enormous_.
+Cases should be marked with a red cross, and sent per S.S. _Invicta_,
+Admiralty Pier, Dover.
+
+[Page Heading: THE SHELLING OF LAMPERNESSE]
+
+The fighting has had a sort of lull here for some time, but there are
+always horrible things happening. The other day at Lampernesse, 500
+soldiers were sleeping on straw in a church. A spy informed the Germans,
+who were twelve miles off, but they got the range to an inch, and sent
+shells straight into the church, killing and wounding nearly everyone in
+it, and leaving men under the ruins. We had some terrible cases that
+day. The church was shelled at 6 a.m., and by 11 a.m. all the wounded
+were having soup and coffee at the station. I thought their faces were
+more full of horror than any I had seen.
+
+The parson belonging to our convoy is a particularly nice young fellow.
+I have had a bad cold lately, and every night he puts a hot-water bottle
+in my bed. When he can raise any food he lays a little supper for me, so
+that when I come in between 12 and 1 o'clock I can have something to
+eat, a lump of cheese, plum jam, and perhaps a piece of bully beef,
+always three pieces of ginger from a paper bag he has of them. Last
+night when I got back I found I couldn't open the door leading into a
+sort of garage through which we have to enter this house. I pushed as
+hard as I could, and then found I was pushing against horses, and that a
+whole squad of troop horses had been shoved in there for the night, so I
+had to make my entry under their noses and behind their heels. Pinned to
+the table inside the house was a note from the parson, "I can't get you
+any food, but I have put a bottle of port-wine in your room. Stick to
+it."
+
+I had meant to go early to church to-day, but I was really too tired, so
+I am writing to you instead. Now I must be getting up, for "business
+must be attended to."
+
+Well, good-bye, my dear. I am always too busy to write now, so would you
+mind sending this letter on to the family?
+
+Your loving sister,
+S. MACNAUGHTAN.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_December._--Unexpected people continue to arrive at Furnes. Mme. Curie
+and her daughter are in charge of the X-ray apparatus at the hospital.
+Sir Bartle Frere is there as a guest. Miss Vaughan, of the _Nursing
+Times_, came in out of the dark one evening. To-day the King has been
+here. God bless him! he always does the right thing.
+
+_6 December._--My horizon is bounded by soup and the men who drink it.
+There is a stir outside the kitchen, and someone says, "Convoi." So then
+we begin to fill pots and take steaming "marmites" off the fire. The
+"sitting cases" come in first, hobbling, or carried on their comrades'
+backs--heads and feet bandaged or poor hands maimed. When they have been
+carried or have stiffly and slowly marched through the entrance to the
+train, the "brancard" cases are brought in and laid on the floor. They
+are hastily examined, and a doctor goes round reading the labels
+attached to them which describe their wounds. An English ambulance and
+a French one wait to take serious cases to their respective hospitals.
+The others are lifted on to train-stretchers and carried to the train.
+
+[Page Heading: A QUESTION OF STRETCHERS]
+
+Two doctors came out from England on inspection duty to-day. They asked
+if I had anything to report, and I made them come to the station to go
+into this matter of the different-sized stretchers. It is agony to the
+men to be shifted. Dr. Wilson has promised to take up the question. The
+transport service is now much improved. The trains are heated and
+lighted, and priests travel with the lying-down cases.
+
+_8 December._--I have a little "charette" for my soup. It is painted
+red, and gives a lot of amusement to the wounded. The trains are very
+long, and my small carriage is useful for cups and basins, bread, soup,
+coffee, etc. Clemmie Waring designed and sent it to me.
+
+To-day I was giving out my soup on the train and three shells came in in
+quick succession. One came just over my head and lodged in a haystall on
+the other side of the platform. The wall of the store has an enormous
+hole in it, but the thickly packed hay prevented the shrapnel
+scattering. The station-master was hit, and his watch saved him, but it
+was crumpled up like a rag. Two men were wounded, and one of them died.
+A whole crowd of refugees came in from Coxide, which is being heavily
+shelled. There was not a scrap of food for them, so I made soup in great
+quantities, and distributed it to them in a crowded room whose
+atmosphere was thick. Ladling out the soup is great fun.
+
+_12 December._--The days are very short now, and darkness falls early.
+All the streets are dark, so are the houses, so is the station. Two
+candles are a rare treat, and oil is difficult to get.
+
+Such a nice boy died to-night. We brought him to the hospital from the
+station, and learned that he had lain for eight days wounded and
+untended. Strangely enough he was naked, and had only a blanket over him
+on the stretcher. I do not know why he was still alive. Everything was
+done for him that could be done, but as I passed through one of the
+wards this evening the nurses were doing their last kindly duty to him.
+Poor fellow! He was one of those who had "given even their names." No
+one knew who he was. He had a woman's portrait tattooed on his breast.
+
+_19 December._--Not much to record this week. The days have become more
+stereotyped, and their variety consists in the number of wounded who
+come in. One day we had 280 extra men to feed--a batch of soldiers
+returning hungry to the trenches, and some refugees. So far we have
+never refused anyone a cup of soup; or coffee and bread.
+
+I haven't been fit lately, and get fearful bad headaches. I go to the
+station at 10 a.m. every morning, and work till 1 o'clock. Then to the
+hospital for lunch. I like the staff there very much. The surgeons are
+not only skilful, but they are men of education. We all get on well
+together, in spite of that curious form of temper which war always seems
+to bring. No one is affable here, except those who have just come out
+from home, and it is quite common to hear a request made and refused,
+or granted with, "Please do not ask again." Newcomers are looked upon as
+aliens, and there is a queer sort of jealousy about all the work.
+
+[Page Heading: WAR WORKERS' DIFFICULTIES]
+
+Oddly enough, few persons seem to show at their best at a time when the
+best should be apparent. No doubt, it is a form of nerves, which is
+quite pardonable. Nurses and surgeons do not suffer from it. They are
+accustomed to work and to seeing suffering, but amateur workers are a
+bit headlong at times. I think the expectation of excitement (which is
+often frustrated) has a good deal to do with it. Those who "come out for
+thrills" often have a long waiting time, and energies unexpended in one
+direction often show themselves unexpectedly and a little unpleasantly
+in another.
+
+In my own department I always let Zeal spend itself unchecked, and I
+find that people who have claimed work or a job ferociously are the
+first to complain of over-work if left to themselves. Afterwards, if
+there is any good in them, they settle down into their stride. They are
+only like young horses, pulling too hard at first and sweating off their
+strength--jibbing one moment and shying the next--when it comes to
+"'ammer, 'ammer, 'ammer on the 'ard 'igh road," one finds who is going
+to stick it and who is not.
+
+There has been some heavy firing round about Nieuport and south of the
+Yser lately, and an unusual number of wounded have been coming in, many
+of them "gravement blesses."
+
+One evening a young French officer came to the kitchen for soup. It was
+on Wednesday, December 16th, the day the Allies assumed the offensive,
+and all night cases were being brought in. He was quite a boy, and
+utterly shaken by what he had been through. He could only repeat, "It
+was horrible, horrible!" These are the men who tell brave tales when
+they get home, but we see them dirty and worn, when they have left the
+trenches only an hour before, and have the horror of battle in their
+eyes.
+
+There are scores of "pieds geles" at present, and I now have bags of
+socks for these. So many men come in with bare feet, and I hope in time
+to get carpet slippers and socks for them all. One night no one came to
+help, and I had a great business getting down a long train, so Mrs.
+Logette has promised to come every evening. The kitchen is much nicer
+now, as we are in a larger passage, and we have three stoves, lamps,
+etc. Many things are being "straightened out" besides, my poor little
+corner and war seems better understood. There is hardly a thing which is
+not thought of and done for the sick and wounded, and I should say a
+grievance was impossible.
+
+I still lodge at the Villa Joos, and am beginning to enjoy a study of
+middle-class provincial life. The ladies do all the house-work. We have
+breakfast (a bite) in the kitchen at 8.30 a.m., then I go to make soup,
+and when I come back after lunch for a rest, "the family" are dressed
+and sitting round a stove, and this they continue to do till a meal has
+to be prepared. There is one lamp and one table, and one stove, and
+unless papa plays the pianola there is nothing to do but talk. No one
+reads, and only one woman does a little embroidery, while the small
+girl of the party cuts out scraps from a fashion paper.
+
+The poor convoy! it is becoming very squabbly and tiresome, and there is
+a good deal of "talking over," which is one of the weakest sides of
+"communal life." It is petty and ridiculous to quarrel when Death is so
+near, and things are so big and often so tragic. Yet human nature has
+strict limitations. Mr. Ramsay MacDonald came out from the committee to
+see what all the complaints were about. So there were strange
+interviews, in store-rooms, etc. (no one has a place to call their
+own!), and everyone "explained" and "gave evidence" and tried to "put
+matters straight."
+
+It rains every day. This may be a "providence," as the floods are
+keeping the Germans away. The sound of constant rain on the window-panes
+is a little melancholy. Let us pray that in singleness and cheerfulness
+of heart we may do our little bit of work.
+
+[Page Heading: EXPEDITION TO DUNKIRK]
+
+_23 December._--Yesterday I motored into Dunkirk, and did a lot of
+shopping. By accident our motor-car went back to Furnes without me, and
+there was not a bed to be had in Dunkirk! After many vicissitudes I met
+Captain Whiting, who gave up his room in his own house to me, and slept
+at the club. I was in clover for once, and nearly wept when I found my
+boots brushed and hot water at my door. It was so like home again.
+
+I was leaving the station to-day when shelling began again. One shell
+dropped not far behind the bridge, which I had just crossed, and
+wrecked a house. Another fell into a boat on the canal and wounded the
+occupants badly. I went to tell the Belgian Sisters not to go down to
+the station, and I lunched at their house, and then went home till the
+evening work began. People are always telling one that danger is now
+over--a hidden gun has been discovered and captured, and there will be
+no more shelling. Quel blague! The shelling goes on just the same
+whether hidden guns are captured or not.
+
+I can't say at present when I shall get home, because no one ever knows
+what is going to happen. I don't quite know who would take my place at
+the soup-kitchen if I were to leave.
+
+_25 December._--My Christmas Day began at midnight, when I walked home
+through the moonlit empty streets of Furnes. At 2 a.m. the guns began to
+roar, and roared all night. They say the Allies are making an attack.
+
+I got up early and went to church in the untidy school-room at the
+hospital, which is called the nurses' sitting-room. Mr. Streatfield had
+arranged a little altar, which was quite nice, and had set some chairs
+in an orderly row. As much as in him lay--from the altar linen to the
+white artificial flowers in the vases--all was as decent as could be and
+there were candles and a cross. We were quite a small congregation, but
+another service had been held earlier, and the wounded heard Mass in
+their ward at 6 a.m. The priests put up an altar there, and I believe
+the singing was excellent. Inside we prayed for peace, and outside the
+guns went on firing. Prince Alexander of Teck came to our service--a
+big soldierly figure in the bare room.
+
+[Page Heading: CHRISTMAS IN BELGIUM]
+
+After breakfast I went to the soup-kitchen at the station, as usual,
+then home--_i.e._, to the hospital to lunch. At 3.15 came a sort of
+evensong with hymns, and then we went to the civil hospital, where there
+was a Christmas-tree for all the Belgian refugee children. Anything more
+touching I never saw, and to be with them made one blind with tears. One
+tiny mite, with her head in bandages, and a little black shawl on, was
+introduced to me as "une blessee, madame." Another little boy in the
+hospital is always spoken of gravely as "the civilian."
+
+Every man, woman, and child got a treat or a present or a good dinner.
+The wounded had turkey, and all they could eat, and the children got
+toys and sweets off the tree. I suppose these children are not much
+accustomed to presents, for their delight was almost too much for them.
+I have never seen such excitement! Poor mites! without homes or money,
+and with their relations often lost--yet little boys were gibbering over
+their toys, and little girls clung to big parcels, and squeaked dolls or
+blew trumpets. The bigger children had rather good voices, and all sang
+our National Anthem in English. "God save our nobbler King"--the accent
+was quaint, but the children sang lustily.
+
+We had finished, and were waiting for our own Christmas dinner when
+shells began to fly. One came whizzing past Mr. Streatfield's store-room
+as I stood there with him. The next minute a little child in floods of
+tears came in, grasping her mother's bag, to say "Maman" had had her arm
+blown off. The child herself was covered with dust and dirt, and in the
+streets people were sheltering in doorways, and taking little runs for
+safety as soon as a shell had finished bursting. The bombardment lasted
+about an hour, and we all waited in the kitchen and listened to it. At
+such times, when everyone is rather strung up, someone always and
+continually lets things fall. A nun clattered down a pail, and Maurice
+the cook seemed to fling saucepan-lids on the floor.
+
+About 8.15 the bombardment ceased, and we went in to a cheery
+dinner--soup, turkey, and plum-pudding, with crackers and speeches. I
+believe no one would have guessed we had been a bit "on the stretch."
+
+At 9.30 I went to the station. It was very melancholy. No one was there
+but myself. The fires were out, or smoking badly. Everyone had been
+scared to death by the shells, and talked of nothing else, whereas
+shells should be forgotten directly. I got things in order as soon as I
+could and the wounded in the train got their hot soup and coffee as
+usual, which was a satisfaction. Then I came home alone at
+midnight--keeping as near the houses as I could because of possible
+shells--and so to bed, very cold, and rather too inclined to think about
+home.
+
+_26 December._--Went to the station. Oddly enough, very few wounded were
+there, so I came away, and had my first day at home. I got a little
+oil-stove put in my room, wrote letters, tidied up, and thoroughly
+enjoyed myself.
+
+A Taube came over and hovered above Furnes, and dropped bombs. I was at
+the Villa, and the family of Joos and I stood and watched it, and a
+nasty dangerous moth it looked away up in the sky. Presently it came
+over our house, so we went down to the kitchen. A few shots were fired,
+but the Taube was far too high up to be hit. Max, the Joos' cousin, went
+out and "tirait," to the admiration of the women-kind, and then, of
+course, "Papa" had to have a try. The two men, with their little gun and
+their talk and gesticulations, lent a queer touch of comic opera to the
+scene. The garden was so small, the men in their little hats were so
+suggestive of the "broken English" scene on the stage, that one could
+only stand and laugh.
+
+[Page Heading: A BELGIAN DINNER-PARTY]
+
+The Joos family are quite a study, and so kind. On Christmas Eve I dined
+with them, and they gave me the best of all they had. There was a
+pheasant, which someone had given the doctor (I fancy he is a very small
+practitioner amongst the poor people); surely, never did a bird give
+more pleasure. I had known of its arrival days before by seeing
+Fernande, the little girl, decorated with feathers from its tail. Then
+the good papa must be decorated also, and these small jokes delighted
+the whole family to the point of ecstasy.
+
+On Christmas Eve Monsieur Max conceived the splendid joke, carefully
+arranged, of presenting Madame Joos--who is young and pretty--and the
+doctor with two parcels, which on being opened contained the child's
+umbrella and a toy gun. There wasn't even a comic address on the
+parcels; but Yrma, the servant, carefully trained for the part, brought
+them in in fits of delight, and all the family laughed with joy till the
+tears ran down their cheeks. As they wiped their eyes, they admitted
+they were sick with laughter. After supper we had the pianola, played by
+papa; and I must say that, when one can get nothing else, this
+instrument gives a great deal of pleasure. One gets a sort of ache for
+music which is just as bad as being hungry.
+
+_27 December._--Bad, bad weather again. It has rained almost
+continuously for five weeks. Yesterday it snowed. Always the wind blows,
+and _something_ lashes itself against the panes. One can't leave the
+windows open, as the rooms get flooded. It is amazingly cold o' nights,
+I can't sleep for the cold.
+
+We have some funny incidents at the station sometimes. A particularly
+amusing one occurred the other day, when three ladies in knickerbockers
+and khaki and badges appeared at our soup-kitchen door and announced
+they were "on duty" there till 6 o'clock. I was not there, but the scene
+that followed has been described to me, and has often made me laugh.
+
+It seems the ladies never got further than the door!
+Some people might have been firm in the "Too sorry!
+Come-some-other-day-when-we-are-not-so-busy" sort of way. Not so Miss
+----. In more primitive times she would probably have gone for the
+visitors with a broom, but her tongue is just as rough as the hardest
+besom, and from their dress ("skipping over soldiers' faces with
+breeches on, indeed!") to their corps there was very little left of
+them.
+
+[Page Heading: OUR TROUBLE WITH SPIES]
+
+It wasn't really from the dog-in-the-manger spirit that the little woman
+acted. The fact is that Belgians and French run the station together,
+and they are all agreed on one thing, which is, that no one but an
+authorised and registered person is to come within its doors. Heaven
+knows the trouble there has been with spies, and this rule is absolutely
+necessary.
+
+Two Red Cross khaki-clad men have been driving everywhere in Furnes, and
+have been found to be Germans. Had we permitted itinerant workers, the
+authorities gave notice that the kitchen would have to close.
+
+In the evening, when I went to the station, another knickerbockered lady
+sat there! I told her our difficulties, but allowed her to do a little
+work rather than hurt her feelings. The following day Miss ---- engaged
+in deadly conflict with the lady who had sent our unwelcome visitors.
+Over the scene we will draw a veil, but we never saw the knickerbockered
+ladies again!
+
+_31 December, 1914._--The last day of this bad old year. I feel quite
+thankful for the summer I had at the Grange. It has been something to
+look back upon all the time I have been here; the pergolas of pink
+roses, the sleepy fields, the dear people who used to come and stay with
+me, and all the fun and pleasure of it, help one a good deal now.
+
+Yesterday was a fine day in the middle of weeks of rain. When I came
+down to breakfast in the Joos' little kitchen I remarked, of course, on
+the beauty of the weather. "What a day for Taubes!" said Monsieur Max,
+looking up at the clear blue sky. Before I had left home there was a
+shell in a street close by, and one heard that already these horrible
+birds of prey had been at work, and had thrown two bombs, which
+destroyed two houses in the Rue des Trefles. The pigeons that circle
+round the old buildings in Furnes always seem to see the Taubes first,
+as if they knew by sight their hateful brothers. They flutter disturbed
+from roof and turret, and then, with a flash of white wings, they fly
+far away. I often wish I had wings when I see them.
+
+I went to the station, and then to the hospital for slippers for some
+wounded men. Five aeroplanes were overhead--Allies' and German--and
+there was a good deal of firing. I was struck by the fact that the night
+before I had seen _exactly_ this scene in a dream. Second sight always
+gives me much to think about. The inevitableness of things seems much
+accentuated by it. In my dream I stood by the other people in the yard
+looking at the war in the air, and watching the circling aeroplanes and
+the bursts of smoke.
+
+At the station there was a nasty feeling that something was going to
+happen. The Taubes wheeled about and hovered in the blue. I went to the
+hospital for lunch, and afterwards I asked Mr. Bevan to come to the
+station to look at some wounded whose dressings had not been touched for
+too long. He said he would come in half an hour, so I said I wouldn't
+wait, as he knew exactly where to find the men, and I came back to the
+Villa for my rest. As I walked home I heard that the station had been
+shelled, and I met one of the Belgian Sisters and told her not to go on
+duty till after dark, but I had no idea till evening came of what had
+happened. Ten shells burst in or round the station. Men, women, and
+children were killed. They tell me that limbs were flying, and a French
+chauffeur, who came on here, picked up a man's leg in the street. Mr.
+Bevan sent up word to say none of us was to go to the station for the
+present.
+
+At Dunkirk seven Taubes flew overhead and dropped bombs, killing
+twenty-eight people. At Pervyse shells are coming in every day. I can't
+help wondering when we shall clear out of this. If the bridges are
+destroyed it will be difficult to get away. The weather has turned very
+wet again this evening. We have only had two or three fine days in as
+many months. The wind howls day and night, and the place is so well
+known for it that "vent de Furnes" is a byword. No doubt the floods
+protect us, so one mustn't grumble at a sore throat.
+
+[Page Heading: SHELLS AT FURNES]
+
+_1 January._--The station was shelled again to-day. Three houses were
+destroyed, and there was one person killed and a good many more were
+wounded. A rumour got about that the Germans had promised 500 shells in
+Furnes on New Year's Day.
+
+In the evening I went down to the station, and I was evidently not
+expected. Not a thing was ready for the wounded. The man in charge had
+let all three fires out, and he and about seven soldiers (mostly drunk)
+were making merry in the kitchen. None of them would budge, and I was
+glad I had young Mr. Findlay with me, as he was in uniform, and helped
+to get things straight. But these French seem to have very little
+discipline, and even when the military doctors came in the men did
+nothing but argue with them. It was amazing to hear them. One night a
+soldier, who is always drunk, was lying on a brancard in the doctor's
+own room, and no one seemed to mind.
+
+_3 January, Sunday._--I have had my usual rest and hot bath. I find I
+never want a holiday if I may have my Sundays. I spent a lazy afternoon
+in Miss Scott's room, she being ill, then went to Mr. Streatfield's
+service, dinner, and the station. A new officer was on duty there, and
+was introduced to the kitchen. He said, "Les anglais, of course. No one
+else ever does anything for anybody."
+
+I believe this is very nearly the case. God knows, we are full of
+faults, but the superiority of the British race to any other that I know
+is a matter of deep conviction with me, and it is founded, I think, on
+wide experience.
+
+_6 January._--I went to Adinkerke two days ago to establish a
+soup-kitchen there, as they say that Furnes station is too dangerous. We
+have been given a nice little waiting-room and a stove. We heard to-day
+that the station-master at Furnes has been signalling to the enemy, so
+that is why we have been shelled so punctually. His daughter is engaged
+to a German. Two of our hospital people noticed that before each
+bombardment a blue light appeared to flash on the sky. They reported
+the matter, with the result that the signals were discovered.
+
+[Page Heading: THE SHELLING GETS WORSE]
+
+There has been a lot of shelling again to-day, and several houses are
+destroyed. A child of two years is in our hospital with one leg blown
+off and the other broken. One only hears people spoken of as, "the man
+with the abdominal trouble," or "the one shot through the lungs."
+
+Children know the different aeroplanes by sight, and one little girl,
+when I ask her for news, gives me a list of the "obus" that have
+arrived, and which have "s'eclate," and which have not. One can see that
+she despises those which "ne s'eclatent pas." One says "Bon soir, pas
+des obus," as in English one says, "Good-night, sleep well."
+
+_10 January._--Prince Alexander of Teck dined at the hospital last
+night, and we had a great spread. Madame Sindici did wonders, and there
+were hired plates and finger-bowls, and food galore! We felt real
+swells. An old General--the head of the Army Medical Corps--gave me the
+most grateful thanks for serving the soldiers. It was gracefully and
+delightfully done.
+
+I am going home for a week's holiday.
+
+_14 January._--I went home _via_ Calais. Mr. Bevan and Mr. Morgan took
+me there. It was a fine day and I felt happy for once, that is, for once
+out here.
+
+Some people enjoy this war. I think it is far the worst time, except
+one, I ever spent. Perhaps I have seen more suffering than most people.
+A doctor sees a hospital, and a nurse sees a ward of sick and wounded,
+but I see them by the hundred passing before me in an endless train all
+day. I can make none of them really better. I feed them, and they pass
+on.
+
+One reviews one's life a little as one departs. Always I shall remember
+Furnes as a place of wet streets and long dark evenings, with gales
+blowing, and as a place where I have been always alone. I have not once
+all this time exchanged a thought with anyone. I have lived in a very
+damp attic, and talked French to some kind middle-class people, and I
+have walked a mile for every meal I have had. So I shall always think of
+Furnes as a wet, dark place, and of myself with a lantern trudging about
+its mean streets.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+WORKING UNDER DIFFICULTIES
+
+
+I have not written my diary for some weeks. I went home to England and
+stayed at Rayleigh House. On my way home I met Mr. F. Ware, who told me
+submarines were about. As I had but just left a much-shelled town, I
+think he might have held his peace. The usual warm welcome at Rayleigh
+House, with Mary there to meet me, and Emily Strutt.
+
+I wasn't very tired when I first arrived, but fatigue came out on me
+like a rash afterwards. I got more tired every day, and ended by having
+a sort of breakdown. This rather spoilt my holiday, but it was very nice
+seeing people again. It was difficult, I found, to accommodate myself to
+small things, and one was amazed to find people still driving serenely
+in closed broughams. It was like going back to live on earth again after
+being in rather a horrible other world. I went to my own house and
+enjoyed the very smell of the place. My little library and an hour or
+two spent there made my happiest time. Different people asked me to
+things, but I wasn't up to going out, and the weather was amazingly
+bad.
+
+I was to have gone back to work on the Thursday week after I arrived
+home, but I got a telegram from Madame Sindici saying Furnes was being
+shelled, and the hospital, etc., was to be evacuated. Dr. Perrin, who
+was to have taken me back, had to start immediately without me. It was
+difficult to get news, and hearing nothing I went over on Saturday,
+January 23rd, as I had left Mrs. Clitheroe in charge of my soup-kitchen,
+and thought I had better do the burning deck act and get back to it.
+
+Mr. Bevan and Mr. Morgan met me at Calais, and told me to wait at
+Dunkirk, as everyone was quitting Furnes. One of our poor nurses was
+killed, and the Joos' little house was much damaged. I stopped at Mrs.
+Clitheroe's flat, very glad to be ill in peace after my seedy condition
+in London and a bad crossing. Rested quietly all Sunday in the flat by
+myself. It is an empty, bare little place, with neither carpets nor
+curtains, but there is something home-like about it, the result, I
+think, of having an open fire in one room.
+
+On Monday, the 25th, I went back to work at Adinkerke station, to which
+place our soup-kitchen has been moved. I got a warm welcome from the
+Belgian Sisters. It is very difficult doing the station work from
+Dunkirk, as it is 16 kilometres from Adinkerke; but the place itself is
+nice, and I just have to trust to lifts. I fill my pockets with
+cigarettes and go to the "sortie de la ville," and just wait for
+something to pass--and some queer, bumpy rides I get. Still, the
+soldiers who drive me are delightful, and the cigarettes are always
+taken as good pay.
+
+One day I went and spent the night at Hoogstadt, where the hospital now
+is, and that I much enjoyed. Dr. Perrin gave up his little room to me,
+and the nurses and staff were all so full of welcome and pleasant
+speeches.
+
+On Monday, February 8th, I went out to La Panne to start living in the
+hotel there; but I was really dreadfully seedy, and suffered so much
+that I had to return to the flat at Dunkirk again to be nursed. My day
+at La Panne was therefore very sad, as I nearly perished with cold, and
+felt so ill. Not a soul came near me, and I wished I could be a Belgian
+refugee, when I might have had a little attention from somebody.
+
+On Tuesday, February 9th, a Belgian officer came into Adinkerke station,
+claimed our kitchen as a bureau, and turned us out on to the platform. I
+am trying to get General Millis to interfere; but, indeed, the rudeness
+of this man's act makes one furious.
+
+[Page Heading: ILLNESS AT DUNKIRK]
+
+_14 February._--I have been laid up for some days at the flat at
+Dunkirk. It is amazing to realise that this place should be one's
+present idea of comfort. It has no carpets, no curtains, not a blind
+that will pull up or down, and rather dirty floors, yet it is so much
+more comfortable than anything I have had yet that I am too thankful to
+be here. There is a gas-ring in the kitchen, on which it is possible to
+cook our food, and there are shops where things can be got.
+
+Mr. Strickland and I are both laid up here, and Miss Logan nurses us
+devotedly. Our joy is having a sitting-room with a fire in it. Was
+there ever anything half so good as that fire, or half so homely, half
+so warm or so much one's own? I lie on three chairs in front of it, and
+headache and cold and throat are almost forgotten. The wind howls, the
+sea roars, and aeroplanes fly overhead, but at least we have our fire
+and are at home.
+
+_17 February._--Another cold, wet day. I am alone in the flat with a
+"femme de menage" to look after me. A doctor comes to see me sometimes.
+Miss Logan and Mr. Strickland left this morning. There was a tempest of
+rain, and I couldn't think of being moved. They were sweet and kind, and
+felt bad about leaving me; but I am just loving being left alone with
+some books and my fire.
+
+I have been lying in bed correcting proofs. Oh, the joy of being at
+one's own work again! Just to see print is a pleasure. I believe I have
+forgotten all I ever knew before the war began. A magazine article comes
+to me like a language I have almost forgotten.
+
+_18 February._--This is the day that German "piracy" is supposed to
+begin. We heard a great explosion early this morning, but it was only a
+mine that had been found on the shore being blown up. The sailors'
+aeroplane corps is opposite us, and we see Commander Samson and others
+flying off in the morning and whirling back at night, and then we hear
+there has been a raid somewhere. When a Taube comes over here the
+sailors fire at it with a gun just opposite us, and then tell us they
+only do it to give us flower-vases--_i.e._, empty shell-cases!
+
+[Page Heading: SOME STORIES OF THE WAR]
+
+Mr. Holland came here to-day, and told me some humorous sides of his
+experiences with ambulances. One man from the Church Army marched in,
+and said: "I am a Christian and you are not. I come here for petrol, and
+I ask it, not for the Red Cross, but in the name of Christ." Another man
+came dashing in, and said: "I want to go to Poperinghe. I was once there
+before, and the mud was beastly. Send someone with me."
+
+My own latest experience was with an American woman of awful vulgarity.
+I asked her if she was busy, like everyone else in this place, and she
+said:
+
+"No. I was suffering from a nervous breakdown, so I came out here. What
+is your _war_ is my _peace_, and I now sleep like a baby."
+
+I want adjectives! How is one to describe the people who come for
+one brief visit to the station or hospital with an intense
+conviction that they and they only feel the suffering or even notice
+the wants of the men. Some are good workers. Others I call
+"This-poor-fellow-has-had-none." Nurses may have been up all night,
+doctors may be worked off their feet, seven hundred men may have passed
+through the station, all wounded and all fed, but when our visitors
+arrive they discover that "This poor fellow has had none," and firmly,
+and with a high sense of duty and of their own efficiency, they make the
+thing known.
+
+No one else has heard a man shouting for water; no one else knows that a
+man wants soup. The man may have appendicitis, or colitis, or
+pancreatitis, or he may have been shot through the lungs or the abdomen.
+It doesn't matter. The casual visitor knows he has been neglected, and
+she says so, and quite indiscriminately she fills everyone up with
+soup. Only she is tender-hearted. Only she could never really be
+hardened by being a nurse. She seizes a little cup, stoops over a man
+gracefully, and raises his head. Then she wants things passed to her,
+and someone must help her, and someone must listen to what she has to
+say. She feeds one man in half an hour, and goes away horrified at the
+way things are done. Fortunately these people never stay for long.
+
+Then there is another. She can't understand why our ships should be
+blown up or why trenches should be taken. In her own mind she proves
+herself of good sound intelligence and a member of the Empire who won't
+be bamboozled, when she says firmly and with heat, "Why don't we _do_
+something?" She would like to scold a few Generals and Admirals, and she
+says she believes the Germans are much cleverer than ourselves. This
+last taunt she hopes will make people "_do_ something." It stings, she
+thinks.
+
+I could write a good deal about this "solitary winter," but I have not
+had time either to write or to read. I think something inside me has
+stood still or died during this war.
+
+_21 February, Sunday._--The Munro corps has swooped down in its usual
+hurry to distribute letters, and to say that someone is waiting down
+below and they can't stop. They eat a hasty sardine, drink a cup of
+coffee, and are off!
+
+To-day I have made this flat tidy at last, and have had it cleaned and
+scrubbed. I have thrown away old papers and empty boxes, and can sit
+down and sniff contentedly. No convoy-ite sees the difference!
+
+[Page Heading: THE COMMUNAL LIFE]
+
+I think I have learnt every phase of muddle and makeshift this winter,
+but chiefly have I learnt the value of the Biblical recommendation to
+put candles on candlesticks. In the "convoi Munro" I find them in
+bottles, on the lids of mustard-tins, in metal cups, or in the necks of
+bedroom carafes. Never is the wax removed. Where it drips there it
+remains. Where matches fall there they lie. The stumps of cigarettes
+grace even the insides of flower-pots, knives are wiped on bread,
+and overcoats of enormous weight (khaki in colour, with a red cross
+on the arm) are hung on inefficient loose nails, and fall down.
+Towels are always scarce; but then, they serve as dinner-napkins,
+pocket-handkerchiefs, and even as pillow-cases, so no wonder we are a
+little short of them. There is no necessity for muddle. There never is
+any necessity for it.
+
+The communal life is a mistake. I wonder if Christ got bored with it.
+
+On Sundays I always want to rest, and something always makes me write.
+The attack comes on quite early. It is irresistible. At last I am a
+little happy after these dreary months, and it is only because I can
+think a little, and because the days are not quite so dark. I think the
+nights have been longer here than I ever knew them. No doubt it is the
+bad weather and the small amount of light indoors that make the days
+seem so short.
+
+I am going back to-morrow to the station, with its train-loads of
+wounded men. I _want_ to go, and to give them soup and comforts and
+cigarettes, but just ten days' illness and idleness have "balmed my
+soul."
+
+_22 February._--Waited all day for a car to come and fetch me away. It
+was dull work as I could never leave the flat, and all my things were
+packed up, and there was no coal.
+
+_23 February._--Waited again all day. I got very tired of standing by
+the window looking out on a strip of beach at the bottom of the street,
+and on the people passing to and fro. Then I went down to the dock to
+try and get a car there, but the new police regulations made it
+impossible to cross the bridge. I went to the airmen opposite. No luck.
+
+There is a peculiar brutality which seems to possess everyone out here
+during the war. I find it nearly everywhere, and it entails a good deal
+of unnecessary suffering. Always I am reminded of birds on a small ledge
+pushing each other into the sea. The big bird that pushes another one
+over goes to sleep comfortably.
+
+I remember one evening at Dunkirk when we couldn't get rooms or food
+because the landlady of the hotel had lost all her servants. The staff
+at the ---- gave me a meal, but there was a queer want of courtesy about
+it. I said that anything would do for my supper, and I went to help get
+it myself. I spied a roll of cold veal on a shelf, and said helpfully
+that that would do splendidly, but the answer was: "Yes, but I believe
+that is for our next meal." However, in the end I got a scrap,
+consisting mostly of green stuffing.
+
+"But when thou art bidden, go and sit down in the lowest room"--ah, my
+dear Lord, in this world one may certainly take the lowest place, and
+keep it. It is only the great men who say, "Friend, come up higher."
+
+"You can't have it," is on everyone's lips, and a general sense of
+bustle goes with the brutality. "You can't come here," "We won't have
+her," are quite common phrases. God help us, how nasty we all are!
+
+I find one can score pretty heavily nowadays by being a "psychologist."
+All the most disagreeable people I know are psychologists, notably ----,
+who breaks his promises and throws all his friends to the wolves, but
+who can still explain everything in his sapient way by saying he is a
+psychologist.
+
+One thing I hope--that no one will ever call me "highly strung." I wish
+good old-fashioned bad temper was still the word for highly strung and
+nervy people.
+
+... I am longing for beautiful things, music, flowers, fine thoughts....
+
+[Page Heading: LA PANNE]
+
+_La Panne. 25 February._--At last I have succeeded in getting away from
+Dunkirk! The Duchess of Sutherland brought me here in her car. Last
+night I dined with Mrs. Clitheroe. She was less bustled than usual, and
+I enjoyed a chat with her as we walked home through the cold white mist
+which enshrouded La Panne.
+
+This long war has settled down to a long wait. Little goes on except
+desultory shelling, with its occasional quite useless victims. At the
+station we have mostly "malades" and "eclopes"; in the trenches the
+soldiers stand in the bitter cold, and occasionally are moved out by
+shells falling by chance amongst them. The men who are capable of big
+things wait and do nothing.
+
+If it was not for the wounded how would one stand the life here? A man
+looks up patiently, dumbly, out of brown eyes, and one is able to go on
+again.
+
+_La Panne. 27 February_.--I have been staying for three nights at the
+Kursaal Hotel, but my room was wanted and I had to turn out, so I packed
+my things and came down to the Villa les Chrysanthemes, and shared Mrs.
+Clitheroe's room for a night. In the morning all our party packed up and
+left to go to Furnes, and I took on these rooms. I may be turned out any
+minute for "le militaire," but meanwhile I am very comfortable.
+
+The heroic element (a real thing among us) takes queer forms sometimes.
+"No sheets, of course," is what one hears on every side, and to eat a
+meal standing and with dirty hands is to "play the game." Maxine Elliott
+said, "The nervous exhaustion attendant upon discomfort hinders work,"
+and she "does herself" very well, as also do all the men of the regular
+forces. But volunteer corps--especially women--are heroically bent on
+being uncomfortable. In a way they like it, and they eat strange meals
+in large quantities, and feel that this is war.
+
+Lord Leigh took me into Dunkirk in his car to-day, and I managed to get
+lots of vegetables for the soup-kitchen, and several other things I
+wanted. A lift is everything at this time, when one can "command"
+nothing. If one might for once feel that by paying a fare, however high,
+one could ensure having something--a railway journey, a motor-car, or
+even a bed! My work isn't so heavy at the kitchen now, and the hours are
+not so long, so I hope to do some work of a literary nature.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Page Heading: LA PANNE]
+
+_To Miss Macnaughtan's Sisters._
+
+VILLA LES CHRYSANTHEMES
+LA PANNE, BELGIUM,
+_Sunday, 28 February._
+
+MY DEAR FAMILY,
+
+It is so long since I wrote a decently long letter that I think I must
+write to you all, to thank you for yours, and to give you what news
+there is of myself.
+
+Of war news there is none. The long war is now a long wait, and the huge
+expense still goes on, while we lock horns with our foes and just sway
+backwards and forwards a little, and this, as you know, we have done for
+weeks past. Every day at the station there is a little stream of men
+with heads or limbs bandaged, and our work goes on as before, although
+it is not on quite the same lines now. I used to make every drop of the
+soup myself, and give it out all down the train. Now we have a
+receiving-room for the wounded, where they stay all day, and we feed
+them four times, and then they are sent away. The whole thing is more
+military than it used to be, the result, I think, of officers not having
+much to do, and with a passion for writing out rules and regulations
+with a nice broad pen. Two orderlies help in the kitchen, the soup is
+"inspected," and what used to be "la cuisine de la dame ecossaise" is
+not so much a charitable institution as it was.
+
+One sees a good deal of that sort of thing during this war. Women have
+been seeing what is wanted, and have done the work themselves at really
+enormous difficulty, and in the face of opposition, and when it is a
+going concern it is taken over and, in many cases, the women are turned
+out. This was the case at Dunkirk station, which was known everywhere as
+"the shambles." I myself tried to get the wounded attended to, and I
+went there with a naval doctor, who told me that he couldn't uncover a
+single wound because of the awful atmosphere (it was quite common to see
+15,000 men lying on straw). One woman took this matter in hand, purged
+the place, got mattresses, clean straw, stoves, etc., and when all was
+in order the voice of authority turned her out.
+
+This long waiting is being much more trying for people than actual
+fighting. In every corps the old heroic outlook is a little bit fogged
+by petty things. One sees the result of it in some wrangling and
+jealousy, but this will soon be forgotten when fighting with all its
+realities begins again.
+
+I think Britain on the subject of "piracy" is about as fine as anything
+in her history. Her determination to ignore ultimatums and threats is
+really quite funny, and English people still put out in boats as they
+have always done, and are quite undismayed. Our own people here continue
+to travel by sea, as if submarines were rather a joke, and when going
+over to England on some small and useless little job they say
+apologetically, "Of course, I wouldn't go if I hadn't got to." The fact
+is, if there is any danger about they have to be in it.
+
+Some of our own corps have gone back to Furnes--I believe because it is
+being shelled. The rest of us are at La Panne, a cold seaside place
+amongst the dunes. In summer-time I fancy it is fashionable, but now it
+contains nothing but soldiers. They are quartered everywhere, and one
+never knows how long one will be able to keep a room. The station is at
+Adinkerke, where I have my kitchen. It is about two miles from La Panne,
+and it also is crammed with soldiers. There seems to be no attempt at
+sanitation anywhere.
+
+I wish I had more interesting news to tell you, but I am at my station
+all day, and if there is anything to hear (which I doubt) I do not hear
+it.
+
+There is a barge on the canal at Adinkerke which is our only excitement.
+It is the property of Maxine Elliott, Lady Drogheda, and Miss Close, and
+to go to tea with them is everyone's ambition. The barge is crammed with
+things for Belgian refugees, and Maxine told me that the cargo
+represents "nearer L10,000 than L5,000." It is piled with flour in
+sacks, clothing, medical comforts, etc. The work is good.
+
+I am sending home some long pins like nails. They are called "Silent
+Death," and are dropped from German aeroplanes. Boys pick them up and
+give them to us in exchange for cigarettes.
+
+[Page Heading: MRS. PERCIVAL'S SLIPPERS]
+
+I want to tell Tabby how immensely pleased everyone is with her
+slippers. The men who have stood long in the trenches are in agonies of
+frost-bite and rheumatism, and now that I can give them these slippers
+when they arrive at the station, they are able to take off their wet
+boots caked with mud.
+
+If J. would send me another little packet of groceries I should love it.
+Just what can come by post. That Benger's Food of hers nearly saved my
+life when I was ill at Dunkirk. What I should like better than anything
+is a few good magazines and books. I get _Punch_ and the _Spectator_,
+but I want the _English Review_ and the _National_, and perhaps a
+_Hibbert_. I enclose ten shillings for these. What is being read?
+Stephen Coleridge seems to have brought out an interesting collection,
+but I can't remember its name. I wonder if any notice will be taken of
+"They who Question." The reviews speak well of the Canadian book.
+
+Love to you all, and tell Alan how much I think of him. Bless you, my
+dears. Write often.
+
+Yours as ever,
+SARAH.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_1 March._--Woe betide the person who owns anything out here: he is
+instantly deprived of it. "Pinching" is proverbial, and people have
+taken to carrying as many of their possessions as possible on their
+person, with the result that they are the strangest shapes and sizes.
+Still, one hopes the goods are valuable until one discovers that they
+generally consist of the following items: a watch that doesn't go, a
+fountain-pen that is never filled, an electric torch that won't light, a
+much-used hanky, an empty iodine bottle, and a scarf.
+
+_5 March._--I went as usual to-day to the muddy station and distributed
+soup, which I no longer make now that the station has become
+militarised. My hours are from 12 noon to 5 o'clock. This includes the
+men's dinner-hour and the washing of the kitchen. They eat and smoke
+when I am there, and loll on the little bench. They are Belgians and I
+am English, and one is always being warned that the English can't be too
+careful! We are entertaining 40,000 Belgians in England, but it must be
+done "carefully."
+
+[Page Heading: THIEVING AND GIVING]
+
+It is a great bore out here that everything is stolen. One can hardly
+lay a thing down for an instant that it isn't taken. To-day my Thermos
+flask in a leather case, in which I carry my lunch, was prigged from the
+kitchen. Things like metal cups are stolen by the score, and everyone
+begs! Even well-to-do people are always asking for something, and they
+simply whine for tobacco. The fact is, I think, the English are giving
+things away with their usual generosity and want of discrimination,
+and--it is a horrid word--they are already pauperising a nice lot of
+people. I can't help thinking that the thing is being run on wrong
+lines. We should have given or lent what was necessary to the Belgian
+Government, and let them undertake to provide for soldiers and refugees
+through the proper channels. No lasting good ever came of gifts--every
+child begs for cigarettes, and they begin smoking at five years old.
+
+I often think of our poor at home, and wish I had a few sacks full of
+things for them! I have not myself come across any instances of poverty
+nearly as bad as I have seen in England. I understand from Dr. Joos and
+other Belgians who know about these things that there is still a good
+deal of money tucked away in this country. I hope there is, and we all
+want to help the Belgians over a bad time, but it would be better and
+more dignified for them to get it through their own Government.
+
+I had tea with Lady Bagot the other day, and afterwards I had a chat
+with Prince Francis at the English Mission. Another afternoon I went
+down to the Kursaal Hotel for tea. The stuffy sitting-room there is
+always filled with knickerbockered, leather-coated ladies and with
+officers in dark blue uniform, who talk loudly and pat the barmaid's
+cheeks. She seems to expect it; it is almost etiquette. A cup of bad
+tea, some German trophies examined and discussed, and then I came away
+with a "British" longing for skirts for my ladies, and for something
+graceful and (odious word) dainty about them. Yesterday evening Lady
+Bagot dined with me. This Villa is the only comfortable place I have
+been in since the war began: it makes an amazing difference to my
+health.
+
+It is odd to have to admit that one has hardly ever been unhappy for a
+long time before this war. The year my brother died, the year one went
+through a tragedy, the year of deadly dullness in the country--but now
+it isn't so much a personal matter. War and the sound of guns, and the
+sense of destruction and death abroad, the solitude of it, and the
+disappointing people! Oh, and the poor wounded--the poor, smelly, dirty
+wounded, whom one sees all day, and for whom one just sticks this out.
+
+I have only twice been for a drive out here, and I have not seen a
+single place of interest, nor, indeed, a single interesting person
+connected with the war. That, I suppose, is the result of being a
+"cuisiniere!" It is rather strange to me, because for a very long time I
+always seem to have had the best of things. To-day I hear of this
+General or that Secretary, or this great personage or that important
+functionary, but the only people whom I see are three little Sisters and
+two Belgian cooks.
+
+To give up work seems to me a little like divorcing a husband. There is
+a feeling of failure about it, and the sense that one is giving up what
+one has undertaken to do. So, however dull or tiresome husband or work
+may be, one mustn't give them up.
+
+[Page Heading: THE POWER OF THE BIBLE]
+
+_6 March._--To-day I have been thinking, as I have often thought, that
+the real power of the Bible is that it is a Universal Human Document.
+The world is based upon sentiment--_i.e._, the personality of man and
+his feelings brought to bear upon facts. It is also the world's dynamic
+force. Now, the books of the Bible--especially, perhaps, the magical,
+beautiful Psalms--are the most tender and sentimental (the word has been
+misused, of course) that were ever written. They express the thoughts
+and feelings of generations of men who always did express their thoughts
+and feelings, and thought no shame of it. And so we northern people,
+with our passionate inarticulateness, love to find ourselves expressed
+in the old pages.
+
+I find in the Gospels one of the few complaints of Christ. "Have I been
+so long time with you and yet hast thou not known me, Philip?" All one
+has ever felt is said for one in a phrase, all that one finds most
+isolating in the world is put into one sentence. There is a wan feeling
+of wonder in it; "so long," and yet you think that of me! "so long," and
+yet such absolute inability to read my character! "so long," and yet
+still quite unaware of my message! The humour of it (to us) lies in the
+little side of it! The dear people who "thought you would like this or
+dislike that"--the kind givers of presents even--the little people who
+shop for one! The friends who invite one to their queer, soulless, thin
+entertainments, with their garish lights; the people who choose a book
+for one, who counsel one, even with importunity, to go to some play
+which they are "sure we shall like." "So long"--they are old friends,
+and yet they thought we should like that play or that book! "So
+long"--and yet they think one capable of certain acts or feelings which
+do not remotely seem to belong to one! "So long"--and yet they can't
+even touch one chord that responds!
+
+We are always quite alone. The communal life is the loneliest of all,
+because "yet thou hast not known me." The world comes next in
+loneliness, but it is _big_, and with a big soul of its own. The family
+life is almost naive in its misunderstanding--no one listens, they just
+wait for pauses....
+
+... The worship of the "sane mind" has been a little overdone, I think.
+The men who are prone to say of everyone that they "exaggerate a
+little," or "are morbid," are like weights in a scale--just, but oh,
+how heavy!...
+
+... This war is fine, _fine_, FINE! I know it, and yet I don't get near
+the fineness except in the pages of _Punch_! I see streams of men whose
+language (Flemish) I don't speak, holding up protecting hands to keep
+people from jostling a poor wounded limb, and I watch them sleeping
+heavily, or eating oranges and smoking cigarettes down to the last hot
+stump, but I don't hear of the heroic stands which I know are made, or
+catch the volition of it all. Perhaps only in a voluntary army is such a
+thing possible. Our own boys make one's heart beat, but these poor,
+dumb, sodden little men, coming in caked with mud--to be patched up and
+sent into a hole in the ground again, are simply tragic.
+
+[Page Heading: "THE WOMAN'S TOUCH"]
+
+_7 March._--"The woman's touch." When a woman has been down on her knees
+scrubbing for a week, and washing for another week, a man, returning and
+finding his house in order, and vaguely conscious of a newer and fresher
+smell about it, talks quite tenderly of "a woman's touch."...
+
+... There are some people who never care to enter a door unless it has
+"passage interdite" upon it....
+
+... The guns are booming heavily this morning. Nothing seems to
+correspond. Are men really falling and dying in agonies quite close to
+us? I believe we ought to see less or more--be nearer the front or
+further from it. Or is it that nothing really changes us? Only war
+pictures and war letters remain as a fixed blazing standard. The
+soldiers in the trenches are quite as keen about sugar in their coffee
+as we are about tea. No wonder men have decided that one day we must put
+off flesh. It is far too obstrusive....
+
+... To comfort myself I try to remember that Wellington took his old
+nurse with him on all his campaigns because she was the only person who
+washed his stocks properly....
+
+... Surely the expense of the thing will one day put a stop to war. We
+are spending two million sterling per day, the French certainly as much,
+the Germans probably more, and Austria and Russia much more, in order to
+keep men most uncomfortably in unroofed graves, and to send high
+explosives into the air, most of which don't hit anything. Surely, if
+fighting was (as it is) impossible in this flooded country in winter, we
+might have called a truce and gone home for three months, and trained
+and drilled like Christians on Salisbury Plain!...
+
+... Health--_i.e._, bad health--obtrudes itself tiresomely. I am ill
+again, and, fortunately, few people notice it, so I am able to keep on.
+A festered hand makes me awkward; and as I wind a bandage round it and
+tie it with my teeth, I once more wish I was a Belgian refugee, as I am
+sure I would be interesting, and would get things done for me!
+
+A sick Belgian artist, M. Rotsartz{3}, is doing a drawing of me. I go to
+Lady Bagot's hospital, where he is laid up, and sit to him in the
+intervals of soup. That little wooden hospital is the best place I have
+known so far. Lady Bagot is never bustled or fussy, nor even "busy," and
+her staff are excellent men, with the "Mark of the Lamb" on them.
+
+I gave away a lot of things to-day to a regiment going into the
+trenches. The soldiers were delighted with them.
+
+_11 March._--There was a lot of firing near La Panne to-day, and a
+British warship was repeatedly shelled by the Germans from Nieuport. I
+went into Dunkirk with Mr. Clegg, and got the usual hasty shopping done.
+No one can ever wait a minute. If one has time to buy a newspaper one is
+lucky. The difficulty of communicating with anyone is great--no
+telephone--no letters--no motor-car. I am stranded.
+
+[Page Heading: FRENCH MARINES]
+
+I generally go in the train to Adinkerke with the French Marines, nice
+little fellows, with labels attached to them stating their "case"--not
+knowing where they are going or anything else--just human lives battered
+about and carted off. I don't even know where they get the little bit of
+money which they always seem able to spend on loud-smelling oranges and
+cigarettes. The place is littered with orange-skins--to-day I saw a long
+piece lying in the form of an "S" amid the mud; and, like a story of a
+century old, I thought of ourselves as children throwing orange-skins
+round our heads and on to the floor to read the initial of our future
+husband, and I seemed to hear mother say, "'S' for Sammy--Sammy C----,"
+a boy with thick legs whom we secretly despised!
+
+I have found a whole new household of "eclopes" at Adinkerke, who want
+cigarettes, socks, and shoes all the time. They are a pitiful lot, with
+earache, toothache, and all the minor complaints which I myself find so
+trying, and they lie about on straw till they are able to go back to the
+trenches again.
+
+The pollard willows between here and Adinkerke are all being cut down to
+build trenches. They were big with buds and the promise of spring.
+
+_14 March._--I went to the station yesterday, as usual. Suddenly I
+couldn't stand it any more. Everyone was cleaning. I was getting swept
+up with straw and mopped up with dirty cloths. The kitchen work was
+done. I ate my lunch in a filthy little out-building and then I fled. I
+had to get into the open air, and I hopped on to an ambulance and drove
+to Dunkirk. I had a good deal to do there getting vegetables,
+cigarettes, etc., and we got back late to the station, where I heard the
+Queen had paid a visit. Rather bad luck on almost the only day I have
+been away.
+
+I am waiting anxiously to hear if the report of the new British advance
+yesterday is true. When fighting really begins we are going to be in for
+a big thing; one dreads it for the sake of the boys we are going to
+lose. I want things to start now just to get them over, but I rather
+envy the people who died before this unspeakable war began.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_To Mrs. Keays-Young._
+
+CARE OF FIELD POST OFFICE, DUNKIRK,
+_17 March._
+
+MY DEAREST BABY,
+
+[Page Heading: CAPTAIN L. M. B. SALMON]
+
+I have (of course) been getting letters and parcels very badly lately. I
+am sending this home by hand, which is not allowed except on Red Cross
+business, but this is to ask how Lionel is, so I think I may send it. My
+poor Bet! What anxiety for her! This spring weather is making me long to
+be at home, and when people tell me the crocuses are up in the
+park!--well, you know London and the park belong to me! Are the catkins
+out? We can get flowers at Dunkirk, but not here.
+
+Not a word of war news, because that wouldn't be fair. A shilling wire
+about Lionel would satisfy me--just "Better, and Bet well," or something
+of that sort.
+
+Always, my dear,
+Your loving,
+S. MACNAUGHTAN.
+
+P.S.--Your two letters and Bet's have just come. To be in touch with you
+again is _very_ pleasant. I can't tell you what it was like to sit down
+to a pretty, clean breakfast to-day with my letters beside me. Someone
+brought them here early.
+
+I heard to-day that I am going to be decorated by the King of the
+Belgians, but don't spread this broadcast, as anything might happen in
+war.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_20 March._--I met an Englishman belonging to an armoured car in Dunkirk
+a couple of days ago. He told me that the last four days' fighting at La
+Bassee has cost the British 13,000 casualties. Three lines of holes in
+the ground, and fighting only just beginning again! Bet's fiance has
+been shot through the head, but is still alive. My God, the horror of it
+all! And England is still cheerful, I hear, and is going to hold
+race-meetings as usual.
+
+At the station to-day I saw a mad man, who fought and struggled. I
+thought madmen raved. This one fought silently, like a man one sees in a
+dream. Another soldier shook all over like an old man. Many were blind.
+
+"On the whole," someone said to me in England, "I suppose you are having
+a good time."
+
+There is a snowstorm to-day, and it is bitterly cold. It is very odd how
+many small "complaints" seem to attack one. I can't remember the day out
+here when I felt well all over.
+
+Last night some Belgians came in to dinner. It was like old times trying
+to get things nice. I had some flowers and a tablecloth. I believe in
+making a contrast with the discomfort I see out here. We forced open a
+piano, and had some perfect music.
+
+_21 March._--The weather is brighter to-day; the sound of firing is more
+distant; it is possible to think of other things besides the war.
+
+Mrs. ---- came to the station this morning. I think she has the most
+untidy mind I have ever met with.
+
+With all our faults, I often wish that there were more Macnaughtans in
+the world. Their simple and plain intelligence gives one something to
+work upon. Mrs. ---- came and told me to-day that last night "they
+laughed till they cried" over her attempt at making a pudding. I should
+have cried, only, over a woman of fifty who wasn't able to make a
+pudding. She and ---- are twin nebulae who think themselves
+constellations.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_To Miss Mary King._
+
+CARE OF FIELD POST OFFICE, DUNKIRK,
+_22 March._
+
+DEAR MARY,
+
+My plans, like those of everybody else, are undecided because of the
+war. If it is going to stop in May I should like to stay till the end,
+but if it is likely to go on for a long time, I shall come home. I don't
+think hot soup (which is my business) can be wanted much longer, as the
+warm weather will be coming.
+
+I have been asked to take over full charge of a hospital here. It is a
+great compliment, but I have almost decided to refuse. I have other
+duties, and I have some important writing to do, as I am busy with a
+book on the war. I begin work as early as ever, and then go to my
+kitchen.
+
+[Page Heading: LONGING FOR HOME]
+
+When I do come home I want to be in my own house, and I am longing to be
+back. Many of my friends go backwards and forwards to England all the
+time, but when I return, I should like to stay.
+
+I am in wonderfully comfortable rooms at present, and the landlady is
+most kind and attentive. She gives me a morning cup of tea, and the care
+and comfort are making me much better. I get some soup before I go off
+to my station, and last night I was really a fine lady. When I came in
+tired, the landlady, who is a Belgian, took off my boots for me!
+
+When I come home I think I'll lie in bed all day, and poor old Mary
+will get quite thin again nursing me. The things you will have to do for
+me, and all the pretty things I shall see and have, are a great pleasure
+to think about!
+
+Yours truly,
+S. MACNAUGHTAN.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+THE SPRING OFFENSIVE
+
+
+_Villa les Chrysanthemes, La Panne._--I have been to London for a few
+days to see about the publication of my little war book. I got frightful
+neuralgia there, and find that as soon as I begin to rest I get ill.
+
+I went to a daffodil show, and found myself in the very hall where the
+military bazaar was held last year. I saw the place where the Welch had
+their stall. What fun we had! How many of the regiment are left? Only
+one officer not killed or wounded. Lord Roberts, who opened the bazaar,
+is gone too. All the soldiers whom I knew best have been taken, and only
+a few tough women seem to weather the storm of life.
+
+I had to see publishers in London, and do a lot of business, and just
+when I was beginning to love it all again my holiday was over. There had
+been heavy fighting out here, and I felt I must come back. My dear
+people didn't want me to return, and were very severe on the subject,
+and Mary scolded me most of the time. It was all affection on their
+part, although it made "duty" rather a criminal affair!
+
+There was endless difficulty about my passport when I returned. The
+French Consulate was besieged by people, and I had to go there at 8.30
+a.m. and wait till the doors were opened, and was then told I must first
+go to the Foreign Office to get an order from Colonel Walker. I went
+down to Whitehall from Bedford Square, and was told I must get a letter
+from Mr. Coventry. I went to Pall Mall and Mr. Coventry said it was
+quite impossible to do anything for me without instructions from Mr.
+Sawyer. Mr. Sawyer said the only thing he could do (if I could establish
+my identity) was to send me to a matron who would make every enquiry
+about me, and perhaps in three days I might get an Anglo-French
+certificate, through which Mr. Coventry might be induced to give me a
+letter to give to Colonel Walker, who might then sign the passport,
+which I could then take to Bedford Square to be vise{4}.
+
+I got Sir John Furley to identify me, and then began a dogged going from
+place to place and from official to official till at last I got the
+thing through. I felt just like a Russian being "broken." There is a
+regular system, I believe, in Russia of wearing people out by this sort
+of official tyranny. I do not know anything more tiring or more
+discouraging! I had all my papers in order--my passport{5}, my "laissez
+passer," a letter from Mr. Bevan, explaining who I was and asking for
+"every facility" for me, and my photograph, properly stamped. I am now
+so loaded with papers that I feel as if I were carrying a library about
+with me. Oh, give me intelligent women to do things for me! The best-run
+things I have seen since the war began have been our women's unit at
+Antwerp and Lady Bagot's hospital at Adinkerke.
+
+[Page Heading: QUARRELLING]
+
+I came back refreshed. I think everyone (every woman) out here has
+noticed how indifferent and really "nasty" people are to each other at
+the front. It is one of the singular things about the war, because one
+always hears it said that it is deepening people's characters, purifying
+them, and so on. As far as my experience goes, it has shown me the
+reverse. I have seldom known so much quarrelling, and there is a sort of
+queer unhappiness which has nothing to do with the actual war or loss of
+friends. I can't be mistaken about it, because I see it on all sides.
+
+At the ---- hospital men and women alike are quarrelling all the time.
+Resignations are frequent. So-and-so has got So-and-so turned out;
+someone has written to the committee in London to report on someone
+else; a nice doctor is dismissed. Every nurse has given notice at
+different times. Most people are hurt and sore about something. Love
+seems quite at a discount, and one can't help wondering if Hate can be
+infectious! It is all frightfully disappointing, for surely one's heart
+beat high when one made up one's mind to do what one could for suffering
+Belgium and for the sake of the English name.
+
+Those two poor girls at ----! I know they meant well, and had high ideas
+of what they were going to do. Now they "use langwidge" to each other
+(although I know a very strong affection binds them), and very, very
+strong that language is.
+
+Poor souls, the people here aren't a bit happy. I wonder if the work is
+sufficiently "sanctified." One never knows. Lady Bagot's is the happiest
+and most serene place here; her men are Church Army people, and they
+have evening prayers in the ward. It _does_ make a difference.
+
+Scandals also exist out here, but they are merely silly, I think, and
+very unnecessary, though a little conventionality wouldn't hurt anyone.
+Sometimes I think it would be better if we were all at home, for
+Belgians are particular, and I hate breeches and gaiters for girls, and
+a silly way of going on. I do wish people could sometimes leave sex at
+home, but they never seem to. I wonder if Crusaders came back with
+scandals attached to their names!
+
+I got back here in one of those rushes of work that come in war time
+when fighting is near. At first no car could be spared to meet me at
+Boulogne, so I had to wait at the Hotel Maurice for two or three days. I
+didn't mind much as I met such a lot of English friends, and also
+visited some interesting hospitals; but I knew by the thousands of
+wounded coming in that things must be busy at the front, and this made
+one champ one's bit.
+
+The Canadians and English who poured in from Ypres were terribly
+damaged, and the asphyxiating gas seems to have been simply diabolical.
+It was awful to see human beings so mangled, and I never get one bit
+accustomed to it. The streets were full of British soldiers, and the
+hospitals swarmed with wounded. I went to visit the Casino one. The
+bright sun streamed through lowered blinds on hundreds of beds, and on
+stretchers lying between them. Many Canadians were there, and rows of
+British. God! how they were knocked about! The vast rooms echoed to the
+cries of pain. The men were vowing they could never face shells and hand
+grenades any more. They were so newly wounded, poor boys; but they come
+up smiling when their country calls again.
+
+But it _isn't right_. This damage to human life is horrible. It is
+madness to slaughter these thousands of young men. Almost at last, in a
+rage, one feels inclined to cry out against the sheer imbecility of it.
+Why bring lives into the world and shell them out of it with jagged
+pieces of iron, and knives thrust through their quivering flesh? The
+pain of it is all too much. I am _sick_ with seeing suffering.
+
+[Page Heading: DUNKIRK SHELLED]
+
+On Thursday, April 29th, Mr. Cooper, and another man came for us, and we
+left Boulogne. At Dunkirk we could hardly credit our eyes--the place had
+been shelled that very afternoon! I never saw such a look of
+bewilderment and horror as there was on all faces. No one had ever
+dreamed that the place could be hit by a German gun, yet here were
+houses falling as if by magic, and no one knew for a moment where on
+earth or in heaven the shells were coming from. Some people said they
+came from the sea, but the houses I saw hadn't been hit from the sea,
+which lies north, but from the east. Others talked of an armoured train,
+but armoured trains don't carry 15-inch shells. So all anyone could do
+was to _gape_ with sheer astonishment.
+
+Dunkirk, that safest of places, the haven to which we were all to fly
+when Furnes or La Panne were bombarded! Everybody contradicted one, of
+course, when one declared that no naval gun had been at work, but the
+fact remains that a long-range field-piece had been hidden at Leke, and
+Dunkirk was shelled for three days, and, as far as I know, may be
+shelled again. The inhabitants have all fled. The shops are not even
+shut; one could help oneself to anything! The "etat major" has left, and
+so have all the officials; 23,000 tickets have been taken at the railway
+station, and the road to Calais is{6} blocked with fleeing refugees.
+
+It was rather odd that the day I left here and passed through Furnes it
+was being shelled, and we had to wait a little while before we could get
+through; and when I arrived at Dunkirk the bombardment was just over,
+and a huge shell-hole prevented us passing down a certain road.
+
+Well, I got back to my work at Adinkerke in the midst of the fighting,
+and reached it just as the sun was setting. What a scene at the station,
+where I stopped before reaching home to leave the chairs and things I
+had bought for the hospital there! They were bringing in civilians
+wounded at Ypres and Poperinghe, which place also has been shelled (and
+yet we say we are advancing!), and there were natives also from
+Nieuport.
+
+[Page Heading: WOUNDED WOMEN AND CHILDREN]
+
+One whole ambulance was filled with wounded children. I think King Herod
+himself might have been sorry for them. Wee things in splints, or with
+their curly heads bandaged; tiny mites, looking with wonder at their
+hands swathed in linen; babies with their tender flesh torn, and older
+children crying with terror. There were two tiny things seated opposite
+each other on a big stretcher playing with dolls, and a little
+Christmas-card sort of baby in a red hood had had its mother and father
+killed beside it. Another little mite belonged to no one at all. Who
+could tell whether its parents had been killed or not? I am afraid many
+of them will never find their relations again. In the general scrimmage
+everyone gets lost. If this isn't frightfulness enough, God in heaven
+help us!
+
+On the platform was a row of women lying on stretchers. They were
+decent-looking brown-haired matrons for the most part, and it looked
+unnatural and ghastly to see them lying there. One big railway
+compartment was slung with their stretchers, and some young men in
+uniform nursed the babies. I shall never forget that railway compartment
+as long as I live. A man in khaki appeared, thoughtful, as our people
+always are, and brought a box of groceries with him, and sweet biscuits
+for the children, and other things. Thank Heaven for the English!
+
+At the hospital it was really awful, and the doctors were working in
+shifts of twenty-four hours at a time.
+
+I left my tables, chairs, trays, etc., for the hospital at the station,
+and returned early the next day, for numbers of wounded were still
+coming in. I wanted slippers for everyone, but my Belgian helpers had
+given a hundred pairs of mine away in my absence. They were overworked a
+little, I think, so I overlooked the fact that they lost their tempers
+rather badly. Besides, I will _not_ quarrel. In a small kitchen it
+would be too ridiculous. The three little people fight among themselves,
+but I don't fancy I was made for that sort of thing.
+
+There was nothing but work for some time. My "eclopes" had been entirely
+neglected, and no one had even bothered to buy vegetables for the men.
+
+On Sunday, May 2nd, I went to see Dr. de Page's hospital. I saw a baby
+three weeks old with both his feet wounded. His mother came in one mass
+of wounds, and died on the operating table--a young mother, and a pretty
+one. A young man with tears in his eyes looked at the baby, and then
+said, "A jolly good shot at fifteen miles."
+
+They can't help making jokes.
+
+There were two Scots lying in a little room--both gunners, who had been
+hit at Nieuport. One, Ochterlony from Arbroath, had an eye shot away,
+and some other wounds; the other, McDonald, had seven bad injuries.
+Ochterlony talked a good deal about his eyes, till McDonald rolled his
+head round on the pillow, and remarked briefly, "I'd swop my stomach for
+your eyes."
+
+Sunday wasn't such a nasty day as I usually have--in fact, Sunday never
+is. But that station, with its glaring hot platform, its hotter kitchen,
+and its smells, takes a bit of sticking. I have discovered one thing
+about Belgium. Everything smells exactly alike. To-day there have been
+presented to my nose four different things purporting to have different
+odours, drains, some cheese, tobacco, and a bunch of lilac. There was no
+difference at all in the smells!
+
+[Page Heading: WAR WEARINESS]
+
+I am much struck by the feeling of sheer weariness and disgust at the
+war which prevails at present. People are "soul sick" of it. A man told
+me last night that he longed to be wounded so that he might go home
+honourably. Amongst all the volunteer corps I notice the same thing.
+"Fed up" is the expression they all use, fed up with the suffering they
+see, fed up even with red crosses and khaki.
+
+When one thinks of primrose woods at home, and birds singing, and
+apple-blossom against blue sky, and the park with its flower-beds newly
+planted, and the fresh-watered streets, and women in pretty dresses--but
+one mustn't!
+
+_6 May._--Mrs. Guest arrived here to stay yesterday, and her chauffeur,
+Mr. Wood, dined here. It is nice to be no longer quite alone. Last night
+we were talking about how horrible war is. Mrs. Guest told me of a sight
+she had herself seen. Some men, horribly wounded, were being sent away
+by rail in a covered waggon ("fourgon"). One man had only his mouth left
+in his face. He was raving mad, and raged up and down the van, trampling
+on other men's wounded and broken limbs.
+
+Certainly war is a pretty game, and we must go on singing "Tipperary,"
+and saying what fun it is. A young friend of mine at home gave me a
+pamphlet (price 2d.) written by a spinster friend of hers who had never
+left England, proving what a good thing this war was for us all. When I
+said I saw another aspect of it, the kind, soothing suggestion was that
+I must be a little over-tired.
+
+_7 May._--They say La Panne is to be bombarded to-day. The Queen has
+left. Some people fussed a good deal, but if one bothered one's poor
+head about every rumour of this sort (mostly "dropped from a German
+aeroplane") where would one be?
+
+I was much touched when some people at home clubbed together and sent me
+out a little car a short time ago. But, alas! it had not been chosen
+with judgment, and is no use. It has been rather a bother to me, and now
+it must go back. Mr. Carlile drove it up from Dunkirk, and it broke down
+six times, and then had to be left in a ditch while he got another car
+to tow it home. Since then it has lain at the station.
+
+I can't get anyone to come and inspect it. The extraordinary habit which
+prevails here of saying "No" to every request makes things difficult,
+for no privileges can be bought. Sometimes, when I hear people ask for
+the salt, I fancy the answer will be, "Certainly not." Two of our own
+chauffeurs live quite close to the station: they say they are busy, and
+can't look at my car. One smiles, and says: "When you _have_ time I
+shall be _so_ grateful, etc." Inwardly one is feeling that if one could
+_roar_ just for once it would be a relief.
+
+Sometimes at home I have felt a little embarrassed by the love people
+have shown me--as if I have somehow deceived them into thinking I was
+nicer than I really am. Out here I have to try to remember that I have a
+few friends! In London I couldn't understand it when people praised me
+or said kind things.
+
+There is only one straight tip for Belgium--have a car, and understand
+it yourself. Never did I feel so helpless without one. But the roads are
+too bad and too crowded to begin to learn to drive, and there are
+difficulties about a garage.
+
+[Page Heading: MY CAR]
+
+This evening Mr. Wood and I went to Hoogstadt, and towed that
+_corpse_--my car--up to La Panne for ---- to inspect. The whole Belgian
+army seemed to gather round us as we proceeded on our toilsome journey,
+with breaking tow-ropes (for the "corpse" is heavy) and defective
+steering-gear. _They_ were amused. I was just cracking with fatigue.
+Needless to say, ---- didn't come. As the car was a present I can't send
+it back without the authority of a chauffeur. If I keep it any longer
+they will say I used it and broke it....
+
+There were some fearful bad cases at Hoogstadt to-day, and we were
+touched to see an old man sitting beside his unconscious son and keeping
+the flies off him, while he sobbed in great gusts. One Belgian officer
+told us that the hardest thing he had to do in the war was to give the
+order to fire on a German regiment which was advancing with Belgian
+women and children in front of it. He gave the order, and saw these
+helpless creatures shot down before his eyes.
+
+At the Yser the other night two German regiments got across the river
+and found themselves surrounded. One regiment surrendered, and the men
+of the other coolly turned their guns on it and shot their comrades
+down.
+
+Some of our corps were evacuating women and children the other day. One
+man, seeing his wife and daughter stretched out on the ground, went
+mad, and ran up and down the field screaming. We see a lot of madness.
+
+_8 May._--The guns sound rather near this morning, and the windows
+shake. One never knows what is happening till the wounded come in. I sat
+with my watch in my hand and counted the sound of bursting shells. There
+were 32 in one minute. The firing is continuous, and very loud, and
+living men are under this fire at this moment, "mown down," "wiped out,"
+as the horrible terms go. I loathe even the sound of a bugle now. This
+carnage is too horrible. If people can't "realise" let them come near
+the guns.
+
+They were shelling Furnes again when I was at Steenkerke the other day,
+and it was a strange sound to hear the shells whizzing over the peaceful
+fields. One heard them coming, and they passed overhead to fall on the
+old town. Under them the brown cattle fed unheeding, and old women hoed
+undisturbed, and the sinking sun threw long shadows on the grass. And
+then a busy ambulance would fly past on the road; one caught a glimpse
+of blood-covered forms. "Yes, a few wounded, and two or three killed."
+
+Old women are the most courageous creatures on this earth. When everyone
+else has fled from a place you can see them sitting by their cottage
+doors or hoeing turnips in the line of fire.
+
+It was touching to see a little family of terrified children sheltering
+with their mother in a roadside Calvary when the shells were coming
+over. The poor young mother was holding up her baby to Christ on His
+cross.
+
+[Page Heading: THE CRUCIFIX UNDAMAGED]
+
+There is a matter which seems almost more than a coincidence, and one
+which has been too often remarked to be ignored, and that is, that in
+the midst of ruins which are almost totally destroyed the figure of
+Christ in some niche often remains untouched. I have seen it myself, and
+many writers have commented on the fact. Sometimes it is only a crucifix
+on some humble wall, or it may be a shrine in a church. The solitary
+figure remains and stands--often with arms raised to bless. At Neuve
+Chapelle one learns that, although the havoc is like that wrought by an
+earthquake, and the very dead have been uprooted there, a crucifix
+stands at the cross-roads at the north end of the village, and the
+pitiful Christ still stretches out His hands. At His feet lie the dead
+bodies of young soldiers. At Nieuport I noticed a shrine over a doorway
+in the church standing peacefully among the ruins, and at Pervyse also
+one remained, until the tower reeled and fell with an explosion from
+beneath, which was deliberately ordered to prevent accidents from
+falling masonry.
+
+I had to go to Dunkirk this afternoon and while I was there I heard that
+the _Lusitania_ had been torpedoed and sunk with 1,600 souls on board
+her. What change will this make in the situation? Is America any use to
+us except in the matter of supplies, and are we not getting these
+through as it is? A nation like that ought to have an army or a navy.
+
+Dunkirk was nearly deserted owing to the bombardment, and it was
+difficult to find a shop open to buy vegetables for my soup-kitchen.
+Still, I enjoyed my afternoon. There was a chance that shelling might
+begin again at any time, and a bitter wind blew up clouds of prickly
+dust and sand; but it was a great relief to be out in the open and away
+from smells, and to have one's view no longer bounded by a line of
+rails. God help us! What a year this has been! It tires me even to think
+of being happy again, cheerfulness has become such an effort.
+
+_10 May._--I went to see my Scottish gunner at the hospital to-day. He
+said, "I can't forget that night," and burst out crying. "That night" he
+had been wounded in seven places, and then had to crawl to a "dug-out"
+by himself for shelter.
+
+Strong healthy men lie inert in these hospitals. Many of them have face
+and head wounds. I saw one splendid young fellow, with a beautiful face,
+and straight clear eyes of a sort of forget-me-not blue. He won't be
+able to speak again, as his jaw is shot away. The man next him was being
+fed through the nose.
+
+The matron told me to-day that last night a man came in from Nieuport
+with the base of a shell ("the bit they make into ash trays," she said)
+embedded in him. His clothing had been carried in with it. He died, of
+course.
+
+One of our friends has been helping with stretcher work, removing
+civilians. He was carrying away a girl shot to pieces, and with her
+clothing in rags. He took her head, and a young Belgian took her feet,
+and the Belgian looked round and said quietly, "This is my fiancee."
+
+[Page Heading: THE "LUSITANIA"]
+
+_11 May._--To-day being madame's washing day--we ring the changes on
+the "nettoyage," "le grand nettoyage," and "le lavage"--everything was
+late. The newspaper came in, and was full of such words as "horror,"
+"resentment," "indignation," about the _Lusitania_, but that won't give
+us back our ship or our men. I wish we could do more and say less, but
+the Press must talk, and always does so "with its mouth." M. Rotsartz
+came to breakfast. The guns had been going all night long, there was a
+sense of something in the air, and I fretted against platitudes in
+French and madame's washing. At last I got away, and went to the sea
+front, for the sound of bursting shells had become tremendous.
+
+It was a sort of British morning, with a fresh British breeze blowing
+our own blessed waves, and there, in its grey grandeur, stood off a
+British man-of-war, blazing away at the coast. The Germans answered by
+shells, which fell a bit wide, and must have startled the fishes (but no
+one else) by the splash they made. There were long, swift torpedo-boats,
+with two great white wings of cloven foam at their bows, and a great
+flourish of it in their wake, moving along under a canopy of their own
+black smoke. It was the smoke of good British coal, from pits where
+grimy workmen dwell in the black country, and British sweat has to get
+it out of the ground. Our grey lady was burning plenty of it, and when
+she had done her work, she put up a banner of smoke, and steamed away
+with a splendid air of dignity across the white-flecked sea. One knew
+the men on board her! Probably not a heart beat quicker by a second for
+all the German shells, probably dinner was served as usual, and men got
+their tubs and had their clothes brushed when it was all over.
+
+I went down to my kitchen a little late, but I had seen something that
+Drake never saw--a bit of modern sea-fighting. And in the evening, when
+I returned, my grey mistress had come back again. The sun was westering
+now, and the sea had turned to gold, and the grey lady looked black
+against the glare, but the fire of her guns was brighter than the
+evening sunset, and she was a spit-fire, after all, this dignified
+queen, and she, "let 'em have it," too, while the long, lean
+torpedo-boats looked on.
+
+I went to the kitchen; I gave out jam, I distributed socks, I heard the
+fussy importance of minor officials, but I had something to work on
+since I had seen the grey lady at work.
+
+In the evening I dined quietly on the barge with Miss Close and Maxine
+Elliott. We had a game of bridge--a thing I had not seen for a year and
+more (the last time I played was down in Surrey at the Grange!), and the
+little gathering on the old timbered barge was pleasant.
+
+Some terrible stories of the war are coming through from the front. An
+officer told us that when they take a trench, the only thing which
+describes what the place is like is strawberry jam. Another said that in
+one trench the sides were falling, and the Germans used corpses to make
+a wall, and kept them in with piles fixed into the ground. Hundreds of
+men remain unburied.
+
+[Page Heading: GERMAN PRISONERS]
+
+Some people say that the German gunners are chained to their guns. There
+were six Germans at the station to-day, two wounded and four prisoners.
+Individually I always like them, and it is useless to say I don't. They
+are all polite and grateful, and I thought to-day, when the prisoners
+were surrounded by a gaping crowd, that they bore themselves very well.
+After all, one can't expect a whole nation of mad dogs. A Scotchman
+said, "The ones opposite us (_i.e._, in the trenches) were a very
+respectable lot of men."
+
+The German prisoners' letters contain news that battalions of British
+suffragettes have arrived at the front, and they warn officers not to be
+captured by these!
+
+_12 May._--To-day, when I got to the station, I was asked to remove an
+old couple who sat there hand in hand, covered with blood. The old woman
+had her arm blown off, and the man's hand was badly injured. We took
+them to de Page's hospital.
+
+The firing has been continuous for the last few days, and men coming in
+from Ypres and Dixmude and Nieuport say that the losses on both sides
+have been enormous. There were four Belgian officers who lived opposite
+my villa, whom one used to see going in and out. Last night all were
+killed.
+
+At Dixmude the other day the Duke of Westminster went to the French
+bureau to get his passport vise. The clerks were just leaving, but he
+begged them to remain a minute or two and to do his little business.
+They did so, and came to the door to see him off, but a shell came
+hurtling in and killed them both, and of a woman who stood near there
+was literally nothing left.
+
+Last night ---- and I were talking about the _gossip_, which would fill
+ten unpublishable volumes out here.... Why do these people come out to
+the front? Give me men for war, and no one else except nuns. Things may
+be all right, but the Belgians are horrified, and I hate them to "say
+things" of the English. The grim part of it is that I don't believe I
+personally hear one half of what goes on and what is being said. They
+are afraid of shocking me, I believe.
+
+The craze for men baffles me. I see women, _dead tired_, perk up and
+begin to be sparkling as soon as a man appears; and when they are alone
+they just seem to sink back into apathy and fatigue. Why won't these mad
+creatures stop at home? They _are_ the exception, but war seems to bring
+them out. It really is intolerable, and I hate it for women's sake, and
+for England's.
+
+The other day I heard some ladies having a rather forced discussion on
+moral questions, loud and frank.... Shades of my modest ancestresses! Is
+this war time, and in a room filled with men and smoke and drink, are
+women in knickerbockers discussing such things? I know I have got to
+"let out tucks," but surely not quite so far!
+
+Beautiful women and fast women should be chained up. Let men meet their
+God with their conscience clear. Most of them will be killed before the
+war is over. Surely the least we can do is not to offer them temptation.
+Death and destruction, and horror and wonderful heroism, seem so near
+and so transcendent, and then, quite close at hand, one finds evil
+doings.
+
+[Page Heading: A TREASURE]
+
+_14 May._--I heard two little stories to-day, one of a British soldier
+limping painfully through Poperinghe with a horrid wound in his arm and
+thigh.
+
+"You seem badly wounded," a friend of mine said to him.
+
+"Yus," said the soldier; "there were a German, and he wounded me in
+three places, but"--he drew from under his arm a treasure, and his poor
+dirty face was transformed by a delighted grin--"I got his bloody
+helmet."
+
+Another story was of an English officer telephoning from a church-tower.
+He gave all his directions clearly and distinctly, and never even hinted
+that the Germans had taken the town and were approaching the church. He
+just went on talking, till at last, as the tramp of footsteps sounded on
+the belfry stairs, he said, "Don't take any notice of any further
+information. I am going." He went--all the brave ones seem to go--and
+those were the last words he spoke.
+
+Rhodes Moorhouse flew low over the German lines the other day, in order
+to bombard the German station at Courtrai. He planed down to 300 feet,
+and became the target for a hundred guns. In the murderous fire he was
+wounded, and might have descended, but he was determined not to let the
+Germans have his machine. He planed down to 100 feet in order to gather
+speed. At this elevation he was hit again, and mortally wounded, but he
+flew on alone to the British lines--like a shot bird heading for its own
+nest. He didn't even stop at the first aerodrome he came to, but sailed
+on--always alone--to his base, made a good landing, handed over his
+machine, and died.
+
+In the hospitals what heroism one finds! One splendid fellow of 6 feet 2
+inches had both his legs and both his arms amputated. He turned round to
+the doctor and said, smiling, "I shan't have to complain of beds being
+too short now!" And when someone came and sat with him in his deadly
+pain, he remarked in his gentle way, "I am afraid I am taking up all
+your time." His old father and mother arrived after he was dead.
+
+Ah! if one could hear more, surely one would do more! But this
+hole-and-corner way of doing warfare damps all enthusiasm and stifles
+recruiting. Why are we allowed to know nothing until the news is stale?
+Yesterday I heard at first hand of the treatment of some civilians by
+Germans, and I visited a village to hear from the _people themselves_
+what had happened.
+
+My work isn't so heavy now, and, much as I want to be here when the
+"forward movement" comes, I believe I ought to use the small amount of
+kick I have left in me to go to give lectures on the war to men in
+ammunition works at home. They all seem to be slacking and drinking, and
+I believe one might rouse them if one went oneself, and told stories of
+heroism, and tales of the front. The British authorities out here seem
+to think I ought to go home and give lectures at various centres, and I
+have heard from Vickers-Maxim's people that they want me to come.
+
+I think I'll arrive in London about the 1st of June, as there is a good
+deal to arrange, and I have to see heads of departments. One has to
+forget all about _parties_ in politics, and get help from Lloyd George
+himself. I only hope the lectures may be of some use.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Page Heading: TO MRS. FFOLLIOTT]
+
+_To Mrs. ffolliott._
+
+VILLA LES CHRYSANTHEMES,
+LA PANNE, BELGIUM,
+_16 May._
+
+DARLING OLD POOT,
+
+One line, to wish you with all my heart a happy birthday. I shan't
+forget you on the 22nd. Will you buy yourself some little thing with the
+enclosed cheque?
+
+This war becomes a terrible strain. I don't know what we shall do when
+four nephews, a brother-in-law, and a nephew to be are in the field.
+
+I get quite sick with the loss of life that is going on; the whole land
+seems under the shadow of death. I shall always think it an idiotic way
+of settling disputes to plug pieces of iron and steel into innocent boys
+and men. But the bravery is simply wonderful. I could tell you stories
+which are almost unbelievable of British courage and fortitude.
+
+I am coming home soon to give some lectures, and then I hope to come out
+here again.
+
+Bless you, dear Poot,
+
+Your loving
+SARAH.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_17 May._--I saw a most curious thing to-day. A soldier in the Pavilion
+St. Vincent showed me five 5-franc pieces which he had had in his
+pocket when he was shot. A piece of shrapnel had bent the whole five
+until they were welded together. The shrapnel fitted into the silver
+exactly, and actually it was silvered by the scrape it had made against
+the coin. I should like to have had it, but the man valued his souvenir,
+so one didn't like to offer him money for it.
+
+A young Canadian found a comrade of his nailed to a door, and stone
+dead, of course. When did he die?
+
+A Belgian doctor told Mrs. Wynne that in looking through a German
+officer's knapsack he found a quantity of children's hands--a pretty
+souvenir! I write these things down because they must be known, and if I
+go home to lecture to munition-workers I suppose I must tell them of
+these barbarities.
+
+Meanwhile, the German prisoners in England are getting country houses
+placed at their service, electric light, baths, etc., and they say girls
+are allowed to come and play lawn tennis with them. The ships where they
+are interned are costing us L86,000 a month. Our own men imprisoned in
+Germany are starved, and beaten, and spat upon. They sleep on mouldy
+straw, have no sanitation, and in winter weather their coats, and
+sometimes even their tunics, were taken from them.
+
+Fortunately, reprisals need not come from us. Talk to Zouaves and Turcos
+and the French. God help Germany if they ever penetrate to the Rhine.
+
+A young man--Mr. Shoppe--is occupied in flying low over the gun that is
+bombarding Dunkirk in order to take a photograph of it.
+
+It seems to me a great deal to ask of young men to give their lives when
+life must be so sweet, but no one seems to grudge their all. Of some one
+hears touching and splendid stories; others, one knows, die all alone,
+gasping out their last breath painfully, with no one at hand to give
+them even a cup of water. No one has a tale to tell of them. God,
+perhaps, heard a last prayer or a last groan before Death came with its
+merciful hand and put an end to the intolerable pain.
+
+How much can a man endure? A Frenchman at the Zouave Poste au Secours
+looked calmly on while the remains of his arm were cut away the other
+night. Many operations are performed without chloroform (because they
+take a shorter time) at the French hospital.
+
+[Page Heading: A HEAVENLY HOST]
+
+I heard from R. to-day. He says the story about Mons is true. The
+English were retreating, and Kluck was following hard after them. He
+wired to the Kaiser that he had "got the English," but this is what men
+say happened. A cloud came out of a clear day and stood between the two
+armies, and in the cloud men saw the chariots and horses of a heavenly
+host. Kluck turned back from pursuing, and the English went on unharmed.
+
+This may be true, or it may be the result of men's fancy or of their
+imagination. But there is one vision which no one can deny, and which
+each man who cares to look may see for himself. It is the vision of what
+lies beyond sacrifice; and in that bright and heavenly atmosphere we
+shall see--we may, indeed, see to-day--the forms of those who have
+fallen. They fight still for England, unharmed now and for ever more,
+warriors on the side of right, captains of the host which no man can
+number, champions of all that we hold good. They are marching on ahead,
+and we hope to follow; and when we all meet, and the roll is called, we
+shall find them still cheery, I think, still unwavering, and answering
+to their good English names, which they carried unstained through a
+score of fights, at what price God and a few comrades know.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+LAST DAYS IN FLANDERS
+
+
+_19 May._--In order to get material for my lecture to munition-workers I
+was very anxious to see more of the war for myself than is possible at a
+soup-kitchen, and I asked at the British Mission if I might be given
+permission to go into the British lines. Major ---- in giving me a flat
+refusal, was a little pompous and important I thought, and he said it
+was _impossible_ to get near the British.
+
+To-day I lunched on the barge with Miss Close, and we took her car and
+drove to Poperinghe. I hardly like to write this even in a diary, I am
+so seldom naughty! But I really did something very wrong for once. And
+the amusing part of it was that military orders made going to Poperinghe
+so impossible that no one molested us! We passed all the sentries with a
+flourish of our green papers, and drove on to the typhoid hospital with
+only a few Tommies gaping at us.
+
+I was amazed at the pleasure that wrong-doing gives, and regretted my
+desperately strict past life! Oh, the freedom of that day in the open
+air! the joy of seeing trees after looking at one wretched line of rails
+for nine months! Lilacs were abloom in every garden, and buttercups
+made the fields look yellow. The air was misty--one could hardly have
+gone to Poperinghe except in a mist, as it was being so constantly
+shelled--but in the mist the trees had a queer light on them which made
+the early green look a deeper and stronger colour than I have ever seen
+it. There appeared to be a sort of glare under the mist, and the fresh
+wet landscape, with its top-heavy sky, radiated with some light of its
+own. Oh, the intoxication of that damp, wet drive, with a fine rain in
+our faces, and the car bounding under us on the "pave"! If I am interned
+till the end of the war I don't care a bit! I have had some fresh air,
+and I have been away for one whole day from the smell of soup and
+drains.
+
+How describe it all? The dear sense of guilt first, and then the still
+dearer British soldiers, all ready with some cheery, cheeky remark as
+they sat in carts under the wet trees. They were our brethren--blue-eyed
+and fair-haired, and with their old clumsy ways, which one seemed to be
+seeing plainly for the first time, or, rather, recognising for the first
+time. It was all part of England, and a day out. The officers were
+taking exercise, of course, with dogs, and in the rain. We are never
+less than English! To-morrow we may be killed, but to-day we will put on
+thick boots, and take the dogs for a run in the rain.
+
+[Page Heading: AT POPERINGHE]
+
+Poperinghe was deserted, of course. Its busy cobbled streets were quite
+empty except for a few strolling soldiers in khaki, and just here and
+there the same toothless old woman who is always the last to leave a
+doomed city. At the typhoid hospital we gravely offered the cases of
+milk which we had brought with us as an earnest of our good conduct, but
+even the hospital was nearly empty. However, a secretary offered us a
+cup of tea, and in the dining-room we found Madame van den Steen, who
+had just returned to take up her noble work again. She was at Dinant, at
+her own chateau, when war broke out, and she was most interesting, and
+able to tell me things at first hand. The German methods are pretty well
+known now, but she told me a great deal which only women talking
+together could discuss. When a village or town was taken, the women
+inhabitants were quite at the mercy of the Germans.
+
+Continuing, Madame van den Steen said that all the filthiness that could
+be thought of was committed--the furniture, cupboards, flowerpots, and
+even bridge-tables, being sullied by these brutes. Children had their
+hands cut off, and one woman, at least, at Dinant was crucified. One's
+pen won't write more. The horrors upset one too much. All the babies
+born about that time died; their mothers had been so shocked and
+frightened....
+
+Of Ypres Madame said, "It smells of lilac and death." Some Englishmen
+were looking for the body of a comrade there, and failed to find it
+amongst the ruins of the burning and devastated town. By seeming chance
+they opened the door of a house which still stood, and found in a room
+within an old man of eighty-six, sitting placidly in a chair. He said,
+"How do you do?" and bade them be seated, and when they exclaimed,
+aghast at his being still in Ypres, he replied that he was paralysed
+and couldn't move, but that he knew God would send someone to take him
+away; and he smiled gently at them, and was taken away in their
+ambulance.
+
+Madame gave me a shell-case, and asked Mr. Thompson if he would bring in
+his large piece to show us. He wheeled it across the hall, as no one
+could lift it, and this was only the _base_ of a 15-inch shell. It was
+picked up in the garden of the hospital, and had travelled fifteen
+miles!
+
+The other day I went to see for myself some of the poor refugees at
+Coxide. There were twenty-five people in one small cottage. Some were
+sleeping in a cart. One weeping woman, wearing the little black woollen
+cap which all the women wear, told me that she and her family had to fly
+from their little farm at Lombaertzyde because it was being shelled by
+the Germans, but afterwards, when all seemed quiet, they went back to
+their home to save the cows. Alas, the Germans were there! They made
+this woman (who was expecting a baby) and all her family stand in a row,
+and one girl of twenty, the eldest daughter, was shot before their eyes.
+When the poor mother begged for the body of her child it was refused
+her.
+
+The _Times_ list of atrocities is too frightful, and all the evidence
+has been sifted and proved to be true.
+
+_20 May._--Yesterday I arranged with Major du Pont about leaving the
+station to go home and give lectures in England. Then I had a good deal
+to do, so I abandoned my plan of visiting refugees with Etta Close, and
+stayed on at the station. At 5.30 I came back to La Panne to see
+Countess de Caraman Chimay, the dame d'honneur of the Queen of the
+Belgians; then I went on to dine with the nurses at the "Ocean." Here I
+heard that Adinkerke, which I had just left, was being shelled.
+Fortunately, the station being there, I hope the inhabitants got away;
+but it was unpleasant to hear the sound of guns so near. I knew the
+three Belgian Sisters would be all right, as they have a good cellar at
+their house, and I could trust Lady Bagot's staff to look after her. All
+the same, it was a horrible night, full of anxiety, and there seems
+little doubt that La Panne will be shelled any day. My one wish
+is--let's all behave well.
+
+I watched the sunset over the sea, and longed to be in England; but,
+naturally, one means to stick it, and not leave at a nasty time.
+
+[Page Heading: SOCKS]
+
+_21 May._--Yesterday, at the station, there was a poor fellow lying on a
+stretcher, battered and wounded, as they all are, an eye gone, and a
+foot bandaged. His toes were exposed, and I went and got him rather a
+gay pair of socks to pull on over his "pansement." He gave me a twinkle
+out of his remaining eye, and said, "Madame, in those socks I could take
+Constantinople!"
+
+The work is slack for the moment, but a great attack is expected at
+Nieuport, and they say the Kaiser is behind the lines there. His
+presence hasn't brought luck so far, and I hope it won't this time.
+
+I went to tea with Miss Close on the barge, and afterwards we picked up
+M. de la Haye, and went to see an old farm, which filled me with joy.
+The buildings here, except at the larger towns, are not interesting or
+beautiful, but this lovely old house was evidently once a summer palace
+of the bishops (perhaps of Bruges). It is called "Beau Garde," and lies
+off the Coxide road. One enters what must once have been a splendid
+courtyard, but it is now filled indiscriminately with soldiers and pigs.
+The chapel still stands, with the Bishops' Arms on the wall; and there
+are Spanish windows in the old house, and a curious dog-kennel built
+into the wall. Over the gateway some massive beams have been roughly
+painted in dark blue, and these, covered in ivy, and with the old
+dim-toned bricks above, make a scheme of colour which is simply
+enchanting. Some wind-torn trees and the sand-dunes, piled in miniature
+mountains, form a delicious background to the old place.
+
+I also went with Etta Close to visit some of the refugees for whom she
+has done so much, and in the sweet spring sunshine I took a little walk
+in the fields with M. de la Haye, so altogether it was a real nice day.
+There were so few wounded that I was able to have a chat with each of
+them, and the poor "eclopes" were happy gambling for ha'pence in the
+garden of the St. Vincent.
+
+In the evening I went up to the Kursaal to dine with Mrs. Wynne. Our two
+new warriors who have come out with ambulances have stood this
+_absolutely_ quiet time for three days, and are now leaving because it
+is too dangerous! The shells at Adinkerke never came near them, as they
+were deputed to drive to Nieuport only. (N.B.--Mrs. Wynne continues to
+drive there every night!) Eight men of our corps have funked, no women.
+
+I am going to take a week's rest before going home, in the hope that I
+won't arrive looking as ill as I usually do. I hardly know how to
+celebrate my holiday, as it is the first time since I came out here that
+I haven't gone to the station except on Sundays.
+
+[Page Heading: SUNDAY]
+
+_23 May, Sunday._--I went to Morning Service at the "Ocean" to-day, then
+walked back with Prince Alexander. In the evening we drove to the
+Hoogstadt hospital. The King of the Belgians was just saying good-bye to
+the staff, after paying a surprise visit. He has a splendid face, and
+the simplicity of his plain dark uniform makes the strength and goodness
+of it all the more striking.
+
+As I was waiting at the hospital the Germans began firing at a little
+village a mile off. It is always strange to hear the shells whizzing
+over the fields. We drove out to see the Yser and the floods, which have
+protected us all the winter. With glasses one could have seen the German
+lines.
+
+Spring is coming late, and with a marvel of green. A wind blows in from
+the sea, and the lilacs nod from over the hedge. The tender corn rustles
+its soft little chimes, and all across it the wind sends arpeggio chords
+of delicate music, like a harp played on silver strings. A great big
+horse-chestnut tree, carrying its flowers proudly like a bouquet,
+showers the road with petals, and the shy hedges put up a screen all
+laced and decorated with white may. It just seems as if Mother Earth
+had become young again, and was tossing her babies up to the summer sky,
+and the wind played hide-and-seek, or peep-bo, or some other ridiculous
+game, with them, and made the summer babies as glad and as mischievous
+as himself. Only the guns boom all the time, and my poor little French
+Marines, who drink far too much, and have the manners of princes, come
+in on ambulances in the evening, or at the "poste" a hole is dug for
+them in the ground, and they are laid down gently in their dirty coats.
+
+Mother Earth, with her new-born babies, stops laughing for a moment, and
+says to me, "It's all right, my dear; they have to come back to me, as
+all my children and all their works must do. Why make any complaint? For
+a time they are happy, playing and building their little castles, and
+making their little books, and weaving stories and wreaths of flowers;
+but the stories, the castles, the flowers I gave them, and they
+themselves, all come back to me at last--the leaves next autumn, and the
+boy you love perhaps to-morrow."
+
+Oh, Father God, Mother Earth, as it was in the beginning will it be in
+the end? Will you give us and them a good time again, and will the
+spring burst into singing in some other country? I don't know. I don't
+know.
+
+Only I do know this--I am sure of it now for the first time, and it is
+worth while spending a long, long winter within the sound of guns in
+order to know it--that death brings release, not release from mere
+suffering or pain, but in some strange and unknown way it brings
+freedom. Soldiers realise it: they have been more terrified than their
+own mothers will ever know, and their very spines have melted under the
+shrieking sound of shells, and then comes the day when they "don't
+mind." Death stalks just as near as ever, but his face is suddenly quite
+kind. A stray bullet or a piece of shell may come, but what does it
+matter? This is the day when the soldier learns to stroll when the
+shrapnel is falling, and to look up and laugh when the murderous bullet
+pings close by.
+
+[Page Heading: SOUVENIRS]
+
+War souvenirs! There are heaps of them, and I hate them all; pieces of
+jagged shell, helmets with bullets through them, pieces of burnt
+aeroplanes, scraps of clothing rent by a bayonet. Yesterday, at the
+station, I saw a sick Zouave nursing a German summer casquette. He said
+quietly, being very sick: "The burgomaster chez moi wanted one. Yes, I
+had to kill a German officer for it--ce n'est rien de quoi--I got a ball
+in my leg too, mais mon burgomaster sera tres content d'avoir une
+casquette d'un boche." Our own men leave their trenches and go out into
+the open to get these horrible things, with their battered exterior and
+the suggestion of pomade inside.
+
+Yesterday, by chance, I went to the "Ierlinck" to see Mr. Clegg. I met
+Mr. Hubert Walter, lately arrived from England, and asked him to dine,
+so both he and Mr. Clegg came, and Madame van der Gienst. It was _so_
+like England to talk to Mr. Walter again, and to learn news of everyone,
+and we actually sat up till 10.30, and had a great pow-wow.
+
+Mr. Walter attaches great importance to the fact that the Germans are
+courageous in victory, but their spirits go down at once under defeat,
+and he thinks that even one decisive defeat would do wonders in the way
+of bringing the war to an end. The Russians are preparing for a winter
+campaign. I look at all my "woollies," and wonder if I had better save
+some for 1916. What new horrors will have been invented by that time? I
+hear the Germans are throwing vitriol now! In their results I hate hand
+grenades more than anything. The poor burnt faces which have been
+wounded by them are hardly human sometimes, and in their bandages they
+have a suggestion of something tragically grotesque.
+
+_26 May._--We had a great day--rather, a glorious day--at the station
+yesterday. In the morning I heard that "les anglais" were arriving
+there, and, although the news was a little startling, I couldn't go
+early to Adinkerke because I felt so seedy. However, I got off at last
+in a "camion," and when I arrived I found the little station hospital
+and salle and Lady Bagot's hospital crowded with men in khaki.
+
+We don't know yet all that it means. The fighting has been fierce and
+awful at Ypres. Are the hospitals at the base all crowded? Is there no
+more room for our men? What numbers of them have fallen? Who is killed,
+and who is left?
+
+All questions are idle for the moment. Only I have a postcard to say
+that Colin is at the front, so I suppose until the war is over I shall
+go on being very sick with anxiety. At night I say to myself, as the
+guns boom on, "Is he lying out in the open with a bullet through his
+heart?" and in the morning I say, "Is he safe in hospital, and wounded,
+or is he still with his men, making them follow him (in the way he has)
+wherever he likes to lead them?" God knows, and the War Office, and
+neither tells us much.
+
+[Page Heading: GAS-POISONING]
+
+The men at the station were nearly all cases of asphyxiation by gas.
+Unless one had actually seen the immediate results one could hardly have
+credited it. In a day or two the soldiers may leave off twitching and
+shuddering as they breathe, and may be able to draw a breath fairly, but
+an hour or two after they have inhaled the deadly German gas is an awful
+time to see one's men. Most of them yesterday were in bed, but a few sat
+on canvas chairs round the empty stove in the salle, and all slept, even
+those in deadly pain. Sleep comes to these tired soldiers like a death.
+They succumb to it. They are difficult to rouse. They are oblivious, and
+want nothing else. They are able to sleep anywhere and in any position,
+but even in sleep they twitch and shudder, and their sides heave like
+those of spent horses.
+
+It struck me very forcibly that what was immediately wanted was a long
+draught for each of them of some clean, simple stimulant. I went and
+bought them red wine, and I could see that this seemed to do good, and I
+went to the barge and got bottles of whisky and a quantity of distilled
+water, and we dosed the men. It seemed to do them a wonderful lot of
+good, and in some way acted as an antidote to the poison. Also, it
+pulled them together, and they got some quieter sleep afterwards.
+
+Towards the afternoon, indeed, all but one Irishman seemed to be better,
+and then we began to be cheery, and the scene at the station took colour
+and became intensely alive. The khaki-clad forms roused themselves, and
+(of course) wanted a wash. Also, they sat on their beds and produced
+pocket-combs, and ran them through their hair. In their dirt and rags
+these poor battered, breathless men began to try to be smart again. It
+was a tragedy and a comedy all in one. A Highlander, in a shrunk kilt
+and with long bare legs, had his head bound about with bandages till it
+looked like a great melon, and his sleeve dangled empty from his
+great-coat. Others of the Seaforths, and mere boys of the Highland
+Territorials, wore khaki shirts over their tartan, and these were
+bullet-torn and hanging in great rents. And some boys still wore their
+caps with the wee dambrod pattern jauntily, and some had no caps to
+wear, and some were all daubed about with white bandages stained
+crimson, and none had hose, and few had brogues. They had breathed
+poison and received shrapnel, and none of them had slept since Sunday
+night. They had had an "awful doing," and no one knew how the battle at
+Ypres had gone, but these were men yet--walking upright when they could,
+always civil, undismayed, intelligent, and about as like giving in as a
+piece of granite.
+
+Only the young Scottish boys--the children of seventeen who had sworn in
+as nineteen--were longing for Loch Lomond's side and the falls of
+Inversnaid. I believe the Loch Lomond lads believed that the white burn
+that falls over the rocks near the pier has no rival (although they have
+heard of Niagara and the Victoria Falls), and it's "oor glen" and "oor
+country" wi' them all. And one boy wanted his mother badly, and said so.
+But oh, how ready they were to be cheery! how they enjoyed their day!
+And, indeed, we did our best for them.
+
+[Page Heading: A GARDEN-PARTY]
+
+Lady Bagot's hospital was full, and we called it her garden-party when
+we all had tea in the open air there. We fed them, we got them
+handkerchiefs, our good du Pont got them tubs, the cook heaped more coal
+on the fire, although it was very hot, and made soup in buckets, and
+then began a curious stage scene which I shall never forget. It was on
+the platform of the station. A band appeared from somewhere, and, out of
+compliment to the English, played "God Save the King." All the dirty
+bandaged men stood at attention. As they did so an armoured train backed
+slowly into the station and an aeroplane swooped overhead. At Drury Lane
+one would have said that the staging had been overdone, that the clothes
+were too ragged, the men too gaunt and too much wounded, and that by no
+stretch of imagination could a band be playing "God save the King" while
+a square painted train called "Lou-lou" steamed in, looking like a
+child's giant gaudy toy, and an aeroplane fussed overhead.
+
+Everyone had stories to tell, but I think the best of them concerns the
+arrival of the wounded last night. All the beds in Lady Bagot's little
+hospital were full, and the Belgians who occupied them insisted on
+getting up and giving their places to the English. They lay on the floor
+or stood on their feet all night, and someone told me that even very
+sick men leapt from their beds to give them to their Allies.
+
+God help us, what a mixture it all is! Here were men talking of the very
+_sound_ of bayonets on human flesh; here were men not only asphyxiated
+by gas, but blinded by the pepper that the Germans mix with it; and here
+were men determined to give no quarter--yet they were babbling of Loch
+Lomond's side and their mothers, and fighting as to who should give up
+their beds to each other.
+
+Of course the day ended with the exchange of souvenirs, and the soldiers
+pulled buttons off their coats and badges out of their caps. And when it
+was all over, every mother's son of them rolled round and went to sleep.
+Most of them, I thought, had a curious air of innocence about them as
+they slept.
+
+_27 May._--I took a great bundle of newspapers and magazines to the
+"Jellicoe" men to-day. English current literature isn't a waste out
+here, and I often wonder why people don't buy more. They all fall upon
+my tableful, and generally bear away much of it.
+
+The war news, even in the ever optimistic English press, is _not_ good,
+but not nearly as bad as what seems to me the real condition of affairs.
+The shortage of high explosives is very great. At Nieuport yesterday
+Mrs. Wynne said to a French officer, "Things seem quiet here to-day," at
+which he laughed, and said, "I suppose even Germans will stop firing
+when they know you have no ammunition."
+
+[Page Heading: SLACKERS IN GLASGOW]
+
+In France the armament works are going night and day, and the men work
+in shifts of 24 hours--even the women only get one day off in a
+week--while in Glasgow the men are sticking out for strict labour
+conditions, and are "slacking" from Friday night till late on Tuesday
+morning, and then demanding extra pay for overtime. And this in face of
+the bare facts that since October the Allies have lost ground in Russia;
+in Belgium they remain as they were; and in France they have advanced a
+few kilometres. At Ypres the Germans are now within a mile of us, and
+the losses there are terrible. Whom shall we ever see again?
+
+Men come out to die now, not to fight. One order from a sergeant was,
+"You've got to take that trench. You can't do it. Get on!"
+
+A captain was heard saying to a gunner subaltern: "We must go back and
+get that gun." The subaltern said, "We shall be killed, but it doesn't
+matter." The captain echoed heavily, "No, it doesn't matter," and they
+went back.
+
+Sir William Ramsay, speaking about the war, says that half the adult
+male population of Europe will be killed before it is over. Those who
+are left will be the feeble ones, the slackers, the unfit, and the
+cowards. It is good to be left to breed from such stock!
+
+It is odd to me how confusing is the want of difference that has come to
+pass between the living and the not living. Cottages and little towns
+seem to be part of nature. One regrets their destruction almost as one
+regrets the loss of life. They have a tragic look, with their
+dishevelled windows and stripped roofs and skeleton frames. Life has
+become so cheap that cottages seem almost as valuable. "It doesn't
+matter"--nothing matters. I rather dread going back to London, because
+there things may begin to seem important and one will be in bondage
+again. Here our men are going to their death laughing because it doesn't
+matter.
+
+There is a proud humility about my countrymen which few people have yet
+realised. It is the outcome of nursery days and public schools. No one
+is allowed to think much of himself in either place, so when he dies,
+"It doesn't matter."
+
+God help the boys! If they only knew how much it mattered to _us_! Life
+is over for them. We don't even know for certain that they will live
+again. But their _spirit_, as I know it, can never die. I am not sure
+about the survival of personality. I care, but I do not know. But I do
+know that by these simple, glorious, uncomplaining deaths, some higher,
+purer, more splendid place is reached, some release is found from the
+heavy weight of foolish, sticky, burdensome, contemptible things. These
+heroes do "rise," and we "rise" with them. Could Christ himself desire a
+better resurrection?
+
+[Page Heading: LARKS]
+
+_28 May._--I am busy getting things prepared for going home--my lecture,
+two articles, etc. I did not go to the station to-day, but worked till 3
+o'clock, and then walked over to St. Idesbald. How I wish I could have
+been out-of-doors more since I came here. It is such a wonderful
+country, all sky. No wonder there are painters in Belgium. During the
+winter it was too wet to see much, and I was always in the kitchen, but
+now I could kiss the very ground with the little roses on it amongst the
+Dunes. Larks sing at St. Idesbald, and nightingales. Some fine night I
+mean to walk out there and listen.
+
+_29 May._--To-day, according to promise, Mr. Bevan took me into
+Nieuport. It was very difficult to get permission to go there, but Mr.
+Bevan got it from the British Mission on the plea that I was going to
+give lectures at home.
+
+"The worst of going to Nieuport," said Major Tyrell, "is that you won't
+be likely to see home again."
+
+Mr. Bevan called at 10 o'clock with the faithful MacEwan, and we went
+first to the Cabour hospital, which I always like so much, and where the
+large pleasure-grounds make things healthy and quiet for the patients.
+Then we had a tyre out of order, so had to go on to Dunkirk, where I met
+Mr. Sarrel and his friend Mr. Hanson--Vice-Consul at Constantinople--and
+they lunched with us while the car was being doctored.
+
+At last we started towards Nieuport, but before we got there we found a
+motor-car in a ditch, and its owner with a cut on his head and his arm
+broken, so we had to pick him up and take him to Coxide. It was a clear,
+bright day, with all the trees swishing the sky, and Mr. Bevan and
+MacEwan did nothing all the time but tell me how dangerous it was, and
+they pointed out every place on the road where they had picked up dead
+men or found people blown to pieces. This was lively for me, and the
+amusing part of it was that I think they did it from a belated sense of
+responsibility.
+
+It is as difficult to find words to describe Nieuport as it is to talk
+of metaphysics in slang. The words don't seem invented that will convey
+that haunting sense of desolation, that supreme quiet under the shock of
+continually firing guns. Hardly anything is left now of the little
+homely bits that, when I saw the place last autumn, reminded one that
+this was once a city of living human beings. _Then_ one saw a few
+interiors--exposed, it is true, and damaged, but still of this world.
+Now it is one big grave, the grave of a city, and the grave of many of
+its inhabitants. Here, at a corner house, nine ladies lie under the
+piled-up debris that once made their home. There some soldiers met their
+death, and some crumbling bricks are heaped over them too. The houses
+are all fallen--some outer walls remain, but I hardly saw a roof
+left--and everywhere there are empty window-frames and skeleton rafters.
+
+[Page Heading: NIEUPORT]
+
+I never knew so surely that a town can live and can die, and it set one
+wondering whether Life means a thing as a whole and Death simply
+disintegration. A perfect crystal, chemists tell us, has the elements of
+life in it and may be said to live. Destruction and decay mean death;
+separation and disintegration mean death. In this way we die, a crystal
+dies, a flower or a city dies. Nieuport is dead. There isn't a
+heart-beat left to throb in it. Thousands and thousands of shells have
+fallen into it, and at night the nightingale sings there, and by day
+the river flows gently under the ruined bridge. Every tree in a wood
+near by is torn and beheaded; hardly one has the top remaining. The new
+green pushes out amongst the blackened trunks.
+
+One speaks low in Nieuport, the place is so horribly dead.
+
+Mr. Bevan showed me a shell-hole 42 feet across, made by one single
+"soixante-quinze" shell. Every field is pitted with holes, and where
+there are stretches of pale-coloured mud the round pits dotted all over
+it give one the impression of an immense Gruyere cheese. The streets,
+heaped with debris, and with houses fallen helplessly forward into their
+midst, were full of sunshine. From ruined cottages--whose insecure walls
+tottered--one saw here and there some Zouaves or a little French "marin"
+appear. Most of these ran out with letters in their hands for us to
+post. Heaven knows what they can have to write about from that grave!
+
+Some beautiful pillars of the cathedral still stand, and the tower, full
+of holes, has not yet bent its head. Lieutenant Shoppe, R.N., sits up
+there all day, and takes observations, with the shells knocking gaily
+against the walls. One day the tower will fall or its stones will be
+pierced, and then Lieutenant Shoppe, R.N., will be killed, as the
+Belgian "observateur" was killed at Oostkerke the other day. He still
+hangs there across a beam for all the world to see. His arms are
+stretched out, and his body lies head downwards, and no one can go near
+the dead Belgian because the tower is too unsafe now. One day perhaps
+it will fall altogether and bury him.
+
+Meanwhile, in the tower of the ruined cathedral at Nieuport Shoppe sits
+in his shirt-sleeves, with his telephone beside him and his observation
+instruments. His small staff are with him. They are immensely interested
+in the range of a gun and the accuracy of a hit. I believe they do not
+think of anything else. No doubt the tower shakes a great deal when a
+shell hits it, and no doubt the number of holes in its sides is daily
+becoming more numerous. Each morning that Shoppe leaves home to spend
+his day in the tower he runs an excellent chance of being killed, and in
+the evening he returns and eats a good dinner in rather an uncomfortable
+hotel.
+
+In the cathedral, and amongst its crumbling battered aisles, a strange
+peace rests. The pitiful columns of the church stand here and there--the
+roof has long since gone. On its most sheltered side is the little
+graveyard, filled with crosses, where the dead lie. Here and there a
+shell has entered and torn a corpse from its resting-place, and bones
+lie scattered. On other graves a few simple flowers are laid.
+
+We went to see the dim cellars which form the two "postes au secours."
+In the inner recess of one a doctor has a bed, in the outer cave some
+soldiers were eating food. There is no light even during the day except
+from the doorway. At Nieuport the Germans put in 3,000 shells in one
+day. Nothing is left. If there ever was anything to loot, it has been
+looted. One doesn't know what lies under the debris. Here one sees the
+inside of a piano and a few twisted strings, and there a metal
+umbrella-stand. I saw one wrought-iron sign hanging from the falling
+walls of an inn.
+
+Mr. Bevan and I wandered about in the unearthly quiet, which persisted
+even when the guns began to blaze away close by us, whizzing shells over
+our heads, and we walked down to the river, and saw the few boards which
+are all that remain of the bridge. Afterwards a German shell landed with
+its unpleasant noise in the middle of the street; but we had wandered up
+a by-way, and so escaped it by a minute or less.
+
+In a little burned house, where only a piece of blackened wall remained,
+I found a little crucifix which impressed me very much--it stood out
+against the smoke-stained walls with a sort of grandeur of pity about
+it. The legs had been shot away or burned, but "the hands were stretched
+out still."
+
+As we came away firing began all round about, and we saw the toss of
+smoke as the shells fell.
+
+[Page Heading: STEENKERKE]
+
+_31 May._--We went to Steenkerke yesterday and called on Mrs. Knocker,
+and saw a terrible infirmary, which must be put right. It isn't fit for
+dogs.
+
+At the station to-day our poor Irishman died. Ah, it was terrible! His
+lungs never recovered from the gas, and he breathed his last difficult
+breath at 5 o'clock.
+
+In the evening a Zeppelin flew overhead on its way to England.
+
+[Page Heading: NIGHTINGALES]
+
+There is a nightingale in a wood near here. He seems to sing louder and
+more purely the heavier the fighting that is going on. When men are
+murdering each other he loses himself in a rapture, of song, recalling
+all the old joyous things which one used to know.
+
+The poetry of life seems to be over. The war songs are forced and
+foolish. There is no time for reading, and no one looks at pictures, but
+the nightingale sings on, and the long-ago spirit of youth looks out
+through Time's strong bars, and speaks of evenings in old, dim woods at
+home, and of girlish, splendid drives home from some dance where "he"
+was, when we watched the dawn break, and saw our mother sleeping in the
+carriage, and wondered what it would be like not to "thrill" all the
+time, and to sleep when the nightingale was singing.
+
+Later there came the time when the song of the throbbing nightingale
+made one impatient, because it sang in intolerable silence, and one
+ached for the roar of things, and for the clash of endeavour and for the
+strain of purpose. Peace was at a discount then, and struggle seemed to
+be the eternal good. The silent woods had no word for one, the
+nightingale was only a mate singing a love-song, and one wanted
+something more than that.
+
+And afterwards, when the struggle and the strain were given one in
+abundant measure, the song of the nightingale came in the lulls that
+occurred in one's busy life. One grew to connect it with coffee out on
+the lawn in some houses of surpassing comfort, where (years and years
+ago) one dressed for dinner, and a crinkly housemaid brought hot water
+to one's room. The song went on above the smug comfort of things, and
+the amusing conversation, and the smell of good cigars. Within, we saw
+some pleasant drawing-room, with lamps and a big table set with candles
+and cards, and we felt that the nightingale provided a very charming
+orchestra. We listened to it as we listened to amusing conversation,
+with a sense of comfortable enjoyment and rest. Why talk of the time
+when it sang of breaking hearts and high endeavour never satisfied, and
+things which no one ever knew or guessed except oneself?
+
+It sings now above the sound of death and of tears. Sometimes I think to
+myself that God has sent his angel to open the prison doors when I hear
+that bird in the little wood close beside the tram-way line.
+
+On Thursday, June 3rd, I drove in the "bug" to Boulogne, and took the
+steamer to England. I went through a nasty time in Belgium, but now a
+good deal of queer affection is shown me, and I believe they all rather
+like me in the corps.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The following brief impression of Miss Macnaughtan's work at the
+soup-kitchen forms the most appropriate conclusion to her story of her
+experiences in Belgium. She cut it out of some paper, and sent it home
+to a friend in England, and we seem to learn from it--more than from any
+words of her own--how much she did to help our Allies in their hour of
+need:
+
+ "It was dark when my car stopped at the little station of
+ Adinkerke, where I had been invited to visit a soup-kitchen
+ established there by a Scotchwoman. In peace she is a
+ distinguished author; in war she is being a mother to such of the
+ Belgian Army as are lucky enough to pass her way. I can see her
+ now, against a background of big soup-boilers and cooking-stoves,
+ handing out woollen gloves and mufflers to the men who were to be
+ on sentry duty along the line that night. It was bitterly cold, and
+ the comforts were gratefully received.
+
+ "For a long time this most versatile lady made every drop of the
+ soup that was prepared for the men herself, and she has, so a
+ Belgian military doctor says, saved more lives than he has with her
+ timely cups of hot, nourishing food. It is only the most seriously
+ wounded men who are taken to the field hospital, the others are
+ carried straight to the railway-station, and have to wait there,
+ sometimes for many hours, till a train can take them on. Even then
+ trains carrying the wounded have constantly to be shunted to let
+ troop trains through. But, thanks to the enterprise and hard work
+ of this clever little lady, there is always a plentiful supply of
+ hot food ready for the men who, weak from loss of blood, are often
+ besides faint with hunger."
+
+
+
+
+PART II
+
+AT HOME
+
+HOW THE MESSAGE WAS DELIVERED
+
+
+_October, 1915._--So much has happened since I came home from Flanders
+in June, and I have not had one moment in which to write of it. I found
+my house occupied when I returned, so I went to the Petrograd Hotel and
+stayed there, going out of London for Sundays.
+
+Everyone I met in England seemed absorbed in pale children with
+adenoids. No one cared much about the war. Children in houses nowadays
+require food at weird hours, not roast mutton and a good plain Christian
+pudding, but, "You will excuse our beginning, I know, dear, Jane has to
+have her massage after lunch, and Tom has to do his exercises, and baby
+has to learn to breathe." This one has its ears strapped, and that one
+is "nervous" and must be "understood," and nothing is talked of but
+children. My mother would never have a doctor in the house;
+"nervousness" was called bad temper, and was dosed, and stooping was
+called "a trick," and was smacked. The children I now see eat far too
+much, and when they finish off lunch with gravy drunk out of tumblers
+it makes me feel very unwell.
+
+I went to the Breitmeyers, at Rushton Hall, Kettering; it's a fine
+place, but I was too tired to enjoy anything but a bed. The next Sunday
+I stayed at Chenies, with the Duchess of Bedford--always a favourite
+resort of mine--and another week I went to Welwyn.
+
+I met a few old men at these places, but no one else. Everyone is at the
+front. The houses generally have wounded soldiers in them, and these
+play croquet with a nurse on the lawn, or smoke in the sun. None of them
+want to go back to fight. They seem tired, and talk of the trenches as
+"proper 'ell."
+
+There is always a little too much walking about at a "week-end." One
+feels tired and stiff on Monday. I well remember last summer having to
+take people three times to a distant water garden--talking all the time,
+too! People are so kind in making it pleasant that they wear one out.
+
+[Page Heading: ERITH]
+
+All the time I was in London I was preparing my campaign of lecturing. I
+began with Vickers-Maxim works at Erith, on Wednesday, 9th June, and on
+the 8th I went to stay with the Cameron Heads. There was great bustle
+and preparation for my lecture, Press people in the house at all hours
+of the day, and so on. A great bore for my poor friends; but they were
+so good about it, and I loved being with them.
+
+The lecture was rather a red-letter occasion for me, everyone praising,
+the Press very attentive, etc., etc. The audience promised well for
+future things, and the emotion that was stirred nearly bowled myself
+over. In some of the hushes that came one could hear men crying. The
+Scott Gattys and a few of my own friends came to "stand by," and we all
+drove down to Erith in motor-cars, and returned to supper with the
+Vickers at 10.30.
+
+The next day old Vickers sent for me and asked me to name my own price
+for my lectures, but I couldn't mix money up with the message, so I
+refused all pay, and feel happy that I did so. I can't, and won't,
+profit by this war. I'd rather lose--I am losing--but that doesn't
+matter. Nothing matters much now. The former things are swept away, and
+all the old barriers are disappearing. Our old gods of possession and
+wealth are crumbling, and class distinctions don't count, and even life
+and death are pretty much the same thing.
+
+The Jews say the Messiah will come after the war. I think He is here
+already--but on a cross as of yore!
+
+I went up to Glasgow to make arrangements there, and my task wasn't an
+easy one. Somehow I knew that I must speak, that I must arouse slackers,
+and tell rotters about what is going on. One goes forth (led in a way),
+and only then does one realise that one is going in unasked to
+ship-building yards and munition sheds and docks, and that one is quite
+a small woman, alone, and up against a big thing.
+
+Always the answer I got was the same: "The men are not working; forty
+per cent. are slackers. The output of shells is not what it ought to be,
+but they _won't_ listen!"
+
+In the face of this I arranged seven meetings in seven days, to take
+place early in August, and then I went back to give my lecture in the
+Queen's Hall, London. I took the large Hall, because if one has a
+message to deliver one had better deliver it to as many people as
+possible. It was rather a breathless undertaking, but people turned up
+splendidly, and I had a full house. Sir F. Lloyd gave me the band of the
+Coldstream Guards, and things went with a good swing.
+
+I am still wondering how I did it. The whole "campaign" has already got
+rather an unreal atmosphere about it, and often, after crowded meetings,
+I have come home and lain in the dark and have seen nothing but a sea of
+faces, and eyes all turned my way. It has been a most curious and
+unexpected experience, but England did not realise the war, and she did
+not realise the wave of heroism that is sweeping over the world, and I
+had to tell about it.
+
+Well, my lectures went on--Erith, Queen's Hall, Sheffield (a splendid
+meeting, 3,000 people inside the hall and 300 turned away at the door!),
+Barrow-in-Furness. I gave two lectures at Barrow, at 3 and 7.30. They
+seemed very popular. In the evening quite a demonstration--pipe band
+playing "Auld lang syne," and much cheering. After that Newcastle, and
+back to the south again to speak there. Everywhere I took my
+magic-lantern and showed my pictures, and I told "good stories" to
+attract people to the meetings, although my heart was, and is, nearly
+breaking all the time.
+
+[Page Heading: GLASGOW]
+
+Then I began the Glasgow campaign--Parkhead, Whiteinch, Rose-Bank,
+Dumbarton, Greenock, Beardmore's, Denny's, Armour's, etc., etc.
+Everywhere there were big audiences, and although I would have spoken to
+two listeners gladly, I was still more glad to see the halls filled. The
+cheers of horny-handed workmen when they are really roused just get me
+by the throat till I can't speak for a minute or two!
+
+At one place I spoke from a lorry in the dinner-hour. All the men, with
+blackened faces, crowded round the car, and others swung from the iron
+girders, while some perched, like queer bronze images, on pieces of
+machinery. They were all very intent, and very polite and courteous, no
+interruptions at any of the meetings. A keen interest was shown in the
+war pictures, and the cheers were deafening sometimes.
+
+After Glasgow I went to dear Clemmie Waring's, at Lennel, and found her
+house full of convalescent officers, and she herself very happy with
+them and her new baby. I really wanted to rest, and meant to enjoy five
+days of repose; but I gave a lecture the first night, and then had a
+sort of breakdown and took to my bed. However, that had to be got over,
+and I went down to Wales at the end of the week. The Butes gave me their
+own rooms at Cardiff Castle, and a nice housekeeper looked after me.
+
+[Page Heading: CARDIFF]
+
+There followed a strange fortnight in that ugly old fortress, with its
+fine stone-work and the execrable decorations covering every inch of it.
+The days passed oddly. I did a little writing, and I saw my committee,
+whom I like. Colonel Dennis is an excellent fellow, and so are Mr.
+Needle, Mr. Vivian Reece{7}, and Mr. Harrison. A Mr. Howse acted as
+secretary.
+
+The first day I gave a dock-gate meeting, and spoke from a lorry, and
+that night I had my great meeting at Cardiff. Sir Frank Younghusband
+came down for it, and the Mayor took the chair. The audience was
+enthusiastic, and every place was filled. At one moment they all rose to
+their feet, and holding up their hands swore to fight for the right till
+right was won. It was one of the scenes I shall always remember.
+
+Every day after that I used to have tea and an egg at 5 o'clock, and a
+motor would come with one of my committee to take me to different places
+of meeting. It was generally up the Rhondda Valley that we went, and I
+came to know well that westward drive, with the sun setting behind the
+hills and turning the Taff river to gold. Every night we went a little
+further and a little higher--Aberdare, Aberystwyth, Toney Pandy,
+Tonepentre, etc., etc. I gave fourteen lectures in thirteen days.
+Generally, I spoke in chapels, and from the pulpit, and this seemed to
+give me the chance I wanted to speak all my mind to these people, and to
+ask them and teach them what Power, and Possession, and Freedom really
+meant. Oh, it was wonderful! The rapt faces of the miners, the hush of
+the big buildings, and then the sudden burst of cheering!
+
+At one meeting there was a bumptious-looking man, with a bald head, whom
+I remember. He took up his position just over the clock in the gallery.
+He listened critically, talked a good deal, and made remarks. I began to
+speak straight at him, without looking at him, and quite suddenly I saw
+him, as I spoke of our men at the war, cover his face and burst into
+tears.
+
+The children were the only drawback. They were attracted by the idea of
+the magic-lantern, and used to come to the meetings and keep older
+people out. My lectures were not meant for children, and I had to adopt
+the plan of showing the pictures first and then telling the youngsters
+to go, and settling down to a talk with the older ones, who always
+remained behind voluntarily.
+
+We had some times which I can never forget; nor can I forget those dark
+drives from far up in the hills, and the mists in the valley, and my own
+aching fatigue as I got back about midnight. From 5 till 12.30 every
+night I was on the stretch.
+
+In the day-time I used to wander round the garden. One always meets
+someone whom one knows. I had lunch with the Tylers one day, and tea
+with the Plymouths. It was still, bright autumn weather, and the trees
+were gold in the ugly garden with the black river running through it. I
+got a few lessons in motor driving, and I spoke at the hospital one
+afternoon. I took the opportunity of getting a dress made at rather a
+good tailor's, and time passed in a manner quite solitary till the
+evenings.
+
+Never before have I spent a year of so much solitude, and yet I have
+been with people during my work. I think I know now what thousands of
+men and women living alone and working are feeling. I wish I could help
+them. There won't be many young marriages now. What are we to do for
+girls all alone?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_To Mrs. Keays-Young._
+
+CARDIFF CASTLE, CARDIFF,
+_31 August, 1915._
+
+DEAREST BABY,
+
+Many thanks for your letter, which I got on my way through London. I
+spent one night there to see about some work I am having done in the
+house.
+
+I have a drawer quite full of press-cuttings, and I do not know what is
+in any of them. It is difficult to choose anything of interest, as they
+are all a good deal alike, and all sound my trumpet very loudly; but I
+enclose one specimen.
+
+We had meetings every night in Glasgow. They were mostly badly organised
+and well attended. Here I have an agent arranging everything, and two of
+my meetings have been enormous. The first was at the dock-gates in the
+open air, and the second in the Town Hall. The band of the Welch
+Regiment played, and Mr. Glover conducted, but nothing is the same, of
+course. Alan is at Porthcawl, and came to see me this morning.
+
+The war news could hardly be worse, and yet I am told by men who get
+sealed information from the Foreign Office that worse is coming.
+
+Poor Russia! She wants help more than anyone. Her wounded are quite
+untended. I go there next month.
+
+The King of the Belgians has made me Chevalier de l'Ordre de Leopold.
+
+Love to all.
+Yours ever,
+S.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Press-cutting enclosed in Miss Macnaughtan's letter:
+
+ "STORIES OF THE WAR."
+
+ CARDIFF LECTURE BY MISS MACNAUGHTAN.
+
+ AUTHORESS'S APPEAL.
+
+ TESTING-TIME OF NATIONAL CHARACTER.
+
+[Page Heading: A CROWDED MEETING]
+
+ A large and enthusiastic audience assembled at the Park-hall,
+ Cardiff, on Monday evening, to hear and see Miss Macnaughtan's
+ "Stories and Pictures of the War." Miss Macnaughtan is a well-known
+ authoress, whose works have attained a world-wide reputation, and,
+ in addition to her travels in almost every corner of the globe, she
+ has had actual experience of warfare at the bombardment of Rio, in
+ the Balkans, the South African War, and, since September last, in
+ Belgium and Flanders. In her capacity as ministrant to wounded
+ soldiers she has gained a unique experience of the horrors of war,
+ and in order to bring home the realities of the situation, at the
+ instigation of Lady Bute, she consented to address a number of
+ meetings in South Wales.
+
+ At the meeting on Monday night the Lord Mayor (Alderman J. T.
+ Richards) presided, and in introducing Miss Macnaughtan to the
+ audience announced that for her services in Belgium the honour of
+ the Order of Leopold had been conferred upon her. (Applause.) We
+ were engaged, he said, in fighting a war of right. We were not
+ fighting only for the interests of England and our Empire, but we
+ were fighting for the interests of humanity at large. ("Hear,
+ hear.")
+
+ Miss Macnaughtan, in the course of her address, referred to the
+ origin of the war, and how suddenly it came upon the people of this
+ nation, who were, for the most part, engaged in summer holidays at
+ the time. She knew what was going on at the front, and knew what
+ the Welch Regiment had been doing, and "I must tell you," she
+ added, "of the splendid way in which your regiment has behaved, and
+ how proud Cardiff must be of it." We knew very well now that this
+ war had been arranged by Germany for many years. The Germans used
+ to profess exceeding kindness to us, and were received on excellent
+ terms by our Royal House, but the veil was drawn away from that
+ nation's face, and we had it revealed as an implacable foe. The
+ Germans had spoken for years in their own country about "The Day,"
+ and now "The Day" had arrived, and it was for everyone a day of
+ judgment, because it was a test of character. We had to put
+ ourselves to the test. We knew that for some time England had not
+ been at her best. Her great heart was beating true all the time,
+ but there had crept into England a sort of national coldness and
+ selfishness, and a great deal too much seriousness in the matter of
+ money and money-getting. Although this was discounted in great
+ measure by her generosity, we appeared to the world at large as a
+ greedy and money-getting nation.
+
+ However this might be, in all parts of the world the word of an
+ Englishman was still as good as his bond. ("Hear, hear.") Yet
+ England, with its strikes and quarrels and class hatred, and one
+ thing and another, was not at its best. It was well to admit that,
+ just as they admitted the faults of those they loved best.
+
+ Had any one of them failed to rally round the flag? Had they kept
+ anything back in this great war? She hoped not. The war had tested
+ us more than anything else, and we had responded greatly to it; and
+ the young manhood had come out in a way that was remarkable. We
+ knew very well that when the war was begun we were quite unprepared
+ for it; but she would tell them this, that our army, although
+ small, was the finest army that ever took the field. (Applause.)
+
+ Miss Macnaughtan then related a number of interesting incidents,
+ one of which was, that when a party of wounded Englishmen came to a
+ station where she was tending the Belgian wounded, every wounded
+ Belgian gave up his bed to accommodate an English soldier. The idea
+ of a German occupation of English soil, she said, was the idea of a
+ catastrophe that was unspeakable. People read things in the papers
+ and thought they were exaggerated, but she had seen them, and she
+ would show photographs of ruined Belgium which would convince them
+ of what the Germans were now doing in the name of God. However
+ unprepared we were for war, the wounded had been well cared for,
+ and she thought there never was a war in which the care of the
+ wounded had been so well managed or so efficient. (Applause.) They
+ had to be thankful that there had been no terrible epidemic, and
+ she could not speak too highly of the work of the nurses and
+ doctors in the performance of their duties. This was the time for
+ every man to do his duty, and strain every nerve and muscle to
+ bring the war to an end and get the boys home again. (Applause.)
+
+[Page Heading: SIR FRANCIS YOUNGHUSBAND, K.C.I.E.]
+
+ Sir Francis Younghusband, K.C.I.E., spoke of Miss Macnaughtan as a
+ very old friend, whom he had met in many parts of the Empire. In
+ this crisis she might well have stayed at home in her comfortable
+ residence in London, but she had sacrificed her own personal
+ comforts in order to assist others. They must realise that this war
+ was something much more than a war of defence of their homes. It
+ was a fight on behalf of the whole of humanity. A staggering blow
+ had been dealt by our relentless enemy at Belgium, which had been
+ knocked down and trampled upon, and Germany had also dealt blow
+ after blow at humanity by the use of poison-gas, the bombardment of
+ seaside towns, and bombs thrown on defenceless places by Zeppelins.
+ She had thrust aside all those rights of humanity which we had
+ cherished as a nation as most dear to our hearts. What we were now
+ fighting for was right, and he would put to them a resolution that
+ we would fight for right till right had won. In response to an
+ appeal for the endorsement of his sentiments the audience stood en
+ masse, and with upraised hands shouted "Aye." It was a stirring
+ moment, and must have been gratifying to the authoress, who has
+ devoted so much of her time and energy to the comfort of the
+ wounded soldiers.
+
+ The Lord Mayor then proposed a vote of thanks to Miss Macnaughtan
+ for her address, and this was carried by acclamation.
+
+ Miss Macnaughtan briefly responded, and then proceeded to
+ illustrate many of the scenes she had witnessed by lantern-slides,
+ showing the results of bombardments and the ruin of some of the
+ fairest domains of Belgium and France.
+
+ The provision of stewards was arranged by the Cardiff Chamber of
+ Trade, under the direction of the President (Mr. G. Clarry). During
+ the evening the band of the 3rd Welch Regiment, under the
+ conductorship of Bandmaster K. S. Glover, gave selections.
+
+[Page Heading: POISON-GAS]
+
+ A statement having been made that Miss Macnaughtan was the first to
+ discover a remedy for the poison-gas used by the Germans, a
+ _Western Mail_ reporter interviewed the lady before the lecture on
+ her experiences in this direction. She replied, that when the first
+ batch of men came in from the trenches suffering from the effects
+ of the gas, the first thing they asked was for something to drink,
+ to take the horrible taste out of their mouths. She obtained a
+ couple of bottles of whisky from the barge of an American lady, and
+ some distilled water, and gave this to the soldiers, who appeared
+ to be greatly relieved. Whenever possible, she had adopted the same
+ course, but she was unaware that the remedy had been applied by the
+ military authorities. Even this method of relieving their
+ sufferings, however, was rejected by a large number of young
+ soldiers, on the ground that they were teetotallers, but the
+ Belgian doctors had permitted its use amongst their men.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ SHOULD THE GERMANS COME.
+
+ FORETASTE OF HORRORS FURNISHED BY BELGIUM.
+
+ During the dinner-hour Miss Macnaughtan gave an address to workmen
+ at the Bute Docks. An improvised platform was arranged at the back
+ of the Seamen's Institute, and some hundreds of men gathered to
+ hear the story that Miss Macnaughtan had to give of the war.
+ Colonel C. S. Denniss presided, and amongst those present were
+ Messrs. T. Vivian Rees, John Andrews, W. Cocks, A. Hope, S. Fisher,
+ and Robinson Smith.
+
+ Colonel Denniss, in a few introductory remarks, referred to Miss
+ Macnaughtan's reputation as a writer, and stated that since the
+ outbreak of war she had devoted herself to the noble work of
+ helping the wounded soldiers in Belgium and France. She had come
+ to Cardiff to tell the working-men what she had seen, with the
+ object, if possible, of stimulating them to help forward the great
+ cause we were fighting for.
+
+ Miss Macnaughtan said she had been speaking in many parts of the
+ country, but she was especially proud to address a meeting of Welsh
+ working-men. Besides coming of a long line of Welsh ancestors, her
+ brother-in-law, Colonel Young, was in command of the 9th Welch
+ Battalion at the front, and she had also four nephews serving in
+ the Welch Regiment. Only the day before Colonel Young had written
+ to her: "The Welshman is the most intensely patriotic man that I
+ know, and it is always the same thing, 'Stick it, Welch.' His
+ patriotism is splendid, and I do not want to fight with a better
+ man." Miss Macnaughtan then explained that she was not asking for
+ funds, and was not speaking for employers or owners. She simply
+ wished to tell them her experiences of the war as she had seen it,
+ and to describe the heroism which was going on at the front. If
+ they looked at the war from the point of view of men going out to
+ kill each other they had a wrong conception of what was going on.
+ She had been asked to speak of the conditions which might prevail
+ should the Germans reach this country. She did not feel competent
+ to speak on that subject, as the whole idea of Germans in this
+ country seemed absolutely inconceivable. If the Germans were to
+ land on our shores all the waters which surrounded this isle would
+ not wash the land clean. She knew what the Germans were, and had
+ seen the wreck they had made of Belgium and part of France. She
+ knew what the women and children had suffered, and how the churches
+ had been desecrated and demolished. It was said that this was a war
+ of humanity, but she believed it was a war of right against wrong;
+ and if she were asked when the war would finish, she could only say
+ that we would fight it right on to the end until we were
+ victorious.
+
+ The Germans were beaten already, and had been beaten from the day
+ they gave up their honour. She spoke of the heroism of the troops,
+ and stated that since September last she had been running a
+ soup-kitchen for the wounded. In this humble vocation she had had
+ an opportunity of gauging the spirit of the soldiers. She had seen
+ them sick, wounded, and dying, but had never known them give in.
+ Why should humble villages in France without soldiers in them be
+ shelled? That was Germany, and that was what they saw. The thing
+ was almost inconceivable, but she had seen helpless women and
+ children brought to the hospitals, maimed and wounded by the cruel
+ German shells. After this war England was going to be a better
+ country than before. Up to now there had been a national
+ selfishness which was growing very strong, and there was a terrible
+ love of money, which, after all, was of very little account unless
+ it was used in the proper direction. She could tell them stories of
+ Belgians who had had to fire upon their own women and children who
+ were being marched in front of German troops. The power of Germany
+ had to be crushed. The spirit of England and Wales was one in this
+ great war, and they would not falter until they had emerged
+ triumphant. (Applause.)
+
+[Page Heading: A CLARION CALL]
+
+ Mr. Robinson Smith said the clarion call had been sounded, and they
+ were prepared, if necessary, to give their last shilling, their
+ last drop of blood, and their very selves, body, soul, and spirit,
+ to fight for right till right had won. (Applause.)
+
+ Cheers were given for the distinguished authoress, and the
+ proceedings terminated.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+After Cardiff (and a most cordial send-off from my committee) I came
+back to London, and lectured at Eton, at the Polytechnic, and various
+other places, while all the time I was preparing to go to Russia, and I
+was also writing.
+
+In the year that has passed my time has been fully occupied. To begin
+with, when the war broke out I studied district-nursing in Walworth for
+a month. I attended committees, and arranged to go to Belgium, got my
+kit, and had a good deal of business to arrange in the way of
+house-letting, etc., etc. Afterwards, I went to Antwerp, till the siege
+and the bombardment; then followed the flight to Ostend; after that a
+further flight to Furnes. Then came the winter of my work, day and night
+at the soup-kitchen for the wounded, a few days at home in January, then
+back again and to work at Adinkerke till June, when I came home to
+lecture.
+
+During the year I have brought out four books, I have given thirty-five
+lectures, and written both stories and articles. I have gone from town
+to town in England, Scotland, and Wales, and I have had a good deal of
+anxiety and much business at home. I have paid a few visits, but not
+restful ones, and I have written all my own correspondence, as I have
+not had a secretary. I have collected funds for my work, and sent off
+scores of begging letters. Often I have begun work at 5.30 a.m., and I
+have not rested all day. As I am not very young this seems to me a
+pretty strenuous time!
+
+[Page Heading: THE DEATH OF YOUTH]
+
+Now I have let my house again, and am off "into the unknown" in Russia!
+I shouldn't really mind a few days' rest before we begin any definite
+work. Behind everyone I suppose at this time lurks the horror of war,
+the deadly fear for one's dearest; and, above all, one feels--at least I
+do--that one is always, and quite palpably, in the shadow of the death
+of youth--beautiful youth, happy and healthy and free. Always I seem to
+see the white faces of boys turned up to the sky, and I hear their cries
+and see the agony which joyous youth was never meant to bear. They are
+too young for it, far too young; but they lie out on the field between
+the trenches, and bite the mud in their frenzy of pain; and they call
+for their mothers, and no one comes, and they call to their friends, but
+no one hears. There is a roar of battle and of bursting shells, and who
+can listen to a boy's groans and his shrieks of pain? This is war.
+
+A nation or a people want more sea-board or more trade, so they begin to
+kill youth, and to torture and to burn, and God himself may ask, "Where
+is my beautiful flock?" No one answers. It is war. We must expect a
+"list of casualties." "The Germans have lost more than we have done;"
+"We must go on, even if the war lasts ten years;" "A million more men
+are needed"--thus the fools called men talk! But Youth looks up with
+haggard eyes, and Youth, grown old, learns that Death alone is merciful.
+
+One sees even in soldiers' jokes that the thought of death is not far
+off. I said to one man, "You have had a narrow squeak," and he replied,
+"I don't mind if I get there first so long as I can stoke up for those
+Germans." Another, clasping the hand of his dead Captain, said, "Put
+plenty of sandbags round heaven, sir, and don't let a German through."
+
+The other day, when the forward movement was made in France and Belgium,
+Charles's Regiment, the 9th Welch, was told to attack at a certain
+point, which could only be reached across an open space raked by
+machine-gun fire. They were not given the order to move for twelve days,
+during which time the men hardly slept. When the charge had to be made
+the roar of guns made speaking quite impossible, so directions were
+given by sending up rockets. When the rockets appeared, not a single man
+delayed an instant in making the attack. One young officer, in the
+trench where Charles was, had a football, and this he flung over the
+parapet, and shouting, "Come on, boys!" he and the men of the regiment
+played football in the open and in front of the guns. Right across the
+gun-raked level they kicked the ball, and when they reached the enemy's
+lines only a few of them were left.
+
+Charles wrote, "I am too old to see boys killed."
+
+Colonel Walton, with a handful of his regiment, was the only officer to
+get through the three lines of the enemy's trenches, and he and his men
+dug themselves in. Just in front of them where they paused, he saw a
+fine young officer come along the road on a motor bicycle, carrying
+despatches. The next minute a high-explosive shell burst, and, to use
+his own words, "There was not enough of the young officer to put on a
+threepenny bit." Always men tell me there is nothing left to bury. One
+minute there is a splendid piece of upstanding, vigorous manhood, and
+the next there is no finding one piece of him to lay in the sod.
+
+[Page Heading: A LESSON FOR TURKS]
+
+The Turks seem to have forsaken their first horrible and devilish
+cruelties towards English prisoners. They have been taught a lesson by
+the Australians, who took some prisoners up to the top of a ridge and
+rolled them down into the Turks' trenches like balls, firing on them as
+they rolled. Horrible! but after that Turkish cruelties ceased.
+
+Our own men see red since the Canadians were crucified, and I fancy no
+prisoners were taken for a long time after. We "censor" this or that in
+the newspapers, but nothing will censor men's tongues, and there is a
+terrible and awful tale of suffering and death and savagery going on
+now. Like a ghastly dream we hear of trenches taken, and the cries of
+men go up, "Mercy, comrade, mercy!" Sometimes they plead, poor caught
+and trapped and pitiful human beings, that they have wives and children
+who love them. The slaughter goes on, the bayonet rends open the poor
+body that someone loved, then comes the internal gush of blood, and
+another carcase is flung into the burying trench, with some lime on the
+top of it to prevent a smell of rotting flesh.
+
+My God, what does it all mean? Are men so mad? And why are they killing
+all our best and bravest? Our first army is gone, and surely such a
+company never before took the field! Outmatched by twenty to one, they
+stuck it at Mons and on the Aisne, and saved Paris by a miracle. All my
+old friends fell then--men near my own age, whom I have known in many
+climes--Eustace Crawley, Victor Brooke, the Goughs, and other splendid
+men. Now the sons of my friends are falling fast--Duncan Sim's boy,
+young Wilson, Neville Strutt, and scores of others. I know one case in
+which four brothers have fallen; another, where twins of nineteen died
+side by side; and this one has his eyes blown out, and that one has his
+leg torn off, and another goes mad; and boys, creeping back to the base
+holding an arm on, or bewildered by a bullet through the brain, wander
+out of their way till a piece of shrapnel or torn edge of shell finds
+them, and they fall again, with their poor boyish faces buried in the
+mud!
+
+Mr. ---- dined with us last night. He had been talking of his brother
+who was killed, and he said: "I think it makes a difference if you
+belong to a family which has always given its lives to the country. We
+are accustomed to make these sacrifices."
+
+Thus bravely in the light of day, but when evening came and we sat
+together, then we knew just what the life of the boy had cost him. They
+tell us--these defrauded broken-hearted ones--just how tall the lad was,
+and how good to look at! That seems to me so sad--as if one reckoned
+one's love by inches! And yet it is the beauty of youth that I mourn
+also, and its horribly lonely death.
+
+"They never got him further than the dressing-station," Mr. ---- said;
+"but--he would always put up a fight, you know--he lived for four days.
+No, there was never any hope. Half the back of his head was shattered.
+But he put up a fight. My brother would always do that."
+
+
+
+
+PART III
+
+RUSSIA AND THE PERSIAN FRONT
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+PETROGRAD
+
+
+Mrs. Wynne, Mr. Bevan, and I left London for Russia on October 16, 1915.
+We are attached provisionally to the Anglo-Russian hospital, with a
+stipulation that we are at liberty to proceed to the front with our
+ambulances as soon as we can get permission to do so. We understand that
+the Russian wounded are suffering terribly, and getting no doctors,
+nurses, or field ambulances. We crossed from Newcastle to Christiania in
+a Norwegian boat, the _Bessheim_. It was supposed that in this ship
+there was less chance of being stopped, torpedoed, or otherwise
+inconvenienced.
+
+We reached Christiania after a wonderfully calm crossing, and went to
+the Grand Hotel at 1 a.m. No rooms to be had, so we went on to the
+Victoria--a good old house, not fashionable, but with a nice air about
+it, and some solid comforts. We left on Wednesday, the 20th, at 7 a.m.
+This was something of a feat, as we have twenty-four boxes with us. I
+only claim four, and feel as if I might have brought more, but everyone
+has a different way of travelling, and luggage is often objected to.
+
+Indeed, I think this matter of travelling is one of the most curious in
+the world. I cannot understand why it is that to get into a train or a
+boat causes men and women to leave off restraint and to act in a
+primitive way. Why should the companionship of the open road be the
+supreme test of friendship? and why should one feel a certain fear of
+getting to know people too well on a journey? The last friends I
+travelled with were very careful indeed, and we used to reckon up
+accounts and divide the price of a bottle of "vin ordinaire" equally. My
+friends to-day seem inclined to do themselves very well, and to scatter
+largesse everywhere.
+
+[Page Heading: STOCKHOLM]
+
+_Stockholm. 21 October._--After a long day in the train we reached
+Stockholm yesterday evening, and went to the usual "Grand Hotel." This
+time it is very "grand," and very expensive. Mr. Bevan has a terrible
+pink boudoir-bedroom, which costs L3 per night, and I have a small room
+on the fourth floor, which costs 17s. 6d. without a bath. There is
+rather a nice court in the middle of the house, with flowers and a band
+and tables for dinner, but the sight of everyone "doing himself well"
+always makes me feel a little sick. The wines and liqueurs, and the big
+cigars at two shillings each, and the look of repletion on men's faces
+as they listen to the band after being fed, somewhat disgust me.
+
+One's instinct is to dislike luxury, but in war-time it seems horrible.
+We ourselves will probably have to rough it badly soon, so I don't
+mind, but it's a side of life that seems to me as beastly as anything I
+know. Fortunately, the luxury of an hotel is minimised by the fact that
+there are no "necessaries," and one lives in an atmosphere of open
+trunks and bags, with things pulled out of them, which counterbalances
+crystal electric fittings and marble floors.
+
+We rested all this morning, lunched out, and in the afternoon went to
+have tea with the Crown Prince and Princess of Sweden. They were very
+delightful. The British Minister's wife, Lady Isobel Howard, went with
+us. The Princess had just finished reading my "Diary of the War," and
+was very nice about it. The children, who came in to tea, were the
+prettiest little creatures I have ever seen, with curly hair, and faces
+like the water-colour pictures of a hundred years ago. The Princess
+herself is most attractive, and reminds one of the pictures of Queen
+Victoria as a young woman. Her sensitive face is full of expression, and
+her colour comes and goes as she speaks of things that move her.
+
+This afternoon we went to tea at the Legation with the Howards. The
+House is charmingly situated on the Lake, with lovely trees all about
+it. It isn't quite finished yet, but will be very delightful.
+
+_22 October._--It is very strange to find oneself in a country where war
+is not going on. The absence of guns and Zeppelins, the well-lighted
+streets, and the peace of it all, are quite striking. But the country is
+pro-German almost to a man! And it has been a narrow squeak to prevent
+war. Even now I suppose one wrong move may lead to an outbreak of
+hostilities, and the recent German victories may yet bring in other
+countries on her side. Bulgaria has been a glaring instance of siding
+with the one she considers the winning side (Gott strafe her!), and
+Greece is still wondering what to do! Thank God, I belong to a race that
+is full of primitive instincts! Poor old England still barges in
+whenever there is a fight going on, and gets her head knocked, and goes
+on fighting just the same, and never knows that she is heroic, but
+blunders on--simple-hearted, stupid, sublime!
+
+_24 October._--I went to the English church this morning with Mr.
+Lancelot Smith, but there was no service as the chaplain had
+chicken-pox! So I came home and packed, and then lunched with Mr. Eric
+Hambro, Mr. Lancelot Smith, and Mr. ----, all rather interesting men at
+this crisis, when four nations at least are undecided what to do in the
+matter of the war.
+
+About 6 o'clock we and our boxes got away from Stockholm. Our expenses
+for the few days we spent there were L60, although we had very few meals
+in the hotel. We had a long journey to Haparanda, where we stopped for a
+day. The cold was terrible and we spent the day (my birthday) on a sort
+of luggage barge on the river. On my last birthday we were bolting from
+Furnes in front of the Germans, and the birthday before that I was on
+the top of the Rocky Mountains.
+
+Talking of the Rockies reminds me (did I need reminding) of Elsie
+Northcote, my dear friend, who married and went to live there. The
+other night some friends of mine gave me a little "send-off" before I
+left London--dinner and the Palace Theatre, where I felt like a ghost
+returned to earth. All the old lot were there as of yore--Viola Tree,
+Lady Diana Manners, Harry Lindsay, the Raymond Asquiths, etc., etc. I
+saw them all from quite far away. Lord Stanmore was in the box with us,
+and he it was who told me of Elsie Northcote's sudden death. It wasn't
+the right place to hear about it. Too many are gone or are going. My own
+losses are almost stupefying; and something dead within myself looks
+with sightless eyes on death; with groping hands I touch it sometimes,
+and then I know that I am dead also.
+
+[Page Heading: LOVE AND PAIN]
+
+There is only one thing that one can never renounce, and that is love.
+Love is part of one, and can't be given up. Love can't be separated from
+one, even by death. It comes once and remains always. It is never
+fulfilled; the fulfilment of love is its crucifixion; but it lives on
+for ever in a passion-week of pain until pain itself grows dull; and
+then one wishes one had been born quite a common little soul, when one
+would probably have been very happy.
+
+_28 October._--We arrived at midnight last night at Petrograd. Ian
+Malcolm was at the hotel, and had remained up to welcome us. To-day we
+have been unpacking, and settling down into rather comfortable, very
+expensive rooms. My little box of a place costs twenty-six shillings a
+night. We lunched with two Russian officers and Mr. Ian Malcolm, and
+then I went to the British Embassy, where the other two joined me. Sir
+George Buchanan, our Ambassador, looks overworked and tired. Lady
+Georgina and I got on well together....
+
+The day wasn't quite satisfactory, but one must remember that a queer
+spirit is evoked in war-time which is very difficult of analysis.
+Primarily there is "a right spirit renewed" in every one of us. We want
+to be one in the great sacrifice which war involves, and we offer and
+present ourselves, our souls and bodies in great causes, only to find
+that there is some strange unexplained quality of resistance meeting us
+everywhere.
+
+Mary once said to me in her quaint way, "Your duty is to give to the
+Queen's Fund as becomes your position, and to get properly thanked."
+
+This lady-like behaviour, combined with cheque-writing on a large scale,
+is always popular. It can be repeated and again repeated till
+cheque-writing becomes automatic. Then from nowhere there springs a
+curious class of persons whom one has never heard of before, with skins
+of invulnerable thickness and with wonderful self-confidence. They claim
+almost occult powers in the matter of "organisation," and they generally
+require pity for being overworked. For a time their names are in great
+circulation, and afterwards one doesn't hear very much about them.
+Florence Nightingale would have had no distinction nowadays. It is
+doubtful if she would have been allowed to work. Some quite inept person
+in a high position would have effectually prevented it. Most people are
+on the offensive against "high-souled work," and prepared to put their
+foot down heavily on anything so presumptuous as heroism except of the
+orthodox kind, and even the right kind is often not understood.
+
+There is a story I try to tell, but something gets into my throat, and I
+tell it in jerks when I can.
+
+[Page Heading: FOOTBALL UNDER FIRE]
+
+It is the story of the men who played football across the open between
+the enemy's line of trenches and our own when it was raked by fire. When
+I had finished, a friend of mine, evidently waiting for the end of a
+pointless story, said, "What did they do that for?" (Oh, ye gods, have
+pity on men and women who suffer from fatty degeneration of the soul!)
+
+Still, in spite of it all, the Voice comes, and has to be obeyed.
+
+_30 October._--We lunched at the Embassy yesterday to meet the Grand
+Duchess Victoria. She is a striking-looking woman, tall and strong, and
+she wore a plain dark blue cloth dress and a funny little blue silk cap,
+and one splendid string of pearls. At the front she does very fine work,
+and we offered our services to her. I have begun to write a little, but
+after my crowded life the days feel curiously empty. Lady Heron Maxwell
+came to call.
+
+We were telling each other spy stories the other night. Some of them
+were very interesting. The Germans have lately adopted the plan of
+writing letters in English to English prisoners of war in Germany.
+These, of course, are quite simple, and pass the Censor in England, but,
+once on the other side, they go straight to Government officials, and
+whereas "Dear Bill" may mean nothing to us, it is part of a German code
+and conveys some important information. Mr. Philpotts at Stockholm
+discovered this trick.
+
+On the Russian front a soldier was found with his jaw tied up,
+speechless and bleeding. A doctor tried to persuade him to take cover
+and get attention; but he shook his head, and signified by actions that
+he was unable to speak owing to his damaged jaw. The doctor shoved him
+into a dug-out, and said kindly, "Just let me have a look at you." On
+stripping the bandages off there was no wound at all, and the German in
+Russian uniform was given a cigarette and shot through the head.
+
+In Flanders we used to see companies of spies led out to be shot--first
+a party of soldiers, then the spies, after them the burying-party, and
+then the firing-party--marching stolidly to some place of execution.
+
+How awful shell-fire must be for those who really can't stand it! I
+heard of a Colonel the other day--a man who rode to hounds, and seemed
+quite a sound sort of fellow--and when the first shell came over, he
+leapt from his horse and lay on the ground shrieking with fear, and with
+every shell that came over he yelled and screamed. He had to be sent
+home, of course. Some people say this sort of thing is purely physical.
+That is never my view of the matter.
+
+[Page Heading: MISS CAVELL]
+
+Miss Cavell's execution has stirred us all to the bottom of our hearts.
+The mean trickiness of her trial, the refusal to let facts be known, and
+then the cold-blooded murder of a brave English woman at 2 a.m. on a
+Sunday morning in a prison yard!
+
+It is too awful to think about. She was not even technically a spy, but
+had merely assisted some soldiers to get away because she thought they
+were going to be shot. A rumour reached the American and Spanish
+Legations that she had been condemned and was to be shot at once, and
+they instantly rang up on the telephone to know if this was true. They
+were informed by the Military Court which had tried and condemned her
+that the verdict would not be pronounced till three days later. But the
+two Legations, still not satisfied, protested that they must be allowed
+to visit the prisoner. This was refused.
+
+The English chaplain was at last permitted to enter the prison, and he
+saw Miss Cavell, and gave her the Sacrament. She said she was happy to
+die for her country. They led her out into the prison yard to stand
+before a firing-party of soldiers, but on her way there she fainted, and
+an officer took out his revolver and shot her through the head.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Petrograd! the stage of romance, and the subject of dazzling pictures,
+is one of the most commonplace towns I have ever been in. It has its one
+big street--the Nevski Prospect--where people walk and shop as they do
+in Oxford Street, and it has a few cathedrals and churches, which are
+not very wonderful. The roadways are a mass of slush and are seldom
+swept; and there are tramways, always crowded and hot, and many rickety
+little victorias with damp cushions, in which one goes everywhere. Even
+in the evening we go out in these; and the colds in the head which
+follow are chronic.
+
+The English colony seems to me as provincial as the rest of Petrograd.
+The town and its people disappoint me greatly. The Hotel Astoria is a
+would-be fashionable place, and there is a queer crowd of people
+listening to the band and eating, as surely only in Russia they can eat.
+It is all wrong in war-time, and I hate being one of the people here.
+
+N.B.--Write "Miss Wilbraham" as soon as possible, and write it in gusts.
+Call one chapter "The Diners," and try to convey the awful solemnity of
+meals--the grave young men with their goblets of brandy, in which they
+slowly rotate ice, the waiter who hands the bowl where the ice is thrown
+when the brandy is cool enough, and then the final gulp, with a nose
+inside the large goblet. Shade of Heliogabalus! If the human tummy must
+indeed be distended four times in twenty-four hours, need it be done so
+solemnly, and with such a pig-like love of the trough? If they would
+even eat what there is with joy one wouldn't mind, but the talk about
+food, the once-enjoyed food, the favourite food, is really too tiresome.
+"Where to dine" becomes a sort of test of true worth. Grave young men
+give the names of four or five favoured places in London. Others, hailed
+and acknowledged as really good judges, name half-a-dozen more in Paris
+where they "do you well." The real toff knows that Russia is the place
+to dine. We earnestly discuss blue-point oysters and caviare, which, if
+you "know the man," you can get sent fresh on the Vienna Express from
+Moscow.
+
+[Page Heading: BERNARD SHAW]
+
+I once asked Bernard Shaw to dinner, and he replied on a postcard:
+"Never! I decline to sit in a hot room and eat dead animals, even with
+you to amuse me!"
+
+I always seem to be sitting in hot rooms and eating dead animals, and
+then paying amazing high prices for them.
+
+_4 November._--I dined with the ----s the other night. Either the hot
+rooms, or the fact that I am anaemic at present, causes me to be so
+sleepy in the evenings that I dislike dining out. I sway with sleep even
+when people are talking to me. It was a middle-class little party, such
+as I often enjoy. One's friends would fain only have one see a few fine
+blooms, but I love common flowers.
+
+We have been to see "Peter's little house." There was a tiny shrine,
+crowded with people in wraps and shawls, who crossed themselves
+ceaselessly, to the danger of their neighbours' faces, for so fervid
+were their gesticulations that their hands flew in every direction! They
+shoved with their elbows to get near the wax candles that dripped before
+the pictures of the black-faced Virgin and Child, who were "allowing"
+soldiers to be painfully slaughtered by the million.
+
+Ye gods, what a faith! What an acrobatic performance to try and
+reconcile a Father's personal care for His poor little sparrows and His
+indifference at seeing so many of them stretched bleeding on the ground!
+
+Religion so far has been a success where martyrs are concerned, but we
+must go on with courage to something that teaches men to _live_ for the
+best and the highest. This should come from ourselves, and lead up to
+God. It should not require teaching, or priests, or even prayer.
+Humanity is big enough for this. It should shake off cords and chains
+and old Bible stories of carnage and killing, and get to work to find a
+new, responsible, clean, sensible, practical scheme of life, in which
+each man will have to get away from silly old idols and step out by
+himself.
+
+There is nothing very difficult about it, but we are so beset by bogies,
+and so full of fears and fancies that we are half the time either in a
+state of funk, or in its antithesis, a state of cheekiness.
+Schoolmaster-ridden, we are behaving still like silly children, and our
+highest endeavour is (school-boy-like) to resemble our fellows as nearly
+as possible. The result is stagnation, crippled forms, wasted energy,
+people waiting for years by some healing pool and longing for someone to
+dip them in. All the release that Christ preached to men is being
+smothered in something worse than Judaism. We love chains, and when they
+are removed we either turn and put them on again, or else caper like mad
+things because we have cast them off. Freedom is still as distant as the
+stars.
+
+_5 November._--Yesterday we lunched with the English chaplain, Mr.
+Lombard. He and I had a great talk walking home on a dark afternoon
+through the slush after we had been to call on the Maxwells. I think he
+is one of the "exiles" whom one meets all the world over, one of those
+who don't transplant well. I am one myself! And Mr. Lombard and I nearly
+wept when we found ourselves in a street that recalled the Marylebone
+Road. We pretended we were in sight of Euston Station, and talked of
+taking a Baker Street bus till our voices grew choky.
+
+How absurd we islanders are! London is a poky place, but we adore it.
+St. James's Street is about the length of a good big ship, yet we don't
+feel we have lived till we get back to it! And as for Piccadilly and St.
+Paul's, well, we see them in our dreams.
+
+Our little unit has not found work yet. I was told before I joined it
+that it had been accepted by the Russian Red Cross Society.
+
+[Page Heading: "CHARITY" AND WAR]
+
+I have been hearing many things out here, and thinking many things.
+There is only one way of directing Red Cross work. Everything should
+be--and must be in future--put under military authority and used by
+military authority. "Charity" and war should be separate. It is absurd
+that the Belgians in England should be housed and fed by a Government
+grant, and our own soldiers are dependent on private charity for the
+very socks they wear and the cigarettes they smoke. Aeroplanes had to be
+instituted and prizes offered for them by a newspaper, and ammunition
+wasn't provided till a newspaper took up the matter. To be mob-ridden is
+bad enough, but to be press-ridden is worse!
+
+Now, war is a military matter, and should be controlled by military
+authorities. Mrs. Wynne, Mr. Bevan, and I should not be out here waiting
+for work. We ought to be sent where we are needed, and so ought all Red
+Cross people. This would put an end, one hopes, to the horrid business
+of getting "soft jobs."
+
+_7 November._--Whenever I am away from England I rejoice in the passing
+of each week that brings me nearer to my return. I had hardly realised
+to-day was the 7th, but I am thankful I am one week nearer the grey
+little island and all the nice people in it.
+
+Yesterday I went to Lady Georgina Buchanan's soup-kitchen, and helped to
+feed Polish refugees. They strike me as being very like animals, but not
+so interesting. In the barracks where they lodge everyone crowds in.
+There is no division of the sexes, babies are yelling, and families are
+sleeping on wooden boards. The places are heated but not aired, and the
+smell is horrid; but they seem to revel in "frowst." All the women are
+dandling babies or trying to cook things on little oil-stoves. At
+night-time things are awful, I believe, and the British Ambassador has
+been asked to protect the girls who are there.
+
+_8 November._--This afternoon I went to see Mrs. Bray, and then I had an
+unexpected pleasure, for I met Johnnie{8} Parsons, who is Naval Attache
+to Admiral Phillimore, and we had a long chat. When one is in a strange
+land, or with people who know one but little, these encounters are
+wonderfully nice.
+
+The other night I dined with the Heron Maxwells, and had a nice evening
+and a game of bridge. Some Americans, called de Velter, were there. I
+think most people from the States regret the neutrality of their
+country.
+
+[Page Heading: VISIONS OF PEACE]
+
+Everyone brings in different stories of the war. Some say Germany is
+exhausted and beaten, others say she is flushed with victory, and with
+enormous reserves of men, food, and ammunition. I try to believe all the
+good I hear, and when even children or fools tell me the war will soon
+be over, I want to embrace them--I don't care whether they are talking
+nonsense or not. Sometimes I seem to see a great hushed cathedral, and
+ourselves returning thanks for Peace and Victory, and the vision is too
+much for me. I must either work or be chloroformed till that time comes.
+
+_9 November._--I think there is only one thing I dislike more than
+sitting in an hotel bedroom and learning a new language, and that is
+sitting in an hotel bedroom and nursing a cold in my head. Lately I have
+been learning Russian--and now I am sniffing. My own fault. I would
+sleep with my window open in this unhealthiest of cities, and smells and
+marsh produced a feverish cold.
+
+Out in the square the soldiers drill all the time in the snow, lying in
+it, standing in it, and dressed for the most part in cotton clothing.
+Wool can't be bought, so a close cotton web is made, with the inside
+teased out like flannelette, and this is all they have. The necessaries
+of life are being "cornered" right and left, mostly by the commercial
+houses and the banks. The other day 163 railway trucks of sugar were
+discovered in a siding, where the owners had placed it to wait for a
+rise. Meanwhile, sugar has been almost unprocurable.
+
+Everyone from the front describes the condition of the refugees as being
+most wretched. They are camping in the snow by the thousand, and are
+still tramping from Poland.
+
+And here we are in the Astoria Hotel, and there is one pane of glass
+between us and the weather; one pane of glass between us and the
+peasants of Poland; one pane of glass dividing us from poverty, and
+keeping us in the horrid atmosphere of this place, with its evil women
+and its squeaky band! How I hate money!
+
+I hope soon to join a train going to Dvinsk with food and supplies.
+
+_13 November._--I have felt very brainless since I came here. It is the
+result, I believe, of the Petrograd climate. Nearly everyone feels it. I
+had a little book in my head which I thought I could "dash off," and
+that writing it would fill up these waiting days, but I can't write a
+word.
+
+The war news is not good, but the more territory that Germany takes, the
+more the British rub their hands and cry victory. Their courage and
+optimism are wonderful.
+
+To-day I spent with the Maxwells, and met a nurse, newly returned from
+Galicia, who had interesting tales to tell. One about some Russian
+airmen touched me. There had been a fierce fight overhead, when suddenly
+the German aeroplane began to wheel round and round like a leaf, when it
+was found that the machine was on fire. One of the airmen had been shot
+and the other burnt to death. The Russians refused to come and look at
+the remains even of the aeroplane, and said sadly, "All we men of the
+air are brothers." They gave the dead Germans a military funeral, and
+then sailed over the enemy's lines to drop a note to say that all
+honour had been done to the brave dead.
+
+[Page Heading: BULGARIA]
+
+I met Monsieur Jecquier, who was full of the political situation--said
+Bulgaria would have joined us any day if we had promised to give her
+Bukowina; and blamed Bark, the Russian Finance Minister, for the terms
+of England's loan (the loan is for thirty millions, and repayment is
+promised in a year, which is manifestly impossible, and the situation
+may be strained). He said also that Motono, the Japanese Ambassador, is
+far the finest politician here; and he told me that while Russia ought
+to have been protecting the road to Constantinople she was quarrelling
+about what its new name was to be, and had decided to call it
+"Czareska." Now, I suppose, the Germans are already there. Lloyds has
+been giving L100 at a premium of L5 that King Ferdinand won't be on his
+throne next June. The premium has gone to L10, which is good news. If
+Ferdie is assassinated the world will be rid of an evil fellow who has
+played a mean and degraded part in this war.
+
+We dined at the British Embassy last night. I was taken in to dinner by
+Mr. George Lloyd, who was full of interesting news. I had a nice chat
+with Lady Georgina.
+
+_20 November._--It has been rather a "hang-on" ever since I wrote last,
+nothing settled and nothing to do. No one ever seems at their best in
+Petrograd. It is a cross place and a common place. I never understood
+Tolstoi till I came here. On all sides one sees the same insane love of
+money and love of food.
+
+A restaurant here disgusts me as nothing else ever did. From a menu a
+foot long no one seems able to choose a meal, but something fresh must
+be ordered. The prices are quite silly, and, oddly enough, people seem
+to revel in them. They still eat caviare at ten shillings a head; the
+larger the bill the better they are pleased.
+
+Joseph, the Napoleon of the restaurant, keeps an eye on everyone. He is
+yellow, and pigeon-breasted, but his voice is like grease, and he speaks
+caressingly of food, pencils entries in his pocket-book, and stimulates
+jaded appetites by signalling the "voiture aux hors d'oeuvres" to
+approach. The rooms are far too hot for anyone to feel hungry, the band
+plays, and the leader of it grins all the time, and capers about on his
+little platform like a monkey on an organ.
+
+Always in this life of restaurants and gilt and roubles I am reminded of
+the fact that the only authentic picture we have of hell is of a man
+there who all his life had eaten good dinners.
+
+[Page Heading: STAGNATION]
+
+I have been busy seeing all manner of people in order to try and get
+work to do. I hear of suffering, but I am never able to locate it or to
+do anything for it. No distinct information is forthcoming; and when I
+go to one high official he gives me his card and sends me to another.
+Nothing is even decided about Mrs. Wynne's cars, although she is
+offering a gift worth some thousands of pounds. I go to Lady Georgina's
+work-party on Mondays and meet the English colony, and on Wednesdays and
+Saturdays I distribute soup; but it is an unsatisfactory business, and
+the days go by and one gets nothing done. One isn't even storing up
+health, because this is rather an unhealthy place, so altogether we are
+feeling a bit low. I can never again be surprised at Russian "laissez
+faire," or want of push and energy. It is all the result of the place
+itself. I feel in a dream, and wish with all my heart I could wake up in
+my own bed.
+
+_21 November._--Sunday, and I have slept late. At home I begin work at 6
+a.m. Here, like everyone else, I only wake up at night, and the "best
+hours of the day," as we call them, are wasted, a la Watts' hymn, in
+slumber. If it was possible one would organise one's time a bit, but
+hotel life is the very mischief for that sort of thing. There are no
+facilities for anything. One must telephone in Russian or spend roubles
+on messengers if one wants to get into touch with anyone. I took a taxi
+out to lunch one day. It cost 16 roubles--_i.e._, 32s.
+
+Dear old Lord Radstock used to say in the spring, "The Lord is calling
+me to Italy," and a testy parson once remarked, "The Lord always calls
+you at very convenient times, Radstock." I don't feel as if the Lord had
+called me here at a very convenient time.
+
+I called on Princess Helene Scherbatoff yesterday, and found her and her
+people at home. The mother runs a hospital-train for the wounded in the
+intervals of hunting wolves. Her son has been dead for some months, and
+she says she hasn't had time to bury him yet! One assumes he is
+embalmed! Yet I can't help saying they were charming people to meet, so
+we must suppose they are somewhat cracked. The daughter is lovely, and
+they were all in deep mourning for the unburied relative.
+
+_24 November._--This long wait is trying us a bit high. There is
+literally nothing to do. We arrange pathetic little programmes for
+ourselves. To-day I shall lunch with Mr. Cunard, and see the lace he has
+bought: yesterday I did some shopping with Captain Smith: one day I sew
+at Lady Georgina's work-party.
+
+Heavens, what a life! I realise that for years I have not drawn rein,
+and I am sure I don't require holidays. Moses was a wise man, and he
+knew that one day in seven is rest enough for most humans. I always
+"keep the Sabbath," and it is all the rest I want. Even here I might
+write and get on with something, but there is something paralysing about
+the place, and my brain won't work. I can't even write a diary! Everyone
+is depressed and everyone longs to be out of Petrograd. To-day we hear
+that the Swedes have closed the Haparanda line, and Archangel is frozen,
+so here we are.
+
+Now I have got to work at the hospital. There are 25,000 amputation
+cases in Petrograd. The men at my hospital are mostly convalescent, but,
+of course, their wounds require dressing. This is never done in their
+beds, as the English plan is, but each man is carried in turn to the
+"salle des pansements," and is laid on an operating-table and has his
+fresh dressings put on, and is then carried back to bed again. It is a
+good plan, I think. The hospital keeps me busy all the morning. Once
+more I begin to see severed limbs and gashed flesh, and the old
+question arises, "Why, what evil hath he done?" This war is the
+crucifixion of the youth of the world.
+
+[Page Heading: "SPEAKING ONE'S MIND"]
+
+In a way I am learning something here. For instance, I have always
+disliked "explanations" and "speaking one's mind," etc., etc., more than
+I can say. I dare say I have chosen the path of least resistance in
+these matters. Here one must speak out sometimes, and speak firmly. It
+isn't all "being pleasant." One girl has been consistently rude to me.
+To-day, poor soul, I gave her a second sermon on our way back from
+church; but, indeed she has numerous opportunities in this war, and she
+is wasting them all on gossip, and prejudices, and petty jealousies. So
+we had a straight talk, and I hope she didn't hate it. At any rate, she
+has promised amendment of life. One hears of men that "this war gives
+them a chance to distinguish themselves." Women ought to distinguish
+themselves, too.
+
+ "Hesper! Venus! were we native to their splendour, or in Mars,
+ We should see this world we live in, fairest of their evening stars.
+ Who could dream of wars and tumults, hate and envy, sin and spite,
+ Roaring London, raving Paris, in that spot of peaceful light?
+ Might we not, in looking heavenward on a star so silver fair,
+ Yearn and clasp our hands and murmur, 'Would to God that
+ we were there!'"
+
+Always when I see war, and boys with their poor dead faces turned up to
+the sky, and their hands so small in death, and when I see wounded men,
+and hear of soldiers going out of the trenches with a laugh and a joke
+to cut wire entanglements, knowing they will not come back, then I am
+ashamed of meanness and petty spite. So my poor young woman got a "fair
+dose of it" this morning, and when she had gulped once or twice I think
+she felt better.
+
+Yesterday one saw enough to stir one profoundly, and enough to make
+small things seem small indeed! It was a fine day at last, after weeks
+of black weather and skies heavy with snow, and although the cold was
+intense the sun was shining. I got into one of the horrid little
+droshkys, in which one sits on very damp cushions, and an "izvoztchik"
+in a heavy coat takes one to the wrong address always!
+
+The weather has been so thick, the rain and snow so constant, that I had
+not yet seen Petrograd. Yesterday, out of the mists appeared golden
+spires, and beyond the Neva, all sullen and heavy with ice, I saw towers
+and domes which I hadn't seen before. I stamped my feet on the shaky
+little carriage and begged the izvoztchik to drive a little quicker. We
+had to be at the Finnish station at 10 a.m., and my horse, with a long
+tail that embraced the reins every time that the driver urged speed,
+seemed incapable of doing more than potter over the frozen roads. I
+picked up Mme. Takmakoff, who was taking me to the station, and we went
+on together.
+
+[Page Heading: BLIND]
+
+At the station there was a long wooden building and, outside, a
+platform, all frozen and white, where we waited for the train to come
+in. Mme. Sazonoff, a fine well-bred woman, the wife of the Minister for
+Foreign Affairs, was there, and "many others," as the press notices say.
+The train was late. We went inside the long wooden building to shelter
+from the bitter cold beside the hot-water pipes, and as we waited we
+heard that the train was coming in. It came slowly and carefully
+alongside the platform with its crunching snow, almost with the creeping
+movement of a woman who carries something tenderly. Then it stopped. Its
+windows were frozen and dark, so that one could see nothing. I heard a
+voice behind me say, "The blind are coming first," and from the train
+there came groping one by one young men with their eyes shot out. They
+felt for the step of the train, and waited bewildered till someone came
+to lead them; then, with their sightless eyes looking upwards more than
+ours do, they moved stumbling along. Poor fellows, they'll never _see_
+home; but they turned with smiles of delight when the band, in its grey
+uniforms and fur caps, began to play the National Anthem.
+
+These were the first wounded prisoners from Germany, sent home because
+they could never fight again--quite useless men, too sorely hurt to
+stand once more under raining bullets and hurtling shell-fire--so back
+they came, and like dazed creatures they got out of the train, carrying
+their little bundles, limping, groping, but home.
+
+After the blind came those who had lost limbs--one-legged men, men still
+in bandages, men hobbling with sticks or with an arm round a comrade's
+neck, and then the stretcher cases. There was one man carrying his
+crutches like a cross. Others lay twisted sideways. Some never moved
+their heads from their pillows. All seemed to me to have about them a
+splendid dignity which made the long, battered, suffering company into
+some great pageant. I have never seen men so lean as they were. I have
+never seen men's cheek-bones seem to cut through the flesh just where
+the close-cropped hair on their temples ends. I had never seen such
+hollow eyes; but they were Russian soldiers, Russian gentlemen, and they
+were home again!
+
+In the great hall we greeted them with tables laid with food, and spread
+with wine and little presents beside each place. They know how to do
+this, the princely Russians, so each man got a welcome to make him
+proud. The band was there, and the long tables, the hot soup and the
+cigarettes. All the men had washed at Torneo, and all of them wore clean
+cotton waistcoats. Their hair was cut, too, but their faces hadn't
+recovered. One knew they would never be young again. The Germans had
+done their work. Semi-starvation and wounds had made old men of these
+poor Russian soldiers. All was done that could be done to welcome them
+back, but no one could take it in for a time. A sister in black
+distributed some little Testaments, each with a cross on it, and the
+soldiers kissed the symbol of suffering passionately.
+
+They filed into their places at the tables, and the stretchers were
+placed in a row two deep up the whole length of the room. In the middle
+of it stood an altar, covered with silver tinsel, and two priests in
+tinsel and gold stood beside it. Upon it was the sacred ikon, and the
+everlasting Mother and Child smiled down at the men laid in helplessness
+and weakness at their feet.
+
+A General welcomed the soldiers back; and when they were thanked in the
+name of the Emperor for what they had done, the tears coursed down their
+thin cheeks. It was too pitiful and touching to be borne. I remember
+thinking how quietly and sweetly a sister of mercy went from one group
+of soldiers to another, silently giving them handkerchiefs to dry their
+tears. We are all mothers now, and our sons are so helpless, so much in
+need of us.
+
+[Page Heading: WOUNDED RUSSIANS]
+
+Down the middle of the room were low tables for the men who lay down all
+the time. They saluted the ikon, as all the soldiers did, and some
+service began which I was unable to follow. I can't tell what the
+soldiers said, or of what they were thinking. About their comrades they
+said to Mme. Takmakoff that 25,000 of them had died in two days from
+neglect. We shall never hear the worst perhaps.
+
+There were three officers at a table. One of them was shot through the
+throat, and was bandaged. I saw him put all his food on one side, unable
+to swallow it. Then a high official came and sat down and drank his
+health. The officer raised his glass gallantly, and put his lips to the
+wine, but his throat was shot through, he made a face of agony, bowed to
+the great man opposite, and put down his glass.
+
+Some surgeons in white began to go about, taking names and particulars
+of the men's condition. Everyone was kind to the returned soldiers, but
+they had borne too much. Some day they will smile perhaps, but yesterday
+they were silent men returned from the dead, and not yet certain that
+their feet touched Russia again.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+WAITING FOR WORK
+
+
+We paid our heavy bills and left Petrograd on Monday, the 29th November.
+Great fuss at the station, as our luggage and the guide had disappeared
+together. A comfortable, slow journey, and Colonel Malcolm met us at
+Moscow station and took us to the Hotel de Luxe--a shocking bad pub, but
+the only one where we could get rooms. We went out to lunch, and I had a
+plate of soup, two faens (little wheat cakes), and the fifth part of a
+bottle of Graves. This modest repast cost sixteen shillings per head. We
+turned out of the Luxe Hotel the following day, and came to the
+National, where four hundred people were waiting to get in. But our
+guide Grundy had influence, and managed to get us rooms. It is quite
+comfortable.
+
+None of us was sorry to leave Petrograd, and that is putting the case
+mildly. People there are very depressed, and it was a case of "she said"
+and "he said" all the time. Everyone was trying to snuff everyone else
+out. "I don't know them"--and the lips pursed up finished many a
+reputation, and I heard more about money and position than I ever heard
+in my life before. "Bunty" and I used to say that the world was
+inhabited by "nice people and very nice people," and once she added a
+third class, "fearfully nice people." That is a world one used to
+inhabit. I suppose one must make the best of this one!
+
+[Page Heading: MOSCOW]
+
+_Moscow. 2 December._--Hilda Wynne was rather feverish to-day, and lay
+in bed, so I had a solitary walk about the Kremlin, and saw a fine view
+from its splendid position. But, somehow, I am getting tired of
+solitude. I suppose the war gives us the feeling that we must hold
+together, and yet I have never been more alone than during this last
+eighteen months.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_To Miss Macnaughtan's Sisters._
+
+CREDIT LYONNAIS, MOSCOW,
+_3 December._
+
+MY DEARS,
+
+I have just heard that there is a man going up to Petrograd to-night who
+will put our letters in the Embassy bag, so there is some hope of this
+reaching you. It is really my Christmas letter to you all, so may it be
+passed round, please, although there won't be much in it.
+
+We are now at Moscow, _en route_ for the Caucasus _via_ Tiflis, and our
+base will probably be Julfa. We have been chosen to go there by the
+Grand Duchess Cyril, but the reports about the roads are so conflicting
+that we are going to see for ourselves. When we get there it will be
+difficult to send letters home, but the banks will always be in
+communication with each other, so I shall get all you send to Credit
+Lyonnais, Petrograd.
+
+So far we have been waiting for our cars all this time. They had to
+come by Archangel, and they left long before we did, but they have not
+arrived yet. There are six ambulance cars, on board three different
+ships (for safety), and no news of any of them yet.
+
+Now, at least, _we_ have got a move on, and, barring accidents, we shall
+be in Tiflis next week. It's rather a fearsome journey, as the train
+only takes us to the foot of the mountains in four days, and then we
+must ride or drive across the passes, which they say are too cold for
+anything. You must imagine us like Napoleon in the "Retreat from Moscow"
+picture.
+
+Petrograd is a singularly unpleasant town, where the sun never shines,
+and it rains or snows every day. The river is full of ice, but it looks
+sullen and sad in the perpetual mist. There are a good many English
+people there; but one is supposed to know the Russians, which means
+speaking French all the time. Moscow is a far superior place, and is
+really most interesting and beautiful, and very Eastern, while Petrograd
+might be Liverpool. I filled up my time there in the hospital and
+soup-kitchen.
+
+The price of everything gets worse, I do believe! Even a glass of
+filtered water costs one shilling and threepence! I have just left an
+hotel for which my bill was L3 for one night, and I was sick nearly all
+the time!
+
+[Page Heading: "WHEN WILL THE WAR END?"]
+
+Now, my dears, I wish you all the best Christmas you can have this year.
+I am just longing for news of you, but I never knew such a cut-off place
+as this for letters. Tell me about every one of the family. Write
+lengthy letters. When do people say the war will end?
+
+Your loving
+SARAH BROOM.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Tiflis. 12 December._--It is evening, and I have only just remembered
+it is Sunday, a thing I can't recollect ever having happened before. I
+have been ill in my room all day, which no doubt accounts for it.
+
+We stayed at Moscow for a few days, and my recollection of it is of a
+great deal of snow and frequent shopping expeditions in cold little
+sleighs. I liked the place, and it was infinitely preferable to
+Petrograd. Mr. Cazalet took us to the theatre one night, and there was
+rather a good ballet. These poor dancers! They, like others, have lost
+their nearest and dearest in the war, but they still have to dance. Of
+course they call themselves "The Allies," and one saw rather a stale
+ballet-girl in very sketchy clothes dancing with a red, yellow, and
+black flag draped across her. Poor Belgium! It was such a travesty of
+her sufferings.
+
+Mr. Cazalet came to see us off at the station, and we began our long
+journey to Tiflis, but we changed our minds, and took the local train
+from ---- to Vladikavkas, where we stayed one night rather enjoyably at
+a smelly hotel, and the following day we got a motor-car and started at
+7 a.m. for the pass. The drive did us all good. The great snow peaks
+were so unlike Petrograd and gossip! I had been rather ill on the train,
+and I got worse at the hotel and during the drive, so I was quite a
+poor Sarah when I reached Tiflis. Still, the scenery had been lovely
+all the time, and we had funny little meals at rest houses.
+
+When we got to Tiflis I went on being seedy for a while. I finished
+Stephen Graham's book on Russia which he gave me before I left home. It
+is charmingly written. The line he chooses is mine also, but his is a
+more important book than mine.
+
+_Batoum. 22 December._--We have had a really delightful time since I
+last wrote up the old diary! (A dull book so far.) We saw a good many
+important people at Tiflis--Gorlebeff, the head of the Russian Red
+Cross, Prince Orloff, Prince Galitzin (a charming man), General Bernoff,
+etc., etc.
+
+Mrs. Wynne's and Mr. Bevan's cars are definitely accepted for the Tehran
+district. My own plans are not yet settled, but I hope they may be soon.
+People seem to think I look so delicate that they are a little bit
+afraid of giving me hard work, and yet I suppose there are not many
+women who get through more work than I do; but I believe I am looking
+rather a poor specimen, and my hair has fallen out. I think I am rather
+like those pictures on the covers of "appeals"--pictures of small
+children, underneath which is written, "This is Johnny Smith, or Eliza
+Jones, who was found in a cellar by one of our officers;
+weight--age--etc., etc."
+
+If I could have a small hospital north of Tehran it would be a good
+centre for the wounded, and it would also be a good place for the others
+to come to. Mr. Hills and Dr. Gordon (American missionaries) seem to
+think they would like me to join them in their work for the Armenians.
+These unfortunate people have been nearly exterminated by massacres, and
+it has been officially stated that 75 per cent. of the whole race has
+been put to the sword. This sounds awful enough, but when we consider
+that there is no refinement of torture that has not been practised upon
+them, then something within one gets up and shouts for revenge.
+
+The photographs which General Bernoff has are proof of the devildom of
+the Turks, only that the devil could not have been so beastly, and a
+beast could not have been so devilish. The Kaiser has convinced the
+Turks that he is now converted from Christianity to Mahomedanism. In
+every mosque he is prayed for under the title of "Hajed Mahomet
+Wilhelm," and photographs of burned and ruined cathedrals in France and
+Belgium are displayed to prove that he is now anti-Christian. Heaven
+knows it doesn't want much proving!
+
+[Page Heading: RASPUTIN]
+
+There are rumours of peace offers from Germany, but we must go on
+fighting now, if only for the sake of the soldiers, who will be the ones
+to suffer, but who _can't_ be asked to give in. The Russians are
+terribly out of spirits, and very depressed about the war. The German
+influence at Court scares them, and there is, besides, the mysterious
+Rasputin to contend with! This extraordinary man seems to exercise a
+malign influence over everyone, and people are powerless to resist him.
+Nothing seems too strange or too mad to recount of this man and his
+dupes. He is by birth a moujik, or peasant, and is illiterate, a
+drunkard, and an immoral wretch. Yet there is hardly a great lady at
+Court who has not come under his influence, and he is supposed by this
+set of persons to be a reincarnation of Christ. Rasputin's figure is one
+of those mysterious ones round which every sort of rumour gathers.
+
+We left Tiflis on Friday, 17th December, and had rather a panic at the
+station, as our passports had been left at the hotel, and our tickets
+had gone off to Baku. However, the unpunctuality of the train helped us,
+and we got off all right, an hour late. The train was about a thousand
+years old, and went at the rate of ten miles an hour, and we could only
+get second-class ordinary carriages to sleep in! But morning showed us
+such lovely scenery that nothing else mattered. One found oneself in a
+semi-tropical country, with soft skies and blue sea, and palms and
+flowers, and with tea-gardens on all the hillsides. When will people
+discover Caucasia? It is one of the countries of the world.
+
+We had letters to Count Groholski, a most charming young fellow, who
+arranged a delightful journey for us into the mountains, and as we had
+brought no riding things we began to search the small shops for
+riding-boots and the like. Then, in the evening we dined with Count
+Oulieheff, and had an interesting pleasant time. Two Japanese were at
+dinner, and, although they couldn't speak any tongue but their own,
+Japanese always manage to look interesting. No doubt much of that
+depends upon being able to say nothing.
+
+[Page Heading: GEORGIA]
+
+Early next day we motored out to the Count's Red Cross camp at ----.
+Here everyone was sleeping under tents or in little wooden huts, and we
+met some good-mannered, nice soldier men, most of them Poles. The
+scenery was grand, and we were actually in the little known and
+wonderful old kingdom of Georgia. Very little of it is left.{9} There
+are ruins all along the river of castles and fortresses and old
+stone bridges now crumbling into decay, but of the country, once so
+proud, only one small dirty city remains, and that is Artvin, on the
+mountain-side. It was too full of an infectious sort of typhus for us to
+go there, but we drove out to the hospital on the opposite side of the
+valley, and the doctor in charge there gave us beds for the night.
+
+On Sunday, December 19th, I wandered about the hillside, found some
+well-made trenches, and saw some houses which had been shelled. The
+Turks were in possession of Artvin only a year ago, and there was a lot
+of fighting in the mountains. It seems to me that the population of the
+place is pretty Turkish still; and there are Turkish houses with small
+Moorish doorways, and little windows looking out on the glorious view.
+In all the mountains round here the shooting is fine, and consists of
+toor (goats), leopards, bears, wolves, and on the Persian front, tigers
+also. Land can be had for nothing if one is a Russian.
+
+On Sunday afternoon we drove in a most painful little carriage to a
+village which seemed to be inhabited by good-looking cut-throats, but
+there was not much to see except the picturesque, smelly, old brown
+houses. We met a handsome Cossack carrying a man down to the military
+hospital. He was holding him upright, as children carry each other; the
+man was moaning with fever, and had been stricken with the virulent
+typhus, which nearly always kills. But what did the handsome Cossack
+care about infection? He was a mountaineer, and had eyes with a little
+flame in them, and a fierce moustache. Perhaps to-morrow he will be
+gone. People die like flies in these unhealthy towns, and the Russians
+are supremely careless.
+
+We went back to the hospital for dinner, and then went out into crisp,
+beautiful moonlight, and motored back to the Red Cross camp. I had a
+little hut to sleep in, which had just been built. It contained a bed
+and two chairs, upon one of which was a tin basin! The cold in the
+morning was about as sharp as anything I have known, but everyone was
+jolly and pleasant, and we had a charming time.
+
+The Count told us of the old proud Georgians when there was a famine in
+the country and a Russian Governor came to offer relief to the starving
+inhabitants. Their great men went out to receive him, and said
+courteously, "We have not been here, Gracious One, one hundred or two
+hundred years, but much more than a thousand years, and during that time
+we have not had a visit from the Russian Government. We are pleased to
+see you, and the honour you have done us is sufficient in itself--for
+the rest we think we will not require anything at your hands."
+
+On Monday I motored with the others out to the ferry; then I had to
+leave them, as they were going to ride forty miles, and that was thought
+too much for me. Age has _no_ compensations, and it is not much use
+fighting it. One only ends by being "a wonderful old woman of eighty":
+reminiscent, perhaps a little obstinate, and in the world to
+come--always eighty?
+
+Came back to Batoum with Count Stanislas Constant, and went for a drive
+with him to see the tea-gardens.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Page Heading: TIFLIS]
+
+Christmas Eve at Tiflis, and here we are with cars still stuck in the
+ice thirty miles from Archangel, and ourselves just holding on and
+trying not to worry. But what a waste of time! Also, fighting is going
+on now in Persia, and we might be a lot of use. We came back from Batoum
+in the hottest and slowest train I have ever been in. Still, Georgia
+delighted me, and I am glad to have seen it. They have a curious custom
+there (the result of generations of fighting). Instead of saying
+"Good-morning," they say "Victory"; and the answer is, "May the victory
+be yours." The language is Georgian, of course; and then there is
+Tartar, and Polish, and Russian, and I can't help thinking that the
+Tower of Babel was the poorest joke that was ever played on mankind.
+Nothing stops work so completely.
+
+What will Christmas Day be like at home? I think of all the village
+churches, with the holly and evergreens, and in almost every one the
+little new brass plates to the memory of beautiful youth, dead and
+mangled, and left in the mud to await another trumpet than that which
+called it from the trenches. There is nothing like a boy, and all the
+life of England and the prayers of mothers have centred round them.
+One's older friends died first, and now the boys are falling, and from
+every little vicarage, from school-houses and colleges, the endless
+stream goes, all with their heads up, fussing over their little bits of
+packing, and then away to stand exploding shells and gas and bombs. No
+one except those who have seen knows the ghastly tale of human suffering
+that this war involves every day. Down here 550,000 Armenians have been
+butchered in cold blood. The women are either massacred or driven into
+Turkish harems.
+
+Yesterday we heard some news at last in this most benighted corner of
+the world! England has raised four million volunteers. Hurrah! Over one
+million men volunteered in one week. French takes command at home and
+Haig at the front.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_To Mrs. Charles Young._
+
+HOTEL ORIENT, TIFLIS,
+_26 December._
+
+DARLING J.,
+
+It seems almost useless to write letters, or even to wire! Letters
+sometimes take forty-nine days to get to England, and telegrams are
+_always_ kept a fortnight before being sent. We have had great
+difficulty about the ambulance cars, as they all got frozen into the
+river at Archangel; however, as you will see from the newspapers, there
+isn't a great deal going on yet.
+
+I do hope you and all the family are safe and sound. I wired to ---- for
+her birthday to ask news of you all, and I prepaid the reply, but, of
+course, none came, so I am sure she never got the wire. I have wired
+twice to ----, but no reply. At last one gives up expecting any. I got
+some newspapers nearly a month old to-day, and I have been devouring
+them.
+
+This is rather a curious place, and the climate is quite good; no snow,
+and a good deal of pleasant sun, but the hills all round are very bare
+and rugged.
+
+I have had a cough, which I think equals your best efforts in that line.
+How it does shake one up! I had some queer travelling when it was at its
+worst: for the first night we were given a shakedown in a little
+mountain hospital, which was fearfully cold; and the next night I was
+put into a newly-built little place, made of planks roughly nailed
+together, and with just a bed and a basin in it.
+
+The cold was wonderful, and since then--as you may imagine--the
+Macnaughtan cough has been heard in the land!
+
+[Page Heading: GRAND DUKE NICHOLAS]
+
+Yesterday (Christmas Day) we were invited to breakfast with the Grand
+Duke Nicholas. A Court function in Russia is the most royal that you can
+imagine--no half measures about it! The Grand Duke is an adorably
+handsome man, quite extraordinarily and obviously a Grand Duke. He
+measures 6 feet 5 inches, and is worshipped by every soldier in the
+Army.
+
+We went first into a huge anteroom, where a lady-in-waiting received us,
+and presented us to "Son Altesse Imperiale," and then to the Grand Duke
+and to his brother, the Grand Duke Peter. Some scenes seem to move as
+in a play. I had a vision of a great polished floor, and many tall men
+in Cossack dress, with daggers and swords, most of them different grades
+of Princes and Imperial Highnesses.
+
+A great party of Generals, and ladies, and members of the Household,
+then went into a big dining-room, where every imaginable hors d'oeuvre
+was laid out on dishes--dozens of different kinds--and we each ate
+caviare or something. Afterwards, with a great tramp and clank of spurs
+and swords, everyone moved on to a larger dining-room, where there were
+a lot of servants, who waited excellently.
+
+In the middle of the dejeuner the Grand Duke Nicholas got up, and
+everyone else did the same, and they toasted us! The Grand Duke made a
+speech about our "gallantry," etc., etc., and everyone raised glasses
+and bowed to one. Nothing in a play could have been more of a real fine
+sort of scene. And certainly S. Macnaughtan in her wildest dreams hadn't
+thought of anything so wonderful as being toasted in Russia by the
+Imperial Staff.
+
+It's quite a thing to be tiresome about when one grows old!
+
+In the evening we tried to be merry, and failed. The Grand Duchess sent
+us mistletoe and plum-pudding by the hand of M. Boulderoff. He took us
+shopping, but the bazaars are not interesting.
+
+Good-bye, and bless you, my dear,
+Yours as ever,
+S. MACNAUGHTAN.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_To Miss Julia Keays-Young._
+
+HOTEL D'ORIENT, TIFLIS,
+CAUCASUS, RUSSIA,
+_27 December._
+
+DARLING JENNY,
+
+I can't tell you what a pleasure your letters are. I only wish I could
+get some more from anybody, but not a line gets through! I want so much
+to hear about Bet and her marriage, and to know if the nephews and
+Charles are safe.
+
+There seems to be the usual winter pause over the greater part of the
+war area, but round about here, there are the most awful massacres;
+550,000 Armenians have been slaughtered in cold blood by the Turks, and
+with cruelties that pass all telling. One is quite impotent.
+
+I expect to be sent into Persia soon, and meanwhile I hope to join some
+American missionaries who are helping the refugees. Our ambulances are
+at last out of the ice at Archangel, and will be here in a fortnight;
+but we are not to go to Persia for a month. "The Front" is always
+altering, and we never have any idea where our work will be wanted.
+
+[Page Heading: HOMESICK]
+
+We are still asking when the war will end, but, of course, no one knows.
+One gets pretty homesick out here at times, and there was a chance I
+might have to go back to England for equipment, but that seems off at
+present.
+
+Your always loving
+A. S.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_29 December._--I have still got a horrid bad cough, and my big, dull
+room is depressing. We are all depressed, I am afraid. Being accustomed
+to have plenty to do, this long wait is maddening.
+
+Whatever Russia may have in store for us in the way of useful work,
+nothing can exceed the boredom of our first seven weeks here. We are
+just spoiling for work. I believe it is as bad as an illness to feel
+like this, and we won't be normal again for some time. Oddly enough, it
+does affect one's health, and Hilda Wynne and I are both seedy. We are
+always trying to wire for things, but not a word gets through.
+
+We were summoned to dine at the palace last night. Everyone very
+charming.
+
+_31 December._.--Prince Murat came to dine and play bridge. Count
+Groholski turned up for a few days. My doctor vetted me for my cold.
+Business done--none. No sailor ever longed for port as I do for home.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+SOME IMPRESSIONS OF TIFLIS AND ARMENIA
+
+
+_Tiflis. 1 January, 1916._--Kind wishes from the Grand Duke and
+everybody. Not such an aimless day as usual. I got into a new
+sitting-room and put it straight, and in the evening we went to Prince
+Orloff's box for a performance of "Carmen." It was very Russian and
+wealthy. At the back of the box were two anterooms, where we sat and
+talked between the acts, and where tea, chocolates, etc., were served.
+They say the Prince has L200,000 a year. He is gigantically fat, with a
+real Cossack face.
+
+Scandal is so rife here that it hardly seems to mean scandal. They don't
+appear to be so much immoral as non-moral. Everyone sits up late; then
+most of them, I am told, get drunk, and then the evening orgies begin.
+No one is ostracised, everyone is called upon and "known" whatever they
+have done. I suppose English respectability would simply make them
+smile--if, indeed, they believed in it.
+
+_2 January._--I don't suppose I shall ever write an article on war
+charities, but I believe I ought to. A good many facts about them have
+come my way, and I consider that the public at home should be told how
+the finances are being administered.
+
+I know of one hospital in Russia which has, I believe, cost England
+L100,000. The staff consists of nurses and doctors, dressers, etc., all
+fully paid. The expenses of those in charge of it are met out of the
+funds. They live in good hotels, and have "entertaining allowances" for
+entertaining their friends, and yet one of them herself volunteered the
+information that the hospital is not required. The staff arrived weeks
+ago, but not the stores. Probably the building won't be opened for some
+time to come, and when it is opened there will be difficulty in getting
+patients to fill it.
+
+In many parts of Russia hospitals are _not_ wanted. In Petrograd there
+are five hundred of them run by Russians alone.
+
+Then there is a fund for relief of the Poles, which is administered by
+Princess ----. The ambulance-car which the fund possesses is used by the
+Princess to take her to the theatre every night.
+
+A great deal of money has been subscribed for the benefit of the
+Armenians. Who knows how much this has cost the givers? yet the
+distribution of this large sum seems to be conducted on most haphazard
+lines. An open letter arrived the other day for the Mayor of Tiflis.
+There is no Mayor of Tiflis, so the letter was brought to Major ----. It
+said: "Have you received two cheques already sent? We have had no
+acknowledgment." There seems to be no check on the expenditure, and
+there is no local organisation for dispensing the relief. I don't say
+that it is cheating: I only say as much as I know.
+
+[Page Heading: ILL-BESTOWED CHARITY]
+
+A number of motor-ambulances were sent to Russia by some generous people
+in England the other day. They were inspected by Royalty before being
+despatched, and arrived in the care of Mr. ----. When their engines were
+examined it was found that they were tied together with bits of
+copper-wire, and even with string. None of them could be made to go, and
+they were returned to England.
+
+We are desperately hard up at home just now, and we are denying
+ourselves in order to send these charitable contributions to the richest
+country in the world. Gorlebeff himself (head of the Russian Red Cross
+Society) has L30,000 a year. Armenians are literally rolling in money,
+and it is common to find Armenian ladies buying hats at 250 Rs. (L25) in
+Tiflis. The Poles are not ruined, nor do they seem to object to German
+rule, which is doing more for them than Russia ever did. Tiflis people
+are now sending money for relief to Mesopotamia. Of the 300,000 Rs. sent
+by England, 70,000 Rs. have stuck to someone's fingers.
+
+In Flanders there were many people living in comfort such as they had
+probably never seen before, at the expense of the charitable public, and
+doing very little indeed all the time: cars to go about in, chauffeurs
+at their disposal, petrol without stint, and even their clothes (called
+uniforms for the nonce!) paid for.
+
+And the little half-crowns that come in to run these shows, "how hardly
+they are earned sometimes! with what sacrifices they are given!" A man
+in Flanders said to me one day: "We could lie down and roll in tobacco,
+and we all help ourselves to every blooming thing we want; and here is a
+note I found in a poor little parcel of things to-night: 'We are so
+sorry not to be able to send more, but money is very scarce this week.'"
+
+My own cousin brought four cars over to France, and he told me he was
+simply an unpaid chauffeur at the command of young officers coming in to
+shop at Dunkirk.
+
+I am thankful to say that Mrs. Wynne and Mr. Bevan and I have paid our
+own expenses ever since the war began, and given things too. And I think
+a good many of our own corps in Flanders used to contribute liberally
+and pay for all they had. People here tell us that their cars have all
+been commandeered, and they are used for the wives of Generals, who
+never had entered one before, and who proudly do their shopping in them.
+
+War must be a military matter, and these things must end, unless money
+is to find its way into the possession of the vultures who are always at
+hand when there is any carcase about.
+
+_5 January._--Absolutely nothing to write about. I saw Gorlebeff,
+Domerchekoff, and Count Tysczkievcz{10} of the Croix Rouge about my
+plans. They suggest my going to Urumiyah in Persia, where workers seem
+to be needed. The only other opening seems to be to go to Count
+Groholski's new little hospital on the top of the mountains. Mr. Hills,
+the American missionary, wants me first to go with him to see the
+Armenian refugees at Erivan, but we can't get transports for his gifts
+of clothing for them.
+
+[Page Heading: A PRESENTIMENT]
+
+Before I left England I had a very strange, almost an overwhelming
+presentiment that I had better not come to Russia. I had by that time
+promised Mrs. Wynne that I would come, and I couldn't see that it would
+be the right thing to chuck her. I thought the work would suffer if I
+stayed at home, as she might find it impossible to get any other woman
+who would pay her own way and consent to be away for so long a time. Our
+prayers are always such childish things--prayer itself is only a
+cry--and I remember praying that if I was "meant to stay at home" some
+substitute might be found for me. This all seems too absurd when one
+views it in the light of what afterwards happened. My vision of "honour"
+and "work" seem for the moment ridiculous, and yet I know that I was not
+so foolish as I seem, for I got a written statement from Mr. Hume
+Williams (Mrs. Wynne's trustee), saying, "A unit has been formed,
+consisting of Mrs. Wynne, Miss Macnaughtan, etc., and it has been
+accepted by the Russian Red Cross." The idea of being in Russia and
+having to look for work never in my wildest moments entered my head--and
+this is the end of the "vision," I suppose.
+
+_Russian Christmas Day._--Took a car and went for a short run into the
+country. Weather fine and bright.
+
+There is severe fighting in Galicia, and the rumour is that
+Urumiyah--the place to which I am going--has been evacuated.
+
+My impression of Russia deepens--that it is run by beautiful women and
+rich men; and yet how charming everyone is to meet! Hardly anyone is
+uninteresting, and half the men are good-looking. The Cossack-dress is
+very handsome, and nearly everyone wears it. When the colour is dark red
+and the ornaments are of silver the effect is unusually good. They all
+walk well. One is amongst a primitive people, but a remarkably fine one!
+
+_10 January._--I am taking French lessons. This would appear to be a
+simple matter, even in Russia, but it has taken me three weeks to get a
+teacher. The first to come required a rest, and must decline; the second
+was recalled by an old employer; the third had too many engagements; the
+fourth came and then holidays began, as they always do! First our
+Christmas, then the Russian Christmas, then the Armenian Christmas,
+leading on to three New Year Days! After that the Baptism, with its
+holidays and its vigils.
+
+There is only one sort of breakfast-roll in this hotel which is soft
+enough to eat; it is not made on festivals, nor on the day after a
+festival. I can honestly say we hardly ever see one.
+
+With much fear and trembling I have bought a motor-car. No work seems
+possible without it. The price is heavy, but everyone says I shall be
+able to get it back when I leave. All the same I shake in my shoes--a
+chauffeur, tyres, petrol, mean money all the time. One can't stop
+spending out here. It is like some fate from which one can't escape.
+Still the car is bought, and I suppose now I shall get work.
+
+[Page Heading: DIFFICULTIES]
+
+We are all in the same boat. Mrs. Wynne has waited for her ambulances
+for three months, and I hear that even the Anglo-Russian hospital, with
+every name from Queen Alexandra's downwards on the list of its patrons,
+is in "one long difficulty." It is Russia, and nothing but Russia, that
+breaks us all. Everything is promised, nothing is done. The only _hope_
+of getting a move on is by bribery, and one may bribe the wrong people
+till one finds one's way about.
+
+_13 January._--The car took us up the Kajour road, and behaved well; but
+the chauffeur drove us into a bridge on the way down, and had to be
+dismissed. Tried to go to Erivan, but the new chauffeur mistook the
+road, so we had to return to Tiflis. N.B.--Another holiday was coming
+on, and he wanted to be at home. _I actually used to like difficulties!_
+
+_15 January._--Started again for Erivan. All went well, and we had a
+lovely drive till about 6 p.m. The dusk was gathering and we were up in
+the hills, when "bang!" went something, and nothing on earth would make
+the car move. We unscrewed nuts, we lighted matches, we got out the
+"jack," but we could not discover what was wrong. So where were we to
+spend the night?
+
+In a fold of the grey hills was a little grey village--just a few huts
+belonging to Mahomedan shepherds, but there was nothing for it but to
+ask them for shelter. Fortunately, Dr. Wilson knew the language, and he
+persuaded the "head man" to turn out for us. His family consisted of
+about sixteen persons, all sleeping on the floor. They gave us the
+clay-daubed little place, and fortunately it contained a stove, but
+nothing else. The snow was all round us, but we made up the fire and got
+some tea, which we carried with us, and finally slept in the little
+place while the chauffeur guarded the car.
+
+In the morning nothing would make the car budge an inch, and, seeing our
+difficulty, the Mahomedans made us pay a good deal for horses to tow the
+thing to the next village, where we heard there was a blacksmith. We
+followed in a hay-cart. We got to a Malokand settlement about 5 o'clock,
+and found ourselves in an extraordinarily pretty little village, and
+were given shelter in the very cleanest house I ever saw. The woman was
+a perfect treasure, and made us soup and gave us clean beds, and honey
+for breakfast. The chauffeur found that our shaft was broken, and the
+whole piece had to go back to Tiflis.
+
+It was a real blow, our trip knocked on the head again, and now how were
+we to get on? The railway was 48 versts away, and the railway had to be
+reached. We hired one of those painful little carts, which are made of
+rough poles on wheels, and, clinging on by our eyelids, we drove as far
+as an Armenian village, where a snowstorm came on, and we took shelter
+with a "well-to-do" Armenian family, who gave us lunch and displayed
+their wool-work and were very friendly. From there we got into another
+"deelyjahns" of the painful variety, and jolted off for about 25 miles,
+till, as night fell, we struck the railway, and were given two wooden
+benches to sleep on in a small waiting-room. People came and went all
+night, and we slept with one eye open till 2 a.m., when the chauffeur
+took a train to Tiflis. We sat up till 6 a.m., when the train, two hours
+late, started for Erivan, where we arrived pretty well "cooked" at 11
+p.m.
+
+[Page Heading: ERIVAN]
+
+_Erivan. 20 January._--Last night's experiences were certainly very
+"Russian." We had wired for rooms, but although the message had been
+received nothing was prepared. The miserable rooms were an inch thick in
+dust, there were no fires, and no sheets on the beds! We went to a
+restaurant--fortunately no Russian goes to bed early--and found the
+queerest place, empty save for a band and a lady. The lady and the band
+were having supper. She, poor soul, was painted and dyed, but she
+offered her services to translate my French for me when the waiters
+could understand nothing but Russian. I was thankful to eat something
+and go to bed under my fur coat.
+
+To-day we have been busy seeing the Armenian refugees. There are 17,000
+of them in this city of 30,000 inhabitants. We went from one place to
+another, and always one saw the same things and heard the same tales.
+
+Since the war broke out I think I have seen the actual breaking of the
+wave of anguish which has swept over the world (I often wonder if I can
+"feel" much more!). There was Dunkirk and its shambles, there was ruined
+Belgium, and there was, above all, the field hospital at Furnes, with
+its horrible courtyard, the burning heap of bandages, and the mattresses
+set on edge to drip the blood off them and then laid on some bed again.
+I can never forget it. I was helping a nurse once, and all the time I
+was sitting on a dead man and never knew it!
+
+And now I am hearing of one million Armenians slaughtered in cold blood.
+The pitiful women in the shelters were saying, "We are safe because we
+are old and ugly; all the young ones went to the harems." Nearly all the
+men were massacred. The surplus children and unwanted women were put
+into houses and burned alive. Everywhere one heard, "We were 4,000 in
+one village, and only 143 escaped;" "There were 30 of us, and now only a
+few children remain;" "All the men are killed." These were things one
+saw for oneself, heard for oneself. There was nothing sensational in the
+way the women told their stories.
+
+Russia does what she can in the way of "relief." She gives 4-1/2 Rs. per
+month to each person. This gives them bread, and there might be fires,
+for stoves are there, but no one seems to have the gumption to put them
+up. Here and there men and women are sleeping on valuable rugs, which
+look strange in the bare shelters. Most of the women knitted, and some
+wove on little "fegir" looms. The dullness of their existence matches
+the tragedy of it. The food is so plain that it doesn't want
+cooking--being mostly bread and water; but sometimes a few rags are
+washed, and there is an attempt to try and keep warm. Yet I have heard
+an English officer say that nothing pleases a Russian more than to ask,
+"When is there to be another Armenian massacre?"
+
+The Armenians are hated. I wonder Christ doesn't do more for them
+considering they were the first nation in the world to embrace
+Christianity; but then, one wonders about so many things during this
+war. Oh, if we could stamp out the madness that seems to accompany
+religion, and just live sober, kind, sensible lives, how good it would
+be; but the Turks must burn women and children, alive, because, poor
+souls, they think one thing and the Turks think another! And men and
+women are hating and killing each other because Christ, says one, had a
+nature both human and divine, and, says another, the two were merged in
+one. And a third says that Christ was equal to the Father, while a whole
+Church separated itself on the question of Sabellianism, or "The
+Procession of the Son."
+
+Poor Christ, once crucified, and now dismembered by your own disciples,
+are you glad you came to earth, or do you still think God forsook you,
+and did you, too, die an unbeliever? The crucifixion will never be
+understood until men know that its worst agony consisted in the
+disbelief which first of all doubts God and then must, by all reason,
+doubt itself. The resurrection comes when we discover that we are God
+and He is us.
+
+[Page Heading: ETCHMIADZIN]
+
+_21 January._--To-day, I drove out to Etchmiadzin with Mr. Lazarienne,
+an Armenian, to see that curious little place. It is the ecclesiastical
+city of Armenia--its little Rome, where the Catholicus lives. He was
+ill, but a charming Bishop--Wardepett by name--with a flowing brown
+beard and long black silk hood, made us welcome and gave us lunch, and
+then showed us the hospital--which had no open windows, and smelt
+horrible--and the lovely little third-century "temple." Then he took us
+round the strange, quiet little place, with its peaceful park and its
+three old brown churches, which mark what must once have been a great
+city and the first seat of a national Christianity. Now there are
+perhaps 300 inhabitants, but Mount Ararat dominates it, and Mount Ararat
+is not a hill. It is a great white jewel set up against a sheet of
+dazzling blue.
+
+Hills and ships always seem to me to be alive, and I think they have a
+personality of their own. Ararat stands for the unassailable. It is like
+some great fact, such as that what is beautiful must be true. It is
+grand and pure and lovely, and when the sun sets it is more than this,
+for then its top is one sheet of rose, and it melts into a mystic hill,
+and one knows that whatever else may "go to Heaven" Ararat goes there
+every night.
+
+We visited the old Persian palace built on the river's cliff, and looked
+out over the gardens to the hills beyond, and saw the mosque, with its
+blue roof against the blue sky, and its wonderful covering of old tiles,
+which drop like leaves and are left to crumble.
+
+_Tiflis. 24 January._--I left Erivan on Sunday, January 23rd. It was
+cold and sharp, and the train was crowded. People were standing all down
+the corridors, as usual. Nothing goes quicker than eight miles an hour,
+nothing is punctual, nothing arrives. The stations are filthy, and the
+food is quite uneatable. I often despair of this country, and if the
+Russians were not our Allies I should feel inclined to say that nothing
+would do them so much good as a year or two of German conquest. No one,
+after the first six months, has been enthusiastic over the war, and the
+soldiers want to get home. One young officer, 26 years old, has been
+loafing in Tiflis for six months, and has at last been arrested. Another
+took his ticket on eight successive nights to leave the place and never
+moved. At last he was locked in his room, and a motor-car ordered to
+take him to the station. He got into it, and was not heard of for three
+days, when his wife appeared, and found her husband somewhere in the
+town.
+
+Mrs. Wynne and Mr. Bevan have gone on ahead to Baku, but I must wait for
+my damaged car. A young officer in this hotel shot himself dead this
+morning. No one seems to mind much.
+
+[Page Heading: RUSSIAN SOCIETY]
+
+_25 January._--Last night I was invited to play bridge by one of the
+richest women in Russia. Her room was just a converted bedroom, with a
+dirty wall-paper. The packs of cards were such as one might see
+railway-men playing with in a lamp-room. Our stakes were a few kopeks,
+and the refreshments consisted of one tepid cup of tea, without either
+milk or lemon, and not a biscuit to eat. We all sat with shawls on, as
+our hostess said it wasn't worth while to light a fire so late at night.
+A nice little Princess Musaloff and Prince Napoleon Murat played with
+me. We were rich in titles, but our shoulders were cold.
+
+I have not seen a single nice or even comfortable room since I left
+England, and although some women dress well, and have pretty
+cigarette-boxes from the renowned Faberje, other things about them are
+all wrong. The furniture in their rooms is covered with plush, and the
+ornaments (to me) suggest a head-gardener's house at home with "an
+enlargement of mother" over the mantelpiece; or a Clapham drawing-room,
+furnished during some happy year when cotton rose, or copper was
+cornered. In this hotel the carpets are in holes in the passages, and
+there are few servants; but I don't fancy that the people here notice
+things very much.
+
+I went to see Mme. ---- one day in her new house. The rooms were large
+and handsome. There was a picture of a cow at one end of the
+drawing-room, and a mirror framed in plush at the other!
+
+I must draw a "character" one day of the very charming woman who is
+absolutely indifferent to people's feelings. The fact that some humble
+soul has prepared something for her, or that a sacrifice has been made,
+or that one kind speech would satisfy, does not occur to her. These are
+the people who chuck engagements when they get better invitations, and
+always I seem to see them with expensive little bags and chains and
+Faberje enamels. Men will slave for such women--will carry things for
+them, and serve them. They have "success" until they are quite old, and
+after they have taken to rouge and paint. A tired woman hardly ever gets
+anything carried for her.
+
+_26 January._--A day's march nearer home! This is the Feast of St. Nina.
+There is always a feast or a fete here. People walk about the streets,
+they give each other rich cakes, and work a little less than usual.
+
+This hotel still keeps its cripples. Prince Murat sits on his little
+chair on the landing. Prince Tschelikoff has his heart all wrong; there
+is the man with one leg.
+
+Now Mlle. Lepnakoff, the singer, Musaloff, in his red coat, and some
+heavy Generals are here. We have the same food every day.
+
+[Page Heading: ENFORCED IDLENESS]
+
+Perhaps I was pretty near having a breakdown when I came abroad, and the
+enforced idleness of this life may have been Providential (all my hair
+was falling out, and my eyes were very bad, and the war was wearing me
+down rather); but to sit in an hotel bedroom or to potter over trifles
+in sitting-rooms seems a poor sort of way of passing one's time. To rest
+has always seemed to me very hard work. I can't even go to bed without a
+pile of papers beside me to work at during the night or in the early
+morning!
+
+When the power of writing leaves me, as it does fitfully and without
+warning, I have a feeling of loneliness, which helps to convince me of
+what I have always felt, that this power comes from outside, and can
+only be explained psychically. I asked a great writer once if he ever
+experienced the feeling I had of being "left," and he told me that
+sometimes during the time of desolation he had seriously contemplated
+suicide.
+
+_30 January._--I got a telephone message from Mr. Bevan last night. He
+says Baku is too horrible, and there is no news of the cars. People are
+telling me now that if instead of cars we had given money, we should
+have been feted and decorated and extolled to the skies; but then, where
+would the money have gone? Last week the two richest Armenian merchants
+in this town were arrested for cheating the soldiers out of thousands of
+yards of stuff for their coats. A Government official could easily be
+found to say that the cloth had been received, and meanwhile what has
+the soldier to cover him in the trenches?
+
+Armenians are certainly an odious set of people, and their ingratitude
+is equalled by their meanness and greed. Mr. Hills, who is doing the
+Armenian relief work here, pays all his own expenses, and he can't get a
+truck to take his things to the refugees without paying for it, while he
+is often asked the question, "Why can't you leave these things alone?"
+Now that Mrs. Wynne has left I am asked the same question about her.
+Russia can "break" one very successfully.
+
+The weather has turned cold, and there is tearing wind and snow.
+
+_1 February._--"No," says I to myself, in a supremely virtuous manner,
+"I shall not be beaten by this enervating existence here. I'll do
+_something_--if it's only sewing a seam."
+
+So out came needles and cotton and mending and hemming, but, would it be
+believed, I am afflicted with two "doigts blancs" (festered fingers),
+and have to wear bandages, which prevent my doing even the mildest seam.
+Oddly enough, this "maladie" is a sort of epidemic here. The fact is,
+the dust is full of microbes, and no one is too well nourished.
+
+[Page Heading: SOME "MALADES IMAGINAIRES"]
+
+I am rather amused by those brave strong people who "don't make a fuss
+about their health." One hears from them almost daily that their
+temperature has gone up to 103 deg.; "but it's nothing," they say
+heroically, "or if it is, it's only typhoid, and who cares for a little
+typhoid?" Does a head ache, there is "something very queer about it,
+but"--pushing back hair from hot brow--"no one is to worry about it. It
+will be better to-morrow; or if it really is going to be fever, we must
+just try to make the best of it." A sty in the eye is cataract, "but
+lots of blind people are very happy;" and a bilious attack is generally
+that mysterious, oft-recurring and interesting complaint "camp fever."
+Cheer up, no one is to be discouraged if the worst happens! A
+thermometer is produced and shaken and applied. The temperature is too
+low now; it is probably only typhus, and we mean to be brave and get up.
+
+_3 February._--Last night we played bridge. All the princes and
+princesses moistened their thumbs before dealing, and no one is above
+using a "crachoir" on the staircase! Oh for one hour of England! In all
+my travels I have only found one foreign race which seemed to me to be
+well-bred (as I understand it), and that is the native of India. The
+very best French people come next; and the Spaniard knows how to bow,
+but he clears his throat in an objectionable manner. None of them have
+been licked! That is the trouble. An Eton boy of fifteen could give them
+all points, and beat them with his hands in his pockets.
+
+I am quite sure that the British nation is really superior to all
+others. Ours is the only well-bred race, and the only generous or
+hospitable nation. Fancy a foreigner keeping "open house"! Here the
+entertainment is a glass of thickened tea, and the stove is frequently
+not lighted even on a chilly evening. Since I have been in Russia I have
+had nothing better or more substantial given to me (by the Russians)
+than a piece of cake, except by the Grand Duke. We brought heaps of
+letters of introduction, and people called, but that is all, or else
+they gave an "evening" with the very lightest refreshments I have ever
+seen. Someone plays badly on the piano, there is a little bridge, and a
+samovar!
+
+_6 February._--The queer epidemic of "gathered fingers" continues here.
+Having two I am in the fashion. They make one awkward, and more idle
+than ever. A lot of people come in and out of my sitting-room to "cheer
+me up," and everyone wants me to tell their fortune. Mrs. Wynne and Mr.
+Bevan are still at Baku.
+
+Last night I went to Prince Orloff's box to hear Lipkofskaya in "Faust."
+
+My car has come back, and is running well, but the weather has been cold
+and stormy, with snow drifting in from the hills. I took Mme. Derfelden
+and her husband to Kajura to-day. Now that I have the car everyone wants
+me to work with them. The difficulty of transport is indescribable.
+Without a car is like being without a leg. One simply can't get about.
+In order to get a seat on a train people walk up the line and bribe the
+officials at the place where it is standing to allow them to get on
+board.{11}
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+ON THE PERSIAN FRONT
+
+
+_8 February._--A "platteforme" having been found for my car, I and M.
+Ignatieff of the Red Cross started for Baku to-day. We found our little
+party at the Metropole Hotel. Went to the MacDonell's to lunch. He is
+Consul. They are quite charming people, and their little flat was open
+to us all the time we were at Baku.
+
+The place itself is wind-blown and fly-blown and brown, but the harbour
+is very pretty, with its crowds of shipping, painted with red hulls,
+which make a nice bit of colour in the general drab of the hills and the
+town. There are no gardens and no trees, and all enterprise in the way
+of town-planning and the like is impossible owing to the Russian habit
+of cheating. They have tried for sixteen years to start electric trams,
+but everyone wants too much for his own pocket. The morals become
+dingier and dingier as one gets nearer Tartar influence, and no shame is
+thought of it. Most of the stories one hears would blister the pages of
+a diary. When a house of ill-fame is opened it is publicly blessed by
+the priest!
+
+_Kasvin. 18 February._.--We spent a week at Baku and grumbled all the
+time, although really we were not at all unhappy. The MacDonells were
+always with us, and we had good games of bridge with Ignatieff in the
+evenings. We went to see the oil city at Baku, and one day we motored to
+the far larger one further out. One of the directors, an Armenian, went
+with us, and gave us at his house the very largest lunch I have ever
+seen. It began with many plates of zakouska (hors d'oeuvres), and went
+on to a cold entree of cream and chickens' livers; then grilled salmon,
+with some excellent sauce, and a salad of beetroot and cranberries. This
+was followed by an entree of kidneys, and then we came to soup, the best
+I have ever eaten; after soup, roast turkey, followed by chicken pilau,
+sweets and cheese. It was impossible even to taste all the things, but
+the Georgian cook must have been a "cordon bleu."
+
+On February 16th one of the long-delayed cars arrived, and we were in
+ecstasies, and took our places on the steamer for Persia; but the
+radiator had been broken on the way down, and Mrs. Wynne was delayed
+again. I started, as my car was arranged for, and had to go on board.
+Also, I found I could be of use to Mr. Scott of the Tehran Legation, who
+was going there. We travelled on the boat together, and had an excellent
+crossing to Enzeli, a lovely little port, and then we took my car and
+drove to Resht, where Mr. and Mrs. McLaren, the Consul and his wife,
+kindly put us up. Their garden is quiet and damp; the house is damp too,
+and very ugly. There are only two other English people (at the bank) to
+form the society of the place, and it must be a bit lonely for a young
+woman. I found the situation a little tragic.
+
+[Page Heading: KASVIN]
+
+We drove on next day to this place (Kasvin), and Mr. and Mrs. Goodwin
+were good enough to ask us to stay with them. The big fires in the house
+were very cheering after our cold drive in the snow. The moonlight was
+marvellous, and the mountain passes were beyond words picturesque. We
+passed a string of 150 camels pacing along in the moonlight and the
+snow. All of them wore bells which jingled softly. Around us were the
+weird white hills, with a smear of mist over them. The radiant moon, the
+snow, and the chiming camels I shall never forget.
+
+Captain Rhys Williams was also at the Goodwins; and as he was in very
+great anxiety to get to Hamadan, I offered to take him in my car, and
+let Mr. Scott do the last stage of the journey in the Legation car to
+Tehran. We were delayed one day at Kasvin, which was passed very
+pleasantly in the sheltered sunny compound of the house. My little white
+bedroom was part of the "women's quarters" of old days, and with its
+bright fire at night and the sun by day it was a very comfortable place
+in which to perch.
+
+_Hamadan. 24 February._--Captain Williams and I left Kasvin at 8 a.m. on
+February 19th.
+
+I had always had an idea that Persia was in the tropics. _Where_ I got
+this notion I can't say. As soon as we left sheltered Kasvin and got out
+on to the plains the cold was as sharp as anything I have known. Snow
+lay deep on every side, and the icy wind nearly cut one in two. We
+stopped at a little "tschinaya" (tea-house), and ate some sandwiches
+which we carried with us. I also had a flask of Sandeman's port, given
+me last Christmas by Sir Ivor Maxwell. I think a glass of this just
+prevented me from being frozen solid. We drove on to the top of the
+pass, and arrived there about 3 o'clock. We found some Russian officers
+having an excellent lunch, and we shared ours and had some of theirs. We
+saw a lot of game in the snow--great coveys of fat partridges, hares by
+the score, a jackal, two wolves, and many birds. The hares were very
+odd, for after twilight fell, and we lit our lamps, they seemed quite
+paralysed by the glare, and used to sit down in front of the car.
+
+We passed a regiment of Cossacks, extended in a long line, and coming
+over the snow on their strong horses. We began to get near war once
+more, and to see transport and guns. General Baratoff wants us up here
+to remove wounded men when the advance begins towards Bagdad.
+
+The cold was really as bad as they make after the sun had sunk, and an
+icy mist enveloped the hills. We got within sight of the clay-built,
+flat Persian town of Hamadan about 10 p.m., but the car couldn't make
+any way on the awful roads, so I left Captain Williams at the barracks,
+and came on to the Red Cross hospital with two Russian officers, one a
+little the worse for drink.
+
+[Page Heading: ARRIVAL AT HAMADAN]
+
+With the genius for muddling which the Russians possess in a remarkable
+degree no preparations had been made for me. Rather an unpleasant Jew
+doctor came to the gateway with two nurses, and the officers began to
+flirt with the girls, and to pay them compliments. Some young
+Englishmen, one of whom was the British Consul, then appeared on the
+scene, so we began to get forward a little (although it seemed to me
+that we stood about in the snow for a terrible long time and I got quite
+frozen!). As it was then past midnight I felt I had had enough, so I
+made for the American missionary's house, which was pointed out to me,
+and he and his wife hopped out of bed, and, clad in curious grey
+dressing-gowns, they came downstairs and got me a cup of hot tea, which
+I had wanted badly for many hours. There was no fireplace in my room,
+and the other fires of the house were all out, but the old couple were
+kindness and goodness itself, and in the end I rolled myself up in my
+faithful plaid and slept at their house.
+
+The next day--Sunday, the 20th--Mr. Cowan, the young Consul, and a Mr.
+Lightfoot, came round and bore me off to the Consulate. On Monday I
+began to settle in, but even now I find it difficult to take my
+bearings, as we have been in a heavy mountain fog ever since I got here.
+There is a little English colony, the bank manager, Mr. MacMurray, and
+his wife--a capable, energetic woman, and an excellent working
+partner--Mr. McLean, a Scottish clerk, a Mr. McDowal, also a Scot, and a
+few other good folk; whom in Scotland one would reckon the farmer class,
+but none the worse for that, and never vulgar however humbly born.
+
+On Monday, the 21st, I called on the Russian element--Mme. Kirsanoff,
+General Baratoff, etc. They were all cordial, but nothing will convince
+me that Russians take this war seriously. They do the thing as
+comfortably as possible. "My country" is a word one never hears from
+their lips, and they indulge in masterly retreats too often for my
+liking. The fire of the French, the dogged pluck of the British, seem
+quite unknown to them. Literally, no one seems much interested. There is
+a good deal of fuss about a "forward movement" on this front; but I
+fancy that at Kermanshah and at ---- there will be very little
+resistance, and the troops there are only Persian gendarmerie. No doubt
+the most will be made of the Russian "victory," but compared with the
+western front, this is simply not war. I often think of the guns firing
+day and night, and the Taubes overhead, and the burning towns of
+Flanders, and then I find myself living a peaceful life, with an
+occasional glimpse of a regiment passing by.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_To Mrs. Charles Percival._
+
+BRITISH VICE-CONSULATE,
+HAMADAN.
+_23 February, 1916._
+
+MY DEAREST TABBY,
+
+We are buried in snow, and every road is a dug-out, with parapets of
+snow on either side. All journeys have to be made by road, and generally
+over mountain passes, where you may or may not get through the snow. One
+sees "breakdowns" all along the routes, and everywhere we go we have to
+take food and blankets in case of a camp out. I have had to buy a
+motor-car, and I got a very good one in Tiflis, but they are so scarce
+one has to pay a ransom for them. I am hoping it won't be quite smashed
+up, and that I shall be able to sell it for something when I leave.
+
+[Page Heading: THE DIFFICULTY OF TRANSPORT]
+
+Transport is the difficulty everywhere in these vast countries, with
+their persistent want of railways; so that the most necessary way of
+helping the wounded is to remove them as painlessly and expeditiously as
+possible, and this can only be done by motor-cars. Only one of Mrs.
+Wynne's ambulances has yet arrived, and in the end I came on here
+without her and Mr. Bevan. I was wanted to give a member of the Legation
+at Tehran a lift; and, still more important, I had to bring a soldier of
+consequence here. So long as one can offer a motor-car one is
+everybody's friend.
+
+Yesterday I was in request to go up to a pass and fetch two doctors, who
+had broken down in the snow. The wind is often a hurricane, and I am
+told there will be no warm weather till May. I look at a light silk
+dressing-gown and gauze underclothing, and wonder why it is that no one
+seems able to tell one what a climate will be like. I have warm things
+too, I am glad to say, although our luggage is now of the lightest, and
+is only what we can take in a car. The great thing is to be quite
+independent. No one would dream of bringing on heavy luggage or anything
+of that sort, except, of course, Legation people, who have their own
+transport and servants.
+
+On journeys one is kindly treated by the few Scottish people (they all
+seem to be Scots) scattered here and there. Everywhere I go I find the
+usual Scottish couple trying to "have things nice," and longing for
+mails from home. One woman was newly married, and had only one wish in
+life, and that was for acid drops. Poor soul, she wasn't well, and I
+mean to make her the best imitation I can and send them to her. They
+make their houses wonderfully comfortable; _but_ the difficulty of
+getting things! Another woman had written home for her child's frock in
+August, and got it by post on February 15th. Cases of things coming by
+boat or train take far longer, or never arrive at all.
+
+I shall be working with the Russian hospital here till our next move.
+There are 25 beds and 120 patients. Of course we are only waiting to
+push on further. The political situation is most interesting, but I must
+not write about it, of course. It is rather wonderful to have seen the
+war from so many quarters.
+
+The long wait for the cars was quite maddening, but I believe it did me
+good. I was just about "through." Now I am in a bachelor's little house,
+full of terrier dogs and tobacco smoke; and when I am not at the
+hospital I darn socks and play bridge.
+
+Now that really is all my news, I think. Empire is not made for nothing,
+and one sees some plucky lives in these out-of-the-way parts. I did not
+take a fancy to my host at one house where we stayed, and something made
+me think his wife was bullied and not very happy. A husband would have
+to be quite all right to compensate for exile, mud, and solitude. Always
+my feeling is that we want far more people--especially educated people,
+of course--to run the world; yet we continue to shoot down our best and
+noblest, and when shall we ever see their like again?
+
+Always, my dear,
+Your loving
+S. MACNAUGHTAN.
+
+I hope to get over to Tehran on my "transport service," and there I may
+find a mail. Some people called ----, living near Glasgow, had nine
+sons, eight of whom have been killed in the war. The ninth is delicate,
+and is doing Red Cross work.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_26 February._--On Tuesday a Jew doctor took my motor-car by fraud, so
+there had to be an enquiry, and I don't feel happy about it yet. With
+Russians _anything_ may happen. I have begun to suffer from my chillsome
+time getting here, and also my mouth and chin are very bad; so I have
+had to lie doggo, and see an ancient Persian doctor, who prescribed and
+talked of the mission-field at the same time.
+
+[Page Heading: MISSIONARIES AND RELIGION]
+
+I am struck by one thing, which is so naively expressed out here that it
+is very humorous, and that is the firm and formidable front which the
+best sort of men show towards religion. To all of them it means
+missionaries and pious talk, and to hear them speak one would imagine it
+was something between a dangerous disease and a disgrace. The best they
+can say of any clergyman (whom they loathe) or missionary, is, "He never
+tried the Gospel on with me." A religious young man means a sneak, and
+one who swears freely is generally rather a good fellow. When one lives
+in the wilds I am afraid that one often finds that this view is the
+right one, although it isn't very orthodox; but the pi-jaw which passes
+for religion seems deliberately calculated to disgust the natural man,
+who shows his contempt for the thing wholesomely as becomes him. He
+means to smoke, he means to have a whisky-peg when he can get it, and a
+game of cards when that is possible. His smoke is harmless, he seldom
+drinks too much, and he plays fair at all games, but when he finds that
+these harmless amusements preclude him from a place in the Kingdom of
+Heaven he naturally--if he has the spirit of a mouse--says, "All right.
+Leave me out. I am not on in this show."
+
+_27 February._--On Sunday one always thinks of home. I am rather
+inclined to wonder what my family imagine I am actually doing on the
+Persian front. No doubt some of my dear contemporaries saddle me with
+noble deeds, but I still seem unable to strike the "noble" tack. Even my
+work in hospital has been stopped by a telegram from the Red Cross,
+saying, "Don't let Miss Macnaughtan work yet." A typhus scare, I fancy.
+Such rot. But I am used now to hearing all the British out here murmur,
+"What _can_ be the good of this long delay?"
+
+[Page Heading: HOW NEWS TRAVELS IN PERSIA]
+
+I am still staying at the British Consulate. The Consul, Mr. Cowan, is a
+good fellow, and Mr. Lightfoot, his chum, is a real backwoodsman, full
+of histories of adventures, fights, "natives," and wars in many lands.
+He seems to me one of those headstrong, straight, fine fellows whom one
+only meets in the wilds. England doesn't agree with them; they haven't
+always a suit of evening clothes; but in a tight place one knows how
+cool he would be, and for yarns there is no one better. He tells one a
+lot about this country, and he knows the Arabs like brothers. Their
+system of communicating with each other is as puzzling to him as it is
+to everyone else. News travels faster among them than any messenger or
+post can take it. At Bagdad they heard from these strange people of the
+fall of Basra, which is 230 miles away, within 25 hours of its having
+been taken. Mr. Lightfoot says that even if he travels by car Arab news
+is always ahead of him, and where he arrives with news it is known
+already. Telegraphy is unknown in the places he speaks of, except in
+Bagdad, of course, and Persia owns exactly one line of railway, eight
+miles long, which leads to a tomb!
+
+More important than any man here are the dogs--Smudge, Jimmy, and the
+puppy. Most of the conversation is addressed to them. All of it is about
+them.
+
+_28 February. A day on the Persian front._--I wake early because it is
+always so cold at 4 a.m., and I generally boil up water for my hot-water
+bottle and go to sleep again. Then at 8 comes the usual Resident Sahib's
+servant, whom I have known in many countries and in many climes. He is
+always exactly alike, and the Empire depends upon him! He is thin, he is
+mysterious. He is faithful, and allows no one to rob his master but
+himself. He believes in the British. He worships British rule, and he
+speaks no language but his own, though he probably knows English
+perfectly, and listens to it at every meal without even the cock of an
+ear! He is never hurried, never surprised. What he thinks his private
+idol may know--no one else does. His master's boots--especially the
+brown sort--are part of his religion. He understands an Englishman, and
+is unmoved by his behaviour, whatever it may be. I have met him in
+India, in Kashmir, at Embassies, in Consulates, on steamers, and I have
+never known his conduct alter by a hair's breadth. He is piped in red,
+and let that explain him, as it explains much else that is British. Just
+a thin red line down the length of a trouser or round a coat, and the
+man thus adorned is part of the Empire.
+
+The man piped in red lights my fire every morning in Persia, and
+arranges my tub, and we breakfast very late because there is nothing to
+do on three days of the week--_i.e._, Friday, the Persian Sabbath,
+Saturday, the Jewish Sabbath, and Sunday, the Armenian Sunday. On these
+three days neither bazaars nor offices are open. Business is at a
+standstill. The Consulate smokes pipes, develops photographs, and reads
+old novels. On the four busy days we breakfast at 10 o'clock, and during
+the meal we learn what the dogs have done during the night--whether
+Jimmy has barked, or Smudge has lain on someone's bed, or the puppy
+"coolly put his head on my pillow."
+
+About 11 o'clock I, who am acting as wardrobe-mender to some very untidy
+clothes and socks, get to work, and the young men go to the town and
+appear at lunch-time. We hear what the local news is, and what Mr.
+MacMurray has said and Mr. McLean thought, and sometimes one of the
+people from the Russian hospital comes in. About 3 we put on goloshes
+and take exercise single-file on the pathways cut in the snow. At 5 the
+samovar appears and tea and cake, and we talk to the dogs and to each
+other. We dress for dinner, because that is our creed; and we burn a
+good deal of wood, and go to bed early.
+
+Travel really means movement. Otherwise, it is far better to stay at
+home. I am beginning to sympathise with the Americans who insist upon
+doing two cities a day. We got some papers to-day dated October 26th,
+and also a few letters of the same date.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Page Heading: UNFINISHED ARTICLE ON PERSIA]
+
+_Unfinished Article on Persia found among Miss Macnaughtan's papers._
+
+Persia is a difficult country to write about, for unless one colours the
+picture too highly to be recognisable, it is apt to be uninteresting
+even under the haze of the summer sun, while in wintertime the country
+disappears under a blanket of white snow. Of course, most of us thought
+that Persia was somewhere in the tropics, and it gives us a little shock
+when we find ourselves living in a temperature of 8 degrees below zero.
+The rays of the sun are popularly supposed to minimise the effect of
+this cold, and a fortnight's fog on the Persian highlands has still left
+one a believer in this phenomenon, for when the sun does shine, it does
+it handsomely, and, according to the inhabitants, it is only when
+strangers are here that it turns sulky. Be that as it may, the most
+loyal lover of Persia will have to admit that Persian mud is the deepest
+and blackest in the world, and that snow and mud in equal proportions to
+a depth of 8 inches make anything but agreeable travelling. Snow is
+indiscriminately shovelled down off the roofs of houses on to the heads
+of passers-by, and great holes in the road are accepted as the
+inevitable accompaniment to winter traffic.
+
+In the bazaars--narrow, and filled with small booths, where Manchester
+cotton is stacked upon shelves--the merchants sit huddled up on their
+counters, each with a cotton lahaf (quilt) over him, under which is a
+small brazier of ougol (charcoal). In this way he manages to remain in a
+thawed condition, while a pipe consoles him for his little trade and the
+horrible weather. Before him, in the narrow alleys of the bazaar,
+Persians walk with their umbrellas unfurled, and Russians have put the
+convenient bashluk (a sort of woollen hood) over their heads and ears.
+The Arab, in his long camel-skin coat, looks impervious to the weather,
+and women with veiled faces and long black cloaks pick their way through
+the mire. Throngs of donkeys, melancholy and overladen, their small feet
+sinking in the slush, may be with the foot-passengers. Some pariah dogs
+make a dirty patch in the snow, and a troop of Cossacks, their long
+cloaks spotted with huge snow-flakes, trot heavily through the narrow
+lanes.
+
+But it is not only, nor principally, of climate that one speaks in
+Persia at the present time.
+
+Persia has been stirring, if not with great events, at least with
+important ones, and at the risk of telling stale news, one must take a
+glance at the recent history of the country and its people. It is
+proverbial to say that Persia has been misgoverned for years. It is a
+country and the Persians are people who seem fated by circumstances and
+by temperament to endure ill-government. A ruler is either a despot or a
+knave, and frequently both. Any system of policy is liable to change at
+any moment. Property is held in the uneasy tenure of those who have
+stolen it, and a long string of names of rulers and politicians reveals
+the fact that most of them have made what they could for themselves by
+any means, and that perhaps, on the whole, violence has been less
+detrimental to the country than weakness.
+
+[Page Heading: THE YOUNG PERSIAN MOVEMENT]
+
+The worst of it is that no one seems particularly to want the
+Deliverer--the great and single-minded leader who might free and uplift
+the country. Persia does not crave the ideal ruler; he might make it
+very unpleasant for those who are content and rich in their own way. It
+is this thing, amongst many others, which helps to make the situation in
+Persia not only difficult but almost impossible to follow or describe,
+and it is, above all, the temperament of the Persians themselves which
+is the baffling thing in the way of Persian reform. Yet reform has been
+spoken of loudly, and again and again in the last few years, and the
+reformation is generally known as the Nationalist or Young Persian
+Movement. To follow this Movement through its various ramifications
+would require a clue as plain and as clear as a golden thread, and the
+best we can do in our present obscurity is to give a few of the leading
+features.
+
+The important and critical situation evident in Persia to-day owes its
+beginning to the disturbances in 1909, when the Constitutional Party
+came into power, forcibly, and with guns ready to train on Tehran, and
+when, almost without an effort, they obtained their rights, and lost
+them again with even less effort....
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_29 February._--The last day of a long month. The snow falls without
+ceasing, blotting out everything that there may be to be seen. To-day,
+for the first time, I realised that there are hills near. Mr. Lightfoot
+and I walked to the old stone lion which marks the gateway of
+Ekmadan--_i.e._, ancient Hamadan. I think the snow was rather thicker
+than usual to-day. Mr. Lightfoot and I went to Hamadan, plodding our way
+through little tramped-down paths, with snow three feet deep on either
+side. By way of being cheerful we went to see two tombs. One was an old,
+old place, where slept "the first great physician" who ever lived. In it
+a dervish kept watch in the bitter cold, and some slabs of dung kept a
+smouldering fire not burning but smoking. These dervishes have been
+carrying messages for Germans. Mysterious, like all religious men, they
+travel through the country and distribute their whispers and messages.
+The other tomb is called Queen Esther's, though why they should bury her
+at Ekmadan when she lived down at Shushan I don't know.
+
+We went to see Miss Montgomerie the other day. She is an American
+missionary, who has lived at Hamadan for thirty-three years. She has
+schools, etc., and she lives in the Armenian quarter, and devotes her
+life to her neighbours. Her language is entirely Biblical, and it sounds
+almost racy as she says it.
+
+There is nothing to record. Yesterday I cleaned out my room for
+something to do, and in the evening a smoky lamp laid it an inch thick
+in blacks. The pass here is quite blocked, and no one can come or go.
+The snow falls steadily in fine small flakes. My car has disappeared,
+with the chauffeur, at Kasvin. I hear of it being sent to Enzeli; but
+the whole thing is a mystery, and is making me very anxious. There are
+no answers to any of my telegrams, and I am completely in the dark.
+
+_3 March._--I think that to be on a frozen hill-top, with fever, some
+boils, three dogs, and a blizzard, is about as near wearing down one's
+spirits as anything I know.
+
+_5 March, Sunday._--In bed all day, with the ancient Persian in
+attendance.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Page Heading: THE RETURN OF THE PILGRIM]
+
+_The Return of the Pilgrim._
+
+This is not a story for Sunday afternoon. It is true for one thing, and
+Sunday afternoon stories are not, as a rule, true. They nearly all tell
+of the return of the Prodigals, but they leave out the return of the
+Pilgrims, and that is why this parable is not for Sunday afternoon. I
+write it because I never knew a true thing yet that was not of use to
+someone.
+
+Most of us leave home when we are grown up. The people who never grow up
+stop at home. The journey and the outward-bound vision are the signs of
+an active mind stirring wholesomely or unwholesomely as the case may be.
+The Prodigal is generally accounted one of those whose sane mind demands
+an outlet; but he lands in trouble, and gets hungry, and comes back
+penitent, as we have heard a thousand million times. The Far Country is
+always barren, the husks of swine are the only food to be had, and
+bankruptcy is inevitable.
+
+The story has been accepted by many generations of men as a picture of
+the world, with its temptations, its sins, its moral bankruptcy, and its
+illusionary and unsatisfying pleasures. Preachers have always been fond
+of allusions to the husks and swine, and the desperate hunger which
+there is nothing to satisfy in the Far Country. The story is true, God
+wot; it gives many a man a wholesome fright, and keeps him at home, and
+its note of forgiveness for a wasted life has proved the salvation of
+many Prodigals.
+
+But there is another journey, far more often undertaken by the young and
+by all those who needs must seek--the brave, the energetic, the good. It
+is towards a country distant yet ever near, and it lies much removed
+from the Far Country where swine feed. Its minarets stand up against a
+clear and cloudless sky, its radiancy shines from afar off. It is set on
+a hill, and the road thither is very steep and very long, but the
+Pilgrims start out bravely. They know the way! They carry torches! They
+have the Light within and without, and "watchwords" for every night, and
+songs for the morning. Some walk painfully, with bleeding feet, on the
+path that leads to the beautiful country, and some run joyously with
+eager feet. Whatever anyone likes to say, it is a much more crowded path
+than the old trail towards the pigsty. At the first step of the journey
+stand Faith and Hope and Charity, and beyond are more wondrous things by
+far--Glory, Praise, Vision, Sacrifice, Heroism, sublime Trust, the
+Need-to-Give, and the Love that runs to help. And some of the
+Pilgrims--most of them--get there.
+
+[Page Heading: DISAPPOINTMENT]
+
+But there is a little stream of Pilgrims sometimes to be met with going
+the other way. They are returning, like the Prodigal, but there is no
+one to welcome them. Some are very tragic figures, and for them the sun
+is for ever obscured. But there are others--quite plain, sober men and
+women, some humorists, and some sages. They have honestly sought the
+Country, and they, too, have unfurled banners and marched on; but they
+have met with many things on the road which do not match the watchwords,
+and they have heard many wonderful things which, truthfully considered,
+do not always appear to them to be facts. They have called Poverty
+beautiful, and they have found it very ugly; and they have called Money
+naught, and they have found it to be Power. They have found Sacrifice
+accepted, and then claimed by the selfish and mean, and even Love has
+not been all that was expected. The Pilgrims return. Their poor tummies,
+too, are empty, but no calf is killed for them, there is no feasting
+and no joy. They stay at home, but neither Elder Son nor Prodigal has
+any use for them. In the end they turn out the light and go to sleep,
+regretting--if they have any humour--their many virtues, which for so
+long prevented them enjoying the pleasant things of life.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_March._--I lie in bed all day up here amongst these horrible snows. The
+engineer comes in sometimes and makes me a cup of Benger's Food. For the
+rest, I lean up on my elbow when I can, and cook some little
+thing--Bovril or hot milk--on my Etna stove. Then I am too tired to eat
+it, and the sickness begins all over again. Oh, if I could leave this
+place! If only someone would send back my car, which has been taken
+away, or if I could hear where Mrs. Wynne and Mr. Bevan are! But no, the
+door of this odious place is locked, and the key is thrown away.
+
+I have lost count of time. I just wait from day to day, hoping someone
+will come and take me away, though I am now getting so weak I don't
+suppose I can travel.
+
+One wonders whether there can be a Providence in all this
+disappointment. I think not. I just made a great mistake coming out
+here, and I have suffered for it. Ye gods, what a winter it has
+been--disillusioning, dull, hideously and achingly disappointing!
+
+[Page Heading: MEMORIES OF HOME]
+
+It is too odd to think that until the war came I was the happiest woman
+in the world. It is too funny to think of my house in London, which
+people say is the only "salon"--a small "salon," indeed! But I can
+hardly believe now in my crowds of friends, my devoted servants, my
+pleasant work, the daily budget of letters and invitations, and the
+press notices in their pink slips. Then the big lectures and the
+applause--the shouts when I come in. The joy, almost the intoxication of
+life, has been mine.
+
+Of course, I ought to have turned back at Petrograd! But I thought all
+my work was before me, and in Russia one can't go about alone without
+knowing the way and the language of the people. Permits are difficult,
+nothing is possible unless one is attached to a body. And now I have
+reached the end--_Persia! And there is no earthly use for us, and there
+are no roads._
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+THE LAST JOURNEY
+
+
+My car turned up at Hamadan on March 9th, and on the 13th I said
+good-bye to my friends at the Consulate, and left the place with a
+Tartar prince, who cleared his throat from the bottom of his soul, and
+spat luxuriously all the time. The mud was beyond anything that one
+could imagine. There was a sea of it everywhere, and men waded knee-deep
+in slush. My poor car floundered bravely and bumped heavily, till at
+last it could move no more. Two wheels were sunk far past the hubs, and
+the step of the car was under mud.
+
+The Tartar prince hailed a horse from some men and flung himself across
+it, and then rode off through the thick sea of mud to find help to move
+the car. His methods were simple. He came up behind men, and clouted
+them over the head, or beat them with a stick, and drove them in front
+of him. Sometimes he took out a revolver and fired over the men's heads,
+making them jump; but nothing makes them really work. We pushed on for a
+mile or two, and then stuck again. This time there were no men near, and
+the prince walked on to collect some soldiers at the next station. It
+was a wicked, blowy day, and I crept into a wrecked "camion" and
+sheltered there, and ate some lunch and slept a little. I wasn't feeling
+a bit well.
+
+That night we only made twenty miles, and then we put up at a little
+rest-house, where the woman had ten children. They all had colds, and
+coughed all the time. She promised supper at 8 o'clock, but kept us
+waiting till 10 p.m., and then a terrible repast of batter appeared in a
+big tin dish, and everyone except me ate it, and everyone drank my wine.
+Then six children and their parents lay in one tiny room, and I and a
+nurse occupied the hot supper-room, and thus we lay until the cold
+morning came, and I felt very ill.
+
+So the day began, and it did not improve. I was sick all the time until
+I could neither think nor see. The poor prince could do nothing, of
+course.
+
+[Page Heading: ILLNESS AT KASVIN]
+
+At last we came to a rest-house, and I felt I could go no further. I was
+quite unconscious for a time. Then they told me it was only two hours to
+Kasvin, and somehow they got me on board the motor-car, and the horrible
+journey began again. Every time the car bumped I was sick. Of course we
+punctured a tyre, which delayed us, and when we got into Kasvin it was 9
+o'clock. The Tartar lifted me out of the car, and I had been told that I
+might put up at a room belonging to Dr. Smitkin, but where it was I had
+no idea, and I knew there would be no one there. So I plucked up courage
+to go to the only English people in the place--the Goodwins, with whom I
+had stayed on my way up--and ask for a bed. This I did, and they let me
+spread my camp-bed in his little sitting-room. I was ill indeed, and
+aching in every bone.
+
+The next day I had to go to Smitkin's room. It was an absolutely bare
+apartment, but someone spread my bed for me, and there were some Red
+Cross nurses who all offered to do things. The one thing I wanted was
+food, and this they could only get at the soldiers' mess two miles away.
+So all I had was one tin of sweet Swiss milk. The day after this I
+decided I must quit, whatever happened, and get to Tehran, where there
+are hotels. After one night there I was taken to a hospital. I was alone
+in Persia, in a Russian hospital, where few people even spoke French!
+
+On March 19th an English doctor rescued me. He heard I was ill, and came
+to see me, and took me off to be with his wife at his own home at the
+Legation. I shall never forget it as long as I live--the blessed change
+from dirty glasses and tin basins and a rocky bed! What does illness
+matter with a pretty room, and kindness showered on one, and everything
+clean and fragrant? I have a little sitting-room, where my meals are
+served, and I have a fire, a bath, and a garden to sit in.
+
+God bless these good people!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Page Heading: A LETTER FROM TEHRAN]
+
+_To Lady Clementine Waring._
+
+BRITISH LEGATION, TEHRAN,
+_22 March._
+
+DARLING CLEMMIE,
+
+I am coming home, having fallen sick. Do you know, I was thinking about
+you so much the other night, for you told me that if ever I was really
+"down and out" you would know. So I wondered if, about a week ago, you
+saw a poor small person (who has shrunk to about half her size!) in an
+empty room, feeling worth nothing at all, and getting nothing to eat and
+no attention! Persia isn't the country to be ill in. I was taken to the
+Russian hospital--which is an experience I don't want to repeat!--but
+now I am in the hands of the Legation doctor, and he is going to nurse
+me till I am well enough to go home.
+
+There are no railways in this country, except one of eight miles to a
+tomb! Hence we all have to flounder about on awful roads in motor-cars,
+which break down and have to be dug out, and always collapse at the
+wrong moment, so we have to stay out all night.
+
+You thought Persia was in the tropics? So did I! I have been in deep
+snow all the time till I came here.
+
+I think the campaign here is nearly over. It might have been a lot
+bigger, for the Germans were bribing like mad, but you can't make a
+Persian wake up.
+
+Ever, dear Clemmie,
+Your loving
+S. MACNAUGHTAN.
+
+So nice to know you think of me, as I know you do.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_26 March._--I am getting stronger, and the days are bright. As a great
+treat I have been allowed to go to church this morning, the first I have
+been to since Petrograd.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_To Miss Julia Keays-Young._
+
+BRITISH LEGATION, TEHRAN.
+_1 April._
+
+DARLING JENNY,
+
+In case you want to make plans about leave, etc., will you come and stop
+with me when first I get home, say about the 5th or 6th May, I can't say
+to a day? It will be nice to see you all and have a holiday, and then I
+hope to come out to Russia again. Did I tell you I have been ill, but am
+now being nursed by a delightful English doctor and his wife, and
+getting the most ideal attention, and medicines changed at every change
+in the health of the patient.
+
+I've missed everything here. I was to be presented to the Shah, etc.,
+etc., and to have gone to the reception on his birthday. All the time
+I've lain in bed or in the garden, but as I haven't felt up to anything
+else I haven't fashed, and the Shah must do wanting me for the present.
+
+The flowers here are just like England, primroses and violets and Lent
+lilies, but I'm sure the trees are further out at home.
+
+Your most loving
+AUNT SALLY.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_To Mrs. Keays-Young._
+
+BRITISH LEGATION, TEHRAN,
+_8 April._
+
+DEAREST BABY,
+
+I don't think I'll get home till quite the end of April, as I am not
+supposed to be strong enough to travel yet. My journey begins with a
+motor drive of 300 miles over fearful roads and a chain of mountains
+always under snow. Then I have to cross the lumpy Caspian Sea, and I
+shall rest at Baku two nights before beginning the four days journey to
+Petrograd. After that the fun really begins, as one always loses all
+one's luggage in Finland, and one finishes up with the North Sea. What
+do you think of that, my cat?
+
+[Page Heading: CONVALESCENCE]
+
+Dr. Neligan is still looking after me quite splendidly, and I never
+drank so much medicine in my life. No fees or money can repay the dear
+man.
+
+Tehran is _the_ most primitive place! You can't, for instance, get one
+scrap of flannel, and if a bit of bacon comes into the town there is a
+stampede for it. People get their wine from England in two-bottle
+parcels.
+
+Yours as ever,
+S.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Tehran. April._--The days pass peacefully and even quickly, which is
+odd, for they are singularly idle. I get up about 11 a.m., and am pretty
+tired when dressing is finished. Then I sit in the garden and have my
+lunch there, and after lunch I lie down for an hour. Presently tea
+comes; I watch the Neligans start for their ride, and already I wonder
+if I was ever strong and rode!
+
+It is such an odd jump I have taken. At home I drifted on, never feeling
+older, hardly counting birthdays--always brisk, and getting through a
+heap of work--beginning my day early and ending it late. And now there
+is a great gulf dividing me from youth and old times, and it is filled
+with dead people whom I can't forget.
+
+In the matter of dying one doesn't interfere with Providence, but it
+seems to me that _now_ would be rather an appropriate time to depart. I
+wish I could give my life for some boy who would like to live very much,
+and to whom all things are joyous. But alas! one can't swop lives like
+this--at least, I don't see the chance of doing so.
+
+I should like to have "left the party"--quitted the feast of life--when
+all was gay and amusing. I should have been sorry to come away, but it
+would have been far better than being left till all the lights are out.
+I could have said truly to the Giver of the feast, "Thanks for an
+excellent time." But now so many of the guests have left, and the fires
+are going out, and I am tired.
+
+END OF THE DIARY.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The rest of the story is soon told.
+
+Miss Macnaughtan left Tehran about the middle of April. The Persian hot
+weather was approaching, and it would have been impossible for her to
+travel any later in the season. The long journey seemed a sufficiently
+hazardous undertaking for a person in her weak state of health, but in
+Dr. Neligan's opinion she would have run an even greater risk by
+remaining in Persia during the hot weather.
+
+[Page Heading: STARTING FOR HOME]
+
+Dr. Neligan's goodness and kindness to Miss Macnaughtan will always be
+remembered by her family, and he seems to have taken an enormous amount
+of trouble to make arrangements for her journey home. He found an escort
+for her in the shape of an English missionary who was going to
+Petrograd, and gave her a pass which enabled her to travel as
+expeditiously as possible. The authorities were not allowed to delay or
+hinder her. She was much too ill to stop for anything, and drove night
+and day--even through a cholera village--to the shores of the Caspian
+Sea.
+
+We know very few details concerning the journey home, and I think my
+aunt herself did not remember much about it. One can hardly bear to
+think of the suffering it caused her. A few incidents stood out in her
+memory from the indeterminate recollection of pain and discomfort in
+which most of the expedition was mercifully veiled, and we learnt them
+after she returned.
+
+There was the occasion when she reached the port on the Caspian Sea one
+hour after the English boat had sailed. She called it the "English"
+boat, but whether it could have belonged to an English company, or was
+merely the usual boat run in connection with the train service to
+England, I do not know. A "Russian" vessel was due to leave in a couple
+of hours' time, but for some reason Miss Macnaughtan was obliged to walk
+three-quarters of a mile to get permission to go by it. We can never
+forget her piteous description of how she staggered and crawled to the
+office and back, so ill that only her iron strength of will could force
+her tired body to accomplish the distance. She obtained the necessary
+sanction, and started forth once more upon her way.
+
+She stayed for a week at the British Embassy in Petrograd, where her
+escort was obliged to leave her, so the rest of the journey was
+undertaken alone.
+
+We know nothing of how she got to Helsingfors, but I believe it was at
+that place that she had to walk some considerable distance over a frozen
+lake to reach the ship. She was hobbling along, leaning heavily on two
+sticks, and just as she stumbled and almost fell, a young Englishman
+came up and offered her his arm.
+
+In an old diary, written years before in the Argentine, during a time
+when Miss Macnaughtan was faced with what seemed overwhelming
+difficulties, and when she had in her charge a very sick man, a kind
+stranger came to the rescue. Her diary entry for that day is one of
+heartfelt gratitude, and ends with the words: "God always sends
+someone."
+
+Certainly at Helsingfors some Protecting Power sent help in a big
+extremity, and this young fellow--Mr. Seymour--devoted himself to her
+for the rest of the journey in a marvellously unselfish manner. He could
+not have been kinder to her if she had been his mother, and he actually
+altered all his plans on arriving in England, and brought her to the
+very door of her house in Norfolk Street. Without his help I sometimes
+wonder whether my aunt would have succeeded in reaching home, and her
+own gratitude to him knew no bounds. She used to say that in her
+experience if people were in a difficulty and wanted help they ought to
+go to a young man for it. She said that young men were the kindest
+members of the human race.
+
+[Page Heading: ARRIVAL IN ENGLAND]
+
+It was on the 8th of May that Miss Macnaughtan reached home, and her
+travels were over for good and all. One is only thankful that the last
+weeks of her life were not spent in a foreign land but among her own
+people, surrounded by all the care and comfort that love could supply.
+Two of her sisters were with her always, and her house was thronged with
+visitors, who had to wait their turn of a few minutes by her bedside,
+which, alas! were all that her strength allowed.
+
+She was nursed night and day by her devoted maid, Mary King, as she did
+not wish to have a professional nurse; but no skill or care could save
+her. The seeds of her illness had probably been sown some years before,
+during a shooting trip in Kashmir, and the hard work and strain of the
+first year of the war had weakened her powers of resistance. But it was
+Russia that killed her.
+
+Before she went there many of her friends urged her to give up the
+expedition. Her maid had a premonition that the enterprise would end in
+disaster, and had begged her mistress to stay at home.
+
+"I feel sure you will never return alive ma'am," she had urged, and Miss
+Macnaughtan's first words to her old servant on her return were: "You
+were right, Mary. Russia has killed me."
+
+Miss Macnaughtan rallied a little in June, and was occasionally carried
+down to her library for a few hours in the afternoon, but even that
+amount of exertion was too much for her. For the last weeks of her life
+she never left her room.
+
+Surely there never was a sweeter or more adorable invalid! I can see her
+now, propped up on pillows in a room filled with masses of most
+exquisite flowers. She always had things dainty and fragrant about her,
+and one had a vision of pale blue ribbons, and soft laces, and lovely
+flowers, and then one forgot everything else as one looked at the dear
+face framed in such soft grey hair. She looked so fragile that one
+fancied she might be wafted away by a summer breeze, and I have never
+seen anyone so pale. There was not a tinge of colour in face or hands,
+and one kissed her gently for fear that even a caress might be too much
+for her waning strength.
+
+Her patience never failed. She never grumbled or made complaint, and
+even in the smallest things her interest and sympathy were as fresh as
+ever. A new dress worn by one of her sisters was a pleasure, and she
+would plan it, and suggest and admire.
+
+It was a supreme joy to Miss Macnaughtan to hear, some time in June,
+that she had received the honour of being chosen to be a Lady of Grace
+of the Order of St. John of Jerusalem. Any recognition of her good work
+was an unfailing source of gratification to her sensitive nature,
+sensitive alike to praise or blame.
+
+She was so wonderfully strong in her mind and will that it seemed
+impossible in those long June days to believe that she had such a little
+time to live. She managed all her own business affairs, personally
+dictated or wrote answers to her correspondence, and was full of schemes
+for the redecoration of her house and of plans for the future.
+
+I have only been able to procure three of my aunt's letters written
+after her return to England. They were addressed to her eldest sister,
+Mrs. ffolliott. I insert them here:
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Page Heading: MISS MACNAUGHTAN'S LAST LETTERS]
+
+1, NORFOLK STREET,
+PARK LANE, W.
+_Tuesday._
+
+MY DEAREST OLD POOT,
+
+How good of you to write. I was awfully pleased to see a letter from
+you. I have been a fearful crock since I got home, and I have to lie in
+bed for six weeks and live on milk diet for eight weeks. The illness is
+of a tropical nature, and one of the symptoms is that one can't eat, so
+one gets fearfully thin. I am something over six stone now, but I was
+very much less.
+
+We were right up on the Persian front, and I went on to Tehran. One saw
+some most interesting phases of the war, and met all the distinguished
+Generals and such-like people.
+
+The notice you sent me of my little book is charming.
+
+Your loving
+S. B .M.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+1, NORFOLK STREET,
+PARK LANE, W.,
+_9 June._
+
+DARLING POOT,
+
+I must thank you myself for the lovely flowers and your kind letters. I
+am sure that people's good wishes and prayers do one good. I so nearly
+died!
+
+Your loving
+S. M.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_17th June_
+
+Still getting on pretty well, but it is slow work. Baby and Julia both
+in town, so they are constantly here. I am to get up for a little bit
+to-morrow.
+
+Kindest love. It _was_ naughty of you to send more flowers.
+
+As ever fondly,
+SARAH.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As the hot weather advanced it was hoped to move Miss Macnaughtan to the
+country. Her friends showered invitations on "dear Sally" to come and
+convalesce with them, but the plans fell through. It became increasingly
+clear that the traveller was about to embark on that last journey from
+which there is no return, and, indeed, towards the end her sufferings
+were so great that those who loved her best could only pray that she
+might not have long to wait. She passed away in the afternoon of Monday,
+July 24th, 1916.
+
+A few days later the body of Sarah Broom Macnaughtan was laid to rest in
+the plot of ground reserved for her kinsfolk in the churchyard at Chart
+Sutton, in Kent. It is very quiet there up on the hill, the great Weald
+stretches away to the south, and fruit-trees surround the Hallowed Acre.
+But even as they laid earth to earth and dust to dust in this peaceful
+spot the booming of the guns in Flanders broke the quiet of the sunny
+afternoon, and reminded the little funeral party that they were indeed
+burying one whose life had been sacrificed in the Great War.
+
+[Page Heading: THE GRAVE IN CHART SUTTON]
+
+Surely those who pass through the old churchyard will pause by the
+grave, with its beautiful grey cross, and the children growing up in the
+parish will come there sometimes, and will read and remember the simple
+inscription on it:
+
+ "In the Great War, by Word and Deed, at Home and Abroad,
+ She served her Country even unto Death."
+
+And if any ghosts hover round the little place, they will be the ghosts
+of a purity, a kindness, and of a love for humanity which are not often
+met with in this workaday world.
+
+
+
+
+CONCLUSION
+
+
+Perhaps a review of her war work by an onlooker, and a slight sketch of
+Miss Macnaughtan's character, may form an appropriate conclusion to this
+book.
+
+I stayed with my aunt for one night, on August 7th, 1914. One may be
+pardoned for saying that during the previous three days one had scarcely
+begun to realise the war, but I was recalled by telegram from
+Northamptonshire to the headquarters of my Voluntary Aid Detachment in
+Kent, and spent a night in town en route, to get uniform, etc. Certainly
+at my aunt's house my eyes were opened to a little of what lay before
+us. She was on fire with patriotism and a burning wish to help her
+country, and I immediately caught some of her enthusiasm.
+
+Every hour we rushed out to buy papers, every minute seemed consecrated
+to preparation for what we could do. There were uniforms to buy, notes
+of Red Cross lectures to "rub up," and, in my aunt's case, she was busy
+offering her services in every direction in which they could be of use.
+
+[Page Heading: VOLUNTARY RATIONING]
+
+Miss Macnaughtan must surely have been one of the first people to begin
+voluntary rationing. We had the simplest possible meals during my visit,
+and although she was proud of her housekeeping, and usually gave one
+rather perfect food, on this occasion she said how impossible it was for
+her to indulge in anything but necessaries, when our soldiers would so
+soon have to endure hardships of every kind. She said that we ought to
+be particularly careful to eat very little meat, because there would
+certainly be a shortage of it later on.
+
+I recollect that there was some hitch about my departure from Norfolk
+Street on August 8th. It did not seem clear whether my Voluntary Aid
+Detachment was going to provide billets for all recalled members, and I
+remember my aunt's absolute scorn of difficulties at such a time.
+
+"Of course, go straight to Kent and obey orders," she cried. "If you
+can't get a bed, come back here; but at least go and see what you can
+do."
+
+That was typical of Miss Macnaughtan. Difficulties did not exist for
+her. When quite a young girl she made up her mind that no lack of money,
+time, or strength should ever prevent her doing anything she wanted to
+do. It certainly never prevented her doing anything she felt she _ought_
+to do.
+
+The war provided her with a supreme opportunity for service, and she did
+not fail to take advantage of it. Of her work in Belgium, especially at
+the soup-kitchen, I believe it is impossible to say too much. According
+to _The Times_, "The lady with the soup was everything to thousands of
+stricken men, who would otherwise have gone on their way fasting."
+
+Among individual cases, too, there were many men who benefited by some
+special care bestowed on them by her. There was one wounded Belgian to
+whom my aunt gave my address before she left for Russia that he might
+have someone with whom he might correspond. I used to hear from him
+regularly, and every letter breathed gratitude to "la dame ecossaise."
+He said she had saved his life.
+
+Miss Macnaughtan's lectures to munition-workers were, perhaps, the best
+work that she did during the war. She was a charming speaker, and I
+never heard one who got more quickly into touch with an audience. As I
+saw it expressed in one of the papers "Stiffness and depression vanished
+from any company when she took the platform." Her enunciation was
+extraordinarily distinct, and she had an arresting delivery which
+compelled attention from the first word to the last.
+
+She never minced the truth about the war, but showed people at home how
+far removed it was from being a "merry picnic."
+
+"They say recruiting will stop if people know what is going on at the
+Front," she used to tell them. "I am a woman, but I know what I would do
+if I were a man when I heard of these things. _I would do my durndest._"
+
+All through her life the idea of personal service appealed to Miss
+Macnaughtan. She never sent a message of sympathy or a gift of help
+unless it was quite impossible to go herself to the sufferer.
+
+She was only a girl when she heard of what proved to be the fatal
+accident to her eldest brother in the Argentine. She went to him by the
+next ship, alone, save for the escort of his old yacht's skipper, and a
+journey to the Argentine in those days was a big undertaking for a
+delicate young girl. On another occasion she was in Switzerland when
+she heard of the death, in Northamptonshire, of a little niece. She left
+for England the same day, to go and offer her sympathy, and try to
+comfort the child's mother.
+
+"When I hear of trouble I always go at once," she used to say.
+
+I have known her drive in her brougham to the most horrible slum in the
+East End to see what she could do for a woman who had begged from her in
+the street--yes, and go there again and again until she had done all
+that was possible to help the sad case.
+
+[Page Heading: ZEAL TO HELP OTHERS]
+
+It was this burning zeal to help which sent her to Belgium and carried
+her through the long dark winter there, and it was, perhaps, the same
+feeling which obscured her judgment when her expedition to Russia was
+contemplated. She was a delicate woman, and there did not seem to be
+much scope for her services in Russia. She was not a qualified nurse,
+and the distance from home, and the handicap of her ignorance of the
+Russian language, would probably have prevented her organising anything
+like comforts for the soldiers there as she had done in Belgium. To
+those of us who loved her the very uselessness of her efforts in Russia
+adds to the poignancy of the tragedy of the death which resulted from
+them.
+
+The old question arises: "To what purpose is this waste?" And the old
+answer comes still to teach us the underlying meaning and beauty of what
+seems to be unnecessary sacrifice: "She hath done what she could."
+
+Indeed, that epitaph might fitly describe Miss Macnaughtan's war work.
+She grudged nothing, she gave her strength, her money, her very life.
+The precious ointment was poured out in the service of her King and
+Country and for the Master she served so faithfully.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I have been looking through some notices which appeared in the press
+after Miss Macnaughtan's death. Some of them allude to her wit, her
+energy and vivacity, the humour which was "without a touch of cynicism";
+others, to her inexhaustible spirit, her geniality, and the "powers of
+sarcasm, which she used with strong reserve." Others, again, see through
+to the faith and philosophy which lay behind her humour, "Scottish in
+its penetrating tenderness."
+
+In my opinion my aunt's strongest characteristic was a dazzling purity
+of soul, mind, and body. She was a person whose very presence lifted the
+tone of the conversation. It was impossible to think of telling her a
+nasty story, a "double entendre" fell flat when she was there. She was
+the least priggish person in the world, but no one who knew her could
+doubt for an instant her transparent goodness. I have read every word of
+her diary; there is not in it the record of an ugly thought, or of one
+action that would not bear the full light of day. About her books she
+used to say that she had tried never to publish one word which her
+father would not like her to have written.
+
+She had a tremendous capacity for affection, and when she once loved
+she loved most faithfully. Her devotion to her father and to her eldest
+brother influenced her whole life, and it would have been impossible for
+those she loved to make too heavy claims on her kindness.
+
+[Page Heading: SOCIAL CHARM]
+
+Miss Macnaughtan had great social charm. She was friendly and easy to
+know, and she had a wonderful power of finding out the interesting side
+of people and of seeing their good points. Her popularity was
+extraordinary, although hers was too strong a personality to command
+universal affection. Among her friends were people of the most varied
+dispositions and circumstances. Distinction of birth, position, or
+intellect appealed to her, and she was always glad to meet a celebrity,
+but distinction was no passport to her favour unless it was accompanied
+by character. To her poorer and humbler friends she was kindness itself,
+and she was extraordinarily staunch in her friendships. Nothing would
+make her "drop" a person with whom she had once been intimate.
+
+In attempting to give a character-sketch of a person whose nature was as
+complex as Miss Macnaughtan's, one admits defeat from the start. She had
+so many interests, so many sides to her character, that it seems
+impossible to present them all fairly. Her love of music, literature,
+and art was coupled with an enthusiasm for sport, big-game shooting,
+riding, travel, and adventure of every kind. She was an ambitious woman,
+and a brilliantly clever one, and her clearness of perception and
+wonderful intuition gave her a quick grasp of a subject or idea. She had
+a thirst for knowledge which made learning easy, but hers was the brain
+of the poet and philosopher, not of the mathematician. Accuracy of
+thought or information was often lacking. Her imagination led the way,
+and left her with a picture of a situation or a subject, but she was
+very vague about facts and statistics. As a woman of business she was
+shrewd, with all a Scotchwoman's power of looking at both sides of a
+bawbee before she spent it, but she was also extraordinarily generous in
+a very simple and unostentatious way, and her hospitality was boundless.
+
+Miss Macnaughtan was almost hypersensitive to criticism. Her intense
+desire to do right and to serve her fellow-beings animated her whole
+life, and it seemed to her rather hard to be found fault with. Indeed,
+she had not many faults, and the defects of her character were mostly
+temperamental.
+
+As a girl she was unpunctual, and subject to fits of indecision when it
+seemed impossible for her to make up her mind one way or the other. The
+inconvenience caused by her frequent changes of times and plans was
+probably not realised by her. Later in life, when she lived so much
+alone, she did not always see that difficulties which appeared nothing
+to her might be almost insuperable to other people, and that in houses
+where there are several members of a family to be considered, no
+individual can be quite as free to carry out his own plans as a person
+who is independent of family ties. But when one remembered how
+splendidly she always responded to any claim on her own kindness one
+forgave her for being a little exacting.
+
+Perhaps Miss Macnaughtan's greatest handicap in life was her immense
+capacity for suffering--suffering poignantly, unbearably, not only for
+her own sorrows but for the sorrows of others. Only those who appealed
+to her in trouble knew the depth of her sympathy, and how absolutely she
+shared the burden of the grief. But perhaps they did not always know how
+she agonised over their misfortunes, and at what price her sympathy was
+given.
+
+[Page Heading: RELIGIOUS VIEWS]
+
+My aunt was a passionately religious woman. Her faith was the
+inspiration of her whole life, and it is safe to say that from the
+smallest to the greatest things there was never a struggle between
+conscience and inclination in which conscience was not victorious. As
+she grew older, I fancy that she became a less orthodox member of the
+Church of England, to which she belonged, but her love for Christ and
+for His people never wavered.
+
+As each Sunday came round during her last illness, when she could not go
+to church, she used to say to a very dear sister, "Now, J., we must have
+our little service." Then the bedroom door was left ajar, and her sister
+would go down to the drawing-room and play the simple hymns they had
+sung together in childhood. And on the last Sunday, the day before her
+death, when the invalid lay in a stupor and seemed scarcely conscious,
+that same dear sister played the old hymns once more, and as the sound
+floated up to the room above those who watched there saw a gleam of
+pleasure on the dying woman's face.
+
+My aunt had no fear of death. There had been a time, some weeks before
+the end, when her feet had wandered very close to the waters which
+divide us from the unknown shore, and she told her sisters afterwards
+that she had almost seemed to see over to the "other side," and that so
+many of those she loved were waiting for her, and saying, "Come over to
+us, Sally. We are all here to welcome you."
+
+Perhaps just at the last, when her body had grown weak, the journey
+seemed rather far, and she clung to earth more closely, but such
+weakness was purely physical. The brave spirit was ready to go, and as
+the music of her favourite hymn pierced her consciousness when she lay
+dying, so surely the words summed up all that she felt or wished to say,
+and formed her last prayer in death, as they had been her constant
+prayer in life:
+
+ "In death's dark vale I fear no ill
+ With Thee, dear Lord, beside me;
+ Thy rod and staff my comfort still,
+ Thy Cross before to guide me.
+
+ "And so through all the length of days
+ Thy goodness faileth never;
+ Good Shepherd, may I sing Thy praise
+ Within Thy house for ever."
+
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+
+Aberdare, 164
+
+Aberystwyth, 164
+
+Adinkerke, 116;
+ soup-kitchen, 82, 86, 157;
+ bombardment, 139
+
+Airships, German, over Antwerp, 5, 9;
+ Dunkirk, 81;
+ Furnes, 80;
+ St. Malo-les-Bains, 55;
+ destroyed, 27, 194
+
+Andrews, John, 171
+
+Antwerp, 1;
+ Hospital, 2;
+ arrival of wounded, 2, 3, 5, 12;
+ siege, 3-21;
+ reinforcements, 12, 16;
+ shelled, 18-21;
+ retreat of the Marines, 28
+
+Arabs, rapid system of communication, 247
+
+Ararat, Mount, 230
+
+Armenians, massacres of, 209, 214, 217, 228;
+ refugees, 227;
+ character, 234
+
+Artvin, 211
+
+Asquith, Raymond, 183
+
+Australians, treatment of the Turks, 177
+
+
+Bagdad, 247
+
+Bagot, Lady, 100;
+ at St. Malo-les-Bains, 49, 55;
+ hospital, 104, 113, 114;
+ arrival of wounded, 144;
+ entertains them, 147
+
+Bailey, Sister, 22, 24
+
+Baku, 233, 237
+
+Baratoff, General, 240, 241
+
+Bark, M., Russian Finance Minister, 195
+
+Barrow-in-Furness, lectures by Miss Macnaughtan, 162
+
+Bartlett, Ashmead, war correspondent, at Furnes, 35
+
+Batoum, 208, 213
+
+"Beau Garde," farm, 140
+
+Bedford, Adeline, Duchess of, 59
+
+Belgians, King of the, 141
+
+Belgians, Queen of the, visits the Hospital at Furnes, 38
+
+Benjamin, Miss, 2, 20
+
+Bernoff, General, 208, 209
+
+_Bessheim_, the, 179
+
+Bevan, Mr., at Furnes, 80, 83;
+ Calais, 86;
+ Nieuport, 151;
+ Christiania, 179;
+ Stockholm, 180;
+ Baku, 231, 233
+
+Bible, the, a Universal Human Document, 101
+
+Boulderoff, M., 216
+
+Boulogne, 55;
+ wounded at, 114
+
+Bray, Mrs., 192
+
+British man-of-war, 125
+
+Brockville, Mr., at Dixmude, 35
+
+Brooke, Victor, 178
+
+Buchanan, Sir George, Ambassador at Petrograd, 184
+
+Buchanan, Lady Georgina, at Petrograd, 184;
+ soup-kitchen, 192;
+ work-party, 196
+
+Bute Docks, 171
+
+
+Cabour hospital, 151
+
+Calais, 83, 86
+
+Cardiff, lecture by Miss Macnaughtan, 164, 167-171
+
+Cardiff Castle, 163
+
+Carlile, Mr., 120
+
+Caspian Sea, 265
+
+Caucasia, 210
+
+Cavell, Miss, execution, 186
+
+Cazalet, Mr., 207
+
+Chart Sutton, churchyard at, 270
+
+Chenies, 160
+
+Children wounded, 116, 118
+
+Chimay, Countess de Caraman, dame d'honneur of the Queen of the
+ Belgians, 139
+
+Chisholm, Miss, 26, 63
+
+Christiania, 179
+
+Churchill, Winston, at Antwerp, 12, 16;
+ Dunkirk, 44
+
+Clarry, Mr. G., President of the Cardiff Chamber of Trade, 170
+
+Clegg, Mr., 105, 143
+
+Clitheroe, Mrs., 86, 93
+
+Close, Miss Etta, barge, 97, 126, 135;
+ work for the refugees, 140
+
+Cocks, W., 171
+
+Constant, Count Stanislas, 213
+
+Cooper, Mr., 115
+
+Courage, definition of, 24
+
+Coventry, Mr., 112
+
+Cowan{12}, Mr., Consul at Hamadan, 241, 246
+
+Coxide, bombardment of, 69;
+ refugees at, 138
+
+Crawley, Eustace, 178
+
+Cunard, Mr., 198
+
+Cunliffe, Miss, 2
+
+Curie, Mme., at Furnes, 68
+
+Cyril, Grand Duchess, 205
+
+
+Decies, Lady, 55
+
+Decker, Mrs., 26
+
+Denniss, Colonel, 164;
+ speech at the Bute Docks, 171
+
+Derfelden, Mme., 236
+
+Dick, Miss, 2
+
+Dinant, atrocities of the Germans at, 137
+
+Dixmude, 127;
+ bombardment, 35, 39
+
+Donnisthorpe, Miss, 2, 22
+
+Drogheda, Lady, 97
+
+Dunkirk, 25, 43, 57, 73, 86, 87, 94, 123, 151;
+ arrival of wounded, 44;
+ bombs on, 81;
+ condition of the station, 96;
+ shelled by the Germans, 115
+
+
+Elliot, Lady Eileen, at Boulogne, 58
+
+Elliott, Maxine, 94, 97, 126
+
+Enzeli, 238
+
+Erivan, 225, 227
+
+Etchmiadzin, 229
+
+
+Ferdinand, King of Bulgaria, 195
+
+ffolliott, Mrs., letters from Miss Macnaughtan, 131, 269, 270
+
+Fielding, Lady Dorothy, 12, 26, 63
+
+Findlay, Mr., 82
+
+Fisher, S., 171
+
+France, armament works, 149
+
+French, Sir John, at Dunkirk, 44
+
+Frere, Sir Bartle, at Furnes, 68
+
+Furley, Sir John, 112
+
+Furnes hospital, 33;
+ arrival of wounded, 37, 68;
+ evacuated, 41, 43;
+ hopeless cases, 46;
+ soup-kitchen, 60;
+ shelled by the Germans, 75, 86, 122;
+ bombs on, 80, 81
+
+Fyfe, Miss, 43
+
+
+Galicia, fighting in, 223
+
+Galitzin, Prince, 208
+
+Gas, asphyxiating, cases of, 114, 145, 171
+
+Georgia, 211;
+ custom at, 213
+
+German army, siege of Antwerp, 3-21;
+ driven back, 18{13};
+ two regiments surrounded, 121;
+ atrocities, 126, 132, 137, 138;
+ throw vitriol, 144
+
+Germany, preparations for war, 30;
+ treatment of prisoners, 132
+
+Ghent, 12
+
+Gibbs, Mr., war correspondent, at Furnes, 35
+
+Gienst, Mme. van der, 143
+
+Gilbert, 34
+
+Glade, Mr., 2
+
+Glasgow, munition works, output, 149, 161;
+ lectures by Miss Macnaughtan, 163
+
+Gleeson, Mr., 33, 35
+
+Glover, Bandmaster, K. S., 170
+
+Godfrey, Miss, 2
+
+Goodwin, Mr. and Mrs., 239
+
+Gordon, Dr., American Missionary, 208
+
+Gorlebeff, head of the Russian Red Cross, 208, 221, 222
+
+Graham, Stephen, book on Russia, 208
+
+Groholski, Count, 210, 218
+
+Guest, Mrs., at Adinkerke, 119
+
+
+Hamadan, 240;
+ climate, 243, 247;
+ tombs, 252
+
+Hambro, Mr. Eric, 182
+
+Hanson, Dr., 2, 23
+
+Hanson, Mr., Vice-Consul at Constantinople, at Dunkirk, 151
+
+Haparanda, 182
+
+Harrison, Mr., 164
+
+Haye, M. de la, 139, 140
+
+Helsingfors, 266
+
+_Hermes_, the, torpedoed, 43
+
+Herslet, Sir Cecil, Surgeon-General, at Antwerp, 9
+
+Hills, Mr., American missionary, 208, 222
+
+Holland, Mr., 88
+
+Hoogstadt, 87;
+ wounded at, 121
+
+Hope, A., 171
+
+Howard, Lady Isobel, 181
+
+Howse, Mr., 164
+
+
+Ignatieff, M., 237
+
+_Invicta_, the, 43, 52
+
+
+Jecquier, M., 195
+
+Joffre, Marshal, at Dunkirk, 44
+
+Joos, Dr., 77;
+ villa at Furnes, 48, 79
+
+Joos, Mme., 77
+
+
+Kajura, 236
+
+Kasvin, 239, 259
+
+Keays-Young, Mrs., letters from Miss Macnaughtan, 3, 106, 166, 262
+
+Keays-Young, Miss Julia, letters from Miss Macnaughtan, 217, 262
+
+King, Mary, 267;
+ letters from Miss Macnaughtan, 63, 109
+
+Kirsanoff, Mme., 241
+
+Kitchener, Lord, at Dunkirk, 44
+
+Kluck, General von, at Mons, 133
+
+Knocker, Mrs., 45, 63, 155
+
+
+La Bassee, British casualties at, 107
+
+Lampernesse, church shelled, 67
+
+La Panne, 87, 93, 97
+
+Lazarienne, Mr., 229
+
+Leigh, Lord, 94
+
+Lennel, 163
+
+Lepnakoff{14}, Mlle., 233
+
+Lightfoot, Mr., at Hamadan, 241, 246, 252
+
+Lindsay, Harry, 183
+
+Lloyd, Sir F., 162
+
+Lloyd, George, 195
+
+Logan, Miss, 87
+
+Logette, Mrs., 72
+
+Lombaertzyde, farm at, 138
+
+Lombard, Mr., 190
+
+_Lusitania_ torpedoed, 123
+
+
+McDonald, gunner, wounded, 118, 124
+
+MacDonald{15}, Mr. Ramsay, 73
+
+MacDonell, Consul, at Baku, 237
+
+McDowal, Mr., 241
+
+McLaren, Mr. and Mrs., 238
+
+McLean, Mr., 241, 248
+
+MacMurray, Mr., 241, 248
+
+Macnaughtan, Lieut. Colin, 144
+
+Macnaughtan, Sarah, at Antwerp 1;
+ work in the Hospital, 8;
+ incentive to keep up, 17;
+ leaves Antwerp, 21;
+ at Ostend, 22;
+ joins Dr. Munro's convoy, 25;
+ at Dunkirk, 25, 43, 57, 73, 86;
+ St. Malo-les-Bains, 26, 49;
+ Furnes, 34-43, 46, 57;
+ flight to Poperinghe, 43;
+ description of the ruins of Nieuport, 46, 152-155;
+ request for travelling-kitchens, 51, 58;
+ visits her nephew at Boulogne, 55-57;
+ starts a soup-kitchen, 59-61;
+ feeding the wounded, 61, 69;
+ "charette," 69;
+ at the Villa Joos, 72, 77;
+ attends a Church service, 74;
+ return to England, 83, 111, 157, 267;
+ at Rayleigh House, 85;
+ soup-kitchen at Adinkerke, 86, 116, 157;
+ illness, 87, 104, 207, 245, 256, 259-264, 267-270;
+ at La Panne, 93, 111;
+ publication of war book, 111;
+ difficulties in getting her passport, 112;
+ at Boulogne, 114;
+ presented with a car, 120;
+ at Poperinghe, 135;
+ method of relieving cases of poison gas, 145, 171;
+ lectures on the war, 160-174, 274;
+ at Lennel, 163;
+ Cardiff Castle, 163;
+ Chevalier de l'Ordre de Leopold conferred, 167;
+ journey to Russia, 179-183;
+ at Christiania, 179;
+ Stockholm, 180;
+ Petrograd, 183-204, 265;
+ waiting for work, 191-198, 218;
+ studies Russian, 193;
+ works in a hospital, 198;
+ at Moscow, 204;
+ Tiflis, 208-210, 214, 230;
+ delicate appearance, 208;
+ at Caucasia, 210;
+ entertained by the Grand Duke Nicholas, 215;
+ on the administration of war charities, 219-222;
+ lessons in French, 224;
+ buys a motor-car, 224;
+ journey to Erivan, 225-227;
+ car breaks down, 225;
+ festered fingers, 234;
+ at Baku, 237;
+ Resht, 238;
+ Kasvin, 239, 259;
+ Hamadan, 240-257;
+ a day on the Persian front, 247-249;
+ unfinished article on Persia, 249-252;
+ _Return of the Pilgrim_, 253-256;
+ Tehran, 260-264;
+ journey home, 264-266;
+ at Helsingfors, 266;
+ appearance, 268;
+ appointed Lady of Grace of the Order of St. John of Jerusalem, 268;
+ death, 270, 280;
+ funeral, 270;
+ review of her war work, 272-276;
+ ideal of personal service, 274;
+ sketch of her character, 276-279;
+ religious views, 279
+
+Malcolm, Colonel Ian, at Boulogne, 58;
+ Petrograd, 183;
+ at Moscow, 204
+
+Malokand settlement, 226
+
+Manners, Lady Diana, 183
+
+Marines, British, at Antwerp, 12, 16;
+ retreat from, 28
+
+Marines, French, 105{16}
+
+Maxwell, Lady Heron, 185
+
+Millis, General, 87
+
+Mons, retreat from, 133;
+ vision at, 133
+
+Montgomerie, Miss, American missionary at Hamadan, 252
+
+Moorhouse, Rhodes, heroism, 129
+
+Morgan, Mr., 83, 86
+
+Morris, Dr., 2
+
+Moscow, 204
+
+Motono, M., at Petrograd, 195
+
+Munitions, shortage of, 148
+
+Munro, Dr. Hector, 12;
+ convoy, 25, 90;
+ at Dixmude, 35;
+ knocked over by a shell, 49
+
+Murat, Prince Napoleon, 218, 231, 233
+
+Murray, Mr. John, xii
+
+Musaloff, Princess, 231
+
+
+Needle, Mr., 164
+
+Neligan, Dr., care of Miss Macnaughtan, 260, 263, 264
+
+Neuve Chapelle, ruins of, 123
+
+Neva, the, 200
+
+Nevinson, Mr., at Furnes, 38
+
+Nicholas, Grand Duke, 215
+
+Nieuport, 71, 151;
+ ruins of, 46, 123, 152-155
+
+Nightingale, song of the, 155-157
+
+Nightingale, Florence, 184
+
+Northcote, Elsie, 182;
+ death, 183
+
+
+Ochterlony, gunner, wounded, 118
+
+O'Gormon, Mrs., 16
+
+Oostkerke, Belgian "observateur" killed at, 153
+
+Orloff, Prince, 208;
+ appearance, 219
+
+Ostend, 22, 24
+
+Oulieheff, Count, 210
+
+
+Page, Dr. de, 118
+
+Parsons, Johnny{17}, 192
+
+Passport, difficulties, 112
+
+Percival, Mrs. Charles, letters from Miss Macnaughtan, 65, 242-245
+
+Perrin, Dr., 86, 87
+
+Perry, Miss, 2
+
+Persia, climate, 239, 249;
+ railway, 247;
+ system of administration, 251;
+ unfinished article on, 249-252
+
+Pervyse, 63, 64;
+ bombardment, 81;
+ ruins of, 123
+
+Peter, Grand Duke, 215
+
+Petrograd, 183, 187, 206, 265;
+ climate, 194;
+ number of amputation cases, 198;
+ return of wounded prisoners, 201-203;
+ number of hospitals, 220
+
+Philpotts, Mr., 186
+
+_Pilgrim, Return of the_, 253-256
+
+"Pinching," habit of, 98
+
+Poincare, M., at Dunkirk, 44
+
+Polish refugees, at Petrograd, 192, 193
+
+Pont, Major du, 138
+
+Poperinghe, 43, 135-137;
+ shelled, 116
+
+Powell, Miss Hilda, xii
+
+Prisoners, German, treatment in England, 132
+
+
+Queen's Hall, London, lecture by Miss Macnaughtan, 162
+
+
+Radstock, Lord, anecdote of, 197
+
+Ramsay, Sir William, on the result of the war, 149
+
+Ramsey, Dr., 2, 22
+
+Randell, Miss, 2
+
+Rasputin, malign influence, 209
+
+Rayleigh House, 85
+
+Reading, Mr. "Dick," 42
+
+Rees{18}, T. Vivian, 164, 171
+
+Resht, 238
+
+Rhondda Valley, 164
+
+Richards, Alderman J. T., speech at Cardiff, 167
+
+Roberts, Lord, death, 63, 111
+
+Rocky Mountains, 182
+
+Rotsartz, M., 125;
+ portrait of Miss Macnaughtan, 104
+
+Rushton Hall, Kettering, 160
+
+Russian army, return of wounded prisoners to Petrograd, 201-203
+
+
+St. Clair, Miss, 12
+
+St. Gilles, convent at, 22
+
+St. Idesbald, 150
+
+St. Malo-les-Bains, 26, 49;
+ wounded at, 50
+
+Samson, Commander, 88
+
+Sarrel, Mr., 151
+
+Sawyer, Mr., 112
+
+Sazonoff, Mme., 200
+
+Scherbatoff, Princess Helene, 197
+
+Scott, Lord Francis, at Boulogne, 58
+
+Scott, Mr., 238
+
+Scott, Miss, 82
+
+Secher, Mr., wounded, 49
+
+Seymour, Mr., kindness to Miss Macnaughtan, 266
+
+Shaw, Bernard, 189
+
+Sheffield, lecture by Miss Macnaughtan, 162
+
+Shoppe, Lieutenant, 132;
+ at Nieuport, 153
+
+"Should the Germans come," lecture on, 171-173
+
+Sim, 178
+
+Sindici, Mme.{19}, 83, 86
+
+Slippers for the wounded, 66, 98
+
+Smith, Captain, 198
+
+Smith, Mr. Lancelot, 182
+
+Smith, Mr. Robinson, 171, 173
+
+Smitkin, Dr., 259
+
+Sommerville, Mr. R., xii
+
+Soup-kitchen at Adinkerke, 82, 97, 157;
+ Furnes, 60
+
+Spies, German, shot, 44, 186
+
+Stanley, Miss, 2
+
+Stanmore, Lord, 183
+
+Stear, Miss, 4
+
+Steen, Mme. van den, 137
+
+Steenkerke, 122, 155
+
+Stenning, Mr., xii
+
+Stobart, Mrs. St. Clair, head of the hospital unit at Antwerp, 2;
+ office, 7, 10;
+ issues orders, 18;
+ leaves Antwerp, 21;
+ return to England, 22
+
+Stockholm, 180
+
+Stoney, Dr. F., 2
+
+"Stories and Pictures of the War," lecture on, 167
+
+Streatfield, Mr., 74
+
+Stretchers, size of, 66, 69
+
+Strickland, Mr., 87
+
+Strutt, Emily, 85
+
+Strutt, Neville, 178
+
+Sutherland, Duchess of, 93;
+ hospital at St. Malo-les-Bains, 44
+
+Sweden, Crown Prince of, 181
+
+Sweden, Crown Princess of, appearance, 181
+
+
+Taff river, 164
+
+Takmakoff, Mme., 200, 203
+
+Tapp, Mr., 64
+
+Teck, Prince Alexander of, 141;
+ at Furnes, 75, 83
+
+Tehran, 260
+
+Thompson, Mr., 138
+
+Tiflis, 208, 214, 230
+
+Tonepentre, 164
+
+Toney Pandy, 164
+
+Travelling-kitchens, 51
+
+Tree, Viola, 183
+
+Tschelikoff, Prince, 233{20}
+
+Turks, cruelties, 177, 209
+
+Turner, Dr. Rose, 2
+
+Tyrell, Major, 151
+
+Tysczkievez{21}, Count, 222
+
+
+Urumiyah, evacuated, 223
+
+
+Vaughan, Miss, at Furnes, 68
+
+Vickers-Maxim works, Erith, lecture by Miss Macnaughtan, 160
+
+Victoria, Grand Duchess, 185
+
+Villiers, Sir Francis, British Minister at Antwerp, 9
+
+Vladikavkas, 207
+
+
+Wales, 163
+
+Walker, Colonel, 112
+
+Walter, Mr. Hubert, 143
+
+Walton, Colonel, 176
+
+War,{22} charities, administration, 219-222;
+ cost of the, 104;
+ cruelties, 175-178;
+ result, 115;
+ souvenirs, 143
+
+Wardepett, Bishop, 229
+
+Ware, Mr. F., 85
+
+Waring, Lady Clementine, letters from Miss Macnaughtan, 50-52, 58, 260;
+ at Lennel, 163
+
+Warship, British, shelled by the Germans, 105
+
+Watts, Dr., 2
+
+Welwyn, 160
+
+Westminster{23}, Duke of, at Dixmude, 127
+
+Whiting, Captain, 73
+
+William II., Emperor of Germany, supposed conversion to
+Mahomedanism{24}, 209
+
+William, Capt. Rhys, 239
+
+Williams, Mr. Hume, 223
+
+Wilson, Dr., 69, 225
+
+Wilson, 178
+
+Wood, Mr., 119, 121
+
+Wynne, Mrs., 132, 140;
+ at Christiania, 179;
+ Moscow, 205;
+ Baku, 231
+
+
+Young, Capt. Alan, at Boulogne, 55;
+ experiences in the war, 56;
+ wounded, 57
+
+Young, Mrs. Charles, letter from Miss Macnaughtan, 214
+
+Younghusband, Sir Frank, 164;
+ speech at Cardiff, 169
+
+Ypres, 114, 137;
+ battle at, 144, 146
+
+Yser, the, 64, 71, 121, 141
+
+
+Billing and Sons, Ltd., Printers, Guildford, England
+
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+Transcriber's corrections and comments:
+
+ 1. Added period missing in original.
+
+ 2. Added comma missing in original.
+
+ 3. Original had "Rotsarzt"; changed to "Rotsartz" to be consistent
+ with later occurrences.
+
+ 4. Original had "vise"; changed to "vise".
+
+ 5. Original had "pasport"; changed to "passport".
+
+ 6. Original had "...road to Calais s blocked..."; changed to
+ "...road to Calais is blocked...".
+
+ 7. Note inconsistency in spelling: text has "Reece", index has
+ "Rees".
+
+ 8. Note inconsistency in spelling: text has "Johnnie", index has
+ "Johnny".
+
+ 9. Changed from comma in original to period.
+
+ 10. Note inconsistency in spelling: text has "Tysczkievcz", index has
+ "Tysczkievez"; most likely meant to be the Polish name
+ "Tyszkiewicz".
+
+ 11. Added period missing in original.
+
+ 12. Original had "Cowen"; changed to "Cowan", which is the spelling
+ used in both instances in the text.
+
+ 13. Original reference to page 10; changed to page 18, as this
+ contains the actual reference to the German army being driven
+ back.
+
+ 14. Original had "Lipnakoff"; changed to "Lepnakoff" as the more
+ likely spelling and to be consistent with the text.
+
+ 15. Original had "Macdonald"; changed to "MacDonald".
+
+ 16. Original reference to page 165; changed to page 105, as this
+ contains the actual reference to the French Marines.
+
+ 17. Note inconsistency in spelling: text has "Johnnie", index has
+ "Johnny".
+
+ 18. Note inconsistency in spelling: text has "Reece", index has
+ "Rees".
+
+ 19. Added period missing in original.
+
+ 20. Removed comma that was superfluous in the original.
+
+ 21. Note inconsistency in spelling: text has "Tysczkievcz", index has
+ "Tysczkievez"; most likely meant to be the Polish name
+ "Tyszkiewicz".
+
+ 22. Added comma missing in original.
+
+ 23. Original had "Westminister"; changed to "Westminster".
+
+ 24. Original had "Mahommedanism"; changed to "Mahomedanism" to be
+ consistent with the text.
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MY WAR EXPERIENCES IN TWO
+CONTINENTS***
+
+
+******* This file should be named 18364.txt or 18364.zip *******
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