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+Project Gutenberg's A Journal of Impressions in Belgium, by May Sinclair
+
+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: A Journal of Impressions in Belgium
+
+Author: May Sinclair
+
+Release Date: February 20, 2010 [EBook #31332]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IMPRESSIONS IN BELGIUM ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Suzanne Shell, Tamise Totterdell and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+A JOURNAL OF
+IMPRESSIONS IN BELGIUM
+
+
+
+
+THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
+
+NEW YORK · BOSTON · CHICAGO · DALLAS
+ATLANTA · SAN FRANCISCO
+
+MACMILLAN & CO., LIMITED
+
+LONDON · BOMBAY · CALCUTTA
+MELBOURNE
+
+THE MACMILLAN CO. OF CANADA, LTD.
+
+TORONTO
+
+
+
+
+A JOURNAL OF
+IMPRESSIONS IN BELGIUM
+
+BY
+
+MAY SINCLAIR
+
+Author of "The Three Sisters," "The Return of
+The Prodigal," etc.
+
+New York
+
+THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
+1915
+
+_All rights reserved_
+
+
+
+
+COPYRIGHT, 1915
+
+BY MAY SINCLAIR
+
+Set up and electrotyped. Published, September, 1915
+
+
+
+
+DEDICATION
+
+(_To a Field Ambulance in Flanders_)
+
+
+ I do not call you comrades,
+ You,
+ Who did what I only dreamed.
+ Though you have taken my dream,
+ And dressed yourselves in its beauty and its glory,
+ Your faces are turned aside as you pass by.
+ I am nothing to you,
+ For I have done no more than dream.
+
+ Your faces are like the face of her whom you follow,
+ Danger,
+ The Beloved who looks backward as she runs, calling to her lovers,
+ The Huntress who flies before her quarry, trailing her lure.
+ She called to me from her battle-places,
+ She flung before me the curved lightning of her shells for a lure;
+ And when I came within sight of her,
+ She turned aside,
+ And hid her face from me.
+
+ But you she loved;
+ You she touched with her hand;
+ For you the white flames of her feet stayed in their running;
+ She kept you with her in her fields of Flanders,
+ Where you go,
+ Gathering your wounded from among her dead.
+ Grey night falls on your going and black night on your returning.
+ You go
+ Under the thunder of the guns, the shrapnel's rain and the curved
+ lightning of the shells,
+ And where the high towers are broken,
+ And houses crack like the staves of a thin crate filled with fire;
+ Into the mixing smoke and dust of roof and walls torn asunder
+ You go;
+ And only my dream follows you.
+
+ That is why I do not speak of you,
+ Calling you by your names.
+ Your names are strung with the names of ruined and immortal cities,
+ Termonde and Antwerp, Dixmude and Ypres and Furnes,
+ Like jewels on one chain--
+
+ Thus,
+ In the high places of Heaven,
+ They shall tell all your names.
+
+ MAY SINCLAIR.
+
+ March 8th, 1915.
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION
+
+
+This is a "Journal of Impressions," and it is nothing more. It will not
+satisfy people who want accurate and substantial information about
+Belgium, or about the War, or about Field Ambulances and Hospital Work,
+and do not want to see any of these things "across a temperament." For
+the Solid Facts and the Great Events they must go to such books as Mr.
+E. A. Powell's "Fighting in Flanders," or Mr. Frank Fox's "The Agony of
+Belgium," or Dr. H. S. Souttar's "A Surgeon in Belgium," or "A Woman's
+Experiences in the Great War," by Louise Mack.
+
+For many of these impressions I can claim only a psychological accuracy;
+some were insubstantial to the last degree, and very few were actually
+set down there and then, on the spot, as I have set them down here. This
+is only a Journal in so far as it is a record of days, as faithful as I
+could make it in every detail, and as direct as circumstances allowed.
+But circumstances seldom _did_ allow, and I was always behindhand with
+my Journal--a week behind with the first day of the seventeen, four
+months behind with the last.
+
+This was inevitable. For in the last week of the Siege of Antwerp, when
+the wounded were being brought into Ghent by hundreds, and when the
+fighting came closer and closer to the city, and at the end, when the
+Germans were driving you from Ghent to Bruges, and from Bruges to Ostend
+and from Ostend to Dunkirk, you could not sit down to write your
+impressions, even if you were cold-blooded enough to want to. It was as
+much as you could do to scribble the merest note of what happened in
+your Day-Book.
+
+But when you had made fast each day with its note, your impressions were
+safe, far safer than if you had tried to record them in their flux as
+they came. However far behind I might be with my Journal, it was _kept_.
+It is not written "up," or round and about the original notes in my
+Day-Book, it is simply written _out_. Each day of the seventeen had its
+own quality and was soaked in its own atmosphere; each had its own
+unique and incorruptible memory, and the slight lapse of time, so far
+from dulling or blurring that memory, crystallized it and made it sharp
+and clean. And in writing _out_ I have been careful never to go behind
+or beyond the day, never to add anything, but to leave each moment as it
+was. I have set down the day's imperfect or absurd impression, in all
+its imperfection or absurdity, and the day's crude emotion in all its
+crudity, rather than taint its reality with the discreet reflections
+that came after.
+
+I make no apology for my many errors--where they were discoverable I
+have corrected them in a footnote; to this day I do not know how wildly
+wrong I may have been about kilometres and the points of the compass,
+and the positions of batteries and the movements of armies; but there
+were other things of which I was dead sure; and this record has at least
+the value of a "human document."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There is one question that I may be asked: "Why, when you had the luck
+to go out with a Field Ambulance Corps distinguished by its
+gallantry--why in heaven's name have you not told the story of its
+heroism?"
+
+Well--I have not told it for several excellent reasons. When I set out
+to keep a Journal I pledged myself to set down only what I had seen or
+felt, and to avoid as far as possible the second-hand; and it was my
+misfortune that I saw very little of the field-work of the Corps.
+Besides, the Corps itself was then in its infancy, and it is its
+infancy--its irrepressible, half-irresponsible, whole engaging
+infancy--that I have touched here. After those seventeen days at Ghent
+it grew up in all conscience. It was at Furnes and Dixmude and La Panne,
+after I had left it, that its most memorable deeds were done.[A]
+
+And this story of the Corps is not mine to tell. Part of it has been
+told already by Dr. Souttar, and part by Mr. Philip Gibbs, and others.
+The rest is yet to come.
+
+ M. S.
+
+ July 15th, 1915.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote A: See Postscript.]
+
+
+
+
+A JOURNAL OF IMPRESSIONS IN BELGIUM
+
+
+
+
+A JOURNAL OF IMPRESSIONS IN BELGIUM
+
+[_September 25th, 1914._]
+
+
+After the painful births and deaths of I don't know how many committees,
+after six weeks' struggling with something we imagined to be Red Tape,
+which proved to be the combined egoism of several persons all
+desperately anxious to "get to the Front," and desperately afraid of
+somebody else getting there too, and getting there first, we are
+actually off. Impossible to describe the mysterious processes by which
+we managed it. I think the War Office kicked us out twice, and the
+Admiralty once, though what we were doing with the Admiralty I don't to
+this day understand. The British Red Cross kicked us steadily all the
+time, on general principles; the American snubbed us rather badly; what
+the French said to us I don't remember, and I can't think that we
+carried persistency so far as to apply to the Russian and the Japanese.
+Many of our scheme perished in their own vagueness. Others, vivid and
+adventurous, were checked by the first encounter with the crass
+reality. At one time, I remember, we were to have sent out a detachment
+of stalwart Amazons in khaki breeches who were to dash out on to the
+battle-field, reconnoitre, and pick up the wounded and carry them away
+slung over their saddles. The only difficulty was to get the horses. But
+the author of the scheme--who had bought her breeches--had allowed for
+that. The horses were to be caught on the battle-field; as the wounded
+and dead dropped from their saddles the Amazons were to leap into them
+and ride off. On this system "remounts" were also to be supplied.
+Whenever a horse was shot dead under its rider, an Amazon was to dash up
+with another whose rider had been shot dead. It was all perfectly simple
+and only needed a little "organization." For four weeks the lure of the
+battle-field kept our volunteers dancing round the War Office and the
+Red Cross Societies, and for four weeks their progress to the Front was
+frustrated by Lord Kitchener. Some dropped off disheartened, but others
+came on, and a regenerated committee dealt with them. Finally the thing
+crystallized into a Motor Ambulance Corps. An awful sanity came over the
+committee, chastened by its sufferings, and the volunteers, under
+pressure, definitely renounced the battle-field. Then somebody said,
+"Let's help the Belgian refugees." From that moment our course was
+clear. Everybody was perfectly willing that we should help the refugees,
+provided we relinquished all claim on the wounded. The Belgian Legation
+was enchanted. It gave passports to a small private commission of
+inquiry under our Commandant to go out to Belgium and send in a report.
+At Ostend the commission of inquiry whittled itself down to the one
+energetic person who had taken it out. And before we knew where we were
+our Ambulance Corps was accepted by the Belgian Red Cross.
+
+Only we had not got the ambulances.
+
+And though we had got some money, we had not got enough. This was really
+our good luck, for it saved us from buying the wrong kind of motor
+ambulance car. But at first the blow staggered us. Then, by some abrupt,
+incalculable turn of destiny, the British Red Cross, which had kicked us
+so persistently, came to our help and gave us all the ambulances we
+wanted.
+
+And we are off.
+
+There are thirteen of us: The Commandant, and Dr. Haynes and Dr. Bird
+under him; and Mrs. Torrence, a trained nurse and midwife, who can drive
+a motor car through anything, and take it to bits and put it together
+again; Janet McNeil, also an expert motorist, and Ursula Dearmer and
+Mrs. Lambert, Red Cross emergency nurses; Mr. Grierson, Mr. Foster and
+Mr. Riley, stretcher-bearers, and two chauffeurs and me. I don't know
+where I come in. But they've called me the Secretary and Reporter, which
+sounds very fine, and I am to keep the accounts (Heaven help them!) and
+write the Commandant's reports, and toss off articles for the daily
+papers, to make a little money for the Corps. We've got some already,
+raised by the Commandant's Report and Appeal that we published in the
+_Daily Telegraph_ and _Daily Chronicle_. I shall never forget how I
+sprinted down Fleet Street to get it in in time, four days before we
+started.
+
+And we have landed at Ostend.
+
+I'll confess now that I dreaded Ostend more than anything. We had been
+told that there were horrors upon horrors in Ostend. Children were being
+born in the streets, and the state of the bathing-machines where the
+refugees lived was unspeakable. I imagined the streets of Ostend crowded
+with refugee women bearing children, and the Digue covered with the
+horrific bathing-machines. On the other hand, Ostend was said to be the
+safest spot in Europe. No Germans there. No Zeppelins. No bombs.
+
+And we found the bathing-machines planted out several miles from the
+town, almost invisible specks on a vanishing shore-line. The refugees we
+met walking about the streets of Ostend were in fairly good case and
+bore themselves bravely. But the town had been bombarded the night
+before and our hotel had been the object of very special attentions. We
+chose it (the "Terminus") because it lay close to the landing-stage and
+saved us the trouble of going into the town to look for quarters. It was
+under the same roof as the railway station, where we proposed to leave
+our ambulance cars and heavy luggage. And we had no difficulty whatever
+in getting rooms for the whole thirteen of us. There was no sort of
+competition for rooms in that hotel. I said to myself, "If Ostend ever
+is bombarded, this railway station will be the first to suffer. And the
+hotel and the railway station are one." And when I was shown into a
+bedroom with glass windows all along its inner wall and a fine glass
+front looking out on to the platforms under the immense glass roof of
+the station, I said, "If this hotel is ever bombarded, what fun it will
+be for the person who sleeps in this bed between these glass windows."
+
+We were all rather tired and hungry as we met for dinner at seven
+o'clock. And when we were told that all lights would be put out in the
+town at eight-thirty we only thought that a municipality which was
+receiving all the refugees in Belgium must practise _some_ economy, and
+that, anyway, an hour and a half was enough for anybody to dine in; and
+we hoped that the Commandant, who had gone to call on the English
+chaplain at the Grand Hôtel Littoral, would find his way back again to
+the peaceful and commodious shelter of the "Terminus."
+
+He did find his way back, at seven-thirty, just in time to give us a
+chance of clearing out, if we chose to take it. The English chaplain, it
+seemed, was surprised and dismayed at our idea of a suitable hotel, and
+he implored us to fly, instantly, before a bomb burst in among us (this
+was the first we had heard of the bombardment of the night before). The
+Commandant put it to us as we sat there: Whether would we leave that
+dining-room at once and pack our baggage all over again, and bundle out,
+and go hunting for rooms all through Ostend with the lights out, and
+perhaps fall into the harbour; or stay where we were and risk the
+off-chance of a bomb? And we were all very tired and hungry, and we had
+only got to the soup, and we had seen (and smelt) the harbour, so we
+said we'd stay where we were and risk it.
+
+And we stayed. A Taube hovered over us and never dropped its bomb.
+
+
+[_Saturday, 26th._]
+
+When we compared notes the next morning we found that we had all gone
+soundly to sleep, too tired to take the Taube seriously, all except our
+two chauffeurs, who were downright annoyed because no bomb had entered
+their bedroom. Then we all went out and looked at the little hole in the
+roof of the fish market, and the big hole in the hotel garden, and
+thought of bombs as curious natural phenomena that never had and never
+would have any intimate connection with _us_.
+
+And for five weeks, ever since I knew that I must certainly go out with
+this expedition, I had been living in black funk; in shameful and
+appalling terror. Every night before I went to sleep I saw an
+interminable spectacle of horrors: trunks without heads, heads without
+trunks, limbs tangled in intestines, corpses by every roadside, murders,
+mutilations, my friends shot dead before my eyes. Nothing I shall ever
+see will be more ghastly than the things I have seen. And yet, before a
+possibly-to-be-bombarded Ostend this strange visualizing process
+ceases, and I see nothing and feel nothing. Absolutely nothing; until
+suddenly the Commandant announces that he is going into the town, by
+himself, to _buy a hat_, and I get my first experience of real terror.
+
+For the hats that the Commandant buys when he is by himself--there are
+no words for them.
+
+This morning the Corps begins to realize its need of discipline. First
+of all, our chauffeurs have disappeared and can nowhere be found. The
+motor ambulances languish in inactivity on Cockerill's Wharf. We find
+one chauffeur and set him to keep guard over a tin of petrol. We _know_
+the ambulances can't start till heaven knows when, and so, first Mrs.
+Lambert, our emergency nurse, then, I regret to say, our Secretary and
+Reporter make off and sneak into the Cathedral. We are only ten minutes,
+but still we are away, and Mrs. Torrence, our trained nurse, is ready
+for us when we come back. We are accused bitterly of sight-seeing. (We
+had betrayed the inherent levity of our nature the day before, on the
+boat, when we looked at the sunset.) Then the Secretary and Reporter,
+utterly intractable, wanders forth ostensibly to look for the
+Commandant, who has disappeared, but really to get a sight of the motor
+ambulances on Cockerill's Wharf. And Mrs. Torrence is ready again for
+the Secretary, convicted now of sight-seeing. And I have seen no
+Commandant, and no motor ambulances and no wharf. (Unbearable thought,
+that I may never, absolutely never, see Cockerill's Wharf!) It is really
+awful this time, because the President of the Belgian Red Cross is
+waiting to get the thirteen of us to the Town Hall to have our passports
+_visés_. And the Commandant is rounding up his Corps, and Ursula Dearmer
+is heaven knows where, and Mrs. Lambert only somewhere in the middle
+distance, and Mrs. Torrence's beautiful eyes are blazing at the
+slip-sloppiness of it all. Things were very different at the ----
+Hospital, where she was trained.
+
+Only the President remains imperturbable.
+
+For, after all this fuming and fretting, the President isn't quite ready
+himself, or perhaps the Town Hall isn't ready, and we all stroll about
+the streets of Ostend for half an hour. And the Commandant goes off by
+himself, to buy that hat.
+
+It is a terrible half-hour. But after all, he comes back without it,
+judging it better to bear the ills he has.
+
+Very leisurely, and with an immense consumption of time, we stroll and
+get photographed for our passports. Then on to the Town Hall, and then
+to the Military Depôt for our _Laissez-passer_, and then to the Hôtel
+Terminus for lunch. And at one-thirty we are off.
+
+Whatever happens, whatever we see and suffer, nothing can take from us
+that run from Ostend to Ghent.
+
+We go along a straight, flat highway of grey stones, through flat, green
+fields and between thin lines of trees--tall and slender and delicate
+trees. There are no hedges. Only here and there a row of poplars or
+pollard willows is flung out as a screen against the open sky. This
+country is formed for the very expression of peace. The straight flat
+roads, the straight flat fields and straight tall trees stand still in
+an immense quiet and serenity. We pass low Flemish houses with white
+walls and red roofs. Their green doors and shutters are tall and slender
+like the trees, the colours vivid as if the paint had been laid on
+yesterday. It is all unspeakably beautiful and it comes to me with the
+natural, inevitable shock and ecstasy of beauty. I am going straight
+into the horror of war. For all I know it may be anywhere, here, behind
+this sentry; or there, beyond that line of willows. I don't know. I
+don't care. I cannot realize it. All that I can see or feel at the
+moment is this beauty. I look and look, so that I may remember it.
+
+Is it possible that I am enjoying myself?
+
+I dare not tell Mrs. Torrence. I dare not tell any of the others. They
+seem to me inspired with an austere sense of duty, a terrible integrity.
+They know what they are here for. To me it is incredible that I should
+be here.
+
+I am in Car 1., sitting beside Tom, the chauffeur; Mrs. Torrence is on
+the other side of me. Tom disapproves of these Flemish roads. He cannot
+see that they are beautiful. They will play the devil with his tyres.
+
+I am reminded unpleasantly that our Daimler is not a touring car but a
+motor ambulance and that these roads will jolt the wounded most
+abominably.
+
+There are straggling troops on the road now. At the nearest village all
+the inhabitants turn out to cheer us. They cry out "_Les Anglais!_" and
+laugh for joy. Perhaps they think that if the British Red Cross has come
+the British Army can't be far behind. But when they hear that we are
+Belgian Red Cross they are gladder than ever. They press round us. It is
+wonderful to them that we should have come all the way from England
+"_pour les Belges!_" Somehow the beauty of the landscape dies before
+these crowding, pressing faces.
+
+We pass through Bruges without seeing it. I have no recollection
+whatever of having seen the Belfry. We see nothing but the Canal (where
+we halt to take in petrol) and more villages, more faces. And more
+troops.
+
+Half-way between Bruges and Ghent an embankment thrown up on each side
+of the road tells of possible patrols and casual shooting. It is the
+first visible intimation that the enemy may be anywhere.
+
+A curious excitement comes to you. I suppose it is excitement, though it
+doesn't feel like it. You have been drunk, very slightly drunk with the
+speed of the car. But now you are sober. Your heart beats quietly,
+steadily, but with a little creeping, mounting thrill in the beat. The
+sensation is distinctly pleasurable. You say to yourself, "It is coming.
+Now--or the next minute--perhaps at the end of the road." You have one
+moment of regret. "After all, it would be a pity if it came too soon,
+before we'd even begun our job." But the thrill, mounting steadily,
+overtakes the regret. It is only a little thrill, so far (for you don't
+really believe that there is any danger), but you can imagine the thing
+growing, growing steadily, till it becomes ecstasy. Not that you imagine
+anything at the moment. At the moment you are no longer an observing,
+reflecting being; you have ceased to be aware of yourself; you exist
+only in that quiet, steady thrill that is so unlike any excitement that
+you have ever known. Presently you get used to it. "What a fool I should
+have been if I hadn't come. I wouldn't have missed this run for the
+world."
+
+I forget myself so far as to say this to Mrs. Torrence. My voice doesn't
+sound at all like the stern voice of duty. It is the voice of somebody
+enjoying herself. I am behaving exactly as I behaved this morning at
+Ostend; and cannot possibly hope for any sympathy from Mrs. Torrence.
+
+But Mrs. Torrence has unbent a little. She has in fact been unbending
+gradually ever since we left Ostend. There is a softer light in her
+beautiful eyes. For she is not only a trained nurse but an expert
+motorist; and a Daimler is a Daimler even when it's an ambulance car.
+From time to time remarks of a severely technical nature are exchanged
+between her and Tom. Still, up till now, nothing has passed to indicate
+any flagging in the relentless spirit of the ---- Hospital.
+
+The next minute I hear that the desire of Mrs. Torrence's heart is to
+get into the greatest possible danger--and to get out of it.
+
+The greatest possible danger is to fall into the hands of the Uhlans. I
+feel that I should be very glad indeed to get out of it, but that I'm
+not by any means so keen on getting in. I say so. I confess frankly
+that I'm afraid of Uhlans, particularly when they're drunk.
+
+But Mrs. Torrence is not afraid of anything. There is no German living,
+drunk or sober, who could break her spirit. Nothing dims for her that
+shining vision of the greatest possible danger. She does not know what
+fear is.
+
+I conceive an adoration for Mrs. Torrence, and a corresponding distaste
+for myself. For I do know what fear is. And in spite of the little
+steadily-mounting thrill, I remember distinctly those five weeks of
+frightful anticipation when I knew that I must go out to the War; the
+going to bed, night after night, drugged with horror, black horror that
+creeps like poison through your nerves; the falling asleep and
+forgetting it; the waking, morning after morning, with an energetic and
+lucid brain that throws out a dozen war pictures to the minute like a
+ghastly cinema show, till horror becomes terror; the hunger for
+breakfast; the queer, almost uncanny revival of courage that follows its
+satisfaction; the driving will that strengthens as the day goes on and
+slackens its hold at evening. I remember one evening very near the end;
+the Sunday evening when the Commandant dropped in, after he had come
+back from Belgium. We were stirring soup over the gas stove in the
+scullery--you couldn't imagine a more peaceful scene--when he said,
+"They are bringing up the heavy siege guns from Namur, and there is
+going to be a terrific bombardment of Antwerp, and I think it will be
+very interesting for you to see it." I remember replying with passionate
+sincerity that I would rather die than see it; that if I could nurse the
+wounded I would face any bombardment you please to name; but to go and
+look on and make copy out of the sufferings I cannot help--I couldn't
+and I wouldn't, and that was flat. And I wasn't a journalist any more
+than I was a trained nurse.
+
+I can still see the form of the Commandant rising up on the other side
+of the scullery stove, and in his pained, uncomprehending gaze and in
+the words he utters I imagine a challenge. It is as if he said, "Of
+course, if you're _afraid_"--(haven't I told him that I _am_ afraid?).
+
+The gage is thrown down on the scullery floor. I pick it up. And that is
+why I am here on this singular adventure.
+
+Thus, for the next three kilometres, I meditate on my cowardice. It is
+all over as if it had never been, but how can I tell that it won't come
+back again? I can only hope that when the Uhlans appear I shall behave
+decently. And this place that we have come to is Ecloo. We are not very
+far from Ghent.
+
+A church spire, a few roofs rising above trees. Then many roofs all
+together. Then the beautiful grey-white foreign city.
+
+As we run through the streets we are followed by cyclists; cyclists
+issue from every side-street and pour into our road; cyclists rise up
+out of the ground to follow us. We don't realize all at once that it is
+the ambulance they are following. Bowing low like racers over their
+handle-bars, they shoot past us; they slacken pace and keep alongside,
+they shoot ahead; the cyclists are most fearfully excited. It dawns on
+us that they are escorting us; that they are racing each other; that
+they are bringing the news of our arrival to the town. They behave as if
+we were the vanguard of the British Army.
+
+We pass the old Military Hospital--_Hôpital Militaire_ No. I.--and
+presently arrive at the Flandria Palace Hotel, which is _Hôpital
+Militaire_ No. II. The cyclists wheel off, scatter and disappear. The
+crowd in the Place gathers round the porch of the hotel to look at the
+English Ambulance.
+
+We enter. We are received by various officials and presented to Madame
+F., the head of the Red Cross nursing staff. There is some confusion,
+and Mrs. Torrence finds herself introduced as the Secretary of the
+English Committee. Successfully concealed behind the broadest back in
+the Corps, which belongs to Mr. Grierson, I have time to realize how
+funny we all are. Everybody in the hospital is in uniform, of course.
+The nurses of the Belgian Red Cross wear white linen overalls with the
+brassard on one sleeve, and the Red Cross on the breasts of their
+overalls, and over their foreheads on the front of their white linen
+veils. The men wear military or semi-military uniforms. We had never
+agreed as to our uniform, and some of us had had no time to get it, if
+we had agreed. Assembled in the vestibule, we look more like a party of
+refugees, or the cast of a Barrie play, than a field ambulance corps.
+Mr. Grierson, the Chaplain, alone wears complete khaki, in which he is
+indistinguishable from any Tommy. The Commandant, obeying some
+mysterious inspiration, has left his khaki suit behind. He wears a
+Norfolk jacket and one of his hats. Mr. Foster in plain clothes, with a
+satchel slung over his shoulders, has the air of an inquiring tourist.
+Mrs. Torrence and Janet McNeil in short khaki tunics, khaki putties, and
+round Jaeger caps, and very thick coats over all, strapped in with
+leather belts, look as if they were about to sail on an Arctic
+expedition; I was told to wear dark blue serge, and I wear it
+accordingly; Ursula Dearmer and Mrs. Lambert are in normal clothes. But
+the amiable officials and the angelic Belgian ladies behave as if there
+was nothing in the least odd about our appearance. They remember only
+that we are English and that it is now six o'clock and that we have had
+no tea. They conceive this to be the most deplorable fate that can
+overtake the English, and they hurry us into the great kitchen to a
+round table, loaded with cake and bread-and-butter and enormous bowls of
+tea. The angelic beings in white veils wait on us. We are hungry and we
+think (a pardonable error) that this meal is hospital supper; after
+which some work will surely be found for us to do.
+
+We are shown to our quarters on the third floor. We expect two bare
+dormitories with rows of hard beds, which we are prepared to make
+ourselves, besides sweeping the dormitories, and we find a fine suite of
+rooms--a mess-room, bedrooms, dressing-rooms, bathrooms--and hospital
+orderlies for our _valets de chambre_.
+
+We unpack, sit round the mess-room and wait for orders. Perhaps we may
+all be sent down into the kitchen to wash up. Personally, I hope we
+shall be, for washing up is a thing I can do both quickly and well. It
+is now seven o'clock.
+
+At half-past we are sent down into the kitchen, not to wash up, but, if
+you will believe it, to dine. And more hospital orderlies wait on us at
+dinner.
+
+The desire of our hearts is to do _something_, if it is only to black
+the boots of the angelic beings. But no, there is nothing for us to do.
+To-morrow, perhaps, the doctors and stretcher-bearers will be busy. We
+hear that only five wounded have been brought into the hospital to-day.
+They have no ambulance cars, and ours will be badly needed--to-morrow.
+But to-night, no.
+
+We go out into the town, to the Hôtel de la Poste, and sit outside the
+café and drink black coffee in despair. We find our chauffeurs doing the
+same thing. Then we go back to our sumptuous hotel and so, dejectedly,
+to bed. Aeroplanes hover above us all night.
+
+
+[_Sunday, 27th._]
+
+We hang about waiting for orders. They may come at any moment. Meanwhile
+this place grows incredible and fantastic. Now it is an hotel and now it
+is a military hospital; its two aspects shift and merge into each other
+with a dream-like effect. It is a huge building of extravagant design,
+wearing its turrets, its balconies, its very roofs, like so much
+decoration. The gilded legend, "Flandria Palace Hotel," glitters across
+the immense white façade. But the Red Cross flag flies from the front
+and from the corners of the turrets and from the balconies of the long
+flank facing south. You arrive under a fan-like porch that covers the
+smooth slope of the approach. You enter your hotel through mahogany
+revolving doors. A colossal Flora stands by the lift at the foot of the
+big staircase. Unaware that this is no festival of flowers, the poor
+stupid thing leans forward, smiling, and holds out her garland to the
+wounded as they are carried past. Nobody takes any notice of her. The
+great hall of the hotel has been stripped bare. All draperies and
+ornaments have disappeared. The proprietor has disappeared, or goes
+about disguised as a Red Cross officer. The grey mosaic of floors and
+stairs is cleared of rugs and carpeting; the reading-room is now a
+secretarial bureau; the billiard-room is an operating theatre; the great
+dining-hall and the reception-rooms and the bedrooms are wards. The army
+of waiters and valets and chambermaids has gone, and everywhere there
+are surgeons, ambulance men, hospital orderlies and the Belgian nurses
+with their white overalls and red crosses. And in every corridor and on
+every staircase and in every room there is a mixed odour, bitter and
+sweet and penetrating, of antiseptics and of ether. When the ambulance
+cars come up from the railway stations and the battle-fields, the last
+inappropriate detail, the mahogany revolving doors, will disappear, so
+that the wounded may be carried through on their stretchers.
+
+I confess to a slight, persistent fear of _seeing_ these wounded whom I
+cannot help. It is not very active, it has left off visualizing the
+horror of bloody bandages and mangled bodies. But it's there; it waits
+for me in every corridor and at the turn of every stair, and it makes me
+loathe myself.
+
+We have news this morning of a battle at Alost, a town about fifteen
+kilometres south-east of Ghent. The Belgians are moving forty thousand
+men from Antwerp towards Ghent, and heavy fighting is expected near the
+town. If we are not in the thick of it, we are on the edge of the thick.
+
+They have just told us an awful thing. Two wounded men were left lying
+out on the battle-field all night after yesterday's fighting. The
+military ambulances did not fetch them. Our ambulance was not sent out.
+There are all sorts of formalities to be observed before it can go. We
+haven't got our military passes yet. And our English Red Cross brassards
+are no use. We must have Belgian ones stamped with the Government stamp.
+And these things take time.
+
+Meanwhile we, who have still the appearance of a disorganized Cook's
+tourist party, are beginning to realize each other, the first step to
+realizing ourselves. We have come from heaven knows where to live
+together here heaven knows for how long. The Commandant and I are
+friends; Mrs. Torrence and Janet McNeil are friends; Dr. Haynes and Dr.
+Bird are evidently friends; our chauffeurs, Bert and Tom, are bound to
+fraternize professionally; we and they are all right; but these pairs
+were only known to each other a week or two ago, and some of the
+thirteen never met at all till yesterday. An unknown fourteenth is
+coming to-day. We are five women and nine men. You might wonder how, for
+all social purposes, we are to sort ourselves? But the idea, sternly
+emphasized by Mrs. Torrence, is that we have no social purposes. We are
+neither more nor less than a strictly official and absolutely impersonal
+body, held together, not by the ordinary affinities of men and women,
+but by a common devotion and a common aim. Differences, if any should
+exist, will be sunk in the interest of the community. Probabilities that
+rule all human intercourse, as we have hitherto known it, will be
+temporarily suspended in our case. But we shall gain more than we lose.
+Insignificant as individuals, as a corps we share the honour and
+prestige of the Military Authority under which we work. We have visions
+of a relentless discipline commanding and controlling us. A cold glory
+hovers over the Commandant as the vehicle of this transcendent power.
+
+When the Power has its way with us it will take no count of friendships
+or affinities. It will set precedence at naught. It will say to itself,
+"Here are two field ambulance cars and fourteen people. Five out of
+these fourteen are women, and what the devil are they doing in a field
+ambulance?" And it will appoint two surgeons, who will also serve as
+stretcher-bearers, to each car; it will set our trained nurse, Mrs.
+Torrence, in command of the untrained nurses in one of the wards of the
+Military Hospital No. II.; the Hospital itself will find suitable
+feminine tasks for Ursula Dearmer and Mrs. Lambert; while Janet McNeil
+and the Secretary will be told off to work among the refugees. And until
+more stretcher-bearers are wanted the rest of us will be nowhere. If
+nothing can be found for our women in the Hospital they will be sent
+home.
+
+It seems inconceivable that the Power, if it is anything like Lord
+Kitchener, can decide otherwise.
+
+Odd how the War changes us. I, who abhor and resist authority, who
+hardly know how I am to bring myself to obey my friend the Commandant,
+am enamoured of this Power and utterly submissive. I realize with
+something like a thrill that we are in a military hospital under
+military orders; and that my irrelevant former self, with all that it
+has desired or done, must henceforth cease (perhaps irrevocably) to
+exist. I contemplate its extinction with equanimity. I remember that one
+of my brothers was a Captain in the Gunners, that another of them fought
+as a volunteer in the first Boer War; that my uncle, Captain Hind, of
+the Bengal Fusiliers, fought in the Mutiny and in the Crimean War, and
+his son at Chitral, and that I have one nephew in Kitchener's Army and
+one in the West Lancashire Hussars; and that three generations of solid
+sugar-planters and ship-owners cannot separate me from my forefathers,
+who seem to have been fighting all the time. (At the moment I have
+forgotten my five weeks' blue funk.)
+
+Mrs. Torrence's desire for discipline is not more sincere than mine.
+Meanwhile the hand that is to lick us into shape hovers over us and does
+not fall. We wait expectantly in the mess-room which is to contain us.
+
+It was once the sitting-room of a fine suite. A diminutive vestibule
+divides it from the corridor. You enter through double doors with muffed
+glass panes in a wooden partition opposite the wide French windows
+opening on the balcony. A pale blond light from the south fills the
+room. Its walls are bare except for a map of Belgium, faced by a print
+from one of the illustrated papers representing the King and Queen of
+the Belgians. Of its original furnishings only a few cane chairs and a
+settee remain. These are set back round the walls and in the window.
+Long tables with marble tops, brought up from what was once the hotel
+restaurant, enclose three sides of a hollow square, like this:
+
+ ==================================
+ || ||
+ || ||
+ || ||
+ || ||
+
+Round these we group ourselves thus: the Commandant in the middle of the
+top table in the window, between Mrs. Torrence and Ursula Dearmer; Dr.
+Haynes and Dr. Bird, on the other side of Ursula Dearmer; the
+chauffeurs, Tom and Bert, round the corner at the right-hand side table;
+I am round the other corner at the left-hand side table, by Mrs.
+Torrence, and Janet McNeil is on my right, and on hers are Mrs. Lambert
+and Mr. Foster and the Chaplain. Mr. Riley sits alone on the inside
+opposite Mrs. Torrence.
+
+This rather quiet and very serious person interests me. He doesn't say
+anything, and you wonder what sort of consciousness goes on under the
+close-cropped, boyish, black velvet hair. Nature has left his features a
+bit unfinished, the further to baffle you.
+
+All these people are interesting, intensely interesting and baffling, as
+men and women are bound to be who have come from heaven knows where to
+face heaven knows what. Most of them are quite innocently unaware. They
+do not know that they are interesting, or baffling either. They do not
+know, and it has not occurred to them to wonder, how they are going to
+affect each other or how they are going to behave. Nobody, you would
+say, is going to affect the Commandant. When he is not dashing up and
+down, driven by his mysterious energy, he stands apart in remote and
+dreamy isolation. His eyes, when they are not darting brilliantly in
+pursuit of the person or the thing he needs, stand apart too in a blank,
+blue purity, undarkened by any perception of the details that may
+accumulate under his innocent nose. He has called this corps into being,
+gathered these strange men and women up with a sweep of his wing and
+swept them almost violently together. He doesn't know how any of us are
+going to behave. He has taken for granted, with his naïve and
+heart-rending trust in the beauty of human nature, that we are all going
+to behave beautifully. He is absorbed in his scheme. Each one of us
+fits into it at some point, and if there is anything in us left over it
+is not, at the moment, his concern.
+
+Yet he himself has margins about him and a mysterious hinterland not to
+be confined or accounted for by any scheme. He alone of us has the air,
+buoyant, restless, and a little vague, of being in for some tremendous
+but wholly visionary adventure.
+
+When I look at him I wonder again what this particular adventure is
+going to do to him, and whether he has, even now, any vivid sense of the
+things that are about to happen. I remember that evening in my scullery,
+and how he talked about the German siege-guns as if they were details in
+some unreal scene, the most interesting part, say, of a successful
+cinematograph show.
+
+But they are really bringing up those siege-guns from Namur.
+
+And the Commandant has brought four women with him besides me. I confess
+I was appalled when I first knew that they would be brought.
+
+Mrs. Torrence, perhaps--for she is in love with danger,[1] and she is of
+the kind whom no power, military or otherwise, can keep back from their
+desired destiny.
+
+But why little Janet McNeil?[2] She is the youngest of us, an
+eighteen-year-old child who has followed Mrs. Torrence, and will follow
+her if she walks straight into the German trenches. She sits beside me
+on my right, ready for anything, all her delicate Highland beauty
+bundled up in the kit of a little Arctic explorer, utterly determined,
+utterly impassive. Her small face, under the woolly cap that defies the
+North Pole, is nearly always grave; but it has a sudden smile that is
+adorable.
+
+And the youngest but one, Ursula Dearmer, who can't be so much
+older--Mr. Riley's gloom and the Commandant's hinterland are nothing to
+the mystery of this young girl. She looks as if she were not yet
+perfectly awake, as if it would take considerably more than the
+siege-guns of Namur to rouse her. She moves about slowly, as if she were
+in no sort of hurry for the adventure. She has slow-moving eyes, with
+sleepy, drooping eyelids that blink at you. She has a rather sleepy,
+rather drooping nose. Her shoulders droop; her small head droops,
+slightly, half the time. If she were not so slender she would be rather
+like a pretty dormouse half-recovering from its torpor. You insist on
+the determination of her little thrust-out underlip, only to be
+contradicted by her gentle and delicately-retreating chin.
+
+In our committee-room, among a band of turbulent female volunteers, all
+clamouring for the firing-line, Ursula Dearmer, dressed very simply,
+rather like a senior school-girl, and accompanied by her mother, had a
+most engaging air of submission and docility. If anybody breaks out into
+bravura it will not be Ursula Dearmer.
+
+This thought consoles me when I think of the last solemn scenes in that
+committee-room and of the pledges, the frightfully sacred pledges, I
+gave to Ursula Dearmer's mother. As a result of this responsibility I
+see myself told off to the dreary duty of conducting Ursula Dearmer back
+to Dover at the moment when things begin to be really thick and
+thrilling. And I deplore the Commandant's indiscriminate hospitality to
+volunteers.
+
+Mrs. Lambert (she must surely be the next youngest) you can think of
+with less agitation, in spite of her youth, her charming eyes and the
+recklessly extravagant quantity of her golden hair. For she is an
+American citizen, and she has a husband (also an American citizen) in
+Ghent, and her husband has a high-speed motor-car, and if the Germans
+should ever advance upon this city he can be relied upon to take her
+out of it before they can possibly get in. Besides, even in the German
+lines American citizens are safe.
+
+We are all suffering a slight tension. The men, who can see no reason
+why the ambulance should not have been sent out last night, are restless
+and abstracted and impatient for the order to get up and go. No wonder.
+They have been waiting five weeks for their chance.
+
+There is Dr. Haynes, whose large dark head and heavy shoulders look as
+if they sustained the whole weight of an intolerable world. His
+features, designed for sensuous composure, brood in a sad and sulky
+resignation to the boredom of delay.
+
+His friend, Dr. Bird, the young man with the head of an enormous cherub
+and the hair of a blond baby, hair that _will_ fall in a shining lock on
+his pink forehead, Dr. Bird has an air of boisterous preparation, as if
+the ambulance were a picnic party and he was responsible for the
+champagne.
+
+Mr. Foster, the inquiring tourist, looks a little anxious, as if he were
+preoccupied with the train he's got to catch.
+
+Bert, the chauffeur, sits tight with the grim assurance of a man who
+knows that the expedition cannot start without him. The chauffeur Tom
+has an expressive face. Every minute it becomes more vivid with
+humorous, contemptuous, indignant protest. It says plainly: "Well, this
+is about the rottenest show I ever was let in for. Bar none. Call
+yourself a field ambulance? Garn! And if you _are_ a field ambulance,
+who but a blanky fool would have hit upon this old blankety haunt of
+peace. It'll be the 'Ague Conference next!"
+
+But it is on the Chaplain, Mr. Grierson, that the strain is telling
+most. It shows in his pale and prominent blue eyes, and in a slight
+whiteness about his high cheek-bones. In his valiant khaki he has more
+than any of us the air of being on the eve. He is visibly bracing
+himself to a stupendous effort. He smokes a cigarette with ostentatious
+nonchalance. We all think we know these symptoms. We turn our eyes away,
+considerately, from Mr. Grierson. Which of us can say that when our turn
+comes the thought of danger will not spoil our breakfast?
+
+The poor boy squares his shoulders. He is white now round the edges of
+his lips. But he is going through with it.
+
+Suddenly he speaks.
+
+"I shall hold Matins in this room at ten o'clock every Sunday morning.
+If any of you like to attend you may."
+
+There is a terrible silence. None of us look at each other. None of us
+look at Mr. Grierson.
+
+Presently Mrs. Torrence is heard protesting that we haven't come here
+for Matins; that this is a mess-room and not a private chapel; and that
+Matins are against all military discipline.
+
+"I shall hold Matins all the same," says Mr. Grierson. His voice is
+thick and jerky. "And if anybody likes to attend, they can. That's all
+I've got to say."
+
+He gets up. He faces the batteries of unholy and unsympathetic eyes. He
+throws away the end of his cigarette with a gesture of superb defiance.
+
+He has gone through with it. He has faced the fire. He has come out, not
+quite victorious, but with his hero's honour unstained.
+
+It seemed to me awful that none of us should want his Matins. I should
+like, personally, to see him through with them. I could face the hostile
+eyes. But what I cannot face is the ceremony itself. My _moral_ was
+spoiled with too many ceremonies in my youth; ceremonies that lacked all
+beauty and sincerity and dignity. And though I am convinced of the
+beauty and sincerity and dignity of Mr. Grierson's soul I cannot kneel
+down with him and take part in the performance of his prayer. Prayer is
+either the Supreme Illusion, or the Supreme Act, the pure and naked
+surrender to Reality, and attended by such sacredness and shyness that
+you can accomplish it only when alone or lost in a multitude that prays.
+
+But why is there no Victoria Cross for moral courage?
+
+(Dr. Wilson has come. He looks clever and nice.)
+
+Our restlessness increases.
+
+
+[_11 a.m._]
+
+I have seen one of them. As I went downstairs this morning, two men
+carrying a stretcher crossed the landing below. I saw the outline of the
+wounded body under the blanket, and the head laid back on the pillow.
+
+It is impossible, it is inconceivable, that I should have been afraid of
+seeing this. It is as if the wounded man himself absolved me from the
+memory and the reproach of fear.
+
+I stood by the stair-rail to let them pass. There was some difficulty
+about turning at the stair-head. Mr. Riley was there. He came forward
+and took one end of the stretcher and turned it. He was very quiet and
+very gentle. You could see that he did the right thing by instinct. And
+I saw his face, and knew what had brought him here.
+
+And here on the first landing is another wounded. His face is deformed
+by an abscess from a bullet in his mouth. It gives him a terrible look,
+half savage, wholly suffering. He sits there and cannot speak.
+
+Mr. Riley is the only one of us who has found anything to do. So
+presently we go out to get our military passes. We stroll miserably
+about the town, oppressed with a sense of our futility. We buy
+cigarettes for the convalescents.
+
+And at noon no orders have come for us.
+
+They come just as we are sitting down to lunch. Our ambulance car is to
+go to Alost at once. The Commandant is arrested in the act of cutting
+bread. Dr. Bird is arrested in the act of eating it. We are all arrested
+in our several acts. As if they had been criminal acts, we desist
+suddenly. The men get up and look at each other. It is clear that they
+cannot all go. Mr. Grierson looks at the Commandant. His face is a
+little white and strained, as it was this morning when he announced
+Matins for ten o'clock.
+
+The Commandant looks at Dr. Bird and tells him that he may go if he
+likes. His tone is admirably casual; it conveys no sense of the
+magnificence of his renunciation. He looks also at Mr. Grierson and Mr.
+Foster. The lot of honour falls upon these three.
+
+They set out, still with their air of a youthful picnic party. Dr. Bird
+is more than ever the boisterous young man in charge of the champagne.
+
+I am contented so long as Ursula Dearmer and Mrs. Lambert and Mrs.
+Torrence and Janet McNeil and the Commandant do not go yet. To anybody
+who knows the Commandant he is bound to be a prominent figure in the
+terrible moving pictures made by fear. Smitten by some great idea, he
+dashes out of cover as the shrapnel is falling. He wanders, wrapped in a
+happy dream, into the enemies' trenches. He mingles with their lines of
+communication as I have seen him mingle with the traffic at the junction
+of Chandos Street and the Strand. If you were to inform him of a patrol
+of Uhlans coming down the road, he would only say, "I see no Uhlans,"
+and continue in their direction. It is inconceivable to his optimism
+that he should encounter Uhlans in a world so obviously made for peace
+and righteousness.
+
+So that it is a relief to see somebody else (whom I do not know quite so
+well) going first. Time enough to be jumpy when the Commandant and the
+women go forth on the perilous adventure.
+
+That is all very well. But I am jumpy all the same. By the mere fact
+that they are going out first Mr. Grierson and Mr. Foster have suddenly
+become dear and sacred. Their lives, their persons, their very
+clothes--Dr. Bird's cheerful face, which is so like an overgrown
+cherub's, his blond, gold lock of infantile hair, Mr. Grierson's pale
+eyes that foresee danger, his not too well fitting khaki coat--have
+acquired suddenly a priceless value, the value of things long seen and
+long admired. It is as if I had known them all my life; as if life will
+be unendurable if they do not come back safe.
+
+It is not very endurable now. Of all the things that can happen to a
+woman on a field ambulance, the worst is to stay behind. To stay behind
+with nothing in the world to do but to devise a variety of dreadful
+deaths for Tom, the chauffeur, and Dr. Bird and Mr. Grierson and Mr.
+Foster. To know nothing except that Alost is being bombarded and that it
+is to Alost that they are going.
+
+And the others who have been left behind are hanging about in gloom,
+disgusted with their fate. Mrs. Torrence and Janet McNeil are beginning
+to ask themselves what they are here for. To go through the wards is
+only to be in the way of the angelic beings with red crosses on their
+breasts and foreheads who are already somewhat in each other's way.
+Mrs. Torrence and the others do, however, go into the wards and talk to
+the wounded and cheer them up. I sit in the deserted mess-room, and look
+at the lunch that Tom and Dr. Bird and Mr. Grierson should have eaten
+and were obliged to leave behind. I would give anything to be able to go
+round the wards and cheer the wounded up. I wonder whether there is
+anything I could conceivably do for the wounded that would not bore them
+inexpressibly if I were to do it. I frame sentence after sentence in
+strange and abominable French, and each, apart from its own inherent
+absurdity, seems a mockery of the wounded. You cannot go to an immortal
+hero and grin at him and say _Comment allez-vous?_ and expect him to be
+cheered up, especially when you know yourself to be one of a long
+procession of women who have done the same.
+
+I abandon myself to my malady of self-distrust.
+
+It is at its worst when Jean and Max, the convalescent orderlies, come
+in to remove the ruins of our mess. They are pathetic and adorable with
+their close-cropped heads in the pallor of their convalescence (Jean is
+attired in a suit of yellowish linen and Max in striped flannels).
+Jean's pallor is decorated (there is no other word for it) with
+blue-grey eyes, black eyebrows, black eyelashes and a little black
+moustache. He is martial and ardent and alert. But the pallor of Max is
+unredeemed; it is morbid and profound. It has invaded his whole being.
+His eyelids and his small sensitive mouth are involved; and his round
+dark eyes have the queer grey look of some lamentable wonder and
+amazement. But neither horror nor discipline have spoiled his engaging
+air--the air of a very young _collégien_ who has broken loose and got
+into this Military Hospital by mistake.
+
+I do not know whether intuition is a French or Belgian gift. Jean and
+Max are not Belgian but French, and they have it to a marvellous degree.
+They seemed to know in an instant what was the matter with the English
+lady; and they set about curing the malady. I have seldom seen such
+perfect tact and gentleness as was then displayed by those two hospital
+orderlies, Max and Jean. They had been wounded not so very long ago. But
+they think nothing of that. They intimate that if I insist on helping
+them with their plates and dishes they will be wounded, and more
+severely, in their honour.
+
+We converse.
+
+It is in conversation that they are most adorable. They gaze at you with
+candid, innocent eyes; not a quiver of a lip or an eyelash betrays to
+you the outrageous quality of your French. The behaviour of your
+sentences would cause a scandal in a private boarding school for young
+ladies, it is so fantastically incorrect. But Max and Jean receive each
+phrase with an imperturbable and charming gravity. By the subtlest
+suggestion of manner they assure you that you speak with fluency and
+distinction, that yours is a very perfect French. Only their severe
+attentiveness warns you of the strain you are putting on them.
+
+Max lingered long after Jean had departed to his kitchen. And presently
+he gave up his secret. He is a student, and they took him from his
+College (his course unfinished) to fight for his country. When the War
+broke out his mother went mad with the horror of it. He told me this
+quite simply, as if he were relating a common incident of war-time.
+Then, with a little air of mystery, he signed to me to follow him along
+the corridor. He stopped at a closed door and showed me a name inscribed
+in thick ornamental Gothic characters on a card tacked to the panel:
+
+ Prosper Panne.
+
+Max is not his real name. It is the name that Prosper Panne has taken to
+disguise himself while he is a servant. Prosper Panne--_il est écrivain,
+journaliste_. He writes for the Paris papers. He looked at me with his
+amazed, pathetic eyes, and pointed with a finger to his breast to
+assure me that he is he, Prosper Panne.
+
+And in the end I asked him whether it would bore the wounded frightfully
+if I took them some cigarettes? (I laid in cigarettes this morning as a
+provision for this desolate afternoon.)
+
+And--dear Prosper Panne--so thoroughly did he understand my malady, that
+he himself escorted me. It is as if he knew the _peur sacré_ that
+restrains me from flinging myself into the presence of the wounded.
+Soft-footed and graceful, turning now and then with his instinct of
+protection, the orderly glides before me, smoothing the way between my
+shyness and this dreaded majesty of suffering.
+
+I followed him (with my cigarettes in my hand and my heart in my mouth)
+into the big ward on the ground floor.
+
+I don't want to describe that ward, or the effect of those rows upon
+rows of beds, those rows upon rows of bound and bandaged bodies, the
+intensity of physical anguish suggested by sheer force of
+multiplication, by the diminishing perspective of the beds, by the clear
+light and nakedness of the great hall that sets these repeated units of
+torture in a world apart, a world of insufferable space and agonizing
+time, ruled by some inhuman mathematics and given over to pure
+transcendent pain. A sufficiently large ward full of wounded really
+does leave an impression very like that. But the one true thing about
+this impression is its transcendence. It is utterly removed from and
+unlike anything that you have experienced before. From the moment that
+the doors have closed behind you, you are in another world, and under
+its strange impact you are given new senses and a new soul. If there is
+horror here you are not aware of it as horror. Before these multiplied
+forms of anguish what you feel--if there be anything of _you_ left to
+feel--is not pity, because it is so near to adoration.
+
+If you are tired of the burden and malady of self, go into one of these
+great wards and you will find instant release. You and the sum of your
+little consciousness are not things that matter any more. The lowest and
+the least of these wounded Belgians is of supreme importance and
+infinite significance. You, who were once afraid of them and of their
+wounds, may think that you would suffer for them now, gladly; but you
+are not allowed to suffer; you are marvellously and mercilessly let off.
+In this sudden deliverance from yourself you have received the ultimate
+absolution, and their torment is your peace.
+
+In the big ward very few of the men were well enough to smoke. So we
+went to the little wards where the convalescents are, Max leading.
+
+I do not think that Max has received absolution yet. It is quite evident
+that he is proud of his _entrée_ into this place and of his intimacy
+with the wounded, of his rôle of interpreter.
+
+But how perfectly he does it! He has no Flemish, but through his subtle
+gestures even the poor Flamand, who has no French, understands what I
+want to say to him and can't. He turns this modest presentation of
+cigarettes into a high social function, a trifle ambitious, perhaps, but
+triumphantly achieved.
+
+All that was over by about three o'clock, when the sanctuary cast us
+out, and Max went back to his empty kitchen and became Prosper Panne
+again, and remembered that his mother was mad; and I went to the empty
+mess-room and became my miserable self and remembered that the Field
+Ambulance was still out, God knows where.
+
+The mess-room windows look south over the railway lines towards the
+country where the fighting is. From the balcony you can see the lines
+where the troop trains run, going north-west and south-east. The
+Station, the Post Office, the Telegraph and Telephone Offices are here,
+all in one long red-brick building that bounds one side of the _Place_.
+It stands at right angles to the Flandria and stretches along opposite
+its flank. It has a flat roof with a crenelated parapet. Grass grows on
+the roof. No guns are mounted there, for Ghent is an open city. But in
+German tactics bombardment by aeroplane doesn't seem to count, and our
+situation is more provocative now than the Terminus Hotel at Ostend.
+
+Beyond the straight black railway lines are miles upon miles of flat
+open country, green fields and rows of poplars, and little woods, and
+here and there a low rise dark with trees. Under our windows the white
+street runs south-eastward, and along it scouting cars and cycling corps
+rush to the fighting lines, and military motor-cars hurry impatiently,
+carrying Belgian staff officers; the ammunition wagons lumber along, and
+the troops march in a long file, to disappear round the turn of the
+road. That is where the others have gone, and I'd give everything I
+possess to go with them.
+
+They have come back, incredibly safe, and have brought in four wounded.
+
+There was a large crowd gathered in the _Place_ to see them come, a
+crowd that has nothing to do and that lives from hour to hour on this
+spectacle of the wounded. Intense excitement this time, for one of the
+four wounded is a German. He was lying on a stretcher. No sooner had
+they drawn him out of the ambulance than they put him back again. (No
+Germans are taken in at our Hospital; they are all sent to the old
+_Hôpital Militaire_ No. I.) He thrust up his poor hand and grabbed the
+hanging strap to raise himself a little in his stretcher, and I saw him.
+He was ruddy and handsome. His thick blond hair stood up stiff from his
+forehead. His little blond moustache was turned up and twisted fiercely
+like the Kaiser's. The crowd booed at him as he lay there. His was a
+terrible pathos, unlike any other. He was so defiant and so helpless.
+And there's another emotion gone by the board. You simply could not hate
+him.
+
+Later in the evening both cars were sent out, Car No. 1 with the
+Commandant and, if you will believe it, Ursula Dearmer. Heavens! What
+can the Military Power be thinking of? Car No. 2 took Dr. Wilson and
+Mrs. Torrence. The Military Power, I suppose, has ordained this too. And
+when I think of Mrs. Torrence's dream of getting into the greatest
+possible danger, I am glad that the Commandant is with Ursula Dearmer.
+We pledged our words, he and I, that danger and Ursula Dearmer should
+never meet.
+
+They all come back, impossibly safe. They are rather like children after
+the party, too excited to give a lucid and coherent tale of what they've
+done. My ambulance Day-Book stores the stuff from which reports and
+newspaper articles are to be made. I note that Car No. 1 has brought
+three wounded to Hospital I., and that Car No. 2 has brought four
+wounded to Hospital II., also that a dum-dum bullet has been found in
+the hand of one of the three. There is a considerable stir among the
+surgeons over this bullet. They are vaguely gratified at its being found
+in our hospital and not the other.
+
+Little Janet McNeil and Mr. Riley and all the others who were left
+behind have gone to bed in hopeless gloom. Even the bullet hasn't roused
+them beyond the first tense moment.
+
+I ask for ink, and dear Max has given me all his in his own ink-pot.
+
+
+[_Monday, 28th._]
+
+We have been here a hundred years.
+
+Car No. 1 went out at eight-thirty this morning, with the Commandant and
+Dr. Bird and Ursula Dearmer and Mr. Grierson and a Belgian Red Cross
+guide. With Tom, the chauffeur, that makes six. Tom's face, as he sees
+this party swarming on his car, is expressive of tumultuous passions.
+Disgust predominates.
+
+Their clothes seem stranger than ever by contrast with the severe
+military khaki of the car. Dr. Bird has added to his civilian costume a
+Belgian forage cap with a red tassel that hangs over his forehead. It
+was given to him yesterday by way of homage to his courage and his
+personal charm. But it makes him horribly vulnerable. The Chaplain,
+standing out from the rest of the Corps in complete khaki, is an even
+more inevitable mark for bullets. Tom stares at everybody with eyes of
+violent inquiry. He still evidently wants to know whether we call
+ourselves a field ambulance. He starts his car with movements of
+exasperation and despair. We are to judge what his sense of discipline
+must be since he consents to drive the thing at all.
+
+The Commandant affects not to see Tom. Perhaps he really doesn't see
+him.
+
+It is just as well that he can't see Mrs. Torrence, or Janet McNeil or
+Mr. Riley or Dr. Haynes. They are overpowered by this tragedy of being
+left behind. Under it the discipline of the ---- Hospital breaks down.
+The eighteen-year-old child is threatening to commit suicide or else go
+home. She regards the two acts as equivalent. Mr. Riley's gloom is now
+so awful that he will not speak when he is spoken to. He looks at me
+with dumb hostility, as if he thought that I had something to do with
+it. Dr. Haynes's melancholy is even more heart-rending, because it is
+gentle and unexpressed.
+
+I try to console them. I point out that it is a question of arithmetic.
+There are only two cars and there are fourteen of us. Fourteen into two
+won't go, even if you don't count the wounded. And, after all, we
+haven't been here two days. But it is no good. We have been here a
+hundred years, and we have done nothing. There isn't anything to do.
+There are not enough wounded to go round. We turn our eyes with longing
+towards Antwerp, so soon to be battered by the siege-guns from Namur.
+
+And Bert, poor Bert! he has crawled into Ambulance Car No. 2 where it
+stands outside in the hospital yard, and he has hidden himself under the
+hood.
+
+Mrs. Lambert is a little sad, too. But we are none of us very sorry for
+Mrs. Lambert. We have gathered that her husband is a journalist, and
+that he is special correspondent at the front for some American paper.
+He has a motor-car which we assume rashly to be the property of his
+paper. He is always dashing off to the firing-line in it, and Mrs.
+Lambert is always at liberty to go with him. She is mistaken if she
+thinks that her sorrow is in any way comparable with ours.
+
+But if there are not enough wounded to go round in Ghent, there are
+more refugees than Ghent can deal with. They are pouring in by all the
+roads from Alost and Termonde. Every train disgorges multitudes of them
+into the _Place_.
+
+This morning I went to the Matron, Madame F., and told her I wasn't much
+good, but I'd be glad if she could give me some work. I said I supposed
+there was some to be done among the refugees.
+
+Work? Among the refugees? They could employ whole armies of us. There
+are thousands of refugees at the Palais des Fêtes. I had better go there
+and see what is being done. Madame will give me an introduction to her
+sister-in-law, Madame F., the Présidente of the Comité des Dames, and to
+her niece, Mademoiselle F., who will take me to the Palais.
+
+And Madame adds that there will soon be work for all of us in the
+Hospital. Yes: even for the untrained.
+
+Life is once more bearable.
+
+But the others won't believe it. They say there are three hundred nurses
+in the hospital.
+
+And the fact remains that we have two young surgeons cooling their heels
+in the corridors, and a fully-trained nurse tearing her hair out, while
+the young girl, Ursula Dearmer, takes the field.
+
+And I think of the poor little dreamy, guileless Commandant in his
+conspicuous car, and I smile at her in secret, thanking Heaven that it's
+Ursula Dearmer and not Mrs. Torrence who is at his side.
+
+The ambulance has come back from Alost with two or three wounded and
+some refugees. The Commandant is visibly elated, elated out of all
+proportion to the work actually done. Ursula Dearmer is not elated in
+the very least, but she is wide-awake. Her docility has vanished with
+her torpor. She and the Commandant both look as if something extremely
+agreeable had happened to them at Alost. But they are reticent. We
+gather that Ursula Dearmer has been working with the nuns in the Convent
+at Alost, where the wounded were taken before the ambulance cars removed
+them to Ghent. It sounded very safe.
+
+But the Commandant dashed into my room after luncheon. His face was
+radiant, almost ecstatic. He was like a child who has rushed in to tell
+you how ripping the pantomime was.
+
+"We've been _under fire_!"
+
+But I was very angry. Coldly and quietly angry. I felt like that when I
+was ten years old and piloting my mother through the thick of the
+traffic between Guildhall and the Bank, and she broke from me and was
+all but run over. I don't quite know what I said to him, but I think I
+said he ought to be ashamed of himself. For it seems that Ursula
+Dearmer was with him.
+
+I remembered how Ursula Dearmer's mother had come to me in the
+committee-room and asked me how near we proposed to go to the
+firing-line, and whether her daughter would be in any danger, and how I
+said, first of all, that there wasn't any use pretending that there
+wouldn't be danger, and that the chances were--and how the Commandant
+had intervened at that moment to assure her that danger there would be
+none. With a finger on the map of France and Belgium he traced the
+probable, the inevitable, course of the campaign; and in light, casual
+tones which allayed all anxiety, he explained how, as the Germans
+advanced upon any point, we should retire upon our base. As for the
+actual field-work, with one gesture he swept the whole battle-line into
+the distance, and you saw it as an infinitely receding tide that left
+its wrack strewn on a place of peace where the ambulance wandered at its
+will, secure from danger. The whole thing was done with such compelling
+and convincing enthusiasm that Ursula Dearmer's mother adopted more and
+more the humble attitude of a mere woman who has failed to grasp the
+conditions of modern warfare. Ursula Dearmer herself looked more docile
+than ever, though a little bored, and very sleepy.
+
+And I remembered how when it was all over Ursula Dearmer's mother
+implored me, if there _was_ any danger, to see that Ursula Dearmer was
+sent home, and how I promised that whatever happened Ursula Dearmer
+would be safe, clinching it with a frightfully sacred inner vow, and
+saying to myself at the same time what a terrible nuisance this young
+girl is going to be. I saw myself at the moment of parting, standing on
+the hearthrug, stiff as a poker with resolution, and saying solemnly,
+"I'll keep my word!"
+
+And here was the Commandant informing me with glee that a shell had
+fallen and burst at Ursula Dearmer's feet.
+
+He was so pleased, and with such innocent and childlike pleasure, that I
+hadn't the heart to tell him that there wasn't much resemblance between
+those spaces of naked peace behind the receding battle-line and the
+narrow streets of a bombarded village. I only said that I should write
+to Ursula Dearmer's mother and ask her to release me from my promise. He
+said I would do nothing of the kind. I said I would. And I did. And the
+poor Commandant left me, somewhat dashed, and not at all pleased with
+me.
+
+It seems that the shell burst, not exactly at Ursula Dearmer's feet, but
+ten yards away from her. It came romping down the street with immense
+impetus and determination; and it is not said of Ursula Dearmer that she
+was much less coy in the encounter. She took to shell-fire "like a duck
+to water."
+
+Dr. Bird told us this. Ursula Dearmer herself was modest, and claimed no
+sort of intimacy with the shell that waked her up. She was as nice as
+possible about it. But all the same, into the whole Corps (that part of
+it that had been left behind) there has crept a sneaking envy of her
+luck. I feel it myself. And if _I_ feel it, what must Mrs. Torrence and
+Janet feel?
+
+Mrs. Lambert, anyhow, has had nothing to complain of so far. Her husband
+took her to Alost in his motor-car; I mean the motor-car which is the
+property of his paper.
+
+In the afternoon Mademoiselle F. called to take me to the Palais des
+Fêtes. We stopped at a shop on the way to buy the Belgian Red Cross
+uniform--the white linen overall and veil--which you must wear if you
+work among the refugees there.
+
+Madame F. is very kind and very tired. She has been working here since
+early morning for weeks on end. They are short of volunteers for the
+service of the evening meals, and I am to work at the tables for three
+hours, from six to nine P.M. This is settled, and a young Red Cross
+volunteer takes me over the Palais. It is an immense building, rather
+like Olympia. It stands away from the town in open grounds like the
+Botanical Gardens, Regent's Park. It is where the great Annual Shows
+were held and the vast civic entertainments given. Miles of country
+round Ghent are given up to market-gardening. There are whole fields of
+begonias out here, brilliant and vivid in the sun. They will never be
+sold, never gathered, never shown in the Palais des Fêtes. It is the
+peasants, the men and women who tilled these fields, and their children
+that are being shown here, in the splendid and wonderful place where
+they never set foot before.
+
+There are four thousand of them lying on straw in the outer hall, in a
+space larger than Olympia. They are laid out in rows all round the four
+walls, and on every foot of ground between; men, women and children
+together, packed so tight that there is barely standing-room between any
+two of them. Here and there a family huddles up close, trying to put a
+few inches between it and the rest; some have hollowed out a place in
+the straw or piled a barrier of straw between themselves and their
+neighbours, in a piteous attempt at privacy; some have dragged their own
+bedding with them and are lodged in comparative comfort. But these are
+the very few. The most part are utterly destitute, and utterly
+abandoned to their destitution. They are broken with fatigue. They have
+stumbled and dropped no matter where, no matter beside whom. None turns
+from his neighbour; none scorns or hates or loathes his fellow. The
+rigidly righteous _bourgeoise_ lies in the straw breast to breast with
+the harlot of the village slum, and her innocent daughter back to back
+with the parish drunkard. Nothing matters. Nothing will ever matter any
+more.
+
+They tell you that when darkness comes down on all this there is hell.
+But you do not believe it. You can see nothing sordid and nothing ugly
+here. The scale is too vast. Your mind refuses this coupling of infamy
+with transcendent sorrow. It rejects all images but the one image of
+desolation which is final and supreme. It is as if these forms had no
+stability and no significance of their own; as if they were locked
+together in one immense body and stirred or slept as one.
+
+Two or three figures mount guard over this litter of prostrate forms.
+They are old men and old women seated on chairs. They sit upright and
+immobile, with their hands folded on their knees. Some of them have
+fallen asleep where they sit. They are all rigid in an attitude of
+resignation. They have the dignity of figures that will endure, like
+that, for ever. They are Flamands.
+
+This place is terribly still. There is hardly any rustling of the straw.
+Only here and there the cry of a child fretting for sleep or for its
+mother's breast. These people do not speak to each other. Half of them
+are sound asleep, fixed in the posture they took when they dropped into
+the straw. The others are drowsed with weariness, stupefied with sorrow.
+On all these thousands of faces there is a mortal apathy. Their ruin is
+complete. They have been stripped bare of the means of life and of all
+likeness to living things. They do not speak. They do not think. They do
+not, for the moment, feel. In all the four thousand--except for the
+child crying yonder--there is not one tear.
+
+And you who look at them cannot speak or think or feel either, and you
+have not one tear. A path has been cleared through the straw from door
+to door down the middle of the immense hall, a narrower track goes all
+round it in front of the litters that are ranged under the walls, and
+you are taken through and round the Show. You are to see it all. The
+dear little Belgian lady, your guide, will not let you miss anything.
+"_Regardez, Mademoiselle, ces deux petites filles. Qu'elles sont jolies,
+les pauvres petites._" "_Voici deux jeunes mariés, qui dorment. Regardez
+l'homme; il tient encore la main de sa femme._"
+
+You look. Yes. They are asleep. He is really holding her hand. "_Et ces
+quatre petits enfants qui ont perdu leur père et leur mère. C'est
+triste, n'est-ce pas, Mademoiselle?_"
+
+And you say, "_Oui, Mademoiselle. C'est bien triste._"
+
+But you don't mean it. You don't feel it. You don't know whether it is
+"_triste_" or not. You are not sure that "_triste_" is the word for it.
+There are no words for it, because there are no ideas for it. It is a
+sorrow that transcends all sorrow that you have ever known. You have a
+sort of idea that perhaps, if you can ever feel again, this sight will
+be worse to remember than it is to see. You can't believe what you see;
+you are stunned, stupefied, as if you yourself had been crushed and
+numbed in the same catastrophe. Only now and then a face upturned (a
+face that your guide hasn't pointed out to you) surging out of this
+incredible welter of faces and forms, smites you with pity, and you feel
+as if you had received a lacerating wound in sleep.
+
+Little things strike you, though. Already you are forgetting the faces
+of the two little girls and of the young husband and wife holding each
+other's hands, and of the four little children who have lost their
+father and mother, but you notice the little dog, the yellow-brown
+mongrel terrier, that absurd little dog which belongs to all nations and
+all countries. He has obtained possession of the warm centre of a pile
+of straw and is curled up on it fast asleep. And the Flemish family who
+brought him, who carried him in turn for miles rather than leave him to
+the Germans, they cannot stretch themselves on the straw because of him.
+They have propped themselves up as best they may all round him, and they
+cannot sleep, they are too uncomfortable.
+
+More thousands than there is room for in the straw are fed three times a
+day in the inner hall, leading out of this dreadful dormitory. All round
+the inner hall and on the upper story off the gallery are rooms for
+washing and dressing the children and for bandaging sore feet and
+attending to the wounded. For there are many wounded among the refugees.
+This part of the Palais is also a hospital, with separate wards for men,
+for women and children and for special cases.
+
+Late in the evening M. P---- took the whole Corps to see the Palais des
+Fêtes, and I went again. By night I suppose it is even more "_triste_"
+than it was by day. In the darkness the gardens have taken on some
+malign mystery and have given it to the multitudes that move there, that
+turn in the winding paths among ghostly flowers and bushes, that
+approach and recede and approach in the darkness of the lawns. Blurred
+by the darkness and diminished to the barest indications of humanity,
+their forms are more piteous and forlorn than ever; their faces, thrown
+up by the darkness, more awful in their blankness and their pallor. The
+scene, drenched in darkness, is unearthly and unintelligible. You cannot
+account for it in saying to yourself that these are the refugees, and
+everybody knows what a refugee is; that there is War--and everybody
+knows what war is--in Belgium; and that these people have been shelled
+out of their homes and are here at the Palais des Fêtes, because there
+is no other place for them, and the kind citizens of Ghent have
+undertaken to house and feed them here. That doesn't make it one bit
+more credible or bring you nearer to the secret of these forms. You who
+are compelled to move with them in the sinister darkness are more than
+ever under the spell that forbids you and them to feel. You are deadened
+now to the touch of the incarnate.
+
+On the edge of the lawn, near the door of the Palais, some ghostly roses
+are growing on a ghostly tree. Your guide, M. P----, pauses to tell you
+their names and kind. It seems that they are rare.
+
+Several hundred more refugees have come into the Palais since the
+afternoon. They have had to pack them a little closer in the straw.
+Eight thousand were fed this evening in the inner hall.
+
+In the crush I get separated from M. P---- and from the Corps. I see
+some of them in the distance, the Commandant and Ursula Dearmer and Mrs.
+Lambert and M. P----. I do not feel as if I belonged to them any more. I
+belong so much to the stunned sleepers in the straw who cannot feel.
+
+Nice Dr. Wilson comes across to me and we go round together, looking at
+the sleepers. He says that nothing he has seen of the War has moved him
+so much as this sight. He wishes that the Kaiser could be brought here
+to see what he has done. And I find myself clenching my hands tight till
+it hurts, not to suppress my feelings--for I feel nothing--but because I
+am afraid that kind Dr. Wilson is going to talk. At the same time, I
+would rather he didn't leave me just yet. There is a sort of comfort and
+protection in being with somebody who isn't callous, who can really
+feel.
+
+But Dr. Wilson isn't very fluent, and presently he leaves off talking,
+too.
+
+Near the door we pass the family with the little yellow-brown dog. All
+day the little dog slept in their place. And now that they are trying to
+sleep he will not let them. The little dog is wide awake and walking
+all over them. And when you think what it must have cost to bring him--
+
+_C'est triste, n'est-ce pas?_
+
+As we left the gardens M. P---- gathered two ghostly roses, the last
+left on their tree, and gave one to Mrs. Lambert and one to me. I felt
+something rather like a pang then. Heaven knows why, for such a little
+thing.
+
+Conference in our mess-room. M. ----, the Belgian Red Cross guide who
+goes out with our ambulances, is there. He is very serious and
+important. The Commandant calls us to come and hear what he has to say.
+It seems it had been arranged that one of our cars should be sent
+to-morrow morning to Termonde to bring back refugees. But M. ---- does
+not think that car will ever start. He says that the Germans are now
+within a few miles of Ghent, and may be expected to occupy it to-morrow
+morning, and that instead of going to Termonde to-morrow we had very
+much better pack up and retreat to Bruges to-night. There are ten
+thousand Germans ready to march into Ghent.
+
+M. ---- is weighed down by the thought of his ten thousand Germans. But
+the Commandant is not weighed down a bit. On the contrary, a pleasant
+exaltation comes upon him. It comes upon the whole Corps, it comes even
+upon me. We refuse to believe in his ten thousand Germans. M. ----
+himself cannot swear to them. We refuse to pack up. We refuse to retreat
+to Bruges to-night. Time enough for agitation in the morning. We prefer
+to go to bed. M. ---- shrugs his shoulders, as much as to say that he
+has done his duty and if we are all murdered in our beds it isn't his
+fault.
+
+Does M. ---- really believe in the advance of the ten thousand? His face
+is inscrutable.
+
+
+[_Tuesday, 29th._]
+
+No Germans in Ghent. No Germans reported near Ghent.
+
+Madame F. and her daughter smile at the idea of the Germans coming into
+Ghent. They will never come, and if they do come they will only take a
+little food and go out again. They will never do any harm to Ghent.
+Namur and Liége and Brussels, if you like, and Malines, and Louvain, and
+Termonde and Antwerp (perhaps); but Ghent--why should they? It is
+Antwerp they are making for, not Ghent.
+
+And Madame represents the mind of the average Gantois. It is placid,
+incredulous, stolidly at ease, superbly inhospitable to disagreeable
+ideas. No Gantois can conceive that what has been done to the citizens
+of Termonde would be done to him. _C'est triste_--what has been done to
+the citizens of Termonde, but it doesn't shake his belief in the
+immunity of Ghent.
+
+Which makes M. ----'s behaviour all the more mysterious. _Why_ did he
+try to scare us so? Five theories are tenable:
+
+(1.) M. ---- did honestly believe that ten thousand Germans would come
+in the morning and take our ambulance prisoner. That is to say, he
+believed what nobody else believed.
+
+(2.) M. ---- was scared himself. He had no desire to be taken quite so
+near the firing-line as the English Ambulance seemed likely to take him;
+so that the departure of the English Ambulance would not be wholly
+disagreeable to M. ----. (This theory is too far-fetched.)
+
+(3.) M. ---- was the agent of the Military Power, commissioned to test
+the nerve of the English Ambulance. ("Stood fire, have they? Give 'em a
+_real_ scare, and see how they behave.")
+
+(4.) M. ---- is a psychologist and made this little experiment on the
+English Ambulance himself.
+
+(5.) He is a humorist and was simply "pulling its leg."
+
+The three last theories are plausible, but all five collapse before the
+inscrutability of Monsieur's face.
+
+Germans or no Germans, one ambulance car started at five in the morning
+for Quatrecht, somewhere between Ghent and Brussels, to fetch wounded
+and refugees. The other went, later, to Zele. I am not very clear as to
+who has gone with them, but Mrs. Torrence, Mrs. Lambert, Janet McNeil
+and Dr. Haynes and Mr. Riley have been left behind.
+
+It is their third day of inactivity, and three months of it could not
+have devastated them more. They have touched the very bottom of suicidal
+gloom. Three months hence their state of mind will no doubt appear in
+all its absurdity, but at the moment it is too piteous for words. When
+you think what they were yesterday and the day before, there is no
+language to express the crescendo of their despair. I came upon Mr.
+Riley this morning, standing by the window of the mess-room, and
+contemplating the façade of the railway station. (It is making a pattern
+on our brains.) I tried to soothe him. I said it was hard lines--beastly
+hard lines--and told him to cheer up--there'd be heaps for him to do
+presently. And he turned from me like a man who has just buried his
+first-born.
+
+Janet McNeil is even more heart-rending, sunk in a chair with her hands
+stuck into the immense pockets of her overcoat, her flawless and
+impassive face tilted forward as her head droops forlornly to her
+breast. She is such a child that she can see nothing beyond to-day, and
+yesterday and the day before that. She is going back to-morrow. Her
+valour and energy are frustrated and she is wounded in her honour. She
+is conscious of the rottenness of putting on a khaki tunic, and winding
+khaki putties round and round her legs to hang about the Hospital doing
+nothing. And she had to sell her motor bicycle in order to come out. Not
+that that matters in the least. What matters is that we are here, eating
+Belgian food and quartered in a Belgian Military Hospital, and
+"swanking" about with Belgian Red Cross brassards (stamped) on our
+sleeves, and doing nothing for the Belgians, doing nothing for anybody.
+We are not justifying our existence. We are frauds.
+
+I tell the poor child that she cannot possibly feel as big a fraud as I
+do; that there was no earthly reason why I should have come, and none
+whatever why I should remain.
+
+And then, to my amazement, I learn that I am envied. It's all right for
+me. My job is clearly defined, and nobody can take it from me. I haven't
+got to wind khaki putties round my legs for nothing.
+
+I should have thought that the child was making jokes at my expense but
+for the extreme purity and candour of her gaze. Incredible that there
+should exist an abasement profounder than my own. I have hidden my tunic
+and breeches in my hold-all. I dare not own to having brought them.
+
+Down in the vestibule I encounter Mrs. Torrence in khaki. Mrs. Torrence
+yearning for her wounded. Mrs. Torrence determined to get to her wounded
+at any cost. She is not abased or dejected, but exalted, rather. She is
+ready to go to the President or to the Military Power itself, and demand
+her wounded from them. Her beautiful eyes demand them from Heaven
+itself.
+
+I cannot say there are not enough wounded to go round, but I point out
+for the fifteenth time that the trouble is there are not enough
+ambulance cars to go round.
+
+But it is no use. It does not explain why Heaven should have chosen
+Ursula Dearmer and caused shells to bound in her direction, and have
+rejected Mrs. Torrence. The Military Power that should have ordered
+these things has abandoned us to the caprice of Heaven.
+
+Of course if Mrs. Torrence was a saint she would fold her hands and bow
+her superb little head before the decrees of Heaven; but she is only a
+mortal woman, born with the genius of succour and trained to the last
+point of efficiency; so she rages. The tigress, robbed of her young, is
+not more furiously inconsolable than Mrs. Torrence.
+
+It is not Ursula Dearmer's fault. She is innocent of supplanting Mrs.
+Torrence. The thing simply happened. More docile than determined,
+unhurrying and uneager, and only half-awake, she seems to have rolled
+into Car No. 1 with Heaven's impetus behind her. Like the shell at
+Alost, it is her luck.
+
+And on the rest of us our futility and frustration weigh like lead. The
+good Belgian food has become bitter in our mouths. When we took our
+miserable walk through Ghent this morning we felt that _l'Ambulance
+Anglaise_ must be a mark for public hatred and derision because of us. I
+declare I hardly dare go into the shops with the Red Cross brassard on
+my arm. I imagine sardonic raillery in the eyes of every Belgian that I
+meet. We do not think the authorities will stand it much longer; they
+will fire us out of the _Hôpital Militaire_ No. II.
+
+But no, the authorities do not fire us out. Impassive in wisdom and
+foreknowledge, they smile benignly on our agitation. They compliment the
+English Ambulance on the work it has done already. They convey the
+impression that but for the English Ambulance the Belgian Army would be
+in a bad way. Mademoiselle F. insists that the Hospital will soon be
+overflowing with the wounded from Antwerp and that she can find work
+even for me. It is untrue that there are three hundred nurses in the
+Hospital. There are only three hundred nurses in all Belgium. They pile
+it on so that we are more depressed than ever.
+
+Janet McNeil is convinced that they think we are no good and that they
+are just being angels to us because they are sorry for us.
+
+I break it to them very gently that I've volunteered to serve at the
+tables at the Palais des Fêtes. I feel as if I had sneaked into a
+remunerative job while my comrades are starving.
+
+The Commandant is not quite as pleased as I thought he would be to hear
+of my engagement at the Palais des Fêtes. He says, "It is not your
+work." I insist that my work is to do anything I can do; and that if I
+cannot dress wounds I can at least hand round bread and pour out coffee
+and wash up dishes. It is true that I am Secretary and Reporter and (for
+the time being) Treasurer to the Ambulance, and that I carry its funds
+in a leather purse belt round my body. Because I am the smallest and
+weakest member of the Corps that is the most unlikely place for the
+funds to be. It was imprudent, to say the least of it, for the Chaplain
+in his khaki, to carry them, as he did, into the firing-line. The belt,
+which fitted the Chaplain, hangs about half a yard below my waist and is
+extremely uncomfortable, but that is neither here nor there. Keeping the
+Corps' accounts only takes two hours and a half, even with Belgian and
+English money mixed, and when I've added the same column of figures ten
+times up and ten times down, to make certain it's all right (I am no
+good at accounts, but I know my weakness and guard against it, giving
+the Corps the benefit of every doubt and making good every deficit out
+of my private purse). Writing the Day-Book--perhaps half an hour. The
+Commandant's correspondence, when he has any, and reporting to the
+British Red Cross Society, when there is anything to report, another
+half-hour at the outside; and there you have only three and a half hours
+employed out of the twenty-four, even if I balanced my accounts every
+day, and I don't.
+
+True that _The Daily Chronicle_ promised to take any articles that I
+might send them from the front, but I haven't written any. You cannot
+write articles for _The Daily Chronicle_ out of nothing; at least I
+can't.
+
+The Commandant finally yields to argument and entreaty.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I do not tell him that what I really want to do is to go out with the
+Field Ambulance, and get beyond the turn of that road.
+
+I know I haven't the ghost of a chance; I know that if I had--as things
+stand at present--not being a surgeon or a trained nurse, I wouldn't
+take it, even to get there. And at the same time I know, with a superior
+certainty, that this unlikely thing will happen. This sense of certainty
+is not at all uncommon, but it is, or seems, unintelligible. You can
+only conceive it as a premonition of some unavoidable event. It is as if
+something had been looking for you, waiting for you, from all eternity
+out here; something that you have been looking for; and, when you are
+getting near, it begins calling to you; it draws your heart out to it
+all day long. You can give no account of it. All that you know about it
+is that it is unique. It has nothing to do with your ordinary
+curiosities and interests and loves; nothing to do with the thirst for
+experience, or for adventure, or for glory, or for the thrill. You can't
+"get" anything out of it. It is something hidden and secret and
+supremely urgent. Its urgency, indeed, is so great that if you miss it
+you will have missed reality itself.
+
+For me this uncanny anticipation is somehow connected with the turn of
+the south-east road. I do not see how I am ever going to get there or
+anywhere near there. But I am not uneasy or impatient any more. There is
+no hurry. The thing, whatever it is, will be irresistible, and if I
+don't go out to find it, it will find me.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Mrs. Torrence has gone, Heaven knows where. She has not been with the
+others at the Palais des Fêtes. Janet McNeil and Mrs. Lambert have been
+working there for five hours, serving meals to the refugees. Ursula
+Dearmer with extreme docility has been working all the afternoon with
+the nurses.
+
+It looks as if we were beginning to settle down.
+
+Mrs. Torrence has come back. The red German pom-pom has gone from her
+cap and she wears the badge of the Belgian Motor Cyclist Corps, black
+wings on a white ground. Providence has rehabilitated himself. He has
+abased our trained nurse and expert motorist in order to exalt her. He
+fairly flung her in the path of the Colonel of (I think) the Belgian
+Motor Cyclist Corps at a moment when the Colonel found himself in a
+jibbing motor-car without a chauffeur. We gather that the Colonel was
+becoming hectic with blasphemy when she appeared and settled the little
+difficulty between him and his car. She seems to have followed it up by
+driving him then and there straight up to the firing-line to look for
+wounded.
+
+End of the adventure--she volunteered her services as chauffeur to the
+Colonel and was accepted.
+
+The Commandant has received the news with imperturbable optimism.
+
+As for her, she is appeased. She will realize her valorous dream of "the
+greatest possible danger;" and she will get to her wounded.
+
+The others have come back too. They have toiled for five hours among the
+refugees.
+
+
+[_5.30._]
+
+It is my turn now at the Palais des Fêtes.
+
+It took ages to get in. The dining-hall is narrower than the
+sleeping-hall, but it extends beyond it on one side where there is a
+large door opening on the garden. But this door is closed to the public.
+You can only reach the dining-hall by going through the straw among the
+sleepers. And at this point the Commandant's optimism has broken down.
+He won't let you go in through the straw, and the clerk who controls the
+entry won't let you go in through the other door. You explain to the
+clerk that the English Ambulance being quartered in a Military Hospital,
+its rules are inviolable; it is not allowed to expose itself to the
+horrors of the straw. The clerk is not interested in the English
+Ambulance, he is not impressed by the fact that it has volunteered its
+priceless services to the Refugee Committee, and he is contemptuous of
+the orders of its Commandant. His business is to see that you go into
+the Palais through _his_ door and not through any other door. And when
+you tell him that if he will not withdraw his regulations the Ambulance
+will be compelled to withdraw its services, he replies with delicious
+sarcasm, "_Nous n'avons pas prévu ça_." In the end you are referred to
+the Secretary in his bureau. He grasps the situation and is urbanity
+itself. Provided with a special permit bearing his sacred signature, you
+are admitted by the other door.
+
+Your passage to the _Vestiaire_ takes you through the infants' room and
+along the galleries past the wards. The crowd of refugees is so great
+that beds have been put up in the galleries. You take off your outer
+garments and put on the Belgian Red Cross uniform (you have realized by
+this time that your charming white overall and veil are sanitary
+precautions).
+
+Coming down the wide wooden stairways you have a full view of the Inner
+Hall. This enormous oblong space below the galleries is the heart, the
+fervid central _foyer_ of the Palais des Fêtes. At either end of it is
+an immense auditorium, tier above tier of seats, rising towards the
+gallery floors. All down each side of it, standards with triumphal
+devices are tilted from the balustrade. Banners hang from the rafters.
+
+And under them, down the whole length of the hall from auditorium to
+auditorium, the tables are set out. Bare wooden tables, one after
+another, more tables than you can count.
+
+From the door of the sleeping-hall to each auditorium, and from each
+auditorium down the line of the tables a gangway is roped off for the
+passage of the refugees.
+
+They say there are ten thousand five hundred here to-night. Beyond the
+rope-line, along the inner hall, more straw has been laid down to bed
+the overflow from the outer hall. They come on in relays to be fed. They
+are marshalled first into the seats of each auditorium, where they sit
+like the spectators of some monstrous festival and wait for their turn
+at the tables.
+
+This, the long procession of people streaming in without haste, in
+perfect order and submission, is heart-rending if you like. The
+immensity of the crowd no longer overpowers you. The barriers make it a
+steady procession, a credible spectacle. You can take it in. It is the
+thin end of the wedge in your heart. They come on so slowly that you can
+count them as they come. They have sorted themselves out. The fathers
+and the mothers are together, they lead their little children by the
+hand or push them gently before them. There is no anticipation in their
+eyes; no eagerness and no impatience in their bearing. They do not
+hustle each other or scramble for their places. It is their silence and
+submission that you cannot stand.
+
+For you have a moment of dreadful inactivity after the setting of the
+tables for the _premier service_. You have filled your bowls with black
+coffee; somebody else has laid the slices of white bread on the bare
+tables. You have nothing to do but stand still and see them file in to
+the banquet. On the banners and standards from the roof and balustrades
+the Lion of Flanders ramps over their heads. And somewhere in the back
+of your brain a song sings itself to a tune that something in your brain
+wakes up:
+
+ _Ils ne vont pas dompter
+ Le vieux lion de Flandres,
+ Tant que le lion a des dents,
+ Tant que le lion peut griffer._
+
+It is the song the Belgian soldiers sang as they marched to battle in
+the first week of August. It is only the end of September now.
+
+And somebody standing beside you says: "_C'est triste, n'est-ce pas?_"
+
+You cannot look any more.
+
+At the canteen the men are pouring out coffee from enormous enamelled
+jugs into the small jugs that the waitresses bring. This wastes your
+time and cools the coffee. So you take a big jug from the men. It seems
+to you no heavier than an ordinary teapot. And you run with it. To carry
+the largest possible jug at the swiftest possible pace is your only
+chance of keeping sane. (It isn't till it is all over that you hear the
+whisper of "_Anglaise!_" and realize how very far from sane you must
+have looked running round with your enormous jug.) You can fill up the
+coffee bowls again--the little bowls full, the big bowls only half full;
+there is more than enough coffee to go round. But there is no milk
+except for the babies. And when they ask you for more bread there is not
+enough to go twice round. The ration is now two slices of dry bread and
+a bowl of black coffee three times a day. Till yesterday there was an
+allowance of meat for soup at the mid-day meal; to-day the army has
+commandeered all the meat.
+
+But you needn't stand still any more. After the first service the bowls
+have to be cleared from the tables and washed and laid ready for the
+next. Round the great wooden tubs there is a frightful competition. It
+is who can wash and dry and carry back the quickest. You contend with
+brawny Flemish women for the first dip into the tub and the driest
+towel. Then you race round the tables with your pile of crockery, and
+then with your jug, and so on over and over again for three hours, till
+the last relay is fed and the tables are deserted. You wash up again and
+it is all over for you till six o'clock to-morrow evening.
+
+You go back to your mess-room and a ten-o'clock supper of cold coffee
+and sandwiches and Belgian current loaf eaten with butter. And in a
+nightmare afterwards Belgian refugees gather round you and pluck at your
+sleeve and cry to you for more bread: "_Une petite tranche de pain, s'il
+vous plaît, mademoiselle!_"
+
+
+[_Wednesday, 30th._]
+
+No Germans, nor sign of Germans yet.
+
+Fighting is reported at Saint Nicolas, between Antwerp and Ghent. The
+Commandant has an idea. He says that if the Belgian Army has to meet the
+Germans at Saint Nicolas, so as to cut off their advance on Antwerp, the
+base hospital must be removed from Ghent to some centre or point which
+will bring the Ambulance behind the Belgian lines. He thinks that
+working from Ghent would necessarily bring it behind the German lines.
+This is assuming that the Germans coming up from the south-east will cut
+in between Saint Nicolas and Ghent.
+
+He consults the President, who apparently thinks that the base hospital
+will do very well where it is.
+
+
+[_2.30._]
+
+Mrs. Torrence brought her Colonel in to lunch. He is battered and
+grizzled, but still a fine figure in the dark-green uniform of the Motor
+Cyclist Corps. He is very polite and gallant _à la belge_ and vows that
+he has taken on Mrs. Torrence _pour toujours, pour la vie_! She diverts
+the flow of urbanity adroitly.
+
+Except the Colonel nothing noteworthy seems to have occurred to-day. The
+three hours at the Palais des Fêtes were like the three hours last
+night.
+
+
+[_Thursday, October 1st._]
+
+It really isn't safe for the Commandant to go out with Ursula Dearmer.
+For her luck in the matter of bombardments continues. (He might just as
+well be with Mrs. Torrence.) They have been at Termonde. What is more,
+it was Ursula Dearmer who got them through, in spite of the medical
+military officer whose vigorous efforts stopped them at the barrier. He
+seems at one point to have shown weakness and given them leave to go on
+a little way up the road; and the little way seems to have carried them
+out of his sight and onward till they encountered the Colonel (or it may
+have been a General) in command. The Colonel (or the General) seems to
+have broken down very badly, for the car and Ursula Dearmer and the
+Commandant went on towards Termonde. Young Haynes was with them this
+time, and on the way they had picked up Mr. G. L----, War Correspondent
+to the _Daily Mail_ and _Westminster_. They left the car behind
+somewhere in a safe place where the fire from the machine-guns couldn't
+reach it. There is a street or a road--I can't make out whether it is
+inside or outside the town; it leads straight to the bridge over the
+river, which is about as wide there as the Thames at Westminster. The
+bridge is the key to the position; it has been blown up and built again
+several times in the course of the War, and the Germans are now
+entrenched beyond it. The road had been raked by their _mitrailleuses_
+the day before.
+
+It seems to have struck the four simultaneously that it would be quite a
+good thing to walk down this road on the off-chance of the machine-guns
+opening fire again. The tale told by the Commandant evokes an awful
+vision of them walking down it, four abreast, the Commandant and Mr. G.
+L---- on the outside, fairly under shelter, and Ursula Dearmer and young
+Haynes a little in front of them down the middle, where the fire comes,
+when it does come. This spectacle seems to have shaken the Commandant in
+his view of bombarded towns as suitable places of amusement for young
+girls. Young Haynes ought to have known better. You tell him that as
+long as the world endures young Haynes will be young Haynes, and if
+there is danger in the middle of the road, it is there that he will walk
+by preference. And as no young woman of modern times is going to let
+herself be outdone by young Haynes, you must expect to find Ursula
+Dearmer in the middle of the road too. You cannot suppress this
+competitive heroism of young people. The roots strike too deep down in
+human nature. In the modern young man and woman competitive heroism has
+completely forgotten its origin and is now an end in itself.
+
+And if it comes to that--how about Alost?
+
+At the mention of Alost the Commandant's face becomes childlike again in
+its utter simplicity and innocence and candour. Alost was a very
+different thing. Looking for shells at Alost, you understand, was like
+looking for shells on the seashore. At Alost Ursula Dearmer was in no
+sort of danger. For at Alost she was under the Commandant's wing (young
+Haynes hasn't got any wings, only legs to walk into the line of fire
+on). He explains very carefully that he took her under his wing
+_because_ she is a young girl and he feels responsible for her to her
+mother.
+
+(Which, oddly enough, is just how _I_ feel!)
+
+As for young Haynes, I suppose he would plead that when he and Ursula
+Dearmer walked down the middle of the road there was no firing.
+
+That seems to have been young Haynes's particular good fortune. I have
+now a perfect obsession of responsibility. I see, in one dreadful vision
+after another, the things that must happen to Ursula Dearmer under the
+Commandant's wing, and to young Haynes and the Commandant under Ursula
+Dearmer's.
+
+No wounded were found, this time, at Termonde.
+
+This little _contretemps_ with the Commandant has made me forget to
+record a far more notable event. Mrs. Torrence brought young Lieutenant
+G---- in to luncheon. He is the hero of the Belgian Motor Cyclist Corps.
+He is said to have accounted for nine Germans with his own rifle in one
+morning. The Corps has already intimated that this is the first
+well-defined specimen of a man it has yet seen in Belgium. His
+dark-green uniform fits him exceedingly well. He is tall and handsome.
+Drenched in the glamour of the greatest possible danger, he gives it off
+like a subtle essence. As he was led in he had rather the air, the
+slightly awkward, puzzled and embarrassed air, of being on show as a
+fine specimen of a man. But it very soon wore off. In the absence of the
+Commandant he sat in the Commandant's place, so magnificent a figure
+that our mess, with gaps at every table, looked like a banquet given in
+his honour, a banquet whose guests had been decimated by some
+catastrophe.
+
+Suddenly--whether it was the presence of the Lieutenant or the absence
+of the Commandant, or merely reaction from the strain of inactivity, I
+don't know, but suddenly madness came upon our mess. The mess-room was
+no longer a mess-room in a Military Hospital, but a British school-room.
+Mrs. Torrence had changed her woollen cap for a grey felt wide-awake.
+She was no longer an Arctic explorer, but the wild-western cowboy of
+British melodrama. She was the first to go mad. One moment she was
+seated decorously at the Lieutenant's right hand; the next she was
+strolling round the tables with an air of innocent abstraction, having
+armed herself in secret with the little hard round rolls supplied by
+order of the Commandant. Each little roll became a deadly _obus_ in her
+hand. She turned. Her innocent abstraction was intense as she poised
+herself to aim.
+
+With a shout of laughter Dr. Bird ducked behind the cover of his
+table-napkin.
+
+I had a sudden memory of Mrs. Torrence in command of the party at
+Ostend, a figure of austere duty, of inexorable propriety, rigid with
+the discipline of the ---- Hospital, restraining the criminal levity of
+the Red Cross volunteer who would look or dream of looking at Ostend
+Cathedral. Mrs. Torrence, like a seven-year-old child meditating
+mischief, like a baby panther at play, like a very young and very
+engaging demon let loose, is looking at Dr. Bird. He is not a Cathedral,
+but he suffered bombardment all the same. She got his range with a roll.
+She landed her shell in the very centre of his waistcoat.
+
+Her madness entered into Dr. Bird. He replied with a spirited fire which
+fell wide of her and battered the mess-room door. The orderlies
+retreated for shelter into the vestibule beyond. Jean was the first to
+penetrate the line of fire. Max followed him.
+
+Madness entered into Max. He ceased to be a hospital orderly. He became
+Prosper Panne again, the very young _collégien_, as he put down his
+dishes and glided unobtrusively into the affair.
+
+And then the young Belgian Lieutenant went mad. But he gave way by
+degrees. At first he sat up straight and stiff with polite astonishment
+before the spectacle of a British "rag." He paid the dubious tribute of
+a weak giggle to the bombardment of Dr. Bird. He was convulsed at the
+first performance of Prosper Panne. In his final collapse he was rocking
+to and fro and crowing with helpless, hysterical laughter.
+
+For with the entrance of Prosper Panne the mess-room became a scene at
+the _Folies Bergères_. There was Mrs. Torrence, _première comédienne_,
+in the costume of a wild-western cowboy; there was the young Lieutenant
+himself, looking like a stage-lieutenant in the dark-green uniform of
+the Belgian Motor Cyclist Corps; and there was Prosper Panne. He began
+by picking up Mrs. Torrence's brown leather motor glove with its huge
+gauntlet, and examining it with the deliciously foolish bewilderment of
+the accomplished clown. After one or two failures, brilliantly
+improvised, he fixed it firmly on his head. The huge gauntlet, with its
+limp five fingers dangling over his left ear, became a rakish képi with
+a five-pointed flap. Max--I mean Prosper Panne--wore it with an "_air
+impayable_." Out of his round, soft, putty-coloured face he made
+fifteen other faces in rapid succession, all incomparably absurd. He lit
+a cigarette and held it between his lower lip and his chin. The effect
+was of a miraculous transformation of those features, in which his upper
+lip disappeared altogether, his lower lip took on its functions, while
+his chin ceased to be a chin and became a lower lip. With this
+achievement Prosper Panne had his audience in the hollow of his hands.
+He could do what he liked with it. He did. He caused his motor-glove cap
+to fall from his head as if by some mysterious movement of its own. Then
+he went round the stalls and gravely and earnestly removed all our hats.
+With an air more and more "_impayable_" he wore each one of them in
+turn--the grey felt wide-awake of the wild-western cowboy, the knitted
+Jaeger head-gear of the little Arctic explorer, the dark-blue military
+cap with the red tassel assumed by Dr. Bird, even the green cap with the
+winged symbol of the young Belgian officer. By this time the young
+Belgian officer was so entirely the thrall of Prosper Panne that he
+didn't turn a hair.
+
+Flushed with success, Max rose to his top-notch. Moving slowly towards
+the open door (centre) with his back to his audience and his head turned
+towards it over his left shoulder, by some extraordinary dislocation of
+his hip-joints, he achieved the immemorial salutation of the _Folies
+Bergères_--the last faint survival of the Old Athenian Comedy.
+
+Up till now Jean had affected to ignore the performance of his
+colleague. But under this supreme provocation he yielded to the
+Aristophanic impulse, and--_exit_ Max in the approved manner of the
+_Folies Bergères_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It is all over. The young Belgian officer has flown away on his motor
+cycle to pot Germans; Mrs. Torrence has gone off to the field with the
+Colonel on the quest of the greatest possible danger. The Ambulance has
+followed them there.
+
+I am in the mess-room, sitting at the disordered table and gazing at the
+ruins of our mess. I hear again the wild laughter of the mess-mates; it
+mingles with the cry of the refugees in the Palais des Fêtes: "_Une
+petite tranche de pain, s'il vous plaît, mademoiselle!_"
+
+_C'est triste, n'est-ce pas?_
+
+In the chair by the window Max lies back with his loose boyish legs
+extended limply in front of him; his round, close-cropped head droops to
+his shoulder, his round face (the face of a very young _collégien_) is
+white, the features are blurred and inert. Max is asleep with his
+dish-cloth in his hand, in the sudden, pathetic sleep of exhaustion.
+After his brief, funny madness, he is asleep. Jean comes and looks at
+him and shakes his head. You understand from Jean that Max goes mad like
+that now and then on purpose, so that he may forget in what manner his
+mother went mad.
+
+We go quietly so as not to wake him a minute too soon, lest when he
+wakes he should remember.
+
+There is a Taube hovering over Ghent.
+
+Up there, in the clear blue sky it looks innocent, like an enormous
+greyish blond dragon-fly hovering over a pond. You stare at it,
+fascinated, as you stare at a hawk that hangs in mid-air, steadied by
+the vibration of its wings, watching its prey.
+
+You are not in the least disturbed by the watching Taube. An aeroplane,
+dropping a few bombs, is nothing to what goes on down there where the
+ambulances are.
+
+The ambulances have come back. I go out into the yard to look at them.
+They are not always nice to look at; the floors and steps would make you
+shudder if you were not past shuddering.
+
+I have found something to do. Not much, but still something. I am to
+look after the linen for the ambulances, to take away the blood-stained
+pillow-slips and blankets, and deliver them at the laundry and get clean
+ones from the linen-room. It's odd, but I'm almost foolishly elated at
+being allowed to do this. We are still more or less weighed down by the
+sense of our uselessness. Even the Chaplain, though his services as a
+stretcher-bearer have been definitely recognized--even the Chaplain
+continues to suffer in this way. He has just come to me to tell me with
+pride that he is making a good job of the stretchers he has got to mend.
+
+Then, just as I am beginning to lift up my head, the blow falls. Not one
+member of the Field Ambulance Corps is to be allowed to work at the
+Palais des Fêtes, for fear of bringing fever into the Military Hospital.
+And here we are, exactly where we were at the beginning of the week,
+Mrs. Lambert, Janet McNeil and I, three women out of five, with nothing
+to do and two convalescent orderlies waiting on us. If I could please
+myself I would tuck Max up in bed and wait on _him_.
+
+In spite of the ambulance linen, this is the worst day of all for the
+wretched Secretary and Reporter. Five days in Ghent and not a thing
+done; not a line written of those brilliant articles (from the Front)
+which were to bring in money for the Corps. To have nothing to do but
+hang about the Hospital on the off-chance of the Commandant coming back
+unexpectedly and wanting a letter written; to pass the man with the
+bullet wound in his mouth a dozen times a day (he is getting very slowly
+better; his poor face was a little more human this morning); to see the
+maimed and crippled men trailing and hobbling about the hall, and the
+wounded carried in on their stretchers--dripping stretchers, agonized
+bodies, limbs rolled in bandages, blood oozing through the bandages,
+heads bound with bandages, bandages glued tight to the bone with
+blood--to see all this and be utterly powerless to help; to endure, day
+after day, the blank, blond horror of the empty mess-room; to sit before
+a marble-topped table with a bad pen, never enough paper and hardly any
+ink, and nothing at all to write about, while all the time the names of
+places, places you have not seen and never will see--Termonde, Alost,
+Quatrecht and Courtrai--go on sounding in your brain with a maddening,
+luring reiteration; to sit in a hateful inactivity, and a disgusting, an
+intolerable safety, and to be haunted by a vision of two figures,
+intensely clear on a somewhat vague background--Mrs. Torrence following
+her star of the greatest possible danger, and Ursula Dearmer wandering
+in youth and innocence among the shells; to be obliged to think of
+Ursula Dearmer's mother when you would much rather not think of her; to
+be profoundly and irrevocably angry with the guileless Commandant, whom
+at the moment you regard (it may be perversely) as the prime agent in
+this fatuous sacrifice of women's lives; to want to stop it and to be
+unable to stop it, and at the same time to feel a brute because you want
+to stop it--when _they_ are enjoying the adventure--I can only say of
+the experience that I hope there is no depth of futility deeper than
+this to come. You might as well be taken prisoner by the
+Germans--better, since that would, at least, give you something to write
+about afterwards.
+
+What's more, I'm bored.
+
+When I told the Commandant all this he looked very straight at me and
+said, "Then you'd better come with us to Termonde." So straight he
+looked that the suggestion struck me less as a _bona fide_ offer than an
+ironic reference to my five weeks' funk.
+
+I don't tell him that that is precisely what I want to do. That his
+wretched Reporter nourishes an insane ambition--not to become a Special
+Correspondent; not to career under massive headlines in the columns of
+the _Daily Mail_; not to steal a march on other War Correspondents and
+secure the one glorious "scoop" of the campaign. Not any of these sickly
+and insignificant things. But--in defiance of Tom, the chauffeur--to go
+out with the Field Ambulance as an _ambulancière_, and hunt for wounded
+men, and in the intervals of hunting to observe the orbit of a shell and
+the manner of shrapnel in descending. To be left behind, every day, in
+an empty mess-room, with a bad pen, utterly deprived of copy or of any
+substitute for copy, and to have to construct war articles out of your
+inner consciousness, would be purgatory for a journalist. But to have a
+mad dream in your soul and a pair of breeches in your hold-all, and to
+see no possibility of "sporting" either, is the very refinement of hell.
+And your tortures will be unbearable if, at the same time, you have to
+hold your tongue about them and pretend that you are a genuine reporter
+and that all you want is copy and your utmost aim the business of the
+"scoop."
+
+After a week of it you will not be likely to look with crystal clarity
+on other people's lapses from precaution.
+
+But it would be absurd to tell him this. Ten to one he wouldn't believe
+it. He thinks I am funking all the time.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I am still very angry with him. He must know that I am very angry. I
+think that somewhere inside him he is rather angry too.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+All the same he has come to me and asked me to give him my soap. He says
+Max has taken his.
+
+I give him my soap, but--
+
+These oppressions and obsessions, the deadly anxiety, the futile
+responsibility and the boredom are too much for me. I am thinking
+seriously of going home.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the evening we--the Commandant and Janet McNeil and I--went down to
+the Hôtel de la Poste, to see the War Correspondents and hear the War
+news. Mr. G. L. and Mr. M. and Mr. P. were there. And there among them,
+to my astonishment, I found Mr. Davidson, the American sculptor.
+
+The last time I saw Mr. Davidson it was in Mr. Joseph Simpson's studio,
+the one under mine in Edwardes Square. He was making a bust of
+Rabindranath Tagore; and as the great mystic poet disconcerted him by
+continually lapsing into meditation under this process, thereby emptying
+his beautiful face of all expression whatever, I had been called down
+from my studio to talk to him, so as to lure him, if possible, from
+meditation and keep his features in play. Mr. Davidson made a very fine
+bust of Rabindranath Tagore. And here he is, imperfectly disguised by
+the shortest of short beards, drawing caricatures of G. L.--G. L.
+explaining the plan of campaign to the Belgian General Staff; G. L. very
+straight and tall, the Belgian General Staff looking up to him with
+innocent, deferential faces, earnestly anxious to be taught. I am not
+more surprised at seeing Mr. Davidson here than he is at seeing me. In
+the world that makes war we have both entirely forgotten the world where
+people make busts and pictures and books. But we accept each other's
+presence. It is only a small part of the fantastic dislocation of war.
+
+Nothing could be more different from the Flandria Palace Hotel, our
+Military Hospital, than the Hôtel de la Poste. It is packed with War
+Correspondents and Belgian officers. After the surgeons and the Red
+Cross nurses and their wounded, and the mysterious officials hanging
+about the porch and the hall, apparently doing nothing, after the
+English Ambulance and the melancholy inactivity of half its Corps, this
+place seems alive with a rich and virile life. It is full of live,
+exultant fighters, and of men who have their business not with the
+wounded and the dying but with live men and live things, and they have
+live words to tell about them. At least so it seems.
+
+You listen with all your ears, and presently Termonde and Alost and
+Quatrecht and Courtrai cease to be mere names for you and become
+realities. It is as if you had been taken from your prison and had been
+let loose into the world again.
+
+They are saying that there is no fighting at Saint Nicolas (the
+Commandant has been feeling about again for his visionary base
+hospital), but that the French troops are at Courtrai in great force.
+They have turned their left [?] wing round to the north-east and will
+probably sweep towards Brussels to cut off the German advance on
+Antwerp. The siege of Antwerp will then be raised. And a great battle
+will be fought outside Brussels, probably at Waterloo.
+
+WATERLOO!
+
+Mr. L. looks at you as much as to say that is what he has had up his
+sleeve all the time. The word comes from him as casually as if he spoke
+of the London and South-Western terminus. But he is alive to the power
+of its evocation, to the unsurpassable thrill. So are you. It starts the
+current in that wireless system of vibrations that travel unperishing,
+undiminished, from the dead to the living. There are not many kilometres
+between Ghent and Waterloo; you are not only within the radius of the
+psychic shock, you are close to the central batteries, and ninety-nine
+years are no more than one pulse of their vibration. Through I don't
+know how many kilometres and ninety-nine years it has tracked you down
+and found you in your one moment of response.
+
+It has a sudden steadying effect. Your brain clears. The things that
+loomed so large, the "Flandria," and the English Field Ambulance and its
+miseries, and the terrifying recklessness of its Commandant, are reduced
+suddenly to invisibility. You can see nothing but the second Waterloo.
+You forget that you have ever been a prisoner in an Hotel-Hospital. You
+understand the mystic fascination of the road under your windows, going
+south-east from Ghent to Brussels, somewhere towards Waterloo. You are
+reconciled to the incomprehensible lassitude of events. That is what we
+have all been waiting for--the second Waterloo. And we have only waited
+five days.
+
+I am certainly not going back to England.
+
+The French troops are being massed at Courtrai.
+
+Suddenly it strikes me that I have done an injustice to the Commandant.
+It is all very well to say that he brought me out here against my will.
+But did he? He said it would interest me to see the siege of Antwerp,
+and I said it wouldn't. I said with the most perfect sincerity that I'd
+die rather than go anywhere near the siege of Antwerp, or of any other
+place. And now the siege-guns from Namur are battering the forts of
+Antwerp, and down there the armies are gathering towards the second
+Waterloo, and the Commandant was right. I am extremely interested. I
+would die rather than go back to England.
+
+Is it possible that he knew me better than I knew myself?
+
+When I think that it is possible I feel a slight revulsion of justice
+towards the Commandant. After all, he brought me here. We may disagree
+about the present state of Alost and Termonde, considered as
+health-resorts for English girls, but it is pretty certain that without
+him we would none of us have got here. Where, indeed, should we have
+been and how should we have got our motor ambulances, but for his
+intrepid handling of Providence and of the Belgian Red Cross and the
+Belgian Legation? There is genius in a man who can go out without one
+car, or the least little nut or cog of a _châssis_ to his name, and
+impose himself upon a Government as the Commandant of a Motor Field
+Ambulance.
+
+Still, though I am not going back to England as a protest, I _am_ going
+to leave the Hospital Hotel for a little while. That bright idea has
+come to me just now while we are waiting for the Commandant to tear
+himself from the War Correspondents and come away. I shall get a room
+here in the Hôtel de la Poste for a week, and, while we wait for
+Waterloo, I shall write some articles. The War Correspondents will tell
+me what is being done, and what has been overdone and what remains to
+do. I shall at least hear things if I can't see them. And I shall cut
+the obsession of responsibility. It'll be worse than ever if there
+really is going to be a second Waterloo.
+
+Waterloo with Ursula Dearmer and Janet in the thick of it, and Mrs.
+Torrence driving the Colonel's scouting-car!
+
+There are moments of bitterness and distortion when I see the Commandant
+as a curious psychic monster bringing up his women with him to the
+siege-guns because of some uncanny satisfaction he finds in their
+presence there. There are moods, only less perverted, when I see him
+pursuing his course because it is his course, through sheer Highland
+Celtic obstinacy; lucid flashes when he appears, blinded by the glamour
+of his dream, and innocently regardless of actuality. Is it uncanniness?
+Is it obstinacy? Is it dreamy innocence? Or is it some gorgeous streak
+of Feminism? Is it the New Chivalry, that refuses to keep women back,
+even from the firing-line? The New Romance, that gives them their share
+of divine danger? Or, since nothing can be more absurd than to suppose
+that any person acts at all times and in all circumstances on one
+ground, or necessarily on any grounds, is it a little bit of all these
+things? I am not sure that Feminism, or at any rate the New Chivalry,
+doesn't presuppose them all.
+
+The New Chivalry sees the point of its reporter's retirement to the
+Hôtel de la Poste, since it has decided that journalism is my work, and
+journalism cannot flourish at the "Flandria." So we interview the nice
+fat _propriétaire_, and the _propriétaire's_ nice fat wife, and between
+them they find a room for me, a back room on the fourth floor, the only
+one vacant in the hotel; it looks out on the white-tiled walls and the
+windows of the enclosing wings. The space shut in is deep and narrow as
+a well. The view from that room is more like a prison than any view from
+the "Flandria," but I take it. I am not deceived by appearances, and I
+recognize that the peace of God is there.
+
+It is a relief to think that poor Max will have one less to work for.
+
+At the "Flandria" we find that the Military Power has put its foot down.
+The General--he cannot have a spark of the New Chivalry in his brutal
+breast--has ordered Mrs. Torrence off her chauffeur's job. You see the
+grizzled Colonel as the image of protest and desolation, helpless in the
+hands of the implacable Power. You are sorry for Mrs. Torrence (she has
+seen practically no service with the ambulance as yet), but she, at any
+rate, has had her fling. No power can take from her the memory of those
+two days.
+
+Still, something is going to be done to-morrow, and this time, even the
+miserable Reporter is to have a look in. The Commandant has another
+scheme for a temporary hospital or a dressing-station or something, and
+to-morrow he is going with Car 1 to Courtrai to reconnoitre for a
+position and incidentally to see the French troops. A God-sent
+opportunity for the Reporter; and Janet McNeil is going, too. We are to
+get up at six o'clock in the morning and start before seven.
+
+
+[_Friday, October 2nd._]
+
+We get up at six.
+
+We hang about till eight-thirty or nine. A fine rain begins to fall. An
+ominous rain. Car 1 and Car 2 are drawn up at the far end of the
+Hospital yard. The rain falls ominously over the yellow-brown, trodden
+clay of the yard. There is an ominous look of preparation about the
+cars. There is also an ominous light in the blue eyes of the chauffeur
+Tom.
+
+The chauffeur Tom appears as one inspired by hatred of the whole human
+race. You would say that he was also hostile to the entire female sex.
+For Woman in her right place he may, he probably does, feel tenderness
+and reverence. Woman in a field ambulance he despises and abhors. I
+really think it was the sight of us that accounted for his depression at
+Ostend. I have gathered from Mrs. Torrence that the chauffeur Tom has
+none of the New Chivalry about him. He is the mean and brutal male, the
+crass obstructionist who grudges women their laurels in the equal field.
+
+I know the dreadful, blasphemous and abominable things that Tom is
+probably thinking about me as I climb on to his car. He is visibly
+disgusted with his orders. That he, a Red Cross Field Ambulance
+chauffeur, should be told to drive four--or is it all five?--women to
+look at the massing of the French troops at Courtrai! He is not deceived
+by the specious pretext of the temporary hospital. Hospitals be blowed.
+It's a bloomin' joy-ride, with about as much Red Cross in it as there is
+in my hat. He is glad that it is raining.
+
+Yes, I know what Tom is thinking. And all the time I have a sneaking
+sympathy with Tom. I want to go to Courtrai more than I ever wanted
+anything in my life, but I see the expedition plainly from Tom's point
+of view. A field ambulance is a field ambulance and not a motor touring
+car.
+
+And to-day Tom is justified. We have hardly got upon his car than we
+were told to get off it. We are not going to Courtrai. We are not going
+anywhere. From somewhere in those mysterious regions where it abides,
+the Military Power has come down.
+
+Even as I get off the car and return to the Hospital-prison, in
+melancholy retreat over the yellow-brown clay of the yard, through the
+rain, I acknowledge the essential righteousness of the point of view.
+And, to the everlasting honour of the Old Chivalry, it should be stated
+that the chauffeur Tom repressed all open and visible expression of his
+joy.
+
+The morning passes, as the other mornings passed, in unspeakable
+inactivity. Except that I make up the accounts and hand them over to Mr.
+Grierson. It seems incredible, but I have balanced them to the last
+franc.
+
+I pack. Am surprised in packing by Max and Jean. They both want to know
+the reason why. This is the terrible part of the business--leaving Max
+and Jean.
+
+I try to explain. Prosper Panne, who "writes for the Paris papers,"
+understands me. He can see that the Hôtel de la Poste may be a better
+base for an attack upon the London papers. But Max does not understand.
+He perceives that I have a scruple about occupying my room. And he takes
+me into _his_ room to show me how nice it is--every bit as good as mine.
+The implication being that if the Hospital can afford to lodge one of
+its orderlies so well, it can perfectly well afford to lodge me. (This
+is one of the prettiest things that Max has done yet! As long as I live
+I shall see him standing in his room and showing me how nice it is.)
+
+Still you can always appeal from Max to Prosper Panne. He understands
+these journalistic tempers and caprices. He knows on how thin a thread
+an article can hang. We have a brief discussion on the comparative
+difficulties of the _roman_ and the _conte_, and he promises me to
+cherish and protect the hat I must leave behind me as if it were his
+bride.
+
+But Jean--Jean does not understand at all. He thinks that I am not
+satisfied with the service of our incomparable mess; that I prefer the
+flesh-pots of the "Poste" and the manners of its waiters. He has no
+other thought but this, and it is abominable; it is the worst of all.
+The explanation thickens. I struggle gloriously with the French
+language; one moment it has me by the throat and I am strangled; the
+next I writhe forth triumphant. Strange gestures are given to me; I
+plunge into the darkest pits of memory for the words that have escaped
+me; I find them (or others just as good); it is really quite easy to say
+that I am coming back again in a week.
+
+Interview with Madame F. and M. G., the President.
+
+Interview with the Commandant. Final assault on the defences of the New
+Chivalry (the Commandant's mind is an impregnable fortress).
+
+And, by way of afterthought, I inquire whether, in the event of a sudden
+scoot before the Germans, a reporter quartered at the Hôtel de la Poste
+will be cut off from the base of communications and left to his or her
+ingenuity in flight?
+
+The Commandant, vague and imperturbable, replies that in all probability
+it will be so.
+
+And I (if possible more imperturbable than he) observe that the War
+Correspondents will make quite a nice flying-party.
+
+In a little open carriage--the taxis have long ago all gone to the
+War--in an absurd little open carriage, exactly like a Cheltenham "rat,"
+I depart like a lady of Cheltenham, for the Hôtel de la Poste. The
+appearance and the odour of this little carriage give you an odd sense
+of security and peace. The Germans may be advancing on Ghent at this
+moment, but for all the taste of war there is in it, you might be that
+lady, going from one hotel to the other, down the Cheltenham Promenade.
+
+The further you go from the Military Hospital and the Railway Station
+the more it is so. The War does not seem yet to have shaken the
+essential peace of the _bourgeois_ city. The Hôtel de la Poste is in the
+old quarter of the town, where the Cathedrals are. Instead of the long,
+black railway lines and the red-brick façade of the Station and Post
+Office; instead of the wooded fields beyond and the white street that
+leads to the battle-places south and east; instead of the great Square
+with its mustering troops and swarms of refugees, you have the quiet
+Place d'Armes, shut in by trees, and all round it are the hotels and
+cafés where the officers and the War Correspondents come and go. Through
+all that coming and going you get the sense of the old foreign town that
+was dreaming yesterday. People are sitting outside the restaurants all
+round the Place, drinking coffee and liqueurs as if nothing had
+happened, as if Antwerp were far-off in another country, and as if it
+were still yesterday. Mosquitoes come up from the drowsy canal water
+and swarm into the hotels and bite you. I found any number of mosquitoes
+clinging drowsily to my bedroom walls.
+
+But there are very few women among those crowds outside the restaurants.
+There are not many women except refugees in the streets, and fewer still
+in the shops.
+
+I have blundered across a little café with an affectionately smiling and
+reassuringly fat proprietress, where they give you _brioches_ and China
+tea, which, as it were in sheer affection, they call English. It is not
+as happy a find as you might think. It is not, in the circumstances,
+happy at all. In fact, if you have never known what melancholy is and
+would like to know it, I can recommend two courses. Go down the Grand
+Canal in Venice in the grey spring of the year, in a gondola, all by
+yourself. Or get mixed up with a field ambulance which is not only doing
+noble work but running thrilling risks, in neither of which you have a
+share, or the ghost of a chance of a share; cut yourself off from your
+comrades, if it is only for a week, and go into a Belgian café in
+war-time and try to eat _brioches_ and drink English tea all by yourself.
+This is the more successful course. You may see hope beyond the gondola
+and the Grand Canal. But you will see no hope beyond the _brioche_ and
+the English tea.
+
+I walk about again till it is time to go back to the Hotel. So far, my
+emancipation has not been agreeable.
+
+
+[_Evening. Hôtel de la Poste._]
+
+I dined in the crowded restaurant, avoiding the War Correspondents,
+choosing a table where I hoped I might be unobserved. Somewhere through
+a glass screen I caught a sight of Mr. L.'s head. I was careful to avoid
+the glass screen and Mr. L.'s head. He shall not say, if I can possibly
+help it, that I am an infernal nuisance. For I know I haven't any
+business to be here, and if Belgium had a Kitchener I shouldn't be here.
+However you look at me, I am here on false pretences. In the eyes of Mr.
+L. I would have no more right to be a War Correspondent (if I were one)
+than I have to be on a field ambulance. It is with the game of war as it
+was with the game of football I used to play with my big brothers in the
+garden. The women may play it if they're fit enough, up to a certain
+point, very much as I played football in the garden. The big brothers
+let their little sister kick off; they let her run away with the ball;
+they stood back and let her make goal after goal; but when it came to
+the scrimmage they took hold of her and gently but firmly moved her to
+one side. If she persisted she became an infernal nuisance. And if those
+big brothers over there only knew what I was after they would make
+arrangements for my immediate removal from the seat of war.
+
+The Commandant has turned up with Ursula Dearmer. He is drawn to these
+War Correspondents who appear to know more than he does. On the other
+hand, an ambulance that can get into the firing-line has an irresistible
+attraction for a War Correspondent. It may at any moment constitute his
+only means of getting there himself.
+
+One of our cars has been sent out to Antwerp with dispatches and
+surgical appliances.
+
+The sight of the Commandant reminds me that I have got all the funds of
+the Ambulance upstairs in my suit-case in that leather purse-belt--and
+if the Ambulance does fly from Ghent without me, and without that belt,
+it will find itself in considerable embarrassment before it has
+retreated very far.
+
+It is quite certain that I shall have to take my chance. I have asked
+the Commandant again (either this evening or earlier) so that there may
+be no possible doubt about it: "If we do have to scoot from Ghent in a
+hurry I shall have nothing but my wits to trust to?"
+
+And he says, "True for you."
+
+And he looks as if he meant it.[3]
+
+These remarkable words have a remarkable effect on the new War
+Correspondent. It is as if the coolness and the courage and the strength
+of a hundred War Correspondents and of fifty Red Cross Ambulances had
+been suddenly discharged into my soul. This absurd accession of power
+and valour[4] is accompanied by a sudden immense lucidity. It is as if
+my soul had never really belonged to me until now, as if it had been
+either drugged or drunk and had never known what it was to be sober
+until now. The sensation is distinctly agreeable. And on the top of it
+all there is a peace which I distinctly recognize as the peace of God.
+
+So, while the Commandant talks to the War Correspondents as if nothing
+had happened, I go upstairs and unlock my suit-case and take from it the
+leather purse-belt with the Ambulance funds in it, and I bring it to the
+Commandant and lay it before him and compel him to put it on. As I do
+this I feel considerable compunction, as if I were launching a
+three-year-old child in a cockle-shell on the perilous ocean of finance.
+I remind him that fifteen pounds of the money in the belt is his (he
+would be as likely as not to forget it). As for the accounts, they are
+so clear that a three-year-old child could understand them. I notice
+with a diabolical satisfaction which persists through the all-pervading
+peace by no means as incongruously as you might imagine--I notice
+particularly that the Commandant doesn't like this part of it a bit.
+There is not anybody in the Corps who wants to be responsible for its
+funds or enjoys wearing that belt. But it is obvious that if the Ambulance
+can bear to be separated from its Treasurer-Secretary-Reporter, in the
+flight from Ghent, it cannot possibly bear to be separated from its funds.
+
+I am alone with the Commandant while this happens, standing by one of
+the writing-tables in the lounge. Ursula Dearmer (she grows more mature
+every day) and the War Correspondents and a few Generals have melted
+somewhere into the background. The long, lithe pigskin belt lies between
+us on the table--between my friend and me--like a pale snake. It exerts
+some malign and poisonous influence. It makes me say things, things
+that I should not have thought it possible to say. And it is all about
+the shells at Alost.
+
+He is astonished.
+
+And I do not care.
+
+I am sustained, exalted by that sense of righteousness you feel when you
+are insanely pounding somebody who thinks that in perfect sanity and
+integrity he has pounded you.
+
+
+[_Saturday, 3rd._]
+
+Mr. L. asked me to breakfast. He has told me more about the Corps in
+five minutes than the Corps has been able to tell me in as many days. He
+has seen it at Alost and Termonde. You gather that he has seen other
+heroic enterprises also and that he would perjure himself if he swore
+that they were indispensable. Every Correspondent is besieged by the
+leaders of heroic enterprises, and I imagine that Mr. L. has been "had"
+before now by amateurs of the Red Cross, and his heart must have sunk
+when he heard of an English Field Ambulance in Ghent. And he owns to
+positive terror when he saw it, with its girls in breeches, its
+Commandant in Norfolk jacket, grey knickerbockers, heather-mixture
+stockings and deer-stalker; its Chaplain in khaki, and its Surgeon a
+mark for bullets in his Belgian officer's cap. I suggest that this
+absence of uniform only proves our passionate eagerness to be off and
+get to work. But it is right. Our ambulance is the real thing, and Mr.
+L. is going to be an angel and help it all he can. He will write about
+it in the _Illustrated London News_ and the _Westminster_. When he hears
+that I came out here to write about the War and make a little money for
+the Field Ambulance, and that I haven't seen anything of the War and
+that my invasion of his hotel is simply a last despairing effort to at
+least hear something, he is more angelic than ever. He causes a whole
+cinema of war-scenes to pass before my eyes. When I ask if there is
+anything left for me to "do," he evokes a long procession of
+articles--pure, virgin copy on which no journalist has ever laid his
+hands--and assures me that it is mine, that the things that have been
+done are nothing to the things that are left to do. I tell him that I
+have no business on his pitch, and that I am horribly afraid of getting
+in the regular Correspondents' way and spoiling their game; as I am
+likely to play it, there isn't any pitch. Of course, I suppose, there is
+the "scoop," but that's another matter. It is the War Correspondent's
+crown of cunning and of valour, and nobody can take from him that
+crown. But in the psychology of the thing, every Correspondent is his
+own pitch. He has told me very nearly all the things I want to know,
+among them what the Belgian General said to the Commandant when he saw
+Ursula Dearmer at Alost:
+
+"What the devil is the lady doing there?"
+
+I gather that Mr. L. shares the General's wonder and my own anxiety. I
+am not far wrong in regarding Alost and Termonde as no fit place for
+Ursula Dearmer or any other woman.
+
+Answered the Commandant's letters for him. Wrote to Ezra Pound. Wrote
+out the report for the last three days' ambulance work and sent it to
+the British Red Cross; also a letter to Mr. Rogers about a light
+scouting-car. The British Red Cross has written that it cannot spare any
+more motor ambulances, but it may possibly send out a small car. (The
+Commandant has cabled to Mr. Gould, of Gould Bros., Exeter, accepting
+his offer of his own car and services.)
+
+Went down to the "Flandria" for news of the Ambulance. The car that was
+sent out yesterday evening got through all right to Antwerp and returned
+safely. It has brought very bad news. Two of the outer forts are said to
+have fallen. The position is critical, and grave anxiety is felt for
+the safety of the English in Antwerp. Mrs. St. Clair Stobart has asked
+us for one of our ambulances. But even if we could spare it we cannot
+give it up without an order from the military authority at Ghent. We
+hear that Dr. ----, one of Mrs. Stobart's women, is to leave Antwerp and
+work at our hospital. She is engaged to be married to Dr. ----, and the
+poor boy is somewhat concerned for her safety. I'm very glad I have left
+the "Flandria," for she can have my room.
+
+I wish they would make Miss ---- come away too.
+
+Yes: Miss ----, that clever novelist, who passes for a woman of the
+world because she uses mundane appearances to hide herself from the
+world's importunity--Miss ---- is here. The War caught her. Some people
+were surprised. I wasn't.[5]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Walked through the town again--old quarter. Walked and walked and
+walked, thinking about Antwerp all the time. Through streets of
+grey-white and lavender-tinted houses, with very fragile balconies. Saw
+the two Cathedrals[6] and the Town Hall--refugees swarming round it--and
+the Rab--I can't remember its name: see Baedeker--with its turrets and
+its moat. Any amount of time to see cathedrals in and no Mrs. Torrence
+to protest. I wonder how much of all this will be left by next month, or
+even by next week? Two of the Antwerp forts have fallen. They say the
+occupation of Ghent will be peaceful; while of Antwerp I suppose they
+would say, "_C'est triste, n'est-ce pas?_" They say the Germans will
+just march into Ghent and march out again, commandeering a few things
+here and there. But nobody knows, and by the stolid faces of these
+civilians you might imagine that nobody cares. Certainly none of them
+think that the fate of Antwerp can be the fate of Ghent.
+
+And the faces of the soldiers, of the men who know? They are the faces
+of important people, cheerful people, pleasantly preoccupied with the
+business in hand. Only here and there a grave face, a fixed, drawn face,
+a face twisted with the irritation of the strain.
+
+Why, the very refugees have the look of a rather tired tourist-party,
+wandering about, seeing Ghent, seeing the Cathedral.
+
+Only they aren't looking at the Cathedral. They are looking straight
+ahead, across the _Place_, up the street; they do not see or hear the
+trams swinging down on them, or the tearing, snorting motors; they
+stroll abstractedly into the line of the motors and stand there; they
+start and scatter, wild-eyed, with a sudden recrudescence of the terror
+that has driven them here from their villages in the fields.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It seems incredible that I should be free to walk about like this. It is
+as if I had cut the rope that tied me to a soaring air-balloon and found
+myself, with firm feet, safe on the solid earth. Any bit of earth, even
+surrounded by Germans, seems safe compared with the asphyxiation of that
+ascent. And when the air-balloon wasn't going up it was as if I had lain
+stifling under a soft feather-bed for more than a year. Now I've waked
+up suddenly and flung the feather-bed off with a vigorous kick.
+
+
+[_[7]Sunday, 4th._]
+
+(I have no clear recollection of Sunday morning, because in the
+afternoon we went to Antwerp; and Antwerp has blotted out everything
+that went near before it.)
+
+The Ambulance has been ordered to take two Belgian professors (or else
+they are doctors) into Antwerp. There isn't any question this time of
+carrying wounded. It seems incredible, but I am going too. I shall see
+the siege of Antwerp and hear the guns that were brought up from Namur.
+
+Somewhere, on the north-west horizon, a vision, heavenly, but
+impalpable, aerial, indistinct, of the Greatest Possible Danger.
+
+I am glad I am going. But the odd thing is that there is no excitement
+about it. It seems an entirely fit and natural thing that the vision
+should materialize, that I should see the shells battering the forts of
+Antwerp and hear the big siege-guns from Namur. For all its
+incredibility, the adventure lacks every element of surprise. It is
+simply what I came out for. For here in Belgium the really incredible
+things are the things that existed and happened before the War. They
+existed and happened a hundred years ago and the memory of them is
+indistinct; the feeling of them is gone. You have ceased to have any
+personal interest in them; if they happened at all they happened to
+somebody else. What is happening now has been happening always. All your
+past is soaking in the vivid dye of these days, and what you are now you
+have been always. I have been a War Correspondent all my life--_blasée_
+with battles. The Commandant orders me into the front seat beside the
+chauffeur Tom, so that I may see things. Even Tom's face cannot shake me
+in my conviction that I am merely setting out once more on my usual,
+legitimate, daily job.
+
+It is all so natural that you do not wonder in the least at this really
+very singular extension of your personality. You are not aware of your
+personality at all. If you could be you would see it undergoing
+shrinkage. It is, anyhow, one of the things that ceased to matter a
+hundred years ago. If you could examine its contents at this moment you
+would find nothing there but that shining vision of danger, the siege of
+Antwerp, indistinct, impalpable, aerial.
+
+Presently the vision itself shrinks and disappears on the north-west
+horizon. The car has shot beyond the streets into the open road, the
+great paved highway to Antwerp, and I am absorbed in other matters: in
+Car 1 and in the chauffeur Tom, who is letting her rip more and more
+into her top speed with every mile; in M. C----, the Belgian Red Cross
+guide, beside me on my left, and in the Belgian soldier sitting on the
+floor at his feet. The soldier is confiding some fearful secret to
+M. C---- about somebody called Achille. M. C---- bends very low to catch
+the name, as if he were trying to intercept and conceal it, and when he
+_has_ caught it he assumes an air of superb mystery and gravity and
+importance. With one gesture he buries the name of Achille in his breast
+under his uniform. You know that he would die rather than betray the
+secret of Achille. You decide that Achille is the heroic bearer of
+dispatches, and that we have secret orders to pick him up somewhere and
+convey him in safety to Antwerp. You do not grasp the meaning of this
+pantomime until the third sentry has approached us, and M. C---- has
+stopped for the third time to whisper "Ach-ille!" behind the cover of
+his hand, and the third sentry is instantly appeased.
+
+(Concerning sentries, you learn that the Belgian kind is amiable, but
+that the French sentry is a terrible fellow, who will think nothing of
+shooting you if your car doesn't stop dead the instant he levels his
+rifle.)
+
+Except for sentries and straggling troops and the long trains of
+refugees, the country is as peaceful between Ghent and Saint Nicolas as
+it was last week between Ostend and Ghent. It is the same adorable
+Flemish country, the same flat fields, the same paved causeway and the
+same tall, slender avenues of trees. But if anything could make the
+desolation of Belgium more desolate it is this intolerable beauty of
+slender trees and infinite flat land, the beauty of a country formed for
+the very expression of peace. In the vivid gold and green of its autumn
+it has become a stage dressed with ironic splendour for the spectacle of
+a people in flight. Half the population of Antwerp and the country round
+it is pouring into Ghent.[8] First the automobiles, Belgian officers in
+uniform packed tight between women and children and their bundles,
+convoying the train. Then the carriages secured by the _bourgeois_ (they
+are very few); then men and boys on bicycles; then the carts, and with
+the coming on of the carts the spectacle grows incredible, fantastic.
+You see a thing advancing like a house on wheels. It is a tall
+hay-wagon--the tallest wagon you have ever seen in your life--piled with
+household furniture and mattresses on the top of the furniture, and on
+top of the mattresses, on the roof, as it were, a family of women and
+children and young girls. Some of them seem conscious of the stupendous
+absurdity of this appearance; they smile at you or laugh as the
+structure goes towering and toppling by.
+
+Next, low on the ground, enormous and grotesque bundles, endowed with
+movement and with legs. Only when you come up to them do you see that
+they are borne on the bowed backs of men and women and children. The
+children--when there are no bundles to be borne these carry a bird in a
+cage, or a dog, a dog that sits in their arms like a baby and is pressed
+tight to their breasts. Here and there men and women driving their
+cattle before them, driving them gently, without haste, with a great
+dignity and patience.
+
+These, for all the panic and ruin in their bearing, might be pilgrims or
+suppliants, or the servants of some religious rite, bringing the votive
+offerings and the sacrificial beasts. The infinite land and the avenues
+of slender trees persuade you that it is so.
+
+And wherever the ambulance cars go they meet endless processions of
+refugees; endless, for the straight, flat Flemish roads are endless, and
+as far as your eye can see the stream of people is unbroken; endless,
+because the misery of Belgium is endless; the mind cannot grasp it or
+take it in. You cannot meet it with grief, hardly with conscious pity;
+you have no tears for it; it is a sorrow that transcends everything you
+have known of sorrow. These people have been left "only their eyes to
+weep with." But they do not weep any more than you do. They have no
+tears for themselves or for each other.[9] This is the terrible thing,
+this and the manner of their flight. It is not flight, it is the vast,
+unhasting and unending movement of a people crushed down by grief and
+weariness, pushed on by its own weight, by the ceaseless impact of its
+ruin.
+
+This stream is the main stream from Antwerp, swollen by its tributaries.
+It doesn't seem to matter where it comes from, its strength and volume
+always seem the same. After the siege of Antwerp it will thicken and
+flow from some other direction, that is all. And all the streams seem to
+flow into Ghent and to meet in the Palais des Fêtes.[10]
+
+I forget whether it was near Lokeren or Saint Nicolas that we saw the
+first sign of fighting, in houses levelled to the ground to make way for
+the artillery fire; levelled, and raked into neat plots without the
+semblance of a site.
+
+After the refugees, the troops. Village streets crowded with military
+automobiles and trains of baggage wagons and regiments of infantry.
+Little villas with desolate, surprised and innocent faces, standing back
+in their gardens; soldiers sitting in their porches and verandahs,
+soldiers' faces looking out of their windows; soldiers are quartered in
+every room, and the grass grows high in their gardens. Soldiers run down
+the garden paths to look at our ambulance as it goes by.
+
+There is excitement in the village streets.
+
+At Saint Nicolas we overtake Dr. Wilson and Mr. Davidson walking into
+Antwerp. They tell us the news.
+
+The British troops have come. At last. They have been through before us
+on their way to Antwerp. Dr. Wilson and Mr. Davidson have seen the
+British troops. They have talked to them.
+
+Mr. Davidson cannot conceal his glee at getting in before the War
+Correspondents. Pure luck has given into his hands _the_ great
+journalistic scoop of the War in Belgium. And he is not a journalist. He
+is a sculptor out for the busts of warriors, and for actuality in those
+tragic and splendid figures that are grouped round memorial columns, for
+the living attitude and gesture.
+
+We take up Mr. Davidson and Dr. Wilson, and leave one of our professors
+(if he is a professor) at Saint Nicolas, for the poor man has come
+without his passport. He will have to hang about at Saint Nicolas, doing
+nothing, until such time as it pleases Heaven to send us back from
+Antwerp. He resigns himself, and we abandon him, a piteous figure
+wrapped in a brown shawl.
+
+After Saint Nicolas more troops, a few batteries of artillery, some
+infantry, long, long regiments of Belgian cavalry, coming to the defence
+of the country outside Antwerp. Cavalry halting at a fork of the road by
+a little fir-wood. A road that is rather like the road just outside
+Wareham as you go towards Poole. More troops. And after the troops an
+interminable procession of labourers trudging on foot. At a distance you
+take them for refugees, until you see that they are carrying poles and
+spades. Presently the road cuts through the circle of stakes and barbed
+wire entanglements set for the German cavalry. And somewhere on our left
+(whether before or after Saint Nicolas I cannot remember), across a
+field, the rail embankment ran parallel with our field, and we saw the
+long ambulance train, flying the Red Cross and loaded with wounded, on
+its way from Antwerp to Ghent. At this point the line is exposed
+conspicuously, and we must have been well within range of the German
+fire, for the next ambulance train--but we didn't know about the next
+ambulance train till afterwards.
+
+After the circle of the stakes and wire entanglements you begin to think
+of the bombardment. You strain your ears for the sound of the siege-guns
+from Namur. Somewhere ahead of us on the horizon there is Antwerp.
+Towers and tall chimneys in a very grey distance. Every minute you look
+for the flight of the shells across the grey and the fall of a tower or
+a chimney. But the grey is utterly peaceful and the towers and the tall
+chimneys remain. And at last you turn in a righteous indignation and
+say: "Where is the bombardment?"
+
+The bombardment is at the outer forts.
+
+And where are the forts, then? (You see no forts.)
+
+The outer forts? Oh, the outer forts are thirty kilometres away.
+
+No. Not there. To your right.
+
+And you, who thought you would have died rather than see the siege of
+Antwerp, are dumb with disgust. Your heart swells with a holy and
+incorruptible resentment of the sheer levity of the Commandant.
+
+A pretty thing--to bring a War Correspondent out to see a bombardment
+when there isn't any bombardment, or when all there ever was is a
+hundred--well then, _thirty_ kilometres away.[11]
+
+It was twilight as we came into Antwerp. We approached it by the west,
+by the way of the sea, by the great bridge of boats over the Scheldt.
+The sea and the dykes are the defence of Antwerp on this side. Whole
+regiments of troops are crossing the bridge of boats. Our car crawls by
+inches at a time. It is jammed tight among some baggage wagons. It
+disentangles itself with difficulty from the baggage wagons, and is
+wedged tighter still among the troops. But the troops are moving, though
+by inches at a time. We get our front wheels on to the bridge. Packed in
+among the troops, but moving steadily as they move, we cross the
+Scheldt. On our right the sharp bows and on our left the blunt sterns of
+the boats. Boat after boat pressed close, gunwale to gunwale, our
+roadway goes across their breasts. Their breasts are taut as the breasts
+of gymnasts under the tramping of the regiments. They vibrate like the
+breasts of living things as they bear us up.
+
+No heaving of any beautiful and beloved ship, no crossing of any sea, no
+sight of any city that has the sea at her feet, not New York City nor
+Venice, no coming into any foreign land, ever thrilled me as that
+coming into Antwerp with the Belgian army over that bridge of boats.
+
+At twilight, from the river, with its lamps lit and all its waters
+shining, Antwerp looked beautiful as Venice and as safe and still. For
+the dykes are her defences on this side. But for the trudging regiments
+you would not have guessed that on the land side the outer ramparts were
+being shelled incessantly.
+
+It was a struggle up the slope from the river bank to the quay, a
+struggle in which we engaged with commissariat and ammunition wagons and
+troops and refugees in carts, all trying to get away from the city over
+the bridge of boats. The ascent was so steep and slippery that you felt
+as though at any moment the car might hurl itself down backwards on the
+top of the processions struggling behind it.
+
+At last we landed. I have no vivid recollection[12] of our passage
+through the town. Except that I know we actually were in Antwerp I could
+not say whether I really saw certain winding streets and old houses with
+steep gables or whether I dreamed them. There was one great street of
+white houses and gilded signs that stood shimmering somewhere in the
+twilight; but I cannot tell you what street it was. And there were some
+modern boulevards, and the whole place was very silent. It had the
+silence and half darkness of dreams, and the beauty and magic and
+sinister sadness of dreams. And in that silence and sadness our car,
+with its backings and turnings and its snorts, and our own voices as we
+asked our way (for we were more or less lost in Antwerp) seemed to be
+making an appalling and inappropriate and impious noise.
+
+Antwerp seems to me to have been all hospitals, though I only saw two,
+or perhaps three. One was in an ordinary house in a street, and I think
+this must have been the British Field Hospital; for Mrs. Winterbottom
+was there. And of all the women I met thus casually "at the front" she
+was, by a long way, the most attractive. We went into one or two of the
+wards; in others, where the cases were very serious, we were only
+allowed to stand for a second in the doorway; there were others again
+which we could not see at all.
+
+I think, unless I am rolling two hospitals into one, that we saw a
+second--the English Hospital. It was for the English Hospital that we
+heard the Commandant inquire perpetually as we made our way through the
+strange streets and the boulevards beyond them, following at his own
+furious pace, losing him in byways and finding him by some miracle
+again. Talk of dreams! Our progress through Antwerp was like one of
+those nightmares which have no form or substance but are made up of
+ghastly twilight and hopeless quest and ever-accelerating speed. It was
+not till it was all over that we knew the reason for his excessive
+haste.
+
+When we got to Mrs. St. Clair Stobart's Hospital--in a garden, planted
+somewhere away beyond the boulevards in an open place--we had hardly any
+time to look at it. All the same, I shall never forget that Hospital as
+long as I live. It had been a concert-hall[13] and was built principally
+of glass and iron; at any rate, if it was not really the greenhouse that
+it seemed to be there was a great deal of glass about it, and it had
+been shelled by aeroplane the night before. No great damage had been
+done, but the sound and the shock had terrified the wounded in their
+beds. This hospital, as everybody knows, is run entirely by women, with
+women doctors, women surgeons, women orderlies. Mrs. St. Clair Stobart
+and some of her gallant staff came out to meet us on a big verandah in
+front of this fantastic building, she and her orderlies in the uniform
+of the British Red Cross, her surgeons in long white linen coats over
+their skirts. Dr. ---- whom we are to take back with us to Ghent, was
+there.
+
+We asked for Miss ----, and she came to us finally in a small room
+adjoining what must have been the restaurant of the concert-hall.
+
+I was shocked at her appearance. She was quieter than ever and her face
+was grey and worn with watching. She looked as if she could not have
+held out another night.
+
+She told us about last night's bombardment. The effect of it on this
+absurd greenhouse must have been terrific. Every day they are expecting
+the bombardment of the town.
+
+No, none of them are leaving except two. Every woman will stick to her
+post[14] till the order comes to evacuate the hospital, and then not one
+will quit till the last wounded man is carried to the transport.
+
+It seems that Miss ---- is a hospital orderly, and that her duty is to
+stand at the gate of the garden with a lantern as the ambulances come in
+and to light them to the door of the hospital, and then to see that each
+man has the number of his cot pinned to the breast of his
+sleeping-jacket.
+
+Mrs. Stobart, very properly, will have none but trained women in her
+hospital. But even an untrained woman is equal to holding a lantern and
+pinning on tickets, so I implored Miss ---- to let me take her place
+while she went back to rest in my room at Ghent, if it was only for one
+night. I used every argument I could think of, and for one second I
+thought the best argument had prevailed. But it was only for a second.
+Probably not even for a second. Miss ---- may drop to pieces at her
+post, but it is there that she will drop.
+
+Outside on the verandah the Commandant was fairly ramping to be off.
+No--I can't see the Hospital. There isn't any time to see the Hospital.
+But Miss ---- could not bear me not to see it, and together we made a
+surreptitious bolt for it, and I did see the Hospital.
+
+It was not like any hospital you had ever seen before. Except that the
+wounded were all comfortably bedded, it was more like the sleeping-hall
+of the Palais des Fêtes. The floor of the great concert-hall was covered
+with mattresses and beds, where the wounded lay about in every attitude
+of suffering. No doubt everything was in the most perfect order, and the
+nurses and doctors knew how to thread their way through it all, but to
+the hurried spectator in the doorway the effect was one of the most
+_macabre_ confusion. Only one object stood out--the large naked back of
+a Belgian soldier, who sat on the edge of his bed waiting to be washed.
+He must have been really the most cheerful and (comparatively) uninjured
+figure in the whole crowd, but he seemed the most pitiful, because of
+the sheer human insistence of his pathetic back.
+
+Over this back and over all that prostrate agony the enormous floriated
+bronze rings that carried the lights of the concert-hall hung from the
+ceiling in frightful, festive decoration.
+
+Miss ---- whispered: "One of them is dying. We can't save him."
+
+She seemed to regard this one as a positive slur on their record. I
+thought: "Only one--among all that crowd!"
+
+Mrs. Stobart came after us in some alarm as we ran down the garden.
+
+"What are you doing with Miss ----? You're not going to carry her off?"
+
+"No," I said, "we're not. She won't come."
+
+But we have got off with Dr. ----.
+
+Mrs. Stobart has refused the Commandant's offer of one of our best
+surgeons in exchange. He is a man. And this hospital is a Feminist Show.
+
+We dined in a great hurry in a big restaurant in one of the main
+streets. The restaurant was nearly empty and funereal black cloths were
+hung over the windows to obscure the lights.
+
+Mr. Davidson (this cheerful presence was with us in our dream-like
+career through Antwerp)--Mr. Davidson and I amused ourselves by planning
+how we will behave when we are taken prisoner by the Germans. He is
+safe, because he is an American citizen. The unfortunate thing about me
+is my passport, otherwise, by means of a well-simulated nasal twang I
+might get through as an American novelist. I've been mistaken for one
+often enough in my own country. But, as I don't mean to be taken
+prisoner, and perhaps murdered or have my hands chopped off, without a
+struggle, my plan is to deliver a speech in German, as follows: "_Ich
+bin eine berühmte Schriftstellerin_" (on these occasions you stick at
+nothing), "_berühmt in England, aber viel berühmter in den Vereinigten
+Staaten, und mein Schicksal will den Presidenten Wilson nicht
+gleichgültig sein_." I added by way of rhetorical flourish as the
+language went to my head: "_Er will mein Tod zu vertheidigen gut
+wissen_;" but I was aware that this was overdoing it.
+
+Mr. Davidson thought it would be better on the whole if he were to pass
+me off as his wife. Perhaps it would, but it seems a pity that so much
+good German should be wasted.
+
+We got up from that dinner with even more haste than we had sat down.
+All lights in the town were put out at eight-thirty, and we didn't want
+to go crawling and blundering about in the dark with our ambulance car.
+There was a general feeling that the faster we ran back to Ghent the
+better.
+
+We left Mr. Davidson and Dr. Wilson in Antwerp. They were staying
+over-night for the fun of the thing.
+
+Another awful struggle on the downward slope from the quay to the bridge
+of boats. A bad jam at the turn. A sudden loosening and letting go of
+the traffic, and we were over.
+
+We ran back to Ghent so fast that at Saint Nicolas (where we stopped to
+pick up our poor little Belgian professor) we took the wrong turn at the
+fork of the road and dashed with considerable _élan_ over the Dutch
+frontier. We only realized it when a sentry in an unfamiliar uniform
+raised his rifle and prepared to fire, not with the cheerful,
+perfunctory vigilance of our Belgians, but in a determined,
+business-like manner, and the word "Achille," imparted in a burst of
+confidence, produced no sympathy whatever. On the contrary, this absurd
+sentry (who had come out of a straw sentry-box that was like an enormous
+beehive) went on pointing his rifle at us with most unnecessary
+persistence. I was so interested in seeing what he would do next that I
+missed the very pleasing behaviour of the little Belgian professor, who
+sat next to me, wrapped in his brown shawl. He still imagined himself
+to be on the road to Ghent, and when he saw that sentry continuing to
+prepare to fire in spite of our password, he concluded that we and the
+road to Ghent were in the hands of the Germans. So he instantly ducked
+behind me for cover and collapsed on the floor of the ambulance in his
+shawl.
+
+Then somebody said "We're in Holland!" and there were shouts of laughter
+from everybody in the car except the little Belgian. Then shouts of
+laughter from the Dutch sentries and Customs officers, who enjoyed this
+excellent joke as much as we did.
+
+We were now out of our course by I don't know how many miles and short
+of petrol. But one of the Customs officers gave us all we wanted.
+
+It's heart-breaking the way these dear Belgians take the British. They
+have waited so long for our army, believing that it would come, till
+they could believe no more. In Ghent, in Antwerp, you wouldn't know that
+Belgium had any allies; you never see the British flag, or the French
+either, hanging from the windows. The black, yellow and red standard
+flies everywhere alone. Now that we _have_ come, their belief in us is
+almost unbearable. They really think we are going to save Antwerp.
+Somewhere between Antwerp and Saint Nicolas the population of a whole
+village turned out to meet us with cries of "_Les Anglais! Les
+Anglaises!_" and laughed for joy. Terrible for us, who had heard
+Belgians say reproachfully: "We thought that the British would come to
+our help. But they never came!" They said it more in sorrow than in
+anger; but you couldn't persuade them that the British fought for
+Belgium at Mons.
+
+We got into Ghent about midnight.
+
+Dr. ---- is to stay at the Hôtel de la Poste to-night.
+
+
+[_Monday, 5th._]
+
+The mosquitoes from the canal have come up and bitten me. I was ill all
+night with something that felt like malarial fever, if it isn't
+influenza. Couldn't get up--too drowsy.
+
+Mr. L. came in to see me first thing in the morning. He also came to
+hear at first hand the story of our run into Antwerp. He was extremely
+kind. He sat and looked at me sorrowfully, as if he had been the family
+doctor, and gave me some of his very own China tea (in Belgium in
+war-time this is one of the most devoted things that man can do for his
+brother). He was so gentle and so sympathetic that my heart went out to
+him, and I forgot all about poor Mr. Davidson, and gave up to him the
+whole splendid "scoop" of the British troops at Saint Nicolas.
+
+I couldn't tell him much about the run into Antwerp. No doubt it was a
+thrilling performance--through all the languor of malaria it thrills me
+now when I think of it--but it wasn't much to offer a War Correspondent,
+since it took us nowhere near the bombardment. It had nothing for the
+psychologist or for the amateur of strange sensations, and nothing for
+the pure and ardent Spirit of Adventure, and nothing for that insatiable
+and implacable Self, that drives you to the abhorred experiment,
+determined to know how you will come out of it. For there was no more
+danger in the excursion than in a run down to Brighton and back; and I
+know no more of fear or courage than I did before I started.
+
+But now that I realize what the insatiable and implacable Self is after,
+how it worked in me against all decency and all pity, how it actually
+made me feel as if I wanted to see Antwerp under siege, and how the
+spirit of adventure backed it up, I can forgive the Commandant. I still
+think that he sinned when he took Ursula Dearmer to Termonde and to
+Alost. But the temptation that assailed him at Alost and Termonde was
+not to be measured by anybody who was not there.
+
+It must have been irresistible.
+
+Besides, it is not certain that he did take Ursula Dearmer into danger;
+it is every bit as likely that she took him; more likely still that they
+were both victims of _force majeure_, fascinated by the lure of the
+greatest possible danger. And, oh, how I did pitch into him!
+
+I am ashamed of the things I said in that access of insulting and
+indignant virtue.
+
+Can it be that I was jealous of Ursula Dearmer, that innocent girl,
+because she saw a shell burst and I didn't? I know this is what was the
+matter with Mrs. Torrence the other day. She even seemed to imply that
+there was some feminine perfidy in Ursula Dearmer's power of drawing
+shells to her. (She, poor dear, can't attract even a bullet within a
+mile of her.)[15]
+
+Lying there, in that mosquito-haunted room, I dissolved into a blessed
+state, a beautiful, drowsy tenderness to everybody, a drowsy, beautiful
+forgiveness of the Commandant. I forgot that he intimated, sternly, that
+no ambulance would be at my disposal in the flight from Ghent--I
+remember only that he took me into Antwerp yesterday, and that he
+couldn't help it if the outer forts _were_ thirty kilometres away, and
+I forgive him, beautifully and drowsily.
+
+But when he came running up in great haste to see me, and rushed down
+into the kitchens of the Hotel to order soup for me, and into the
+chemist's shop in the Place d'Armes to get my medicine, and ran back
+again to give it me, before I knew where I was (such is the debilitating
+influence of malaria), instead of forgiving him, I found myself, in
+abject contrition, actually asking him to forgive _me_.
+
+It was all wrong, of course; but the mosquitoes had bitten me rather
+badly.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Mrs. Torrence and Janet McNeil have got to work at last. All afternoon
+and all night yesterday they were busy between the Station and the
+hospitals removing the wounded from the Antwerp trains.
+
+And Car 1 had no sooner got into the yard of the "Flandria" to rest
+after its trip to Antwerp and back than it was ordered out again with
+the Commandant and Ursula Dearmer and Mrs. Torrence to meet the last
+ambulance train. The chauffeur Tom was nowhere to be seen when the order
+came. He was, however, found after much search, in the Park, in the
+company of the Cricklewood bus and a whole regiment of Tommies.
+
+One of these ambulance trains had been shelled by the Germans (they
+couldn't have been very far from us in our run from Antwerp--it was
+their nearness, in fact, that accounted for our prodigious haste!), and
+many of the men came in worse wounded than they went out.
+
+We are all tremendously excited over the arrival of the Tommies and the
+Cricklewood bus. We can think of nothing else but the relief of Antwerp.
+
+Ursula Dearmer came to see me. She understands that I have forgiven her
+that shell--and why. She wore the clothes--the rather heart-rending
+school-girl clothes--she wore when she came to see the Committee. But
+oh, how the youngest but one has grown up since then!
+
+Mrs. Torrence came to see me also, and Janet McNeil. Mrs. Torrence,
+though that shell still rankles, is greatly appeased by the labours of
+last night. So is Janet.
+
+They told rather a nice story.
+
+A train full of British troops from Ostend came into the station
+yesterday at the same time as the ambulance train from Antwerp. The two
+were drawn up one on each side of the same platform. When the wounded
+Belgians saw the British they struggled to their feet. At every window
+of the ambulance train bandaged heads were thrust out and bandaged hands
+waved. And the Belgians shouted.
+
+But the British stood dumb, stolid and impassive before their
+enthusiasm.
+
+Mrs. Torrence called out, "Give them a cheer, boys. They're the bravest
+little soldiers in the world."
+
+Then the Tommies let themselves go, and the Station roof nearly flew off
+with the explosion.
+
+The Corps worked till four in the morning clearing out those ambulance
+trains. The wards are nearly full. And this is only the beginning.
+
+
+[_Tuesday, 6th._]
+
+Malaria gone.
+
+The Commandant called to give his report of the ambulance work. He, Mrs.
+Torrence, Janet McNeil, Ursula Dearmer and the men were working all
+yesterday afternoon and evening till long past dark at Termonde. It's
+the finest thing they've done yet. The men and the women crawled on
+their hands and knees in the trenches [? under the river bank] under
+fire. Ursula Dearmer (that girl's luck is simply staggering!)--Ursula
+Dearmer, wandering adventurously apart, after dark, on the battle-field,
+found a young Belgian officer, badly wounded, lying out under a tree.
+She couldn't carry him, but she went for two stretchers and three men;
+and they put the young officer on one stretcher, and she trotted off
+with his sword, his cap and the rest of his accoutrements on the other.
+He owes his life to this manifestation of her luck.
+
+Dr. Wilson has come back from Antwerp.
+
+It looks as if Dr. Haynes and Dr. Bird would go. At any rate, I think
+they will give up working on the Field Ambulance. There aren't enough
+cars for four surgeons _and_ four field-women, and they have seen hardly
+any service. This is rather hard luck on them, as they gave up their
+practice to come out with us. Naturally, they don't want to waste any
+more time.
+
+I managed to get some work done to-day. Wrote a paragraph about the
+Ambulance for Mr. L., who will publish it in the _Westminster_ under his
+name, to raise funds for us. He is more than ever certain that it (the
+Ambulance) is the real thing.
+
+Also wrote an article ("L'Hôpital Militaire, No. 2") for the _Daily
+Chronicle_; the first bit of journalism I've had time or material for.
+
+Shopped. Very _triste_ affair.
+
+Went to mass in the Cathedral. Sat far back among the refugees.
+
+If you want to know what Religion really is, go into a Catholic church
+in a Catholic country under invasion. You only feel the tenderness, the
+naïveté of Catholicism in peace-time. In war-time you realize its power.
+
+
+[_Evening._]
+
+Saw Mr. P., who has been at Termonde. He spoke with great praise of the
+gallantry of our Corps.
+
+It's odd--either I'm getting used to it, or it's the effect of that run
+into Antwerp--but I'm no longer torn by fear and anxiety for their
+safety.
+
+[?] Dined with Mr. L. in a restaurant in the town. It proved to be more
+expensive than either of us cared for. Our fried sole left us hungry and
+yet conscience-stricken, as if after an orgy, suffering in a dreadful
+communion of guilt.
+
+
+[_Wednesday, 7th._]
+
+7 A.M. Got up early and went to Mass in the Cathedral.
+
+Prepared report for British Red Cross. Wrote "Journal of Impressions"
+from September 25th to September 26th, 11 A.M. It's slow work. Haven't
+got out of Ostend yet!
+
+Fighting at Zele.
+
+
+[_Afternoon._]
+
+Got very near the fighting this time.
+
+Mr. L. (Heaven bless him!) took me out with him in the War
+Correspondents' car to see what the Ambulance was doing at Zele, and,
+incidentally, to look at the bombardment of some evacuated villages near
+it (I have no desire to see the bombardment of any village that has not
+been evacuated first). Mr. M. came too, and they brought a Belgian lady
+with them, a charming and beautiful lady, whose name I forget.
+
+When Mr. L. told me to get up and come with him to Zele, I did get up
+with an energy and enthusiasm that amazed me; I got up like one who has
+been summoned at last, after long waiting, to a sure and certain
+enterprise. I can trust Mr. L. or any War Correspondent who means
+business, as I cannot (after Antwerp) trust the Commandant. So far, if
+the Commandant happens upon a bombardment it has been either in the way
+of duty, or by sheer luck, or both, as at Alost and Termonde, when duty
+took him to these places, and any bombardment or firing was, as it were,
+thrown in. He did not go out deliberately to seek it, for its own sake,
+and find it infallibly, which is the War Correspondent's way. So that if
+Mr. L. says there is going to be a bombardment, we shall probably get
+somewhere nearer to it than thirty kilometres.
+
+We took the main road to Zele. I don't know whether it was really a
+continuation of the south-east road that runs under the Hospital
+windows; anyhow, we left it very soon, striking southwards to the right
+to find what Mr. L. believed to be a short cut. Thus we never got to
+Zele at all. We came out on a good straight road that would no doubt
+have led us there in time, but that we allowed ourselves to be lured by
+the smoke of the great factory at Schoonard burning away to the south.
+
+For a long time I could not believe that it was smoke we saw and not an
+enormous cloud blown by the wind across miles of sky. We seemed to run
+for miles with that terrible banner streaming on our right to the south,
+apparently in the same place, as far off as ever. East of it, on the
+sky-line, was a whole fleet of little clouds that hung low over the
+earth; that rose from it; rose and were never lifted, but as they were
+shredded away, scattered and vanished, were perpetually renewed. This
+movement of their death and re-birth had a horrible sinister pulse in
+it.
+
+Each cloud of this fleet of clouds was the smoke from a burning village.
+
+At last, after an endless flanking pursuit of the great cloud that
+continued steadily on our right, piling itself on itself and mounting
+incessantly, we struck into a side lane that seemed to lead straight to
+the factory on fire. But in this direct advance the cloud eluded us at
+every turn of the lane. Now it was rising straight in front of us in the
+south, now it was streaming away somewhere to the west of our track.
+When we went west it went east. When we went east it went west. And
+wherever we went we met refugees from the burning villages. They were
+trudging along slowly, very tired, very miserable, but with no panic and
+no violent grief. We passed through villages and hamlets, untouched
+still, but waiting quietly, and a little breathlessly, on the edge of
+their doom.
+
+At the end of one lane, where it turned straight to the east round the
+square of a field we came upon a great lake ringed with trees and set in
+a green place of the most serene and vivid beauty. It seemed incredible
+that the same hour should bring us to this magic stillness and peace and
+within sight of the smoke of war and within sound of the guns.
+
+At the next turn we heard them.
+
+We still thought that we could get to Schoonard, to the burning factory,
+and work back to Zele by a slight round. But at this turn we had lost
+sight of Schoonard and the great cloud altogether, and found ourselves
+in a little hamlet Heaven knows where. Only, straight ahead of us, as we
+looked westwards, we heard the guns. The sound came from somewhere over
+there and from two quarters; German guns booming away on the south,
+Belgian [? French] guns answering from the north.
+
+Judging by these sounds and those we heard afterwards, we must have been
+now on the outer edge of a line of fire stretching west and east and
+following the course of the Scheldt. The Germans were entrenched behind
+the river.
+
+In the little hamlet we asked our way of a peasant. As far as we could
+make out from his mixed French and Flemish, he told us to turn back and
+take the road we had left where it goes south to the village of
+Baerlaere. This we did. We gathered that we could get a road through
+Baerlaere to Schoonard. Failing Schoonard, our way to Zele lay through
+Baerlaere in the opposite direction.
+
+We set off along a very bad road to Baerlaere.
+
+Coming into Baerlaere, we saw a house with a remarkable roof, a
+steep-pitched roof of black and white tiles arranged in a sort of
+chequer-board pattern. I asked Mr. L. if he had ever seen a roof like
+that in his life and he replied promptly, "Yes; in China." And that
+roof--if it was coming into Baerlaere that we saw it--is all that I can
+remember of Baerlaere. There was, I suppose, the usual church with its
+steeple where the streets forked and the usual town hall near it, with a
+flight of steps before the door and a three-cornered classic pediment;
+and the usual double line of flat-fronted, grey-shuttered houses; I do
+seem to remember these things as if they had really been there, but you
+couldn't see the bottom half of the houses for the troops that were
+crowded in front of them, or the top half for the shells you tried to
+see and didn't. They were sweeping high up over the roofs, making for
+the entrenchments and the batteries beyond the village.
+
+We had come bang into the middle of an artillery duel. It was going on
+at a range of about a mile and a half, but all over our heads, so that
+though we heard it with great intensity, we saw nothing.
+
+There were intervals of a few seconds between the firing. The Belgian [?
+French] batteries were pounding away on the left quite near (the booming
+seemed to come from behind the houses at our backs), and the German on
+the right, farther away.
+
+Now, you may have hated and dreaded the sound of guns all your life, as
+you hate and dread any immense and violent noise, but there is something
+about the sound of the first near gun of your first battle that, so far
+from being hateful or dreadful, or in any way abhorrent to you, will
+make you smile in spite of yourself with a kind of quiet exultation
+mixed very oddly with reminiscence[16] so that, though your first
+impression (by no means disagreeable) is of being "in for it," your
+next, after the second and the third gun, is that of having been in for
+it many times before. The effect on your nerves is now like that of
+being in a very small sailing-boat in a very big-running sea. You climb
+wave after high wave, and are not swallowed up as you expected. You
+wait, between guns, for the boom and the shock of the next, with a
+passionate anticipation, as you wait for the next wave. And the sound of
+the gun when it comes is like the exhilarating smack of the wave that
+you and your boat mean to resist and do resist when it gets you.
+
+You do not think, as you used to think when you sat safe in your little
+box-like house in St. John's Wood, how terrible it is that shells should
+be hurtling through the air and killing men by whole regiments. You do
+not think at all. Nobody anywhere near you is thinking that sort of
+thing, or thinking very much at all.
+
+At the sound of the first near gun I found myself looking across the
+road at a French soldier. We were smiling at each other.
+
+When we tried to get to Schoonard from the west end of the town we were
+stopped and turned back by the General in command. Not in the least
+abashed by this _contretemps_, Mr. L., after some parley with various
+officers, decided not to go back in ignominious safety by the way we
+came, but to push on from the east end of the village into the open
+country through the line of fire that stretched between us and the road
+to Zele. On our way, while we were about it, he said, we might as well
+stop and have a look at the Belgian batteries at work--as if he had said
+we might as well stop at Olympia and have a look at the Motor Show on
+our way to Richmond.
+
+At this point the unhappy chauffeur, who had not found himself by any
+means at home in Baerlaere, remarked that he had a wife and family
+dependent on him.
+
+Mr. L. replied with dignity that he had a wife and family too, and that
+we all had somebody or something; and that War Correspondents cannot
+afford to think of their wives and families at these moments.
+
+Mr. M.'s face backed up Mr. L. with an expression of extreme
+determination.
+
+The little Belgian lady smiled placidly and imperturbably, with an air
+of being ready to go anywhere where these intrepid Englishmen should see
+fit to take her.
+
+I felt a little sorry for the chauffeur. He had been out with the War
+Correspondents several times already, and I hadn't.
+
+We left him and his car behind us in the village, squeezed very tight
+against a stable wall that stood between them and the German fire. We
+four went on a little way beyond the village and turned into a bridle
+path across the open fields. At the bottom of a field to our left was a
+small slump of willows; we had heard the Belgian guns firing from that
+direction a few minutes before. We concluded that the battery was
+concealed behind the willows. We strolled on like one half of a picnic
+party that has been divided and is looking innocently for the other half
+in a likely place.[17] But as we came nearer to the willows we lost our
+clue. The battery had evidently made up its mind not to fire as long as
+we were in sight. Like the cloud of smoke from the Schoonard factory, it
+eluded us successfully. And indeed it is hardly the way of batteries to
+choose positions where interested War Correspondents can come out and
+find them.[18]
+
+So we went back to the village, where we found the infantry being drawn
+up in order and doing something to its rifles. For one thrilling moment
+I imagined that the Germans were about to leap out of their trenches and
+rush the village, and that the Belgians [? French] were preparing for a
+bayonet charge.
+
+"In that case," I thought, "we shall be very useful in picking up the
+wounded and carrying them away in that car."
+
+I never thought of the ugly rush and the horrors after it. It is
+extraordinary how your mind can put away from it any thought that would
+make life insupportable.
+
+But no, they were not fixing bayonets. They were not doing anything to
+their rifles; they were only stacking them.
+
+It was then that you thought of the ugly rush and were glad that, after
+all, it wouldn't happen.
+
+You were glad--and yet in spite of that same gladness, there was a
+little sense of disappointment, unaccountable, unpardonable, and not
+quite sane.
+
+One of the men showed us a burst shrapnel shell. We examined it with
+great interest as the kind of thing that would be most likely to hit us
+on our way from Baerlaere to Zele.
+
+We had been barely half an hour hanging about Baerlaere, but it seemed
+as if we had wasted a whole afternoon there. At last we started. We were
+told to drive fast, as the fire might open on us at any minute. We drove
+very fast. Our road lay through open country flat to the river, with no
+sort of cover anywhere from the German fire, if it chose to come. About
+half a mile ahead of us was a small hamlet that had been shelled. Mr. L.
+told us to duck when we heard the guns. I remember thinking that I
+particularly didn't want to be wounded in my right arm, and that as I
+sat with my right arm resting on the ledge of the car it was somewhat
+exposed to the German batteries, so I wriggled low down in my seat and
+tucked my arm well under cover for quite five minutes. But you couldn't
+see anything that way, so I popped up again and presently forgot all
+about my valuable arm in the sheer excitement of the rush through the
+danger zone. Our car was low on the ground; still, it was high enough
+and big enough to serve as a mark for the German guns and it fairly gave
+them the range of the road.
+
+But though the guns had been pounding away before we started, they
+ceased firing as we went through.
+
+That, however, was sheer luck. And presently it was brought home to me
+that we were not the only persons involved in the risk of this joyous
+adventure. Just outside the bombarded hamlet ahead of us we were stopped
+by some Belgian [? French] soldiers hidden in the cover of a ditch by
+the roadside, which if it was not a trench might very easily have been
+one. They were talking in whispers for fear of being overheard by the
+Germans, who must have been at least a mile off, across the fields on
+the other side of the river. A mile seemed a pretty safe distance; but
+Mr. L. said it wouldn't help us much, considering that the range of
+their guns was twenty-four miles. The soldiers told us we couldn't
+possibly get through to Zele. That was true. The road was blocked--by
+the ruins of the hamlet--not twenty yards from where we were pulled up.
+We got out of the car; and while Mr. L. and the Belgian lady conversed
+with the soldiers, Mr. M. and I walked on to investigate the road.
+
+At the abrupt end of a short row of houses it stopped where it should
+have turned suddenly, and became a rubbish-heap lying in a waste place.
+
+Just at first I thought we must have gone out of our course somehow and
+missed the road to Zele. It was difficult to realize that this
+rubbish-heap lying in a waste place ever _had_ been a road. But for the
+shell of a house that stood next to it, the last of the row, and the
+piles of lath and plaster, and the shattered glass on the sidewalk and
+the blown dust everywhere, it might have passed for the ordinary
+no-thoroughfare of an abandoned brick-field.
+
+Mr. M. made me keep close under the wall of a barn or something on the
+other side of the street, the only thing that stood between us and the
+German batteries. Beyond the barn were the green fields bare to the guns
+that had shelled this end of the village. At first we hugged our shelter
+tight, only looking out now and then round the corner of the barn into
+the open country.
+
+A flat field, a low line of willows at the bottom, and somewhere behind
+the willows the German batteries. Grey puffs were still curling about
+the stems and clinging to the tops of the willows. They might have been
+mist from the river or smoke from the guns we had heard. I hadn't time
+to watch them, for suddenly Mr. M. darted from his cover and made an
+alarming sally into the open field.
+
+He said he wanted to find some pieces of nice hot shell for me.
+
+So I had to run out after Mr. M. and tell him I didn't want any pieces
+of hot shell, and pull him back into safety.
+
+All for nothing. Not a gun fired.
+
+We strolled across what was left of the narrow street and looked through
+the window-frames of a shattered house. It had been a little inn. The
+roof and walls of the parlour had been wrecked, so had most of the
+furniture. But on a table against the inner wall a row of clean glasses
+still stood in their order as the landlord had left them; and not one of
+them was broken.
+
+I suppose it must have been about time for the guns to begin firing
+again, for Mr. L. called to us to come back and to look sharp too. So we
+ran for it. And as we leaped into the car Mr. L. reproved Mr. M. gravely
+and virtuously for "taking a lady into danger."
+
+The car rushed back into Baerlaere if anything faster than it had rushed
+out, Mr. L. sitting bolt upright with an air of great majesty and
+integrity. I remember thinking that it would never, never do to duck if
+the shells came, for if we did Mr. L.'s head would stand out like a
+noble monument and he would be hit as infallibly as any cathedral in
+Belgium.
+
+It seems that the soldiers were not particularly pleased at our
+blundering up against their trench in our noisy car, which, they said,
+might draw down the German fire at any minute on the Belgian lines.
+
+We got into Ghent after dark by the way we came.
+
+
+[_Evening._]
+
+Called at the "Flandria." Ursula Dearmer and two Belgian nurses have
+been sent to the convent at Zele to work there to-night.
+
+Mr. ---- is here. But you wouldn't know him. I have just been introduced
+to him without knowing him. Before the War he was a Quaker,[19] a
+teetotaller, and a pacifist at any price. And I suppose he wore clothes
+that conformed more or less to his principles. Now he is wearing
+the uniform of a British naval officer. He is drinking long
+whiskies-and-sodas in the restaurant, in the society of Major R. And the
+Major's khaki doesn't give a point to the Quaker's uniform. As for the
+Quaker, they say he could give points to any able seaman when it comes
+to swear words (but this may be sheer affectionate exaggeration). His
+face and his high, hatchet nose, whatever colour they used to be, are
+now the colour of copper--not an ordinary, Dutch kettle and
+coal-scuttle, pacifist, arts-and-crafts copper, but a fine old,
+truculent, damn-disarmament, Krupp-&-Co., bloody, ammunition copper, and
+battered by the wars of all the world. He is the commander and the
+owner of an armoured car, one of the unit of five volunteer armoured
+cars. I do not know whether he was happy or unhappy when there wasn't a
+war. No man, and certainly no Quaker, could possibly be happier than
+this Quaker is now. He and the Major have been out potting Germans all
+the afternoon. (They have accounted for nine.) A schoolboy who has hit
+the mark nine times running with his first toy rifle is not merrier
+than, if as merry as, these more than mature men with their armoured
+car. They do not say much, but you gather that it is more fun being a
+volunteer than a regular; it is to enjoy delight with liberty, the
+maximum of risk with the minimum of responsibility.
+
+And their armoured car--if it is the one I saw standing to-day in the
+Place d'Armes--it is, as far as you can make out through its disguises,
+an ordinary open touring car, with a wooden hoarding (mere matchboard)
+stuck all round it, the whole painted grey to simulate, armoured
+painting. Through four holes, fore and aft and on either side of her,
+their machine-guns rake the horizon. The Major and Mr. ---- sit inside,
+hidden behind the matchboard plating. They scour the country. When they
+see any Germans they fire and bring them down. It is quite simple. When
+you inquire how they can regard that old wooden rabbit-hutch as an
+armoured cover, they reply that their car isn't for defence, it's for
+attack. The Germans have only to see their guns and they're off. And
+really it looks like it, since the two are actually here before your
+eyes, drinking whiskies-and-sodas, and the rest of the armoured car
+corps are alive somewhere in Ghent.
+
+Dear Major R. and Mr. ---- (whom I never met before), unless they read
+this Journal, which isn't likely, they will never know how my heart
+warmed towards them, nor how happy I count myself in being allowed to
+see them. They showed me how good it is to be alive; how excellent,
+above all things, to be a man and to be young for ever, and to go out
+into the most gigantic war in history, sitting in an armoured car which
+is as a rabbit-hutch for safety, and to have been a pacifist, that is to
+say a sinner, like Mr. ----, so that on the top of it you feel the whole
+glamour and glory of conversion. Others may have known the agony and the
+fear and sordid filth and horror and the waste, but they know nothing
+but the clean and fiery passion and the contagious ecstasy of war.
+
+If you were to tell Mr. ---- about the mystic fascination of the
+south-east road, the road that leads eventually to Waterloo, he would
+most certainly understand you, but it is very doubtful whether he would
+let you venture very far down it. Whereas the Commandant, sooner or
+later, will.
+
+
+[_Thursday, 8th._]
+
+Had breakfast with Mr. L.
+
+Went down to the "Flandria." They say Zele has been taken. There has
+been terrific anxiety here for Ursula Dearmer and the two Belgian nurses
+(Madame F.'s daughter and niece), who were left there all night in the
+convent, which may very well be in the hands of the Germans by now. An
+Ambulance car went off very early this morning to their rescue and has
+brought them back safe.
+
+We are told that the Germans are really advancing on Ghent. We have
+orders to prepare to leave it at a minute's notice. This time it looks
+as if there might be something in it.
+
+I attend to the Commandant's correspondence. Wired Mr. Hastings. Wired
+Miss F. definitely accepting the Field Ambulance Corps and nurses she
+has raised in Glasgow. Her idea is that her Ambulance should be an
+independent unit attached to our corps but bearing her name. (Seems
+rather a pity to bring the poor lady out just now when things are
+beginning to be risky and our habitations uncertain.)
+
+The British troops are pouring into Ghent. There is a whole crowd of
+them in the _Place_ in front of the Station. And some British wounded
+from Antwerp are in our Hospital.
+
+Heavy fighting at Lokeren, between Ghent and Saint Nicolas. Car 1 has
+been sent there with the Commandant, Ursula Dearmer, Janet McNeil and
+the Chaplain (Mr. Foster has been hurt in lifting a stretcher; he is out
+of it, poor man). Mrs. Torrence, Dr. Wilson and Mr. Riley have been sent
+to Nazareth. Mrs. Lambert has gone to Lokeren with her husband in his
+car.
+
+I was sent for this morning by somebody who desired to see the English
+Field Ambulance. Drawn up before the Hospital I found all that was left
+of a Hendon bus, in the charge of two British Red Cross volunteers in
+khaki and a British tar. The three were smiling in full enjoyment of the
+high comedy of disaster. They said they were looking for a job, and they
+wanted to know if our Ambulance would take them on. They were keen. They
+had every qualification under the sun.
+
+"Only," they said, "there's one thing we bar. And that's the
+firing-line. We've been under shell-fire for fifteen hours--and look at
+our bus!"
+
+The bus was a thing of heroism and gorgeous ruin. The nose of its engine
+looked as if it had nuzzled its way through a thousand _débâcles_; its
+dark-blue sides were coated with dust and mud to the colour of an
+armoured car. The letters M. E. T. were barely discernible through the
+grey. Its windows were shattered to mere jags and spikes and splinters
+of glass that adhered marvellously to their frames.
+
+I don't know how I managed to convey to the three volunteers that such a
+bus would be about as much use to our Field Ambulance as an old
+greenhouse that had come through an earthquake. It was one of the
+saddest things I ever had to do.
+
+Unperturbed, and still credulous of adventure, they climbed on to their
+bus, turned her nose round, and went, smiling, away.
+
+Who they were, and what corps they belonged to, and how they acquired
+that Metropolitan bus I shall never know, and do not want to know. I
+would far rather think of them as the heroes of some fantastic
+enterprise, careering in gladness and in mystery from one besieged city
+to another.
+
+Saw Madame F., who looks worried. She suggested that I should come back
+to the Hospital. She says it must be inconvenient for the Commandant not
+to have his secretary always at hand. At the same time, we are told
+that the Hospital is filling up so fast that our rooms will be wanted.
+And anyhow, Dr. ---- has got mine.
+
+I have found an absurd little hotel, the Hôtel Cecil in the _Place_,
+opposite the Hospital, where I can have a room. Then I can be on duty
+all day.
+
+Went down to the "Poste." Gave up my room, packed and took leave of the
+nice fat _propriétaire_ and his wife.
+
+Driving through the town, I meet French troops pouring through the
+streets. There was very little cheering.
+
+Settled into the Hôtel Cecil; if it could be called settling when my
+things have to stay packed, in case the Germans come before the evening.
+
+The Hôtel Cecil is a thin slice of a house with three rooms on each
+little floor, and a staircase like a ladder. There is something very
+sinister about this smallness and narrowness and steepness. You say to
+yourself: Supposing the Germans really do come into Ghent; there will be
+some Uhlans among them; and the Uhlans will certainly come into the
+Hôtel Cecil, and they will get very drunk in the restaurant below; and
+you might as well be in a trap as in this den at the top of the slice up
+all these abominable little steep stairs. And you are very glad that
+your room has a balcony.
+
+But though your room has a balcony it hasn't got a table, or any space
+where a table could stand. There is hardly anything in it but a big
+double bed and a tall hat-stand. I have never seen a room more
+inappropriate to a secretary and reporter.
+
+The proprietor and his wife are very amiable. He is a Red Cross man; and
+they have taken two refugee women into their house. They have promised
+faithfully that by noon there shall be a table.
+
+Noon has come; and there is no table.
+
+The cars have come back from Lokeren and Nazareth, full of wounded.
+
+Mrs. Lambert and her husband have come back from Lokeren. They drove
+right into the German lines to fetch two wounded. They were promptly
+arrested and as promptly released when their passports had shown them to
+be good American citizens. They brought back their two wounded.
+Altogether, ten or fifteen wounded have been brought back from Lokeren
+this morning.
+
+
+[_Afternoon._]
+
+The Commandant has taken me out with the Ambulance for the first time.
+We were to go to Lokeren.
+
+On the way we came up with the Lamberts in their scouting-car. They
+asked me to get out of the Ambulance car and come with them. On the
+whole, after this morning, it looked as if the scouting-car promised
+better incident. So I threw in my lot with the Lamberts.
+
+It was a little disappointing, for no sooner had the Ambulance car got
+clean away than the scouting-car broke down. Also Mr. Lambert stated
+that it was not his intention to take Mrs. Lambert into the German lines
+again to-day if he could possibly help it.
+
+We waited for an exasperating twenty minutes while the car got righted.
+From our street, in a blue transparent sky, so high up that it seemed
+part of the transparency, we saw a Taube hanging over Ghent. People came
+out of their houses and watched it with interest and a kind of amiable
+toleration.
+
+At last we got off; and the scouting-car made such good running that we
+came up with our Ambulance in a small town half-way between Ghent and
+Lokeren. We stopped here to confer with the Belgian Army Medical
+officers. They told us it was impossible to go on to Lokeren. Lokeren
+was now in the hands of the Germans. The wounded had been brought into a
+small village about two miles away.
+
+When we got into the village we were told to go back at once, for the
+Germans were coming in. The Commandant answered that we had come to
+fetch the wounded and were certainly not going back without them. It
+seemed that there were only four wounded, and they had been taken into
+houses in the village.
+
+We were given five minutes to get them out and go.
+
+I suppose we stayed in that village quite three-quarters of an hour.
+
+It was one straight street of small houses, and beyond the last house
+about a quarter of a mile of flat road, a quiet, grey road between tall,
+slender trees, then the turn. And behind the turn the Germans were
+expected to come in from Lokeren every minute.
+
+And we had to find the houses and the wounded men.
+
+The Commandant went into the first house and came out again very
+quickly.
+
+The man in the room inside was dead.
+
+We went on up the village.
+
+Down that quiet road and through the village, swerving into the rough,
+sandy track that fringed the paved street, a battery of Belgian
+artillery came clattering in full retreat. The leader turned his horse
+violently into a side alley and plunged down it. I was close behind the
+battery when it turned; I could see the faces of the men. They had not
+that terrible look that Mr. Davidson told me he saw on the faces of
+Belgians in retreat from [?] Zele. There was no terror in them, only a
+sort of sullen annoyance and disgust.
+
+I was walking beside the Commandant, and how I managed to get mixed up
+with this battery I don't know. First of all it held me up when it
+turned, then when I got through, it still came on and cut me off from
+the Commandant. (The rest of the Corps were with the Ambulance in the
+middle of the village.)
+
+Then, through the plunging train, I caught sight of the innocent
+Commandant, all by himself, strolling serenely towards the open road,
+where beyond the bend the Germans were presumably pursuing the battery.
+It was terribly alarming to see the Commandant advancing to meet them,
+all alone, without a word of German to protect him.
+
+There were gaps in the retreat, and I dashed through one of them (as you
+dash through the traffic in the Strand when you're in a hurry) and went
+after the Commandant with the brilliant idea of defending him with a
+volley of bad German hurled at the enemy's head.
+
+And the Commandant went on, indifferent both to his danger and to his
+salvation, and disappeared down a little lane and into a house where a
+wounded man was. I stood at the end of the lane with the sublime
+intention of guarding it.
+
+The Commandant came out presently. He looked as if he were steeped in a
+large, vague leisure, and he asked me to go and find Mr. Lambert and his
+scouting-car. Mr. Lambert had got to go to Lokeren to fetch some
+wounded.
+
+So I ran back down the village and found Mr. Lambert and his car at the
+other end of it. He accepted his destiny with a beautiful transatlantic
+calm and dashed off to Lokeren. I do not think he took his wife with him
+this time.[20]
+
+I went back to see if the Germans had got any nearer to the Commandant.
+They hadn't. What with dressings and bandages and looking for wounded,
+the Ambulance must have worked for about half an hour, and not any
+Germans had turned the corner yet.
+
+It was still busy getting its load safely stowed away. Nothing for the
+wretched Secretary to do but to stand there at the far end of the
+village, looking up the road to Lokeren. There was a most singular
+fascination about the turn of that road beyond the trees.
+
+Suddenly, at what seemed the last minute of safety, two Belgian
+stretcher-bearers, without a stretcher, rushed up to me. They said there
+was a man badly wounded in some house somewhere up the road. I found a
+stretcher and went off with them to look for him.
+
+We went on and on up the road. It couldn't have been more than a few
+hundred yards, really, if as much; but it felt like going on and on; it
+seemed impossible to find that house.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There was something odd about that short stretch of grey road and the
+tall trees at the end of it and the turn. These things appeared in a
+queer, vivid stillness, as if they were not there on their own account,
+but stood in witness to some superior reality. Through them you were
+somehow assured of Reality with a most singular and overpowering
+certainty. You were aware of the possibility of an ensuing agony and
+horror as of something unreal and transitory that would break through
+the peace of it in a merely episodical manner. Whatever happened to come
+round the turn of the road would simply not matter.
+
+And with your own quick movements up the road there came that steadily
+mounting thrill which is not excitement, or anything in the least like
+excitement, because of its extreme quietness. This thrill is apt to
+cheat you by stopping short of the ecstasy it seems to promise. But this
+time it didn't stop short; it became more and more steady and more and
+more quiet in the swing of its vibration; it became ecstasy; it became
+intense happiness.
+
+It lasted till we reached the little plantation by the roadside.
+
+While it lasted you had the sense of touching Reality at its highest
+point in a secure and effortless consummation; so far were you from
+being strung up to any pitch.
+
+Then came the plantation.
+
+Behind the plantation, on a railway siding, a train came up from Lokeren
+with yet another load of wounded. And in the train there was confusion
+and agitation and fear. Belgian Red Cross men hung out by the doors of
+the train and clamoured excitedly for stretchers. There was only one
+stretcher, the one we had brought from the village.
+
+Somebody complained bitterly: "_C'est mal arrangé. Avec les Allemands
+sur nos dos!_"
+
+Somebody tried to grab our one stretcher. The two bearers seemed
+inclined to give it up. Nobody knew where our badly wounded man was.
+Nobody seemed very eager now to go and look for him. We three were
+surrounded and ordered to give up our stretcher. No use wasting time in
+hunting for one man, with the Germans on our backs.
+
+None of the men we were helping out of the train were seriously hurt. I
+had to choose between my one badly wounded man, whom we hadn't found,
+and about a dozen who could stumble somehow into safety. But my two
+stretcher-bearers were wavering badly, and it was all I could do to keep
+them firmly to their job.
+
+Then three women came out of a little house half hidden by the
+plantation. They spoke low, for fear the Germans should overhear them.
+
+"He is here," they said; "he is here."
+
+The stretcher-bearers hurried off with their stretcher. The train
+unloaded itself somehow.
+
+The man, horribly hurt, with a wound like a red pit below his
+shoulder-blades, was brought out and laid on the stretcher. He lay
+there, quietly, on his side, in a posture of utter resignation to
+anguish.
+
+He was a Flamand, clumsily built; he had a broad, rather ugly face,
+narrowing suddenly as the fringe of his whiskers became a little
+straggling beard. But to me he was the most beautiful thing I have ever
+seen. And I loved him. I do not think it is possible to love, to adore
+any creature more than I loved and adored that clumsy, ugly Flamand.
+
+He was my first wounded man.
+
+For I tried, I still try, to persuade myself that if I hadn't bullied my
+two bearers and repulsed the attack on my stretcher, he would have been
+left behind in the little house in the plantation.
+
+We got him out of the plantation all right and on to the paved road.
+Ursula Dearmer at Termonde with her Belgian officer, and at Zele with
+all her wounded, couldn't have been happier than I was with my one
+Flamand.
+
+We got him a few yards down the road all right.
+
+Then, to my horror, the bearers dumped him down on the paving-stones.
+They said he was much too heavy. They couldn't possibly carry him any
+more unless they rested.
+
+I didn't think it was exactly the moment for resting, and I told them
+so. The Germans hadn't come round the turn, and probably never would
+come; still, you never know; and the general impression seemed to be
+that they were about due.
+
+But the bearers stood stolidly in the middle of the road and mopped
+their faces and puffed. The situation began to feel as absurd and as
+terrible as a nightmare.
+
+So I grabbed one end of the stretcher and said I'd carry it myself. I
+said I wasn't very strong, and perhaps I couldn't carry it, but anyhow
+I'd try.
+
+They picked it up at once then, and went off at a good swinging trot
+over the paving-stones that jolted my poor Flamand most horribly. I told
+them to go on the smooth track at the side. They hailed this suggestion
+as a most brilliant and original idea.
+
+As the Flamand was brought into the village, the Ambulance had got its
+wounded in, and was ready to go. But he had to have his wound dressed.
+
+He lay there on his stretcher in the middle of the village street, my
+beloved Flamand, stripped to the waist, with the great red pit of his
+wound yawning in his white flesh. I had to look on while the Commandant
+stuffed it with antiseptic gauze.
+
+I had always supposed that the dressing of a wound was a cautious and
+delicate process. But it isn't. There is a certain casual audacity about
+it. The Commandant's hands worked rapidly as he rammed cyanide gauze
+into the red pit. It looked as if he were stuffing an old crate with
+straw. And it was all over in a moment. There seemed something indecent
+in the haste with which my Flamand was disposed of.
+
+When the Commandant observed that my Flamand's wound looked much worse
+than it was, I felt hurt, as if this beloved person had been slighted;
+also as if there was some subtle disparagement to my "find."
+
+I rather hoped that we were going to wait till the men I had left behind
+in the plantation had come up. But the car was fairly full, and Ursula
+Dearmer and Janet and Mrs. Lambert were told off to take it in to Z----,
+leave the wounded there and come back for the rest. I was to walk to
+Z---- and wait there for the returning car.
+
+Nothing would have pleased me better, but the distance was farther than
+the Commandant realized, farther, perhaps, than was desirable in the
+circumstances, so I was ordered to get on the car and come back with it.
+
+(Tom the chauffeur is perfectly right. There are too many of us.)
+
+We got away long before the Germans turned the corner, if they ever did
+turn it. In Z----, which is half-way between Lokeren and Ghent, we came
+upon six or seven fine military ambulances, all huddled together as if
+they sought safety in companionship (why none of them had been sent up
+to our village I can't imagine). Ursula Dearmer, with admirable
+presence of mind, commandeered one of these and went back with it to the
+village, so that we could take our load of wounded into Ghent. We did
+this, and went back at once.
+
+The return journey was a tame affair. Before we got to Z---- we met the
+Commandant and the Chaplain and two refugees, in Mr. Lambert's
+scouting-car, towed by a motor-wagon. It had broken down on the way from
+Lokeren. We took them on board and turned back to Ghent.
+
+The wounded came on in Ursula Dearmer's military car.
+
+Twenty-three wounded in all were taken from Lokeren or near it to-day.
+Hundreds had to be left behind in the German lines.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We have heard that Antwerp is burning; that the Government is removed to
+Ostend; that all the English have left.
+
+There are a great many British wounded, with nurses and Army doctors, in
+Ghent. Three or four British have been brought into the "Flandria."
+
+One of them is a young British officer, Mr. ----. He is said to be
+mortally wounded.
+
+Dr. Haynes and Dr. Bird have not gone. They and Dr. ---- have joined the
+surgical staff of the Hospital, and are working in the operating
+theatre all day. They have got enough to do now in all conscience.
+
+All night there has been a sound of the firing of machine guns [?]. At
+first it was like the barking, of all the dogs in Belgium. I thought it
+_was_ the dogs of Belgium, till I discovered a deadly rhythm and
+precision in the barking.[21]
+
+
+[_Friday, 9th._]
+
+The Hospital is so full that beds have been put in the entrance hall,
+along the walls by the big ward and the secretarial bureau. In the
+recess by the ward there are three British soldiers.
+
+There are some men standing about there whose heads and faces are
+covered with a thick white mask of cotton-wool like a diver's helmet.
+There are three small holes in each white mask, for mouth and eyes. The
+effect is appalling.
+
+These are the men whose faces have been burned by shell-fire at Antwerp.
+
+The Commandant asked me to come with him through the wards and find all
+the British wounded who are well enough to be sent home. I am to take
+their names and dress them and get them ready to go by the morning
+train.
+
+There are none in the upper wards. Mr. ---- cannot be moved. He is very
+ill. They do not think he will live.
+
+There are three downstairs in the hall. One is well enough to look after
+himself (I have forgotten his name). One, Russell, is wounded in the
+knee. The third, Cameron, a big Highlander, is wounded in the head. He
+wears a high headdress of bandages wound round and round many times like
+an Indian turban, and secured by more bandages round his jaw and chin.
+It is glued tight to one side of his head with clotted blood. Between
+the bandages his sharp, Highland face looks piteous.
+
+I am to dress these two and have them ready by eleven. Dr. ---- of the
+British Field Hospital, who is to take them over, comes round to enter
+their names on his list.
+
+They are to be dressed in civilian clothes supplied by the Hospital.
+
+It all sounded very simple until you tried to get the clothes. First you
+had to see the President, who referred you to the Matron, who referred
+you to the clerk in charge of the clothing department. An _infirmier_
+(one of the mysterious officials who hang about the hall wearing peaked
+caps; the problem of their existence was now solved for the first
+time)--an _infirmier_ was despatched to find the clerk. The clothing
+department must have been hidden in the remotest recesses of the
+Hospital, for it was ages before he came back to ask me all over again
+what clothes would be wanted. He was a little fat man with bright, curly
+hair, very eager, and very cheerful and very kind. He scuttled off again
+like a rabbit, and I had to call him back to measure Russell. And when
+he had measured Russell, with his gay and amiable alacrity, Russell and
+I had to wait until he came back with the clothes.
+
+I had made up my mind very soon that it would be no use measuring
+Cameron for any clothes, or getting him ready for any train. He was
+moving his head from side to side and making queer moaning sounds of
+agitation and dismay. He had asked for a cigarette, which somebody had
+brought him. It dropped from his fingers. Somebody picked it up and lit
+it and stuck it in his mouth; it dropped again. Then I noticed something
+odd about his left arm; he was holding it up with his right hand and
+feeling it. It dropped, too, like a dead weight, on the counterpane.
+Cameron watched its behaviour with anguish. He complained that his left
+arm was all numb and too heavy to hold up. Also he said he was afraid
+to be moved and taken away.
+
+It struck me that Cameron's head must be smashed in on the right side
+and that some pressure on his brain was causing paralysis. It was quite
+clear that he couldn't be moved. So I sent for one of the Belgian
+doctors to come and look at him, and keep him in the Hospital.
+
+The Belgian doctor found that Cameron's head _was_ smashed in on the
+right side, and that there was pressure on his brain, causing paralysis
+in his left arm.
+
+He is to be kept in the Hospital and operated on this morning. They may
+save him if they can remove the pressure.
+
+It seemed ages before the merry little _infirmier_ came back with
+Russell's clothes. And when he did come he brought socks that were too
+tight, and went back and brought socks that were too large, and a shirt
+that was too tight and trousers that were too long. Then he went back,
+eager as ever, and brought drawers that were too tight, and more
+trousers that were too short. He brought boots that were too large and
+boots that were too tight; and he had to be sent back again for
+slippers. Last of all he brought a shirt which made Russell smile and
+mutter something about being dressed in all the colours of the rainbow;
+and a black cutaway morning coat, and a variety of hats, all too small
+for Russell.
+
+Then when you had made a selection, you began to try to get Russell into
+all these things that were too tight or too loose for him. The socks
+were the worst. The right-hand one had to be put on very carefully, by
+quarter inches at a time; the least tug on the sock would give Russell
+an excruciating pain in his wounded knee; and Russell was all for
+violence and haste; he was so afraid of being left behind.
+
+Though he called me "Sister," I felt certain that Russell must know that
+I wasn't a trained nurse and that he was the first wounded man I had
+ever dressed in my life. However, I did get him dressed, somehow, with
+the help of the little _infirmier_, and a wonderful sight he was, in the
+costume of a Belgian civilian.
+
+What tried him most were the hats. He refused a peaked cap which the
+_infirmier_ pressed on him, and compromised finally on a sort of checked
+cricket cap that just covered the extreme top of his head. We got him
+off in time, after all.
+
+Then two _infirmiers_ came with a stretcher and carried Cameron
+upstairs to the operating theatre, and I went up and waited with him in
+the corridor till the surgeons were ready for him. He had grown drowsy
+and indifferent by now.
+
+I have missed the Ambulance going out to Lokeren, and have had to stay
+behind.
+
+Two ladies called to see Mr. ----. One of them was Miss Ashley-Smith,
+who had him in her ward at Antwerp. I took them over the Hospital to
+find his room, which is on the second story. His name--his names--in
+thick Gothic letters, were on a white card by the door.
+
+He was asleep and the nurse could not let them see him.
+
+Miss Ashley-Smith and her friend are staying in the Couvent de Saint
+Pierre, where the British Field Hospital has taken some of its wounded.
+
+Towards one o'clock news came of heavy fighting. The battle is creeping
+nearer to us; it has stretched from Zele and Quatrecht to Melle, four
+and a half miles from Ghent. They are saying that the Germans may enter
+Ghent to-day, in an hour--half an hour! It will be very awkward for us
+and for our wounded if they do, as both our ambulance cars are out.
+
+Later news of more fighting at Quatrecht.
+
+
+[_Afternoon._]
+
+The Commandant has come back. They were at Quatrecht, not Lokeren.
+
+Mr. ---- is awake now. The Commandant has taken me to see him.
+
+He is lying in one of the officers' wards, a small room, with bare walls
+and a blond light, looking south. There are two beds in this room, set
+side by side. In the one next the door there is a young French officer.
+He is very young: a boy with sleek black hair and smooth rose-leaf skin,
+shining and fresh as if he had never been near the smoke and dirt of
+battle. He is sitting up reading a French magazine. He is wounded in the
+leg. His crutches are propped up against the wall.
+
+Stretched on his back in the further bed there is a very tall young
+Englishman. The sheet is drawn very tight over his chest; his face is
+flushed and he is breathing rapidly, in short jerks. At first you do not
+see that he, too, is not more than a boy, for he is so big and tall, and
+a little brown feathery beard has begun to curl about his jaw and chin.
+
+When I came to him and the Commandant told him my name, he opened his
+eyes wide with a look of startled recognition. He said he knew me; he
+had seen me somewhere in England. He was so certain about it that he
+persuaded me that I had seen him somewhere. But we can neither of us
+remember where or when. They say he is not perfectly conscious all the
+time.
+
+We stayed with him for a few minutes till he went off to sleep again.
+
+None of the doctors think that he can live. He was wounded in front with
+mitrailleuse; eight bullets in his body. He has been operated on. How he
+survived the operation and the journey on the top of it I can't imagine.
+And now general peritonitis has set in. It doesn't look as if he had a
+chance.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We have heard that all the War Correspondents have been sent out of
+Ghent.
+
+Numbers of British troops came in to-day.
+
+Went up to see Mr. Foster, who is in his room, ill. It is hard lines
+that he should have had this accident when he has been working so
+splendidly. And it wasn't his fault, either. One of the Belgian bearers
+slipped with his end of a stretcher when they were carrying a heavy man,
+and Mr. Foster got hurt in trying to right the balance and save his
+wounded man. He is very much distressed at having to lie up and be
+waited on.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Impossible to write a Journal or any articles while I am in the
+Hospital, and there is no table yet in my room at the Hôtel Cecil.
+
+The first ambulance car, with the chauffeur Bert and Mr. Riley, has come
+back from Melle, where they left Mrs. Torrence and Janet and Dr. Wilson.
+They went back again in the afternoon.
+
+They are all out now except poor Mr. Foster and Mrs. Lambert, who is
+somewhere with her husband.
+
+I am the only available member of the Corps left in the Hospital!
+
+
+[_3.30._]
+
+No Germans have appeared yet.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I was sitting up in the mess-room, making entries in the Day-Book, when
+I was sent for. Somebody or something had arrived, and was waiting
+below.
+
+On the steps of the Hospital I found two brand-new British chauffeurs in
+brand-new suits of khaki. Behind them, drawn up in the entry, were two
+brand-new Daimler motor-ambulance cars.
+
+I thought it was a Field Ambulance that had lost itself on the way to
+France. The chauffeurs (they had beautiful manners, and were very spick
+and span, and one pleased me by his remarkable resemblance to the
+editor of the _English Review_)--the chauffeurs wanted to know whether
+they had come to the right place. And of course they hardly had, if all
+the British Red Cross ambulance cars were going into France.
+
+Then they explained.
+
+They were certainly making for Ghent. The British Red Cross Society had
+sent them there. They were only anxious to know whether they had come to
+the right Hospital, the Hospital where the English Field Ambulance was
+quartered.
+
+Yes: that was right. They had been sent for us.
+
+They had just come up from Ostend, and they had not been ten minutes in
+Ghent before orders came through for an ambulance to be sent at once to
+Melle.
+
+The only available member of the Corps was its Secretary and Reporter.
+To that utterly untrained and supremely inappropriate person Heaven sent
+this incredible luck.
+
+When I think how easily I might have missed it! If I'd gone for a stroll
+in the town. If I'd sat five minutes longer with Mr. Foster. If the
+landlord of the Hôtel Cecil had kept his word and given me a table, when
+I should, to a dead certainty, have been writing this wretched Journal
+at the ineffable moment when the chauffeurs arrived.
+
+I am glad to think that I had just enough morality left to play fair
+with Mrs. Lambert. I did try to find her, so that she shouldn't miss it.
+Somebody said she was in one of the restaurants on the _Place_ with her
+husband. I looked in all the restaurants and she wasn't in one of them.
+The finger of Heaven pointed unmistakably to the Secretary and Reporter.
+
+There was a delay of ten minutes, no more, while I got some cake and
+sandwiches for the hungry chauffeurs and took them to the bureau to have
+their brassards stamped. And in every minute of the ten I suffered
+tortures while we waited. I thought something _must_ happen to prevent
+my taking that ambulance car out. I thought my heart would leave off
+beating and I should die before we started (I believe people feel like
+this sometimes before their wedding night). I thought the Commandant
+would come back and send out Ursula Dearmer instead. I thought the
+Military Power would come down from its secret hiding-place and stop me.
+But none of these things happened. At the last moment, I thought that M.
+C----
+
+M. C---- was the Belgian Red Cross guide who took us into Antwerp. To M.
+C---- I said simply and firmly that I was going. The functions of the
+Secretary and Reporter had never been very clearly defined, and this
+was certainly not the moment to define them. M. C----, in his innocence,
+accepted me with confidence and a chivalrous gravity that left nothing
+to be desired.
+
+The chauffeur Newlands (the leaner and darker one) declared himself
+ready for anything. All he wanted was to get to work. Poor Ascot, who
+was so like my friend the editor, had to be content with his vigil in
+the back yard.
+
+At last we got off. I might have trusted Heaven. The getting off was a
+foregone conclusion, for we went along the south-east road, which had
+not worked its mysterious fascination for nothing.
+
+At a fork where two roads go into Ghent we saw one of our old ambulance
+cars dashing into Ghent down the other road on our left. It was beyond
+hail. Heaven _meant_ us to go on uninterrupted and unchallenged.
+
+I had not allowed for trouble at the barrier. There always is a barrier,
+which may be anything from a mile to four miles from the field or
+village where the wounded are. Yesterday on the way to Lokeren the
+barrier was at Z----. To-day it was somewhere half-way between Ghent and
+Melle.
+
+None of us had ever quite got to the bottom of the trouble at the
+barrier. We know that the Belgian authorities wisely refused all
+responsibility. Properly speaking, our ambulances were not supposed to
+go nearer than a certain safe distance from the enemy's firing-line. For
+two reasons. First, it stood the chance of being shelled or taken
+prisoner. Second, there was a very natural fear that it might draw down
+the enemy's fire on the Belgians. Our huge, lumbering cars, with their
+brand-new khaki hoods and flaming red crosses on a white ground, were an
+admirable mark for German guns. But as the Corps in this case went into
+the firing-line on foot, I do not think that the risk was to the
+Belgians. So, though in theory we stopped outside the barriers, in
+practice we invariably got through.
+
+The new car was stopped at the barrier now by the usual Belgian Army
+Medical Officer. We were not to go on to Melle.
+
+I said that we had orders to go on to Melle; and I meant to go on to
+Melle. The Medical Officer said again that we were not to go, and I said
+again that we were going.
+
+Then that Belgian Army Medical Officer began to tell us what I imagine
+is the usual barrier tale.
+
+There were any amount of ambulances at Melle.
+
+There were no wounded at Melle.
+
+And in any case this ambulance wouldn't be allowed to go there. And then
+the usual battle of the barrier had place.
+
+It was one against three. For M. C---- went over to the enemy, and the
+chauffeur Newlands, confronted by two official adversaries in uniform,
+became deafer and deafer to my voice in his right ear.
+
+First, the noble and chivalrous Belgian Red Cross guide, with an
+appalling treachery, gave the order to turn the car round to Ghent. I
+gave the counter order. Newlands wavered for one heroic moment; then he
+turned the car round.
+
+I jumped out and went up to the Army Medical Officer and delivered a
+frontal attack, discharging execrable French.
+
+"No wounded? You tell us that tale every day, and there are always
+wounded. Do you want any more of them to die? I mean to go on and I
+shall go on."
+
+I didn't ask him how he thought he could stop one whom Heaven had
+predestined to go on to Melle.
+
+M. C---- had got out now to see the fight.
+
+The Army Medical Officer looked the Secretary and Reporter up and down,
+taking in that vision of inappropriateness and disproportion. There was
+a faint, a very faint smile under the ferocity of his moustache, the
+first sign of relenting. The Secretary and Reporter saw the advantage
+and followed, as you might follow a bend in the enemy's line of
+defence.
+
+"I _want_ to go on" (placably, almost pathetically). "_Je veux
+continuer._ Do you by any chance imagine we're _afraid_?"
+
+At this, M. C----, the Belgian guide, smiled too, under a moustache not
+quite so ferocious as the Army Medical Officer's. They shrugged their
+shoulders. They had done their duty. Anyhow, they had lost the battle.
+
+The guide and the reporter jumped back into the car; I didn't hear
+anybody give the order, but the chauffeur Newlands turned her round in
+no time, and we dashed past the barrier and into Melle.
+
+The village street, that had been raked by mitrailleuses from the field
+beyond it, was quiet when we came in, and almost deserted. Up a side
+street, propped against the wall of a stable, four wounded Frenchmen
+waited for the ambulance. A fifth, shot through the back of his head by
+a dum-dum bullet, lay in front of them on a stretcher that dripped
+blood.
+
+I found Mr. Grierson in the village, left behind by the last ambulance.
+He was immensely astonished at my arrival with the new car. He had with
+him an eager little Englishman, one of the sort that tracks an
+ambulance everywhere on the off-chance of being useful.
+
+And the Curé of the village was there. He wore the Red Cross brassard on
+the sleeve of his cassock and he carried the Host in a little bag of
+purple silk.
+
+They told me that the village had been fired on by shrapnel a few
+minutes before we came into it. They said we were only a hundred [?]
+yards from the German trenches. We could see the edge of the field from
+the village street. The trenches [?] were at the bottom of it.
+
+It was Baerlaere all over again. The firing stopped as soon as I came
+within range of it, and didn't begin again until we had got away.
+
+You couldn't take any interest in the firing or the German trenches, or
+the eager little Englishman, or anything. You couldn't see anything but
+those five wounded men, or think of anything but how to get them into
+the ambulance as painlessly and in as short a time as possible.
+
+The man on the dripping stretcher was mortally wounded. He was lifted in
+first, very slowly and gently.
+
+The Curé climbed in after him, carrying the Host.
+
+He kneeled there while the blood from the wounded head oozed through the
+bandages and through the canvas of the stretcher to the floor and to
+the skirts of his cassock.
+
+We waited.
+
+There was no ugly haste in the Supreme Act; the three mortal moments
+that it lasted (it could not have lasted more) were charged with
+immortality, while the Curé remained kneeling in the pool of blood.
+
+I shall never become a Catholic. But if I do, it will be because of the
+Curé of Melle, who turned our new motor ambulance into a sanctuary after
+the French soldier had baptized it with his blood. I have never seen, I
+never shall see, anything more beautiful, more gracious than the Soul
+that appeared in his lean, dark face and in the straight, slender body
+under the black _soutane_. In his simple, inevitable gestures you saw
+adoration of God, contempt for death, and uttermost compassion.
+
+It was all over. I received his missal and his bag of purple silk as he
+gathered his cassock about him and came down.
+
+I asked him if anything could be done. His eyes smiled as he answered.
+But his lips quivered as he took again his missal and his purple bag.
+
+M. C---- is now glad that we went on to Melle.
+
+We helped the four other wounded men in. They sat in a row alongside the
+stretcher.
+
+I sat on the edge of the ambulance, at the feet of the dying man, by the
+handles of the stretcher.
+
+At the last minute the Chaplain jumped on to the step. So did the little
+eager Englishman. Hanging on to the hood and swaying with the rush of
+the car, he talked continually. He talked from the moment we left Melle
+to the moment when we landed him at his street in Ghent; explaining over
+and over again the qualifications that justified him in attaching
+himself to ambulances. He had lived fourteen years in Ghent. He could
+speak French and Flemish.
+
+I longed for the eager little Englishman to stop. I longed for his
+street to come and swallow him up. He had lived in Ghent fourteen years.
+He could speak Flemish and French. I felt that I couldn't bear it if he
+went on a minute longer. I wanted to think. The dying man lay close
+behind me, very straight and stiff; his poor feet stuck out close under
+my hand.
+
+But I couldn't think. The little eager Englishman went on swaying and
+talking.
+
+He had lived fourteen years in Ghent.
+
+He could speak French and Flemish.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The dying man was still alive when he was lifted out of the ambulance.
+
+He died that evening.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Commandant is pleased with his new ambulances. He is not altogether
+displeased with me.
+
+We must have been very quick. For it was the Commandant's car that we
+passed at the fork of the road. And either he arrived a few minutes
+after we got back or we arrived just as he had got in. Anyhow, we met in
+the porch.
+
+He and Ursula Dearmer and I went back to Melle again at once, in the new
+car. It was nearly dark when we got there.
+
+We found Mrs. Torrence and little Janet in the village. They and Dr.
+Wilson had been working all day long picking up wounded off the field
+outside it. The German lines are not far off--at the bottom of the
+field. I think only a small number of their guns could rake the main
+street of the village where we were. Their shell went over our heads and
+over the roofs of the houses towards the French batteries on this side
+of the village. There must have been a rush from the German lines across
+this field, and the French batteries have done their work well, for Mrs.
+Torrence said the German dead are lying thick there among the turnips.
+She and Janet and Dr. Wilson had been under fire for eight hours on
+end, lifting men and carrying stretchers. I don't know whether their
+figures (the two girls in khaki tunics and breeches) could be seen from
+the German lines, but they just trudged on between the furrows, and over
+the turnip-tops, serenely regardless of the enemy, carefully sorting the
+wounded from the dead, with the bullets whizzing past their noses.
+
+Of bullets Mrs. Torrence said, indeed, that eight hours of them were
+rather more than she cared for; and of carrying stretchers over a
+turnip-field, that it was as much as she and Janet could do. But they
+came back from it without turning a hair. I have seen women more
+dishevelled after tramping a turnip-field in a day's partridge-shooting.
+
+They went off somewhere to find Dr. Wilson; and we--Ursula Dearmer, the
+Commandant and I--hung about the village waiting for the wounded to be
+brought in. The village was crowded with French and Belgian troops when
+we came into it. Then they gathered together and went on towards the
+field, and we followed them up the street. They called to us to stay
+under cover, or, if we _must_ walk up the street, to keep close under
+the houses, as the bullets might come flying at us any minute.
+
+No bullets came, however. It was like Baerlaere--it was like Lokeren--it
+was like every place I've been in, so far. Nothing came as long as
+there was a chance of its getting me.
+
+After that we drove down to the station. While we were hanging about
+there, a shell was hurled over this side of the village from the German
+batteries. It careered over the roofs, with a track that was luminous in
+the dusk, like a curved sheet of lightning. I don't know where it fell
+and burst.
+
+We were told to stand out from under the station building for fear it
+should be struck.
+
+When we got back into the village we went into the inn and waited there
+in a long, narrow room, lit by a few small oil-lamps and crammed with
+soldiers. They were eating and drinking in vehement haste. Wherever the
+light from the lamps fell on them, you saw faces flushed and scarred
+under a blur of smoke and grime. Here and there a bandage showed up,
+violently white. On the tables enormous quantities of bread appeared and
+disappeared.
+
+These soldiers, with all their vehemence and violence, were exceedingly
+lovable. One man brought me a chair; another brought bread and offered
+it. Charming smiles flashed through the grime.
+
+At last, when we had found one man with a wounded hand, we got into the
+ambulance and went back to Ghent.
+
+
+[_Saturday, 10th._]
+
+I have got something to do again--at last!
+
+I am to help to look after Mr. ----. He has the pick of the Belgian Red
+Cross women to nurse him, and they are angelically kind and very
+skilful, but he is not very happy with them. He says: "These dear people
+are so good to me, but I can't make out what they say. I can't tell them
+what I want." He is pathetically glad to have any English people with
+him. (Even I am a little better than a Belgian whom he cannot
+understand.)
+
+I sat with him all morning. The French boy has gone and he is alone in
+his room now. It seems that the kind Chaplain sat up with him all last
+night after his hard day at Melle. (I wish now I had stood by the
+Chaplain with his Matins. He has never tried to have them again--given
+us up as an unholy crew, all except Mr. Foster, whom he clings to.)
+
+The morning went like half an hour, while it was going; but when it was
+over I felt as if I had been nursing for weeks on end. There were so
+many little things to be done, and so much that you mustn't do, and the
+anxiety was appalling. I don't suppose there is a worse case in the
+Hospital. He is perhaps a shade better to-day, but none of the medical
+staff think that he can live.
+
+Madame E---- and Dr. Bird have shown me what to do, and what not to do.
+I must keep him all the time in the same position. I must give him sips
+of iced broth, and little pieces of ice to suck every now and then. I
+must not let him try to raise himself in bed. I must not try to lift him
+myself. If we do lift him we must keep his body tilted at the same
+angle. I must not give him any hot drinks and not too much cold drink.
+
+And he is six foot high, so tall that his feet come through the blankets
+at the bottom of the bed; and he keeps sinking down in it all the time
+and wanting to raise himself up again. And his fever makes him restless.
+And he is always thirsty and he longs for hot tea more than iced water,
+and for more iced water than is good for him. The iced broth that is his
+only nourishment he does not want at all.
+
+And then he must be kept very quiet. I must not let him talk more than
+is necessary to tell me what he wants, or he will die of exhaustion. And
+what he wants is to talk every minute that he is awake.
+
+He drops off to sleep, breathing in jerks and with a terrible rapidity.
+And I think it will be all right as long as he sleeps. But his sleep
+only lasts for a few minutes. I hear the rhythm of his breathing alter;
+it slackens and goes slow; then it jerks again, and I know that he is
+awake.
+
+And then he begins. He says things that tear at your heart. He has looks
+and gestures that break it--the adorable, wilful smile of a child that
+knows that it is being watched when you find his hand groping too often
+for the glass of iced water that stands beside his bed; a still more
+adorable and utterly gentle submission when you take the glass from him;
+when you tell him not to say anything more just yet but to go to sleep
+again. You feel as if you were guilty of act after act of nameless and
+abominable cruelty.
+
+He sticks to it that he has seen me before, that he has heard of me,
+that his people know me. And he wants to know what I do and where I live
+and where it was that he saw me. Once, when I thought he had gone to
+sleep, I heard him begin again: "Where did you say you lived?"
+
+I tell him. And I tell him to go to sleep again.
+
+He closes his eyes obediently and opens them the next instant.
+
+"I say, may I come and call on you when we get back to England?"
+
+You can only say: "Yes. Of course," and tell him to go to sleep.
+
+His voice is so strong and clear that I could almost believe that he
+will get back and that some day I shall look up and see him standing at
+my garden gate.
+
+Mercifully, when I tell him to go to sleep again, he does go to sleep.
+And his voice is a little clearer and stronger every time he wakes.
+
+And so the morning goes on. The only thing he wants you to do for him is
+to sponge his hands and face with iced water and to give him little bits
+of ice to suck. Over and over again I do these things. And over and over
+again he asks me, "Do you mind?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He wears a little grey woollen cord round his neck. Something has gone
+from it. Whatever he has lost, they have left him his little woollen
+cord, as if some immense importance attached to it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He has fallen into a long doze. And at the end of the morning I left him
+sleeping.
+
+Some of the Corps have brought in trophies from the battle-field--a fine
+grey cloak with a scarlet collar, a spiked helmet, a cuff with three
+buttons cut from the coat of a dead German.
+
+These things make me sick. I see the body under the cloak, the head
+under the helmet, and the dead hand under the cuff.
+
+
+[_Afternoon._]
+
+Saw Mr. Foster. He is to be sent back to England for an operation. Dr.
+Wilson is to take him. He asked me if I thought the Commandant would
+take him back again when he is better.
+
+Saw the President about Mr. Foster. He will not hear of his going back
+to England. He wants him to stay in the Hospital and be operated on
+here. He promises the utmost care and attention. He is most distressed
+to think that he should go.
+
+It doesn't occur to him in his kindness that it would be much more
+distressing if the Germans came into Ghent and interrupted the
+operation.
+
+Cabled Miss F. about her Glasgow ambulance, asking her to pay her staff
+if her funds ran to it. Cabled British Red Cross to send Mr. Gould and
+his scouting-car here instead of to France. Cabled Mr. Gould to get the
+British Red Cross to send him here.
+
+Mr. Lambert has been ill with malaria. He has gone back to England to
+get well again and to repair the car that broke down at Lokeren.[22]
+
+Somebody else is to look after Mr. ---- this afternoon.
+
+I have been given leave rather reluctantly to sit up with him at night.
+
+The Commandant is going to take me in Tom's Daimler (Car 1) to the
+British lines to look for a base for that temporary hospital which is
+still running in his head like a splendid dream. I do not see how, with
+the Germans at Melle, only four and a half miles off, any sort of
+hospital is to be established on this side of Ghent.
+
+Tom, the chauffeur, does not look with favour on the expedition. I have
+had to point out to him that a Field Ambulance is _not_, as he would
+say, the House of Commons, and that there is a certain propriety
+binding even on a chauffeur and a limit to the freedom of the speech you
+may apply to your Commandant. This afternoon Tom has exceeded all the
+limits. The worst of Tom is that while his tongue rages on the confines
+of revolt, he himself is punctilious to excess on the point of orders.
+Either he has orders or he hasn't them. If he has them he obeys them
+with a punctuality that puts everybody else in the wrong. If he hasn't
+them, an earthquake wouldn't make him move. Such is his devotion to
+orders that he will insist on any one order holding good for an
+unlimited time after it has been given.
+
+So now, in defence of his manners, he urges that what with orders and
+counter-orders, the provocation is more than flesh and blood can stand.
+Tom himself is protest clothed in flesh and blood.
+
+To-day at two o'clock Tom's orders are that his car is to be ready at
+two-thirty. My orders are to be ready in twenty minutes. I _am_ ready in
+twenty minutes. The Commandant thinks that he has transacted all his
+business and is ready in twenty minutes too. Tom and his car are nowhere
+to be seen. I go to look for Tom. Tom is reported as being last seen
+riding on a motor-lorry towards the British lines in the company of a
+detachment of British infantry.
+
+The chauffeur Tom is considered to have disgraced himself everlastingly.
+
+Punctually at two-thirty he appears with his car at the door of the
+"Flandria."
+
+The Commandant is nowhere to be seen. He has gone to look for Tom.
+
+I reprove Tom for the sin of unpunctuality, and he has me.
+
+His orders were to be ready at two-thirty and he is ready at two-thirty.
+And it is nobody's business what he did with himself ten minutes before.
+He wants to know where the Commandant is.
+
+I go to look for the Commandant.
+
+The Commandant is reported to have been last seen going through the
+Hospital on his way to the garage. I go round to the garage through the
+Hospital; and the Commandant goes out of the garage by the street. He
+was last seen _in_ the garage.
+
+He appears suddenly from some quarter where you wouldn't expect him in
+the least. He reproves Tom.
+
+Tom with considerable violence declares his righteousness. He has
+gathered to himself a friend, a Belgian Red Cross man, whose language he
+does not understand. But they exchange winks that surpass all language.
+
+Then the Commandant remembers that he has several cables to send off.
+He is seen disappearing in the direction of the Post and Telegraph
+Office.
+
+Tom swallows words that would be curses if I were not there.
+
+I keep my eyes fixed on the doors of the Post Office. Ages pass.
+
+I go to the Post Office to look for the Commandant. He is not in the
+Telegraph Office. He is not in the Post Office. Tom keeps his eyes on
+the doors of both.
+
+More ages pass. Finally, the Commandant appears from inside the
+Hospital, which he has not been seen to enter.
+
+The chauffeur Tom dismounts and draws from his car's mysterious being
+sounds that express the savage fury of his resentment.
+
+You would think we were off now. But we only get as far as a street
+somewhere near the Hôtel de la Poste. Here we wait for apparently no
+reason in such tension that you can hear the ages pass.
+
+The Commandant disappears.
+
+Tom says something about there being no room for the wounded at this
+rate.
+
+It seems his orders are to go first to the British lines at a place
+whose name I forget, and then on to Melle.
+
+I remember Tom's views on the subject of field-women. And suddenly I
+seem to understand them. Tom is very like Lord Kitchener. He knows
+nothing about the aims and wants of modern womanhood and he cares less.
+The modern woman does not ask to be protected, does not want to be
+protected, and Tom, like Lord Kitchener, will go on protecting. You
+cannot elevate men like Lord Kitchener and Tom above the primitive plane
+of chivalry. Tom in the danger zone with a woman by his side feels about
+as peaceful and comfortable as a woman in the danger zone with a
+two-year-old baby in her lap. A bomb in his bedroom is one thing and a
+band of drunken Uhlans making for his women is another. Tom's nerves are
+racked with problems: How the dickens is he to steer his car and protect
+his women at the same time? And if it comes to a toss-up between his
+women and his wounded? You've got to stow the silly things somewhere,
+and every one of them takes up the place of a wounded man.
+
+I get out of the car and tell the Commandant that I would rather not go
+than take up the place of a wounded man.
+
+He orders me back to the car again. Tom seems inclined to regard me as a
+woman who has done her best.
+
+We go on a little way and stop again. And there springs out of the
+pavement a curious figure that I have seen somewhere before in Ghent, I
+cannot remember when or where. The figure wears a check suit of extreme
+horsyness and carries a kodak in its hand. It is excited.
+
+There is something about it that reminds me now of the eager little
+Englishman at Melle. These figures spring up everywhere in the track of
+a field ambulance.
+
+When Tom sees it he groans in despair.
+
+The Commandant gets out and appears to be offering it the hospitality of
+the car. I am introduced.
+
+To my horror the figure skips round in front of the car, levels its
+kodak at my head and implores me to sit still.
+
+I am very rude. I tell it sternly to take that beastly thing away and go
+away itself.
+
+It goes, rather startled.
+
+And we get off, somehow, without it, and arrive at the end of the
+street.
+
+Here Tom has orders to stop at the first hat-shop he comes to.
+
+The Commandant has lost his hat at Melle (he has been wearing little
+Janet's Arctic cap, to the delight of everybody). He has just remembered
+that he wants a hat and he thinks that he will get it now.
+
+At this point I break down. I hear myself say "Damn" five times, softly
+but distinctly. (This after reproving Tom for unfettered speech and
+potential insubordination.)
+
+Tom stops at a hat-shop. The Commandant to his doom enters, and
+presently returns wearing a soft felt hat of a vivid green. He asks me
+what I think of it.
+
+I tell him all I think of it, and he says that if I feel like that about
+it he'll go in again and get another one.
+
+I forget what I said then except that I wanted to get on to Melle. That
+Melle was the place of all places where I most wished to be.
+
+Then, lest he might feel unhappy in his green hat, I said that if he
+would leave it out all night in the rain and then sit on it no doubt
+time and weather and God would do something for it.
+
+This time we were off, and when I realized it I said "Hurray!"[23]
+
+Tom had not said anything for some considerable time.
+
+We found the British lines in a little village just outside of Ghent.
+No place there for a base hospital.
+
+We hung about here for twenty minutes, and the women and children came
+out to stare at us with innocent, pathetic faces.
+
+Somebody had stowed away one of the trophies--the spiked German
+helmet--in the ambulance car, and the chauffeur Tom stuck it on a stick
+and held it up before the British lines. It was greeted with cheers and
+a great shout of laughter from the troops; and the villagers came
+running out of their houses to look; they uttered little sharp and
+guttural cries of satisfaction. The whole thing was a bit savage and
+barbaric and horribly impressive.
+
+Finally we left the British lines and set out towards Melle by a
+cross-road.
+
+We got through all right. A thousand accidents may delay his going, but
+once off, no barriers exist for the Commandant. Seated in the front of
+the car, utterly unperturbed by the chauffeur Tom's sarcastic comments
+on men, things and women, wrapped (apparently) in a beautiful dream, he
+looks straight ahead with eyes whose vagueness veils a deadly simplicity
+of purpose. I marvel at the transfiguration of the Commandant. Before
+the War he was a fairly complex personality. Now he has ceased to exist
+as a separate individual. He is merged, vaguely and vastly, in his
+adventure. He is the Motor Ambulance Field Corps; he is the ambulance
+car; he is the electric spark and the continuous explosion that drives
+the thing along. It is useless to talk to him about anything that
+happened before the War or about anything that exists outside it. He
+would not admit that anything did exist outside it. He is capable of
+forgetting the day of the week and the precise number of female units in
+his company and the amount standing to his credit at his banker's, but,
+once off, he is cock-sure of the shortest cut to the firing-line within
+a radius of fifty kilometres.
+
+Some of us who have never seen a human phenomenon of this sort are ready
+to deny him an identity. They complain of his inveterate and deplorable
+lack of any sense of detail. This is absurd. You might as well insist on
+a faithful representation of the household furniture of the burgomaster
+of Zoetenaeg, which is the smallest village in Belgium, in drawing the
+map of Europe to scale. At the critical moment this more than
+continental vastness gathers to a wedge-like determination that goes
+home. He means to get through.
+
+We ran into Melle about an hour before sunset.
+
+There had been a great slaughter of Germans on the field outside the
+village where the Germans were still firing when the Corps left it. We
+found two of our cars drawn up by the side of the village street, close
+under the houses. The Chaplain, Ursula Dearmer and Mrs. Lambert were
+waiting in one of them, the new Daimler, with the chauffeur Newlands.
+Dr. Wilson was in Bert's car with three wounded Germans. He was sitting
+in front with one of them beside him. They say that the enemy's wounded
+sometimes fire on our surgeons and Red Cross men, and Dr. Wilson had a
+revolver about him when he went on the battle-field yesterday. He said
+he wasn't taking any risks. The man he had got beside him to-day was
+only wounded in the foot, and had his hands entirely free to do what he
+liked with. He looked rather a low type, and at the first sight of him I
+thought I shouldn't have cared to be alone with him anywhere on a dark
+night.
+
+And then I saw the look on his face. He was purely pathetic. He didn't
+look at you. He stared in front of him down the road towards Ghent, in a
+dull, helpless misery. These unhappy German Tommies are afraid of us.
+They are told that we shall treat them badly, and some of them believe
+it. I wanted Dr. Wilson to let me get up and go with the poor fellow,
+but he wouldn't. He was sorry for him and very gentle. He is always
+sorry for people and very gentle. So I knew that the German would be all
+right with him. But I should have liked to have gone.
+
+We found Mrs. Torrence and Janet with M. ---- on the other side of the
+street, left behind by Dr. Wilson. They have been working all day
+yesterday and half the night and all this morning and afternoon on that
+hideous turnip-field. They have seen things and combinations of things
+that no forewarning imagination could have devised. Last night the car
+was fired on where it stood waiting for them in the village, and they
+had to race back to it under a shower of bullets.
+
+They were as fresh as paint and very cheerful. Mrs. Torrence was wearing
+a large silver order on a broad blue ribbon pinned to her khaki
+overcoat. It was given to her to-day as the reward of valour by the
+Belgian General in command here. Somebody took it from the breast of a
+Prussian officer. She had covered it up with her khaki scarf so that she
+might not seem to swank.
+
+Little Janet was with her. She always is with her. She looked younger
+than ever, more impassive than ever, more adorable than ever. I have got
+used to Mrs. Torrence and to Ursula Dearmer; but I cannot get used to
+Janet. It always seems appalling to me that she should be here,
+strolling about the seat of War with her hands in her pockets, as if a
+battle were a cricket-match at which you looked on between your innings.
+And yet there isn't a man in the Corps who does his work better, and
+with more courage and endurance, than this eighteen-year-old child.
+
+They told us that there were no French or Belgian wounded left, but that
+two wounded Germans were still lying over there among the turnips. They
+were waiting for our car to come out and take these men up. The car was
+now drawn up close under some building that looked like a town hall, on
+the other side of the street. We were in the middle of the village. The
+village itself was the extreme fringe of the danger zone. Where the
+houses ended, a stretch of white road ran up for about [?] a hundred
+yards to the turnip-field. Standing in the village street, we could see
+the turnip-field, but not all of it. The road goes straight up to the
+edge of it and turns there with a sweep to the left and runs alongside
+for about a mile and a half.
+
+On the other side of the turnip-field were the German lines. The first
+that had raked the village street also raked the fields and the mile and
+a half of road alongside.
+
+It was along that road that the car would have to go.
+
+M. ---- told our Ambulance that it might as well go back. There were no
+more wounded. Only two Germans lying in a turnip-field. The three of
+us--Mrs. Torrence and Janet and I--tried to bring pressure to bear on M.
+----. We meant to go and get those Germans.
+
+But M. ---- was impervious to pressure. He refused either to go with the
+car himself or to let us go. He said we were too late and it was too far
+and there wouldn't be light enough. He said that for two Belgians, or
+two French, or two British, it would be worth while taking risks. But
+for two Germans under German fire it wasn't good enough.
+
+But Mrs. Torrence and Janet and I didn't agree with him. Wounded were
+wounded. We said we were going if he wasn't.
+
+Then the chauffeur Tom joined in. He refused to offer his car as a
+target for the enemy.[24] Our firm Belgian was equally determined. The
+Commandant, as if roused from his beautiful dream to a sudden
+realization of the horrors of war, absolutely forbade the expedition.
+
+It took place all the same.
+
+Tom's car, planted there on our side of the street, hugging the wall,
+with its hood over its eyes, preserved its attitude of obstinate
+immobility. Newlands' car, hugging the wall on the other side of the
+street, stood discreetly apart from the discussion. But a Belgian
+military ambulance car ran up, smaller and more alert than ours. And a
+Belgian Army Medical Officer strolled up to see what was happening.
+
+We three advanced on that Army Medical Officer, Mrs. Torrence and Janet
+on his left and I on his right.
+
+I shall always be grateful to that righteous man. He gave Mrs. Torrence
+and Janet leave to go, and he gave me leave to go with them; he gave us
+the military ambulance to go in and a Belgian soldier with a rifle to
+protect us. And he didn't waste a second over it. He just looked at us,
+and smiled, and let us go.
+
+Mrs. Torrence got on to the ambulance beside the driver, Janet jumped on
+to one step and I on to the other, while the Commandant came up, trying
+to look stern, and told me to get down.
+
+I hung on all the tighter.
+
+And then----
+
+What happened then was so ignominious, so sickening, that, if I were not
+sworn to the utmost possible realism in this record, I should suppress
+it in the interests of human dignity.
+
+Mrs. Torrence, having the advantage of me in weight, height, muscle and
+position, got up and tried to push me off the step. As she did this she
+said: "You can't come. You'll take up the place of a wounded man."
+
+And I found myself standing in the village street, while the car rushed
+out of it, with Janet clinging on to the hood, like a little sailor to
+his shrouds. She was on the side next the German guns.
+
+It was the most revolting thing that had happened to me yet, in a life
+filled with incidents that I have no desire to repeat. And it made me
+turn on the Commandant in a way that I do not like to think of. I
+believe I asked him how he could bear to let that kid go into the German
+lines, which was exactly what the poor man hadn't done.[25]
+
+Then we waited, Mrs. Lambert and I in Tom's car; and the Commandant in
+the car with Ursula Dearmer and the Chaplain on the other side of the
+street.
+
+We were dreadfully silent now. We stared at objects that had no earthly
+interest for us as if our lives depended on mastering their detail. We
+were thus aware of a beautiful little Belgian house standing back from
+the village street down a short turning, a cream-coloured house with
+green shutters and a roof of rose-red tiles, and a very small poplar
+tree mounting guard beside it. This house and its tree were vivid and
+very still. They stood back in an atmosphere of their own, an atmosphere
+of perfect but utterly unreal peace. And as long as our memories endure,
+that house which we never saw before, and shall probably never see
+again, is bound up with the fate of Mrs. Torrence and Janet McNeil.
+
+We thought we should have an hour to wait before they came back, if they
+ever did come. We waited for them during a whole dreadful lifetime.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In something less than half an hour the military ambulance came swinging
+round the turn of the road, with Mrs. Torrence and the Kid, and the two
+German wounded with them on the stretchers.
+
+Those Germans never thought that they were going to be saved. They
+couldn't get over it--that two Englishwomen should have gone through
+their fire, for them! As they were being carried through the fire they
+said: "We shall never forget what you've done for us. God will bless you
+for it."
+
+Mrs. Torrence asked them, "What will you do for us if we are taken
+prisoner?"
+
+And they said: "We will do all we can to save you."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Antwerp is said to have fallen.
+
+Antwerp is said to be holding its own well.[26]
+
+All evening the watching Taube has been hanging over Ghent.
+
+Mrs. Torrence and Janet have gone back with the ambulance to Melle.
+
+
+[_Night._]
+
+Sat up all night with Mr. ----.
+
+There is one night nurse for all the wards on this floor, and she has a
+serious case to watch in another room. But I can call her if I want
+help. And there is the chemist who sleeps in the room next door, who
+will come if I go in and wake him up. And there are our own four doctors
+upstairs. And the _infirmiers_. It ought to be all right.
+
+As a matter of fact it was the most terrible night I have ever spent in
+my life; and I have lived through a good many terrible nights in
+sick-rooms. But no amount of amateur nursing can take the place of
+training or of the self-confidence of knowing you are trained. And even
+if you _are_ trained, no amount of medical nursing will prepare you for
+a bad surgical case. To begin with, I had never nursed a patient so tall
+and heavy that I couldn't lift him by sheer strength and a sort of
+amateur knack.
+
+And though in theory it was reassuring to know that you could call the
+night nurse and the chemist and the four doctors and the _infirmiers_,
+in practice it didn't work out quite so easily as it sounded. When the
+night nurse came she couldn't lift any more than I could; and she had a
+greater command of discouraging criticism than of useful, practical
+suggestion. And the chemist knew no more about lifting than the night
+nurse. (Luckily none of us pretended for an instant that we knew!) When
+I had called up two of our hard-worked surgeons each once out of his
+bed, I had some scruples about waking them again. And it took four
+Belgian _infirmiers_ to do in five minutes what one surgeon could do in
+as many seconds. And when the chemist went to look for the _infirmiers_
+he was gone for ages--he must have had to round them up from every floor
+in the Hospital. Whenever any of them went to look for anything, it took
+them ages. It was as if for every article needed in the wards of that
+Hospital there was a separate and inaccessible central depôt.[27]
+
+At one moment a small pillow had to be placed in the hollow of my
+patient's back if he was to be kept in that position on which I had been
+told his life depended. When I sent the night nurse to look for
+something that would serve, she was gone a quarter of an hour, in which
+I realized that my case was not the only case in the Hospital. For a
+quarter of an hour I had to kneel by his bed with my two arms thrust
+together under the hollow of his back, supporting it. I had nothing at
+hand that was small enough or firm enough but my arms.
+
+That night I would have given everything I possess, and everything I
+have ever done, to have been a trained nurse.
+
+To make matters worse, I had an atrocious cough, acquired at the Hôtel
+de la Poste. The chemist had made up some medicine for it, but the poor
+busy dispensary clerk had forgotten to send it to my room. I had to stop
+it by an expenditure of will when I wanted every atom of will to keep my
+patient quiet and send him to sleep, if possible, without his morphia
+_piqûres_. He is only to have one if he is restless or in pain.
+
+And to-night he wanted more than ever to talk when he woke. And his
+conversation in the night is even more lacerating than his conversation
+in the day. For all the time, often in pain, always in extreme
+discomfort, he is thinking of other people.
+
+First of all he asked me if I had any books, and I thought that he
+wanted me to read to him. I told him I was afraid he mustn't be read to,
+he must go to sleep. And he said: "I mean for you to read yourself--to
+pass the time."
+
+He is afraid that I shall be bored by sitting up with him, that I shall
+tire myself, that I shall make my cough worse. He asks me if I think he
+will ever be well enough to play games. That is what he has always
+wanted to do most.
+
+And then he begins to tell me about his mother.
+
+He tells me things that I have no right to put down here.
+
+There is nothing that I can do for him but to will. And I will hard, or
+I pray--I don't know which it is; your acutest willing and your
+intensest prayer are indistinguishable. And it seems to work. I will--or
+I pray--that he shall lie still without morphia, and that he shall have
+no pain. And he lies still, without pain. I will--or I pray--that he
+shall sleep without morphia. And he sleeps (I think that in spite of his
+extreme discomfort, he must have slept the best part of the night). And
+because it seems to work, I will--or I pray--that he shall get well.
+
+There are many things that obstruct this process as fast as it is begun:
+your sensation of sight and touch; the swarms and streams of images that
+your brain throws out; and the crushing obsession of your fear. This
+last is like a dead weight that you hold off you with your arms
+stretched out. Your arms sink and drop under it perpetually and have to
+be raised again. At last the weight goes. And the sensations go, and the
+swarms and streams of images go, and there is nothing before you and
+around you but a clear blank darkness where your will vibrates.
+
+Only one avenue of sense is left open. You are lost to the very memories
+of touch and sight, but you are intensely conscious of every sound from
+the bed, every movement of the sleeper. And while one half of you only
+lives in that pure and effortless vibration, the other half is aware of
+the least change in the rhythm of his breathing.
+
+It is by this rhythm that I can tell whether he is asleep or awake. This
+rhythm of his breathing, and the rhythm of his sleeping and his waking
+measure out the night for me. It goes like one hour.
+
+And yet I have spent months of nights watching in this room. Its blond
+walls are as familiar to me as the walls of rooms where I have lived a
+long time; I know with a profound and intimate knowledge every crinkle
+in the red shade of the electric bulb that hangs on the inner wall
+between the two beds, the shape and position of every object on the
+night table in the little white-tiled dressing-room; I know every trick
+of the inner and outer doors leading to the corridor, and the long grey
+lane of the corridor, and the room that I must go through to find ice,
+and the face of the little ward-maid who sleeps there, who wants to get
+up and break the ice for me every time. I have known the little
+ward-maid all my life; I have known the night nurse all my life, with
+her white face and sharp black eyes, and all my life I have not cared
+for her. All my life I have known and cared only for the wounded man on
+the bed.
+
+I have known every sound of his voice and every line of his face and
+hands (the face and hands that he asks me to wash, over and over again,
+if I don't mind), and the strong springing of his dark hair from his
+forehead and every little feathery tuft of beard on his chin. And I have
+known no other measure of time than the rhythm of his breathing, no mark
+or sign of time than the black crescent of his eyelashes when the lids
+are closed, and the curling blue of his eyes when they open. His eyes
+always smile as they open, as if he apologized for waking when he knows
+that I want him to sleep. And I have known these things so long that
+each one of them is already like a separate wound in my memory.[28] He
+sums up for me all the heroism and the agony and waste of the defence of
+Antwerp, all the heroism and agony and waste of war.
+
+About midnight [?] he wakes and tells me he has had a jolly dream. He
+dreamed that he was running in a field in England, running in a big
+race, that he led the race and won it.
+
+
+[_Sunday, 11th._]
+
+One bad symptom is disappearing. Towards dawn it has almost gone. He
+really does seem stronger.
+
+
+[_5 a.m._]
+
+He has had no return of pain or restlessness. But he was to have a
+morphia _piqûre_ at five o'clock, and they have given it to him to make
+sure.
+
+
+[_8 a.m._]
+
+The night has not been so terrible, after all. It has gone like an hour
+and I have left him sleeping.
+
+I am not in the least bit tired; I never felt drowsy once, and my cough
+has nearly gone.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Antwerp has fallen.
+
+Taube over Ghent in the night.
+
+Six doctors have seen Mr. ----. They all say he is ever so much better.
+They even say he may live--that he has a good chance.
+
+Dr. Wilson is taking Mr. Foster to England this morning.
+
+Went back to the Hôtel Cecil to sleep for an hour or two. An enormous
+oval table-top is leaning flat against the wall; but by no possibility
+can it be set up. Still, the landlord said he would find a table, and he
+has found one.
+
+Went back to the "Flandria" for lunch. In the mess-room Janet tells me
+that Mr. ----'s case has been taken out of my hands. I am not to try to
+do any more nursing.
+
+Little Janet looks as if she were trying to soften a blow. But it isn't
+a blow. Far from it. It is the end of an intolerable responsibility.
+
+The Commandant and the Chaplain started about nine or ten this morning
+for Melle, and are not back yet.
+
+We expect that we may have to clear out of Ghent before to-morrow.
+
+Mr. Riley, Mrs. Lambert and Janet have gone in the second car to Melle.
+
+I waited in all afternoon on the chance of being taken when the
+Commandant comes and goes out again.
+
+
+[_4.45._]
+
+He is not back yet. I am very anxious. The Germans may be in Melle by
+now.
+
+One of the old officials in peaked caps has called on me solemnly this
+afternoon. He is the most mysterious of them all, an old man with a
+white moustache, who never seems to do anything but hang about. He is
+certainly not an _infirmier_. He called ostensibly to ask some question
+and remained to talk. I think he thought he would pump me. He began by
+asking if we women enjoyed going out with the Field Ambulance; he
+supposed we felt very daring and looked on the whole thing as an
+adventure. I detected some sinister intention, and replied that that was
+not exactly the idea; that our women went out to help to save the lives
+of the wounded soldiers, and that they had succeeded in this object over
+and over again; and that I didn't imagine they thought of anything much
+except their duty. We certainly were not out for amusement.
+
+Then he took another line. He told me that the reason why our Ambulance
+is to be put under the charge of the British General here (we had heard
+that the whole of the Belgian Army was shortly to be under the control
+of the British, and the whole of the Belgian Red Cross with it)--the
+reason is that its behaviour in going into the firing-line has been
+criticized. And when I ask him on what grounds, it turns out that
+somebody thinks there is a risk of our Ambulance drawing down the fire
+on the lines it serves. I told him that in all the time I had been with
+the Ambulance it had never placed itself in any position that could
+possibly have drawn down fire on the Belgians, and that I had never
+heard of any single instance of this danger; and I made him confess that
+there was no proof or even rumour of any single instance when it had
+occurred. I further told the old gentleman very plainly that these
+things ought not to be said or repeated, and that every man and woman in
+the English Ambulance would rather lose their own life than risk that of
+one Belgian soldier.
+
+The old gentleman was somewhat flattened out before he left me; having
+"_parfaitement compris_."
+
+It is a delicious idea that Kitchener and Joffre should be reorganizing
+the Allied Armies because of the behaviour of our Ambulance.
+
+There are Gordon Highlanders in Ghent.[29]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Went over to the Couvent de Saint Pierre, where Miss Ashley-Smith is
+with her British wounded. I had to warn her that the Germans may come in
+to-night. I had told the Commandant about her yesterday, and arranged
+with him that we should take her and her British away in our Ambulance
+if we have to go. I had to find out how many there would be to take.
+
+The Convent is a little way beyond the _Place_ on the boulevard. I knew
+it by the Red Cross hanging from the upper windows. Everything is as
+happy and peaceful here as if Ghent were not on the eve of an invasion.
+The nuns took me to Miss Ashley-Smith in her ward. I hardly knew her,
+for she had changed the uniform of the British Field Hospital[30] for
+the white linen of the Belgian Red Cross. I found her in charge of the
+ward. Absolutely unperturbed by the news, she went on superintending
+the disposal of a table of surgical instruments. She would not consent
+to come with us at first. But the nuns persuaded her that she would do
+no good by remaining.
+
+I am to come again and tell her what time to be ready with her wounded,
+when we know whether we are going and when.
+
+Came back to the "Flandria" and finished entries in my Day-Book.
+
+
+[_Evening._]
+
+The Commandant has come back from Melle; but he is going there again
+almost directly. He has been to the British lines, and heard for certain
+that the Germans will be in Ghent before morning. We have orders to
+clear out before two in the morning. I am to have all his things packed
+by midnight.
+
+The British Consul has left Ghent.
+
+The news spread through the "Flandria."
+
+Max has gone about all day with a scared, white face. They say he is
+suffering from cold feet. But I will not believe it. He has just
+appeared in the mess-room and summoned me mysteriously. He takes me
+along the corridor to that room of his which he is so proud of. There is
+a brand-new uniform lying on the bed, the uniform of a French soldier
+of the line. Max handles it with love and holy adoration, as a priest
+handles his sacred vestments. He takes it in his arms, he spreads before
+me the grey-blue coat, the grey-blue trousers, and his queer eyes are in
+their solemnity large and quiet as dark moons.
+
+Max is going to rejoin his regiment.
+
+It is sheer nervous excitement that gave him that wild, white face.
+
+Max is confident that we shall meet again; and I have a horrid vision of
+Max carried on a bloody stretcher, a brutally wounded Max.
+
+He has given me his address in Brussels, which will not find him there
+for long enough: if ever.
+
+Jean also is to rejoin his regiment.
+
+Marie, the _bonne_, stands at the door of the service room and watches
+us with frightened eyes. She follows me into the mess-room and shuts the
+door. The poor thing has been seized with panic, and her one idea is to
+get away from Ghent. Can I find a place for her on one of our ambulance
+cars? She will squeeze in anywhere, she will stand outside on the step.
+Will I take her back to England? She will do any sort of work, no matter
+what, and she won't ask for wages if only I will take her there. I tell
+her we are not going to England. We are going to Bruges. We have to
+follow the Belgian Army wherever it is sent.
+
+Then will I take her to Bruges? She has a mother there.
+
+It is ghastly. I have to tell her that it is impossible; that there will
+be no place for her in the ambulance cars, that they will be crammed
+with wounded, that we will have to stand on the steps ourselves, that I
+do not know how many we shall have to take from the Convent, or how many
+from the hospitals; that I can do nothing without the Commandant's
+orders, and that the Commandant is not here. And she pleads and
+implores. She cannot believe that we can be so cruel, and I find my
+voice growing hard and stern with sheer, wrenching pity. At last I tell
+her that if there is room I will see what can be done, but that I am
+afraid that there will not be room. She stays, she clings, trying to
+extort through pity a more certain promise, and I have to tell her to
+go. She goes, looking at me with the dull resentment of a helpless
+creature whom I have hurt. The fact that she has left me sick with pity
+will not do her any good. Nothing can do her any good but that place on
+the ambulance which I have no power to give her.
+
+For Marie is not the only one.
+
+I see all the servants in the "Flandria" coming to me before the night
+is over, and clinging and pleading for a place in the ambulance cars.
+
+And this is only the beginning. After Marie comes Janet McNeil. She,
+poor child, has surrendered to the overpowering assault on her feelings
+and has pledged herself to smuggle the four young children of Madame
+---- into the ambulance somehow. I don't see how it was possible for her
+to endure the agony of refusing this request. But what we are to do with
+four young children in cars packed with wounded soldiers, through all
+the stages of the Belgian Army's retreat--!
+
+The next problem that faced me was the Commandant's packing--how to get
+all the things he had brought with him into one small Gladstone bag and
+a sleeping-sack. There was a blue serge suit, two sleeping-suits, a
+large Burberry, a great many pocket-handkerchiefs, socks and stockings,
+an assortment of neckties, a quantity of small miscellaneous objects
+whose fugitive tendencies he proposed to frustrate by confinement in a
+large tin biscuit-box; there was the biscuit-box itself, a tobacco tin,
+a packet of Gillette razors, a pipe, a leather case containing some
+electric apparatus, and a fat scarlet volume: Freud's "Psychopathology
+of Everyday Life." All these things he had pointed out to me as they lay
+flung on the bed or strewn about the room. He had impressed on me the
+absolute necessity of packing every one of them, and by the pathetic
+grouping around the Gladstone bag of the biscuit-box, the tobacco-tin,
+the case of instruments and Freud, I gathered that he believed that they
+would all enter the bag placably and be contained in it with ease.
+
+The night is still young.
+
+I pack the Gladstone bag. By alternate coaxing and coercion Freud and
+the tobacco-tin and the biscuit-box occupy it amicably enough; but the
+case of instruments offers an unconquerable resistance.
+
+The night is not quite so young as it has been, and I think I must have
+left off packing to run over to the Hôtel Cecil and pay my bill; for I
+remember going out into the _Place_ and seeing a crowd drawn up in the
+middle of it before the "Flandria." An official was addressing this
+crowd, ordering them to give up their revolvers and any arms they had on
+them.
+
+The fate of Ghent depends on absolute obedience to this order.
+
+When I get back I find Mrs. Torrence downstairs in the hall of the
+"Flandria." I ask her what we had better do about our refugee children.
+She says we can do nothing. There must be no refugee children. How _can_
+there be in an ambulance packed with wounded men? When I tell her that
+the children will certainly be there if somebody doesn't do something to
+stop them, she goes off to do it. I do not envy her her job. She is not
+enjoying it herself. First of all she has got to break it to Janet. And
+Janet will have to break it to the mother.
+
+As to poor Marie, she is out of the question. _I_ shall have to break it
+to Marie.
+
+The night goes on. I sit with Mr. ---- for a little while. I have still
+to finish the Commandant's packing; I have not yet begun my own, and it
+is time that I should go round to the Convent to tell Miss Ashley-Smith
+to be ready with her British before two o'clock.
+
+I sit with him for what seems a very long time. It is appalling to me
+that the time should seem long. For it is really such a little while,
+and when it is over there will be nothing more that I shall ever do for
+him. This thought is not prominent and vivid; it is barely discernible;
+but it is there, a dull background of pain under my anxiety for the
+safety of the English over there in the Couvent de Saint Pierre. It is
+more than time that I should go and tell them to be ready.
+
+He holds out his hands to be sponged "if I don't mind." I sponge them
+over and over again with iced water and eau de Cologne, gently and very
+slowly. I am afraid lest he should be aware that there is any hurry. The
+time goes on, and my anxiety becomes acuter every minute, till with each
+slow, lingering turn of my hand I think, "If I don't go soon it will be
+too late."
+
+I hear that the children will be all right. Somebody has had a _crise de
+nerfs_, and Janet was the victim.
+
+It is past midnight, and very dark. The _Place_ and the boulevards are
+deserted. I cannot see the Red Cross flag hanging from the window of the
+Convent. The boulevards look all the same in the blackness, and I turn
+up the one to the left. I run on and on very fast, but I cannot see the
+white flag with the red cross anywhere; I run back, thinking I must have
+passed it, turn and go on again.
+
+There is nobody in sight. No sound anywhere but the sound of my own feet
+running faster and faster up the wrong boulevard.
+
+At last I know I have gone too far, the houses are entirely strange. I
+run back to the _Place_ to get my bearings, and start again. I run
+faster than ever. I pass a solitary civilian coming down the boulevard.
+The place is so empty and so still that he and I seem to be the only
+things alive and awake in this quarter of the town. As I pass he turns
+to look after me, wondering at the solitary lady running so fast at
+this hour of the morning. I see the Red Cross flag in the distance, and
+I come to a door that looks like the door of the Convent. It _is_ the
+door of the Convent.
+
+I ring the bell. I ring it many times. Nobody comes.
+
+I ring a little louder. A tired lay sister puts her head out of an upper
+window and asks me what I want. I tell her. She is rather cross and says
+I've come to the wrong door. I must go to the second door; and she puts
+her head in and shuts the window with a clang that expresses her just
+resentment.
+
+I go to the second door, and ring many times again. And another lay
+sister puts her head out of an upper window.
+
+She is gentle but sleepy and very slow. She cannot take it in all at
+once. She says they are all asleep in the Convent, and she does not like
+to wake them. She says this several times, so that I may understand.
+
+I am exasperated.
+
+"_Mais, Madame--de grâce! C'est peut-être la vie ou la mort!_"
+
+The minute I've said it it sounds to me melodramatic and absurd. _I_ am
+melodramatic and absurd, with my running feet, and my small figure and
+earnest, upturned face, standing under a Convent wall at midnight, and
+talking about _la vie et la mort_. It is too improbable. _I_ am too
+improbable. I feel that I am making a fuss out of all proportion to the
+occasion. And I am sorry for frightening the poor lay sister all for
+nothing.
+
+Very soon, down the south-east road, the Germans will be marching upon
+Ghent.
+
+And I cannot realize it. The whole thing is too improbable.
+
+But the lay sister has understood this time. She will go and wake the
+porteress. She is not at all frightened.
+
+I wait a little longer, and presently the porteress opens the door. When
+she hears my message she goes away, and returns after a little while
+with one of the nuns.
+
+They are very quiet, very kind, and absolutely unafraid. They say that
+Miss Ashley-Smith and her British wounded shall be ready before [?] two
+o'clock.
+
+I go back to the "Flandria."
+
+The Commandant, who went out to Melle in Tom's car, has not come back
+yet.
+
+I think Ursula Dearmer and Mrs. Lambert have gone to bed. They are not
+taking the Germans very seriously.
+
+There is nobody in the mess-room but the other three chauffeurs, Bert,
+Tom and Newlands. Newlands has just come back from Ostend. They have had
+no supper. We bustle about to find some.
+
+We all know the Germans are coming into Ghent. But we do not speak of
+it. We are all very polite, almost supernaturally gentle, and very kind
+to each other. The beautiful manners of Newlands are conspicuous in this
+hour, the tragedy of which we are affecting to ignore. I behave as if
+there was nothing so important in the world as cutting bread for
+Newlands. Newlands behaves as if there were nothing so important as
+fetching a bottle of formamint, which he has with him, to cure my cough.
+(It has burst out again worse than ever after the unnatural repression
+of last night.)
+
+When the chauffeurs are provided with supper I go into the Commandant's
+room and finish his packing. The ties, the pocket-handkerchiefs and the
+collars are all safe in the Gladstone bag. Only the underclothing and
+the suits remain and there is any amount of room for them in the
+hold-all.
+
+I roll up the blue serge coat, and the trousers, and the waistcoat very
+smooth and tight, also the underclothes. It seems very simple. I have
+only got to put them in the hold-all and then roll it up, smooth and
+tight, too--
+
+It would have been simple, if the hold-all had been a simple hold-all
+and if it had been nothing more. But it was also a sleeping-bag and a
+field-tent. As sleeping-bag, it was provided with a thick blanket which
+took up most of the room inside, and a waterproof sheet which was part
+of itself. As field-tent, it had large protruding flanges, shaped like
+jib-sails, and a complicated system of ropes.
+
+First of all I tucked in the jib-sails and ropes and laid them as flat
+as might be on the bottom of the sleeping-bag, with the blanket on the
+top of them. Then I packed the clothes on the top of the blanket and
+turned it over them to make all snug; I buttoned up the waterproof sheet
+over everything, rolled up the hold-all and secured it with its straps.
+This was only done by much stratagem and strength, by desperate tugging
+and pushing, and by lying flat on my waist on the rolled-up half to keep
+it quiet while I brought the loose half over. No sooner had I secured
+the hold-all by its straps than I realized that it was no more a
+hold-all than it was a sleeping-bag and a field tent, and that its
+contents were exposed to the weather down one side, where they bulged
+through the spaces that yawned between the buttons, strained almost to
+bursting.
+
+I still believed in the genius that had devised this trinity. Clearly
+the jib-sails which made it a field-tent were intended to serve also as
+the pockets of the hold-all. I had done wrong to flatten them out and
+tuck them in, frustrating the fulfilment of their function. It was not
+acting fairly by the inventor.
+
+I unpacked the hold-all, I mean the field-tent.
+
+Then, with the Commandant's clothes again lying round me on the floor, I
+grappled with the mystery of the jib-sails and their cords. The
+jib-sails and their cords were, so to speak, the heart of this infernal
+triple entity.
+
+They were treacherous. They had all the appearance of pockets, but owing
+to the intricate and malign relations of their cords, it was impossible
+to deal faithfully with them on this footing. When the contents had been
+packed inside them, the field-tent asserted itself as against the
+hold-all and refused to roll up. And I am sure that if the field-tent
+had had to be set up in a field in a hurry, the hold-all and the
+sleeping-bag would have arisen and insisted on their consubstantial
+rights.
+
+I unpacked the field-tent and packed it all over again exactly as I had
+packed it before, but more carefully, swearing gently and continuously,
+as I tugged with my arms and pushed with my knees, and pressed hard on
+it with my waist to keep it still. I cursed the day when I had first
+heard of it; I cursed myself for giving it to the Commandant; more than
+all I cursed the combined ingenuity and levity of its creator, who had
+indulged his fantasy at our expense, without a thought to the actual
+conditions of the retreat of armies and of ambulances.
+
+And in the middle of it all Janet came in, and curled herself up in a
+corner, and forecast luridly and inconsolably the possible fate of her
+friends, the nurses in the "Flandria." For the moment her coolness and
+her wise impassivity had gone. Her behaviour was lacerating.
+
+This was the very worst moment we had come to yet.[31]
+
+And it seemed that Ursula Dearmer and Mrs. Lambert had gone to bed,
+regardless of the retreat from Ghent.
+
+Somewhere in the small hours of the morning the Commandant came back
+from Melle.[32]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It is nearly two o'clock. Downstairs, in the great silent hall two
+British wounded are waiting for some ambulance to take them to the
+Station. They are sitting bolt upright on chairs near the doorway, their
+heads nodding with drowsiness. One or two Belgian Red Cross men wait
+beside them. Opposite them, on three other chairs, the three doctors,
+Dr. Haynes, Dr. Bird and Dr. ---- sit waiting for our own ambulance to
+take them. They have been up all night and are utterly exhausted. They
+sit, fast asleep, with their heads bowed on their breasts.
+
+Outside, the darkness has mist and a raw cold sting in it.
+
+A wretched ambulance wagon drawn by two horses is driven up to the door.
+It had a hood once, but the hood has disappeared and only the naked
+hoops remain. The British wounded from two [?] other hospitals are
+packed in it in two rows. They sit bolt upright under the hoops, exposed
+to mist and to the raw cold sting of the night; some of them wear their
+blankets like shawls over their shoulders as they were taken from their
+beds. The shawls and the head bandages give these British a strange,
+foreign look, infinitely helpless, infinitely pitiful.
+
+Nobody seems to be out there but Mrs. Torrence and one or two Belgian
+Red Cross men. She and I help to get our two men taken gently out of the
+hall and stowed away in the ambulance wagon. There are not enough
+blankets. We try to find some.
+
+At the last minute two bearers come forward, carrying a third. He is
+tall and thin; he is wrapped in a coat flung loosely over his
+sleeping-jacket; he wears a turban of bandages; his long bare feet stick
+out as he is carried along. It is Cameron, my poor Highlander, who was
+shot through the brain.
+
+They lift him, very gently, into the wagon.
+
+Then, very gently, they lift him out again.
+
+This attempt to save him is desperate. He is dying.
+
+They carry him up the steps and stand him there with his naked feet on
+the stone. It is anguish to see those thin white feet on the stone; I
+take off my coat and put it under them.
+
+It is all I can do for him.
+
+Presently they carry him back into the Hospital.
+
+They can't find any blankets. I run over to the Hôtel Cecil for my
+thick, warm travelling-rug to wrap round the knees of the wounded,
+shivering in the wagon.
+
+It is all I can do for them.
+
+And presently the wagon is turned round, slowly, almost solemnly, and
+driven off into the darkness and the cold mist, with its load of weird
+and piteous figures, wrapped in blankets like shawls. Their bandages
+show blurred white spots in the mist, and they are gone.
+
+It is horrible.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I am reminded that I have not packed yet, nor dressed for the journey. I
+go over and pack and dress. I leave behind what I don't need and it
+takes seven minutes. There is something sad and terrible about the
+little hotel, and its proprietors and their daughter, who has waited on
+me. They have so much the air of waiting, of being on the eve. They hang
+about doing nothing. They sit mournfully in a corner of the
+half-darkened restaurant. As I come and go they smile at me with the
+patient Belgian smile that says, "_C'est triste, n'est-ce pas?_" and no
+more.
+
+The landlord puts on his soft brown felt hat and carries my luggage over
+to the "Flandria." He stays there, hanging about the porch, fascinated
+by these preparations for departure. There is the same terrible
+half-darkness here, the same expectant stillness. Now and then the
+servants of the hospital look at each other and there are whisperings,
+mutterings. They sound sinister somehow and inimical. Or perhaps I
+imagine this because I do not take kindly to retreating. Anyhow I am
+only aware of them afterwards. For now it is time to go and fetch Miss
+Ashley-Smith and her three wounded men from the Convent.
+
+Tom has come up with his first ambulance car. He is waiting for orders
+in the porch. His enormous motor goggles are pushed up over the peak of
+his cap. They make it look like some formidable helmet. They give an air
+of mastership to Tom's face. At this last hour it wears its expression
+of righteous protest, of volcanic patience, of exasperated discipline.
+
+The Commandant is nowhere to be seen. And every minute of his delay
+increases Tom's sense of tortured integrity.
+
+I tell Tom that he is to drive me at once to the Couvent de Saint
+Pierre. He wants to know what for.
+
+I tell him it is to fetch Miss Ashley-Smith and three British wounded.
+
+He shrugs his shoulders. He knows nothing about the Couvent de Saint
+Pierre and Miss Ashley-Smith and three British wounded, and his shrug
+implies that he cares less.
+
+And he says he has no orders to go and fetch them.
+
+I perceive that in this supreme moment I am up against Tom's
+superstition. He won't move anywhere without orders. It is his one means
+of putting himself in the right and everybody else in the wrong.
+
+And the worst of it is he _is_ right.
+
+I am also up against Tom's sex prejudices. I remember that he is said to
+have sworn with an oath that he wasn't going to take orders from any
+woman.
+
+And the Commandant is nowhere to be seen.
+
+Tom sticks to the ledge of the porch and stares at me defiantly. The
+servants of the Hospital come out and look at us. They are so many
+reinforcements to Tom's position.
+
+I tell him that the arrangement has been made with the Commandant's
+consent, and I repeat firmly that he is to get into his car this minute
+and drive to the Couvent de Saint Pierre.
+
+He says he does not know where the Convent is. It may be anywhere.
+
+I tell him where it is, and he says again he hasn't got orders.
+
+I stand over him and with savage and violent determination I say:
+"You've got them _now_!"
+
+And, actually, Tom obeys. He says, "_All_ right, all right, all right,"
+very fast, and humps his shoulders and slouches off to his car. He
+cranks it up with less vehemence than I have yet known him bring to the
+starting of any car.
+
+We get in. Then, and not till then, I am placable. I say: "You see, Tom,
+it wouldn't do to leave that lady and three British wounded behind,
+would it?"
+
+What he says about orders then is purely by way of apology.
+
+Regardless of my instructions, he does what I did and dashes up the
+wrong boulevard as if the Germans were even now marching into the
+_Place_ behind him. But he works round somehow and we arrive.
+
+They are all there, ready and waiting. And the Mother Superior and two
+of her nuns are in the corridor. They bring out glasses of hot milk for
+everybody. They are so gentle and so kind that I recall with agony my
+impatience when I rang at their gate. Even familiar French words desert
+me in this crisis, and I implore Miss Ashley-Smith to convey my regrets
+for my rudeness. Their only answer is to smile and press hot milk on me.
+I am glad of it, for I have been so absorbed in the drama of preparation
+that I have entirely forgotten to eat anything since lunch.
+
+The wounded are brought along the passage. We help them into the
+ambulance. Two, Williams and ----, are only slightly wounded; they can
+sit up all the way. But the third, Fisher, is wounded in the head.
+Sometimes he is delirious and must be looked after. A fourth man is
+dying and must be left behind.
+
+Then we say good-bye to the nuns.
+
+The other ambulance cars are drawn up in the _Place_ before the
+"Flandria," waiting. For the first time I hate the sight of them. This
+feeling is inexplicable but profound.
+
+We arrange for the final disposal of the wounded in one of the new
+Daimlers, where they can all lie down. Mrs. Torrence comes out and helps
+us. The Commandant is not there yet. Dr. Haynes and Dr. Bird pack Dr.
+---- away well inside the car. They are very quiet and very firm and
+refuse to travel otherwise than together. Mrs. Torrence goes with the
+wounded.
+
+I go into the Hospital and upstairs to our quarters to see if anything
+has been left behind. If I can find Marie we must take her. There is
+room, after all.
+
+But Marie is nowhere to be seen.
+
+Nobody is to be seen but the Belgian night nurses on duty, watching, one
+on each landing at the entrance to her corridor. They smile at me
+gravely and sadly as they say good-bye.
+
+I have left many places, many houses, many people behind me, knowing
+that I shall never see them again. But of all leave-takings this seems
+to me the worst. For those others I have been something, done something
+that absolves me. But for these and for this place I have not done
+anything, and now there is not anything to be done.
+
+I go slowly downstairs. Each flight is a more abominable descent. At
+each flight I stand still and pull myself together to face the next
+nurse on the next landing. At the second story I go past without
+looking. I know every stain on the floor of the corridor there as you
+turn to the right. The number of the door and the names on the card
+beside it have made a pattern on my brain.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It is quarter to three.
+
+They are all ready now. The Commandant is there giving the final orders
+and stowing away the nine wounded he has brought from Melle. The hall of
+the Hospital is utterly deserted. So is the _Place_ outside it. And in
+the stillness and desolation our going has an air of intolerable
+secrecy, of furtive avoidance of fate. This Field Ambulance of ours
+abhors retreat.
+
+It is dark with the black darkness before dawn.
+
+And the Belgian Red Cross guides have all gone. There is nobody to show
+us the roads.
+
+At the last minute we find a Belgian soldier who will take us as far as
+Ecloo.
+
+The Commandant has arranged to stay at Ecloo for a few hours. Some
+friends there have offered him their house. The wounded are to be put up
+at the Convent. Ecloo is about half-way between Ghent and Bruges.
+
+We start. Tom's car goes first with the Belgian soldier in front. Ursula
+Dearmer, Mrs. Lambert, Miss Ashley-Smith and Mr. Riley and I are inside.
+The Commandant sits, silent, wrapped in meditation, on the step.
+
+We are not going so very fast, not faster than the three cars behind us,
+and the slowest of the three (the Fiat with the hard tyres, carrying the
+baggage) sets the pace. We must keep within their sight or they may lose
+their way. But though we are not really going fast, the speed seems
+intolerable, especially the speed that swings us out of sight of the
+"Flandria." You think that is the worst. But it isn't. The speed with
+its steady acceleration grows more intolerable with every mile. Your
+sense of safety grows intolerable.
+
+You never knew that safety could hurt like this.
+
+Somewhere on this road the Belgian Army has gone before us. We have got
+to go with it. We have had our orders.
+
+That thought consoles you, but not for long. You may call it following
+the Belgian Army. But the Belgian Army is retreating, and you are
+retreating with it. There is nothing else you can do; but that does not
+make it any better. And this speed of the motor over the flat roads,
+this speed that cuts the air, driving its furrow so fast that the wind
+rushes by you like strong water, this speed that so inspired and exalted
+you when it brought you into Flanders, when it took you to Antwerp and
+Baerlaere and Lokeren and Melle, this vehement and frightful and
+relentless speed is the thing that beats you down and tortures you. For
+several hours, ever since you had your orders to pack up and go, you
+have been working with no other purpose than this going; you have
+contemplated it many times with equanimity, with indifference; you knew
+all along that it was not possible to stay in Ghent for ever; and when
+you were helping to get the wounded into the ambulances you thought it
+would be the easiest thing in the world to get in yourself and go with
+them; when you had time to think about it you were even aware of looking
+forward with pleasure to the thrill of a clean run before the Germans.
+You never thought, and nobody could possibly have told you, that it
+would be like this.
+
+I never thought, and nobody could possibly have told me, that I was
+going to behave as I did then.
+
+The thing began with the first turn of the road that hid the "Flandria."
+Up till that moment, whatever I may have felt about the people we had to
+leave behind us, as long as none of our field-women were left behind, I
+had not the smallest objection to being saved myself. And if it had
+occurred to me to stay behind for the sake of one man who couldn't be
+moved and who had the best surgeon in the Hospital and the pick of the
+nursing-staff to look after him, I think I should have disposed of the
+idea as sheer sentimentalism. When I was with him to-night I could think
+of nothing but the wounded in the Couvent de Saint Pierre. And
+afterwards there had been so much to do.
+
+And now that there was nothing more to do, I couldn't think of anything
+but that one man.
+
+The night before came back to me in a vision, or rather an obsession,
+infinitely more present, more visible and palpable than this night that
+we were living in. The light with the red shade hung just over my head
+on my right hand; the blond walls were round me; they shut me in alone
+with the wounded man who lay stretched before me on the bed. And the
+moments were measured by the rhythm of his breathing, and by the
+closing and opening of his eyes.
+
+I thought, he will open his eyes to-night and look for me and I shall
+not be there. He will know that he has been left to the Belgians, who
+cannot understand him, whom he cannot understand. And he will think that
+I have betrayed him.
+
+I felt as if I _had_ betrayed him.
+
+I am sitting between Mr. Riley and Miss Ashley-Smith. Mr. Riley is ill;
+he has got blood-poisoning through a cut in his hand. Every now and then
+I remember him, and draw the rug over his knees as it slips. Miss
+Ashley-Smith, tired with her night watching, has gone to sleep with her
+head on my shoulder, where it must be horribly jolted and shaken by my
+cough, which of course chooses this moment to break out again. I try to
+get into a position that will rest her better; and between her and Mr.
+Riley I forget for a second.
+
+Then the obsession begins again, and I am shut in between the blond
+walls with the wounded man.
+
+I feel his hand and arm lying heavily on my shoulder in the attempt to
+support me as I kneel by his bed with my arms stretched out together
+under the hollow of his back, as we wait for the pillow that never
+comes.
+
+It is quite certain that I have betrayed him.
+
+It seems to me then that nothing that could happen to me in Ghent could
+be more infernal than leaving it. And I think that when the ambulance
+stops to put down the Belgian soldier I will get out and walk back with
+him to Ghent.
+
+Every half-mile I think that the ambulance will stop to put down the
+Belgian soldier.
+
+But the ambulance does not stop. It goes on and on, and we have got to
+Ecloo before we seem to have put three miles between us and Ghent.
+
+Still, though I'm dead tired when we get there, I can walk three miles
+easily. I do not feel at all insane with my obsession. On the contrary,
+these moments are moments of exceptional lucidity.[33] While the
+Commandant goes to look for the Convent I get out and look for the
+Belgian soldier. Other Belgian soldiers have joined him in the village
+street.
+
+I tell him I want to go back to Ghent. I ask him how far it is to walk,
+and if he will take me. And he says it is twenty kilometres. The other
+soldiers say, too, it is twenty kilometres. I had thought it couldn't
+possibly be more than four or five at the outside. And I am just sane
+enough to know that I can't walk as far as that if I'm to be any good
+when I get there.
+
+We wait in the village while they find the Convent and take the wounded
+men there; we wait while the Commandant goes off in the dark to find his
+friend's house.
+
+The house stands in a garden somewhere beyond the railway station, up a
+rough village street and a stretch of country road. It is about four in
+the morning when we get there. A thin ooze of light is beginning to leak
+through the mist. The mist holds it as a dark cloth holds a fluid that
+bleaches it.
+
+There is something queer about this light. There is something queer,
+something almost inimical, about the garden, as if it tried to protect
+itself by enchantment from the fifteen who are invading it. The mist
+stands straight up from the earth like a high wall drawn close about the
+house; it blocks with dense grey stuff every inch of space between the
+bushes and trees; they are thrust forward rank upon rank, closing in
+upon the house; they loom enormous and near. A few paces further back
+they appear as without substance in the dense grey stuff that invests
+them; their tops are tangled and lost in a web of grey. In this strange
+garden it is as if space itself had solidified in masses, and solid
+objects had become spaces between.
+
+When your eyes get used to this curious inversion it is as if the mist
+was no longer a wall but a growth; the garden is the heart of a jungle
+bleached by enchantment and struck with stillness and cold; a tangle of
+grey; a muffled, huddled and stifled bower, all grey, and webbed and
+laced with grey.
+
+The door of the house opens and the effect of queerness, of inimical
+magic disappears.
+
+Mr. E., our kind Dutch host, and Mrs. E., our kind English hostess, have
+got up out of their beds to receive us. This hospitality of theirs is
+not a little thing when you think that their house is to be invaded by
+Germans, perhaps to-day.[34]
+
+They do not allow you to think of it. For all you are to see of the
+tragedy they and their house might be remaining at Ecloo in leisure and
+perfect hospitality and peace. Only, as they see us pouring in over
+their threshold a hovering twinkle in their kind eyes shows that they
+are not blind to the comic aspect of retreats.
+
+They have only one spare bedroom, which they offer; but they have filled
+their drawing-room with blankets; piles and piles of white fleecy
+blankets on chairs and sofas and on the floor. And they have built up a
+roaring fire. It is as if they were succouring fifteen survivors of
+shipwreck or of earthquake, or the remnants of a forlorn hope. To be
+sure, we are flying from Ghent, but we have only flown twenty kilometres
+as yet.
+
+However, most of the Corps have been up all night for several nights,
+and the mist outside is a clinging and a biting mist, and everybody is
+grateful.
+
+I shall never forget the look of the E.s' drawing-room, smothered in
+blankets and littered with the members of the Corps, who lay about it in
+every pathetic posture of fatigue. A group of seven or eight snuggled
+down among the blankets on the floor in front of the hearth like a camp
+before a campfire. Janet McNeil, curled up on one window-seat, and
+Ursula Dearmer, rolled in a blanket on the other, had the heart-rending
+beauty of furry animals under torpor. The chauffeurs Tom and Bert made
+themselves entirely lovable by going to sleep bolt upright on
+dining-room chairs on the outer ring of the camp. The E.s' furniture
+came in where it could with fantastic and incongruous effect.
+
+I don't know how I got through the next three hours, for my obsession
+came back on me again and again, and as soon as I shut my eyes I saw the
+face and eyes of the wounded man. I remember sitting part of the time
+beside Miss Ashley-Smith, wide-awake, in a corner of the room behind
+Bert's chair. I remember wandering about the E.s' house. I must have got
+out of it, for I also remember finding myself in their garden, at
+sunrise.
+
+And I remember the garden, though I was not perfectly aware of it at the
+time. It had a divine beauty, a serenity that refused to enter into, to
+ally itself in any way with an experience tainted by the sadness of the
+retreat from Ghent.
+
+But because of its supernatural detachment and tranquillity and its no
+less supernatural illumination I recalled it the more vividly
+afterwards.
+
+It was full of tall bushes and little slender trees standing in a
+delicate light. The mist had cleared to the transparency of still water,
+so still that under it the bushes and the trees stood in a cold, quiet
+radiance without a shimmer. The light itself was intensely still. What
+you saw was not the approach of light, but its mysterious arrest. It was
+held suspended in crystalline vapour, in thin shafts of violet and gold,
+clear as panes; it was caught and lifted upwards by the high bushes and
+the slender trees; it was veiled in the silver-green masses of their
+tops. Every green leaf and every blade of grass was a vessel charged. It
+was not so much that the light revealed these things as that these
+things revealed the light. There was no kindling touch, no tremor of
+dawn in that garden. It was as if it had removed the walls and put off
+the lacing webs and the thick cloths of grey stuff by some mystic
+impulse of its own, as if it maintained itself in stillness by an inner
+flame. Only the very finest tissues yet clung to it, to show that it was
+the same garden that disclosed itself in this clarity and beauty.
+
+The next thing I remember is the Chaplain coming to me and our going
+together into the E.s' dining-room, and Miss Ashley-Smith's joining us
+there. My malady was contagious and she had caught it, but with no
+damage to her self-control.
+
+She says very simply and quietly that she is going back to Ghent. And
+the infection spreads to the Chaplain. He says that neither of us is
+going back to Ghent, but that he is going. The poor boy tries to arrange
+with us how he may best do it, in secrecy, without poisoning the
+Commandant[35] and the whole Ambulance with the spirit of return. With
+difficulty we convince him that it would be useless for any man to go.
+He would be taken prisoner the minute he showed his nose in the
+"Flandria" and set to dig trenches till the end of the War.
+
+Then he says, if only he had his cassock with him. They would respect
+_that_ (which is open to doubt).
+
+We are there a long time discussing which of us is going back to Ghent.
+Miss Ashley-Smith is fertile and ingenious in argument. She is a nurse,
+and I and the Chaplain are not. She has friends in Ghent who have not
+been warned, whom she must go back to. In any case, she says, it was a
+toss-up whether she went or stayed.
+
+And while we are still arguing, we go out on the road that leads to the
+village, to find the ambulances and see if any of the chauffeurs will
+take us back to Ghent. I am not very hopeful about the means of
+transport. I do not think that Tom or any of the chauffeurs will move,
+this time, without orders from the Commandant. I do not think that the
+Commandant will let any of us go except himself.
+
+And Miss Ashley-Smith says if only she had a horse.
+
+If she had a horse she would be in Ghent in no time. Perhaps, if none of
+the chauffeurs will take her back, she can find a horse in the village.
+
+She keeps on saying very quietly and simply that she is going, and
+explaining the reasons why she should go rather than anybody else. And I
+bring forward every reason I can think of why she should do nothing of
+the sort.
+
+I abhor the possibility of her going back instead of me; but I am not
+yet afraid of it. I do not yet think seriously that she will do it. I do
+not see how she is going to, if the chauffeurs refuse to take her. (I do
+not see how, in this case, I am to go myself.) And I do not imagine for
+one moment that she will find a horse. Still, I am vaguely uneasy. And
+the Chaplain doesn't make it any better by backing her up and declaring
+that as she will be more good than either of us when she gets there, her
+going is the best thing that in the circumstances can be done.
+
+And in the end, with an extreme quietness and simplicity, she went.
+
+We had not yet found the ambulance cars, and it seemed pretty certain
+that Miss Ashley-Smith would not get her horse any more than the
+Chaplain could get his cassock.
+
+And then, just when we thought the difficulties of transport were
+insuperable, we came straight on the railway lines and the station,
+where a train had pulled up on its way to Ghent. Miss Ashley-Smith got
+on to the train. I got on too, to go with her, and the Chaplain, who is
+abominably strong, put his arms round my waist and pulled me off.
+
+I have never ceased to wish that I had hung on to that train.
+
+On our way back to the E.s' house we met the Commandant and told him
+what had happened. I said I thought it was the worst thing that had
+happened yet. It wasn't the smallest consolation when he said it was the
+most sensible solution.
+
+And when Mrs. ---- for fifteen consecutive seconds took the view that I
+had decoyed Miss Ashley-Smith out on to that accursed road in order to
+send her to Ghent, and deliberately persuaded her to go back to the
+"Flandria" instead of me, for fifteen consecutive seconds I believed
+that this diabolical thing was what I had actually done.
+
+Mrs. ----'s indignation never blazes away for more than fifteen seconds;
+but while the conflagration lasts it is terrific. And on circumstantial
+evidence the case was black against me. When last seen, Miss
+Ashley-Smith was entirely willing to be saved. She goes out for a walk
+with me along a quiet country road, and the next thing you hear is that
+she has gone back to Ghent. And since, actually and really, it was my
+obsession that had passed into her, I felt that if I had taken Miss
+Ashley-Smith down that road and murdered her in a dyke my responsibility
+wouldn't have been a bit worse, if as bad.
+
+And it seemed to me that all the people scattered among the blankets in
+that strange room, those that still lay snuggling down amiably in the
+warmth, and those that had started to their feet in dismay, and those
+that sat on chairs upright and apart, were hostile with a just and
+righteous hostility, that they had an intimate knowledge of my crime,
+and had risen up in abhorrence of the thing I was.
+
+And somewhere, as if they were far off in some blessed place on the
+other side of this nightmare, I was aware of the merciful and pitiful
+faces of Mrs. Lambert and Janet McNeil.
+
+Then, close beside me, there was a sudden heaving of the Chaplain's
+broad shoulders as he faced the room.
+
+And I heard him saying, in the same voice in which he had declared that
+he was going to hold Matins, that it wasn't my fault at all--that it was
+_he_ who had persuaded Miss Ashley-Smith to go back to Ghent.[36]
+
+The Chaplain has a moral nerve that never fails him.
+
+Then Mrs. Torrence says that she is going back to protect Miss
+Ashley-Smith, and Ursula Dearmer says that she is going back to protect
+Mrs. Torrence, and somebody down in the blankets remarks that the thing
+was settled last night, and that all this going back is simply rotten.
+
+I can only repeat that it is all my fault, and that therefore, if Mrs.
+Torrence goes back, nobody is going back with her but me.
+
+And there can be no doubt that three motor ambulances, with possibly the
+entire Corps inside them, certainly with the five women and the Chaplain
+and the Commandant, would presently have been seen tearing along the
+road to Ghent, one in violent pursuit of the other, if we had not
+telephoned and received news of Miss Ashley-Smith's safe arrival at the
+"Flandria," and orders that no more women were to return to Ghent.
+
+Among all the variously assorted anguish of that halt at Ecloo the
+figures and the behaviour of Mrs. E. and her husband and their children
+are beautiful to remember--their courtesy, their serenity, their gentle
+and absolving wonder that anybody should see anything in the least
+frightful or distressing, or even disconcerting and unusual, in the
+situation; the little girl who sat beside me, showing me her
+picture-book of animals, accepting gravely and earnestly all that you
+had to tell her about the ways of squirrels, of kangaroos and opossums,
+while we waited for the ambulance cars to take us to Bruges; the boy who
+ran after us as we went, and stood looking after us and waving to us in
+the lane; the aspect of that Flemish house and garden as we left
+them--there is no word that embraces all these things but beauty.
+
+We stopped in the village to take up our wounded from the Convent. The
+nuns brought us through a long passage and across a little court to the
+refectory, which had been turned into a ward. Bowls steaming with the
+morning meal for the patients stood on narrow tables between the two
+rows of beds. Each bed was hung round and littered with haversacks,
+boots, rifles, bandoliers and uniforms bloody and begrimed. Except for
+the figures of the nuns and the aspect of its white-washed walls and its
+atmosphere of incorruptible peace, the place might have been a barracks
+or the dormitory in a night lodging, rather than a convent ward.
+
+When we had found and dressed our men, we led them out as we had come.
+As we went we saw, framed through some open doorway, sunlight and vivid
+green, and the high walls and clipped alleys of the Convent garden.
+
+Of all our sad contacts and separations, these leave-takings at the
+convents were the saddest. And it was not only that this place had the
+same poignant and unbearable beauty as the place we had just left, but
+its beauty was unique. You felt that if the friends you had just left
+were turned out of their house and garden to-morrow, they might still
+return some day. But here you saw a carefully guarded and fragile
+loveliness on the very eve of its dissolution. The place was fairly
+saturated with holiness, and the beauty of holiness was in the faces and
+in every gesture of the nuns. And you felt that they and their faces and
+their gestures were impermanent, that this highly specialized form of
+holiness had continued with difficulty until now, that it hung by a
+single thread to a world that had departed very far from it.
+
+Yet, for the moment while you looked at it, it maintained itself in
+perfection.
+
+We shall never know all that the War has annihilated. But for that
+moment of time while it lasted, the Convent at Ecloo annihilated the
+nineteenth and eighteenth centuries, every century between now and the
+fifteenth. What you saw was a piece of life cut straight out of the
+Middle Ages. What you felt was the guarded and hidden beauty of the
+Middle Ages, the beauty of obedience, simplicity and chastity, of souls
+set apart and dedicated, the whole insoluble secret charm of the
+cloistered life. The very horror of the invasion that threatened it at
+this hour of the twentieth century was a horror of the Middle Ages.
+
+But these devoted women did not seem aware of it. The little high-bred
+English nun who conducted us talked politely and placidly of England and
+of English things as of things remembered with a certain mortal
+affection but left behind without regret. It was as if she contemplated
+the eternal continuance of the Convent at Ecloo with no break in its
+divine tranquillity. One sister went so far as to express the hope that
+their Convent would be spared. It was as if she were uttering some
+merely perfunctory piety. The rest, without ceasing from their
+ministrations, looked up at us and smiled.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+On the way up to Bruges we passed whole regiments of the Belgian Army in
+retreat. They trooped along in straggling disorder, their rifles at
+trail; behind them the standard-bearers trudged, carrying the standard
+furled and covered with black. The speed of our cars as we overtook them
+was more insufferable than ever.
+
+
+[_Bruges._]
+
+We thought that the Belgian Army would be quartered in Bruges, and that
+we should find a hospital there and serve the Army from that base.
+
+We took our wounded to the Convent, and set out to find quarters for
+ourselves in the town. We had orders to meet at the Convent again at a
+certain hour.
+
+Most of the Corps were being put up at the Convent. The rest of us had
+to look for rooms.
+
+In the search I got separated from the Corps, and wandered about the
+streets of Bruges with much interest and a sense of great intimacy and
+leisure. By the time I had found a _pension_ in a narrow street behind
+the market-place, I felt it to be quite certain that we should stay in
+Bruges at least as long as we had stayed in Ghent, and what moments I
+could spare from the obsession of Ghent I spent in contemplating the
+Belfry. Very soon it was time to go back to the Convent. The way to the
+Convent was through many tortuous streets, but I was going in the right
+direction, accompanied by a kind Flamand and her husband, when at the
+turn by the canal bridge I was nearly run over by one of our own
+ambulance cars. It was Bert's car, and he was driving with fury and
+perturbation away from the Convent and towards the town. Janet McNeil
+was with him. They stopped to tell me that we had orders to clear out of
+Bruges. The Germans had taken Ghent and were coming on to Bruges. We had
+orders to go on to Ostend.
+
+We found the rest of the cars drawn up in a street near the Convent. We
+had not been two hours in Bruges, and we left it, if anything, quicker
+than we had come in. The flat land fairly dropped away before our speed.
+I sat on the back step of the leading car, and I shall never forget the
+look of those ambulances, three in a line, as they came into sight
+scooting round the turns on the road to Ostend.
+
+Besides the wounded we had brought from Ghent, we took with us three
+footsore Tommies whom we had picked up in Bruges. They had had a long
+march. The stoutest, biggest and most robust of these three fainted just
+as we drew up in the courtyard of the _Kursaal_ at Ostend.
+
+
+[_Ostend._]
+
+The _Kursaal_ had been taken by some English and American women and
+turned into a Hospital. It was filled already to overflowing, but they
+found room for our wounded for the night. Ostend was to be evacuated in
+the morning. In fact, we were considered to be running things rather
+fine by staying here instead of going on straight to Dunkirk. It was
+supposed that if the Germans were not yet in Bruges they might be there
+any minute.
+
+But we had had so many premature orders to clear out, and the Germans
+had always been hours behind time, and we judged it a safe risk.
+Besides, there were forty-seven Belgian wounded in Bruges, and three of
+our ambulance cars were going back to fetch them.
+
+There was some agitation as to who would and who wouldn't be allowed to
+go back to Bruges. The Commandant was at first inclined to reject his
+Secretary as unfit. But if you take him the right way he is fairly
+tractable, and I managed to convince him that nothing but going back to
+Bruges could make up for my failure to go back to Ghent. He earned my
+everlasting gratitude by giving me leave. As for Mrs. Torrence, she had
+no difficulty. She was obviously competent.
+
+Then, just as I was congratulating myself that the shame of Ecloo was to
+be wiped out (to say nothing of that ignominious overthrow at Melle),
+there occurred a _contretemps_ that made our ambulance conspicuous among
+the many ambulances in the courtyard of the Hospital.
+
+We had reckoned without the mistimed chivalry of our chauffeurs.
+
+They had all, even Tom, been quite pathetically kind and gentle during
+and ever since the flight from Ghent. (I remember poor Newlands coming
+up with his bottle of formamint just as we were preparing to leave
+Ecloo.) It never occurred to us that there was anything ominous in this
+mood.
+
+Mrs. Torrence and I were just going to get into (I think) Newlands' car,
+when we were aware of Newlands standing fixed on the steps of the
+Hospital, looking like Hamlet, Prince of Denmark, in khaki, and flatly
+refusing to drive his car into Bruges, not only if we were in his car,
+but if one woman went with the expedition in any other car.
+
+He stood there, very upright, on the steps of the Hospital, and rather
+pale, while the Commandant and Mrs. Torrence surged up to him in fury.
+The Commandant told him he would be sacked for insubordination, and Mrs.
+Torrence, in a wild flight of fancy, threatened to expose him "in the
+papers."
+
+But Newlands stood his ground. He was even more like Lord Kitchener than
+Tom. He simply could not get over the idea that women were to be
+protected. And to take the women into Bruges when the Germans were, for
+all we knew, _in_ Bruges, was an impossibility to Newlands, as it would
+have been to Lord Kitchener. So he went on refusing to take his car into
+Bruges if one woman went with the expedition. In retort to a charge of
+cold feet, he intimated that he was ready to drive into any hell you
+pleased, provided he hadn't got to take any women with him. He didn't
+care if he _was_ sacked. He didn't care if Mrs. Torrence _did_ report
+him in the papers. He wouldn't drive his car into Bruges if one woman--
+
+Here, in his utter disregard of all discipline, the likeness between
+Newlands and Lord Kitchener ends. Enough that he drove his car into
+Bruges on his own terms, and Mrs. Torrence and I were left behind.
+
+The expedition to Bruges returned safely with the forty-seven Belgian
+wounded.
+
+We found rooms in a large hotel on the Digue, overlooking the sea.
+Before evening I went round to the Hospital to see Miss Ashley-Smith's
+three wounded men. The _Kursaal_ is built in terraces and galleries
+going all round the front and side of it. I took the wrong turning round
+one of them and found myself in the doorway of an immense ward. From
+somewhere inside there came loud and lacerating screams, high-pitched
+but appallingly monotonous and without intervals. I thought it was a man
+in delirium; I even thought it might be poor Fisher, of whose attacks we
+had been warned. I went in.
+
+I had barely got a yard inside the ward before a kind little rosy-faced
+English nurse ran up to me. I told her what I wanted.
+
+She said, "You'd better go back. You won't be able to stand it."
+
+Even then I didn't take it in, and said I supposed the poor man was
+delirious.
+
+She cried out, "No! No! He is having his leg taken off."
+
+They had run short of anæsthetics.
+
+I don't know what I must have looked like, but the little rosy-faced
+nurse grabbed me and said, "Come away. You'll faint if you see it."
+
+And I went away. Somebody took me into the right ward, where I found
+Fisher and Williams and the other man. Fisher was none the worse for
+his journey, and Williams and the other man were very cheerful. Another
+English nurse, who must have had the tact of a heavenly angel, brought
+up a bowl of chicken broth and said I might feed Fisher if I liked. So I
+sat a little while there, feeding Fisher, and regretting for the
+hundredth time that I had not had the foresight to be trained as a nurse
+when I was young. Unfortunately, though I foresaw this war ten years
+ago, I had not foreseen it when I was young. I told the men I would come
+and see them early in the morning, and bring them some money, as I had
+promised Miss Ashley-Smith. I never saw them again.
+
+Nothing happened quite as I had planned it.
+
+To begin with, we had discovered as we lunched at Bruges that the funds
+remaining in the leather purse-belt were hardly enough to keep the
+Ambulance going for another week. And our hotel expenses at Ostend were
+reducing its term to a problematic three days. So it was more or less
+settled amongst us that somebody would have to go over to England the
+next day and return with funds, and that the supernumerary Secretary
+was, on the whole, the fittest person for the job.
+
+I slept peaceably on this prospect of a usefulness that seemed to
+justify my existence at a moment when it most needed vindication.
+
+
+[_Tuesday, 13th._]
+
+I got up at six. Last thing at night I had said to myself that I must
+wake early and go round to the Hospital with the money.
+
+With my first sleep the obsession of Ghent had slackened its hold. And
+though it came back again after I had got up, dressed and had realized
+my surroundings, its returns were at longer and longer intervals.
+
+The first thing I did was to go round to the _Kursaal_. The Hospital was
+being evacuated, the wounded were lying about everywhere on the terraces
+and galleries, waiting for the ambulances. Williams and Fisher and the
+other man were nowhere to be seen. I was told that their ward had been
+cleared out first, and that the three were now safe on their way to
+England.
+
+I went away very grieved that they had not got their money.
+
+At the Hotel I find the Commandant very cheerful. He has made Miss ----
+his Secretary and Reporter till my return.[37]
+
+He goes down to the quay to make arrangements for my transport and
+returns after some considerable time. There have been difficulties
+about this detail. And the Commandant has an abhorrence of details, even
+of easy ones.
+
+He comes back. He looks abstracted. I inquire, a little too anxiously,
+perhaps, about my transport. It is all right, all perfectly right. He
+has arranged with Dr. Beavis of the British Field Hospital to take me on
+his ship.
+
+He looks a little spent with his exertions, and as he has again become
+abstracted I forbear to press for more information at the moment.
+
+We breakfasted. Presently I ask him the name of Dr. Beavis's ship.
+
+Oh, the _name_ of the ship is the _Dresden_.
+
+Time passes. And presently, just as he is going, I suggest that it would
+be as well for me to know what time the _Dresden_ sails.
+
+This detail either he never knew or has forgotten. And there is
+something about it, about the nature of stated times, as about all
+things conventional and mechanical and precise, that peculiarly
+exasperates him.
+
+He waves both hands in a fury of nescience and cries, "Ask me another!"
+
+By a sort of mutual consent we assume that the _Dresden_ will sail with
+Dr. Beavis at ten o'clock. After all, it is a very likely hour.
+
+More time passes. Finally we go into the street that runs along the
+Digue. And there we find Dr. Beavis sitting in a motor-car. We approach
+him. I thank him for his kindness in giving me transport. I say I'm sure
+his ship will be crowded with his own people, but that I don't in the
+least mind standing in the stoke-hole, if _he_ doesn't mind taking me
+over.
+
+He looks at me with a dreamy benevolence mixed with amazement. He would
+take me over with pleasure if he knew how he was to get away himself.
+
+"But," I say to the Commandant, "I thought you had arranged with Dr.
+Beavis to take me on the _Dresden_."
+
+The Commandant says nothing. And Dr. Beavis smiles again. A smile of
+melancholy knowledge.
+
+"The _Dresden_," he says, "sailed two hours ago."
+
+So it is decided that I am to proceed with the Ambulance to Dunkirk,
+thence by train to Boulogne, thence to Folkestone. It sounds so simple
+that I wonder why we didn't think of it before.
+
+But it was not by any means so simple as it sounded.
+
+First of all we had to collect ourselves. Then we had to collect Dr.
+Hanson's luggage. Dr. Hanson was one of Mrs. St. Clair Stobart's women
+surgeons, and she had left her luggage for Miss ---- to carry from
+Ostend to England. There was a yellow tin box and a suit-case. Dr.
+Hanson's best clothes and her cases of surgical instruments were in the
+suit-case and all the things she didn't particularly care about in the
+tin box. Or else the best clothes and the surgical instruments were in
+the tin box, and the things she didn't particularly care about in the
+suit-case. As we were certainly going to take both boxes, it didn't seem
+to matter much which way round it was.
+
+Then there was Mr. Foster's green canvas kit-bag to be taken to
+Folkestone and sent to him at the Victoria Hospital there.
+
+And there was a British Red Cross lady and her luggage--but we didn't
+know anything about the lady and her luggage yet.
+
+We found them at the _Kursaal_ Hospital, where some of our ambulances
+were waiting.
+
+By this time the courtyard, the steps and terraces of the Hospital were
+a scene of the most ghastly confusion. The wounded were still being
+carried out and still lay, wrapped in blankets, on the terraces; those
+who could sit or stand sat or stood. Ambulance cars jostled each other
+in the courtyard. Red Cross nurses dressed for departure were grouped
+despairingly about their luggage. Other nurses, who were not dressed
+for departure, who still remained superintending the removal of their
+wounded, paid no attention to these groups and their movements and their
+cries. The Hospital had cast off all care for any but its wounded.
+
+Women seized hold of other women for guidance and instruction, and
+received none. Nobody was rudely shaken off--they were all, in fact,
+very kind to each other--but nobody had time or ability to attend to
+anybody else.
+
+Somebody seized hold of the Commandant and sent us both off to look for
+the kitchen and for a sack of loaves which we would find in it. We were
+to bring the sack of loaves out as quickly as we could. We went off and
+found the kitchen, we found several kitchens; but we couldn't find the
+sack of loaves, and had to go back without it. When we got back the lady
+who had commandeered the sack of loaves was no more to be seen on the
+terrace.
+
+While we waited on the steps somebody remarked that there was a German
+aeroplane in the sky and that it was going to drop a bomb. There was. It
+was sailing high over the houses on the other side of the street. And it
+dropped its bomb right in front of us, above an enormous building not
+fifty yards away.
+
+We looked, fascinated. We expected to see the building knocked to bits
+and flying in all directions. The bomb fell. And nothing happened.
+Nothing at all.
+
+It was soon after the bomb that my attention was directed to the lady.
+She was a British Red Cross nurse, stranded with a hold-all and a green
+canvas trunk, and most particularly forlorn. She had lost her friends,
+she had lost her equanimity, she had lost everything except her luggage.
+How she attached herself to us I do not know. The Commandant says it was
+I who made myself responsible for her safety. We couldn't leave her to
+the Germans with her green canvas trunk and her hold-all.
+
+So I heaved up one end of the canvas trunk, and the Commandant tore it
+from me and flung it to the chauffeurs, who got it and the hold-all into
+Bert's ambulance. I grasped the British Red Cross lady firmly by the
+arm, lest she should get adrift again, and hustled her along to the
+Hotel, where the yellow tin box and the suit-case and the kit-bag
+waited. Somebody got them into the ambulance somehow.
+
+It was at this point that Ursula Dearmer appeared. (She had put up at
+some other hotel with Mrs. Lambert.)
+
+My British Red Cross lady was explaining to me that she had by no means
+abandoned her post, but that she was doing the right thing in leaving
+Ostend, seeing that she meant to apply for another post on a hospital
+ship. She was sure, she said, she was doing the right thing. I said, as
+I towed her securely along by one hand through a gathering crowd of
+refugees (we were now making for the ambulance cars that were drawn up
+along the street by the Digue), I said I was equally sure she was doing
+the right thing and that nobody could possibly think otherwise.
+
+And, as I say, Ursula Dearmer appeared.
+
+The youngest but one was seated with Mr. Riley in the military
+scouting-car that was to be our convoy to Dunkirk. I do not know how it
+had happened, but in this hour, at any rate, she had taken over the
+entire control and command of the Ambulance; and this with a coolness
+and competence that suggested that it was no new thing. It suggested,
+also, that without her we should not have got away from Ostend before
+the Germans marched into it. In fact, it is hardly fair to say that she
+had taken everything over. Everything had lapsed into her hands at the
+supreme crisis by a sort of natural fitness.
+
+We were all ready to go. The only one we yet waited for was the
+Commandant, who presently emerged from the Hotel. In his still dreamy
+and abstracted movements he was pursued by an excited waiter flourishing
+a bill. I forgot whose bill it was (it may have been mine), but anyhow
+it wasn't _his_ bill.
+
+We may have thought we were following the retreat of the Belgian Army
+when we went from Ghent to Bruges. We were, in fact, miles behind it,
+and the regiments we overtook were stragglers. The whole of the Belgian
+Army seemed to be poured out on to that road between Ostend and Dunkirk.
+Sometimes it was going before us, sometimes it was mysteriously coming
+towards us, sometimes it was stationary, but always it was there. It
+covered the roads; we had to cut our way through it. It was retreating
+slowly, as if in leisure, with a firm, unhasting dignity.
+
+Every now and then, as we looked at the men, they smiled at us, with a
+curious still and tragic smile.
+
+And it is by that smile that I shall always remember the look of the
+Belgian Army in the great retreat.
+
+Our own retreat--the Ostend-Dunkirk bit of it--is memorable chiefly by
+Miss ----'s account of the siege of Antwerp and the splendid courage of
+Mrs. St. Clair Stobart and her women.
+
+But that is her story, not mine, and it should be left to her to tell.
+
+
+[_Dunkirk._]
+
+At Dunkirk the question of the Secretary's transport again arose. It
+contended feebly with the larger problem of where and when and how the
+Corps was to lunch, things being further complicated by the Commandant's
+impending interview with Baron de Broqueville, the Belgian Minister of
+War. I began to feel like a large and useless parcel which the
+Commandant had brought with him in sheer absence of mind, and was now
+anxious to lose or otherwise get rid of. At the same time the Ambulance
+could not go on for more than three days without further funds, and, as
+the courier to be despatched to fetch them, I was, for the moment, the
+most important person in the Corps; and my transport was not a question
+to be lightly set aside.
+
+I was about to solve the problem for myself by lugging my lady to the
+railway station, when Ursula Dearmer took us over too, in her stride, as
+inconsiderable items of the business before her. I have nothing but
+admiration for her handling of it.
+
+We halted in the main street of Dunkirk while Mr. Riley and the
+chauffeurs unearthed from the baggage-car my hold-all and suit-case and
+the British Red Cross lady's hold-all and trunk and Mr. Foster's
+kit-bag and Dr. Hanson's suit-case with her best clothes and her
+surgical instruments and the tin--No, not the tin box, for the
+Commandant, now possessed by a violent demon of hurry, resisted our
+efforts to drag it from its lair.[38]
+
+All these things were piled on Ursula Dearmer's military scouting-car.
+The British Red Cross lady (almost incredulous of her good luck) and I
+got inside it, and Ursula Dearmer and Mr. Riley drove us to the railway
+station.
+
+By the mercy of Heaven a train was to leave for Boulogne either a little
+before or a little after one, and we had time to catch it.
+
+There was a long line of refugee _bourgeois_ drawn up before the station
+doors, and I noticed that every one of them carried in his hand a slip
+of paper.
+
+Ursula Dearmer hailed a porter, who, she said, would look after us like
+a father. With a matchless celerity he and Mr. Riley tore down the pile
+of luggage. The porter put them on a barrow and disappeared with them
+very swiftly through the station doors.
+
+At least I suppose it was through the doors. All we knew was that he
+disappeared.
+
+Then Ursula Dearmer handed over to me three cables to be sent from
+Dunkirk. I said good-bye to her and Mr. Riley. They got back into the
+motor-car, and they, too, very swiftly disappeared.
+
+Mr. Riley went away bearing with him the baffling mystery of his
+personality. After nearly three weeks' association with him I know that
+Mr. Riley's whole heart is in his job of carrying the wounded. Beyond
+that I know no more of him than on the day when he first turned up
+before our Committee.
+
+But with Ursula Dearmer it is different. Before the Committee she
+appeared as a very young girl, docile, diffident, only half-awake, and
+of dubious efficiency. I remember my solemn pledges to her mother that
+Ursula Dearmer should not be allowed to go into danger, and how, if
+danger insisted on coming to her, she should be violently packed up and
+sent home. I remember thinking what a nuisance Ursula Dearmer will be,
+and how, when things are just beginning to get interesting, I shall be
+told off to see her home.
+
+And Ursula Dearmer, the youngest but one, has gone, not at all docilely
+and diffidently, into the greatest possible danger, and come out of it.
+And here she is, wide awake and in full command of the Ostend-Dunkirk
+expedition. And instead of my seeing her off and all the way home, she
+is very thoroughly and competently seeing _me_ off.
+
+At least this was her beautiful intention.
+
+But getting out of France in war-time is not a simple matter.
+
+When we tried to follow the flight of our luggage through the station
+door we were stopped by a sentry with a rifle. We produced our
+passports. They were not enough.
+
+At the sight of us brought to halt there, all the refugees began to
+agitate their slips of paper. And on the slips we read the words
+"_Laissez-passer_."
+
+My British Red Cross lady had no "_laissez-passer_." I had only my
+sixteenth part in the "_laissez-passer_" of the Corps, and that, hidden
+away in the Commandant's breast-pocket, was a part either of the
+luncheon-party or of the interview with the Belgian Minister of War.
+
+We couldn't get military passes, for military passes take time; and the
+train was due in about fifteen minutes.
+
+And the fatherly porter had vanished, taking with him the secret of our
+luggage.
+
+It was a fatherly old French gentleman who advised us to go to the
+British _Consulat_. And it was a fatherly old French _cocher_ who drove
+us there, or rather who drove us through interminable twisted streets
+and into blind alleys and out of them till we got there.
+
+As for our luggage, we renounced it and Mr. Foster's and Dr. Hanson's
+luggage in the interests of our own safety.
+
+At last we got to the British _Consulat_. Only I think the _cocher_ took
+us to the Town Hall and the Hospital and the British Embassy and the
+Admiralty offices first.
+
+At intervals during this transit the British Red Cross lady explained
+again that she was doing the right thing in leaving Ostend. It wasn't as
+if she was leaving her post, she was going on a hospital ship. She was
+sure she had done the right thing.
+
+It was not for me to be unsympathetic to an obsession produced by a
+retreat, so I assured her again and again that if there ever was a right
+thing she had done it. My heart bled for this poor lady, abandoned by
+the organization that had brought her out.
+
+In the courtyard of the _Consulat_ we met a stalwart man in khaki, who
+smiled as a god might smile at our trouble, and asked us why on earth we
+hadn't got a passage on the naval transport _Victoria_, sailing at three
+o'clock. We said nothing would have pleased us better, only we had
+never heard of the _Victoria_ and her sailing. And he took us to the
+Consul, and the Consul--who must have been buried alive in detail--gave
+us a letter to Captain King of the _Victoria_, and the _cocher_ drove us
+to the dock.
+
+Captain King was an angel. He was the head of a whole hierarchy of
+angels who called themselves ship's officers.
+
+There is no difficulty about our transport. But we must be at the docks
+by half-past two.
+
+We have an hour before us; so we drive back to the station to see if,
+after all, we can find that luggage. Not that we in the least expected
+to find it, for we had been told that it had gone on by the train to
+Boulogne.
+
+Now the British Red Cross lady declared many times that but for me and
+my mastery of the French language she would never have got out of
+Dunkirk. And it was true that I looked on her more as a sacred charge
+than as a valuable ally in the struggle with French sentries, porters
+and officials. As for the _cocher_, I didn't consider him valuable at
+all, even as the driver of an ancient _fiacre_. And yet it was the lady
+and the _cocher_ who found the luggage. It seems that the station hall
+is open between trains, and they had simply gone into the hall and seen
+it there, withdrawn bashfully into a corner. The _cocher's_ face as he
+announces his discovery makes the War seem a monstrous illusion. It is
+incredible that anything so joyous should exist in a country under
+German invasion.
+
+We drive again to the _Victoria_ in her dock. The stewards run about and
+do things for us. They give us lunch. They give us tea. And the other
+officers come in and make large, simple jokes about bombs and mines and
+submarines. We have the ship all to ourselves except for a few British
+soldiers, recruits sent out to Antwerp too soon and sent back again for
+more training.
+
+They looked, poor boys, far sadder than the Belgian Army.
+
+And I walk the decks; I walk the decks till we get to Dover. My sacred
+charge appears and disappears. Every now and then I see her engaged in
+earnest conversation with the ship's officers; and I wonder whether she
+is telling them that she has not really left her post and that she is
+sure she has done right. I am no longer concerned about my own post, for
+I feel so sure that I am going back to it.
+
+To-morrow I shall get the money from our Committee; and on Thursday I
+shall go back.
+
+And yet--and yet--I must have had a premonition. We are approaching
+England. I can see the white cliffs.
+
+And I hate the white cliffs. I hate them with a sudden and mysterious
+hatred.
+
+More especially I hate the cliffs of Dover. For it is there that we must
+land. I should not have thought it possible to hate the white coast of
+my own country when she is at war.
+
+And now I know that I hate it because it is not the coast of Flanders.
+Which would be absurd if I were really going back again.
+
+Yes, I must have had a premonition.
+
+
+[_Dover._]
+
+We have landed now. I have said good-bye to Captain King and all the
+ship's officers and thanked them for their kindness. I have said
+good-bye to the British Red Cross lady, who is not going to London.
+
+And I go to the station telegraph-office to send off five wires.
+
+I am sending off the five wires when I hear feet returning through the
+station hall. The Red Cross lady is back again. She is saying this time
+that she is _really_ sure she has done the right thing.
+
+And again I assure her that she has.
+
+Well--there are obsessions and obsessions. I do not know whether I have
+done the right thing or not in leaving Flanders (or, for that matter, in
+leaving Ghent). All that I know is that I love it and that I have left
+it. And that I want to go back.
+
+
+
+
+POSTSCRIPT
+
+
+There have been changes in that Motor Field Ambulance Corps that set out
+for Flanders on the 25th of September, 1914.
+
+Its Commandant has gone from it to join the Royal Army Medical Corps. A
+few of the original volunteers have dropped out and others have taken
+their places, and it is larger now than it was, and better organized.
+
+But whoever went and whoever stayed, its four field-women have remained
+at the Front. Two of them are attached to the Third Division of the
+Belgian Army; all four have distinguished themselves by their devotion
+to that Army and by their valour, and they have all received the Order
+of Leopold II., the highest Belgian honour ever given to women.
+
+The Commandant, being a man, has the Order of Leopold I. Mr.
+Ashmead-Bartlett and Mr. Philip Gibbs and Dr. Souttar have described his
+heroic action at the Battle of Dixmude on the 22nd of October, 1914,
+when he went into the cellars of the burning and toppling Town Hall to
+rescue the wounded. And from that day to this the whole Corps--old
+volunteers and new--has covered itself with glory.
+
+On our two chauffeurs, Tom and Bert, the glory lies quite thick. "Tom"
+(if I may quote from my own story of the chauffeurs) "Tom was in the
+battle of Dixmude. At the order of his commandant he drove his car
+straight into the thick of it, over the ruins of a shattered house that
+blocked the way. He waited with his car while all the bombs that he had
+ever dreamed of crashed around him, and houses flamed, and tottered and
+fell. 'Pretty warm, ain't it?' was Tom's comment.
+
+"Four days later he was waiting at Oudekappele with his car when he
+heard that the Hospital of Saint-Jean at Dixmude was being shelled and
+that the Belgian military man who had been sent with a motor-car to
+carry off the wounded had been turned back by the fragment of a shell
+that dropped in front of him. Tom thereupon drove into Dixmude to the
+Hospital of Saint-Jean and removed from it two wounded soldiers and two
+aged and paralysed civilians who had sheltered there, and brought them
+to Furnes. The military ambulance men then followed his lead, and the
+Hospital was emptied. That evening it was destroyed by a shell.
+
+"And Bert--it was Bert who drove his ambulance into Kams-Kappele to the
+barricade by the railway. It was Bert who searched in a shell-hole to
+pick out three wounded from among thirteen dead; who with the help of a
+Belgian priest, carried the three several yards to his car, under fire,
+and who brought them in safety to Furnes."
+
+And the others, the brave "Chaplain," and "Mr. Riley," and "Mr.
+Lambert," have also proved themselves.
+
+But when I think of the Corps it is chiefly of the four field-women that
+I think--the two "women of Pervyse," and the other two who joined them
+at their dangerous _poste_.
+
+Both at Furnes and Pervyse they worked all night, looking after their
+wounded; sometimes sleeping on straw in a room shared by the Belgian
+troops, when there was no other shelter for them in the bombarded town.
+One of them has driven a heavy ambulance car--in a pitch-black night,
+along a road raked by shell-fire, and broken here and there into great
+pits--to fetch a load of wounded, a performance that would have racked
+the nerves of any male chauffeur ever born. She has driven the same car,
+_alone_, with five German prisoners for her passengers. The four women
+served at Pervyse (the town nearest to the firing-line) in "Mrs.
+Torrence's" dressing-station--a cellar only twenty yards behind the
+Belgian trenches. In that cellar, eight feet square and lighted and
+ventilated only by a slit in the wall, two lived for three weeks,
+sleeping on straw, eating what they could get, drinking water that had
+passed through a cemetery where nine hundred Germans are buried. They
+had to burn candles night and day. Here the wounded were brought as they
+fell in the trenches, and were tended until the ambulance came to take
+them to the base hospital at Furnes.
+
+Day in, day out, and all night long, with barely an interval for a wash
+or a change of clothing, the women stayed on, the two always, and the
+four often, till the engineers built them a little hut for a
+dressing-station; they stayed till the Germans shelled them out of their
+little hut.
+
+This is only a part of what they have done. The finest part will never
+be known, for it was done in solitary places and in the dark, when
+special correspondents are asleep in their hotels. There was no
+limelight on the road between Dixmude and Furnes, or among the blood and
+straw in the cellar at Pervyse.
+
+And Miss Ashley-Smith (who is now Mrs. McDougall)--her escape from Ghent
+(when she had no more to do there) was as heroic as her return.
+
+Since then she has gone back to the Front and done splendid service in
+her own Corps, the First Aid Nursing Yeomanry.
+
+ M. S.
+
+ July 15th, 1915.
+
+
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
+
+
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+
+[Footnote 1: It would be truer to say she was in love with duty which
+was often dangerous.]
+
+[Footnote 2: She very soon let us know why. "Followed" is the wrong
+word.]
+
+[Footnote 3: He didn't. People never do mean these things.]
+
+[Footnote 4: This only means that, whether you attended to it or not
+(you generally didn't), as long as you were in Belgium, your
+sub-consciousness was never entirely free from the fear of Uhlans--of
+Uhlans in the flesh. The illusion of valour is the natural, healthy
+reaction of your psyche against its fear and your indifference to its
+fear.]
+
+[Footnote 5: Nobody need have been surprised. She had distinguished
+herself in other wars.]
+
+[Footnote 6: One is a church and not a cathedral.]
+
+[Footnote 7: I am puzzled about this date. It stands in my ambulance
+Day-Book as Saturday, 3rd, with a note that the British came into Ghent
+on their way to Antwerp on the evening of that day. Now I believe there
+were no British in Antwerp before the evening of Sunday, the 4th, yet
+"Dr. Wilson" and Mr. Davidson, going into Saint Nicolas before us, saw
+the British there, and "Mrs. Torrence" and "Janet McNeil" saw more
+British come into Ghent in the evening. I was ill with fever the day
+after the run into Antwerp, and got behindhand with my Day-Book. So it
+seems safest to assume that I made a wrong entry and that we went into
+Antwerp on Sunday, and to record Saturday's events as spreading over the
+whole day. Similarly the events that the Day-Book attributes to Monday
+must have belonged to Tuesday. And if Tuesday's events were really
+Wednesday's, that clears up a painful doubt I had as to Wednesday, which
+came into my Day-Book as an empty extra which I couldn't account for in
+any way. There I was with a day left over and nothing to put into it.
+And yet Wednesday, the 7th, was the first day of the real siege of
+Antwerp. On Thursday, the 8th, I started clear.]
+
+[Footnote 8: It wasn't. This was only the first slender trickling. The
+flood came three days later with the bombardment of the city.]
+
+[Footnote 9: Of all the thousands and thousands of refugees whom I have
+seen I have only seen three weep, and they were three out of six hundred
+who had just disembarked at the Prince of Wales's Pier at Dover. But in
+Belgium not one tear.]
+
+[Footnote 10: This is all wrong. The main stream went as straight as it
+could for the sea-coast--Holland or Ostend.]
+
+[Footnote 11: The outer forts were twelve miles away.]
+
+[Footnote 12: At the time of writing--February 19th, 1915. My Day-Book
+gives no record of anything but the hospitals we visited.]
+
+[Footnote 13: There must be something wrong here, for the place was, I
+believe, a convent.]
+
+[Footnote 14: Every woman did.]
+
+[Footnote 15: This was made up to her afterwards! Her cup fairly ran
+over.]
+
+[Footnote 16: I have heard a distinguished alienist say that this
+reminiscent sensation is a symptom of approaching insanity. As it is not
+at all uncommon, there must be a great many lunatics going about.]
+
+[Footnote 17: Except that nobody had any time to attend to us, I can't
+think why we weren't all four of us arrested for spies. We hadn't any
+business to be looking for the position of the Belgian batteries.]
+
+[Footnote 18: More than likely our appearance there stopped the firing.]
+
+[Footnote 19: I have since been told that he was not. And I think in any
+case I am wrong about his "matchboard" car. It must have been somebody
+else's. In fact, I'm very much afraid that "he" was somebody else--that
+I hadn't the luck really to meet him.]
+
+[Footnote 20: He did. She was not a lady whom it was possible to leave
+behind on such an expedition.]
+
+[Footnote 21: I'm inclined to think it may have been the dogs of
+Belgium, after all. I can't think where the guns could have been.
+Antwerp had fallen. It might have been the bombardment of Melle,
+though.]
+
+[Footnote 22: The fate of "Mr. Lambert" and the scouting-car was one of
+those things that ought never to have happened. It turned out that the
+car was not the property of his paper, but his own car, hired and
+maintained by him at great expense; that this brave and devoted young
+American had joined our Corps before it left England and gone out to the
+front to wait for us. And he was kept waiting long after we got there.
+
+But if he didn't see as much service at Ghent as he undertook to see
+(though he did some fine things on his own even there), it was made up
+to him in Flanders afterwards, when, with the Commandant and other
+members of the Corps, he distinguished himself by his gallantry at
+Furnes and in the Battle of Dixmude.
+
+(For an account of his wife's services see Postscript.)]
+
+[Footnote 23: I record these details (March 11th, 1915) because the
+Commandant accused me subsequently of a total lack of "balance" upon
+this occasion.]
+
+[Footnote 24: This is no reflection on Tom's courage. His chief
+objection was to driving three women so near the German lines. The same
+consideration probably weighed with the Commandant and M. ----.]
+
+[Footnote 25: The whole thing was a piece of rank insubordination. The
+Commandant was entirely right to forbid the expedition, and we were
+entirely wrong in disobeying him. But it was one of those wrong things
+that I would do again to-morrow.]
+
+[Footnote 26: Antwerp had surrendered on Friday, the 9th.]
+
+[Footnote 27: All the same it was splendidly equipped and managed.]
+
+[Footnote 28: Even now, when I am asked if I did any nursing when I was
+in Belgium I have to think before I answer: "Only for one morning and
+one night"--it would still be much truer to say, "I was nursing all the
+time."]
+
+[Footnote 29: My Day-Book ends abruptly here; and I have no note of the
+events that followed.]
+
+[Footnote 30: Incorrect. It was, I believe, the uniform of the First Aid
+Nursing Yeomanry Corps.]
+
+[Footnote 31: It was so bad that it made me forget to pack the
+Commandant's Burberry and his Gillette razors and his pipe.]
+
+[Footnote 32: The Commandant had had an adventure. The Belgian guide
+mistook the road and brought the car straight into the German lines
+instead of the British lines where it had been sent. If the Germans
+hadn't been preoccupied with firing at that moment, the Commandant and
+Ascot and the Belgian would all have been taken prisoner.]
+
+[Footnote 33: Even now, five months after, I cannot tell whether it was
+or was not insanity.]
+
+[Footnote 34: It is really dreadful to think of the nuisance we must
+have been to these dear people on the eve of their own flight.]
+
+[Footnote 35: The Commandant had his own scheme for going back to Ghent,
+which fortunately he did not carry out.]
+
+[Footnote 36: This girl's courage and self-devotion were enough to
+establish our innocence--they needed no persuasion. But I still hold
+myself responsible for her going, since it was my failure to control my
+obsession that first of all put the idea in her head.]
+
+[Footnote 37: I saw nothing sinister about this arrangement at the time.
+It seemed incredible to me that I should not return.]
+
+[Footnote 38: Having saved the suit-case, I guarded it as a sacred
+thing. But Dr. Hanson's best clothes and her surgical instruments were
+in the tin box after all.]
+
+
+
+
+The following pages contain advertisements of books by the same author
+or on kindred subjects.
+
+
+
+
+By THE SAME AUTHOR
+
+The Return of the Prodigal
+
+_Cloth, 12mo. $1.35_
+
+
+"These are stories to be read leisurely with a feeling for the stylish
+and the careful workmanship which is always a part of May Sinclair's
+work. They need no recommendation to those who know the author's work
+and one of the things on which we may congratulate ourselves is the fact
+that so many Americans are her reading friends."--_Kansas City
+Gazette-Globe._
+
+"They are the product of a master workman who has both skill and art,
+and who scorns to produce less than the best."--_Buffalo Express._
+
+"Always a clever writer, Miss Sinclair at her best is an exceptionally
+interesting one, and in several of the tales bound together in this new
+volume we have her at her best."--_N. Y. Times._
+
+" ... All of which show the same sensitive apprehension of unusual cases
+and delicate relations, and reveal a truth which would be hidden from
+the hasty or blunt observer."--_Boston Transcript._
+
+"One of the best of the many collections of stories published this
+season."--_N. Y. Sun._
+
+" ... All these stories are of deep interest because all of them are out
+of the rut."--_Kentucky Post._
+
+"Let no one who cares for good and sincere work neglect this
+book."--_London Post._
+
+"The stories are touched with a peculiar delicacy and
+whimsicality."--_Los Angeles Times._
+
+
+PUBLISHED BY
+
+THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
+
+64-66 Fifth Avenue, New York
+
+
+
+
+BY THE SAME AUTHOR
+
+The Three Sisters
+
+By MAY SINCLAIR
+
+Author of "The Divine Fire," "The Return of the Prodigal," etc.
+
+_Cloth, 12mo, $1.35_
+
+
+Every reader of "The Divine Fire," in fact every reader of any of Miss
+Sinclair's books, will at once accord her unlimited praise for her
+character work. "The Three Sisters" reveals her at her best. It is a
+story of temperament, made evident not through tiresome analyses but by
+means of a series of dramatic incidents. The sisters of the title
+represent three distinct types of womankind. In their reaction under
+certain conditions Miss Sinclair is not only telling a story of
+tremendous interest but she is really showing a cross section of life.
+
+"Once again Miss Sinclair has shown us that among the women writers
+to-day she can be acclaimed as without rival in the ability to draw a
+character and to suggest atmosphere.... In "The Three Sisters" she gives
+full measure of her qualities. It is in every way a characteristic
+novel."--_London Standard._
+
+"Miss Sinclair's singular power as an artist lies in her identification with
+nature.... She has seldom written a more moving story."--_Metropolitan._
+
+"It is a book powerful alike in its description of the background and in
+its analysis of character.... This story confirms the impression of her
+unusual ability."--_Outlook._
+
+"Miss Sinclair's most important book."--_Reedy's Mirror._
+
+"'The Three Sisters' is a powerful novel, written with both vigor and
+delicacy, dramatic, absorbingly interesting."--_New York Times._
+
+
+THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
+
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+
+
+
+
+The Pentecost of Calamity
+
+By OWEN WISTER
+
+Author of "The Virginian," etc.
+
+_Boards, 16mo, 50 cents_
+
+
+The author of "The Virginian" has written a new book which describes,
+more forcibly and clearly than any other account so far published, the
+meaning, to America, of the tragic changes which are taking place in the
+hearts and minds of the German people.
+
+Written with ease and charm of style, it is prose that holds the reader
+for its very beauty, even as it impresses him with its force. It is
+doubtful whether there will come out of the entire mass of war
+literature a more understanding or suggestive survey.
+
+"Owen Wister has depicted the tragedy of Germany and has hinted at the
+possible tragedy of the United States.... We wish it could be read in
+full by every American."--_The Outlook._
+
+
+
+
+The Military Unpreparedness of the United States
+
+By FREDERIC L. HUIDEKOPER
+
+_Cloth, 8vo_
+
+
+By many army officers the author of this work is regarded as the
+foremost military expert in the United States. For nine years he has
+been striving to awaken the American people to a knowledge of the
+weaknesses of their land forces and the defencelessness of the country.
+Out of his extensive study and research he has compiled the present
+volume, which represents the last word on this subject. It comes at a
+time when its importance cannot be overestimated, and in the eight
+hundred odd pages given over to the discussion there are presented facts
+and arguments with which every citizen should be familiar. Mr.
+Huidekoper's writings in this field are already well known. These
+hitherto, however, have been largely confined to magazines and
+pamphlets, but his book deals with the matters under consideration with
+that frankness and authority evidenced in these previous contributions
+and much more comprehensively.
+
+
+THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
+
+Publishers 64-66 Fifth Avenue New York
+
+
+
+
+AN IMPORTANT NEW WORK
+
+With the Russian Army
+
+By Col. ROBERT McCORMICK
+
+_Illustrated, 8vo_
+
+
+This book deals with the author's experiences in the war area. The work
+traces the cause of the war from the treaty of 1878 through the Balkan
+situation. It contains many facts drawn from personal observation, for
+Col. McCormick has had opportunities such as have been given to no other
+man during the present engagements. He has been at the various
+headquarters and actually in the trenches. One of the most interesting
+chapters of the volume is the concluding one dealing with great
+personalities of the war from first-hand acquaintance.
+
+The work contains a considerable amount of material calculated to upset
+generally accepted ideas, comparisons of the fighting forces, and much
+else that is fresh and original.
+
+
+THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
+
+Publishers 64-66 Fifth Avenue New York
+
+
+
+
+The World War:
+
+How it Looks to the Nations Involved and What it Means to Us
+
+By ELBERT FRANCIS BALDWIN
+
+_Decorated cloth, 12mo, $1.25_
+
+
+The present war in Europe has called forth a great many books bearing on
+its different phases, but in the majority of instances these have been
+written from the standpoint of some one of the nations. Elbert Francis
+Baldwin has here, however, brought together within the compass of a
+single volume a survey of the entire field.
+
+Mr. Baldwin was in Europe at the outbreak of hostilities. He mingled
+with the people, observing their spirit and temper more intimately than
+it has been permitted most writers to do, and in consequence the
+descriptions which he gives of the German, or French, or English, or
+Russian attitude are truer and more complete than those found in
+previous studies of the war. Mr. Baldwin's statements are calm and just
+in conclusion. When discussing the German side he has included all of
+the factors which the Germans think important, and assimilated wholly
+the German feeling, as he has done in his considerations of the other
+countries.
+
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+comprehensive survey of the situation.... One of the most valuable
+contributions to the literature of the World War."--_Portland Express._
+
+"The dramatic story ... is unusually calm and dispassionate,
+after the modern historical manner, with a great deal of fresh
+information."--_Philadelphia North American._
+
+"Sets down without bias the real causes of the Great War."--_New York
+Times._
+
+
+THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
+
+Publishers 64-66 Fifth Avenue New York
+
+
+
+
+Russia and the World
+
+By STEPHEN GRAHAM
+
+Author of "With the Russian Pilgrims to Jerusalem," "With Poor
+Immigrants to America," etc.
+
+_Illustrated, cloth, 8vo, $2.00_
+
+
+At the outbreak of the present European war Mr. Graham was in Russia,
+and his book opens, therefore, with a description of the way the news of
+war was received on the Chinese frontier, one thousand miles from a
+railway station, where he happened to be when the Tsar's summons came.
+Following this come other chapters on Russia and the War, considering
+such questions as, Is It a Last War?, Why Russia Is Fighting, The
+Economic Isolation of Russia, An Aeroplane Hunt at Warsaw, Suffering
+Poland: A Belgium of the East, and The Soldier and the Cross.
+
+But "Russia and the World" is not by any means wholly a war book. It is
+a comprehensive survey of Russian problems. Inasmuch as the War is at
+present one of her problems, it receives its due consideration. It has
+been, however, Mr. Graham's intention to supply the very definite need
+that there is for enlightenment in English and American circles as to
+the Russian nation, what its people think and feel on great world
+matters. On almost every country there are more books and more concrete
+information than on his chosen land. In fact, "Russia and the World" may
+be regarded as one of the very first to deal with it in any adequate
+fashion.
+
+"It shows the author creeping as near as he was allowed to the firing
+line. It gives broad views of difficult questions, like the future of
+the Poles and the Jews. It rises into high politics, forecasts the terms
+of peace and the rearrangement of the world, east and west, that may
+follow. But the salient thing in it is its interpretation for Western
+minds of the spirit of Russia."--_London Times._
+
+
+THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
+
+Publishers 64-66 Fifth Avenue New York
+
+
+
+
+German World Policies
+
+(Der Deutsche Gedanke in der Welt)
+
+By PAUL ROHRBACH
+
+Translated by DR. EDMUND VON MACH
+
+_Cloth, 12mo, $1.25_
+
+
+Paul Rohrbach has been for several years the most popular author of
+books on politics and economics in Germany. He is described by his
+translator as a "constructive optimist," one who, at the same time, is
+an incisive critic of those shortcomings which have kept Germany, as he
+thinks, from playing the great part to which she is called. In this
+volume Dr. Rohrbach gives a true insight into the character of the
+German people, their aims, fears and aspirations.
+
+Though it was written before the war started and has not been hastily
+put together, it still possesses peculiar significance now, for in its
+analysis of the German idea of culture and its dissemination, in its
+consideration of German foreign policies and moral conquests, it is an
+important contribution to the widespread speculation now current on
+these matters.
+
+"Dr. von Mach renders an extraordinary service to his country in making
+known to English readers at this time a book like Rohrbach's."--_New
+York Globe._
+
+"A clear insight into Prussian ideals."--_Boston Transcript._
+
+"A valuable, significant, and most informing book."--_New York Tribune._
+
+
+THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
+
+Publishers 64-66 Fifth Avenue New York
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of A Journal of Impressions in Belgium, by
+May Sinclair
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+
+Project Gutenberg's A Journal of Impressions in Belgium, by May Sinclair
+
+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: A Journal of Impressions in Belgium
+
+Author: May Sinclair
+
+Release Date: February 20, 2010 [EBook #31332]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IMPRESSIONS IN BELGIUM ***
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+Produced by Suzanne Shell, Tamise Totterdell and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
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+</pre>
+
+
+<p class="figcenterns">
+<img src="images/cover.jpg" height="600" width="393" alt="Cover Image" />
+</p>
+
+<h1>A JOURNAL OF<br />
+IMPRESSIONS IN BELGIUM</h1>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/macmillan.png" width="200" height="66" alt="The MM Co." />
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+THE MACMILLAN COMPANY<br />
+<br />
+NEW YORK · BOSTON · CHICAGO · DALLAS<br />
+ATLANTA · SAN FRANCISCO<br />
+<br />
+MACMILLAN &amp; CO., <span class="smcap">Limited</span><br />
+<br />
+LONDON · BOMBAY · CALCUTTA<br />
+MELBOURNE<br />
+<br />
+THE MACMILLAN CO. OF CANADA, <span class="smcap">Ltd.</span><br />
+<br />
+TORONTO</p>
+
+<h1 class="spaced">A JOURNAL OF<br />
+IMPRESSIONS IN BELGIUM</h1>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="bold">BY<br />
+<span class="big">MAY SINCLAIR</span></span><br />
+Author of "The Three Sisters," "The Return of<br />
+The Prodigal," etc.</p>
+
+<p class="centerspaced">
+<img src="images/ny.png" height="28" width="100" alt="New York" /><br />
+<span class="big">THE MACMILLAN COMPANY<br />
+1915</span><br />
+<i>All rights reserved</i></p>
+
+<p class="centerspaced">
+<span class="smcap">Copyright</span>, 1915<br />
+<br />
+<span class="smcap">By</span> MAY SINCLAIR<br />
+<br />
+Set up and electrotyped. Published, September, 1915</p>
+
+<h2 class="spaced">DEDICATION</h2>
+
+<p class="center">(<i>To a Field Ambulance in Flanders</i>)</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+I do not call you comrades,<br />
+You,<br />
+Who did what I only dreamed.<br />
+Though you have taken my dream,<br />
+And dressed yourselves in its beauty and its glory,<br />
+Your faces are turned aside as you pass by.<br />
+I am nothing to you,<br />
+For I have done no more than dream.<br />
+<br />
+Your faces are like the face of her whom you follow,<br />
+Danger,<br />
+The Beloved who looks backward as she runs, calling to her lovers,<br />
+The Huntress who flies before her quarry, trailing her lure.<br />
+She called to me from her battle-places,<br />
+She flung before me the curved lightning of her shells for a lure;<br />
+And when I came within sight of her,<br />
+She turned aside,<br />
+And hid her face from me.</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+But you she loved;<br />
+You she touched with her hand;<br />
+For you the white flames of her feet stayed in their running;<br />
+She kept you with her in her fields of Flanders,<br />
+Where you go,<br />
+Gathering your wounded from among her dead.<br />
+Grey night falls on your going and black night on your returning.<br />
+You go<br />
+Under the thunder of the guns, the shrapnel's rain and the curved lightning of the shells,<br />
+And where the high towers are broken,<br />
+And houses crack like the staves of a thin crate filled with fire;<br />
+Into the mixing smoke and dust of roof and walls torn asunder<br />
+You go;<br />
+And only my dream follows you.</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+That is why I do not speak of you,<br />
+Calling you by your names.<br />
+Your names are strung with the names of ruined and immortal cities,<br />
+Termonde and Antwerp, Dixmude and Ypres and Furnes,<br />
+Like jewels on one chain&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+Thus,<br />
+In the high places of Heaven,<br />
+They shall tell all your names.</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+<span class="sinclair">May Sinclair.</span><br />
+March 8th, 1915.<br />
+</p>
+
+<h2 class="spaced">INTRODUCTION</h2>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">This</span> is a "Journal of Impressions," and it is nothing
+more. It will not satisfy people who want accurate
+and substantial information about Belgium, or
+about the War, or about Field Ambulances and Hospital
+Work, and do not want to see any of these things
+"across a temperament." For the Solid Facts and
+the Great Events they must go to such books as Mr.
+E. A. Powell's "Fighting in Flanders," or Mr. Frank
+Fox's "The Agony of Belgium," or Dr. H. S. Souttar's
+"A Surgeon in Belgium," or "A Woman's Experiences
+in the Great War," by Louise Mack.</p>
+
+<p>For many of these impressions I can claim only a
+psychological accuracy; some were insubstantial to
+the last degree, and very few were actually set down
+there and then, on the spot, as I have set them down
+here. This is only a Journal in so far as it is a record
+of days, as faithful as I could make it in every detail,
+and as direct as circumstances allowed. But circumstances
+seldom <i>did</i> allow, and I was always behindhand
+with my Journal&mdash;a week behind with the first
+day of the seventeen, four months behind with the last.</p>
+
+<p>This was inevitable. For in the last week of the
+Siege of Antwerp, when the wounded were being
+brought into Ghent by hundreds, and when the fighting
+came closer and closer to the city, and at the end, when
+the Germans were driving you from Ghent to Bruges,
+and from Bruges to Ostend and from Ostend to Dunkirk,
+you could not sit down to write your impressions,
+even if you were cold-blooded enough to want to. It
+was as much as you could do to scribble the merest
+note of what happened in your Day-Book.</p>
+
+<p>But when you had made fast each day with its note,
+your impressions were safe, far safer than if you had
+tried to record them in their flux as they came. However
+far behind I might be with my Journal, it was
+<i>kept</i>. It is not written "up," or round and about the
+original notes in my Day-Book, it is simply written <i>out</i>.
+Each day of the seventeen had its own quality and was
+soaked in its own atmosphere; each had its own unique
+and incorruptible memory, and the slight lapse of time,
+so far from dulling or blurring that memory, crystallized
+it and made it sharp and clean. And in writing
+<i>out</i> I have been careful never to go behind or beyond
+the day, never to add anything, but to leave each moment
+as it was. I have set down the day's imperfect
+or absurd impression, in all its imperfection or absurdity,
+and the day's crude emotion in all its crudity,
+rather than taint its reality with the discreet reflections
+that came after.</p>
+
+<p>I make no apology for my many errors&mdash;where
+they were discoverable I have corrected them in a footnote;
+to this day I do not know how wildly wrong I
+may have been about kilometres and the points of the
+compass, and the positions of batteries and the movements
+of armies; but there were other things of which
+I was dead sure; and this record has at least the value
+of a "human document."</p>
+
+<p class="tbspace">There is one question that I may be asked: "Why,
+when you had the luck to go out with a Field Ambulance
+Corps distinguished by its gallantry&mdash;why
+in heaven's name have you not told the story of its
+heroism?"</p>
+
+<p>Well&mdash;I have not told it for several excellent reasons.
+When I set out to keep a Journal I pledged
+myself to set down only what I had seen or felt, and
+to avoid as far as possible the second-hand; and it was
+my misfortune that I saw very little of the field-work
+of the Corps. Besides, the Corps itself was then in its
+infancy, and it is its infancy&mdash;its irrepressible, half-irresponsible,
+whole engaging infancy&mdash;that I have
+touched here. After those seventeen days at Ghent
+it grew up in all conscience. It was at Furnes and
+Dixmude and La Panne, after I had left it, that its
+most memorable deeds were done.<a name="FNanchor_A_1" id="FNanchor_A_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_1" class="fnanchor">[A]</a></p>
+
+<p>And this story of the Corps is not mine to tell. Part
+of it has been told already by Dr. Souttar, and part by
+Mr. Philip Gibbs, and others. The rest is yet to come.</p>
+
+<p class="sign">
+<span class="sinclair2">M. S.</span><br />
+July 15th, 1915.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p>
+<a name="Footnote_A_1" id="Footnote_A_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_A_1"><span class="label">[A]</span></a> See Postscript.</p>
+</div>
+
+<h1 class="spaced">A JOURNAL OF<br />
+IMPRESSIONS IN BELGIUM</h1>
+
+<h2 class="spaced">A JOURNAL OF IMPRESSIONS<br />
+IN BELGIUM</h2>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="center">[<i>September 25th, 1914.</i>]</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">After</span> the painful births and deaths of I don't
+know how many committees, after six weeks'
+struggling with something we imagined to be
+Red Tape, which proved to be the combined egoism
+of several persons all desperately anxious to "get
+to the Front," and desperately afraid of somebody
+else getting there too, and getting there first, we
+are actually off. Impossible to describe the mysterious
+processes by which we managed it. I think
+the War Office kicked us out twice, and the Admiralty
+once, though what we were doing with the
+Admiralty I don't to this day understand. The
+British Red Cross kicked us steadily all the time,
+on general principles; the American snubbed us
+rather badly; what the French said to us I don't remember,
+and I can't think that we carried persistency
+so far as to apply to the Russian and the Japanese.
+Many of our scheme perished in their own
+vagueness. Others, vivid and adventurous, were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span>
+checked by the first encounter with the crass reality.
+At one time, I remember, we were to have sent out
+a detachment of stalwart Amazons in khaki breeches
+who were to dash out on to the battle-field, reconnoitre,
+and pick up the wounded and carry them
+away slung over their saddles. The only difficulty
+was to get the horses. But the author of the
+scheme&mdash;who had bought her breeches&mdash;had allowed
+for that. The horses were to be caught on
+the battle-field; as the wounded and dead dropped
+from their saddles the Amazons were to leap into
+them and ride off. On this system "remounts"
+were also to be supplied. Whenever a horse was
+shot dead under its rider, an Amazon was to dash
+up with another whose rider had been shot dead.
+It was all perfectly simple and only needed a little
+"organization." For four weeks the lure of the
+battle-field kept our volunteers dancing round the
+War Office and the Red Cross Societies, and for
+four weeks their progress to the Front was frustrated
+by Lord Kitchener. Some dropped off disheartened,
+but others came on, and a regenerated
+committee dealt with them. Finally the thing crystallized
+into a Motor Ambulance Corps. An awful
+sanity came over the committee, chastened by its
+sufferings, and the volunteers, under pressure, definitely
+renounced the battle-field.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span>
+Then somebody said, "Let's help the Belgian
+refugees." From that moment our course was
+clear. Everybody was perfectly willing that we
+should help the refugees, provided we relinquished
+all claim on the wounded. The Belgian Legation
+was enchanted. It gave passports to a small private
+commission of inquiry under our Commandant
+to go out to Belgium and send in a report. At Ostend
+the commission of inquiry whittled itself down
+to the one energetic person who had taken it out.
+And before we knew where we were our Ambulance
+Corps was accepted by the Belgian Red Cross.</p>
+
+<p>Only we had not got the ambulances.</p>
+
+<p>And though we had got some money, we had not
+got enough. This was really our good luck, for it
+saved us from buying the wrong kind of motor ambulance
+car. But at first the blow staggered us.
+Then, by some abrupt, incalculable turn of destiny,
+the British Red Cross, which had kicked us so persistently,
+came to our help and gave us all the ambulances
+we wanted.</p>
+
+<p>And we are off.</p>
+
+<p>There are thirteen of us: The Commandant,
+and Dr. Haynes and Dr. Bird under him; and Mrs.
+Torrence, a trained nurse and midwife, who can
+drive a motor car through anything, and take it to
+bits and put it together again; Janet McNeil, also an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span>
+expert motorist, and Ursula Dearmer and Mrs.
+Lambert, Red Cross emergency nurses; Mr. Grierson,
+Mr. Foster and Mr. Riley, stretcher-bearers,
+and two chauffeurs and me. I don't know where I
+come in. But they've called me the Secretary and
+Reporter, which sounds very fine, and I am to keep
+the accounts (Heaven help them!) and write the
+Commandant's reports, and toss off articles for the
+daily papers, to make a little money for the Corps.
+We've got some already, raised by the Commandant's
+Report and Appeal that we published in the
+<i>Daily Telegraph</i> and <i>Daily Chronicle</i>. I shall never
+forget how I sprinted down Fleet Street to get it
+in in time, four days before we started.</p>
+
+<p>And we have landed at Ostend.</p>
+
+<p>I'll confess now that I dreaded Ostend more than
+anything. We had been told that there were horrors
+upon horrors in Ostend. Children were being
+born in the streets, and the state of the bathing-machines
+where the refugees lived was unspeakable.
+I imagined the streets of Ostend crowded with
+refugee women bearing children, and the Digue
+covered with the horrific bathing-machines. On
+the other hand, Ostend was said to be the safest
+spot in Europe. No Germans there. No Zeppelins.
+No bombs.</p>
+
+<p>And we found the bathing-machines planted out<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span>
+several miles from the town, almost invisible specks
+on a vanishing shore-line. The refugees we met
+walking about the streets of Ostend were in fairly
+good case and bore themselves bravely. But the
+town had been bombarded the night before and our
+hotel had been the object of very special attentions.
+We chose it (the "Terminus") because it lay close
+to the landing-stage and saved us the trouble of
+going into the town to look for quarters. It was
+under the same roof as the railway station, where
+we proposed to leave our ambulance cars and heavy
+luggage. And we had no difficulty whatever in getting
+rooms for the whole thirteen of us. There was
+no sort of competition for rooms in that hotel.
+I said to myself, "If Ostend ever is bombarded,
+this railway station will be the first to suffer. And
+the hotel and the railway station are one." And
+when I was shown into a bedroom with glass windows
+all along its inner wall and a fine glass front
+looking out on to the platforms under the immense
+glass roof of the station, I said, "If this hotel
+is ever bombarded, what fun it will be for the person
+who sleeps in this bed between these glass windows."</p>
+
+<p>We were all rather tired and hungry as we met
+for dinner at seven o'clock. And when we were
+told that all lights would be put out in the town<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span>
+at eight-thirty we only thought that a municipality
+which was receiving all the refugees in Belgium
+must practise <i>some</i> economy, and that, anyway, an
+hour and a half was enough for anybody to dine
+in; and we hoped that the Commandant, who had
+gone to call on the English chaplain at the Grand
+Hôtel Littoral, would find his way back again to
+the peaceful and commodious shelter of the "Terminus."</p>
+
+<p>He did find his way back, at seven-thirty, just
+in time to give us a chance of clearing out, if we
+chose to take it. The English chaplain, it seemed,
+was surprised and dismayed at our idea of a suitable
+hotel, and he implored us to fly, instantly, before
+a bomb burst in among us (this was the first
+we had heard of the bombardment of the night before).
+The Commandant put it to us as we sat
+there: Whether would we leave that dining-room
+at once and pack our baggage all over again, and
+bundle out, and go hunting for rooms all through
+Ostend with the lights out, and perhaps fall into the
+harbour; or stay where we were and risk the off-chance
+of a bomb? And we were all very tired and
+hungry, and we had only got to the soup, and we
+had seen (and smelt) the harbour, so we said we'd
+stay where we were and risk it.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>And we stayed. A Taube hovered over us and
+never dropped its bomb.</p>
+
+<p class="centerspaced2">[<i>Saturday, 26th.</i>]</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">When</span> we compared notes the next morning we
+found that we had all gone soundly to sleep, too
+tired to take the Taube seriously, all except our two
+chauffeurs, who were downright annoyed because no
+bomb had entered their bedroom. Then we all went
+out and looked at the little hole in the roof of the
+fish market, and the big hole in the hotel garden,
+and thought of bombs as curious natural phenomena
+that never had and never would have any intimate
+connection with <i>us</i>.</p>
+
+<p>And for five weeks, ever since I knew that I must
+certainly go out with this expedition, I had been
+living in black funk; in shameful and appalling
+terror. Every night before I went to sleep I saw
+an interminable spectacle of horrors: trunks without
+heads, heads without trunks, limbs tangled in
+intestines, corpses by every roadside, murders, mutilations,
+my friends shot dead before my eyes.
+Nothing I shall ever see will be more ghastly than
+the things I have seen. And yet, before a possibly-to-be-bombarded
+Ostend this strange visualizing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span>
+process ceases, and I see nothing and feel nothing.
+Absolutely nothing; until suddenly the Commandant
+announces that he is going into the town, by himself,
+to <i>buy a hat</i>, and I get my first experience of
+real terror.</p>
+
+<p>For the hats that the Commandant buys when he
+is by himself&mdash;there are no words for them.</p>
+
+<p>This morning the Corps begins to realize its need
+of discipline. First of all, our chauffeurs have disappeared
+and can nowhere be found. The motor
+ambulances languish in inactivity on Cockerill's
+Wharf. We find one chauffeur and set him to keep
+guard over a tin of petrol. We <i>know</i> the ambulances
+can't start till heaven knows when, and
+so, first Mrs. Lambert, our emergency nurse, then,
+I regret to say, our Secretary and Reporter make
+off and sneak into the Cathedral. We are only ten
+minutes, but still we are away, and Mrs. Torrence,
+our trained nurse, is ready for us when we come
+back. We are accused bitterly of sight-seeing.
+(We had betrayed the inherent levity of our nature
+the day before, on the boat, when we looked at the
+sunset.) Then the Secretary and Reporter, utterly
+intractable, wanders forth ostensibly to look for the
+Commandant, who has disappeared, but really to
+get a sight of the motor ambulances on Cockerill's
+Wharf. And Mrs. Torrence is ready again for the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span>
+Secretary, convicted now of sight-seeing. And I
+have seen no Commandant, and no motor ambulances
+and no wharf. (Unbearable thought, that I
+may never, absolutely never, see Cockerill's Wharf!)
+It is really awful this time, because the President of
+the Belgian Red Cross is waiting to get the thirteen
+of us to the Town Hall to have our passports <i>visés</i>.
+And the Commandant is rounding up his Corps, and
+Ursula Dearmer is heaven knows where, and Mrs.
+Lambert only somewhere in the middle distance,
+and Mrs. Torrence's beautiful eyes are blazing at
+the slip-sloppiness of it all. Things were very
+different at the &mdash;&mdash; Hospital, where she was
+trained.</p>
+
+<p>Only the President remains imperturbable.</p>
+
+<p>For, after all this fuming and fretting, the President
+isn't quite ready himself, or perhaps the Town
+Hall isn't ready, and we all stroll about the streets
+of Ostend for half an hour. And the Commandant
+goes off by himself, to buy that hat.</p>
+
+<p>It is a terrible half-hour. But after all, he comes
+back without it, judging it better to bear the ills he
+has.</p>
+
+<p>Very leisurely, and with an immense consumption
+of time, we stroll and get photographed for our passports.
+Then on to the Town Hall, and then to the
+Military Depôt for our <i>Laissez-passer</i>, and then to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span>
+the Hôtel Terminus for lunch. And at one-thirty
+we are off.</p>
+
+<p>Whatever happens, whatever we see and suffer,
+nothing can take from us that run from Ostend to
+Ghent.</p>
+
+<p>We go along a straight, flat highway of grey
+stones, through flat, green fields and between thin
+lines of trees&mdash;tall and slender and delicate trees.
+There are no hedges. Only here and there a row
+of poplars or pollard willows is flung out as a screen
+against the open sky. This country is formed for
+the very expression of peace. The straight flat
+roads, the straight flat fields and straight tall trees
+stand still in an immense quiet and serenity. We
+pass low Flemish houses with white walls and red
+roofs. Their green doors and shutters are tall and
+slender like the trees, the colours vivid as if the
+paint had been laid on yesterday. It is all unspeakably
+beautiful and it comes to me with the natural,
+inevitable shock and ecstasy of beauty. I am going
+straight into the horror of war. For all I know
+it may be anywhere, here, behind this sentry; or
+there, beyond that line of willows. I don't know.
+I don't care. I cannot realize it. All that I can
+see or feel at the moment is this beauty. I look
+and look, so that I may remember it.</p>
+
+<p>Is it possible that I am enjoying myself?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>I dare not tell Mrs. Torrence. I dare not tell
+any of the others. They seem to me inspired with
+an austere sense of duty, a terrible integrity. They
+know what they are here for. To me it is incredible
+that I should be here.</p>
+
+<p>I am in Car 1., sitting beside Tom, the chauffeur;
+Mrs. Torrence is on the other side of me. Tom
+disapproves of these Flemish roads. He cannot see
+that they are beautiful. They will play the devil
+with his tyres.</p>
+
+<p>I am reminded unpleasantly that our Daimler is
+not a touring car but a motor ambulance and that
+these roads will jolt the wounded most abominably.</p>
+
+<p>There are straggling troops on the road now.
+At the nearest village all the inhabitants turn out
+to cheer us. They cry out "<i>Les Anglais!</i>" and
+laugh for joy. Perhaps they think that if the British
+Red Cross has come the British Army can't
+be far behind. But when they hear that we are
+Belgian Red Cross they are gladder than ever.
+They press round us. It is wonderful to them that
+we should have come all the way from England
+"<i>pour les Belges!</i>" Somehow the beauty of the
+landscape dies before these crowding, pressing faces.</p>
+
+<p>We pass through Bruges without seeing it. I
+have no recollection whatever of having seen the
+Belfry. We see nothing but the Canal (where we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span>
+halt to take in petrol) and more villages, more faces.
+And more troops.</p>
+
+<p>Half-way between Bruges and Ghent an embankment
+thrown up on each side of the road tells of
+possible patrols and casual shooting. It is the first
+visible intimation that the enemy may be anywhere.</p>
+
+<p>A curious excitement comes to you. I suppose
+it is excitement, though it doesn't feel like it. You
+have been drunk, very slightly drunk with the speed
+of the car. But now you are sober. Your heart
+beats quietly, steadily, but with a little creeping,
+mounting thrill in the beat. The sensation is distinctly
+pleasurable. You say to yourself, "It is
+coming. Now&mdash;or the next minute&mdash;perhaps at
+the end of the road." You have one moment of
+regret. "After all, it would be a pity if it came too
+soon, before we'd even begun our job." But the
+thrill, mounting steadily, overtakes the regret. It
+is only a little thrill, so far (for you don't really
+believe that there is any danger), but you can imagine
+the thing growing, growing steadily, till it becomes
+ecstasy. Not that you imagine anything at
+the moment. At the moment you are no longer an
+observing, reflecting being; you have ceased to be
+aware of yourself; you exist only in that quiet,
+steady thrill that is so unlike any excitement that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span>
+you have ever known. Presently you get used to
+it. "What a fool I should have been if I hadn't
+come. I wouldn't have missed this run for the
+world."</p>
+
+<p>I forget myself so far as to say this to Mrs. Torrence.
+My voice doesn't sound at all like the stern
+voice of duty. It is the voice of somebody enjoying
+herself. I am behaving exactly as I behaved
+this morning at Ostend; and cannot possibly hope
+for any sympathy from Mrs. Torrence.</p>
+
+<p>But Mrs. Torrence has unbent a little. She has
+in fact been unbending gradually ever since we left
+Ostend. There is a softer light in her beautiful
+eyes. For she is not only a trained nurse but an
+expert motorist; and a Daimler is a Daimler even
+when it's an ambulance car. From time to time
+remarks of a severely technical nature are exchanged
+between her and Tom. Still, up till now, nothing
+has passed to indicate any flagging in the relentless
+spirit of the &mdash;&mdash; Hospital.</p>
+
+<p>The next minute I hear that the desire of Mrs.
+Torrence's heart is to get into the greatest possible
+danger&mdash;and to get out of it.</p>
+
+<p>The greatest possible danger is to fall into the
+hands of the Uhlans. I feel that I should be very
+glad indeed to get out of it, but that I'm not by
+any means so keen on getting in. I say so. I con<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span>fess
+frankly that I'm afraid of Uhlans, particularly
+when they're drunk.</p>
+
+<p>But Mrs. Torrence is not afraid of anything.
+There is no German living, drunk or sober, who
+could break her spirit. Nothing dims for her that
+shining vision of the greatest possible danger. She
+does not know what fear is.</p>
+
+<p>I conceive an adoration for Mrs. Torrence, and
+a corresponding distaste for myself. For I do
+know what fear is. And in spite of the little
+steadily-mounting thrill, I remember distinctly those
+five weeks of frightful anticipation when I knew
+that I must go out to the War; the going to bed,
+night after night, drugged with horror, black horror
+that creeps like poison through your nerves; the
+falling asleep and forgetting it; the waking, morning
+after morning, with an energetic and lucid brain
+that throws out a dozen war pictures to the minute
+like a ghastly cinema show, till horror becomes terror;
+the hunger for breakfast; the queer, almost
+uncanny revival of courage that follows its satisfaction;
+the driving will that strengthens as the day
+goes on and slackens its hold at evening. I remember
+one evening very near the end; the Sunday
+evening when the Commandant dropped in, after he
+had come back from Belgium. We were stirring
+soup over the gas stove in the scullery&mdash;you<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span>
+couldn't imagine a more peaceful scene&mdash;when he
+said, "They are bringing up the heavy siege guns
+from Namur, and there is going to be a terrific
+bombardment of Antwerp, and I think it will be
+very interesting for you to see it." I remember
+replying with passionate sincerity that I would
+rather die than see it; that if I could nurse the
+wounded I would face any bombardment you please
+to name; but to go and look on and make copy out
+of the sufferings I cannot help&mdash;I couldn't and
+I wouldn't, and that was flat. And I wasn't a journalist
+any more than I was a trained nurse.</p>
+
+<p>I can still see the form of the Commandant rising
+up on the other side of the scullery stove, and in his
+pained, uncomprehending gaze and in the words
+he utters I imagine a challenge. It is as if he said,
+"Of course, if you're <i>afraid</i>"&mdash;(haven't I told him
+that I <i>am</i> afraid?).</p>
+
+<p>The gage is thrown down on the scullery floor.
+I pick it up. And that is why I am here on this
+singular adventure.</p>
+
+<p>Thus, for the next three kilometres, I meditate on
+my cowardice. It is all over as if it had never been,
+but how can I tell that it won't come back again?
+I can only hope that when the Uhlans appear I
+shall behave decently. And this place that we have
+come to is Ecloo. We are not very far from Ghent.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>A church spire, a few roofs rising above trees.
+Then many roofs all together. Then the beautiful
+grey-white foreign city.</p>
+
+<p>As we run through the streets we are followed
+by cyclists; cyclists issue from every side-street and
+pour into our road; cyclists rise up out of the ground
+to follow us. We don't realize all at once that
+it is the ambulance they are following. Bowing
+low like racers over their handle-bars, they shoot
+past us; they slacken pace and keep alongside, they
+shoot ahead; the cyclists are most fearfully excited.
+It dawns on us that they are escorting us; that they
+are racing each other; that they are bringing the
+news of our arrival to the town. They behave as
+if we were the vanguard of the British Army.</p>
+
+<p>We pass the old Military Hospital&mdash;<i>Hôpital
+Militaire</i> No. I.&mdash;and presently arrive at the Flandria
+Palace Hotel, which is <i>Hôpital Militaire</i> No.
+II. The cyclists wheel off, scatter and disappear.
+The crowd in the Place gathers round the porch of
+the hotel to look at the English Ambulance.</p>
+
+<p>We enter. We are received by various officials
+and presented to Madame F., the head of the Red
+Cross nursing staff. There is some confusion, and
+Mrs. Torrence finds herself introduced as the Secretary
+of the English Committee. Successfully concealed
+behind the broadest back in the Corps, which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span>
+belongs to Mr. Grierson, I have time to realize how
+funny we all are. Everybody in the hospital is in
+uniform, of course. The nurses of the Belgian Red
+Cross wear white linen overalls with the brassard
+on one sleeve, and the Red Cross on the breasts of
+their overalls, and over their foreheads on the front
+of their white linen veils. The men wear military
+or semi-military uniforms. We had never agreed
+as to our uniform, and some of us had had no time
+to get it, if we had agreed. Assembled in the vestibule,
+we look more like a party of refugees, or the
+cast of a Barrie play, than a field ambulance corps.
+Mr. Grierson, the Chaplain, alone wears complete
+khaki, in which he is indistinguishable from any
+Tommy. The Commandant, obeying some mysterious
+inspiration, has left his khaki suit behind. He
+wears a Norfolk jacket and one of his hats. Mr.
+Foster in plain clothes, with a satchel slung over his
+shoulders, has the air of an inquiring tourist. Mrs.
+Torrence and Janet McNeil in short khaki tunics,
+khaki putties, and round Jaeger caps, and very thick
+coats over all, strapped in with leather belts, look
+as if they were about to sail on an Arctic expedition;
+I was told to wear dark blue serge, and I
+wear it accordingly; Ursula Dearmer and Mrs.
+Lambert are in normal clothes. But the amiable
+officials and the angelic Belgian ladies behave as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span>
+if there was nothing in the least odd about our appearance.
+They remember only that we are English
+and that it is now six o'clock and that we have
+had no tea. They conceive this to be the most deplorable
+fate that can overtake the English, and
+they hurry us into the great kitchen to a round table,
+loaded with cake and bread-and-butter and enormous
+bowls of tea. The angelic beings in white
+veils wait on us. We are hungry and we think (a
+pardonable error) that this meal is hospital supper;
+after which some work will surely be found for us
+to do.</p>
+
+<p>We are shown to our quarters on the third floor.
+We expect two bare dormitories with rows of hard
+beds, which we are prepared to make ourselves, besides
+sweeping the dormitories, and we find a fine
+suite of rooms&mdash;a mess-room, bedrooms, dressing-rooms,
+bathrooms&mdash;and hospital orderlies for our
+<i>valets de chambre</i>.</p>
+
+<p>We unpack, sit round the mess-room and wait
+for orders. Perhaps we may all be sent down into
+the kitchen to wash up. Personally, I hope we shall
+be, for washing up is a thing I can do both quickly
+and well. It is now seven o'clock.</p>
+
+<p>At half-past we are sent down into the kitchen,
+not to wash up, but, if you will believe it, to dine.
+And more hospital orderlies wait on us at dinner.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The desire of our hearts is to do <i>something</i>, if
+it is only to black the boots of the angelic beings.
+But no, there is nothing for us to do. To-morrow,
+perhaps, the doctors and stretcher-bearers will be
+busy. We hear that only five wounded have been
+brought into the hospital to-day. They have no
+ambulance cars, and ours will be badly needed&mdash;to-morrow.
+But to-night, no.</p>
+
+<p>We go out into the town, to the Hôtel de la Poste,
+and sit outside the café and drink black coffee in
+despair. We find our chauffeurs doing the same
+thing. Then we go back to our sumptuous hotel
+and so, dejectedly, to bed. Aeroplanes hover above
+us all night.</p>
+
+<p class="centerspaced2">[<i>Sunday, 27th.</i>]</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">We</span> hang about waiting for orders. They may
+come at any moment. Meanwhile this place grows
+incredible and fantastic. Now it is an hotel and
+now it is a military hospital; its two aspects shift
+and merge into each other with a dream-like effect.
+It is a huge building of extravagant design, wearing
+its turrets, its balconies, its very roofs, like so much
+decoration. The gilded legend, "Flandria Palace
+Hotel," glitters across the immense white façade.
+But the Red Cross flag flies from the front and from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>
+the corners of the turrets and from the balconies of
+the long flank facing south. You arrive under a
+fan-like porch that covers the smooth slope of the
+approach. You enter your hotel through mahogany
+revolving doors. A colossal Flora stands by the
+lift at the foot of the big staircase. Unaware that
+this is no festival of flowers, the poor stupid thing
+leans forward, smiling, and holds out her garland
+to the wounded as they are carried past. Nobody
+takes any notice of her. The great hall of the hotel
+has been stripped bare. All draperies and ornaments
+have disappeared. The proprietor has disappeared,
+or goes about disguised as a Red Cross
+officer. The grey mosaic of floors and stairs is
+cleared of rugs and carpeting; the reading-room is
+now a secretarial bureau; the billiard-room is an
+operating theatre; the great dining-hall and the reception-rooms
+and the bedrooms are wards. The
+army of waiters and valets and chambermaids has
+gone, and everywhere there are surgeons, ambulance
+men, hospital orderlies and the Belgian nurses with
+their white overalls and red crosses. And in every
+corridor and on every staircase and in every room
+there is a mixed odour, bitter and sweet and penetrating,
+of antiseptics and of ether. When the ambulance
+cars come up from the railway stations and
+the battle-fields, the last inappropriate detail, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span>
+mahogany revolving doors, will disappear, so that
+the wounded may be carried through on their
+stretchers.</p>
+
+<p>I confess to a slight, persistent fear of <i>seeing</i>
+these wounded whom I cannot help. It is not very
+active, it has left off visualizing the horror of
+bloody bandages and mangled bodies. But it's
+there; it waits for me in every corridor and at the
+turn of every stair, and it makes me loathe myself.</p>
+
+<p>We have news this morning of a battle at Alost,
+a town about fifteen kilometres south-east of Ghent.
+The Belgians are moving forty thousand men from
+Antwerp towards Ghent, and heavy fighting is expected
+near the town. If we are not in the thick
+of it, we are on the edge of the thick.</p>
+
+<p>They have just told us an awful thing. Two
+wounded men were left lying out on the battle-field
+all night after yesterday's fighting. The military
+ambulances did not fetch them. Our ambulance
+was not sent out. There are all sorts of formalities
+to be observed before it can go. We haven't got
+our military passes yet. And our English Red
+Cross brassards are no use. We must have Belgian
+ones stamped with the Government stamp. And
+these things take time.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile we, who have still the appearance of
+a disorganized Cook's tourist party, are beginning<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span>
+to realize each other, the first step to realizing ourselves.
+We have come from heaven knows where
+to live together here heaven knows for how long.
+The Commandant and I are friends; Mrs. Torrence
+and Janet McNeil are friends; Dr. Haynes and Dr.
+Bird are evidently friends; our chauffeurs, Bert and
+Tom, are bound to fraternize professionally; we and
+they are all right; but these pairs were only known
+to each other a week or two ago, and some of the
+thirteen never met at all till yesterday. An unknown
+fourteenth is coming to-day. We are five
+women and nine men. You might wonder how, for
+all social purposes, we are to sort ourselves? But
+the idea, sternly emphasized by Mrs. Torrence, is
+that we have no social purposes. We are neither
+more nor less than a strictly official and absolutely
+impersonal body, held together, not by the ordinary
+affinities of men and women, but by a common devotion
+and a common aim. Differences, if any
+should exist, will be sunk in the interest of the community.
+Probabilities that rule all human intercourse,
+as we have hitherto known it, will be temporarily
+suspended in our case. But we shall gain
+more than we lose. Insignificant as individuals, as
+a corps we share the honour and prestige of the
+Military Authority under which we work. We
+have visions of a relentless discipline commanding<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span>
+and controlling us. A cold glory hovers over the
+Commandant as the vehicle of this transcendent
+power.</p>
+
+<p>When the Power has its way with us it will take
+no count of friendships or affinities. It will set precedence
+at naught. It will say to itself, "Here are
+two field ambulance cars and fourteen people. Five
+out of these fourteen are women, and what the devil
+are they doing in a field ambulance?" And it will
+appoint two surgeons, who will also serve as
+stretcher-bearers, to each car; it will set our trained
+nurse, Mrs. Torrence, in command of the untrained
+nurses in one of the wards of the Military Hospital
+No. II.; the Hospital itself will find suitable feminine
+tasks for Ursula Dearmer and Mrs. Lambert;
+while Janet McNeil and the Secretary will be told
+off to work among the refugees. And until more
+stretcher-bearers are wanted the rest of us will be
+nowhere. If nothing can be found for our women
+in the Hospital they will be sent home.</p>
+
+<p>It seems inconceivable that the Power, if it is
+anything like Lord Kitchener, can decide otherwise.</p>
+
+<p>Odd how the War changes us. I, who abhor and
+resist authority, who hardly know how I am to bring
+myself to obey my friend the Commandant, am enamoured
+of this Power and utterly submissive. I
+realize with something like a thrill that we are in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span>
+a military hospital under military orders; and that
+my irrelevant former self, with all that it has desired
+or done, must henceforth cease (perhaps irrevocably)
+to exist. I contemplate its extinction
+with equanimity. I remember that one of my
+brothers was a Captain in the Gunners, that another
+of them fought as a volunteer in the first Boer War;
+that my uncle, Captain Hind, of the Bengal Fusiliers,
+fought in the Mutiny and in the Crimean War, and
+his son at Chitral, and that I have one nephew in
+Kitchener's Army and one in the West Lancashire
+Hussars; and that three generations of solid sugar-planters
+and ship-owners cannot separate me from
+my forefathers, who seem to have been fighting all
+the time. (At the moment I have forgotten my
+five weeks' blue funk.)</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Torrence's desire for discipline is not more
+sincere than mine. Meanwhile the hand that is to
+lick us into shape hovers over us and does not fall.
+We wait expectantly in the mess-room which is to
+contain us.</p>
+
+<p>It was once the sitting-room of a fine suite. A
+diminutive vestibule divides it from the corridor.
+You enter through double doors with muffed glass
+panes in a wooden partition opposite the wide
+French windows opening on the balcony. A pale
+blond light from the south fills the room. Its walls<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span>
+are bare except for a map of Belgium, faced by a
+print from one of the illustrated papers representing
+the King and Queen of the Belgians. Of its
+original furnishings only a few cane chairs and a
+settee remain. These are set back round the walls
+and in the window. Long tables with marble tops,
+brought up from what was once the hotel restaurant,
+enclose three sides of a hollow square, like this:</p>
+
+<p class="figcenterns">
+<img src="images/table.png" width="300" height="151" alt="Table Diagram" /></p>
+
+<p>Round these we group ourselves thus: the Commandant
+in the middle of the top table in the window,
+between Mrs. Torrence and Ursula Dearmer;
+Dr. Haynes and Dr. Bird, on the other side of Ursula
+Dearmer; the chauffeurs, Tom and Bert, round the
+corner at the right-hand side table; I am round the
+other corner at the left-hand side table, by Mrs.
+Torrence, and Janet McNeil is on my right, and on
+hers are Mrs. Lambert and Mr. Foster and the
+Chaplain. Mr. Riley sits alone on the inside opposite
+Mrs. Torrence.</p>
+
+<p>This rather quiet and very serious person interests
+me. He doesn't say anything, and you wonder<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span>
+what sort of consciousness goes on under the close-cropped,
+boyish, black velvet hair. Nature has left
+his features a bit unfinished, the further to baffle
+you.</p>
+
+<p>All these people are interesting, intensely interesting
+and baffling, as men and women are bound to
+be who have come from heaven knows where to
+face heaven knows what. Most of them are quite
+innocently unaware. They do not know that they
+are interesting, or baffling either. They do not
+know, and it has not occurred to them to wonder,
+how they are going to affect each other or how they
+are going to behave. Nobody, you would say, is
+going to affect the Commandant. When he is not
+dashing up and down, driven by his mysterious
+energy, he stands apart in remote and dreamy isolation.
+His eyes, when they are not darting brilliantly
+in pursuit of the person or the thing he needs,
+stand apart too in a blank, blue purity, undarkened
+by any perception of the details that may accumulate
+under his innocent nose. He has called this corps
+into being, gathered these strange men and women
+up with a sweep of his wing and swept them almost
+violently together. He doesn't know how any of
+us are going to behave. He has taken for granted,
+with his naïve and heart-rending trust in the beauty
+of human nature, that we are all going to behave<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span>
+beautifully. He is absorbed in his scheme. Each
+one of us fits into it at some point, and if there is
+anything in us left over it is not, at the moment,
+his concern.</p>
+
+<p>Yet he himself has margins about him and a
+mysterious hinterland not to be confined or accounted
+for by any scheme. He alone of us has the
+air, buoyant, restless, and a little vague, of being in
+for some tremendous but wholly visionary adventure.</p>
+
+<p>When I look at him I wonder again what this
+particular adventure is going to do to him, and
+whether he has, even now, any vivid sense of the
+things that are about to happen. I remember that
+evening in my scullery, and how he talked about the
+German siege-guns as if they were details in some
+unreal scene, the most interesting part, say, of a
+successful cinematograph show.</p>
+
+<p>But they are really bringing up those siege-guns
+from Namur.</p>
+
+<p>And the Commandant has brought four women
+with him besides me. I confess I was appalled
+when I first knew that they would be brought.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Torrence, perhaps&mdash;for she is in love with
+danger,<a name="FNanchor_1_2" id="FNanchor_1_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_2" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> and she is of the kind whom no power,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span>
+military or otherwise, can keep back from their desired
+destiny.</p>
+
+<p>But why little Janet McNeil?<a name="FNanchor_2_3" id="FNanchor_2_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_3" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> She is the youngest
+of us, an eighteen-year-old child who has followed
+Mrs. Torrence, and will follow her if she
+walks straight into the German trenches. She sits
+beside me on my right, ready for anything, all her
+delicate Highland beauty bundled up in the kit of
+a little Arctic explorer, utterly determined, utterly
+impassive. Her small face, under the woolly cap
+that defies the North Pole, is nearly always grave;
+but it has a sudden smile that is adorable.</p>
+
+<p>And the youngest but one, Ursula Dearmer, who
+can't be so much older&mdash;Mr. Riley's gloom and
+the Commandant's hinterland are nothing to the
+mystery of this young girl. She looks as if she
+were not yet perfectly awake, as if it would take
+considerably more than the siege-guns of Namur
+to rouse her. She moves about slowly, as if she
+were in no sort of hurry for the adventure. She
+has slow-moving eyes, with sleepy, drooping eyelids
+that blink at you. She has a rather sleepy, rather
+drooping nose. Her shoulders droop; her small
+head droops, slightly, half the time. If she were
+not so slender she would be rather like a pretty dor<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span>mouse
+half-recovering from its torpor. You insist
+on the determination of her little thrust-out underlip,
+only to be contradicted by her gentle and
+delicately-retreating chin.</p>
+
+<p>In our committee-room, among a band of turbulent
+female volunteers, all clamouring for the firing-line,
+Ursula Dearmer, dressed very simply, rather
+like a senior school-girl, and accompanied by her
+mother, had a most engaging air of submission and
+docility. If anybody breaks out into bravura it
+will not be Ursula Dearmer.</p>
+
+<p>This thought consoles me when I think of the
+last solemn scenes in that committee-room and of
+the pledges, the frightfully sacred pledges, I gave
+to Ursula Dearmer's mother. As a result of this
+responsibility I see myself told off to the dreary
+duty of conducting Ursula Dearmer back to Dover
+at the moment when things begin to be really thick
+and thrilling. And I deplore the Commandant's
+indiscriminate hospitality to volunteers.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Lambert (she must surely be the next youngest)
+you can think of with less agitation, in spite
+of her youth, her charming eyes and the recklessly
+extravagant quantity of her golden hair. For she
+is an American citizen, and she has a husband (also
+an American citizen) in Ghent, and her husband has
+a high-speed motor-car, and if the Germans should<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span>
+ever advance upon this city he can be relied upon to
+take her out of it before they can possibly get in.
+Besides, even in the German lines American citizens
+are safe.</p>
+
+<p>We are all suffering a slight tension. The men,
+who can see no reason why the ambulance should
+not have been sent out last night, are restless and
+abstracted and impatient for the order to get up and
+go. No wonder. They have been waiting five
+weeks for their chance.</p>
+
+<p>There is Dr. Haynes, whose large dark head and
+heavy shoulders look as if they sustained the whole
+weight of an intolerable world. His features, designed
+for sensuous composure, brood in a sad and
+sulky resignation to the boredom of delay.</p>
+
+<p>His friend, Dr. Bird, the young man with the
+head of an enormous cherub and the hair of a blond
+baby, hair that <i>will</i> fall in a shining lock on his
+pink forehead, Dr. Bird has an air of boisterous
+preparation, as if the ambulance were a picnic party
+and he was responsible for the champagne.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Foster, the inquiring tourist, looks a little
+anxious, as if he were preoccupied with the train
+he's got to catch.</p>
+
+<p>Bert, the chauffeur, sits tight with the grim assurance
+of a man who knows that the expedition
+cannot start without him. The chauffeur Tom has<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span>
+an expressive face. Every minute it becomes more
+vivid with humorous, contemptuous, indignant protest.
+It says plainly: "Well, this is about the rottenest
+show I ever was let in for. Bar none. Call
+yourself a field ambulance? Garn! And if you
+<i>are</i> a field ambulance, who but a blanky fool would
+have hit upon this old blankety haunt of peace. It'll
+be the 'Ague Conference next!"</p>
+
+<p>But it is on the Chaplain, Mr. Grierson, that the
+strain is telling most. It shows in his pale and
+prominent blue eyes, and in a slight whiteness about
+his high cheek-bones. In his valiant khaki he has
+more than any of us the air of being on the eve.
+He is visibly bracing himself to a stupendous effort.
+He smokes a cigarette with ostentatious nonchalance.
+We all think we know these symptoms.
+We turn our eyes away, considerately, from Mr.
+Grierson. Which of us can say that when our turn
+comes the thought of danger will not spoil our
+breakfast?</p>
+
+<p>The poor boy squares his shoulders. He is white
+now round the edges of his lips. But he is going
+through with it.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly he speaks.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall hold Matins in this room at ten o'clock
+every Sunday morning. If any of you like to attend
+you may."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>There is a terrible silence. None of us look at
+each other. None of us look at Mr. Grierson.</p>
+
+<p>Presently Mrs. Torrence is heard protesting that
+we haven't come here for Matins; that this is a
+mess-room and not a private chapel; and that Matins
+are against all military discipline.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall hold Matins all the same," says Mr.
+Grierson. His voice is thick and jerky. "And if
+anybody likes to attend, they can. That's all I've
+got to say."</p>
+
+<p>He gets up. He faces the batteries of unholy
+and unsympathetic eyes. He throws away the end
+of his cigarette with a gesture of superb defiance.</p>
+
+<p>He has gone through with it. He has faced the
+fire. He has come out, not quite victorious, but
+with his hero's honour unstained.</p>
+
+<p>It seemed to me awful that none of us should
+want his Matins. I should like, personally, to see
+him through with them. I could face the hostile
+eyes. But what I cannot face is the ceremony itself.
+My <i>moral</i> was spoiled with too many ceremonies
+in my youth; ceremonies that lacked all
+beauty and sincerity and dignity. And though I am
+convinced of the beauty and sincerity and dignity
+of Mr. Grierson's soul I cannot kneel down with
+him and take part in the performance of his prayer.
+Prayer is either the Supreme Illusion, or the Su<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span>preme
+Act, the pure and naked surrender to Reality,
+and attended by such sacredness and shyness that
+you can accomplish it only when alone or lost in a
+multitude that prays.</p>
+
+<p>But why is there no Victoria Cross for moral
+courage?</p>
+
+<p>(Dr. Wilson has come. He looks clever and
+nice.)</p>
+
+<p>Our restlessness increases.</p>
+
+<p class="centerspaced2">[<i>11 a.m.</i>]</p>
+
+<p>I <span class="smcap">have</span> seen one of them. As I went downstairs
+this morning, two men carrying a stretcher crossed
+the landing below. I saw the outline of the
+wounded body under the blanket, and the head laid
+back on the pillow.</p>
+
+<p>It is impossible, it is inconceivable, that I should
+have been afraid of seeing this. It is as if the
+wounded man himself absolved me from the memory
+and the reproach of fear.</p>
+
+<p>I stood by the stair-rail to let them pass. There
+was some difficulty about turning at the stair-head.
+Mr. Riley was there. He came forward and took
+one end of the stretcher and turned it. He was
+very quiet and very gentle. You could see that he
+did the right thing by instinct. And I saw his face,
+and knew what had brought him here.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>And here on the first landing is another wounded.
+His face is deformed by an abscess from a bullet
+in his mouth. It gives him a terrible look, half
+savage, wholly suffering. He sits there and cannot
+speak.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Riley is the only one of us who has found
+anything to do. So presently we go out to get our
+military passes. We stroll miserably about the
+town, oppressed with a sense of our futility. We
+buy cigarettes for the convalescents.</p>
+
+<p>And at noon no orders have come for us.</p>
+
+<p>They come just as we are sitting down to lunch.
+Our ambulance car is to go to Alost at once. The
+Commandant is arrested in the act of cutting bread.
+Dr. Bird is arrested in the act of eating it. We
+are all arrested in our several acts. As if they had
+been criminal acts, we desist suddenly. The men
+get up and look at each other. It is clear that they
+cannot all go. Mr. Grierson looks at the Commandant.
+His face is a little white and strained,
+as it was this morning when he announced Matins
+for ten o'clock.</p>
+
+<p>The Commandant looks at Dr. Bird and tells him
+that he may go if he likes. His tone is admirably
+casual; it conveys no sense of the magnificence of
+his renunciation. He looks also at Mr. Grierson<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span>
+and Mr. Foster. The lot of honour falls upon these
+three.</p>
+
+<p>They set out, still with their air of a youthful
+picnic party. Dr. Bird is more than ever the boisterous
+young man in charge of the champagne.</p>
+
+<p>I am contented so long as Ursula Dearmer and
+Mrs. Lambert and Mrs. Torrence and Janet McNeil
+and the Commandant do not go yet. To anybody
+who knows the Commandant he is bound to be a
+prominent figure in the terrible moving pictures
+made by fear. Smitten by some great idea, he
+dashes out of cover as the shrapnel is falling. He
+wanders, wrapped in a happy dream, into the enemies'
+trenches. He mingles with their lines of
+communication as I have seen him mingle with the
+traffic at the junction of Chandos Street and the
+Strand. If you were to inform him of a patrol of
+Uhlans coming down the road, he would only say,
+"I see no Uhlans," and continue in their direction.
+It is inconceivable to his optimism that he should
+encounter Uhlans in a world so obviously made for
+peace and righteousness.</p>
+
+<p>So that it is a relief to see somebody else (whom
+I do not know quite so well) going first. Time
+enough to be jumpy when the Commandant and the
+women go forth on the perilous adventure.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>That is all very well. But I am jumpy all the
+same. By the mere fact that they are going out
+first Mr. Grierson and Mr. Foster have suddenly
+become dear and sacred. Their lives, their persons,
+their very clothes&mdash;Dr. Bird's cheerful face, which
+is so like an overgrown cherub's, his blond, gold
+lock of infantile hair, Mr. Grierson's pale eyes that
+foresee danger, his not too well fitting khaki coat&mdash;have
+acquired suddenly a priceless value, the
+value of things long seen and long admired. It is
+as if I had known them all my life; as if life will
+be unendurable if they do not come back safe.</p>
+
+<p>It is not very endurable now. Of all the things
+that can happen to a woman on a field ambulance,
+the worst is to stay behind. To stay behind with
+nothing in the world to do but to devise a variety
+of dreadful deaths for Tom, the chauffeur, and Dr.
+Bird and Mr. Grierson and Mr. Foster. To know
+nothing except that Alost is being bombarded and
+that it is to Alost that they are going.</p>
+
+<p>And the others who have been left behind are
+hanging about in gloom, disgusted with their fate.
+Mrs. Torrence and Janet McNeil are beginning to
+ask themselves what they are here for. To go
+through the wards is only to be in the way of the
+angelic beings with red crosses on their breasts and
+foreheads who are already somewhat in each other's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span>
+way. Mrs. Torrence and the others do, however,
+go into the wards and talk to the wounded and cheer
+them up. I sit in the deserted mess-room, and look
+at the lunch that Tom and Dr. Bird and Mr. Grierson
+should have eaten and were obliged to leave
+behind. I would give anything to be able to go
+round the wards and cheer the wounded up. I wonder
+whether there is anything I could conceivably
+do for the wounded that would not bore them inexpressibly
+if I were to do it. I frame sentence
+after sentence in strange and abominable French,
+and each, apart from its own inherent absurdity,
+seems a mockery of the wounded. You cannot go
+to an immortal hero and grin at him and say <i>Comment
+allez-vous?</i> and expect him to be cheered up,
+especially when you know yourself to be one of a
+long procession of women who have done the same.</p>
+
+<p>I abandon myself to my malady of self-distrust.</p>
+
+<p>It is at its worst when Jean and Max, the convalescent
+orderlies, come in to remove the ruins of
+our mess. They are pathetic and adorable with
+their close-cropped heads in the pallor of their convalescence
+(Jean is attired in a suit of yellowish
+linen and Max in striped flannels). Jean's pallor
+is decorated (there is no other word for it) with
+blue-grey eyes, black eyebrows, black eyelashes and
+a little black moustache. He is martial and ardent<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span>
+and alert. But the pallor of Max is unredeemed; it
+is morbid and profound. It has invaded his whole
+being. His eyelids and his small sensitive mouth
+are involved; and his round dark eyes have the
+queer grey look of some lamentable wonder and
+amazement. But neither horror nor discipline have
+spoiled his engaging air&mdash;the air of a very young
+<i>collégien</i> who has broken loose and got into this
+Military Hospital by mistake.</p>
+
+<p>I do not know whether intuition is a French or
+Belgian gift. Jean and Max are not Belgian but
+French, and they have it to a marvellous degree.
+They seemed to know in an instant what was the
+matter with the English lady; and they set about
+curing the malady. I have seldom seen such perfect
+tact and gentleness as was then displayed by those
+two hospital orderlies, Max and Jean. They had
+been wounded not so very long ago. But they
+think nothing of that. They intimate that if I insist
+on helping them with their plates and dishes they
+will be wounded, and more severely, in their honour.</p>
+
+<p>We converse.</p>
+
+<p>It is in conversation that they are most adorable.
+They gaze at you with candid, innocent eyes; not
+a quiver of a lip or an eyelash betrays to you the
+outrageous quality of your French. The behaviour
+of your sentences would cause a scandal in a private<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span>
+boarding school for young ladies, it is so fantastically
+incorrect. But Max and Jean receive each
+phrase with an imperturbable and charming gravity.
+By the subtlest suggestion of manner they assure
+you that you speak with fluency and distinction,
+that yours is a very perfect French. Only their
+severe attentiveness warns you of the strain you are
+putting on them.</p>
+
+<p>Max lingered long after Jean had departed to his
+kitchen. And presently he gave up his secret. He
+is a student, and they took him from his College
+(his course unfinished) to fight for his country.
+When the War broke out his mother went mad
+with the horror of it. He told me this quite simply,
+as if he were relating a common incident of war-time.
+Then, with a little air of mystery, he signed
+to me to follow him along the corridor. He stopped
+at a closed door and showed me a name inscribed
+in thick ornamental Gothic characters on a card
+tacked to the panel:</p>
+
+<p class="figcenterns">
+<img src="images/prosper.png" width="200" height="38" alt="Prosper Panne." />
+</p>
+
+<p>Max is not his real name. It is the name that
+Prosper Panne has taken to disguise himself while
+he is a servant. Prosper Panne&mdash;<i>il est écrivain,
+journaliste</i>. He writes for the Paris papers. He
+looked at me with his amazed, pathetic eyes, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span>
+pointed with a finger to his breast to assure me that
+he is he, Prosper Panne.</p>
+
+<p>And in the end I asked him whether it would bore
+the wounded frightfully if I took them some cigarettes?
+(I laid in cigarettes this morning as a provision
+for this desolate afternoon.)</p>
+
+<p>And&mdash;dear Prosper Panne&mdash;so thoroughly did
+he understand my malady, that he himself escorted
+me. It is as if he knew the <i>peur sacré</i> that restrains
+me from flinging myself into the presence of the
+wounded. Soft-footed and graceful, turning now
+and then with his instinct of protection, the orderly
+glides before me, smoothing the way between my
+shyness and this dreaded majesty of suffering.</p>
+
+<p>I followed him (with my cigarettes in my hand
+and my heart in my mouth) into the big ward on the
+ground floor.</p>
+
+<p>I don't want to describe that ward, or the effect
+of those rows upon rows of beds, those rows upon
+rows of bound and bandaged bodies, the intensity
+of physical anguish suggested by sheer force of
+multiplication, by the diminishing perspective of the
+beds, by the clear light and nakedness of the great
+hall that sets these repeated units of torture in a
+world apart, a world of insufferable space and agonizing
+time, ruled by some inhuman mathematics
+and given over to pure transcendent pain. A suf<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span>ficiently
+large ward full of wounded really does
+leave an impression very like that. But the one
+true thing about this impression is its transcendence.
+It is utterly removed from and unlike anything that
+you have experienced before. From the moment
+that the doors have closed behind you, you are in
+another world, and under its strange impact you
+are given new senses and a new soul. If there is
+horror here you are not aware of it as horror. Before
+these multiplied forms of anguish what you
+feel&mdash;if there be anything of <i>you</i> left to feel&mdash;is
+not pity, because it is so near to adoration.</p>
+
+<p>If you are tired of the burden and malady of
+self, go into one of these great wards and you will
+find instant release. You and the sum of your little
+consciousness are not things that matter any more.
+The lowest and the least of these wounded Belgians
+is of supreme importance and infinite significance.
+You, who were once afraid of them and of their
+wounds, may think that you would suffer for them
+now, gladly; but you are not allowed to suffer; you
+are marvellously and mercilessly let off. In this
+sudden deliverance from yourself you have received
+the ultimate absolution, and their torment is your
+peace.</p>
+
+<p>In the big ward very few of the men were
+well enough to smoke. So we went to the little<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span>
+wards where the convalescents are, Max leading.</p>
+
+<p>I do not think that Max has received absolution
+yet. It is quite evident that he is proud of his <i>entrée</i>
+into this place and of his intimacy with the wounded,
+of his rôle of interpreter.</p>
+
+<p>But how perfectly he does it! He has no Flemish,
+but through his subtle gestures even the poor
+Flamand, who has no French, understands what I
+want to say to him and can't. He turns this modest
+presentation of cigarettes into a high social function,
+a trifle ambitious, perhaps, but triumphantly
+achieved.</p>
+
+<p>All that was over by about three o'clock, when
+the sanctuary cast us out, and Max went back to
+his empty kitchen and became Prosper Panne again,
+and remembered that his mother was mad; and I
+went to the empty mess-room and became my miserable
+self and remembered that the Field Ambulance
+was still out, God knows where.</p>
+
+<p>The mess-room windows look south over the railway
+lines towards the country where the fighting is.
+From the balcony you can see the lines where the
+troop trains run, going north-west and south-east.
+The Station, the Post Office, the Telegraph and
+Telephone Offices are here, all in one long red-brick
+building that bounds one side of the <i>Place</i>. It
+stands at right angles to the Flandria and stretches<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span>
+along opposite its flank. It has a flat roof with a
+crenelated parapet. Grass grows on the roof. No
+guns are mounted there, for Ghent is an open city.
+But in German tactics bombardment by aeroplane
+doesn't seem to count, and our situation is more
+provocative now than the Terminus Hotel at Ostend.</p>
+
+<p>Beyond the straight black railway lines are miles
+upon miles of flat open country, green fields and
+rows of poplars, and little woods, and here and there
+a low rise dark with trees. Under our windows the
+white street runs south-eastward, and along it scouting
+cars and cycling corps rush to the fighting lines,
+and military motor-cars hurry impatiently, carrying
+Belgian staff officers; the ammunition wagons lumber
+along, and the troops march in a long file, to
+disappear round the turn of the road. That is
+where the others have gone, and I'd give everything
+I possess to go with them.</p>
+
+<p>They have come back, incredibly safe, and have
+brought in four wounded.</p>
+
+<p>There was a large crowd gathered in the <i>Place</i>
+to see them come, a crowd that has nothing to do
+and that lives from hour to hour on this spectacle
+of the wounded. Intense excitement this time, for
+one of the four wounded is a German. He was
+lying on a stretcher. No sooner had they drawn<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span>
+him out of the ambulance than they put him back
+again. (No Germans are taken in at our Hospital;
+they are all sent to the old <i>Hôpital Militaire</i> No. I.)
+He thrust up his poor hand and grabbed the hanging
+strap to raise himself a little in his stretcher,
+and I saw him. He was ruddy and handsome.
+His thick blond hair stood up stiff from his forehead.
+His little blond moustache was turned up and
+twisted fiercely like the Kaiser's. The crowd booed
+at him as he lay there. His was a terrible pathos,
+unlike any other. He was so defiant and so helpless.
+And there's another emotion gone by the
+board. You simply could not hate him.</p>
+
+<p>Later in the evening both cars were sent out,
+Car No. 1 with the Commandant and, if you will
+believe it, Ursula Dearmer. Heavens! What can
+the Military Power be thinking of? Car No. 2 took
+Dr. Wilson and Mrs. Torrence. The Military
+Power, I suppose, has ordained this too. And when
+I think of Mrs. Torrence's dream of getting into
+the greatest possible danger, I am glad that the
+Commandant is with Ursula Dearmer. We pledged
+our words, he and I, that danger and Ursula Dearmer
+should never meet.</p>
+
+<p>They all come back, impossibly safe. They are
+rather like children after the party, too excited to
+give a lucid and coherent tale of what they've done.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span>
+My ambulance Day-Book stores the stuff from
+which reports and newspaper articles are to be made.
+I note that Car No. 1 has brought three wounded to
+Hospital I., and that Car No. 2 has brought four
+wounded to Hospital II., also that a dum-dum
+bullet has been found in the hand of one of the
+three. There is a considerable stir among the surgeons
+over this bullet. They are vaguely gratified
+at its being found in our hospital and not the other.</p>
+
+<p>Little Janet McNeil and Mr. Riley and all the
+others who were left behind have gone to bed in
+hopeless gloom. Even the bullet hasn't roused them
+beyond the first tense moment.</p>
+
+<p>I ask for ink, and dear Max has given me all his
+in his own ink-pot.</p>
+
+<p class="centerspaced2">[<i>Monday, 28th.</i>]</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">We</span> have been here a hundred years.</p>
+
+<p>Car No. 1 went out at eight-thirty this morning,
+with the Commandant and Dr. Bird and Ursula
+Dearmer and Mr. Grierson and a Belgian Red Cross
+guide. With Tom, the chauffeur, that makes six.
+Tom's face, as he sees this party swarming on his
+car, is expressive of tumultuous passions. Disgust
+predominates.</p>
+
+<p>Their clothes seem stranger than ever by contrast<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span>
+with the severe military khaki of the car. Dr. Bird
+has added to his civilian costume a Belgian forage
+cap with a red tassel that hangs over his forehead.
+It was given to him yesterday by way of homage to
+his courage and his personal charm. But it makes
+him horribly vulnerable. The Chaplain, standing
+out from the rest of the Corps in complete khaki,
+is an even more inevitable mark for bullets. Tom
+stares at everybody with eyes of violent inquiry.
+He still evidently wants to know whether we call
+ourselves a field ambulance. He starts his car with
+movements of exasperation and despair. We are to
+judge what his sense of discipline must be since he
+consents to drive the thing at all.</p>
+
+<p>The Commandant affects not to see Tom. Perhaps
+he really doesn't see him.</p>
+
+<p>It is just as well that he can't see Mrs. Torrence,
+or Janet McNeil or Mr. Riley or Dr. Haynes.
+They are overpowered by this tragedy of being left
+behind. Under it the discipline of the &mdash;&mdash; Hospital
+breaks down. The eighteen-year-old child is
+threatening to commit suicide or else go home. She
+regards the two acts as equivalent. Mr. Riley's
+gloom is now so awful that he will not speak when
+he is spoken to. He looks at me with dumb hostility,
+as if he thought that I had something to do
+with it. Dr. Haynes's melancholy is even more<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span>
+heart-rending, because it is gentle and unexpressed.</p>
+
+<p>I try to console them. I point out that it is a
+question of arithmetic. There are only two cars
+and there are fourteen of us. Fourteen into two
+won't go, even if you don't count the wounded.
+And, after all, we haven't been here two days. But
+it is no good. We have been here a hundred years,
+and we have done nothing. There isn't anything
+to do. There are not enough wounded to go round.
+We turn our eyes with longing towards Antwerp,
+so soon to be battered by the siege-guns from
+Namur.</p>
+
+<p>And Bert, poor Bert! he has crawled into Ambulance
+Car No. 2 where it stands outside in the
+hospital yard, and he has hidden himself under the
+hood.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Lambert is a little sad, too. But we are
+none of us very sorry for Mrs. Lambert. We have
+gathered that her husband is a journalist, and that
+he is special correspondent at the front for some
+American paper. He has a motor-car which we assume
+rashly to be the property of his paper. He is
+always dashing off to the firing-line in it, and Mrs.
+Lambert is always at liberty to go with him. She
+is mistaken if she thinks that her sorrow is in any
+way comparable with ours.</p>
+
+<p>But if there are not enough wounded to go round<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span>
+in Ghent, there are more refugees than Ghent can
+deal with. They are pouring in by all the roads
+from Alost and Termonde. Every train disgorges
+multitudes of them into the <i>Place</i>.</p>
+
+<p>This morning I went to the Matron, Madame F.,
+and told her I wasn't much good, but I'd be glad
+if she could give me some work. I said I supposed
+there was some to be done among the refugees.</p>
+
+<p>Work? Among the refugees? They could employ
+whole armies of us. There are thousands of
+refugees at the Palais des Fêtes. I had better go
+there and see what is being done. Madame will
+give me an introduction to her sister-in-law, Madame
+F., the Présidente of the Comité des Dames, and
+to her niece, Mademoiselle F., who will take me to
+the Palais.</p>
+
+<p>And Madame adds that there will soon be work
+for all of us in the Hospital. Yes: even for the
+untrained.</p>
+
+<p>Life is once more bearable.</p>
+
+<p>But the others won't believe it. They say there
+are three hundred nurses in the hospital.</p>
+
+<p>And the fact remains that we have two young
+surgeons cooling their heels in the corridors, and
+a fully-trained nurse tearing her hair out, while the
+young girl, Ursula Dearmer, takes the field.</p>
+
+<p>And I think of the poor little dreamy, guileless<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span>
+Commandant in his conspicuous car, and I smile at
+her in secret, thanking Heaven that it's Ursula
+Dearmer and not Mrs. Torrence who is at his side.</p>
+
+<p>The ambulance has come back from Alost with
+two or three wounded and some refugees. The
+Commandant is visibly elated, elated out of all proportion
+to the work actually done. Ursula Dearmer
+is not elated in the very least, but she is wide-awake.
+Her docility has vanished with her torpor. She and
+the Commandant both look as if something extremely
+agreeable had happened to them at Alost.
+But they are reticent. We gather that Ursula
+Dearmer has been working with the nuns in the Convent
+at Alost, where the wounded were taken before
+the ambulance cars removed them to Ghent. It
+sounded very safe.</p>
+
+<p>But the Commandant dashed into my room after
+luncheon. His face was radiant, almost ecstatic.
+He was like a child who has rushed in to tell you
+how ripping the pantomime was.</p>
+
+<p>"We've been <i>under fire</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>But I was very angry. Coldly and quietly
+angry. I felt like that when I was ten years old
+and piloting my mother through the thick of the
+traffic between Guildhall and the Bank, and she
+broke from me and was all but run over. I don't
+quite know what I said to him, but I think I said<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span>
+he ought to be ashamed of himself. For it seems
+that Ursula Dearmer was with him.</p>
+
+<p>I remembered how Ursula Dearmer's mother had
+come to me in the committee-room and asked me
+how near we proposed to go to the firing-line, and
+whether her daughter would be in any danger, and
+how I said, first of all, that there wasn't any use
+pretending that there wouldn't be danger, and that
+the chances were&mdash;and how the Commandant had
+intervened at that moment to assure her that danger
+there would be none. With a finger on the map of
+France and Belgium he traced the probable, the inevitable,
+course of the campaign; and in light, casual
+tones which allayed all anxiety, he explained how, as
+the Germans advanced upon any point, we should
+retire upon our base. As for the actual field-work,
+with one gesture he swept the whole battle-line into
+the distance, and you saw it as an infinitely receding
+tide that left its wrack strewn on a place of peace
+where the ambulance wandered at its will, secure
+from danger. The whole thing was done with such
+compelling and convincing enthusiasm that Ursula
+Dearmer's mother adopted more and more the humble
+attitude of a mere woman who has failed to
+grasp the conditions of modern warfare. Ursula
+Dearmer herself looked more docile than ever,
+though a little bored, and very sleepy.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>And I remembered how when it was all over
+Ursula Dearmer's mother implored me, if there <i>was</i>
+any danger, to see that Ursula Dearmer was sent
+home, and how I promised that whatever happened
+Ursula Dearmer would be safe, clinching it with a
+frightfully sacred inner vow, and saying to myself
+at the same time what a terrible nuisance this young
+girl is going to be. I saw myself at the moment of
+parting, standing on the hearthrug, stiff as a poker
+with resolution, and saying solemnly, "I'll keep
+my word!"</p>
+
+<p>And here was the Commandant informing me
+with glee that a shell had fallen and burst at Ursula
+Dearmer's feet.</p>
+
+<p>He was so pleased, and with such innocent and
+childlike pleasure, that I hadn't the heart to tell him
+that there wasn't much resemblance between those
+spaces of naked peace behind the receding battle-line
+and the narrow streets of a bombarded village. I
+only said that I should write to Ursula Dearmer's
+mother and ask her to release me from my promise.
+He said I would do nothing of the kind. I said I
+would. And I did. And the poor Commandant
+left me, somewhat dashed, and not at all pleased
+with me.</p>
+
+<p>It seems that the shell burst, not exactly at Ursula
+Dearmer's feet, but ten yards away from her. It<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span>
+came romping down the street with immense impetus
+and determination; and it is not said of Ursula
+Dearmer that she was much less coy in the encounter.
+She took to shell-fire "like a duck to water."</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Bird told us this. Ursula Dearmer herself
+was modest, and claimed no sort of intimacy with
+the shell that waked her up. She was as nice as
+possible about it. But all the same, into the whole
+Corps (that part of it that had been left behind)
+there has crept a sneaking envy of her luck. I feel
+it myself. And if <i>I</i> feel it, what must Mrs. Torrence
+and Janet feel?</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Lambert, anyhow, has had nothing to complain
+of so far. Her husband took her to Alost in
+his motor-car; I mean the motor-car which is the
+property of his paper.</p>
+
+<p>In the afternoon Mademoiselle F. called to take
+me to the Palais des Fêtes. We stopped at a shop
+on the way to buy the Belgian Red Cross uniform&mdash;the
+white linen overall and veil&mdash;which you
+must wear if you work among the refugees there.</p>
+
+<p>Madame F. is very kind and very tired. She has
+been working here since early morning for weeks
+on end. They are short of volunteers for the service
+of the evening meals, and I am to work at the
+tables for three hours, from six to nine <span class="smcap">P.M.</span> This
+is settled, and a young Red Cross volunteer takes me<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span>
+over the Palais. It is an immense building, rather
+like Olympia. It stands away from the town in
+open grounds like the Botanical Gardens, Regent's
+Park. It is where the great Annual Shows were
+held and the vast civic entertainments given. Miles
+of country round Ghent are given up to market-gardening.
+There are whole fields of begonias out
+here, brilliant and vivid in the sun. They will never
+be sold, never gathered, never shown in the Palais
+des Fêtes. It is the peasants, the men and women
+who tilled these fields, and their children that are
+being shown here, in the splendid and wonderful
+place where they never set foot before.</p>
+
+<p>There are four thousand of them lying on straw
+in the outer hall, in a space larger than Olympia.
+They are laid out in rows all round the four walls,
+and on every foot of ground between; men, women
+and children together, packed so tight that there is
+barely standing-room between any two of them.
+Here and there a family huddles up close, trying to
+put a few inches between it and the rest; some have
+hollowed out a place in the straw or piled a barrier
+of straw between themselves and their neighbours,
+in a piteous attempt at privacy; some have dragged
+their own bedding with them and are lodged in comparative
+comfort. But these are the very few.
+The most part are utterly destitute, and utterly aban<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span>doned
+to their destitution. They are broken with
+fatigue. They have stumbled and dropped no matter
+where, no matter beside whom. None turns
+from his neighbour; none scorns or hates or loathes
+his fellow. The rigidly righteous <i>bourgeoise</i> lies in
+the straw breast to breast with the harlot of the
+village slum, and her innocent daughter back to back
+with the parish drunkard. Nothing matters.
+Nothing will ever matter any more.</p>
+
+<p>They tell you that when darkness comes down
+on all this there is hell. But you do not believe it.
+You can see nothing sordid and nothing ugly here.
+The scale is too vast. Your mind refuses this coupling
+of infamy with transcendent sorrow. It rejects
+all images but the one image of desolation which is
+final and supreme. It is as if these forms had no
+stability and no significance of their own; as if they
+were locked together in one immense body and
+stirred or slept as one.</p>
+
+<p>Two or three figures mount guard over this litter
+of prostrate forms. They are old men and old
+women seated on chairs. They sit upright and immobile,
+with their hands folded on their knees.
+Some of them have fallen asleep where they sit.
+They are all rigid in an attitude of resignation.
+They have the dignity of figures that will endure,
+like that, for ever. They are Flamands.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>This place is terribly still. There is hardly any
+rustling of the straw. Only here and there the cry
+of a child fretting for sleep or for its mother's
+breast. These people do not speak to each other.
+Half of them are sound asleep, fixed in the posture
+they took when they dropped into the straw. The
+others are drowsed with weariness, stupefied with
+sorrow. On all these thousands of faces there is a
+mortal apathy. Their ruin is complete. They have
+been stripped bare of the means of life and of all
+likeness to living things. They do not speak.
+They do not think. They do not, for the moment,
+feel. In all the four thousand&mdash;except for the
+child crying yonder&mdash;there is not one tear.</p>
+
+<p>And you who look at them cannot speak or think
+or feel either, and you have not one tear. A path
+has been cleared through the straw from door to
+door down the middle of the immense hall, a narrower
+track goes all round it in front of the litters
+that are ranged under the walls, and you are taken
+through and round the Show. You are to see it
+all. The dear little Belgian lady, your guide, will
+not let you miss anything. "<i>Regardez, Mademoiselle,
+ces deux petites filles. Qu'elles sont jolies,
+les pauvres petites.</i>" "<i>Voici deux jeunes mariés,
+qui dorment. Regardez l'homme; il tient encore la
+main de sa femme.</i>"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>You look. Yes. They are asleep. He is really
+holding her hand. "<i>Et ces quatre petits enfants
+qui ont perdu leur père et leur mère. C'est triste,
+n'est-ce pas, Mademoiselle?</i>"</p>
+
+<p>And you say, "<i>Oui, Mademoiselle. C'est bien
+triste.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>But you don't mean it. You don't feel it. You
+don't know whether it is "<i>triste</i>" or not. You are
+not sure that "<i>triste</i>" is the word for it. There are
+no words for it, because there are no ideas for it.
+It is a sorrow that transcends all sorrow that you
+have ever known. You have a sort of idea that perhaps,
+if you can ever feel again, this sight will be
+worse to remember than it is to see. You can't believe
+what you see; you are stunned, stupefied, as if
+you yourself had been crushed and numbed in the
+same catastrophe. Only now and then a face upturned
+(a face that your guide hasn't pointed out
+to you) surging out of this incredible welter of
+faces and forms, smites you with pity, and you
+feel as if you had received a lacerating wound in
+sleep.</p>
+
+<p>Little things strike you, though. Already you are
+forgetting the faces of the two little girls and of
+the young husband and wife holding each other's
+hands, and of the four little children who have lost
+their father and mother, but you notice the little dog,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span>
+the yellow-brown mongrel terrier, that absurd little
+dog which belongs to all nations and all countries.
+He has obtained possession of the warm centre of a
+pile of straw and is curled up on it fast asleep. And
+the Flemish family who brought him, who carried
+him in turn for miles rather than leave him to the
+Germans, they cannot stretch themselves on the
+straw because of him. They have propped themselves
+up as best they may all round him, and they
+cannot sleep, they are too uncomfortable.</p>
+
+<p>More thousands than there is room for in the
+straw are fed three times a day in the inner hall,
+leading out of this dreadful dormitory. All round
+the inner hall and on the upper story off the gallery
+are rooms for washing and dressing the children
+and for bandaging sore feet and attending to the
+wounded. For there are many wounded among
+the refugees. This part of the Palais is also a hospital,
+with separate wards for men, for women and
+children and for special cases.</p>
+
+<p>Late in the evening M. P&mdash;&mdash; took the whole
+Corps to see the Palais des Fêtes, and I went again.
+By night I suppose it is even more "<i>triste</i>" than it
+was by day. In the darkness the gardens have
+taken on some malign mystery and have given it to
+the multitudes that move there, that turn in the
+winding paths among ghostly flowers and bushes,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span>
+that approach and recede and approach in the darkness
+of the lawns. Blurred by the darkness and
+diminished to the barest indications of humanity,
+their forms are more piteous and forlorn than ever;
+their faces, thrown up by the darkness, more awful
+in their blankness and their pallor. The scene,
+drenched in darkness, is unearthly and unintelligible.
+You cannot account for it in saying to yourself that
+these are the refugees, and everybody knows what
+a refugee is; that there is War&mdash;and everybody
+knows what war is&mdash;in Belgium; and that these
+people have been shelled out of their homes and are
+here at the Palais des Fêtes, because there is no
+other place for them, and the kind citizens of Ghent
+have undertaken to house and feed them here.
+That doesn't make it one bit more credible or bring
+you nearer to the secret of these forms. You who
+are compelled to move with them in the sinister darkness
+are more than ever under the spell that forbids
+you and them to feel. You are deadened now to
+the touch of the incarnate.</p>
+
+<p>On the edge of the lawn, near the door of the
+Palais, some ghostly roses are growing on a ghostly
+tree. Your guide, M. P&mdash;&mdash;, pauses to tell you
+their names and kind. It seems that they are
+rare.</p>
+
+<p>Several hundred more refugees have come into<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span>
+the Palais since the afternoon. They have had to
+pack them a little closer in the straw. Eight thousand
+were fed this evening in the inner hall.</p>
+
+<p>In the crush I get separated from M. P&mdash;&mdash; and
+from the Corps. I see some of them in the distance,
+the Commandant and Ursula Dearmer and Mrs.
+Lambert and M. P&mdash;&mdash;. I do not feel as if I belonged
+to them any more. I belong so much to the
+stunned sleepers in the straw who cannot feel.</p>
+
+<p>Nice Dr. Wilson comes across to me and we go
+round together, looking at the sleepers. He says
+that nothing he has seen of the War has moved him
+so much as this sight. He wishes that the Kaiser
+could be brought here to see what he has done. And
+I find myself clenching my hands tight till it hurts,
+not to suppress my feelings&mdash;for I feel nothing&mdash;but
+because I am afraid that kind Dr. Wilson is
+going to talk. At the same time, I would rather
+he didn't leave me just yet. There is a sort of comfort
+and protection in being with somebody who
+isn't callous, who can really feel.</p>
+
+<p>But Dr. Wilson isn't very fluent, and presently he
+leaves off talking, too.</p>
+
+<p>Near the door we pass the family with the little
+yellow-brown dog. All day the little dog slept in
+their place. And now that they are trying to sleep
+he will not let them. The little dog is wide awake<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span>
+and walking all over them. And when you think
+what it must have cost to bring him&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><i>C'est triste, n'est-ce pas?</i></p>
+
+<p>As we left the gardens M. P&mdash;&mdash; gathered two
+ghostly roses, the last left on their tree, and gave
+one to Mrs. Lambert and one to me. I felt something
+rather like a pang then. Heaven knows why,
+for such a little thing.</p>
+
+<p>Conference in our mess-room. M. &mdash;&mdash;, the
+Belgian Red Cross guide who goes out with our
+ambulances, is there. He is very serious and important.
+The Commandant calls us to come and hear
+what he has to say. It seems it had been arranged
+that one of our cars should be sent to-morrow morning
+to Termonde to bring back refugees. But M.
+&mdash;&mdash; does not think that car will ever start. He
+says that the Germans are now within a few miles
+of Ghent, and may be expected to occupy it to-morrow
+morning, and that instead of going to Termonde
+to-morrow we had very much better pack up and retreat
+to Bruges to-night. There are ten thousand
+Germans ready to march into Ghent.</p>
+
+<p>M. &mdash;&mdash; is weighed down by the thought of his
+ten thousand Germans. But the Commandant is
+not weighed down a bit. On the contrary, a pleasant
+exaltation comes upon him. It comes upon the
+whole Corps, it comes even upon me. We refuse to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span>
+believe in his ten thousand Germans. M. &mdash;&mdash; himself
+cannot swear to them. We refuse to pack up.
+We refuse to retreat to Bruges to-night. Time
+enough for agitation in the morning. We prefer to
+go to bed. M. &mdash;&mdash; shrugs his shoulders, as much
+as to say that he has done his duty and if we are all
+murdered in our beds it isn't his fault.</p>
+
+<p>Does M. &mdash;&mdash; really believe in the advance of the
+ten thousand? His face is inscrutable.</p>
+
+<p class="centerspaced2">[<i>Tuesday, 29th.</i>]</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">No</span> Germans in Ghent. No Germans reported
+near Ghent.</p>
+
+<p>Madame F. and her daughter smile at the idea
+of the Germans coming into Ghent. They will
+never come, and if they do come they will only take
+a little food and go out again. They will never do
+any harm to Ghent. Namur and Liége and Brussels,
+if you like, and Malines, and Louvain, and
+Termonde and Antwerp (perhaps); but Ghent&mdash;why
+should they? It is Antwerp they are making
+for, not Ghent.</p>
+
+<p>And Madame represents the mind of the average
+Gantois. It is placid, incredulous, stolidly at ease,
+superbly inhospitable to disagreeable ideas. No
+Gantois can conceive that what has been done to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span>
+citizens of Termonde would be done to him. <i>C'est
+triste</i>&mdash;what has been done to the citizens of Termonde,
+but it doesn't shake his belief in the immunity
+of Ghent.</p>
+
+<p>Which makes M. &mdash;&mdash;'s behaviour all the more
+mysterious. <i>Why</i> did he try to scare us so? Five
+theories are tenable:</p>
+
+<p>(1.) M. &mdash;&mdash; did honestly believe that ten thousand
+Germans would come in the morning and take
+our ambulance prisoner. That is to say, he believed
+what nobody else believed.</p>
+
+<p>(2.) M. &mdash;&mdash; was scared himself. He had no
+desire to be taken quite so near the firing-line as the
+English Ambulance seemed likely to take him; so
+that the departure of the English Ambulance would
+not be wholly disagreeable to M. &mdash;&mdash;. (This
+theory is too far-fetched.)</p>
+
+<p>(3.) M. &mdash;&mdash; was the agent of the Military
+Power, commissioned to test the nerve of the English
+Ambulance. ("Stood fire, have they? Give
+'em a <i>real</i> scare, and see how they behave.")</p>
+
+<p>(4.) M. &mdash;&mdash; is a psychologist and made this little
+experiment on the English Ambulance himself.</p>
+
+<p>(5.) He is a humorist and was simply "pulling
+its leg."</p>
+
+<p>The three last theories are plausible, but all five
+collapse before the inscrutability of Monsieur's face.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Germans or no Germans, one ambulance car
+started at five in the morning for Quatrecht, somewhere
+between Ghent and Brussels, to fetch
+wounded and refugees. The other went, later, to
+Zele. I am not very clear as to who has gone with
+them, but Mrs. Torrence, Mrs. Lambert, Janet McNeil
+and Dr. Haynes and Mr. Riley have been left
+behind.</p>
+
+<p>It is their third day of inactivity, and three months
+of it could not have devastated them more. They
+have touched the very bottom of suicidal gloom.
+Three months hence their state of mind will no
+doubt appear in all its absurdity, but at the moment
+it is too piteous for words. When you think what
+they were yesterday and the day before, there is no
+language to express the crescendo of their despair.
+I came upon Mr. Riley this morning, standing by
+the window of the mess-room, and contemplating the
+façade of the railway station. (It is making a pattern
+on our brains.) I tried to soothe him. I said
+it was hard lines&mdash;beastly hard lines&mdash;and told
+him to cheer up&mdash;there'd be heaps for him to do
+presently. And he turned from me like a man who
+has just buried his first-born.</p>
+
+<p>Janet McNeil is even more heart-rending, sunk
+in a chair with her hands stuck into the immense
+pockets of her overcoat, her flawless and impassive<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span>
+face tilted forward as her head droops forlornly to
+her breast. She is such a child that she can see
+nothing beyond to-day, and yesterday and the day
+before that. She is going back to-morrow. Her
+valour and energy are frustrated and she is wounded
+in her honour. She is conscious of the rottenness
+of putting on a khaki tunic, and winding khaki putties
+round and round her legs to hang about the Hospital
+doing nothing. And she had to sell her motor
+bicycle in order to come out. Not that that matters
+in the least. What matters is that we are here, eating
+Belgian food and quartered in a Belgian Military
+Hospital, and "swanking" about with Belgian
+Red Cross brassards (stamped) on our sleeves, and
+doing nothing for the Belgians, doing nothing for
+anybody. We are not justifying our existence.
+We are frauds.</p>
+
+<p>I tell the poor child that she cannot possibly feel
+as big a fraud as I do; that there was no earthly
+reason why I should have come, and none whatever
+why I should remain.</p>
+
+<p>And then, to my amazement, I learn that I am
+envied. It's all right for me. My job is clearly
+defined, and nobody can take it from me. I haven't
+got to wind khaki putties round my legs for nothing.</p>
+
+<p>I should have thought that the child was making<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span>
+jokes at my expense but for the extreme purity and
+candour of her gaze. Incredible that there should
+exist an abasement profounder than my own. I
+have hidden my tunic and breeches in my hold-all.
+I dare not own to having brought them.</p>
+
+<p>Down in the vestibule I encounter Mrs. Torrence
+in khaki. Mrs. Torrence yearning for her wounded.
+Mrs. Torrence determined to get to her wounded
+at any cost. She is not abased or dejected, but exalted,
+rather. She is ready to go to the President
+or to the Military Power itself, and demand her
+wounded from them. Her beautiful eyes demand
+them from Heaven itself.</p>
+
+<p>I cannot say there are not enough wounded to
+go round, but I point out for the fifteenth time that
+the trouble is there are not enough ambulance cars
+to go round.</p>
+
+<p>But it is no use. It does not explain why Heaven
+should have chosen Ursula Dearmer and caused
+shells to bound in her direction, and have rejected
+Mrs. Torrence. The Military Power that should
+have ordered these things has abandoned us to the
+caprice of Heaven.</p>
+
+<p>Of course if Mrs. Torrence was a saint she would
+fold her hands and bow her superb little head before
+the decrees of Heaven; but she is only a mortal
+woman, born with the genius of succour and trained<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span>
+to the last point of efficiency; so she rages. The
+tigress, robbed of her young, is not more furiously
+inconsolable than Mrs. Torrence.</p>
+
+<p>It is not Ursula Dearmer's fault. She is innocent
+of supplanting Mrs. Torrence. The thing simply
+happened. More docile than determined, unhurrying
+and uneager, and only half-awake, she
+seems to have rolled into Car No. 1 with Heaven's
+impetus behind her. Like the shell at Alost, it is
+her luck.</p>
+
+<p>And on the rest of us our futility and frustration
+weigh like lead. The good Belgian food has become
+bitter in our mouths. When we took our miserable
+walk through Ghent this morning we felt that
+<i>l'Ambulance Anglaise</i> must be a mark for public
+hatred and derision because of us. I declare I
+hardly dare go into the shops with the Red Cross
+brassard on my arm. I imagine sardonic raillery in
+the eyes of every Belgian that I meet. We do not
+think the authorities will stand it much longer; they
+will fire us out of the <i>Hôpital Militaire</i> No. II.</p>
+
+<p>But no, the authorities do not fire us out. Impassive
+in wisdom and foreknowledge, they smile
+benignly on our agitation. They compliment the
+English Ambulance on the work it has done already.
+They convey the impression that but for the English
+Ambulance the Belgian Army would be in a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span>
+bad way. Mademoiselle F. insists that the Hospital
+will soon be overflowing with the wounded from
+Antwerp and that she can find work even for me.
+It is untrue that there are three hundred nurses in
+the Hospital. There are only three hundred nurses in
+all Belgium. They pile it on so that we are more
+depressed than ever.</p>
+
+<p>Janet McNeil is convinced that they think we are
+no good and that they are just being angels to us
+because they are sorry for us.</p>
+
+<p>I break it to them very gently that I've volunteered
+to serve at the tables at the Palais des Fêtes.
+I feel as if I had sneaked into a remunerative job
+while my comrades are starving.</p>
+
+<p>The Commandant is not quite as pleased as I
+thought he would be to hear of my engagement at
+the Palais des Fêtes. He says, "It is not your
+work." I insist that my work is to do anything I
+can do; and that if I cannot dress wounds I can at
+least hand round bread and pour out coffee and wash
+up dishes. It is true that I am Secretary and Reporter
+and (for the time being) Treasurer to the
+Ambulance, and that I carry its funds in a leather
+purse belt round my body. Because I am the smallest
+and weakest member of the Corps that is the
+most unlikely place for the funds to be. It was imprudent,
+to say the least of it, for the Chaplain in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span>
+his khaki, to carry them, as he did, into the firing-line.
+The belt, which fitted the Chaplain, hangs
+about half a yard below my waist and is extremely
+uncomfortable, but that is neither here nor there.
+Keeping the Corps' accounts only takes two hours
+and a half, even with Belgian and English money
+mixed, and when I've added the same column of
+figures ten times up and ten times down, to make
+certain it's all right (I am no good at accounts, but
+I know my weakness and guard against it, giving the
+Corps the benefit of every doubt and making good
+every deficit out of my private purse). Writing the
+Day-Book&mdash;perhaps half an hour. The Commandant's
+correspondence, when he has any, and
+reporting to the British Red Cross Society, when
+there is anything to report, another half-hour at the
+outside; and there you have only three and a half
+hours employed out of the twenty-four, even if I
+balanced my accounts every day, and I don't.</p>
+
+<p>True that <i>The Daily Chronicle</i> promised to take
+any articles that I might send them from the front,
+but I haven't written any. You cannot write articles
+for <i>The Daily Chronicle</i> out of nothing; at
+least I can't.</p>
+
+<p>The Commandant finally yields to argument and
+entreaty.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="centerspread">········</p>
+
+<p>I do not tell him that what I really want to do is
+to go out with the Field Ambulance, and get beyond
+the turn of that road.</p>
+
+<p>I know I haven't the ghost of a chance; I know
+that if I had&mdash;as things stand at present&mdash;not being
+a surgeon or a trained nurse, I wouldn't take it,
+even to get there. And at the same time I know,
+with a superior certainty, that this unlikely thing
+will happen. This sense of certainty is not at all
+uncommon, but it is, or seems, unintelligible. You
+can only conceive it as a premonition of some unavoidable
+event. It is as if something had been
+looking for you, waiting for you, from all eternity
+out here; something that you have been looking for;
+and, when you are getting near, it begins calling to
+you; it draws your heart out to it all day long.
+You can give no account of it. All that you know
+about it is that it is unique. It has nothing to do
+with your ordinary curiosities and interests and
+loves; nothing to do with the thirst for experience,
+or for adventure, or for glory, or for the thrill.
+You can't "get" anything out of it. It is something
+hidden and secret and supremely urgent. Its
+urgency, indeed, is so great that if you miss it you
+will have missed reality itself.</p>
+
+<p>For me this uncanny anticipation is somehow connected
+with the turn of the south-east road. I do<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span>
+not see how I am ever going to get there or anywhere
+near there. But I am not uneasy or impatient
+any more. There is no hurry. The thing,
+whatever it is, will be irresistible, and if I don't go
+out to find it, it will find me.</p>
+
+<p class="centerspread">········</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Torrence has gone, Heaven knows where.
+She has not been with the others at the Palais des
+Fêtes. Janet McNeil and Mrs. Lambert have been
+working there for five hours, serving meals to the
+refugees. Ursula Dearmer with extreme docility
+has been working all the afternoon with the nurses.</p>
+
+<p>It looks as if we were beginning to settle
+down.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Torrence has come back. The red German
+pom-pom has gone from her cap and she wears the
+badge of the Belgian Motor Cyclist Corps, black
+wings on a white ground. Providence has rehabilitated
+himself. He has abased our trained nurse and
+expert motorist in order to exalt her. He fairly
+flung her in the path of the Colonel of (I think)
+the Belgian Motor Cyclist Corps at a moment when
+the Colonel found himself in a jibbing motor-car
+without a chauffeur. We gather that the Colonel
+was becoming hectic with blasphemy when she appeared
+and settled the little difficulty between him
+and his car. She seems to have followed it up by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span>
+driving him then and there straight up to the firing-line
+to look for wounded.</p>
+
+<p>End of the adventure&mdash;she volunteered her services
+as chauffeur to the Colonel and was accepted.</p>
+
+<p>The Commandant has received the news with imperturbable
+optimism.</p>
+
+<p>As for her, she is appeased. She will realize her
+valorous dream of "the greatest possible danger;"
+and she will get to her wounded.</p>
+
+<p>The others have come back too. They have toiled
+for five hours among the refugees.</p>
+
+<p class="centerspaced2">[<i>5.30.</i>]</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">It</span> is my turn now at the Palais des Fêtes.</p>
+
+<p>It took ages to get in. The dining-hall is narrower
+than the sleeping-hall, but it extends beyond
+it on one side where there is a large door opening
+on the garden. But this door is closed to the public.
+You can only reach the dining-hall by going through
+the straw among the sleepers. And at this point the
+Commandant's optimism has broken down. He
+won't let you go in through the straw, and the clerk
+who controls the entry won't let you go in through
+the other door. You explain to the clerk that the
+English Ambulance being quartered in a Military
+Hospital, its rules are inviolable; it is not allowed to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span>
+expose itself to the horrors of the straw. The clerk
+is not interested in the English Ambulance, he is
+not impressed by the fact that it has volunteered its
+priceless services to the Refugee Committee, and he
+is contemptuous of the orders of its Commandant.
+His business is to see that you go into the Palais
+through <i>his</i> door and not through any other door.
+And when you tell him that if he will not withdraw
+his regulations the Ambulance will be compelled to
+withdraw its services, he replies with delicious sarcasm,
+"<i>Nous n'avons pas prévu ça</i>."
+In the end you are referred to the Secretary in
+his bureau. He grasps the situation and is urbanity
+itself. Provided with a special permit bearing his
+sacred signature, you are admitted by the other
+door.</p>
+
+<p>Your passage to the <i>Vestiaire</i> takes you through
+the infants' room and along the galleries past the
+wards. The crowd of refugees is so great that beds
+have been put up in the galleries. You take off your
+outer garments and put on the Belgian Red Cross
+uniform (you have realized by this time that your
+charming white overall and veil are sanitary precautions).</p>
+
+<p>Coming down the wide wooden stairways you
+have a full view of the Inner Hall. This enormous
+oblong space below the galleries is the heart, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span>
+fervid central <i>foyer</i> of the Palais des Fêtes. At
+either end of it is an immense auditorium, tier above
+tier of seats, rising towards the gallery floors. All
+down each side of it, standards with triumphal devices
+are tilted from the balustrade. Banners hang
+from the rafters.</p>
+
+<p>And under them, down the whole length of the
+hall from auditorium to auditorium, the tables are
+set out. Bare wooden tables, one after another,
+more tables than you can count.</p>
+
+<p>From the door of the sleeping-hall to each auditorium,
+and from each auditorium down the line of
+the tables a gangway is roped off for the passage of
+the refugees.</p>
+
+<p>They say there are ten thousand five hundred here
+to-night. Beyond the rope-line, along the inner hall,
+more straw has been laid down to bed the overflow
+from the outer hall. They come on in relays to be
+fed. They are marshalled first into the seats of
+each auditorium, where they sit like the spectators
+of some monstrous festival and wait for their turn
+at the tables.</p>
+
+<p>This, the long procession of people streaming in
+without haste, in perfect order and submission, is
+heart-rending if you like. The immensity of the
+crowd no longer overpowers you. The barriers
+make it a steady procession, a credible spectacle.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span>
+You can take it in. It is the thin end of the wedge in
+your heart. They come on so slowly that you can
+count them as they come. They have sorted themselves
+out. The fathers and the mothers are together,
+they lead their little children by the hand or
+push them gently before them. There is no anticipation
+in their eyes; no eagerness and no impatience
+in their bearing. They do not hustle each other or
+scramble for their places. It is their silence and
+submission that you cannot stand.</p>
+
+<p>For you have a moment of dreadful inactivity
+after the setting of the tables for the <i>premier service</i>.
+You have filled your bowls with black coffee; somebody
+else has laid the slices of white bread on the
+bare tables. You have nothing to do but stand still
+and see them file in to the banquet. On the banners
+and standards from the roof and balustrades the
+Lion of Flanders ramps over their heads. And
+somewhere in the back of your brain a song sings
+itself to a tune that something in your brain wakes
+up:</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+<i>Ils ne vont pas dompter<br />
+Le vieux lion de Flandres,<br />
+Tant que le lion a des dents,<br />
+Tant que le lion peut griffer.</i></p>
+
+<p>It is the song the Belgian soldiers sang as they
+marched to battle in the first week of August. It
+is only the end of September now.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>And somebody standing beside you says: "<i>C'est
+triste, n'est-ce pas?</i>"</p>
+
+<p>You cannot look any more.</p>
+
+<p>At the canteen the men are pouring out coffee
+from enormous enamelled jugs into the small jugs
+that the waitresses bring. This wastes your time
+and cools the coffee. So you take a big jug from
+the men. It seems to you no heavier than an ordinary
+teapot. And you run with it. To carry the
+largest possible jug at the swiftest possible pace is
+your only chance of keeping sane. (It isn't till it
+is all over that you hear the whisper of "<i>Anglaise!</i>"
+and realize how very far from sane you must have
+looked running round with your enormous jug.)
+You can fill up the coffee bowls again&mdash;the little
+bowls full, the big bowls only half full; there is
+more than enough coffee to go round. But there is
+no milk except for the babies. And when they ask
+you for more bread there is not enough to go twice
+round. The ration is now two slices of dry bread
+and a bowl of black coffee three times a day. Till
+yesterday there was an allowance of meat for soup
+at the mid-day meal; to-day the army has commandeered
+all the meat.</p>
+
+<p>But you needn't stand still any more. After the
+first service the bowls have to be cleared from the
+tables and washed and laid ready for the next.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span>
+Round the great wooden tubs there is a frightful
+competition. It is who can wash and dry and carry
+back the quickest. You contend with brawny
+Flemish women for the first dip into the tub and the
+driest towel. Then you race round the tables with
+your pile of crockery, and then with your jug, and
+so on over and over again for three hours, till the last
+relay is fed and the tables are deserted. You wash
+up again and it is all over for you till six o'clock to-morrow
+evening.</p>
+
+<p>You go back to your mess-room and a ten-o'clock
+supper of cold coffee and sandwiches and Belgian
+current loaf eaten with butter. And in a nightmare
+afterwards Belgian refugees gather round you
+and pluck at your sleeve and cry to you for more
+bread: "<i>Une petite tranche de pain, s'il vous plaît,
+mademoiselle!</i>"</p>
+
+<p class="centerspaced2">[<i>Wednesday, 30th.</i>]</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">No</span> Germans, nor sign of Germans yet.</p>
+
+<p>Fighting is reported at Saint Nicolas, between
+Antwerp and Ghent. The Commandant has an
+idea. He says that if the Belgian Army has to meet
+the Germans at Saint Nicolas, so as to cut off their
+advance on Antwerp, the base hospital must be removed
+from Ghent to some centre or point which
+will bring the Ambulance behind the Belgian lines.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span>
+He thinks that working from Ghent would necessarily
+bring it behind the German lines. This is
+assuming that the Germans coming up from the
+south-east will cut in between Saint Nicolas and
+Ghent.</p>
+
+<p>He consults the President, who apparently thinks
+that the base hospital will do very well where it is.</p>
+
+<p class="centerspaced2">[<i>2.30.</i>]</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. Torrence</span> brought her Colonel in to lunch.
+He is battered and grizzled, but still a fine figure
+in the dark-green uniform of the Motor Cyclist
+Corps. He is very polite and gallant <i>à la belge</i> and
+vows that he has taken on Mrs. Torrence <i>pour toujours,
+pour la vie</i>! She diverts the flow of urbanity
+adroitly.</p>
+
+<p>Except the Colonel nothing noteworthy seems to
+have occurred to-day. The three hours at the Palais
+des Fêtes were like the three hours last night.</p>
+
+<p class="centerspaced2">[<i>Thursday, October 1st.</i>]</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">It</span> really isn't safe for the Commandant to go out
+with Ursula Dearmer. For her luck in the matter
+of bombardments continues. (He might just as
+well be with Mrs. Torrence.) They have been at
+Termonde. What is more, it was Ursula Dearmer<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span>
+who got them through, in spite of the medical military
+officer whose vigorous efforts stopped them at
+the barrier. He seems at one point to have shown
+weakness and given them leave to go on a little way
+up the road; and the little way seems to have carried
+them out of his sight and onward till they encountered
+the Colonel (or it may have been a General)
+in command. The Colonel (or the General) seems
+to have broken down very badly, for the car and
+Ursula Dearmer and the Commandant went on towards
+Termonde. Young Haynes was with them
+this time, and on the way they had picked up Mr.
+G. L&mdash;&mdash;, War Correspondent to the <i>Daily Mail</i> and
+<i>Westminster</i>. They left the car behind somewhere
+in a safe place where the fire from the machine-guns
+couldn't reach it. There is a street or a road&mdash;I
+can't make out whether it is inside or outside the
+town; it leads straight to the bridge over the river,
+which is about as wide there as the Thames at Westminster.
+The bridge is the key to the position; it has
+been blown up and built again several times in the
+course of the War, and the Germans are now entrenched
+beyond it. The road had been raked by
+their <i>mitrailleuses</i> the day before.</p>
+
+<p>It seems to have struck the four simultaneously
+that it would be quite a good thing to walk
+down this road on the off-chance of the machine<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span>-guns
+opening fire again. The tale told by the Commandant
+evokes an awful vision of them walking
+down it, four abreast, the Commandant and Mr. G.
+L&mdash;&mdash; on the outside, fairly under shelter, and
+Ursula Dearmer and young Haynes a little in front
+of them down the middle, where the fire comes, when
+it does come. This spectacle seems to have shaken
+the Commandant in his view of bombarded towns
+as suitable places of amusement for young girls.
+Young Haynes ought to have known better. You
+tell him that as long as the world endures young
+Haynes will be young Haynes, and if there is danger
+in the middle of the road, it is there that he will
+walk by preference. And as no young woman of
+modern times is going to let herself be outdone by
+young Haynes, you must expect to find Ursula Dearmer
+in the middle of the road too. You cannot suppress
+this competitive heroism of young people.
+The roots strike too deep down in human nature.
+In the modern young man and woman competitive
+heroism has completely forgotten its origin and is
+now an end in itself.</p>
+
+<p>And if it comes to that&mdash;how about Alost?</p>
+
+<p>At the mention of Alost the Commandant's face
+becomes childlike again in its utter simplicity and
+innocence and candour. Alost was a very different
+thing. Looking for shells at Alost, you understand,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span>
+was like looking for shells on the seashore. At
+Alost Ursula Dearmer was in no sort of danger.
+For at Alost she was under the Commandant's wing
+(young Haynes hasn't got any wings, only legs to
+walk into the line of fire on). He explains very
+carefully that he took her under his wing <i>because</i> she
+is a young girl and he feels responsible for her to her
+mother.</p>
+
+<p>(Which, oddly enough, is just how <i>I</i> feel!)</p>
+
+<p>As for young Haynes, I suppose he would plead
+that when he and Ursula Dearmer walked down the
+middle of the road there was no firing.</p>
+
+<p>That seems to have been young Haynes's particular
+good fortune. I have now a perfect obsession
+of responsibility. I see, in one dreadful vision
+after another, the things that must happen to Ursula
+Dearmer under the Commandant's wing, and to
+young Haynes and the Commandant under Ursula
+Dearmer's.</p>
+
+<p>No wounded were found, this time, at Termonde.</p>
+
+<p>This little <i>contretemps</i> with the Commandant has
+made me forget to record a far more notable event.
+Mrs. Torrence brought young Lieutenant G&mdash;&mdash; in
+to luncheon. He is the hero of the Belgian Motor
+Cyclist Corps. He is said to have accounted for
+nine Germans with his own rifle in one morning.
+The Corps has already intimated that this is the first<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span>
+well-defined specimen of a man it has yet seen in
+Belgium. His dark-green uniform fits him exceedingly
+well. He is tall and handsome. Drenched in
+the glamour of the greatest possible danger, he gives
+it off like a subtle essence. As he was led in he had
+rather the air, the slightly awkward, puzzled and embarrassed
+air, of being on show as a fine specimen of
+a man. But it very soon wore off. In the absence
+of the Commandant he sat in the Commandant's
+place, so magnificent a figure that our mess, with
+gaps at every table, looked like a banquet given in
+his honour, a banquet whose guests had been decimated
+by some catastrophe.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly&mdash;whether it was the presence of the
+Lieutenant or the absence of the Commandant, or
+merely reaction from the strain of inactivity, I don't
+know, but suddenly madness came upon our mess.
+The mess-room was no longer a mess-room in a Military
+Hospital, but a British school-room. Mrs. Torrence
+had changed her woollen cap for a grey felt
+wide-awake. She was no longer an Arctic explorer,
+but the wild-western cowboy of British melodrama.
+She was the first to go mad. One moment she was
+seated decorously at the Lieutenant's right hand; the
+next she was strolling round the tables with an air
+of innocent abstraction, having armed herself in
+secret with the little hard round rolls supplied by or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span>der
+of the Commandant. Each little roll became a
+deadly <i>obus</i> in her hand. She turned. Her innocent
+abstraction was intense as she poised herself to
+aim.</p>
+
+<p>With a shout of laughter Dr. Bird ducked behind
+the cover of his table-napkin.</p>
+
+<p>I had a sudden memory of Mrs. Torrence in command
+of the party at Ostend, a figure of austere
+duty, of inexorable propriety, rigid with the discipline
+of the &mdash;&mdash; Hospital, restraining the criminal
+levity of the Red Cross volunteer who would look
+or dream of looking at Ostend Cathedral. Mrs.
+Torrence, like a seven-year-old child meditating mischief,
+like a baby panther at play, like a very young
+and very engaging demon let loose, is looking at Dr.
+Bird. He is not a Cathedral, but he suffered bombardment
+all the same. She got his range with a
+roll. She landed her shell in the very centre of his
+waistcoat.</p>
+
+<p>Her madness entered into Dr. Bird. He replied
+with a spirited fire which fell wide of her and battered
+the mess-room door. The orderlies retreated
+for shelter into the vestibule beyond. Jean was the
+first to penetrate the line of fire. Max followed
+him.</p>
+
+<p>Madness entered into Max. He ceased to be a
+hospital orderly. He became Prosper Panne again,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span>
+the very young <i>collégien</i>, as he put down his dishes
+and glided unobtrusively into the affair.</p>
+
+<p>And then the young Belgian Lieutenant went mad.
+But he gave way by degrees. At first he sat up
+straight and stiff with polite astonishment before the
+spectacle of a British "rag." He paid the dubious
+tribute of a weak giggle to the bombardment of Dr.
+Bird. He was convulsed at the first performance of
+Prosper Panne. In his final collapse he was rocking
+to and fro and crowing with helpless, hysterical
+laughter.</p>
+
+<p>For with the entrance of Prosper Panne the mess-room
+became a scene at the <i>Folies Bergères</i>. There
+was Mrs. Torrence, <i>première comédienne</i>, in the costume
+of a wild-western cowboy; there was the young
+Lieutenant himself, looking like a stage-lieutenant in
+the dark-green uniform of the Belgian Motor Cyclist
+Corps; and there was Prosper Panne. He began by
+picking up Mrs. Torrence's brown leather motor
+glove with its huge gauntlet, and examining it with
+the deliciously foolish bewilderment of the accomplished
+clown. After one or two failures, brilliantly
+improvised, he fixed it firmly on his head. The huge
+gauntlet, with its limp five fingers dangling over his
+left ear, became a rakish képi with a five-pointed
+flap. Max&mdash;I mean Prosper Panne&mdash;wore it
+with an "<i>air impayable</i>." Out of his round, soft,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span>
+putty-coloured face he made fifteen other faces in
+rapid succession, all incomparably absurd. He lit a
+cigarette and held it between his lower lip and his
+chin. The effect was of a miraculous transformation
+of those features, in which his upper lip disappeared
+altogether, his lower lip took on its functions,
+while his chin ceased to be a chin and became
+a lower lip. With this achievement Prosper Panne
+had his audience in the hollow of his hands. He
+could do what he liked with it. He did. He
+caused his motor-glove cap to fall from his head
+as if by some mysterious movement of its own.
+Then he went round the stalls and gravely and
+earnestly removed all our hats. With an air more
+and more "<i>impayable</i>" he wore each one of them
+in turn&mdash;the grey felt wide-awake of the wild-western
+cowboy, the knitted Jaeger head-gear of
+the little Arctic explorer, the dark-blue military cap
+with the red tassel assumed by Dr. Bird, even the
+green cap with the winged symbol of the young
+Belgian officer. By this time the young Belgian
+officer was so entirely the thrall of Prosper Panne
+that he didn't turn a hair.</p>
+
+<p>Flushed with success, Max rose to his top-notch.
+Moving slowly towards the open door (centre)
+with his back to his audience and his head turned
+towards it over his left shoulder, by some extraor<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span>dinary
+dislocation of his hip-joints, he achieved
+the immemorial salutation of the <i>Folies Bergères</i>&mdash;the
+last faint survival of the Old Athenian Comedy.</p>
+
+<p>Up till now Jean had affected to ignore the performance
+of his colleague. But under this supreme
+provocation he yielded to the Aristophanic impulse,
+and&mdash;<i>exit</i> Max in the approved manner of the
+<i>Folies Bergères</i>.</p>
+
+<p class="centerspread">········</p>
+
+<p>It is all over. The young Belgian officer has
+flown away on his motor cycle to pot Germans;
+Mrs. Torrence has gone off to the field with the
+Colonel on the quest of the greatest possible danger.
+The Ambulance has followed them there.</p>
+
+<p>I am in the mess-room, sitting at the disordered
+table and gazing at the ruins of our mess. I hear
+again the wild laughter of the mess-mates; it
+mingles with the cry of the refugees in the Palais
+des Fêtes: "<i>Une petite tranche de pain, s'il vous
+plaît, mademoiselle!</i>"</p>
+
+<p><i>C'est triste, n'est-ce pas?</i></p>
+
+<p>In the chair by the window Max lies back with
+his loose boyish legs extended limply in front of
+him; his round, close-cropped head droops to his
+shoulder, his round face (the face of a very young
+<i>collégien</i>) is white, the features are blurred and
+inert. Max is asleep with his dish-cloth in his hand,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span>
+in the sudden, pathetic sleep of exhaustion. After
+his brief, funny madness, he is asleep. Jean comes
+and looks at him and shakes his head. You understand
+from Jean that Max goes mad like that now
+and then on purpose, so that he may forget in what
+manner his mother went mad.</p>
+
+<p>We go quietly so as not to wake him a minute
+too soon, lest when he wakes he should remember.</p>
+
+<p>There is a Taube hovering over Ghent.</p>
+
+<p>Up there, in the clear blue sky it looks innocent,
+like an enormous greyish blond dragon-fly hovering
+over a pond. You stare at it, fascinated, as you
+stare at a hawk that hangs in mid-air, steadied by
+the vibration of its wings, watching its prey.</p>
+
+<p>You are not in the least disturbed by the watching
+Taube. An aeroplane, dropping a few bombs,
+is nothing to what goes on down there where the
+ambulances are.</p>
+
+<p>The ambulances have come back. I go out into
+the yard to look at them. They are not always nice
+to look at; the floors and steps would make you
+shudder if you were not past shuddering.</p>
+
+<p>I have found something to do. Not much, but
+still something. I am to look after the linen for
+the ambulances, to take away the blood-stained
+pillow-slips and blankets, and deliver them at the
+laundry and get clean ones from the linen-room.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span>
+It's odd, but I'm almost foolishly elated at being
+allowed to do this. We are still more or less
+weighed down by the sense of our uselessness.
+Even the Chaplain, though his services as a stretcher-bearer
+have been definitely recognized&mdash;even the
+Chaplain continues to suffer in this way. He has
+just come to me to tell me with pride that he is
+making a good job of the stretchers he has got to
+mend.</p>
+
+<p>Then, just as I am beginning to lift up my head,
+the blow falls. Not one member of the Field
+Ambulance Corps is to be allowed to work at the
+Palais des Fêtes, for fear of bringing fever into
+the Military Hospital. And here we are, exactly
+where we were at the beginning of the week, Mrs.
+Lambert, Janet McNeil and I, three women out of
+five, with nothing to do and two convalescent orderlies
+waiting on us. If I could please myself I
+would tuck Max up in bed and wait on <i>him</i>.</p>
+
+<p>In spite of the ambulance linen, this is the worst
+day of all for the wretched Secretary and Reporter.
+Five days in Ghent and not a thing done; not a
+line written of those brilliant articles (from the
+Front) which were to bring in money for the Corps.
+To have nothing to do but hang about the Hospital
+on the off-chance of the Commandant coming back
+unexpectedly and wanting a letter written; to pass<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span>
+the man with the bullet wound in his mouth a dozen
+times a day (he is getting very slowly better; his
+poor face was a little more human this morning);
+to see the maimed and crippled men trailing and
+hobbling about the hall, and the wounded carried
+in on their stretchers&mdash;dripping stretchers, agonized
+bodies, limbs rolled in bandages, blood oozing
+through the bandages, heads bound with bandages,
+bandages glued tight to the bone with blood&mdash;to
+see all this and be utterly powerless to help; to endure,
+day after day, the blank, blond horror of the
+empty mess-room; to sit before a marble-topped
+table with a bad pen, never enough paper and
+hardly any ink, and nothing at all to write about,
+while all the time the names of places, places you
+have not seen and never will see&mdash;Termonde,
+Alost, Quatrecht and Courtrai&mdash;go on sounding
+in your brain with a maddening, luring reiteration;
+to sit in a hateful inactivity, and a disgusting, an
+intolerable safety, and to be haunted by a vision of
+two figures, intensely clear on a somewhat vague
+background&mdash;Mrs. Torrence following her star of
+the greatest possible danger, and Ursula Dearmer
+wandering in youth and innocence among the shells;
+to be obliged to think of Ursula Dearmer's mother
+when you would much rather not think of her; to
+be profoundly and irrevocably angry with the guile<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span>less
+Commandant, whom at the moment you regard
+(it may be perversely) as the prime agent in this
+fatuous sacrifice of women's lives; to want to stop
+it and to be unable to stop it, and at the same time
+to feel a brute because you want to stop it&mdash;when
+<i>they</i> are enjoying the adventure&mdash;I can only say
+of the experience that I hope there is no depth of
+futility deeper than this to come. You might as
+well be taken prisoner by the Germans&mdash;better,
+since that would, at least, give you something to
+write about afterwards.</p>
+
+<p>What's more, I'm bored.</p>
+
+<p>When I told the Commandant all this he looked
+very straight at me and said, "Then you'd better
+come with us to Termonde." So straight he looked
+that the suggestion struck me less as a <i>bona fide</i>
+offer than an ironic reference to my five weeks'
+funk.</p>
+
+<p>I don't tell him that that is precisely what I want
+to do. That his wretched Reporter nourishes an
+insane ambition&mdash;not to become a Special Correspondent;
+not to career under massive headlines
+in the columns of the <i>Daily Mail</i>; not to steal a
+march on other War Correspondents and secure the
+one glorious "scoop" of the campaign. Not any
+of these sickly and insignificant things. But&mdash;in
+defiance of Tom, the chauffeur&mdash;to go out with the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span>
+Field Ambulance as an <i>ambulancière</i>, and hunt for
+wounded men, and in the intervals of hunting to
+observe the orbit of a shell and the manner of
+shrapnel in descending. To be left behind, every
+day, in an empty mess-room, with a bad pen, utterly
+deprived of copy or of any substitute for copy,
+and to have to construct war articles out of your
+inner consciousness, would be purgatory for a journalist.
+But to have a mad dream in your soul and
+a pair of breeches in your hold-all, and to see no
+possibility of "sporting" either, is the very refinement
+of hell. And your tortures will be unbearable
+if, at the same time, you have to hold your
+tongue about them and pretend that you are a genuine
+reporter and that all you want is copy and your
+utmost aim the business of the "scoop."</p>
+
+<p>After a week of it you will not be likely to look
+with crystal clarity on other people's lapses from
+precaution.</p>
+
+<p>But it would be absurd to tell him this. Ten to
+one he wouldn't believe it. He thinks I am funking
+all the time.</p>
+
+<p class="centerspread">········</p>
+
+<p>I am still very angry with him. He must know
+that I am very angry. I think that somewhere inside
+him he is rather angry too.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="centerspread">········</p>
+
+<p>All the same he has come to me and asked me
+to give him my soap. He says Max has taken his.</p>
+
+<p>I give him my soap, but&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>These oppressions and obsessions, the deadly
+anxiety, the futile responsibility and the boredom
+are too much for me. I am thinking seriously of
+going home.</p>
+
+<p class="centerspread">········</p>
+
+<p>In the evening we&mdash;the Commandant and Janet
+McNeil and I&mdash;went down to the Hôtel de la
+Poste, to see the War Correspondents and hear the
+War news. Mr. G. L. and Mr. M. and Mr. P.
+were there. And there among them, to my astonishment,
+I found Mr. Davidson, the American sculptor.</p>
+
+<p>The last time I saw Mr. Davidson it was in Mr.
+Joseph Simpson's studio, the one under mine in
+Edwardes Square. He was making a bust of
+Rabindranath Tagore; and as the great mystic poet
+disconcerted him by continually lapsing into meditation
+under this process, thereby emptying his beautiful
+face of all expression whatever, I had been
+called down from my studio to talk to him, so as
+to lure him, if possible, from meditation and keep
+his features in play. Mr. Davidson made a very
+fine bust of Rabindranath Tagore. And here he
+is, imperfectly disguised by the shortest of short<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span>
+beards, drawing caricatures of G. L.&mdash;G. L. explaining
+the plan of campaign to the Belgian General
+Staff; G. L. very straight and tall, the Belgian
+General Staff looking up to him with innocent,
+deferential faces, earnestly anxious to be taught.
+I am not more surprised at seeing Mr. Davidson
+here than he is at seeing me. In the world that
+makes war we have both entirely forgotten the
+world where people make busts and pictures and
+books. But we accept each other's presence. It is
+only a small part of the fantastic dislocation of war.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing could be more different from the Flandria
+Palace Hotel, our Military Hospital, than the
+Hôtel de la Poste. It is packed with War Correspondents
+and Belgian officers. After the surgeons
+and the Red Cross nurses and their wounded,
+and the mysterious officials hanging about the porch
+and the hall, apparently doing nothing, after the
+English Ambulance and the melancholy inactivity
+of half its Corps, this place seems alive with a rich
+and virile life. It is full of live, exultant fighters,
+and of men who have their business not with the
+wounded and the dying but with live men and live
+things, and they have live words to tell about them.
+At least so it seems.</p>
+
+<p>You listen with all your ears, and presently Termonde
+and Alost and Quatrecht and Courtrai cease<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span>
+to be mere names for you and become realities. It
+is as if you had been taken from your prison and
+had been let loose into the world again.</p>
+
+<p>They are saying that there is no fighting at Saint
+Nicolas (the Commandant has been feeling about
+again for his visionary base hospital), but that the
+French troops are at Courtrai in great force. They
+have turned their left [?] wing round to the north-east
+and will probably sweep towards Brussels to
+cut off the German advance on Antwerp. The
+siege of Antwerp will then be raised. And a great
+battle will be fought outside Brussels, probably at
+Waterloo.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Waterloo!</span></p>
+
+<p>Mr. L. looks at you as much as to say that is
+what he has had up his sleeve all the time. The
+word comes from him as casually as if he spoke
+of the London and South-Western terminus. But
+he is alive to the power of its evocation, to the unsurpassable
+thrill. So are you. It starts the current
+in that wireless system of vibrations that travel
+unperishing, undiminished, from the dead to the
+living. There are not many kilometres between
+Ghent and Waterloo; you are not only within the
+radius of the psychic shock, you are close to the
+central batteries, and ninety-nine years are no more
+than one pulse of their vibration. Through I don't<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span>
+know how many kilometres and ninety-nine years it
+has tracked you down and found you in your one
+moment of response.</p>
+
+<p>It has a sudden steadying effect. Your brain
+clears. The things that loomed so large, the "Flandria,"
+and the English Field Ambulance and its
+miseries, and the terrifying recklessness of its Commandant,
+are reduced suddenly to invisibility. You
+can see nothing but the second Waterloo. You
+forget that you have ever been a prisoner in an
+Hotel-Hospital. You understand the mystic fascination
+of the road under your windows, going
+south-east from Ghent to Brussels, somewhere towards
+Waterloo. You are reconciled to the incomprehensible
+lassitude of events. That is what
+we have all been waiting for&mdash;the second Waterloo.
+And we have only waited five days.</p>
+
+<p>I am certainly not going back to England.</p>
+
+<p>The French troops are being massed at Courtrai.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly it strikes me that I have done an injustice
+to the Commandant. It is all very well to
+say that he brought me out here against my will.
+But did he? He said it would interest me to see
+the siege of Antwerp, and I said it wouldn't. I
+said with the most perfect sincerity that I'd die
+rather than go anywhere near the siege of Antwerp,
+or of any other place. And now the siege-guns<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span>
+from Namur are battering the forts of Antwerp,
+and down there the armies are gathering towards
+the second Waterloo, and the Commandant was
+right. I am extremely interested. I would die
+rather than go back to England.</p>
+
+<p>Is it possible that he knew me better than I knew
+myself?</p>
+
+<p>When I think that it is possible I feel a slight
+revulsion of justice towards the Commandant.
+After all, he brought me here. We may disagree
+about the present state of Alost and Termonde,
+considered as health-resorts for English girls, but
+it is pretty certain that without him we would none
+of us have got here. Where, indeed, should we
+have been and how should we have got our motor
+ambulances, but for his intrepid handling of Providence
+and of the Belgian Red Cross and the Belgian
+Legation? There is genius in a man who can go
+out without one car, or the least little nut or cog
+of a <i>châssis</i> to his name, and impose himself upon
+a Government as the Commandant of a Motor Field
+Ambulance.</p>
+
+<p>Still, though I am not going back to England as
+a protest, I <i>am</i> going to leave the Hospital Hotel
+for a little while. That bright idea has come to me
+just now while we are waiting for the Commandant
+to tear himself from the War Correspondents and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span>
+come away. I shall get a room here in the Hôtel
+de la Poste for a week, and, while we wait for
+Waterloo, I shall write some articles. The War
+Correspondents will tell me what is being done,
+and what has been overdone and what remains
+to do. I shall at least hear things if I can't see
+them. And I shall cut the obsession of responsibility.
+It'll be worse than ever if there really is
+going to be a second Waterloo.</p>
+
+<p>Waterloo with Ursula Dearmer and Janet in the
+thick of it, and Mrs. Torrence driving the Colonel's
+scouting-car!</p>
+
+<p>There are moments of bitterness and distortion
+when I see the Commandant as a curious psychic
+monster bringing up his women with him to the
+siege-guns because of some uncanny satisfaction
+he finds in their presence there. There are moods,
+only less perverted, when I see him pursuing his
+course because it is his course, through sheer Highland
+Celtic obstinacy; lucid flashes when he appears,
+blinded by the glamour of his dream, and innocently
+regardless of actuality. Is it uncanniness? Is it
+obstinacy? Is it dreamy innocence? Or is it some
+gorgeous streak of Feminism? Is it the New
+Chivalry, that refuses to keep women back, even
+from the firing-line? The New Romance, that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span>
+gives them their share of divine danger? Or, since
+nothing can be more absurd than to suppose that
+any person acts at all times and in all circumstances
+on one ground, or necessarily on any grounds, is
+it a little bit of all these things? I am not sure
+that Feminism, or at any rate the New Chivalry,
+doesn't presuppose them all.</p>
+
+<p>The New Chivalry sees the point of its reporter's
+retirement to the Hôtel de la Poste, since it has
+decided that journalism is my work, and journalism
+cannot flourish at the "Flandria." So we interview
+the nice fat <i>propriétaire</i>, and the <i>propriétaire's</i>
+nice fat wife, and between them they find a room
+for me, a back room on the fourth floor, the only
+one vacant in the hotel; it looks out on the white-tiled
+walls and the windows of the enclosing wings.
+The space shut in is deep and narrow as a well.
+The view from that room is more like a prison than
+any view from the "Flandria," but I take it. I
+am not deceived by appearances, and I recognize
+that the peace of God is there.</p>
+
+<p>It is a relief to think that poor Max will have one
+less to work for.</p>
+
+<p>At the "Flandria" we find that the Military
+Power has put its foot down. The General&mdash;he
+cannot have a spark of the New Chivalry in his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span>
+brutal breast&mdash;has ordered Mrs. Torrence off her
+chauffeur's job. You see the grizzled Colonel as
+the image of protest and desolation, helpless in the
+hands of the implacable Power. You are sorry for
+Mrs. Torrence (she has seen practically no service
+with the ambulance as yet), but she, at any rate,
+has had her fling. No power can take from her
+the memory of those two days.</p>
+
+<p>Still, something is going to be done to-morrow,
+and this time, even the miserable Reporter is to have
+a look in. The Commandant has another scheme
+for a temporary hospital or a dressing-station or
+something, and to-morrow he is going with Car
+1 to Courtrai to reconnoitre for a position and incidentally
+to see the French troops. A God-sent
+opportunity for the Reporter; and Janet McNeil
+is going, too. We are to get up at six o'clock in
+the morning and start before seven.</p>
+
+<p class="centerspaced2">[<i>Friday, October 2nd.</i>]</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">We</span> get up at six.</p>
+
+<p>We hang about till eight-thirty or nine. A fine
+rain begins to fall. An ominous rain. Car 1 and
+Car 2 are drawn up at the far end of the Hospital
+yard. The rain falls ominously over the yellow-brown,
+trodden clay of the yard. There is an om<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span>inous
+look of preparation about the cars. There is
+also an ominous light in the blue eyes of the chauffeur
+Tom.</p>
+
+<p>The chauffeur Tom appears as one inspired by
+hatred of the whole human race. You would say
+that he was also hostile to the entire female sex.
+For Woman in her right place he may, he probably
+does, feel tenderness and reverence. Woman in a
+field ambulance he despises and abhors. I really
+think it was the sight of us that accounted for his
+depression at Ostend. I have gathered from Mrs.
+Torrence that the chauffeur Tom has none of the
+New Chivalry about him. He is the mean and
+brutal male, the crass obstructionist who grudges
+women their laurels in the equal field.</p>
+
+<p>I know the dreadful, blasphemous and abominable
+things that Tom is probably thinking about me as
+I climb on to his car. He is visibly disgusted with
+his orders. That he, a Red Cross Field Ambulance
+chauffeur, should be told to drive four&mdash;or is it
+all five?&mdash;women to look at the massing of the
+French troops at Courtrai! He is not deceived by
+the specious pretext of the temporary hospital.
+Hospitals be blowed. It's a bloomin' joy-ride, with
+about as much Red Cross in it as there is in my
+hat. He is glad that it is raining.</p>
+
+<p>Yes, I know what Tom is thinking. And all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span>
+the time I have a sneaking sympathy with Tom.
+I want to go to Courtrai more than I ever wanted
+anything in my life, but I see the expedition plainly
+from Tom's point of view. A field ambulance is
+a field ambulance and not a motor touring car.</p>
+
+<p>And to-day Tom is justified. We have hardly
+got upon his car than we were told to get off it.
+We are not going to Courtrai. We are not going
+anywhere. From somewhere in those mysterious
+regions where it abides, the Military Power has
+come down.</p>
+
+<p>Even as I get off the car and return to the Hospital-prison,
+in melancholy retreat over the yellow-brown
+clay of the yard, through the rain, I acknowledge
+the essential righteousness of the point of view.
+And, to the everlasting honour of the Old Chivalry,
+it should be stated that the chauffeur Tom repressed
+all open and visible expression of his joy.</p>
+
+<p>The morning passes, as the other mornings
+passed, in unspeakable inactivity. Except that I
+make up the accounts and hand them over to Mr.
+Grierson. It seems incredible, but I have balanced
+them to the last franc.</p>
+
+<p>I pack. Am surprised in packing by Max and
+Jean. They both want to know the reason why.
+This is the terrible part of the business&mdash;leaving
+Max and Jean.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>I try to explain. Prosper Panne, who "writes
+for the Paris papers," understands me. He can see
+that the Hôtel de la Poste may be a better base for
+an attack upon the London papers. But Max does
+not understand. He perceives that I have a scruple
+about occupying my room. And he takes me into
+<i>his</i> room to show me how nice it is&mdash;every bit as
+good as mine. The implication being that if the
+Hospital can afford to lodge one of its orderlies so
+well, it can perfectly well afford to lodge me.
+(This is one of the prettiest things that Max has
+done yet! As long as I live I shall see him standing
+in his room and showing me how nice it is.)</p>
+
+<p>Still you can always appeal from Max to Prosper
+Panne. He understands these journalistic tempers
+and caprices. He knows on how thin a thread an
+article can hang. We have a brief discussion on
+the comparative difficulties of the <i>roman</i> and the
+<i>conte</i>, and he promises me to cherish and protect
+the hat I must leave behind me as if it were his
+bride.</p>
+
+<p>But Jean&mdash;Jean does not understand at all. He
+thinks that I am not satisfied with the service of
+our incomparable mess; that I prefer the flesh-pots
+of the "Poste" and the manners of its waiters.
+He has no other thought but this, and it is abominable;
+it is the worst of all. The explanation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span>
+thickens. I struggle gloriously with the French
+language; one moment it has me by the throat and
+I am strangled; the next I writhe forth triumphant.
+Strange gestures are given to me; I plunge into the
+darkest pits of memory for the words that have
+escaped me; I find them (or others just as good);
+it is really quite easy to say that I am coming back
+again in a week.</p>
+
+<p>Interview with Madame F. and M. G., the President.</p>
+
+<p>Interview with the Commandant. Final assault
+on the defences of the New Chivalry (the Commandant's
+mind is an impregnable fortress).</p>
+
+<p>And, by way of afterthought, I inquire whether,
+in the event of a sudden scoot before the Germans,
+a reporter quartered at the Hôtel de la Poste will
+be cut off from the base of communications and
+left to his or her ingenuity in flight?</p>
+
+<p>The Commandant, vague and imperturbable, replies
+that in all probability it will be so.</p>
+
+<p>And I (if possible more imperturbable than he)
+observe that the War Correspondents will make
+quite a nice flying-party.</p>
+
+<p>In a little open carriage&mdash;the taxis have long
+ago all gone to the War&mdash;in an absurd little open
+carriage, exactly like a Cheltenham "rat," I depart
+like a lady of Cheltenham, for the Hôtel de la Poste.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span>
+The appearance and the odour of this little carriage
+give you an odd sense of security and peace. The
+Germans may be advancing on Ghent at this moment,
+but for all the taste of war there is in it,
+you might be that lady, going from one hotel to
+the other, down the Cheltenham Promenade.</p>
+
+<p>The further you go from the Military Hospital
+and the Railway Station the more it is so. The
+War does not seem yet to have shaken the essential
+peace of the <i>bourgeois</i> city. The Hôtel de la Poste
+is in the old quarter of the town, where the Cathedrals
+are. Instead of the long, black railway lines
+and the red-brick façade of the Station and Post
+Office; instead of the wooded fields beyond and the
+white street that leads to the battle-places south
+and east; instead of the great Square with its mustering
+troops and swarms of refugees, you have
+the quiet Place d'Armes, shut in by trees, and all
+round it are the hotels and cafés where the officers
+and the War Correspondents come and go.
+Through all that coming and going you get the
+sense of the old foreign town that was dreaming
+yesterday. People are sitting outside the restaurants
+all round the Place, drinking coffee and liqueurs
+as if nothing had happened, as if Antwerp
+were far-off in another country, and as if it were
+still yesterday. Mosquitoes come up from the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span>
+drowsy canal water and swarm into the hotels and
+bite you. I found any number of mosquitoes clinging
+drowsily to my bedroom walls.</p>
+
+<p>But there are very few women among those
+crowds outside the restaurants. There are not
+many women except refugees in the streets, and
+fewer still in the shops.</p>
+
+<p>I have blundered across a little café with an affectionately
+smiling and reassuringly fat proprietress,
+where they give you <i>brioches</i> and China tea,
+which, as it were in sheer affection, they call English.
+It is not as happy a find as you might think.
+It is not, in the circumstances, happy at all. In fact,
+if you have never known what melancholy is and
+would like to know it, I can recommend two courses.
+Go down the Grand Canal in Venice in the grey
+spring of the year, in a gondola, all by yourself.
+Or get mixed up with a field ambulance which is
+not only doing noble work but running thrilling
+risks, in neither of which you have a share, or the
+ghost of a chance of a share; cut yourself off from
+your comrades, if it is only for a week, and go into
+a Belgian café in war-time and try to eat <i>brioches</i>and drink English tea all by yourself. This is
+the more successful course. You may see hope
+beyond the gondola and the Grand Canal. But<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span>
+you will see no hope beyond the <i>brioche</i> and the
+English tea.</p>
+
+<p>I walk about again till it is time to go back to
+the Hotel. So far, my emancipation has not been
+agreeable.</p>
+
+<p class="centerspaced2">[<i>Evening. Hôtel de la Poste.</i>]</p>
+
+<p>I <span class="smcap">dined</span> in the crowded restaurant, avoiding the
+War Correspondents, choosing a table where I
+hoped I might be unobserved. Somewhere through
+a glass screen I caught a sight of Mr. L.'s head.
+I was careful to avoid the glass screen and Mr. L.'s
+head. He shall not say, if I can possibly help it,
+that I am an infernal nuisance. For I know I
+haven't any business to be here, and if Belgium had
+a Kitchener I shouldn't be here. However you
+look at me, I am here on false pretences. In the
+eyes of Mr. L. I would have no more right to be
+a War Correspondent (if I were one) than I have
+to be on a field ambulance. It is with the game
+of war as it was with the game of football I used
+to play with my big brothers in the garden. The
+women may play it if they're fit enough, up to a
+certain point, very much as I played football in the
+garden. The big brothers let their little sister kick<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span>
+off; they let her run away with the ball; they stood
+back and let her make goal after goal; but when it
+came to the scrimmage they took hold of her and
+gently but firmly moved her to one side. If she persisted
+she became an infernal nuisance. And if
+those big brothers over there only knew what I
+was after they would make arrangements for my
+immediate removal from the seat of war.</p>
+
+<p>The Commandant has turned up with Ursula
+Dearmer. He is drawn to these War Correspondents
+who appear to know more than he does. On
+the other hand, an ambulance that can get into the
+firing-line has an irresistible attraction for a War
+Correspondent. It may at any moment constitute
+his only means of getting there himself.</p>
+
+<p>One of our cars has been sent out to Antwerp
+with dispatches and surgical appliances.</p>
+
+<p>The sight of the Commandant reminds me that
+I have got all the funds of the Ambulance upstairs
+in my suit-case in that leather purse-belt&mdash;and if
+the Ambulance does fly from Ghent without me,
+and without that belt, it will find itself in considerable
+embarrassment before it has retreated very far.</p>
+
+<p>It is quite certain that I shall have to take my
+chance. I have asked the Commandant again
+(either this evening or earlier) so that there may
+be no possible doubt about it: "If we do have to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span>
+scoot from Ghent in a hurry I shall have nothing
+but my wits to trust to?"</p>
+
+<p>And he says, "True for you."</p>
+
+<p>And he looks as if he meant it.<a name="FNanchor_3_4" id="FNanchor_3_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_4" class="fnanchor">[3]</a></p>
+
+<p>These remarkable words have a remarkable effect
+on the new War Correspondent. It is as if
+the coolness and the courage and the strength of
+a hundred War Correspondents and of fifty Red
+Cross Ambulances had been suddenly discharged
+into my soul. This absurd accession of power and
+valour<a name="FNanchor_4_5" id="FNanchor_4_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_5" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> is accompanied by a sudden immense lucidity.
+It is as if my soul had never really belonged
+to me until now, as if it had been either drugged
+or drunk and had never known what it was to be
+sober until now. The sensation is distinctly agreeable.
+And on the top of it all there is a peace which
+I distinctly recognize as the peace of God.</p>
+
+<p>So, while the Commandant talks to the War
+Correspondents as if nothing had happened, I go
+upstairs and unlock my suit-case and take from it
+the leather purse-belt with the Ambulance funds
+in it, and I bring it to the Commandant and lay it
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span>before him and compel him to put it on. As I
+do this I feel considerable compunction, as if I were
+launching a three-year-old child in a cockle-shell
+on the perilous ocean of finance. I remind him
+that fifteen pounds of the money in the belt is his
+(he would be as likely as not to forget it). As
+for the accounts, they are so clear that a three-year-old
+child could understand them. I notice
+with a diabolical satisfaction which persists through
+the all-pervading peace by no means as incongruously
+as you might imagine&mdash;I notice particularly
+that the Commandant doesn't like this part of it
+a bit. There is not anybody in the Corps who
+wants to be responsible for its funds or enjoys
+wearing that belt. But it is obvious that if the
+Ambulance can bear to be separated from its
+Treasurer-Secretary-Reporter, in the flight from
+Ghent, it cannot possibly bear to be separated from
+its funds.</p>
+
+<p>I am alone with the Commandant while this happens,
+standing by one of the writing-tables in the
+lounge. Ursula Dearmer (she grows more mature
+every day) and the War Correspondents and a few
+Generals have melted somewhere into the background.
+The long, lithe pigskin belt lies between
+us on the table&mdash;between my friend and me&mdash;like
+a pale snake. It exerts some malign and poi<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span>sonous
+influence. It makes me say things, things
+that I should not have thought it possible to say.
+And it is all about the shells at Alost.</p>
+
+<p>He is astonished.</p>
+
+<p>And I do not care.</p>
+
+<p>I am sustained, exalted by that sense of righteousness
+you feel when you are insanely pounding
+somebody who thinks that in perfect sanity and
+integrity he has pounded you.</p>
+
+<p class="centerspaced2">[<i>Saturday, 3rd.</i>]</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr.</span> L. asked me to breakfast. He has told me
+more about the Corps in five minutes than the
+Corps has been able to tell me in as many days. He
+has seen it at Alost and Termonde. You gather
+that he has seen other heroic enterprises also and
+that he would perjure himself if he swore that
+they were indispensable. Every Correspondent is
+besieged by the leaders of heroic enterprises, and
+I imagine that Mr. L. has been "had" before now
+by amateurs of the Red Cross, and his heart must
+have sunk when he heard of an English Field Ambulance
+in Ghent. And he owns to positive terror
+when he saw it, with its girls in breeches, its Commandant
+in Norfolk jacket, grey knickerbockers,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span>
+heather-mixture stockings and deer-stalker; its
+Chaplain in khaki, and its Surgeon a mark for bullets
+in his Belgian officer's cap. I suggest that this
+absence of uniform only proves our passionate eagerness
+to be off and get to work. But it is right.
+Our ambulance is the real thing, and Mr. L. is going
+to be an angel and help it all he can. He will
+write about it in the <i>Illustrated London News</i> and
+the <i>Westminster</i>. When he hears that I came out
+here to write about the War and make a little
+money for the Field Ambulance, and that I haven't
+seen anything of the War and that my invasion of
+his hotel is simply a last despairing effort to at least
+hear something, he is more angelic than ever. He
+causes a whole cinema of war-scenes to pass before
+my eyes. When I ask if there is anything left
+for me to "do," he evokes a long procession of articles&mdash;pure,
+virgin copy on which no journalist
+has ever laid his hands&mdash;and assures me that it is
+mine, that the things that have been done are nothing
+to the things that are left to do. I tell him that
+I have no business on his pitch, and that I am horribly
+afraid of getting in the regular Correspondents'
+way and spoiling their game; as I am likely to play
+it, there isn't any pitch. Of course, I suppose, there
+is the "scoop," but that's another matter. It is
+the War Correspondent's crown of cunning and of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span>
+valour, and nobody can take from him that crown.
+But in the psychology of the thing, every Correspondent
+is his own pitch. He has told me very
+nearly all the things I want to know, among them
+what the Belgian General said to the Commandant
+when he saw Ursula Dearmer at Alost:</p>
+
+<p>"What the devil is the lady doing there?"</p>
+
+<p>I gather that Mr. L. shares the General's wonder
+and my own anxiety. I am not far wrong in regarding
+Alost and Termonde as no fit place for
+Ursula Dearmer or any other woman.</p>
+
+<p>Answered the Commandant's letters for him.
+Wrote to Ezra Pound. Wrote out the report for
+the last three days' ambulance work and sent it to
+the British Red Cross; also a letter to Mr. Rogers
+about a light scouting-car. The British Red Cross
+has written that it cannot spare any more motor
+ambulances, but it may possibly send out a small
+car. (The Commandant has cabled to Mr. Gould,
+of Gould Bros., Exeter, accepting his offer of his
+own car and services.)</p>
+
+<p>Went down to the "Flandria" for news of the
+Ambulance. The car that was sent out yesterday
+evening got through all right to Antwerp and returned
+safely. It has brought very bad news. Two
+of the outer forts are said to have fallen. The
+position is critical, and grave anxiety is felt for the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span>
+safety of the English in Antwerp. Mrs. St. Clair
+Stobart has asked us for one of our ambulances.
+But even if we could spare it we cannot give it up
+without an order from the military authority at
+Ghent. We hear that Dr. &mdash;&mdash;, one of Mrs. Stobart's
+women, is to leave Antwerp and work at our
+hospital. She is engaged to be married to Dr. &mdash;&mdash;,
+and the poor boy is somewhat concerned for her
+safety. I'm very glad I have left the "Flandria,"
+for she can have my room.</p>
+
+<p>I wish they would make Miss &mdash;&mdash; come away
+too.</p>
+
+<p>Yes: Miss &mdash;&mdash;, that clever novelist, who passes
+for a woman of the world because she uses mundane
+appearances to hide herself from the world's
+importunity&mdash;Miss &mdash;&mdash; is here. The War caught
+her. Some people were surprised. I wasn't.<a name="FNanchor_5_6" id="FNanchor_5_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_6" class="fnanchor">[5]</a></p>
+
+<p class="centerspread">········</p>
+
+<p>Walked through the town again&mdash;old quarter.
+Walked and walked and walked, thinking about
+Antwerp all the time. Through streets of grey-white
+and lavender-tinted houses, with very fragile
+balconies. Saw the two Cathedrals<a name="FNanchor_6_7" id="FNanchor_6_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_7" class="fnanchor">[6]</a> and the Town
+Hall&mdash;refugees swarming round it&mdash;and the Rab&mdash;I
+can't remember its name: see Baedeker&mdash;with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span>
+its turrets and its moat. Any amount of time to
+see cathedrals in and no Mrs. Torrence to protest.
+I wonder how much of all this will be left by
+next month, or even by next week? Two of the
+Antwerp forts have fallen. They say the occupation
+of Ghent will be peaceful; while of Antwerp I
+suppose they would say, "<i>C'est triste, n'est-ce pas?</i>"
+They say the Germans will just march into Ghent
+and march out again, commandeering a few things
+here and there. But nobody knows, and by the
+stolid faces of these civilians you might imagine that
+nobody cares. Certainly none of them think that
+the fate of Antwerp can be the fate of Ghent.</p>
+
+<p>And the faces of the soldiers, of the men who
+know? They are the faces of important people,
+cheerful people, pleasantly preoccupied with the business
+in hand. Only here and there a grave face, a
+fixed, drawn face, a face twisted with the irritation
+of the strain.</p>
+
+<p>Why, the very refugees have the look of a rather
+tired tourist-party, wandering about, seeing Ghent,
+seeing the Cathedral.</p>
+
+<p>Only they aren't looking at the Cathedral. They
+are looking straight ahead, across the <i>Place</i>, up the
+street; they do not see or hear the trams swinging
+down on them, or the tearing, snorting motors; they
+stroll abstractedly into the line of the motors and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span>
+stand there; they start and scatter, wild-eyed, with a
+sudden recrudescence of the terror that has driven
+them here from their villages in the fields.</p>
+
+<p class="centerspread">········</p>
+
+<p>It seems incredible that I should be free to walk
+about like this. It is as if I had cut the rope that tied
+me to a soaring air-balloon and found myself, with
+firm feet, safe on the solid earth. Any bit of earth,
+even surrounded by Germans, seems safe compared
+with the asphyxiation of that ascent. And when the
+air-balloon wasn't going up it was as if I had lain
+stifling under a soft feather-bed for more than a
+year. Now I've waked up suddenly and flung the
+feather-bed off with a vigorous kick.</p>
+
+<p class="centerspaced2">[<a name="FNanchor_7_8" id="FNanchor_7_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_7_8" class="fnanchor">[7]</a><i>Sunday, 4th.</i>]</p>
+
+<p>(I <span class="smcap">have</span> no clear recollection of Sunday morning,
+because in the afternoon we went to Antwerp; and
+Antwerp has blotted out everything that went near
+before it.)</p>
+
+<p>The Ambulance has been ordered to take two Bel<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span>gian
+professors (or else they are doctors) into Antwerp.
+There isn't any question this time of carrying
+wounded. It seems incredible, but I am going
+too. I shall see the siege of Antwerp and hear the
+guns that were brought up from Namur.</p>
+
+<p>Somewhere, on the north-west horizon, a vision,
+heavenly, but impalpable, aerial, indistinct, of the
+Greatest Possible Danger.</p>
+
+<p>I am glad I am going. But the odd thing is that
+there is no excitement about it. It seems an entirely
+fit and natural thing that the vision should
+materialize, that I should see the shells battering the
+forts of Antwerp and hear the big siege-guns from
+Namur. For all its incredibility, the adventure lacks
+every element of surprise. It is simply what I came
+out for. For here in Belgium the really incredible
+things are the things that existed and happened
+before the War. They existed and happened a hun<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span>dred
+years ago and the memory of them is indistinct;
+the feeling of them is gone. You have ceased
+to have any personal interest in them; if they happened
+at all they happened to somebody else. What
+is happening now has been happening always. All
+your past is soaking in the vivid dye of these days,
+and what you are now you have been always. I
+have been a War Correspondent all my life&mdash;<i>blasée</i>
+with battles. The Commandant orders me into the
+front seat beside the chauffeur Tom, so that I may
+see things. Even Tom's face cannot shake me in
+my conviction that I am merely setting out once more
+on my usual, legitimate, daily job.</p>
+
+<p>It is all so natural that you do not wonder in
+the least at this really very singular extension of
+your personality. You are not aware of your personality
+at all. If you could be you would see it
+undergoing shrinkage. It is, anyhow, one of the
+things that ceased to matter a hundred years ago.
+If you could examine its contents at this moment
+you would find nothing there but that shining vision
+of danger, the siege of Antwerp, indistinct, impalpable,
+aerial.</p>
+
+<p>Presently the vision itself shrinks and disappears
+on the north-west horizon. The car has shot beyond
+the streets into the open road, the great paved
+highway to Antwerp, and I am absorbed in other<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span>
+matters: in Car 1 and in the chauffeur Tom, who is
+letting her rip more and more into her top speed
+with every mile; in M. C&mdash;&mdash;, the Belgian Red
+Cross guide, beside me on my left, and in the Belgian
+soldier sitting on the floor at his feet. The
+soldier is confiding some fearful secret to M. C&mdash;&mdash;
+about somebody called Achille. M. C&mdash;&mdash; bends
+very low to catch the name, as if he were trying to
+intercept and conceal it, and when he <i>has</i> caught it
+he assumes an air of superb mystery and gravity
+and importance. With one gesture he buries the
+name of Achille in his breast under his uniform.
+You know that he would die rather than betray the
+secret of Achille. You decide that Achille is the
+heroic bearer of dispatches, and that we have secret
+orders to pick him up somewhere and convey him in
+safety to Antwerp. You do not grasp the meaning
+of this pantomime until the third sentry has approached
+us, and M. C&mdash;&mdash; has stopped for the third
+time to whisper "Ach-ille!" behind the cover of his
+hand, and the third sentry is instantly appeased.</p>
+
+<p>(Concerning sentries, you learn that the Belgian
+kind is amiable, but that the French sentry is a terrible
+fellow, who will think nothing of shooting you
+if your car doesn't stop dead the instant he levels his
+rifle.)</p>
+
+<p>Except for sentries and straggling troops and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span>
+long trains of refugees, the country is as peaceful
+between Ghent and Saint Nicolas as it was last week
+between Ostend and Ghent. It is the same adorable
+Flemish country, the same flat fields, the same paved
+causeway and the same tall, slender avenues of trees.
+But if anything could make the desolation of Belgium
+more desolate it is this intolerable beauty of
+slender trees and infinite flat land, the beauty of a
+country formed for the very expression of peace.
+In the vivid gold and green of its autumn it has
+become a stage dressed with ironic splendour for
+the spectacle of a people in flight. Half the population
+of Antwerp and the country round it is pouring
+into Ghent.<a name="FNanchor_8_9" id="FNanchor_8_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_8_9" class="fnanchor">[8]</a> First the automobiles, Belgian officers
+in uniform packed tight between women and
+children and their bundles, convoying the train.
+Then the carriages secured by the <i>bourgeois</i> (they
+are very few); then men and boys on bicycles; then
+the carts, and with the coming on of the carts the
+spectacle grows incredible, fantastic. You see a
+thing advancing like a house on wheels. It is a tall
+hay-wagon&mdash;the tallest wagon you have ever seen
+in your life&mdash;piled with household furniture and
+mattresses on the top of the furniture, and on top of
+the mattresses, on the roof, as it were, a family of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span>
+women and children and young girls. Some of
+them seem conscious of the stupendous absurdity of
+this appearance; they smile at you or laugh as the
+structure goes towering and toppling by.</p>
+
+<p>Next, low on the ground, enormous and grotesque
+bundles, endowed with movement and with legs.
+Only when you come up to them do you see that
+they are borne on the bowed backs of men and
+women and children. The children&mdash;when there
+are no bundles to be borne these carry a bird in a
+cage, or a dog, a dog that sits in their arms like a
+baby and is pressed tight to their breasts. Here and
+there men and women driving their cattle before
+them, driving them gently, without haste, with a
+great dignity and patience.</p>
+
+<p>These, for all the panic and ruin in their bearing,
+might be pilgrims or suppliants, or the servants
+of some religious rite, bringing the votive offerings
+and the sacrificial beasts. The infinite land and the
+avenues of slender trees persuade you that it is so.</p>
+
+<p>And wherever the ambulance cars go they meet
+endless processions of refugees; endless, for the
+straight, flat Flemish roads are endless, and as far
+as your eye can see the stream of people is unbroken;
+endless, because the misery of Belgium is endless;
+the mind cannot grasp it or take it in. You cannot
+meet it with grief, hardly with conscious pity; you<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span>
+have no tears for it; it is a sorrow that transcends
+everything you have known of sorrow. These people
+have been left "only their eyes to weep with."
+But they do not weep any more than you do. They
+have no tears for themselves or for each other.<a name="FNanchor_9_10" id="FNanchor_9_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_9_10" class="fnanchor">[9]</a>
+This is the terrible thing, this and the manner of
+their flight. It is not flight, it is the vast, unhasting
+and unending movement of a people crushed down
+by grief and weariness, pushed on by its own weight,
+by the ceaseless impact of its ruin.</p>
+
+<p>This stream is the main stream from Antwerp,
+swollen by its tributaries. It doesn't seem to matter
+where it comes from, its strength and volume always
+seem the same. After the siege of Antwerp
+it will thicken and flow from some other direction,
+that is all. And all the streams seem to flow into
+Ghent and to meet in the Palais des Fêtes.<a name="FNanchor_10_11" id="FNanchor_10_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_10_11" class="fnanchor">[10]</a></p>
+
+<p>I forget whether it was near Lokeren or Saint
+Nicolas that we saw the first sign of fighting, in
+houses levelled to the ground to make way for the
+artillery fire; levelled, and raked into neat plots
+without the semblance of a site.</p>
+
+<p>After the refugees, the troops. Village streets<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span>
+crowded with military automobiles and trains of
+baggage wagons and regiments of infantry. Little
+villas with desolate, surprised and innocent faces,
+standing back in their gardens; soldiers sitting in
+their porches and verandahs, soldiers' faces looking
+out of their windows; soldiers are quartered in every
+room, and the grass grows high in their gardens.
+Soldiers run down the garden paths to look at our
+ambulance as it goes by.</p>
+
+<p>There is excitement in the village streets.</p>
+
+<p>At Saint Nicolas we overtake Dr. Wilson and
+Mr. Davidson walking into Antwerp. They tell us
+the news.</p>
+
+<p>The British troops have come. At last. They
+have been through before us on their way to Antwerp.
+Dr. Wilson and Mr. Davidson have seen the
+British troops. They have talked to them.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Davidson cannot conceal his glee at getting
+in before the War Correspondents. Pure luck has
+given into his hands <i>the</i> great journalistic scoop of
+the War in Belgium. And he is not a journalist.
+He is a sculptor out for the busts of warriors, and
+for actuality in those tragic and splendid figures
+that are grouped round memorial columns, for the
+living attitude and gesture.</p>
+
+<p>We take up Mr. Davidson and Dr. Wilson, and
+leave one of our professors (if he is a professor)<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span>
+at Saint Nicolas, for the poor man has come without
+his passport. He will have to hang about at Saint
+Nicolas, doing nothing, until such time as it pleases
+Heaven to send us back from Antwerp. He resigns
+himself, and we abandon him, a piteous figure
+wrapped in a brown shawl.</p>
+
+<p>After Saint Nicolas more troops, a few batteries
+of artillery, some infantry, long, long regiments of
+Belgian cavalry, coming to the defence of the country
+outside Antwerp. Cavalry halting at a fork of
+the road by a little fir-wood. A road that is rather
+like the road just outside Wareham as you go towards
+Poole. More troops. And after the troops
+an interminable procession of labourers trudging on
+foot. At a distance you take them for refugees,
+until you see that they are carrying poles and spades.
+Presently the road cuts through the circle of stakes
+and barbed wire entanglements set for the German
+cavalry. And somewhere on our left (whether
+before or after Saint Nicolas I cannot remember),
+across a field, the rail embankment ran parallel with
+our field, and we saw the long ambulance train, flying
+the Red Cross and loaded with wounded, on
+its way from Antwerp to Ghent. At this point the
+line is exposed conspicuously, and we must have been
+well within range of the German fire, for the next<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span>
+ambulance train&mdash;but we didn't know about the
+next ambulance train till afterwards.</p>
+
+<p>After the circle of the stakes and wire entanglements
+you begin to think of the bombardment. You
+strain your ears for the sound of the siege-guns from
+Namur. Somewhere ahead of us on the horizon
+there is Antwerp. Towers and tall chimneys in a
+very grey distance. Every minute you look for the
+flight of the shells across the grey and the fall of a
+tower or a chimney. But the grey is utterly peaceful
+and the towers and the tall chimneys remain.
+And at last you turn in a righteous indignation and
+say: "Where is the bombardment?"</p>
+
+<p>The bombardment is at the outer forts.</p>
+
+<p>And where are the forts, then? (You see no
+forts.)</p>
+
+<p>The outer forts? Oh, the outer forts are thirty
+kilometres away.</p>
+
+<p>No. Not there. To your right.</p>
+
+<p>And you, who thought you would have died rather
+than see the siege of Antwerp, are dumb with disgust.
+Your heart swells with a holy and incorruptible
+resentment of the sheer levity of the Commandant.</p>
+
+<p>A pretty thing&mdash;to bring a War Correspondent
+out to see a bombardment when there isn't any bom<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span>bardment,
+or when all there ever was is a hundred&mdash;well
+then, <i>thirty</i> kilometres away.<a name="FNanchor_11_12" id="FNanchor_11_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_11_12" class="fnanchor">[11]</a></p>
+
+<p>It was twilight as we came into Antwerp. We
+approached it by the west, by the way of the sea, by
+the great bridge of boats over the Scheldt. The
+sea and the dykes are the defence of Antwerp on
+this side. Whole regiments of troops are crossing
+the bridge of boats. Our car crawls by inches at
+a time. It is jammed tight among some baggage
+wagons. It disentangles itself with difficulty from
+the baggage wagons, and is wedged tighter still
+among the troops. But the troops are moving,
+though by inches at a time. We get our front
+wheels on to the bridge. Packed in among the
+troops, but moving steadily as they move, we cross
+the Scheldt. On our right the sharp bows and on
+our left the blunt sterns of the boats. Boat after
+boat pressed close, gunwale to gunwale, our roadway
+goes across their breasts. Their breasts are
+taut as the breasts of gymnasts under the tramping
+of the regiments. They vibrate like the breasts of
+living things as they bear us up.</p>
+
+<p>No heaving of any beautiful and beloved ship,
+no crossing of any sea, no sight of any city that
+has the sea at her feet, not New York City nor
+Venice, no coming into any foreign land, ever thrilled<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span>
+me as that coming into Antwerp with the Belgian
+army over that bridge of boats.</p>
+
+<p>At twilight, from the river, with its lamps lit and
+all its waters shining, Antwerp looked beautiful as
+Venice and as safe and still. For the dykes are
+her defences on this side. But for the trudging
+regiments you would not have guessed that on the
+land side the outer ramparts were being shelled incessantly.</p>
+
+<p>It was a struggle up the slope from the river bank
+to the quay, a struggle in which we engaged with
+commissariat and ammunition wagons and troops
+and refugees in carts, all trying to get away from
+the city over the bridge of boats. The ascent was
+so steep and slippery that you felt as though at any
+moment the car might hurl itself down backwards
+on the top of the processions struggling behind
+it.</p>
+
+<p>At last we landed. I have no vivid recollection<a name="FNanchor_12_13" id="FNanchor_12_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_12_13" class="fnanchor">[12]</a>
+of our passage through the town. Except that I
+know we actually were in Antwerp I could not say
+whether I really saw certain winding streets and old
+houses with steep gables or whether I dreamed them.
+There was one great street of white houses and
+gilded signs that stood shimmering somewhere in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span>
+the twilight; but I cannot tell you what street it
+was. And there were some modern boulevards, and
+the whole place was very silent. It had the silence
+and half darkness of dreams, and the beauty and
+magic and sinister sadness of dreams. And in that
+silence and sadness our car, with its backings and
+turnings and its snorts, and our own voices as we
+asked our way (for we were more or less lost in
+Antwerp) seemed to be making an appalling and inappropriate
+and impious noise.</p>
+
+<p>Antwerp seems to me to have been all hospitals,
+though I only saw two, or perhaps three. One was
+in an ordinary house in a street, and I think this
+must have been the British Field Hospital; for Mrs.
+Winterbottom was there. And of all the women
+I met thus casually "at the front" she was, by a
+long way, the most attractive. We went into one
+or two of the wards; in others, where the cases were
+very serious, we were only allowed to stand for a
+second in the doorway; there were others again
+which we could not see at all.</p>
+
+<p>I think, unless I am rolling two hospitals into
+one, that we saw a second&mdash;the English Hospital.
+It was for the English Hospital that we heard the
+Commandant inquire perpetually as we made our
+way through the strange streets and the boulevards
+beyond them, following at his own furious pace, los<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span>ing
+him in byways and finding him by some miracle
+again. Talk of dreams! Our progress through
+Antwerp was like one of those nightmares which
+have no form or substance but are made up of
+ghastly twilight and hopeless quest and ever-accelerating
+speed. It was not till it was all over that we
+knew the reason for his excessive haste.</p>
+
+<p>When we got to Mrs. St. Clair Stobart's Hospital&mdash;in
+a garden, planted somewhere away beyond
+the boulevards in an open place&mdash;we had
+hardly any time to look at it. All the same, I shall
+never forget that Hospital as long as I live. It
+had been a concert-hall<a name="FNanchor_13_14" id="FNanchor_13_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_13_14" class="fnanchor">[13]</a> and was built principally
+of glass and iron; at any rate, if it was not really
+the greenhouse that it seemed to be there was a great
+deal of glass about it, and it had been shelled by
+aeroplane the night before. No great damage had
+been done, but the sound and the shock had terrified
+the wounded in their beds. This hospital, as everybody
+knows, is run entirely by women, with women
+doctors, women surgeons, women orderlies. Mrs.
+St. Clair Stobart and some of her gallant staff came
+out to meet us on a big verandah in front of this
+fantastic building, she and her orderlies in the uniform
+of the British Red Cross, her surgeons in long<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span>
+white linen coats over their skirts. Dr. &mdash;&mdash; whom
+we are to take back with us to Ghent, was there.</p>
+
+<p>We asked for Miss &mdash;&mdash;, and she came to us
+finally in a small room adjoining what must have
+been the restaurant of the concert-hall.</p>
+
+<p>I was shocked at her appearance. She was quieter
+than ever and her face was grey and worn with
+watching. She looked as if she could not have held
+out another night.</p>
+
+<p>She told us about last night's bombardment. The
+effect of it on this absurd greenhouse must have
+been terrific. Every day they are expecting the bombardment
+of the town.</p>
+
+<p>No, none of them are leaving except two. Every
+woman will stick to her post<a name="FNanchor_14_15" id="FNanchor_14_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_14_15" class="fnanchor">[14]</a> till the order comes
+to evacuate the hospital, and then not one will quit
+till the last wounded man is carried to the transport.</p>
+
+<p>It seems that Miss &mdash;&mdash; is a hospital orderly, and
+that her duty is to stand at the gate of the garden
+with a lantern as the ambulances come in and to light
+them to the door of the hospital, and then to see
+that each man has the number of his cot pinned to the
+breast of his sleeping-jacket.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Stobart, very properly, will have none but
+trained women in her hospital. But even an untrained
+woman is equal to holding a lantern and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span>
+pinning on tickets, so I implored Miss &mdash;&mdash; to let
+me take her place while she went back to rest in my
+room at Ghent, if it was only for one night. I used
+every argument I could think of, and for one second
+I thought the best argument had prevailed. But
+it was only for a second. Probably not even for a
+second. Miss &mdash;&mdash; may drop to pieces at her post,
+but it is there that she will drop.</p>
+
+<p>Outside on the verandah the Commandant was
+fairly ramping to be off. No&mdash;I can't see the
+Hospital. There isn't any time to see the Hospital.
+But Miss &mdash;&mdash; could not bear me not to see it, and
+together we made a surreptitious bolt for it, and I
+did see the Hospital.</p>
+
+<p>It was not like any hospital you had ever seen before.
+Except that the wounded were all comfortably
+bedded, it was more like the sleeping-hall of
+the Palais des Fêtes. The floor of the great concert-hall
+was covered with mattresses and beds,
+where the wounded lay about in every attitude of
+suffering. No doubt everything was in the most
+perfect order, and the nurses and doctors knew how
+to thread their way through it all, but to the hurried
+spectator in the doorway the effect was one of the
+most <i>macabre</i> confusion. Only one object stood
+out&mdash;the large naked back of a Belgian soldier,
+who sat on the edge of his bed waiting to be washed.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span>
+He must have been really the most cheerful and
+(comparatively) uninjured figure in the whole
+crowd, but he seemed the most pitiful, because of
+the sheer human insistence of his pathetic back.</p>
+
+<p>Over this back and over all that prostrate agony
+the enormous floriated bronze rings that carried the
+lights of the concert-hall hung from the ceiling in
+frightful, festive decoration.</p>
+
+<p>Miss &mdash;&mdash; whispered: "One of them is dying.
+We can't save him."</p>
+
+<p>She seemed to regard this one as a positive slur
+on their record. I thought: "Only one&mdash;among
+all that crowd!"</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Stobart came after us in some alarm as we
+ran down the garden.</p>
+
+<p>"What are you doing with Miss &mdash;&mdash;? You're
+not going to carry her off?"</p>
+
+<p>"No," I said, "we're not. She won't come."</p>
+
+<p>But we have got off with Dr. &mdash;&mdash;.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Stobart has refused the Commandant's offer
+of one of our best surgeons in exchange. He is a
+man. And this hospital is a Feminist Show.</p>
+
+<p>We dined in a great hurry in a big restaurant in
+one of the main streets. The restaurant was nearly
+empty and funereal black cloths were hung over the
+windows to obscure the lights.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Davidson (this cheerful presence was with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span>
+us in our dream-like career through Antwerp)&mdash;Mr.
+Davidson and I amused ourselves by planning
+how we will behave when we are taken prisoner
+by the Germans. He is safe, because he is an American
+citizen. The unfortunate thing about me is my
+passport, otherwise, by means of a well-simulated
+nasal twang I might get through as an American
+novelist. I've been mistaken for one often enough
+in my own country. But, as I don't mean to be
+taken prisoner, and perhaps murdered or have my
+hands chopped off, without a struggle, my plan is to
+deliver a speech in German, as follows: "<i>Ich bin
+eine berühmte Schriftstellerin</i>" (on these occasions
+you stick at nothing), "<i>berühmt in England, aber
+viel berühmter in den Vereinigten Staaten, und mein
+Schicksal will den Presidenten Wilson nicht gleichgültig
+sein</i>." I added by way of rhetorical flourish
+as the language went to my head: "<i>Er will mein
+Tod zu vertheidigen gut wissen</i>;" but I was aware
+that this was overdoing it.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Davidson thought it would be better on the
+whole if he were to pass me off as his wife. Perhaps
+it would, but it seems a pity that so much good
+German should be wasted.</p>
+
+<p>We got up from that dinner with even more haste
+than we had sat down. All lights in the town were
+put out at eight-thirty, and we didn't want to go<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span>
+crawling and blundering about in the dark with our
+ambulance car. There was a general feeling that
+the faster we ran back to Ghent the better.</p>
+
+<p>We left Mr. Davidson and Dr. Wilson in
+Antwerp. They were staying over-night for the
+fun of the thing.</p>
+
+<p>Another awful struggle on the downward slope
+from the quay to the bridge of boats. A bad jam
+at the turn. A sudden loosening and letting go of
+the traffic, and we were over.</p>
+
+<p>We ran back to Ghent so fast that at Saint Nicolas
+(where we stopped to pick up our poor little Belgian
+professor) we took the wrong turn at the fork
+of the road and dashed with considerable <i>élan</i> over
+the Dutch frontier. We only realized it when a
+sentry in an unfamiliar uniform raised his rifle and
+prepared to fire, not with the cheerful, perfunctory
+vigilance of our Belgians, but in a determined, business-like
+manner, and the word "Achille," imparted
+in a burst of confidence, produced no sympathy
+whatever. On the contrary, this absurd sentry
+(who had come out of a straw sentry-box that was
+like an enormous beehive) went on pointing his rifle
+at us with most unnecessary persistence. I was so
+interested in seeing what he would do next that I
+missed the very pleasing behaviour of the little Belgian
+professor, who sat next to me, wrapped in his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span>
+brown shawl. He still imagined himself to be on
+the road to Ghent, and when he saw that sentry
+continuing to prepare to fire in spite of our password,
+he concluded that we and the road to Ghent
+were in the hands of the Germans. So he instantly
+ducked behind me for cover and collapsed on the
+floor of the ambulance in his shawl.</p>
+
+<p>Then somebody said "We're in Holland!" and
+there were shouts of laughter from everybody in the
+car except the little Belgian. Then shouts of laughter
+from the Dutch sentries and Customs officers,
+who enjoyed this excellent joke as much as we did.</p>
+
+<p>We were now out of our course by I don't know
+how many miles and short of petrol. But one of
+the Customs officers gave us all we wanted.</p>
+
+<p>It's heart-breaking the way these dear Belgians
+take the British. They have waited so long for our
+army, believing that it would come, till they could
+believe no more. In Ghent, in Antwerp, you
+wouldn't know that Belgium had any allies; you
+never see the British flag, or the French either, hanging
+from the windows. The black, yellow and red
+standard flies everywhere alone. Now that we <i>have</i>
+come, their belief in us is almost unbearable. They
+really think we are going to save Antwerp. Somewhere
+between Antwerp and Saint Nicolas the population
+of a whole village turned out to meet us with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span>
+cries of "<i>Les Anglais! Les Anglaises!</i>" and
+laughed for joy. Terrible for us, who had heard
+Belgians say reproachfully: "We thought that the
+British would come to our help. But they never
+came!" They said it more in sorrow than in anger;
+but you couldn't persuade them that the British
+fought for Belgium at Mons.</p>
+
+<p>We got into Ghent about midnight.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. &mdash;&mdash; is to stay at the Hôtel de la Poste to-night.</p>
+
+<p class="centerspaced2">[<i>Monday, 5th.</i>]</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> mosquitoes from the canal have come up and
+bitten me. I was ill all night with something that
+felt like malarial fever, if it isn't influenza.
+Couldn't get up&mdash;too drowsy.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. L. came in to see me first thing in the morning.
+He also came to hear at first hand the story
+of our run into Antwerp. He was extremely kind.
+He sat and looked at me sorrowfully, as if he had
+been the family doctor, and gave me some of his very
+own China tea (in Belgium in war-time this is one
+of the most devoted things that man can do for his
+brother). He was so gentle and so sympathetic
+that my heart went out to him, and I forgot all about
+poor Mr. Davidson, and gave up to him the whole<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span>
+splendid "scoop" of the British troops at Saint Nicolas.</p>
+
+<p>I couldn't tell him much about the run into Antwerp.
+No doubt it was a thrilling performance&mdash;through
+all the languor of malaria it thrills me now
+when I think of it&mdash;but it wasn't much to offer a
+War Correspondent, since it took us nowhere near
+the bombardment. It had nothing for the psychologist
+or for the amateur of strange sensations, and
+nothing for the pure and ardent Spirit of Adventure,
+and nothing for that insatiable and implacable Self,
+that drives you to the abhorred experiment, determined
+to know how you will come out of it. For
+there was no more danger in the excursion than in
+a run down to Brighton and back; and I know
+no more of fear or courage than I did before I
+started.</p>
+
+<p>But now that I realize what the insatiable and implacable
+Self is after, how it worked in me against
+all decency and all pity, how it actually made me feel
+as if I wanted to see Antwerp under siege, and how
+the spirit of adventure backed it up, I can forgive
+the Commandant. I still think that he sinned when
+he took Ursula Dearmer to Termonde and to Alost.
+But the temptation that assailed him at Alost and
+Termonde was not to be measured by anybody who
+was not there.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>It must have been irresistible.</p>
+
+<p>Besides, it is not certain that he did take Ursula
+Dearmer into danger; it is every bit as likely that
+she took him; more likely still that they were both
+victims of <i>force majeure</i>, fascinated by the lure of
+the greatest possible danger. And, oh, how I did
+pitch into him!</p>
+
+<p>I am ashamed of the things I said in that access
+of insulting and indignant virtue.</p>
+
+<p>Can it be that I was jealous of Ursula Dearmer,
+that innocent girl, because she saw a shell burst and
+I didn't? I know this is what was the matter with
+Mrs. Torrence the other day. She even seemed to
+imply that there was some feminine perfidy in Ursula
+Dearmer's power of drawing shells to her.
+(She, poor dear, can't attract even a bullet within a
+mile of her.)<a name="FNanchor_15_16" id="FNanchor_15_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_15_16" class="fnanchor">[15]</a></p>
+
+<p>Lying there, in that mosquito-haunted room, I
+dissolved into a blessed state, a beautiful, drowsy
+tenderness to everybody, a drowsy, beautiful forgiveness
+of the Commandant. I forgot that he intimated,
+sternly, that no ambulance would be at my
+disposal in the flight from Ghent&mdash;I remember only
+that he took me into Antwerp yesterday, and that
+he couldn't help it if the outer forts <i>were</i> thirty kilo<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span>metres
+away, and I forgive him, beautifully and
+drowsily.</p>
+
+<p>But when he came running up in great haste to see
+me, and rushed down into the kitchens of the Hotel
+to order soup for me, and into the chemist's shop in
+the Place d'Armes to get my medicine, and ran back
+again to give it me, before I knew where I was
+(such is the debilitating influence of malaria), instead
+of forgiving him, I found myself, in abject
+contrition, actually asking him to forgive <i>me</i>.</p>
+
+<p>It was all wrong, of course; but the mosquitoes
+had bitten me rather badly.</p>
+
+<p class="centerspread">········</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Torrence and Janet McNeil have got to work
+at last. All afternoon and all night yesterday they
+were busy between the Station and the hospitals removing
+the wounded from the Antwerp trains.</p>
+
+<p>And Car 1 had no sooner got into the yard of the
+"Flandria" to rest after its trip to Antwerp and
+back than it was ordered out again with the Commandant
+and Ursula Dearmer and Mrs. Torrence to
+meet the last ambulance train. The chauffeur Tom
+was nowhere to be seen when the order came. He
+was, however, found after much search, in the Park,
+in the company of the Cricklewood bus and a whole
+regiment of Tommies.</p>
+
+<p>One of these ambulance trains had been shelled by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span>
+the Germans (they couldn't have been very far from
+us in our run from Antwerp&mdash;it was their nearness,
+in fact, that accounted for our prodigious haste!),
+and many of the men came in worse wounded than
+they went out.</p>
+
+<p>We are all tremendously excited over the arrival
+of the Tommies and the Cricklewood bus. We can
+think of nothing else but the relief of Antwerp.</p>
+
+<p>Ursula Dearmer came to see me. She understands
+that I have forgiven her that shell&mdash;and
+why. She wore the clothes&mdash;the rather heart-rending
+school-girl clothes&mdash;she wore when she
+came to see the Committee. But oh, how the youngest
+but one has grown up since then!</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Torrence came to see me also, and Janet
+McNeil. Mrs. Torrence, though that shell still rankles,
+is greatly appeased by the labours of last night.
+So is Janet.</p>
+
+<p>They told rather a nice story.</p>
+
+<p>A train full of British troops from Ostend came
+into the station yesterday at the same time as the
+ambulance train from Antwerp. The two were
+drawn up one on each side of the same platform.
+When the wounded Belgians saw the British they
+struggled to their feet. At every window of the ambulance
+train bandaged heads were thrust out and
+bandaged hands waved. And the Belgians shouted.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>But the British stood dumb, stolid and impassive
+before their enthusiasm.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Torrence called out, "Give them a cheer,
+boys. They're the bravest little soldiers in the
+world."</p>
+
+<p>Then the Tommies let themselves go, and the Station
+roof nearly flew off with the explosion.</p>
+
+<p>The Corps worked till four in the morning clearing
+out those ambulance trains. The wards are
+nearly full. And this is only the beginning.</p>
+
+<p class="centerspaced2">[<i>Tuesday, 6th.</i>]</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Malaria</span> gone.</p>
+
+<p>The Commandant called to give his report of the
+ambulance work. He, Mrs. Torrence, Janet McNeil,
+Ursula Dearmer and the men were working all
+yesterday afternoon and evening till long past dark
+at Termonde. It's the finest thing they've done yet.
+The men and the women crawled on their hands and
+knees in the trenches [? under the river bank] under
+fire. Ursula Dearmer (that girl's luck is simply
+staggering!)&mdash;Ursula Dearmer, wandering adventurously
+apart, after dark, on the battle-field, found a
+young Belgian officer, badly wounded, lying out
+under a tree. She couldn't carry him, but she went
+for two stretchers and three men; and they put the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span>
+young officer on one stretcher, and she trotted off
+with his sword, his cap and the rest of his accoutrements
+on the other. He owes his life to this manifestation
+of her luck.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Wilson has come back from Antwerp.</p>
+
+<p>It looks as if Dr. Haynes and Dr. Bird would go.
+At any rate, I think they will give up working on
+the Field Ambulance. There aren't enough cars for
+four surgeons <i>and</i> four field-women, and they have
+seen hardly any service. This is rather hard luck
+on them, as they gave up their practice to come out
+with us. Naturally, they don't want to waste any
+more time.</p>
+
+<p>I managed to get some work done to-day. Wrote
+a paragraph about the Ambulance for Mr. L.,
+who will publish it in the <i>Westminster</i> under his
+name, to raise funds for us. He is more than
+ever certain that it (the Ambulance) is the real
+thing.</p>
+
+<p>Also wrote an article ("L'Hôpital Militaire, No.
+2") for the <i>Daily Chronicle</i>; the first bit of journalism
+I've had time or material for.</p>
+
+<p>Shopped. Very <i>triste</i> affair.</p>
+
+<p>Went to mass in the Cathedral. Sat far back
+among the refugees.</p>
+
+<p>If you want to know what Religion really is, go
+into a Catholic church in a Catholic country under<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span>
+invasion. You only feel the tenderness, the naïveté
+of Catholicism in peace-time. In war-time you realize
+its power.</p>
+
+<p class="centerspaced2">[<i>Evening.</i>]</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Saw</span> Mr. P., who has been at Termonde. He
+spoke with great praise of the gallantry of our
+Corps.</p>
+
+<p>It's odd&mdash;either I'm getting used to it, or it's the
+effect of that run into Antwerp&mdash;but I'm no longer
+torn by fear and anxiety for their safety.</p>
+
+<p>[?] Dined with Mr. L. in a restaurant in the
+town. It proved to be more expensive than either
+of us cared for. Our fried sole left us hungry and
+yet conscience-stricken, as if after an orgy, suffering
+in a dreadful communion of guilt.</p>
+
+<p class="centerspaced2">[<i>Wednesday, 7th.</i>]</p>
+
+<p>7 <span class="smcap">A.M.</span> Got up early and went to Mass in the Cathedral.</p>
+
+<p>Prepared report for British Red Cross. Wrote
+"Journal of Impressions" from September 25th to
+September 26th, 11 <span class="smcap">A.M.</span> It's slow work. Haven't
+got out of Ostend yet!</p>
+
+<p>Fighting at Zele.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="centerspaced2">[<i>Afternoon.</i>]</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Got</span> very near the fighting this time.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. L. (Heaven bless him!) took me out with
+him in the War Correspondents' car to see what the
+Ambulance was doing at Zele, and, incidentally, to
+look at the bombardment of some evacuated villages
+near it (I have no desire to see the bombardment of
+any village that has not been evacuated first). Mr.
+M. came too, and they brought a Belgian lady with
+them, a charming and beautiful lady, whose name I
+forget.</p>
+
+<p>When Mr. L. told me to get up and come with
+him to Zele, I did get up with an energy and enthusiasm
+that amazed me; I got up like one who has been
+summoned at last, after long waiting, to a sure and
+certain enterprise. I can trust Mr. L. or any War
+Correspondent who means business, as I cannot
+(after Antwerp) trust the Commandant. So far,
+if the Commandant happens upon a bombardment
+it has been either in the way of duty, or by sheer
+luck, or both, as at Alost and Termonde, when duty
+took him to these places, and any bombardment or
+firing was, as it were, thrown in. He did not go out
+deliberately to seek it, for its own sake, and find it
+infallibly, which is the War Correspondent's way.
+So that if Mr. L. says there is going to be a bom<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span>bardment,
+we shall probably get somewhere nearer
+to it than thirty kilometres.</p>
+
+<p>We took the main road to Zele. I don't know
+whether it was really a continuation of the south-east
+road that runs under the Hospital windows;
+anyhow, we left it very soon, striking southwards
+to the right to find what Mr. L. believed to be a
+short cut. Thus we never got to Zele at all. We
+came out on a good straight road that would no
+doubt have led us there in time, but that we allowed
+ourselves to be lured by the smoke of the great factory
+at Schoonard burning away to the south.</p>
+
+<p>For a long time I could not believe that it was
+smoke we saw and not an enormous cloud blown by
+the wind across miles of sky. We seemed to run for
+miles with that terrible banner streaming on our
+right to the south, apparently in the same place, as
+far off as ever. East of it, on the sky-line, was a
+whole fleet of little clouds that hung low over the
+earth; that rose from it; rose and were never lifted,
+but as they were shredded away, scattered and vanished,
+were perpetually renewed. This movement
+of their death and re-birth had a horrible sinister
+pulse in it.</p>
+
+<p>Each cloud of this fleet of clouds was the smoke
+from a burning village.</p>
+
+<p>At last, after an endless flanking pursuit of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span>
+great cloud that continued steadily on our right, piling
+itself on itself and mounting incessantly, we
+struck into a side lane that seemed to lead straight
+to the factory on fire. But in this direct advance the
+cloud eluded us at every turn of the lane. Now it
+was rising straight in front of us in the south, now
+it was streaming away somewhere to the west of our
+track. When we went west it went east. When we
+went east it went west. And wherever we went
+we met refugees from the burning villages. They
+were trudging along slowly, very tired, very miserable,
+but with no panic and no violent grief. We
+passed through villages and hamlets, untouched
+still, but waiting quietly, and a little breathlessly,
+on the edge of their doom.</p>
+
+<p>At the end of one lane, where it turned straight
+to the east round the square of a field we came upon
+a great lake ringed with trees and set in a green
+place of the most serene and vivid beauty. It seemed
+incredible that the same hour should bring us to this
+magic stillness and peace and within sight of the
+smoke of war and within sound of the guns.</p>
+
+<p>At the next turn we heard them.</p>
+
+<p>We still thought that we could get to Schoonard,
+to the burning factory, and work back to Zele by a
+slight round. But at this turn we had lost sight of
+Schoonard and the great cloud altogether, and found<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span>
+ourselves in a little hamlet Heaven knows where.
+Only, straight ahead of us, as we looked westwards,
+we heard the guns. The sound came from somewhere
+over there and from two quarters; German
+guns booming away on the south, Belgian [? French]
+guns answering from the north.</p>
+
+<p>Judging by these sounds and those we heard afterwards,
+we must have been now on the outer edge
+of a line of fire stretching west and east and following
+the course of the Scheldt. The Germans were
+entrenched behind the river.</p>
+
+<p>In the little hamlet we asked our way of a peasant.
+As far as we could make out from his mixed French
+and Flemish, he told us to turn back and take the
+road we had left where it goes south to the village
+of Baerlaere. This we did. We gathered that we
+could get a road through Baerlaere to Schoonard.
+Failing Schoonard, our way to Zele lay through
+Baerlaere in the opposite direction.</p>
+
+<p>We set off along a very bad road to Baerlaere.</p>
+
+<p>Coming into Baerlaere, we saw a house with a remarkable
+roof, a steep-pitched roof of black and
+white tiles arranged in a sort of chequer-board pattern.
+I asked Mr. L. if he had ever seen a roof like
+that in his life and he replied promptly, "Yes; in
+China." And that roof&mdash;if it was coming into
+Baerlaere that we saw it&mdash;is all that I can remember<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span>
+of Baerlaere. There was, I suppose, the usual
+church with its steeple where the streets forked and
+the usual town hall near it, with a flight of steps before
+the door and a three-cornered classic pediment;
+and the usual double line of flat-fronted, grey-shuttered
+houses; I do seem to remember these things as
+if they had really been there, but you couldn't see
+the bottom half of the houses for the troops that
+were crowded in front of them, or the top half for
+the shells you tried to see and didn't. They were
+sweeping high up over the roofs, making for the entrenchments
+and the batteries beyond the village.</p>
+
+<p>We had come bang into the middle of an artillery
+duel. It was going on at a range of about a mile
+and a half, but all over our heads, so that though we
+heard it with great intensity, we saw nothing.</p>
+
+<p>There were intervals of a few seconds between the
+firing. The Belgian [? French] batteries were
+pounding away on the left quite near (the booming
+seemed to come from behind the houses at
+our backs), and the German on the right, farther
+away.</p>
+
+<p>Now, you may have hated and dreaded the sound
+of guns all your life, as you hate and dread any immense
+and violent noise, but there is something about
+the sound of the first near gun of your first battle
+that, so far from being hateful or dreadful, or in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span>
+any way abhorrent to you, will make you smile in
+spite of yourself with a kind of quiet exultation
+mixed very oddly with reminiscence<a name="FNanchor_16_17" id="FNanchor_16_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_16_17" class="fnanchor">[16]</a> so that,
+though your first impression (by no means disagreeable)
+is of being "in for it," your next, after the
+second and the third gun, is that of having been in
+for it many times before. The effect on your nerves
+is now like that of being in a very small sailing-boat
+in a very big-running sea. You climb wave after
+high wave, and are not swallowed up as you expected.
+You wait, between guns, for the boom and
+the shock of the next, with a passionate anticipation,
+as you wait for the next wave. And the sound of
+the gun when it comes is like the exhilarating smack
+of the wave that you and your boat mean to resist
+and do resist when it gets you.</p>
+
+<p>You do not think, as you used to think when you
+sat safe in your little box-like house in St. John's
+Wood, how terrible it is that shells should be hurtling
+through the air and killing men by whole regiments.
+You do not think at all. Nobody anywhere near
+you is thinking that sort of thing, or thinking very
+much at all.</p>
+
+<p>At the sound of the first near gun I found myself<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span>
+looking across the road at a French soldier. We
+were smiling at each other.</p>
+
+<p>When we tried to get to Schoonard from the west
+end of the town we were stopped and turned back
+by the General in command. Not in the least
+abashed by this <i>contretemps</i>, Mr. L., after some parley
+with various officers, decided not to go back in
+ignominious safety by the way we came, but to push
+on from the east end of the village into the open
+country through the line of fire that stretched between
+us and the road to Zele. On our way, while
+we were about it, he said, we might as well stop and
+have a look at the Belgian batteries at work&mdash;as if
+he had said we might as well stop at Olympia and
+have a look at the Motor Show on our way to Richmond.</p>
+
+<p>At this point the unhappy chauffeur, who had not
+found himself by any means at home in Baerlaere,
+remarked that he had a wife and family dependent
+on him.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. L. replied with dignity that he had a wife and
+family too, and that we all had somebody or something;
+and that War Correspondents cannot afford
+to think of their wives and families at these moments.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. M.'s face backed up Mr. L. with an expression
+of extreme determination.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The little Belgian lady smiled placidly and imperturbably,
+with an air of being ready to go anywhere
+where these intrepid Englishmen should see fit to
+take her.</p>
+
+<p>I felt a little sorry for the chauffeur. He had
+been out with the War Correspondents several times
+already, and I hadn't.</p>
+
+<p>We left him and his car behind us in the village,
+squeezed very tight against a stable wall that stood
+between them and the German fire. We four went
+on a little way beyond the village and turned into a
+bridle path across the open fields. At the bottom
+of a field to our left was a small slump of willows;
+we had heard the Belgian guns firing from that direction
+a few minutes before. We concluded that the
+battery was concealed behind the willows. We
+strolled on like one half of a picnic party that has
+been divided and is looking innocently for the other
+half in a likely place.<a name="FNanchor_17_18" id="FNanchor_17_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_17_18" class="fnanchor">[17]</a> But as we came nearer to
+the willows we lost our clue. The battery had evidently
+made up its mind not to fire as long as we
+were in sight. Like the cloud of smoke from the
+Schoonard factory, it eluded us successfully. And
+indeed it is hardly the way of batteries to choose<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span>
+positions where interested War Correspondents can
+come out and find them.<a name="FNanchor_18_19" id="FNanchor_18_19"></a><a href="#Footnote_18_19" class="fnanchor">[18]</a></p>
+
+<p>So we went back to the village, where we found
+the infantry being drawn up in order and doing
+something to its rifles. For one thrilling moment
+I imagined that the Germans were about to leap out
+of their trenches and rush the village, and that the
+Belgians [? French] were preparing for a bayonet
+charge.</p>
+
+<p>"In that case," I thought, "we shall be very useful
+in picking up the wounded and carrying them
+away in that car."</p>
+
+<p>I never thought of the ugly rush and the horrors
+after it. It is extraordinary how your mind can put
+away from it any thought that would make life insupportable.</p>
+
+<p>But no, they were not fixing bayonets. They
+were not doing anything to their rifles; they were
+only stacking them.</p>
+
+<p>It was then that you thought of the ugly rush and
+were glad that, after all, it wouldn't happen.</p>
+
+<p>You were glad&mdash;and yet in spite of that same
+gladness, there was a little sense of disappointment,
+unaccountable, unpardonable, and not quite sane.</p>
+
+<p>One of the men showed us a burst shrapnel shell.
+We examined it with great interest as the kind of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span>
+thing that would be most likely to hit us on our way
+from Baerlaere to Zele.</p>
+
+<p>We had been barely half an hour hanging about
+Baerlaere, but it seemed as if we had wasted a whole
+afternoon there. At last we started. We were told
+to drive fast, as the fire might open on us at any minute.
+We drove very fast. Our road lay through
+open country flat to the river, with no sort of cover
+anywhere from the German fire, if it chose to come.
+About half a mile ahead of us was a small hamlet
+that had been shelled. Mr. L. told us to duck when
+we heard the guns. I remember thinking that I particularly
+didn't want to be wounded in my right arm,
+and that as I sat with my right arm resting on the
+ledge of the car it was somewhat exposed to the German
+batteries, so I wriggled low down in my seat and
+tucked my arm well under cover for quite five minutes.
+But you couldn't see anything that way, so I
+popped up again and presently forgot all about my
+valuable arm in the sheer excitement of the rush
+through the danger zone. Our car was low on the
+ground; still, it was high enough and big enough to
+serve as a mark for the German guns and it fairly
+gave them the range of the road.</p>
+
+<p>But though the guns had been pounding away before
+we started, they ceased firing as we went
+through.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>That, however, was sheer luck. And presently it
+was brought home to me that we were not the only
+persons involved in the risk of this joyous adventure.
+Just outside the bombarded hamlet ahead of us we
+were stopped by some Belgian [? French] soldiers
+hidden in the cover of a ditch by the roadside, which
+if it was not a trench might very easily have been one.
+They were talking in whispers for fear of being overheard
+by the Germans, who must have been at least
+a mile off, across the fields on the other side of the
+river. A mile seemed a pretty safe distance; but
+Mr. L. said it wouldn't help us much, considering
+that the range of their guns was twenty-four miles.
+The soldiers told us we couldn't possibly get through
+to Zele. That was true. The road was blocked&mdash;by
+the ruins of the hamlet&mdash;not twenty yards from
+where we were pulled up. We got out of the car;
+and while Mr. L. and the Belgian lady conversed
+with the soldiers, Mr. M. and I walked on to investigate
+the road.</p>
+
+<p>At the abrupt end of a short row of houses it
+stopped where it should have turned suddenly, and
+became a rubbish-heap lying in a waste place.</p>
+
+<p>Just at first I thought we must have gone out of
+our course somehow and missed the road to Zele.
+It was difficult to realize that this rubbish-heap lying
+in a waste place ever <i>had</i> been a road. But for the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span>
+shell of a house that stood next to it, the last of the
+row, and the piles of lath and plaster, and the shattered
+glass on the sidewalk and the blown dust everywhere,
+it might have passed for the ordinary no-thoroughfare
+of an abandoned brick-field.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. M. made me keep close under the wall of a
+barn or something on the other side of the street,
+the only thing that stood between us and the German
+batteries. Beyond the barn were the green fields bare
+to the guns that had shelled this end of the village.
+At first we hugged our shelter tight, only looking
+out now and then round the corner of the barn into
+the open country.</p>
+
+<p>A flat field, a low line of willows at the bottom,
+and somewhere behind the willows the German batteries.
+Grey puffs were still curling about the stems
+and clinging to the tops of the willows. They might
+have been mist from the river or smoke from the
+guns we had heard. I hadn't time to watch them,
+for suddenly Mr. M. darted from his cover and made
+an alarming sally into the open field.</p>
+
+<p>He said he wanted to find some pieces of nice hot
+shell for me.</p>
+
+<p>So I had to run out after Mr. M. and tell him I
+didn't want any pieces of hot shell, and pull him
+back into safety.</p>
+
+<p>All for nothing. Not a gun fired.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>We strolled across what was left of the narrow
+street and looked through the window-frames of a
+shattered house. It had been a little inn. The roof
+and walls of the parlour had been wrecked, so had
+most of the furniture. But on a table against the
+inner wall a row of clean glasses still stood in their
+order as the landlord had left them; and not one of
+them was broken.</p>
+
+<p>I suppose it must have been about time for the
+guns to begin firing again, for Mr. L. called to us to
+come back and to look sharp too. So we ran for it.
+And as we leaped into the car Mr. L. reproved Mr.
+M. gravely and virtuously for "taking a lady into
+danger."</p>
+
+<p>The car rushed back into Baerlaere if anything
+faster than it had rushed out, Mr. L. sitting bolt upright
+with an air of great majesty and integrity. I
+remember thinking that it would never, never do to
+duck if the shells came, for if we did Mr. L.'s head
+would stand out like a noble monument and he would
+be hit as infallibly as any cathedral in Belgium.</p>
+
+<p>It seems that the soldiers were not particularly
+pleased at our blundering up against their trench in
+our noisy car, which, they said, might draw down
+the German fire at any minute on the Belgian lines.</p>
+
+<p>We got into Ghent after dark by the way we
+came.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="centerspaced2">[<i>Evening.</i>]</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Called</span> at the "Flandria." Ursula Dearmer and
+two Belgian nurses have been sent to the convent at
+Zele to work there to-night.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. &mdash;&mdash; is here. But you wouldn't know him.
+I have just been introduced to him without knowing
+him. Before the War he was a Quaker,<a name="FNanchor_19_20" id="FNanchor_19_20"></a><a href="#Footnote_19_20" class="fnanchor">[19]</a> a teetotaller,
+and a pacifist at any price. And I suppose
+he wore clothes that conformed more or less to his
+principles. Now he is wearing the uniform of a
+British naval officer. He is drinking long whiskies-and-sodas
+in the restaurant, in the society of Major
+R. And the Major's khaki doesn't give a point to
+the Quaker's uniform. As for the Quaker, they say
+he could give points to any able seaman when it
+comes to swear words (but this may be sheer affectionate
+exaggeration). His face and his high,
+hatchet nose, whatever colour they used to be, are
+now the colour of copper&mdash;not an ordinary, Dutch
+kettle and coal-scuttle, pacifist, arts-and-crafts copper,
+but a fine old, truculent, damn-disarmament,
+Krupp-&amp;-Co., bloody, ammunition copper, and bat<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a></span>tered
+by the wars of all the world. He is the commander
+and the owner of an armoured car, one of
+the unit of five volunteer armoured cars. I do not
+know whether he was happy or unhappy when there
+wasn't a war. No man, and certainly no Quaker,
+could possibly be happier than this Quaker is now.
+He and the Major have been out potting Germans all
+the afternoon. (They have accounted for nine.)
+A schoolboy who has hit the mark nine times running
+with his first toy rifle is not merrier than, if as merry
+as, these more than mature men with their armoured
+car. They do not say much, but you gather that it is
+more fun being a volunteer than a regular; it is to
+enjoy delight with liberty, the maximum of risk with
+the minimum of responsibility.</p>
+
+<p>And their armoured car&mdash;if it is the one I saw
+standing to-day in the Place d'Armes&mdash;it is, as far
+as you can make out through its disguises, an ordinary
+open touring car, with a wooden hoarding
+(mere matchboard) stuck all round it, the whole
+painted grey to simulate, armoured painting.
+Through four holes, fore and aft and on either side
+of her, their machine-guns rake the horizon. The
+Major and Mr. &mdash;&mdash; sit inside, hidden behind the
+matchboard plating. They scour the country.
+When they see any Germans they fire and bring them
+down. It is quite simple. When you inquire how<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span>
+they can regard that old wooden rabbit-hutch as an
+armoured cover, they reply that their car isn't for
+defence, it's for attack. The Germans have only to
+see their guns and they're off. And really it looks
+like it, since the two are actually here before your
+eyes, drinking whiskies-and-sodas, and the rest of
+the armoured car corps are alive somewhere in
+Ghent.</p>
+
+<p>Dear Major R. and Mr. &mdash;&mdash; (whom I never met
+before), unless they read this Journal, which isn't
+likely, they will never know how my heart warmed
+towards them, nor how happy I count myself in being
+allowed to see them. They showed me how
+good it is to be alive; how excellent, above all things,
+to be a man and to be young for ever, and to go out
+into the most gigantic war in history, sitting in an
+armoured car which is as a rabbit-hutch for safety,
+and to have been a pacifist, that is to say a sinner,
+like Mr. &mdash;&mdash;, so that on the top of it you feel the
+whole glamour and glory of conversion. Others
+may have known the agony and the fear and sordid
+filth and horror and the waste, but they know nothing
+but the clean and fiery passion and the contagious
+ecstasy of war.</p>
+
+<p>If you were to tell Mr. &mdash;&mdash; about the mystic fascination
+of the south-east road, the road that leads
+eventually to Waterloo, he would most certainly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span>
+understand you, but it is very doubtful whether he
+would let you venture very far down it. Whereas
+the Commandant, sooner or later, will.</p>
+
+<p class="centerspaced2">[<i>Thursday, 8th.</i>]</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Had</span> breakfast with Mr. L.</p>
+
+<p>Went down to the "Flandria." They say Zele
+has been taken. There has been terrific anxiety
+here for Ursula Dearmer and the two Belgian
+nurses (Madame F.'s daughter and niece), who
+were left there all night in the convent, which may
+very well be in the hands of the Germans by now.
+An Ambulance car went off very early this morning
+to their rescue and has brought them back
+safe.</p>
+
+<p>We are told that the Germans are really advancing
+on Ghent. We have orders to prepare to leave
+it at a minute's notice. This time it looks as if
+there might be something in it.</p>
+
+<p>I attend to the Commandant's correspondence.
+Wired Mr. Hastings. Wired Miss F. definitely accepting
+the Field Ambulance Corps and nurses she
+has raised in Glasgow. Her idea is that her Ambulance
+should be an independent unit attached to
+our corps but bearing her name. (Seems rather a
+pity to bring the poor lady out just now when things<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span>
+are beginning to be risky and our habitations uncertain.)</p>
+
+<p>The British troops are pouring into Ghent. There
+is a whole crowd of them in the <i>Place</i> in front of
+the Station. And some British wounded from Antwerp
+are in our Hospital.</p>
+
+<p>Heavy fighting at Lokeren, between Ghent and
+Saint Nicolas. Car 1 has been sent there with the
+Commandant, Ursula Dearmer, Janet McNeil and
+the Chaplain (Mr. Foster has been hurt in lifting a
+stretcher; he is out of it, poor man). Mrs. Torrence,
+Dr. Wilson and Mr. Riley have been sent to
+Nazareth. Mrs. Lambert has gone to Lokeren with
+her husband in his car.</p>
+
+<p>I was sent for this morning by somebody who
+desired to see the English Field Ambulance. Drawn
+up before the Hospital I found all that was left of
+a Hendon bus, in the charge of two British Red
+Cross volunteers in khaki and a British tar. The
+three were smiling in full enjoyment of the high
+comedy of disaster. They said they were looking
+for a job, and they wanted to know if our Ambulance
+would take them on. They were keen. They
+had every qualification under the sun.</p>
+
+<p>"Only," they said, "there's one thing we bar.
+And that's the firing-line. We've been under shell-fire
+for fifteen hours&mdash;and look at our bus!"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The bus was a thing of heroism and gorgeous
+ruin. The nose of its engine looked as if it had
+nuzzled its way through a thousand <i>débâcles</i>; its
+dark-blue sides were coated with dust and mud to
+the colour of an armoured car. The letters
+M. E. T. were barely discernible through the grey.
+Its windows were shattered to mere jags and spikes
+and splinters of glass that adhered marvellously to
+their frames.</p>
+
+<p>I don't know how I managed to convey to the
+three volunteers that such a bus would be about as
+much use to our Field Ambulance as an old greenhouse
+that had come through an earthquake. It
+was one of the saddest things I ever had to do.</p>
+
+<p>Unperturbed, and still credulous of adventure,
+they climbed on to their bus, turned her nose round,
+and went, smiling, away.</p>
+
+<p>Who they were, and what corps they belonged to,
+and how they acquired that Metropolitan bus I shall
+never know, and do not want to know. I would far
+rather think of them as the heroes of some fantastic
+enterprise, careering in gladness and in mystery
+from one besieged city to another.</p>
+
+<p>Saw Madame F., who looks worried. She suggested
+that I should come back to the Hospital. She
+says it must be inconvenient for the Commandant
+not to have his secretary always at hand. At the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span>
+same time, we are told that the Hospital is filling up
+so fast that our rooms will be wanted. And anyhow,
+Dr. &mdash;&mdash; has got mine.</p>
+
+<p>I have found an absurd little hotel, the Hôtel
+Cecil in the <i>Place</i>, opposite the Hospital, where I
+can have a room. Then I can be on duty all day.</p>
+
+<p>Went down to the "Poste." Gave up my room,
+packed and took leave of the nice fat <i>propriétaire</i>
+and his wife.</p>
+
+<p>Driving through the town, I meet French troops
+pouring through the streets. There was very little
+cheering.</p>
+
+<p>Settled into the Hôtel Cecil; if it could be called
+settling when my things have to stay packed, in
+case the Germans come before the evening.</p>
+
+<p>The Hôtel Cecil is a thin slice of a house with
+three rooms on each little floor, and a staircase like a
+ladder. There is something very sinister about this
+smallness and narrowness and steepness. You say
+to yourself: Supposing the Germans really do
+come into Ghent; there will be some Uhlans among
+them; and the Uhlans will certainly come into the
+Hôtel Cecil, and they will get very drunk in the
+restaurant below; and you might as well be in a trap
+as in this den at the top of the slice up all these
+abominable little steep stairs. And you are very
+glad that your room has a balcony.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>But though your room has a balcony it hasn't
+got a table, or any space where a table could stand.
+There is hardly anything in it but a big double bed
+and a tall hat-stand. I have never seen a room
+more inappropriate to a secretary and reporter.</p>
+
+<p>The proprietor and his wife are very amiable.
+He is a Red Cross man; and they have taken two
+refugee women into their house. They have promised
+faithfully that by noon there shall be a table.</p>
+
+<p>Noon has come; and there is no table.</p>
+
+<p>The cars have come back from Lokeren and Nazareth,
+full of wounded.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Lambert and her husband have come back
+from Lokeren. They drove right into the German
+lines to fetch two wounded. They were promptly
+arrested and as promptly released when their passports
+had shown them to be good American citizens.
+They brought back their two wounded. Altogether,
+ten or fifteen wounded have been brought
+back from Lokeren this morning.</p>
+
+<p class="centerspaced2">[<i>Afternoon.</i>]</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> Commandant has taken me out with the Ambulance
+for the first time. We were to go to
+Lokeren.</p>
+
+<p>On the way we came up with the Lamberts in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span>
+their scouting-car. They asked me to get out of
+the Ambulance car and come with them. On the
+whole, after this morning, it looked as if the scouting-car
+promised better incident. So I threw in
+my lot with the Lamberts.</p>
+
+<p>It was a little disappointing, for no sooner had
+the Ambulance car got clean away than the scouting-car
+broke down. Also Mr. Lambert stated that it
+was not his intention to take Mrs. Lambert into the
+German lines again to-day if he could possibly
+help it.</p>
+
+<p>We waited for an exasperating twenty minutes
+while the car got righted. From our street, in a
+blue transparent sky, so high up that it seemed part
+of the transparency, we saw a Taube hanging over
+Ghent. People came out of their houses and
+watched it with interest and a kind of amiable toleration.</p>
+
+<p>At last we got off; and the scouting-car made
+such good running that we came up with our Ambulance
+in a small town half-way between Ghent
+and Lokeren. We stopped here to confer with the
+Belgian Army Medical officers. They told us it was
+impossible to go on to Lokeren. Lokeren was now
+in the hands of the Germans. The wounded had
+been brought into a small village about two miles
+away.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>When we got into the village we were told to go
+back at once, for the Germans were coming in. The
+Commandant answered that we had come to fetch
+the wounded and were certainly not going back without
+them. It seemed that there were only four
+wounded, and they had been taken into houses in
+the village.</p>
+
+<p>We were given five minutes to get them out and
+go.</p>
+
+<p>I suppose we stayed in that village quite three-quarters
+of an hour.</p>
+
+<p>It was one straight street of small houses, and
+beyond the last house about a quarter of a mile of
+flat road, a quiet, grey road between tall, slender
+trees, then the turn. And behind the turn the Germans
+were expected to come in from Lokeren every
+minute.</p>
+
+<p>And we had to find the houses and the wounded
+men.</p>
+
+<p>The Commandant went into the first house and
+came out again very quickly.</p>
+
+<p>The man in the room inside was dead.</p>
+
+<p>We went on up the village.</p>
+
+<p>Down that quiet road and through the village,
+swerving into the rough, sandy track that fringed
+the paved street, a battery of Belgian artillery came
+clattering in full retreat. The leader turned his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span>
+horse violently into a side alley and plunged down
+it. I was close behind the battery when it turned;
+I could see the faces of the men. They had not
+that terrible look that Mr. Davidson told me he saw
+on the faces of Belgians in retreat from [?] Zele.
+There was no terror in them, only a sort of sullen
+annoyance and disgust.</p>
+
+<p>I was walking beside the Commandant, and how
+I managed to get mixed up with this battery I don't
+know. First of all it held me up when it turned,
+then when I got through, it still came on and cut
+me off from the Commandant. (The rest of the
+Corps were with the Ambulance in the middle of the
+village.)</p>
+
+<p>Then, through the plunging train, I caught sight
+of the innocent Commandant, all by himself, strolling
+serenely towards the open road, where beyond
+the bend the Germans were presumably pursuing
+the battery. It was terribly alarming to see the
+Commandant advancing to meet them, all alone,
+without a word of German to protect him.</p>
+
+<p>There were gaps in the retreat, and I dashed
+through one of them (as you dash through the traffic
+in the Strand when you're in a hurry) and went
+after the Commandant with the brilliant idea of defending
+him with a volley of bad German hurled
+at the enemy's head.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>And the Commandant went on, indifferent both to
+his danger and to his salvation, and disappeared
+down a little lane and into a house where a wounded
+man was. I stood at the end of the lane with the
+sublime intention of guarding it.</p>
+
+<p>The Commandant came out presently. He looked
+as if he were steeped in a large, vague leisure, and
+he asked me to go and find Mr. Lambert and his
+scouting-car. Mr. Lambert had got to go to Lokeren
+to fetch some wounded.</p>
+
+<p>So I ran back down the village and found Mr.
+Lambert and his car at the other end of it. He accepted
+his destiny with a beautiful transatlantic
+calm and dashed off to Lokeren. I do not think
+he took his wife with him this time.<a name="FNanchor_20_21" id="FNanchor_20_21"></a><a href="#Footnote_20_21" class="fnanchor">[20]</a></p>
+
+<p>I went back to see if the Germans had got any
+nearer to the Commandant. They hadn't. What
+with dressings and bandages and looking for
+wounded, the Ambulance must have worked for
+about half an hour, and not any Germans had turned
+the corner yet.</p>
+
+<p>It was still busy getting its load safely stowed
+away. Nothing for the wretched Secretary to do
+but to stand there at the far end of the village, looking
+up the road to Lokeren. There was a most sin<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span>gular
+fascination about the turn of that road beyond
+the trees.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly, at what seemed the last minute of
+safety, two Belgian stretcher-bearers, without a
+stretcher, rushed up to me. They said there was a
+man badly wounded in some house somewhere up
+the road. I found a stretcher and went off with
+them to look for him.</p>
+
+<p>We went on and on up the road. It couldn't
+have been more than a few hundred yards, really, if
+as much; but it felt like going on and on; it seemed
+impossible to find that house.</p>
+
+<p class="centerspread">········</p>
+
+<p>There was something odd about that short stretch
+of grey road and the tall trees at the end of it and
+the turn. These things appeared in a queer, vivid
+stillness, as if they were not there on their own account,
+but stood in witness to some superior reality.
+Through them you were somehow assured of Reality
+with a most singular and overpowering certainty.
+You were aware of the possibility of an ensuing
+agony and horror as of something unreal and transitory
+that would break through the peace of it in a
+merely episodical manner. Whatever happened to
+come round the turn of the road would simply not
+matter.</p>
+
+<p>And with your own quick movements up the road<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></span>
+there came that steadily mounting thrill which is
+not excitement, or anything in the least like excitement,
+because of its extreme quietness. This thrill
+is apt to cheat you by stopping short of the ecstasy
+it seems to promise. But this time it didn't stop
+short; it became more and more steady and more
+and more quiet in the swing of its vibration; it became
+ecstasy; it became intense happiness.</p>
+
+<p>It lasted till we reached the little plantation by
+the roadside.</p>
+
+<p>While it lasted you had the sense of touching
+Reality at its highest point in a secure and effortless
+consummation; so far were you from being strung
+up to any pitch.</p>
+
+<p>Then came the plantation.</p>
+
+<p>Behind the plantation, on a railway siding, a train
+came up from Lokeren with yet another load of
+wounded. And in the train there was confusion
+and agitation and fear. Belgian Red Cross men
+hung out by the doors of the train and clamoured
+excitedly for stretchers. There was only one
+stretcher, the one we had brought from the village.</p>
+
+<p>Somebody complained bitterly: "<i>C'est mal arrangé.
+Avec les Allemands sur nos dos!</i>"</p>
+
+<p>Somebody tried to grab our one stretcher. The
+two bearers seemed inclined to give it up. Nobody
+knew where our badly wounded man was. Nobody<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span>
+seemed very eager now to go and look for him.
+We three were surrounded and ordered to give up
+our stretcher. No use wasting time in hunting for
+one man, with the Germans on our backs.</p>
+
+<p>None of the men we were helping out of the train
+were seriously hurt. I had to choose between my
+one badly wounded man, whom we hadn't found,
+and about a dozen who could stumble somehow into
+safety. But my two stretcher-bearers were wavering
+badly, and it was all I could do to keep them
+firmly to their job.</p>
+
+<p>Then three women came out of a little house half
+hidden by the plantation. They spoke low, for
+fear the Germans should overhear them.</p>
+
+<p>"He is here," they said; "he is here."</p>
+
+<p>The stretcher-bearers hurried off with their
+stretcher. The train unloaded itself somehow.</p>
+
+<p>The man, horribly hurt, with a wound like a red
+pit below his shoulder-blades, was brought out and
+laid on the stretcher. He lay there, quietly, on his
+side, in a posture of utter resignation to anguish.</p>
+
+<p>He was a Flamand, clumsily built; he had a
+broad, rather ugly face, narrowing suddenly as the
+fringe of his whiskers became a little straggling
+beard. But to me he was the most beautiful thing
+I have ever seen. And I loved him. I do not think
+it is possible to love, to adore any creature more<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span>
+than I loved and adored that clumsy, ugly Flamand.</p>
+
+<p>He was my first wounded man.</p>
+
+<p>For I tried, I still try, to persuade myself that if
+I hadn't bullied my two bearers and repulsed the attack
+on my stretcher, he would have been left behind
+in the little house in the plantation.</p>
+
+<p>We got him out of the plantation all right and
+on to the paved road. Ursula Dearmer at Termonde
+with her Belgian officer, and at Zele with all
+her wounded, couldn't have been happier than I was
+with my one Flamand.</p>
+
+<p>We got him a few yards down the road all
+right.</p>
+
+<p>Then, to my horror, the bearers dumped him down
+on the paving-stones. They said he was much too
+heavy. They couldn't possibly carry him any more
+unless they rested.</p>
+
+<p>I didn't think it was exactly the moment for resting,
+and I told them so. The Germans hadn't come
+round the turn, and probably never would come;
+still, you never know; and the general impression
+seemed to be that they were about due.</p>
+
+<p>But the bearers stood stolidly in the middle of the
+road and mopped their faces and puffed. The situation
+began to feel as absurd and as terrible as a
+nightmare.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>So I grabbed one end of the stretcher and said I'd
+carry it myself. I said I wasn't very strong, and
+perhaps I couldn't carry it, but anyhow I'd try.</p>
+
+<p>They picked it up at once then, and went off at
+a good swinging trot over the paving-stones that
+jolted my poor Flamand most horribly. I told
+them to go on the smooth track at the side. They
+hailed this suggestion as a most brilliant and original
+idea.</p>
+
+<p>As the Flamand was brought into the village, the
+Ambulance had got its wounded in, and was ready
+to go. But he had to have his wound dressed.</p>
+
+<p>He lay there on his stretcher in the middle of the
+village street, my beloved Flamand, stripped to the
+waist, with the great red pit of his wound yawning
+in his white flesh. I had to look on while the Commandant
+stuffed it with antiseptic gauze.</p>
+
+<p>I had always supposed that the dressing of a
+wound was a cautious and delicate process. But it
+isn't. There is a certain casual audacity about it.
+The Commandant's hands worked rapidly as he
+rammed cyanide gauze into the red pit. It looked
+as if he were stuffing an old crate with straw. And
+it was all over in a moment. There seemed something
+indecent in the haste with which my Flamand
+was disposed of.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>When the Commandant observed that my
+Flamand's wound looked much worse than it was,
+I felt hurt, as if this beloved person had been
+slighted; also as if there was some subtle disparagement
+to my "find."</p>
+
+<p>I rather hoped that we were going to wait till the
+men I had left behind in the plantation had come
+up. But the car was fairly full, and Ursula Dearmer
+and Janet and Mrs. Lambert were told off to
+take it in to Z&mdash;&mdash;, leave the wounded there and
+come back for the rest. I was to walk to Z&mdash;&mdash;
+and wait there for the returning car.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing would have pleased me better, but the
+distance was farther than the Commandant realized,
+farther, perhaps, than was desirable in the circumstances,
+so I was ordered to get on the car and
+come back with it.</p>
+
+<p>(Tom the chauffeur is perfectly right. There are
+too many of us.)</p>
+
+<p>We got away long before the Germans turned
+the corner, if they ever did turn it. In Z&mdash;&mdash;, which
+is half-way between Lokeren and Ghent, we came
+upon six or seven fine military ambulances, all huddled
+together as if they sought safety in companionship
+(why none of them had been sent up to our
+village I can't imagine). Ursula Dearmer, with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span>
+admirable presence of mind, commandeered one of
+these and went back with it to the village, so that we
+could take our load of wounded into Ghent. We
+did this, and went back at once.</p>
+
+<p>The return journey was a tame affair. Before
+we got to Z&mdash;&mdash; we met the Commandant and the
+Chaplain and two refugees, in Mr. Lambert's scouting-car,
+towed by a motor-wagon. It had broken
+down on the way from Lokeren. We took them on
+board and turned back to Ghent.</p>
+
+<p>The wounded came on in Ursula Dearmer's military
+car.</p>
+
+<p>Twenty-three wounded in all were taken from
+Lokeren or near it to-day. Hundreds had to be
+left behind in the German lines.</p>
+
+<p class="centerspread">········</p>
+
+<p>We have heard that Antwerp is burning; that the
+Government is removed to Ostend; that all the English
+have left.</p>
+
+<p>There are a great many British wounded, with
+nurses and Army doctors, in Ghent. Three or four
+British have been brought into the "Flandria."</p>
+
+<p>One of them is a young British officer, Mr. &mdash;&mdash;.
+He is said to be mortally wounded.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Haynes and Dr. Bird have not gone. They
+and Dr. &mdash;&mdash; have joined the surgical staff of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span>
+Hospital, and are working in the operating theatre
+all day. They have got enough to do now in all
+conscience.</p>
+
+<p>All night there has been a sound of the firing of
+machine guns [?]. At first it was like the barking,
+of all the dogs in Belgium. I thought it <i>was</i> the
+dogs of Belgium, till I discovered a deadly rhythm
+and precision in the barking.<a name="FNanchor_21_22" id="FNanchor_21_22"></a><a href="#Footnote_21_22" class="fnanchor">[21]</a></p>
+
+<p class="centerspaced2">[<i>Friday, 9th.</i>]</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> Hospital is so full that beds have been put
+in the entrance hall, along the walls by the big ward
+and the secretarial bureau. In the recess by the
+ward there are three British soldiers.</p>
+
+<p>There are some men standing about there whose
+heads and faces are covered with a thick white mask
+of cotton-wool like a diver's helmet. There are
+three small holes in each white mask, for mouth and
+eyes. The effect is appalling.</p>
+
+<p>These are the men whose faces have been burned
+by shell-fire at Antwerp.</p>
+
+<p>The Commandant asked me to come with him
+through the wards and find all the British wounded<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span>
+who are well enough to be sent home. I am to take
+their names and dress them and get them ready to
+go by the morning train.</p>
+
+<p>There are none in the upper wards. Mr. &mdash;&mdash;
+cannot be moved. He is very ill. They do not
+think he will live.</p>
+
+<p>There are three downstairs in the hall. One is
+well enough to look after himself (I have forgotten
+his name). One, Russell, is wounded in the knee.
+The third, Cameron, a big Highlander, is wounded
+in the head. He wears a high headdress of bandages
+wound round and round many times like an
+Indian turban, and secured by more bandages round
+his jaw and chin. It is glued tight to one side of
+his head with clotted blood. Between the bandages
+his sharp, Highland face looks piteous.</p>
+
+<p>I am to dress these two and have them ready by
+eleven. Dr. &mdash;&mdash; of the British Field Hospital,
+who is to take them over, comes round to enter their
+names on his list.</p>
+
+<p>They are to be dressed in civilian clothes supplied
+by the Hospital.</p>
+
+<p>It all sounded very simple until you tried to get
+the clothes. First you had to see the President,
+who referred you to the Matron, who referred you
+to the clerk in charge of the clothing department.
+An <i>infirmier</i> (one of the mysterious officials who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span>
+hang about the hall wearing peaked caps; the problem
+of their existence was now solved for the first
+time)&mdash;an <i>infirmier</i> was despatched to find the
+clerk. The clothing department must have been
+hidden in the remotest recesses of the Hospital, for
+it was ages before he came back to ask me all over
+again what clothes would be wanted. He was a
+little fat man with bright, curly hair, very eager, and
+very cheerful and very kind. He scuttled off again
+like a rabbit, and I had to call him back to measure
+Russell. And when he had measured Russell, with
+his gay and amiable alacrity, Russell and I had to
+wait until he came back with the clothes.</p>
+
+<p>I had made up my mind very soon that it would
+be no use measuring Cameron for any clothes, or
+getting him ready for any train. He was moving
+his head from side to side and making queer moaning
+sounds of agitation and dismay. He had asked
+for a cigarette, which somebody had brought him.
+It dropped from his fingers. Somebody picked it
+up and lit it and stuck it in his mouth; it dropped
+again. Then I noticed something odd about his left
+arm; he was holding it up with his right hand and
+feeling it. It dropped, too, like a dead weight, on
+the counterpane. Cameron watched its behaviour
+with anguish. He complained that his left arm was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span>
+all numb and too heavy to hold up. Also he said
+he was afraid to be moved and taken away.</p>
+
+<p>It struck me that Cameron's head must be
+smashed in on the right side and that some pressure
+on his brain was causing paralysis. It was quite
+clear that he couldn't be moved. So I sent for one
+of the Belgian doctors to come and look at him, and
+keep him in the Hospital.</p>
+
+<p>The Belgian doctor found that Cameron's head
+<i>was</i> smashed in on the right side, and that there
+was pressure on his brain, causing paralysis in his
+left arm.</p>
+
+<p>He is to be kept in the Hospital and operated on
+this morning. They may save him if they can remove
+the pressure.</p>
+
+<p>It seemed ages before the merry little <i>infirmier</i>
+came back with Russell's clothes. And when he
+did come he brought socks that were too tight, and
+went back and brought socks that were too large,
+and a shirt that was too tight and trousers that were
+too long. Then he went back, eager as ever, and
+brought drawers that were too tight, and more trousers
+that were too short. He brought boots that
+were too large and boots that were too tight; and
+he had to be sent back again for slippers. Last of
+all he brought a shirt which made Russell smile and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span>
+mutter something about being dressed in all the
+colours of the rainbow; and a black cutaway morning
+coat, and a variety of hats, all too small for
+Russell.</p>
+
+<p>Then when you had made a selection, you began
+to try to get Russell into all these things that were
+too tight or too loose for him. The socks were the
+worst. The right-hand one had to be put on very
+carefully, by quarter inches at a time; the least tug
+on the sock would give Russell an excruciating pain
+in his wounded knee; and Russell was all for violence
+and haste; he was so afraid of being left behind.</p>
+
+<p>Though he called me "Sister," I felt certain that
+Russell must know that I wasn't a trained nurse and
+that he was the first wounded man I had ever dressed
+in my life. However, I did get him dressed, somehow,
+with the help of the little <i>infirmier</i>, and a wonderful
+sight he was, in the costume of a Belgian
+civilian.</p>
+
+<p>What tried him most were the hats. He refused
+a peaked cap which the <i>infirmier</i> pressed on him, and
+compromised finally on a sort of checked cricket cap
+that just covered the extreme top of his head. We
+got him off in time, after all.</p>
+
+<p>Then two <i>infirmiers</i> came with a stretcher and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span>
+carried Cameron upstairs to the operating theatre,
+and I went up and waited with him in the corridor
+till the surgeons were ready for him. He had
+grown drowsy and indifferent by now.</p>
+
+<p>I have missed the Ambulance going out to
+Lokeren, and have had to stay behind.</p>
+
+<p>Two ladies called to see Mr. &mdash;&mdash;. One of them
+was Miss Ashley-Smith, who had him in her ward
+at Antwerp. I took them over the Hospital to find
+his room, which is on the second story. His name&mdash;his
+names&mdash;in thick Gothic letters, were on a
+white card by the door.</p>
+
+<p>He was asleep and the nurse could not let them
+see him.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Ashley-Smith and her friend are staying in
+the Couvent de Saint Pierre, where the British Field
+Hospital has taken some of its wounded.</p>
+
+<p>Towards one o'clock news came of heavy fighting.
+The battle is creeping nearer to us; it has
+stretched from Zele and Quatrecht to Melle, four
+and a half miles from Ghent. They are saying that
+the Germans may enter Ghent to-day, in an hour&mdash;half
+an hour! It will be very awkward for us and
+for our wounded if they do, as both our ambulance
+cars are out.</p>
+
+<p>Later news of more fighting at Quatrecht.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="centerspaced2">[<i>Afternoon.</i>]</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> Commandant has come back. They were at
+Quatrecht, not Lokeren.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. &mdash;&mdash; is awake now. The Commandant has
+taken me to see him.</p>
+
+<p>He is lying in one of the officers' wards, a small
+room, with bare walls and a blond light, looking
+south. There are two beds in this room, set side
+by side. In the one next the door there is a young
+French officer. He is very young: a boy with sleek
+black hair and smooth rose-leaf skin, shining and
+fresh as if he had never been near the smoke and
+dirt of battle. He is sitting up reading a French
+magazine. He is wounded in the leg. His crutches
+are propped up against the wall.</p>
+
+<p>Stretched on his back in the further bed there is
+a very tall young Englishman. The sheet is drawn
+very tight over his chest; his face is flushed and he
+is breathing rapidly, in short jerks. At first you do
+not see that he, too, is not more than a boy, for he
+is so big and tall, and a little brown feathery beard
+has begun to curl about his jaw and chin.</p>
+
+<p>When I came to him and the Commandant told
+him my name, he opened his eyes wide with a look
+of startled recognition. He said he knew me; he
+had seen me somewhere in England. He was so<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</a></span>
+certain about it that he persuaded me that I had
+seen him somewhere. But we can neither of us remember
+where or when. They say he is not perfectly
+conscious all the time.</p>
+
+<p>We stayed with him for a few minutes till he
+went off to sleep again.</p>
+
+<p>None of the doctors think that he can live. He
+was wounded in front with mitrailleuse; eight bullets
+in his body. He has been operated on. How
+he survived the operation and the journey on the
+top of it I can't imagine. And now general peritonitis
+has set in. It doesn't look as if he had a
+chance.</p>
+
+<p class="centerspread">········</p>
+
+<p>We have heard that all the War Correspondents
+have been sent out of Ghent.</p>
+
+<p>Numbers of British troops came in to-day.</p>
+
+<p>Went up to see Mr. Foster, who is in his room,
+ill. It is hard lines that he should have had this
+accident when he has been working so splendidly.
+And it wasn't his fault, either. One of the Belgian
+bearers slipped with his end of a stretcher when they
+were carrying a heavy man, and Mr. Foster got hurt
+in trying to right the balance and save his wounded
+man. He is very much distressed at having to lie
+up and be waited on.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="centerspread">········</p>
+
+<p>Impossible to write a Journal or any articles while
+I am in the Hospital, and there is no table yet in my
+room at the Hôtel Cecil.</p>
+
+<p>The first ambulance car, with the chauffeur Bert
+and Mr. Riley, has come back from Melle, where
+they left Mrs. Torrence and Janet and Dr. Wilson.
+They went back again in the afternoon.</p>
+
+<p>They are all out now except poor Mr. Foster
+and Mrs. Lambert, who is somewhere with her husband.</p>
+
+<p>I am the only available member of the Corps left
+in the Hospital!</p>
+
+<p class="centerspaced2">[<i>3.30.</i>]</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">No</span> Germans have appeared yet.</p>
+
+<p class="centerspread">········</p>
+
+<p>I was sitting up in the mess-room, making entries
+in the Day-Book, when I was sent for. Somebody
+or something had arrived, and was waiting below.</p>
+
+<p>On the steps of the Hospital I found two brand-new
+British chauffeurs in brand-new suits of khaki.
+Behind them, drawn up in the entry, were two brand-new
+Daimler motor-ambulance cars.</p>
+
+<p>I thought it was a Field Ambulance that had lost
+itself on the way to France. The chauffeurs (they
+had beautiful manners, and were very spick and
+span, and one pleased me by his remarkable resem<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</a></span>blance
+to the editor of the <i>English Review</i>)&mdash;the
+chauffeurs wanted to know whether they had come
+to the right place. And of course they hardly had,
+if all the British Red Cross ambulance cars were going
+into France.</p>
+
+<p>Then they explained.</p>
+
+<p>They were certainly making for Ghent. The
+British Red Cross Society had sent them there.
+They were only anxious to know whether they had
+come to the right Hospital, the Hospital where the
+English Field Ambulance was quartered.</p>
+
+<p>Yes: that was right. They had been sent for us.</p>
+
+<p>They had just come up from Ostend, and they
+had not been ten minutes in Ghent before orders
+came through for an ambulance to be sent at once to
+Melle.</p>
+
+<p>The only available member of the Corps was its
+Secretary and Reporter. To that utterly untrained
+and supremely inappropriate person Heaven sent
+this incredible luck.</p>
+
+<p>When I think how easily I might have missed it!
+If I'd gone for a stroll in the town. If I'd sat five
+minutes longer with Mr. Foster. If the landlord
+of the Hôtel Cecil had kept his word and given me
+a table, when I should, to a dead certainty, have
+been writing this wretched Journal at the ineffable
+moment when the chauffeurs arrived.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>I am glad to think that I had just enough morality
+left to play fair with Mrs. Lambert. I did try to
+find her, so that she shouldn't miss it. Somebody
+said she was in one of the restaurants on the <i>Place</i>
+with her husband. I looked in all the restaurants
+and she wasn't in one of them. The finger of
+Heaven pointed unmistakably to the Secretary and
+Reporter.</p>
+
+<p>There was a delay of ten minutes, no more, while
+I got some cake and sandwiches for the hungry
+chauffeurs and took them to the bureau to have their
+brassards stamped. And in every minute of the ten
+I suffered tortures while we waited. I thought
+something <i>must</i> happen to prevent my taking that
+ambulance car out. I thought my heart would leave
+off beating and I should die before we started (I
+believe people feel like this sometimes before their
+wedding night). I thought the Commandant would
+come back and send out Ursula Dearmer instead.
+I thought the Military Power would come down
+from its secret hiding-place and stop me. But none
+of these things happened. At the last moment, I
+thought that M. C&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>M. C&mdash;&mdash; was the Belgian Red Cross guide who
+took us into Antwerp. To M. C&mdash;&mdash; I said simply
+and firmly that I was going. The functions of the
+Secretary and Reporter had never been very clearly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</a></span>
+defined, and this was certainly not the moment to
+define them. M. C&mdash;&mdash;, in his innocence, accepted
+me with confidence and a chivalrous gravity that left
+nothing to be desired.</p>
+
+<p>The chauffeur Newlands (the leaner and darker
+one) declared himself ready for anything. All he
+wanted was to get to work. Poor Ascot, who was
+so like my friend the editor, had to be content with
+his vigil in the back yard.</p>
+
+<p>At last we got off. I might have trusted Heaven.
+The getting off was a foregone conclusion, for we
+went along the south-east road, which had not
+worked its mysterious fascination for nothing.</p>
+
+<p>At a fork where two roads go into Ghent we saw
+one of our old ambulance cars dashing into Ghent
+down the other road on our left. It was beyond
+hail. Heaven <i>meant</i> us to go on uninterrupted and
+unchallenged.</p>
+
+<p>I had not allowed for trouble at the barrier. There
+always is a barrier, which may be anything from a
+mile to four miles from the field or village where
+the wounded are. Yesterday on the way to Lokeren
+the barrier was at Z&mdash;&mdash;. To-day it was somewhere
+half-way between Ghent and Melle.</p>
+
+<p>None of us had ever quite got to the bottom of
+the trouble at the barrier. We know that the Belgian
+authorities wisely refused all responsibility.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</a></span>
+Properly speaking, our ambulances were not supposed
+to go nearer than a certain safe distance from
+the enemy's firing-line. For two reasons. First,
+it stood the chance of being shelled or taken prisoner.
+Second, there was a very natural fear that
+it might draw down the enemy's fire on the Belgians.
+Our huge, lumbering cars, with their brand-new
+khaki hoods and flaming red crosses on a white
+ground, were an admirable mark for German guns.
+But as the Corps in this case went into the firing-line
+on foot, I do not think that the risk was to the
+Belgians. So, though in theory we stopped outside
+the barriers, in practice we invariably got through.</p>
+
+<p>The new car was stopped at the barrier now by
+the usual Belgian Army Medical Officer. We were
+not to go on to Melle.</p>
+
+<p>I said that we had orders to go on to Melle; and
+I meant to go on to Melle. The Medical Officer
+said again that we were not to go, and I said again
+that we were going.</p>
+
+<p>Then that Belgian Army Medical Officer began
+to tell us what I imagine is the usual barrier tale.</p>
+
+<p>There were any amount of ambulances at Melle.</p>
+
+<p>There were no wounded at Melle.</p>
+
+<p>And in any case this ambulance wouldn't be allowed
+to go there. And then the usual battle of the
+barrier had place.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>It was one against three. For M. C&mdash;&mdash; went
+over to the enemy, and the chauffeur Newlands,
+confronted by two official adversaries in uniform,
+became deafer and deafer to my voice in his right
+ear.</p>
+
+<p>First, the noble and chivalrous Belgian Red Cross
+guide, with an appalling treachery, gave the order
+to turn the car round to Ghent. I gave the counter
+order. Newlands wavered for one heroic moment;
+then he turned the car round.</p>
+
+<p>I jumped out and went up to the Army Medical
+Officer and delivered a frontal attack, discharging
+execrable French.</p>
+
+<p>"No wounded? You tell us that tale every day,
+and there are always wounded. Do you want any
+more of them to die? I mean to go on and I shall
+go on."</p>
+
+<p>I didn't ask him how he thought he could stop
+one whom Heaven had predestined to go on to
+Melle.</p>
+
+<p>M. C&mdash;&mdash; had got out now to see the fight.</p>
+
+<p>The Army Medical Officer looked the Secretary
+and Reporter up and down, taking in that vision
+of inappropriateness and disproportion. There was
+a faint, a very faint smile under the ferocity of his
+moustache, the first sign of relenting. The Secretary
+and Reporter saw the advantage and followed,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</a></span>
+as you might follow a bend in the enemy's line of
+defence.</p>
+
+<p>"I <i>want</i> to go on" (placably, almost pathetically).
+"<i>Je veux continuer.</i> Do you by any chance imagine
+we're <i>afraid</i>?"</p>
+
+<p>At this, M. C&mdash;&mdash;, the Belgian guide, smiled too,
+under a moustache not quite so ferocious as the
+Army Medical Officer's. They shrugged their shoulders.
+They had done their duty. Anyhow, they
+had lost the battle.</p>
+
+<p>The guide and the reporter jumped back into
+the car; I didn't hear anybody give the order, but
+the chauffeur Newlands turned her round in no
+time, and we dashed past the barrier and into
+Melle.</p>
+
+<p>The village street, that had been raked by mitrailleuses
+from the field beyond it, was quiet when we
+came in, and almost deserted. Up a side street,
+propped against the wall of a stable, four wounded
+Frenchmen waited for the ambulance. A fifth,
+shot through the back of his head by a dum-dum
+bullet, lay in front of them on a stretcher that
+dripped blood.</p>
+
+<p>I found Mr. Grierson in the village, left behind
+by the last ambulance. He was immensely astonished
+at my arrival with the new car. He had with
+him an eager little Englishman, one of the sort that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</a></span>
+tracks an ambulance everywhere on the off-chance
+of being useful.</p>
+
+<p>And the Curé of the village was there. He wore
+the Red Cross brassard on the sleeve of his cassock
+and he carried the Host in a little bag of purple
+silk.</p>
+
+<p>They told me that the village had been fired on
+by shrapnel a few minutes before we came into it.
+They said we were only a hundred [?] yards from
+the German trenches. We could see the edge of the
+field from the village street. The trenches [?] were
+at the bottom of it.</p>
+
+<p>It was Baerlaere all over again. The firing
+stopped as soon as I came within range of it, and
+didn't begin again until we had got away.</p>
+
+<p>You couldn't take any interest in the firing or
+the German trenches, or the eager little Englishman,
+or anything. You couldn't see anything but
+those five wounded men, or think of anything but
+how to get them into the ambulance as painlessly and
+in as short a time as possible.</p>
+
+<p>The man on the dripping stretcher was mortally
+wounded. He was lifted in first, very slowly and
+gently.</p>
+
+<p>The Curé climbed in after him, carrying the Host.</p>
+
+<p>He kneeled there while the blood from the
+wounded head oozed through the bandages and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</a></span>
+through the canvas of the stretcher to the floor and
+to the skirts of his cassock.</p>
+
+<p>We waited.</p>
+
+<p>There was no ugly haste in the Supreme Act; the
+three mortal moments that it lasted (it could not
+have lasted more) were charged with immortality,
+while the Curé remained kneeling in the pool of
+blood.</p>
+
+<p>I shall never become a Catholic. But if I do,
+it will be because of the Curé of Melle, who turned
+our new motor ambulance into a sanctuary after
+the French soldier had baptized it with his blood.
+I have never seen, I never shall see, anything more
+beautiful, more gracious than the Soul that appeared
+in his lean, dark face and in the straight, slender
+body under the black <i>soutane</i>. In his simple, inevitable
+gestures you saw adoration of God, contempt
+for death, and uttermost compassion.</p>
+
+<p>It was all over. I received his missal and his bag
+of purple silk as he gathered his cassock about him
+and came down.</p>
+
+<p>I asked him if anything could be done. His eyes
+smiled as he answered. But his lips quivered as he
+took again his missal and his purple bag.</p>
+
+<p>M. C&mdash;&mdash; is now glad that we went on to Melle.</p>
+
+<p>We helped the four other wounded men in. They
+sat in a row alongside the stretcher.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>I sat on the edge of the ambulance, at the feet
+of the dying man, by the handles of the stretcher.</p>
+
+<p>At the last minute the Chaplain jumped on to the
+step. So did the little eager Englishman. Hanging
+on to the hood and swaying with the rush of the
+car, he talked continually. He talked from the moment
+we left Melle to the moment when we landed
+him at his street in Ghent; explaining over and over
+again the qualifications that justified him in attaching
+himself to ambulances. He had lived fourteen
+years in Ghent. He could speak French and Flemish.</p>
+
+<p>I longed for the eager little Englishman to stop.
+I longed for his street to come and swallow him
+up. He had lived in Ghent fourteen years. He
+could speak Flemish and French. I felt that I
+couldn't bear it if he went on a minute longer. I
+wanted to think. The dying man lay close behind
+me, very straight and stiff; his poor feet stuck out
+close under my hand.</p>
+
+<p>But I couldn't think. The little eager Englishman
+went on swaying and talking.</p>
+
+<p>He had lived fourteen years in Ghent.</p>
+
+<p>He could speak French and Flemish.</p>
+
+<p class="centerspread">········</p>
+
+<p>The dying man was still alive when he was lifted
+out of the ambulance.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>He died that evening.</p>
+
+<p class="centerspread">········</p>
+
+<p>The Commandant is pleased with his new ambulances.
+He is not altogether displeased with
+me.</p>
+
+<p>We must have been very quick. For it was the
+Commandant's car that we passed at the fork of
+the road. And either he arrived a few minutes after
+we got back or we arrived just as he had got in.
+Anyhow, we met in the porch.</p>
+
+<p>He and Ursula Dearmer and I went back to Melle
+again at once, in the new car. It was nearly dark
+when we got there.</p>
+
+<p>We found Mrs. Torrence and little Janet in the
+village. They and Dr. Wilson had been working
+all day long picking up wounded off the field outside
+it. The German lines are not far off&mdash;at the
+bottom of the field. I think only a small number
+of their guns could rake the main street of the village
+where we were. Their shell went over our
+heads and over the roofs of the houses towards the
+French batteries on this side of the village. There
+must have been a rush from the German lines across
+this field, and the French batteries have done their
+work well, for Mrs. Torrence said the German dead
+are lying thick there among the turnips. She and
+Janet and Dr. Wilson had been under fire for eight<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</a></span>
+hours on end, lifting men and carrying stretchers.
+I don't know whether their figures (the two girls
+in khaki tunics and breeches) could be seen from
+the German lines, but they just trudged on between
+the furrows, and over the turnip-tops, serenely regardless
+of the enemy, carefully sorting the wounded
+from the dead, with the bullets whizzing past their
+noses.</p>
+
+<p>Of bullets Mrs. Torrence said, indeed, that eight
+hours of them were rather more than she cared for;
+and of carrying stretchers over a turnip-field, that
+it was as much as she and Janet could do. But they
+came back from it without turning a hair. I have
+seen women more dishevelled after tramping a turnip-field
+in a day's partridge-shooting.</p>
+
+<p>They went off somewhere to find Dr. Wilson;
+and we&mdash;Ursula Dearmer, the Commandant and I&mdash;hung
+about the village waiting for the wounded
+to be brought in. The village was crowded with
+French and Belgian troops when we came into it.
+Then they gathered together and went on towards
+the field, and we followed them up the street. They
+called to us to stay under cover, or, if we <i>must</i> walk
+up the street, to keep close under the houses, as the
+bullets might come flying at us any minute.</p>
+
+<p>No bullets came, however. It was like Baerlaere&mdash;it
+was like Lokeren&mdash;it was like every place I've<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</a></span>
+been in, so far. Nothing came as long as there was
+a chance of its getting me.</p>
+
+<p>After that we drove down to the station. While
+we were hanging about there, a shell was hurled
+over this side of the village from the German batteries.
+It careered over the roofs, with a track that
+was luminous in the dusk, like a curved sheet of
+lightning. I don't know where it fell and burst.</p>
+
+<p>We were told to stand out from under the station
+building for fear it should be struck.</p>
+
+<p>When we got back into the village we went into
+the inn and waited there in a long, narrow room,
+lit by a few small oil-lamps and crammed with soldiers.
+They were eating and drinking in vehement
+haste. Wherever the light from the lamps fell on
+them, you saw faces flushed and scarred under a
+blur of smoke and grime. Here and there a bandage
+showed up, violently white. On the tables enormous
+quantities of bread appeared and disappeared.</p>
+
+<p>These soldiers, with all their vehemence and violence,
+were exceedingly lovable. One man brought
+me a chair; another brought bread and offered it.
+Charming smiles flashed through the grime.</p>
+
+<p>At last, when we had found one man with a
+wounded hand, we got into the ambulance and went
+back to Ghent.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="centerspaced2">[<i>Saturday, 10th.</i>]</p>
+
+<p>I <span class="smcap">have</span> got something to do again&mdash;at last!</p>
+
+<p>I am to help to look after Mr. &mdash;&mdash;. He has the
+pick of the Belgian Red Cross women to nurse him,
+and they are angelically kind and very skilful, but
+he is not very happy with them. He says: "These
+dear people are so good to me, but I can't make out
+what they say. I can't tell them what I want."
+He is pathetically glad to have any English people
+with him. (Even I am a little better than a Belgian
+whom he cannot understand.)</p>
+
+<p>I sat with him all morning. The French boy
+has gone and he is alone in his room now. It
+seems that the kind Chaplain sat up with him all
+last night after his hard day at Melle. (I wish
+now I had stood by the Chaplain with his Matins.
+He has never tried to have them again&mdash;given
+us up as an unholy crew, all except Mr. Foster,
+whom he clings to.)</p>
+
+<p>The morning went like half an hour, while it was
+going; but when it was over I felt as if I had been
+nursing for weeks on end. There were so many
+little things to be done, and so much that you
+mustn't do, and the anxiety was appalling. I don't
+suppose there is a worse case in the Hospital. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</a></span>
+is perhaps a shade better to-day, but none of the
+medical staff think that he can live.</p>
+
+<p>Madame E&mdash;&mdash; and Dr. Bird have shown me
+what to do, and what not to do. I must keep him
+all the time in the same position. I must give
+him sips of iced broth, and little pieces of ice to
+suck every now and then. I must not let him try
+to raise himself in bed. I must not try to lift
+him myself. If we do lift him we must keep his
+body tilted at the same angle. I must not
+give him any hot drinks and not too much cold
+drink.</p>
+
+<p>And he is six foot high, so tall that his feet
+come through the blankets at the bottom of the
+bed; and he keeps sinking down in it all the time
+and wanting to raise himself up again. And his
+fever makes him restless. And he is always thirsty
+and he longs for hot tea more than iced water, and
+for more iced water than is good for him. The
+iced broth that is his only nourishment he does not
+want at all.</p>
+
+<p>And then he must be kept very quiet. I must
+not let him talk more than is necessary to tell me
+what he wants, or he will die of exhaustion. And
+what he wants is to talk every minute that he is
+awake.</p>
+
+<p>He drops off to sleep, breathing in jerks and with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</a></span>
+a terrible rapidity. And I think it will be all right
+as long as he sleeps. But his sleep only lasts for
+a few minutes. I hear the rhythm of his breathing
+alter; it slackens and goes slow; then it jerks again,
+and I know that he is awake.</p>
+
+<p>And then he begins. He says things that tear
+at your heart. He has looks and gestures that
+break it&mdash;the adorable, wilful smile of a child that
+knows that it is being watched when you find his
+hand groping too often for the glass of iced water
+that stands beside his bed; a still more adorable and
+utterly gentle submission when you take the glass
+from him; when you tell him not to say anything
+more just yet but to go to sleep again. You feel
+as if you were guilty of act after act of nameless
+and abominable cruelty.</p>
+
+<p>He sticks to it that he has seen me before, that
+he has heard of me, that his people know me. And
+he wants to know what I do and where I live and
+where it was that he saw me. Once, when I
+thought he had gone to sleep, I heard him begin
+again: "Where did you say you lived?"</p>
+
+<p>I tell him. And I tell him to go to sleep again.</p>
+
+<p>He closes his eyes obediently and opens them the
+next instant.</p>
+
+<p>"I say, may I come and call on you when we
+get back to England?"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>You can only say: "Yes. Of course," and tell
+him to go to sleep.</p>
+
+<p>His voice is so strong and clear that I could almost
+believe that he will get back and that some
+day I shall look up and see him standing at my
+garden gate.</p>
+
+<p>Mercifully, when I tell him to go to sleep again,
+he does go to sleep. And his voice is a little clearer
+and stronger every time he wakes.</p>
+
+<p>And so the morning goes on. The only thing he
+wants you to do for him is to sponge his hands and
+face with iced water and to give him little bits of
+ice to suck. Over and over again I do these things.
+And over and over again he asks me, "Do you
+mind?"</p>
+
+<p class="centerspread">········</p>
+
+<p>He wears a little grey woollen cord round his
+neck. Something has gone from it. Whatever he
+has lost, they have left him his little woollen cord,
+as if some immense importance attached to it.</p>
+
+<p class="centerspread">········</p>
+
+<p>He has fallen into a long doze. And at the end
+of the morning I left him sleeping.</p>
+
+<p>Some of the Corps have brought in trophies from
+the battle-field&mdash;a fine grey cloak with a scarlet<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</a></span>
+collar, a spiked helmet, a cuff with three buttons
+cut from the coat of a dead German.</p>
+
+<p>These things make me sick. I see the body under
+the cloak, the head under the helmet, and the dead
+hand under the cuff.</p>
+
+<p class="centerspaced2">[<i>Afternoon.</i>]</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Saw</span> Mr. Foster. He is to be sent back to England
+for an operation. Dr. Wilson is to take him.
+He asked me if I thought the Commandant would
+take him back again when he is better.</p>
+
+<p>Saw the President about Mr. Foster. He will
+not hear of his going back to England. He wants
+him to stay in the Hospital and be operated on here.
+He promises the utmost care and attention. He is
+most distressed to think that he should go.</p>
+
+<p>It doesn't occur to him in his kindness that it
+would be much more distressing if the Germans
+came into Ghent and interrupted the operation.</p>
+
+<p>Cabled Miss F. about her Glasgow ambulance,
+asking her to pay her staff if her funds ran to it.
+Cabled British Red Cross to send Mr. Gould and
+his scouting-car here instead of to France. Cabled
+Mr. Gould to get the British Red Cross to send
+him here.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Lambert has been ill with malaria. He has<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</a></span>
+gone back to England to get well again and to repair
+the car that broke down at Lokeren.<a name="FNanchor_22_23" id="FNanchor_22_23"></a><a href="#Footnote_22_23" class="fnanchor">[22]</a></p>
+
+<p>Somebody else is to look after Mr. &mdash;&mdash; this afternoon.</p>
+
+<p>I have been given leave rather reluctantly to sit
+up with him at night.</p>
+
+<p>The Commandant is going to take me in Tom's
+Daimler (Car 1) to the British lines to look for a
+base for that temporary hospital which is still running
+in his head like a splendid dream. I do not
+see how, with the Germans at Melle, only four and
+a half miles off, any sort of hospital is to be established
+on this side of Ghent.</p>
+
+<p>Tom, the chauffeur, does not look with favour
+on the expedition. I have had to point out to him
+that a Field Ambulance is <i>not</i>, as he would say,
+the House of Commons, and that there is a certain<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</a></span>
+propriety binding even on a chauffeur and a limit
+to the freedom of the speech you may apply to your
+Commandant. This afternoon Tom has exceeded
+all the limits. The worst of Tom is that while his
+tongue rages on the confines of revolt, he himself
+is punctilious to excess on the point of orders.
+Either he has orders or he hasn't them. If he has
+them he obeys them with a punctuality that puts
+everybody else in the wrong. If he hasn't them,
+an earthquake wouldn't make him move. Such is
+his devotion to orders that he will insist on any
+one order holding good for an unlimited time after
+it has been given.</p>
+
+<p>So now, in defence of his manners, he urges
+that what with orders and counter-orders, the provocation
+is more than flesh and blood can stand. Tom
+himself is protest clothed in flesh and blood.</p>
+
+<p>To-day at two o'clock Tom's orders are that his
+car is to be ready at two-thirty. My orders are to
+be ready in twenty minutes. I <i>am</i> ready in twenty
+minutes. The Commandant thinks that he has
+transacted all his business and is ready in twenty
+minutes too. Tom and his car are nowhere to be
+seen. I go to look for Tom. Tom is reported as
+being last seen riding on a motor-lorry towards the
+British lines in the company of a detachment of
+British infantry.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The chauffeur Tom is considered to have disgraced
+himself everlastingly.</p>
+
+<p>Punctually at two-thirty he appears with his car
+at the door of the "Flandria."</p>
+
+<p>The Commandant is nowhere to be seen. He
+has gone to look for Tom.</p>
+
+<p>I reprove Tom for the sin of unpunctuality, and
+he has me.</p>
+
+<p>His orders were to be ready at two-thirty and
+he is ready at two-thirty. And it is nobody's business
+what he did with himself ten minutes before.
+He wants to know where the Commandant is.</p>
+
+<p>I go to look for the Commandant.</p>
+
+<p>The Commandant is reported to have been last
+seen going through the Hospital on his way to the
+garage. I go round to the garage through the Hospital;
+and the Commandant goes out of the garage
+by the street. He was last seen <i>in</i> the garage.</p>
+
+<p>He appears suddenly from some quarter where
+you wouldn't expect him in the least. He reproves
+Tom.</p>
+
+<p>Tom with considerable violence declares his
+righteousness. He has gathered to himself a friend,
+a Belgian Red Cross man, whose language he does
+not understand. But they exchange winks that surpass
+all language.</p>
+
+<p>Then the Commandant remembers that he has<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</a></span>
+several cables to send off. He is seen disappearing
+in the direction of the Post and Telegraph
+Office.</p>
+
+<p>Tom swallows words that would be curses if I
+were not there.</p>
+
+<p>I keep my eyes fixed on the doors of the Post
+Office. Ages pass.</p>
+
+<p>I go to the Post Office to look for the Commandant.
+He is not in the Telegraph Office. He is not
+in the Post Office. Tom keeps his eyes on the doors
+of both.</p>
+
+<p>More ages pass. Finally, the Commandant appears
+from inside the Hospital, which he has not
+been seen to enter.</p>
+
+<p>The chauffeur Tom dismounts and draws from
+his car's mysterious being sounds that express the
+savage fury of his resentment.</p>
+
+<p>You would think we were off now. But we only
+get as far as a street somewhere near the Hôtel de
+la Poste. Here we wait for apparently no reason
+in such tension that you can hear the ages pass.</p>
+
+<p>The Commandant disappears.</p>
+
+<p>Tom says something about there being no room
+for the wounded at this rate.</p>
+
+<p>It seems his orders are to go first to the British
+lines at a place whose name I forget, and then on
+to Melle.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>I remember Tom's views on the subject of field-women.
+And suddenly I seem to understand them.
+Tom is very like Lord Kitchener. He knows nothing
+about the aims and wants of modern womanhood
+and he cares less. The modern woman does
+not ask to be protected, does not want to be protected,
+and Tom, like Lord Kitchener, will go on
+protecting. You cannot elevate men like Lord
+Kitchener and Tom above the primitive plane of
+chivalry. Tom in the danger zone with a woman
+by his side feels about as peaceful and comfortable
+as a woman in the danger zone with a two-year-old
+baby in her lap. A bomb in his bedroom is one
+thing and a band of drunken Uhlans making for his
+women is another. Tom's nerves are racked with
+problems: How the dickens is he to steer his car
+and protect his women at the same time? And if
+it comes to a toss-up between his women and his
+wounded? You've got to stow the silly things
+somewhere, and every one of them takes up the
+place of a wounded man.</p>
+
+<p>I get out of the car and tell the Commandant
+that I would rather not go than take up the place
+of a wounded man.</p>
+
+<p>He orders me back to the car again. Tom seems
+inclined to regard me as a woman who has done her
+best.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>We go on a little way and stop again. And there
+springs out of the pavement a curious figure that
+I have seen somewhere before in Ghent, I cannot
+remember when or where. The figure wears a
+check suit of extreme horsyness and carries a kodak
+in its hand. It is excited.</p>
+
+<p>There is something about it that reminds me now
+of the eager little Englishman at Melle. These
+figures spring up everywhere in the track of a field
+ambulance.</p>
+
+<p>When Tom sees it he groans in despair.</p>
+
+<p>The Commandant gets out and appears to be
+offering it the hospitality of the car. I am introduced.</p>
+
+<p>To my horror the figure skips round in front of
+the car, levels its kodak at my head and implores me
+to sit still.</p>
+
+<p>I am very rude. I tell it sternly to take that
+beastly thing away and go away itself.</p>
+
+<p>It goes, rather startled.</p>
+
+<p>And we get off, somehow, without it, and arrive
+at the end of the street.</p>
+
+<p>Here Tom has orders to stop at the first hat-shop
+he comes to.</p>
+
+<p>The Commandant has lost his hat at Melle (he
+has been wearing little Janet's Arctic cap, to the delight
+of everybody). He has just remembered that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</a></span>
+he wants a hat and he thinks that he will get it
+now.</p>
+
+<p>At this point I break down. I hear myself say
+"Damn" five times, softly but distinctly. (This
+after reproving Tom for unfettered speech and potential
+insubordination.)</p>
+
+<p>Tom stops at a hat-shop. The Commandant to
+his doom enters, and presently returns wearing a
+soft felt hat of a vivid green. He asks me what
+I think of it.</p>
+
+<p>I tell him all I think of it, and he says that if I
+feel like that about it he'll go in again and get another
+one.</p>
+
+<p>I forget what I said then except that I wanted to
+get on to Melle. That Melle was the place of all
+places where I most wished to be.</p>
+
+<p>Then, lest he might feel unhappy in his green
+hat, I said that if he would leave it out all night in
+the rain and then sit on it no doubt time and
+weather and God would do something for it.</p>
+
+<p>This time we were off, and when I realized it I
+said "Hurray!"<a name="FNanchor_23_24" id="FNanchor_23_24"></a><a href="#Footnote_23_24" class="fnanchor">[23]</a></p>
+
+<p>Tom had not said anything for some considerable
+time.</p>
+
+<p>We found the British lines in a little village just<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</a></span>
+outside of Ghent. No place there for a base hospital.</p>
+
+<p>We hung about here for twenty minutes, and the
+women and children came out to stare at us with
+innocent, pathetic faces.</p>
+
+<p>Somebody had stowed away one of the trophies&mdash;the
+spiked German helmet&mdash;in the ambulance
+car, and the chauffeur Tom stuck it on a stick and
+held it up before the British lines. It was greeted
+with cheers and a great shout of laughter from the
+troops; and the villagers came running out of their
+houses to look; they uttered little sharp and guttural
+cries of satisfaction. The whole thing was a bit
+savage and barbaric and horribly impressive.</p>
+
+<p>Finally we left the British lines and set out towards
+Melle by a cross-road.</p>
+
+<p>We got through all right. A thousand accidents
+may delay his going, but once off, no barriers exist
+for the Commandant. Seated in the front of the
+car, utterly unperturbed by the chauffeur Tom's
+sarcastic comments on men, things and women,
+wrapped (apparently) in a beautiful dream, he
+looks straight ahead with eyes whose vagueness
+veils a deadly simplicity of purpose. I marvel at
+the transfiguration of the Commandant. Before
+the War he was a fairly complex personality. Now
+he has ceased to exist as a separate individual. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</a></span>
+is merged, vaguely and vastly, in his adventure.
+He is the Motor Ambulance Field Corps; he is the
+ambulance car; he is the electric spark and the continuous
+explosion that drives the thing along. It is
+useless to talk to him about anything that happened
+before the War or about anything that exists outside
+it. He would not admit that anything did exist
+outside it. He is capable of forgetting the day
+of the week and the precise number of female units
+in his company and the amount standing to his credit
+at his banker's, but, once off, he is cock-sure of the
+shortest cut to the firing-line within a radius of
+fifty kilometres.</p>
+
+<p>Some of us who have never seen a human phenomenon
+of this sort are ready to deny him an
+identity. They complain of his inveterate and deplorable
+lack of any sense of detail. This is absurd.
+You might as well insist on a faithful representation
+of the household furniture of the burgomaster
+of Zoetenaeg, which is the smallest village in
+Belgium, in drawing the map of Europe to scale.
+At the critical moment this more than continental
+vastness gathers to a wedge-like determination that
+goes home. He means to get through.</p>
+
+<p>We ran into Melle about an hour before sunset.</p>
+
+<p>There had been a great slaughter of Germans on
+the field outside the village where the Germans were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</a></span>
+still firing when the Corps left it. We found two
+of our cars drawn up by the side of the village street,
+close under the houses. The Chaplain, Ursula
+Dearmer and Mrs. Lambert were waiting in one of
+them, the new Daimler, with the chauffeur Newlands.
+Dr. Wilson was in Bert's car with three
+wounded Germans. He was sitting in front with
+one of them beside him. They say that the enemy's
+wounded sometimes fire on our surgeons and Red
+Cross men, and Dr. Wilson had a revolver about
+him when he went on the battle-field yesterday.
+He said he wasn't taking any risks. The man he
+had got beside him to-day was only wounded in the
+foot, and had his hands entirely free to do what he
+liked with. He looked rather a low type, and at
+the first sight of him I thought I shouldn't have
+cared to be alone with him anywhere on a dark
+night.</p>
+
+<p>And then I saw the look on his face. He was
+purely pathetic. He didn't look at you. He
+stared in front of him down the road towards
+Ghent, in a dull, helpless misery. These unhappy
+German Tommies are afraid of us. They are told
+that we shall treat them badly, and some of them
+believe it. I wanted Dr. Wilson to let me get up
+and go with the poor fellow, but he wouldn't. He
+was sorry for him and very gentle. He is always<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</a></span>
+sorry for people and very gentle. So I knew that
+the German would be all right with him. But I
+should have liked to have gone.</p>
+
+<p>We found Mrs. Torrence and Janet with M. &mdash;&mdash;
+on the other side of the street, left behind by Dr.
+Wilson. They have been working all day yesterday
+and half the night and all this morning and
+afternoon on that hideous turnip-field. They have
+seen things and combinations of things that no forewarning
+imagination could have devised. Last
+night the car was fired on where it stood waiting for
+them in the village, and they had to race back to it
+under a shower of bullets.</p>
+
+<p>They were as fresh as paint and very cheerful.
+Mrs. Torrence was wearing a large silver order on
+a broad blue ribbon pinned to her khaki overcoat.
+It was given to her to-day as the reward of valour
+by the Belgian General in command here. Somebody
+took it from the breast of a Prussian officer.
+She had covered it up with her khaki scarf so that
+she might not seem to swank.</p>
+
+<p>Little Janet was with her. She always is with
+her. She looked younger than ever, more impassive
+than ever, more adorable than ever. I have
+got used to Mrs. Torrence and to Ursula Dearmer;
+but I cannot get used to Janet. It always seems
+appalling to me that she should be here, strolling<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</a></span>
+about the seat of War with her hands in her pockets,
+as if a battle were a cricket-match at which you
+looked on between your innings. And yet there
+isn't a man in the Corps who does his work better,
+and with more courage and endurance, than this
+eighteen-year-old child.</p>
+
+<p>They told us that there were no French or Belgian
+wounded left, but that two wounded Germans
+were still lying over there among the turnips. They
+were waiting for our car to come out and take these
+men up. The car was now drawn up close under
+some building that looked like a town hall, on the
+other side of the street. We were in the middle
+of the village. The village itself was the extreme
+fringe of the danger zone. Where the houses
+ended, a stretch of white road ran up for about [?]
+a hundred yards to the turnip-field. Standing in
+the village street, we could see the turnip-field, but
+not all of it. The road goes straight up to the edge
+of it and turns there with a sweep to the left and
+runs alongside for about a mile and a half.</p>
+
+<p>On the other side of the turnip-field were the
+German lines. The first that had raked the village
+street also raked the fields and the mile and a half of
+road alongside.</p>
+
+<p>It was along that road that the car would have
+to go.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>M. &mdash;&mdash; told our Ambulance that it might as well
+go back. There were no more wounded. Only
+two Germans lying in a turnip-field. The three of
+us&mdash;Mrs. Torrence and Janet and I&mdash;tried to
+bring pressure to bear on M. &mdash;&mdash;. We meant to
+go and get those Germans.</p>
+
+<p>But M. &mdash;&mdash; was impervious to pressure. He
+refused either to go with the car himself or to let
+us go. He said we were too late and it was too
+far and there wouldn't be light enough. He said
+that for two Belgians, or two French, or two
+British, it would be worth while taking risks. But
+for two Germans under German fire it wasn't good
+enough.</p>
+
+<p>But Mrs. Torrence and Janet and I didn't agree
+with him. Wounded were wounded. We said we
+were going if he wasn't.</p>
+
+<p>Then the chauffeur Tom joined in. He refused
+to offer his car as a target for the enemy.<a name="FNanchor_24_25" id="FNanchor_24_25"></a><a href="#Footnote_24_25" class="fnanchor">[24]</a> Our
+firm Belgian was equally determined. The Commandant,
+as if roused from his beautiful dream to
+a sudden realization of the horrors of war, absolutely
+forbade the expedition.</p>
+
+<p>It took place all the same.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</a></span></p>
+<p>Tom's car, planted there on our side of the street,
+hugging the wall, with its hood over its eyes, preserved
+its attitude of obstinate immobility. Newlands'
+car, hugging the wall on the other side of
+the street, stood discreetly apart from the discussion.
+But a Belgian military ambulance car ran
+up, smaller and more alert than ours. And a Belgian
+Army Medical Officer strolled up to see what
+was happening.</p>
+
+<p>We three advanced on that Army Medical Officer,
+Mrs. Torrence and Janet on his left and I on his
+right.</p>
+
+<p>I shall always be grateful to that righteous man.
+He gave Mrs. Torrence and Janet leave to go, and
+he gave me leave to go with them; he gave us the
+military ambulance to go in and a Belgian soldier
+with a rifle to protect us. And he didn't waste a
+second over it. He just looked at us, and smiled,
+and let us go.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Torrence got on to the ambulance beside
+the driver, Janet jumped on to one step and I on to
+the other, while the Commandant came up, trying to
+look stern, and told me to get down.</p>
+
+<p>I hung on all the tighter.</p>
+
+<p>And then&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>What happened then was so ignominious, so sickening,
+that, if I were not sworn to the utmost pos<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</a></span>sible
+realism in this record, I should suppress it in
+the interests of human dignity.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Torrence, having the advantage of me in
+weight, height, muscle and position, got up and tried
+to push me off the step. As she did this she said:
+"You can't come. You'll take up the place of a
+wounded man."</p>
+
+<p>And I found myself standing in the village street,
+while the car rushed out of it, with Janet clinging
+on to the hood, like a little sailor to his shrouds.
+She was on the side next the German guns.</p>
+
+<p>It was the most revolting thing that had happened
+to me yet, in a life filled with incidents that I have
+no desire to repeat. And it made me turn on the
+Commandant in a way that I do not like to think of.
+I believe I asked him how he could bear to let that
+kid go into the German lines, which was exactly
+what the poor man hadn't done.<a name="FNanchor_25_26" id="FNanchor_25_26"></a><a href="#Footnote_25_26" class="fnanchor">[25]</a></p>
+
+<p>Then we waited, Mrs. Lambert and I in Tom's
+car; and the Commandant in the car with Ursula
+Dearmer and the Chaplain on the other side of the
+street.</p>
+
+<p>We were dreadfully silent now. We stared at
+objects that had no earthly interest for us as if our<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</a></span>
+lives depended on mastering their detail. We were
+thus aware of a beautiful little Belgian house standing
+back from the village street down a short turning,
+a cream-coloured house with green shutters and
+a roof of rose-red tiles, and a very small poplar
+tree mounting guard beside it. This house and its
+tree were vivid and very still. They stood back in
+an atmosphere of their own, an atmosphere of perfect
+but utterly unreal peace. And as long as our
+memories endure, that house which we never saw
+before, and shall probably never see again, is bound
+up with the fate of Mrs. Torrence and Janet McNeil.</p>
+
+<p>We thought we should have an hour to wait before
+they came back, if they ever did come. We
+waited for them during a whole dreadful lifetime.</p>
+
+<p class="centerspread">········</p>
+
+<p>In something less than half an hour the military
+ambulance came swinging round the turn of the
+road, with Mrs. Torrence and the Kid, and the two
+German wounded with them on the stretchers.</p>
+
+<p>Those Germans never thought that they were going
+to be saved. They couldn't get over it&mdash;that
+two Englishwomen should have gone through their
+fire, for them! As they were being carried through
+the fire they said: "We shall never forget what
+you've done for us. God will bless you for it."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Torrence asked them, "What will you do
+for us if we are taken prisoner?"</p>
+
+<p>And they said: "We will do all we can to save
+you."</p>
+
+<p class="centerspread">········</p>
+
+<p>Antwerp is said to have fallen.</p>
+
+<p>Antwerp is said to be holding its own well.<a name="FNanchor_26_27" id="FNanchor_26_27"></a><a href="#Footnote_26_27" class="fnanchor">[26]</a></p>
+
+<p>All evening the watching Taube has been hanging
+over Ghent.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Torrence and Janet have gone back with the
+ambulance to Melle.</p>
+
+<p class="centerspaced2">[<i>Night.</i>]</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Sat</span> up all night with Mr. &mdash;&mdash;.</p>
+
+<p>There is one night nurse for all the wards on
+this floor, and she has a serious case to watch in
+another room. But I can call her if I want help.
+And there is the chemist who sleeps in the room
+next door, who will come if I go in and wake him
+up. And there are our own four doctors upstairs.
+And the <i>infirmiers</i>. It ought to be all right.</p>
+
+<p>As a matter of fact it was the most terrible night
+I have ever spent in my life; and I have lived
+through a good many terrible nights in sick-rooms.
+But no amount of amateur nursing can take the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</a></span>
+place of training or of the self-confidence of knowing
+you are trained. And even if you <i>are</i> trained,
+no amount of medical nursing will prepare you for
+a bad surgical case. To begin with, I had never
+nursed a patient so tall and heavy that I couldn't
+lift him by sheer strength and a sort of amateur
+knack.</p>
+
+<p>And though in theory it was reassuring to know
+that you could call the night nurse and the chemist
+and the four doctors and the <i>infirmiers</i>, in practice
+it didn't work out quite so easily as it sounded.
+When the night nurse came she couldn't lift any
+more than I could; and she had a greater command
+of discouraging criticism than of useful, practical
+suggestion. And the chemist knew no more about
+lifting than the night nurse. (Luckily none of us
+pretended for an instant that we knew!) When I
+had called up two of our hard-worked surgeons
+each once out of his bed, I had some scruples about
+waking them again. And it took four Belgian <i>infirmiers</i>
+to do in five minutes what one surgeon
+could do in as many seconds. And when the
+chemist went to look for the <i>infirmiers</i> he was gone
+for ages&mdash;he must have had to round them up
+from every floor in the Hospital. Whenever any
+of them went to look for anything, it took them
+ages. It was as if for every article needed in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</a></span>
+wards of that Hospital there was a separate and inaccessible
+central depôt.<a name="FNanchor_27_28" id="FNanchor_27_28"></a><a href="#Footnote_27_28" class="fnanchor">[27]</a></p>
+
+<p>At one moment a small pillow had to be placed
+in the hollow of my patient's back if he was to be
+kept in that position on which I had been told his
+life depended. When I sent the night nurse to look
+for something that would serve, she was gone a
+quarter of an hour, in which I realized that my
+case was not the only case in the Hospital. For
+a quarter of an hour I had to kneel by his bed with
+my two arms thrust together under the hollow of his
+back, supporting it. I had nothing at hand that was
+small enough or firm enough but my arms.</p>
+
+<p>That night I would have given everything I possess,
+and everything I have ever done, to have been
+a trained nurse.</p>
+
+<p>To make matters worse, I had an atrocious cough,
+acquired at the Hôtel de la Poste. The chemist
+had made up some medicine for it, but the poor busy
+dispensary clerk had forgotten to send it to my
+room. I had to stop it by an expenditure of will
+when I wanted every atom of will to keep my patient
+quiet and send him to sleep, if possible, without his
+morphia <i>piqûres</i>. He is only to have one if he is
+restless or in pain.</p>
+
+<p>And to-night he wanted more than ever to talk<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</a></span>
+when he woke. And his conversation in the night
+is even more lacerating than his conversation in the
+day. For all the time, often in pain, always in extreme
+discomfort, he is thinking of other people.</p>
+
+<p>First of all he asked me if I had any books, and
+I thought that he wanted me to read to him. I told
+him I was afraid he mustn't be read to, he must go
+to sleep. And he said: "I mean for you to read
+yourself&mdash;to pass the time."</p>
+
+<p>He is afraid that I shall be bored by sitting up
+with him, that I shall tire myself, that I shall make
+my cough worse. He asks me if I think he will ever
+be well enough to play games. That is what he
+has always wanted to do most.</p>
+
+<p>And then he begins to tell me about his mother.</p>
+
+<p>He tells me things that I have no right to put
+down here.</p>
+
+<p>There is nothing that I can do for him but to
+will. And I will hard, or I pray&mdash;I don't know
+which it is; your acutest willing and your intensest
+prayer are indistinguishable. And it seems to work.
+I will&mdash;or I pray&mdash;that he shall lie still without
+morphia, and that he shall have no pain. And he
+lies still, without pain. I will&mdash;or I pray&mdash;that
+he shall sleep without morphia. And he sleeps (I
+think that in spite of his extreme discomfort, he
+must have slept the best part of the night). And<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</a></span>
+because it seems to work, I will&mdash;or I pray&mdash;that
+he shall get well.</p>
+
+<p>There are many things that obstruct this process
+as fast as it is begun: your sensation of sight and
+touch; the swarms and streams of images that your
+brain throws out; and the crushing obsession of
+your fear. This last is like a dead weight that you
+hold off you with your arms stretched out. Your
+arms sink and drop under it perpetually and have to
+be raised again. At last the weight goes. And the
+sensations go, and the swarms and streams of
+images go, and there is nothing before you and
+around you but a clear blank darkness where your
+will vibrates.</p>
+
+<p>Only one avenue of sense is left open. You are
+lost to the very memories of touch and sight, but
+you are intensely conscious of every sound from
+the bed, every movement of the sleeper. And while
+one half of you only lives in that pure and effortless
+vibration, the other half is aware of the least change
+in the rhythm of his breathing.</p>
+
+<p>It is by this rhythm that I can tell whether he
+is asleep or awake. This rhythm of his breathing,
+and the rhythm of his sleeping and his waking measure
+out the night for me. It goes like one hour.</p>
+
+<p>And yet I have spent months of nights watching
+in this room. Its blond walls are as familiar to me<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</a></span>
+as the walls of rooms where I have lived a long
+time; I know with a profound and intimate knowledge
+every crinkle in the red shade of the electric
+bulb that hangs on the inner wall between the two
+beds, the shape and position of every object on the
+night table in the little white-tiled dressing-room;
+I know every trick of the inner and outer doors
+leading to the corridor, and the long grey lane of
+the corridor, and the room that I must go through
+to find ice, and the face of the little ward-maid who
+sleeps there, who wants to get up and break the ice
+for me every time. I have known the little ward-maid
+all my life; I have known the night nurse all
+my life, with her white face and sharp black eyes,
+and all my life I have not cared for her. All my
+life I have known and cared only for the wounded
+man on the bed.</p>
+
+<p>I have known every sound of his voice and every
+line of his face and hands (the face and hands that
+he asks me to wash, over and over again, if I don't
+mind), and the strong springing of his dark hair
+from his forehead and every little feathery tuft of
+beard on his chin. And I have known no other
+measure of time than the rhythm of his breathing,
+no mark or sign of time than the black crescent of
+his eyelashes when the lids are closed, and the curling
+blue of his eyes when they open. His eyes al<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</a></span>ways
+smile as they open, as if he apologized for waking
+when he knows that I want him to sleep. And
+I have known these things so long that each one of
+them is already like a separate wound in my
+memory.<a name="FNanchor_28_29" id="FNanchor_28_29"></a><a href="#Footnote_28_29" class="fnanchor">[28]</a> He sums up for me all the heroism and
+the agony and waste of the defence of Antwerp, all
+the heroism and agony and waste of war.</p>
+
+<p>About midnight [?] he wakes and tells me he
+has had a jolly dream. He dreamed that he was
+running in a field in England, running in a big race,
+that he led the race and won it.</p>
+
+<p class="centerspaced2">[<i>Sunday, 11th.</i>]</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">One</span> bad symptom is disappearing. Towards
+dawn it has almost gone. He really does seem
+stronger.</p>
+
+<p class="centerspaced2">[<i>5 a.m.</i>]</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">He</span> has had no return of pain or restlessness.
+But he was to have a morphia <i>piqûre</i> at five o'clock,
+and they have given it to him to make sure.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="centerspaced2">[<i>8 a.m.</i>]</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> night has not been so terrible, after all. It
+has gone like an hour and I have left him sleeping.</p>
+
+<p>I am not in the least bit tired; I never felt drowsy
+once, and my cough has nearly gone.</p>
+
+<p class="centerspread">········</p>
+
+<p>Antwerp has fallen.</p>
+
+<p>Taube over Ghent in the night.</p>
+
+<p>Six doctors have seen Mr. &mdash;&mdash;. They all say
+he is ever so much better. They even say he may
+live&mdash;that he has a good chance.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Wilson is taking Mr. Foster to England this
+morning.</p>
+
+<p>Went back to the Hôtel Cecil to sleep for an hour
+or two. An enormous oval table-top is leaning flat
+against the wall; but by no possibility can it be set
+up. Still, the landlord said he would find a table,
+and he has found one.</p>
+
+<p>Went back to the "Flandria" for lunch. In the
+mess-room Janet tells me that Mr. &mdash;&mdash;'s case has
+been taken out of my hands. I am not to try to
+do any more nursing.</p>
+
+<p>Little Janet looks as if she were trying to soften
+a blow. But it isn't a blow. Far from it. It
+is the end of an intolerable responsibility.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The Commandant and the Chaplain started about
+nine or ten this morning for Melle, and are not back
+yet.</p>
+
+<p>We expect that we may have to clear out of Ghent
+before to-morrow.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Riley, Mrs. Lambert and Janet have gone in
+the second car to Melle.</p>
+
+<p>I waited in all afternoon on the chance of being
+taken when the Commandant comes and goes out
+again.</p>
+
+<p class="centerspaced2">[<i>4.45.</i>]</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">He</span> is not back yet. I am very anxious. The
+Germans may be in Melle by now.</p>
+
+<p>One of the old officials in peaked caps has called
+on me solemnly this afternoon. He is the most
+mysterious of them all, an old man with a white
+moustache, who never seems to do anything but
+hang about. He is certainly not an <i>infirmier</i>. He
+called ostensibly to ask some question and remained
+to talk. I think he thought he would pump me.
+He began by asking if we women enjoyed going out
+with the Field Ambulance; he supposed we felt very
+daring and looked on the whole thing as an adventure.
+I detected some sinister intention, and replied
+that that was not exactly the idea; that our women<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</a></span>
+went out to help to save the lives of the wounded
+soldiers, and that they had succeeded in this object
+over and over again; and that I didn't imagine they
+thought of anything much except their duty. We
+certainly were not out for amusement.</p>
+
+<p>Then he took another line. He told me that the
+reason why our Ambulance is to be put under the
+charge of the British General here (we had heard
+that the whole of the Belgian Army was shortly to
+be under the control of the British, and the whole
+of the Belgian Red Cross with it)&mdash;the reason
+is that its behaviour in going into the firing-line
+has been criticized. And when I ask him on
+what grounds, it turns out that somebody thinks
+there is a risk of our Ambulance drawing down
+the fire on the lines it serves. I told him that in
+all the time I had been with the Ambulance it had
+never placed itself in any position that could possibly
+have drawn down fire on the Belgians, and
+that I had never heard of any single instance of
+this danger; and I made him confess that there was
+no proof or even rumour of any single instance
+when it had occurred. I further told the old gentleman
+very plainly that these things ought not to
+be said or repeated, and that every man and woman
+in the English Ambulance would rather lose their
+own life than risk that of one Belgian soldier.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The old gentleman was somewhat flattened out
+before he left me; having "<i>parfaitement compris</i>."</p>
+
+<p>It is a delicious idea that Kitchener and Joffre
+should be reorganizing the Allied Armies because
+of the behaviour of our Ambulance.</p>
+
+<p>There are Gordon Highlanders in Ghent.<a name="FNanchor_29_30" id="FNanchor_29_30"></a><a href="#Footnote_29_30" class="fnanchor">[29]</a></p>
+
+<p class="centerspread">········</p>
+
+<p>Went over to the Couvent de Saint Pierre, where
+Miss Ashley-Smith is with her British wounded.
+I had to warn her that the Germans may come in
+to-night. I had told the Commandant about her
+yesterday, and arranged with him that we should
+take her and her British away in our Ambulance if
+we have to go. I had to find out how many there
+would be to take.</p>
+
+<p>The Convent is a little way beyond the <i>Place</i>
+on the boulevard. I knew it by the Red Cross
+hanging from the upper windows. Everything is
+as happy and peaceful here as if Ghent were not on
+the eve of an invasion. The nuns took me to Miss
+Ashley-Smith in her ward. I hardly knew her, for
+she had changed the uniform of the British Field
+Hospital<a name="FNanchor_30_31" id="FNanchor_30_31"></a><a href="#Footnote_30_31" class="fnanchor">[30]</a> for the white linen of the Belgian Red
+Cross. I found her in charge of the ward. Ab<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</a></span>solutely
+unperturbed by the news, she went on superintending
+the disposal of a table of surgical instruments.
+She would not consent to come with
+us at first. But the nuns persuaded her that she
+would do no good by remaining.</p>
+
+<p>I am to come again and tell her what time to be
+ready with her wounded, when we know whether
+we are going and when.</p>
+
+<p>Came back to the "Flandria" and finished entries
+in my Day-Book.</p>
+
+<p class="centerspaced2">[<i>Evening.</i>]</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> Commandant has come back from Melle;
+but he is going there again almost directly. He has
+been to the British lines, and heard for certain that
+the Germans will be in Ghent before morning. We
+have orders to clear out before two in the morning.
+I am to have all his things packed by midnight.</p>
+
+<p>The British Consul has left Ghent.</p>
+
+<p>The news spread through the "Flandria."</p>
+
+<p>Max has gone about all day with a scared, white
+face. They say he is suffering from cold feet.
+But I will not believe it. He has just appeared in
+the mess-room and summoned me mysteriously.
+He takes me along the corridor to that room of his
+which he is so proud of. There is a brand-new uni<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</a></span>form
+lying on the bed, the uniform of a French
+soldier of the line. Max handles it with love and
+holy adoration, as a priest handles his sacred vestments.
+He takes it in his arms, he spreads before
+me the grey-blue coat, the grey-blue trousers, and
+his queer eyes are in their solemnity large and quiet
+as dark moons.</p>
+
+<p>Max is going to rejoin his regiment.</p>
+
+<p>It is sheer nervous excitement that gave him that
+wild, white face.</p>
+
+<p>Max is confident that we shall meet again; and
+I have a horrid vision of Max carried on a bloody
+stretcher, a brutally wounded Max.</p>
+
+<p>He has given me his address in Brussels, which
+will not find him there for long enough: if ever.</p>
+
+<p>Jean also is to rejoin his regiment.</p>
+
+<p>Marie, the <i>bonne</i>, stands at the door of the service
+room and watches us with frightened eyes. She
+follows me into the mess-room and shuts the door.
+The poor thing has been seized with panic, and her
+one idea is to get away from Ghent. Can I find a
+place for her on one of our ambulance cars? She
+will squeeze in anywhere, she will stand outside on
+the step. Will I take her back to England? She
+will do any sort of work, no matter what, and she
+won't ask for wages if only I will take her there.
+I tell her we are not going to England. We are go<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</a></span>ing
+to Bruges. We have to follow the Belgian
+Army wherever it is sent.</p>
+
+<p>Then will I take her to Bruges? She has a
+mother there.</p>
+
+<p>It is ghastly. I have to tell her that it is impossible;
+that there will be no place for her in the
+ambulance cars, that they will be crammed with
+wounded, that we will have to stand on the steps
+ourselves, that I do not know how many we shall
+have to take from the Convent, or how many from
+the hospitals; that I can do nothing without the
+Commandant's orders, and that the Commandant is
+not here. And she pleads and implores. She cannot
+believe that we can be so cruel, and I find my
+voice growing hard and stern with sheer, wrenching
+pity. At last I tell her that if there is room
+I will see what can be done, but that I am afraid
+that there will not be room. She stays, she clings,
+trying to extort through pity a more certain promise,
+and I have to tell her to go. She goes, looking
+at me with the dull resentment of a helpless creature
+whom I have hurt. The fact that she has left me
+sick with pity will not do her any good. Nothing
+can do her any good but that place on the ambulance
+which I have no power to give her.</p>
+
+<p>For Marie is not the only one.</p>
+
+<p>I see all the servants in the "Flandria" coming<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</a></span>
+to me before the night is over, and clinging and
+pleading for a place in the ambulance cars.</p>
+
+<p>And this is only the beginning. After Marie
+comes Janet McNeil. She, poor child, has surrendered
+to the overpowering assault on her feelings
+and has pledged herself to smuggle the four
+young children of Madame &mdash;&mdash; into the ambulance
+somehow. I don't see how it was possible for her
+to endure the agony of refusing this request. But
+what we are to do with four young children in cars
+packed with wounded soldiers, through all the stages
+of the Belgian Army's retreat&mdash;!</p>
+
+<p>The next problem that faced me was the Commandant's
+packing&mdash;how to get all the things he
+had brought with him into one small Gladstone bag
+and a sleeping-sack. There was a blue serge suit,
+two sleeping-suits, a large Burberry, a great many
+pocket-handkerchiefs, socks and stockings, an assortment
+of neckties, a quantity of small miscellaneous
+objects whose fugitive tendencies he proposed
+to frustrate by confinement in a large tin
+biscuit-box; there was the biscuit-box itself, a tobacco
+tin, a packet of Gillette razors, a pipe, a
+leather case containing some electric apparatus, and
+a fat scarlet volume: Freud's "Psychopathology
+of Everyday Life." All these things he had pointed
+out to me as they lay flung on the bed or strewn<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</a></span>
+about the room. He had impressed on me the absolute
+necessity of packing every one of them, and
+by the pathetic grouping around the Gladstone bag
+of the biscuit-box, the tobacco-tin, the case of instruments
+and Freud, I gathered that he believed
+that they would all enter the bag placably and be
+contained in it with ease.</p>
+
+<p>The night is still young.</p>
+
+<p>I pack the Gladstone bag. By alternate coaxing
+and coercion Freud and the tobacco-tin and the
+biscuit-box occupy it amicably enough; but the case
+of instruments offers an unconquerable resistance.</p>
+
+<p>The night is not quite so young as it has been,
+and I think I must have left off packing to run over
+to the Hôtel Cecil and pay my bill; for I remember
+going out into the <i>Place</i> and seeing a crowd drawn
+up in the middle of it before the "Flandria." An
+official was addressing this crowd, ordering them
+to give up their revolvers and any arms they had
+on them.</p>
+
+<p>The fate of Ghent depends on absolute obedience
+to this order.</p>
+
+<p>When I get back I find Mrs. Torrence downstairs
+in the hall of the "Flandria." I ask her what
+we had better do about our refugee children. She
+says we can do nothing. There must be no refugee
+children. How <i>can</i> there be in an ambulance<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</a></span>
+packed with wounded men? When I tell her that
+the children will certainly be there if somebody
+doesn't do something to stop them, she goes off to
+do it. I do not envy her her job. She is not enjoying
+it herself. First of all she has got to break
+it to Janet. And Janet will have to break it to the
+mother.</p>
+
+<p>As to poor Marie, she is out of the question. <i>I</i>
+shall have to break it to Marie.</p>
+
+<p>The night goes on. I sit with Mr. &mdash;&mdash; for a
+little while. I have still to finish the Commandant's
+packing; I have not yet begun my own, and
+it is time that I should go round to the Convent to
+tell Miss Ashley-Smith to be ready with her British
+before two o'clock.</p>
+
+<p>I sit with him for what seems a very long time.
+It is appalling to me that the time should seem long.
+For it is really such a little while, and when it is
+over there will be nothing more that I shall ever
+do for him. This thought is not prominent and
+vivid; it is barely discernible; but it is there, a dull
+background of pain under my anxiety for the safety
+of the English over there in the Couvent de Saint
+Pierre. It is more than time that I should go and
+tell them to be ready.</p>
+
+<p>He holds out his hands to be sponged "if I don't
+mind." I sponge them over and over again with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</a></span>
+iced water and eau de Cologne, gently and very
+slowly. I am afraid lest he should be aware that
+there is any hurry. The time goes on, and my
+anxiety becomes acuter every minute, till with each
+slow, lingering turn of my hand I think, "If I don't
+go soon it will be too late."</p>
+
+<p>I hear that the children will be all right. Somebody
+has had a <i>crise de nerfs</i>, and Janet was the
+victim.</p>
+
+<p>It is past midnight, and very dark. The <i>Place</i>
+and the boulevards are deserted. I cannot see the
+Red Cross flag hanging from the window of the
+Convent. The boulevards look all the same in the
+blackness, and I turn up the one to the left. I run
+on and on very fast, but I cannot see the white flag
+with the red cross anywhere; I run back, thinking
+I must have passed it, turn and go on again.</p>
+
+<p>There is nobody in sight. No sound anywhere
+but the sound of my own feet running faster and
+faster up the wrong boulevard.</p>
+
+<p>At last I know I have gone too far, the houses are
+entirely strange. I run back to the <i>Place</i> to get my
+bearings, and start again. I run faster than ever.
+I pass a solitary civilian coming down the boulevard.
+The place is so empty and so still that he and I seem
+to be the only things alive and awake in this quarter
+of the town. As I pass he turns to look after<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</a></span>
+me, wondering at the solitary lady running so fast
+at this hour of the morning. I see the Red Cross
+flag in the distance, and I come to a door that looks
+like the door of the Convent. It <i>is</i> the door of the
+Convent.</p>
+
+<p>I ring the bell. I ring it many times. Nobody
+comes.</p>
+
+<p>I ring a little louder. A tired lay sister puts
+her head out of an upper window and asks me what
+I want. I tell her. She is rather cross and says
+I've come to the wrong door. I must go to the
+second door; and she puts her head in and shuts
+the window with a clang that expresses her just resentment.</p>
+
+<p>I go to the second door, and ring many times
+again. And another lay sister puts her head out of
+an upper window.</p>
+
+<p>She is gentle but sleepy and very slow. She cannot
+take it in all at once. She says they are all
+asleep in the Convent, and she does not like to
+wake them. She says this several times, so that I
+may understand.</p>
+
+<p>I am exasperated.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Mais, Madame&mdash;de grâce! C'est peut-être la
+vie ou la mort!</i>"</p>
+
+<p>The minute I've said it it sounds to me melo<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</a></span>dramatic
+and absurd. <i>I</i> am melodramatic and absurd,
+with my running feet, and my small figure and
+earnest, upturned face, standing under a Convent
+wall at midnight, and talking about <i>la vie et la mort</i>.
+It is too improbable. <i>I</i> am too improbable. I feel
+that I am making a fuss out of all proportion to the
+occasion. And I am sorry for frightening the poor
+lay sister all for nothing.</p>
+
+<p>Very soon, down the south-east road, the Germans
+will be marching upon Ghent.</p>
+
+<p>And I cannot realize it. The whole thing is too
+improbable.</p>
+
+<p>But the lay sister has understood this time. She
+will go and wake the porteress. She is not at all
+frightened.</p>
+
+<p>I wait a little longer, and presently the porteress
+opens the door. When she hears my message she
+goes away, and returns after a little while with one
+of the nuns.</p>
+
+<p>They are very quiet, very kind, and absolutely
+unafraid. They say that Miss Ashley-Smith and
+her British wounded shall be ready before [?] two
+o'clock.</p>
+
+<p>I go back to the "Flandria."</p>
+
+<p>The Commandant, who went out to Melle in
+Tom's car, has not come back yet.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>I think Ursula Dearmer and Mrs. Lambert have
+gone to bed. They are not taking the Germans very
+seriously.</p>
+
+<p>There is nobody in the mess-room but the other
+three chauffeurs, Bert, Tom and Newlands. Newlands
+has just come back from Ostend. They have
+had no supper. We bustle about to find some.</p>
+
+<p>We all know the Germans are coming into Ghent.
+But we do not speak of it. We are all very polite,
+almost supernaturally gentle, and very kind to each
+other. The beautiful manners of Newlands are
+conspicuous in this hour, the tragedy of which we
+are affecting to ignore. I behave as if there was
+nothing so important in the world as cutting bread
+for Newlands. Newlands behaves as if there were
+nothing so important as fetching a bottle of formamint,
+which he has with him, to cure my cough.
+(It has burst out again worse than ever after the
+unnatural repression of last night.)</p>
+
+<p>When the chauffeurs are provided with supper
+I go into the Commandant's room and finish his
+packing. The ties, the pocket-handkerchiefs and
+the collars are all safe in the Gladstone bag.
+Only the underclothing and the suits remain and
+there is any amount of room for them in the hold-all.</p>
+
+<p>I roll up the blue serge coat, and the trousers, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</a></span>
+the waistcoat very smooth and tight, also the underclothes.
+It seems very simple. I have only got to
+put them in the hold-all and then roll it up, smooth
+and tight, too&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>It would have been simple, if the hold-all had
+been a simple hold-all and if it had been nothing
+more. But it was also a sleeping-bag and a field-tent.
+As sleeping-bag, it was provided with a thick
+blanket which took up most of the room inside, and
+a waterproof sheet which was part of itself. As
+field-tent, it had large protruding flanges, shaped
+like jib-sails, and a complicated system of ropes.</p>
+
+<p>First of all I tucked in the jib-sails and ropes and
+laid them as flat as might be on the bottom of the
+sleeping-bag, with the blanket on the top of them.
+Then I packed the clothes on the top of the blanket
+and turned it over them to make all snug; I buttoned
+up the waterproof sheet over everything, rolled up
+the hold-all and secured it with its straps. This
+was only done by much stratagem and strength, by
+desperate tugging and pushing, and by lying flat on
+my waist on the rolled-up half to keep it quiet while
+I brought the loose half over. No sooner had I
+secured the hold-all by its straps than I realized that
+it was no more a hold-all than it was a sleeping-bag
+and a field tent, and that its contents were exposed
+to the weather down one side, where they bulged<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</a></span>
+through the spaces that yawned between the buttons,
+strained almost to bursting.</p>
+
+<p>I still believed in the genius that had devised this
+trinity. Clearly the jib-sails which made it a field-tent
+were intended to serve also as the pockets of
+the hold-all. I had done wrong to flatten them out
+and tuck them in, frustrating the fulfilment of their
+function. It was not acting fairly by the inventor.</p>
+
+<p>I unpacked the hold-all, I mean the field-tent.</p>
+
+<p>Then, with the Commandant's clothes again lying
+round me on the floor, I grappled with the mystery
+of the jib-sails and their cords. The jib-sails and
+their cords were, so to speak, the heart of this infernal
+triple entity.</p>
+
+<p>They were treacherous. They had all the appearance
+of pockets, but owing to the intricate and
+malign relations of their cords, it was impossible to
+deal faithfully with them on this footing. When
+the contents had been packed inside them, the field-tent
+asserted itself as against the hold-all and refused
+to roll up. And I am sure that if the field-tent
+had had to be set up in a field in a hurry, the
+hold-all and the sleeping-bag would have arisen and
+insisted on their consubstantial rights.</p>
+
+<p>I unpacked the field-tent and packed it all over
+again exactly as I had packed it before, but more
+carefully, swearing gently and continuously, as I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</a></span>
+tugged with my arms and pushed with my knees,
+and pressed hard on it with my waist to keep it still.
+I cursed the day when I had first heard of it; I
+cursed myself for giving it to the Commandant;
+more than all I cursed the combined ingenuity and
+levity of its creator, who had indulged his fantasy at
+our expense, without a thought to the actual conditions
+of the retreat of armies and of ambulances.</p>
+
+<p>And in the middle of it all Janet came in, and
+curled herself up in a corner, and forecast luridly
+and inconsolably the possible fate of her friends,
+the nurses in the "Flandria." For the moment her
+coolness and her wise impassivity had gone. Her
+behaviour was lacerating.</p>
+
+<p>This was the very worst moment we had come to
+yet.<a name="FNanchor_31_32" id="FNanchor_31_32"></a><a href="#Footnote_31_32" class="fnanchor">[31]</a></p>
+
+<p>And it seemed that Ursula Dearmer and Mrs.
+Lambert had gone to bed, regardless of the retreat
+from Ghent.</p>
+
+<p>Somewhere in the small hours of the morning the
+Commandant came back from Melle.<a name="FNanchor_32_33" id="FNanchor_32_33"></a><a href="#Footnote_32_33" class="fnanchor">[32]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="centerspread">········</p>
+
+<p>It is nearly two o'clock. Downstairs, in the great
+silent hall two British wounded are waiting for some
+ambulance to take them to the Station. They are
+sitting bolt upright on chairs near the doorway,
+their heads nodding with drowsiness. One or two
+Belgian Red Cross men wait beside them. Opposite
+them, on three other chairs, the three doctors, Dr.
+Haynes, Dr. Bird and Dr. &mdash;&mdash; sit waiting for our
+own ambulance to take them. They have been up
+all night and are utterly exhausted. They sit, fast
+asleep, with their heads bowed on their breasts.</p>
+
+<p>Outside, the darkness has mist and a raw cold
+sting in it.</p>
+
+<p>A wretched ambulance wagon drawn by two
+horses is driven up to the door. It had a hood once,
+but the hood has disappeared and only the naked
+hoops remain. The British wounded from two [?]
+other hospitals are packed in it in two rows. They
+sit bolt upright under the hoops, exposed to mist and
+to the raw cold sting of the night; some of them
+wear their blankets like shawls over their shoulders
+as they were taken from their beds. The shawls
+and the head bandages give these British a strange,
+foreign look, infinitely helpless, infinitely pitiful.</p>
+
+<p>Nobody seems to be out there but Mrs. Torrence
+and one or two Belgian Red Cross men. She and I
+help to get our two men taken gently out of the hall<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</a></span>
+and stowed away in the ambulance wagon. There
+are not enough blankets. We try to find some.</p>
+
+<p>At the last minute two bearers come forward,
+carrying a third. He is tall and thin; he is wrapped
+in a coat flung loosely over his sleeping-jacket; he
+wears a turban of bandages; his long bare feet stick
+out as he is carried along. It is Cameron, my poor
+Highlander, who was shot through the brain.</p>
+
+<p>They lift him, very gently, into the wagon.</p>
+
+<p>Then, very gently, they lift him out again.</p>
+
+<p>This attempt to save him is desperate. He is
+dying.</p>
+
+<p>They carry him up the steps and stand him there
+with his naked feet on the stone. It is anguish to see
+those thin white feet on the stone; I take off my
+coat and put it under them.</p>
+
+<p>It is all I can do for him.</p>
+
+<p>Presently they carry him back into the Hospital.</p>
+
+<p>They can't find any blankets. I run over to the
+Hôtel Cecil for my thick, warm travelling-rug to
+wrap round the knees of the wounded, shivering in
+the wagon.</p>
+
+<p>It is all I can do for them.</p>
+
+<p>And presently the wagon is turned round, slowly,
+almost solemnly, and driven off into the darkness
+and the cold mist, with its load of weird and piteous
+figures, wrapped in blankets like shawls. Their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</a></span>
+bandages show blurred white spots in the mist, and
+they are gone.</p>
+
+<p>It is horrible.</p>
+
+<p class="centerspread">········</p>
+
+<p>I am reminded that I have not packed yet, nor
+dressed for the journey. I go over and pack and
+dress. I leave behind what I don't need and it takes
+seven minutes. There is something sad and terrible
+about the little hotel, and its proprietors and their
+daughter, who has waited on me. They have so much
+the air of waiting, of being on the eve. They hang
+about doing nothing. They sit mournfully in a corner
+of the half-darkened restaurant. As I come
+and go they smile at me with the patient Belgian
+smile that says, "<i>C'est triste, n'est-ce pas?</i>" and no
+more.</p>
+
+<p>The landlord puts on his soft brown felt hat and
+carries my luggage over to the "Flandria." He
+stays there, hanging about the porch, fascinated by
+these preparations for departure. There is the
+same terrible half-darkness here, the same expectant
+stillness. Now and then the servants of the hospital
+look at each other and there are whisperings, mutterings.
+They sound sinister somehow and inimical.
+Or perhaps I imagine this because I do not take
+kindly to retreating. Anyhow I am only aware of
+them afterwards. For now it is time to go and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</a></span>
+fetch Miss Ashley-Smith and her three wounded
+men from the Convent.</p>
+
+<p>Tom has come up with his first ambulance car.
+He is waiting for orders in the porch. His enormous
+motor goggles are pushed up over the peak
+of his cap. They make it look like some formidable
+helmet. They give an air of mastership to Tom's
+face. At this last hour it wears its expression of
+righteous protest, of volcanic patience, of exasperated
+discipline.</p>
+
+<p>The Commandant is nowhere to be seen. And
+every minute of his delay increases Tom's sense of
+tortured integrity.</p>
+
+<p>I tell Tom that he is to drive me at once to the
+Couvent de Saint Pierre. He wants to know what
+for.</p>
+
+<p>I tell him it is to fetch Miss Ashley-Smith and
+three British wounded.</p>
+
+<p>He shrugs his shoulders. He knows nothing
+about the Couvent de Saint Pierre and Miss Ashley-Smith
+and three British wounded, and his shrug
+implies that he cares less.</p>
+
+<p>And he says he has no orders to go and fetch
+them.</p>
+
+<p>I perceive that in this supreme moment I am up
+against Tom's superstition. He won't move anywhere
+without orders. It is his one means of put<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</a></span>ting
+himself in the right and everybody else in the
+wrong.</p>
+
+<p>And the worst of it is he <i>is</i> right.</p>
+
+<p>I am also up against Tom's sex prejudices. I
+remember that he is said to have sworn with an oath
+that he wasn't going to take orders from any
+woman.</p>
+
+<p>And the Commandant is nowhere to be seen.</p>
+
+<p>Tom sticks to the ledge of the porch and stares
+at me defiantly. The servants of the Hospital come
+out and look at us. They are so many reinforcements
+to Tom's position.</p>
+
+<p>I tell him that the arrangement has been made
+with the Commandant's consent, and I repeat firmly
+that he is to get into his car this minute and drive
+to the Couvent de Saint Pierre.</p>
+
+<p>He says he does not know where the Convent is.
+It may be anywhere.</p>
+
+<p>I tell him where it is, and he says again he hasn't
+got orders.</p>
+
+<p>I stand over him and with savage and violent
+determination I say: "You've got them <i>now</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>And, actually, Tom obeys. He says, "<i>All</i> right,
+all right, all right," very fast, and humps his shoulders
+and slouches off to his car. He cranks it up
+with less vehemence than I have yet known him
+bring to the starting of any car.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>We get in. Then, and not till then, I am placable.
+I say: "You see, Tom, it wouldn't do to leave
+that lady and three British wounded behind, would
+it?"</p>
+
+<p>What he says about orders then is purely by way
+of apology.</p>
+
+<p>Regardless of my instructions, he does what I did
+and dashes up the wrong boulevard as if the Germans
+were even now marching into the <i>Place</i> behind
+him. But he works round somehow and we
+arrive.</p>
+
+<p>They are all there, ready and waiting. And the
+Mother Superior and two of her nuns are in the
+corridor. They bring out glasses of hot milk for
+everybody. They are so gentle and so kind that
+I recall with agony my impatience when I rang at
+their gate. Even familiar French words desert me
+in this crisis, and I implore Miss Ashley-Smith to
+convey my regrets for my rudeness. Their only
+answer is to smile and press hot milk on me. I
+am glad of it, for I have been so absorbed in the
+drama of preparation that I have entirely forgotten
+to eat anything since lunch.</p>
+
+<p>The wounded are brought along the passage.
+We help them into the ambulance. Two, Williams
+and &mdash;&mdash;, are only slightly wounded; they can sit
+up all the way. But the third, Fisher, is wounded<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</a></span>
+in the head. Sometimes he is delirious and must
+be looked after. A fourth man is dying and must
+be left behind.</p>
+
+<p>Then we say good-bye to the nuns.</p>
+
+<p>The other ambulance cars are drawn up in the
+<i>Place</i> before the "Flandria," waiting. For the
+first time I hate the sight of them. This feeling
+is inexplicable but profound.</p>
+
+<p>We arrange for the final disposal of the wounded
+in one of the new Daimlers, where they can all lie
+down. Mrs. Torrence comes out and helps us.
+The Commandant is not there yet. Dr. Haynes
+and Dr. Bird pack Dr. &mdash;&mdash; away well inside the
+car. They are very quiet and very firm and refuse
+to travel otherwise than together. Mrs. Torrence
+goes with the wounded.</p>
+
+<p>I go into the Hospital and upstairs to our quarters
+to see if anything has been left behind. If I can
+find Marie we must take her. There is room, after
+all.</p>
+
+<p>But Marie is nowhere to be seen.</p>
+
+<p>Nobody is to be seen but the Belgian night nurses
+on duty, watching, one on each landing at the entrance
+to her corridor. They smile at me gravely
+and sadly as they say good-bye.</p>
+
+<p>I have left many places, many houses, many people
+behind me, knowing that I shall never see them<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</a></span>
+again. But of all leave-takings this seems to me
+the worst. For those others I have been something,
+done something that absolves me. But for these
+and for this place I have not done anything, and
+now there is not anything to be done.</p>
+
+<p>I go slowly downstairs. Each flight is a more
+abominable descent. At each flight I stand still and
+pull myself together to face the next nurse on the
+next landing. At the second story I go past without
+looking. I know every stain on the floor of the
+corridor there as you turn to the right. The number
+of the door and the names on the card beside
+it have made a pattern on my brain.</p>
+
+<p class="centerspread">········</p>
+
+<p>It is quarter to three.</p>
+
+<p>They are all ready now. The Commandant is
+there giving the final orders and stowing away the
+nine wounded he has brought from Melle. The
+hall of the Hospital is utterly deserted. So is the
+<i>Place</i> outside it. And in the stillness and desolation
+our going has an air of intolerable secrecy, of
+furtive avoidance of fate. This Field Ambulance
+of ours abhors retreat.</p>
+
+<p>It is dark with the black darkness before dawn.</p>
+
+<p>And the Belgian Red Cross guides have all gone.
+There is nobody to show us the roads.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>At the last minute we find a Belgian soldier who
+will take us as far as Ecloo.</p>
+
+<p>The Commandant has arranged to stay at Ecloo
+for a few hours. Some friends there have offered
+him their house. The wounded are to be put up at
+the Convent. Ecloo is about half-way between
+Ghent and Bruges.</p>
+
+<p>We start. Tom's car goes first with the Belgian
+soldier in front. Ursula Dearmer, Mrs. Lambert,
+Miss Ashley-Smith and Mr. Riley and I are
+inside. The Commandant sits, silent, wrapped in
+meditation, on the step.</p>
+
+<p>We are not going so very fast, not faster than
+the three cars behind us, and the slowest of the
+three (the Fiat with the hard tyres, carrying the
+baggage) sets the pace. We must keep within their
+sight or they may lose their way. But though we
+are not really going fast, the speed seems intolerable,
+especially the speed that swings us out of sight of
+the "Flandria." You think that is the worst.
+But it isn't. The speed with its steady acceleration
+grows more intolerable with every mile. Your sense
+of safety grows intolerable.</p>
+
+<p>You never knew that safety could hurt like this.</p>
+
+<p>Somewhere on this road the Belgian Army has
+gone before us. We have got to go with it. We
+have had our orders.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>That thought consoles you, but not for long.
+You may call it following the Belgian Army. But
+the Belgian Army is retreating, and you are retreating
+with it. There is nothing else you can do;
+but that does not make it any better. And this
+speed of the motor over the flat roads, this speed
+that cuts the air, driving its furrow so fast that the
+wind rushes by you like strong water, this speed
+that so inspired and exalted you when it brought
+you into Flanders, when it took you to Antwerp
+and Baerlaere and Lokeren and Melle, this vehement
+and frightful and relentless speed is the thing that
+beats you down and tortures you. For several
+hours, ever since you had your orders to pack up
+and go, you have been working with no other purpose
+than this going; you have contemplated it
+many times with equanimity, with indifference; you
+knew all along that it was not possible to stay in
+Ghent for ever; and when you were helping to get
+the wounded into the ambulances you thought it
+would be the easiest thing in the world to get in
+yourself and go with them; when you had time to
+think about it you were even aware of looking forward
+with pleasure to the thrill of a clean run before
+the Germans. You never thought, and nobody
+could possibly have told you, that it would be like
+this.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>I never thought, and nobody could possibly have
+told me, that I was going to behave as I did then.</p>
+
+<p>The thing began with the first turn of the road
+that hid the "Flandria." Up till that moment,
+whatever I may have felt about the people we had
+to leave behind us, as long as none of our field-women
+were left behind, I had not the smallest
+objection to being saved myself. And if it had occurred
+to me to stay behind for the sake of one
+man who couldn't be moved and who had the best
+surgeon in the Hospital and the pick of the nursing-staff
+to look after him, I think I should have disposed
+of the idea as sheer sentimentalism. When
+I was with him to-night I could think of nothing
+but the wounded in the Couvent de Saint Pierre.
+And afterwards there had been so much to do.</p>
+
+<p>And now that there was nothing more to do, I
+couldn't think of anything but that one man.</p>
+
+<p>The night before came back to me in a vision,
+or rather an obsession, infinitely more present, more
+visible and palpable than this night that we were
+living in. The light with the red shade hung just
+over my head on my right hand; the blond walls
+were round me; they shut me in alone with the
+wounded man who lay stretched before me on the
+bed. And the moments were measured by the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</a></span>
+rhythm of his breathing, and by the closing and
+opening of his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>I thought, he will open his eyes to-night and look
+for me and I shall not be there. He will know
+that he has been left to the Belgians, who cannot
+understand him, whom he cannot understand.
+And he will think that I have betrayed him.</p>
+
+<p>I felt as if I <i>had</i> betrayed him.</p>
+
+<p>I am sitting between Mr. Riley and Miss Ashley-Smith.
+Mr. Riley is ill; he has got blood-poisoning
+through a cut in his hand. Every now and then I
+remember him, and draw the rug over his knees
+as it slips. Miss Ashley-Smith, tired with her night
+watching, has gone to sleep with her head on my
+shoulder, where it must be horribly jolted and
+shaken by my cough, which of course chooses this
+moment to break out again. I try to get into a
+position that will rest her better; and between her
+and Mr. Riley I forget for a second.</p>
+
+<p>Then the obsession begins again, and I am shut
+in between the blond walls with the wounded man.</p>
+
+<p>I feel his hand and arm lying heavily on my
+shoulder in the attempt to support me as I kneel
+by his bed with my arms stretched out together
+under the hollow of his back, as we wait for the
+pillow that never comes.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>It is quite certain that I have betrayed him.</p>
+
+<p>It seems to me then that nothing that could happen
+to me in Ghent could be more infernal than
+leaving it. And I think that when the ambulance
+stops to put down the Belgian soldier I will get out
+and walk back with him to Ghent.</p>
+
+<p>Every half-mile I think that the ambulance will
+stop to put down the Belgian soldier.</p>
+
+<p>But the ambulance does not stop. It goes on and
+on, and we have got to Ecloo before we seem to
+have put three miles between us and Ghent.</p>
+
+<p>Still, though I'm dead tired when we get there,
+I can walk three miles easily. I do not feel at all
+insane with my obsession. On the contrary, these
+moments are moments of exceptional lucidity.<a name="FNanchor_33_34" id="FNanchor_33_34"></a><a href="#Footnote_33_34" class="fnanchor">[33]</a>
+While the Commandant goes to look for the Convent
+I get out and look for the Belgian soldier.
+Other Belgian soldiers have joined him in the village
+street.</p>
+
+<p>I tell him I want to go back to Ghent. I ask
+him how far it is to walk, and if he will take me.
+And he says it is twenty kilometres. The other
+soldiers say, too, it is twenty kilometres. I had
+thought it couldn't possibly be more than four or
+five at the outside. And I am just sane enough to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</a></span>
+know that I can't walk as far as that if I'm to be
+any good when I get there.</p>
+
+<p>We wait in the village while they find the Convent
+and take the wounded men there; we wait
+while the Commandant goes off in the dark to find
+his friend's house.</p>
+
+<p>The house stands in a garden somewhere beyond
+the railway station, up a rough village street and a
+stretch of country road. It is about four in the
+morning when we get there. A thin ooze of light
+is beginning to leak through the mist. The mist
+holds it as a dark cloth holds a fluid that bleaches it.</p>
+
+<p>There is something queer about this light. There
+is something queer, something almost inimical,
+about the garden, as if it tried to protect itself by
+enchantment from the fifteen who are invading it.
+The mist stands straight up from the earth like a
+high wall drawn close about the house; it blocks
+with dense grey stuff every inch of space between
+the bushes and trees; they are thrust forward rank
+upon rank, closing in upon the house; they loom
+enormous and near. A few paces further back
+they appear as without substance in the dense grey
+stuff that invests them; their tops are tangled and
+lost in a web of grey. In this strange garden it is
+as if space itself had solidified in masses, and solid
+objects had become spaces between.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>When your eyes get used to this curious inversion
+it is as if the mist was no longer a wall but a
+growth; the garden is the heart of a jungle bleached
+by enchantment and struck with stillness and cold;
+a tangle of grey; a muffled, huddled and stifled
+bower, all grey, and webbed and laced with grey.</p>
+
+<p>The door of the house opens and the effect of
+queerness, of inimical magic disappears.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. E., our kind Dutch host, and Mrs. E., our
+kind English hostess, have got up out of their beds
+to receive us. This hospitality of theirs is not a
+little thing when you think that their house is to be
+invaded by Germans, perhaps to-day.<a name="FNanchor_34_35" id="FNanchor_34_35"></a><a href="#Footnote_34_35" class="fnanchor">[34]</a></p>
+
+<p>They do not allow you to think of it. For all
+you are to see of the tragedy they and their house
+might be remaining at Ecloo in leisure and perfect
+hospitality and peace. Only, as they see us pouring
+in over their threshold a hovering twinkle in
+their kind eyes shows that they are not blind to the
+comic aspect of retreats.</p>
+
+<p>They have only one spare bedroom, which they
+offer; but they have filled their drawing-room with
+blankets; piles and piles of white fleecy blankets on
+chairs and sofas and on the floor. And they have
+built up a roaring fire. It is as if they were suc<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</a></span>couring
+fifteen survivors of shipwreck or of earthquake,
+or the remnants of a forlorn hope. To be
+sure, we are flying from Ghent, but we have only
+flown twenty kilometres as yet.</p>
+
+<p>However, most of the Corps have been up all
+night for several nights, and the mist outside is a
+clinging and a biting mist, and everybody is grateful.</p>
+
+<p>I shall never forget the look of the E.s' drawing-room,
+smothered in blankets and littered with the
+members of the Corps, who lay about it in every
+pathetic posture of fatigue. A group of seven or
+eight snuggled down among the blankets on the floor
+in front of the hearth like a camp before a campfire.
+Janet McNeil, curled up on one window-seat,
+and Ursula Dearmer, rolled in a blanket on the other,
+had the heart-rending beauty of furry animals under
+torpor. The chauffeurs Tom and Bert made themselves
+entirely lovable by going to sleep bolt upright
+on dining-room chairs on the outer ring of the
+camp. The E.s' furniture came in where it could
+with fantastic and incongruous effect.</p>
+
+<p>I don't know how I got through the next three
+hours, for my obsession came back on me again
+and again, and as soon as I shut my eyes I saw
+the face and eyes of the wounded man. I remember
+sitting part of the time beside Miss Ashley-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</a></span>Smith,
+wide-awake, in a corner of the room behind
+Bert's chair. I remember wandering about
+the E.s' house. I must have got out of it, for I
+also remember finding myself in their garden, at
+sunrise.</p>
+
+<p>And I remember the garden, though I was not
+perfectly aware of it at the time. It had a divine
+beauty, a serenity that refused to enter into, to
+ally itself in any way with an experience tainted
+by the sadness of the retreat from Ghent.</p>
+
+<p>But because of its supernatural detachment and
+tranquillity and its no less supernatural illumination
+I recalled it the more vividly afterwards.</p>
+
+<p>It was full of tall bushes and little slender trees
+standing in a delicate light. The mist had cleared
+to the transparency of still water, so still that under
+it the bushes and the trees stood in a cold, quiet
+radiance without a shimmer. The light itself was
+intensely still. What you saw was not the approach
+of light, but its mysterious arrest. It was held
+suspended in crystalline vapour, in thin shafts of
+violet and gold, clear as panes; it was caught and
+lifted upwards by the high bushes and the slender
+trees; it was veiled in the silver-green masses of
+their tops. Every green leaf and every blade of
+grass was a vessel charged. It was not so much
+that the light revealed these things as that these<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</a></span>
+things revealed the light. There was no kindling
+touch, no tremor of dawn in that garden. It was
+as if it had removed the walls and put off the lacing
+webs and the thick cloths of grey stuff by some
+mystic impulse of its own, as if it maintained itself
+in stillness by an inner flame. Only the very
+finest tissues yet clung to it, to show that it was
+the same garden that disclosed itself in this clarity
+and beauty.</p>
+
+<p>The next thing I remember is the Chaplain coming
+to me and our going together into the E.s'
+dining-room, and Miss Ashley-Smith's joining us
+there. My malady was contagious and she had
+caught it, but with no damage to her self-control.</p>
+
+<p>She says very simply and quietly that she is going
+back to Ghent. And the infection spreads to
+the Chaplain. He says that neither of us is going
+back to Ghent, but that he is going. The poor
+boy tries to arrange with us how he may best do
+it, in secrecy, without poisoning the Commandant<a name="FNanchor_35_36" id="FNanchor_35_36"></a><a href="#Footnote_35_36" class="fnanchor">[35]</a>
+and the whole Ambulance with the spirit of return.
+With difficulty we convince him that it would be
+useless for any man to go. He would be taken
+prisoner the minute he showed his nose in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</a></span>
+"Flandria" and set to dig trenches till the end of
+the War.</p>
+
+<p>Then he says, if only he had his cassock with
+him. They would respect <i>that</i> (which is open to
+doubt).</p>
+
+<p>We are there a long time discussing which of
+us is going back to Ghent. Miss Ashley-Smith is
+fertile and ingenious in argument. She is a nurse,
+and I and the Chaplain are not. She has friends in
+Ghent who have not been warned, whom she must
+go back to. In any case, she says, it was a toss-up
+whether she went or stayed.</p>
+
+<p>And while we are still arguing, we go out on
+the road that leads to the village, to find the ambulances
+and see if any of the chauffeurs will take
+us back to Ghent. I am not very hopeful about
+the means of transport. I do not think that Tom
+or any of the chauffeurs will move, this time, without
+orders from the Commandant. I do not think
+that the Commandant will let any of us go except
+himself.</p>
+
+<p>And Miss Ashley-Smith says if only she had a
+horse.</p>
+
+<p>If she had a horse she would be in Ghent in no
+time. Perhaps, if none of the chauffeurs will take
+her back, she can find a horse in the village.</p>
+
+<p>She keeps on saying very quietly and simply<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</a></span>
+that she is going, and explaining the reasons why
+she should go rather than anybody else. And I
+bring forward every reason I can think of why she
+should do nothing of the sort.</p>
+
+<p>I abhor the possibility of her going back instead
+of me; but I am not yet afraid of it. I do not yet
+think seriously that she will do it. I do not see
+how she is going to, if the chauffeurs refuse to take
+her. (I do not see how, in this case, I am to go
+myself.) And I do not imagine for one moment
+that she will find a horse. Still, I am vaguely uneasy.
+And the Chaplain doesn't make it any better
+by backing her up and declaring that as she
+will be more good than either of us when she gets
+there, her going is the best thing that in the circumstances
+can be done.</p>
+
+<p>And in the end, with an extreme quietness and
+simplicity, she went.</p>
+
+<p>We had not yet found the ambulance cars, and
+it seemed pretty certain that Miss Ashley-Smith
+would not get her horse any more than the Chaplain
+could get his cassock.</p>
+
+<p>And then, just when we thought the difficulties
+of transport were insuperable, we came straight on
+the railway lines and the station, where a train
+had pulled up on its way to Ghent. Miss Ashley-Smith
+got on to the train. I got on too, to go<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</a></span>
+with her, and the Chaplain, who is abominably
+strong, put his arms round my waist and pulled me
+off.</p>
+
+<p>I have never ceased to wish that I had hung on
+to that train.</p>
+
+<p>On our way back to the E.s' house we met the
+Commandant and told him what had happened. I
+said I thought it was the worst thing that had happened
+yet. It wasn't the smallest consolation when
+he said it was the most sensible solution.</p>
+
+<p>And when Mrs. &mdash;&mdash; for fifteen consecutive
+seconds took the view that I had decoyed Miss
+Ashley-Smith out on to that accursed road in order
+to send her to Ghent, and deliberately persuaded
+her to go back to the "Flandria" instead of me,
+for fifteen consecutive seconds I believed that this
+diabolical thing was what I had actually done.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. &mdash;&mdash;'s indignation never blazes away for
+more than fifteen seconds; but while the conflagration
+lasts it is terrific. And on circumstantial evidence
+the case was black against me. When last
+seen, Miss Ashley-Smith was entirely willing to be
+saved. She goes out for a walk with me along
+a quiet country road, and the next thing you hear
+is that she has gone back to Ghent. And since,
+actually and really, it was my obsession that had
+passed into her, I felt that if I had taken Miss<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</a></span>
+Ashley-Smith down that road and murdered her in
+a dyke my responsibility wouldn't have been a bit
+worse, if as bad.</p>
+
+<p>And it seemed to me that all the people scattered
+among the blankets in that strange room, those that
+still lay snuggling down amiably in the warmth, and
+those that had started to their feet in dismay, and
+those that sat on chairs upright and apart, were
+hostile with a just and righteous hostility, that they
+had an intimate knowledge of my crime, and had
+risen up in abhorrence of the thing I was.</p>
+
+<p>And somewhere, as if they were far off in some
+blessed place on the other side of this nightmare,
+I was aware of the merciful and pitiful faces of
+Mrs. Lambert and Janet McNeil.</p>
+
+<p>Then, close beside me, there was a sudden heaving
+of the Chaplain's broad shoulders as he faced the
+room.</p>
+
+<p>And I heard him saying, in the same voice in
+which he had declared that he was going to hold
+Matins, that it wasn't my fault at all&mdash;that it was
+<i>he</i> who had persuaded Miss Ashley-Smith to go
+back to Ghent.<a name="FNanchor_36_37" id="FNanchor_36_37"></a><a href="#Footnote_36_37" class="fnanchor">[36]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The Chaplain has a moral nerve that never fails
+him.</p>
+
+<p>Then Mrs. Torrence says that she is going back
+to protect Miss Ashley-Smith, and Ursula Dearmer
+says that she is going back to protect Mrs. Torrence,
+and somebody down in the blankets remarks
+that the thing was settled last night, and that all
+this going back is simply rotten.</p>
+
+<p>I can only repeat that it is all my fault, and that
+therefore, if Mrs. Torrence goes back, nobody is
+going back with her but me.</p>
+
+<p>And there can be no doubt that three motor ambulances,
+with possibly the entire Corps inside them,
+certainly with the five women and the Chaplain and
+the Commandant, would presently have been seen
+tearing along the road to Ghent, one in violent pursuit
+of the other, if we had not telephoned and received
+news of Miss Ashley-Smith's safe arrival at
+the "Flandria," and orders that no more women
+were to return to Ghent.</p>
+
+<p>Among all the variously assorted anguish of that
+halt at Ecloo the figures and the behaviour of Mrs.
+E. and her husband and their children are beautiful
+to remember&mdash;their courtesy, their serenity, their
+gentle and absolving wonder that anybody should
+see anything in the least frightful or distressing,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</a></span>
+or even disconcerting and unusual, in the situation;
+the little girl who sat beside me, showing me her
+picture-book of animals, accepting gravely and earnestly
+all that you had to tell her about the ways
+of squirrels, of kangaroos and opossums, while we
+waited for the ambulance cars to take us to Bruges;
+the boy who ran after us as we went, and stood
+looking after us and waving to us in the lane; the
+aspect of that Flemish house and garden as we left
+them&mdash;there is no word that embraces all these
+things but beauty.</p>
+
+<p>We stopped in the village to take up our wounded
+from the Convent. The nuns brought us through
+a long passage and across a little court to the refectory,
+which had been turned into a ward. Bowls
+steaming with the morning meal for the patients
+stood on narrow tables between the two rows of
+beds. Each bed was hung round and littered with
+haversacks, boots, rifles, bandoliers and uniforms
+bloody and begrimed. Except for the figures of
+the nuns and the aspect of its white-washed walls
+and its atmosphere of incorruptible peace, the place
+might have been a barracks or the dormitory in a
+night lodging, rather than a convent ward.</p>
+
+<p>When we had found and dressed our men, we
+led them out as we had come. As we went we saw,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</a></span>
+framed through some open doorway, sunlight and
+vivid green, and the high walls and clipped alleys
+of the Convent garden.</p>
+
+<p>Of all our sad contacts and separations, these
+leave-takings at the convents were the saddest.
+And it was not only that this place had the same
+poignant and unbearable beauty as the place we had
+just left, but its beauty was unique. You felt that
+if the friends you had just left were turned out
+of their house and garden to-morrow, they might
+still return some day. But here you saw a carefully
+guarded and fragile loveliness on the very
+eve of its dissolution. The place was fairly saturated
+with holiness, and the beauty of holiness was
+in the faces and in every gesture of the nuns. And
+you felt that they and their faces and their gestures
+were impermanent, that this highly specialized form
+of holiness had continued with difficulty until now,
+that it hung by a single thread to a world that had
+departed very far from it.</p>
+
+<p>Yet, for the moment while you looked at it, it
+maintained itself in perfection.</p>
+
+<p>We shall never know all that the War has annihilated.
+But for that moment of time while it
+lasted, the Convent at Ecloo annihilated the nineteenth
+and eighteenth centuries, every century be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</a></span>tween
+now and the fifteenth. What you saw was
+a piece of life cut straight out of the Middle Ages.
+What you felt was the guarded and hidden beauty
+of the Middle Ages, the beauty of obedience, simplicity
+and chastity, of souls set apart and dedicated,
+the whole insoluble secret charm of the cloistered
+life. The very horror of the invasion that threatened
+it at this hour of the twentieth century was
+a horror of the Middle Ages.</p>
+
+<p>But these devoted women did not seem aware
+of it. The little high-bred English nun who conducted
+us talked politely and placidly of England
+and of English things as of things remembered with
+a certain mortal affection but left behind without
+regret. It was as if she contemplated the eternal
+continuance of the Convent at Ecloo with no break
+in its divine tranquillity. One sister went so far
+as to express the hope that their Convent would be
+spared. It was as if she were uttering some merely
+perfunctory piety. The rest, without ceasing from
+their ministrations, looked up at us and smiled.</p>
+
+<p class="centerspread">········</p>
+
+<p>On the way up to Bruges we passed whole regiments
+of the Belgian Army in retreat. They
+trooped along in straggling disorder, their rifles at
+trail; behind them the standard-bearers trudged,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</a></span>
+carrying the standard furled and covered with black.
+The speed of our cars as we overtook them was
+more insufferable than ever.</p>
+
+<p class="centerspaced2">[<i>Bruges.</i>]</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">We</span> thought that the Belgian Army would be
+quartered in Bruges, and that we should find a
+hospital there and serve the Army from that base.</p>
+
+<p>We took our wounded to the Convent, and set
+out to find quarters for ourselves in the town. We
+had orders to meet at the Convent again at a certain
+hour.</p>
+
+<p>Most of the Corps were being put up at the Convent.
+The rest of us had to look for rooms.</p>
+
+<p>In the search I got separated from the Corps, and
+wandered about the streets of Bruges with much
+interest and a sense of great intimacy and leisure.
+By the time I had found a <i>pension</i> in a narrow
+street behind the market-place, I felt it to be quite
+certain that we should stay in Bruges at least as
+long as we had stayed in Ghent, and what moments
+I could spare from the obsession of Ghent I spent
+in contemplating the Belfry. Very soon it was time
+to go back to the Convent. The way to the Convent
+was through many tortuous streets, but I was
+going in the right direction, accompanied by a kind<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</a></span>
+Flamand and her husband, when at the turn by the
+canal bridge I was nearly run over by one of our
+own ambulance cars. It was Bert's car, and he was
+driving with fury and perturbation away from the
+Convent and towards the town. Janet McNeil was
+with him. They stopped to tell me that we had
+orders to clear out of Bruges. The Germans had
+taken Ghent and were coming on to Bruges. We
+had orders to go on to Ostend.</p>
+
+<p>We found the rest of the cars drawn up in a
+street near the Convent. We had not been two
+hours in Bruges, and we left it, if anything, quicker
+than we had come in. The flat land fairly dropped
+away before our speed. I sat on the back step of
+the leading car, and I shall never forget the look
+of those ambulances, three in a line, as they came
+into sight scooting round the turns on the road to
+Ostend.</p>
+
+<p>Besides the wounded we had brought from Ghent,
+we took with us three footsore Tommies whom we
+had picked up in Bruges. They had had a long
+march. The stoutest, biggest and most robust of
+these three fainted just as we drew up in the courtyard
+of the <i>Kursaal</i> at Ostend.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="centerspaced2">[<i>Ostend.</i>]</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> <i>Kursaal</i> had been taken by some English
+and American women and turned into a Hospital.
+It was filled already to overflowing, but they found
+room for our wounded for the night. Ostend was
+to be evacuated in the morning. In fact, we were
+considered to be running things rather fine by staying
+here instead of going on straight to Dunkirk.
+It was supposed that if the Germans were not yet
+in Bruges they might be there any minute.</p>
+
+<p>But we had had so many premature orders to
+clear out, and the Germans had always been hours
+behind time, and we judged it a safe risk. Besides,
+there were forty-seven Belgian wounded in Bruges,
+and three of our ambulance cars were going back
+to fetch them.</p>
+
+<p>There was some agitation as to who would and
+who wouldn't be allowed to go back to Bruges.
+The Commandant was at first inclined to reject his
+Secretary as unfit. But if you take him the right
+way he is fairly tractable, and I managed to convince
+him that nothing but going back to Bruges
+could make up for my failure to go back to Ghent.
+He earned my everlasting gratitude by giving me
+leave. As for Mrs. Torrence, she had no difficulty.
+She was obviously competent.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Then, just as I was congratulating myself that
+the shame of Ecloo was to be wiped out (to say
+nothing of that ignominious overthrow at Melle),
+there occurred a <i>contretemps</i> that made our ambulance
+conspicuous among the many ambulances in
+the courtyard of the Hospital.</p>
+
+<p>We had reckoned without the mistimed chivalry
+of our chauffeurs.</p>
+
+<p>They had all, even Tom, been quite pathetically
+kind and gentle during and ever since the flight
+from Ghent. (I remember poor Newlands coming
+up with his bottle of formamint just as we were
+preparing to leave Ecloo.) It never occurred to
+us that there was anything ominous in this mood.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Torrence and I were just going to get into
+(I think) Newlands' car, when we were aware of
+Newlands standing fixed on the steps of the Hospital,
+looking like Hamlet, Prince of Denmark, in
+khaki, and flatly refusing to drive his car into
+Bruges, not only if we were in his car, but if
+one woman went with the expedition in any other
+car.</p>
+
+<p>He stood there, very upright, on the steps of the
+Hospital, and rather pale, while the Commandant
+and Mrs. Torrence surged up to him in fury. The
+Commandant told him he would be sacked for insubordination,
+and Mrs. Torrence, in a wild flight<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</a></span>
+of fancy, threatened to expose him "in the papers."</p>
+
+<p>But Newlands stood his ground. He was even
+more like Lord Kitchener than Tom. He simply
+could not get over the idea that women were to be
+protected. And to take the women into Bruges
+when the Germans were, for all we knew, <i>in</i> Bruges,
+was an impossibility to Newlands, as it would have
+been to Lord Kitchener. So he went on refusing
+to take his car into Bruges if one woman went with
+the expedition. In retort to a charge of cold feet,
+he intimated that he was ready to drive into any
+hell you pleased, provided he hadn't got to take any
+women with him. He didn't care if he <i>was</i> sacked.
+He didn't care if Mrs. Torrence <i>did</i> report him in
+the papers. He wouldn't drive his car into Bruges
+if one woman&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Here, in his utter disregard of all discipline, the
+likeness between Newlands and Lord Kitchener
+ends. Enough that he drove his car into Bruges
+on his own terms, and Mrs. Torrence and I were
+left behind.</p>
+
+<p>The expedition to Bruges returned safely with
+the forty-seven Belgian wounded.</p>
+
+<p>We found rooms in a large hotel on the Digue,
+overlooking the sea. Before evening I went round
+to the Hospital to see Miss Ashley-Smith's three<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</a></span>
+wounded men. The <i>Kursaal</i> is built in terraces and
+galleries going all round the front and side of it.
+I took the wrong turning round one of them and
+found myself in the doorway of an immense ward.
+From somewhere inside there came loud and lacerating
+screams, high-pitched but appallingly monotonous
+and without intervals. I thought it was
+a man in delirium; I even thought it might be poor
+Fisher, of whose attacks we had been warned. I
+went in.</p>
+
+<p>I had barely got a yard inside the ward before
+a kind little rosy-faced English nurse ran up to me.
+I told her what I wanted.</p>
+
+<p>She said, "You'd better go back. You won't be
+able to stand it."</p>
+
+<p>Even then I didn't take it in, and said I supposed
+the poor man was delirious.</p>
+
+<p>She cried out, "No! No! He is having his leg
+taken off."</p>
+
+<p>They had run short of anæsthetics.</p>
+
+<p>I don't know what I must have looked like, but
+the little rosy-faced nurse grabbed me and said,
+"Come away. You'll faint if you see it."</p>
+
+<p>And I went away. Somebody took me into the
+right ward, where I found Fisher and Williams and
+the other man. Fisher was none the worse for his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</a></span>
+journey, and Williams and the other man were very
+cheerful. Another English nurse, who must have
+had the tact of a heavenly angel, brought up a bowl
+of chicken broth and said I might feed Fisher if I
+liked. So I sat a little while there, feeding Fisher,
+and regretting for the hundredth time that I had not
+had the foresight to be trained as a nurse when I
+was young. Unfortunately, though I foresaw this
+war ten years ago, I had not foreseen it when I
+was young. I told the men I would come and see
+them early in the morning, and bring them some
+money, as I had promised Miss Ashley-Smith. I
+never saw them again.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing happened quite as I had planned it.</p>
+
+<p>To begin with, we had discovered as we lunched
+at Bruges that the funds remaining in the leather
+purse-belt were hardly enough to keep the Ambulance
+going for another week. And our hotel expenses
+at Ostend were reducing its term to a problematic
+three days. So it was more or less settled
+amongst us that somebody would have to go over
+to England the next day and return with funds,
+and that the supernumerary Secretary was, on the
+whole, the fittest person for the job.</p>
+
+<p>I slept peaceably on this prospect of a usefulness
+that seemed to justify my existence at a moment
+when it most needed vindication.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="centerspaced2">[<i>Tuesday, 13th.</i>]</p>
+
+<p>I <span class="smcap">got</span> up at six. Last thing at night I had said
+to myself that I must wake early and go round to
+the Hospital with the money.</p>
+
+<p>With my first sleep the obsession of Ghent had
+slackened its hold. And though it came back again
+after I had got up, dressed and had realized my surroundings,
+its returns were at longer and longer
+intervals.</p>
+
+<p>The first thing I did was to go round to the
+<i>Kursaal</i>. The Hospital was being evacuated, the
+wounded were lying about everywhere on the terraces
+and galleries, waiting for the ambulances.
+Williams and Fisher and the other man were nowhere
+to be seen. I was told that their ward had
+been cleared out first, and that the three were now
+safe on their way to England.</p>
+
+<p>I went away very grieved that they had not got
+their money.</p>
+
+<p>At the Hotel I find the Commandant very cheerful.
+He has made Miss &mdash;&mdash; his Secretary and Reporter
+till my return.<a name="FNanchor_37_38" id="FNanchor_37_38"></a><a href="#Footnote_37_38" class="fnanchor">[37]</a></p>
+
+<p>He goes down to the quay to make arrangements
+for my transport and returns after some consider<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</a></span>able
+time. There have been difficulties about this
+detail. And the Commandant has an abhorrence of
+details, even of easy ones.</p>
+
+<p>He comes back. He looks abstracted. I inquire,
+a little too anxiously, perhaps, about my transport.
+It is all right, all perfectly right. He has
+arranged with Dr. Beavis of the British Field Hospital
+to take me on his ship.</p>
+
+<p>He looks a little spent with his exertions, and
+as he has again become abstracted I forbear to press
+for more information at the moment.</p>
+
+<p>We breakfasted. Presently I ask him the name
+of Dr. Beavis's ship.</p>
+
+<p>Oh, the <i>name</i> of the ship is the <i>Dresden</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Time passes. And presently, just as he is going,
+I suggest that it would be as well for me to know
+what time the <i>Dresden</i> sails.</p>
+
+<p>This detail either he never knew or has forgotten.
+And there is something about it, about the nature
+of stated times, as about all things conventional and
+mechanical and precise, that peculiarly exasperates
+him.</p>
+
+<p>He waves both hands in a fury of nescience and
+cries, "Ask me another!"</p>
+
+<p>By a sort of mutual consent we assume that the
+<i>Dresden</i> will sail with Dr. Beavis at ten o'clock.
+After all, it is a very likely hour.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>More time passes. Finally we go into the street
+that runs along the Digue. And there we find Dr.
+Beavis sitting in a motor-car. We approach him.
+I thank him for his kindness in giving me transport.
+I say I'm sure his ship will be crowded with his
+own people, but that I don't in the least mind standing
+in the stoke-hole, if <i>he</i> doesn't mind taking me
+over.</p>
+
+<p>He looks at me with a dreamy benevolence mixed
+with amazement. He would take me over with
+pleasure if he knew how he was to get away himself.</p>
+
+<p>"But," I say to the Commandant, "I thought
+you had arranged with Dr. Beavis to take me on the
+<i>Dresden</i>."</p>
+
+<p>The Commandant says nothing. And Dr. Beavis
+smiles again. A smile of melancholy knowledge.</p>
+
+<p>"The <i>Dresden</i>," he says, "sailed two hours ago."</p>
+
+<p>So it is decided that I am to proceed with the
+Ambulance to Dunkirk, thence by train to Boulogne,
+thence to Folkestone. It sounds so simple that I
+wonder why we didn't think of it before.</p>
+
+<p>But it was not by any means so simple as it
+sounded.</p>
+
+<p>First of all we had to collect ourselves. Then
+we had to collect Dr. Hanson's luggage. Dr. Hanson
+was one of Mrs. St. Clair Stobart's women sur<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</a></span>geons,
+and she had left her luggage for Miss &mdash;&mdash; to
+carry from Ostend to England. There was a
+yellow tin box and a suit-case. Dr. Hanson's best
+clothes and her cases of surgical instruments were
+in the suit-case and all the things she didn't
+particularly care about in the tin box. Or else the
+best clothes and the surgical instruments were in
+the tin box, and the things she didn't particularly
+care about in the suit-case. As we were certainly
+going to take both boxes, it didn't seem to matter
+much which way round it was.</p>
+
+<p>Then there was Mr. Foster's green canvas kit-bag
+to be taken to Folkestone and sent to him at
+the Victoria Hospital there.</p>
+
+<p>And there was a British Red Cross lady and her
+luggage&mdash;but we didn't know anything about the
+lady and her luggage yet.</p>
+
+<p>We found them at the <i>Kursaal</i> Hospital, where
+some of our ambulances were waiting.</p>
+
+<p>By this time the courtyard, the steps and terraces
+of the Hospital were a scene of the most ghastly
+confusion. The wounded were still being carried
+out and still lay, wrapped in blankets, on the terraces;
+those who could sit or stand sat or stood.
+Ambulance cars jostled each other in the courtyard.
+Red Cross nurses dressed for departure were
+grouped despairingly about their luggage. Other<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</a></span>
+nurses, who were not dressed for departure, who
+still remained superintending the removal of their
+wounded, paid no attention to these groups and their
+movements and their cries. The Hospital had cast
+off all care for any but its wounded.</p>
+
+<p>Women seized hold of other women for guidance
+and instruction, and received none. Nobody was
+rudely shaken off&mdash;they were all, in fact, very kind
+to each other&mdash;but nobody had time or ability to
+attend to anybody else.</p>
+
+<p>Somebody seized hold of the Commandant and
+sent us both off to look for the kitchen and for a
+sack of loaves which we would find in it. We were
+to bring the sack of loaves out as quickly as we
+could. We went off and found the kitchen, we
+found several kitchens; but we couldn't find the sack
+of loaves, and had to go back without it. When
+we got back the lady who had commandeered the
+sack of loaves was no more to be seen on the terrace.</p>
+
+<p>While we waited on the steps somebody remarked
+that there was a German aeroplane in the sky and
+that it was going to drop a bomb. There was. It
+was sailing high over the houses on the other side
+of the street. And it dropped its bomb right in
+front of us, above an enormous building not fifty
+yards away.</p>
+
+<p>We looked, fascinated. We expected to see the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</a></span>
+building knocked to bits and flying in all directions.
+The bomb fell. And nothing happened. Nothing
+at all.</p>
+
+<p>It was soon after the bomb that my attention was
+directed to the lady. She was a British Red Cross
+nurse, stranded with a hold-all and a green canvas
+trunk, and most particularly forlorn. She had lost
+her friends, she had lost her equanimity, she had
+lost everything except her luggage. How she attached
+herself to us I do not know. The Commandant
+says it was I who made myself responsible
+for her safety. We couldn't leave her to the Germans
+with her green canvas trunk and her hold-all.</p>
+
+<p>So I heaved up one end of the canvas trunk, and
+the Commandant tore it from me and flung it to
+the chauffeurs, who got it and the hold-all into
+Bert's ambulance. I grasped the British Red Cross
+lady firmly by the arm, lest she should get adrift
+again, and hustled her along to the Hotel, where
+the yellow tin box and the suit-case and the kit-bag
+waited. Somebody got them into the ambulance
+somehow.</p>
+
+<p>It was at this point that Ursula Dearmer appeared.
+(She had put up at some other hotel with Mrs.
+Lambert.)</p>
+
+<p>My British Red Cross lady was explaining to me<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</a></span>
+that she had by no means abandoned her post, but
+that she was doing the right thing in leaving Ostend,
+seeing that she meant to apply for another post on
+a hospital ship. She was sure, she said, she was
+doing the right thing. I said, as I towed her securely
+along by one hand through a gathering crowd
+of refugees (we were now making for the ambulance
+cars that were drawn up along the street by
+the Digue), I said I was equally sure she was doing
+the right thing and that nobody could possibly
+think otherwise.</p>
+
+<p>And, as I say, Ursula Dearmer appeared.</p>
+
+<p>The youngest but one was seated with Mr. Riley
+in the military scouting-car that was to be our convoy
+to Dunkirk. I do not know how it had happened,
+but in this hour, at any rate, she had taken
+over the entire control and command of the Ambulance;
+and this with a coolness and competence
+that suggested that it was no new thing. It suggested,
+also, that without her we should not have
+got away from Ostend before the Germans marched
+into it. In fact, it is hardly fair to say that she
+had taken everything over. Everything had lapsed
+into her hands at the supreme crisis by a sort of
+natural fitness.</p>
+
+<p>We were all ready to go. The only one we yet
+waited for was the Commandant, who presently<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</a></span>
+emerged from the Hotel. In his still dreamy and
+abstracted movements he was pursued by an excited
+waiter flourishing a bill. I forgot whose bill
+it was (it may have been mine), but anyhow it
+wasn't <i>his</i> bill.</p>
+
+<p>We may have thought we were following the
+retreat of the Belgian Army when we went from
+Ghent to Bruges. We were, in fact, miles behind
+it, and the regiments we overtook were stragglers.
+The whole of the Belgian Army seemed to be poured
+out on to that road between Ostend and Dunkirk.
+Sometimes it was going before us, sometimes it
+was mysteriously coming towards us, sometimes
+it was stationary, but always it was there. It covered
+the roads; we had to cut our way through it.
+It was retreating slowly, as if in leisure, with a
+firm, unhasting dignity.</p>
+
+<p>Every now and then, as we looked at the men,
+they smiled at us, with a curious still and tragic
+smile.</p>
+
+<p>And it is by that smile that I shall always remember
+the look of the Belgian Army in the great
+retreat.</p>
+
+<p>Our own retreat&mdash;the Ostend-Dunkirk bit of
+it&mdash;is memorable chiefly by Miss &mdash;&mdash;'s account
+of the siege of Antwerp and the splendid courage of
+Mrs. St. Clair Stobart and her women.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>But that is her story, not mine, and it should be
+left to her to tell.</p>
+
+<p class="centerspaced2">[<i>Dunkirk.</i>]</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">At</span> Dunkirk the question of the Secretary's transport
+again arose. It contended feebly with the
+larger problem of where and when and how the
+Corps was to lunch, things being further complicated
+by the Commandant's impending interview
+with Baron de Broqueville, the Belgian Minister of
+War. I began to feel like a large and useless parcel
+which the Commandant had brought with him in
+sheer absence of mind, and was now anxious to
+lose or otherwise get rid of. At the same time the
+Ambulance could not go on for more than three
+days without further funds, and, as the courier to
+be despatched to fetch them, I was, for the moment,
+the most important person in the Corps; and my
+transport was not a question to be lightly set aside.</p>
+
+<p>I was about to solve the problem for myself by
+lugging my lady to the railway station, when
+Ursula Dearmer took us over too, in her stride, as
+inconsiderable items of the business before her. I
+have nothing but admiration for her handling of it.</p>
+
+<p>We halted in the main street of Dunkirk while
+Mr. Riley and the chauffeurs unearthed from the
+baggage-car my hold-all and suit-case and the Brit<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</a></span>ish
+Red Cross lady's hold-all and trunk and Mr.
+Foster's kit-bag and Dr. Hanson's suit-case with
+her best clothes and her surgical instruments and
+the tin&mdash;No, not the tin box, for the Commandant,
+now possessed by a violent demon of hurry, resisted
+our efforts to drag it from its lair.<a name="FNanchor_38_39" id="FNanchor_38_39"></a><a href="#Footnote_38_39" class="fnanchor">[38]</a></p>
+
+<p>All these things were piled on Ursula Dearmer's
+military scouting-car. The British Red Cross lady
+(almost incredulous of her good luck) and I got
+inside it, and Ursula Dearmer and Mr. Riley drove
+us to the railway station.</p>
+
+<p>By the mercy of Heaven a train was to leave for
+Boulogne either a little before or a little after one,
+and we had time to catch it.</p>
+
+<p>There was a long line of refugee <i>bourgeois</i> drawn
+up before the station doors, and I noticed that every
+one of them carried in his hand a slip of paper.</p>
+
+<p>Ursula Dearmer hailed a porter, who, she said,
+would look after us like a father. With a matchless
+celerity he and Mr. Riley tore down the pile
+of luggage. The porter put them on a barrow and
+disappeared with them very swiftly through the
+station doors.</p>
+
+<p>At least I suppose it was through the doors. All
+we knew was that he disappeared.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Then Ursula Dearmer handed over to me three
+cables to be sent from Dunkirk. I said good-bye
+to her and Mr. Riley. They got back into the
+motor-car, and they, too, very swiftly disappeared.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Riley went away bearing with him the baffling
+mystery of his personality. After nearly
+three weeks' association with him I know that Mr.
+Riley's whole heart is in his job of carrying the
+wounded. Beyond that I know no more of him
+than on the day when he first turned up before our
+Committee.</p>
+
+<p>But with Ursula Dearmer it is different. Before
+the Committee she appeared as a very young
+girl, docile, diffident, only half-awake, and of dubious
+efficiency. I remember my solemn pledges to
+her mother that Ursula Dearmer should not be allowed
+to go into danger, and how, if danger insisted
+on coming to her, she should be violently packed
+up and sent home. I remember thinking what a
+nuisance Ursula Dearmer will be, and how, when
+things are just beginning to get interesting, I shall
+be told off to see her home.</p>
+
+<p>And Ursula Dearmer, the youngest but one, has
+gone, not at all docilely and diffidently, into the
+greatest possible danger, and come out of it. And
+here she is, wide awake and in full command of the
+Ostend-Dunkirk expedition. And instead of my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</a></span>
+seeing her off and all the way home, she is very
+thoroughly and competently seeing <i>me</i> off.</p>
+
+<p>At least this was her beautiful intention.</p>
+
+<p>But getting out of France in war-time is not a
+simple matter.</p>
+
+<p>When we tried to follow the flight of our luggage
+through the station door we were stopped by a
+sentry with a rifle. We produced our passports.
+They were not enough.</p>
+
+<p>At the sight of us brought to halt there, all the
+refugees began to agitate their slips of paper. And
+on the slips we read the words "<i>Laissez-passer</i>."</p>
+
+<p>My British Red Cross lady had no "<i>laissez-passer</i>."
+I had only my sixteenth part in the
+"<i>laissez-passer</i>" of the Corps, and that, hidden
+away in the Commandant's breast-pocket, was a
+part either of the luncheon-party or of the interview
+with the Belgian Minister of War.</p>
+
+<p>We couldn't get military passes, for military
+passes take time; and the train was due in about
+fifteen minutes.</p>
+
+<p>And the fatherly porter had vanished, taking with
+him the secret of our luggage.</p>
+
+<p>It was a fatherly old French gentleman who advised
+us to go to the British <i>Consulat</i>. And it was
+a fatherly old French <i>cocher</i> who drove us there,
+or rather who drove us through interminable twisted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</a></span>
+streets and into blind alleys and out of them till
+we got there.</p>
+
+<p>As for our luggage, we renounced it and Mr.
+Foster's and Dr. Hanson's luggage in the interests
+of our own safety.</p>
+
+<p>At last we got to the British <i>Consulat</i>. Only I
+think the <i>cocher</i> took us to the Town Hall and the
+Hospital and the British Embassy and the Admiralty
+offices first.</p>
+
+<p>At intervals during this transit the British Red
+Cross lady explained again that she was doing the
+right thing in leaving Ostend. It wasn't as if she
+was leaving her post, she was going on a hospital
+ship. She was sure she had done the right
+thing.</p>
+
+<p>It was not for me to be unsympathetic to an obsession
+produced by a retreat, so I assured her again
+and again that if there ever was a right thing she
+had done it. My heart bled for this poor lady,
+abandoned by the organization that had brought her
+out.</p>
+
+<p>In the courtyard of the <i>Consulat</i> we met a stalwart
+man in khaki, who smiled as a god might
+smile at our trouble, and asked us why on earth
+we hadn't got a passage on the naval transport
+<i>Victoria</i>, sailing at three o'clock. We said nothing
+would have pleased us better, only we had never<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</a></span>
+heard of the <i>Victoria</i> and her sailing. And he took
+us to the Consul, and the Consul&mdash;who must have
+been buried alive in detail&mdash;gave us a letter to
+Captain King of the <i>Victoria</i>, and the <i>cocher</i> drove
+us to the dock.</p>
+
+<p>Captain King was an angel. He was the head of
+a whole hierarchy of angels who called themselves
+ship's officers.</p>
+
+<p>There is no difficulty about our transport. But
+we must be at the docks by half-past two.</p>
+
+<p>We have an hour before us; so we drive back to
+the station to see if, after all, we can find that luggage.
+Not that we in the least expected to find it,
+for we had been told that it had gone on by the
+train to Boulogne.</p>
+
+<p>Now the British Red Cross lady declared many
+times that but for me and my mastery of the French
+language she would never have got out of Dunkirk.
+And it was true that I looked on her more as a
+sacred charge than as a valuable ally in the struggle
+with French sentries, porters and officials. As for
+the <i>cocher</i>, I didn't consider him valuable at all,
+even as the driver of an ancient <i>fiacre</i>. And yet
+it was the lady and the <i>cocher</i> who found the luggage.
+It seems that the station hall is open between
+trains, and they had simply gone into the hall and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</a></span>
+seen it there, withdrawn bashfully into a corner.
+The <i>cocher's</i> face as he announces his discovery
+makes the War seem a monstrous illusion. It is
+incredible that anything so joyous should exist in
+a country under German invasion.</p>
+
+<p>We drive again to the <i>Victoria</i> in her dock. The
+stewards run about and do things for us. They
+give us lunch. They give us tea. And the other
+officers come in and make large, simple jokes about
+bombs and mines and submarines. We have the
+ship all to ourselves except for a few British soldiers,
+recruits sent out to Antwerp too soon and
+sent back again for more training.</p>
+
+<p>They looked, poor boys, far sadder than the Belgian
+Army.</p>
+
+<p>And I walk the decks; I walk the decks till we
+get to Dover. My sacred charge appears and disappears.
+Every now and then I see her engaged in
+earnest conversation with the ship's officers; and I
+wonder whether she is telling them that she has not
+really left her post and that she is sure she has done
+right. I am no longer concerned about my own
+post, for I feel so sure that I am going back to it.</p>
+
+<p>To-morrow I shall get the money from our Committee;
+and on Thursday I shall go back.</p>
+
+<p>And yet&mdash;and yet&mdash;I must have had a pre<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</a></span>monition.
+We are approaching England. I can
+see the white cliffs.</p>
+
+<p>And I hate the white cliffs. I hate them with a
+sudden and mysterious hatred.</p>
+
+<p>More especially I hate the cliffs of Dover. For
+it is there that we must land. I should not have
+thought it possible to hate the white coast of my own
+country when she is at war.</p>
+
+<p>And now I know that I hate it because it is not
+the coast of Flanders. Which would be absurd if
+I were really going back again.</p>
+
+<p>Yes, I must have had a premonition.</p>
+
+<p class="centerspaced2">[<i>Dover.</i>]</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">We</span> have landed now. I have said good-bye to
+Captain King and all the ship's officers and thanked
+them for their kindness. I have said good-bye to
+the British Red Cross lady, who is not going to
+London.</p>
+
+<p>And I go to the station telegraph-office to send
+off five wires.</p>
+
+<p>I am sending off the five wires when I hear feet
+returning through the station hall. The Red Cross
+lady is back again. She is saying this time that she
+is <i>really</i> sure she has done the right thing.</p>
+
+<p>And again I assure her that she has.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Well&mdash;there are obsessions and obsessions. I
+do not know whether I have done the right thing or
+not in leaving Flanders (or, for that matter, in
+leaving Ghent). All that I know is that I love it
+and that I have left it. And that I want to go back.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[Pg 290]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2 class="spaced">POSTSCRIPT</h2>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>There have been changes in that Motor Field Ambulance
+Corps that set out for Flanders on the 25th of
+September, 1914.</p>
+
+<p>Its Commandant has gone from it to join the Royal
+Army Medical Corps. A few of the original volunteers
+have dropped out and others have taken their
+places, and it is larger now than it was, and better organized.</p>
+
+<p>But whoever went and whoever stayed, its four field-women
+have remained at the Front. Two of them are
+attached to the Third Division of the Belgian Army;
+all four have distinguished themselves by their devotion
+to that Army and by their valour, and they have
+all received the Order of Leopold II., the highest Belgian
+honour ever given to women.</p>
+
+<p>The Commandant, being a man, has the Order of
+Leopold I. Mr. Ashmead-Bartlett and Mr. Philip
+Gibbs and Dr. Souttar have described his heroic action
+at the Battle of Dixmude on the 22nd of October,
+1914, when he went into the cellars of the burning and
+toppling Town Hall to rescue the wounded. And
+from that day to this the whole Corps&mdash;old volunteers
+and new&mdash;has covered itself with glory.</p>
+
+<p>On our two chauffeurs, Tom and Bert, the glory lies
+quite thick. "Tom" (if I may quote from my own
+story of the chauffeurs) "Tom was in the battle of
+Dixmude. At the order of his commandant he drove
+his car straight into the thick of it, over the ruins of
+a shattered house that blocked the way. He waited<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[Pg 292]</a></span>
+with his car while all the bombs that he had ever
+dreamed of crashed around him, and houses flamed,
+and tottered and fell. 'Pretty warm, ain't it?' was
+Tom's comment.</p>
+
+<p>"Four days later he was waiting at Oudekappele
+with his car when he heard that the Hospital of Saint-Jean
+at Dixmude was being shelled and that the Belgian
+military man who had been sent with a motor-car
+to carry off the wounded had been turned back by the
+fragment of a shell that dropped in front of him.
+Tom thereupon drove into Dixmude to the Hospital of
+Saint-Jean and removed from it two wounded soldiers
+and two aged and paralysed civilians who had sheltered
+there, and brought them to Furnes. The military
+ambulance men then followed his lead, and the
+Hospital was emptied. That evening it was destroyed
+by a shell.</p>
+
+<p>"And Bert&mdash;it was Bert who drove his ambulance
+into Kams-Kappele to the barricade by the railway.
+It was Bert who searched in a shell-hole to pick out
+three wounded from among thirteen dead; who with
+the help of a Belgian priest, carried the three several
+yards to his car, under fire, and who brought them in
+safety to Furnes."</p>
+
+<p>And the others, the brave "Chaplain," and "Mr.
+Riley," and "Mr. Lambert," have also proved themselves.</p>
+
+<p>But when I think of the Corps it is chiefly of the
+four field-women that I think&mdash;the two "women of
+Pervyse," and the other two who joined them at their
+dangerous <i>poste</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Both at Furnes and Pervyse they worked all night,
+looking after their wounded; sometimes sleeping on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[Pg 293]</a></span>
+straw in a room shared by the Belgian troops, when
+there was no other shelter for them in the bombarded
+town. One of them has driven a heavy ambulance
+car&mdash;in a pitch-black night, along a road raked by
+shell-fire, and broken here and there into great pits&mdash;to
+fetch a load of wounded, a performance that would
+have racked the nerves of any male chauffeur ever
+born. She has driven the same car, <i>alone</i>, with five
+German prisoners for her passengers. The four
+women served at Pervyse (the town nearest to the
+firing-line) in "Mrs. Torrence's" dressing-station&mdash;a
+cellar only twenty yards behind the Belgian trenches.
+In that cellar, eight feet square and lighted and ventilated
+only by a slit in the wall, two lived for three
+weeks, sleeping on straw, eating what they could get,
+drinking water that had passed through a cemetery
+where nine hundred Germans are buried. They had
+to burn candles night and day. Here the wounded
+were brought as they fell in the trenches, and were
+tended until the ambulance came to take them to the
+base hospital at Furnes.</p>
+
+<p>Day in, day out, and all night long, with barely an
+interval for a wash or a change of clothing, the women
+stayed on, the two always, and the four often, till the
+engineers built them a little hut for a dressing-station;
+they stayed till the Germans shelled them out
+of their little hut.</p>
+
+<p>This is only a part of what they have done. The
+finest part will never be known, for it was done in solitary
+places and in the dark, when special correspondents
+are asleep in their hotels. There was no limelight
+on the road between Dixmude and Furnes, or
+among the blood and straw in the cellar at Pervyse.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[Pg 294]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>And Miss Ashley-Smith (who is now Mrs. McDougall)&mdash;her
+escape from Ghent (when she had no
+more to do there) was as heroic as her return.</p>
+
+<p>Since then she has gone back to the Front and done
+splendid service in her own Corps, the First Aid Nursing
+Yeomanry.</p>
+
+<p class="sign">
+<span class="sinclair2">M. S.</span><br />
+July 15th, 1915.</p>
+
+<p class="centerspaced">THE END</p>
+
+<p class="centerspaced">PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA</p>
+
+<h2 class="spaced">FOOTNOTES:</h2>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_1_2" id="Footnote_1_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_2"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> It would be truer to say she was in love with duty which
+was often dangerous.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_2_3" id="Footnote_2_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_3"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> She very soon let us know why. "Followed" is the
+wrong word.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_3_4" id="Footnote_3_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_4"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> He didn't. People never do mean these things.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_4_5" id="Footnote_4_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_5"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> This only means that, whether you attended to it or not
+(you generally didn't), as long as you were in Belgium, your
+sub-consciousness was never entirely free from the fear of
+Uhlans&mdash;of Uhlans in the flesh. The illusion of valour is
+the natural, healthy reaction of your psyche against its fear
+and your indifference to its fear.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_5_6" id="Footnote_5_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_6"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> Nobody need have been surprised. She had distinguished
+herself in other wars.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_6_7" id="Footnote_6_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6_7"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> One is a church and not a cathedral.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_7_8" id="Footnote_7_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7_8"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> I am puzzled about this date. It stands in my ambulance
+Day-Book as Saturday, 3rd, with a note that the British came
+into Ghent on their way to Antwerp on the evening of that
+day. Now I believe there were no British in Antwerp before
+the evening of Sunday, the 4th, yet "Dr. Wilson" and Mr.
+Davidson, going into Saint Nicolas before us, saw the British
+there, and "Mrs. Torrence" and "Janet McNeil" saw more
+British come into Ghent in the evening. I was ill with fever
+the day after the run into Antwerp, and got behindhand with
+my Day-Book. So it seems safest to assume that I made a
+wrong entry and that we went into Antwerp on Sunday, and
+to record Saturday's events as spreading over the whole day.
+Similarly the events that the Day-Book attributes to Monday
+must have belonged to Tuesday. And if Tuesday's events
+were really Wednesday's, that clears up a painful doubt I had
+as to Wednesday, which came into my Day-Book as an empty
+extra which I couldn't account for in any way. There I was
+with a day left over and nothing to put into it. And yet
+Wednesday, the 7th, was the first day of the real siege of
+Antwerp. On Thursday, the 8th, I started clear.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_8_9" id="Footnote_8_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8_9"><span class="label">[8]</span></a> It wasn't. This was only the first slender trickling. The
+flood came three days later with the bombardment of the city.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_9_10" id="Footnote_9_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9_10"><span class="label">[9]</span></a> Of all the thousands and thousands of refugees whom I
+have seen I have only seen three weep, and they were three
+out of six hundred who had just disembarked at the Prince
+of Wales's Pier at Dover. But in Belgium not one tear.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_10_11" id="Footnote_10_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10_11"><span class="label">[10]</span></a> This is all wrong. The main stream went as straight as it
+could for the sea-coast&mdash;Holland or Ostend.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_11_12" id="Footnote_11_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11_12"><span class="label">[11]</span></a> The outer forts were twelve miles away.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_12_13" id="Footnote_12_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12_13"><span class="label">[12]</span></a> At the time of writing&mdash;February 19th, 1915. My Day-Book
+gives no record of anything but the hospitals we visited.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_13_14" id="Footnote_13_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13_14"><span class="label">[13]</span></a> There must be something wrong here, for the place was, I
+believe, a convent.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_14_15" id="Footnote_14_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14_15"><span class="label">[14]</span></a> Every woman did.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_15_16" id="Footnote_15_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_15_16"><span class="label">[15]</span></a> This was made up to her afterwards! Her cup fairly ran
+over.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_16_17" id="Footnote_16_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor_16_17"><span class="label">[16]</span></a> I have heard a distinguished alienist say that this reminiscent
+sensation is a symptom of approaching insanity. As
+it is not at all uncommon, there must be a great many lunatics
+going about.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_17_18" id="Footnote_17_18"></a><a href="#FNanchor_17_18"><span class="label">[17]</span></a> Except that nobody had any time to attend to us, I can't
+think why we weren't all four of us arrested for spies. We
+hadn't any business to be looking for the position of the
+Belgian batteries.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_18_19" id="Footnote_18_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor_18_19"><span class="label">[18]</span></a> More than likely our appearance there stopped the firing.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_19_20" id="Footnote_19_20"></a><a href="#FNanchor_19_20"><span class="label">[19]</span></a> I have since been told that he was not. And I think in
+any case I am wrong about his "matchboard" car. It must
+have been somebody else's. In fact, I'm very much afraid that
+"he" was somebody else&mdash;that I hadn't the luck really to
+meet him.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_20_21" id="Footnote_20_21"></a><a href="#FNanchor_20_21"><span class="label">[20]</span></a> He did. She was not a lady whom it was possible to
+leave behind on such an expedition.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_21_22" id="Footnote_21_22"></a><a href="#FNanchor_21_22"><span class="label">[21]</span></a> I'm inclined to think it may have been the dogs of Belgium,
+after all. I can't think where the guns could have been.
+Antwerp had fallen. It might have been the bombardment of
+Melle, though.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_22_23" id="Footnote_22_23"></a><a href="#FNanchor_22_23"><span class="label">[22]</span></a> The fate of "Mr. Lambert" and the scouting-car was one
+of those things that ought never to have happened. It turned
+out that the car was not the property of his paper, but his
+own car, hired and maintained by him at great expense; that
+this brave and devoted young American had joined our Corps
+before it left England and gone out to the front to wait for us.
+And he was kept waiting long after we got there.
+</p><p>
+But if he didn't see as much service at Ghent as he undertook
+to see (though he did some fine things on his own even
+there), it was made up to him in Flanders afterwards, when,
+with the Commandant and other members of the Corps, he
+distinguished himself by his gallantry at Furnes and in the
+Battle of Dixmude.
+</p><p>
+(For an account of his wife's services see Postscript.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_23_24" id="Footnote_23_24"></a><a href="#FNanchor_23_24"><span class="label">[23]</span></a> I record these details (March 11th, 1915) because the
+Commandant accused me subsequently of a total lack of "balance"
+upon this occasion.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_24_25" id="Footnote_24_25"></a><a href="#FNanchor_24_25"><span class="label">[24]</span></a> This is no reflection on Tom's courage. His chief objection
+was to driving three women so near the German lines.
+The same consideration probably weighed with the Commandant
+and M. &mdash;&mdash;.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_25_26" id="Footnote_25_26"></a><a href="#FNanchor_25_26"><span class="label">[25]</span></a> The whole thing was a piece of rank insubordination. The
+Commandant was entirely right to forbid the expedition, and
+we were entirely wrong in disobeying him. But it was one
+of those wrong things that I would do again to-morrow.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_26_27" id="Footnote_26_27"></a><a href="#FNanchor_26_27"><span class="label">[26]</span></a> Antwerp had surrendered on Friday, the 9th.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_27_28" id="Footnote_27_28"></a><a href="#FNanchor_27_28"><span class="label">[27]</span></a> All the same it was splendidly equipped and managed.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_28_29" id="Footnote_28_29"></a><a href="#FNanchor_28_29"><span class="label">[28]</span></a> Even now, when I am asked if I did any nursing when I
+was in Belgium I have to think before I answer: "Only for
+one morning and one night"&mdash;it would still be much truer to
+say, "I was nursing all the time."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_29_30" id="Footnote_29_30"></a><a href="#FNanchor_29_30"><span class="label">[29]</span></a> My Day-Book ends abruptly here; and I have no note of
+the events that followed.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_30_31" id="Footnote_30_31"></a><a href="#FNanchor_30_31"><span class="label">[30]</span></a> Incorrect. It was, I believe, the uniform of the First Aid
+Nursing Yeomanry Corps.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_31_32" id="Footnote_31_32"></a><a href="#FNanchor_31_32"><span class="label">[31]</span></a> It was so bad that it made me forget to pack the Commandant's
+Burberry and his Gillette razors and his pipe.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_32_33" id="Footnote_32_33"></a><a href="#FNanchor_32_33"><span class="label">[32]</span></a> The Commandant had had an adventure. The Belgian
+guide mistook the road and brought the car straight into the
+German lines instead of the British lines where it had been
+sent. If the Germans hadn't been preoccupied with firing
+at that moment, the Commandant and Ascot and the Belgian
+would all have been taken prisoner.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_33_34" id="Footnote_33_34"></a><a href="#FNanchor_33_34"><span class="label">[33]</span></a> Even now, five months after, I cannot tell whether it was
+or was not insanity.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_34_35" id="Footnote_34_35"></a><a href="#FNanchor_34_35"><span class="label">[34]</span></a> It is really dreadful to think of the nuisance we must have
+been to these dear people on the eve of their own flight.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_35_36" id="Footnote_35_36"></a><a href="#FNanchor_35_36"><span class="label">[35]</span></a> The Commandant had his own scheme for going back to
+Ghent, which fortunately he did not carry out.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_36_37" id="Footnote_36_37"></a><a href="#FNanchor_36_37"><span class="label">[36]</span></a> This girl's courage and self-devotion were enough to establish
+our innocence&mdash;they needed no persuasion. But I
+still hold myself responsible for her going, since it was my
+failure to control my obsession that first of all put the idea
+in her head.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_37_38" id="Footnote_37_38"></a><a href="#FNanchor_37_38"><span class="label">[37]</span></a> I saw nothing sinister about this arrangement at the time.
+It seemed incredible to me that I should not return.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_38_39" id="Footnote_38_39"></a><a href="#FNanchor_38_39"><span class="label">[38]</span></a> Having saved the suit-case, I guarded it as a sacred thing.
+But Dr. Hanson's best clothes and her surgical instruments
+were in the tin box after all.</p></div>
+
+<div class="boxed">
+
+<p class="initial">
+<span class="smcap">The</span> following pages contain advertisements of
+books by the same author or on kindred subjects.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class="u">By THE SAME AUTHOR</p>
+
+<h2>The Return of the Prodigal</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><i>Cloth, 12mo. $1.35</i></p>
+
+<p>"These are stories to be read leisurely with a feeling for the stylish
+and the careful workmanship which is always a part of May Sinclair's
+work. They need no recommendation to those who know the author's
+work and one of the things on which we may congratulate ourselves is
+the fact that so many Americans are her reading friends."&mdash;<i>Kansas
+City Gazette-Globe.</i></p>
+
+<p>"They are the product of a master workman who has both skill and
+art, and who scorns to produce less than the best."&mdash;<i>Buffalo Express.</i></p>
+
+<p>"Always a clever writer, Miss Sinclair at her best is an exceptionally
+interesting one, and in several of the tales bound together in this new
+volume we have her at her best."&mdash;<i>N. Y. Times.</i></p>
+
+<p>" ... All of which show the same sensitive apprehension of unusual
+cases and delicate relations, and reveal a truth which would be
+hidden from the hasty or blunt observer."&mdash;<i>Boston Transcript.</i></p>
+
+<p>"One of the best of the many collections of stories published this
+season."&mdash;<i>N. Y. Sun.</i></p>
+
+<p>" ... All these stories are of deep interest because all of them are
+out of the rut."&mdash;<i>Kentucky Post.</i></p>
+
+<p>"Let no one who cares for good and sincere work neglect this book."&mdash;<i>London
+Post.</i></p>
+
+<p>"The stories are touched with a peculiar delicacy and whimsicality."&mdash;<i>Los
+Angeles Times.</i></p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="center">PUBLISHED BY<br />
+<br />
+THE MACMILLAN COMPANY<br />
+<br />
+<span class="bold">64-66 Fifth Avenue, New York</span></p>
+
+<p class="centerspacedbold">BY THE SAME AUTHOR</p>
+
+<h2 class="sp">The Three Sisters</h2>
+
+<p class="center">By MAY SINCLAIR<br />
+<br />
+Author of "The Divine Fire," "The Return of the Prodigal," etc.</p>
+
+<p class="right"><i>Cloth, 12mo, $1.35</i></p>
+
+<p>Every reader of "The Divine Fire," in fact every reader of any of Miss
+Sinclair's books, will at once accord her unlimited praise for her character work.
+"The Three Sisters" reveals her at her best. It is a story of temperament,
+made evident not through tiresome analyses but by means of a series of dramatic
+incidents. The sisters of the title represent three distinct types of womankind.
+In their reaction under certain conditions Miss Sinclair is not only
+telling a story of tremendous interest but she is really showing a cross section
+of life.</p>
+
+<p>"Once again Miss Sinclair has shown us that among the women writers to-day
+she can be acclaimed as without rival in the ability to draw a character
+and to suggest atmosphere.... In "The Three Sisters" she gives full measure
+of her qualities. It is in every way a characteristic novel."&mdash;<i>London
+Standard.</i></p>
+
+<p>"Miss Sinclair's singular power as an artist lies in her identification with
+nature.... She has seldom written a more moving story."&mdash;<i>Metropolitan.</i></p>
+
+<p>"It is a book powerful alike in its description of the background and in its
+analysis of character.... This story confirms the impression of her unusual
+ability."&mdash;<i>Outlook.</i></p>
+
+<p>"Miss Sinclair's most important book."&mdash;<i>Reedy's Mirror.</i></p>
+
+<p>"'The Three Sisters' is a powerful novel, written with both vigor and
+delicacy, dramatic, absorbingly interesting."&mdash;<i>New York Times.</i></p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="center">THE MACMILLAN COMPANY<br />
+<br />
+<span class="bold">Publishers &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 64-66 Fifth Avenue &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; New York</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="spsp">The Pentecost of Calamity</h2>
+
+<p class="center">By OWEN WISTER<br />
+Author of "The Virginian," etc.</p>
+
+<p class="right"><i>Boards, 16mo, 50 cents</i></p>
+
+<p>The author of "The Virginian" has written a new book which describes,
+more forcibly and clearly than any other account so far published, the
+meaning, to America, of the tragic changes which are taking place in the
+hearts and minds of the German people.</p>
+
+<p>Written with ease and charm of style, it is prose that holds the reader
+for its very beauty, even as it impresses him with its force. It is doubtful
+whether there will come out of the entire mass of war literature a more
+understanding or suggestive survey.</p>
+
+<p>"Owen Wister has depicted the tragedy of Germany and has hinted at the possible
+tragedy of the United States.... We wish it could be read in full by every American."&mdash;<i>The
+Outlook.</i></p>
+
+<h2 class="ready">The Military Unpreparedness of the United<br />
+States</h2>
+
+<p class="center">By FREDERIC L. HUIDEKOPER</p>
+
+<p class="right"><i>Cloth, 8vo</i></p>
+
+<p>By many army officers the author of this work is regarded as the foremost
+military expert in the United States. For nine years he has been
+striving to awaken the American people to a knowledge of the weaknesses
+of their land forces and the defencelessness of the country. Out of his extensive
+study and research he has compiled the present volume, which
+represents the last word on this subject. It comes at a time when its importance
+cannot be overestimated, and in the eight hundred odd pages
+given over to the discussion there are presented facts and arguments with
+which every citizen should be familiar. Mr. Huidekoper's writings in this
+field are already well known. These hitherto, however, have been largely
+confined to magazines and pamphlets, but his book deals with the matters
+under consideration with that frankness and authority evidenced in these
+previous contributions and much more comprehensively.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="center">THE MACMILLAN COMPANY<br />
+<br />
+<span class="bold">Publishers &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 64-66 Fifth Avenue &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; New York</span></p>
+
+<p class="centerspacedbold">AN IMPORTANT NEW WORK</p>
+
+<h2 class="sp">With the Russian Army</h2>
+
+<p class="center">By Col. ROBERT McCORMICK</p>
+
+<p class="right"><i>Illustrated, 8vo</i></p>
+
+<p>This book deals with the author's experiences in the
+war area. The work traces the cause of the war from
+the treaty of 1878 through the Balkan situation. It
+contains many facts drawn from personal observation,
+for Col. McCormick has had opportunities such as have
+been given to no other man during the present engagements.
+He has been at the various headquarters and
+actually in the trenches. One of the most interesting
+chapters of the volume is the concluding one dealing
+with great personalities of the war from first-hand
+acquaintance.</p>
+
+<p>The work contains a considerable amount of material
+calculated to upset generally accepted ideas, comparisons
+of the fighting forces, and much else that is fresh
+and original.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="center">THE MACMILLAN COMPANY<br />
+<br />
+<span class="bold">Publishers &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 64-66 Fifth Avenue &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; New York</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="spsp">The World War:</h2>
+
+<p class="centerbold">How it Looks to the Nations Involved and What it Means to Us</p>
+
+<p class="center">By ELBERT FRANCIS BALDWIN</p>
+
+<p class="right"><i>Decorated cloth, 12mo, $1.25</i></p>
+
+<p>The present war in Europe has called forth a great many
+books bearing on its different phases, but in the majority of
+instances these have been written from the standpoint of some
+one of the nations. Elbert Francis Baldwin has here, however,
+brought together within the compass of a single volume
+a survey of the entire field.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Baldwin was in Europe at the outbreak of hostilities.
+He mingled with the people, observing their spirit and temper
+more intimately than it has been permitted most writers
+to do, and in consequence the descriptions which he gives of
+the German, or French, or English, or Russian attitude are
+truer and more complete than those found in previous studies
+of the war. Mr. Baldwin's statements are calm and just in
+conclusion. When discussing the German side he has included
+all of the factors which the Germans think important,
+and assimilated wholly the German feeling, as he has done in
+his considerations of the other countries.</p>
+
+<div class="block">
+
+<p>"The one indispensable volume so far published for those who desire a
+comprehensive survey of the situation.... One of the most valuable
+contributions to the literature of the World War."&mdash;<i>Portland Express.</i></p>
+
+<p>"The dramatic story ... is unusually calm and dispassionate, after the
+modern historical manner, with a great deal of fresh information."&mdash;<i>Philadelphia
+North American.</i></p>
+
+<p>"Sets down without bias the real causes of the Great War."&mdash;<i>New
+York Times.</i></p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="center">THE MACMILLAN COMPANY<br />
+<br />
+<span class="bold">Publishers &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 64-66 Fifth Avenue &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; New York</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="spsp">Russia and the World</h2>
+
+<p class="center">By STEPHEN GRAHAM<br />
+<br />
+Author of "With the Russian Pilgrims to Jerusalem," "With Poor Immigrants<br />
+to America," etc.</p>
+
+<p class="right"><i>Illustrated, cloth, 8vo, $2.00</i></p>
+
+<p>At the outbreak of the present European war Mr. Graham was
+in Russia, and his book opens, therefore, with a description of the
+way the news of war was received on the Chinese frontier, one
+thousand miles from a railway station, where he happened to be
+when the Tsar's summons came. Following this come other chapters
+on Russia and the War, considering such questions as, Is It a
+Last War?, Why Russia Is Fighting, The Economic Isolation of
+Russia, An Aeroplane Hunt at Warsaw, Suffering Poland: A Belgium
+of the East, and The Soldier and the Cross.</p>
+
+<p>But "Russia and the World" is not by any means wholly a war
+book. It is a comprehensive survey of Russian problems. Inasmuch
+as the War is at present one of her problems, it receives its
+due consideration. It has been, however, Mr. Graham's intention
+to supply the very definite need that there is for enlightenment in
+English and American circles as to the Russian nation, what its
+people think and feel on great world matters. On almost every
+country there are more books and more concrete information than
+on his chosen land. In fact, "Russia and the World" may be regarded
+as one of the very first to deal with it in any adequate fashion.</p>
+
+<p>"It shows the author creeping as near as he was allowed to the
+firing line. It gives broad views of difficult questions, like the future
+of the Poles and the Jews. It rises into high politics, forecasts the
+terms of peace and the rearrangement of the world, east and west,
+that may follow. But the salient thing in it is its interpretation for
+Western minds of the spirit of Russia."&mdash;<i>London Times.</i></p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="center">THE MACMILLAN COMPANY<br />
+<br />
+<span class="bold">Publishers &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 64-66 Fifth Avenue &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; New York</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="spsp">German World Policies</h2>
+
+<p class="centerbold">(Der Deutsche Gedanke in der Welt)</p>
+
+<p class="center">By PAUL ROHRBACH<br />
+<br />
+Translated by <span class="smcap">Dr. Edmund von Mach</span></p>
+
+<p class="right"><i>Cloth, 12mo, $1.25</i></p>
+
+<p>Paul Rohrbach has been for several years the most popular
+author of books on politics and economics in Germany. He is
+described by his translator as a "constructive optimist," one who,
+at the same time, is an incisive critic of those shortcomings which
+have kept Germany, as he thinks, from playing the great part to
+which she is called. In this volume Dr. Rohrbach gives a true insight
+into the character of the German people, their aims, fears and
+aspirations.</p>
+
+<p>Though it was written before the war started and has not been
+hastily put together, it still possesses peculiar significance now, for
+in its analysis of the German idea of culture and its dissemination,
+in its consideration of German foreign policies and moral conquests,
+it is an important contribution to the widespread speculation now
+current on these matters.</p>
+
+<div class="block">
+
+<p>"Dr. von Mach renders an extraordinary service to his country
+in making known to English readers at this time a book like
+Rohrbach's."&mdash;<i>New York Globe.</i></p>
+
+<p>"A clear insight into Prussian ideals."&mdash;<i>Boston Transcript.</i></p>
+
+<p>"A valuable, significant, and most informing book."&mdash;<i>New
+York Tribune.</i></p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="center">THE MACMILLAN COMPANY<br />
+<br />
+<span class="bold">Publishers &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 64-66 Fifth Avenue &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; New York</span></p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of A Journal of Impressions in Belgium, by
+May Sinclair
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+Project Gutenberg's A Journal of Impressions in Belgium, by May Sinclair
+
+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: A Journal of Impressions in Belgium
+
+Author: May Sinclair
+
+Release Date: February 20, 2010 [EBook #31332]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IMPRESSIONS IN BELGIUM ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Suzanne Shell, Tamise Totterdell and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+A JOURNAL OF
+IMPRESSIONS IN BELGIUM
+
+
+
+
+THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
+
+NEW YORK . BOSTON . CHICAGO . DALLAS
+ATLANTA . SAN FRANCISCO
+
+MACMILLAN & CO., LIMITED
+
+LONDON . BOMBAY . CALCUTTA
+MELBOURNE
+
+THE MACMILLAN CO. OF CANADA, LTD.
+
+TORONTO
+
+
+
+
+A JOURNAL OF
+IMPRESSIONS IN BELGIUM
+
+BY
+
+MAY SINCLAIR
+
+Author of "The Three Sisters," "The Return of
+The Prodigal," etc.
+
+New York
+
+THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
+1915
+
+_All rights reserved_
+
+
+
+
+COPYRIGHT, 1915
+
+BY MAY SINCLAIR
+
+Set up and electrotyped. Published, September, 1915
+
+
+
+
+DEDICATION
+
+(_To a Field Ambulance in Flanders_)
+
+
+ I do not call you comrades,
+ You,
+ Who did what I only dreamed.
+ Though you have taken my dream,
+ And dressed yourselves in its beauty and its glory,
+ Your faces are turned aside as you pass by.
+ I am nothing to you,
+ For I have done no more than dream.
+
+ Your faces are like the face of her whom you follow,
+ Danger,
+ The Beloved who looks backward as she runs, calling to her lovers,
+ The Huntress who flies before her quarry, trailing her lure.
+ She called to me from her battle-places,
+ She flung before me the curved lightning of her shells for a lure;
+ And when I came within sight of her,
+ She turned aside,
+ And hid her face from me.
+
+ But you she loved;
+ You she touched with her hand;
+ For you the white flames of her feet stayed in their running;
+ She kept you with her in her fields of Flanders,
+ Where you go,
+ Gathering your wounded from among her dead.
+ Grey night falls on your going and black night on your returning.
+ You go
+ Under the thunder of the guns, the shrapnel's rain and the curved
+ lightning of the shells,
+ And where the high towers are broken,
+ And houses crack like the staves of a thin crate filled with fire;
+ Into the mixing smoke and dust of roof and walls torn asunder
+ You go;
+ And only my dream follows you.
+
+ That is why I do not speak of you,
+ Calling you by your names.
+ Your names are strung with the names of ruined and immortal cities,
+ Termonde and Antwerp, Dixmude and Ypres and Furnes,
+ Like jewels on one chain--
+
+ Thus,
+ In the high places of Heaven,
+ They shall tell all your names.
+
+ MAY SINCLAIR.
+
+ March 8th, 1915.
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION
+
+
+This is a "Journal of Impressions," and it is nothing more. It will not
+satisfy people who want accurate and substantial information about
+Belgium, or about the War, or about Field Ambulances and Hospital Work,
+and do not want to see any of these things "across a temperament." For
+the Solid Facts and the Great Events they must go to such books as Mr.
+E. A. Powell's "Fighting in Flanders," or Mr. Frank Fox's "The Agony of
+Belgium," or Dr. H. S. Souttar's "A Surgeon in Belgium," or "A Woman's
+Experiences in the Great War," by Louise Mack.
+
+For many of these impressions I can claim only a psychological accuracy;
+some were insubstantial to the last degree, and very few were actually
+set down there and then, on the spot, as I have set them down here. This
+is only a Journal in so far as it is a record of days, as faithful as I
+could make it in every detail, and as direct as circumstances allowed.
+But circumstances seldom _did_ allow, and I was always behindhand with
+my Journal--a week behind with the first day of the seventeen, four
+months behind with the last.
+
+This was inevitable. For in the last week of the Siege of Antwerp, when
+the wounded were being brought into Ghent by hundreds, and when the
+fighting came closer and closer to the city, and at the end, when the
+Germans were driving you from Ghent to Bruges, and from Bruges to Ostend
+and from Ostend to Dunkirk, you could not sit down to write your
+impressions, even if you were cold-blooded enough to want to. It was as
+much as you could do to scribble the merest note of what happened in
+your Day-Book.
+
+But when you had made fast each day with its note, your impressions were
+safe, far safer than if you had tried to record them in their flux as
+they came. However far behind I might be with my Journal, it was _kept_.
+It is not written "up," or round and about the original notes in my
+Day-Book, it is simply written _out_. Each day of the seventeen had its
+own quality and was soaked in its own atmosphere; each had its own
+unique and incorruptible memory, and the slight lapse of time, so far
+from dulling or blurring that memory, crystallized it and made it sharp
+and clean. And in writing _out_ I have been careful never to go behind
+or beyond the day, never to add anything, but to leave each moment as it
+was. I have set down the day's imperfect or absurd impression, in all
+its imperfection or absurdity, and the day's crude emotion in all its
+crudity, rather than taint its reality with the discreet reflections
+that came after.
+
+I make no apology for my many errors--where they were discoverable I
+have corrected them in a footnote; to this day I do not know how wildly
+wrong I may have been about kilometres and the points of the compass,
+and the positions of batteries and the movements of armies; but there
+were other things of which I was dead sure; and this record has at least
+the value of a "human document."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There is one question that I may be asked: "Why, when you had the luck
+to go out with a Field Ambulance Corps distinguished by its
+gallantry--why in heaven's name have you not told the story of its
+heroism?"
+
+Well--I have not told it for several excellent reasons. When I set out
+to keep a Journal I pledged myself to set down only what I had seen or
+felt, and to avoid as far as possible the second-hand; and it was my
+misfortune that I saw very little of the field-work of the Corps.
+Besides, the Corps itself was then in its infancy, and it is its
+infancy--its irrepressible, half-irresponsible, whole engaging
+infancy--that I have touched here. After those seventeen days at Ghent
+it grew up in all conscience. It was at Furnes and Dixmude and La Panne,
+after I had left it, that its most memorable deeds were done.[A]
+
+And this story of the Corps is not mine to tell. Part of it has been
+told already by Dr. Souttar, and part by Mr. Philip Gibbs, and others.
+The rest is yet to come.
+
+ M. S.
+
+ July 15th, 1915.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote A: See Postscript.]
+
+
+
+
+A JOURNAL OF IMPRESSIONS IN BELGIUM
+
+
+
+
+A JOURNAL OF IMPRESSIONS IN BELGIUM
+
+[_September 25th, 1914._]
+
+
+After the painful births and deaths of I don't know how many committees,
+after six weeks' struggling with something we imagined to be Red Tape,
+which proved to be the combined egoism of several persons all
+desperately anxious to "get to the Front," and desperately afraid of
+somebody else getting there too, and getting there first, we are
+actually off. Impossible to describe the mysterious processes by which
+we managed it. I think the War Office kicked us out twice, and the
+Admiralty once, though what we were doing with the Admiralty I don't to
+this day understand. The British Red Cross kicked us steadily all the
+time, on general principles; the American snubbed us rather badly; what
+the French said to us I don't remember, and I can't think that we
+carried persistency so far as to apply to the Russian and the Japanese.
+Many of our scheme perished in their own vagueness. Others, vivid and
+adventurous, were checked by the first encounter with the crass
+reality. At one time, I remember, we were to have sent out a detachment
+of stalwart Amazons in khaki breeches who were to dash out on to the
+battle-field, reconnoitre, and pick up the wounded and carry them away
+slung over their saddles. The only difficulty was to get the horses. But
+the author of the scheme--who had bought her breeches--had allowed for
+that. The horses were to be caught on the battle-field; as the wounded
+and dead dropped from their saddles the Amazons were to leap into them
+and ride off. On this system "remounts" were also to be supplied.
+Whenever a horse was shot dead under its rider, an Amazon was to dash up
+with another whose rider had been shot dead. It was all perfectly simple
+and only needed a little "organization." For four weeks the lure of the
+battle-field kept our volunteers dancing round the War Office and the
+Red Cross Societies, and for four weeks their progress to the Front was
+frustrated by Lord Kitchener. Some dropped off disheartened, but others
+came on, and a regenerated committee dealt with them. Finally the thing
+crystallized into a Motor Ambulance Corps. An awful sanity came over the
+committee, chastened by its sufferings, and the volunteers, under
+pressure, definitely renounced the battle-field. Then somebody said,
+"Let's help the Belgian refugees." From that moment our course was
+clear. Everybody was perfectly willing that we should help the refugees,
+provided we relinquished all claim on the wounded. The Belgian Legation
+was enchanted. It gave passports to a small private commission of
+inquiry under our Commandant to go out to Belgium and send in a report.
+At Ostend the commission of inquiry whittled itself down to the one
+energetic person who had taken it out. And before we knew where we were
+our Ambulance Corps was accepted by the Belgian Red Cross.
+
+Only we had not got the ambulances.
+
+And though we had got some money, we had not got enough. This was really
+our good luck, for it saved us from buying the wrong kind of motor
+ambulance car. But at first the blow staggered us. Then, by some abrupt,
+incalculable turn of destiny, the British Red Cross, which had kicked us
+so persistently, came to our help and gave us all the ambulances we
+wanted.
+
+And we are off.
+
+There are thirteen of us: The Commandant, and Dr. Haynes and Dr. Bird
+under him; and Mrs. Torrence, a trained nurse and midwife, who can drive
+a motor car through anything, and take it to bits and put it together
+again; Janet McNeil, also an expert motorist, and Ursula Dearmer and
+Mrs. Lambert, Red Cross emergency nurses; Mr. Grierson, Mr. Foster and
+Mr. Riley, stretcher-bearers, and two chauffeurs and me. I don't know
+where I come in. But they've called me the Secretary and Reporter, which
+sounds very fine, and I am to keep the accounts (Heaven help them!) and
+write the Commandant's reports, and toss off articles for the daily
+papers, to make a little money for the Corps. We've got some already,
+raised by the Commandant's Report and Appeal that we published in the
+_Daily Telegraph_ and _Daily Chronicle_. I shall never forget how I
+sprinted down Fleet Street to get it in in time, four days before we
+started.
+
+And we have landed at Ostend.
+
+I'll confess now that I dreaded Ostend more than anything. We had been
+told that there were horrors upon horrors in Ostend. Children were being
+born in the streets, and the state of the bathing-machines where the
+refugees lived was unspeakable. I imagined the streets of Ostend crowded
+with refugee women bearing children, and the Digue covered with the
+horrific bathing-machines. On the other hand, Ostend was said to be the
+safest spot in Europe. No Germans there. No Zeppelins. No bombs.
+
+And we found the bathing-machines planted out several miles from the
+town, almost invisible specks on a vanishing shore-line. The refugees we
+met walking about the streets of Ostend were in fairly good case and
+bore themselves bravely. But the town had been bombarded the night
+before and our hotel had been the object of very special attentions. We
+chose it (the "Terminus") because it lay close to the landing-stage and
+saved us the trouble of going into the town to look for quarters. It was
+under the same roof as the railway station, where we proposed to leave
+our ambulance cars and heavy luggage. And we had no difficulty whatever
+in getting rooms for the whole thirteen of us. There was no sort of
+competition for rooms in that hotel. I said to myself, "If Ostend ever
+is bombarded, this railway station will be the first to suffer. And the
+hotel and the railway station are one." And when I was shown into a
+bedroom with glass windows all along its inner wall and a fine glass
+front looking out on to the platforms under the immense glass roof of
+the station, I said, "If this hotel is ever bombarded, what fun it will
+be for the person who sleeps in this bed between these glass windows."
+
+We were all rather tired and hungry as we met for dinner at seven
+o'clock. And when we were told that all lights would be put out in the
+town at eight-thirty we only thought that a municipality which was
+receiving all the refugees in Belgium must practise _some_ economy, and
+that, anyway, an hour and a half was enough for anybody to dine in; and
+we hoped that the Commandant, who had gone to call on the English
+chaplain at the Grand Hotel Littoral, would find his way back again to
+the peaceful and commodious shelter of the "Terminus."
+
+He did find his way back, at seven-thirty, just in time to give us a
+chance of clearing out, if we chose to take it. The English chaplain, it
+seemed, was surprised and dismayed at our idea of a suitable hotel, and
+he implored us to fly, instantly, before a bomb burst in among us (this
+was the first we had heard of the bombardment of the night before). The
+Commandant put it to us as we sat there: Whether would we leave that
+dining-room at once and pack our baggage all over again, and bundle out,
+and go hunting for rooms all through Ostend with the lights out, and
+perhaps fall into the harbour; or stay where we were and risk the
+off-chance of a bomb? And we were all very tired and hungry, and we had
+only got to the soup, and we had seen (and smelt) the harbour, so we
+said we'd stay where we were and risk it.
+
+And we stayed. A Taube hovered over us and never dropped its bomb.
+
+
+[_Saturday, 26th._]
+
+When we compared notes the next morning we found that we had all gone
+soundly to sleep, too tired to take the Taube seriously, all except our
+two chauffeurs, who were downright annoyed because no bomb had entered
+their bedroom. Then we all went out and looked at the little hole in the
+roof of the fish market, and the big hole in the hotel garden, and
+thought of bombs as curious natural phenomena that never had and never
+would have any intimate connection with _us_.
+
+And for five weeks, ever since I knew that I must certainly go out with
+this expedition, I had been living in black funk; in shameful and
+appalling terror. Every night before I went to sleep I saw an
+interminable spectacle of horrors: trunks without heads, heads without
+trunks, limbs tangled in intestines, corpses by every roadside, murders,
+mutilations, my friends shot dead before my eyes. Nothing I shall ever
+see will be more ghastly than the things I have seen. And yet, before a
+possibly-to-be-bombarded Ostend this strange visualizing process
+ceases, and I see nothing and feel nothing. Absolutely nothing; until
+suddenly the Commandant announces that he is going into the town, by
+himself, to _buy a hat_, and I get my first experience of real terror.
+
+For the hats that the Commandant buys when he is by himself--there are
+no words for them.
+
+This morning the Corps begins to realize its need of discipline. First
+of all, our chauffeurs have disappeared and can nowhere be found. The
+motor ambulances languish in inactivity on Cockerill's Wharf. We find
+one chauffeur and set him to keep guard over a tin of petrol. We _know_
+the ambulances can't start till heaven knows when, and so, first Mrs.
+Lambert, our emergency nurse, then, I regret to say, our Secretary and
+Reporter make off and sneak into the Cathedral. We are only ten minutes,
+but still we are away, and Mrs. Torrence, our trained nurse, is ready
+for us when we come back. We are accused bitterly of sight-seeing. (We
+had betrayed the inherent levity of our nature the day before, on the
+boat, when we looked at the sunset.) Then the Secretary and Reporter,
+utterly intractable, wanders forth ostensibly to look for the
+Commandant, who has disappeared, but really to get a sight of the motor
+ambulances on Cockerill's Wharf. And Mrs. Torrence is ready again for
+the Secretary, convicted now of sight-seeing. And I have seen no
+Commandant, and no motor ambulances and no wharf. (Unbearable thought,
+that I may never, absolutely never, see Cockerill's Wharf!) It is really
+awful this time, because the President of the Belgian Red Cross is
+waiting to get the thirteen of us to the Town Hall to have our passports
+_vises_. And the Commandant is rounding up his Corps, and Ursula Dearmer
+is heaven knows where, and Mrs. Lambert only somewhere in the middle
+distance, and Mrs. Torrence's beautiful eyes are blazing at the
+slip-sloppiness of it all. Things were very different at the ----
+Hospital, where she was trained.
+
+Only the President remains imperturbable.
+
+For, after all this fuming and fretting, the President isn't quite ready
+himself, or perhaps the Town Hall isn't ready, and we all stroll about
+the streets of Ostend for half an hour. And the Commandant goes off by
+himself, to buy that hat.
+
+It is a terrible half-hour. But after all, he comes back without it,
+judging it better to bear the ills he has.
+
+Very leisurely, and with an immense consumption of time, we stroll and
+get photographed for our passports. Then on to the Town Hall, and then
+to the Military Depot for our _Laissez-passer_, and then to the Hotel
+Terminus for lunch. And at one-thirty we are off.
+
+Whatever happens, whatever we see and suffer, nothing can take from us
+that run from Ostend to Ghent.
+
+We go along a straight, flat highway of grey stones, through flat, green
+fields and between thin lines of trees--tall and slender and delicate
+trees. There are no hedges. Only here and there a row of poplars or
+pollard willows is flung out as a screen against the open sky. This
+country is formed for the very expression of peace. The straight flat
+roads, the straight flat fields and straight tall trees stand still in
+an immense quiet and serenity. We pass low Flemish houses with white
+walls and red roofs. Their green doors and shutters are tall and slender
+like the trees, the colours vivid as if the paint had been laid on
+yesterday. It is all unspeakably beautiful and it comes to me with the
+natural, inevitable shock and ecstasy of beauty. I am going straight
+into the horror of war. For all I know it may be anywhere, here, behind
+this sentry; or there, beyond that line of willows. I don't know. I
+don't care. I cannot realize it. All that I can see or feel at the
+moment is this beauty. I look and look, so that I may remember it.
+
+Is it possible that I am enjoying myself?
+
+I dare not tell Mrs. Torrence. I dare not tell any of the others. They
+seem to me inspired with an austere sense of duty, a terrible integrity.
+They know what they are here for. To me it is incredible that I should
+be here.
+
+I am in Car 1., sitting beside Tom, the chauffeur; Mrs. Torrence is on
+the other side of me. Tom disapproves of these Flemish roads. He cannot
+see that they are beautiful. They will play the devil with his tyres.
+
+I am reminded unpleasantly that our Daimler is not a touring car but a
+motor ambulance and that these roads will jolt the wounded most
+abominably.
+
+There are straggling troops on the road now. At the nearest village all
+the inhabitants turn out to cheer us. They cry out "_Les Anglais!_" and
+laugh for joy. Perhaps they think that if the British Red Cross has come
+the British Army can't be far behind. But when they hear that we are
+Belgian Red Cross they are gladder than ever. They press round us. It is
+wonderful to them that we should have come all the way from England
+"_pour les Belges!_" Somehow the beauty of the landscape dies before
+these crowding, pressing faces.
+
+We pass through Bruges without seeing it. I have no recollection
+whatever of having seen the Belfry. We see nothing but the Canal (where
+we halt to take in petrol) and more villages, more faces. And more
+troops.
+
+Half-way between Bruges and Ghent an embankment thrown up on each side
+of the road tells of possible patrols and casual shooting. It is the
+first visible intimation that the enemy may be anywhere.
+
+A curious excitement comes to you. I suppose it is excitement, though it
+doesn't feel like it. You have been drunk, very slightly drunk with the
+speed of the car. But now you are sober. Your heart beats quietly,
+steadily, but with a little creeping, mounting thrill in the beat. The
+sensation is distinctly pleasurable. You say to yourself, "It is coming.
+Now--or the next minute--perhaps at the end of the road." You have one
+moment of regret. "After all, it would be a pity if it came too soon,
+before we'd even begun our job." But the thrill, mounting steadily,
+overtakes the regret. It is only a little thrill, so far (for you don't
+really believe that there is any danger), but you can imagine the thing
+growing, growing steadily, till it becomes ecstasy. Not that you imagine
+anything at the moment. At the moment you are no longer an observing,
+reflecting being; you have ceased to be aware of yourself; you exist
+only in that quiet, steady thrill that is so unlike any excitement that
+you have ever known. Presently you get used to it. "What a fool I should
+have been if I hadn't come. I wouldn't have missed this run for the
+world."
+
+I forget myself so far as to say this to Mrs. Torrence. My voice doesn't
+sound at all like the stern voice of duty. It is the voice of somebody
+enjoying herself. I am behaving exactly as I behaved this morning at
+Ostend; and cannot possibly hope for any sympathy from Mrs. Torrence.
+
+But Mrs. Torrence has unbent a little. She has in fact been unbending
+gradually ever since we left Ostend. There is a softer light in her
+beautiful eyes. For she is not only a trained nurse but an expert
+motorist; and a Daimler is a Daimler even when it's an ambulance car.
+From time to time remarks of a severely technical nature are exchanged
+between her and Tom. Still, up till now, nothing has passed to indicate
+any flagging in the relentless spirit of the ---- Hospital.
+
+The next minute I hear that the desire of Mrs. Torrence's heart is to
+get into the greatest possible danger--and to get out of it.
+
+The greatest possible danger is to fall into the hands of the Uhlans. I
+feel that I should be very glad indeed to get out of it, but that I'm
+not by any means so keen on getting in. I say so. I confess frankly
+that I'm afraid of Uhlans, particularly when they're drunk.
+
+But Mrs. Torrence is not afraid of anything. There is no German living,
+drunk or sober, who could break her spirit. Nothing dims for her that
+shining vision of the greatest possible danger. She does not know what
+fear is.
+
+I conceive an adoration for Mrs. Torrence, and a corresponding distaste
+for myself. For I do know what fear is. And in spite of the little
+steadily-mounting thrill, I remember distinctly those five weeks of
+frightful anticipation when I knew that I must go out to the War; the
+going to bed, night after night, drugged with horror, black horror that
+creeps like poison through your nerves; the falling asleep and
+forgetting it; the waking, morning after morning, with an energetic and
+lucid brain that throws out a dozen war pictures to the minute like a
+ghastly cinema show, till horror becomes terror; the hunger for
+breakfast; the queer, almost uncanny revival of courage that follows its
+satisfaction; the driving will that strengthens as the day goes on and
+slackens its hold at evening. I remember one evening very near the end;
+the Sunday evening when the Commandant dropped in, after he had come
+back from Belgium. We were stirring soup over the gas stove in the
+scullery--you couldn't imagine a more peaceful scene--when he said,
+"They are bringing up the heavy siege guns from Namur, and there is
+going to be a terrific bombardment of Antwerp, and I think it will be
+very interesting for you to see it." I remember replying with passionate
+sincerity that I would rather die than see it; that if I could nurse the
+wounded I would face any bombardment you please to name; but to go and
+look on and make copy out of the sufferings I cannot help--I couldn't
+and I wouldn't, and that was flat. And I wasn't a journalist any more
+than I was a trained nurse.
+
+I can still see the form of the Commandant rising up on the other side
+of the scullery stove, and in his pained, uncomprehending gaze and in
+the words he utters I imagine a challenge. It is as if he said, "Of
+course, if you're _afraid_"--(haven't I told him that I _am_ afraid?).
+
+The gage is thrown down on the scullery floor. I pick it up. And that is
+why I am here on this singular adventure.
+
+Thus, for the next three kilometres, I meditate on my cowardice. It is
+all over as if it had never been, but how can I tell that it won't come
+back again? I can only hope that when the Uhlans appear I shall behave
+decently. And this place that we have come to is Ecloo. We are not very
+far from Ghent.
+
+A church spire, a few roofs rising above trees. Then many roofs all
+together. Then the beautiful grey-white foreign city.
+
+As we run through the streets we are followed by cyclists; cyclists
+issue from every side-street and pour into our road; cyclists rise up
+out of the ground to follow us. We don't realize all at once that it is
+the ambulance they are following. Bowing low like racers over their
+handle-bars, they shoot past us; they slacken pace and keep alongside,
+they shoot ahead; the cyclists are most fearfully excited. It dawns on
+us that they are escorting us; that they are racing each other; that
+they are bringing the news of our arrival to the town. They behave as if
+we were the vanguard of the British Army.
+
+We pass the old Military Hospital--_Hopital Militaire_ No. I.--and
+presently arrive at the Flandria Palace Hotel, which is _Hopital
+Militaire_ No. II. The cyclists wheel off, scatter and disappear. The
+crowd in the Place gathers round the porch of the hotel to look at the
+English Ambulance.
+
+We enter. We are received by various officials and presented to Madame
+F., the head of the Red Cross nursing staff. There is some confusion,
+and Mrs. Torrence finds herself introduced as the Secretary of the
+English Committee. Successfully concealed behind the broadest back in
+the Corps, which belongs to Mr. Grierson, I have time to realize how
+funny we all are. Everybody in the hospital is in uniform, of course.
+The nurses of the Belgian Red Cross wear white linen overalls with the
+brassard on one sleeve, and the Red Cross on the breasts of their
+overalls, and over their foreheads on the front of their white linen
+veils. The men wear military or semi-military uniforms. We had never
+agreed as to our uniform, and some of us had had no time to get it, if
+we had agreed. Assembled in the vestibule, we look more like a party of
+refugees, or the cast of a Barrie play, than a field ambulance corps.
+Mr. Grierson, the Chaplain, alone wears complete khaki, in which he is
+indistinguishable from any Tommy. The Commandant, obeying some
+mysterious inspiration, has left his khaki suit behind. He wears a
+Norfolk jacket and one of his hats. Mr. Foster in plain clothes, with a
+satchel slung over his shoulders, has the air of an inquiring tourist.
+Mrs. Torrence and Janet McNeil in short khaki tunics, khaki putties, and
+round Jaeger caps, and very thick coats over all, strapped in with
+leather belts, look as if they were about to sail on an Arctic
+expedition; I was told to wear dark blue serge, and I wear it
+accordingly; Ursula Dearmer and Mrs. Lambert are in normal clothes. But
+the amiable officials and the angelic Belgian ladies behave as if there
+was nothing in the least odd about our appearance. They remember only
+that we are English and that it is now six o'clock and that we have had
+no tea. They conceive this to be the most deplorable fate that can
+overtake the English, and they hurry us into the great kitchen to a
+round table, loaded with cake and bread-and-butter and enormous bowls of
+tea. The angelic beings in white veils wait on us. We are hungry and we
+think (a pardonable error) that this meal is hospital supper; after
+which some work will surely be found for us to do.
+
+We are shown to our quarters on the third floor. We expect two bare
+dormitories with rows of hard beds, which we are prepared to make
+ourselves, besides sweeping the dormitories, and we find a fine suite of
+rooms--a mess-room, bedrooms, dressing-rooms, bathrooms--and hospital
+orderlies for our _valets de chambre_.
+
+We unpack, sit round the mess-room and wait for orders. Perhaps we may
+all be sent down into the kitchen to wash up. Personally, I hope we
+shall be, for washing up is a thing I can do both quickly and well. It
+is now seven o'clock.
+
+At half-past we are sent down into the kitchen, not to wash up, but, if
+you will believe it, to dine. And more hospital orderlies wait on us at
+dinner.
+
+The desire of our hearts is to do _something_, if it is only to black
+the boots of the angelic beings. But no, there is nothing for us to do.
+To-morrow, perhaps, the doctors and stretcher-bearers will be busy. We
+hear that only five wounded have been brought into the hospital to-day.
+They have no ambulance cars, and ours will be badly needed--to-morrow.
+But to-night, no.
+
+We go out into the town, to the Hotel de la Poste, and sit outside the
+cafe and drink black coffee in despair. We find our chauffeurs doing the
+same thing. Then we go back to our sumptuous hotel and so, dejectedly,
+to bed. Aeroplanes hover above us all night.
+
+
+[_Sunday, 27th._]
+
+We hang about waiting for orders. They may come at any moment. Meanwhile
+this place grows incredible and fantastic. Now it is an hotel and now it
+is a military hospital; its two aspects shift and merge into each other
+with a dream-like effect. It is a huge building of extravagant design,
+wearing its turrets, its balconies, its very roofs, like so much
+decoration. The gilded legend, "Flandria Palace Hotel," glitters across
+the immense white facade. But the Red Cross flag flies from the front
+and from the corners of the turrets and from the balconies of the long
+flank facing south. You arrive under a fan-like porch that covers the
+smooth slope of the approach. You enter your hotel through mahogany
+revolving doors. A colossal Flora stands by the lift at the foot of the
+big staircase. Unaware that this is no festival of flowers, the poor
+stupid thing leans forward, smiling, and holds out her garland to the
+wounded as they are carried past. Nobody takes any notice of her. The
+great hall of the hotel has been stripped bare. All draperies and
+ornaments have disappeared. The proprietor has disappeared, or goes
+about disguised as a Red Cross officer. The grey mosaic of floors and
+stairs is cleared of rugs and carpeting; the reading-room is now a
+secretarial bureau; the billiard-room is an operating theatre; the great
+dining-hall and the reception-rooms and the bedrooms are wards. The army
+of waiters and valets and chambermaids has gone, and everywhere there
+are surgeons, ambulance men, hospital orderlies and the Belgian nurses
+with their white overalls and red crosses. And in every corridor and on
+every staircase and in every room there is a mixed odour, bitter and
+sweet and penetrating, of antiseptics and of ether. When the ambulance
+cars come up from the railway stations and the battle-fields, the last
+inappropriate detail, the mahogany revolving doors, will disappear, so
+that the wounded may be carried through on their stretchers.
+
+I confess to a slight, persistent fear of _seeing_ these wounded whom I
+cannot help. It is not very active, it has left off visualizing the
+horror of bloody bandages and mangled bodies. But it's there; it waits
+for me in every corridor and at the turn of every stair, and it makes me
+loathe myself.
+
+We have news this morning of a battle at Alost, a town about fifteen
+kilometres south-east of Ghent. The Belgians are moving forty thousand
+men from Antwerp towards Ghent, and heavy fighting is expected near the
+town. If we are not in the thick of it, we are on the edge of the thick.
+
+They have just told us an awful thing. Two wounded men were left lying
+out on the battle-field all night after yesterday's fighting. The
+military ambulances did not fetch them. Our ambulance was not sent out.
+There are all sorts of formalities to be observed before it can go. We
+haven't got our military passes yet. And our English Red Cross brassards
+are no use. We must have Belgian ones stamped with the Government stamp.
+And these things take time.
+
+Meanwhile we, who have still the appearance of a disorganized Cook's
+tourist party, are beginning to realize each other, the first step to
+realizing ourselves. We have come from heaven knows where to live
+together here heaven knows for how long. The Commandant and I are
+friends; Mrs. Torrence and Janet McNeil are friends; Dr. Haynes and Dr.
+Bird are evidently friends; our chauffeurs, Bert and Tom, are bound to
+fraternize professionally; we and they are all right; but these pairs
+were only known to each other a week or two ago, and some of the
+thirteen never met at all till yesterday. An unknown fourteenth is
+coming to-day. We are five women and nine men. You might wonder how, for
+all social purposes, we are to sort ourselves? But the idea, sternly
+emphasized by Mrs. Torrence, is that we have no social purposes. We are
+neither more nor less than a strictly official and absolutely impersonal
+body, held together, not by the ordinary affinities of men and women,
+but by a common devotion and a common aim. Differences, if any should
+exist, will be sunk in the interest of the community. Probabilities that
+rule all human intercourse, as we have hitherto known it, will be
+temporarily suspended in our case. But we shall gain more than we lose.
+Insignificant as individuals, as a corps we share the honour and
+prestige of the Military Authority under which we work. We have visions
+of a relentless discipline commanding and controlling us. A cold glory
+hovers over the Commandant as the vehicle of this transcendent power.
+
+When the Power has its way with us it will take no count of friendships
+or affinities. It will set precedence at naught. It will say to itself,
+"Here are two field ambulance cars and fourteen people. Five out of
+these fourteen are women, and what the devil are they doing in a field
+ambulance?" And it will appoint two surgeons, who will also serve as
+stretcher-bearers, to each car; it will set our trained nurse, Mrs.
+Torrence, in command of the untrained nurses in one of the wards of the
+Military Hospital No. II.; the Hospital itself will find suitable
+feminine tasks for Ursula Dearmer and Mrs. Lambert; while Janet McNeil
+and the Secretary will be told off to work among the refugees. And until
+more stretcher-bearers are wanted the rest of us will be nowhere. If
+nothing can be found for our women in the Hospital they will be sent
+home.
+
+It seems inconceivable that the Power, if it is anything like Lord
+Kitchener, can decide otherwise.
+
+Odd how the War changes us. I, who abhor and resist authority, who
+hardly know how I am to bring myself to obey my friend the Commandant,
+am enamoured of this Power and utterly submissive. I realize with
+something like a thrill that we are in a military hospital under
+military orders; and that my irrelevant former self, with all that it
+has desired or done, must henceforth cease (perhaps irrevocably) to
+exist. I contemplate its extinction with equanimity. I remember that one
+of my brothers was a Captain in the Gunners, that another of them fought
+as a volunteer in the first Boer War; that my uncle, Captain Hind, of
+the Bengal Fusiliers, fought in the Mutiny and in the Crimean War, and
+his son at Chitral, and that I have one nephew in Kitchener's Army and
+one in the West Lancashire Hussars; and that three generations of solid
+sugar-planters and ship-owners cannot separate me from my forefathers,
+who seem to have been fighting all the time. (At the moment I have
+forgotten my five weeks' blue funk.)
+
+Mrs. Torrence's desire for discipline is not more sincere than mine.
+Meanwhile the hand that is to lick us into shape hovers over us and does
+not fall. We wait expectantly in the mess-room which is to contain us.
+
+It was once the sitting-room of a fine suite. A diminutive vestibule
+divides it from the corridor. You enter through double doors with muffed
+glass panes in a wooden partition opposite the wide French windows
+opening on the balcony. A pale blond light from the south fills the
+room. Its walls are bare except for a map of Belgium, faced by a print
+from one of the illustrated papers representing the King and Queen of
+the Belgians. Of its original furnishings only a few cane chairs and a
+settee remain. These are set back round the walls and in the window.
+Long tables with marble tops, brought up from what was once the hotel
+restaurant, enclose three sides of a hollow square, like this:
+
+ ==================================
+ || ||
+ || ||
+ || ||
+ || ||
+
+Round these we group ourselves thus: the Commandant in the middle of the
+top table in the window, between Mrs. Torrence and Ursula Dearmer; Dr.
+Haynes and Dr. Bird, on the other side of Ursula Dearmer; the
+chauffeurs, Tom and Bert, round the corner at the right-hand side table;
+I am round the other corner at the left-hand side table, by Mrs.
+Torrence, and Janet McNeil is on my right, and on hers are Mrs. Lambert
+and Mr. Foster and the Chaplain. Mr. Riley sits alone on the inside
+opposite Mrs. Torrence.
+
+This rather quiet and very serious person interests me. He doesn't say
+anything, and you wonder what sort of consciousness goes on under the
+close-cropped, boyish, black velvet hair. Nature has left his features a
+bit unfinished, the further to baffle you.
+
+All these people are interesting, intensely interesting and baffling, as
+men and women are bound to be who have come from heaven knows where to
+face heaven knows what. Most of them are quite innocently unaware. They
+do not know that they are interesting, or baffling either. They do not
+know, and it has not occurred to them to wonder, how they are going to
+affect each other or how they are going to behave. Nobody, you would
+say, is going to affect the Commandant. When he is not dashing up and
+down, driven by his mysterious energy, he stands apart in remote and
+dreamy isolation. His eyes, when they are not darting brilliantly in
+pursuit of the person or the thing he needs, stand apart too in a blank,
+blue purity, undarkened by any perception of the details that may
+accumulate under his innocent nose. He has called this corps into being,
+gathered these strange men and women up with a sweep of his wing and
+swept them almost violently together. He doesn't know how any of us are
+going to behave. He has taken for granted, with his naive and
+heart-rending trust in the beauty of human nature, that we are all going
+to behave beautifully. He is absorbed in his scheme. Each one of us
+fits into it at some point, and if there is anything in us left over it
+is not, at the moment, his concern.
+
+Yet he himself has margins about him and a mysterious hinterland not to
+be confined or accounted for by any scheme. He alone of us has the air,
+buoyant, restless, and a little vague, of being in for some tremendous
+but wholly visionary adventure.
+
+When I look at him I wonder again what this particular adventure is
+going to do to him, and whether he has, even now, any vivid sense of the
+things that are about to happen. I remember that evening in my scullery,
+and how he talked about the German siege-guns as if they were details in
+some unreal scene, the most interesting part, say, of a successful
+cinematograph show.
+
+But they are really bringing up those siege-guns from Namur.
+
+And the Commandant has brought four women with him besides me. I confess
+I was appalled when I first knew that they would be brought.
+
+Mrs. Torrence, perhaps--for she is in love with danger,[1] and she is of
+the kind whom no power, military or otherwise, can keep back from their
+desired destiny.
+
+But why little Janet McNeil?[2] She is the youngest of us, an
+eighteen-year-old child who has followed Mrs. Torrence, and will follow
+her if she walks straight into the German trenches. She sits beside me
+on my right, ready for anything, all her delicate Highland beauty
+bundled up in the kit of a little Arctic explorer, utterly determined,
+utterly impassive. Her small face, under the woolly cap that defies the
+North Pole, is nearly always grave; but it has a sudden smile that is
+adorable.
+
+And the youngest but one, Ursula Dearmer, who can't be so much
+older--Mr. Riley's gloom and the Commandant's hinterland are nothing to
+the mystery of this young girl. She looks as if she were not yet
+perfectly awake, as if it would take considerably more than the
+siege-guns of Namur to rouse her. She moves about slowly, as if she were
+in no sort of hurry for the adventure. She has slow-moving eyes, with
+sleepy, drooping eyelids that blink at you. She has a rather sleepy,
+rather drooping nose. Her shoulders droop; her small head droops,
+slightly, half the time. If she were not so slender she would be rather
+like a pretty dormouse half-recovering from its torpor. You insist on
+the determination of her little thrust-out underlip, only to be
+contradicted by her gentle and delicately-retreating chin.
+
+In our committee-room, among a band of turbulent female volunteers, all
+clamouring for the firing-line, Ursula Dearmer, dressed very simply,
+rather like a senior school-girl, and accompanied by her mother, had a
+most engaging air of submission and docility. If anybody breaks out into
+bravura it will not be Ursula Dearmer.
+
+This thought consoles me when I think of the last solemn scenes in that
+committee-room and of the pledges, the frightfully sacred pledges, I
+gave to Ursula Dearmer's mother. As a result of this responsibility I
+see myself told off to the dreary duty of conducting Ursula Dearmer back
+to Dover at the moment when things begin to be really thick and
+thrilling. And I deplore the Commandant's indiscriminate hospitality to
+volunteers.
+
+Mrs. Lambert (she must surely be the next youngest) you can think of
+with less agitation, in spite of her youth, her charming eyes and the
+recklessly extravagant quantity of her golden hair. For she is an
+American citizen, and she has a husband (also an American citizen) in
+Ghent, and her husband has a high-speed motor-car, and if the Germans
+should ever advance upon this city he can be relied upon to take her
+out of it before they can possibly get in. Besides, even in the German
+lines American citizens are safe.
+
+We are all suffering a slight tension. The men, who can see no reason
+why the ambulance should not have been sent out last night, are restless
+and abstracted and impatient for the order to get up and go. No wonder.
+They have been waiting five weeks for their chance.
+
+There is Dr. Haynes, whose large dark head and heavy shoulders look as
+if they sustained the whole weight of an intolerable world. His
+features, designed for sensuous composure, brood in a sad and sulky
+resignation to the boredom of delay.
+
+His friend, Dr. Bird, the young man with the head of an enormous cherub
+and the hair of a blond baby, hair that _will_ fall in a shining lock on
+his pink forehead, Dr. Bird has an air of boisterous preparation, as if
+the ambulance were a picnic party and he was responsible for the
+champagne.
+
+Mr. Foster, the inquiring tourist, looks a little anxious, as if he were
+preoccupied with the train he's got to catch.
+
+Bert, the chauffeur, sits tight with the grim assurance of a man who
+knows that the expedition cannot start without him. The chauffeur Tom
+has an expressive face. Every minute it becomes more vivid with
+humorous, contemptuous, indignant protest. It says plainly: "Well, this
+is about the rottenest show I ever was let in for. Bar none. Call
+yourself a field ambulance? Garn! And if you _are_ a field ambulance,
+who but a blanky fool would have hit upon this old blankety haunt of
+peace. It'll be the 'Ague Conference next!"
+
+But it is on the Chaplain, Mr. Grierson, that the strain is telling
+most. It shows in his pale and prominent blue eyes, and in a slight
+whiteness about his high cheek-bones. In his valiant khaki he has more
+than any of us the air of being on the eve. He is visibly bracing
+himself to a stupendous effort. He smokes a cigarette with ostentatious
+nonchalance. We all think we know these symptoms. We turn our eyes away,
+considerately, from Mr. Grierson. Which of us can say that when our turn
+comes the thought of danger will not spoil our breakfast?
+
+The poor boy squares his shoulders. He is white now round the edges of
+his lips. But he is going through with it.
+
+Suddenly he speaks.
+
+"I shall hold Matins in this room at ten o'clock every Sunday morning.
+If any of you like to attend you may."
+
+There is a terrible silence. None of us look at each other. None of us
+look at Mr. Grierson.
+
+Presently Mrs. Torrence is heard protesting that we haven't come here
+for Matins; that this is a mess-room and not a private chapel; and that
+Matins are against all military discipline.
+
+"I shall hold Matins all the same," says Mr. Grierson. His voice is
+thick and jerky. "And if anybody likes to attend, they can. That's all
+I've got to say."
+
+He gets up. He faces the batteries of unholy and unsympathetic eyes. He
+throws away the end of his cigarette with a gesture of superb defiance.
+
+He has gone through with it. He has faced the fire. He has come out, not
+quite victorious, but with his hero's honour unstained.
+
+It seemed to me awful that none of us should want his Matins. I should
+like, personally, to see him through with them. I could face the hostile
+eyes. But what I cannot face is the ceremony itself. My _moral_ was
+spoiled with too many ceremonies in my youth; ceremonies that lacked all
+beauty and sincerity and dignity. And though I am convinced of the
+beauty and sincerity and dignity of Mr. Grierson's soul I cannot kneel
+down with him and take part in the performance of his prayer. Prayer is
+either the Supreme Illusion, or the Supreme Act, the pure and naked
+surrender to Reality, and attended by such sacredness and shyness that
+you can accomplish it only when alone or lost in a multitude that prays.
+
+But why is there no Victoria Cross for moral courage?
+
+(Dr. Wilson has come. He looks clever and nice.)
+
+Our restlessness increases.
+
+
+[_11 a.m._]
+
+I have seen one of them. As I went downstairs this morning, two men
+carrying a stretcher crossed the landing below. I saw the outline of the
+wounded body under the blanket, and the head laid back on the pillow.
+
+It is impossible, it is inconceivable, that I should have been afraid of
+seeing this. It is as if the wounded man himself absolved me from the
+memory and the reproach of fear.
+
+I stood by the stair-rail to let them pass. There was some difficulty
+about turning at the stair-head. Mr. Riley was there. He came forward
+and took one end of the stretcher and turned it. He was very quiet and
+very gentle. You could see that he did the right thing by instinct. And
+I saw his face, and knew what had brought him here.
+
+And here on the first landing is another wounded. His face is deformed
+by an abscess from a bullet in his mouth. It gives him a terrible look,
+half savage, wholly suffering. He sits there and cannot speak.
+
+Mr. Riley is the only one of us who has found anything to do. So
+presently we go out to get our military passes. We stroll miserably
+about the town, oppressed with a sense of our futility. We buy
+cigarettes for the convalescents.
+
+And at noon no orders have come for us.
+
+They come just as we are sitting down to lunch. Our ambulance car is to
+go to Alost at once. The Commandant is arrested in the act of cutting
+bread. Dr. Bird is arrested in the act of eating it. We are all arrested
+in our several acts. As if they had been criminal acts, we desist
+suddenly. The men get up and look at each other. It is clear that they
+cannot all go. Mr. Grierson looks at the Commandant. His face is a
+little white and strained, as it was this morning when he announced
+Matins for ten o'clock.
+
+The Commandant looks at Dr. Bird and tells him that he may go if he
+likes. His tone is admirably casual; it conveys no sense of the
+magnificence of his renunciation. He looks also at Mr. Grierson and Mr.
+Foster. The lot of honour falls upon these three.
+
+They set out, still with their air of a youthful picnic party. Dr. Bird
+is more than ever the boisterous young man in charge of the champagne.
+
+I am contented so long as Ursula Dearmer and Mrs. Lambert and Mrs.
+Torrence and Janet McNeil and the Commandant do not go yet. To anybody
+who knows the Commandant he is bound to be a prominent figure in the
+terrible moving pictures made by fear. Smitten by some great idea, he
+dashes out of cover as the shrapnel is falling. He wanders, wrapped in a
+happy dream, into the enemies' trenches. He mingles with their lines of
+communication as I have seen him mingle with the traffic at the junction
+of Chandos Street and the Strand. If you were to inform him of a patrol
+of Uhlans coming down the road, he would only say, "I see no Uhlans,"
+and continue in their direction. It is inconceivable to his optimism
+that he should encounter Uhlans in a world so obviously made for peace
+and righteousness.
+
+So that it is a relief to see somebody else (whom I do not know quite so
+well) going first. Time enough to be jumpy when the Commandant and the
+women go forth on the perilous adventure.
+
+That is all very well. But I am jumpy all the same. By the mere fact
+that they are going out first Mr. Grierson and Mr. Foster have suddenly
+become dear and sacred. Their lives, their persons, their very
+clothes--Dr. Bird's cheerful face, which is so like an overgrown
+cherub's, his blond, gold lock of infantile hair, Mr. Grierson's pale
+eyes that foresee danger, his not too well fitting khaki coat--have
+acquired suddenly a priceless value, the value of things long seen and
+long admired. It is as if I had known them all my life; as if life will
+be unendurable if they do not come back safe.
+
+It is not very endurable now. Of all the things that can happen to a
+woman on a field ambulance, the worst is to stay behind. To stay behind
+with nothing in the world to do but to devise a variety of dreadful
+deaths for Tom, the chauffeur, and Dr. Bird and Mr. Grierson and Mr.
+Foster. To know nothing except that Alost is being bombarded and that it
+is to Alost that they are going.
+
+And the others who have been left behind are hanging about in gloom,
+disgusted with their fate. Mrs. Torrence and Janet McNeil are beginning
+to ask themselves what they are here for. To go through the wards is
+only to be in the way of the angelic beings with red crosses on their
+breasts and foreheads who are already somewhat in each other's way.
+Mrs. Torrence and the others do, however, go into the wards and talk to
+the wounded and cheer them up. I sit in the deserted mess-room, and look
+at the lunch that Tom and Dr. Bird and Mr. Grierson should have eaten
+and were obliged to leave behind. I would give anything to be able to go
+round the wards and cheer the wounded up. I wonder whether there is
+anything I could conceivably do for the wounded that would not bore them
+inexpressibly if I were to do it. I frame sentence after sentence in
+strange and abominable French, and each, apart from its own inherent
+absurdity, seems a mockery of the wounded. You cannot go to an immortal
+hero and grin at him and say _Comment allez-vous?_ and expect him to be
+cheered up, especially when you know yourself to be one of a long
+procession of women who have done the same.
+
+I abandon myself to my malady of self-distrust.
+
+It is at its worst when Jean and Max, the convalescent orderlies, come
+in to remove the ruins of our mess. They are pathetic and adorable with
+their close-cropped heads in the pallor of their convalescence (Jean is
+attired in a suit of yellowish linen and Max in striped flannels).
+Jean's pallor is decorated (there is no other word for it) with
+blue-grey eyes, black eyebrows, black eyelashes and a little black
+moustache. He is martial and ardent and alert. But the pallor of Max is
+unredeemed; it is morbid and profound. It has invaded his whole being.
+His eyelids and his small sensitive mouth are involved; and his round
+dark eyes have the queer grey look of some lamentable wonder and
+amazement. But neither horror nor discipline have spoiled his engaging
+air--the air of a very young _collegien_ who has broken loose and got
+into this Military Hospital by mistake.
+
+I do not know whether intuition is a French or Belgian gift. Jean and
+Max are not Belgian but French, and they have it to a marvellous degree.
+They seemed to know in an instant what was the matter with the English
+lady; and they set about curing the malady. I have seldom seen such
+perfect tact and gentleness as was then displayed by those two hospital
+orderlies, Max and Jean. They had been wounded not so very long ago. But
+they think nothing of that. They intimate that if I insist on helping
+them with their plates and dishes they will be wounded, and more
+severely, in their honour.
+
+We converse.
+
+It is in conversation that they are most adorable. They gaze at you with
+candid, innocent eyes; not a quiver of a lip or an eyelash betrays to
+you the outrageous quality of your French. The behaviour of your
+sentences would cause a scandal in a private boarding school for young
+ladies, it is so fantastically incorrect. But Max and Jean receive each
+phrase with an imperturbable and charming gravity. By the subtlest
+suggestion of manner they assure you that you speak with fluency and
+distinction, that yours is a very perfect French. Only their severe
+attentiveness warns you of the strain you are putting on them.
+
+Max lingered long after Jean had departed to his kitchen. And presently
+he gave up his secret. He is a student, and they took him from his
+College (his course unfinished) to fight for his country. When the War
+broke out his mother went mad with the horror of it. He told me this
+quite simply, as if he were relating a common incident of war-time.
+Then, with a little air of mystery, he signed to me to follow him along
+the corridor. He stopped at a closed door and showed me a name inscribed
+in thick ornamental Gothic characters on a card tacked to the panel:
+
+ Prosper Panne.
+
+Max is not his real name. It is the name that Prosper Panne has taken to
+disguise himself while he is a servant. Prosper Panne--_il est ecrivain,
+journaliste_. He writes for the Paris papers. He looked at me with his
+amazed, pathetic eyes, and pointed with a finger to his breast to
+assure me that he is he, Prosper Panne.
+
+And in the end I asked him whether it would bore the wounded frightfully
+if I took them some cigarettes? (I laid in cigarettes this morning as a
+provision for this desolate afternoon.)
+
+And--dear Prosper Panne--so thoroughly did he understand my malady, that
+he himself escorted me. It is as if he knew the _peur sacre_ that
+restrains me from flinging myself into the presence of the wounded.
+Soft-footed and graceful, turning now and then with his instinct of
+protection, the orderly glides before me, smoothing the way between my
+shyness and this dreaded majesty of suffering.
+
+I followed him (with my cigarettes in my hand and my heart in my mouth)
+into the big ward on the ground floor.
+
+I don't want to describe that ward, or the effect of those rows upon
+rows of beds, those rows upon rows of bound and bandaged bodies, the
+intensity of physical anguish suggested by sheer force of
+multiplication, by the diminishing perspective of the beds, by the clear
+light and nakedness of the great hall that sets these repeated units of
+torture in a world apart, a world of insufferable space and agonizing
+time, ruled by some inhuman mathematics and given over to pure
+transcendent pain. A sufficiently large ward full of wounded really
+does leave an impression very like that. But the one true thing about
+this impression is its transcendence. It is utterly removed from and
+unlike anything that you have experienced before. From the moment that
+the doors have closed behind you, you are in another world, and under
+its strange impact you are given new senses and a new soul. If there is
+horror here you are not aware of it as horror. Before these multiplied
+forms of anguish what you feel--if there be anything of _you_ left to
+feel--is not pity, because it is so near to adoration.
+
+If you are tired of the burden and malady of self, go into one of these
+great wards and you will find instant release. You and the sum of your
+little consciousness are not things that matter any more. The lowest and
+the least of these wounded Belgians is of supreme importance and
+infinite significance. You, who were once afraid of them and of their
+wounds, may think that you would suffer for them now, gladly; but you
+are not allowed to suffer; you are marvellously and mercilessly let off.
+In this sudden deliverance from yourself you have received the ultimate
+absolution, and their torment is your peace.
+
+In the big ward very few of the men were well enough to smoke. So we
+went to the little wards where the convalescents are, Max leading.
+
+I do not think that Max has received absolution yet. It is quite evident
+that he is proud of his _entree_ into this place and of his intimacy
+with the wounded, of his role of interpreter.
+
+But how perfectly he does it! He has no Flemish, but through his subtle
+gestures even the poor Flamand, who has no French, understands what I
+want to say to him and can't. He turns this modest presentation of
+cigarettes into a high social function, a trifle ambitious, perhaps, but
+triumphantly achieved.
+
+All that was over by about three o'clock, when the sanctuary cast us
+out, and Max went back to his empty kitchen and became Prosper Panne
+again, and remembered that his mother was mad; and I went to the empty
+mess-room and became my miserable self and remembered that the Field
+Ambulance was still out, God knows where.
+
+The mess-room windows look south over the railway lines towards the
+country where the fighting is. From the balcony you can see the lines
+where the troop trains run, going north-west and south-east. The
+Station, the Post Office, the Telegraph and Telephone Offices are here,
+all in one long red-brick building that bounds one side of the _Place_.
+It stands at right angles to the Flandria and stretches along opposite
+its flank. It has a flat roof with a crenelated parapet. Grass grows on
+the roof. No guns are mounted there, for Ghent is an open city. But in
+German tactics bombardment by aeroplane doesn't seem to count, and our
+situation is more provocative now than the Terminus Hotel at Ostend.
+
+Beyond the straight black railway lines are miles upon miles of flat
+open country, green fields and rows of poplars, and little woods, and
+here and there a low rise dark with trees. Under our windows the white
+street runs south-eastward, and along it scouting cars and cycling corps
+rush to the fighting lines, and military motor-cars hurry impatiently,
+carrying Belgian staff officers; the ammunition wagons lumber along, and
+the troops march in a long file, to disappear round the turn of the
+road. That is where the others have gone, and I'd give everything I
+possess to go with them.
+
+They have come back, incredibly safe, and have brought in four wounded.
+
+There was a large crowd gathered in the _Place_ to see them come, a
+crowd that has nothing to do and that lives from hour to hour on this
+spectacle of the wounded. Intense excitement this time, for one of the
+four wounded is a German. He was lying on a stretcher. No sooner had
+they drawn him out of the ambulance than they put him back again. (No
+Germans are taken in at our Hospital; they are all sent to the old
+_Hopital Militaire_ No. I.) He thrust up his poor hand and grabbed the
+hanging strap to raise himself a little in his stretcher, and I saw him.
+He was ruddy and handsome. His thick blond hair stood up stiff from his
+forehead. His little blond moustache was turned up and twisted fiercely
+like the Kaiser's. The crowd booed at him as he lay there. His was a
+terrible pathos, unlike any other. He was so defiant and so helpless.
+And there's another emotion gone by the board. You simply could not hate
+him.
+
+Later in the evening both cars were sent out, Car No. 1 with the
+Commandant and, if you will believe it, Ursula Dearmer. Heavens! What
+can the Military Power be thinking of? Car No. 2 took Dr. Wilson and
+Mrs. Torrence. The Military Power, I suppose, has ordained this too. And
+when I think of Mrs. Torrence's dream of getting into the greatest
+possible danger, I am glad that the Commandant is with Ursula Dearmer.
+We pledged our words, he and I, that danger and Ursula Dearmer should
+never meet.
+
+They all come back, impossibly safe. They are rather like children after
+the party, too excited to give a lucid and coherent tale of what they've
+done. My ambulance Day-Book stores the stuff from which reports and
+newspaper articles are to be made. I note that Car No. 1 has brought
+three wounded to Hospital I., and that Car No. 2 has brought four
+wounded to Hospital II., also that a dum-dum bullet has been found in
+the hand of one of the three. There is a considerable stir among the
+surgeons over this bullet. They are vaguely gratified at its being found
+in our hospital and not the other.
+
+Little Janet McNeil and Mr. Riley and all the others who were left
+behind have gone to bed in hopeless gloom. Even the bullet hasn't roused
+them beyond the first tense moment.
+
+I ask for ink, and dear Max has given me all his in his own ink-pot.
+
+
+[_Monday, 28th._]
+
+We have been here a hundred years.
+
+Car No. 1 went out at eight-thirty this morning, with the Commandant and
+Dr. Bird and Ursula Dearmer and Mr. Grierson and a Belgian Red Cross
+guide. With Tom, the chauffeur, that makes six. Tom's face, as he sees
+this party swarming on his car, is expressive of tumultuous passions.
+Disgust predominates.
+
+Their clothes seem stranger than ever by contrast with the severe
+military khaki of the car. Dr. Bird has added to his civilian costume a
+Belgian forage cap with a red tassel that hangs over his forehead. It
+was given to him yesterday by way of homage to his courage and his
+personal charm. But it makes him horribly vulnerable. The Chaplain,
+standing out from the rest of the Corps in complete khaki, is an even
+more inevitable mark for bullets. Tom stares at everybody with eyes of
+violent inquiry. He still evidently wants to know whether we call
+ourselves a field ambulance. He starts his car with movements of
+exasperation and despair. We are to judge what his sense of discipline
+must be since he consents to drive the thing at all.
+
+The Commandant affects not to see Tom. Perhaps he really doesn't see
+him.
+
+It is just as well that he can't see Mrs. Torrence, or Janet McNeil or
+Mr. Riley or Dr. Haynes. They are overpowered by this tragedy of being
+left behind. Under it the discipline of the ---- Hospital breaks down.
+The eighteen-year-old child is threatening to commit suicide or else go
+home. She regards the two acts as equivalent. Mr. Riley's gloom is now
+so awful that he will not speak when he is spoken to. He looks at me
+with dumb hostility, as if he thought that I had something to do with
+it. Dr. Haynes's melancholy is even more heart-rending, because it is
+gentle and unexpressed.
+
+I try to console them. I point out that it is a question of arithmetic.
+There are only two cars and there are fourteen of us. Fourteen into two
+won't go, even if you don't count the wounded. And, after all, we
+haven't been here two days. But it is no good. We have been here a
+hundred years, and we have done nothing. There isn't anything to do.
+There are not enough wounded to go round. We turn our eyes with longing
+towards Antwerp, so soon to be battered by the siege-guns from Namur.
+
+And Bert, poor Bert! he has crawled into Ambulance Car No. 2 where it
+stands outside in the hospital yard, and he has hidden himself under the
+hood.
+
+Mrs. Lambert is a little sad, too. But we are none of us very sorry for
+Mrs. Lambert. We have gathered that her husband is a journalist, and
+that he is special correspondent at the front for some American paper.
+He has a motor-car which we assume rashly to be the property of his
+paper. He is always dashing off to the firing-line in it, and Mrs.
+Lambert is always at liberty to go with him. She is mistaken if she
+thinks that her sorrow is in any way comparable with ours.
+
+But if there are not enough wounded to go round in Ghent, there are
+more refugees than Ghent can deal with. They are pouring in by all the
+roads from Alost and Termonde. Every train disgorges multitudes of them
+into the _Place_.
+
+This morning I went to the Matron, Madame F., and told her I wasn't much
+good, but I'd be glad if she could give me some work. I said I supposed
+there was some to be done among the refugees.
+
+Work? Among the refugees? They could employ whole armies of us. There
+are thousands of refugees at the Palais des Fetes. I had better go there
+and see what is being done. Madame will give me an introduction to her
+sister-in-law, Madame F., the Presidente of the Comite des Dames, and to
+her niece, Mademoiselle F., who will take me to the Palais.
+
+And Madame adds that there will soon be work for all of us in the
+Hospital. Yes: even for the untrained.
+
+Life is once more bearable.
+
+But the others won't believe it. They say there are three hundred nurses
+in the hospital.
+
+And the fact remains that we have two young surgeons cooling their heels
+in the corridors, and a fully-trained nurse tearing her hair out, while
+the young girl, Ursula Dearmer, takes the field.
+
+And I think of the poor little dreamy, guileless Commandant in his
+conspicuous car, and I smile at her in secret, thanking Heaven that it's
+Ursula Dearmer and not Mrs. Torrence who is at his side.
+
+The ambulance has come back from Alost with two or three wounded and
+some refugees. The Commandant is visibly elated, elated out of all
+proportion to the work actually done. Ursula Dearmer is not elated in
+the very least, but she is wide-awake. Her docility has vanished with
+her torpor. She and the Commandant both look as if something extremely
+agreeable had happened to them at Alost. But they are reticent. We
+gather that Ursula Dearmer has been working with the nuns in the Convent
+at Alost, where the wounded were taken before the ambulance cars removed
+them to Ghent. It sounded very safe.
+
+But the Commandant dashed into my room after luncheon. His face was
+radiant, almost ecstatic. He was like a child who has rushed in to tell
+you how ripping the pantomime was.
+
+"We've been _under fire_!"
+
+But I was very angry. Coldly and quietly angry. I felt like that when I
+was ten years old and piloting my mother through the thick of the
+traffic between Guildhall and the Bank, and she broke from me and was
+all but run over. I don't quite know what I said to him, but I think I
+said he ought to be ashamed of himself. For it seems that Ursula
+Dearmer was with him.
+
+I remembered how Ursula Dearmer's mother had come to me in the
+committee-room and asked me how near we proposed to go to the
+firing-line, and whether her daughter would be in any danger, and how I
+said, first of all, that there wasn't any use pretending that there
+wouldn't be danger, and that the chances were--and how the Commandant
+had intervened at that moment to assure her that danger there would be
+none. With a finger on the map of France and Belgium he traced the
+probable, the inevitable, course of the campaign; and in light, casual
+tones which allayed all anxiety, he explained how, as the Germans
+advanced upon any point, we should retire upon our base. As for the
+actual field-work, with one gesture he swept the whole battle-line into
+the distance, and you saw it as an infinitely receding tide that left
+its wrack strewn on a place of peace where the ambulance wandered at its
+will, secure from danger. The whole thing was done with such compelling
+and convincing enthusiasm that Ursula Dearmer's mother adopted more and
+more the humble attitude of a mere woman who has failed to grasp the
+conditions of modern warfare. Ursula Dearmer herself looked more docile
+than ever, though a little bored, and very sleepy.
+
+And I remembered how when it was all over Ursula Dearmer's mother
+implored me, if there _was_ any danger, to see that Ursula Dearmer was
+sent home, and how I promised that whatever happened Ursula Dearmer
+would be safe, clinching it with a frightfully sacred inner vow, and
+saying to myself at the same time what a terrible nuisance this young
+girl is going to be. I saw myself at the moment of parting, standing on
+the hearthrug, stiff as a poker with resolution, and saying solemnly,
+"I'll keep my word!"
+
+And here was the Commandant informing me with glee that a shell had
+fallen and burst at Ursula Dearmer's feet.
+
+He was so pleased, and with such innocent and childlike pleasure, that I
+hadn't the heart to tell him that there wasn't much resemblance between
+those spaces of naked peace behind the receding battle-line and the
+narrow streets of a bombarded village. I only said that I should write
+to Ursula Dearmer's mother and ask her to release me from my promise. He
+said I would do nothing of the kind. I said I would. And I did. And the
+poor Commandant left me, somewhat dashed, and not at all pleased with
+me.
+
+It seems that the shell burst, not exactly at Ursula Dearmer's feet, but
+ten yards away from her. It came romping down the street with immense
+impetus and determination; and it is not said of Ursula Dearmer that she
+was much less coy in the encounter. She took to shell-fire "like a duck
+to water."
+
+Dr. Bird told us this. Ursula Dearmer herself was modest, and claimed no
+sort of intimacy with the shell that waked her up. She was as nice as
+possible about it. But all the same, into the whole Corps (that part of
+it that had been left behind) there has crept a sneaking envy of her
+luck. I feel it myself. And if _I_ feel it, what must Mrs. Torrence and
+Janet feel?
+
+Mrs. Lambert, anyhow, has had nothing to complain of so far. Her husband
+took her to Alost in his motor-car; I mean the motor-car which is the
+property of his paper.
+
+In the afternoon Mademoiselle F. called to take me to the Palais des
+Fetes. We stopped at a shop on the way to buy the Belgian Red Cross
+uniform--the white linen overall and veil--which you must wear if you
+work among the refugees there.
+
+Madame F. is very kind and very tired. She has been working here since
+early morning for weeks on end. They are short of volunteers for the
+service of the evening meals, and I am to work at the tables for three
+hours, from six to nine P.M. This is settled, and a young Red Cross
+volunteer takes me over the Palais. It is an immense building, rather
+like Olympia. It stands away from the town in open grounds like the
+Botanical Gardens, Regent's Park. It is where the great Annual Shows
+were held and the vast civic entertainments given. Miles of country
+round Ghent are given up to market-gardening. There are whole fields of
+begonias out here, brilliant and vivid in the sun. They will never be
+sold, never gathered, never shown in the Palais des Fetes. It is the
+peasants, the men and women who tilled these fields, and their children
+that are being shown here, in the splendid and wonderful place where
+they never set foot before.
+
+There are four thousand of them lying on straw in the outer hall, in a
+space larger than Olympia. They are laid out in rows all round the four
+walls, and on every foot of ground between; men, women and children
+together, packed so tight that there is barely standing-room between any
+two of them. Here and there a family huddles up close, trying to put a
+few inches between it and the rest; some have hollowed out a place in
+the straw or piled a barrier of straw between themselves and their
+neighbours, in a piteous attempt at privacy; some have dragged their own
+bedding with them and are lodged in comparative comfort. But these are
+the very few. The most part are utterly destitute, and utterly
+abandoned to their destitution. They are broken with fatigue. They have
+stumbled and dropped no matter where, no matter beside whom. None turns
+from his neighbour; none scorns or hates or loathes his fellow. The
+rigidly righteous _bourgeoise_ lies in the straw breast to breast with
+the harlot of the village slum, and her innocent daughter back to back
+with the parish drunkard. Nothing matters. Nothing will ever matter any
+more.
+
+They tell you that when darkness comes down on all this there is hell.
+But you do not believe it. You can see nothing sordid and nothing ugly
+here. The scale is too vast. Your mind refuses this coupling of infamy
+with transcendent sorrow. It rejects all images but the one image of
+desolation which is final and supreme. It is as if these forms had no
+stability and no significance of their own; as if they were locked
+together in one immense body and stirred or slept as one.
+
+Two or three figures mount guard over this litter of prostrate forms.
+They are old men and old women seated on chairs. They sit upright and
+immobile, with their hands folded on their knees. Some of them have
+fallen asleep where they sit. They are all rigid in an attitude of
+resignation. They have the dignity of figures that will endure, like
+that, for ever. They are Flamands.
+
+This place is terribly still. There is hardly any rustling of the straw.
+Only here and there the cry of a child fretting for sleep or for its
+mother's breast. These people do not speak to each other. Half of them
+are sound asleep, fixed in the posture they took when they dropped into
+the straw. The others are drowsed with weariness, stupefied with sorrow.
+On all these thousands of faces there is a mortal apathy. Their ruin is
+complete. They have been stripped bare of the means of life and of all
+likeness to living things. They do not speak. They do not think. They do
+not, for the moment, feel. In all the four thousand--except for the
+child crying yonder--there is not one tear.
+
+And you who look at them cannot speak or think or feel either, and you
+have not one tear. A path has been cleared through the straw from door
+to door down the middle of the immense hall, a narrower track goes all
+round it in front of the litters that are ranged under the walls, and
+you are taken through and round the Show. You are to see it all. The
+dear little Belgian lady, your guide, will not let you miss anything.
+"_Regardez, Mademoiselle, ces deux petites filles. Qu'elles sont jolies,
+les pauvres petites._" "_Voici deux jeunes maries, qui dorment. Regardez
+l'homme; il tient encore la main de sa femme._"
+
+You look. Yes. They are asleep. He is really holding her hand. "_Et ces
+quatre petits enfants qui ont perdu leur pere et leur mere. C'est
+triste, n'est-ce pas, Mademoiselle?_"
+
+And you say, "_Oui, Mademoiselle. C'est bien triste._"
+
+But you don't mean it. You don't feel it. You don't know whether it is
+"_triste_" or not. You are not sure that "_triste_" is the word for it.
+There are no words for it, because there are no ideas for it. It is a
+sorrow that transcends all sorrow that you have ever known. You have a
+sort of idea that perhaps, if you can ever feel again, this sight will
+be worse to remember than it is to see. You can't believe what you see;
+you are stunned, stupefied, as if you yourself had been crushed and
+numbed in the same catastrophe. Only now and then a face upturned (a
+face that your guide hasn't pointed out to you) surging out of this
+incredible welter of faces and forms, smites you with pity, and you feel
+as if you had received a lacerating wound in sleep.
+
+Little things strike you, though. Already you are forgetting the faces
+of the two little girls and of the young husband and wife holding each
+other's hands, and of the four little children who have lost their
+father and mother, but you notice the little dog, the yellow-brown
+mongrel terrier, that absurd little dog which belongs to all nations and
+all countries. He has obtained possession of the warm centre of a pile
+of straw and is curled up on it fast asleep. And the Flemish family who
+brought him, who carried him in turn for miles rather than leave him to
+the Germans, they cannot stretch themselves on the straw because of him.
+They have propped themselves up as best they may all round him, and they
+cannot sleep, they are too uncomfortable.
+
+More thousands than there is room for in the straw are fed three times a
+day in the inner hall, leading out of this dreadful dormitory. All round
+the inner hall and on the upper story off the gallery are rooms for
+washing and dressing the children and for bandaging sore feet and
+attending to the wounded. For there are many wounded among the refugees.
+This part of the Palais is also a hospital, with separate wards for men,
+for women and children and for special cases.
+
+Late in the evening M. P---- took the whole Corps to see the Palais des
+Fetes, and I went again. By night I suppose it is even more "_triste_"
+than it was by day. In the darkness the gardens have taken on some
+malign mystery and have given it to the multitudes that move there, that
+turn in the winding paths among ghostly flowers and bushes, that
+approach and recede and approach in the darkness of the lawns. Blurred
+by the darkness and diminished to the barest indications of humanity,
+their forms are more piteous and forlorn than ever; their faces, thrown
+up by the darkness, more awful in their blankness and their pallor. The
+scene, drenched in darkness, is unearthly and unintelligible. You cannot
+account for it in saying to yourself that these are the refugees, and
+everybody knows what a refugee is; that there is War--and everybody
+knows what war is--in Belgium; and that these people have been shelled
+out of their homes and are here at the Palais des Fetes, because there
+is no other place for them, and the kind citizens of Ghent have
+undertaken to house and feed them here. That doesn't make it one bit
+more credible or bring you nearer to the secret of these forms. You who
+are compelled to move with them in the sinister darkness are more than
+ever under the spell that forbids you and them to feel. You are deadened
+now to the touch of the incarnate.
+
+On the edge of the lawn, near the door of the Palais, some ghostly roses
+are growing on a ghostly tree. Your guide, M. P----, pauses to tell you
+their names and kind. It seems that they are rare.
+
+Several hundred more refugees have come into the Palais since the
+afternoon. They have had to pack them a little closer in the straw.
+Eight thousand were fed this evening in the inner hall.
+
+In the crush I get separated from M. P---- and from the Corps. I see
+some of them in the distance, the Commandant and Ursula Dearmer and Mrs.
+Lambert and M. P----. I do not feel as if I belonged to them any more. I
+belong so much to the stunned sleepers in the straw who cannot feel.
+
+Nice Dr. Wilson comes across to me and we go round together, looking at
+the sleepers. He says that nothing he has seen of the War has moved him
+so much as this sight. He wishes that the Kaiser could be brought here
+to see what he has done. And I find myself clenching my hands tight till
+it hurts, not to suppress my feelings--for I feel nothing--but because I
+am afraid that kind Dr. Wilson is going to talk. At the same time, I
+would rather he didn't leave me just yet. There is a sort of comfort and
+protection in being with somebody who isn't callous, who can really
+feel.
+
+But Dr. Wilson isn't very fluent, and presently he leaves off talking,
+too.
+
+Near the door we pass the family with the little yellow-brown dog. All
+day the little dog slept in their place. And now that they are trying to
+sleep he will not let them. The little dog is wide awake and walking
+all over them. And when you think what it must have cost to bring him--
+
+_C'est triste, n'est-ce pas?_
+
+As we left the gardens M. P---- gathered two ghostly roses, the last
+left on their tree, and gave one to Mrs. Lambert and one to me. I felt
+something rather like a pang then. Heaven knows why, for such a little
+thing.
+
+Conference in our mess-room. M. ----, the Belgian Red Cross guide who
+goes out with our ambulances, is there. He is very serious and
+important. The Commandant calls us to come and hear what he has to say.
+It seems it had been arranged that one of our cars should be sent
+to-morrow morning to Termonde to bring back refugees. But M. ---- does
+not think that car will ever start. He says that the Germans are now
+within a few miles of Ghent, and may be expected to occupy it to-morrow
+morning, and that instead of going to Termonde to-morrow we had very
+much better pack up and retreat to Bruges to-night. There are ten
+thousand Germans ready to march into Ghent.
+
+M. ---- is weighed down by the thought of his ten thousand Germans. But
+the Commandant is not weighed down a bit. On the contrary, a pleasant
+exaltation comes upon him. It comes upon the whole Corps, it comes even
+upon me. We refuse to believe in his ten thousand Germans. M. ----
+himself cannot swear to them. We refuse to pack up. We refuse to retreat
+to Bruges to-night. Time enough for agitation in the morning. We prefer
+to go to bed. M. ---- shrugs his shoulders, as much as to say that he
+has done his duty and if we are all murdered in our beds it isn't his
+fault.
+
+Does M. ---- really believe in the advance of the ten thousand? His face
+is inscrutable.
+
+
+[_Tuesday, 29th._]
+
+No Germans in Ghent. No Germans reported near Ghent.
+
+Madame F. and her daughter smile at the idea of the Germans coming into
+Ghent. They will never come, and if they do come they will only take a
+little food and go out again. They will never do any harm to Ghent.
+Namur and Liege and Brussels, if you like, and Malines, and Louvain, and
+Termonde and Antwerp (perhaps); but Ghent--why should they? It is
+Antwerp they are making for, not Ghent.
+
+And Madame represents the mind of the average Gantois. It is placid,
+incredulous, stolidly at ease, superbly inhospitable to disagreeable
+ideas. No Gantois can conceive that what has been done to the citizens
+of Termonde would be done to him. _C'est triste_--what has been done to
+the citizens of Termonde, but it doesn't shake his belief in the
+immunity of Ghent.
+
+Which makes M. ----'s behaviour all the more mysterious. _Why_ did he
+try to scare us so? Five theories are tenable:
+
+(1.) M. ---- did honestly believe that ten thousand Germans would come
+in the morning and take our ambulance prisoner. That is to say, he
+believed what nobody else believed.
+
+(2.) M. ---- was scared himself. He had no desire to be taken quite so
+near the firing-line as the English Ambulance seemed likely to take him;
+so that the departure of the English Ambulance would not be wholly
+disagreeable to M. ----. (This theory is too far-fetched.)
+
+(3.) M. ---- was the agent of the Military Power, commissioned to test
+the nerve of the English Ambulance. ("Stood fire, have they? Give 'em a
+_real_ scare, and see how they behave.")
+
+(4.) M. ---- is a psychologist and made this little experiment on the
+English Ambulance himself.
+
+(5.) He is a humorist and was simply "pulling its leg."
+
+The three last theories are plausible, but all five collapse before the
+inscrutability of Monsieur's face.
+
+Germans or no Germans, one ambulance car started at five in the morning
+for Quatrecht, somewhere between Ghent and Brussels, to fetch wounded
+and refugees. The other went, later, to Zele. I am not very clear as to
+who has gone with them, but Mrs. Torrence, Mrs. Lambert, Janet McNeil
+and Dr. Haynes and Mr. Riley have been left behind.
+
+It is their third day of inactivity, and three months of it could not
+have devastated them more. They have touched the very bottom of suicidal
+gloom. Three months hence their state of mind will no doubt appear in
+all its absurdity, but at the moment it is too piteous for words. When
+you think what they were yesterday and the day before, there is no
+language to express the crescendo of their despair. I came upon Mr.
+Riley this morning, standing by the window of the mess-room, and
+contemplating the facade of the railway station. (It is making a pattern
+on our brains.) I tried to soothe him. I said it was hard lines--beastly
+hard lines--and told him to cheer up--there'd be heaps for him to do
+presently. And he turned from me like a man who has just buried his
+first-born.
+
+Janet McNeil is even more heart-rending, sunk in a chair with her hands
+stuck into the immense pockets of her overcoat, her flawless and
+impassive face tilted forward as her head droops forlornly to her
+breast. She is such a child that she can see nothing beyond to-day, and
+yesterday and the day before that. She is going back to-morrow. Her
+valour and energy are frustrated and she is wounded in her honour. She
+is conscious of the rottenness of putting on a khaki tunic, and winding
+khaki putties round and round her legs to hang about the Hospital doing
+nothing. And she had to sell her motor bicycle in order to come out. Not
+that that matters in the least. What matters is that we are here, eating
+Belgian food and quartered in a Belgian Military Hospital, and
+"swanking" about with Belgian Red Cross brassards (stamped) on our
+sleeves, and doing nothing for the Belgians, doing nothing for anybody.
+We are not justifying our existence. We are frauds.
+
+I tell the poor child that she cannot possibly feel as big a fraud as I
+do; that there was no earthly reason why I should have come, and none
+whatever why I should remain.
+
+And then, to my amazement, I learn that I am envied. It's all right for
+me. My job is clearly defined, and nobody can take it from me. I haven't
+got to wind khaki putties round my legs for nothing.
+
+I should have thought that the child was making jokes at my expense but
+for the extreme purity and candour of her gaze. Incredible that there
+should exist an abasement profounder than my own. I have hidden my tunic
+and breeches in my hold-all. I dare not own to having brought them.
+
+Down in the vestibule I encounter Mrs. Torrence in khaki. Mrs. Torrence
+yearning for her wounded. Mrs. Torrence determined to get to her wounded
+at any cost. She is not abased or dejected, but exalted, rather. She is
+ready to go to the President or to the Military Power itself, and demand
+her wounded from them. Her beautiful eyes demand them from Heaven
+itself.
+
+I cannot say there are not enough wounded to go round, but I point out
+for the fifteenth time that the trouble is there are not enough
+ambulance cars to go round.
+
+But it is no use. It does not explain why Heaven should have chosen
+Ursula Dearmer and caused shells to bound in her direction, and have
+rejected Mrs. Torrence. The Military Power that should have ordered
+these things has abandoned us to the caprice of Heaven.
+
+Of course if Mrs. Torrence was a saint she would fold her hands and bow
+her superb little head before the decrees of Heaven; but she is only a
+mortal woman, born with the genius of succour and trained to the last
+point of efficiency; so she rages. The tigress, robbed of her young, is
+not more furiously inconsolable than Mrs. Torrence.
+
+It is not Ursula Dearmer's fault. She is innocent of supplanting Mrs.
+Torrence. The thing simply happened. More docile than determined,
+unhurrying and uneager, and only half-awake, she seems to have rolled
+into Car No. 1 with Heaven's impetus behind her. Like the shell at
+Alost, it is her luck.
+
+And on the rest of us our futility and frustration weigh like lead. The
+good Belgian food has become bitter in our mouths. When we took our
+miserable walk through Ghent this morning we felt that _l'Ambulance
+Anglaise_ must be a mark for public hatred and derision because of us. I
+declare I hardly dare go into the shops with the Red Cross brassard on
+my arm. I imagine sardonic raillery in the eyes of every Belgian that I
+meet. We do not think the authorities will stand it much longer; they
+will fire us out of the _Hopital Militaire_ No. II.
+
+But no, the authorities do not fire us out. Impassive in wisdom and
+foreknowledge, they smile benignly on our agitation. They compliment the
+English Ambulance on the work it has done already. They convey the
+impression that but for the English Ambulance the Belgian Army would be
+in a bad way. Mademoiselle F. insists that the Hospital will soon be
+overflowing with the wounded from Antwerp and that she can find work
+even for me. It is untrue that there are three hundred nurses in the
+Hospital. There are only three hundred nurses in all Belgium. They pile
+it on so that we are more depressed than ever.
+
+Janet McNeil is convinced that they think we are no good and that they
+are just being angels to us because they are sorry for us.
+
+I break it to them very gently that I've volunteered to serve at the
+tables at the Palais des Fetes. I feel as if I had sneaked into a
+remunerative job while my comrades are starving.
+
+The Commandant is not quite as pleased as I thought he would be to hear
+of my engagement at the Palais des Fetes. He says, "It is not your
+work." I insist that my work is to do anything I can do; and that if I
+cannot dress wounds I can at least hand round bread and pour out coffee
+and wash up dishes. It is true that I am Secretary and Reporter and (for
+the time being) Treasurer to the Ambulance, and that I carry its funds
+in a leather purse belt round my body. Because I am the smallest and
+weakest member of the Corps that is the most unlikely place for the
+funds to be. It was imprudent, to say the least of it, for the Chaplain
+in his khaki, to carry them, as he did, into the firing-line. The belt,
+which fitted the Chaplain, hangs about half a yard below my waist and is
+extremely uncomfortable, but that is neither here nor there. Keeping the
+Corps' accounts only takes two hours and a half, even with Belgian and
+English money mixed, and when I've added the same column of figures ten
+times up and ten times down, to make certain it's all right (I am no
+good at accounts, but I know my weakness and guard against it, giving
+the Corps the benefit of every doubt and making good every deficit out
+of my private purse). Writing the Day-Book--perhaps half an hour. The
+Commandant's correspondence, when he has any, and reporting to the
+British Red Cross Society, when there is anything to report, another
+half-hour at the outside; and there you have only three and a half hours
+employed out of the twenty-four, even if I balanced my accounts every
+day, and I don't.
+
+True that _The Daily Chronicle_ promised to take any articles that I
+might send them from the front, but I haven't written any. You cannot
+write articles for _The Daily Chronicle_ out of nothing; at least I
+can't.
+
+The Commandant finally yields to argument and entreaty.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I do not tell him that what I really want to do is to go out with the
+Field Ambulance, and get beyond the turn of that road.
+
+I know I haven't the ghost of a chance; I know that if I had--as things
+stand at present--not being a surgeon or a trained nurse, I wouldn't
+take it, even to get there. And at the same time I know, with a superior
+certainty, that this unlikely thing will happen. This sense of certainty
+is not at all uncommon, but it is, or seems, unintelligible. You can
+only conceive it as a premonition of some unavoidable event. It is as if
+something had been looking for you, waiting for you, from all eternity
+out here; something that you have been looking for; and, when you are
+getting near, it begins calling to you; it draws your heart out to it
+all day long. You can give no account of it. All that you know about it
+is that it is unique. It has nothing to do with your ordinary
+curiosities and interests and loves; nothing to do with the thirst for
+experience, or for adventure, or for glory, or for the thrill. You can't
+"get" anything out of it. It is something hidden and secret and
+supremely urgent. Its urgency, indeed, is so great that if you miss it
+you will have missed reality itself.
+
+For me this uncanny anticipation is somehow connected with the turn of
+the south-east road. I do not see how I am ever going to get there or
+anywhere near there. But I am not uneasy or impatient any more. There is
+no hurry. The thing, whatever it is, will be irresistible, and if I
+don't go out to find it, it will find me.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Mrs. Torrence has gone, Heaven knows where. She has not been with the
+others at the Palais des Fetes. Janet McNeil and Mrs. Lambert have been
+working there for five hours, serving meals to the refugees. Ursula
+Dearmer with extreme docility has been working all the afternoon with
+the nurses.
+
+It looks as if we were beginning to settle down.
+
+Mrs. Torrence has come back. The red German pom-pom has gone from her
+cap and she wears the badge of the Belgian Motor Cyclist Corps, black
+wings on a white ground. Providence has rehabilitated himself. He has
+abased our trained nurse and expert motorist in order to exalt her. He
+fairly flung her in the path of the Colonel of (I think) the Belgian
+Motor Cyclist Corps at a moment when the Colonel found himself in a
+jibbing motor-car without a chauffeur. We gather that the Colonel was
+becoming hectic with blasphemy when she appeared and settled the little
+difficulty between him and his car. She seems to have followed it up by
+driving him then and there straight up to the firing-line to look for
+wounded.
+
+End of the adventure--she volunteered her services as chauffeur to the
+Colonel and was accepted.
+
+The Commandant has received the news with imperturbable optimism.
+
+As for her, she is appeased. She will realize her valorous dream of "the
+greatest possible danger;" and she will get to her wounded.
+
+The others have come back too. They have toiled for five hours among the
+refugees.
+
+
+[_5.30._]
+
+It is my turn now at the Palais des Fetes.
+
+It took ages to get in. The dining-hall is narrower than the
+sleeping-hall, but it extends beyond it on one side where there is a
+large door opening on the garden. But this door is closed to the public.
+You can only reach the dining-hall by going through the straw among the
+sleepers. And at this point the Commandant's optimism has broken down.
+He won't let you go in through the straw, and the clerk who controls the
+entry won't let you go in through the other door. You explain to the
+clerk that the English Ambulance being quartered in a Military Hospital,
+its rules are inviolable; it is not allowed to expose itself to the
+horrors of the straw. The clerk is not interested in the English
+Ambulance, he is not impressed by the fact that it has volunteered its
+priceless services to the Refugee Committee, and he is contemptuous of
+the orders of its Commandant. His business is to see that you go into
+the Palais through _his_ door and not through any other door. And when
+you tell him that if he will not withdraw his regulations the Ambulance
+will be compelled to withdraw its services, he replies with delicious
+sarcasm, "_Nous n'avons pas prevu ca_." In the end you are referred to
+the Secretary in his bureau. He grasps the situation and is urbanity
+itself. Provided with a special permit bearing his sacred signature, you
+are admitted by the other door.
+
+Your passage to the _Vestiaire_ takes you through the infants' room and
+along the galleries past the wards. The crowd of refugees is so great
+that beds have been put up in the galleries. You take off your outer
+garments and put on the Belgian Red Cross uniform (you have realized by
+this time that your charming white overall and veil are sanitary
+precautions).
+
+Coming down the wide wooden stairways you have a full view of the Inner
+Hall. This enormous oblong space below the galleries is the heart, the
+fervid central _foyer_ of the Palais des Fetes. At either end of it is
+an immense auditorium, tier above tier of seats, rising towards the
+gallery floors. All down each side of it, standards with triumphal
+devices are tilted from the balustrade. Banners hang from the rafters.
+
+And under them, down the whole length of the hall from auditorium to
+auditorium, the tables are set out. Bare wooden tables, one after
+another, more tables than you can count.
+
+From the door of the sleeping-hall to each auditorium, and from each
+auditorium down the line of the tables a gangway is roped off for the
+passage of the refugees.
+
+They say there are ten thousand five hundred here to-night. Beyond the
+rope-line, along the inner hall, more straw has been laid down to bed
+the overflow from the outer hall. They come on in relays to be fed. They
+are marshalled first into the seats of each auditorium, where they sit
+like the spectators of some monstrous festival and wait for their turn
+at the tables.
+
+This, the long procession of people streaming in without haste, in
+perfect order and submission, is heart-rending if you like. The
+immensity of the crowd no longer overpowers you. The barriers make it a
+steady procession, a credible spectacle. You can take it in. It is the
+thin end of the wedge in your heart. They come on so slowly that you can
+count them as they come. They have sorted themselves out. The fathers
+and the mothers are together, they lead their little children by the
+hand or push them gently before them. There is no anticipation in their
+eyes; no eagerness and no impatience in their bearing. They do not
+hustle each other or scramble for their places. It is their silence and
+submission that you cannot stand.
+
+For you have a moment of dreadful inactivity after the setting of the
+tables for the _premier service_. You have filled your bowls with black
+coffee; somebody else has laid the slices of white bread on the bare
+tables. You have nothing to do but stand still and see them file in to
+the banquet. On the banners and standards from the roof and balustrades
+the Lion of Flanders ramps over their heads. And somewhere in the back
+of your brain a song sings itself to a tune that something in your brain
+wakes up:
+
+ _Ils ne vont pas dompter
+ Le vieux lion de Flandres,
+ Tant que le lion a des dents,
+ Tant que le lion peut griffer._
+
+It is the song the Belgian soldiers sang as they marched to battle in
+the first week of August. It is only the end of September now.
+
+And somebody standing beside you says: "_C'est triste, n'est-ce pas?_"
+
+You cannot look any more.
+
+At the canteen the men are pouring out coffee from enormous enamelled
+jugs into the small jugs that the waitresses bring. This wastes your
+time and cools the coffee. So you take a big jug from the men. It seems
+to you no heavier than an ordinary teapot. And you run with it. To carry
+the largest possible jug at the swiftest possible pace is your only
+chance of keeping sane. (It isn't till it is all over that you hear the
+whisper of "_Anglaise!_" and realize how very far from sane you must
+have looked running round with your enormous jug.) You can fill up the
+coffee bowls again--the little bowls full, the big bowls only half full;
+there is more than enough coffee to go round. But there is no milk
+except for the babies. And when they ask you for more bread there is not
+enough to go twice round. The ration is now two slices of dry bread and
+a bowl of black coffee three times a day. Till yesterday there was an
+allowance of meat for soup at the mid-day meal; to-day the army has
+commandeered all the meat.
+
+But you needn't stand still any more. After the first service the bowls
+have to be cleared from the tables and washed and laid ready for the
+next. Round the great wooden tubs there is a frightful competition. It
+is who can wash and dry and carry back the quickest. You contend with
+brawny Flemish women for the first dip into the tub and the driest
+towel. Then you race round the tables with your pile of crockery, and
+then with your jug, and so on over and over again for three hours, till
+the last relay is fed and the tables are deserted. You wash up again and
+it is all over for you till six o'clock to-morrow evening.
+
+You go back to your mess-room and a ten-o'clock supper of cold coffee
+and sandwiches and Belgian current loaf eaten with butter. And in a
+nightmare afterwards Belgian refugees gather round you and pluck at your
+sleeve and cry to you for more bread: "_Une petite tranche de pain, s'il
+vous plait, mademoiselle!_"
+
+
+[_Wednesday, 30th._]
+
+No Germans, nor sign of Germans yet.
+
+Fighting is reported at Saint Nicolas, between Antwerp and Ghent. The
+Commandant has an idea. He says that if the Belgian Army has to meet the
+Germans at Saint Nicolas, so as to cut off their advance on Antwerp, the
+base hospital must be removed from Ghent to some centre or point which
+will bring the Ambulance behind the Belgian lines. He thinks that
+working from Ghent would necessarily bring it behind the German lines.
+This is assuming that the Germans coming up from the south-east will cut
+in between Saint Nicolas and Ghent.
+
+He consults the President, who apparently thinks that the base hospital
+will do very well where it is.
+
+
+[_2.30._]
+
+Mrs. Torrence brought her Colonel in to lunch. He is battered and
+grizzled, but still a fine figure in the dark-green uniform of the Motor
+Cyclist Corps. He is very polite and gallant _a la belge_ and vows that
+he has taken on Mrs. Torrence _pour toujours, pour la vie_! She diverts
+the flow of urbanity adroitly.
+
+Except the Colonel nothing noteworthy seems to have occurred to-day. The
+three hours at the Palais des Fetes were like the three hours last
+night.
+
+
+[_Thursday, October 1st._]
+
+It really isn't safe for the Commandant to go out with Ursula Dearmer.
+For her luck in the matter of bombardments continues. (He might just as
+well be with Mrs. Torrence.) They have been at Termonde. What is more,
+it was Ursula Dearmer who got them through, in spite of the medical
+military officer whose vigorous efforts stopped them at the barrier. He
+seems at one point to have shown weakness and given them leave to go on
+a little way up the road; and the little way seems to have carried them
+out of his sight and onward till they encountered the Colonel (or it may
+have been a General) in command. The Colonel (or the General) seems to
+have broken down very badly, for the car and Ursula Dearmer and the
+Commandant went on towards Termonde. Young Haynes was with them this
+time, and on the way they had picked up Mr. G. L----, War Correspondent
+to the _Daily Mail_ and _Westminster_. They left the car behind
+somewhere in a safe place where the fire from the machine-guns couldn't
+reach it. There is a street or a road--I can't make out whether it is
+inside or outside the town; it leads straight to the bridge over the
+river, which is about as wide there as the Thames at Westminster. The
+bridge is the key to the position; it has been blown up and built again
+several times in the course of the War, and the Germans are now
+entrenched beyond it. The road had been raked by their _mitrailleuses_
+the day before.
+
+It seems to have struck the four simultaneously that it would be quite a
+good thing to walk down this road on the off-chance of the machine-guns
+opening fire again. The tale told by the Commandant evokes an awful
+vision of them walking down it, four abreast, the Commandant and Mr. G.
+L---- on the outside, fairly under shelter, and Ursula Dearmer and young
+Haynes a little in front of them down the middle, where the fire comes,
+when it does come. This spectacle seems to have shaken the Commandant in
+his view of bombarded towns as suitable places of amusement for young
+girls. Young Haynes ought to have known better. You tell him that as
+long as the world endures young Haynes will be young Haynes, and if
+there is danger in the middle of the road, it is there that he will walk
+by preference. And as no young woman of modern times is going to let
+herself be outdone by young Haynes, you must expect to find Ursula
+Dearmer in the middle of the road too. You cannot suppress this
+competitive heroism of young people. The roots strike too deep down in
+human nature. In the modern young man and woman competitive heroism has
+completely forgotten its origin and is now an end in itself.
+
+And if it comes to that--how about Alost?
+
+At the mention of Alost the Commandant's face becomes childlike again in
+its utter simplicity and innocence and candour. Alost was a very
+different thing. Looking for shells at Alost, you understand, was like
+looking for shells on the seashore. At Alost Ursula Dearmer was in no
+sort of danger. For at Alost she was under the Commandant's wing (young
+Haynes hasn't got any wings, only legs to walk into the line of fire
+on). He explains very carefully that he took her under his wing
+_because_ she is a young girl and he feels responsible for her to her
+mother.
+
+(Which, oddly enough, is just how _I_ feel!)
+
+As for young Haynes, I suppose he would plead that when he and Ursula
+Dearmer walked down the middle of the road there was no firing.
+
+That seems to have been young Haynes's particular good fortune. I have
+now a perfect obsession of responsibility. I see, in one dreadful vision
+after another, the things that must happen to Ursula Dearmer under the
+Commandant's wing, and to young Haynes and the Commandant under Ursula
+Dearmer's.
+
+No wounded were found, this time, at Termonde.
+
+This little _contretemps_ with the Commandant has made me forget to
+record a far more notable event. Mrs. Torrence brought young Lieutenant
+G---- in to luncheon. He is the hero of the Belgian Motor Cyclist Corps.
+He is said to have accounted for nine Germans with his own rifle in one
+morning. The Corps has already intimated that this is the first
+well-defined specimen of a man it has yet seen in Belgium. His
+dark-green uniform fits him exceedingly well. He is tall and handsome.
+Drenched in the glamour of the greatest possible danger, he gives it off
+like a subtle essence. As he was led in he had rather the air, the
+slightly awkward, puzzled and embarrassed air, of being on show as a
+fine specimen of a man. But it very soon wore off. In the absence of the
+Commandant he sat in the Commandant's place, so magnificent a figure
+that our mess, with gaps at every table, looked like a banquet given in
+his honour, a banquet whose guests had been decimated by some
+catastrophe.
+
+Suddenly--whether it was the presence of the Lieutenant or the absence
+of the Commandant, or merely reaction from the strain of inactivity, I
+don't know, but suddenly madness came upon our mess. The mess-room was
+no longer a mess-room in a Military Hospital, but a British school-room.
+Mrs. Torrence had changed her woollen cap for a grey felt wide-awake.
+She was no longer an Arctic explorer, but the wild-western cowboy of
+British melodrama. She was the first to go mad. One moment she was
+seated decorously at the Lieutenant's right hand; the next she was
+strolling round the tables with an air of innocent abstraction, having
+armed herself in secret with the little hard round rolls supplied by
+order of the Commandant. Each little roll became a deadly _obus_ in her
+hand. She turned. Her innocent abstraction was intense as she poised
+herself to aim.
+
+With a shout of laughter Dr. Bird ducked behind the cover of his
+table-napkin.
+
+I had a sudden memory of Mrs. Torrence in command of the party at
+Ostend, a figure of austere duty, of inexorable propriety, rigid with
+the discipline of the ---- Hospital, restraining the criminal levity of
+the Red Cross volunteer who would look or dream of looking at Ostend
+Cathedral. Mrs. Torrence, like a seven-year-old child meditating
+mischief, like a baby panther at play, like a very young and very
+engaging demon let loose, is looking at Dr. Bird. He is not a Cathedral,
+but he suffered bombardment all the same. She got his range with a roll.
+She landed her shell in the very centre of his waistcoat.
+
+Her madness entered into Dr. Bird. He replied with a spirited fire which
+fell wide of her and battered the mess-room door. The orderlies
+retreated for shelter into the vestibule beyond. Jean was the first to
+penetrate the line of fire. Max followed him.
+
+Madness entered into Max. He ceased to be a hospital orderly. He became
+Prosper Panne again, the very young _collegien_, as he put down his
+dishes and glided unobtrusively into the affair.
+
+And then the young Belgian Lieutenant went mad. But he gave way by
+degrees. At first he sat up straight and stiff with polite astonishment
+before the spectacle of a British "rag." He paid the dubious tribute of
+a weak giggle to the bombardment of Dr. Bird. He was convulsed at the
+first performance of Prosper Panne. In his final collapse he was rocking
+to and fro and crowing with helpless, hysterical laughter.
+
+For with the entrance of Prosper Panne the mess-room became a scene at
+the _Folies Bergeres_. There was Mrs. Torrence, _premiere comedienne_,
+in the costume of a wild-western cowboy; there was the young Lieutenant
+himself, looking like a stage-lieutenant in the dark-green uniform of
+the Belgian Motor Cyclist Corps; and there was Prosper Panne. He began
+by picking up Mrs. Torrence's brown leather motor glove with its huge
+gauntlet, and examining it with the deliciously foolish bewilderment of
+the accomplished clown. After one or two failures, brilliantly
+improvised, he fixed it firmly on his head. The huge gauntlet, with its
+limp five fingers dangling over his left ear, became a rakish kepi with
+a five-pointed flap. Max--I mean Prosper Panne--wore it with an "_air
+impayable_." Out of his round, soft, putty-coloured face he made
+fifteen other faces in rapid succession, all incomparably absurd. He lit
+a cigarette and held it between his lower lip and his chin. The effect
+was of a miraculous transformation of those features, in which his upper
+lip disappeared altogether, his lower lip took on its functions, while
+his chin ceased to be a chin and became a lower lip. With this
+achievement Prosper Panne had his audience in the hollow of his hands.
+He could do what he liked with it. He did. He caused his motor-glove cap
+to fall from his head as if by some mysterious movement of its own. Then
+he went round the stalls and gravely and earnestly removed all our hats.
+With an air more and more "_impayable_" he wore each one of them in
+turn--the grey felt wide-awake of the wild-western cowboy, the knitted
+Jaeger head-gear of the little Arctic explorer, the dark-blue military
+cap with the red tassel assumed by Dr. Bird, even the green cap with the
+winged symbol of the young Belgian officer. By this time the young
+Belgian officer was so entirely the thrall of Prosper Panne that he
+didn't turn a hair.
+
+Flushed with success, Max rose to his top-notch. Moving slowly towards
+the open door (centre) with his back to his audience and his head turned
+towards it over his left shoulder, by some extraordinary dislocation of
+his hip-joints, he achieved the immemorial salutation of the _Folies
+Bergeres_--the last faint survival of the Old Athenian Comedy.
+
+Up till now Jean had affected to ignore the performance of his
+colleague. But under this supreme provocation he yielded to the
+Aristophanic impulse, and--_exit_ Max in the approved manner of the
+_Folies Bergeres_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It is all over. The young Belgian officer has flown away on his motor
+cycle to pot Germans; Mrs. Torrence has gone off to the field with the
+Colonel on the quest of the greatest possible danger. The Ambulance has
+followed them there.
+
+I am in the mess-room, sitting at the disordered table and gazing at the
+ruins of our mess. I hear again the wild laughter of the mess-mates; it
+mingles with the cry of the refugees in the Palais des Fetes: "_Une
+petite tranche de pain, s'il vous plait, mademoiselle!_"
+
+_C'est triste, n'est-ce pas?_
+
+In the chair by the window Max lies back with his loose boyish legs
+extended limply in front of him; his round, close-cropped head droops to
+his shoulder, his round face (the face of a very young _collegien_) is
+white, the features are blurred and inert. Max is asleep with his
+dish-cloth in his hand, in the sudden, pathetic sleep of exhaustion.
+After his brief, funny madness, he is asleep. Jean comes and looks at
+him and shakes his head. You understand from Jean that Max goes mad like
+that now and then on purpose, so that he may forget in what manner his
+mother went mad.
+
+We go quietly so as not to wake him a minute too soon, lest when he
+wakes he should remember.
+
+There is a Taube hovering over Ghent.
+
+Up there, in the clear blue sky it looks innocent, like an enormous
+greyish blond dragon-fly hovering over a pond. You stare at it,
+fascinated, as you stare at a hawk that hangs in mid-air, steadied by
+the vibration of its wings, watching its prey.
+
+You are not in the least disturbed by the watching Taube. An aeroplane,
+dropping a few bombs, is nothing to what goes on down there where the
+ambulances are.
+
+The ambulances have come back. I go out into the yard to look at them.
+They are not always nice to look at; the floors and steps would make you
+shudder if you were not past shuddering.
+
+I have found something to do. Not much, but still something. I am to
+look after the linen for the ambulances, to take away the blood-stained
+pillow-slips and blankets, and deliver them at the laundry and get clean
+ones from the linen-room. It's odd, but I'm almost foolishly elated at
+being allowed to do this. We are still more or less weighed down by the
+sense of our uselessness. Even the Chaplain, though his services as a
+stretcher-bearer have been definitely recognized--even the Chaplain
+continues to suffer in this way. He has just come to me to tell me with
+pride that he is making a good job of the stretchers he has got to mend.
+
+Then, just as I am beginning to lift up my head, the blow falls. Not one
+member of the Field Ambulance Corps is to be allowed to work at the
+Palais des Fetes, for fear of bringing fever into the Military Hospital.
+And here we are, exactly where we were at the beginning of the week,
+Mrs. Lambert, Janet McNeil and I, three women out of five, with nothing
+to do and two convalescent orderlies waiting on us. If I could please
+myself I would tuck Max up in bed and wait on _him_.
+
+In spite of the ambulance linen, this is the worst day of all for the
+wretched Secretary and Reporter. Five days in Ghent and not a thing
+done; not a line written of those brilliant articles (from the Front)
+which were to bring in money for the Corps. To have nothing to do but
+hang about the Hospital on the off-chance of the Commandant coming back
+unexpectedly and wanting a letter written; to pass the man with the
+bullet wound in his mouth a dozen times a day (he is getting very slowly
+better; his poor face was a little more human this morning); to see the
+maimed and crippled men trailing and hobbling about the hall, and the
+wounded carried in on their stretchers--dripping stretchers, agonized
+bodies, limbs rolled in bandages, blood oozing through the bandages,
+heads bound with bandages, bandages glued tight to the bone with
+blood--to see all this and be utterly powerless to help; to endure, day
+after day, the blank, blond horror of the empty mess-room; to sit before
+a marble-topped table with a bad pen, never enough paper and hardly any
+ink, and nothing at all to write about, while all the time the names of
+places, places you have not seen and never will see--Termonde, Alost,
+Quatrecht and Courtrai--go on sounding in your brain with a maddening,
+luring reiteration; to sit in a hateful inactivity, and a disgusting, an
+intolerable safety, and to be haunted by a vision of two figures,
+intensely clear on a somewhat vague background--Mrs. Torrence following
+her star of the greatest possible danger, and Ursula Dearmer wandering
+in youth and innocence among the shells; to be obliged to think of
+Ursula Dearmer's mother when you would much rather not think of her; to
+be profoundly and irrevocably angry with the guileless Commandant, whom
+at the moment you regard (it may be perversely) as the prime agent in
+this fatuous sacrifice of women's lives; to want to stop it and to be
+unable to stop it, and at the same time to feel a brute because you want
+to stop it--when _they_ are enjoying the adventure--I can only say of
+the experience that I hope there is no depth of futility deeper than
+this to come. You might as well be taken prisoner by the
+Germans--better, since that would, at least, give you something to write
+about afterwards.
+
+What's more, I'm bored.
+
+When I told the Commandant all this he looked very straight at me and
+said, "Then you'd better come with us to Termonde." So straight he
+looked that the suggestion struck me less as a _bona fide_ offer than an
+ironic reference to my five weeks' funk.
+
+I don't tell him that that is precisely what I want to do. That his
+wretched Reporter nourishes an insane ambition--not to become a Special
+Correspondent; not to career under massive headlines in the columns of
+the _Daily Mail_; not to steal a march on other War Correspondents and
+secure the one glorious "scoop" of the campaign. Not any of these sickly
+and insignificant things. But--in defiance of Tom, the chauffeur--to go
+out with the Field Ambulance as an _ambulanciere_, and hunt for wounded
+men, and in the intervals of hunting to observe the orbit of a shell and
+the manner of shrapnel in descending. To be left behind, every day, in
+an empty mess-room, with a bad pen, utterly deprived of copy or of any
+substitute for copy, and to have to construct war articles out of your
+inner consciousness, would be purgatory for a journalist. But to have a
+mad dream in your soul and a pair of breeches in your hold-all, and to
+see no possibility of "sporting" either, is the very refinement of hell.
+And your tortures will be unbearable if, at the same time, you have to
+hold your tongue about them and pretend that you are a genuine reporter
+and that all you want is copy and your utmost aim the business of the
+"scoop."
+
+After a week of it you will not be likely to look with crystal clarity
+on other people's lapses from precaution.
+
+But it would be absurd to tell him this. Ten to one he wouldn't believe
+it. He thinks I am funking all the time.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I am still very angry with him. He must know that I am very angry. I
+think that somewhere inside him he is rather angry too.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+All the same he has come to me and asked me to give him my soap. He says
+Max has taken his.
+
+I give him my soap, but--
+
+These oppressions and obsessions, the deadly anxiety, the futile
+responsibility and the boredom are too much for me. I am thinking
+seriously of going home.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the evening we--the Commandant and Janet McNeil and I--went down to
+the Hotel de la Poste, to see the War Correspondents and hear the War
+news. Mr. G. L. and Mr. M. and Mr. P. were there. And there among them,
+to my astonishment, I found Mr. Davidson, the American sculptor.
+
+The last time I saw Mr. Davidson it was in Mr. Joseph Simpson's studio,
+the one under mine in Edwardes Square. He was making a bust of
+Rabindranath Tagore; and as the great mystic poet disconcerted him by
+continually lapsing into meditation under this process, thereby emptying
+his beautiful face of all expression whatever, I had been called down
+from my studio to talk to him, so as to lure him, if possible, from
+meditation and keep his features in play. Mr. Davidson made a very fine
+bust of Rabindranath Tagore. And here he is, imperfectly disguised by
+the shortest of short beards, drawing caricatures of G. L.--G. L.
+explaining the plan of campaign to the Belgian General Staff; G. L. very
+straight and tall, the Belgian General Staff looking up to him with
+innocent, deferential faces, earnestly anxious to be taught. I am not
+more surprised at seeing Mr. Davidson here than he is at seeing me. In
+the world that makes war we have both entirely forgotten the world where
+people make busts and pictures and books. But we accept each other's
+presence. It is only a small part of the fantastic dislocation of war.
+
+Nothing could be more different from the Flandria Palace Hotel, our
+Military Hospital, than the Hotel de la Poste. It is packed with War
+Correspondents and Belgian officers. After the surgeons and the Red
+Cross nurses and their wounded, and the mysterious officials hanging
+about the porch and the hall, apparently doing nothing, after the
+English Ambulance and the melancholy inactivity of half its Corps, this
+place seems alive with a rich and virile life. It is full of live,
+exultant fighters, and of men who have their business not with the
+wounded and the dying but with live men and live things, and they have
+live words to tell about them. At least so it seems.
+
+You listen with all your ears, and presently Termonde and Alost and
+Quatrecht and Courtrai cease to be mere names for you and become
+realities. It is as if you had been taken from your prison and had been
+let loose into the world again.
+
+They are saying that there is no fighting at Saint Nicolas (the
+Commandant has been feeling about again for his visionary base
+hospital), but that the French troops are at Courtrai in great force.
+They have turned their left [?] wing round to the north-east and will
+probably sweep towards Brussels to cut off the German advance on
+Antwerp. The siege of Antwerp will then be raised. And a great battle
+will be fought outside Brussels, probably at Waterloo.
+
+WATERLOO!
+
+Mr. L. looks at you as much as to say that is what he has had up his
+sleeve all the time. The word comes from him as casually as if he spoke
+of the London and South-Western terminus. But he is alive to the power
+of its evocation, to the unsurpassable thrill. So are you. It starts the
+current in that wireless system of vibrations that travel unperishing,
+undiminished, from the dead to the living. There are not many kilometres
+between Ghent and Waterloo; you are not only within the radius of the
+psychic shock, you are close to the central batteries, and ninety-nine
+years are no more than one pulse of their vibration. Through I don't
+know how many kilometres and ninety-nine years it has tracked you down
+and found you in your one moment of response.
+
+It has a sudden steadying effect. Your brain clears. The things that
+loomed so large, the "Flandria," and the English Field Ambulance and its
+miseries, and the terrifying recklessness of its Commandant, are reduced
+suddenly to invisibility. You can see nothing but the second Waterloo.
+You forget that you have ever been a prisoner in an Hotel-Hospital. You
+understand the mystic fascination of the road under your windows, going
+south-east from Ghent to Brussels, somewhere towards Waterloo. You are
+reconciled to the incomprehensible lassitude of events. That is what we
+have all been waiting for--the second Waterloo. And we have only waited
+five days.
+
+I am certainly not going back to England.
+
+The French troops are being massed at Courtrai.
+
+Suddenly it strikes me that I have done an injustice to the Commandant.
+It is all very well to say that he brought me out here against my will.
+But did he? He said it would interest me to see the siege of Antwerp,
+and I said it wouldn't. I said with the most perfect sincerity that I'd
+die rather than go anywhere near the siege of Antwerp, or of any other
+place. And now the siege-guns from Namur are battering the forts of
+Antwerp, and down there the armies are gathering towards the second
+Waterloo, and the Commandant was right. I am extremely interested. I
+would die rather than go back to England.
+
+Is it possible that he knew me better than I knew myself?
+
+When I think that it is possible I feel a slight revulsion of justice
+towards the Commandant. After all, he brought me here. We may disagree
+about the present state of Alost and Termonde, considered as
+health-resorts for English girls, but it is pretty certain that without
+him we would none of us have got here. Where, indeed, should we have
+been and how should we have got our motor ambulances, but for his
+intrepid handling of Providence and of the Belgian Red Cross and the
+Belgian Legation? There is genius in a man who can go out without one
+car, or the least little nut or cog of a _chassis_ to his name, and
+impose himself upon a Government as the Commandant of a Motor Field
+Ambulance.
+
+Still, though I am not going back to England as a protest, I _am_ going
+to leave the Hospital Hotel for a little while. That bright idea has
+come to me just now while we are waiting for the Commandant to tear
+himself from the War Correspondents and come away. I shall get a room
+here in the Hotel de la Poste for a week, and, while we wait for
+Waterloo, I shall write some articles. The War Correspondents will tell
+me what is being done, and what has been overdone and what remains to
+do. I shall at least hear things if I can't see them. And I shall cut
+the obsession of responsibility. It'll be worse than ever if there
+really is going to be a second Waterloo.
+
+Waterloo with Ursula Dearmer and Janet in the thick of it, and Mrs.
+Torrence driving the Colonel's scouting-car!
+
+There are moments of bitterness and distortion when I see the Commandant
+as a curious psychic monster bringing up his women with him to the
+siege-guns because of some uncanny satisfaction he finds in their
+presence there. There are moods, only less perverted, when I see him
+pursuing his course because it is his course, through sheer Highland
+Celtic obstinacy; lucid flashes when he appears, blinded by the glamour
+of his dream, and innocently regardless of actuality. Is it uncanniness?
+Is it obstinacy? Is it dreamy innocence? Or is it some gorgeous streak
+of Feminism? Is it the New Chivalry, that refuses to keep women back,
+even from the firing-line? The New Romance, that gives them their share
+of divine danger? Or, since nothing can be more absurd than to suppose
+that any person acts at all times and in all circumstances on one
+ground, or necessarily on any grounds, is it a little bit of all these
+things? I am not sure that Feminism, or at any rate the New Chivalry,
+doesn't presuppose them all.
+
+The New Chivalry sees the point of its reporter's retirement to the
+Hotel de la Poste, since it has decided that journalism is my work, and
+journalism cannot flourish at the "Flandria." So we interview the nice
+fat _proprietaire_, and the _proprietaire's_ nice fat wife, and between
+them they find a room for me, a back room on the fourth floor, the only
+one vacant in the hotel; it looks out on the white-tiled walls and the
+windows of the enclosing wings. The space shut in is deep and narrow as
+a well. The view from that room is more like a prison than any view from
+the "Flandria," but I take it. I am not deceived by appearances, and I
+recognize that the peace of God is there.
+
+It is a relief to think that poor Max will have one less to work for.
+
+At the "Flandria" we find that the Military Power has put its foot down.
+The General--he cannot have a spark of the New Chivalry in his brutal
+breast--has ordered Mrs. Torrence off her chauffeur's job. You see the
+grizzled Colonel as the image of protest and desolation, helpless in the
+hands of the implacable Power. You are sorry for Mrs. Torrence (she has
+seen practically no service with the ambulance as yet), but she, at any
+rate, has had her fling. No power can take from her the memory of those
+two days.
+
+Still, something is going to be done to-morrow, and this time, even the
+miserable Reporter is to have a look in. The Commandant has another
+scheme for a temporary hospital or a dressing-station or something, and
+to-morrow he is going with Car 1 to Courtrai to reconnoitre for a
+position and incidentally to see the French troops. A God-sent
+opportunity for the Reporter; and Janet McNeil is going, too. We are to
+get up at six o'clock in the morning and start before seven.
+
+
+[_Friday, October 2nd._]
+
+We get up at six.
+
+We hang about till eight-thirty or nine. A fine rain begins to fall. An
+ominous rain. Car 1 and Car 2 are drawn up at the far end of the
+Hospital yard. The rain falls ominously over the yellow-brown, trodden
+clay of the yard. There is an ominous look of preparation about the
+cars. There is also an ominous light in the blue eyes of the chauffeur
+Tom.
+
+The chauffeur Tom appears as one inspired by hatred of the whole human
+race. You would say that he was also hostile to the entire female sex.
+For Woman in her right place he may, he probably does, feel tenderness
+and reverence. Woman in a field ambulance he despises and abhors. I
+really think it was the sight of us that accounted for his depression at
+Ostend. I have gathered from Mrs. Torrence that the chauffeur Tom has
+none of the New Chivalry about him. He is the mean and brutal male, the
+crass obstructionist who grudges women their laurels in the equal field.
+
+I know the dreadful, blasphemous and abominable things that Tom is
+probably thinking about me as I climb on to his car. He is visibly
+disgusted with his orders. That he, a Red Cross Field Ambulance
+chauffeur, should be told to drive four--or is it all five?--women to
+look at the massing of the French troops at Courtrai! He is not deceived
+by the specious pretext of the temporary hospital. Hospitals be blowed.
+It's a bloomin' joy-ride, with about as much Red Cross in it as there is
+in my hat. He is glad that it is raining.
+
+Yes, I know what Tom is thinking. And all the time I have a sneaking
+sympathy with Tom. I want to go to Courtrai more than I ever wanted
+anything in my life, but I see the expedition plainly from Tom's point
+of view. A field ambulance is a field ambulance and not a motor touring
+car.
+
+And to-day Tom is justified. We have hardly got upon his car than we
+were told to get off it. We are not going to Courtrai. We are not going
+anywhere. From somewhere in those mysterious regions where it abides,
+the Military Power has come down.
+
+Even as I get off the car and return to the Hospital-prison, in
+melancholy retreat over the yellow-brown clay of the yard, through the
+rain, I acknowledge the essential righteousness of the point of view.
+And, to the everlasting honour of the Old Chivalry, it should be stated
+that the chauffeur Tom repressed all open and visible expression of his
+joy.
+
+The morning passes, as the other mornings passed, in unspeakable
+inactivity. Except that I make up the accounts and hand them over to Mr.
+Grierson. It seems incredible, but I have balanced them to the last
+franc.
+
+I pack. Am surprised in packing by Max and Jean. They both want to know
+the reason why. This is the terrible part of the business--leaving Max
+and Jean.
+
+I try to explain. Prosper Panne, who "writes for the Paris papers,"
+understands me. He can see that the Hotel de la Poste may be a better
+base for an attack upon the London papers. But Max does not understand.
+He perceives that I have a scruple about occupying my room. And he takes
+me into _his_ room to show me how nice it is--every bit as good as mine.
+The implication being that if the Hospital can afford to lodge one of
+its orderlies so well, it can perfectly well afford to lodge me. (This
+is one of the prettiest things that Max has done yet! As long as I live
+I shall see him standing in his room and showing me how nice it is.)
+
+Still you can always appeal from Max to Prosper Panne. He understands
+these journalistic tempers and caprices. He knows on how thin a thread
+an article can hang. We have a brief discussion on the comparative
+difficulties of the _roman_ and the _conte_, and he promises me to
+cherish and protect the hat I must leave behind me as if it were his
+bride.
+
+But Jean--Jean does not understand at all. He thinks that I am not
+satisfied with the service of our incomparable mess; that I prefer the
+flesh-pots of the "Poste" and the manners of its waiters. He has no
+other thought but this, and it is abominable; it is the worst of all.
+The explanation thickens. I struggle gloriously with the French
+language; one moment it has me by the throat and I am strangled; the
+next I writhe forth triumphant. Strange gestures are given to me; I
+plunge into the darkest pits of memory for the words that have escaped
+me; I find them (or others just as good); it is really quite easy to say
+that I am coming back again in a week.
+
+Interview with Madame F. and M. G., the President.
+
+Interview with the Commandant. Final assault on the defences of the New
+Chivalry (the Commandant's mind is an impregnable fortress).
+
+And, by way of afterthought, I inquire whether, in the event of a sudden
+scoot before the Germans, a reporter quartered at the Hotel de la Poste
+will be cut off from the base of communications and left to his or her
+ingenuity in flight?
+
+The Commandant, vague and imperturbable, replies that in all probability
+it will be so.
+
+And I (if possible more imperturbable than he) observe that the War
+Correspondents will make quite a nice flying-party.
+
+In a little open carriage--the taxis have long ago all gone to the
+War--in an absurd little open carriage, exactly like a Cheltenham "rat,"
+I depart like a lady of Cheltenham, for the Hotel de la Poste. The
+appearance and the odour of this little carriage give you an odd sense
+of security and peace. The Germans may be advancing on Ghent at this
+moment, but for all the taste of war there is in it, you might be that
+lady, going from one hotel to the other, down the Cheltenham Promenade.
+
+The further you go from the Military Hospital and the Railway Station
+the more it is so. The War does not seem yet to have shaken the
+essential peace of the _bourgeois_ city. The Hotel de la Poste is in the
+old quarter of the town, where the Cathedrals are. Instead of the long,
+black railway lines and the red-brick facade of the Station and Post
+Office; instead of the wooded fields beyond and the white street that
+leads to the battle-places south and east; instead of the great Square
+with its mustering troops and swarms of refugees, you have the quiet
+Place d'Armes, shut in by trees, and all round it are the hotels and
+cafes where the officers and the War Correspondents come and go. Through
+all that coming and going you get the sense of the old foreign town that
+was dreaming yesterday. People are sitting outside the restaurants all
+round the Place, drinking coffee and liqueurs as if nothing had
+happened, as if Antwerp were far-off in another country, and as if it
+were still yesterday. Mosquitoes come up from the drowsy canal water
+and swarm into the hotels and bite you. I found any number of mosquitoes
+clinging drowsily to my bedroom walls.
+
+But there are very few women among those crowds outside the restaurants.
+There are not many women except refugees in the streets, and fewer still
+in the shops.
+
+I have blundered across a little cafe with an affectionately smiling and
+reassuringly fat proprietress, where they give you _brioches_ and China
+tea, which, as it were in sheer affection, they call English. It is not
+as happy a find as you might think. It is not, in the circumstances,
+happy at all. In fact, if you have never known what melancholy is and
+would like to know it, I can recommend two courses. Go down the Grand
+Canal in Venice in the grey spring of the year, in a gondola, all by
+yourself. Or get mixed up with a field ambulance which is not only doing
+noble work but running thrilling risks, in neither of which you have a
+share, or the ghost of a chance of a share; cut yourself off from your
+comrades, if it is only for a week, and go into a Belgian cafe in
+war-time and try to eat _brioches_ and drink English tea all by yourself.
+This is the more successful course. You may see hope beyond the gondola
+and the Grand Canal. But you will see no hope beyond the _brioche_ and
+the English tea.
+
+I walk about again till it is time to go back to the Hotel. So far, my
+emancipation has not been agreeable.
+
+
+[_Evening. Hotel de la Poste._]
+
+I dined in the crowded restaurant, avoiding the War Correspondents,
+choosing a table where I hoped I might be unobserved. Somewhere through
+a glass screen I caught a sight of Mr. L.'s head. I was careful to avoid
+the glass screen and Mr. L.'s head. He shall not say, if I can possibly
+help it, that I am an infernal nuisance. For I know I haven't any
+business to be here, and if Belgium had a Kitchener I shouldn't be here.
+However you look at me, I am here on false pretences. In the eyes of Mr.
+L. I would have no more right to be a War Correspondent (if I were one)
+than I have to be on a field ambulance. It is with the game of war as it
+was with the game of football I used to play with my big brothers in the
+garden. The women may play it if they're fit enough, up to a certain
+point, very much as I played football in the garden. The big brothers
+let their little sister kick off; they let her run away with the ball;
+they stood back and let her make goal after goal; but when it came to
+the scrimmage they took hold of her and gently but firmly moved her to
+one side. If she persisted she became an infernal nuisance. And if those
+big brothers over there only knew what I was after they would make
+arrangements for my immediate removal from the seat of war.
+
+The Commandant has turned up with Ursula Dearmer. He is drawn to these
+War Correspondents who appear to know more than he does. On the other
+hand, an ambulance that can get into the firing-line has an irresistible
+attraction for a War Correspondent. It may at any moment constitute his
+only means of getting there himself.
+
+One of our cars has been sent out to Antwerp with dispatches and
+surgical appliances.
+
+The sight of the Commandant reminds me that I have got all the funds of
+the Ambulance upstairs in my suit-case in that leather purse-belt--and
+if the Ambulance does fly from Ghent without me, and without that belt,
+it will find itself in considerable embarrassment before it has
+retreated very far.
+
+It is quite certain that I shall have to take my chance. I have asked
+the Commandant again (either this evening or earlier) so that there may
+be no possible doubt about it: "If we do have to scoot from Ghent in a
+hurry I shall have nothing but my wits to trust to?"
+
+And he says, "True for you."
+
+And he looks as if he meant it.[3]
+
+These remarkable words have a remarkable effect on the new War
+Correspondent. It is as if the coolness and the courage and the strength
+of a hundred War Correspondents and of fifty Red Cross Ambulances had
+been suddenly discharged into my soul. This absurd accession of power
+and valour[4] is accompanied by a sudden immense lucidity. It is as if
+my soul had never really belonged to me until now, as if it had been
+either drugged or drunk and had never known what it was to be sober
+until now. The sensation is distinctly agreeable. And on the top of it
+all there is a peace which I distinctly recognize as the peace of God.
+
+So, while the Commandant talks to the War Correspondents as if nothing
+had happened, I go upstairs and unlock my suit-case and take from it the
+leather purse-belt with the Ambulance funds in it, and I bring it to the
+Commandant and lay it before him and compel him to put it on. As I do
+this I feel considerable compunction, as if I were launching a
+three-year-old child in a cockle-shell on the perilous ocean of finance.
+I remind him that fifteen pounds of the money in the belt is his (he
+would be as likely as not to forget it). As for the accounts, they are
+so clear that a three-year-old child could understand them. I notice
+with a diabolical satisfaction which persists through the all-pervading
+peace by no means as incongruously as you might imagine--I notice
+particularly that the Commandant doesn't like this part of it a bit.
+There is not anybody in the Corps who wants to be responsible for its
+funds or enjoys wearing that belt. But it is obvious that if the Ambulance
+can bear to be separated from its Treasurer-Secretary-Reporter, in the
+flight from Ghent, it cannot possibly bear to be separated from its funds.
+
+I am alone with the Commandant while this happens, standing by one of
+the writing-tables in the lounge. Ursula Dearmer (she grows more mature
+every day) and the War Correspondents and a few Generals have melted
+somewhere into the background. The long, lithe pigskin belt lies between
+us on the table--between my friend and me--like a pale snake. It exerts
+some malign and poisonous influence. It makes me say things, things
+that I should not have thought it possible to say. And it is all about
+the shells at Alost.
+
+He is astonished.
+
+And I do not care.
+
+I am sustained, exalted by that sense of righteousness you feel when you
+are insanely pounding somebody who thinks that in perfect sanity and
+integrity he has pounded you.
+
+
+[_Saturday, 3rd._]
+
+Mr. L. asked me to breakfast. He has told me more about the Corps in
+five minutes than the Corps has been able to tell me in as many days. He
+has seen it at Alost and Termonde. You gather that he has seen other
+heroic enterprises also and that he would perjure himself if he swore
+that they were indispensable. Every Correspondent is besieged by the
+leaders of heroic enterprises, and I imagine that Mr. L. has been "had"
+before now by amateurs of the Red Cross, and his heart must have sunk
+when he heard of an English Field Ambulance in Ghent. And he owns to
+positive terror when he saw it, with its girls in breeches, its
+Commandant in Norfolk jacket, grey knickerbockers, heather-mixture
+stockings and deer-stalker; its Chaplain in khaki, and its Surgeon a
+mark for bullets in his Belgian officer's cap. I suggest that this
+absence of uniform only proves our passionate eagerness to be off and
+get to work. But it is right. Our ambulance is the real thing, and Mr.
+L. is going to be an angel and help it all he can. He will write about
+it in the _Illustrated London News_ and the _Westminster_. When he hears
+that I came out here to write about the War and make a little money for
+the Field Ambulance, and that I haven't seen anything of the War and
+that my invasion of his hotel is simply a last despairing effort to at
+least hear something, he is more angelic than ever. He causes a whole
+cinema of war-scenes to pass before my eyes. When I ask if there is
+anything left for me to "do," he evokes a long procession of
+articles--pure, virgin copy on which no journalist has ever laid his
+hands--and assures me that it is mine, that the things that have been
+done are nothing to the things that are left to do. I tell him that I
+have no business on his pitch, and that I am horribly afraid of getting
+in the regular Correspondents' way and spoiling their game; as I am
+likely to play it, there isn't any pitch. Of course, I suppose, there is
+the "scoop," but that's another matter. It is the War Correspondent's
+crown of cunning and of valour, and nobody can take from him that
+crown. But in the psychology of the thing, every Correspondent is his
+own pitch. He has told me very nearly all the things I want to know,
+among them what the Belgian General said to the Commandant when he saw
+Ursula Dearmer at Alost:
+
+"What the devil is the lady doing there?"
+
+I gather that Mr. L. shares the General's wonder and my own anxiety. I
+am not far wrong in regarding Alost and Termonde as no fit place for
+Ursula Dearmer or any other woman.
+
+Answered the Commandant's letters for him. Wrote to Ezra Pound. Wrote
+out the report for the last three days' ambulance work and sent it to
+the British Red Cross; also a letter to Mr. Rogers about a light
+scouting-car. The British Red Cross has written that it cannot spare any
+more motor ambulances, but it may possibly send out a small car. (The
+Commandant has cabled to Mr. Gould, of Gould Bros., Exeter, accepting
+his offer of his own car and services.)
+
+Went down to the "Flandria" for news of the Ambulance. The car that was
+sent out yesterday evening got through all right to Antwerp and returned
+safely. It has brought very bad news. Two of the outer forts are said to
+have fallen. The position is critical, and grave anxiety is felt for
+the safety of the English in Antwerp. Mrs. St. Clair Stobart has asked
+us for one of our ambulances. But even if we could spare it we cannot
+give it up without an order from the military authority at Ghent. We
+hear that Dr. ----, one of Mrs. Stobart's women, is to leave Antwerp and
+work at our hospital. She is engaged to be married to Dr. ----, and the
+poor boy is somewhat concerned for her safety. I'm very glad I have left
+the "Flandria," for she can have my room.
+
+I wish they would make Miss ---- come away too.
+
+Yes: Miss ----, that clever novelist, who passes for a woman of the
+world because she uses mundane appearances to hide herself from the
+world's importunity--Miss ---- is here. The War caught her. Some people
+were surprised. I wasn't.[5]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Walked through the town again--old quarter. Walked and walked and
+walked, thinking about Antwerp all the time. Through streets of
+grey-white and lavender-tinted houses, with very fragile balconies. Saw
+the two Cathedrals[6] and the Town Hall--refugees swarming round it--and
+the Rab--I can't remember its name: see Baedeker--with its turrets and
+its moat. Any amount of time to see cathedrals in and no Mrs. Torrence
+to protest. I wonder how much of all this will be left by next month, or
+even by next week? Two of the Antwerp forts have fallen. They say the
+occupation of Ghent will be peaceful; while of Antwerp I suppose they
+would say, "_C'est triste, n'est-ce pas?_" They say the Germans will
+just march into Ghent and march out again, commandeering a few things
+here and there. But nobody knows, and by the stolid faces of these
+civilians you might imagine that nobody cares. Certainly none of them
+think that the fate of Antwerp can be the fate of Ghent.
+
+And the faces of the soldiers, of the men who know? They are the faces
+of important people, cheerful people, pleasantly preoccupied with the
+business in hand. Only here and there a grave face, a fixed, drawn face,
+a face twisted with the irritation of the strain.
+
+Why, the very refugees have the look of a rather tired tourist-party,
+wandering about, seeing Ghent, seeing the Cathedral.
+
+Only they aren't looking at the Cathedral. They are looking straight
+ahead, across the _Place_, up the street; they do not see or hear the
+trams swinging down on them, or the tearing, snorting motors; they
+stroll abstractedly into the line of the motors and stand there; they
+start and scatter, wild-eyed, with a sudden recrudescence of the terror
+that has driven them here from their villages in the fields.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It seems incredible that I should be free to walk about like this. It is
+as if I had cut the rope that tied me to a soaring air-balloon and found
+myself, with firm feet, safe on the solid earth. Any bit of earth, even
+surrounded by Germans, seems safe compared with the asphyxiation of that
+ascent. And when the air-balloon wasn't going up it was as if I had lain
+stifling under a soft feather-bed for more than a year. Now I've waked
+up suddenly and flung the feather-bed off with a vigorous kick.
+
+
+[_[7]Sunday, 4th._]
+
+(I have no clear recollection of Sunday morning, because in the
+afternoon we went to Antwerp; and Antwerp has blotted out everything
+that went near before it.)
+
+The Ambulance has been ordered to take two Belgian professors (or else
+they are doctors) into Antwerp. There isn't any question this time of
+carrying wounded. It seems incredible, but I am going too. I shall see
+the siege of Antwerp and hear the guns that were brought up from Namur.
+
+Somewhere, on the north-west horizon, a vision, heavenly, but
+impalpable, aerial, indistinct, of the Greatest Possible Danger.
+
+I am glad I am going. But the odd thing is that there is no excitement
+about it. It seems an entirely fit and natural thing that the vision
+should materialize, that I should see the shells battering the forts of
+Antwerp and hear the big siege-guns from Namur. For all its
+incredibility, the adventure lacks every element of surprise. It is
+simply what I came out for. For here in Belgium the really incredible
+things are the things that existed and happened before the War. They
+existed and happened a hundred years ago and the memory of them is
+indistinct; the feeling of them is gone. You have ceased to have any
+personal interest in them; if they happened at all they happened to
+somebody else. What is happening now has been happening always. All your
+past is soaking in the vivid dye of these days, and what you are now you
+have been always. I have been a War Correspondent all my life--_blasee_
+with battles. The Commandant orders me into the front seat beside the
+chauffeur Tom, so that I may see things. Even Tom's face cannot shake me
+in my conviction that I am merely setting out once more on my usual,
+legitimate, daily job.
+
+It is all so natural that you do not wonder in the least at this really
+very singular extension of your personality. You are not aware of your
+personality at all. If you could be you would see it undergoing
+shrinkage. It is, anyhow, one of the things that ceased to matter a
+hundred years ago. If you could examine its contents at this moment you
+would find nothing there but that shining vision of danger, the siege of
+Antwerp, indistinct, impalpable, aerial.
+
+Presently the vision itself shrinks and disappears on the north-west
+horizon. The car has shot beyond the streets into the open road, the
+great paved highway to Antwerp, and I am absorbed in other matters: in
+Car 1 and in the chauffeur Tom, who is letting her rip more and more
+into her top speed with every mile; in M. C----, the Belgian Red Cross
+guide, beside me on my left, and in the Belgian soldier sitting on the
+floor at his feet. The soldier is confiding some fearful secret to
+M. C---- about somebody called Achille. M. C---- bends very low to catch
+the name, as if he were trying to intercept and conceal it, and when he
+_has_ caught it he assumes an air of superb mystery and gravity and
+importance. With one gesture he buries the name of Achille in his breast
+under his uniform. You know that he would die rather than betray the
+secret of Achille. You decide that Achille is the heroic bearer of
+dispatches, and that we have secret orders to pick him up somewhere and
+convey him in safety to Antwerp. You do not grasp the meaning of this
+pantomime until the third sentry has approached us, and M. C---- has
+stopped for the third time to whisper "Ach-ille!" behind the cover of
+his hand, and the third sentry is instantly appeased.
+
+(Concerning sentries, you learn that the Belgian kind is amiable, but
+that the French sentry is a terrible fellow, who will think nothing of
+shooting you if your car doesn't stop dead the instant he levels his
+rifle.)
+
+Except for sentries and straggling troops and the long trains of
+refugees, the country is as peaceful between Ghent and Saint Nicolas as
+it was last week between Ostend and Ghent. It is the same adorable
+Flemish country, the same flat fields, the same paved causeway and the
+same tall, slender avenues of trees. But if anything could make the
+desolation of Belgium more desolate it is this intolerable beauty of
+slender trees and infinite flat land, the beauty of a country formed for
+the very expression of peace. In the vivid gold and green of its autumn
+it has become a stage dressed with ironic splendour for the spectacle of
+a people in flight. Half the population of Antwerp and the country round
+it is pouring into Ghent.[8] First the automobiles, Belgian officers in
+uniform packed tight between women and children and their bundles,
+convoying the train. Then the carriages secured by the _bourgeois_ (they
+are very few); then men and boys on bicycles; then the carts, and with
+the coming on of the carts the spectacle grows incredible, fantastic.
+You see a thing advancing like a house on wheels. It is a tall
+hay-wagon--the tallest wagon you have ever seen in your life--piled with
+household furniture and mattresses on the top of the furniture, and on
+top of the mattresses, on the roof, as it were, a family of women and
+children and young girls. Some of them seem conscious of the stupendous
+absurdity of this appearance; they smile at you or laugh as the
+structure goes towering and toppling by.
+
+Next, low on the ground, enormous and grotesque bundles, endowed with
+movement and with legs. Only when you come up to them do you see that
+they are borne on the bowed backs of men and women and children. The
+children--when there are no bundles to be borne these carry a bird in a
+cage, or a dog, a dog that sits in their arms like a baby and is pressed
+tight to their breasts. Here and there men and women driving their
+cattle before them, driving them gently, without haste, with a great
+dignity and patience.
+
+These, for all the panic and ruin in their bearing, might be pilgrims or
+suppliants, or the servants of some religious rite, bringing the votive
+offerings and the sacrificial beasts. The infinite land and the avenues
+of slender trees persuade you that it is so.
+
+And wherever the ambulance cars go they meet endless processions of
+refugees; endless, for the straight, flat Flemish roads are endless, and
+as far as your eye can see the stream of people is unbroken; endless,
+because the misery of Belgium is endless; the mind cannot grasp it or
+take it in. You cannot meet it with grief, hardly with conscious pity;
+you have no tears for it; it is a sorrow that transcends everything you
+have known of sorrow. These people have been left "only their eyes to
+weep with." But they do not weep any more than you do. They have no
+tears for themselves or for each other.[9] This is the terrible thing,
+this and the manner of their flight. It is not flight, it is the vast,
+unhasting and unending movement of a people crushed down by grief and
+weariness, pushed on by its own weight, by the ceaseless impact of its
+ruin.
+
+This stream is the main stream from Antwerp, swollen by its tributaries.
+It doesn't seem to matter where it comes from, its strength and volume
+always seem the same. After the siege of Antwerp it will thicken and
+flow from some other direction, that is all. And all the streams seem to
+flow into Ghent and to meet in the Palais des Fetes.[10]
+
+I forget whether it was near Lokeren or Saint Nicolas that we saw the
+first sign of fighting, in houses levelled to the ground to make way for
+the artillery fire; levelled, and raked into neat plots without the
+semblance of a site.
+
+After the refugees, the troops. Village streets crowded with military
+automobiles and trains of baggage wagons and regiments of infantry.
+Little villas with desolate, surprised and innocent faces, standing back
+in their gardens; soldiers sitting in their porches and verandahs,
+soldiers' faces looking out of their windows; soldiers are quartered in
+every room, and the grass grows high in their gardens. Soldiers run down
+the garden paths to look at our ambulance as it goes by.
+
+There is excitement in the village streets.
+
+At Saint Nicolas we overtake Dr. Wilson and Mr. Davidson walking into
+Antwerp. They tell us the news.
+
+The British troops have come. At last. They have been through before us
+on their way to Antwerp. Dr. Wilson and Mr. Davidson have seen the
+British troops. They have talked to them.
+
+Mr. Davidson cannot conceal his glee at getting in before the War
+Correspondents. Pure luck has given into his hands _the_ great
+journalistic scoop of the War in Belgium. And he is not a journalist. He
+is a sculptor out for the busts of warriors, and for actuality in those
+tragic and splendid figures that are grouped round memorial columns, for
+the living attitude and gesture.
+
+We take up Mr. Davidson and Dr. Wilson, and leave one of our professors
+(if he is a professor) at Saint Nicolas, for the poor man has come
+without his passport. He will have to hang about at Saint Nicolas, doing
+nothing, until such time as it pleases Heaven to send us back from
+Antwerp. He resigns himself, and we abandon him, a piteous figure
+wrapped in a brown shawl.
+
+After Saint Nicolas more troops, a few batteries of artillery, some
+infantry, long, long regiments of Belgian cavalry, coming to the defence
+of the country outside Antwerp. Cavalry halting at a fork of the road by
+a little fir-wood. A road that is rather like the road just outside
+Wareham as you go towards Poole. More troops. And after the troops an
+interminable procession of labourers trudging on foot. At a distance you
+take them for refugees, until you see that they are carrying poles and
+spades. Presently the road cuts through the circle of stakes and barbed
+wire entanglements set for the German cavalry. And somewhere on our left
+(whether before or after Saint Nicolas I cannot remember), across a
+field, the rail embankment ran parallel with our field, and we saw the
+long ambulance train, flying the Red Cross and loaded with wounded, on
+its way from Antwerp to Ghent. At this point the line is exposed
+conspicuously, and we must have been well within range of the German
+fire, for the next ambulance train--but we didn't know about the next
+ambulance train till afterwards.
+
+After the circle of the stakes and wire entanglements you begin to think
+of the bombardment. You strain your ears for the sound of the siege-guns
+from Namur. Somewhere ahead of us on the horizon there is Antwerp.
+Towers and tall chimneys in a very grey distance. Every minute you look
+for the flight of the shells across the grey and the fall of a tower or
+a chimney. But the grey is utterly peaceful and the towers and the tall
+chimneys remain. And at last you turn in a righteous indignation and
+say: "Where is the bombardment?"
+
+The bombardment is at the outer forts.
+
+And where are the forts, then? (You see no forts.)
+
+The outer forts? Oh, the outer forts are thirty kilometres away.
+
+No. Not there. To your right.
+
+And you, who thought you would have died rather than see the siege of
+Antwerp, are dumb with disgust. Your heart swells with a holy and
+incorruptible resentment of the sheer levity of the Commandant.
+
+A pretty thing--to bring a War Correspondent out to see a bombardment
+when there isn't any bombardment, or when all there ever was is a
+hundred--well then, _thirty_ kilometres away.[11]
+
+It was twilight as we came into Antwerp. We approached it by the west,
+by the way of the sea, by the great bridge of boats over the Scheldt.
+The sea and the dykes are the defence of Antwerp on this side. Whole
+regiments of troops are crossing the bridge of boats. Our car crawls by
+inches at a time. It is jammed tight among some baggage wagons. It
+disentangles itself with difficulty from the baggage wagons, and is
+wedged tighter still among the troops. But the troops are moving, though
+by inches at a time. We get our front wheels on to the bridge. Packed in
+among the troops, but moving steadily as they move, we cross the
+Scheldt. On our right the sharp bows and on our left the blunt sterns of
+the boats. Boat after boat pressed close, gunwale to gunwale, our
+roadway goes across their breasts. Their breasts are taut as the breasts
+of gymnasts under the tramping of the regiments. They vibrate like the
+breasts of living things as they bear us up.
+
+No heaving of any beautiful and beloved ship, no crossing of any sea, no
+sight of any city that has the sea at her feet, not New York City nor
+Venice, no coming into any foreign land, ever thrilled me as that
+coming into Antwerp with the Belgian army over that bridge of boats.
+
+At twilight, from the river, with its lamps lit and all its waters
+shining, Antwerp looked beautiful as Venice and as safe and still. For
+the dykes are her defences on this side. But for the trudging regiments
+you would not have guessed that on the land side the outer ramparts were
+being shelled incessantly.
+
+It was a struggle up the slope from the river bank to the quay, a
+struggle in which we engaged with commissariat and ammunition wagons and
+troops and refugees in carts, all trying to get away from the city over
+the bridge of boats. The ascent was so steep and slippery that you felt
+as though at any moment the car might hurl itself down backwards on the
+top of the processions struggling behind it.
+
+At last we landed. I have no vivid recollection[12] of our passage
+through the town. Except that I know we actually were in Antwerp I could
+not say whether I really saw certain winding streets and old houses with
+steep gables or whether I dreamed them. There was one great street of
+white houses and gilded signs that stood shimmering somewhere in the
+twilight; but I cannot tell you what street it was. And there were some
+modern boulevards, and the whole place was very silent. It had the
+silence and half darkness of dreams, and the beauty and magic and
+sinister sadness of dreams. And in that silence and sadness our car,
+with its backings and turnings and its snorts, and our own voices as we
+asked our way (for we were more or less lost in Antwerp) seemed to be
+making an appalling and inappropriate and impious noise.
+
+Antwerp seems to me to have been all hospitals, though I only saw two,
+or perhaps three. One was in an ordinary house in a street, and I think
+this must have been the British Field Hospital; for Mrs. Winterbottom
+was there. And of all the women I met thus casually "at the front" she
+was, by a long way, the most attractive. We went into one or two of the
+wards; in others, where the cases were very serious, we were only
+allowed to stand for a second in the doorway; there were others again
+which we could not see at all.
+
+I think, unless I am rolling two hospitals into one, that we saw a
+second--the English Hospital. It was for the English Hospital that we
+heard the Commandant inquire perpetually as we made our way through the
+strange streets and the boulevards beyond them, following at his own
+furious pace, losing him in byways and finding him by some miracle
+again. Talk of dreams! Our progress through Antwerp was like one of
+those nightmares which have no form or substance but are made up of
+ghastly twilight and hopeless quest and ever-accelerating speed. It was
+not till it was all over that we knew the reason for his excessive
+haste.
+
+When we got to Mrs. St. Clair Stobart's Hospital--in a garden, planted
+somewhere away beyond the boulevards in an open place--we had hardly any
+time to look at it. All the same, I shall never forget that Hospital as
+long as I live. It had been a concert-hall[13] and was built principally
+of glass and iron; at any rate, if it was not really the greenhouse that
+it seemed to be there was a great deal of glass about it, and it had
+been shelled by aeroplane the night before. No great damage had been
+done, but the sound and the shock had terrified the wounded in their
+beds. This hospital, as everybody knows, is run entirely by women, with
+women doctors, women surgeons, women orderlies. Mrs. St. Clair Stobart
+and some of her gallant staff came out to meet us on a big verandah in
+front of this fantastic building, she and her orderlies in the uniform
+of the British Red Cross, her surgeons in long white linen coats over
+their skirts. Dr. ---- whom we are to take back with us to Ghent, was
+there.
+
+We asked for Miss ----, and she came to us finally in a small room
+adjoining what must have been the restaurant of the concert-hall.
+
+I was shocked at her appearance. She was quieter than ever and her face
+was grey and worn with watching. She looked as if she could not have
+held out another night.
+
+She told us about last night's bombardment. The effect of it on this
+absurd greenhouse must have been terrific. Every day they are expecting
+the bombardment of the town.
+
+No, none of them are leaving except two. Every woman will stick to her
+post[14] till the order comes to evacuate the hospital, and then not one
+will quit till the last wounded man is carried to the transport.
+
+It seems that Miss ---- is a hospital orderly, and that her duty is to
+stand at the gate of the garden with a lantern as the ambulances come in
+and to light them to the door of the hospital, and then to see that each
+man has the number of his cot pinned to the breast of his
+sleeping-jacket.
+
+Mrs. Stobart, very properly, will have none but trained women in her
+hospital. But even an untrained woman is equal to holding a lantern and
+pinning on tickets, so I implored Miss ---- to let me take her place
+while she went back to rest in my room at Ghent, if it was only for one
+night. I used every argument I could think of, and for one second I
+thought the best argument had prevailed. But it was only for a second.
+Probably not even for a second. Miss ---- may drop to pieces at her
+post, but it is there that she will drop.
+
+Outside on the verandah the Commandant was fairly ramping to be off.
+No--I can't see the Hospital. There isn't any time to see the Hospital.
+But Miss ---- could not bear me not to see it, and together we made a
+surreptitious bolt for it, and I did see the Hospital.
+
+It was not like any hospital you had ever seen before. Except that the
+wounded were all comfortably bedded, it was more like the sleeping-hall
+of the Palais des Fetes. The floor of the great concert-hall was covered
+with mattresses and beds, where the wounded lay about in every attitude
+of suffering. No doubt everything was in the most perfect order, and the
+nurses and doctors knew how to thread their way through it all, but to
+the hurried spectator in the doorway the effect was one of the most
+_macabre_ confusion. Only one object stood out--the large naked back of
+a Belgian soldier, who sat on the edge of his bed waiting to be washed.
+He must have been really the most cheerful and (comparatively) uninjured
+figure in the whole crowd, but he seemed the most pitiful, because of
+the sheer human insistence of his pathetic back.
+
+Over this back and over all that prostrate agony the enormous floriated
+bronze rings that carried the lights of the concert-hall hung from the
+ceiling in frightful, festive decoration.
+
+Miss ---- whispered: "One of them is dying. We can't save him."
+
+She seemed to regard this one as a positive slur on their record. I
+thought: "Only one--among all that crowd!"
+
+Mrs. Stobart came after us in some alarm as we ran down the garden.
+
+"What are you doing with Miss ----? You're not going to carry her off?"
+
+"No," I said, "we're not. She won't come."
+
+But we have got off with Dr. ----.
+
+Mrs. Stobart has refused the Commandant's offer of one of our best
+surgeons in exchange. He is a man. And this hospital is a Feminist Show.
+
+We dined in a great hurry in a big restaurant in one of the main
+streets. The restaurant was nearly empty and funereal black cloths were
+hung over the windows to obscure the lights.
+
+Mr. Davidson (this cheerful presence was with us in our dream-like
+career through Antwerp)--Mr. Davidson and I amused ourselves by planning
+how we will behave when we are taken prisoner by the Germans. He is
+safe, because he is an American citizen. The unfortunate thing about me
+is my passport, otherwise, by means of a well-simulated nasal twang I
+might get through as an American novelist. I've been mistaken for one
+often enough in my own country. But, as I don't mean to be taken
+prisoner, and perhaps murdered or have my hands chopped off, without a
+struggle, my plan is to deliver a speech in German, as follows: "_Ich
+bin eine beruehmte Schriftstellerin_" (on these occasions you stick at
+nothing), "_beruehmt in England, aber viel beruehmter in den Vereinigten
+Staaten, und mein Schicksal will den Presidenten Wilson nicht
+gleichgueltig sein_." I added by way of rhetorical flourish as the
+language went to my head: "_Er will mein Tod zu vertheidigen gut
+wissen_;" but I was aware that this was overdoing it.
+
+Mr. Davidson thought it would be better on the whole if he were to pass
+me off as his wife. Perhaps it would, but it seems a pity that so much
+good German should be wasted.
+
+We got up from that dinner with even more haste than we had sat down.
+All lights in the town were put out at eight-thirty, and we didn't want
+to go crawling and blundering about in the dark with our ambulance car.
+There was a general feeling that the faster we ran back to Ghent the
+better.
+
+We left Mr. Davidson and Dr. Wilson in Antwerp. They were staying
+over-night for the fun of the thing.
+
+Another awful struggle on the downward slope from the quay to the bridge
+of boats. A bad jam at the turn. A sudden loosening and letting go of
+the traffic, and we were over.
+
+We ran back to Ghent so fast that at Saint Nicolas (where we stopped to
+pick up our poor little Belgian professor) we took the wrong turn at the
+fork of the road and dashed with considerable _elan_ over the Dutch
+frontier. We only realized it when a sentry in an unfamiliar uniform
+raised his rifle and prepared to fire, not with the cheerful,
+perfunctory vigilance of our Belgians, but in a determined,
+business-like manner, and the word "Achille," imparted in a burst of
+confidence, produced no sympathy whatever. On the contrary, this absurd
+sentry (who had come out of a straw sentry-box that was like an enormous
+beehive) went on pointing his rifle at us with most unnecessary
+persistence. I was so interested in seeing what he would do next that I
+missed the very pleasing behaviour of the little Belgian professor, who
+sat next to me, wrapped in his brown shawl. He still imagined himself
+to be on the road to Ghent, and when he saw that sentry continuing to
+prepare to fire in spite of our password, he concluded that we and the
+road to Ghent were in the hands of the Germans. So he instantly ducked
+behind me for cover and collapsed on the floor of the ambulance in his
+shawl.
+
+Then somebody said "We're in Holland!" and there were shouts of laughter
+from everybody in the car except the little Belgian. Then shouts of
+laughter from the Dutch sentries and Customs officers, who enjoyed this
+excellent joke as much as we did.
+
+We were now out of our course by I don't know how many miles and short
+of petrol. But one of the Customs officers gave us all we wanted.
+
+It's heart-breaking the way these dear Belgians take the British. They
+have waited so long for our army, believing that it would come, till
+they could believe no more. In Ghent, in Antwerp, you wouldn't know that
+Belgium had any allies; you never see the British flag, or the French
+either, hanging from the windows. The black, yellow and red standard
+flies everywhere alone. Now that we _have_ come, their belief in us is
+almost unbearable. They really think we are going to save Antwerp.
+Somewhere between Antwerp and Saint Nicolas the population of a whole
+village turned out to meet us with cries of "_Les Anglais! Les
+Anglaises!_" and laughed for joy. Terrible for us, who had heard
+Belgians say reproachfully: "We thought that the British would come to
+our help. But they never came!" They said it more in sorrow than in
+anger; but you couldn't persuade them that the British fought for
+Belgium at Mons.
+
+We got into Ghent about midnight.
+
+Dr. ---- is to stay at the Hotel de la Poste to-night.
+
+
+[_Monday, 5th._]
+
+The mosquitoes from the canal have come up and bitten me. I was ill all
+night with something that felt like malarial fever, if it isn't
+influenza. Couldn't get up--too drowsy.
+
+Mr. L. came in to see me first thing in the morning. He also came to
+hear at first hand the story of our run into Antwerp. He was extremely
+kind. He sat and looked at me sorrowfully, as if he had been the family
+doctor, and gave me some of his very own China tea (in Belgium in
+war-time this is one of the most devoted things that man can do for his
+brother). He was so gentle and so sympathetic that my heart went out to
+him, and I forgot all about poor Mr. Davidson, and gave up to him the
+whole splendid "scoop" of the British troops at Saint Nicolas.
+
+I couldn't tell him much about the run into Antwerp. No doubt it was a
+thrilling performance--through all the languor of malaria it thrills me
+now when I think of it--but it wasn't much to offer a War Correspondent,
+since it took us nowhere near the bombardment. It had nothing for the
+psychologist or for the amateur of strange sensations, and nothing for
+the pure and ardent Spirit of Adventure, and nothing for that insatiable
+and implacable Self, that drives you to the abhorred experiment,
+determined to know how you will come out of it. For there was no more
+danger in the excursion than in a run down to Brighton and back; and I
+know no more of fear or courage than I did before I started.
+
+But now that I realize what the insatiable and implacable Self is after,
+how it worked in me against all decency and all pity, how it actually
+made me feel as if I wanted to see Antwerp under siege, and how the
+spirit of adventure backed it up, I can forgive the Commandant. I still
+think that he sinned when he took Ursula Dearmer to Termonde and to
+Alost. But the temptation that assailed him at Alost and Termonde was
+not to be measured by anybody who was not there.
+
+It must have been irresistible.
+
+Besides, it is not certain that he did take Ursula Dearmer into danger;
+it is every bit as likely that she took him; more likely still that they
+were both victims of _force majeure_, fascinated by the lure of the
+greatest possible danger. And, oh, how I did pitch into him!
+
+I am ashamed of the things I said in that access of insulting and
+indignant virtue.
+
+Can it be that I was jealous of Ursula Dearmer, that innocent girl,
+because she saw a shell burst and I didn't? I know this is what was the
+matter with Mrs. Torrence the other day. She even seemed to imply that
+there was some feminine perfidy in Ursula Dearmer's power of drawing
+shells to her. (She, poor dear, can't attract even a bullet within a
+mile of her.)[15]
+
+Lying there, in that mosquito-haunted room, I dissolved into a blessed
+state, a beautiful, drowsy tenderness to everybody, a drowsy, beautiful
+forgiveness of the Commandant. I forgot that he intimated, sternly, that
+no ambulance would be at my disposal in the flight from Ghent--I
+remember only that he took me into Antwerp yesterday, and that he
+couldn't help it if the outer forts _were_ thirty kilometres away, and
+I forgive him, beautifully and drowsily.
+
+But when he came running up in great haste to see me, and rushed down
+into the kitchens of the Hotel to order soup for me, and into the
+chemist's shop in the Place d'Armes to get my medicine, and ran back
+again to give it me, before I knew where I was (such is the debilitating
+influence of malaria), instead of forgiving him, I found myself, in
+abject contrition, actually asking him to forgive _me_.
+
+It was all wrong, of course; but the mosquitoes had bitten me rather
+badly.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Mrs. Torrence and Janet McNeil have got to work at last. All afternoon
+and all night yesterday they were busy between the Station and the
+hospitals removing the wounded from the Antwerp trains.
+
+And Car 1 had no sooner got into the yard of the "Flandria" to rest
+after its trip to Antwerp and back than it was ordered out again with
+the Commandant and Ursula Dearmer and Mrs. Torrence to meet the last
+ambulance train. The chauffeur Tom was nowhere to be seen when the order
+came. He was, however, found after much search, in the Park, in the
+company of the Cricklewood bus and a whole regiment of Tommies.
+
+One of these ambulance trains had been shelled by the Germans (they
+couldn't have been very far from us in our run from Antwerp--it was
+their nearness, in fact, that accounted for our prodigious haste!), and
+many of the men came in worse wounded than they went out.
+
+We are all tremendously excited over the arrival of the Tommies and the
+Cricklewood bus. We can think of nothing else but the relief of Antwerp.
+
+Ursula Dearmer came to see me. She understands that I have forgiven her
+that shell--and why. She wore the clothes--the rather heart-rending
+school-girl clothes--she wore when she came to see the Committee. But
+oh, how the youngest but one has grown up since then!
+
+Mrs. Torrence came to see me also, and Janet McNeil. Mrs. Torrence,
+though that shell still rankles, is greatly appeased by the labours of
+last night. So is Janet.
+
+They told rather a nice story.
+
+A train full of British troops from Ostend came into the station
+yesterday at the same time as the ambulance train from Antwerp. The two
+were drawn up one on each side of the same platform. When the wounded
+Belgians saw the British they struggled to their feet. At every window
+of the ambulance train bandaged heads were thrust out and bandaged hands
+waved. And the Belgians shouted.
+
+But the British stood dumb, stolid and impassive before their
+enthusiasm.
+
+Mrs. Torrence called out, "Give them a cheer, boys. They're the bravest
+little soldiers in the world."
+
+Then the Tommies let themselves go, and the Station roof nearly flew off
+with the explosion.
+
+The Corps worked till four in the morning clearing out those ambulance
+trains. The wards are nearly full. And this is only the beginning.
+
+
+[_Tuesday, 6th._]
+
+Malaria gone.
+
+The Commandant called to give his report of the ambulance work. He, Mrs.
+Torrence, Janet McNeil, Ursula Dearmer and the men were working all
+yesterday afternoon and evening till long past dark at Termonde. It's
+the finest thing they've done yet. The men and the women crawled on
+their hands and knees in the trenches [? under the river bank] under
+fire. Ursula Dearmer (that girl's luck is simply staggering!)--Ursula
+Dearmer, wandering adventurously apart, after dark, on the battle-field,
+found a young Belgian officer, badly wounded, lying out under a tree.
+She couldn't carry him, but she went for two stretchers and three men;
+and they put the young officer on one stretcher, and she trotted off
+with his sword, his cap and the rest of his accoutrements on the other.
+He owes his life to this manifestation of her luck.
+
+Dr. Wilson has come back from Antwerp.
+
+It looks as if Dr. Haynes and Dr. Bird would go. At any rate, I think
+they will give up working on the Field Ambulance. There aren't enough
+cars for four surgeons _and_ four field-women, and they have seen hardly
+any service. This is rather hard luck on them, as they gave up their
+practice to come out with us. Naturally, they don't want to waste any
+more time.
+
+I managed to get some work done to-day. Wrote a paragraph about the
+Ambulance for Mr. L., who will publish it in the _Westminster_ under his
+name, to raise funds for us. He is more than ever certain that it (the
+Ambulance) is the real thing.
+
+Also wrote an article ("L'Hopital Militaire, No. 2") for the _Daily
+Chronicle_; the first bit of journalism I've had time or material for.
+
+Shopped. Very _triste_ affair.
+
+Went to mass in the Cathedral. Sat far back among the refugees.
+
+If you want to know what Religion really is, go into a Catholic church
+in a Catholic country under invasion. You only feel the tenderness, the
+naivete of Catholicism in peace-time. In war-time you realize its power.
+
+
+[_Evening._]
+
+Saw Mr. P., who has been at Termonde. He spoke with great praise of the
+gallantry of our Corps.
+
+It's odd--either I'm getting used to it, or it's the effect of that run
+into Antwerp--but I'm no longer torn by fear and anxiety for their
+safety.
+
+[?] Dined with Mr. L. in a restaurant in the town. It proved to be more
+expensive than either of us cared for. Our fried sole left us hungry and
+yet conscience-stricken, as if after an orgy, suffering in a dreadful
+communion of guilt.
+
+
+[_Wednesday, 7th._]
+
+7 A.M. Got up early and went to Mass in the Cathedral.
+
+Prepared report for British Red Cross. Wrote "Journal of Impressions"
+from September 25th to September 26th, 11 A.M. It's slow work. Haven't
+got out of Ostend yet!
+
+Fighting at Zele.
+
+
+[_Afternoon._]
+
+Got very near the fighting this time.
+
+Mr. L. (Heaven bless him!) took me out with him in the War
+Correspondents' car to see what the Ambulance was doing at Zele, and,
+incidentally, to look at the bombardment of some evacuated villages near
+it (I have no desire to see the bombardment of any village that has not
+been evacuated first). Mr. M. came too, and they brought a Belgian lady
+with them, a charming and beautiful lady, whose name I forget.
+
+When Mr. L. told me to get up and come with him to Zele, I did get up
+with an energy and enthusiasm that amazed me; I got up like one who has
+been summoned at last, after long waiting, to a sure and certain
+enterprise. I can trust Mr. L. or any War Correspondent who means
+business, as I cannot (after Antwerp) trust the Commandant. So far, if
+the Commandant happens upon a bombardment it has been either in the way
+of duty, or by sheer luck, or both, as at Alost and Termonde, when duty
+took him to these places, and any bombardment or firing was, as it were,
+thrown in. He did not go out deliberately to seek it, for its own sake,
+and find it infallibly, which is the War Correspondent's way. So that if
+Mr. L. says there is going to be a bombardment, we shall probably get
+somewhere nearer to it than thirty kilometres.
+
+We took the main road to Zele. I don't know whether it was really a
+continuation of the south-east road that runs under the Hospital
+windows; anyhow, we left it very soon, striking southwards to the right
+to find what Mr. L. believed to be a short cut. Thus we never got to
+Zele at all. We came out on a good straight road that would no doubt
+have led us there in time, but that we allowed ourselves to be lured by
+the smoke of the great factory at Schoonard burning away to the south.
+
+For a long time I could not believe that it was smoke we saw and not an
+enormous cloud blown by the wind across miles of sky. We seemed to run
+for miles with that terrible banner streaming on our right to the south,
+apparently in the same place, as far off as ever. East of it, on the
+sky-line, was a whole fleet of little clouds that hung low over the
+earth; that rose from it; rose and were never lifted, but as they were
+shredded away, scattered and vanished, were perpetually renewed. This
+movement of their death and re-birth had a horrible sinister pulse in
+it.
+
+Each cloud of this fleet of clouds was the smoke from a burning village.
+
+At last, after an endless flanking pursuit of the great cloud that
+continued steadily on our right, piling itself on itself and mounting
+incessantly, we struck into a side lane that seemed to lead straight to
+the factory on fire. But in this direct advance the cloud eluded us at
+every turn of the lane. Now it was rising straight in front of us in the
+south, now it was streaming away somewhere to the west of our track.
+When we went west it went east. When we went east it went west. And
+wherever we went we met refugees from the burning villages. They were
+trudging along slowly, very tired, very miserable, but with no panic and
+no violent grief. We passed through villages and hamlets, untouched
+still, but waiting quietly, and a little breathlessly, on the edge of
+their doom.
+
+At the end of one lane, where it turned straight to the east round the
+square of a field we came upon a great lake ringed with trees and set in
+a green place of the most serene and vivid beauty. It seemed incredible
+that the same hour should bring us to this magic stillness and peace and
+within sight of the smoke of war and within sound of the guns.
+
+At the next turn we heard them.
+
+We still thought that we could get to Schoonard, to the burning factory,
+and work back to Zele by a slight round. But at this turn we had lost
+sight of Schoonard and the great cloud altogether, and found ourselves
+in a little hamlet Heaven knows where. Only, straight ahead of us, as we
+looked westwards, we heard the guns. The sound came from somewhere over
+there and from two quarters; German guns booming away on the south,
+Belgian [? French] guns answering from the north.
+
+Judging by these sounds and those we heard afterwards, we must have been
+now on the outer edge of a line of fire stretching west and east and
+following the course of the Scheldt. The Germans were entrenched behind
+the river.
+
+In the little hamlet we asked our way of a peasant. As far as we could
+make out from his mixed French and Flemish, he told us to turn back and
+take the road we had left where it goes south to the village of
+Baerlaere. This we did. We gathered that we could get a road through
+Baerlaere to Schoonard. Failing Schoonard, our way to Zele lay through
+Baerlaere in the opposite direction.
+
+We set off along a very bad road to Baerlaere.
+
+Coming into Baerlaere, we saw a house with a remarkable roof, a
+steep-pitched roof of black and white tiles arranged in a sort of
+chequer-board pattern. I asked Mr. L. if he had ever seen a roof like
+that in his life and he replied promptly, "Yes; in China." And that
+roof--if it was coming into Baerlaere that we saw it--is all that I can
+remember of Baerlaere. There was, I suppose, the usual church with its
+steeple where the streets forked and the usual town hall near it, with a
+flight of steps before the door and a three-cornered classic pediment;
+and the usual double line of flat-fronted, grey-shuttered houses; I do
+seem to remember these things as if they had really been there, but you
+couldn't see the bottom half of the houses for the troops that were
+crowded in front of them, or the top half for the shells you tried to
+see and didn't. They were sweeping high up over the roofs, making for
+the entrenchments and the batteries beyond the village.
+
+We had come bang into the middle of an artillery duel. It was going on
+at a range of about a mile and a half, but all over our heads, so that
+though we heard it with great intensity, we saw nothing.
+
+There were intervals of a few seconds between the firing. The Belgian [?
+French] batteries were pounding away on the left quite near (the booming
+seemed to come from behind the houses at our backs), and the German on
+the right, farther away.
+
+Now, you may have hated and dreaded the sound of guns all your life, as
+you hate and dread any immense and violent noise, but there is something
+about the sound of the first near gun of your first battle that, so far
+from being hateful or dreadful, or in any way abhorrent to you, will
+make you smile in spite of yourself with a kind of quiet exultation
+mixed very oddly with reminiscence[16] so that, though your first
+impression (by no means disagreeable) is of being "in for it," your
+next, after the second and the third gun, is that of having been in for
+it many times before. The effect on your nerves is now like that of
+being in a very small sailing-boat in a very big-running sea. You climb
+wave after high wave, and are not swallowed up as you expected. You
+wait, between guns, for the boom and the shock of the next, with a
+passionate anticipation, as you wait for the next wave. And the sound of
+the gun when it comes is like the exhilarating smack of the wave that
+you and your boat mean to resist and do resist when it gets you.
+
+You do not think, as you used to think when you sat safe in your little
+box-like house in St. John's Wood, how terrible it is that shells should
+be hurtling through the air and killing men by whole regiments. You do
+not think at all. Nobody anywhere near you is thinking that sort of
+thing, or thinking very much at all.
+
+At the sound of the first near gun I found myself looking across the
+road at a French soldier. We were smiling at each other.
+
+When we tried to get to Schoonard from the west end of the town we were
+stopped and turned back by the General in command. Not in the least
+abashed by this _contretemps_, Mr. L., after some parley with various
+officers, decided not to go back in ignominious safety by the way we
+came, but to push on from the east end of the village into the open
+country through the line of fire that stretched between us and the road
+to Zele. On our way, while we were about it, he said, we might as well
+stop and have a look at the Belgian batteries at work--as if he had said
+we might as well stop at Olympia and have a look at the Motor Show on
+our way to Richmond.
+
+At this point the unhappy chauffeur, who had not found himself by any
+means at home in Baerlaere, remarked that he had a wife and family
+dependent on him.
+
+Mr. L. replied with dignity that he had a wife and family too, and that
+we all had somebody or something; and that War Correspondents cannot
+afford to think of their wives and families at these moments.
+
+Mr. M.'s face backed up Mr. L. with an expression of extreme
+determination.
+
+The little Belgian lady smiled placidly and imperturbably, with an air
+of being ready to go anywhere where these intrepid Englishmen should see
+fit to take her.
+
+I felt a little sorry for the chauffeur. He had been out with the War
+Correspondents several times already, and I hadn't.
+
+We left him and his car behind us in the village, squeezed very tight
+against a stable wall that stood between them and the German fire. We
+four went on a little way beyond the village and turned into a bridle
+path across the open fields. At the bottom of a field to our left was a
+small slump of willows; we had heard the Belgian guns firing from that
+direction a few minutes before. We concluded that the battery was
+concealed behind the willows. We strolled on like one half of a picnic
+party that has been divided and is looking innocently for the other half
+in a likely place.[17] But as we came nearer to the willows we lost our
+clue. The battery had evidently made up its mind not to fire as long as
+we were in sight. Like the cloud of smoke from the Schoonard factory, it
+eluded us successfully. And indeed it is hardly the way of batteries to
+choose positions where interested War Correspondents can come out and
+find them.[18]
+
+So we went back to the village, where we found the infantry being drawn
+up in order and doing something to its rifles. For one thrilling moment
+I imagined that the Germans were about to leap out of their trenches and
+rush the village, and that the Belgians [? French] were preparing for a
+bayonet charge.
+
+"In that case," I thought, "we shall be very useful in picking up the
+wounded and carrying them away in that car."
+
+I never thought of the ugly rush and the horrors after it. It is
+extraordinary how your mind can put away from it any thought that would
+make life insupportable.
+
+But no, they were not fixing bayonets. They were not doing anything to
+their rifles; they were only stacking them.
+
+It was then that you thought of the ugly rush and were glad that, after
+all, it wouldn't happen.
+
+You were glad--and yet in spite of that same gladness, there was a
+little sense of disappointment, unaccountable, unpardonable, and not
+quite sane.
+
+One of the men showed us a burst shrapnel shell. We examined it with
+great interest as the kind of thing that would be most likely to hit us
+on our way from Baerlaere to Zele.
+
+We had been barely half an hour hanging about Baerlaere, but it seemed
+as if we had wasted a whole afternoon there. At last we started. We were
+told to drive fast, as the fire might open on us at any minute. We drove
+very fast. Our road lay through open country flat to the river, with no
+sort of cover anywhere from the German fire, if it chose to come. About
+half a mile ahead of us was a small hamlet that had been shelled. Mr. L.
+told us to duck when we heard the guns. I remember thinking that I
+particularly didn't want to be wounded in my right arm, and that as I
+sat with my right arm resting on the ledge of the car it was somewhat
+exposed to the German batteries, so I wriggled low down in my seat and
+tucked my arm well under cover for quite five minutes. But you couldn't
+see anything that way, so I popped up again and presently forgot all
+about my valuable arm in the sheer excitement of the rush through the
+danger zone. Our car was low on the ground; still, it was high enough
+and big enough to serve as a mark for the German guns and it fairly gave
+them the range of the road.
+
+But though the guns had been pounding away before we started, they
+ceased firing as we went through.
+
+That, however, was sheer luck. And presently it was brought home to me
+that we were not the only persons involved in the risk of this joyous
+adventure. Just outside the bombarded hamlet ahead of us we were stopped
+by some Belgian [? French] soldiers hidden in the cover of a ditch by
+the roadside, which if it was not a trench might very easily have been
+one. They were talking in whispers for fear of being overheard by the
+Germans, who must have been at least a mile off, across the fields on
+the other side of the river. A mile seemed a pretty safe distance; but
+Mr. L. said it wouldn't help us much, considering that the range of
+their guns was twenty-four miles. The soldiers told us we couldn't
+possibly get through to Zele. That was true. The road was blocked--by
+the ruins of the hamlet--not twenty yards from where we were pulled up.
+We got out of the car; and while Mr. L. and the Belgian lady conversed
+with the soldiers, Mr. M. and I walked on to investigate the road.
+
+At the abrupt end of a short row of houses it stopped where it should
+have turned suddenly, and became a rubbish-heap lying in a waste place.
+
+Just at first I thought we must have gone out of our course somehow and
+missed the road to Zele. It was difficult to realize that this
+rubbish-heap lying in a waste place ever _had_ been a road. But for the
+shell of a house that stood next to it, the last of the row, and the
+piles of lath and plaster, and the shattered glass on the sidewalk and
+the blown dust everywhere, it might have passed for the ordinary
+no-thoroughfare of an abandoned brick-field.
+
+Mr. M. made me keep close under the wall of a barn or something on the
+other side of the street, the only thing that stood between us and the
+German batteries. Beyond the barn were the green fields bare to the guns
+that had shelled this end of the village. At first we hugged our shelter
+tight, only looking out now and then round the corner of the barn into
+the open country.
+
+A flat field, a low line of willows at the bottom, and somewhere behind
+the willows the German batteries. Grey puffs were still curling about
+the stems and clinging to the tops of the willows. They might have been
+mist from the river or smoke from the guns we had heard. I hadn't time
+to watch them, for suddenly Mr. M. darted from his cover and made an
+alarming sally into the open field.
+
+He said he wanted to find some pieces of nice hot shell for me.
+
+So I had to run out after Mr. M. and tell him I didn't want any pieces
+of hot shell, and pull him back into safety.
+
+All for nothing. Not a gun fired.
+
+We strolled across what was left of the narrow street and looked through
+the window-frames of a shattered house. It had been a little inn. The
+roof and walls of the parlour had been wrecked, so had most of the
+furniture. But on a table against the inner wall a row of clean glasses
+still stood in their order as the landlord had left them; and not one of
+them was broken.
+
+I suppose it must have been about time for the guns to begin firing
+again, for Mr. L. called to us to come back and to look sharp too. So we
+ran for it. And as we leaped into the car Mr. L. reproved Mr. M. gravely
+and virtuously for "taking a lady into danger."
+
+The car rushed back into Baerlaere if anything faster than it had rushed
+out, Mr. L. sitting bolt upright with an air of great majesty and
+integrity. I remember thinking that it would never, never do to duck if
+the shells came, for if we did Mr. L.'s head would stand out like a
+noble monument and he would be hit as infallibly as any cathedral in
+Belgium.
+
+It seems that the soldiers were not particularly pleased at our
+blundering up against their trench in our noisy car, which, they said,
+might draw down the German fire at any minute on the Belgian lines.
+
+We got into Ghent after dark by the way we came.
+
+
+[_Evening._]
+
+Called at the "Flandria." Ursula Dearmer and two Belgian nurses have
+been sent to the convent at Zele to work there to-night.
+
+Mr. ---- is here. But you wouldn't know him. I have just been introduced
+to him without knowing him. Before the War he was a Quaker,[19] a
+teetotaller, and a pacifist at any price. And I suppose he wore clothes
+that conformed more or less to his principles. Now he is wearing
+the uniform of a British naval officer. He is drinking long
+whiskies-and-sodas in the restaurant, in the society of Major R. And the
+Major's khaki doesn't give a point to the Quaker's uniform. As for the
+Quaker, they say he could give points to any able seaman when it comes
+to swear words (but this may be sheer affectionate exaggeration). His
+face and his high, hatchet nose, whatever colour they used to be, are
+now the colour of copper--not an ordinary, Dutch kettle and
+coal-scuttle, pacifist, arts-and-crafts copper, but a fine old,
+truculent, damn-disarmament, Krupp-&-Co., bloody, ammunition copper, and
+battered by the wars of all the world. He is the commander and the
+owner of an armoured car, one of the unit of five volunteer armoured
+cars. I do not know whether he was happy or unhappy when there wasn't a
+war. No man, and certainly no Quaker, could possibly be happier than
+this Quaker is now. He and the Major have been out potting Germans all
+the afternoon. (They have accounted for nine.) A schoolboy who has hit
+the mark nine times running with his first toy rifle is not merrier
+than, if as merry as, these more than mature men with their armoured
+car. They do not say much, but you gather that it is more fun being a
+volunteer than a regular; it is to enjoy delight with liberty, the
+maximum of risk with the minimum of responsibility.
+
+And their armoured car--if it is the one I saw standing to-day in the
+Place d'Armes--it is, as far as you can make out through its disguises,
+an ordinary open touring car, with a wooden hoarding (mere matchboard)
+stuck all round it, the whole painted grey to simulate, armoured
+painting. Through four holes, fore and aft and on either side of her,
+their machine-guns rake the horizon. The Major and Mr. ---- sit inside,
+hidden behind the matchboard plating. They scour the country. When they
+see any Germans they fire and bring them down. It is quite simple. When
+you inquire how they can regard that old wooden rabbit-hutch as an
+armoured cover, they reply that their car isn't for defence, it's for
+attack. The Germans have only to see their guns and they're off. And
+really it looks like it, since the two are actually here before your
+eyes, drinking whiskies-and-sodas, and the rest of the armoured car
+corps are alive somewhere in Ghent.
+
+Dear Major R. and Mr. ---- (whom I never met before), unless they read
+this Journal, which isn't likely, they will never know how my heart
+warmed towards them, nor how happy I count myself in being allowed to
+see them. They showed me how good it is to be alive; how excellent,
+above all things, to be a man and to be young for ever, and to go out
+into the most gigantic war in history, sitting in an armoured car which
+is as a rabbit-hutch for safety, and to have been a pacifist, that is to
+say a sinner, like Mr. ----, so that on the top of it you feel the whole
+glamour and glory of conversion. Others may have known the agony and the
+fear and sordid filth and horror and the waste, but they know nothing
+but the clean and fiery passion and the contagious ecstasy of war.
+
+If you were to tell Mr. ---- about the mystic fascination of the
+south-east road, the road that leads eventually to Waterloo, he would
+most certainly understand you, but it is very doubtful whether he would
+let you venture very far down it. Whereas the Commandant, sooner or
+later, will.
+
+
+[_Thursday, 8th._]
+
+Had breakfast with Mr. L.
+
+Went down to the "Flandria." They say Zele has been taken. There has
+been terrific anxiety here for Ursula Dearmer and the two Belgian nurses
+(Madame F.'s daughter and niece), who were left there all night in the
+convent, which may very well be in the hands of the Germans by now. An
+Ambulance car went off very early this morning to their rescue and has
+brought them back safe.
+
+We are told that the Germans are really advancing on Ghent. We have
+orders to prepare to leave it at a minute's notice. This time it looks
+as if there might be something in it.
+
+I attend to the Commandant's correspondence. Wired Mr. Hastings. Wired
+Miss F. definitely accepting the Field Ambulance Corps and nurses she
+has raised in Glasgow. Her idea is that her Ambulance should be an
+independent unit attached to our corps but bearing her name. (Seems
+rather a pity to bring the poor lady out just now when things are
+beginning to be risky and our habitations uncertain.)
+
+The British troops are pouring into Ghent. There is a whole crowd of
+them in the _Place_ in front of the Station. And some British wounded
+from Antwerp are in our Hospital.
+
+Heavy fighting at Lokeren, between Ghent and Saint Nicolas. Car 1 has
+been sent there with the Commandant, Ursula Dearmer, Janet McNeil and
+the Chaplain (Mr. Foster has been hurt in lifting a stretcher; he is out
+of it, poor man). Mrs. Torrence, Dr. Wilson and Mr. Riley have been sent
+to Nazareth. Mrs. Lambert has gone to Lokeren with her husband in his
+car.
+
+I was sent for this morning by somebody who desired to see the English
+Field Ambulance. Drawn up before the Hospital I found all that was left
+of a Hendon bus, in the charge of two British Red Cross volunteers in
+khaki and a British tar. The three were smiling in full enjoyment of the
+high comedy of disaster. They said they were looking for a job, and they
+wanted to know if our Ambulance would take them on. They were keen. They
+had every qualification under the sun.
+
+"Only," they said, "there's one thing we bar. And that's the
+firing-line. We've been under shell-fire for fifteen hours--and look at
+our bus!"
+
+The bus was a thing of heroism and gorgeous ruin. The nose of its engine
+looked as if it had nuzzled its way through a thousand _debacles_; its
+dark-blue sides were coated with dust and mud to the colour of an
+armoured car. The letters M. E. T. were barely discernible through the
+grey. Its windows were shattered to mere jags and spikes and splinters
+of glass that adhered marvellously to their frames.
+
+I don't know how I managed to convey to the three volunteers that such a
+bus would be about as much use to our Field Ambulance as an old
+greenhouse that had come through an earthquake. It was one of the
+saddest things I ever had to do.
+
+Unperturbed, and still credulous of adventure, they climbed on to their
+bus, turned her nose round, and went, smiling, away.
+
+Who they were, and what corps they belonged to, and how they acquired
+that Metropolitan bus I shall never know, and do not want to know. I
+would far rather think of them as the heroes of some fantastic
+enterprise, careering in gladness and in mystery from one besieged city
+to another.
+
+Saw Madame F., who looks worried. She suggested that I should come back
+to the Hospital. She says it must be inconvenient for the Commandant not
+to have his secretary always at hand. At the same time, we are told
+that the Hospital is filling up so fast that our rooms will be wanted.
+And anyhow, Dr. ---- has got mine.
+
+I have found an absurd little hotel, the Hotel Cecil in the _Place_,
+opposite the Hospital, where I can have a room. Then I can be on duty
+all day.
+
+Went down to the "Poste." Gave up my room, packed and took leave of the
+nice fat _proprietaire_ and his wife.
+
+Driving through the town, I meet French troops pouring through the
+streets. There was very little cheering.
+
+Settled into the Hotel Cecil; if it could be called settling when my
+things have to stay packed, in case the Germans come before the evening.
+
+The Hotel Cecil is a thin slice of a house with three rooms on each
+little floor, and a staircase like a ladder. There is something very
+sinister about this smallness and narrowness and steepness. You say to
+yourself: Supposing the Germans really do come into Ghent; there will be
+some Uhlans among them; and the Uhlans will certainly come into the
+Hotel Cecil, and they will get very drunk in the restaurant below; and
+you might as well be in a trap as in this den at the top of the slice up
+all these abominable little steep stairs. And you are very glad that
+your room has a balcony.
+
+But though your room has a balcony it hasn't got a table, or any space
+where a table could stand. There is hardly anything in it but a big
+double bed and a tall hat-stand. I have never seen a room more
+inappropriate to a secretary and reporter.
+
+The proprietor and his wife are very amiable. He is a Red Cross man; and
+they have taken two refugee women into their house. They have promised
+faithfully that by noon there shall be a table.
+
+Noon has come; and there is no table.
+
+The cars have come back from Lokeren and Nazareth, full of wounded.
+
+Mrs. Lambert and her husband have come back from Lokeren. They drove
+right into the German lines to fetch two wounded. They were promptly
+arrested and as promptly released when their passports had shown them to
+be good American citizens. They brought back their two wounded.
+Altogether, ten or fifteen wounded have been brought back from Lokeren
+this morning.
+
+
+[_Afternoon._]
+
+The Commandant has taken me out with the Ambulance for the first time.
+We were to go to Lokeren.
+
+On the way we came up with the Lamberts in their scouting-car. They
+asked me to get out of the Ambulance car and come with them. On the
+whole, after this morning, it looked as if the scouting-car promised
+better incident. So I threw in my lot with the Lamberts.
+
+It was a little disappointing, for no sooner had the Ambulance car got
+clean away than the scouting-car broke down. Also Mr. Lambert stated
+that it was not his intention to take Mrs. Lambert into the German lines
+again to-day if he could possibly help it.
+
+We waited for an exasperating twenty minutes while the car got righted.
+From our street, in a blue transparent sky, so high up that it seemed
+part of the transparency, we saw a Taube hanging over Ghent. People came
+out of their houses and watched it with interest and a kind of amiable
+toleration.
+
+At last we got off; and the scouting-car made such good running that we
+came up with our Ambulance in a small town half-way between Ghent and
+Lokeren. We stopped here to confer with the Belgian Army Medical
+officers. They told us it was impossible to go on to Lokeren. Lokeren
+was now in the hands of the Germans. The wounded had been brought into a
+small village about two miles away.
+
+When we got into the village we were told to go back at once, for the
+Germans were coming in. The Commandant answered that we had come to
+fetch the wounded and were certainly not going back without them. It
+seemed that there were only four wounded, and they had been taken into
+houses in the village.
+
+We were given five minutes to get them out and go.
+
+I suppose we stayed in that village quite three-quarters of an hour.
+
+It was one straight street of small houses, and beyond the last house
+about a quarter of a mile of flat road, a quiet, grey road between tall,
+slender trees, then the turn. And behind the turn the Germans were
+expected to come in from Lokeren every minute.
+
+And we had to find the houses and the wounded men.
+
+The Commandant went into the first house and came out again very
+quickly.
+
+The man in the room inside was dead.
+
+We went on up the village.
+
+Down that quiet road and through the village, swerving into the rough,
+sandy track that fringed the paved street, a battery of Belgian
+artillery came clattering in full retreat. The leader turned his horse
+violently into a side alley and plunged down it. I was close behind the
+battery when it turned; I could see the faces of the men. They had not
+that terrible look that Mr. Davidson told me he saw on the faces of
+Belgians in retreat from [?] Zele. There was no terror in them, only a
+sort of sullen annoyance and disgust.
+
+I was walking beside the Commandant, and how I managed to get mixed up
+with this battery I don't know. First of all it held me up when it
+turned, then when I got through, it still came on and cut me off from
+the Commandant. (The rest of the Corps were with the Ambulance in the
+middle of the village.)
+
+Then, through the plunging train, I caught sight of the innocent
+Commandant, all by himself, strolling serenely towards the open road,
+where beyond the bend the Germans were presumably pursuing the battery.
+It was terribly alarming to see the Commandant advancing to meet them,
+all alone, without a word of German to protect him.
+
+There were gaps in the retreat, and I dashed through one of them (as you
+dash through the traffic in the Strand when you're in a hurry) and went
+after the Commandant with the brilliant idea of defending him with a
+volley of bad German hurled at the enemy's head.
+
+And the Commandant went on, indifferent both to his danger and to his
+salvation, and disappeared down a little lane and into a house where a
+wounded man was. I stood at the end of the lane with the sublime
+intention of guarding it.
+
+The Commandant came out presently. He looked as if he were steeped in a
+large, vague leisure, and he asked me to go and find Mr. Lambert and his
+scouting-car. Mr. Lambert had got to go to Lokeren to fetch some
+wounded.
+
+So I ran back down the village and found Mr. Lambert and his car at the
+other end of it. He accepted his destiny with a beautiful transatlantic
+calm and dashed off to Lokeren. I do not think he took his wife with him
+this time.[20]
+
+I went back to see if the Germans had got any nearer to the Commandant.
+They hadn't. What with dressings and bandages and looking for wounded,
+the Ambulance must have worked for about half an hour, and not any
+Germans had turned the corner yet.
+
+It was still busy getting its load safely stowed away. Nothing for the
+wretched Secretary to do but to stand there at the far end of the
+village, looking up the road to Lokeren. There was a most singular
+fascination about the turn of that road beyond the trees.
+
+Suddenly, at what seemed the last minute of safety, two Belgian
+stretcher-bearers, without a stretcher, rushed up to me. They said there
+was a man badly wounded in some house somewhere up the road. I found a
+stretcher and went off with them to look for him.
+
+We went on and on up the road. It couldn't have been more than a few
+hundred yards, really, if as much; but it felt like going on and on; it
+seemed impossible to find that house.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There was something odd about that short stretch of grey road and the
+tall trees at the end of it and the turn. These things appeared in a
+queer, vivid stillness, as if they were not there on their own account,
+but stood in witness to some superior reality. Through them you were
+somehow assured of Reality with a most singular and overpowering
+certainty. You were aware of the possibility of an ensuing agony and
+horror as of something unreal and transitory that would break through
+the peace of it in a merely episodical manner. Whatever happened to come
+round the turn of the road would simply not matter.
+
+And with your own quick movements up the road there came that steadily
+mounting thrill which is not excitement, or anything in the least like
+excitement, because of its extreme quietness. This thrill is apt to
+cheat you by stopping short of the ecstasy it seems to promise. But this
+time it didn't stop short; it became more and more steady and more and
+more quiet in the swing of its vibration; it became ecstasy; it became
+intense happiness.
+
+It lasted till we reached the little plantation by the roadside.
+
+While it lasted you had the sense of touching Reality at its highest
+point in a secure and effortless consummation; so far were you from
+being strung up to any pitch.
+
+Then came the plantation.
+
+Behind the plantation, on a railway siding, a train came up from Lokeren
+with yet another load of wounded. And in the train there was confusion
+and agitation and fear. Belgian Red Cross men hung out by the doors of
+the train and clamoured excitedly for stretchers. There was only one
+stretcher, the one we had brought from the village.
+
+Somebody complained bitterly: "_C'est mal arrange. Avec les Allemands
+sur nos dos!_"
+
+Somebody tried to grab our one stretcher. The two bearers seemed
+inclined to give it up. Nobody knew where our badly wounded man was.
+Nobody seemed very eager now to go and look for him. We three were
+surrounded and ordered to give up our stretcher. No use wasting time in
+hunting for one man, with the Germans on our backs.
+
+None of the men we were helping out of the train were seriously hurt. I
+had to choose between my one badly wounded man, whom we hadn't found,
+and about a dozen who could stumble somehow into safety. But my two
+stretcher-bearers were wavering badly, and it was all I could do to keep
+them firmly to their job.
+
+Then three women came out of a little house half hidden by the
+plantation. They spoke low, for fear the Germans should overhear them.
+
+"He is here," they said; "he is here."
+
+The stretcher-bearers hurried off with their stretcher. The train
+unloaded itself somehow.
+
+The man, horribly hurt, with a wound like a red pit below his
+shoulder-blades, was brought out and laid on the stretcher. He lay
+there, quietly, on his side, in a posture of utter resignation to
+anguish.
+
+He was a Flamand, clumsily built; he had a broad, rather ugly face,
+narrowing suddenly as the fringe of his whiskers became a little
+straggling beard. But to me he was the most beautiful thing I have ever
+seen. And I loved him. I do not think it is possible to love, to adore
+any creature more than I loved and adored that clumsy, ugly Flamand.
+
+He was my first wounded man.
+
+For I tried, I still try, to persuade myself that if I hadn't bullied my
+two bearers and repulsed the attack on my stretcher, he would have been
+left behind in the little house in the plantation.
+
+We got him out of the plantation all right and on to the paved road.
+Ursula Dearmer at Termonde with her Belgian officer, and at Zele with
+all her wounded, couldn't have been happier than I was with my one
+Flamand.
+
+We got him a few yards down the road all right.
+
+Then, to my horror, the bearers dumped him down on the paving-stones.
+They said he was much too heavy. They couldn't possibly carry him any
+more unless they rested.
+
+I didn't think it was exactly the moment for resting, and I told them
+so. The Germans hadn't come round the turn, and probably never would
+come; still, you never know; and the general impression seemed to be
+that they were about due.
+
+But the bearers stood stolidly in the middle of the road and mopped
+their faces and puffed. The situation began to feel as absurd and as
+terrible as a nightmare.
+
+So I grabbed one end of the stretcher and said I'd carry it myself. I
+said I wasn't very strong, and perhaps I couldn't carry it, but anyhow
+I'd try.
+
+They picked it up at once then, and went off at a good swinging trot
+over the paving-stones that jolted my poor Flamand most horribly. I told
+them to go on the smooth track at the side. They hailed this suggestion
+as a most brilliant and original idea.
+
+As the Flamand was brought into the village, the Ambulance had got its
+wounded in, and was ready to go. But he had to have his wound dressed.
+
+He lay there on his stretcher in the middle of the village street, my
+beloved Flamand, stripped to the waist, with the great red pit of his
+wound yawning in his white flesh. I had to look on while the Commandant
+stuffed it with antiseptic gauze.
+
+I had always supposed that the dressing of a wound was a cautious and
+delicate process. But it isn't. There is a certain casual audacity about
+it. The Commandant's hands worked rapidly as he rammed cyanide gauze
+into the red pit. It looked as if he were stuffing an old crate with
+straw. And it was all over in a moment. There seemed something indecent
+in the haste with which my Flamand was disposed of.
+
+When the Commandant observed that my Flamand's wound looked much worse
+than it was, I felt hurt, as if this beloved person had been slighted;
+also as if there was some subtle disparagement to my "find."
+
+I rather hoped that we were going to wait till the men I had left behind
+in the plantation had come up. But the car was fairly full, and Ursula
+Dearmer and Janet and Mrs. Lambert were told off to take it in to Z----,
+leave the wounded there and come back for the rest. I was to walk to
+Z---- and wait there for the returning car.
+
+Nothing would have pleased me better, but the distance was farther than
+the Commandant realized, farther, perhaps, than was desirable in the
+circumstances, so I was ordered to get on the car and come back with it.
+
+(Tom the chauffeur is perfectly right. There are too many of us.)
+
+We got away long before the Germans turned the corner, if they ever did
+turn it. In Z----, which is half-way between Lokeren and Ghent, we came
+upon six or seven fine military ambulances, all huddled together as if
+they sought safety in companionship (why none of them had been sent up
+to our village I can't imagine). Ursula Dearmer, with admirable
+presence of mind, commandeered one of these and went back with it to the
+village, so that we could take our load of wounded into Ghent. We did
+this, and went back at once.
+
+The return journey was a tame affair. Before we got to Z---- we met the
+Commandant and the Chaplain and two refugees, in Mr. Lambert's
+scouting-car, towed by a motor-wagon. It had broken down on the way from
+Lokeren. We took them on board and turned back to Ghent.
+
+The wounded came on in Ursula Dearmer's military car.
+
+Twenty-three wounded in all were taken from Lokeren or near it to-day.
+Hundreds had to be left behind in the German lines.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We have heard that Antwerp is burning; that the Government is removed to
+Ostend; that all the English have left.
+
+There are a great many British wounded, with nurses and Army doctors, in
+Ghent. Three or four British have been brought into the "Flandria."
+
+One of them is a young British officer, Mr. ----. He is said to be
+mortally wounded.
+
+Dr. Haynes and Dr. Bird have not gone. They and Dr. ---- have joined the
+surgical staff of the Hospital, and are working in the operating
+theatre all day. They have got enough to do now in all conscience.
+
+All night there has been a sound of the firing of machine guns [?]. At
+first it was like the barking, of all the dogs in Belgium. I thought it
+_was_ the dogs of Belgium, till I discovered a deadly rhythm and
+precision in the barking.[21]
+
+
+[_Friday, 9th._]
+
+The Hospital is so full that beds have been put in the entrance hall,
+along the walls by the big ward and the secretarial bureau. In the
+recess by the ward there are three British soldiers.
+
+There are some men standing about there whose heads and faces are
+covered with a thick white mask of cotton-wool like a diver's helmet.
+There are three small holes in each white mask, for mouth and eyes. The
+effect is appalling.
+
+These are the men whose faces have been burned by shell-fire at Antwerp.
+
+The Commandant asked me to come with him through the wards and find all
+the British wounded who are well enough to be sent home. I am to take
+their names and dress them and get them ready to go by the morning
+train.
+
+There are none in the upper wards. Mr. ---- cannot be moved. He is very
+ill. They do not think he will live.
+
+There are three downstairs in the hall. One is well enough to look after
+himself (I have forgotten his name). One, Russell, is wounded in the
+knee. The third, Cameron, a big Highlander, is wounded in the head. He
+wears a high headdress of bandages wound round and round many times like
+an Indian turban, and secured by more bandages round his jaw and chin.
+It is glued tight to one side of his head with clotted blood. Between
+the bandages his sharp, Highland face looks piteous.
+
+I am to dress these two and have them ready by eleven. Dr. ---- of the
+British Field Hospital, who is to take them over, comes round to enter
+their names on his list.
+
+They are to be dressed in civilian clothes supplied by the Hospital.
+
+It all sounded very simple until you tried to get the clothes. First you
+had to see the President, who referred you to the Matron, who referred
+you to the clerk in charge of the clothing department. An _infirmier_
+(one of the mysterious officials who hang about the hall wearing peaked
+caps; the problem of their existence was now solved for the first
+time)--an _infirmier_ was despatched to find the clerk. The clothing
+department must have been hidden in the remotest recesses of the
+Hospital, for it was ages before he came back to ask me all over again
+what clothes would be wanted. He was a little fat man with bright, curly
+hair, very eager, and very cheerful and very kind. He scuttled off again
+like a rabbit, and I had to call him back to measure Russell. And when
+he had measured Russell, with his gay and amiable alacrity, Russell and
+I had to wait until he came back with the clothes.
+
+I had made up my mind very soon that it would be no use measuring
+Cameron for any clothes, or getting him ready for any train. He was
+moving his head from side to side and making queer moaning sounds of
+agitation and dismay. He had asked for a cigarette, which somebody had
+brought him. It dropped from his fingers. Somebody picked it up and lit
+it and stuck it in his mouth; it dropped again. Then I noticed something
+odd about his left arm; he was holding it up with his right hand and
+feeling it. It dropped, too, like a dead weight, on the counterpane.
+Cameron watched its behaviour with anguish. He complained that his left
+arm was all numb and too heavy to hold up. Also he said he was afraid
+to be moved and taken away.
+
+It struck me that Cameron's head must be smashed in on the right side
+and that some pressure on his brain was causing paralysis. It was quite
+clear that he couldn't be moved. So I sent for one of the Belgian
+doctors to come and look at him, and keep him in the Hospital.
+
+The Belgian doctor found that Cameron's head _was_ smashed in on the
+right side, and that there was pressure on his brain, causing paralysis
+in his left arm.
+
+He is to be kept in the Hospital and operated on this morning. They may
+save him if they can remove the pressure.
+
+It seemed ages before the merry little _infirmier_ came back with
+Russell's clothes. And when he did come he brought socks that were too
+tight, and went back and brought socks that were too large, and a shirt
+that was too tight and trousers that were too long. Then he went back,
+eager as ever, and brought drawers that were too tight, and more
+trousers that were too short. He brought boots that were too large and
+boots that were too tight; and he had to be sent back again for
+slippers. Last of all he brought a shirt which made Russell smile and
+mutter something about being dressed in all the colours of the rainbow;
+and a black cutaway morning coat, and a variety of hats, all too small
+for Russell.
+
+Then when you had made a selection, you began to try to get Russell into
+all these things that were too tight or too loose for him. The socks
+were the worst. The right-hand one had to be put on very carefully, by
+quarter inches at a time; the least tug on the sock would give Russell
+an excruciating pain in his wounded knee; and Russell was all for
+violence and haste; he was so afraid of being left behind.
+
+Though he called me "Sister," I felt certain that Russell must know that
+I wasn't a trained nurse and that he was the first wounded man I had
+ever dressed in my life. However, I did get him dressed, somehow, with
+the help of the little _infirmier_, and a wonderful sight he was, in the
+costume of a Belgian civilian.
+
+What tried him most were the hats. He refused a peaked cap which the
+_infirmier_ pressed on him, and compromised finally on a sort of checked
+cricket cap that just covered the extreme top of his head. We got him
+off in time, after all.
+
+Then two _infirmiers_ came with a stretcher and carried Cameron
+upstairs to the operating theatre, and I went up and waited with him in
+the corridor till the surgeons were ready for him. He had grown drowsy
+and indifferent by now.
+
+I have missed the Ambulance going out to Lokeren, and have had to stay
+behind.
+
+Two ladies called to see Mr. ----. One of them was Miss Ashley-Smith,
+who had him in her ward at Antwerp. I took them over the Hospital to
+find his room, which is on the second story. His name--his names--in
+thick Gothic letters, were on a white card by the door.
+
+He was asleep and the nurse could not let them see him.
+
+Miss Ashley-Smith and her friend are staying in the Couvent de Saint
+Pierre, where the British Field Hospital has taken some of its wounded.
+
+Towards one o'clock news came of heavy fighting. The battle is creeping
+nearer to us; it has stretched from Zele and Quatrecht to Melle, four
+and a half miles from Ghent. They are saying that the Germans may enter
+Ghent to-day, in an hour--half an hour! It will be very awkward for us
+and for our wounded if they do, as both our ambulance cars are out.
+
+Later news of more fighting at Quatrecht.
+
+
+[_Afternoon._]
+
+The Commandant has come back. They were at Quatrecht, not Lokeren.
+
+Mr. ---- is awake now. The Commandant has taken me to see him.
+
+He is lying in one of the officers' wards, a small room, with bare walls
+and a blond light, looking south. There are two beds in this room, set
+side by side. In the one next the door there is a young French officer.
+He is very young: a boy with sleek black hair and smooth rose-leaf skin,
+shining and fresh as if he had never been near the smoke and dirt of
+battle. He is sitting up reading a French magazine. He is wounded in the
+leg. His crutches are propped up against the wall.
+
+Stretched on his back in the further bed there is a very tall young
+Englishman. The sheet is drawn very tight over his chest; his face is
+flushed and he is breathing rapidly, in short jerks. At first you do not
+see that he, too, is not more than a boy, for he is so big and tall, and
+a little brown feathery beard has begun to curl about his jaw and chin.
+
+When I came to him and the Commandant told him my name, he opened his
+eyes wide with a look of startled recognition. He said he knew me; he
+had seen me somewhere in England. He was so certain about it that he
+persuaded me that I had seen him somewhere. But we can neither of us
+remember where or when. They say he is not perfectly conscious all the
+time.
+
+We stayed with him for a few minutes till he went off to sleep again.
+
+None of the doctors think that he can live. He was wounded in front with
+mitrailleuse; eight bullets in his body. He has been operated on. How he
+survived the operation and the journey on the top of it I can't imagine.
+And now general peritonitis has set in. It doesn't look as if he had a
+chance.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We have heard that all the War Correspondents have been sent out of
+Ghent.
+
+Numbers of British troops came in to-day.
+
+Went up to see Mr. Foster, who is in his room, ill. It is hard lines
+that he should have had this accident when he has been working so
+splendidly. And it wasn't his fault, either. One of the Belgian bearers
+slipped with his end of a stretcher when they were carrying a heavy man,
+and Mr. Foster got hurt in trying to right the balance and save his
+wounded man. He is very much distressed at having to lie up and be
+waited on.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Impossible to write a Journal or any articles while I am in the
+Hospital, and there is no table yet in my room at the Hotel Cecil.
+
+The first ambulance car, with the chauffeur Bert and Mr. Riley, has come
+back from Melle, where they left Mrs. Torrence and Janet and Dr. Wilson.
+They went back again in the afternoon.
+
+They are all out now except poor Mr. Foster and Mrs. Lambert, who is
+somewhere with her husband.
+
+I am the only available member of the Corps left in the Hospital!
+
+
+[_3.30._]
+
+No Germans have appeared yet.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I was sitting up in the mess-room, making entries in the Day-Book, when
+I was sent for. Somebody or something had arrived, and was waiting
+below.
+
+On the steps of the Hospital I found two brand-new British chauffeurs in
+brand-new suits of khaki. Behind them, drawn up in the entry, were two
+brand-new Daimler motor-ambulance cars.
+
+I thought it was a Field Ambulance that had lost itself on the way to
+France. The chauffeurs (they had beautiful manners, and were very spick
+and span, and one pleased me by his remarkable resemblance to the
+editor of the _English Review_)--the chauffeurs wanted to know whether
+they had come to the right place. And of course they hardly had, if all
+the British Red Cross ambulance cars were going into France.
+
+Then they explained.
+
+They were certainly making for Ghent. The British Red Cross Society had
+sent them there. They were only anxious to know whether they had come to
+the right Hospital, the Hospital where the English Field Ambulance was
+quartered.
+
+Yes: that was right. They had been sent for us.
+
+They had just come up from Ostend, and they had not been ten minutes in
+Ghent before orders came through for an ambulance to be sent at once to
+Melle.
+
+The only available member of the Corps was its Secretary and Reporter.
+To that utterly untrained and supremely inappropriate person Heaven sent
+this incredible luck.
+
+When I think how easily I might have missed it! If I'd gone for a stroll
+in the town. If I'd sat five minutes longer with Mr. Foster. If the
+landlord of the Hotel Cecil had kept his word and given me a table, when
+I should, to a dead certainty, have been writing this wretched Journal
+at the ineffable moment when the chauffeurs arrived.
+
+I am glad to think that I had just enough morality left to play fair
+with Mrs. Lambert. I did try to find her, so that she shouldn't miss it.
+Somebody said she was in one of the restaurants on the _Place_ with her
+husband. I looked in all the restaurants and she wasn't in one of them.
+The finger of Heaven pointed unmistakably to the Secretary and Reporter.
+
+There was a delay of ten minutes, no more, while I got some cake and
+sandwiches for the hungry chauffeurs and took them to the bureau to have
+their brassards stamped. And in every minute of the ten I suffered
+tortures while we waited. I thought something _must_ happen to prevent
+my taking that ambulance car out. I thought my heart would leave off
+beating and I should die before we started (I believe people feel like
+this sometimes before their wedding night). I thought the Commandant
+would come back and send out Ursula Dearmer instead. I thought the
+Military Power would come down from its secret hiding-place and stop me.
+But none of these things happened. At the last moment, I thought that M.
+C----
+
+M. C---- was the Belgian Red Cross guide who took us into Antwerp. To M.
+C---- I said simply and firmly that I was going. The functions of the
+Secretary and Reporter had never been very clearly defined, and this
+was certainly not the moment to define them. M. C----, in his innocence,
+accepted me with confidence and a chivalrous gravity that left nothing
+to be desired.
+
+The chauffeur Newlands (the leaner and darker one) declared himself
+ready for anything. All he wanted was to get to work. Poor Ascot, who
+was so like my friend the editor, had to be content with his vigil in
+the back yard.
+
+At last we got off. I might have trusted Heaven. The getting off was a
+foregone conclusion, for we went along the south-east road, which had
+not worked its mysterious fascination for nothing.
+
+At a fork where two roads go into Ghent we saw one of our old ambulance
+cars dashing into Ghent down the other road on our left. It was beyond
+hail. Heaven _meant_ us to go on uninterrupted and unchallenged.
+
+I had not allowed for trouble at the barrier. There always is a barrier,
+which may be anything from a mile to four miles from the field or
+village where the wounded are. Yesterday on the way to Lokeren the
+barrier was at Z----. To-day it was somewhere half-way between Ghent and
+Melle.
+
+None of us had ever quite got to the bottom of the trouble at the
+barrier. We know that the Belgian authorities wisely refused all
+responsibility. Properly speaking, our ambulances were not supposed to
+go nearer than a certain safe distance from the enemy's firing-line. For
+two reasons. First, it stood the chance of being shelled or taken
+prisoner. Second, there was a very natural fear that it might draw down
+the enemy's fire on the Belgians. Our huge, lumbering cars, with their
+brand-new khaki hoods and flaming red crosses on a white ground, were an
+admirable mark for German guns. But as the Corps in this case went into
+the firing-line on foot, I do not think that the risk was to the
+Belgians. So, though in theory we stopped outside the barriers, in
+practice we invariably got through.
+
+The new car was stopped at the barrier now by the usual Belgian Army
+Medical Officer. We were not to go on to Melle.
+
+I said that we had orders to go on to Melle; and I meant to go on to
+Melle. The Medical Officer said again that we were not to go, and I said
+again that we were going.
+
+Then that Belgian Army Medical Officer began to tell us what I imagine
+is the usual barrier tale.
+
+There were any amount of ambulances at Melle.
+
+There were no wounded at Melle.
+
+And in any case this ambulance wouldn't be allowed to go there. And then
+the usual battle of the barrier had place.
+
+It was one against three. For M. C---- went over to the enemy, and the
+chauffeur Newlands, confronted by two official adversaries in uniform,
+became deafer and deafer to my voice in his right ear.
+
+First, the noble and chivalrous Belgian Red Cross guide, with an
+appalling treachery, gave the order to turn the car round to Ghent. I
+gave the counter order. Newlands wavered for one heroic moment; then he
+turned the car round.
+
+I jumped out and went up to the Army Medical Officer and delivered a
+frontal attack, discharging execrable French.
+
+"No wounded? You tell us that tale every day, and there are always
+wounded. Do you want any more of them to die? I mean to go on and I
+shall go on."
+
+I didn't ask him how he thought he could stop one whom Heaven had
+predestined to go on to Melle.
+
+M. C---- had got out now to see the fight.
+
+The Army Medical Officer looked the Secretary and Reporter up and down,
+taking in that vision of inappropriateness and disproportion. There was
+a faint, a very faint smile under the ferocity of his moustache, the
+first sign of relenting. The Secretary and Reporter saw the advantage
+and followed, as you might follow a bend in the enemy's line of
+defence.
+
+"I _want_ to go on" (placably, almost pathetically). "_Je veux
+continuer._ Do you by any chance imagine we're _afraid_?"
+
+At this, M. C----, the Belgian guide, smiled too, under a moustache not
+quite so ferocious as the Army Medical Officer's. They shrugged their
+shoulders. They had done their duty. Anyhow, they had lost the battle.
+
+The guide and the reporter jumped back into the car; I didn't hear
+anybody give the order, but the chauffeur Newlands turned her round in
+no time, and we dashed past the barrier and into Melle.
+
+The village street, that had been raked by mitrailleuses from the field
+beyond it, was quiet when we came in, and almost deserted. Up a side
+street, propped against the wall of a stable, four wounded Frenchmen
+waited for the ambulance. A fifth, shot through the back of his head by
+a dum-dum bullet, lay in front of them on a stretcher that dripped
+blood.
+
+I found Mr. Grierson in the village, left behind by the last ambulance.
+He was immensely astonished at my arrival with the new car. He had with
+him an eager little Englishman, one of the sort that tracks an
+ambulance everywhere on the off-chance of being useful.
+
+And the Cure of the village was there. He wore the Red Cross brassard on
+the sleeve of his cassock and he carried the Host in a little bag of
+purple silk.
+
+They told me that the village had been fired on by shrapnel a few
+minutes before we came into it. They said we were only a hundred [?]
+yards from the German trenches. We could see the edge of the field from
+the village street. The trenches [?] were at the bottom of it.
+
+It was Baerlaere all over again. The firing stopped as soon as I came
+within range of it, and didn't begin again until we had got away.
+
+You couldn't take any interest in the firing or the German trenches, or
+the eager little Englishman, or anything. You couldn't see anything but
+those five wounded men, or think of anything but how to get them into
+the ambulance as painlessly and in as short a time as possible.
+
+The man on the dripping stretcher was mortally wounded. He was lifted in
+first, very slowly and gently.
+
+The Cure climbed in after him, carrying the Host.
+
+He kneeled there while the blood from the wounded head oozed through the
+bandages and through the canvas of the stretcher to the floor and to
+the skirts of his cassock.
+
+We waited.
+
+There was no ugly haste in the Supreme Act; the three mortal moments
+that it lasted (it could not have lasted more) were charged with
+immortality, while the Cure remained kneeling in the pool of blood.
+
+I shall never become a Catholic. But if I do, it will be because of the
+Cure of Melle, who turned our new motor ambulance into a sanctuary after
+the French soldier had baptized it with his blood. I have never seen, I
+never shall see, anything more beautiful, more gracious than the Soul
+that appeared in his lean, dark face and in the straight, slender body
+under the black _soutane_. In his simple, inevitable gestures you saw
+adoration of God, contempt for death, and uttermost compassion.
+
+It was all over. I received his missal and his bag of purple silk as he
+gathered his cassock about him and came down.
+
+I asked him if anything could be done. His eyes smiled as he answered.
+But his lips quivered as he took again his missal and his purple bag.
+
+M. C---- is now glad that we went on to Melle.
+
+We helped the four other wounded men in. They sat in a row alongside the
+stretcher.
+
+I sat on the edge of the ambulance, at the feet of the dying man, by the
+handles of the stretcher.
+
+At the last minute the Chaplain jumped on to the step. So did the little
+eager Englishman. Hanging on to the hood and swaying with the rush of
+the car, he talked continually. He talked from the moment we left Melle
+to the moment when we landed him at his street in Ghent; explaining over
+and over again the qualifications that justified him in attaching
+himself to ambulances. He had lived fourteen years in Ghent. He could
+speak French and Flemish.
+
+I longed for the eager little Englishman to stop. I longed for his
+street to come and swallow him up. He had lived in Ghent fourteen years.
+He could speak Flemish and French. I felt that I couldn't bear it if he
+went on a minute longer. I wanted to think. The dying man lay close
+behind me, very straight and stiff; his poor feet stuck out close under
+my hand.
+
+But I couldn't think. The little eager Englishman went on swaying and
+talking.
+
+He had lived fourteen years in Ghent.
+
+He could speak French and Flemish.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The dying man was still alive when he was lifted out of the ambulance.
+
+He died that evening.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Commandant is pleased with his new ambulances. He is not altogether
+displeased with me.
+
+We must have been very quick. For it was the Commandant's car that we
+passed at the fork of the road. And either he arrived a few minutes
+after we got back or we arrived just as he had got in. Anyhow, we met in
+the porch.
+
+He and Ursula Dearmer and I went back to Melle again at once, in the new
+car. It was nearly dark when we got there.
+
+We found Mrs. Torrence and little Janet in the village. They and Dr.
+Wilson had been working all day long picking up wounded off the field
+outside it. The German lines are not far off--at the bottom of the
+field. I think only a small number of their guns could rake the main
+street of the village where we were. Their shell went over our heads and
+over the roofs of the houses towards the French batteries on this side
+of the village. There must have been a rush from the German lines across
+this field, and the French batteries have done their work well, for Mrs.
+Torrence said the German dead are lying thick there among the turnips.
+She and Janet and Dr. Wilson had been under fire for eight hours on
+end, lifting men and carrying stretchers. I don't know whether their
+figures (the two girls in khaki tunics and breeches) could be seen from
+the German lines, but they just trudged on between the furrows, and over
+the turnip-tops, serenely regardless of the enemy, carefully sorting the
+wounded from the dead, with the bullets whizzing past their noses.
+
+Of bullets Mrs. Torrence said, indeed, that eight hours of them were
+rather more than she cared for; and of carrying stretchers over a
+turnip-field, that it was as much as she and Janet could do. But they
+came back from it without turning a hair. I have seen women more
+dishevelled after tramping a turnip-field in a day's partridge-shooting.
+
+They went off somewhere to find Dr. Wilson; and we--Ursula Dearmer, the
+Commandant and I--hung about the village waiting for the wounded to be
+brought in. The village was crowded with French and Belgian troops when
+we came into it. Then they gathered together and went on towards the
+field, and we followed them up the street. They called to us to stay
+under cover, or, if we _must_ walk up the street, to keep close under
+the houses, as the bullets might come flying at us any minute.
+
+No bullets came, however. It was like Baerlaere--it was like Lokeren--it
+was like every place I've been in, so far. Nothing came as long as
+there was a chance of its getting me.
+
+After that we drove down to the station. While we were hanging about
+there, a shell was hurled over this side of the village from the German
+batteries. It careered over the roofs, with a track that was luminous in
+the dusk, like a curved sheet of lightning. I don't know where it fell
+and burst.
+
+We were told to stand out from under the station building for fear it
+should be struck.
+
+When we got back into the village we went into the inn and waited there
+in a long, narrow room, lit by a few small oil-lamps and crammed with
+soldiers. They were eating and drinking in vehement haste. Wherever the
+light from the lamps fell on them, you saw faces flushed and scarred
+under a blur of smoke and grime. Here and there a bandage showed up,
+violently white. On the tables enormous quantities of bread appeared and
+disappeared.
+
+These soldiers, with all their vehemence and violence, were exceedingly
+lovable. One man brought me a chair; another brought bread and offered
+it. Charming smiles flashed through the grime.
+
+At last, when we had found one man with a wounded hand, we got into the
+ambulance and went back to Ghent.
+
+
+[_Saturday, 10th._]
+
+I have got something to do again--at last!
+
+I am to help to look after Mr. ----. He has the pick of the Belgian Red
+Cross women to nurse him, and they are angelically kind and very
+skilful, but he is not very happy with them. He says: "These dear people
+are so good to me, but I can't make out what they say. I can't tell them
+what I want." He is pathetically glad to have any English people with
+him. (Even I am a little better than a Belgian whom he cannot
+understand.)
+
+I sat with him all morning. The French boy has gone and he is alone in
+his room now. It seems that the kind Chaplain sat up with him all last
+night after his hard day at Melle. (I wish now I had stood by the
+Chaplain with his Matins. He has never tried to have them again--given
+us up as an unholy crew, all except Mr. Foster, whom he clings to.)
+
+The morning went like half an hour, while it was going; but when it was
+over I felt as if I had been nursing for weeks on end. There were so
+many little things to be done, and so much that you mustn't do, and the
+anxiety was appalling. I don't suppose there is a worse case in the
+Hospital. He is perhaps a shade better to-day, but none of the medical
+staff think that he can live.
+
+Madame E---- and Dr. Bird have shown me what to do, and what not to do.
+I must keep him all the time in the same position. I must give him sips
+of iced broth, and little pieces of ice to suck every now and then. I
+must not let him try to raise himself in bed. I must not try to lift him
+myself. If we do lift him we must keep his body tilted at the same
+angle. I must not give him any hot drinks and not too much cold drink.
+
+And he is six foot high, so tall that his feet come through the blankets
+at the bottom of the bed; and he keeps sinking down in it all the time
+and wanting to raise himself up again. And his fever makes him restless.
+And he is always thirsty and he longs for hot tea more than iced water,
+and for more iced water than is good for him. The iced broth that is his
+only nourishment he does not want at all.
+
+And then he must be kept very quiet. I must not let him talk more than
+is necessary to tell me what he wants, or he will die of exhaustion. And
+what he wants is to talk every minute that he is awake.
+
+He drops off to sleep, breathing in jerks and with a terrible rapidity.
+And I think it will be all right as long as he sleeps. But his sleep
+only lasts for a few minutes. I hear the rhythm of his breathing alter;
+it slackens and goes slow; then it jerks again, and I know that he is
+awake.
+
+And then he begins. He says things that tear at your heart. He has looks
+and gestures that break it--the adorable, wilful smile of a child that
+knows that it is being watched when you find his hand groping too often
+for the glass of iced water that stands beside his bed; a still more
+adorable and utterly gentle submission when you take the glass from him;
+when you tell him not to say anything more just yet but to go to sleep
+again. You feel as if you were guilty of act after act of nameless and
+abominable cruelty.
+
+He sticks to it that he has seen me before, that he has heard of me,
+that his people know me. And he wants to know what I do and where I live
+and where it was that he saw me. Once, when I thought he had gone to
+sleep, I heard him begin again: "Where did you say you lived?"
+
+I tell him. And I tell him to go to sleep again.
+
+He closes his eyes obediently and opens them the next instant.
+
+"I say, may I come and call on you when we get back to England?"
+
+You can only say: "Yes. Of course," and tell him to go to sleep.
+
+His voice is so strong and clear that I could almost believe that he
+will get back and that some day I shall look up and see him standing at
+my garden gate.
+
+Mercifully, when I tell him to go to sleep again, he does go to sleep.
+And his voice is a little clearer and stronger every time he wakes.
+
+And so the morning goes on. The only thing he wants you to do for him is
+to sponge his hands and face with iced water and to give him little bits
+of ice to suck. Over and over again I do these things. And over and over
+again he asks me, "Do you mind?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He wears a little grey woollen cord round his neck. Something has gone
+from it. Whatever he has lost, they have left him his little woollen
+cord, as if some immense importance attached to it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He has fallen into a long doze. And at the end of the morning I left him
+sleeping.
+
+Some of the Corps have brought in trophies from the battle-field--a fine
+grey cloak with a scarlet collar, a spiked helmet, a cuff with three
+buttons cut from the coat of a dead German.
+
+These things make me sick. I see the body under the cloak, the head
+under the helmet, and the dead hand under the cuff.
+
+
+[_Afternoon._]
+
+Saw Mr. Foster. He is to be sent back to England for an operation. Dr.
+Wilson is to take him. He asked me if I thought the Commandant would
+take him back again when he is better.
+
+Saw the President about Mr. Foster. He will not hear of his going back
+to England. He wants him to stay in the Hospital and be operated on
+here. He promises the utmost care and attention. He is most distressed
+to think that he should go.
+
+It doesn't occur to him in his kindness that it would be much more
+distressing if the Germans came into Ghent and interrupted the
+operation.
+
+Cabled Miss F. about her Glasgow ambulance, asking her to pay her staff
+if her funds ran to it. Cabled British Red Cross to send Mr. Gould and
+his scouting-car here instead of to France. Cabled Mr. Gould to get the
+British Red Cross to send him here.
+
+Mr. Lambert has been ill with malaria. He has gone back to England to
+get well again and to repair the car that broke down at Lokeren.[22]
+
+Somebody else is to look after Mr. ---- this afternoon.
+
+I have been given leave rather reluctantly to sit up with him at night.
+
+The Commandant is going to take me in Tom's Daimler (Car 1) to the
+British lines to look for a base for that temporary hospital which is
+still running in his head like a splendid dream. I do not see how, with
+the Germans at Melle, only four and a half miles off, any sort of
+hospital is to be established on this side of Ghent.
+
+Tom, the chauffeur, does not look with favour on the expedition. I have
+had to point out to him that a Field Ambulance is _not_, as he would
+say, the House of Commons, and that there is a certain propriety
+binding even on a chauffeur and a limit to the freedom of the speech you
+may apply to your Commandant. This afternoon Tom has exceeded all the
+limits. The worst of Tom is that while his tongue rages on the confines
+of revolt, he himself is punctilious to excess on the point of orders.
+Either he has orders or he hasn't them. If he has them he obeys them
+with a punctuality that puts everybody else in the wrong. If he hasn't
+them, an earthquake wouldn't make him move. Such is his devotion to
+orders that he will insist on any one order holding good for an
+unlimited time after it has been given.
+
+So now, in defence of his manners, he urges that what with orders and
+counter-orders, the provocation is more than flesh and blood can stand.
+Tom himself is protest clothed in flesh and blood.
+
+To-day at two o'clock Tom's orders are that his car is to be ready at
+two-thirty. My orders are to be ready in twenty minutes. I _am_ ready in
+twenty minutes. The Commandant thinks that he has transacted all his
+business and is ready in twenty minutes too. Tom and his car are nowhere
+to be seen. I go to look for Tom. Tom is reported as being last seen
+riding on a motor-lorry towards the British lines in the company of a
+detachment of British infantry.
+
+The chauffeur Tom is considered to have disgraced himself everlastingly.
+
+Punctually at two-thirty he appears with his car at the door of the
+"Flandria."
+
+The Commandant is nowhere to be seen. He has gone to look for Tom.
+
+I reprove Tom for the sin of unpunctuality, and he has me.
+
+His orders were to be ready at two-thirty and he is ready at two-thirty.
+And it is nobody's business what he did with himself ten minutes before.
+He wants to know where the Commandant is.
+
+I go to look for the Commandant.
+
+The Commandant is reported to have been last seen going through the
+Hospital on his way to the garage. I go round to the garage through the
+Hospital; and the Commandant goes out of the garage by the street. He
+was last seen _in_ the garage.
+
+He appears suddenly from some quarter where you wouldn't expect him in
+the least. He reproves Tom.
+
+Tom with considerable violence declares his righteousness. He has
+gathered to himself a friend, a Belgian Red Cross man, whose language he
+does not understand. But they exchange winks that surpass all language.
+
+Then the Commandant remembers that he has several cables to send off.
+He is seen disappearing in the direction of the Post and Telegraph
+Office.
+
+Tom swallows words that would be curses if I were not there.
+
+I keep my eyes fixed on the doors of the Post Office. Ages pass.
+
+I go to the Post Office to look for the Commandant. He is not in the
+Telegraph Office. He is not in the Post Office. Tom keeps his eyes on
+the doors of both.
+
+More ages pass. Finally, the Commandant appears from inside the
+Hospital, which he has not been seen to enter.
+
+The chauffeur Tom dismounts and draws from his car's mysterious being
+sounds that express the savage fury of his resentment.
+
+You would think we were off now. But we only get as far as a street
+somewhere near the Hotel de la Poste. Here we wait for apparently no
+reason in such tension that you can hear the ages pass.
+
+The Commandant disappears.
+
+Tom says something about there being no room for the wounded at this
+rate.
+
+It seems his orders are to go first to the British lines at a place
+whose name I forget, and then on to Melle.
+
+I remember Tom's views on the subject of field-women. And suddenly I
+seem to understand them. Tom is very like Lord Kitchener. He knows
+nothing about the aims and wants of modern womanhood and he cares less.
+The modern woman does not ask to be protected, does not want to be
+protected, and Tom, like Lord Kitchener, will go on protecting. You
+cannot elevate men like Lord Kitchener and Tom above the primitive plane
+of chivalry. Tom in the danger zone with a woman by his side feels about
+as peaceful and comfortable as a woman in the danger zone with a
+two-year-old baby in her lap. A bomb in his bedroom is one thing and a
+band of drunken Uhlans making for his women is another. Tom's nerves are
+racked with problems: How the dickens is he to steer his car and protect
+his women at the same time? And if it comes to a toss-up between his
+women and his wounded? You've got to stow the silly things somewhere,
+and every one of them takes up the place of a wounded man.
+
+I get out of the car and tell the Commandant that I would rather not go
+than take up the place of a wounded man.
+
+He orders me back to the car again. Tom seems inclined to regard me as a
+woman who has done her best.
+
+We go on a little way and stop again. And there springs out of the
+pavement a curious figure that I have seen somewhere before in Ghent, I
+cannot remember when or where. The figure wears a check suit of extreme
+horsyness and carries a kodak in its hand. It is excited.
+
+There is something about it that reminds me now of the eager little
+Englishman at Melle. These figures spring up everywhere in the track of
+a field ambulance.
+
+When Tom sees it he groans in despair.
+
+The Commandant gets out and appears to be offering it the hospitality of
+the car. I am introduced.
+
+To my horror the figure skips round in front of the car, levels its
+kodak at my head and implores me to sit still.
+
+I am very rude. I tell it sternly to take that beastly thing away and go
+away itself.
+
+It goes, rather startled.
+
+And we get off, somehow, without it, and arrive at the end of the
+street.
+
+Here Tom has orders to stop at the first hat-shop he comes to.
+
+The Commandant has lost his hat at Melle (he has been wearing little
+Janet's Arctic cap, to the delight of everybody). He has just remembered
+that he wants a hat and he thinks that he will get it now.
+
+At this point I break down. I hear myself say "Damn" five times, softly
+but distinctly. (This after reproving Tom for unfettered speech and
+potential insubordination.)
+
+Tom stops at a hat-shop. The Commandant to his doom enters, and
+presently returns wearing a soft felt hat of a vivid green. He asks me
+what I think of it.
+
+I tell him all I think of it, and he says that if I feel like that about
+it he'll go in again and get another one.
+
+I forget what I said then except that I wanted to get on to Melle. That
+Melle was the place of all places where I most wished to be.
+
+Then, lest he might feel unhappy in his green hat, I said that if he
+would leave it out all night in the rain and then sit on it no doubt
+time and weather and God would do something for it.
+
+This time we were off, and when I realized it I said "Hurray!"[23]
+
+Tom had not said anything for some considerable time.
+
+We found the British lines in a little village just outside of Ghent.
+No place there for a base hospital.
+
+We hung about here for twenty minutes, and the women and children came
+out to stare at us with innocent, pathetic faces.
+
+Somebody had stowed away one of the trophies--the spiked German
+helmet--in the ambulance car, and the chauffeur Tom stuck it on a stick
+and held it up before the British lines. It was greeted with cheers and
+a great shout of laughter from the troops; and the villagers came
+running out of their houses to look; they uttered little sharp and
+guttural cries of satisfaction. The whole thing was a bit savage and
+barbaric and horribly impressive.
+
+Finally we left the British lines and set out towards Melle by a
+cross-road.
+
+We got through all right. A thousand accidents may delay his going, but
+once off, no barriers exist for the Commandant. Seated in the front of
+the car, utterly unperturbed by the chauffeur Tom's sarcastic comments
+on men, things and women, wrapped (apparently) in a beautiful dream, he
+looks straight ahead with eyes whose vagueness veils a deadly simplicity
+of purpose. I marvel at the transfiguration of the Commandant. Before
+the War he was a fairly complex personality. Now he has ceased to exist
+as a separate individual. He is merged, vaguely and vastly, in his
+adventure. He is the Motor Ambulance Field Corps; he is the ambulance
+car; he is the electric spark and the continuous explosion that drives
+the thing along. It is useless to talk to him about anything that
+happened before the War or about anything that exists outside it. He
+would not admit that anything did exist outside it. He is capable of
+forgetting the day of the week and the precise number of female units in
+his company and the amount standing to his credit at his banker's, but,
+once off, he is cock-sure of the shortest cut to the firing-line within
+a radius of fifty kilometres.
+
+Some of us who have never seen a human phenomenon of this sort are ready
+to deny him an identity. They complain of his inveterate and deplorable
+lack of any sense of detail. This is absurd. You might as well insist on
+a faithful representation of the household furniture of the burgomaster
+of Zoetenaeg, which is the smallest village in Belgium, in drawing the
+map of Europe to scale. At the critical moment this more than
+continental vastness gathers to a wedge-like determination that goes
+home. He means to get through.
+
+We ran into Melle about an hour before sunset.
+
+There had been a great slaughter of Germans on the field outside the
+village where the Germans were still firing when the Corps left it. We
+found two of our cars drawn up by the side of the village street, close
+under the houses. The Chaplain, Ursula Dearmer and Mrs. Lambert were
+waiting in one of them, the new Daimler, with the chauffeur Newlands.
+Dr. Wilson was in Bert's car with three wounded Germans. He was sitting
+in front with one of them beside him. They say that the enemy's wounded
+sometimes fire on our surgeons and Red Cross men, and Dr. Wilson had a
+revolver about him when he went on the battle-field yesterday. He said
+he wasn't taking any risks. The man he had got beside him to-day was
+only wounded in the foot, and had his hands entirely free to do what he
+liked with. He looked rather a low type, and at the first sight of him I
+thought I shouldn't have cared to be alone with him anywhere on a dark
+night.
+
+And then I saw the look on his face. He was purely pathetic. He didn't
+look at you. He stared in front of him down the road towards Ghent, in a
+dull, helpless misery. These unhappy German Tommies are afraid of us.
+They are told that we shall treat them badly, and some of them believe
+it. I wanted Dr. Wilson to let me get up and go with the poor fellow,
+but he wouldn't. He was sorry for him and very gentle. He is always
+sorry for people and very gentle. So I knew that the German would be all
+right with him. But I should have liked to have gone.
+
+We found Mrs. Torrence and Janet with M. ---- on the other side of the
+street, left behind by Dr. Wilson. They have been working all day
+yesterday and half the night and all this morning and afternoon on that
+hideous turnip-field. They have seen things and combinations of things
+that no forewarning imagination could have devised. Last night the car
+was fired on where it stood waiting for them in the village, and they
+had to race back to it under a shower of bullets.
+
+They were as fresh as paint and very cheerful. Mrs. Torrence was wearing
+a large silver order on a broad blue ribbon pinned to her khaki
+overcoat. It was given to her to-day as the reward of valour by the
+Belgian General in command here. Somebody took it from the breast of a
+Prussian officer. She had covered it up with her khaki scarf so that she
+might not seem to swank.
+
+Little Janet was with her. She always is with her. She looked younger
+than ever, more impassive than ever, more adorable than ever. I have got
+used to Mrs. Torrence and to Ursula Dearmer; but I cannot get used to
+Janet. It always seems appalling to me that she should be here,
+strolling about the seat of War with her hands in her pockets, as if a
+battle were a cricket-match at which you looked on between your innings.
+And yet there isn't a man in the Corps who does his work better, and
+with more courage and endurance, than this eighteen-year-old child.
+
+They told us that there were no French or Belgian wounded left, but that
+two wounded Germans were still lying over there among the turnips. They
+were waiting for our car to come out and take these men up. The car was
+now drawn up close under some building that looked like a town hall, on
+the other side of the street. We were in the middle of the village. The
+village itself was the extreme fringe of the danger zone. Where the
+houses ended, a stretch of white road ran up for about [?] a hundred
+yards to the turnip-field. Standing in the village street, we could see
+the turnip-field, but not all of it. The road goes straight up to the
+edge of it and turns there with a sweep to the left and runs alongside
+for about a mile and a half.
+
+On the other side of the turnip-field were the German lines. The first
+that had raked the village street also raked the fields and the mile and
+a half of road alongside.
+
+It was along that road that the car would have to go.
+
+M. ---- told our Ambulance that it might as well go back. There were no
+more wounded. Only two Germans lying in a turnip-field. The three of
+us--Mrs. Torrence and Janet and I--tried to bring pressure to bear on M.
+----. We meant to go and get those Germans.
+
+But M. ---- was impervious to pressure. He refused either to go with the
+car himself or to let us go. He said we were too late and it was too far
+and there wouldn't be light enough. He said that for two Belgians, or
+two French, or two British, it would be worth while taking risks. But
+for two Germans under German fire it wasn't good enough.
+
+But Mrs. Torrence and Janet and I didn't agree with him. Wounded were
+wounded. We said we were going if he wasn't.
+
+Then the chauffeur Tom joined in. He refused to offer his car as a
+target for the enemy.[24] Our firm Belgian was equally determined. The
+Commandant, as if roused from his beautiful dream to a sudden
+realization of the horrors of war, absolutely forbade the expedition.
+
+It took place all the same.
+
+Tom's car, planted there on our side of the street, hugging the wall,
+with its hood over its eyes, preserved its attitude of obstinate
+immobility. Newlands' car, hugging the wall on the other side of the
+street, stood discreetly apart from the discussion. But a Belgian
+military ambulance car ran up, smaller and more alert than ours. And a
+Belgian Army Medical Officer strolled up to see what was happening.
+
+We three advanced on that Army Medical Officer, Mrs. Torrence and Janet
+on his left and I on his right.
+
+I shall always be grateful to that righteous man. He gave Mrs. Torrence
+and Janet leave to go, and he gave me leave to go with them; he gave us
+the military ambulance to go in and a Belgian soldier with a rifle to
+protect us. And he didn't waste a second over it. He just looked at us,
+and smiled, and let us go.
+
+Mrs. Torrence got on to the ambulance beside the driver, Janet jumped on
+to one step and I on to the other, while the Commandant came up, trying
+to look stern, and told me to get down.
+
+I hung on all the tighter.
+
+And then----
+
+What happened then was so ignominious, so sickening, that, if I were not
+sworn to the utmost possible realism in this record, I should suppress
+it in the interests of human dignity.
+
+Mrs. Torrence, having the advantage of me in weight, height, muscle and
+position, got up and tried to push me off the step. As she did this she
+said: "You can't come. You'll take up the place of a wounded man."
+
+And I found myself standing in the village street, while the car rushed
+out of it, with Janet clinging on to the hood, like a little sailor to
+his shrouds. She was on the side next the German guns.
+
+It was the most revolting thing that had happened to me yet, in a life
+filled with incidents that I have no desire to repeat. And it made me
+turn on the Commandant in a way that I do not like to think of. I
+believe I asked him how he could bear to let that kid go into the German
+lines, which was exactly what the poor man hadn't done.[25]
+
+Then we waited, Mrs. Lambert and I in Tom's car; and the Commandant in
+the car with Ursula Dearmer and the Chaplain on the other side of the
+street.
+
+We were dreadfully silent now. We stared at objects that had no earthly
+interest for us as if our lives depended on mastering their detail. We
+were thus aware of a beautiful little Belgian house standing back from
+the village street down a short turning, a cream-coloured house with
+green shutters and a roof of rose-red tiles, and a very small poplar
+tree mounting guard beside it. This house and its tree were vivid and
+very still. They stood back in an atmosphere of their own, an atmosphere
+of perfect but utterly unreal peace. And as long as our memories endure,
+that house which we never saw before, and shall probably never see
+again, is bound up with the fate of Mrs. Torrence and Janet McNeil.
+
+We thought we should have an hour to wait before they came back, if they
+ever did come. We waited for them during a whole dreadful lifetime.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In something less than half an hour the military ambulance came swinging
+round the turn of the road, with Mrs. Torrence and the Kid, and the two
+German wounded with them on the stretchers.
+
+Those Germans never thought that they were going to be saved. They
+couldn't get over it--that two Englishwomen should have gone through
+their fire, for them! As they were being carried through the fire they
+said: "We shall never forget what you've done for us. God will bless you
+for it."
+
+Mrs. Torrence asked them, "What will you do for us if we are taken
+prisoner?"
+
+And they said: "We will do all we can to save you."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Antwerp is said to have fallen.
+
+Antwerp is said to be holding its own well.[26]
+
+All evening the watching Taube has been hanging over Ghent.
+
+Mrs. Torrence and Janet have gone back with the ambulance to Melle.
+
+
+[_Night._]
+
+Sat up all night with Mr. ----.
+
+There is one night nurse for all the wards on this floor, and she has a
+serious case to watch in another room. But I can call her if I want
+help. And there is the chemist who sleeps in the room next door, who
+will come if I go in and wake him up. And there are our own four doctors
+upstairs. And the _infirmiers_. It ought to be all right.
+
+As a matter of fact it was the most terrible night I have ever spent in
+my life; and I have lived through a good many terrible nights in
+sick-rooms. But no amount of amateur nursing can take the place of
+training or of the self-confidence of knowing you are trained. And even
+if you _are_ trained, no amount of medical nursing will prepare you for
+a bad surgical case. To begin with, I had never nursed a patient so tall
+and heavy that I couldn't lift him by sheer strength and a sort of
+amateur knack.
+
+And though in theory it was reassuring to know that you could call the
+night nurse and the chemist and the four doctors and the _infirmiers_,
+in practice it didn't work out quite so easily as it sounded. When the
+night nurse came she couldn't lift any more than I could; and she had a
+greater command of discouraging criticism than of useful, practical
+suggestion. And the chemist knew no more about lifting than the night
+nurse. (Luckily none of us pretended for an instant that we knew!) When
+I had called up two of our hard-worked surgeons each once out of his
+bed, I had some scruples about waking them again. And it took four
+Belgian _infirmiers_ to do in five minutes what one surgeon could do in
+as many seconds. And when the chemist went to look for the _infirmiers_
+he was gone for ages--he must have had to round them up from every floor
+in the Hospital. Whenever any of them went to look for anything, it took
+them ages. It was as if for every article needed in the wards of that
+Hospital there was a separate and inaccessible central depot.[27]
+
+At one moment a small pillow had to be placed in the hollow of my
+patient's back if he was to be kept in that position on which I had been
+told his life depended. When I sent the night nurse to look for
+something that would serve, she was gone a quarter of an hour, in which
+I realized that my case was not the only case in the Hospital. For a
+quarter of an hour I had to kneel by his bed with my two arms thrust
+together under the hollow of his back, supporting it. I had nothing at
+hand that was small enough or firm enough but my arms.
+
+That night I would have given everything I possess, and everything I
+have ever done, to have been a trained nurse.
+
+To make matters worse, I had an atrocious cough, acquired at the Hotel
+de la Poste. The chemist had made up some medicine for it, but the poor
+busy dispensary clerk had forgotten to send it to my room. I had to stop
+it by an expenditure of will when I wanted every atom of will to keep my
+patient quiet and send him to sleep, if possible, without his morphia
+_piqures_. He is only to have one if he is restless or in pain.
+
+And to-night he wanted more than ever to talk when he woke. And his
+conversation in the night is even more lacerating than his conversation
+in the day. For all the time, often in pain, always in extreme
+discomfort, he is thinking of other people.
+
+First of all he asked me if I had any books, and I thought that he
+wanted me to read to him. I told him I was afraid he mustn't be read to,
+he must go to sleep. And he said: "I mean for you to read yourself--to
+pass the time."
+
+He is afraid that I shall be bored by sitting up with him, that I shall
+tire myself, that I shall make my cough worse. He asks me if I think he
+will ever be well enough to play games. That is what he has always
+wanted to do most.
+
+And then he begins to tell me about his mother.
+
+He tells me things that I have no right to put down here.
+
+There is nothing that I can do for him but to will. And I will hard, or
+I pray--I don't know which it is; your acutest willing and your
+intensest prayer are indistinguishable. And it seems to work. I will--or
+I pray--that he shall lie still without morphia, and that he shall have
+no pain. And he lies still, without pain. I will--or I pray--that he
+shall sleep without morphia. And he sleeps (I think that in spite of his
+extreme discomfort, he must have slept the best part of the night). And
+because it seems to work, I will--or I pray--that he shall get well.
+
+There are many things that obstruct this process as fast as it is begun:
+your sensation of sight and touch; the swarms and streams of images that
+your brain throws out; and the crushing obsession of your fear. This
+last is like a dead weight that you hold off you with your arms
+stretched out. Your arms sink and drop under it perpetually and have to
+be raised again. At last the weight goes. And the sensations go, and the
+swarms and streams of images go, and there is nothing before you and
+around you but a clear blank darkness where your will vibrates.
+
+Only one avenue of sense is left open. You are lost to the very memories
+of touch and sight, but you are intensely conscious of every sound from
+the bed, every movement of the sleeper. And while one half of you only
+lives in that pure and effortless vibration, the other half is aware of
+the least change in the rhythm of his breathing.
+
+It is by this rhythm that I can tell whether he is asleep or awake. This
+rhythm of his breathing, and the rhythm of his sleeping and his waking
+measure out the night for me. It goes like one hour.
+
+And yet I have spent months of nights watching in this room. Its blond
+walls are as familiar to me as the walls of rooms where I have lived a
+long time; I know with a profound and intimate knowledge every crinkle
+in the red shade of the electric bulb that hangs on the inner wall
+between the two beds, the shape and position of every object on the
+night table in the little white-tiled dressing-room; I know every trick
+of the inner and outer doors leading to the corridor, and the long grey
+lane of the corridor, and the room that I must go through to find ice,
+and the face of the little ward-maid who sleeps there, who wants to get
+up and break the ice for me every time. I have known the little
+ward-maid all my life; I have known the night nurse all my life, with
+her white face and sharp black eyes, and all my life I have not cared
+for her. All my life I have known and cared only for the wounded man on
+the bed.
+
+I have known every sound of his voice and every line of his face and
+hands (the face and hands that he asks me to wash, over and over again,
+if I don't mind), and the strong springing of his dark hair from his
+forehead and every little feathery tuft of beard on his chin. And I have
+known no other measure of time than the rhythm of his breathing, no mark
+or sign of time than the black crescent of his eyelashes when the lids
+are closed, and the curling blue of his eyes when they open. His eyes
+always smile as they open, as if he apologized for waking when he knows
+that I want him to sleep. And I have known these things so long that
+each one of them is already like a separate wound in my memory.[28] He
+sums up for me all the heroism and the agony and waste of the defence of
+Antwerp, all the heroism and agony and waste of war.
+
+About midnight [?] he wakes and tells me he has had a jolly dream. He
+dreamed that he was running in a field in England, running in a big
+race, that he led the race and won it.
+
+
+[_Sunday, 11th._]
+
+One bad symptom is disappearing. Towards dawn it has almost gone. He
+really does seem stronger.
+
+
+[_5 a.m._]
+
+He has had no return of pain or restlessness. But he was to have a
+morphia _piqure_ at five o'clock, and they have given it to him to make
+sure.
+
+
+[_8 a.m._]
+
+The night has not been so terrible, after all. It has gone like an hour
+and I have left him sleeping.
+
+I am not in the least bit tired; I never felt drowsy once, and my cough
+has nearly gone.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Antwerp has fallen.
+
+Taube over Ghent in the night.
+
+Six doctors have seen Mr. ----. They all say he is ever so much better.
+They even say he may live--that he has a good chance.
+
+Dr. Wilson is taking Mr. Foster to England this morning.
+
+Went back to the Hotel Cecil to sleep for an hour or two. An enormous
+oval table-top is leaning flat against the wall; but by no possibility
+can it be set up. Still, the landlord said he would find a table, and he
+has found one.
+
+Went back to the "Flandria" for lunch. In the mess-room Janet tells me
+that Mr. ----'s case has been taken out of my hands. I am not to try to
+do any more nursing.
+
+Little Janet looks as if she were trying to soften a blow. But it isn't
+a blow. Far from it. It is the end of an intolerable responsibility.
+
+The Commandant and the Chaplain started about nine or ten this morning
+for Melle, and are not back yet.
+
+We expect that we may have to clear out of Ghent before to-morrow.
+
+Mr. Riley, Mrs. Lambert and Janet have gone in the second car to Melle.
+
+I waited in all afternoon on the chance of being taken when the
+Commandant comes and goes out again.
+
+
+[_4.45._]
+
+He is not back yet. I am very anxious. The Germans may be in Melle by
+now.
+
+One of the old officials in peaked caps has called on me solemnly this
+afternoon. He is the most mysterious of them all, an old man with a
+white moustache, who never seems to do anything but hang about. He is
+certainly not an _infirmier_. He called ostensibly to ask some question
+and remained to talk. I think he thought he would pump me. He began by
+asking if we women enjoyed going out with the Field Ambulance; he
+supposed we felt very daring and looked on the whole thing as an
+adventure. I detected some sinister intention, and replied that that was
+not exactly the idea; that our women went out to help to save the lives
+of the wounded soldiers, and that they had succeeded in this object over
+and over again; and that I didn't imagine they thought of anything much
+except their duty. We certainly were not out for amusement.
+
+Then he took another line. He told me that the reason why our Ambulance
+is to be put under the charge of the British General here (we had heard
+that the whole of the Belgian Army was shortly to be under the control
+of the British, and the whole of the Belgian Red Cross with it)--the
+reason is that its behaviour in going into the firing-line has been
+criticized. And when I ask him on what grounds, it turns out that
+somebody thinks there is a risk of our Ambulance drawing down the fire
+on the lines it serves. I told him that in all the time I had been with
+the Ambulance it had never placed itself in any position that could
+possibly have drawn down fire on the Belgians, and that I had never
+heard of any single instance of this danger; and I made him confess that
+there was no proof or even rumour of any single instance when it had
+occurred. I further told the old gentleman very plainly that these
+things ought not to be said or repeated, and that every man and woman in
+the English Ambulance would rather lose their own life than risk that of
+one Belgian soldier.
+
+The old gentleman was somewhat flattened out before he left me; having
+"_parfaitement compris_."
+
+It is a delicious idea that Kitchener and Joffre should be reorganizing
+the Allied Armies because of the behaviour of our Ambulance.
+
+There are Gordon Highlanders in Ghent.[29]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Went over to the Couvent de Saint Pierre, where Miss Ashley-Smith is
+with her British wounded. I had to warn her that the Germans may come in
+to-night. I had told the Commandant about her yesterday, and arranged
+with him that we should take her and her British away in our Ambulance
+if we have to go. I had to find out how many there would be to take.
+
+The Convent is a little way beyond the _Place_ on the boulevard. I knew
+it by the Red Cross hanging from the upper windows. Everything is as
+happy and peaceful here as if Ghent were not on the eve of an invasion.
+The nuns took me to Miss Ashley-Smith in her ward. I hardly knew her,
+for she had changed the uniform of the British Field Hospital[30] for
+the white linen of the Belgian Red Cross. I found her in charge of the
+ward. Absolutely unperturbed by the news, she went on superintending
+the disposal of a table of surgical instruments. She would not consent
+to come with us at first. But the nuns persuaded her that she would do
+no good by remaining.
+
+I am to come again and tell her what time to be ready with her wounded,
+when we know whether we are going and when.
+
+Came back to the "Flandria" and finished entries in my Day-Book.
+
+
+[_Evening._]
+
+The Commandant has come back from Melle; but he is going there again
+almost directly. He has been to the British lines, and heard for certain
+that the Germans will be in Ghent before morning. We have orders to
+clear out before two in the morning. I am to have all his things packed
+by midnight.
+
+The British Consul has left Ghent.
+
+The news spread through the "Flandria."
+
+Max has gone about all day with a scared, white face. They say he is
+suffering from cold feet. But I will not believe it. He has just
+appeared in the mess-room and summoned me mysteriously. He takes me
+along the corridor to that room of his which he is so proud of. There is
+a brand-new uniform lying on the bed, the uniform of a French soldier
+of the line. Max handles it with love and holy adoration, as a priest
+handles his sacred vestments. He takes it in his arms, he spreads before
+me the grey-blue coat, the grey-blue trousers, and his queer eyes are in
+their solemnity large and quiet as dark moons.
+
+Max is going to rejoin his regiment.
+
+It is sheer nervous excitement that gave him that wild, white face.
+
+Max is confident that we shall meet again; and I have a horrid vision of
+Max carried on a bloody stretcher, a brutally wounded Max.
+
+He has given me his address in Brussels, which will not find him there
+for long enough: if ever.
+
+Jean also is to rejoin his regiment.
+
+Marie, the _bonne_, stands at the door of the service room and watches
+us with frightened eyes. She follows me into the mess-room and shuts the
+door. The poor thing has been seized with panic, and her one idea is to
+get away from Ghent. Can I find a place for her on one of our ambulance
+cars? She will squeeze in anywhere, she will stand outside on the step.
+Will I take her back to England? She will do any sort of work, no matter
+what, and she won't ask for wages if only I will take her there. I tell
+her we are not going to England. We are going to Bruges. We have to
+follow the Belgian Army wherever it is sent.
+
+Then will I take her to Bruges? She has a mother there.
+
+It is ghastly. I have to tell her that it is impossible; that there will
+be no place for her in the ambulance cars, that they will be crammed
+with wounded, that we will have to stand on the steps ourselves, that I
+do not know how many we shall have to take from the Convent, or how many
+from the hospitals; that I can do nothing without the Commandant's
+orders, and that the Commandant is not here. And she pleads and
+implores. She cannot believe that we can be so cruel, and I find my
+voice growing hard and stern with sheer, wrenching pity. At last I tell
+her that if there is room I will see what can be done, but that I am
+afraid that there will not be room. She stays, she clings, trying to
+extort through pity a more certain promise, and I have to tell her to
+go. She goes, looking at me with the dull resentment of a helpless
+creature whom I have hurt. The fact that she has left me sick with pity
+will not do her any good. Nothing can do her any good but that place on
+the ambulance which I have no power to give her.
+
+For Marie is not the only one.
+
+I see all the servants in the "Flandria" coming to me before the night
+is over, and clinging and pleading for a place in the ambulance cars.
+
+And this is only the beginning. After Marie comes Janet McNeil. She,
+poor child, has surrendered to the overpowering assault on her feelings
+and has pledged herself to smuggle the four young children of Madame
+---- into the ambulance somehow. I don't see how it was possible for her
+to endure the agony of refusing this request. But what we are to do with
+four young children in cars packed with wounded soldiers, through all
+the stages of the Belgian Army's retreat--!
+
+The next problem that faced me was the Commandant's packing--how to get
+all the things he had brought with him into one small Gladstone bag and
+a sleeping-sack. There was a blue serge suit, two sleeping-suits, a
+large Burberry, a great many pocket-handkerchiefs, socks and stockings,
+an assortment of neckties, a quantity of small miscellaneous objects
+whose fugitive tendencies he proposed to frustrate by confinement in a
+large tin biscuit-box; there was the biscuit-box itself, a tobacco tin,
+a packet of Gillette razors, a pipe, a leather case containing some
+electric apparatus, and a fat scarlet volume: Freud's "Psychopathology
+of Everyday Life." All these things he had pointed out to me as they lay
+flung on the bed or strewn about the room. He had impressed on me the
+absolute necessity of packing every one of them, and by the pathetic
+grouping around the Gladstone bag of the biscuit-box, the tobacco-tin,
+the case of instruments and Freud, I gathered that he believed that they
+would all enter the bag placably and be contained in it with ease.
+
+The night is still young.
+
+I pack the Gladstone bag. By alternate coaxing and coercion Freud and
+the tobacco-tin and the biscuit-box occupy it amicably enough; but the
+case of instruments offers an unconquerable resistance.
+
+The night is not quite so young as it has been, and I think I must have
+left off packing to run over to the Hotel Cecil and pay my bill; for I
+remember going out into the _Place_ and seeing a crowd drawn up in the
+middle of it before the "Flandria." An official was addressing this
+crowd, ordering them to give up their revolvers and any arms they had on
+them.
+
+The fate of Ghent depends on absolute obedience to this order.
+
+When I get back I find Mrs. Torrence downstairs in the hall of the
+"Flandria." I ask her what we had better do about our refugee children.
+She says we can do nothing. There must be no refugee children. How _can_
+there be in an ambulance packed with wounded men? When I tell her that
+the children will certainly be there if somebody doesn't do something to
+stop them, she goes off to do it. I do not envy her her job. She is not
+enjoying it herself. First of all she has got to break it to Janet. And
+Janet will have to break it to the mother.
+
+As to poor Marie, she is out of the question. _I_ shall have to break it
+to Marie.
+
+The night goes on. I sit with Mr. ---- for a little while. I have still
+to finish the Commandant's packing; I have not yet begun my own, and it
+is time that I should go round to the Convent to tell Miss Ashley-Smith
+to be ready with her British before two o'clock.
+
+I sit with him for what seems a very long time. It is appalling to me
+that the time should seem long. For it is really such a little while,
+and when it is over there will be nothing more that I shall ever do for
+him. This thought is not prominent and vivid; it is barely discernible;
+but it is there, a dull background of pain under my anxiety for the
+safety of the English over there in the Couvent de Saint Pierre. It is
+more than time that I should go and tell them to be ready.
+
+He holds out his hands to be sponged "if I don't mind." I sponge them
+over and over again with iced water and eau de Cologne, gently and very
+slowly. I am afraid lest he should be aware that there is any hurry. The
+time goes on, and my anxiety becomes acuter every minute, till with each
+slow, lingering turn of my hand I think, "If I don't go soon it will be
+too late."
+
+I hear that the children will be all right. Somebody has had a _crise de
+nerfs_, and Janet was the victim.
+
+It is past midnight, and very dark. The _Place_ and the boulevards are
+deserted. I cannot see the Red Cross flag hanging from the window of the
+Convent. The boulevards look all the same in the blackness, and I turn
+up the one to the left. I run on and on very fast, but I cannot see the
+white flag with the red cross anywhere; I run back, thinking I must have
+passed it, turn and go on again.
+
+There is nobody in sight. No sound anywhere but the sound of my own feet
+running faster and faster up the wrong boulevard.
+
+At last I know I have gone too far, the houses are entirely strange. I
+run back to the _Place_ to get my bearings, and start again. I run
+faster than ever. I pass a solitary civilian coming down the boulevard.
+The place is so empty and so still that he and I seem to be the only
+things alive and awake in this quarter of the town. As I pass he turns
+to look after me, wondering at the solitary lady running so fast at
+this hour of the morning. I see the Red Cross flag in the distance, and
+I come to a door that looks like the door of the Convent. It _is_ the
+door of the Convent.
+
+I ring the bell. I ring it many times. Nobody comes.
+
+I ring a little louder. A tired lay sister puts her head out of an upper
+window and asks me what I want. I tell her. She is rather cross and says
+I've come to the wrong door. I must go to the second door; and she puts
+her head in and shuts the window with a clang that expresses her just
+resentment.
+
+I go to the second door, and ring many times again. And another lay
+sister puts her head out of an upper window.
+
+She is gentle but sleepy and very slow. She cannot take it in all at
+once. She says they are all asleep in the Convent, and she does not like
+to wake them. She says this several times, so that I may understand.
+
+I am exasperated.
+
+"_Mais, Madame--de grace! C'est peut-etre la vie ou la mort!_"
+
+The minute I've said it it sounds to me melodramatic and absurd. _I_ am
+melodramatic and absurd, with my running feet, and my small figure and
+earnest, upturned face, standing under a Convent wall at midnight, and
+talking about _la vie et la mort_. It is too improbable. _I_ am too
+improbable. I feel that I am making a fuss out of all proportion to the
+occasion. And I am sorry for frightening the poor lay sister all for
+nothing.
+
+Very soon, down the south-east road, the Germans will be marching upon
+Ghent.
+
+And I cannot realize it. The whole thing is too improbable.
+
+But the lay sister has understood this time. She will go and wake the
+porteress. She is not at all frightened.
+
+I wait a little longer, and presently the porteress opens the door. When
+she hears my message she goes away, and returns after a little while
+with one of the nuns.
+
+They are very quiet, very kind, and absolutely unafraid. They say that
+Miss Ashley-Smith and her British wounded shall be ready before [?] two
+o'clock.
+
+I go back to the "Flandria."
+
+The Commandant, who went out to Melle in Tom's car, has not come back
+yet.
+
+I think Ursula Dearmer and Mrs. Lambert have gone to bed. They are not
+taking the Germans very seriously.
+
+There is nobody in the mess-room but the other three chauffeurs, Bert,
+Tom and Newlands. Newlands has just come back from Ostend. They have had
+no supper. We bustle about to find some.
+
+We all know the Germans are coming into Ghent. But we do not speak of
+it. We are all very polite, almost supernaturally gentle, and very kind
+to each other. The beautiful manners of Newlands are conspicuous in this
+hour, the tragedy of which we are affecting to ignore. I behave as if
+there was nothing so important in the world as cutting bread for
+Newlands. Newlands behaves as if there were nothing so important as
+fetching a bottle of formamint, which he has with him, to cure my cough.
+(It has burst out again worse than ever after the unnatural repression
+of last night.)
+
+When the chauffeurs are provided with supper I go into the Commandant's
+room and finish his packing. The ties, the pocket-handkerchiefs and the
+collars are all safe in the Gladstone bag. Only the underclothing and
+the suits remain and there is any amount of room for them in the
+hold-all.
+
+I roll up the blue serge coat, and the trousers, and the waistcoat very
+smooth and tight, also the underclothes. It seems very simple. I have
+only got to put them in the hold-all and then roll it up, smooth and
+tight, too--
+
+It would have been simple, if the hold-all had been a simple hold-all
+and if it had been nothing more. But it was also a sleeping-bag and a
+field-tent. As sleeping-bag, it was provided with a thick blanket which
+took up most of the room inside, and a waterproof sheet which was part
+of itself. As field-tent, it had large protruding flanges, shaped like
+jib-sails, and a complicated system of ropes.
+
+First of all I tucked in the jib-sails and ropes and laid them as flat
+as might be on the bottom of the sleeping-bag, with the blanket on the
+top of them. Then I packed the clothes on the top of the blanket and
+turned it over them to make all snug; I buttoned up the waterproof sheet
+over everything, rolled up the hold-all and secured it with its straps.
+This was only done by much stratagem and strength, by desperate tugging
+and pushing, and by lying flat on my waist on the rolled-up half to keep
+it quiet while I brought the loose half over. No sooner had I secured
+the hold-all by its straps than I realized that it was no more a
+hold-all than it was a sleeping-bag and a field tent, and that its
+contents were exposed to the weather down one side, where they bulged
+through the spaces that yawned between the buttons, strained almost to
+bursting.
+
+I still believed in the genius that had devised this trinity. Clearly
+the jib-sails which made it a field-tent were intended to serve also as
+the pockets of the hold-all. I had done wrong to flatten them out and
+tuck them in, frustrating the fulfilment of their function. It was not
+acting fairly by the inventor.
+
+I unpacked the hold-all, I mean the field-tent.
+
+Then, with the Commandant's clothes again lying round me on the floor, I
+grappled with the mystery of the jib-sails and their cords. The
+jib-sails and their cords were, so to speak, the heart of this infernal
+triple entity.
+
+They were treacherous. They had all the appearance of pockets, but owing
+to the intricate and malign relations of their cords, it was impossible
+to deal faithfully with them on this footing. When the contents had been
+packed inside them, the field-tent asserted itself as against the
+hold-all and refused to roll up. And I am sure that if the field-tent
+had had to be set up in a field in a hurry, the hold-all and the
+sleeping-bag would have arisen and insisted on their consubstantial
+rights.
+
+I unpacked the field-tent and packed it all over again exactly as I had
+packed it before, but more carefully, swearing gently and continuously,
+as I tugged with my arms and pushed with my knees, and pressed hard on
+it with my waist to keep it still. I cursed the day when I had first
+heard of it; I cursed myself for giving it to the Commandant; more than
+all I cursed the combined ingenuity and levity of its creator, who had
+indulged his fantasy at our expense, without a thought to the actual
+conditions of the retreat of armies and of ambulances.
+
+And in the middle of it all Janet came in, and curled herself up in a
+corner, and forecast luridly and inconsolably the possible fate of her
+friends, the nurses in the "Flandria." For the moment her coolness and
+her wise impassivity had gone. Her behaviour was lacerating.
+
+This was the very worst moment we had come to yet.[31]
+
+And it seemed that Ursula Dearmer and Mrs. Lambert had gone to bed,
+regardless of the retreat from Ghent.
+
+Somewhere in the small hours of the morning the Commandant came back
+from Melle.[32]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It is nearly two o'clock. Downstairs, in the great silent hall two
+British wounded are waiting for some ambulance to take them to the
+Station. They are sitting bolt upright on chairs near the doorway, their
+heads nodding with drowsiness. One or two Belgian Red Cross men wait
+beside them. Opposite them, on three other chairs, the three doctors,
+Dr. Haynes, Dr. Bird and Dr. ---- sit waiting for our own ambulance to
+take them. They have been up all night and are utterly exhausted. They
+sit, fast asleep, with their heads bowed on their breasts.
+
+Outside, the darkness has mist and a raw cold sting in it.
+
+A wretched ambulance wagon drawn by two horses is driven up to the door.
+It had a hood once, but the hood has disappeared and only the naked
+hoops remain. The British wounded from two [?] other hospitals are
+packed in it in two rows. They sit bolt upright under the hoops, exposed
+to mist and to the raw cold sting of the night; some of them wear their
+blankets like shawls over their shoulders as they were taken from their
+beds. The shawls and the head bandages give these British a strange,
+foreign look, infinitely helpless, infinitely pitiful.
+
+Nobody seems to be out there but Mrs. Torrence and one or two Belgian
+Red Cross men. She and I help to get our two men taken gently out of the
+hall and stowed away in the ambulance wagon. There are not enough
+blankets. We try to find some.
+
+At the last minute two bearers come forward, carrying a third. He is
+tall and thin; he is wrapped in a coat flung loosely over his
+sleeping-jacket; he wears a turban of bandages; his long bare feet stick
+out as he is carried along. It is Cameron, my poor Highlander, who was
+shot through the brain.
+
+They lift him, very gently, into the wagon.
+
+Then, very gently, they lift him out again.
+
+This attempt to save him is desperate. He is dying.
+
+They carry him up the steps and stand him there with his naked feet on
+the stone. It is anguish to see those thin white feet on the stone; I
+take off my coat and put it under them.
+
+It is all I can do for him.
+
+Presently they carry him back into the Hospital.
+
+They can't find any blankets. I run over to the Hotel Cecil for my
+thick, warm travelling-rug to wrap round the knees of the wounded,
+shivering in the wagon.
+
+It is all I can do for them.
+
+And presently the wagon is turned round, slowly, almost solemnly, and
+driven off into the darkness and the cold mist, with its load of weird
+and piteous figures, wrapped in blankets like shawls. Their bandages
+show blurred white spots in the mist, and they are gone.
+
+It is horrible.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I am reminded that I have not packed yet, nor dressed for the journey. I
+go over and pack and dress. I leave behind what I don't need and it
+takes seven minutes. There is something sad and terrible about the
+little hotel, and its proprietors and their daughter, who has waited on
+me. They have so much the air of waiting, of being on the eve. They hang
+about doing nothing. They sit mournfully in a corner of the
+half-darkened restaurant. As I come and go they smile at me with the
+patient Belgian smile that says, "_C'est triste, n'est-ce pas?_" and no
+more.
+
+The landlord puts on his soft brown felt hat and carries my luggage over
+to the "Flandria." He stays there, hanging about the porch, fascinated
+by these preparations for departure. There is the same terrible
+half-darkness here, the same expectant stillness. Now and then the
+servants of the hospital look at each other and there are whisperings,
+mutterings. They sound sinister somehow and inimical. Or perhaps I
+imagine this because I do not take kindly to retreating. Anyhow I am
+only aware of them afterwards. For now it is time to go and fetch Miss
+Ashley-Smith and her three wounded men from the Convent.
+
+Tom has come up with his first ambulance car. He is waiting for orders
+in the porch. His enormous motor goggles are pushed up over the peak of
+his cap. They make it look like some formidable helmet. They give an air
+of mastership to Tom's face. At this last hour it wears its expression
+of righteous protest, of volcanic patience, of exasperated discipline.
+
+The Commandant is nowhere to be seen. And every minute of his delay
+increases Tom's sense of tortured integrity.
+
+I tell Tom that he is to drive me at once to the Couvent de Saint
+Pierre. He wants to know what for.
+
+I tell him it is to fetch Miss Ashley-Smith and three British wounded.
+
+He shrugs his shoulders. He knows nothing about the Couvent de Saint
+Pierre and Miss Ashley-Smith and three British wounded, and his shrug
+implies that he cares less.
+
+And he says he has no orders to go and fetch them.
+
+I perceive that in this supreme moment I am up against Tom's
+superstition. He won't move anywhere without orders. It is his one means
+of putting himself in the right and everybody else in the wrong.
+
+And the worst of it is he _is_ right.
+
+I am also up against Tom's sex prejudices. I remember that he is said to
+have sworn with an oath that he wasn't going to take orders from any
+woman.
+
+And the Commandant is nowhere to be seen.
+
+Tom sticks to the ledge of the porch and stares at me defiantly. The
+servants of the Hospital come out and look at us. They are so many
+reinforcements to Tom's position.
+
+I tell him that the arrangement has been made with the Commandant's
+consent, and I repeat firmly that he is to get into his car this minute
+and drive to the Couvent de Saint Pierre.
+
+He says he does not know where the Convent is. It may be anywhere.
+
+I tell him where it is, and he says again he hasn't got orders.
+
+I stand over him and with savage and violent determination I say:
+"You've got them _now_!"
+
+And, actually, Tom obeys. He says, "_All_ right, all right, all right,"
+very fast, and humps his shoulders and slouches off to his car. He
+cranks it up with less vehemence than I have yet known him bring to the
+starting of any car.
+
+We get in. Then, and not till then, I am placable. I say: "You see, Tom,
+it wouldn't do to leave that lady and three British wounded behind,
+would it?"
+
+What he says about orders then is purely by way of apology.
+
+Regardless of my instructions, he does what I did and dashes up the
+wrong boulevard as if the Germans were even now marching into the
+_Place_ behind him. But he works round somehow and we arrive.
+
+They are all there, ready and waiting. And the Mother Superior and two
+of her nuns are in the corridor. They bring out glasses of hot milk for
+everybody. They are so gentle and so kind that I recall with agony my
+impatience when I rang at their gate. Even familiar French words desert
+me in this crisis, and I implore Miss Ashley-Smith to convey my regrets
+for my rudeness. Their only answer is to smile and press hot milk on me.
+I am glad of it, for I have been so absorbed in the drama of preparation
+that I have entirely forgotten to eat anything since lunch.
+
+The wounded are brought along the passage. We help them into the
+ambulance. Two, Williams and ----, are only slightly wounded; they can
+sit up all the way. But the third, Fisher, is wounded in the head.
+Sometimes he is delirious and must be looked after. A fourth man is
+dying and must be left behind.
+
+Then we say good-bye to the nuns.
+
+The other ambulance cars are drawn up in the _Place_ before the
+"Flandria," waiting. For the first time I hate the sight of them. This
+feeling is inexplicable but profound.
+
+We arrange for the final disposal of the wounded in one of the new
+Daimlers, where they can all lie down. Mrs. Torrence comes out and helps
+us. The Commandant is not there yet. Dr. Haynes and Dr. Bird pack Dr.
+---- away well inside the car. They are very quiet and very firm and
+refuse to travel otherwise than together. Mrs. Torrence goes with the
+wounded.
+
+I go into the Hospital and upstairs to our quarters to see if anything
+has been left behind. If I can find Marie we must take her. There is
+room, after all.
+
+But Marie is nowhere to be seen.
+
+Nobody is to be seen but the Belgian night nurses on duty, watching, one
+on each landing at the entrance to her corridor. They smile at me
+gravely and sadly as they say good-bye.
+
+I have left many places, many houses, many people behind me, knowing
+that I shall never see them again. But of all leave-takings this seems
+to me the worst. For those others I have been something, done something
+that absolves me. But for these and for this place I have not done
+anything, and now there is not anything to be done.
+
+I go slowly downstairs. Each flight is a more abominable descent. At
+each flight I stand still and pull myself together to face the next
+nurse on the next landing. At the second story I go past without
+looking. I know every stain on the floor of the corridor there as you
+turn to the right. The number of the door and the names on the card
+beside it have made a pattern on my brain.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It is quarter to three.
+
+They are all ready now. The Commandant is there giving the final orders
+and stowing away the nine wounded he has brought from Melle. The hall of
+the Hospital is utterly deserted. So is the _Place_ outside it. And in
+the stillness and desolation our going has an air of intolerable
+secrecy, of furtive avoidance of fate. This Field Ambulance of ours
+abhors retreat.
+
+It is dark with the black darkness before dawn.
+
+And the Belgian Red Cross guides have all gone. There is nobody to show
+us the roads.
+
+At the last minute we find a Belgian soldier who will take us as far as
+Ecloo.
+
+The Commandant has arranged to stay at Ecloo for a few hours. Some
+friends there have offered him their house. The wounded are to be put up
+at the Convent. Ecloo is about half-way between Ghent and Bruges.
+
+We start. Tom's car goes first with the Belgian soldier in front. Ursula
+Dearmer, Mrs. Lambert, Miss Ashley-Smith and Mr. Riley and I are inside.
+The Commandant sits, silent, wrapped in meditation, on the step.
+
+We are not going so very fast, not faster than the three cars behind us,
+and the slowest of the three (the Fiat with the hard tyres, carrying the
+baggage) sets the pace. We must keep within their sight or they may lose
+their way. But though we are not really going fast, the speed seems
+intolerable, especially the speed that swings us out of sight of the
+"Flandria." You think that is the worst. But it isn't. The speed with
+its steady acceleration grows more intolerable with every mile. Your
+sense of safety grows intolerable.
+
+You never knew that safety could hurt like this.
+
+Somewhere on this road the Belgian Army has gone before us. We have got
+to go with it. We have had our orders.
+
+That thought consoles you, but not for long. You may call it following
+the Belgian Army. But the Belgian Army is retreating, and you are
+retreating with it. There is nothing else you can do; but that does not
+make it any better. And this speed of the motor over the flat roads,
+this speed that cuts the air, driving its furrow so fast that the wind
+rushes by you like strong water, this speed that so inspired and exalted
+you when it brought you into Flanders, when it took you to Antwerp and
+Baerlaere and Lokeren and Melle, this vehement and frightful and
+relentless speed is the thing that beats you down and tortures you. For
+several hours, ever since you had your orders to pack up and go, you
+have been working with no other purpose than this going; you have
+contemplated it many times with equanimity, with indifference; you knew
+all along that it was not possible to stay in Ghent for ever; and when
+you were helping to get the wounded into the ambulances you thought it
+would be the easiest thing in the world to get in yourself and go with
+them; when you had time to think about it you were even aware of looking
+forward with pleasure to the thrill of a clean run before the Germans.
+You never thought, and nobody could possibly have told you, that it
+would be like this.
+
+I never thought, and nobody could possibly have told me, that I was
+going to behave as I did then.
+
+The thing began with the first turn of the road that hid the "Flandria."
+Up till that moment, whatever I may have felt about the people we had to
+leave behind us, as long as none of our field-women were left behind, I
+had not the smallest objection to being saved myself. And if it had
+occurred to me to stay behind for the sake of one man who couldn't be
+moved and who had the best surgeon in the Hospital and the pick of the
+nursing-staff to look after him, I think I should have disposed of the
+idea as sheer sentimentalism. When I was with him to-night I could think
+of nothing but the wounded in the Couvent de Saint Pierre. And
+afterwards there had been so much to do.
+
+And now that there was nothing more to do, I couldn't think of anything
+but that one man.
+
+The night before came back to me in a vision, or rather an obsession,
+infinitely more present, more visible and palpable than this night that
+we were living in. The light with the red shade hung just over my head
+on my right hand; the blond walls were round me; they shut me in alone
+with the wounded man who lay stretched before me on the bed. And the
+moments were measured by the rhythm of his breathing, and by the
+closing and opening of his eyes.
+
+I thought, he will open his eyes to-night and look for me and I shall
+not be there. He will know that he has been left to the Belgians, who
+cannot understand him, whom he cannot understand. And he will think that
+I have betrayed him.
+
+I felt as if I _had_ betrayed him.
+
+I am sitting between Mr. Riley and Miss Ashley-Smith. Mr. Riley is ill;
+he has got blood-poisoning through a cut in his hand. Every now and then
+I remember him, and draw the rug over his knees as it slips. Miss
+Ashley-Smith, tired with her night watching, has gone to sleep with her
+head on my shoulder, where it must be horribly jolted and shaken by my
+cough, which of course chooses this moment to break out again. I try to
+get into a position that will rest her better; and between her and Mr.
+Riley I forget for a second.
+
+Then the obsession begins again, and I am shut in between the blond
+walls with the wounded man.
+
+I feel his hand and arm lying heavily on my shoulder in the attempt to
+support me as I kneel by his bed with my arms stretched out together
+under the hollow of his back, as we wait for the pillow that never
+comes.
+
+It is quite certain that I have betrayed him.
+
+It seems to me then that nothing that could happen to me in Ghent could
+be more infernal than leaving it. And I think that when the ambulance
+stops to put down the Belgian soldier I will get out and walk back with
+him to Ghent.
+
+Every half-mile I think that the ambulance will stop to put down the
+Belgian soldier.
+
+But the ambulance does not stop. It goes on and on, and we have got to
+Ecloo before we seem to have put three miles between us and Ghent.
+
+Still, though I'm dead tired when we get there, I can walk three miles
+easily. I do not feel at all insane with my obsession. On the contrary,
+these moments are moments of exceptional lucidity.[33] While the
+Commandant goes to look for the Convent I get out and look for the
+Belgian soldier. Other Belgian soldiers have joined him in the village
+street.
+
+I tell him I want to go back to Ghent. I ask him how far it is to walk,
+and if he will take me. And he says it is twenty kilometres. The other
+soldiers say, too, it is twenty kilometres. I had thought it couldn't
+possibly be more than four or five at the outside. And I am just sane
+enough to know that I can't walk as far as that if I'm to be any good
+when I get there.
+
+We wait in the village while they find the Convent and take the wounded
+men there; we wait while the Commandant goes off in the dark to find his
+friend's house.
+
+The house stands in a garden somewhere beyond the railway station, up a
+rough village street and a stretch of country road. It is about four in
+the morning when we get there. A thin ooze of light is beginning to leak
+through the mist. The mist holds it as a dark cloth holds a fluid that
+bleaches it.
+
+There is something queer about this light. There is something queer,
+something almost inimical, about the garden, as if it tried to protect
+itself by enchantment from the fifteen who are invading it. The mist
+stands straight up from the earth like a high wall drawn close about the
+house; it blocks with dense grey stuff every inch of space between the
+bushes and trees; they are thrust forward rank upon rank, closing in
+upon the house; they loom enormous and near. A few paces further back
+they appear as without substance in the dense grey stuff that invests
+them; their tops are tangled and lost in a web of grey. In this strange
+garden it is as if space itself had solidified in masses, and solid
+objects had become spaces between.
+
+When your eyes get used to this curious inversion it is as if the mist
+was no longer a wall but a growth; the garden is the heart of a jungle
+bleached by enchantment and struck with stillness and cold; a tangle of
+grey; a muffled, huddled and stifled bower, all grey, and webbed and
+laced with grey.
+
+The door of the house opens and the effect of queerness, of inimical
+magic disappears.
+
+Mr. E., our kind Dutch host, and Mrs. E., our kind English hostess, have
+got up out of their beds to receive us. This hospitality of theirs is
+not a little thing when you think that their house is to be invaded by
+Germans, perhaps to-day.[34]
+
+They do not allow you to think of it. For all you are to see of the
+tragedy they and their house might be remaining at Ecloo in leisure and
+perfect hospitality and peace. Only, as they see us pouring in over
+their threshold a hovering twinkle in their kind eyes shows that they
+are not blind to the comic aspect of retreats.
+
+They have only one spare bedroom, which they offer; but they have filled
+their drawing-room with blankets; piles and piles of white fleecy
+blankets on chairs and sofas and on the floor. And they have built up a
+roaring fire. It is as if they were succouring fifteen survivors of
+shipwreck or of earthquake, or the remnants of a forlorn hope. To be
+sure, we are flying from Ghent, but we have only flown twenty kilometres
+as yet.
+
+However, most of the Corps have been up all night for several nights,
+and the mist outside is a clinging and a biting mist, and everybody is
+grateful.
+
+I shall never forget the look of the E.s' drawing-room, smothered in
+blankets and littered with the members of the Corps, who lay about it in
+every pathetic posture of fatigue. A group of seven or eight snuggled
+down among the blankets on the floor in front of the hearth like a camp
+before a campfire. Janet McNeil, curled up on one window-seat, and
+Ursula Dearmer, rolled in a blanket on the other, had the heart-rending
+beauty of furry animals under torpor. The chauffeurs Tom and Bert made
+themselves entirely lovable by going to sleep bolt upright on
+dining-room chairs on the outer ring of the camp. The E.s' furniture
+came in where it could with fantastic and incongruous effect.
+
+I don't know how I got through the next three hours, for my obsession
+came back on me again and again, and as soon as I shut my eyes I saw the
+face and eyes of the wounded man. I remember sitting part of the time
+beside Miss Ashley-Smith, wide-awake, in a corner of the room behind
+Bert's chair. I remember wandering about the E.s' house. I must have got
+out of it, for I also remember finding myself in their garden, at
+sunrise.
+
+And I remember the garden, though I was not perfectly aware of it at the
+time. It had a divine beauty, a serenity that refused to enter into, to
+ally itself in any way with an experience tainted by the sadness of the
+retreat from Ghent.
+
+But because of its supernatural detachment and tranquillity and its no
+less supernatural illumination I recalled it the more vividly
+afterwards.
+
+It was full of tall bushes and little slender trees standing in a
+delicate light. The mist had cleared to the transparency of still water,
+so still that under it the bushes and the trees stood in a cold, quiet
+radiance without a shimmer. The light itself was intensely still. What
+you saw was not the approach of light, but its mysterious arrest. It was
+held suspended in crystalline vapour, in thin shafts of violet and gold,
+clear as panes; it was caught and lifted upwards by the high bushes and
+the slender trees; it was veiled in the silver-green masses of their
+tops. Every green leaf and every blade of grass was a vessel charged. It
+was not so much that the light revealed these things as that these
+things revealed the light. There was no kindling touch, no tremor of
+dawn in that garden. It was as if it had removed the walls and put off
+the lacing webs and the thick cloths of grey stuff by some mystic
+impulse of its own, as if it maintained itself in stillness by an inner
+flame. Only the very finest tissues yet clung to it, to show that it was
+the same garden that disclosed itself in this clarity and beauty.
+
+The next thing I remember is the Chaplain coming to me and our going
+together into the E.s' dining-room, and Miss Ashley-Smith's joining us
+there. My malady was contagious and she had caught it, but with no
+damage to her self-control.
+
+She says very simply and quietly that she is going back to Ghent. And
+the infection spreads to the Chaplain. He says that neither of us is
+going back to Ghent, but that he is going. The poor boy tries to arrange
+with us how he may best do it, in secrecy, without poisoning the
+Commandant[35] and the whole Ambulance with the spirit of return. With
+difficulty we convince him that it would be useless for any man to go.
+He would be taken prisoner the minute he showed his nose in the
+"Flandria" and set to dig trenches till the end of the War.
+
+Then he says, if only he had his cassock with him. They would respect
+_that_ (which is open to doubt).
+
+We are there a long time discussing which of us is going back to Ghent.
+Miss Ashley-Smith is fertile and ingenious in argument. She is a nurse,
+and I and the Chaplain are not. She has friends in Ghent who have not
+been warned, whom she must go back to. In any case, she says, it was a
+toss-up whether she went or stayed.
+
+And while we are still arguing, we go out on the road that leads to the
+village, to find the ambulances and see if any of the chauffeurs will
+take us back to Ghent. I am not very hopeful about the means of
+transport. I do not think that Tom or any of the chauffeurs will move,
+this time, without orders from the Commandant. I do not think that the
+Commandant will let any of us go except himself.
+
+And Miss Ashley-Smith says if only she had a horse.
+
+If she had a horse she would be in Ghent in no time. Perhaps, if none of
+the chauffeurs will take her back, she can find a horse in the village.
+
+She keeps on saying very quietly and simply that she is going, and
+explaining the reasons why she should go rather than anybody else. And I
+bring forward every reason I can think of why she should do nothing of
+the sort.
+
+I abhor the possibility of her going back instead of me; but I am not
+yet afraid of it. I do not yet think seriously that she will do it. I do
+not see how she is going to, if the chauffeurs refuse to take her. (I do
+not see how, in this case, I am to go myself.) And I do not imagine for
+one moment that she will find a horse. Still, I am vaguely uneasy. And
+the Chaplain doesn't make it any better by backing her up and declaring
+that as she will be more good than either of us when she gets there, her
+going is the best thing that in the circumstances can be done.
+
+And in the end, with an extreme quietness and simplicity, she went.
+
+We had not yet found the ambulance cars, and it seemed pretty certain
+that Miss Ashley-Smith would not get her horse any more than the
+Chaplain could get his cassock.
+
+And then, just when we thought the difficulties of transport were
+insuperable, we came straight on the railway lines and the station,
+where a train had pulled up on its way to Ghent. Miss Ashley-Smith got
+on to the train. I got on too, to go with her, and the Chaplain, who is
+abominably strong, put his arms round my waist and pulled me off.
+
+I have never ceased to wish that I had hung on to that train.
+
+On our way back to the E.s' house we met the Commandant and told him
+what had happened. I said I thought it was the worst thing that had
+happened yet. It wasn't the smallest consolation when he said it was the
+most sensible solution.
+
+And when Mrs. ---- for fifteen consecutive seconds took the view that I
+had decoyed Miss Ashley-Smith out on to that accursed road in order to
+send her to Ghent, and deliberately persuaded her to go back to the
+"Flandria" instead of me, for fifteen consecutive seconds I believed
+that this diabolical thing was what I had actually done.
+
+Mrs. ----'s indignation never blazes away for more than fifteen seconds;
+but while the conflagration lasts it is terrific. And on circumstantial
+evidence the case was black against me. When last seen, Miss
+Ashley-Smith was entirely willing to be saved. She goes out for a walk
+with me along a quiet country road, and the next thing you hear is that
+she has gone back to Ghent. And since, actually and really, it was my
+obsession that had passed into her, I felt that if I had taken Miss
+Ashley-Smith down that road and murdered her in a dyke my responsibility
+wouldn't have been a bit worse, if as bad.
+
+And it seemed to me that all the people scattered among the blankets in
+that strange room, those that still lay snuggling down amiably in the
+warmth, and those that had started to their feet in dismay, and those
+that sat on chairs upright and apart, were hostile with a just and
+righteous hostility, that they had an intimate knowledge of my crime,
+and had risen up in abhorrence of the thing I was.
+
+And somewhere, as if they were far off in some blessed place on the
+other side of this nightmare, I was aware of the merciful and pitiful
+faces of Mrs. Lambert and Janet McNeil.
+
+Then, close beside me, there was a sudden heaving of the Chaplain's
+broad shoulders as he faced the room.
+
+And I heard him saying, in the same voice in which he had declared that
+he was going to hold Matins, that it wasn't my fault at all--that it was
+_he_ who had persuaded Miss Ashley-Smith to go back to Ghent.[36]
+
+The Chaplain has a moral nerve that never fails him.
+
+Then Mrs. Torrence says that she is going back to protect Miss
+Ashley-Smith, and Ursula Dearmer says that she is going back to protect
+Mrs. Torrence, and somebody down in the blankets remarks that the thing
+was settled last night, and that all this going back is simply rotten.
+
+I can only repeat that it is all my fault, and that therefore, if Mrs.
+Torrence goes back, nobody is going back with her but me.
+
+And there can be no doubt that three motor ambulances, with possibly the
+entire Corps inside them, certainly with the five women and the Chaplain
+and the Commandant, would presently have been seen tearing along the
+road to Ghent, one in violent pursuit of the other, if we had not
+telephoned and received news of Miss Ashley-Smith's safe arrival at the
+"Flandria," and orders that no more women were to return to Ghent.
+
+Among all the variously assorted anguish of that halt at Ecloo the
+figures and the behaviour of Mrs. E. and her husband and their children
+are beautiful to remember--their courtesy, their serenity, their gentle
+and absolving wonder that anybody should see anything in the least
+frightful or distressing, or even disconcerting and unusual, in the
+situation; the little girl who sat beside me, showing me her
+picture-book of animals, accepting gravely and earnestly all that you
+had to tell her about the ways of squirrels, of kangaroos and opossums,
+while we waited for the ambulance cars to take us to Bruges; the boy who
+ran after us as we went, and stood looking after us and waving to us in
+the lane; the aspect of that Flemish house and garden as we left
+them--there is no word that embraces all these things but beauty.
+
+We stopped in the village to take up our wounded from the Convent. The
+nuns brought us through a long passage and across a little court to the
+refectory, which had been turned into a ward. Bowls steaming with the
+morning meal for the patients stood on narrow tables between the two
+rows of beds. Each bed was hung round and littered with haversacks,
+boots, rifles, bandoliers and uniforms bloody and begrimed. Except for
+the figures of the nuns and the aspect of its white-washed walls and its
+atmosphere of incorruptible peace, the place might have been a barracks
+or the dormitory in a night lodging, rather than a convent ward.
+
+When we had found and dressed our men, we led them out as we had come.
+As we went we saw, framed through some open doorway, sunlight and vivid
+green, and the high walls and clipped alleys of the Convent garden.
+
+Of all our sad contacts and separations, these leave-takings at the
+convents were the saddest. And it was not only that this place had the
+same poignant and unbearable beauty as the place we had just left, but
+its beauty was unique. You felt that if the friends you had just left
+were turned out of their house and garden to-morrow, they might still
+return some day. But here you saw a carefully guarded and fragile
+loveliness on the very eve of its dissolution. The place was fairly
+saturated with holiness, and the beauty of holiness was in the faces and
+in every gesture of the nuns. And you felt that they and their faces and
+their gestures were impermanent, that this highly specialized form of
+holiness had continued with difficulty until now, that it hung by a
+single thread to a world that had departed very far from it.
+
+Yet, for the moment while you looked at it, it maintained itself in
+perfection.
+
+We shall never know all that the War has annihilated. But for that
+moment of time while it lasted, the Convent at Ecloo annihilated the
+nineteenth and eighteenth centuries, every century between now and the
+fifteenth. What you saw was a piece of life cut straight out of the
+Middle Ages. What you felt was the guarded and hidden beauty of the
+Middle Ages, the beauty of obedience, simplicity and chastity, of souls
+set apart and dedicated, the whole insoluble secret charm of the
+cloistered life. The very horror of the invasion that threatened it at
+this hour of the twentieth century was a horror of the Middle Ages.
+
+But these devoted women did not seem aware of it. The little high-bred
+English nun who conducted us talked politely and placidly of England and
+of English things as of things remembered with a certain mortal
+affection but left behind without regret. It was as if she contemplated
+the eternal continuance of the Convent at Ecloo with no break in its
+divine tranquillity. One sister went so far as to express the hope that
+their Convent would be spared. It was as if she were uttering some
+merely perfunctory piety. The rest, without ceasing from their
+ministrations, looked up at us and smiled.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+On the way up to Bruges we passed whole regiments of the Belgian Army in
+retreat. They trooped along in straggling disorder, their rifles at
+trail; behind them the standard-bearers trudged, carrying the standard
+furled and covered with black. The speed of our cars as we overtook them
+was more insufferable than ever.
+
+
+[_Bruges._]
+
+We thought that the Belgian Army would be quartered in Bruges, and that
+we should find a hospital there and serve the Army from that base.
+
+We took our wounded to the Convent, and set out to find quarters for
+ourselves in the town. We had orders to meet at the Convent again at a
+certain hour.
+
+Most of the Corps were being put up at the Convent. The rest of us had
+to look for rooms.
+
+In the search I got separated from the Corps, and wandered about the
+streets of Bruges with much interest and a sense of great intimacy and
+leisure. By the time I had found a _pension_ in a narrow street behind
+the market-place, I felt it to be quite certain that we should stay in
+Bruges at least as long as we had stayed in Ghent, and what moments I
+could spare from the obsession of Ghent I spent in contemplating the
+Belfry. Very soon it was time to go back to the Convent. The way to the
+Convent was through many tortuous streets, but I was going in the right
+direction, accompanied by a kind Flamand and her husband, when at the
+turn by the canal bridge I was nearly run over by one of our own
+ambulance cars. It was Bert's car, and he was driving with fury and
+perturbation away from the Convent and towards the town. Janet McNeil
+was with him. They stopped to tell me that we had orders to clear out of
+Bruges. The Germans had taken Ghent and were coming on to Bruges. We had
+orders to go on to Ostend.
+
+We found the rest of the cars drawn up in a street near the Convent. We
+had not been two hours in Bruges, and we left it, if anything, quicker
+than we had come in. The flat land fairly dropped away before our speed.
+I sat on the back step of the leading car, and I shall never forget the
+look of those ambulances, three in a line, as they came into sight
+scooting round the turns on the road to Ostend.
+
+Besides the wounded we had brought from Ghent, we took with us three
+footsore Tommies whom we had picked up in Bruges. They had had a long
+march. The stoutest, biggest and most robust of these three fainted just
+as we drew up in the courtyard of the _Kursaal_ at Ostend.
+
+
+[_Ostend._]
+
+The _Kursaal_ had been taken by some English and American women and
+turned into a Hospital. It was filled already to overflowing, but they
+found room for our wounded for the night. Ostend was to be evacuated in
+the morning. In fact, we were considered to be running things rather
+fine by staying here instead of going on straight to Dunkirk. It was
+supposed that if the Germans were not yet in Bruges they might be there
+any minute.
+
+But we had had so many premature orders to clear out, and the Germans
+had always been hours behind time, and we judged it a safe risk.
+Besides, there were forty-seven Belgian wounded in Bruges, and three of
+our ambulance cars were going back to fetch them.
+
+There was some agitation as to who would and who wouldn't be allowed to
+go back to Bruges. The Commandant was at first inclined to reject his
+Secretary as unfit. But if you take him the right way he is fairly
+tractable, and I managed to convince him that nothing but going back to
+Bruges could make up for my failure to go back to Ghent. He earned my
+everlasting gratitude by giving me leave. As for Mrs. Torrence, she had
+no difficulty. She was obviously competent.
+
+Then, just as I was congratulating myself that the shame of Ecloo was to
+be wiped out (to say nothing of that ignominious overthrow at Melle),
+there occurred a _contretemps_ that made our ambulance conspicuous among
+the many ambulances in the courtyard of the Hospital.
+
+We had reckoned without the mistimed chivalry of our chauffeurs.
+
+They had all, even Tom, been quite pathetically kind and gentle during
+and ever since the flight from Ghent. (I remember poor Newlands coming
+up with his bottle of formamint just as we were preparing to leave
+Ecloo.) It never occurred to us that there was anything ominous in this
+mood.
+
+Mrs. Torrence and I were just going to get into (I think) Newlands' car,
+when we were aware of Newlands standing fixed on the steps of the
+Hospital, looking like Hamlet, Prince of Denmark, in khaki, and flatly
+refusing to drive his car into Bruges, not only if we were in his car,
+but if one woman went with the expedition in any other car.
+
+He stood there, very upright, on the steps of the Hospital, and rather
+pale, while the Commandant and Mrs. Torrence surged up to him in fury.
+The Commandant told him he would be sacked for insubordination, and Mrs.
+Torrence, in a wild flight of fancy, threatened to expose him "in the
+papers."
+
+But Newlands stood his ground. He was even more like Lord Kitchener than
+Tom. He simply could not get over the idea that women were to be
+protected. And to take the women into Bruges when the Germans were, for
+all we knew, _in_ Bruges, was an impossibility to Newlands, as it would
+have been to Lord Kitchener. So he went on refusing to take his car into
+Bruges if one woman went with the expedition. In retort to a charge of
+cold feet, he intimated that he was ready to drive into any hell you
+pleased, provided he hadn't got to take any women with him. He didn't
+care if he _was_ sacked. He didn't care if Mrs. Torrence _did_ report
+him in the papers. He wouldn't drive his car into Bruges if one woman--
+
+Here, in his utter disregard of all discipline, the likeness between
+Newlands and Lord Kitchener ends. Enough that he drove his car into
+Bruges on his own terms, and Mrs. Torrence and I were left behind.
+
+The expedition to Bruges returned safely with the forty-seven Belgian
+wounded.
+
+We found rooms in a large hotel on the Digue, overlooking the sea.
+Before evening I went round to the Hospital to see Miss Ashley-Smith's
+three wounded men. The _Kursaal_ is built in terraces and galleries
+going all round the front and side of it. I took the wrong turning round
+one of them and found myself in the doorway of an immense ward. From
+somewhere inside there came loud and lacerating screams, high-pitched
+but appallingly monotonous and without intervals. I thought it was a man
+in delirium; I even thought it might be poor Fisher, of whose attacks we
+had been warned. I went in.
+
+I had barely got a yard inside the ward before a kind little rosy-faced
+English nurse ran up to me. I told her what I wanted.
+
+She said, "You'd better go back. You won't be able to stand it."
+
+Even then I didn't take it in, and said I supposed the poor man was
+delirious.
+
+She cried out, "No! No! He is having his leg taken off."
+
+They had run short of anaesthetics.
+
+I don't know what I must have looked like, but the little rosy-faced
+nurse grabbed me and said, "Come away. You'll faint if you see it."
+
+And I went away. Somebody took me into the right ward, where I found
+Fisher and Williams and the other man. Fisher was none the worse for
+his journey, and Williams and the other man were very cheerful. Another
+English nurse, who must have had the tact of a heavenly angel, brought
+up a bowl of chicken broth and said I might feed Fisher if I liked. So I
+sat a little while there, feeding Fisher, and regretting for the
+hundredth time that I had not had the foresight to be trained as a nurse
+when I was young. Unfortunately, though I foresaw this war ten years
+ago, I had not foreseen it when I was young. I told the men I would come
+and see them early in the morning, and bring them some money, as I had
+promised Miss Ashley-Smith. I never saw them again.
+
+Nothing happened quite as I had planned it.
+
+To begin with, we had discovered as we lunched at Bruges that the funds
+remaining in the leather purse-belt were hardly enough to keep the
+Ambulance going for another week. And our hotel expenses at Ostend were
+reducing its term to a problematic three days. So it was more or less
+settled amongst us that somebody would have to go over to England the
+next day and return with funds, and that the supernumerary Secretary
+was, on the whole, the fittest person for the job.
+
+I slept peaceably on this prospect of a usefulness that seemed to
+justify my existence at a moment when it most needed vindication.
+
+
+[_Tuesday, 13th._]
+
+I got up at six. Last thing at night I had said to myself that I must
+wake early and go round to the Hospital with the money.
+
+With my first sleep the obsession of Ghent had slackened its hold. And
+though it came back again after I had got up, dressed and had realized
+my surroundings, its returns were at longer and longer intervals.
+
+The first thing I did was to go round to the _Kursaal_. The Hospital was
+being evacuated, the wounded were lying about everywhere on the terraces
+and galleries, waiting for the ambulances. Williams and Fisher and the
+other man were nowhere to be seen. I was told that their ward had been
+cleared out first, and that the three were now safe on their way to
+England.
+
+I went away very grieved that they had not got their money.
+
+At the Hotel I find the Commandant very cheerful. He has made Miss ----
+his Secretary and Reporter till my return.[37]
+
+He goes down to the quay to make arrangements for my transport and
+returns after some considerable time. There have been difficulties
+about this detail. And the Commandant has an abhorrence of details, even
+of easy ones.
+
+He comes back. He looks abstracted. I inquire, a little too anxiously,
+perhaps, about my transport. It is all right, all perfectly right. He
+has arranged with Dr. Beavis of the British Field Hospital to take me on
+his ship.
+
+He looks a little spent with his exertions, and as he has again become
+abstracted I forbear to press for more information at the moment.
+
+We breakfasted. Presently I ask him the name of Dr. Beavis's ship.
+
+Oh, the _name_ of the ship is the _Dresden_.
+
+Time passes. And presently, just as he is going, I suggest that it would
+be as well for me to know what time the _Dresden_ sails.
+
+This detail either he never knew or has forgotten. And there is
+something about it, about the nature of stated times, as about all
+things conventional and mechanical and precise, that peculiarly
+exasperates him.
+
+He waves both hands in a fury of nescience and cries, "Ask me another!"
+
+By a sort of mutual consent we assume that the _Dresden_ will sail with
+Dr. Beavis at ten o'clock. After all, it is a very likely hour.
+
+More time passes. Finally we go into the street that runs along the
+Digue. And there we find Dr. Beavis sitting in a motor-car. We approach
+him. I thank him for his kindness in giving me transport. I say I'm sure
+his ship will be crowded with his own people, but that I don't in the
+least mind standing in the stoke-hole, if _he_ doesn't mind taking me
+over.
+
+He looks at me with a dreamy benevolence mixed with amazement. He would
+take me over with pleasure if he knew how he was to get away himself.
+
+"But," I say to the Commandant, "I thought you had arranged with Dr.
+Beavis to take me on the _Dresden_."
+
+The Commandant says nothing. And Dr. Beavis smiles again. A smile of
+melancholy knowledge.
+
+"The _Dresden_," he says, "sailed two hours ago."
+
+So it is decided that I am to proceed with the Ambulance to Dunkirk,
+thence by train to Boulogne, thence to Folkestone. It sounds so simple
+that I wonder why we didn't think of it before.
+
+But it was not by any means so simple as it sounded.
+
+First of all we had to collect ourselves. Then we had to collect Dr.
+Hanson's luggage. Dr. Hanson was one of Mrs. St. Clair Stobart's women
+surgeons, and she had left her luggage for Miss ---- to carry from
+Ostend to England. There was a yellow tin box and a suit-case. Dr.
+Hanson's best clothes and her cases of surgical instruments were in the
+suit-case and all the things she didn't particularly care about in the
+tin box. Or else the best clothes and the surgical instruments were in
+the tin box, and the things she didn't particularly care about in the
+suit-case. As we were certainly going to take both boxes, it didn't seem
+to matter much which way round it was.
+
+Then there was Mr. Foster's green canvas kit-bag to be taken to
+Folkestone and sent to him at the Victoria Hospital there.
+
+And there was a British Red Cross lady and her luggage--but we didn't
+know anything about the lady and her luggage yet.
+
+We found them at the _Kursaal_ Hospital, where some of our ambulances
+were waiting.
+
+By this time the courtyard, the steps and terraces of the Hospital were
+a scene of the most ghastly confusion. The wounded were still being
+carried out and still lay, wrapped in blankets, on the terraces; those
+who could sit or stand sat or stood. Ambulance cars jostled each other
+in the courtyard. Red Cross nurses dressed for departure were grouped
+despairingly about their luggage. Other nurses, who were not dressed
+for departure, who still remained superintending the removal of their
+wounded, paid no attention to these groups and their movements and their
+cries. The Hospital had cast off all care for any but its wounded.
+
+Women seized hold of other women for guidance and instruction, and
+received none. Nobody was rudely shaken off--they were all, in fact,
+very kind to each other--but nobody had time or ability to attend to
+anybody else.
+
+Somebody seized hold of the Commandant and sent us both off to look for
+the kitchen and for a sack of loaves which we would find in it. We were
+to bring the sack of loaves out as quickly as we could. We went off and
+found the kitchen, we found several kitchens; but we couldn't find the
+sack of loaves, and had to go back without it. When we got back the lady
+who had commandeered the sack of loaves was no more to be seen on the
+terrace.
+
+While we waited on the steps somebody remarked that there was a German
+aeroplane in the sky and that it was going to drop a bomb. There was. It
+was sailing high over the houses on the other side of the street. And it
+dropped its bomb right in front of us, above an enormous building not
+fifty yards away.
+
+We looked, fascinated. We expected to see the building knocked to bits
+and flying in all directions. The bomb fell. And nothing happened.
+Nothing at all.
+
+It was soon after the bomb that my attention was directed to the lady.
+She was a British Red Cross nurse, stranded with a hold-all and a green
+canvas trunk, and most particularly forlorn. She had lost her friends,
+she had lost her equanimity, she had lost everything except her luggage.
+How she attached herself to us I do not know. The Commandant says it was
+I who made myself responsible for her safety. We couldn't leave her to
+the Germans with her green canvas trunk and her hold-all.
+
+So I heaved up one end of the canvas trunk, and the Commandant tore it
+from me and flung it to the chauffeurs, who got it and the hold-all into
+Bert's ambulance. I grasped the British Red Cross lady firmly by the
+arm, lest she should get adrift again, and hustled her along to the
+Hotel, where the yellow tin box and the suit-case and the kit-bag
+waited. Somebody got them into the ambulance somehow.
+
+It was at this point that Ursula Dearmer appeared. (She had put up at
+some other hotel with Mrs. Lambert.)
+
+My British Red Cross lady was explaining to me that she had by no means
+abandoned her post, but that she was doing the right thing in leaving
+Ostend, seeing that she meant to apply for another post on a hospital
+ship. She was sure, she said, she was doing the right thing. I said, as
+I towed her securely along by one hand through a gathering crowd of
+refugees (we were now making for the ambulance cars that were drawn up
+along the street by the Digue), I said I was equally sure she was doing
+the right thing and that nobody could possibly think otherwise.
+
+And, as I say, Ursula Dearmer appeared.
+
+The youngest but one was seated with Mr. Riley in the military
+scouting-car that was to be our convoy to Dunkirk. I do not know how it
+had happened, but in this hour, at any rate, she had taken over the
+entire control and command of the Ambulance; and this with a coolness
+and competence that suggested that it was no new thing. It suggested,
+also, that without her we should not have got away from Ostend before
+the Germans marched into it. In fact, it is hardly fair to say that she
+had taken everything over. Everything had lapsed into her hands at the
+supreme crisis by a sort of natural fitness.
+
+We were all ready to go. The only one we yet waited for was the
+Commandant, who presently emerged from the Hotel. In his still dreamy
+and abstracted movements he was pursued by an excited waiter flourishing
+a bill. I forgot whose bill it was (it may have been mine), but anyhow
+it wasn't _his_ bill.
+
+We may have thought we were following the retreat of the Belgian Army
+when we went from Ghent to Bruges. We were, in fact, miles behind it,
+and the regiments we overtook were stragglers. The whole of the Belgian
+Army seemed to be poured out on to that road between Ostend and Dunkirk.
+Sometimes it was going before us, sometimes it was mysteriously coming
+towards us, sometimes it was stationary, but always it was there. It
+covered the roads; we had to cut our way through it. It was retreating
+slowly, as if in leisure, with a firm, unhasting dignity.
+
+Every now and then, as we looked at the men, they smiled at us, with a
+curious still and tragic smile.
+
+And it is by that smile that I shall always remember the look of the
+Belgian Army in the great retreat.
+
+Our own retreat--the Ostend-Dunkirk bit of it--is memorable chiefly by
+Miss ----'s account of the siege of Antwerp and the splendid courage of
+Mrs. St. Clair Stobart and her women.
+
+But that is her story, not mine, and it should be left to her to tell.
+
+
+[_Dunkirk._]
+
+At Dunkirk the question of the Secretary's transport again arose. It
+contended feebly with the larger problem of where and when and how the
+Corps was to lunch, things being further complicated by the Commandant's
+impending interview with Baron de Broqueville, the Belgian Minister of
+War. I began to feel like a large and useless parcel which the
+Commandant had brought with him in sheer absence of mind, and was now
+anxious to lose or otherwise get rid of. At the same time the Ambulance
+could not go on for more than three days without further funds, and, as
+the courier to be despatched to fetch them, I was, for the moment, the
+most important person in the Corps; and my transport was not a question
+to be lightly set aside.
+
+I was about to solve the problem for myself by lugging my lady to the
+railway station, when Ursula Dearmer took us over too, in her stride, as
+inconsiderable items of the business before her. I have nothing but
+admiration for her handling of it.
+
+We halted in the main street of Dunkirk while Mr. Riley and the
+chauffeurs unearthed from the baggage-car my hold-all and suit-case and
+the British Red Cross lady's hold-all and trunk and Mr. Foster's
+kit-bag and Dr. Hanson's suit-case with her best clothes and her
+surgical instruments and the tin--No, not the tin box, for the
+Commandant, now possessed by a violent demon of hurry, resisted our
+efforts to drag it from its lair.[38]
+
+All these things were piled on Ursula Dearmer's military scouting-car.
+The British Red Cross lady (almost incredulous of her good luck) and I
+got inside it, and Ursula Dearmer and Mr. Riley drove us to the railway
+station.
+
+By the mercy of Heaven a train was to leave for Boulogne either a little
+before or a little after one, and we had time to catch it.
+
+There was a long line of refugee _bourgeois_ drawn up before the station
+doors, and I noticed that every one of them carried in his hand a slip
+of paper.
+
+Ursula Dearmer hailed a porter, who, she said, would look after us like
+a father. With a matchless celerity he and Mr. Riley tore down the pile
+of luggage. The porter put them on a barrow and disappeared with them
+very swiftly through the station doors.
+
+At least I suppose it was through the doors. All we knew was that he
+disappeared.
+
+Then Ursula Dearmer handed over to me three cables to be sent from
+Dunkirk. I said good-bye to her and Mr. Riley. They got back into the
+motor-car, and they, too, very swiftly disappeared.
+
+Mr. Riley went away bearing with him the baffling mystery of his
+personality. After nearly three weeks' association with him I know that
+Mr. Riley's whole heart is in his job of carrying the wounded. Beyond
+that I know no more of him than on the day when he first turned up
+before our Committee.
+
+But with Ursula Dearmer it is different. Before the Committee she
+appeared as a very young girl, docile, diffident, only half-awake, and
+of dubious efficiency. I remember my solemn pledges to her mother that
+Ursula Dearmer should not be allowed to go into danger, and how, if
+danger insisted on coming to her, she should be violently packed up and
+sent home. I remember thinking what a nuisance Ursula Dearmer will be,
+and how, when things are just beginning to get interesting, I shall be
+told off to see her home.
+
+And Ursula Dearmer, the youngest but one, has gone, not at all docilely
+and diffidently, into the greatest possible danger, and come out of it.
+And here she is, wide awake and in full command of the Ostend-Dunkirk
+expedition. And instead of my seeing her off and all the way home, she
+is very thoroughly and competently seeing _me_ off.
+
+At least this was her beautiful intention.
+
+But getting out of France in war-time is not a simple matter.
+
+When we tried to follow the flight of our luggage through the station
+door we were stopped by a sentry with a rifle. We produced our
+passports. They were not enough.
+
+At the sight of us brought to halt there, all the refugees began to
+agitate their slips of paper. And on the slips we read the words
+"_Laissez-passer_."
+
+My British Red Cross lady had no "_laissez-passer_." I had only my
+sixteenth part in the "_laissez-passer_" of the Corps, and that, hidden
+away in the Commandant's breast-pocket, was a part either of the
+luncheon-party or of the interview with the Belgian Minister of War.
+
+We couldn't get military passes, for military passes take time; and the
+train was due in about fifteen minutes.
+
+And the fatherly porter had vanished, taking with him the secret of our
+luggage.
+
+It was a fatherly old French gentleman who advised us to go to the
+British _Consulat_. And it was a fatherly old French _cocher_ who drove
+us there, or rather who drove us through interminable twisted streets
+and into blind alleys and out of them till we got there.
+
+As for our luggage, we renounced it and Mr. Foster's and Dr. Hanson's
+luggage in the interests of our own safety.
+
+At last we got to the British _Consulat_. Only I think the _cocher_ took
+us to the Town Hall and the Hospital and the British Embassy and the
+Admiralty offices first.
+
+At intervals during this transit the British Red Cross lady explained
+again that she was doing the right thing in leaving Ostend. It wasn't as
+if she was leaving her post, she was going on a hospital ship. She was
+sure she had done the right thing.
+
+It was not for me to be unsympathetic to an obsession produced by a
+retreat, so I assured her again and again that if there ever was a right
+thing she had done it. My heart bled for this poor lady, abandoned by
+the organization that had brought her out.
+
+In the courtyard of the _Consulat_ we met a stalwart man in khaki, who
+smiled as a god might smile at our trouble, and asked us why on earth we
+hadn't got a passage on the naval transport _Victoria_, sailing at three
+o'clock. We said nothing would have pleased us better, only we had
+never heard of the _Victoria_ and her sailing. And he took us to the
+Consul, and the Consul--who must have been buried alive in detail--gave
+us a letter to Captain King of the _Victoria_, and the _cocher_ drove us
+to the dock.
+
+Captain King was an angel. He was the head of a whole hierarchy of
+angels who called themselves ship's officers.
+
+There is no difficulty about our transport. But we must be at the docks
+by half-past two.
+
+We have an hour before us; so we drive back to the station to see if,
+after all, we can find that luggage. Not that we in the least expected
+to find it, for we had been told that it had gone on by the train to
+Boulogne.
+
+Now the British Red Cross lady declared many times that but for me and
+my mastery of the French language she would never have got out of
+Dunkirk. And it was true that I looked on her more as a sacred charge
+than as a valuable ally in the struggle with French sentries, porters
+and officials. As for the _cocher_, I didn't consider him valuable at
+all, even as the driver of an ancient _fiacre_. And yet it was the lady
+and the _cocher_ who found the luggage. It seems that the station hall
+is open between trains, and they had simply gone into the hall and seen
+it there, withdrawn bashfully into a corner. The _cocher's_ face as he
+announces his discovery makes the War seem a monstrous illusion. It is
+incredible that anything so joyous should exist in a country under
+German invasion.
+
+We drive again to the _Victoria_ in her dock. The stewards run about and
+do things for us. They give us lunch. They give us tea. And the other
+officers come in and make large, simple jokes about bombs and mines and
+submarines. We have the ship all to ourselves except for a few British
+soldiers, recruits sent out to Antwerp too soon and sent back again for
+more training.
+
+They looked, poor boys, far sadder than the Belgian Army.
+
+And I walk the decks; I walk the decks till we get to Dover. My sacred
+charge appears and disappears. Every now and then I see her engaged in
+earnest conversation with the ship's officers; and I wonder whether she
+is telling them that she has not really left her post and that she is
+sure she has done right. I am no longer concerned about my own post, for
+I feel so sure that I am going back to it.
+
+To-morrow I shall get the money from our Committee; and on Thursday I
+shall go back.
+
+And yet--and yet--I must have had a premonition. We are approaching
+England. I can see the white cliffs.
+
+And I hate the white cliffs. I hate them with a sudden and mysterious
+hatred.
+
+More especially I hate the cliffs of Dover. For it is there that we must
+land. I should not have thought it possible to hate the white coast of
+my own country when she is at war.
+
+And now I know that I hate it because it is not the coast of Flanders.
+Which would be absurd if I were really going back again.
+
+Yes, I must have had a premonition.
+
+
+[_Dover._]
+
+We have landed now. I have said good-bye to Captain King and all the
+ship's officers and thanked them for their kindness. I have said
+good-bye to the British Red Cross lady, who is not going to London.
+
+And I go to the station telegraph-office to send off five wires.
+
+I am sending off the five wires when I hear feet returning through the
+station hall. The Red Cross lady is back again. She is saying this time
+that she is _really_ sure she has done the right thing.
+
+And again I assure her that she has.
+
+Well--there are obsessions and obsessions. I do not know whether I have
+done the right thing or not in leaving Flanders (or, for that matter, in
+leaving Ghent). All that I know is that I love it and that I have left
+it. And that I want to go back.
+
+
+
+
+POSTSCRIPT
+
+
+There have been changes in that Motor Field Ambulance Corps that set out
+for Flanders on the 25th of September, 1914.
+
+Its Commandant has gone from it to join the Royal Army Medical Corps. A
+few of the original volunteers have dropped out and others have taken
+their places, and it is larger now than it was, and better organized.
+
+But whoever went and whoever stayed, its four field-women have remained
+at the Front. Two of them are attached to the Third Division of the
+Belgian Army; all four have distinguished themselves by their devotion
+to that Army and by their valour, and they have all received the Order
+of Leopold II., the highest Belgian honour ever given to women.
+
+The Commandant, being a man, has the Order of Leopold I. Mr.
+Ashmead-Bartlett and Mr. Philip Gibbs and Dr. Souttar have described his
+heroic action at the Battle of Dixmude on the 22nd of October, 1914,
+when he went into the cellars of the burning and toppling Town Hall to
+rescue the wounded. And from that day to this the whole Corps--old
+volunteers and new--has covered itself with glory.
+
+On our two chauffeurs, Tom and Bert, the glory lies quite thick. "Tom"
+(if I may quote from my own story of the chauffeurs) "Tom was in the
+battle of Dixmude. At the order of his commandant he drove his car
+straight into the thick of it, over the ruins of a shattered house that
+blocked the way. He waited with his car while all the bombs that he had
+ever dreamed of crashed around him, and houses flamed, and tottered and
+fell. 'Pretty warm, ain't it?' was Tom's comment.
+
+"Four days later he was waiting at Oudekappele with his car when he
+heard that the Hospital of Saint-Jean at Dixmude was being shelled and
+that the Belgian military man who had been sent with a motor-car to
+carry off the wounded had been turned back by the fragment of a shell
+that dropped in front of him. Tom thereupon drove into Dixmude to the
+Hospital of Saint-Jean and removed from it two wounded soldiers and two
+aged and paralysed civilians who had sheltered there, and brought them
+to Furnes. The military ambulance men then followed his lead, and the
+Hospital was emptied. That evening it was destroyed by a shell.
+
+"And Bert--it was Bert who drove his ambulance into Kams-Kappele to the
+barricade by the railway. It was Bert who searched in a shell-hole to
+pick out three wounded from among thirteen dead; who with the help of a
+Belgian priest, carried the three several yards to his car, under fire,
+and who brought them in safety to Furnes."
+
+And the others, the brave "Chaplain," and "Mr. Riley," and "Mr.
+Lambert," have also proved themselves.
+
+But when I think of the Corps it is chiefly of the four field-women that
+I think--the two "women of Pervyse," and the other two who joined them
+at their dangerous _poste_.
+
+Both at Furnes and Pervyse they worked all night, looking after their
+wounded; sometimes sleeping on straw in a room shared by the Belgian
+troops, when there was no other shelter for them in the bombarded town.
+One of them has driven a heavy ambulance car--in a pitch-black night,
+along a road raked by shell-fire, and broken here and there into great
+pits--to fetch a load of wounded, a performance that would have racked
+the nerves of any male chauffeur ever born. She has driven the same car,
+_alone_, with five German prisoners for her passengers. The four women
+served at Pervyse (the town nearest to the firing-line) in "Mrs.
+Torrence's" dressing-station--a cellar only twenty yards behind the
+Belgian trenches. In that cellar, eight feet square and lighted and
+ventilated only by a slit in the wall, two lived for three weeks,
+sleeping on straw, eating what they could get, drinking water that had
+passed through a cemetery where nine hundred Germans are buried. They
+had to burn candles night and day. Here the wounded were brought as they
+fell in the trenches, and were tended until the ambulance came to take
+them to the base hospital at Furnes.
+
+Day in, day out, and all night long, with barely an interval for a wash
+or a change of clothing, the women stayed on, the two always, and the
+four often, till the engineers built them a little hut for a
+dressing-station; they stayed till the Germans shelled them out of their
+little hut.
+
+This is only a part of what they have done. The finest part will never
+be known, for it was done in solitary places and in the dark, when
+special correspondents are asleep in their hotels. There was no
+limelight on the road between Dixmude and Furnes, or among the blood and
+straw in the cellar at Pervyse.
+
+And Miss Ashley-Smith (who is now Mrs. McDougall)--her escape from Ghent
+(when she had no more to do there) was as heroic as her return.
+
+Since then she has gone back to the Front and done splendid service in
+her own Corps, the First Aid Nursing Yeomanry.
+
+ M. S.
+
+ July 15th, 1915.
+
+
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
+
+
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+
+[Footnote 1: It would be truer to say she was in love with duty which
+was often dangerous.]
+
+[Footnote 2: She very soon let us know why. "Followed" is the wrong
+word.]
+
+[Footnote 3: He didn't. People never do mean these things.]
+
+[Footnote 4: This only means that, whether you attended to it or not
+(you generally didn't), as long as you were in Belgium, your
+sub-consciousness was never entirely free from the fear of Uhlans--of
+Uhlans in the flesh. The illusion of valour is the natural, healthy
+reaction of your psyche against its fear and your indifference to its
+fear.]
+
+[Footnote 5: Nobody need have been surprised. She had distinguished
+herself in other wars.]
+
+[Footnote 6: One is a church and not a cathedral.]
+
+[Footnote 7: I am puzzled about this date. It stands in my ambulance
+Day-Book as Saturday, 3rd, with a note that the British came into Ghent
+on their way to Antwerp on the evening of that day. Now I believe there
+were no British in Antwerp before the evening of Sunday, the 4th, yet
+"Dr. Wilson" and Mr. Davidson, going into Saint Nicolas before us, saw
+the British there, and "Mrs. Torrence" and "Janet McNeil" saw more
+British come into Ghent in the evening. I was ill with fever the day
+after the run into Antwerp, and got behindhand with my Day-Book. So it
+seems safest to assume that I made a wrong entry and that we went into
+Antwerp on Sunday, and to record Saturday's events as spreading over the
+whole day. Similarly the events that the Day-Book attributes to Monday
+must have belonged to Tuesday. And if Tuesday's events were really
+Wednesday's, that clears up a painful doubt I had as to Wednesday, which
+came into my Day-Book as an empty extra which I couldn't account for in
+any way. There I was with a day left over and nothing to put into it.
+And yet Wednesday, the 7th, was the first day of the real siege of
+Antwerp. On Thursday, the 8th, I started clear.]
+
+[Footnote 8: It wasn't. This was only the first slender trickling. The
+flood came three days later with the bombardment of the city.]
+
+[Footnote 9: Of all the thousands and thousands of refugees whom I have
+seen I have only seen three weep, and they were three out of six hundred
+who had just disembarked at the Prince of Wales's Pier at Dover. But in
+Belgium not one tear.]
+
+[Footnote 10: This is all wrong. The main stream went as straight as it
+could for the sea-coast--Holland or Ostend.]
+
+[Footnote 11: The outer forts were twelve miles away.]
+
+[Footnote 12: At the time of writing--February 19th, 1915. My Day-Book
+gives no record of anything but the hospitals we visited.]
+
+[Footnote 13: There must be something wrong here, for the place was, I
+believe, a convent.]
+
+[Footnote 14: Every woman did.]
+
+[Footnote 15: This was made up to her afterwards! Her cup fairly ran
+over.]
+
+[Footnote 16: I have heard a distinguished alienist say that this
+reminiscent sensation is a symptom of approaching insanity. As it is not
+at all uncommon, there must be a great many lunatics going about.]
+
+[Footnote 17: Except that nobody had any time to attend to us, I can't
+think why we weren't all four of us arrested for spies. We hadn't any
+business to be looking for the position of the Belgian batteries.]
+
+[Footnote 18: More than likely our appearance there stopped the firing.]
+
+[Footnote 19: I have since been told that he was not. And I think in any
+case I am wrong about his "matchboard" car. It must have been somebody
+else's. In fact, I'm very much afraid that "he" was somebody else--that
+I hadn't the luck really to meet him.]
+
+[Footnote 20: He did. She was not a lady whom it was possible to leave
+behind on such an expedition.]
+
+[Footnote 21: I'm inclined to think it may have been the dogs of
+Belgium, after all. I can't think where the guns could have been.
+Antwerp had fallen. It might have been the bombardment of Melle,
+though.]
+
+[Footnote 22: The fate of "Mr. Lambert" and the scouting-car was one of
+those things that ought never to have happened. It turned out that the
+car was not the property of his paper, but his own car, hired and
+maintained by him at great expense; that this brave and devoted young
+American had joined our Corps before it left England and gone out to the
+front to wait for us. And he was kept waiting long after we got there.
+
+But if he didn't see as much service at Ghent as he undertook to see
+(though he did some fine things on his own even there), it was made up
+to him in Flanders afterwards, when, with the Commandant and other
+members of the Corps, he distinguished himself by his gallantry at
+Furnes and in the Battle of Dixmude.
+
+(For an account of his wife's services see Postscript.)]
+
+[Footnote 23: I record these details (March 11th, 1915) because the
+Commandant accused me subsequently of a total lack of "balance" upon
+this occasion.]
+
+[Footnote 24: This is no reflection on Tom's courage. His chief
+objection was to driving three women so near the German lines. The same
+consideration probably weighed with the Commandant and M. ----.]
+
+[Footnote 25: The whole thing was a piece of rank insubordination. The
+Commandant was entirely right to forbid the expedition, and we were
+entirely wrong in disobeying him. But it was one of those wrong things
+that I would do again to-morrow.]
+
+[Footnote 26: Antwerp had surrendered on Friday, the 9th.]
+
+[Footnote 27: All the same it was splendidly equipped and managed.]
+
+[Footnote 28: Even now, when I am asked if I did any nursing when I was
+in Belgium I have to think before I answer: "Only for one morning and
+one night"--it would still be much truer to say, "I was nursing all the
+time."]
+
+[Footnote 29: My Day-Book ends abruptly here; and I have no note of the
+events that followed.]
+
+[Footnote 30: Incorrect. It was, I believe, the uniform of the First Aid
+Nursing Yeomanry Corps.]
+
+[Footnote 31: It was so bad that it made me forget to pack the
+Commandant's Burberry and his Gillette razors and his pipe.]
+
+[Footnote 32: The Commandant had had an adventure. The Belgian guide
+mistook the road and brought the car straight into the German lines
+instead of the British lines where it had been sent. If the Germans
+hadn't been preoccupied with firing at that moment, the Commandant and
+Ascot and the Belgian would all have been taken prisoner.]
+
+[Footnote 33: Even now, five months after, I cannot tell whether it was
+or was not insanity.]
+
+[Footnote 34: It is really dreadful to think of the nuisance we must
+have been to these dear people on the eve of their own flight.]
+
+[Footnote 35: The Commandant had his own scheme for going back to Ghent,
+which fortunately he did not carry out.]
+
+[Footnote 36: This girl's courage and self-devotion were enough to
+establish our innocence--they needed no persuasion. But I still hold
+myself responsible for her going, since it was my failure to control my
+obsession that first of all put the idea in her head.]
+
+[Footnote 37: I saw nothing sinister about this arrangement at the time.
+It seemed incredible to me that I should not return.]
+
+[Footnote 38: Having saved the suit-case, I guarded it as a sacred
+thing. But Dr. Hanson's best clothes and her surgical instruments were
+in the tin box after all.]
+
+
+
+
+The following pages contain advertisements of books by the same author
+or on kindred subjects.
+
+
+
+
+By THE SAME AUTHOR
+
+The Return of the Prodigal
+
+_Cloth, 12mo. $1.35_
+
+
+"These are stories to be read leisurely with a feeling for the stylish
+and the careful workmanship which is always a part of May Sinclair's
+work. They need no recommendation to those who know the author's work
+and one of the things on which we may congratulate ourselves is the fact
+that so many Americans are her reading friends."--_Kansas City
+Gazette-Globe._
+
+"They are the product of a master workman who has both skill and art,
+and who scorns to produce less than the best."--_Buffalo Express._
+
+"Always a clever writer, Miss Sinclair at her best is an exceptionally
+interesting one, and in several of the tales bound together in this new
+volume we have her at her best."--_N. Y. Times._
+
+" ... All of which show the same sensitive apprehension of unusual cases
+and delicate relations, and reveal a truth which would be hidden from
+the hasty or blunt observer."--_Boston Transcript._
+
+"One of the best of the many collections of stories published this
+season."--_N. Y. Sun._
+
+" ... All these stories are of deep interest because all of them are out
+of the rut."--_Kentucky Post._
+
+"Let no one who cares for good and sincere work neglect this
+book."--_London Post._
+
+"The stories are touched with a peculiar delicacy and
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+
+
+PUBLISHED BY
+
+THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
+
+64-66 Fifth Avenue, New York
+
+
+
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+
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+
+By MAY SINCLAIR
+
+Author of "The Divine Fire," "The Return of the Prodigal," etc.
+
+_Cloth, 12mo, $1.35_
+
+
+Every reader of "The Divine Fire," in fact every reader of any of Miss
+Sinclair's books, will at once accord her unlimited praise for her
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+story of temperament, made evident not through tiresome analyses but by
+means of a series of dramatic incidents. The sisters of the title
+represent three distinct types of womankind. In their reaction under
+certain conditions Miss Sinclair is not only telling a story of
+tremendous interest but she is really showing a cross section of life.
+
+"Once again Miss Sinclair has shown us that among the women writers
+to-day she can be acclaimed as without rival in the ability to draw a
+character and to suggest atmosphere.... In "The Three Sisters" she gives
+full measure of her qualities. It is in every way a characteristic
+novel."--_London Standard._
+
+"Miss Sinclair's singular power as an artist lies in her identification with
+nature.... She has seldom written a more moving story."--_Metropolitan._
+
+"It is a book powerful alike in its description of the background and in
+its analysis of character.... This story confirms the impression of her
+unusual ability."--_Outlook._
+
+"Miss Sinclair's most important book."--_Reedy's Mirror._
+
+"'The Three Sisters' is a powerful novel, written with both vigor and
+delicacy, dramatic, absorbingly interesting."--_New York Times._
+
+
+THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
+
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+
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+
+
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+
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+
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+
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+
+
+The author of "The Virginian" has written a new book which describes,
+more forcibly and clearly than any other account so far published, the
+meaning, to America, of the tragic changes which are taking place in the
+hearts and minds of the German people.
+
+Written with ease and charm of style, it is prose that holds the reader
+for its very beauty, even as it impresses him with its force. It is
+doubtful whether there will come out of the entire mass of war
+literature a more understanding or suggestive survey.
+
+"Owen Wister has depicted the tragedy of Germany and has hinted at the
+possible tragedy of the United States.... We wish it could be read in
+full by every American."--_The Outlook._
+
+
+
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+The Military Unpreparedness of the United States
+
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+
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+
+
+By many army officers the author of this work is regarded as the
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+hundred odd pages given over to the discussion there are presented facts
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+hitherto, however, have been largely confined to magazines and
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+that frankness and authority evidenced in these previous contributions
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+
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+
+
+This book deals with the author's experiences in the war area. The work
+traces the cause of the war from the treaty of 1878 through the Balkan
+situation. It contains many facts drawn from personal observation, for
+Col. McCormick has had opportunities such as have been given to no other
+man during the present engagements. He has been at the various
+headquarters and actually in the trenches. One of the most interesting
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+
+The work contains a considerable amount of material calculated to upset
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+
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+
+
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+The World War:
+
+How it Looks to the Nations Involved and What it Means to Us
+
+By ELBERT FRANCIS BALDWIN
+
+_Decorated cloth, 12mo, $1.25_
+
+
+The present war in Europe has called forth a great many books bearing on
+its different phases, but in the majority of instances these have been
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+Baldwin has here, however, brought together within the compass of a
+single volume a survey of the entire field.
+
+Mr. Baldwin was in Europe at the outbreak of hostilities. He mingled
+with the people, observing their spirit and temper more intimately than
+it has been permitted most writers to do, and in consequence the
+descriptions which he gives of the German, or French, or English, or
+Russian attitude are truer and more complete than those found in
+previous studies of the war. Mr. Baldwin's statements are calm and just
+in conclusion. When discussing the German side he has included all of
+the factors which the Germans think important, and assimilated wholly
+the German feeling, as he has done in his considerations of the other
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+
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+
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+after the modern historical manner, with a great deal of fresh
+information."--_Philadelphia North American._
+
+"Sets down without bias the real causes of the Great War."--_New York
+Times._
+
+
+THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
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+
+
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+Russia and the World
+
+By STEPHEN GRAHAM
+
+Author of "With the Russian Pilgrims to Jerusalem," "With Poor
+Immigrants to America," etc.
+
+_Illustrated, cloth, 8vo, $2.00_
+
+
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+and his book opens, therefore, with a description of the way the news of
+war was received on the Chinese frontier, one thousand miles from a
+railway station, where he happened to be when the Tsar's summons came.
+Following this come other chapters on Russia and the War, considering
+such questions as, Is It a Last War?, Why Russia Is Fighting, The
+Economic Isolation of Russia, An Aeroplane Hunt at Warsaw, Suffering
+Poland: A Belgium of the East, and The Soldier and the Cross.
+
+But "Russia and the World" is not by any means wholly a war book. It is
+a comprehensive survey of Russian problems. Inasmuch as the War is at
+present one of her problems, it receives its due consideration. It has
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+that there is for enlightenment in English and American circles as to
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+
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+minds of the spirit of Russia."--_London Times._
+
+
+THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
+
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+
+
+
+
+German World Policies
+
+(Der Deutsche Gedanke in der Welt)
+
+By PAUL ROHRBACH
+
+Translated by DR. EDMUND VON MACH
+
+_Cloth, 12mo, $1.25_
+
+
+Paul Rohrbach has been for several years the most popular author of
+books on politics and economics in Germany. He is described by his
+translator as a "constructive optimist," one who, at the same time, is
+an incisive critic of those shortcomings which have kept Germany, as he
+thinks, from playing the great part to which she is called. In this
+volume Dr. Rohrbach gives a true insight into the character of the
+German people, their aims, fears and aspirations.
+
+Though it was written before the war started and has not been hastily
+put together, it still possesses peculiar significance now, for in its
+analysis of the German idea of culture and its dissemination, in its
+consideration of German foreign policies and moral conquests, it is an
+important contribution to the widespread speculation now current on
+these matters.
+
+"Dr. von Mach renders an extraordinary service to his country in making
+known to English readers at this time a book like Rohrbach's."--_New
+York Globe._
+
+"A clear insight into Prussian ideals."--_Boston Transcript._
+
+"A valuable, significant, and most informing book."--_New York Tribune._
+
+
+THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
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+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of A Journal of Impressions in Belgium, by
+May Sinclair
+
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