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+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #51206 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/51206)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, True Stories of the Great War, Volume VI (of
-6), by Various, Edited by Francis Trevelyan Miller
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-
-Title: True Stories of the Great War, Volume VI (of 6)
- Tales of Adventure--Heroic Deeds--Exploits Told by the Soldiers, Officers, Nurses, Diplomats, Eye Witnesses
-
-
-Author: Various
-
-Editor: Francis Trevelyan Miller
-
-Release Date: February 13, 2016 [eBook #51206]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TRUE STORIES OF THE GREAT WAR,
-VOLUME VI (OF 6)***
-
-
-E-text prepared by Brian Coe, Moti Ben-Ari, and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made
-available by Internet Archive/American Libraries
-(https://archive.org/details/americana)
-
-
-
-Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
- file which includes the original illustrations.
- See 51206-h.htm or 51206-h.zip:
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/51206/51206-h/51206-h.htm)
- or
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/51206/51206-h.zip)
-
-
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive/American Libraries. See
- https://archive.org/details/truestoriesofgre06mill
-
-
-
-
-
-TRUE STORIES OF THE GREAT WAR
-
-Tales of Adventure--Heroic Deeds--Exploits
-Told by the Soldiers, Officers, Nurses,
-Diplomats, Eye Witnesses
-
-Collected in Six Volumes
-From Official and Authoritative Sources
-(See Introductory to Volume I)
-
-VOLUME VI
-
-Editor-in-Chief
-FRANCIS TREVELYAN MILLER (Litt. D., LL.D.)
-Editor of The Search-Light Library
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-1917
-Review of Reviews Company
-New York
-
-Copyright, 1917, by
-Review of Reviews Company
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- The Board of Editors has selected for VOLUME VI this group of
- stories told by Soldiers and Army Officers direct from the battle-grounds
- of the Great War. It includes 165 episodes and personal
- adventures by forty-two story-tellers--"Tommies," "Boches,"
- "Poilus," Russians, Italians, Austrians, Turks, Belgians, Scotchmen,
- Irishmen, Canadians, Americans--the "Best Stories of the
- War" gathered from the most authentic sources, according to the
- plan outlined in "Introductory" to Volume I. Full credit is given
- in every instance to the original sources.
-
- VOLUME VI--FORTY STORY-TELLERS--165 EPISODES
-
- "BEHIND THE GERMAN VEIL"--WITH VON HINDENBURG 1
- RECORD OF A REMARKABLE WAR PILGRIMAGE
- Told by Count Van Maurik De Beaufort
- (Permission of Dodd, Mead and Company)
-
- "KITCHENER'S MOB"--ADVENTURES OF AN AMERICAN WITH
- THE BRITISH ARMY 16
- UNCENSORED ACCOUNT OF A YOUNG VOLUNTEER
- Told by James Norman Hall
- (Permission of Houghton, Mifflin Company)
-
- "HOW BELGIUM SAVED EUROPE"--THE LITTLE KINGDOM
- OF HEROES 32
- TRAGEDY OF THE BELGIANS
- Told by Dr. Charles Sarolea
- (Permission of J. B. Lippincott Company)
-
- THE BISHOP OF LONDON'S VISIT TO THE FRONT 43
- TAKING THE MESSAGE OF CHRIST TO THE BATTLE LINES
- Told by The Reverend G. Vernon Smith
- (Permission of Longmans, Green and Company)
-
- "GRAPES OF WRATH"--WITH THE "BIG PUSH" ON THE
- SOMME 52
- TWENTY-FOUR HOURS IN THE LIFE OF A PRIVATE
- SOLDIER
- Told by Boyd Cable
- (Permission of E. P. Dutton and Company)
-
- A NOVELIST AND SOLDIER ON THE BATTLE LINE 63
- Told by Coningsby Dawson
- (Permission of John Lane Company)
-
- STORIES OF THE WAR PHOTOGRAPHERS IN BELGIUM 81
- AN AMERICAN AT THE BATTLEFRONT
- Told by Albert Rhys Williams
- (Permission of E. P. Dutton and Company)
-
- TALES OF THE FIRST BRITISH EXPEDITIONARY FORCE 94
- TO FRANCE
- IMPRESSIONS OF A SUBALTERN
- Told by "Casualty" (Name of Soldier Suppressed)
- (Permission of J. B. Lippincott Company)
-
- IN THE HANDS OF THE ENEMY--EXPERIENCES OF A
- PRISONER OF WAR 104
- Told by Benjamin G. O'Rorke, M. A.
- (Permission of Longmans, Green and Company)
-
- "AT SUVLA BAY"--THE WAR AGAINST THE TURKS 117
- ADVENTURES ON THE BLUE ÆGEAN SHORES
- Told by John Hargrave
- (Permission of Houghton, Mifflin Company)
-
- SEEING THE WAR THROUGH A WOMAN'S EYES 122
- SOUL-STIRRING DESCRIPTION OF SCENES AMONG THE
- WOUNDED IN PARIS
- Told by (Name Suppressed)
- (Permission of New York American)
-
- LOST ON A SEAPLANE AND SET ADRIFT IN A MINE-FIELD 134
- ADVENTURES ON THE NORTH SEA
- Told by a Seaplane Observer
- (Permission of Wide World Magazine)
-
- HOW I HELPED TO TAKE THE TURKISH TRENCHES AT
- GALLIPOLI 144
- AN AMERICAN BOY'S WAR ADVENTURES
- Told by Wilfred Raymond Doyle
- (Permission of New York World)
-
- "BIG BANG"--STORY OF AN AMERICAN ADVENTURER 156
- A TALE OF THE GREAT TRENCH MORTARS
- Told by C. P. Thompson
- (Permission of Wide World Magazine)
-
- "WITH OUR ARMY IN FLANDERS"--FIGHTING WITH TOMMY
- ATKINS 165
- WHERE MEN HOLD RENDEZVOUS WITH DEATH
- Told by G. Valentine Williams
- (Permission of London Daily Mail)
-
- COMEDIES OF THE GREAT WAR 176
- TALES OF HUMOR ON THE FIGHTING LINES
- Told by W. F. Martindale
- (Permission of Wide World Magazine)
-
- LITTLE STORIES OF THE BIG WAR 188
- UNUSUAL ANECDOTES AT FIRST HAND
- Told by Karl K. Kitchen in Germany
- (Permission of New York World)
-
- POGROM--THE TRAGEDY OF THE JEWS AND THE ARMENIANS 194
- A MASTERFUL TALE OF THE EASTERN FRONT
- Told by M. C. della Grazie
- (Permission of New York Tribune)
-
- TALE OF THE SAVING OF PARIS 204
- HOW A WOMAN'S WIT AVERTED A GREAT DISASTER
- (Permission of Wide World Magazine)
-
- HOW IT FEELS TO A CLERGYMAN TO BE TORPEDOED ON
- A MAN-OF-WAR 212
- Told by the Rev. G. H. Collier
-
- STORY OF LEON BARBESSE, SLACKER, SOLDIER, HERO 213
- Told by Fred B. Pitney
- (Permission of New York Tribune)
-
- THE DESERTER--A BELGIAN INCIDENT 230
- Told by Edward Eyre Hunt
- (Permission of Red Cross Magazine)
-
- GRIM HUMOR OF THE TRENCHES 240
- AS SEEN BY PATRICK CORCORAN, OF THE ROYAL ENGINEERS
- (Permission of New York World)
-
- PRIVATE McTOSHER DISCOVERS LONDON 247
- Told by C. Malcolm Hincks
- (Permission of Wide World Magazine)
-
- RUSSIAN COUNTESS IN THE ARABIAN DESERT 259
- ADVENTURES OF COUNTESS MOLITOR AS TOLD IN HER
- DIARY
-
- GERMAN STUDENTS TELL WHAT SHERMAN MEANT 270
- THREE CONFESSIONS FROM GERMAN SOLDIERS
- Told by Walter Harich, Wilhelm Spengler and Willie Treller
- (Permission of New York Tribune)
-
- BAITING THE BOCHE--THE WIT OF THE BELGIANS 277
- Told by W. F. Martindale
- (Permission of Wide World Magazine)
-
- HOW SERGEANT O'LEARY WON HIS VICTORIA CROSS 288
- STORY OF THE FIRST BATTALION OF THE IRISH GUARDS
- (Permission of New York American)
-
- STORY OF A RUSSIAN IN AN AUSTRIAN PRISON 295
- AN OFFICER'S REMARKABLE EXPERIENCE
- (Permission of Current History)
-
- TWO WEEKS ON A SUBMARINE 302
- Told by Carl List
- (Permission of Current History)
-
- A GERMAN BATTALION THAT PERISHED IN THE SNOW 305
- Told by a Russian Officer
-
- THE FATAL WOOD--"NOT ONE SHALL BE SAVED" 309
- A STORY OF VERDUN
- Told by Bernard St. Lawrence
- (Permission of Wide World Magazine)
-
- HEROISM AND PATHOS OF THE FRONT 316
- Told by Lauchlan MacLean Watt
-
- AN AVIATOR'S STORY OF BOMBARDING THE ENEMY 321
- Told by a French Aviator
- (Permission of Illustration, Paris)
-
- A DAY IN A GERMAN WAR PRISON 325
- Told by Wilhelm Hegeler
-
- MURDER TRIAL OF CAPTAIN HERAIL OF FRENCH HUSSARS 330
- STRANGEST EPISODE OF THE WAR
- Told by an Eye-Witness
- (Permission of New York American)
-
- HOW THEY KILLED "THE MAN WHO COULD NOT DIE" 338
- Told by a Soldier Under General Cantore
- (Permission of New York World)
-
- HOW MLLE. DUCLOS WON THE LEGION OF HONOR 344
- STORY OF A WOMAN WHO DROVE HER AUTO AT FULL
- SPEED INTO A GERMAN FORCE
- Told by an Eye-Witness
- (Permission of New York American)
-
- THE RUSSIAN "JOAN OF ARC'S" OWN STORY 351
- Told by Mme. Alexandra Kokotseva
-
- AN ITALIAN SOLDIER'S LAST MESSAGE TO HIS MOTHER 355
- Translated by Father Pasquale Maltese
-
-[Illustration: IN A PRISONERS' CAMP
-Germans in a French Camp]
-
-[Illustration: THE U-9 SPEEDING ON THE SURFACE
-_From a Drawing by a German Artist Published in a German Magazine_]
-
-[Illustration: A NARROW SHAVE!
-_A Remarkable Photograph of a Torpedo That Missed Its Mark by a Scant
-Ten Feet. The Men on This Vessel, From the Stern of Which the Picture
-Was Made, Literally Looked Death in the Face and Watched Him Pass By._]
-
-[Illustration: THE LAST ACT OF A SUDDEN SEA TRAGEDY
-_Rescuing Sailors From H. M. S. Audacious_]
-
-
-
-
-"BEHIND THE GERMAN VEIL" WITH VON HINDENBURG
-
-_Record of a Remarkable War Pilgrimage_
-
-_Told by Count Van Maurik De Beaufort_
-
- This is the remarkable story of a titled Hollander, who was living
- in America at the outbreak of the War. "Europe called me," he
- says. "Blood will tell. I soon found myself getting restless. My
- sympathies with the Allies ... urged that I had no right to lag
- behind in making sacrifices. Before starting for the War, I applied
- for my first American citizenship papers. I hope to obtain my
- final papers shortly, after which I shall place my services at the
- disposal of the American Government." This Hollander was educated
- in Germany and recalls how in his youth he was forced to stand up
- in front of the class and recite five verses, each ending with: "I
- am a Prussian and a Prussian I will be." He later became a student
- at Bonn. Count De Beaufort has written a book of sensational
- revelations in which the German veil is lifted. With a magic
- passport, nothing less than a letter to Von Hindenburg from his
- nephew, he gained access to German headquarters and to the Eastern
- front in Poland and East Prussia. We here record what he thinks
- of Von Hindenburg from his book: "Behind the German Veil," by
- permission of his publishers, _Dodd, Mead and Company_: Copyright
- 1917.
-
-[1] I--GOING TO SEE VON HINDENBURG
-
-Yes, if the truth be told, I must say that I felt just a wee bit
-shaky about the knees. I wondered what view they would take of my
-perseverance, worthy, I am sure, of a kind reception.
-
-I would wager that in the whole of Germany there could not be found one
-... whose hair would not have stood on end at the mere suggestion of
-travelling to Hindenburg's headquarters without a pass. Why, he would
-sooner think of calling at the Palace "_Unter den Linden_," and of
-asking to interview the Kaiser.
-
-I think I must describe to you the way I appeared at headquarters. At
-Allenstein I had bought, the day before, a huge portrait of Hindenburg;
-it must have been nearly thirty inches long.
-
-Under one arm I carried the photograph, in my hand my letter of
-introduction, and in my other hand a huge umbrella, which was a local
-acquisition. On my face I wore that beatific, enthusiastic and very
-naïve expression of "the innocent abroad." I had blossomed out into
-that modern pest--the autographic maniac.
-
-Army corps, headquarters, strategy and tactics were words that meant
-nothing to me. How could they, stupid, unmilitary foreigner that I was!
-It was a pure case of "Fools will enter where angels fear to tread."
-You may be sure that my subsequent conversation with the Staff captain
-confirmed the idea that I was innocent of all military knowledge, and
-that I probably--so he thought--did not know the difference between an
-army corps and a section of snipers.
-
-Why had I come to Lötzen? Why, of course, to shake hands with the
-famous General, the new Napoleon; to have a little chat with him,
-and--last, but not least--to obtain his most priceless signature to
-my most priceless photograph. What? Not as easy as all that, but why?
-Could there be any harm in granting me those favors? Could it by the
-furthest stretch of imagination be considered as giving information to
-the enemy? What good was my letter of introduction from the General's
-dear nephew? Of course, I would not ask the General where he had his
-guns hidden, and when he intended to take Petrograd, Moscow or Kieff.
-Oh, no; I knew enough about military matters not to ask such leading
-questions.
-
-But joking apart. On showing my famous letter I had no difficulty
-whatsoever in entering the buildings of the General Staff. The first
-man I met was Hauptmann Frantz. He didn't seem a bad sort at all, and
-appeared rather to enjoy the joke and my "innocence," at imagining that
-I could walk up to Hindenburg's Eastern headquarters and say "Hello!"
-to the General.
-
-He thought it was most "original," and certainly exceedingly American.
-Still, it got him into the right mood. "Make people smile," might be a
-good motto for itinerant journalists in the war zones. Few people, not
-excepting Germans, are so mean as to bite you with a smile on their
-faces. Make them laugh, and half the battle is won.
-
-Frantz read my letter and was duly impressed. He never asked me whether
-I had any passes. He advised me to go to the General's house, shook
-hands, and wished me luck.
-
-Phew! I was glad that my first contact with the General Staff had come
-off so smoothly. I had been fully prepared for stormy weather, if not
-for a hurricane. Cockily, I went off to Hindenburg's residence, a very
-modest suburban village not far from the station, and belonging to a
-country lawyer. There was a bit of garden in front, and at the back;
-the house was new, and the bricks still bright red. Across the road on
-two poles a wide banner was stretched, with "Willkommen" painted on it.
-
-Two old Mecklenburger Landstrum men guarded the little wooden gate. I
-told them that I came from Great Headquarters, and once more produced
-the letter. They saluted, opened the gate, and one of them ran ahead to
-ring the door bell.
-
-
-II--HE ENTERS THE STRANGE HOUSE
-
-I walked up the little gravel path with here and there a patch of green
-dilapidated grass on either side. I remember the window curtains were
-of yellow plush. In the window seat stood a tall vase with artificial
-flowers flanked by a birdcage with two canaries. It was all very
-suburban, and did not look at all like the residence of such a famous
-man. An orderly, with his left arm thrust into a top-boot, opened
-the door. In a tone of voice that left no chance for the familiar
-War-Office question: "Have you an appointment, sir?" I inquired whether
-the Field-Marshal was at home, at the same time giving him my letter.
-The orderly peeled off his top-boot, unfastened his overalls, and
-slipped on his coat.
-
-Then he carefully took my letter, holding it gingerly between thumb
-and third finger, so as not to leave any marks on it, and ushered me
-into the "Wohnzimmer," a sort of living- and dining-room combined. It
-was the usual German affair. A couch, a table, a huge porcelain stove,
-were the prominent pieces of furniture. All three were ranged against
-the long wall. The straight-backed chairs were covered with red plush.
-On the walls hung several monstrosities, near-etchings representing
-the effigies of the Kaiser, the Kaiserin, and, of course, of "Our"
-Hindenburg. There was the usual overabundance of artificial flowers and
-ferns so dear to the heart of every German Hausfrau.
-
-The two canaries lived in the most elaborate homemade cage. (I
-understand they were the property of the "Hausfrau," not of
-Hindenburg!) On the table, covered with a check tablecloth, stood a
-bowl containing three goldfish. The floor was covered with a bright
-carpet, and in front of one of the doors lay a mat with "Salve" on
-it. Over the couch hung a photographic enlargement of a middle-aged
-soldier leaning nonchalantly against a door on which was chalked
-"Kriegsjahr, 1914." Over the frame hung a wreath with a black and white
-ribbon, inscribed "In Memoriam," telling its eloquent story.
-
-Behind me was a map of the Eastern front, and pinned alongside of it a
-caricature of a British Tommy sitting astride of a pyramid and pulling
-a number of strings fastened to the legs, arms and head of the Sultan,
-who was apparently dancing a jig.
-
-That room impressed itself upon my memory for all time. I often dream
-of it.
-
- * * * * *
-
-I had waited only a few minutes when a young officer came in, who,
-bowing obsequiously, wished me a very formal good-morning. I took my
-cue from the way he bowed. He explained that the General was out in
-the car but was expected back before noon. Would I condescend to wait?
-Needless to say, I did "condescend."
-
-I forgot to mention one point in my meditations. When I took the chance
-of continuing East instead of returning to Berlin, I thought there
-might just be a possibility that the Adjutant or Staff Officer who
-had spoken with von Schlieffen had entirely taken it upon himself to
-say "No," and that it was not unlikely that the General knew nothing
-whatever about my letter or my contemplated visit. If my surmise was
-correct, I would stand a sporting chance, because it was hardly to be
-expected that out of the thirty-odd officers comprising the Staff, I
-should run bang into the very man who had telephoned.
-
-I soon knew that the officer in immediate attendance on Hindenburg
-was not aware of my _contretempts_ at Allenstein on the previous day.
-Neither did he inquire after my passes. You see, they take these things
-for granted. Would I prefer to wait here or come in his office, where
-the stove was lit? Of course, I thought that would be more pleasant. I
-thought, and am glad to say was not mistaken, that probably the young
-officer felt he needed some mental relaxation. This will sound strange,
-but I have found during my travels through Germany, that in spite of
-the many warnings not to talk shop, every soldier, from the humblest
-private to the highest General--I am sure not excepting the War Lord
-himself--dearly loves to expatiate on matters military, his ambitions
-and hopes. This one was no exception. He chatted away very merrily,
-and more than once I recognized points and arguments which I had read
-weeks ago in interviews granted by General Hindenburg to Austrian
-journalists. He quite imagined himself an embryo Field-Marshal.
-
-He showed me several excellent maps, which gave every railroad line
-on both sides of the Polish frontier. They certainly emphasized the
-enormous difference and the many advantages of German _versus_ Russian
-railroad communications. Many of his predictions have since come
-true, but most of them have not. He hinted very mysteriously, but
-quite unmistakably, at a prospective Russian _débâcle_, and predicted
-a separate peace with Russia before the end of 1915! "And then," he
-added, "we will shake up the old women at the Western front a bit and
-show them the 'Hindenburg method.'"
-
- * * * * *
-
-The room we were in was fitted up as an emergency staff office. There
-were several large tables, maps galore, a safe, a number of books
-that looked like ledgers and journals, six telephones and a telegraph
-instrument. Two non-commissioned officers were writing in a corner. In
-case anything important happens at night, such as an urgent despatch
-that demands immediate attention, everything was at hand to enable the
-General to issue new orders. A staff-officer and a clerk are always on
-duty.
-
-I learned later on, though, that a position in that auxiliary
-staff-office at Hindenburg's residence is more or less of a sinecure.
-All despatches go first to Ludendorff, Hindenburg's Chief-of-Staff,
-who, in ninety-nine cases out of a hundred, issues orders without
-consulting his Chief.
-
-
-III--HE STANDS BEFORE VON HINDENBURG
-
-In the midst of a long explanation of the Russian plight, the voluble
-subaltern suddenly stopped short. I heard a car halt in front of the
-house, and a minute or two later the door of the office opened and
-Germany's giant idol entered. I rose and bowed. The officer and the two
-sergeants clicked their heels audibly, and replied to the stentorian
-"_Morgen, meine Herren_," with a brisk "_Morgen, Excellence_."
-
-Hindenburg looked questions at me, but I thought I would let my young
-friend do the talking and act as master of ceremonies. He handed
-Hindenburg my letter, and introduced me as "Herr 'von' Beaufort, who
-has just arrived from Rome." (I had left Rome nearly three months
-before!) The General read his nephew's letter and then shook hands with
-me, assuring me of the pleasure it gave him to meet me. Of course, I
-was glad that he was glad, and expressed reciprocity of sentiments.
-I looked at him--well, for lack of a better word, I will say, with
-affection; you know the kind of childlike, simple admiration which
-expresses so much. I tried to look at him as a certain little girl
-would have done, who wrote: "You are like my governess: she, too, knows
-everything." I felt sure that that attitude was a better one than
-to pretend that I was overawed. That sort of homage he must receive
-every day. Besides, as soon as I realized that he knew nothing of the
-telephone message from and to Allenstein, my old self-assurance had
-returned.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Now for my impressions of Germany's--and, as some people try to make us
-believe, the world's--greatest military genius. They might be summed
-up in two words: "Strength and cruelty." Hindenburg stands over six
-feet high. His whole personality radiates strength, brute, animal
-strength. He was, when I met him, sixty-nine years of age, but looked
-very much younger. His hair and moustache were still pepper and salt
-color. His face and forehead are deeply furrowed, which adds to his
-forbidding appearance. His nose and chin are prominent, but the most
-striking feature of the man's whole appearance are his eyes. They are
-steel-blue and very small, much too small for his head, which, in turn,
-is much too small compared with his large body. But what the eyes
-lacked in size they fully made up for in intensity and penetrating
-powers. Until I met Hindenburg I always thought that the eyes of the
-Mexican rebel Villa were the worst and most cruel I had ever seen.
-They are mild compared with those of Hindenburg. _Never in all my life
-have I seen such hard, cruel, nay, such utterly brutal eyes as those
-of Hindenburg._ The moment I looked at him I believed every story of
-refined (and unrefined) cruelty I had ever heard about him.
-
-He has the disagreeable habit of looking at you as if he did not
-believe a word you said. Frequently in conversation he closes his
-eyes, but even then it seemed as if their steel-like sharpness pierced
-his eyelids. Instead of deep circles, such as, for instance, I have
-noticed on the Kaiser, he has big fat cushions of flesh under his
-eyes, which accentuate their smallness. When he closes his eyes, these
-cushions almost touch his bushy eyebrows and give his face a somewhat
-prehistoric appearance. His hair, about an inch long I should judge,
-was brushed straight up--what the French call _en brosse_. The general
-contour of his head seemed that of a square, rounded off at the corners.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Speaking about the stories of cruelty, one or two of them may bear
-re-telling.
-
-When during the heavy fighting, early in 1915, General Rennenkampf
-was forced to evacuate Insterburg somewhat hastily, he was unable
-to find transport for about fifty thousand loaves of bread. Not
-feeling inclined to make a present of them to the Germans, he ordered
-paraffin to be poured over them. When the Germans found that bread
-and discovered its condition, Hindenburg is reported to have been
-frantic with rage. The next day, after he had calmed down, he said
-to one of his aides: "Well, it seems to be a matter of taste. If the
-Russians like their bread that way, very well. _Give it to the Russian
-prisoners._"
-
-You may feel certain that his orders were scrupulously carried out.
-
-Another incident which they are very fond of relating in Germany is
-more amusing, though it also plays on their idol's cruelty.
-
-It is a fact that both officers and men are deadly afraid of him. It is
-said that the great General has a special predilection for bringing the
-tip of his riding boots into contact with certain parts of the human
-anatomy. A private would far rather face day and night the Russian guns
-than be orderly to Hindenburg.
-
-But one day a man came up and offered himself for the job.
-
-"And what are you in private life?" the General snorted at him.
-
-"At your orders, sir, I am a wild animal trainer."
-
-
-IV--"WHAT VON HINDENBURG TOLD ME"
-
-Hindenburg and I talked for about twenty minutes on various
-subjects--Holland, Italy, America, and, of course, the campaign.
-
-When he tried to point out to me how all-important it was for Holland
-that Germany should crush England's "world-domination," I mentioned
-the Dutch Colonies. That really set him going. "Colonies," he shouted.
-"Pah! I am sick of all this talk about colonies. It would be better
-for people, and I am not referring to our enemies alone, to pay more
-attention to events in Europe. I say 'to the devil' (_zum Teufel_) with
-the colonies. Let us first safeguard our own country; the colonies will
-follow. It is here," and he went up to a large map of Poland hanging on
-the wall, and laid a hand almost as large as a medium-sized breakfast
-tray over the center of it--"It is here," he continued, "that European
-and colonial affairs will be settled and nowhere else. As far as the
-colonies are concerned, it will be a matter of a foot for a mile, as
-long as we hold large slices of enemy territory."
-
-He spoke with great respect of the Russian soldier, but maintained that
-they lacked proper leaders. "It takes more than ten years to reform
-the morale of an officers' corps. From what I have learned, the morale
-of the Russian officer is to this day much the same as it was in the
-Russo-Japanese war. We will show you one of their ambulance trains
-captured near Kirbaty. It is the last word in luxury. By all means
-give your wounded all the comfort, all the attention you can; but I
-do not think that car-loads of champagne, oysters, caviare and the
-finest French liqueurs are necessary adjuncts to an ambulance train.
-The Russian soldier is splendid, but his discipline is not of the same
-quality as that of our men. In our armies discipline is the result of
-spiritual and moral training; in the Russian armies discipline stands
-for dumb obedience. The Russian soldier remains at his post because he
-has been ordered to stay there, and he stands as if nailed to the spot.
-What Napoleon I. said still applies to-day: 'It is not sufficient to
-kill a Russian, you have to throw him over as well.'
-
-"It is absurd," the General continued, "for the enemy Press to compare
-this campaign with that of Napoleon in 1812." Again he got up, and
-pointing to another map, he said: "This is what will win the war for
-us." The map showed the close railroad net of Eastern Germany and the
-paucity of permanent roads in Russia. Hindenburg is almost a crank on
-the subject of railroads in connection with strategy. In the early days
-of the war he shuffled his army corps about from one corner of Poland
-to the other. It is said that he transferred four army corps (160,000
-men--about 600 trains) in two days from Kalish, in Western Poland, to
-Tannenberg, a distance of nearly two hundred miles. On some tracks the
-trains followed each other at intervals of six minutes.
-
-"Our enemies reckon without two great factors unknown in Napoleon's
-time: railroads and German organization. Next to artillery this war
-means railroads, railroads, and then still more railroads. The Russians
-built forts; we built railroads. They would have spent their millions
-better if they had emulated our policy instead of spending millions
-on forts. For the present fortresses are of no value against modern
-siege guns--at least, not until another military genius such as Vauban,
-Brialmont, Montalembert, Coehoorn, springs up, who will be able to
-invent proper defensive measures against heavy howitzers.
-
-"Another delusion under which our enemies are laboring is that of
-Russia's colossal supply of men. He who fights with Russia must always
-expect superiority in numbers; but in this age of science, strategy
-and organization, numbers are only decisive, 'all else being equal.'
-The Russian forces opposed to us on this front have always been far
-superior in numbers to ours, but we are not afraid of that. A crowd of
-men fully armed and equipped does not make an army in these days."
-
-This brought him to the subject of the British forces, more especially
-to Kitchener's army. "It is a great mistake to underestimate your
-enemy," said Hindenburg, referring to the continual slights and
-attacks appearing in the German Press. "I by no means underrate the
-thoroughness, the fighting qualities of the British soldier. England
-is a fighting nation, and has won her spurs on many battlefields. But
-to-day they are up against a different problem. Even supposing that
-Kitchener should be able to raise his army of several millions, where
-is he going to get his officers and his non-commissioned officers from?
-How is he going to train them, so to speak, overnight, when it has
-taken us several generations of uninterrupted instruction, study and
-work to create an efficient staff? Let me emphasize, and with all the
-force I can: 'Efficiency and training are everything.' There lies their
-difficulty. I have many officers here with me who have fought opposite
-the English, and all are united in their opinion that they are brave
-and worthy opponents; but one criticism was also unanimously made:
-'Their officers often lead their men needlessly to death, either from
-sheer foolhardiness, but more often through inefficiency.'"
-
-
-V--"WHEN I LEFT VON HINDENBURG"
-
-Although he did not express this opinion to me personally, I have it on
-excellent authority that Hindenburg believes this war will last close
-on four years at least. And the result--stalemate. He does not believe
-that the Allies will be able to push the Germans out of Belgium, France
-or Poland.
-
-Personally, I found it impossible to get him to make any definite
-statement on the probable outcome and duration of the war. "Until we
-have gained an honorable peace," was his cryptic reply. He refused to
-state what, in his opinion, constituted an honorable peace. If I am to
-believe several of his officers--and I discussed the subject almost
-every day--then Hindenburg must by now be a very disappointed man. I
-was told that he calculated as a practical certainty on a separate
-peace with Russia soon after the fall of Warsaw. (I should like to
-point out here that this "separate peace with Russia" idea was one of
-the most popular and most universal topics of conversation in Germany
-last year.)
-
- * * * * *
-
-When Hindenburg learnt that I had come all the way from Berlin without
-a pass from the General Staff, he appeared very much amused; but in a
-quasi-serious manner he said:
-
-"Well, you know that I ought to send you back at once, otherwise
-I shall risk getting the sack myself; still, as all ordinary
-train-service between here and Posen will be suspended for four days,
-the only way for you to get back is by motor-car. It would be a pity to
-come all the way from sunny Italy to this Siberian cold, and not see
-something of the men and of the hardships of a Russian winter campaign.
-Travelling by motor-car, you will have ample opportunity to see
-something of the country, and, if you feel so inclined, of the fighting
-as well. And then go home and tell them abroad about the insurmountable
-obstacles, the enormous difficulties the German has to overcome."
-
-Hindenburg does not like the Berlin General Staff officers, and that is
-why he was so amused at my having got the better of them. He describes
-them as "drawing-room" officers, who remain safely in Berlin. With
-their spick and span uniforms they look askance at their mud-stained
-colleagues at the front. His officers, who know Hindenburg's feelings
-towards these gentlemen, play many a practical joke on their Berlin
-_confrères_. The latter have frequently returned from a visit to some
-communication trenches only to find that their car has mysteriously
-retreated some two or three miles ... over Polish roads.
-
-Any one who can tell of such an experience befalling a "Salon Offizier"
-is sure to raise a good laugh from Hindenburg.
-
-At the conclusion of our conversation he instructed the young A.D.C. to
-take me over to Headquarters and present me to Captain Cämmerer. "Tell
-him," and I inscribed the words that followed deeply on my mind, "to be
-kind to Herr Beaufort."
-
- * * * * *
-
-My introduction to Cämmerer proved to be one of those curious vagaries
-of fate. He was the very man who less than twenty-four hours ago
-had spoken with General von Schlieffen, and who had assured him how
-impossible it was for me to continue, and that I was to be sent back to
-Berlin at once!
-
-"Beaufort, Beaufort," he sniffed once or twice before he could place
-me. Then suddenly he remembered. "Ah, yes, him! You are the man General
-von Schlieffen telephoned about yesterday? But did he not instruct you
-to return to Berlin?"
-
-However, I remembered Hindenburg's injunction: "Tell Cämmerer to be
-kind to him," so what did I care for a mere captain?
-
-Consequently, as they say in the moving pictures, I "registered" my
-most angelic smile, and sweetly said:
-
-"Ah, yes, Captain, quite so, quite so. But, you see, I felt _certain_
-that there was some misunderstanding at this end of the wire. Probably
-it was not clearly explained to you that I had this very important
-letter of introduction to General von Hindenburg from my friend his
-nephew. As you see," and I waved my hand at the A.D.C., my master of
-ceremonies, "I was quite right in my surmise."
-
- * * * * *
-
-However that may be, you may be certain that I saw to it that when
-we mapped out my return journey, Cämmerer was being "kind" to me.
-Consequently, I spent two most interesting weeks in the German Eastern
-war-zones, much to the surprise and disgust of the "Drawing-room Staff"
-in Berlin.
-
-(Count De Beaufort's revelations form one of the most valuable records
-of the war. He tells about "Spies and Spying;" "German Women;" "When I
-Prayed with the Kaiser;" "An Incognito Visit to the Fleet and German
-Naval Harbors;" "Interviews with the Leading Naval, Military and Civil
-Authorities in Germany"--closing with an interview that upset Berlin,
-caused his arrest, and as he describes it, "My Ultimate Escape Across
-the Baltic.")
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[1] All numerals throughout this volume relate to the stories herein
-told--not to chapters in the original sources.
-
-
-
-
-"KITCHENER'S MOB"--ADVENTURES OF AN AMERICAN WITH THE BRITISH ARMY
-
-_Uncensored Account of a Young Volunteer_
-
-_Told by James Norman Hall, of the First Expeditionary Force_
-
- This is a glimpse of life in a battalion of one of Lord Kitchener's
- first armies. It gives an intimate view of the men who are so
- gallantly laying down their lives for England. Kitchener's Mob
- has become the greatest volunteer army in the history of the
- world--for more than three million of disciplined fighting men are
- united under one flag in this magnificent military organization.
- Their fighting has become an epic of heroism in France, Belgium,
- Africa and the Balkans. Some of them have seen service in India,
- Egypt and South Africa; they might have stepped out of any of the
- "Barrack-Room Ballads." The name which they bear was fastened
- upon them by themselves--thereby hangs a tale. Stories of their
- adventures have been gathered into a volume under title of
- "Kitchener's Mob"--and published by _Houghton, Mifflin Company_:
- Copyright, 1916, by _Atlantic Monthly Company_; Copyright, 1916, by
- James Norman Hall.
-
-[2] I--STORY OF A YANKEE IN THE TRENCHES
-
-With Kitchener's mob we wandered through the trenches listening to the
-learned discourse of the genial professors of the Parapet-etic School,
-storing up much useful information for future reference. I made a
-serious blunder when I asked one of them a question about Ypres, for I
-pronounced the name French fashion, which put me under suspicion as a
-"swanker."
-
-"Don't try to come it, son," he said. "S'y 'Wipers.' That's wot we
-calls it."
-
-Henceforth it was "Wipers" for me, although I learned that "Eeps" and
-"Yipps" are sanctioned by some trench authorities. I made no further
-mistakes of this nature, and by keeping silent about the names of
-the towns and villages along our front, I soon learned the accepted
-pronunciation of all of them. Armentières is called "Armenteers";
-Balleul, "Ballyall"; Hazebrouck, "Hazy-Brook"; and what more natural
-than "Plug-Street," Atkinsese for Ploegsteert?
-
-As was the case wherever I went, my accent betrayed my American birth;
-and again, as an American Expeditionary Force of one, I was shown many
-favors. Private Shorty Holloway, upon learning that I was a "Yank,"
-offered to tell me "every bloomin' thing about the trenches that a
-bloke needs to know." I was only too glad to place myself under his
-instruction.
-
-"Right you are!" said Shorty; "now, sit down 'ere w'ile I'm going over
-me shirt, an' arsk me anything yer a mind to." I began immediately by
-asking him what he meant by "going over" his shirt.
-
-"Blimy! You are new to this game, mate! You mean to s'y you ain't got
-any graybacks?"
-
-I confessed shamefacedly that I had not. He stripped to the waist,
-turned his shirt wrong side out, and laid it upon his knee.
-
-"'Ave a look," he said proudly.
-
-The less said about my discoveries the better for the fastidiously
-minded. Suffice it to say that I made my first acquaintance with
-members of a British Expeditionary Force which is not mentioned in
-official _communiqués_.
-
-"Trench pets," said Shorty. Then he told me that they were not all
-graybacks. There is a great variety of species, but they all belong to
-the same parasitical family, and wage a non-discriminating warfare upon
-the soldiery on both sides of No-man's-Land. Germans, British, French,
-Belgians alike were their victims.
-
-"You'll soon 'ave plenty," he said reassuringly; "I give you about a
-week to get covered with 'em. Now, wot you want to do is this: always
-'ave an extra shirt in yer pack. Don't be a bloomin' ass an' sell
-it fer a packet o' fags like I did! An' the next time you writes to
-England, get some one to send you out some Keatings"--he displayed a
-box of grayish-colored powder. "It won't kill 'em, mind you! They ain't
-nothin' but fire that'll kill 'em. But Keatings tykes all the ginger
-out o' 'em. They ain't near so lively arter you strafe 'em with this
-'ere powder."
-
-I remembered Shorty's advice later when I became a reluctant host to a
-prolific colony of graybacks. For nearly six months I was never without
-a box of Keatings, and I was never without the need for it.
-
-
-II--IN THE BARBED-WIRE "MAN-TRAPS"
-
-Barbed wire had a new and terrible significance for me from the first
-day which we spent in the trenches. I could more readily understand
-why there had been so long a deadlock on the western front. The
-entanglements in front of the first line of trenches were from fifteen
-to twenty yards wide, the wires being twisted from post to post in such
-a hopeless jumble that no man could possibly get through them under
-fire. The posts were set firmly in the ground, but there were movable
-segments, every fifty or sixty yards, which could be put to one side in
-case an attack was to be launched against the German lines.
-
-At certain positions there were what appeared to be openings through
-the wire, but these were nothing less than man-traps which have been
-found serviceable in case of an enemy attack. In an assault men follow
-the line of least resistance when they reach the barbed wire. These
-apparent openings are V-shaped with the open end toward the enemy. The
-attacking troops think they see a clear passage-way. They rush into the
-trap and when it is filled with struggling men machine guns are turned
-upon them, and, as Shorty said, "You got 'em cold."
-
-That, at least, was the presumption. Practically, man-traps were not
-always a success. The intensive bombardments which precede infantry
-attacks play havoc with entanglements, but there is always a chance of
-the destruction being incomplete, as upon one occasion farther north,
-where, Shorty told me, a man-trap caught a whole platoon of Germans
-"dead to rights."
-
-"But this is wot gives you the pip," he said. "'Ere we got three
-lines of trenches, all of 'em wired up so that a rat couldn't get
-through without scratchin' hisself to death. Fritzie's got better wire
-than wot we 'ave, an' more of it. An' 'e's got more machine guns,
-more artill'ry, more shells. They ain't any little old man-killer
-ever invented wot they 'aven't got more of than we 'ave. An' at 'ome
-they're a-s'yin', 'W'y don't they get on with it? W'y don't they smash
-through?' Let some of 'em come out 'ere an' 'ave a try! That's all I
-got to s'y."
-
-I didn't tell Shorty that I had been, not exactly an armchair critic,
-but at least a barrack-room critic in England. I had wondered why
-British and French troops had failed to smash through. A few weeks
-in the trenches gave me a new viewpoint. I could only wonder at the
-magnificent fighting qualities of soldiers who had held their own so
-effectively against armies equipped and armed and munitioned as the
-Germans were.
-
-After he had finished drugging his trench pets, Shorty and I made a
-tour of the trenches. I was much surprised at seeing how clean and
-comfortable they can be kept in pleasant summer weather. Men were
-busily at work sweeping up the walks, collecting the rubbish, which
-was put into sandbags hung on pegs at intervals along the fire trench.
-At night the refuse was taken back of the trenches and buried. Most of
-this work devolved upon the pioneers whose business it was to keep the
-trenches sanitary.
-
-The fire trench was built in much the same way as those which we had
-made during our training in England. In pattern it was something like
-a tesselated border. For the space of five yards it ran straight, then
-it turned at right angles around a traverse of solid earth six feet
-square, then straight again for another five yards, then around another
-traverse, and so throughout the length of the line. Each five-yard
-segment, which is called a "bay," offered firing room for five men. The
-traverses, of course, were for the purpose of preventing enfilade fire.
-They also limited the execution which might be done by one shell. Even
-so they were not an unmixed blessing, for they were always in the way
-when you wanted to get anywhere in a hurry.
-
-"An' you are in a 'urry w'en you sees a Minnie [_Minnenwerfer_] comin'
-your w'y. But you gets trench legs arter a w'ile. It'll be a funny
-sight to see blokes walkin' along the street in Lunnon w'en the war's
-over. They'll be so used to dogin' in an' out o' traverses they won't
-be able to go in a straight line."
-
-
-III--STORIES OF SHORTY HOLLOWAY--"PROFESSOR OF TRENCHES"
-
-As we walked through the firing-line trenches, I could quite understand
-the possibility of one's acquiring trench legs. Five paces forward,
-two to the right, two to the left, two to the left again, then five to
-the right, and so on to Switzerland. Shorty was of the opinion that
-one could enter the trenches on the Channel coast and walk through
-to the Alps without once coming out on top of the ground. I am not
-in a position either to affirm or to question this statement. My own
-experience was confined to that part of the British front which lies
-between Messines in Belgium and Loos in France. There, certainly,
-one could walk for miles, through an intricate maze of continuous
-underground passages.
-
-But the firing-line trench was neither a traffic route nor a promenade.
-The great bulk of inter-trench business passed through the travelling
-trench, about fifteen yards in rear of the fire trench and running
-parallel to it. The two were connected by many passageways, the chief
-difference between them being that the fire trench was the business
-district, while the traveling trench was primarily residential. Along
-the latter were built most of the dugouts, lavatories, and trench
-kitchens. The sleeping quarters for the men were not very elaborate.
-Recesses were made in the wall of the trench about two feet above the
-floor. They were not more than three feet high, so that one had to
-crawl in head first when going to bed. They were partitioned in the
-middle, and were supposed to offer accommodations for four men, two
-on each side. But, as Shorty said, everything depended on the ration
-allowance. Two men who had eaten to repletion could not hope to occupy
-the same apartment. One had a choice of going to bed hungry or of
-eating heartily and sleeping outside on the firing-bench.
-
-"'Ere's a funny thing," he said. "W'y do you suppose they makes the
-dugouts open at one end?"
-
-I had no explanation to offer.
-
-"Crawl inside an' I'll show you."
-
-I stood my rifle against the side of the trench and crept in.
-
-"Now, yer supposed to be asleep," said Shorty, and with that he gave
-me a whack on the soles of my boots with his entrenching tool handle.
-I can still feel the pain of the blow.
-
-"Stand to! Wyke up 'ere! Stand to!" he shouted, and gave me another
-resounding wallop.
-
-I backed out in all haste.
-
-"Get the idea? That's 'ow they wykes you up at stand-to, or w'en your
-turn comes fer sentry. Not bad, wot?"
-
-I said that it all depended on whether one was doing the waking or the
-sleeping, and that, for my part, when sleeping, I would lie with my
-head out.
-
-"You wouldn't if you belonged to our lot. They'd give it to you on the
-napper just as quick as 'it you on the feet. You ain't on to the game,
-that's all. Let me show you suthin'."
-
-He crept inside and drew his knees up to his chest so that his feet
-were well out of reach. At his suggestion I tried to use the active
-service alarm clock on him, but there was not room enough in which to
-wield it. My feet were tingling from the effect of his blows, and I
-felt that the reputation for resourcefulness of Kitchener's Mob was at
-stake. In a moment of inspiration I seized my rifle, gave him a dig in
-the shins with the butt, and shouted, "Stand to, Shorty!" He came out
-rubbing his leg ruefully.
-
-"You got the idea, mate," he said. "That's just wot they does w'en you
-tries to double-cross 'em by pullin' yer feet in. I ain't sure w'ere I
-likes it best, on the shins or on the feet."
-
-This explanation of the reason for building three-sided dugouts,
-while not, of course, the true one, was none the less interesting.
-And certainly, the task of arousing sleeping men for sentry duty was
-greatly facilitated with rows of protruding boot soles "simply arskin'
-to be 'it," as Shorty put it.
-
-All of the dugouts for privates and N.C.O.s were of equal size and
-built on the same model, the reason being that the walls and floors,
-which were made of wood, and the roofs, which were of corrugated
-iron, were put together in sections at the headquarters of the Royal
-Engineers, who superintended all the work of trench construction. The
-material was brought up at night ready to be fitted into excavations.
-Furthermore, with thousands of men to house within a very limited
-area, space was a most important consideration. There was no room for
-indulging individual tastes in dugout architecture. The roofs were
-covered with from three to four feet of earth, which made them proof
-against shrapnel or shell splinters. In case of a heavy bombardment
-with high explosives, the men took shelter in deep and narrow "slip
-trenches." These were blind alley-ways leading off from the traveling
-trench, with room for from ten to fifteen men in each. At this part of
-the line there were none of the very deep shell-proof shelters, from
-fifteen to twenty feet below the surface of the ground, of which I had
-read. Most of the men seemed to be glad of this. They preferred taking
-their chances in an open trench during heavy shell fire.
-
-
-IV--THE "SUICIDE CLUB"--A BOMBING SQUAD
-
-Realists and Romanticists lived side by side in the traveling trench.
-"My Little Gray Home in the West" was the modest legend over one
-apartment. The "Ritz Carlton" was next door to "The Rats' Retreat,"
-with "Vermin Villa" next door but one. "The Suicide Club" was the
-suburban residence of some members of the bombing squad. I remarked
-that the bombers seemed to take rather a pessimistic view of their
-profession, whereupon Shorty told me that if there were any men slated
-for the Order of the Wooden Cross, the bombers were those unfortunate
-ones. In an assault they were first at the enemy's position. They had
-dangerous work to do even on the quietest of days. But theirs was a
-post of honor, and no one of them but was proud of his membership in
-the Suicide Club.
-
-The officers' quarters were on a much more generous and elaborate
-scale than those of the men. This I gathered from Shorty's description
-of them, for I saw only the exteriors as we passed along the trench.
-Those for platoon and company commanders were built along the traveling
-trench. The colonel, major, and adjutant lived in a luxurious palace,
-about fifty yards down a communication trench. Near it was the
-officers' mess, a café de luxe with glass panels in the door, a cooking
-stove, a long wooden table, chairs,--everything, in fact, but hot and
-cold running water.
-
-"You know," said Shorty, "the officers thinks they 'as to rough it, but
-they got it soft, I'm tellin' you! Wooden bunks to sleep in, batmen
-to bring 'em 'ot water fer shavin' in the mornin', all the fags they
-wants,----Blimy, I wonder wot they calls livin' 'igh?"
-
-I agreed that in so far as living quarters are concerned, they were
-roughing it under very pleasant circumstances. However, they were not
-always so fortunate, as later experience proved. Here there had been
-little serious fighting for months and the trenches were at their best.
-Elsewhere the officers' dugouts were often but little better than those
-of the men.
-
-The first-line trenches were connected with two lines of support or
-reserve trenches built in precisely the same fashion, and each heavily
-wired. The communication trenches which joined them were from seven to
-eight feet deep and wide enough to permit the convenient passage of
-incoming and outgoing troops, and the transport of the wounded back to
-the field dressing stations. From the last reserve line they wound on
-backward through the fields until troops might leave them well out of
-range of rifle fire. Under Shorty's guidance I saw the field dressing
-stations, the dugouts for the reserve ammunition supply and the stores
-of bombs and hand grenades, battalion and brigade trench headquarters.
-We wandered from one part of the line to another through trenches, all
-of which were kept amazingly neat and clean. The walls were stayed with
-fine-mesh wire to hold the earth in place. The floors were covered with
-board walks carefully laid over the drains, which ran along the center
-of the trench and emptied into deep wells, built in recesses in the
-walls. I felt very much encouraged when I saw the careful provision for
-sanitation and drainage. On a fine June morning it seemed probable that
-living in ditches was not to be so unpleasant as I had imagined it.
-Shorty listened to my comments with a smile.
-
-"Don't pat yerself on the back yet a w'ile, mate," he said. "They looks
-right enough now, but wite till you've seen 'em arter a 'eavy rain."
-
-I had this opportunity many times during the summer and autumn. A more
-wretched existence than that of soldiering in wet weather could hardly
-be imagined. The walls of the trenches caved in in great masses. The
-drains filled to overflowing, and the trench walks were covered deep in
-mud. After a few hours of rain, dry and comfortable trenches became a
-quagmire, and we were kept busy for days afterward repairing the damage.
-
-As a machine gunner I was particularly interested in the construction
-of the machine-gun emplacements. The covered battle positions were
-very solidly built. The roofs were supported with immense logs or
-steel girders covered over with many layers of sandbags. There were
-two carefully concealed loopholes looking out to a flank, but none for
-frontal fire, as this dangerous little weapon best enjoys catching
-troops in enfilade owing to the rapidity and the narrow cone of its
-fire. Its own front is protected by the guns on its right and left. At
-each emplacement there was a range chart giving the ranges to all parts
-of the enemy's trenches, and to every prominent object both in front of
-and behind them, within its field of fire. When not in use the gun was
-kept mounted and ready for action in the battle position.
-
-"But remember this," said Shorty, "you never fires from your battle
-position except in case of attack. W'en you goes out at night to 'ave
-a little go at Fritzie, you always tykes yer gun sommers else. If you
-don't, you'll 'ave Minnie an' Busy Bertha an' all the rest o' the Krupp
-childern comin' over to see w'ere you live."
-
-This was a wise precaution, as we were soon to learn from experience.
-Machine guns are objects of special interest to the artillery, and the
-locality from which they are fired becomes very unhealthy for some
-little time thereafter.
-
-
-V--AT THE "MUD LARKS'" BEAUTY SHOP
-
-We stopped for a moment at "The Mud Larks' Hair-dressing Parlor," a
-very important institution if one might judge by its patronage. It was
-housed in a recess in the wall of the traveling trench, and was open
-to the sky. There I saw the latest fashion in "oversea" hair cuts. The
-victims sat on a ration box while the barber mowed great swaths through
-tangled thatch with a pair of close-cutting clippers. But instead of
-making a complete job of it, a thick fringe of hair which resembled a
-misplaced scalping tuft was left for decorative purposes, just above
-the forehead. The effect was so grotesque that I had to invent an
-excuse for laughing. It was a lame one, I fear, for Shorty looked at me
-warningly. When we had gone on a little way he said:--
-
-"Ain't it a proper beauty parlor? But you got to be careful about
-larfin'. Some o' the blokes thinks that 'edge-row is a regular
-ornament."
-
-I had supposed that a daily shave was out of the question on the
-firing-line; but the British Tommy is nothing if not resourceful.
-Although water is scarce and fuel even more so, the self-respecting
-soldier easily surmounts difficulties, and the Gloucesters were all
-nice in matters pertaining to the toilet. Instead of draining their
-canteens of tea, they saved a few drops for shaving purposes.
-
-"It's a bit sticky," said Shorty, "but it's 'ot, an' not 'arf bad w'en
-you gets used to it. Now, another thing you don't want to ferget is
-this: W'en yer movin' up fer yer week in the first line, always bring a
-bundle o' firewood with you. They ain't so much as a match-stick left
-in the trenches. Then you wants to be savin' of it. Don't go an use it
-all the first d'y or you'll 'ave to do without yer tea the rest o' the
-week."
-
-I remembered his emphasis upon this point afterward when I saw men
-risking their lives in order to procure firewood. Without his tea Tommy
-was a wretched being. I do not remember a day, no matter how serious
-the fighting, when he did not find both the time and the means for
-making it.
-
-
-VI--FLIES--RATS--AND DOMESTIC SCIENCE
-
-Shorty was a Ph.D. in every subject in the curriculum, including
-domestic science. In preparing breakfast he gave me a practical
-demonstration of the art of conserving a limited resource of fuel,
-bringing our two canteens to a boil with a very meager handful of
-sticks; and while doing so he delivered an oral thesis on the best
-methods of food preparation. For example, there was the item of corned
-beef--familiarly called "bully." It was the _pièce de résistance_ at
-every meal with the possible exception of breakfast, when there was
-usually a strip of bacon. Now, one's appetite for "bully" becomes jaded
-in the course of a few weeks or months. To use the German expression
-one doesn't eat it _gern_. But it is not a question of liking it. One
-must eat it or go hungry. Therefore, said Shorty, save carefully all
-of your bacon grease, and instead of eating your "bully" cold out of
-the tin, mix it with bread crumbs and grated cheese and fry it in
-the grease. He prepared some in this way, and I thought it a most
-delectable dish. Another way of stimulating the palate was to boil the
-beef in a solution of bacon grease and water, and then, while eating
-it, "kid yerself that it's Irish stew." This second method of taking
-away the curse did not appeal to me very strongly, and Shorty admitted
-that he practiced such self-deception with very indifferent success;
-for after all "bully" was "bully" in whatever form you ate it.
-
-In addition to this staple, the daily rations consisted of bacon,
-bread, cheese, jam, army biscuits, tea, and sugar. Sometimes they
-received a tinned meat and vegetable ration, already cooked, and at
-welcome intervals fresh meat and potatoes were substituted for corned
-beef. Each man had a very generous allowance of food, a great deal
-more, I thought, than he could possibly eat. Shorty explained this by
-saying that allowance was made for the amount which would be consumed
-by the rats and the blue-bottle flies.
-
-There were, in fact, millions of flies. They settled in great swarms
-along the walls of the trenches, which were filled to the brim with
-warm light as soon as the sun had climbed a little way up the sky.
-Empty tin-lined ammunition boxes were used as cupboards for food. But
-of what avail were cupboards to a jam-loving and jam-fed British army
-living in open ditches in the summer time? Flytraps made of empty jam
-tins were set along the top of the parapet. As soon as one was filled,
-another was set in its place. But it was an unequal war against an
-expeditionary force of countless numbers.
-
-"They ain't nothin' you can do," said Shorty. "They steal the jam right
-off yer bread."
-
-As for the rats, speaking in the light of later experience, I can say
-that an army corps of Pied Pipers would not have sufficed to entice
-away the hordes of them that infested the trenches, living like house
-pets on our rations. They were great lazy animals, almost as large
-as cats, and so gorged with food that they could hardly move. They
-ran over us in the dugouts at night, and filched cheese and crackers
-right through the heavy waterproofed coverings of our haversacks. They
-squealed and fought among themselves at all hours. I think it possible
-that they were carrion eaters, but never, to my knowledge, did they
-attack living men. While they were unpleasant bedfellows, we became so
-accustomed to them that we were not greatly concerned about our very
-intimate associations.
-
-Our course of instruction at the Parapet-etic School was brought to a
-close late in the evening when we shouldered our packs, bade good-bye
-to our friends the Gloucesters, and marched back in the moonlight to
-our billets. I had gained an entirely new conception of trench life, of
-the difficulties involved in trench building, and the immense amount of
-material and labor needed for the work.
-
-Americans who are interested in learning of these things at first hand
-will do well to make the grand tour of the trenches when the war is
-finished. Perhaps the thrifty continentals will seek to commercialize
-such advantage as misfortune as brought them, in providing favorable
-opportunities. Perhaps the Touring Club of France will lay out a new
-route, following the windings of the firing line from the Channel coast
-across the level fields of Flanders, over the Vosges Mountains to
-the borders of Switzerland. Pedestrians may wish to make the journey
-on foot, cooking their supper over Tommy's rusty biscuit-tin stoves,
-sleeping at night in the dugouts where he lay shivering with cold
-during the winter nights of 1914 and 1915. If there are enthusiasts
-who will be satisfied with only the most intimate personal view of the
-trenches, if there are those who would try to understand the hardships
-and discomforts of trench life by living it during a summer vacation,
-I would suggest that they remember Private Shorty Holloway's parting
-injunction to me:--
-
-"Now, don't ferget, Jamie!" he said as we shook hands, "always 'ave a
-box o' Keatings 'andy, an' 'ang on to yer extra shirt!"
-
- * * * * *
-
-(Private Hall, of Kitchener's Mob, describes the scenes when the army
-was being organized for the first British expeditionary force. He
-tells about "The Rookies"; "The Mob in Training"; "Ordered Abroad." He
-describes their fights; their life under cover; their lodgings, billets
-and experiences in the trenches, "sitting tight." It is "men of this
-stamp," he says, "who have the fortunes of England in their keeping.
-And they are called 'The Boys of the Bulldog Breed.'")
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[2] All numerals relate to stories herein told--not to chapters from
-original sources.
-
-
-
-
-"HOW BELGIUM SAVED EUROPE"--THE LITTLE KINGDOM OF HEROES
-
-_Tragedy of the Belgians_
-
-_Told by Dr. Charles Sarolea, Ph. D. (Liège), Litt. D. (Brussels),
-Belgian Consul in Edinburgh_
-
- Dr. Sarolea is the historian of the Belgian people in the world
- tragedy through which they have passed. Count D'Aviella, Belgian
- Secretary of State, exclaims: "I am sure no one can read these
- tragic pages without becoming more than ever confirmed in his
- conviction that we are fighting in the cause of right, of liberty,
- and of civilization." Dr. Sarolea has for twelve years been Belgian
- Consul in Scotland; he is the personal friend of His Majesty
- King Albert of Belgium, with whom he frequently sits in private
- audience. He has written a book, "How Belgium Saved Europe," which
- sets forth the great tragedy which places the Belgian people on the
- same plane with those soul stirring heroes of universal history in
- the Persian Wars of Greece, the Punic Wars of Rome, the Wars of
- Spain against the Moors, the epic of Joan of Arc, the Wars of the
- French Revolution--and all the outstanding and inspiring chapters
- in the drama of human heroism. He tells about "The Hero-King" and
- "The German Plot in Belgium." We here record his story on "The
- Destruction of Louvain," by permission of his publishers, _J. B.
- Lippincott Company_: Copyright 1915.
-
-[3] I--STORIES OF MAD FURY IN LOUVAIN
-
-On September 1 (1914) a procession of refugees from Louvain arrived at
-Malines in a frenzy of terror with the news that the town of Louvain
-had been set on fire by the Germans and that the whole city was a heap
-of ruins. The wildest stories added to the horror of the tale. It
-was said that there had been a wholesale massacre of men, women, and
-children, and that hundreds of priests, and especially Jesuits, had
-been singled out for murder. Many of the stories proved to be without
-any foundation. But when all the exaggerations had been discounted
-there remained a body of substantial facts that were enough to send a
-thrill of indignation through Europe.
-
-Two certainties emerged from the chaos of conflicting evidence. First,
-there had been indiscriminate slaughter of civilians and looting of
-property. Secondly, the Germans, armed with incendiary fuses and
-obeying the order of the military authorities, had methodically burned
-the whole section of Louvain which extends from the station in the
-centre of the town, including the University and the church of St.
-Pierre.
-
-Since the destruction of the hapless University town other atrocities
-have followed in almost daily succession, Termonde, Aerschot, Malines,
-Antwerp. The world has almost got accustomed to them. There has been
-nothing like this mad fury of destruction in the whole history of
-modern warfare. Rheims has outdone even Louvain, and the ruin of the
-Cathedral of Rheims is an even greater loss than the destruction of the
-old Belgian Catholic University.
-
-Still Louvain remains the one crowning infamy. German casuistry may at
-least find some extenuating circumstances in the fact that Rheims was
-a fortified town, and that the Cathedral tower might have been used as
-an observation post for the French armies. For the crime of Louvain
-no extenuating circumstance can be urged. Louvain was undefended. It
-was a peaceful city of students, priests, and landladies. It was in
-the occupation of the Germans. Its destruction, therefore, was both a
-wanton and a cowardly act of cruelty, and being both wanton and cruel,
-it will stand out as the typical atrocity of German militarism.
-
-Only those who are familiar with the history of Belgium and Brabant,
-and with the history of Belgian Universities, know what Louvain and
-the University stood for. Founded in 1425, in the days of Petrarch,
-Froissart, and Chaucer, it was one of the oldest and most illustrious
-seats of learning in Europe. It was the seat of Pope Adrian VI,
-the tutor of Charles V. It still remained the most famous Catholic
-University in the world. It still attracted scholars from every
-country. It was still the nursery of Irish, English, and American
-priests.
-
-And not only had Louvain 500 years of learning behind it, it was also a
-city with a magnificent municipal tradition. The town hall, one of the
-gems of Gothic architecture, was a glorious monument to that municipal
-tradition. By the destruction of Louvain the German soldiery have
-wiped out five centuries of religious and intellectual culture and of
-municipal freedom.
-
-
-II--THE TRUTH ABOUT GERMAN ATROCITIES
-
-Wherever the Germans have perpetrated some atrocious crime they have
-used the same threadbare excuse--the shooting of German soldiers by
-civilians. Civilians fired on German soldiers at Visé, therefore Visé
-was razed to the ground. The fourteen-year-old son of the Burgomaster
-of Aerschot killed a German officer, therefore the whole city of
-Aerschot had to be destroyed. Similarly, it was to avenge the murder of
-German soldiers that Louvain was burned. It is the civilian population
-of Louvain who must ultimately be held responsible.
-
-On the face of it, the German version is an incredible invention.
-Louvain was in the occupation of German troops. _All the arms had
-been handed in days before by the civil population._ The authorities
-had posted placards recommending tranquility to the population, and
-warning them that any individual act of hostility would bring down
-instant vengeance. Those placards could still be read on the walls
-on the day of the destruction of Louvain. Under those circumstances,
-is it credible that a few peaceful citizens should have brought down
-destruction by their own deliberate act, which they knew would be met
-with instant and ruthless retribution?
-
-But even assuming that individual Belgians had been guilty of firing
-on the German troops, supposing a civilian exasperated by the
-monstrous treatment described in the narrative of Mr. Van Ernem, the
-Town Treasurer. When the Belgian troops were repulsed by the enemy's
-crushing numbers, and the Germans had put their big guns in position
-on all the heights dominating the town, the Germans sent a deputation
-to the Burgomaster, who agreed to receive the officers to hear their
-proposals and conditions for occupying the town.
-
-The German General with his état-major then came to the town hall to
-confer with the Burgomaster, councillors, and myself as treasurer of
-the town.
-
-These were the stipulated conditions.
-
-First: That the town should fully provide for the invaders, in
-consideration of which no war contributions would be exacted.
-
-Secondly: The soldiers not billeted in private houses were to pay cash
-for all goods obtained; also, they were not to molest the inhabitants
-under any circumstances.
-
-These stiplations, agreed to on both sides, were most scrupulously kept
-by the Belgians, but not by the Germans. On certain days, for example,
-the Germans would exact 67,000 pounds of meat, and would let 20,000
-pounds of it rot, although the population were suffering from hunger.
-
-On Monday, August 24, toward 10 P. M., the Burgomaster--a respectable
-merchant, sixty-two years of age--was arrested in his bed, where he was
-lying ill. He was forced to rise and marched to the railway station,
-where it was demanded of him that he should provide immediately 250
-warm meals and as many mattresses for the soldiers, under penalty of
-being shot. With admirable dispatch the inhabitants rushed to comply
-with the German demand. In their solicitude and pity for their aged
-chief, and their anxiety to save his life, they gave their own beds and
-their last drops of wine.
-
-The Germans acted without the slightest consideration or regard for the
-faithful promises of their état-major. The troops rushed into private
-houses, making forcible entrances, and taking from old and young,
-many of the latter already orphans, whatever they fancied, paying
-for nothing except with paper money to be presented to the "caisse
-communal" at the end of the war.
-
-The promise of exemption from contribution to a war levy was violated,
-like every other contract. Failing to find enough money in the
-treasury, the Germans in authority ordered the immediate payment of
-100,000 francs.
-
-This large sum could not be gathered from the inhabitants, and nearly
-all the banks had on the first warning of the approach of the enemy
-succeeded in transferring their funds to the National Bank.
-
-Finally, after much bickering, the officer in command of the German
-troops agreed to accept 3,000 fr., to be paid the next day. But with
-the next morning came a further demand for 5,000 fr. The Burgomaster
-vigorously protested against this new exaction; but nevertheless I,
-as treasurer of the town, was held responsible for collecting 5,000
-fr. With the greatest difficulty, I succeeded in procuring 3,080 fr.,
-and after considerable bickering this sum was accepted by the enemy,
-and the horrors of reprisals were delayed. The population, conscious
-of the terrible risk which they ran, submitted with calm resignation
-to the inevitable. As a functionary of the city, I can vouch for the
-absolutely dignified and passive attitude of the whole population
-of Louvain. They understood perfectly well their grave individual
-responsibility, and that any break of their promises would be instantly
-met by crushing action.
-
-The position of affairs was minutely explained to the inhabitants in
-several printed proclamations, and they were personally warned by our
-venerable Burgomaster. Good order was so rigorously maintained that the
-German authorities praised the exemplary conduct of the inhabitants.
-
-This attitude was all the more laudable because the invaders,
-immediately upon entering the city, liberated nine of their compatriots
-who had been incarcerated before the war for murder, theft, and other
-felonies.
-
-
-III--TRUE STORIES OF "THE UNSPEAKABLE CRIME"
-
-At last, on the Tuesday night, there took place the unspeakable crime,
-the shame of which can be understood only by those who followed and
-watched the different phases of the German occupation of Louvain.
-
-It is a significant fact that the German wounded and sick, including
-their Red Cross nurses, were all removed from the hospitals. The
-Germans meanwhile proceeded methodically to make a last and supreme
-requisition, although they knew the town could not satisfy it.
-
-Towards 6 o'clock the bugle sounded, and officers lodging in private
-houses left at once with arms and luggage. At the same time thousands
-of additional soldiers, with numerous field-pieces and cannon, marched
-into the town to their allotted positions. The gas factory, which
-had been idle, had been worked through the previous night and day by
-Germans, so that during this premeditated outrage the people could not
-take advantage of darkness to escape from the town. A further fact
-that proves their premeditation is that the attack took place at 8
-o'clock, the exact time at which the population entered their houses in
-conformity with the German orders--consequently escape became well-nigh
-impossible. At 8.20 a full fusillade with the roar of the cannons came
-from all sides of the town at once.
-
-The sky at the same time was lit up with the sinister light of fires
-from all quarters. The cavalry charged through the streets, sabring
-fugitives, while the infantry, posted on the footpaths, had their
-fingers on the triggers of their guns waiting for the unfortunate
-people to rush from the houses or appear at the windows, the soldiers
-complimenting each other on their marksmanship as they fired at the
-unhappy fugitives.
-
-Those whose homes were not yet destroyed were ordered to quit and
-follow the soldiers to the railway station. There the men were
-separated from mothers, wives, and children, and thrown, some bound,
-into trains leaving in the direction of Germany.
-
-I cannot but feel that, following the system they have inaugurated
-in this campaign, the Germans will use these non-combatant prisoners
-as human shields when they are fighting the Allies. The cruelty of
-these madmen surpasses all limits. They shot numbers of absolutely
-inoffensive people, forcing those who survived to bury their dead in
-the square, already encumbered with corpses whose positions suggested
-that they had fallen with arms uplifted in token of surrender.
-
-Others who have been allowed to live were driven past approving drunken
-officers by the brutal use of rifle butts, and while they were being
-maltreated they saw their carefully collected art and other treasures
-being shared out by the soldiers, the officers looking on. Those
-who attempted to appeal to their tormentors' better feelings were
-immediately shot. A few were let loose, but most of them were sent to
-Germany.
-
-On Wednesday at daybreak the remaining women and children were driven
-out of the town--a lamentable spectacle--with uplifted arms and under
-the menace of bayonets and revolvers.
-
-The day was practically calm. The destruction of the most beautiful
-part of the town seemed to have momentarily soothed the barbarian rage
-of the invaders.
-
-On the Thursday the remnant of the Civil Guard was called up on
-the pretext of extinguishing the conflagration; those who demurred
-were chained and sent with some wounded Germans to the Fatherland.
-The population had to quit at a moment's notice before the final
-destruction.
-
-Then, to complete their devastation, the German hordes fell back on the
-surrounding villages to burn them. They tracked down the men--some were
-shot, some made prisoners--and during many long hours they tortured the
-helpless women and children. This country of Eastern Brabant, so rich,
-so fertile, and so beautiful, is to-day a deserted charnel-house.
-
-Why should these individual deeds have been visited on thousands of
-innocent and inoffensive people? Why should those deeds have been
-visited on monuments of brick and stone? Why should treasuries of
-learning and shrines of religion be destroyed? Why should the six
-centuries of European history be destroyed because of the acts of a few
-patriots acting under the impulse of terror or indignation?
-
-As I said, the whole truth cannot yet be revealed. It is difficult
-to disentangle the facts even from ocular witnesses, from terrorized
-victims who were present at the ghastly crime. I have cross-examined
-some of those witnesses. I have read private letters from my cousin,
-Professor Albert Nerincx, at present Acting-Burgomaster of Louvain, who
-assumed office when the civic authorities had left, and whose heroic
-conduct is one of the few bright spots in the tragedy. Comparing and
-collating all the evidence at our disposal, we may take the following
-version given by the Belgian Commission of Inquiry as substantially
-correct:
-
-"On Tuesday evening a German corps, after receiving a check, withdrew
-in disorder into the town of Louvain. A German guard at the entrance of
-the town mistook the nature of this incursion and fired on their routed
-fellow-countrymen, mistaking them for Belgians.
-
-"In spite of all denials from the authorities the Germans, in order
-to cover their mistake, pretended that it was the inhabitants who had
-fired on them, whereas the inhabitants, including the police, had been
-disarmed more than a week ago.
-
-"Without inquiry, and without listening to any protests, the German
-Commander-in-Chief announced that the town would be immediately
-destroyed. The inhabitants were ordered to leave their dwellings; a
-party of men were made prisoners and the women and children put into
-trains the destination of which is unknown. Soldiers furnished with
-bombs set fire to all parts of the town."
-
-
-IV--MURDER--LOOT--RAPINE--IN BELGIUM
-
-An Oxford student who visited the scene of the disaster with Mr. Henry
-Fürst, of Exeter College, Oxford, on August 29, gives the following
-description of the awful picture:
-
-"Burning houses were every moment falling into the roads; shooting
-was still going on. The dead and dying, burnt and burning, lay on all
-sides. Over some the Germans had placed sacks. I saw about half a dozen
-women and children. In one street I saw two little children walking
-hand in hand over the bodies of dead men. I have no words to describe
-these things. I hope people will not make too much of the saving of the
-Hôtel de Ville.
-
-"The Hôtel de Ville was standing on Friday morning last, and, as we
-plainly saw, every effort was being made to save it from the flames. We
-were told by German officers that it was not to be destroyed. I have
-personally no doubt that it is still standing. The German officers
-dashing about the streets in fine motor-cars made a wonderful sight.
-They were well-dressed, shaven, and contented-looking; they might have
-been assisting at a fashionable race-meeting. The soldiers were looting
-everywhere; champagne, wines, boots, cigars--everything was being
-carried off."
-
-But let it not be thought that Louvain was destroyed in vain. To the
-Belgian people it has meant more than a glorious victory. To the
-Germans it has been more disastrous than the most ignominious defeat.
-Until Louvain neutral peoples might still hesitate in their sympathies.
-Pacifists might still waver as to the justice of the cause. After
-Louvain any hesitation or doubt became impossible. The destruction of
-Louvain was needed to drive home the meaning of German culture. The
-crime of Louvain branded the German rulers and the commanders of the
-German armies as the enemies of the human race.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The atrocities committed by the German armies have roused the
-indignation of both hemispheres. They have placed Germany outside the
-pale of civilization. They have covered the German armies with eternal
-infamy. In the full light of the twentieth century the German terror
-has outdone the deeds and wiped out the memory of the Spanish terror.
-We make ample allowances for wild rumors bred of panic, although
-in the present instance the panic caused by the mere approach of
-the German soldiery is in itself a most significant symptom. If the
-German armies had observed the laws of civilized warfare which protect
-the defenceless inhabitants, there would have been no need for the
-population to fly for their lives, and there would not be at present a
-million homeless exiles wandering over the high roads of Holland.
-
- * * * * *
-
-(Dr. Sarolea describes the vicissitudes of Belgian triumphants
-alternating with Belgian reverses, the pathetic story of brave endeavor
-and of suffering nobly endured in the noblest of causes. The Defense of
-Liège, the fall of Namur, the capture of Brussels and the beleaguering
-of Antwerp: the destruction of Dinant and Termonde, the bursting of the
-dykes of the Scheldt, the German Terror and the wholesale exodus of the
-stricken nation which through all time will be the favorite theme of
-historians and poets.)
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[3] All numerals throughout this volume relate to the stories herein
-told--not to chapters in the original books.
-
-
-
-
-THE BISHOP OF LONDON'S VISIT TO THE FRONT
-
-_Taking the Message of Christ to the Battle Lines_
-
-_Told by The Reverend G. Vernon Smith, Resident Chaplain to the Bishop
-of London, Deputy Priest in Ordinary to the King_
-
- This is an account of how a Bishop of the Church of England visited
- the troops at the front. He went to France as the guest of Sir John
- French, Field Marshall of the British Army, to spend Holy Week and
- Easter with the troops. The chaplain who relates these experiences
- was one of the guests. He said before he left London, the Bishop
- received most cordial letters of God-speed from the Bishops of
- Canterbury and York. The Bishop's first evening in France was spent
- at the Soldiers' Institute at Boulogne, and this building was
- packed with soldiers at a concert. He then started in a motor car
- for the headquarters of the British Army, where he was received by
- the Field Marshall with all the members of the staff. A complete
- record of his journeys has been published by _Longmans, Green and
- Company_, with whose permission the following chapter is here
- presented.
-
-[4] I--HOLY COMMUNION AT THE FRONT
-
-It was in ---- that the Bishop for the first time came close to the
-actual front and within range of the German guns. The cars were at the
-door of the house where the Bishop was billeted, in a quiet little
-side-street, at 6:45 in the morning, for an early start had been
-arranged.
-
-We drove through the narrow streets to one of the large Hospitals in
-the town, where he celebrated the Holy Communion at seven o'clock for
-those of the officers and patients who wished to attend. After this
-service the other patients came in for morning prayers, at which the
-Bishop said a few words to them. It was invariably the case, when the
-Bishop visited a hospital, that there were many patients who wished to
-have a word with him. There were always, also, some men to whom, for
-some special reason, the Medical Officer or Chaplain wished to take
-him, and not infrequently in the Officers' Hospitals there were men
-whom he knew personally.
-
-It was, therefore, a hard task to keep up to time in saying "Good-bye"
-at a hospital, and Mr. Macpherson, whom the Bishop soon called his
-"nigger-driver," and who was responsible for seeing that the time-table
-was strictly kept--a task of considerable difficulty--had generally to
-remind the Bishop at a suitable moment that his car was waiting at the
-door.
-
-In a few minutes we had arrived at the Jute Factory again, where thirty
-men were ready and waiting to be confirmed in the little Chapel which
-has been carefully partitioned off in one corner of the building.
-
-It had been arranged that on this day the Bishop should visit some of
-the London Regiments that have recently gone to the front. Naturally
-he always looked forward with special eagerness to an opportunity of
-meeting, in these fresh surroundings, London men, to so many of whom he
-has spoken and preached in his diocese. Fortunately he was able in the
-course of the week to visit nearly all these regiments, although some
-of the men who were in the trenches could not, of course, be present
-at his services. To us, coming out from London, it was a great source
-of satisfaction and pride to hear of the high esteem in which these
-Territorial regiments are held by the leaders of our Army.
-
-It was not a very long time, as the motors slipped along the quiet
-country roads, before we began to hear the distant sound of guns, and
-as long as we were within a short distance of the firing-line there was
-seldom an hour in which guns could not be distinctly heard.
-
-Here and there, too, could be seen a battery hidden beneath a belt of
-trees, or sheltered under the hedge by the side of the road. We were
-curious to see how the countryside would look after its long occupation
-by the British Army. We had expected, perhaps, to see more signs of
-war, although we had not known what to anticipate.
-
-Beyond the fact that there were many bodies of troops moving on the
-roads, and that many farms and other large houses had notices fixed
-up outside to show they were the Headquarters of some unit, there
-was nothing, as a rule, except in the areas which have been actually
-shelled, to give any indication of the terrible nature of the struggle
-which is being waged so close at hand. Indeed, if the road took us to
-the top of one of the few hills in that country, and we looked out over
-the landscape, just beginning to show the first touches of spring,
-it was almost impossible to realize that between us and the horizon
-stretched that long valley of trenches which divides the two great
-armies.
-
-When we drove along the roads at some distance from the actual front,
-it was often hard to believe that this was the real seat of war; but a
-passing transport wagon or a patrol of cavalry riding by soon reminded
-us of stern realities. The recent absence of rain, and the warm sun,
-had caused the roads to dry up considerably, and many officers seemed
-to be quite disappointed not to be able to show us many samples of
-the mud to which they had become so accustomed, and of which we had
-heard so much. We wondered, also, very much how the men would look
-after their hard and trying winter. Certainly I was surprised to notice
-how very clean and tidy they invariably appeared to be; although, of
-course, uniforms must show signs of wear and tear. In every case,
-except where the men were actually fresh from the trenches, the
-Battalions presented a smart appearance.
-
-
-II--SOLDIERS SINGING: "JESUS LOVER OF MY SOUL"
-
-At our first halt a Battalion of the London Regiment was drawn up on
-parade in a field, and for the first time we opened the large red box
-and handed round the hymn-sheets. It was here that we were to begin to
-understand the wonderful uplifting power of our great English hymns
-when they are sung on great occasions. After all, the heart of a nation
-is often to be found in its hymns. They express a simple theology in
-simple terms, and words and tunes of hymns learned in childhood are
-very dear to men, even if in the rush of life they have not, as many
-said, "found much time for religion before I came to France." The
-Bishop had chosen hymns which he knew would be familiar to all the men
-of all denominations.
-
-Only four hymns were sung throughout the week--"When I Survey the
-Wondrous Cross," "Rock of Ages, Cleft for Me," "There Is a Green
-Hill Far Away," and "Jesus, Lover of My Soul"--hymns which are known
-throughout the world wherever British men have gone. There was no
-necessity to have an accompaniment, for everybody knew the tunes. Once
-or twice a band was present, and now and then a small harmonium was
-used, but as a rule the hymns were sung unaccompanied, except by the
-thunder of the guns.
-
-It is always moving and inspiring to join in hymns when they are
-sung by large bodies of men, especially when those hymns have been
-associated with great moments in our lives, but never before can these
-familiar tunes have had such a setting; never, certainly, have they
-been sung more reverently or with greater earnestness. Perhaps, as
-children they liked the tunes best, but now that they have become men
-and put away childish things, the soldiers think first of the words.
-
-How much those words meant to many hearts no one but He to Whom all
-hearts are open can ever know; but that they moved thoughts too deep
-for words was clearly written on every face in those great gatherings
-of men. As they must have raised many memories of childhood in the
-hearts of many of the men, so now they will in future years be sung by
-many with another and a deeper memory of the occasions when they were
-sung upon the battlefields of Flanders in the days of the Great War.
-
-There was one verse in the Gospels which was continually in my mind at
-these great services. In Holy Week, of course, we were often thinking
-of that last night of our Lord with His disciples in the upper room at
-Jerusalem before He went out to His great battle in Gethsemane, and on
-the Cross: "When they had sung an hymn, they went out into the Mount of
-Olives."
-
-We were with men at the great moments of their lives, many of them
-having come straight out of the trenches, many going back to the
-trenches in but a few moments after we had left them--men who had
-been in battle, and men who were preparing for battle. Nobody who was
-present at those services would ever forget what it meant to say: "And
-when they had sung a hymn, they went back to the trenches."
-
-Every service, of course, was closed with the National Anthem. At
-the front, men seem instinctively to know that this great hymn is in
-reality a prayer, and on not a few occasions the whole body of men
-reverently sang "Amen" at the conclusion of the last line. So also "God
-Save the King" will have won for itself an even deeper place in the
-hearts of men than that which it has held for so many generations.
-
-From the open field, it was not far to pass on to a little French town
-where another regiment was drawn up in the principal square. No more
-suitable place could have been chosen for a service, and a wagon, which
-served as a pulpit for the Bishop, was just in front of the western
-door of the fine old church.
-
-
-III--"THE KINGDOM OF GOD"--NEAR THE GUNS
-
-To see a Bishop of the Anglican Communion preaching in France at the
-door of a Roman Catholic church raised many thoughts in my mind.
-I could not but hope that these days of trial may draw the Allies
-together by something that is deeper than the bonds of friendship.
-We had heard not infrequently of the sympathetic help which is being
-offered by many priests of the Roman Catholic Church to our own
-Chaplains, and I thought, as many are thinking at this time, that if
-the war could serve in any way to help the two great Communions to
-understand better their distinctive points of view, some real step
-will have been taken to advance the cause of the Kingdom of God.
-This service was reverently watched by a considerable number of the
-inhabitants of the place.
-
-After holding a short service for two batteries near their guns, the
-Bishop came to another open square where a Brigade was assembled, which
-included a regiment almost, if not entirely, recruited from East
-London. The East Londoner has his own unique characteristics, and his
-friends will be glad to know that he is just as cheerful and bright in
-France at war as he is in England in times of peace. It was hard to
-distinguish faces, but as the regiment swung by the place where I was
-standing, I saw many who remembered me from the time that I spent at
-Oxford House, and they waved just as hearty a greeting from the ranks
-as they used to wave from the top of a van in the Bethnal Green Road
-five years ago.
-
-The deepest note on this day was struck when we came to a little town
-filled with British troops, a very large number of whom had been
-recently engaged in heavy fighting. The Chaplain had sent a notice
-throughout one Division that the Bishop would hold a short service in
-the evening for officers, and that this would be followed by a service
-for non-commissioned officers and men. As he entered the large hall
-which is used for a church in that town, he found at least five hundred
-officers, including many Generals, waiting in silence. They had come,
-some of them, from considerable distances, and almost every officer
-who was off duty in that district must have been present. It was only
-a bare, whitewashed building, with a hard stone floor, and a little
-platform at the end, but in it were gathered together some of the
-flower of the British Army.
-
-There were Generals kneeling side by side with subalterns--men who had
-faced together the terrible ordeal of battle. Those who were present
-will surely never forget the silence and reverence of that service.
-
-
-IV--THE CANADIANS--AND A BENEDICTION
-
-After so long a day the Bishop was naturally beginning to feel tired,
-and his voice began to show signs of the great tax which frequent
-speaking in the open air had placed upon it. But there was one more
-gathering at which he was to be present, and in many ways this was the
-most striking and memorable of the whole Mission.
-
-The Canadians were there, and they wished to see him. That was quite
-enough for the Bishop. His two visits to the Dominion have made Canada
-very dear to his heart, and to Canada he will always give of his best.
-It was not far to go to the large open square in the town where the
-Canadians were waiting for him. The square was packed with men, and in
-the center was a statue or fountain--I really could not distinguish
-which, so completely was it concealed by the men sitting and standing
-upon it.
-
-The last rays of the sun came across the old tiled roofs, and lent a
-touch of color to the scene. On one side of the square was the Town
-Hall, and the Bishop stood in the balcony, surrounded by the General
-and staff officers. It was a moving sight to look down from the balcony
-of this old French Town Hall upon this great gathering of men who had
-come so many thousands of miles from their homes to fight for the
-honor of the Empire. There was no opportunity for an ordinary service.
-The gathering darkness would have made it impossible for the men to
-read, and, even if it had been lighter, the men were so closely packed
-together that hymn-sheets could not have been held.
-
-It is always difficult to estimate numbers, but someone said that
-nearly ten thousand men must have been present. When the Bishop
-appeared on the balcony there was a Canadian cheer. He is well known in
-the Dominion, and the volume of sound left no doubt as to the warmth of
-feeling with which he is regarded there.
-
-"This is a sight," he began, "which reminds me of Montreal and
-Toronto."
-
-"How about Winnipeg?" came a voice from the crowd, and the men all
-laughed. It was a glorious chance to tell them of the way in which the
-Mother Country appreciates the splendid loyalty with which her sons
-beyond the seas have rallied at the Empire's call, and the Bishop was
-not slow to let them know that we in Great Britain rejoice to feel
-that the men of Canada and the men of Britain are standing shoulder to
-shoulder in France. And then they cheered again.
-
-"Yes, you may cheer that," he added, "while I get breath for the next
-sentence." He passed on to speak of the great cause of the freedom of
-the world for which the Empire and the Allies are fighting to-day.
-Canada, the great self-governing Dominion--free, and yet part of the
-Empire--would understand what freedom means.
-
-"Yes, you may cheer that too," the Bishop said, "while I get breath
-again."
-
-And then, as he turned to deeper thoughts and closed, he added: "Now
-we will all together say the Lord's Prayer." In a flash there was not
-a cap to be seen in the square, but only the bared heads of that great
-throng of men reverently bent forward in prayer. Then, in absolute
-silence, the Bishop gave the Blessing, and as he left the balcony a
-staff officer turned to me and said: "That is a really great man."
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[4] All numerals relate to stories herein told--not to chapters from
-original sources.
-
-
-
-
-"GRAPES OF WRATH"--WITH THE "BIG PUSH" ON THE SOMME
-
-_Twenty-four Hours in the Life of a Private Soldier_
-
-_Told by Boyd Cable, an English Author in the British Army_
-
- Boyd Cable has suddenly become one of the foremost word painters
- of active fighting--"the greatest literary discovery of the War."
- He is primarily a man of action. At the age of twenty, he joined a
- corps of Scouts in the Boer War and fought in South Africa. He then
- became a traveler and spent some time in Australia and New Zealand,
- in the Philippines, Java and the Islands of the Pacific. He is a
- "knight of adventure"--he has been an ordinary seaman, a typewriter
- agent, a steamer fireman, office manager, hobo, gold prospector,
- coach driver, navvy. He was one of the first men not in the Regular
- Army to get a commission and be sent to the front in 1914. As an
- observation officer in the artillery, he was "spotted" by the enemy
- sharpshooters, got a bullet through his cap, one through the inside
- of his sleeve close to his heart, and fifty-three others near
- enough for him to hear them pass--all in less than an hour. After
- eighteen months of this death-defying work without even a wound,
- he was invalided home on account of stomach trouble and then began
- to write of his adventures. His books, "Behind the Line," "Action
- Front," and "Doing Their Bit," are acknowledged to be the most
- vivid and stimulating pictures of the War as seen by the men in the
- trenches. We here record his story of the tanks from his volume of
- tales entitled "Grapes of Wrath," by permission of his publishers,
- _E. P. Dutton and Company_: Copyright 1917.
-
-[5] I--STORY OF "KENTUCKY"--AN AMERICAN IN THE BRITISH TRENCHES
-
-Soon after Kentucky rejoined them the Stonewalls were moved forward a
-little clear of the village they had helped to take, just as one or two
-heavy shells whooped over from the German guns and dropped crashing on
-the ground that had been theirs. The men were spread out along shell
-holes and told to dig in for better cover because a bit of a redoubt on
-the left flank hadn't been taken and bullets were falling in enfilade
-from it.
-
-"Dig, you cripples," said the sergeant, "dig in. Can't you see that
-if they counter-attack from the front now you'll get shot in the back
-while you're lining the front edge of those shell holes. Get to it
-there, you Pug."
-
-"Shot in the back, linin' the front," said Pug as the sergeant passed
-on. "Is it a conundrum, Kentuck?"
-
-"Sounds sort of mixed," admitted Kentucky. "But it's tainted some with
-the truth. That redoubt is half rear to us. If another lot comes at us
-in front and we get up on the front edge of this shell hole, there's
-nothing to stop the redoubt bullets hitting us in the back. Look at
-that," he concluded, nodding upward to where a bullet had smacked
-noisily into the mud above their heads as they squatted in the hole.
-
-The two commenced wearily to cut out with their trenching tools a
-couple of niches in the sides of the crater which would give them
-protection from the flank and rear bullets. They made reasonably
-secure cover and then stayed to watch a hurricane bombardment that was
-developing on the redoubt. "_Goo_ on the guns," said Pug joyfully.
-"That's the talk; smack 'em about."
-
-The gunners "smacked 'em about" with fifteen savage minutes' deluge
-of light and heavy shells, blotting out the redoubt in a whirlwind of
-fire-flashes, belching smoke clouds and dust haze. Then suddenly the
-tempest ceased to play there, lifted and shifted and fell roaring in a
-wall of fire and steel beyond the low slope which the redoubt crowned.
-
-With past knowledge of what the lift and the further barrage meant the
-two men in the shell-pit turned and craned their necks and looked out
-along the line.
-
-"There they go," said Pug suddenly, and "Attacking round a
-half-circle," said Kentucky. The British line was curved in a horseshoe
-shape about the redoubt and the two being out near one of the points
-could look back and watch clearly the infantry attack launching from
-the center and half-way round the sides of the horseshoe. They saw
-the khaki figures running heavily, scrambling round and through the
-scattered shell holes, and presently, as a crackle of rifle fire rose
-and rose and swelled to a sullen roar with the quick, rhythmic clatter
-of machine guns beating through it, they saw also the figures stumbling
-and falling, the line thinning and shredding out and wasting away under
-the withering fire.
-
-The sergeant dodged along the pit-edge above them. "Covering fire," he
-shouted, "at four hundred--slam it in," and disappeared. The two opened
-fire, aiming at the crest of the slope and beyond the tangle of barbed
-wire which alone indicated the position of the redoubt.
-
-They only ceased to fire when they saw the advanced fringe of the line,
-of a line by now woefully thinned and weakened, come to the edge of the
-barbed wire and try to force a way through it.
-
-"They're beat," gasped Pug. "They're done in ..." and cursed long and
-bitterly, fingering nervously at his rifle the while. "Time we rung in
-again," said Kentucky. "Aim steady and pitch 'em well clear of the
-wire." The two opened careful fire again while the broken remnants of
-the attacking line ran and hobbled and crawled back or into the cover
-of shell holes. A second wave flooded out in a new assault, but by now
-the German artillery joining in helped it and the new line was cut
-down, broken and beaten back before it had covered half the distance to
-the entanglements. Kentucky and Pug and others of the Stonewalls near
-them could only curse helplessly as they watched the tragedy and plied
-their rifles in a slender hope of some of their bullets finding those
-unseen loopholes and embrasures.
-
-
-II--HIS MAJESTY'S LAND SHIP--"WE ARE HERE"
-
-"An' wot's the next item o' the program, I wonder?" said Pug half an
-hour after the last attack had failed, half an hour filled with a
-little shooting, a good deal of listening to the pipe and whistle of
-overhead bullets and the rolling thunder of the guns, a watching of the
-shells falling and spouting earth and smoke on the defiant redoubt.
-
-"Reinforcements and another butt-in at it, I expect," surmised
-Kentucky. "Don't see anything else for it. Looks like this
-pimple-on-the-map of a redoubt was holdin' up any advance on this
-front. Anyhow I'm not hankering to go pushin' on with that redoubt
-bunch shootin' holes in my back, which they'd surely do."
-
-"Wot's all the buzz about be'ind us?" said Pug suddenly, raising
-himself for a quick look over the covering edge of earth behind him,
-and in the act of dropping again stopped and stared with raised
-eyebrows and gaping mouth.
-
-"What is it?" said Kentucky quickly, and also rose, and also stayed
-risen and staring in amazement. Towards them, lumbering and rolling,
-dipping heavily into the shell holes, heaving clumsily out of them,
-moving with a motion something between that of a half-sunken ship and a
-hamstrung toad, striped and banded and splashed from head to foot, or,
-if you prefer, from fo'c'sl-head to cutwater, with splashes of lurid
-color, came His Majesty's Land Ship "Here We Are."
-
-"Gor-_strewth_!" ejaculated Pug. "Wha-what is it?"
-
-Kentucky only gasped.
-
-"'Ere," said Pug hurriedly, "let's gerrout o' this. It's comin' over
-atop of us," and he commenced to scramble clear.
-
-But a light of understanding was dawning on Kentucky's face and a wide
-grin growing on his lips. "It's one of the Tanks," he said, and giggled
-aloud as the Here We Are dipped her nose and slid head first into a
-huge shell-crater in ludicrous likeness to a squat bull-pup sitting
-back on its haunches and dragged into a hole: "I've heard lots about
-'em, but the seein' beats all the hearin' by whole streets," and he and
-Pug laughed aloud together as the Here We Are's face and gun-port eyes
-and bent-elbow driving gear appeared above the crater rim in still more
-ridiculous resemblance to an amazed toad emerging from a rain-barrel.
-The creature lumbered past them, taking in its stride the narrow trench
-dug to link up the shell holes, and the laughter on Kentucky's lips
-died to thoughtfully serious lines as his eye caught the glint of fat,
-vicious-looking gun muzzles peering from their ports.
-
-"Haw haw haw," guffawed Pug as the monster lurched drunkenly, checked
-and steadied itself with one foot poised over a deep hole, halted and
-backed away, and edged nervously round the rim of the hole. "See them
-machine guns pokin' out, Kentucky," he continued delightedly. "They
-won't 'arf pepper them Huns when they gets near enough."
-
-Fifty yards in the wake of the Here We Are a line of men followed
-up until an officer halted them along the front line where Pug and
-Kentucky were posted.
-
-"You blokes just takin' 'im out for an airin'?" Pug asked one of the
-newcomers. "Oughtn't you to 'ave 'im on a leadin' string?"
-
-"Here we are, Here we are again," chanted the other and giggled
-spasmodically. "An' ain't he just hot stuff! But wait till you see 'im
-get to work with his sprinklers."
-
-"Does 'e bite?" asked Pug, grinning joyously. "Oughtn't you to 'ave 'is
-muzzle on?"
-
-"Bite," retorted another. "He's a bloomin' Hun-eater. Jes' gulps 'em
-whole, coal-scuttle 'ats an' all."
-
-"He's a taed," said another. "A lollopin, flat-nosed, splay-fittit,
-ugly puddock, wi's hin' legs stuck oot whaur his front should be."
-
-"Look at 'im, oh, look at 'im ... he's alive, lad, nobbut alive."...
-"Does every bloomin' thing but talk."... "Skatin' he is now, skatin' on
-'is off hind leg," came a chorus of delighted comment.
-
-"Is he goin' to waltz in and take that redoubt on his ownsum?" asked
-Kentucky. "No," some one told him. "We give him ten minutes' start and
-then follow on and pick up the pieces, and the prisoners."
-
-
-III--HOW THE "TOMMIES" CHEERED THE "PEPPER POTS"--TANK TALES
-
-They lay there laughing and joking and watching the uncouth antics of
-the monster waddling across the shell-riddled ground, cheering when
-it appeared to trip and recover itself, cheering when it floundered
-sideways into a hole and crawled out again, cheering most wildly of
-all when it reached the barbed-wire entanglements, waddled through,
-bursting them apart and trailing them in long tangles behind it, or
-trampling them calmly under its churning caterpillar-wheel-bands. It
-was little wonder they cheered and less wonder they laughed. The Here
-We Are's motions were so weirdly alive and life-like, so playfully
-ponderous, so massively ridiculous, that it belonged by nature to
-nothing outside a Drury Lane Panto. At one moment it looked exactly
-like a squat tug-boat in a heavy cross sea or an ugly tide-rip,
-lurching, dipping, rolling rail and rail, plunging wildly bows under,
-tossing its nose up and squattering again stern-rail deep, pitching
-and heaving and diving and staggering, but always pushing forward.
-Next minute it was a monster out of Prehistoric Peeps, or a new patent
-fire-breathing dragon from the pages of a very Grimm Fairy Tale, nosing
-its way blindly over the Fairy Prince's pitfalls; next it was a big
-broad-buttocked sow nuzzling and rooting as it went; next it was a
-drunk man reeling and staggering, rolling and falling, scrabbling and
-crawling; next it was--was anything on or in, or underneath the earth,
-anything at all except a deadly, grim, purposeful murdering product of
-modern war.
-
-The infantry pushed out after it when it reached the barbed wire,
-and although they took little heed to keep cover--being much more
-concerned not to miss any of the grave and comic antics of their giant
-joke than to shelter from flying bullets--the line went on almost
-without casualties. "Mighty few bullets about this time," remarked
-Kentucky, who with Pug had moved out along with the others "to see the
-fun." "That's 'cos they're too busy with the old Pepper-pots, an' the
-Pepper-pots is too busy wi' them to leave much time for shootin' at
-us," said Pug gayly. It was true too. The Pepper-pots--a second one
-had lumbered into sight from the center of the horseshoe curve--were
-drawing a tearing hurricane of machine-gun bullets that beat and
-rattled on their armored sides like hail on a window-pane. They waddled
-indifferently through the storm and Here We Are, crawling carefully
-across a trench, halted half-way over and sprinkled bullets up and
-down its length to port and starboard for a minute, hitched itself
-over, steered straight for a fire-streaming machine-gun embrasure. It
-squirted a jet of lead into the loophole, walked on, butted at the
-emplacement once or twice, got a grip of it under the upward sloped
-caterpillar band, climbed jerkily till it stood reared up on end like
-a frightened colt, ground its driving bands round and round, and--fell
-forward on its face with a cloud of dust belching up and out from the
-collapsed dug-out. Then it crawled out of the wreckage, crunching over
-splintered beams and broken concrete, wheeled and cruised casually down
-the length of a crooked trench, halting every now and then to spray
-bullets on any German who showed or to hail a stream of them down the
-black entrance to a dug-out, straying aside to nose over any suspicious
-cranny, swinging round again to plod up the slope in search of more
-trenches.
-
-The infantry followed up, cheering and laughing like children at a
-fair, rounding up batches of prisoners who crawled white-faced and with
-scared eyes from dug-out doors and trench corners, shouting jests and
-comments at the lumbering Pepper-pots.
-
-A yell went up as the Here We Are, edging along a trench, lurched
-suddenly, staggered, side-slipped, and half disappeared in a fog of
-dust. The infantry raced up and found it with its starboard driving
-gear grinding and churning full power and speed of revolution above
-ground and the whole port side and gear down somewhere in the depths of
-the collapsed trench, grating and squealing and flinging out clods of
-earth as big as clothes-baskets. Then the engines eased, slowed, and
-stopped, and after a little and in answer to the encouraging yells of
-the men outside, a scuttle jerked open and a grimy figure crawled out.
-
-"Blimey," said Pug rapturously, "'ere's Jonah 'isself. Ol' Pepper-pot's
-spewed 'im out."
-
-
-IV--JONAH'S SHIP RECHRISTENED--"THE D.T.'S"
-
-But "Jonah" addressed himself pointedly and at some length to the
-laughing spectators, and they, urged on by a stream of objurgation and
-invective, fell to work with trenching-tools, with spades retrieved
-from the trench, with bare hands and busy fingers, to break down the
-trench-side under Here We Are's starboard driver, and pile it down
-into the trench and under the uplifted end of her port one. The second
-Pepper-pot cruised up and brought to adjacent to the operations with
-a watchful eye on the horizon. It was well she did, for suddenly a
-crowd of Germans seeing or sensing that one of the monsters was out of
-action, swarmed out of cover on the crest and came storming down on
-the party. Here We Are could do nothing; but the sister ship could,
-and did, do quite a lot to those Germans. It sidled round so as to
-bring both bow guns and all its broadside to bear and let loose a
-close-quarter tornado of bullets that cut the attackers to rags. The
-men who had ceased digging to grab their rifles had not time to fire
-a shot before the affair was over and "Jonah" was again urging them
-to their spade-work. Then when he thought the way ready, Here We Are
-at his orders steamed ahead again, its lower port side scraping and
-jarring along the trench wall, the drivers biting and gripping at the
-soft ground. Jerkily, a foot at a time, it scuffled its way along the
-trench till it came to a sharp angle of it where a big shell hole had
-broken down the wall. But just as the starboard driver was reaching
-out over the shell hole and the easy job of plunging into it, gaining
-a level keel and climbing out the other side, the trench wall on the
-right gave way and the Here We Are sank its starboard side level to and
-then below the port one. She had fallen bodily into a German dug-out,
-but after a pause to regain its shaken breath--or the crew's--it began
-once more to revolve its drivers slowly, and to churn out behind them,
-first a cloud of dust and clots of earth, then, as the starboard
-driver bit deeper into the dug-out, a mangled débris of clothing and
-trench-made furniture. On the ground above the infantry stood shrieking
-with laughter, while the frantic skipper raved unheard-of oaths and the
-Here We Are pawed and hoofed behind, or caught on its driving band and
-hoisted in turn into the naked light of day, a splintered bedstead,
-a chewed-up blanket or two, separately and severally the legs, back,
-and seat of a red velvet armchair, a torn gray coat and a forlorn and
-muddy pair of pink pajama trousers tangled up in one officer's field
-boot. And when the drivers got their grip again and the Here We are
-rolled majestically forward and up the further sloping side of the
-shell-crater and halted to take the skipper aboard again, Pug dragged
-a long branch from the fascines in the trench débris, slid it up one
-leg and down the other of the pink pajamas, tied the boot by its laces
-to the tip and jammed the root into a convenient crevice in the Tank's
-stern. And so beflagged she rolled her triumphant way up over the
-captured redoubt and down the other side, with the boot-tip bobbing
-and swaying and jerking at the end of her pink tail. The sequel to
-her story may be told here, although it only came back to the men who
-decorated her after filtering round the firing line, up and down the
-communication lines, round half the hospitals and most of the messes
-at or behind the Front.
-
-And many as came to be the Tales of the Tanks, this of the Pink-Tailed
-'un, as Pug called her, belonged unmistakably to her and, being so, was
-joyfully recognized and acclaimed by her decorators. She came in due
-time across the redoubt, says the story, and bore down on the British
-line at the other extreme of the horseshoe to where a certain infantry
-C.O., famed in past days for a somewhat speedy and hectic career,
-glared in amazement at the apparition lurching and bobbing and bowing
-and crawling toad-like towards him.
-
-"I knew," he is reported to have afterwards admitted, "I knew it
-couldn't be that I'd got 'em again. But in the old days I always had
-one infallible sign. Crimson rats and purple snakes I might get over;
-but if they had pink tails, I knew I was in for it certain. And I
-tell you it gave me quite a turn to see this blighter waddling up and
-wagging the old pink tail."
-
-But this end of the story only came to the Stonewalls long enough
-after--just as it is said to have come in time to the ears of the Here
-We Are's skipper, and, mightily pleasing him and his crew, set him
-chuckling delightedly and swearing he meant to apply and in due and
-formal course obtain permission to change his land-ship's name, and
-having regretfully parted with the pink tail, immortalize it in the
-name of H.M.L.S. _The D.T.'s_.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[5] All numerals relate to stories herein told--not to chapters from
-original sources.
-
-
-
-
-A NOVELIST AND SOLDIER ON THE BATTLE LINE
-
-_Letters by Coningsby Dawson_
-
-_British-American Author of Many Notable Books_
-
- Coningsby Dawson, the brilliant young novelist, was 31 years of
- age at the outbreak of the war. He was graduated with honors from
- Oxford in 1905 and came to the United States to take a theological
- course at Union Seminary. After a year at the Seminary, he reached
- the conclusion that his life work lay in literature. His family
- left England and established their home in Taunton, Massachusetts.
- Here, young Dawson began the career which is to place him in the
- front rank of modern novelists. At the outbreak of the Great War,
- he laid his pen aside and took up his sword for his native country.
- Enlisting with the gallant Canadians, he went to the front where
- he soon became a lieutenant. His letters home have been collected
- by his father and published in book form under the title "Carry
- On--Letters in War Time" by _John Lane Company_: Copyright 1917.
- These intimate letters written from dug-outs on the Somme battle
- fronts in the intervals of incessant artillery fire reveal the
- heart of the young man who embodies the elements of greatness.
- They breathe the very spirit of heroism. Several of the most
- inspirational of these letters are here reproduced.
-
-[6] I--WITH 6,000 TROOPS AND A CONVOY
-
- Ottawa, July 16th, 1916.
- DEAREST ALL:
-
-So much has happened since last I saw you that it's difficult to know
-where to start. On Thursday, after lunch, I got the news that we were
-to entrain from Petewawa next Friday morning. I at once put in for
-leave to go to Ottawa the next day until the following Thursday at
-Reveille. We came here with a lot of the other officers who are going
-over and have been having a very full time.
-
-I am sailing from a port unknown on board the _Olympic_ with 6,000
-troops--there is to be a big convoy. I feel more than ever I did--and
-I'm sure it's a feeling that you share since visiting the camp--that I
-am setting out on a Crusade from which it would have been impossible
-to withhold myself with honor. I go quite gladly and contentedly, and
-pray that in God's good time we may all sit again in the little shack
-at Kootenay and listen to the rustling of the orchard outside. It will
-be of those summer days that I shall be thinking all the time.
-
- Yours, with very much love,
- CON.
-
-
-II--OFF FOR FRANCE--ACROSS THE CHANNEL
-
- Shorncliff, August 30th, 1916.
- MY DEARESTS:
-
-I have just returned from sending you a cable to let you know that I'm
-off to France. The word came out in orders yesterday, and I shall leave
-before the end of the week with a draft of officers--I have been in
-England just a day over four weeks....
-
-Selfishly I wish that you were here at this moment--actually I'm glad
-that you are away. Everybody goes out quite unemotionally and with very
-few good-byes--we made far more fuss in the old days about a week-end
-visit.
-
-Now that at last it has come--this privileged moment for which I have
-worked and waited--my heart is very quiet. It's the test of a character
-which I have often doubted. I shall be glad not to have to doubt it
-again. Whatever happens, I know you will be glad to remember that at a
-great crisis I tried to play the man, however small my qualifications.
-We have always lived so near to one another's affections that this
-going out alone is more lonely to me than to most men. I have always
-had some one near at hand with love-blinded eyes to see my faults
-as springing from higher motives. Now I reach out my hands across
-six thousand miles and only touch yours with my imagination to say
-good-bye. What queer sights these eyes, which have been almost your
-eyes, will witness! If my hands do anything respectable, remember that
-it is your hands that are doing it. It is your influence as a family
-that has made me ready for the part I have to play, and where I go, you
-follow me.
-
-Poor little circle of three loving persons, please be tremendously
-brave. Don't let anything turn you into cowards--we've all got to be
-worthy of each other's sacrifice; the greater the sacrifice may prove
-to be for the one the greater the nobility demanded of the remainder.
-How idle the words sound, and yet they will take deep meanings when
-time has given them graver sanctions. I think gallant is the word I've
-been trying to find--we must be gallant English women and gentlemen....
-
-How far away the childish past seems--almost as though it never
-happened. And was I really the budding novelist in New York? Life has
-become so stern and scarlet--and so brave. From my window I look out on
-the English Channel, a cold, grey-green sea, with rain driving across
-it and a fleet of small craft taking shelter. Over there beyond the
-curtain of mist lies France--and everything that awaits me.
-
-News has just come that I have to start. Will continue from France.
-
- Yours ever lovingly,
- CON.
-
-
-III--"HERE I AM IN FRANCE--A SOLDIER"
-
- France, September 1st, 1916.
-
- DEAREST M.:
-
-Here I am in France with the same strange smells and street cries,
-and almost the same little boys bowling hoops over the very cobbly
-cobble stones. I had afternoon tea at a patisserie and ate a great
-many gâteaux for the sake of old times. We had a very choppy crossing,
-and you would most certainly have been sick had you been on board. It
-seemed to me that I must be coming on one of those romantic holidays to
-see churches and dead history--only the khaki-clad figures reminded me
-that I was coming to see history in the making. It's a funny world that
-batters us about so. It's three years since I was in France--the last
-time was with Arthur in Provence. It's five years since you and I did
-our famous trip together.
-
-I wish you were here--there are heaps of English nurses in the
-streets. I expect to sleep in this place and proceed to my destination
-to-morrow. How I wish I could send you a really descriptive letter! If
-I did, I fear you would not get it--so I have to write in generalities.
-None of this seems real--it's a kind of wild pretence from which I
-shall awake--and when I tell you my dream you'll laugh and say, "How
-absurd of you, dreaming that you were a soldier. I must say you look
-like it."
-
- Good-bye, my dearest girl,
- God bless you,
- CON.
-
-
-IV--"I HAVE SEEN MY FIRST BATTLEFIELD"
-
- September 19th, 1916.
- DEAREST FATHER:
-
-I'm writing you your birthday letter early, as I don't know how busy
-I may be in the next week, nor how long this may take to reach you.
-You know how much love I send you and how I would like to be with you.
-D'you remember the birthday three years ago when we set the victrola
-going outside your room door? Those were my high-jinks days when very
-many things seemed possible. I'd rather be the person I am now than the
-person I was then. Life was selfish though glorious.
-
-Well, I've seen my first modern battlefield and am quite disillusioned
-about the splendor of war. The splendor is all in the souls of the men
-who creep through the squalor like vermin--it's in nothing external.
-There was a chap here the other day who deserved the V. C. four times
-over by running back through the Hun shell fire to bring news that the
-infantry wanted more artillery support. I was observing for my brigade
-in the forward station at the time. How he managed to live through the
-ordeal nobody knows. But men laugh while they do these things. It's
-fine.
-
-A modern battlefield is the abomination of abominations. Imagine a
-vast stretch of dead country, pitted with shell-holes as though it had
-been mutilated with smallpox. There's not a leaf or a blade of grass
-in sight. Every house has either been leveled or is in ruins. No bird
-sings. Nothing stirs. The only live sound is at night--the scurry
-of rats. You enter a kind of ditch, called a trench; it leads on to
-another and another in an unjoyful maze. From the sides feet stick
-out, and arms and faces--the dead of previous encounters. "One of our
-chaps," you say casually, recognizing him by his boots or khaki, or
-"Poor blighter--a Hun!" One can afford to forget enmity in the presence
-of the dead. It is horribly difficult sometimes to distinguish between
-the living and the slaughtered--they both lie so silently in their
-little kennels in the earthen bank. You push on--especially if you
-are doing observation work, till you are past your own front line and
-out in No Man's Land. You have to crouch and move warily now. Zing! A
-bullet from a German sniper. You laugh and whisper, "A near one, that."
-My first trip to the trenches was up to No Man's Land. I went in the
-early dawn and came to a Madame Tussaud's show of the dead, frozen
-into immobility in the most extraordinary attitudes. Some of them were
-part way out of the ground, one hand pressed to the wound, the other
-pointing, the head sunken and the hair plastered over the forehead
-by repeated rains. I kept on wondering what my companions would look
-like had they been three weeks dead. My imagination became ingeniously
-and vividly morbid. When I had to step over them to pass, it seemed
-as though they must clutch at my trench coat and ask me to help. Poor
-lonely people, so brave and so anonymous in their death! Somewhere
-there is a woman who loved each one of them and would give her life for
-my opportunity to touch the poor clay that had been kind to her. It's
-like walking through the day of resurrection to visit No Man's Land.
-Then the Huns see you and the shrapnel begins to fall--you crouch like
-a dog and run for it.
-
-One gets used to shell-fire up to a point, but there's not a man who
-doesn't want to duck when he hears one coming. The worst of all is the
-whizz-bang, because it doesn't give you a chance--it pounces and is on
-you the same moment that it bangs. There's so much I wish that I could
-tell you. I can only say this, at the moment we're making history.
-
-What a curious birthday letter! I think of all your other
-birthdays--the ones before I met these silent men with the green and
-yellow faces, and the blackened lips which will never speak again.
-What happy times we have had as a family--what happy jaunts when you
-took me in those early days, dressed in a sailor suit, when you went
-hunting pictures. Yet, for all the damnability of what I now witness,
-I was never quieter in my heart. To have surrendered to an imperative
-self-denial brings a peace which self-seeking never brought.
-
-So don't let this birthday be less gay for my absence. It ought to be
-the proudest in your life--proud because your example has taught each
-of your sons to do the difficult things which seem right. It would have
-been a condemnation of you if any one of us had been a shirker.
-
- "I want to buy fine things for you
- And be a soldier if I can."
-
-The lines come back to me now. You read them to me first in the dark
-little study from a green oblong book. You little thought that I would
-be a soldier--even now I can hardly realize the fact. It seems a dream
-from which I shall wake up. Am I really killing men day by day? Am I
-really in jeopardy myself?
-
-Whatever happens I'm not afraid, and I'll give you reason to be glad of
-me.
-
- Very much love,
- CON.
-
-
-V--"I AM IN THE TRENCHES--UNDER FIRE"
-
- November 6th, 1916.
- MY DEAR ONES:
-
-Such a wonderful day it has been--I scarcely know where to start. I
-came down last night from twenty-four hours in the mud, where I had
-been observing. I'd spent the night in a hole dug in the side of the
-trench and a dead Hun forming part of the roof. I'd sat there reliving
-so many things--the ecstatic moments of my life when I first touched
-fame--and my feet were so cold that I could not feel them, so I thought
-all the harder of the pleasant things of the past. Then, as I say, I
-came back to the gun position to learn that I was to have one day off
-at the back of the lines. You can't imagine what that meant to me--one
-day in a country that is green, one day where there is no shell-fire,
-one day where you don't turn up corpses with your tread! For two months
-I have never left the guns except to go forward and I have never been
-from under shell-fire. All night long as I have slept the ground had
-been shaken by the stamping of the guns--and now after two months,
-to come back to comparative normality! The reason for this privilege
-being granted was that the powers that be had come to the conclusion
-that it was time I had a bath. Since I sleep in my clothes and water
-is too valuable for washing anything but the face and hands, they were
-probably right in their guess at my condition.
-
-So with the greatest holiday of my life in prospect I went to the empty
-gunpit in which I sleep, and turned in. This morning I set out early
-with my servant, tramping back across the long, long battlefields which
-our boys have won. The mud was knee-deep in places, but we floundered
-on till we came to our old and deserted gun-position where my horses
-waited for me. From there I rode to the wagon-lines--the first time
-I've sat a horse since I came into action. Far behind me the thunder of
-winged murder grew more faint. The country became greener; trees even
-had leaves upon them which fluttered against the grey-blue sky. It was
-wonderful--like awaking from an appalling nightmare. My little beast
-was fresh and seemed to share my joy, for she stepped out bravely.
-
-When I arrived at the wagon-lines I would not wait--I longed to see
-something even greener and quieter. My groom packed up some oats and
-away we went again. My first objective was the military baths; I lay in
-hot water for half-an-hour and read the advertisements of my book. As
-I lay there, for the first time since I've been out, I began to get a
-half-way true perspective of myself. What's left of the egotism of the
-author came to life, and--now laugh--I planned my next novel--planned
-it to the sound of men singing, because they were clean for the first
-time in months. I left my towels and soap with a military policeman, by
-the roadside, and went prancing off along country roads in search of
-the almost forgotten places where people don't kill one another. Was it
-imagination? There seemed to me to be a different look in the faces of
-the men I met--for the time being they were neither hunters nor hunted.
-There were actually cows in the fields. At one point, where pollarded
-trees stand like a Hobbema sketch against the sky, a group of officers
-were coursing a hare, following a big black hound on horseback. We lost
-our way. A drenching rainstorm fell over us--we didn't care; and we saw
-as we looked back a most beautiful thing--a rainbow over green fields.
-It was as romantic as the first rainbow in childhood.
-
-All day I have been seeing lovely and familiar things as though for
-the first time. I've been a sort of Lazarus, rising out of his tomb
-and praising God at the sound of a divine voice. You don't know how
-exquisite a ploughed field can look, especially after rain, unless you
-have feared that you might never see one again....
-
-Life, how I love you! What a wonderful, kindly thing I could make of
-you to-night. Strangely the vision has come to me of all that you
-mean. Now I could write. So soon you may go from me or be changed into
-a form of existence which all my training has taught me to dread. After
-death is there only nothingness? I think that for those who have missed
-love in this life there must be compensations--the little children whom
-they ought to have had, perhaps. To-day, after so many weeks, I have
-seen little children again.
-
-And yet, so strange a havoc does this war work that, if I have to "Go
-West," I shall go _proudly_ and quietly. I have seen too many men die
-bravely to make a fuss if my turn comes. A mixed passenger list old
-Father Charon must have each night--Englishmen, Frenchmen, and Huns.
-To-morrow I shall have another sight of the greenness and then--the
-guns.
-
-I don't know whether I have been able to make any of my emotions clear
-to you in my letters. Terror has a terrible fascination. Up to now I
-have always been afraid--afraid of small fears. At last I meet fear
-itself and it stings my pride into an unpremeditated courage.
-
-I've just had a pile of letters from you all. How ripping it is to be
-remembered! Letters keep one civilized.
-
-It's late and I'm very tired. God bless you each and all.
-
- CON.
-
-
-VI--LIVING WITH DEATH AS YOUR COMRADE
-
- December 20th, 1916.
- DEAR MR. A. D.:
-
-I've just come in from an argument with Fritz when your chocolate
-formed my meal. You were very kind to think of me and to send it,
-and you were extraordinarily understanding in the letter that you
-sent me. One's life out here is like a pollarded tree--all the lower
-branches are gone--one gazes on great nobilities, on the fascinating
-horror of Eternity sometimes--I said horror, but it's often fine in
-its spaciousness--one gazes on many inverted splendors of Titans,
-but it's giddy work being so high and rarefied, and all the gentle
-past seems gone. That's why it is pleasant in this grimy anonymity of
-death and courage to get reminders, such as your letter, that one was
-once localized and had a familiar history. If I come back, I shall be
-like Rip Van Winkle, or a Robinson Crusoe--like any and all of the
-creatures of legend and history to whom abnormality has grown to seem
-normal. If you can imagine yourself living in a world in which every
-day is a demonstration of a Puritan's conception of what happens when
-the last trump sounds, then you have some idea of my queer situation.
-One has come to a point when death seems very inconsiderable and
-only failure to do one's duty is an utter loss. Love and the future,
-and all the sweet and tender dreams of bygone days are like a house
-in which the blinds are lowered and from which the sight has gone.
-Landscapes have lost their beauty, everything God-made and man-made
-is destroyed except man's power to endure with a smile the things he
-once most dreaded, because he believes that only so may he be righteous
-in his own eyes. How one has longed for that sure confidence in the
-petty failings of little living--the confidence to believe that he
-can stand up and suffer for principle! God has given all men who are
-out here that opportunity--the supremest that can be hoped for--so,
-in spite of exile, Christmas for most of us will be a happy day. Does
-one see more truly life's worth on a battlefield? I often ask myself
-that question. Is the contempt that is hourly shown for life the real
-standard of life's worth? I shrug my shoulders at my own unanswerable
-questions--all I know is that I move daily with men who have
-everything to live for who, nevertheless, are urged by an unconscious
-magnanimity to die. I don't think any of our dead pity themselves--but
-they would have done so if they had faltered in their choice. One lives
-only from sunrise to sunrise, but there's a more real happiness in this
-brief living than I ever knew before, because it is so exactingly worth
-while.
-
- Thank you again for your kindness.
- Very sincerely yours,
- C. D.
-
-
-VII--GLORY OF WAR IS IN MEN'S SOULS
-
- February 2d.
-
-The gramophone is playing an air from _La Tosca_ to which the guns beat
-out a bass accompaniment. I close my eyes and picture the many times
-I have heard the (probably) German orchestras of Broadway Joy Palaces
-play that same music. How incongruous that I should be listening to
-it here and under these circumstances! It must have been listened to
-so often by gay crowds in the beauty places of the world. A romantic
-picture grows up in my mind of a blue night, the laughter of youth
-in evening dress, lamps twinkling through trees, far off the velvety
-shadow of water and mountains, and as a voice to it all, that air
-from _La Tosca_. I can believe that the silent people near by raise
-themselves up in their snow-beds to listen, each one recalling some
-ecstatic moment before the dream of life was shattered.
-
-There's a picture in the Pantheon at Paris, I remember; I believe
-it's called _To Glory_. One sees all the armies of the ages charging
-out of the middle distance with Death riding at their head. The only
-glory that I have discovered in this war is in men's hearts--it's not
-external. Were one to paint the spirit of this war he would depict a
-mud landscape, blasted trees, an iron sky; wading through the slush and
-shell-holes would come a file of bowed figures, more like outcasts from
-the Embankment than soldiers. They're loaded down like pack animals,
-their shoulders are rounded, they're wearied to death, but they go
-on and go on. There's no "To Glory" about what we're doing out here;
-there's no flash of swords or splendor of uniforms. There are only
-very tired men determined to carry on. The war will be won by tired
-men who could never again pass an insurance test, a mob of broken
-counter-jumpers, ragged ex-plumbers and quite unheroic persons. We're
-civilians in khaki, but because of the ideals for which we fight we've
-managed to acquire soldiers' hearts.
-
-My flow of thought was interrupted by a burst of song in which I
-was compelled to join. We're all writing letters around one candle;
-suddenly the O. C. looked up and began, "God Be with You Till We Meet
-Again." We sang it in parts. It was in Southport, when I was about nine
-years old, that I first heard that sung. You had gone for your first
-trip to America, leaving a very lonely family behind you. We children
-were scared to death that you'd be drowned. One evening, coming back
-from a walk on the sand-hills, we heard voices singing in a garden,
-"God Be with You Till We Meet Again." The words and the soft dusk, and
-the vague figures in the English summer garden, seemed to typify the
-terror of all partings. We've said good-bye so often since, and God has
-been with us. I don't think any parting was more hard than our last
-at the prosaic dock-gates with the cold wind of duty blowing, and the
-sentry barring your entrance, and your path leading back to America
-while mine led on to France. But you three were regular soldiers--just
-as much soldiers as we chaps who were embarking. One talks of our
-armies in the field, but there are the other armies, millions strong,
-of mothers and fathers and sisters, who keep their eyes dry, treasure
-muddy letters beneath their pillows, offer up prayers and wait, wait,
-wait so eternally for God to open another door.
-
-To-morrow I again go forward, which means rising early and taking a
-long plod through the snows; that's one reason for not writing any
-more, and another is that our one poor candle is literally on its last
-legs.
-
-Your poem, written years ago when the poor were marching in London, is
-often in my mind:
-
- "Yesterday and to-day
- Have been heavy with labor and sorrow;
- I should faint if I did not see
- The day that is after to-morrow."
-
-And there's that last verse which prophesied utterly the spirit in
-which we men at the Front are fighting to-day:
-
- "And for me, with spirit elate
- The mire and the fog I press through,
- For Heaven shines under the cloud
- Of the day that is after to-morrow."
-
-We civilians who have been taught so long to love our enemies and do
-good to them who hate us--much too long ever to make professional
-soldiers--are watching with our hearts in our eyes for that day which
-comes after to-morrow. Meanwhile we plod on determinedly, hoping for
-the hidden glory.
-
- Yours very lovingly,
- CON.
-
-
-VIII--MEN MARCHING TO "CALVARY"
-
- February 4th, 1917.
- DEAR MR. B.:
-
-War's a queer game--not at all what one's civilian mind imagined; it's
-far more horrible and less exciting. The horrors which the civilian
-mind dreads most are mutilation and death. Out here we rarely think
-about them; the thing which wears on one most and calls out his gravest
-courage is the endless sequence of physical discomfort. Not to be
-able to wash, not to be able to sleep, to have to be wet and cold
-for long periods at a stretch, to find mud on your person, in your
-food, to have to stand in mud, see mud, sleep in mud and to continue
-to smile--that's what tests courage. Our chaps are splendid. They're
-not the hair-brained idiots that some war-correspondents depict from
-day to day. They're perfectly sane people who know to a fraction what
-they're up against, but who carry on with a grim good-nature and a
-determination to win with a smile. I never before appreciated as I do
-to-day the latent capacity for big-hearted endurance that is in the
-heart of every man. Here are apparently quite ordinary chaps--chaps who
-washed, liked theatres, loved kiddies and sweethearts, had a zest for
-life--they're bankrupt of all pleasures except the supreme pleasure of
-knowing that they're doing the ordinary and finest thing of which they
-are capable. There are millions to whom the mere consciousness of doing
-their duty has brought an heretofore unexperienced peace of mind. For
-myself I was never happier than I am at present; there's a novel zip
-added to life by the daily risks and the knowledge that at last you're
-doing something into which no trace of selfishness enters. One can only
-die once; the chief concern that matters is _how_ and not _when_ you
-die. I don't pity the weary men who have attained eternal leisure in
-the corruption of our shell-furrowed battles; they "went West" in their
-supreme moment. The men I pity are those who could not hear the call of
-duty and whose consciences will grow more flabby every day. With the
-brutal roar of the first Prussian gun the cry came to the civilized
-world, "Follow thou me," just as truly as it did in Palestine. Men
-went to their Calvary singing Tipperary, rubbish, rhymed doggerel,
-but their spirit was equal to that of any Christian martyr in a Roman
-amphitheatre. "Greater love hath no man than this, that he lay down his
-life for his friend." Our chaps are doing that consciously, willingly,
-almost without bitterness towards their enemies; for the rest it
-doesn't matter whether they sing hymns or ragtime. They've followed
-their ideal--freedom--and died for it. A former age expressed itself in
-Gregorian chants; ours, no less sincerely, disguises its feelings in
-ragtime.
-
-Since September I have been less than a month out of action. The game
-doesn't pall as time goes on--it fascinates. We've got to win so that
-men may never again be tortured by the ingenious inquisition of modern
-warfare. The winning of the war becomes a personal affair to the chaps
-who are fighting. The world which sits behind the lines, buys extra
-specials of the daily papers and eats three square meals a day, will
-never know what this other world has endured for its safety, for no
-man of this other world will have the vocabulary in which to tell. But
-don't for a moment mistake me--we're grimly happy.
-
-What a serial I'll write for you if I emerge from this turmoil! Thank
-God, my outlook is all altered. I don't want to live any longer--only
-to live well.
-
- Good-bye and good luck.
- Yours,
- CONINGSBY DAWSON.
-
-
-IX--AMERICA MUST SACRIFICE--OR DIE
-
- February 6th, 1917.
- MY VERY DEAR M.:
-
-I read in to-day's paper that U. S. A. threatens to come over and
-help us. I wish she would. The very thought of the possibility fills
-me with joy. I've been lightheaded all day. It would be so ripping
-to live among people, when the war is ended, of whom you need not be
-ashamed. Somewhere deep down in my heart I've felt a sadness ever
-since I've been out here, at America's lack of gallantry--it's so easy
-to find excuses for not climbing to Calvary; sacrifice was always
-too noble to be sensible. I would like to see the country of our
-adoption become splendidly irrational even at this eleventh hour in
-the game; it would redeem her in the world's eyes. She doesn't know
-what she's losing. From these carcase-strewn fields of khaki there's
-a cleansing wind blowing for the nations that have died. Though there
-was only one Englishman left to carry on the race when this war is
-victoriously ended, I would give more for the future of England than
-for the future of America with her ninety millions whose sluggish
-blood was not stirred by the call of duty. It's bigness of soul that
-makes nations great and not population. Money, comfort, limousines and
-ragtime are not the requisites of men when heroes are dying. I hate
-the thought of Fifth Avenue, with its pretty faces, its fashions, its
-smiling frivolity. America as a great nation will die, as all coward
-civilizations have died, unless she accepts the stigmata of sacrifice,
-which a divine opportunity again offers her.
-
-If it were but possible to show those ninety millions one battlefield
-with its sprawling dead, its pity, its marvellous forgetfulness of
-self, I think then--no, they wouldn't be afraid. Fear isn't the emotion
-one feels--they would experience the shame of living when so many have
-shed their youth freely. This war is a prolonged moment of exultation
-for most of us--we are redeeming ourselves in our own eyes. To lay
-down one's life for one's friend once seemed impossible. All that is
-altered. We lay down our lives that the future generations may be good
-and kind, and so we can contemplate oblivion with quiet eyes. Nothing
-that is noblest that the Greeks taught is unpractised by the simplest
-men out here to-day. They may die childless, but their example will
-father the imagination of all the coming ages. These men, in the noble
-indignation of a great ideal, face a worse hell than the most ingenious
-of fanatics ever planned or plotted. Men die scorched like moths in a
-furnace, blown to atoms, gassed, tortured. And again other men step
-forward to take their places well knowing what will be their fate.
-Bodies may die, but the spirit of England grows greater as each new
-soul speeds upon its way. The battened souls of America will die and be
-buried. I believe the decision of the next few days will prove to be
-the crisis in America's nationhood. If she refuses the pain which will
-save her, the cancer of self-despising will rob her of her life.
-
-This feeling is strong with us. It's past midnight, but I could write
-of nothing else to-night.
-
- God bless you.
- Yours ever,
- CON.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[6] All numerals relate to stories herein told--not to chapters from
-original sources.
-
-
-
-
-STORIES OF THE WAR PHOTOGRAPHERS IN BELGIUM
-
-_An American at the Battlefront_
-
-_Told by Albert Rhys Williams, War Correspondent_
-
- This narrator tells of his experiences with the spy hunters of
- Belgium. He was swept into the war-stricken country where he was
- arrested by the Germans, sweating under the German third degree,
- spending a fearful night on a prison floor, suffering with his
- fellow prisoners the torments of a trial as a spy in a German
- military court in Brussels, and finally securing his liberty. He
- has collected his experiences in a volume under title "In the Claws
- of the German Eagle," thus preserving in book form his remarkable
- articles which were first published in The Outlook. A few episodes
- from his amazing adventures are here given by permission of the
- publishers, _E. P. Dutton and Company_: Copyright 1917.
-
-[7] I--STORY OF AN AMERICAN IN GHENT
-
-In the last days of September, the Belgians moving in and through Ghent
-in their rainbow-colored costumes, gave to the city a distinctively
-holiday touch. The clatter of cavalry hoofs and the throb of racing
-motors rose above the voices of the mobs that surged along the streets.
-
-Service was normal in the cafés. To the accompaniment of music and
-clinking glasses the dress-suited waiter served me a five-course lunch
-for two francs. It was uncanny to see this blaze of life while the city
-sat under the shadow of a grave disaster. At any moment the gray German
-tide might break out of Brussels and pour its turbid flood of soldiers
-through these very streets. Even now a Taube hovered in the sky, and
-from the skirmish-line an occasional ambulance rumbled in with its
-crimsoned load.
-
-I chanced into Gambrinus' café and was lost in the babbling sea of
-French and Flemish. Above the mêlée of sounds, however, I caught a
-gladdening bit of English. Turning about, I espied a little group of
-men whose plain clothes stood out in contrast to the colored uniforms
-of officers and soldiers crowded into the café. Wearied of my efforts
-at conversing in a foreign tongue, I went over and said:
-
-"Do you really speak English?"
-
-"Well, rather!" answered the one who seemed to act as leader of the
-group. "We are the only ones now and it will be scarcer still around
-here in a few days."
-
-"Why?" I asked.
-
-"Because Ghent will be in German hands."
-
-This brought an emphatic denial from one of his confrères who insisted
-that the Germans had already reached the end of their rope. A certain
-correspondent, joining in the argument, came in for a deal of banter
-for taking the war _de luxe_ in a good hotel far from the front.
-
-"What do you know about the war?" they twitted him. "You've pumped all
-your best stories out of the refugees ten miles from the front, after
-priming them with a glass of beer."
-
-They were a group of young war-photographers to whom danger was a
-magnet. Though none of them had yet reached the age of thirty, they
-had seen service in all the stirring events of Europe and even around
-the globe. Where the clouds lowered and the seas tossed, there they
-flocked. Like stormy petrels they rushed to the center of the swirling
-world. That was their element. A freelance, a representative of the
-Northcliffe press, and two movie-men comprised this little group and
-made an island of English amidst the general babel.
-
-Like most men who have seen much of the world, they had ceased to
-be cynics. When I came to them out of the rain, carrying no other
-introduction than a dripping overcoat, they welcomed me into their
-company and whiled away the evening with tales of the Balkan wars.
-
-They were in high spirits over their exploits of the previous day, when
-the Germans, withdrawing from Melle on the outskirts of the city, had
-left a long row of cottages still burning. As the enemy troops pulled
-out the further end of the street, the movie men came in at the other
-and caught the pictures of the still blazing houses. We went down to
-view them on the screen. To the gentle throbbing of drums and piano,
-the citizens of Ghent viewed the unique spectacle of their own suburbs
-going up in smoke.
-
-At the end of the show they invited me to fill out their automobile
-on the morrow. Nearly every other motor had been commandeered by the
-authorities for the "Service Militaire" and bore on the front the
-letters "S. M." Our car was by no means in the blue-ribbon class. It
-had a hesitating disposition and the authorities, regarding it as more
-of a liability than an asset, passed it over.
-
-But the correspondents counted it a great stroke of fortune to have any
-car at all; and, that they might continue to have it, they kept it at
-night carefully locked in a room in the hotel. They had their chauffeur
-under like supervision. He was one of their kind, and with the cunning
-of a diplomat obtained the permit to buy petrol, most precious of all
-treasures in the field of war. Indeed, gasoline, along with courage and
-discipline, completed the trinity of success in the military mind.
-
-
-II--STORIES OF THE WAR PHOTOGRAPHERS IN BELGIUM
-
-With the British flag flying at the front, we sped away next morning
-on the road to Termonde. At Melle we came upon the blazing cottages
-we had seen pictured the night before. Here we encountered a roving
-band of Belgian soldiers who were in a free and careless mood and
-evinced a ready willingness to put themselves at our disposal. Under
-the command of the photographers, they charged across the fields with
-fixed bayonets, wriggled up through the grass, or, standing behind the
-trenches, blazed away with their guns at an imaginary enemy. They did
-some good acting, grim and serious as death. All except one.
-
-This youth couldn't suppress his sense of humor. He could not, or would
-not, keep from laughing, even when he was supposed to be blowing the
-head off a Boche. He was properly disciplined and put out of the game,
-and we went on with our manoeuvers to the accompaniment of the clicking
-cameras until the photographers had gathered in a fine lot of realistic
-fighting-line pictures.
-
-One of the photographers sat stolidly in the automobile smoking his
-cigarette while the others were reaping their harvest.
-
-"Why don't you take these too?" I asked.
-
-"Oh," he replied, "I've been sending in so much of that stuff that I
-just got a telegram from my paper saying, 'Pension off that Belgian
-regiment which is doing stunts in the trenches.'"
-
-While his little army rested from their manoeuvers the
-Director-in-Chief turned to me and said:
-
-"Wouldn't you like to have a photograph of yourself in these
-war-surroundings, just to take home as a souvenir?"
-
-That appealed to me. After rejecting some commonplace suggestions, he
-exclaimed: "I have it. Shot as a German Spy. There's the wall to stand
-up against; and we'll pick a crack firing-squad out of these Belgians.
-A little bit of all right, eh?"
-
-I acquiesced in the plan and was led over to the wall while a movie-man
-whipped out a handkerchief and tied it over my eyes. The director
-then took a firing squad in hand. He had but recently witnessed
-the execution of a spy where he had almost burst with a desire to
-photograph the scene. It had been excruciating torture to restrain
-himself. But the experience had made him feel conversant with the
-etiquette of shooting a spy, as it was being done amongst the very best
-firing-squads. He made it now stand him in good stead.
-
-"Aim right across the bandage," the director coached them. I could hear
-one of the soldiers laughing excitedly as he was warming up to the
-rehearsal. It occurred to me that I was reposing a lot of confidence
-in a stray band of soldiers. Some one of those Belgians, gifted with a
-lively imagination, might get carried away with the suggestion and act
-as if I really were a German spy.
-
-"Shoot the blooming blighter in the eye," said one movie man playfully.
-
-"Bally good idea!" exclaimed the other one approvingly, while one eager
-actor realistically clicked his rifle-hammer. That was altogether too
-much. I tore the bandage from my eyes, exclaiming:
-
-"It would be a bally good idea to take those cartridges out first."
-Some fellow might think his cartridge was blank or try to fire wild,
-just as a joke in order to see me jump. I wasn't going to take any risk
-and flatly refused to play my part until the cartridges were ejected.
-Even when the bandage was readjusted "Didn't-know-it-was-loaded"
-stories still were haunting me. In a moment, however, it was over and
-I was promised my picture within a fortnight.
-
-A week later I picked up the London _Daily Mirror_ from a news-stand.
-It had the caption:
-
- BELGIAN SOLDIERS SHOOT A GERMAN SPY CAUGHT AT
- TERMONDE ... PICTURE
-
-I opened up the paper and what was my surprise to see a big spread
-picture of myself, lined up against that row of Melle cottages and
-being shot for the delectation of the British public. There is the same
-long raincoat that runs as a _motif_ through all the other pictures.
-Underneath it were the words:
-
-"The Belgians have a short, sharp method of dealing with the Kaiser's
-rat-hole spies. This one was caught near Termonde and, after being
-blindfolded, the firing-squad soon put an end to his inglorious career."
-
-One would not call it fame exactly, even though I played the star-rôle.
-But it is a source of some satisfaction to have helped a royal lot
-of fellows to a first-class scoop. As the "authentic spy-picture
-of the war," it has had a broadcast circulation. I have seen it in
-publications ranging all the way from _The Police Gazette to Collier's
-Photographic History of the European War_. In a university club I once
-chanced upon a group gathered around this identical picture. They were
-discussing the psychology of this "poor devil" in the moments before
-he was shot. It was a further source of satisfaction to step in and
-arbitrarily contradict all their conclusions and, having shown them how
-totally mistaken they were, proceed to tell them exactly how the victim
-felt. This high-handed manner nettled one fellow terribly:
-
-"Not so arbitrary, my friend!" he said. "You haven't any right to be so
-devilish cock-sure."
-
-"Haven't I?" I replied. "Who has any better right? I happen to be that
-identical man!"
-
-But that little episode has been of real value to me. It is said that
-if one goes through the motions he gets the emotions. I believe that I
-have an inkling of how a man feels when he momentarily expects a volley
-of cold lead to turn his skull into a sieve.
-
-
-III--HOW CAMERA MEN RISK THEIR LIVES
-
-Most of the pictures which the public casually gazes on have been
-secured at a price--and a large one, too. The names of these men who
-go to the front with cameras, rather than with rifles or pens, are
-generally unknown. They are rarely found beneath the pictures, yet
-where would be our vivid impression of courage in daring and of skill
-in doing, of cunning strategy upon the field of battle, of wounded
-soldiers sacrificing for their comrades, if we had no pictures? A few
-pictures are faked, but behind most pictures there is another tale of
-daring and of strategy, and that is the tale concerning the man who
-took it. That very day thrice these same men risked their lives.
-
-The apparatus loaded in the car, we were off again. Past a few
-barricades of paving-stones and wagons, past the burned houses which
-marked the place where the Germans had come within five miles of Ghent,
-we encountered some uniformed Belgians who looked quite as dismal and
-dispirited as the fog which hung above the fields. They were the famous
-Guarde Civique of Belgium. Our Union Jack, flapping in the wind, was
-very likely quite the most thrilling spectacle they had seen in a week,
-and they hailed it with a cheer and a cry of "_Vive l'Angleterre!_"
-(Long live England!) The Guarde Civique had a rather inglorious time
-of it. Wearisomely in their wearisome-looking uniform, they stood
-for hours on their guns or marched and counter-marched in dreary
-patrolling, often doomed not even to scent the battle from afar off.
-
-Whenever we were called to a halt for the examination of our passports,
-these men crowded around and begged for newspapers. We held up our
-stock, and they would clamor for the ones with pictures. The English
-text was unintelligible to most of them, but the pictures they could
-understand, and they bore them away to enjoy the sight of other
-soldiers fighting, even if they themselves were denied that excitement.
-Our question to them was always the same, "Where are the Germans?"
-
-Out of the conflicting reports it was hard to tell whether the Germans
-were heading this way or not. That they were expected was shown by the
-sign-posts whose directions had just been obliterated by fresh paint--a
-rather futile operation, because the Germans had better maps and plans
-of the region than the Belgians themselves, maps which showed every
-by-path, well and barn. The chauffeur's brother had been shot in his
-car by the Germans but a week before, and he didn't relish the idea of
-thus flaunting the enemy's flag along a road where some German scouting
-party might appear at any moment. The Union Jack had done good service
-in getting us easy passage so far, but the driver was not keen for
-going further with it.
-
-It was proposed to turn the car around and back it down the road, as
-had been done the previous day. Thus the car would be headed in the
-home direction, and at sight of the dreaded uniform we could make a
-quick leap for safety. At this juncture, however, I produced a small
-Stars and Stripes, which the chauffeur hailed with delight, and we
-continued our journey now under the ægis of a neutral flag.
-
-It might have secured temporary safety, but only temporary; for if the
-Englishmen with only British passports had fallen into the hands of the
-Germans, like their unfortunate kinsmen who did venture too far into
-the war zone, they, too, would have had a chance to cool their ardor
-in some detention-camp of Germany. This cheerful prospect was in the
-mind of these men, for, when we espied coming around a distant corner
-two gray-looking men on horseback, they turned white as the chauffeur
-cried, "Uhlans!"
-
-It is a question whether the car or our hearts came to a dead
-standstill first. Our shock was unnecessary. They proved to be
-Belgians, and assured us that the road was clear all the way to
-Termonde; and, except for an occasional peasant tilling his fields,
-the countryside was quite deserted until at Grembergen we came upon
-an unending procession of refugees streaming down the road. They were
-all coming out of Termonde. Termonde, after being taken and retaken,
-bombarded and burned, was for the moment neutral territory. A Belgian
-commandant had allowed the refugees that morning to return and gather
-what they might from among the ruins.
-
-In the early morning, then, they had gone into the city, and now
-at high noon they were pouring out, a great procession of the
-dispossessed. They came tracking their way to where--God only knows.
-All they knew was that in their hearts was set the fear of Uhlans, and
-in the sky the smoke and flames of their burning homesteads. They came
-laden with their lares and penates,--mainly dogs, feather beds, and
-crayon portraits of their ancestors.
-
-
-IV--WHEN LENS HAS A HEART
-
-Women came carrying on their heads packs which looked like their entire
-household paraphernalia. The men were more unassuming, and, as a rule,
-carried a package considerably lighter and comporting more with their
-superior masculine dignity. I recall one little woman in particular.
-She was bearing a burden heavy enough to send a strong American athlete
-staggering down to the ground, while at her side majestically marched
-her faithful knight, bearing a birdcage, and there wasn't any bird in
-it, either.
-
-Nothing could be more mirth-provoking than that sight; yet, strangely
-enough, the most tear-compelling memory of the war is connected with
-another birdcage. Two children rummaging through their ruined home dug
-it out of the débris. In it was their little pet canary. While fire and
-smoke rolled through the house it had beat its wings against the bars
-in vain. Its prison had become its tomb. Its feathers were but slightly
-singed, yet it was dead with that pathetic finality which attaches
-itself to only a dead bird--its silver songs and flutterings, once the
-delight of the children, now stilled forever.
-
-The photographers had long looked for what they termed a first-class
-sob-picture. Here it was _par excellence_. The larger child stood
-stroking the feathers of her pet and murmuring over and over "Poor
-Annette," "Poor Annette!" Then the smaller one snuggling the limp
-little thing against her neck wept inconsolably.
-
-Instead of seizing their opportunity, the movie man was clearing his
-throat while the freelance was busy on what he said was a cinder in
-his eye. Yet this very man had brought back from the Balkan War of
-1907 a prime collection of horrors; corpses thrown into the death-cart
-with arms and legs sticking out like so much stubble; the death-cart
-creeping away with its ghastly load; and the dumping together of bodies
-of men and beasts into a pit to be eaten by the lime. This man who had
-gone through all this with good nerve was now touched to tears by two
-children crying over their pet canary. There are some things that are
-too much for the heart of even a war-photographer.
-
-To give the whole exodus the right tragic setting, one is tempted to
-write that tears were streaming down all the faces of the refugees,
-but on the contrary, indeed, most of them carried a smile and a pipe,
-and trudged stolidly along, much as though bound for a fair. Some of
-our pictures show laughing refugees. That may not be fair, for man is
-so constituted that the muscles of his face automatically relax to the
-click of the camera. But as I recall that pitiful procession, there was
-in it very little outward expression of sorrow.
-
-Undoubtedly there was sadness enough in all their hearts, but people in
-Europe have learned to live on short rations; they rarely indulge in
-luxuries like weeping, but bear the most unwonted afflictions as though
-they were the ordinary fortunes of life. War has set a new standard
-for grief. So these victims passed along the road, but not before the
-record of their passing was etched for ever on our moving-picture
-films. The coming generation will not have to reconstruct the scene
-from the colored accounts of the journalist, but with their own eyes
-they can see the hegira of the homeless as it really was.
-
-The resignation of the peasant in the face of the great calamity was a
-continual source of amazement to us. Zola in "_Le Debacle_" puts into
-his picture of the battle of Sedan an old peasant plowing on his farm
-in the valley. While shells go screaming overhead he placidly drives
-his old white horse through the accustomed furrows. One naturally
-presumed that this was a dramatic touch of the great novelist. But
-similar incidents we saw in this Great War over and over again.
-
-
-V--A THOUSAND HORSES STRAIN AT THEIR BRIDLES
-
-We were with Consul van Hee one morning early before the clinging veil
-of sleep had lifted from our spirits or the mists from the low-lying
-meadows. Without warning our car shot through a bank of fog into a
-spectacle of mediæval splendor--a veritable Field of the Cloth of Gold,
-spread out on the green plains of Flanders.
-
-A thousand horses strained at their bridles while their thousand
-riders in great fur busbies loomed up almost like giants. A thousand
-pennons stirred in the morning air while the sun burning through the
-mists glinted on the tips of as many lances. The crack Belgian cavalry
-divisions had been gathered here just behind the firing-lines in
-readiness for a sortie; the Lancers in their cherry and green and the
-Guides in their blue and gold making a blaze of color.
-
-It was as if in a trance we had been carried back to a tourney of
-ancient chivalry--this was before privations and the new drab uniforms
-had taken all glamor out of the war. As we gazed upon the glittering
-spectacle the order from the commander came to us:
-
-"Back, back out of danger!"
-
-"Forward!" was the charge to the Lancers.
-
-The field-guns rumbled into line and each rider unslung his carbine.
-Putting spurs to the horses, the whole line rode past saluting our
-Stars and Stripes with a "_Vive L'Amerique_." Bringing up the rear two
-cassocked priests served to give this pageantry a touch of prophetic
-grimness.
-
-And yet as the cavalcade swept across the fields thrilling us with its
-color and its action, the nearby peasants went on spreading fertilizer
-quite as calm and unconcerned as we were exhilarated.
-
-"Stupid," "Clods," "Souls of oxen," we commented, yet a protagonist of
-the peasant might point out that it was perhaps as noble and certainly
-quite as useful to be held by a passion for the soil as to be caught by
-the glamor of men riding out to slaughter. And Zola puts this in the
-mind of his peasants.
-
-"Why should I lose a day? Soldiers must fight, but folks must live. It
-is for me to keep the corn growing."
-
-Deep down into the soil the peasant strikes his roots. Urban people can
-never comprehend when these roots are cut away how hopelessly lost and
-adrift this European peasant in particular becomes. Wicked as the Great
-War has seemed to us in its bearing down upon these innocent folks, yet
-we can never understand the cruelty that they have suffered in being
-uprooted from the land and sent forth to become beggars and wanderers
-upon the highroads of the world.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[7] All numerals relate to stories herein told--not to chapters from
-original sources.
-
-
-
-
-TALES OF THE FIRST BRITISH EXPEDITIONARY FORCE TO FRANCE
-
-_Impressions of a Subaltern_
-
-_Told by "Casualty" (Name of Soldier Suppressed)_
-
- This is another of the soldiers' tales of the Great War. This
- soldier tells thirty-six fascinating experiences in which death is
- defied. He describes: "The Advance to Mons"; "Sir John French";
- "The Crossing of the Marne"; "The Crossing of the Aisne"; "The Jaws
- of Death," among his many adventures. The story here told gives his
- impressions on "Leaving England." It is reprinted from his volume
- "Contemptible," by permission of his publishers, _J. B. Lippincott
- Company_.
-
-[8] I--WHEN THE FIRST BATTALION SWUNG OUT
-
-No cheers, no handkerchiefs, no bands. Nothing that even suggested
-the time-honored scene of soldiers leaving home to fight the Empire's
-battles. Parade was at midnight. Except for the lighted windows of the
-barracks, and the rush of hurrying feet, all was dark and quiet. It was
-more like ordinary night operations than the dramatic departure of a
-Unit of the First British Expeditionary Force to France.
-
-As the Battalion swung into the road, the Subaltern could not help
-thinking that this was indeed a queer send-off. A few sergeants' wives,
-standing at the corner of the Parade ground, were saying good-bye to
-their friends as they passed. "Good-bye, Bill;" "Good luck, Sam!" Not a
-hint of emotion in their voices. One might have thought that husbands
-and fathers went away to risk their lives in war every day of the week.
-And if the men were at all moved at leaving what had served for their
-home, they hid it remarkably well. Songs were soon breaking out from
-all parts of the column of route.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In an hour the station was reached. An engine was shunting up and down,
-piecing the troop trains together, and in twenty minutes the Battalion
-was shuffling down the platform, the empty trains on either side.
-Two companies were to go to each train, twelve men to a third-class
-compartment, N.C.O.s second class, Officers first. As soon as the men
-were in their seats, the Subaltern made his way to the seat he had
-"bagged," and prepared to go to sleep. Another fellow pushed his head
-through the window and wondered what had become of the regimental
-transport. Somebody else said he didn't know or care; his valise was
-always lost, he said; they always make a point of it.
-
-Soon after, they were all asleep, and the train pulled slowly out of
-the station.
-
-When the Subaltern awoke it was early morning, and they were moving
-through Hampshire fields at a rather sober pace. He was assailed with
-a poignant feeling of annoyance and resentment that this war should
-be forced upon them. England looked so good in the morning sunshine,
-and the comforts of English civilization were so hard to leave. The
-sinister uncertainty of the Future brooded over them like a thunder
-cloud.
-
-Isolated houses thickened into clusters, streets sprang up, and soon
-they were in Southampton.
-
-The train pulled up at the Embarkation Station, quite close to the
-wharf to which some half-dozen steamers were moored. There was little
-or no delay. The Battalion fell straight into "massed formation," and
-began immediately to move on to one of the ships. The Colonel stood
-by the gangway talking to an Embarkation Officer. Everything was in
-perfect readiness, and the Subaltern was soon able to secure a berth.
-
-
-II--CROSSING THE CHANNEL ON TRANSPORTS
-
-There was plenty of excitement on deck while the horses of the
-regimental transport were being shipped into the hold.
-
-To induce "Light Draft," "Heavy Draft" horses and "Officers'
-Chargers"--in all some sixty animals--to trust themselves to be lowered
-into a dark and evil-smelling cavern, was no easy matter. Some shied
-from the gangway, neighing; others walked peaceably onto it, and,
-with a "thus far and no farther" expression in every line of their
-bodies, took up a firm stand, and had to be pushed into the hold with
-the combined weight of many men. Several of the transport section
-narrowly escaped death and mutilation at the hands, or rather hoofs,
-of the Officers' Chargers. Meanwhile a sentry, with fixed bayonet,
-was observed watching some Lascars, who were engaged in getting the
-transport on board. It appeared that the wretched fellows, thinking
-that they were to be taken to France and forced to fight the Germans,
-had deserted to a man on the previous night, and had had to be routed
-out of their hiding-places in Southampton.
-
-Not that such a small thing as that could upset for one moment the
-steady progress of the Embarkation of the Army. It was like a huge,
-slow-moving machine; there was a hint of the inexorable in its
-exactitude. Nothing had been forgotten--not even eggs for the Officers'
-breakfast in the Captain's cabin.
-
-Meanwhile the other ships were filling up. By midday they began to
-slide down the Solent, and guesses were being freely exchanged about
-the destination of the little flotilla. Some said Bolougne, others
-Calais; but the general opinion was Havre, though nobody knew for
-certain, for the Captain of the ship had not yet opened his sealed
-orders. The transports crept slowly along the coast of the Isle of
-Wight, but it was not until evening that the business of crossing the
-Channel was begun in earnest.
-
-The day had been lovely, and Officers and men had spent it mostly in
-sleeping and smoking upon the deck. Spirits had risen as the day grew
-older. For at dawn the cheeriest optimist is a pessimist, while at
-midday pessimists become optimists. In the early morning the German
-Army had been invincible. At lunch the Battalion was going to Berlin,
-on the biggest holiday of its long life!
-
-The Subaltern, still suffering from the after-effects of inoculation
-against enteric, which had been unfortunately augmented by a premature
-indulgence in fruit, and by the inability to rest during the rush of
-mobilization, did not spend a very happy night. The men fared even
-worse, for the smell of hot, cramped horses, steaming up from the lower
-deck, was almost unbearable. But their troubles were soon over, for by
-seven o'clock the boat was gliding through the crowded docks of Havre.
-
-Naturally most of the Mess had been in France before, but to Tommy it
-was a world undiscovered. The first impression made on the men was
-created by a huge negro working on the docks. He was greeted with roars
-of laughter, and cries of, "Hallo, Jack Johnson!" The red trousers of
-the French sentries, too, created a tremendous sensation. At length the
-right landing-stage was reached. Equipments were thrown on, and the
-Battalion was paraded on the dock.
-
-
-III--LANDING IN FRANCE--TOMMIES IN HAVRE
-
-The march through the cobbled streets of Havre rapidly developed into
-a fiasco. This was one of the first, if not the very first, landing of
-British Troops in France, and to the French it was a novelty, calling
-for a tremendous display of open-armed welcome. Children rushed from
-the houses, and fell upon the men crying for "souvenirs." Ladies
-pursued them with basins full of wine and what they were pleased to
-call beer. Men were literally carried from the ranks, under the eyes
-of their Officers, and borne in triumph into houses and inns. What
-with the heat of the day and the heaviness of the equipment and the
-after-effects of the noisome deck, the men could scarcely be blamed for
-availing themselves of such hospitality, though to drink intoxicants on
-the march is suicidal. Men "fell out," first by ones and twos, then by
-whole half-dozens and dozens. The Subaltern himself was scarcely strong
-enough to stagger up the long hills at the back of the town, let alone
-worrying about his men. The Colonel was aghast, and very furious. He
-couldn't understand it. (He was riding.)
-
-The camp was prepared for the troops in a wonderfully complete
-fashion--not the least thing seemed to have been forgotten. The men,
-stripped of their boots, coats and equipments, were resting in the
-shade of the tents. A caterer from Havre had come up to supply the
-Mess, and the Subaltern was able to procure from him a bottle of rather
-heady claret, which, as he was thirsty and exhausted, he consumed too
-rapidly, and found himself hopelessly inebriate. Luckily there was
-nothing to do, so he slept for many hours.
-
-Waking up in the cool of the evening he heard the voices of another
-Second-Lieutenant and a reservist Subaltern talking about some people
-he knew near his home. It was good to forget about wars and soldiers,
-and everything that filled so amply the present and future, and to lose
-himself in pleasant talk of pleasant things at home.... The dinner
-provided by the French caterer was very French, and altogether the
-last sort of meal that a young gentleman suffering from anti-enteric
-inoculation ought to have indulged in. Everything conspired to make him
-worse, and what with the heat and the malady, he spent a very miserable
-time.
-
-After about two days' stay, the Battalion moved away from the rest
-camp, and, setting out before dawn, marched back through those fatal
-streets of Havre, this time deserted in the moonlight, to a sort of
-shed, called by the French authorities a troop station. Here as usual
-the train was waiting, and the men had but to be put in. The carriages
-could not be called luxurious; to be frank, they were cattle-trucks.
-But it takes more than that to damp the spirits of Mr. Thomas Atkins.
-Cries imitating the lowing of cattle and the bleating of sheep broke
-out from the trucks!
-
-The train moved out of the depot, and wended its way in the most
-casual manner through the streets of Havre. This so amused Tommy that
-he roared with laughter. The people who rushed to give the train
-a send-off, with many cries of "_Vive les Anglais_." "_A bas les
-Bosches_," were greeted with more bleatings and brayings.
-
-
-IV--QUARTERED IN A BELGIAN WATER-MILL
-
-The journey through France was quite uneventful. Sleeping or reading
-the whole day through, the Subaltern only remembered Rouen, passed at
-about midday, and Amiens later in the evening. The train had paused at
-numerous villages on its way, and in every case there had been violent
-demonstrations of enthusiasm. In one case a young lady of prepossessing
-appearance had thrust her face through the window, and talked very
-excitedly and quite incomprehensibly, until one of the fellows in the
-carriage grasped the situation, leant forward, and did honor to the
-occasion. The damsel retired blushing.
-
-At Amiens various rumors were afloat. Somebody had heard the Colonel
-say the magic word "Liège." Pictures of battles to be fought that very
-night thrilled some of them not a little.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Dawn found the Battalion hungry, shivering and miserable, paraded by
-the side of the track, at a little wayside station called Wassigné. The
-train shunted away, leaving the Battalion with a positive feeling of
-desolation. A Staff Officer, rubbing sleep from his eyes, emerged from
-a little "estaminet" and gave the Colonel the necessary orders. During
-the march that ensued the Battalion passed through villages where the
-three other regiments in the Brigade were billeted. At length a village
-called Iron was reached, and their various billets were allotted to
-each Company.
-
-The Subaltern's Company settled down in a huge water-mill; its Officers
-being quartered in the miller's private house.
-
-A wash, a shave and a meal worked wonders.
-
-And so the journey was finished, and the Battalion found itself at
-length in the theater of operations.
-
- * * * * *
-
-I have tried in this chapter to give some idea of the ease and
-smoothness with which this delicate operation of transportation was
-carried out. The Battalions which composed the First Expeditionary
-Force had been spread in small groups over the whole length and breadth
-of Britain. They had been mobilized, embarked, piloted across the
-Channel in the face of an undefeated enemy fleet, rested, and trained
-to their various areas of concentration, to take their place by the
-side of their French Allies.
-
-All this was accomplished without a single hitch, and with a speed
-that was astonishing. When the time comes for the inner history of
-the war to be written, no doubt proper praise for these preliminary
-arrangements will be given to those who so eminently deserve it.
-
-
-V--AT MADAM MERE'S--BEFORE THE STORM
-
-Peace reigned for the next five days, the last taste of careless days
-that so many of those poor fellows were to have.
-
-A route march generally occupied the mornings, and a musketry parade
-the evenings. Meanwhile, the men were rapidly accustoming themselves to
-the new conditions. The Officers occupied themselves with polishing up
-their French, and getting a hold upon the reservists who had joined the
-Battalion on mobilization.
-
-The French did everything in their power to make the Battalion at home.
-Cider was given to the men in buckets. The Officers were treated like
-the best friends of the families with whom they were billeted. The
-fatted calf was not spared, and this in a land where there were not too
-many fatted calves.
-
-The Company "struck a particularly soft spot." The miller had gone
-to the war leaving behind him his wife, his mother and two children.
-Nothing they could do for the five Officers of the Company was too much
-trouble. Madame Mère resigned her bedroom to the Major and his second
-in command, while Madame herself slew the fattest of her chickens and
-rabbits for the meals of her hungry Officers.
-
-The talk that was indulged in must have been interesting, even though
-the French was halting and ungrammatical. Of all the companies' Messes,
-this one took the most serious view of the future, and earned for
-itself the nickname of "_Les Misérables_." The Senior Subaltern said
-openly that this calm preceded a storm. The papers they got--_Le Petit
-Parisien_ and such like--talked vaguely of a successful offensive
-on the extreme right: Mülhouse, it was said, had been taken. But of
-the left, of Belgium, there was silence. Such ideas as the Subaltern
-himself had on the strategical situation were but crude. The line of
-battle, he fancied, would stretch north and south, from Mülhouse to
-Liège. If it were true that Liège had fallen, he thought the left would
-rest successfully on Namur. The English Army, he imagined, was acting
-as "general reserve," behind the French line, and would not be employed
-until the time had arrived to hurl the last reserve into the mêlée, at
-the most critical point.
-
-And all the while, never a sound of firing, never a sight of the red
-and blue of the French uniforms. The war might have been two hundred
-miles away!
-
-Meanwhile Tommy on his marches was discovering things. Wonder of
-wonders, this curious people called "baccy" tabac! "And if yer wants a
-bit of bread yer awsks for pain, strewth!" He loved to hear the French
-gabble to him in their excited way; he never thought that reciprocally
-his talk was just as funny. The French matches earned unprintable
-names. But on the whole he admired sunny France with its squares of
-golden corn and vegetables, and when he passed a painted Crucifix with
-its cluster of flowering graves, he would say: "Golly, Bill, ain't it
-pretty? We oughter 'ave them at 'ome, yer know." And of course he kept
-on saying what he was going to do with "Kayser Bill."
-
-One night after the evening meal, the men of the Company gave a little
-concert outside the mill. The flower-scented twilight was fragrantly
-beautiful, and the mill stream gurgled a lullaby accompaniment as it
-swept past the trailing grass. Nor was there any lack of talent. One
-reservist, a miner since he had left the army, roared out several songs
-concerning the feminine element at the seaside, or voicing an inquiry
-as to a gentleman's companion on the previous night. Then, with an
-entire lack of appropriateness, another got up and recited "The Wreck
-of the _Titanic_" in a most touching and dramatic manner. Followed a
-song with a much appreciated chorus--
-
- "Though your heart may ache awhile,
- Never mind!
- Though your face may lose its smile,
- Never mind!
- For there's sunshine after rain,
- And then gladness follows pain,
- You'll be happy once again,
- Never mind!"
-
-The ditty deals with broken vows, and faithless hearts, and blighted
-lives; just the sort of song that Tommy loves to warble after a good
-meal in the evening. It conjured to the Subaltern's eyes the picture of
-the dainty little star who had sung it on the boards of the Coliseum.
-And to conclude, Madame's voice, French, and sonorously metallic,
-was heard in the dining-room striking up the "_Marseillaise_." Tommy
-did not know a word of it, but he yelled "March on" (a very good
-translation of "_Marchons_") and sang "lar lar" to the rest of the tune.
-
-Thus passed peacefully enough those five days--the calm before the
-storm.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[8] All numerals relate to stories herein told--not to chapters from
-original sources.
-
-
-
-
-IN THE HANDS OF THE ENEMY--EXPERIENCES OF A PRISONER OF WAR
-
-_Told by Benjamin G. O'Rorke, M. A., Chaplain to the Forces_
-
- This narrative reveals the actual scenes and experiences in a
- German prison where this British chaplain was incarcerated. He
- dedicates it "To my fellow prisoners, who already during twelve
- months have borne disappointment with patient resignation and
- insults with silent dignity: who have made the name of Britain
- respected in the heart of Germany." Nearly the whole of the diary
- on which this narrative is based was confiscated by the Germans
- when the writer was searched for the last time before his release.
- It was restored to him by post a few weeks later, bearing the mark
- showing that it had been passed by the censor. The diary has been
- published complete by _Longmans, Green and Company_, with whose
- permission the following interesting extracts are given.
-
-[9] I--STORY OF THE CONSECRATED SWORDS
-
-On Saturday, August 15, 1914, we entrained, whither we knew not. The
-railway officials either did not know or would not tell, but we were
-not long before we discovered that our destination was Southampton.
-
-Here we spent a wearisome afternoon and evening at the docks, embarking
-horses and wagons on board our transport, a cattle-boat named
-_Armenian_, which has since been sunk by the Germans. With us embarked
-contingents of the 18th Hussars and 9th Lancers. It was a calm journey,
-and there were no signs of sea-sickness. Pipes and cigarettes were
-freely smoked, a good sign on the first day of a voyage. Once more our
-destination was kept a profound secret, even from the captain, until we
-got well out to sea. It being Sunday, we had a service on board, which
-gave me a golden opportunity of addressing my flock for the first time.
-Speaking on the text, "Whoso feareth the Lord shall not be afraid, and
-shall not play the coward," Eccl. xxiv. 14 (R.V.), I reminded them that
-we were setting out to take our part in the greatest war in history.
-
-After the service on deck, a number of officers and men, after the
-example of the knights of old who consecrated their swords at the
-altar, partook of the Holy Communion in the saloon.
-
-In the course of the afternoon we sighted the beautiful harbor of
-Boulogne, where we landed. "'Eep, 'eep, 'ooray!" called out the crowds
-of French people who lined the pier and landing-stage to give us a
-hearty welcome as their allies. From the first moment we were made to
-feel at home in France, and careful arrangements had been undertaken
-for our comfort. To every regiment a Frenchman was appointed as
-interpreter, many of whom were educated men of good standing....
-
-Strolling through the town, I passed the barracks where the Argyll
-and Sutherland Highlanders were quartered. True to their national
-characteristic that "a Scotsman is never at home unless he is abroad,"
-they appeared to have been at Boulogne for years, and already to be on
-intimate terms with the townsfolk. On the steps of the Post-Office was
-a bareheaded woman in the act of posting a letter to her son at the
-front. She spoke to me about him very tenderly, and it was obvious that
-all sorts of good wishes and prayers were dropped into the letterbox
-with her letter....
-
-Flags were in evidence everywhere. Men wore in their buttonholes the
-colors of France, Belgium, and England intertwined, and women pinned
-them to their dresses. Little children followed the soldiers about,
-crying, "Souvenir, souvenir!" and pointed to their regimental badges.
-After a while it was a rare sight to meet a soldier with a badge, or a
-French woman or child without one. The sole distinguishing mark between
-one regiment and another was the design of the badge on cap and the
-initials of the regiment on shoulder-strap drawn in indelible pencil.
-
-The next morning the march through the town to the station was little
-short of a triumphal procession. The most popular figure amongst us
-was a diminutive soldier boy of the R.A.M.C., Trumpeter Berry. Some of
-the French women were with difficulty restrained from rushing out to
-kiss him. The crowd around the station as we left, pressing against the
-railings beyond which they were not permitted to go, gave us a send-off
-as enthusiastic as the welcome had been. Keepsakes, charms, blessings,
-and prayers were bestowed upon us generously. "_Vive la France!_" we
-shouted from the railway carriage, and we heard, dying away in the
-distance, the hearty response, "_Vive l'Angleterre!_"
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Belgians in the villages through which we passed had already begun
-to flee into France for protection. A long line of refugees marched
-with us, carrying such of their worldly goods as they could snatch up
-at the last moment. There were white-haired old men being wheeled along
-in barrows, cripples limping as fast as they could go, hatless women
-with a heavy bundle in one arm and an infant in the other, and by their
-side were two or three little toddlers wondering what it was all about.
-Behind were the homes with all their associations of the past and with
-the last meal, perhaps, still on the table untouched, so suddenly
-had the warning come. When would they see those homes again? If ever,
-probably as a heap of ruins. And in front, whither should they go?...
-
-Along the road they would have constant reminders that there was One
-above who knew all about it, and would not leave them comfortless. For
-at irregular intervals by the roadside in Belgium and France there are
-"Calvaries," little sanctuaries containing a figure of the Crucified
-One, seeming to whisper to all who pass by, "I have trodden this path
-before you."
-
-
-II--WITH THE DYING SOLDIERS AT LANDRECIES
-
-The sun was well up before we set out on Tuesday, August 25. Southwards
-again our direction lay: a strategic retirement, we were told. Early in
-the evening we reached Landrecies. Hardly had we passed the outskirts
-of the town before a scare arose. Civilians came tearing out of
-Landrecies. Motor cars and carts rushed past us at breakneck speed.
-The cry went up, "_Les Allemands!_" ("The Germans!") A certain peasant
-who for the moment had lost control of himself whipped the horse which
-he was driving into a gallop, deaf to the heartrending call of some
-children who ran in panic after him begging him to give them a lift.
-Out rushed a footsore guardsman from one of the ambulance wagons,
-placed a rifle at his head, and compelled him to stop and pick them
-up....
-
-At about 8 P.M. we heard the rat-a-tat-tat of machine guns and the boom
-of field artillery. The men of the Royal Army Medical Corps meanwhile
-awaited the summons that did not come. The rain came down in torrents,
-and they lay down wherever they could find a sheltered spot. Sleep for
-most of us was impossible. The din of battle was terrific....
-
-I went at once in search of the Hon. Rupert Keppel and handed to him
-Major Matheson's note. He was in an upstairs room with five or six
-wounded men. He was lying on a bed with a bandage round his forehead,
-but made light of the wounds which he had received. After a few words
-and a short prayer at each bedside, I made inquiries for Lord Hawarden.
-I was told that he was already dead, but I found him in a little room
-by himself, still breathing although apparently unconscious. He had
-lost his left arm, and a portion of his back had been shot away. I
-knelt down beside him and commended him to God, saying in the form of
-a prayer as from myself the hymn "Abide with Me." As I rose from my
-knees he opened his eyes and smiled. He had been asleep merely, and now
-began to speak with quite a strong voice. Not a word did he say about
-himself, or his sufferings. He talked about the battle, about his old
-home near Bordon, which was within a couple of miles of my own home and
-formed a happy link between us, and about his mother....
-
-The other poor patients were terribly knocked about. Limbs in some
-cases had been entirely blown off by shells. Lyddite had turned many
-complexions to a jaundiced yellow. And yet every man was calm and
-resigned, and proud to have had a share in the fight.... A kindly
-French priest was going from bed to bed saying comforting words in
-French. Probably not one of the patients understood his words, but they
-all understood and appreciated his meaning.
-
-Meanwhile the Germans began to appear on the canal bridge near the
-hospital. Major Collingwood went out to meet them, and they entered
-the hospital with him. The officer in charge of them, Herr Ruttner
-of Berlin, shook hands with me and said that my work would not be
-interfered with, and that I had his permission to go anywhere over the
-scene of battle in search of the killed, and that I might bury them
-where most convenient. He said he was personally acquainted with Sir
-Douglas Haig, who with Sir John French had actually been in Landrecies
-the previous afternoon. He seemed disappointed not to find Sir Douglas
-there still, and desired to be remembered to him. By his orders the
-hospital was examined and all arms and ammunition were removed. A
-sentry was then placed at the gate.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In the early morning of the next day, Thursday, August 27, the gallant
-young Lord Hawarden died. The medical officer who looked after him said
-that he had never met a braver patient. A party of twelve men, under
-the command of Lieut. Hattersley, went with me to lay him to rest,
-together with the two officers and men whose bodies had been placed in
-the compound of the hospital. We selected the best spot in the pretty
-little cemetery of Landrecies.
-
-
-III--ON A PRISON TRAIN--GOING TO GERMANY
-
-We remained in Landrecies until Saturday, August 29, expecting daily
-to be returned to our own people in accordance with the terms of the
-Geneva Convention. Our destination, however, was fated to be in the
-opposite direction. Under an escort of half a dozen German soldiers,
-commanded by an under-officer, we marched out of the town, up the hill
-where the battle had taken place, to Bavay. It was a tiring journey for
-the wounded men lying in ambulance wagons. The Hon. R. Keppel was the
-only wounded officer. He traveled in a wagon with certain men of his
-regiment, with whom he appeared to be on exceedingly friendly terms.
-Two of the occupants of that wagon had lost an arm each, and they were
-the cheeriest of our party.
-
-It was dark when we reached Bavay, and everyone was tired out. The
-journey seemed to be quite twenty miles. The first thing we did was
-to see the wounded safely into the hospital, which was a young men's
-college. M. L'Abbé J. Lebrun, the Superior, and his colleague were at
-the door to welcome us. I was at once taken into the English ward, and
-arrived just in time to commend the soul of a dying man, a private
-of the 12th Lancers. His officer--though wounded--had got out of bed
-to see the last of him, and besought me as I entered to visit his
-dying comrade without delay. His anxiety on his friend's behalf was a
-touching sight.
-
-On the morrow, Sunday, August 30, I held a service, at the request of
-the patients, in the English ward. I spoke on "Be of good cheer," or,
-as we had so often heard it put by our French friends along the road,
-"_Bon courage_."...
-
-At the funeral of the 12th Lancer that afternoon we had an imposing
-procession. The body was laid on a stretcher covered over with a Union
-Jack and the French national flag. I led the way before the coffin,
-robed in a cassock and surplice which had been presented to me by a
-French priest to replace my own lost robes. After the coffin came the
-three R.C. priests of the town and a number of the French Red Cross
-nurses; then Major Collingwood and the men of the 4th Field Ambulance.
-One of the nurses, noticing that I had no stole, on returning from the
-funeral made me one of black material with three white crosses, and
-presented it within a couple of hours.
-
-The next day we were marched under escort to Mons. This is a large,
-well-built town of about 35,000 inhabitants. We were paraded through
-the cobbled streets to the barracks, then (evidently by a mistake) to
-the station, and finally back again to the barracks, where, in some
-dirty rooms over a filthy stable, we spent the night. Here we met the
-Hon. Ivan Hay, of the 5th Lancers, who had narrowly escaped being shot
-after his capture by the Germans, but he was not allowed to accompany
-our party. The following morning we were marched once more to the
-station, and were bundled into the station-master's office, which was
-littered with looted papers. The men meanwhile were herded in a shed.
-A sentry was posted at the entrance of the station to prevent anyone
-going to the town. Just outside the station were the ambulance wagons
-and our servants. Whyman, my soldier-servant, was amongst them with my
-horse. That was the last I saw of either of them. I parted from them
-with a very sad heart.
-
-During the afternoon an ill-mannered under-officer bade us hand over
-knives, razors, and sticks. At 6 P.M. we were entrained with about
-1,000 wounded, of whom some forty or fifty were ours, the rest being
-Germans. The train must have been a quarter of a mile long. In the
-middle of the night we passed through Brussels, and in the early
-morning through Louvain and Liège. Louvain seemed to be a heap of
-ruins; hardly a house visible from the station was intact.... We looked
-with great interest upon Liège as we passed through it, and recalled
-the gallant defence of the town by the Belgians. A few more miles
-brought us over the border into Germany.
-
-At Aachen a hostile demonstration took place at our expense. There
-happened to be a German troop train in the station at the time. A
-soldier of our escort displayed a specimen of the British soldier's
-knife, holding it up with the marline-spike open, and declared that
-this was the deadly instrument which British medical officers had
-been using to gouge out the eyes of the wounded Germans who had fallen
-into their vindictive hands! From the knife he pointed to the medical
-officers sitting placidly in the train, as much as to say, "And these
-are some of the culprits." This was too much for the German soldiers.
-They strained like bloodhounds on the leash. "Out with them!" said
-their irate colonel, pointing with his thumb over his shoulder to
-the carriages in which these bloodthirsty British officers sat. The
-colonel, however, did not wait to see his behest carried out, and a
-very gentlemanly German subaltern quietly urged his men to get back to
-their train and leave us alone. The only daggers that pierced us were
-the eyes of a couple of priests, a few women and boys, who appeared to
-be shocked beyond words that even a clergyman was amongst such wicked
-men. The enormity of the crimes which had necessitated my capture I
-could only conjecture from their looks.
-
-At Düsseldorf we crossed the Rhine--a beautiful sight. At Essen I was
-permitted to visit one of our wounded men who was dying of tetanus. The
-unfortunate patients lay in rows on the floor of luggage vans, with
-straw beneath them. When the train stopped at a station the doors of
-these vans were sometimes flung open in order that the crowd might have
-a look at them....
-
-Even the Red Cross ladies at the stations steeled their hearts against
-us, giving us not so much as a cup of coffee or a piece of bread. But
-for the haversack rations and chocolate, which most of us carried with
-us, we should have fared badly. Now, however, we were to receive our
-first meal from our captors. This consisted of a plate of hot soup
-and a slice of bread and butter, which we ate ravenously. Two kind
-ladies brought us this food, and we were duly grateful. One of them
-was standing near me as we ate the meal, and I thanked her cordially
-in English. She paid no attention, so I asked her if she understood
-English. "I do, but I don't mean to," was her laconic reply, which
-seemed highly to amuse my companions....
-
-At length, on Friday morning, the journey came to an end on our
-arrival at Torgau. We were ordered out of the train and drawn up on
-the platform in fours. Each officer carried what articles of clothing
-he possessed. Several of them had preserved their medical panniers,
-and, heavy as these were, they had to be carried or left behind. On
-either side of us a German guard with fixed bayonets was drawn up,
-and then was given the word, "Quick march!" With our bundle on our
-shoulder, there was no man could be bolder, yet this same bundle and
-the burning sun prevented there being anything "quick" about our march.
-The townsfolk evidently had heard that we were coming, and they were at
-the station gate in scores to show us how pleased they were to welcome
-us to their town. In fact, they told us quite freely what they thought
-of us and the nation which we represented. They walked beside us every
-inch of the way, keeping up our spirits by telling us the particular
-kind of _Schweinhunds_ they believed the _Engländer_ to be. Not until
-they had crossed the massive bridge which spans the Elbe and reached
-the Brückenkopf fortress did they turn back home, and the doors of the
-fortress closed behind us.
-
-
-IV--STORY OF PRISON LIFE AT TORGAU
-
-Passing over the moat through two iron doors, we enter a courtyard,
-about 100 yards long by 40 broad. Facing the gateway is a semi-circular
-building two stories high, with an entrance at either end and one in
-the centre. A turret with windows and battlements surmounts each
-entrance; and from the central turret rises a flag-pole....
-
-The commandant was a Prussian reservist officer with a long heavy
-moustache. We were told that he was courteous and considerate in every
-respect, and that, provided we took care to salute him whenever we
-passed him, we should find him everything we could reasonably wish.
-
-Supper was at 6 P.M. The same plate did duty for both courses, soup and
-meat, the more fastidious taking it under the pump in the interval.
-When the meal was over the junior members of the messes did the washing
-up. After supper we walked a mile, as the old adage recommends. We soon
-knew to a nicety how many turns round the court made up this distance,
-and some active spirits improved on the advice by walking several
-miles. At 8.30 a bugle sounded, and everyone had to retire to his room;
-at 9 sounded "lights out."
-
-That first night was memorable for the little occupants which we found
-already in possession of our beds. Just when we hoped we had finished
-our labours for the day these little bedfellows began theirs. The more
-we wanted to sleep, the more wakeful they became. Scratching, tossing,
-and--it must be owned--a little mild swearing could be heard, where
-snoring would have been much more tolerable....
-
-At 6 A.M. reveillé sounded, and before it was finished Major Yate was
-up and out of bed. I followed his example, and then the two of us began
-a practice which we kept up while the warm weather lasted, namely, a
-cold bath under the pump in the solitude of the courtyard.
-
-Poor Major Yate! He attempted to escape ten days later, and lost his
-life in so doing. One of the sentries affirmed that he shot him as he
-made his way through the barbed wire, and that the Major fled wounded
-into the river, from which he never came forth alive.... He has since
-been awarded posthumously the Victoria Cross for his gallantry in the
-campaign.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We selected as our chapel the passage over the entrance at one end
-of the building. There was an inspiring atmosphere about that first
-service. Our altar was a dormitory table, our altar linen a couple of
-white handkerchiefs, our chalice a twopenny wine-glass (the best we
-could procure), our paten an ordinary dinner-plate. Pews, of course,
-there were none, and as for books, we were fortunate enough to have
-one, a hymn-book, prayer-book, and Bible bound together in a single
-volume, which I was carrying in my haversack at the time we were
-captured. The pew difficulty was overcome by each officer bringing his
-stool. The lack of books made no difference to the heartiness of the
-service, for the hymns and chants were familiar to most of us from
-childhood. The mighty volume of sound that went up that morning in
-hymns of thankfulness and praise was a never-to-be-forgotten sensation
-to those who heard it or joined in it. The place whereon we stood was
-holy ground, and it was good for us to be there....
-
-As time went on, our numbers increased to about 230 British officers,
-and 800 French officers joined us from Maubeuge, including four
-generals. One of the latter had been interned in Torgau before, in the
-1870 war, and had made good his escape. The authorities guarded against
-the recurrence of such an eventuality on the present occasion, their
-most elaborate precaution being the enlistment of dogs to reinforce
-the sentries. Their barkings could be heard occasionally by night, but
-their presence disturbed neither our repose nor our equanimity....
-
-During the last two months of our stay at Torgau I occupied a small
-room in the centre of the building with Major (now Lieut.-Col.) A. G.
-Thompson, Major W. H. Long, and Captain P. C. T. Davy, of the R.A.M.C.,
-as companions. Like the Hindus, we divided ourselves into exclusive
-castes, as far as the necessary duties in connection with the room were
-concerned. The Colonel (as we may call him by anticipation) lit the
-stove, the Major washed the cups and saucers, the Captain swept the
-floor, and I, with the assistance of a member of our mess, brought in
-the coal.
-
-We often dreamt and spoke of the day when we should march out of
-Torgau. There were two destinations only which came within the range
-of our contemplation--one was Berlin, and the other was England.
-Meanwhile, however, there was a place of four short letters which was
-to be our home for six long months.
-
-(The chaplain continues to relate his experiences in this German prison
-with many interesting anecdotes. He tells about the prison occupations,
-how they spent their time in work and recreation, and describes his
-parole and visits to several internment camps.)
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[9] All numerals relate to stories herein told--not to chapters from
-original sources.
-
-
-
-
-"AT SUVLA BAY"--THE WAR AGAINST THE TURKS
-
-_Adventures on the Blue Aegean Shores_
-
-_Told by John Hargrave, the Famous Scoutmaster in the Mediterranean
-Expeditionary Forces_
-
- John Hargrave is known throughout England as "White Fox," the
- famous scoutmaster. On September 8th, 1914, he said farewell to
- his little camp in the beechwoods of Buckinghamshire and to his
- woodcraft scouts and went off to enlist in the Royal Army Medical
- Corps. He was assigned to the 32nd Field Ambulance, X Division,
- Mediterranean Expeditionary Forces, and sailed away to Suvla Bay,
- where he passed through the tragic scenes of the Dardanelles
- Campaign. He soon began sending stories "back home," achieving for
- the Gallipoli Campaign what Ian Hay did for the Western Front.
- These stories have been collected into a volume entitled: "At
- Suvla Bay," which is published in America by _Houghton, Mifflin
- and Company_. There are twenty-eight narratives told in the jargon
- of the common soldier. He tells about its being "A Long Way to
- Tipperary"; "Mediterranean Nights"; "Marooned on Lemnos Island";
- "The Adventure of the White Pack Mule"; "The Sniper of Pear-Tree
- Gulley"; "The Adventure of the Lost Squads"; "Dug-Out Yarns"; "The
- Sharpshooters"; and many other incidents of Army life. One of his
- narratives, "Jhill-O! Johnnie!" is here retold by permission of his
- publishers.
-
-
-I--STORY OF THE INDIAN PACK MULE CORPS
-
-One evening the colonel sent me from our dugout near the Salt Lake to
-"A" Beach to make a report on the water supply which was pumped ashore
-from the tank-boats. I trudged along the sandy shore. At one spot I
-remember the carcass of a mule washed up by the tide, the flesh rotted
-and sodden, and here and there a yellow rib bursting through the skin.
-Its head floated in the water and nodded to and fro with a most uncanny
-motion with every ripple of the bay.
-
-The wet season was coming on, and the chill winds went through my
-khaki drill uniform. The sky was overcast, and the bay, generally a
-kaleidoscope of Eastern blues and greens, was dull and gray.
-
-At "A" Beach I examined the pipes and tanks of the water-supply system
-and had a chat with the Australians who were in charge. I drew a small
-plan, showing how the water was pumped from the tanks afloat to the
-standing tank ashore, and suggested the probable cause of the sand and
-dirt of which the C.O. complained.
-
-This done I found our own ambulance water-cart just ready to return to
-our camp with its nightly supply. Evening was giving place to darkness,
-and soon the misty hills and the bay were enveloped in starless gloom.
-
-The traffic about "A" Beach was always congested. It reminded you of
-the Bank and the Mansion House crush far away in London town.
-
-Here were clanking water-carts, dozens of them waiting in their turn,
-stamping mules and snorting horses; here were motor-transport wagons
-with "W.D." in white on their gray sides; ambulance wagons jolting
-slowly back to their respective units, sometimes full of wounded,
-sometimes empty. Here all was bustle and noise. Sergeants shouting and
-corporals cursing; transport-officers giving directions; a party of New
-Zealand sharpshooters in scout hats and leggings laughing and yarning;
-a patrol of the R.E.'s Telegraph Section coming in after repairing the
-wires along the beach; or a new batch of men, just arrived, falling in
-with new-looking kit-bags.
-
-It was through this throng of seething khaki and transport traffic
-that our water-cart jostled and pushed.
-
-Often we had to pull up to let the Indian Pack-mule Corps pass, and it
-was at one of these halts that I happened to come close to one of these
-dusky soldiers waiting calmly by the side of his mules.
-
-I wished I had some knowledge of Hindustani, and began to think over
-any words he might recognize.
-
-"You ever hear of Rabindranarth Tagore, Johnnie?" I asked him. The name
-of the great writer came to mind.
-
-He shook his head. "No, sergeant," he answered.
-
-"Buddha, Johnnie?" His face gleamed and he showed his great white teeth.
-
-"No, Buddie."
-
-"Mahomet, Johnnie?"
-
-"Yes--me, Mahommedie," he said proudly.
-
-"Gunga, Johnnie?" I asked, remembering the name of the sacred river
-Ganges from Kipling's _Kim_.
-
-"No Gunga, sa'b--Mahommedie, me."
-
-"You go Benares, Johnnie?"
-
-"No Benares."
-
-"Mecca?"
-
-"Mokka, yes; afterwards me go Mokka."
-
-"After the war you going to Mokka, Johnnie?"
-
-"Yes; Indee, France--here--Indee back again--then Mokka."
-
-"You been to France, Johnnie?"
-
-"Yes, sa'b."
-
-"You know Kashmir, Johnnie?"
-
-"Kashmir my house," he replied.
-
-"You live in Kashmir?"
-
-"Yes;--you go Indee, sergeant?"
-
-"No, I've never been."
-
-"No go Indee?"
-
-"Not yet."
-
-"Indee very good--English very good--Turk, finish!"
-
-With a sudden jerk and a rattle of chains our water-cart mules pulled
-out on the trail again and the ghostly figure with its well-folded
-turban and gleaming white teeth was left behind.
-
-
-II--HEROISM OF THE SILENT HINDUS
-
-A beautifully calm race, the Hindus. They did wonderful work at Suvla
-Bay. Up and down, up and down, hour after hour they worked steadily on;
-taking up biscuits, bully-beef and ammunition to the firing-line, and
-returning for more and still more. Day and night these splendidly built
-Easterns kept up the supply.
-
-I remember one man who had had his left leg blown off by shrapnel
-sitting on a rock smoking a cigarette and great tears rolling down his
-cheeks. But he said no word. Not a groan or a cry of pain.
-
-They ate little, and said little. But they were always extraordinarily
-polite and courteous to each other. They never neglected their prayers,
-even under heavy shell fire.
-
-Once, when we were moving from the Salt Lake to "C" Beach, Lala Baba,
-the Indians moved all our equipment in their little two-wheeled carts.
-
-They were much amused and interested in our sergeant clerk, who stood 6
-feet 8 inches. They were joking and pointing to him in a little bunch.
-
-Going up to them, I pointed up to the sky, and then to the Sergeant,
-saying: "Himalayas, Johnnie!"
-
-They roared with laughter, and ever afterwards called him "Himalayas."
-
- THE INDIAN TRANSPORT TRAIN
-
-(Across the bed of the Salt Lake every night from the Supply Depot at
-Kangaroo Beach to the firing-line beyond Chocolate Hill, September,
-1915.)
-
- The Indian whallahs go up to the hills;--
- "Jhill-o! Johnnie, Jhill-o!"[10]
- They pass by the spot where the gun-cotton kills;
- They shiver and huddle--they feel the night chills;--
- "Jhill-o! Johnnie, Jhill-o!"
-
- With creaking and jingle of harness and pack;--
- "Jhill-o! Johnnie, Jhill-o!"
- Where the moonlight is white and the shadows are black,
- They are climbing the winding and rocky mule-track;--
- "Jhill-o! Johnnie, Jhill-o!"
-
- By the blessing of Allah he's more than one wife;--
- "Jhill-o! Johnnie, Jhill-o!"
- He's forbidden the wine which encourages strife,
- But you don't like the look of his dangerous knife;--
- "Jhill-o! Johnnie, Jhill-o!"
-
- The picturesque whallah is dusky and spare;
- "Jhill-o! Johnnie, Jhill-o!"
- A turban he wears with magnificent air,
- But he chucks down his pack when it's time for his prayer;--
- "Jhill-o! Johnnie, Jhill-o!"
-
- When his moment arrives he'll be dropped in a hole;--
- "Jhill-o! Johnnie, Jhill-o!"
- 'Tis Kismet, he says, and beyond his control;
- But the dear little houris will comfort his soul;--
- "Jhill-o! Johnnie, Jhill-o!"
-
- The Indian whallahs go up to the hills;--
- "Jhill-o! Johnnie, Jhill-o!"
- They pass by the spot where the gun-cotton kills;
- But those who come down carry something that chills;--
- "Jhill-o! Johnnie, Jhill-o!"
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[10] "Jhill-o!"--Hindustani for "Gee-up"; used by the drivers of the
-Indian Pack-mule Corps.
-
-
-
-
-SEEING THE WAR THROUGH A WOMAN'S EYES
-
-_Soul-Stirring Description of Scenes Among the Wounded in Paris_
-
-_Told by (Name Suppressed)_
-
-
-I--"THEY HAVE NOTHING LEFT--NOT EVEN TEARS"
-
-What I have seen--can that be told? When will words be found simple
-enough and infinite enough to tell of so much heroism, so much sorrow,
-so much beauty, so much terror? All those sublimities: how can they be
-explained without losing their soul, without taking away their value,
-which is of mystery and miracle? All those hideous things, all those
-unnatural crimes; how can they be revealed with cold and ponderous
-reasoning, while one is still trembling, keeping back tears, smothering
-cries?
-
-It must be done, though, and that French shyness that hates all that
-is bluff or bragging, and which fain would wait that our glory and
-suffering be understood, it too must be conquered. We must rise above
-that too delicate conscience which says: "Speak? What good will it do?
-Truth is luminous; it shines before all eyes." Yes, but it must be
-helped to shine, and without delay.
-
-That is why, I have decided to address the American nation, to tell it
-that which I know, that which is evident, undeniable--to take it to the
-frightful and divine Calvary of truth.
-
-For six months I have been living among our soldiers, our wounded.
-I live in my Paris. That Paris that every one visits and that no one
-knows. I have only left it for some brief excursions to the cathedrals
-in agony, to the villages in ashes, to the ambulances at the front, to
-the old peasants who have nothing left--not even tears! To the little
-orphans with tragic and stupefied eyes.
-
-Sent to distribute woolens to the combatants, I have heard a language,
-haughty and superb. I have clasped the rude hands, sometimes deformed,
-of more than twenty-two thousand soldiers, some wounded, others well
-again, returning to the firing line, a flame in their eyes and in their
-hearts. I have bent over more than ten thousand beds of mutilated young
-men, many of them with gangrene. I have held hundreds in my arms on the
-operating tables--I who could not support the sight of blood, nor of
-illness--hundreds of poor things with atrocious wounds, and only felt
-during those minutes one care--a superhuman desire to discover in the
-surgeon's look or attitude the hope the poor boy would be saved.
-
-
-II--"IF HE DIED, I SHOULD HAVE FELT GUILTY"
-
-I remember, above all, a youth twenty years old, who had such a
-complicated wound in the chest that it is indescribable. I held the
-poor, inert body while the surgeon lay wide open the thorax. "Take him
-back," said the surgeon, "and be careful." I did so. Then from the
-deep, bleeding wound the whole chest emptied itself, as one empties a
-bucket of I don't know what unnamable liquid. The surgeon approached
-then, and leaning over the now visible palpitating lung murmured:
-"What can be done? It will only begin again." However, he did find
-out what could be done. He had him put back in his bed--he was still
-unconscious. Sitting near him, filled with anxiety I waited his
-awakening. I wanted him to be saved, that child! While he was being
-chloroformed a few minutes before, while he was holding my hand without
-saying a word, there was in his look, before his eyes closed, such a
-gentle desire to live, such a prayer for protection--such confidence
-in the infinite aid I gave him. If he died I should have felt myself
-guilty--I don't know of what.
-
-He awoke--looked at me and smiled. He then murmured: "Why are you so
-good to us, madame? We are not near to you."
-
-To this dying child, to give him back his life, it was necessary I
-should explain to him his glory. I said: "Not near, my boy? Why,
-understand then what I owe you! If the enemy has not entered our
-Paris--if Notre Dame is intact--if I, myself, am living--it is because
-you gave your blood for us. But that is not all. When you fight for
-France you do not only fight for your country, you do not only save
-your native land; you save an ideal, an ideal supreme, universal.
-In helping all that is pure and beautiful in the world you save the
-liberty of peoples, the liberty of the soul. You say to each one of us
-'the yoke that weighs you down I shall help you to cast off.'
-
-"You do not understand me well, my boy. But see--you must live. Later
-in the eternal books of history you will learn the meaning of the
-blood you have given. You must live! _You must live!_ Years from now
-your little children will look at you with eyes of love and admiration
-because you were a soldier in the great war. They will know the meaning
-of the medal shining on your chest, and for generations they will be
-proud of the honour of their name. You must live, my dear boy!"
-
-As I spoke something wonderful illuminated the youth's eyes. "Oh, I
-shall live, madame. One only has to will it. I shall live."
-
-He is saved!
-
-I do not know why I stopped to recount the agony and resurrection of
-that child, because almost all of them are divinely alike--childlike,
-confident, smiling.
-
-Another had had a whole leg amputated--a young man of twenty-two, with
-a charming face. Doubtless he had already been loved by some pretty
-girl. At last the day came when for the first time he was to get out of
-bed and try to walk with crutches. I dreaded that moment. I expected
-complaints. I already had made up my consoling arguments.
-
-Ah, how little I knew the soul of our children of France. He arose,
-poor boy, so thin, on his one leg; and as he was also wounded in one
-arm, in spite of the crutches he couldn't balance himself. That made
-him laugh; _made him laugh_!
-
-I turned him over to a nurse because tears were choking me. But they
-were not tears of sorrow; they were sobs of tenderness, respect,
-admiration.
-
-Another had received nine wounds. He didn't want to have them spoken
-of. He only wanted to talk about his days of battle--to live them
-over again. "Those last days, madame, we were so near the enemy that
-they could not get to us to bring us our rations. We had to find our
-nourishment ourselves. When evening arrived some of us would steal out
-of the trenches and pick carrots--we lived eleven days like that. One
-day I brought down a pigeon. When I was able to get it we broiled it
-with matches. Ah, that was a royal feast! How glad we were!"
-
-"Content" (glad, happy), that was the word he used most frequently. One
-morning when I got to the hospital, believing him still very ill, he
-greeted me with, "I go back to my depot in three days; in a fortnight
-I shall be under fire! Oh, how 'content' I am!"
-
-Since then he has written me, "I received the tobacco. We had an awful
-fight at ----. I have a finger less and am still in the ambulance, but
-still 'content.'"
-
-
-III--STORY OF THE DYING ALGERIAN
-
-Ah, let me still tell of my country's smile in her sorrow--so sweet,
-and which is such a comfort to my heart. I have so much to tell that is
-horrible.
-
-Another time I conducted a celebrated visitor to a "tirailleur" (a
-part of the colonial infantry who leave the ranks in action and fight
-individually). This "tirailleur" had had his right arm amputated. I
-said, "he is an Algerian." The wounded man looked at me reproachfully
-with his great soft eyes, saying: "Don't say Algerian, madame, me
-French, me give arm for France."
-
-Another time I was with another Algerian; this one was about to die;
-nothing could save him. I was trying to soften his agony. He let me go
-on awhile, then suddenly stopped me with the melancholy childish accent
-of the Arabs, saying: "Don't bother about me any more, madame. All
-over. Me dead in two hours. Me just as happy as if get well. Thee write
-my mother that." I wrote his mother. She replied: "He has served France
-well. Allah has taken him to his breast."
-
-
-IV--"WHAT I HAVE SEEN IN PARIS"
-
-What I have seen! I have seen Paris under the Teutonic shadow cast
-from the north. Three days, on opening my windows at dawn, I anxiously
-listened for the expected rumble of the cannonading. Nothing....
-It will be soon, this evening, to-morrow, I said. Everything in my
-threatened city became sacred to me. For me to die, that was nothing.
-But for Paris to be destroyed; my Paris! the city that cannot be
-described; cannot be explained! I couldn't stand that. I burst out
-weeping in the deserted streets, leaning perchance against a humble and
-old house. This mere relic had feelings, regrets, like the most sublime
-monuments.
-
-The gravest day dawned. Those who only stayed in Paris for the pleasure
-they receive from it, and those who have children to take care of,
-were hastening toward the stations or crowding into automobiles. I
-stayed there. My heart wrung with agony, I drifted through my ordinary
-occupations. Then the unbelievable happened. As I was crossing the
-Place de la Madeleine, in a semi-dazed condition, a little boy, about
-five or six years old, ran up to me and gave me a slip of paper. I saw
-distractedly that he was decently dressed and had large blue eyes. I
-automatically opened the paper. The following unheard of phrase was
-typewritten on it: "_France is invincible_."
-
-I turned toward the child: "Who gave you that?"
-
-"Madame," said the little one, raising his head with a look that was
-grand, immense, "We wrote them ourselves, all night." Tears filled my
-eyes; I had a presentiment they were tears of deliverance. So, while
-we knew the Uhlans were in Chantilly, while in the hearts of the
-grown-up people horror placed its claws on faith, on hope, there was a
-little child with immense blue eyes, who knew nothing, like the good
-shepherds, St. Genevieve and Joan of Arc, but who knew that "France was
-invincible" and who passed the night writing it.
-
-Yes, the miracle that saved Paris was revealed to us. But there was
-another miracle, something imponderable, which was the soul of the
-little boy with his eyes of light--which is the soul of Paris.
-
-Paris ... even during those hours did not lose its sweet disposition
-of smiling independence. And it was among the children that we
-found the most touching proofs. One day--at the hour when the German
-aviators were storming Paris with bombs--we called it our _five o'clock
-taube_--I went out with a friend near the Park Monceau. All the
-passers-by were walking with their noses in the air, as they already
-had got the habit of the visits of "the bad pigeons."
-
-One little boy had his bicycle to follow the flight, another a pair
-of opera glasses. But look around in the sky as I might, I could see
-nothing. Then a little boy, this one about six or seven years old,
-pulled my coat. "Straight up, madame; straight up, over my head!"
-That's how they frightened our little kiddies!
-
-The next day I was passing through a thickly populated neighbourhood
-over which they had been flying for an hour. Suddenly a child bolted
-out of a house as fast as it could go. But his mother caught him and
-administered two resounding slaps. "I told you to stay in the house."
-"Ah," protested the urchin, "ye don't only keep me from seein' de tobe,
-but cher lick me in der bargain."
-
-These are trifles, will perhaps be said. Do you think so? Nothing is
-small that reveals the immortal soul of a people. And we found it so
-everywhere. Don't lose patience with me if I speak without order. My
-words resemble the days I am living. They have a unity, however, as
-from them always shines forth the trials, the smiles, the bravery of my
-country.
-
-
-V--"THEY ARE ALL DEAD NOW"
-
-What have I seen?... I saw a white glove stained with a gray spot and
-a brown spot. Here is its history. When war was declared all the young
-students of the Saint Cyr Army School were promoted second lieutenants.
-Their average age was about twenty years. How happy they were to fight
-for France. But to fight was not enough. They must do it with grace,
-with style, carelessly, according to French traditions. They all swore,
-those boys, to go to the first battle wearing white gloves. They kept
-their word. But the white gloves made them a mark for the ambushed
-sharpshooters. They are all dead. The glove I saw belonged to one of
-them. The gray spot is of brain--the brown spot is blood. Piously this
-relic was brought to the mother of the dead young man. This special one
-was only nineteen years old.
-
-And let us not think that it was a useless sacrifice. It is well that
-in the beginning of this war of surprises, mud and shadow, some of our
-children died in the light, facing the enemy, and facing the sun, for
-the good renown of French allegiance.
-
-What I have seen ... Yesterday I received a letter. It came from a
-sergeant in the Argonne, an uneducated workman. Here it is, with the
-spelling and punctuation corrected:
-
- * * * * *
-
-"Madame, thanks for letting me know that my wife has had a little girl.
-But do not think I am worried. We love our families, but our duty is to
-love our country first. And if I do, those at home will be taken care
-of, I know it, madame.
-
-"I'm going to tell you something you'll be glad to hear, not at the
-beginning, but you'll see at the end. A couple of weeks ago we lost a
-trench and almost everybody was massacred, including our commander. I
-escaped with a few more of my men. From our new trench we could see
-the bodies of our comrades and officers down there. The worst of it
-was that the Germans would get behind them to shoot at us. Ah, that
-all those Frenchmen, dead for their country, were made to protect the
-enemy! I couldn't look at that. So here's what I did. I said to my
-men, 'I'm going for them, but if I stay there I don't want my body to
-be made a rampart. Tie a rope around my body and if you see I'm done
-for, pull me back by it.' At first things went all right. I got back
-three of our comrades' corpses. But the Germans began to see something
-was up. To mix them up I ordered a feint on the right--another on the
-left. I kept on.
-
-"I was all right. Never would those people suspect that I would risk
-my life to save dead bodies. So I had the joy of getting them all
-back--there were sixty-seven. And can you believe it, madame, there
-were two men still living. They are in a good way to getting well, and
-they can indeed say they came back from pretty far off. We buried the
-others. They are now sleeping peacefully. But I couldn't resist letting
-those in the opposite trench know. Not a bad trick, was it, madame?"
-
-
-VI--"THEY WILL PAY FOR THIS MISERY"
-
-What have I seen.... The other morning among the men who came to the
-vestiaire (wardrobe), where I am occupied part of the time, and who are
-generally very gay and good-humoured, there was a young soldier with a
-sober, set, disagreeable face. I shook him up with, "Why, what's the
-matter that a French soldier makes such a face? Won't you look me in
-the face and make me a nice smile?" But he didn't change expression. I
-took him to one side. "What's the matter with you, my child? First of
-all, where are you from?"
-
-"I am from the North, madame."
-
-"Oh, then I understand why you are sad. You do not know where your dear
-ones are."
-
-He looked at me with a fierce, wild expression and suddenly replied:
-"I do know, madame. My elder brother was killed beside me, struck
-by the same shell that wounded me. That is war. They have burned my
-home, killed my mother and my father. My sister, sixteen years old,
-has been violated and abused; my little sister, of nine years, has
-disappeared." A black flame burned in the sombre look of the boy and
-made it unbearable. I received that look straight in my eyes. "Tell me,
-madame, we will get to their country, won't we, won't we?"
-
-"Why, certainly, my boy--nothing surer."
-
-"Oh, madame, they will pay for all this misery. But do not fear, _their
-women and children will not be touched_."
-
-"Their women and children will not be touched." That is what this
-martyr of barbarism and of the cruelty of the enemy found in his heart
-to say--this sombre, uncultivated child of a northern village. I shook
-his rough hand--I squeezed it--I kissed the poor cheeks of this orphan
-with maternal kisses, and I said: "I thank thee."
-
-
-VII--"THE CHILDREN WHO ARE MUTILATED"
-
-But they--what are they doing with our little children? Here's a letter
-from a lady friend--a great musician. "My son-in-law, Lieutenant ----
-has been defending Verdun since August. He's all right. But when will
-these barbarians be entirely driven away? Lately my son-in-law had a
-German soldier who was very badly wounded picked up. When stripping
-him to give him aid they found a child's hand in his pocket. He was
-immediately shot."
-
-Don't think it's a single case. The children who are mutilated,
-assassinated, burned, are counted by hundreds. At Blamont, in the
-presence of the Baroness de V----, the Germans killed a child in its
-mother's arms. "Why did you do that?" asked the Baroness. "We are
-obliged to, otherwise we are shot," replied the men.
-
-Witnesses who have seen like things are too numerous to be counted.
-Everybody in France remembers the sad question of the little girl
-who asked her mother, "Will Santa Claus bring me back my hands for
-Christmas?"
-
-Some time I shall go into the details of the arrival of the Belgian
-children in Paris, with their terrorized looks, their screams of
-fear if anyone approached them. I haven't yet the courage to go over
-it. The memory I am going to call up is almost as frightful, though.
-It was Sunday, August 30. All at once I got a telephone call from a
-hospital where I often assisted: "Come, quick; they're bringing a lot
-of wounded."
-
-As I arrived they were carrying in a young woman, either dead or
-unconscious. Everybody was under the strain of deep emotion. We
-undressed her. Her body was horribly mutilated with hideous wounds.
-She was the victim of the first "taube," as the Parisiennes called
-the German aeroplanes. She was passing along the street, humble and
-inoffensive. Her husband was at the front. She had a child at home.
-From above death smote her. The French gave men wings, and that is how
-the barbarians use them.
-
-I left the young woman dead. I went to see the child. He was playing
-at a table, laughing. The contrast was so sad I couldn't stand it. I
-took away his toys. "You mustn't play any more just now, baby. You will
-not see your mother again to-day." He looked up at me sadly as if he
-understood. I took him in my arms and wept over him.
-
-There is a little--so little--of what I have seen and heard.
-
-Just as I finished writing I received a photograph from the painter
-Guirand de Scévola, showing an old woman of sixty-five, who had been
-attacked--then slaughtered. With it was a part of the Belgium official
-report, not yet made public. I shall divulge the paragraph: "September
-11th, Josephy Louis Buron, of the Twenty-fourth regiment of the line,
-declared that having been made prisoner by the Germans, near Aerschot,
-they made him plunge both hands into a kettle of boiling water. Dr.
-Thone, of the Twenty-fourth regiment of the line, declared he saw the
-wounds of the hero." (Told in the _New York American_.)
-
-
-
-
-LOST ON A SEAPLANE AND SET ADRIFT IN A MINE-FIELD
-
-_Adventures on the North Sea_
-
-_Told by a Seaplane Observer_
-
- The Great War has introduced new perils both on land and sea. Here
- is the story of one of them--two men drifting through a mine-field
- on a crippled seaplane, fending off mines with their bare hands,
- and expecting every moment to be blown to pieces! Daring adventure
- told in the _Wide World_.
-
-
-I--"MY HUNDREDTH FLIGHT OVER THE NORTH SEA"
-
-I completed my "century" of seaplane flights over the North Sea with an
-adventure the like of which, I trust, will never occur again.
-
-Many varied experiences have gone to total up that number of
-ascents--some far from pleasant, others most interesting, and well
-repaying one for occasional hardships.
-
-The sequel to my one-hundredth flight, however, will take a lot of
-effacing from my memory.
-
-The atmosphere was a trifle thick when we started off from our base
-with the intention of flying an ordinary hundred-and-fifty-mile
-circular patrol.
-
-The farther we progressed, the thicker grew the haze, till we at last
-were travelling through dense fog.
-
-We left at 7.30 a.m., and climbed to two thousand five hundred feet to
-get above the heat-haze and fog over the water.
-
-At eight-twenty-five, almost an hour later, the revolutions of the
-eight-foot tractor began slackening perceptibly, and presently, to our
-dismay, the engine stopped dead.
-
-We were compelled to descend so quickly that there was no time to send
-a wireless signal; in fact, I just barely managed to cut the trailing
-aerial wire free before we struck the sea.
-
-That I did so was a slice of luck, as, otherwise, the fuselage would
-probably have been ripped up, and the machine capsized.
-
-When the floats smacked the water we got quite a bump, and a decided
-jar in the nape of our necks.
-
-Fortunately, however, the under-carriage struts retained their rigidity
-and did not buckle, and the seaplane rode the water right way up.
-
-I will not worry the reader with a technical explanation of the trouble
-which had befallen our engine. Sufficient to state that it was of so
-serious a nature as to preclude us from any attempt at "patching her
-up."
-
-"Do you know where we are?" inquired the pilot, after we had heartily
-chorused a round of expletives appropriate to such an eventuality. I
-shook my head.
-
-It must be remembered we had been travelling through fog most of the
-journey, and therefore could not spot the regular aids to maritime
-aerial pilotage, such as light-vessels, sandbanks, buoys, and coast
-contours. In addition to this there are always air currents about, to
-counteract a dead compass-reckoning alone.
-
-By taking the mean of our calculations, however, we were eventually
-able to place a finger on the approximate area where we believed
-ourselves to be on the chart.
-
-The result was anything but encouraging. We were at least fifty miles
-from the shores of England, and in a neighbourhood devoid of all
-shipping, even in times of peace. What was worse, it was gradually
-borne in upon us that we were perilously near, if not actually in, a
-most extensive mine-field!
-
-Personally, I was feeling anything but buoyant, and the reason is not
-far to seek. I had had the middle watch (12-4 a.m.) in the wireless
-cabin ashore the previous night. A report then came through that
-there was "something buzzing"--hostile submarines scudding round, or
-Zeppelins or other aircraft--and I had the wireless of half-a-dozen
-machines to overhaul, and superintend their going off. Then my own turn
-came, and, minus breakfast or a bite of anything, off I went, having
-had no food since the previous afternoon at five. Worse still, I had
-not so much as a bite of "grub" about me, or even a smoke.
-
-The pilot went through his pockets, and discovered one solitary
-cigarette resting in state in his case. Being a sportsman, as well as
-a companion in misfortune, he offered it to me, and, on my emphatic
-refusal, halved it. So we both lit up whilst we reviewed the situation.
-
-I don't believe I ever treated a smoke with greater care than I did
-that half-cigarette. For aught I knew it might be my last.
-
-When we had finished our cogitations the joint result of our thinking
-was by no means hopeful.
-
-
-II--"S. O. S." MESSAGE ON MACHINE GUN
-
-A strong sun was beginning to shine through the intense heat-haze, and
-the glare of the water was very trying.
-
-At regular intervals I fired off a Very's light, with the idea of
-attracting attention. As the coloured projectiles curved high into the
-air and plunged downwards, so did our hopes seem to rise and fall.
-
-When my Very's cartridges were exhausted, I commenced a series of
-"S.O.S." messages in the Morse code on the machine-gun. The nickel
-bullets of two trays of Mark VII. ammunition had winged through the
-heavy air before we realized the practical futility of it all.
-
-We therefore kept the remainder of our gun magazines intact, as also a
-brace of heavy service revolvers, 455 calibre, fully loaded.
-
-We were not to know what might crop up at any moment. A Taube might
-find us and swoop down for bombing practice, or to make an easy prey.
-We could not in any event be taken prisoners by hostile aircraft, as
-there would be no space for us in a machine already full.
-
-At any moment, too, a U-boat might pop up and either make a target of
-us for their quick-firer or take us in tow for the Belgian coast, which
-was uncomfortably near at hand.
-
-However, come what might, we were in a mood to fight to a finish.
-
-Unfortunately, my wireless transmitter was worked from the engine
-direct, otherwise I might have rigged up an extempore aerial from the
-spare reel carried, and sent a "S.O.S." from accumulators.
-
-It is doubtful if such a scheme would have proved effective, but it
-would have been worth trying. But in the circumstances I was helpless.
-
-The heat was now simply awful, the sea dead calm. We had taken off our
-leather coats long since, and now rigged them up across the fuselage
-overhead, for shelter from the sun's rays.
-
-Presently it became so hot and stuffy on the seats that both the pilot
-and myself took our boots and trousers off, climbed down on the floats,
-and stretched ourselves along them in the comparative shelter of the
-wings and fuselage body.
-
-The stern part of the floats was, of course, submerged, so we lay with
-our lower limbs under water, and felt cooler. This we did for about
-three hours, each of which seemed an age.
-
-What with the heat and the want of food, which caused a dull throbbing
-in my temples, by noon I was in such a state that I did not care what
-happened to us.
-
-The pilot (poor chap) had only recently been married, and he rattled
-along continually about his young wife.
-
-I have no wish to be in like straits again, but if such a misfortune
-_should_ happen, I earnestly trust I shall not have the misfortune to
-be beside a young fellow newly wedded! In the long weary time we spent
-together I had the whole of his history, from childhood to courtship,
-and I suppose he had mine!
-
-What surprised us was the great number of logs floating about.
-Apparently a timber boat had foundered somewhere close by.
-
-Every log that hove in sight through the haze we thought was a ship. It
-was a terrible time.
-
-At intervals we either heard--or imagined we did--the engines of
-aircraft. Sometimes they seemed all around us; sometimes a long way off.
-
-"Our only chance is a relief seaplane being sent after us," said the
-pilot. "Otherwise we are done for!"
-
-There was precious little chance of us ever being spotted, we reckoned,
-owing to the extremely low visibility.
-
-At least a dozen times, as the day wore on, we heard the unmistakable
-roar of aircraft, and it was torture to listen to them.
-
-"It's coming nearer. They will see us!" the pilot would cry, hopefully.
-
-Then the sound would recede into the distance, and we would become
-despondent again.
-
-
-III--"WE WERE FLOATING OVER DYNAMITE"
-
-It was extremely irritating, whilst anxiously following these sounds
-with straining ears, to hear the swish, swish of the water across the
-floats, the ripple as it rejoined the ocean again, and the creak, creak
-of the great wings as we rose and fell with a squelch on the gentle
-undulations of a swell.
-
-These sounds eventually developed into a perfect nightmare. Every swish
-and creak seemed to pierce our brains.
-
-Eventually we climbed up into the seats again for a while and stared
-our eyes out scanning the horizon with our powerful glasses. Every
-piece of flotsam seen we dubbed a boat, till it drifted near enough to
-make out detail.
-
-The wind got up a little and died down again, but it shifted the haze
-somewhat.
-
-In the afternoon we saw a sight which gladdened our hearts.
-
-High up to the nor'-west, and dropping towards us, was a bird-like
-machine. Nearer and nearer it came, till we could hear the engines
-clearly. Soon we identified her marks, which set our fears at rest. It
-was a British 'plane.
-
-We sprang up, gesticulated wildly, and fired a few pistol-shots just to
-relieve our excitement.
-
-She was a rescue seaplane from our own base, it appeared, and presently
-she dropped on the water beside us and "taxied" as close as she might.
-
-Her pilot steered within twenty yards or so of us, and the observer
-heaved overboard in our direction a huge vacuum flask.
-
-Then, without stopping their engine, and waving cheerily, they droned
-along the surface and tilted into the air again. We watched her until
-the machine became a mere speck and finally faded into the blue.
-
-Then, and not till then, we remembered the flask. We were fated never
-to taste its contents, however, for it floated past out of reach, in
-the midst of a great school of giant jellyfish.
-
-I have never been stung by one of these loathsome-looking creatures,
-and I had no desire to be on this occasion. Neither had the pilot, so
-the bottle floated out of sight without giving us anything but moral
-support.
-
-After this interlude our long impatient wait recommenced. The episode
-had instilled hope into us, but the hours seemed to drag more heavily
-than ever. There was nothing but sea on every hand--a great circular
-expanse of glaring, shimmering water.
-
-Presently schools of porpoises began to put in an appearance, sporting
-about in their own unmistakable style. There must have been hundreds of
-them. One group frolicked close around us, and several times a glossy
-black tail caught one or other of the floats a resounding smack.
-
-The fabric of these floats is exceedingly frail, and we were rather
-concerned about them. It seemed a pity to shoot the playful creatures,
-particularly as their antics created a diversion, but we trembled for
-the safety of the floats every time they were struck.
-
-As the tide went down, several dark, spheroidal objects commenced
-bobbing up by twos to the surface--on our starboard beam, as we were
-floating at that time.
-
-Through our glasses we could spot scores more of them in the distance.
-No need to tell one another what they were. We _knew_--deadly contact
-mines!
-
-The nearest pair were only a matter of half a cable's length away, and
-presently our worst ordeal commenced.
-
-We were drifting towards them with the ebbing tide, and were now on the
-fringe of the great mine-field, perhaps the most extensive ever laid.
-Once in among those floating engines of death we should have a lively
-time.
-
-It was with no very pleasant thoughts that we considered this new
-danger. I might have turned the machine gun on the mines, but there
-was the risk of exploding instead of sinking them, and if one went off
-it was fairly safe to assume that its mate, a couple of fathoms away,
-would detonate in sympathy. I presume that this is the underlying idea
-of distributing mines in this fashion.
-
-During the next four hours these horrid death-traps gave us a terribly
-anxious time. We had some very narrow shaves, for at low-water hundreds
-were in sight, and as the seaplane drifted along we were powerless to
-avoid them.
-
-The pilot got on one float and I got on the other, and once or twice
-we actually had to ward the mines off with our bare hands in order to
-keep them from knocking against the machine. Had one of them done so
-this story would never have been written. Fending off the mines was a
-ticklish operation, as you may suppose. Great care had to be observed
-in exerting our strength, and we had to place our hands on parts of the
-casing of the mine that were devoid of horns, or between two horns,
-if it was not floating high enough. While engaged in this delightful
-occupation I went overboard twice, but managed to scramble back safely
-without getting into trouble with the mines.
-
-Once a mine went off. It was too far away, however, for us to see what
-caused the explosion. It is not improbable that a luckless porpoise
-might have bent a horn in one of its leaps.
-
-At length, to our heartfelt relief, the tide turned, and the mines
-began to disappear under the water again.
-
-By that time we were drifting nearly the opposite way again, carried
-along by the flood-tide.
-
-
-IV--"AN AEROPLANE COMES TO RESCUE"
-
-Six o'clock came, by our chronometer--seven p.m. summer time--and we
-were still intact, having for about ten hours been dependent on our
-frail seaplane floats for buoyancy. Had the sea risen at all, even to a
-decent cat's paw, we should have been below the surface long ere this.
-
-It was shortly after six o'clock, when--burnt almost black by the sun,
-with parched throats and swollen tongues--we heard the sound of a
-propeller chugging away at no great distance. The haze had thickened
-again as the sun moved west, and at first we could see nothing. In
-fact, we both thought we were dreaming.
-
-But there was no mistake. The chugging and throbbing grew louder
-and louder, and I fired three single pistol-shots into the air at
-intervals. Thereupon the sound intensified, and out of the haze
-ploughed a trim little armed motor-launch--officially known as an "M.L."
-
-She crept alongside very gingerly, lowered her dinghy, and took us off.
-Then she made fast a line to the seaplane, and took her in tow at a
-good seven or eight knots.
-
-We were heartily welcomed by the bluff sailormen aboard.
-
-Curiously enough, I did not feel thirst so badly as hunger. I am not of
-a thirsty nature at any time, and perhaps that accounted for it.
-
-The first mouthful of food was torture; it seemed to rasp the skin off
-my throat. After that I ate ravenously. It was the first touch of real
-hunger I had known, and after the experience, I vowed that if it lay in
-my power I would never again see a poor beggar go hungry.
-
-When our bodily wants had been attended to we settled down to a
-comfortable smoke in the ward-room. The skipper, a Lieutenant R.N.R.,
-told us he had just made up his mind he was not going to venture
-another fathom farther when he heard our shots. Owing to the proximity
-of the mine-field he had been very anxious.
-
-After our smoke we turned in for a sleep which only terminated when the
-"M.L." reached the shores of Old England and her Diesel oil-engines
-ceased throbbing! This was long after midnight.
-
-They say our little experience has left its mark on us, but personally
-I feel as fit as ever.
-
-
-
-
-HOW I HELPED TO TAKE THE TURKISH TRENCHES AT GALLIPOLI
-
-_An American Boy's War Adventures_
-
-_Told by Wilfred Raymond Doyle, on His Majesty's Ship "The Queen
-Elizabeth"_
-
- This is the first-hand narrative of an American boy's extraordinary
- yet characteristic exploits, told from his own viewpoint and in
- his own language. Young Doyle's noticeable aptitude at telling
- his story may be accounted for by the fact that he is a born
- journalist. His parents, who reside in Yonkers, are people of
- education and refinement. The father is a blind poet of some local
- repute, and at one time published a little newspaper in the Harlem
- district of New York City. The special causes which led to the
- enterprising lad's departure from home, and how he came to enlist
- in the British Navy, are best detailed by himself in the _New York
- World_.
-
-
-I--STORY OF AN AMERICAN RUN-AWAY
-
-At the age of nineteen I was employed in the shipping department of a
-large publishing house at a salary of six dollars a week, with small
-prospect of advancement. My family were in need of all the help I could
-give. I grew restless, and one day February (1916) suddenly decided to
-make a change. Instead of taking a car for home I boarded a steamer for
-Boston, expecting to do better in that city, and then to surprise my
-parents with my success. I could get nothing better than a place as a
-"bus boy" in a lunch room. After working there for three days I saw a
-chance of getting a better position, but unfortunately was too late.
-I was delayed two hours and that cost me my first job.
-
-I could find nothing else to do, and the next day I signed on an ocean
-steamer, _Etonin_, bound for Liverpool with a cargo of horses. My job
-was working the donkey engine for getting the feed up out of the hold;
-it was an easy job--two hours a day. The rest of the time we played
-cards, and when we reached Liverpool I had one penny in my pocket. The
-ship was not to return to Boston before fourteen days, and I had either
-to secure some work or starve. There was many a job I might have gotten
-but for the fact that I was an American. At least that was the excuse
-given for refusing me employment.
-
-I had no choice but to go to the Naval Recruiting Office. I said I was
-born in Dublin and was at once accepted. I received a half crown, which
-was one shilling from the King, another from the Queen, and six pence
-from the Prince of Wales. I signed for the period of hostilities only,
-and that night had a good supper at the Government's expense.
-
-
-II--"HOW I REACHED THE DARDANELLES"
-
-The next day I was sent to the training depot at Portsmouth, where
-I received my uniform and kit. I was two weeks training with the
-rifle and bayonet and one week at target practice. On April 16, after
-physical examination, I was declared fit for service on His Majesty's
-ships. That afternoon I was drafted to the torpedo boat destroyer
-_Lynx_, which reached the Dardanelles in safety at noon of April 19.
-There I was assigned for service on the _Queen Elizabeth_, which I
-boarded two days later when she came out from the firing line for
-ammunition.
-
-In the distance the _Queen Elizabeth_ appeared like a huge island,
-with four trees in the centre, but on a closer view was seen to be an
-immense floating fortress with huge guns, ready for action.
-
-The complement of the _Queen Elizabeth_ is twelve hundred men,
-including all ratings. I was assigned to No. 4 boiler room, which
-to my surprise, was not a grimy place but scrupulously clean, and
-everything in it polished as bright as a mirror. The ship uses oil fuel
-exclusively. My duties were: To keep the oil sprayers and steel combs
-clean, to take the density of the water every four hours, to regulate
-the supply of water and the fan engine for supplying the air pressure
-to the fires, and lastly to test the different safety valves. All
-orders are given by means of two telegraphs, an engine room telegraph
-and an oil supply telegraph.
-
-The _Queen Elizabeth_ went into action from midnight April 21 to
-midnight April 24. I was on duty without relief. During that time I had
-four times a day biscuits and water, with a half pint of rum. At noon
-I was allowed two hours' rest, but could not sleep on account of the
-noise. Our ship was hit every few minutes.
-
-During action the fire pumps are pounding tons of water over the deck
-to prevent fire in case of a shell exploding on the wooden deck. It
-was our duty to keep the pipes and connections clear, for the water
-sucked up from the sea often contains foreign substances. One occasion
-we were subjected to a heavy rapid-fire gun bombardment. The structure
-shielding us was punctured like a piece of Swiss cheese and the deck
-about us was splintered before the guns on our ship found the range and
-destroyed the enemy's battery of guns that were turned upon us. It was
-a miracle that the seven of us escaped.
-
-Once I was sent to the store room for tools. I had to pass the six-inch
-guns and neglected to get a piece of India rubber to place between my
-teeth; the result was a dislocated jaw from the shock of the firing. I
-hastened to the doctor and pointed to my jaw. He put his left hand on
-my head, and with his right gave me a couple of "Jim Jeffries" punches,
-and, while I saw stars, reset my jaw.
-
-On April 26 the _Queen Elizabeth_ was ordered out from the firing line
-to bring up troops to the Gallipoli Peninsula. The Royal Scots were
-taken aboard from a transport in the Aegean Sea. We returned at once
-and landed the Royal Scots safely under heavy fire.
-
-We withdrew at once about ten miles from the enemy's range, and,
-borrowing a telescope, I watched the Royal Scots, 1,100 strong, make
-their heroic charge, which began at 2 P. M.
-
-They advanced on the double and took the three rows of Turkish trenches
-at the point of the bayonet without firing a shot. Then, without
-waiting for reinforcements, they advanced two and a half miles into
-the enemy's country. Their lines were gradually getting thinner, and
-realizing that they were in a tight place, they began to retreat. That
-is all that I saw. Corporal Joseph Nicolson was the only survivor of
-that ill-fated regiment.
-
-On May 8 the news of the sinking of the _Lusitania_ reached us by
-wireless, and the bombardment by the _Queen Elizabeth_ became doubly
-terrific. I think more damage was done to the enemy that day than
-ordinarily in a week.
-
-The next day there was a call for 1,000 men, 200 from each of the five
-largest ships, to support the soldiers on land on May 9. I was one
-of the number from the _Queen Elizabeth_, told off to go as landing
-parties at 6 A. M. Every man received a rifle, bayonet, two hundred
-rounds of ammunition, and two days' supply of food.
-
-
-III--"TAKE THOSE TRENCHES OR DON'T COME BACK!"
-
-On leaving the ship the commander's order was: "My boys, take those
-trenches or don't come back." Six hours later we landed on the
-Gallipoli Peninsula, and reached the trenches safely though under
-heavy firing of the enemy. I was for twelve hours in the third line
-of trenches, knee deep in mud and water. Our time there was spent in
-sharpening our bayonets like razors.
-
-At midnight we advanced to the first line trenches. All around us were
-the dead and wounded of both sides. Four unsuccessful attempts were
-made by the Turks to take our trenches, but each time they were beaten
-back, with a heavy loss. Our side also suffered heavily. Before we
-landed the British troops had lost 3,000 men in six attempts to take
-the Turkish trenches. The enemy's fire had been so severe that the
-transports could not land reinforcements without being sunk.
-
-We navy men were told that the Turkish trenches must be taken at all
-costs. They were only fifty yards in front of ours. At 10.15 A. M. our
-rifles were loaded with fifteen rounds, the magazine safety catch was
-put on and the respirators were adjusted over our faces. Not a shot was
-to be fired in our charge.
-
-Meanwhile our ships were firing on the enemy's trenches. At 10.25 the
-order rang out, "Cold steel!" We fixed our bayonets. At 10.30 the
-bugles sounded the charge. Fifty men fell while getting out; but in ten
-minutes we took the Turkish trenches. Our losses were 250 killed and
-200 wounded.
-
-It is almost impossible to describe a bayonet charge. On the instant of
-the order you spring out, jump or crawl from the trenches, with bayonet
-fixed, and charge on the double. Sometimes you have to creep to make
-an attack. You become like a raving maniac; your senses seem to leave
-you. All around comrades are dropping, but you do not think of them.
-Reaching the enemy's trench, a terrific hand-to-hand struggle takes
-place. Strategy is the main point. Our bayonets were eighteen inches in
-length, while those of the Turks were all lengths from 12 to 15 inches.
-We wore the gas respirators in our charge, as our commander thought
-that our appearance would frighten the enemy. It did. We looked like
-black devils.
-
-At 10.45 the Turkish trench was taken. After the victory our captain
-made a brief address. Facing the dead and wounded with the tears
-streaming from his eyes, he said:
-
-"I am proud of my boys who fought so splendidly and did what seven
-thousand soldiers failed to do in six attempts, losing three thousand.
-You, a mere handful, one thousand strong, succeeded in the first
-attempt. The army has much to thank the navy for."
-
-The last was uttered loud enough to be heard by the soldiers in the
-neighboring trenches. They were so sore about it that they would not
-speak to us navy men for several days.
-
-
-IV--THE TURKISH GIRL BEFORE THE FIRING SQUAD
-
-One day we were allowed a few hours' leave to go where we pleased.
-In our wanderings we came to a farm where women were working in the
-fields. In one field was a huge haystack. Approaching it, one of my
-comrades said that he would show how he killed six Turks. He fixed his
-bayonet to his rifle and made a charge at the haystack. There was blood
-on his bayonet when he withdrew it. We ripped open the haystack and in
-the hollow found a young Turkish girl trying to bandage her arm where
-my chum's bayonet had wounded her. There were a cot, table and chair
-in the stack, and the girl had a rifle with a telescopic sight, and
-a box of cartridges. We were about to let her go, when she dropped a
-package which broke, and thirty-one identification disks, such as are
-worn by every soldier and sailor in the British Army and Navy, fell on
-the ground!
-
-She was a sniper. We had to turn her over to our superior officer. She
-was court martialed and ordered to be shot in a half hour. We could not
-bear to see a woman face the firing squad, so we left the place and
-went back to our trench. We stayed there until the troops were landed
-and relieved us.
-
-While in the trenches we went through many an ordeal, the chief of
-which was the vermin that, combined with the heat and filthy water,
-made life almost unbearable. When we returned to our ship all our
-clothing was taken from us and burned. We were then subjected to a bath
-of hot water containing some powerful disinfectant which took away a
-part of our skin. New uniforms were given us and we put them on our raw
-hides with a sense of unspeakable delight.
-
-While on land we saw something of the Turkish sniper. He is a
-sharpshooter, painted green from head to foot, as he is usually hidden
-among the leaves of the trees. His cartridges are in a box fastened
-to a branch above his head, and on his rifle is the famous telescopic
-sight, an Austrian invention by means of which a child could hardly
-miss the mark. When their hiding place was discovered and they were
-shot, we let them hang from the branches as a warning to others. If the
-sniper sees that he cannot escape, he destroys his telescopic sight. No
-more than six of these wonderful inventions had been found up to that
-date. I picked up one in the Turkish trench and had it in my hand for
-a few minutes, but was obliged to turn it over to my superior officer
-of the division to be sent to the Government arsenal for examination.
-
-... Shortly after our arrival in the Dardanelles one of the mine
-sweepers was sunk and the body of a boy seaman floated by our ship.
-One of the survivors of the sunken _Irresistible_ jumped overboard and
-found the boy was not dead, though unconscious. We threw a rope and
-hauled them in. A marine stepped forward and took the boy from the arms
-of his rescuer. As he was carrying him to shelter a small shell from
-the enemy's gun blew off the marine's head. A sailor snatched the boy
-away from him. For half a minute the headless man, having his lungs
-still full of air, threw up his arms, and dashed madly about the deck.
-This was the only casualty on our ship during my service.
-
-
-V--CAPTURED ON BELGIAN COAST
-
-On May 23 we left the Dardanelles to have our guns refitted. May 27
-we were fifteen miles off the Belgian coast and there we heard heavy
-bombardment. The following day H.M.S. _Drake_ asked for a loan of fifty
-men from our ship. I was one of the fifty.
-
-The _Drake_ was trying to locate a heavy German battery, and a lucky
-shot killed the gun crew but did not damage the guns. We fifty from
-the _Queen Elizabeth_ were sent ashore to destroy the guns by blowing
-them up. We reached them under the heavy fire of the enemy, took off
-the breeches and destroyed the mechanism. As we were setting the
-dynamite to blow up these guns, a party of about three hundred Germans
-surrounded us. Our rifles were stacked up about thirty feet away and in
-running to reach them several of us were wounded. I received slight
-flesh wounds in the arm and leg. After being searched and relieved of
-all weapons, we were marched to a barbed wire stockade, about a mile
-and a half inland, and were told that we were to be sent to Germany the
-next day. There was another stockade with British, French and Belgian
-prisoners near by, and over the barbed wire they threw us a football to
-amuse ourselves. We played football until dusk.
-
-A German soldier was sent with a spade to dig a hole for another post
-in support of the barbed wire gate. We played football all around the
-field and managed to get the German soldier in our midst. We bound and
-gagged him, seized his weapons and took his spade. It was getting dark
-and no one suspected but that we were still playing football.
-
-We took turns in digging under the barbed wire fence a tunnel for
-escape. While we were at work we had a genuine surprise. A German
-sentry on his rounds, trod on a weak spot over our tunnel and fell in,
-face downward. He could make no outcry as his mouth was filled with
-grass and dirt. We immediately bound and gagged him, took his weapons
-and left him there.
-
-We all escaped through this tunnel and beat it for the coast as fast
-as our legs could carry us. The searchlights of our ship were in
-action and were playing all over the coast looking for us. One of our
-number was a signal man. He ripped off his jumper and, tearing it in
-two pieces, waved them over his head. The signal was seen--we knew it
-because the guns of the ship were brought to bear over us, to protect
-us from an attack in the rear, and recapture. We received a flash light
-signal to lie down, and soon we heard the sound of two engines. It was
-the ship's picket boats, mounted with machine guns on stern and bow. We
-were conveyed in short order to the _Drake_.
-
-All ships have a master of arms and a ship's corporal; they are the
-ship's police, and they are always looking for trouble. As soon as
-we were on the deck we were placed under arrest and taken before the
-captain. The charges against us were: over-staying shore leave fourteen
-hours, disobeying orders and general untidiness. We did, in fact, look
-like a bunch of Hooligans. Several of us had no caps and the faces of
-all of us were covered with blood and muck. Our new uniforms were so
-torn that a rag man would not have given us two cents for the lot.
-
-The following are some of the captain's questions, and our answers:
-
-"Where were you men?"
-
-"Ashore, sir."
-
-"Why were you not back in time?"
-
-"The Germans would not let us come back, sir."
-
-"Where are your rifles? And did you destroy the enemy's guns? What
-happened to your uniforms?"
-
-"We destroyed the guns, sir, but were captured. We tried to escape, but
-were caught between liquid fire and poisonous gas. We lost part of our
-uniforms trying to climb over the barbed wire fence, sir."
-
-"You pack of fools!"
-
-"Yes, sir."
-
-Then the captain, smiling, congratulated us and ordered the steward to
-supply us with new uniforms and send us back to our ship as soon as
-possible. We went back next day, June 2.
-
-
-VI--BACK TO TURKEY--THEN TO AMERICA
-
-The _Queen Elizabeth_ was ordered back to the Dardanelles and remained
-there until July 26. Through the telescope we saw many demolished
-Turkish forts and big black holes where clusters of houses and groves
-had been.
-
-On July 26 we sailed for Gibraltar. We left there on August 1 and
-sailed for the North Sea and went in harbor to give the ship a thorough
-overhauling. From August 10 to Sept. 5 we were cruising around the
-North Sea and North Atlantic Ocean in search of the German fleet. This
-sort of life, after the excitement of battle grew wearisome to every
-one on board. Thoughts of home and family came to me. There had been
-no chance to write or to have our letters mailed. The only mail boat
-leaving the _Queen Elizabeth_ was sunk. I told the officer in charge
-that I was an American.
-
-After hearing my story he sent a message to the Admiralty and they
-ordered my discharge. I was sent to Portsmouth Naval Branch to receive
-my final papers. On obtaining these I thought I was free; but I was
-arrested for having failed to register as an alien when I first landed
-in Liverpool.
-
-I was brought before a magistrate and remanded for a week. Acting on
-advice I wrote to the American Consul at London. The Consul replied
-that he had been looking for me since June, and he requested the
-magistrate to release me so that I could be sent back to the United
-States. The letter to the magistrate took fifteen minutes to read in
-court. It stated that the whole army had been looking for me, at the
-instigation of my parents, through the Secretary of State at Washington.
-
-The magistrate discharged me at once, regretting my imprisonment for a
-week and stating that it was no disgrace. I left Portsmouth the next
-day, Sept. 25, for Liverpool but had to stop over in London for several
-hours, awaiting the fast mail train. It was shortly after the last
-Zeppelin raid and, being in uniform, I was allowed to pass the lines,
-to look at the effects of the bombs. Many houses were wrecked, streets
-torn up and soldiers were searching the ruins for the missing. Now and
-then they recovered a body, usually that of a woman or a child. The
-official death list reported 150 killed. I saw a cartoon reprinted from
-a German paper, picturing the people of London kneeling in prayer in
-their cellars during and after a Zeppelin raid. But the fact is that
-the London police had their hands full keeping the people from rushing
-out of their houses to get a glimpse of the raider.
-
-I reached Liverpool that night and the day following I signed for my
-passage on the steamship _Minian_, sailing for Boston Oct. 9. While
-in Liverpool I was offered a position in a munition factory as a gun
-tester at a salary of four pounds per week, but I refused the offer
-because I had secured my discharge from the British Navy for the
-purpose of going home.
-
-
-
-
-"BIG-BANG"--STORY OF AN AMERICAN ADVENTURER
-
-_A Tale of the Great Trench Mortars_
-
-_Told by C. P. Thompson_
-
- "Big-Bang" was Tommy's name for one of our pioneer trench mortars,
- invented and operated by a man named X----. The author met X---- in
- a café not far from the front, and heard from him the details of
- the story that is here set down. "So far as I am aware," he writes,
- "the tale is perfectly true. I had it confirmed by the men of the
- R. E. company to which X---- was attached." Recorded in the _Wide
- World_.
-
-
-I--THE SOLDIERS IN THE CAFE SALOME
-
-It was at Noeux-les-Mines, in the Café Salome, at the bottom of the
-old slag-heap by the station. After tea, there being no further parade
-until the working party assembled at ten o'clock that night, I had
-repaired thither to drink wine and smoke until closing time. As always,
-the _café_ was crowded with the men of half-a-dozen London regiments,
-with Scotsmen in stained and muddy kilts, and French artillerymen
-from the South. Later in the evening they would begin to sing in
-unison--great roaring choruses swung and tossed from _café_ to _café_
-and taken up by the crowded-out groups in the street.
-
-I had managed to secure a chair at a little table in the corner, and
-for companion saw before me a small, grizzled man, about fifty, whose
-blue eyes, despite the dark rings underneath them, were yet singularly
-intelligent, keen, and clear. We exchanged a few remarks whilst
-taking each other's measure, and then, apropos of my description
-of a terrible bombardment by the German _minenwerfers_ which we had
-recently endured, he began to talk, and gave me a rambling impression
-of his strange and original career, and especially of his adventures in
-connection with his masterpiece, "Big-Bang"--a device now extinct.
-
-I will call him X----. Before his connection with the British Army I
-gathered he had wandered widely in an up-and-down, rolling-stone sort
-of fashion. The Klondike had known his store during the gold rush.
-He was one of those men who did undefined but profitable things in
-the Western States before the days of their organized exploitation;
-made thousands of dollars and spent every cent of them, roving here
-and there, never staying anywhere for long, as is the way with these
-pioneers of the human race.
-
-
-II--THE AMERICAN ADVENTURER TELLS HIS TALE
-
-When the war broke out he was in the West, the manager of an opera
-company touring the coast towns, and immediately he determined to
-take a hand. At first he experienced considerable perplexity as to
-how he was to get "mixed up" in the war. Apart from his nationality,
-his small stature, a finger missing from his right hand, and a
-pronounced limp--both legacies from the Spanish-American war in the
-Philippines--seemed destined to preclude him from serving in the
-army of any country in any capacity. He was even refused by a party
-of Americans forming a Red Cross contingent for duty with any of the
-belligerents willing to accept their service.
-
-However, he remembered an old friend, a major of Engineers in charge
-of a company at a China station, and he immediately hurried from San
-Francisco across the Pacific to Hong-Kong, where he found the --th
-Siege Company, R.E., under orders to move, and cursing destiny, in the
-shape of the British War Office, which refused to allow them to be
-in at the fall of Tsing-tau. Forthwith he attached himself to them.
-His sole qualification consisted of an erratic but handy knowledge
-of mechanics, picked up here and there--as chauffeur to a Vancouver
-millionaire, as a greaser, ganger, and a stoker, but principally
-during eighteen months of desultory employment in the machine-shops of
-Pittsburg. After much argument concerning the King's Regulations with
-regard to recruits and the position of a man in the ranks, the major
-had taken him on the strength as mechanic for the three motor-cycles
-owned by his command. In September, 1914, he left the Western theatre
-of war--quietly exultant, as I imagine.
-
-He was curiously frank as to his attitude towards the war.
-
-"I have always liked big things, and I had to get into this somehow,"
-he said, finishing a large _cassis_. "This war is the biggest thing
-that ever happened to this old world, and if I were left out of it I
-should go mad--I should, or commit suicide. That's how I feel about
-it. Looking on is no good to me; I have to be right in it. But I've
-illusions. Neither your cause nor the Germans' nor the newspaper gas
-of both parties interest me. If the Allies hadn't adopted me I should
-have squeezed somehow into one of the armies of the Central Powers. Of
-course, the party I joined, that party I stick to; you can count on me
-to the last drop of my blood. But you take me--I've no patriotism, as
-you understand these things."
-
-They landed in France early in October, and within forty-eight hours
-were with a corps at a point where the British forces lay resting after
-the Marne and the Aisne. With those battles the operations passed
-the mobile phase and began to settle down to the stagnation of the
-trenches.
-
-The novel conditions of warfare in the earth demanded new methods
-and ingenious adaptations, and soon the Engineers found themselves
-overwhelmed with orders from corps headquarters and harassed by
-perplexed divisions and brigades. Bombs and explosive missiles of all
-sorts were in great demand, but materials other than Tickler's jam-pots
-were not to be procured. And pumps were wanted; emplacements, redoubts,
-trenches, field works of all descriptions required overseers from the
-Engineers to superintend the working-parties, composed of uninitiated
-infantry.
-
-
-III--CATAPULT THAT HURLS BOMBS
-
-One day while he was busy upon a patent catapult the major came
-to X---- and showed him a message from the corps, who, introduced
-suddenly and unexpectedly to that formidable engine of destruction,
-the _minenwerfer_, desired urgently some improvised machine or gun
-wherewith to retaliate until supplies of the new weapon arrived from
-home arsenals. Nor were the elaborate specifications peculiar to all
-staff instructions lacking. The proposed machine must be capable of
-hurling a heavy bomb a distance of not less than two hundred yards; but
-at the same time, if a gun, it must not require a powerful propelling
-charge. It must be portable and sufficiently compact to allow of its
-introduction into a front-line trench; its working must not demand
-intricate mechanical knowledge, nor must more than four men be needed
-for its crew, and so on and so forth. X----, if I recollect his
-narrative aright, remarked, "Jehoshaphat!" and went away to a nearby
-_café_ to ponder out this problem in mechanics. By the next morning he
-had planned and partly constructed the first of his famous simplified
-mortars.
-
-It was, so far as I remember the constructional details, merely a large
-tube, about three feet long and with a diameter of six inches, made
-of very thick sheet-iron and closed at one end by a block of wrought
-iron, pinned and welded on. The barrel mounted on a cradle, the bed
-weighed under half a hundredweight, and was secured to the ground by
-long iron pins like glorified tent-pegs. The ammunition consisted of
-huge canisters packed with gun-cotton and exploded by a time fuse or a
-simple percussion detonator. And if one did not look what he was doing,
-the bomb might easily be slipped into the mortar detonator first--to
-the dire confusion of the gun-crew. Gunpowder, rammed and wadded and
-ignited through a touch-hole, discharged the canister upon its travel.
-This creation was dispatched with precise instructions as to its use
-and probable eccentricities, and all hoped it would "make good."
-
-Two days later came the report that at the first discharge the mortar
-had burst. It was requested that a stronger one be made, and, further,
-that the engineer-constructor should accompany his engine into the
-trenches, there to superintend its working. Thus one day X----
-descended upon the lines with a new and larger mortar of more solid
-construction, one dubious artilleryman as assistant gunner, canister,
-a bag of powder, and a ramrod.
-
-I can imagine the breathless interest with which the garrison in the
-trenches observed the loading of the mortar, the swift retirement from
-its vicinity, and the stunned confusion following the first shot.
-It went off with a stupendous roar, belching forth smoke and flame.
-The canister, turning over and over in the air, was seen to describe
-a mighty arc and fall upon a ruined house behind the German lines
-and there explode mightily, demolishing the place as completely and
-spectacularly as if a mine had been sprung beneath it. A great cheer
-burst forth. The delighted soldiers promptly poured in "fifteen rounds
-rapid," and a machine-gun rattled through a belt in honour of the
-occasion and to follow up the bomb. The new weapon was voted a huge
-success.
-
-It was fired five times in all, two bombs failing to explode, one
-excavating a ton or so of earth from the centre of No Man's Land,
-whilst the fifth fell plump into the German fire-trench, levelling it
-for half-a-dozen yards in either direction and sending high into the
-air a vast shower of earth, rent sandbags, timber, and human fragments.
-
-Then, just as a sixth projectile was being loaded, the German artillery
-got to work. A storm of "whizz-bang" shells hurtled over, exploding
-everywhere--in the air, on the ground, and sometimes against the high
-parapet, which was sent flying. Two batteries of heavy howitzers
-concentrated a slow, deliberate fire, dropping 5.2 and 9-inch shells in
-the zone of the mortar, which was buried under tons of earth. At length
-the bombardment ceased, and rescue parties came to dig out those men
-whose dug-outs had fallen in upon them or who had been buried in the
-ruins of the trench. X---- had remained by his mortar and was rescued
-unconscious.
-
-Yet, with the tenaciousness of his breed, he came back again--having
-spent a week at the field ambulance's barn hospital and a few days at
-his company's quarters--armed with a third and more powerful mortar.
-This time he had taken the precaution to provide himself with smokeless
-powder. The German artillery observers, however, were on the look-out
-for him, and although there was no longer a mountain of smoke to serve
-as a target, the position of the mortar was disclosed by the enormous
-roar of its discharge, which could be heard four miles away. Not five
-minutes elapsed before half-a-dozen batteries, informed by telephone,
-opened a tremendous fire and speedily rendered the vicinity untenable.
-Casualties were high, and X---- and his weapon lost favour with the
-neighbouring infantry.
-
-
-IV--"BIG-BANG" HIS ONLY FRIEND
-
-Then this intrepid man mounted "Big-Bang" upon a base to which were
-affixed four small wheels with broad treads. Having fired the mortar,
-he would trundle it away down the trench as fast as he could go,
-invariably getting clear of the fatal area before the shells began to
-fall. Then he would stop and fire another shot and again make off,
-dragging his mortar at the end of a rope. His ammunition he placed in
-recess here and there along the line. The enraged infantry took to
-heaving the canisters over the parapet until one so thrown exploded,
-blowing in the trench, upon which they left them severely alone. But
-whenever the maker of those canisters appeared with his mortar round
-the corner of the traverse they cursed him heartily.
-
-In this way X---- became the best-hated man from Richebourg to the
-sea. Refused admittance to dug-outs, he was obliged to sleep on
-firing-platforms, on the floors of side trenches, or in saps where
-night working-parties trod on him. No one spoke to him except to utter
-oaths. Men said upon seeing him:--
-
-"Here comes the Kaiser's best friend!"
-
-Sarcastic remarks were also passed on his mortar; and, strangely
-enough, these hurt him more than personal abuse. He had come almost
-to love his creation. Hatred of it he could tolerate, but anything
-savouring of contempt; anything derogatory uttered against its power as
-a destroyer, touched him to the quick; and I fancy singularly biting
-language was heard in those winter trenches of 1914 and 1915.
-
-So he dragged on his solitary existence--desolate, hated, yet feared
-because of his power of avenging himself by firing his weapon from any
-spot he pleased, and thus dooming it to a tremendous "strafing" by the
-enemy. He wanted someone to own him, and tried to attach himself to
-the artillery, but they refused to have anything to do with him. The
-thing his peculiar nature found it hardest to endure was the knowledge,
-gradually forced upon him, that he was "out of it," a mere independent
-unit belonging actually to neither side, a man whose decease many of
-the British, equally with the Huns, would have hailed with much glee.
-
-This must have weighed upon him. Possibly he brooded. And all the time,
-with an invincible obstinacy that was almost heroic, he fired and
-fled and fled and fired, retreating sometimes up, sometimes down the
-trenches, dodging the shells all day and sometimes at night. And then
-he broke down.
-
-"It was one of those illnesses your Army doesn't recognize officially,"
-he told me. "It began with a sort of tired, discouraged feeling, and I
-used to have queer dreams. The noise of 'Big-Bang' going off made me
-jump like a marionette. I'd sweat and grow dizzy and my knees trembled
-and my stomach rose. I fell down one day and they came and took me away
-to the field ambulance, and after a bit they sent me down to Boulogne.
-I don't quite know what happened there during the first weeks. But when
-I got better they gave me a pretty good time--made quite a fuss of me,
-in fact. The colonel wanted to send me to England, but I told him how
-great I am on seeing this war through, and he grunted and said he'd see
-what he could do. When I came out I found this staff job waiting for
-me. It's not what I'd like exactly, but I suppose I'm getting old now.
-Still, we're close to the guns and I have a pretty free hand here, and
-can make trips to the trenches to say 'How-do' to the boys and see how
-things are getting along. Oh, yes; it's not so bad. But I was sorry to
-leave old 'Big-Bang.' I made her and I worked her, and I guess she did
-her bit."
-
-For a space he meditated, puffing clouds of smoke from a ten-sou cigar.
-Then with a start he returned to life.
-
-"Will you have a _vin blanc_, old chap? Hi, papa, _deux vins blancs_!"
-
-As he pushed back his soft cap I saw that "Big-Bang" had set its mark
-upon him. The hair about his temples was white as snow.
-
-
-
-
-"WITH OUR ARMY IN FLANDERS"--FIGHTING WITH TOMMY ATKINS
-
-_Where Men Hold Rendezvous with Death_
-
-_Told by G. Valentine Williams, with the British Army_
-
- Written in the field and under the eye of the censor, G. Valentine
- Williams presents in "With Our Army in Flanders" (Edward Arnold,
- London) a series of vivid war chapters differing in many respects
- from the current conventional accounts from the battle fronts. Mr.
- Williams is the _London Daily Mail_ correspondent. He tells about
- the babel of tongues where men gather in khaki, strange meetings at
- the front of long separated friends and brothers, the hunger of the
- big guns.
-
-
-I--WHERE ALL DIALECTS MEET AT BATTLE
-
-One of the most fascinating things to me about our army in France
-are the variations of speech. I have sometimes closed my eyes when a
-battalion has been marching past me on the road and tried to guess,
-often with some measure of success, at the recruiting area of the
-regiment from the men's accents or from their tricks of speech.
-
-Take the Scottish regiments, for instance. I have little acquaintance
-with the dialects of Scotland, but my ear has told me that the speech
-of almost every Scottish regiment, save such regiments as the Gordons
-and the Black Watch, that attract men from all over the United Kingdom,
-differs.
-
-I spent a most fascinating half hour one morning with a handful of
-Glasgow newsboys serving in a famous Scottish regiment that wears the
-trews. Their speech was unmistakably the speech of the Glasgow streets,
-and their wits were as sharp as their bayonets. I told them they were
-newsboys and newsboys they were, or of the same class, vanboys and the
-like.
-
-I visited the Cameron Highlanders--what was left of their Territorial
-battalion--after the second battle of Ypres and heard, in the speech of
-Inverness-shire, their story of the battle. Many of them speak Gaelic.
-One of their officers confided to me that during the battle, requiring
-two men to go down to the rear, the wires being cut, to ascertain the
-whereabouts of the brigade headquarters, he selected two notorious deer
-poachers as likely to have their wits about them.
-
-It is a gratifying task, this identification of dialects. I have heard
-two sappers "fra' Wigan" engaged in a lively argument with two privates
-(from Cork) of the Leinster Regiment, in whose trench the two gentlemen
-"fra' Wigan" were operating. A London cockney, say, from one of the
-innumerable battalions of the Royal Fusiliers, would have understood
-less of that conversation if it had been carried on in German, but only
-a little less.
-
-During the Battle of Ypres two privates of the Monmouthshire Regiment,
-who were talking Welsh, were pounced upon by two prowling Southerners
-from one of the home counties and carried off to brigade headquarters
-as German spies. What with Welsh miners talking Welsh and Cameron
-Highlanders Gaelic, the broad speech of the Yorkshire Geordines, the
-homely burr of the Third Hussars and other regiments recruited in the
-West Country, the familiar twang of the cockneys, the rich brogue of
-the Irish regiments, the strong American intonation of the Canadians,
-a man out here begins to realize of what composite layers our race is
-formed.
-
-
-II--OLD FRIENDS AT THE FRONT
-
-Everybody who is anything is at the front. Never was there such a place
-for meeting as at Flanders. The Strand is not in it. My own experience
-is that of everybody else. One finds at the front men one has lost
-sight of for years, old friends who have dropped away in the hurry of
-existence, chance acquaintances of a Riviera train de luxe, men one has
-met in business, men who have measured one for clothes.
-
-Often I have heard my name sung out from the center of a column of
-marching troops, and a figure has stepped out to the roadside who,
-after my mind has shredded it of the unfamiliar uniform, the deep brown
-sunburn, the set expression, has revealed itself as old Tubby Somebody
-whom one had known at school, or Brown with whom one had played golf on
-those little links behind the Casino at Monte Carlo, or the manager of
-Messrs. Blank in the city.
-
-I wanted to find a relation of mine, a sergeant in a famous London
-regiment, and wrote to his people to get the number of his battalion
-and his company. When the reply came I discovered that the man I wanted
-was billetted not a hundred yards from me in the village, in which the
-War Correspondents' Headquarters were situated, where he had come with
-the shattered remnant of his battalion to rest, after the terrible
-"gruelling" they sustained in the second battle of Ypres.
-
-At the front one constantly witnesses joyous reunions, brother meeting
-brother in the happy, hazardous encounter of two battalions on the road
-or in the trenches. The very first man I met on coming out to the front
-was a motor-car driver, whose father had particularly asked me to look
-out for his boy. I discovered that he was the man appointed to drive
-me!
-
-Humor is probably the largest component part of the spirit of the
-British soldier, a paradoxical, phlegmatic sense of humor that comes
-out strongest when the danger is the most threatening. A Jack Johnson
-bursts close beside a British soldier who is lighting his pipe with
-one of those odious French sulphur matches. The shell blows a foul
-whiff of chemicals right across the man's face. "Oh, dear! Oh, dear!"
-he exclaimed with a perfectly genuine sigh, "these 'ere French matches
-will be the death o' me!"
-
-A reply which is equally characteristic of the state of mind of the
-British soldier who goes forth to war is that given by the irate driver
-of a staff car to a sentry in the early days of the war. The sentry
-in the dead of night had levelled his rifle at the chauffeur because
-the car had not stopped instantly on challenge. The driver backed his
-car toward where the sentry was standing. "I'll 'ave a word with you,
-young feller," he said. "Allow me to inform you that this car can't
-be stopped in less than twenty yards. If you go shoving that rifle of
-yours in people's faces some one will get shot before this war's over!"
-
-There is a great strain of tenderness in the British soldier, a great
-readiness to serve. Hear him on a wet night in the trenches, begrimed,
-red-eyed with fatigue, chilled to the bone, just about to lie down for
-a rest, offer to make his officer, tired as he is, "a drop of 'ot tea!"
-Watch him with German prisoners! His attitude is paternal, patronizing,
-rather that of a friendly London policeman guiding homeward the errant
-footsteps of a drunkard.
-
-
-III--DEEP IN A SOLDIER'S HEART
-
-Under influence of nameless German atrocities of all descriptions,
-the attitude of the British soldier in the fighting line is becoming
-fierce and embittered. Nothing will induce him, however, to vent his
-spite on prisoners, though few Germans understand anything else but
-force as the expression of power. They look upon our men as miserable
-mercenaries whose friendliness is simply an attempt to curry favor with
-the noble German krieger; our men regard them as misguided individuals
-who don't know any better....
-
-The German phrase, "_Stellungskrieg_," is a very accurate description
-of the great stalemate on the western front which we, more vaguely,
-term "trench warfare." It is, indeed, a constant manoeuvering for
-positions, a kind of great game of chess, in which the Germans,
-generally speaking, are seeking to gain the advantage for the purposes
-of their defensive, whilst the Allies' aim is to obtain the best
-positions for an offensive when the moment for this is ripe.
-
-The ground is under ceaseless survey. A move by the enemy calls for
-a counter-move on our part. A new trench dug by him may be found
-to enfilade our trenches from a certain angle, and while by the
-construction of new traverses or the heightening of parapet and parados
-the trench may be rendered immune from sniping, a fresh trench will be
-dug at a new angle or a machine gun brought up to make life sour for
-the occupants of the new German position, and force them in their turn
-to counter-measures.
-
-Any one who saw the trenches at Mons or even, much later, the trenches
-on the Aisne, would scarcely recognize them in the deep, elaborate
-earthworks of Flanders, with the construction of which our army is now
-so familiar.
-
-High explosive shells in unlimited quantities are necessary to keep
-the hammer pounding away at one given spot. To break a path for our
-infantry through the weakly held German trenches around Neuve Chapelle
-we had many scores of guns pouring in a concentrated fire on a front
-of 1,400 yards for a period of thirty-five minutes. In the operations
-around Arras the French are said to have fired nearly 800,000 shells in
-one day.
-
-Even this colossal figure was surpassed by the expenditure of
-high-explosive shells by the German and Austrian armies in their
-successful thrust against Przemysl. Our bombardment of Neuve Chapelle
-was, in the main, effective, though barbed-wire entanglements in front
-of part of the German trenches were not cut, and heavy casualties were
-thus caused to the infantry when they advanced.
-
-For the most part, however, we found the German trenches obliterated,
-the little village a smoking heap of ruins, and those Germans who
-survived, dazed and frightened, amid piles of torn corpses. If this
-enormous concentration of guns was required to blast a path of
-1,400 yards with a thirty-five-minute bombardment, what a gigantic
-concentration of artillery, what a colossal expenditure of ammunition,
-will be required to drive a wedge several miles deep through positions
-which the Germans have spent three seasons in strengthening and
-consolidating!
-
-
-IV--IN THE BOWELS OF THE EARTH
-
-I went down one of our mines one night. I was spending the night in our
-trenches and the captain in command of this particular section asked
-me if I would care to see "our mine." Considerations of the censorship
-impel me to abridge what follows up to the moment when I found myself
-in a square, greasy gallery, with clay walls propped up by timber balks
-leading straight out in the direction of the German trenches. Guttering
-candles stuck on the balks at intervals faintly lit up as strange a
-scene as I have witnessed in this war.
-
-Deep in the bowels of the earth a thick, square-set man in khaki
-trousers and trench boots, a ragged vest displaying a tremendous torso
-all glistening with sweat, was tipping clay out of a trolley and gently
-chaffing in a quite unprintable English of the region of Lancashire a
-hoarse but invisible person somewhere down the shaft.
-
-I crawled round the quizzer, slipping on the greasy planks awash with
-muddy water on the floor of the gallery, and found myself confronted
-by another of the troglodytes, a man who was so coated with clay that
-he appeared to be dyed khaki (like the horses of the Scots Greys) from
-top to toe. I asked him whence he came, so different was he, in speech
-and appearance, from the black-haired, low-browed Irishmen watching at
-the parapet of the trench far above us. "A coom fra' Wigan!" he said,
-wiping the sweat from his forehead with a grimy hand, and, thus saying,
-he turned round and made off swiftly, bent double as he was, down the
-low gallery.
-
-I followed, the water swishing ankle-deep round my field boots. The air
-was dank and foul; the stooping position became almost unbearable after
-a few paces; one slipped and slithered at every step.
-
-At intervals side-galleries ran out from the main gap, unlit, dark
-and forbidding--listening posts. After a hundred paces or so a
-trolley blocked the way. Behind it two men were working, my taciturn
-acquaintance and another. The latter was hacking at the virgin earth
-with a pick; the former was shoveling the clay into the trolley.
-
-I had not been out of that mine for more than a minute when an electric
-lamp flashed in my eyes, and an excitable young man, who held an
-automatic pistol uncomfortably near my person, accosted me thus: "I beg
-your pardon, sir"--it occurred to me that the pistol accorded ill with
-this polite form of address--"but may I ask what you were doing down my
-mine?" My friend, the Captain, rushed forward with an explanation and
-an introduction, the pistol was put away, and the sapper subaltern was
-easily persuaded to come along to the dugout and have a drop of grog
-before turning in.
-
-One story of the mines which made everybody laugh was that of the
-subaltern fresh out from home, a keen young officer, who came one night
-to the dug-out of the sapper officer supervising the digging of a mine.
-
-"You must go up at once," he whispered in his ear in a voice hoarse
-with excitement, "it is very important. Lose no time." The sapper had
-gone to his dug-out worn out after several sleepless nights, and was
-very loath to sally forth into the cold and frosty air. "It is a mine,
-a German mine," said the subaltern fresh out from home; "you can see
-them working through the glasses." The sapper was out in a brace of
-shakes, and hurriedly followed the subaltern along the interminable
-windings of the trenches.
-
-In great excitement the subaltern led him to where a telescope rested
-on the parapet. "Look!" he said dramatically. The sapper applied his
-eye to the glass. There was a bright moon, and by its rays he saw, sure
-enough, figures working feverishly about a shaft. There was something
-familiar about it, though; then he realized that he was looking down
-his own mine. The wretched youth who had dragged him from his slumbers
-had forgotten the windings of the trench.
-
-
-V--INVENTIVE GENIUS OF THE SOLDIERS
-
-"Bombing" is one form of trench warfare particularly annoying to the
-enemy. The revival of bombing began when a British soldier, to while
-away an idle moment, put some high explosive and a lighted fuse in
-a discarded bully-beef tin, and pitched it into the German trench
-opposite him.
-
-In his way the British soldier is as handy as the bluejacket, and the
-long days of the winter monotony produced all kinds of inventions in
-the way of mortars and bombs, which led to the scientific development
-of this mode of warfare. A Territorial officer was discovered making
-all manner of ingenious bombs and trench appliances in his spare time.
-He was taken out of the trenches and installed in an empty school, and
-when last I heard of him had a regular factory turning out bombs for
-the firing line.
-
-Bombing is very tricky work. Your bomb must be safe as long as it is in
-your possession. Nor must it be liable to explosion if dropped after
-the safety-catch has been removed. That is why bombs are provided with
-time fuses. Some nicety of judgment is required to hurl them so that
-they will explode on impact or immediately afterward.
-
-If the time fuse has still a second or so to burn when the bomb falls
-in the enemy trench, a resolute man will pick it up and fling it back,
-with disastrous consequences to the bomber. Therefore bombers must be
-trained. The training is extremely simple, but it is essential, and I
-look forward to the time when every soldier who comes out to France
-from home will have gone through a course of bombing just as he has
-gone through a course of musketry.
-
-Just as the Austro-Prussian War of 1866 introduced the needle-gun, and
-the Franco-Prussian War the chassepot rifle, and the South African War
-was the war of the magazine rifle, so the present war will be known
-as the war of the automatic gun. When the German General Staff sits
-down to write its official history of the great war it will be able
-to attribute the greater part of the success that German arms may
-have achieved to its foresight in accumulating an immense stock of
-machine-guns, and in studying the whole theory and tactics of this
-comparatively new weapon before any other army in the world became
-alive to its paramount importance.
-
-The only factor that furnishes anything like a certain basis for
-calculation as to the date of the conclusion of the war is the number
-of fighting men available for each of the different belligerents. Of
-all the supplies required for making war, the supply of men is limited.
-The Germans recognized this sooner than any of their opponents. In the
-machine-gun they had a machine that does the work of many men.
-
-The machine-gun is the multiplication of the rifle. The Vickers gun
-fires up to 500 shots a minute. This is also the average performance of
-the German gun. To silence this multiplication of fire you must outbid
-it, you must beat it down with an even greater multiplication. This is
-where the difficulty comes in for an attacking force.
-
-The machine-gun, with its mounting and ammunition and spare parts, is
-neither light in weight nor inconspicuous to carry. When the infantry
-has rushed a trench after the preliminary bombardment the machine-guns
-have to be carried bodily forward over a shell and bullet swept area,
-where the machine-gun detachment is a familiar and unexpected target
-for the German marksmen. This is where the automatic rifle is destined
-to play a part--a part so decisive, in my opinion, as may win the war
-for us.
-
-The automatic rifle is a light machine-gun. In appearance it
-resembles an ordinary service rifle, with rather a complicated and
-swollen-looking magazine. It is not water-cooled like the machine-gun,
-but air-cooled, and is therefore not absolutely reliable for long
-usage, as it inevitably becomes heated after much firing. It will fire,
-however, up to 300-odd shots a minute, and can be regarded as the
-ideal weapon for beating down German machine-gun fire and checking the
-advance of bombers while the heavier but more reliable machine-guns are
-coming up.
-
-
-
-
-COMEDIES OF THE GREAT WAR
-
-_Tales of Humor on the Fighting Lines_
-
-_Told by W. F. Martindale_
-
- In the Great War, as in everything else, comedy treads hard on
- the heels of tragedy, and all sorts of quaint and comical things
- happen. Here are some little stories, from a variety of reliable
- sources, which will serve to show that our fighting-men, both
- ashore and afloat, are still able to preserve a sense of humor.
- Narrated in the _Wide World_.
-
-
-I--STORIES TOLD "ON THE SOLDIERS"
-
-Human nature is whetted to a keep edge under the stress of warfare;
-that is why every war is rich in anecdote.
-
-Character is the basis of all comedy, and the conditions of military
-life, whether on active service or not, are such that "character will
-out." In barracks, in camp, or in the field, soldiering applies a test
-which no man can evade. Ranker, non-com., or officer, he is bound soon
-or late (generally soon) to be "found out."
-
-There is a pretty little comedy of character which concerns a young
-subaltern, fresh from an English public school, who found himself
-attached, through one of the unexpected chances of war, to a battalion
-of Colonial infantry. The subaltern was youthful--and looked it.
-His cheek was smooth and innocent of hair, the accents of his voice
-cultured and refined, his manner languid to the point of seeming
-boredom. He was slight of stature, and he wore a monocle permanently
-fixed in one eye. In short, he was a complete antithesis to the brawny
-brood of Anak which constituted his platoon, amongst whom his advent
-aroused no enthusiasm whatever. He was not popular.
-
-There is little risk of offence at this time of day in observing that
-some of the Overseas troops are not remarkable for the strictness of
-their discipline. It is a little idiosyncrasy at which no one, with
-memories of Ypres and Anzac still fresh, will be disposed to cavil.
-This is not to say that they cannot be handled; on the contrary,
-there is ample evidence of their instant response to leadership of
-the sort which they understand. But one would hardly look for that
-particular sort from a beardless youth with an eye permanently glazed,
-and a refined taste in language and clothes. A manner which might be
-acceptable to the Guards is as little suited to Colonials as Colonial
-methods to the Household Brigade. There is a custom and usage in these
-matters.
-
-So it came to pass that the platoon took counsel with itself and
-darkly determined to take its young subaltern down a peg or two. Is it
-necessary to observe that the prime offences of the latter, in the eyes
-of these critics, were his monocle and his accent--those traditional
-marks and insignia of the "dude"? It is strange that so often the dandy
-(whom history has shown to be invariably a man of spirit and courage)
-should be mistaken for the dude.
-
-
-II--THE OFFICER WITH THE MONOCLE
-
-On a certain morning, therefore, behold the platoon drawn up on
-parade, accoutred with meticulous care, aligned in the most precise
-formation--each man wearing his "identity disc" in his eye! For the
-benefit of any reader who has never seen an identity disc, it may be
-mentioned that the latter is the small plate of metal on which is
-stamped certain information concerning the wearer which enable his
-body, if necessary, to be identified. Being of the same shape, and
-about the same size, as an eyeglass, and, moreover, suspended from a
-cord worn round the neck, it can be made to form an admirable travesty
-of a monocle.
-
-Not a twitch of a single muscle in the face of the young subaltern, not
-a flicker of his unmonocled eye, betrayed that he was aware of anything
-unusual in the appearance of his men. He took the situation in coolly,
-and when, in answer to routine questions, the sergeants answered
-smartly and respectfully but with a pointed imitation of his own
-"haw-haw" accent, he ignored the studied insult with equal nonchalance.
-
-It was a good start, for an attempt at sarcasm when quietly ignored
-falls flatter even than when it is wholly unperceived. In the present
-case there was no possibility of an insult having been missed, and the
-platoon began to feel that things were not going quite as had been
-anticipated. Each man kept his identity disc firmly screwed in one eye,
-however, and stared fixedly out of the other in expectation of the
-officer's present discomfort. The latter could never afford to dismiss
-the parade without taking cognizance of what had occurred, and the
-platoon awaited the crux with interest.
-
-But the moment of dismissal arrived and nothing had been said. Some of
-the men were covertly smiling.
-
-As he gave the order, the subaltern let the monocle drop from his
-eye, and while the command was being obeyed, swung the glass round
-and round, with the cord between finger and thumb, in a rapid circle.
-Scanning the line narrowly and noting every glance upon him, he jerked
-the twirling glass suddenly into the air and with the neatness of
-a juggler caught it in his eye as it fell. Then he glared fiercely
-through it.
-
-"See if you can do _that_!" he observed. "Dis-MISS!"
-
-Thereafter no officer ever had men under him more ready to do whatever
-he asked them. And it was by a sure instinct that the latter "gave him
-best." As one of them remarked, "I've seen men take risks in my time,
-but that beat everything. _Suppose he'd missed catchin' that glass?_"
-
-If wit is a Gallic prerogative, humor belongs to the British, and not
-a few comedies of the war pivot on that uniquely humorous character
-Thomas Atkins. Humor is an elusive and baffling quantity, as the
-wit discovered who mixed up all the boots in an hotel corridor one
-evening and learned the next morning that his friend (a humorist) had
-sorted them out again as soon as his back was turned. The humorist can
-sometimes understand the wit, but the compliment is seldom, if ever,
-returned; which is the reason why Mr. Atkins and his idiosyncrasies
-remain an inscrutable enigma to our French allies.
-
-And if the British soldier appears incomprehensible to the
-nimble-minded French, one can readily perceive that to the slow and
-methodically-thinking German he must seem merely mad. The French marvel
-that he is never "serious"; the Boche is perplexed to find that Hymns
-of Hate and other laborious insults afford him the keenest possible
-enjoyment. The secret lies in Mr. Atkins's sense of humor, which is
-another way of saying his sense of proportion. He may be guilty of
-little aberrations such as dribbling a football in front of him as he
-advances with cold steel to the charge, but _au fond_ he has a pretty
-just sense of values.
-
-
-III--THE GERMANS WHO SANG "RULE BRITTANIA"
-
-At all events, his humor has the dry quality which connotes an even
-mind and temper, as the following incident will show. In the earlier
-days of the war, before the opposing armies in the West had burrowed
-into the soil and some freedom of movement was still possible, a patrol
-of three British soldiers under a sergeant were prowling abroad one
-night. Within disputed territory they espied a lighted window in a
-lonely farmhouse which they knew had been deserted by its owners. They
-approached it stealthily. The house was surrounded without challenge,
-and having posted his men at points which commanded the exits the
-sergeant crept forward to reconnoitre. Music and sounds of revelry were
-audible within, and the sergeant had no difficulty in discovering the
-presence of four German soldiers in the farmer's best sitting-room.
-The cellar had been looted, the piano commandeered, and four Teutonic
-voices were upraised in melody.
-
-The sergeant beckoned to the waiting figures outside, and four large
-but softly-treading men tiptoed delicately to the scene of the
-carousal. At a given signal the door was flung open and four rifles
-were levelled.
-
-"Hands up!"
-
-A chorus of "_Deutschland, Deutschland, über Alles_" was interrupted a
-shade abruptly, and four pairs of arms shot up into the air. The Boche
-does not shine in an emergency.
-
-With a gesture the sergeant marshalled the captives against the wall,
-where they stood in a row, blinking and crestfallen. Their weapons
-having been collected and removed, they were allowed to put their hands
-down, and their captors regarded them quizzically.
-
-"Any of you blokes speak English?" queried the sergeant, genially.
-
-A smile of modest pride momentarily illumined one of the four wooden
-faces.
-
-"_Ja_, I spik leedle English," ventured its owner.
-
-"In-_deed_!" was the rejoinder; "and where did _you_ learn it--in the
-Tottenham Court Road?"
-
-The linguist simpered deprecatingly, with evident gratification over
-the good impression which he appeared to be making. It takes a lot to
-upset the complacence of the Boche.
-
-"Been havin' a sing-song?" continued the sergeant, encouragingly.
-
-The other nodded. "Der Shermans vas always der beoble of singing," he
-observed, in faintly patronizing tones.
-
-"Ho, _are_ they?" said the sergeant. "Then suppose you start in and
-sing us 'Rule Britannia' for a bit. Give us a tune, Bill."
-
-Bill propped his rifle against the wall, and sat himself solemnly at
-the open piano. He was not a great performer, but rose to the occasion
-and produced a rendering of the familiar tune which was at least
-recognizable.
-
-"Now, then," said the sergeant, warming to his work, "not bein' a
-blinkin' German I don't 'appen to be no singer, but just you listen,
-and if you don't know the words, say 'em after me. '_When Brit-ain
-fir-ir-ir-ir-irst at----_'"
-
-The musical evening was a great success, said the member of the party
-from whom the present writer had the story. "We kept 'em there for four
-hours, and by the time we'd finished with 'em they could sing it a fair
-treat. And we didn't spare 'em the encores neither. Course, they wasn't
-singin' _all_ the time, 'cos we spent some of it in moppin' up the
-liquor and the food and the cigars they hadn't finished. But I reckon
-they did all the singin' they wanted. Then we fell 'em into line and
-drove 'em home as prisoners. They _asked_ for it, you see!"
-
-
-IV--STORY OF A FISHERMAN AND A MINE
-
-The chief officer of a steamer under charter to the Admiralty tells
-a very amusing story concerning an encounter with a mine, though he
-candidly admits that he didn't see the humor of it until some time
-after the incident occurred.
-
-His ship was lying alongside the quay at X----, taking in some hundreds
-of tons of explosives. He himself, having nothing particular to do at
-the moment, was leaning over the bridge-rails looking thoughtfully out
-to sea. All of a sudden he noticed an aged waterman rowing towards the
-ship, with some odd-looking object towing astern of his bluff-bowed
-craft. The old man seemed to have difficulty in getting along, and the
-officer watched him curiously, speculating as to what he was hauling.
-At first sight it looked like a mooring-buoy, but as the boat came
-nearer the watcher got the shock of his life. The fisherman was towing
-a German mine of the very largest type!
-
-There flashed through the officer's mind the thought of the latent
-power stored away in that wicked-looking sphere, only needing a slight
-shock to set it free; he thought, too, of the vast store of explosives
-under his feet and on the quay. If that mine exploded against the
-steamer's side there would not be one stone of X---- left upon another!
-
-"Hi, you!" he shouted to the oncoming rower. "Sheer off with that
-thing! We've got explosive aboard!"
-
-By way of answer the old man--now scarce a dozen yards away--cupped his
-hand behind his ear.
-
-"What d'yer say, sir?" he called back, mildly. "I found this 'ere in
-the tideway, an' I knew there was a bit of a reward offered, an' so----"
-
-The big mine was now bobbing dangerously close to the steamer's side,
-and the officer, frantic with anxiety, literally bellowed orders
-for the man to remove himself and his prize. In his excitement he
-suggested regions where it is possible the temperature might have had
-a disastrous effect.
-
-The fisherman looked up at him with a smile. "That's all right, sir,"
-he replied. "He 'on't do no harm. I knocked the horns off he with a
-boat-hook."
-
-And so it proved. The old man, in his ignorance, had taken a million to
-one chance, and it had come off. They say there is a special Providence
-that looks after fools, but it must be peculiarly irritating to the
-apostle of "frightfulness" to know that an aged waterman, encountering
-a drifting mine, can lightheartedly knock off the detonator-equipped
-"horns" or projections and live to bring his prize into port and
-receive a reward. The chief officer aforesaid, however is not anxious
-for another experience of the kind; he says they are too trying to the
-nerves.
-
-
-V--THE COCKNEY AND HIS "SOOVENEER"
-
-Comedy, it has been observed, turns upon character, and many little
-comedies of the war hinge upon the mere personality of Thomas Atkins
-himself, and the somewhat difficult adjustment of that uniquely
-stubborn thing to a new environment. The resulting incidents derive
-a great part of their humor from Mr. Atkins's manner of narrating
-them--especially if he chance to be from London. There is no wittier or
-more tersely vivid _raconteur_ than the Cockney, and though one often
-hears the humor of the British soldier described as unconscious, it
-is really nothing of the kind. Spontaneous and unpremeditated it may
-be, but such penetrating acumen as his racy idiom reveals was never
-unconscious.
-
-Half-a-dozen soldiers home from the Front on short leave found
-themselves in a railway carriage bound for Victoria. They were of
-different battalions, and fell naturally to the swapping of yarns.
-Soon the conversation drifted to "souvenirs," a topic of surpassing
-interest. Trophies were produced by each in turn, with the exception
-of one taciturn member of the party who sat in a corner seat morosely
-sucking at a short clay pipe.
-
-"_I_ ain't brought nothin' 'ome wiv me," was the curt response to a
-suggestion that the silent one should produce his little lot. There
-ensued a dialogue.
-
-"Wot, nothin' at all?"
-
-"No!"
-
-"Well, I'm blowed! Fancy a bloke comin' 'ome on leave and not bringin'
-nothin' wiv 'im! Ain't you got no sooverneer?"
-
-"Sooveneer! No, I ain't got no sooveneer--not unless you call this 'ere
-a sooverneer."
-
-The morose one fumbled in his haversack and pulled forth a brass
-door-knob, which he displayed upon an extended palm. Its appearance
-excited derision.
-
-"That's a perishin' fine sooveneer, I _don't_ think! Why, it's only a
-ornery door-knob!"
-
-"Well, wot abaht it? S'posin' it is only an ornery door-knob! Maybe you
-dunno 'ow I come by it!"
-
-Pressed for the story, the owner of the unexpected article proceeded:--
-
-"It was like this 'ere. I'd been two weeks on a stretch in the
-trenches, and never a drink--wot you might _call_ a drink--the 'ole
-blinkin' time. Goin' back through the billets after we was relieved I
-seed a place where they had liquor for sale, and I goes up to the door
-to get a drink. Well, I 'adn't no more than took 'old o' the knob when
-a blinkin' Jack Johnson come over and blew the 'ole blinkin' 'ouse out
-of my 'and!"
-
-And with an evident sense of personal grievance not yet allayed the
-speaker pouched his "sooveneer" and relapsed into gloomy taciturnity.
-
-
-VI--THE COOK AND THE BOMB IN GREECE
-
-Of comedies arising out of Mr. Atkins's imperturbable phlegm there is
-no end. One will suffice here--a little incident which occurred at
-Salonica. At the Greek port some of our troops, it seems, are encamped
-upon the hills above the town. One morning a covey of six enemy
-aeroplanes flew overhead and dropped three bombs in passing. The first
-exploded harmlessly, but the second fell plumb on a cook's tent, and
-blew it sky-high. Shirts, coats, and trousers went hurtling up into
-the air with a grim resemblance to mutilated bodies. Fortunately no
-one was inside the tent. The cook was only five yards away, however,
-busily marshalling an array of "dixies" (military camp-kettles) which
-had been newly filled at the distant water-supply below. The force of
-the explosion blew him off his feet, and likewise overturned the row of
-dixies.
-
-Those near at hand feared their comrade had been hit by a fragment
-of the bomb and ran to his assistance. But as they approached a
-dishevelled figure rose from amidst the _débris_ and wrathfully
-surveyed the wreckage of his "kitchen." At the spot where his tent
-had been two minutes previously he hardly glanced. "And now," was his
-indignant comment, "I serpose I'll 'ave to go down the ---- 'ill and
-fill up the ---- dixies again!"
-
-
-VII--A SEA-TALE--THE LIEUTENANT'S STANCHIONS
-
-By way of conclusion here is a little naval comedy. A minor unit of
-His Majesty's Navy was undergoing the process known as "fitting
-out." Her commander, one of the many good sportsmen who have placed
-their personal services and such seamanship as they have acquired as
-amateur yachtsmen and sailors at the disposal of the Admiralty, arrived
-one morning to find a score or two of dockyard workmen on board, all
-busy (in theory) with the multifarious tasks awaiting completion. In
-practice, something like half the number were, if not idle, at least
-less occupied than the immediate requirements of the vessel seemed to
-warrant.
-
-The commander, being in private life a business man of considerable
-energy, with a habit of getting things done, regarded the scene with
-considerable disfavour, and set himself at once to remedy the state
-of affairs. But the dockyard workman is an individual with very
-definite ideas of his own as to how a job should be done, and a fixed
-determination to do it that way unless thwarted by an authority which
-he dare not evade.
-
-Finding orders, though respectfully received, were inadequate to the
-occasion, the commander tried reason and persuasion. But though the
-latter was carried to the point of cajolery the result was the same.
-Baffled in the exercise of his own authority and a trifle nettled in
-consequence, the energetic lieutenant determined upon a desperate
-expedient. In his best sarcastic vein he wrote out a signal and
-requested its transmission to the flag-captain. The officer in whose
-discretion it lay to forward or suppress the message being likewise an
-amateur, not yet too deeply imbued with a respect for conventions, the
-signal was duly made. It was to the following effect:--
-
-"SUBMITTED: That as there are at present forty workmen on No. 001, of
-which number half are seated permanently on the ship's rail, a further
-working party be at once sent down to strengthen the stanchions, which
-will otherwise collapse under the strain."
-
-Within half an hour a party of workmen reported themselves at No. 001
-and gravely proceeded to strengthen the stanchions! Protests were
-unavailing: the men had their orders, and with bolts, rivets, rods, and
-who shall say what other contraptions, they proceeded to carry them out
-with a thoroughness almost menacing.
-
-The commanding officer of No. 001 delights to tell this story to his
-friends as a shining example of the crass ineptitude of which the
-official mind, even in the Navy, is sometimes capable. It may be so;
-but his friends, observing those admirably buttressed stanchions, and
-noting the considerable inconvenience to which their immovable presence
-permanently condemns the maker of that rash signal, sometimes wonder
-whether the laugh is altogether on the latter's side.
-
-Lieutenant X---- looks forward to some future day when he may meet
-the flag-captain in person, and there is no doubt he already has a
-very good notion of what he then intends to say. But suppose he should
-be greeted, before ever he can introduce the topic himself, with the
-genial inquiry, "And how are your stanchions lasting?"
-
-They have a way of their own in the Navy.
-
-
-
-
-LITTLE STORIES OF THE BIG WAR
-
-_Unusual Anecdotes at First Hand_
-
-_Told by Karl K. Kitchen in Germany_
-
- The four war stories which follow--stories of adventure, suffering
- and daring--were heard by Karl K. Kitchen of the _New York World_
- during his sojourn in Germany. Two of the stories he had at
- first hand, and can vouch for. A third was related to him by His
- Excellency Baron von Bissing, the Military Governor of Belgium. The
- fourth--recounting the exploits of Capt. Peifer, perhaps the most
- remarkable story of the war--was related to the writer by a naval
- officer. Copyright, 1916, Press Publishing Company.
-
-
-I--STORY OF A MOTHER'S TRAGEDY
-
-One of my best friends in Vienna was Ernst Karczag. Shortly after the
-outbreak of the war I received a postal from him stating that he was
-about to rejoin his regiment--he was a lieutenant in a crack hussar
-regiment--and proceed to the Galician front. At Christmas I received a
-long letter from him and a photograph of himself in his hussar uniform.
-Then one morning in March I received a cablegram from a mutual friend
-in London, stating that Ernst had died of cholera in Poland.
-
-Ernst was in his twenty-fifth year and was tenderly attached to his
-mother. Until the war broke out he had never been away from home except
-on a brief holiday, and his long absence at the front last winter
-brought his mother to the verge of a nervous collapse. It came to a
-point where it was absolutely necessary for her to see her son. Mr.
-Karczag, although a millionaire and a man of considerable influence,
-was unable to get a pass for his wife to visit the line near Lodz in
-Poland, where the son's regiment was stationed. She set out for Lodz
-alone.
-
-After nearly a week of the hardest kind of travelling, much of it in
-troop trains, she reached Lodz, where she found every hotel occupied by
-German and Austrian officers. In desperation she decided to appeal to
-Gen. Mackensen, the famous German General, who was in supreme command.
-
-"You shall see your son to-morrow morning," he told her when he learned
-that her boy was a lieutenant of a certain hussar regiment. "I am
-reviewing the Austrian troops at 6 o'clock to-morrow morning. If you
-will come to my headquarters at that time I shall permit you to witness
-the review."
-
-The review of the Austrian troops lasted nearly five hours, and it was
-witnessed by Gen. Mackensen, his staff and the mother of my friend.
-Regiment after regiment passed by, but there was no sign of the young
-hussar officer. The anxious mother was almost ready to break down, when
-at the very end of the last regiment in the review she caught sight of
-her son. Forgetting her peculiar position she called to her boy. But he
-did not hear her, and a few moments later he galloped out of sight.
-
-"I must have a few words with my boy," she pleaded with Gen. Mackensen;
-"I must talk with him."
-
-Evidently she struck a sympathetic chord in his nature, for he told
-her he would send a motor car to the hotel to take her to her son's
-regiment. For two days she waited for the car, but as it did not arrive
-she again went to Gen. Mackensen's headquarters, only to learn that he
-had been called away to another position on the front. Apparently he
-had forgotten all about his promise. There was no one to help her, so
-she started out alone to reach the little Polish village where her
-son's regiment was stationed. No conveyance was obtainable for any sum,
-so for three days and three nights the poor mother walked the frozen
-roads to her son's side.
-
-It was a wonderful meeting between mother and son, and when the Colonel
-of the regiment heard what she had gone through he placed his own
-quarters at her disposal. When the time came for her return he sent
-her back to Lodz in a military wagon. Three days later she was back in
-Vienna, rejoicing with her husband that their son was alive and well.
-
-Imagine their great shock when two days after her return they received
-a telegram from the Colonel of the regiment stating that Ernst had died
-suddenly of cholera.
-
-It is difficult to convey any idea of the grief of the parents of this
-young officer. The father has lost all interest in life--money means
-nothing to him. The mother is inconsolable and her mental condition is
-becoming critical.
-
-
-II--HOW CAPT. PEIFER WON HIS "POUR LE MERITE"
-
-Shortly after the outbreak of the war, Capt. Peifer, a German naval
-officer in command of the cruiser _Yorke_, ran his ship on a mine and
-the cruiser sank with nearly all on board, but Capt. Peifer was saved.
-He was court-martialled and sentenced to twenty years' imprisonment.
-
-The Captain being an expert in high explosives, influential friends
-pleaded his cause with the Kaiser, who suspended the sentence. Capt.
-Peifer accordingly was released and offered his services to the
-commander of the German forces in Turkey. He was assigned to duties
-connected with the production of munitions when the Gallipoli campaign
-began. According to the story, the British forces might have succeeded
-in reaching Constantinople if it had not been for Major Peifer.
-
-With characteristic energy and ingenuity he started several munition
-factories for the production of high explosive shells within a few
-miles of Constantinople. His knowledge, combined with German efficiency
-and tireless Turk labor, gave the defenders of the Dardanelles
-sufficient high explosive shells to check the invaders until munitions
-arrived from Germany.
-
-Of course the Turkish and the German commanders-in-chief were highly
-pleased with Capt. Peifer's service, and the latter sent in his name to
-the Kaiser as an officer deserving the order of "Pour le Merite"--one
-of the most coveted honors of all Germany.
-
-For once German thoroughness and efficiency were inoperative. Neither
-the Kaiser nor his closest advisers recognized in Major Peifer the
-former naval captain who had sent his ship on a mine in violation of
-proper warnings. The order of "Pour le Merite" was conferred on the new
-military officer, who naturally thought that his previous blunder had
-been forgiven.
-
-Accordingly he applied to the naval ministry for permission to rejoin
-his old branch of the service. This let the cat out of the bag, and
-the entire matter was laid before the Kaiser. With true magnanimity he
-commuted the twenty years' sentence, but ordered the Major to remain in
-the army, promising him promotion in the very near future.
-
-
-III--STORY OF AUTOMOBILE THAT CAPTURED AN AEROPLANE
-
-The day Germany declared war on France, Gunther Hensel, the
-twenty-two-year-old son of Ernest Johannes Hensel, a wealthy real
-estate operator in Berlin, offered his services to his Fatherland.
-As he had been engaged in the automobile business in Berlin he was
-enlisted in a motor car battalion, where he became what is known in
-Germany as a "benzine lieutenant," with no immediate prospects of ever
-becoming anything else.
-
-However, last October, after driving military motors at the front for
-more than a year, an opportunity presented itself which won Gunther
-Hensel his coveted promotion.
-
-While driving behind the lines near Arras he caught sight of a French
-aeroplane which had landed because of motor trouble. Young Hensel's
-only companion at the time was an orderly, so it was a question of
-acting without orders.
-
-Without hesitation he drove at full speed toward the aeroplane. The
-Frenchmen opened fire with their revolvers, but their shots went wild,
-and before they could prevent it the heavy motor car crossed the field
-and crashed into the flying machine, wrecking it beyond all hope of
-immediate repair.
-
-Both Frenchmen were caught in the wreckage, and the orderly, who of
-course had a rifle, forced them to surrender. Thus in one fell swoop
-the young benzine lieutenant captured a valuable French aeroplane and
-two enemy soldiers. In all probability this was the first aeroplane
-ever captured by an automobile.
-
-As a reward for this exploit he received an Iron Cross and was
-transferred to the officers' college, where he is now getting
-instruction in the duties of a full-fledged infantry officer.
-
-
-IV--STORY OF THE "UNDERGROUND RAILROAD"
-
-Ever since the Germans have been in Brussels there has existed an
-"underground railroad" to aid escaped French and Belgian prisoners
-of war in reaching the Holland border and thus regaining their lines.
-The German secret service tried in vain to discover how the prisoners
-got away, but without success--until last September. Then one of the
-"operatives," as Detective Burns would say, conceived the idea of
-donning part of a French uniform and appealing to Belgian farmers on
-the outskirts of Brussels to help him to get over the frontier.
-
-When a train load of French prisoners was moved from Lille to Aix la
-Chapelle, this secret service man jumped from the train just before it
-reached Brussels, and, taking refuge in a barn until dusk, appealed to
-the farmer to let him remain there until he could obtain other clothes
-to effect his escape.
-
-Impressed by the spy's French language and uniform, the unsuspecting
-farmer provided him with the desired garments. The spy then asked him
-for the name of some one in Brussels who would help him. The farmer
-directed him to a wealthy flour and feed dealer in the Belgian capital.
-This man in turn passed him on to another Belgian who was connected
-with the "underground railroad," and in less than two weeks the German
-spy found himself in Rotterdam.
-
-Of course he had learned the identity of every Belgian who had
-befriended him, and on his return to Brussels he uncovered the entire
-"underground" system. The trail led right to the chief surgical
-hospital in the capital--the hospital in which Miss Edith Cavell was
-the head nurse.
-
-
-
-
-POGROM--THE TRAGEDY OF THE JEWS AND THE ARMENIANS
-
-_A Masterful Tale of the Eastern Front_
-
-_Told by M. C. della Grazie of Vienna_
-
- No result of the war has been more pitiable than the suffering
- inflicted on the subject races caught in its grip. These submerged
- peoples have had to submit helplessly to the brutalities of both
- sets of combatants. The Poles, the Ruthenians, the Ukranians, the
- Slavs of Bohemia and Moravia, have fought with little heart for
- Russia, Austria or Prussia, as the case might be. But the Jews
- of the Polish Pale and of Galicia have had an even harder fate;
- for while the men of military age have followed the flags of
- their masters, the women, the children and the old men have been
- obliged to face at home all the evils which travel in the wake of
- war--disorder, violence, disease, spoliation and semi-starvation.
- The following story is by M. C. della Grazie, a well known Viennese
- writer. It makes a masterly use of a single, simple incident to
- bring home the meaning of one of the war's most hopeless and
- poignant tragedies. It was written at the time when the Russians
- still occupied the greater part of the Austrian province of
- Galicia. This translation, with editorial comment, is by William L.
- McPherson in the _New York Tribune_.
-
-
-I--STORY OF GABRIEL GABRILOVITCH
-
-The colonel sat on the edge of his rumpled-up peasant's bed and with
-an impatient movement knocked the ashes from his cigar. On the dirty
-table before him lay the last number of a Russian weekly, which had
-just arrived by field post in Galicia--a little crumpled, but otherwise
-fresh looking, and with pictures which made one's mouth water.
-
-The devil! Was it still going so comfortably back in Petersburg (he
-stopped suddenly and substituted Petrograd) with those rascals of
-civilians and war cripples? Did such attractive girls still come in
-and sing and dance as those whose pictures stared at him out of the
-pages of the last number of the _Nida_? They must be damnably well off,
-those dogs, able to frequent the Varieties, where people sit in cozy
-warmth about the tables and worry about nothing more serious than the
-genuineness of the labels on the wine bottles.
-
-And he, Gabriel Gabrilovitch! He had lain with his regiment for
-nearly two weeks in this miserable Galician hole and was forced to
-congratulate himself that a single windproof hut remained in which to
-stop for breath after all those futile attacks--that he was able at
-night to throw himself on a bundle of straw under this foul roof and
-drink punch brewed from whiskey stolen from the Jews.
-
-For this time no headway was to be made against the devils opposite.
-Not even once as far as their barbed wire defences! So well was their
-artillery posted. To such a raking fire was every moving object exposed
-which came in sight within an area several hundred meters wide!
-
-A tiresome game that--an accursedly tiresome game--and if Gabriel
-Gabrilovitch himself should be one of the victims! He sprang up and
-began to pace with heavy steps the uneven clay floor. He knew of better
-things than that!
-
-Those Petrogradians--look, look!
-
-The slender, willowy, singing girl there in the _Nida_, with that
-smile which was in itself a seduction! She evoked another image in his
-excited fancy. It was his last evening of pleasure in golden Petrograd.
-In a variety cabaret, too.
-
-The stage is already empty, the programme finished. But in a room off
-the stage reserved for the performers and their guests he sees just
-such a piquant little creature take form in the thin smoke clouds of
-his cigarette. Exactly the same smile--acquired in Paris, and then
-carried triumphantly from stage to stage, from banquet to banquet.
-
-The imitation diamonds glitter in the deep corsage of her dress. The
-coquettish curls hang like golden orchids over her ears. The atrophied
-stare of the wide pupils has the fascination of a serpent's eye. Before
-her stands a tall, narrow glass vase, out of which nod the blood-red,
-long-stemmed pinks which he had brought her. He, Gabriel Gabrilovitch!
-
-It is a picture imprinted so vividly on his senses by the warm rush of
-recollection that he thinks he really sees it--not least of all the
-purplish red of the vase of flowers.
-
-They take it easy, those Nevsky Prospekt loungers--they take it easy!
-
-He reaches for the glass--already cold, curse it! Not very long now and
-it will be day again and a new assault, as vain as the others, will
-bring them face to face with death.
-
-A cold draft strikes his neck. He turns around, half angry, to see who
-has entered.
-
-
-II--THE COSSACK LIEUTENANT'S HATRED
-
-"Ah, so!"
-
-It is the sotnik (lieutenant) of a Cossack detachment which has
-received the order to drive the last Jews out of the surrounding
-villages, so that the army can have a free field. The snow, which has
-frozen finger thick on his green overcoat, begins to melt in the close,
-hot air of the room. The small, hard Asiatic eyes shine. The red,
-frosted fists are still clenched, as if they had just beaten somebody.
-
-"One can't be really angry with these fellows," says the colonel to
-himself, with a feeling of soldierly satisfaction.
-
-"They are such splendid beasts."
-
-But he asks aloud:
-
-"Finished?"
-
-The Cossack's laugh is quick and harsh.
-
-"All herded together, Colonel. Nothing is lacking but the Red Sea."
-
-"How many?"
-
-"Several hundred."
-
-"And where are you going to drive them?"
-
-The young lieutenant raises his shoulders slowly, so that the snow on
-them touches and cools his red cheeks.
-
-"I'll have to get an order from you as to that!"
-
-"An order!" cries the colonel. "An order! Now, by all three
-metropolitans! The devil take me if I know!"
-
-The sotnik raises his shoulder again.
-
-"While they're here they will be in our way."
-
-"The vermin," growls the colonel, "always pestering us like----"
-
-"Like others we are on intimate terms with," laughs the Cossack.
-
-"Look there, if you please!" And half jokingly, half disgustedly, he
-points to a black swarm of roaches hurrying like a wagon train from
-behind the stove and making for a crack in the floor near the open door.
-
-"They are emigrating, the vermin," exclaims the colonel; "upon my soul,
-they are."
-
-"Because they are hungry," says the Cossack, with a grin.
-
-"But the Jews. The Jews, those----" curses the colonel.
-
-"Just as black and just as hungry--but good patriots."
-
-The colonel lifts his head, gazes thoughtfully for a while into the
-flickering flame of the slowly melting candle. Then he begins to laugh.
-
-"Why didn't I think of it before? Why didn't I think of it before? Ah,
-Little Brother, what asses we have been!"
-
-The Cossack's eyes snap. He, too, has a plan which in all this orgy of
-bloodthirstiness appeals to him with an even bloodier zest.
-
-"Do you know what we shall do with them--with all these patriots?"
-
-"Drive them together somewhere and sabre them," suggests the sotnik.
-
-"So that they can fill the newspapers again with their tale of
-martyrdom," laughs Gabriel Gabrilovitch, scornfully. "Beware, Little
-Brother, beware! We shall leave that to their countrymen this time."
-
-The blank eyes of the Cossack follow the colonel questioningly--like
-the eyes of a hunting dog.
-
-"So," laughs the latter, softly stroking his cheek. "We'll drive these
-patriots to the Austrian wire entanglements. What do you think? Will
-those people over there shoot down their own subjects?"
-
-"But they are non-combatants, Gabriel Gabrilovitch----"
-
-The young man suppressed the thought before he had put it into words.
-There was something in the voice of his superior which cowered him.
-And, like a hunting dog, he merely listened.
-
-"Don't you see, Little Brother?" continues Gabriel Gabrilovitch,
-rubbing his hands together with satisfaction. "And just because in that
-case they will not fire, we shall rush in on the enemy. We shall have
-cover and can excuse ourselves for using it."
-
-"It would take the devil himself to think of that!" exclaims the
-sotnik, full of submissiveness and admiration.
-
-"I am a good Christian," declares Gabriel Gabrilovitch with bitter
-humor. "And now I must have an intermediary; for, naturally, I must
-inform the enemy so that they will not shoot down so many patriots."
-
-The young Cossack rocked his body as if already in the saddle.
-
-"Won't you permit me to go?"
-
-"Muttonhead! Shall I send one on whose face are the imprints of all
-the Devil's ten fingers? Pick out the youngest, the handsomest and
-the stupidist of the sotnia and send him over. The kind that believes
-anything anybody tells him. Then they over there will believe him. And
-what we are going to do nobody but you and I will know. Well, have you
-any such 'steed of God?'"
-
-The sotnik strikes his body with both hands, smiles and nods. "There is
-a Raskolnik here."
-
-"Is that so, Little Brother?"
-
-Both burst into violent peals of laughter as if overcome by the humor
-of the situation.
-
-
-III--THE PLOT THAT FAILED
-
-They would send the Raskolnik--the sectarian who was prepared to die
-at any moment rather than sin in any particular against the teachings
-of Jesus, who even in war abhorred attacking the enemy and wanted only
-to defend himself--one of these religious enthusiasts who had to be
-driven into military service with a whip. What a joke for these two
-orthodox Slavs to load upon this "steed of God" the bloodguilt of their
-stratagem!
-
-They laugh--laugh till their eyes fill with water.
-
-Half an hour later a young cavalryman trots away into the murky dawn.
-
-The fresh wind of the steppe whistles about his ears. Over his head
-flutters the little white flag, which they have fastened to the top of
-his lance.
-
-"How is it that he has found so much favor in the eyes of his commander
-as to be sent as a parlamentaire to the enemy?"
-
-But he puzzles little about that. He is glad that the poor creatures of
-God who have been driven like mice out of their holes will be allowed
-to go to-morrow over into the camp of their friends. He must be a real
-man, the colonel, even if so far the soldiers have found little good in
-him.
-
-In the east it is getting lighter. Already a silvery wave spreads over
-the plain from the edge of the horizon. By the time he arrives at the
-first entrenchment it will be so light that the enemy can easily see
-the flag on his lance.
-
-"It is cold," he muses. "But yet it is already spring, and where my
-horse steps the snow gives way. Soon the steppe will be green again,
-just as it will be back in Russia."
-
-And in the midst of the deep silence which surrounds him, in sight of
-all the horrible traces which war and death have left upon his pathway,
-there blossoms out of his innocent soul a pure, sweet memory--of home.
-He recalls the straw-covered hut, the calm and mighty waves of the
-distant Don, the peace of the steppe purling like a breath from heaven
-through the tall grasses.
-
-He was only a pious peasant's son--not a Cossack. But now they have put
-him as a supernumerary in a Cossack regiment, and he must go along,
-through all the blood, through all the horror.
-
-With a slight shudder he puts his hand upon the crucifix beneath his
-soldier's coat and crosses himself.
-
-"God grant me His grace!"
-
-On the other side they had caught sight of him. A sentinel advanced to
-meet him. Soon he stands before the Austrian officer.
-
-The latter is a handsome, sturdy man. Everything neat about him,
-although he has lain so long with his men in the trenches. Close up to
-him the soldier stands, so that he can feel the other's breath--but it
-doesn't smell of brandy. The gray eyes hold him fast while he speaks.
-Not a muscle moves. But suddenly he laughs in the messenger's face.
-
-"Good. Now ride back. And say to your colonel that he has miscalculated
-if he believes that I shall not open fire if you try to sneak in behind
-those unfortunates. I know my duty, and should innocent blood be shed
-the blame will rest on you."
-
-He speaks and turns upon his heel. The sentinel leads the dejected
-messenger back to his horse and calls scornfully after him: "Are you
-really so stupid or did you think that we were so stupid?"
-
-The latter makes no answer. But a few steps further on he strips the
-white flag from his lance and throws it in the muck. Then that was the
-colonel's idea. And he will stick to it. At his command they are to
-hide like cowards behind the victims who are to be pushed--as a living
-wall--up to the enemy's trenches!
-
-"They are, of course, only Jews," he says to himself. "But yet--but
-yet----"
-
-Why does he feel that way about it?
-
-Suddenly he realizes.
-
-Like a picture it stands before him.
-
-The sputtering fire about which the half-frozen Jews are huddled
-together--women, children, grizzled old men. Here and there a sentinel
-to guard them. He, too, one of the guards.
-
-
-IV--IN HIS BREAST HIS OWN BULLET
-
-Like shadows they crouch about the fire, rub the freezing hands of the
-children between their own, weep, groan, pray softly. One has prayer
-boxes bound on his brow and on his arms and nods and bows unceasingly,
-so that his shadow dances like a curious grotesque against the light
-of the fire. The Cossacks laugh. He, too, has laughed, carelessly,
-unconcerned.
-
-Laughed until he has suddenly noticed the woman at the side of the
-bearded Jew--with the slumbering child at her breast. Something in that
-sight appealed to him strangely. But then they had summoned him before
-the sotnik. And he had thought of it no more.
-
-How sharply that whole picture stands before him now--and among the
-other details especially these three: The man in prayer, the shivering
-mother bent toward the fire, her head cloth like a veil drawn deep over
-the unconscious, slumbering child.
-
-"Bethlehem," he murmurs reverently, and crosses himself.
-
-And he is going to take part to-day in this infamy--he, a Christian!
-
-Then it must be true what they believe back home. That the Pravoslavine
-is Anti-Christ. And he fights with him--for him--is part of his army.
-Have they then altered the text of the Holy Books? So that some day
-God's word of love will no longer be found in it--the Holy Word spoken
-by Him who lay in the womb of a daughter of the House of David?
-
-It must be so! It must be so! And if till to-day he has doubted it, now
-all is clear. Only Anti-Christ can give such orders.
-
-Shall he return to the camp? Stain his hands, too, with the blood of
-these innocents?
-
-"When the master speaks the servant must hearken," they say back home.
-
-He must obey.
-
-Something flashes in front of him like the flash of a gun.
-
-"A bullet," he thinks.
-
-"Would it were one!" he exclaims in the torment of his soul.
-
-It is only a sun ray which suddenly shoots through the mist. But it has
-shown a poor mortal the right way.
-
-They found the Raskolnik just outside the village--in his breast his
-own bullet, in his right hand the cross. On his lips the smile of peace
-that passeth understanding.
-
-
-
-
-TALE OF THE SAVING OF PARIS
-
-_How a Woman's Wit Averted a Great Disaster_
-
- Little by little the "inner history" of the Great War is coming to
- light. This remarkable story shows how the presence of mind of a
- humble woodman's widow, in the early days of hostilities, led to
- the preservation of the Western Railway of France, on which at that
- time Paris depended for its supplies and the transport of troops.
- Told in the _Wide World_.
-
-
-I--IN NORMANDY--STORY OF OCTAVIE DELACOURT
-
-In a clearing of the Forêt de Lyons, near Martagny, in Normandy,
-and by the side of a barely distinguishable road, stands the rustic
-half-timbered cottage of Octavie Delacourt. A solitary habitation
-indeed, but one well fitted to the mental outlook of a lonely woman--no
-fair young heroine of romance, as some readers may hastily conclude,
-but a widow of over fifty with hair turning a silvery grey. Her
-husband--a forester, and the builder of the little home--had died from
-a fever a year before the war. Childless, she had elected to live on
-there alone, partly through necessity, partly because of the memories
-which the surroundings stirred in her mind whenever she went forth
-to collect sticks for her fire, or when, lying in bed at night, she
-heard the wind in the trees. Twenty years with "her man," twenty years
-of labour in common, had made her a fervent lover of the forest. It
-had become, as it were, her domain. Certainly no one knew better its
-confusing tangle of roads and pathways.
-
-The outbreak of the war naturally had an effect on the mind and habits
-of Octavie Delacourt, but, alone in the world as she was, it affected
-her much less than it had done her friends and acquaintances in the
-neighbouring villages. In her case the war fever took the form of
-restlessness--an eager, insatiable desire to learn the truth about the
-danger which was threatening her dear France.
-
-As the cloud darkened over the country her anxiety for news grew keener
-and keener. It seemed as though her sub-conscious self was aware that
-the tide of invasion was drawing nearer and nearer to the fair fields
-and orchards of Normandy, and that one morning she would wake up to
-find Martagny, Gournay, and Les Andelys in the hands of the Boches. So
-every day, in those early weeks of the war, she was up betimes and,
-having carefully done up her grey tresses and put on a newly-ironed
-blue apron, set forth to one or other of the neighbouring villages,
-where she would be able to read the latest "communiqué" and pick up any
-stray item of news that might filter through from Paris.
-
-About eight o'clock on the morning of September 16th, 1914, Octavie
-Delacourt set out in this way, her destination on this occasion
-being Gournay and the house of an old friend of her husband, a small
-landowner named Rismude. It is a good distance by road from Martagny
-to Gournay, so she decided to take a short cut through the Forêt de
-Lyons. Setting her best foot foremost, she struck off through the trees
-with the swinging stride of a hardy countrywoman, and soon picked up
-a little pathway amidst the undergrowth which she knew would lead
-her in the right direction. After walking for some ten minutes at
-full speed, she came to a part of the forest known as "La Molière,"
-the site of a disused chalk quarry, the gasping white mouth of which
-is partly hidden by dense foliage. It was here that her eye--long
-experienced in woodcraft--noticed something unusual near the path she
-was following: a number of green branches, freshly cut from the trees,
-which someone--apparently in vain--had been trying to make into a fire.
-Stopping in front of the charred remains, she could not suppress the
-utterance of the reflection which sprang to her mind:--
-
-"How stupid to cut green branches for a fire!"
-
-Hardly had the words passed her lips than Octavie felt a heavy hand
-descended on her shoulder. With thumping heart and suddenly blanched
-face she spun half round and beheld her aggressor--a heavy-featured man
-in a strange dress who, with a cynical smile on his thick lips and a
-hard look in his little grey eyes, had noiselessly appeared from behind
-a tree.
-
-"How you frightened me!" exclaimed Octavie, retaining her
-self-possession, in spite of her fright, and endeavouring to shake off
-the leaden fingers which weighed on her slender frame.
-
-But not a word in reply came from the mysterious man, who might have
-been made of cast-iron, so motionless did he stand. Gradually, as
-Octavie Delacourt fell to examining him, the hideous truth began to
-dawn upon her, and her heart almost stopped beating. She had never set
-eyes before on a German soldier; she had never even seen a picture of
-one. But she had heard tell of their uniform, in a vague sort of way,
-and suddenly, one might say instinctively, she recognized the ash-grey
-dress and the round cap of the same colour. How came the wearer of
-these tell-tale clothes to be in her forest, not fifteen miles from Les
-Andelys, and within rifle-shot of her native village of Martagny?
-
-
-II--WAS HE GOING TO BAYONET HER?
-
-The mystery terrified her. However, no trace of fear or the tumult in
-her breast appeared on her face. Her simple peasant logic told her
-that would have been fatal. In the presence of the hidden and perhaps
-imminent danger into which she divined she had stumbled, she told
-herself, with feminine shrewdness, that at all costs she must preserve
-a brave countenance and combat the enemy by craft.
-
-"What do you want with me? Can I be of any service to you? If you have
-lost your way I can set you right. No one knows the forest better than
-I."
-
-She paused and smiled.
-
-The German soldier's only reply was a sort of grunt and a slightly
-relaxed hold on her shoulder. At the same time he led her in the
-direction of a deep excavation, formerly used as a wolf-trap. What was
-he going to do to her? She now noticed that he carried in his right
-hand a bayonet, with which he swished, as they walked along, at the
-tall grass and weeds. Was he going to kill her? She would have turned
-and fled like a hare but for the grip in which she was held. Perhaps,
-after all, she thought, there was greater safety in non-resistance than
-in attempted flight. So she allowed herself to be led to the very edge
-of the excavation before saying to her captor, in a pleading voice:--
-
-"You are not going to do me any harm, are you? I'm only a poor,
-inoffensive woman."
-
-Whilst making this appeal, standing on the edge of what she imagined
-might be her grave, she noticed that the greater part of the hole was
-skilfully hidden by a roof of branches. The next moment she heard the
-man with the bayonet whistle, whereupon the head of a blond, blue-eyed
-giant, also dressed in grey, but with the rank marks of an officer,
-suddenly appeared through the aperture. Words in a gutteral tongue
-passed between the two soldiers. Then the fair-complexioned Boche,
-eyeing her critically, shrugged his shoulders disdainfully, uttered an
-order, and disappeared.
-
-The leaden hand immediately fell from Octavie Delacourt's shoulder and
-she was once more free. Now, however, all her strength seemed to have
-gone from her. The feeling that she had just escaped a very real danger
-robbed her of her desire to flee. Slowly, timidly, like a frightened
-animal, she moved away, with her head slightly turned towards her
-captor, who stood watching her, as a cat will a mouse, his bayonet
-still in his hand and a look of mingled cruelty and regret on his
-coarse, heavy features. A few steps more and he called to her to halt.
-
-"Has he changed his mind?" thought Octavie, seeing him walk towards
-her. No; he intended to do her no harm; all he wanted to do was to take
-her by the hand and lead her in an entirely opposite direction to the
-one she was heading in. This done, he released her.
-
-Once through the trees, and hidden from view, Octavie Delacourt made a
-_détour_ and ran as fast as her legs would carry her to Neuf-Marché.
-At first she thought of returning to Martagny, but the fear of being
-recaptured restrained her. Moreover, she felt that she had now an
-urgent duty to perform--to inform the nearest authorities of her
-discovery. That it foreboded something extremely serious for the
-country she could now no longer doubt for a moment. In her flight she
-had caught sight through an opening in the trees, of a third grey-clad
-soldier, lying flat on his stomach at the edge of the forest and, with
-his rifle close to hand, watching the movements of a peasant guiding
-his plough.
-
-Dupont, the _aubergiste_ of Neuf-Marché, listened to her story with a
-puzzled face. But, though his scepticism was great, he did not allow it
-to get the better of his judgment. "Nothing would astonish him in these
-times," he declared; so off he went in search of the _garde champêtre_,
-one of the keepers of the forest. He was lucky in catching him before
-he went for his leisurely morning round, and brought him to the inn,
-ready to explode with hilarity.
-
-"My poor woman, you must be suffering from illusions," he exclaimed,
-bursting into a roar of laughter. "Prussians in the Forêt de Lyons? No
-more than there are cockchafers on a switch!"
-
-Whilst he hastened to turn to his wine and touch glasses with the
-innkeeper, Octavie, seeing that it would be useless to discuss
-the matter, slipped out without a word and hurried off to the
-_gendarmerie_. Here Quartermaster Crosnier was almost as difficult to
-convince as the _garde champêtre_.
-
-"Prussians at Martagny?" he said, with wrinkled brow and a look of
-doubt in his eyes, as he twisted his moustache. "Are you quite sure?
-You astonish me."
-
-"Yes, I'm quite sure," affirmed Octavie, in an almost supplicating
-voice. "Quite, _quite_ sure. And if you go after them, take care you
-go in force, otherwise they will kill you. There is one Boche, as I've
-told you, at the edge of the wood, ready to fire, and I've no doubt
-there are others also lying in waiting."
-
-"Certainly we shall go and see if there's anything in what you say, my
-good woman," replied the Quartermaster, in a condescending tone, which
-proved to her that he was still undecided whether to accept her story
-for gospel.
-
-However, there was no knowing. So he promised he would see to the
-matter at once. Fraets and Lebas, his _gendarmes_, should accompany him
-into the wood. They would look into the mystery as a matter of duty.
-
-
-III--"BUT FOR A CURSED COUNTRY WOMAN!"
-
-On leaving the constabulary Octavie Delacourt, not wholly satisfied
-that she had set the administrative machinery sufficiently in motion,
-asked herself what more she could do. All at once she thought of the
-post-mistress she knew at Mainneville, a village some three miles off.
-Excellent idea! A post-mistress had both the telegraph and telephone
-at her disposal, and she knew that this official, at any rate, would
-not laugh at her. Pulling herself together once more, she set off at a
-brisk walk--almost a run--in the direction of Mainneville.
-
-There, as she had foreseen, she met with the most sympathetic of
-receptions. Mme. B----, the post-mistress, lost not a moment in
-telephoning to M. Armand Bernard, the Prefect of the Eure, who
-immediately passed on the news to his colleagues of the adjoining
-departments. Within half an hour not a prefect, not a commissary
-of police, not a _gendarme_ with a radius of a hundred miles was
-uninformed. The Germans in the Forêt de Lyons and their accomplices
-were entrapped, as it were, within the meshes of a net.
-
-Octavie Delacourt went to sleep that night content indeed. But she
-little knew what a service she had rendered to France--nothing less,
-in fact, than the saving of the Western Railway line, on which Paris
-depended at that time for its supplies and the transport of troops.
-
-The facts relating to the capture of the Huns in the Forêt de Lyons,
-and those working in conjunction with them, were briefly recorded at
-the time, but, overshadowed by the greater events of those early days
-of the war, their true significance was lost sight of. A Prussian
-captain, a non-commissioned officer, and eleven engineers were
-arrested at Oissel, thanks to the good marksmanship of Sergeant Leroy,
-of the G.V.C. Service, who punctured with rifle-bullets the tyres
-of the motor-cars in which they were fleeing. One of the cars bore
-the plate and number of the prefect of police of Aix-la-Chapelle.
-In a motor-lorry which formed part of the convoy was half a ton of
-explosives.
-
-In the course of his examination the German officer declared that he
-had crossed the departments of the Somme and the Oise without being
-troubled, and that he had come into the Eure with the intention of
-blowing up the Oissel bridge, or, failing this, that of Manoir. He
-added that "but for a cursed countrywoman" whom one of his men had
-caught in the forest, and whom he ought to have "suppressed," he would
-certainly have succeeded.
-
-This happened about three o'clock in the afternoon. Less than an hour
-later it was discovered that the capture had not been made without
-bloodshed. Between the "Molière" quarry and the excavation where the
-blond Hun had appeared to Octavie Delacourt three bodies were found
-stretched on the ground--those of the luckless Quartermaster Crosnier
-and his _gendarmes_, who had been shot almost point-blank when calling
-on the automobilists to surrender.
-
-Octavie Delacourt's presence of mind, bravery, and persistence were
-recognized by the French Government. But the service she rendered was
-infinitely greater than either the praise or the monetary reward--one
-hundred francs!--which she received for having been instrumental in
-preventing the perpetration of an act which might have resulted in
-grave disaster to the capital of France.
-
-
-
-
-HOW IT FEELS TO A CLERGYMAN TO BE TORPEDOED ON A MAN-OF-WAR
-
-_Told by the Rev. G. H. Collier, Chaplain on Board the British Cruiser
-"Cressy"_
-
-
-I--"MY LIFE SPARED IN MIRACULOUS WAY"
-
-As you know, I was on the cruiser _Cressy_ on September 22, 1914, when
-in company with the cruisers _Aboukir_ and _Hogue_ she was torpedoed by
-a German submarine. My life has been spared in a most miraculous way.
-
-About 6:15 a.m. I was awakened by some marines waking their comrades.
-"Get up quick, the _Aboukir_ is sinking."
-
-I tumbled out of my bunk, put on my shoes and slipping my big coat
-over my pajamas I hastened up to the sheltered deck. I should tell you
-that we were proceeding in line formation, the _Hogue_ leading, our
-ship, the _Cressy_, bringing up the rear. We were steaming between six
-to nine knots, and at a distance of about a mile or so apart. When
-I got on deck the _Hogue_ had fallen back on the starboard side of
-the _Aboukir_, while we stood by on the port side, both of us a good
-distance off.
-
-The _Aboukir_ had signalled asking for boats, which, of course, were
-sent off to them. Their ship gradually began to turn turtle, and it was
-an inspiring sight to see the ship's company lined up on the side of
-the ship awaiting the order, "Every man for himself." After a while I
-went down to the quarter deck and began with the others to throw planks
-of wood, etc., overboard.
-
-While doing this the Hogue was hit by a torpedo from a German submarine
-and very quickly settled down. Indeed, no sooner was she hit than her
-quarter deck was below water. She then listed, turned turtle, and in
-about ten minutes had disappeared.
-
-Our captain sent me word to take photographs, and I had taken five when
-I saw the white line of a torpedo approaching us in the starboard side,
-in line with the aft-bridge.
-
-A few shouts heralded her approach, but nothing could be done, as our
-engines were not going, and she bored her hole in our side.
-
-The impact was not so great or so terrible as I should have thought,
-indeed it was a dull thud, and did not even throw me off my feet.
-Previous to this the order to close watertight doors had been given, an
-order which prevented this torpedo doing so much serious damage.
-
-We listed to starboard about 40 degrees, and after a time the ship
-righted herself to about 30 degrees. Everyone was on the look-out for
-submarines, and guns were fired at every suspicious-looking object that
-looked like like a periscope. I am not going to make any assertions,
-as I am much too inexperienced. I was standing by when three guns were
-fired.
-
-The first was fired at what I thought to be a man's head. At any rate
-the shell hit something, for it exploded.
-
-Unfortunately, I was called down from the boat deck then, so did not
-see what ensued, but the gunner says he saw two men pop up from the
-spot after he fired a second shot, and the torpedo lieutenant supports
-his assertion of having hit the submarine.
-
-The second shot I saw (of course, other guns were fired) was at what I
-feel sure was a submarine. She came up, and it was a plucky thing to
-do, amid a mass of struggling men. I do not know if she was hit, but
-I admit I felt a spasm of horror at the damage to our own men in the
-water.
-
-The third shot went right home, and did its work, and I cheered
-heartily with the rest. The Germans evidently attacked us under cover
-of a sailing trawler carrying the Dutch flag. This trawler, after we
-had all been hit, made no attempt at rescue work, a heartless act that
-roused our anger, and the captain of the after 9.2 gun trained his gun
-on her and fired. The shell hit her in the stern and she at once took
-fire.
-
-
-II--"I SAW THE TORPEDO APPROACH"
-
-While this was going on the Germans had fired another torpedo at
-us, but it missed and went astern. Meanwhile several men had swum
-alongside, and we helped them aboard, rubbed them down, pumped water
-out of them, and wrapping them in blankets gave them hot tea. One of
-those rescued was a midshipman. He was taken to the sick bay and after
-drinking his tea, he turned to his commander and said:
-
-"Why shouldn't we get into these cots, sir?"
-
-"Quite right, sonny, jump in." He hadn't been there long when we were
-struck again. The plucky boy jumped out and said, "Look here, sir, I'm
-off," and away he went and jumped over the ship's side, and was picked
-up by a boat some half-an-hour later.
-
-It was this torpedo that settled our fate.
-
-I saw her approaching about 400 yards distant, and she entered the
-ship's side just abaft of the fore-bridge and entered No. 5 boiler
-room. No doubt many poor fellows were killed outright. The ship seemed
-to rise out of the water, settled back and at once listed badly and
-began to turn turtle.
-
-There was no panic whatever. The officers supervised the collecting
-of all woodwork, etc., and the order was then given, "Every man for
-himself."
-
-Our middies were awfully brave and busily set to work to construct a
-small raft with chairs and a boxing dummy. Staff-Surgeon Sawdy came up
-to me, after Dr. Martin had procured me a lifebuoy, and said, "Shall I
-come with you, Padre?" He is a west-country man and you may guess how
-readily I said "Yes."
-
-After a time we had to kneel on the deck and hang on to the side. It
-was just before this that I slipped off my coat and shoes. When the
-ship was at an angle of 75 to 80 degrees, we stepped over the port side
-on to a ledge, and hung on to the chains. A wave caught us and knocked
-us against the side a bit, but not enough to injure us, but with the
-next the ship turned over.
-
-I retained my hold of the chain and the lifebuoy, and when I felt the
-ship steady I let go the chain, and after what seemed a very long
-time came to the surface. Dr. Sawdy had also retained his hold of the
-lifebuoy and we appeared together in the water.
-
-You may not realize how we could do it, but we actually laughed. He
-complained of the length of time below water (I had been keeping him
-down), and to suddenly pop up together, was really funny. We at once
-struck out with our feet (as I can't swim) and succeeded in getting
-away from the ship.
-
-We were soon joined by others, and six of us stuck to our lifebuoys and
-a plank of wood which came floating by. After about ten minutes I began
-to shake badly and my teeth were chattering.
-
-It was a horrible feeling, and I told the doctor I couldn't hang on
-much longer, but he told me--good fellow that he is--to hang on, and
-after a while the shivering passed off, but a sort of numbness set
-in and occasionally we had cramps. To keep the circulation going we
-rubbed each other's legs, or kicked about a bit.
-
-
-III--THE WAY MEN MEET DEATH
-
-The scenes in the water were not so terrible as you may think. Here and
-there men were singing, "It's a Long, Long Way to Tipperary," "We All
-Go the Same Way Home," indeed, one man who joined us actually began
-joking.
-
-The way men met their death was wonderful. They would give a smile to
-their comrades, wish them luck, and slide away quite peacefully without
-a struggle.
-
-Floating spars, etc., occasionally put us in difficulties and several
-of us were badly bruised. It was a strange sight to see one's comrades,
-some fully dressed, even to their caps, others naked, while others like
-myself were clothed only in their pajamas.
-
-Before going into the water I happened to look at my watch and it was
-7:50. It speaks well for an English watch, doesn't it? when I tell you
-it didn't stop till 9:15. This watch and my crucifix I still have.
-
-Well, there we were floating about until 9:45, when we sighted some
-trawlers approaching. It seemed as if they would never come to the
-doctor, a marine, and myself--for we were but three then.
-
-At 10:20 I turned and saw a steam trawler near us and I suppose the
-relief was too much for me, as I became unconscious, so from then till
-1 p.m. I must give information supplied me by the doctor. Becoming
-unconscious, he tells me I released my hold of the plank, but still
-kept my arm around the lifebuoy.
-
-The steam trawler did not see us and headed away in another direction,
-but from behind her came a small cutter. The doctor shouted "If you
-come now you can save the Padre," and come they did, and, thank God,
-saved our lives. They hauled me into the boat and pumped away at me. I
-just remember being conscious for a moment and hearing voices.
-
-We were then put on the Lowestoft trawler, S. S. _Coriandar_, and put
-in the stokehold. It was not until 1 p.m. that I became conscious, a
-most painful awakening and I was very sick. The fishermen had put an
-under flannel over me and given me hot tea. They were indeed good to us.
-
-Our commander was picked up by the same boat and was superintending
-the boats which were in company with the Lowestoft trawler and others
-transferring us to H. M. S. _Lennox_. (They had their reward off the
-Dutch coast, eh?)
-
-We buried one poor fellow there and then, but brought home another.
-After being massaged, I was put to bed, where I remained till 5 p.m.
-until the worst of the soreness had passed off. We were landed at
-Harwich at 8:30. The passage home, I'm told, was not without interest!
-
-An order was given to "clear for action." Those who could, rushed
-on deck to see what was happening, and in the far distance saw an
-aeroplane and a waterplane approaching, but as they put it, "There was
-nothing doing," as they turned out to be British.
-
-On landing we were received at the Great Eastern Hotel, equipped as a
-hospital, by the matron and her staff of Red Cross nurses. After being
-examined by the doctor, and found to have no bones broken, I had my
-first meal since 7 p.m. the previous day, and it was good!
-
-
-
-
-LEON BARBESSE, SLACKER, SOLDIER, HERO
-
-_Told by Fred B. Pitney, War Correspondent_
-
-
-I--"I MET HIM IN THE TRENCHES ON THE SOMME"
-
-This is the story of Léon Barbèsse, a volunteer of France. I met him
-first in the trenches on the Somme. He stood in a first line post,
-where we were halted because the Germans had begun a fierce rain of
-shells on the French lines. They were nervous that day, the Germans.
-All the day and night before there had been a succession of sallies
-from the French trenches. They were really only reconnoitering
-expeditions, but the Germans had come to think each the precursor of an
-attack in force, and every time there was the least sign of activity
-in the French lines the German artillery burst into furious action,
-shelling the French trenches to prevent a sortie. We arrive as one of
-these _rafales_ began, and we were halted to seek shelter.
-
-The best trench is not proof against a real bombardment of heavy
-shells. Parapets crumble in like walls of sand. There is nothing
-reassuring about coming suddenly upon a great gaping hole in what has
-been considered a moment before a solid rampart, a hole still steaming
-from the impact of a white hot shell weighing half a ton. It does not
-add to one's confidence to find that instead of walking quietly along a
-well ordered corridor with a decent, dry plank floor one is crossing a
-miniature mountain chain, sinking suddenly into narrow valleys, waist
-deep in water, rising as suddenly to heights that leave half one's
-body exposed to the full view of the enemy. And to know that those
-valleys and those heights have been caused by the explosion in the
-trench of the shells that are constantly screaming overhead--that is
-the most disconcerting of all.
-
-Such was the position we were in when I first saw Léon Barbèsse. We
-had come to a comparatively quiet spot. The shells whined above us
-or exploded in the barbed wire in front, but they had not found the
-trench. We stopped to take stock, to look about us, to get our breath,
-to straighten our backs and get a new thought in our minds, something
-except where the next shell would land. And standing in front of us
-in the trench, some ten feet away, I saw a bearded soldier with the
-stripes of a sergeant and the ribbon of the _Medaille Militaire_--the
-highest honor any French soldier, from ranking general down, can
-win--and the _Croix de Guerre_ with two palms, meaning that he had been
-mentioned twice for conspicuous bravery in the general orders of the
-army. Despite his beard he was a young man, well under thirty, and he
-stood with a quiet air of confidence and looked at us with a certain
-amusement.
-
-Five minutes later we were all distributed at the bottoms of various
-deep shelters. The shells had begun to fall on the section of trench
-where we were, and we had been ordered underground. I had descended
-eighteen steep steps, a matter of twenty feet, and found myself in a
-little, low celled, earth walled, square chamber, with six bunks in
-double tiers taking up three sides and the narrow door in the fourth
-side. The bearded soldier was in our party. He had preceded me and lent
-me a helping hand down the ladder-like stairs. When we were safe in the
-cave he lighted a candle and pulled up an empty shell box for me to sit
-on.
-
-"You are safe here," he said.
-
-"That is all right," I replied. "I want to know why you smiled at us
-when we came up. We had come across pretty dangerous ground."
-
-"I know you had," he said. "That was why I smiled. You know now
-something more of what it means to be a soldier. You don't know very
-much. You can go back and tell of the narrow escape you had, and you
-need never come again. But for a few minutes, when you were under that
-rain of shells, you knew the glory of war. You prayed. That was why I
-smiled."
-
-
-II--THE CONFESSION OF A SLACKER
-
-It was not exactly what one expects from a man wearing the _Medaille
-Militaire_ and the _Croix de Guerre_ with two palms. There was a
-certain implication in it. It sounded as though he meant that any man
-not in military uniform was a curiosity seeker or a sensation monger.
-I said something to that effect.
-
-"No," he said hastily. "Not at all. Not at all. I only meant you could
-understand now, perhaps what it is that moves men in this, what makes
-them take part in it."
-
-"Most of the men are conscripts," I said. "You are, I suppose."
-
-"No," he answered. "I am a volunteer. I might be at the rear; I might
-even be writing for some paper."
-
-It was a fine answer to my brutality.
-
-"I beg your pardon," I said. "You are a volunteer. Tell me why you are
-here."
-
-"I will tell you my name first," he said. "It is Léon Barbèsse. I was
-a schoolteacher in the centre of France, married, and with a boy four
-years old. The war came and I was called to the colors, as every one
-was called. But I was sent home. My lungs, you know. They are all
-right now, though. A few months of this life and your lungs kill you or
-they get all right. Mine are all right."
-
-He struck himself a heavy blow on the chest and grinned.
-
-"I could not have done that in 1914," he said. "I would have coughed
-for half an hour."
-
-"So I was sent back," he continued, "and I was glad of it. I can't tell
-you how glad. I did not want to go to war. I was afraid. That is the
-truth. I was afraid. And when the doctor said I would not do, I could
-have cheered. The doctor was sorry for me, and I pretended to be sorry,
-also, but not too sorry, for he might have passed me.
-
-"I went home. I was safe. I did not have to fight. I did not have to
-be killed. I did not have to be ashamed, for the doctors had turned me
-back. Well, I was ashamed. My country was in danger. The Germans were
-in France. And I was at home. But I was afraid. There you have it, I
-was ashamed because I would not fight for my country, my country that
-needed me, and I was afraid to fight. I was afraid to be hurt. I was
-afraid to die.
-
-"Do you remember when they called the 1917 class a year ahead of time?
-I went then. I volunteered. God, what a struggle that was! I walked
-the road to the _caserne_ with the sweat running off me. For a year I
-had dreamed nightly of the shells. I had heard them. They had fallen
-around me. I had been wounded. I had felt the impact of the steel on my
-yielding flesh. For a year I had spent my days trying to hide my terror
-from my wife, my friends and my neighbors. And all the time my country
-had called. Fear and shame! Fear and shame! My country called and I was
-afraid to go!
-
-"For a man who loves his country, there is nothing harder than to be
-a coward and know it. I went at last because I could not stand the
-torture of failing to do my duty. No one else knew. I had been sent
-back by the doctors. I was blameless before the community. But I knew
-it was because I was afraid to be hurt, afraid to die. So when they
-called the class 1917 I went.
-
-"They sent me to Verdun. Can you imagine what that meant to me? It was
-in the very midst of the German attack on the left bank of the Meuse. I
-had been drafted into a veteran regiment with a lot of others to help
-fill up the gaps, and I joined just in time to go into the front line.
-
-"You know how the papers were filled at that time with the terrors of
-the Verdun fighting. It was not of the bravery of our troops that I
-read, but of the terrors. I don't know how I ever got into line on the
-day we marched from the rear to go to the front. Everything I did was
-mechanical. We were called before daylight; we had a cup of coffee; we
-were marching along the road.
-
-"I had managed it up to then without giving myself away. True, I talked
-little to my comrades, and probably that saved me. But the morning we
-marched to the front, what saved me then I don't know, except possibly
-because I said nothing. I was unable to speak. I was numb with fear.
-I was sick. My stomach turned. I walked with my head down and my feet
-dragged like great weights.
-
-"You know, at that time you could always hear at Verdun the pounding
-of the big guns. I had heard it for days, while my regiment was in
-repose. I used to go out in the woods by myself and listen to it and
-terrify myself by thinking what it would be like to be under that rain
-of shells. A foolish thing to do, but for more than a year, nearly two
-years, I had been under the obsession of my fear. I could no longer
-control it."
-
-
-III--"WE WERE MARCHING TO INFERNO"
-
-"And then we were on the road, marching toward that inferno. By
-imperceptible degrees the pounding grew louder. I moved mechanically
-because I was in the ranks, with a man on each side of me and one
-in front and one behind. I had to go on. My will could not control
-my movements. I was part of a machine. The machine went toward the
-pounding and I went with it. That was all, except that once I vomited.
-
-"Mind you, I had never really heard a shell, only the distant sound of
-the explosions. We had been marching nearly two hours, when I heard my
-first shell. There was a long, thin whine some place in the air. It was
-a new sound, and it was so strange to me that I raised my head for the
-first time since we started on the march. The man next to me laughed.
-
-"'A shell,' he said.
-
-"I looked all around me. I tried to stop to see the path of that queer
-whine, but the man behind me prodded me on. Several of them laughed.
-
-"'You will hear plenty more,' they said.
-
-"They thought I was eager for them.
-
-"The shells began to come at regular intervals, all following the same
-path with the same peculiar whine. I tried every time to see them.
-
-"'The Boches are hunting for a battery over on our left,' the veterans
-said. There was no change in the pace. I was saying to myself, 'I have
-really heard a shell, and I did not run.'
-
-"It was very queer to me; I tried to think it out. I was afraid. I knew
-I was afraid. But I had not run. I began to wonder just how afraid I
-was, and I wanted to know. I had heard the shell and my curiosity was
-aroused. I wanted to go on and see how far I would go before my fear
-overcame me. With every one of their long whines I studied myself to
-see if I would run, then when I continued marching with the regiment I
-would say:
-
-"'Not yet; perhaps the next time. Certainly, there is a limit beyond
-which I will not go.'
-
-"It was as though I were studying some other man. There was the me who
-was afraid and knew it, and the me who watched to see how afraid I was.
-
-"Eleven o'clock came and we stopped for luncheon. We stacked our
-arms beside the road and eased off our equipment. I felt wonderfully
-relieved that I had got that far. I was not really hungry, because I
-was afraid, but I was enough master of myself to know that I must eat,
-and to force myself to do so.
-
-"While we waited there shells began to fall close to us--close enough
-so that we could hear the explosion after the whine. Before we had only
-heard the whine. The first one made me jump. The whine was loud and
-strong and the explosion came quick and sharp. With the second I was
-strong enough to turn and look at the cloud of earth, smoke and rocks.
-I was doing pretty well. A shell fell short of us. Some of the men
-looked up and saw an aeroplane sailing around over our heads.
-
-"'Better get out of here,' they said. 'That is a Boche. He is giving
-our range to his battery.' A shell dropped up near the head of the
-line, almost in the road. I heard no orders, but we all gathered up our
-rifles and equipment and marched off at quick step.
-
-"I had looked straight in the face of the shell that fell in the
-field beside us. It was another triumph for me. I had looked at it,
-shivering, to be sure, wondering if I would run. But I had not run.
-There was still a little further to go to pursue my investigation and
-find out how much I could stand before I ran."
-
-My curiosity got the better of me.
-
-"Have you found out yet?" I asked.
-
-"I am coming to that," he replied. "We went on up that road at the
-quick step until we came to the entrance of a _boyau_ leading to the
-supporting trenches. Shells fell around us all the time. The Boche
-aeroplane was still trying to regulate the fire of its battery, and
-there was a maddening wait at the mouth of the _boyau_ until it came
-time for us to go in. We had been marching in the road four abreast,
-but we had to go into the _boyau_ single file. My platoon was well
-toward the rear, and that made us wait. We had nothing to do but stand
-in the road and watch the shells and wait our turn."
-
-
-IV--"HOW I CONQUERED MY FEAR"
-
-"I tried to follow the course of every shell. My head was continually
-twisting. I jumped at every explosion. I could not control the muscles
-of my back and shoulders. But I stepped out of the line and walked a
-little way into the field, toward the shells. I wanted to see if I
-could do it. I got close enough so that I could hear a piece of shell
-whiz past my ear. Then I waited for another piece. It was a hard job,
-but I waited, leaning on my rifle and looking at the ground a little
-way in front of me, where the last shell had exploded. If I had moved
-my eyes from that spot I could not have stayed. Not until the third one
-came did I hear another piece of shell. The others had struck too far
-to one side.
-
-"'Now I can go back,' I said to myself. But I walked very fast going
-back.
-
-"In the _boyau_ it was not so bad. A French _avion_ had come up and
-chased away the Boche.
-
-"I thought of the things I had done and hoped that having done them
-once I could do them again. But I was not sure. I was afraid. I knew
-that. I have always been afraid, and there has always been the question
-in my mind if my fear would conquer or if I would conquer my fear.
-
-"There was the time when it became necessary to take a message from
-our support trenches to our advanced lines in the _Bois des Corbeaux_.
-There was a _tir de barrage_ to be crossed and volunteers were called
-for. I was chosen.
-
-"By that time I had formed the theory that a man can do anything if
-his duty demands it of him and he will keep that in his mind. It was a
-part of the thought that came to me that first day in the _boyau_ and
-I developed it later in the long nights. The first day I had no really
-coherent thoughts, only a great fear of my own fear. Afterward I found
-that I could control it, if there was a reason. And then I found that
-the reason was France.
-
-"Of course, you may say that it was France that made me volunteer, but
-I do not think so. I think it was shame--shame that I feared to go when
-others went. With all the good reasons that I had for not going, with
-the doctor's word, I knew, nevertheless, it was fear that kept me back.
-It was because I could not tell the truth to my wife and friends and
-neighbours that I went.
-
-"Only afterward did I find out that a great duty will take a man any
-place with a calm mind. I stood against German attacks. I was in
-counter attacks. I lay out in shell holes, helping to hold a line
-where there were no trenches. I never forgot my fear, but I thought of
-France, my country, my duty; and though I shivered and the cold sweat
-rolled off me, I held steady.
-
-"Have you ever seen a _tir de barrage_? You can walk up to it and draw
-a line with a surveyor's chain on the ground, marking exactly the
-limit where the shells fall, and all beyond that line will be a mass of
-boiling earth, like waves in a storm dashing on a rocky coast. There
-is no interval between the explosions. They are constant, unremitting,
-one following so closely on another that their detonations mingle in a
-steady roar."
-
-
-V--"I DASHED FORWARD INTO EXPLODING SHELLS"
-
-"I came within fifty yards of the _tir de barrage_ and stopped to watch
-it and try to mark out a path. But no path was possible. No sooner was
-one chosen than it was wiped out, all the little landmarks gone, the
-whole face of the ground changed by a new rain of shells. My heart
-sank. My stomach went suddenly empty. I knew that I had reached the
-limit beyond which I could not go. I had found the point where my fear
-was greater than my duty. I lay flat down on the earth. I do not know
-how long I lay. I thought of nothing. There was only a horrible blank
-fear.
-
-"And then I found that unconsciously, not knowing it, I was digging
-my fingers into the ground, clutching the roots of grass and dragging
-myself into the _tir de barrage_. I might as well have been dragging
-myself the other way, but I had lain down with my face toward my duty.
-
-"When I made that discovery I got to my feet and stood upright for a
-second, not more, only time to say, 'I must not give myself time to
-think,' and dashed forward into the exploding shells. Such a race as
-that is like the last steps of a dying horse, one that has broken a
-blood vessel, straining for the wire, and plunges on his face in the
-midst of his stride. I floundered blindly into the raw earth and fell
-again on my face. But this time my mind was working. There was only
-one thing for me to do, and I knew it. That was to go on. I crawled
-forward on my hands and knees. I could not stand. It would be certain
-death. Twenty times I was knocked flat, my wind gone, by the explosion
-of a shell almost beside me. But I crawled on. I did not know if I had
-been hit. I thought I had. Two hundred yards I crawled through the _tir
-de barrage_ and then I got to our lines. They gave me the _Medaille
-Militaire_ for that.
-
-"You asked me why I smiled when you came up to us in the trench. I was
-wondering what you had to take you through the shells. I thought of
-my own struggles. I wondered if you had any of the thoughts that have
-crowded in on me under fire. And I smiled."
-
-The next time I saw him was in a hospital back of the Somme, one of
-the hospitals where wounded soldiers stay only a few hours, unless
-they are too badly hurt to be moved on. He was one of those who could
-not be moved. He lay with closed eyes, asleep or exhausted--more
-likely exhausted--propped up a little with pillows behind his head and
-shoulders. His tunic hung beside his cot, and on it there was a new
-ribbon, the _Legion d'Honneur_. I stopped before him.
-
-"There is little chance for him," the doctor said.
-
-"What did he do?" I asked.
-
-"Led his company into the Park of Deniécourt, when all the officers
-were gone," replied the doctor. "They got a footing in the park and
-stuck there for two days, because he would not give up, until we made
-a new attack and got the park, the château and the village. He had
-been wounded the first day, but he would not give up. He has received
-the _Legion d'Honneur_ and been made a sous-lieutenant, but he will
-probably never know it."
-
-I saw him once more. This time was on the boulevards of Paris. His
-left sleeve was pinned across his breast and above it were his three
-medals, from left to right the _Croix de Guerre_, now with three palms;
-the _Medaille Militaire_ and the _Legion d'Honneur_. He was having a
-look at Paris, he told me, while he waited for the train to take him
-home to the centre of France, to his wife and boy.
-
-"I can tell them now that I was afraid," he said. (Told in the _New
-York Tribune_.)
-
-
-
-
-THE DESERTER--A BELGIAN INCIDENT
-
-_Told by Edward Eyre Hunt, formerly Antwerp Delegate of the American
-Commission for Relief in Belgium_
-
-
-I--STORY OF AN AMERICAN AT THE BARONIAL CASTLE
-
-It was five o'clock in the morning. A riotous sunrise deluged the
-Campine as I slipped into my clothes and ran down the narrow, twisting
-tower-stair to keep a secret tryst with the _Baas_, or overseer. Little
-slits in the tower wall, cut for mediæval archers, let in the arrows
-of the sun; and as I ran through the gloomy armory and the high-roofed
-Flemish dining hall--stripped of their treasure of old pikes, swords,
-crossbars, and blunderbusses by the diligent Germans--out to the
-causeway, and over the creaking drawbridge on my way to the stables and
-the dismantled brewery, I imagined myself an escaped prisoner from the
-donjons of Château Drie Toren. In truth, I was running away from Baron
-van Steen's week-end house-party for a breath of rustic air while the
-others slept.
-
-The stables, tool sheds, hostlers' barracks, bake-oven, and brewery
-were thatch roofed and walled with brick, toned to a claret-red,
-pierced with small windows and heavy oaken doors. The doors were banded
-with the baronial colors--blue stripes, alternating with yellow, like
-the stripes on a barber pole--and in the centre of the hollow square of
-farm buildings fumed a mammoth brown manure pile. A smell of fresh cut
-hay and the warm smell of animals clung about the stables, and I heard
-the watch-dog rattle his chain and sniff at the door as I passed.
-
-I found the Baas standing before his door, his face wrinkled with
-pleasure, his cap in his hand. Behind him his wife peered out at us,
-wiping her fat hands on her skirts, and two half-grown children stared
-from the nearest window. The Baas and his wife were the parents of
-sixteen children!
-
-"Good day, mynheer!" every one shouted in chorus.
-
-"Good day, madame; good day, Baas." (I used the Flemish title for
-overseer--the word from which has come our much-abused word "Boss.")
-"I'm a deserter this morning: the rest of the Baron's party sleeps."
-
-"Ah, so," laughed the wife. "Mynheer is like the German soldiers who
-desert by dozens nowadays. And would your Honor hide in the forest like
-them--like the Germans?"
-
-"To be sure. The Baas is to show me the deepest coverts, where mynheer
-the Baron will never find me more."
-
-We laughed and passed on. A girl with a neckyoke and full milk pails
-came by from the dairy; nodding faces appeared at the windows of the
-farm buildings as we walked toward the woods; bees sped in the air from
-conical straw hives close to our path; and in a few minutes we were
-threading our way through a nursery of young pines, tilled like corn
-rows in Kansas, and all of equal age.
-
-"Monsieur, there is a soul in trees," said the Baas, affectionately
-patting an ancient linden on the border of the old forest. The Baas was
-a man from the Province of Liège, and he preferred to speak French with
-me rather than Flemish. He had, too, a Walloon lightness of wit which
-went sometimes incongruously with his heavy frame, as when he said to
-me once when we were debating the joys of youth versus age, "To be old
-has its advantages, monsieur. One can then be virtuous, and it is not
-hard."
-
-"There is a soul in trees," he repeated. "All together the trees have
-a soul. A forest is one spirit. These trees are old men and old women,
-very patient and kindly and sluggish of blood. They nod their heads in
-the wind like peasants over a stove. And they talk. Sometimes I think
-I can understand their talk--very wise and patient and slow. Men hurry
-apart, monsieur, but the trees remain together like old married people
-and watch their children grow up around them.
-
-"Here,"--we had turned down a path and were in the fringes of another
-forest of small pines--"here the Germans have taken trees for their
-fortifications, slashed and cut, and those trees that are left are like
-wounded soldiers: they have arms too long or too short, heads smashed;
-feet uprooted, and yet they wish to live, because they are one spirit."
-
-"What is this?" I demanded abruptly; for at my feet yawned a little
-pit, with lumpy clay still fresh about it and a fallen cross lying half
-hidden in the weeds.
-
-"Ho, that? It is the grave of a German," said the Baas heartily.
-He spat into the raw pit. "The German has been taken away, but the
-children of Drie Toren are still afraid. They will not come by this
-path, on account of the dead _Deutscher_."
-
-His foot crushed the rude cross as he talked, and we walked on. But
-I was vaguely troubled. That vile pit and the thought of what it had
-contained had spoiled my promenade. As I had found on a thousand other
-occasions, my freedom in Belgium was only a fiction. The war could not
-be forgotten, even for an hour.
-
-A partridge thundered up at our feet and rocketed to earth again beyond
-the protecting pines. In a little glade we surprised four young rabbits
-together at breakfast. The Baas laid his hand lightly on my arm. "It
-is sad, monsieur, isn't it?" he said. "The poachers steal right and
-left nowadays. The _gardes champêtres_ are no longer armed, so the
-thieves do as they will. There is more pheasant in the city markets
-than chicken, and more rabbit than veal. The game will soon be gone,
-like our horses and cattle.
-
-"You remember, monsieur, the sand dunes by Blankenberghe and Knocke on
-the Belgian coast? Ah, the rabbits that used to be in those dunes! But
-now the firing of cannon has driven them all away."
-
-A silence fell upon us both. The thickets grew denser, and we pushed
-our way slowly toward the deeper coverts. I found myself thinking of
-the little crosses along the seaside dunes which marked where greater
-game than rabbits had fallen--the graves of men--the biggest game on
-earth--the shallow pits and the frail wooden crosses, like that which
-the Baas's leather boot had crushed a half hour before.
-
-
-II--"WE FOUND A STARVING GERMAN"
-
-We had reached the deepest woods, when a gasping, choking cry stopped
-us short. The thicket directly before us stirred and then lay still
-as death. The cry had been horrible as a Banshee's wail, and as
-mysterious, but it was not the cry of an animal; it was human, and it
-came from a human being in agony. The Baas crossed himself swiftly and
-leaped forward, and instantly we had parted the protecting bushes and
-were looking down on a man lying flat on the ground--a spectre with
-a thin white face, chattering teeth, enormous frightened eyes, and a
-filthy, much worn German uniform.
-
-"What are you doing here?" I demanded.
-
-The soldier did not answer, he did not rise, he lay motionless and
-hideous like a beast. Then I caught sight of his left ankle, enormously
-swollen and wrapped in rags, and his hands--they were thin as sticks.
-The man was helpless, and he was starving.
-
-And now came a strange thing. We two walked slowly around the man on
-the ground as if he were a wild creature caught in a snare. We felt no
-pity or astonishment; only curiosity. Utterly unemotionally we took
-note of him and his surroundings. He had no gun, no knife, and no
-blankets. He lay on some broken boughs, and he seemed to have covered
-himself with boughs at night. The wild, haggard eyes turned in their
-sockets and watched us as we moved, but otherwise no part of the man
-stirred. He seemed transfixed, frozen in an agony of fear and horror.
-
-"Ashes! He has had a fire here, monsieur, but it was days ago." At the
-man's feet the Baas had discovered the remnants of a little fire. "Holy
-blue!" he added in astonishment, "he has eaten these!"
-
-A pile of small green twigs lay near the fire. The bark had been chewed
-from them!
-
-A buzzing swarm of flies, disturbed by our investigations, rotated in
-the air, and a faint, bad odor hung about the place, indescribably
-stale and filthy.
-
-At the end of our search we turned again to the man on the ground.
-"Who are you? What are you doing here?" I demanded again. There was no
-answer. "Baas, have you a flask?"
-
-The old man slowly drew a little leather-clad bottle from his breast
-pocket and passed it to me in silence. He offered it with obvious
-reluctance, and watched jealously as I knelt and dropped a little
-stream of liquid between the parted lips of the creature on the ground.
-The man's lips sucked inward, his throat choked at the raw liquor,
-he opened his mouth wide and gasped horribly for breath, his knees
-twitched, and his wrists trembled as if he were dying. Then the parched
-mouth tried to form words; it could only grimace.
-
-For a moment I felt a mad impulse to leap on that moving mouth and
-crush it into stillness; such an impulse as makes a hunter wring the
-neck of a wounded bird. Instead, I continued dropping the stinging
-liquor and listening.
-
-Then came the first word. "More!" the black lips begged, and I emptied
-the flask into them. The Baas sighed plaintively. "German?" the soldier
-whispered.
-
-"No. American," I answered.
-
-"The other one?"
-
-"Belgian."
-
-The frightened eyes closed in evident relief. The man seemed to sleep.
-
-"But you?" I asked.
-
-"I'm German--a soldier," he said.
-
-"Lost?"
-
-"Missing." He used the German word _vermisst_--the word employed in the
-official lists of losses to designate the wounded or dead who are not
-recovered, and those lost by capture or desertion.
-
-"You understand, Baas?"
-
-"No, monsieur."
-
-"He says he is a German soldier--a deserter, I suppose, trying to make
-his way over the frontier to Holland. And he is starving."
-
-The Baas's face became a battle-ground of emotions. His kindly eyes
-glared merrily, his lips twisted until his beard seemed to spread
-to twice its natural width. Instantly his face became grave again,
-then puzzled, even anxious. A stream of invective and imprecation in
-mingled French and Flemish poured from his troubled lips, and he
-stamped his feet vigorously.
-
-"He can't stay here," I concluded.
-
-"It is death to help him," said the Baas.
-
-"For you, yes; for me, no. The Germans can only disgrace me as a member
-of the Relief Commission. They cannot kill me."
-
-"He must not be left to die here, monsieur."
-
-"The Germans will probably search your house if we take him there."
-
-"He may betray us if we help him."
-
-"That is possible. But you see he is very weak--almost dead."
-
-"He may be a spy."
-
-"That again is possible. But see! He has eaten twigs!"
-
-"He is a damned pig of a German!"
-
-"But you do not feed even pigs on sticks and leaves."
-
-"I am afraid, monsieur."
-
-"So am I, Baas. Yet you must decide, and not I. It is much more
-dangerous for you than for me."
-
-
-III--THE DESERTER'S LAST HOUR
-
-We stared into each other's eyes, trying to guess each other's
-thoughts. Every one in Belgium knows that the German army sows its
-informers everywhere. We could not even trust each other in that
-stricken country. Deserters and traitors were tracked down like dogs.
-Any one who gave aid or comfort to such persons did so at the risk of
-his life. It is said that pretended deserters deliberately trapped
-Belgians into aiding them, and then betrayed their hosts. Something of
-the sort was hinted in the famous case of Miss Edith Cavell. Knowledge,
-then, bade us be cautious: instinct alone bade us be kind.
-
-The Baas's wide eyes turned again to the creature on the ground, and he
-sighed plaintively. "Monsieur," he began, in a very low, gentle voice,
-"I will help him. Give me my flask and I will go for food and drink.
-Then we must plan. Does it please you to remain here?"
-
-"I shall stay here with him."
-
-"Good! I will go."
-
-I knelt beside the soldier and chafed his filthy hands until blood
-flowed again in his dry veins. The swollen pupils of his heavy eyes
-brightened. He talked continuously in a thin trickling whisper--a
-patter of information about dinners he had eaten, wines he had drunk,
-his military service, his hardships, and his physical and mental
-sensations. I had read of victims of scurvy in the Arctic snows
-dreaming and talking day and night of food, only of food. So it was
-with the starving soldier. The liquor had made him slightly delirious,
-and he babbled on and on.
-
-His broken ankle pained him. When I moved him about to rest it, his
-lightness astonished me. The man had been large and heavy; he was
-shrunken to a bag of bones. His uniform hung about him like a sack, and
-it seemed as if the slightest jar would snap his arms and legs. Tears
-welled under his heavy, dirty eyelids. "Mother! Mother!" he whispered
-once. "Art thou there? Mother!" Then as his eyes again cleared and he
-saw the trees interarched above him--the trees which the Baas had told
-me were one spirit; the grim, silent, sepulchral trees; the haunted,
-malignant trees which had wooed him with their shelter and then broken
-him and starved him; the trees beneath which his forest-dwelling
-ancestors had cowered for thousands of years and to which they had
-offered human sacrifices--he broke down and sobbed horribly. "She is
-not here! She is not here! No, she is not here!" he repeated over and
-over again.
-
-
-IV--"WE BURIED HIM IN THE PIT"
-
-When the Baas returned, we covered the deserter with our coats and
-fed him. Perhaps we did wrong to give him food, although I think now
-that he was doomed before we found him. We did our best, but it was
-not enough. In less than an hour, after a horrible spell of vomiting,
-the poor man was beyond all help of ours. His eyes rolled desperately,
-his breath came in horrid gasps, and he grew rigid like a man in an
-epileptic fit.
-
-We tore open the breast of his uniform to ease his labored breathing.
-A metal identification disk hung on a cord from about his neck over
-a chest which was like a wicker-work of ribs. His belly was sunken
-until one almost saw the spinal column through it. His tortured lungs
-subsided little by little, the terrifying sound of his breathing sank
-to nothing, his head thrust far back and over to the right side, his
-arms stiffened slowly, his mouth fell open.
-
-We watched, as if fascinated, the pulsing vein in his emaciated neck,
-still pumping blood through a body which had ceased to breathe. The top
-of the blood column at last appeared, like mercury in a thermometer. It
-fell half an inch with each stroke of the famished heart. It reached
-the base of the neck and sank from sight, and still we stared and
-stared. The man was dead, yet I seemed to have an awful vision of
-billions of sentient cells, billions of little selfish lives which had
-made up his life, fighting, choking, starving to death within that
-cooling clay.
-
-The Baas bent his head, uncovered, and crossed himself. With a quick
-stooping motion, he closed the wide open eyes and straightened the bent
-limbs. Then he rose to his full height and looked at me sadly. "This
-man had a mother, monsieur," he said. "We must forget the rest."
-
-In the pit where the other German had lain we buried the body of the
-deserter, and we found and repaired the little lath cross and set it up
-at the grave's head. But first I took from about the neck of the corpse
-the oval medallion which told the man's name and regimental number. It
-was a silver medal, finer than those usually worn by privates in the
-German army. I have it by me as I write, and on it is etched the brave
-sentence, "God shield you from all dangers of warfare, and render you
-back to us safe and victorious!"
-
-I was late for breakfast at the Château, but Van Steen kindly made room
-for me at his right hand. "Aha, monsieur!" he called gaily, "we thought
-you were helping to find the deserter."
-
-"Wha-what, monsieur le Baron?" I stuttered in amazement.
-
-"The German deserter. A file of soldiers woke us up at seven o'clock,
-inquiring for one of their men who ran away from Mons a month ago. They
-are searching the stables and the forest. They have traced him here to
-our commune. I hope they catch him!"
-
-My fingers clutched the silver disk in my pocket. "I think they will
-not catch him, messieurs. He ran away a month ago, you say?"
-
-"A month ago.... But it is nothing to us, eh? Let us eat our
-breakfasts." The Baron bowed grandly to me. "Monsieur le Délégue," he
-began in his smooth, formal voice, "once again we remind ourselves
-that it is thanks to you and the generous American people that we have
-bread. It is thanks to you that our noble Belgium is not starving....
-Eh bien! Let us eat our breakfasts."
-
-And so we did.
-
-(Told in the _Red Cross Magazine_.)
-
-
-
-
-GRIM HUMOR OF THE TRENCHES
-
-_As Seen by Patrick Corcoran, of the Royal Engineers_
-
- Patrick Corcoran, of the Royal Engineers, on leave in New York,
- gives a picture in which the monotony of slaughter is relieved
- by wagers among the men and pranks with a football as the charge
- begins. Told in the _New York World_.
-
-
-I--AN IRISHMAN TELLS HIS TALE
-
-"To the German soldier war is a serious business. To the Frenchman it
-is sublime devotion. To the Englishman it is bully sport."
-
-This from Capt. Patrick Corcoran of the Royal Engineers, hero of a
-dozen "Somewheres" in France, twice wounded and on permanent leave in
-New York City.
-
-"And to the Irishman?" I asked.
-
-"Fighting always was the Irishman's great amusement," he said. "The
-English are good sports, but they never did get the fun out of their
-fun that the Irish do."
-
- * * * * *
-
-Fun in the trenches! With shells dropping all around and blowing the
-bodies of your comrades into red fragments! What do the soldiers do, I
-wondered, when this is happening?
-
-The Frenchmen sing, this captain told me. Not to keep up their courage,
-but joyously, exultantly.
-
-"And the British?"
-
-"Sure, they lay bets on what the next shell will do."
-
- * * * * *
-
-"The 'sausages' are the fine toys," the captain went on. "The Boche
-call 'em minnewieffers, but they look like sausages. They always come
-with a series of whoops, and you can tell almost exactly where they're
-going to hit. Then they sit down and rest five seconds before they
-explode; they muss things up a little sometimes, but they're decent
-about it.
-
-"But the whizz-bangs--nobody loves a whizz-bang. You can't even hear
-them coming. You never have time to place a bet. They just whizz and
-bang in the same breath; and if you happen to be conscious after that,
-you help to bandage."
-
- * * * * *
-
-Capt. Corcoran enlisted as a private. I wondered how he came to get his
-commission.
-
-"So did I," he said. "I was carrying despatches to different places
-within our sector; couldn't go to another sector without special
-orders. But one day I was asked to take a despatch to another sector
-and I took it. When I came back, they made me a lieutenant. Nothing at
-all had happened, and I couldn't understand it. I didn't have any pull
-that I knew of; and besides, pulls don't count nowadays.
-
-"They told me a while later," he added, "that I was the seventh man
-sent out with that despatch. The first six were killed."
-
-
-II--"I WAS IN A CAVE ON CHRISTMAS EVE"
-
-It was nearing Christmas when I met Capt. Corcoran. He is a genial
-and, I felt sure, a rather sentimental soul; but his matter-of-fact
-conversation about matter-of-fact human slaughter was altogether
-chilling. So I asked him about Christmas in the trenches.
-
-"I spent last Christmas at Loos," he said. Loos, one of the worst of
-slaughter pens! I grew expectant.
-
-"I was sapping," he said. "Part of an engineer's duties are the
-extension of deep underground passages toward the enemy's lines, laying
-mines under 'No Man's Land' and listening, if possible, for signs of
-activity on the other side.
-
-"I was sapping--Christmas Eve. We were down thirty-five feet, in a
-little cave about nine by four. There were three of us. Along toward
-midnight a big shell landed right, and we were buried. We were buried
-thirteen hours. One of the boys lost his mind, but they dug us out
-Christmas afternoon."
-
-"It wouldn't have been so bad," he added, "if we had only had to wait.
-But we could hear the Boche sapping just a few feet away and we hated
-like everything to be mined and blown up down there. You don't mind
-it when you're out in the open air, but you get nervous in a fix like
-that."
-
-"It must have been a merry Christmas after all--just to get out," I
-remarked.
-
-"No," he said. "Something happened that got on my nerves. I went as
-soon as I could to get my Christmas mail--wanted to see what Santa
-Claus had brought--and he didn't bring me a blessed thing but a bill
-for thirty pounds."
-
- * * * * *
-
-I have hoped for a reaction against war on the part of the troops--a
-psychological revulsion, in time, against the long-drawn-out killing. I
-tried to present my theory to the captain, but he didn't seem to grasp
-it.
-
-"Everybody's nervous," he said, "for the first day or two--like a horse
-just in from the quiet country being driven through your city streets.
-But, sure, if he was going to shy at the 'Elevated,' he'd do it the
-first week. After that, he gets used to the noise and he'd be nervous
-without it. 'Tis so with a soldier. He's glad to get wounded for a
-change, and be sent back home; but then he gets to missing the noise
-of the whizz-bangs and the coal boxes and the darling little sausages,
-and he isn't easy until he gets into the game again."
-
-"But the horrors of hand-to-hand fighting," I protested. "How can
-anybody go through that and come out sane?"
-
-"'Tis simple," he said. "You know you've got to get your man, or he'll
-get you."
-
-"Get him? How?"
-
-"With whatever you've got. Maybe your bayonet. Maybe your knife. Maybe
-nothing but your fists and teeth."
-
-I tried to picture youths advancing under the smoke of artillery,
-through fields mowed by machine guns, dropping a moment into craters
-ploughed out by giant shells, creeping out under other curtains of
-smoke and reaching at last that other line of youths--then the thrust,
-the stab or the fight to the death with teeth and claws. I tried to
-picture young husbands and fathers and lovers, and even jolly good
-fellows, getting used to this--but I failed. I am an incorrigible
-mollycoddle.
-
- * * * * *
-
-"What is the war doing to the soldiers?" I asked. "How is it changing
-them most?"
-
-"Making men of them," said the captain. "They came out little
-pasty-faced clerks with no lungs, no muscle, no nerve and no vision.
-Now they've seen life--and death--and aren't afraid of either. They
-have muscles and nerves of iron, and a man's outlook on life. They'll
-never be mere clerks or mere Londoners again."
-
- * * * * *
-
-Capt. Corcoran doesn't reminisce. He doesn't romance. Getting a war
-story from him is hard newspaper work; not that he isn't willing to
-give information, but war conditions are no longer a novelty in Europe,
-and heroes are so common that their stories are no longer interesting.
-Little by little, I learned the following facts about his record, which
-did not seem at all extraordinary to him:
-
-He fought in the battles of the Aisne, Pepereign, Festubert, Hooge,
-St. Eloi, Neuve Chapelle, Loos and Pommier. He was wounded at Neuve
-Chapelle, sent to England, recovered and insisted on going back. He was
-wounded again at Pommier last February, two miles back of the line,
-when a stray shell fragment struck him in the back. The force of it
-hurled him to the ground in the midst of some barbed wire entanglements
-that caught in his forehead and tore back his scalp to the crown. A
-comrade clapped a cap upon his head to hold the scalp in place while he
-was carried to the hospital. His recovery amazed the surgeons.
-
-Once he broke military rules by staying away from his billet all night.
-That night a shell struck the billet and killed his partner with whom
-he had been sleeping for months.
-
-At another time, a shell split a house in which he was installing
-signal apparatus and killed half a dozen telegraph clerks with whom he
-had just been talking. He was uninjured.
-
-
-III--"EVERYBODY IS A HERO"
-
-"Heroes," he mused. "I suppose everybody is a hero after he has got
-on to the knack of heroism. You don't call a man a hero because he
-rushes fearlessly across Fifth Avenue; but to a person who has never
-seen anything busier than a country road, the act looks heroic. It's
-something the same with No Man's Land. I have a friend, a doctor, who
-got a D.S.O. for going out on No Man's Land to bandage up some wounded
-comrades. He didn't know he was doing anything heroic. They needed
-care; they couldn't come in, so he went out--that's all.
-
-"It was different with O'Leary. He went out for the fun of the thing
-and got eighteen Germans."
-
-The captain spoke of Private Michael O'Leary, V. C., who won the
-coveted decorations for this particular joke. It happened in the sector
-where Capt. Corcoran was stationed and he was well acquainted with the
-details.
-
-"O'Leary had been betting on the 'sausages' for several days," he said,
-"and he was bored. He wanted some real fun and let everybody know he
-was in the mood.
-
-"Betcha can't go across and bring back a Boche," somebody suggested.
-O'Leary sprung from the trench and went. In a second he was lost in the
-darkness and in half a minute the boys heard him yelling like a demon
-for help. Nobody could ever figure out how he did it--he must have
-brained the sentinel and disarmed the others while they were asleep.
-But there he was, with the arms of eighteen of them piled up before
-him, yelling back to the British trenches to come over and get the men.
-Of course, the boys answered his call and brought the whole eighteen
-back to the British lines.
-
-"You see, the Germans, with all their efficiency, aren't used to that
-kind of fighting. They're always so darn serious about it. They're
-good soldiers but they don't have any fun. When they see us come over
-kicking a football ahead of the charge, they don't seem to know what to
-make of it. We do it sometimes, don't you know, just to add a little
-novelty to the sport.
-
-"The war is just beginning. The Germans have a great machine and it'll
-take a long while to break it.
-
-"As much as you people in the States have heard about German
-efficiency, there has been little overestimating of it. Only one who
-has seen the Germans in action can appreciate what a well-regulated
-business organization they have made of war.
-
-"I don't know what our boys will do when it's all over; they're so used
-to war that peace will probably come hard for a while.
-
-"Seriously, now, I don't know a soldier who is even dreaming of peace.
-They didn't want war, but now that it is here, they're going to carry
-it through. And they're going to have all the fun they can out of it
-while it lasts."
-
-
-
-
-PRIVATE McTOSHER DISCOVERS LONDON
-
-_Told by C. Malcolm Hincks_
-
- Experiences of a Highland soldier, back from the front, while
- visiting London for the first time in his life. The hero's correct
- name, of course, has been suppressed in this story in the _Wide
- World_.
-
-
-I--STORY OF THE HIGHLANDER ON FURLOUGH
-
-He was standing on the main-line departure platform of St. Pancras
-Station. Motionless, as though on guard over the bookstall, he might
-have been made of the granite of his native country, and I felt sure
-that his name was Sandy or Jock.
-
-His war-stained khaki bore traces of many ordeals undergone; even the
-big, red knees were flecked with mud. Around him hung the extraordinary
-medley of equipment that so thoroughly justifies the old Army axiom
-that a soldier is "something to hang things on."
-
-A red face beamed out like a beacon from the mass of paraphernalia, a
-wisp of sandy hair peeped from under the soft khaki headgear, but the
-steady blue eyes glanced at me with hard suspicion as I felt for my
-cigarette-case; and thinking my action might be misunderstood, I went
-into the refreshment-room and dined.
-
-Nearly three-quarters of an hour later I emerged. It was eight o'clock,
-and I had half an hour longer to wait for my train to the Midlands. I
-gasped when I saw the Highlander still standing on sentry-go beside
-the bookstall. Presently he shouldered his rifle and paced along the
-platform. There was a clatter, and his steel helmet slipped from his
-back and rolled towards me. I just saved it from going under the wheels
-of a heavy luggage truck a porter was pushing along.
-
-The Highlander took his property with gruff word of thanks.
-
-"Losh, mon; it's a terrible city!" he murmured, as he placed his rifle
-between his knees and groped among the multitudinous buckles and straps
-on his broad back. "D'ye ken it's been my life's dream to see yon
-London? Ma old mither don't believe in dreams--and I'm thinkin' she's
-reet. I'll be glad when eleven o'clock comes and I'm off for bonnie
-Scotland!"
-
-"Eleven o'clock!" I gasped. "Why, you've nearly three hours to wait,
-and you were here when I arrived just after seven."
-
-"Aye; I've been here since four o'clock. Mon, I know this platform as
-well as I know ma own wee house! I feel safer here than in yon streets."
-
-Having fixed his steel helmet to his satisfaction on top of the other
-gear, he swung his rifle round on the sling--nearly braining an elderly
-gentleman who was passing behind him in the process. Ignoring the
-civilian's angry protest, he turned to me.
-
-"That's the sixth," he said, shortly, and a faint glimmer of amusement
-came into his clear blue eyes, "the sixth thieving rascal that felt ma
-rifle this day. They hang round trying to steal something from ma kit.
-It's a terrible city. I've been discoverin' it all day."
-
-"Look here," I said, "I've half an hour to spare, and you must be
-feeling hungry. I can't offer you a drink, but if you'll come and have
-some hot tea or cocoa and something to eat, I'll be proud, and you can
-tell me of your adventures."
-
-The Scot eyed me suspiciously.
-
-"A wee lassie made the same offer three hours since," he replied,
-doubtfully. "A lassie all in furs, but I didna trust her, and I told
-her so. She was after ma money or ma kit, or she wouldn't have been
-so angry at having been found oot! But I'll trust ye, mon. I want a
-bite of something, and if it's my adventures you want to hear, it's a
-wonderful story I'll have to tell ye."
-
-And here is the tale he told me, though I can only indicate the broad
-Scots in which he spoke.
-
-
-II--THE SCOTCHMAN TELLS HIS OWN TALE
-
-For years in ma wee Inverness-shire home I'd dreamt of seeing London.
-I'd never seen a city in ma life. I might have gone to Edinburgh once,
-but I lost the excursion ticket I'd bought and couldna find it till
-the train had gone. Ma mither had put it away for safety and forgotten
-where she'd put it! I was working for Farmer Macpherson when news of
-the war came, and about the end of August I was in the market-toon,
-when up came a chap dressed like I am now, except that he'd only got
-three stripes on his arm ... and was twisting a cane. "My lad," says
-he, "don't you wish to serve your King and Country?"
-
-"Aye," says I, "but I'm serving Farmer Macpherson juist noo, and he and
-ma mither wouldna like me changing jobs."
-
-Well, the sergeant had a lot to say. Mon, he was an awfu' liar, that
-sergeant! Maybe he came from here; I'm thinking he did! He talked of
-seeing life and of being in Berlin before Christmas.
-
-"Mon," I says, "I'm not fashing maself about Berlin, but if I go in the
-Army shall I go to London?"
-
-"Of course," says he. "As soon as you're a soldier you'll go to London."
-
-"All reet," says I; and I sent a boy home with the pony-cart to tell
-them that Jock McTosher had 'listed and was going to London. Well, I
-didna go to London. I trained in various parts of Scotland, just far
-enough away to miss ma home, but too close to get a real change. Then
-we went to an awfu' place in Wiltshire, all mud and huts and hard work;
-and then slipped across to France. I was a sad mon when I left the dock
-that night. I'd thought as a soldier I'd be sure to see London, but
-I'd never even seen a big town save the one we sailed from, and they
-marched us through that at night, when everything was quiet, and stowed
-us away in the big ship like smuggled goods.
-
-Well, I'd given up all hope of seeing London unless I got wounded and
-was sent there, when a bit ago they told me ma name was down for a ten
-days' leave! "Losh!" I says to maself, "I'll have a whole day in London
-before going north!" Well, I've had it, mon, and it's been a wash-out!
-
-At six o'clock this morning I arrived at Victoria, and with some pals
-had breakfast at a hut in the station. One of them was a Londoner,
-and when the laddies left me to go to their homes, he told me to keep
-straight along the street and I'd come to Westminster Abbey and the
-Houses of Parliament.
-
-Losh! mon, I was verra disappointed with London when I stepped out into
-yon street. It was quieter than the ruined wee village I'd left in
-France. Well, I looked at the Abbey from the outside, but no' feeling
-dressed for the kirk, I went across to the Houses of Parliament,
-thinking maybe the politicians would have had their breakfast interval
-and be starting again soon, as it was by then getting on for eight
-o'clock.
-
-But the big gates were shut and there seemed no one about but a
-policeman. A nice mon he was--and he knew me, too.
-
-"Halloa, Jock!" says he, quite friendly. "What are ye wanting?"
-
-"Mon," says I, "I'm having a day in London, and I want to see
-the Members of Parliament and the great lords at work. Maybe the
-day-shift's having breakfast and not started yet?"
-
-The policeman laughed as though I'd made a joke. He said the members
-weren't working that day, and anyway they didn't start till the
-afternoon.
-
-"Mon," I said, "they must make good money, or they'd never be able to
-live with so much standing-off time."
-
-"They don't do so bad," says the policeman, with another laugh; and I
-walked up a road called Whitehall, though I couldn't see anything white
-about it, unless it was the faces of the wee lassies hurrying to work.
-Then I went into a park and sat down and had a rest and a smoke. Maybe
-I dozed for awhile, for when I got out into that same Whitehall again
-something wonderful seemed to have happened. It was all noise and rush,
-and I was saluting officers until my arm ached. Then I crossed the
-road a bit, and after having been nearly run over twice, turned down a
-side-street and lost myself.
-
-
-III--ON THE WAY TO PICCADILLY
-
-Presently I saw what looked like a kindly old gentleman, and I asked
-him the way to Piccadilly.
-
-"You'd better take the Tube," says he. "There's a station just over
-there."
-
-"Tube!" says I, doubtful like. "What's that?"
-
-"An underground railway," says he, hurrying off. "You'll get to
-Piccadilly Circus in a few minutes."
-
-He was an awfu' liar, that mon! Why, it was ten minutes before I got
-ma ticket! There were penny-in-the-slot machines besides the little
-windows; but I don't trust them. There seemed to be about half-a-dozen
-railways running into the place, and there were maps with all the
-colours o' the rainbow to show you how to get to places; but as I
-didn't know where I was, or whether I was on a green or a brown line,
-they didn't help me much. I looked at the pictures and I looked at
-the pert lassies in uniform clippin' tickets an' all. I didn't like
-bothering them with questions, but at last I got to a window and asked
-for Piccadilly.
-
-"Penny," says the girl.
-
-"Aye," says I, and I put down ma rifle, not meaning to hurt the foot of
-the fussy mon behind me. "Is there any reduction for a return?" says I,
-having been brought up never to waste the bawbees.
-
-"No," she snapped. "Penny's the fare. Hurry up, please!"
-
-"Yes, do," growled out the mon behind, hopping about on one foot and I
-saw it was true about a crowd quickly gathering in London--for just in
-the little time I'd been talking there were dozens of people waiting in
-a line.
-
-"I'll have to get at ma purse," says I, starting to search ma pockets.
-"Losh! I believe I have it in ma pack! Will ye give us a hand with
-these straps, laddie?"
-
-"Oh, I'll pay your fare," says the man behind me; and no doubt he
-meant it kindly, though his way was rough. Well, I puts ma ticket in
-ma pocket and walks a little way. Then one of the wee lassies with
-clippers stops me and wants ma ticket.
-
-"Hold ma rifle, lassie," says I, "so as I can get it."
-
-Seeing how unsociable everyone else seemed, I spoke kindly to the
-lassie and told her I hoped she liked the job and her mither approved
-and all. But maybe, knowing Londoners, she didna trust any mon; anyway,
-the C.O. with a bad attack of liver couldn't have told me off much
-sharper; and there was a crowd behind charging at me just like a game
-of football!
-
-Mon, I'm not surprised that these Londoners make good soldiers! A man
-that could take that Tube every day of his life would think the first
-line of trenches restful! Down a sort of underground tunnel I walked;
-then suddenly I came to the funniest staircase I'd ever seen. I should
-have stopped to stare at the rumbling, snarling thing, but people from
-behind pushed me, and all of a sudden there was somethin' wrong with ma
-feet, and I found myself carried forwards. While I was looking about me
-steps formed before my eyes, and I gave a yell and clutched out to save
-myself.
-
-Now mind ye, mon, I'm a respectable young chap; ma feyther was elder at
-the kirk and ma mither's always warned me to treat lassies with proper
-respect.
-
-I didna know it was a lassie's waist I clutched hold of when I went
-down with a crash, ma rifle clattering and those awfu' stairs sliding
-downwards all the time. When I pulled myself together I saw that I'd
-dragged down with me a very pretty lassie, and she was sitting on ma
-knee! She was wearing one of those terrible short skirts, and there
-before my eyes was about a yard of silk stockings; but the lassie
-jumped to her feet just as I was going to shut ma eyes.
-
-She was quite nice aboot it, mind ye--the only nice Londoner I'd
-met. She was flushed-up like, and confused, as anybody would be on
-that awfu' livin' staircase, but she helped me to get to ma feet and
-collect ma kit. It wasn't her fault, moreover, that I fell down again
-in getting off that movin' contraption. I thought I was going to be
-carried doon the crack where it disappeared, and what with marking time
-and trying to step off with both feet at once I came down again with
-another crash. I blocked the passage-way for a minute or two, and the
-poor Londoners, with never a second to spare, were clambering all over
-me. Do they get paid by the minute?
-
-When I'd picked maself up and seen that nothing was missing, the dainty
-little lassie had disappeared. I was sorry, for, although I've been
-taught to be cautious of women, she was certainly verra nice, and no
-weight at all on ma knee.
-
-
-IV--"I'VE WALKED THE SEWERS OF LONDON"
-
-Finding myself alone, I set off up a tunnel. Presently I came to a
-notice--"Exit by Stairs." I didna know what "exit" meant, but I knew
-all about those terrible conjuring-trick stairs, and so I turned back
-and tried another tunnel. Seeing a lot of people going into a little
-room, I followed them. I gave ma ticket to another lassie, but she was
-so busy love-making to a bit of a boy that she took it without so much
-as a glance at it or me. There were advertisements in the room, and
-sort of sliding doors at each end of it. "It's a waiting-room," says I
-to maself; and thinking there might be some time before a train came
-and they opened the other door, I lit a "fag." Very wisely, I saw,
-they'd put up "Beware of Pickpockets," so I kept my eyes about me.
-
-"No smoking!" barks the lassie; and she came into the room, closing the
-other gates behind her.
-
-I was just going to argue with her, when all of a sudden the room
-started to move upwards. Losh! mon, it gave me an awfu' turn! I yelled
-out, and a man standing next to me laughed--anyway, he laughed till
-I turned round and ma rifle knocked against his head. Then, before I
-knew what had happened, the other gates swung open in a ghostly way.
-Mon, I'll swear there was no one to open them! I drew in a breath
-of fresh air, thinking I'd got to Piccadilly but, if you'll believe
-me, I'd walked the sewers of London and _come out at place where I'd
-entered_! And that old man said the "Tube" was an underground railway!
-Underground maze, I call it! I walked to Piccadilly after that; I was
-afraid of spending the rest of ma leave down there.
-
-I have no doot that Piccadilly is gay enough. But I was feeling tired
-and hungry the noo there were officers thick as flies after jam; and
-there didn't seem room for me and ma kit on the pavement. And the
-lassies! Never have I seen such clothes, and some of 'em had enough fur
-on them to make twenty goatskin waistcoats. It's a queer thing, though,
-but all of them seemed to have their clothes too short for them;
-ma mither would have been horrified. They looked at me as if I was
-something out of a show, and I began to feel nervous. "Losh!" I says to
-maself, "I'll have a bit of dinner. I'll do maself well." So I walked
-into a restaurant, after dodging a naval officer who was standing at
-the entrance and seemed to have something to do with the place. As
-soon as I got in I saw I'd made a mistake, and I'd have retired at the
-double, but a foreigner in evening dress, with about four square feet
-of starched shirt on him, came rushing up quite excited.
-
-"You can'd sdop here," says he. "Dis blace is for ladies and gendlemen."
-
-"Mon," says I, "there's many a rule made to be broken, or you wouldna
-be here."
-
-"I'll haf no insolence!" he cries, going very red. "You go to a common
-restaurant. We do not serve your sort here."
-
-That roused what ma mither calls the devil in me.
-
-"Mon," says I, catching him by the collar, "I've been killing the
-likes of you for the past sixteen months. The only difference is that
-they wore a grey uniform, instead of that fancy dress of yours. Say
-'kamerad' and bring me some sausages and mashed and a pint of beer, or
-you'll be the thirteenth I've finished off at close quarters, and that
-might be unlucky for both of us!"
-
-"The Scotsman's quite right," piped a pretty voice; and I felt fair
-frightened. The whole place was in an uproar. Ma rifle--an awkward
-thing is a rifle--had knocked over a chair, and a young Brass Hat
-(Staff officer) who was sitting at a table with the girl with the
-pretty voice, came over. I had to let the other chap go, so as to
-salute.
-
-"This won't do, you know," says Brass Hat, very severe; but the pretty
-lassie frowned at him, and he looked a bit awkward. "Confound you, you
-fool!" says he, very fierce, to the man in evening dress. "The young
-lady wants this man to lunch with us!"
-
-
-V--"AND I WENT TO THE CINEMA"
-
-I can't quite remember what happened after that. I should have liked to
-have fed with that lassie, for her eyes sparkled like stars, and as the
-Brass Hat was afraid of her it showed she was worth knowing. Still, she
-wasn't my lassie, but his, and he mightn't have liked it, so I started
-to retire. The Brass Hat gave me half a crown and said something about
-being quite as keen on killing the waiter as I was; and then I found
-myself out in Piccadilly again. It was some time before I found a
-little pub where I got a good dinner, with beer, for eighteenpence. I
-will say that for Londoners, mon, they do throw money aboot. Within an
-hour or so I'd had a railway fare paid and been stood a good dinner.
-But they take so much more out of you than what they give you, that's
-my grievance.
-
-Well, having had a good dinner, I strolled along for a bit, and then I
-thought I'd have a motor-bus ride. As I was standing on the pavements
-a 'bus stopped alongside me. Mon, I blushed and turned away ma head.
-
-There, on the wee platform at the end, stood a lassie in a blue kilt
-shorter than mine and high-top boots. Ma little sister wears longer
-skirts! She was a brown, curly-haired lassie, quite twenty years old,
-with a funny-shaped hat on her head and a cheeky smile on her lips.
-
-"Want the Bank, Sandy?" says she.
-
-"Lassie," says I, "war's a terrible thing! Go hame to your mither and
-ask her to lengthen your kilt!"
-
-"Kilt, indeed!" says the hussy, unabashed. "You're out of date, old
-boy!" And she jerked the bell and the 'bus went off. She waved to me
-from the stairs, but, of course, I took no notice. By now I was tired
-of London, mon; I wanted a little peace. Coming to a cinema, I paid
-saxpence at a little ticket-office and went through a hall that was all
-mahogany and plush, with a sort of field-marshal in full dress sweeping
-the marble floor. A lassie with a torch pulled a curtain on one side,
-and I saw a man falling into a river with a motor-car chasing him. Then
-the lights went up, and I saw I'd paid saxpence just to stand. I said
-I'd been swindled, but the people round only cried "Hush!" and then the
-lights went out again and some letters came up on the screen--"The Big
-Advance on the Somme."
-
-Mon, when you've been dodging shells and bullets for sixteen months,
-and ruins and broken trees are the only sort of scenery you've seen,
-you don't want to have "Big Advances" thrown at you on the pictures.
-I think I began a speech, and I'm sure it would have been a fine one,
-but things happen so sudden in London. I saw a shell coming over--on
-the film, ye ken--and I ducked from force of habit and jostled one or
-two people. In the excitement I upset a pretty lassie who picked up ma
-helmet--it was in the dark, ye see--and then I was put out. I wanted to
-go, or else they'd never have done it. After that---- Oh, is that your
-train, mon?
-
-"I should have liked to hear the remainder of your adventures in
-London, Jock," I said, leaning out of the carriage window.
-
-"There weren't any more," replied Jock, gazing suspiciously round him.
-"I came straight here after that. I've had enough of London. I've only
-three hours to wait the noo! I'll be feeling a wee-bit lonely, but----"
-
-The train moved away suddenly. I saw the brawny man in khaki take up
-his position by the bookstall, now closed. I waved to him, but he had
-turned to granite again. Private McTosher had discovered London!
-
-
-
-
-RUSSIAN COUNTESS IN THE ARABIAN DESERT
-
-_Adventures of Countess Molitor as Told in Her Diary_
-
-
-I--ON THE GREAT ARABIAN DESERT
-
-One of the most striking of all the numberless enterprises of one kind
-and another which have been brought to naught by the war was the plan
-of a young, rich and beautiful Russian countess to unveil the secrets
-of one of the earth's last unexplored and admittedly most dangerous
-regions--the great Desert of Arabia, called by the tribesmen who live
-on its fringe "The Dwelling of the Void," a region that is three times
-as large as Great Britain, and upon which no European foot is yet known
-to have been set.
-
-The young widow of a wealthy Russian nobleman, whose estates were in
-the neighborhood of Moscow, Countess Molitor's life had been full of
-thrilling experiences even before she made her plan to go, without any
-European companion, and conquer the unexplored Ruba-el-Khali.
-
-Previously she had wandered, with only a small escort of native
-bearers, through savage Southwest Africa, and had been captured there
-and held for ransom by native torturers. She had adventured, too,
-among the savage Tuaregs of the Saharan Desert, known as the most
-bloodthirsty tribe on earth; had crossed the Alps in a balloon, made
-between sixty and seventy flights in aero and water planes, been
-attacked and kept prisoner by Apaches in Paris, had nursed in the
-hospitals of Europe and taken part in rescue work in the slums of
-London.
-
-Of the remarkable experiences that have befallen the plucky countess
-since then I am now able to tell as the result of having, to begin
-with, received several lengthy letters from her at Cartagena, in Spain,
-where she has been living for some months, and, more recently, having
-been privileged to read the mightily interesting and vividly written
-journal that she kept from the moment of her arrival at Port Said.
-
-Had it not been for the war, it is extremely probable that the countess
-would have accomplished her project, which would have pushed her into
-the front rank of successful explorers. She carried out, it seems, her
-original intention, a venturesome one, indeed, for a white woman, of
-joining a Bedouin tribe and traveling with them, and had covered over
-nine hundred miles of her journey when she was caught in the Turkish
-mobilization and arrested, on suspicion of being a Russian spy, by
-the Moslems, who, from the beginning had frowned on her project and
-attempted to prevent it. Bitterly disappointed at being thus defeated
-just when the chance of success seemed rosiest, the countess was
-brought back as a prisoner to Damascus. There she had the narrowest
-escape of being shot for supposed espionage, and it was only after
-months of surveillance and affronts that she finally was permitted to
-return to Europe.
-
-
-II--GUEST OF A BEDOUIN SULTAN
-
-Though she failed to get across the Arabian Desert, the countess,
-previous to her arrest, had some of the strangest and most picturesque
-experiences that ever have befallen a white woman. Probably no other
-European woman has traveled, as she did, for weeks on end as the
-honored guest of a Bedouin Sultan (who insisted on believing her to
-be a sister of the Czar of Russia), living the nomadic life of the
-tribe and riding on camel-back, nor lived, as did the countess, all by
-herself, in the heart of old-world Damascus, an experiment that does
-not commend itself even to the foreign consuls. What she saw of the
-brutalities of the Turkish mobilization alone makes as thrilling a tale
-as any that has been told since the war began.
-
-Meanwhile the countess has been the victim of an astonishing accident,
-as a result of which she is still chary about using her right arm.
-
-"One day here at Cartagena," she writes, "while swimming some distance
-out at sea, I was followed and attacked by a big dolphin. Luckily an
-officer at the fortress had seen it, and he fired on the dolphin. But
-before killing him, one bullet went through my right arm! I must say in
-fairness to the dolphin that it really was not he who first attacked
-me. I saw him following me, and I thought I could have a little ride
-on his back, knowing that dolphins are good-natured, as a rule. But he
-misunderstood my attentions and turned on me, and, had not the second
-shot been fired an instant later, I should have been lost."
-
-The countess made the journey to Beyrout via Port Said.
-
-From Beyrout she went by train to Damascus (a day's journey), where she
-had planned to live for a time and improve her knowledge of Arabic,
-which is one of the six languages which she speaks, before setting out
-for the desert. To begin with, she put up at the only European hotel in
-this famous city of the East, and found its proprietor to be a strange
-character, indeed. Untidy of person and appallingly rude in manner, "he
-reigned there," writes the countess, "with absolute despotism. This
-his monopoly of the European hotel business in Damascus enabled him to
-do, as the Arab hostelries are impossible for foreigners.
-
-"Here is a little example of his delightful ways. One day an English
-visitor asked for a bath and, as answer, was told to get his luggage
-ready and leave the hotel in two hours' time, as his hotel had no
-room for people who were dirty enough to need a bath! It seemed to be
-a special passion and sport of his to turn people out of his hotel,
-and any one to whom he took the smallest dislike was ejected without
-the slightest consideration. Those who won his favor, however, he
-entertained with jokes and stories worthy of an old pirate!"
-
-She met both the English and Russian consuls, who placed themselves at
-her service and introduced her to other Europeans likely to advise her
-wisely in the matter of engaging her caravan and getting acquainted
-with friendly Arab chiefs, who would be able to give her a certain
-amount of protection at the outset of her journey, and eventually she
-found an old Syrian woman willing to let her house and act as cook and
-general factotum.
-
-
-III--UNDER ESPIONAGE IN DAMASCUS
-
-And so she settled down, and from this time, the early days of May,
-until when in June she began her journey the countess, with no other
-protector than old Sitt Trusim, as her bent and shriveled landlady, who
-proved to be the most capable of spies, was called, lived the life of
-a Syrian woman of the upper class, wearing the native dress, smoking
-the nargileh, studying Arabic diligently and always dreaming of what
-would happen when she was alone with her camels and the Arabs under the
-desert stars.
-
-The pages of the journal she kept during those months are reminiscent
-of "Kismet" and the "Thousand and One Nights," for where the countess
-willed to go she went, regardless of whether it was precisely safe
-to do so or not. And adventures she had in plenty. For while keeping
-nominally in touch with her European acquaintances on the hill of
-Sahiye, outside Damascus, she found her chief delight in wandering
-through the bazaars and the quaint streets of this enchanted city of
-minarets and in riding on horseback through the surrounding country in
-the cool of the evening. Once while thus doing she was attacked, as she
-had been warned she would be, by a couple of robbers, who possessed
-themselves of all the money she had, but missed her small Browning
-pistol, which, Bedouin fashion, she carried in her riding boot, and
-with this she eventually cowed them and made her escape.
-
-It was soon made plain to the countess that all her movements were
-painstakingly reported to the Turkish authorities, though the Vali,
-or Governor, consistently posed as her friend. She had by no means
-agreeable experiences, too, owing to the jealousy of certain Syrian
-families, whose pressing invitations to various ceremonials she had
-been obliged to decline, while accepting those of others and immensely
-enjoying the impressive and occasionally screamingly funny rites which
-she witnessed as their guest. One of these hosts of hers, by the
-way, was the proud possessor of the only bath in Damascus. More than
-one attempt was made to lure Countess Molitor to places where it was
-undoubtedly intended to ill-treat if not actually to make away with
-her. I will let her tell of one of these plots.
-
-"To-day Sitt Trusim brought me a letter addressed in unknown
-handwriting. Before opening it I asked her who brought it. She tells
-me that a man delivered it, whom, after questioning him, she found out
-to be deaf and dumb. I read the letter, which was an invitation from
-a lady asking me to visit her and her daughters this afternoon. She
-complained that I had given preference to her friends by visiting them,
-and said that she would send her man-servant to bring me at 5 o'clock.
-I don't know why this letter aroused my suspicions. Perhaps on account
-of the mysterious deaf and dumb messenger.
-
-"I sent for Vadra Meshaak (a friend's dragoman) to come to me,
-and showed him the letter quite carelessly, without mentioning my
-suspicions. He at once declared that it was written by a man and not
-by a woman and became very serious and angry, feeling sure that there
-was some treason behind it. At 5 o'clock the man was to come and fetch
-me. Well, he (Vadra) would dress up in my Arab costume, which in its
-largeness covers the whole figure, and go with the man and find out who
-the writer of the letter was. If it really was a woman he could explain
-his disguise as a joke. But he absolutely feared foul play! So in the
-afternoon we sent Sitt Trusim on an errand to the farthest end of the
-town, and I arranged Vadra Meshaak to look like a Syrian lady.
-
-"Punctually at 5 o'clock the mysterious deaf-and-dumb man knocked at
-the door, and Vadra Meshaak opened it and went away with him. I had not
-been alone a quarter of an hour till he was back again, all fury and
-excitement. After he had calmed down a little I heard his story! He
-had followed the man to a house in the inner court where three Turks,
-very well known to Vadra Meshaak, were getting up to pounce upon him.
-He did not leave them any time to talk, but gave each of them a heavy
-blow in the face, and before they could realize what had happened he
-had disappeared again.
-
-"They must have thought me a very fine pugilist! What their intrigue
-against me had been we shall never know. Vadra thinks that they
-probably meant to keep me in their house by force over night and then
-afterward report that I was a woman of no character and thus get me
-expelled."
-
-At the outset of the arrangements for the journey she was fortunate
-in getting acquainted with an old Arab Sheik, Mahmoud Bassaam, who
-had previously traveled with the Arabian lady explorer, Miss Bell,
-and was known to be entirely trustworthy. He had spent virtually all
-his life with the Bedouin and, as a camel dealer, had accumulated
-what was regarded in the East as a large fortune; yet he consented to
-accompany the countess (whose personal charm generally prevails, not
-only with men, but with her own sex, too), and took charge of all the
-arrangements for her journey, including the buying of camels and outfit.
-
-"My idea," the countess writes in her diary, "is to join the Roalla
-tribe at Palmyra and make friends with their Sultan, as they are one of
-the greatest and richest tribes in all Arabia. Once friends with the
-Roalla I intend to travel with them, move with them through the inner
-deserts southward and, arrived south, I hope to be able to interest the
-Sultan and induce him to cross the Ruba-el-Khali with me. Because I
-think this is only possible for a great tribe, with all their herds of
-camels and sheep. On my journey with him I shall try my utmost to fire
-his imagination and to rouse his enthusiasm for the exploration of the
-great desert."
-
-As her dragoman, the countess had an American university graduate,
-one Doctor Kahl, a Syrian, "well educated, serious and clever," who
-also had spent many years with the tribes of Arabia, but who, when
-introduced to the countess by Sheik Mahmoud Bassaam, had a lucrative
-practice as a dentist in Damascus.
-
-
-IV--ACROSS DESERT ON CAMEL CARAVAN
-
-It was on the fifth of June that she set out, secretly, for fear that
-the Turkish authorities at Damascus would oppose her if they knew of
-her intentions. Allowing it to be supposed that she was merely going
-for a ride on horseback, she met her American-taught dragoman on the
-outskirts of Damascus, and rode with him to Adra, on the fringe of the
-desert, where Mahmoud Bassaam and her caravan (eight camels and camel
-men, an Arabian cook and a guide) were awaiting her.
-
-It was in September, after they had traveled for more than 900 miles
-through the desert in company with the Sultan Al Tayar and his
-followers that the first echoes of the European war reached these
-travelers.
-
-In the meanwhile the Countess who, from first to last, was treated
-as a guest of the highest distinction by the Sultan (to whom she had
-been presented by Mahmoud Bassaam) had been able to revel to the full
-in the dreamy "_dolce far niente_" existence which she had so often
-pictured to herself. She had become familiar with all the customs and
-observances of the Bedouins--she had even witnessed a pitched battle
-between her hosts and an enemy tribe--and had learned to eat with her
-fingers as they did without discomfort. By some means the impression
-that she was a sister of the Czar of Russia had become fixed in the
-minds of these tribesmen, and when the Countess wished to disabuse them
-of it, the Sultan dissuaded her, hinting that it was all to the good.
-
-It was while crossing the Dahma Desert and heading for the wells of
-Wadi-al-Mustarri that a small Arab tribe brought them the tidings that
-Turkish soldiers were scouting the country, and that at Hail great
-demonstrations and assemblies of Turks and Arabs had taken place. And,
-on arriving at Jilfi, a small trading town, a few days later they
-learned that a European war had broken out, though between whom nobody
-knew.
-
-At Jilfi the countess was arrested, a paralyzing blow for her,
-considering that she had covered more than half the distance to the
-Ruba-el-Khali, and that another two months would have found her on
-its borders, and that she had succeeded in winning the Sultan to the
-venture of attempting to cross it. He and his chiefs, who first wished
-to resist, parted from their guest with keen sorrow, and the Sultan
-presented her, as his parting gift, with a magnificent emerald, of
-which, however, she was robbed while being brought back as a prisoner
-and ill with fever to Damascus. There the Turkish authorities greeted
-her with soft words, declaring that they had acted only for her safety,
-but, though she was allowed to go free and to live in her own house,
-she was aware all the time that she was carefully watched.
-
-
-V--HELD PRISONER--ESCAPE TO EGYPT
-
-The account which she gives of the Turkish mobilization in the days
-that immediately followed is graphic enough: "Soldiers armed to the
-teeth pass," she writes, "driving before them villagers to be enlisted.
-The boys all look terrified. Patriotism means nothing to them; they
-loathe their Government and are frightened to death at the thought of
-becoming Turkish soldiers, who are treated like dogs. Those who can,
-fly and hide themselves in the mountains. At present the Lebanon is
-full of such fugitives, and, being very desperate and nearly mad with
-fright and hunger, they are quite dangerous to meet. I am told they
-hide like animals in the grass and bushes and live on wild cucumbers.
-Poor things."
-
-Then German officers arrived on the scene and things grew rapidly
-worse. "The commandeering in town," writes the countess, "is rapidly
-bringing about the utter financial ruin of many families. To-day
-every house was ordered to provide a hundred blankets or to pay a sum
-equivalent to their value. Those who cannot comply are thrown into
-prison. From the store at which I buy my provisions they have taken
-$2,500 worth of rice, sugar and coffee, the poor man's entire stock,
-without paying him a penny or even giving him a receipt. He is ruined.
-From another store they have taken carpets and rugs valued at $1,000
-which are, I am told, destined for the private households of the
-officers! The same is, no doubt, the destination of $1,500 worth of
-ladies' silk stockings, linen and dresses, which were also commandeered!
-
-"A commission visited the manager of a firm of automatic pistols and
-took away 800 without paying for them, leaving the rest. Two days later
-the manager was arrested, under the pretext that he had purposely
-hidden the arms which the commission had not taken. They put him into
-prison, and only after a week's incarceration, his family having paid
-£50 to the Government, was released. Meanwhile he has not had a receipt
-for his guns."
-
-Eventually the countess managed to escape from Damascus to Bayreuth,
-where she had hoped to find a friend in the Vali, or Governor, there,
-who had treated her with great consideration at the time of her arrival
-in Syria. Upon instructions from Damascus, however, he kept her a
-virtual prisoner, and when later her trunks were examined and the
-photographs and notes she had made while on her expedition discovered
-she was in imminent danger of being shot as a Russian secret agent. The
-Russian consul, who was himself in danger and had made one fruitless
-effort to escape, was unable to assist her.
-
-She found her best friends, then, in the officers of the American
-men-of-war _North Carolina_ and _Tennessee_, which were lying off the
-town. They gave her good counsel and helped to keep her spirits up.
-After some weeks of agonizing uncertainty it was decided that the
-countess should merely be expelled from the country, and she was given
-an hour to get aboard of a vessel which was sailing for Egypt.
-
-
-
-
-GERMAN STUDENTS TELL WHAT SHERMAN MEANT
-
-_Three Confessions from German Soldiers_
-
-_Told by Walther Harich, Wilhelm Spengler and Willie Treller_
-
- What the educated German soldier thinks about the war, how he is
- affected by the strain and the brutalities and the heroisms of life
- consequent of it, is described with a fresh, powerful vividness
- in a book of war letters from German students issued under the
- editorship of Professor Philipp Witkop, of Freiburg ("Kriegsbriefe
- Deutscher Studenten"). Translations of some of the impressions on
- the German youth are here presented.
-
-
-I--"DRIVEN TO DEATH BY ME"
-
-Of the worst of all I have not written.... It is not the slaying, not
-the mounds of dead, which we are always passing, and not the wounded
-(they have the morphine needle and they lie quiet and peaceful in the
-straw of the requisitioned peasant carts). To me the worst is the
-distress and suffering to which man and beast are constantly subjected
-by the terrible strain. We have just buried my first mount, a glorious
-animal, virtually driven to his death. Driven to death by me! Can you
-imagine that a person as peaceable as I could find it possible to drive
-a horse to death with whip and spurs?
-
-There is no help for it. The word is forward--always forward!
-
-Oh, this everlasting driving on!
-
-One stands beside a team that can go no further and compels the
-drivers, with kindness or threats, to force the impossible out of the
-horses. The poor animals are all in, but one grabs the whip himself and
-mercilessly beats away at the miserable beasts till they move again.
-That is the shocking thing--that one is constantly compelled to make
-demands upon the poor animals to which they are not equal. Everything
-here is beyond one's strength. The impossible is made possible. It must
-go--till something or other breaks.
-
-Or picture this to yourself: Shaken with fever and with burning eyes, a
-boy comes to me, whimpering--he can endure no more--and I ride into him
-and drive him back to the front. Can you picture that? But it must be!
-
-Everything here is beyond one's strength. My God! We ourselves must
-do impossible things. But can one demand that of the others? We know
-that the struggle is for the German idea in the world--that it is to
-defend German understanding, German perception against the onslaught
-of Asiatic barbarism and Romanic indifference. We know what is on the
-cards if we do not do our utmost.
-
-But the men? How often since we came to this God-forsaken region did
-we tell ourselves that it was impossible to go forward at night. It is
-really impossible. And then came an order--an order which could not be
-carried out during the day, so it went at night. It went because it
-must. Because "the order" is the great unavoidable--something that must
-be carried out--Fate, the all-determining. We know what "the order"
-means now! It is that which gives our people the ascendancy over the
-whole world.
-
- WALTHER HARICH.
-
-
-II--HORRORS OF "NO MAN'S LAND"
-
- Near Maricourt, December 17, 1914.
-
-Soon after 11 we were awakened by the retiring sentries. As tired as
-dogs though we were, we crawled out into the open. It was still raining
-wet strings--a cold, ugly December night; not a star to be seen. Every
-once in a while the sound of a shot came to us from the other side of
-the stream.
-
-"You," remarked Hias suddenly, "listen! Hear anything?"
-
-"What do you mean?"
-
-"Now."
-
-It was a long, wailing cry for help. I could hear it distinctly.
-
-"There is a poor devil out there, wounded," said Hias.
-
-Great heavens--in this weather! And he must have been lying there
-without help since early yesterday.
-
-He couldn't be in the wood anywhere, for we had gone through that
-thoroughly. Perhaps he had been caught by a shrapnel splinter during
-the retreat across the field. Well, what was it to us? Let his comrades
-get him. He must be just a few meters from the French trenches, anyhow.
-
-Released at 1, we went back to our tents to get some sleep, cursing the
-French who left their comrade to perish so miserably.
-
-At 3 the next afternoon, when I went on duty again, the poor devil
-was still calling for help, keeping it up all day. We could not help;
-we did not see him. And to expose ourselves to the French was a
-proceeding not to be lightly recommended. It was a horrible feeling to
-be condemned thus to inaction while a wounded soldier called for help.
-
-When the wind changed one could hear the poor devil whimper and weep
-and then suddenly rouse himself and send out a call for help, "Oh, la,
-la!"
-
-Why didn't the French take him away? There was no danger. We could not
-shoot, for we saw nothing. And we had no intention of doing that. I was
-glad when my hour was up.
-
-At 8 o'clock I was at my place again with Hias. The poor Frenchman was
-whining more pitiably than ever. For half an hour we listened; then
-Hias lost his patience.
-
-"What a tribe of pigs," he broke out, "to leave a comrade to die like
-a dog! He can't last much longer."
-
-"Well, Hias," I said, "what can we do? I am sorry for him myself, but
-there is no help. He must die."
-
-After a few minutes a terrible scream: "Oh, la, la, la, la!" pierced
-the night. Then there was quiet. God be praised! Now he is dead and at
-peace, I thought. And quietly I repeated a few prayers for his soul.
-But after a while we heard his cry again.
-
-"Well, it's enough now," exclaimed Hias. "I can't stand this any
-longer. I'm going to get him, with or without permission." He spoke and
-disappeared.
-
-In a minute his brother took his place at my side, while he himself
-ran up to the trenches. He was back in about ten minutes. He had the
-permission. The lieutenant also was going and asked if I would come
-along, as I knew something of first aid and could speak a little French.
-
-When we got to the lieutenant three more men, splendid fellows, on whom
-one could rely, had volunteered. In a twinkling we had gathered tent
-cloth, side arms and saws and were running singly across the meadow. Of
-course, the sentries were notified that we were out in front.
-
-We entered the wood. While two men worked with knives and saws to cut a
-way through, the others held themselves ready for anything that might
-develop. We stumbled over bodies, weapons and knapsacks. At last I
-found a little path which the French had made a few days previously.
-
-I rested a while and was just about to return to my comrades when a
-hand gripped my foot. Great God, I was frightened! For a second I was
-paralyzed; then, tearing out my sword--
-
-"Pitie! pitie!"
-
-Some one under my feet was whining for mercy. My teeth chattered. I
-could hardly move or answer.
-
-"Oh, m'sieur camarade; pitie! pitie!"
-
-Suddenly the lieutenant appeared and I found my control again. Getting
-down on my knees, I carefully groped for the body.
-
-"Look out now," whispered the lieutenant. "It may be a trap."
-
-"Give me your hand," I ordered the Frenchman. A cold, moist, trembling
-hand was put into mine.
-
-"Where is your weapon?" I asked. He had lost it as he pulled himself
-along till he was exhausted.
-
-Suddenly from somewhere near we heard the horribly familiar call, "Oh,
-la! la!"
-
-"Well, now," said the lieutenant, "we have one man, but not the right
-one."
-
-I asked the wounded one whether we would be seen if we tried to get the
-other man.
-
-"_Oui, mon brave camarade, Allemand._" The lieutenant hesitated, but
-resolved nevertheless to go on.
-
-One man remained behind with the Frenchman--a corporal, he said he
-was--with orders to stab him instantly if he called for help while we
-were working our way through the brush. We came to the edge of the wood
-at last and peered out.
-
-We could make out the forms of many black objects--dead men, killed so
-near their own trenches, too! Hias was beside me, and with his sharp
-peasant eyes soon espied the body of the poor fellow we were after.
-The lieutenant crawled out, and we followed. Coming up to him, I called
-softly, "_Camarade!_" I did not want to frighten him; besides, he might
-scream for help, then we would be in a nice fix.
-
-"Oh, oh, _Dieu! Dieu!_" he breathed and emitted sounds like the joyful
-whining of a puppy when he saw me.
-
-He grasped my hand and pressed it to his breast and cheek.
-
-I felt him over carefully. As I fumbled along his left leg I received
-a sudden shock. Just below the calf it ended. The foot was torn off
-above the angle and hung loosely on the leg. As his whole body was
-wet I could not tell whether he was still bleeding. I could only make
-out that a rag was tied about the wound. He had bandaged it with his
-handkerchief, as I learned later.
-
-We soon had him beside his comrade.
-
-The lieutenant went back to his command, leaving the rest to me. The
-others carried the corporal away to the nearest aid station, while I
-remained with his comrade, who, as he lay there, softly spoke to me
-about himself--his wife and his child--of the mobilization. This was
-his first day at the front. Fate had overtaken him swiftly. He was a
-handsome man, with big, black eyes, dark hair and mustache. His pale,
-bloodless face made him doubly interesting. His voice was so tender and
-soft that I was touched; I could not help it. I gently stroked him:
-"_Pauvre, pauvre camarade Français!_"
-
-"Oh, monsieur, _c'est tout pour la patrie_."
-
-I lay down and nestled up close to him and threw my coat over him, for
-he was beginning to shiver with fever and frost. Then it began to rain
-very softly. So we lay one-half, three-quarters, a whole hour. At last,
-after one and a half hours, the comrades returned.
-
-My poor wounded one was crying softly to himself.
-
-He was soon in the hands of a physician and an attendant. His wounds
-were looked after and he was given some cold coffee.
-
-I had to go.
-
-A look of unutterable gratefulness, which I shall never forget, a nod:
-"_Bonne nuit, monsieur_," and I was outside in the cold, damp December
-night.
-
- WILHELM SPENGLER.
-
-
-III--A BELGIAN MOTHER AND HER BABE
-
- Ingelmünster, November, 1914.
-
-In Fosses, near Namur, I happened to be the only physician in the
-place, as all the doctors had fled. So it came about that the first
-prescriptions that I have ever written were in the French language. It
-was rather odd, but it went. The sixty-five-year-old apothecary and I
-have opened many good bottles of Burgundy in his bachelor apartment
-while he told of his student days in Geneva and Brussels; I of Germany
-and its glories.
-
-One time I was called to a village an hour distant to the help of a
-young mother. And it may have presented a curious and unforgettable
-spectacle to the Belgian peasants when after two hours' hard work the
-"_jeune docteur Allemand_," shirt-sleeved, armed and girt with a woman's
-apron, presented the young mother with a tiny, howling Belgian, while
-outside the guns thundered in the distance, killing perhaps hundreds
-and hundreds of other Belgians.
-
- WILLY TRELLER.
-
-(Translations by Julian Bindley Freedman for the _New York Tribune_.)
-
-
-
-
-BAITING THE BOCHE--THE WIT OF THE BELGIANS
-
-_Told by W. F. Martindale_
-
- The people of Brussels have always been noted for a very pretty
- turn of wit. On the other hand, not even his best friends have
- ever accused the German of possessing a sense of humor. With the
- "Boches" in possession of Brussels, it is easy to forecast that the
- Bruxellois would find them fair game. This amusing story shows how
- the citizens have "got their own back" on the invaders, as related
- in the _Wide World_.
-
-
-I--STORY OF M. MAX--BURGOMASTER
-
-No one ever suspected the German mind of possessing a sense of humour.
-But that it should prove such easy--and fair--game as Teutonic
-behaviour in the course of the war has shown it to be is more than
-the most maliciously satirical could ever have hoped. In turn, and
-according to their several temperaments, the Allied nations have
-indulged their wit at the expense of the Boche. The British have guyed
-him with an almost affectionate contempt; the French have sacrificed
-him with a wholly contemptuous hatred, and the rest have all scored off
-him in turn.
-
-But it has been left to the Belgians, and more particularly the
-citizens of Brussels, to elevate the pleasing pastime of Boche-baiting
-into a fine art. The heaviest harness has its weak joints, and the
-comedies enacted during the German occupation of the Belgian capital
-have shown that even the mailed fist is not proof against the
-penetrating shafts of ridicule and wit.
-
-For a contest of wit _versus_ mere force the Bruxellois were well
-equipped. They have long enjoyed a reputation for a wit peculiarly
-their own, a blend of English levity and French irony, and they have
-had the advantage of a victim who positively, as the phrase goes, "asks
-for it." Moreover, a brilliant lead was set them. The exploits of M.
-Max, the dauntless Burgomaster of Brussels, will live long in the
-annals of war, for his courageous wit well matched the spirit of the
-troops which at Liège dared to confront and dispute the passage of the
-German legions.
-
-When the Germans marched into the undefended city, doing their utmost
-to make their entry as humiliating as possible to the inhabitants, M.
-Max went to meet their commander as calmly as though he were paying an
-ordinary official call. The Prussian general informed him that he would
-be held responsible for the good behaviour of the citizens and their
-instant obedience to every order of the conquerers. The Burgomaster
-knew very well what that meant--that he would be shot out of hand, as
-other mayors had been, if anyone dared to lift a finger against the
-Germans. But he received the news with a smiling face, and assured the
-commandant that all necessary steps had already been taken for the
-maintenance of public order. Then he went back to his office, showing
-a courage and calmness in a most difficult situation that delighted
-his fellow-countrymen, and even invoked the grudging admiration of the
-enemy.
-
-
-II--HOW HE OUTWITTED THE PRUSSIANS
-
-Some of the stories told concerning the worthy magistrate's prowess
-are probably fiction, but others rest upon good foundation. For
-instance, when M. Max was summoned to confer with the German commander,
-the latter ostentatiously laid his revolver on the table--just one
-of those characteristic little actions that have made the invaders
-so cordially hated everywhere. It said, as plainly as spoken words,
-"Remember that the powers of life and death are in my hands, and that
-I have got force at my back." Some men would have lost their nerve in
-such circumstances, but the Burgomaster was made of different stuff.
-Without a moment's hesitation, M. Max took his fountain pen from his
-pocket and, with a humorously emphatic gesture, banged it down upon the
-table opposite the revolver. Was it a sort of hint, one wonders, that
-"the pen is mightier than the sword"--that the soldier's reign would
-be a brief one? Anyway, it evidently impressed the Prussian, as did
-the Burgomaster's conduct throughout the conference, for at the close
-of the meeting the general patronizingly congratulated M. Max on his
-conduct at the discussion and graciously offered to shake hands with
-him. But the Burgomaster was no more susceptible to soft words than
-to threats. He remembered how German officers had deliberately ridden
-their horses through the city's flower-beds and roughly jostled women
-and children off the sidewalks. "Excuse me," he said, firmly, "but we
-are enemies."
-
-A little later there came another sharp passage of arms. The new
-governor of the city sent for M. Max and informed him curtly that, on
-account of the stubborn resistance Belgium had offered, the capital
-would have to pay the staggering fine of eight million pounds! How long
-would it take the Burgomaster to produce the money?
-
-M. Max looked at him with a smile.
-
-"You are a little too late, general," he said. "All the funds of the
-city were sent to Antwerp some time ago, and we have not a penny in our
-coffers."
-
-That was check number one to the governor, but another was to follow.
-The good folk of Brussels, the Germans noted, were showing altogether
-too much spirit. They were saying among themselves that the French
-would soon put the Germans in their places. So the governor placarded
-the town with a notice informing the inhabitants that France had left
-the Belgians to their fate; she had all she could do to look after
-herself, and would trouble no further about her little ally. This
-specious story might have had the designed effect but for M. Max.
-Paying no heed to the possible consequences to himself, he immediately
-had another notice, bearing his own signature, pasted underneath the
-governor's poster. It was short and very much to the point. It stated
-that the German statement was an out-and-out lie to which no attention
-should be paid. What the governor said when he heard of this swift
-counter-stroke may be left to the imagination. What he did was weak
-enough. He simply issued another notice saying that in future no
-proclamations were to be posted up without his sanction.
-
-For a few days M. Max was left in peace; then he had another little
-tussle with the enemy. Because a clerk at the town hall refused
-to accept a requisition order which was not properly filled up, a
-blustering German officer forced his way into the Burgomaster's room
-with a cigar in his mouth.
-
-M. Max looked at him coldly.
-
-"Sir," he said, "you are the first person to walk into my rooms without
-being properly announced."
-
-The Prussian began to bully and threaten, but without heeding him M.
-Max sent one of his staff to fetch the intruder's superior officer,
-General von Arnim. The general came, heard of his subordinate's
-rudeness, and sentenced him on the spot to eleven days' arrest. Then he
-turned to M. Max.
-
-"Now, sir," he said, "the conversation can continue."
-
-"Pardon, general," replied the Burgomaster, "it can now commence."
-
-
-III--HUMOR OF THE WITTY BRUXELLOIS
-
-Throughout their dealings with the people of Brussels the Germans
-have found themselves time and again outwitted. Scarce a prohibition
-has been framed which has not been countered on the instant by some
-brilliant evasion that has rendered it not merely null and void, but
-ridiculous as well. "_Verboten_," that fetish of the docile German
-mind, succeeds only in stimulating the inventiveness of the witty
-Bruxellois.
-
-Exception was taken, for example, to the wording of certain
-proclamations by the Burgomaster which had been put up on the walls
-in various parts of the city, and the German authorities ordered that
-sheets of white paper be pasted over them. The order was duly carried
-out. Ere nightfall blameless blank sheets marked the spots where the
-suppressed placards had previously figured. Next morning the sheets
-were still there, blank as before, but hardly blameless. An oily sponge
-had rendered them transparent during the night, and the censored
-proclamations underneath were plainly visible for all who chose--and
-there were many--to pause and ostentatiously read.
-
-Again, the wearing of the Belgian national colours is forbidden. So
-be it. Rosettes of red, black, and yellow ribbon are discarded; not a
-favour adorns the decorous civilian buttonhole. But soon a new fashion
-in attire appears upon the boulevards. A dandy is observed handsomely,
-indeed strikingly, apparelled in yellow trousers, red vest, and black
-coat. The mode quickly becomes popular, and soon it might almost be
-said that for the patriotic Bruxellois "motley's the only wear." That
-the motley in this case should comprise the Belgian national colours
-is a coincidence which any wearer of it, one may be sure, would be
-astonished to discover.
-
-When last year the anniversary of that fateful fourth of August came
-round, the Germans in Brussels, guilty of conscience, sought to
-anticipate by prohibition all public reminiscence of the date. Their
-feelings may be imagined when, on the morning of that significant
-anniversary, they were greeted by the sight of a careless torn
-"scrap of paper" thrust negligently through the buttonhole of every
-Bruxellois. To frame an edict that would render _verboten_ such subtle
-demonstrations as this would tax even the Teuton's encyclopædic
-diligence.
-
-A scrap of paper is not the only strange but meaning device which has
-adorned the citizen's buttonhole in Brussels. On the day when Italy
-joined the Allies, the Germans, in anticipation of that long-expected
-event, had of their wisdom forbidden any display of the Italian colours
-or flag. None appeared, but from out of those resourceful buttonholes
-peeped neat rosettes and sprigs of macaroni.
-
-If presently we learn that by order of the All-Highest every buttonhole
-in Brussels is sewn up, it will hardly be matter for surprise. It would
-be a charactertistic step.
-
-Those ribbon favours have proved prickly thorns to the Germans. They
-seem to act upon the Prussian mind as a red rag upon the bull, and
-like the rag, when in the deft hands of a skilled _toriro_, they
-frequently lure the victim to his own undoing. It happened once, soon
-after the display of national colours had been prohibited, that a
-Prussian officer, entering a Brussels tramcar, found himself seated
-opposite a Belgian lady upon whose coat the forbidden red, black, and
-yellow ribbons were flauntingly displayed. It is the custom of many
-Belgian ladies, on finding themselves in a public vehicle with a German
-officer, to quit their seats and stand on the conductor's platform
-outside. Ruffled, perhaps, by the omission of this somewhat pointed
-tribute to his presence, the intruder leaned forward and requested the
-removal of the offending colours. The suggestion was greeted by a stony
-stare, the demand which followed it by an expressive and provocative
-shrug of the shoulders.
-
-"If you will not take off those colours, madam, I shall remove them
-myself."
-
-This menace eliciting no response, the Prussian officer stretched forth
-a Prussian fist and made a Prussian grab. The favour came away in his
-clutch, but that was not the end of it. Within his fair antagonist's
-dress ample lengths of ribbon were concealed, and the more the
-discomfited officer pulled the more streamers of red, black, and yellow
-reeled forth. It was a case literally of getting more than he bargained
-for, and the charming murmur of thanks which he received when, in sheer
-desperation, he dropped the tangle of ribbon on the floor and made
-hastily for the door must have gratified that Prussian exceedingly.
-
-
-IV--THE JOKERS OF BRUSSELS
-
-Practical joking has become popular in Brussels since the German
-occupation. "Everybody's doing it"--amongst the Bruxellois, that
-is. A prohibition was lately placed upon the use of motor-cars by
-the civil population, and orders were issued for the enforcement of
-dire penalties in cases of disobedience. One afternoon a couple of
-German officers were seated in a _café_ discussing mugs of beer with
-that portentous solemnity which the Teutonic mind finds proper to
-such an occasion, when a loud "Honk, honk!" the unmistakable blast
-of a motor-horn, was heard in the street outside. Forth dashed the
-officers, indignant at this flagrant transgression of orders, but when
-they reached the pavement no car was there. None was even in sight
-upon the whole length of the boulevard, though the sound of the horn
-had been close at hand. Crestfallen, the representatives of law and
-order--Prussian style--returned to their beer-mugs, but were hardly
-seated when again the loud "Honk, honk!" fell upon their ears, and
-again they dashed into the street, with the same result. Convinced that
-some impudent guttersnipe must be playing a trick, they questioned the
-nearest sentry. But the latter had seen neither car nor urchin; he
-had not even heard the mysterious sound, he averred, and the baffled
-officers began almost to doubt their ears. But the smile on the face of
-the Belgian proprietor of the _café_ was suspicious.
-
-Fresh mugs of beer were requisitioned, but the very first "Prosit" was
-interrupted by the malevolent "Honk, honk!" With froth-flecked lips
-that gave them an aspect admirably suited to their mood, the enraged
-officers set down the mugs with a bang and once more strode forth in
-quest of the miscreant. Once more a perfectly empty street met their
-gaze. But even as they scowled abroad, a mocking "Honk, honk!" sounded,
-this time just above their heads. The listeners started and looked up,
-to see a green parrot in a cage upon the window-sill above regarding
-them imperturably with a beady inscrutable eye. So flagrant a case
-of _lèse majesté_ could not be overlooked, and the green parrot was
-executed.
-
-But even in his murders the Boche lacks a sense of proportion, which
-is, of course, merely another way of saying that he has no sense
-of humor. To the martyrdom of the parrot must be added that of two
-luckless pigeons whose sole crime against the Deutches Reich was that
-of being born after a certain date. It was decreed soon after the
-occupation of Brussels that all owners of pigeons must notify the
-authorities the number of birds which they possessed. Amongst those
-complying with the order was a certain shopkeeper who kept a pair
-of pigeons as pets. They were not of the carrier variety, and he was
-allowed to retain them. But pigeons are notoriously domesticated
-creatures, and presently an interesting event occurred in the
-establishment of this happy couple. A couple of squabs were hatched
-out. These duly assumed down, which in turn became feathers, and
-presently there were four pigeons where formerly had been but two. At
-this stage a German official, armed with a registration list, paid a
-visit of inspection. He noted the well-preened quartette, and referred
-to his papers. Then he frowned ominously.
-
-"On such and such a date you registered two pigeons."
-
-"That is so," was the answer. "Since then----"
-
-"But you have four there."
-
-"Quite true. You are----"
-
-"But you are only entitled to have two."
-
-"A thousand pardons, mein Herr. But one cannot interfere with Nature.
-My two pigeons, you see----"
-
-"If you registered two only, you cannot be allowed to have four. It is
-self-evident."
-
-It is needless to repeat the colloquy at length. Though that
-explanations were cut short, refused a hearing. No German official
-was ever known to "use his discretion"; that is a prerogative of the
-muddle-headed British. The list had _two_ pigeons; here were _four_.
-Obviously there was only one course to be taken. The abundant pigeons
-shared the fate of the indiscreet parrot.
-
-Next day there appeared suspended in the mourning owner's shop-window
-two feathered corpses adorned with this pathetic placard:--
-
- MORTS
- POUR LA PATRIE!
-
-
-V--THE SECRET NEWSPAPER--_LIBRE BELGIQUE_
-
-But the most brilliant and daring feat achieved in Brussels is
-unquestionably the publication of _Libre Belgique_, a mysterious weekly
-journal which makes its appearance with unfailing regularity, though
-how, where, and by whom produced the Germans have never been able to
-discover. This is the very apotheosis of Boche-baiting, for _Libre
-Belgique_ is a fiery sheet. It does not mince words, but flagellates
-the Germans with the most scornful virulence, holding them up to
-ridicule and contempt. Every week it pours the vials of bitter wrath
-and hatred upon the Boche's devoted head, and the Boche can do nothing
-but sit meekly under this scorching cataract. For though a reward,
-which has already risen from a thousand pounds to three times that
-figure, is offered for a denunciation of those responsible for this
-"scurrilous rag," the secret of _Libre Belgique_ remains inviolate.
-Exhaustive searches have been conducted, many arrests have been made
-upon suspicion, but except for two minor actors in the great comedy,
-whose function was merely the distribution of copies, no one has been
-caught. Yet _Libre Belgique_ has already celebrated one anniversary
-of its birth, and is well into its second year of existence. And
-every week, without fail, General von Bissing, the German governor of
-Brussels, receives a "complimentary" copy, which he doubtless peruses
-with absorbed interest.
-
-It is characteristic of Brussels wit that in conformity with law the
-paper announces in each issue the address of its office and printing
-works. These, it appears, are in "a cellar on wheels," and in view
-of the peripatetic habits thus suggested, correspondents are desired
-to address their communications to the _Kommandatur_, _i.e._, the
-headquarters of the German authorities!
-
-But _Libre Belgique_ has another function to discharge beyond that
-of a courageous jest, well calculated to keep the Bruxellois in good
-heart. Drastic in its satire upon the enemy, it is equally unsparing in
-its record of German crimes and its dissection of the often grotesque
-claims made by the German official communiqués. Von Bissing and his
-staff may affect to make light of this gadfly among journals, but the
-rewards offered for its betrayal and the energetic measures taken to
-bring about its suppression tell another story. _Libre Belgique_,
-indeed, aptly illustrates the parable at which Burgomaster Max so
-subtly hinted when he laid his pen beside his interlocutor's pistol.
-The pen is far mightier--in the long run--than the sword, and the
-Germans, though they will not perhaps admit it even to themselves, have
-an uncomfortable inkling of that fact.
-
-That _Libre Belgique_, in spite of all proffered bribes, should never
-yet have been betrayed is a wonderful testimony to the high patriotic
-spirit of the Bruxellois. For though the operations of the paper's
-staff are doubtless closely guarded, the number of persons who are in
-the secret must inevitably be considerable, and leakage is difficult
-to prevent. But the Belgian spirit is a thing with which we are
-all familiar now, and when to that is added Brussels wit the whole
-phenomenon is explained.
-
-One fancies, indeed, that when the Belgian capital is at length
-evacuated by the Germans the populace will be half sorry to see them
-go. The Boche is not exactly a lovable fellow, but to people of a
-satirical turn of mind, _naïveté_, which he possesses in unparalleled
-degree, is always engaging. As a butt the Boche is unique, and in that
-capacity, if in no other, he has positively endeared himself to the
-witty citizens of Brussels.
-
-
-
-
-HOW SERGEANT O'LEARY WON HIS VICTORIA CROSS
-
-_Story of the First Battalion of the Irish Guards_
-
- He shot eight Germans in eight seconds, captured a machine gun,
- took two barricades single handed, and saved his whole company from
- being exterminated. The story is told in the _New York American_ as
- dispatched from London.
-
-
-I--WHO IS THE BRAVEST MAN IN THE WAR?
-
-Who is the bravest man that the war has produced?
-
-It would probably be impossible to answer this question with any
-approach to accuracy and impartiality. But it is interesting to compare
-some of the incidents reported and see how modern courage compares with
-that of past history.
-
-It is generally admitted that all the nations engaged have fought with
-remarkable bravery and steadiness, so that a man must have done some
-extraordinarily daring action to make himself notable. Thousands and
-thousands of acts of bravery have been performed by many among the
-millions of soldiers engaged. Doubtless some of the most heroic have
-died without having their acts mentioned.
-
-Of the innumerable feats of bravery reported the one that has impressed
-the British public most is that of Sergeant Michael O'Leary, of the
-Irish Guards, who is a native of Ireland, as his name suggests.
-
-He has received the coveted Victoria Cross, been promoted Sergeant and
-a long description of his deeds has been given him on the official
-records--a very great honor. He has also been offered a commission,
-but will not take it at present because he does not want to leave the
-Irish Guards, and there is no place for him there as an officer.
-
-The cold official record says that O'Leary won his Victoria Cross "for
-conspicuous bravery at Cuinchy. When forming one of the storming party
-which advanced against the enemy's barricades he rushed to the front
-and himself killed five Germans who were behind the first barricade,
-after which he attacked a second barricade, about sixty yards further
-on, which he captured, after killing three of the enemy and making
-prisoners of two more. Lance Corporal O'Leary thus practically captured
-the enemy's position by himself and prevented the rest of the attacking
-party from being fired on."
-
-Further details of O'Leary's wonderful exploit were given by Company
-Quartermaster Sergeant J. G. Lowry, of the Irish Guards, who was
-engaged in the fight.
-
-"Our First Battalion," he said, "had been holding trenches near the La
-Bassee brickfield, and our losses were heavy. The Germans had excellent
-cover, both in trenches and behind stacks of bricks.
-
-"We were all delighted when the order came that the brickfield had to
-be taken by assault next day.
-
-"Lance Corporal O'Leary never looked to see if his mates were coming,
-and he must have done pretty near even time over that patch of ground.
-When he got near the end of one of the German trenches he dropped, and
-so did many others a long way behind him. The enemy had discovered what
-was up.
-
-"A machine-gun was O'Leary's mark. Before the Germans could manage to
-slew it around and meet the charging men O'Leary picked off the whole
-of the five of the machine crew, and leaving some of his mates to come
-up and capture the gun, he dashed forward to the second barricade,
-which the Germans were quitting in a hurry and shot three more.
-
-"O'Leary came back from his killing as cool as if he had been for a
-walk in the park and accompanied by two prisoners he had taken. He
-probably saved the lives of a whole company.
-
-"Had that machine gun got slewed round, No. 1 Company might have been
-nearly wiped out."
-
-
-II--STORY OF THE YOUNG IRISH GUARD
-
-What impresses people in O'Leary's deed is not only his bravery but
-the triumphant success with which he carried out the whole act. Other
-soldiers may have displayed more self-sacrifice and endurance, but not
-one of them appears to have done more for his side by one individual
-act of bravery than O'Leary.
-
-It is the dashing quality of his deed that wins admiration and this
-quality, it is to be noted, is peculiarly Irish. He is credited by his
-admirers with having shot eight men in eight seconds. His quickness
-must have been phenomenal, and here again he showed a peculiarly Irish
-trait.
-
-How one man could have shot eight soldiers, when all eight of them
-were armed and many of their comrades were only a few yards away, must
-appear a mystery to many. The Germans were perhaps retiring hastily
-from their positions, but they had magazine rifles in their hands and
-fired many shots at the British.
-
-Why did they not get O'Leary, who was running out alone ahead of his
-companions? He must have been amazingly lucky, as well as amazingly
-quick.
-
-Then it is almost equally astonishing that he could have shot eight men
-in a few moments while running. The best explanation of this is that
-the British soldier has a rifle carrying more bullets than that of any
-other army.
-
-The Lee Enfield rifle now used in the British army carries ten bullets
-in the magazine and one in the barrel. O'Leary, of course, fired all
-his eleven bullets, and he is credited with making eight of them kill a
-man apiece. That is an amazing shooting record, said to be unequalled
-for a soldier.
-
-Sergeant O'Leary is not a particularly fierce looking soldier, as might
-be expected, but a tall, slender, fair-haired young fellow. He is only
-twenty-five years old.
-
-"A quiet, easy-going young fellow O'Leary is," said his friend,
-Sergeant Daly, of the Second Battalion of the Irish Guards. "But he is
-remarkably quick on his feet."
-
-O'Leary was born in the little village of Inchigeelach, in the County
-Cork. His father and mother still live there. He has an older brother
-and four sisters, who are now in America.
-
-He served for several years in the Canadian Northwest Mounted Police,
-but went back and joined the British Army in order to be nearer home.
-
-After the fight in which he won his decoration he wrote home:
-
-"Dear Parents: I guess you will be glad to hear that I was promoted
-full sergeant on the field on account of distinguished conduct on
-February 1, when we charged the Huns and routed them in disorder.
-
-"You bet the Irish Guards are getting back now."
-
-Mrs. O'Leary, the old mother of the hero, has been interviewed at her
-home in Ireland. As might be expected her words were very simple.
-
-"It's proud I am of Mike," said Mrs. O'Leary, "but I wish he was home
-instead of being in that cruel war.
-
-"When that telegram came for me, I thought sure Mike was dead, but
-when I opened it I found that he had been promoted. Sure I was better
-pleased to know that he was alive than promoted.
-
-"Mike is a good boy. He never gave me a moment's uneasiness since he
-was in the cradle, except when he went away on his foreign adventures.
-I suppose he had to leave me. There's little enough chance for a boy
-here, with only the pigs to look after and his father and me."
-
-We have been inclined to think that the days were over when a mighty
-warrior could rush in among the foe and slay many with his own hands
-but O'Leary and many others in this war have proved that that is not
-the case.
-
-
-III--TALE OF A GORDON HIGHLANDER
-
-Many of the famous deeds of antiquity have been curiously paralleled in
-the war. For instance, one of the ancient feats that everybody mentions
-occasionally was how the brave Horatius held the bridge across the
-Tiber with two companions against the whole Etruscan army.
-
-Now we find again and again that a bridge has been the scene of deeds
-of conspicuous heroism in this war. The British were defending a
-river bank and bridge against a fierce German attack. The crew of a
-British Maxim gun had all been killed. Then Angus MacLeod, of the
-Gordon Highlanders, rose from cover, seized the Maxim gun and all alone
-carried it, under fire, to the far side of the bridge, where he played
-it on the advancing Germans.
-
-He is credited with having killed sixty Germans. Finally he fell dead
-and thirty bullets were counted in his body. The delay enabled the
-British to rally and repel their opponents.
-
-An extraordinary act of heroism was reported of an unnamed French
-soldier during the disastrous retreat of the French from the Belgian
-frontier and the Meuse River early in the war.
-
-This man had been taken prisoner with some companions. The Germans,
-according to the report, drove their prisoners before them when
-attempting to cross a strongly defended bridge, to make the French
-think it was a party of their own men returning. As the French
-prisoners stepped on the bridge, one of them, a big and strong-voiced
-man, yelled:
-
-"Fire, nom de Dieu, or you will be wiped out."
-
-His own act made his death certain. He fell riddled with bullets from
-both sides.
-
-Lieutenant Leach and Sergeant Hogan of the British Army each received
-the Victoria Cross for an extraordinarily daring and ingenious action.
-The two men killed two Germans, took sixteen unwounded prisoners and
-twenty wounded men. Leach and Hogan with ten men crawled unobserved to
-a section of trench that had been captured by the Germans earlier in
-the day. Leach and Hogan dropped into the trench unnoticed and the ten
-men lay in wait to shoot any Germans who showed themselves.
-
-A trench is built in zigzags so that there is only a straight section
-of about twenty yards along which an enemy could shoot. The Germans in
-the first section were taken by surprise and all killed or wounded.
-Then the two men hurried on to the next turning. As they walked Hogan
-put his cap on his rifle and held it above the trench to show their men
-outside where they were.
-
-Lieutenant Leach poked his automatic revolver round the corner of
-the trench and began shooting at the Germans from cover. The German
-soldiers with their big clumsy rifles could not hit the deadly hand
-that was the only object to aim at. While the Lieutenant was shooting,
-Hogan watched over the top of the trench to shoot any German who tried
-to get out or attack them in the rear. Thus all the men in each section
-were killed, wounded or captured.
-
-How do these and the many other brave men who have been reported in
-the present war compare with the heroes of antiquity? Achilles is the
-foremost of Greek warriors. He personified the Greek ideal of bravery,
-manly beauty and fiery enthusiasm. The "Iliad" contains pages and pages
-about his deeds, his speeches, how he sulked in his tent, and his
-quarrel with Agamemnon, but it does not seem after all that he did a
-vast amount of harm to the enemy. Of course, he killed Hector, but that
-was not amazing, and he acted with considerable brutality about it.
-
-Achilles was undoubtedly a fine orator, but in achievement he appeared
-to compare badly with modest Sergeant O'Leary.
-
-
-
-
-STORY OF A RUSSIAN IN AN AUSTRIAN PRISON
-
-_An Officer's Remarkable Experience_
-
- This very unusual narrative, with its light on Austrian prison
- conditions, appeared in the Russkoe Slovo, Moscow, June 30, 1916.
- It was written by a petty officer of the Russian Army at the
- request of the paper's Paris correspondent. The correspondent tells
- of a party of thirty Russians who had recently arrived in Paris
- from Italy, all war prisoners from Austria, who had managed at
- different times to slip through the lines on the Italian front. It
- was translated for _Current History_.
-
-
-I--"I WAS PRISONER OF THE MAGYARS"
-
-I was taken prisoner by the Magyars in the Carpathians. We were driven
-to the station of Kashitzi, where we found more Russians, I don't know
-how many, and were placed in dirty cars, from which cattle had just
-been removed. The stench was terrible, the crowd unthinkable. The doors
-were locked all the time.... We travelled two days; on the third we
-arrived in a camp called Lintz. What did I see in this camp? Filthy
-barracks, naked bunks on which our soldiers were scattered, pale,
-exhausted, hungry, nearly all barefoot or in wooden clogs. Many were
-suffering from inflamed feet and exhaustion. I don't know how they call
-it in medicine, but to my mind it was the fever of starvation. One gets
-yellow, trembles incessantly, longs for food....
-
-The prisoners were fed very poorly, mainly with turnips, beans, and
-peas.
-
-Once a soldier decided to complain to Francis Joseph or Wilhelm. He
-went up to an electric pole, formed his fingers so that it looked as if
-he were speaking into a telephone horn, and shouted, "Hello, Germans,
-give us some more bread!" He called and knocked with his fists for some
-time, but, of course, received no reply. Many soldiers made fun of
-him at first, but others began to look for a way to complain against
-such treatment of war prisoners. Meanwhile the bread became poorer and
-poorer in quality and less in quantity. The meals consisted of beans,
-and in addition there were bugs in the beans. We got meat three times
-a week, the other days we got herring.
-
-On the 24th of May, 1915, a company was recruited among us to be sent
-away to do some "agricultural" work. The soldiers would not believe
-it, claiming that peace was near. I was in the first contingent. Our
-train was passing between mountains covered with evergreen. Every now
-and then it would shoot through tunnels. This surprised me greatly. I
-understood that we were not going in the direction of Russia. And so
-it was. We finally arrived in a place, where the thousand of us were
-quartered in one building. We at once began to be treated differently,
-much more insolently and severely. On the 27th we were driven to the
-fields to work. We wondered what the agricultural labour we were to do
-could be. We were supplied with shovels and pick-axes, led to a wood on
-a hill some 1,600 metres high, mustered into rows, and ordered to dig a
-ditch--that is what the Germans called it--but we called it otherwise.
-It became clear that we were to dig trenches.
-
-The first day passed in idleness and grumbling. All unanimously refused
-to work, even if we had to pay with our lives for it.
-
-We waited for the following morning. The guards came to take us out to
-work, but we said that we would not dig trenches. Then the Colonel
-came and asked in Russian: "Why don't you want to work?" We all
-answered: "This work is against the law. You are violating the European
-laws and breaking all agreements by forcing us to construct defensive
-lines for you." The Colonel said: "Look out, don't resist, or we will
-shoot every one of you. We don't care now for the laws to which you
-point us. All Europe is at war now--this is no time for laws. If you
-don't go to work, I will have you shot."
-
-We all exclaimed: "We won't. Shoot us, but we will not do the work."
-
-
-II--STANDING BEFORE THE EXECUTIONER
-
-All of the 28th we were in our yard. No food was given us. Thus we were
-held for three days without food. On the fourth day a company of cadets
-arrived. Leading them was the executioner, with stripes on his sleeves.
-They loaded their rifles, holding them ready. Then the Colonel asked:
-"Who will go to work?" The crowd answered "No!" The Colonel said: "I
-am sorry for you, boys, you don't understand that you are resisting
-in vain." Suddenly the crowd was split into two. Those who agreed to
-work were given dinner and put to work. The other half, in which I was
-included, was led away to another yard. From among us ten were picked
-out and taken away--we knew not where. We were ordered to lie on the
-ground with our faces downward, and not to turn our heads.
-
-On June 2 there remained only fifty men who still refused to work,
-suffering hunger for the sixth day. The ten soldiers who were daily
-taken away from us were subjected to, besides hunger, suspense in the
-air from rings, with their hands tied to their backs. In about thirty
-minutes one would lose consciousness, and then he would be taken down
-to the ground. After he recovered his senses he would be asked if he
-agreed to work. What could one answer? To say "I refuse" meant another
-ordeal. He would begin to cry and agree to work.
-
-The following day our heroes were led out into the open, ten were
-selected from our midst, arranged in a line facing the rest of us,
-and told that they would be shot immediately. Of the remainder half
-were to be shot in the evening, the other half the following morning.
-Their graves had been dug by the ten heroes themselves. I have not the
-slightest hesitancy in calling them so.
-
-Then a space was cleared, and Ivan Tistchenko, Feodor Lupin, Ivan
-Katayev, and Philip Kulikov were ordered forward. The first was Ivan
-Tistchenko. An officer and four cadets approached him. The officer
-asked him if he would agree to work. He answered "No," and crossed
-himself. His eyes were bound with a white 'kerchief, and these pitiless
-and unjust cadets fired at the order of the officer. Two bullets
-pierced his head and two his breast, and the brave fellow fell to the
-wet ground noiselessly and peacefully.
-
-In the same manner the second, third, and fourth were treated. When the
-fifth was led forward he also refused to work, and they already had his
-eyes bound. But some one in the crowd exclaimed: "Halt--don't fire!"
-And the comrades asked for his life, all agreeing to go to work. And I
-never learned the identity of the chap who saved that fellow's life and
-many other lives.
-
-We remained in that camp for two and a half months. Then we were
-removed closer to the front, to a locality inhabited by Italians.
-Our soldiers there would inquire from the Italian labourers, to whom
-the guards paid no attention, where the boundary lay. We learned the
-direction and the distance to the boundary, which was about thirty
-miles. It was even nearer to the Italian front. And so on Sept. 29 a
-comrade and I decided to escape.
-
-(Some particulars of the escape have been deleted by the Russian
-censor.)
-
-Toward dawn we emerged from the thick of the pine trees and bushes, and
-descended to the base of the mountain. At our feet was a stream, about
-fifty feet wide, rapid, and full of rocks. Here we made good use of our
-training in gymnastics. My comrade, a tall fellow, was light on his
-feet. He jumped like a squirrel from rock to rock. To me it seemed that
-I would slip and be swept away by the current. My comrade was already
-on the opposite shore when I, making my last jump, failed to gain the
-beach. Fortunately he was quick to stretch out to me his long stick,
-and drew me out of the water as wet as a lobster.
-
-We walked along the stream all day without encountering anybody. At the
-end of the day we came in sight of a tiny village, but there were no
-people nor soldiers to be seen. Only near one house smoke was rising.
-We decided to approach stealthily and investigate. We saw an old woman
-at the fire, bending over a kettle of sweet corn. We surmised that
-the inhabitants of the village must have deserted it because of its
-proximity to the front, while the old woman refused to abandon her home.
-
-We approached her and confessed that we were Russian soldiers. She
-thought long. What "Russian" meant she did not know, but she understood
-the meaning of the word "soldiers." She presented us with some of her
-sweet corn and pointed out the way to the Italian front.
-
-
-III--"WE ESCAPED TO ITALIAN FRONTIER"
-
-It was six in the evening when we came upon an advanced Italian
-post. The sentinel stopped us with a "Halt!" He was pointing his
-rifle at us, showing that he would shoot if we advanced. He called
-for his superior. We were searched and taken into their quarters.
-An officer soon came in. Through an interpreter he asked us for our
-names, regiments, and army branches. He gave each of us a package of
-cigarettes.
-
-Only then I understood that we were received as guests. When the
-officer gave us the cigarettes, saying "Bravo, Russi!" the soldiers
-began showering us with cigarettes, chocolate, and confetti. One
-soldier guessed better than the rest; he brought us a dish of soup,
-meat, and a bottle of wine. After this there was a regular wedding
-feast. Each of the soldiers brought something to eat, cheese, butter,
-sardines. We, knowing our condition, abstained from eating too much.
-Thinking that on the following day we would have to suffer hunger
-again, we put all the presents into a bag presented us by one of the
-Italians. Thus we accumulated about fifteen pounds of bread, cheese,
-butter, chocolate, lard, and boiled beef. Then the Italians noticed
-that our clothes were wet, and began presenting us with underwear and
-clothing, so that we soon changed our appearance. We were anxious to
-converse with them. The interpreter, who spoke Russian imperfectly, had
-a great deal of work. Just the same, I will never in my life forget
-his first words in Russian, as he asked us, by order of the officer:
-"Who are you--brothers?" In tears we answered him that we were Russian
-officers escaped from captivity; he asked it so kindly, and we were
-infinitely gladdened by his sweet words.
-
-The following day we were taken to the corps headquarters. Officers
-would come in, shake hands--some even kissed us, which embarrassed us.
-Unwittingly tears would come to our eyes when we recalled our life in
-the prison camp and this sudden change for the better.
-
-The General also visited us. He pressed our hands, gave each of us a
-package of cigarettes, and presented us with 10 lire in gold. We wanted
-to decline the money, but the interpreter said, "Take," and we did.
-
-We lived for about a month in Italy. What a noble people!--soldiers,
-civilians, and officers. It is impossible to describe! At every station
-(on the way to France) the public would surround us, all anxious to do
-us some favours, all showing their deep affection for the Russians.
-Once a Sister of Mercy was distributing coffee to our party as the
-train began to move. She ran along till the train gained full speed,
-desiring not to leave some of us without coffee. Our soldiers would
-wonder at the affection of the entire Italian people for the Russians,
-and would shout incessantly: "Viva Italia! Viva Italia!"
-
-
-
-
-TWO WEEKS ON A SUBMARINE
-
-_Told by Carl List_
-
- This article, by a German-American sailor on a Norwegian ship
- bound for Queenstown with a cargo of wheat, was communicated to
- _L'Illustrazione Italiana_, from which it is here translated for
- _Current History_.
-
-
-I--"I WAS ON A NORWEGIAN SHIP"
-
-The Norwegian ship on which I was embarked was nearing the Irish
-Channel. The afternoon was misty, the sea rough. We were warned by an
-English steamer of the presence of German submarines in the vicinity.
-There was a certain depression among those on board.
-
-I asked the Captain if there were anything to do. "No," he answered.
-Boom! a cannon shot was heard at the very moment. General confusion.
-All the men ran up on deck and looked about, terrified. Boom! another
-cannon shot. Then one of the German sailors, pointing to a spot on the
-horizon, said: "A German submarine."
-
-It was true. The black spot grew rapidly larger, and then one could
-make out some human figures near the small cannon on the deck. It was
-the famous U-39. We hoisted our flag and awaited events. The Captain
-sent the mate with our ship's papers over to the submarine, which was
-now near. Soon those who were not German received orders to take to the
-boats. The Germans were taken on board the U-39, I among them. When
-this was done our ship was sunk.
-
-So there I was on board a submarine. The impression of it was strange
-enough. The first evening, quite exhausted, I threw myself down in a
-corner. I heard a few short orders, then the sound of the machinery....
-After that everything was in absolute silence. Some said we were
-navigating at such a depth that big ships could pass overhead of us....
-I fell asleep.
-
-Next day on waking I tried to get my bearings. We Germans were treated
-as friends. We were permitted to go about everywhere.
-
-The boat had the shape of a gigantic cigar, about 200 feet long,
-divided into numerous compartments. They were full of shining
-instruments. Now there was a buzzing sound, like the inside of a
-bee-hive, now absolute silence reigned. Every nerve was tense with
-the expectation of the orders on which our lives depended. Toward the
-prow was the room from which the torpedo was launched, a room full of
-tubes and valves. The officers' lodgings are very restricted, since the
-space on board a submarine proscribes any comfort. The commander was
-Lieut. Capt. Foerstner, a tall young man, thin and pale--which is not
-surprising, since he never had a moment's repose; neither he nor the
-men of the crew ever got their clothes off during the twelve days I was
-on board.
-
-The periscope, the eye of the submarine, made known to us everything
-that took place on the surface of the water, and it did so with such
-clearness that it was almost like looking through a telescope. There
-was always a man on watch there.
-
-
-II--"I WAS ABOARD THE U-39"
-
-Suddenly a ship comes in sight. Its smoke is like a black line drawn
-on the horizon. A bell rings. It is a signal for each man to be at his
-post. The U-39 slowly rises to the surface. A last look is given at
-the mirror of the periscope; no English coast guard is in sight. So
-everything is ready for action. We hear the command, "Empty the water
-cistern." Freed from her ballast, the submarine rises to the surface.
-"Both engines ahead at full speed!" The boat cleaves her way through
-the water that cascades her sides with foam. In a short time the ship
-is reached. The submarine hoists her flag and fires a cannon shot. No
-flag betrays the nationality of the captured ship, but we can read the
-name, _Gadsby_, on her side. She is English. We signal that her whole
-crew is to take to the lifeboats, and quickly! At any moment we may be
-surprised.
-
-Through the megaphone we indicate to the men the nearest way to land;
-then a cannon shot, then a second one. The captured ship, after
-pitching for a while, sinks.
-
-The time necessary for the sinking of a ship differs considerably in
-different cases. Some disappear in five minutes, others float for
-several hours. The finest spectacle I witnessed was the sinking of
-the _Fiery Cross_. The crew received orders to get off in the boats.
-Some of our men rowed up close to the abandoned ship and attached
-hand grenades to her sides. They were fired and the three-master was
-blown up with all her sails spread and set. The hull and the rigging
-went down to the depths, but the sails spread out on the surface of
-the water like so many little fields of polar ice. Eleven ships were
-destroyed during my stay on board. Quite a number of others were
-captured, besides these, but they were let go again.
-
-This trip, which I shall never forget, lasted twelve days. It was
-dangerous, but it was exciting and so fine that I would not have missed
-it for anything in the world.
-
-
-
-
-A GERMAN BATTALION THAT PERISHED IN THE SNOW
-
-_Told by a Russian Officer_
-
- This is a tragic story of a night fight in snow-buried barbed wire
- entanglements where a whole German battalion perished. It comes
- from Petrograd to Montgomery Schuyler in the form of a letter from
- a Russian officer.
-
-
-I--TRAGIC STORY OF A NIGHT FIGHT
-
-"We were creeping across the snow, when we hear a frightened '_Wer
-kommt da?_'
-
-"'Hold on, Germans! Where the devil do they come from?' ask our men in
-surprise. 'Are they numerous?'
-
-"'_Wer ist da?_' we hear again.
-
-"Our only reply is to fire by the squad, and then again. The Germans
-are a little surprised, but pull themselves together and return the
-fire. It is dark and neither side can see the other. In groping about,
-we finally meet, and it is give and take with the bayonet. We strike
-in silence, but bullets are falling about us like rain. Nobody knows
-who is firing and every one is crying in his own language, 'Don't fire!
-Stop!' From the side where the firing comes from, beyond and to the
-right, they are yelling at us, both in German and Russian, 'What's the
-matter? Where are you?'
-
-"Our men cry to the Germans, 'Surrender!'
-
-"They answer: 'Throw down your arms. We have surrounded you and you are
-all prisoners.'
-
-"Wild with rage, we throw ourselves forward with the bayonet, pushing
-the enemy back along the trenches. In their holes the Germans cry,
-peering into the impenetrable darkness, 'Help! Don't fire! Bayonet
-them!' Hundreds of shouts answer them, like a wave rolling in on us
-from every hand.
-
-"'Oh, little brothers, their force is numberless. We are surrounded on
-three sides. Would it not be better to surrender?' cries some one with
-a sob.
-
-"'Crack him over the head! Pull out his tongue! Drive him to the
-Germans with the bayonet!' are the growling comments this evokes.
-
-"A command rings out, vibrating like a cord: 'Rear ranks, wheel, fire,
-fire!'
-
-"The crowd before us yells, moves, and seems to stop. But behind them
-new ranks groan and approach. Anew the command is given, 'Fire, fire!'
-
-"Cries and groans answer the fusillade and a hand-to-hand struggle
-along the trenches ensues.
-
-"German shouts are heard: 'Help! Here, this way! Fall on their backs!'
-
-"But it is we who fall on their backs. We pry them out and clear the
-trenches.
-
-"In front of us all is quiet. On the right we hear the Germans
-struggling, growling, repeating the commands of the officers:
-'_Vorwärts! Vorwärts!_' But nobody fires and nobody attacks our
-trenches. We fire in the general direction of the German voices,
-infrequent shots far apart answer us. The commands of '_Vorwärts_' have
-stopped. They are at the foot of the trenches, but they do not storm
-them. 'After them with the bayonet,' our men cry, 'Finish them as we
-finished the others.'
-
-"'Halt, boys,' calls the sharp, vibrating voice of our commander. 'This
-may be only another German trick. They don't come on; we are firing and
-they do not answer. Shoot further and lower. Fire!'"
-
-
-II--"SO PERISHED A WHOLE BATTALION"
-
-"New cries and groans come from the Germans, followed by some isolated
-shots, which fly high above us. After five or six rounds silence
-settles upon the trenches and continues unbroken. 'What can this mean?'
-wonder our men. 'Have we exterminated them all?'
-
-"'Excellency, permit me to go and feel around,' offers S., chief scout,
-already decorated with the Cross of St. George.
-
-"'Wait, I am going to look into it myself.'
-
-"The officer lights a little electric lamp, and prudently sticks his
-arm above the rampart. The light does not draw a single shot. We peer
-cautiously over and see, almost within reach of our hands, the Germans
-lying in ranks, piled on top of one another.
-
-"'Excellency,' the soldiers marvel, 'they are all dead. They don't
-move, or are they pretending?'
-
-"The officer raises himself and directs the rays from his lamp on the
-heaps. We see that they are buried in the snow up to the waist, or to
-the neck, but none of them moves. The officer throws the light right
-and left, and shows us hundreds of Germans extended, their fallen
-rifles sticking up in the snow like planted things.
-
-"'I don't understand,' he mutters.
-
-"'Excellency, I am going to see,' says the chief scout.
-
-"'Go on,' the officer consents, 'and you, boys, have your rifles ready
-and fire at anything suspicious without waiting for orders from me.'
-
-"S. gets out of the trench and immediately disappears, swallowed by
-the soft snow up to the neck. He tries to get one leg out, but without
-success. He tries to lean on one hand, pushes it down into the snow,
-then pulls hard and swears. His hands are frightfully scratched; the
-blood tinges the snow with dark blotches.
-
-"'It's the barbed wire defenses,' he cries. 'Help me, little brothers.
-Alone I can do nothing.'
-
-"We catch him by the collar of his tunic, and with difficulty pull him
-out. His coat, trousers, boots are in shreds.
-
-"'Thousand devils,' he swears. 'I have no legs left. They're scratched
-to pieces.'
-
-"The officer understands: the trenches are defended by intrenchments
-of barbed wire. The snow had covered and piled high above them. The
-whole battalion we had seen had rushed forward to the help of those
-who had called and had got mixed up in the wires. The first over had
-sunk into the snow and disappeared. Those coming after had stepped on
-them, passed on, become entangled wires, and had fallen in turn under
-our hail of lead. Rank on rank, ignorant of what had happened and
-rushing on like wild animals, had shared the fate of their comrades. So
-perished a whole battalion."
-
-
-
-
-THE FATAL WOOD--"NOT ONE SHALL BE SAVED"
-
-_A Story of Verdun_
-
-_Told by Bernard St. Lawrence_
-
- The following graphic account of one of the most dramatic episodes
- in the great Battle of Verdun was related to the writer by a
- Verdunois, who himself heard it from a young French officer, and
- recorded it in the _Wide World_.
-
-
-I--POILUS GOING TO SAVE VERDUN
-
-"Courage! We'll never allow the Boches to get through. Cheer up! They
-shall never get your town. _Vive Verdun et les Verdunois!_"
-
-Thus, in a hundred and one different ways, did the brave _poilus_,
-marching with admirable _entrain_ towards Verdun, instil hope into our
-downcast hearts.
-
-We were on our way, the civilians of Verdun, to Paris and elsewhere, in
-cattle-trucks and military wagons--a painful journey, in bitter cold
-and snow, which would have been almost unbearable but for the sight of
-those merry-hearted troops, swinging along in the daytime on the road
-bordering the railway, and at night sweeping past us in trainload after
-trainload in the direction of the town which, shattered by shot and
-shell though it was, we still pictured in our hearts as home. There
-were long waits in the darkness at wayside stations or on sidings,
-whilst the saviours of France went forth to battle, but wherever
-possible we found help and encouragement. At the larger _gares_ warmth
-and creature-comforts were in readiness to cheer us on our way. The
-waiting and refreshment rooms were crowded with railway officials,
-charitably-disposed ladies, and military officers, all of them eager to
-do something to ameliorate our lot, and at the same time to hear the
-latest news from the Front.
-
-I was fortunate in making the acquaintance at Chalons of a young
-officer, Lieutenant Marcel R----, who was able to tell me a good deal
-about the Battle of Verdun, or, more strictly speaking, a singular
-episode in it. Vague rumours of the "_Coup_ of the Caures Wood" had
-already reached my ears, but it was not until I met Lieutenant R----
-that I heard all the dramatic details, in the planning and execution of
-which he himself had played a part, though a minor one.
-
-"_Eh bien!_ How have you been getting on at Verdun lately?" he began
-by asking me. "I was quite sorry to have to leave the battlefield and
-go, _en mission_, to Paris. But I shall be back there to-morrow. Shall
-I find a soul left?"
-
-"Only Père François, the _marchand de vin_ of the Rue Nationale," I
-replied. "He alone remains of the three thousand inhabitants. We left
-him standing at the door of his wine-shop, which he said he would not
-abandon for all the Boches in creation."
-
-"He plays his part, without a doubt," replied Lieutenant R----, with a
-laugh. "It was at Père François's that we celebrated the _coup_ of the
-Caures Wood, and I shall never forget his enthusiasm when we told him
-the story."
-
-"I envy him the privilege," said I. "Might I hope to hear you repeat
-it, if there is time before the train starts?"
-
-"_Mais certainement!_ This is what happened. But I must begin at the
-very beginning. The setting for the episode I have to describe is
-indispensable."
-
-And Lieutenant R---- proceeded to tell his story as follows:--
-
-
-II--LIEUTENANT R---- TELLS HIS STORY
-
-We were in the early days of the battle, but sufficient had already
-happened to make it clear to every one of us that at last we were
-face to face with a big affair. The German High Command had decided
-on a step which we welcomed most joyfully--to stake its all on a vain
-endeavour to regain the confidence which the public in Germany has
-fast been losing, not only in the military party, but also in the
-Hohenzollerns themselves. The roar of the guns was so deafening that
-we had to stuff our ears with cotton-wool or any material we could
-find to deaden the dreadful sound. The ground shook under the shock of
-the exploding shells. But neither the sounds which came to us, nor the
-sights which met our eyes as we looked down upon the ever-advancing
-masses of men in grey-green uniforms, had the slightest ill-effect upon
-our nerves. Judging by my own feelings, we were all supremely uplifted.
-It seemed to me that we had been preparing all our lives for that one
-glorious day.
-
-"Come on, come on, grey-green battalions, and let us bite deep into
-your flesh! It matters not what cowardly means you adopt; poison gas
-or squirters of flaming liquid are all one to us, for you will never
-succeed in getting through. Come on, like animals to the slaughter!
-Those who succeed in escaping the _arrosage_ of the 'seventy-fives'
-will find that Rosalie--the bayonet--is waiting for them." Such was the
-savage hymn which my men were singing in their hearts as we defended
-the Bois de Caures.
-
-"Rosalie" did her work well, I can tell you, when the Boches came to
-close quarters. The snow-flecked ground in front of us, furrowed as
-though by a titanic plough, was covered with bodies. However, as they
-still came on in serried masses, it was decided that a retreat to the
-defences which had been prepared many weeks before was necessary. Full
-of confidence, and knowing that this slow retreat would enable us to
-kill more and still more Germans, we made our preparations.
-
-But first of all let me locate the Wood of Caures, though it may
-be superfluous to do so in the presence of an inhabitant--perhaps
-a native--of Verdun. It is situated to the north of your town, and
-is one of a number of woods and forests which are visible as dark
-masses of foliage to anyone standing on the heights in the immediate
-neighbourhood of Verdun, or, better still, if the observer be seated
-in an aeroplane. The eyes of our gallant airmen were constantly fixed
-on the Bois de Caures, which lies between the Bois d'Haumont and the
-Herbe Bois, on the Bois des Fosses, which is due south of where we
-were, and on the Forest of Spincourt, which was to our east. These
-precious collaborators kept us constantly informed as to the movements
-of the enemy. Every few hours they brought in their reports to the
-Headquarters Staff, whence came the order that, in conjunction with the
-remainder of the line, we were to fall back.
-
-"The move is to be made to-morrow--towards evening." Captain Peyron
-told me in the afternoon. "But I understand from Chief Engineer Moreau
-that we're to prepare a little surprise for the Kaiser's crack troops.
-We've got to hold the wood like grim death until everything is ready.
-Moreau and his staff of engineers have been out all day in the wood
-prospecting, and the sappers must be already at work."
-
-
-III--ON THE EVE OF THE _COUP_
-
-At nightfall I learnt a little more from one of Moreau's assistants,
-Lieutenant Chabert, a former brilliant pupil of the Ecole des Arts et
-Métiers, who, owing to his deep knowledge of electrical science, has
-on countless occasions rendered invaluable service. He is one of those
-men who can turn their hands to anything in the scientific line. He
-staggered into our dug-out, dead-beat, after ten hours of feverish and
-continuous work with the sappers, and before throwing himself down to
-sleep had just strength enough to mumble, "See that I'm called as early
-as possible, _mon ami_, will you? I've got hundreds of yards of wiring
-to see to yet. _Dieu merci_, we've still got a day before us!"
-
-I promised to wake him at five sharp, and, envying him his sleep,
-immediately went in search of Sergeant Fleury, to delegate him to carry
-out the duty entrusted to me in case--one never knows what the fortunes
-of war may bring about--I were prevented from doing it. By the time I
-had found the sergeant the moon had risen over the battlefield, and if
-I live to be a hundred I shall never forget the sight. Our machine-guns
-were still firing two hundred rounds a minute on the German formations.
-As the enemy approached through the ravines round Flasbas and Azannes
-they were enfiladed, and the deep clefts in the hills were positively
-filled up with dead. Then, towards the early hours of the morning,
-came a lull. The respite was doubly welcome; it gave us both time to
-breathe and behold the work we had done. A ghastly spectacle indeed was
-revealed as our searchlights swept over the battlefield.
-
-When the dawn came the lull continued--at least, till noon, when we
-had once more to face the hammer-blows of the Kaiser and the Crown
-Prince. I called Chabert at the appointed hour. After a great stretch
-and a yawn, he went off like a giant refreshed to his work among the
-human moles of the Caures Wood. About noon, Moreau came to hold a
-consultation with Captain Peyron, under whose immediate orders we were,
-but he was in such a hurry to get back to his sappers and electricians
-that he had not time to say more than:--
-
-"_Bonjour_, R----; see you later. All goes well!"
-
-The satisfied expression on his face told me that without words.
-
-
-IV--"COUP OF CAURES WOOD"
-
-I did not meet either him or Chabert until after the retreat; and,
-to tell you the truth, we were so busily engaged in keeping back the
-Germans until it suited our purpose to let them come on _en masse_ that
-I almost forgot about the "little surprise" which Moreau, Chabert, et
-Cie. had announced to me through my chief.
-
-When evening came the gradual move back to more advantageous positions
-began. I shall not go into the details of a strategic retreat with
-which you yourself must be almost as well acquainted as myself,
-but simply state that we evacuated the Caures Wood and got away to
-the high ground in the neighbourhood of the Bois des Fosses, where
-Peyron, Moreau, Chabert, Sergeant Fleury and myself calmly awaited the
-impending catastrophe which had been so skilfully and rapidly prepared
-for the oncoming enemy. The Bois de Caures, in the gathering darkness
-of night, stood out like a huge black mass against the sky.
-
-"What do you estimate the strength of the attacking force in our
-section to be?" I asked Captain Peyron.
-
-"Two thousand odd," he replied, "and they have all of them fallen
-into the trap. As our men ran away through the wood, they followed in
-masses, blindly and stupidly--_les imbéciles_! Not one of them will
-escape, Moreau?"
-
-"Not a soul," replied the chief engineer. Then, glancing at his
-luminous watch and turning to Chabert, he added, "One more minute, and
-we shall see what we shall see."
-
-We kept our eyes fixed intently on the dark Bois de Caures. Someone,
-somewhere, was pressing a button; for all at once huge tongues of
-flames, accompanied by a series of explosions which rent the cold night
-air, leapt into the sky. Simultaneously a mental vision must have
-occurred to every one of us, as it certainly did to me--a vision of
-hundreds upon hundreds of Germans, caught like rats in a trap, blown to
-pieces amidst the shattered trees of that fatal wood.
-
-So ended the story of the "_Coup_ of the Caures Wood" as related to
-me by Lieutenant R----. Hardly had he uttered the last words when the
-departure bell rang and we hurried away to the train which was to take
-us to Paris.
-
-
-
-
-HEROISM AND PATHOS OF THE FRONT
-
-_Told by Lauchlan MacLean Watt_
-
- This touching bit of genuine literature, penned by a poetic Scot
- "somewhere in France," deserves to rank as a classic among war
- letters.
-
-
-I--STORY OF A YOUNG SCOTTISH SOLDIER
-
-Out here in the land of war we sometimes feel very far from those we
-love; and then, as though we had walked somehow right through reality,
-our thoughts are lifted oversea, and the mirage of home floats like
-a dream before us. The magic stop is touched in many ways. Little do
-the brave lads speaking to us in camp or hospital know how often they
-brought us underneath its spell.
-
-Just a week ago, in a tent where the wounded lay, I was beside the
-bed of a fine young Scottish soldier, stricken down in the prime of
-his manhood, yet full of hope. The thought of the faces far away was
-always with him upholdingly. In fact, the whole tent seemed vibrant
-with the expectation of the journey across the narrow strip of blue
-which sunders us from home. This Scottish youth had been talking, and
-it was all about what to-morrow held for him. His mother, and the girl
-that was to share life with him--these were foremost in his thought.
-His face shone as he whispered, "I'm going home soon." Everything
-would be all right then. What a welcome would be his, what stories
-would be told by the fireside in the Summer evenings! But he made the
-greater journey that very night. We buried him two days later, where
-the crosses, with precious names upon them, are growing thick together.
-Surely that is a place most holy. There will be a rare parade there on
-Judgment Day of the finest youth and truest chivalry of Britain and of
-France. Soft be their sleep till that reveillé!
-
-We got the Pipe Major of a famous Highland regiment to come over; and
-when the brave dust was lowered, while a little group of bronzed and
-kilted men stood around the grave, he played the old wail of sorrow of
-our people, "Lochaber No More." I heard it last when I stood in the
-rain beside my mother's grave; and there can be nothing more deeply
-moving for the Highland heart. The sigh of the waves along Hebridean
-shores called to me there, among the graves in France.
-
-The men who lie in this hospital are those who could not be carried
-further meanwhile, and they have been dropped here, in passing, to
-hover between life and death until they make a move on one side or
-other of the Great Divide. So it is a place where uncertainty takes
-her seat beside the bed of the sufferer, watching with ever unshut eye
-the fluctuating levels of the tide of destiny. It is a place where
-the meaning of war gets branded deep upon you. The merest glimpse
-solemnizes. Of course, the young may forget. The scars of youth heal
-easily. But the middle-aged of our generation will certainly carry to
-the grave the remembrance of this awful passion of a world.
-
-
-II--THE MIRACLE OF DEATH
-
-Here, of course, you meet all kinds of men, from everywhere. They were
-not forced to come, except by duty, in their country's need. They were
-willing in the day of sacrifice, and theirs is that glory deathless.
-
-One has been burned severely. How he escaped at all is a miracle. But
-they are all children of miracle. Death's pursuing hand seems just to
-have slipped off some as he clutched at them. This man looks through
-eye-holes in his bandages. He is an Irishman, and the Irish do take
-heavy hurts with a patient optimism wonderful to see.
-
-There is also a fine little Welshman, quite a lad, who has lost his
-leg. He has been suffering continually in the limb that is not there.
-To-day he was lying out in the sun, and he looked up cheerily at me.
-"Last night," he said, "for about half an hour I had no pain. I tell
-you I lay still and held my breath. It was so good I scarcely could
-believe it. I thought my heart would never beat again, at the wonder of
-it."
-
-The usual picture postcard of the family is always close at hand.
-One North of Ireland man, up out of bed for the first time, was very
-full-hearted about his "missis and the childer." Said he with pride,
-"She's doin' extra well. She's as brave as the best of them, and good
-as the red gold--that's what she is."
-
-Another poor fellow, in terrible pain, asked me to search in a little
-cotton bag which was beside him for the photograph of his wife and
-himself and the little baby. "It was took just when I joined," he
-whispered. "Baby's only two months old there."
-
-One day those who were able were outside, and a gramophone was
-throatily grinding the melody out of familiar tunes, with a peculiarly
-mesmeric effect. Suddenly the record was changed to "Mary of Argyle."
-The Scotsman by whose bed I was standing said: "Wheesht! D'ye hear
-thot? Man, is it no fine?" And the tears ran down his cheeks as he
-listened. It was a poor enough record. In ordinary times he would have
-shouted his condemnation of it. But he was now in a foreign land--a
-stricken, suffering man. And it made him think of some woman far away
-beside the Forth, where he came from. And his heart asked no further
-question.
-
-At the head of the bed of some of them you will see a blue paper.
-"You're looking grand to-day," said I to a young fellow. And he
-replied, "Is there anny wonder, Sir, wid that scrap o' paper there?"
-For it was the order for home on the first available opportunity.
-"Sure, won't the ould mother be glad to see me?" he continued. "The
-sunshine here is beautiful, but sunshine in the ould country is worth
-the world."
-
-"Good-bye, Sir!" they sometimes cry. "I'll be away when you come round
-again." But perhaps next time a sad face looks up at you, for the day
-so eagerly anticipated has been again postponed.
-
-It is always home, and what the dear ones there are like, and what
-they will be thinking yonder, that fills up the quiet hours toward
-restoration, as it strengthened the heart and arm of the brave in the
-hour of terrible conflict.
-
-The endurance, patience, and courage of the men are beyond praise--as
-marvelous as their sufferings. I can never forget one who lay moaning
-a kind of chant of pain--to prevent himself screaming, as he said.
-
-
-III--THE PIPER PLAYED "LOCHABER NO MORE"
-
-Last night we had a very beautiful experience. We were searching
-for a man on most important business, but as the wrong address had
-been given, that part of it ended in wild-goose chase. Nevertheless
-we were brought into contact with a real bit of wonder. It was an
-exquisite night. The moon, big, warm, and round as a harvest moon
-at home, hung low near the dreaming world. The trees stood still
-and ghost-like, and the river ran through a picture of breathless
-beauty. We had got away beyond houses, and were climbing up through
-a great far-stretching glade. The roar before us was a trellis of
-shadow and moonlight. Suddenly we had to stand and listen. It was the
-nightingale. How indescribably glorious! The note of inquiry, repeated
-and repeated, like a searching sadness; and then the liquid golden
-stream of other-world song. How wonderfully peaceful the night lay all
-around--the very moonlight seemed to soften in the listening. And yet
-again came the question with the sob in it; and then the cry of the
-heart running over.
-
-The valley lay lapped in luminous haze, a lake somewhere shining. But
-there was no other sound, no motion, no sign of life anywhere--only
-ourselves standing in that shadow glade, and that song of the
-beginnings of the world's sadness, yearning, and delight, somewhere in
-the thicket near.
-
-It was difficult to believe that we were in a land of war; that not far
-from us lay ruined towns of ancient story; that the same moonlight,
-so flooded with delight for us, was falling on the uninterred, the
-suffering, and the dying, and the graves where brave dust was buried.
-It was all very beautiful. And yet, somehow, it made me weary. For I
-could not help thinking of the boy we had laid down to rest, so far
-from home, and the piper playing "Lochaber No More" over his grave. And
-of the regiment we had seen that very day, marching in full equipment,
-with the pipers at the head of the column, so soon to be separated from
-the peat fires and the dear ones more widely than by sundering seas.
-And we hated the war. God recompenses the cruel ones who loosened that
-bloody curse from among the old-time sorrows which were sleeping, to
-afflict again the world!
-
-
-
-
-AN AVIATOR'S STORY OF BOMBARDING THE ENEMY
-
-_Told by a French Aviator_
-
- This is a tale of the risks, the courage, the fears, the luck, the
- compulsion of duty and the haunting memory of destruction that mark
- the fighting service of the airmen. It is a French aviator's plain
- tale of experience from _Illustration_, Paris.
-
-
-I--"OUR FLIGHT AT DAY BREAK"
-
-When our flight commander came in we knew by his smiling face that he
-had something interesting for us. "Make a careful inspection," he said.
-"The staff counts on you to destroy a station of great importance. Take
-oil and essence enough for four hours' flight. Each of you will carry
-five 90's and one 155. If you do not wholly destroy the place during
-the first attack, rest, go back to-morrow and finish your work. You
-will get explicit orders before you start."
-
-Our service is not confined to the defense of Paris. We are not the G.
-V. C. of the skies. We had no idea where we were going; but our chief
-was in such good spirits that we looked for a fine adventure. So full
-of ardor, we all, pilots and engineers, inspected our great flyers.
-Then, in view of resting for our work, we turned in for the night. When
-someone knocked violently on my door I sprang up broad awake.
-
-"Get up, sergeant!" cried a voice. "It is nearly three o'clock! You
-will be late!"
-
-The motors were turning on the ground. I dressed hastily and went
-out.... Brr! it was cold. The field lay like a shadow in the
-moonlight; the sky was of ideal clearness; a light fog was rising
-from the damp ground. Our whole assembly, pilots and observers, went
-into the little shack used as our flight bureau. Then came a great
-hand-clasping, farewells--silence.
-
-The commander pointed out our route and we traced it on our charts. Now
-we knew where we were going and what we had to do.
-
-There were our machines in the half-light, drawn up in line of battle.
-Every pilot cast a swift glance at his craft as he went aboard. They
-tested the motors. The grinding of the motors had slowed down; there
-was an instant of relative calm. An order passed from pilot to pilot:
-"Start from right to left, thirty seconds headway!"
-
-A long rattle broke the silence; an avion glided over the ground and
-went up: _Our Chief!_ I was second. I heard my friends wishing me luck.
-I rolled on at full speed, rose, and rushed out, into the darkness.
-
-When I had been flying ten minutes I realized that something was the
-matter. My motor was not "giving." The altimeter marked 1,800 meters.
-I saw the trenches stretching like cobwebs across the ground. I tried
-to rise--_Impossible!_ I was less than 2,000 meters above the earth; I
-was under orders; it was up to me to get to my destination and destroy
-the object I had been sent to destroy; and my motor would not raise me
-one foot. For one moment sickly doubt assailed me. I crossed the line
-and, instantly, my craft was a target. The explosion of the bombs was
-so violent and the bombs were so near, and there was so many of them,
-that the air was in a tumult. My machine oscillated. The noise was
-head-splitting; the muzzles of their 77's formed a bar of fire. I was
-taking heavy risks, but what else could I do? _I must get there and do
-my work._
-
-The 105 was going; so were the 77's, upward like a bit of fireworks,
-hurrying along towards the zenith until his lamps were like little
-stars. On the following day we set out again to do our work. _We had
-been sent to destroy._
-
-
-II--"WE DROPPED BOMBS ON THE ENEMY"
-
-We started at four o'clock in the afternoon and landed to reconnoiter
-at a camp near the lines. While the motormen examined our motors, and
-while the electricians put in the lights, we automobiled to a nearby
-town and ate our dinner. We were dressed for our trip. The time set for
-our ascension was nine o'clock.
-
-At dinner the chief had said to us: "When my lights go out you will
-know that I am flying as a bird flies _for their lines_!" As we stood
-there watching his flight his lights went out. That was his signal to
-us; _his farewell_. But we saw him once more when his swift black plane
-cut across the disk of the yellow moon.
-
-Then I went up. I rose to a height of 600 meters. I turned my last
-spiral and put out my lights and the lights fixed to the wings, leaving
-nothing but the little chart lamp.
-
-The earth lay away below us, vast, dark and still. We heard no sound,
-we saw no light save the pallid light of the moon. The wind was strong.
-I had no guiding points. I steered by the stars. As we approached the
-lines the broad fan of a searchlight fixed upon me. I made a rapid
-turn. Something was coming. We saw two light-bombs and three golden
-fusees shooting worms of fire.
-
-After a flight of fifty minutes we reached our objective point. I
-slowed down and we descended. When 500 meters above the earth we
-dropped incendiary cans and bombs. A shower of light bombs answered
-us; they showed us what we were doing and made it easier to do our
-work. Then the lights of powerful projectors fastened on us. But our
-work was done, and before long we were over our landing.
-
-The home run before the light wind was a pleasure. _But a man always
-remembers_, and the thought of the damage I had done haunted me! They
-fired their cannon. We were so close to them I wondered they did not
-hit us. On that occasion my big machine did well because my motors
-were normal. But, to sum it all up in a few words, everything was in
-my favor this last time. We escaped, and, what is more important, we
-contributed not a little to the success of the French in Champagne.
-
-
-
-
-A DAY IN A GERMAN WAR PRISON
-
-_Told by Wilhelm Hegeler, Popular German Novelist_
-
- The strange mixture of races on the western front is here depicted
- by a noted German author in the form of a prison guard's narrative
- of his daily life.
-
-
-I--THE ANIMALS IN THE "ZOO"
-
-There they lie in a gloomy room of the railroad station, the English
-prisoners, together with their allies from the Old and New Worlds. The
-room used to be the waiting room for non-smokers, and it is no darker
-or uglier than any of the other rooms, only it seems so because of its
-occupants.
-
-"Service at the Zoo." Every one of us knows what this means--duty with
-the prisoners. Our soldiers have invented good-natured nicknames for
-the Turcos, Indians, and Algerians that they meet here: "The men from
-the monkey theatre," "The Masqueraders," "The Hagenbeck Troop." But
-they walk past the Englishmen in silent hatred. A little sympathy is
-needed, even for banter.
-
-The prisoners' room is empty, except for a few inmates who for various
-reasons could not be sent away. I am on duty here to-day. Crumpled
-forms squat on mattresses along the wall like multi-colored bundles of
-clothing. Not much is to be seen of their faces. Only a black arm, a
-lank yellow hand, a gaudy blue sash, a pair of wide red trousers stand
-out. There they crouch in the same stoical calm as they did before
-their houses in the distant Orient, with the exception that they, with
-the instinct of wounded animals, hide their faces.
-
-An Englishman lies on a bed opposite them. He looks at me expectantly
-as if he wants to say something. But although I am not forbidden to
-talk with the prisoners, I feel no necessity for doing so.
-
-An hour goes by. From time to time I give a drink to the Orientals who
-ask me for it through gestures. At last the Englishman can keep silent
-no longer and asks:
-
-"Will they treat us very severely?"
-
-I shrug my shoulders. "People feel angry at the English. Our soldiers
-assert that they waved white flags and then threw hand grenades."
-
-"I don't know anything about that. That may have been the case earlier,
-but I have been in the war only eight days. A week ago I was in
-Newcastle with my wife."
-
-He takes a tin case from under his shirt, opens it, and looks at it
-for a long time. Then he shows me the case, which contains the picture
-of a woman, his wife. Then he takes a piece of paper from his trousers
-pocket and shows me that, too. A name and address are written on it.
-
-"That is the man who bound up my wound on the field of battle. He was
-very good to me. After the war I shall write to him."
-
-After a long period of silence he begins to talk again. But I do not
-think further conversation timely. I only pay attention once and that
-is when he explains to me his grade in the service and his rate of pay.
-He is something like a Sergeant and says, pointing to his insignia: "A
-common soldier gets only so much; with this insignia he gets so much
-more, and when he has both, as I have, he gets so much." He names the
-munificent sum with visible pride.
-
-
-II--"A BELGIAN IN GERMAN UNIFORM"
-
-Then the door opens and my comrade announces in a tone that implies
-something unusual: "A Belgian in a German uniform." I look at the man
-in astonishment. Why is he allowed to run around without any guard in
-particular? The expression of his face is rather stupid. He sits down
-near the stove and crosses his legs comfortably. I ask him how he got
-the uniform. He answers in Flemish. Before an explanation is possible
-the hospital corps men bring in six or seven Englishmen on stretchers.
-Now quick work is necessary. Mattresses must be spread out on the
-floor and the people changed from bed to bed. The room is filled with
-inquisitive hospital corps men and soldiers. I shove them all out. When
-the door is finally closed again I count my prisoners and find the
-Belgian is missing. I rush outside to look around the station platform.
-There stands my Belgian on the doorstep. I seize his arm in an almost
-friendly manner and invite him to come inside again. At last he tells
-me how he got the uniform. He insists he got it in the hospital in the
-place of his own tattered one. I shake my head increduously, but the
-chaffeur who brought the prisoner hurries up and verifies the story.
-
-Now the station commandant comes along and is also of the opinion that
-the prisoner must get some other kind of clothing. "But," he orders,
-"first ask the staff doctor if his uniform can be taken off without any
-danger to his wounds." I don't have to do this, because the wound is on
-his upper thigh. I hunt up an unclaimed English cloak and, with visible
-relief, the Belgian warrior crawls out of the German lion's skin.
-
-
-III--PRISON KEEPER TELLS HIS STORY
-
-New prisoners are brought in--Frenchmen, Scotchmen, and Canadians.
-Many of the first-named cough frightfully. When they are asked where
-they got that, they answer that they have had it the whole Winter long.
-There is a lank, powerful-looking non-commissioned officer among them.
-He makes a sign to me and confesses confidentially that he is very
-hungry. I tell him he must have patience, as there will soon be coffee
-and bread given out.
-
-"Bread? Black bread?" He curls up his nose. "May I not have a little
-pastry, perhaps?"
-
-"You just try our black bread," is my reply. "It is the same as we have
-ourselves. We are better than we are supposed to be in France."
-
-"Yes, that's true," he agrees. "They told us that the prisoners were
-badly treated in Germany. Now I see that such is not the case. Besides,
-they tell you the same thing about our prisoners in France. But they,
-too, do not have it so bad. On the contrary. I have seen some of them
-myself in Brittany. They get a quart of cider a day. There was an
-enormous crop of apples last Summer. And there is enough to eat. And
-besides that, they are allowed to stroll through the city a couple of
-hours every afternoon."
-
-I permit myself to make a mental reservation regarding the last
-assertion, but a Frenchman brought in a little later makes the same
-statement.
-
-A fairly educated and intelligent Canadian joins in the conversation
-and puts the question that occupies all of them the most: "What sort of
-fate awaits the prisoners?"
-
-"You will have to work a few hours a day. Still, you are paid extra for
-that."
-
-"It is tough to have to sit in close rooms all the time."
-
-"No," I answer, "the wooden houses are surrounded by broad, open
-places. I, myself, have seen Englishmen playing football in a prison
-camp."
-
-Then his eyes sparkle and he lets slip the remark: "That is certainly
-better than in Canada." Presumably he refers to the camp of the
-civilians interned there. I ask him why he enlisted. He colors up and
-answers, with a somewhat embarrassed smile: "Well, I knew that my
-country was in danger, so I wanted to aid it." And this smile seems
-to me to betray less the embarrassment of a man looking for a clever
-answer than that of an educated person not liking to use pathetic
-expressions. For the entire man has the appearance of frankness and
-decency.
-
-In these days when fresh batches of prisoners are coming along all the
-time I have answered many more questions. They are almost always the
-same questions and receive the same answers. I have also seen convoys
-of unwounded prisoners wending their way by day and by night along
-lonely roads not so very far back of the front. I have repeatedly asked
-prisoners how they were being treated. Many had requests to make;
-none had a complaint. On the other hand, I saw many acts of kindness
-performed by the doctors, by the sisters, and, not the fewest, by the
-soldiers.
-
-
-
-
-MURDER TRIAL OF CAPT. HERAIL OF FRENCH HUSSARS
-
-_Strangest Episode of the War_
-
-_Told by an Eye-Witness_
-
-
-I--KILLED HIS WIFE--TRIED BY COURT-MARTIAL
-
-Captain Edouard Anselme Jean Herail, of the Eleventh Regiment of
-French Hussars, but formerly of a cuirassier regiment, killed his wife
-at Compiegne, because she insisted on staying in a place where his
-regiment was encamped in defiance of military orders, which required
-that officers' wives must not visit them. Herail was threatened with
-disgrace for failure to obey orders.
-
-Captain Herail was tried for the murder before a court-martial in
-Paris. The courtroom was crowded by a fashionable attendance, largely
-consisting of women, for the case involved most delicate and unique
-domestic problems, and the persons concerned were of high social
-position. The Captain's father was a prominent judge. His wife had one
-brother who won the Nobel Prize, and another brother is a well-known
-lawyer.
-
-She was tall, slender, with a mass of Titian red hair and large blue
-eyes. She had an artistic temperament and a seductive personality, when
-not enraged.
-
-The Captain is a man of middle height, strongly built, his thick hair
-brushed back, his complexion ruddy, altogether a good type of the
-cavalry officer. A reddish mustache adds to the impression of physical
-vigor, but his manner is gentle.
-
-The address of the prosecuting attorney showed that on November 23
-last the regiment of cavalry to which the captain belonged had been
-withdrawn from the front and sent to camp at Campiegne for a period of
-rest, after extremely severe fighting in Lorraine and in the north,
-where the officers and soldiers of the regiment had lost heavily and
-performed their duty in a very gallant manner. Captain Herail, for his
-bravery, was recommended by his superiors for the cross of knight of
-the Legion of Honor.
-
-Mme. Herail, who had been at Narbonne with her three children, learned
-three days after the regiment came to Compiegne that it was there.
-She hurried immediately to meet and embrace her husband, who was
-embarrassed by her presence from the beginning.
-
-He felt obliged to take every means to hide the presence of his wife
-in the town, for a note from the commanding general of October 4 had
-absolutely forbidden the wives of officers to be with their husbands,
-and it was added that any infraction of the order would be severely
-punished. Much disorder and disregard of discipline had been caused
-in the army by the presence of wives and also of those who were not
-wives. In spite of this officers' wives had frequently broken the order
-and had settled down in the vicinity of the camp. Lieutenant-Colonel
-Meneville, commanding the Captain's regiment decided to call the
-attention of his officers a second time to the necessity of observing
-the rule.
-
-
-II--MME. HERAIL DEFIED MILITARY LAW
-
-It was in the midst of this already very delicate situation that Mme.
-Herail arrived to stay with her husband. He represented to her in
-the most affectionate manner that she was breaking the orders of his
-superiors, but she met his remonstrances with a storm of indignant
-reproaches.
-
-"Your superiors are not my superiors!" exclaimed Mme. Herail, "and I
-owe them no obedience. Did one ever hear of such tyranny? Their orders
-are an outrage on personal liberty and the rights of a wife. There
-is no power in France that can make me leave my husband or keep my
-children away from their father."
-
-Finally, Mme. Herail burst into tears and her husband, instead of
-pressing her to go, fell on her bosom and wept with her.
-
-The colonel of the regiment, who learned that his orders and warnings
-were being disregarded by Mme. Herail, called his officers together
-again. This was a third warning to them. He did not wish to appear
-to be striking especially at Captain Herail, for whom he had a high
-regard, and he told them all that very severe punishment would be
-inflicted on those who disobeyed the order. The disobedient, he said,
-would be sent back from the front, which, under the circumstances,
-would be a humiliating disgrace for a soldier.
-
-Then he turned to Captain Herail and asked him to speak out "like a
-soldier and without beating about the bush" and tell him why his wife
-did not go away. Captain Herail endeavored to make an explanation, but
-instead of saying that he had been struggling vainly to make her go
-away, he tried, out of affection for his wife, to excuse her conduct
-and to offer special reasons why she should remain.
-
-The colonel then lost his patience, and inflicted fifteen days close
-arrest on the captain, and made a report to the general of the brigade
-that the captain should be sent back to the depot at Narbonne. The
-general approved the recommendation and in addition said that the
-captain should not receive the Cross of the Legion of Honor for
-which he had been recommended. The colonel ordered Major Bouchez, the
-immediate superior to Captain Herail, to keep the latter under arrest
-in his rooms at 26, rue de la Sous-Prefecture, Compiegne, where he
-lodged with Mme. Masson.
-
-
-III--DRAMATIC SCENE BETWEEN HUSBAND AND WIFE
-
-It was here that the climax of this unique drama occurred at about
-8 o'clock in the evening. Major Bouchez came into Captain Herail's
-room. The latter's wife remained concealed in the next room. She heard
-everything that was said. Major Bouchez, who knew that she was there,
-raised his voice so that she could hear perfectly the reproofs which he
-addressed to his comrade. The interview lasted an hour and the major
-demonstrated fully to Captain Herail the terrible and disgraceful
-situation in which he would be placed, from a military point of view,
-at this supreme crisis of the French nation, if he did not obey orders
-by sending his wife away.
-
-"You will be sent before a court martial," said Major Bouchez, "for
-refusing to obey the orders of your superiors, you will be struck from
-the list of the Legion of Honor, and you will be sent back from the
-front to the depot with the cripples and the old women. You would be
-better off if you were dead."
-
-Captain Herail went into the next room and addressed his wife:
-
-"You have heard what he has said? I must insist that you go away
-immediately. Go!"
-
-"I will not go," said Mme. Herail, squaring her shoulders and settling
-down upon a divan.
-
-"I give you the order to go immediately," repeated her husband with
-anger.
-
-"As a matter of morality," said Mme. Herail, "you have no right to give
-me such an order."
-
-"We are not in the domain of abstract morality," replied the husband,
-"but in the domain of civil and military law and you owe me obedience."
-
-"If you give me that order, everything will be over between us for
-life, and anyhow, I will not obey the order," retorted Mme. Herail,
-with remarkable feminine logic.
-
-"I give you two minutes to reflect," said the unfortunate captain,
-whose emotions were getting terribly wrought up.
-
-He went back to the other room, where Major Bouchez was waiting for
-him, took up his service revolver, and then returned to his wife's room.
-
-"Have you reflected? Is it no?" he asked, evidently anticipating his
-wife's immovable obstinacy.
-
-"I will never leave you alive. I love you too much, Jean," said Madame
-Herail.
-
-"Then you will leave me dead," said Captain Herail.
-
-
-IV--"HE AIMED AT HIS WIFE--AND FIRED"
-
-Captain Herail then aimed point-blank at his wife with his revolver and
-fired three shots at her. She fell to the ground dead, all three of the
-bullets having passed through her head. Major Bouchez rushed in, saw
-the body, and, as he testified at the trial, found Captain Herail in
-tears and out of his mind with remorse.
-
-Witnesses said that the sorrow of Captain Herail was intense. He was
-continually weeping, calling on the dead woman, and asking for his
-three children. It was proved that during the eleven years they were
-married he had shown the deepest affection for his wife, and it was
-only the military disgrace she had brought upon him that could have
-caused him to commit the act.
-
-He was married to his wife in 1904 when he was a lieutenant in the
-First Regiment of Cuirassiers. She was then Mlle. Henriette Courel.
-They both belonged to wealthy families and their marriage was an event
-in fashionable society. They began life under the happiest auspices.
-They were apparently a well-matched couple. He was very good-tempered
-and easy-going, while she was a devoted wife and a model housekeeper,
-but very jealous and extremely exacting.
-
-She required that her husband should have no interest in life apart
-from her. At the annual military manoeuvres she insisted on following
-him around, and he, from fear of being made ridiculous, asked her to
-stay away, but she would not do so. His comrades called her his colonel.
-
-During the testimony relating to these facts Captain Herail's eyes were
-wet with tears, and finally, when it came to the description of the
-scene of the killing, he could not restrain himself at all and broke
-into heartrending sobs.
-
-Then the presiding officer ordered him to stand up and relate what he
-had to say in defence of his act. His tears continued to flow and at
-first he was unable to utter an intelligible sentence. He could be
-heard sobbing:
-
-"My poor wife! My poor wife!"
-
-After a time he was able to make a statement concerning his
-difficulties with his wife, of which these were the most striking
-passages:
-
-"If she had only let me fulfill my military duties we should have been
-the happiest family possible. She was very good and very clever, but
-she never would permit me to be away from her."
-
-The unfortunate captain, who had faced death from bullets, day after
-day for months, without a tremor, while his comrades were falling all
-around him, broke down as he spoke of his dead wife and buried his
-nails in his flesh, unable to continue. The spectacle was an intensely
-painful one and caused nearly everybody in the audience to weep,
-including some of the officers on the bench.
-
-"What could I do?" went on the poor captain when he had recovered some
-self-control. "I thought of handing in my resignation, and yet, I loved
-my calling, although my promotion had been slow. I remained thirteen
-years a simple lieutenant.
-
-"Naturally, I appeared a careless officer, without ardor, constantly
-trying to get away from my daily duties. The truth is that my wife,
-every time I went out, urged me to return home as soon as possible,
-complaining that I was leaving her alone.
-
-"I wished to give my resignation, although it was a hard prospect for
-me to leave the army a simple lieutenant without getting the Cross of
-the Legion of Honor. I did not tell my conjugal difficulties to any one.
-
-"Then I was forced to abandon the idea of resigning, because my wife
-would not agree to such a solution. She was proud of the service I was
-in.
-
-"Our third child had just been born when my squadron was ordered to
-start for the frontier of Morocco, where the war had just broken out.
-Suddenly my wife, though still in delicate health, announced that she
-would go with me, that she would make the campaign."
-
-
-V--THE VERDICT--"NOT GUILTY!"
-
-The captain continued the history of his curiously troubled married
-life up to the time of the outbreak of the present war. When he came to
-the recital of the tragedy at Compiegne he lost all control of himself.
-He said that the only thing with which he could reproach himself was
-having concealed from his military superiors the truth concerning his
-difficulties with his wife.
-
-Colonel Jacquillart, the president of the court martial, asked Captain
-Herail sharply:
-
-"Why did you not use some other method than shooting your wife to end
-the distressing situation?"
-
-"I tried every other means first," replied the captain, "and I must
-have been mad with fear of disgrace to kill the wife I loved so much."
-
-Many military officers testified and gave Captain Herail a splendid
-character. Colonel Meneville, who had recommended that the captain
-should not receive the Legion of Honor on account of his disobeying the
-order to send wives away, said that in every other respect Herail was
-an excellent officer, brave and competent.
-
-Henri Robert, the most noted member of the Paris Bar, defended Captain
-Herail eloquently.
-
-"A judge far more inexorable than any of you," said M. Robert, pointing
-to the bench, "his mother-in-law, has forgiven him. She writes me
-lauding him as an ideal man and officer and worthy of his country. His
-dead wife's sisters and brothers also forgive him freely."
-
-The members of the court martial only took fifteen minutes to reach a
-decision. They returned and rendered unanimously a simple verdict of
-"Not guilty!"
-
-The verdict was received with frantic applause mingled with tears by
-the audience. (Told in the _New York American_.)
-
-
-
-
-HOW THEY KILLED "THE MAN WHO COULD NOT DIE"
-
-_Told by a Soldier Under General Cantore_
-
-
-I--STORY OF THE ITALIAN ALPINI
-
-They said he could not die. The men who fought under him in Tripoli,
-the men who stood beside him in the bloody capture of Ala, looked on
-Antonio Cantore with almost superstitious awe. For he ought to have
-been killed a hundred times. A hundred times he came back, smiling
-quietly behind his spectacles, out of perils through which other men
-could not live. So the legend grew up among the Italian Alpini that
-their commander led a charmed life; they said he had the camicia della
-madonna and that bullets could not harm him. Death got him at last, but
-those boys of his--as he used to call his soldiers--will not believe
-it, even though they carved his tomb out of the rock and heaped the
-earth over his body.
-
-Gen. Cantore was not a bit like a hero, as one pictures heroes. One
-might have taken him for a schoolmaster, a clerk in the post office,
-a retired commercial traveller. He was not tall, nor was his bearing
-martial. His kind blue eyes looked mildly through his round spectacles.
-His mouth laughed under his white mustache. He wore a black mackintosh
-and walked with his head a little on one side and his hands in his
-pockets. But he was not afraid. Neither was he foolhardy. He neither
-feared nor courted death; he merely ignored it. He had the sublime
-courage of the man who knows the danger so well that he will let no
-one else face it, but will brave it all alone.
-
-The veterans of the Tripoli campaign talked in this wise to the young
-recruits of the Alpini:
-
-"Look at that old man, with his kind face and gentle soul. He is the
-father of the Alpini. He has seen them born and has brought them up,
-all of them. They are his sons, his boys. With a word he has moulded
-them according to his own heart of bronze; with a smile he has forged
-them a heart of steel. You don't know him? Then you were not in Libya!
-But go to him, say 'Good morning, General!' and tell him your name.
-Ten years from now he will remember the name. And some night when you
-are on outpost duty and the hail of bullets is most furious, and the
-miaowing of the shells is maddest, when the air seems a-quiver with
-death, and the darkness is shot through with arrows and flashes, and
-the silence is shattered with bangs and explosions and roars, if your
-heart trembles a moment as you think of your little ones at home and
-the bells of the far-away village church ringing the Angelus, you will
-see the old man, the General, Antonio Cantore, rise suddenly before
-you, place himself between you and the enemy, shield you with his body.
-
-"For, you see, Antonio Cantore is everywhere and always ahead of
-everybody. When you leap first into an enemy's trench, eyes aflame,
-hands clawing, bayonet between your teeth, look ahead from the trench
-in which you are battling, and between it and the second line of
-trenches from which the enemy is still bombarding you with rapid-fire
-guns you will see a kind old man, his eyes twinkling behind his
-spectacles, his mouth smiling under its white mustaches, his hands in
-his pockets, his head slightly bent and inclined to one side. It will
-be Antonio Cantore.
-
-"For that old man, you see, is always everywhere and ahead of
-everybody. And he cannot die. We have seen him return unscathed from
-places where hundreds and hundreds have been killed. We have seen him
-march without flinching right up to the cannon and the mitrailleuse.
-Shells and bullets fall before him; they are afraid of his smile!"
-
-
-II--"MY GOD! A GENERAL!"
-
-Thus the lengend grew and spread from the Adige to Leno, from the
-Altissimo to Coni Zugna, from Pasubio to the Col Santo, wherever the
-Alpini were engaged.
-
-And every hardy mountaineer who was called to the colors cheered his
-loved ones on parting with the words: "Never fear! I am going to join
-Antonio Cantore's brigade."
-
-One night on the slopes of Monte Campo, Gen. Cantore was on
-reconnoitring patrol. For he was his own scout. Most commanders ask
-for two or three volunteers for a night reconnaissance. This general,
-instead, would say: "Are there two men who would like to come with me
-to-night and inspect the enemy's barbed wire entanglements?" And all
-the men would want to go. He would pick out two, saying to the others:
-"No, no, boys; I need only two of you. Thank you, just the same.
-Your time will come." To the chosen ones it was like a promotion or
-receiving a medal of honor.
-
-And so, one night he was out scouting with only his sergeant as
-company. "His" sergeant was Sergt. Cillario, a veteran of Libya,
-who had stayed in the army just to be with Antonio Cantore, whom he
-called "my" general. They had climbed a difficult mule-path toward
-the Austrian trenches, the general leading, the sergeant following in
-silence.
-
-At last the general told the sergeant to stop, and he went on alone.
-When he would not permit a man to risk his life, that man did as he was
-told. Only on such occasions did Gen. Cantore make his rank felt. He no
-longer said: "Let us go, my boy," but "Sergeant, stay there." His boys
-were not saints, but they obeyed. They had to, for otherwise he--raised
-his voice and smiled no more!
-
-So that night, as on many others, he went on alone. And when his hands
-touched the first barbed wire the sentries of the Austrian trenches
-fired at him. This did not disconcert him. He went on with his hands
-in his pockets, his head on one side, stooping to examine through his
-spectacles the entanglements by the light of flashes from the enemy's
-guns. He was ten yards from the Austrian trench, a single dark shadow
-advancing like fate through the volleys, an invulnerable shadow seeking
-out the interstices of the barbed wire entanglements to find spaces
-through which men might pass, scrutinizing them with the calm interest
-of a botanist examining a garden.
-
-A Tryolean kaiserjaeger, who has been taking careful aim at him, saw
-the insignia of his rank.
-
-"My God! a General!" he exclaimed, and let his rifle fall.
-
-
-III--TALES OF GENERAL CANTORE
-
-When the town of Ala was carried by assault last June he was the first
-to enter it. He went through the hail of bullets with the same calmness
-as he would have gone through a rainstorm, and as unscathed.
-
-When the Austrians fled a group of about one hundred and fifty took
-refuge in the Cafe 25 Maggio in the piazza then called Moses, and in
-the Villa Brazil, almost opposite, determined to resist to the last
-in order to cover the retreat. Gen. Cantore said the lieutenant in
-command of the nearest platoon, "Come on." They went to the door of
-the cafe. "Make them open," he said, "but leave your pistol. They won't
-fire." But they did, sending a shower of bullets from the windows.
-Neither of the Italians was hit.
-
-"They won't open," said the lieutenant.
-
-"I'll make them," said Cantore. He approached the door, armed only with
-his riding whip. Another volley greeted him, and shots from the windows
-of the Villa Brazil. He was unwounded, but he lost his calm as he cried:
-
-"Charge, boys, charge! Burst the place open and take them all
-prisoners!"
-
-The fight lasted a quarter of an hour. The walls, windows and door of
-the cafe were shot full of holes; the Villa Brazil was turned into a
-ruin. The few Austrians left alive were made prisoners.
-
-That street is now the Piazza Antonio Cantore.
-
-When the fight was over Gen. Cantore and a few other officers sat down
-to dine in the Albergo di Ala. There were three girls from Roverto
-who had taken refuge there. They were so pretty that they were called
-the "three graces." They waited on the diners. Gen. Cantore chatted
-with them, joking one especially, whose name was Pina, calling her
-affectionately by pet names--Pinotta, Pinella, Pinina, Pignotta,
-Pignina--laughing like a big boy. When he rose from dinner he took her
-chin in his hand and said:
-
-"Poor little Pina, far away from thy home! But we shall soon be at
-Roverto, and thou wilt come to Roverto right after us. Then thou wilt
-be happy again, eh?"
-
-But Antonio Cantore was never to see Roverto. A man cannot snub Death
-indefinitely. Death had to get even with Cantore, or remain forever
-discredited. One day he had his revenge.
-
-It was on July 20. The Alpini, under Gen. Cantore, were in the
-Ampazzano valley, trying to dislodge the Austrians from the slopes of
-the three mountains called Tofana di Rozzes, Tofana di Mezzo and Tofana
-di Dentro, whence they were able to fire on Cortina and other towns.
-Between the Tofana di Rozzes and the Tofana di Mezzo was a refuge hut
-for chamois hunters from which Austrian sharpshooters picked off the
-Italian soldiers at their leisure. The refuge hut had been bombarded,
-but the effect was doubtful.
-
-At 12.30 o'clock Gen. Cantore and Capt. Argenteri started to explore
-the place. They reached the advanced trenches by 5.15 o'clock. The
-Austrians were still firing from the hidden hut. Cantore and the
-Captain tried to locate the precise spot, but could not.
-
-"Captain, we will go up higher and look," said the General. They
-climbed up the slope and hid behind some rocks. As they peeped over
-these the sun shone straight in Cantore's face.
-
-"I cannot see well," he called to the Captain. Then he stood up and
-was placing his field-glasses to his eyes when three shots rang out.
-Cantore fell, with two bullets in his forehead. He died instantly.
-
-"His" sergeant, veteran of many battles, grown callous by the sight and
-suffering, asked a month's leave of absence to go away and mourn for
-his general. In Verona he walked about like a spectre, his face ghastly
-and set. They asked, "How did the General die?" And Cillario answered,
-"Antonio Cantore is not dead. Antonio Cantore could not die." (Told in
-the _New York World_.)
-
-
-
-
-HOW MLLE. DUCLOS WON THE LEGION OF HONOR
-
-_Story of a Woman Who Drove Her Auto at Full Speed into a German Force_
-
-_Told by an Eye-Witness_
-
-
-I--DECORATED BY MARSHAL JOFFRE
-
- PARIS, Sept. 24.
-
-The two most romantic and brilliant features of the war, the two
-things that have relieved it from being a dull record of close-range
-slaughter, have been the use of flying machines and automobiles.
-
-Flying machines may appear more romantic and spectacular to the
-outsider, but those who have seen the war at close quarters are of the
-opinion that the most astonishing and brilliant feats of arms have been
-performed by motor cars.
-
-The experience of Mlle. Helene Duclos, who annihilated practically a
-whole German company with her automobile, is one of the many amazing
-instances of the use of this comparatively novel instrument of war.
-Other cases in the various warring countries have, perhaps, been
-equally remarkable, but hers necessarily gains added interest from the
-fact that she is a woman, and a very attractive one.
-
-It has been shown that a high-powered armored motor car, running at
-sixty miles an hour, can, under certain conditions, disorganize a whole
-army and slaughter scores of soldiers. If driven into a body of men
-in close formation and taken by surprise its powers of injury are
-unlimited.
-
-Armored cars have been used for the terribly difficult work of removing
-barbed wire entanglements. The car runs up to the entanglements, throws
-grapnel irons over them, and then backs away to uproot them. The
-armored car can do this work under a fire that exposed men could not
-live in.
-
-Armored cars are employed in coöperation with flying machines. The
-aviator brings information where a car can do most damage, and then
-hovers overhead, giving warning to the motormen when they must retire
-or, return for help if necessary. An armored car crew connected with
-the British Naval Flying Corps has received honorable mention for
-annihilating a whole party of Uhlans.
-
-Some armored cars carry two machine guns and others a gun of larger
-calibre.
-
-Mlle. Duclos's motor exploit has made her the great heroine of the
-moment. She has been decorated by General Joffre with the cross of the
-Legion of Honor for her brilliant and heroic act.
-
-
-II--MLLE. DUCLOS TELLS HER STORY
-
-"I was determined to do something for my country in the fighting field,
-something that the Germans would remember--something more than soothing
-the fevered brow," said Mlle. Duclos, describing her exploits. "My
-great-grandfather was a captain of grenadiers under Napoleon, and the
-blood of generations of soldiers runs in my veins.
-
-"My first ambition was to enlist in the fighting automobile service.
-I had been used to running all kinds of cars since my childhood, and
-was as fit for this work as any human being could be. But I found the
-authorities obdurate. They simply would not let a woman into the
-combatant services. I tried disguising myself as a man, but the rigid
-physical examination made this attempt useless.
-
-"Finally it seemed to me that the only way of reaching the front was
-to join a volunteer motor ambulance corps, as several other women had
-done. I transformed a 60-horsepower, eight-seated touring car into a
-motor ambulance for four badly wounded men or eight slightly wounded
-ones. I qualified for the service and was authorized to proceed to the
-front in Alsace, accompanied by a mechanician.
-
-"While performing my ambulance duties I had a good opportunity to watch
-the armored automobiles, and realized that their work was the most
-exciting and perhaps the most decisive of the war."
-
-One day Mlle. Duclos, having taken some wounded men to the field
-hospital, was returning once more to the fighting line. Eager for
-adventure she drove her car up a mountain road, which was not included
-in the trench zone, and entered a wild, mountainous country, from
-which the French were desperately trying to drive the Germans by flank
-attacks, surprises, air raids and other stratagems.
-
-Soon the rattle of rifle bullets and machine gun fire close at hand
-caught her attention. A turn in the road brought her in sight of a big
-armored French car that stood disabled in the middle of the road. The
-engine had been smashed by a shell. The Germans were firing at it from
-cover some distance away. The French soldiers were firing away from the
-protection of the armor with their machine guns and their rifles, but
-they were handicapped by the immobility of the car, and the Germans
-were gradually encircling them. Three of the eight Frenchmen forming
-the crew of the car lay dead in the road, killed while they had exposed
-themselves in an attempt to repair the engine.
-
-Mlle. Duclos saw three German soldiers rise from cover and advance in
-an effort to rush the car. They were shot down, but she saw that in a
-few more minutes the Frenchmen must be overwhelmed.
-
-Taking in the situation at a glance, the experienced motorist sped up
-to the injured car and backed up her machine before she stopped.
-
-"Get in," she cried to the French soldiers, "or you will be taken in
-another minute."
-
-The five Frenchmen jumped into Mlle. Duclos's car with their rifles.
-Under a rain of bullets she sped back by the way she had come. Luckily
-they all escaped, and a turn in the zigzag road soon put them out of
-danger.
-
-The Germans must have taken possession of the car in a leisurely manner
-after the escape of the French. It was precious booty to them. Probably
-they tried to repair it, and, finding that impossible, started to tow
-it back.
-
-The Frenchmen were not satisfied to escape with their lives and leave
-their car behind. Mlle. Duclos had noted carefully the direction of the
-surrounding roads. After running back a short distance she found a road
-that would lead them to the one that the Germans would follow on their
-way back.
-
-The French officer in charge of the party insisted on taking the
-steering wheel of the car, but Mlle. Duclos demonstrated that she was
-the only one who could get the best speed out of her car. Thus she
-forced them to let her stay in the place of danger.
-
-Behind a pile of rocks that marked the meeting of the roads they lay in
-wait for the returning Germans.
-
-Up the road came the Germans tugging at a rope that drew the great
-disabled French armored car. There were about forty of them,
-practically half a company, minus the men who had already fallen in the
-fight.
-
-It was impossible for the five Frenchmen to cope with them in any
-ordinary fight. Only surprise and stratagem could hope to meet the
-situation.
-
-
-III--SHE PLUNGES HER MOTOR INTO THE GERMANS
-
-Mlle. Duclos immediately suggested that she should drive the car
-straight down on the unsuspecting Germans. Her opportunity for a great
-action had come. She seized it.
-
-Down hill upon the toiling Germans flew the great 60-horsepower
-car. Straight as an arrow it went, with the weight of its two tons
-multiplied a hundred times by its speed and downward course.
-
-All the Germans in its full path went down like ripe corn before the
-scythe. Straight it flew on without being swerved in the slightest
-degree by the human obstacles in its way.
-
-Severed heads flew up in the air and arms and legs were chopped off by
-the flying car. Ghastly fragments of flesh and bone, a muddy mixture
-of blood and viscera, human remains that had nothing human about them,
-spattered the wheels and the body and all the occupants of the car.
-
-"I felt like the very incarnation of the spirit of destruction and
-revenge," says Mlle. Duclos describing this wild scene. "I was not
-human."
-
-The car flew on its path of death until it reached the captured French
-armored car. Mlle. Duclos missed this by an incalculable fraction of
-an inch and then slowly brought her racing car to a stop.
-
-The French soldiers looked back. Only a few German soldiers, who were
-out of the path of the auto, had escaped death or maiming. Perhaps
-there were six in all, and they were aghast at the demon of death that
-had swept through them.
-
-The French soldiers showered the Germans with hand grenades and would
-probably have overcome the rest of the party and recaptured their auto,
-when a party of Uhlans was seen riding up the road from the direction
-of the German lines.
-
-It appeared that scouting aviators of both sides had witnessed
-the fight over the armored car and had carried word back to their
-respective forces.
-
-Once more the gallant French motor fighters were in danger of being
-wiped out. Acting in co-operation with the officer, Mlle. Duclos ran
-her car back again, putting it between the survivors of the first
-German party and the new reinforcements. This move put the former at a
-great disadvantage, as they were standing about in a flat, open place,
-but, of course, it exposed the Frenchmen to the newly arriving German
-forces.
-
-The Frenchmen with rifles and pistols disposed of the remnant of the
-first German party, and then started to hitch their disabled car to
-Madame Durand's machine.
-
-A shower of bullets from the German side warned them that their gallant
-efforts would probably be in vain.
-
-"Whir-r-r! whir-r-r!" came the frightful scream of war cars from the
-direction of the French lines.
-
-Two powerful French armored cars sped down the road, with machine guns
-spouting death, and engaged the German reinforcements.
-
-At the conclusion of this new battle the five French motor fighters
-were able to secure their disabled car, and Mlle. Duclos at the wheel
-of her own car led the glorious wreck back in triumph.
-
-Thus it happened that she received the military cross of the Legion of
-Honor and is the heroine of the hour.--(_New York American._)
-
-
-
-
-THE RUSSIAN "JOAN OF ARC'S" OWN STORY
-
- _Told by Mme. Alexandra Kokotseva, the "Russian Joan of Arc,"
- Colonel Commanding the Sixth Ural Cossack Regiment--Translated from
- a Letter Forwarded from Petrograd to Friends in New York_
-
-
-I--"BELIEVE NONE OF THOSE GERMAN LIES"
-
-As Jessaul (Colonel) of my dashing Cossack regiment I must be discreet
-in my letter writing. Only last week one of my officers--in fact the
-Sotnik (Captain) himself--let himself in for a nice wigging from the
-department censor by heading a letter to his mother in Moscow with the
-name of the nearest village to our regimental headquarters and the
-exact date. All such details are "verboten," as the Austrian would say
-whose bullet has given me this nice little rest in the field hospital.
-
-Do not worry on my account. In a week I shall sit just as firmly in
-my saddle as ever. Never was a wounded soldier of either sex more
-petted and coddled than I am. Every day my little ones (Cossacks of her
-regiment) almost bury me under Spring flowers.
-
-"Listen, Batjuschka," I had to say just now to the grimmest and
-fiercest of them--a grizzled giant who only yesterday captured six
-Austrians single-handed--"do you wish to see your Jessual shedding
-tears like a mere woman? For shame! About face--march!"
-
-But the wretch had the audacity to try and kiss my hand--he left a tear
-on it, anyway. When I'm out I shall have to discipline him severely!
-
-My splendid Cossacks! Who would have thought that they would consent
-to be commanded by a woman? Often have I told you of their superior
-attitude toward women. They expect their women to work for them,
-to serve them and be always submissive. Evidently my fierce little
-ones consider me as a sort of Superwoman. Or, perhaps they do not
-consider me a woman at all--except now that I am wounded and in the
-hospital--and respect merely my colonel's uniform. Truly it has little
-in common with the Tartar shirt, half-coat and foot-gear and kerchief
-of their sisters and wives. At any rate they obey my slightest wish,
-perform the most reckless deeds, gayly court death, to win my approval.
-
-If you should be writing to Paul ----, or to Anna in America, be sure
-and tell them to believe none of those German lies. Not one of my
-fire-eating Cossacks has been guilty of offering indignities to a woman
-of the enemy. Maybe my little ones do some burning and looting--if my
-back is turned--but to act in a beastly way to women and children, no!
-
-
-II--"TO MY FRIENDS IN AMERICA"
-
-You have heard of us in the enemy's country. Ah, there was fat living!
-Eggs by the hundred thousand; egg pancakes to tighten the belts of a
-whole army, and mutton and beef without stint. We grew fat. Our ragged
-and gaunt Austrian prisoners looked upon us with envy. Soon they also
-were fat!
-
-You know that we of the Cossack regiments have little to do with
-the fighting in trenches. For us it is to make forays, to make
-whirlwind attacks upon detachments of the enemy guarding their line
-of communications, and capture positions badly defended by artillery.
-I may be permitted to instance our usefulness on the frontier of
-Galicia, between the Dniester and Pruth. It was my Cossacks who
-surprised the Austrians at Okna.
-
-The Austrians were intrenched. Our infantry attacked, but were
-repulsed. Ah, then you should have beheld my little ones! There were
-two Cossack regiments--two thousand dashing, fierce fellows--itching
-for a hand-to-hand encounter with the despised Teutons. As the infantry
-were retreating my little ones were given their chance.
-
-Yelling madly and firing their carbines, they galloped west and east,
-covering a long front to convince the Austrians that they were in large
-force. The ruse worked. The enemy started to retreat to the southwest.
-Before they were clear of their trenches the Cossacks were riding them
-down, plying the cold steel right and left and cutting off large bodies
-for prisoners--finally taking the position.
-
-That is the work at which my fine fire-eaters are famous. The Sotnik
-(Captain) of my regiment sent to me a bloodstained, grizzled victor in
-a hundred battles who begged the privilege of presenting to me seven
-caps belonging to the Austrian infantry service uniform, each pierced
-through its crown. Like so many grouse, they were skewered upon my
-brave Cossack's bayonet.
-
-"Thank you, Batjuschka, but I am not hungry," I said, for my little
-ones do not mind being teased. "Neither are they hungry who lately
-wore them," was the quick answer. "Where are those seven Austrians?"
-I asked, looking about in pretended stupidity. "With God," said my
-gallant Cossack, as he reverently crossed himself. "Ah," I said,
-"afterwards you went back and with your bayonet skewered each Austrian
-cap where it lay beside its dead owner." "No," he replied gravely,
-"with my bayonet I skewered each cap with the same thrust that sent its
-owner to God." And again he crossed himself.
-
-It was all true--there were witnesses of the encounter--seven to one,
-and all the seven now "with God."
-
-Do you shudder when I write to you of these things? Do you say to
-yourself that "this terrible war" has robbed me of all my estimable
-"woman's weaknesses?" Do you picture me brazenly calloused to scenes
-of human agony and violent deaths for thousands in a single engagement
-which probably has no effect upon the final outcome?
-
-You would be wrong. It is simply that if you are a soldier it is your
-duty to kill, and perhaps to be killed, in defense of your country. No
-matter how dreadful the things that happen, they are inseparable from
-war and you must get used to them. Gradually you do get used to them.
-If you did not your services to your country would be of no value.
-You would not be a true soldier, who must be able always to shrug his
-shoulders and say to himself, "Well, such things happen," and then go
-on faithfully with his soldier's work.
-
-But believe me, these duties performed as well as I am able to
-perform them, promotions, honors--afterward they will be as nothing
-compared with what is dear to me as a woman. Through all this violence
-and carnage and misery I know that I shall have gained in all that
-becomes a woman--in faithfulness, tenderness, pity for the poor and
-unfortunate, and in charity.
-
-
-
-
-AN ITALIAN SOLDIER'S LAST MESSAGE TO HIS MOTHER
-
-_Translated by Father Pasquale Maltese_
-
- This is an extraordinary revelation of the heart of an Italian
- soldier. It is the last letter to his mother written by a young
- poet who fell on the Isonzo leading a platoon in battle. Father
- Pasquale Maltese, pastor of the church of St. Anthony, New York,
- translates it for _The Parish Monthly_ as an "inspiration to the
- youth of every land."
-
-
-I--"TO DIE A BEAUTIFUL AND GLORIOUS DEATH"
-
-MOTHER:
-
-This letter, which you will receive only in case that I should fall
-in this battle, I am writing in an advanced trench, where I have been
-since last night, with my soldiers, in expectation of the order to
-cross the river and move to the attack.
-
-I am calm, perfectly serene, and firmly resolved to do my duty in full
-and to the last, like a brave and good soldier, confident to the utmost
-of our final unfailing victory; although I am not equally sure that I
-will live to see it. But this uncertainty does not trouble me in the
-least, nor has it any terror for me. I am happy in offering my life to
-my country; I am proud to spend it for so noble a purpose, and I know
-not how to thank Divine Providence for the opportunity--which I deem
-an honor--afforded me, on this fulgent autumnal day, in the midst of
-this enchanting valley of our Julian Venetia, while I am in the prime
-of life, in the fulness of my physical and mental powers, to fight in
-this holy war for liberty and justice. All is propitious to me, all
-is favorable to die a beautiful and glorious death; the weather, the
-place, the season, the opportunity, the age. A better end could not
-have crowned my life, and I feel the pleasure to have made a good and
-generous use of it. Do not grieve over my death, mother, or else you
-will offend my good fortune. Do not weep, mother, for it was written
-in Heaven that I should die. Do not mourn, mother, or else you would
-regret my happiness. I am not to be mourned but envied.
-
-You know the ineffable hopes that give me comfort because they are the
-very same hopes in which you also have placed all that is dear to you.
-When you read these words of mine, I will be free, unfettered and in a
-safe place, far from the miseries of this world. My struggle will be
-finished and I shall be peaceful; my daily death shall have come to an
-end, and I shall have reached the place on high, to the life without
-end. I shall be face to face with the Judge whom I have greatly feared,
-to the Lord whom I have greatly loved.
-
-Think of it, mother dear, when you read these words. I shall view you
-from heaven, side by side with our dear ones, with father, with my dear
-Laura, with Dino, our Guardian Angel. We shall be in the regions above,
-all united to celebrate your arrival, to watch over you and over Gino,
-to prepare for you, with our prayers, the place of your everlasting
-glory. Should not this thought alone be sufficient to dry your tears
-and to fill you with unspeakable joy?
-
-
-II--"WEEP NOT, MY DEAR MOTHER"
-
-No, no, weep not, my dear and saintly mother, and be brave, as you
-have always been. Should the pleasure of having offered to our adored
-Italy, this glorious land, this land predestined by God, should the
-pleasure of having offered the sacrifice of the life of one of your
-sons, be not sufficient for you, remember, nevertheless, that you must
-not rebel, not even for one instant, to the divinely wise and divinely
-loving decrees of our Lord. If He wanted to reserve me for other
-work, He could have permitted me to survive. Since He has called me
-to Himself, it is a sign that such was the best thing that could have
-happened and the best thing for me. He knows what He is doing, and it
-remains for us to bow and to adore, accepting with trustful joy His
-most Exalted Will.
-
-I do not bemoan life. I have tasted of all its insane infatuations and
-have withdrawn with an insurmountable weariness and disgust.
-
-Like a young prodigal son, after so many wanderings, having returned to
-the house of the father, I could have hoped now, and reasonably so, to
-taste of the good joys, the joys of duties well performed, of the good
-practised and preached, the joys born of art, of labor, of charity, of
-a fruitful mind.
-
-Side by side with the good, beautiful girl whom you know and esteem,
-and whom I have always loved, always so tenderly, timidly and
-faithfully loved, even in the midst of my errors and blameworthy
-blunders, I could have hoped to make a good husband and a good father.
-
-In the world there are so many battles to fight, for love, for
-justice, for liberty, for the faith, and for a time I must confess, I
-presumptuously believed myself predestined and assigned to the arduous
-and terrible task of winning one or another of these battles.
-
-All this was, I admit, beautiful, flattering, desirable, but it cannot
-compare with my present lot. This is the very truth, and indeed I
-cannot say whether I would really be satisfied if the writing of this
-letter would have been in vain. Life is sad; it is a painful and
-annoying duty, a long exile in the uncertainty of our own lot. In
-order that life might go quickly in accordance with my wishes, and
-without leaving me in a thousand disappointments, there would be need
-of many very rare and difficult occurrences. Besides, I am and I feel
-weak, I have not the least confidence in myself. The whole battle
-against the ingratitude and wickedness of the world would not have
-frightened me as much as the battle against myself. It is better,
-therefore, dear mother, as it has happened. The Lord, in His wise and
-infinite goodness, has reserved for me just the destiny that was fit
-for me; a destiny that is easy, sweet, honorable, rapid; to die in
-battle for one's country.
-
-With this beautiful and praiseworthy past, fulfilling the most desired
-of all duties as a good citizen towards the land that gave him birth,
-I depart, in the midst of the tears of all those that love me, from
-a life toward which I felt weary and disgusted. I leave the failings
-of life, I leave sin, I leave the sad and afflicted spectacle of the
-small and momentary triumphs of evil over good. I leave to my humble
-body the weight of all my chains and I fly away, free, free in the end,
-to the heavens above, where resides our Father, to the heavens above,
-where His holy will is always done. Just imagine, dear mother, with
-what joy I will receive from His hands even the chastisements that His
-justice will impose on account of my sins. He Himself has paid all
-these chastisements by His superabundant merits, a God of mercy and
-of love, redeeming me with His precious blood, living and dying here
-below for my sake. Only through His grace, only through Jesus Christ,
-could I have succeeded that my sins be not my eternal death. He has
-seen the tears of my sorrow, He has pardoned me through the mouth of
-His spotless spouse, the Church. I do sincerely hope that the Madonna,
-so loving and kind toward us, will assist me with her powerful help in
-the instant when my eternity will be decided.
-
-
-III--"GOOD-BYE, MOTHER--WE SHALL NOT DIE IN VAIN"
-
-And as I am about to speak of forgiveness, dear mother, I have only
-one thing to say with all simplicity: Forgive me! Forgive me all the
-sorrows that I have caused you; all the agonies that you have suffered
-on my account every time I have been ungrateful, stubborn, forgetful,
-disobedient toward you. Forgive me if, by neglect and inexperience, I
-have failed to render your life more comfortable and tranquil since the
-day when my father, by his premature death, entrusted you to my care.
-Now I understand well the many wrongs I have been guilty of toward you,
-and I feel all the remorse and cruel anguish now that dying I have to
-entrust you to the providence of the Lord. Forgive me lastly this final
-sorrow that I have inflicted upon you, perhaps not without stubborn
-and cruel inconsideration on my part, in giving up my life voluntarily
-for my country, fascinated by the attractions of this beautiful lot.
-Forgive me also if I have not sufficiently recognized and tried to
-compensate the incomparable nobility of your soul, of your heart, so
-immense and sublime. Mother, truly perfect and exemplary, to whom I owe
-all that I am and the least good I have done in this world.
-
-I have so many things to say to you that a book could hardly contain
-them. Nothing else, therefore, is left me but to recommend you to our
-Gino, on whose goodness, on whose integrity, and on whose strength
-of will, I put all trust. Tell him in my name to serve willingly
-our country as long as she will have need of him, to serve her with
-abnegation, with ardor, with enthusiasm, even unto death, should that
-be necessary. Should he be destined to live a long and struggling life,
-let him be equal to it with serenity, with firmness, with indomitable
-love for justice and honesty, trusting always in the triumph of good
-with God's grace. Let him be a good husband and a good father; let
-him raise up his children in the love of God, respect for the Church,
-fidelity toward our King, to the observance of the law, to scrupulous
-devotion to our beloved country. Think often of us here above; speak
-of us among yourselves; remember us and love us as when we were alive,
-because we shall always be with you.
-
-Pray often for me, for I am in need of it. Be courageous in the trials
-of life, as you have always been strong and energetic in the midst
-of the tempest of your earthly career; continue to be humble, pious,
-charitable, so that the peace of God may always be with you.
-
-Good-bye, mother; good-bye, Gino, my dear and my belovèd! I embrace
-you with all the ardor of my immense love, which has increased a
-hundredfold during my absence in the midst of the dangers and hardships
-of the war. Here, far away from the world, always with the image of
-imminent death, I have felt how strong are the ties that bind us to
-this world; how mankind is in need of mutual love, of faith in each
-other, of discipline, of harmony, of unity, what necessary and sacred
-things are the fatherland, the home, the family; how blameworthy is the
-person who renounces these, who betrays and oppresses them.
-
-Love and freedom for all, this is the ideal for which it is a pleasure
-to offer one's life. May God cause our sacrifice to be fruitful; may
-He take pity upon mankind, forgive and forget their offenses, and give
-them peace. Then, oh! dear mother, we shall not have died in vain. Just
-one more tender kiss.
-
- GIOSUE BORSI.
-
-
-
-
- * * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber's Notes
-
-Obvious errors of punctuation and diacritical markings were corrected.
-
-Inconsistent hyphenation was made consistent.
-
-Both "dug-out" and "dugout" are used frequently and have not been
-changed.
-
-"of" added in "Permission of New York American" in table of contents
-entry for "HOW MLLE. DUCLOS...".
-
-P. 35: One the face of it -> On the face of it.
-
-P. 35: These stiplations -> These stipulations.
-
-P. 82: There were a group -> They were a group.
-
-P. 94: The Advance to Monse -> The Advance to Mons.
-
-P. 96: secure a birth -> secure a berth.
-
-P. 115: we could could procure -> we could procure.
-
-P. 133: Aerschat -> Aerschot.
-
-P. 134: The sequal to my one-hundredth flight -> The sequel to my
-one-hundredth flight.
-
-P. 143: Deisel -> Diesel.
-
-P. 158: But I've illusions -> But I've no illusions.
-
-P. 176: There it a pretty little comedy -> There is a pretty little
-comedy.
-
-P. 178: as had been been anticipated -> as had been anticipated.
-
-P. 180: Deutschland, Deutschland, über Allies -> Deutschland,
-Deutschland, über Alles.
-
-P. 182: It that mine exploded -> If that mine exploded.
-
-P. 186: undergoing the the process -> undergoing the process.
-
-P. 186: immediate requiremenst -> immediate requirements.
-
-P. 191: this his previous blunder -> that his previous blunder.
-
-P. 192: one well swoop -> one fell swoop.
-
-P. 195: back in in Petersburg -> back in Petersburg.
-
-P. 198: non-combatatants -> non-combatants.
-
-P. 204: barely distinguishable roads -> barely distinguishable road.
-
-P. 206: descended on her shoulder -> descend on her shoulder.
-
-P. 208: keepers of the the forest -> keepers of the forest.
-
-P. 214: the German had fired -> the Germans had fired.
-
-P. 220: as thought he meant -> as though he meant.
-
-P. 221: turned be back -> turned me back.
-
-P. 222: obession of my fear -> obsession of my fear.
-
-P. 231: Flemish titler -> Flemish title.
-
-P. 241: without specal orders -> without special orders.
-
-P. 266: Jilfla -> Jilfi.
-
-P. 273: leave a comrade die like a dog -> leave a comrade to die like
-a dog.
-
-P. 276: jeun docteur Allemand -> jeune docteur Allemand.
-
-P. 282: a public vehicles -> a public vehicle.
-
-P. 284: lès majesté -> lèse majesté.
-
-P. 309: Vive Verund -> Vive Verdun.
-
-P. 317: the old wail of sorow -> the old wail of sorrow.
-
-P. 325: Every one us -> Every one of us.
-
-P. 334: replied the hsuband -> replied the husband.
-
-P. 340: Thus the lengend grew -> Thus the legend grew.
-
-
-
-***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TRUE STORIES OF THE GREAT WAR,
-VOLUME VI (OF 6)***
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-<h1 class="pg">The Project Gutenberg eBook, True Stories of the Great War, Volume VI (of
-6), by Various, Edited by Francis Trevelyan Miller</h1>
-<p>This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States
-and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no
-restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
-under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
-eBook or online at <a
-href="http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you are not
-located in the United States, you'll have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this ebook.</p>
-<p>Title: True Stories of the Great War, Volume VI (of 6)</p>
-<p> Tales of Adventure--Heroic Deeds--Exploits Told by the Soldiers, Officers, Nurses, Diplomats, Eye Witnesses</p>
-<p>Author: Various</p>
-<p>Editor: Francis Trevelyan Miller</p>
-<p>Release Date: February 13, 2016 [eBook #51206]</p>
-<p>Language: English</p>
-<p>Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1</p>
-<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TRUE STORIES OF THE GREAT WAR, VOLUME VI (OF 6)***</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<h4>E-text prepared by Brian Coe, Moti Ben-Ari,<br />
- and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
- (<a href="http://www.pgdp.net">http://www.pgdp.net</a>)<br />
- from page images generously made available by<br />
- Internet Archive/American Libraries<br />
- (<a href="https://archive.org/details/americana">https://archive.org/details/americana</a>)</h4>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<table border="0" style="background-color: #ccccff;margin: 0 auto;" cellpadding="10">
- <tr>
- <td valign="top">
- Note:
- </td>
- <td>
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive/American Libraries. See
- <a href="https://archive.org/details/truestoriesofgre06mill">
- https://archive.org/details/truestoriesofgre06mill</a>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="full" />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 416px;">
-<img id="coverpage" src="images/cover.jpg" width="416" height="600" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
-<img src="images/front1.jpg" width="400" height="600" alt="" />
-<br /><br />
-<img src="images/front2.jpg" width="400" height="600" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p id="half-title">TRUE STORIES OF THE GREAT WAR</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h1>TRUE STORIES OF THE GREAT WAR</h1>
-
-<p class="center spaced space-above">
-TALES OF ADVENTURE&mdash;HEROIC DEEDS&mdash;EXPLOITS<br />
-TOLD BY THE SOLDIERS, OFFICERS, NURSES,<br />
-DIPLOMATS, EYE WITNESSES<br />
-<br />
-<i>Collected in Six Volumes<br />
-From Official and Authoritative Sources</i><br />
-(<i>See Introductory to Volume I</i>)<br />
-<br />
-VOLUME VI<br />
-<br />
-Editor-in-Chief<br />
-FRANCIS TREVELYAN MILLER (Litt. D., LL.D.)<br />
-Editor of The Search-Light Library<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-1917<br />
-REVIEW OF REVIEWS COMPANY<br />
-NEW YORK<br />
-</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="center">
-Copyright, 1917, by<br />
-REVIEW OF REVIEWS COMPANY<br />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>
-The Board of Editors has selected for VOLUME VI this group of
-stories told by Soldiers and Army Officers direct from the battle-grounds
-of the Great War. It includes 165 episodes and personal
-adventures by forty-two story-tellers&mdash;"Tommies," "Boches,"
-"Poilus," Russians, Italians, Austrians, Turks, Belgians, Scotchmen,
-Irishmen, Canadians, Americans&mdash;the "Best Stories of the
-War" gathered from the most authentic sources, according to the
-plan outlined in "Introductory" to Volume I. Full credit is given
-in every instance to the original sources.
-</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-
-<div class="center">
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" summary="">
-<tr><td align="left">VOLUME VI&mdash;FORTY STORY-TELLERS&mdash;165 EPISODES</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">"BEHIND THE GERMAN VEIL"&mdash;WITH VON HINDENBURG</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">RECORD OF A REMARKABLE WAR PILGRIMAGE</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by Count Van Maurik De Beaufort</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of Dodd, Mead and Company)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">"KITCHENER'S MOB"&mdash;ADVENTURES OF AN AMERICAN WITH</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">THE BRITISH ARMY</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_16">16</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">UNCENSORED ACCOUNT OF A YOUNG VOLUNTEER</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by James Norman Hall</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of Houghton, Mifflin Company)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">"HOW BELGIUM SAVED EUROPE"&mdash;THE LITTLE KINGDOM</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">OF HEROES</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_32">32</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">TRAGEDY OF THE BELGIANS</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by Dr. Charles Sarolea</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of J. B. Lippincott Company)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">THE BISHOP OF LONDON'S VISIT TO THE FRONT</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_43">43</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">TAKING THE MESSAGE OF CHRIST TO THE BATTLE LINES</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by The Reverend G. Vernon Smith</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of Longmans, Green and Company)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">"GRAPES OF WRATH"&mdash;WITH THE "BIG PUSH" ON THE</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">SOMME</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_52">52</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">TWENTY-FOUR HOURS IN THE LIFE OF A PRIVATE</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">SOLDIER</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by Boyd Cable</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of E. P. Dutton and Company)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">A NOVELIST AND SOLDIER ON THE BATTLE LINE</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_63">63</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by Coningsby Dawson</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of John Lane Company)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">STORIES OF THE WAR PHOTOGRAPHERS IN BELGIUM</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_81">81</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">AN AMERICAN AT THE BATTLEFRONT</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by Albert Rhys Williams</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of E. P. Dutton and Company)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">TALES OF THE FIRST BRITISH EXPEDITIONARY FORCE</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">TO FRANCE</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_94">94</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">IMPRESSIONS OF A SUBALTERN</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by "Casualty" (Name of Soldier Suppressed)</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of J. B. Lippincott Company)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">IN THE HANDS OF THE ENEMY&mdash;EXPERIENCES OF A PRISONER</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">OF WAR</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_104">104</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by Benjamin G. O'Rorke, M. A.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of Longmans, Green and Company)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">"AT SUVLA BAY"&mdash;THE WAR AGAINST THE TURKS</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_117">117</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">ADVENTURES ON THE BLUE ÆGEAN SHORES</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by John Hargrave</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of Houghton, Mifflin Company)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">SEEING THE WAR THROUGH A WOMAN'S EYES</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_122">122</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">SOUL-STIRRING DESCRIPTION OF SCENES AMONG THE</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">WOUNDED IN PARIS</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by (Name Suppressed)</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of New York American)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">LOST ON A SEAPLANE AND SET ADRIFT IN A MINE-FIELD</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_134">134</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">ADVENTURES ON THE NORTH SEA</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by a Seaplane Observer</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of Wide World Magazine)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">HOW I HELPED TO TAKE THE TURKISH TRENCHES AT</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">GALLIPOLI</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_144">144</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">AN AMERICAN BOY'S WAR ADVENTURES</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by Wilfred Raymond Doyle</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of New York World)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">"BIG BANG"&mdash;STORY OF AN AMERICAN ADVENTURER</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_156">156</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">A TALE OF THE GREAT TRENCH MORTARS</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by C. P. Thompson</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of Wide World Magazine)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">"WITH OUR ARMY IN FLANDERS"&mdash;FIGHTING WITH TOMMY</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">ATKINS</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_165">165</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">WHERE MEN HOLD RENDEZVOUS WITH DEATH</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by G. Valentine Williams</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of London Daily Mail)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">COMEDIES OF THE GREAT WAR</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_176">176</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">TALES OF HUMOR ON THE FIGHTING LINES</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by W. F. Martindale</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of Wide World Magazine)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">LITTLE STORIES OF THE BIG WAR</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_188">188</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">UNUSUAL ANECDOTES AT FIRST HAND</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by Karl K. Kitchen in Germany</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of New York World)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">POGROM&mdash;THE TRAGEDY OF THE JEWS AND THE ARMENIANS</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_194">194</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">A MASTERFUL TALE OF THE EASTERN FRONT</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by M. C. della Grazie</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of New York Tribune)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">TALE OF THE SAVING OF PARIS</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_204">204</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">HOW A WOMAN'S WIT AVERTED A GREAT DISASTER</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of Wide World Magazine)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">HOW IT FEELS TO A CLERGYMAN TO BE TORPEDOED ON</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">A MAN-OF-WAR</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_212">212</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by the Rev. G. H. Collier</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">STORY OF LEON BARBESSE, SLACKER, SOLDIER, HERO</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_213">213</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by Fred B. Pitney</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of New York Tribune)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">THE DESERTER&mdash;A BELGIAN INCIDENT</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_230">230</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by Edward Eyre Hunt</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of Red Cross Magazine)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">GRIM HUMOR OF THE TRENCHES</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_240">240</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">AS SEEN BY PATRICK CORCORAN, OF THE ROYAL ENGINEERS</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of New York World)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">PRIVATE McTOSHER DISCOVERS LONDON</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_247">247</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by C. Malcolm Hincks</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of Wide World Magazine)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">RUSSIAN COUNTESS IN THE ARABIAN DESERT</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_259">259</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">ADVENTURES OF COUNTESS MOLITOR AS TOLD IN HER</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">DIARY</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">GERMAN STUDENTS TELL WHAT SHERMAN MEANT</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_270">270</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">THREE CONFESSIONS FROM GERMAN SOLDIERS</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by Walter Harich, Wilhelm Spengler and Willie Treller</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of New York Tribune)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">BAITING THE BOCHE&mdash;THE WIT OF THE BELGIANS</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_277">277</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by W. F. Martindale</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of Wide World Magazine)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">HOW SERGEANT O'LEARY WON HIS VICTORIA CROSS</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_288">288</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">STORY OF THE FIRST BATTALION OF THE IRISH GUARDS</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of New York American)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">STORY OF A RUSSIAN IN AN AUSTRIAN PRISON</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_295">295</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">AN OFFICER'S REMARKABLE EXPERIENCE</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of Current History)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">TWO WEEKS ON A SUBMARINE</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_302">302</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by Carl List</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of Current History)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">A GERMAN BATTALION THAT PERISHED IN THE SNOW</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_305">305</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by a Russian Officer</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">THE FATAL WOOD&mdash;"NOT ONE SHALL BE SAVED"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_309">309</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">A STORY OF VERDUN</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by Bernard St. Lawrence</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of Wide World Magazine)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">HEROISM AND PATHOS OF THE FRONT</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_316">316</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by Lauchlan MacLean Watt</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">AN AVIATOR'S STORY OF BOMBARDING THE ENEMY</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_321">321</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by a French Aviator</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of Illustration, Paris)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">A DAY IN A GERMAN WAR PRISON</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_325">325</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by Wilhelm Hegeler</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">MURDER TRIAL OF CAPTAIN HERAIL OF FRENCH HUSSARS</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_330">330</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">STRANGEST EPISODE OF THE WAR</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by an Eye-Witness</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of New York American)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">HOW THEY KILLED "THE MAN WHO COULD NOT DIE"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_338">338</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by a Soldier Under General Cantore</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of New York World)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">HOW MLLE. DUCLOS WON THE LEGION OF HONOR</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_344">344</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">STORY OF A WOMAN WHO DROVE HER AUTO AT FULL</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">SPEED INTO A GERMAN FORCE</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by an Eye-Witness</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of New York American)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">THE RUSSIAN "JOAN OF ARC'S" OWN STORY</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_351">351</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by Mme. Alexandra Kokotseva</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">AN ITALIAN SOLDIER'S LAST MESSAGE TO HIS MOTHER</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_355">355</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Translated by Father Pasquale Maltese</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1200px;">
-<img src="images/i_a_001afp.jpg" width="1200" height="719" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>IN A PRISONERS' CAMP</p>
-<p>Germans in a French Camp</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 841px;">
-<img src="images/i_a_001bfp.jpg" width="841" height="1200" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>THE U-9 SPEEDING ON THE SURFACE</p>
-<p><i>From a Drawing by a German Artist Published in a German Magazine</i></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 858px;">
-<img src="images/i_a_001cfp.jpg" width="858" height="1200" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>A NARROW SHAVE!</p>
-<p><i>A Remarkable Photograph of a Torpedo That Missed Its Mark by a Scant Ten Feet. The Men on This
-Vessel, From the Stern of Which the Picture Was Made, Literally Looked
-Death in the Face and Watched Him Pass By.</i></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1200px;">
-<img src="images/i_a_001dfp.jpg" width="1200" height="715" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>THE LAST ACT OF A SUDDEN SEA TRAGEDY</p>
-<p><i>Rescuing Sailors From H. M. S. Audacious</i></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>"BEHIND THE GERMAN VEIL"
-WITH VON HINDENBURG</h2>
-
-<div class="center"><i>Record of a Remarkable War Pilgrimage</i></div>
-
-<div class="center"><br /><i>Told by Count Van Maurik De Beaufort</i></div>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>This is the remarkable story of a titled Hollander, who was
-living in America at the outbreak of the War. "Europe called
-me," he says. "Blood will tell. I soon found myself getting
-restless. My sympathies with the Allies ... urged that I had
-no right to lag behind in making sacrifices. Before starting for
-the War, I applied for my first American citizenship papers. I
-hope to obtain my final papers shortly, after which I shall place
-my services at the disposal of the American Government." This
-Hollander was educated in Germany and recalls how in his
-youth he was forced to stand up in front of the class and
-recite five verses, each ending with: "I am a Prussian and a
-Prussian I will be." He later became a student at Bonn.
-Count De Beaufort has written a book of sensational revelations
-in which the German veil is lifted. With a magic passport,
-nothing less than a letter to Von Hindenburg from his
-nephew, he gained access to German headquarters and to the
-Eastern front in Poland and East Prussia. We here record
-what he thinks of Von Hindenburg from his book: "Behind
-the German Veil," by permission of his publishers, <i>Dodd, Mead
-and Company</i>: Copyright 1917.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p><a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a>
-I&mdash;GOING TO SEE VON HINDENBURG</p>
-
-<p>Yes, if the truth be told, I must say that I felt just
-a wee bit shaky about the knees. I wondered what view
-they would take of my perseverance, worthy, I am sure,
-of a kind reception.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span></p>
-<p>I would wager that in the whole of Germany there
-could not be found one ... whose hair would not
-have stood on end at the mere suggestion of travelling
-to Hindenburg's headquarters without a pass. Why,
-he would sooner think of calling at the Palace "<i><span xml:lang="de">Unter
-den Linden</span></i>," and of asking to interview the Kaiser.</p>
-
-<p>I think I must describe to you the way I appeared at
-headquarters. At Allenstein I had bought, the day before,
-a huge portrait of Hindenburg; it must have been
-nearly thirty inches long.</p>
-
-<p>Under one arm I carried the photograph, in my hand
-my letter of introduction, and in my other hand a huge
-umbrella, which was a local acquisition. On my face I
-wore that beatific, enthusiastic and very naïve expression
-of "the innocent abroad." I had blossomed out into
-that modern pest&mdash;the autographic maniac.</p>
-
-<p>Army corps, headquarters, strategy and tactics were
-words that meant nothing to me. How could they, stupid,
-unmilitary foreigner that I was! It was a pure case of
-"Fools will enter where angels fear to tread." You
-may be sure that my subsequent conversation with the
-Staff captain confirmed the idea that I was innocent of
-all military knowledge, and that I probably&mdash;so he
-thought&mdash;did not know the difference between an army
-corps and a section of snipers.</p>
-
-<p>Why had I come to Lötzen? Why, of course, to shake
-hands with the famous General, the new Napoleon; to
-have a little chat with him, and&mdash;last, but not least&mdash;to
-obtain his most priceless signature to my most priceless
-photograph. What? Not as easy as all that, but why?
-Could there be any harm in granting me those favors?
-Could it by the furthest stretch of imagination be considered
-as giving information to the enemy? What good
-was my letter of introduction from the General's dear
-nephew? Of course, I would not ask the General where<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span>
-he had his guns hidden, and when he intended to take
-Petrograd, Moscow or Kieff. Oh, no; I knew enough
-about military matters not to ask such leading questions.</p>
-
-<p>But joking apart. On showing my famous letter I
-had no difficulty whatsoever in entering the buildings
-of the General Staff. The first man I met was Hauptmann
-Frantz. He didn't seem a bad sort at all, and appeared
-rather to enjoy the joke and my "innocence,"
-at imagining that I could walk up to Hindenburg's Eastern
-headquarters and say "Hello!" to the General.</p>
-
-<p>He thought it was most "original," and certainly exceedingly
-American. Still, it got him into the right mood.
-"Make people smile," might be a good motto for itinerant
-journalists in the war zones. Few people, not excepting
-Germans, are so mean as to bite you with a smile on their
-faces. Make them laugh, and half the battle is won.</p>
-
-<p>Frantz read my letter and was duly impressed. He
-never asked me whether I had any passes. He advised
-me to go to the General's house, shook hands, and wished
-me luck.</p>
-
-<p>Phew! I was glad that my first contact with the
-General Staff had come off so smoothly. I had been
-fully prepared for stormy weather, if not for a hurricane.
-Cockily, I went off to Hindenburg's residence, a
-very modest suburban village not far from the station,
-and belonging to a country lawyer. There was a bit of
-garden in front, and at the back; the house was new,
-and the bricks still bright red. Across the road on two
-poles a wide banner was stretched, with "Willkommen"
-painted on it.</p>
-
-<p>Two old Mecklenburger Landstrum men guarded the
-little wooden gate. I told them that I came from Great
-Headquarters, and once more produced the letter. They
-saluted, opened the gate, and one of them ran ahead
-to ring the door bell.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;HE ENTERS THE STRANGE HOUSE</p>
-
-<p>I walked up the little gravel path with here and there
-a patch of green dilapidated grass on either side. I
-remember the window curtains were of yellow plush. In
-the window seat stood a tall vase with artificial flowers
-flanked by a birdcage with two canaries. It was all
-very suburban, and did not look at all like the residence
-of such a famous man. An orderly, with his left arm
-thrust into a top-boot, opened the door. In a tone of
-voice that left no chance for the familiar War-Office
-question: "Have you an appointment, sir?" I inquired
-whether the Field-Marshal was at home, at the same
-time giving him my letter. The orderly peeled off his
-top-boot, unfastened his overalls, and slipped on his coat.</p>
-
-<p>Then he carefully took my letter, holding it gingerly
-between thumb and third finger, so as not to leave any
-marks on it, and ushered me into the "Wohnzimmer,"
-a sort of living- and dining-room combined. It was the
-usual German affair. A couch, a table, a huge porcelain
-stove, were the prominent pieces of furniture. All
-three were ranged against the long wall. The straight-backed
-chairs were covered with red plush. On the
-walls hung several monstrosities, near-etchings representing
-the effigies of the Kaiser, the Kaiserin, and, of
-course, of "Our" Hindenburg. There was the usual overabundance
-of artificial flowers and ferns so dear to the
-heart of every German Hausfrau.</p>
-
-<p>The two canaries lived in the most elaborate homemade
-cage. (I understand they were the property of
-the "Hausfrau," not of Hindenburg!) On the table,
-covered with a check tablecloth, stood a bowl containing
-three goldfish. The floor was covered with a bright carpet,
-and in front of one of the doors lay a mat with
-"Salve" on it. Over the couch hung a photographic enlargement<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span>
-of a middle-aged soldier leaning nonchalantly
-against a door on which was chalked "Kriegsjahr, 1914."
-Over the frame hung a wreath with a black and white ribbon,
-inscribed "In Memoriam," telling its eloquent story.</p>
-
-<p>Behind me was a map of the Eastern front, and pinned
-alongside of it a caricature of a British Tommy sitting
-astride of a pyramid and pulling a number of strings
-fastened to the legs, arms and head of the Sultan, who
-was apparently dancing a jig.</p>
-
-<p>That room impressed itself upon my memory for all
-time. I often dream of it.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>I had waited only a few minutes when a young officer
-came in, who, bowing obsequiously, wished me a very
-formal good-morning. I took my cue from the way he
-bowed. He explained that the General was out in the
-car but was expected back before noon. Would I condescend
-to wait? Needless to say, I did "condescend."</p>
-
-<p>I forgot to mention one point in my meditations. When
-I took the chance of continuing East instead of returning
-to Berlin, I thought there might just be a possibility that
-the Adjutant or Staff Officer who had spoken with von
-Schlieffen had entirely taken it upon himself to say "No,"
-and that it was not unlikely that the General knew nothing
-whatever about my letter or my contemplated visit.
-If my surmise was correct, I would stand a sporting
-chance, because it was hardly to be expected that out of
-the thirty-odd officers comprising the Staff, I should run
-bang into the very man who had telephoned.</p>
-
-<p>I soon knew that the officer in immediate attendance
-on Hindenburg was not aware of my <i><span xml:lang="fr">contretempts</span></i> at
-Allenstein on the previous day. Neither did he inquire
-after my passes. You see, they take these things for
-granted. Would I prefer to wait here or come in his
-office, where the stove was lit? Of course, I thought<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span>
-that would be more pleasant. I thought, and am glad
-to say was not mistaken, that probably the young officer
-felt he needed some mental relaxation. This will sound
-strange, but I have found during my travels through
-Germany, that in spite of the many warnings not to talk
-shop, every soldier, from the humblest private to the highest
-General&mdash;I am sure not excepting the War Lord himself&mdash;dearly
-loves to expatiate on matters military, his
-ambitions and hopes. This one was no exception. He
-chatted away very merrily, and more than once I recognized
-points and arguments which I had read weeks ago
-in interviews granted by General Hindenburg to Austrian
-journalists. He quite imagined himself an embryo
-Field-Marshal.</p>
-
-<p>He showed me several excellent maps, which gave every
-railroad line on both sides of the Polish frontier. They
-certainly emphasized the enormous difference and the
-many advantages of German <i>versus</i> Russian railroad communications.
-Many of his predictions have since come
-true, but most of them have not. He hinted very mysteriously,
-but quite unmistakably, at a prospective Russian
-<i><span xml:lang="fr">débâcle</span></i>, and predicted a separate peace with Russia before
-the end of 1915! "And then," he added, "we will
-shake up the old women at the Western front a bit and
-show them the 'Hindenburg method.'"</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The room we were in was fitted up as an emergency
-staff office. There were several large tables, maps galore,
-a safe, a number of books that looked like ledgers
-and journals, six telephones and a telegraph instrument.
-Two non-commissioned officers were writing in a corner.
-In case anything important happens at night, such as an
-urgent despatch that demands immediate attention, everything
-was at hand to enable the General to issue new
-orders. A staff-officer and a clerk are always on duty.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>I learned later on, though, that a position in that
-auxiliary staff-office at Hindenburg's residence is more
-or less of a sinecure. All despatches go first to Ludendorff,
-Hindenburg's Chief-of-Staff, who, in ninety-nine
-cases out of a hundred, issues orders without consulting
-his Chief.</p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;HE STANDS BEFORE VON HINDENBURG</p>
-
-<p>In the midst of a long explanation of the Russian
-plight, the voluble subaltern suddenly stopped short. I
-heard a car halt in front of the house, and a minute
-or two later the door of the office opened and Germany's
-giant idol entered. I rose and bowed. The officer and
-the two sergeants clicked their heels audibly, and replied
-to the stentorian "<i><span xml:lang="de">Morgen, meine Herren</span></i>," with a brisk
-"<i><span xml:lang="de">Morgen, Excellence</span></i>."</p>
-
-<p>Hindenburg looked questions at me, but I thought I
-would let my young friend do the talking and act as
-master of ceremonies. He handed Hindenburg my letter,
-and introduced me as "Herr 'von' Beaufort, who has
-just arrived from Rome." (I had left Rome nearly three
-months before!) The General read his nephew's letter
-and then shook hands with me, assuring me of the pleasure
-it gave him to meet me. Of course, I was glad that
-he was glad, and expressed reciprocity of sentiments.
-I looked at him&mdash;well, for lack of a better word, I will
-say, with affection; you know the kind of childlike, simple
-admiration which expresses so much. I tried to look
-at him as a certain little girl would have done, who wrote:
-"You are like my governess: she, too, knows everything."
-I felt sure that that attitude was a better one than to
-pretend that I was overawed. That sort of homage he
-must receive every day. Besides, as soon as I realized<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span>
-that he knew nothing of the telephone message from and
-to Allenstein, my old self-assurance had returned.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Now for my impressions of Germany's&mdash;and, as some
-people try to make us believe, the world's&mdash;greatest military
-genius. They might be summed up in two words:
-"Strength and cruelty." Hindenburg stands over six feet
-high. His whole personality radiates strength, brute, animal
-strength. He was, when I met him, sixty-nine years
-of age, but looked very much younger. His hair and
-moustache were still pepper and salt color. His face and
-forehead are deeply furrowed, which adds to his forbidding
-appearance. His nose and chin are prominent,
-but the most striking feature of the man's whole appearance
-are his eyes. They are steel-blue and very small,
-much too small for his head, which, in turn, is much too
-small compared with his large body. But what the eyes
-lacked in size they fully made up for in intensity and
-penetrating powers. Until I met Hindenburg I always
-thought that the eyes of the Mexican rebel Villa were the
-worst and most cruel I had ever seen. They are mild
-compared with those of Hindenburg. <i>Never in all my
-life have I seen such hard, cruel, nay, such utterly brutal
-eyes as those of Hindenburg.</i> The moment I looked at
-him I believed every story of refined (and unrefined)
-cruelty I had ever heard about him.</p>
-
-<p>He has the disagreeable habit of looking at you as if
-he did not believe a word you said. Frequently in conversation
-he closes his eyes, but even then it seemed as
-if their steel-like sharpness pierced his eyelids. Instead
-of deep circles, such as, for instance, I have noticed on
-the Kaiser, he has big fat cushions of flesh under his
-eyes, which accentuate their smallness. When he closes
-his eyes, these cushions almost touch his bushy eyebrows
-and give his face a somewhat prehistoric appearance.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span>
-His hair, about an inch long I should judge, was
-brushed straight up&mdash;what the French call <i><span xml:lang="fr">en brosse</span></i>. The
-general contour of his head seemed that of a square,
-rounded off at the corners.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Speaking about the stories of cruelty, one or two of
-them may bear re-telling.</p>
-
-<p>When during the heavy fighting, early in 1915, General
-Rennenkampf was forced to evacuate Insterburg
-somewhat hastily, he was unable to find transport for
-about fifty thousand loaves of bread. Not feeling inclined
-to make a present of them to the Germans, he
-ordered paraffin to be poured over them. When the
-Germans found that bread and discovered its condition,
-Hindenburg is reported to have been frantic with rage.
-The next day, after he had calmed down, he said to one
-of his aides: "Well, it seems to be a matter of taste.
-If the Russians like their bread that way, very well.
-<i>Give it to the Russian prisoners.</i>"</p>
-
-<p>You may feel certain that his orders were scrupulously
-carried out.</p>
-
-<p>Another incident which they are very fond of relating
-in Germany is more amusing, though it also plays on
-their idol's cruelty.</p>
-
-<p>It is a fact that both officers and men are deadly
-afraid of him. It is said that the great General has a
-special predilection for bringing the tip of his riding boots
-into contact with certain parts of the human anatomy.
-A private would far rather face day and night the Russian
-guns than be orderly to Hindenburg.</p>
-
-<p>But one day a man came up and offered himself for
-the job.</p>
-
-<p>"And what are you in private life?" the General
-snorted at him.</p>
-
-<p>"At your orders, sir, I am a wild animal trainer."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p>IV&mdash;"WHAT VON HINDENBURG TOLD ME"</p>
-
-<p>Hindenburg and I talked for about twenty minutes on
-various subjects&mdash;Holland, Italy, America, and, of course,
-the campaign.</p>
-
-<p>When he tried to point out to me how all-important
-it was for Holland that Germany should crush England's
-"world-domination," I mentioned the Dutch Colonies.
-That really set him going. "Colonies," he shouted.
-"Pah! I am sick of all this talk about colonies. It would
-be better for people, and I am not referring to our enemies
-alone, to pay more attention to events in Europe. I say
-'to the devil' (<i><span xml:lang="de">zum Teufel</span></i>) with the colonies. Let us
-first safeguard our own country; the colonies will follow.
-It is here," and he went up to a large map of Poland
-hanging on the wall, and laid a hand almost as large as
-a medium-sized breakfast tray over the center of it&mdash;"It
-is here," he continued, "that European and colonial affairs
-will be settled and nowhere else. As far as the colonies
-are concerned, it will be a matter of a foot for a mile, as
-long as we hold large slices of enemy territory."</p>
-
-<p>He spoke with great respect of the Russian soldier, but
-maintained that they lacked proper leaders. "It takes
-more than ten years to reform the morale of an officers'
-corps. From what I have learned, the morale of the Russian
-officer is to this day much the same as it was in the
-Russo-Japanese war. We will show you one of their ambulance
-trains captured near Kirbaty. It is the last word
-in luxury. By all means give your wounded all the comfort,
-all the attention you can; but I do not think that
-car-loads of champagne, oysters, caviare and the finest
-French liqueurs are necessary adjuncts to an ambulance
-train. The Russian soldier is splendid, but his discipline
-is not of the same quality as that of our men. In our
-armies discipline is the result of spiritual and moral training;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span>
-in the Russian armies discipline stands for dumb
-obedience. The Russian soldier remains at his post because
-he has been ordered to stay there, and he stands
-as if nailed to the spot. What Napoleon I. said still applies
-to-day: 'It is not sufficient to kill a Russian, you
-have to throw him over as well.'</p>
-
-<p>"It is absurd," the General continued, "for the enemy
-Press to compare this campaign with that of Napoleon
-in 1812." Again he got up, and pointing to another map,
-he said: "This is what will win the war for us." The
-map showed the close railroad net of Eastern Germany
-and the paucity of permanent roads in Russia. Hindenburg
-is almost a crank on the subject of railroads in connection
-with strategy. In the early days of the war he
-shuffled his army corps about from one corner of Poland
-to the other. It is said that he transferred four army
-corps (160,000 men&mdash;about 600 trains) in two days from
-Kalish, in Western Poland, to Tannenberg, a distance of
-nearly two hundred miles. On some tracks the trains
-followed each other at intervals of six minutes.</p>
-
-<p>"Our enemies reckon without two great factors unknown
-in Napoleon's time: railroads and German organization.
-Next to artillery this war means railroads, railroads,
-and then still more railroads. The Russians built
-forts; we built railroads. They would have spent their
-millions better if they had emulated our policy instead
-of spending millions on forts. For the present fortresses
-are of no value against modern siege guns&mdash;at least, not
-until another military genius such as Vauban, Brialmont,
-Montalembert, Coehoorn, springs up, who will be able
-to invent proper defensive measures against heavy howitzers.</p>
-
-<p>"Another delusion under which our enemies are laboring
-is that of Russia's colossal supply of men. He
-who fights with Russia must always expect superiority<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>
-in numbers; but in this age of science, strategy and organization,
-numbers are only decisive, 'all else being
-equal.' The Russian forces opposed to us on this front
-have always been far superior in numbers to ours, but
-we are not afraid of that. A crowd of men fully armed
-and equipped does not make an army in these days."</p>
-
-<p>This brought him to the subject of the British forces,
-more especially to Kitchener's army. "It is a great mistake
-to underestimate your enemy," said Hindenburg, referring
-to the continual slights and attacks appearing in
-the German Press. "I by no means underrate the thoroughness,
-the fighting qualities of the British soldier.
-England is a fighting nation, and has won her spurs on
-many battlefields. But to-day they are up against a different
-problem. Even supposing that Kitchener should
-be able to raise his army of several millions, where is he
-going to get his officers and his non-commissioned officers
-from? How is he going to train them, so to speak, overnight,
-when it has taken us several generations of uninterrupted
-instruction, study and work to create an efficient
-staff? Let me emphasize, and with all the force I
-can: 'Efficiency and training are everything.' There lies
-their difficulty. I have many officers here with me who
-have fought opposite the English, and all are united in
-their opinion that they are brave and worthy opponents;
-but one criticism was also unanimously made: 'Their officers
-often lead their men needlessly to death, either from
-sheer foolhardiness, but more often through inefficiency.'"</p>
-
-
-<p>V&mdash;"WHEN I LEFT VON HINDENBURG"</p>
-
-<p>Although he did not express this opinion to me personally,
-I have it on excellent authority that Hindenburg
-believes this war will last close on four years at least.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span>
-And the result&mdash;stalemate. He does not believe that the
-Allies will be able to push the Germans out of Belgium,
-France or Poland.</p>
-
-<p>Personally, I found it impossible to get him to make
-any definite statement on the probable outcome and duration
-of the war. "Until we have gained an honorable
-peace," was his cryptic reply. He refused to state what,
-in his opinion, constituted an honorable peace. If I am
-to believe several of his officers&mdash;and I discussed the subject
-almost every day&mdash;then Hindenburg must by now be
-a very disappointed man. I was told that he calculated
-as a practical certainty on a separate peace with Russia
-soon after the fall of Warsaw. (I should like to point
-out here that this "separate peace with Russia" idea was
-one of the most popular and most universal topics of conversation
-in Germany last year.)</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>When Hindenburg learnt that I had come all the way
-from Berlin without a pass from the General Staff, he
-appeared very much amused; but in a quasi-serious manner
-he said:</p>
-
-<p>"Well, you know that I ought to send you back at
-once, otherwise I shall risk getting the sack myself;
-still, as all ordinary train-service between here and Posen
-will be suspended for four days, the only way for you
-to get back is by motor-car. It would be a pity to come
-all the way from sunny Italy to this Siberian cold, and
-not see something of the men and of the hardships of a
-Russian winter campaign. Travelling by motor-car, you
-will have ample opportunity to see something of the country,
-and, if you feel so inclined, of the fighting as well.
-And then go home and tell them abroad about the insurmountable
-obstacles, the enormous difficulties the German
-has to overcome."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Hindenburg does not like the Berlin General Staff
-officers, and that is why he was so amused at my having
-got the better of them. He describes them as "drawing-room"
-officers, who remain safely in Berlin. With
-their spick and span uniforms they look askance at their
-mud-stained colleagues at the front. His officers, who
-know Hindenburg's feelings towards these gentlemen,
-play many a practical joke on their Berlin <i><span xml:lang="fr">confrères</span></i>. The
-latter have frequently returned from a visit to some
-communication trenches only to find that their car has
-mysteriously retreated some two or three miles ... over
-Polish roads.</p>
-
-<p>Any one who can tell of such an experience befalling
-a "Salon Offizier" is sure to raise a good laugh from Hindenburg.</p>
-
-<p>At the conclusion of our conversation he instructed the
-young A.D.C. to take me over to Headquarters and present
-me to Captain Cämmerer. "Tell him," and I inscribed
-the words that followed deeply on my mind, "to
-be kind to Herr Beaufort."</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>My introduction to Cämmerer proved to be one of
-those curious vagaries of fate. He was the very man
-who less than twenty-four hours ago had spoken with
-General von Schlieffen, and who had assured him how
-impossible it was for me to continue, and that I was
-to be sent back to Berlin at once!</p>
-
-<p>"Beaufort, Beaufort," he sniffed once or twice before
-he could place me. Then suddenly he remembered. "Ah,
-yes, him! You are the man General von Schlieffen telephoned
-about yesterday? But did he not instruct you to
-return to Berlin?"</p>
-
-<p>However, I remembered Hindenburg's injunction:
-"Tell Cämmerer to be kind to him," so what did I care for
-a mere captain?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Consequently, as they say in the moving pictures, I
-"registered" my most angelic smile, and sweetly said:</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, yes, Captain, quite so, quite so. But, you see,
-I felt <i>certain</i> that there was some misunderstanding at
-this end of the wire. Probably it was not clearly explained
-to you that I had this very important letter of
-introduction to General von Hindenburg from my friend
-his nephew. As you see," and I waved my hand at the
-A.D.C., my master of ceremonies, "I was quite right in
-my surmise."</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>However that may be, you may be certain that I saw
-to it that when we mapped out my return journey, Cämmerer
-was being "kind" to me. Consequently, I spent
-two most interesting weeks in the German Eastern war-zones,
-much to the surprise and disgust of the "Drawing-room
-Staff" in Berlin.</p>
-
-<p>(Count De Beaufort's revelations form one of the most
-valuable records of the war. He tells about "Spies and
-Spying;" "German Women;" "When I Prayed with the
-Kaiser;" "An Incognito Visit to the Fleet and German
-Naval Harbors;" "Interviews with the Leading Naval,
-Military and Civil Authorities in Germany"&mdash;closing with
-an interview that upset Berlin, caused his arrest, and as
-he describes it, "My Ultimate Escape Across the Baltic.")</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-<h3>FOOTNOTE:</h3>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> All numerals throughout this volume relate to the stories
-herein told&mdash;not to chapters in the original sources.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h2>"KITCHENER'S MOB"&mdash;ADVENTURES
-OF AN AMERICAN WITH THE
-BRITISH ARMY</h2>
-
-<div class="center"><i>Uncensored Account of a Young Volunteer</i></div>
-
-<div class="center"><br /><i>Told by James Norman Hall, of the First Expeditionary
-Force</i></div>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>This is a glimpse of life in a battalion of one of Lord Kitchener's
-first armies. It gives an intimate view of the men who are so
-gallantly laying down their lives for England. Kitchener's Mob
-has become the greatest volunteer army in the history of the
-world&mdash;for more than three million of disciplined fighting men
-are united under one flag in this magnificent military organization.
-Their fighting has become an epic of heroism in France,
-Belgium, Africa and the Balkans. Some of them have seen
-service in India, Egypt and South Africa; they might have
-stepped out of any of the "Barrack-Room Ballads." The name
-which they bear was fastened upon them by themselves&mdash;thereby
-hangs a tale. Stories of their adventures have been
-gathered into a volume under title of "Kitchener's Mob"&mdash;and
-published by <i>Houghton, Mifflin Company</i>: Copyright, 1916, by
-<i>Atlantic Monthly Company</i>; Copyright, 1916, by James Norman
-Hall.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p><a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a>
-I&mdash;STORY OF A YANKEE IN THE TRENCHES</p>
-
-<p>With Kitchener's mob we wandered through the
-trenches listening to the learned discourse of the genial
-professors of the Parapet-etic School, storing up much
-useful information for future reference. I made a serious
-blunder when I asked one of them a question about
-Ypres, for I pronounced the name French fashion, which
-put me under suspicion as a "swanker."</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span></p>
-<p>"Don't try to come it, son," he said. "S'y 'Wipers.'
-That's wot we calls it."</p>
-
-<p>Henceforth it was "Wipers" for me, although I
-learned that "Eeps" and "Yipps" are sanctioned by some
-trench authorities. I made no further mistakes of this
-nature, and by keeping silent about the names of the
-towns and villages along our front, I soon learned the
-accepted pronunciation of all of them. Armentières is
-called "Armenteers"; Balleul, "Ballyall"; Hazebrouck,
-"Hazy-Brook"; and what more natural than "Plug-Street,"
-Atkinsese for Ploegsteert?</p>
-
-<p>As was the case wherever I went, my accent betrayed
-my American birth; and again, as an American Expeditionary
-Force of one, I was shown many favors. Private
-Shorty Holloway, upon learning that I was a
-"Yank," offered to tell me "every bloomin' thing about
-the trenches that a bloke needs to know." I was only
-too glad to place myself under his instruction.</p>
-
-<p>"Right you are!" said Shorty; "now, sit down 'ere
-w'ile I'm going over me shirt, an' arsk me anything yer a
-mind to." I began immediately by asking him what he
-meant by "going over" his shirt.</p>
-
-<p>"Blimy! You are new to this game, mate! You mean
-to s'y you ain't got any graybacks?"</p>
-
-<p>I confessed shamefacedly that I had not. He stripped
-to the waist, turned his shirt wrong side out, and laid it
-upon his knee.</p>
-
-<p>"'Ave a look," he said proudly.</p>
-
-<p>The less said about my discoveries the better for the
-fastidiously minded. Suffice it to say that I made my
-first acquaintance with members of a British Expeditionary
-Force which is not mentioned in official <i><span xml:lang="fr">communiqués</span></i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"Trench pets," said Shorty. Then he told me that
-they were not all graybacks. There is a great variety
-of species, but they all belong to the same parasitical
-family, and wage a non-discriminating warfare upon the
-soldiery on both sides of No-man's-Land. Germans,
-British, French, Belgians alike were their victims.</p>
-
-<p>"You'll soon 'ave plenty," he said reassuringly; "I give
-you about a week to get covered with 'em. Now, wot
-you want to do is this: always 'ave an extra shirt in yer
-pack. Don't be a bloomin' ass an' sell it fer a packet o'
-fags like I did! An' the next time you writes to England,
-get some one to send you out some Keatings"&mdash;he
-displayed a box of grayish-colored powder. "It won't kill
-'em, mind you! They ain't nothin' but fire that'll kill
-'em. But Keatings tykes all the ginger out o' 'em. They
-ain't near so lively arter you strafe 'em with this 'ere
-powder."</p>
-
-<p>I remembered Shorty's advice later when I became
-a reluctant host to a prolific colony of graybacks. For
-nearly six months I was never without a box of Keatings,
-and I was never without the need for it.</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;IN THE BARBED-WIRE "MAN-TRAPS"</p>
-
-<p>Barbed wire had a new and terrible significance for
-me from the first day which we spent in the trenches. I
-could more readily understand why there had been so
-long a deadlock on the western front. The entanglements
-in front of the first line of trenches were from
-fifteen to twenty yards wide, the wires being twisted from
-post to post in such a hopeless jumble that no man could
-possibly get through them under fire. The posts were
-set firmly in the ground, but there were movable segments,
-every fifty or sixty yards, which could be put to
-one side in case an attack was to be launched against the
-German lines.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>At certain positions there were what appeared to be
-openings through the wire, but these were nothing less
-than man-traps which have been found serviceable in
-case of an enemy attack. In an assault men follow the
-line of least resistance when they reach the barbed wire.
-These apparent openings are V-shaped with the open end
-toward the enemy. The attacking troops think they see
-a clear passage-way. They rush into the trap and when
-it is filled with struggling men machine guns are turned
-upon them, and, as Shorty said, "You got 'em cold."</p>
-
-<p>That, at least, was the presumption. Practically, man-traps
-were not always a success. The intensive bombardments
-which precede infantry attacks play havoc
-with entanglements, but there is always a chance of the
-destruction being incomplete, as upon one occasion farther
-north, where, Shorty told me, a man-trap caught a
-whole platoon of Germans "dead to rights."</p>
-
-<p>"But this is wot gives you the pip," he said. "'Ere
-we got three lines of trenches, all of 'em wired up so
-that a rat couldn't get through without scratchin' hisself
-to death. Fritzie's got better wire than wot we 'ave,
-an' more of it. An' 'e's got more machine guns, more
-artill'ry, more shells. They ain't any little old man-killer
-ever invented wot they 'aven't got more of than we 'ave.
-An' at 'ome they're a-s'yin', 'W'y don't they get on with
-it? W'y don't they smash through?' Let some of 'em
-come out 'ere an' 'ave a try! That's all I got to s'y."</p>
-
-<p>I didn't tell Shorty that I had been, not exactly an
-armchair critic, but at least a barrack-room critic in England.
-I had wondered why British and French troops
-had failed to smash through. A few weeks in the trenches
-gave me a new viewpoint. I could only wonder at the
-magnificent fighting qualities of soldiers who had held
-their own so effectively against armies equipped and
-armed and munitioned as the Germans were.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>After he had finished drugging his trench pets, Shorty
-and I made a tour of the trenches. I was much surprised
-at seeing how clean and comfortable they can be
-kept in pleasant summer weather. Men were busily at
-work sweeping up the walks, collecting the rubbish, which
-was put into sandbags hung on pegs at intervals along the
-fire trench. At night the refuse was taken back of the
-trenches and buried. Most of this work devolved upon
-the pioneers whose business it was to keep the trenches
-sanitary.</p>
-
-<p>The fire trench was built in much the same way as
-those which we had made during our training in England.
-In pattern it was something like a tesselated border.
-For the space of five yards it ran straight, then it
-turned at right angles around a traverse of solid earth
-six feet square, then straight again for another five yards,
-then around another traverse, and so throughout the
-length of the line. Each five-yard segment, which is
-called a "bay," offered firing room for five men. The
-traverses, of course, were for the purpose of preventing
-enfilade fire. They also limited the execution which
-might be done by one shell. Even so they were not an
-unmixed blessing, for they were always in the way when
-you wanted to get anywhere in a hurry.</p>
-
-<p>"An' you are in a 'urry w'en you sees a Minnie [<i><span xml:lang="de">Minnenwerfer</span></i>]
-comin' your w'y. But you gets trench
-legs arter a w'ile. It'll be a funny sight to see blokes
-walkin' along the street in Lunnon w'en the war's over.
-They'll be so used to dogin' in an' out o' traverses they
-won't be able to go in a straight line."</p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;STORIES OF SHORTY HOLLOWAY&mdash;"PROFESSOR
-OF TRENCHES"</p>
-
-<p>As we walked through the firing-line trenches, I could
-quite understand the possibility of one's acquiring trench<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span>
-legs. Five paces forward, two to the right, two to the
-left, two to the left again, then five to the right, and so on
-to Switzerland. Shorty was of the opinion that one
-could enter the trenches on the Channel coast and walk
-through to the Alps without once coming out on top of
-the ground. I am not in a position either to affirm or to
-question this statement. My own experience was confined
-to that part of the British front which lies between
-Messines in Belgium and Loos in France. There, certainly,
-one could walk for miles, through an intricate
-maze of continuous underground passages.</p>
-
-<p>But the firing-line trench was neither a traffic route
-nor a promenade. The great bulk of inter-trench business
-passed through the travelling trench, about fifteen
-yards in rear of the fire trench and running parallel to it.
-The two were connected by many passageways, the chief
-difference between them being that the fire trench was
-the business district, while the traveling trench was primarily
-residential. Along the latter were built most of
-the dugouts, lavatories, and trench kitchens. The sleeping
-quarters for the men were not very elaborate. Recesses
-were made in the wall of the trench about two feet
-above the floor. They were not more than three feet high,
-so that one had to crawl in head first when going to bed.
-They were partitioned in the middle, and were supposed
-to offer accommodations for four men, two on each side.
-But, as Shorty said, everything depended on the ration
-allowance. Two men who had eaten to repletion could
-not hope to occupy the same apartment. One had a
-choice of going to bed hungry or of eating heartily and
-sleeping outside on the firing-bench.</p>
-
-<p>"'Ere's a funny thing," he said. "W'y do you suppose
-they makes the dugouts open at one end?"</p>
-
-<p>I had no explanation to offer.</p>
-
-<p>"Crawl inside an' I'll show you."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>I stood my rifle against the side of the trench and
-crept in.</p>
-
-<p>"Now, yer supposed to be asleep," said Shorty, and
-with that he gave me a whack on the soles of my boots
-with his entrenching tool handle. I can still feel the pain
-of the blow.</p>
-
-<p>"Stand to! Wyke up 'ere! Stand to!" he shouted,
-and gave me another resounding wallop.</p>
-
-<p>I backed out in all haste.</p>
-
-<p>"Get the idea? That's 'ow they wykes you up at
-stand-to, or w'en your turn comes fer sentry. Not bad,
-wot?"</p>
-
-<p>I said that it all depended on whether one was doing
-the waking or the sleeping, and that, for my part, when
-sleeping, I would lie with my head out.</p>
-
-<p>"You wouldn't if you belonged to our lot. They'd give
-it to you on the napper just as quick as 'it you on the
-feet. You ain't on to the game, that's all. Let me show
-you suthin'."</p>
-
-<p>He crept inside and drew his knees up to his chest so
-that his feet were well out of reach. At his suggestion I
-tried to use the active service alarm clock on him, but
-there was not room enough in which to wield it. My feet
-were tingling from the effect of his blows, and I felt that
-the reputation for resourcefulness of Kitchener's Mob
-was at stake. In a moment of inspiration I seized my
-rifle, gave him a dig in the shins with the butt, and
-shouted, "Stand to, Shorty!" He came out rubbing his
-leg ruefully.</p>
-
-<p>"You got the idea, mate," he said. "That's just wot
-they does w'en you tries to double-cross 'em by pullin'
-yer feet in. I ain't sure w'ere I likes it best, on the shins
-or on the feet."</p>
-
-<p>This explanation of the reason for building three-sided
-dugouts, while not, of course, the true one, was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span>
-none the less interesting. And certainly, the task of
-arousing sleeping men for sentry duty was greatly facilitated
-with rows of protruding boot soles "simply arskin'
-to be 'it," as Shorty put it.</p>
-
-<p>All of the dugouts for privates and N.C.O.s were of
-equal size and built on the same model, the reason being
-that the walls and floors, which were made of wood, and
-the roofs, which were of corrugated iron, were put together
-in sections at the headquarters of the Royal Engineers,
-who superintended all the work of trench construction.
-The material was brought up at night ready
-to be fitted into excavations. Furthermore, with thousands
-of men to house within a very limited area, space
-was a most important consideration. There was no room
-for indulging individual tastes in dugout architecture.
-The roofs were covered with from three to four feet of
-earth, which made them proof against shrapnel or shell
-splinters. In case of a heavy bombardment with high
-explosives, the men took shelter in deep and narrow "slip
-trenches." These were blind alley-ways leading off from
-the traveling trench, with room for from ten to fifteen
-men in each. At this part of the line there were none of
-the very deep shell-proof shelters, from fifteen to twenty
-feet below the surface of the ground, of which I had
-read. Most of the men seemed to be glad of this. They
-preferred taking their chances in an open trench during
-heavy shell fire.</p>
-
-
-<p>IV&mdash;THE "SUICIDE CLUB"&mdash;A BOMBING SQUAD</p>
-
-<p>Realists and Romanticists lived side by side in the traveling
-trench. "My Little Gray Home in the West" was
-the modest legend over one apartment. The "Ritz Carlton"
-was next door to "The Rats' Retreat," with "Vermin
-Villa" next door but one. "The Suicide Club" was the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span>
-suburban residence of some members of the bombing
-squad. I remarked that the bombers seemed to take
-rather a pessimistic view of their profession, whereupon
-Shorty told me that if there were any men slated for the
-Order of the Wooden Cross, the bombers were those unfortunate
-ones. In an assault they were first at the
-enemy's position. They had dangerous work to do even
-on the quietest of days. But theirs was a post of honor,
-and no one of them but was proud of his membership
-in the Suicide Club.</p>
-
-<p>The officers' quarters were on a much more generous
-and elaborate scale than those of the men. This I gathered
-from Shorty's description of them, for I saw only
-the exteriors as we passed along the trench. Those for
-platoon and company commanders were built along the
-traveling trench. The colonel, major, and adjutant lived
-in a luxurious palace, about fifty yards down a communication
-trench. Near it was the officers' mess, a café de
-luxe with glass panels in the door, a cooking stove, a
-long wooden table, chairs,&mdash;everything, in fact, but hot
-and cold running water.</p>
-
-<p>"You know," said Shorty, "the officers thinks they 'as
-to rough it, but they got it soft, I'm tellin' you! Wooden
-bunks to sleep in, batmen to bring 'em 'ot water fer
-shavin' in the mornin', all the fags they wants,&mdash;&mdash;Blimy,
-I wonder wot they calls livin' 'igh?"</p>
-
-<p>I agreed that in so far as living quarters are concerned,
-they were roughing it under very pleasant circumstances.
-However, they were not always so fortunate,
-as later experience proved. Here there had been
-little serious fighting for months and the trenches were
-at their best. Elsewhere the officers' dugouts were often
-but little better than those of the men.</p>
-
-<p>The first-line trenches were connected with two lines
-of support or reserve trenches built in precisely the same<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>
-fashion, and each heavily wired. The communication
-trenches which joined them were from seven to eight
-feet deep and wide enough to permit the convenient
-passage of incoming and outgoing troops, and the transport
-of the wounded back to the field dressing stations.
-From the last reserve line they wound on backward
-through the fields until troops might leave them well out
-of range of rifle fire. Under Shorty's guidance I saw
-the field dressing stations, the dugouts for the reserve
-ammunition supply and the stores of bombs and hand
-grenades, battalion and brigade trench headquarters. We
-wandered from one part of the line to another through
-trenches, all of which were kept amazingly neat and
-clean. The walls were stayed with fine-mesh wire to
-hold the earth in place. The floors were covered with
-board walks carefully laid over the drains, which ran
-along the center of the trench and emptied into deep
-wells, built in recesses in the walls. I felt very much
-encouraged when I saw the careful provision for sanitation
-and drainage. On a fine June morning it seemed
-probable that living in ditches was not to be so unpleasant
-as I had imagined it. Shorty listened to my comments
-with a smile.</p>
-
-<p>"Don't pat yerself on the back yet a w'ile, mate," he
-said. "They looks right enough now, but wite till you've
-seen 'em arter a 'eavy rain."</p>
-
-<p>I had this opportunity many times during the summer
-and autumn. A more wretched existence than that of
-soldiering in wet weather could hardly be imagined. The
-walls of the trenches caved in in great masses. The
-drains filled to overflowing, and the trench walks were
-covered deep in mud. After a few hours of rain, dry
-and comfortable trenches became a quagmire, and we
-were kept busy for days afterward repairing the damage.</p>
-
-<p>As a machine gunner I was particularly interested in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span>
-the construction of the machine-gun emplacements. The
-covered battle positions were very solidly built. The
-roofs were supported with immense logs or steel girders
-covered over with many layers of sandbags. There were
-two carefully concealed loopholes looking out to a flank,
-but none for frontal fire, as this dangerous little weapon
-best enjoys catching troops in enfilade owing to the
-rapidity and the narrow cone of its fire. Its own front
-is protected by the guns on its right and left. At each
-emplacement there was a range chart giving the ranges
-to all parts of the enemy's trenches, and to every prominent
-object both in front of and behind them, within its
-field of fire. When not in use the gun was kept mounted
-and ready for action in the battle position.</p>
-
-<p>"But remember this," said Shorty, "you never fires
-from your battle position except in case of attack. W'en
-you goes out at night to 'ave a little go at Fritzie, you
-always tykes yer gun sommers else. If you don't, you'll
-'ave Minnie an' Busy Bertha an' all the rest o' the Krupp
-childern comin' over to see w'ere you live."</p>
-
-<p>This was a wise precaution, as we were soon to learn
-from experience. Machine guns are objects of special
-interest to the artillery, and the locality from which
-they are fired becomes very unhealthy for some little
-time thereafter.</p>
-
-
-<p>V&mdash;AT THE "MUD LARKS'" BEAUTY SHOP</p>
-
-<p>We stopped for a moment at "The Mud Larks' Hair-dressing
-Parlor," a very important institution if one
-might judge by its patronage. It was housed in a recess
-in the wall of the traveling trench, and was open to the
-sky. There I saw the latest fashion in "oversea" hair
-cuts. The victims sat on a ration box while the barber
-mowed great swaths through tangled thatch with a pair<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span>
-of close-cutting clippers. But instead of making a complete
-job of it, a thick fringe of hair which resembled a
-misplaced scalping tuft was left for decorative purposes,
-just above the forehead. The effect was so grotesque
-that I had to invent an excuse for laughing. It was a
-lame one, I fear, for Shorty looked at me warningly.
-When we had gone on a little way he said:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Ain't it a proper beauty parlor? But you got to be
-careful about larfin'. Some o' the blokes thinks that
-'edge-row is a regular ornament."</p>
-
-<p>I had supposed that a daily shave was out of the question
-on the firing-line; but the British Tommy is nothing
-if not resourceful. Although water is scarce and fuel
-even more so, the self-respecting soldier easily surmounts
-difficulties, and the Gloucesters were all nice in matters
-pertaining to the toilet. Instead of draining their canteens
-of tea, they saved a few drops for shaving purposes.</p>
-
-<p>"It's a bit sticky," said Shorty, "but it's 'ot, an' not
-'arf bad w'en you gets used to it. Now, another thing
-you don't want to ferget is this: W'en yer movin' up fer
-yer week in the first line, always bring a bundle o' firewood
-with you. They ain't so much as a match-stick
-left in the trenches. Then you wants to be savin' of it.
-Don't go an use it all the first d'y or you'll 'ave to do
-without yer tea the rest o' the week."</p>
-
-<p>I remembered his emphasis upon this point afterward
-when I saw men risking their lives in order to procure
-firewood. Without his tea Tommy was a wretched being.
-I do not remember a day, no matter how serious the
-fighting, when he did not find both the time and the
-means for making it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p>VI&mdash;FLIES&mdash;RATS&mdash;AND DOMESTIC SCIENCE</p>
-
-<p>Shorty was a Ph.D. in every subject in the curriculum,
-including domestic science. In preparing breakfast he
-gave me a practical demonstration of the art of conserving
-a limited resource of fuel, bringing our two canteens
-to a boil with a very meager handful of sticks; and while
-doing so he delivered an oral thesis on the best methods
-of food preparation. For example, there was the item
-of corned beef&mdash;familiarly called "bully." It was the
-<i><span xml:lang="fr">pièce de résistance</span></i> at every meal with the possible exception
-of breakfast, when there was usually a strip of bacon.
-Now, one's appetite for "bully" becomes jaded in the
-course of a few weeks or months. To use the German
-expression one doesn't eat it <i><span xml:lang="de">gern</span></i>. But it is not a question
-of liking it. One must eat it or go hungry. Therefore,
-said Shorty, save carefully all of your bacon grease,
-and instead of eating your "bully" cold out of the tin,
-mix it with bread crumbs and grated cheese and fry it
-in the grease. He prepared some in this way, and I
-thought it a most delectable dish. Another way of stimulating
-the palate was to boil the beef in a solution of bacon
-grease and water, and then, while eating it, "kid yerself
-that it's Irish stew." This second method of taking away
-the curse did not appeal to me very strongly, and Shorty
-admitted that he practiced such self-deception with very
-indifferent success; for after all "bully" was "bully" in
-whatever form you ate it.</p>
-
-<p>In addition to this staple, the daily rations consisted of
-bacon, bread, cheese, jam, army biscuits, tea, and sugar.
-Sometimes they received a tinned meat and vegetable
-ration, already cooked, and at welcome intervals fresh
-meat and potatoes were substituted for corned beef.
-Each man had a very generous allowance of food, a great<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span>
-deal more, I thought, than he could possibly eat. Shorty
-explained this by saying that allowance was made for the
-amount which would be consumed by the rats and the
-blue-bottle flies.</p>
-
-<p>There were, in fact, millions of flies. They settled in
-great swarms along the walls of the trenches, which were
-filled to the brim with warm light as soon as the sun
-had climbed a little way up the sky. Empty tin-lined
-ammunition boxes were used as cupboards for food. But
-of what avail were cupboards to a jam-loving and jam-fed
-British army living in open ditches in the summer
-time? Flytraps made of empty jam tins were set along
-the top of the parapet. As soon as one was filled, another
-was set in its place. But it was an unequal war
-against an expeditionary force of countless numbers.</p>
-
-<p>"They ain't nothin' you can do," said Shorty. "They
-steal the jam right off yer bread."</p>
-
-<p>As for the rats, speaking in the light of later experience,
-I can say that an army corps of Pied Pipers would
-not have sufficed to entice away the hordes of them that
-infested the trenches, living like house pets on our rations.
-They were great lazy animals, almost as large
-as cats, and so gorged with food that they could hardly
-move. They ran over us in the dugouts at night, and
-filched cheese and crackers right through the heavy waterproofed
-coverings of our haversacks. They squealed and
-fought among themselves at all hours. I think it possible
-that they were carrion eaters, but never, to my
-knowledge, did they attack living men. While they were
-unpleasant bedfellows, we became so accustomed to them
-that we were not greatly concerned about our very intimate
-associations.</p>
-
-<p>Our course of instruction at the Parapet-etic School
-was brought to a close late in the evening when we shouldered
-our packs, bade good-bye to our friends the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span>
-Gloucesters, and marched back in the moonlight to our
-billets. I had gained an entirely new conception of
-trench life, of the difficulties involved in trench building,
-and the immense amount of material and labor needed
-for the work.</p>
-
-<p>Americans who are interested in learning of these
-things at first hand will do well to make the grand tour
-of the trenches when the war is finished. Perhaps the
-thrifty continentals will seek to commercialize such advantage
-as misfortune as brought them, in providing favorable
-opportunities. Perhaps the Touring Club of
-France will lay out a new route, following the windings
-of the firing line from the Channel coast across the level
-fields of Flanders, over the Vosges Mountains to the
-borders of Switzerland. Pedestrians may wish to make
-the journey on foot, cooking their supper over Tommy's
-rusty biscuit-tin stoves, sleeping at night in the dugouts
-where he lay shivering with cold during the winter
-nights of 1914 and 1915. If there are enthusiasts who
-will be satisfied with only the most intimate personal
-view of the trenches, if there are those who would try
-to understand the hardships and discomforts of trench
-life by living it during a summer vacation, I would suggest
-that they remember Private Shorty Holloway's parting
-injunction to me:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Now, don't ferget, Jamie!" he said as we shook hands,
-"always 'ave a box o' Keatings 'andy, an' 'ang on to yer
-extra shirt!"</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>(Private Hall, of Kitchener's Mob, describes the scenes
-when the army was being organized for the first British
-expeditionary force. He tells about "The Rookies";
-"The Mob in Training"; "Ordered Abroad." He describes
-their fights; their life under cover; their lodgings,
-billets and experiences in the trenches, "sitting tight."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span>
-It is "men of this stamp," he says, "who have the fortunes
-of England in their keeping. And they are called
-'The Boys of the Bulldog Breed.'")</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTE:</h3>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> All numerals relate to stories herein told&mdash;not to chapters
-from original sources.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>"HOW BELGIUM SAVED EUROPE"&mdash;THE
-LITTLE KINGDOM OF
-HEROES</h2>
-
-<div class="center"><i>Tragedy of the Belgians</i></div>
-
-<div class="center"><br /><i>Told by Dr. Charles Sarolea, Ph. D. (Liège), Litt. D.<br />
-(Brussels), Belgian Consul in Edinburgh</i></div>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>Dr. Sarolea is the historian of the Belgian people in the world
-tragedy through which they have passed. Count D'Aviella,
-Belgian Secretary of State, exclaims: "I am sure no one can
-read these tragic pages without becoming more than ever confirmed
-in his conviction that we are fighting in the cause of
-right, of liberty, and of civilization." Dr. Sarolea has for twelve
-years been Belgian Consul in Scotland; he is the personal friend
-of His Majesty King Albert of Belgium, with whom he frequently
-sits in private audience. He has written a book, "How
-Belgium Saved Europe," which sets forth the great tragedy
-which places the Belgian people on the same plane with those
-soul stirring heroes of universal history in the Persian Wars of
-Greece, the Punic Wars of Rome, the Wars of Spain against
-the Moors, the epic of Joan of Arc, the Wars of the French
-Revolution&mdash;and all the outstanding and inspiring chapters in
-the drama of human heroism. He tells about "The Hero-King"
-and "The German Plot in Belgium." We here record his story
-on "The Destruction of Louvain," by permission of his publishers,
-<i>J. B. Lippincott Company</i>: Copyright 1915.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p><a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a>
-I&mdash;STORIES OF MAD FURY IN LOUVAIN</p>
-
-<p>On September 1 (1914) a procession of refugees from
-Louvain arrived at Malines in a frenzy of terror with
-the news that the town of Louvain had been set on
-fire by the Germans and that the whole city was a heap
-of ruins. The wildest stories added to the horror of
-the tale. It was said that there had been a wholesale
-massacre of men, women, and children, and that hundreds
-of priests, and especially Jesuits, had been singled
-out for murder. Many of the stories proved to be without
-any foundation. But when all the exaggerations had
-been discounted there remained a body of substantial
-facts that were enough to send a thrill of indignation
-through Europe.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span></p>
-<p>Two certainties emerged from the chaos of conflicting
-evidence. First, there had been indiscriminate slaughter
-of civilians and looting of property. Secondly, the Germans,
-armed with incendiary fuses and obeying the order
-of the military authorities, had methodically burned the
-whole section of Louvain which extends from the station
-in the centre of the town, including the University and
-the church of St. Pierre.</p>
-
-<p>Since the destruction of the hapless University town
-other atrocities have followed in almost daily succession,
-Termonde, Aerschot, Malines, Antwerp. The world has
-almost got accustomed to them. There has been nothing
-like this mad fury of destruction in the whole history of
-modern warfare. Rheims has outdone even Louvain, and
-the ruin of the Cathedral of Rheims is an even greater
-loss than the destruction of the old Belgian Catholic
-University.</p>
-
-<p>Still Louvain remains the one crowning infamy. German
-casuistry may at least find some extenuating circumstances
-in the fact that Rheims was a fortified town, and
-that the Cathedral tower might have been used as an
-observation post for the French armies. For the crime
-of Louvain no extenuating circumstance can be urged.
-Louvain was undefended. It was a peaceful city of students,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span>
-priests, and landladies. It was in the occupation
-of the Germans. Its destruction, therefore, was both a
-wanton and a cowardly act of cruelty, and being both
-wanton and cruel, it will stand out as the typical atrocity
-of German militarism.</p>
-
-<p>Only those who are familiar with the history of Belgium
-and Brabant, and with the history of Belgian Universities,
-know what Louvain and the University stood
-for. Founded in 1425, in the days of Petrarch, Froissart,
-and Chaucer, it was one of the oldest and most illustrious
-seats of learning in Europe. It was the seat of
-Pope Adrian VI, the tutor of Charles V. It still remained
-the most famous Catholic University in the world.
-It still attracted scholars from every country. It was
-still the nursery of Irish, English, and American priests.</p>
-
-<p>And not only had Louvain 500 years of learning behind
-it, it was also a city with a magnificent municipal
-tradition. The town hall, one of the gems of Gothic
-architecture, was a glorious monument to that municipal
-tradition. By the destruction of Louvain the German
-soldiery have wiped out five centuries of religious and
-intellectual culture and of municipal freedom.</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;THE TRUTH ABOUT GERMAN ATROCITIES</p>
-
-<p>Wherever the Germans have perpetrated some atrocious
-crime they have used the same threadbare excuse&mdash;the
-shooting of German soldiers by civilians. Civilians
-fired on German soldiers at Visé, therefore Visé was
-razed to the ground. The fourteen-year-old son of the
-Burgomaster of Aerschot killed a German officer, therefore
-the whole city of Aerschot had to be destroyed.
-Similarly, it was to avenge the murder of German soldiers
-that Louvain was burned. It is the civilian population
-of Louvain who must ultimately be held responsible.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>On the face of it, the German version is an incredible
-invention. Louvain was in the occupation of German
-troops. <i>All the arms had been handed in days before by
-the civil population.</i> The authorities had posted placards
-recommending tranquility to the population, and warning
-them that any individual act of hostility would bring
-down instant vengeance. Those placards could still be
-read on the walls on the day of the destruction of Louvain.
-Under those circumstances, is it credible that a
-few peaceful citizens should have brought down destruction
-by their own deliberate act, which they knew would
-be met with instant and ruthless retribution?</p>
-
-<p>But even assuming that individual Belgians had been
-guilty of firing on the German troops, supposing a civilian
-exasperated by the monstrous treatment described in the
-narrative of Mr. Van Ernem, the Town Treasurer.
-When the Belgian troops were repulsed by the enemy's
-crushing numbers, and the Germans had put their big
-guns in position on all the heights dominating the town,
-the Germans sent a deputation to the Burgomaster, who
-agreed to receive the officers to hear their proposals and
-conditions for occupying the town.</p>
-
-<p>The German General with his état-major then came to
-the town hall to confer with the Burgomaster, councillors,
-and myself as treasurer of the town.</p>
-
-<p>These were the stipulated conditions.</p>
-
-<p>First: That the town should fully provide for the
-invaders, in consideration of which no war contributions
-would be exacted.</p>
-
-<p>Secondly: The soldiers not billeted in private houses
-were to pay cash for all goods obtained; also, they were
-not to molest the inhabitants under any circumstances.</p>
-
-<p>These stiplations, agreed to on both sides, were most
-scrupulously kept by the Belgians, but not by the Germans.
-On certain days, for example, the Germans would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span>
-exact 67,000 pounds of meat, and would let 20,000 pounds
-of it rot, although the population were suffering from
-hunger.</p>
-
-<p>On Monday, August 24, toward 10 <span class="smcap">P. M.</span>, the Burgomaster&mdash;a
-respectable merchant, sixty-two years of age&mdash;was
-arrested in his bed, where he was lying ill. He was
-forced to rise and marched to the railway station, where
-it was demanded of him that he should provide immediately
-250 warm meals and as many mattresses for the
-soldiers, under penalty of being shot. With admirable
-dispatch the inhabitants rushed to comply with the German
-demand. In their solicitude and pity for their aged
-chief, and their anxiety to save his life, they gave their
-own beds and their last drops of wine.</p>
-
-<p>The Germans acted without the slightest consideration
-or regard for the faithful promises of their état-major.
-The troops rushed into private houses, making forcible
-entrances, and taking from old and young, many of the
-latter already orphans, whatever they fancied, paying for
-nothing except with paper money to be presented to the
-"caisse communal" at the end of the war.</p>
-
-<p>The promise of exemption from contribution to a war
-levy was violated, like every other contract. Failing to
-find enough money in the treasury, the Germans in
-authority ordered the immediate payment of 100,000
-francs.</p>
-
-<p>This large sum could not be gathered from the inhabitants,
-and nearly all the banks had on the first warning
-of the approach of the enemy succeeded in transferring
-their funds to the National Bank.</p>
-
-<p>Finally, after much bickering, the officer in command
-of the German troops agreed to accept 3,000 fr., to be
-paid the next day. But with the next morning came a
-further demand for 5,000 fr. The Burgomaster vigorously
-protested against this new exaction; but nevertheless<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>
-I, as treasurer of the town, was held responsible for
-collecting 5,000 fr. With the greatest difficulty, I succeeded
-in procuring 3,080 fr., and after considerable bickering
-this sum was accepted by the enemy, and the horrors
-of reprisals were delayed. The population, conscious
-of the terrible risk which they ran, submitted with calm
-resignation to the inevitable. As a functionary of the
-city, I can vouch for the absolutely dignified and passive
-attitude of the whole population of Louvain. They
-understood perfectly well their grave individual responsibility,
-and that any break of their promises would be
-instantly met by crushing action.</p>
-
-<p>The position of affairs was minutely explained to the
-inhabitants in several printed proclamations, and they
-were personally warned by our venerable Burgomaster.
-Good order was so rigorously maintained that the German
-authorities praised the exemplary conduct of the
-inhabitants.</p>
-
-<p>This attitude was all the more laudable because the
-invaders, immediately upon entering the city, liberated
-nine of their compatriots who had been incarcerated before
-the war for murder, theft, and other felonies.</p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;TRUE STORIES OF "THE UNSPEAKABLE
-CRIME"</p>
-
-<p>At last, on the Tuesday night, there took place the
-unspeakable crime, the shame of which can be understood
-only by those who followed and watched the different
-phases of the German occupation of Louvain.</p>
-
-<p>It is a significant fact that the German wounded and
-sick, including their Red Cross nurses, were all removed
-from the hospitals. The Germans meanwhile proceeded
-methodically to make a last and supreme requisition,
-although they knew the town could not satisfy it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Towards 6 o'clock the bugle sounded, and officers lodging
-in private houses left at once with arms and luggage.
-At the same time thousands of additional soldiers,
-with numerous field-pieces and cannon, marched into the
-town to their allotted positions. The gas factory, which
-had been idle, had been worked through the previous
-night and day by Germans, so that during this premeditated
-outrage the people could not take advantage of
-darkness to escape from the town. A further fact that
-proves their premeditation is that the attack took place
-at 8 o'clock, the exact time at which the population entered
-their houses in conformity with the German orders&mdash;consequently
-escape became well-nigh impossible. At
-8.20 a full fusillade with the roar of the cannons came
-from all sides of the town at once.</p>
-
-<p>The sky at the same time was lit up with the sinister
-light of fires from all quarters. The cavalry charged
-through the streets, sabring fugitives, while the infantry,
-posted on the footpaths, had their fingers on the triggers
-of their guns waiting for the unfortunate people to rush
-from the houses or appear at the windows, the soldiers
-complimenting each other on their marksmanship as they
-fired at the unhappy fugitives.</p>
-
-<p>Those whose homes were not yet destroyed were ordered
-to quit and follow the soldiers to the railway station.
-There the men were separated from mothers,
-wives, and children, and thrown, some bound, into trains
-leaving in the direction of Germany.</p>
-
-<p>I cannot but feel that, following the system they have
-inaugurated in this campaign, the Germans will use these
-non-combatant prisoners as human shields when they are
-fighting the Allies. The cruelty of these madmen surpasses
-all limits. They shot numbers of absolutely inoffensive
-people, forcing those who survived to bury their
-dead in the square, already encumbered with corpses<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span>
-whose positions suggested that they had fallen with arms
-uplifted in token of surrender.</p>
-
-<p>Others who have been allowed to live were driven past
-approving drunken officers by the brutal use of rifle butts,
-and while they were being maltreated they saw their
-carefully collected art and other treasures being shared
-out by the soldiers, the officers looking on. Those who
-attempted to appeal to their tormentors' better feelings
-were immediately shot. A few were let loose, but most
-of them were sent to Germany.</p>
-
-<p>On Wednesday at daybreak the remaining women and
-children were driven out of the town&mdash;a lamentable spectacle&mdash;with
-uplifted arms and under the menace of bayonets
-and revolvers.</p>
-
-<p>The day was practically calm. The destruction of the
-most beautiful part of the town seemed to have momentarily
-soothed the barbarian rage of the invaders.</p>
-
-<p>On the Thursday the remnant of the Civil Guard was
-called up on the pretext of extinguishing the conflagration;
-those who demurred were chained and sent with
-some wounded Germans to the Fatherland. The population
-had to quit at a moment's notice before the final
-destruction.</p>
-
-<p>Then, to complete their devastation, the German hordes
-fell back on the surrounding villages to burn them. They
-tracked down the men&mdash;some were shot, some made
-prisoners&mdash;and during many long hours they tortured the
-helpless women and children. This country of Eastern
-Brabant, so rich, so fertile, and so beautiful, is to-day a
-deserted charnel-house.</p>
-
-<p>Why should these individual deeds have been visited
-on thousands of innocent and inoffensive people? Why
-should those deeds have been visited on monuments of
-brick and stone? Why should treasuries of learning and
-shrines of religion be destroyed? Why should the six<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span>
-centuries of European history be destroyed because of
-the acts of a few patriots acting under the impulse of
-terror or indignation?</p>
-
-<p>As I said, the whole truth cannot yet be revealed. It
-is difficult to disentangle the facts even from ocular witnesses,
-from terrorized victims who were present at the
-ghastly crime. I have cross-examined some of those
-witnesses. I have read private letters from my cousin,
-Professor Albert Nerincx, at present Acting-Burgomaster
-of Louvain, who assumed office when the civic
-authorities had left, and whose heroic conduct is one of
-the few bright spots in the tragedy. Comparing and collating
-all the evidence at our disposal, we may take the
-following version given by the Belgian Commission of
-Inquiry as substantially correct:</p>
-
-<p>"On Tuesday evening a German corps, after receiving
-a check, withdrew in disorder into the town of Louvain.
-A German guard at the entrance of the town mistook
-the nature of this incursion and fired on their routed
-fellow-countrymen, mistaking them for Belgians.</p>
-
-<p>"In spite of all denials from the authorities the Germans,
-in order to cover their mistake, pretended that it
-was the inhabitants who had fired on them, whereas the
-inhabitants, including the police, had been disarmed more
-than a week ago.</p>
-
-<p>"Without inquiry, and without listening to any protests,
-the German Commander-in-Chief announced that
-the town would be immediately destroyed. The inhabitants
-were ordered to leave their dwellings; a party of
-men were made prisoners and the women and children
-put into trains the destination of which is unknown. Soldiers
-furnished with bombs set fire to all parts of the
-town."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p>IV&mdash;MURDER&mdash;LOOT&mdash;RAPINE&mdash;IN BELGIUM</p>
-
-<p>An Oxford student who visited the scene of the disaster
-with Mr. Henry Fürst, of Exeter College, Oxford,
-on August 29, gives the following description of the
-awful picture:</p>
-
-<p>"Burning houses were every moment falling into the
-roads; shooting was still going on. The dead and dying,
-burnt and burning, lay on all sides. Over some the
-Germans had placed sacks. I saw about half a dozen
-women and children. In one street I saw two little
-children walking hand in hand over the bodies of dead
-men. I have no words to describe these things. I hope
-people will not make too much of the saving of the Hôtel
-de Ville.</p>
-
-<p>"The Hôtel de Ville was standing on Friday morning
-last, and, as we plainly saw, every effort was being made
-to save it from the flames. We were told by German
-officers that it was not to be destroyed. I have personally
-no doubt that it is still standing. The German
-officers dashing about the streets in fine motor-cars made
-a wonderful sight. They were well-dressed, shaven, and
-contented-looking; they might have been assisting at a
-fashionable race-meeting. The soldiers were looting
-everywhere; champagne, wines, boots, cigars&mdash;everything
-was being carried off."</p>
-
-<p>But let it not be thought that Louvain was destroyed
-in vain. To the Belgian people it has meant more than a
-glorious victory. To the Germans it has been more disastrous
-than the most ignominious defeat. Until Louvain
-neutral peoples might still hesitate in their sympathies.
-Pacifists might still waver as to the justice of the cause.
-After Louvain any hesitation or doubt became impossible.
-The destruction of Louvain was needed to drive
-home the meaning of German culture. The crime of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span>
-Louvain branded the German rulers and the commanders
-of the German armies as the enemies of the human
-race.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The atrocities committed by the German armies have
-roused the indignation of both hemispheres. They have
-placed Germany outside the pale of civilization. They
-have covered the German armies with eternal infamy.
-In the full light of the twentieth century the German
-terror has outdone the deeds and wiped out the memory
-of the Spanish terror. We make ample allowances for
-wild rumors bred of panic, although in the present instance
-the panic caused by the mere approach of the
-German soldiery is in itself a most significant symptom.
-If the German armies had observed the laws of civilized
-warfare which protect the defenceless inhabitants, there
-would have been no need for the population to fly for
-their lives, and there would not be at present a million
-homeless exiles wandering over the high roads of
-Holland.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>(Dr. Sarolea describes the vicissitudes of Belgian triumphants
-alternating with Belgian reverses, the pathetic
-story of brave endeavor and of suffering nobly endured
-in the noblest of causes. The Defense of Liège, the fall
-of Namur, the capture of Brussels and the beleaguering
-of Antwerp: the destruction of Dinant and Termonde,
-the bursting of the dykes of the Scheldt, the German
-Terror and the wholesale exodus of the stricken nation
-which through all time will be the favorite theme of
-historians and poets.)</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTE:</h3>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> All numerals throughout this volume relate to the stories
-herein told&mdash;not to chapters in the original books.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h2>THE BISHOP OF LONDON'S VISIT
-TO THE FRONT</h2>
-
-<div class="center"><i>Taking the Message of Christ to the Battle
-Lines</i></div>
-
-<div class="center"><br /><i>Told by The Reverend G. Vernon Smith, Resident<br />
-Chaplain to the Bishop of London, Deputy<br />
-Priest in Ordinary to the King</i></div>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>This is an account of how a Bishop of the Church of England
-visited the troops at the front. He went to France as the guest
-of Sir John French, Field Marshall of the British Army, to
-spend Holy Week and Easter with the troops. The chaplain
-who relates these experiences was one of the guests. He said
-before he left London, the Bishop received most cordial letters
-of God-speed from the Bishops of Canterbury and York. The
-Bishop's first evening in France was spent at the Soldiers'
-Institute at Boulogne, and this building was packed with soldiers
-at a concert. He then started in a motor car for the headquarters
-of the British Army, where he was received by the
-Field Marshall with all the members of the staff. A complete
-record of his journeys has been published by <i>Longmans, Green
-and Company</i>, with whose permission the following chapter is
-here presented.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p><a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a>
-I&mdash;HOLY COMMUNION AT THE FRONT</p>
-
-<p>It was in &mdash;&mdash; that the Bishop for the first time
-came close to the actual front and within range of the
-German guns. The cars were at the door of the house
-where the Bishop was billeted, in a quiet little side-street,
-at 6:45 in the morning, for an early start had been arranged.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span></p>
-<p>We drove through the narrow streets to one of the
-large Hospitals in the town, where he celebrated the Holy
-Communion at seven o'clock for those of the officers and
-patients who wished to attend. After this service the
-other patients came in for morning prayers, at which the
-Bishop said a few words to them. It was invariably the
-case, when the Bishop visited a hospital, that there were
-many patients who wished to have a word with him.
-There were always, also, some men to whom, for some
-special reason, the Medical Officer or Chaplain wished to
-take him, and not infrequently in the Officers' Hospitals
-there were men whom he knew personally.</p>
-
-<p>It was, therefore, a hard task to keep up to time in
-saying "Good-bye" at a hospital, and Mr. Macpherson,
-whom the Bishop soon called his "nigger-driver," and
-who was responsible for seeing that the time-table was
-strictly kept&mdash;a task of considerable difficulty&mdash;had generally
-to remind the Bishop at a suitable moment that his
-car was waiting at the door.</p>
-
-<p>In a few minutes we had arrived at the Jute Factory
-again, where thirty men were ready and waiting to be
-confirmed in the little Chapel which has been carefully
-partitioned off in one corner of the building.</p>
-
-<p>It had been arranged that on this day the Bishop should
-visit some of the London Regiments that have recently
-gone to the front. Naturally he always looked forward
-with special eagerness to an opportunity of meeting, in
-these fresh surroundings, London men, to so many of
-whom he has spoken and preached in his diocese. Fortunately
-he was able in the course of the week to visit
-nearly all these regiments, although some of the men who
-were in the trenches could not, of course, be present at
-his services. To us, coming out from London, it was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>
-a great source of satisfaction and pride to hear of the
-high esteem in which these Territorial regiments are
-held by the leaders of our Army.</p>
-
-<p>It was not a very long time, as the motors slipped along
-the quiet country roads, before we began to hear the distant
-sound of guns, and as long as we were within a short
-distance of the firing-line there was seldom an hour in
-which guns could not be distinctly heard.</p>
-
-<p>Here and there, too, could be seen a battery hidden beneath
-a belt of trees, or sheltered under the hedge by
-the side of the road. We were curious to see how the
-countryside would look after its long occupation by the
-British Army. We had expected, perhaps, to see more
-signs of war, although we had not known what to anticipate.</p>
-
-<p>Beyond the fact that there were many bodies of troops
-moving on the roads, and that many farms and other large
-houses had notices fixed up outside to show they were
-the Headquarters of some unit, there was nothing, as a
-rule, except in the areas which have been actually shelled,
-to give any indication of the terrible nature of the struggle
-which is being waged so close at hand. Indeed, if the
-road took us to the top of one of the few hills in that
-country, and we looked out over the landscape, just beginning
-to show the first touches of spring, it was almost
-impossible to realize that between us and the horizon
-stretched that long valley of trenches which divides the
-two great armies.</p>
-
-<p>When we drove along the roads at some distance from
-the actual front, it was often hard to believe that this
-was the real seat of war; but a passing transport wagon
-or a patrol of cavalry riding by soon reminded us of
-stern realities. The recent absence of rain, and the warm
-sun, had caused the roads to dry up considerably, and
-many officers seemed to be quite disappointed not to be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span>
-able to show us many samples of the mud to which they
-had become so accustomed, and of which we had heard
-so much. We wondered, also, very much how the men
-would look after their hard and trying winter. Certainly
-I was surprised to notice how very clean and tidy they
-invariably appeared to be; although, of course, uniforms
-must show signs of wear and tear. In every case, except
-where the men were actually fresh from the trenches,
-the Battalions presented a smart appearance.</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;SOLDIERS SINGING: "JESUS LOVER OF
-MY SOUL"</p>
-
-<p>At our first halt a Battalion of the London Regiment
-was drawn up on parade in a field, and for the first time
-we opened the large red box and handed round the hymn-sheets.
-It was here that we were to begin to understand
-the wonderful uplifting power of our great English
-hymns when they are sung on great occasions. After all,
-the heart of a nation is often to be found in its hymns.
-They express a simple theology in simple terms, and
-words and tunes of hymns learned in childhood are very
-dear to men, even if in the rush of life they have not,
-as many said, "found much time for religion before I
-came to France." The Bishop had chosen hymns which
-he knew would be familiar to all the men of all denominations.</p>
-
-<p>Only four hymns were sung throughout the week&mdash;"When
-I Survey the Wondrous Cross," "Rock of Ages,
-Cleft for Me," "There Is a Green Hill Far Away," and
-"Jesus, Lover of My Soul"&mdash;hymns which are known
-throughout the world wherever British men have gone.
-There was no necessity to have an accompaniment, for
-everybody knew the tunes. Once or twice a band was
-present, and now and then a small harmonium was used,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>
-but as a rule the hymns were sung unaccompanied, except
-by the thunder of the guns.</p>
-
-<p>It is always moving and inspiring to join in hymns
-when they are sung by large bodies of men, especially
-when those hymns have been associated with great moments
-in our lives, but never before can these familiar
-tunes have had such a setting; never, certainly, have they
-been sung more reverently or with greater earnestness.
-Perhaps, as children they liked the tunes best, but now
-that they have become men and put away childish things,
-the soldiers think first of the words.</p>
-
-<p>How much those words meant to many hearts no one
-but He to Whom all hearts are open can ever know; but
-that they moved thoughts too deep for words was clearly
-written on every face in those great gatherings of men.
-As they must have raised many memories of childhood
-in the hearts of many of the men, so now they will in
-future years be sung by many with another and a deeper
-memory of the occasions when they were sung upon the
-battlefields of Flanders in the days of the Great War.</p>
-
-<p>There was one verse in the Gospels which was continually
-in my mind at these great services. In Holy
-Week, of course, we were often thinking of that last
-night of our Lord with His disciples in the upper room
-at Jerusalem before He went out to His great battle in
-Gethsemane, and on the Cross: "When they had sung
-an hymn, they went out into the Mount of Olives."</p>
-
-<p>We were with men at the great moments of their lives,
-many of them having come straight out of the trenches,
-many going back to the trenches in but a few moments
-after we had left them&mdash;men who had been in battle, and
-men who were preparing for battle. Nobody who was
-present at those services would ever forget what it meant
-to say: "And when they had sung a hymn, they went
-back to the trenches."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Every service, of course, was closed with the National
-Anthem. At the front, men seem instinctively to know
-that this great hymn is in reality a prayer, and on not a
-few occasions the whole body of men reverently sang
-"Amen" at the conclusion of the last line. So also "God
-Save the King" will have won for itself an even deeper
-place in the hearts of men than that which it has held
-for so many generations.</p>
-
-<p>From the open field, it was not far to pass on to a
-little French town where another regiment was drawn
-up in the principal square. No more suitable place could
-have been chosen for a service, and a wagon, which served
-as a pulpit for the Bishop, was just in front of the western
-door of the fine old church.</p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;"THE KINGDOM OF GOD"&mdash;NEAR THE
-GUNS</p>
-
-<p>To see a Bishop of the Anglican Communion preaching
-in France at the door of a Roman Catholic church raised
-many thoughts in my mind. I could not but hope that
-these days of trial may draw the Allies together by something
-that is deeper than the bonds of friendship. We
-had heard not infrequently of the sympathetic help which
-is being offered by many priests of the Roman Catholic
-Church to our own Chaplains, and I thought, as many are
-thinking at this time, that if the war could serve in any
-way to help the two great Communions to understand
-better their distinctive points of view, some real step
-will have been taken to advance the cause of the Kingdom
-of God. This service was reverently watched by a considerable
-number of the inhabitants of the place.</p>
-
-<p>After holding a short service for two batteries near
-their guns, the Bishop came to another open square where
-a Brigade was assembled, which included a regiment almost,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span>
-if not entirely, recruited from East London. The
-East Londoner has his own unique characteristics, and
-his friends will be glad to know that he is just as cheerful
-and bright in France at war as he is in England in
-times of peace. It was hard to distinguish faces, but as
-the regiment swung by the place where I was standing,
-I saw many who remembered me from the time that I
-spent at Oxford House, and they waved just as hearty
-a greeting from the ranks as they used to wave from the
-top of a van in the Bethnal Green Road five years ago.</p>
-
-<p>The deepest note on this day was struck when we came
-to a little town filled with British troops, a very large
-number of whom had been recently engaged in heavy
-fighting. The Chaplain had sent a notice throughout one
-Division that the Bishop would hold a short service in
-the evening for officers, and that this would be followed
-by a service for non-commissioned officers and men. As
-he entered the large hall which is used for a church in
-that town, he found at least five hundred officers, including
-many Generals, waiting in silence. They had come,
-some of them, from considerable distances, and almost
-every officer who was off duty in that district must have
-been present. It was only a bare, whitewashed building,
-with a hard stone floor, and a little platform at the end,
-but in it were gathered together some of the flower of the
-British Army.</p>
-
-<p>There were Generals kneeling side by side with subalterns&mdash;men
-who had faced together the terrible ordeal
-of battle. Those who were present will surely never forget
-the silence and reverence of that service.</p>
-
-
-<p>IV&mdash;THE CANADIANS&mdash;AND A BENEDICTION</p>
-
-<p>After so long a day the Bishop was naturally beginning
-to feel tired, and his voice began to show signs of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span>
-the great tax which frequent speaking in the open air
-had placed upon it. But there was one more gathering
-at which he was to be present, and in many ways this was
-the most striking and memorable of the whole Mission.</p>
-
-<p>The Canadians were there, and they wished to see him.
-That was quite enough for the Bishop. His two visits
-to the Dominion have made Canada very dear to his
-heart, and to Canada he will always give of his best. It
-was not far to go to the large open square in the town
-where the Canadians were waiting for him. The square
-was packed with men, and in the center was a statue or
-fountain&mdash;I really could not distinguish which, so completely
-was it concealed by the men sitting and standing
-upon it.</p>
-
-<p>The last rays of the sun came across the old tiled roofs,
-and lent a touch of color to the scene. On one side of
-the square was the Town Hall, and the Bishop stood in
-the balcony, surrounded by the General and staff officers.
-It was a moving sight to look down from the balcony of
-this old French Town Hall upon this great gathering of
-men who had come so many thousands of miles from their
-homes to fight for the honor of the Empire. There was
-no opportunity for an ordinary service. The gathering
-darkness would have made it impossible for the men to
-read, and, even if it had been lighter, the men were so
-closely packed together that hymn-sheets could not have
-been held.</p>
-
-<p>It is always difficult to estimate numbers, but someone
-said that nearly ten thousand men must have been
-present. When the Bishop appeared on the balcony
-there was a Canadian cheer. He is well known in the
-Dominion, and the volume of sound left no doubt as to
-the warmth of feeling with which he is regarded there.</p>
-
-<p>"This is a sight," he began, "which reminds me of Montreal
-and Toronto."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"How about Winnipeg?" came a voice from the crowd,
-and the men all laughed. It was a glorious chance to tell
-them of the way in which the Mother Country appreciates
-the splendid loyalty with which her sons beyond the seas
-have rallied at the Empire's call, and the Bishop was not
-slow to let them know that we in Great Britain rejoice
-to feel that the men of Canada and the men of Britain
-are standing shoulder to shoulder in France. And then
-they cheered again.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, you may cheer that," he added, "while I get
-breath for the next sentence." He passed on to speak of
-the great cause of the freedom of the world for which
-the Empire and the Allies are fighting to-day. Canada,
-the great self-governing Dominion&mdash;free, and yet part of
-the Empire&mdash;would understand what freedom means.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, you may cheer that too," the Bishop said, "while
-I get breath again."</p>
-
-<p>And then, as he turned to deeper thoughts and closed,
-he added: "Now we will all together say the Lord's
-Prayer." In a flash there was not a cap to be seen in the
-square, but only the bared heads of that great throng of
-men reverently bent forward in prayer. Then, in absolute
-silence, the Bishop gave the Blessing, and as he left
-the balcony a staff officer turned to me and said: "That
-is a really great man."</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTE:</h3>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> All numerals relate to stories herein told&mdash;not to chapters
-from original sources.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>"GRAPES OF WRATH"&mdash;WITH THE
-"BIG PUSH" ON THE SOMME</h2>
-
-<div class="center"><i>Twenty-four Hours in the Life of a Private
-Soldier</i></div>
-
-<div class="center"><br /><i>Told by Boyd Cable, an English Author in the
-British Army</i></div>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>Boyd Cable has suddenly become one of the foremost word
-painters of active fighting&mdash;"the greatest literary discovery of
-the War." He is primarily a man of action. At the age of
-twenty, he joined a corps of Scouts in the Boer War and fought
-in South Africa. He then became a traveler and spent some
-time in Australia and New Zealand, in the Philippines, Java and
-the Islands of the Pacific. He is a "knight of adventure"&mdash;he
-has been an ordinary seaman, a typewriter agent, a steamer fireman,
-office manager, hobo, gold prospector, coach driver, navvy.
-He was one of the first men not in the Regular Army to get a
-commission and be sent to the front in 1914. As an observation
-officer in the artillery, he was "spotted" by the enemy sharpshooters,
-got a bullet through his cap, one through the inside
-of his sleeve close to his heart, and fifty-three others near enough
-for him to hear them pass&mdash;all in less than an hour. After
-eighteen months of this death-defying work without even a
-wound, he was invalided home on account of stomach trouble
-and then began to write of his adventures. His books, "Behind
-the Line," "Action Front," and "Doing Their Bit," are acknowledged
-to be the most vivid and stimulating pictures of the
-War as seen by the men in the trenches. We here record his
-story of the tanks from his volume of tales entitled "Grapes of
-Wrath," by permission of his publishers, <i>E. P. Dutton and Company</i>:
-Copyright 1917.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a>
-I&mdash;STORY OF "KENTUCKY"&mdash;AN AMERICAN
-IN THE BRITISH TRENCHES</p>
-
-<p>Soon after Kentucky rejoined them the Stonewalls
-were moved forward a little clear of the village they had
-helped to take, just as one or two heavy shells whooped
-over from the German guns and dropped crashing on the
-ground that had been theirs. The men were spread out
-along shell holes and told to dig in for better cover because
-a bit of a redoubt on the left flank hadn't been taken
-and bullets were falling in enfilade from it.</p>
-
-<p>"Dig, you cripples," said the sergeant, "dig in. Can't
-you see that if they counter-attack from the front now
-you'll get shot in the back while you're lining the front
-edge of those shell holes. Get to it there, you Pug."</p>
-
-<p>"Shot in the back, linin' the front," said Pug as the
-sergeant passed on. "Is it a conundrum, Kentuck?"</p>
-
-<p>"Sounds sort of mixed," admitted Kentucky. "But
-it's tainted some with the truth. That redoubt is half rear
-to us. If another lot comes at us in front and we get
-up on the front edge of this shell hole, there's nothing to
-stop the redoubt bullets hitting us in the back. Look at
-that," he concluded, nodding upward to where a bullet
-had smacked noisily into the mud above their heads as
-they squatted in the hole.</p>
-
-<p>The two commenced wearily to cut out with their
-trenching tools a couple of niches in the sides of the
-crater which would give them protection from the flank
-and rear bullets. They made reasonably secure cover and
-then stayed to watch a hurricane bombardment that was
-developing on the redoubt. "<i>Goo</i> on the guns," said Pug
-joyfully. "That's the talk; smack 'em about."</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span></p>
-<p>The gunners "smacked 'em about" with fifteen savage
-minutes' deluge of light and heavy shells, blotting out the
-redoubt in a whirlwind of fire-flashes, belching smoke
-clouds and dust haze. Then suddenly the tempest ceased
-to play there, lifted and shifted and fell roaring in a wall
-of fire and steel beyond the low slope which the redoubt
-crowned.</p>
-
-<p>With past knowledge of what the lift and the further
-barrage meant the two men in the shell-pit turned and
-craned their necks and looked out along the line.</p>
-
-<p>"There they go," said Pug suddenly, and "Attacking
-round a half-circle," said Kentucky. The British line was
-curved in a horseshoe shape about the redoubt and the
-two being out near one of the points could look back and
-watch clearly the infantry attack launching from the center
-and half-way round the sides of the horseshoe. They
-saw the khaki figures running heavily, scrambling round
-and through the scattered shell holes, and presently, as
-a crackle of rifle fire rose and rose and swelled to a sullen
-roar with the quick, rhythmic clatter of machine guns
-beating through it, they saw also the figures stumbling
-and falling, the line thinning and shredding out and wasting
-away under the withering fire.</p>
-
-<p>The sergeant dodged along the pit-edge above them.
-"Covering fire," he shouted, "at four hundred&mdash;slam it
-in," and disappeared. The two opened fire, aiming at
-the crest of the slope and beyond the tangle of barbed
-wire which alone indicated the position of the redoubt.</p>
-
-<p>They only ceased to fire when they saw the advanced
-fringe of the line, of a line by now woefully thinned and
-weakened, come to the edge of the barbed wire and try
-to force a way through it.</p>
-
-<p>"They're beat," gasped Pug. "They're done in ..."
-and cursed long and bitterly, fingering nervously at his
-rifle the while. "Time we rung in again," said Kentucky.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span>
-"Aim steady and pitch 'em well clear of the wire."
-The two opened careful fire again while the broken remnants
-of the attacking line ran and hobbled and crawled
-back or into the cover of shell holes. A second wave
-flooded out in a new assault, but by now the German artillery
-joining in helped it and the new line was cut down,
-broken and beaten back before it had covered half the
-distance to the entanglements. Kentucky and Pug and
-others of the Stonewalls near them could only curse helplessly
-as they watched the tragedy and plied their rifles
-in a slender hope of some of their bullets finding those
-unseen loopholes and embrasures.</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;HIS MAJESTY'S LAND SHIP&mdash;"WE ARE
-HERE"</p>
-
-<p>"An' wot's the next item o' the program, I wonder?"
-said Pug half an hour after the last attack had failed,
-half an hour filled with a little shooting, a good deal of
-listening to the pipe and whistle of overhead bullets and
-the rolling thunder of the guns, a watching of the shells
-falling and spouting earth and smoke on the defiant redoubt.</p>
-
-<p>"Reinforcements and another butt-in at it, I expect,"
-surmised Kentucky. "Don't see anything else for it.
-Looks like this pimple-on-the-map of a redoubt was
-holdin' up any advance on this front. Anyhow I'm not
-hankering to go pushin' on with that redoubt bunch
-shootin' holes in my back, which they'd surely do."</p>
-
-<p>"Wot's all the buzz about be'ind us?" said Pug suddenly,
-raising himself for a quick look over the covering
-edge of earth behind him, and in the act of dropping again
-stopped and stared with raised eyebrows and gaping
-mouth.</p>
-
-<p>"What is it?" said Kentucky quickly, and also rose,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span>
-and also stayed risen and staring in amazement. Towards
-them, lumbering and rolling, dipping heavily into
-the shell holes, heaving clumsily out of them, moving with
-a motion something between that of a half-sunken
-ship and a hamstrung toad, striped and banded and
-splashed from head to foot, or, if you prefer, from fo'c'sl-head
-to cutwater, with splashes of lurid color, came His
-Majesty's Land Ship "Here We Are."</p>
-
-<p>"Gor-<i>strewth</i>!" ejaculated Pug. "Wha-what is it?"</p>
-
-<p>Kentucky only gasped.</p>
-
-<p>"'Ere," said Pug hurriedly, "let's gerrout o' this. It's
-comin' over atop of us," and he commenced to scramble
-clear.</p>
-
-<p>But a light of understanding was dawning on Kentucky's
-face and a wide grin growing on his lips. "It's
-one of the Tanks," he said, and giggled aloud as the
-Here We Are dipped her nose and slid head first into
-a huge shell-crater in ludicrous likeness to a squat bull-pup
-sitting back on its haunches and dragged into a hole:
-"I've heard lots about 'em, but the seein' beats all the
-hearin' by whole streets," and he and Pug laughed aloud
-together as the Here We Are's face and gun-port eyes and
-bent-elbow driving gear appeared above the crater rim
-in still more ridiculous resemblance to an amazed toad
-emerging from a rain-barrel. The creature lumbered
-past them, taking in its stride the narrow trench dug to
-link up the shell holes, and the laughter on Kentucky's
-lips died to thoughtfully serious lines as his eye caught the
-glint of fat, vicious-looking gun muzzles peering from
-their ports.</p>
-
-<p>"Haw haw haw," guffawed Pug as the monster lurched
-drunkenly, checked and steadied itself with one foot
-poised over a deep hole, halted and backed away, and
-edged nervously round the rim of the hole. "See them
-machine guns pokin' out, Kentucky," he continued delightedly.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>
-"They won't 'arf pepper them Huns when they
-gets near enough."</p>
-
-<p>Fifty yards in the wake of the Here We Are a line
-of men followed up until an officer halted them along
-the front line where Pug and Kentucky were posted.</p>
-
-<p>"You blokes just takin' 'im out for an airin'?" Pug
-asked one of the newcomers. "Oughtn't you to 'ave 'im
-on a leadin' string?"</p>
-
-<p>"Here we are, Here we are again," chanted the other
-and giggled spasmodically. "An' ain't he just hot stuff!
-But wait till you see 'im get to work with his sprinklers."</p>
-
-<p>"Does 'e bite?" asked Pug, grinning joyously.
-"Oughtn't you to 'ave 'is muzzle on?"</p>
-
-<p>"Bite," retorted another. "He's a bloomin' Hun-eater.
-Jes' gulps 'em whole, coal-scuttle 'ats an' all."</p>
-
-<p>"He's a taed," said another. "A lollopin, flat-nosed,
-splay-fittit, ugly puddock, wi's hin' legs stuck oot whaur
-his front should be."</p>
-
-<p>"Look at 'im, oh, look at 'im ... he's alive, lad, nobbut
-alive."... "Does every bloomin' thing but
-talk."... "Skatin' he is now, skatin' on 'is off hind
-leg," came a chorus of delighted comment.</p>
-
-<p>"Is he goin' to waltz in and take that redoubt on his
-ownsum?" asked Kentucky. "No," some one told him.
-"We give him ten minutes' start and then follow on and
-pick up the pieces, and the prisoners."</p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;HOW THE "TOMMIES" CHEERED THE
-"PEPPER POTS"&mdash;TANK TALES</p>
-
-<p>They lay there laughing and joking and watching the
-uncouth antics of the monster waddling across the shell-riddled
-ground, cheering when it appeared to trip and
-recover itself, cheering when it floundered sideways into
-a hole and crawled out again, cheering most wildly of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span>
-all when it reached the barbed-wire entanglements, waddled
-through, bursting them apart and trailing them in
-long tangles behind it, or trampling them calmly under
-its churning caterpillar-wheel-bands. It was little wonder
-they cheered and less wonder they laughed. The Here
-We Are's motions were so weirdly alive and life-like, so
-playfully ponderous, so massively ridiculous, that it belonged
-by nature to nothing outside a Drury Lane Panto.
-At one moment it looked exactly like a squat tug-boat
-in a heavy cross sea or an ugly tide-rip, lurching, dipping,
-rolling rail and rail, plunging wildly bows under, tossing
-its nose up and squattering again stern-rail deep, pitching
-and heaving and diving and staggering, but always
-pushing forward. Next minute it was a monster out of
-Prehistoric Peeps, or a new patent fire-breathing dragon
-from the pages of a very Grimm Fairy Tale, nosing its
-way blindly over the Fairy Prince's pitfalls; next it was a
-big broad-buttocked sow nuzzling and rooting as it went;
-next it was a drunk man reeling and staggering, rolling
-and falling, scrabbling and crawling; next it was&mdash;was
-anything on or in, or underneath the earth, anything at
-all except a deadly, grim, purposeful murdering product
-of modern war.</p>
-
-<p>The infantry pushed out after it when it reached the
-barbed wire, and although they took little heed to keep
-cover&mdash;being much more concerned not to miss any of
-the grave and comic antics of their giant joke than to shelter
-from flying bullets&mdash;the line went on almost without
-casualties. "Mighty few bullets about this time," remarked
-Kentucky, who with Pug had moved out along
-with the others "to see the fun." "That's 'cos they're
-too busy with the old Pepper-pots, an' the Pepper-pots is
-too busy wi' them to leave much time for shootin' at us,"
-said Pug gayly. It was true too. The Pepper-pots&mdash;a
-second one had lumbered into sight from the center of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span>
-the horseshoe curve&mdash;were drawing a tearing hurricane
-of machine-gun bullets that beat and rattled on their armored
-sides like hail on a window-pane. They waddled
-indifferently through the storm and Here We Are, crawling
-carefully across a trench, halted half-way over and
-sprinkled bullets up and down its length to port and
-starboard for a minute, hitched itself over, steered
-straight for a fire-streaming machine-gun embrasure. It
-squirted a jet of lead into the loophole, walked on, butted
-at the emplacement once or twice, got a grip of it under
-the upward sloped caterpillar band, climbed jerkily till it
-stood reared up on end like a frightened colt, ground its
-driving bands round and round, and&mdash;fell forward on
-its face with a cloud of dust belching up and out from
-the collapsed dug-out. Then it crawled out of the wreckage,
-crunching over splintered beams and broken concrete,
-wheeled and cruised casually down the length of
-a crooked trench, halting every now and then to spray
-bullets on any German who showed or to hail a stream
-of them down the black entrance to a dug-out, straying
-aside to nose over any suspicious cranny, swinging round
-again to plod up the slope in search of more trenches.</p>
-
-<p>The infantry followed up, cheering and laughing like
-children at a fair, rounding up batches of prisoners who
-crawled white-faced and with scared eyes from dug-out
-doors and trench corners, shouting jests and comments
-at the lumbering Pepper-pots.</p>
-
-<p>A yell went up as the Here We Are, edging along a
-trench, lurched suddenly, staggered, side-slipped, and half
-disappeared in a fog of dust. The infantry raced up and
-found it with its starboard driving gear grinding and
-churning full power and speed of revolution above ground
-and the whole port side and gear down somewhere in the
-depths of the collapsed trench, grating and squealing and
-flinging out clods of earth as big as clothes-baskets. Then<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span>
-the engines eased, slowed, and stopped, and after a little
-and in answer to the encouraging yells of the men outside,
-a scuttle jerked open and a grimy figure crawled out.</p>
-
-<p>"Blimey," said Pug rapturously, "'ere's Jonah 'isself.
-Ol' Pepper-pot's spewed 'im out."</p>
-
-
-<p>IV&mdash;JONAH'S SHIP RECHRISTENED&mdash;"THE
-D.T.'S"</p>
-
-<p>But "Jonah" addressed himself pointedly and at some
-length to the laughing spectators, and they, urged on
-by a stream of objurgation and invective, fell to work
-with trenching-tools, with spades retrieved from the
-trench, with bare hands and busy fingers, to break down
-the trench-side under Here We Are's starboard driver,
-and pile it down into the trench and under the uplifted
-end of her port one. The second Pepper-pot cruised up
-and brought to adjacent to the operations with a watchful
-eye on the horizon. It was well she did, for suddenly
-a crowd of Germans seeing or sensing that one of
-the monsters was out of action, swarmed out of cover
-on the crest and came storming down on the party. Here
-We Are could do nothing; but the sister ship could, and
-did, do quite a lot to those Germans. It sidled round so
-as to bring both bow guns and all its broadside to bear
-and let loose a close-quarter tornado of bullets that cut
-the attackers to rags. The men who had ceased digging
-to grab their rifles had not time to fire a shot before the
-affair was over and "Jonah" was again urging them to
-their spade-work. Then when he thought the way ready,
-Here We Are at his orders steamed ahead again, its
-lower port side scraping and jarring along the trench
-wall, the drivers biting and gripping at the soft ground.
-Jerkily, a foot at a time, it scuffled its way along the trench
-till it came to a sharp angle of it where a big shell hole<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span>
-had broken down the wall. But just as the starboard
-driver was reaching out over the shell hole and the easy
-job of plunging into it, gaining a level keel and climbing
-out the other side, the trench wall on the right gave way
-and the Here We Are sank its starboard side level to and
-then below the port one. She had fallen bodily into a
-German dug-out, but after a pause to regain its shaken
-breath&mdash;or the crew's&mdash;it began once more to revolve its
-drivers slowly, and to churn out behind them, first a cloud
-of dust and clots of earth, then, as the starboard driver bit
-deeper into the dug-out, a mangled débris of clothing and
-trench-made furniture. On the ground above the infantry
-stood shrieking with laughter, while the frantic
-skipper raved unheard-of oaths and the Here We Are
-pawed and hoofed behind, or caught on its driving band
-and hoisted in turn into the naked light of day, a splintered
-bedstead, a chewed-up blanket or two, separately
-and severally the legs, back, and seat of a red velvet armchair,
-a torn gray coat and a forlorn and muddy pair of
-pink pajama trousers tangled up in one officer's field
-boot. And when the drivers got their grip again and the
-Here We are rolled majestically forward and up the further
-sloping side of the shell-crater and halted to take
-the skipper aboard again, Pug dragged a long branch
-from the fascines in the trench débris, slid it up one leg
-and down the other of the pink pajamas, tied the boot
-by its laces to the tip and jammed the root into a convenient
-crevice in the Tank's stern. And so beflagged
-she rolled her triumphant way up over the captured redoubt
-and down the other side, with the boot-tip bobbing
-and swaying and jerking at the end of her pink tail. The
-sequel to her story may be told here, although it only
-came back to the men who decorated her after filtering
-round the firing line, up and down the communication<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span>
-lines, round half the hospitals and most of the messes
-at or behind the Front.</p>
-
-<p>And many as came to be the Tales of the Tanks, this
-of the Pink-Tailed 'un, as Pug called her, belonged unmistakably
-to her and, being so, was joyfully recognized
-and acclaimed by her decorators. She came in due time
-across the redoubt, says the story, and bore down on the
-British line at the other extreme of the horseshoe to
-where a certain infantry C.O., famed in past days for
-a somewhat speedy and hectic career, glared in amazement
-at the apparition lurching and bobbing and bowing
-and crawling toad-like towards him.</p>
-
-<p>"I knew," he is reported to have afterwards admitted,
-"I knew it couldn't be that I'd got 'em again. But in
-the old days I always had one infallible sign. Crimson
-rats and purple snakes I might get over; but if they had
-pink tails, I knew I was in for it certain. And I tell you
-it gave me quite a turn to see this blighter waddling up
-and wagging the old pink tail."</p>
-
-<p>But this end of the story only came to the Stonewalls
-long enough after&mdash;just as it is said to have come in time
-to the ears of the Here We Are's skipper, and, mightily
-pleasing him and his crew, set him chuckling delightedly
-and swearing he meant to apply and in due and formal
-course obtain permission to change his land-ship's name,
-and having regretfully parted with the pink tail, immortalize
-it in the name of H.M.L.S. <i>The D.T.'s</i>.</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTE:</h3>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_5_5" id="Footnote_5_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> All numerals relate to stories herein told&mdash;not to chapters
-from original sources.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>A NOVELIST AND SOLDIER ON THE
-BATTLE LINE</h2>
-
-<div class="center"><i>Letters by Coningsby Dawson</i></div>
-
-<div class="center"><br /><i>British-American Author of Many Notable Books</i></div>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>Coningsby Dawson, the brilliant young novelist, was 31 years
-of age at the outbreak of the war. He was graduated with
-honors from Oxford in 1905 and came to the United States
-to take a theological course at Union Seminary. After a year
-at the Seminary, he reached the conclusion that his life work
-lay in literature. His family left England and established their
-home in Taunton, Massachusetts. Here, young Dawson began
-the career which is to place him in the front rank of modern
-novelists. At the outbreak of the Great War, he laid his pen
-aside and took up his sword for his native country. Enlisting
-with the gallant Canadians, he went to the front where he
-soon became a lieutenant. His letters home have been collected
-by his father and published in book form under the title "Carry
-On&mdash;Letters in War Time" by <i>John Lane Company</i>: Copyright
-1917. These intimate letters written from dug-outs on the
-Somme battle fronts in the intervals of incessant artillery fire
-reveal the heart of the young man who embodies the elements
-of greatness. They breathe the very spirit of heroism. Several
-of the most inspirational of these letters are here reproduced.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p><a name="FNanchor_6_6" id="FNanchor_6_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a>
-I&mdash;WITH 6,000 TROOPS AND A CONVOY</p>
-
-<div class="right">
-Ottawa, July 16th, 1916.<br />
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Dearest All</span>:</p>
-
-<p>So much has happened since last I saw you that it's
-difficult to know where to start. On Thursday, after
-lunch, I got the news that we were to entrain from Petewawa
-next Friday morning. I at once put in for leave
-to go to Ottawa the next day until the following Thursday
-at Reveille. We came here with a lot of the other
-officers who are going over and have been having a very
-full time.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>I am sailing from a port unknown on board the <i>Olympic</i>
-with 6,000 troops&mdash;there is to be a big convoy. I
-feel more than ever I did&mdash;and I'm sure it's a feeling
-that you share since visiting the camp&mdash;that I am setting
-out on a Crusade from which it would have been impossible
-to withhold myself with honor. I go quite gladly
-and contentedly, and pray that in God's good time we
-may all sit again in the little shack at Kootenay and listen
-to the rustling of the orchard outside. It will be of
-those summer days that I shall be thinking all the time.</p>
-
-<div class="right">
-Yours, with very much love,<br />
-<span class="smcap">Con</span>.<br />
-</div>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;OFF FOR FRANCE&mdash;ACROSS THE CHANNEL</p>
-
-<div class="right">
-Shorncliff, August 30th, 1916.<br />
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">My Dearests</span>:</p>
-
-<p>I have just returned from sending you a cable to let
-you know that I'm off to France. The word came out
-in orders yesterday, and I shall leave before the end of
-the week with a draft of officers&mdash;I have been in England
-just a day over four weeks....</p>
-
-<p>Selfishly I wish that you were here at this moment&mdash;actually
-I'm glad that you are away. Everybody goes out
-quite unemotionally and with very few good-byes&mdash;we
-made far more fuss in the old days about a week-end
-visit.</p>
-
-<p>Now that at last it has come&mdash;this privileged moment
-for which I have worked and waited&mdash;my heart is very
-quiet. It's the test of a character which I have often
-doubted. I shall be glad not to have to doubt it again.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span>
-Whatever happens, I know you will be glad to remember
-that at a great crisis I tried to play the man, however
-small my qualifications. We have always lived so near
-to one another's affections that this going out alone is
-more lonely to me than to most men. I have always had
-some one near at hand with love-blinded eyes to see my
-faults as springing from higher motives. Now I reach
-out my hands across six thousand miles and only touch
-yours with my imagination to say good-bye. What queer
-sights these eyes, which have been almost your eyes, will
-witness! If my hands do anything respectable, remember
-that it is your hands that are doing it. It is your
-influence as a family that has made me ready for the
-part I have to play, and where I go, you follow me.</p>
-
-<p>Poor little circle of three loving persons, please be
-tremendously brave. Don't let anything turn you into
-cowards&mdash;we've all got to be worthy of each other's sacrifice;
-the greater the sacrifice may prove to be for the
-one the greater the nobility demanded of the remainder.
-How idle the words sound, and yet they will take deep
-meanings when time has given them graver sanctions.
-I think gallant is the word I've been trying to find&mdash;we
-must be gallant English women and gentlemen....</p>
-
-<p>How far away the childish past seems&mdash;almost as
-though it never happened. And was I really the budding
-novelist in New York? Life has become so stern and
-scarlet&mdash;and so brave. From my window I look out on
-the English Channel, a cold, grey-green sea, with rain
-driving across it and a fleet of small craft taking shelter.
-Over there beyond the curtain of mist lies France&mdash;and
-everything that awaits me.</p>
-
-<p>News has just come that I have to start. Will continue
-from France.</p>
-
-<div class="right">
-Yours ever lovingly,<br />
-<span class="smcap">Con</span>.<br />
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;"HERE I AM IN FRANCE&mdash;A SOLDIER"</p>
-
-<div class="right">
-France, September 1st, 1916.<br />
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Dearest M.</span>:</p>
-
-<p>Here I am in France with the same strange smells and
-street cries, and almost the same little boys bowling hoops
-over the very cobbly cobble stones. I had afternoon tea
-at a patisserie and ate a great many gâteaux for the sake
-of old times. We had a very choppy crossing, and you
-would most certainly have been sick had you been on
-board. It seemed to me that I must be coming on one
-of those romantic holidays to see churches and dead
-history&mdash;only the khaki-clad figures reminded me that I
-was coming to see history in the making. It's a funny
-world that batters us about so. It's three years since I
-was in France&mdash;the last time was with Arthur in Provence.
-It's five years since you and I did our famous trip
-together.</p>
-
-<p>I wish you were here&mdash;there are heaps of English
-nurses in the streets. I expect to sleep in this place and
-proceed to my destination to-morrow. How I wish I
-could send you a really descriptive letter! If I did, I
-fear you would not get it&mdash;so I have to write in generalities.
-None of this seems real&mdash;it's a kind of wild pretence
-from which I shall awake&mdash;and when I tell you my
-dream you'll laugh and say, "How absurd of you, dreaming
-that you were a soldier. I must say you look like
-it."</p>
-
-<p>Good-bye, my dearest girl,</p>
-
-<div class="right">
-God bless you,<br />
-<span class="smcap">Con</span>.<br />
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p>IV&mdash;"I HAVE SEEN MY FIRST BATTLEFIELD"</p>
-
-<div class="right">
-September 19th, 1916.<br />
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Dearest Father</span>:</p>
-
-<p>I'm writing you your birthday letter early, as I don't
-know how busy I may be in the next week, nor how long
-this may take to reach you. You know how much love I
-send you and how I would like to be with you. D'you
-remember the birthday three years ago when we set the
-victrola going outside your room door? Those were my
-high-jinks days when very many things seemed possible.
-I'd rather be the person I am now than the person I was
-then. Life was selfish though glorious.</p>
-
-<p>Well, I've seen my first modern battlefield and am quite
-disillusioned about the splendor of war. The splendor is
-all in the souls of the men who creep through the squalor
-like vermin&mdash;it's in nothing external. There was a chap
-here the other day who deserved the V. C. four times
-over by running back through the Hun shell fire to bring
-news that the infantry wanted more artillery support. I
-was observing for my brigade in the forward station at
-the time. How he managed to live through the ordeal
-nobody knows. But men laugh while they do these
-things. It's fine.</p>
-
-<p>A modern battlefield is the abomination of abominations.
-Imagine a vast stretch of dead country, pitted with
-shell-holes as though it had been mutilated with smallpox.
-There's not a leaf or a blade of grass in sight.
-Every house has either been leveled or is in ruins. No
-bird sings. Nothing stirs. The only live sound is at
-night&mdash;the scurry of rats. You enter a kind of ditch,
-called a trench; it leads on to another and another in an
-unjoyful maze. From the sides feet stick out, and arms
-and faces&mdash;the dead of previous encounters. "One of
-our chaps," you say casually, recognizing him by his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span>
-boots or khaki, or "Poor blighter&mdash;a Hun!" One can
-afford to forget enmity in the presence of the dead. It
-is horribly difficult sometimes to distinguish between the
-living and the slaughtered&mdash;they both lie so silently in
-their little kennels in the earthen bank. You push on&mdash;especially
-if you are doing observation work, till you are
-past your own front line and out in No Man's Land.
-You have to crouch and move warily now. Zing! A
-bullet from a German sniper. You laugh and whisper,
-"A near one, that." My first trip to the trenches was
-up to No Man's Land. I went in the early dawn and
-came to a Madame Tussaud's show of the dead, frozen
-into immobility in the most extraordinary attitudes.
-Some of them were part way out of the ground, one
-hand pressed to the wound, the other pointing, the head
-sunken and the hair plastered over the forehead by repeated
-rains. I kept on wondering what my companions
-would look like had they been three weeks dead. My
-imagination became ingeniously and vividly morbid.
-When I had to step over them to pass, it seemed as though
-they must clutch at my trench coat and ask me to help.
-Poor lonely people, so brave and so anonymous in their
-death! Somewhere there is a woman who loved each
-one of them and would give her life for my opportunity
-to touch the poor clay that had been kind to her. It's
-like walking through the day of resurrection to visit No
-Man's Land. Then the Huns see you and the shrapnel
-begins to fall&mdash;you crouch like a dog and run for it.</p>
-
-<p>One gets used to shell-fire up to a point, but there's
-not a man who doesn't want to duck when he hears one
-coming. The worst of all is the whizz-bang, because it
-doesn't give you a chance&mdash;it pounces and is on you the
-same moment that it bangs. There's so much I wish that
-I could tell you. I can only say this, at the moment we're
-making history.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>What a curious birthday letter! I think of all your
-other birthdays&mdash;the ones before I met these silent men
-with the green and yellow faces, and the blackened lips
-which will never speak again. What happy times we have
-had as a family&mdash;what happy jaunts when you took me in
-those early days, dressed in a sailor suit, when you went
-hunting pictures. Yet, for all the damnability of what I
-now witness, I was never quieter in my heart. To have
-surrendered to an imperative self-denial brings a peace
-which self-seeking never brought.</p>
-
-<p>So don't let this birthday be less gay for my absence.
-It ought to be the proudest in your life&mdash;proud because
-your example has taught each of your sons to do the
-difficult things which seem right. It would have been a
-condemnation of you if any one of us had been a
-shirker.</p>
-
-<div class="poem">
-"I want to buy fine things for you<br />
-And be a soldier if I can."<br />
-</div>
-
-<p>The lines come back to me now. You read them to me
-first in the dark little study from a green oblong book.
-You little thought that I would be a soldier&mdash;even now
-I can hardly realize the fact. It seems a dream from
-which I shall wake up. Am I really killing men day
-by day? Am I really in jeopardy myself?</p>
-
-<p>Whatever happens I'm not afraid, and I'll give you
-reason to be glad of me.</p>
-
-<div class="right">
-Very much love,<br />
-<span class="smcap">Con</span>.<br />
-</div>
-
-
-<p>V&mdash;"I AM IN THE TRENCHES&mdash;UNDER FIRE"</p>
-
-<div class="right">
-November 6th, 1916.<br />
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">My Dear Ones</span>:</p>
-
-<p>Such a wonderful day it has been&mdash;I scarcely know
-where to start. I came down last night from twenty-four<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>
-hours in the mud, where I had been observing. I'd
-spent the night in a hole dug in the side of the trench and
-a dead Hun forming part of the roof. I'd sat there reliving
-so many things&mdash;the ecstatic moments of my life
-when I first touched fame&mdash;and my feet were so cold
-that I could not feel them, so I thought all the harder
-of the pleasant things of the past. Then, as I say, I
-came back to the gun position to learn that I was to have
-one day off at the back of the lines. You can't imagine
-what that meant to me&mdash;one day in a country that is
-green, one day where there is no shell-fire, one day where
-you don't turn up corpses with your tread! For two
-months I have never left the guns except to go forward
-and I have never been from under shell-fire. All night
-long as I have slept the ground had been shaken by the
-stamping of the guns&mdash;and now after two months, to
-come back to comparative normality! The reason for
-this privilege being granted was that the powers that be
-had come to the conclusion that it was time I had a
-bath. Since I sleep in my clothes and water is too valuable
-for washing anything but the face and hands, they
-were probably right in their guess at my condition.</p>
-
-<p>So with the greatest holiday of my life in prospect I
-went to the empty gunpit in which I sleep, and turned in.
-This morning I set out early with my servant, tramping
-back across the long, long battlefields which our boys
-have won. The mud was knee-deep in places, but we
-floundered on till we came to our old and deserted gun-position
-where my horses waited for me. From there I
-rode to the wagon-lines&mdash;the first time I've sat a horse
-since I came into action. Far behind me the thunder of
-winged murder grew more faint. The country became
-greener; trees even had leaves upon them which fluttered
-against the grey-blue sky. It was wonderful&mdash;like awaking
-from an appalling nightmare. My little beast was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span>
-fresh and seemed to share my joy, for she stepped out
-bravely.</p>
-
-<p>When I arrived at the wagon-lines I would not wait&mdash;I
-longed to see something even greener and quieter.
-My groom packed up some oats and away we went again.
-My first objective was the military baths; I lay in hot
-water for half-an-hour and read the advertisements of
-my book. As I lay there, for the first time since I've
-been out, I began to get a half-way true perspective of
-myself. What's left of the egotism of the author came
-to life, and&mdash;now laugh&mdash;I planned my next novel&mdash;planned
-it to the sound of men singing, because they
-were clean for the first time in months. I left my towels
-and soap with a military policeman, by the roadside, and
-went prancing off along country roads in search of the
-almost forgotten places where people don't kill one another.
-Was it imagination? There seemed to me to be
-a different look in the faces of the men I met&mdash;for the
-time being they were neither hunters nor hunted. There
-were actually cows in the fields. At one point, where
-pollarded trees stand like a Hobbema sketch against the
-sky, a group of officers were coursing a hare, following
-a big black hound on horseback. We lost our way. A
-drenching rainstorm fell over us&mdash;we didn't care; and
-we saw as we looked back a most beautiful thing&mdash;a rainbow
-over green fields. It was as romantic as the first
-rainbow in childhood.</p>
-
-<p>All day I have been seeing lovely and familiar things
-as though for the first time. I've been a sort of Lazarus,
-rising out of his tomb and praising God at the sound of
-a divine voice. You don't know how exquisite a ploughed
-field can look, especially after rain, unless you have feared
-that you might never see one again....</p>
-
-<p>Life, how I love you! What a wonderful, kindly thing
-I could make of you to-night. Strangely the vision has<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span>
-come to me of all that you mean. Now I could write.
-So soon you may go from me or be changed into a form
-of existence which all my training has taught me to
-dread. After death is there only nothingness? I think
-that for those who have missed love in this life there
-must be compensations&mdash;the little children whom they
-ought to have had, perhaps. To-day, after so many
-weeks, I have seen little children again.</p>
-
-<p>And yet, so strange a havoc does this war work that,
-if I have to "Go West," I shall go <i>proudly</i> and quietly.
-I have seen too many men die bravely to make a fuss
-if my turn comes. A mixed passenger list old Father
-Charon must have each night&mdash;Englishmen, Frenchmen,
-and Huns. To-morrow I shall have another sight of the
-greenness and then&mdash;the guns.</p>
-
-<p>I don't know whether I have been able to make any
-of my emotions clear to you in my letters. Terror has
-a terrible fascination. Up to now I have always been
-afraid&mdash;afraid of small fears. At last I meet fear itself
-and it stings my pride into an unpremeditated courage.</p>
-
-<p>I've just had a pile of letters from you all. How ripping
-it is to be remembered! Letters keep one civilized.</p>
-
-<p>It's late and I'm very tired. God bless you each and
-all.</p>
-
-<div class="right">
-<span class="smcap">Con</span>.<br />
-</div>
-
-
-<p>VI&mdash;LIVING WITH DEATH AS YOUR COMRADE</p>
-
-<div class="right">
-December 20th, 1916.<br />
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Dear Mr. A. D.</span>:</p>
-
-<p>I've just come in from an argument with Fritz when
-your chocolate formed my meal. You were very kind
-to think of me and to send it, and you were extraordinarily
-understanding in the letter that you sent me. One's
-life out here is like a pollarded tree&mdash;all the lower<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span>
-branches are gone&mdash;one gazes on great nobilities, on the
-fascinating horror of Eternity sometimes&mdash;I said horror,
-but it's often fine in its spaciousness&mdash;one gazes on
-many inverted splendors of Titans, but it's giddy work
-being so high and rarefied, and all the gentle past seems
-gone. That's why it is pleasant in this grimy anonymity
-of death and courage to get reminders, such as your letter,
-that one was once localized and had a familiar history.
-If I come back, I shall be like Rip Van Winkle, or a
-Robinson Crusoe&mdash;like any and all of the creatures of
-legend and history to whom abnormality has grown to
-seem normal. If you can imagine yourself living in a
-world in which every day is a demonstration of a Puritan's
-conception of what happens when the last trump
-sounds, then you have some idea of my queer situation.
-One has come to a point when death seems very inconsiderable
-and only failure to do one's duty is an utter
-loss. Love and the future, and all the sweet and tender
-dreams of bygone days are like a house in which the
-blinds are lowered and from which the sight has gone.
-Landscapes have lost their beauty, everything God-made
-and man-made is destroyed except man's power to endure
-with a smile the things he once most dreaded, because he
-believes that only so may he be righteous in his own
-eyes. How one has longed for that sure confidence in
-the petty failings of little living&mdash;the confidence to believe
-that he can stand up and suffer for principle! God
-has given all men who are out here that opportunity&mdash;the
-supremest that can be hoped for&mdash;so, in spite of exile,
-Christmas for most of us will be a happy day. Does
-one see more truly life's worth on a battlefield? I often
-ask myself that question. Is the contempt that is hourly
-shown for life the real standard of life's worth? I shrug
-my shoulders at my own unanswerable questions&mdash;all I
-know is that I move daily with men who have everything<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span>
-to live for who, nevertheless, are urged by an unconscious
-magnanimity to die. I don't think any of our dead pity
-themselves&mdash;but they would have done so if they had
-faltered in their choice. One lives only from sunrise to
-sunrise, but there's a more real happiness in this brief
-living than I ever knew before, because it is so exactingly
-worth while.</p>
-
-<p>Thank you again for your kindness.</p>
-
-<div class="right">
-Very sincerely yours,<br />
-C. D.<br />
-</div>
-
-
-<p>VII&mdash;GLORY OF WAR IS IN MEN'S SOULS</p>
-
-<div class="right">
-February 2d.<br />
-</div>
-
-<p>The gramophone is playing an air from <i>La Tosca</i> to
-which the guns beat out a bass accompaniment. I close
-my eyes and picture the many times I have heard the
-(probably) German orchestras of Broadway Joy Palaces
-play that same music. How incongruous that I should be
-listening to it here and under these circumstances! It
-must have been listened to so often by gay crowds in
-the beauty places of the world. A romantic picture grows
-up in my mind of a blue night, the laughter of youth in
-evening dress, lamps twinkling through trees, far off
-the velvety shadow of water and mountains, and as a
-voice to it all, that air from <i>La Tosca</i>. I can believe that
-the silent people near by raise themselves up in their
-snow-beds to listen, each one recalling some ecstatic moment
-before the dream of life was shattered.</p>
-
-<p>There's a picture in the Pantheon at Paris, I remember;
-I believe it's called <i>To Glory</i>. One sees all the armies
-of the ages charging out of the middle distance with
-Death riding at their head. The only glory that I have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span>
-discovered in this war is in men's hearts&mdash;it's not external.
-Were one to paint the spirit of this war he would
-depict a mud landscape, blasted trees, an iron sky; wading
-through the slush and shell-holes would come a file
-of bowed figures, more like outcasts from the Embankment
-than soldiers. They're loaded down like pack animals,
-their shoulders are rounded, they're wearied to
-death, but they go on and go on. There's no "To Glory"
-about what we're doing out here; there's no flash of
-swords or splendor of uniforms. There are only very
-tired men determined to carry on. The war will be won
-by tired men who could never again pass an insurance
-test, a mob of broken counter-jumpers, ragged ex-plumbers
-and quite unheroic persons. We're civilians in khaki,
-but because of the ideals for which we fight we've managed
-to acquire soldiers' hearts.</p>
-
-<p>My flow of thought was interrupted by a burst of song
-in which I was compelled to join. We're all writing letters
-around one candle; suddenly the O. C. looked up
-and began, "God Be with You Till We Meet Again."
-We sang it in parts. It was in Southport, when I was
-about nine years old, that I first heard that sung. You
-had gone for your first trip to America, leaving a very
-lonely family behind you. We children were scared to
-death that you'd be drowned. One evening, coming back
-from a walk on the sand-hills, we heard voices singing
-in a garden, "God Be with You Till We Meet Again."
-The words and the soft dusk, and the vague figures in
-the English summer garden, seemed to typify the terror
-of all partings. We've said good-bye so often since, and
-God has been with us. I don't think any parting was
-more hard than our last at the prosaic dock-gates with
-the cold wind of duty blowing, and the sentry barring
-your entrance, and your path leading back to America
-while mine led on to France. But you three were regular<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>
-soldiers&mdash;just as much soldiers as we chaps who were
-embarking. One talks of our armies in the field, but there
-are the other armies, millions strong, of mothers and
-fathers and sisters, who keep their eyes dry, treasure
-muddy letters beneath their pillows, offer up prayers and
-wait, wait, wait so eternally for God to open another
-door.</p>
-
-<p>To-morrow I again go forward, which means rising
-early and taking a long plod through the snows; that's
-one reason for not writing any more, and another is that
-our one poor candle is literally on its last legs.</p>
-
-<p>Your poem, written years ago when the poor were
-marching in London, is often in my mind:</p>
-
-<div class="poem">
-"Yesterday and to-day<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Have been heavy with labor and sorrow;</span><br />
-I should faint if I did not see<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">The day that is after to-morrow."</span><br />
-</div>
-
-<p>And there's that last verse which prophesied utterly the
-spirit in which we men at the Front are fighting to-day:</p>
-
-<div class="poem">
-"And for me, with spirit elate<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">The mire and the fog I press through,</span><br />
-For Heaven shines under the cloud<br />
-Of the day that is after to-morrow."<br />
-</div>
-
-<p>We civilians who have been taught so long to love our
-enemies and do good to them who hate us&mdash;much too
-long ever to make professional soldiers&mdash;are watching
-with our hearts in our eyes for that day which comes
-after to-morrow. Meanwhile we plod on determinedly,
-hoping for the hidden glory.</p>
-
-<div class="right">
-Yours very lovingly,<br />
-<span class="smcap">Con</span>.<br />
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p>VIII&mdash;MEN MARCHING TO "CALVARY"</p>
-
-<div class="right">
-February 4th, 1917.<br />
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Dear Mr. B.</span>:</p>
-
-<p>War's a queer game&mdash;not at all what one's civilian
-mind imagined; it's far more horrible and less exciting.
-The horrors which the civilian mind dreads most are mutilation
-and death. Out here we rarely think about them;
-the thing which wears on one most and calls out his
-gravest courage is the endless sequence of physical discomfort.
-Not to be able to wash, not to be able to sleep,
-to have to be wet and cold for long periods at a stretch,
-to find mud on your person, in your food, to have to
-stand in mud, see mud, sleep in mud and to continue to
-smile&mdash;that's what tests courage. Our chaps are splendid.
-They're not the hair-brained idiots that some war-correspondents
-depict from day to day. They're perfectly
-sane people who know to a fraction what they're
-up against, but who carry on with a grim good-nature and
-a determination to win with a smile. I never before
-appreciated as I do to-day the latent capacity for big-hearted
-endurance that is in the heart of every man.
-Here are apparently quite ordinary chaps&mdash;chaps who
-washed, liked theatres, loved kiddies and sweethearts, had
-a zest for life&mdash;they're bankrupt of all pleasures except
-the supreme pleasure of knowing that they're doing the
-ordinary and finest thing of which they are capable.
-There are millions to whom the mere consciousness of
-doing their duty has brought an heretofore unexperienced
-peace of mind. For myself I was never happier than I
-am at present; there's a novel zip added to life by the
-daily risks and the knowledge that at last you're doing
-something into which no trace of selfishness enters. One
-can only die once; the chief concern that matters is <i>how</i>
-and not <i>when</i> you die. I don't pity the weary men who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>
-have attained eternal leisure in the corruption of our shell-furrowed
-battles; they "went West" in their supreme
-moment. The men I pity are those who could not hear
-the call of duty and whose consciences will grow more
-flabby every day. With the brutal roar of the first Prussian
-gun the cry came to the civilized world, "Follow thou
-me," just as truly as it did in Palestine. Men went to
-their Calvary singing Tipperary, rubbish, rhymed doggerel,
-but their spirit was equal to that of any Christian
-martyr in a Roman amphitheatre. "Greater love hath
-no man than this, that he lay down his life for his friend."
-Our chaps are doing that consciously, willingly, almost
-without bitterness towards their enemies; for the rest it
-doesn't matter whether they sing hymns or ragtime.
-They've followed their ideal&mdash;freedom&mdash;and died for it.
-A former age expressed itself in Gregorian chants; ours,
-no less sincerely, disguises its feelings in ragtime.</p>
-
-<p>Since September I have been less than a month out
-of action. The game doesn't pall as time goes on&mdash;it
-fascinates. We've got to win so that men may never
-again be tortured by the ingenious inquisition of modern
-warfare. The winning of the war becomes a personal
-affair to the chaps who are fighting. The world which
-sits behind the lines, buys extra specials of the daily papers
-and eats three square meals a day, will never know
-what this other world has endured for its safety, for no
-man of this other world will have the vocabulary in which
-to tell. But don't for a moment mistake me&mdash;we're
-grimly happy.</p>
-
-<p>What a serial I'll write for you if I emerge from this
-turmoil! Thank God, my outlook is all altered. I don't
-want to live any longer&mdash;only to live well.</p>
-
-<p>Good-bye and good luck.</p>
-
-<div class="right">
-Yours,<br />
-<span class="smcap">Coningsby Dawson</span>.<br />
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p>IX&mdash;AMERICA MUST SACRIFICE&mdash;OR DIE</p>
-
-<div class="right">
-February 6th, 1917.<br />
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">My Very Dear M.</span>:</p>
-
-<p>I read in to-day's paper that U. S. A. threatens to come
-over and help us. I wish she would. The very thought
-of the possibility fills me with joy. I've been lightheaded
-all day. It would be so ripping to live among
-people, when the war is ended, of whom you need not be
-ashamed. Somewhere deep down in my heart I've felt a
-sadness ever since I've been out here, at America's lack
-of gallantry&mdash;it's so easy to find excuses for not climbing
-to Calvary; sacrifice was always too noble to be sensible.
-I would like to see the country of our adoption become
-splendidly irrational even at this eleventh hour in the
-game; it would redeem her in the world's eyes. She
-doesn't know what she's losing. From these carcase-strewn
-fields of khaki there's a cleansing wind blowing
-for the nations that have died. Though there was only
-one Englishman left to carry on the race when this war
-is victoriously ended, I would give more for the future
-of England than for the future of America with her
-ninety millions whose sluggish blood was not stirred by
-the call of duty. It's bigness of soul that makes nations
-great and not population. Money, comfort, limousines
-and ragtime are not the requisites of men when heroes
-are dying. I hate the thought of Fifth Avenue, with its
-pretty faces, its fashions, its smiling frivolity. America
-as a great nation will die, as all coward civilizations have
-died, unless she accepts the stigmata of sacrifice, which a
-divine opportunity again offers her.</p>
-
-<p>If it were but possible to show those ninety millions
-one battlefield with its sprawling dead, its pity, its marvellous
-forgetfulness of self, I think then&mdash;no, they
-wouldn't be afraid. Fear isn't the emotion one feels&mdash;they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span>
-would experience the shame of living when so many
-have shed their youth freely. This war is a prolonged
-moment of exultation for most of us&mdash;we are redeeming
-ourselves in our own eyes. To lay down one's life
-for one's friend once seemed impossible. All that is
-altered. We lay down our lives that the future generations
-may be good and kind, and so we can contemplate
-oblivion with quiet eyes. Nothing that is noblest that the
-Greeks taught is unpractised by the simplest men out here
-to-day. They may die childless, but their example will
-father the imagination of all the coming ages. These men,
-in the noble indignation of a great ideal, face a worse hell
-than the most ingenious of fanatics ever planned or
-plotted. Men die scorched like moths in a furnace,
-blown to atoms, gassed, tortured. And again other men
-step forward to take their places well knowing what will
-be their fate. Bodies may die, but the spirit of England
-grows greater as each new soul speeds upon its way. The
-battened souls of America will die and be buried. I believe
-the decision of the next few days will prove to be
-the crisis in America's nationhood. If she refuses the
-pain which will save her, the cancer of self-despising will
-rob her of her life.</p>
-
-<p>This feeling is strong with us. It's past midnight, but
-I could write of nothing else to-night.</p>
-
-<p>God bless you.</p>
-
-<div class="right">
-Yours ever,<br />
-<span class="smcap">Con</span>.<br />
-<br />
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTE:</h3>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_6_6" id="Footnote_6_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6_6"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> All numerals relate to stories herein told&mdash;not to chapters
-from original sources.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h2>STORIES OF THE WAR PHOTOGRAPHERS
-IN BELGIUM</h2>
-
-<div class="center"><i>An American at the Battlefront</i></div>
-
-<div class="center"><br /><i>Told by Albert Rhys Williams, War Correspondent</i></div>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>This narrator tells of his experiences with the spy hunters of
-Belgium. He was swept into the war-stricken country where
-he was arrested by the Germans, sweating under the German
-third degree, spending a fearful night on a prison floor, suffering
-with his fellow prisoners the torments of a trial as a spy
-in a German military court in Brussels, and finally securing his
-liberty. He has collected his experiences in a volume under title
-"In the Claws of the German Eagle," thus preserving in book
-form his remarkable articles which were first published in The
-Outlook. A few episodes from his amazing adventures are here
-given by permission of the publishers, <i>E. P. Dutton and Company</i>:
-Copyright 1917.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p><a name="FNanchor_7_7" id="FNanchor_7_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a>
-I&mdash;STORY OF AN AMERICAN IN GHENT</p>
-
-<p>In the last days of September, the Belgians moving in
-and through Ghent in their rainbow-colored costumes,
-gave to the city a distinctively holiday touch. The clatter
-of cavalry hoofs and the throb of racing motors rose
-above the voices of the mobs that surged along the
-streets.</p>
-
-<p>Service was normal in the cafés. To the accompaniment
-of music and clinking glasses the dress-suited waiter
-served me a five-course lunch for two francs. It was uncanny
-to see this blaze of life while the city sat under the
-shadow of a grave disaster. At any moment the gray
-German tide might break out of Brussels and pour its
-turbid flood of soldiers through these very streets. Even
-now a Taube hovered in the sky, and from the skirmish-line
-an occasional ambulance rumbled in with its crimsoned
-load.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span></p>
-<p>I chanced into Gambrinus' café and was lost in the
-babbling sea of French and Flemish. Above the mêlée
-of sounds, however, I caught a gladdening bit of English.
-Turning about, I espied a little group of men whose
-plain clothes stood out in contrast to the colored uniforms
-of officers and soldiers crowded into the café. Wearied
-of my efforts at conversing in a foreign tongue, I went
-over and said:</p>
-
-<p>"Do you really speak English?"</p>
-
-<p>"Well, rather!" answered the one who seemed to act
-as leader of the group. "We are the only ones now and
-it will be scarcer still around here in a few days."</p>
-
-<p>"Why?" I asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Because Ghent will be in German hands."</p>
-
-<p>This brought an emphatic denial from one of his confrères
-who insisted that the Germans had already reached
-the end of their rope. A certain correspondent, joining
-in the argument, came in for a deal of banter for taking
-the war <i>de luxe</i> in a good hotel far from the front.</p>
-
-<p>"What do you know about the war?" they twitted
-him. "You've pumped all your best stories out of the
-refugees ten miles from the front, after priming them
-with a glass of beer."</p>
-
-<p>They were a group of young war-photographers to
-whom danger was a magnet. Though none of them had
-yet reached the age of thirty, they had seen service in all
-the stirring events of Europe and even around the globe.
-Where the clouds lowered and the seas tossed, there they
-flocked. Like stormy petrels they rushed to the center<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>
-of the swirling world. That was their element. A freelance,
-a representative of the Northcliffe press, and two
-movie-men comprised this little group and made an island
-of English amidst the general babel.</p>
-
-<p>Like most men who have seen much of the world, they
-had ceased to be cynics. When I came to them out of
-the rain, carrying no other introduction than a dripping
-overcoat, they welcomed me into their company and
-whiled away the evening with tales of the Balkan wars.</p>
-
-<p>They were in high spirits over their exploits of the
-previous day, when the Germans, withdrawing from
-Melle on the outskirts of the city, had left a long row
-of cottages still burning. As the enemy troops pulled
-out the further end of the street, the movie men came in
-at the other and caught the pictures of the still blazing
-houses. We went down to view them on the screen. To
-the gentle throbbing of drums and piano, the citizens of
-Ghent viewed the unique spectacle of their own suburbs
-going up in smoke.</p>
-
-<p>At the end of the show they invited me to fill out their
-automobile on the morrow. Nearly every other motor
-had been commandeered by the authorities for the "Service
-Militaire" and bore on the front the letters "S. M."
-Our car was by no means in the blue-ribbon class. It
-had a hesitating disposition and the authorities, regarding
-it as more of a liability than an asset, passed it over.</p>
-
-<p>But the correspondents counted it a great stroke of
-fortune to have any car at all; and, that they might continue
-to have it, they kept it at night carefully locked in
-a room in the hotel. They had their chauffeur under like
-supervision. He was one of their kind, and with the
-cunning of a diplomat obtained the permit to buy petrol,
-most precious of all treasures in the field of war. Indeed,
-gasoline, along with courage and discipline, completed
-the trinity of success in the military mind.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;STORIES OF THE WAR PHOTOGRAPHERS
-IN BELGIUM</p>
-
-<p>With the British flag flying at the front, we sped away
-next morning on the road to Termonde. At Melle we
-came upon the blazing cottages we had seen pictured
-the night before. Here we encountered a roving band of
-Belgian soldiers who were in a free and careless mood
-and evinced a ready willingness to put themselves at our
-disposal. Under the command of the photographers, they
-charged across the fields with fixed bayonets, wriggled
-up through the grass, or, standing behind the trenches,
-blazed away with their guns at an imaginary enemy.
-They did some good acting, grim and serious as death.
-All except one.</p>
-
-<p>This youth couldn't suppress his sense of humor. He
-could not, or would not, keep from laughing, even when
-he was supposed to be blowing the head off a Boche.
-He was properly disciplined and put out of the game,
-and we went on with our manoeuvers to the accompaniment
-of the clicking cameras until the photographers had
-gathered in a fine lot of realistic fighting-line pictures.</p>
-
-<p>One of the photographers sat stolidly in the automobile
-smoking his cigarette while the others were reaping their
-harvest.</p>
-
-<p>"Why don't you take these too?" I asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh," he replied, "I've been sending in so much of that
-stuff that I just got a telegram from my paper saying,
-'Pension off that Belgian regiment which is doing stunts
-in the trenches.'"</p>
-
-<p>While his little army rested from their manoeuvers the
-Director-in-Chief turned to me and said:</p>
-
-<p>"Wouldn't you like to have a photograph of yourself
-in these war-surroundings, just to take home as a souvenir?"</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>That appealed to me. After rejecting some commonplace
-suggestions, he exclaimed: "I have it. Shot as a
-German Spy. There's the wall to stand up against; and
-we'll pick a crack firing-squad out of these Belgians. A
-little bit of all right, eh?"</p>
-
-<p>I acquiesced in the plan and was led over to the wall
-while a movie-man whipped out a handkerchief and tied
-it over my eyes. The director then took a firing squad
-in hand. He had but recently witnessed the execution of
-a spy where he had almost burst with a desire to photograph
-the scene. It had been excruciating torture to restrain
-himself. But the experience had made him feel
-conversant with the etiquette of shooting a spy, as it
-was being done amongst the very best firing-squads.
-He made it now stand him in good stead.</p>
-
-<p>"Aim right across the bandage," the director coached
-them. I could hear one of the soldiers laughing excitedly
-as he was warming up to the rehearsal. It occurred to
-me that I was reposing a lot of confidence in a stray
-band of soldiers. Some one of those Belgians, gifted with
-a lively imagination, might get carried away with the
-suggestion and act as if I really were a German spy.</p>
-
-<p>"Shoot the blooming blighter in the eye," said one
-movie man playfully.</p>
-
-<p>"Bally good idea!" exclaimed the other one approvingly,
-while one eager actor realistically clicked his rifle-hammer.
-That was altogether too much. I tore the bandage
-from my eyes, exclaiming:</p>
-
-<p>"It would be a bally good idea to take those cartridges
-out first." Some fellow might think his cartridge
-was blank or try to fire wild, just as a joke in order to
-see me jump. I wasn't going to take any risk and flatly
-refused to play my part until the cartridges were ejected.
-Even when the bandage was readjusted "Didn't-know-it-was-loaded"
-stories still were haunting me. In a moment,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span>
-however, it was over and I was promised my picture
-within a fortnight.</p>
-
-<p>A week later I picked up the London <i>Daily Mirror</i>
-from a news-stand. It had the caption:</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<span class="smcap">Belgian Soldiers Shoot a German Spy Caught at<br />
-Termonde ... Picture</span>
-</div>
-
-<p>I opened up the paper and what was my surprise to
-see a big spread picture of myself, lined up against that
-row of Melle cottages and being shot for the delectation
-of the British public. There is the same long raincoat
-that runs as a <i>motif</i> through all the other pictures. Underneath
-it were the words:</p>
-
-<p>"The Belgians have a short, sharp method of dealing
-with the Kaiser's rat-hole spies. This one was caught
-near Termonde and, after being blindfolded, the firing-squad
-soon put an end to his inglorious career."</p>
-
-<p>One would not call it fame exactly, even though I
-played the star-rôle. But it is a source of some satisfaction
-to have helped a royal lot of fellows to a first-class
-scoop. As the "authentic spy-picture of the war,"
-it has had a broadcast circulation. I have seen it in
-publications ranging all the way from <i>The Police Gazette
-to Collier's Photographic History of the European
-War</i>. In a university club I once chanced upon
-a group gathered around this identical picture. They
-were discussing the psychology of this "poor devil" in
-the moments before he was shot. It was a further source
-of satisfaction to step in and arbitrarily contradict all
-their conclusions and, having shown them how totally
-mistaken they were, proceed to tell them exactly how the
-victim felt. This high-handed manner nettled one fellow
-terribly:</p>
-
-<p>"Not so arbitrary, my friend!" he said. "You haven't
-any right to be so devilish cock-sure."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"Haven't I?" I replied. "Who has any better right?
-I happen to be that identical man!"</p>
-
-<p>But that little episode has been of real value to me.
-It is said that if one goes through the motions he gets
-the emotions. I believe that I have an inkling of how a
-man feels when he momentarily expects a volley of cold
-lead to turn his skull into a sieve.</p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;HOW CAMERA MEN RISK THEIR LIVES</p>
-
-<p>Most of the pictures which the public casually gazes on
-have been secured at a price&mdash;and a large one, too. The
-names of these men who go to the front with cameras,
-rather than with rifles or pens, are generally unknown.
-They are rarely found beneath the pictures, yet where
-would be our vivid impression of courage in daring and
-of skill in doing, of cunning strategy upon the field of
-battle, of wounded soldiers sacrificing for their comrades,
-if we had no pictures? A few pictures are faked,
-but behind most pictures there is another tale of daring
-and of strategy, and that is the tale concerning the man
-who took it. That very day thrice these same men risked
-their lives.</p>
-
-<p>The apparatus loaded in the car, we were off again.
-Past a few barricades of paving-stones and wagons, past
-the burned houses which marked the place where the
-Germans had come within five miles of Ghent, we encountered
-some uniformed Belgians who looked quite as
-dismal and dispirited as the fog which hung above the
-fields. They were the famous Guarde Civique of Belgium.
-Our Union Jack, flapping in the wind, was very
-likely quite the most thrilling spectacle they had seen in
-a week, and they hailed it with a cheer and a cry of
-"<i><span xml:lang="fr">Vive l'Angleterre!</span></i>" (Long live England!) The Guarde
-Civique had a rather inglorious time of it. Wearisomely
-in their wearisome-looking uniform, they stood for hours<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span>
-on their guns or marched and counter-marched in dreary
-patrolling, often doomed not even to scent the battle
-from afar off.</p>
-
-<p>Whenever we were called to a halt for the examination
-of our passports, these men crowded around and
-begged for newspapers. We held up our stock, and they
-would clamor for the ones with pictures. The English
-text was unintelligible to most of them, but the pictures
-they could understand, and they bore them away to enjoy
-the sight of other soldiers fighting, even if they themselves
-were denied that excitement. Our question to
-them was always the same, "Where are the Germans?"</p>
-
-<p>Out of the conflicting reports it was hard to tell whether
-the Germans were heading this way or not. That they
-were expected was shown by the sign-posts whose directions
-had just been obliterated by fresh paint&mdash;a rather
-futile operation, because the Germans had better maps
-and plans of the region than the Belgians themselves,
-maps which showed every by-path, well and barn. The
-chauffeur's brother had been shot in his car by the Germans
-but a week before, and he didn't relish the idea
-of thus flaunting the enemy's flag along a road where
-some German scouting party might appear at any moment.
-The Union Jack had done good service in getting
-us easy passage so far, but the driver was not keen for
-going further with it.</p>
-
-<p>It was proposed to turn the car around and back it
-down the road, as had been done the previous day. Thus
-the car would be headed in the home direction, and at
-sight of the dreaded uniform we could make a quick
-leap for safety. At this juncture, however, I produced
-a small Stars and Stripes, which the chauffeur hailed
-with delight, and we continued our journey now under the
-ægis of a neutral flag.</p>
-
-<p>It might have secured temporary safety, but only temporary;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span>
-for if the Englishmen with only British passports
-had fallen into the hands of the Germans, like
-their unfortunate kinsmen who did venture too far into
-the war zone, they, too, would have had a chance to cool
-their ardor in some detention-camp of Germany. This
-cheerful prospect was in the mind of these men, for,
-when we espied coming around a distant corner two
-gray-looking men on horseback, they turned white as the
-chauffeur cried, "Uhlans!"</p>
-
-<p>It is a question whether the car or our hearts came
-to a dead standstill first. Our shock was unnecessary.
-They proved to be Belgians, and assured us
-that the road was clear all the way to Termonde; and,
-except for an occasional peasant tilling his fields, the
-countryside was quite deserted until at Grembergen we
-came upon an unending procession of refugees streaming
-down the road. They were all coming out of Termonde.
-Termonde, after being taken and retaken, bombarded
-and burned, was for the moment neutral territory.
-A Belgian commandant had allowed the refugees that
-morning to return and gather what they might from
-among the ruins.</p>
-
-<p>In the early morning, then, they had gone into the
-city, and now at high noon they were pouring out, a
-great procession of the dispossessed. They came tracking
-their way to where&mdash;God only knows. All they knew
-was that in their hearts was set the fear of Uhlans, and
-in the sky the smoke and flames of their burning homesteads.
-They came laden with their lares and penates,&mdash;mainly
-dogs, feather beds, and crayon portraits of
-their ancestors.</p>
-
-
-<p>IV&mdash;WHEN LENS HAS A HEART</p>
-
-<p>Women came carrying on their heads packs which
-looked like their entire household paraphernalia. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span>
-men were more unassuming, and, as a rule, carried a
-package considerably lighter and comporting more with
-their superior masculine dignity. I recall one little
-woman in particular. She was bearing a burden heavy
-enough to send a strong American athlete staggering
-down to the ground, while at her side majestically
-marched her faithful knight, bearing a birdcage, and
-there wasn't any bird in it, either.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing could be more mirth-provoking than that sight;
-yet, strangely enough, the most tear-compelling memory
-of the war is connected with another birdcage. Two
-children rummaging through their ruined home dug it
-out of the débris. In it was their little pet canary. While
-fire and smoke rolled through the house it had beat its
-wings against the bars in vain. Its prison had become
-its tomb. Its feathers were but slightly singed, yet it
-was dead with that pathetic finality which attaches itself
-to only a dead bird&mdash;its silver songs and flutterings, once
-the delight of the children, now stilled forever.</p>
-
-<p>The photographers had long looked for what they
-termed a first-class sob-picture. Here it was <i><span xml:lang="fr">par excellence</span></i>.
-The larger child stood stroking the feathers of
-her pet and murmuring over and over "Poor Annette,"
-"Poor Annette!" Then the smaller one snuggling the
-limp little thing against her neck wept inconsolably.</p>
-
-<p>Instead of seizing their opportunity, the movie man
-was clearing his throat while the freelance was busy on
-what he said was a cinder in his eye. Yet this very
-man had brought back from the Balkan War of 1907 a
-prime collection of horrors; corpses thrown into the
-death-cart with arms and legs sticking out like so much
-stubble; the death-cart creeping away with its ghastly
-load; and the dumping together of bodies of men and
-beasts into a pit to be eaten by the lime. This man who
-had gone through all this with good nerve was now<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span>
-touched to tears by two children crying over their pet
-canary. There are some things that are too much for
-the heart of even a war-photographer.</p>
-
-<p>To give the whole exodus the right tragic setting, one
-is tempted to write that tears were streaming down all
-the faces of the refugees, but on the contrary, indeed,
-most of them carried a smile and a pipe, and trudged
-stolidly along, much as though bound for a fair. Some
-of our pictures show laughing refugees. That may not
-be fair, for man is so constituted that the muscles of
-his face automatically relax to the click of the camera.
-But as I recall that pitiful procession, there was in it
-very little outward expression of sorrow.</p>
-
-<p>Undoubtedly there was sadness enough in all their
-hearts, but people in Europe have learned to live on
-short rations; they rarely indulge in luxuries like weeping,
-but bear the most unwonted afflictions as though
-they were the ordinary fortunes of life. War has set a
-new standard for grief. So these victims passed along
-the road, but not before the record of their passing was
-etched for ever on our moving-picture films. The coming
-generation will not have to reconstruct the scene from
-the colored accounts of the journalist, but with their own
-eyes they can see the hegira of the homeless as it really
-was.</p>
-
-<p>The resignation of the peasant in the face of the great
-calamity was a continual source of amazement to us.
-Zola in "<i><span xml:lang="fr">Le Debacle</span></i>" puts into his picture of the battle
-of Sedan an old peasant plowing on his farm in the valley.
-While shells go screaming overhead he placidly
-drives his old white horse through the accustomed furrows.
-One naturally presumed that this was a dramatic
-touch of the great novelist. But similar incidents we saw
-in this Great War over and over again.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p>V&mdash;A THOUSAND HORSES STRAIN AT THEIR
-BRIDLES</p>
-
-<p>We were with Consul van Hee one morning early before
-the clinging veil of sleep had lifted from our spirits
-or the mists from the low-lying meadows. Without
-warning our car shot through a bank of fog into a spectacle
-of mediæval splendor&mdash;a veritable Field of the
-Cloth of Gold, spread out on the green plains of Flanders.</p>
-
-<p>A thousand horses strained at their bridles while their
-thousand riders in great fur busbies loomed up almost
-like giants. A thousand pennons stirred in the morning
-air while the sun burning through the mists glinted on
-the tips of as many lances. The crack Belgian cavalry
-divisions had been gathered here just behind the firing-lines
-in readiness for a sortie; the Lancers in their cherry
-and green and the Guides in their blue and gold making
-a blaze of color.</p>
-
-<p>It was as if in a trance we had been carried back to a
-tourney of ancient chivalry&mdash;this was before privations
-and the new drab uniforms had taken all glamor out of
-the war. As we gazed upon the glittering spectacle the
-order from the commander came to us:</p>
-
-<p>"Back, back out of danger!"</p>
-
-<p>"Forward!" was the charge to the Lancers.</p>
-
-<p>The field-guns rumbled into line and each rider unslung
-his carbine. Putting spurs to the horses, the whole
-line rode past saluting our Stars and Stripes with a "<i><span xml:lang="fr">Vive
-L'Amerique</span></i>." Bringing up the rear two cassocked priests
-served to give this pageantry a touch of prophetic grimness.</p>
-
-<p>And yet as the cavalcade swept across the fields thrilling
-us with its color and its action, the nearby peasants<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span>
-went on spreading fertilizer quite as calm and unconcerned
-as we were exhilarated.</p>
-
-<p>"Stupid," "Clods," "Souls of oxen," we commented,
-yet a protagonist of the peasant might point out that it
-was perhaps as noble and certainly quite as useful to be
-held by a passion for the soil as to be caught by the
-glamor of men riding out to slaughter. And Zola puts
-this in the mind of his peasants.</p>
-
-<p>"Why should I lose a day? Soldiers must fight, but
-folks must live. It is for me to keep the corn growing."</p>
-
-<p>Deep down into the soil the peasant strikes his roots.
-Urban people can never comprehend when these roots
-are cut away how hopelessly lost and adrift this European
-peasant in particular becomes. Wicked as the Great
-War has seemed to us in its bearing down upon these innocent
-folks, yet we can never understand the cruelty
-that they have suffered in being uprooted from the land
-and sent forth to become beggars and wanderers upon
-the highroads of the world.</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTE:</h3>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_7_7" id="Footnote_7_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7_7"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> All numerals relate to stories herein told&mdash;not to chapters
-from original sources.</p></div></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h2>TALES OF THE FIRST BRITISH
-EXPEDITIONARY FORCE
-TO FRANCE</h2>
-
-<div class="center"><i>Impressions of a Subaltern</i></div>
-
-<div class="center"><br /><i>Told by "Casualty" (Name of Soldier Suppressed)</i></div>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>This is another of the soldiers' tales of the Great War. This
-soldier tells thirty-six fascinating experiences in which death is
-defied. He describes: "The Advance to Mons"; "Sir John
-French"; "The Crossing of the Marne"; "The Crossing of the
-Aisne"; "The Jaws of Death," among his many adventures.
-The story here told gives his impressions on "Leaving England."
-It is reprinted from his volume "Contemptible," by permission
-of his publishers, <i>J. B. Lippincott Company</i>.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p><a name="FNanchor_8_8" id="FNanchor_8_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a>
-I&mdash;WHEN THE FIRST BATTALION SWUNG
-OUT</p>
-
-<p>No cheers, no handkerchiefs, no bands. Nothing that
-even suggested the time-honored scene of soldiers leaving
-home to fight the Empire's battles. Parade was at
-midnight. Except for the lighted windows of the barracks,
-and the rush of hurrying feet, all was dark and
-quiet. It was more like ordinary night operations than
-the dramatic departure of a Unit of the First British
-Expeditionary Force to France.</p>
-
-<p>As the Battalion swung into the road, the Subaltern
-could not help thinking that this was indeed a queer
-send-off. A few sergeants' wives, standing at the corner
-of the Parade ground, were saying good-bye to their
-friends as they passed. "Good-bye, Bill;" "Good luck,
-Sam!" Not a hint of emotion in their voices. One
-might have thought that husbands and fathers went away
-to risk their lives in war every day of the week. And
-if the men were at all moved at leaving what had served
-for their home, they hid it remarkably well. Songs were
-soon breaking out from all parts of the column of route.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span></p>
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>In an hour the station was reached. An engine was
-shunting up and down, piecing the troop trains together,
-and in twenty minutes the Battalion was shuffling down
-the platform, the empty trains on either side. Two companies
-were to go to each train, twelve men to a third-class
-compartment, N.C.O.s second class, Officers first.
-As soon as the men were in their seats, the Subaltern
-made his way to the seat he had "bagged," and prepared
-to go to sleep. Another fellow pushed his head
-through the window and wondered what had become of
-the regimental transport. Somebody else said he didn't
-know or care; his valise was always lost, he said; they
-always make a point of it.</p>
-
-<p>Soon after, they were all asleep, and the train pulled
-slowly out of the station.</p>
-
-<p>When the Subaltern awoke it was early morning, and
-they were moving through Hampshire fields at a rather
-sober pace. He was assailed with a poignant feeling of
-annoyance and resentment that this war should be forced
-upon them. England looked so good in the morning
-sunshine, and the comforts of English civilization were
-so hard to leave. The sinister uncertainty of the Future
-brooded over them like a thunder cloud.</p>
-
-<p>Isolated houses thickened into clusters, streets sprang
-up, and soon they were in Southampton.</p>
-
-<p>The train pulled up at the Embarkation Station, quite
-close to the wharf to which some half-dozen steamers
-were moored. There was little or no delay. The Battalion<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span>
-fell straight into "massed formation," and began
-immediately to move on to one of the ships. The Colonel
-stood by the gangway talking to an Embarkation
-Officer. Everything was in perfect readiness, and the
-Subaltern was soon able to secure a berth.</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;CROSSING THE CHANNEL ON
-TRANSPORTS</p>
-
-<p>There was plenty of excitement on deck while the
-horses of the regimental transport were being shipped
-into the hold.</p>
-
-<p>To induce "Light Draft," "Heavy Draft" horses and
-"Officers' Chargers"&mdash;in all some sixty animals&mdash;to trust
-themselves to be lowered into a dark and evil-smelling
-cavern, was no easy matter. Some shied from the gangway,
-neighing; others walked peaceably onto it, and, with
-a "thus far and no farther" expression in every line of
-their bodies, took up a firm stand, and had to be pushed
-into the hold with the combined weight of many men.
-Several of the transport section narrowly escaped death
-and mutilation at the hands, or rather hoofs, of the
-Officers' Chargers. Meanwhile a sentry, with fixed bayonet,
-was observed watching some Lascars, who were
-engaged in getting the transport on board. It appeared
-that the wretched fellows, thinking that they were to be
-taken to France and forced to fight the Germans, had
-deserted to a man on the previous night, and had had to
-be routed out of their hiding-places in Southampton.</p>
-
-<p>Not that such a small thing as that could upset for one
-moment the steady progress of the Embarkation of the
-Army. It was like a huge, slow-moving machine; there
-was a hint of the inexorable in its exactitude. Nothing
-had been forgotten&mdash;not even eggs for the Officers' breakfast
-in the Captain's cabin.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the other ships were filling up. By midday<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span>
-they began to slide down the Solent, and guesses were
-being freely exchanged about the destination of the little
-flotilla. Some said Bolougne, others Calais; but the general
-opinion was Havre, though nobody knew for certain,
-for the Captain of the ship had not yet opened his
-sealed orders. The transports crept slowly along the
-coast of the Isle of Wight, but it was not until evening
-that the business of crossing the Channel was begun in
-earnest.</p>
-
-<p>The day had been lovely, and Officers and men had
-spent it mostly in sleeping and smoking upon the deck.
-Spirits had risen as the day grew older. For at dawn
-the cheeriest optimist is a pessimist, while at midday
-pessimists become optimists. In the early morning the
-German Army had been invincible. At lunch the Battalion
-was going to Berlin, on the biggest holiday of its
-long life!</p>
-
-<p>The Subaltern, still suffering from the after-effects of
-inoculation against enteric, which had been unfortunately
-augmented by a premature indulgence in fruit, and by the
-inability to rest during the rush of mobilization, did not
-spend a very happy night. The men fared even worse,
-for the smell of hot, cramped horses, steaming up from
-the lower deck, was almost unbearable. But their troubles
-were soon over, for by seven o'clock the boat was gliding
-through the crowded docks of Havre.</p>
-
-<p>Naturally most of the Mess had been in France before,
-but to Tommy it was a world undiscovered. The
-first impression made on the men was created by a
-huge negro working on the docks. He was greeted with
-roars of laughter, and cries of, "Hallo, Jack Johnson!"
-The red trousers of the French sentries, too, created a
-tremendous sensation. At length the right landing-stage
-was reached. Equipments were thrown on, and the
-Battalion was paraded on the dock.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;LANDING IN FRANCE&mdash;TOMMIES IN
-HAVRE</p>
-
-<p>The march through the cobbled streets of Havre rapidly
-developed into a fiasco. This was one of the first,
-if not the very first, landing of British Troops in France,
-and to the French it was a novelty, calling for a tremendous
-display of open-armed welcome. Children
-rushed from the houses, and fell upon the men crying for
-"souvenirs." Ladies pursued them with basins full of
-wine and what they were pleased to call beer. Men were
-literally carried from the ranks, under the eyes of their
-Officers, and borne in triumph into houses and inns.
-What with the heat of the day and the heaviness of the
-equipment and the after-effects of the noisome deck, the
-men could scarcely be blamed for availing themselves of
-such hospitality, though to drink intoxicants on the march
-is suicidal. Men "fell out," first by ones and twos, then
-by whole half-dozens and dozens. The Subaltern himself
-was scarcely strong enough to stagger up the long
-hills at the back of the town, let alone worrying about
-his men. The Colonel was aghast, and very furious.
-He couldn't understand it. (He was riding.)</p>
-
-<p>The camp was prepared for the troops in a wonderfully
-complete fashion&mdash;not the least thing seemed to
-have been forgotten. The men, stripped of their boots,
-coats and equipments, were resting in the shade of the
-tents. A caterer from Havre had come up to supply the
-Mess, and the Subaltern was able to procure from him
-a bottle of rather heady claret, which, as he was thirsty
-and exhausted, he consumed too rapidly, and found himself
-hopelessly inebriate. Luckily there was nothing to
-do, so he slept for many hours.</p>
-
-<p>Waking up in the cool of the evening he heard the
-voices of another Second-Lieutenant and a reservist Subaltern<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span>
-talking about some people he knew near his home.
-It was good to forget about wars and soldiers, and everything
-that filled so amply the present and future, and to
-lose himself in pleasant talk of pleasant things at
-home.... The dinner provided by the French caterer
-was very French, and altogether the last sort of meal
-that a young gentleman suffering from anti-enteric inoculation
-ought to have indulged in. Everything conspired
-to make him worse, and what with the heat and the malady,
-he spent a very miserable time.</p>
-
-<p>After about two days' stay, the Battalion moved away
-from the rest camp, and, setting out before dawn,
-marched back through those fatal streets of Havre, this
-time deserted in the moonlight, to a sort of shed, called
-by the French authorities a troop station. Here as usual
-the train was waiting, and the men had but to be put in.
-The carriages could not be called luxurious; to be frank,
-they were cattle-trucks. But it takes more than that to
-damp the spirits of Mr. Thomas Atkins. Cries imitating
-the lowing of cattle and the bleating of sheep broke out
-from the trucks!</p>
-
-<p>The train moved out of the depot, and wended its way
-in the most casual manner through the streets of Havre.
-This so amused Tommy that he roared with laughter.
-The people who rushed to give the train a send-off, with
-many cries of "<i><span xml:lang="fr">Vive les Anglais</span></i>." "<i><span xml:lang="fr">A bas les Bosches</span></i>,"
-were greeted with more bleatings and brayings.</p>
-
-
-<p>IV&mdash;QUARTERED IN A BELGIAN WATER-MILL</p>
-
-<p>The journey through France was quite uneventful.
-Sleeping or reading the whole day through, the Subaltern
-only remembered Rouen, passed at about midday, and
-Amiens later in the evening. The train had paused at
-numerous villages on its way, and in every case there had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span>
-been violent demonstrations of enthusiasm. In one case
-a young lady of prepossessing appearance had thrust her
-face through the window, and talked very excitedly and
-quite incomprehensibly, until one of the fellows in the
-carriage grasped the situation, leant forward, and did
-honor to the occasion. The damsel retired blushing.</p>
-
-<p>At Amiens various rumors were afloat. Somebody
-had heard the Colonel say the magic word "Liège." Pictures
-of battles to be fought that very night thrilled some
-of them not a little.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Dawn found the Battalion hungry, shivering and miserable,
-paraded by the side of the track, at a little wayside
-station called Wassigné. The train shunted away,
-leaving the Battalion with a positive feeling of desolation.
-A Staff Officer, rubbing sleep from his eyes,
-emerged from a little "estaminet" and gave the Colonel
-the necessary orders. During the march that ensued the
-Battalion passed through villages where the three
-other regiments in the Brigade were billeted. At length
-a village called Iron was reached, and their various billets
-were allotted to each Company.</p>
-
-<p>The Subaltern's Company settled down in a huge
-water-mill; its Officers being quartered in the miller's
-private house.</p>
-
-<p>A wash, a shave and a meal worked wonders.</p>
-
-<p>And so the journey was finished, and the Battalion
-found itself at length in the theater of operations.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>I have tried in this chapter to give some idea of the
-ease and smoothness with which this delicate operation
-of transportation was carried out. The Battalions which
-composed the First Expeditionary Force had been spread
-in small groups over the whole length and breadth of
-Britain. They had been mobilized, embarked, piloted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>
-across the Channel in the face of an undefeated enemy
-fleet, rested, and trained to their various areas of concentration,
-to take their place by the side of their French
-Allies.</p>
-
-<p>All this was accomplished without a single hitch, and
-with a speed that was astonishing. When the time comes
-for the inner history of the war to be written, no doubt
-proper praise for these preliminary arrangements will be
-given to those who so eminently deserve it.</p>
-
-
-<p>V&mdash;AT MADAM MERE'S&mdash;BEFORE THE STORM</p>
-
-<p>Peace reigned for the next five days, the last taste of
-careless days that so many of those poor fellows were
-to have.</p>
-
-<p>A route march generally occupied the mornings, and
-a musketry parade the evenings. Meanwhile, the men
-were rapidly accustoming themselves to the new conditions.
-The Officers occupied themselves with polishing
-up their French, and getting a hold upon the reservists
-who had joined the Battalion on mobilization.</p>
-
-<p>The French did everything in their power to make the
-Battalion at home. Cider was given to the men in buckets.
-The Officers were treated like the best friends of
-the families with whom they were billeted. The fatted
-calf was not spared, and this in a land where there were
-not too many fatted calves.</p>
-
-<p>The Company "struck a particularly soft spot." The
-miller had gone to the war leaving behind him his wife,
-his mother and two children. Nothing they could do for
-the five Officers of the Company was too much trouble.
-Madame Mère resigned her bedroom to the Major and
-his second in command, while Madame herself slew the
-fattest of her chickens and rabbits for the meals of her
-hungry Officers.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The talk that was indulged in must have been interesting,
-even though the French was halting and ungrammatical.
-Of all the companies' Messes, this one took
-the most serious view of the future, and earned for itself
-the nickname of "<i><span xml:lang="fr">Les Misérables</span></i>." The Senior Subaltern
-said openly that this calm preceded a storm. The
-papers they got&mdash;<i><span xml:lang="fr">Le Petit Parisien</span></i> and such like&mdash;talked
-vaguely of a successful offensive on the extreme right:
-Mülhouse, it was said, had been taken. But of the left,
-of Belgium, there was silence. Such ideas as the Subaltern
-himself had on the strategical situation were but
-crude. The line of battle, he fancied, would stretch north
-and south, from Mülhouse to Liège. If it were true that
-Liège had fallen, he thought the left would rest successfully
-on Namur. The English Army, he imagined, was
-acting as "general reserve," behind the French line, and
-would not be employed until the time had arrived to hurl
-the last reserve into the mêlée, at the most critical point.</p>
-
-<p>And all the while, never a sound of firing, never a sight
-of the red and blue of the French uniforms. The war
-might have been two hundred miles away!</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile Tommy on his marches was discovering
-things. Wonder of wonders, this curious people called
-"baccy" tabac! "And if yer wants a bit of bread yer
-awsks for pain, strewth!" He loved to hear the French
-gabble to him in their excited way; he never thought that
-reciprocally his talk was just as funny. The French
-matches earned unprintable names. But on the whole he
-admired sunny France with its squares of golden corn and
-vegetables, and when he passed a painted Crucifix with
-its cluster of flowering graves, he would say: "Golly,
-Bill, ain't it pretty? We oughter 'ave them at 'ome, yer
-know." And of course he kept on saying what he was
-going to do with "Kayser Bill."</p>
-
-<p>One night after the evening meal, the men of the Company<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span>
-gave a little concert outside the mill. The flower-scented
-twilight was fragrantly beautiful, and the mill
-stream gurgled a lullaby accompaniment as it swept past
-the trailing grass. Nor was there any lack of talent. One
-reservist, a miner since he had left the army, roared out
-several songs concerning the feminine element at the seaside,
-or voicing an inquiry as to a gentleman's companion
-on the previous night. Then, with an entire lack of appropriateness,
-another got up and recited "The Wreck of
-the <i>Titanic</i>" in a most touching and dramatic manner.
-Followed a song with a much appreciated chorus&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poem">
-"Though your heart may ache awhile,<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 10em;">Never mind!</span><br />
-Though your face may lose its smile,<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 10em;">Never mind!</span><br />
-For there's sunshine after rain,<br />
-And then gladness follows pain,<br />
-You'll be happy once again,<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 10em;">Never mind!"</span><br />
-</div>
-
-<p>The ditty deals with broken vows, and faithless hearts,
-and blighted lives; just the sort of song that Tommy loves
-to warble after a good meal in the evening. It conjured
-to the Subaltern's eyes the picture of the dainty little star
-who had sung it on the boards of the Coliseum. And to
-conclude, Madame's voice, French, and sonorously metallic,
-was heard in the dining-room striking up the "<i><span xml:lang="fr">Marseillaise</span></i>."
-Tommy did not know a word of it, but he
-yelled "March on" (a very good translation of "<i><span xml:lang="fr">Marchons</span></i>")
-and sang "lar lar" to the rest of the tune.</p>
-
-<p>Thus passed peacefully enough those five days&mdash;the
-calm before the storm.</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTE:</h3>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_8_8" id="Footnote_8_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8_8"><span class="label">[8]</span></a> All numerals relate to stories herein told&mdash;not to chapters
-from original sources.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>IN THE HANDS OF THE ENEMY&mdash;EXPERIENCES
-OF A PRISONER
-OF WAR</h2>
-
-<div class="center"><i>Told by Benjamin G. O'Rorke, M. A., Chaplain to the
-Forces</i></div>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>This narrative reveals the actual scenes and experiences in a
-German prison where this British chaplain was incarcerated. He
-dedicates it "To my fellow prisoners, who already during twelve
-months have borne disappointment with patient resignation and
-insults with silent dignity: who have made the name of Britain
-respected in the heart of Germany." Nearly the whole of the
-diary on which this narrative is based was confiscated by the
-Germans when the writer was searched for the last time before
-his release. It was restored to him by post a few weeks later,
-bearing the mark showing that it had been passed by the censor.
-The diary has been published complete by <i>Longmans, Green
-and Company</i>, with whose permission the following interesting
-extracts are given.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p><a name="FNanchor_9_9" id="FNanchor_9_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a>
-I&mdash;STORY OF THE CONSECRATED SWORDS</p>
-
-<p>On Saturday, August 15, 1914, we entrained, whither
-we knew not. The railway officials either did not know or
-would not tell, but we were not long before we discovered
-that our destination was Southampton.</p>
-
-<p>Here we spent a wearisome afternoon and evening at
-the docks, embarking horses and wagons on board our
-transport, a cattle-boat named <i>Armenian</i>, which has since
-been sunk by the Germans. With us embarked contingents
-of the 18th Hussars and 9th Lancers. It was a
-calm journey, and there were no signs of sea-sickness.
-Pipes and cigarettes were freely smoked, a good sign
-on the first day of a voyage. Once more our destination
-was kept a profound secret, even from the captain, until
-we got well out to sea. It being Sunday, we had a service
-on board, which gave me a golden opportunity of
-addressing my flock for the first time. Speaking on the
-text, "Whoso feareth the Lord shall not be afraid, and
-shall not play the coward," Eccl. xxiv. 14 (R.V.), I reminded
-them that we were setting out to take our part in
-the greatest war in history.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span></p>
-<p>After the service on deck, a number of officers and
-men, after the example of the knights of old who consecrated
-their swords at the altar, partook of the Holy Communion
-in the saloon.</p>
-
-<p>In the course of the afternoon we sighted the beautiful
-harbor of Boulogne, where we landed. "'Eep, 'eep,
-'ooray!" called out the crowds of French people who
-lined the pier and landing-stage to give us a hearty welcome
-as their allies. From the first moment we were
-made to feel at home in France, and careful arrangements
-had been undertaken for our comfort. To every regiment
-a Frenchman was appointed as interpreter, many of
-whom were educated men of good standing....</p>
-
-<p>Strolling through the town, I passed the barracks where
-the Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders were quartered.
-True to their national characteristic that "a Scotsman
-is never at home unless he is abroad," they appeared to
-have been at Boulogne for years, and already to be on
-intimate terms with the townsfolk. On the steps of the
-Post-Office was a bareheaded woman in the act of posting
-a letter to her son at the front. She spoke to me
-about him very tenderly, and it was obvious that all sorts
-of good wishes and prayers were dropped into the letterbox
-with her letter....</p>
-
-<p>Flags were in evidence everywhere. Men wore in their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span>
-buttonholes the colors of France, Belgium, and England
-intertwined, and women pinned them to their dresses.
-Little children followed the soldiers about, crying, "Souvenir,
-souvenir!" and pointed to their regimental badges.
-After a while it was a rare sight to meet a soldier with
-a badge, or a French woman or child without one. The
-sole distinguishing mark between one regiment and another
-was the design of the badge on cap and the initials
-of the regiment on shoulder-strap drawn in indelible
-pencil.</p>
-
-<p>The next morning the march through the town to the
-station was little short of a triumphal procession. The
-most popular figure amongst us was a diminutive soldier
-boy of the R.A.M.C., Trumpeter Berry. Some of the
-French women were with difficulty restrained from rushing
-out to kiss him. The crowd around the station as we
-left, pressing against the railings beyond which they were
-not permitted to go, gave us a send-off as enthusiastic as
-the welcome had been. Keepsakes, charms, blessings,
-and prayers were bestowed upon us generously. "<i><span xml:lang="fr">Vive
-la France!</span></i>" we shouted from the railway carriage, and
-we heard, dying away in the distance, the hearty response,
-"<i><span xml:lang="fr">Vive l'Angleterre!</span></i>"</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The Belgians in the villages through which we passed
-had already begun to flee into France for protection. A
-long line of refugees marched with us, carrying such of
-their worldly goods as they could snatch up at the last
-moment. There were white-haired old men being wheeled
-along in barrows, cripples limping as fast as they could
-go, hatless women with a heavy bundle in one arm and
-an infant in the other, and by their side were two or
-three little toddlers wondering what it was all about.
-Behind were the homes with all their associations of the
-past and with the last meal, perhaps, still on the table<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span>
-untouched, so suddenly had the warning come. When
-would they see those homes again? If ever, probably
-as a heap of ruins. And in front, whither should they
-go?...</p>
-
-<p>Along the road they would have constant reminders
-that there was One above who knew all about it, and
-would not leave them comfortless. For at irregular intervals
-by the roadside in Belgium and France there are
-"Calvaries," little sanctuaries containing a figure of the
-Crucified One, seeming to whisper to all who pass by, "I
-have trodden this path before you."</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;WITH THE DYING SOLDIERS AT
-LANDRECIES</p>
-
-<p>The sun was well up before we set out on Tuesday,
-August 25. Southwards again our direction lay: a strategic
-retirement, we were told. Early in the evening we
-reached Landrecies. Hardly had we passed the outskirts
-of the town before a scare arose. Civilians came tearing
-out of Landrecies. Motor cars and carts rushed past us
-at breakneck speed. The cry went up, "<i><span xml:lang="fr">Les Allemands!</span></i>"
-("The Germans!") A certain peasant who for the moment
-had lost control of himself whipped the horse which
-he was driving into a gallop, deaf to the heartrending
-call of some children who ran in panic after him begging
-him to give them a lift. Out rushed a footsore guardsman
-from one of the ambulance wagons, placed a rifle
-at his head, and compelled him to stop and pick them
-up....</p>
-
-<p>At about 8 <span class="smcap">P.M.</span> we heard the rat-a-tat-tat of machine
-guns and the boom of field artillery. The men of the
-Royal Army Medical Corps meanwhile awaited the summons
-that did not come. The rain came down in torrents,
-and they lay down wherever they could find a sheltered<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span>
-spot. Sleep for most of us was impossible. The
-din of battle was terrific....</p>
-
-<p>I went at once in search of the Hon. Rupert Keppel
-and handed to him Major Matheson's note. He was in
-an upstairs room with five or six wounded men. He was
-lying on a bed with a bandage round his forehead, but
-made light of the wounds which he had received. After
-a few words and a short prayer at each bedside, I made
-inquiries for Lord Hawarden. I was told that he was
-already dead, but I found him in a little room by himself,
-still breathing although apparently unconscious. He had
-lost his left arm, and a portion of his back had been shot
-away. I knelt down beside him and commended him to
-God, saying in the form of a prayer as from myself the
-hymn "Abide with Me." As I rose from my knees he
-opened his eyes and smiled. He had been asleep merely,
-and now began to speak with quite a strong voice. Not
-a word did he say about himself, or his sufferings.
-He talked about the battle, about his old home near Bordon,
-which was within a couple of miles of my own home
-and formed a happy link between us, and about his
-mother....</p>
-
-<p>The other poor patients were terribly knocked about.
-Limbs in some cases had been entirely blown off by
-shells. Lyddite had turned many complexions to a jaundiced
-yellow. And yet every man was calm and resigned,
-and proud to have had a share in the fight.... A kindly
-French priest was going from bed to bed saying comforting
-words in French. Probably not one of the patients
-understood his words, but they all understood and appreciated
-his meaning.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the Germans began to appear on the canal
-bridge near the hospital. Major Collingwood went out
-to meet them, and they entered the hospital with him.
-The officer in charge of them, Herr Ruttner of Berlin,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>
-shook hands with me and said that my work would not
-be interfered with, and that I had his permission to go
-anywhere over the scene of battle in search of the killed,
-and that I might bury them where most convenient. He
-said he was personally acquainted with Sir Douglas Haig,
-who with Sir John French had actually been in Landrecies
-the previous afternoon. He seemed disappointed not
-to find Sir Douglas there still, and desired to be remembered
-to him. By his orders the hospital was examined
-and all arms and ammunition were removed. A sentry
-was then placed at the gate.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>In the early morning of the next day, Thursday, August
-27, the gallant young Lord Hawarden died. The
-medical officer who looked after him said that he had
-never met a braver patient. A party of twelve men,
-under the command of Lieut. Hattersley, went with me
-to lay him to rest, together with the two officers and men
-whose bodies had been placed in the compound of the
-hospital. We selected the best spot in the pretty little
-cemetery of Landrecies.</p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;ON A PRISON TRAIN&mdash;GOING TO
-GERMANY</p>
-
-<p>We remained in Landrecies until Saturday, August 29,
-expecting daily to be returned to our own people in accordance
-with the terms of the Geneva Convention. Our
-destination, however, was fated to be in the opposite direction.
-Under an escort of half a dozen German soldiers,
-commanded by an under-officer, we marched out
-of the town, up the hill where the battle had taken place,
-to Bavay. It was a tiring journey for the wounded men
-lying in ambulance wagons. The Hon. R. Keppel was
-the only wounded officer. He traveled in a wagon with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span>
-certain men of his regiment, with whom he appeared to
-be on exceedingly friendly terms. Two of the occupants
-of that wagon had lost an arm each, and they were the
-cheeriest of our party.</p>
-
-<p>It was dark when we reached Bavay, and everyone
-was tired out. The journey seemed to be quite twenty
-miles. The first thing we did was to see the wounded
-safely into the hospital, which was a young men's college.
-M. L'Abbé J. Lebrun, the Superior, and his colleague
-were at the door to welcome us. I was at once taken
-into the English ward, and arrived just in time to commend
-the soul of a dying man, a private of the 12th
-Lancers. His officer&mdash;though wounded&mdash;had got out of
-bed to see the last of him, and besought me as I entered
-to visit his dying comrade without delay. His anxiety
-on his friend's behalf was a touching sight.</p>
-
-<p>On the morrow, Sunday, August 30, I held a service,
-at the request of the patients, in the English ward. I
-spoke on "Be of good cheer," or, as we had so often
-heard it put by our French friends along the road, "<i><span xml:lang="fr">Bon
-courage</span></i>."...</p>
-
-<p>At the funeral of the 12th Lancer that afternoon we
-had an imposing procession. The body was laid on a
-stretcher covered over with a Union Jack and the French
-national flag. I led the way before the coffin, robed in
-a cassock and surplice which had been presented to me
-by a French priest to replace my own lost robes. After
-the coffin came the three R.C. priests of the town and a
-number of the French Red Cross nurses; then Major
-Collingwood and the men of the 4th Field Ambulance.
-One of the nurses, noticing that I had no stole, on returning
-from the funeral made me one of black material with
-three white crosses, and presented it within a couple of
-hours.</p>
-
-<p>The next day we were marched under escort to Mons.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span>
-This is a large, well-built town of about 35,000 inhabitants.
-We were paraded through the cobbled streets to
-the barracks, then (evidently by a mistake) to the station,
-and finally back again to the barracks, where, in some
-dirty rooms over a filthy stable, we spent the night.
-Here we met the Hon. Ivan Hay, of the 5th Lancers, who
-had narrowly escaped being shot after his capture by
-the Germans, but he was not allowed to accompany our
-party. The following morning we were marched once
-more to the station, and were bundled into the station-master's
-office, which was littered with looted papers.
-The men meanwhile were herded in a shed. A sentry
-was posted at the entrance of the station to prevent anyone
-going to the town. Just outside the station were the
-ambulance wagons and our servants. Whyman, my soldier-servant,
-was amongst them with my horse. That
-was the last I saw of either of them. I parted from
-them with a very sad heart.</p>
-
-<p>During the afternoon an ill-mannered under-officer
-bade us hand over knives, razors, and sticks. At 6 <span class="smcap">P.M.</span>
-we were entrained with about 1,000 wounded, of whom
-some forty or fifty were ours, the rest being Germans.
-The train must have been a quarter of a mile long. In
-the middle of the night we passed through Brussels, and
-in the early morning through Louvain and Liège. Louvain
-seemed to be a heap of ruins; hardly a house visible
-from the station was intact.... We looked with great
-interest upon Liège as we passed through it, and recalled
-the gallant defence of the town by the Belgians. A few
-more miles brought us over the border into Germany.</p>
-
-<p>At Aachen a hostile demonstration took place at our
-expense. There happened to be a German troop train
-in the station at the time. A soldier of our escort displayed
-a specimen of the British soldier's knife, holding
-it up with the marline-spike open, and declared that this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span>
-was the deadly instrument which British medical officers
-had been using to gouge out the eyes of the wounded
-Germans who had fallen into their vindictive hands!
-From the knife he pointed to the medical officers sitting
-placidly in the train, as much as to say, "And these are
-some of the culprits." This was too much for the German
-soldiers. They strained like bloodhounds on the
-leash. "Out with them!" said their irate colonel, pointing
-with his thumb over his shoulder to the carriages
-in which these bloodthirsty British officers sat. The
-colonel, however, did not wait to see his behest carried
-out, and a very gentlemanly German subaltern quietly
-urged his men to get back to their train and leave us
-alone. The only daggers that pierced us were the eyes
-of a couple of priests, a few women and boys, who appeared
-to be shocked beyond words that even a clergyman
-was amongst such wicked men. The enormity of the
-crimes which had necessitated my capture I could only
-conjecture from their looks.</p>
-
-<p>At Düsseldorf we crossed the Rhine&mdash;a beautiful sight.
-At Essen I was permitted to visit one of our wounded
-men who was dying of tetanus. The unfortunate patients
-lay in rows on the floor of luggage vans, with straw
-beneath them. When the train stopped at a station the
-doors of these vans were sometimes flung open in order
-that the crowd might have a look at them....</p>
-
-<p>Even the Red Cross ladies at the stations steeled their
-hearts against us, giving us not so much as a cup of
-coffee or a piece of bread. But for the haversack rations
-and chocolate, which most of us carried with us, we
-should have fared badly. Now, however, we were to
-receive our first meal from our captors. This consisted
-of a plate of hot soup and a slice of bread and butter,
-which we ate ravenously. Two kind ladies brought us
-this food, and we were duly grateful. One of them was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span>
-standing near me as we ate the meal, and I thanked her
-cordially in English. She paid no attention, so I asked
-her if she understood English. "I do, but I don't mean
-to," was her laconic reply, which seemed highly to amuse
-my companions....</p>
-
-<p>At length, on Friday morning, the journey came to
-an end on our arrival at Torgau. We were ordered out
-of the train and drawn up on the platform in fours.
-Each officer carried what articles of clothing he possessed.
-Several of them had preserved their medical
-panniers, and, heavy as these were, they had to be carried
-or left behind. On either side of us a German guard
-with fixed bayonets was drawn up, and then was given
-the word, "Quick march!" With our bundle on our
-shoulder, there was no man could be bolder, yet this
-same bundle and the burning sun prevented there being
-anything "quick" about our march. The townsfolk evidently
-had heard that we were coming, and they were
-at the station gate in scores to show us how pleased they
-were to welcome us to their town. In fact, they told us
-quite freely what they thought of us and the nation
-which we represented. They walked beside us every inch
-of the way, keeping up our spirits by telling us the particular
-kind of <i><span xml:lang="de">Schweinhunds</span></i> they believed the <i><span xml:lang="fr">Engländer</span></i>
-to be. Not until they had crossed the massive bridge
-which spans the Elbe and reached the Brückenkopf
-fortress did they turn back home, and the doors of the
-fortress closed behind us.</p>
-
-
-<p>IV&mdash;STORY OF PRISON LIFE AT TORGAU</p>
-
-<p>Passing over the moat through two iron doors, we
-enter a courtyard, about 100 yards long by 40 broad.
-Facing the gateway is a semi-circular building two stories
-high, with an entrance at either end and one in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span>
-centre. A turret with windows and battlements surmounts
-each entrance; and from the central turret rises
-a flag-pole....</p>
-
-<p>The commandant was a Prussian reservist officer with
-a long heavy moustache. We were told that he was
-courteous and considerate in every respect, and that, provided
-we took care to salute him whenever we passed
-him, we should find him everything we could reasonably
-wish.</p>
-
-<p>Supper was at 6 <span class="smcap">P.M.</span> The same plate did duty for
-both courses, soup and meat, the more fastidious taking
-it under the pump in the interval. When the meal was
-over the junior members of the messes did the washing
-up. After supper we walked a mile, as the old adage
-recommends. We soon knew to a nicety how many
-turns round the court made up this distance, and some
-active spirits improved on the advice by walking several
-miles. At 8.30 a bugle sounded, and everyone had to
-retire to his room; at 9 sounded "lights out."</p>
-
-<p>That first night was memorable for the little occupants
-which we found already in possession of our beds.
-Just when we hoped we had finished our labours for
-the day these little bedfellows began theirs. The more
-we wanted to sleep, the more wakeful they became.
-Scratching, tossing, and&mdash;it must be owned&mdash;a little mild
-swearing could be heard, where snoring would have been
-much more tolerable....</p>
-
-<p>At 6 <span class="smcap">A.M.</span> reveillé sounded, and before it was finished
-Major Yate was up and out of bed. I followed his example,
-and then the two of us began a practice which
-we kept up while the warm weather lasted, namely, a
-cold bath under the pump in the solitude of the courtyard.</p>
-
-<p>Poor Major Yate! He attempted to escape ten days
-later, and lost his life in so doing. One of the sentries<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>
-affirmed that he shot him as he made his way through
-the barbed wire, and that the Major fled wounded into
-the river, from which he never came forth alive....
-He has since been awarded posthumously the Victoria
-Cross for his gallantry in the campaign.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>We selected as our chapel the passage over the entrance
-at one end of the building. There was an inspiring
-atmosphere about that first service. Our altar was a
-dormitory table, our altar linen a couple of white handkerchiefs,
-our chalice a twopenny wine-glass (the best
-we could procure), our paten an ordinary dinner-plate.
-Pews, of course, there were none, and as for
-books, we were fortunate enough to have one, a hymn-book,
-prayer-book, and Bible bound together in a single
-volume, which I was carrying in my haversack at the
-time we were captured. The pew difficulty was overcome
-by each officer bringing his stool. The lack of
-books made no difference to the heartiness of the service,
-for the hymns and chants were familiar to most of us
-from childhood. The mighty volume of sound that went
-up that morning in hymns of thankfulness and praise was
-a never-to-be-forgotten sensation to those who heard it
-or joined in it. The place whereon we stood was holy
-ground, and it was good for us to be there....</p>
-
-<p>As time went on, our numbers increased to about 230
-British officers, and 800 French officers joined us from
-Maubeuge, including four generals. One of the latter
-had been interned in Torgau before, in the 1870 war,
-and had made good his escape. The authorities guarded
-against the recurrence of such an eventuality on the present
-occasion, their most elaborate precaution being the
-enlistment of dogs to reinforce the sentries. Their barkings
-could be heard occasionally by night, but their presence
-disturbed neither our repose nor our equanimity....</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>During the last two months of our stay at Torgau I
-occupied a small room in the centre of the building with
-Major (now Lieut.-Col.) A. G. Thompson, Major W. H.
-Long, and Captain P. C. T. Davy, of the R.A.M.C., as
-companions. Like the Hindus, we divided ourselves into
-exclusive castes, as far as the necessary duties in connection
-with the room were concerned. The Colonel (as
-we may call him by anticipation) lit the stove, the Major
-washed the cups and saucers, the Captain swept the floor,
-and I, with the assistance of a member of our mess,
-brought in the coal.</p>
-
-<p>We often dreamt and spoke of the day when we should
-march out of Torgau. There were two destinations only
-which came within the range of our contemplation&mdash;one
-was Berlin, and the other was England. Meanwhile,
-however, there was a place of four short letters which
-was to be our home for six long months.</p>
-
-<p>(The chaplain continues to relate his experiences in
-this German prison with many interesting anecdotes. He
-tells about the prison occupations, how they spent their
-time in work and recreation, and describes his parole
-and visits to several internment camps.)</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTE:</h3>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_9_9" id="Footnote_9_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9_9"><span class="label">[9]</span></a> All numerals relate to stories herein told&mdash;not to chapters
-from original sources.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>"AT SUVLA BAY"&mdash;THE WAR
-AGAINST THE TURKS</h2>
-
-<div class="center"><i>Adventures on the Blue Aegean Shores</i></div>
-
-<div class="center"><br /><i>Told by John Hargrave, the Famous Scoutmaster in<br />
-the Mediterranean Expeditionary Forces</i></div>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>John Hargrave is known throughout England as "White Fox,"
-the famous scoutmaster. On September 8th, 1914, he said farewell
-to his little camp in the beechwoods of Buckinghamshire
-and to his woodcraft scouts and went off to enlist in the Royal
-Army Medical Corps. He was assigned to the 32nd Field
-Ambulance, X Division, Mediterranean Expeditionary Forces,
-and sailed away to Suvla Bay, where he passed through the
-tragic scenes of the Dardanelles Campaign. He soon began
-sending stories "back home," achieving for the Gallipoli Campaign
-what Ian Hay did for the Western Front. These stories
-have been collected into a volume entitled: "At Suvla Bay,"
-which is published in America by <i>Houghton, Mifflin and Company</i>.
-There are twenty-eight narratives told in the jargon of
-the common soldier. He tells about its being "A Long Way
-to Tipperary"; "Mediterranean Nights"; "Marooned on Lemnos
-Island"; "The Adventure of the White Pack Mule"; "The Sniper
-of Pear-Tree Gulley"; "The Adventure of the Lost Squads";
-"Dug-Out Yarns"; "The Sharpshooters"; and many other incidents
-of Army life. One of his narratives, "Jhill-O! Johnnie!"
-is here retold by permission of his publishers.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;STORY OF THE INDIAN PACK MULE
-CORPS</p>
-
-<p>One evening the colonel sent me from our dugout near
-the Salt Lake to "A" Beach to make a report on the
-water supply which was pumped ashore from the tank-boats.
-I trudged along the sandy shore. At one spot<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span>
-I remember the carcass of a mule washed up by the
-tide, the flesh rotted and sodden, and here and there a
-yellow rib bursting through the skin. Its head floated in
-the water and nodded to and fro with a most uncanny
-motion with every ripple of the bay.</p>
-
-<p>The wet season was coming on, and the chill winds
-went through my khaki drill uniform. The sky was
-overcast, and the bay, generally a kaleidoscope of Eastern
-blues and greens, was dull and gray.</p>
-
-<p>At "A" Beach I examined the pipes and tanks of the
-water-supply system and had a chat with the Australians
-who were in charge. I drew a small plan, showing how
-the water was pumped from the tanks afloat to the standing
-tank ashore, and suggested the probable cause of the
-sand and dirt of which the C.O. complained.</p>
-
-<p>This done I found our own ambulance water-cart just
-ready to return to our camp with its nightly supply.
-Evening was giving place to darkness, and soon the misty
-hills and the bay were enveloped in starless gloom.</p>
-
-<p>The traffic about "A" Beach was always congested.
-It reminded you of the Bank and the Mansion House
-crush far away in London town.</p>
-
-<p>Here were clanking water-carts, dozens of them waiting
-in their turn, stamping mules and snorting horses;
-here were motor-transport wagons with "W.D." in white
-on their gray sides; ambulance wagons jolting slowly back
-to their respective units, sometimes full of wounded,
-sometimes empty. Here all was bustle and noise. Sergeants
-shouting and corporals cursing; transport-officers
-giving directions; a party of New Zealand sharpshooters
-in scout hats and leggings laughing and yarning; a
-patrol of the R.E.'s Telegraph Section coming in after
-repairing the wires along the beach; or a new batch of
-men, just arrived, falling in with new-looking kit-bags.</p>
-
-<p>It was through this throng of seething khaki and transport<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span>
-traffic that our water-cart jostled and pushed.</p>
-
-<p>Often we had to pull up to let the Indian Pack-mule
-Corps pass, and it was at one of these halts that I happened
-to come close to one of these dusky soldiers waiting
-calmly by the side of his mules.</p>
-
-<p>I wished I had some knowledge of Hindustani, and
-began to think over any words he might recognize.</p>
-
-<p>"You ever hear of Rabindranarth Tagore, Johnnie?"
-I asked him. The name of the great writer came to
-mind.</p>
-
-<p>He shook his head. "No, sergeant," he answered.</p>
-
-<p>"Buddha, Johnnie?" His face gleamed and he showed
-his great white teeth.</p>
-
-<p>"No, Buddie."</p>
-
-<p>"Mahomet, Johnnie?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes&mdash;me, Mahommedie," he said proudly.</p>
-
-<p>"Gunga, Johnnie?" I asked, remembering the name of
-the sacred river Ganges from Kipling's <i>Kim</i>.</p>
-
-<p>"No Gunga, sa'b&mdash;Mahommedie, me."</p>
-
-<p>"You go Benares, Johnnie?"</p>
-
-<p>"No Benares."</p>
-
-<p>"Mecca?"</p>
-
-<p>"Mokka, yes; afterwards me go Mokka."</p>
-
-<p>"After the war you going to Mokka, Johnnie?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes; Indee, France&mdash;here&mdash;Indee back again&mdash;then
-Mokka."</p>
-
-<p>"You been to France, Johnnie?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, sa'b."</p>
-
-<p>"You know Kashmir, Johnnie?"</p>
-
-<p>"Kashmir my house," he replied.</p>
-
-<p>"You live in Kashmir?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes;&mdash;you go Indee, sergeant?"</p>
-
-<p>"No, I've never been."</p>
-
-<p>"No go Indee?"</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"Not yet."</p>
-
-<p>"Indee very good&mdash;English very good&mdash;Turk, finish!"</p>
-
-<p>With a sudden jerk and a rattle of chains our water-cart
-mules pulled out on the trail again and the ghostly
-figure with its well-folded turban and gleaming white
-teeth was left behind.</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;HEROISM OF THE SILENT HINDUS</p>
-
-<p>A beautifully calm race, the Hindus. They did wonderful
-work at Suvla Bay. Up and down, up and down,
-hour after hour they worked steadily on; taking up biscuits,
-bully-beef and ammunition to the firing-line, and
-returning for more and still more. Day and night these
-splendidly built Easterns kept up the supply.</p>
-
-<p>I remember one man who had had his left leg blown
-off by shrapnel sitting on a rock smoking a cigarette and
-great tears rolling down his cheeks. But he said no
-word. Not a groan or a cry of pain.</p>
-
-<p>They ate little, and said little. But they were always
-extraordinarily polite and courteous to each other. They
-never neglected their prayers, even under heavy shell
-fire.</p>
-
-<p>Once, when we were moving from the Salt Lake to
-"C" Beach, Lala Baba, the Indians moved all our equipment
-in their little two-wheeled carts.</p>
-
-<p>They were much amused and interested in our sergeant
-clerk, who stood 6 feet 8 inches. They were joking
-and pointing to him in a little bunch.</p>
-
-<p>Going up to them, I pointed up to the sky, and then
-to the Sergeant, saying: "Himalayas, Johnnie!"</p>
-
-<p>They roared with laughter, and ever afterwards called
-him "Himalayas."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>
-THE INDIAN TRANSPORT TRAIN<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>(Across the bed of the Salt Lake every night from the Supply
-Depot at Kangaroo Beach to the firing-line beyond Chocolate
-Hill, September, 1915.)</p>
-
-<div class="poem">
-The Indian whallahs go up to the hills;&mdash;<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"Jhill-o! Johnnie, Jhill-o!"<a name="FNanchor_10_10" id="FNanchor_10_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_10_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a></span><br />
-They pass by the spot where the gun-cotton kills;<br />
-They shiver and huddle&mdash;they feel the night chills;&mdash;<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"Jhill-o! Johnnie, Jhill-o!"</span><br />
-<br />
-With creaking and jingle of harness and pack;&mdash;<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"Jhill-o! Johnnie, Jhill-o!"</span><br />
-Where the moonlight is white and the shadows are black,<br />
-They are climbing the winding and rocky mule-track;&mdash;<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"Jhill-o! Johnnie, Jhill-o!"</span><br />
-<br />
-By the blessing of Allah he's more than one wife;&mdash;<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"Jhill-o! Johnnie, Jhill-o!"</span><br />
-He's forbidden the wine which encourages strife,<br />
-But you don't like the look of his dangerous knife;&mdash;<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"Jhill-o! Johnnie, Jhill-o!"</span><br />
-<br />
-The picturesque whallah is dusky and spare;<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"Jhill-o! Johnnie, Jhill-o!"</span><br />
-A turban he wears with magnificent air,<br />
-But he chucks down his pack when it's time for his prayer;&mdash;<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"Jhill-o! Johnnie, Jhill-o!"</span><br />
-<br />
-When his moment arrives he'll be dropped in a hole;&mdash;<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"Jhill-o! Johnnie, Jhill-o!"</span><br />
-'Tis Kismet, he says, and beyond his control;<br />
-But the dear little houris will comfort his soul;&mdash;<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"Jhill-o! Johnnie, Jhill-o!"</span><br />
-<br />
-The Indian whallahs go up to the hills;&mdash;<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"Jhill-o! Johnnie, Jhill-o!"</span><br />
-They pass by the spot where the gun-cotton kills;<br />
-But those who come down carry something that chills;&mdash;<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"Jhill-o! Johnnie, Jhill-o!"</span><br />
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTE:</h3>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_10_10" id="Footnote_10_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10_10"><span class="label">[10]</span></a> "Jhill-o!"&mdash;Hindustani for "Gee-up"; used by the drivers of
-the Indian Pack-mule Corps.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>SEEING THE WAR THROUGH A
-WOMAN'S EYES</h2>
-
-<div class="center"><i>Soul-Stirring Description of Scenes Among the
-Wounded in Paris</i></div>
-
-<div class="center"><br /><i>Told by (Name Suppressed)</i></div>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;"THEY HAVE NOTHING LEFT&mdash;NOT EVEN
-TEARS"</p>
-
-<p>What I have seen&mdash;can that be told? When will
-words be found simple enough and infinite enough to tell
-of so much heroism, so much sorrow, so much beauty,
-so much terror? All those sublimities: how can they be
-explained without losing their soul, without taking away
-their value, which is of mystery and miracle? All those
-hideous things, all those unnatural crimes; how can they
-be revealed with cold and ponderous reasoning, while one
-is still trembling, keeping back tears, smothering cries?</p>
-
-<p>It must be done, though, and that French shyness that
-hates all that is bluff or bragging, and which fain would
-wait that our glory and suffering be understood, it too
-must be conquered. We must rise above that too delicate
-conscience which says: "Speak? What good will
-it do? Truth is luminous; it shines before all eyes."
-Yes, but it must be helped to shine, and without delay.</p>
-
-<p>That is why, I have decided to address the American
-nation, to tell it that which I know, that which is evident,
-undeniable&mdash;to take it to the frightful and divine Calvary
-of truth.</p>
-
-<p>For six months I have been living among our soldiers,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span>
-our wounded. I live in my Paris. That Paris that every
-one visits and that no one knows. I have only left it for
-some brief excursions to the cathedrals in agony, to the
-villages in ashes, to the ambulances at the front, to the
-old peasants who have nothing left&mdash;not even tears! To
-the little orphans with tragic and stupefied eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Sent to distribute woolens to the combatants, I have
-heard a language, haughty and superb. I have clasped
-the rude hands, sometimes deformed, of more than
-twenty-two thousand soldiers, some wounded, others well
-again, returning to the firing line, a flame in their eyes
-and in their hearts. I have bent over more than ten
-thousand beds of mutilated young men, many of them
-with gangrene. I have held hundreds in my arms on the
-operating tables&mdash;I who could not support the sight of
-blood, nor of illness&mdash;hundreds of poor things with atrocious
-wounds, and only felt during those minutes one
-care&mdash;a superhuman desire to discover in the surgeon's
-look or attitude the hope the poor boy would be saved.</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;"IF HE DIED, I SHOULD HAVE FELT
-GUILTY"</p>
-
-<p>I remember, above all, a youth twenty years old, who
-had such a complicated wound in the chest that it is
-indescribable. I held the poor, inert body while the surgeon
-lay wide open the thorax. "Take him back," said
-the surgeon, "and be careful." I did so. Then from the
-deep, bleeding wound the whole chest emptied itself, as
-one empties a bucket of I don't know what unnamable
-liquid. The surgeon approached then, and leaning over
-the now visible palpitating lung murmured: "What can
-be done? It will only begin again." However, he did
-find out what could be done. He had him put back in
-his bed&mdash;he was still unconscious. Sitting near him,
-filled with anxiety I waited his awakening. I wanted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span>
-him to be saved, that child! While he was being chloroformed
-a few minutes before, while he was holding my
-hand without saying a word, there was in his look, before
-his eyes closed, such a gentle desire to live, such a prayer
-for protection&mdash;such confidence in the infinite aid I gave
-him. If he died I should have felt myself guilty&mdash;I don't
-know of what.</p>
-
-<p>He awoke&mdash;looked at me and smiled. He then murmured:
-"Why are you so good to us, madame? We
-are not near to you."</p>
-
-<p>To this dying child, to give him back his life, it was
-necessary I should explain to him his glory. I said:
-"Not near, my boy? Why, understand then what I owe
-you! If the enemy has not entered our Paris&mdash;if Notre
-Dame is intact&mdash;if I, myself, am living&mdash;it is because
-you gave your blood for us. But that is not all. When
-you fight for France you do not only fight for your country,
-you do not only save your native land; you save an
-ideal, an ideal supreme, universal. In helping all that is
-pure and beautiful in the world you save the liberty of
-peoples, the liberty of the soul. You say to each one of
-us 'the yoke that weighs you down I shall help you to
-cast off.'</p>
-
-<p>"You do not understand me well, my boy. But see&mdash;you
-must live. Later in the eternal books of history you
-will learn the meaning of the blood you have given. You
-must live! <i>You must live!</i> Years from now your little
-children will look at you with eyes of love and admiration
-because you were a soldier in the great war. They
-will know the meaning of the medal shining on your
-chest, and for generations they will be proud of the
-honour of their name. You must live, my dear boy!"</p>
-
-<p>As I spoke something wonderful illuminated the
-youth's eyes. "Oh, I shall live, madame. One only has
-to will it. I shall live."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>He is saved!</p>
-
-<p>I do not know why I stopped to recount the agony and
-resurrection of that child, because almost all of them are
-divinely alike&mdash;childlike, confident, smiling.</p>
-
-<p>Another had had a whole leg amputated&mdash;a young
-man of twenty-two, with a charming face. Doubtless
-he had already been loved by some pretty girl. At last
-the day came when for the first time he was to get out
-of bed and try to walk with crutches. I dreaded that
-moment. I expected complaints. I already had made up
-my consoling arguments.</p>
-
-<p>Ah, how little I knew the soul of our children of
-France. He arose, poor boy, so thin, on his one leg;
-and as he was also wounded in one arm, in spite of the
-crutches he couldn't balance himself. That made him
-laugh; <i>made him laugh</i>!</p>
-
-<p>I turned him over to a nurse because tears were choking
-me. But they were not tears of sorrow; they were
-sobs of tenderness, respect, admiration.</p>
-
-<p>Another had received nine wounds. He didn't want
-to have them spoken of. He only wanted to talk
-about his days of battle&mdash;to live them over again.
-"Those last days, madame, we were so near the enemy
-that they could not get to us to bring us our rations. We
-had to find our nourishment ourselves. When evening
-arrived some of us would steal out of the trenches and
-pick carrots&mdash;we lived eleven days like that. One day I
-brought down a pigeon. When I was able to get it we
-broiled it with matches. Ah, that was a royal feast!
-How glad we were!"</p>
-
-<p>"Content" (glad, happy), that was the word he used
-most frequently. One morning when I got to the hospital,
-believing him still very ill, he greeted me with, "I
-go back to my depot in three days; in a fortnight I shall
-be under fire! Oh, how 'content' I am!"</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Since then he has written me, "I received the tobacco.
-We had an awful fight at &mdash;&mdash;. I have a finger less and
-am still in the ambulance, but still 'content.'"</p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;STORY OF THE DYING ALGERIAN</p>
-
-<p>Ah, let me still tell of my country's smile in her sorrow&mdash;so
-sweet, and which is such a comfort to my heart.
-I have so much to tell that is horrible.</p>
-
-<p>Another time I conducted a celebrated visitor to a
-"tirailleur" (a part of the colonial infantry who leave the
-ranks in action and fight individually). This "tirailleur"
-had had his right arm amputated. I said, "he is an
-Algerian." The wounded man looked at me reproachfully
-with his great soft eyes, saying: "Don't say Algerian,
-madame, me French, me give arm for France."</p>
-
-<p>Another time I was with another Algerian; this one
-was about to die; nothing could save him. I was trying
-to soften his agony. He let me go on awhile, then suddenly
-stopped me with the melancholy childish accent of
-the Arabs, saying: "Don't bother about me any more,
-madame. All over. Me dead in two hours. Me just
-as happy as if get well. Thee write my mother that." I
-wrote his mother. She replied: "He has served France
-well. Allah has taken him to his breast."</p>
-
-
-<p>IV&mdash;"WHAT I HAVE SEEN IN PARIS"</p>
-
-<p>What I have seen! I have seen Paris under the Teutonic
-shadow cast from the north. Three days, on opening
-my windows at dawn, I anxiously listened for the
-expected rumble of the cannonading. Nothing.... It
-will be soon, this evening, to-morrow, I said. Everything
-in my threatened city became sacred to me. For
-me to die, that was nothing. But for Paris to be destroyed;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span>
-my Paris! the city that cannot be described;
-cannot be explained! I couldn't stand that. I burst out
-weeping in the deserted streets, leaning perchance against
-a humble and old house. This mere relic had feelings,
-regrets, like the most sublime monuments.</p>
-
-<p>The gravest day dawned. Those who only stayed in
-Paris for the pleasure they receive from it, and those
-who have children to take care of, were hastening toward
-the stations or crowding into automobiles. I stayed
-there. My heart wrung with agony, I drifted through
-my ordinary occupations. Then the unbelievable happened.
-As I was crossing the Place de la Madeleine, in
-a semi-dazed condition, a little boy, about five or six
-years old, ran up to me and gave me a slip of paper. I
-saw distractedly that he was decently dressed and had
-large blue eyes. I automatically opened the paper. The
-following unheard of phrase was typewritten on it:
-"<i>France is invincible</i>."</p>
-
-<p>I turned toward the child: "Who gave you that?"</p>
-
-<p>"Madame," said the little one, raising his head with a
-look that was grand, immense, "We wrote them ourselves,
-all night." Tears filled my eyes; I had a presentiment
-they were tears of deliverance. So, while we knew
-the Uhlans were in Chantilly, while in the hearts of the
-grown-up people horror placed its claws on faith, on
-hope, there was a little child with immense blue eyes, who
-knew nothing, like the good shepherds, St. Genevieve and
-Joan of Arc, but who knew that "France was invincible"
-and who passed the night writing it.</p>
-
-<p>Yes, the miracle that saved Paris was revealed to us.
-But there was another miracle, something imponderable,
-which was the soul of the little boy with his eyes of light&mdash;which
-is the soul of Paris.</p>
-
-<p>Paris ... even during those hours did not lose its
-sweet disposition of smiling independence. And it was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span>
-among the children that we found the most touching
-proofs. One day&mdash;at the hour when the German aviators
-were storming Paris with bombs&mdash;we called it our
-<i>five o'clock taube</i>&mdash;I went out with a friend near the
-Park Monceau. All the passers-by were walking with
-their noses in the air, as they already had got the habit
-of the visits of "the bad pigeons."</p>
-
-<p>One little boy had his bicycle to follow the flight, another
-a pair of opera glasses. But look around in the
-sky as I might, I could see nothing. Then a little boy,
-this one about six or seven years old, pulled my coat.
-"Straight up, madame; straight up, over my head!"
-That's how they frightened our little kiddies!</p>
-
-<p>The next day I was passing through a thickly populated
-neighbourhood over which they had been flying for
-an hour. Suddenly a child bolted out of a house as fast
-as it could go. But his mother caught him and administered
-two resounding slaps. "I told you to stay in the
-house." "Ah," protested the urchin, "ye don't only keep
-me from seein' de tobe, but cher lick me in der bargain."</p>
-
-<p>These are trifles, will perhaps be said. Do you think
-so? Nothing is small that reveals the immortal soul of a
-people. And we found it so everywhere. Don't lose patience
-with me if I speak without order. My words
-resemble the days I am living. They have a unity,
-however, as from them always shines forth the trials,
-the smiles, the bravery of my country.</p>
-
-
-<p>V&mdash;"THEY ARE ALL DEAD NOW"</p>
-
-<p>What have I seen?... I saw a white glove stained
-with a gray spot and a brown spot. Here is its history.
-When war was declared all the young students of the
-Saint Cyr Army School were promoted second lieutenants.
-Their average age was about twenty years. How<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span>
-happy they were to fight for France. But to fight was
-not enough. They must do it with grace, with style,
-carelessly, according to French traditions. They all
-swore, those boys, to go to the first battle wearing white
-gloves. They kept their word. But the white gloves
-made them a mark for the ambushed sharpshooters.
-They are all dead. The glove I saw belonged to one of
-them. The gray spot is of brain&mdash;the brown spot is
-blood. Piously this relic was brought to the mother of
-the dead young man. This special one was only nineteen
-years old.</p>
-
-<p>And let us not think that it was a useless sacrifice.
-It is well that in the beginning of this war of surprises,
-mud and shadow, some of our children died in the light,
-facing the enemy, and facing the sun, for the good renown
-of French allegiance.</p>
-
-<p>What I have seen ... Yesterday I received a letter.
-It came from a sergeant in the Argonne, an uneducated
-workman. Here it is, with the spelling and punctuation
-corrected:</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>"Madame, thanks for letting me know that my wife
-has had a little girl. But do not think I am worried.
-We love our families, but our duty is to love our country
-first. And if I do, those at home will be taken care of,
-I know it, madame.</p>
-
-<p>"I'm going to tell you something you'll be glad to hear,
-not at the beginning, but you'll see at the end. A couple
-of weeks ago we lost a trench and almost everybody was
-massacred, including our commander. I escaped with a
-few more of my men. From our new trench we could
-see the bodies of our comrades and officers down there.
-The worst of it was that the Germans would get behind
-them to shoot at us. Ah, that all those Frenchmen, dead
-for their country, were made to protect the enemy! I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span>
-couldn't look at that. So here's what I did. I said to
-my men, 'I'm going for them, but if I stay there I don't
-want my body to be made a rampart. Tie a rope around
-my body and if you see I'm done for, pull me back by it.'
-At first things went all right. I got back three of our
-comrades' corpses. But the Germans began to see something
-was up. To mix them up I ordered a feint on the
-right&mdash;another on the left. I kept on.</p>
-
-<p>"I was all right. Never would those people suspect
-that I would risk my life to save dead bodies. So I had
-the joy of getting them all back&mdash;there were sixty-seven.
-And can you believe it, madame, there were two men
-still living. They are in a good way to getting well, and
-they can indeed say they came back from pretty far off.
-We buried the others. They are now sleeping peacefully.
-But I couldn't resist letting those in the opposite trench
-know. Not a bad trick, was it, madame?"</p>
-
-
-<p>VI&mdash;"THEY WILL PAY FOR THIS MISERY"</p>
-
-<p>What have I seen.... The other morning among the
-men who came to the vestiaire (wardrobe), where I am
-occupied part of the time, and who are generally very
-gay and good-humoured, there was a young soldier with
-a sober, set, disagreeable face. I shook him up with,
-"Why, what's the matter that a French soldier makes
-such a face? Won't you look me in the face and make
-me a nice smile?" But he didn't change expression. I
-took him to one side. "What's the matter with you, my
-child? First of all, where are you from?"</p>
-
-<p>"I am from the North, madame."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, then I understand why you are sad. You do not
-know where your dear ones are."</p>
-
-<p>He looked at me with a fierce, wild expression and
-suddenly replied: "I do know, madame. My elder<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span>
-brother was killed beside me, struck by the same shell
-that wounded me. That is war. They have burned my
-home, killed my mother and my father. My sister, sixteen
-years old, has been violated and abused; my little
-sister, of nine years, has disappeared." A black flame
-burned in the sombre look of the boy and made it unbearable.
-I received that look straight in my eyes. "Tell
-me, madame, we will get to their country, won't we, won't
-we?"</p>
-
-<p>"Why, certainly, my boy&mdash;nothing surer."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, madame, they will pay for all this misery. But
-do not fear, <i>their women and children will not be
-touched</i>."</p>
-
-<p>"Their women and children will not be touched."
-That is what this martyr of barbarism and of the cruelty
-of the enemy found in his heart to say&mdash;this sombre,
-uncultivated child of a northern village. I shook his
-rough hand&mdash;I squeezed it&mdash;I kissed the poor cheeks of
-this orphan with maternal kisses, and I said: "I thank
-thee."</p>
-
-
-<p>VII&mdash;"THE CHILDREN WHO ARE MUTILATED"</p>
-
-<p>But they&mdash;what are they doing with our little children?
-Here's a letter from a lady friend&mdash;a great musician.
-"My son-in-law, Lieutenant &mdash;&mdash; has been defending
-Verdun since August. He's all right. But when
-will these barbarians be entirely driven away? Lately
-my son-in-law had a German soldier who was very badly
-wounded picked up. When stripping him to give him
-aid they found a child's hand in his pocket. He was immediately
-shot."</p>
-
-<p>Don't think it's a single case. The children who are
-mutilated, assassinated, burned, are counted by hundreds.
-At Blamont, in the presence of the Baroness de V&mdash;&mdash;,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span>
-the Germans killed a child in its mother's arms. "Why
-did you do that?" asked the Baroness. "We are obliged
-to, otherwise we are shot," replied the men.</p>
-
-<p>Witnesses who have seen like things are too numerous
-to be counted. Everybody in France remembers the sad
-question of the little girl who asked her mother, "Will
-Santa Claus bring me back my hands for Christmas?"</p>
-
-<p>Some time I shall go into the details of the arrival of
-the Belgian children in Paris, with their terrorized looks,
-their screams of fear if anyone approached them. I
-haven't yet the courage to go over it. The memory I am
-going to call up is almost as frightful, though. It was
-Sunday, August 30. All at once I got a telephone call
-from a hospital where I often assisted: "Come, quick;
-they're bringing a lot of wounded."</p>
-
-<p>As I arrived they were carrying in a young woman,
-either dead or unconscious. Everybody was under the
-strain of deep emotion. We undressed her. Her body
-was horribly mutilated with hideous wounds. She was
-the victim of the first "taube," as the Parisiennes called
-the German aeroplanes. She was passing along the street,
-humble and inoffensive. Her husband was at the front.
-She had a child at home. From above death smote her.
-The French gave men wings, and that is how the barbarians
-use them.</p>
-
-<p>I left the young woman dead. I went to see the child.
-He was playing at a table, laughing. The contrast was
-so sad I couldn't stand it. I took away his toys. "You
-mustn't play any more just now, baby. You will not see
-your mother again to-day." He looked up at me sadly
-as if he understood. I took him in my arms and wept
-over him.</p>
-
-<p>There is a little&mdash;so little&mdash;of what I have seen and
-heard.</p>
-
-<p>Just as I finished writing I received a photograph from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span>
-the painter Guirand de Scévola, showing an old woman
-of sixty-five, who had been attacked&mdash;then slaughtered.
-With it was a part of the Belgium official report, not yet
-made public. I shall divulge the paragraph: "September
-11th, Josephy Louis Buron, of the Twenty-fourth regiment
-of the line, declared that having been made prisoner
-by the Germans, near Aerschot, they made him plunge
-both hands into a kettle of boiling water. Dr. Thone,
-of the Twenty-fourth regiment of the line, declared he
-saw the wounds of the hero." (Told in the <i>New York
-American</i>.)</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>LOST ON A SEAPLANE AND SET
-ADRIFT IN A MINE-FIELD</h2>
-
-<div class="center"><i>Adventures on the North Sea</i></div>
-
-<div class="center"><br /><i>Told by a Seaplane Observer</i></div>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>The Great War has introduced new perils both on land and
-sea. Here is the story of one of them&mdash;two men drifting
-through a mine-field on a crippled seaplane, fending off mines
-with their bare hands, and expecting every moment to be
-blown to pieces! Daring adventure told in the <i>Wide World</i>.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;"MY HUNDREDTH FLIGHT OVER THE
-NORTH SEA"</p>
-
-<p>I completed my "century" of seaplane flights over the
-North Sea with an adventure the like of which, I trust,
-will never occur again.</p>
-
-<p>Many varied experiences have gone to total up that
-number of ascents&mdash;some far from pleasant, others most
-interesting, and well repaying one for occasional hardships.</p>
-
-<p>The sequel to my one-hundredth flight, however, will
-take a lot of effacing from my memory.</p>
-
-<p>The atmosphere was a trifle thick when we started off
-from our base with the intention of flying an ordinary
-hundred-and-fifty-mile circular patrol.</p>
-
-<p>The farther we progressed, the thicker grew the haze,
-till we at last were travelling through dense fog.</p>
-
-<p>We left at 7.30 a.m., and climbed to two thousand
-five hundred feet to get above the heat-haze and fog
-over the water.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>At eight-twenty-five, almost an hour later, the revolutions
-of the eight-foot tractor began slackening perceptibly,
-and presently, to our dismay, the engine stopped
-dead.</p>
-
-<p>We were compelled to descend so quickly that there
-was no time to send a wireless signal; in fact, I just
-barely managed to cut the trailing aerial wire free before
-we struck the sea.</p>
-
-<p>That I did so was a slice of luck, as, otherwise, the
-fuselage would probably have been ripped up, and the
-machine capsized.</p>
-
-<p>When the floats smacked the water we got quite a
-bump, and a decided jar in the nape of our necks.</p>
-
-<p>Fortunately, however, the under-carriage struts retained
-their rigidity and did not buckle, and the seaplane
-rode the water right way up.</p>
-
-<p>I will not worry the reader with a technical explanation
-of the trouble which had befallen our engine. Sufficient
-to state that it was of so serious a nature as to
-preclude us from any attempt at "patching her up."</p>
-
-<p>"Do you know where we are?" inquired the pilot, after
-we had heartily chorused a round of expletives appropriate
-to such an eventuality. I shook my head.</p>
-
-<p>It must be remembered we had been travelling through
-fog most of the journey, and therefore could not spot
-the regular aids to maritime aerial pilotage, such as light-vessels,
-sandbanks, buoys, and coast contours. In addition
-to this there are always air currents about, to counteract
-a dead compass-reckoning alone.</p>
-
-<p>By taking the mean of our calculations, however, we
-were eventually able to place a finger on the approximate
-area where we believed ourselves to be on the chart.</p>
-
-<p>The result was anything but encouraging. We were
-at least fifty miles from the shores of England, and in a
-neighbourhood devoid of all shipping, even in times of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span>
-peace. What was worse, it was gradually borne in upon
-us that we were perilously near, if not actually in, a most
-extensive mine-field!</p>
-
-<p>Personally, I was feeling anything but buoyant, and
-the reason is not far to seek. I had had the middle watch
-(12-4 a.m.) in the wireless cabin ashore the previous
-night. A report then came through that there was "something
-buzzing"&mdash;hostile submarines scudding round, or
-Zeppelins or other aircraft&mdash;and I had the wireless of
-half-a-dozen machines to overhaul, and superintend their
-going off. Then my own turn came, and, minus breakfast
-or a bite of anything, off I went, having had no food
-since the previous afternoon at five. Worse still, I had
-not so much as a bite of "grub" about me, or even a
-smoke.</p>
-
-<p>The pilot went through his pockets, and discovered one
-solitary cigarette resting in state in his case. Being a
-sportsman, as well as a companion in misfortune, he
-offered it to me, and, on my emphatic refusal, halved it.
-So we both lit up whilst we reviewed the situation.</p>
-
-<p>I don't believe I ever treated a smoke with greater care
-than I did that half-cigarette. For aught I knew it might
-be my last.</p>
-
-<p>When we had finished our cogitations the joint result
-of our thinking was by no means hopeful.</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;"S. O. S." MESSAGE ON MACHINE GUN</p>
-
-<p>A strong sun was beginning to shine through the intense
-heat-haze, and the glare of the water was very trying.</p>
-
-<p>At regular intervals I fired off a Very's light, with the
-idea of attracting attention. As the coloured projectiles
-curved high into the air and plunged downwards, so did
-our hopes seem to rise and fall.</p>
-
-<p>When my Very's cartridges were exhausted, I commenced<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span>
-a series of "S.O.S." messages in the Morse code
-on the machine-gun. The nickel bullets of two trays of
-Mark VII. ammunition had winged through the heavy air
-before we realized the practical futility of it all.</p>
-
-<p>We therefore kept the remainder of our gun magazines
-intact, as also a brace of heavy service revolvers, 455
-calibre, fully loaded.</p>
-
-<p>We were not to know what might crop up at any
-moment. A Taube might find us and swoop down for
-bombing practice, or to make an easy prey. We could
-not in any event be taken prisoners by hostile aircraft,
-as there would be no space for us in a machine already
-full.</p>
-
-<p>At any moment, too, a U-boat might pop up and either
-make a target of us for their quick-firer or take us in
-tow for the Belgian coast, which was uncomfortably
-near at hand.</p>
-
-<p>However, come what might, we were in a mood to
-fight to a finish.</p>
-
-<p>Unfortunately, my wireless transmitter was worked
-from the engine direct, otherwise I might have rigged up
-an extempore aerial from the spare reel carried, and sent
-a "S.O.S." from accumulators.</p>
-
-<p>It is doubtful if such a scheme would have proved
-effective, but it would have been worth trying. But in
-the circumstances I was helpless.</p>
-
-<p>The heat was now simply awful, the sea dead calm.
-We had taken off our leather coats long since, and now
-rigged them up across the fuselage overhead, for shelter
-from the sun's rays.</p>
-
-<p>Presently it became so hot and stuffy on the seats that
-both the pilot and myself took our boots and trousers
-off, climbed down on the floats, and stretched ourselves
-along them in the comparative shelter of the wings and
-fuselage body.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The stern part of the floats was, of course, submerged,
-so we lay with our lower limbs under water, and felt
-cooler. This we did for about three hours, each of which
-seemed an age.</p>
-
-<p>What with the heat and the want of food, which caused
-a dull throbbing in my temples, by noon I was in such a
-state that I did not care what happened to us.</p>
-
-<p>The pilot (poor chap) had only recently been married,
-and he rattled along continually about his young
-wife.</p>
-
-<p>I have no wish to be in like straits again, but if such a
-misfortune <i>should</i> happen, I earnestly trust I shall not
-have the misfortune to be beside a young fellow newly
-wedded! In the long weary time we spent together I
-had the whole of his history, from childhood to courtship,
-and I suppose he had mine!</p>
-
-<p>What surprised us was the great number of logs floating
-about. Apparently a timber boat had foundered
-somewhere close by.</p>
-
-<p>Every log that hove in sight through the haze we
-thought was a ship. It was a terrible time.</p>
-
-<p>At intervals we either heard&mdash;or imagined we did&mdash;the
-engines of aircraft. Sometimes they seemed all
-around us; sometimes a long way off.</p>
-
-<p>"Our only chance is a relief seaplane being sent after
-us," said the pilot. "Otherwise we are done for!"</p>
-
-<p>There was precious little chance of us ever being spotted,
-we reckoned, owing to the extremely low visibility.</p>
-
-<p>At least a dozen times, as the day wore on, we heard
-the unmistakable roar of aircraft, and it was torture to
-listen to them.</p>
-
-<p>"It's coming nearer. They will see us!" the pilot would
-cry, hopefully.</p>
-
-<p>Then the sound would recede into the distance, and we
-would become despondent again.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;"WE WERE FLOATING OVER DYNAMITE"</p>
-
-<p>It was extremely irritating, whilst anxiously following
-these sounds with straining ears, to hear the swish, swish
-of the water across the floats, the ripple as it rejoined
-the ocean again, and the creak, creak of the great wings
-as we rose and fell with a squelch on the gentle undulations
-of a swell.</p>
-
-<p>These sounds eventually developed into a perfect nightmare.
-Every swish and creak seemed to pierce our
-brains.</p>
-
-<p>Eventually we climbed up into the seats again for a
-while and stared our eyes out scanning the horizon with
-our powerful glasses. Every piece of flotsam seen we
-dubbed a boat, till it drifted near enough to make out
-detail.</p>
-
-<p>The wind got up a little and died down again, but it
-shifted the haze somewhat.</p>
-
-<p>In the afternoon we saw a sight which gladdened our
-hearts.</p>
-
-<p>High up to the nor'-west, and dropping towards us,
-was a bird-like machine. Nearer and nearer it came, till
-we could hear the engines clearly. Soon we identified her
-marks, which set our fears at rest. It was a British
-'plane.</p>
-
-<p>We sprang up, gesticulated wildly, and fired a few
-pistol-shots just to relieve our excitement.</p>
-
-<p>She was a rescue seaplane from our own base, it appeared,
-and presently she dropped on the water beside
-us and "taxied" as close as she might.</p>
-
-<p>Her pilot steered within twenty yards or so of us,
-and the observer heaved overboard in our direction a
-huge vacuum flask.</p>
-
-<p>Then, without stopping their engine, and waving cheerily,
-they droned along the surface and tilted into the air<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>
-again. We watched her until the machine became a mere
-speck and finally faded into the blue.</p>
-
-<p>Then, and not till then, we remembered the flask. We
-were fated never to taste its contents, however, for it
-floated past out of reach, in the midst of a great school
-of giant jellyfish.</p>
-
-<p>I have never been stung by one of these loathsome-looking
-creatures, and I had no desire to be on this occasion.
-Neither had the pilot, so the bottle floated out of
-sight without giving us anything but moral support.</p>
-
-<p>After this interlude our long impatient wait recommenced.
-The episode had instilled hope into us, but the
-hours seemed to drag more heavily than ever. There
-was nothing but sea on every hand&mdash;a great circular expanse
-of glaring, shimmering water.</p>
-
-<p>Presently schools of porpoises began to put in an appearance,
-sporting about in their own unmistakable style.
-There must have been hundreds of them. One group
-frolicked close around us, and several times a glossy black
-tail caught one or other of the floats a resounding smack.</p>
-
-<p>The fabric of these floats is exceedingly frail, and we
-were rather concerned about them. It seemed a pity to
-shoot the playful creatures, particularly as their antics
-created a diversion, but we trembled for the safety of the
-floats every time they were struck.</p>
-
-<p>As the tide went down, several dark, spheroidal objects
-commenced bobbing up by twos to the surface&mdash;on our
-starboard beam, as we were floating at that time.</p>
-
-<p>Through our glasses we could spot scores more of them
-in the distance. No need to tell one another what they
-were. We <i>knew</i>&mdash;deadly contact mines!</p>
-
-<p>The nearest pair were only a matter of half a cable's
-length away, and presently our worst ordeal commenced.</p>
-
-<p>We were drifting towards them with the ebbing tide,
-and were now on the fringe of the great mine-field, perhaps<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span>
-the most extensive ever laid. Once in among those
-floating engines of death we should have a lively time.</p>
-
-<p>It was with no very pleasant thoughts that we considered
-this new danger. I might have turned the machine
-gun on the mines, but there was the risk of exploding
-instead of sinking them, and if one went off it was fairly
-safe to assume that its mate, a couple of fathoms away,
-would detonate in sympathy. I presume that this is the
-underlying idea of distributing mines in this fashion.</p>
-
-<p>During the next four hours these horrid death-traps
-gave us a terribly anxious time. We had some very
-narrow shaves, for at low-water hundreds were in sight,
-and as the seaplane drifted along we were powerless to
-avoid them.</p>
-
-<p>The pilot got on one float and I got on the other, and
-once or twice we actually had to ward the mines off
-with our bare hands in order to keep them from knocking
-against the machine. Had one of them done so this story
-would never have been written. Fending off the mines
-was a ticklish operation, as you may suppose. Great care
-had to be observed in exerting our strength, and we had
-to place our hands on parts of the casing of the mine
-that were devoid of horns, or between two horns, if it was
-not floating high enough. While engaged in this delightful
-occupation I went overboard twice, but managed to
-scramble back safely without getting into trouble with
-the mines.</p>
-
-<p>Once a mine went off. It was too far away, however,
-for us to see what caused the explosion. It is not
-improbable that a luckless porpoise might have bent a
-horn in one of its leaps.</p>
-
-<p>At length, to our heartfelt relief, the tide turned, and
-the mines began to disappear under the water again.</p>
-
-<p>By that time we were drifting nearly the opposite way
-again, carried along by the flood-tide.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p>IV&mdash;"AN AEROPLANE COMES TO RESCUE"</p>
-
-<p>Six o'clock came, by our chronometer&mdash;seven p.m.
-summer time&mdash;and we were still intact, having for about
-ten hours been dependent on our frail seaplane floats for
-buoyancy. Had the sea risen at all, even to a decent
-cat's paw, we should have been below the surface long
-ere this.</p>
-
-<p>It was shortly after six o'clock, when&mdash;burnt almost
-black by the sun, with parched throats and swollen
-tongues&mdash;we heard the sound of a propeller chugging
-away at no great distance. The haze had thickened again
-as the sun moved west, and at first we could see nothing.
-In fact, we both thought we were dreaming.</p>
-
-<p>But there was no mistake. The chugging and throbbing
-grew louder and louder, and I fired three single
-pistol-shots into the air at intervals. Thereupon the
-sound intensified, and out of the haze ploughed a trim
-little armed motor-launch&mdash;officially known as an "M.L."</p>
-
-<p>She crept alongside very gingerly, lowered her dinghy,
-and took us off. Then she made fast a line to the seaplane,
-and took her in tow at a good seven or eight knots.</p>
-
-<p>We were heartily welcomed by the bluff sailormen
-aboard.</p>
-
-<p>Curiously enough, I did not feel thirst so badly as
-hunger. I am not of a thirsty nature at any time, and
-perhaps that accounted for it.</p>
-
-<p>The first mouthful of food was torture; it seemed to
-rasp the skin off my throat. After that I ate ravenously.
-It was the first touch of real hunger I had known, and
-after the experience, I vowed that if it lay in my power
-I would never again see a poor beggar go hungry.</p>
-
-<p>When our bodily wants had been attended to we settled
-down to a comfortable smoke in the ward-room.
-The skipper, a Lieutenant R.N.R., told us he had just<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span>
-made up his mind he was not going to venture another
-fathom farther when he heard our shots. Owing to the
-proximity of the mine-field he had been very anxious.</p>
-
-<p>After our smoke we turned in for a sleep which only
-terminated when the "M.L." reached the shores of Old
-England and her Diesel oil-engines ceased throbbing!
-This was long after midnight.</p>
-
-<p>They say our little experience has left its mark on us,
-but personally I feel as fit as ever.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>HOW I HELPED TO TAKE THE
-TURKISH TRENCHES AT
-GALLIPOLI</h2>
-
-<div class="center"><i>An American Boy's War Adventures</i></div>
-
-<div class="center"><br /><i>Told by Wilfred Raymond Doyle, on His Majesty's<br />
-Ship "The Queen Elizabeth"</i></div>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>This is the first-hand narrative of an American boy's extraordinary
-yet characteristic exploits, told from his own viewpoint
-and in his own language. Young Doyle's noticeable aptitude at
-telling his story may be accounted for by the fact that he is a
-born journalist. His parents, who reside in Yonkers, are people
-of education and refinement. The father is a blind poet of
-some local repute, and at one time published a little newspaper
-in the Harlem district of New York City. The special causes
-which led to the enterprising lad's departure from home, and
-how he came to enlist in the British Navy, are best detailed by
-himself in the <i>New York World</i>.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;STORY OF AN AMERICAN RUN-AWAY</p>
-
-<p>At the age of nineteen I was employed in the shipping
-department of a large publishing house at a salary of six
-dollars a week, with small prospect of advancement. My
-family were in need of all the help I could give. I grew
-restless, and one day February (1916) suddenly decided
-to make a change. Instead of taking a car for home I
-boarded a steamer for Boston, expecting to do better in
-that city, and then to surprise my parents with my success.
-I could get nothing better than a place as a "bus
-boy" in a lunch room. After working there for three
-days I saw a chance of getting a better position, but unfortunately<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span>
-was too late. I was delayed two hours and
-that cost me my first job.</p>
-
-<p>I could find nothing else to do, and the next day I
-signed on an ocean steamer, <i>Etonin</i>, bound for Liverpool
-with a cargo of horses. My job was working the donkey
-engine for getting the feed up out of the hold; it was an
-easy job&mdash;two hours a day. The rest of the time we
-played cards, and when we reached Liverpool I had one
-penny in my pocket. The ship was not to return to
-Boston before fourteen days, and I had either to secure
-some work or starve. There was many a job I might
-have gotten but for the fact that I was an American. At
-least that was the excuse given for refusing me employment.</p>
-
-<p>I had no choice but to go to the Naval Recruiting
-Office. I said I was born in Dublin and was at once accepted.
-I received a half crown, which was one shilling
-from the King, another from the Queen, and six pence
-from the Prince of Wales. I signed for the period of
-hostilities only, and that night had a good supper at the
-Government's expense.</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;"HOW I REACHED THE DARDANELLES"</p>
-
-<p>The next day I was sent to the training depot at Portsmouth,
-where I received my uniform and kit. I was two
-weeks training with the rifle and bayonet and one week
-at target practice. On April 16, after physical examination,
-I was declared fit for service on His Majesty's ships.
-That afternoon I was drafted to the torpedo boat destroyer
-<i>Lynx</i>, which reached the Dardanelles in safety at
-noon of April 19. There I was assigned for service on
-the <i>Queen Elizabeth</i>, which I boarded two days later
-when she came out from the firing line for ammunition.</p>
-
-<p>In the distance the <i>Queen Elizabeth</i> appeared like a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span>
-huge island, with four trees in the centre, but on a closer
-view was seen to be an immense floating fortress with
-huge guns, ready for action.</p>
-
-<p>The complement of the <i>Queen Elizabeth</i> is twelve hundred
-men, including all ratings. I was assigned to No. 4
-boiler room, which to my surprise, was not a grimy place
-but scrupulously clean, and everything in it polished as
-bright as a mirror. The ship uses oil fuel exclusively.
-My duties were: To keep the oil sprayers and steel combs
-clean, to take the density of the water every four hours,
-to regulate the supply of water and the fan engine for
-supplying the air pressure to the fires, and lastly to test
-the different safety valves. All orders are given by means
-of two telegraphs, an engine room telegraph and an oil
-supply telegraph.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Queen Elizabeth</i> went into action from midnight
-April 21 to midnight April 24. I was on duty without
-relief. During that time I had four times a day biscuits
-and water, with a half pint of rum. At noon I was
-allowed two hours' rest, but could not sleep on account
-of the noise. Our ship was hit every few minutes.</p>
-
-<p>During action the fire pumps are pounding tons of
-water over the deck to prevent fire in case of a shell
-exploding on the wooden deck. It was our duty to keep
-the pipes and connections clear, for the water sucked up
-from the sea often contains foreign substances. One
-occasion we were subjected to a heavy rapid-fire gun
-bombardment. The structure shielding us was punctured
-like a piece of Swiss cheese and the deck about us was
-splintered before the guns on our ship found the range
-and destroyed the enemy's battery of guns that were
-turned upon us. It was a miracle that the seven of us
-escaped.</p>
-
-<p>Once I was sent to the store room for tools. I had to
-pass the six-inch guns and neglected to get a piece of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span>
-India rubber to place between my teeth; the result was a
-dislocated jaw from the shock of the firing. I hastened
-to the doctor and pointed to my jaw. He put his left
-hand on my head, and with his right gave me a couple of
-"Jim Jeffries" punches, and, while I saw stars, reset my
-jaw.</p>
-
-<p>On April 26 the <i>Queen Elizabeth</i> was ordered out from
-the firing line to bring up troops to the Gallipoli Peninsula.
-The Royal Scots were taken aboard from a transport
-in the Aegean Sea. We returned at once and landed
-the Royal Scots safely under heavy fire.</p>
-
-<p>We withdrew at once about ten miles from the enemy's
-range, and, borrowing a telescope, I watched the Royal
-Scots, 1,100 strong, make their heroic charge, which
-began at 2 P. M.</p>
-
-<p>They advanced on the double and took the three rows
-of Turkish trenches at the point of the bayonet without
-firing a shot. Then, without waiting for reinforcements,
-they advanced two and a half miles into the enemy's
-country. Their lines were gradually getting thinner, and
-realizing that they were in a tight place, they began to
-retreat. That is all that I saw. Corporal Joseph Nicolson
-was the only survivor of that ill-fated regiment.</p>
-
-<p>On May 8 the news of the sinking of the <i>Lusitania</i>
-reached us by wireless, and the bombardment by the
-<i>Queen Elizabeth</i> became doubly terrific. I think more
-damage was done to the enemy that day than ordinarily
-in a week.</p>
-
-<p>The next day there was a call for 1,000 men, 200 from
-each of the five largest ships, to support the soldiers on
-land on May 9. I was one of the number from the <i>Queen
-Elizabeth</i>, told off to go as landing parties at 6 A. M.
-Every man received a rifle, bayonet, two hundred rounds
-of ammunition, and two days' supply of food.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;"TAKE THOSE TRENCHES OR DON'T
-COME BACK!"</p>
-
-<p>On leaving the ship the commander's order was: "My
-boys, take those trenches or don't come back." Six hours
-later we landed on the Gallipoli Peninsula, and reached
-the trenches safely though under heavy firing of the
-enemy. I was for twelve hours in the third line of
-trenches, knee deep in mud and water. Our time there
-was spent in sharpening our bayonets like razors.</p>
-
-<p>At midnight we advanced to the first line trenches. All
-around us were the dead and wounded of both sides.
-Four unsuccessful attempts were made by the Turks to
-take our trenches, but each time they were beaten back,
-with a heavy loss. Our side also suffered heavily. Before
-we landed the British troops had lost 3,000 men in
-six attempts to take the Turkish trenches. The enemy's
-fire had been so severe that the transports could not land
-reinforcements without being sunk.</p>
-
-<p>We navy men were told that the Turkish trenches must
-be taken at all costs. They were only fifty yards in
-front of ours. At 10.15 A. M. our rifles were loaded
-with fifteen rounds, the magazine safety catch was put on
-and the respirators were adjusted over our faces. Not
-a shot was to be fired in our charge.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile our ships were firing on the enemy's
-trenches. At 10.25 the order rang out, "Cold steel!"
-We fixed our bayonets. At 10.30 the bugles sounded the
-charge. Fifty men fell while getting out; but in ten minutes
-we took the Turkish trenches. Our losses were 250
-killed and 200 wounded.</p>
-
-<p>It is almost impossible to describe a bayonet charge.
-On the instant of the order you spring out, jump or
-crawl from the trenches, with bayonet fixed, and charge
-on the double. Sometimes you have to creep to make<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span>
-an attack. You become like a raving maniac; your senses
-seem to leave you. All around comrades are dropping,
-but you do not think of them. Reaching the enemy's
-trench, a terrific hand-to-hand struggle takes place.
-Strategy is the main point. Our bayonets were eighteen
-inches in length, while those of the Turks were all lengths
-from 12 to 15 inches. We wore the gas respirators in
-our charge, as our commander thought that our appearance
-would frighten the enemy. It did. We looked like
-black devils.</p>
-
-<p>At 10.45 the Turkish trench was taken. After the victory
-our captain made a brief address. Facing the dead
-and wounded with the tears streaming from his eyes, he
-said:</p>
-
-<p>"I am proud of my boys who fought so splendidly and
-did what seven thousand soldiers failed to do in six
-attempts, losing three thousand. You, a mere handful,
-one thousand strong, succeeded in the first attempt. The
-army has much to thank the navy for."</p>
-
-<p>The last was uttered loud enough to be heard by the
-soldiers in the neighboring trenches. They were so sore
-about it that they would not speak to us navy men for
-several days.</p>
-
-
-<p>IV&mdash;THE TURKISH GIRL BEFORE THE FIRING
-SQUAD</p>
-
-<p>One day we were allowed a few hours' leave to go
-where we pleased. In our wanderings we came to a farm
-where women were working in the fields. In one field
-was a huge haystack. Approaching it, one of my comrades
-said that he would show how he killed six Turks.
-He fixed his bayonet to his rifle and made a charge at
-the haystack. There was blood on his bayonet when he
-withdrew it. We ripped open the haystack and in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span>
-hollow found a young Turkish girl trying to bandage her
-arm where my chum's bayonet had wounded her. There
-were a cot, table and chair in the stack, and the girl had
-a rifle with a telescopic sight, and a box of cartridges.
-We were about to let her go, when she dropped a package
-which broke, and thirty-one identification disks, such as
-are worn by every soldier and sailor in the British Army
-and Navy, fell on the ground!</p>
-
-<p>She was a sniper. We had to turn her over to our
-superior officer. She was court martialed and ordered to
-be shot in a half hour. We could not bear to see a woman
-face the firing squad, so we left the place and went back
-to our trench. We stayed there until the troops were
-landed and relieved us.</p>
-
-<p>While in the trenches we went through many an
-ordeal, the chief of which was the vermin that, combined
-with the heat and filthy water, made life almost unbearable.
-When we returned to our ship all our clothing was
-taken from us and burned. We were then subjected to a
-bath of hot water containing some powerful disinfectant
-which took away a part of our skin. New uniforms were
-given us and we put them on our raw hides with a sense
-of unspeakable delight.</p>
-
-<p>While on land we saw something of the Turkish sniper.
-He is a sharpshooter, painted green from head to foot,
-as he is usually hidden among the leaves of the trees.
-His cartridges are in a box fastened to a branch above
-his head, and on his rifle is the famous telescopic sight,
-an Austrian invention by means of which a child could
-hardly miss the mark. When their hiding place was discovered
-and they were shot, we let them hang from the
-branches as a warning to others. If the sniper sees that
-he cannot escape, he destroys his telescopic sight. No
-more than six of these wonderful inventions had been
-found up to that date. I picked up one in the Turkish<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span>
-trench and had it in my hand for a few minutes, but was
-obliged to turn it over to my superior officer of the division
-to be sent to the Government arsenal for examination.</p>
-
-<p>... Shortly after our arrival in the Dardanelles
-one of the mine sweepers was sunk and the body of a
-boy seaman floated by our ship. One of the survivors
-of the sunken <i>Irresistible</i> jumped overboard and found
-the boy was not dead, though unconscious. We threw a
-rope and hauled them in. A marine stepped forward
-and took the boy from the arms of his rescuer. As he
-was carrying him to shelter a small shell from the enemy's
-gun blew off the marine's head. A sailor snatched
-the boy away from him. For half a minute the headless
-man, having his lungs still full of air, threw up his arms,
-and dashed madly about the deck. This was the only
-casualty on our ship during my service.</p>
-
-
-<p>V&mdash;CAPTURED ON BELGIAN COAST</p>
-
-<p>On May 23 we left the Dardanelles to have our guns
-refitted. May 27 we were fifteen miles off the Belgian
-coast and there we heard heavy bombardment. The following
-day H.M.S. <i>Drake</i> asked for a loan of fifty men
-from our ship. I was one of the fifty.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Drake</i> was trying to locate a heavy German battery,
-and a lucky shot killed the gun crew but did not
-damage the guns. We fifty from the <i>Queen Elizabeth</i>
-were sent ashore to destroy the guns by blowing them up.
-We reached them under the heavy fire of the enemy,
-took off the breeches and destroyed the mechanism. As
-we were setting the dynamite to blow up these guns, a
-party of about three hundred Germans surrounded us.
-Our rifles were stacked up about thirty feet away and
-in running to reach them several of us were wounded. I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span>
-received slight flesh wounds in the arm and leg. After
-being searched and relieved of all weapons, we were
-marched to a barbed wire stockade, about a mile and a
-half inland, and were told that we were to be sent to
-Germany the next day. There was another stockade
-with British, French and Belgian prisoners near by, and
-over the barbed wire they threw us a football to amuse
-ourselves. We played football until dusk.</p>
-
-<p>A German soldier was sent with a spade to dig a hole
-for another post in support of the barbed wire gate. We
-played football all around the field and managed to get
-the German soldier in our midst. We bound and gagged
-him, seized his weapons and took his spade. It was getting
-dark and no one suspected but that we were still
-playing football.</p>
-
-<p>We took turns in digging under the barbed wire fence
-a tunnel for escape. While we were at work we had a
-genuine surprise. A German sentry on his rounds, trod
-on a weak spot over our tunnel and fell in, face downward.
-He could make no outcry as his mouth was filled
-with grass and dirt. We immediately bound and gagged
-him, took his weapons and left him there.</p>
-
-<p>We all escaped through this tunnel and beat it for the
-coast as fast as our legs could carry us. The searchlights
-of our ship were in action and were playing all over the
-coast looking for us. One of our number was a signal
-man. He ripped off his jumper and, tearing it in two
-pieces, waved them over his head. The signal was seen&mdash;we
-knew it because the guns of the ship were brought
-to bear over us, to protect us from an attack in the rear,
-and recapture. We received a flash light signal to lie
-down, and soon we heard the sound of two engines. It
-was the ship's picket boats, mounted with machine guns
-on stern and bow. We were conveyed in short order to
-the <i>Drake</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>All ships have a master of arms and a ship's corporal;
-they are the ship's police, and they are always looking
-for trouble. As soon as we were on the deck we were
-placed under arrest and taken before the captain. The
-charges against us were: over-staying shore leave fourteen
-hours, disobeying orders and general untidiness.
-We did, in fact, look like a bunch of Hooligans. Several
-of us had no caps and the faces of all of us were covered
-with blood and muck. Our new uniforms were so torn
-that a rag man would not have given us two cents for
-the lot.</p>
-
-<p>The following are some of the captain's questions, and
-our answers:</p>
-
-<p>"Where were you men?"</p>
-
-<p>"Ashore, sir."</p>
-
-<p>"Why were you not back in time?"</p>
-
-<p>"The Germans would not let us come back, sir."</p>
-
-<p>"Where are your rifles? And did you destroy the
-enemy's guns? What happened to your uniforms?"</p>
-
-<p>"We destroyed the guns, sir, but were captured. We
-tried to escape, but were caught between liquid fire and
-poisonous gas. We lost part of our uniforms trying to
-climb over the barbed wire fence, sir."</p>
-
-<p>"You pack of fools!"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, sir."</p>
-
-<p>Then the captain, smiling, congratulated us and ordered
-the steward to supply us with new uniforms and send us
-back to our ship as soon as possible. We went back next
-day, June 2.</p>
-
-
-<p>VI&mdash;BACK TO TURKEY&mdash;THEN TO AMERICA</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Queen Elizabeth</i> was ordered back to the Dardanelles
-and remained there until July 26. Through the
-telescope we saw many demolished Turkish forts and big<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span>
-black holes where clusters of houses and groves had been.</p>
-
-<p>On July 26 we sailed for Gibraltar. We left there on
-August 1 and sailed for the North Sea and went in harbor
-to give the ship a thorough overhauling. From
-August 10 to Sept. 5 we were cruising around the North
-Sea and North Atlantic Ocean in search of the German
-fleet. This sort of life, after the excitement of battle
-grew wearisome to every one on board. Thoughts of
-home and family came to me. There had been no chance
-to write or to have our letters mailed. The only mail
-boat leaving the <i>Queen Elizabeth</i> was sunk. I told the
-officer in charge that I was an American.</p>
-
-<p>After hearing my story he sent a message to the Admiralty
-and they ordered my discharge. I was sent to
-Portsmouth Naval Branch to receive my final papers.
-On obtaining these I thought I was free; but I was arrested
-for having failed to register as an alien when I
-first landed in Liverpool.</p>
-
-<p>I was brought before a magistrate and remanded for
-a week. Acting on advice I wrote to the American Consul
-at London. The Consul replied that he had been
-looking for me since June, and he requested the magistrate
-to release me so that I could be sent back to the
-United States. The letter to the magistrate took fifteen
-minutes to read in court. It stated that the whole army
-had been looking for me, at the instigation of my parents,
-through the Secretary of State at Washington.</p>
-
-<p>The magistrate discharged me at once, regretting my
-imprisonment for a week and stating that it was no disgrace.
-I left Portsmouth the next day, Sept. 25, for
-Liverpool but had to stop over in London for several
-hours, awaiting the fast mail train. It was shortly after
-the last Zeppelin raid and, being in uniform, I was allowed
-to pass the lines, to look at the effects of the bombs.
-Many houses were wrecked, streets torn up and soldiers<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span>
-were searching the ruins for the missing. Now and then
-they recovered a body, usually that of a woman or a child.
-The official death list reported 150 killed. I saw a cartoon
-reprinted from a German paper, picturing the people of
-London kneeling in prayer in their cellars during and
-after a Zeppelin raid. But the fact is that the London
-police had their hands full keeping the people from rushing
-out of their houses to get a glimpse of the raider.</p>
-
-<p>I reached Liverpool that night and the day following I
-signed for my passage on the steamship <i>Minian</i>, sailing
-for Boston Oct. 9. While in Liverpool I was offered a
-position in a munition factory as a gun tester at a salary
-of four pounds per week, but I refused the offer because
-I had secured my discharge from the British Navy for
-the purpose of going home.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>"BIG-BANG"&mdash;STORY OF AN AMERICAN
-ADVENTURER</h2>
-
-<div class="center"><i>A Tale of the Great Trench Mortars</i></div>
-
-<div class="center"><br /><i>Told by C. P. Thompson</i></div>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"Big-Bang" was Tommy's name for one of our pioneer trench
-mortars, invented and operated by a man named X&mdash;&mdash;. The
-author met X&mdash;&mdash; in a café not far from the front, and heard
-from him the details of the story that is here set down. "So
-far as I am aware," he writes, "the tale is perfectly true. I
-had it confirmed by the men of the R. E. company to which
-X&mdash;&mdash; was attached." Recorded in the <i>Wide World</i>.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;THE SOLDIERS IN THE CAFE SALOME</p>
-
-<p>It was at N&oelig;ux-les-Mines, in the Café Salome, at the
-bottom of the old slag-heap by the station. After tea,
-there being no further parade until the working party
-assembled at ten o'clock that night, I had repaired thither
-to drink wine and smoke until closing time. As always,
-the <i><span xml:lang="fr">café</span></i> was crowded with the men of half-a-dozen London
-regiments, with Scotsmen in stained and muddy kilts,
-and French artillerymen from the South. Later in the
-evening they would begin to sing in unison&mdash;great roaring
-choruses swung and tossed from <i><span xml:lang="fr">café</span></i> to <i><span xml:lang="fr">café</span></i> and
-taken up by the crowded-out groups in the street.</p>
-
-<p>I had managed to secure a chair at a little table in the
-corner, and for companion saw before me a small, grizzled
-man, about fifty, whose blue eyes, despite the dark rings
-underneath them, were yet singularly intelligent, keen,
-and clear. We exchanged a few remarks whilst taking
-each other's measure, and then, apropos of my description<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span>
-of a terrible bombardment by the German <i><span xml:lang="de">minenwerfers</span></i>
-which we had recently endured, he began to talk,
-and gave me a rambling impression of his strange and
-original career, and especially of his adventures in connection
-with his masterpiece, "Big-Bang"&mdash;a device now
-extinct.</p>
-
-<p>I will call him X&mdash;&mdash;. Before his connection with the
-British Army I gathered he had wandered widely in an
-up-and-down, rolling-stone sort of fashion. The Klondike
-had known his store during the gold rush. He was
-one of those men who did undefined but profitable things
-in the Western States before the days of their organized
-exploitation; made thousands of dollars and spent every
-cent of them, roving here and there, never staying anywhere
-for long, as is the way with these pioneers of the
-human race.</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;THE AMERICAN ADVENTURER TELLS
-HIS TALE</p>
-
-<p>When the war broke out he was in the West, the manager
-of an opera company touring the coast towns, and
-immediately he determined to take a hand. At first he
-experienced considerable perplexity as to how he was to
-get "mixed up" in the war. Apart from his nationality,
-his small stature, a finger missing from his right hand,
-and a pronounced limp&mdash;both legacies from the Spanish-American
-war in the Philippines&mdash;seemed destined to
-preclude him from serving in the army of any country
-in any capacity. He was even refused by a party of
-Americans forming a Red Cross contingent for duty with
-any of the belligerents willing to accept their service.</p>
-
-<p>However, he remembered an old friend, a major of
-Engineers in charge of a company at a China station, and
-he immediately hurried from San Francisco across the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span>
-Pacific to Hong-Kong, where he found the &mdash;th Siege
-Company, R.E., under orders to move, and cursing destiny,
-in the shape of the British War Office, which refused
-to allow them to be in at the fall of Tsing-tau.
-Forthwith he attached himself to them. His sole qualification
-consisted of an erratic but handy knowledge of
-mechanics, picked up here and there&mdash;as chauffeur to a
-Vancouver millionaire, as a greaser, ganger, and a stoker,
-but principally during eighteen months of desultory employment
-in the machine-shops of Pittsburg. After much
-argument concerning the King's Regulations with regard
-to recruits and the position of a man in the ranks, the
-major had taken him on the strength as mechanic for the
-three motor-cycles owned by his command. In September,
-1914, he left the Western theatre of war&mdash;quietly
-exultant, as I imagine.</p>
-
-<p>He was curiously frank as to his attitude towards the
-war.</p>
-
-<p>"I have always liked big things, and I had to get into
-this somehow," he said, finishing a large <i><span xml:lang="fr">cassis</span></i>. "This
-war is the biggest thing that ever happened to this old
-world, and if I were left out of it I should go mad&mdash;I
-should, or commit suicide. That's how I feel about it.
-Looking on is no good to me; I have to be right in it. But
-I've no illusions. Neither your cause nor the Germans' nor
-the newspaper gas of both parties interest me. If the
-Allies hadn't adopted me I should have squeezed somehow
-into one of the armies of the Central Powers. Of course,
-the party I joined, that party I stick to; you can count
-on me to the last drop of my blood. But you take me&mdash;I've
-no patriotism, as you understand these things."</p>
-
-<p>They landed in France early in October, and within
-forty-eight hours were with a corps at a point where the
-British forces lay resting after the Marne and the Aisne.
-With those battles the operations passed the mobile phase<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span>
-and began to settle down to the stagnation of the trenches.</p>
-
-<p>The novel conditions of warfare in the earth demanded
-new methods and ingenious adaptations, and soon the
-Engineers found themselves overwhelmed with orders
-from corps headquarters and harassed by perplexed divisions
-and brigades. Bombs and explosive missiles of all
-sorts were in great demand, but materials other than
-Tickler's jam-pots were not to be procured. And pumps
-were wanted; emplacements, redoubts, trenches, field
-works of all descriptions required overseers from the
-Engineers to superintend the working-parties, composed
-of uninitiated infantry.</p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;CATAPULT THAT HURLS BOMBS</p>
-
-<p>One day while he was busy upon a patent catapult the
-major came to X&mdash;&mdash; and showed him a message from the
-corps, who, introduced suddenly and unexpectedly to that
-formidable engine of destruction, the <i><span xml:lang="de">minenwerfer</span></i>, desired
-urgently some improvised machine or gun wherewith
-to retaliate until supplies of the new weapon arrived
-from home arsenals. Nor were the elaborate specifications
-peculiar to all staff instructions lacking. The proposed
-machine must be capable of hurling a heavy bomb
-a distance of not less than two hundred yards; but at the
-same time, if a gun, it must not require a powerful propelling
-charge. It must be portable and sufficiently compact
-to allow of its introduction into a front-line trench;
-its working must not demand intricate mechanical knowledge,
-nor must more than four men be needed for its
-crew, and so on and so forth. X&mdash;&mdash;, if I recollect his
-narrative aright, remarked, "Jehoshaphat!" and went
-away to a nearby <i><span xml:lang="fr">café</span></i> to ponder out this problem in
-mechanics. By the next morning he had planned and
-partly constructed the first of his famous simplified
-mortars.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It was, so far as I remember the constructional details,
-merely a large tube, about three feet long and with a diameter
-of six inches, made of very thick sheet-iron and
-closed at one end by a block of wrought iron, pinned and
-welded on. The barrel mounted on a cradle, the bed
-weighed under half a hundredweight, and was secured to
-the ground by long iron pins like glorified tent-pegs. The
-ammunition consisted of huge canisters packed with gun-cotton
-and exploded by a time fuse or a simple percussion
-detonator. And if one did not look what he was
-doing, the bomb might easily be slipped into the mortar
-detonator first&mdash;to the dire confusion of the gun-crew.
-Gunpowder, rammed and wadded and ignited through a
-touch-hole, discharged the canister upon its travel. This
-creation was dispatched with precise instructions as to its
-use and probable eccentricities, and all hoped it would
-"make good."</p>
-
-<p>Two days later came the report that at the first discharge
-the mortar had burst. It was requested that a
-stronger one be made, and, further, that the engineer-constructor
-should accompany his engine into the trenches,
-there to superintend its working. Thus one day X&mdash;&mdash;
-descended upon the lines with a new and larger mortar of
-more solid construction, one dubious artilleryman as assistant
-gunner, canister, a bag of powder, and a ramrod.</p>
-
-<p>I can imagine the breathless interest with which the
-garrison in the trenches observed the loading of the mortar,
-the swift retirement from its vicinity, and the stunned
-confusion following the first shot. It went off with a stupendous
-roar, belching forth smoke and flame. The canister,
-turning over and over in the air, was seen to describe
-a mighty arc and fall upon a ruined house behind
-the German lines and there explode mightily, demolishing
-the place as completely and spectacularly as if a mine
-had been sprung beneath it. A great cheer burst forth.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span>
-The delighted soldiers promptly poured in "fifteen rounds
-rapid," and a machine-gun rattled through a belt in honour
-of the occasion and to follow up the bomb. The new
-weapon was voted a huge success.</p>
-
-<p>It was fired five times in all, two bombs failing to explode,
-one excavating a ton or so of earth from the centre
-of No Man's Land, whilst the fifth fell plump into the
-German fire-trench, levelling it for half-a-dozen yards
-in either direction and sending high into the air a vast
-shower of earth, rent sandbags, timber, and human fragments.</p>
-
-<p>Then, just as a sixth projectile was being loaded, the
-German artillery got to work. A storm of "whizz-bang"
-shells hurtled over, exploding everywhere&mdash;in the air, on
-the ground, and sometimes against the high parapet, which
-was sent flying. Two batteries of heavy howitzers concentrated
-a slow, deliberate fire, dropping 5.2 and 9-inch
-shells in the zone of the mortar, which was buried under
-tons of earth. At length the bombardment ceased, and
-rescue parties came to dig out those men whose dug-outs
-had fallen in upon them or who had been buried in the
-ruins of the trench. X&mdash;&mdash; had remained by his mortar
-and was rescued unconscious.</p>
-
-<p>Yet, with the tenaciousness of his breed, he came back
-again&mdash;having spent a week at the field ambulance's barn
-hospital and a few days at his company's quarters&mdash;armed
-with a third and more powerful mortar. This time
-he had taken the precaution to provide himself with
-smokeless powder. The German artillery observers, however,
-were on the look-out for him, and although there
-was no longer a mountain of smoke to serve as a target,
-the position of the mortar was disclosed by the enormous
-roar of its discharge, which could be heard four miles
-away. Not five minutes elapsed before half-a-dozen batteries,
-informed by telephone, opened a tremendous fire<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span>
-and speedily rendered the vicinity untenable. Casualties
-were high, and X&mdash;&mdash; and his weapon lost favour with
-the neighbouring infantry.</p>
-
-
-<p>IV&mdash;"BIG-BANG" HIS ONLY FRIEND</p>
-
-<p>Then this intrepid man mounted "Big-Bang" upon a
-base to which were affixed four small wheels with broad
-treads. Having fired the mortar, he would trundle it
-away down the trench as fast as he could go, invariably
-getting clear of the fatal area before the shells began to
-fall. Then he would stop and fire another shot and again
-make off, dragging his mortar at the end of a rope. His
-ammunition he placed in recess here and there along the
-line. The enraged infantry took to heaving the canisters
-over the parapet until one so thrown exploded, blowing
-in the trench, upon which they left them severely alone.
-But whenever the maker of those canisters appeared with
-his mortar round the corner of the traverse they cursed
-him heartily.</p>
-
-<p>In this way X&mdash;&mdash; became the best-hated man from
-Richebourg to the sea. Refused admittance to dug-outs,
-he was obliged to sleep on firing-platforms, on the floors
-of side trenches, or in saps where night working-parties
-trod on him. No one spoke to him except to utter oaths.
-Men said upon seeing him:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Here comes the Kaiser's best friend!"</p>
-
-<p>Sarcastic remarks were also passed on his mortar; and,
-strangely enough, these hurt him more than personal
-abuse. He had come almost to love his creation. Hatred
-of it he could tolerate, but anything savouring of contempt;
-anything derogatory uttered against its power
-as a destroyer, touched him to the quick; and I fancy
-singularly biting language was heard in those winter
-trenches of 1914 and 1915.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>So he dragged on his solitary existence&mdash;desolate,
-hated, yet feared because of his power of avenging himself
-by firing his weapon from any spot he pleased, and
-thus dooming it to a tremendous "strafing" by the enemy.
-He wanted someone to own him, and tried to attach
-himself to the artillery, but they refused to have anything
-to do with him. The thing his peculiar nature found
-it hardest to endure was the knowledge, gradually forced
-upon him, that he was "out of it," a mere independent
-unit belonging actually to neither side, a man whose decease
-many of the British, equally with the Huns, would
-have hailed with much glee.</p>
-
-<p>This must have weighed upon him. Possibly he brooded.
-And all the time, with an invincible obstinacy that
-was almost heroic, he fired and fled and fled and fired, retreating
-sometimes up, sometimes down the trenches,
-dodging the shells all day and sometimes at night. And
-then he broke down.</p>
-
-<p>"It was one of those illnesses your Army doesn't recognize
-officially," he told me. "It began with a sort of
-tired, discouraged feeling, and I used to have queer
-dreams. The noise of 'Big-Bang' going off made me
-jump like a marionette. I'd sweat and grow dizzy and
-my knees trembled and my stomach rose. I fell down one
-day and they came and took me away to the field ambulance,
-and after a bit they sent me down to Boulogne.
-I don't quite know what happened there during the first
-weeks. But when I got better they gave me a pretty good
-time&mdash;made quite a fuss of me, in fact. The colonel
-wanted to send me to England, but I told him how great
-I am on seeing this war through, and he grunted and
-said he'd see what he could do. When I came out I found
-this staff job waiting for me. It's not what I'd like exactly,
-but I suppose I'm getting old now. Still, we're close
-to the guns and I have a pretty free hand here, and can<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span>
-make trips to the trenches to say 'How-do' to the boys
-and see how things are getting along. Oh, yes; it's not
-so bad. But I was sorry to leave old 'Big-Bang.' I made
-her and I worked her, and I guess she did her bit."</p>
-
-<p>For a space he meditated, puffing clouds of smoke from
-a ten-sou cigar. Then with a start he returned to life.</p>
-
-<p>"Will you have a <i><span xml:lang="fr">vin blanc</span></i>, old chap? Hi, papa, <i><span xml:lang="fr">deux
-vins blancs</span></i>!"</p>
-
-<p>As he pushed back his soft cap I saw that "Big-Bang"
-had set its mark upon him. The hair about his temples
-was white as snow.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>"WITH OUR ARMY IN FLANDERS"&mdash;FIGHTING
-WITH TOMMY ATKINS</h2>
-
-<div class="center"><i>Where Men Hold Rendezvous with Death</i></div>
-
-<div class="center"><br /><i>Told by G. Valentine Williams, with the British Army</i></div>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>Written in the field and under the eye of the censor, G. Valentine
-Williams presents in "With Our Army in Flanders"
-(Edward Arnold, London) a series of vivid war chapters differing
-in many respects from the current conventional accounts
-from the battle fronts. Mr. Williams is the <i>London Daily Mail</i>
-correspondent. He tells about the babel of tongues where men
-gather in khaki, strange meetings at the front of long separated
-friends and brothers, the hunger of the big guns.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;WHERE ALL DIALECTS MEET AT BATTLE</p>
-
-<p>One of the most fascinating things to me about our
-army in France are the variations of speech. I have
-sometimes closed my eyes when a battalion has been
-marching past me on the road and tried to guess, often
-with some measure of success, at the recruiting area of
-the regiment from the men's accents or from their tricks
-of speech.</p>
-
-<p>Take the Scottish regiments, for instance. I have little
-acquaintance with the dialects of Scotland, but my
-ear has told me that the speech of almost every Scottish
-regiment, save such regiments as the Gordons and the
-Black Watch, that attract men from all over the United
-Kingdom, differs.</p>
-
-<p>I spent a most fascinating half hour one morning with
-a handful of Glasgow newsboys serving in a famous Scottish<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span>
-regiment that wears the trews. Their speech was
-unmistakably the speech of the Glasgow streets, and their
-wits were as sharp as their bayonets. I told them they
-were newsboys and newsboys they were, or of the same
-class, vanboys and the like.</p>
-
-<p>I visited the Cameron Highlanders&mdash;what was left of
-their Territorial battalion&mdash;after the second battle of
-Ypres and heard, in the speech of Inverness-shire, their
-story of the battle. Many of them speak Gaelic. One
-of their officers confided to me that during the battle, requiring
-two men to go down to the rear, the wires being
-cut, to ascertain the whereabouts of the brigade headquarters,
-he selected two notorious deer poachers as likely
-to have their wits about them.</p>
-
-<p>It is a gratifying task, this identification of dialects. I
-have heard two sappers "fra' Wigan" engaged in a lively
-argument with two privates (from Cork) of the Leinster
-Regiment, in whose trench the two gentlemen "fra' Wigan"
-were operating. A London cockney, say, from one
-of the innumerable battalions of the Royal Fusiliers,
-would have understood less of that conversation if it
-had been carried on in German, but only a little less.</p>
-
-<p>During the Battle of Ypres two privates of the Monmouthshire
-Regiment, who were talking Welsh, were
-pounced upon by two prowling Southerners from one of
-the home counties and carried off to brigade headquarters
-as German spies. What with Welsh miners talking
-Welsh and Cameron Highlanders Gaelic, the broad speech
-of the Yorkshire Geordines, the homely burr of the Third
-Hussars and other regiments recruited in the West Country,
-the familiar twang of the cockneys, the rich brogue
-of the Irish regiments, the strong American intonation of
-the Canadians, a man out here begins to realize of what
-composite layers our race is formed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;OLD FRIENDS AT THE FRONT</p>
-
-<p>Everybody who is anything is at the front. Never
-was there such a place for meeting as at Flanders. The
-Strand is not in it. My own experience is that of everybody
-else. One finds at the front men one has lost sight
-of for years, old friends who have dropped away in the
-hurry of existence, chance acquaintances of a Riviera
-train de luxe, men one has met in business, men who
-have measured one for clothes.</p>
-
-<p>Often I have heard my name sung out from the center
-of a column of marching troops, and a figure has stepped
-out to the roadside who, after my mind has shredded it
-of the unfamiliar uniform, the deep brown sunburn, the
-set expression, has revealed itself as old Tubby Somebody
-whom one had known at school, or Brown with
-whom one had played golf on those little links behind
-the Casino at Monte Carlo, or the manager of Messrs.
-Blank in the city.</p>
-
-<p>I wanted to find a relation of mine, a sergeant in a
-famous London regiment, and wrote to his people to get
-the number of his battalion and his company. When the
-reply came I discovered that the man I wanted was billetted
-not a hundred yards from me in the village, in
-which the War Correspondents' Headquarters were situated,
-where he had come with the shattered remnant of
-his battalion to rest, after the terrible "gruelling" they
-sustained in the second battle of Ypres.</p>
-
-<p>At the front one constantly witnesses joyous reunions,
-brother meeting brother in the happy, hazardous encounter
-of two battalions on the road or in the trenches.
-The very first man I met on coming out to the front was
-a motor-car driver, whose father had particularly asked
-me to look out for his boy. I discovered that he was
-the man appointed to drive me!</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Humor is probably the largest component part of the
-spirit of the British soldier, a paradoxical, phlegmatic
-sense of humor that comes out strongest when the danger
-is the most threatening. A Jack Johnson bursts close
-beside a British soldier who is lighting his pipe with one
-of those odious French sulphur matches. The shell
-blows a foul whiff of chemicals right across the man's
-face. "Oh, dear! Oh, dear!" he exclaimed with a perfectly
-genuine sigh, "these 'ere French matches will be
-the death o' me!"</p>
-
-<p>A reply which is equally characteristic of the state of
-mind of the British soldier who goes forth to war is that
-given by the irate driver of a staff car to a sentry in the
-early days of the war. The sentry in the dead of night
-had levelled his rifle at the chauffeur because the car
-had not stopped instantly on challenge. The driver
-backed his car toward where the sentry was standing.
-"I'll 'ave a word with you, young feller," he said. "Allow
-me to inform you that this car can't be stopped in
-less than twenty yards. If you go shoving that rifle
-of yours in people's faces some one will get shot before
-this war's over!"</p>
-
-<p>There is a great strain of tenderness in the British
-soldier, a great readiness to serve. Hear him on a wet
-night in the trenches, begrimed, red-eyed with fatigue,
-chilled to the bone, just about to lie down for a rest,
-offer to make his officer, tired as he is, "a drop of 'ot
-tea!" Watch him with German prisoners! His attitude
-is paternal, patronizing, rather that of a friendly London
-policeman guiding homeward the errant footsteps of
-a drunkard.</p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;DEEP IN A SOLDIER'S HEART</p>
-
-<p>Under influence of nameless German atrocities of all
-descriptions, the attitude of the British soldier in the fighting<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span>
-line is becoming fierce and embittered. Nothing will
-induce him, however, to vent his spite on prisoners,
-though few Germans understand anything else but force
-as the expression of power. They look upon our men
-as miserable mercenaries whose friendliness is simply
-an attempt to curry favor with the noble German krieger;
-our men regard them as misguided individuals who don't
-know any better....</p>
-
-<p>The German phrase, "<i><span xml:lang="de">Stellungskrieg</span></i>," is a very accurate
-description of the great stalemate on the western
-front which we, more vaguely, term "trench warfare."
-It is, indeed, a constant manoeuvering for positions, a
-kind of great game of chess, in which the Germans, generally
-speaking, are seeking to gain the advantage for
-the purposes of their defensive, whilst the Allies' aim
-is to obtain the best positions for an offensive when the
-moment for this is ripe.</p>
-
-<p>The ground is under ceaseless survey. A move by
-the enemy calls for a counter-move on our part. A new
-trench dug by him may be found to enfilade our trenches
-from a certain angle, and while by the construction of
-new traverses or the heightening of parapet and parados
-the trench may be rendered immune from sniping, a
-fresh trench will be dug at a new angle or a machine gun
-brought up to make life sour for the occupants of the
-new German position, and force them in their turn to
-counter-measures.</p>
-
-<p>Any one who saw the trenches at Mons or even, much
-later, the trenches on the Aisne, would scarcely recognize
-them in the deep, elaborate earthworks of Flanders, with
-the construction of which our army is now so familiar.</p>
-
-<p>High explosive shells in unlimited quantities are necessary
-to keep the hammer pounding away at one given
-spot. To break a path for our infantry through the
-weakly held German trenches around Neuve Chapelle we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span>
-had many scores of guns pouring in a concentrated fire
-on a front of 1,400 yards for a period of thirty-five minutes.
-In the operations around Arras the French are said
-to have fired nearly 800,000 shells in one day.</p>
-
-<p>Even this colossal figure was surpassed by the expenditure
-of high-explosive shells by the German and Austrian
-armies in their successful thrust against Przemysl.
-Our bombardment of Neuve Chapelle was, in the main,
-effective, though barbed-wire entanglements in front of
-part of the German trenches were not cut, and heavy
-casualties were thus caused to the infantry when they
-advanced.</p>
-
-<p>For the most part, however, we found the German
-trenches obliterated, the little village a smoking heap of
-ruins, and those Germans who survived, dazed and frightened,
-amid piles of torn corpses. If this enormous concentration
-of guns was required to blast a path of 1,400
-yards with a thirty-five-minute bombardment, what a
-gigantic concentration of artillery, what a colossal expenditure
-of ammunition, will be required to drive a wedge
-several miles deep through positions which the Germans
-have spent three seasons in strengthening and consolidating!</p>
-
-
-<p>IV&mdash;IN THE BOWELS OF THE EARTH</p>
-
-<p>I went down one of our mines one night. I was
-spending the night in our trenches and the captain in
-command of this particular section asked me if I would
-care to see "our mine." Considerations of the censorship
-impel me to abridge what follows up to the moment
-when I found myself in a square, greasy gallery, with
-clay walls propped up by timber balks leading straight
-out in the direction of the German trenches. Guttering
-candles stuck on the balks at intervals faintly lit up as
-strange a scene as I have witnessed in this war.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Deep in the bowels of the earth a thick, square-set
-man in khaki trousers and trench boots, a ragged vest
-displaying a tremendous torso all glistening with sweat,
-was tipping clay out of a trolley and gently chaffing in
-a quite unprintable English of the region of Lancashire
-a hoarse but invisible person somewhere down the shaft.</p>
-
-<p>I crawled round the quizzer, slipping on the greasy
-planks awash with muddy water on the floor of the gallery,
-and found myself confronted by another of the
-troglodytes, a man who was so coated with clay that he
-appeared to be dyed khaki (like the horses of the Scots
-Greys) from top to toe. I asked him whence he came, so
-different was he, in speech and appearance, from the
-black-haired, low-browed Irishmen watching at the parapet
-of the trench far above us. "A coom fra' Wigan!"
-he said, wiping the sweat from his forehead with a grimy
-hand, and, thus saying, he turned round and made off
-swiftly, bent double as he was, down the low gallery.</p>
-
-<p>I followed, the water swishing ankle-deep round my
-field boots. The air was dank and foul; the stooping
-position became almost unbearable after a few paces;
-one slipped and slithered at every step.</p>
-
-<p>At intervals side-galleries ran out from the main gap,
-unlit, dark and forbidding&mdash;listening posts. After a
-hundred paces or so a trolley blocked the way. Behind
-it two men were working, my taciturn acquaintance and
-another. The latter was hacking at the virgin earth with
-a pick; the former was shoveling the clay into the trolley.</p>
-
-<p>I had not been out of that mine for more than a
-minute when an electric lamp flashed in my eyes, and an
-excitable young man, who held an automatic pistol uncomfortably
-near my person, accosted me thus: "I beg
-your pardon, sir"&mdash;it occurred to me that the pistol accorded
-ill with this polite form of address&mdash;"but may I
-ask what you were doing down my mine?" My friend,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span>
-the Captain, rushed forward with an explanation and an
-introduction, the pistol was put away, and the sapper
-subaltern was easily persuaded to come along to the
-dugout and have a drop of grog before turning in.</p>
-
-<p>One story of the mines which made everybody laugh
-was that of the subaltern fresh out from home, a keen
-young officer, who came one night to the dug-out of the
-sapper officer supervising the digging of a mine.</p>
-
-<p>"You must go up at once," he whispered in his ear in
-a voice hoarse with excitement, "it is very important.
-Lose no time." The sapper had gone to his dug-out worn
-out after several sleepless nights, and was very loath to
-sally forth into the cold and frosty air. "It is a mine,
-a German mine," said the subaltern fresh out from home;
-"you can see them working through the glasses." The
-sapper was out in a brace of shakes, and hurriedly followed
-the subaltern along the interminable windings of
-the trenches.</p>
-
-<p>In great excitement the subaltern led him to where a
-telescope rested on the parapet. "Look!" he said dramatically.
-The sapper applied his eye to the glass. There
-was a bright moon, and by its rays he saw, sure enough,
-figures working feverishly about a shaft. There was
-something familiar about it, though; then he realized
-that he was looking down his own mine. The wretched
-youth who had dragged him from his slumbers had forgotten
-the windings of the trench.</p>
-
-
-<p>V&mdash;INVENTIVE GENIUS OF THE SOLDIERS</p>
-
-<p>"Bombing" is one form of trench warfare particularly
-annoying to the enemy. The revival of bombing began
-when a British soldier, to while away an idle moment,
-put some high explosive and a lighted fuse in a discarded
-bully-beef tin, and pitched it into the German trench opposite
-him.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In his way the British soldier is as handy as the bluejacket,
-and the long days of the winter monotony produced
-all kinds of inventions in the way of mortars and
-bombs, which led to the scientific development of this
-mode of warfare. A Territorial officer was discovered
-making all manner of ingenious bombs and trench appliances
-in his spare time. He was taken out of the
-trenches and installed in an empty school, and when last
-I heard of him had a regular factory turning out bombs
-for the firing line.</p>
-
-<p>Bombing is very tricky work. Your bomb must be
-safe as long as it is in your possession. Nor must it be
-liable to explosion if dropped after the safety-catch has
-been removed. That is why bombs are provided with
-time fuses. Some nicety of judgment is required to
-hurl them so that they will explode on impact or immediately
-afterward.</p>
-
-<p>If the time fuse has still a second or so to burn when
-the bomb falls in the enemy trench, a resolute man will
-pick it up and fling it back, with disastrous consequences
-to the bomber. Therefore bombers must be trained.
-The training is extremely simple, but it is essential, and
-I look forward to the time when every soldier who comes
-out to France from home will have gone through a course
-of bombing just as he has gone through a course of
-musketry.</p>
-
-<p>Just as the Austro-Prussian War of 1866 introduced
-the needle-gun, and the Franco-Prussian War the chassepot
-rifle, and the South African War was the war of the
-magazine rifle, so the present war will be known as the
-war of the automatic gun. When the German General
-Staff sits down to write its official history of the great
-war it will be able to attribute the greater part of the
-success that German arms may have achieved to its foresight
-in accumulating an immense stock of machine-guns,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span>
-and in studying the whole theory and tactics of this comparatively
-new weapon before any other army in the
-world became alive to its paramount importance.</p>
-
-<p>The only factor that furnishes anything like a certain
-basis for calculation as to the date of the conclusion of
-the war is the number of fighting men available for each
-of the different belligerents. Of all the supplies required
-for making war, the supply of men is limited. The Germans
-recognized this sooner than any of their opponents.
-In the machine-gun they had a machine that does the
-work of many men.</p>
-
-<p>The machine-gun is the multiplication of the rifle. The
-Vickers gun fires up to 500 shots a minute. This is also
-the average performance of the German gun. To silence
-this multiplication of fire you must outbid it, you
-must beat it down with an even greater multiplication.
-This is where the difficulty comes in for an attacking
-force.</p>
-
-<p>The machine-gun, with its mounting and ammunition
-and spare parts, is neither light in weight nor inconspicuous
-to carry. When the infantry has rushed a trench
-after the preliminary bombardment the machine-guns
-have to be carried bodily forward over a shell and bullet
-swept area, where the machine-gun detachment is a familiar
-and unexpected target for the German marksmen.
-This is where the automatic rifle is destined to play a
-part&mdash;a part so decisive, in my opinion, as may win the
-war for us.</p>
-
-<p>The automatic rifle is a light machine-gun. In appearance
-it resembles an ordinary service rifle, with rather
-a complicated and swollen-looking magazine. It is not
-water-cooled like the machine-gun, but air-cooled, and is
-therefore not absolutely reliable for long usage, as it inevitably
-becomes heated after much firing. It will fire,
-however, up to 300-odd shots a minute, and can be regarded<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span>
-as the ideal weapon for beating down German
-machine-gun fire and checking the advance of bombers
-while the heavier but more reliable machine-guns are
-coming up.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>COMEDIES OF THE GREAT WAR</h2>
-
-<div class="center"><i>Tales of Humor on the Fighting Lines</i></div>
-
-<div class="center"><br /><i>Told by W. F. Martindale</i></div>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>In the Great War, as in everything else, comedy treads hard
-on the heels of tragedy, and all sorts of quaint and comical
-things happen. Here are some little stories, from a variety of
-reliable sources, which will serve to show that our fighting-men,
-both ashore and afloat, are still able to preserve a sense
-of humor. Narrated in the <i>Wide World</i>.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;STORIES TOLD "ON THE SOLDIERS"</p>
-
-<p>Human nature is whetted to a keep edge under the
-stress of warfare; that is why every war is rich in
-anecdote.</p>
-
-<p>Character is the basis of all comedy, and the conditions
-of military life, whether on active service or not, are
-such that "character will out." In barracks, in camp,
-or in the field, soldiering applies a test which no man can
-evade. Ranker, non-com., or officer, he is bound soon or
-late (generally soon) to be "found out."</p>
-
-<p>There is a pretty little comedy of character which concerns
-a young subaltern, fresh from an English public
-school, who found himself attached, through one of the
-unexpected chances of war, to a battalion of Colonial
-infantry. The subaltern was youthful&mdash;and looked it.
-His cheek was smooth and innocent of hair, the accents
-of his voice cultured and refined, his manner languid to
-the point of seeming boredom. He was slight of stature,
-and he wore a monocle permanently fixed in one eye. In
-short, he was a complete antithesis to the brawny brood<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span>
-of Anak which constituted his platoon, amongst whom
-his advent aroused no enthusiasm whatever. He was not
-popular.</p>
-
-<p>There is little risk of offence at this time of day in
-observing that some of the Overseas troops are not remarkable
-for the strictness of their discipline. It is a
-little idiosyncrasy at which no one, with memories of
-Ypres and Anzac still fresh, will be disposed to cavil.
-This is not to say that they cannot be handled; on the
-contrary, there is ample evidence of their instant response
-to leadership of the sort which they understand. But
-one would hardly look for that particular sort from a
-beardless youth with an eye permanently glazed, and a
-refined taste in language and clothes. A manner which
-might be acceptable to the Guards is as little suited to
-Colonials as Colonial methods to the Household Brigade.
-There is a custom and usage in these matters.</p>
-
-<p>So it came to pass that the platoon took counsel with
-itself and darkly determined to take its young subaltern
-down a peg or two. Is it necessary to observe that the
-prime offences of the latter, in the eyes of these critics,
-were his monocle and his accent&mdash;those traditional marks
-and insignia of the "dude"? It is strange that so often
-the dandy (whom history has shown to be invariably a
-man of spirit and courage) should be mistaken for the
-dude.</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;THE OFFICER WITH THE MONOCLE</p>
-
-<p>On a certain morning, therefore, behold the platoon
-drawn up on parade, accoutred with meticulous care,
-aligned in the most precise formation&mdash;each man wearing
-his "identity disc" in his eye! For the benefit of any
-reader who has never seen an identity disc, it may be
-mentioned that the latter is the small plate of metal on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span>
-which is stamped certain information concerning the
-wearer which enable his body, if necessary, to be identified.
-Being of the same shape, and about the same size,
-as an eyeglass, and, moreover, suspended from a cord
-worn round the neck, it can be made to form an admirable
-travesty of a monocle.</p>
-
-<p>Not a twitch of a single muscle in the face of the young
-subaltern, not a flicker of his unmonocled eye, betrayed
-that he was aware of anything unusual in the appearance
-of his men. He took the situation in coolly, and when,
-in answer to routine questions, the sergeants answered
-smartly and respectfully but with a pointed imitation of
-his own "haw-haw" accent, he ignored the studied insult
-with equal nonchalance.</p>
-
-<p>It was a good start, for an attempt at sarcasm when
-quietly ignored falls flatter even than when it is wholly
-unperceived. In the present case there was no possibility
-of an insult having been missed, and the platoon began
-to feel that things were not going quite as had been
-anticipated. Each man kept his identity disc firmly
-screwed in one eye, however, and stared fixedly out of
-the other in expectation of the officer's present discomfort.
-The latter could never afford to dismiss the parade
-without taking cognizance of what had occurred, and the
-platoon awaited the crux with interest.</p>
-
-<p>But the moment of dismissal arrived and nothing had
-been said. Some of the men were covertly smiling.</p>
-
-<p>As he gave the order, the subaltern let the monocle drop
-from his eye, and while the command was being obeyed,
-swung the glass round and round, with the cord between
-finger and thumb, in a rapid circle. Scanning the line
-narrowly and noting every glance upon him, he jerked
-the twirling glass suddenly into the air and with the neatness
-of a juggler caught it in his eye as it fell. Then
-he glared fiercely through it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"See if you can do <i>that</i>!" he observed. "Dis-MISS!"</p>
-
-<p>Thereafter no officer ever had men under him more
-ready to do whatever he asked them. And it was by a
-sure instinct that the latter "gave him best." As one of
-them remarked, "I've seen men take risks in my time, but
-that beat everything. <i>Suppose he'd missed catchin' that
-glass?</i>"</p>
-
-<p>If wit is a Gallic prerogative, humor belongs to the
-British, and not a few comedies of the war pivot on that
-uniquely humorous character Thomas Atkins. Humor
-is an elusive and baffling quantity, as the wit discovered
-who mixed up all the boots in an hotel corridor one evening
-and learned the next morning that his friend (a
-humorist) had sorted them out again as soon as his back
-was turned. The humorist can sometimes understand
-the wit, but the compliment is seldom, if ever, returned;
-which is the reason why Mr. Atkins and his idiosyncrasies
-remain an inscrutable enigma to our French allies.</p>
-
-<p>And if the British soldier appears incomprehensible
-to the nimble-minded French, one can readily perceive
-that to the slow and methodically-thinking German he
-must seem merely mad. The French marvel that he is
-never "serious"; the Boche is perplexed to find that
-Hymns of Hate and other laborious insults afford him
-the keenest possible enjoyment. The secret lies in Mr.
-Atkins's sense of humor, which is another way of saying
-his sense of proportion. He may be guilty of little aberrations
-such as dribbling a football in front of him as he
-advances with cold steel to the charge, but <i><span xml:lang="fr">au fond</span></i> he
-has a pretty just sense of values.</p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;THE GERMANS WHO SANG "RULE
-BRITTANIA"</p>
-
-<p>At all events, his humor has the dry quality which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span>
-connotes an even mind and temper, as the following incident
-will show. In the earlier days of the war, before
-the opposing armies in the West had burrowed into the
-soil and some freedom of movement was still possible,
-a patrol of three British soldiers under a sergeant were
-prowling abroad one night. Within disputed territory
-they espied a lighted window in a lonely farmhouse which
-they knew had been deserted by its owners. They approached
-it stealthily. The house was surrounded without
-challenge, and having posted his men at points which
-commanded the exits the sergeant crept forward to reconnoitre.
-Music and sounds of revelry were audible
-within, and the sergeant had no difficulty in discovering
-the presence of four German soldiers in the farmer's best
-sitting-room. The cellar had been looted, the piano commandeered,
-and four Teutonic voices were upraised in
-melody.</p>
-
-<p>The sergeant beckoned to the waiting figures outside,
-and four large but softly-treading men tiptoed delicately
-to the scene of the carousal. At a given signal the door
-was flung open and four rifles were levelled.</p>
-
-<p>"Hands up!"</p>
-
-<p>A chorus of "<i><span xml:lang="de">Deutschland, Deutschland, über Alles</span></i>"
-was interrupted a shade abruptly, and four pairs of arms
-shot up into the air. The Boche does not shine in an
-emergency.</p>
-
-<p>With a gesture the sergeant marshalled the captives
-against the wall, where they stood in a row, blinking and
-crestfallen. Their weapons having been collected and
-removed, they were allowed to put their hands down, and
-their captors regarded them quizzically.</p>
-
-<p>"Any of you blokes speak English?" queried the sergeant,
-genially.</p>
-
-<p>A smile of modest pride momentarily illumined one of
-the four wooden faces.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"<i>Ja</i>, I spik leedle English," ventured its owner.</p>
-
-<p>"In-<i>deed</i>!" was the rejoinder; "and where did <i>you</i>
-learn it&mdash;in the Tottenham Court Road?"</p>
-
-<p>The linguist simpered deprecatingly, with evident gratification
-over the good impression which he appeared to
-be making. It takes a lot to upset the complacence of the
-Boche.</p>
-
-<p>"Been havin' a sing-song?" continued the sergeant, encouragingly.</p>
-
-<p>The other nodded. "Der Shermans vas always der
-beoble of singing," he observed, in faintly patronizing
-tones.</p>
-
-<p>"Ho, <i>are</i> they?" said the sergeant. "Then suppose you
-start in and sing us 'Rule Britannia' for a bit. Give us a
-tune, Bill."</p>
-
-<p>Bill propped his rifle against the wall, and sat himself
-solemnly at the open piano. He was not a great performer,
-but rose to the occasion and produced a rendering
-of the familiar tune which was at least recognizable.</p>
-
-<p>"Now, then," said the sergeant, warming to his work,
-"not bein' a blinkin' German I don't 'appen to be no
-singer, but just you listen, and if you don't know the
-words, say 'em after me. '<i>When Brit-ain fir-ir-ir-ir-irst
-at&mdash;&mdash;</i>'"</p>
-
-<p>The musical evening was a great success, said the member
-of the party from whom the present writer had the
-story. "We kept 'em there for four hours, and by the
-time we'd finished with 'em they could sing it a fair treat.
-And we didn't spare 'em the encores neither. Course,
-they wasn't singin' <i>all</i> the time, 'cos we spent some of it in
-moppin' up the liquor and the food and the cigars they
-hadn't finished. But I reckon they did all the singin'
-they wanted. Then we fell 'em into line and drove 'em
-home as prisoners. They <i>asked</i> for it, you see!"</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p>IV&mdash;STORY OF A FISHERMAN AND A MINE</p>
-
-<p>The chief officer of a steamer under charter to the
-Admiralty tells a very amusing story concerning an encounter
-with a mine, though he candidly admits that he
-didn't see the humor of it until some time after the
-incident occurred.</p>
-
-<p>His ship was lying alongside the quay at X&mdash;&mdash;, taking
-in some hundreds of tons of explosives. He himself,
-having nothing particular to do at the moment, was leaning
-over the bridge-rails looking thoughtfully out to sea.
-All of a sudden he noticed an aged waterman rowing
-towards the ship, with some odd-looking object towing
-astern of his bluff-bowed craft. The old man seemed to
-have difficulty in getting along, and the officer watched
-him curiously, speculating as to what he was hauling.
-At first sight it looked like a mooring-buoy, but as the
-boat came nearer the watcher got the shock of his life.
-The fisherman was towing a German mine of the very
-largest type!</p>
-
-<p>There flashed through the officer's mind the thought
-of the latent power stored away in that wicked-looking
-sphere, only needing a slight shock to set it free; he
-thought, too, of the vast store of explosives under his
-feet and on the quay. If that mine exploded against the
-steamer's side there would not be one stone of X&mdash;&mdash;
-left upon another!</p>
-
-<p>"Hi, you!" he shouted to the oncoming rower. "Sheer
-off with that thing! We've got explosive aboard!"</p>
-
-<p>By way of answer the old man&mdash;now scarce a dozen
-yards away&mdash;cupped his hand behind his ear.</p>
-
-<p>"What d'yer say, sir?" he called back, mildly. "I
-found this 'ere in the tideway, an' I knew there was a bit
-of a reward offered, an' so&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>The big mine was now bobbing dangerously close to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span>
-the steamer's side, and the officer, frantic with anxiety,
-literally bellowed orders for the man to remove himself
-and his prize. In his excitement he suggested regions
-where it is possible the temperature might have had a
-disastrous effect.</p>
-
-<p>The fisherman looked up at him with a smile. "That's
-all right, sir," he replied. "He 'on't do no harm. I
-knocked the horns off he with a boat-hook."</p>
-
-<p>And so it proved. The old man, in his ignorance, had
-taken a million to one chance, and it had come off. They
-say there is a special Providence that looks after fools,
-but it must be peculiarly irritating to the apostle of
-"frightfulness" to know that an aged waterman, encountering
-a drifting mine, can lightheartedly knock off the
-detonator-equipped "horns" or projections and live to
-bring his prize into port and receive a reward. The chief
-officer aforesaid, however is not anxious for another experience
-of the kind; he says they are too trying to the
-nerves.</p>
-
-
-<p>V&mdash;THE COCKNEY AND HIS "SOOVENEER"</p>
-
-<p>Comedy, it has been observed, turns upon character,
-and many little comedies of the war hinge upon the mere
-personality of Thomas Atkins himself, and the somewhat
-difficult adjustment of that uniquely stubborn thing to a
-new environment. The resulting incidents derive a great
-part of their humor from Mr. Atkins's manner of narrating
-them&mdash;especially if he chance to be from London.
-There is no wittier or more tersely vivid <i><span xml:lang="fr">raconteur</span></i> than
-the Cockney, and though one often hears the humor
-of the British soldier described as unconscious, it is really
-nothing of the kind. Spontaneous and unpremeditated
-it may be, but such penetrating acumen as his racy idiom
-reveals was never unconscious.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Half-a-dozen soldiers home from the Front on short
-leave found themselves in a railway carriage bound for
-Victoria. They were of different battalions, and fell
-naturally to the swapping of yarns. Soon the conversation
-drifted to "souvenirs," a topic of surpassing interest.
-Trophies were produced by each in turn, with the
-exception of one taciturn member of the party who sat
-in a corner seat morosely sucking at a short clay pipe.</p>
-
-<p>"<i>I</i> ain't brought nothin' 'ome wiv me," was the curt
-response to a suggestion that the silent one should produce
-his little lot. There ensued a dialogue.</p>
-
-<p>"Wot, nothin' at all?"</p>
-
-<p>"No!"</p>
-
-<p>"Well, I'm blowed! Fancy a bloke comin' 'ome on
-leave and not bringin' nothin' wiv 'im! Ain't you got
-no sooverneer?"</p>
-
-<p>"Sooveneer! No, I ain't got no sooveneer&mdash;not unless
-you call this 'ere a sooverneer."</p>
-
-<p>The morose one fumbled in his haversack and pulled
-forth a brass door-knob, which he displayed upon an
-extended palm. Its appearance excited derision.</p>
-
-<p>"That's a perishin' fine sooveneer, I <i>don't</i> think!
-Why, it's only a ornery door-knob!"</p>
-
-<p>"Well, wot abaht it? S'posin' it is only an ornery
-door-knob! Maybe you dunno 'ow I come by it!"</p>
-
-<p>Pressed for the story, the owner of the unexpected
-article proceeded:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"It was like this 'ere. I'd been two weeks on a stretch
-in the trenches, and never a drink&mdash;wot you might <i>call</i> a
-drink&mdash;the 'ole blinkin' time. Goin' back through the
-billets after we was relieved I seed a place where they
-had liquor for sale, and I goes up to the door to get a
-drink. Well, I 'adn't no more than took 'old o' the knob
-when a blinkin' Jack Johnson come over and blew the
-'ole blinkin' 'ouse out of my 'and!"</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>And with an evident sense of personal grievance not
-yet allayed the speaker pouched his "sooveneer" and relapsed
-into gloomy taciturnity.</p>
-
-
-<p>VI&mdash;THE COOK AND THE BOMB IN GREECE</p>
-
-<p>Of comedies arising out of Mr. Atkins's imperturbable
-phlegm there is no end. One will suffice here&mdash;a little
-incident which occurred at Salonica. At the Greek port
-some of our troops, it seems, are encamped upon the
-hills above the town. One morning a covey of six enemy
-aeroplanes flew overhead and dropped three bombs in
-passing. The first exploded harmlessly, but the second
-fell plumb on a cook's tent, and blew it sky-high. Shirts,
-coats, and trousers went hurtling up into the air with a
-grim resemblance to mutilated bodies. Fortunately no
-one was inside the tent. The cook was only five yards
-away, however, busily marshalling an array of "dixies"
-(military camp-kettles) which had been newly filled at
-the distant water-supply below. The force of the explosion
-blew him off his feet, and likewise overturned
-the row of dixies.</p>
-
-<p>Those near at hand feared their comrade had been
-hit by a fragment of the bomb and ran to his assistance.
-But as they approached a dishevelled figure rose from
-amidst the <i><span xml:lang="fr">débris</span></i> and wrathfully surveyed the wreckage
-of his "kitchen." At the spot where his tent had been
-two minutes previously he hardly glanced. "And now,"
-was his indignant comment, "I serpose I'll 'ave to go
-down the &mdash;&mdash; 'ill and fill up the &mdash;&mdash; dixies again!"</p>
-
-
-<p>VII&mdash;A SEA-TALE&mdash;THE LIEUTENANT'S
-STANCHIONS</p>
-
-<p>By way of conclusion here is a little naval comedy.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span>
-A minor unit of His Majesty's Navy was undergoing
-the process known as "fitting out." Her commander,
-one of the many good sportsmen who have placed their
-personal services and such seamanship as they have acquired
-as amateur yachtsmen and sailors at the disposal
-of the Admiralty, arrived one morning to find a score
-or two of dockyard workmen on board, all busy (in
-theory) with the multifarious tasks awaiting completion.
-In practice, something like half the number were, if not
-idle, at least less occupied than the immediate requirements
-of the vessel seemed to warrant.</p>
-
-<p>The commander, being in private life a business man
-of considerable energy, with a habit of getting things
-done, regarded the scene with considerable disfavour,
-and set himself at once to remedy the state of affairs.
-But the dockyard workman is an individual with very
-definite ideas of his own as to how a job should be done,
-and a fixed determination to do it that way unless
-thwarted by an authority which he dare not evade.</p>
-
-<p>Finding orders, though respectfully received, were inadequate
-to the occasion, the commander tried reason
-and persuasion. But though the latter was carried to
-the point of cajolery the result was the same. Baffled
-in the exercise of his own authority and a trifle nettled
-in consequence, the energetic lieutenant determined upon
-a desperate expedient. In his best sarcastic vein he wrote
-out a signal and requested its transmission to the flag-captain.
-The officer in whose discretion it lay to forward
-or suppress the message being likewise an amateur,
-not yet too deeply imbued with a respect for conventions,
-the signal was duly made. It was to the following
-effect:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"<span class="smcap">Submitted:</span> That as there are at present forty
-workmen on No. 001, of which number half are seated
-permanently on the ship's rail, a further working party<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span>
-be at once sent down to strengthen the stanchions, which
-will otherwise collapse under the strain."</p>
-
-<p>Within half an hour a party of workmen reported
-themselves at No. 001 and gravely proceeded to
-strengthen the stanchions! Protests were unavailing: the
-men had their orders, and with bolts, rivets, rods, and
-who shall say what other contraptions, they proceeded to
-carry them out with a thoroughness almost menacing.</p>
-
-<p>The commanding officer of No. 001 delights to tell this
-story to his friends as a shining example of the crass
-ineptitude of which the official mind, even in the Navy,
-is sometimes capable. It may be so; but his friends,
-observing those admirably buttressed stanchions, and
-noting the considerable inconvenience to which their immovable
-presence permanently condemns the maker of
-that rash signal, sometimes wonder whether the laugh is
-altogether on the latter's side.</p>
-
-<p>Lieutenant X&mdash;&mdash; looks forward to some future day
-when he may meet the flag-captain in person, and there
-is no doubt he already has a very good notion of what
-he then intends to say. But suppose he should be
-greeted, before ever he can introduce the topic himself,
-with the genial inquiry, "And how are your stanchions
-lasting?"</p>
-
-<p>They have a way of their own in the Navy.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>LITTLE STORIES OF THE BIG WAR</h2>
-
-<div class="center"><i>Unusual Anecdotes at First Hand</i></div>
-
-<div class="center"><br /><i>Told by Karl K. Kitchen in Germany</i></div>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>The four war stories which follow&mdash;stories of adventure, suffering
-and daring&mdash;were heard by Karl K. Kitchen of the <i>New
-York World</i> during his sojourn in Germany. Two of the stories
-he had at first hand, and can vouch for. A third was related
-to him by His Excellency Baron von Bissing, the Military Governor
-of Belgium. The fourth&mdash;recounting the exploits of Capt.
-Peifer, perhaps the most remarkable story of the war&mdash;was
-related to the writer by a naval officer. Copyright, 1916, Press
-Publishing Company.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;STORY OF A MOTHER'S TRAGEDY</p>
-
-<p>One of my best friends in Vienna was Ernst Karczag.
-Shortly after the outbreak of the war I received a postal
-from him stating that he was about to rejoin his regiment&mdash;he
-was a lieutenant in a crack hussar regiment&mdash;and
-proceed to the Galician front. At Christmas I received a
-long letter from him and a photograph of himself in his
-hussar uniform. Then one morning in March I received
-a cablegram from a mutual friend in London, stating
-that Ernst had died of cholera in Poland.</p>
-
-<p>Ernst was in his twenty-fifth year and was tenderly
-attached to his mother. Until the war broke out he had
-never been away from home except on a brief holiday,
-and his long absence at the front last winter brought his
-mother to the verge of a nervous collapse. It came to a
-point where it was absolutely necessary for her to see
-her son. Mr. Karczag, although a millionaire and a man<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span>
-of considerable influence, was unable to get a pass for
-his wife to visit the line near Lodz in Poland, where the
-son's regiment was stationed. She set out for Lodz
-alone.</p>
-
-<p>After nearly a week of the hardest kind of travelling,
-much of it in troop trains, she reached Lodz, where she
-found every hotel occupied by German and Austrian
-officers. In desperation she decided to appeal to Gen.
-Mackensen, the famous German General, who was in supreme
-command.</p>
-
-<p>"You shall see your son to-morrow morning," he told
-her when he learned that her boy was a lieutenant of a
-certain hussar regiment. "I am reviewing the Austrian
-troops at 6 o'clock to-morrow morning. If you will come
-to my headquarters at that time I shall permit you to
-witness the review."</p>
-
-<p>The review of the Austrian troops lasted nearly five
-hours, and it was witnessed by Gen. Mackensen, his staff
-and the mother of my friend. Regiment after regiment
-passed by, but there was no sign of the young hussar
-officer. The anxious mother was almost ready to break
-down, when at the very end of the last regiment in the
-review she caught sight of her son. Forgetting her peculiar
-position she called to her boy. But he did not hear
-her, and a few moments later he galloped out of sight.</p>
-
-<p>"I must have a few words with my boy," she pleaded
-with Gen. Mackensen; "I must talk with him."</p>
-
-<p>Evidently she struck a sympathetic chord in his nature,
-for he told her he would send a motor car to the hotel to
-take her to her son's regiment. For two days she waited
-for the car, but as it did not arrive she again went to
-Gen. Mackensen's headquarters, only to learn that he had
-been called away to another position on the front. Apparently
-he had forgotten all about his promise. There
-was no one to help her, so she started out alone to reach<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span>
-the little Polish village where her son's regiment was
-stationed. No conveyance was obtainable for any sum,
-so for three days and three nights the poor mother walked
-the frozen roads to her son's side.</p>
-
-<p>It was a wonderful meeting between mother and son,
-and when the Colonel of the regiment heard what she had
-gone through he placed his own quarters at her disposal.
-When the time came for her return he sent her back to
-Lodz in a military wagon. Three days later she was
-back in Vienna, rejoicing with her husband that their son
-was alive and well.</p>
-
-<p>Imagine their great shock when two days after her
-return they received a telegram from the Colonel of the
-regiment stating that Ernst had died suddenly of cholera.</p>
-
-<p>It is difficult to convey any idea of the grief of the
-parents of this young officer. The father has lost all
-interest in life&mdash;money means nothing to him. The
-mother is inconsolable and her mental condition is becoming
-critical.</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;HOW CAPT. PEIFER WON HIS "POUR LE
-MERITE"</p>
-
-<p>Shortly after the outbreak of the war, Capt. Peifer, a
-German naval officer in command of the cruiser <i>Yorke</i>,
-ran his ship on a mine and the cruiser sank with nearly
-all on board, but Capt. Peifer was saved. He was court-martialled
-and sentenced to twenty years' imprisonment.</p>
-
-<p>The Captain being an expert in high explosives, influential
-friends pleaded his cause with the Kaiser, who suspended
-the sentence. Capt. Peifer accordingly was released
-and offered his services to the commander of the
-German forces in Turkey. He was assigned to duties
-connected with the production of munitions when the
-Gallipoli campaign began. According to the story, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span>
-British forces might have succeeded in reaching Constantinople
-if it had not been for Major Peifer.</p>
-
-<p>With characteristic energy and ingenuity he started
-several munition factories for the production of high explosive
-shells within a few miles of Constantinople. His
-knowledge, combined with German efficiency and tireless
-Turk labor, gave the defenders of the Dardanelles sufficient
-high explosive shells to check the invaders until
-munitions arrived from Germany.</p>
-
-<p>Of course the Turkish and the German commanders-in-chief
-were highly pleased with Capt. Peifer's service,
-and the latter sent in his name to the Kaiser as an officer
-deserving the order of "Pour le Merite"&mdash;one of the
-most coveted honors of all Germany.</p>
-
-<p>For once German thoroughness and efficiency were
-inoperative. Neither the Kaiser nor his closest advisers
-recognized in Major Peifer the former naval captain who
-had sent his ship on a mine in violation of proper warnings.
-The order of "Pour le Merite" was conferred on
-the new military officer, who naturally thought that his
-previous blunder had been forgiven.</p>
-
-<p>Accordingly he applied to the naval ministry for permission
-to rejoin his old branch of the service. This let
-the cat out of the bag, and the entire matter was laid
-before the Kaiser. With true magnanimity he commuted
-the twenty years' sentence, but ordered the Major to
-remain in the army, promising him promotion in the very
-near future.</p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;STORY OF AUTOMOBILE THAT CAPTURED
-AN AEROPLANE</p>
-
-<p>The day Germany declared war on France, Gunther
-Hensel, the twenty-two-year-old son of Ernest Johannes
-Hensel, a wealthy real estate operator in Berlin, offered<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span>
-his services to his Fatherland. As he had been engaged
-in the automobile business in Berlin he was enlisted in a
-motor car battalion, where he became what is known in
-Germany as a "benzine lieutenant," with no immediate
-prospects of ever becoming anything else.</p>
-
-<p>However, last October, after driving military motors
-at the front for more than a year, an opportunity presented
-itself which won Gunther Hensel his coveted promotion.</p>
-
-<p>While driving behind the lines near Arras he caught
-sight of a French aeroplane which had landed because of
-motor trouble. Young Hensel's only companion at the
-time was an orderly, so it was a question of acting without
-orders.</p>
-
-<p>Without hesitation he drove at full speed toward the
-aeroplane. The Frenchmen opened fire with their revolvers,
-but their shots went wild, and before they could
-prevent it the heavy motor car crossed the field and
-crashed into the flying machine, wrecking it beyond all
-hope of immediate repair.</p>
-
-<p>Both Frenchmen were caught in the wreckage, and the
-orderly, who of course had a rifle, forced them to surrender.
-Thus in one fell swoop the young benzine lieutenant
-captured a valuable French aeroplane and two
-enemy soldiers. In all probability this was the first aeroplane
-ever captured by an automobile.</p>
-
-<p>As a reward for this exploit he received an Iron Cross
-and was transferred to the officers' college, where he is
-now getting instruction in the duties of a full-fledged
-infantry officer.</p>
-
-
-<p>IV&mdash;STORY OF THE "UNDERGROUND RAILROAD"</p>
-
-<p>Ever since the Germans have been in Brussels there
-has existed an "underground railroad" to aid escaped<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span>
-French and Belgian prisoners of war in reaching the
-Holland border and thus regaining their lines. The German
-secret service tried in vain to discover how the
-prisoners got away, but without success&mdash;until last September.
-Then one of the "operatives," as Detective
-Burns would say, conceived the idea of donning part of
-a French uniform and appealing to Belgian farmers on
-the outskirts of Brussels to help him to get over the
-frontier.</p>
-
-<p>When a train load of French prisoners was moved
-from Lille to Aix la Chapelle, this secret service man
-jumped from the train just before it reached Brussels,
-and, taking refuge in a barn until dusk, appealed to the
-farmer to let him remain there until he could obtain
-other clothes to effect his escape.</p>
-
-<p>Impressed by the spy's French language and uniform,
-the unsuspecting farmer provided him with the desired
-garments. The spy then asked him for the name of some
-one in Brussels who would help him. The farmer directed
-him to a wealthy flour and feed dealer in the
-Belgian capital. This man in turn passed him on to another
-Belgian who was connected with the "underground
-railroad," and in less than two weeks the German spy
-found himself in Rotterdam.</p>
-
-<p>Of course he had learned the identity of every Belgian
-who had befriended him, and on his return to Brussels
-he uncovered the entire "underground" system. The trail
-led right to the chief surgical hospital in the capital&mdash;the
-hospital in which Miss Edith Cavell was the head nurse.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>POGROM&mdash;THE TRAGEDY OF THE
-JEWS AND THE ARMENIANS</h2>
-
-<div class="center"><i>A Masterful Tale of the Eastern Front</i></div>
-
-<div class="center"><br /><i>Told by M. C. della Grazie of Vienna</i></div>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>No result of the war has been more pitiable than the suffering
-inflicted on the subject races caught in its grip. These submerged
-peoples have had to submit helplessly to the brutalities
-of both sets of combatants. The Poles, the Ruthenians, the
-Ukranians, the Slavs of Bohemia and Moravia, have fought with
-little heart for Russia, Austria or Prussia, as the case might be.
-But the Jews of the Polish Pale and of Galicia have had an
-even harder fate; for while the men of military age have followed
-the flags of their masters, the women, the children and
-the old men have been obliged to face at home all the evils
-which travel in the wake of war&mdash;disorder, violence, disease,
-spoliation and semi-starvation. The following story is by M. C.
-della Grazie, a well known Viennese writer. It makes a masterly
-use of a single, simple incident to bring home the meaning of
-one of the war's most hopeless and poignant tragedies. It was
-written at the time when the Russians still occupied the greater
-part of the Austrian province of Galicia. This translation, with
-editorial comment, is by William L. McPherson in the <i>New York
-Tribune</i>.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;STORY OF GABRIEL GABRILOVITCH</p>
-
-<p>The colonel sat on the edge of his rumpled-up peasant's
-bed and with an impatient movement knocked the
-ashes from his cigar. On the dirty table before him lay
-the last number of a Russian weekly, which had just
-arrived by field post in Galicia&mdash;a little crumpled, but
-otherwise fresh looking, and with pictures which made
-one's mouth water.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The devil! Was it still going so comfortably back in
-Petersburg (he stopped suddenly and substituted Petrograd)
-with those rascals of civilians and war cripples?
-Did such attractive girls still come in and sing and dance
-as those whose pictures stared at him out of the pages
-of the last number of the <i>Nida</i>? They must be damnably
-well off, those dogs, able to frequent the Varieties, where
-people sit in cozy warmth about the tables and worry
-about nothing more serious than the genuineness of the
-labels on the wine bottles.</p>
-
-<p>And he, Gabriel Gabrilovitch! He had lain with his
-regiment for nearly two weeks in this miserable Galician
-hole and was forced to congratulate himself that a single
-windproof hut remained in which to stop for breath after
-all those futile attacks&mdash;that he was able at night to
-throw himself on a bundle of straw under this foul roof
-and drink punch brewed from whiskey stolen from the
-Jews.</p>
-
-<p>For this time no headway was to be made against the
-devils opposite. Not even once as far as their barbed
-wire defences! So well was their artillery posted. To
-such a raking fire was every moving object exposed which
-came in sight within an area several hundred meters
-wide!</p>
-
-<p>A tiresome game that&mdash;an accursedly tiresome game&mdash;and
-if Gabriel Gabrilovitch himself should be one of the
-victims! He sprang up and began to pace with heavy
-steps the uneven clay floor. He knew of better things
-than that!</p>
-
-<p>Those Petrogradians&mdash;look, look!</p>
-
-<p>The slender, willowy, singing girl there in the <i>Nida</i>,
-with that smile which was in itself a seduction! She
-evoked another image in his excited fancy. It was his
-last evening of pleasure in golden Petrograd. In a variety
-cabaret, too.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The stage is already empty, the programme finished.
-But in a room off the stage reserved for the performers
-and their guests he sees just such a piquant little creature
-take form in the thin smoke clouds of his cigarette.
-Exactly the same smile&mdash;acquired in Paris, and then carried
-triumphantly from stage to stage, from banquet to
-banquet.</p>
-
-<p>The imitation diamonds glitter in the deep corsage of
-her dress. The coquettish curls hang like golden orchids
-over her ears. The atrophied stare of the wide
-pupils has the fascination of a serpent's eye. Before her
-stands a tall, narrow glass vase, out of which nod the
-blood-red, long-stemmed pinks which he had brought her.
-He, Gabriel Gabrilovitch!</p>
-
-<p>It is a picture imprinted so vividly on his senses by the
-warm rush of recollection that he thinks he really sees
-it&mdash;not least of all the purplish red of the vase of flowers.</p>
-
-<p>They take it easy, those Nevsky Prospekt loungers&mdash;they
-take it easy!</p>
-
-<p>He reaches for the glass&mdash;already cold, curse it! Not
-very long now and it will be day again and a new assault,
-as vain as the others, will bring them face to face with
-death.</p>
-
-<p>A cold draft strikes his neck. He turns around, half
-angry, to see who has entered.</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;THE COSSACK LIEUTENANT'S HATRED</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, so!"</p>
-
-<p>It is the sotnik (lieutenant) of a Cossack detachment
-which has received the order to drive the last Jews out
-of the surrounding villages, so that the army can have
-a free field. The snow, which has frozen finger thick
-on his green overcoat, begins to melt in the close, hot air
-of the room. The small, hard Asiatic eyes shine. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span>
-red, frosted fists are still clenched, as if they had just
-beaten somebody.</p>
-
-<p>"One can't be really angry with these fellows," says
-the colonel to himself, with a feeling of soldierly satisfaction.</p>
-
-<p>"They are such splendid beasts."</p>
-
-<p>But he asks aloud:</p>
-
-<p>"Finished?"</p>
-
-<p>The Cossack's laugh is quick and harsh.</p>
-
-<p>"All herded together, Colonel. Nothing is lacking but
-the Red Sea."</p>
-
-<p>"How many?"</p>
-
-<p>"Several hundred."</p>
-
-<p>"And where are you going to drive them?"</p>
-
-<p>The young lieutenant raises his shoulders slowly, so
-that the snow on them touches and cools his red cheeks.</p>
-
-<p>"I'll have to get an order from you as to that!"</p>
-
-<p>"An order!" cries the colonel. "An order! Now, by
-all three metropolitans! The devil take me if I know!"</p>
-
-<p>The sotnik raises his shoulder again.</p>
-
-<p>"While they're here they will be in our way."</p>
-
-<p>"The vermin," growls the colonel, "always pestering
-us like&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"Like others we are on intimate terms with," laughs
-the Cossack.</p>
-
-<p>"Look there, if you please!" And half jokingly, half
-disgustedly, he points to a black swarm of roaches hurrying
-like a wagon train from behind the stove and
-making for a crack in the floor near the open door.</p>
-
-<p>"They are emigrating, the vermin," exclaims the colonel;
-"upon my soul, they are."</p>
-
-<p>"Because they are hungry," says the Cossack, with a
-grin.</p>
-
-<p>"But the Jews. The Jews, those&mdash;&mdash;" curses the colonel.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"Just as black and just as hungry&mdash;but good patriots."</p>
-
-<p>The colonel lifts his head, gazes thoughtfully for a
-while into the flickering flame of the slowly melting candle.
-Then he begins to laugh.</p>
-
-<p>"Why didn't I think of it before? Why didn't I think
-of it before? Ah, Little Brother, what asses we have
-been!"</p>
-
-<p>The Cossack's eyes snap. He, too, has a plan which
-in all this orgy of bloodthirstiness appeals to him with
-an even bloodier zest.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you know what we shall do with them&mdash;with all
-these patriots?"</p>
-
-<p>"Drive them together somewhere and sabre them,"
-suggests the sotnik.</p>
-
-<p>"So that they can fill the newspapers again with their
-tale of martyrdom," laughs Gabriel Gabrilovitch, scornfully.
-"Beware, Little Brother, beware! We shall leave
-that to their countrymen this time."</p>
-
-<p>The blank eyes of the Cossack follow the colonel questioningly&mdash;like
-the eyes of a hunting dog.</p>
-
-<p>"So," laughs the latter, softly stroking his cheek.
-"We'll drive these patriots to the Austrian wire entanglements.
-What do you think? Will those people over there
-shoot down their own subjects?"</p>
-
-<p>"But they are non-combatants, Gabriel Gabrilovitch&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>The young man suppressed the thought before he had
-put it into words. There was something in the voice of
-his superior which cowered him. And, like a hunting
-dog, he merely listened.</p>
-
-<p>"Don't you see, Little Brother?" continues Gabriel Gabrilovitch,
-rubbing his hands together with satisfaction.
-"And just because in that case they will not fire, we shall
-rush in on the enemy. We shall have cover and can
-excuse ourselves for using it."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"It would take the devil himself to think of that!" exclaims
-the sotnik, full of submissiveness and admiration.</p>
-
-<p>"I am a good Christian," declares Gabriel Gabrilovitch
-with bitter humor. "And now I must have an intermediary;
-for, naturally, I must inform the enemy so that
-they will not shoot down so many patriots."</p>
-
-<p>The young Cossack rocked his body as if already in the
-saddle.</p>
-
-<p>"Won't you permit me to go?"</p>
-
-<p>"Muttonhead! Shall I send one on whose face are the
-imprints of all the Devil's ten fingers? Pick out the
-youngest, the handsomest and the stupidist of the sotnia
-and send him over. The kind that believes anything anybody
-tells him. Then they over there will believe him.
-And what we are going to do nobody but you and I will
-know. Well, have you any such 'steed of God?'"</p>
-
-<p>The sotnik strikes his body with both hands, smiles and
-nods. "There is a Raskolnik here."</p>
-
-<p>"Is that so, Little Brother?"</p>
-
-<p>Both burst into violent peals of laughter as if overcome
-by the humor of the situation.</p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;THE PLOT THAT FAILED</p>
-
-<p>They would send the Raskolnik&mdash;the sectarian who was
-prepared to die at any moment rather than sin in any
-particular against the teachings of Jesus, who even in
-war abhorred attacking the enemy and wanted only to
-defend himself&mdash;one of these religious enthusiasts who
-had to be driven into military service with a whip. What
-a joke for these two orthodox Slavs to load upon this
-"steed of God" the bloodguilt of their stratagem!</p>
-
-<p>They laugh&mdash;laugh till their eyes fill with water.</p>
-
-<p>Half an hour later a young cavalryman trots away
-into the murky dawn.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The fresh wind of the steppe whistles about his ears.
-Over his head flutters the little white flag, which they
-have fastened to the top of his lance.</p>
-
-<p>"How is it that he has found so much favor in the
-eyes of his commander as to be sent as a parlamentaire to
-the enemy?"</p>
-
-<p>But he puzzles little about that. He is glad that the
-poor creatures of God who have been driven like mice
-out of their holes will be allowed to go to-morrow over
-into the camp of their friends. He must be a real man,
-the colonel, even if so far the soldiers have found little
-good in him.</p>
-
-<p>In the east it is getting lighter. Already a silvery wave
-spreads over the plain from the edge of the horizon.
-By the time he arrives at the first entrenchment it will
-be so light that the enemy can easily see the flag on his
-lance.</p>
-
-<p>"It is cold," he muses. "But yet it is already spring,
-and where my horse steps the snow gives way. Soon the
-steppe will be green again, just as it will be back in Russia."</p>
-
-<p>And in the midst of the deep silence which surrounds
-him, in sight of all the horrible traces which war and
-death have left upon his pathway, there blossoms out
-of his innocent soul a pure, sweet memory&mdash;of home. He
-recalls the straw-covered hut, the calm and mighty waves
-of the distant Don, the peace of the steppe purling like a
-breath from heaven through the tall grasses.</p>
-
-<p>He was only a pious peasant's son&mdash;not a Cossack.
-But now they have put him as a supernumerary in a Cossack
-regiment, and he must go along, through all the
-blood, through all the horror.</p>
-
-<p>With a slight shudder he puts his hand upon the crucifix
-beneath his soldier's coat and crosses himself.</p>
-
-<p>"God grant me His grace!"</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>On the other side they had caught sight of him. A
-sentinel advanced to meet him. Soon he stands before
-the Austrian officer.</p>
-
-<p>The latter is a handsome, sturdy man. Everything
-neat about him, although he has lain so long with his men
-in the trenches. Close up to him the soldier stands, so
-that he can feel the other's breath&mdash;but it doesn't smell
-of brandy. The gray eyes hold him fast while he speaks.
-Not a muscle moves. But suddenly he laughs in the messenger's
-face.</p>
-
-<p>"Good. Now ride back. And say to your colonel that
-he has miscalculated if he believes that I shall not open
-fire if you try to sneak in behind those unfortunates. I
-know my duty, and should innocent blood be shed the
-blame will rest on you."</p>
-
-<p>He speaks and turns upon his heel. The sentinel leads
-the dejected messenger back to his horse and calls scornfully
-after him: "Are you really so stupid or did you
-think that we were so stupid?"</p>
-
-<p>The latter makes no answer. But a few steps further
-on he strips the white flag from his lance and throws it
-in the muck. Then that was the colonel's idea. And he
-will stick to it. At his command they are to hide like
-cowards behind the victims who are to be pushed&mdash;as a
-living wall&mdash;up to the enemy's trenches!</p>
-
-<p>"They are, of course, only Jews," he says to himself.
-"But yet&mdash;but yet&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>Why does he feel that way about it?</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly he realizes.</p>
-
-<p>Like a picture it stands before him.</p>
-
-<p>The sputtering fire about which the half-frozen Jews
-are huddled together&mdash;women, children, grizzled old men.
-Here and there a sentinel to guard them. He, too, one
-of the guards.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p>IV&mdash;IN HIS BREAST HIS OWN BULLET</p>
-
-<p>Like shadows they crouch about the fire, rub the freezing
-hands of the children between their own, weep, groan,
-pray softly. One has prayer boxes bound on his brow
-and on his arms and nods and bows unceasingly, so that
-his shadow dances like a curious grotesque against the
-light of the fire. The Cossacks laugh. He, too, has
-laughed, carelessly, unconcerned.</p>
-
-<p>Laughed until he has suddenly noticed the woman at
-the side of the bearded Jew&mdash;with the slumbering child
-at her breast. Something in that sight appealed to him
-strangely. But then they had summoned him before the
-sotnik. And he had thought of it no more.</p>
-
-<p>How sharply that whole picture stands before him
-now&mdash;and among the other details especially these three:
-The man in prayer, the shivering mother bent toward
-the fire, her head cloth like a veil drawn deep over the
-unconscious, slumbering child.</p>
-
-<p>"Bethlehem," he murmurs reverently, and crosses himself.</p>
-
-<p>And he is going to take part to-day in this infamy&mdash;he,
-a Christian!</p>
-
-<p>Then it must be true what they believe back home.
-That the Pravoslavine is Anti-Christ. And he fights with
-him&mdash;for him&mdash;is part of his army. Have they then altered
-the text of the Holy Books? So that some day
-God's word of love will no longer be found in it&mdash;the
-Holy Word spoken by Him who lay in the womb of a
-daughter of the House of David?</p>
-
-<p>It must be so! It must be so! And if till to-day he
-has doubted it, now all is clear. Only Anti-Christ can
-give such orders.</p>
-
-<p>Shall he return to the camp? Stain his hands, too,
-with the blood of these innocents?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"When the master speaks the servant must hearken,"
-they say back home.</p>
-
-<p>He must obey.</p>
-
-<p>Something flashes in front of him like the flash of a
-gun.</p>
-
-<p>"A bullet," he thinks.</p>
-
-<p>"Would it were one!" he exclaims in the torment of
-his soul.</p>
-
-<p>It is only a sun ray which suddenly shoots through
-the mist. But it has shown a poor mortal the right way.</p>
-
-<p>They found the Raskolnik just outside the village&mdash;in
-his breast his own bullet, in his right hand the cross. On
-his lips the smile of peace that passeth understanding.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>TALE OF THE SAVING OF PARIS</h2>
-
-<div class="center"><i>How a Woman's Wit Averted a Great
-Disaster</i></div>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>Little by little the "inner history" of the Great War is coming
-to light. This remarkable story shows how the presence of
-mind of a humble woodman's widow, in the early days of
-hostilities, led to the preservation of the Western Railway of
-France, on which at that time Paris depended for its supplies
-and the transport of troops. Told in the <i>Wide World</i>.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;IN NORMANDY&mdash;STORY OF OCTAVIE
-DELACOURT</p>
-
-<p>In a clearing of the Forêt de Lyons, near Martagny,
-in Normandy, and by the side of a barely distinguishable
-road, stands the rustic half-timbered cottage of Octavie
-Delacourt. A solitary habitation indeed, but one well
-fitted to the mental outlook of a lonely woman&mdash;no fair
-young heroine of romance, as some readers may hastily
-conclude, but a widow of over fifty with hair turning a
-silvery grey. Her husband&mdash;a forester, and the builder
-of the little home&mdash;had died from a fever a year before
-the war. Childless, she had elected to live on there alone,
-partly through necessity, partly because of the memories
-which the surroundings stirred in her mind whenever she
-went forth to collect sticks for her fire, or when, lying
-in bed at night, she heard the wind in the trees. Twenty
-years with "her man," twenty years of labour in common,
-had made her a fervent lover of the forest. It had become,
-as it were, her domain. Certainly no one knew
-better its confusing tangle of roads and pathways.</p>
-
-<p>The outbreak of the war naturally had an effect on the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span>
-mind and habits of Octavie Delacourt, but, alone in the
-world as she was, it affected her much less than it had
-done her friends and acquaintances in the neighbouring
-villages. In her case the war fever took the form of restlessness&mdash;an
-eager, insatiable desire to learn the truth
-about the danger which was threatening her dear France.</p>
-
-<p>As the cloud darkened over the country her anxiety
-for news grew keener and keener. It seemed as though
-her sub-conscious self was aware that the tide of invasion
-was drawing nearer and nearer to the fair fields and
-orchards of Normandy, and that one morning she would
-wake up to find Martagny, Gournay, and Les Andelys
-in the hands of the Boches. So every day, in those early
-weeks of the war, she was up betimes and, having carefully
-done up her grey tresses and put on a newly-ironed
-blue apron, set forth to one or other of the neighbouring
-villages, where she would be able to read the latest "communiqué"
-and pick up any stray item of news that might
-filter through from Paris.</p>
-
-<p>About eight o'clock on the morning of September 16th,
-1914, Octavie Delacourt set out in this way, her destination
-on this occasion being Gournay and the house of an
-old friend of her husband, a small landowner named Rismude.
-It is a good distance by road from Martagny to
-Gournay, so she decided to take a short cut through the
-Forêt de Lyons. Setting her best foot foremost, she
-struck off through the trees with the swinging stride of a
-hardy countrywoman, and soon picked up a little pathway
-amidst the undergrowth which she knew would lead her
-in the right direction. After walking for some ten minutes
-at full speed, she came to a part of the forest known
-as "La Molière," the site of a disused chalk quarry, the
-gasping white mouth of which is partly hidden by dense
-foliage. It was here that her eye&mdash;long experienced in
-woodcraft&mdash;noticed something unusual near the path she<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span>
-was following: a number of green branches, freshly cut
-from the trees, which someone&mdash;apparently in vain&mdash;had
-been trying to make into a fire. Stopping in front of the
-charred remains, she could not suppress the utterance of
-the reflection which sprang to her mind:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"How stupid to cut green branches for a fire!"</p>
-
-<p>Hardly had the words passed her lips than Octavie felt
-a heavy hand descended on her shoulder. With thumping
-heart and suddenly blanched face she spun half round
-and beheld her aggressor&mdash;a heavy-featured man in a
-strange dress who, with a cynical smile on his thick lips
-and a hard look in his little grey eyes, had noiselessly
-appeared from behind a tree.</p>
-
-<p>"How you frightened me!" exclaimed Octavie, retaining
-her self-possession, in spite of her fright, and endeavouring
-to shake off the leaden fingers which weighed
-on her slender frame.</p>
-
-<p>But not a word in reply came from the mysterious man,
-who might have been made of cast-iron, so motionless did
-he stand. Gradually, as Octavie Delacourt fell to examining
-him, the hideous truth began to dawn upon her,
-and her heart almost stopped beating. She had never set
-eyes before on a German soldier; she had never even seen
-a picture of one. But she had heard tell of their uniform,
-in a vague sort of way, and suddenly, one might say instinctively,
-she recognized the ash-grey dress and the
-round cap of the same colour. How came the wearer of
-these tell-tale clothes to be in her forest, not fifteen miles
-from Les Andelys, and within rifle-shot of her native village
-of Martagny?</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;WAS HE GOING TO BAYONET HER?</p>
-
-<p>The mystery terrified her. However, no trace of fear
-or the tumult in her breast appeared on her face. Her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span>
-simple peasant logic told her that would have been fatal.
-In the presence of the hidden and perhaps imminent danger
-into which she divined she had stumbled, she told herself,
-with feminine shrewdness, that at all costs she must
-preserve a brave countenance and combat the enemy by
-craft.</p>
-
-<p>"What do you want with me? Can I be of any service
-to you? If you have lost your way I can set you right.
-No one knows the forest better than I."</p>
-
-<p>She paused and smiled.</p>
-
-<p>The German soldier's only reply was a sort of grunt
-and a slightly relaxed hold on her shoulder. At the same
-time he led her in the direction of a deep excavation, formerly
-used as a wolf-trap. What was he going to do to
-her? She now noticed that he carried in his right hand
-a bayonet, with which he swished, as they walked along,
-at the tall grass and weeds. Was he going to kill her?
-She would have turned and fled like a hare but for the
-grip in which she was held. Perhaps, after all, she
-thought, there was greater safety in non-resistance than
-in attempted flight. So she allowed herself to be led to
-the very edge of the excavation before saying to her captor,
-in a pleading voice:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"You are not going to do me any harm, are you? I'm
-only a poor, inoffensive woman."</p>
-
-<p>Whilst making this appeal, standing on the edge of
-what she imagined might be her grave, she noticed that
-the greater part of the hole was skilfully hidden by a
-roof of branches. The next moment she heard the man
-with the bayonet whistle, whereupon the head of a blond,
-blue-eyed giant, also dressed in grey, but with the rank
-marks of an officer, suddenly appeared through the aperture.
-Words in a gutteral tongue passed between the
-two soldiers. Then the fair-complexioned Boche, eyeing
-her critically, shrugged his shoulders disdainfully, uttered
-an order, and disappeared.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The leaden hand immediately fell from Octavie Delacourt's
-shoulder and she was once more free. Now, however,
-all her strength seemed to have gone from her. The
-feeling that she had just escaped a very real danger
-robbed her of her desire to flee. Slowly, timidly, like a
-frightened animal, she moved away, with her head slightly
-turned towards her captor, who stood watching her, as
-a cat will a mouse, his bayonet still in his hand and a
-look of mingled cruelty and regret on his coarse, heavy
-features. A few steps more and he called to her to halt.</p>
-
-<p>"Has he changed his mind?" thought Octavie, seeing
-him walk towards her. No; he intended to do her no
-harm; all he wanted to do was to take her by the hand and
-lead her in an entirely opposite direction to the one she
-was heading in. This done, he released her.</p>
-
-<p>Once through the trees, and hidden from view, Octavie
-Delacourt made a <i><span xml:lang="fr">détour</span></i> and ran as fast as her legs would
-carry her to Neuf-Marché. At first she thought of returning
-to Martagny, but the fear of being recaptured restrained
-her. Moreover, she felt that she had now an
-urgent duty to perform&mdash;to inform the nearest authorities
-of her discovery. That it foreboded something extremely
-serious for the country she could now no longer
-doubt for a moment. In her flight she had caught sight
-through an opening in the trees, of a third grey-clad soldier,
-lying flat on his stomach at the edge of the forest
-and, with his rifle close to hand, watching the movements
-of a peasant guiding his plough.</p>
-
-<p>Dupont, the <i><span xml:lang="fr">aubergiste</span></i> of Neuf-Marché, listened to
-her story with a puzzled face. But, though his scepticism
-was great, he did not allow it to get the better of his judgment.
-"Nothing would astonish him in these times," he
-declared; so off he went in search of the <i><span xml:lang="fr">garde champêtre</span></i>,
-one of the keepers of the forest. He was lucky in
-catching him before he went for his leisurely morning<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span>
-round, and brought him to the inn, ready to explode with
-hilarity.</p>
-
-<p>"My poor woman, you must be suffering from illusions,"
-he exclaimed, bursting into a roar of laughter.
-"Prussians in the Forêt de Lyons? No more than there
-are cockchafers on a switch!"</p>
-
-<p>Whilst he hastened to turn to his wine and touch glasses
-with the innkeeper, Octavie, seeing that it would be useless
-to discuss the matter, slipped out without a word and
-hurried off to the <i><span xml:lang="fr">gendarmerie</span></i>. Here Quartermaster
-Crosnier was almost as difficult to convince as the <i><span xml:lang="fr">garde
-champêtre</span></i>.</p>
-
-<p>"Prussians at Martagny?" he said, with wrinkled brow
-and a look of doubt in his eyes, as he twisted his moustache.
-"Are you quite sure? You astonish me."</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, I'm quite sure," affirmed Octavie, in an almost
-supplicating voice. "Quite, <i>quite</i> sure. And if you go
-after them, take care you go in force, otherwise they will
-kill you. There is one Boche, as I've told you, at the edge
-of the wood, ready to fire, and I've no doubt there are
-others also lying in waiting."</p>
-
-<p>"Certainly we shall go and see if there's anything in
-what you say, my good woman," replied the Quartermaster,
-in a condescending tone, which proved to her that he
-was still undecided whether to accept her story for gospel.</p>
-
-<p>However, there was no knowing. So he promised he
-would see to the matter at once. Fraets and Lebas, his
-<i><span xml:lang="fr">gendarmes</span></i>, should accompany him into the wood. They
-would look into the mystery as a matter of duty.</p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;"BUT FOR A CURSED COUNTRY WOMAN!"</p>
-
-<p>On leaving the constabulary Octavie Delacourt, not
-wholly satisfied that she had set the administrative machinery
-sufficiently in motion, asked herself what more she<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span>
-could do. All at once she thought of the post-mistress
-she knew at Mainneville, a village some three miles off.
-Excellent idea! A post-mistress had both the telegraph
-and telephone at her disposal, and she knew that this official,
-at any rate, would not laugh at her. Pulling herself
-together once more, she set off at a brisk walk&mdash;almost
-a run&mdash;in the direction of Mainneville.</p>
-
-<p>There, as she had foreseen, she met with the most sympathetic
-of receptions. Mme. B&mdash;&mdash;, the post-mistress,
-lost not a moment in telephoning to M. Armand Bernard,
-the Prefect of the Eure, who immediately passed on the
-news to his colleagues of the adjoining departments.
-Within half an hour not a prefect, not a commissary of
-police, not a <i><span xml:lang="fr">gendarme</span></i> with a radius of a hundred miles
-was uninformed. The Germans in the Forêt de Lyons
-and their accomplices were entrapped, as it were, within
-the meshes of a net.</p>
-
-<p>Octavie Delacourt went to sleep that night content indeed.
-But she little knew what a service she had rendered
-to France&mdash;nothing less, in fact, than the saving of
-the Western Railway line, on which Paris depended at
-that time for its supplies and the transport of troops.</p>
-
-<p>The facts relating to the capture of the Huns in the
-Forêt de Lyons, and those working in conjunction with
-them, were briefly recorded at the time, but, overshadowed
-by the greater events of those early days of the
-war, their true significance was lost sight of. A Prussian
-captain, a non-commissioned officer, and eleven engineers
-were arrested at Oissel, thanks to the good marksmanship
-of Sergeant Leroy, of the G.V.C. Service, who
-punctured with rifle-bullets the tyres of the motor-cars
-in which they were fleeing. One of the cars bore the
-plate and number of the prefect of police of Aix-la-Chapelle.
-In a motor-lorry which formed part of the convoy
-was half a ton of explosives.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In the course of his examination the German officer
-declared that he had crossed the departments of the
-Somme and the Oise without being troubled, and that
-he had come into the Eure with the intention of blowing
-up the Oissel bridge, or, failing this, that of Manoir. He
-added that "but for a cursed countrywoman" whom one
-of his men had caught in the forest, and whom he ought
-to have "suppressed," he would certainly have succeeded.</p>
-
-<p>This happened about three o'clock in the afternoon.
-Less than an hour later it was discovered that the capture
-had not been made without bloodshed. Between the
-"Molière" quarry and the excavation where the blond
-Hun had appeared to Octavie Delacourt three bodies were
-found stretched on the ground&mdash;those of the luckless
-Quartermaster Crosnier and his <i><span xml:lang="fr">gendarmes</span></i>, who had
-been shot almost point-blank when calling on the automobilists
-to surrender.</p>
-
-<p>Octavie Delacourt's presence of mind, bravery, and persistence
-were recognized by the French Government. But
-the service she rendered was infinitely greater than either
-the praise or the monetary reward&mdash;one hundred francs!&mdash;which
-she received for having been instrumental in preventing
-the perpetration of an act which might have resulted
-in grave disaster to the capital of France.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>HOW IT FEELS TO A CLERGYMAN
-TO BE TORPEDOED ON A
-MAN-OF-WAR</h2>
-
-<div class="center"><i>Told by the Rev. G. H. Collier, Chaplain on Board the<br />
-British Cruiser "Cressy"</i></div>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;"MY LIFE SPARED IN MIRACULOUS WAY"</p>
-
-<p>As you know, I was on the cruiser <i>Cressy</i> on September
-22, 1914, when in company with the cruisers <i>Aboukir</i>
-and <i>Hogue</i> she was torpedoed by a German submarine.
-My life has been spared in a most miraculous way.</p>
-
-<p>About 6:15 a.m. I was awakened by some marines
-waking their comrades. "Get up quick, the <i>Aboukir</i> is
-sinking."</p>
-
-<p>I tumbled out of my bunk, put on my shoes and slipping
-my big coat over my pajamas I hastened up to the
-sheltered deck. I should tell you that we were proceeding
-in line formation, the <i>Hogue</i> leading, our ship, the <i>Cressy</i>,
-bringing up the rear. We were steaming between six to
-nine knots, and at a distance of about a mile or so apart.
-When I got on deck the <i>Hogue</i> had fallen back on the
-starboard side of the <i>Aboukir</i>, while we stood by on the
-port side, both of us a good distance off.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Aboukir</i> had signalled asking for boats, which, of
-course, were sent off to them. Their ship gradually began
-to turn turtle, and it was an inspiring sight to see the
-ship's company lined up on the side of the ship awaiting
-the order, "Every man for himself." After a while I
-went down to the quarter deck and began with the others
-to throw planks of wood, etc., overboard.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>While doing this the Hogue was hit by a torpedo from
-a German submarine and very quickly settled down. Indeed,
-no sooner was she hit than her quarter deck was
-below water. She then listed, turned turtle, and in about
-ten minutes had disappeared.</p>
-
-<p>Our captain sent me word to take photographs, and I
-had taken five when I saw the white line of a torpedo
-approaching us in the starboard side, in line with the
-aft-bridge.</p>
-
-<p>A few shouts heralded her approach, but nothing could
-be done, as our engines were not going, and she bored
-her hole in our side.</p>
-
-<p>The impact was not so great or so terrible as I should
-have thought, indeed it was a dull thud, and did not even
-throw me off my feet. Previous to this the order to
-close watertight doors had been given, an order which
-prevented this torpedo doing so much serious damage.</p>
-
-<p>We listed to starboard about 40 degrees, and after a
-time the ship righted herself to about 30 degrees. Everyone
-was on the look-out for submarines, and guns were
-fired at every suspicious-looking object that looked like
-like a periscope. I am not going to make any assertions,
-as I am much too inexperienced. I was standing by
-when three guns were fired.</p>
-
-<p>The first was fired at what I thought to be a man's
-head. At any rate the shell hit something, for it exploded.</p>
-
-<p>Unfortunately, I was called down from the boat deck
-then, so did not see what ensued, but the gunner says
-he saw two men pop up from the spot after he fired a
-second shot, and the torpedo lieutenant supports his assertion
-of having hit the submarine.</p>
-
-<p>The second shot I saw (of course, other guns were
-fired) was at what I feel sure was a submarine. She
-came up, and it was a plucky thing to do, amid a mass of
-struggling men. I do not know if she was hit, but I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span>
-admit I felt a spasm of horror at the damage to our own
-men in the water.</p>
-
-<p>The third shot went right home, and did its work,
-and I cheered heartily with the rest. The Germans evidently
-attacked us under cover of a sailing trawler carrying
-the Dutch flag. This trawler, after we had all been
-hit, made no attempt at rescue work, a heartless act that
-roused our anger, and the captain of the after 9.2 gun
-trained his gun on her and fired. The shell hit her in
-the stern and she at once took fire.</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;"I SAW THE TORPEDO APPROACH"</p>
-
-<p>While this was going on the Germans had fired another
-torpedo at us, but it missed and went astern. Meanwhile
-several men had swum alongside, and we helped
-them aboard, rubbed them down, pumped water out of
-them, and wrapping them in blankets gave them hot tea.
-One of those rescued was a midshipman. He was taken
-to the sick bay and after drinking his tea, he turned to his
-commander and said:</p>
-
-<p>"Why shouldn't we get into these cots, sir?"</p>
-
-<p>"Quite right, sonny, jump in." He hadn't been there
-long when we were struck again. The plucky boy jumped
-out and said, "Look here, sir, I'm off," and away he went
-and jumped over the ship's side, and was picked up by a
-boat some half-an-hour later.</p>
-
-<p>It was this torpedo that settled our fate.</p>
-
-<p>I saw her approaching about 400 yards distant, and
-she entered the ship's side just abaft of the fore-bridge
-and entered No. 5 boiler room. No doubt many poor
-fellows were killed outright. The ship seemed to rise out
-of the water, settled back and at once listed badly and
-began to turn turtle.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>There was no panic whatever. The officers supervised
-the collecting of all woodwork, etc., and the order was
-then given, "Every man for himself."</p>
-
-<p>Our middies were awfully brave and busily set to work
-to construct a small raft with chairs and a boxing dummy.
-Staff-Surgeon Sawdy came up to me, after Dr. Martin
-had procured me a lifebuoy, and said, "Shall I come with
-you, Padre?" He is a west-country man and you may
-guess how readily I said "Yes."</p>
-
-<p>After a time we had to kneel on the deck and hang on
-to the side. It was just before this that I slipped off
-my coat and shoes. When the ship was at an angle of
-75 to 80 degrees, we stepped over the port side on to a
-ledge, and hung on to the chains. A wave caught us and
-knocked us against the side a bit, but not enough to injure
-us, but with the next the ship turned over.</p>
-
-<p>I retained my hold of the chain and the lifebuoy, and
-when I felt the ship steady I let go the chain, and after
-what seemed a very long time came to the surface. Dr.
-Sawdy had also retained his hold of the lifebuoy and we
-appeared together in the water.</p>
-
-<p>You may not realize how we could do it, but we actually
-laughed. He complained of the length of time
-below water (I had been keeping him down), and to
-suddenly pop up together, was really funny. We at
-once struck out with our feet (as I can't swim) and succeeded
-in getting away from the ship.</p>
-
-<p>We were soon joined by others, and six of us stuck
-to our lifebuoys and a plank of wood which came floating
-by. After about ten minutes I began to shake badly
-and my teeth were chattering.</p>
-
-<p>It was a horrible feeling, and I told the doctor I
-couldn't hang on much longer, but he told me&mdash;good fellow
-that he is&mdash;to hang on, and after a while the shivering
-passed off, but a sort of numbness set in and occasionally<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span>
-we had cramps. To keep the circulation going we rubbed
-each other's legs, or kicked about a bit.</p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;THE WAY MEN MEET DEATH</p>
-
-<p>The scenes in the water were not so terrible as you
-may think. Here and there men were singing, "It's a
-Long, Long Way to Tipperary," "We All Go the Same
-Way Home," indeed, one man who joined us actually
-began joking.</p>
-
-<p>The way men met their death was wonderful. They
-would give a smile to their comrades, wish them luck, and
-slide away quite peacefully without a struggle.</p>
-
-<p>Floating spars, etc., occasionally put us in difficulties
-and several of us were badly bruised. It was a strange
-sight to see one's comrades, some fully dressed, even to
-their caps, others naked, while others like myself were
-clothed only in their pajamas.</p>
-
-<p>Before going into the water I happened to look at my
-watch and it was 7:50. It speaks well for an English
-watch, doesn't it? when I tell you it didn't stop till 9:15.
-This watch and my crucifix I still have.</p>
-
-<p>Well, there we were floating about until 9:45, when
-we sighted some trawlers approaching. It seemed as if
-they would never come to the doctor, a marine, and myself&mdash;for
-we were but three then.</p>
-
-<p>At 10:20 I turned and saw a steam trawler near us
-and I suppose the relief was too much for me, as I became
-unconscious, so from then till 1 p.m. I must give
-information supplied me by the doctor. Becoming unconscious,
-he tells me I released my hold of the plank,
-but still kept my arm around the lifebuoy.</p>
-
-<p>The steam trawler did not see us and headed away in
-another direction, but from behind her came a small
-cutter. The doctor shouted "If you come now you can<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span>
-save the Padre," and come they did, and, thank God,
-saved our lives. They hauled me into the boat and
-pumped away at me. I just remember being conscious
-for a moment and hearing voices.</p>
-
-<p>We were then put on the Lowestoft trawler, S. S.
-<i>Coriandar</i>, and put in the stokehold. It was not until
-1 p.m. that I became conscious, a most painful awakening
-and I was very sick. The fishermen had put an
-under flannel over me and given me hot tea. They were
-indeed good to us.</p>
-
-<p>Our commander was picked up by the same boat and
-was superintending the boats which were in company
-with the Lowestoft trawler and others transferring us
-to H. M. S. <i>Lennox</i>. (They had their reward off the
-Dutch coast, eh?)</p>
-
-<p>We buried one poor fellow there and then, but brought
-home another. After being massaged, I was put to bed,
-where I remained till 5 p.m. until the worst of the soreness
-had passed off. We were landed at Harwich at 8:30.
-The passage home, I'm told, was not without interest!</p>
-
-<p>An order was given to "clear for action." Those who
-could, rushed on deck to see what was happening, and
-in the far distance saw an aeroplane and a waterplane
-approaching, but as they put it, "There was nothing doing,"
-as they turned out to be British.</p>
-
-<p>On landing we were received at the Great Eastern
-Hotel, equipped as a hospital, by the matron and her
-staff of Red Cross nurses. After being examined by the
-doctor, and found to have no bones broken, I had my
-first meal since 7 p.m. the previous day, and it was good!</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>LEON BARBESSE, SLACKER,
-SOLDIER, HERO</h2>
-
-<div class="center"><i>Told by Fred B. Pitney, War Correspondent</i></div>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;"I MET HIM IN THE TRENCHES ON THE
-SOMME"</p>
-
-<p>This is the story of Léon Barbèsse, a volunteer of
-France. I met him first in the trenches on the Somme.
-He stood in a first line post, where we were halted because
-the Germans had begun a fierce rain of shells on
-the French lines. They were nervous that day, the Germans.
-All the day and night before there had been a
-succession of sallies from the French trenches. They
-were really only reconnoitering expeditions, but the Germans
-had come to think each the precursor of an attack
-in force, and every time there was the least sign of activity
-in the French lines the German artillery burst into
-furious action, shelling the French trenches to prevent a
-sortie. We arrive as one of these <i><span xml:lang="fr">rafales</span></i> began, and we
-were halted to seek shelter.</p>
-
-<p>The best trench is not proof against a real bombardment
-of heavy shells. Parapets crumble in like walls of
-sand. There is nothing reassuring about coming suddenly
-upon a great gaping hole in what has been considered a
-moment before a solid rampart, a hole still steaming from
-the impact of a white hot shell weighing half a ton. It
-does not add to one's confidence to find that instead of
-walking quietly along a well ordered corridor with a decent,
-dry plank floor one is crossing a miniature mountain
-chain, sinking suddenly into narrow valleys, waist deep in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span>
-water, rising as suddenly to heights that leave half one's
-body exposed to the full view of the enemy. And to
-know that those valleys and those heights have been
-caused by the explosion in the trench of the shells that
-are constantly screaming overhead&mdash;that is the most disconcerting
-of all.</p>
-
-<p>Such was the position we were in when I first saw
-Léon Barbèsse. We had come to a comparatively quiet
-spot. The shells whined above us or exploded in the
-barbed wire in front, but they had not found the trench.
-We stopped to take stock, to look about us, to get our
-breath, to straighten our backs and get a new thought in
-our minds, something except where the next shell would
-land. And standing in front of us in the trench, some
-ten feet away, I saw a bearded soldier with the stripes
-of a sergeant and the ribbon of the <i><span xml:lang="fr">Medaille Militaire</span></i>&mdash;the
-highest honor any French soldier, from ranking general
-down, can win&mdash;and the <i><span xml:lang="fr">Croix de Guerre</span></i> with two
-palms, meaning that he had been mentioned twice for
-conspicuous bravery in the general orders of the army.
-Despite his beard he was a young man, well under thirty,
-and he stood with a quiet air of confidence and looked
-at us with a certain amusement.</p>
-
-<p>Five minutes later we were all distributed at the bottoms
-of various deep shelters. The shells had begun to
-fall on the section of trench where we were, and we
-had been ordered underground. I had descended eighteen
-steep steps, a matter of twenty feet, and found myself
-in a little, low celled, earth walled, square chamber,
-with six bunks in double tiers taking up three sides and
-the narrow door in the fourth side. The bearded soldier
-was in our party. He had preceded me and lent me a
-helping hand down the ladder-like stairs. When we were
-safe in the cave he lighted a candle and pulled up an
-empty shell box for me to sit on.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"You are safe here," he said.</p>
-
-<p>"That is all right," I replied. "I want to know why
-you smiled at us when we came up. We had come across
-pretty dangerous ground."</p>
-
-<p>"I know you had," he said. "That was why I smiled.
-You know now something more of what it means to be
-a soldier. You don't know very much. You can go
-back and tell of the narrow escape you had, and you
-need never come again. But for a few minutes, when you
-were under that rain of shells, you knew the glory of
-war. You prayed. That was why I smiled."</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;THE CONFESSION OF A SLACKER</p>
-
-<p>It was not exactly what one expects from a man wearing
-the <i><span xml:lang="fr">Medaille Militaire</span></i> and the <i><span xml:lang="fr">Croix de Guerre</span></i> with
-two palms. There was a certain implication in it. It
-sounded as though he meant that any man not in military
-uniform was a curiosity seeker or a sensation monger.
-I said something to that effect.</p>
-
-<p>"No," he said hastily. "Not at all. Not at all. I only
-meant you could understand now, perhaps what it is
-that moves men in this, what makes them take part in
-it."</p>
-
-<p>"Most of the men are conscripts," I said. "You are, I
-suppose."</p>
-
-<p>"No," he answered. "I am a volunteer. I might be
-at the rear; I might even be writing for some paper."</p>
-
-<p>It was a fine answer to my brutality.</p>
-
-<p>"I beg your pardon," I said. "You are a volunteer.
-Tell me why you are here."</p>
-
-<p>"I will tell you my name first," he said. "It is Léon
-Barbèsse. I was a schoolteacher in the centre of France,
-married, and with a boy four years old. The war came
-and I was called to the colors, as every one was called.
-But I was sent home. My lungs, you know. They are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</a></span>
-all right now, though. A few months of this life and
-your lungs kill you or they get all right. Mine are all
-right."</p>
-
-<p>He struck himself a heavy blow on the chest and grinned.</p>
-
-<p>"I could not have done that in 1914," he said. "I
-would have coughed for half an hour."</p>
-
-<p>"So I was sent back," he continued, "and I was glad
-of it. I can't tell you how glad. I did not want to go
-to war. I was afraid. That is the truth. I was afraid.
-And when the doctor said I would not do, I could have
-cheered. The doctor was sorry for me, and I pretended
-to be sorry, also, but not too sorry, for he might have
-passed me.</p>
-
-<p>"I went home. I was safe. I did not have to fight. I
-did not have to be killed. I did not have to be ashamed,
-for the doctors had turned me back. Well, I was ashamed.
-My country was in danger. The Germans were in France.
-And I was at home. But I was afraid. There you have
-it, I was ashamed because I would not fight for my country,
-my country that needed me, and I was afraid to fight.
-I was afraid to be hurt. I was afraid to die.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you remember when they called the 1917 class a
-year ahead of time? I went then. I volunteered. God,
-what a struggle that was! I walked the road to the
-<i><span xml:lang="fr">caserne</span></i> with the sweat running off me. For a year I had
-dreamed nightly of the shells. I had heard them. They
-had fallen around me. I had been wounded. I had felt
-the impact of the steel on my yielding flesh. For a year
-I had spent my days trying to hide my terror from my
-wife, my friends and my neighbors. And all the time
-my country had called. Fear and shame! Fear and
-shame! My country called and I was afraid to go!</p>
-
-<p>"For a man who loves his country, there is nothing
-harder than to be a coward and know it. I went at last<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</a></span>
-because I could not stand the torture of failing to do
-my duty. No one else knew. I had been sent back by
-the doctors. I was blameless before the community. But
-I knew it was because I was afraid to be hurt, afraid
-to die. So when they called the class 1917 I went.</p>
-
-<p>"They sent me to Verdun. Can you imagine what
-that meant to me? It was in the very midst of the German
-attack on the left bank of the Meuse. I had been
-drafted into a veteran regiment with a lot of others to
-help fill up the gaps, and I joined just in time to go
-into the front line.</p>
-
-<p>"You know how the papers were filled at that time with
-the terrors of the Verdun fighting. It was not of the
-bravery of our troops that I read, but of the terrors.
-I don't know how I ever got into line on the day we
-marched from the rear to go to the front. Everything I
-did was mechanical. We were called before daylight;
-we had a cup of coffee; we were marching along the
-road.</p>
-
-<p>"I had managed it up to then without giving myself
-away. True, I talked little to my comrades, and probably
-that saved me. But the morning we marched to the
-front, what saved me then I don't know, except possibly
-because I said nothing. I was unable to speak. I was
-numb with fear. I was sick. My stomach turned. I
-walked with my head down and my feet dragged like
-great weights.</p>
-
-<p>"You know, at that time you could always hear at Verdun
-the pounding of the big guns. I had heard it for
-days, while my regiment was in repose. I used to go out
-in the woods by myself and listen to it and terrify myself
-by thinking what it would be like to be under that
-rain of shells. A foolish thing to do, but for more than
-a year, nearly two years, I had been under the obsession
-of my fear. I could no longer control it."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;"WE WERE MARCHING TO INFERNO"</p>
-
-<p>"And then we were on the road, marching toward
-that inferno. By imperceptible degrees the pounding
-grew louder. I moved mechanically because I was in the
-ranks, with a man on each side of me and one in front
-and one behind. I had to go on. My will could not
-control my movements. I was part of a machine. The
-machine went toward the pounding and I went with it.
-That was all, except that once I vomited.</p>
-
-<p>"Mind you, I had never really heard a shell, only the
-distant sound of the explosions. We had been marching
-nearly two hours, when I heard my first shell. There
-was a long, thin whine some place in the air. It was a
-new sound, and it was so strange to me that I raised my
-head for the first time since we started on the march.
-The man next to me laughed.</p>
-
-<p>"'A shell,' he said.</p>
-
-<p>"I looked all around me. I tried to stop to see the
-path of that queer whine, but the man behind me prodded
-me on. Several of them laughed.</p>
-
-<p>"'You will hear plenty more,' they said.</p>
-
-<p>"They thought I was eager for them.</p>
-
-<p>"The shells began to come at regular intervals, all
-following the same path with the same peculiar whine. I
-tried every time to see them.</p>
-
-<p>"'The Boches are hunting for a battery over on our
-left,' the veterans said. There was no change in the pace.
-I was saying to myself, 'I have really heard a shell, and
-I did not run.'</p>
-
-<p>"It was very queer to me; I tried to think it out. I
-was afraid. I knew I was afraid. But I had not run.
-I began to wonder just how afraid I was, and I wanted
-to know. I had heard the shell and my curiosity was
-aroused. I wanted to go on and see how far I would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</a></span>
-go before my fear overcame me. With every one of their
-long whines I studied myself to see if I would run,
-then when I continued marching with the regiment I
-would say:</p>
-
-<p>"'Not yet; perhaps the next time. Certainly, there is
-a limit beyond which I will not go.'</p>
-
-<p>"It was as though I were studying some other man.
-There was the me who was afraid and knew it, and the
-me who watched to see how afraid I was.</p>
-
-<p>"Eleven o'clock came and we stopped for luncheon.
-We stacked our arms beside the road and eased off our
-equipment. I felt wonderfully relieved that I had got
-that far. I was not really hungry, because I was afraid,
-but I was enough master of myself to know that I must
-eat, and to force myself to do so.</p>
-
-<p>"While we waited there shells began to fall close to us&mdash;close
-enough so that we could hear the explosion after
-the whine. Before we had only heard the whine. The
-first one made me jump. The whine was loud and strong
-and the explosion came quick and sharp. With the
-second I was strong enough to turn and look at the cloud
-of earth, smoke and rocks. I was doing pretty well. A
-shell fell short of us. Some of the men looked up and
-saw an aeroplane sailing around over our heads.</p>
-
-<p>"'Better get out of here,' they said. 'That is a Boche.
-He is giving our range to his battery.' A shell dropped
-up near the head of the line, almost in the road. I
-heard no orders, but we all gathered up our rifles and
-equipment and marched off at quick step.</p>
-
-<p>"I had looked straight in the face of the shell that
-fell in the field beside us. It was another triumph for
-me. I had looked at it, shivering, to be sure, wondering
-if I would run. But I had not run. There was still
-a little further to go to pursue my investigation and find
-out how much I could stand before I ran."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>My curiosity got the better of me.</p>
-
-<p>"Have you found out yet?" I asked.</p>
-
-<p>"I am coming to that," he replied. "We went on up
-that road at the quick step until we came to the entrance
-of a <i><span xml:lang="fr">boyau</span></i> leading to the supporting trenches. Shells
-fell around us all the time. The Boche aeroplane was
-still trying to regulate the fire of its battery, and there
-was a maddening wait at the mouth of the <i><span xml:lang="fr">boyau</span></i> until
-it came time for us to go in. We had been marching
-in the road four abreast, but we had to go into the <i><span xml:lang="fr">boyau</span></i>
-single file. My platoon was well toward the rear, and
-that made us wait. We had nothing to do but stand in
-the road and watch the shells and wait our turn."</p>
-
-
-<p>IV&mdash;"HOW I CONQUERED MY FEAR"</p>
-
-<p>"I tried to follow the course of every shell. My head
-was continually twisting. I jumped at every explosion.
-I could not control the muscles of my back and shoulders.
-But I stepped out of the line and walked a little
-way into the field, toward the shells. I wanted to see
-if I could do it. I got close enough so that I could hear
-a piece of shell whiz past my ear. Then I waited for
-another piece. It was a hard job, but I waited, leaning
-on my rifle and looking at the ground a little way in
-front of me, where the last shell had exploded. If I
-had moved my eyes from that spot I could not have
-stayed. Not until the third one came did I hear another
-piece of shell. The others had struck too far to one
-side.</p>
-
-<p>"'Now I can go back,' I said to myself. But I walked
-very fast going back.</p>
-
-<p>"In the <i><span xml:lang="fr">boyau</span></i> it was not so bad. A French <i><span xml:lang="fr">avion</span></i> had
-come up and chased away the Boche.</p>
-
-<p>"I thought of the things I had done and hoped that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span>
-having done them once I could do them again. But I
-was not sure. I was afraid. I knew that. I have always
-been afraid, and there has always been the question
-in my mind if my fear would conquer or if I would
-conquer my fear.</p>
-
-<p>"There was the time when it became necessary to take
-a message from our support trenches to our advanced
-lines in the <i><span xml:lang="fr">Bois des Corbeaux</span></i>. There was a <i><span xml:lang="fr">tir de barrage</span></i>
-to be crossed and volunteers were called for. I was
-chosen.</p>
-
-<p>"By that time I had formed the theory that a man
-can do anything if his duty demands it of him and he
-will keep that in his mind. It was a part of the thought
-that came to me that first day in the <i><span xml:lang="fr">boyau</span></i> and I developed
-it later in the long nights. The first day I had no
-really coherent thoughts, only a great fear of my own
-fear. Afterward I found that I could control it, if there
-was a reason. And then I found that the reason was
-France.</p>
-
-<p>"Of course, you may say that it was France that made
-me volunteer, but I do not think so. I think it was
-shame&mdash;shame that I feared to go when others went.
-With all the good reasons that I had for not going, with
-the doctor's word, I knew, nevertheless, it was fear that
-kept me back. It was because I could not tell the truth
-to my wife and friends and neighbours that I went.</p>
-
-<p>"Only afterward did I find out that a great duty will
-take a man any place with a calm mind. I stood against
-German attacks. I was in counter attacks. I lay out
-in shell holes, helping to hold a line where there were
-no trenches. I never forgot my fear, but I thought of
-France, my country, my duty; and though I shivered and
-the cold sweat rolled off me, I held steady.</p>
-
-<p>"Have you ever seen a <i><span xml:lang="fr">tir de barrage</span></i>? You can walk
-up to it and draw a line with a surveyor's chain on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span>
-the ground, marking exactly the limit where the shells
-fall, and all beyond that line will be a mass of boiling
-earth, like waves in a storm dashing on a rocky coast.
-There is no interval between the explosions. They are
-constant, unremitting, one following so closely on another
-that their detonations mingle in a steady roar."</p>
-
-
-<p>V&mdash;"I DASHED FORWARD INTO EXPLODING
-SHELLS"</p>
-
-<p>"I came within fifty yards of the <i><span xml:lang="fr">tir de barrage</span></i> and
-stopped to watch it and try to mark out a path. But no
-path was possible. No sooner was one chosen than it
-was wiped out, all the little landmarks gone, the whole
-face of the ground changed by a new rain of shells.
-My heart sank. My stomach went suddenly empty. I
-knew that I had reached the limit beyond which I could
-not go. I had found the point where my fear was
-greater than my duty. I lay flat down on the earth. I
-do not know how long I lay. I thought of nothing.
-There was only a horrible blank fear.</p>
-
-<p>"And then I found that unconsciously, not knowing
-it, I was digging my fingers into the ground, clutching
-the roots of grass and dragging myself into the <i><span xml:lang="fr">tir de
-barrage</span></i>. I might as well have been dragging myself the
-other way, but I had lain down with my face toward
-my duty.</p>
-
-<p>"When I made that discovery I got to my feet and
-stood upright for a second, not more, only time to say,
-'I must not give myself time to think,' and dashed forward
-into the exploding shells. Such a race as that is
-like the last steps of a dying horse, one that has broken
-a blood vessel, straining for the wire, and plunges on
-his face in the midst of his stride. I floundered blindly
-into the raw earth and fell again on my face. But this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</a></span>
-time my mind was working. There was only one thing
-for me to do, and I knew it. That was to go on. I
-crawled forward on my hands and knees. I could not
-stand. It would be certain death. Twenty times I was
-knocked flat, my wind gone, by the explosion of a shell
-almost beside me. But I crawled on. I did not know
-if I had been hit. I thought I had. Two hundred yards
-I crawled through the <i><span xml:lang="fr">tir de barrage</span></i> and then I got to
-our lines. They gave me the <i><span xml:lang="fr">Medaille Militaire</span></i> for that.</p>
-
-<p>"You asked me why I smiled when you came up to us
-in the trench. I was wondering what you had to take
-you through the shells. I thought of my own struggles.
-I wondered if you had any of the thoughts that have
-crowded in on me under fire. And I smiled."</p>
-
-<p>The next time I saw him was in a hospital back of
-the Somme, one of the hospitals where wounded soldiers
-stay only a few hours, unless they are too badly hurt to
-be moved on. He was one of those who could not be
-moved. He lay with closed eyes, asleep or exhausted&mdash;more
-likely exhausted&mdash;propped up a little with pillows
-behind his head and shoulders. His tunic hung beside
-his cot, and on it there was a new ribbon, the <i><span xml:lang="fr">Legion
-d'Honneur</span></i>. I stopped before him.</p>
-
-<p>"There is little chance for him," the doctor said.</p>
-
-<p>"What did he do?" I asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Led his company into the Park of Deniécourt, when
-all the officers were gone," replied the doctor. "They
-got a footing in the park and stuck there for two days,
-because he would not give up, until we made a new
-attack and got the park, the château and the village. He
-had been wounded the first day, but he would not give
-up. He has received the <i><span xml:lang="fr">Legion d'Honneur</span></i> and been
-made a sous-lieutenant, but he will probably never know
-it."</p>
-
-<p>I saw him once more. This time was on the boulevards<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span>
-of Paris. His left sleeve was pinned across his
-breast and above it were his three medals, from left to
-right the <i><span xml:lang="fr">Croix de Guerre</span></i>, now with three palms; the
-<i><span xml:lang="fr">Medaille Militaire</span></i> and the <i><span xml:lang="fr">Legion d'Honneur</span></i>. He was
-having a look at Paris, he told me, while he waited for
-the train to take him home to the centre of France, to
-his wife and boy.</p>
-
-<p>"I can tell them now that I was afraid," he said. (Told
-in the <i>New York Tribune</i>.)</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>THE DESERTER&mdash;A BELGIAN
-INCIDENT</h2>
-
-<div class="center"><i>Told by Edward Eyre Hunt, formerly Antwerp<br />
-Delegate of the American Commission for Relief
-in Belgium</i></div>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;STORY OF AN AMERICAN AT THE
-BARONIAL CASTLE</p>
-
-<p>It was five o'clock in the morning. A riotous sunrise
-deluged the Campine as I slipped into my clothes and ran
-down the narrow, twisting tower-stair to keep a secret
-tryst with the <i>Baas</i>, or overseer. Little slits in the tower
-wall, cut for mediæval archers, let in the arrows of the
-sun; and as I ran through the gloomy armory and the
-high-roofed Flemish dining hall&mdash;stripped of their treasure
-of old pikes, swords, crossbars, and blunderbusses
-by the diligent Germans&mdash;out to the causeway, and over
-the creaking drawbridge on my way to the stables and
-the dismantled brewery, I imagined myself an escaped
-prisoner from the donjons of Château Drie Toren. In
-truth, I was running away from Baron van Steen's week-end
-house-party for a breath of rustic air while the others
-slept.</p>
-
-<p>The stables, tool sheds, hostlers' barracks, bake-oven,
-and brewery were thatch roofed and walled with brick,
-toned to a claret-red, pierced with small windows and
-heavy oaken doors. The doors were banded with the
-baronial colors&mdash;blue stripes, alternating with yellow, like
-the stripes on a barber pole&mdash;and in the centre of the
-hollow square of farm buildings fumed a mammoth<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</a></span>
-brown manure pile. A smell of fresh cut hay and the
-warm smell of animals clung about the stables, and I
-heard the watch-dog rattle his chain and sniff at the door
-as I passed.</p>
-
-<p>I found the Baas standing before his door, his face
-wrinkled with pleasure, his cap in his hand. Behind him
-his wife peered out at us, wiping her fat hands on her
-skirts, and two half-grown children stared from the nearest
-window. The Baas and his wife were the parents
-of sixteen children!</p>
-
-<p>"Good day, mynheer!" every one shouted in chorus.</p>
-
-<p>"Good day, madame; good day, Baas." (I used the
-Flemish title for overseer&mdash;the word from which has
-come our much-abused word "Boss.") "I'm a deserter
-this morning: the rest of the Baron's party sleeps."</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, so," laughed the wife. "Mynheer is like the German
-soldiers who desert by dozens nowadays. And would
-your Honor hide in the forest like them&mdash;like the Germans?"</p>
-
-<p>"To be sure. The Baas is to show me the deepest
-coverts, where mynheer the Baron will never find me
-more."</p>
-
-<p>We laughed and passed on. A girl with a neckyoke
-and full milk pails came by from the dairy; nodding faces
-appeared at the windows of the farm buildings as we
-walked toward the woods; bees sped in the air from
-conical straw hives close to our path; and in a few minutes
-we were threading our way through a nursery of
-young pines, tilled like corn rows in Kansas, and all of
-equal age.</p>
-
-<p>"Monsieur, there is a soul in trees," said the Baas,
-affectionately patting an ancient linden on the border of
-the old forest. The Baas was a man from the Province
-of Liège, and he preferred to speak French with me
-rather than Flemish. He had, too, a Walloon lightness<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</a></span>
-of wit which went sometimes incongruously with his
-heavy frame, as when he said to me once when we were
-debating the joys of youth versus age, "To be old has
-its advantages, monsieur. One can then be virtuous, and
-it is not hard."</p>
-
-<p>"There is a soul in trees," he repeated. "All together
-the trees have a soul. A forest is one spirit. These
-trees are old men and old women, very patient and kindly
-and sluggish of blood. They nod their heads in the wind
-like peasants over a stove. And they talk. Sometimes
-I think I can understand their talk&mdash;very wise and patient
-and slow. Men hurry apart, monsieur, but the trees
-remain together like old married people and watch their
-children grow up around them.</p>
-
-<p>"Here,"&mdash;we had turned down a path and were in the
-fringes of another forest of small pines&mdash;"here the Germans
-have taken trees for their fortifications, slashed and
-cut, and those trees that are left are like wounded soldiers:
-they have arms too long or too short, heads
-smashed; feet uprooted, and yet they wish to live, because
-they are one spirit."</p>
-
-<p>"What is this?" I demanded abruptly; for at my feet
-yawned a little pit, with lumpy clay still fresh about it
-and a fallen cross lying half hidden in the weeds.</p>
-
-<p>"Ho, that? It is the grave of a German," said the
-Baas heartily. He spat into the raw pit. "The German
-has been taken away, but the children of Drie Toren are
-still afraid. They will not come by this path, on account
-of the dead <i><span xml:lang="de">Deutscher</span></i>."</p>
-
-<p>His foot crushed the rude cross as he talked, and we
-walked on. But I was vaguely troubled. That vile pit
-and the thought of what it had contained had spoiled
-my promenade. As I had found on a thousand other occasions,
-my freedom in Belgium was only a fiction. The
-war could not be forgotten, even for an hour.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>A partridge thundered up at our feet and rocketed to
-earth again beyond the protecting pines. In a little glade
-we surprised four young rabbits together at breakfast.
-The Baas laid his hand lightly on my arm. "It is sad,
-monsieur, isn't it?" he said. "The poachers steal right
-and left nowadays. The <i><span xml:lang="fr">gardes champêtres</span></i> are no
-longer armed, so the thieves do as they will. There is
-more pheasant in the city markets than chicken, and
-more rabbit than veal. The game will soon be gone, like
-our horses and cattle.</p>
-
-<p>"You remember, monsieur, the sand dunes by Blankenberghe
-and Knocke on the Belgian coast? Ah, the
-rabbits that used to be in those dunes! But now the
-firing of cannon has driven them all away."</p>
-
-<p>A silence fell upon us both. The thickets grew denser,
-and we pushed our way slowly toward the deeper coverts.
-I found myself thinking of the little crosses along
-the seaside dunes which marked where greater game
-than rabbits had fallen&mdash;the graves of men&mdash;the biggest
-game on earth&mdash;the shallow pits and the frail wooden
-crosses, like that which the Baas's leather boot had
-crushed a half hour before.</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;"WE FOUND A STARVING GERMAN"</p>
-
-<p>We had reached the deepest woods, when a gasping,
-choking cry stopped us short. The thicket directly before
-us stirred and then lay still as death. The cry had
-been horrible as a Banshee's wail, and as mysterious, but
-it was not the cry of an animal; it was human, and it
-came from a human being in agony. The Baas crossed
-himself swiftly and leaped forward, and instantly we had
-parted the protecting bushes and were looking down on
-a man lying flat on the ground&mdash;a spectre with a thin
-white face, chattering teeth, enormous frightened eyes,
-and a filthy, much worn German uniform.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"What are you doing here?" I demanded.</p>
-
-<p>The soldier did not answer, he did not rise, he lay
-motionless and hideous like a beast. Then I caught sight
-of his left ankle, enormously swollen and wrapped in
-rags, and his hands&mdash;they were thin as sticks. The man
-was helpless, and he was starving.</p>
-
-<p>And now came a strange thing. We two walked
-slowly around the man on the ground as if he were a
-wild creature caught in a snare. We felt no pity or
-astonishment; only curiosity. Utterly unemotionally we
-took note of him and his surroundings. He had no gun,
-no knife, and no blankets. He lay on some broken
-boughs, and he seemed to have covered himself with
-boughs at night. The wild, haggard eyes turned in their
-sockets and watched us as we moved, but otherwise no
-part of the man stirred. He seemed transfixed, frozen in
-an agony of fear and horror.</p>
-
-<p>"Ashes! He has had a fire here, monsieur, but it was
-days ago." At the man's feet the Baas had discovered
-the remnants of a little fire. "Holy blue!" he added in
-astonishment, "he has eaten these!"</p>
-
-<p>A pile of small green twigs lay near the fire. The
-bark had been chewed from them!</p>
-
-<p>A buzzing swarm of flies, disturbed by our investigations,
-rotated in the air, and a faint, bad odor hung
-about the place, indescribably stale and filthy.</p>
-
-<p>At the end of our search we turned again to the man
-on the ground. "Who are you? What are you doing
-here?" I demanded again. There was no answer.
-"Baas, have you a flask?"</p>
-
-<p>The old man slowly drew a little leather-clad bottle
-from his breast pocket and passed it to me in silence.
-He offered it with obvious reluctance, and watched jealously
-as I knelt and dropped a little stream of liquid between
-the parted lips of the creature on the ground. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</a></span>
-man's lips sucked inward, his throat choked at the raw
-liquor, he opened his mouth wide and gasped horribly for
-breath, his knees twitched, and his wrists trembled as if
-he were dying. Then the parched mouth tried to form
-words; it could only grimace.</p>
-
-<p>For a moment I felt a mad impulse to leap on that
-moving mouth and crush it into stillness; such an impulse
-as makes a hunter wring the neck of a wounded bird.
-Instead, I continued dropping the stinging liquor and
-listening.</p>
-
-<p>Then came the first word. "More!" the black lips
-begged, and I emptied the flask into them. The Baas
-sighed plaintively. "German?" the soldier whispered.</p>
-
-<p>"No. American," I answered.</p>
-
-<p>"The other one?"</p>
-
-<p>"Belgian."</p>
-
-<p>The frightened eyes closed in evident relief. The man
-seemed to sleep.</p>
-
-<p>"But you?" I asked.</p>
-
-<p>"I'm German&mdash;a soldier," he said.</p>
-
-<p>"Lost?"</p>
-
-<p>"Missing." He used the German word <i><span xml:lang="de">vermisst</span></i>&mdash;the
-word employed in the official lists of losses to designate
-the wounded or dead who are not recovered, and those
-lost by capture or desertion.</p>
-
-<p>"You understand, Baas?"</p>
-
-<p>"No, monsieur."</p>
-
-<p>"He says he is a German soldier&mdash;a deserter, I suppose,
-trying to make his way over the frontier to Holland.
-And he is starving."</p>
-
-<p>The Baas's face became a battle-ground of emotions.
-His kindly eyes glared merrily, his lips twisted until his
-beard seemed to spread to twice its natural width. Instantly
-his face became grave again, then puzzled, even
-anxious. A stream of invective and imprecation in mingled<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</a></span>
-French and Flemish poured from his troubled lips,
-and he stamped his feet vigorously.</p>
-
-<p>"He can't stay here," I concluded.</p>
-
-<p>"It is death to help him," said the Baas.</p>
-
-<p>"For you, yes; for me, no. The Germans can only
-disgrace me as a member of the Relief Commission.
-They cannot kill me."</p>
-
-<p>"He must not be left to die here, monsieur."</p>
-
-<p>"The Germans will probably search your house if we
-take him there."</p>
-
-<p>"He may betray us if we help him."</p>
-
-<p>"That is possible. But you see he is very weak&mdash;almost
-dead."</p>
-
-<p>"He may be a spy."</p>
-
-<p>"That again is possible. But see! He has eaten
-twigs!"</p>
-
-<p>"He is a damned pig of a German!"</p>
-
-<p>"But you do not feed even pigs on sticks and leaves."</p>
-
-<p>"I am afraid, monsieur."</p>
-
-<p>"So am I, Baas. Yet you must decide, and not I.
-It is much more dangerous for you than for me."</p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;THE DESERTER'S LAST HOUR</p>
-
-<p>We stared into each other's eyes, trying to guess each
-other's thoughts. Every one in Belgium knows that the
-German army sows its informers everywhere. We could
-not even trust each other in that stricken country. Deserters
-and traitors were tracked down like dogs. Any
-one who gave aid or comfort to such persons did so at
-the risk of his life. It is said that pretended deserters
-deliberately trapped Belgians into aiding them, and then
-betrayed their hosts. Something of the sort was hinted
-in the famous case of Miss Edith Cavell. Knowledge,
-then, bade us be cautious: instinct alone bade us be
-kind.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The Baas's wide eyes turned again to the creature
-on the ground, and he sighed plaintively. "Monsieur,"
-he began, in a very low, gentle voice, "I will help him.
-Give me my flask and I will go for food and drink.
-Then we must plan. Does it please you to remain here?"</p>
-
-<p>"I shall stay here with him."</p>
-
-<p>"Good! I will go."</p>
-
-<p>I knelt beside the soldier and chafed his filthy hands
-until blood flowed again in his dry veins. The swollen
-pupils of his heavy eyes brightened. He talked continuously
-in a thin trickling whisper&mdash;a patter of information
-about dinners he had eaten, wines he had drunk,
-his military service, his hardships, and his physical and
-mental sensations. I had read of victims of scurvy in
-the Arctic snows dreaming and talking day and night of
-food, only of food. So it was with the starving soldier.
-The liquor had made him slightly delirious, and he babbled
-on and on.</p>
-
-<p>His broken ankle pained him. When I moved him
-about to rest it, his lightness astonished me. The man
-had been large and heavy; he was shrunken to a bag of
-bones. His uniform hung about him like a sack, and it
-seemed as if the slightest jar would snap his arms and
-legs. Tears welled under his heavy, dirty eyelids.
-"Mother! Mother!" he whispered once. "Art thou
-there? Mother!" Then as his eyes again cleared and
-he saw the trees interarched above him&mdash;the trees which
-the Baas had told me were one spirit; the grim, silent,
-sepulchral trees; the haunted, malignant trees which had
-wooed him with their shelter and then broken him and
-starved him; the trees beneath which his forest-dwelling
-ancestors had cowered for thousands of years and to
-which they had offered human sacrifices&mdash;he broke down
-and sobbed horribly. "She is not here! She is not here!
-No, she is not here!" he repeated over and over again.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p>IV&mdash;"WE BURIED HIM IN THE PIT"</p>
-
-<p>When the Baas returned, we covered the deserter with
-our coats and fed him. Perhaps we did wrong to give
-him food, although I think now that he was doomed
-before we found him. We did our best, but it was not
-enough. In less than an hour, after a horrible spell of
-vomiting, the poor man was beyond all help of ours.
-His eyes rolled desperately, his breath came in horrid
-gasps, and he grew rigid like a man in an epileptic fit.</p>
-
-<p>We tore open the breast of his uniform to ease his
-labored breathing. A metal identification disk hung on
-a cord from about his neck over a chest which was like
-a wicker-work of ribs. His belly was sunken until one
-almost saw the spinal column through it. His tortured
-lungs subsided little by little, the terrifying sound of his
-breathing sank to nothing, his head thrust far back and
-over to the right side, his arms stiffened slowly, his
-mouth fell open.</p>
-
-<p>We watched, as if fascinated, the pulsing vein in his
-emaciated neck, still pumping blood through a body
-which had ceased to breathe. The top of the blood
-column at last appeared, like mercury in a thermometer.
-It fell half an inch with each stroke of the famished
-heart. It reached the base of the neck and sank from
-sight, and still we stared and stared. The man was dead,
-yet I seemed to have an awful vision of billions of sentient
-cells, billions of little selfish lives which had made
-up his life, fighting, choking, starving to death within
-that cooling clay.</p>
-
-<p>The Baas bent his head, uncovered, and crossed himself.
-With a quick stooping motion, he closed the wide
-open eyes and straightened the bent limbs. Then he rose
-to his full height and looked at me sadly. "This man<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</a></span>
-had a mother, monsieur," he said. "We must forget
-the rest."</p>
-
-<p>In the pit where the other German had lain we buried
-the body of the deserter, and we found and repaired the
-little lath cross and set it up at the grave's head. But
-first I took from about the neck of the corpse the oval
-medallion which told the man's name and regimental
-number. It was a silver medal, finer than those usually
-worn by privates in the German army. I have it by me
-as I write, and on it is etched the brave sentence, "God
-shield you from all dangers of warfare, and render you
-back to us safe and victorious!"</p>
-
-<p>I was late for breakfast at the Château, but Van Steen
-kindly made room for me at his right hand. "Aha, monsieur!"
-he called gaily, "we thought you were helping to
-find the deserter."</p>
-
-<p>"Wha-what, monsieur le Baron?" I stuttered in amazement.</p>
-
-<p>"The German deserter. A file of soldiers woke us
-up at seven o'clock, inquiring for one of their men who
-ran away from Mons a month ago. They are searching
-the stables and the forest. They have traced him
-here to our commune. I hope they catch him!"</p>
-
-<p>My fingers clutched the silver disk in my pocket. "I
-think they will not catch him, messieurs. He ran away a
-month ago, you say?"</p>
-
-<p>"A month ago.... But it is nothing to us, eh? Let
-us eat our breakfasts." The Baron bowed grandly to
-me. "Monsieur le Délégue," he began in his smooth,
-formal voice, "once again we remind ourselves that it is
-thanks to you and the generous American people that we
-have bread. It is thanks to you that our noble Belgium
-is not starving.... Eh bien! Let us eat our breakfasts."</p>
-
-<p>And so we did.</p>
-
-<p>(Told in the <i>Red Cross Magazine</i>.)</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>GRIM HUMOR OF THE TRENCHES</h2>
-
-<div class="center"><i>As Seen by Patrick Corcoran, of the Royal
-Engineers</i></div>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>Patrick Corcoran, of the Royal Engineers, on leave in New
-York, gives a picture in which the monotony of slaughter is
-relieved by wagers among the men and pranks with a football as
-the charge begins. Told in the <i>New York World</i>.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;AN IRISHMAN TELLS HIS TALE</p>
-
-<p>"To the German soldier war is a serious business. To
-the Frenchman it is sublime devotion. To the Englishman
-it is bully sport."</p>
-
-<p>This from Capt. Patrick Corcoran of the Royal Engineers,
-hero of a dozen "Somewheres" in France, twice
-wounded and on permanent leave in New York City.</p>
-
-<p>"And to the Irishman?" I asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Fighting always was the Irishman's great amusement,"
-he said. "The English are good sports, but they
-never did get the fun out of their fun that the Irish do."</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Fun in the trenches! With shells dropping all around
-and blowing the bodies of your comrades into red fragments!
-What do the soldiers do, I wondered, when this
-is happening?</p>
-
-<p>The Frenchmen sing, this captain told me. Not to
-keep up their courage, but joyously, exultantly.</p>
-
-<p>"And the British?"</p>
-
-<p>"Sure, they lay bets on what the next shell will do."</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>"The 'sausages' are the fine toys," the captain went on.
-"The Boche call 'em minnewieffers, but they look like<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</a></span>
-sausages. They always come with a series of whoops,
-and you can tell almost exactly where they're going to
-hit. Then they sit down and rest five seconds before they
-explode; they muss things up a little sometimes, but
-they're decent about it.</p>
-
-<p>"But the whizz-bangs&mdash;nobody loves a whizz-bang.
-You can't even hear them coming. You never have time
-to place a bet. They just whizz and bang in the same
-breath; and if you happen to be conscious after that, you
-help to bandage."</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Capt. Corcoran enlisted as a private. I wondered how
-he came to get his commission.</p>
-
-<p>"So did I," he said. "I was carrying despatches to
-different places within our sector; couldn't go to another
-sector without special orders. But one day I was asked
-to take a despatch to another sector and I took it. When
-I came back, they made me a lieutenant. Nothing at all
-had happened, and I couldn't understand it. I didn't have
-any pull that I knew of; and besides, pulls don't count
-nowadays.</p>
-
-<p>"They told me a while later," he added, "that I was
-the seventh man sent out with that despatch. The first
-six were killed."</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;"I WAS IN A CAVE ON CHRISTMAS EVE"</p>
-
-<p>It was nearing Christmas when I met Capt. Corcoran.
-He is a genial and, I felt sure, a rather sentimental soul;
-but his matter-of-fact conversation about matter-of-fact
-human slaughter was altogether chilling. So I asked him
-about Christmas in the trenches.</p>
-
-<p>"I spent last Christmas at Loos," he said. Loos, one
-of the worst of slaughter pens! I grew expectant.</p>
-
-<p>"I was sapping," he said. "Part of an engineer's duties<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</a></span>
-are the extension of deep underground passages
-toward the enemy's lines, laying mines under 'No Man's
-Land' and listening, if possible, for signs of activity on
-the other side.</p>
-
-<p>"I was sapping&mdash;Christmas Eve. We were down
-thirty-five feet, in a little cave about nine by four. There
-were three of us. Along toward midnight a big shell
-landed right, and we were buried. We were buried thirteen
-hours. One of the boys lost his mind, but they dug
-us out Christmas afternoon."</p>
-
-<p>"It wouldn't have been so bad," he added, "if we had
-only had to wait. But we could hear the Boche sapping
-just a few feet away and we hated like everything to be
-mined and blown up down there. You don't mind it
-when you're out in the open air, but you get nervous in
-a fix like that."</p>
-
-<p>"It must have been a merry Christmas after all&mdash;just
-to get out," I remarked.</p>
-
-<p>"No," he said. "Something happened that got on my
-nerves. I went as soon as I could to get my Christmas
-mail&mdash;wanted to see what Santa Claus had brought&mdash;and
-he didn't bring me a blessed thing but a bill for
-thirty pounds."</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>I have hoped for a reaction against war on the part
-of the troops&mdash;a psychological revulsion, in time, against
-the long-drawn-out killing. I tried to present my theory
-to the captain, but he didn't seem to grasp it.</p>
-
-<p>"Everybody's nervous," he said, "for the first day or
-two&mdash;like a horse just in from the quiet country being
-driven through your city streets. But, sure, if he was
-going to shy at the 'Elevated,' he'd do it the first week.
-After that, he gets used to the noise and he'd be nervous
-without it. 'Tis so with a soldier. He's glad to get
-wounded for a change, and be sent back home; but then<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</a></span>
-he gets to missing the noise of the whizz-bangs and the
-coal boxes and the darling little sausages, and he isn't
-easy until he gets into the game again."</p>
-
-<p>"But the horrors of hand-to-hand fighting," I protested.
-"How can anybody go through that and come
-out sane?"</p>
-
-<p>"'Tis simple," he said. "You know you've got to get
-your man, or he'll get you."</p>
-
-<p>"Get him? How?"</p>
-
-<p>"With whatever you've got. Maybe your bayonet.
-Maybe your knife. Maybe nothing but your fists and
-teeth."</p>
-
-<p>I tried to picture youths advancing under the smoke
-of artillery, through fields mowed by machine guns, dropping
-a moment into craters ploughed out by giant shells,
-creeping out under other curtains of smoke and reaching
-at last that other line of youths&mdash;then the thrust, the stab
-or the fight to the death with teeth and claws. I tried
-to picture young husbands and fathers and lovers, and
-even jolly good fellows, getting used to this&mdash;but I failed.
-I am an incorrigible mollycoddle.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>"What is the war doing to the soldiers?" I asked.
-"How is it changing them most?"</p>
-
-<p>"Making men of them," said the captain. "They came
-out little pasty-faced clerks with no lungs, no muscle, no
-nerve and no vision. Now they've seen life&mdash;and death&mdash;and
-aren't afraid of either. They have muscles and
-nerves of iron, and a man's outlook on life. They'll
-never be mere clerks or mere Londoners again."</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Capt. Corcoran doesn't reminisce. He doesn't romance.
-Getting a war story from him is hard newspaper work;
-not that he isn't willing to give information, but war conditions
-are no longer a novelty in Europe, and heroes are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</a></span>
-so common that their stories are no longer interesting.
-Little by little, I learned the following facts about his
-record, which did not seem at all extraordinary to him:</p>
-
-<p>He fought in the battles of the Aisne, Pepereign,
-Festubert, Hooge, St. Eloi, Neuve Chapelle, Loos and
-Pommier. He was wounded at Neuve Chapelle, sent to
-England, recovered and insisted on going back. He was
-wounded again at Pommier last February, two miles back
-of the line, when a stray shell fragment struck him in
-the back. The force of it hurled him to the ground in
-the midst of some barbed wire entanglements that caught
-in his forehead and tore back his scalp to the crown. A
-comrade clapped a cap upon his head to hold the scalp in
-place while he was carried to the hospital. His recovery
-amazed the surgeons.</p>
-
-<p>Once he broke military rules by staying away from his
-billet all night. That night a shell struck the billet and
-killed his partner with whom he had been sleeping for
-months.</p>
-
-<p>At another time, a shell split a house in which he was
-installing signal apparatus and killed half a dozen telegraph
-clerks with whom he had just been talking. He
-was uninjured.</p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;"EVERYBODY IS A HERO"</p>
-
-<p>"Heroes," he mused. "I suppose everybody is a hero
-after he has got on to the knack of heroism. You don't
-call a man a hero because he rushes fearlessly across
-Fifth Avenue; but to a person who has never seen anything
-busier than a country road, the act looks heroic.
-It's something the same with No Man's Land. I have a
-friend, a doctor, who got a D.S.O. for going out on
-No Man's Land to bandage up some wounded comrades.
-He didn't know he was doing anything heroic. They<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</a></span>
-needed care; they couldn't come in, so he went out&mdash;that's
-all.</p>
-
-<p>"It was different with O'Leary. He went out for the
-fun of the thing and got eighteen Germans."</p>
-
-<p>The captain spoke of Private Michael O'Leary, V. C.,
-who won the coveted decorations for this particular joke.
-It happened in the sector where Capt. Corcoran was stationed
-and he was well acquainted with the details.</p>
-
-<p>"O'Leary had been betting on the 'sausages' for several
-days," he said, "and he was bored. He wanted some
-real fun and let everybody know he was in the mood.</p>
-
-<p>"Betcha can't go across and bring back a Boche,"
-somebody suggested. O'Leary sprung from the trench
-and went. In a second he was lost in the darkness and
-in half a minute the boys heard him yelling like a demon
-for help. Nobody could ever figure out how he did it&mdash;he
-must have brained the sentinel and disarmed the others
-while they were asleep. But there he was, with the
-arms of eighteen of them piled up before him, yelling
-back to the British trenches to come over and get the
-men. Of course, the boys answered his call and brought
-the whole eighteen back to the British lines.</p>
-
-<p>"You see, the Germans, with all their efficiency, aren't
-used to that kind of fighting. They're always so darn
-serious about it. They're good soldiers but they don't
-have any fun. When they see us come over kicking a
-football ahead of the charge, they don't seem to know
-what to make of it. We do it sometimes, don't you
-know, just to add a little novelty to the sport.</p>
-
-<p>"The war is just beginning. The Germans have a
-great machine and it'll take a long while to break it.</p>
-
-<p>"As much as you people in the States have heard about
-German efficiency, there has been little overestimating
-of it. Only one who has seen the Germans in action can<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</a></span>
-appreciate what a well-regulated business organization
-they have made of war.</p>
-
-<p>"I don't know what our boys will do when it's all over;
-they're so used to war that peace will probably come hard
-for a while.</p>
-
-<p>"Seriously, now, I don't know a soldier who is even
-dreaming of peace. They didn't want war, but now that
-it is here, they're going to carry it through. And they're
-going to have all the fun they can out of it while it lasts."</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>PRIVATE McTOSHER DISCOVERS
-LONDON</h2>
-
-<div class="center"><i>Told by C. Malcolm Hincks</i></div>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>Experiences of a Highland soldier, back from the front, while
-visiting London for the first time in his life. The hero's correct
-name, of course, has been suppressed in this story in the <i>Wide
-World</i>.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;STORY OF THE HIGHLANDER ON
-FURLOUGH</p>
-
-<p>He was standing on the main-line departure platform
-of St. Pancras Station. Motionless, as though on guard
-over the bookstall, he might have been made of the granite
-of his native country, and I felt sure that his name
-was Sandy or Jock.</p>
-
-<p>His war-stained khaki bore traces of many ordeals
-undergone; even the big, red knees were flecked with
-mud. Around him hung the extraordinary medley of
-equipment that so thoroughly justifies the old Army
-axiom that a soldier is "something to hang things on."</p>
-
-<p>A red face beamed out like a beacon from the mass of
-paraphernalia, a wisp of sandy hair peeped from under
-the soft khaki headgear, but the steady blue eyes glanced
-at me with hard suspicion as I felt for my cigarette-case;
-and thinking my action might be misunderstood,
-I went into the refreshment-room and dined.</p>
-
-<p>Nearly three-quarters of an hour later I emerged. It
-was eight o'clock, and I had half an hour longer to wait
-for my train to the Midlands. I gasped when I saw the
-Highlander still standing on sentry-go beside the bookstall.
-Presently he shouldered his rifle and paced along<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</a></span>
-the platform. There was a clatter, and his steel helmet
-slipped from his back and rolled towards me. I just
-saved it from going under the wheels of a heavy luggage
-truck a porter was pushing along.</p>
-
-<p>The Highlander took his property with gruff word of
-thanks.</p>
-
-<p>"Losh, mon; it's a terrible city!" he murmured, as he
-placed his rifle between his knees and groped among the
-multitudinous buckles and straps on his broad back.
-"D'ye ken it's been my life's dream to see yon London?
-Ma old mither don't believe in dreams&mdash;and I'm thinkin'
-she's reet. I'll be glad when eleven o'clock comes and
-I'm off for bonnie Scotland!"</p>
-
-<p>"Eleven o'clock!" I gasped. "Why, you've nearly
-three hours to wait, and you were here when I arrived
-just after seven."</p>
-
-<p>"Aye; I've been here since four o'clock. Mon, I know
-this platform as well as I know ma own wee house!
-I feel safer here than in yon streets."</p>
-
-<p>Having fixed his steel helmet to his satisfaction on
-top of the other gear, he swung his rifle round on the
-sling&mdash;nearly braining an elderly gentleman who was
-passing behind him in the process. Ignoring the civilian's
-angry protest, he turned to me.</p>
-
-<p>"That's the sixth," he said, shortly, and a faint glimmer
-of amusement came into his clear blue eyes, "the
-sixth thieving rascal that felt ma rifle this day. They
-hang round trying to steal something from ma kit. It's a
-terrible city. I've been discoverin' it all day."</p>
-
-<p>"Look here," I said, "I've half an hour to spare, and
-you must be feeling hungry. I can't offer you a drink,
-but if you'll come and have some hot tea or cocoa and
-something to eat, I'll be proud, and you can tell me of
-your adventures."</p>
-
-<p>The Scot eyed me suspiciously.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"A wee lassie made the same offer three hours since,"
-he replied, doubtfully. "A lassie all in furs, but I didna
-trust her, and I told her so. She was after ma money
-or ma kit, or she wouldn't have been so angry at having
-been found oot! But I'll trust ye, mon. I want a bite
-of something, and if it's my adventures you want to hear,
-it's a wonderful story I'll have to tell ye."</p>
-
-<p>And here is the tale he told me, though I can only
-indicate the broad Scots in which he spoke.</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;THE SCOTCHMAN TELLS HIS OWN TALE</p>
-
-<p>For years in ma wee Inverness-shire home I'd dreamt
-of seeing London. I'd never seen a city in ma life. I
-might have gone to Edinburgh once, but I lost the excursion
-ticket I'd bought and couldna find it till the train
-had gone. Ma mither had put it away for safety and
-forgotten where she'd put it! I was working for Farmer
-Macpherson when news of the war came, and about the
-end of August I was in the market-toon, when up came a
-chap dressed like I am now, except that he'd only got
-three stripes on his arm ... and was twisting a cane.
-"My lad," says he, "don't you wish to serve your King
-and Country?"</p>
-
-<p>"Aye," says I, "but I'm serving Farmer Macpherson
-juist noo, and he and ma mither wouldna like me changing
-jobs."</p>
-
-<p>Well, the sergeant had a lot to say. Mon, he was an
-awfu' liar, that sergeant! Maybe he came from here;
-I'm thinking he did! He talked of seeing life and of
-being in Berlin before Christmas.</p>
-
-<p>"Mon," I says, "I'm not fashing maself about Berlin,
-but if I go in the Army shall I go to London?"</p>
-
-<p>"Of course," says he. "As soon as you're a soldier
-you'll go to London."</p>
-
-<p>"All reet," says I; and I sent a boy home with the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</a></span>
-pony-cart to tell them that Jock McTosher had 'listed
-and was going to London. Well, I didna go to London.
-I trained in various parts of Scotland, just far enough
-away to miss ma home, but too close to get a real change.
-Then we went to an awfu' place in Wiltshire, all mud
-and huts and hard work; and then slipped across to
-France. I was a sad mon when I left the dock that
-night. I'd thought as a soldier I'd be sure to see London,
-but I'd never even seen a big town save the one we sailed
-from, and they marched us through that at night, when
-everything was quiet, and stowed us away in the big
-ship like smuggled goods.</p>
-
-<p>Well, I'd given up all hope of seeing London unless
-I got wounded and was sent there, when a bit ago they
-told me ma name was down for a ten days' leave!
-"Losh!" I says to maself, "I'll have a whole day in London
-before going north!" Well, I've had it, mon, and
-it's been a wash-out!</p>
-
-<p>At six o'clock this morning I arrived at Victoria, and
-with some pals had breakfast at a hut in the station. One
-of them was a Londoner, and when the laddies left me
-to go to their homes, he told me to keep straight along
-the street and I'd come to Westminster Abbey and the
-Houses of Parliament.</p>
-
-<p>Losh! mon, I was verra disappointed with London
-when I stepped out into yon street. It was quieter than
-the ruined wee village I'd left in France. Well, I looked
-at the Abbey from the outside, but no' feeling dressed for
-the kirk, I went across to the Houses of Parliament,
-thinking maybe the politicians would have had their
-breakfast interval and be starting again soon, as it was
-by then getting on for eight o'clock.</p>
-
-<p>But the big gates were shut and there seemed no one
-about but a policeman. A nice mon he was&mdash;and he
-knew me, too.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"Halloa, Jock!" says he, quite friendly. "What are ye
-wanting?"</p>
-
-<p>"Mon," says I, "I'm having a day in London, and I
-want to see the Members of Parliament and the great
-lords at work. Maybe the day-shift's having breakfast
-and not started yet?"</p>
-
-<p>The policeman laughed as though I'd made a joke. He
-said the members weren't working that day, and anyway
-they didn't start till the afternoon.</p>
-
-<p>"Mon," I said, "they must make good money, or they'd
-never be able to live with so much standing-off time."</p>
-
-<p>"They don't do so bad," says the policeman, with another
-laugh; and I walked up a road called Whitehall,
-though I couldn't see anything white about it, unless it
-was the faces of the wee lassies hurrying to work. Then
-I went into a park and sat down and had a rest and a
-smoke. Maybe I dozed for awhile, for when I got out
-into that same Whitehall again something wonderful
-seemed to have happened. It was all noise and rush, and
-I was saluting officers until my arm ached. Then I
-crossed the road a bit, and after having been nearly run
-over twice, turned down a side-street and lost myself.</p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;ON THE WAY TO PICCADILLY</p>
-
-<p>Presently I saw what looked like a kindly old gentleman,
-and I asked him the way to Piccadilly.</p>
-
-<p>"You'd better take the Tube," says he. "There's a
-station just over there."</p>
-
-<p>"Tube!" says I, doubtful like. "What's that?"</p>
-
-<p>"An underground railway," says he, hurrying off.
-"You'll get to Piccadilly Circus in a few minutes."</p>
-
-<p>He was an awfu' liar, that mon! Why, it was ten
-minutes before I got ma ticket! There were penny-in-the-slot
-machines besides the little windows; but I don't
-trust them. There seemed to be about half-a-dozen railways<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</a></span>
-running into the place, and there were maps with
-all the colours o' the rainbow to show you how to get to
-places; but as I didn't know where I was, or whether I
-was on a green or a brown line, they didn't help me
-much. I looked at the pictures and I looked at the pert
-lassies in uniform clippin' tickets an' all. I didn't like
-bothering them with questions, but at last I got to a
-window and asked for Piccadilly.</p>
-
-<p>"Penny," says the girl.</p>
-
-<p>"Aye," says I, and I put down ma rifle, not meaning to
-hurt the foot of the fussy mon behind me. "Is there any
-reduction for a return?" says I, having been brought up
-never to waste the bawbees.</p>
-
-<p>"No," she snapped. "Penny's the fare. Hurry up,
-please!"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, do," growled out the mon behind, hopping about
-on one foot and I saw it was true about a crowd quickly
-gathering in London&mdash;for just in the little time I'd been
-talking there were dozens of people waiting in a line.</p>
-
-<p>"I'll have to get at ma purse," says I, starting to search
-ma pockets. "Losh! I believe I have it in ma pack!
-Will ye give us a hand with these straps, laddie?"</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, I'll pay your fare," says the man behind me; and
-no doubt he meant it kindly, though his way was rough.
-Well, I puts ma ticket in ma pocket and walks a little
-way. Then one of the wee lassies with clippers stops me
-and wants ma ticket.</p>
-
-<p>"Hold ma rifle, lassie," says I, "so as I can get it."</p>
-
-<p>Seeing how unsociable everyone else seemed, I spoke
-kindly to the lassie and told her I hoped she liked the
-job and her mither approved and all. But maybe, knowing
-Londoners, she didna trust any mon; anyway, the
-C.O. with a bad attack of liver couldn't have told me
-off much sharper; and there was a crowd behind charging
-at me just like a game of football!</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Mon, I'm not surprised that these Londoners make
-good soldiers! A man that could take that Tube every
-day of his life would think the first line of trenches restful!
-Down a sort of underground tunnel I walked; then
-suddenly I came to the funniest staircase I'd ever seen.
-I should have stopped to stare at the rumbling, snarling
-thing, but people from behind pushed me, and all of a
-sudden there was somethin' wrong with ma feet, and I
-found myself carried forwards. While I was looking
-about me steps formed before my eyes, and I gave a yell
-and clutched out to save myself.</p>
-
-<p>Now mind ye, mon, I'm a respectable young chap;
-ma feyther was elder at the kirk and ma mither's always
-warned me to treat lassies with proper respect.</p>
-
-<p>I didna know it was a lassie's waist I clutched hold of
-when I went down with a crash, ma rifle clattering and
-those awfu' stairs sliding downwards all the time. When
-I pulled myself together I saw that I'd dragged down
-with me a very pretty lassie, and she was sitting on ma
-knee! She was wearing one of those terrible short skirts,
-and there before my eyes was about a yard of silk stockings;
-but the lassie jumped to her feet just as I was
-going to shut ma eyes.</p>
-
-<p>She was quite nice aboot it, mind ye&mdash;the only nice
-Londoner I'd met. She was flushed-up like, and confused,
-as anybody would be on that awfu' livin' staircase,
-but she helped me to get to ma feet and collect ma kit.
-It wasn't her fault, moreover, that I fell down again in
-getting off that movin' contraption. I thought I was
-going to be carried doon the crack where it disappeared,
-and what with marking time and trying to step off with
-both feet at once I came down again with another crash.
-I blocked the passage-way for a minute or two, and the
-poor Londoners, with never a second to spare, were
-clambering all over me. Do they get paid by the minute?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>When I'd picked maself up and seen that nothing was
-missing, the dainty little lassie had disappeared. I was
-sorry, for, although I've been taught to be cautious of
-women, she was certainly verra nice, and no weight at
-all on ma knee.</p>
-
-
-<p>IV&mdash;"I'VE WALKED THE SEWERS OF LONDON"</p>
-
-<p>Finding myself alone, I set off up a tunnel. Presently
-I came to a notice&mdash;"Exit by Stairs." I didna know
-what "exit" meant, but I knew all about those terrible
-conjuring-trick stairs, and so I turned back and tried
-another tunnel. Seeing a lot of people going into a little
-room, I followed them. I gave ma ticket to another
-lassie, but she was so busy love-making to a bit of a boy
-that she took it without so much as a glance at it or me.
-There were advertisements in the room, and sort of sliding
-doors at each end of it. "It's a waiting-room," says
-I to maself; and thinking there might be some time before
-a train came and they opened the other door, I lit
-a "fag." Very wisely, I saw, they'd put up "Beware of
-Pickpockets," so I kept my eyes about me.</p>
-
-<p>"No smoking!" barks the lassie; and she came into
-the room, closing the other gates behind her.</p>
-
-<p>I was just going to argue with her, when all of a sudden
-the room started to move upwards. Losh! mon, it
-gave me an awfu' turn! I yelled out, and a man standing
-next to me laughed&mdash;anyway, he laughed till I turned
-round and ma rifle knocked against his head. Then, before
-I knew what had happened, the other gates swung
-open in a ghostly way. Mon, I'll swear there was no one
-to open them! I drew in a breath of fresh air, thinking
-I'd got to Piccadilly but, if you'll believe me, I'd walked
-the sewers of London and <i>come out at place where I'd
-entered</i>! And that old man said the "Tube" was an
-underground railway! Underground maze, I call it! I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[255]</a></span>
-walked to Piccadilly after that; I was afraid of spending
-the rest of ma leave down there.</p>
-
-<p>I have no doot that Piccadilly is gay enough. But I was
-feeling tired and hungry the noo there were officers thick
-as flies after jam; and there didn't seem room for me and
-ma kit on the pavement. And the lassies! Never have I
-seen such clothes, and some of 'em had enough fur on
-them to make twenty goatskin waistcoats. It's a queer
-thing, though, but all of them seemed to have their
-clothes too short for them; ma mither would have been
-horrified. They looked at me as if I was something out
-of a show, and I began to feel nervous. "Losh!" I says
-to maself, "I'll have a bit of dinner. I'll do maself well."
-So I walked into a restaurant, after dodging a naval
-officer who was standing at the entrance and seemed to
-have something to do with the place. As soon as I got
-in I saw I'd made a mistake, and I'd have retired at the
-double, but a foreigner in evening dress, with about four
-square feet of starched shirt on him, came rushing up
-quite excited.</p>
-
-<p>"You can'd sdop here," says he. "Dis blace is for
-ladies and gendlemen."</p>
-
-<p>"Mon," says I, "there's many a rule made to be broken,
-or you wouldna be here."</p>
-
-<p>"I'll haf no insolence!" he cries, going very red.
-"You go to a common restaurant. We do not serve your
-sort here."</p>
-
-<p>That roused what ma mither calls the devil in me.</p>
-
-<p>"Mon," says I, catching him by the collar, "I've been
-killing the likes of you for the past sixteen months. The
-only difference is that they wore a grey uniform, instead
-of that fancy dress of yours. Say 'kamerad' and bring
-me some sausages and mashed and a pint of beer, or
-you'll be the thirteenth I've finished off at close quarters,
-and that might be unlucky for both of us!"</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"The Scotsman's quite right," piped a pretty voice;
-and I felt fair frightened. The whole place was in an
-uproar. Ma rifle&mdash;an awkward thing is a rifle&mdash;had
-knocked over a chair, and a young Brass Hat (Staff
-officer) who was sitting at a table with the girl with the
-pretty voice, came over. I had to let the other chap go,
-so as to salute.</p>
-
-<p>"This won't do, you know," says Brass Hat, very severe;
-but the pretty lassie frowned at him, and he looked
-a bit awkward. "Confound you, you fool!" says he, very
-fierce, to the man in evening dress. "The young lady
-wants this man to lunch with us!"</p>
-
-
-<p>V&mdash;"AND I WENT TO THE CINEMA"</p>
-
-<p>I can't quite remember what happened after that. I
-should have liked to have fed with that lassie, for her
-eyes sparkled like stars, and as the Brass Hat was afraid
-of her it showed she was worth knowing. Still, she
-wasn't my lassie, but his, and he mightn't have liked it,
-so I started to retire. The Brass Hat gave me half a
-crown and said something about being quite as keen on
-killing the waiter as I was; and then I found myself
-out in Piccadilly again. It was some time before I found
-a little pub where I got a good dinner, with beer, for
-eighteenpence. I will say that for Londoners, mon, they
-do throw money aboot. Within an hour or so I'd had a
-railway fare paid and been stood a good dinner. But
-they take so much more out of you than what they give
-you, that's my grievance.</p>
-
-<p>Well, having had a good dinner, I strolled along for a
-bit, and then I thought I'd have a motor-bus ride. As I
-was standing on the pavements a 'bus stopped alongside
-me. Mon, I blushed and turned away ma head.</p>
-
-<p>There, on the wee platform at the end, stood a lassie<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</a></span>
-in a blue kilt shorter than mine and high-top boots. Ma
-little sister wears longer skirts! She was a brown, curly-haired
-lassie, quite twenty years old, with a funny-shaped
-hat on her head and a cheeky smile on her lips.</p>
-
-<p>"Want the Bank, Sandy?" says she.</p>
-
-<p>"Lassie," says I, "war's a terrible thing! Go hame to
-your mither and ask her to lengthen your kilt!"</p>
-
-<p>"Kilt, indeed!" says the hussy, unabashed. "You're
-out of date, old boy!" And she jerked the bell and the
-'bus went off. She waved to me from the stairs, but,
-of course, I took no notice. By now I was tired of
-London, mon; I wanted a little peace. Coming to a
-cinema, I paid saxpence at a little ticket-office and went
-through a hall that was all mahogany and plush, with a
-sort of field-marshal in full dress sweeping the marble
-floor. A lassie with a torch pulled a curtain on one side,
-and I saw a man falling into a river with a motor-car
-chasing him. Then the lights went up, and I saw I'd
-paid saxpence just to stand. I said I'd been swindled,
-but the people round only cried "Hush!" and then the
-lights went out again and some letters came up on the
-screen&mdash;"The Big Advance on the Somme."</p>
-
-<p>Mon, when you've been dodging shells and bullets for
-sixteen months, and ruins and broken trees are the only
-sort of scenery you've seen, you don't want to have "Big
-Advances" thrown at you on the pictures. I think I
-began a speech, and I'm sure it would have been a fine
-one, but things happen so sudden in London. I saw a
-shell coming over&mdash;on the film, ye ken&mdash;and I ducked
-from force of habit and jostled one or two people. In
-the excitement I upset a pretty lassie who picked up ma
-helmet&mdash;it was in the dark, ye see&mdash;and then I was put
-out. I wanted to go, or else they'd never have done it.
-After that&mdash;&mdash; Oh, is that your train, mon?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"I should have liked to hear the remainder of your
-adventures in London, Jock," I said, leaning out of the
-carriage window.</p>
-
-<p>"There weren't any more," replied Jock, gazing suspiciously
-round him. "I came straight here after that.
-I've had enough of London. I've only three hours to
-wait the noo! I'll be feeling a wee-bit lonely, but&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>The train moved away suddenly. I saw the brawny
-man in khaki take up his position by the bookstall, now
-closed. I waved to him, but he had turned to granite
-again. Private McTosher had discovered London!</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>RUSSIAN COUNTESS IN THE
-ARABIAN DESERT</h2>
-
-<div class="center"><i>Adventures of Countess Molitor as Told in Her
-Diary</i></div>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;ON THE GREAT ARABIAN DESERT</p>
-
-<p>One of the most striking of all the numberless enterprises
-of one kind and another which have been brought
-to naught by the war was the plan of a young, rich and
-beautiful Russian countess to unveil the secrets of one
-of the earth's last unexplored and admittedly most dangerous
-regions&mdash;the great Desert of Arabia, called by the
-tribesmen who live on its fringe "The Dwelling of the
-Void," a region that is three times as large as Great Britain,
-and upon which no European foot is yet known to
-have been set.</p>
-
-<p>The young widow of a wealthy Russian nobleman,
-whose estates were in the neighborhood of Moscow,
-Countess Molitor's life had been full of thrilling experiences
-even before she made her plan to go, without any
-European companion, and conquer the unexplored Ruba-el-Khali.</p>
-
-<p>Previously she had wandered, with only a small escort
-of native bearers, through savage Southwest Africa, and
-had been captured there and held for ransom by native
-torturers. She had adventured, too, among the savage
-Tuaregs of the Saharan Desert, known as the most bloodthirsty
-tribe on earth; had crossed the Alps in a balloon,
-made between sixty and seventy flights in aero and water
-planes, been attacked and kept prisoner by Apaches in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</a></span>
-Paris, had nursed in the hospitals of Europe and taken
-part in rescue work in the slums of London.</p>
-
-<p>Of the remarkable experiences that have befallen the
-plucky countess since then I am now able to tell as the
-result of having, to begin with, received several lengthy
-letters from her at Cartagena, in Spain, where she has
-been living for some months, and, more recently, having
-been privileged to read the mightily interesting and vividly
-written journal that she kept from the moment of
-her arrival at Port Said.</p>
-
-<p>Had it not been for the war, it is extremely probable
-that the countess would have accomplished her project,
-which would have pushed her into the front rank of successful
-explorers. She carried out, it seems, her original
-intention, a venturesome one, indeed, for a white woman,
-of joining a Bedouin tribe and traveling with them, and
-had covered over nine hundred miles of her journey
-when she was caught in the Turkish mobilization and arrested,
-on suspicion of being a Russian spy, by the Moslems,
-who, from the beginning had frowned on her project
-and attempted to prevent it. Bitterly disappointed at
-being thus defeated just when the chance of success
-seemed rosiest, the countess was brought back as a prisoner
-to Damascus. There she had the narrowest escape
-of being shot for supposed espionage, and it was only
-after months of surveillance and affronts that she finally
-was permitted to return to Europe.</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;GUEST OF A BEDOUIN SULTAN</p>
-
-<p>Though she failed to get across the Arabian Desert,
-the countess, previous to her arrest, had some of the
-strangest and most picturesque experiences that ever have
-befallen a white woman. Probably no other European
-woman has traveled, as she did, for weeks on end as the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</a></span>
-honored guest of a Bedouin Sultan (who insisted on believing
-her to be a sister of the Czar of Russia), living
-the nomadic life of the tribe and riding on camel-back,
-nor lived, as did the countess, all by herself, in the heart
-of old-world Damascus, an experiment that does not commend
-itself even to the foreign consuls. What she saw
-of the brutalities of the Turkish mobilization alone makes
-as thrilling a tale as any that has been told since the war
-began.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the countess has been the victim of an astonishing
-accident, as a result of which she is still chary
-about using her right arm.</p>
-
-<p>"One day here at Cartagena," she writes, "while swimming
-some distance out at sea, I was followed and attacked
-by a big dolphin. Luckily an officer at the fortress
-had seen it, and he fired on the dolphin. But before killing
-him, one bullet went through my right arm! I must
-say in fairness to the dolphin that it really was not he
-who first attacked me. I saw him following me, and I
-thought I could have a little ride on his back, knowing
-that dolphins are good-natured, as a rule. But he misunderstood
-my attentions and turned on me, and, had not
-the second shot been fired an instant later, I should have
-been lost."</p>
-
-<p>The countess made the journey to Beyrout via Port
-Said.</p>
-
-<p>From Beyrout she went by train to Damascus (a day's
-journey), where she had planned to live for a time and
-improve her knowledge of Arabic, which is one of the six
-languages which she speaks, before setting out for the
-desert. To begin with, she put up at the only European
-hotel in this famous city of the East, and found its proprietor
-to be a strange character, indeed. Untidy of
-person and appallingly rude in manner, "he reigned
-there," writes the countess, "with absolute despotism.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</a></span>
-This his monopoly of the European hotel business in
-Damascus enabled him to do, as the Arab hostelries are
-impossible for foreigners.</p>
-
-<p>"Here is a little example of his delightful ways. One
-day an English visitor asked for a bath and, as answer,
-was told to get his luggage ready and leave the hotel in
-two hours' time, as his hotel had no room for people who
-were dirty enough to need a bath! It seemed to be a
-special passion and sport of his to turn people out of his
-hotel, and any one to whom he took the smallest dislike
-was ejected without the slightest consideration. Those
-who won his favor, however, he entertained with jokes
-and stories worthy of an old pirate!"</p>
-
-<p>She met both the English and Russian consuls, who
-placed themselves at her service and introduced her to
-other Europeans likely to advise her wisely in the matter
-of engaging her caravan and getting acquainted with
-friendly Arab chiefs, who would be able to give her a
-certain amount of protection at the outset of her journey,
-and eventually she found an old Syrian woman willing
-to let her house and act as cook and general factotum.</p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;UNDER ESPIONAGE IN DAMASCUS</p>
-
-<p>And so she settled down, and from this time, the early
-days of May, until when in June she began her journey
-the countess, with no other protector than old Sitt Trusim,
-as her bent and shriveled landlady, who proved to be
-the most capable of spies, was called, lived the life of a
-Syrian woman of the upper class, wearing the native
-dress, smoking the nargileh, studying Arabic diligently
-and always dreaming of what would happen when she
-was alone with her camels and the Arabs under the desert
-stars.</p>
-
-<p>The pages of the journal she kept during those months<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[263]</a></span>
-are reminiscent of "Kismet" and the "Thousand and One
-Nights," for where the countess willed to go she went,
-regardless of whether it was precisely safe to do so or
-not. And adventures she had in plenty. For while keeping
-nominally in touch with her European acquaintances
-on the hill of Sahiye, outside Damascus, she found her
-chief delight in wandering through the bazaars and the
-quaint streets of this enchanted city of minarets and in
-riding on horseback through the surrounding country in
-the cool of the evening. Once while thus doing she was
-attacked, as she had been warned she would be, by a
-couple of robbers, who possessed themselves of all the
-money she had, but missed her small Browning pistol,
-which, Bedouin fashion, she carried in her riding boot,
-and with this she eventually cowed them and made her
-escape.</p>
-
-<p>It was soon made plain to the countess that all her
-movements were painstakingly reported to the Turkish
-authorities, though the Vali, or Governor, consistently
-posed as her friend. She had by no means agreeable experiences,
-too, owing to the jealousy of certain Syrian
-families, whose pressing invitations to various ceremonials
-she had been obliged to decline, while accepting those
-of others and immensely enjoying the impressive and occasionally
-screamingly funny rites which she witnessed as
-their guest. One of these hosts of hers, by the way, was
-the proud possessor of the only bath in Damascus. More
-than one attempt was made to lure Countess Molitor to
-places where it was undoubtedly intended to ill-treat if
-not actually to make away with her. I will let her tell
-of one of these plots.</p>
-
-<p>"To-day Sitt Trusim brought me a letter addressed in
-unknown handwriting. Before opening it I asked her
-who brought it. She tells me that a man delivered it,
-whom, after questioning him, she found out to be deaf<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</a></span>
-and dumb. I read the letter, which was an invitation
-from a lady asking me to visit her and her daughters
-this afternoon. She complained that I had given preference
-to her friends by visiting them, and said that she
-would send her man-servant to bring me at 5 o'clock.
-I don't know why this letter aroused my suspicions. Perhaps
-on account of the mysterious deaf and dumb messenger.</p>
-
-<p>"I sent for Vadra Meshaak (a friend's dragoman) to
-come to me, and showed him the letter quite carelessly,
-without mentioning my suspicions. He at once declared
-that it was written by a man and not by a woman and
-became very serious and angry, feeling sure that there
-was some treason behind it. At 5 o'clock the man was
-to come and fetch me. Well, he (Vadra) would dress
-up in my Arab costume, which in its largeness covers the
-whole figure, and go with the man and find out who the
-writer of the letter was. If it really was a woman he
-could explain his disguise as a joke. But he absolutely
-feared foul play! So in the afternoon we sent Sitt Trusim
-on an errand to the farthest end of the town, and I
-arranged Vadra Meshaak to look like a Syrian lady.</p>
-
-<p>"Punctually at 5 o'clock the mysterious deaf-and-dumb
-man knocked at the door, and Vadra Meshaak opened it
-and went away with him. I had not been alone a quarter
-of an hour till he was back again, all fury and excitement.
-After he had calmed down a little I heard his
-story! He had followed the man to a house in the inner
-court where three Turks, very well known to Vadra Meshaak,
-were getting up to pounce upon him. He did not
-leave them any time to talk, but gave each of them a
-heavy blow in the face, and before they could realize
-what had happened he had disappeared again.</p>
-
-<p>"They must have thought me a very fine pugilist!
-What their intrigue against me had been we shall never<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</a></span>
-know. Vadra thinks that they probably meant to keep
-me in their house by force over night and then afterward
-report that I was a woman of no character and thus get
-me expelled."</p>
-
-<p>At the outset of the arrangements for the journey she
-was fortunate in getting acquainted with an old Arab
-Sheik, Mahmoud Bassaam, who had previously traveled
-with the Arabian lady explorer, Miss Bell, and was known
-to be entirely trustworthy. He had spent virtually all his
-life with the Bedouin and, as a camel dealer, had accumulated
-what was regarded in the East as a large fortune;
-yet he consented to accompany the countess (whose personal
-charm generally prevails, not only with men, but
-with her own sex, too), and took charge of all the arrangements
-for her journey, including the buying of camels
-and outfit.</p>
-
-<p>"My idea," the countess writes in her diary, "is to join
-the Roalla tribe at Palmyra and make friends with their
-Sultan, as they are one of the greatest and richest tribes
-in all Arabia. Once friends with the Roalla I intend to
-travel with them, move with them through the inner deserts
-southward and, arrived south, I hope to be able to
-interest the Sultan and induce him to cross the Ruba-el-Khali
-with me. Because I think this is only possible for
-a great tribe, with all their herds of camels and sheep.
-On my journey with him I shall try my utmost to fire
-his imagination and to rouse his enthusiasm for the exploration
-of the great desert."</p>
-
-<p>As her dragoman, the countess had an American university
-graduate, one Doctor Kahl, a Syrian, "well educated,
-serious and clever," who also had spent many
-years with the tribes of Arabia, but who, when introduced
-to the countess by Sheik Mahmoud Bassaam, had a lucrative
-practice as a dentist in Damascus.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p>IV&mdash;ACROSS DESERT ON CAMEL CARAVAN</p>
-
-<p>It was on the fifth of June that she set out, secretly,
-for fear that the Turkish authorities at Damascus would
-oppose her if they knew of her intentions. Allowing it
-to be supposed that she was merely going for a ride on
-horseback, she met her American-taught dragoman on the
-outskirts of Damascus, and rode with him to Adra, on
-the fringe of the desert, where Mahmoud Bassaam and
-her caravan (eight camels and camel men, an Arabian
-cook and a guide) were awaiting her.</p>
-
-<p>It was in September, after they had traveled for more
-than 900 miles through the desert in company with the
-Sultan Al Tayar and his followers that the first echoes of
-the European war reached these travelers.</p>
-
-<p>In the meanwhile the Countess who, from first to last,
-was treated as a guest of the highest distinction by the
-Sultan (to whom she had been presented by Mahmoud
-Bassaam) had been able to revel to the full in the dreamy
-"<i><span xml:lang="it">dolce far niente</span></i>" existence which she had so often pictured
-to herself. She had become familiar with all the
-customs and observances of the Bedouins&mdash;she had even
-witnessed a pitched battle between her hosts and an enemy
-tribe&mdash;and had learned to eat with her fingers as they did
-without discomfort. By some means the impression that
-she was a sister of the Czar of Russia had become fixed
-in the minds of these tribesmen, and when the Countess
-wished to disabuse them of it, the Sultan dissuaded her,
-hinting that it was all to the good.</p>
-
-<p>It was while crossing the Dahma Desert and heading
-for the wells of Wadi-al-Mustarri that a small Arab
-tribe brought them the tidings that Turkish soldiers were
-scouting the country, and that at Hail great demonstrations
-and assemblies of Turks and Arabs had taken
-place. And, on arriving at Jilfi, a small trading town,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</a></span>
-a few days later they learned that a European war had
-broken out, though between whom nobody knew.</p>
-
-<p>At Jilfi the countess was arrested, a paralyzing blow
-for her, considering that she had covered more than half
-the distance to the Ruba-el-Khali, and that another two
-months would have found her on its borders, and that
-she had succeeded in winning the Sultan to the venture
-of attempting to cross it. He and his chiefs, who first
-wished to resist, parted from their guest with keen sorrow,
-and the Sultan presented her, as his parting gift,
-with a magnificent emerald, of which, however, she was
-robbed while being brought back as a prisoner and ill
-with fever to Damascus. There the Turkish authorities
-greeted her with soft words, declaring that they had acted
-only for her safety, but, though she was allowed to go
-free and to live in her own house, she was aware all
-the time that she was carefully watched.</p>
-
-
-<p>V&mdash;HELD PRISONER&mdash;ESCAPE TO EGYPT</p>
-
-<p>The account which she gives of the Turkish mobilization
-in the days that immediately followed is graphic
-enough: "Soldiers armed to the teeth pass," she writes,
-"driving before them villagers to be enlisted. The boys
-all look terrified. Patriotism means nothing to them;
-they loathe their Government and are frightened to death
-at the thought of becoming Turkish soldiers, who are
-treated like dogs. Those who can, fly and hide themselves
-in the mountains. At present the Lebanon is full
-of such fugitives, and, being very desperate and nearly
-mad with fright and hunger, they are quite dangerous
-to meet. I am told they hide like animals in the grass and
-bushes and live on wild cucumbers. Poor things."</p>
-
-<p>Then German officers arrived on the scene and things
-grew rapidly worse. "The commandeering in town,"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</a></span>
-writes the countess, "is rapidly bringing about the utter
-financial ruin of many families. To-day every house was
-ordered to provide a hundred blankets or to pay a sum
-equivalent to their value. Those who cannot comply
-are thrown into prison. From the store at which I buy
-my provisions they have taken $2,500 worth of rice, sugar
-and coffee, the poor man's entire stock, without paying
-him a penny or even giving him a receipt. He is ruined.
-From another store they have taken carpets and rugs
-valued at $1,000 which are, I am told, destined for the
-private households of the officers! The same is, no
-doubt, the destination of $1,500 worth of ladies' silk
-stockings, linen and dresses, which were also commandeered!</p>
-
-<p>"A commission visited the manager of a firm of automatic
-pistols and took away 800 without paying for them,
-leaving the rest. Two days later the manager was arrested,
-under the pretext that he had purposely hidden
-the arms which the commission had not taken. They put
-him into prison, and only after a week's incarceration,
-his family having paid £50 to the Government, was released.
-Meanwhile he has not had a receipt for his
-guns."</p>
-
-<p>Eventually the countess managed to escape from Damascus
-to Bayreuth, where she had hoped to find a friend
-in the Vali, or Governor, there, who had treated her with
-great consideration at the time of her arrival in Syria.
-Upon instructions from Damascus, however, he kept her
-a virtual prisoner, and when later her trunks were examined
-and the photographs and notes she had made
-while on her expedition discovered she was in imminent
-danger of being shot as a Russian secret agent. The Russian
-consul, who was himself in danger and had made one
-fruitless effort to escape, was unable to assist her.</p>
-
-<p>She found her best friends, then, in the officers of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[269]</a></span>
-American men-of-war <i>North Carolina</i> and <i>Tennessee</i>,
-which were lying off the town. They gave her good
-counsel and helped to keep her spirits up. After some
-weeks of agonizing uncertainty it was decided that the
-countess should merely be expelled from the country, and
-she was given an hour to get aboard of a vessel which
-was sailing for Egypt.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[270]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>GERMAN STUDENTS TELL WHAT
-SHERMAN MEANT</h2>
-
-<div class="center"><i>Three Confessions from German Soldiers</i></div>
-
-<div class="center"><br /><i>Told by Walther Harich, Wilhelm Spengler and
-Willie Treller</i></div>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>What the educated German soldier thinks about the war, how
-he is affected by the strain and the brutalities and the heroisms
-of life consequent of it, is described with a fresh, powerful
-vividness in a book of war letters from German students issued
-under the editorship of Professor Philipp Witkop, of Freiburg
-("Kriegsbriefe Deutscher Studenten"). Translations of some
-of the impressions on the German youth are here presented.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;"DRIVEN TO DEATH BY ME"</p>
-
-<p>Of the worst of all I have not written.... It is not
-the slaying, not the mounds of dead, which we are always
-passing, and not the wounded (they have the morphine
-needle and they lie quiet and peaceful in the straw of the
-requisitioned peasant carts). To me the worst is the
-distress and suffering to which man and beast are constantly
-subjected by the terrible strain. We have just
-buried my first mount, a glorious animal, virtually driven
-to his death. Driven to death by me! Can you imagine
-that a person as peaceable as I could find it possible to
-drive a horse to death with whip and spurs?</p>
-
-<p>There is no help for it. The word is forward&mdash;always
-forward!</p>
-
-<p>Oh, this everlasting driving on!</p>
-
-<p>One stands beside a team that can go no further and
-compels the drivers, with kindness or threats, to force<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[271]</a></span>
-the impossible out of the horses. The poor animals are
-all in, but one grabs the whip himself and mercilessly
-beats away at the miserable beasts till they move again.
-That is the shocking thing&mdash;that one is constantly compelled
-to make demands upon the poor animals to which
-they are not equal. Everything here is beyond one's
-strength. The impossible is made possible. It must go&mdash;till
-something or other breaks.</p>
-
-<p>Or picture this to yourself: Shaken with fever and
-with burning eyes, a boy comes to me, whimpering&mdash;he
-can endure no more&mdash;and I ride into him and drive him
-back to the front. Can you picture that? But it must
-be!</p>
-
-<p>Everything here is beyond one's strength. My God!
-We ourselves must do impossible things. But can one
-demand that of the others? We know that the struggle
-is for the German idea in the world&mdash;that it is to defend
-German understanding, German perception against the
-onslaught of Asiatic barbarism and Romanic indifference.
-We know what is on the cards if we do not do our
-utmost.</p>
-
-<p>But the men? How often since we came to this God-forsaken
-region did we tell ourselves that it was impossible
-to go forward at night. It is really impossible.
-And then came an order&mdash;an order which could not be
-carried out during the day, so it went at night. It went
-because it must. Because "the order" is the great unavoidable&mdash;something
-that must be carried out&mdash;Fate,
-the all-determining. We know what "the order" means
-now! It is that which gives our people the ascendancy
-over the whole world.</p>
-
-<div class="right"><span class="smcap">Walther Harich.</span></div>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;HORRORS OF "NO MAN'S LAND"</p>
-
-<div class="right">
-Near Maricourt, December 17, 1914.<br />
-</div>
-
-<p>Soon after 11 we were awakened by the retiring sentries.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[272]</a></span>
-As tired as dogs though we were, we crawled out
-into the open. It was still raining wet strings&mdash;a cold,
-ugly December night; not a star to be seen. Every once
-in a while the sound of a shot came to us from the other
-side of the stream.</p>
-
-<p>"You," remarked Hias suddenly, "listen! Hear anything?"</p>
-
-<p>"What do you mean?"</p>
-
-<p>"Now."</p>
-
-<p>It was a long, wailing cry for help. I could hear it
-distinctly.</p>
-
-<p>"There is a poor devil out there, wounded," said
-Hias.</p>
-
-<p>Great heavens&mdash;in this weather! And he must have
-been lying there without help since early yesterday.</p>
-
-<p>He couldn't be in the wood anywhere, for we had
-gone through that thoroughly. Perhaps he had been
-caught by a shrapnel splinter during the retreat across
-the field. Well, what was it to us? Let his comrades
-get him. He must be just a few meters from the French
-trenches, anyhow.</p>
-
-<p>Released at 1, we went back to our tents to get some
-sleep, cursing the French who left their comrade to perish
-so miserably.</p>
-
-<p>At 3 the next afternoon, when I went on duty again,
-the poor devil was still calling for help, keeping it up all
-day. We could not help; we did not see him. And to
-expose ourselves to the French was a proceeding not to
-be lightly recommended. It was a horrible feeling to
-be condemned thus to inaction while a wounded soldier
-called for help.</p>
-
-<p>When the wind changed one could hear the poor devil
-whimper and weep and then suddenly rouse himself and
-send out a call for help, "Oh, la, la!"</p>
-
-<p>Why didn't the French take him away? There was no<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[273]</a></span>
-danger. We could not shoot, for we saw nothing. And
-we had no intention of doing that. I was glad when my
-hour was up.</p>
-
-<p>At 8 o'clock I was at my place again with Hias. The
-poor Frenchman was whining more pitiably than ever.
-For half an hour we listened; then Hias lost his patience.</p>
-
-<p>"What a tribe of pigs," he broke out, "to leave a comrade
-to die like a dog! He can't last much longer."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, Hias," I said, "what can we do? I am sorry
-for him myself, but there is no help. He must die."</p>
-
-<p>After a few minutes a terrible scream: "Oh, la, la, la,
-la!" pierced the night. Then there was quiet. God be
-praised! Now he is dead and at peace, I thought. And
-quietly I repeated a few prayers for his soul. But after
-a while we heard his cry again.</p>
-
-<p>"Well, it's enough now," exclaimed Hias. "I can't
-stand this any longer. I'm going to get him, with or
-without permission." He spoke and disappeared.</p>
-
-<p>In a minute his brother took his place at my side, while
-he himself ran up to the trenches. He was back in about
-ten minutes. He had the permission. The lieutenant
-also was going and asked if I would come along, as I
-knew something of first aid and could speak a little
-French.</p>
-
-<p>When we got to the lieutenant three more men, splendid
-fellows, on whom one could rely, had volunteered.
-In a twinkling we had gathered tent cloth, side arms
-and saws and were running singly across the meadow.
-Of course, the sentries were notified that we were out in
-front.</p>
-
-<p>We entered the wood. While two men worked with
-knives and saws to cut a way through, the others held
-themselves ready for anything that might develop. We
-stumbled over bodies, weapons and knapsacks. At last I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[274]</a></span>
-found a little path which the French had made a few days
-previously.</p>
-
-<p>I rested a while and was just about to return to my
-comrades when a hand gripped my foot. Great God, I
-was frightened! For a second I was paralyzed; then,
-tearing out my sword&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Pitie! pitie!"</p>
-
-<p>Some one under my feet was whining for mercy. My
-teeth chattered. I could hardly move or answer.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, m'sieur camarade; pitie! pitie!"</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly the lieutenant appeared and I found my control
-again. Getting down on my knees, I carefully groped
-for the body.</p>
-
-<p>"Look out now," whispered the lieutenant. "It may be
-a trap."</p>
-
-<p>"Give me your hand," I ordered the Frenchman. A
-cold, moist, trembling hand was put into mine.</p>
-
-<p>"Where is your weapon?" I asked. He had lost it
-as he pulled himself along till he was exhausted.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly from somewhere near we heard the horribly
-familiar call, "Oh, la! la!"</p>
-
-<p>"Well, now," said the lieutenant, "we have one man,
-but not the right one."</p>
-
-<p>I asked the wounded one whether we would be seen
-if we tried to get the other man.</p>
-
-<p>"<i><span xml:lang="fr">Oui, mon brave camarade, Allemand.</span></i>" The lieutenant
-hesitated, but resolved nevertheless to go on.</p>
-
-<p>One man remained behind with the Frenchman&mdash;a corporal,
-he said he was&mdash;with orders to stab him instantly
-if he called for help while we were working our way
-through the brush. We came to the edge of the wood
-at last and peered out.</p>
-
-<p>We could make out the forms of many black objects&mdash;dead
-men, killed so near their own trenches, too! Hias
-was beside me, and with his sharp peasant eyes soon<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[275]</a></span>
-espied the body of the poor fellow we were after. The
-lieutenant crawled out, and we followed. Coming up to
-him, I called softly, "<i><span xml:lang="de">Camarade!</span></i>" I did not want to
-frighten him; besides, he might scream for help, then we
-would be in a nice fix.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, oh, <i><span xml:lang="fr">Dieu! Dieu!</span></i>" he breathed and emitted sounds
-like the joyful whining of a puppy when he saw me.</p>
-
-<p>He grasped my hand and pressed it to his breast and
-cheek.</p>
-
-<p>I felt him over carefully. As I fumbled along his
-left leg I received a sudden shock. Just below the calf
-it ended. The foot was torn off above the angle and
-hung loosely on the leg. As his whole body was wet I
-could not tell whether he was still bleeding. I could
-only make out that a rag was tied about the wound. He
-had bandaged it with his handkerchief, as I learned later.</p>
-
-<p>We soon had him beside his comrade.</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant went back to his command, leaving the
-rest to me. The others carried the corporal away to the
-nearest aid station, while I remained with his comrade,
-who, as he lay there, softly spoke to me about himself&mdash;his
-wife and his child&mdash;of the mobilization. This was
-his first day at the front. Fate had overtaken him swiftly.
-He was a handsome man, with big, black eyes, dark hair
-and mustache. His pale, bloodless face made him doubly
-interesting. His voice was so tender and soft that I was
-touched; I could not help it. I gently stroked him:
-"<i><span xml:lang="fr">Pauvre, pauvre camarade Français!</span></i>"</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, monsieur, <i><span xml:lang="fr">c'est tout pour la patrie</span></i>."</p>
-
-<p>I lay down and nestled up close to him and threw my
-coat over him, for he was beginning to shiver with fever
-and frost. Then it began to rain very softly. So we lay
-one-half, three-quarters, a whole hour. At last, after one
-and a half hours, the comrades returned.</p>
-
-<p>My poor wounded one was crying softly to himself.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[276]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>He was soon in the hands of a physician and an attendant.
-His wounds were looked after and he was
-given some cold coffee.</p>
-
-<p>I had to go.</p>
-
-<p>A look of unutterable gratefulness, which I shall never
-forget, a nod: "<i><span xml:lang="fr">Bonne nuit, monsieur</span></i>," and I was outside
-in the cold, damp December night.</p>
-
-<div class="right">
-<span class="smcap">Wilhelm Spengler.</span><br />
-</div>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;A BELGIAN MOTHER AND HER BABE</p>
-
-<div class="right">
-Ingelmünster, November, 1914.<br />
-</div>
-
-<p>In Fosses, near Namur, I happened to be the only
-physician in the place, as all the doctors had fled. So
-it came about that the first prescriptions that I have
-ever written were in the French language. It was rather
-odd, but it went. The sixty-five-year-old apothecary and
-I have opened many good bottles of Burgundy in his
-bachelor apartment while he told of his student days in
-Geneva and Brussels; I of Germany and its glories.</p>
-
-<p>One time I was called to a village an hour distant to
-the help of a young mother. And it may have presented
-a curious and unforgettable spectacle to the Belgian peasants
-when after two hours' hard work the "<i><span xml:lang="fr">jeune docteur
-Allemand</span></i>," shirt-sleeved, armed and girt with a woman's
-apron, presented the young mother with a tiny, howling
-Belgian, while outside the guns thundered in the distance,
-killing perhaps hundreds and hundreds of other Belgians.</p>
-
-<div class="right">
-<span class="smcap">Willy Treller.</span><br />
-</div>
-
-<p>(Translations by Julian Bindley Freedman for the
-<i>New York Tribune</i>.)</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[277]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>BAITING THE BOCHE&mdash;THE WIT OF
-THE BELGIANS</h2>
-
-<div class="center"><i>Told by W. F. Martindale</i></div>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>The people of Brussels have always been noted for a very pretty
-turn of wit. On the other hand, not even his best friends have
-ever accused the German of possessing a sense of humor. With
-the "Boches" in possession of Brussels, it is easy to forecast that
-the Bruxellois would find them fair game. This amusing story
-shows how the citizens have "got their own back" on the invaders,
-as related in the <i>Wide World</i>.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;STORY OF M. MAX&mdash;BURGOMASTER</p>
-
-<p>No one ever suspected the German mind of possessing
-a sense of humour. But that it should prove such easy&mdash;and
-fair&mdash;game as Teutonic behaviour in the course
-of the war has shown it to be is more than the most
-maliciously satirical could ever have hoped. In turn, and
-according to their several temperaments, the Allied nations
-have indulged their wit at the expense of the Boche.
-The British have guyed him with an almost affectionate
-contempt; the French have sacrificed him with a wholly
-contemptuous hatred, and the rest have all scored off him
-in turn.</p>
-
-<p>But it has been left to the Belgians, and more particularly
-the citizens of Brussels, to elevate the pleasing pastime
-of Boche-baiting into a fine art. The heaviest harness
-has its weak joints, and the comedies enacted during
-the German occupation of the Belgian capital have shown
-that even the mailed fist is not proof against the penetrating
-shafts of ridicule and wit.</p>
-
-<p>For a contest of wit <i>versus</i> mere force the Bruxellois<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[278]</a></span>
-were well equipped. They have long enjoyed a reputation
-for a wit peculiarly their own, a blend of English
-levity and French irony, and they have had the advantage
-of a victim who positively, as the phrase goes, "asks for
-it." Moreover, a brilliant lead was set them. The exploits
-of M. Max, the dauntless Burgomaster of Brussels,
-will live long in the annals of war, for his courageous wit
-well matched the spirit of the troops which at Liège
-dared to confront and dispute the passage of the German
-legions.</p>
-
-<p>When the Germans marched into the undefended city,
-doing their utmost to make their entry as humiliating as
-possible to the inhabitants, M. Max went to meet their
-commander as calmly as though he were paying an ordinary
-official call. The Prussian general informed him
-that he would be held responsible for the good behaviour
-of the citizens and their instant obedience to every order
-of the conquerers. The Burgomaster knew very well
-what that meant&mdash;that he would be shot out of hand, as
-other mayors had been, if anyone dared to lift a finger
-against the Germans. But he received the news with a
-smiling face, and assured the commandant that all necessary
-steps had already been taken for the maintenance
-of public order. Then he went back to his office, showing
-a courage and calmness in a most difficult situation
-that delighted his fellow-countrymen, and even invoked
-the grudging admiration of the enemy.</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;HOW HE OUTWITTED THE PRUSSIANS</p>
-
-<p>Some of the stories told concerning the worthy magistrate's
-prowess are probably fiction, but others rest upon
-good foundation. For instance, when M. Max was summoned
-to confer with the German commander, the latter
-ostentatiously laid his revolver on the table&mdash;just one of
-those characteristic little actions that have made the invaders<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[279]</a></span>
-so cordially hated everywhere. It said, as plainly
-as spoken words, "Remember that the powers of life and
-death are in my hands, and that I have got force at my
-back." Some men would have lost their nerve in such
-circumstances, but the Burgomaster was made of different
-stuff. Without a moment's hesitation, M. Max took his
-fountain pen from his pocket and, with a humorously emphatic
-gesture, banged it down upon the table opposite
-the revolver. Was it a sort of hint, one wonders, that "the
-pen is mightier than the sword"&mdash;that the soldier's reign
-would be a brief one? Anyway, it evidently impressed
-the Prussian, as did the Burgomaster's conduct throughout
-the conference, for at the close of the meeting the
-general patronizingly congratulated M. Max on his conduct
-at the discussion and graciously offered to shake
-hands with him. But the Burgomaster was no more
-susceptible to soft words than to threats. He remembered
-how German officers had deliberately ridden their
-horses through the city's flower-beds and roughly jostled
-women and children off the sidewalks. "Excuse me,"
-he said, firmly, "but we are enemies."</p>
-
-<p>A little later there came another sharp passage of arms.
-The new governor of the city sent for M. Max and informed
-him curtly that, on account of the stubborn resistance
-Belgium had offered, the capital would have to
-pay the staggering fine of eight million pounds! How
-long would it take the Burgomaster to produce the
-money?</p>
-
-<p>M. Max looked at him with a smile.</p>
-
-<p>"You are a little too late, general," he said. "All the
-funds of the city were sent to Antwerp some time ago,
-and we have not a penny in our coffers."</p>
-
-<p>That was check number one to the governor, but another
-was to follow. The good folk of Brussels, the
-Germans noted, were showing altogether too much spirit.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[280]</a></span>
-They were saying among themselves that the French
-would soon put the Germans in their places. So the governor
-placarded the town with a notice informing the
-inhabitants that France had left the Belgians to their
-fate; she had all she could do to look after herself, and
-would trouble no further about her little ally. This specious
-story might have had the designed effect but for M.
-Max. Paying no heed to the possible consequences to
-himself, he immediately had another notice, bearing his
-own signature, pasted underneath the governor's poster.
-It was short and very much to the point. It stated that
-the German statement was an out-and-out lie to which
-no attention should be paid. What the governor said
-when he heard of this swift counter-stroke may be left
-to the imagination. What he did was weak enough. He
-simply issued another notice saying that in future no proclamations
-were to be posted up without his sanction.</p>
-
-<p>For a few days M. Max was left in peace; then he had
-another little tussle with the enemy. Because a clerk at
-the town hall refused to accept a requisition order which
-was not properly filled up, a blustering German officer
-forced his way into the Burgomaster's room with a cigar
-in his mouth.</p>
-
-<p>M. Max looked at him coldly.</p>
-
-<p>"Sir," he said, "you are the first person to walk into
-my rooms without being properly announced."</p>
-
-<p>The Prussian began to bully and threaten, but without
-heeding him M. Max sent one of his staff to fetch the
-intruder's superior officer, General von Arnim. The general
-came, heard of his subordinate's rudeness, and sentenced
-him on the spot to eleven days' arrest. Then he
-turned to M. Max.</p>
-
-<p>"Now, sir," he said, "the conversation can continue."</p>
-
-<p>"Pardon, general," replied the Burgomaster, "it can
-now commence."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[281]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;HUMOR OF THE WITTY BRUXELLOIS</p>
-
-<p>Throughout their dealings with the people of Brussels
-the Germans have found themselves time and again outwitted.
-Scarce a prohibition has been framed which has
-not been countered on the instant by some brilliant evasion
-that has rendered it not merely null and void, but
-ridiculous as well. "<i><span xml:lang="de">Verboten</span></i>," that fetish of the docile
-German mind, succeeds only in stimulating the inventiveness
-of the witty Bruxellois.</p>
-
-<p>Exception was taken, for example, to the wording of
-certain proclamations by the Burgomaster which had
-been put up on the walls in various parts of the city,
-and the German authorities ordered that sheets of white
-paper be pasted over them. The order was duly carried
-out. Ere nightfall blameless blank sheets marked the
-spots where the suppressed placards had previously figured.
-Next morning the sheets were still there, blank
-as before, but hardly blameless. An oily sponge had
-rendered them transparent during the night, and the
-censored proclamations underneath were plainly visible
-for all who chose&mdash;and there were many&mdash;to pause and
-ostentatiously read.</p>
-
-<p>Again, the wearing of the Belgian national colours is
-forbidden. So be it. Rosettes of red, black, and yellow
-ribbon are discarded; not a favour adorns the decorous
-civilian buttonhole. But soon a new fashion in attire appears
-upon the boulevards. A dandy is observed handsomely,
-indeed strikingly, apparelled in yellow trousers,
-red vest, and black coat. The mode quickly becomes popular,
-and soon it might almost be said that for the patriotic
-Bruxellois "motley's the only wear." That the
-motley in this case should comprise the Belgian national
-colours is a coincidence which any wearer of it, one may
-be sure, would be astonished to discover.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[282]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>When last year the anniversary of that fateful fourth
-of August came round, the Germans in Brussels, guilty
-of conscience, sought to anticipate by prohibition all public
-reminiscence of the date. Their feelings may be imagined
-when, on the morning of that significant anniversary,
-they were greeted by the sight of a careless torn "scrap
-of paper" thrust negligently through the buttonhole of
-every Bruxellois. To frame an edict that would render
-<i><span xml:lang="de">verboten</span></i> such subtle demonstrations as this would tax
-even the Teuton's encyclopædic diligence.</p>
-
-<p>A scrap of paper is not the only strange but meaning
-device which has adorned the citizen's buttonhole in
-Brussels. On the day when Italy joined the Allies, the
-Germans, in anticipation of that long-expected event, had
-of their wisdom forbidden any display of the Italian colours
-or flag. None appeared, but from out of those resourceful
-buttonholes peeped neat rosettes and sprigs of
-macaroni.</p>
-
-<p>If presently we learn that by order of the All-Highest
-every buttonhole in Brussels is sewn up, it will hardly
-be matter for surprise. It would be a charactertistic
-step.</p>
-
-<p>Those ribbon favours have proved prickly thorns to
-the Germans. They seem to act upon the Prussian mind
-as a red rag upon the bull, and like the rag, when in the
-deft hands of a skilled <i>toriro</i>, they frequently lure the
-victim to his own undoing. It happened once, soon after
-the display of national colours had been prohibited, that
-a Prussian officer, entering a Brussels tramcar, found
-himself seated opposite a Belgian lady upon whose coat
-the forbidden red, black, and yellow ribbons were flauntingly
-displayed. It is the custom of many Belgian ladies,
-on finding themselves in a public vehicle with a German
-officer, to quit their seats and stand on the conductor's
-platform outside. Ruffled, perhaps, by the omission of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[283]</a></span>
-this somewhat pointed tribute to his presence, the intruder
-leaned forward and requested the removal of the offending
-colours. The suggestion was greeted by a stony stare,
-the demand which followed it by an expressive and provocative
-shrug of the shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>"If you will not take off those colours, madam, I shall
-remove them myself."</p>
-
-<p>This menace eliciting no response, the Prussian officer
-stretched forth a Prussian fist and made a Prussian grab.
-The favour came away in his clutch, but that was not the
-end of it. Within his fair antagonist's dress ample lengths
-of ribbon were concealed, and the more the discomfited
-officer pulled the more streamers of red, black, and yellow
-reeled forth. It was a case literally of getting more
-than he bargained for, and the charming murmur of
-thanks which he received when, in sheer desperation, he
-dropped the tangle of ribbon on the floor and made hastily
-for the door must have gratified that Prussian exceedingly.</p>
-
-
-<p>IV&mdash;THE JOKERS OF BRUSSELS</p>
-
-<p>Practical joking has become popular in Brussels since
-the German occupation. "Everybody's doing it"&mdash;amongst
-the Bruxellois, that is. A prohibition was lately
-placed upon the use of motor-cars by the civil population,
-and orders were issued for the enforcement of dire
-penalties in cases of disobedience. One afternoon a couple
-of German officers were seated in a <i><span xml:lang="fr">café</span></i> discussing
-mugs of beer with that portentous solemnity which the
-Teutonic mind finds proper to such an occasion, when a
-loud "Honk, honk!" the unmistakable blast of a motor-horn,
-was heard in the street outside. Forth dashed the
-officers, indignant at this flagrant transgression of orders,
-but when they reached the pavement no car was there.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[284]</a></span>
-None was even in sight upon the whole length of the
-boulevard, though the sound of the horn had been close
-at hand. Crestfallen, the representatives of law and
-order&mdash;Prussian style&mdash;returned to their beer-mugs, but
-were hardly seated when again the loud "Honk, honk!"
-fell upon their ears, and again they dashed into the street,
-with the same result. Convinced that some impudent
-guttersnipe must be playing a trick, they questioned the
-nearest sentry. But the latter had seen neither car nor
-urchin; he had not even heard the mysterious sound, he
-averred, and the baffled officers began almost to doubt
-their ears. But the smile on the face of the Belgian proprietor
-of the <i><span xml:lang="fr">café</span></i> was suspicious.</p>
-
-<p>Fresh mugs of beer were requisitioned, but the very
-first "Prosit" was interrupted by the malevolent "Honk,
-honk!" With froth-flecked lips that gave them an aspect
-admirably suited to their mood, the enraged officers set
-down the mugs with a bang and once more strode forth
-in quest of the miscreant. Once more a perfectly empty
-street met their gaze. But even as they scowled abroad,
-a mocking "Honk, honk!" sounded, this time just above
-their heads. The listeners started and looked up, to see
-a green parrot in a cage upon the window-sill above regarding
-them imperturably with a beady inscrutable eye.
-So flagrant a case of <i><span xml:lang="fr">lèse majesté</span></i> could not be overlooked,
-and the green parrot was executed.</p>
-
-<p>But even in his murders the Boche lacks a sense of proportion,
-which is, of course, merely another way of saying
-that he has no sense of humor. To the martyrdom of
-the parrot must be added that of two luckless pigeons
-whose sole crime against the Deutches Reich was that of
-being born after a certain date. It was decreed soon
-after the occupation of Brussels that all owners of pigeons
-must notify the authorities the number of birds which
-they possessed. Amongst those complying with the order<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[285]</a></span>
-was a certain shopkeeper who kept a pair of pigeons as
-pets. They were not of the carrier variety, and he was
-allowed to retain them. But pigeons are notoriously domesticated
-creatures, and presently an interesting event
-occurred in the establishment of this happy couple. A
-couple of squabs were hatched out. These duly assumed
-down, which in turn became feathers, and presently
-there were four pigeons where formerly had been but
-two. At this stage a German official, armed with a registration
-list, paid a visit of inspection. He noted the well-preened
-quartette, and referred to his papers. Then he
-frowned ominously.</p>
-
-<p>"On such and such a date you registered two pigeons."</p>
-
-<p>"That is so," was the answer. "Since then&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"But you have four there."</p>
-
-<p>"Quite true. You are&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"But you are only entitled to have two."</p>
-
-<p>"A thousand pardons, mein Herr. But one cannot
-interfere with Nature. My two pigeons, you see&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"If you registered two only, you cannot be allowed to
-have four. It is self-evident."</p>
-
-<p>It is needless to repeat the colloquy at length. Though
-that explanations were cut short, refused a hearing. No
-German official was ever known to "use his discretion";
-that is a prerogative of the muddle-headed British. The
-list had <i>two</i> pigeons; here were <i>four</i>. Obviously there
-was only one course to be taken. The abundant pigeons
-shared the fate of the indiscreet parrot.</p>
-
-<p>Next day there appeared suspended in the mourning
-owner's shop-window two feathered corpses adorned with
-this pathetic placard:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-MORTS<br />
-POUR LA PATRIE!<br />
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[286]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p>V&mdash;THE SECRET NEWSPAPER&mdash;<i><span xml:lang="fr">LIBRE
-BELGIQUE</span></i></p>
-
-<p>But the most brilliant and daring feat achieved in Brussels
-is unquestionably the publication of <i><span xml:lang="fr">Libre Belgique</span></i>,
-a mysterious weekly journal which makes its appearance
-with unfailing regularity, though how, where, and by
-whom produced the Germans have never been able to
-discover. This is the very apotheosis of Boche-baiting,
-for <i><span xml:lang="fr">Libre Belgique</span></i> is a fiery sheet. It does not mince
-words, but flagellates the Germans with the most scornful
-virulence, holding them up to ridicule and contempt.
-Every week it pours the vials of bitter wrath and hatred
-upon the Boche's devoted head, and the Boche can do
-nothing but sit meekly under this scorching cataract. For
-though a reward, which has already risen from a thousand
-pounds to three times that figure, is offered for a
-denunciation of those responsible for this "scurrilous rag,"
-the secret of <i><span xml:lang="fr">Libre Belgique</span></i> remains inviolate. Exhaustive
-searches have been conducted, many arrests have
-been made upon suspicion, but except for two minor
-actors in the great comedy, whose function was merely
-the distribution of copies, no one has been caught. Yet
-<i><span xml:lang="fr">Libre Belgique</span></i> has already celebrated one anniversary
-of its birth, and is well into its second year of existence.
-And every week, without fail, General von Bissing, the
-German governor of Brussels, receives a "complimentary"
-copy, which he doubtless peruses with absorbed
-interest.</p>
-
-<p>It is characteristic of Brussels wit that in conformity
-with law the paper announces in each issue the address
-of its office and printing works. These, it appears, are
-in "a cellar on wheels," and in view of the peripatetic
-habits thus suggested, correspondents are desired to address<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[287]</a></span>
-their communications to the <i><span xml:lang="de">Kommandatur</span></i>, <i>i.e.</i>,
-the headquarters of the German authorities!</p>
-
-<p>But <i><span xml:lang="fr">Libre Belgique</span></i> has another function to discharge
-beyond that of a courageous jest, well calculated to keep
-the Bruxellois in good heart. Drastic in its satire upon
-the enemy, it is equally unsparing in its record of German
-crimes and its dissection of the often grotesque
-claims made by the German official communiqués. Von
-Bissing and his staff may affect to make light of this
-gadfly among journals, but the rewards offered for its
-betrayal and the energetic measures taken to bring about
-its suppression tell another story. <i><span xml:lang="fr">Libre Belgique</span></i>, indeed,
-aptly illustrates the parable at which Burgomaster
-Max so subtly hinted when he laid his pen beside his
-interlocutor's pistol. The pen is far mightier&mdash;in the
-long run&mdash;than the sword, and the Germans, though they
-will not perhaps admit it even to themselves, have an uncomfortable
-inkling of that fact.</p>
-
-<p>That <i><span xml:lang="fr">Libre Belgique</span></i>, in spite of all proffered bribes,
-should never yet have been betrayed is a wonderful testimony
-to the high patriotic spirit of the Bruxellois. For
-though the operations of the paper's staff are doubtless
-closely guarded, the number of persons who are in the
-secret must inevitably be considerable, and leakage is
-difficult to prevent. But the Belgian spirit is a thing with
-which we are all familiar now, and when to that is added
-Brussels wit the whole phenomenon is explained.</p>
-
-<p>One fancies, indeed, that when the Belgian capital is at
-length evacuated by the Germans the populace will be half
-sorry to see them go. The Boche is not exactly a lovable
-fellow, but to people of a satirical turn of mind, <i><span xml:lang="fr">naïveté</span></i>,
-which he possesses in unparalleled degree, is always engaging.
-As a butt the Boche is unique, and in that capacity,
-if in no other, he has positively endeared himself
-to the witty citizens of Brussels.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[288]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>HOW SERGEANT O'LEARY WON HIS
-VICTORIA CROSS</h2>
-
-<div class="center"><i>Story of the First Battalion of the Irish Guards</i></div>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>He shot eight Germans in eight seconds, captured a machine
-gun, took two barricades single handed, and saved his whole
-company from being exterminated. The story is told in the
-<i>New York American</i> as dispatched from London.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;WHO IS THE BRAVEST MAN IN THE WAR?</p>
-
-<p>Who is the bravest man that the war has produced?</p>
-
-<p>It would probably be impossible to answer this question
-with any approach to accuracy and impartiality.
-But it is interesting to compare some of the incidents
-reported and see how modern courage compares with
-that of past history.</p>
-
-<p>It is generally admitted that all the nations engaged
-have fought with remarkable bravery and steadiness, so
-that a man must have done some extraordinarily daring
-action to make himself notable. Thousands and thousands
-of acts of bravery have been performed by many
-among the millions of soldiers engaged. Doubtless some
-of the most heroic have died without having their acts
-mentioned.</p>
-
-<p>Of the innumerable feats of bravery reported the one
-that has impressed the British public most is that of
-Sergeant Michael O'Leary, of the Irish Guards, who is
-a native of Ireland, as his name suggests.</p>
-
-<p>He has received the coveted Victoria Cross, been promoted
-Sergeant and a long description of his deeds has
-been given him on the official records&mdash;a very great<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[289]</a></span>
-honor. He has also been offered a commission, but will
-not take it at present because he does not want to leave
-the Irish Guards, and there is no place for him there
-as an officer.</p>
-
-<p>The cold official record says that O'Leary won his
-Victoria Cross "for conspicuous bravery at Cuinchy.
-When forming one of the storming party which advanced
-against the enemy's barricades he rushed to the front
-and himself killed five Germans who were behind the first
-barricade, after which he attacked a second barricade,
-about sixty yards further on, which he captured, after
-killing three of the enemy and making prisoners of two
-more. Lance Corporal O'Leary thus practically captured
-the enemy's position by himself and prevented the rest
-of the attacking party from being fired on."</p>
-
-<p>Further details of O'Leary's wonderful exploit were
-given by Company Quartermaster Sergeant J. G. Lowry,
-of the Irish Guards, who was engaged in the fight.</p>
-
-<p>"Our First Battalion," he said, "had been holding
-trenches near the La Bassee brickfield, and our losses
-were heavy. The Germans had excellent cover, both in
-trenches and behind stacks of bricks.</p>
-
-<p>"We were all delighted when the order came that the
-brickfield had to be taken by assault next day.</p>
-
-<p>"Lance Corporal O'Leary never looked to see if his
-mates were coming, and he must have done pretty near
-even time over that patch of ground. When he got near
-the end of one of the German trenches he dropped, and
-so did many others a long way behind him. The enemy
-had discovered what was up.</p>
-
-<p>"A machine-gun was O'Leary's mark. Before the
-Germans could manage to slew it around and meet the
-charging men O'Leary picked off the whole of the five
-of the machine crew, and leaving some of his mates
-to come up and capture the gun, he dashed forward to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[290]</a></span>
-the second barricade, which the Germans were quitting
-in a hurry and shot three more.</p>
-
-<p>"O'Leary came back from his killing as cool as if he
-had been for a walk in the park and accompanied by
-two prisoners he had taken. He probably saved the lives
-of a whole company.</p>
-
-<p>"Had that machine gun got slewed round, No. 1 Company
-might have been nearly wiped out."</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;STORY OF THE YOUNG IRISH GUARD</p>
-
-<p>What impresses people in O'Leary's deed is not only
-his bravery but the triumphant success with which he
-carried out the whole act. Other soldiers may have displayed
-more self-sacrifice and endurance, but not one of
-them appears to have done more for his side by one individual
-act of bravery than O'Leary.</p>
-
-<p>It is the dashing quality of his deed that wins admiration
-and this quality, it is to be noted, is peculiarly Irish.
-He is credited by his admirers with having shot eight
-men in eight seconds. His quickness must have been
-phenomenal, and here again he showed a peculiarly Irish
-trait.</p>
-
-<p>How one man could have shot eight soldiers, when all
-eight of them were armed and many of their comrades
-were only a few yards away, must appear a mystery to
-many. The Germans were perhaps retiring hastily from
-their positions, but they had magazine rifles in their hands
-and fired many shots at the British.</p>
-
-<p>Why did they not get O'Leary, who was running out
-alone ahead of his companions? He must have been
-amazingly lucky, as well as amazingly quick.</p>
-
-<p>Then it is almost equally astonishing that he could
-have shot eight men in a few moments while running.
-The best explanation of this is that the British soldier<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[291]</a></span>
-has a rifle carrying more bullets than that of any other
-army.</p>
-
-<p>The Lee Enfield rifle now used in the British army
-carries ten bullets in the magazine and one in the barrel.
-O'Leary, of course, fired all his eleven bullets, and he is
-credited with making eight of them kill a man apiece.
-That is an amazing shooting record, said to be unequalled
-for a soldier.</p>
-
-<p>Sergeant O'Leary is not a particularly fierce looking
-soldier, as might be expected, but a tall, slender, fair-haired
-young fellow. He is only twenty-five years old.</p>
-
-<p>"A quiet, easy-going young fellow O'Leary is," said
-his friend, Sergeant Daly, of the Second Battalion of
-the Irish Guards. "But he is remarkably quick on his
-feet."</p>
-
-<p>O'Leary was born in the little village of Inchigeelach,
-in the County Cork. His father and mother still live
-there. He has an older brother and four sisters, who are
-now in America.</p>
-
-<p>He served for several years in the Canadian Northwest
-Mounted Police, but went back and joined the
-British Army in order to be nearer home.</p>
-
-<p>After the fight in which he won his decoration he wrote
-home:</p>
-
-<p>"Dear Parents: I guess you will be glad to hear that
-I was promoted full sergeant on the field on account of
-distinguished conduct on February 1, when we charged
-the Huns and routed them in disorder.</p>
-
-<p>"You bet the Irish Guards are getting back now."</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. O'Leary, the old mother of the hero, has been
-interviewed at her home in Ireland. As might be expected
-her words were very simple.</p>
-
-<p>"It's proud I am of Mike," said Mrs. O'Leary, "but
-I wish he was home instead of being in that cruel war.</p>
-
-<p>"When that telegram came for me, I thought sure Mike<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[292]</a></span>
-was dead, but when I opened it I found that he had been
-promoted. Sure I was better pleased to know that he
-was alive than promoted.</p>
-
-<p>"Mike is a good boy. He never gave me a moment's
-uneasiness since he was in the cradle, except when he
-went away on his foreign adventures. I suppose he had
-to leave me. There's little enough chance for a boy here,
-with only the pigs to look after and his father and me."</p>
-
-<p>We have been inclined to think that the days were
-over when a mighty warrior could rush in among the
-foe and slay many with his own hands but O'Leary and
-many others in this war have proved that that is not the
-case.</p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;TALE OF A GORDON HIGHLANDER</p>
-
-<p>Many of the famous deeds of antiquity have been curiously
-paralleled in the war. For instance, one of the
-ancient feats that everybody mentions occasionally was
-how the brave Horatius held the bridge across the Tiber
-with two companions against the whole Etruscan army.</p>
-
-<p>Now we find again and again that a bridge has been
-the scene of deeds of conspicuous heroism in this war.
-The British were defending a river bank and bridge
-against a fierce German attack. The crew of a British
-Maxim gun had all been killed. Then Angus MacLeod,
-of the Gordon Highlanders, rose from cover, seized the
-Maxim gun and all alone carried it, under fire, to the
-far side of the bridge, where he played it on the advancing
-Germans.</p>
-
-<p>He is credited with having killed sixty Germans.
-Finally he fell dead and thirty bullets were counted in
-his body. The delay enabled the British to rally and
-repel their opponents.</p>
-
-<p>An extraordinary act of heroism was reported of an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[293]</a></span>
-unnamed French soldier during the disastrous retreat of
-the French from the Belgian frontier and the Meuse
-River early in the war.</p>
-
-<p>This man had been taken prisoner with some companions.
-The Germans, according to the report, drove
-their prisoners before them when attempting to cross a
-strongly defended bridge, to make the French think it
-was a party of their own men returning. As the French
-prisoners stepped on the bridge, one of them, a big and
-strong-voiced man, yelled:</p>
-
-<p>"Fire, <span xml:lang="fr">nom de Dieu</span>, or you will be wiped out."</p>
-
-<p>His own act made his death certain. He fell riddled
-with bullets from both sides.</p>
-
-<p>Lieutenant Leach and Sergeant Hogan of the British
-Army each received the Victoria Cross for an extraordinarily
-daring and ingenious action. The two men
-killed two Germans, took sixteen unwounded prisoners
-and twenty wounded men. Leach and Hogan with ten
-men crawled unobserved to a section of trench that had
-been captured by the Germans earlier in the day. Leach
-and Hogan dropped into the trench unnoticed and the
-ten men lay in wait to shoot any Germans who showed
-themselves.</p>
-
-<p>A trench is built in zigzags so that there is only a
-straight section of about twenty yards along which an
-enemy could shoot. The Germans in the first section
-were taken by surprise and all killed or wounded. Then
-the two men hurried on to the next turning. As they
-walked Hogan put his cap on his rifle and held it above
-the trench to show their men outside where they were.</p>
-
-<p>Lieutenant Leach poked his automatic revolver round
-the corner of the trench and began shooting at the Germans
-from cover. The German soldiers with their big
-clumsy rifles could not hit the deadly hand that was the
-only object to aim at. While the Lieutenant was shooting,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[294]</a></span>
-Hogan watched over the top of the trench to shoot
-any German who tried to get out or attack them in the
-rear. Thus all the men in each section were killed,
-wounded or captured.</p>
-
-<p>How do these and the many other brave men who have
-been reported in the present war compare with the heroes
-of antiquity? Achilles is the foremost of Greek warriors.
-He personified the Greek ideal of bravery, manly
-beauty and fiery enthusiasm. The "Iliad" contains pages
-and pages about his deeds, his speeches, how he sulked
-in his tent, and his quarrel with Agamemnon, but it does
-not seem after all that he did a vast amount of harm to
-the enemy. Of course, he killed Hector, but that was
-not amazing, and he acted with considerable brutality
-about it.</p>
-
-<p>Achilles was undoubtedly a fine orator, but in achievement
-he appeared to compare badly with modest Sergeant
-O'Leary.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[295]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>STORY OF A RUSSIAN IN AN
-AUSTRIAN PRISON</h2>
-
-<div class="center"><i>An Officer's Remarkable Experience</i></div>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>This very unusual narrative, with its light on Austrian prison
-conditions, appeared in the Russkoe Slovo, Moscow, June 30,
-1916. It was written by a petty officer of the Russian Army at
-the request of the paper's Paris correspondent. The correspondent
-tells of a party of thirty Russians who had recently arrived
-in Paris from Italy, all war prisoners from Austria, who had
-managed at different times to slip through the lines on the
-Italian front. It was translated for <i>Current History</i>.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;"I WAS PRISONER OF THE MAGYARS"</p>
-
-<p>I was taken prisoner by the Magyars in the Carpathians.
-We were driven to the station of Kashitzi, where
-we found more Russians, I don't know how many, and
-were placed in dirty cars, from which cattle had just been
-removed. The stench was terrible, the crowd unthinkable.
-The doors were locked all the time.... We
-travelled two days; on the third we arrived in a
-camp called Lintz. What did I see in this camp?
-Filthy barracks, naked bunks on which our soldiers
-were scattered, pale, exhausted, hungry, nearly all
-barefoot or in wooden clogs. Many were suffering from
-inflamed feet and exhaustion. I don't know how they
-call it in medicine, but to my mind it was the fever of
-starvation. One gets yellow, trembles incessantly, longs
-for food....</p>
-
-<p>The prisoners were fed very poorly, mainly with turnips,
-beans, and peas.</p>
-
-<p>Once a soldier decided to complain to Francis Joseph<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[296]</a></span>
-or Wilhelm. He went up to an electric pole, formed his
-fingers so that it looked as if he were speaking into a
-telephone horn, and shouted, "Hello, Germans, give us
-some more bread!" He called and knocked with his
-fists for some time, but, of course, received no reply.
-Many soldiers made fun of him at first, but others began
-to look for a way to complain against such treatment of
-war prisoners. Meanwhile the bread became poorer and
-poorer in quality and less in quantity. The meals consisted
-of beans, and in addition there were bugs in the
-beans. We got meat three times a week, the other days
-we got herring.</p>
-
-<p>On the 24th of May, 1915, a company was recruited
-among us to be sent away to do some "agricultural"
-work. The soldiers would not believe it, claiming that
-peace was near. I was in the first contingent. Our train
-was passing between mountains covered with evergreen.
-Every now and then it would shoot through tunnels.
-This surprised me greatly. I understood that we were
-not going in the direction of Russia. And so it was. We
-finally arrived in a place, where the thousand of us were
-quartered in one building. We at once began to be
-treated differently, much more insolently and severely.
-On the 27th we were driven to the fields to work. We
-wondered what the agricultural labour we were to do
-could be. We were supplied with shovels and pick-axes,
-led to a wood on a hill some 1,600 metres high, mustered
-into rows, and ordered to dig a ditch&mdash;that is what the
-Germans called it&mdash;but we called it otherwise. It became
-clear that we were to dig trenches.</p>
-
-<p>The first day passed in idleness and grumbling. All
-unanimously refused to work, even if we had to pay with
-our lives for it.</p>
-
-<p>We waited for the following morning. The guards
-came to take us out to work, but we said that we would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[297]</a></span>
-not dig trenches. Then the Colonel came and asked in
-Russian: "Why don't you want to work?" We all answered:
-"This work is against the law. You are violating
-the European laws and breaking all agreements by
-forcing us to construct defensive lines for you." The
-Colonel said: "Look out, don't resist, or we will shoot
-every one of you. We don't care now for the laws to
-which you point us. All Europe is at war now&mdash;this
-is no time for laws. If you don't go to work, I will
-have you shot."</p>
-
-<p>We all exclaimed: "We won't. Shoot us, but we
-will not do the work."</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;STANDING BEFORE THE EXECUTIONER</p>
-
-<p>All of the 28th we were in our yard. No food was
-given us. Thus we were held for three days without
-food. On the fourth day a company of cadets arrived.
-Leading them was the executioner, with stripes on his
-sleeves. They loaded their rifles, holding them ready.
-Then the Colonel asked: "Who will go to work?" The
-crowd answered "No!" The Colonel said: "I am sorry
-for you, boys, you don't understand that you are resisting
-in vain." Suddenly the crowd was split into two. Those
-who agreed to work were given dinner and put to work.
-The other half, in which I was included, was led away
-to another yard. From among us ten were picked out
-and taken away&mdash;we knew not where. We were ordered
-to lie on the ground with our faces downward, and not
-to turn our heads.</p>
-
-<p>On June 2 there remained only fifty men who still
-refused to work, suffering hunger for the sixth day. The
-ten soldiers who were daily taken away from us were
-subjected to, besides hunger, suspense in the air from
-rings, with their hands tied to their backs. In about
-thirty minutes one would lose consciousness, and then he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[298]</a></span>
-would be taken down to the ground. After he recovered
-his senses he would be asked if he agreed to work.
-What could one answer? To say "I refuse" meant another
-ordeal. He would begin to cry and agree to work.</p>
-
-<p>The following day our heroes were led out into the
-open, ten were selected from our midst, arranged in a
-line facing the rest of us, and told that they would be
-shot immediately. Of the remainder half were to be
-shot in the evening, the other half the following morning.
-Their graves had been dug by the ten heroes themselves.
-I have not the slightest hesitancy in calling them so.</p>
-
-<p>Then a space was cleared, and Ivan Tistchenko, Feodor
-Lupin, Ivan Katayev, and Philip Kulikov were ordered
-forward. The first was Ivan Tistchenko. An
-officer and four cadets approached him. The officer
-asked him if he would agree to work. He answered
-"No," and crossed himself. His eyes were bound
-with a white 'kerchief, and these pitiless and unjust
-cadets fired at the order of the officer. Two bullets
-pierced his head and two his breast, and the brave fellow
-fell to the wet ground noiselessly and peacefully.</p>
-
-<p>In the same manner the second, third, and fourth
-were treated. When the fifth was led forward he also
-refused to work, and they already had his eyes bound.
-But some one in the crowd exclaimed: "Halt&mdash;don't
-fire!" And the comrades asked for his life, all agreeing
-to go to work. And I never learned the identity of the
-chap who saved that fellow's life and many other lives.</p>
-
-<p>We remained in that camp for two and a half months.
-Then we were removed closer to the front, to a locality
-inhabited by Italians. Our soldiers there would inquire
-from the Italian labourers, to whom the guards paid no
-attention, where the boundary lay. We learned the direction
-and the distance to the boundary, which was
-about thirty miles. It was even nearer to the Italian<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[299]</a></span>
-front. And so on Sept. 29 a comrade and I decided to
-escape.</p>
-
-<p>(Some particulars of the escape have been deleted by
-the Russian censor.)</p>
-
-<p>Toward dawn we emerged from the thick of the pine
-trees and bushes, and descended to the base of the mountain.
-At our feet was a stream, about fifty feet wide,
-rapid, and full of rocks. Here we made good use of our
-training in gymnastics. My comrade, a tall fellow, was
-light on his feet. He jumped like a squirrel from rock
-to rock. To me it seemed that I would slip and be swept
-away by the current. My comrade was already on the
-opposite shore when I, making my last jump, failed to
-gain the beach. Fortunately he was quick to stretch out
-to me his long stick, and drew me out of the water as
-wet as a lobster.</p>
-
-<p>We walked along the stream all day without encountering
-anybody. At the end of the day we came in sight
-of a tiny village, but there were no people nor soldiers
-to be seen. Only near one house smoke was rising. We
-decided to approach stealthily and investigate. We saw
-an old woman at the fire, bending over a kettle of sweet
-corn. We surmised that the inhabitants of the village
-must have deserted it because of its proximity to the
-front, while the old woman refused to abandon her home.</p>
-
-<p>We approached her and confessed that we were Russian
-soldiers. She thought long. What "Russian"
-meant she did not know, but she understood the meaning
-of the word "soldiers." She presented us with some
-of her sweet corn and pointed out the way to the Italian
-front.</p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;"WE ESCAPED TO ITALIAN FRONTIER"</p>
-
-<p>It was six in the evening when we came upon an advanced
-Italian post. The sentinel stopped us with a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[300]</a></span>
-"Halt!" He was pointing his rifle at us, showing that
-he would shoot if we advanced. He called for his superior.
-We were searched and taken into their quarters.
-An officer soon came in. Through an interpreter he
-asked us for our names, regiments, and army branches.
-He gave each of us a package of cigarettes.</p>
-
-<p>Only then I understood that we were received as
-guests. When the officer gave us the cigarettes, saying
-"Bravo, Russi!" the soldiers began showering us with
-cigarettes, chocolate, and confetti. One soldier guessed
-better than the rest; he brought us a dish of soup, meat,
-and a bottle of wine. After this there was a regular
-wedding feast. Each of the soldiers brought something
-to eat, cheese, butter, sardines. We, knowing our condition,
-abstained from eating too much. Thinking that
-on the following day we would have to suffer hunger
-again, we put all the presents into a bag presented us by
-one of the Italians. Thus we accumulated about fifteen
-pounds of bread, cheese, butter, chocolate, lard, and
-boiled beef. Then the Italians noticed that our clothes
-were wet, and began presenting us with underwear and
-clothing, so that we soon changed our appearance. We
-were anxious to converse with them. The interpreter,
-who spoke Russian imperfectly, had a great deal of work.
-Just the same, I will never in my life forget his first
-words in Russian, as he asked us, by order of the officer:
-"Who are you&mdash;brothers?" In tears we answered him
-that we were Russian officers escaped from captivity; he
-asked it so kindly, and we were infinitely gladdened by
-his sweet words.</p>
-
-<p>The following day we were taken to the corps headquarters.
-Officers would come in, shake hands&mdash;some
-even kissed us, which embarrassed us. Unwittingly tears
-would come to our eyes when we recalled our life in the
-prison camp and this sudden change for the better.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[301]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The General also visited us. He pressed our hands,
-gave each of us a package of cigarettes, and presented us
-with 10 lire in gold. We wanted to decline the money,
-but the interpreter said, "Take," and we did.</p>
-
-<p>We lived for about a month in Italy. What a noble
-people!&mdash;soldiers, civilians, and officers. It is impossible
-to describe! At every station (on the way to France)
-the public would surround us, all anxious to do us some
-favours, all showing their deep affection for the Russians.
-Once a Sister of Mercy was distributing coffee
-to our party as the train began to move. She ran along
-till the train gained full speed, desiring not to leave some
-of us without coffee. Our soldiers would wonder at the
-affection of the entire Italian people for the Russians,
-and would shout incessantly: "Viva Italia! Viva
-Italia!"</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[302]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>TWO WEEKS ON A SUBMARINE</h2>
-
-<div class="center"><i>Told by Carl List</i></div>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>This article, by a German-American sailor on a Norwegian ship
-bound for Queenstown with a cargo of wheat, was communicated
-to <i>L'Illustrazione Italiana</i>, from which it is here translated
-for <i>Current History</i>.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;"I WAS ON A NORWEGIAN SHIP"</p>
-
-<p>The Norwegian ship on which I was embarked was
-nearing the Irish Channel. The afternoon was misty,
-the sea rough. We were warned by an English steamer
-of the presence of German submarines in the vicinity.
-There was a certain depression among those on board.</p>
-
-<p>I asked the Captain if there were anything to do.
-"No," he answered. Boom! a cannon shot was heard
-at the very moment. General confusion. All the men
-ran up on deck and looked about, terrified. Boom!
-another cannon shot. Then one of the German sailors,
-pointing to a spot on the horizon, said: "A German
-submarine."</p>
-
-<p>It was true. The black spot grew rapidly larger, and
-then one could make out some human figures near the
-small cannon on the deck. It was the famous U-39. We
-hoisted our flag and awaited events. The Captain sent
-the mate with our ship's papers over to the submarine,
-which was now near. Soon those who were not German
-received orders to take to the boats. The Germans were
-taken on board the U-39, I among them. When this
-was done our ship was sunk.</p>
-
-<p>So there I was on board a submarine. The impression<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[303]</a></span>
-of it was strange enough. The first evening, quite exhausted,
-I threw myself down in a corner. I heard a
-few short orders, then the sound of the machinery....
-After that everything was in absolute silence. Some said
-we were navigating at such a depth that big ships could
-pass overhead of us.... I fell asleep.</p>
-
-<p>Next day on waking I tried to get my bearings. We
-Germans were treated as friends. We were permitted
-to go about everywhere.</p>
-
-<p>The boat had the shape of a gigantic cigar, about 200
-feet long, divided into numerous compartments. They
-were full of shining instruments. Now there was a
-buzzing sound, like the inside of a bee-hive, now absolute
-silence reigned. Every nerve was tense with the
-expectation of the orders on which our lives depended.
-Toward the prow was the room from which the torpedo
-was launched, a room full of tubes and valves. The
-officers' lodgings are very restricted, since the space on
-board a submarine proscribes any comfort. The commander
-was Lieut. Capt. Foerstner, a tall young man,
-thin and pale&mdash;which is not surprising, since he never
-had a moment's repose; neither he nor the men of the
-crew ever got their clothes off during the twelve days I
-was on board.</p>
-
-<p>The periscope, the eye of the submarine, made known
-to us everything that took place on the surface of the
-water, and it did so with such clearness that it was
-almost like looking through a telescope. There was
-always a man on watch there.</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;"I WAS ABOARD THE U-39"</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly a ship comes in sight. Its smoke is like a
-black line drawn on the horizon. A bell rings. It is a
-signal for each man to be at his post. The U-39 slowly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[304]</a></span>
-rises to the surface. A last look is given at the mirror
-of the periscope; no English coast guard is in sight. So
-everything is ready for action. We hear the command,
-"Empty the water cistern." Freed from her ballast, the
-submarine rises to the surface. "Both engines ahead at
-full speed!" The boat cleaves her way through the water
-that cascades her sides with foam. In a short time the
-ship is reached. The submarine hoists her flag and fires
-a cannon shot. No flag betrays the nationality of the
-captured ship, but we can read the name, <i>Gadsby</i>, on
-her side. She is English. We signal that her whole crew
-is to take to the lifeboats, and quickly! At any moment
-we may be surprised.</p>
-
-<p>Through the megaphone we indicate to the men the
-nearest way to land; then a cannon shot, then a second
-one. The captured ship, after pitching for a while, sinks.</p>
-
-<p>The time necessary for the sinking of a ship differs
-considerably in different cases. Some disappear in five
-minutes, others float for several hours. The finest spectacle
-I witnessed was the sinking of the <i>Fiery Cross</i>.
-The crew received orders to get off in the boats. Some
-of our men rowed up close to the abandoned ship and
-attached hand grenades to her sides. They were fired
-and the three-master was blown up with all her sails
-spread and set. The hull and the rigging went down to
-the depths, but the sails spread out on the surface of the
-water like so many little fields of polar ice. Eleven ships
-were destroyed during my stay on board. Quite a number
-of others were captured, besides these, but they were
-let go again.</p>
-
-<p>This trip, which I shall never forget, lasted twelve
-days. It was dangerous, but it was exciting and so fine
-that I would not have missed it for anything in the
-world.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[305]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>A GERMAN BATTALION THAT
-PERISHED IN THE SNOW</h2>
-
-<div class="center"><i>Told by a Russian Officer</i></div>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>This is a tragic story of a night fight in snow-buried barbed
-wire entanglements where a whole German battalion perished.
-It comes from Petrograd to Montgomery Schuyler in the form
-of a letter from a Russian officer.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;TRAGIC STORY OF A NIGHT FIGHT</p>
-
-<p>"We were creeping across the snow, when we hear a
-frightened '<i><span xml:lang="de">Wer kommt da?</span></i>'</p>
-
-<p>"'Hold on, Germans! Where the devil do they come
-from?' ask our men in surprise. 'Are they numerous?'</p>
-
-<p>"'<i><span xml:lang="de">Wer ist da?</span></i>' we hear again.</p>
-
-<p>"Our only reply is to fire by the squad, and then again.
-The Germans are a little surprised, but pull themselves
-together and return the fire. It is dark and neither side
-can see the other. In groping about, we finally meet, and
-it is give and take with the bayonet. We strike in silence,
-but bullets are falling about us like rain. Nobody
-knows who is firing and every one is crying in his
-own language, 'Don't fire! Stop!' From the side
-where the firing comes from, beyond and to the right,
-they are yelling at us, both in German and Russian,
-'What's the matter? Where are you?'</p>
-
-<p>"Our men cry to the Germans, 'Surrender!'</p>
-
-<p>"They answer: 'Throw down your arms. We have
-surrounded you and you are all prisoners.'</p>
-
-<p>"Wild with rage, we throw ourselves forward with
-the bayonet, pushing the enemy back along the trenches.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[306]</a></span>
-In their holes the Germans cry, peering into the impenetrable
-darkness, 'Help! Don't fire! Bayonet them!'
-Hundreds of shouts answer them, like a wave rolling
-in on us from every hand.</p>
-
-<p>"'Oh, little brothers, their force is numberless. We
-are surrounded on three sides. Would it not be better
-to surrender?' cries some one with a sob.</p>
-
-<p>"'Crack him over the head! Pull out his tongue!
-Drive him to the Germans with the bayonet!' are the
-growling comments this evokes.</p>
-
-<p>"A command rings out, vibrating like a cord: 'Rear
-ranks, wheel, fire, fire!'</p>
-
-<p>"The crowd before us yells, moves, and seems to
-stop. But behind them new ranks groan and approach.
-Anew the command is given, 'Fire, fire!'</p>
-
-<p>"Cries and groans answer the fusillade and a hand-to-hand
-struggle along the trenches ensues.</p>
-
-<p>"German shouts are heard: 'Help! Here, this way!
-Fall on their backs!'</p>
-
-<p>"But it is we who fall on their backs. We pry them
-out and clear the trenches.</p>
-
-<p>"In front of us all is quiet. On the right we hear
-the Germans struggling, growling, repeating the commands
-of the officers: '<i><span xml:lang="de">Vorwärts! Vorwärts!</span></i>' But nobody
-fires and nobody attacks our trenches. We fire in
-the general direction of the German voices, infrequent
-shots far apart answer us. The commands of '<i><span xml:lang="de">Vorwärts</span></i>'
-have stopped. They are at the foot of the trenches, but
-they do not storm them. 'After them with the bayonet,'
-our men cry, 'Finish them as we finished the others.'</p>
-
-<p>"'Halt, boys,' calls the sharp, vibrating voice of our
-commander. 'This may be only another German trick.
-They don't come on; we are firing and they do not
-answer. Shoot further and lower. Fire!'"</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[307]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;"SO PERISHED A WHOLE BATTALION"</p>
-
-<p>"New cries and groans come from the Germans, followed
-by some isolated shots, which fly high above us.
-After five or six rounds silence settles upon the trenches
-and continues unbroken. 'What can this mean?' wonder
-our men. 'Have we exterminated them all?'</p>
-
-<p>"'Excellency, permit me to go and feel around,' offers
-S., chief scout, already decorated with the Cross of St.
-George.</p>
-
-<p>"'Wait, I am going to look into it myself.'</p>
-
-<p>"The officer lights a little electric lamp, and prudently
-sticks his arm above the rampart. The light does not
-draw a single shot. We peer cautiously over and see,
-almost within reach of our hands, the Germans lying
-in ranks, piled on top of one another.</p>
-
-<p>"'Excellency,' the soldiers marvel, 'they are all dead.
-They don't move, or are they pretending?'</p>
-
-<p>"The officer raises himself and directs the rays from
-his lamp on the heaps. We see that they are buried in
-the snow up to the waist, or to the neck, but none of them
-moves. The officer throws the light right and left, and
-shows us hundreds of Germans extended, their fallen
-rifles sticking up in the snow like planted things.</p>
-
-<p>"'I don't understand,' he mutters.</p>
-
-<p>"'Excellency, I am going to see,' says the chief scout.</p>
-
-<p>"'Go on,' the officer consents, 'and you, boys, have
-your rifles ready and fire at anything suspicious without
-waiting for orders from me.'</p>
-
-<p>"S. gets out of the trench and immediately disappears,
-swallowed by the soft snow up to the neck. He
-tries to get one leg out, but without success. He tries to
-lean on one hand, pushes it down into the snow, then
-pulls hard and swears. His hands are frightfully
-scratched; the blood tinges the snow with dark blotches.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[308]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"'It's the barbed wire defenses,' he cries. 'Help me,
-little brothers. Alone I can do nothing.'</p>
-
-<p>"We catch him by the collar of his tunic, and with
-difficulty pull him out. His coat, trousers, boots are in
-shreds.</p>
-
-<p>"'Thousand devils,' he swears. 'I have no legs left.
-They're scratched to pieces.'</p>
-
-<p>"The officer understands: the trenches are defended
-by intrenchments of barbed wire. The snow had covered
-and piled high above them. The whole battalion we had
-seen had rushed forward to the help of those who had
-called and had got mixed up in the wires. The first
-over had sunk into the snow and disappeared. Those
-coming after had stepped on them, passed on, become
-entangled wires, and had fallen in turn under our hail
-of lead. Rank on rank, ignorant of what had happened
-and rushing on like wild animals, had shared the fate
-of their comrades. So perished a whole battalion."</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[309]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>THE FATAL WOOD&mdash;"NOT ONE
-SHALL BE SAVED"</h2>
-
-<div class="center"><i>A Story of Verdun</i></div>
-
-<div class="center"><br /><i>Told by Bernard St. Lawrence</i></div>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>The following graphic account of one of the most dramatic
-episodes in the great Battle of Verdun was related to the
-writer by a Verdunois, who himself heard it from a young
-French officer, and recorded it in the <i>Wide World</i>.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;POILUS GOING TO SAVE VERDUN</p>
-
-<p>"Courage! We'll never allow the Boches to get
-through. Cheer up! They shall never get your town.
-<i><span xml:lang="fr">Vive Verdun et les Verdunois!</span></i>"</p>
-
-<p>Thus, in a hundred and one different ways, did the
-brave <i><span xml:lang="fr">poilus</span></i>, marching with admirable <i><span xml:lang="fr">entrain</span></i> towards
-Verdun, instil hope into our downcast hearts.</p>
-
-<p>We were on our way, the civilians of Verdun, to Paris
-and elsewhere, in cattle-trucks and military wagons&mdash;a
-painful journey, in bitter cold and snow, which would
-have been almost unbearable but for the sight of those
-merry-hearted troops, swinging along in the daytime on the
-road bordering the railway, and at night sweeping past us
-in trainload after trainload in the direction of the town
-which, shattered by shot and shell though it was, we still
-pictured in our hearts as home. There were long waits in
-the darkness at wayside stations or on sidings, whilst
-the saviours of France went forth to battle, but wherever
-possible we found help and encouragement. At the larger
-<i><span xml:lang="fr">gares</span></i> warmth and creature-comforts were in readiness<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[310]</a></span>
-to cheer us on our way. The waiting and refreshment
-rooms were crowded with railway officials, charitably-disposed
-ladies, and military officers, all of them eager
-to do something to ameliorate our lot, and at the same
-time to hear the latest news from the Front.</p>
-
-<p>I was fortunate in making the acquaintance at Chalons
-of a young officer, Lieutenant Marcel R&mdash;&mdash;, who was
-able to tell me a good deal about the Battle of Verdun,
-or, more strictly speaking, a singular episode in it. Vague
-rumours of the "<i><span xml:lang="fr">Coup</span></i> of the Caures Wood" had already
-reached my ears, but it was not until I met Lieutenant
-R&mdash;&mdash; that I heard all the dramatic details, in the planning
-and execution of which he himself had played a
-part, though a minor one.</p>
-
-<p>"<i><span xml:lang="fr">Eh bien!</span></i> How have you been getting on at Verdun
-lately?" he began by asking me. "I was quite sorry to
-have to leave the battlefield and go, <i><span xml:lang="fr">en mission</span></i>, to Paris.
-But I shall be back there to-morrow. Shall I find a soul
-left?"</p>
-
-<p>"Only Père François, the <i><span xml:lang="fr">marchand de vin</span></i> of the Rue
-Nationale," I replied. "He alone remains of the three
-thousand inhabitants. We left him standing at the door
-of his wine-shop, which he said he would not abandon
-for all the Boches in creation."</p>
-
-<p>"He plays his part, without a doubt," replied Lieutenant
-R&mdash;&mdash;, with a laugh. "It was at Père François's that
-we celebrated the <i><span xml:lang="fr">coup</span></i> of the Caures Wood, and I shall
-never forget his enthusiasm when we told him the story."</p>
-
-<p>"I envy him the privilege," said I. "Might I hope to
-hear you repeat it, if there is time before the train starts?"</p>
-
-<p>"<i><span xml:lang="fr">Mais certainement!</span></i> This is what happened. But I
-must begin at the very beginning. The setting for the
-episode I have to describe is indispensable."</p>
-
-<p>And Lieutenant R&mdash;&mdash; proceeded to tell his story as
-follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[311]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;LIEUTENANT R&mdash;&mdash; TELLS HIS STORY</p>
-
-<p>We were in the early days of the battle, but sufficient
-had already happened to make it clear to every one of us
-that at last we were face to face with a big affair. The
-German High Command had decided on a step which we
-welcomed most joyfully&mdash;to stake its all on a vain endeavour
-to regain the confidence which the public in Germany
-has fast been losing, not only in the military party,
-but also in the Hohenzollerns themselves. The roar of the
-guns was so deafening that we had to stuff our ears with
-cotton-wool or any material we could find to deaden the
-dreadful sound. The ground shook under the shock of
-the exploding shells. But neither the sounds which came
-to us, nor the sights which met our eyes as we looked
-down upon the ever-advancing masses of men in grey-green
-uniforms, had the slightest ill-effect upon our
-nerves. Judging by my own feelings, we were all supremely
-uplifted. It seemed to me that we had been preparing
-all our lives for that one glorious day.</p>
-
-<p>"Come on, come on, grey-green battalions, and let us
-bite deep into your flesh! It matters not what cowardly
-means you adopt; poison gas or squirters of flaming liquid
-are all one to us, for you will never succeed in getting
-through. Come on, like animals to the slaughter! Those
-who succeed in escaping the <i><span xml:lang="fr">arrosage</span></i> of the 'seventy-fives'
-will find that Rosalie&mdash;the bayonet&mdash;is waiting for them."
-Such was the savage hymn which my men were singing
-in their hearts as we defended the Bois de Caures.</p>
-
-<p>"Rosalie" did her work well, I can tell you, when the
-Boches came to close quarters. The snow-flecked ground
-in front of us, furrowed as though by a titanic plough,
-was covered with bodies. However, as they still came on
-in serried masses, it was decided that a retreat to the defences
-which had been prepared many weeks before was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[312]</a></span>
-necessary. Full of confidence, and knowing that this slow
-retreat would enable us to kill more and still more Germans,
-we made our preparations.</p>
-
-<p>But first of all let me locate the Wood of Caures,
-though it may be superfluous to do so in the presence of
-an inhabitant&mdash;perhaps a native&mdash;of Verdun. It is situated
-to the north of your town, and is one of a number
-of woods and forests which are visible as dark masses of
-foliage to anyone standing on the heights in the immediate
-neighbourhood of Verdun, or, better still, if the observer
-be seated in an aeroplane. The eyes of our gallant
-airmen were constantly fixed on the Bois de Caures, which
-lies between the Bois d'Haumont and the Herbe Bois, on
-the Bois des Fosses, which is due south of where we
-were, and on the Forest of Spincourt, which was to
-our east. These precious collaborators kept us constantly
-informed as to the movements of the enemy. Every few
-hours they brought in their reports to the Headquarters
-Staff, whence came the order that, in conjunction with the
-remainder of the line, we were to fall back.</p>
-
-<p>"The move is to be made to-morrow&mdash;towards evening."
-Captain Peyron told me in the afternoon. "But
-I understand from Chief Engineer Moreau that we're to
-prepare a little surprise for the Kaiser's crack troops.
-We've got to hold the wood like grim death until everything
-is ready. Moreau and his staff of engineers have
-been out all day in the wood prospecting, and the sappers
-must be already at work."</p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;ON THE EVE OF THE <i><span xml:lang="fr">COUP</span></i></p>
-
-<p>At nightfall I learnt a little more from one of Moreau's
-assistants, Lieutenant Chabert, a former brilliant pupil
-of the Ecole des Arts et Métiers, who, owing to his deep
-knowledge of electrical science, has on countless occasions
-rendered invaluable service. He is one of those men who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[313]</a></span>
-can turn their hands to anything in the scientific line.
-He staggered into our dug-out, dead-beat, after ten hours
-of feverish and continuous work with the sappers, and
-before throwing himself down to sleep had just strength
-enough to mumble, "See that I'm called as early as possible,
-<i><span xml:lang="fr">mon ami</span></i>, will you? I've got hundreds of yards of
-wiring to see to yet. <i><span xml:lang="fr">Dieu merci</span></i>, we've still got a day before
-us!"</p>
-
-<p>I promised to wake him at five sharp, and, envying him
-his sleep, immediately went in search of Sergeant Fleury,
-to delegate him to carry out the duty entrusted to me in
-case&mdash;one never knows what the fortunes of war may
-bring about&mdash;I were prevented from doing it. By the
-time I had found the sergeant the moon had risen over
-the battlefield, and if I live to be a hundred I shall never
-forget the sight. Our machine-guns were still firing two
-hundred rounds a minute on the German formations. As
-the enemy approached through the ravines round Flasbas
-and Azannes they were enfiladed, and the deep clefts in
-the hills were positively filled up with dead. Then, towards
-the early hours of the morning, came a lull. The
-respite was doubly welcome; it gave us both time to
-breathe and behold the work we had done. A ghastly
-spectacle indeed was revealed as our searchlights swept
-over the battlefield.</p>
-
-<p>When the dawn came the lull continued&mdash;at least, till
-noon, when we had once more to face the hammer-blows
-of the Kaiser and the Crown Prince. I called Chabert at
-the appointed hour. After a great stretch and a yawn,
-he went off like a giant refreshed to his work among the
-human moles of the Caures Wood. About noon, Moreau
-came to hold a consultation with Captain Peyron, under
-whose immediate orders we were, but he was in such a
-hurry to get back to his sappers and electricians that he
-had not time to say more than:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[314]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"<i><span xml:lang="fr">Bonjour</span></i>, R&mdash;&mdash;; see you later. All goes well!"</p>
-
-<p>The satisfied expression on his face told me that without
-words.</p>
-
-
-<p>IV&mdash;"COUP OF CAURES WOOD"</p>
-
-<p>I did not meet either him or Chabert until after the retreat;
-and, to tell you the truth, we were so busily engaged
-in keeping back the Germans until it suited our purpose
-to let them come on <i><span xml:lang="fr">en masse</span></i> that I almost forgot
-about the "little surprise" which Moreau, Chabert, et Cie.
-had announced to me through my chief.</p>
-
-<p>When evening came the gradual move back to more advantageous
-positions began. I shall not go into the details
-of a strategic retreat with which you yourself must be almost
-as well acquainted as myself, but simply state that
-we evacuated the Caures Wood and got away to the high
-ground in the neighbourhood of the Bois des Fosses,
-where Peyron, Moreau, Chabert, Sergeant Fleury and
-myself calmly awaited the impending catastrophe
-which had been so skilfully and rapidly prepared for the
-oncoming enemy. The Bois de Caures, in the gathering
-darkness of night, stood out like a huge black mass against
-the sky.</p>
-
-<p>"What do you estimate the strength of the attacking
-force in our section to be?" I asked Captain Peyron.</p>
-
-<p>"Two thousand odd," he replied, "and they have all of
-them fallen into the trap. As our men ran away through
-the wood, they followed in masses, blindly and stupidly&mdash;<i><span xml:lang="fr">les
-imbéciles</span></i>! Not one of them will escape, Moreau?"</p>
-
-<p>"Not a soul," replied the chief engineer. Then, glancing
-at his luminous watch and turning to Chabert, he
-added, "One more minute, and we shall see what we
-shall see."</p>
-
-<p>We kept our eyes fixed intently on the dark Bois de<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[315]</a></span>
-Caures. Someone, somewhere, was pressing a button;
-for all at once huge tongues of flames, accompanied by a
-series of explosions which rent the cold night air, leapt
-into the sky. Simultaneously a mental vision must have
-occurred to every one of us, as it certainly did to me&mdash;a
-vision of hundreds upon hundreds of Germans,
-caught like rats in a trap, blown to pieces amidst the
-shattered trees of that fatal wood.</p>
-
-<p>So ended the story of the "<i><span xml:lang="fr">Coup</span></i> of the Caures Wood"
-as related to me by Lieutenant R&mdash;&mdash;. Hardly had he
-uttered the last words when the departure bell rang and
-we hurried away to the train which was to take us to
-Paris.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[316]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>HEROISM AND PATHOS OF THE
-FRONT</h2>
-
-<div class="center"><i>Told by Lauchlan MacLean Watt</i></div>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>This touching bit of genuine literature, penned by a poetic
-Scot "somewhere in France," deserves to rank as a classic
-among war letters.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;STORY OF A YOUNG SCOTTISH SOLDIER</p>
-
-<p>Out here in the land of war we sometimes feel very
-far from those we love; and then, as though we had
-walked somehow right through reality, our thoughts are
-lifted oversea, and the mirage of home floats like a dream
-before us. The magic stop is touched in many ways.
-Little do the brave lads speaking to us in camp or hospital
-know how often they brought us underneath its
-spell.</p>
-
-<p>Just a week ago, in a tent where the wounded lay,
-I was beside the bed of a fine young Scottish soldier,
-stricken down in the prime of his manhood, yet full of
-hope. The thought of the faces far away was always
-with him upholdingly. In fact, the whole tent seemed
-vibrant with the expectation of the journey across the
-narrow strip of blue which sunders us from home. This
-Scottish youth had been talking, and it was all about what
-to-morrow held for him. His mother, and the girl that
-was to share life with him&mdash;these were foremost in his
-thought. His face shone as he whispered, "I'm going
-home soon." Everything would be all right then. What
-a welcome would be his, what stories would be told by
-the fireside in the Summer evenings! But he made the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[317]</a></span>
-greater journey that very night. We buried him two
-days later, where the crosses, with precious names upon
-them, are growing thick together. Surely that is a place
-most holy. There will be a rare parade there on Judgment
-Day of the finest youth and truest chivalry of
-Britain and of France. Soft be their sleep till that
-reveillé!</p>
-
-<p>We got the Pipe Major of a famous Highland regiment
-to come over; and when the brave dust was lowered,
-while a little group of bronzed and kilted men stood
-around the grave, he played the old wail of sorrow of our
-people, "Lochaber No More." I heard it last when I
-stood in the rain beside my mother's grave; and there can
-be nothing more deeply moving for the Highland heart.
-The sigh of the waves along Hebridean shores called to
-me there, among the graves in France.</p>
-
-<p>The men who lie in this hospital are those who could
-not be carried further meanwhile, and they have been
-dropped here, in passing, to hover between life and death
-until they make a move on one side or other of the Great
-Divide. So it is a place where uncertainty takes her
-seat beside the bed of the sufferer, watching with ever
-unshut eye the fluctuating levels of the tide of destiny.
-It is a place where the meaning of war gets branded
-deep upon you. The merest glimpse solemnizes. Of
-course, the young may forget. The scars of youth heal
-easily. But the middle-aged of our generation will certainly
-carry to the grave the remembrance of this awful
-passion of a world.</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;THE MIRACLE OF DEATH</p>
-
-<p>Here, of course, you meet all kinds of men, from
-everywhere. They were not forced to come, except by
-duty, in their country's need. They were willing in the
-day of sacrifice, and theirs is that glory deathless.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[318]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>One has been burned severely. How he escaped at all
-is a miracle. But they are all children of miracle. Death's
-pursuing hand seems just to have slipped off some as he
-clutched at them. This man looks through eye-holes in
-his bandages. He is an Irishman, and the Irish do take
-heavy hurts with a patient optimism wonderful to see.</p>
-
-<p>There is also a fine little Welshman, quite a lad, who
-has lost his leg. He has been suffering continually in the
-limb that is not there. To-day he was lying out in the
-sun, and he looked up cheerily at me. "Last night,"
-he said, "for about half an hour I had no pain. I tell
-you I lay still and held my breath. It was so good I
-scarcely could believe it. I thought my heart would never
-beat again, at the wonder of it."</p>
-
-<p>The usual picture postcard of the family is always
-close at hand. One North of Ireland man, up out of
-bed for the first time, was very full-hearted about his
-"missis and the childer." Said he with pride, "She's
-doin' extra well. She's as brave as the best of them, and
-good as the red gold&mdash;that's what she is."</p>
-
-<p>Another poor fellow, in terrible pain, asked me to
-search in a little cotton bag which was beside him for
-the photograph of his wife and himself and the little
-baby. "It was took just when I joined," he whispered.
-"Baby's only two months old there."</p>
-
-<p>One day those who were able were outside, and a gramophone
-was throatily grinding the melody out of familiar
-tunes, with a peculiarly mesmeric effect. Suddenly
-the record was changed to "Mary of Argyle." The Scotsman
-by whose bed I was standing said: "Wheesht! D'ye
-hear thot? Man, is it no fine?" And the tears ran
-down his cheeks as he listened. It was a poor enough
-record. In ordinary times he would have shouted his
-condemnation of it. But he was now in a foreign land&mdash;a
-stricken, suffering man. And it made him think of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[319]</a></span>
-some woman far away beside the Forth, where he came
-from. And his heart asked no further question.</p>
-
-<p>At the head of the bed of some of them you will
-see a blue paper. "You're looking grand to-day," said I
-to a young fellow. And he replied, "Is there anny wonder,
-Sir, wid that scrap o' paper there?" For it was the
-order for home on the first available opportunity. "Sure,
-won't the ould mother be glad to see me?" he continued.
-"The sunshine here is beautiful, but sunshine in the ould
-country is worth the world."</p>
-
-<p>"Good-bye, Sir!" they sometimes cry. "I'll be away
-when you come round again." But perhaps next time a
-sad face looks up at you, for the day so eagerly anticipated
-has been again postponed.</p>
-
-<p>It is always home, and what the dear ones there are
-like, and what they will be thinking yonder, that fills up
-the quiet hours toward restoration, as it strengthened the
-heart and arm of the brave in the hour of terrible conflict.</p>
-
-<p>The endurance, patience, and courage of the men are
-beyond praise&mdash;as marvelous as their sufferings. I can
-never forget one who lay moaning a kind of chant of
-pain&mdash;to prevent himself screaming, as he said.</p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;THE PIPER PLAYED "LOCHABER NO
-MORE"</p>
-
-<p>Last night we had a very beautiful experience. We
-were searching for a man on most important business,
-but as the wrong address had been given, that part of
-it ended in wild-goose chase. Nevertheless we were
-brought into contact with a real bit of wonder. It was
-an exquisite night. The moon, big, warm, and round as
-a harvest moon at home, hung low near the dreaming
-world. The trees stood still and ghost-like, and the river<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[320]</a></span>
-ran through a picture of breathless beauty. We had got
-away beyond houses, and were climbing up through a
-great far-stretching glade. The roar before us was a
-trellis of shadow and moonlight. Suddenly we had to
-stand and listen. It was the nightingale. How indescribably
-glorious! The note of inquiry, repeated and
-repeated, like a searching sadness; and then the liquid
-golden stream of other-world song. How wonderfully
-peaceful the night lay all around&mdash;the very moonlight
-seemed to soften in the listening. And yet again came
-the question with the sob in it; and then the cry of the
-heart running over.</p>
-
-<p>The valley lay lapped in luminous haze, a lake somewhere
-shining. But there was no other sound, no motion,
-no sign of life anywhere&mdash;only ourselves standing
-in that shadow glade, and that song of the beginnings of
-the world's sadness, yearning, and delight, somewhere
-in the thicket near.</p>
-
-<p>It was difficult to believe that we were in a land of
-war; that not far from us lay ruined towns of ancient
-story; that the same moonlight, so flooded with delight
-for us, was falling on the uninterred, the suffering, and
-the dying, and the graves where brave dust was buried.
-It was all very beautiful. And yet, somehow, it made
-me weary. For I could not help thinking of the boy we
-had laid down to rest, so far from home, and the piper
-playing "Lochaber No More" over his grave. And of
-the regiment we had seen that very day, marching in
-full equipment, with the pipers at the head of the column,
-so soon to be separated from the peat fires and the dear
-ones more widely than by sundering seas. And we
-hated the war. God recompenses the cruel ones who
-loosened that bloody curse from among the old-time sorrows
-which were sleeping, to afflict again the world!</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[321]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>AN AVIATOR'S STORY OF BOMBARDING
-THE ENEMY</h2>
-
-<div class="center"><i>Told by a French Aviator</i></div>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>This is a tale of the risks, the courage, the fears, the luck, the
-compulsion of duty and the haunting memory of destruction that
-mark the fighting service of the airmen. It is a French aviator's
-plain tale of experience from <i>Illustration</i>, Paris.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;"OUR FLIGHT AT DAY BREAK"</p>
-
-<p>When our flight commander came in we knew by his
-smiling face that he had something interesting for us.
-"Make a careful inspection," he said. "The staff counts
-on you to destroy a station of great importance. Take
-oil and essence enough for four hours' flight. Each of
-you will carry five 90's and one 155. If you do not
-wholly destroy the place during the first attack, rest, go
-back to-morrow and finish your work. You will get explicit
-orders before you start."</p>
-
-<p>Our service is not confined to the defense of Paris.
-We are not the G. V. C. of the skies. We had no idea
-where we were going; but our chief was in such good
-spirits that we looked for a fine adventure. So full of
-ardor, we all, pilots and engineers, inspected our great
-flyers. Then, in view of resting for our work, we turned
-in for the night. When someone knocked violently on
-my door I sprang up broad awake.</p>
-
-<p>"Get up, sergeant!" cried a voice. "It is nearly three
-o'clock! You will be late!"</p>
-
-<p>The motors were turning on the ground. I dressed
-hastily and went out.... Brr! it was cold. The field<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[322]</a></span>
-lay like a shadow in the moonlight; the sky was of ideal
-clearness; a light fog was rising from the damp ground.
-Our whole assembly, pilots and observers, went into the
-little shack used as our flight bureau. Then came a
-great hand-clasping, farewells&mdash;silence.</p>
-
-<p>The commander pointed out our route and we traced
-it on our charts. Now we knew where we were going
-and what we had to do.</p>
-
-<p>There were our machines in the half-light, drawn up
-in line of battle. Every pilot cast a swift glance at his
-craft as he went aboard. They tested the motors. The
-grinding of the motors had slowed down; there was an
-instant of relative calm. An order passed from pilot to
-pilot: "Start from right to left, thirty seconds headway!"</p>
-
-<p>A long rattle broke the silence; an avion glided over
-the ground and went up: <i>Our Chief!</i> I was second. I
-heard my friends wishing me luck. I rolled on at full
-speed, rose, and rushed out, into the darkness.</p>
-
-<p>When I had been flying ten minutes I realized that
-something was the matter. My motor was not "giving."
-The altimeter marked 1,800 meters. I saw the trenches
-stretching like cobwebs across the ground. I tried to
-rise&mdash;<i>Impossible!</i> I was less than 2,000 meters above
-the earth; I was under orders; it was up to me to get
-to my destination and destroy the object I had been sent
-to destroy; and my motor would not raise me one foot.
-For one moment sickly doubt assailed me. I crossed
-the line and, instantly, my craft was a target. The explosion
-of the bombs was so violent and the bombs were
-so near, and there was so many of them, that the air
-was in a tumult. My machine oscillated. The noise
-was head-splitting; the muzzles of their 77's formed a
-bar of fire. I was taking heavy risks, but what else could
-I do? <i>I must get there and do my work.</i></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[323]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The 105 was going; so were the 77's, upward like a bit
-of fireworks, hurrying along towards the zenith until his
-lamps were like little stars. On the following day we
-set out again to do our work. <i>We had been sent to destroy.</i></p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;"WE DROPPED BOMBS ON THE ENEMY"</p>
-
-<p>We started at four o'clock in the afternoon and landed
-to reconnoiter at a camp near the lines. While the
-motormen examined our motors, and while the electricians
-put in the lights, we automobiled to a nearby town
-and ate our dinner. We were dressed for our trip.
-The time set for our ascension was nine o'clock.</p>
-
-<p>At dinner the chief had said to us: "When my lights
-go out you will know that I am flying as a bird flies <i>for
-their lines</i>!" As we stood there watching his flight his
-lights went out. That was his signal to us; <i>his farewell</i>.
-But we saw him once more when his swift black plane
-cut across the disk of the yellow moon.</p>
-
-<p>Then I went up. I rose to a height of 600 meters. I
-turned my last spiral and put out my lights and the
-lights fixed to the wings, leaving nothing but the little
-chart lamp.</p>
-
-<p>The earth lay away below us, vast, dark and still. We
-heard no sound, we saw no light save the pallid light
-of the moon. The wind was strong. I had no guiding
-points. I steered by the stars. As we approached the
-lines the broad fan of a searchlight fixed upon me. I
-made a rapid turn. Something was coming. We saw
-two light-bombs and three golden fusees shooting worms
-of fire.</p>
-
-<p>After a flight of fifty minutes we reached our objective
-point. I slowed down and we descended. When
-500 meters above the earth we dropped incendiary cans<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[324]</a></span>
-and bombs. A shower of light bombs answered us; they
-showed us what we were doing and made it easier to do
-our work. Then the lights of powerful projectors fastened
-on us. But our work was done, and before long
-we were over our landing.</p>
-
-<p>The home run before the light wind was a pleasure.
-<i>But a man always remembers</i>, and the thought of the
-damage I had done haunted me! They fired their cannon.
-We were so close to them I wondered they did
-not hit us. On that occasion my big machine did well
-because my motors were normal. But, to sum it all up
-in a few words, everything was in my favor this last
-time. We escaped, and, what is more important, we
-contributed not a little to the success of the French in
-Champagne.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[325]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>A DAY IN A GERMAN WAR
-PRISON</h2>
-
-<div class="center"><i>Told by Wilhelm Hegeler, Popular German Novelist</i></div>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>The strange mixture of races on the western front is here
-depicted by a noted German author in the form of a prison
-guard's narrative of his daily life.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;THE ANIMALS IN THE "ZOO"</p>
-
-<p>There they lie in a gloomy room of the railroad station,
-the English prisoners, together with their allies from
-the Old and New Worlds. The room used to be the
-waiting room for non-smokers, and it is no darker or uglier
-than any of the other rooms, only it seems so because
-of its occupants.</p>
-
-<p>"Service at the Zoo." Every one of us knows what this
-means&mdash;duty with the prisoners. Our soldiers have invented
-good-natured nicknames for the Turcos, Indians,
-and Algerians that they meet here: "The men from the
-monkey theatre," "The Masqueraders," "The Hagenbeck
-Troop." But they walk past the Englishmen in silent
-hatred. A little sympathy is needed, even for banter.</p>
-
-<p>The prisoners' room is empty, except for a few inmates
-who for various reasons could not be sent away.
-I am on duty here to-day. Crumpled forms squat on
-mattresses along the wall like multi-colored bundles of
-clothing. Not much is to be seen of their faces. Only
-a black arm, a lank yellow hand, a gaudy blue sash, a
-pair of wide red trousers stand out. There they crouch
-in the same stoical calm as they did before their houses
-in the distant Orient, with the exception that they, with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[326]</a></span>
-the instinct of wounded animals, hide their faces.</p>
-
-<p>An Englishman lies on a bed opposite them. He looks
-at me expectantly as if he wants to say something. But
-although I am not forbidden to talk with the prisoners,
-I feel no necessity for doing so.</p>
-
-<p>An hour goes by. From time to time I give a drink
-to the Orientals who ask me for it through gestures. At
-last the Englishman can keep silent no longer and asks:</p>
-
-<p>"Will they treat us very severely?"</p>
-
-<p>I shrug my shoulders. "People feel angry at the English.
-Our soldiers assert that they waved white flags
-and then threw hand grenades."</p>
-
-<p>"I don't know anything about that. That may have
-been the case earlier, but I have been in the war only
-eight days. A week ago I was in Newcastle with my
-wife."</p>
-
-<p>He takes a tin case from under his shirt, opens it, and
-looks at it for a long time. Then he shows me the case,
-which contains the picture of a woman, his wife. Then
-he takes a piece of paper from his trousers pocket and
-shows me that, too. A name and address are written
-on it.</p>
-
-<p>"That is the man who bound up my wound on the
-field of battle. He was very good to me. After the war
-I shall write to him."</p>
-
-<p>After a long period of silence he begins to talk again.
-But I do not think further conversation timely. I only
-pay attention once and that is when he explains to me
-his grade in the service and his rate of pay. He is something
-like a Sergeant and says, pointing to his insignia:
-"A common soldier gets only so much; with this insignia
-he gets so much more, and when he has both, as I have,
-he gets so much." He names the munificent sum with
-visible pride.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[327]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;"A BELGIAN IN GERMAN UNIFORM"</p>
-
-<p>Then the door opens and my comrade announces in
-a tone that implies something unusual: "A Belgian in a
-German uniform." I look at the man in astonishment.
-Why is he allowed to run around without any guard in
-particular? The expression of his face is rather stupid.
-He sits down near the stove and crosses his legs comfortably.
-I ask him how he got the uniform. He answers
-in Flemish. Before an explanation is possible the
-hospital corps men bring in six or seven Englishmen
-on stretchers. Now quick work is necessary. Mattresses
-must be spread out on the floor and the people changed
-from bed to bed. The room is filled with inquisitive hospital
-corps men and soldiers. I shove them all out.
-When the door is finally closed again I count my prisoners
-and find the Belgian is missing. I rush outside to
-look around the station platform. There stands my Belgian
-on the doorstep. I seize his arm in an almost
-friendly manner and invite him to come inside again.
-At last he tells me how he got the uniform. He insists
-he got it in the hospital in the place of his own tattered
-one. I shake my head increduously, but the chaffeur who
-brought the prisoner hurries up and verifies the story.</p>
-
-<p>Now the station commandant comes along and is also
-of the opinion that the prisoner must get some other
-kind of clothing. "But," he orders, "first ask the staff
-doctor if his uniform can be taken off without any danger
-to his wounds." I don't have to do this, because the
-wound is on his upper thigh. I hunt up an unclaimed
-English cloak and, with visible relief, the Belgian warrior
-crawls out of the German lion's skin.</p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;PRISON KEEPER TELLS HIS STORY</p>
-
-<p>New prisoners are brought in&mdash;Frenchmen, Scotchmen,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[328]</a></span>
-and Canadians. Many of the first-named cough frightfully.
-When they are asked where they got that, they
-answer that they have had it the whole Winter long.
-There is a lank, powerful-looking non-commissioned officer
-among them. He makes a sign to me and confesses
-confidentially that he is very hungry. I tell him he must
-have patience, as there will soon be coffee and bread
-given out.</p>
-
-<p>"Bread? Black bread?" He curls up his nose. "May
-I not have a little pastry, perhaps?"</p>
-
-<p>"You just try our black bread," is my reply. "It is the
-same as we have ourselves. We are better than we are
-supposed to be in France."</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, that's true," he agrees. "They told us that the
-prisoners were badly treated in Germany. Now I see
-that such is not the case. Besides, they tell you the same
-thing about our prisoners in France. But they, too, do
-not have it so bad. On the contrary. I have seen some
-of them myself in Brittany. They get a quart of cider
-a day. There was an enormous crop of apples last Summer.
-And there is enough to eat. And besides that, they
-are allowed to stroll through the city a couple of hours
-every afternoon."</p>
-
-<p>I permit myself to make a mental reservation regarding
-the last assertion, but a Frenchman brought in a little
-later makes the same statement.</p>
-
-<p>A fairly educated and intelligent Canadian joins in
-the conversation and puts the question that occupies all
-of them the most: "What sort of fate awaits the prisoners?"</p>
-
-<p>"You will have to work a few hours a day. Still, you
-are paid extra for that."</p>
-
-<p>"It is tough to have to sit in close rooms all the time."</p>
-
-<p>"No," I answer, "the wooden houses are surrounded<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[329]</a></span>
-by broad, open places. I, myself, have seen Englishmen
-playing football in a prison camp."</p>
-
-<p>Then his eyes sparkle and he lets slip the remark:
-"That is certainly better than in Canada." Presumably
-he refers to the camp of the civilians interned there. I
-ask him why he enlisted. He colors up and answers,
-with a somewhat embarrassed smile: "Well, I knew that
-my country was in danger, so I wanted to aid it." And
-this smile seems to me to betray less the embarrassment
-of a man looking for a clever answer than that of an educated
-person not liking to use pathetic expressions. For
-the entire man has the appearance of frankness and
-decency.</p>
-
-<p>In these days when fresh batches of prisoners are
-coming along all the time I have answered many more
-questions. They are almost always the same questions
-and receive the same answers. I have also seen convoys
-of unwounded prisoners wending their way by day and
-by night along lonely roads not so very far back of the
-front. I have repeatedly asked prisoners how they were
-being treated. Many had requests to make; none had
-a complaint. On the other hand, I saw many acts of
-kindness performed by the doctors, by the sisters, and,
-not the fewest, by the soldiers.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">[330]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>MURDER TRIAL OF CAPT. HERAIL
-OF FRENCH HUSSARS</h2>
-
-<div class="center"><i>Strangest Episode of the War</i></div>
-
-<div class="center"><br /><i>Told by an Eye-Witness</i></div>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;KILLED HIS WIFE&mdash;TRIED BY COURT-MARTIAL</p>
-
-<p>Captain Edouard Anselme Jean Herail, of the Eleventh
-Regiment of French Hussars, but formerly of a cuirassier
-regiment, killed his wife at Compiegne, because she
-insisted on staying in a place where his regiment was
-encamped in defiance of military orders, which required
-that officers' wives must not visit them. Herail was
-threatened with disgrace for failure to obey orders.</p>
-
-<p>Captain Herail was tried for the murder before a
-court-martial in Paris. The courtroom was crowded by
-a fashionable attendance, largely consisting of women,
-for the case involved most delicate and unique domestic
-problems, and the persons concerned were of high social
-position. The Captain's father was a prominent judge.
-His wife had one brother who won the Nobel Prize, and
-another brother is a well-known lawyer.</p>
-
-<p>She was tall, slender, with a mass of Titian red hair
-and large blue eyes. She had an artistic temperament and
-a seductive personality, when not enraged.</p>
-
-<p>The Captain is a man of middle height, strongly built,
-his thick hair brushed back, his complexion ruddy, altogether
-a good type of the cavalry officer. A reddish
-mustache adds to the impression of physical vigor, but
-his manner is gentle.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[331]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The address of the prosecuting attorney showed that
-on November 23 last the regiment of cavalry to which
-the captain belonged had been withdrawn from the front
-and sent to camp at Campiegne for a period of rest, after
-extremely severe fighting in Lorraine and in the north,
-where the officers and soldiers of the regiment had lost
-heavily and performed their duty in a very gallant manner.
-Captain Herail, for his bravery, was recommended
-by his superiors for the cross of knight of the Legion
-of Honor.</p>
-
-<p>Mme. Herail, who had been at Narbonne with her three
-children, learned three days after the regiment came to
-Compiegne that it was there. She hurried immediately
-to meet and embrace her husband, who was embarrassed
-by her presence from the beginning.</p>
-
-<p>He felt obliged to take every means to hide the presence
-of his wife in the town, for a note from the commanding
-general of October 4 had absolutely forbidden
-the wives of officers to be with their husbands, and it was
-added that any infraction of the order would be severely
-punished. Much disorder and disregard of discipline
-had been caused in the army by the presence of wives
-and also of those who were not wives. In spite of this
-officers' wives had frequently broken the order and had
-settled down in the vicinity of the camp. Lieutenant-Colonel
-Meneville, commanding the Captain's regiment
-decided to call the attention of his officers a second time
-to the necessity of observing the rule.</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;MME. HERAIL DEFIED MILITARY LAW</p>
-
-<p>It was in the midst of this already very delicate situation
-that Mme. Herail arrived to stay with her husband.
-He represented to her in the most affectionate manner
-that she was breaking the orders of his superiors, but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[332]</a></span>
-she met his remonstrances with a storm of indignant
-reproaches.</p>
-
-<p>"Your superiors are not my superiors!" exclaimed
-Mme. Herail, "and I owe them no obedience. Did one
-ever hear of such tyranny? Their orders are an outrage
-on personal liberty and the rights of a wife. There is
-no power in France that can make me leave my husband
-or keep my children away from their father."</p>
-
-<p>Finally, Mme. Herail burst into tears and her husband,
-instead of pressing her to go, fell on her bosom and wept
-with her.</p>
-
-<p>The colonel of the regiment, who learned that his orders
-and warnings were being disregarded by Mme.
-Herail, called his officers together again. This was a
-third warning to them. He did not wish to appear to
-be striking especially at Captain Herail, for whom he had
-a high regard, and he told them all that very severe punishment
-would be inflicted on those who disobeyed the
-order. The disobedient, he said, would be sent back
-from the front, which, under the circumstances, would
-be a humiliating disgrace for a soldier.</p>
-
-<p>Then he turned to Captain Herail and asked him to
-speak out "like a soldier and without beating about the
-bush" and tell him why his wife did not go away. Captain
-Herail endeavored to make an explanation, but instead
-of saying that he had been struggling vainly to
-make her go away, he tried, out of affection for his
-wife, to excuse her conduct and to offer special reasons
-why she should remain.</p>
-
-<p>The colonel then lost his patience, and inflicted fifteen
-days close arrest on the captain, and made a report
-to the general of the brigade that the captain should be
-sent back to the depot at Narbonne. The general approved
-the recommendation and in addition said that
-the captain should not receive the Cross of the Legion<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[333]</a></span>
-of Honor for which he had been recommended. The
-colonel ordered Major Bouchez, the immediate superior
-to Captain Herail, to keep the latter under arrest in his
-rooms at 26, rue de la Sous-Prefecture, Compiegne, where
-he lodged with Mme. Masson.</p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;DRAMATIC SCENE BETWEEN HUSBAND
-AND WIFE</p>
-
-<p>It was here that the climax of this unique drama occurred
-at about 8 o'clock in the evening. Major Bouchez
-came into Captain Herail's room. The latter's wife remained
-concealed in the next room. She heard everything
-that was said. Major Bouchez, who knew that she
-was there, raised his voice so that she could hear perfectly
-the reproofs which he addressed to his comrade.
-The interview lasted an hour and the major demonstrated
-fully to Captain Herail the terrible and disgraceful situation
-in which he would be placed, from a military point
-of view, at this supreme crisis of the French nation, if
-he did not obey orders by sending his wife away.</p>
-
-<p>"You will be sent before a court martial," said Major
-Bouchez, "for refusing to obey the orders of your superiors,
-you will be struck from the list of the Legion
-of Honor, and you will be sent back from the front to
-the depot with the cripples and the old women. You
-would be better off if you were dead."</p>
-
-<p>Captain Herail went into the next room and addressed
-his wife:</p>
-
-<p>"You have heard what he has said? I must insist that
-you go away immediately. Go!"</p>
-
-<p>"I will not go," said Mme. Herail, squaring her shoulders
-and settling down upon a divan.</p>
-
-<p>"I give you the order to go immediately," repeated her
-husband with anger.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">[334]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"As a matter of morality," said Mme. Herail, "you
-have no right to give me such an order."</p>
-
-<p>"We are not in the domain of abstract morality," replied
-the husband, "but in the domain of civil and military
-law and you owe me obedience."</p>
-
-<p>"If you give me that order, everything will be over
-between us for life, and anyhow, I will not obey the order,"
-retorted Mme. Herail, with remarkable feminine
-logic.</p>
-
-<p>"I give you two minutes to reflect," said the unfortunate
-captain, whose emotions were getting terribly
-wrought up.</p>
-
-<p>He went back to the other room, where Major Bouchez
-was waiting for him, took up his service revolver, and
-then returned to his wife's room.</p>
-
-<p>"Have you reflected? Is it no?" he asked, evidently
-anticipating his wife's immovable obstinacy.</p>
-
-<p>"I will never leave you alive. I love you too much,
-Jean," said Madame Herail.</p>
-
-<p>"Then you will leave me dead," said Captain Herail.</p>
-
-
-<p>IV&mdash;"HE AIMED AT HIS WIFE&mdash;AND FIRED"</p>
-
-<p>Captain Herail then aimed point-blank at his wife with
-his revolver and fired three shots at her. She fell to the
-ground dead, all three of the bullets having passed
-through her head. Major Bouchez rushed in, saw the
-body, and, as he testified at the trial, found Captain Herail
-in tears and out of his mind with remorse.</p>
-
-<p>Witnesses said that the sorrow of Captain Herail was
-intense. He was continually weeping, calling on the dead
-woman, and asking for his three children. It was proved
-that during the eleven years they were married he had
-shown the deepest affection for his wife, and it was only
-the military disgrace she had brought upon him that
-could have caused him to commit the act.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[335]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>He was married to his wife in 1904 when he was a
-lieutenant in the First Regiment of Cuirassiers. She was
-then Mlle. Henriette Courel. They both belonged to
-wealthy families and their marriage was an event in fashionable
-society. They began life under the happiest auspices.
-They were apparently a well-matched couple.
-He was very good-tempered and easy-going, while she
-was a devoted wife and a model housekeeper, but very
-jealous and extremely exacting.</p>
-
-<p>She required that her husband should have no interest
-in life apart from her. At the annual military
-manoeuvres she insisted on following him around, and
-he, from fear of being made ridiculous, asked her to stay
-away, but she would not do so. His comrades called her
-his colonel.</p>
-
-<p>During the testimony relating to these facts Captain
-Herail's eyes were wet with tears, and finally, when it
-came to the description of the scene of the killing, he
-could not restrain himself at all and broke into heartrending
-sobs.</p>
-
-<p>Then the presiding officer ordered him to stand up and
-relate what he had to say in defence of his act. His
-tears continued to flow and at first he was unable to
-utter an intelligible sentence. He could be heard sobbing:</p>
-
-<p>"My poor wife! My poor wife!"</p>
-
-<p>After a time he was able to make a statement concerning
-his difficulties with his wife, of which these were
-the most striking passages:</p>
-
-<p>"If she had only let me fulfill my military duties we
-should have been the happiest family possible. She was
-very good and very clever, but she never would permit
-me to be away from her."</p>
-
-<p>The unfortunate captain, who had faced death from
-bullets, day after day for months, without a tremor, while<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">[336]</a></span>
-his comrades were falling all around him, broke down as
-he spoke of his dead wife and buried his nails in his
-flesh, unable to continue. The spectacle was an intensely
-painful one and caused nearly everybody in the audience
-to weep, including some of the officers on the bench.</p>
-
-<p>"What could I do?" went on the poor captain when
-he had recovered some self-control. "I thought of handing
-in my resignation, and yet, I loved my calling, although
-my promotion had been slow. I remained thirteen
-years a simple lieutenant.</p>
-
-<p>"Naturally, I appeared a careless officer, without ardor,
-constantly trying to get away from my daily duties.
-The truth is that my wife, every time I went out, urged
-me to return home as soon as possible, complaining that
-I was leaving her alone.</p>
-
-<p>"I wished to give my resignation, although it was a
-hard prospect for me to leave the army a simple lieutenant
-without getting the Cross of the Legion of Honor. I
-did not tell my conjugal difficulties to any one.</p>
-
-<p>"Then I was forced to abandon the idea of resigning,
-because my wife would not agree to such a solution. She
-was proud of the service I was in.</p>
-
-<p>"Our third child had just been born when my squadron
-was ordered to start for the frontier of Morocco,
-where the war had just broken out. Suddenly my wife,
-though still in delicate health, announced that she would
-go with me, that she would make the campaign."</p>
-
-
-<p>V&mdash;THE VERDICT&mdash;"NOT GUILTY!"</p>
-
-<p>The captain continued the history of his curiously
-troubled married life up to the time of the outbreak of
-the present war. When he came to the recital of the
-tragedy at Compiegne he lost all control of himself. He
-said that the only thing with which he could reproach<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">[337]</a></span>
-himself was having concealed from his military superiors
-the truth concerning his difficulties with his wife.</p>
-
-<p>Colonel Jacquillart, the president of the court martial,
-asked Captain Herail sharply:</p>
-
-<p>"Why did you not use some other method than shooting
-your wife to end the distressing situation?"</p>
-
-<p>"I tried every other means first," replied the captain,
-"and I must have been mad with fear of disgrace to kill
-the wife I loved so much."</p>
-
-<p>Many military officers testified and gave Captain Herail
-a splendid character. Colonel Meneville, who had
-recommended that the captain should not receive the
-Legion of Honor on account of his disobeying the order
-to send wives away, said that in every other respect Herail
-was an excellent officer, brave and competent.</p>
-
-<p>Henri Robert, the most noted member of the Paris
-Bar, defended Captain Herail eloquently.</p>
-
-<p>"A judge far more inexorable than any of you," said
-M. Robert, pointing to the bench, "his mother-in-law,
-has forgiven him. She writes me lauding him as an
-ideal man and officer and worthy of his country. His
-dead wife's sisters and brothers also forgive him freely."</p>
-
-<p>The members of the court martial only took fifteen
-minutes to reach a decision. They returned and rendered
-unanimously a simple verdict of "Not guilty!"</p>
-
-<p>The verdict was received with frantic applause mingled
-with tears by the audience. (Told in the <i>New York
-American</i>.)</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">[338]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>HOW THEY KILLED "THE MAN
-WHO COULD NOT DIE"</h2>
-
-<div class="center"><i>Told by a Soldier Under General Cantore</i></div>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;STORY OF THE ITALIAN ALPINI</p>
-
-<p>They said he could not die. The men who fought
-under him in Tripoli, the men who stood beside him in
-the bloody capture of Ala, looked on Antonio Cantore
-with almost superstitious awe. For he ought to have
-been killed a hundred times. A hundred times he came
-back, smiling quietly behind his spectacles, out of perils
-through which other men could not live. So the legend
-grew up among the Italian Alpini that their commander
-led a charmed life; they said he had the <span xml:lang="il">camicia della
-madonna</span> and that bullets could not harm him. Death
-got him at last, but those boys of his&mdash;as he used to
-call his soldiers&mdash;will not believe it, even though they
-carved his tomb out of the rock and heaped the earth
-over his body.</p>
-
-<p>Gen. Cantore was not a bit like a hero, as one pictures
-heroes. One might have taken him for a schoolmaster,
-a clerk in the post office, a retired commercial traveller.
-He was not tall, nor was his bearing martial. His kind
-blue eyes looked mildly through his round spectacles.
-His mouth laughed under his white mustache. He wore
-a black mackintosh and walked with his head a little on
-one side and his hands in his pockets. But he was not
-afraid. Neither was he foolhardy. He neither feared
-nor courted death; he merely ignored it. He had the
-sublime courage of the man who knows the danger so<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">[339]</a></span>
-well that he will let no one else face it, but will brave
-it all alone.</p>
-
-<p>The veterans of the Tripoli campaign talked in this
-wise to the young recruits of the Alpini:</p>
-
-<p>"Look at that old man, with his kind face and gentle
-soul. He is the father of the Alpini. He has seen them
-born and has brought them up, all of them. They are
-his sons, his boys. With a word he has moulded them
-according to his own heart of bronze; with a smile he
-has forged them a heart of steel. You don't know him?
-Then you were not in Libya! But go to him, say 'Good
-morning, General!' and tell him your name. Ten years
-from now he will remember the name. And some night
-when you are on outpost duty and the hail of bullets is
-most furious, and the miaowing of the shells is maddest,
-when the air seems a-quiver with death, and the darkness
-is shot through with arrows and flashes, and the silence
-is shattered with bangs and explosions and roars, if your
-heart trembles a moment as you think of your little ones
-at home and the bells of the far-away village church ringing
-the Angelus, you will see the old man, the General,
-Antonio Cantore, rise suddenly before you, place himself
-between you and the enemy, shield you with his body.</p>
-
-<p>"For, you see, Antonio Cantore is everywhere and
-always ahead of everybody. When you leap first into an
-enemy's trench, eyes aflame, hands clawing, bayonet between
-your teeth, look ahead from the trench in which
-you are battling, and between it and the second line of
-trenches from which the enemy is still bombarding you
-with rapid-fire guns you will see a kind old man, his eyes
-twinkling behind his spectacles, his mouth smiling under
-its white mustaches, his hands in his pockets, his head
-slightly bent and inclined to one side. It will be Antonio
-Cantore.</p>
-
-<p>"For that old man, you see, is always everywhere and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">[340]</a></span>
-ahead of everybody. And he cannot die. We have seen
-him return unscathed from places where hundreds and
-hundreds have been killed. We have seen him march
-without flinching right up to the cannon and the mitrailleuse.
-Shells and bullets fall before him; they are afraid
-of his smile!"</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;"MY GOD! A GENERAL!"</p>
-
-<p>Thus the lengend grew and spread from the Adige to
-Leno, from the Altissimo to Coni Zugna, from Pasubio
-to the Col Santo, wherever the Alpini were engaged.</p>
-
-<p>And every hardy mountaineer who was called to the
-colors cheered his loved ones on parting with the words:
-"Never fear! I am going to join Antonio Cantore's brigade."</p>
-
-<p>One night on the slopes of Monte Campo, Gen. Cantore
-was on reconnoitring patrol. For he was his own scout.
-Most commanders ask for two or three volunteers for
-a night reconnaissance. This general, instead, would
-say: "Are there two men who would like to come with me
-to-night and inspect the enemy's barbed wire entanglements?"
-And all the men would want to go. He would
-pick out two, saying to the others: "No, no, boys; I
-need only two of you. Thank you, just the same. Your
-time will come." To the chosen ones it was like a promotion
-or receiving a medal of honor.</p>
-
-<p>And so, one night he was out scouting with only his
-sergeant as company. "His" sergeant was Sergt. Cillario,
-a veteran of Libya, who had stayed in the army just
-to be with Antonio Cantore, whom he called "my" general.
-They had climbed a difficult mule-path toward the
-Austrian trenches, the general leading, the sergeant following
-in silence.</p>
-
-<p>At last the general told the sergeant to stop, and he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">[341]</a></span>
-went on alone. When he would not permit a man to
-risk his life, that man did as he was told. Only on such
-occasions did Gen. Cantore make his rank felt. He no
-longer said: "Let us go, my boy," but "Sergeant, stay
-there." His boys were not saints, but they obeyed. They
-had to, for otherwise he&mdash;raised his voice and smiled no
-more!</p>
-
-<p>So that night, as on many others, he went on alone.
-And when his hands touched the first barbed wire the
-sentries of the Austrian trenches fired at him. This
-did not disconcert him. He went on with his hands in his
-pockets, his head on one side, stooping to examine through
-his spectacles the entanglements by the light of flashes
-from the enemy's guns. He was ten yards from the
-Austrian trench, a single dark shadow advancing like fate
-through the volleys, an invulnerable shadow seeking out
-the interstices of the barbed wire entanglements to find
-spaces through which men might pass, scrutinizing them
-with the calm interest of a botanist examining a garden.</p>
-
-<p>A Tryolean kaiserjaeger, who has been taking careful
-aim at him, saw the insignia of his rank.</p>
-
-<p>"My God! a General!" he exclaimed, and let his rifle
-fall.</p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;TALES OF GENERAL CANTORE</p>
-
-<p>When the town of Ala was carried by assault last June
-he was the first to enter it. He went through the hail
-of bullets with the same calmness as he would have gone
-through a rainstorm, and as unscathed.</p>
-
-<p>When the Austrians fled a group of about one hundred
-and fifty took refuge in the Cafe 25 Maggio in the piazza
-then called Moses, and in the Villa Brazil, almost opposite,
-determined to resist to the last in order to cover the
-retreat. Gen. Cantore said the lieutenant in command<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342">[342]</a></span>
-of the nearest platoon, "Come on." They went to the
-door of the cafe. "Make them open," he said, "but leave
-your pistol. They won't fire." But they did, sending a
-shower of bullets from the windows. Neither of the
-Italians was hit.</p>
-
-<p>"They won't open," said the lieutenant.</p>
-
-<p>"I'll make them," said Cantore. He approached the
-door, armed only with his riding whip. Another volley
-greeted him, and shots from the windows of the Villa
-Brazil. He was unwounded, but he lost his calm as he
-cried:</p>
-
-<p>"Charge, boys, charge! Burst the place open and take
-them all prisoners!"</p>
-
-<p>The fight lasted a quarter of an hour. The walls, windows
-and door of the cafe were shot full of holes; the
-Villa Brazil was turned into a ruin. The few Austrians
-left alive were made prisoners.</p>
-
-<p>That street is now the Piazza Antonio Cantore.</p>
-
-<p>When the fight was over Gen. Cantore and a few other
-officers sat down to dine in the Albergo di Ala. There
-were three girls from Roverto who had taken refuge
-there. They were so pretty that they were called the
-"three graces." They waited on the diners. Gen. Cantore
-chatted with them, joking one especially, whose name was
-Pina, calling her affectionately by pet names&mdash;Pinotta,
-Pinella, Pinina, Pignotta, Pignina&mdash;laughing like a big
-boy. When he rose from dinner he took her chin in his
-hand and said:</p>
-
-<p>"Poor little Pina, far away from thy home! But we
-shall soon be at Roverto, and thou wilt come to Roverto
-right after us. Then thou wilt be happy again, eh?"</p>
-
-<p>But Antonio Cantore was never to see Roverto. A man
-cannot snub Death indefinitely. Death had to get even
-with Cantore, or remain forever discredited. One day
-he had his revenge.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">[343]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It was on July 20. The Alpini, under Gen. Cantore,
-were in the Ampazzano valley, trying to dislodge the Austrians
-from the slopes of the three mountains called
-Tofana di Rozzes, Tofana di Mezzo and Tofana di Dentro,
-whence they were able to fire on Cortina and other
-towns. Between the Tofana di Rozzes and the Tofana
-di Mezzo was a refuge hut for chamois hunters from
-which Austrian sharpshooters picked off the Italian soldiers
-at their leisure. The refuge hut had been bombarded,
-but the effect was doubtful.</p>
-
-<p>At 12.30 o'clock Gen. Cantore and Capt. Argenteri
-started to explore the place. They reached the advanced
-trenches by 5.15 o'clock. The Austrians were still firing
-from the hidden hut. Cantore and the Captain tried to
-locate the precise spot, but could not.</p>
-
-<p>"Captain, we will go up higher and look," said the
-General. They climbed up the slope and hid behind
-some rocks. As they peeped over these the sun shone
-straight in Cantore's face.</p>
-
-<p>"I cannot see well," he called to the Captain. Then
-he stood up and was placing his field-glasses to his eyes
-when three shots rang out. Cantore fell, with two bullets
-in his forehead. He died instantly.</p>
-
-<p>"His" sergeant, veteran of many battles, grown callous
-by the sight and suffering, asked a month's leave of absence
-to go away and mourn for his general. In Verona
-he walked about like a spectre, his face ghastly and set.
-They asked, "How did the General die?" And Cillario
-answered, "Antonio Cantore is not dead. Antonio Cantore
-could not die." (Told in the <i>New York World</i>.)</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">[344]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>HOW MLLE. DUCLOS WON THE
-LEGION OF HONOR</h2>
-
-<div class="center"><i>Story of a Woman Who Drove Her Auto at<br />
-Full Speed into a German Force</i></div>
-
-<div class="center"><br /><i>Told by an Eye-Witness</i></div>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;DECORATED BY MARSHAL JOFFRE</p>
-
-<div class="right">
-<span class="smcap">Paris</span>, Sept. 24.<br />
-</div>
-
-<p>The two most romantic and brilliant features of the
-war, the two things that have relieved it from being a
-dull record of close-range slaughter, have been the use
-of flying machines and automobiles.</p>
-
-<p>Flying machines may appear more romantic and spectacular
-to the outsider, but those who have seen the war
-at close quarters are of the opinion that the most astonishing
-and brilliant feats of arms have been performed
-by motor cars.</p>
-
-<p>The experience of Mlle. Helene Duclos, who annihilated
-practically a whole German company with her automobile,
-is one of the many amazing instances of the use
-of this comparatively novel instrument of war. Other
-cases in the various warring countries have, perhaps, been
-equally remarkable, but hers necessarily gains added interest
-from the fact that she is a woman, and a very attractive
-one.</p>
-
-<p>It has been shown that a high-powered armored motor
-car, running at sixty miles an hour, can, under certain
-conditions, disorganize a whole army and slaughter scores
-of soldiers. If driven into a body of men in close formation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">[345]</a></span>
-and taken by surprise its powers of injury are unlimited.</p>
-
-<p>Armored cars have been used for the terribly difficult
-work of removing barbed wire entanglements. The car
-runs up to the entanglements, throws grapnel irons over
-them, and then backs away to uproot them. The armored
-car can do this work under a fire that exposed
-men could not live in.</p>
-
-<p>Armored cars are employed in coöperation with flying
-machines. The aviator brings information where a car
-can do most damage, and then hovers overhead, giving
-warning to the motormen when they must retire or, return
-for help if necessary. An armored car crew connected
-with the British Naval Flying Corps has received honorable
-mention for annihilating a whole party of Uhlans.</p>
-
-<p>Some armored cars carry two machine guns and others
-a gun of larger calibre.</p>
-
-<p>Mlle. Duclos's motor exploit has made her the great
-heroine of the moment. She has been decorated by General
-Joffre with the cross of the Legion of Honor for her
-brilliant and heroic act.</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;MLLE. DUCLOS TELLS HER STORY</p>
-
-<p>"I was determined to do something for my country
-in the fighting field, something that the Germans would
-remember&mdash;something more than soothing the fevered
-brow," said Mlle. Duclos, describing her exploits. "My
-great-grandfather was a captain of grenadiers under Napoleon,
-and the blood of generations of soldiers runs in
-my veins.</p>
-
-<p>"My first ambition was to enlist in the fighting automobile
-service. I had been used to running all kinds of
-cars since my childhood, and was as fit for this work
-as any human being could be. But I found the authorities<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">[346]</a></span>
-obdurate. They simply would not let a woman into
-the combatant services. I tried disguising myself as a
-man, but the rigid physical examination made this attempt
-useless.</p>
-
-<p>"Finally it seemed to me that the only way of reaching
-the front was to join a volunteer motor ambulance corps,
-as several other women had done. I transformed a
-60-horsepower, eight-seated touring car into a motor
-ambulance for four badly wounded men or eight slightly
-wounded ones. I qualified for the service and was authorized
-to proceed to the front in Alsace, accompanied
-by a mechanician.</p>
-
-<p>"While performing my ambulance duties I had a good
-opportunity to watch the armored automobiles, and realized
-that their work was the most exciting and perhaps
-the most decisive of the war."</p>
-
-<p>One day Mlle. Duclos, having taken some wounded
-men to the field hospital, was returning once more to the
-fighting line. Eager for adventure she drove her car
-up a mountain road, which was not included in the trench
-zone, and entered a wild, mountainous country, from
-which the French were desperately trying to drive the
-Germans by flank attacks, surprises, air raids and other
-stratagems.</p>
-
-<p>Soon the rattle of rifle bullets and machine gun fire
-close at hand caught her attention. A turn in the road
-brought her in sight of a big armored French car that
-stood disabled in the middle of the road. The engine
-had been smashed by a shell. The Germans were firing
-at it from cover some distance away. The French soldiers
-were firing away from the protection of the armor
-with their machine guns and their rifles, but they were
-handicapped by the immobility of the car, and the Germans
-were gradually encircling them. Three of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">[347]</a></span>
-eight Frenchmen forming the crew of the car lay dead
-in the road, killed while they had exposed themselves in
-an attempt to repair the engine.</p>
-
-<p>Mlle. Duclos saw three German soldiers rise from cover
-and advance in an effort to rush the car. They were
-shot down, but she saw that in a few more minutes the
-Frenchmen must be overwhelmed.</p>
-
-<p>Taking in the situation at a glance, the experienced
-motorist sped up to the injured car and backed up her
-machine before she stopped.</p>
-
-<p>"Get in," she cried to the French soldiers, "or you will
-be taken in another minute."</p>
-
-<p>The five Frenchmen jumped into Mlle. Duclos's car
-with their rifles. Under a rain of bullets she sped back
-by the way she had come. Luckily they all escaped, and
-a turn in the zigzag road soon put them out of danger.</p>
-
-<p>The Germans must have taken possession of the car
-in a leisurely manner after the escape of the French. It
-was precious booty to them. Probably they tried to repair
-it, and, finding that impossible, started to tow it
-back.</p>
-
-<p>The Frenchmen were not satisfied to escape with their
-lives and leave their car behind. Mlle. Duclos had noted
-carefully the direction of the surrounding roads. After
-running back a short distance she found a road that would
-lead them to the one that the Germans would follow on
-their way back.</p>
-
-<p>The French officer in charge of the party insisted on
-taking the steering wheel of the car, but Mlle. Duclos
-demonstrated that she was the only one who could get
-the best speed out of her car. Thus she forced them
-to let her stay in the place of danger.</p>
-
-<p>Behind a pile of rocks that marked the meeting of the
-roads they lay in wait for the returning Germans.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348">[348]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Up the road came the Germans tugging at a rope that
-drew the great disabled French armored car. There
-were about forty of them, practically half a company,
-minus the men who had already fallen in the fight.</p>
-
-<p>It was impossible for the five Frenchmen to cope with
-them in any ordinary fight. Only surprise and stratagem
-could hope to meet the situation.</p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;SHE PLUNGES HER MOTOR INTO THE
-GERMANS</p>
-
-<p>Mlle. Duclos immediately suggested that she should
-drive the car straight down on the unsuspecting Germans.
-Her opportunity for a great action had come.
-She seized it.</p>
-
-<p>Down hill upon the toiling Germans flew the great 60-horsepower
-car. Straight as an arrow it went, with the
-weight of its two tons multiplied a hundred times by its
-speed and downward course.</p>
-
-<p>All the Germans in its full path went down like ripe
-corn before the scythe. Straight it flew on without being
-swerved in the slightest degree by the human obstacles
-in its way.</p>
-
-<p>Severed heads flew up in the air and arms and legs
-were chopped off by the flying car. Ghastly fragments
-of flesh and bone, a muddy mixture of blood and viscera,
-human remains that had nothing human about them,
-spattered the wheels and the body and all the occupants
-of the car.</p>
-
-<p>"I felt like the very incarnation of the spirit of destruction
-and revenge," says Mlle. Duclos describing this
-wild scene. "I was not human."</p>
-
-<p>The car flew on its path of death until it reached the
-captured French armored car. Mlle. Duclos missed this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_349" id="Page_349">[349]</a></span>
-by an incalculable fraction of an inch and then slowly
-brought her racing car to a stop.</p>
-
-<p>The French soldiers looked back. Only a few German
-soldiers, who were out of the path of the auto, had escaped
-death or maiming. Perhaps there were six in all,
-and they were aghast at the demon of death that had
-swept through them.</p>
-
-<p>The French soldiers showered the Germans with hand
-grenades and would probably have overcome the rest of
-the party and recaptured their auto, when a party of
-Uhlans was seen riding up the road from the direction
-of the German lines.</p>
-
-<p>It appeared that scouting aviators of both sides had
-witnessed the fight over the armored car and had carried
-word back to their respective forces.</p>
-
-<p>Once more the gallant French motor fighters were in
-danger of being wiped out. Acting in co-operation with
-the officer, Mlle. Duclos ran her car back again, putting
-it between the survivors of the first German party and
-the new reinforcements. This move put the former at
-a great disadvantage, as they were standing about in a
-flat, open place, but, of course, it exposed the Frenchmen
-to the newly arriving German forces.</p>
-
-<p>The Frenchmen with rifles and pistols disposed of the
-remnant of the first German party, and then started to
-hitch their disabled car to Madame Durand's machine.</p>
-
-<p>A shower of bullets from the German side warned
-them that their gallant efforts would probably be in
-vain.</p>
-
-<p>"Whir-r-r! whir-r-r!" came the frightful scream of
-war cars from the direction of the French lines.</p>
-
-<p>Two powerful French armored cars sped down the
-road, with machine guns spouting death, and engaged
-the German reinforcements.</p>
-
-<p>At the conclusion of this new battle the five French<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_350" id="Page_350">[350]</a></span>
-motor fighters were able to secure their disabled car, and
-Mlle. Duclos at the wheel of her own car led the glorious
-wreck back in triumph.</p>
-
-<p>Thus it happened that she received the military cross
-of the Legion of Honor and is the heroine of the hour.&mdash;(<i>New
-York American.</i>)</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_351" id="Page_351">[351]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>THE RUSSIAN "JOAN OF ARC'S"
-OWN STORY</h2>
-
-<div class="center"><i>Told by Mme. Alexandra Kokotseva, the "Russian<br />
-Joan of Arc," Colonel Commanding the Sixth Ural<br />
-Cossack Regiment&mdash;Translated from a Letter<br />
-Forwarded from Petrograd to Friends
-in New York</i></div>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;"BELIEVE NONE OF THOSE GERMAN LIES"</p>
-
-<p>As Jessaul (Colonel) of my dashing Cossack regiment
-I must be discreet in my letter writing. Only last week
-one of my officers&mdash;in fact the Sotnik (Captain) himself&mdash;let
-himself in for a nice wigging from the department
-censor by heading a letter to his mother in Moscow
-with the name of the nearest village to our regimental
-headquarters and the exact date. All such details are
-"verboten," as the Austrian would say whose bullet has
-given me this nice little rest in the field hospital.</p>
-
-<p>Do not worry on my account. In a week I shall sit
-just as firmly in my saddle as ever. Never was a wounded
-soldier of either sex more petted and coddled than
-I am. Every day my little ones (Cossacks of her regiment)
-almost bury me under Spring flowers.</p>
-
-<p>"Listen, Batjuschka," I had to say just now to the
-grimmest and fiercest of them&mdash;a grizzled giant who only
-yesterday captured six Austrians single-handed&mdash;"do you
-wish to see your Jessual shedding tears like a mere woman?
-For shame! About face&mdash;march!"</p>
-
-<p>But the wretch had the audacity to try and kiss my
-hand&mdash;he left a tear on it, anyway. When I'm out I shall
-have to discipline him severely!</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_352" id="Page_352">[352]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>My splendid Cossacks! Who would have thought that
-they would consent to be commanded by a woman? Often
-have I told you of their superior attitude toward women.
-They expect their women to work for them, to serve
-them and be always submissive. Evidently my fierce
-little ones consider me as a sort of Superwoman. Or,
-perhaps they do not consider me a woman at all&mdash;except
-now that I am wounded and in the hospital&mdash;and respect
-merely my colonel's uniform. Truly it has little in common
-with the Tartar shirt, half-coat and foot-gear and
-kerchief of their sisters and wives. At any rate they
-obey my slightest wish, perform the most reckless deeds,
-gayly court death, to win my approval.</p>
-
-<p>If you should be writing to Paul &mdash;&mdash;, or to Anna
-in America, be sure and tell them to believe none of those
-German lies. Not one of my fire-eating Cossacks has
-been guilty of offering indignities to a woman of the
-enemy. Maybe my little ones do some burning and looting&mdash;if
-my back is turned&mdash;but to act in a beastly way
-to women and children, no!</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;"TO MY FRIENDS IN AMERICA"</p>
-
-<p>You have heard of us in the enemy's country. Ah,
-there was fat living! Eggs by the hundred thousand;
-egg pancakes to tighten the belts of a whole army, and
-mutton and beef without stint. We grew fat. Our ragged
-and gaunt Austrian prisoners looked upon us with
-envy. Soon they also were fat!</p>
-
-<p>You know that we of the Cossack regiments have little
-to do with the fighting in trenches. For us it is to
-make forays, to make whirlwind attacks upon detachments
-of the enemy guarding their line of communications,
-and capture positions badly defended by artillery.
-I may be permitted to instance our usefulness on the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_353" id="Page_353">[353]</a></span>
-frontier of Galicia, between the Dniester and Pruth. It
-was my Cossacks who surprised the Austrians at Okna.</p>
-
-<p>The Austrians were intrenched. Our infantry attacked,
-but were repulsed. Ah, then you should have beheld
-my little ones! There were two Cossack regiments&mdash;two
-thousand dashing, fierce fellows&mdash;itching for a hand-to-hand
-encounter with the despised Teutons. As the infantry
-were retreating my little ones were given their
-chance.</p>
-
-<p>Yelling madly and firing their carbines, they galloped
-west and east, covering a long front to convince the Austrians
-that they were in large force. The ruse worked.
-The enemy started to retreat to the southwest. Before
-they were clear of their trenches the Cossacks were riding
-them down, plying the cold steel right and left and
-cutting off large bodies for prisoners&mdash;finally taking the
-position.</p>
-
-<p>That is the work at which my fine fire-eaters are famous.
-The Sotnik (Captain) of my regiment sent to me
-a bloodstained, grizzled victor in a hundred battles who
-begged the privilege of presenting to me seven caps belonging
-to the Austrian infantry service uniform, each
-pierced through its crown. Like so many grouse, they
-were skewered upon my brave Cossack's bayonet.</p>
-
-<p>"Thank you, Batjuschka, but I am not hungry," I said,
-for my little ones do not mind being teased. "Neither
-are they hungry who lately wore them," was the quick
-answer. "Where are those seven Austrians?" I asked,
-looking about in pretended stupidity. "With God," said
-my gallant Cossack, as he reverently crossed himself.
-"Ah," I said, "afterwards you went back and with your
-bayonet skewered each Austrian cap where it lay beside
-its dead owner." "No," he replied gravely, "with my
-bayonet I skewered each cap with the same thrust that
-sent its owner to God." And again he crossed himself.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_354" id="Page_354">[354]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It was all true&mdash;there were witnesses of the encounter&mdash;seven
-to one, and all the seven now "with God."</p>
-
-<p>Do you shudder when I write to you of these things?
-Do you say to yourself that "this terrible war" has robbed
-me of all my estimable "woman's weaknesses?" Do
-you picture me brazenly calloused to scenes of human
-agony and violent deaths for thousands in a single engagement
-which probably has no effect upon the final
-outcome?</p>
-
-<p>You would be wrong. It is simply that if you are a
-soldier it is your duty to kill, and perhaps to be killed,
-in defense of your country. No matter how dreadful
-the things that happen, they are inseparable from war
-and you must get used to them. Gradually you do get
-used to them. If you did not your services to your
-country would be of no value. You would not be a true
-soldier, who must be able always to shrug his shoulders
-and say to himself, "Well, such things happen," and then
-go on faithfully with his soldier's work.</p>
-
-<p>But believe me, these duties performed as well as I
-am able to perform them, promotions, honors&mdash;afterward
-they will be as nothing compared with what is dear
-to me as a woman. Through all this violence and carnage
-and misery I know that I shall have gained in all that
-becomes a woman&mdash;in faithfulness, tenderness, pity for
-the poor and unfortunate, and in charity.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_355" id="Page_355">[355]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>AN ITALIAN SOLDIER'S LAST
-MESSAGE TO HIS MOTHER</h2>
-
-<div class="center"><i>Translated by Father Pasquale Maltese</i></div>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>This is an extraordinary revelation of the heart of an Italian
-soldier. It is the last letter to his mother written by a young
-poet who fell on the Isonzo leading a platoon in battle. Father
-Pasquale Maltese, pastor of the church of St. Anthony, New
-York, translates it for <i>The Parish Monthly</i> as an "inspiration
-to the youth of every land."</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;"TO DIE A BEAUTIFUL AND GLORIOUS
-DEATH"</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mother</span>:</p>
-
-<p>This letter, which you will receive only in case that I
-should fall in this battle, I am writing in an advanced
-trench, where I have been since last night, with my soldiers,
-in expectation of the order to cross the river and
-move to the attack.</p>
-
-<p>I am calm, perfectly serene, and firmly resolved to do
-my duty in full and to the last, like a brave and good
-soldier, confident to the utmost of our final unfailing
-victory; although I am not equally sure that I will live
-to see it. But this uncertainty does not trouble me in the
-least, nor has it any terror for me. I am happy in offering
-my life to my country; I am proud to spend it for
-so noble a purpose, and I know not how to thank Divine
-Providence for the opportunity&mdash;which I deem an
-honor&mdash;afforded me, on this fulgent autumnal day, in
-the midst of this enchanting valley of our Julian Venetia,
-while I am in the prime of life, in the fulness of
-my physical and mental powers, to fight in this holy war<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_356" id="Page_356">[356]</a></span>
-for liberty and justice. All is propitious to me, all is
-favorable to die a beautiful and glorious death; the
-weather, the place, the season, the opportunity, the age.
-A better end could not have crowned my life, and I feel
-the pleasure to have made a good and generous use of
-it. Do not grieve over my death, mother, or else you
-will offend my good fortune. Do not weep, mother, for
-it was written in Heaven that I should die. Do not
-mourn, mother, or else you would regret my happiness.
-I am not to be mourned but envied.</p>
-
-<p>You know the ineffable hopes that give me comfort
-because they are the very same hopes in which you also
-have placed all that is dear to you. When you read these
-words of mine, I will be free, unfettered and in a safe
-place, far from the miseries of this world. My struggle
-will be finished and I shall be peaceful; my daily death
-shall have come to an end, and I shall have reached the
-place on high, to the life without end. I shall be face
-to face with the Judge whom I have greatly feared, to
-the Lord whom I have greatly loved.</p>
-
-<p>Think of it, mother dear, when you read these words.
-I shall view you from heaven, side by side with our dear
-ones, with father, with my dear Laura, with Dino, our
-Guardian Angel. We shall be in the regions above, all
-united to celebrate your arrival, to watch over you and
-over Gino, to prepare for you, with our prayers, the
-place of your everlasting glory. Should not this thought
-alone be sufficient to dry your tears and to fill you with
-unspeakable joy?</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;"WEEP NOT, MY DEAR MOTHER"</p>
-
-<p>No, no, weep not, my dear and saintly mother, and be
-brave, as you have always been. Should the pleasure of
-having offered to our adored Italy, this glorious land,
-this land predestined by God, should the pleasure of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_357" id="Page_357">[357]</a></span>
-having offered the sacrifice of the life of one of your
-sons, be not sufficient for you, remember, nevertheless,
-that you must not rebel, not even for one instant, to the
-divinely wise and divinely loving decrees of our Lord.
-If He wanted to reserve me for other work, He could
-have permitted me to survive. Since He has called me
-to Himself, it is a sign that such was the best thing
-that could have happened and the best thing for me.
-He knows what He is doing, and it remains for us to
-bow and to adore, accepting with trustful joy His most
-Exalted Will.</p>
-
-<p>I do not bemoan life. I have tasted of all its insane
-infatuations and have withdrawn with an insurmountable
-weariness and disgust.</p>
-
-<p>Like a young prodigal son, after so many wanderings,
-having returned to the house of the father, I could have
-hoped now, and reasonably so, to taste of the good joys,
-the joys of duties well performed, of the good practised
-and preached, the joys born of art, of labor, of charity,
-of a fruitful mind.</p>
-
-<p>Side by side with the good, beautiful girl whom you
-know and esteem, and whom I have always loved, always
-so tenderly, timidly and faithfully loved, even in the
-midst of my errors and blameworthy blunders, I could
-have hoped to make a good husband and a good father.</p>
-
-<p>In the world there are so many battles to fight, for
-love, for justice, for liberty, for the faith, and for a
-time I must confess, I presumptuously believed myself
-predestined and assigned to the arduous and terrible task
-of winning one or another of these battles.</p>
-
-<p>All this was, I admit, beautiful, flattering, desirable,
-but it cannot compare with my present lot. This is the
-very truth, and indeed I cannot say whether I would
-really be satisfied if the writing of this letter would
-have been in vain. Life is sad; it is a painful and annoying<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_358" id="Page_358">[358]</a></span>
-duty, a long exile in the uncertainty of our own
-lot. In order that life might go quickly in accordance
-with my wishes, and without leaving me in a thousand
-disappointments, there would be need of many very rare
-and difficult occurrences. Besides, I am and I feel weak,
-I have not the least confidence in myself. The whole
-battle against the ingratitude and wickedness of the world
-would not have frightened me as much as the battle
-against myself. It is better, therefore, dear mother,
-as it has happened. The Lord, in His wise and infinite
-goodness, has reserved for me just the destiny that was
-fit for me; a destiny that is easy, sweet, honorable, rapid;
-to die in battle for one's country.</p>
-
-<p>With this beautiful and praiseworthy past, fulfilling
-the most desired of all duties as a good citizen towards
-the land that gave him birth, I depart, in the midst of
-the tears of all those that love me, from a life toward
-which I felt weary and disgusted. I leave the failings of
-life, I leave sin, I leave the sad and afflicted spectacle of
-the small and momentary triumphs of evil over good.
-I leave to my humble body the weight of all my chains
-and I fly away, free, free in the end, to the heavens
-above, where resides our Father, to the heavens above,
-where His holy will is always done. Just imagine, dear
-mother, with what joy I will receive from His hands
-even the chastisements that His justice will impose on account
-of my sins. He Himself has paid all these chastisements
-by His superabundant merits, a God of mercy
-and of love, redeeming me with His precious blood, living
-and dying here below for my sake. Only through
-His grace, only through Jesus Christ, could I have succeeded
-that my sins be not my eternal death. He has seen
-the tears of my sorrow, He has pardoned me through the
-mouth of His spotless spouse, the Church. I do sincerely
-hope that the Madonna, so loving and kind toward<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_359" id="Page_359">[359]</a></span>
-us, will assist me with her powerful help in the
-instant when my eternity will be decided.</p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;"GOOD-BYE, MOTHER&mdash;WE SHALL NOT
-DIE IN VAIN"</p>
-
-<p>And as I am about to speak of forgiveness, dear
-mother, I have only one thing to say with all simplicity:
-Forgive me! Forgive me all the sorrows that I have
-caused you; all the agonies that you have suffered on
-my account every time I have been ungrateful, stubborn,
-forgetful, disobedient toward you. Forgive me if, by
-neglect and inexperience, I have failed to render your
-life more comfortable and tranquil since the day when
-my father, by his premature death, entrusted you to
-my care. Now I understand well the many wrongs I
-have been guilty of toward you, and I feel all the remorse
-and cruel anguish now that dying I have to entrust
-you to the providence of the Lord. Forgive me
-lastly this final sorrow that I have inflicted upon you,
-perhaps not without stubborn and cruel inconsideration
-on my part, in giving up my life voluntarily for my
-country, fascinated by the attractions of this beautiful
-lot. Forgive me also if I have not sufficiently recognized
-and tried to compensate the incomparable nobility of
-your soul, of your heart, so immense and sublime.
-Mother, truly perfect and exemplary, to whom I owe
-all that I am and the least good I have done in this
-world.</p>
-
-<p>I have so many things to say to you that a book could
-hardly contain them. Nothing else, therefore, is left
-me but to recommend you to our Gino, on whose goodness,
-on whose integrity, and on whose strength of will,
-I put all trust. Tell him in my name to serve willingly
-our country as long as she will have need of him, to
-serve her with abnegation, with ardor, with enthusiasm,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_360" id="Page_360">[360]</a></span>
-even unto death, should that be necessary. Should he
-be destined to live a long and struggling life, let him
-be equal to it with serenity, with firmness, with indomitable
-love for justice and honesty, trusting always in the
-triumph of good with God's grace. Let him be a good
-husband and a good father; let him raise up his children
-in the love of God, respect for the Church, fidelity
-toward our King, to the observance of the law, to scrupulous
-devotion to our beloved country. Think often of
-us here above; speak of us among yourselves; remember
-us and love us as when we were alive, because we shall
-always be with you.</p>
-
-<p>Pray often for me, for I am in need of it. Be courageous
-in the trials of life, as you have always been
-strong and energetic in the midst of the tempest of your
-earthly career; continue to be humble, pious, charitable,
-so that the peace of God may always be with you.</p>
-
-<p>Good-bye, mother; good-bye, Gino, my dear and my
-belovèd! I embrace you with all the ardor of my immense
-love, which has increased a hundredfold during
-my absence in the midst of the dangers and hardships
-of the war. Here, far away from the world, always
-with the image of imminent death, I have felt how strong
-are the ties that bind us to this world; how mankind
-is in need of mutual love, of faith in each other, of discipline,
-of harmony, of unity, what necessary and sacred
-things are the fatherland, the home, the family; how
-blameworthy is the person who renounces these, who betrays
-and oppresses them.</p>
-
-<p>Love and freedom for all, this is the ideal for which
-it is a pleasure to offer one's life. May God cause our
-sacrifice to be fruitful; may He take pity upon mankind,
-forgive and forget their offenses, and give them
-peace. Then, oh! dear mother, we shall not have died
-in vain. Just one more tender kiss.</p>
-
-<div class="right">
-<span class="smcap">Giosue Borsi.</span><br />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class="transnote">
-<h2>Transcriber's Note</h2>
-
-
-<p>Obvious errors of punctuation and diacritical markings were corrected.</p>
-
-<p>Inconsistent hyphenation was made consistent.</p>
-
-<p>Both "dug-out" and "dugout" are used frequently and have not been
-changed.</p>
-
-<p>"of" added in "Permission of New York American" in table of contents
-entry for "HOW MLLE. DUCLOS...".</p>
-
-<p>P. 35: One the face of it -> On the face of it.</p>
-
-<p>P. 35: These stiplations -> These stipulations.</p>
-
-<p>P. 82: There were a group -> They were a group.</p>
-
-<p>P. 94: The Advance to Monse -> The Advance to Mons.</p>
-
-<p>P. 96: secure a birth -> secure a berth.</p>
-
-<p>P. 115: we could could procure -> we could procure.</p>
-
-<p>P. 133: Aerschat -> Aerschot.</p>
-
-<p>P. 134: The sequal to my one-hundredth flight -> The sequel to my
-one-hundredth flight.</p>
-
-<p>P. 143: Deisel -> Diesel.</p>
-
-<p>P. 158: But I've illusions -> But I've no illusions.</p>
-
-<p>P. 176: There it a pretty little comedy -> There is a pretty little
-comedy.</p>
-
-<p>P. 178: as had been been anticipated -> as had been anticipated.</p>
-
-<p>P. 180: Deutschland, Deutschland, über Allies -> Deutschland, Deutschland, über Alles.</p>
-
-<p>P. 182: It that mine exploded -> If that mine exploded.</p>
-
-<p>P. 186: undergoing the the process -> undergoing the process.</p>
-
-<p>P. 186: immediate requiremenst -> immediate requirements.</p>
-
-<p>P. 191: this his previous blunder -> that his previous blunder.</p>
-
-<p>P. 192: one well swoop -> one fell swoop.</p>
-
-<p>P. 195: back in in Petersburg -> back in Petersburg.</p>
-
-<p>P. 198: non-combatatants -> non-combatants.</p>
-
-<p>P. 204: barely distinguishable roads -> barely distinguishable road.</p>
-
-<p>P. 206: descended on her shoulder -> descend on her shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>P. 208: keepers of the the forest -> keepers of the forest.</p>
-
-<p>P. 214: the German had fired -> the Germans had fired.</p>
-
-<p>P. 220: as thought he meant -> as though he meant.</p>
-
-<p>P. 221: turned be back -> turned me back.</p>
-
-<p>P. 222: obession of my fear -> obsession of my fear.</p>
-
-<p>P. 231: Flemish titler -> Flemish title.</p>
-
-<p>P. 241: without specal orders -> without special orders.</p>
-
-<p>P. 266: Jilfla -> Jilfi.</p>
-
-<p>P. 273: leave a comrade die like a dog -> leave a comrade to die like
-a dog.</p>
-
-<p>P. 276: jeun docteur Allemand -> jeune docteur Allemand.</p>
-
-<p>P. 282: a public vehicles -> a public vehicle.</p>
-
-<p>P. 284: lès majesté -> lèse majesté.</p>
-
-<p>P. 309: Vive Verund -> Vive Verdun.</p>
-
-<p>P. 317: the old wail of sorow -> the old wail of sorrow.</p>
-
-<p>P. 325: Every one us -> Every one of us.</p>
-
-<p>P. 334: replied the hsuband -> replied the husband.</p>
-
-<p>P. 340: Thus the lengend grew -> Thus the legend grew.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="full" />
-<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TRUE STORIES OF THE GREAT WAR, VOLUME VI (OF 6)***</p>
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, True Stories of the Great War, Volume VI (of
-6), by Various, Edited by Francis Trevelyan Miller
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-
-Title: True Stories of the Great War, Volume VI (of 6)
- Tales of Adventure--Heroic Deeds--Exploits Told by the Soldiers, Officers, Nurses, Diplomats, Eye Witnesses
-
-
-Author: Various
-
-Editor: Francis Trevelyan Miller
-
-Release Date: February 13, 2016 [eBook #51206]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TRUE STORIES OF THE GREAT WAR,
-VOLUME VI (OF 6)***
-
-
-E-text prepared by Brian Coe, Moti Ben-Ari, and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made
-available by Internet Archive/American Libraries
-(https://archive.org/details/americana)
-
-
-
-Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
- file which includes the original illustrations.
- See 51206-h.htm or 51206-h.zip:
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/51206/51206-h/51206-h.htm)
- or
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/51206/51206-h.zip)
-
-
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive/American Libraries. See
- https://archive.org/details/truestoriesofgre06mill
-
-
-
-
-
-TRUE STORIES OF THE GREAT WAR
-
-Tales of Adventure--Heroic Deeds--Exploits
-Told by the Soldiers, Officers, Nurses,
-Diplomats, Eye Witnesses
-
-Collected in Six Volumes
-From Official and Authoritative Sources
-(See Introductory to Volume I)
-
-VOLUME VI
-
-Editor-in-Chief
-FRANCIS TREVELYAN MILLER (Litt. D., LL.D.)
-Editor of The Search-Light Library
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-1917
-Review of Reviews Company
-New York
-
-Copyright, 1917, by
-Review of Reviews Company
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- The Board of Editors has selected for VOLUME VI this group of
- stories told by Soldiers and Army Officers direct from the battle-grounds
- of the Great War. It includes 165 episodes and personal
- adventures by forty-two story-tellers--"Tommies," "Boches,"
- "Poilus," Russians, Italians, Austrians, Turks, Belgians, Scotchmen,
- Irishmen, Canadians, Americans--the "Best Stories of the
- War" gathered from the most authentic sources, according to the
- plan outlined in "Introductory" to Volume I. Full credit is given
- in every instance to the original sources.
-
- VOLUME VI--FORTY STORY-TELLERS--165 EPISODES
-
- "BEHIND THE GERMAN VEIL"--WITH VON HINDENBURG 1
- RECORD OF A REMARKABLE WAR PILGRIMAGE
- Told by Count Van Maurik De Beaufort
- (Permission of Dodd, Mead and Company)
-
- "KITCHENER'S MOB"--ADVENTURES OF AN AMERICAN WITH
- THE BRITISH ARMY 16
- UNCENSORED ACCOUNT OF A YOUNG VOLUNTEER
- Told by James Norman Hall
- (Permission of Houghton, Mifflin Company)
-
- "HOW BELGIUM SAVED EUROPE"--THE LITTLE KINGDOM
- OF HEROES 32
- TRAGEDY OF THE BELGIANS
- Told by Dr. Charles Sarolea
- (Permission of J. B. Lippincott Company)
-
- THE BISHOP OF LONDON'S VISIT TO THE FRONT 43
- TAKING THE MESSAGE OF CHRIST TO THE BATTLE LINES
- Told by The Reverend G. Vernon Smith
- (Permission of Longmans, Green and Company)
-
- "GRAPES OF WRATH"--WITH THE "BIG PUSH" ON THE
- SOMME 52
- TWENTY-FOUR HOURS IN THE LIFE OF A PRIVATE
- SOLDIER
- Told by Boyd Cable
- (Permission of E. P. Dutton and Company)
-
- A NOVELIST AND SOLDIER ON THE BATTLE LINE 63
- Told by Coningsby Dawson
- (Permission of John Lane Company)
-
- STORIES OF THE WAR PHOTOGRAPHERS IN BELGIUM 81
- AN AMERICAN AT THE BATTLEFRONT
- Told by Albert Rhys Williams
- (Permission of E. P. Dutton and Company)
-
- TALES OF THE FIRST BRITISH EXPEDITIONARY FORCE 94
- TO FRANCE
- IMPRESSIONS OF A SUBALTERN
- Told by "Casualty" (Name of Soldier Suppressed)
- (Permission of J. B. Lippincott Company)
-
- IN THE HANDS OF THE ENEMY--EXPERIENCES OF A
- PRISONER OF WAR 104
- Told by Benjamin G. O'Rorke, M. A.
- (Permission of Longmans, Green and Company)
-
- "AT SUVLA BAY"--THE WAR AGAINST THE TURKS 117
- ADVENTURES ON THE BLUE AEGEAN SHORES
- Told by John Hargrave
- (Permission of Houghton, Mifflin Company)
-
- SEEING THE WAR THROUGH A WOMAN'S EYES 122
- SOUL-STIRRING DESCRIPTION OF SCENES AMONG THE
- WOUNDED IN PARIS
- Told by (Name Suppressed)
- (Permission of New York American)
-
- LOST ON A SEAPLANE AND SET ADRIFT IN A MINE-FIELD 134
- ADVENTURES ON THE NORTH SEA
- Told by a Seaplane Observer
- (Permission of Wide World Magazine)
-
- HOW I HELPED TO TAKE THE TURKISH TRENCHES AT
- GALLIPOLI 144
- AN AMERICAN BOY'S WAR ADVENTURES
- Told by Wilfred Raymond Doyle
- (Permission of New York World)
-
- "BIG BANG"--STORY OF AN AMERICAN ADVENTURER 156
- A TALE OF THE GREAT TRENCH MORTARS
- Told by C. P. Thompson
- (Permission of Wide World Magazine)
-
- "WITH OUR ARMY IN FLANDERS"--FIGHTING WITH TOMMY
- ATKINS 165
- WHERE MEN HOLD RENDEZVOUS WITH DEATH
- Told by G. Valentine Williams
- (Permission of London Daily Mail)
-
- COMEDIES OF THE GREAT WAR 176
- TALES OF HUMOR ON THE FIGHTING LINES
- Told by W. F. Martindale
- (Permission of Wide World Magazine)
-
- LITTLE STORIES OF THE BIG WAR 188
- UNUSUAL ANECDOTES AT FIRST HAND
- Told by Karl K. Kitchen in Germany
- (Permission of New York World)
-
- POGROM--THE TRAGEDY OF THE JEWS AND THE ARMENIANS 194
- A MASTERFUL TALE OF THE EASTERN FRONT
- Told by M. C. della Grazie
- (Permission of New York Tribune)
-
- TALE OF THE SAVING OF PARIS 204
- HOW A WOMAN'S WIT AVERTED A GREAT DISASTER
- (Permission of Wide World Magazine)
-
- HOW IT FEELS TO A CLERGYMAN TO BE TORPEDOED ON
- A MAN-OF-WAR 212
- Told by the Rev. G. H. Collier
-
- STORY OF LEON BARBESSE, SLACKER, SOLDIER, HERO 213
- Told by Fred B. Pitney
- (Permission of New York Tribune)
-
- THE DESERTER--A BELGIAN INCIDENT 230
- Told by Edward Eyre Hunt
- (Permission of Red Cross Magazine)
-
- GRIM HUMOR OF THE TRENCHES 240
- AS SEEN BY PATRICK CORCORAN, OF THE ROYAL ENGINEERS
- (Permission of New York World)
-
- PRIVATE McTOSHER DISCOVERS LONDON 247
- Told by C. Malcolm Hincks
- (Permission of Wide World Magazine)
-
- RUSSIAN COUNTESS IN THE ARABIAN DESERT 259
- ADVENTURES OF COUNTESS MOLITOR AS TOLD IN HER
- DIARY
-
- GERMAN STUDENTS TELL WHAT SHERMAN MEANT 270
- THREE CONFESSIONS FROM GERMAN SOLDIERS
- Told by Walter Harich, Wilhelm Spengler and Willie Treller
- (Permission of New York Tribune)
-
- BAITING THE BOCHE--THE WIT OF THE BELGIANS 277
- Told by W. F. Martindale
- (Permission of Wide World Magazine)
-
- HOW SERGEANT O'LEARY WON HIS VICTORIA CROSS 288
- STORY OF THE FIRST BATTALION OF THE IRISH GUARDS
- (Permission of New York American)
-
- STORY OF A RUSSIAN IN AN AUSTRIAN PRISON 295
- AN OFFICER'S REMARKABLE EXPERIENCE
- (Permission of Current History)
-
- TWO WEEKS ON A SUBMARINE 302
- Told by Carl List
- (Permission of Current History)
-
- A GERMAN BATTALION THAT PERISHED IN THE SNOW 305
- Told by a Russian Officer
-
- THE FATAL WOOD--"NOT ONE SHALL BE SAVED" 309
- A STORY OF VERDUN
- Told by Bernard St. Lawrence
- (Permission of Wide World Magazine)
-
- HEROISM AND PATHOS OF THE FRONT 316
- Told by Lauchlan MacLean Watt
-
- AN AVIATOR'S STORY OF BOMBARDING THE ENEMY 321
- Told by a French Aviator
- (Permission of Illustration, Paris)
-
- A DAY IN A GERMAN WAR PRISON 325
- Told by Wilhelm Hegeler
-
- MURDER TRIAL OF CAPTAIN HERAIL OF FRENCH HUSSARS 330
- STRANGEST EPISODE OF THE WAR
- Told by an Eye-Witness
- (Permission of New York American)
-
- HOW THEY KILLED "THE MAN WHO COULD NOT DIE" 338
- Told by a Soldier Under General Cantore
- (Permission of New York World)
-
- HOW MLLE. DUCLOS WON THE LEGION OF HONOR 344
- STORY OF A WOMAN WHO DROVE HER AUTO AT FULL
- SPEED INTO A GERMAN FORCE
- Told by an Eye-Witness
- (Permission of New York American)
-
- THE RUSSIAN "JOAN OF ARC'S" OWN STORY 351
- Told by Mme. Alexandra Kokotseva
-
- AN ITALIAN SOLDIER'S LAST MESSAGE TO HIS MOTHER 355
- Translated by Father Pasquale Maltese
-
-[Illustration: IN A PRISONERS' CAMP
-Germans in a French Camp]
-
-[Illustration: THE U-9 SPEEDING ON THE SURFACE
-_From a Drawing by a German Artist Published in a German Magazine_]
-
-[Illustration: A NARROW SHAVE!
-_A Remarkable Photograph of a Torpedo That Missed Its Mark by a Scant
-Ten Feet. The Men on This Vessel, From the Stern of Which the Picture
-Was Made, Literally Looked Death in the Face and Watched Him Pass By._]
-
-[Illustration: THE LAST ACT OF A SUDDEN SEA TRAGEDY
-_Rescuing Sailors From H. M. S. Audacious_]
-
-
-
-
-"BEHIND THE GERMAN VEIL" WITH VON HINDENBURG
-
-_Record of a Remarkable War Pilgrimage_
-
-_Told by Count Van Maurik De Beaufort_
-
- This is the remarkable story of a titled Hollander, who was living
- in America at the outbreak of the War. "Europe called me," he
- says. "Blood will tell. I soon found myself getting restless. My
- sympathies with the Allies ... urged that I had no right to lag
- behind in making sacrifices. Before starting for the War, I applied
- for my first American citizenship papers. I hope to obtain my
- final papers shortly, after which I shall place my services at the
- disposal of the American Government." This Hollander was educated
- in Germany and recalls how in his youth he was forced to stand up
- in front of the class and recite five verses, each ending with: "I
- am a Prussian and a Prussian I will be." He later became a student
- at Bonn. Count De Beaufort has written a book of sensational
- revelations in which the German veil is lifted. With a magic
- passport, nothing less than a letter to Von Hindenburg from his
- nephew, he gained access to German headquarters and to the Eastern
- front in Poland and East Prussia. We here record what he thinks
- of Von Hindenburg from his book: "Behind the German Veil," by
- permission of his publishers, _Dodd, Mead and Company_: Copyright
- 1917.
-
-[1] I--GOING TO SEE VON HINDENBURG
-
-Yes, if the truth be told, I must say that I felt just a wee bit
-shaky about the knees. I wondered what view they would take of my
-perseverance, worthy, I am sure, of a kind reception.
-
-I would wager that in the whole of Germany there could not be found one
-... whose hair would not have stood on end at the mere suggestion of
-travelling to Hindenburg's headquarters without a pass. Why, he would
-sooner think of calling at the Palace "_Unter den Linden_," and of
-asking to interview the Kaiser.
-
-I think I must describe to you the way I appeared at headquarters. At
-Allenstein I had bought, the day before, a huge portrait of Hindenburg;
-it must have been nearly thirty inches long.
-
-Under one arm I carried the photograph, in my hand my letter of
-introduction, and in my other hand a huge umbrella, which was a local
-acquisition. On my face I wore that beatific, enthusiastic and very
-naive expression of "the innocent abroad." I had blossomed out into
-that modern pest--the autographic maniac.
-
-Army corps, headquarters, strategy and tactics were words that meant
-nothing to me. How could they, stupid, unmilitary foreigner that I was!
-It was a pure case of "Fools will enter where angels fear to tread."
-You may be sure that my subsequent conversation with the Staff captain
-confirmed the idea that I was innocent of all military knowledge, and
-that I probably--so he thought--did not know the difference between an
-army corps and a section of snipers.
-
-Why had I come to Loetzen? Why, of course, to shake hands with the
-famous General, the new Napoleon; to have a little chat with him,
-and--last, but not least--to obtain his most priceless signature to
-my most priceless photograph. What? Not as easy as all that, but why?
-Could there be any harm in granting me those favors? Could it by the
-furthest stretch of imagination be considered as giving information to
-the enemy? What good was my letter of introduction from the General's
-dear nephew? Of course, I would not ask the General where he had his
-guns hidden, and when he intended to take Petrograd, Moscow or Kieff.
-Oh, no; I knew enough about military matters not to ask such leading
-questions.
-
-But joking apart. On showing my famous letter I had no difficulty
-whatsoever in entering the buildings of the General Staff. The first
-man I met was Hauptmann Frantz. He didn't seem a bad sort at all, and
-appeared rather to enjoy the joke and my "innocence," at imagining that
-I could walk up to Hindenburg's Eastern headquarters and say "Hello!"
-to the General.
-
-He thought it was most "original," and certainly exceedingly American.
-Still, it got him into the right mood. "Make people smile," might be a
-good motto for itinerant journalists in the war zones. Few people, not
-excepting Germans, are so mean as to bite you with a smile on their
-faces. Make them laugh, and half the battle is won.
-
-Frantz read my letter and was duly impressed. He never asked me whether
-I had any passes. He advised me to go to the General's house, shook
-hands, and wished me luck.
-
-Phew! I was glad that my first contact with the General Staff had come
-off so smoothly. I had been fully prepared for stormy weather, if not
-for a hurricane. Cockily, I went off to Hindenburg's residence, a very
-modest suburban village not far from the station, and belonging to a
-country lawyer. There was a bit of garden in front, and at the back;
-the house was new, and the bricks still bright red. Across the road on
-two poles a wide banner was stretched, with "Willkommen" painted on it.
-
-Two old Mecklenburger Landstrum men guarded the little wooden gate. I
-told them that I came from Great Headquarters, and once more produced
-the letter. They saluted, opened the gate, and one of them ran ahead to
-ring the door bell.
-
-
-II--HE ENTERS THE STRANGE HOUSE
-
-I walked up the little gravel path with here and there a patch of green
-dilapidated grass on either side. I remember the window curtains were
-of yellow plush. In the window seat stood a tall vase with artificial
-flowers flanked by a birdcage with two canaries. It was all very
-suburban, and did not look at all like the residence of such a famous
-man. An orderly, with his left arm thrust into a top-boot, opened
-the door. In a tone of voice that left no chance for the familiar
-War-Office question: "Have you an appointment, sir?" I inquired whether
-the Field-Marshal was at home, at the same time giving him my letter.
-The orderly peeled off his top-boot, unfastened his overalls, and
-slipped on his coat.
-
-Then he carefully took my letter, holding it gingerly between thumb
-and third finger, so as not to leave any marks on it, and ushered me
-into the "Wohnzimmer," a sort of living- and dining-room combined. It
-was the usual German affair. A couch, a table, a huge porcelain stove,
-were the prominent pieces of furniture. All three were ranged against
-the long wall. The straight-backed chairs were covered with red plush.
-On the walls hung several monstrosities, near-etchings representing
-the effigies of the Kaiser, the Kaiserin, and, of course, of "Our"
-Hindenburg. There was the usual overabundance of artificial flowers and
-ferns so dear to the heart of every German Hausfrau.
-
-The two canaries lived in the most elaborate homemade cage. (I
-understand they were the property of the "Hausfrau," not of
-Hindenburg!) On the table, covered with a check tablecloth, stood a
-bowl containing three goldfish. The floor was covered with a bright
-carpet, and in front of one of the doors lay a mat with "Salve" on
-it. Over the couch hung a photographic enlargement of a middle-aged
-soldier leaning nonchalantly against a door on which was chalked
-"Kriegsjahr, 1914." Over the frame hung a wreath with a black and white
-ribbon, inscribed "In Memoriam," telling its eloquent story.
-
-Behind me was a map of the Eastern front, and pinned alongside of it a
-caricature of a British Tommy sitting astride of a pyramid and pulling
-a number of strings fastened to the legs, arms and head of the Sultan,
-who was apparently dancing a jig.
-
-That room impressed itself upon my memory for all time. I often dream
-of it.
-
- * * * * *
-
-I had waited only a few minutes when a young officer came in, who,
-bowing obsequiously, wished me a very formal good-morning. I took my
-cue from the way he bowed. He explained that the General was out in
-the car but was expected back before noon. Would I condescend to wait?
-Needless to say, I did "condescend."
-
-I forgot to mention one point in my meditations. When I took the chance
-of continuing East instead of returning to Berlin, I thought there
-might just be a possibility that the Adjutant or Staff Officer who
-had spoken with von Schlieffen had entirely taken it upon himself to
-say "No," and that it was not unlikely that the General knew nothing
-whatever about my letter or my contemplated visit. If my surmise was
-correct, I would stand a sporting chance, because it was hardly to be
-expected that out of the thirty-odd officers comprising the Staff, I
-should run bang into the very man who had telephoned.
-
-I soon knew that the officer in immediate attendance on Hindenburg
-was not aware of my _contretempts_ at Allenstein on the previous day.
-Neither did he inquire after my passes. You see, they take these things
-for granted. Would I prefer to wait here or come in his office, where
-the stove was lit? Of course, I thought that would be more pleasant. I
-thought, and am glad to say was not mistaken, that probably the young
-officer felt he needed some mental relaxation. This will sound strange,
-but I have found during my travels through Germany, that in spite of
-the many warnings not to talk shop, every soldier, from the humblest
-private to the highest General--I am sure not excepting the War Lord
-himself--dearly loves to expatiate on matters military, his ambitions
-and hopes. This one was no exception. He chatted away very merrily,
-and more than once I recognized points and arguments which I had read
-weeks ago in interviews granted by General Hindenburg to Austrian
-journalists. He quite imagined himself an embryo Field-Marshal.
-
-He showed me several excellent maps, which gave every railroad line
-on both sides of the Polish frontier. They certainly emphasized the
-enormous difference and the many advantages of German _versus_ Russian
-railroad communications. Many of his predictions have since come
-true, but most of them have not. He hinted very mysteriously, but
-quite unmistakably, at a prospective Russian _debacle_, and predicted
-a separate peace with Russia before the end of 1915! "And then," he
-added, "we will shake up the old women at the Western front a bit and
-show them the 'Hindenburg method.'"
-
- * * * * *
-
-The room we were in was fitted up as an emergency staff office. There
-were several large tables, maps galore, a safe, a number of books
-that looked like ledgers and journals, six telephones and a telegraph
-instrument. Two non-commissioned officers were writing in a corner. In
-case anything important happens at night, such as an urgent despatch
-that demands immediate attention, everything was at hand to enable the
-General to issue new orders. A staff-officer and a clerk are always on
-duty.
-
-I learned later on, though, that a position in that auxiliary
-staff-office at Hindenburg's residence is more or less of a sinecure.
-All despatches go first to Ludendorff, Hindenburg's Chief-of-Staff,
-who, in ninety-nine cases out of a hundred, issues orders without
-consulting his Chief.
-
-
-III--HE STANDS BEFORE VON HINDENBURG
-
-In the midst of a long explanation of the Russian plight, the voluble
-subaltern suddenly stopped short. I heard a car halt in front of the
-house, and a minute or two later the door of the office opened and
-Germany's giant idol entered. I rose and bowed. The officer and the two
-sergeants clicked their heels audibly, and replied to the stentorian
-"_Morgen, meine Herren_," with a brisk "_Morgen, Excellence_."
-
-Hindenburg looked questions at me, but I thought I would let my young
-friend do the talking and act as master of ceremonies. He handed
-Hindenburg my letter, and introduced me as "Herr 'von' Beaufort, who
-has just arrived from Rome." (I had left Rome nearly three months
-before!) The General read his nephew's letter and then shook hands with
-me, assuring me of the pleasure it gave him to meet me. Of course, I
-was glad that he was glad, and expressed reciprocity of sentiments.
-I looked at him--well, for lack of a better word, I will say, with
-affection; you know the kind of childlike, simple admiration which
-expresses so much. I tried to look at him as a certain little girl
-would have done, who wrote: "You are like my governess: she, too, knows
-everything." I felt sure that that attitude was a better one than
-to pretend that I was overawed. That sort of homage he must receive
-every day. Besides, as soon as I realized that he knew nothing of the
-telephone message from and to Allenstein, my old self-assurance had
-returned.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Now for my impressions of Germany's--and, as some people try to make us
-believe, the world's--greatest military genius. They might be summed
-up in two words: "Strength and cruelty." Hindenburg stands over six
-feet high. His whole personality radiates strength, brute, animal
-strength. He was, when I met him, sixty-nine years of age, but looked
-very much younger. His hair and moustache were still pepper and salt
-color. His face and forehead are deeply furrowed, which adds to his
-forbidding appearance. His nose and chin are prominent, but the most
-striking feature of the man's whole appearance are his eyes. They are
-steel-blue and very small, much too small for his head, which, in turn,
-is much too small compared with his large body. But what the eyes
-lacked in size they fully made up for in intensity and penetrating
-powers. Until I met Hindenburg I always thought that the eyes of the
-Mexican rebel Villa were the worst and most cruel I had ever seen.
-They are mild compared with those of Hindenburg. _Never in all my life
-have I seen such hard, cruel, nay, such utterly brutal eyes as those
-of Hindenburg._ The moment I looked at him I believed every story of
-refined (and unrefined) cruelty I had ever heard about him.
-
-He has the disagreeable habit of looking at you as if he did not
-believe a word you said. Frequently in conversation he closes his
-eyes, but even then it seemed as if their steel-like sharpness pierced
-his eyelids. Instead of deep circles, such as, for instance, I have
-noticed on the Kaiser, he has big fat cushions of flesh under his
-eyes, which accentuate their smallness. When he closes his eyes, these
-cushions almost touch his bushy eyebrows and give his face a somewhat
-prehistoric appearance. His hair, about an inch long I should judge,
-was brushed straight up--what the French call _en brosse_. The general
-contour of his head seemed that of a square, rounded off at the corners.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Speaking about the stories of cruelty, one or two of them may bear
-re-telling.
-
-When during the heavy fighting, early in 1915, General Rennenkampf
-was forced to evacuate Insterburg somewhat hastily, he was unable
-to find transport for about fifty thousand loaves of bread. Not
-feeling inclined to make a present of them to the Germans, he ordered
-paraffin to be poured over them. When the Germans found that bread
-and discovered its condition, Hindenburg is reported to have been
-frantic with rage. The next day, after he had calmed down, he said
-to one of his aides: "Well, it seems to be a matter of taste. If the
-Russians like their bread that way, very well. _Give it to the Russian
-prisoners._"
-
-You may feel certain that his orders were scrupulously carried out.
-
-Another incident which they are very fond of relating in Germany is
-more amusing, though it also plays on their idol's cruelty.
-
-It is a fact that both officers and men are deadly afraid of him. It is
-said that the great General has a special predilection for bringing the
-tip of his riding boots into contact with certain parts of the human
-anatomy. A private would far rather face day and night the Russian guns
-than be orderly to Hindenburg.
-
-But one day a man came up and offered himself for the job.
-
-"And what are you in private life?" the General snorted at him.
-
-"At your orders, sir, I am a wild animal trainer."
-
-
-IV--"WHAT VON HINDENBURG TOLD ME"
-
-Hindenburg and I talked for about twenty minutes on various
-subjects--Holland, Italy, America, and, of course, the campaign.
-
-When he tried to point out to me how all-important it was for Holland
-that Germany should crush England's "world-domination," I mentioned
-the Dutch Colonies. That really set him going. "Colonies," he shouted.
-"Pah! I am sick of all this talk about colonies. It would be better
-for people, and I am not referring to our enemies alone, to pay more
-attention to events in Europe. I say 'to the devil' (_zum Teufel_) with
-the colonies. Let us first safeguard our own country; the colonies will
-follow. It is here," and he went up to a large map of Poland hanging on
-the wall, and laid a hand almost as large as a medium-sized breakfast
-tray over the center of it--"It is here," he continued, "that European
-and colonial affairs will be settled and nowhere else. As far as the
-colonies are concerned, it will be a matter of a foot for a mile, as
-long as we hold large slices of enemy territory."
-
-He spoke with great respect of the Russian soldier, but maintained that
-they lacked proper leaders. "It takes more than ten years to reform
-the morale of an officers' corps. From what I have learned, the morale
-of the Russian officer is to this day much the same as it was in the
-Russo-Japanese war. We will show you one of their ambulance trains
-captured near Kirbaty. It is the last word in luxury. By all means
-give your wounded all the comfort, all the attention you can; but I
-do not think that car-loads of champagne, oysters, caviare and the
-finest French liqueurs are necessary adjuncts to an ambulance train.
-The Russian soldier is splendid, but his discipline is not of the same
-quality as that of our men. In our armies discipline is the result of
-spiritual and moral training; in the Russian armies discipline stands
-for dumb obedience. The Russian soldier remains at his post because he
-has been ordered to stay there, and he stands as if nailed to the spot.
-What Napoleon I. said still applies to-day: 'It is not sufficient to
-kill a Russian, you have to throw him over as well.'
-
-"It is absurd," the General continued, "for the enemy Press to compare
-this campaign with that of Napoleon in 1812." Again he got up, and
-pointing to another map, he said: "This is what will win the war for
-us." The map showed the close railroad net of Eastern Germany and the
-paucity of permanent roads in Russia. Hindenburg is almost a crank on
-the subject of railroads in connection with strategy. In the early days
-of the war he shuffled his army corps about from one corner of Poland
-to the other. It is said that he transferred four army corps (160,000
-men--about 600 trains) in two days from Kalish, in Western Poland, to
-Tannenberg, a distance of nearly two hundred miles. On some tracks the
-trains followed each other at intervals of six minutes.
-
-"Our enemies reckon without two great factors unknown in Napoleon's
-time: railroads and German organization. Next to artillery this war
-means railroads, railroads, and then still more railroads. The Russians
-built forts; we built railroads. They would have spent their millions
-better if they had emulated our policy instead of spending millions
-on forts. For the present fortresses are of no value against modern
-siege guns--at least, not until another military genius such as Vauban,
-Brialmont, Montalembert, Coehoorn, springs up, who will be able to
-invent proper defensive measures against heavy howitzers.
-
-"Another delusion under which our enemies are laboring is that of
-Russia's colossal supply of men. He who fights with Russia must always
-expect superiority in numbers; but in this age of science, strategy
-and organization, numbers are only decisive, 'all else being equal.'
-The Russian forces opposed to us on this front have always been far
-superior in numbers to ours, but we are not afraid of that. A crowd of
-men fully armed and equipped does not make an army in these days."
-
-This brought him to the subject of the British forces, more especially
-to Kitchener's army. "It is a great mistake to underestimate your
-enemy," said Hindenburg, referring to the continual slights and
-attacks appearing in the German Press. "I by no means underrate the
-thoroughness, the fighting qualities of the British soldier. England
-is a fighting nation, and has won her spurs on many battlefields. But
-to-day they are up against a different problem. Even supposing that
-Kitchener should be able to raise his army of several millions, where
-is he going to get his officers and his non-commissioned officers from?
-How is he going to train them, so to speak, overnight, when it has
-taken us several generations of uninterrupted instruction, study and
-work to create an efficient staff? Let me emphasize, and with all the
-force I can: 'Efficiency and training are everything.' There lies their
-difficulty. I have many officers here with me who have fought opposite
-the English, and all are united in their opinion that they are brave
-and worthy opponents; but one criticism was also unanimously made:
-'Their officers often lead their men needlessly to death, either from
-sheer foolhardiness, but more often through inefficiency.'"
-
-
-V--"WHEN I LEFT VON HINDENBURG"
-
-Although he did not express this opinion to me personally, I have it on
-excellent authority that Hindenburg believes this war will last close
-on four years at least. And the result--stalemate. He does not believe
-that the Allies will be able to push the Germans out of Belgium, France
-or Poland.
-
-Personally, I found it impossible to get him to make any definite
-statement on the probable outcome and duration of the war. "Until we
-have gained an honorable peace," was his cryptic reply. He refused to
-state what, in his opinion, constituted an honorable peace. If I am to
-believe several of his officers--and I discussed the subject almost
-every day--then Hindenburg must by now be a very disappointed man. I
-was told that he calculated as a practical certainty on a separate
-peace with Russia soon after the fall of Warsaw. (I should like to
-point out here that this "separate peace with Russia" idea was one of
-the most popular and most universal topics of conversation in Germany
-last year.)
-
- * * * * *
-
-When Hindenburg learnt that I had come all the way from Berlin without
-a pass from the General Staff, he appeared very much amused; but in a
-quasi-serious manner he said:
-
-"Well, you know that I ought to send you back at once, otherwise
-I shall risk getting the sack myself; still, as all ordinary
-train-service between here and Posen will be suspended for four days,
-the only way for you to get back is by motor-car. It would be a pity to
-come all the way from sunny Italy to this Siberian cold, and not see
-something of the men and of the hardships of a Russian winter campaign.
-Travelling by motor-car, you will have ample opportunity to see
-something of the country, and, if you feel so inclined, of the fighting
-as well. And then go home and tell them abroad about the insurmountable
-obstacles, the enormous difficulties the German has to overcome."
-
-Hindenburg does not like the Berlin General Staff officers, and that is
-why he was so amused at my having got the better of them. He describes
-them as "drawing-room" officers, who remain safely in Berlin. With
-their spick and span uniforms they look askance at their mud-stained
-colleagues at the front. His officers, who know Hindenburg's feelings
-towards these gentlemen, play many a practical joke on their Berlin
-_confreres_. The latter have frequently returned from a visit to some
-communication trenches only to find that their car has mysteriously
-retreated some two or three miles ... over Polish roads.
-
-Any one who can tell of such an experience befalling a "Salon Offizier"
-is sure to raise a good laugh from Hindenburg.
-
-At the conclusion of our conversation he instructed the young A.D.C. to
-take me over to Headquarters and present me to Captain Caemmerer. "Tell
-him," and I inscribed the words that followed deeply on my mind, "to be
-kind to Herr Beaufort."
-
- * * * * *
-
-My introduction to Caemmerer proved to be one of those curious vagaries
-of fate. He was the very man who less than twenty-four hours ago
-had spoken with General von Schlieffen, and who had assured him how
-impossible it was for me to continue, and that I was to be sent back to
-Berlin at once!
-
-"Beaufort, Beaufort," he sniffed once or twice before he could place
-me. Then suddenly he remembered. "Ah, yes, him! You are the man General
-von Schlieffen telephoned about yesterday? But did he not instruct you
-to return to Berlin?"
-
-However, I remembered Hindenburg's injunction: "Tell Caemmerer to be
-kind to him," so what did I care for a mere captain?
-
-Consequently, as they say in the moving pictures, I "registered" my
-most angelic smile, and sweetly said:
-
-"Ah, yes, Captain, quite so, quite so. But, you see, I felt _certain_
-that there was some misunderstanding at this end of the wire. Probably
-it was not clearly explained to you that I had this very important
-letter of introduction to General von Hindenburg from my friend his
-nephew. As you see," and I waved my hand at the A.D.C., my master of
-ceremonies, "I was quite right in my surmise."
-
- * * * * *
-
-However that may be, you may be certain that I saw to it that when
-we mapped out my return journey, Caemmerer was being "kind" to me.
-Consequently, I spent two most interesting weeks in the German Eastern
-war-zones, much to the surprise and disgust of the "Drawing-room Staff"
-in Berlin.
-
-(Count De Beaufort's revelations form one of the most valuable records
-of the war. He tells about "Spies and Spying;" "German Women;" "When I
-Prayed with the Kaiser;" "An Incognito Visit to the Fleet and German
-Naval Harbors;" "Interviews with the Leading Naval, Military and Civil
-Authorities in Germany"--closing with an interview that upset Berlin,
-caused his arrest, and as he describes it, "My Ultimate Escape Across
-the Baltic.")
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[1] All numerals throughout this volume relate to the stories herein
-told--not to chapters in the original sources.
-
-
-
-
-"KITCHENER'S MOB"--ADVENTURES OF AN AMERICAN WITH THE BRITISH ARMY
-
-_Uncensored Account of a Young Volunteer_
-
-_Told by James Norman Hall, of the First Expeditionary Force_
-
- This is a glimpse of life in a battalion of one of Lord Kitchener's
- first armies. It gives an intimate view of the men who are so
- gallantly laying down their lives for England. Kitchener's Mob
- has become the greatest volunteer army in the history of the
- world--for more than three million of disciplined fighting men are
- united under one flag in this magnificent military organization.
- Their fighting has become an epic of heroism in France, Belgium,
- Africa and the Balkans. Some of them have seen service in India,
- Egypt and South Africa; they might have stepped out of any of the
- "Barrack-Room Ballads." The name which they bear was fastened
- upon them by themselves--thereby hangs a tale. Stories of their
- adventures have been gathered into a volume under title of
- "Kitchener's Mob"--and published by _Houghton, Mifflin Company_:
- Copyright, 1916, by _Atlantic Monthly Company_; Copyright, 1916, by
- James Norman Hall.
-
-[2] I--STORY OF A YANKEE IN THE TRENCHES
-
-With Kitchener's mob we wandered through the trenches listening to the
-learned discourse of the genial professors of the Parapet-etic School,
-storing up much useful information for future reference. I made a
-serious blunder when I asked one of them a question about Ypres, for I
-pronounced the name French fashion, which put me under suspicion as a
-"swanker."
-
-"Don't try to come it, son," he said. "S'y 'Wipers.' That's wot we
-calls it."
-
-Henceforth it was "Wipers" for me, although I learned that "Eeps" and
-"Yipps" are sanctioned by some trench authorities. I made no further
-mistakes of this nature, and by keeping silent about the names of
-the towns and villages along our front, I soon learned the accepted
-pronunciation of all of them. Armentieres is called "Armenteers";
-Balleul, "Ballyall"; Hazebrouck, "Hazy-Brook"; and what more natural
-than "Plug-Street," Atkinsese for Ploegsteert?
-
-As was the case wherever I went, my accent betrayed my American birth;
-and again, as an American Expeditionary Force of one, I was shown many
-favors. Private Shorty Holloway, upon learning that I was a "Yank,"
-offered to tell me "every bloomin' thing about the trenches that a
-bloke needs to know." I was only too glad to place myself under his
-instruction.
-
-"Right you are!" said Shorty; "now, sit down 'ere w'ile I'm going over
-me shirt, an' arsk me anything yer a mind to." I began immediately by
-asking him what he meant by "going over" his shirt.
-
-"Blimy! You are new to this game, mate! You mean to s'y you ain't got
-any graybacks?"
-
-I confessed shamefacedly that I had not. He stripped to the waist,
-turned his shirt wrong side out, and laid it upon his knee.
-
-"'Ave a look," he said proudly.
-
-The less said about my discoveries the better for the fastidiously
-minded. Suffice it to say that I made my first acquaintance with
-members of a British Expeditionary Force which is not mentioned in
-official _communiques_.
-
-"Trench pets," said Shorty. Then he told me that they were not all
-graybacks. There is a great variety of species, but they all belong to
-the same parasitical family, and wage a non-discriminating warfare upon
-the soldiery on both sides of No-man's-Land. Germans, British, French,
-Belgians alike were their victims.
-
-"You'll soon 'ave plenty," he said reassuringly; "I give you about a
-week to get covered with 'em. Now, wot you want to do is this: always
-'ave an extra shirt in yer pack. Don't be a bloomin' ass an' sell
-it fer a packet o' fags like I did! An' the next time you writes to
-England, get some one to send you out some Keatings"--he displayed a
-box of grayish-colored powder. "It won't kill 'em, mind you! They ain't
-nothin' but fire that'll kill 'em. But Keatings tykes all the ginger
-out o' 'em. They ain't near so lively arter you strafe 'em with this
-'ere powder."
-
-I remembered Shorty's advice later when I became a reluctant host to a
-prolific colony of graybacks. For nearly six months I was never without
-a box of Keatings, and I was never without the need for it.
-
-
-II--IN THE BARBED-WIRE "MAN-TRAPS"
-
-Barbed wire had a new and terrible significance for me from the first
-day which we spent in the trenches. I could more readily understand
-why there had been so long a deadlock on the western front. The
-entanglements in front of the first line of trenches were from fifteen
-to twenty yards wide, the wires being twisted from post to post in such
-a hopeless jumble that no man could possibly get through them under
-fire. The posts were set firmly in the ground, but there were movable
-segments, every fifty or sixty yards, which could be put to one side in
-case an attack was to be launched against the German lines.
-
-At certain positions there were what appeared to be openings through
-the wire, but these were nothing less than man-traps which have been
-found serviceable in case of an enemy attack. In an assault men follow
-the line of least resistance when they reach the barbed wire. These
-apparent openings are V-shaped with the open end toward the enemy. The
-attacking troops think they see a clear passage-way. They rush into the
-trap and when it is filled with struggling men machine guns are turned
-upon them, and, as Shorty said, "You got 'em cold."
-
-That, at least, was the presumption. Practically, man-traps were not
-always a success. The intensive bombardments which precede infantry
-attacks play havoc with entanglements, but there is always a chance of
-the destruction being incomplete, as upon one occasion farther north,
-where, Shorty told me, a man-trap caught a whole platoon of Germans
-"dead to rights."
-
-"But this is wot gives you the pip," he said. "'Ere we got three
-lines of trenches, all of 'em wired up so that a rat couldn't get
-through without scratchin' hisself to death. Fritzie's got better wire
-than wot we 'ave, an' more of it. An' 'e's got more machine guns,
-more artill'ry, more shells. They ain't any little old man-killer
-ever invented wot they 'aven't got more of than we 'ave. An' at 'ome
-they're a-s'yin', 'W'y don't they get on with it? W'y don't they smash
-through?' Let some of 'em come out 'ere an' 'ave a try! That's all I
-got to s'y."
-
-I didn't tell Shorty that I had been, not exactly an armchair critic,
-but at least a barrack-room critic in England. I had wondered why
-British and French troops had failed to smash through. A few weeks
-in the trenches gave me a new viewpoint. I could only wonder at the
-magnificent fighting qualities of soldiers who had held their own so
-effectively against armies equipped and armed and munitioned as the
-Germans were.
-
-After he had finished drugging his trench pets, Shorty and I made a
-tour of the trenches. I was much surprised at seeing how clean and
-comfortable they can be kept in pleasant summer weather. Men were
-busily at work sweeping up the walks, collecting the rubbish, which
-was put into sandbags hung on pegs at intervals along the fire trench.
-At night the refuse was taken back of the trenches and buried. Most of
-this work devolved upon the pioneers whose business it was to keep the
-trenches sanitary.
-
-The fire trench was built in much the same way as those which we had
-made during our training in England. In pattern it was something like
-a tesselated border. For the space of five yards it ran straight, then
-it turned at right angles around a traverse of solid earth six feet
-square, then straight again for another five yards, then around another
-traverse, and so throughout the length of the line. Each five-yard
-segment, which is called a "bay," offered firing room for five men. The
-traverses, of course, were for the purpose of preventing enfilade fire.
-They also limited the execution which might be done by one shell. Even
-so they were not an unmixed blessing, for they were always in the way
-when you wanted to get anywhere in a hurry.
-
-"An' you are in a 'urry w'en you sees a Minnie [_Minnenwerfer_] comin'
-your w'y. But you gets trench legs arter a w'ile. It'll be a funny
-sight to see blokes walkin' along the street in Lunnon w'en the war's
-over. They'll be so used to dogin' in an' out o' traverses they won't
-be able to go in a straight line."
-
-
-III--STORIES OF SHORTY HOLLOWAY--"PROFESSOR OF TRENCHES"
-
-As we walked through the firing-line trenches, I could quite understand
-the possibility of one's acquiring trench legs. Five paces forward,
-two to the right, two to the left, two to the left again, then five to
-the right, and so on to Switzerland. Shorty was of the opinion that
-one could enter the trenches on the Channel coast and walk through
-to the Alps without once coming out on top of the ground. I am not
-in a position either to affirm or to question this statement. My own
-experience was confined to that part of the British front which lies
-between Messines in Belgium and Loos in France. There, certainly,
-one could walk for miles, through an intricate maze of continuous
-underground passages.
-
-But the firing-line trench was neither a traffic route nor a promenade.
-The great bulk of inter-trench business passed through the travelling
-trench, about fifteen yards in rear of the fire trench and running
-parallel to it. The two were connected by many passageways, the chief
-difference between them being that the fire trench was the business
-district, while the traveling trench was primarily residential. Along
-the latter were built most of the dugouts, lavatories, and trench
-kitchens. The sleeping quarters for the men were not very elaborate.
-Recesses were made in the wall of the trench about two feet above the
-floor. They were not more than three feet high, so that one had to
-crawl in head first when going to bed. They were partitioned in the
-middle, and were supposed to offer accommodations for four men, two
-on each side. But, as Shorty said, everything depended on the ration
-allowance. Two men who had eaten to repletion could not hope to occupy
-the same apartment. One had a choice of going to bed hungry or of
-eating heartily and sleeping outside on the firing-bench.
-
-"'Ere's a funny thing," he said. "W'y do you suppose they makes the
-dugouts open at one end?"
-
-I had no explanation to offer.
-
-"Crawl inside an' I'll show you."
-
-I stood my rifle against the side of the trench and crept in.
-
-"Now, yer supposed to be asleep," said Shorty, and with that he gave
-me a whack on the soles of my boots with his entrenching tool handle.
-I can still feel the pain of the blow.
-
-"Stand to! Wyke up 'ere! Stand to!" he shouted, and gave me another
-resounding wallop.
-
-I backed out in all haste.
-
-"Get the idea? That's 'ow they wykes you up at stand-to, or w'en your
-turn comes fer sentry. Not bad, wot?"
-
-I said that it all depended on whether one was doing the waking or the
-sleeping, and that, for my part, when sleeping, I would lie with my
-head out.
-
-"You wouldn't if you belonged to our lot. They'd give it to you on the
-napper just as quick as 'it you on the feet. You ain't on to the game,
-that's all. Let me show you suthin'."
-
-He crept inside and drew his knees up to his chest so that his feet
-were well out of reach. At his suggestion I tried to use the active
-service alarm clock on him, but there was not room enough in which to
-wield it. My feet were tingling from the effect of his blows, and I
-felt that the reputation for resourcefulness of Kitchener's Mob was at
-stake. In a moment of inspiration I seized my rifle, gave him a dig in
-the shins with the butt, and shouted, "Stand to, Shorty!" He came out
-rubbing his leg ruefully.
-
-"You got the idea, mate," he said. "That's just wot they does w'en you
-tries to double-cross 'em by pullin' yer feet in. I ain't sure w'ere I
-likes it best, on the shins or on the feet."
-
-This explanation of the reason for building three-sided dugouts,
-while not, of course, the true one, was none the less interesting.
-And certainly, the task of arousing sleeping men for sentry duty was
-greatly facilitated with rows of protruding boot soles "simply arskin'
-to be 'it," as Shorty put it.
-
-All of the dugouts for privates and N.C.O.s were of equal size and
-built on the same model, the reason being that the walls and floors,
-which were made of wood, and the roofs, which were of corrugated
-iron, were put together in sections at the headquarters of the Royal
-Engineers, who superintended all the work of trench construction. The
-material was brought up at night ready to be fitted into excavations.
-Furthermore, with thousands of men to house within a very limited
-area, space was a most important consideration. There was no room for
-indulging individual tastes in dugout architecture. The roofs were
-covered with from three to four feet of earth, which made them proof
-against shrapnel or shell splinters. In case of a heavy bombardment
-with high explosives, the men took shelter in deep and narrow "slip
-trenches." These were blind alley-ways leading off from the traveling
-trench, with room for from ten to fifteen men in each. At this part of
-the line there were none of the very deep shell-proof shelters, from
-fifteen to twenty feet below the surface of the ground, of which I had
-read. Most of the men seemed to be glad of this. They preferred taking
-their chances in an open trench during heavy shell fire.
-
-
-IV--THE "SUICIDE CLUB"--A BOMBING SQUAD
-
-Realists and Romanticists lived side by side in the traveling trench.
-"My Little Gray Home in the West" was the modest legend over one
-apartment. The "Ritz Carlton" was next door to "The Rats' Retreat,"
-with "Vermin Villa" next door but one. "The Suicide Club" was the
-suburban residence of some members of the bombing squad. I remarked
-that the bombers seemed to take rather a pessimistic view of their
-profession, whereupon Shorty told me that if there were any men slated
-for the Order of the Wooden Cross, the bombers were those unfortunate
-ones. In an assault they were first at the enemy's position. They had
-dangerous work to do even on the quietest of days. But theirs was a
-post of honor, and no one of them but was proud of his membership in
-the Suicide Club.
-
-The officers' quarters were on a much more generous and elaborate
-scale than those of the men. This I gathered from Shorty's description
-of them, for I saw only the exteriors as we passed along the trench.
-Those for platoon and company commanders were built along the traveling
-trench. The colonel, major, and adjutant lived in a luxurious palace,
-about fifty yards down a communication trench. Near it was the
-officers' mess, a cafe de luxe with glass panels in the door, a cooking
-stove, a long wooden table, chairs,--everything, in fact, but hot and
-cold running water.
-
-"You know," said Shorty, "the officers thinks they 'as to rough it, but
-they got it soft, I'm tellin' you! Wooden bunks to sleep in, batmen
-to bring 'em 'ot water fer shavin' in the mornin', all the fags they
-wants,----Blimy, I wonder wot they calls livin' 'igh?"
-
-I agreed that in so far as living quarters are concerned, they were
-roughing it under very pleasant circumstances. However, they were not
-always so fortunate, as later experience proved. Here there had been
-little serious fighting for months and the trenches were at their best.
-Elsewhere the officers' dugouts were often but little better than those
-of the men.
-
-The first-line trenches were connected with two lines of support or
-reserve trenches built in precisely the same fashion, and each heavily
-wired. The communication trenches which joined them were from seven to
-eight feet deep and wide enough to permit the convenient passage of
-incoming and outgoing troops, and the transport of the wounded back to
-the field dressing stations. From the last reserve line they wound on
-backward through the fields until troops might leave them well out of
-range of rifle fire. Under Shorty's guidance I saw the field dressing
-stations, the dugouts for the reserve ammunition supply and the stores
-of bombs and hand grenades, battalion and brigade trench headquarters.
-We wandered from one part of the line to another through trenches, all
-of which were kept amazingly neat and clean. The walls were stayed with
-fine-mesh wire to hold the earth in place. The floors were covered with
-board walks carefully laid over the drains, which ran along the center
-of the trench and emptied into deep wells, built in recesses in the
-walls. I felt very much encouraged when I saw the careful provision for
-sanitation and drainage. On a fine June morning it seemed probable that
-living in ditches was not to be so unpleasant as I had imagined it.
-Shorty listened to my comments with a smile.
-
-"Don't pat yerself on the back yet a w'ile, mate," he said. "They looks
-right enough now, but wite till you've seen 'em arter a 'eavy rain."
-
-I had this opportunity many times during the summer and autumn. A more
-wretched existence than that of soldiering in wet weather could hardly
-be imagined. The walls of the trenches caved in in great masses. The
-drains filled to overflowing, and the trench walks were covered deep in
-mud. After a few hours of rain, dry and comfortable trenches became a
-quagmire, and we were kept busy for days afterward repairing the damage.
-
-As a machine gunner I was particularly interested in the construction
-of the machine-gun emplacements. The covered battle positions were
-very solidly built. The roofs were supported with immense logs or
-steel girders covered over with many layers of sandbags. There were
-two carefully concealed loopholes looking out to a flank, but none for
-frontal fire, as this dangerous little weapon best enjoys catching
-troops in enfilade owing to the rapidity and the narrow cone of its
-fire. Its own front is protected by the guns on its right and left. At
-each emplacement there was a range chart giving the ranges to all parts
-of the enemy's trenches, and to every prominent object both in front of
-and behind them, within its field of fire. When not in use the gun was
-kept mounted and ready for action in the battle position.
-
-"But remember this," said Shorty, "you never fires from your battle
-position except in case of attack. W'en you goes out at night to 'ave
-a little go at Fritzie, you always tykes yer gun sommers else. If you
-don't, you'll 'ave Minnie an' Busy Bertha an' all the rest o' the Krupp
-childern comin' over to see w'ere you live."
-
-This was a wise precaution, as we were soon to learn from experience.
-Machine guns are objects of special interest to the artillery, and the
-locality from which they are fired becomes very unhealthy for some
-little time thereafter.
-
-
-V--AT THE "MUD LARKS'" BEAUTY SHOP
-
-We stopped for a moment at "The Mud Larks' Hair-dressing Parlor," a
-very important institution if one might judge by its patronage. It was
-housed in a recess in the wall of the traveling trench, and was open
-to the sky. There I saw the latest fashion in "oversea" hair cuts. The
-victims sat on a ration box while the barber mowed great swaths through
-tangled thatch with a pair of close-cutting clippers. But instead of
-making a complete job of it, a thick fringe of hair which resembled a
-misplaced scalping tuft was left for decorative purposes, just above
-the forehead. The effect was so grotesque that I had to invent an
-excuse for laughing. It was a lame one, I fear, for Shorty looked at me
-warningly. When we had gone on a little way he said:--
-
-"Ain't it a proper beauty parlor? But you got to be careful about
-larfin'. Some o' the blokes thinks that 'edge-row is a regular
-ornament."
-
-I had supposed that a daily shave was out of the question on the
-firing-line; but the British Tommy is nothing if not resourceful.
-Although water is scarce and fuel even more so, the self-respecting
-soldier easily surmounts difficulties, and the Gloucesters were all
-nice in matters pertaining to the toilet. Instead of draining their
-canteens of tea, they saved a few drops for shaving purposes.
-
-"It's a bit sticky," said Shorty, "but it's 'ot, an' not 'arf bad w'en
-you gets used to it. Now, another thing you don't want to ferget is
-this: W'en yer movin' up fer yer week in the first line, always bring a
-bundle o' firewood with you. They ain't so much as a match-stick left
-in the trenches. Then you wants to be savin' of it. Don't go an use it
-all the first d'y or you'll 'ave to do without yer tea the rest o' the
-week."
-
-I remembered his emphasis upon this point afterward when I saw men
-risking their lives in order to procure firewood. Without his tea Tommy
-was a wretched being. I do not remember a day, no matter how serious
-the fighting, when he did not find both the time and the means for
-making it.
-
-
-VI--FLIES--RATS--AND DOMESTIC SCIENCE
-
-Shorty was a Ph.D. in every subject in the curriculum, including
-domestic science. In preparing breakfast he gave me a practical
-demonstration of the art of conserving a limited resource of fuel,
-bringing our two canteens to a boil with a very meager handful of
-sticks; and while doing so he delivered an oral thesis on the best
-methods of food preparation. For example, there was the item of corned
-beef--familiarly called "bully." It was the _piece de resistance_ at
-every meal with the possible exception of breakfast, when there was
-usually a strip of bacon. Now, one's appetite for "bully" becomes jaded
-in the course of a few weeks or months. To use the German expression
-one doesn't eat it _gern_. But it is not a question of liking it. One
-must eat it or go hungry. Therefore, said Shorty, save carefully all
-of your bacon grease, and instead of eating your "bully" cold out of
-the tin, mix it with bread crumbs and grated cheese and fry it in
-the grease. He prepared some in this way, and I thought it a most
-delectable dish. Another way of stimulating the palate was to boil the
-beef in a solution of bacon grease and water, and then, while eating
-it, "kid yerself that it's Irish stew." This second method of taking
-away the curse did not appeal to me very strongly, and Shorty admitted
-that he practiced such self-deception with very indifferent success;
-for after all "bully" was "bully" in whatever form you ate it.
-
-In addition to this staple, the daily rations consisted of bacon,
-bread, cheese, jam, army biscuits, tea, and sugar. Sometimes they
-received a tinned meat and vegetable ration, already cooked, and at
-welcome intervals fresh meat and potatoes were substituted for corned
-beef. Each man had a very generous allowance of food, a great deal
-more, I thought, than he could possibly eat. Shorty explained this by
-saying that allowance was made for the amount which would be consumed
-by the rats and the blue-bottle flies.
-
-There were, in fact, millions of flies. They settled in great swarms
-along the walls of the trenches, which were filled to the brim with
-warm light as soon as the sun had climbed a little way up the sky.
-Empty tin-lined ammunition boxes were used as cupboards for food. But
-of what avail were cupboards to a jam-loving and jam-fed British army
-living in open ditches in the summer time? Flytraps made of empty jam
-tins were set along the top of the parapet. As soon as one was filled,
-another was set in its place. But it was an unequal war against an
-expeditionary force of countless numbers.
-
-"They ain't nothin' you can do," said Shorty. "They steal the jam right
-off yer bread."
-
-As for the rats, speaking in the light of later experience, I can say
-that an army corps of Pied Pipers would not have sufficed to entice
-away the hordes of them that infested the trenches, living like house
-pets on our rations. They were great lazy animals, almost as large
-as cats, and so gorged with food that they could hardly move. They
-ran over us in the dugouts at night, and filched cheese and crackers
-right through the heavy waterproofed coverings of our haversacks. They
-squealed and fought among themselves at all hours. I think it possible
-that they were carrion eaters, but never, to my knowledge, did they
-attack living men. While they were unpleasant bedfellows, we became so
-accustomed to them that we were not greatly concerned about our very
-intimate associations.
-
-Our course of instruction at the Parapet-etic School was brought to a
-close late in the evening when we shouldered our packs, bade good-bye
-to our friends the Gloucesters, and marched back in the moonlight to
-our billets. I had gained an entirely new conception of trench life, of
-the difficulties involved in trench building, and the immense amount of
-material and labor needed for the work.
-
-Americans who are interested in learning of these things at first hand
-will do well to make the grand tour of the trenches when the war is
-finished. Perhaps the thrifty continentals will seek to commercialize
-such advantage as misfortune as brought them, in providing favorable
-opportunities. Perhaps the Touring Club of France will lay out a new
-route, following the windings of the firing line from the Channel coast
-across the level fields of Flanders, over the Vosges Mountains to
-the borders of Switzerland. Pedestrians may wish to make the journey
-on foot, cooking their supper over Tommy's rusty biscuit-tin stoves,
-sleeping at night in the dugouts where he lay shivering with cold
-during the winter nights of 1914 and 1915. If there are enthusiasts
-who will be satisfied with only the most intimate personal view of the
-trenches, if there are those who would try to understand the hardships
-and discomforts of trench life by living it during a summer vacation,
-I would suggest that they remember Private Shorty Holloway's parting
-injunction to me:--
-
-"Now, don't ferget, Jamie!" he said as we shook hands, "always 'ave a
-box o' Keatings 'andy, an' 'ang on to yer extra shirt!"
-
- * * * * *
-
-(Private Hall, of Kitchener's Mob, describes the scenes when the army
-was being organized for the first British expeditionary force. He
-tells about "The Rookies"; "The Mob in Training"; "Ordered Abroad." He
-describes their fights; their life under cover; their lodgings, billets
-and experiences in the trenches, "sitting tight." It is "men of this
-stamp," he says, "who have the fortunes of England in their keeping.
-And they are called 'The Boys of the Bulldog Breed.'")
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[2] All numerals relate to stories herein told--not to chapters from
-original sources.
-
-
-
-
-"HOW BELGIUM SAVED EUROPE"--THE LITTLE KINGDOM OF HEROES
-
-_Tragedy of the Belgians_
-
-_Told by Dr. Charles Sarolea, Ph. D. (Liege), Litt. D. (Brussels),
-Belgian Consul in Edinburgh_
-
- Dr. Sarolea is the historian of the Belgian people in the world
- tragedy through which they have passed. Count D'Aviella, Belgian
- Secretary of State, exclaims: "I am sure no one can read these
- tragic pages without becoming more than ever confirmed in his
- conviction that we are fighting in the cause of right, of liberty,
- and of civilization." Dr. Sarolea has for twelve years been Belgian
- Consul in Scotland; he is the personal friend of His Majesty
- King Albert of Belgium, with whom he frequently sits in private
- audience. He has written a book, "How Belgium Saved Europe," which
- sets forth the great tragedy which places the Belgian people on the
- same plane with those soul stirring heroes of universal history in
- the Persian Wars of Greece, the Punic Wars of Rome, the Wars of
- Spain against the Moors, the epic of Joan of Arc, the Wars of the
- French Revolution--and all the outstanding and inspiring chapters
- in the drama of human heroism. He tells about "The Hero-King" and
- "The German Plot in Belgium." We here record his story on "The
- Destruction of Louvain," by permission of his publishers, _J. B.
- Lippincott Company_: Copyright 1915.
-
-[3] I--STORIES OF MAD FURY IN LOUVAIN
-
-On September 1 (1914) a procession of refugees from Louvain arrived at
-Malines in a frenzy of terror with the news that the town of Louvain
-had been set on fire by the Germans and that the whole city was a heap
-of ruins. The wildest stories added to the horror of the tale. It
-was said that there had been a wholesale massacre of men, women, and
-children, and that hundreds of priests, and especially Jesuits, had
-been singled out for murder. Many of the stories proved to be without
-any foundation. But when all the exaggerations had been discounted
-there remained a body of substantial facts that were enough to send a
-thrill of indignation through Europe.
-
-Two certainties emerged from the chaos of conflicting evidence. First,
-there had been indiscriminate slaughter of civilians and looting of
-property. Secondly, the Germans, armed with incendiary fuses and
-obeying the order of the military authorities, had methodically burned
-the whole section of Louvain which extends from the station in the
-centre of the town, including the University and the church of St.
-Pierre.
-
-Since the destruction of the hapless University town other atrocities
-have followed in almost daily succession, Termonde, Aerschot, Malines,
-Antwerp. The world has almost got accustomed to them. There has been
-nothing like this mad fury of destruction in the whole history of
-modern warfare. Rheims has outdone even Louvain, and the ruin of the
-Cathedral of Rheims is an even greater loss than the destruction of the
-old Belgian Catholic University.
-
-Still Louvain remains the one crowning infamy. German casuistry may at
-least find some extenuating circumstances in the fact that Rheims was
-a fortified town, and that the Cathedral tower might have been used as
-an observation post for the French armies. For the crime of Louvain
-no extenuating circumstance can be urged. Louvain was undefended. It
-was a peaceful city of students, priests, and landladies. It was in
-the occupation of the Germans. Its destruction, therefore, was both a
-wanton and a cowardly act of cruelty, and being both wanton and cruel,
-it will stand out as the typical atrocity of German militarism.
-
-Only those who are familiar with the history of Belgium and Brabant,
-and with the history of Belgian Universities, know what Louvain and
-the University stood for. Founded in 1425, in the days of Petrarch,
-Froissart, and Chaucer, it was one of the oldest and most illustrious
-seats of learning in Europe. It was the seat of Pope Adrian VI,
-the tutor of Charles V. It still remained the most famous Catholic
-University in the world. It still attracted scholars from every
-country. It was still the nursery of Irish, English, and American
-priests.
-
-And not only had Louvain 500 years of learning behind it, it was also a
-city with a magnificent municipal tradition. The town hall, one of the
-gems of Gothic architecture, was a glorious monument to that municipal
-tradition. By the destruction of Louvain the German soldiery have
-wiped out five centuries of religious and intellectual culture and of
-municipal freedom.
-
-
-II--THE TRUTH ABOUT GERMAN ATROCITIES
-
-Wherever the Germans have perpetrated some atrocious crime they have
-used the same threadbare excuse--the shooting of German soldiers by
-civilians. Civilians fired on German soldiers at Vise, therefore Vise
-was razed to the ground. The fourteen-year-old son of the Burgomaster
-of Aerschot killed a German officer, therefore the whole city of
-Aerschot had to be destroyed. Similarly, it was to avenge the murder of
-German soldiers that Louvain was burned. It is the civilian population
-of Louvain who must ultimately be held responsible.
-
-On the face of it, the German version is an incredible invention.
-Louvain was in the occupation of German troops. _All the arms had
-been handed in days before by the civil population._ The authorities
-had posted placards recommending tranquility to the population, and
-warning them that any individual act of hostility would bring down
-instant vengeance. Those placards could still be read on the walls
-on the day of the destruction of Louvain. Under those circumstances,
-is it credible that a few peaceful citizens should have brought down
-destruction by their own deliberate act, which they knew would be met
-with instant and ruthless retribution?
-
-But even assuming that individual Belgians had been guilty of firing
-on the German troops, supposing a civilian exasperated by the
-monstrous treatment described in the narrative of Mr. Van Ernem, the
-Town Treasurer. When the Belgian troops were repulsed by the enemy's
-crushing numbers, and the Germans had put their big guns in position
-on all the heights dominating the town, the Germans sent a deputation
-to the Burgomaster, who agreed to receive the officers to hear their
-proposals and conditions for occupying the town.
-
-The German General with his etat-major then came to the town hall to
-confer with the Burgomaster, councillors, and myself as treasurer of
-the town.
-
-These were the stipulated conditions.
-
-First: That the town should fully provide for the invaders, in
-consideration of which no war contributions would be exacted.
-
-Secondly: The soldiers not billeted in private houses were to pay cash
-for all goods obtained; also, they were not to molest the inhabitants
-under any circumstances.
-
-These stiplations, agreed to on both sides, were most scrupulously kept
-by the Belgians, but not by the Germans. On certain days, for example,
-the Germans would exact 67,000 pounds of meat, and would let 20,000
-pounds of it rot, although the population were suffering from hunger.
-
-On Monday, August 24, toward 10 P. M., the Burgomaster--a respectable
-merchant, sixty-two years of age--was arrested in his bed, where he was
-lying ill. He was forced to rise and marched to the railway station,
-where it was demanded of him that he should provide immediately 250
-warm meals and as many mattresses for the soldiers, under penalty of
-being shot. With admirable dispatch the inhabitants rushed to comply
-with the German demand. In their solicitude and pity for their aged
-chief, and their anxiety to save his life, they gave their own beds and
-their last drops of wine.
-
-The Germans acted without the slightest consideration or regard for the
-faithful promises of their etat-major. The troops rushed into private
-houses, making forcible entrances, and taking from old and young,
-many of the latter already orphans, whatever they fancied, paying
-for nothing except with paper money to be presented to the "caisse
-communal" at the end of the war.
-
-The promise of exemption from contribution to a war levy was violated,
-like every other contract. Failing to find enough money in the
-treasury, the Germans in authority ordered the immediate payment of
-100,000 francs.
-
-This large sum could not be gathered from the inhabitants, and nearly
-all the banks had on the first warning of the approach of the enemy
-succeeded in transferring their funds to the National Bank.
-
-Finally, after much bickering, the officer in command of the German
-troops agreed to accept 3,000 fr., to be paid the next day. But with
-the next morning came a further demand for 5,000 fr. The Burgomaster
-vigorously protested against this new exaction; but nevertheless I,
-as treasurer of the town, was held responsible for collecting 5,000
-fr. With the greatest difficulty, I succeeded in procuring 3,080 fr.,
-and after considerable bickering this sum was accepted by the enemy,
-and the horrors of reprisals were delayed. The population, conscious
-of the terrible risk which they ran, submitted with calm resignation
-to the inevitable. As a functionary of the city, I can vouch for the
-absolutely dignified and passive attitude of the whole population
-of Louvain. They understood perfectly well their grave individual
-responsibility, and that any break of their promises would be instantly
-met by crushing action.
-
-The position of affairs was minutely explained to the inhabitants in
-several printed proclamations, and they were personally warned by our
-venerable Burgomaster. Good order was so rigorously maintained that the
-German authorities praised the exemplary conduct of the inhabitants.
-
-This attitude was all the more laudable because the invaders,
-immediately upon entering the city, liberated nine of their compatriots
-who had been incarcerated before the war for murder, theft, and other
-felonies.
-
-
-III--TRUE STORIES OF "THE UNSPEAKABLE CRIME"
-
-At last, on the Tuesday night, there took place the unspeakable crime,
-the shame of which can be understood only by those who followed and
-watched the different phases of the German occupation of Louvain.
-
-It is a significant fact that the German wounded and sick, including
-their Red Cross nurses, were all removed from the hospitals. The
-Germans meanwhile proceeded methodically to make a last and supreme
-requisition, although they knew the town could not satisfy it.
-
-Towards 6 o'clock the bugle sounded, and officers lodging in private
-houses left at once with arms and luggage. At the same time thousands
-of additional soldiers, with numerous field-pieces and cannon, marched
-into the town to their allotted positions. The gas factory, which
-had been idle, had been worked through the previous night and day by
-Germans, so that during this premeditated outrage the people could not
-take advantage of darkness to escape from the town. A further fact
-that proves their premeditation is that the attack took place at 8
-o'clock, the exact time at which the population entered their houses in
-conformity with the German orders--consequently escape became well-nigh
-impossible. At 8.20 a full fusillade with the roar of the cannons came
-from all sides of the town at once.
-
-The sky at the same time was lit up with the sinister light of fires
-from all quarters. The cavalry charged through the streets, sabring
-fugitives, while the infantry, posted on the footpaths, had their
-fingers on the triggers of their guns waiting for the unfortunate
-people to rush from the houses or appear at the windows, the soldiers
-complimenting each other on their marksmanship as they fired at the
-unhappy fugitives.
-
-Those whose homes were not yet destroyed were ordered to quit and
-follow the soldiers to the railway station. There the men were
-separated from mothers, wives, and children, and thrown, some bound,
-into trains leaving in the direction of Germany.
-
-I cannot but feel that, following the system they have inaugurated
-in this campaign, the Germans will use these non-combatant prisoners
-as human shields when they are fighting the Allies. The cruelty of
-these madmen surpasses all limits. They shot numbers of absolutely
-inoffensive people, forcing those who survived to bury their dead in
-the square, already encumbered with corpses whose positions suggested
-that they had fallen with arms uplifted in token of surrender.
-
-Others who have been allowed to live were driven past approving drunken
-officers by the brutal use of rifle butts, and while they were being
-maltreated they saw their carefully collected art and other treasures
-being shared out by the soldiers, the officers looking on. Those
-who attempted to appeal to their tormentors' better feelings were
-immediately shot. A few were let loose, but most of them were sent to
-Germany.
-
-On Wednesday at daybreak the remaining women and children were driven
-out of the town--a lamentable spectacle--with uplifted arms and under
-the menace of bayonets and revolvers.
-
-The day was practically calm. The destruction of the most beautiful
-part of the town seemed to have momentarily soothed the barbarian rage
-of the invaders.
-
-On the Thursday the remnant of the Civil Guard was called up on
-the pretext of extinguishing the conflagration; those who demurred
-were chained and sent with some wounded Germans to the Fatherland.
-The population had to quit at a moment's notice before the final
-destruction.
-
-Then, to complete their devastation, the German hordes fell back on the
-surrounding villages to burn them. They tracked down the men--some were
-shot, some made prisoners--and during many long hours they tortured the
-helpless women and children. This country of Eastern Brabant, so rich,
-so fertile, and so beautiful, is to-day a deserted charnel-house.
-
-Why should these individual deeds have been visited on thousands of
-innocent and inoffensive people? Why should those deeds have been
-visited on monuments of brick and stone? Why should treasuries of
-learning and shrines of religion be destroyed? Why should the six
-centuries of European history be destroyed because of the acts of a few
-patriots acting under the impulse of terror or indignation?
-
-As I said, the whole truth cannot yet be revealed. It is difficult
-to disentangle the facts even from ocular witnesses, from terrorized
-victims who were present at the ghastly crime. I have cross-examined
-some of those witnesses. I have read private letters from my cousin,
-Professor Albert Nerincx, at present Acting-Burgomaster of Louvain, who
-assumed office when the civic authorities had left, and whose heroic
-conduct is one of the few bright spots in the tragedy. Comparing and
-collating all the evidence at our disposal, we may take the following
-version given by the Belgian Commission of Inquiry as substantially
-correct:
-
-"On Tuesday evening a German corps, after receiving a check, withdrew
-in disorder into the town of Louvain. A German guard at the entrance of
-the town mistook the nature of this incursion and fired on their routed
-fellow-countrymen, mistaking them for Belgians.
-
-"In spite of all denials from the authorities the Germans, in order
-to cover their mistake, pretended that it was the inhabitants who had
-fired on them, whereas the inhabitants, including the police, had been
-disarmed more than a week ago.
-
-"Without inquiry, and without listening to any protests, the German
-Commander-in-Chief announced that the town would be immediately
-destroyed. The inhabitants were ordered to leave their dwellings; a
-party of men were made prisoners and the women and children put into
-trains the destination of which is unknown. Soldiers furnished with
-bombs set fire to all parts of the town."
-
-
-IV--MURDER--LOOT--RAPINE--IN BELGIUM
-
-An Oxford student who visited the scene of the disaster with Mr. Henry
-Fuerst, of Exeter College, Oxford, on August 29, gives the following
-description of the awful picture:
-
-"Burning houses were every moment falling into the roads; shooting
-was still going on. The dead and dying, burnt and burning, lay on all
-sides. Over some the Germans had placed sacks. I saw about half a dozen
-women and children. In one street I saw two little children walking
-hand in hand over the bodies of dead men. I have no words to describe
-these things. I hope people will not make too much of the saving of the
-Hotel de Ville.
-
-"The Hotel de Ville was standing on Friday morning last, and, as we
-plainly saw, every effort was being made to save it from the flames. We
-were told by German officers that it was not to be destroyed. I have
-personally no doubt that it is still standing. The German officers
-dashing about the streets in fine motor-cars made a wonderful sight.
-They were well-dressed, shaven, and contented-looking; they might have
-been assisting at a fashionable race-meeting. The soldiers were looting
-everywhere; champagne, wines, boots, cigars--everything was being
-carried off."
-
-But let it not be thought that Louvain was destroyed in vain. To the
-Belgian people it has meant more than a glorious victory. To the
-Germans it has been more disastrous than the most ignominious defeat.
-Until Louvain neutral peoples might still hesitate in their sympathies.
-Pacifists might still waver as to the justice of the cause. After
-Louvain any hesitation or doubt became impossible. The destruction of
-Louvain was needed to drive home the meaning of German culture. The
-crime of Louvain branded the German rulers and the commanders of the
-German armies as the enemies of the human race.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The atrocities committed by the German armies have roused the
-indignation of both hemispheres. They have placed Germany outside the
-pale of civilization. They have covered the German armies with eternal
-infamy. In the full light of the twentieth century the German terror
-has outdone the deeds and wiped out the memory of the Spanish terror.
-We make ample allowances for wild rumors bred of panic, although
-in the present instance the panic caused by the mere approach of
-the German soldiery is in itself a most significant symptom. If the
-German armies had observed the laws of civilized warfare which protect
-the defenceless inhabitants, there would have been no need for the
-population to fly for their lives, and there would not be at present a
-million homeless exiles wandering over the high roads of Holland.
-
- * * * * *
-
-(Dr. Sarolea describes the vicissitudes of Belgian triumphants
-alternating with Belgian reverses, the pathetic story of brave endeavor
-and of suffering nobly endured in the noblest of causes. The Defense of
-Liege, the fall of Namur, the capture of Brussels and the beleaguering
-of Antwerp: the destruction of Dinant and Termonde, the bursting of the
-dykes of the Scheldt, the German Terror and the wholesale exodus of the
-stricken nation which through all time will be the favorite theme of
-historians and poets.)
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[3] All numerals throughout this volume relate to the stories herein
-told--not to chapters in the original books.
-
-
-
-
-THE BISHOP OF LONDON'S VISIT TO THE FRONT
-
-_Taking the Message of Christ to the Battle Lines_
-
-_Told by The Reverend G. Vernon Smith, Resident Chaplain to the Bishop
-of London, Deputy Priest in Ordinary to the King_
-
- This is an account of how a Bishop of the Church of England visited
- the troops at the front. He went to France as the guest of Sir John
- French, Field Marshall of the British Army, to spend Holy Week and
- Easter with the troops. The chaplain who relates these experiences
- was one of the guests. He said before he left London, the Bishop
- received most cordial letters of God-speed from the Bishops of
- Canterbury and York. The Bishop's first evening in France was spent
- at the Soldiers' Institute at Boulogne, and this building was
- packed with soldiers at a concert. He then started in a motor car
- for the headquarters of the British Army, where he was received by
- the Field Marshall with all the members of the staff. A complete
- record of his journeys has been published by _Longmans, Green and
- Company_, with whose permission the following chapter is here
- presented.
-
-[4] I--HOLY COMMUNION AT THE FRONT
-
-It was in ---- that the Bishop for the first time came close to the
-actual front and within range of the German guns. The cars were at the
-door of the house where the Bishop was billeted, in a quiet little
-side-street, at 6:45 in the morning, for an early start had been
-arranged.
-
-We drove through the narrow streets to one of the large Hospitals in
-the town, where he celebrated the Holy Communion at seven o'clock for
-those of the officers and patients who wished to attend. After this
-service the other patients came in for morning prayers, at which the
-Bishop said a few words to them. It was invariably the case, when the
-Bishop visited a hospital, that there were many patients who wished to
-have a word with him. There were always, also, some men to whom, for
-some special reason, the Medical Officer or Chaplain wished to take
-him, and not infrequently in the Officers' Hospitals there were men
-whom he knew personally.
-
-It was, therefore, a hard task to keep up to time in saying "Good-bye"
-at a hospital, and Mr. Macpherson, whom the Bishop soon called his
-"nigger-driver," and who was responsible for seeing that the time-table
-was strictly kept--a task of considerable difficulty--had generally to
-remind the Bishop at a suitable moment that his car was waiting at the
-door.
-
-In a few minutes we had arrived at the Jute Factory again, where thirty
-men were ready and waiting to be confirmed in the little Chapel which
-has been carefully partitioned off in one corner of the building.
-
-It had been arranged that on this day the Bishop should visit some of
-the London Regiments that have recently gone to the front. Naturally
-he always looked forward with special eagerness to an opportunity of
-meeting, in these fresh surroundings, London men, to so many of whom he
-has spoken and preached in his diocese. Fortunately he was able in the
-course of the week to visit nearly all these regiments, although some
-of the men who were in the trenches could not, of course, be present
-at his services. To us, coming out from London, it was a great source
-of satisfaction and pride to hear of the high esteem in which these
-Territorial regiments are held by the leaders of our Army.
-
-It was not a very long time, as the motors slipped along the quiet
-country roads, before we began to hear the distant sound of guns, and
-as long as we were within a short distance of the firing-line there was
-seldom an hour in which guns could not be distinctly heard.
-
-Here and there, too, could be seen a battery hidden beneath a belt of
-trees, or sheltered under the hedge by the side of the road. We were
-curious to see how the countryside would look after its long occupation
-by the British Army. We had expected, perhaps, to see more signs of
-war, although we had not known what to anticipate.
-
-Beyond the fact that there were many bodies of troops moving on the
-roads, and that many farms and other large houses had notices fixed
-up outside to show they were the Headquarters of some unit, there
-was nothing, as a rule, except in the areas which have been actually
-shelled, to give any indication of the terrible nature of the struggle
-which is being waged so close at hand. Indeed, if the road took us to
-the top of one of the few hills in that country, and we looked out over
-the landscape, just beginning to show the first touches of spring,
-it was almost impossible to realize that between us and the horizon
-stretched that long valley of trenches which divides the two great
-armies.
-
-When we drove along the roads at some distance from the actual front,
-it was often hard to believe that this was the real seat of war; but a
-passing transport wagon or a patrol of cavalry riding by soon reminded
-us of stern realities. The recent absence of rain, and the warm sun,
-had caused the roads to dry up considerably, and many officers seemed
-to be quite disappointed not to be able to show us many samples of
-the mud to which they had become so accustomed, and of which we had
-heard so much. We wondered, also, very much how the men would look
-after their hard and trying winter. Certainly I was surprised to notice
-how very clean and tidy they invariably appeared to be; although, of
-course, uniforms must show signs of wear and tear. In every case,
-except where the men were actually fresh from the trenches, the
-Battalions presented a smart appearance.
-
-
-II--SOLDIERS SINGING: "JESUS LOVER OF MY SOUL"
-
-At our first halt a Battalion of the London Regiment was drawn up on
-parade in a field, and for the first time we opened the large red box
-and handed round the hymn-sheets. It was here that we were to begin to
-understand the wonderful uplifting power of our great English hymns
-when they are sung on great occasions. After all, the heart of a nation
-is often to be found in its hymns. They express a simple theology in
-simple terms, and words and tunes of hymns learned in childhood are
-very dear to men, even if in the rush of life they have not, as many
-said, "found much time for religion before I came to France." The
-Bishop had chosen hymns which he knew would be familiar to all the men
-of all denominations.
-
-Only four hymns were sung throughout the week--"When I Survey the
-Wondrous Cross," "Rock of Ages, Cleft for Me," "There Is a Green
-Hill Far Away," and "Jesus, Lover of My Soul"--hymns which are known
-throughout the world wherever British men have gone. There was no
-necessity to have an accompaniment, for everybody knew the tunes. Once
-or twice a band was present, and now and then a small harmonium was
-used, but as a rule the hymns were sung unaccompanied, except by the
-thunder of the guns.
-
-It is always moving and inspiring to join in hymns when they are
-sung by large bodies of men, especially when those hymns have been
-associated with great moments in our lives, but never before can these
-familiar tunes have had such a setting; never, certainly, have they
-been sung more reverently or with greater earnestness. Perhaps, as
-children they liked the tunes best, but now that they have become men
-and put away childish things, the soldiers think first of the words.
-
-How much those words meant to many hearts no one but He to Whom all
-hearts are open can ever know; but that they moved thoughts too deep
-for words was clearly written on every face in those great gatherings
-of men. As they must have raised many memories of childhood in the
-hearts of many of the men, so now they will in future years be sung by
-many with another and a deeper memory of the occasions when they were
-sung upon the battlefields of Flanders in the days of the Great War.
-
-There was one verse in the Gospels which was continually in my mind at
-these great services. In Holy Week, of course, we were often thinking
-of that last night of our Lord with His disciples in the upper room at
-Jerusalem before He went out to His great battle in Gethsemane, and on
-the Cross: "When they had sung an hymn, they went out into the Mount of
-Olives."
-
-We were with men at the great moments of their lives, many of them
-having come straight out of the trenches, many going back to the
-trenches in but a few moments after we had left them--men who had
-been in battle, and men who were preparing for battle. Nobody who was
-present at those services would ever forget what it meant to say: "And
-when they had sung a hymn, they went back to the trenches."
-
-Every service, of course, was closed with the National Anthem. At
-the front, men seem instinctively to know that this great hymn is in
-reality a prayer, and on not a few occasions the whole body of men
-reverently sang "Amen" at the conclusion of the last line. So also "God
-Save the King" will have won for itself an even deeper place in the
-hearts of men than that which it has held for so many generations.
-
-From the open field, it was not far to pass on to a little French town
-where another regiment was drawn up in the principal square. No more
-suitable place could have been chosen for a service, and a wagon, which
-served as a pulpit for the Bishop, was just in front of the western
-door of the fine old church.
-
-
-III--"THE KINGDOM OF GOD"--NEAR THE GUNS
-
-To see a Bishop of the Anglican Communion preaching in France at the
-door of a Roman Catholic church raised many thoughts in my mind.
-I could not but hope that these days of trial may draw the Allies
-together by something that is deeper than the bonds of friendship.
-We had heard not infrequently of the sympathetic help which is being
-offered by many priests of the Roman Catholic Church to our own
-Chaplains, and I thought, as many are thinking at this time, that if
-the war could serve in any way to help the two great Communions to
-understand better their distinctive points of view, some real step
-will have been taken to advance the cause of the Kingdom of God.
-This service was reverently watched by a considerable number of the
-inhabitants of the place.
-
-After holding a short service for two batteries near their guns, the
-Bishop came to another open square where a Brigade was assembled, which
-included a regiment almost, if not entirely, recruited from East
-London. The East Londoner has his own unique characteristics, and his
-friends will be glad to know that he is just as cheerful and bright in
-France at war as he is in England in times of peace. It was hard to
-distinguish faces, but as the regiment swung by the place where I was
-standing, I saw many who remembered me from the time that I spent at
-Oxford House, and they waved just as hearty a greeting from the ranks
-as they used to wave from the top of a van in the Bethnal Green Road
-five years ago.
-
-The deepest note on this day was struck when we came to a little town
-filled with British troops, a very large number of whom had been
-recently engaged in heavy fighting. The Chaplain had sent a notice
-throughout one Division that the Bishop would hold a short service in
-the evening for officers, and that this would be followed by a service
-for non-commissioned officers and men. As he entered the large hall
-which is used for a church in that town, he found at least five hundred
-officers, including many Generals, waiting in silence. They had come,
-some of them, from considerable distances, and almost every officer
-who was off duty in that district must have been present. It was only
-a bare, whitewashed building, with a hard stone floor, and a little
-platform at the end, but in it were gathered together some of the
-flower of the British Army.
-
-There were Generals kneeling side by side with subalterns--men who had
-faced together the terrible ordeal of battle. Those who were present
-will surely never forget the silence and reverence of that service.
-
-
-IV--THE CANADIANS--AND A BENEDICTION
-
-After so long a day the Bishop was naturally beginning to feel tired,
-and his voice began to show signs of the great tax which frequent
-speaking in the open air had placed upon it. But there was one more
-gathering at which he was to be present, and in many ways this was the
-most striking and memorable of the whole Mission.
-
-The Canadians were there, and they wished to see him. That was quite
-enough for the Bishop. His two visits to the Dominion have made Canada
-very dear to his heart, and to Canada he will always give of his best.
-It was not far to go to the large open square in the town where the
-Canadians were waiting for him. The square was packed with men, and in
-the center was a statue or fountain--I really could not distinguish
-which, so completely was it concealed by the men sitting and standing
-upon it.
-
-The last rays of the sun came across the old tiled roofs, and lent a
-touch of color to the scene. On one side of the square was the Town
-Hall, and the Bishop stood in the balcony, surrounded by the General
-and staff officers. It was a moving sight to look down from the balcony
-of this old French Town Hall upon this great gathering of men who had
-come so many thousands of miles from their homes to fight for the
-honor of the Empire. There was no opportunity for an ordinary service.
-The gathering darkness would have made it impossible for the men to
-read, and, even if it had been lighter, the men were so closely packed
-together that hymn-sheets could not have been held.
-
-It is always difficult to estimate numbers, but someone said that
-nearly ten thousand men must have been present. When the Bishop
-appeared on the balcony there was a Canadian cheer. He is well known in
-the Dominion, and the volume of sound left no doubt as to the warmth of
-feeling with which he is regarded there.
-
-"This is a sight," he began, "which reminds me of Montreal and
-Toronto."
-
-"How about Winnipeg?" came a voice from the crowd, and the men all
-laughed. It was a glorious chance to tell them of the way in which the
-Mother Country appreciates the splendid loyalty with which her sons
-beyond the seas have rallied at the Empire's call, and the Bishop was
-not slow to let them know that we in Great Britain rejoice to feel
-that the men of Canada and the men of Britain are standing shoulder to
-shoulder in France. And then they cheered again.
-
-"Yes, you may cheer that," he added, "while I get breath for the next
-sentence." He passed on to speak of the great cause of the freedom of
-the world for which the Empire and the Allies are fighting to-day.
-Canada, the great self-governing Dominion--free, and yet part of the
-Empire--would understand what freedom means.
-
-"Yes, you may cheer that too," the Bishop said, "while I get breath
-again."
-
-And then, as he turned to deeper thoughts and closed, he added: "Now
-we will all together say the Lord's Prayer." In a flash there was not
-a cap to be seen in the square, but only the bared heads of that great
-throng of men reverently bent forward in prayer. Then, in absolute
-silence, the Bishop gave the Blessing, and as he left the balcony a
-staff officer turned to me and said: "That is a really great man."
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[4] All numerals relate to stories herein told--not to chapters from
-original sources.
-
-
-
-
-"GRAPES OF WRATH"--WITH THE "BIG PUSH" ON THE SOMME
-
-_Twenty-four Hours in the Life of a Private Soldier_
-
-_Told by Boyd Cable, an English Author in the British Army_
-
- Boyd Cable has suddenly become one of the foremost word painters
- of active fighting--"the greatest literary discovery of the War."
- He is primarily a man of action. At the age of twenty, he joined a
- corps of Scouts in the Boer War and fought in South Africa. He then
- became a traveler and spent some time in Australia and New Zealand,
- in the Philippines, Java and the Islands of the Pacific. He is a
- "knight of adventure"--he has been an ordinary seaman, a typewriter
- agent, a steamer fireman, office manager, hobo, gold prospector,
- coach driver, navvy. He was one of the first men not in the Regular
- Army to get a commission and be sent to the front in 1914. As an
- observation officer in the artillery, he was "spotted" by the enemy
- sharpshooters, got a bullet through his cap, one through the inside
- of his sleeve close to his heart, and fifty-three others near
- enough for him to hear them pass--all in less than an hour. After
- eighteen months of this death-defying work without even a wound,
- he was invalided home on account of stomach trouble and then began
- to write of his adventures. His books, "Behind the Line," "Action
- Front," and "Doing Their Bit," are acknowledged to be the most
- vivid and stimulating pictures of the War as seen by the men in the
- trenches. We here record his story of the tanks from his volume of
- tales entitled "Grapes of Wrath," by permission of his publishers,
- _E. P. Dutton and Company_: Copyright 1917.
-
-[5] I--STORY OF "KENTUCKY"--AN AMERICAN IN THE BRITISH TRENCHES
-
-Soon after Kentucky rejoined them the Stonewalls were moved forward a
-little clear of the village they had helped to take, just as one or two
-heavy shells whooped over from the German guns and dropped crashing on
-the ground that had been theirs. The men were spread out along shell
-holes and told to dig in for better cover because a bit of a redoubt on
-the left flank hadn't been taken and bullets were falling in enfilade
-from it.
-
-"Dig, you cripples," said the sergeant, "dig in. Can't you see that
-if they counter-attack from the front now you'll get shot in the back
-while you're lining the front edge of those shell holes. Get to it
-there, you Pug."
-
-"Shot in the back, linin' the front," said Pug as the sergeant passed
-on. "Is it a conundrum, Kentuck?"
-
-"Sounds sort of mixed," admitted Kentucky. "But it's tainted some with
-the truth. That redoubt is half rear to us. If another lot comes at us
-in front and we get up on the front edge of this shell hole, there's
-nothing to stop the redoubt bullets hitting us in the back. Look at
-that," he concluded, nodding upward to where a bullet had smacked
-noisily into the mud above their heads as they squatted in the hole.
-
-The two commenced wearily to cut out with their trenching tools a
-couple of niches in the sides of the crater which would give them
-protection from the flank and rear bullets. They made reasonably
-secure cover and then stayed to watch a hurricane bombardment that was
-developing on the redoubt. "_Goo_ on the guns," said Pug joyfully.
-"That's the talk; smack 'em about."
-
-The gunners "smacked 'em about" with fifteen savage minutes' deluge
-of light and heavy shells, blotting out the redoubt in a whirlwind of
-fire-flashes, belching smoke clouds and dust haze. Then suddenly the
-tempest ceased to play there, lifted and shifted and fell roaring in a
-wall of fire and steel beyond the low slope which the redoubt crowned.
-
-With past knowledge of what the lift and the further barrage meant the
-two men in the shell-pit turned and craned their necks and looked out
-along the line.
-
-"There they go," said Pug suddenly, and "Attacking round a
-half-circle," said Kentucky. The British line was curved in a horseshoe
-shape about the redoubt and the two being out near one of the points
-could look back and watch clearly the infantry attack launching from
-the center and half-way round the sides of the horseshoe. They saw
-the khaki figures running heavily, scrambling round and through the
-scattered shell holes, and presently, as a crackle of rifle fire rose
-and rose and swelled to a sullen roar with the quick, rhythmic clatter
-of machine guns beating through it, they saw also the figures stumbling
-and falling, the line thinning and shredding out and wasting away under
-the withering fire.
-
-The sergeant dodged along the pit-edge above them. "Covering fire," he
-shouted, "at four hundred--slam it in," and disappeared. The two opened
-fire, aiming at the crest of the slope and beyond the tangle of barbed
-wire which alone indicated the position of the redoubt.
-
-They only ceased to fire when they saw the advanced fringe of the line,
-of a line by now woefully thinned and weakened, come to the edge of the
-barbed wire and try to force a way through it.
-
-"They're beat," gasped Pug. "They're done in ..." and cursed long and
-bitterly, fingering nervously at his rifle the while. "Time we rung in
-again," said Kentucky. "Aim steady and pitch 'em well clear of the
-wire." The two opened careful fire again while the broken remnants of
-the attacking line ran and hobbled and crawled back or into the cover
-of shell holes. A second wave flooded out in a new assault, but by now
-the German artillery joining in helped it and the new line was cut
-down, broken and beaten back before it had covered half the distance to
-the entanglements. Kentucky and Pug and others of the Stonewalls near
-them could only curse helplessly as they watched the tragedy and plied
-their rifles in a slender hope of some of their bullets finding those
-unseen loopholes and embrasures.
-
-
-II--HIS MAJESTY'S LAND SHIP--"WE ARE HERE"
-
-"An' wot's the next item o' the program, I wonder?" said Pug half an
-hour after the last attack had failed, half an hour filled with a
-little shooting, a good deal of listening to the pipe and whistle of
-overhead bullets and the rolling thunder of the guns, a watching of the
-shells falling and spouting earth and smoke on the defiant redoubt.
-
-"Reinforcements and another butt-in at it, I expect," surmised
-Kentucky. "Don't see anything else for it. Looks like this
-pimple-on-the-map of a redoubt was holdin' up any advance on this
-front. Anyhow I'm not hankering to go pushin' on with that redoubt
-bunch shootin' holes in my back, which they'd surely do."
-
-"Wot's all the buzz about be'ind us?" said Pug suddenly, raising
-himself for a quick look over the covering edge of earth behind him,
-and in the act of dropping again stopped and stared with raised
-eyebrows and gaping mouth.
-
-"What is it?" said Kentucky quickly, and also rose, and also stayed
-risen and staring in amazement. Towards them, lumbering and rolling,
-dipping heavily into the shell holes, heaving clumsily out of them,
-moving with a motion something between that of a half-sunken ship and a
-hamstrung toad, striped and banded and splashed from head to foot, or,
-if you prefer, from fo'c'sl-head to cutwater, with splashes of lurid
-color, came His Majesty's Land Ship "Here We Are."
-
-"Gor-_strewth_!" ejaculated Pug. "Wha-what is it?"
-
-Kentucky only gasped.
-
-"'Ere," said Pug hurriedly, "let's gerrout o' this. It's comin' over
-atop of us," and he commenced to scramble clear.
-
-But a light of understanding was dawning on Kentucky's face and a wide
-grin growing on his lips. "It's one of the Tanks," he said, and giggled
-aloud as the Here We Are dipped her nose and slid head first into a
-huge shell-crater in ludicrous likeness to a squat bull-pup sitting
-back on its haunches and dragged into a hole: "I've heard lots about
-'em, but the seein' beats all the hearin' by whole streets," and he and
-Pug laughed aloud together as the Here We Are's face and gun-port eyes
-and bent-elbow driving gear appeared above the crater rim in still more
-ridiculous resemblance to an amazed toad emerging from a rain-barrel.
-The creature lumbered past them, taking in its stride the narrow trench
-dug to link up the shell holes, and the laughter on Kentucky's lips
-died to thoughtfully serious lines as his eye caught the glint of fat,
-vicious-looking gun muzzles peering from their ports.
-
-"Haw haw haw," guffawed Pug as the monster lurched drunkenly, checked
-and steadied itself with one foot poised over a deep hole, halted and
-backed away, and edged nervously round the rim of the hole. "See them
-machine guns pokin' out, Kentucky," he continued delightedly. "They
-won't 'arf pepper them Huns when they gets near enough."
-
-Fifty yards in the wake of the Here We Are a line of men followed
-up until an officer halted them along the front line where Pug and
-Kentucky were posted.
-
-"You blokes just takin' 'im out for an airin'?" Pug asked one of the
-newcomers. "Oughtn't you to 'ave 'im on a leadin' string?"
-
-"Here we are, Here we are again," chanted the other and giggled
-spasmodically. "An' ain't he just hot stuff! But wait till you see 'im
-get to work with his sprinklers."
-
-"Does 'e bite?" asked Pug, grinning joyously. "Oughtn't you to 'ave 'is
-muzzle on?"
-
-"Bite," retorted another. "He's a bloomin' Hun-eater. Jes' gulps 'em
-whole, coal-scuttle 'ats an' all."
-
-"He's a taed," said another. "A lollopin, flat-nosed, splay-fittit,
-ugly puddock, wi's hin' legs stuck oot whaur his front should be."
-
-"Look at 'im, oh, look at 'im ... he's alive, lad, nobbut alive."...
-"Does every bloomin' thing but talk."... "Skatin' he is now, skatin' on
-'is off hind leg," came a chorus of delighted comment.
-
-"Is he goin' to waltz in and take that redoubt on his ownsum?" asked
-Kentucky. "No," some one told him. "We give him ten minutes' start and
-then follow on and pick up the pieces, and the prisoners."
-
-
-III--HOW THE "TOMMIES" CHEERED THE "PEPPER POTS"--TANK TALES
-
-They lay there laughing and joking and watching the uncouth antics of
-the monster waddling across the shell-riddled ground, cheering when
-it appeared to trip and recover itself, cheering when it floundered
-sideways into a hole and crawled out again, cheering most wildly of
-all when it reached the barbed-wire entanglements, waddled through,
-bursting them apart and trailing them in long tangles behind it, or
-trampling them calmly under its churning caterpillar-wheel-bands. It
-was little wonder they cheered and less wonder they laughed. The Here
-We Are's motions were so weirdly alive and life-like, so playfully
-ponderous, so massively ridiculous, that it belonged by nature to
-nothing outside a Drury Lane Panto. At one moment it looked exactly
-like a squat tug-boat in a heavy cross sea or an ugly tide-rip,
-lurching, dipping, rolling rail and rail, plunging wildly bows under,
-tossing its nose up and squattering again stern-rail deep, pitching
-and heaving and diving and staggering, but always pushing forward.
-Next minute it was a monster out of Prehistoric Peeps, or a new patent
-fire-breathing dragon from the pages of a very Grimm Fairy Tale, nosing
-its way blindly over the Fairy Prince's pitfalls; next it was a big
-broad-buttocked sow nuzzling and rooting as it went; next it was a
-drunk man reeling and staggering, rolling and falling, scrabbling and
-crawling; next it was--was anything on or in, or underneath the earth,
-anything at all except a deadly, grim, purposeful murdering product of
-modern war.
-
-The infantry pushed out after it when it reached the barbed wire,
-and although they took little heed to keep cover--being much more
-concerned not to miss any of the grave and comic antics of their giant
-joke than to shelter from flying bullets--the line went on almost
-without casualties. "Mighty few bullets about this time," remarked
-Kentucky, who with Pug had moved out along with the others "to see the
-fun." "That's 'cos they're too busy with the old Pepper-pots, an' the
-Pepper-pots is too busy wi' them to leave much time for shootin' at
-us," said Pug gayly. It was true too. The Pepper-pots--a second one
-had lumbered into sight from the center of the horseshoe curve--were
-drawing a tearing hurricane of machine-gun bullets that beat and
-rattled on their armored sides like hail on a window-pane. They waddled
-indifferently through the storm and Here We Are, crawling carefully
-across a trench, halted half-way over and sprinkled bullets up and
-down its length to port and starboard for a minute, hitched itself
-over, steered straight for a fire-streaming machine-gun embrasure. It
-squirted a jet of lead into the loophole, walked on, butted at the
-emplacement once or twice, got a grip of it under the upward sloped
-caterpillar band, climbed jerkily till it stood reared up on end like
-a frightened colt, ground its driving bands round and round, and--fell
-forward on its face with a cloud of dust belching up and out from the
-collapsed dug-out. Then it crawled out of the wreckage, crunching over
-splintered beams and broken concrete, wheeled and cruised casually down
-the length of a crooked trench, halting every now and then to spray
-bullets on any German who showed or to hail a stream of them down the
-black entrance to a dug-out, straying aside to nose over any suspicious
-cranny, swinging round again to plod up the slope in search of more
-trenches.
-
-The infantry followed up, cheering and laughing like children at a
-fair, rounding up batches of prisoners who crawled white-faced and with
-scared eyes from dug-out doors and trench corners, shouting jests and
-comments at the lumbering Pepper-pots.
-
-A yell went up as the Here We Are, edging along a trench, lurched
-suddenly, staggered, side-slipped, and half disappeared in a fog of
-dust. The infantry raced up and found it with its starboard driving
-gear grinding and churning full power and speed of revolution above
-ground and the whole port side and gear down somewhere in the depths of
-the collapsed trench, grating and squealing and flinging out clods of
-earth as big as clothes-baskets. Then the engines eased, slowed, and
-stopped, and after a little and in answer to the encouraging yells of
-the men outside, a scuttle jerked open and a grimy figure crawled out.
-
-"Blimey," said Pug rapturously, "'ere's Jonah 'isself. Ol' Pepper-pot's
-spewed 'im out."
-
-
-IV--JONAH'S SHIP RECHRISTENED--"THE D.T.'S"
-
-But "Jonah" addressed himself pointedly and at some length to the
-laughing spectators, and they, urged on by a stream of objurgation and
-invective, fell to work with trenching-tools, with spades retrieved
-from the trench, with bare hands and busy fingers, to break down the
-trench-side under Here We Are's starboard driver, and pile it down
-into the trench and under the uplifted end of her port one. The second
-Pepper-pot cruised up and brought to adjacent to the operations with
-a watchful eye on the horizon. It was well she did, for suddenly a
-crowd of Germans seeing or sensing that one of the monsters was out of
-action, swarmed out of cover on the crest and came storming down on
-the party. Here We Are could do nothing; but the sister ship could,
-and did, do quite a lot to those Germans. It sidled round so as to
-bring both bow guns and all its broadside to bear and let loose a
-close-quarter tornado of bullets that cut the attackers to rags. The
-men who had ceased digging to grab their rifles had not time to fire
-a shot before the affair was over and "Jonah" was again urging them
-to their spade-work. Then when he thought the way ready, Here We Are
-at his orders steamed ahead again, its lower port side scraping and
-jarring along the trench wall, the drivers biting and gripping at the
-soft ground. Jerkily, a foot at a time, it scuffled its way along the
-trench till it came to a sharp angle of it where a big shell hole had
-broken down the wall. But just as the starboard driver was reaching
-out over the shell hole and the easy job of plunging into it, gaining
-a level keel and climbing out the other side, the trench wall on the
-right gave way and the Here We Are sank its starboard side level to and
-then below the port one. She had fallen bodily into a German dug-out,
-but after a pause to regain its shaken breath--or the crew's--it began
-once more to revolve its drivers slowly, and to churn out behind them,
-first a cloud of dust and clots of earth, then, as the starboard
-driver bit deeper into the dug-out, a mangled debris of clothing and
-trench-made furniture. On the ground above the infantry stood shrieking
-with laughter, while the frantic skipper raved unheard-of oaths and the
-Here We Are pawed and hoofed behind, or caught on its driving band and
-hoisted in turn into the naked light of day, a splintered bedstead,
-a chewed-up blanket or two, separately and severally the legs, back,
-and seat of a red velvet armchair, a torn gray coat and a forlorn and
-muddy pair of pink pajama trousers tangled up in one officer's field
-boot. And when the drivers got their grip again and the Here We are
-rolled majestically forward and up the further sloping side of the
-shell-crater and halted to take the skipper aboard again, Pug dragged
-a long branch from the fascines in the trench debris, slid it up one
-leg and down the other of the pink pajamas, tied the boot by its laces
-to the tip and jammed the root into a convenient crevice in the Tank's
-stern. And so beflagged she rolled her triumphant way up over the
-captured redoubt and down the other side, with the boot-tip bobbing
-and swaying and jerking at the end of her pink tail. The sequel to
-her story may be told here, although it only came back to the men who
-decorated her after filtering round the firing line, up and down the
-communication lines, round half the hospitals and most of the messes
-at or behind the Front.
-
-And many as came to be the Tales of the Tanks, this of the Pink-Tailed
-'un, as Pug called her, belonged unmistakably to her and, being so, was
-joyfully recognized and acclaimed by her decorators. She came in due
-time across the redoubt, says the story, and bore down on the British
-line at the other extreme of the horseshoe to where a certain infantry
-C.O., famed in past days for a somewhat speedy and hectic career,
-glared in amazement at the apparition lurching and bobbing and bowing
-and crawling toad-like towards him.
-
-"I knew," he is reported to have afterwards admitted, "I knew it
-couldn't be that I'd got 'em again. But in the old days I always had
-one infallible sign. Crimson rats and purple snakes I might get over;
-but if they had pink tails, I knew I was in for it certain. And I
-tell you it gave me quite a turn to see this blighter waddling up and
-wagging the old pink tail."
-
-But this end of the story only came to the Stonewalls long enough
-after--just as it is said to have come in time to the ears of the Here
-We Are's skipper, and, mightily pleasing him and his crew, set him
-chuckling delightedly and swearing he meant to apply and in due and
-formal course obtain permission to change his land-ship's name, and
-having regretfully parted with the pink tail, immortalize it in the
-name of H.M.L.S. _The D.T.'s_.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[5] All numerals relate to stories herein told--not to chapters from
-original sources.
-
-
-
-
-A NOVELIST AND SOLDIER ON THE BATTLE LINE
-
-_Letters by Coningsby Dawson_
-
-_British-American Author of Many Notable Books_
-
- Coningsby Dawson, the brilliant young novelist, was 31 years of
- age at the outbreak of the war. He was graduated with honors from
- Oxford in 1905 and came to the United States to take a theological
- course at Union Seminary. After a year at the Seminary, he reached
- the conclusion that his life work lay in literature. His family
- left England and established their home in Taunton, Massachusetts.
- Here, young Dawson began the career which is to place him in the
- front rank of modern novelists. At the outbreak of the Great War,
- he laid his pen aside and took up his sword for his native country.
- Enlisting with the gallant Canadians, he went to the front where
- he soon became a lieutenant. His letters home have been collected
- by his father and published in book form under the title "Carry
- On--Letters in War Time" by _John Lane Company_: Copyright 1917.
- These intimate letters written from dug-outs on the Somme battle
- fronts in the intervals of incessant artillery fire reveal the
- heart of the young man who embodies the elements of greatness.
- They breathe the very spirit of heroism. Several of the most
- inspirational of these letters are here reproduced.
-
-[6] I--WITH 6,000 TROOPS AND A CONVOY
-
- Ottawa, July 16th, 1916.
- DEAREST ALL:
-
-So much has happened since last I saw you that it's difficult to know
-where to start. On Thursday, after lunch, I got the news that we were
-to entrain from Petewawa next Friday morning. I at once put in for
-leave to go to Ottawa the next day until the following Thursday at
-Reveille. We came here with a lot of the other officers who are going
-over and have been having a very full time.
-
-I am sailing from a port unknown on board the _Olympic_ with 6,000
-troops--there is to be a big convoy. I feel more than ever I did--and
-I'm sure it's a feeling that you share since visiting the camp--that I
-am setting out on a Crusade from which it would have been impossible
-to withhold myself with honor. I go quite gladly and contentedly, and
-pray that in God's good time we may all sit again in the little shack
-at Kootenay and listen to the rustling of the orchard outside. It will
-be of those summer days that I shall be thinking all the time.
-
- Yours, with very much love,
- CON.
-
-
-II--OFF FOR FRANCE--ACROSS THE CHANNEL
-
- Shorncliff, August 30th, 1916.
- MY DEARESTS:
-
-I have just returned from sending you a cable to let you know that I'm
-off to France. The word came out in orders yesterday, and I shall leave
-before the end of the week with a draft of officers--I have been in
-England just a day over four weeks....
-
-Selfishly I wish that you were here at this moment--actually I'm glad
-that you are away. Everybody goes out quite unemotionally and with very
-few good-byes--we made far more fuss in the old days about a week-end
-visit.
-
-Now that at last it has come--this privileged moment for which I have
-worked and waited--my heart is very quiet. It's the test of a character
-which I have often doubted. I shall be glad not to have to doubt it
-again. Whatever happens, I know you will be glad to remember that at a
-great crisis I tried to play the man, however small my qualifications.
-We have always lived so near to one another's affections that this
-going out alone is more lonely to me than to most men. I have always
-had some one near at hand with love-blinded eyes to see my faults
-as springing from higher motives. Now I reach out my hands across
-six thousand miles and only touch yours with my imagination to say
-good-bye. What queer sights these eyes, which have been almost your
-eyes, will witness! If my hands do anything respectable, remember that
-it is your hands that are doing it. It is your influence as a family
-that has made me ready for the part I have to play, and where I go, you
-follow me.
-
-Poor little circle of three loving persons, please be tremendously
-brave. Don't let anything turn you into cowards--we've all got to be
-worthy of each other's sacrifice; the greater the sacrifice may prove
-to be for the one the greater the nobility demanded of the remainder.
-How idle the words sound, and yet they will take deep meanings when
-time has given them graver sanctions. I think gallant is the word I've
-been trying to find--we must be gallant English women and gentlemen....
-
-How far away the childish past seems--almost as though it never
-happened. And was I really the budding novelist in New York? Life has
-become so stern and scarlet--and so brave. From my window I look out on
-the English Channel, a cold, grey-green sea, with rain driving across
-it and a fleet of small craft taking shelter. Over there beyond the
-curtain of mist lies France--and everything that awaits me.
-
-News has just come that I have to start. Will continue from France.
-
- Yours ever lovingly,
- CON.
-
-
-III--"HERE I AM IN FRANCE--A SOLDIER"
-
- France, September 1st, 1916.
-
- DEAREST M.:
-
-Here I am in France with the same strange smells and street cries,
-and almost the same little boys bowling hoops over the very cobbly
-cobble stones. I had afternoon tea at a patisserie and ate a great
-many gateaux for the sake of old times. We had a very choppy crossing,
-and you would most certainly have been sick had you been on board. It
-seemed to me that I must be coming on one of those romantic holidays to
-see churches and dead history--only the khaki-clad figures reminded me
-that I was coming to see history in the making. It's a funny world that
-batters us about so. It's three years since I was in France--the last
-time was with Arthur in Provence. It's five years since you and I did
-our famous trip together.
-
-I wish you were here--there are heaps of English nurses in the
-streets. I expect to sleep in this place and proceed to my destination
-to-morrow. How I wish I could send you a really descriptive letter! If
-I did, I fear you would not get it--so I have to write in generalities.
-None of this seems real--it's a kind of wild pretence from which I
-shall awake--and when I tell you my dream you'll laugh and say, "How
-absurd of you, dreaming that you were a soldier. I must say you look
-like it."
-
- Good-bye, my dearest girl,
- God bless you,
- CON.
-
-
-IV--"I HAVE SEEN MY FIRST BATTLEFIELD"
-
- September 19th, 1916.
- DEAREST FATHER:
-
-I'm writing you your birthday letter early, as I don't know how busy
-I may be in the next week, nor how long this may take to reach you.
-You know how much love I send you and how I would like to be with you.
-D'you remember the birthday three years ago when we set the victrola
-going outside your room door? Those were my high-jinks days when very
-many things seemed possible. I'd rather be the person I am now than the
-person I was then. Life was selfish though glorious.
-
-Well, I've seen my first modern battlefield and am quite disillusioned
-about the splendor of war. The splendor is all in the souls of the men
-who creep through the squalor like vermin--it's in nothing external.
-There was a chap here the other day who deserved the V. C. four times
-over by running back through the Hun shell fire to bring news that the
-infantry wanted more artillery support. I was observing for my brigade
-in the forward station at the time. How he managed to live through the
-ordeal nobody knows. But men laugh while they do these things. It's
-fine.
-
-A modern battlefield is the abomination of abominations. Imagine a
-vast stretch of dead country, pitted with shell-holes as though it had
-been mutilated with smallpox. There's not a leaf or a blade of grass
-in sight. Every house has either been leveled or is in ruins. No bird
-sings. Nothing stirs. The only live sound is at night--the scurry
-of rats. You enter a kind of ditch, called a trench; it leads on to
-another and another in an unjoyful maze. From the sides feet stick
-out, and arms and faces--the dead of previous encounters. "One of our
-chaps," you say casually, recognizing him by his boots or khaki, or
-"Poor blighter--a Hun!" One can afford to forget enmity in the presence
-of the dead. It is horribly difficult sometimes to distinguish between
-the living and the slaughtered--they both lie so silently in their
-little kennels in the earthen bank. You push on--especially if you
-are doing observation work, till you are past your own front line and
-out in No Man's Land. You have to crouch and move warily now. Zing! A
-bullet from a German sniper. You laugh and whisper, "A near one, that."
-My first trip to the trenches was up to No Man's Land. I went in the
-early dawn and came to a Madame Tussaud's show of the dead, frozen
-into immobility in the most extraordinary attitudes. Some of them were
-part way out of the ground, one hand pressed to the wound, the other
-pointing, the head sunken and the hair plastered over the forehead
-by repeated rains. I kept on wondering what my companions would look
-like had they been three weeks dead. My imagination became ingeniously
-and vividly morbid. When I had to step over them to pass, it seemed
-as though they must clutch at my trench coat and ask me to help. Poor
-lonely people, so brave and so anonymous in their death! Somewhere
-there is a woman who loved each one of them and would give her life for
-my opportunity to touch the poor clay that had been kind to her. It's
-like walking through the day of resurrection to visit No Man's Land.
-Then the Huns see you and the shrapnel begins to fall--you crouch like
-a dog and run for it.
-
-One gets used to shell-fire up to a point, but there's not a man who
-doesn't want to duck when he hears one coming. The worst of all is the
-whizz-bang, because it doesn't give you a chance--it pounces and is on
-you the same moment that it bangs. There's so much I wish that I could
-tell you. I can only say this, at the moment we're making history.
-
-What a curious birthday letter! I think of all your other
-birthdays--the ones before I met these silent men with the green and
-yellow faces, and the blackened lips which will never speak again.
-What happy times we have had as a family--what happy jaunts when you
-took me in those early days, dressed in a sailor suit, when you went
-hunting pictures. Yet, for all the damnability of what I now witness,
-I was never quieter in my heart. To have surrendered to an imperative
-self-denial brings a peace which self-seeking never brought.
-
-So don't let this birthday be less gay for my absence. It ought to be
-the proudest in your life--proud because your example has taught each
-of your sons to do the difficult things which seem right. It would have
-been a condemnation of you if any one of us had been a shirker.
-
- "I want to buy fine things for you
- And be a soldier if I can."
-
-The lines come back to me now. You read them to me first in the dark
-little study from a green oblong book. You little thought that I would
-be a soldier--even now I can hardly realize the fact. It seems a dream
-from which I shall wake up. Am I really killing men day by day? Am I
-really in jeopardy myself?
-
-Whatever happens I'm not afraid, and I'll give you reason to be glad of
-me.
-
- Very much love,
- CON.
-
-
-V--"I AM IN THE TRENCHES--UNDER FIRE"
-
- November 6th, 1916.
- MY DEAR ONES:
-
-Such a wonderful day it has been--I scarcely know where to start. I
-came down last night from twenty-four hours in the mud, where I had
-been observing. I'd spent the night in a hole dug in the side of the
-trench and a dead Hun forming part of the roof. I'd sat there reliving
-so many things--the ecstatic moments of my life when I first touched
-fame--and my feet were so cold that I could not feel them, so I thought
-all the harder of the pleasant things of the past. Then, as I say, I
-came back to the gun position to learn that I was to have one day off
-at the back of the lines. You can't imagine what that meant to me--one
-day in a country that is green, one day where there is no shell-fire,
-one day where you don't turn up corpses with your tread! For two months
-I have never left the guns except to go forward and I have never been
-from under shell-fire. All night long as I have slept the ground had
-been shaken by the stamping of the guns--and now after two months,
-to come back to comparative normality! The reason for this privilege
-being granted was that the powers that be had come to the conclusion
-that it was time I had a bath. Since I sleep in my clothes and water
-is too valuable for washing anything but the face and hands, they were
-probably right in their guess at my condition.
-
-So with the greatest holiday of my life in prospect I went to the empty
-gunpit in which I sleep, and turned in. This morning I set out early
-with my servant, tramping back across the long, long battlefields which
-our boys have won. The mud was knee-deep in places, but we floundered
-on till we came to our old and deserted gun-position where my horses
-waited for me. From there I rode to the wagon-lines--the first time
-I've sat a horse since I came into action. Far behind me the thunder of
-winged murder grew more faint. The country became greener; trees even
-had leaves upon them which fluttered against the grey-blue sky. It was
-wonderful--like awaking from an appalling nightmare. My little beast
-was fresh and seemed to share my joy, for she stepped out bravely.
-
-When I arrived at the wagon-lines I would not wait--I longed to see
-something even greener and quieter. My groom packed up some oats and
-away we went again. My first objective was the military baths; I lay in
-hot water for half-an-hour and read the advertisements of my book. As
-I lay there, for the first time since I've been out, I began to get a
-half-way true perspective of myself. What's left of the egotism of the
-author came to life, and--now laugh--I planned my next novel--planned
-it to the sound of men singing, because they were clean for the first
-time in months. I left my towels and soap with a military policeman, by
-the roadside, and went prancing off along country roads in search of
-the almost forgotten places where people don't kill one another. Was it
-imagination? There seemed to me to be a different look in the faces of
-the men I met--for the time being they were neither hunters nor hunted.
-There were actually cows in the fields. At one point, where pollarded
-trees stand like a Hobbema sketch against the sky, a group of officers
-were coursing a hare, following a big black hound on horseback. We lost
-our way. A drenching rainstorm fell over us--we didn't care; and we saw
-as we looked back a most beautiful thing--a rainbow over green fields.
-It was as romantic as the first rainbow in childhood.
-
-All day I have been seeing lovely and familiar things as though for
-the first time. I've been a sort of Lazarus, rising out of his tomb
-and praising God at the sound of a divine voice. You don't know how
-exquisite a ploughed field can look, especially after rain, unless you
-have feared that you might never see one again....
-
-Life, how I love you! What a wonderful, kindly thing I could make of
-you to-night. Strangely the vision has come to me of all that you
-mean. Now I could write. So soon you may go from me or be changed into
-a form of existence which all my training has taught me to dread. After
-death is there only nothingness? I think that for those who have missed
-love in this life there must be compensations--the little children whom
-they ought to have had, perhaps. To-day, after so many weeks, I have
-seen little children again.
-
-And yet, so strange a havoc does this war work that, if I have to "Go
-West," I shall go _proudly_ and quietly. I have seen too many men die
-bravely to make a fuss if my turn comes. A mixed passenger list old
-Father Charon must have each night--Englishmen, Frenchmen, and Huns.
-To-morrow I shall have another sight of the greenness and then--the
-guns.
-
-I don't know whether I have been able to make any of my emotions clear
-to you in my letters. Terror has a terrible fascination. Up to now I
-have always been afraid--afraid of small fears. At last I meet fear
-itself and it stings my pride into an unpremeditated courage.
-
-I've just had a pile of letters from you all. How ripping it is to be
-remembered! Letters keep one civilized.
-
-It's late and I'm very tired. God bless you each and all.
-
- CON.
-
-
-VI--LIVING WITH DEATH AS YOUR COMRADE
-
- December 20th, 1916.
- DEAR MR. A. D.:
-
-I've just come in from an argument with Fritz when your chocolate
-formed my meal. You were very kind to think of me and to send it,
-and you were extraordinarily understanding in the letter that you
-sent me. One's life out here is like a pollarded tree--all the lower
-branches are gone--one gazes on great nobilities, on the fascinating
-horror of Eternity sometimes--I said horror, but it's often fine in
-its spaciousness--one gazes on many inverted splendors of Titans,
-but it's giddy work being so high and rarefied, and all the gentle
-past seems gone. That's why it is pleasant in this grimy anonymity of
-death and courage to get reminders, such as your letter, that one was
-once localized and had a familiar history. If I come back, I shall be
-like Rip Van Winkle, or a Robinson Crusoe--like any and all of the
-creatures of legend and history to whom abnormality has grown to seem
-normal. If you can imagine yourself living in a world in which every
-day is a demonstration of a Puritan's conception of what happens when
-the last trump sounds, then you have some idea of my queer situation.
-One has come to a point when death seems very inconsiderable and
-only failure to do one's duty is an utter loss. Love and the future,
-and all the sweet and tender dreams of bygone days are like a house
-in which the blinds are lowered and from which the sight has gone.
-Landscapes have lost their beauty, everything God-made and man-made
-is destroyed except man's power to endure with a smile the things he
-once most dreaded, because he believes that only so may he be righteous
-in his own eyes. How one has longed for that sure confidence in the
-petty failings of little living--the confidence to believe that he
-can stand up and suffer for principle! God has given all men who are
-out here that opportunity--the supremest that can be hoped for--so,
-in spite of exile, Christmas for most of us will be a happy day. Does
-one see more truly life's worth on a battlefield? I often ask myself
-that question. Is the contempt that is hourly shown for life the real
-standard of life's worth? I shrug my shoulders at my own unanswerable
-questions--all I know is that I move daily with men who have
-everything to live for who, nevertheless, are urged by an unconscious
-magnanimity to die. I don't think any of our dead pity themselves--but
-they would have done so if they had faltered in their choice. One lives
-only from sunrise to sunrise, but there's a more real happiness in this
-brief living than I ever knew before, because it is so exactingly worth
-while.
-
- Thank you again for your kindness.
- Very sincerely yours,
- C. D.
-
-
-VII--GLORY OF WAR IS IN MEN'S SOULS
-
- February 2d.
-
-The gramophone is playing an air from _La Tosca_ to which the guns beat
-out a bass accompaniment. I close my eyes and picture the many times
-I have heard the (probably) German orchestras of Broadway Joy Palaces
-play that same music. How incongruous that I should be listening to
-it here and under these circumstances! It must have been listened to
-so often by gay crowds in the beauty places of the world. A romantic
-picture grows up in my mind of a blue night, the laughter of youth
-in evening dress, lamps twinkling through trees, far off the velvety
-shadow of water and mountains, and as a voice to it all, that air
-from _La Tosca_. I can believe that the silent people near by raise
-themselves up in their snow-beds to listen, each one recalling some
-ecstatic moment before the dream of life was shattered.
-
-There's a picture in the Pantheon at Paris, I remember; I believe
-it's called _To Glory_. One sees all the armies of the ages charging
-out of the middle distance with Death riding at their head. The only
-glory that I have discovered in this war is in men's hearts--it's not
-external. Were one to paint the spirit of this war he would depict a
-mud landscape, blasted trees, an iron sky; wading through the slush and
-shell-holes would come a file of bowed figures, more like outcasts from
-the Embankment than soldiers. They're loaded down like pack animals,
-their shoulders are rounded, they're wearied to death, but they go
-on and go on. There's no "To Glory" about what we're doing out here;
-there's no flash of swords or splendor of uniforms. There are only
-very tired men determined to carry on. The war will be won by tired
-men who could never again pass an insurance test, a mob of broken
-counter-jumpers, ragged ex-plumbers and quite unheroic persons. We're
-civilians in khaki, but because of the ideals for which we fight we've
-managed to acquire soldiers' hearts.
-
-My flow of thought was interrupted by a burst of song in which I
-was compelled to join. We're all writing letters around one candle;
-suddenly the O. C. looked up and began, "God Be with You Till We Meet
-Again." We sang it in parts. It was in Southport, when I was about nine
-years old, that I first heard that sung. You had gone for your first
-trip to America, leaving a very lonely family behind you. We children
-were scared to death that you'd be drowned. One evening, coming back
-from a walk on the sand-hills, we heard voices singing in a garden,
-"God Be with You Till We Meet Again." The words and the soft dusk, and
-the vague figures in the English summer garden, seemed to typify the
-terror of all partings. We've said good-bye so often since, and God has
-been with us. I don't think any parting was more hard than our last
-at the prosaic dock-gates with the cold wind of duty blowing, and the
-sentry barring your entrance, and your path leading back to America
-while mine led on to France. But you three were regular soldiers--just
-as much soldiers as we chaps who were embarking. One talks of our
-armies in the field, but there are the other armies, millions strong,
-of mothers and fathers and sisters, who keep their eyes dry, treasure
-muddy letters beneath their pillows, offer up prayers and wait, wait,
-wait so eternally for God to open another door.
-
-To-morrow I again go forward, which means rising early and taking a
-long plod through the snows; that's one reason for not writing any
-more, and another is that our one poor candle is literally on its last
-legs.
-
-Your poem, written years ago when the poor were marching in London, is
-often in my mind:
-
- "Yesterday and to-day
- Have been heavy with labor and sorrow;
- I should faint if I did not see
- The day that is after to-morrow."
-
-And there's that last verse which prophesied utterly the spirit in
-which we men at the Front are fighting to-day:
-
- "And for me, with spirit elate
- The mire and the fog I press through,
- For Heaven shines under the cloud
- Of the day that is after to-morrow."
-
-We civilians who have been taught so long to love our enemies and do
-good to them who hate us--much too long ever to make professional
-soldiers--are watching with our hearts in our eyes for that day which
-comes after to-morrow. Meanwhile we plod on determinedly, hoping for
-the hidden glory.
-
- Yours very lovingly,
- CON.
-
-
-VIII--MEN MARCHING TO "CALVARY"
-
- February 4th, 1917.
- DEAR MR. B.:
-
-War's a queer game--not at all what one's civilian mind imagined; it's
-far more horrible and less exciting. The horrors which the civilian
-mind dreads most are mutilation and death. Out here we rarely think
-about them; the thing which wears on one most and calls out his gravest
-courage is the endless sequence of physical discomfort. Not to be
-able to wash, not to be able to sleep, to have to be wet and cold
-for long periods at a stretch, to find mud on your person, in your
-food, to have to stand in mud, see mud, sleep in mud and to continue
-to smile--that's what tests courage. Our chaps are splendid. They're
-not the hair-brained idiots that some war-correspondents depict from
-day to day. They're perfectly sane people who know to a fraction what
-they're up against, but who carry on with a grim good-nature and a
-determination to win with a smile. I never before appreciated as I do
-to-day the latent capacity for big-hearted endurance that is in the
-heart of every man. Here are apparently quite ordinary chaps--chaps who
-washed, liked theatres, loved kiddies and sweethearts, had a zest for
-life--they're bankrupt of all pleasures except the supreme pleasure of
-knowing that they're doing the ordinary and finest thing of which they
-are capable. There are millions to whom the mere consciousness of doing
-their duty has brought an heretofore unexperienced peace of mind. For
-myself I was never happier than I am at present; there's a novel zip
-added to life by the daily risks and the knowledge that at last you're
-doing something into which no trace of selfishness enters. One can only
-die once; the chief concern that matters is _how_ and not _when_ you
-die. I don't pity the weary men who have attained eternal leisure in
-the corruption of our shell-furrowed battles; they "went West" in their
-supreme moment. The men I pity are those who could not hear the call of
-duty and whose consciences will grow more flabby every day. With the
-brutal roar of the first Prussian gun the cry came to the civilized
-world, "Follow thou me," just as truly as it did in Palestine. Men
-went to their Calvary singing Tipperary, rubbish, rhymed doggerel,
-but their spirit was equal to that of any Christian martyr in a Roman
-amphitheatre. "Greater love hath no man than this, that he lay down his
-life for his friend." Our chaps are doing that consciously, willingly,
-almost without bitterness towards their enemies; for the rest it
-doesn't matter whether they sing hymns or ragtime. They've followed
-their ideal--freedom--and died for it. A former age expressed itself in
-Gregorian chants; ours, no less sincerely, disguises its feelings in
-ragtime.
-
-Since September I have been less than a month out of action. The game
-doesn't pall as time goes on--it fascinates. We've got to win so that
-men may never again be tortured by the ingenious inquisition of modern
-warfare. The winning of the war becomes a personal affair to the chaps
-who are fighting. The world which sits behind the lines, buys extra
-specials of the daily papers and eats three square meals a day, will
-never know what this other world has endured for its safety, for no
-man of this other world will have the vocabulary in which to tell. But
-don't for a moment mistake me--we're grimly happy.
-
-What a serial I'll write for you if I emerge from this turmoil! Thank
-God, my outlook is all altered. I don't want to live any longer--only
-to live well.
-
- Good-bye and good luck.
- Yours,
- CONINGSBY DAWSON.
-
-
-IX--AMERICA MUST SACRIFICE--OR DIE
-
- February 6th, 1917.
- MY VERY DEAR M.:
-
-I read in to-day's paper that U. S. A. threatens to come over and
-help us. I wish she would. The very thought of the possibility fills
-me with joy. I've been lightheaded all day. It would be so ripping
-to live among people, when the war is ended, of whom you need not be
-ashamed. Somewhere deep down in my heart I've felt a sadness ever
-since I've been out here, at America's lack of gallantry--it's so easy
-to find excuses for not climbing to Calvary; sacrifice was always
-too noble to be sensible. I would like to see the country of our
-adoption become splendidly irrational even at this eleventh hour in
-the game; it would redeem her in the world's eyes. She doesn't know
-what she's losing. From these carcase-strewn fields of khaki there's
-a cleansing wind blowing for the nations that have died. Though there
-was only one Englishman left to carry on the race when this war is
-victoriously ended, I would give more for the future of England than
-for the future of America with her ninety millions whose sluggish
-blood was not stirred by the call of duty. It's bigness of soul that
-makes nations great and not population. Money, comfort, limousines and
-ragtime are not the requisites of men when heroes are dying. I hate
-the thought of Fifth Avenue, with its pretty faces, its fashions, its
-smiling frivolity. America as a great nation will die, as all coward
-civilizations have died, unless she accepts the stigmata of sacrifice,
-which a divine opportunity again offers her.
-
-If it were but possible to show those ninety millions one battlefield
-with its sprawling dead, its pity, its marvellous forgetfulness of
-self, I think then--no, they wouldn't be afraid. Fear isn't the emotion
-one feels--they would experience the shame of living when so many have
-shed their youth freely. This war is a prolonged moment of exultation
-for most of us--we are redeeming ourselves in our own eyes. To lay
-down one's life for one's friend once seemed impossible. All that is
-altered. We lay down our lives that the future generations may be good
-and kind, and so we can contemplate oblivion with quiet eyes. Nothing
-that is noblest that the Greeks taught is unpractised by the simplest
-men out here to-day. They may die childless, but their example will
-father the imagination of all the coming ages. These men, in the noble
-indignation of a great ideal, face a worse hell than the most ingenious
-of fanatics ever planned or plotted. Men die scorched like moths in a
-furnace, blown to atoms, gassed, tortured. And again other men step
-forward to take their places well knowing what will be their fate.
-Bodies may die, but the spirit of England grows greater as each new
-soul speeds upon its way. The battened souls of America will die and be
-buried. I believe the decision of the next few days will prove to be
-the crisis in America's nationhood. If she refuses the pain which will
-save her, the cancer of self-despising will rob her of her life.
-
-This feeling is strong with us. It's past midnight, but I could write
-of nothing else to-night.
-
- God bless you.
- Yours ever,
- CON.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[6] All numerals relate to stories herein told--not to chapters from
-original sources.
-
-
-
-
-STORIES OF THE WAR PHOTOGRAPHERS IN BELGIUM
-
-_An American at the Battlefront_
-
-_Told by Albert Rhys Williams, War Correspondent_
-
- This narrator tells of his experiences with the spy hunters of
- Belgium. He was swept into the war-stricken country where he was
- arrested by the Germans, sweating under the German third degree,
- spending a fearful night on a prison floor, suffering with his
- fellow prisoners the torments of a trial as a spy in a German
- military court in Brussels, and finally securing his liberty. He
- has collected his experiences in a volume under title "In the Claws
- of the German Eagle," thus preserving in book form his remarkable
- articles which were first published in The Outlook. A few episodes
- from his amazing adventures are here given by permission of the
- publishers, _E. P. Dutton and Company_: Copyright 1917.
-
-[7] I--STORY OF AN AMERICAN IN GHENT
-
-In the last days of September, the Belgians moving in and through Ghent
-in their rainbow-colored costumes, gave to the city a distinctively
-holiday touch. The clatter of cavalry hoofs and the throb of racing
-motors rose above the voices of the mobs that surged along the streets.
-
-Service was normal in the cafes. To the accompaniment of music and
-clinking glasses the dress-suited waiter served me a five-course lunch
-for two francs. It was uncanny to see this blaze of life while the city
-sat under the shadow of a grave disaster. At any moment the gray German
-tide might break out of Brussels and pour its turbid flood of soldiers
-through these very streets. Even now a Taube hovered in the sky, and
-from the skirmish-line an occasional ambulance rumbled in with its
-crimsoned load.
-
-I chanced into Gambrinus' cafe and was lost in the babbling sea of
-French and Flemish. Above the melee of sounds, however, I caught a
-gladdening bit of English. Turning about, I espied a little group of
-men whose plain clothes stood out in contrast to the colored uniforms
-of officers and soldiers crowded into the cafe. Wearied of my efforts
-at conversing in a foreign tongue, I went over and said:
-
-"Do you really speak English?"
-
-"Well, rather!" answered the one who seemed to act as leader of the
-group. "We are the only ones now and it will be scarcer still around
-here in a few days."
-
-"Why?" I asked.
-
-"Because Ghent will be in German hands."
-
-This brought an emphatic denial from one of his confreres who insisted
-that the Germans had already reached the end of their rope. A certain
-correspondent, joining in the argument, came in for a deal of banter
-for taking the war _de luxe_ in a good hotel far from the front.
-
-"What do you know about the war?" they twitted him. "You've pumped all
-your best stories out of the refugees ten miles from the front, after
-priming them with a glass of beer."
-
-They were a group of young war-photographers to whom danger was a
-magnet. Though none of them had yet reached the age of thirty, they
-had seen service in all the stirring events of Europe and even around
-the globe. Where the clouds lowered and the seas tossed, there they
-flocked. Like stormy petrels they rushed to the center of the swirling
-world. That was their element. A freelance, a representative of the
-Northcliffe press, and two movie-men comprised this little group and
-made an island of English amidst the general babel.
-
-Like most men who have seen much of the world, they had ceased to
-be cynics. When I came to them out of the rain, carrying no other
-introduction than a dripping overcoat, they welcomed me into their
-company and whiled away the evening with tales of the Balkan wars.
-
-They were in high spirits over their exploits of the previous day, when
-the Germans, withdrawing from Melle on the outskirts of the city, had
-left a long row of cottages still burning. As the enemy troops pulled
-out the further end of the street, the movie men came in at the other
-and caught the pictures of the still blazing houses. We went down to
-view them on the screen. To the gentle throbbing of drums and piano,
-the citizens of Ghent viewed the unique spectacle of their own suburbs
-going up in smoke.
-
-At the end of the show they invited me to fill out their automobile
-on the morrow. Nearly every other motor had been commandeered by the
-authorities for the "Service Militaire" and bore on the front the
-letters "S. M." Our car was by no means in the blue-ribbon class. It
-had a hesitating disposition and the authorities, regarding it as more
-of a liability than an asset, passed it over.
-
-But the correspondents counted it a great stroke of fortune to have any
-car at all; and, that they might continue to have it, they kept it at
-night carefully locked in a room in the hotel. They had their chauffeur
-under like supervision. He was one of their kind, and with the cunning
-of a diplomat obtained the permit to buy petrol, most precious of all
-treasures in the field of war. Indeed, gasoline, along with courage and
-discipline, completed the trinity of success in the military mind.
-
-
-II--STORIES OF THE WAR PHOTOGRAPHERS IN BELGIUM
-
-With the British flag flying at the front, we sped away next morning
-on the road to Termonde. At Melle we came upon the blazing cottages
-we had seen pictured the night before. Here we encountered a roving
-band of Belgian soldiers who were in a free and careless mood and
-evinced a ready willingness to put themselves at our disposal. Under
-the command of the photographers, they charged across the fields with
-fixed bayonets, wriggled up through the grass, or, standing behind the
-trenches, blazed away with their guns at an imaginary enemy. They did
-some good acting, grim and serious as death. All except one.
-
-This youth couldn't suppress his sense of humor. He could not, or would
-not, keep from laughing, even when he was supposed to be blowing the
-head off a Boche. He was properly disciplined and put out of the game,
-and we went on with our manoeuvers to the accompaniment of the clicking
-cameras until the photographers had gathered in a fine lot of realistic
-fighting-line pictures.
-
-One of the photographers sat stolidly in the automobile smoking his
-cigarette while the others were reaping their harvest.
-
-"Why don't you take these too?" I asked.
-
-"Oh," he replied, "I've been sending in so much of that stuff that I
-just got a telegram from my paper saying, 'Pension off that Belgian
-regiment which is doing stunts in the trenches.'"
-
-While his little army rested from their manoeuvers the
-Director-in-Chief turned to me and said:
-
-"Wouldn't you like to have a photograph of yourself in these
-war-surroundings, just to take home as a souvenir?"
-
-That appealed to me. After rejecting some commonplace suggestions, he
-exclaimed: "I have it. Shot as a German Spy. There's the wall to stand
-up against; and we'll pick a crack firing-squad out of these Belgians.
-A little bit of all right, eh?"
-
-I acquiesced in the plan and was led over to the wall while a movie-man
-whipped out a handkerchief and tied it over my eyes. The director
-then took a firing squad in hand. He had but recently witnessed
-the execution of a spy where he had almost burst with a desire to
-photograph the scene. It had been excruciating torture to restrain
-himself. But the experience had made him feel conversant with the
-etiquette of shooting a spy, as it was being done amongst the very best
-firing-squads. He made it now stand him in good stead.
-
-"Aim right across the bandage," the director coached them. I could hear
-one of the soldiers laughing excitedly as he was warming up to the
-rehearsal. It occurred to me that I was reposing a lot of confidence
-in a stray band of soldiers. Some one of those Belgians, gifted with a
-lively imagination, might get carried away with the suggestion and act
-as if I really were a German spy.
-
-"Shoot the blooming blighter in the eye," said one movie man playfully.
-
-"Bally good idea!" exclaimed the other one approvingly, while one eager
-actor realistically clicked his rifle-hammer. That was altogether too
-much. I tore the bandage from my eyes, exclaiming:
-
-"It would be a bally good idea to take those cartridges out first."
-Some fellow might think his cartridge was blank or try to fire wild,
-just as a joke in order to see me jump. I wasn't going to take any risk
-and flatly refused to play my part until the cartridges were ejected.
-Even when the bandage was readjusted "Didn't-know-it-was-loaded"
-stories still were haunting me. In a moment, however, it was over and
-I was promised my picture within a fortnight.
-
-A week later I picked up the London _Daily Mirror_ from a news-stand.
-It had the caption:
-
- BELGIAN SOLDIERS SHOOT A GERMAN SPY CAUGHT AT
- TERMONDE ... PICTURE
-
-I opened up the paper and what was my surprise to see a big spread
-picture of myself, lined up against that row of Melle cottages and
-being shot for the delectation of the British public. There is the same
-long raincoat that runs as a _motif_ through all the other pictures.
-Underneath it were the words:
-
-"The Belgians have a short, sharp method of dealing with the Kaiser's
-rat-hole spies. This one was caught near Termonde and, after being
-blindfolded, the firing-squad soon put an end to his inglorious career."
-
-One would not call it fame exactly, even though I played the star-role.
-But it is a source of some satisfaction to have helped a royal lot
-of fellows to a first-class scoop. As the "authentic spy-picture
-of the war," it has had a broadcast circulation. I have seen it in
-publications ranging all the way from _The Police Gazette to Collier's
-Photographic History of the European War_. In a university club I once
-chanced upon a group gathered around this identical picture. They were
-discussing the psychology of this "poor devil" in the moments before
-he was shot. It was a further source of satisfaction to step in and
-arbitrarily contradict all their conclusions and, having shown them how
-totally mistaken they were, proceed to tell them exactly how the victim
-felt. This high-handed manner nettled one fellow terribly:
-
-"Not so arbitrary, my friend!" he said. "You haven't any right to be so
-devilish cock-sure."
-
-"Haven't I?" I replied. "Who has any better right? I happen to be that
-identical man!"
-
-But that little episode has been of real value to me. It is said that
-if one goes through the motions he gets the emotions. I believe that I
-have an inkling of how a man feels when he momentarily expects a volley
-of cold lead to turn his skull into a sieve.
-
-
-III--HOW CAMERA MEN RISK THEIR LIVES
-
-Most of the pictures which the public casually gazes on have been
-secured at a price--and a large one, too. The names of these men who
-go to the front with cameras, rather than with rifles or pens, are
-generally unknown. They are rarely found beneath the pictures, yet
-where would be our vivid impression of courage in daring and of skill
-in doing, of cunning strategy upon the field of battle, of wounded
-soldiers sacrificing for their comrades, if we had no pictures? A few
-pictures are faked, but behind most pictures there is another tale of
-daring and of strategy, and that is the tale concerning the man who
-took it. That very day thrice these same men risked their lives.
-
-The apparatus loaded in the car, we were off again. Past a few
-barricades of paving-stones and wagons, past the burned houses which
-marked the place where the Germans had come within five miles of Ghent,
-we encountered some uniformed Belgians who looked quite as dismal and
-dispirited as the fog which hung above the fields. They were the famous
-Guarde Civique of Belgium. Our Union Jack, flapping in the wind, was
-very likely quite the most thrilling spectacle they had seen in a week,
-and they hailed it with a cheer and a cry of "_Vive l'Angleterre!_"
-(Long live England!) The Guarde Civique had a rather inglorious time
-of it. Wearisomely in their wearisome-looking uniform, they stood
-for hours on their guns or marched and counter-marched in dreary
-patrolling, often doomed not even to scent the battle from afar off.
-
-Whenever we were called to a halt for the examination of our passports,
-these men crowded around and begged for newspapers. We held up our
-stock, and they would clamor for the ones with pictures. The English
-text was unintelligible to most of them, but the pictures they could
-understand, and they bore them away to enjoy the sight of other
-soldiers fighting, even if they themselves were denied that excitement.
-Our question to them was always the same, "Where are the Germans?"
-
-Out of the conflicting reports it was hard to tell whether the Germans
-were heading this way or not. That they were expected was shown by the
-sign-posts whose directions had just been obliterated by fresh paint--a
-rather futile operation, because the Germans had better maps and plans
-of the region than the Belgians themselves, maps which showed every
-by-path, well and barn. The chauffeur's brother had been shot in his
-car by the Germans but a week before, and he didn't relish the idea of
-thus flaunting the enemy's flag along a road where some German scouting
-party might appear at any moment. The Union Jack had done good service
-in getting us easy passage so far, but the driver was not keen for
-going further with it.
-
-It was proposed to turn the car around and back it down the road, as
-had been done the previous day. Thus the car would be headed in the
-home direction, and at sight of the dreaded uniform we could make a
-quick leap for safety. At this juncture, however, I produced a small
-Stars and Stripes, which the chauffeur hailed with delight, and we
-continued our journey now under the aegis of a neutral flag.
-
-It might have secured temporary safety, but only temporary; for if the
-Englishmen with only British passports had fallen into the hands of the
-Germans, like their unfortunate kinsmen who did venture too far into
-the war zone, they, too, would have had a chance to cool their ardor
-in some detention-camp of Germany. This cheerful prospect was in the
-mind of these men, for, when we espied coming around a distant corner
-two gray-looking men on horseback, they turned white as the chauffeur
-cried, "Uhlans!"
-
-It is a question whether the car or our hearts came to a dead
-standstill first. Our shock was unnecessary. They proved to be
-Belgians, and assured us that the road was clear all the way to
-Termonde; and, except for an occasional peasant tilling his fields,
-the countryside was quite deserted until at Grembergen we came upon
-an unending procession of refugees streaming down the road. They were
-all coming out of Termonde. Termonde, after being taken and retaken,
-bombarded and burned, was for the moment neutral territory. A Belgian
-commandant had allowed the refugees that morning to return and gather
-what they might from among the ruins.
-
-In the early morning, then, they had gone into the city, and now
-at high noon they were pouring out, a great procession of the
-dispossessed. They came tracking their way to where--God only knows.
-All they knew was that in their hearts was set the fear of Uhlans, and
-in the sky the smoke and flames of their burning homesteads. They came
-laden with their lares and penates,--mainly dogs, feather beds, and
-crayon portraits of their ancestors.
-
-
-IV--WHEN LENS HAS A HEART
-
-Women came carrying on their heads packs which looked like their entire
-household paraphernalia. The men were more unassuming, and, as a rule,
-carried a package considerably lighter and comporting more with their
-superior masculine dignity. I recall one little woman in particular.
-She was bearing a burden heavy enough to send a strong American athlete
-staggering down to the ground, while at her side majestically marched
-her faithful knight, bearing a birdcage, and there wasn't any bird in
-it, either.
-
-Nothing could be more mirth-provoking than that sight; yet, strangely
-enough, the most tear-compelling memory of the war is connected with
-another birdcage. Two children rummaging through their ruined home dug
-it out of the debris. In it was their little pet canary. While fire and
-smoke rolled through the house it had beat its wings against the bars
-in vain. Its prison had become its tomb. Its feathers were but slightly
-singed, yet it was dead with that pathetic finality which attaches
-itself to only a dead bird--its silver songs and flutterings, once the
-delight of the children, now stilled forever.
-
-The photographers had long looked for what they termed a first-class
-sob-picture. Here it was _par excellence_. The larger child stood
-stroking the feathers of her pet and murmuring over and over "Poor
-Annette," "Poor Annette!" Then the smaller one snuggling the limp
-little thing against her neck wept inconsolably.
-
-Instead of seizing their opportunity, the movie man was clearing his
-throat while the freelance was busy on what he said was a cinder in
-his eye. Yet this very man had brought back from the Balkan War of
-1907 a prime collection of horrors; corpses thrown into the death-cart
-with arms and legs sticking out like so much stubble; the death-cart
-creeping away with its ghastly load; and the dumping together of bodies
-of men and beasts into a pit to be eaten by the lime. This man who had
-gone through all this with good nerve was now touched to tears by two
-children crying over their pet canary. There are some things that are
-too much for the heart of even a war-photographer.
-
-To give the whole exodus the right tragic setting, one is tempted to
-write that tears were streaming down all the faces of the refugees,
-but on the contrary, indeed, most of them carried a smile and a pipe,
-and trudged stolidly along, much as though bound for a fair. Some of
-our pictures show laughing refugees. That may not be fair, for man is
-so constituted that the muscles of his face automatically relax to the
-click of the camera. But as I recall that pitiful procession, there was
-in it very little outward expression of sorrow.
-
-Undoubtedly there was sadness enough in all their hearts, but people in
-Europe have learned to live on short rations; they rarely indulge in
-luxuries like weeping, but bear the most unwonted afflictions as though
-they were the ordinary fortunes of life. War has set a new standard
-for grief. So these victims passed along the road, but not before the
-record of their passing was etched for ever on our moving-picture
-films. The coming generation will not have to reconstruct the scene
-from the colored accounts of the journalist, but with their own eyes
-they can see the hegira of the homeless as it really was.
-
-The resignation of the peasant in the face of the great calamity was a
-continual source of amazement to us. Zola in "_Le Debacle_" puts into
-his picture of the battle of Sedan an old peasant plowing on his farm
-in the valley. While shells go screaming overhead he placidly drives
-his old white horse through the accustomed furrows. One naturally
-presumed that this was a dramatic touch of the great novelist. But
-similar incidents we saw in this Great War over and over again.
-
-
-V--A THOUSAND HORSES STRAIN AT THEIR BRIDLES
-
-We were with Consul van Hee one morning early before the clinging veil
-of sleep had lifted from our spirits or the mists from the low-lying
-meadows. Without warning our car shot through a bank of fog into a
-spectacle of mediaeval splendor--a veritable Field of the Cloth of Gold,
-spread out on the green plains of Flanders.
-
-A thousand horses strained at their bridles while their thousand
-riders in great fur busbies loomed up almost like giants. A thousand
-pennons stirred in the morning air while the sun burning through the
-mists glinted on the tips of as many lances. The crack Belgian cavalry
-divisions had been gathered here just behind the firing-lines in
-readiness for a sortie; the Lancers in their cherry and green and the
-Guides in their blue and gold making a blaze of color.
-
-It was as if in a trance we had been carried back to a tourney of
-ancient chivalry--this was before privations and the new drab uniforms
-had taken all glamor out of the war. As we gazed upon the glittering
-spectacle the order from the commander came to us:
-
-"Back, back out of danger!"
-
-"Forward!" was the charge to the Lancers.
-
-The field-guns rumbled into line and each rider unslung his carbine.
-Putting spurs to the horses, the whole line rode past saluting our
-Stars and Stripes with a "_Vive L'Amerique_." Bringing up the rear two
-cassocked priests served to give this pageantry a touch of prophetic
-grimness.
-
-And yet as the cavalcade swept across the fields thrilling us with its
-color and its action, the nearby peasants went on spreading fertilizer
-quite as calm and unconcerned as we were exhilarated.
-
-"Stupid," "Clods," "Souls of oxen," we commented, yet a protagonist of
-the peasant might point out that it was perhaps as noble and certainly
-quite as useful to be held by a passion for the soil as to be caught by
-the glamor of men riding out to slaughter. And Zola puts this in the
-mind of his peasants.
-
-"Why should I lose a day? Soldiers must fight, but folks must live. It
-is for me to keep the corn growing."
-
-Deep down into the soil the peasant strikes his roots. Urban people can
-never comprehend when these roots are cut away how hopelessly lost and
-adrift this European peasant in particular becomes. Wicked as the Great
-War has seemed to us in its bearing down upon these innocent folks, yet
-we can never understand the cruelty that they have suffered in being
-uprooted from the land and sent forth to become beggars and wanderers
-upon the highroads of the world.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[7] All numerals relate to stories herein told--not to chapters from
-original sources.
-
-
-
-
-TALES OF THE FIRST BRITISH EXPEDITIONARY FORCE TO FRANCE
-
-_Impressions of a Subaltern_
-
-_Told by "Casualty" (Name of Soldier Suppressed)_
-
- This is another of the soldiers' tales of the Great War. This
- soldier tells thirty-six fascinating experiences in which death is
- defied. He describes: "The Advance to Mons"; "Sir John French";
- "The Crossing of the Marne"; "The Crossing of the Aisne"; "The Jaws
- of Death," among his many adventures. The story here told gives his
- impressions on "Leaving England." It is reprinted from his volume
- "Contemptible," by permission of his publishers, _J. B. Lippincott
- Company_.
-
-[8] I--WHEN THE FIRST BATTALION SWUNG OUT
-
-No cheers, no handkerchiefs, no bands. Nothing that even suggested
-the time-honored scene of soldiers leaving home to fight the Empire's
-battles. Parade was at midnight. Except for the lighted windows of the
-barracks, and the rush of hurrying feet, all was dark and quiet. It was
-more like ordinary night operations than the dramatic departure of a
-Unit of the First British Expeditionary Force to France.
-
-As the Battalion swung into the road, the Subaltern could not help
-thinking that this was indeed a queer send-off. A few sergeants' wives,
-standing at the corner of the Parade ground, were saying good-bye to
-their friends as they passed. "Good-bye, Bill;" "Good luck, Sam!" Not a
-hint of emotion in their voices. One might have thought that husbands
-and fathers went away to risk their lives in war every day of the week.
-And if the men were at all moved at leaving what had served for their
-home, they hid it remarkably well. Songs were soon breaking out from
-all parts of the column of route.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In an hour the station was reached. An engine was shunting up and down,
-piecing the troop trains together, and in twenty minutes the Battalion
-was shuffling down the platform, the empty trains on either side.
-Two companies were to go to each train, twelve men to a third-class
-compartment, N.C.O.s second class, Officers first. As soon as the men
-were in their seats, the Subaltern made his way to the seat he had
-"bagged," and prepared to go to sleep. Another fellow pushed his head
-through the window and wondered what had become of the regimental
-transport. Somebody else said he didn't know or care; his valise was
-always lost, he said; they always make a point of it.
-
-Soon after, they were all asleep, and the train pulled slowly out of
-the station.
-
-When the Subaltern awoke it was early morning, and they were moving
-through Hampshire fields at a rather sober pace. He was assailed with
-a poignant feeling of annoyance and resentment that this war should
-be forced upon them. England looked so good in the morning sunshine,
-and the comforts of English civilization were so hard to leave. The
-sinister uncertainty of the Future brooded over them like a thunder
-cloud.
-
-Isolated houses thickened into clusters, streets sprang up, and soon
-they were in Southampton.
-
-The train pulled up at the Embarkation Station, quite close to the
-wharf to which some half-dozen steamers were moored. There was little
-or no delay. The Battalion fell straight into "massed formation," and
-began immediately to move on to one of the ships. The Colonel stood
-by the gangway talking to an Embarkation Officer. Everything was in
-perfect readiness, and the Subaltern was soon able to secure a berth.
-
-
-II--CROSSING THE CHANNEL ON TRANSPORTS
-
-There was plenty of excitement on deck while the horses of the
-regimental transport were being shipped into the hold.
-
-To induce "Light Draft," "Heavy Draft" horses and "Officers'
-Chargers"--in all some sixty animals--to trust themselves to be lowered
-into a dark and evil-smelling cavern, was no easy matter. Some shied
-from the gangway, neighing; others walked peaceably onto it, and,
-with a "thus far and no farther" expression in every line of their
-bodies, took up a firm stand, and had to be pushed into the hold with
-the combined weight of many men. Several of the transport section
-narrowly escaped death and mutilation at the hands, or rather hoofs,
-of the Officers' Chargers. Meanwhile a sentry, with fixed bayonet,
-was observed watching some Lascars, who were engaged in getting the
-transport on board. It appeared that the wretched fellows, thinking
-that they were to be taken to France and forced to fight the Germans,
-had deserted to a man on the previous night, and had had to be routed
-out of their hiding-places in Southampton.
-
-Not that such a small thing as that could upset for one moment the
-steady progress of the Embarkation of the Army. It was like a huge,
-slow-moving machine; there was a hint of the inexorable in its
-exactitude. Nothing had been forgotten--not even eggs for the Officers'
-breakfast in the Captain's cabin.
-
-Meanwhile the other ships were filling up. By midday they began to
-slide down the Solent, and guesses were being freely exchanged about
-the destination of the little flotilla. Some said Bolougne, others
-Calais; but the general opinion was Havre, though nobody knew for
-certain, for the Captain of the ship had not yet opened his sealed
-orders. The transports crept slowly along the coast of the Isle of
-Wight, but it was not until evening that the business of crossing the
-Channel was begun in earnest.
-
-The day had been lovely, and Officers and men had spent it mostly in
-sleeping and smoking upon the deck. Spirits had risen as the day grew
-older. For at dawn the cheeriest optimist is a pessimist, while at
-midday pessimists become optimists. In the early morning the German
-Army had been invincible. At lunch the Battalion was going to Berlin,
-on the biggest holiday of its long life!
-
-The Subaltern, still suffering from the after-effects of inoculation
-against enteric, which had been unfortunately augmented by a premature
-indulgence in fruit, and by the inability to rest during the rush of
-mobilization, did not spend a very happy night. The men fared even
-worse, for the smell of hot, cramped horses, steaming up from the lower
-deck, was almost unbearable. But their troubles were soon over, for by
-seven o'clock the boat was gliding through the crowded docks of Havre.
-
-Naturally most of the Mess had been in France before, but to Tommy it
-was a world undiscovered. The first impression made on the men was
-created by a huge negro working on the docks. He was greeted with roars
-of laughter, and cries of, "Hallo, Jack Johnson!" The red trousers of
-the French sentries, too, created a tremendous sensation. At length the
-right landing-stage was reached. Equipments were thrown on, and the
-Battalion was paraded on the dock.
-
-
-III--LANDING IN FRANCE--TOMMIES IN HAVRE
-
-The march through the cobbled streets of Havre rapidly developed into
-a fiasco. This was one of the first, if not the very first, landing of
-British Troops in France, and to the French it was a novelty, calling
-for a tremendous display of open-armed welcome. Children rushed from
-the houses, and fell upon the men crying for "souvenirs." Ladies
-pursued them with basins full of wine and what they were pleased to
-call beer. Men were literally carried from the ranks, under the eyes
-of their Officers, and borne in triumph into houses and inns. What
-with the heat of the day and the heaviness of the equipment and the
-after-effects of the noisome deck, the men could scarcely be blamed for
-availing themselves of such hospitality, though to drink intoxicants on
-the march is suicidal. Men "fell out," first by ones and twos, then by
-whole half-dozens and dozens. The Subaltern himself was scarcely strong
-enough to stagger up the long hills at the back of the town, let alone
-worrying about his men. The Colonel was aghast, and very furious. He
-couldn't understand it. (He was riding.)
-
-The camp was prepared for the troops in a wonderfully complete
-fashion--not the least thing seemed to have been forgotten. The men,
-stripped of their boots, coats and equipments, were resting in the
-shade of the tents. A caterer from Havre had come up to supply the
-Mess, and the Subaltern was able to procure from him a bottle of rather
-heady claret, which, as he was thirsty and exhausted, he consumed too
-rapidly, and found himself hopelessly inebriate. Luckily there was
-nothing to do, so he slept for many hours.
-
-Waking up in the cool of the evening he heard the voices of another
-Second-Lieutenant and a reservist Subaltern talking about some people
-he knew near his home. It was good to forget about wars and soldiers,
-and everything that filled so amply the present and future, and to lose
-himself in pleasant talk of pleasant things at home.... The dinner
-provided by the French caterer was very French, and altogether the
-last sort of meal that a young gentleman suffering from anti-enteric
-inoculation ought to have indulged in. Everything conspired to make him
-worse, and what with the heat and the malady, he spent a very miserable
-time.
-
-After about two days' stay, the Battalion moved away from the rest
-camp, and, setting out before dawn, marched back through those fatal
-streets of Havre, this time deserted in the moonlight, to a sort of
-shed, called by the French authorities a troop station. Here as usual
-the train was waiting, and the men had but to be put in. The carriages
-could not be called luxurious; to be frank, they were cattle-trucks.
-But it takes more than that to damp the spirits of Mr. Thomas Atkins.
-Cries imitating the lowing of cattle and the bleating of sheep broke
-out from the trucks!
-
-The train moved out of the depot, and wended its way in the most
-casual manner through the streets of Havre. This so amused Tommy that
-he roared with laughter. The people who rushed to give the train
-a send-off, with many cries of "_Vive les Anglais_." "_A bas les
-Bosches_," were greeted with more bleatings and brayings.
-
-
-IV--QUARTERED IN A BELGIAN WATER-MILL
-
-The journey through France was quite uneventful. Sleeping or reading
-the whole day through, the Subaltern only remembered Rouen, passed at
-about midday, and Amiens later in the evening. The train had paused at
-numerous villages on its way, and in every case there had been violent
-demonstrations of enthusiasm. In one case a young lady of prepossessing
-appearance had thrust her face through the window, and talked very
-excitedly and quite incomprehensibly, until one of the fellows in the
-carriage grasped the situation, leant forward, and did honor to the
-occasion. The damsel retired blushing.
-
-At Amiens various rumors were afloat. Somebody had heard the Colonel
-say the magic word "Liege." Pictures of battles to be fought that very
-night thrilled some of them not a little.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Dawn found the Battalion hungry, shivering and miserable, paraded by
-the side of the track, at a little wayside station called Wassigne. The
-train shunted away, leaving the Battalion with a positive feeling of
-desolation. A Staff Officer, rubbing sleep from his eyes, emerged from
-a little "estaminet" and gave the Colonel the necessary orders. During
-the march that ensued the Battalion passed through villages where the
-three other regiments in the Brigade were billeted. At length a village
-called Iron was reached, and their various billets were allotted to
-each Company.
-
-The Subaltern's Company settled down in a huge water-mill; its Officers
-being quartered in the miller's private house.
-
-A wash, a shave and a meal worked wonders.
-
-And so the journey was finished, and the Battalion found itself at
-length in the theater of operations.
-
- * * * * *
-
-I have tried in this chapter to give some idea of the ease and
-smoothness with which this delicate operation of transportation was
-carried out. The Battalions which composed the First Expeditionary
-Force had been spread in small groups over the whole length and breadth
-of Britain. They had been mobilized, embarked, piloted across the
-Channel in the face of an undefeated enemy fleet, rested, and trained
-to their various areas of concentration, to take their place by the
-side of their French Allies.
-
-All this was accomplished without a single hitch, and with a speed
-that was astonishing. When the time comes for the inner history of
-the war to be written, no doubt proper praise for these preliminary
-arrangements will be given to those who so eminently deserve it.
-
-
-V--AT MADAM MERE'S--BEFORE THE STORM
-
-Peace reigned for the next five days, the last taste of careless days
-that so many of those poor fellows were to have.
-
-A route march generally occupied the mornings, and a musketry parade
-the evenings. Meanwhile, the men were rapidly accustoming themselves to
-the new conditions. The Officers occupied themselves with polishing up
-their French, and getting a hold upon the reservists who had joined the
-Battalion on mobilization.
-
-The French did everything in their power to make the Battalion at home.
-Cider was given to the men in buckets. The Officers were treated like
-the best friends of the families with whom they were billeted. The
-fatted calf was not spared, and this in a land where there were not too
-many fatted calves.
-
-The Company "struck a particularly soft spot." The miller had gone
-to the war leaving behind him his wife, his mother and two children.
-Nothing they could do for the five Officers of the Company was too much
-trouble. Madame Mere resigned her bedroom to the Major and his second
-in command, while Madame herself slew the fattest of her chickens and
-rabbits for the meals of her hungry Officers.
-
-The talk that was indulged in must have been interesting, even though
-the French was halting and ungrammatical. Of all the companies' Messes,
-this one took the most serious view of the future, and earned for
-itself the nickname of "_Les Miserables_." The Senior Subaltern said
-openly that this calm preceded a storm. The papers they got--_Le Petit
-Parisien_ and such like--talked vaguely of a successful offensive
-on the extreme right: Muelhouse, it was said, had been taken. But of
-the left, of Belgium, there was silence. Such ideas as the Subaltern
-himself had on the strategical situation were but crude. The line of
-battle, he fancied, would stretch north and south, from Muelhouse to
-Liege. If it were true that Liege had fallen, he thought the left would
-rest successfully on Namur. The English Army, he imagined, was acting
-as "general reserve," behind the French line, and would not be employed
-until the time had arrived to hurl the last reserve into the melee, at
-the most critical point.
-
-And all the while, never a sound of firing, never a sight of the red
-and blue of the French uniforms. The war might have been two hundred
-miles away!
-
-Meanwhile Tommy on his marches was discovering things. Wonder of
-wonders, this curious people called "baccy" tabac! "And if yer wants a
-bit of bread yer awsks for pain, strewth!" He loved to hear the French
-gabble to him in their excited way; he never thought that reciprocally
-his talk was just as funny. The French matches earned unprintable
-names. But on the whole he admired sunny France with its squares of
-golden corn and vegetables, and when he passed a painted Crucifix with
-its cluster of flowering graves, he would say: "Golly, Bill, ain't it
-pretty? We oughter 'ave them at 'ome, yer know." And of course he kept
-on saying what he was going to do with "Kayser Bill."
-
-One night after the evening meal, the men of the Company gave a little
-concert outside the mill. The flower-scented twilight was fragrantly
-beautiful, and the mill stream gurgled a lullaby accompaniment as it
-swept past the trailing grass. Nor was there any lack of talent. One
-reservist, a miner since he had left the army, roared out several songs
-concerning the feminine element at the seaside, or voicing an inquiry
-as to a gentleman's companion on the previous night. Then, with an
-entire lack of appropriateness, another got up and recited "The Wreck
-of the _Titanic_" in a most touching and dramatic manner. Followed a
-song with a much appreciated chorus--
-
- "Though your heart may ache awhile,
- Never mind!
- Though your face may lose its smile,
- Never mind!
- For there's sunshine after rain,
- And then gladness follows pain,
- You'll be happy once again,
- Never mind!"
-
-The ditty deals with broken vows, and faithless hearts, and blighted
-lives; just the sort of song that Tommy loves to warble after a good
-meal in the evening. It conjured to the Subaltern's eyes the picture of
-the dainty little star who had sung it on the boards of the Coliseum.
-And to conclude, Madame's voice, French, and sonorously metallic,
-was heard in the dining-room striking up the "_Marseillaise_." Tommy
-did not know a word of it, but he yelled "March on" (a very good
-translation of "_Marchons_") and sang "lar lar" to the rest of the tune.
-
-Thus passed peacefully enough those five days--the calm before the
-storm.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[8] All numerals relate to stories herein told--not to chapters from
-original sources.
-
-
-
-
-IN THE HANDS OF THE ENEMY--EXPERIENCES OF A PRISONER OF WAR
-
-_Told by Benjamin G. O'Rorke, M. A., Chaplain to the Forces_
-
- This narrative reveals the actual scenes and experiences in a
- German prison where this British chaplain was incarcerated. He
- dedicates it "To my fellow prisoners, who already during twelve
- months have borne disappointment with patient resignation and
- insults with silent dignity: who have made the name of Britain
- respected in the heart of Germany." Nearly the whole of the diary
- on which this narrative is based was confiscated by the Germans
- when the writer was searched for the last time before his release.
- It was restored to him by post a few weeks later, bearing the mark
- showing that it had been passed by the censor. The diary has been
- published complete by _Longmans, Green and Company_, with whose
- permission the following interesting extracts are given.
-
-[9] I--STORY OF THE CONSECRATED SWORDS
-
-On Saturday, August 15, 1914, we entrained, whither we knew not. The
-railway officials either did not know or would not tell, but we were
-not long before we discovered that our destination was Southampton.
-
-Here we spent a wearisome afternoon and evening at the docks, embarking
-horses and wagons on board our transport, a cattle-boat named
-_Armenian_, which has since been sunk by the Germans. With us embarked
-contingents of the 18th Hussars and 9th Lancers. It was a calm journey,
-and there were no signs of sea-sickness. Pipes and cigarettes were
-freely smoked, a good sign on the first day of a voyage. Once more our
-destination was kept a profound secret, even from the captain, until we
-got well out to sea. It being Sunday, we had a service on board, which
-gave me a golden opportunity of addressing my flock for the first time.
-Speaking on the text, "Whoso feareth the Lord shall not be afraid, and
-shall not play the coward," Eccl. xxiv. 14 (R.V.), I reminded them that
-we were setting out to take our part in the greatest war in history.
-
-After the service on deck, a number of officers and men, after the
-example of the knights of old who consecrated their swords at the
-altar, partook of the Holy Communion in the saloon.
-
-In the course of the afternoon we sighted the beautiful harbor of
-Boulogne, where we landed. "'Eep, 'eep, 'ooray!" called out the crowds
-of French people who lined the pier and landing-stage to give us a
-hearty welcome as their allies. From the first moment we were made to
-feel at home in France, and careful arrangements had been undertaken
-for our comfort. To every regiment a Frenchman was appointed as
-interpreter, many of whom were educated men of good standing....
-
-Strolling through the town, I passed the barracks where the Argyll
-and Sutherland Highlanders were quartered. True to their national
-characteristic that "a Scotsman is never at home unless he is abroad,"
-they appeared to have been at Boulogne for years, and already to be on
-intimate terms with the townsfolk. On the steps of the Post-Office was
-a bareheaded woman in the act of posting a letter to her son at the
-front. She spoke to me about him very tenderly, and it was obvious that
-all sorts of good wishes and prayers were dropped into the letterbox
-with her letter....
-
-Flags were in evidence everywhere. Men wore in their buttonholes the
-colors of France, Belgium, and England intertwined, and women pinned
-them to their dresses. Little children followed the soldiers about,
-crying, "Souvenir, souvenir!" and pointed to their regimental badges.
-After a while it was a rare sight to meet a soldier with a badge, or a
-French woman or child without one. The sole distinguishing mark between
-one regiment and another was the design of the badge on cap and the
-initials of the regiment on shoulder-strap drawn in indelible pencil.
-
-The next morning the march through the town to the station was little
-short of a triumphal procession. The most popular figure amongst us
-was a diminutive soldier boy of the R.A.M.C., Trumpeter Berry. Some of
-the French women were with difficulty restrained from rushing out to
-kiss him. The crowd around the station as we left, pressing against the
-railings beyond which they were not permitted to go, gave us a send-off
-as enthusiastic as the welcome had been. Keepsakes, charms, blessings,
-and prayers were bestowed upon us generously. "_Vive la France!_" we
-shouted from the railway carriage, and we heard, dying away in the
-distance, the hearty response, "_Vive l'Angleterre!_"
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Belgians in the villages through which we passed had already begun
-to flee into France for protection. A long line of refugees marched
-with us, carrying such of their worldly goods as they could snatch up
-at the last moment. There were white-haired old men being wheeled along
-in barrows, cripples limping as fast as they could go, hatless women
-with a heavy bundle in one arm and an infant in the other, and by their
-side were two or three little toddlers wondering what it was all about.
-Behind were the homes with all their associations of the past and with
-the last meal, perhaps, still on the table untouched, so suddenly
-had the warning come. When would they see those homes again? If ever,
-probably as a heap of ruins. And in front, whither should they go?...
-
-Along the road they would have constant reminders that there was One
-above who knew all about it, and would not leave them comfortless. For
-at irregular intervals by the roadside in Belgium and France there are
-"Calvaries," little sanctuaries containing a figure of the Crucified
-One, seeming to whisper to all who pass by, "I have trodden this path
-before you."
-
-
-II--WITH THE DYING SOLDIERS AT LANDRECIES
-
-The sun was well up before we set out on Tuesday, August 25. Southwards
-again our direction lay: a strategic retirement, we were told. Early in
-the evening we reached Landrecies. Hardly had we passed the outskirts
-of the town before a scare arose. Civilians came tearing out of
-Landrecies. Motor cars and carts rushed past us at breakneck speed.
-The cry went up, "_Les Allemands!_" ("The Germans!") A certain peasant
-who for the moment had lost control of himself whipped the horse which
-he was driving into a gallop, deaf to the heartrending call of some
-children who ran in panic after him begging him to give them a lift.
-Out rushed a footsore guardsman from one of the ambulance wagons,
-placed a rifle at his head, and compelled him to stop and pick them
-up....
-
-At about 8 P.M. we heard the rat-a-tat-tat of machine guns and the boom
-of field artillery. The men of the Royal Army Medical Corps meanwhile
-awaited the summons that did not come. The rain came down in torrents,
-and they lay down wherever they could find a sheltered spot. Sleep for
-most of us was impossible. The din of battle was terrific....
-
-I went at once in search of the Hon. Rupert Keppel and handed to him
-Major Matheson's note. He was in an upstairs room with five or six
-wounded men. He was lying on a bed with a bandage round his forehead,
-but made light of the wounds which he had received. After a few words
-and a short prayer at each bedside, I made inquiries for Lord Hawarden.
-I was told that he was already dead, but I found him in a little room
-by himself, still breathing although apparently unconscious. He had
-lost his left arm, and a portion of his back had been shot away. I
-knelt down beside him and commended him to God, saying in the form of
-a prayer as from myself the hymn "Abide with Me." As I rose from my
-knees he opened his eyes and smiled. He had been asleep merely, and now
-began to speak with quite a strong voice. Not a word did he say about
-himself, or his sufferings. He talked about the battle, about his old
-home near Bordon, which was within a couple of miles of my own home and
-formed a happy link between us, and about his mother....
-
-The other poor patients were terribly knocked about. Limbs in some
-cases had been entirely blown off by shells. Lyddite had turned many
-complexions to a jaundiced yellow. And yet every man was calm and
-resigned, and proud to have had a share in the fight.... A kindly
-French priest was going from bed to bed saying comforting words in
-French. Probably not one of the patients understood his words, but they
-all understood and appreciated his meaning.
-
-Meanwhile the Germans began to appear on the canal bridge near the
-hospital. Major Collingwood went out to meet them, and they entered
-the hospital with him. The officer in charge of them, Herr Ruttner
-of Berlin, shook hands with me and said that my work would not be
-interfered with, and that I had his permission to go anywhere over the
-scene of battle in search of the killed, and that I might bury them
-where most convenient. He said he was personally acquainted with Sir
-Douglas Haig, who with Sir John French had actually been in Landrecies
-the previous afternoon. He seemed disappointed not to find Sir Douglas
-there still, and desired to be remembered to him. By his orders the
-hospital was examined and all arms and ammunition were removed. A
-sentry was then placed at the gate.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In the early morning of the next day, Thursday, August 27, the gallant
-young Lord Hawarden died. The medical officer who looked after him said
-that he had never met a braver patient. A party of twelve men, under
-the command of Lieut. Hattersley, went with me to lay him to rest,
-together with the two officers and men whose bodies had been placed in
-the compound of the hospital. We selected the best spot in the pretty
-little cemetery of Landrecies.
-
-
-III--ON A PRISON TRAIN--GOING TO GERMANY
-
-We remained in Landrecies until Saturday, August 29, expecting daily
-to be returned to our own people in accordance with the terms of the
-Geneva Convention. Our destination, however, was fated to be in the
-opposite direction. Under an escort of half a dozen German soldiers,
-commanded by an under-officer, we marched out of the town, up the hill
-where the battle had taken place, to Bavay. It was a tiring journey for
-the wounded men lying in ambulance wagons. The Hon. R. Keppel was the
-only wounded officer. He traveled in a wagon with certain men of his
-regiment, with whom he appeared to be on exceedingly friendly terms.
-Two of the occupants of that wagon had lost an arm each, and they were
-the cheeriest of our party.
-
-It was dark when we reached Bavay, and everyone was tired out. The
-journey seemed to be quite twenty miles. The first thing we did was
-to see the wounded safely into the hospital, which was a young men's
-college. M. L'Abbe J. Lebrun, the Superior, and his colleague were at
-the door to welcome us. I was at once taken into the English ward, and
-arrived just in time to commend the soul of a dying man, a private
-of the 12th Lancers. His officer--though wounded--had got out of bed
-to see the last of him, and besought me as I entered to visit his
-dying comrade without delay. His anxiety on his friend's behalf was a
-touching sight.
-
-On the morrow, Sunday, August 30, I held a service, at the request of
-the patients, in the English ward. I spoke on "Be of good cheer," or,
-as we had so often heard it put by our French friends along the road,
-"_Bon courage_."...
-
-At the funeral of the 12th Lancer that afternoon we had an imposing
-procession. The body was laid on a stretcher covered over with a Union
-Jack and the French national flag. I led the way before the coffin,
-robed in a cassock and surplice which had been presented to me by a
-French priest to replace my own lost robes. After the coffin came the
-three R.C. priests of the town and a number of the French Red Cross
-nurses; then Major Collingwood and the men of the 4th Field Ambulance.
-One of the nurses, noticing that I had no stole, on returning from the
-funeral made me one of black material with three white crosses, and
-presented it within a couple of hours.
-
-The next day we were marched under escort to Mons. This is a large,
-well-built town of about 35,000 inhabitants. We were paraded through
-the cobbled streets to the barracks, then (evidently by a mistake) to
-the station, and finally back again to the barracks, where, in some
-dirty rooms over a filthy stable, we spent the night. Here we met the
-Hon. Ivan Hay, of the 5th Lancers, who had narrowly escaped being shot
-after his capture by the Germans, but he was not allowed to accompany
-our party. The following morning we were marched once more to the
-station, and were bundled into the station-master's office, which was
-littered with looted papers. The men meanwhile were herded in a shed.
-A sentry was posted at the entrance of the station to prevent anyone
-going to the town. Just outside the station were the ambulance wagons
-and our servants. Whyman, my soldier-servant, was amongst them with my
-horse. That was the last I saw of either of them. I parted from them
-with a very sad heart.
-
-During the afternoon an ill-mannered under-officer bade us hand over
-knives, razors, and sticks. At 6 P.M. we were entrained with about
-1,000 wounded, of whom some forty or fifty were ours, the rest being
-Germans. The train must have been a quarter of a mile long. In the
-middle of the night we passed through Brussels, and in the early
-morning through Louvain and Liege. Louvain seemed to be a heap of
-ruins; hardly a house visible from the station was intact.... We looked
-with great interest upon Liege as we passed through it, and recalled
-the gallant defence of the town by the Belgians. A few more miles
-brought us over the border into Germany.
-
-At Aachen a hostile demonstration took place at our expense. There
-happened to be a German troop train in the station at the time. A
-soldier of our escort displayed a specimen of the British soldier's
-knife, holding it up with the marline-spike open, and declared that
-this was the deadly instrument which British medical officers had
-been using to gouge out the eyes of the wounded Germans who had fallen
-into their vindictive hands! From the knife he pointed to the medical
-officers sitting placidly in the train, as much as to say, "And these
-are some of the culprits." This was too much for the German soldiers.
-They strained like bloodhounds on the leash. "Out with them!" said
-their irate colonel, pointing with his thumb over his shoulder to
-the carriages in which these bloodthirsty British officers sat. The
-colonel, however, did not wait to see his behest carried out, and a
-very gentlemanly German subaltern quietly urged his men to get back to
-their train and leave us alone. The only daggers that pierced us were
-the eyes of a couple of priests, a few women and boys, who appeared to
-be shocked beyond words that even a clergyman was amongst such wicked
-men. The enormity of the crimes which had necessitated my capture I
-could only conjecture from their looks.
-
-At Duesseldorf we crossed the Rhine--a beautiful sight. At Essen I was
-permitted to visit one of our wounded men who was dying of tetanus. The
-unfortunate patients lay in rows on the floor of luggage vans, with
-straw beneath them. When the train stopped at a station the doors of
-these vans were sometimes flung open in order that the crowd might have
-a look at them....
-
-Even the Red Cross ladies at the stations steeled their hearts against
-us, giving us not so much as a cup of coffee or a piece of bread. But
-for the haversack rations and chocolate, which most of us carried with
-us, we should have fared badly. Now, however, we were to receive our
-first meal from our captors. This consisted of a plate of hot soup
-and a slice of bread and butter, which we ate ravenously. Two kind
-ladies brought us this food, and we were duly grateful. One of them
-was standing near me as we ate the meal, and I thanked her cordially
-in English. She paid no attention, so I asked her if she understood
-English. "I do, but I don't mean to," was her laconic reply, which
-seemed highly to amuse my companions....
-
-At length, on Friday morning, the journey came to an end on our
-arrival at Torgau. We were ordered out of the train and drawn up on
-the platform in fours. Each officer carried what articles of clothing
-he possessed. Several of them had preserved their medical panniers,
-and, heavy as these were, they had to be carried or left behind. On
-either side of us a German guard with fixed bayonets was drawn up,
-and then was given the word, "Quick march!" With our bundle on our
-shoulder, there was no man could be bolder, yet this same bundle and
-the burning sun prevented there being anything "quick" about our march.
-The townsfolk evidently had heard that we were coming, and they were at
-the station gate in scores to show us how pleased they were to welcome
-us to their town. In fact, they told us quite freely what they thought
-of us and the nation which we represented. They walked beside us every
-inch of the way, keeping up our spirits by telling us the particular
-kind of _Schweinhunds_ they believed the _Englaender_ to be. Not until
-they had crossed the massive bridge which spans the Elbe and reached
-the Brueckenkopf fortress did they turn back home, and the doors of the
-fortress closed behind us.
-
-
-IV--STORY OF PRISON LIFE AT TORGAU
-
-Passing over the moat through two iron doors, we enter a courtyard,
-about 100 yards long by 40 broad. Facing the gateway is a semi-circular
-building two stories high, with an entrance at either end and one in
-the centre. A turret with windows and battlements surmounts each
-entrance; and from the central turret rises a flag-pole....
-
-The commandant was a Prussian reservist officer with a long heavy
-moustache. We were told that he was courteous and considerate in every
-respect, and that, provided we took care to salute him whenever we
-passed him, we should find him everything we could reasonably wish.
-
-Supper was at 6 P.M. The same plate did duty for both courses, soup and
-meat, the more fastidious taking it under the pump in the interval.
-When the meal was over the junior members of the messes did the washing
-up. After supper we walked a mile, as the old adage recommends. We soon
-knew to a nicety how many turns round the court made up this distance,
-and some active spirits improved on the advice by walking several
-miles. At 8.30 a bugle sounded, and everyone had to retire to his room;
-at 9 sounded "lights out."
-
-That first night was memorable for the little occupants which we found
-already in possession of our beds. Just when we hoped we had finished
-our labours for the day these little bedfellows began theirs. The more
-we wanted to sleep, the more wakeful they became. Scratching, tossing,
-and--it must be owned--a little mild swearing could be heard, where
-snoring would have been much more tolerable....
-
-At 6 A.M. reveille sounded, and before it was finished Major Yate was
-up and out of bed. I followed his example, and then the two of us began
-a practice which we kept up while the warm weather lasted, namely, a
-cold bath under the pump in the solitude of the courtyard.
-
-Poor Major Yate! He attempted to escape ten days later, and lost his
-life in so doing. One of the sentries affirmed that he shot him as he
-made his way through the barbed wire, and that the Major fled wounded
-into the river, from which he never came forth alive.... He has since
-been awarded posthumously the Victoria Cross for his gallantry in the
-campaign.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We selected as our chapel the passage over the entrance at one end
-of the building. There was an inspiring atmosphere about that first
-service. Our altar was a dormitory table, our altar linen a couple of
-white handkerchiefs, our chalice a twopenny wine-glass (the best we
-could procure), our paten an ordinary dinner-plate. Pews, of course,
-there were none, and as for books, we were fortunate enough to have
-one, a hymn-book, prayer-book, and Bible bound together in a single
-volume, which I was carrying in my haversack at the time we were
-captured. The pew difficulty was overcome by each officer bringing his
-stool. The lack of books made no difference to the heartiness of the
-service, for the hymns and chants were familiar to most of us from
-childhood. The mighty volume of sound that went up that morning in
-hymns of thankfulness and praise was a never-to-be-forgotten sensation
-to those who heard it or joined in it. The place whereon we stood was
-holy ground, and it was good for us to be there....
-
-As time went on, our numbers increased to about 230 British officers,
-and 800 French officers joined us from Maubeuge, including four
-generals. One of the latter had been interned in Torgau before, in the
-1870 war, and had made good his escape. The authorities guarded against
-the recurrence of such an eventuality on the present occasion, their
-most elaborate precaution being the enlistment of dogs to reinforce
-the sentries. Their barkings could be heard occasionally by night, but
-their presence disturbed neither our repose nor our equanimity....
-
-During the last two months of our stay at Torgau I occupied a small
-room in the centre of the building with Major (now Lieut.-Col.) A. G.
-Thompson, Major W. H. Long, and Captain P. C. T. Davy, of the R.A.M.C.,
-as companions. Like the Hindus, we divided ourselves into exclusive
-castes, as far as the necessary duties in connection with the room were
-concerned. The Colonel (as we may call him by anticipation) lit the
-stove, the Major washed the cups and saucers, the Captain swept the
-floor, and I, with the assistance of a member of our mess, brought in
-the coal.
-
-We often dreamt and spoke of the day when we should march out of
-Torgau. There were two destinations only which came within the range
-of our contemplation--one was Berlin, and the other was England.
-Meanwhile, however, there was a place of four short letters which was
-to be our home for six long months.
-
-(The chaplain continues to relate his experiences in this German prison
-with many interesting anecdotes. He tells about the prison occupations,
-how they spent their time in work and recreation, and describes his
-parole and visits to several internment camps.)
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[9] All numerals relate to stories herein told--not to chapters from
-original sources.
-
-
-
-
-"AT SUVLA BAY"--THE WAR AGAINST THE TURKS
-
-_Adventures on the Blue Aegean Shores_
-
-_Told by John Hargrave, the Famous Scoutmaster in the Mediterranean
-Expeditionary Forces_
-
- John Hargrave is known throughout England as "White Fox," the
- famous scoutmaster. On September 8th, 1914, he said farewell to
- his little camp in the beechwoods of Buckinghamshire and to his
- woodcraft scouts and went off to enlist in the Royal Army Medical
- Corps. He was assigned to the 32nd Field Ambulance, X Division,
- Mediterranean Expeditionary Forces, and sailed away to Suvla Bay,
- where he passed through the tragic scenes of the Dardanelles
- Campaign. He soon began sending stories "back home," achieving for
- the Gallipoli Campaign what Ian Hay did for the Western Front.
- These stories have been collected into a volume entitled: "At
- Suvla Bay," which is published in America by _Houghton, Mifflin
- and Company_. There are twenty-eight narratives told in the jargon
- of the common soldier. He tells about its being "A Long Way to
- Tipperary"; "Mediterranean Nights"; "Marooned on Lemnos Island";
- "The Adventure of the White Pack Mule"; "The Sniper of Pear-Tree
- Gulley"; "The Adventure of the Lost Squads"; "Dug-Out Yarns"; "The
- Sharpshooters"; and many other incidents of Army life. One of his
- narratives, "Jhill-O! Johnnie!" is here retold by permission of his
- publishers.
-
-
-I--STORY OF THE INDIAN PACK MULE CORPS
-
-One evening the colonel sent me from our dugout near the Salt Lake to
-"A" Beach to make a report on the water supply which was pumped ashore
-from the tank-boats. I trudged along the sandy shore. At one spot I
-remember the carcass of a mule washed up by the tide, the flesh rotted
-and sodden, and here and there a yellow rib bursting through the skin.
-Its head floated in the water and nodded to and fro with a most uncanny
-motion with every ripple of the bay.
-
-The wet season was coming on, and the chill winds went through my
-khaki drill uniform. The sky was overcast, and the bay, generally a
-kaleidoscope of Eastern blues and greens, was dull and gray.
-
-At "A" Beach I examined the pipes and tanks of the water-supply system
-and had a chat with the Australians who were in charge. I drew a small
-plan, showing how the water was pumped from the tanks afloat to the
-standing tank ashore, and suggested the probable cause of the sand and
-dirt of which the C.O. complained.
-
-This done I found our own ambulance water-cart just ready to return to
-our camp with its nightly supply. Evening was giving place to darkness,
-and soon the misty hills and the bay were enveloped in starless gloom.
-
-The traffic about "A" Beach was always congested. It reminded you of
-the Bank and the Mansion House crush far away in London town.
-
-Here were clanking water-carts, dozens of them waiting in their turn,
-stamping mules and snorting horses; here were motor-transport wagons
-with "W.D." in white on their gray sides; ambulance wagons jolting
-slowly back to their respective units, sometimes full of wounded,
-sometimes empty. Here all was bustle and noise. Sergeants shouting and
-corporals cursing; transport-officers giving directions; a party of New
-Zealand sharpshooters in scout hats and leggings laughing and yarning;
-a patrol of the R.E.'s Telegraph Section coming in after repairing the
-wires along the beach; or a new batch of men, just arrived, falling in
-with new-looking kit-bags.
-
-It was through this throng of seething khaki and transport traffic
-that our water-cart jostled and pushed.
-
-Often we had to pull up to let the Indian Pack-mule Corps pass, and it
-was at one of these halts that I happened to come close to one of these
-dusky soldiers waiting calmly by the side of his mules.
-
-I wished I had some knowledge of Hindustani, and began to think over
-any words he might recognize.
-
-"You ever hear of Rabindranarth Tagore, Johnnie?" I asked him. The name
-of the great writer came to mind.
-
-He shook his head. "No, sergeant," he answered.
-
-"Buddha, Johnnie?" His face gleamed and he showed his great white teeth.
-
-"No, Buddie."
-
-"Mahomet, Johnnie?"
-
-"Yes--me, Mahommedie," he said proudly.
-
-"Gunga, Johnnie?" I asked, remembering the name of the sacred river
-Ganges from Kipling's _Kim_.
-
-"No Gunga, sa'b--Mahommedie, me."
-
-"You go Benares, Johnnie?"
-
-"No Benares."
-
-"Mecca?"
-
-"Mokka, yes; afterwards me go Mokka."
-
-"After the war you going to Mokka, Johnnie?"
-
-"Yes; Indee, France--here--Indee back again--then Mokka."
-
-"You been to France, Johnnie?"
-
-"Yes, sa'b."
-
-"You know Kashmir, Johnnie?"
-
-"Kashmir my house," he replied.
-
-"You live in Kashmir?"
-
-"Yes;--you go Indee, sergeant?"
-
-"No, I've never been."
-
-"No go Indee?"
-
-"Not yet."
-
-"Indee very good--English very good--Turk, finish!"
-
-With a sudden jerk and a rattle of chains our water-cart mules pulled
-out on the trail again and the ghostly figure with its well-folded
-turban and gleaming white teeth was left behind.
-
-
-II--HEROISM OF THE SILENT HINDUS
-
-A beautifully calm race, the Hindus. They did wonderful work at Suvla
-Bay. Up and down, up and down, hour after hour they worked steadily on;
-taking up biscuits, bully-beef and ammunition to the firing-line, and
-returning for more and still more. Day and night these splendidly built
-Easterns kept up the supply.
-
-I remember one man who had had his left leg blown off by shrapnel
-sitting on a rock smoking a cigarette and great tears rolling down his
-cheeks. But he said no word. Not a groan or a cry of pain.
-
-They ate little, and said little. But they were always extraordinarily
-polite and courteous to each other. They never neglected their prayers,
-even under heavy shell fire.
-
-Once, when we were moving from the Salt Lake to "C" Beach, Lala Baba,
-the Indians moved all our equipment in their little two-wheeled carts.
-
-They were much amused and interested in our sergeant clerk, who stood 6
-feet 8 inches. They were joking and pointing to him in a little bunch.
-
-Going up to them, I pointed up to the sky, and then to the Sergeant,
-saying: "Himalayas, Johnnie!"
-
-They roared with laughter, and ever afterwards called him "Himalayas."
-
- THE INDIAN TRANSPORT TRAIN
-
-(Across the bed of the Salt Lake every night from the Supply Depot at
-Kangaroo Beach to the firing-line beyond Chocolate Hill, September,
-1915.)
-
- The Indian whallahs go up to the hills;--
- "Jhill-o! Johnnie, Jhill-o!"[10]
- They pass by the spot where the gun-cotton kills;
- They shiver and huddle--they feel the night chills;--
- "Jhill-o! Johnnie, Jhill-o!"
-
- With creaking and jingle of harness and pack;--
- "Jhill-o! Johnnie, Jhill-o!"
- Where the moonlight is white and the shadows are black,
- They are climbing the winding and rocky mule-track;--
- "Jhill-o! Johnnie, Jhill-o!"
-
- By the blessing of Allah he's more than one wife;--
- "Jhill-o! Johnnie, Jhill-o!"
- He's forbidden the wine which encourages strife,
- But you don't like the look of his dangerous knife;--
- "Jhill-o! Johnnie, Jhill-o!"
-
- The picturesque whallah is dusky and spare;
- "Jhill-o! Johnnie, Jhill-o!"
- A turban he wears with magnificent air,
- But he chucks down his pack when it's time for his prayer;--
- "Jhill-o! Johnnie, Jhill-o!"
-
- When his moment arrives he'll be dropped in a hole;--
- "Jhill-o! Johnnie, Jhill-o!"
- 'Tis Kismet, he says, and beyond his control;
- But the dear little houris will comfort his soul;--
- "Jhill-o! Johnnie, Jhill-o!"
-
- The Indian whallahs go up to the hills;--
- "Jhill-o! Johnnie, Jhill-o!"
- They pass by the spot where the gun-cotton kills;
- But those who come down carry something that chills;--
- "Jhill-o! Johnnie, Jhill-o!"
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[10] "Jhill-o!"--Hindustani for "Gee-up"; used by the drivers of the
-Indian Pack-mule Corps.
-
-
-
-
-SEEING THE WAR THROUGH A WOMAN'S EYES
-
-_Soul-Stirring Description of Scenes Among the Wounded in Paris_
-
-_Told by (Name Suppressed)_
-
-
-I--"THEY HAVE NOTHING LEFT--NOT EVEN TEARS"
-
-What I have seen--can that be told? When will words be found simple
-enough and infinite enough to tell of so much heroism, so much sorrow,
-so much beauty, so much terror? All those sublimities: how can they be
-explained without losing their soul, without taking away their value,
-which is of mystery and miracle? All those hideous things, all those
-unnatural crimes; how can they be revealed with cold and ponderous
-reasoning, while one is still trembling, keeping back tears, smothering
-cries?
-
-It must be done, though, and that French shyness that hates all that
-is bluff or bragging, and which fain would wait that our glory and
-suffering be understood, it too must be conquered. We must rise above
-that too delicate conscience which says: "Speak? What good will it do?
-Truth is luminous; it shines before all eyes." Yes, but it must be
-helped to shine, and without delay.
-
-That is why, I have decided to address the American nation, to tell it
-that which I know, that which is evident, undeniable--to take it to the
-frightful and divine Calvary of truth.
-
-For six months I have been living among our soldiers, our wounded.
-I live in my Paris. That Paris that every one visits and that no one
-knows. I have only left it for some brief excursions to the cathedrals
-in agony, to the villages in ashes, to the ambulances at the front, to
-the old peasants who have nothing left--not even tears! To the little
-orphans with tragic and stupefied eyes.
-
-Sent to distribute woolens to the combatants, I have heard a language,
-haughty and superb. I have clasped the rude hands, sometimes deformed,
-of more than twenty-two thousand soldiers, some wounded, others well
-again, returning to the firing line, a flame in their eyes and in their
-hearts. I have bent over more than ten thousand beds of mutilated young
-men, many of them with gangrene. I have held hundreds in my arms on the
-operating tables--I who could not support the sight of blood, nor of
-illness--hundreds of poor things with atrocious wounds, and only felt
-during those minutes one care--a superhuman desire to discover in the
-surgeon's look or attitude the hope the poor boy would be saved.
-
-
-II--"IF HE DIED, I SHOULD HAVE FELT GUILTY"
-
-I remember, above all, a youth twenty years old, who had such a
-complicated wound in the chest that it is indescribable. I held the
-poor, inert body while the surgeon lay wide open the thorax. "Take him
-back," said the surgeon, "and be careful." I did so. Then from the
-deep, bleeding wound the whole chest emptied itself, as one empties a
-bucket of I don't know what unnamable liquid. The surgeon approached
-then, and leaning over the now visible palpitating lung murmured:
-"What can be done? It will only begin again." However, he did find
-out what could be done. He had him put back in his bed--he was still
-unconscious. Sitting near him, filled with anxiety I waited his
-awakening. I wanted him to be saved, that child! While he was being
-chloroformed a few minutes before, while he was holding my hand without
-saying a word, there was in his look, before his eyes closed, such a
-gentle desire to live, such a prayer for protection--such confidence
-in the infinite aid I gave him. If he died I should have felt myself
-guilty--I don't know of what.
-
-He awoke--looked at me and smiled. He then murmured: "Why are you so
-good to us, madame? We are not near to you."
-
-To this dying child, to give him back his life, it was necessary I
-should explain to him his glory. I said: "Not near, my boy? Why,
-understand then what I owe you! If the enemy has not entered our
-Paris--if Notre Dame is intact--if I, myself, am living--it is because
-you gave your blood for us. But that is not all. When you fight for
-France you do not only fight for your country, you do not only save
-your native land; you save an ideal, an ideal supreme, universal.
-In helping all that is pure and beautiful in the world you save the
-liberty of peoples, the liberty of the soul. You say to each one of us
-'the yoke that weighs you down I shall help you to cast off.'
-
-"You do not understand me well, my boy. But see--you must live. Later
-in the eternal books of history you will learn the meaning of the
-blood you have given. You must live! _You must live!_ Years from now
-your little children will look at you with eyes of love and admiration
-because you were a soldier in the great war. They will know the meaning
-of the medal shining on your chest, and for generations they will be
-proud of the honour of their name. You must live, my dear boy!"
-
-As I spoke something wonderful illuminated the youth's eyes. "Oh, I
-shall live, madame. One only has to will it. I shall live."
-
-He is saved!
-
-I do not know why I stopped to recount the agony and resurrection of
-that child, because almost all of them are divinely alike--childlike,
-confident, smiling.
-
-Another had had a whole leg amputated--a young man of twenty-two, with
-a charming face. Doubtless he had already been loved by some pretty
-girl. At last the day came when for the first time he was to get out of
-bed and try to walk with crutches. I dreaded that moment. I expected
-complaints. I already had made up my consoling arguments.
-
-Ah, how little I knew the soul of our children of France. He arose,
-poor boy, so thin, on his one leg; and as he was also wounded in one
-arm, in spite of the crutches he couldn't balance himself. That made
-him laugh; _made him laugh_!
-
-I turned him over to a nurse because tears were choking me. But they
-were not tears of sorrow; they were sobs of tenderness, respect,
-admiration.
-
-Another had received nine wounds. He didn't want to have them spoken
-of. He only wanted to talk about his days of battle--to live them
-over again. "Those last days, madame, we were so near the enemy that
-they could not get to us to bring us our rations. We had to find our
-nourishment ourselves. When evening arrived some of us would steal out
-of the trenches and pick carrots--we lived eleven days like that. One
-day I brought down a pigeon. When I was able to get it we broiled it
-with matches. Ah, that was a royal feast! How glad we were!"
-
-"Content" (glad, happy), that was the word he used most frequently. One
-morning when I got to the hospital, believing him still very ill, he
-greeted me with, "I go back to my depot in three days; in a fortnight
-I shall be under fire! Oh, how 'content' I am!"
-
-Since then he has written me, "I received the tobacco. We had an awful
-fight at ----. I have a finger less and am still in the ambulance, but
-still 'content.'"
-
-
-III--STORY OF THE DYING ALGERIAN
-
-Ah, let me still tell of my country's smile in her sorrow--so sweet,
-and which is such a comfort to my heart. I have so much to tell that is
-horrible.
-
-Another time I conducted a celebrated visitor to a "tirailleur" (a
-part of the colonial infantry who leave the ranks in action and fight
-individually). This "tirailleur" had had his right arm amputated. I
-said, "he is an Algerian." The wounded man looked at me reproachfully
-with his great soft eyes, saying: "Don't say Algerian, madame, me
-French, me give arm for France."
-
-Another time I was with another Algerian; this one was about to die;
-nothing could save him. I was trying to soften his agony. He let me go
-on awhile, then suddenly stopped me with the melancholy childish accent
-of the Arabs, saying: "Don't bother about me any more, madame. All
-over. Me dead in two hours. Me just as happy as if get well. Thee write
-my mother that." I wrote his mother. She replied: "He has served France
-well. Allah has taken him to his breast."
-
-
-IV--"WHAT I HAVE SEEN IN PARIS"
-
-What I have seen! I have seen Paris under the Teutonic shadow cast
-from the north. Three days, on opening my windows at dawn, I anxiously
-listened for the expected rumble of the cannonading. Nothing....
-It will be soon, this evening, to-morrow, I said. Everything in my
-threatened city became sacred to me. For me to die, that was nothing.
-But for Paris to be destroyed; my Paris! the city that cannot be
-described; cannot be explained! I couldn't stand that. I burst out
-weeping in the deserted streets, leaning perchance against a humble and
-old house. This mere relic had feelings, regrets, like the most sublime
-monuments.
-
-The gravest day dawned. Those who only stayed in Paris for the pleasure
-they receive from it, and those who have children to take care of,
-were hastening toward the stations or crowding into automobiles. I
-stayed there. My heart wrung with agony, I drifted through my ordinary
-occupations. Then the unbelievable happened. As I was crossing the
-Place de la Madeleine, in a semi-dazed condition, a little boy, about
-five or six years old, ran up to me and gave me a slip of paper. I saw
-distractedly that he was decently dressed and had large blue eyes. I
-automatically opened the paper. The following unheard of phrase was
-typewritten on it: "_France is invincible_."
-
-I turned toward the child: "Who gave you that?"
-
-"Madame," said the little one, raising his head with a look that was
-grand, immense, "We wrote them ourselves, all night." Tears filled my
-eyes; I had a presentiment they were tears of deliverance. So, while
-we knew the Uhlans were in Chantilly, while in the hearts of the
-grown-up people horror placed its claws on faith, on hope, there was a
-little child with immense blue eyes, who knew nothing, like the good
-shepherds, St. Genevieve and Joan of Arc, but who knew that "France was
-invincible" and who passed the night writing it.
-
-Yes, the miracle that saved Paris was revealed to us. But there was
-another miracle, something imponderable, which was the soul of the
-little boy with his eyes of light--which is the soul of Paris.
-
-Paris ... even during those hours did not lose its sweet disposition
-of smiling independence. And it was among the children that we
-found the most touching proofs. One day--at the hour when the German
-aviators were storming Paris with bombs--we called it our _five o'clock
-taube_--I went out with a friend near the Park Monceau. All the
-passers-by were walking with their noses in the air, as they already
-had got the habit of the visits of "the bad pigeons."
-
-One little boy had his bicycle to follow the flight, another a pair
-of opera glasses. But look around in the sky as I might, I could see
-nothing. Then a little boy, this one about six or seven years old,
-pulled my coat. "Straight up, madame; straight up, over my head!"
-That's how they frightened our little kiddies!
-
-The next day I was passing through a thickly populated neighbourhood
-over which they had been flying for an hour. Suddenly a child bolted
-out of a house as fast as it could go. But his mother caught him and
-administered two resounding slaps. "I told you to stay in the house."
-"Ah," protested the urchin, "ye don't only keep me from seein' de tobe,
-but cher lick me in der bargain."
-
-These are trifles, will perhaps be said. Do you think so? Nothing is
-small that reveals the immortal soul of a people. And we found it so
-everywhere. Don't lose patience with me if I speak without order. My
-words resemble the days I am living. They have a unity, however, as
-from them always shines forth the trials, the smiles, the bravery of my
-country.
-
-
-V--"THEY ARE ALL DEAD NOW"
-
-What have I seen?... I saw a white glove stained with a gray spot and
-a brown spot. Here is its history. When war was declared all the young
-students of the Saint Cyr Army School were promoted second lieutenants.
-Their average age was about twenty years. How happy they were to fight
-for France. But to fight was not enough. They must do it with grace,
-with style, carelessly, according to French traditions. They all swore,
-those boys, to go to the first battle wearing white gloves. They kept
-their word. But the white gloves made them a mark for the ambushed
-sharpshooters. They are all dead. The glove I saw belonged to one of
-them. The gray spot is of brain--the brown spot is blood. Piously this
-relic was brought to the mother of the dead young man. This special one
-was only nineteen years old.
-
-And let us not think that it was a useless sacrifice. It is well that
-in the beginning of this war of surprises, mud and shadow, some of our
-children died in the light, facing the enemy, and facing the sun, for
-the good renown of French allegiance.
-
-What I have seen ... Yesterday I received a letter. It came from a
-sergeant in the Argonne, an uneducated workman. Here it is, with the
-spelling and punctuation corrected:
-
- * * * * *
-
-"Madame, thanks for letting me know that my wife has had a little girl.
-But do not think I am worried. We love our families, but our duty is to
-love our country first. And if I do, those at home will be taken care
-of, I know it, madame.
-
-"I'm going to tell you something you'll be glad to hear, not at the
-beginning, but you'll see at the end. A couple of weeks ago we lost a
-trench and almost everybody was massacred, including our commander. I
-escaped with a few more of my men. From our new trench we could see
-the bodies of our comrades and officers down there. The worst of it
-was that the Germans would get behind them to shoot at us. Ah, that
-all those Frenchmen, dead for their country, were made to protect the
-enemy! I couldn't look at that. So here's what I did. I said to my
-men, 'I'm going for them, but if I stay there I don't want my body to
-be made a rampart. Tie a rope around my body and if you see I'm done
-for, pull me back by it.' At first things went all right. I got back
-three of our comrades' corpses. But the Germans began to see something
-was up. To mix them up I ordered a feint on the right--another on the
-left. I kept on.
-
-"I was all right. Never would those people suspect that I would risk
-my life to save dead bodies. So I had the joy of getting them all
-back--there were sixty-seven. And can you believe it, madame, there
-were two men still living. They are in a good way to getting well, and
-they can indeed say they came back from pretty far off. We buried the
-others. They are now sleeping peacefully. But I couldn't resist letting
-those in the opposite trench know. Not a bad trick, was it, madame?"
-
-
-VI--"THEY WILL PAY FOR THIS MISERY"
-
-What have I seen.... The other morning among the men who came to the
-vestiaire (wardrobe), where I am occupied part of the time, and who are
-generally very gay and good-humoured, there was a young soldier with a
-sober, set, disagreeable face. I shook him up with, "Why, what's the
-matter that a French soldier makes such a face? Won't you look me in
-the face and make me a nice smile?" But he didn't change expression. I
-took him to one side. "What's the matter with you, my child? First of
-all, where are you from?"
-
-"I am from the North, madame."
-
-"Oh, then I understand why you are sad. You do not know where your dear
-ones are."
-
-He looked at me with a fierce, wild expression and suddenly replied:
-"I do know, madame. My elder brother was killed beside me, struck
-by the same shell that wounded me. That is war. They have burned my
-home, killed my mother and my father. My sister, sixteen years old,
-has been violated and abused; my little sister, of nine years, has
-disappeared." A black flame burned in the sombre look of the boy and
-made it unbearable. I received that look straight in my eyes. "Tell me,
-madame, we will get to their country, won't we, won't we?"
-
-"Why, certainly, my boy--nothing surer."
-
-"Oh, madame, they will pay for all this misery. But do not fear, _their
-women and children will not be touched_."
-
-"Their women and children will not be touched." That is what this
-martyr of barbarism and of the cruelty of the enemy found in his heart
-to say--this sombre, uncultivated child of a northern village. I shook
-his rough hand--I squeezed it--I kissed the poor cheeks of this orphan
-with maternal kisses, and I said: "I thank thee."
-
-
-VII--"THE CHILDREN WHO ARE MUTILATED"
-
-But they--what are they doing with our little children? Here's a letter
-from a lady friend--a great musician. "My son-in-law, Lieutenant ----
-has been defending Verdun since August. He's all right. But when will
-these barbarians be entirely driven away? Lately my son-in-law had a
-German soldier who was very badly wounded picked up. When stripping
-him to give him aid they found a child's hand in his pocket. He was
-immediately shot."
-
-Don't think it's a single case. The children who are mutilated,
-assassinated, burned, are counted by hundreds. At Blamont, in the
-presence of the Baroness de V----, the Germans killed a child in its
-mother's arms. "Why did you do that?" asked the Baroness. "We are
-obliged to, otherwise we are shot," replied the men.
-
-Witnesses who have seen like things are too numerous to be counted.
-Everybody in France remembers the sad question of the little girl
-who asked her mother, "Will Santa Claus bring me back my hands for
-Christmas?"
-
-Some time I shall go into the details of the arrival of the Belgian
-children in Paris, with their terrorized looks, their screams of
-fear if anyone approached them. I haven't yet the courage to go over
-it. The memory I am going to call up is almost as frightful, though.
-It was Sunday, August 30. All at once I got a telephone call from a
-hospital where I often assisted: "Come, quick; they're bringing a lot
-of wounded."
-
-As I arrived they were carrying in a young woman, either dead or
-unconscious. Everybody was under the strain of deep emotion. We
-undressed her. Her body was horribly mutilated with hideous wounds.
-She was the victim of the first "taube," as the Parisiennes called
-the German aeroplanes. She was passing along the street, humble and
-inoffensive. Her husband was at the front. She had a child at home.
-From above death smote her. The French gave men wings, and that is how
-the barbarians use them.
-
-I left the young woman dead. I went to see the child. He was playing
-at a table, laughing. The contrast was so sad I couldn't stand it. I
-took away his toys. "You mustn't play any more just now, baby. You will
-not see your mother again to-day." He looked up at me sadly as if he
-understood. I took him in my arms and wept over him.
-
-There is a little--so little--of what I have seen and heard.
-
-Just as I finished writing I received a photograph from the painter
-Guirand de Scevola, showing an old woman of sixty-five, who had been
-attacked--then slaughtered. With it was a part of the Belgium official
-report, not yet made public. I shall divulge the paragraph: "September
-11th, Josephy Louis Buron, of the Twenty-fourth regiment of the line,
-declared that having been made prisoner by the Germans, near Aerschot,
-they made him plunge both hands into a kettle of boiling water. Dr.
-Thone, of the Twenty-fourth regiment of the line, declared he saw the
-wounds of the hero." (Told in the _New York American_.)
-
-
-
-
-LOST ON A SEAPLANE AND SET ADRIFT IN A MINE-FIELD
-
-_Adventures on the North Sea_
-
-_Told by a Seaplane Observer_
-
- The Great War has introduced new perils both on land and sea. Here
- is the story of one of them--two men drifting through a mine-field
- on a crippled seaplane, fending off mines with their bare hands,
- and expecting every moment to be blown to pieces! Daring adventure
- told in the _Wide World_.
-
-
-I--"MY HUNDREDTH FLIGHT OVER THE NORTH SEA"
-
-I completed my "century" of seaplane flights over the North Sea with an
-adventure the like of which, I trust, will never occur again.
-
-Many varied experiences have gone to total up that number of
-ascents--some far from pleasant, others most interesting, and well
-repaying one for occasional hardships.
-
-The sequel to my one-hundredth flight, however, will take a lot of
-effacing from my memory.
-
-The atmosphere was a trifle thick when we started off from our base
-with the intention of flying an ordinary hundred-and-fifty-mile
-circular patrol.
-
-The farther we progressed, the thicker grew the haze, till we at last
-were travelling through dense fog.
-
-We left at 7.30 a.m., and climbed to two thousand five hundred feet to
-get above the heat-haze and fog over the water.
-
-At eight-twenty-five, almost an hour later, the revolutions of the
-eight-foot tractor began slackening perceptibly, and presently, to our
-dismay, the engine stopped dead.
-
-We were compelled to descend so quickly that there was no time to send
-a wireless signal; in fact, I just barely managed to cut the trailing
-aerial wire free before we struck the sea.
-
-That I did so was a slice of luck, as, otherwise, the fuselage would
-probably have been ripped up, and the machine capsized.
-
-When the floats smacked the water we got quite a bump, and a decided
-jar in the nape of our necks.
-
-Fortunately, however, the under-carriage struts retained their rigidity
-and did not buckle, and the seaplane rode the water right way up.
-
-I will not worry the reader with a technical explanation of the trouble
-which had befallen our engine. Sufficient to state that it was of so
-serious a nature as to preclude us from any attempt at "patching her
-up."
-
-"Do you know where we are?" inquired the pilot, after we had heartily
-chorused a round of expletives appropriate to such an eventuality. I
-shook my head.
-
-It must be remembered we had been travelling through fog most of the
-journey, and therefore could not spot the regular aids to maritime
-aerial pilotage, such as light-vessels, sandbanks, buoys, and coast
-contours. In addition to this there are always air currents about, to
-counteract a dead compass-reckoning alone.
-
-By taking the mean of our calculations, however, we were eventually
-able to place a finger on the approximate area where we believed
-ourselves to be on the chart.
-
-The result was anything but encouraging. We were at least fifty miles
-from the shores of England, and in a neighbourhood devoid of all
-shipping, even in times of peace. What was worse, it was gradually
-borne in upon us that we were perilously near, if not actually in, a
-most extensive mine-field!
-
-Personally, I was feeling anything but buoyant, and the reason is not
-far to seek. I had had the middle watch (12-4 a.m.) in the wireless
-cabin ashore the previous night. A report then came through that
-there was "something buzzing"--hostile submarines scudding round, or
-Zeppelins or other aircraft--and I had the wireless of half-a-dozen
-machines to overhaul, and superintend their going off. Then my own turn
-came, and, minus breakfast or a bite of anything, off I went, having
-had no food since the previous afternoon at five. Worse still, I had
-not so much as a bite of "grub" about me, or even a smoke.
-
-The pilot went through his pockets, and discovered one solitary
-cigarette resting in state in his case. Being a sportsman, as well as
-a companion in misfortune, he offered it to me, and, on my emphatic
-refusal, halved it. So we both lit up whilst we reviewed the situation.
-
-I don't believe I ever treated a smoke with greater care than I did
-that half-cigarette. For aught I knew it might be my last.
-
-When we had finished our cogitations the joint result of our thinking
-was by no means hopeful.
-
-
-II--"S. O. S." MESSAGE ON MACHINE GUN
-
-A strong sun was beginning to shine through the intense heat-haze, and
-the glare of the water was very trying.
-
-At regular intervals I fired off a Very's light, with the idea of
-attracting attention. As the coloured projectiles curved high into the
-air and plunged downwards, so did our hopes seem to rise and fall.
-
-When my Very's cartridges were exhausted, I commenced a series of
-"S.O.S." messages in the Morse code on the machine-gun. The nickel
-bullets of two trays of Mark VII. ammunition had winged through the
-heavy air before we realized the practical futility of it all.
-
-We therefore kept the remainder of our gun magazines intact, as also a
-brace of heavy service revolvers, 455 calibre, fully loaded.
-
-We were not to know what might crop up at any moment. A Taube might
-find us and swoop down for bombing practice, or to make an easy prey.
-We could not in any event be taken prisoners by hostile aircraft, as
-there would be no space for us in a machine already full.
-
-At any moment, too, a U-boat might pop up and either make a target of
-us for their quick-firer or take us in tow for the Belgian coast, which
-was uncomfortably near at hand.
-
-However, come what might, we were in a mood to fight to a finish.
-
-Unfortunately, my wireless transmitter was worked from the engine
-direct, otherwise I might have rigged up an extempore aerial from the
-spare reel carried, and sent a "S.O.S." from accumulators.
-
-It is doubtful if such a scheme would have proved effective, but it
-would have been worth trying. But in the circumstances I was helpless.
-
-The heat was now simply awful, the sea dead calm. We had taken off our
-leather coats long since, and now rigged them up across the fuselage
-overhead, for shelter from the sun's rays.
-
-Presently it became so hot and stuffy on the seats that both the pilot
-and myself took our boots and trousers off, climbed down on the floats,
-and stretched ourselves along them in the comparative shelter of the
-wings and fuselage body.
-
-The stern part of the floats was, of course, submerged, so we lay with
-our lower limbs under water, and felt cooler. This we did for about
-three hours, each of which seemed an age.
-
-What with the heat and the want of food, which caused a dull throbbing
-in my temples, by noon I was in such a state that I did not care what
-happened to us.
-
-The pilot (poor chap) had only recently been married, and he rattled
-along continually about his young wife.
-
-I have no wish to be in like straits again, but if such a misfortune
-_should_ happen, I earnestly trust I shall not have the misfortune to
-be beside a young fellow newly wedded! In the long weary time we spent
-together I had the whole of his history, from childhood to courtship,
-and I suppose he had mine!
-
-What surprised us was the great number of logs floating about.
-Apparently a timber boat had foundered somewhere close by.
-
-Every log that hove in sight through the haze we thought was a ship. It
-was a terrible time.
-
-At intervals we either heard--or imagined we did--the engines of
-aircraft. Sometimes they seemed all around us; sometimes a long way off.
-
-"Our only chance is a relief seaplane being sent after us," said the
-pilot. "Otherwise we are done for!"
-
-There was precious little chance of us ever being spotted, we reckoned,
-owing to the extremely low visibility.
-
-At least a dozen times, as the day wore on, we heard the unmistakable
-roar of aircraft, and it was torture to listen to them.
-
-"It's coming nearer. They will see us!" the pilot would cry, hopefully.
-
-Then the sound would recede into the distance, and we would become
-despondent again.
-
-
-III--"WE WERE FLOATING OVER DYNAMITE"
-
-It was extremely irritating, whilst anxiously following these sounds
-with straining ears, to hear the swish, swish of the water across the
-floats, the ripple as it rejoined the ocean again, and the creak, creak
-of the great wings as we rose and fell with a squelch on the gentle
-undulations of a swell.
-
-These sounds eventually developed into a perfect nightmare. Every swish
-and creak seemed to pierce our brains.
-
-Eventually we climbed up into the seats again for a while and stared
-our eyes out scanning the horizon with our powerful glasses. Every
-piece of flotsam seen we dubbed a boat, till it drifted near enough to
-make out detail.
-
-The wind got up a little and died down again, but it shifted the haze
-somewhat.
-
-In the afternoon we saw a sight which gladdened our hearts.
-
-High up to the nor'-west, and dropping towards us, was a bird-like
-machine. Nearer and nearer it came, till we could hear the engines
-clearly. Soon we identified her marks, which set our fears at rest. It
-was a British 'plane.
-
-We sprang up, gesticulated wildly, and fired a few pistol-shots just to
-relieve our excitement.
-
-She was a rescue seaplane from our own base, it appeared, and presently
-she dropped on the water beside us and "taxied" as close as she might.
-
-Her pilot steered within twenty yards or so of us, and the observer
-heaved overboard in our direction a huge vacuum flask.
-
-Then, without stopping their engine, and waving cheerily, they droned
-along the surface and tilted into the air again. We watched her until
-the machine became a mere speck and finally faded into the blue.
-
-Then, and not till then, we remembered the flask. We were fated never
-to taste its contents, however, for it floated past out of reach, in
-the midst of a great school of giant jellyfish.
-
-I have never been stung by one of these loathsome-looking creatures,
-and I had no desire to be on this occasion. Neither had the pilot, so
-the bottle floated out of sight without giving us anything but moral
-support.
-
-After this interlude our long impatient wait recommenced. The episode
-had instilled hope into us, but the hours seemed to drag more heavily
-than ever. There was nothing but sea on every hand--a great circular
-expanse of glaring, shimmering water.
-
-Presently schools of porpoises began to put in an appearance, sporting
-about in their own unmistakable style. There must have been hundreds of
-them. One group frolicked close around us, and several times a glossy
-black tail caught one or other of the floats a resounding smack.
-
-The fabric of these floats is exceedingly frail, and we were rather
-concerned about them. It seemed a pity to shoot the playful creatures,
-particularly as their antics created a diversion, but we trembled for
-the safety of the floats every time they were struck.
-
-As the tide went down, several dark, spheroidal objects commenced
-bobbing up by twos to the surface--on our starboard beam, as we were
-floating at that time.
-
-Through our glasses we could spot scores more of them in the distance.
-No need to tell one another what they were. We _knew_--deadly contact
-mines!
-
-The nearest pair were only a matter of half a cable's length away, and
-presently our worst ordeal commenced.
-
-We were drifting towards them with the ebbing tide, and were now on the
-fringe of the great mine-field, perhaps the most extensive ever laid.
-Once in among those floating engines of death we should have a lively
-time.
-
-It was with no very pleasant thoughts that we considered this new
-danger. I might have turned the machine gun on the mines, but there
-was the risk of exploding instead of sinking them, and if one went off
-it was fairly safe to assume that its mate, a couple of fathoms away,
-would detonate in sympathy. I presume that this is the underlying idea
-of distributing mines in this fashion.
-
-During the next four hours these horrid death-traps gave us a terribly
-anxious time. We had some very narrow shaves, for at low-water hundreds
-were in sight, and as the seaplane drifted along we were powerless to
-avoid them.
-
-The pilot got on one float and I got on the other, and once or twice
-we actually had to ward the mines off with our bare hands in order to
-keep them from knocking against the machine. Had one of them done so
-this story would never have been written. Fending off the mines was a
-ticklish operation, as you may suppose. Great care had to be observed
-in exerting our strength, and we had to place our hands on parts of the
-casing of the mine that were devoid of horns, or between two horns,
-if it was not floating high enough. While engaged in this delightful
-occupation I went overboard twice, but managed to scramble back safely
-without getting into trouble with the mines.
-
-Once a mine went off. It was too far away, however, for us to see what
-caused the explosion. It is not improbable that a luckless porpoise
-might have bent a horn in one of its leaps.
-
-At length, to our heartfelt relief, the tide turned, and the mines
-began to disappear under the water again.
-
-By that time we were drifting nearly the opposite way again, carried
-along by the flood-tide.
-
-
-IV--"AN AEROPLANE COMES TO RESCUE"
-
-Six o'clock came, by our chronometer--seven p.m. summer time--and we
-were still intact, having for about ten hours been dependent on our
-frail seaplane floats for buoyancy. Had the sea risen at all, even to a
-decent cat's paw, we should have been below the surface long ere this.
-
-It was shortly after six o'clock, when--burnt almost black by the sun,
-with parched throats and swollen tongues--we heard the sound of a
-propeller chugging away at no great distance. The haze had thickened
-again as the sun moved west, and at first we could see nothing. In
-fact, we both thought we were dreaming.
-
-But there was no mistake. The chugging and throbbing grew louder
-and louder, and I fired three single pistol-shots into the air at
-intervals. Thereupon the sound intensified, and out of the haze
-ploughed a trim little armed motor-launch--officially known as an "M.L."
-
-She crept alongside very gingerly, lowered her dinghy, and took us off.
-Then she made fast a line to the seaplane, and took her in tow at a
-good seven or eight knots.
-
-We were heartily welcomed by the bluff sailormen aboard.
-
-Curiously enough, I did not feel thirst so badly as hunger. I am not of
-a thirsty nature at any time, and perhaps that accounted for it.
-
-The first mouthful of food was torture; it seemed to rasp the skin off
-my throat. After that I ate ravenously. It was the first touch of real
-hunger I had known, and after the experience, I vowed that if it lay in
-my power I would never again see a poor beggar go hungry.
-
-When our bodily wants had been attended to we settled down to a
-comfortable smoke in the ward-room. The skipper, a Lieutenant R.N.R.,
-told us he had just made up his mind he was not going to venture
-another fathom farther when he heard our shots. Owing to the proximity
-of the mine-field he had been very anxious.
-
-After our smoke we turned in for a sleep which only terminated when the
-"M.L." reached the shores of Old England and her Diesel oil-engines
-ceased throbbing! This was long after midnight.
-
-They say our little experience has left its mark on us, but personally
-I feel as fit as ever.
-
-
-
-
-HOW I HELPED TO TAKE THE TURKISH TRENCHES AT GALLIPOLI
-
-_An American Boy's War Adventures_
-
-_Told by Wilfred Raymond Doyle, on His Majesty's Ship "The Queen
-Elizabeth"_
-
- This is the first-hand narrative of an American boy's extraordinary
- yet characteristic exploits, told from his own viewpoint and in
- his own language. Young Doyle's noticeable aptitude at telling
- his story may be accounted for by the fact that he is a born
- journalist. His parents, who reside in Yonkers, are people of
- education and refinement. The father is a blind poet of some local
- repute, and at one time published a little newspaper in the Harlem
- district of New York City. The special causes which led to the
- enterprising lad's departure from home, and how he came to enlist
- in the British Navy, are best detailed by himself in the _New York
- World_.
-
-
-I--STORY OF AN AMERICAN RUN-AWAY
-
-At the age of nineteen I was employed in the shipping department of a
-large publishing house at a salary of six dollars a week, with small
-prospect of advancement. My family were in need of all the help I could
-give. I grew restless, and one day February (1916) suddenly decided to
-make a change. Instead of taking a car for home I boarded a steamer for
-Boston, expecting to do better in that city, and then to surprise my
-parents with my success. I could get nothing better than a place as a
-"bus boy" in a lunch room. After working there for three days I saw a
-chance of getting a better position, but unfortunately was too late.
-I was delayed two hours and that cost me my first job.
-
-I could find nothing else to do, and the next day I signed on an ocean
-steamer, _Etonin_, bound for Liverpool with a cargo of horses. My job
-was working the donkey engine for getting the feed up out of the hold;
-it was an easy job--two hours a day. The rest of the time we played
-cards, and when we reached Liverpool I had one penny in my pocket. The
-ship was not to return to Boston before fourteen days, and I had either
-to secure some work or starve. There was many a job I might have gotten
-but for the fact that I was an American. At least that was the excuse
-given for refusing me employment.
-
-I had no choice but to go to the Naval Recruiting Office. I said I was
-born in Dublin and was at once accepted. I received a half crown, which
-was one shilling from the King, another from the Queen, and six pence
-from the Prince of Wales. I signed for the period of hostilities only,
-and that night had a good supper at the Government's expense.
-
-
-II--"HOW I REACHED THE DARDANELLES"
-
-The next day I was sent to the training depot at Portsmouth, where
-I received my uniform and kit. I was two weeks training with the
-rifle and bayonet and one week at target practice. On April 16, after
-physical examination, I was declared fit for service on His Majesty's
-ships. That afternoon I was drafted to the torpedo boat destroyer
-_Lynx_, which reached the Dardanelles in safety at noon of April 19.
-There I was assigned for service on the _Queen Elizabeth_, which I
-boarded two days later when she came out from the firing line for
-ammunition.
-
-In the distance the _Queen Elizabeth_ appeared like a huge island,
-with four trees in the centre, but on a closer view was seen to be an
-immense floating fortress with huge guns, ready for action.
-
-The complement of the _Queen Elizabeth_ is twelve hundred men,
-including all ratings. I was assigned to No. 4 boiler room, which
-to my surprise, was not a grimy place but scrupulously clean, and
-everything in it polished as bright as a mirror. The ship uses oil fuel
-exclusively. My duties were: To keep the oil sprayers and steel combs
-clean, to take the density of the water every four hours, to regulate
-the supply of water and the fan engine for supplying the air pressure
-to the fires, and lastly to test the different safety valves. All
-orders are given by means of two telegraphs, an engine room telegraph
-and an oil supply telegraph.
-
-The _Queen Elizabeth_ went into action from midnight April 21 to
-midnight April 24. I was on duty without relief. During that time I had
-four times a day biscuits and water, with a half pint of rum. At noon
-I was allowed two hours' rest, but could not sleep on account of the
-noise. Our ship was hit every few minutes.
-
-During action the fire pumps are pounding tons of water over the deck
-to prevent fire in case of a shell exploding on the wooden deck. It
-was our duty to keep the pipes and connections clear, for the water
-sucked up from the sea often contains foreign substances. One occasion
-we were subjected to a heavy rapid-fire gun bombardment. The structure
-shielding us was punctured like a piece of Swiss cheese and the deck
-about us was splintered before the guns on our ship found the range and
-destroyed the enemy's battery of guns that were turned upon us. It was
-a miracle that the seven of us escaped.
-
-Once I was sent to the store room for tools. I had to pass the six-inch
-guns and neglected to get a piece of India rubber to place between my
-teeth; the result was a dislocated jaw from the shock of the firing. I
-hastened to the doctor and pointed to my jaw. He put his left hand on
-my head, and with his right gave me a couple of "Jim Jeffries" punches,
-and, while I saw stars, reset my jaw.
-
-On April 26 the _Queen Elizabeth_ was ordered out from the firing line
-to bring up troops to the Gallipoli Peninsula. The Royal Scots were
-taken aboard from a transport in the Aegean Sea. We returned at once
-and landed the Royal Scots safely under heavy fire.
-
-We withdrew at once about ten miles from the enemy's range, and,
-borrowing a telescope, I watched the Royal Scots, 1,100 strong, make
-their heroic charge, which began at 2 P. M.
-
-They advanced on the double and took the three rows of Turkish trenches
-at the point of the bayonet without firing a shot. Then, without
-waiting for reinforcements, they advanced two and a half miles into
-the enemy's country. Their lines were gradually getting thinner, and
-realizing that they were in a tight place, they began to retreat. That
-is all that I saw. Corporal Joseph Nicolson was the only survivor of
-that ill-fated regiment.
-
-On May 8 the news of the sinking of the _Lusitania_ reached us by
-wireless, and the bombardment by the _Queen Elizabeth_ became doubly
-terrific. I think more damage was done to the enemy that day than
-ordinarily in a week.
-
-The next day there was a call for 1,000 men, 200 from each of the five
-largest ships, to support the soldiers on land on May 9. I was one
-of the number from the _Queen Elizabeth_, told off to go as landing
-parties at 6 A. M. Every man received a rifle, bayonet, two hundred
-rounds of ammunition, and two days' supply of food.
-
-
-III--"TAKE THOSE TRENCHES OR DON'T COME BACK!"
-
-On leaving the ship the commander's order was: "My boys, take those
-trenches or don't come back." Six hours later we landed on the
-Gallipoli Peninsula, and reached the trenches safely though under
-heavy firing of the enemy. I was for twelve hours in the third line
-of trenches, knee deep in mud and water. Our time there was spent in
-sharpening our bayonets like razors.
-
-At midnight we advanced to the first line trenches. All around us were
-the dead and wounded of both sides. Four unsuccessful attempts were
-made by the Turks to take our trenches, but each time they were beaten
-back, with a heavy loss. Our side also suffered heavily. Before we
-landed the British troops had lost 3,000 men in six attempts to take
-the Turkish trenches. The enemy's fire had been so severe that the
-transports could not land reinforcements without being sunk.
-
-We navy men were told that the Turkish trenches must be taken at all
-costs. They were only fifty yards in front of ours. At 10.15 A. M. our
-rifles were loaded with fifteen rounds, the magazine safety catch was
-put on and the respirators were adjusted over our faces. Not a shot was
-to be fired in our charge.
-
-Meanwhile our ships were firing on the enemy's trenches. At 10.25 the
-order rang out, "Cold steel!" We fixed our bayonets. At 10.30 the
-bugles sounded the charge. Fifty men fell while getting out; but in ten
-minutes we took the Turkish trenches. Our losses were 250 killed and
-200 wounded.
-
-It is almost impossible to describe a bayonet charge. On the instant of
-the order you spring out, jump or crawl from the trenches, with bayonet
-fixed, and charge on the double. Sometimes you have to creep to make
-an attack. You become like a raving maniac; your senses seem to leave
-you. All around comrades are dropping, but you do not think of them.
-Reaching the enemy's trench, a terrific hand-to-hand struggle takes
-place. Strategy is the main point. Our bayonets were eighteen inches in
-length, while those of the Turks were all lengths from 12 to 15 inches.
-We wore the gas respirators in our charge, as our commander thought
-that our appearance would frighten the enemy. It did. We looked like
-black devils.
-
-At 10.45 the Turkish trench was taken. After the victory our captain
-made a brief address. Facing the dead and wounded with the tears
-streaming from his eyes, he said:
-
-"I am proud of my boys who fought so splendidly and did what seven
-thousand soldiers failed to do in six attempts, losing three thousand.
-You, a mere handful, one thousand strong, succeeded in the first
-attempt. The army has much to thank the navy for."
-
-The last was uttered loud enough to be heard by the soldiers in the
-neighboring trenches. They were so sore about it that they would not
-speak to us navy men for several days.
-
-
-IV--THE TURKISH GIRL BEFORE THE FIRING SQUAD
-
-One day we were allowed a few hours' leave to go where we pleased.
-In our wanderings we came to a farm where women were working in the
-fields. In one field was a huge haystack. Approaching it, one of my
-comrades said that he would show how he killed six Turks. He fixed his
-bayonet to his rifle and made a charge at the haystack. There was blood
-on his bayonet when he withdrew it. We ripped open the haystack and in
-the hollow found a young Turkish girl trying to bandage her arm where
-my chum's bayonet had wounded her. There were a cot, table and chair
-in the stack, and the girl had a rifle with a telescopic sight, and
-a box of cartridges. We were about to let her go, when she dropped a
-package which broke, and thirty-one identification disks, such as are
-worn by every soldier and sailor in the British Army and Navy, fell on
-the ground!
-
-She was a sniper. We had to turn her over to our superior officer. She
-was court martialed and ordered to be shot in a half hour. We could not
-bear to see a woman face the firing squad, so we left the place and
-went back to our trench. We stayed there until the troops were landed
-and relieved us.
-
-While in the trenches we went through many an ordeal, the chief of
-which was the vermin that, combined with the heat and filthy water,
-made life almost unbearable. When we returned to our ship all our
-clothing was taken from us and burned. We were then subjected to a bath
-of hot water containing some powerful disinfectant which took away a
-part of our skin. New uniforms were given us and we put them on our raw
-hides with a sense of unspeakable delight.
-
-While on land we saw something of the Turkish sniper. He is a
-sharpshooter, painted green from head to foot, as he is usually hidden
-among the leaves of the trees. His cartridges are in a box fastened
-to a branch above his head, and on his rifle is the famous telescopic
-sight, an Austrian invention by means of which a child could hardly
-miss the mark. When their hiding place was discovered and they were
-shot, we let them hang from the branches as a warning to others. If the
-sniper sees that he cannot escape, he destroys his telescopic sight. No
-more than six of these wonderful inventions had been found up to that
-date. I picked up one in the Turkish trench and had it in my hand for
-a few minutes, but was obliged to turn it over to my superior officer
-of the division to be sent to the Government arsenal for examination.
-
-... Shortly after our arrival in the Dardanelles one of the mine
-sweepers was sunk and the body of a boy seaman floated by our ship.
-One of the survivors of the sunken _Irresistible_ jumped overboard and
-found the boy was not dead, though unconscious. We threw a rope and
-hauled them in. A marine stepped forward and took the boy from the arms
-of his rescuer. As he was carrying him to shelter a small shell from
-the enemy's gun blew off the marine's head. A sailor snatched the boy
-away from him. For half a minute the headless man, having his lungs
-still full of air, threw up his arms, and dashed madly about the deck.
-This was the only casualty on our ship during my service.
-
-
-V--CAPTURED ON BELGIAN COAST
-
-On May 23 we left the Dardanelles to have our guns refitted. May 27
-we were fifteen miles off the Belgian coast and there we heard heavy
-bombardment. The following day H.M.S. _Drake_ asked for a loan of fifty
-men from our ship. I was one of the fifty.
-
-The _Drake_ was trying to locate a heavy German battery, and a lucky
-shot killed the gun crew but did not damage the guns. We fifty from
-the _Queen Elizabeth_ were sent ashore to destroy the guns by blowing
-them up. We reached them under the heavy fire of the enemy, took off
-the breeches and destroyed the mechanism. As we were setting the
-dynamite to blow up these guns, a party of about three hundred Germans
-surrounded us. Our rifles were stacked up about thirty feet away and in
-running to reach them several of us were wounded. I received slight
-flesh wounds in the arm and leg. After being searched and relieved of
-all weapons, we were marched to a barbed wire stockade, about a mile
-and a half inland, and were told that we were to be sent to Germany the
-next day. There was another stockade with British, French and Belgian
-prisoners near by, and over the barbed wire they threw us a football to
-amuse ourselves. We played football until dusk.
-
-A German soldier was sent with a spade to dig a hole for another post
-in support of the barbed wire gate. We played football all around the
-field and managed to get the German soldier in our midst. We bound and
-gagged him, seized his weapons and took his spade. It was getting dark
-and no one suspected but that we were still playing football.
-
-We took turns in digging under the barbed wire fence a tunnel for
-escape. While we were at work we had a genuine surprise. A German
-sentry on his rounds, trod on a weak spot over our tunnel and fell in,
-face downward. He could make no outcry as his mouth was filled with
-grass and dirt. We immediately bound and gagged him, took his weapons
-and left him there.
-
-We all escaped through this tunnel and beat it for the coast as fast
-as our legs could carry us. The searchlights of our ship were in
-action and were playing all over the coast looking for us. One of our
-number was a signal man. He ripped off his jumper and, tearing it in
-two pieces, waved them over his head. The signal was seen--we knew it
-because the guns of the ship were brought to bear over us, to protect
-us from an attack in the rear, and recapture. We received a flash light
-signal to lie down, and soon we heard the sound of two engines. It was
-the ship's picket boats, mounted with machine guns on stern and bow. We
-were conveyed in short order to the _Drake_.
-
-All ships have a master of arms and a ship's corporal; they are the
-ship's police, and they are always looking for trouble. As soon as
-we were on the deck we were placed under arrest and taken before the
-captain. The charges against us were: over-staying shore leave fourteen
-hours, disobeying orders and general untidiness. We did, in fact, look
-like a bunch of Hooligans. Several of us had no caps and the faces of
-all of us were covered with blood and muck. Our new uniforms were so
-torn that a rag man would not have given us two cents for the lot.
-
-The following are some of the captain's questions, and our answers:
-
-"Where were you men?"
-
-"Ashore, sir."
-
-"Why were you not back in time?"
-
-"The Germans would not let us come back, sir."
-
-"Where are your rifles? And did you destroy the enemy's guns? What
-happened to your uniforms?"
-
-"We destroyed the guns, sir, but were captured. We tried to escape, but
-were caught between liquid fire and poisonous gas. We lost part of our
-uniforms trying to climb over the barbed wire fence, sir."
-
-"You pack of fools!"
-
-"Yes, sir."
-
-Then the captain, smiling, congratulated us and ordered the steward to
-supply us with new uniforms and send us back to our ship as soon as
-possible. We went back next day, June 2.
-
-
-VI--BACK TO TURKEY--THEN TO AMERICA
-
-The _Queen Elizabeth_ was ordered back to the Dardanelles and remained
-there until July 26. Through the telescope we saw many demolished
-Turkish forts and big black holes where clusters of houses and groves
-had been.
-
-On July 26 we sailed for Gibraltar. We left there on August 1 and
-sailed for the North Sea and went in harbor to give the ship a thorough
-overhauling. From August 10 to Sept. 5 we were cruising around the
-North Sea and North Atlantic Ocean in search of the German fleet. This
-sort of life, after the excitement of battle grew wearisome to every
-one on board. Thoughts of home and family came to me. There had been
-no chance to write or to have our letters mailed. The only mail boat
-leaving the _Queen Elizabeth_ was sunk. I told the officer in charge
-that I was an American.
-
-After hearing my story he sent a message to the Admiralty and they
-ordered my discharge. I was sent to Portsmouth Naval Branch to receive
-my final papers. On obtaining these I thought I was free; but I was
-arrested for having failed to register as an alien when I first landed
-in Liverpool.
-
-I was brought before a magistrate and remanded for a week. Acting on
-advice I wrote to the American Consul at London. The Consul replied
-that he had been looking for me since June, and he requested the
-magistrate to release me so that I could be sent back to the United
-States. The letter to the magistrate took fifteen minutes to read in
-court. It stated that the whole army had been looking for me, at the
-instigation of my parents, through the Secretary of State at Washington.
-
-The magistrate discharged me at once, regretting my imprisonment for a
-week and stating that it was no disgrace. I left Portsmouth the next
-day, Sept. 25, for Liverpool but had to stop over in London for several
-hours, awaiting the fast mail train. It was shortly after the last
-Zeppelin raid and, being in uniform, I was allowed to pass the lines,
-to look at the effects of the bombs. Many houses were wrecked, streets
-torn up and soldiers were searching the ruins for the missing. Now and
-then they recovered a body, usually that of a woman or a child. The
-official death list reported 150 killed. I saw a cartoon reprinted from
-a German paper, picturing the people of London kneeling in prayer in
-their cellars during and after a Zeppelin raid. But the fact is that
-the London police had their hands full keeping the people from rushing
-out of their houses to get a glimpse of the raider.
-
-I reached Liverpool that night and the day following I signed for my
-passage on the steamship _Minian_, sailing for Boston Oct. 9. While
-in Liverpool I was offered a position in a munition factory as a gun
-tester at a salary of four pounds per week, but I refused the offer
-because I had secured my discharge from the British Navy for the
-purpose of going home.
-
-
-
-
-"BIG-BANG"--STORY OF AN AMERICAN ADVENTURER
-
-_A Tale of the Great Trench Mortars_
-
-_Told by C. P. Thompson_
-
- "Big-Bang" was Tommy's name for one of our pioneer trench mortars,
- invented and operated by a man named X----. The author met X---- in
- a cafe not far from the front, and heard from him the details of
- the story that is here set down. "So far as I am aware," he writes,
- "the tale is perfectly true. I had it confirmed by the men of the
- R. E. company to which X---- was attached." Recorded in the _Wide
- World_.
-
-
-I--THE SOLDIERS IN THE CAFE SALOME
-
-It was at Noeux-les-Mines, in the Cafe Salome, at the bottom of the
-old slag-heap by the station. After tea, there being no further parade
-until the working party assembled at ten o'clock that night, I had
-repaired thither to drink wine and smoke until closing time. As always,
-the _cafe_ was crowded with the men of half-a-dozen London regiments,
-with Scotsmen in stained and muddy kilts, and French artillerymen
-from the South. Later in the evening they would begin to sing in
-unison--great roaring choruses swung and tossed from _cafe_ to _cafe_
-and taken up by the crowded-out groups in the street.
-
-I had managed to secure a chair at a little table in the corner, and
-for companion saw before me a small, grizzled man, about fifty, whose
-blue eyes, despite the dark rings underneath them, were yet singularly
-intelligent, keen, and clear. We exchanged a few remarks whilst
-taking each other's measure, and then, apropos of my description
-of a terrible bombardment by the German _minenwerfers_ which we had
-recently endured, he began to talk, and gave me a rambling impression
-of his strange and original career, and especially of his adventures in
-connection with his masterpiece, "Big-Bang"--a device now extinct.
-
-I will call him X----. Before his connection with the British Army I
-gathered he had wandered widely in an up-and-down, rolling-stone sort
-of fashion. The Klondike had known his store during the gold rush.
-He was one of those men who did undefined but profitable things in
-the Western States before the days of their organized exploitation;
-made thousands of dollars and spent every cent of them, roving here
-and there, never staying anywhere for long, as is the way with these
-pioneers of the human race.
-
-
-II--THE AMERICAN ADVENTURER TELLS HIS TALE
-
-When the war broke out he was in the West, the manager of an opera
-company touring the coast towns, and immediately he determined to
-take a hand. At first he experienced considerable perplexity as to
-how he was to get "mixed up" in the war. Apart from his nationality,
-his small stature, a finger missing from his right hand, and a
-pronounced limp--both legacies from the Spanish-American war in the
-Philippines--seemed destined to preclude him from serving in the
-army of any country in any capacity. He was even refused by a party
-of Americans forming a Red Cross contingent for duty with any of the
-belligerents willing to accept their service.
-
-However, he remembered an old friend, a major of Engineers in charge
-of a company at a China station, and he immediately hurried from San
-Francisco across the Pacific to Hong-Kong, where he found the --th
-Siege Company, R.E., under orders to move, and cursing destiny, in the
-shape of the British War Office, which refused to allow them to be
-in at the fall of Tsing-tau. Forthwith he attached himself to them.
-His sole qualification consisted of an erratic but handy knowledge
-of mechanics, picked up here and there--as chauffeur to a Vancouver
-millionaire, as a greaser, ganger, and a stoker, but principally
-during eighteen months of desultory employment in the machine-shops of
-Pittsburg. After much argument concerning the King's Regulations with
-regard to recruits and the position of a man in the ranks, the major
-had taken him on the strength as mechanic for the three motor-cycles
-owned by his command. In September, 1914, he left the Western theatre
-of war--quietly exultant, as I imagine.
-
-He was curiously frank as to his attitude towards the war.
-
-"I have always liked big things, and I had to get into this somehow,"
-he said, finishing a large _cassis_. "This war is the biggest thing
-that ever happened to this old world, and if I were left out of it I
-should go mad--I should, or commit suicide. That's how I feel about
-it. Looking on is no good to me; I have to be right in it. But I've
-illusions. Neither your cause nor the Germans' nor the newspaper gas
-of both parties interest me. If the Allies hadn't adopted me I should
-have squeezed somehow into one of the armies of the Central Powers. Of
-course, the party I joined, that party I stick to; you can count on me
-to the last drop of my blood. But you take me--I've no patriotism, as
-you understand these things."
-
-They landed in France early in October, and within forty-eight hours
-were with a corps at a point where the British forces lay resting after
-the Marne and the Aisne. With those battles the operations passed
-the mobile phase and began to settle down to the stagnation of the
-trenches.
-
-The novel conditions of warfare in the earth demanded new methods
-and ingenious adaptations, and soon the Engineers found themselves
-overwhelmed with orders from corps headquarters and harassed by
-perplexed divisions and brigades. Bombs and explosive missiles of all
-sorts were in great demand, but materials other than Tickler's jam-pots
-were not to be procured. And pumps were wanted; emplacements, redoubts,
-trenches, field works of all descriptions required overseers from the
-Engineers to superintend the working-parties, composed of uninitiated
-infantry.
-
-
-III--CATAPULT THAT HURLS BOMBS
-
-One day while he was busy upon a patent catapult the major came
-to X---- and showed him a message from the corps, who, introduced
-suddenly and unexpectedly to that formidable engine of destruction,
-the _minenwerfer_, desired urgently some improvised machine or gun
-wherewith to retaliate until supplies of the new weapon arrived from
-home arsenals. Nor were the elaborate specifications peculiar to all
-staff instructions lacking. The proposed machine must be capable of
-hurling a heavy bomb a distance of not less than two hundred yards; but
-at the same time, if a gun, it must not require a powerful propelling
-charge. It must be portable and sufficiently compact to allow of its
-introduction into a front-line trench; its working must not demand
-intricate mechanical knowledge, nor must more than four men be needed
-for its crew, and so on and so forth. X----, if I recollect his
-narrative aright, remarked, "Jehoshaphat!" and went away to a nearby
-_cafe_ to ponder out this problem in mechanics. By the next morning he
-had planned and partly constructed the first of his famous simplified
-mortars.
-
-It was, so far as I remember the constructional details, merely a large
-tube, about three feet long and with a diameter of six inches, made
-of very thick sheet-iron and closed at one end by a block of wrought
-iron, pinned and welded on. The barrel mounted on a cradle, the bed
-weighed under half a hundredweight, and was secured to the ground by
-long iron pins like glorified tent-pegs. The ammunition consisted of
-huge canisters packed with gun-cotton and exploded by a time fuse or a
-simple percussion detonator. And if one did not look what he was doing,
-the bomb might easily be slipped into the mortar detonator first--to
-the dire confusion of the gun-crew. Gunpowder, rammed and wadded and
-ignited through a touch-hole, discharged the canister upon its travel.
-This creation was dispatched with precise instructions as to its use
-and probable eccentricities, and all hoped it would "make good."
-
-Two days later came the report that at the first discharge the mortar
-had burst. It was requested that a stronger one be made, and, further,
-that the engineer-constructor should accompany his engine into the
-trenches, there to superintend its working. Thus one day X----
-descended upon the lines with a new and larger mortar of more solid
-construction, one dubious artilleryman as assistant gunner, canister,
-a bag of powder, and a ramrod.
-
-I can imagine the breathless interest with which the garrison in the
-trenches observed the loading of the mortar, the swift retirement from
-its vicinity, and the stunned confusion following the first shot.
-It went off with a stupendous roar, belching forth smoke and flame.
-The canister, turning over and over in the air, was seen to describe
-a mighty arc and fall upon a ruined house behind the German lines
-and there explode mightily, demolishing the place as completely and
-spectacularly as if a mine had been sprung beneath it. A great cheer
-burst forth. The delighted soldiers promptly poured in "fifteen rounds
-rapid," and a machine-gun rattled through a belt in honour of the
-occasion and to follow up the bomb. The new weapon was voted a huge
-success.
-
-It was fired five times in all, two bombs failing to explode, one
-excavating a ton or so of earth from the centre of No Man's Land,
-whilst the fifth fell plump into the German fire-trench, levelling it
-for half-a-dozen yards in either direction and sending high into the
-air a vast shower of earth, rent sandbags, timber, and human fragments.
-
-Then, just as a sixth projectile was being loaded, the German artillery
-got to work. A storm of "whizz-bang" shells hurtled over, exploding
-everywhere--in the air, on the ground, and sometimes against the high
-parapet, which was sent flying. Two batteries of heavy howitzers
-concentrated a slow, deliberate fire, dropping 5.2 and 9-inch shells in
-the zone of the mortar, which was buried under tons of earth. At length
-the bombardment ceased, and rescue parties came to dig out those men
-whose dug-outs had fallen in upon them or who had been buried in the
-ruins of the trench. X---- had remained by his mortar and was rescued
-unconscious.
-
-Yet, with the tenaciousness of his breed, he came back again--having
-spent a week at the field ambulance's barn hospital and a few days at
-his company's quarters--armed with a third and more powerful mortar.
-This time he had taken the precaution to provide himself with smokeless
-powder. The German artillery observers, however, were on the look-out
-for him, and although there was no longer a mountain of smoke to serve
-as a target, the position of the mortar was disclosed by the enormous
-roar of its discharge, which could be heard four miles away. Not five
-minutes elapsed before half-a-dozen batteries, informed by telephone,
-opened a tremendous fire and speedily rendered the vicinity untenable.
-Casualties were high, and X---- and his weapon lost favour with the
-neighbouring infantry.
-
-
-IV--"BIG-BANG" HIS ONLY FRIEND
-
-Then this intrepid man mounted "Big-Bang" upon a base to which were
-affixed four small wheels with broad treads. Having fired the mortar,
-he would trundle it away down the trench as fast as he could go,
-invariably getting clear of the fatal area before the shells began to
-fall. Then he would stop and fire another shot and again make off,
-dragging his mortar at the end of a rope. His ammunition he placed in
-recess here and there along the line. The enraged infantry took to
-heaving the canisters over the parapet until one so thrown exploded,
-blowing in the trench, upon which they left them severely alone. But
-whenever the maker of those canisters appeared with his mortar round
-the corner of the traverse they cursed him heartily.
-
-In this way X---- became the best-hated man from Richebourg to the
-sea. Refused admittance to dug-outs, he was obliged to sleep on
-firing-platforms, on the floors of side trenches, or in saps where
-night working-parties trod on him. No one spoke to him except to utter
-oaths. Men said upon seeing him:--
-
-"Here comes the Kaiser's best friend!"
-
-Sarcastic remarks were also passed on his mortar; and, strangely
-enough, these hurt him more than personal abuse. He had come almost
-to love his creation. Hatred of it he could tolerate, but anything
-savouring of contempt; anything derogatory uttered against its power as
-a destroyer, touched him to the quick; and I fancy singularly biting
-language was heard in those winter trenches of 1914 and 1915.
-
-So he dragged on his solitary existence--desolate, hated, yet feared
-because of his power of avenging himself by firing his weapon from any
-spot he pleased, and thus dooming it to a tremendous "strafing" by the
-enemy. He wanted someone to own him, and tried to attach himself to
-the artillery, but they refused to have anything to do with him. The
-thing his peculiar nature found it hardest to endure was the knowledge,
-gradually forced upon him, that he was "out of it," a mere independent
-unit belonging actually to neither side, a man whose decease many of
-the British, equally with the Huns, would have hailed with much glee.
-
-This must have weighed upon him. Possibly he brooded. And all the time,
-with an invincible obstinacy that was almost heroic, he fired and
-fled and fled and fired, retreating sometimes up, sometimes down the
-trenches, dodging the shells all day and sometimes at night. And then
-he broke down.
-
-"It was one of those illnesses your Army doesn't recognize officially,"
-he told me. "It began with a sort of tired, discouraged feeling, and I
-used to have queer dreams. The noise of 'Big-Bang' going off made me
-jump like a marionette. I'd sweat and grow dizzy and my knees trembled
-and my stomach rose. I fell down one day and they came and took me away
-to the field ambulance, and after a bit they sent me down to Boulogne.
-I don't quite know what happened there during the first weeks. But when
-I got better they gave me a pretty good time--made quite a fuss of me,
-in fact. The colonel wanted to send me to England, but I told him how
-great I am on seeing this war through, and he grunted and said he'd see
-what he could do. When I came out I found this staff job waiting for
-me. It's not what I'd like exactly, but I suppose I'm getting old now.
-Still, we're close to the guns and I have a pretty free hand here, and
-can make trips to the trenches to say 'How-do' to the boys and see how
-things are getting along. Oh, yes; it's not so bad. But I was sorry to
-leave old 'Big-Bang.' I made her and I worked her, and I guess she did
-her bit."
-
-For a space he meditated, puffing clouds of smoke from a ten-sou cigar.
-Then with a start he returned to life.
-
-"Will you have a _vin blanc_, old chap? Hi, papa, _deux vins blancs_!"
-
-As he pushed back his soft cap I saw that "Big-Bang" had set its mark
-upon him. The hair about his temples was white as snow.
-
-
-
-
-"WITH OUR ARMY IN FLANDERS"--FIGHTING WITH TOMMY ATKINS
-
-_Where Men Hold Rendezvous with Death_
-
-_Told by G. Valentine Williams, with the British Army_
-
- Written in the field and under the eye of the censor, G. Valentine
- Williams presents in "With Our Army in Flanders" (Edward Arnold,
- London) a series of vivid war chapters differing in many respects
- from the current conventional accounts from the battle fronts. Mr.
- Williams is the _London Daily Mail_ correspondent. He tells about
- the babel of tongues where men gather in khaki, strange meetings at
- the front of long separated friends and brothers, the hunger of the
- big guns.
-
-
-I--WHERE ALL DIALECTS MEET AT BATTLE
-
-One of the most fascinating things to me about our army in France
-are the variations of speech. I have sometimes closed my eyes when a
-battalion has been marching past me on the road and tried to guess,
-often with some measure of success, at the recruiting area of the
-regiment from the men's accents or from their tricks of speech.
-
-Take the Scottish regiments, for instance. I have little acquaintance
-with the dialects of Scotland, but my ear has told me that the speech
-of almost every Scottish regiment, save such regiments as the Gordons
-and the Black Watch, that attract men from all over the United Kingdom,
-differs.
-
-I spent a most fascinating half hour one morning with a handful of
-Glasgow newsboys serving in a famous Scottish regiment that wears the
-trews. Their speech was unmistakably the speech of the Glasgow streets,
-and their wits were as sharp as their bayonets. I told them they were
-newsboys and newsboys they were, or of the same class, vanboys and the
-like.
-
-I visited the Cameron Highlanders--what was left of their Territorial
-battalion--after the second battle of Ypres and heard, in the speech of
-Inverness-shire, their story of the battle. Many of them speak Gaelic.
-One of their officers confided to me that during the battle, requiring
-two men to go down to the rear, the wires being cut, to ascertain the
-whereabouts of the brigade headquarters, he selected two notorious deer
-poachers as likely to have their wits about them.
-
-It is a gratifying task, this identification of dialects. I have heard
-two sappers "fra' Wigan" engaged in a lively argument with two privates
-(from Cork) of the Leinster Regiment, in whose trench the two gentlemen
-"fra' Wigan" were operating. A London cockney, say, from one of the
-innumerable battalions of the Royal Fusiliers, would have understood
-less of that conversation if it had been carried on in German, but only
-a little less.
-
-During the Battle of Ypres two privates of the Monmouthshire Regiment,
-who were talking Welsh, were pounced upon by two prowling Southerners
-from one of the home counties and carried off to brigade headquarters
-as German spies. What with Welsh miners talking Welsh and Cameron
-Highlanders Gaelic, the broad speech of the Yorkshire Geordines, the
-homely burr of the Third Hussars and other regiments recruited in the
-West Country, the familiar twang of the cockneys, the rich brogue of
-the Irish regiments, the strong American intonation of the Canadians,
-a man out here begins to realize of what composite layers our race is
-formed.
-
-
-II--OLD FRIENDS AT THE FRONT
-
-Everybody who is anything is at the front. Never was there such a place
-for meeting as at Flanders. The Strand is not in it. My own experience
-is that of everybody else. One finds at the front men one has lost
-sight of for years, old friends who have dropped away in the hurry of
-existence, chance acquaintances of a Riviera train de luxe, men one has
-met in business, men who have measured one for clothes.
-
-Often I have heard my name sung out from the center of a column of
-marching troops, and a figure has stepped out to the roadside who,
-after my mind has shredded it of the unfamiliar uniform, the deep brown
-sunburn, the set expression, has revealed itself as old Tubby Somebody
-whom one had known at school, or Brown with whom one had played golf on
-those little links behind the Casino at Monte Carlo, or the manager of
-Messrs. Blank in the city.
-
-I wanted to find a relation of mine, a sergeant in a famous London
-regiment, and wrote to his people to get the number of his battalion
-and his company. When the reply came I discovered that the man I wanted
-was billetted not a hundred yards from me in the village, in which the
-War Correspondents' Headquarters were situated, where he had come with
-the shattered remnant of his battalion to rest, after the terrible
-"gruelling" they sustained in the second battle of Ypres.
-
-At the front one constantly witnesses joyous reunions, brother meeting
-brother in the happy, hazardous encounter of two battalions on the road
-or in the trenches. The very first man I met on coming out to the front
-was a motor-car driver, whose father had particularly asked me to look
-out for his boy. I discovered that he was the man appointed to drive
-me!
-
-Humor is probably the largest component part of the spirit of the
-British soldier, a paradoxical, phlegmatic sense of humor that comes
-out strongest when the danger is the most threatening. A Jack Johnson
-bursts close beside a British soldier who is lighting his pipe with
-one of those odious French sulphur matches. The shell blows a foul
-whiff of chemicals right across the man's face. "Oh, dear! Oh, dear!"
-he exclaimed with a perfectly genuine sigh, "these 'ere French matches
-will be the death o' me!"
-
-A reply which is equally characteristic of the state of mind of the
-British soldier who goes forth to war is that given by the irate driver
-of a staff car to a sentry in the early days of the war. The sentry
-in the dead of night had levelled his rifle at the chauffeur because
-the car had not stopped instantly on challenge. The driver backed his
-car toward where the sentry was standing. "I'll 'ave a word with you,
-young feller," he said. "Allow me to inform you that this car can't
-be stopped in less than twenty yards. If you go shoving that rifle of
-yours in people's faces some one will get shot before this war's over!"
-
-There is a great strain of tenderness in the British soldier, a great
-readiness to serve. Hear him on a wet night in the trenches, begrimed,
-red-eyed with fatigue, chilled to the bone, just about to lie down for
-a rest, offer to make his officer, tired as he is, "a drop of 'ot tea!"
-Watch him with German prisoners! His attitude is paternal, patronizing,
-rather that of a friendly London policeman guiding homeward the errant
-footsteps of a drunkard.
-
-
-III--DEEP IN A SOLDIER'S HEART
-
-Under influence of nameless German atrocities of all descriptions,
-the attitude of the British soldier in the fighting line is becoming
-fierce and embittered. Nothing will induce him, however, to vent his
-spite on prisoners, though few Germans understand anything else but
-force as the expression of power. They look upon our men as miserable
-mercenaries whose friendliness is simply an attempt to curry favor with
-the noble German krieger; our men regard them as misguided individuals
-who don't know any better....
-
-The German phrase, "_Stellungskrieg_," is a very accurate description
-of the great stalemate on the western front which we, more vaguely,
-term "trench warfare." It is, indeed, a constant manoeuvering for
-positions, a kind of great game of chess, in which the Germans,
-generally speaking, are seeking to gain the advantage for the purposes
-of their defensive, whilst the Allies' aim is to obtain the best
-positions for an offensive when the moment for this is ripe.
-
-The ground is under ceaseless survey. A move by the enemy calls for
-a counter-move on our part. A new trench dug by him may be found
-to enfilade our trenches from a certain angle, and while by the
-construction of new traverses or the heightening of parapet and parados
-the trench may be rendered immune from sniping, a fresh trench will be
-dug at a new angle or a machine gun brought up to make life sour for
-the occupants of the new German position, and force them in their turn
-to counter-measures.
-
-Any one who saw the trenches at Mons or even, much later, the trenches
-on the Aisne, would scarcely recognize them in the deep, elaborate
-earthworks of Flanders, with the construction of which our army is now
-so familiar.
-
-High explosive shells in unlimited quantities are necessary to keep
-the hammer pounding away at one given spot. To break a path for our
-infantry through the weakly held German trenches around Neuve Chapelle
-we had many scores of guns pouring in a concentrated fire on a front
-of 1,400 yards for a period of thirty-five minutes. In the operations
-around Arras the French are said to have fired nearly 800,000 shells in
-one day.
-
-Even this colossal figure was surpassed by the expenditure of
-high-explosive shells by the German and Austrian armies in their
-successful thrust against Przemysl. Our bombardment of Neuve Chapelle
-was, in the main, effective, though barbed-wire entanglements in front
-of part of the German trenches were not cut, and heavy casualties were
-thus caused to the infantry when they advanced.
-
-For the most part, however, we found the German trenches obliterated,
-the little village a smoking heap of ruins, and those Germans who
-survived, dazed and frightened, amid piles of torn corpses. If this
-enormous concentration of guns was required to blast a path of
-1,400 yards with a thirty-five-minute bombardment, what a gigantic
-concentration of artillery, what a colossal expenditure of ammunition,
-will be required to drive a wedge several miles deep through positions
-which the Germans have spent three seasons in strengthening and
-consolidating!
-
-
-IV--IN THE BOWELS OF THE EARTH
-
-I went down one of our mines one night. I was spending the night in our
-trenches and the captain in command of this particular section asked
-me if I would care to see "our mine." Considerations of the censorship
-impel me to abridge what follows up to the moment when I found myself
-in a square, greasy gallery, with clay walls propped up by timber balks
-leading straight out in the direction of the German trenches. Guttering
-candles stuck on the balks at intervals faintly lit up as strange a
-scene as I have witnessed in this war.
-
-Deep in the bowels of the earth a thick, square-set man in khaki
-trousers and trench boots, a ragged vest displaying a tremendous torso
-all glistening with sweat, was tipping clay out of a trolley and gently
-chaffing in a quite unprintable English of the region of Lancashire a
-hoarse but invisible person somewhere down the shaft.
-
-I crawled round the quizzer, slipping on the greasy planks awash with
-muddy water on the floor of the gallery, and found myself confronted
-by another of the troglodytes, a man who was so coated with clay that
-he appeared to be dyed khaki (like the horses of the Scots Greys) from
-top to toe. I asked him whence he came, so different was he, in speech
-and appearance, from the black-haired, low-browed Irishmen watching at
-the parapet of the trench far above us. "A coom fra' Wigan!" he said,
-wiping the sweat from his forehead with a grimy hand, and, thus saying,
-he turned round and made off swiftly, bent double as he was, down the
-low gallery.
-
-I followed, the water swishing ankle-deep round my field boots. The air
-was dank and foul; the stooping position became almost unbearable after
-a few paces; one slipped and slithered at every step.
-
-At intervals side-galleries ran out from the main gap, unlit, dark
-and forbidding--listening posts. After a hundred paces or so a
-trolley blocked the way. Behind it two men were working, my taciturn
-acquaintance and another. The latter was hacking at the virgin earth
-with a pick; the former was shoveling the clay into the trolley.
-
-I had not been out of that mine for more than a minute when an electric
-lamp flashed in my eyes, and an excitable young man, who held an
-automatic pistol uncomfortably near my person, accosted me thus: "I beg
-your pardon, sir"--it occurred to me that the pistol accorded ill with
-this polite form of address--"but may I ask what you were doing down my
-mine?" My friend, the Captain, rushed forward with an explanation and
-an introduction, the pistol was put away, and the sapper subaltern was
-easily persuaded to come along to the dugout and have a drop of grog
-before turning in.
-
-One story of the mines which made everybody laugh was that of the
-subaltern fresh out from home, a keen young officer, who came one night
-to the dug-out of the sapper officer supervising the digging of a mine.
-
-"You must go up at once," he whispered in his ear in a voice hoarse
-with excitement, "it is very important. Lose no time." The sapper had
-gone to his dug-out worn out after several sleepless nights, and was
-very loath to sally forth into the cold and frosty air. "It is a mine,
-a German mine," said the subaltern fresh out from home; "you can see
-them working through the glasses." The sapper was out in a brace of
-shakes, and hurriedly followed the subaltern along the interminable
-windings of the trenches.
-
-In great excitement the subaltern led him to where a telescope rested
-on the parapet. "Look!" he said dramatically. The sapper applied his
-eye to the glass. There was a bright moon, and by its rays he saw, sure
-enough, figures working feverishly about a shaft. There was something
-familiar about it, though; then he realized that he was looking down
-his own mine. The wretched youth who had dragged him from his slumbers
-had forgotten the windings of the trench.
-
-
-V--INVENTIVE GENIUS OF THE SOLDIERS
-
-"Bombing" is one form of trench warfare particularly annoying to the
-enemy. The revival of bombing began when a British soldier, to while
-away an idle moment, put some high explosive and a lighted fuse in
-a discarded bully-beef tin, and pitched it into the German trench
-opposite him.
-
-In his way the British soldier is as handy as the bluejacket, and the
-long days of the winter monotony produced all kinds of inventions in
-the way of mortars and bombs, which led to the scientific development
-of this mode of warfare. A Territorial officer was discovered making
-all manner of ingenious bombs and trench appliances in his spare time.
-He was taken out of the trenches and installed in an empty school, and
-when last I heard of him had a regular factory turning out bombs for
-the firing line.
-
-Bombing is very tricky work. Your bomb must be safe as long as it is in
-your possession. Nor must it be liable to explosion if dropped after
-the safety-catch has been removed. That is why bombs are provided with
-time fuses. Some nicety of judgment is required to hurl them so that
-they will explode on impact or immediately afterward.
-
-If the time fuse has still a second or so to burn when the bomb falls
-in the enemy trench, a resolute man will pick it up and fling it back,
-with disastrous consequences to the bomber. Therefore bombers must be
-trained. The training is extremely simple, but it is essential, and I
-look forward to the time when every soldier who comes out to France
-from home will have gone through a course of bombing just as he has
-gone through a course of musketry.
-
-Just as the Austro-Prussian War of 1866 introduced the needle-gun, and
-the Franco-Prussian War the chassepot rifle, and the South African War
-was the war of the magazine rifle, so the present war will be known
-as the war of the automatic gun. When the German General Staff sits
-down to write its official history of the great war it will be able
-to attribute the greater part of the success that German arms may
-have achieved to its foresight in accumulating an immense stock of
-machine-guns, and in studying the whole theory and tactics of this
-comparatively new weapon before any other army in the world became
-alive to its paramount importance.
-
-The only factor that furnishes anything like a certain basis for
-calculation as to the date of the conclusion of the war is the number
-of fighting men available for each of the different belligerents. Of
-all the supplies required for making war, the supply of men is limited.
-The Germans recognized this sooner than any of their opponents. In the
-machine-gun they had a machine that does the work of many men.
-
-The machine-gun is the multiplication of the rifle. The Vickers gun
-fires up to 500 shots a minute. This is also the average performance of
-the German gun. To silence this multiplication of fire you must outbid
-it, you must beat it down with an even greater multiplication. This is
-where the difficulty comes in for an attacking force.
-
-The machine-gun, with its mounting and ammunition and spare parts, is
-neither light in weight nor inconspicuous to carry. When the infantry
-has rushed a trench after the preliminary bombardment the machine-guns
-have to be carried bodily forward over a shell and bullet swept area,
-where the machine-gun detachment is a familiar and unexpected target
-for the German marksmen. This is where the automatic rifle is destined
-to play a part--a part so decisive, in my opinion, as may win the war
-for us.
-
-The automatic rifle is a light machine-gun. In appearance it
-resembles an ordinary service rifle, with rather a complicated and
-swollen-looking magazine. It is not water-cooled like the machine-gun,
-but air-cooled, and is therefore not absolutely reliable for long
-usage, as it inevitably becomes heated after much firing. It will fire,
-however, up to 300-odd shots a minute, and can be regarded as the
-ideal weapon for beating down German machine-gun fire and checking the
-advance of bombers while the heavier but more reliable machine-guns are
-coming up.
-
-
-
-
-COMEDIES OF THE GREAT WAR
-
-_Tales of Humor on the Fighting Lines_
-
-_Told by W. F. Martindale_
-
- In the Great War, as in everything else, comedy treads hard on
- the heels of tragedy, and all sorts of quaint and comical things
- happen. Here are some little stories, from a variety of reliable
- sources, which will serve to show that our fighting-men, both
- ashore and afloat, are still able to preserve a sense of humor.
- Narrated in the _Wide World_.
-
-
-I--STORIES TOLD "ON THE SOLDIERS"
-
-Human nature is whetted to a keep edge under the stress of warfare;
-that is why every war is rich in anecdote.
-
-Character is the basis of all comedy, and the conditions of military
-life, whether on active service or not, are such that "character will
-out." In barracks, in camp, or in the field, soldiering applies a test
-which no man can evade. Ranker, non-com., or officer, he is bound soon
-or late (generally soon) to be "found out."
-
-There is a pretty little comedy of character which concerns a young
-subaltern, fresh from an English public school, who found himself
-attached, through one of the unexpected chances of war, to a battalion
-of Colonial infantry. The subaltern was youthful--and looked it.
-His cheek was smooth and innocent of hair, the accents of his voice
-cultured and refined, his manner languid to the point of seeming
-boredom. He was slight of stature, and he wore a monocle permanently
-fixed in one eye. In short, he was a complete antithesis to the brawny
-brood of Anak which constituted his platoon, amongst whom his advent
-aroused no enthusiasm whatever. He was not popular.
-
-There is little risk of offence at this time of day in observing that
-some of the Overseas troops are not remarkable for the strictness of
-their discipline. It is a little idiosyncrasy at which no one, with
-memories of Ypres and Anzac still fresh, will be disposed to cavil.
-This is not to say that they cannot be handled; on the contrary,
-there is ample evidence of their instant response to leadership of
-the sort which they understand. But one would hardly look for that
-particular sort from a beardless youth with an eye permanently glazed,
-and a refined taste in language and clothes. A manner which might be
-acceptable to the Guards is as little suited to Colonials as Colonial
-methods to the Household Brigade. There is a custom and usage in these
-matters.
-
-So it came to pass that the platoon took counsel with itself and
-darkly determined to take its young subaltern down a peg or two. Is it
-necessary to observe that the prime offences of the latter, in the eyes
-of these critics, were his monocle and his accent--those traditional
-marks and insignia of the "dude"? It is strange that so often the dandy
-(whom history has shown to be invariably a man of spirit and courage)
-should be mistaken for the dude.
-
-
-II--THE OFFICER WITH THE MONOCLE
-
-On a certain morning, therefore, behold the platoon drawn up on
-parade, accoutred with meticulous care, aligned in the most precise
-formation--each man wearing his "identity disc" in his eye! For the
-benefit of any reader who has never seen an identity disc, it may be
-mentioned that the latter is the small plate of metal on which is
-stamped certain information concerning the wearer which enable his
-body, if necessary, to be identified. Being of the same shape, and
-about the same size, as an eyeglass, and, moreover, suspended from a
-cord worn round the neck, it can be made to form an admirable travesty
-of a monocle.
-
-Not a twitch of a single muscle in the face of the young subaltern, not
-a flicker of his unmonocled eye, betrayed that he was aware of anything
-unusual in the appearance of his men. He took the situation in coolly,
-and when, in answer to routine questions, the sergeants answered
-smartly and respectfully but with a pointed imitation of his own
-"haw-haw" accent, he ignored the studied insult with equal nonchalance.
-
-It was a good start, for an attempt at sarcasm when quietly ignored
-falls flatter even than when it is wholly unperceived. In the present
-case there was no possibility of an insult having been missed, and the
-platoon began to feel that things were not going quite as had been
-anticipated. Each man kept his identity disc firmly screwed in one eye,
-however, and stared fixedly out of the other in expectation of the
-officer's present discomfort. The latter could never afford to dismiss
-the parade without taking cognizance of what had occurred, and the
-platoon awaited the crux with interest.
-
-But the moment of dismissal arrived and nothing had been said. Some of
-the men were covertly smiling.
-
-As he gave the order, the subaltern let the monocle drop from his
-eye, and while the command was being obeyed, swung the glass round
-and round, with the cord between finger and thumb, in a rapid circle.
-Scanning the line narrowly and noting every glance upon him, he jerked
-the twirling glass suddenly into the air and with the neatness of
-a juggler caught it in his eye as it fell. Then he glared fiercely
-through it.
-
-"See if you can do _that_!" he observed. "Dis-MISS!"
-
-Thereafter no officer ever had men under him more ready to do whatever
-he asked them. And it was by a sure instinct that the latter "gave him
-best." As one of them remarked, "I've seen men take risks in my time,
-but that beat everything. _Suppose he'd missed catchin' that glass?_"
-
-If wit is a Gallic prerogative, humor belongs to the British, and not
-a few comedies of the war pivot on that uniquely humorous character
-Thomas Atkins. Humor is an elusive and baffling quantity, as the
-wit discovered who mixed up all the boots in an hotel corridor one
-evening and learned the next morning that his friend (a humorist) had
-sorted them out again as soon as his back was turned. The humorist can
-sometimes understand the wit, but the compliment is seldom, if ever,
-returned; which is the reason why Mr. Atkins and his idiosyncrasies
-remain an inscrutable enigma to our French allies.
-
-And if the British soldier appears incomprehensible to the
-nimble-minded French, one can readily perceive that to the slow and
-methodically-thinking German he must seem merely mad. The French marvel
-that he is never "serious"; the Boche is perplexed to find that Hymns
-of Hate and other laborious insults afford him the keenest possible
-enjoyment. The secret lies in Mr. Atkins's sense of humor, which is
-another way of saying his sense of proportion. He may be guilty of
-little aberrations such as dribbling a football in front of him as he
-advances with cold steel to the charge, but _au fond_ he has a pretty
-just sense of values.
-
-
-III--THE GERMANS WHO SANG "RULE BRITTANIA"
-
-At all events, his humor has the dry quality which connotes an even
-mind and temper, as the following incident will show. In the earlier
-days of the war, before the opposing armies in the West had burrowed
-into the soil and some freedom of movement was still possible, a patrol
-of three British soldiers under a sergeant were prowling abroad one
-night. Within disputed territory they espied a lighted window in a
-lonely farmhouse which they knew had been deserted by its owners. They
-approached it stealthily. The house was surrounded without challenge,
-and having posted his men at points which commanded the exits the
-sergeant crept forward to reconnoitre. Music and sounds of revelry were
-audible within, and the sergeant had no difficulty in discovering the
-presence of four German soldiers in the farmer's best sitting-room.
-The cellar had been looted, the piano commandeered, and four Teutonic
-voices were upraised in melody.
-
-The sergeant beckoned to the waiting figures outside, and four large
-but softly-treading men tiptoed delicately to the scene of the
-carousal. At a given signal the door was flung open and four rifles
-were levelled.
-
-"Hands up!"
-
-A chorus of "_Deutschland, Deutschland, ueber Alles_" was interrupted a
-shade abruptly, and four pairs of arms shot up into the air. The Boche
-does not shine in an emergency.
-
-With a gesture the sergeant marshalled the captives against the wall,
-where they stood in a row, blinking and crestfallen. Their weapons
-having been collected and removed, they were allowed to put their hands
-down, and their captors regarded them quizzically.
-
-"Any of you blokes speak English?" queried the sergeant, genially.
-
-A smile of modest pride momentarily illumined one of the four wooden
-faces.
-
-"_Ja_, I spik leedle English," ventured its owner.
-
-"In-_deed_!" was the rejoinder; "and where did _you_ learn it--in the
-Tottenham Court Road?"
-
-The linguist simpered deprecatingly, with evident gratification over
-the good impression which he appeared to be making. It takes a lot to
-upset the complacence of the Boche.
-
-"Been havin' a sing-song?" continued the sergeant, encouragingly.
-
-The other nodded. "Der Shermans vas always der beoble of singing," he
-observed, in faintly patronizing tones.
-
-"Ho, _are_ they?" said the sergeant. "Then suppose you start in and
-sing us 'Rule Britannia' for a bit. Give us a tune, Bill."
-
-Bill propped his rifle against the wall, and sat himself solemnly at
-the open piano. He was not a great performer, but rose to the occasion
-and produced a rendering of the familiar tune which was at least
-recognizable.
-
-"Now, then," said the sergeant, warming to his work, "not bein' a
-blinkin' German I don't 'appen to be no singer, but just you listen,
-and if you don't know the words, say 'em after me. '_When Brit-ain
-fir-ir-ir-ir-irst at----_'"
-
-The musical evening was a great success, said the member of the party
-from whom the present writer had the story. "We kept 'em there for four
-hours, and by the time we'd finished with 'em they could sing it a fair
-treat. And we didn't spare 'em the encores neither. Course, they wasn't
-singin' _all_ the time, 'cos we spent some of it in moppin' up the
-liquor and the food and the cigars they hadn't finished. But I reckon
-they did all the singin' they wanted. Then we fell 'em into line and
-drove 'em home as prisoners. They _asked_ for it, you see!"
-
-
-IV--STORY OF A FISHERMAN AND A MINE
-
-The chief officer of a steamer under charter to the Admiralty tells
-a very amusing story concerning an encounter with a mine, though he
-candidly admits that he didn't see the humor of it until some time
-after the incident occurred.
-
-His ship was lying alongside the quay at X----, taking in some hundreds
-of tons of explosives. He himself, having nothing particular to do at
-the moment, was leaning over the bridge-rails looking thoughtfully out
-to sea. All of a sudden he noticed an aged waterman rowing towards the
-ship, with some odd-looking object towing astern of his bluff-bowed
-craft. The old man seemed to have difficulty in getting along, and the
-officer watched him curiously, speculating as to what he was hauling.
-At first sight it looked like a mooring-buoy, but as the boat came
-nearer the watcher got the shock of his life. The fisherman was towing
-a German mine of the very largest type!
-
-There flashed through the officer's mind the thought of the latent
-power stored away in that wicked-looking sphere, only needing a slight
-shock to set it free; he thought, too, of the vast store of explosives
-under his feet and on the quay. If that mine exploded against the
-steamer's side there would not be one stone of X---- left upon another!
-
-"Hi, you!" he shouted to the oncoming rower. "Sheer off with that
-thing! We've got explosive aboard!"
-
-By way of answer the old man--now scarce a dozen yards away--cupped his
-hand behind his ear.
-
-"What d'yer say, sir?" he called back, mildly. "I found this 'ere in
-the tideway, an' I knew there was a bit of a reward offered, an' so----"
-
-The big mine was now bobbing dangerously close to the steamer's side,
-and the officer, frantic with anxiety, literally bellowed orders
-for the man to remove himself and his prize. In his excitement he
-suggested regions where it is possible the temperature might have had
-a disastrous effect.
-
-The fisherman looked up at him with a smile. "That's all right, sir,"
-he replied. "He 'on't do no harm. I knocked the horns off he with a
-boat-hook."
-
-And so it proved. The old man, in his ignorance, had taken a million to
-one chance, and it had come off. They say there is a special Providence
-that looks after fools, but it must be peculiarly irritating to the
-apostle of "frightfulness" to know that an aged waterman, encountering
-a drifting mine, can lightheartedly knock off the detonator-equipped
-"horns" or projections and live to bring his prize into port and
-receive a reward. The chief officer aforesaid, however is not anxious
-for another experience of the kind; he says they are too trying to the
-nerves.
-
-
-V--THE COCKNEY AND HIS "SOOVENEER"
-
-Comedy, it has been observed, turns upon character, and many little
-comedies of the war hinge upon the mere personality of Thomas Atkins
-himself, and the somewhat difficult adjustment of that uniquely
-stubborn thing to a new environment. The resulting incidents derive
-a great part of their humor from Mr. Atkins's manner of narrating
-them--especially if he chance to be from London. There is no wittier or
-more tersely vivid _raconteur_ than the Cockney, and though one often
-hears the humor of the British soldier described as unconscious, it
-is really nothing of the kind. Spontaneous and unpremeditated it may
-be, but such penetrating acumen as his racy idiom reveals was never
-unconscious.
-
-Half-a-dozen soldiers home from the Front on short leave found
-themselves in a railway carriage bound for Victoria. They were of
-different battalions, and fell naturally to the swapping of yarns.
-Soon the conversation drifted to "souvenirs," a topic of surpassing
-interest. Trophies were produced by each in turn, with the exception
-of one taciturn member of the party who sat in a corner seat morosely
-sucking at a short clay pipe.
-
-"_I_ ain't brought nothin' 'ome wiv me," was the curt response to a
-suggestion that the silent one should produce his little lot. There
-ensued a dialogue.
-
-"Wot, nothin' at all?"
-
-"No!"
-
-"Well, I'm blowed! Fancy a bloke comin' 'ome on leave and not bringin'
-nothin' wiv 'im! Ain't you got no sooverneer?"
-
-"Sooveneer! No, I ain't got no sooveneer--not unless you call this 'ere
-a sooverneer."
-
-The morose one fumbled in his haversack and pulled forth a brass
-door-knob, which he displayed upon an extended palm. Its appearance
-excited derision.
-
-"That's a perishin' fine sooveneer, I _don't_ think! Why, it's only a
-ornery door-knob!"
-
-"Well, wot abaht it? S'posin' it is only an ornery door-knob! Maybe you
-dunno 'ow I come by it!"
-
-Pressed for the story, the owner of the unexpected article proceeded:--
-
-"It was like this 'ere. I'd been two weeks on a stretch in the
-trenches, and never a drink--wot you might _call_ a drink--the 'ole
-blinkin' time. Goin' back through the billets after we was relieved I
-seed a place where they had liquor for sale, and I goes up to the door
-to get a drink. Well, I 'adn't no more than took 'old o' the knob when
-a blinkin' Jack Johnson come over and blew the 'ole blinkin' 'ouse out
-of my 'and!"
-
-And with an evident sense of personal grievance not yet allayed the
-speaker pouched his "sooveneer" and relapsed into gloomy taciturnity.
-
-
-VI--THE COOK AND THE BOMB IN GREECE
-
-Of comedies arising out of Mr. Atkins's imperturbable phlegm there is
-no end. One will suffice here--a little incident which occurred at
-Salonica. At the Greek port some of our troops, it seems, are encamped
-upon the hills above the town. One morning a covey of six enemy
-aeroplanes flew overhead and dropped three bombs in passing. The first
-exploded harmlessly, but the second fell plumb on a cook's tent, and
-blew it sky-high. Shirts, coats, and trousers went hurtling up into
-the air with a grim resemblance to mutilated bodies. Fortunately no
-one was inside the tent. The cook was only five yards away, however,
-busily marshalling an array of "dixies" (military camp-kettles) which
-had been newly filled at the distant water-supply below. The force of
-the explosion blew him off his feet, and likewise overturned the row of
-dixies.
-
-Those near at hand feared their comrade had been hit by a fragment
-of the bomb and ran to his assistance. But as they approached a
-dishevelled figure rose from amidst the _debris_ and wrathfully
-surveyed the wreckage of his "kitchen." At the spot where his tent
-had been two minutes previously he hardly glanced. "And now," was his
-indignant comment, "I serpose I'll 'ave to go down the ---- 'ill and
-fill up the ---- dixies again!"
-
-
-VII--A SEA-TALE--THE LIEUTENANT'S STANCHIONS
-
-By way of conclusion here is a little naval comedy. A minor unit of
-His Majesty's Navy was undergoing the process known as "fitting
-out." Her commander, one of the many good sportsmen who have placed
-their personal services and such seamanship as they have acquired as
-amateur yachtsmen and sailors at the disposal of the Admiralty, arrived
-one morning to find a score or two of dockyard workmen on board, all
-busy (in theory) with the multifarious tasks awaiting completion. In
-practice, something like half the number were, if not idle, at least
-less occupied than the immediate requirements of the vessel seemed to
-warrant.
-
-The commander, being in private life a business man of considerable
-energy, with a habit of getting things done, regarded the scene with
-considerable disfavour, and set himself at once to remedy the state
-of affairs. But the dockyard workman is an individual with very
-definite ideas of his own as to how a job should be done, and a fixed
-determination to do it that way unless thwarted by an authority which
-he dare not evade.
-
-Finding orders, though respectfully received, were inadequate to the
-occasion, the commander tried reason and persuasion. But though the
-latter was carried to the point of cajolery the result was the same.
-Baffled in the exercise of his own authority and a trifle nettled in
-consequence, the energetic lieutenant determined upon a desperate
-expedient. In his best sarcastic vein he wrote out a signal and
-requested its transmission to the flag-captain. The officer in whose
-discretion it lay to forward or suppress the message being likewise an
-amateur, not yet too deeply imbued with a respect for conventions, the
-signal was duly made. It was to the following effect:--
-
-"SUBMITTED: That as there are at present forty workmen on No. 001, of
-which number half are seated permanently on the ship's rail, a further
-working party be at once sent down to strengthen the stanchions, which
-will otherwise collapse under the strain."
-
-Within half an hour a party of workmen reported themselves at No. 001
-and gravely proceeded to strengthen the stanchions! Protests were
-unavailing: the men had their orders, and with bolts, rivets, rods, and
-who shall say what other contraptions, they proceeded to carry them out
-with a thoroughness almost menacing.
-
-The commanding officer of No. 001 delights to tell this story to his
-friends as a shining example of the crass ineptitude of which the
-official mind, even in the Navy, is sometimes capable. It may be so;
-but his friends, observing those admirably buttressed stanchions, and
-noting the considerable inconvenience to which their immovable presence
-permanently condemns the maker of that rash signal, sometimes wonder
-whether the laugh is altogether on the latter's side.
-
-Lieutenant X---- looks forward to some future day when he may meet
-the flag-captain in person, and there is no doubt he already has a
-very good notion of what he then intends to say. But suppose he should
-be greeted, before ever he can introduce the topic himself, with the
-genial inquiry, "And how are your stanchions lasting?"
-
-They have a way of their own in the Navy.
-
-
-
-
-LITTLE STORIES OF THE BIG WAR
-
-_Unusual Anecdotes at First Hand_
-
-_Told by Karl K. Kitchen in Germany_
-
- The four war stories which follow--stories of adventure, suffering
- and daring--were heard by Karl K. Kitchen of the _New York World_
- during his sojourn in Germany. Two of the stories he had at
- first hand, and can vouch for. A third was related to him by His
- Excellency Baron von Bissing, the Military Governor of Belgium. The
- fourth--recounting the exploits of Capt. Peifer, perhaps the most
- remarkable story of the war--was related to the writer by a naval
- officer. Copyright, 1916, Press Publishing Company.
-
-
-I--STORY OF A MOTHER'S TRAGEDY
-
-One of my best friends in Vienna was Ernst Karczag. Shortly after the
-outbreak of the war I received a postal from him stating that he was
-about to rejoin his regiment--he was a lieutenant in a crack hussar
-regiment--and proceed to the Galician front. At Christmas I received a
-long letter from him and a photograph of himself in his hussar uniform.
-Then one morning in March I received a cablegram from a mutual friend
-in London, stating that Ernst had died of cholera in Poland.
-
-Ernst was in his twenty-fifth year and was tenderly attached to his
-mother. Until the war broke out he had never been away from home except
-on a brief holiday, and his long absence at the front last winter
-brought his mother to the verge of a nervous collapse. It came to a
-point where it was absolutely necessary for her to see her son. Mr.
-Karczag, although a millionaire and a man of considerable influence,
-was unable to get a pass for his wife to visit the line near Lodz in
-Poland, where the son's regiment was stationed. She set out for Lodz
-alone.
-
-After nearly a week of the hardest kind of travelling, much of it in
-troop trains, she reached Lodz, where she found every hotel occupied by
-German and Austrian officers. In desperation she decided to appeal to
-Gen. Mackensen, the famous German General, who was in supreme command.
-
-"You shall see your son to-morrow morning," he told her when he learned
-that her boy was a lieutenant of a certain hussar regiment. "I am
-reviewing the Austrian troops at 6 o'clock to-morrow morning. If you
-will come to my headquarters at that time I shall permit you to witness
-the review."
-
-The review of the Austrian troops lasted nearly five hours, and it was
-witnessed by Gen. Mackensen, his staff and the mother of my friend.
-Regiment after regiment passed by, but there was no sign of the young
-hussar officer. The anxious mother was almost ready to break down, when
-at the very end of the last regiment in the review she caught sight of
-her son. Forgetting her peculiar position she called to her boy. But he
-did not hear her, and a few moments later he galloped out of sight.
-
-"I must have a few words with my boy," she pleaded with Gen. Mackensen;
-"I must talk with him."
-
-Evidently she struck a sympathetic chord in his nature, for he told
-her he would send a motor car to the hotel to take her to her son's
-regiment. For two days she waited for the car, but as it did not arrive
-she again went to Gen. Mackensen's headquarters, only to learn that he
-had been called away to another position on the front. Apparently he
-had forgotten all about his promise. There was no one to help her, so
-she started out alone to reach the little Polish village where her
-son's regiment was stationed. No conveyance was obtainable for any sum,
-so for three days and three nights the poor mother walked the frozen
-roads to her son's side.
-
-It was a wonderful meeting between mother and son, and when the Colonel
-of the regiment heard what she had gone through he placed his own
-quarters at her disposal. When the time came for her return he sent
-her back to Lodz in a military wagon. Three days later she was back in
-Vienna, rejoicing with her husband that their son was alive and well.
-
-Imagine their great shock when two days after her return they received
-a telegram from the Colonel of the regiment stating that Ernst had died
-suddenly of cholera.
-
-It is difficult to convey any idea of the grief of the parents of this
-young officer. The father has lost all interest in life--money means
-nothing to him. The mother is inconsolable and her mental condition is
-becoming critical.
-
-
-II--HOW CAPT. PEIFER WON HIS "POUR LE MERITE"
-
-Shortly after the outbreak of the war, Capt. Peifer, a German naval
-officer in command of the cruiser _Yorke_, ran his ship on a mine and
-the cruiser sank with nearly all on board, but Capt. Peifer was saved.
-He was court-martialled and sentenced to twenty years' imprisonment.
-
-The Captain being an expert in high explosives, influential friends
-pleaded his cause with the Kaiser, who suspended the sentence. Capt.
-Peifer accordingly was released and offered his services to the
-commander of the German forces in Turkey. He was assigned to duties
-connected with the production of munitions when the Gallipoli campaign
-began. According to the story, the British forces might have succeeded
-in reaching Constantinople if it had not been for Major Peifer.
-
-With characteristic energy and ingenuity he started several munition
-factories for the production of high explosive shells within a few
-miles of Constantinople. His knowledge, combined with German efficiency
-and tireless Turk labor, gave the defenders of the Dardanelles
-sufficient high explosive shells to check the invaders until munitions
-arrived from Germany.
-
-Of course the Turkish and the German commanders-in-chief were highly
-pleased with Capt. Peifer's service, and the latter sent in his name to
-the Kaiser as an officer deserving the order of "Pour le Merite"--one
-of the most coveted honors of all Germany.
-
-For once German thoroughness and efficiency were inoperative. Neither
-the Kaiser nor his closest advisers recognized in Major Peifer the
-former naval captain who had sent his ship on a mine in violation of
-proper warnings. The order of "Pour le Merite" was conferred on the new
-military officer, who naturally thought that his previous blunder had
-been forgiven.
-
-Accordingly he applied to the naval ministry for permission to rejoin
-his old branch of the service. This let the cat out of the bag, and
-the entire matter was laid before the Kaiser. With true magnanimity he
-commuted the twenty years' sentence, but ordered the Major to remain in
-the army, promising him promotion in the very near future.
-
-
-III--STORY OF AUTOMOBILE THAT CAPTURED AN AEROPLANE
-
-The day Germany declared war on France, Gunther Hensel, the
-twenty-two-year-old son of Ernest Johannes Hensel, a wealthy real
-estate operator in Berlin, offered his services to his Fatherland.
-As he had been engaged in the automobile business in Berlin he was
-enlisted in a motor car battalion, where he became what is known in
-Germany as a "benzine lieutenant," with no immediate prospects of ever
-becoming anything else.
-
-However, last October, after driving military motors at the front for
-more than a year, an opportunity presented itself which won Gunther
-Hensel his coveted promotion.
-
-While driving behind the lines near Arras he caught sight of a French
-aeroplane which had landed because of motor trouble. Young Hensel's
-only companion at the time was an orderly, so it was a question of
-acting without orders.
-
-Without hesitation he drove at full speed toward the aeroplane. The
-Frenchmen opened fire with their revolvers, but their shots went wild,
-and before they could prevent it the heavy motor car crossed the field
-and crashed into the flying machine, wrecking it beyond all hope of
-immediate repair.
-
-Both Frenchmen were caught in the wreckage, and the orderly, who of
-course had a rifle, forced them to surrender. Thus in one fell swoop
-the young benzine lieutenant captured a valuable French aeroplane and
-two enemy soldiers. In all probability this was the first aeroplane
-ever captured by an automobile.
-
-As a reward for this exploit he received an Iron Cross and was
-transferred to the officers' college, where he is now getting
-instruction in the duties of a full-fledged infantry officer.
-
-
-IV--STORY OF THE "UNDERGROUND RAILROAD"
-
-Ever since the Germans have been in Brussels there has existed an
-"underground railroad" to aid escaped French and Belgian prisoners
-of war in reaching the Holland border and thus regaining their lines.
-The German secret service tried in vain to discover how the prisoners
-got away, but without success--until last September. Then one of the
-"operatives," as Detective Burns would say, conceived the idea of
-donning part of a French uniform and appealing to Belgian farmers on
-the outskirts of Brussels to help him to get over the frontier.
-
-When a train load of French prisoners was moved from Lille to Aix la
-Chapelle, this secret service man jumped from the train just before it
-reached Brussels, and, taking refuge in a barn until dusk, appealed to
-the farmer to let him remain there until he could obtain other clothes
-to effect his escape.
-
-Impressed by the spy's French language and uniform, the unsuspecting
-farmer provided him with the desired garments. The spy then asked him
-for the name of some one in Brussels who would help him. The farmer
-directed him to a wealthy flour and feed dealer in the Belgian capital.
-This man in turn passed him on to another Belgian who was connected
-with the "underground railroad," and in less than two weeks the German
-spy found himself in Rotterdam.
-
-Of course he had learned the identity of every Belgian who had
-befriended him, and on his return to Brussels he uncovered the entire
-"underground" system. The trail led right to the chief surgical
-hospital in the capital--the hospital in which Miss Edith Cavell was
-the head nurse.
-
-
-
-
-POGROM--THE TRAGEDY OF THE JEWS AND THE ARMENIANS
-
-_A Masterful Tale of the Eastern Front_
-
-_Told by M. C. della Grazie of Vienna_
-
- No result of the war has been more pitiable than the suffering
- inflicted on the subject races caught in its grip. These submerged
- peoples have had to submit helplessly to the brutalities of both
- sets of combatants. The Poles, the Ruthenians, the Ukranians, the
- Slavs of Bohemia and Moravia, have fought with little heart for
- Russia, Austria or Prussia, as the case might be. But the Jews
- of the Polish Pale and of Galicia have had an even harder fate;
- for while the men of military age have followed the flags of
- their masters, the women, the children and the old men have been
- obliged to face at home all the evils which travel in the wake of
- war--disorder, violence, disease, spoliation and semi-starvation.
- The following story is by M. C. della Grazie, a well known Viennese
- writer. It makes a masterly use of a single, simple incident to
- bring home the meaning of one of the war's most hopeless and
- poignant tragedies. It was written at the time when the Russians
- still occupied the greater part of the Austrian province of
- Galicia. This translation, with editorial comment, is by William L.
- McPherson in the _New York Tribune_.
-
-
-I--STORY OF GABRIEL GABRILOVITCH
-
-The colonel sat on the edge of his rumpled-up peasant's bed and with
-an impatient movement knocked the ashes from his cigar. On the dirty
-table before him lay the last number of a Russian weekly, which had
-just arrived by field post in Galicia--a little crumpled, but otherwise
-fresh looking, and with pictures which made one's mouth water.
-
-The devil! Was it still going so comfortably back in Petersburg (he
-stopped suddenly and substituted Petrograd) with those rascals of
-civilians and war cripples? Did such attractive girls still come in
-and sing and dance as those whose pictures stared at him out of the
-pages of the last number of the _Nida_? They must be damnably well off,
-those dogs, able to frequent the Varieties, where people sit in cozy
-warmth about the tables and worry about nothing more serious than the
-genuineness of the labels on the wine bottles.
-
-And he, Gabriel Gabrilovitch! He had lain with his regiment for
-nearly two weeks in this miserable Galician hole and was forced to
-congratulate himself that a single windproof hut remained in which to
-stop for breath after all those futile attacks--that he was able at
-night to throw himself on a bundle of straw under this foul roof and
-drink punch brewed from whiskey stolen from the Jews.
-
-For this time no headway was to be made against the devils opposite.
-Not even once as far as their barbed wire defences! So well was their
-artillery posted. To such a raking fire was every moving object exposed
-which came in sight within an area several hundred meters wide!
-
-A tiresome game that--an accursedly tiresome game--and if Gabriel
-Gabrilovitch himself should be one of the victims! He sprang up and
-began to pace with heavy steps the uneven clay floor. He knew of better
-things than that!
-
-Those Petrogradians--look, look!
-
-The slender, willowy, singing girl there in the _Nida_, with that
-smile which was in itself a seduction! She evoked another image in his
-excited fancy. It was his last evening of pleasure in golden Petrograd.
-In a variety cabaret, too.
-
-The stage is already empty, the programme finished. But in a room off
-the stage reserved for the performers and their guests he sees just
-such a piquant little creature take form in the thin smoke clouds of
-his cigarette. Exactly the same smile--acquired in Paris, and then
-carried triumphantly from stage to stage, from banquet to banquet.
-
-The imitation diamonds glitter in the deep corsage of her dress. The
-coquettish curls hang like golden orchids over her ears. The atrophied
-stare of the wide pupils has the fascination of a serpent's eye. Before
-her stands a tall, narrow glass vase, out of which nod the blood-red,
-long-stemmed pinks which he had brought her. He, Gabriel Gabrilovitch!
-
-It is a picture imprinted so vividly on his senses by the warm rush of
-recollection that he thinks he really sees it--not least of all the
-purplish red of the vase of flowers.
-
-They take it easy, those Nevsky Prospekt loungers--they take it easy!
-
-He reaches for the glass--already cold, curse it! Not very long now and
-it will be day again and a new assault, as vain as the others, will
-bring them face to face with death.
-
-A cold draft strikes his neck. He turns around, half angry, to see who
-has entered.
-
-
-II--THE COSSACK LIEUTENANT'S HATRED
-
-"Ah, so!"
-
-It is the sotnik (lieutenant) of a Cossack detachment which has
-received the order to drive the last Jews out of the surrounding
-villages, so that the army can have a free field. The snow, which has
-frozen finger thick on his green overcoat, begins to melt in the close,
-hot air of the room. The small, hard Asiatic eyes shine. The red,
-frosted fists are still clenched, as if they had just beaten somebody.
-
-"One can't be really angry with these fellows," says the colonel to
-himself, with a feeling of soldierly satisfaction.
-
-"They are such splendid beasts."
-
-But he asks aloud:
-
-"Finished?"
-
-The Cossack's laugh is quick and harsh.
-
-"All herded together, Colonel. Nothing is lacking but the Red Sea."
-
-"How many?"
-
-"Several hundred."
-
-"And where are you going to drive them?"
-
-The young lieutenant raises his shoulders slowly, so that the snow on
-them touches and cools his red cheeks.
-
-"I'll have to get an order from you as to that!"
-
-"An order!" cries the colonel. "An order! Now, by all three
-metropolitans! The devil take me if I know!"
-
-The sotnik raises his shoulder again.
-
-"While they're here they will be in our way."
-
-"The vermin," growls the colonel, "always pestering us like----"
-
-"Like others we are on intimate terms with," laughs the Cossack.
-
-"Look there, if you please!" And half jokingly, half disgustedly, he
-points to a black swarm of roaches hurrying like a wagon train from
-behind the stove and making for a crack in the floor near the open door.
-
-"They are emigrating, the vermin," exclaims the colonel; "upon my soul,
-they are."
-
-"Because they are hungry," says the Cossack, with a grin.
-
-"But the Jews. The Jews, those----" curses the colonel.
-
-"Just as black and just as hungry--but good patriots."
-
-The colonel lifts his head, gazes thoughtfully for a while into the
-flickering flame of the slowly melting candle. Then he begins to laugh.
-
-"Why didn't I think of it before? Why didn't I think of it before? Ah,
-Little Brother, what asses we have been!"
-
-The Cossack's eyes snap. He, too, has a plan which in all this orgy of
-bloodthirstiness appeals to him with an even bloodier zest.
-
-"Do you know what we shall do with them--with all these patriots?"
-
-"Drive them together somewhere and sabre them," suggests the sotnik.
-
-"So that they can fill the newspapers again with their tale of
-martyrdom," laughs Gabriel Gabrilovitch, scornfully. "Beware, Little
-Brother, beware! We shall leave that to their countrymen this time."
-
-The blank eyes of the Cossack follow the colonel questioningly--like
-the eyes of a hunting dog.
-
-"So," laughs the latter, softly stroking his cheek. "We'll drive these
-patriots to the Austrian wire entanglements. What do you think? Will
-those people over there shoot down their own subjects?"
-
-"But they are non-combatants, Gabriel Gabrilovitch----"
-
-The young man suppressed the thought before he had put it into words.
-There was something in the voice of his superior which cowered him.
-And, like a hunting dog, he merely listened.
-
-"Don't you see, Little Brother?" continues Gabriel Gabrilovitch,
-rubbing his hands together with satisfaction. "And just because in that
-case they will not fire, we shall rush in on the enemy. We shall have
-cover and can excuse ourselves for using it."
-
-"It would take the devil himself to think of that!" exclaims the
-sotnik, full of submissiveness and admiration.
-
-"I am a good Christian," declares Gabriel Gabrilovitch with bitter
-humor. "And now I must have an intermediary; for, naturally, I must
-inform the enemy so that they will not shoot down so many patriots."
-
-The young Cossack rocked his body as if already in the saddle.
-
-"Won't you permit me to go?"
-
-"Muttonhead! Shall I send one on whose face are the imprints of all
-the Devil's ten fingers? Pick out the youngest, the handsomest and
-the stupidist of the sotnia and send him over. The kind that believes
-anything anybody tells him. Then they over there will believe him. And
-what we are going to do nobody but you and I will know. Well, have you
-any such 'steed of God?'"
-
-The sotnik strikes his body with both hands, smiles and nods. "There is
-a Raskolnik here."
-
-"Is that so, Little Brother?"
-
-Both burst into violent peals of laughter as if overcome by the humor
-of the situation.
-
-
-III--THE PLOT THAT FAILED
-
-They would send the Raskolnik--the sectarian who was prepared to die
-at any moment rather than sin in any particular against the teachings
-of Jesus, who even in war abhorred attacking the enemy and wanted only
-to defend himself--one of these religious enthusiasts who had to be
-driven into military service with a whip. What a joke for these two
-orthodox Slavs to load upon this "steed of God" the bloodguilt of their
-stratagem!
-
-They laugh--laugh till their eyes fill with water.
-
-Half an hour later a young cavalryman trots away into the murky dawn.
-
-The fresh wind of the steppe whistles about his ears. Over his head
-flutters the little white flag, which they have fastened to the top of
-his lance.
-
-"How is it that he has found so much favor in the eyes of his commander
-as to be sent as a parlamentaire to the enemy?"
-
-But he puzzles little about that. He is glad that the poor creatures of
-God who have been driven like mice out of their holes will be allowed
-to go to-morrow over into the camp of their friends. He must be a real
-man, the colonel, even if so far the soldiers have found little good in
-him.
-
-In the east it is getting lighter. Already a silvery wave spreads over
-the plain from the edge of the horizon. By the time he arrives at the
-first entrenchment it will be so light that the enemy can easily see
-the flag on his lance.
-
-"It is cold," he muses. "But yet it is already spring, and where my
-horse steps the snow gives way. Soon the steppe will be green again,
-just as it will be back in Russia."
-
-And in the midst of the deep silence which surrounds him, in sight of
-all the horrible traces which war and death have left upon his pathway,
-there blossoms out of his innocent soul a pure, sweet memory--of home.
-He recalls the straw-covered hut, the calm and mighty waves of the
-distant Don, the peace of the steppe purling like a breath from heaven
-through the tall grasses.
-
-He was only a pious peasant's son--not a Cossack. But now they have put
-him as a supernumerary in a Cossack regiment, and he must go along,
-through all the blood, through all the horror.
-
-With a slight shudder he puts his hand upon the crucifix beneath his
-soldier's coat and crosses himself.
-
-"God grant me His grace!"
-
-On the other side they had caught sight of him. A sentinel advanced to
-meet him. Soon he stands before the Austrian officer.
-
-The latter is a handsome, sturdy man. Everything neat about him,
-although he has lain so long with his men in the trenches. Close up to
-him the soldier stands, so that he can feel the other's breath--but it
-doesn't smell of brandy. The gray eyes hold him fast while he speaks.
-Not a muscle moves. But suddenly he laughs in the messenger's face.
-
-"Good. Now ride back. And say to your colonel that he has miscalculated
-if he believes that I shall not open fire if you try to sneak in behind
-those unfortunates. I know my duty, and should innocent blood be shed
-the blame will rest on you."
-
-He speaks and turns upon his heel. The sentinel leads the dejected
-messenger back to his horse and calls scornfully after him: "Are you
-really so stupid or did you think that we were so stupid?"
-
-The latter makes no answer. But a few steps further on he strips the
-white flag from his lance and throws it in the muck. Then that was the
-colonel's idea. And he will stick to it. At his command they are to
-hide like cowards behind the victims who are to be pushed--as a living
-wall--up to the enemy's trenches!
-
-"They are, of course, only Jews," he says to himself. "But yet--but
-yet----"
-
-Why does he feel that way about it?
-
-Suddenly he realizes.
-
-Like a picture it stands before him.
-
-The sputtering fire about which the half-frozen Jews are huddled
-together--women, children, grizzled old men. Here and there a sentinel
-to guard them. He, too, one of the guards.
-
-
-IV--IN HIS BREAST HIS OWN BULLET
-
-Like shadows they crouch about the fire, rub the freezing hands of the
-children between their own, weep, groan, pray softly. One has prayer
-boxes bound on his brow and on his arms and nods and bows unceasingly,
-so that his shadow dances like a curious grotesque against the light
-of the fire. The Cossacks laugh. He, too, has laughed, carelessly,
-unconcerned.
-
-Laughed until he has suddenly noticed the woman at the side of the
-bearded Jew--with the slumbering child at her breast. Something in that
-sight appealed to him strangely. But then they had summoned him before
-the sotnik. And he had thought of it no more.
-
-How sharply that whole picture stands before him now--and among the
-other details especially these three: The man in prayer, the shivering
-mother bent toward the fire, her head cloth like a veil drawn deep over
-the unconscious, slumbering child.
-
-"Bethlehem," he murmurs reverently, and crosses himself.
-
-And he is going to take part to-day in this infamy--he, a Christian!
-
-Then it must be true what they believe back home. That the Pravoslavine
-is Anti-Christ. And he fights with him--for him--is part of his army.
-Have they then altered the text of the Holy Books? So that some day
-God's word of love will no longer be found in it--the Holy Word spoken
-by Him who lay in the womb of a daughter of the House of David?
-
-It must be so! It must be so! And if till to-day he has doubted it, now
-all is clear. Only Anti-Christ can give such orders.
-
-Shall he return to the camp? Stain his hands, too, with the blood of
-these innocents?
-
-"When the master speaks the servant must hearken," they say back home.
-
-He must obey.
-
-Something flashes in front of him like the flash of a gun.
-
-"A bullet," he thinks.
-
-"Would it were one!" he exclaims in the torment of his soul.
-
-It is only a sun ray which suddenly shoots through the mist. But it has
-shown a poor mortal the right way.
-
-They found the Raskolnik just outside the village--in his breast his
-own bullet, in his right hand the cross. On his lips the smile of peace
-that passeth understanding.
-
-
-
-
-TALE OF THE SAVING OF PARIS
-
-_How a Woman's Wit Averted a Great Disaster_
-
- Little by little the "inner history" of the Great War is coming to
- light. This remarkable story shows how the presence of mind of a
- humble woodman's widow, in the early days of hostilities, led to
- the preservation of the Western Railway of France, on which at that
- time Paris depended for its supplies and the transport of troops.
- Told in the _Wide World_.
-
-
-I--IN NORMANDY--STORY OF OCTAVIE DELACOURT
-
-In a clearing of the Foret de Lyons, near Martagny, in Normandy,
-and by the side of a barely distinguishable road, stands the rustic
-half-timbered cottage of Octavie Delacourt. A solitary habitation
-indeed, but one well fitted to the mental outlook of a lonely woman--no
-fair young heroine of romance, as some readers may hastily conclude,
-but a widow of over fifty with hair turning a silvery grey. Her
-husband--a forester, and the builder of the little home--had died from
-a fever a year before the war. Childless, she had elected to live on
-there alone, partly through necessity, partly because of the memories
-which the surroundings stirred in her mind whenever she went forth
-to collect sticks for her fire, or when, lying in bed at night, she
-heard the wind in the trees. Twenty years with "her man," twenty years
-of labour in common, had made her a fervent lover of the forest. It
-had become, as it were, her domain. Certainly no one knew better its
-confusing tangle of roads and pathways.
-
-The outbreak of the war naturally had an effect on the mind and habits
-of Octavie Delacourt, but, alone in the world as she was, it affected
-her much less than it had done her friends and acquaintances in the
-neighbouring villages. In her case the war fever took the form of
-restlessness--an eager, insatiable desire to learn the truth about the
-danger which was threatening her dear France.
-
-As the cloud darkened over the country her anxiety for news grew keener
-and keener. It seemed as though her sub-conscious self was aware that
-the tide of invasion was drawing nearer and nearer to the fair fields
-and orchards of Normandy, and that one morning she would wake up to
-find Martagny, Gournay, and Les Andelys in the hands of the Boches. So
-every day, in those early weeks of the war, she was up betimes and,
-having carefully done up her grey tresses and put on a newly-ironed
-blue apron, set forth to one or other of the neighbouring villages,
-where she would be able to read the latest "communique" and pick up any
-stray item of news that might filter through from Paris.
-
-About eight o'clock on the morning of September 16th, 1914, Octavie
-Delacourt set out in this way, her destination on this occasion
-being Gournay and the house of an old friend of her husband, a small
-landowner named Rismude. It is a good distance by road from Martagny
-to Gournay, so she decided to take a short cut through the Foret de
-Lyons. Setting her best foot foremost, she struck off through the trees
-with the swinging stride of a hardy countrywoman, and soon picked up
-a little pathway amidst the undergrowth which she knew would lead
-her in the right direction. After walking for some ten minutes at
-full speed, she came to a part of the forest known as "La Moliere,"
-the site of a disused chalk quarry, the gasping white mouth of which
-is partly hidden by dense foliage. It was here that her eye--long
-experienced in woodcraft--noticed something unusual near the path she
-was following: a number of green branches, freshly cut from the trees,
-which someone--apparently in vain--had been trying to make into a fire.
-Stopping in front of the charred remains, she could not suppress the
-utterance of the reflection which sprang to her mind:--
-
-"How stupid to cut green branches for a fire!"
-
-Hardly had the words passed her lips than Octavie felt a heavy hand
-descended on her shoulder. With thumping heart and suddenly blanched
-face she spun half round and beheld her aggressor--a heavy-featured man
-in a strange dress who, with a cynical smile on his thick lips and a
-hard look in his little grey eyes, had noiselessly appeared from behind
-a tree.
-
-"How you frightened me!" exclaimed Octavie, retaining her
-self-possession, in spite of her fright, and endeavouring to shake off
-the leaden fingers which weighed on her slender frame.
-
-But not a word in reply came from the mysterious man, who might have
-been made of cast-iron, so motionless did he stand. Gradually, as
-Octavie Delacourt fell to examining him, the hideous truth began to
-dawn upon her, and her heart almost stopped beating. She had never set
-eyes before on a German soldier; she had never even seen a picture of
-one. But she had heard tell of their uniform, in a vague sort of way,
-and suddenly, one might say instinctively, she recognized the ash-grey
-dress and the round cap of the same colour. How came the wearer of
-these tell-tale clothes to be in her forest, not fifteen miles from Les
-Andelys, and within rifle-shot of her native village of Martagny?
-
-
-II--WAS HE GOING TO BAYONET HER?
-
-The mystery terrified her. However, no trace of fear or the tumult in
-her breast appeared on her face. Her simple peasant logic told her
-that would have been fatal. In the presence of the hidden and perhaps
-imminent danger into which she divined she had stumbled, she told
-herself, with feminine shrewdness, that at all costs she must preserve
-a brave countenance and combat the enemy by craft.
-
-"What do you want with me? Can I be of any service to you? If you have
-lost your way I can set you right. No one knows the forest better than
-I."
-
-She paused and smiled.
-
-The German soldier's only reply was a sort of grunt and a slightly
-relaxed hold on her shoulder. At the same time he led her in the
-direction of a deep excavation, formerly used as a wolf-trap. What was
-he going to do to her? She now noticed that he carried in his right
-hand a bayonet, with which he swished, as they walked along, at the
-tall grass and weeds. Was he going to kill her? She would have turned
-and fled like a hare but for the grip in which she was held. Perhaps,
-after all, she thought, there was greater safety in non-resistance than
-in attempted flight. So she allowed herself to be led to the very edge
-of the excavation before saying to her captor, in a pleading voice:--
-
-"You are not going to do me any harm, are you? I'm only a poor,
-inoffensive woman."
-
-Whilst making this appeal, standing on the edge of what she imagined
-might be her grave, she noticed that the greater part of the hole was
-skilfully hidden by a roof of branches. The next moment she heard the
-man with the bayonet whistle, whereupon the head of a blond, blue-eyed
-giant, also dressed in grey, but with the rank marks of an officer,
-suddenly appeared through the aperture. Words in a gutteral tongue
-passed between the two soldiers. Then the fair-complexioned Boche,
-eyeing her critically, shrugged his shoulders disdainfully, uttered an
-order, and disappeared.
-
-The leaden hand immediately fell from Octavie Delacourt's shoulder and
-she was once more free. Now, however, all her strength seemed to have
-gone from her. The feeling that she had just escaped a very real danger
-robbed her of her desire to flee. Slowly, timidly, like a frightened
-animal, she moved away, with her head slightly turned towards her
-captor, who stood watching her, as a cat will a mouse, his bayonet
-still in his hand and a look of mingled cruelty and regret on his
-coarse, heavy features. A few steps more and he called to her to halt.
-
-"Has he changed his mind?" thought Octavie, seeing him walk towards
-her. No; he intended to do her no harm; all he wanted to do was to take
-her by the hand and lead her in an entirely opposite direction to the
-one she was heading in. This done, he released her.
-
-Once through the trees, and hidden from view, Octavie Delacourt made a
-_detour_ and ran as fast as her legs would carry her to Neuf-Marche.
-At first she thought of returning to Martagny, but the fear of being
-recaptured restrained her. Moreover, she felt that she had now an
-urgent duty to perform--to inform the nearest authorities of her
-discovery. That it foreboded something extremely serious for the
-country she could now no longer doubt for a moment. In her flight she
-had caught sight through an opening in the trees, of a third grey-clad
-soldier, lying flat on his stomach at the edge of the forest and, with
-his rifle close to hand, watching the movements of a peasant guiding
-his plough.
-
-Dupont, the _aubergiste_ of Neuf-Marche, listened to her story with a
-puzzled face. But, though his scepticism was great, he did not allow it
-to get the better of his judgment. "Nothing would astonish him in these
-times," he declared; so off he went in search of the _garde champetre_,
-one of the keepers of the forest. He was lucky in catching him before
-he went for his leisurely morning round, and brought him to the inn,
-ready to explode with hilarity.
-
-"My poor woman, you must be suffering from illusions," he exclaimed,
-bursting into a roar of laughter. "Prussians in the Foret de Lyons? No
-more than there are cockchafers on a switch!"
-
-Whilst he hastened to turn to his wine and touch glasses with the
-innkeeper, Octavie, seeing that it would be useless to discuss
-the matter, slipped out without a word and hurried off to the
-_gendarmerie_. Here Quartermaster Crosnier was almost as difficult to
-convince as the _garde champetre_.
-
-"Prussians at Martagny?" he said, with wrinkled brow and a look of
-doubt in his eyes, as he twisted his moustache. "Are you quite sure?
-You astonish me."
-
-"Yes, I'm quite sure," affirmed Octavie, in an almost supplicating
-voice. "Quite, _quite_ sure. And if you go after them, take care you
-go in force, otherwise they will kill you. There is one Boche, as I've
-told you, at the edge of the wood, ready to fire, and I've no doubt
-there are others also lying in waiting."
-
-"Certainly we shall go and see if there's anything in what you say, my
-good woman," replied the Quartermaster, in a condescending tone, which
-proved to her that he was still undecided whether to accept her story
-for gospel.
-
-However, there was no knowing. So he promised he would see to the
-matter at once. Fraets and Lebas, his _gendarmes_, should accompany him
-into the wood. They would look into the mystery as a matter of duty.
-
-
-III--"BUT FOR A CURSED COUNTRY WOMAN!"
-
-On leaving the constabulary Octavie Delacourt, not wholly satisfied
-that she had set the administrative machinery sufficiently in motion,
-asked herself what more she could do. All at once she thought of the
-post-mistress she knew at Mainneville, a village some three miles off.
-Excellent idea! A post-mistress had both the telegraph and telephone
-at her disposal, and she knew that this official, at any rate, would
-not laugh at her. Pulling herself together once more, she set off at a
-brisk walk--almost a run--in the direction of Mainneville.
-
-There, as she had foreseen, she met with the most sympathetic of
-receptions. Mme. B----, the post-mistress, lost not a moment in
-telephoning to M. Armand Bernard, the Prefect of the Eure, who
-immediately passed on the news to his colleagues of the adjoining
-departments. Within half an hour not a prefect, not a commissary
-of police, not a _gendarme_ with a radius of a hundred miles was
-uninformed. The Germans in the Foret de Lyons and their accomplices
-were entrapped, as it were, within the meshes of a net.
-
-Octavie Delacourt went to sleep that night content indeed. But she
-little knew what a service she had rendered to France--nothing less,
-in fact, than the saving of the Western Railway line, on which Paris
-depended at that time for its supplies and the transport of troops.
-
-The facts relating to the capture of the Huns in the Foret de Lyons,
-and those working in conjunction with them, were briefly recorded at
-the time, but, overshadowed by the greater events of those early days
-of the war, their true significance was lost sight of. A Prussian
-captain, a non-commissioned officer, and eleven engineers were
-arrested at Oissel, thanks to the good marksmanship of Sergeant Leroy,
-of the G.V.C. Service, who punctured with rifle-bullets the tyres
-of the motor-cars in which they were fleeing. One of the cars bore
-the plate and number of the prefect of police of Aix-la-Chapelle.
-In a motor-lorry which formed part of the convoy was half a ton of
-explosives.
-
-In the course of his examination the German officer declared that he
-had crossed the departments of the Somme and the Oise without being
-troubled, and that he had come into the Eure with the intention of
-blowing up the Oissel bridge, or, failing this, that of Manoir. He
-added that "but for a cursed countrywoman" whom one of his men had
-caught in the forest, and whom he ought to have "suppressed," he would
-certainly have succeeded.
-
-This happened about three o'clock in the afternoon. Less than an hour
-later it was discovered that the capture had not been made without
-bloodshed. Between the "Moliere" quarry and the excavation where the
-blond Hun had appeared to Octavie Delacourt three bodies were found
-stretched on the ground--those of the luckless Quartermaster Crosnier
-and his _gendarmes_, who had been shot almost point-blank when calling
-on the automobilists to surrender.
-
-Octavie Delacourt's presence of mind, bravery, and persistence were
-recognized by the French Government. But the service she rendered was
-infinitely greater than either the praise or the monetary reward--one
-hundred francs!--which she received for having been instrumental in
-preventing the perpetration of an act which might have resulted in
-grave disaster to the capital of France.
-
-
-
-
-HOW IT FEELS TO A CLERGYMAN TO BE TORPEDOED ON A MAN-OF-WAR
-
-_Told by the Rev. G. H. Collier, Chaplain on Board the British Cruiser
-"Cressy"_
-
-
-I--"MY LIFE SPARED IN MIRACULOUS WAY"
-
-As you know, I was on the cruiser _Cressy_ on September 22, 1914, when
-in company with the cruisers _Aboukir_ and _Hogue_ she was torpedoed by
-a German submarine. My life has been spared in a most miraculous way.
-
-About 6:15 a.m. I was awakened by some marines waking their comrades.
-"Get up quick, the _Aboukir_ is sinking."
-
-I tumbled out of my bunk, put on my shoes and slipping my big coat
-over my pajamas I hastened up to the sheltered deck. I should tell you
-that we were proceeding in line formation, the _Hogue_ leading, our
-ship, the _Cressy_, bringing up the rear. We were steaming between six
-to nine knots, and at a distance of about a mile or so apart. When
-I got on deck the _Hogue_ had fallen back on the starboard side of
-the _Aboukir_, while we stood by on the port side, both of us a good
-distance off.
-
-The _Aboukir_ had signalled asking for boats, which, of course, were
-sent off to them. Their ship gradually began to turn turtle, and it was
-an inspiring sight to see the ship's company lined up on the side of
-the ship awaiting the order, "Every man for himself." After a while I
-went down to the quarter deck and began with the others to throw planks
-of wood, etc., overboard.
-
-While doing this the Hogue was hit by a torpedo from a German submarine
-and very quickly settled down. Indeed, no sooner was she hit than her
-quarter deck was below water. She then listed, turned turtle, and in
-about ten minutes had disappeared.
-
-Our captain sent me word to take photographs, and I had taken five when
-I saw the white line of a torpedo approaching us in the starboard side,
-in line with the aft-bridge.
-
-A few shouts heralded her approach, but nothing could be done, as our
-engines were not going, and she bored her hole in our side.
-
-The impact was not so great or so terrible as I should have thought,
-indeed it was a dull thud, and did not even throw me off my feet.
-Previous to this the order to close watertight doors had been given, an
-order which prevented this torpedo doing so much serious damage.
-
-We listed to starboard about 40 degrees, and after a time the ship
-righted herself to about 30 degrees. Everyone was on the look-out for
-submarines, and guns were fired at every suspicious-looking object that
-looked like like a periscope. I am not going to make any assertions,
-as I am much too inexperienced. I was standing by when three guns were
-fired.
-
-The first was fired at what I thought to be a man's head. At any rate
-the shell hit something, for it exploded.
-
-Unfortunately, I was called down from the boat deck then, so did not
-see what ensued, but the gunner says he saw two men pop up from the
-spot after he fired a second shot, and the torpedo lieutenant supports
-his assertion of having hit the submarine.
-
-The second shot I saw (of course, other guns were fired) was at what I
-feel sure was a submarine. She came up, and it was a plucky thing to
-do, amid a mass of struggling men. I do not know if she was hit, but
-I admit I felt a spasm of horror at the damage to our own men in the
-water.
-
-The third shot went right home, and did its work, and I cheered
-heartily with the rest. The Germans evidently attacked us under cover
-of a sailing trawler carrying the Dutch flag. This trawler, after we
-had all been hit, made no attempt at rescue work, a heartless act that
-roused our anger, and the captain of the after 9.2 gun trained his gun
-on her and fired. The shell hit her in the stern and she at once took
-fire.
-
-
-II--"I SAW THE TORPEDO APPROACH"
-
-While this was going on the Germans had fired another torpedo at
-us, but it missed and went astern. Meanwhile several men had swum
-alongside, and we helped them aboard, rubbed them down, pumped water
-out of them, and wrapping them in blankets gave them hot tea. One of
-those rescued was a midshipman. He was taken to the sick bay and after
-drinking his tea, he turned to his commander and said:
-
-"Why shouldn't we get into these cots, sir?"
-
-"Quite right, sonny, jump in." He hadn't been there long when we were
-struck again. The plucky boy jumped out and said, "Look here, sir, I'm
-off," and away he went and jumped over the ship's side, and was picked
-up by a boat some half-an-hour later.
-
-It was this torpedo that settled our fate.
-
-I saw her approaching about 400 yards distant, and she entered the
-ship's side just abaft of the fore-bridge and entered No. 5 boiler
-room. No doubt many poor fellows were killed outright. The ship seemed
-to rise out of the water, settled back and at once listed badly and
-began to turn turtle.
-
-There was no panic whatever. The officers supervised the collecting
-of all woodwork, etc., and the order was then given, "Every man for
-himself."
-
-Our middies were awfully brave and busily set to work to construct a
-small raft with chairs and a boxing dummy. Staff-Surgeon Sawdy came up
-to me, after Dr. Martin had procured me a lifebuoy, and said, "Shall I
-come with you, Padre?" He is a west-country man and you may guess how
-readily I said "Yes."
-
-After a time we had to kneel on the deck and hang on to the side. It
-was just before this that I slipped off my coat and shoes. When the
-ship was at an angle of 75 to 80 degrees, we stepped over the port side
-on to a ledge, and hung on to the chains. A wave caught us and knocked
-us against the side a bit, but not enough to injure us, but with the
-next the ship turned over.
-
-I retained my hold of the chain and the lifebuoy, and when I felt the
-ship steady I let go the chain, and after what seemed a very long
-time came to the surface. Dr. Sawdy had also retained his hold of the
-lifebuoy and we appeared together in the water.
-
-You may not realize how we could do it, but we actually laughed. He
-complained of the length of time below water (I had been keeping him
-down), and to suddenly pop up together, was really funny. We at once
-struck out with our feet (as I can't swim) and succeeded in getting
-away from the ship.
-
-We were soon joined by others, and six of us stuck to our lifebuoys and
-a plank of wood which came floating by. After about ten minutes I began
-to shake badly and my teeth were chattering.
-
-It was a horrible feeling, and I told the doctor I couldn't hang on
-much longer, but he told me--good fellow that he is--to hang on, and
-after a while the shivering passed off, but a sort of numbness set
-in and occasionally we had cramps. To keep the circulation going we
-rubbed each other's legs, or kicked about a bit.
-
-
-III--THE WAY MEN MEET DEATH
-
-The scenes in the water were not so terrible as you may think. Here and
-there men were singing, "It's a Long, Long Way to Tipperary," "We All
-Go the Same Way Home," indeed, one man who joined us actually began
-joking.
-
-The way men met their death was wonderful. They would give a smile to
-their comrades, wish them luck, and slide away quite peacefully without
-a struggle.
-
-Floating spars, etc., occasionally put us in difficulties and several
-of us were badly bruised. It was a strange sight to see one's comrades,
-some fully dressed, even to their caps, others naked, while others like
-myself were clothed only in their pajamas.
-
-Before going into the water I happened to look at my watch and it was
-7:50. It speaks well for an English watch, doesn't it? when I tell you
-it didn't stop till 9:15. This watch and my crucifix I still have.
-
-Well, there we were floating about until 9:45, when we sighted some
-trawlers approaching. It seemed as if they would never come to the
-doctor, a marine, and myself--for we were but three then.
-
-At 10:20 I turned and saw a steam trawler near us and I suppose the
-relief was too much for me, as I became unconscious, so from then till
-1 p.m. I must give information supplied me by the doctor. Becoming
-unconscious, he tells me I released my hold of the plank, but still
-kept my arm around the lifebuoy.
-
-The steam trawler did not see us and headed away in another direction,
-but from behind her came a small cutter. The doctor shouted "If you
-come now you can save the Padre," and come they did, and, thank God,
-saved our lives. They hauled me into the boat and pumped away at me. I
-just remember being conscious for a moment and hearing voices.
-
-We were then put on the Lowestoft trawler, S. S. _Coriandar_, and put
-in the stokehold. It was not until 1 p.m. that I became conscious, a
-most painful awakening and I was very sick. The fishermen had put an
-under flannel over me and given me hot tea. They were indeed good to us.
-
-Our commander was picked up by the same boat and was superintending
-the boats which were in company with the Lowestoft trawler and others
-transferring us to H. M. S. _Lennox_. (They had their reward off the
-Dutch coast, eh?)
-
-We buried one poor fellow there and then, but brought home another.
-After being massaged, I was put to bed, where I remained till 5 p.m.
-until the worst of the soreness had passed off. We were landed at
-Harwich at 8:30. The passage home, I'm told, was not without interest!
-
-An order was given to "clear for action." Those who could, rushed
-on deck to see what was happening, and in the far distance saw an
-aeroplane and a waterplane approaching, but as they put it, "There was
-nothing doing," as they turned out to be British.
-
-On landing we were received at the Great Eastern Hotel, equipped as a
-hospital, by the matron and her staff of Red Cross nurses. After being
-examined by the doctor, and found to have no bones broken, I had my
-first meal since 7 p.m. the previous day, and it was good!
-
-
-
-
-LEON BARBESSE, SLACKER, SOLDIER, HERO
-
-_Told by Fred B. Pitney, War Correspondent_
-
-
-I--"I MET HIM IN THE TRENCHES ON THE SOMME"
-
-This is the story of Leon Barbesse, a volunteer of France. I met him
-first in the trenches on the Somme. He stood in a first line post,
-where we were halted because the Germans had begun a fierce rain of
-shells on the French lines. They were nervous that day, the Germans.
-All the day and night before there had been a succession of sallies
-from the French trenches. They were really only reconnoitering
-expeditions, but the Germans had come to think each the precursor of an
-attack in force, and every time there was the least sign of activity
-in the French lines the German artillery burst into furious action,
-shelling the French trenches to prevent a sortie. We arrive as one of
-these _rafales_ began, and we were halted to seek shelter.
-
-The best trench is not proof against a real bombardment of heavy
-shells. Parapets crumble in like walls of sand. There is nothing
-reassuring about coming suddenly upon a great gaping hole in what has
-been considered a moment before a solid rampart, a hole still steaming
-from the impact of a white hot shell weighing half a ton. It does not
-add to one's confidence to find that instead of walking quietly along a
-well ordered corridor with a decent, dry plank floor one is crossing a
-miniature mountain chain, sinking suddenly into narrow valleys, waist
-deep in water, rising as suddenly to heights that leave half one's
-body exposed to the full view of the enemy. And to know that those
-valleys and those heights have been caused by the explosion in the
-trench of the shells that are constantly screaming overhead--that is
-the most disconcerting of all.
-
-Such was the position we were in when I first saw Leon Barbesse. We
-had come to a comparatively quiet spot. The shells whined above us
-or exploded in the barbed wire in front, but they had not found the
-trench. We stopped to take stock, to look about us, to get our breath,
-to straighten our backs and get a new thought in our minds, something
-except where the next shell would land. And standing in front of us
-in the trench, some ten feet away, I saw a bearded soldier with the
-stripes of a sergeant and the ribbon of the _Medaille Militaire_--the
-highest honor any French soldier, from ranking general down, can
-win--and the _Croix de Guerre_ with two palms, meaning that he had been
-mentioned twice for conspicuous bravery in the general orders of the
-army. Despite his beard he was a young man, well under thirty, and he
-stood with a quiet air of confidence and looked at us with a certain
-amusement.
-
-Five minutes later we were all distributed at the bottoms of various
-deep shelters. The shells had begun to fall on the section of trench
-where we were, and we had been ordered underground. I had descended
-eighteen steep steps, a matter of twenty feet, and found myself in a
-little, low celled, earth walled, square chamber, with six bunks in
-double tiers taking up three sides and the narrow door in the fourth
-side. The bearded soldier was in our party. He had preceded me and lent
-me a helping hand down the ladder-like stairs. When we were safe in the
-cave he lighted a candle and pulled up an empty shell box for me to sit
-on.
-
-"You are safe here," he said.
-
-"That is all right," I replied. "I want to know why you smiled at us
-when we came up. We had come across pretty dangerous ground."
-
-"I know you had," he said. "That was why I smiled. You know now
-something more of what it means to be a soldier. You don't know very
-much. You can go back and tell of the narrow escape you had, and you
-need never come again. But for a few minutes, when you were under that
-rain of shells, you knew the glory of war. You prayed. That was why I
-smiled."
-
-
-II--THE CONFESSION OF A SLACKER
-
-It was not exactly what one expects from a man wearing the _Medaille
-Militaire_ and the _Croix de Guerre_ with two palms. There was a
-certain implication in it. It sounded as though he meant that any man
-not in military uniform was a curiosity seeker or a sensation monger.
-I said something to that effect.
-
-"No," he said hastily. "Not at all. Not at all. I only meant you could
-understand now, perhaps what it is that moves men in this, what makes
-them take part in it."
-
-"Most of the men are conscripts," I said. "You are, I suppose."
-
-"No," he answered. "I am a volunteer. I might be at the rear; I might
-even be writing for some paper."
-
-It was a fine answer to my brutality.
-
-"I beg your pardon," I said. "You are a volunteer. Tell me why you are
-here."
-
-"I will tell you my name first," he said. "It is Leon Barbesse. I was
-a schoolteacher in the centre of France, married, and with a boy four
-years old. The war came and I was called to the colors, as every one
-was called. But I was sent home. My lungs, you know. They are all
-right now, though. A few months of this life and your lungs kill you or
-they get all right. Mine are all right."
-
-He struck himself a heavy blow on the chest and grinned.
-
-"I could not have done that in 1914," he said. "I would have coughed
-for half an hour."
-
-"So I was sent back," he continued, "and I was glad of it. I can't tell
-you how glad. I did not want to go to war. I was afraid. That is the
-truth. I was afraid. And when the doctor said I would not do, I could
-have cheered. The doctor was sorry for me, and I pretended to be sorry,
-also, but not too sorry, for he might have passed me.
-
-"I went home. I was safe. I did not have to fight. I did not have to
-be killed. I did not have to be ashamed, for the doctors had turned me
-back. Well, I was ashamed. My country was in danger. The Germans were
-in France. And I was at home. But I was afraid. There you have it, I
-was ashamed because I would not fight for my country, my country that
-needed me, and I was afraid to fight. I was afraid to be hurt. I was
-afraid to die.
-
-"Do you remember when they called the 1917 class a year ahead of time?
-I went then. I volunteered. God, what a struggle that was! I walked
-the road to the _caserne_ with the sweat running off me. For a year I
-had dreamed nightly of the shells. I had heard them. They had fallen
-around me. I had been wounded. I had felt the impact of the steel on my
-yielding flesh. For a year I had spent my days trying to hide my terror
-from my wife, my friends and my neighbors. And all the time my country
-had called. Fear and shame! Fear and shame! My country called and I was
-afraid to go!
-
-"For a man who loves his country, there is nothing harder than to be
-a coward and know it. I went at last because I could not stand the
-torture of failing to do my duty. No one else knew. I had been sent
-back by the doctors. I was blameless before the community. But I knew
-it was because I was afraid to be hurt, afraid to die. So when they
-called the class 1917 I went.
-
-"They sent me to Verdun. Can you imagine what that meant to me? It was
-in the very midst of the German attack on the left bank of the Meuse. I
-had been drafted into a veteran regiment with a lot of others to help
-fill up the gaps, and I joined just in time to go into the front line.
-
-"You know how the papers were filled at that time with the terrors of
-the Verdun fighting. It was not of the bravery of our troops that I
-read, but of the terrors. I don't know how I ever got into line on the
-day we marched from the rear to go to the front. Everything I did was
-mechanical. We were called before daylight; we had a cup of coffee; we
-were marching along the road.
-
-"I had managed it up to then without giving myself away. True, I talked
-little to my comrades, and probably that saved me. But the morning we
-marched to the front, what saved me then I don't know, except possibly
-because I said nothing. I was unable to speak. I was numb with fear.
-I was sick. My stomach turned. I walked with my head down and my feet
-dragged like great weights.
-
-"You know, at that time you could always hear at Verdun the pounding
-of the big guns. I had heard it for days, while my regiment was in
-repose. I used to go out in the woods by myself and listen to it and
-terrify myself by thinking what it would be like to be under that rain
-of shells. A foolish thing to do, but for more than a year, nearly two
-years, I had been under the obsession of my fear. I could no longer
-control it."
-
-
-III--"WE WERE MARCHING TO INFERNO"
-
-"And then we were on the road, marching toward that inferno. By
-imperceptible degrees the pounding grew louder. I moved mechanically
-because I was in the ranks, with a man on each side of me and one
-in front and one behind. I had to go on. My will could not control
-my movements. I was part of a machine. The machine went toward the
-pounding and I went with it. That was all, except that once I vomited.
-
-"Mind you, I had never really heard a shell, only the distant sound of
-the explosions. We had been marching nearly two hours, when I heard my
-first shell. There was a long, thin whine some place in the air. It was
-a new sound, and it was so strange to me that I raised my head for the
-first time since we started on the march. The man next to me laughed.
-
-"'A shell,' he said.
-
-"I looked all around me. I tried to stop to see the path of that queer
-whine, but the man behind me prodded me on. Several of them laughed.
-
-"'You will hear plenty more,' they said.
-
-"They thought I was eager for them.
-
-"The shells began to come at regular intervals, all following the same
-path with the same peculiar whine. I tried every time to see them.
-
-"'The Boches are hunting for a battery over on our left,' the veterans
-said. There was no change in the pace. I was saying to myself, 'I have
-really heard a shell, and I did not run.'
-
-"It was very queer to me; I tried to think it out. I was afraid. I knew
-I was afraid. But I had not run. I began to wonder just how afraid I
-was, and I wanted to know. I had heard the shell and my curiosity was
-aroused. I wanted to go on and see how far I would go before my fear
-overcame me. With every one of their long whines I studied myself to
-see if I would run, then when I continued marching with the regiment I
-would say:
-
-"'Not yet; perhaps the next time. Certainly, there is a limit beyond
-which I will not go.'
-
-"It was as though I were studying some other man. There was the me who
-was afraid and knew it, and the me who watched to see how afraid I was.
-
-"Eleven o'clock came and we stopped for luncheon. We stacked our
-arms beside the road and eased off our equipment. I felt wonderfully
-relieved that I had got that far. I was not really hungry, because I
-was afraid, but I was enough master of myself to know that I must eat,
-and to force myself to do so.
-
-"While we waited there shells began to fall close to us--close enough
-so that we could hear the explosion after the whine. Before we had only
-heard the whine. The first one made me jump. The whine was loud and
-strong and the explosion came quick and sharp. With the second I was
-strong enough to turn and look at the cloud of earth, smoke and rocks.
-I was doing pretty well. A shell fell short of us. Some of the men
-looked up and saw an aeroplane sailing around over our heads.
-
-"'Better get out of here,' they said. 'That is a Boche. He is giving
-our range to his battery.' A shell dropped up near the head of the
-line, almost in the road. I heard no orders, but we all gathered up our
-rifles and equipment and marched off at quick step.
-
-"I had looked straight in the face of the shell that fell in the
-field beside us. It was another triumph for me. I had looked at it,
-shivering, to be sure, wondering if I would run. But I had not run.
-There was still a little further to go to pursue my investigation and
-find out how much I could stand before I ran."
-
-My curiosity got the better of me.
-
-"Have you found out yet?" I asked.
-
-"I am coming to that," he replied. "We went on up that road at the
-quick step until we came to the entrance of a _boyau_ leading to the
-supporting trenches. Shells fell around us all the time. The Boche
-aeroplane was still trying to regulate the fire of its battery, and
-there was a maddening wait at the mouth of the _boyau_ until it came
-time for us to go in. We had been marching in the road four abreast,
-but we had to go into the _boyau_ single file. My platoon was well
-toward the rear, and that made us wait. We had nothing to do but stand
-in the road and watch the shells and wait our turn."
-
-
-IV--"HOW I CONQUERED MY FEAR"
-
-"I tried to follow the course of every shell. My head was continually
-twisting. I jumped at every explosion. I could not control the muscles
-of my back and shoulders. But I stepped out of the line and walked a
-little way into the field, toward the shells. I wanted to see if I
-could do it. I got close enough so that I could hear a piece of shell
-whiz past my ear. Then I waited for another piece. It was a hard job,
-but I waited, leaning on my rifle and looking at the ground a little
-way in front of me, where the last shell had exploded. If I had moved
-my eyes from that spot I could not have stayed. Not until the third one
-came did I hear another piece of shell. The others had struck too far
-to one side.
-
-"'Now I can go back,' I said to myself. But I walked very fast going
-back.
-
-"In the _boyau_ it was not so bad. A French _avion_ had come up and
-chased away the Boche.
-
-"I thought of the things I had done and hoped that having done them
-once I could do them again. But I was not sure. I was afraid. I knew
-that. I have always been afraid, and there has always been the question
-in my mind if my fear would conquer or if I would conquer my fear.
-
-"There was the time when it became necessary to take a message from
-our support trenches to our advanced lines in the _Bois des Corbeaux_.
-There was a _tir de barrage_ to be crossed and volunteers were called
-for. I was chosen.
-
-"By that time I had formed the theory that a man can do anything if
-his duty demands it of him and he will keep that in his mind. It was a
-part of the thought that came to me that first day in the _boyau_ and
-I developed it later in the long nights. The first day I had no really
-coherent thoughts, only a great fear of my own fear. Afterward I found
-that I could control it, if there was a reason. And then I found that
-the reason was France.
-
-"Of course, you may say that it was France that made me volunteer, but
-I do not think so. I think it was shame--shame that I feared to go when
-others went. With all the good reasons that I had for not going, with
-the doctor's word, I knew, nevertheless, it was fear that kept me back.
-It was because I could not tell the truth to my wife and friends and
-neighbours that I went.
-
-"Only afterward did I find out that a great duty will take a man any
-place with a calm mind. I stood against German attacks. I was in
-counter attacks. I lay out in shell holes, helping to hold a line
-where there were no trenches. I never forgot my fear, but I thought of
-France, my country, my duty; and though I shivered and the cold sweat
-rolled off me, I held steady.
-
-"Have you ever seen a _tir de barrage_? You can walk up to it and draw
-a line with a surveyor's chain on the ground, marking exactly the
-limit where the shells fall, and all beyond that line will be a mass of
-boiling earth, like waves in a storm dashing on a rocky coast. There
-is no interval between the explosions. They are constant, unremitting,
-one following so closely on another that their detonations mingle in a
-steady roar."
-
-
-V--"I DASHED FORWARD INTO EXPLODING SHELLS"
-
-"I came within fifty yards of the _tir de barrage_ and stopped to watch
-it and try to mark out a path. But no path was possible. No sooner was
-one chosen than it was wiped out, all the little landmarks gone, the
-whole face of the ground changed by a new rain of shells. My heart
-sank. My stomach went suddenly empty. I knew that I had reached the
-limit beyond which I could not go. I had found the point where my fear
-was greater than my duty. I lay flat down on the earth. I do not know
-how long I lay. I thought of nothing. There was only a horrible blank
-fear.
-
-"And then I found that unconsciously, not knowing it, I was digging
-my fingers into the ground, clutching the roots of grass and dragging
-myself into the _tir de barrage_. I might as well have been dragging
-myself the other way, but I had lain down with my face toward my duty.
-
-"When I made that discovery I got to my feet and stood upright for a
-second, not more, only time to say, 'I must not give myself time to
-think,' and dashed forward into the exploding shells. Such a race as
-that is like the last steps of a dying horse, one that has broken a
-blood vessel, straining for the wire, and plunges on his face in the
-midst of his stride. I floundered blindly into the raw earth and fell
-again on my face. But this time my mind was working. There was only
-one thing for me to do, and I knew it. That was to go on. I crawled
-forward on my hands and knees. I could not stand. It would be certain
-death. Twenty times I was knocked flat, my wind gone, by the explosion
-of a shell almost beside me. But I crawled on. I did not know if I had
-been hit. I thought I had. Two hundred yards I crawled through the _tir
-de barrage_ and then I got to our lines. They gave me the _Medaille
-Militaire_ for that.
-
-"You asked me why I smiled when you came up to us in the trench. I was
-wondering what you had to take you through the shells. I thought of
-my own struggles. I wondered if you had any of the thoughts that have
-crowded in on me under fire. And I smiled."
-
-The next time I saw him was in a hospital back of the Somme, one of
-the hospitals where wounded soldiers stay only a few hours, unless
-they are too badly hurt to be moved on. He was one of those who could
-not be moved. He lay with closed eyes, asleep or exhausted--more
-likely exhausted--propped up a little with pillows behind his head and
-shoulders. His tunic hung beside his cot, and on it there was a new
-ribbon, the _Legion d'Honneur_. I stopped before him.
-
-"There is little chance for him," the doctor said.
-
-"What did he do?" I asked.
-
-"Led his company into the Park of Deniecourt, when all the officers
-were gone," replied the doctor. "They got a footing in the park and
-stuck there for two days, because he would not give up, until we made
-a new attack and got the park, the chateau and the village. He had
-been wounded the first day, but he would not give up. He has received
-the _Legion d'Honneur_ and been made a sous-lieutenant, but he will
-probably never know it."
-
-I saw him once more. This time was on the boulevards of Paris. His
-left sleeve was pinned across his breast and above it were his three
-medals, from left to right the _Croix de Guerre_, now with three palms;
-the _Medaille Militaire_ and the _Legion d'Honneur_. He was having a
-look at Paris, he told me, while he waited for the train to take him
-home to the centre of France, to his wife and boy.
-
-"I can tell them now that I was afraid," he said. (Told in the _New
-York Tribune_.)
-
-
-
-
-THE DESERTER--A BELGIAN INCIDENT
-
-_Told by Edward Eyre Hunt, formerly Antwerp Delegate of the American
-Commission for Relief in Belgium_
-
-
-I--STORY OF AN AMERICAN AT THE BARONIAL CASTLE
-
-It was five o'clock in the morning. A riotous sunrise deluged the
-Campine as I slipped into my clothes and ran down the narrow, twisting
-tower-stair to keep a secret tryst with the _Baas_, or overseer. Little
-slits in the tower wall, cut for mediaeval archers, let in the arrows
-of the sun; and as I ran through the gloomy armory and the high-roofed
-Flemish dining hall--stripped of their treasure of old pikes, swords,
-crossbars, and blunderbusses by the diligent Germans--out to the
-causeway, and over the creaking drawbridge on my way to the stables and
-the dismantled brewery, I imagined myself an escaped prisoner from the
-donjons of Chateau Drie Toren. In truth, I was running away from Baron
-van Steen's week-end house-party for a breath of rustic air while the
-others slept.
-
-The stables, tool sheds, hostlers' barracks, bake-oven, and brewery
-were thatch roofed and walled with brick, toned to a claret-red,
-pierced with small windows and heavy oaken doors. The doors were banded
-with the baronial colors--blue stripes, alternating with yellow, like
-the stripes on a barber pole--and in the centre of the hollow square of
-farm buildings fumed a mammoth brown manure pile. A smell of fresh cut
-hay and the warm smell of animals clung about the stables, and I heard
-the watch-dog rattle his chain and sniff at the door as I passed.
-
-I found the Baas standing before his door, his face wrinkled with
-pleasure, his cap in his hand. Behind him his wife peered out at us,
-wiping her fat hands on her skirts, and two half-grown children stared
-from the nearest window. The Baas and his wife were the parents of
-sixteen children!
-
-"Good day, mynheer!" every one shouted in chorus.
-
-"Good day, madame; good day, Baas." (I used the Flemish title for
-overseer--the word from which has come our much-abused word "Boss.")
-"I'm a deserter this morning: the rest of the Baron's party sleeps."
-
-"Ah, so," laughed the wife. "Mynheer is like the German soldiers who
-desert by dozens nowadays. And would your Honor hide in the forest like
-them--like the Germans?"
-
-"To be sure. The Baas is to show me the deepest coverts, where mynheer
-the Baron will never find me more."
-
-We laughed and passed on. A girl with a neckyoke and full milk pails
-came by from the dairy; nodding faces appeared at the windows of the
-farm buildings as we walked toward the woods; bees sped in the air from
-conical straw hives close to our path; and in a few minutes we were
-threading our way through a nursery of young pines, tilled like corn
-rows in Kansas, and all of equal age.
-
-"Monsieur, there is a soul in trees," said the Baas, affectionately
-patting an ancient linden on the border of the old forest. The Baas was
-a man from the Province of Liege, and he preferred to speak French with
-me rather than Flemish. He had, too, a Walloon lightness of wit which
-went sometimes incongruously with his heavy frame, as when he said to
-me once when we were debating the joys of youth versus age, "To be old
-has its advantages, monsieur. One can then be virtuous, and it is not
-hard."
-
-"There is a soul in trees," he repeated. "All together the trees have
-a soul. A forest is one spirit. These trees are old men and old women,
-very patient and kindly and sluggish of blood. They nod their heads in
-the wind like peasants over a stove. And they talk. Sometimes I think
-I can understand their talk--very wise and patient and slow. Men hurry
-apart, monsieur, but the trees remain together like old married people
-and watch their children grow up around them.
-
-"Here,"--we had turned down a path and were in the fringes of another
-forest of small pines--"here the Germans have taken trees for their
-fortifications, slashed and cut, and those trees that are left are like
-wounded soldiers: they have arms too long or too short, heads smashed;
-feet uprooted, and yet they wish to live, because they are one spirit."
-
-"What is this?" I demanded abruptly; for at my feet yawned a little
-pit, with lumpy clay still fresh about it and a fallen cross lying half
-hidden in the weeds.
-
-"Ho, that? It is the grave of a German," said the Baas heartily.
-He spat into the raw pit. "The German has been taken away, but the
-children of Drie Toren are still afraid. They will not come by this
-path, on account of the dead _Deutscher_."
-
-His foot crushed the rude cross as he talked, and we walked on. But
-I was vaguely troubled. That vile pit and the thought of what it had
-contained had spoiled my promenade. As I had found on a thousand other
-occasions, my freedom in Belgium was only a fiction. The war could not
-be forgotten, even for an hour.
-
-A partridge thundered up at our feet and rocketed to earth again beyond
-the protecting pines. In a little glade we surprised four young rabbits
-together at breakfast. The Baas laid his hand lightly on my arm. "It
-is sad, monsieur, isn't it?" he said. "The poachers steal right and
-left nowadays. The _gardes champetres_ are no longer armed, so the
-thieves do as they will. There is more pheasant in the city markets
-than chicken, and more rabbit than veal. The game will soon be gone,
-like our horses and cattle.
-
-"You remember, monsieur, the sand dunes by Blankenberghe and Knocke on
-the Belgian coast? Ah, the rabbits that used to be in those dunes! But
-now the firing of cannon has driven them all away."
-
-A silence fell upon us both. The thickets grew denser, and we pushed
-our way slowly toward the deeper coverts. I found myself thinking of
-the little crosses along the seaside dunes which marked where greater
-game than rabbits had fallen--the graves of men--the biggest game on
-earth--the shallow pits and the frail wooden crosses, like that which
-the Baas's leather boot had crushed a half hour before.
-
-
-II--"WE FOUND A STARVING GERMAN"
-
-We had reached the deepest woods, when a gasping, choking cry stopped
-us short. The thicket directly before us stirred and then lay still
-as death. The cry had been horrible as a Banshee's wail, and as
-mysterious, but it was not the cry of an animal; it was human, and it
-came from a human being in agony. The Baas crossed himself swiftly and
-leaped forward, and instantly we had parted the protecting bushes and
-were looking down on a man lying flat on the ground--a spectre with
-a thin white face, chattering teeth, enormous frightened eyes, and a
-filthy, much worn German uniform.
-
-"What are you doing here?" I demanded.
-
-The soldier did not answer, he did not rise, he lay motionless and
-hideous like a beast. Then I caught sight of his left ankle, enormously
-swollen and wrapped in rags, and his hands--they were thin as sticks.
-The man was helpless, and he was starving.
-
-And now came a strange thing. We two walked slowly around the man on
-the ground as if he were a wild creature caught in a snare. We felt no
-pity or astonishment; only curiosity. Utterly unemotionally we took
-note of him and his surroundings. He had no gun, no knife, and no
-blankets. He lay on some broken boughs, and he seemed to have covered
-himself with boughs at night. The wild, haggard eyes turned in their
-sockets and watched us as we moved, but otherwise no part of the man
-stirred. He seemed transfixed, frozen in an agony of fear and horror.
-
-"Ashes! He has had a fire here, monsieur, but it was days ago." At the
-man's feet the Baas had discovered the remnants of a little fire. "Holy
-blue!" he added in astonishment, "he has eaten these!"
-
-A pile of small green twigs lay near the fire. The bark had been chewed
-from them!
-
-A buzzing swarm of flies, disturbed by our investigations, rotated in
-the air, and a faint, bad odor hung about the place, indescribably
-stale and filthy.
-
-At the end of our search we turned again to the man on the ground.
-"Who are you? What are you doing here?" I demanded again. There was no
-answer. "Baas, have you a flask?"
-
-The old man slowly drew a little leather-clad bottle from his breast
-pocket and passed it to me in silence. He offered it with obvious
-reluctance, and watched jealously as I knelt and dropped a little
-stream of liquid between the parted lips of the creature on the ground.
-The man's lips sucked inward, his throat choked at the raw liquor,
-he opened his mouth wide and gasped horribly for breath, his knees
-twitched, and his wrists trembled as if he were dying. Then the parched
-mouth tried to form words; it could only grimace.
-
-For a moment I felt a mad impulse to leap on that moving mouth and
-crush it into stillness; such an impulse as makes a hunter wring the
-neck of a wounded bird. Instead, I continued dropping the stinging
-liquor and listening.
-
-Then came the first word. "More!" the black lips begged, and I emptied
-the flask into them. The Baas sighed plaintively. "German?" the soldier
-whispered.
-
-"No. American," I answered.
-
-"The other one?"
-
-"Belgian."
-
-The frightened eyes closed in evident relief. The man seemed to sleep.
-
-"But you?" I asked.
-
-"I'm German--a soldier," he said.
-
-"Lost?"
-
-"Missing." He used the German word _vermisst_--the word employed in the
-official lists of losses to designate the wounded or dead who are not
-recovered, and those lost by capture or desertion.
-
-"You understand, Baas?"
-
-"No, monsieur."
-
-"He says he is a German soldier--a deserter, I suppose, trying to make
-his way over the frontier to Holland. And he is starving."
-
-The Baas's face became a battle-ground of emotions. His kindly eyes
-glared merrily, his lips twisted until his beard seemed to spread
-to twice its natural width. Instantly his face became grave again,
-then puzzled, even anxious. A stream of invective and imprecation in
-mingled French and Flemish poured from his troubled lips, and he
-stamped his feet vigorously.
-
-"He can't stay here," I concluded.
-
-"It is death to help him," said the Baas.
-
-"For you, yes; for me, no. The Germans can only disgrace me as a member
-of the Relief Commission. They cannot kill me."
-
-"He must not be left to die here, monsieur."
-
-"The Germans will probably search your house if we take him there."
-
-"He may betray us if we help him."
-
-"That is possible. But you see he is very weak--almost dead."
-
-"He may be a spy."
-
-"That again is possible. But see! He has eaten twigs!"
-
-"He is a damned pig of a German!"
-
-"But you do not feed even pigs on sticks and leaves."
-
-"I am afraid, monsieur."
-
-"So am I, Baas. Yet you must decide, and not I. It is much more
-dangerous for you than for me."
-
-
-III--THE DESERTER'S LAST HOUR
-
-We stared into each other's eyes, trying to guess each other's
-thoughts. Every one in Belgium knows that the German army sows its
-informers everywhere. We could not even trust each other in that
-stricken country. Deserters and traitors were tracked down like dogs.
-Any one who gave aid or comfort to such persons did so at the risk of
-his life. It is said that pretended deserters deliberately trapped
-Belgians into aiding them, and then betrayed their hosts. Something of
-the sort was hinted in the famous case of Miss Edith Cavell. Knowledge,
-then, bade us be cautious: instinct alone bade us be kind.
-
-The Baas's wide eyes turned again to the creature on the ground, and he
-sighed plaintively. "Monsieur," he began, in a very low, gentle voice,
-"I will help him. Give me my flask and I will go for food and drink.
-Then we must plan. Does it please you to remain here?"
-
-"I shall stay here with him."
-
-"Good! I will go."
-
-I knelt beside the soldier and chafed his filthy hands until blood
-flowed again in his dry veins. The swollen pupils of his heavy eyes
-brightened. He talked continuously in a thin trickling whisper--a
-patter of information about dinners he had eaten, wines he had drunk,
-his military service, his hardships, and his physical and mental
-sensations. I had read of victims of scurvy in the Arctic snows
-dreaming and talking day and night of food, only of food. So it was
-with the starving soldier. The liquor had made him slightly delirious,
-and he babbled on and on.
-
-His broken ankle pained him. When I moved him about to rest it, his
-lightness astonished me. The man had been large and heavy; he was
-shrunken to a bag of bones. His uniform hung about him like a sack, and
-it seemed as if the slightest jar would snap his arms and legs. Tears
-welled under his heavy, dirty eyelids. "Mother! Mother!" he whispered
-once. "Art thou there? Mother!" Then as his eyes again cleared and he
-saw the trees interarched above him--the trees which the Baas had told
-me were one spirit; the grim, silent, sepulchral trees; the haunted,
-malignant trees which had wooed him with their shelter and then broken
-him and starved him; the trees beneath which his forest-dwelling
-ancestors had cowered for thousands of years and to which they had
-offered human sacrifices--he broke down and sobbed horribly. "She is
-not here! She is not here! No, she is not here!" he repeated over and
-over again.
-
-
-IV--"WE BURIED HIM IN THE PIT"
-
-When the Baas returned, we covered the deserter with our coats and
-fed him. Perhaps we did wrong to give him food, although I think now
-that he was doomed before we found him. We did our best, but it was
-not enough. In less than an hour, after a horrible spell of vomiting,
-the poor man was beyond all help of ours. His eyes rolled desperately,
-his breath came in horrid gasps, and he grew rigid like a man in an
-epileptic fit.
-
-We tore open the breast of his uniform to ease his labored breathing.
-A metal identification disk hung on a cord from about his neck over
-a chest which was like a wicker-work of ribs. His belly was sunken
-until one almost saw the spinal column through it. His tortured lungs
-subsided little by little, the terrifying sound of his breathing sank
-to nothing, his head thrust far back and over to the right side, his
-arms stiffened slowly, his mouth fell open.
-
-We watched, as if fascinated, the pulsing vein in his emaciated neck,
-still pumping blood through a body which had ceased to breathe. The top
-of the blood column at last appeared, like mercury in a thermometer. It
-fell half an inch with each stroke of the famished heart. It reached
-the base of the neck and sank from sight, and still we stared and
-stared. The man was dead, yet I seemed to have an awful vision of
-billions of sentient cells, billions of little selfish lives which had
-made up his life, fighting, choking, starving to death within that
-cooling clay.
-
-The Baas bent his head, uncovered, and crossed himself. With a quick
-stooping motion, he closed the wide open eyes and straightened the bent
-limbs. Then he rose to his full height and looked at me sadly. "This
-man had a mother, monsieur," he said. "We must forget the rest."
-
-In the pit where the other German had lain we buried the body of the
-deserter, and we found and repaired the little lath cross and set it up
-at the grave's head. But first I took from about the neck of the corpse
-the oval medallion which told the man's name and regimental number. It
-was a silver medal, finer than those usually worn by privates in the
-German army. I have it by me as I write, and on it is etched the brave
-sentence, "God shield you from all dangers of warfare, and render you
-back to us safe and victorious!"
-
-I was late for breakfast at the Chateau, but Van Steen kindly made room
-for me at his right hand. "Aha, monsieur!" he called gaily, "we thought
-you were helping to find the deserter."
-
-"Wha-what, monsieur le Baron?" I stuttered in amazement.
-
-"The German deserter. A file of soldiers woke us up at seven o'clock,
-inquiring for one of their men who ran away from Mons a month ago. They
-are searching the stables and the forest. They have traced him here to
-our commune. I hope they catch him!"
-
-My fingers clutched the silver disk in my pocket. "I think they will
-not catch him, messieurs. He ran away a month ago, you say?"
-
-"A month ago.... But it is nothing to us, eh? Let us eat our
-breakfasts." The Baron bowed grandly to me. "Monsieur le Delegue," he
-began in his smooth, formal voice, "once again we remind ourselves
-that it is thanks to you and the generous American people that we have
-bread. It is thanks to you that our noble Belgium is not starving....
-Eh bien! Let us eat our breakfasts."
-
-And so we did.
-
-(Told in the _Red Cross Magazine_.)
-
-
-
-
-GRIM HUMOR OF THE TRENCHES
-
-_As Seen by Patrick Corcoran, of the Royal Engineers_
-
- Patrick Corcoran, of the Royal Engineers, on leave in New York,
- gives a picture in which the monotony of slaughter is relieved
- by wagers among the men and pranks with a football as the charge
- begins. Told in the _New York World_.
-
-
-I--AN IRISHMAN TELLS HIS TALE
-
-"To the German soldier war is a serious business. To the Frenchman it
-is sublime devotion. To the Englishman it is bully sport."
-
-This from Capt. Patrick Corcoran of the Royal Engineers, hero of a
-dozen "Somewheres" in France, twice wounded and on permanent leave in
-New York City.
-
-"And to the Irishman?" I asked.
-
-"Fighting always was the Irishman's great amusement," he said. "The
-English are good sports, but they never did get the fun out of their
-fun that the Irish do."
-
- * * * * *
-
-Fun in the trenches! With shells dropping all around and blowing the
-bodies of your comrades into red fragments! What do the soldiers do, I
-wondered, when this is happening?
-
-The Frenchmen sing, this captain told me. Not to keep up their courage,
-but joyously, exultantly.
-
-"And the British?"
-
-"Sure, they lay bets on what the next shell will do."
-
- * * * * *
-
-"The 'sausages' are the fine toys," the captain went on. "The Boche
-call 'em minnewieffers, but they look like sausages. They always come
-with a series of whoops, and you can tell almost exactly where they're
-going to hit. Then they sit down and rest five seconds before they
-explode; they muss things up a little sometimes, but they're decent
-about it.
-
-"But the whizz-bangs--nobody loves a whizz-bang. You can't even hear
-them coming. You never have time to place a bet. They just whizz and
-bang in the same breath; and if you happen to be conscious after that,
-you help to bandage."
-
- * * * * *
-
-Capt. Corcoran enlisted as a private. I wondered how he came to get his
-commission.
-
-"So did I," he said. "I was carrying despatches to different places
-within our sector; couldn't go to another sector without special
-orders. But one day I was asked to take a despatch to another sector
-and I took it. When I came back, they made me a lieutenant. Nothing at
-all had happened, and I couldn't understand it. I didn't have any pull
-that I knew of; and besides, pulls don't count nowadays.
-
-"They told me a while later," he added, "that I was the seventh man
-sent out with that despatch. The first six were killed."
-
-
-II--"I WAS IN A CAVE ON CHRISTMAS EVE"
-
-It was nearing Christmas when I met Capt. Corcoran. He is a genial
-and, I felt sure, a rather sentimental soul; but his matter-of-fact
-conversation about matter-of-fact human slaughter was altogether
-chilling. So I asked him about Christmas in the trenches.
-
-"I spent last Christmas at Loos," he said. Loos, one of the worst of
-slaughter pens! I grew expectant.
-
-"I was sapping," he said. "Part of an engineer's duties are the
-extension of deep underground passages toward the enemy's lines, laying
-mines under 'No Man's Land' and listening, if possible, for signs of
-activity on the other side.
-
-"I was sapping--Christmas Eve. We were down thirty-five feet, in a
-little cave about nine by four. There were three of us. Along toward
-midnight a big shell landed right, and we were buried. We were buried
-thirteen hours. One of the boys lost his mind, but they dug us out
-Christmas afternoon."
-
-"It wouldn't have been so bad," he added, "if we had only had to wait.
-But we could hear the Boche sapping just a few feet away and we hated
-like everything to be mined and blown up down there. You don't mind
-it when you're out in the open air, but you get nervous in a fix like
-that."
-
-"It must have been a merry Christmas after all--just to get out," I
-remarked.
-
-"No," he said. "Something happened that got on my nerves. I went as
-soon as I could to get my Christmas mail--wanted to see what Santa
-Claus had brought--and he didn't bring me a blessed thing but a bill
-for thirty pounds."
-
- * * * * *
-
-I have hoped for a reaction against war on the part of the troops--a
-psychological revulsion, in time, against the long-drawn-out killing. I
-tried to present my theory to the captain, but he didn't seem to grasp
-it.
-
-"Everybody's nervous," he said, "for the first day or two--like a horse
-just in from the quiet country being driven through your city streets.
-But, sure, if he was going to shy at the 'Elevated,' he'd do it the
-first week. After that, he gets used to the noise and he'd be nervous
-without it. 'Tis so with a soldier. He's glad to get wounded for a
-change, and be sent back home; but then he gets to missing the noise
-of the whizz-bangs and the coal boxes and the darling little sausages,
-and he isn't easy until he gets into the game again."
-
-"But the horrors of hand-to-hand fighting," I protested. "How can
-anybody go through that and come out sane?"
-
-"'Tis simple," he said. "You know you've got to get your man, or he'll
-get you."
-
-"Get him? How?"
-
-"With whatever you've got. Maybe your bayonet. Maybe your knife. Maybe
-nothing but your fists and teeth."
-
-I tried to picture youths advancing under the smoke of artillery,
-through fields mowed by machine guns, dropping a moment into craters
-ploughed out by giant shells, creeping out under other curtains of
-smoke and reaching at last that other line of youths--then the thrust,
-the stab or the fight to the death with teeth and claws. I tried to
-picture young husbands and fathers and lovers, and even jolly good
-fellows, getting used to this--but I failed. I am an incorrigible
-mollycoddle.
-
- * * * * *
-
-"What is the war doing to the soldiers?" I asked. "How is it changing
-them most?"
-
-"Making men of them," said the captain. "They came out little
-pasty-faced clerks with no lungs, no muscle, no nerve and no vision.
-Now they've seen life--and death--and aren't afraid of either. They
-have muscles and nerves of iron, and a man's outlook on life. They'll
-never be mere clerks or mere Londoners again."
-
- * * * * *
-
-Capt. Corcoran doesn't reminisce. He doesn't romance. Getting a war
-story from him is hard newspaper work; not that he isn't willing to
-give information, but war conditions are no longer a novelty in Europe,
-and heroes are so common that their stories are no longer interesting.
-Little by little, I learned the following facts about his record, which
-did not seem at all extraordinary to him:
-
-He fought in the battles of the Aisne, Pepereign, Festubert, Hooge,
-St. Eloi, Neuve Chapelle, Loos and Pommier. He was wounded at Neuve
-Chapelle, sent to England, recovered and insisted on going back. He was
-wounded again at Pommier last February, two miles back of the line,
-when a stray shell fragment struck him in the back. The force of it
-hurled him to the ground in the midst of some barbed wire entanglements
-that caught in his forehead and tore back his scalp to the crown. A
-comrade clapped a cap upon his head to hold the scalp in place while he
-was carried to the hospital. His recovery amazed the surgeons.
-
-Once he broke military rules by staying away from his billet all night.
-That night a shell struck the billet and killed his partner with whom
-he had been sleeping for months.
-
-At another time, a shell split a house in which he was installing
-signal apparatus and killed half a dozen telegraph clerks with whom he
-had just been talking. He was uninjured.
-
-
-III--"EVERYBODY IS A HERO"
-
-"Heroes," he mused. "I suppose everybody is a hero after he has got
-on to the knack of heroism. You don't call a man a hero because he
-rushes fearlessly across Fifth Avenue; but to a person who has never
-seen anything busier than a country road, the act looks heroic. It's
-something the same with No Man's Land. I have a friend, a doctor, who
-got a D.S.O. for going out on No Man's Land to bandage up some wounded
-comrades. He didn't know he was doing anything heroic. They needed
-care; they couldn't come in, so he went out--that's all.
-
-"It was different with O'Leary. He went out for the fun of the thing
-and got eighteen Germans."
-
-The captain spoke of Private Michael O'Leary, V. C., who won the
-coveted decorations for this particular joke. It happened in the sector
-where Capt. Corcoran was stationed and he was well acquainted with the
-details.
-
-"O'Leary had been betting on the 'sausages' for several days," he said,
-"and he was bored. He wanted some real fun and let everybody know he
-was in the mood.
-
-"Betcha can't go across and bring back a Boche," somebody suggested.
-O'Leary sprung from the trench and went. In a second he was lost in the
-darkness and in half a minute the boys heard him yelling like a demon
-for help. Nobody could ever figure out how he did it--he must have
-brained the sentinel and disarmed the others while they were asleep.
-But there he was, with the arms of eighteen of them piled up before
-him, yelling back to the British trenches to come over and get the men.
-Of course, the boys answered his call and brought the whole eighteen
-back to the British lines.
-
-"You see, the Germans, with all their efficiency, aren't used to that
-kind of fighting. They're always so darn serious about it. They're
-good soldiers but they don't have any fun. When they see us come over
-kicking a football ahead of the charge, they don't seem to know what to
-make of it. We do it sometimes, don't you know, just to add a little
-novelty to the sport.
-
-"The war is just beginning. The Germans have a great machine and it'll
-take a long while to break it.
-
-"As much as you people in the States have heard about German
-efficiency, there has been little overestimating of it. Only one who
-has seen the Germans in action can appreciate what a well-regulated
-business organization they have made of war.
-
-"I don't know what our boys will do when it's all over; they're so used
-to war that peace will probably come hard for a while.
-
-"Seriously, now, I don't know a soldier who is even dreaming of peace.
-They didn't want war, but now that it is here, they're going to carry
-it through. And they're going to have all the fun they can out of it
-while it lasts."
-
-
-
-
-PRIVATE McTOSHER DISCOVERS LONDON
-
-_Told by C. Malcolm Hincks_
-
- Experiences of a Highland soldier, back from the front, while
- visiting London for the first time in his life. The hero's correct
- name, of course, has been suppressed in this story in the _Wide
- World_.
-
-
-I--STORY OF THE HIGHLANDER ON FURLOUGH
-
-He was standing on the main-line departure platform of St. Pancras
-Station. Motionless, as though on guard over the bookstall, he might
-have been made of the granite of his native country, and I felt sure
-that his name was Sandy or Jock.
-
-His war-stained khaki bore traces of many ordeals undergone; even the
-big, red knees were flecked with mud. Around him hung the extraordinary
-medley of equipment that so thoroughly justifies the old Army axiom
-that a soldier is "something to hang things on."
-
-A red face beamed out like a beacon from the mass of paraphernalia, a
-wisp of sandy hair peeped from under the soft khaki headgear, but the
-steady blue eyes glanced at me with hard suspicion as I felt for my
-cigarette-case; and thinking my action might be misunderstood, I went
-into the refreshment-room and dined.
-
-Nearly three-quarters of an hour later I emerged. It was eight o'clock,
-and I had half an hour longer to wait for my train to the Midlands. I
-gasped when I saw the Highlander still standing on sentry-go beside
-the bookstall. Presently he shouldered his rifle and paced along the
-platform. There was a clatter, and his steel helmet slipped from his
-back and rolled towards me. I just saved it from going under the wheels
-of a heavy luggage truck a porter was pushing along.
-
-The Highlander took his property with gruff word of thanks.
-
-"Losh, mon; it's a terrible city!" he murmured, as he placed his rifle
-between his knees and groped among the multitudinous buckles and straps
-on his broad back. "D'ye ken it's been my life's dream to see yon
-London? Ma old mither don't believe in dreams--and I'm thinkin' she's
-reet. I'll be glad when eleven o'clock comes and I'm off for bonnie
-Scotland!"
-
-"Eleven o'clock!" I gasped. "Why, you've nearly three hours to wait,
-and you were here when I arrived just after seven."
-
-"Aye; I've been here since four o'clock. Mon, I know this platform as
-well as I know ma own wee house! I feel safer here than in yon streets."
-
-Having fixed his steel helmet to his satisfaction on top of the other
-gear, he swung his rifle round on the sling--nearly braining an elderly
-gentleman who was passing behind him in the process. Ignoring the
-civilian's angry protest, he turned to me.
-
-"That's the sixth," he said, shortly, and a faint glimmer of amusement
-came into his clear blue eyes, "the sixth thieving rascal that felt ma
-rifle this day. They hang round trying to steal something from ma kit.
-It's a terrible city. I've been discoverin' it all day."
-
-"Look here," I said, "I've half an hour to spare, and you must be
-feeling hungry. I can't offer you a drink, but if you'll come and have
-some hot tea or cocoa and something to eat, I'll be proud, and you can
-tell me of your adventures."
-
-The Scot eyed me suspiciously.
-
-"A wee lassie made the same offer three hours since," he replied,
-doubtfully. "A lassie all in furs, but I didna trust her, and I told
-her so. She was after ma money or ma kit, or she wouldn't have been
-so angry at having been found oot! But I'll trust ye, mon. I want a
-bite of something, and if it's my adventures you want to hear, it's a
-wonderful story I'll have to tell ye."
-
-And here is the tale he told me, though I can only indicate the broad
-Scots in which he spoke.
-
-
-II--THE SCOTCHMAN TELLS HIS OWN TALE
-
-For years in ma wee Inverness-shire home I'd dreamt of seeing London.
-I'd never seen a city in ma life. I might have gone to Edinburgh once,
-but I lost the excursion ticket I'd bought and couldna find it till
-the train had gone. Ma mither had put it away for safety and forgotten
-where she'd put it! I was working for Farmer Macpherson when news of
-the war came, and about the end of August I was in the market-toon,
-when up came a chap dressed like I am now, except that he'd only got
-three stripes on his arm ... and was twisting a cane. "My lad," says
-he, "don't you wish to serve your King and Country?"
-
-"Aye," says I, "but I'm serving Farmer Macpherson juist noo, and he and
-ma mither wouldna like me changing jobs."
-
-Well, the sergeant had a lot to say. Mon, he was an awfu' liar, that
-sergeant! Maybe he came from here; I'm thinking he did! He talked of
-seeing life and of being in Berlin before Christmas.
-
-"Mon," I says, "I'm not fashing maself about Berlin, but if I go in the
-Army shall I go to London?"
-
-"Of course," says he. "As soon as you're a soldier you'll go to London."
-
-"All reet," says I; and I sent a boy home with the pony-cart to tell
-them that Jock McTosher had 'listed and was going to London. Well, I
-didna go to London. I trained in various parts of Scotland, just far
-enough away to miss ma home, but too close to get a real change. Then
-we went to an awfu' place in Wiltshire, all mud and huts and hard work;
-and then slipped across to France. I was a sad mon when I left the dock
-that night. I'd thought as a soldier I'd be sure to see London, but
-I'd never even seen a big town save the one we sailed from, and they
-marched us through that at night, when everything was quiet, and stowed
-us away in the big ship like smuggled goods.
-
-Well, I'd given up all hope of seeing London unless I got wounded and
-was sent there, when a bit ago they told me ma name was down for a ten
-days' leave! "Losh!" I says to maself, "I'll have a whole day in London
-before going north!" Well, I've had it, mon, and it's been a wash-out!
-
-At six o'clock this morning I arrived at Victoria, and with some pals
-had breakfast at a hut in the station. One of them was a Londoner,
-and when the laddies left me to go to their homes, he told me to keep
-straight along the street and I'd come to Westminster Abbey and the
-Houses of Parliament.
-
-Losh! mon, I was verra disappointed with London when I stepped out into
-yon street. It was quieter than the ruined wee village I'd left in
-France. Well, I looked at the Abbey from the outside, but no' feeling
-dressed for the kirk, I went across to the Houses of Parliament,
-thinking maybe the politicians would have had their breakfast interval
-and be starting again soon, as it was by then getting on for eight
-o'clock.
-
-But the big gates were shut and there seemed no one about but a
-policeman. A nice mon he was--and he knew me, too.
-
-"Halloa, Jock!" says he, quite friendly. "What are ye wanting?"
-
-"Mon," says I, "I'm having a day in London, and I want to see
-the Members of Parliament and the great lords at work. Maybe the
-day-shift's having breakfast and not started yet?"
-
-The policeman laughed as though I'd made a joke. He said the members
-weren't working that day, and anyway they didn't start till the
-afternoon.
-
-"Mon," I said, "they must make good money, or they'd never be able to
-live with so much standing-off time."
-
-"They don't do so bad," says the policeman, with another laugh; and I
-walked up a road called Whitehall, though I couldn't see anything white
-about it, unless it was the faces of the wee lassies hurrying to work.
-Then I went into a park and sat down and had a rest and a smoke. Maybe
-I dozed for awhile, for when I got out into that same Whitehall again
-something wonderful seemed to have happened. It was all noise and rush,
-and I was saluting officers until my arm ached. Then I crossed the
-road a bit, and after having been nearly run over twice, turned down a
-side-street and lost myself.
-
-
-III--ON THE WAY TO PICCADILLY
-
-Presently I saw what looked like a kindly old gentleman, and I asked
-him the way to Piccadilly.
-
-"You'd better take the Tube," says he. "There's a station just over
-there."
-
-"Tube!" says I, doubtful like. "What's that?"
-
-"An underground railway," says he, hurrying off. "You'll get to
-Piccadilly Circus in a few minutes."
-
-He was an awfu' liar, that mon! Why, it was ten minutes before I got
-ma ticket! There were penny-in-the-slot machines besides the little
-windows; but I don't trust them. There seemed to be about half-a-dozen
-railways running into the place, and there were maps with all the
-colours o' the rainbow to show you how to get to places; but as I
-didn't know where I was, or whether I was on a green or a brown line,
-they didn't help me much. I looked at the pictures and I looked at
-the pert lassies in uniform clippin' tickets an' all. I didn't like
-bothering them with questions, but at last I got to a window and asked
-for Piccadilly.
-
-"Penny," says the girl.
-
-"Aye," says I, and I put down ma rifle, not meaning to hurt the foot of
-the fussy mon behind me. "Is there any reduction for a return?" says I,
-having been brought up never to waste the bawbees.
-
-"No," she snapped. "Penny's the fare. Hurry up, please!"
-
-"Yes, do," growled out the mon behind, hopping about on one foot and I
-saw it was true about a crowd quickly gathering in London--for just in
-the little time I'd been talking there were dozens of people waiting in
-a line.
-
-"I'll have to get at ma purse," says I, starting to search ma pockets.
-"Losh! I believe I have it in ma pack! Will ye give us a hand with
-these straps, laddie?"
-
-"Oh, I'll pay your fare," says the man behind me; and no doubt he
-meant it kindly, though his way was rough. Well, I puts ma ticket in
-ma pocket and walks a little way. Then one of the wee lassies with
-clippers stops me and wants ma ticket.
-
-"Hold ma rifle, lassie," says I, "so as I can get it."
-
-Seeing how unsociable everyone else seemed, I spoke kindly to the
-lassie and told her I hoped she liked the job and her mither approved
-and all. But maybe, knowing Londoners, she didna trust any mon; anyway,
-the C.O. with a bad attack of liver couldn't have told me off much
-sharper; and there was a crowd behind charging at me just like a game
-of football!
-
-Mon, I'm not surprised that these Londoners make good soldiers! A man
-that could take that Tube every day of his life would think the first
-line of trenches restful! Down a sort of underground tunnel I walked;
-then suddenly I came to the funniest staircase I'd ever seen. I should
-have stopped to stare at the rumbling, snarling thing, but people from
-behind pushed me, and all of a sudden there was somethin' wrong with ma
-feet, and I found myself carried forwards. While I was looking about me
-steps formed before my eyes, and I gave a yell and clutched out to save
-myself.
-
-Now mind ye, mon, I'm a respectable young chap; ma feyther was elder at
-the kirk and ma mither's always warned me to treat lassies with proper
-respect.
-
-I didna know it was a lassie's waist I clutched hold of when I went
-down with a crash, ma rifle clattering and those awfu' stairs sliding
-downwards all the time. When I pulled myself together I saw that I'd
-dragged down with me a very pretty lassie, and she was sitting on ma
-knee! She was wearing one of those terrible short skirts, and there
-before my eyes was about a yard of silk stockings; but the lassie
-jumped to her feet just as I was going to shut ma eyes.
-
-She was quite nice aboot it, mind ye--the only nice Londoner I'd
-met. She was flushed-up like, and confused, as anybody would be on
-that awfu' livin' staircase, but she helped me to get to ma feet and
-collect ma kit. It wasn't her fault, moreover, that I fell down again
-in getting off that movin' contraption. I thought I was going to be
-carried doon the crack where it disappeared, and what with marking time
-and trying to step off with both feet at once I came down again with
-another crash. I blocked the passage-way for a minute or two, and the
-poor Londoners, with never a second to spare, were clambering all over
-me. Do they get paid by the minute?
-
-When I'd picked maself up and seen that nothing was missing, the dainty
-little lassie had disappeared. I was sorry, for, although I've been
-taught to be cautious of women, she was certainly verra nice, and no
-weight at all on ma knee.
-
-
-IV--"I'VE WALKED THE SEWERS OF LONDON"
-
-Finding myself alone, I set off up a tunnel. Presently I came to a
-notice--"Exit by Stairs." I didna know what "exit" meant, but I knew
-all about those terrible conjuring-trick stairs, and so I turned back
-and tried another tunnel. Seeing a lot of people going into a little
-room, I followed them. I gave ma ticket to another lassie, but she was
-so busy love-making to a bit of a boy that she took it without so much
-as a glance at it or me. There were advertisements in the room, and
-sort of sliding doors at each end of it. "It's a waiting-room," says I
-to maself; and thinking there might be some time before a train came
-and they opened the other door, I lit a "fag." Very wisely, I saw,
-they'd put up "Beware of Pickpockets," so I kept my eyes about me.
-
-"No smoking!" barks the lassie; and she came into the room, closing the
-other gates behind her.
-
-I was just going to argue with her, when all of a sudden the room
-started to move upwards. Losh! mon, it gave me an awfu' turn! I yelled
-out, and a man standing next to me laughed--anyway, he laughed till
-I turned round and ma rifle knocked against his head. Then, before I
-knew what had happened, the other gates swung open in a ghostly way.
-Mon, I'll swear there was no one to open them! I drew in a breath
-of fresh air, thinking I'd got to Piccadilly but, if you'll believe
-me, I'd walked the sewers of London and _come out at place where I'd
-entered_! And that old man said the "Tube" was an underground railway!
-Underground maze, I call it! I walked to Piccadilly after that; I was
-afraid of spending the rest of ma leave down there.
-
-I have no doot that Piccadilly is gay enough. But I was feeling tired
-and hungry the noo there were officers thick as flies after jam; and
-there didn't seem room for me and ma kit on the pavement. And the
-lassies! Never have I seen such clothes, and some of 'em had enough fur
-on them to make twenty goatskin waistcoats. It's a queer thing, though,
-but all of them seemed to have their clothes too short for them;
-ma mither would have been horrified. They looked at me as if I was
-something out of a show, and I began to feel nervous. "Losh!" I says to
-maself, "I'll have a bit of dinner. I'll do maself well." So I walked
-into a restaurant, after dodging a naval officer who was standing at
-the entrance and seemed to have something to do with the place. As
-soon as I got in I saw I'd made a mistake, and I'd have retired at the
-double, but a foreigner in evening dress, with about four square feet
-of starched shirt on him, came rushing up quite excited.
-
-"You can'd sdop here," says he. "Dis blace is for ladies and gendlemen."
-
-"Mon," says I, "there's many a rule made to be broken, or you wouldna
-be here."
-
-"I'll haf no insolence!" he cries, going very red. "You go to a common
-restaurant. We do not serve your sort here."
-
-That roused what ma mither calls the devil in me.
-
-"Mon," says I, catching him by the collar, "I've been killing the
-likes of you for the past sixteen months. The only difference is that
-they wore a grey uniform, instead of that fancy dress of yours. Say
-'kamerad' and bring me some sausages and mashed and a pint of beer, or
-you'll be the thirteenth I've finished off at close quarters, and that
-might be unlucky for both of us!"
-
-"The Scotsman's quite right," piped a pretty voice; and I felt fair
-frightened. The whole place was in an uproar. Ma rifle--an awkward
-thing is a rifle--had knocked over a chair, and a young Brass Hat
-(Staff officer) who was sitting at a table with the girl with the
-pretty voice, came over. I had to let the other chap go, so as to
-salute.
-
-"This won't do, you know," says Brass Hat, very severe; but the pretty
-lassie frowned at him, and he looked a bit awkward. "Confound you, you
-fool!" says he, very fierce, to the man in evening dress. "The young
-lady wants this man to lunch with us!"
-
-
-V--"AND I WENT TO THE CINEMA"
-
-I can't quite remember what happened after that. I should have liked to
-have fed with that lassie, for her eyes sparkled like stars, and as the
-Brass Hat was afraid of her it showed she was worth knowing. Still, she
-wasn't my lassie, but his, and he mightn't have liked it, so I started
-to retire. The Brass Hat gave me half a crown and said something about
-being quite as keen on killing the waiter as I was; and then I found
-myself out in Piccadilly again. It was some time before I found a
-little pub where I got a good dinner, with beer, for eighteenpence. I
-will say that for Londoners, mon, they do throw money aboot. Within an
-hour or so I'd had a railway fare paid and been stood a good dinner.
-But they take so much more out of you than what they give you, that's
-my grievance.
-
-Well, having had a good dinner, I strolled along for a bit, and then I
-thought I'd have a motor-bus ride. As I was standing on the pavements
-a 'bus stopped alongside me. Mon, I blushed and turned away ma head.
-
-There, on the wee platform at the end, stood a lassie in a blue kilt
-shorter than mine and high-top boots. Ma little sister wears longer
-skirts! She was a brown, curly-haired lassie, quite twenty years old,
-with a funny-shaped hat on her head and a cheeky smile on her lips.
-
-"Want the Bank, Sandy?" says she.
-
-"Lassie," says I, "war's a terrible thing! Go hame to your mither and
-ask her to lengthen your kilt!"
-
-"Kilt, indeed!" says the hussy, unabashed. "You're out of date, old
-boy!" And she jerked the bell and the 'bus went off. She waved to me
-from the stairs, but, of course, I took no notice. By now I was tired
-of London, mon; I wanted a little peace. Coming to a cinema, I paid
-saxpence at a little ticket-office and went through a hall that was all
-mahogany and plush, with a sort of field-marshal in full dress sweeping
-the marble floor. A lassie with a torch pulled a curtain on one side,
-and I saw a man falling into a river with a motor-car chasing him. Then
-the lights went up, and I saw I'd paid saxpence just to stand. I said
-I'd been swindled, but the people round only cried "Hush!" and then the
-lights went out again and some letters came up on the screen--"The Big
-Advance on the Somme."
-
-Mon, when you've been dodging shells and bullets for sixteen months,
-and ruins and broken trees are the only sort of scenery you've seen,
-you don't want to have "Big Advances" thrown at you on the pictures.
-I think I began a speech, and I'm sure it would have been a fine one,
-but things happen so sudden in London. I saw a shell coming over--on
-the film, ye ken--and I ducked from force of habit and jostled one or
-two people. In the excitement I upset a pretty lassie who picked up ma
-helmet--it was in the dark, ye see--and then I was put out. I wanted to
-go, or else they'd never have done it. After that---- Oh, is that your
-train, mon?
-
-"I should have liked to hear the remainder of your adventures in
-London, Jock," I said, leaning out of the carriage window.
-
-"There weren't any more," replied Jock, gazing suspiciously round him.
-"I came straight here after that. I've had enough of London. I've only
-three hours to wait the noo! I'll be feeling a wee-bit lonely, but----"
-
-The train moved away suddenly. I saw the brawny man in khaki take up
-his position by the bookstall, now closed. I waved to him, but he had
-turned to granite again. Private McTosher had discovered London!
-
-
-
-
-RUSSIAN COUNTESS IN THE ARABIAN DESERT
-
-_Adventures of Countess Molitor as Told in Her Diary_
-
-
-I--ON THE GREAT ARABIAN DESERT
-
-One of the most striking of all the numberless enterprises of one kind
-and another which have been brought to naught by the war was the plan
-of a young, rich and beautiful Russian countess to unveil the secrets
-of one of the earth's last unexplored and admittedly most dangerous
-regions--the great Desert of Arabia, called by the tribesmen who live
-on its fringe "The Dwelling of the Void," a region that is three times
-as large as Great Britain, and upon which no European foot is yet known
-to have been set.
-
-The young widow of a wealthy Russian nobleman, whose estates were in
-the neighborhood of Moscow, Countess Molitor's life had been full of
-thrilling experiences even before she made her plan to go, without any
-European companion, and conquer the unexplored Ruba-el-Khali.
-
-Previously she had wandered, with only a small escort of native
-bearers, through savage Southwest Africa, and had been captured there
-and held for ransom by native torturers. She had adventured, too,
-among the savage Tuaregs of the Saharan Desert, known as the most
-bloodthirsty tribe on earth; had crossed the Alps in a balloon, made
-between sixty and seventy flights in aero and water planes, been
-attacked and kept prisoner by Apaches in Paris, had nursed in the
-hospitals of Europe and taken part in rescue work in the slums of
-London.
-
-Of the remarkable experiences that have befallen the plucky countess
-since then I am now able to tell as the result of having, to begin
-with, received several lengthy letters from her at Cartagena, in Spain,
-where she has been living for some months, and, more recently, having
-been privileged to read the mightily interesting and vividly written
-journal that she kept from the moment of her arrival at Port Said.
-
-Had it not been for the war, it is extremely probable that the countess
-would have accomplished her project, which would have pushed her into
-the front rank of successful explorers. She carried out, it seems, her
-original intention, a venturesome one, indeed, for a white woman, of
-joining a Bedouin tribe and traveling with them, and had covered over
-nine hundred miles of her journey when she was caught in the Turkish
-mobilization and arrested, on suspicion of being a Russian spy, by
-the Moslems, who, from the beginning had frowned on her project and
-attempted to prevent it. Bitterly disappointed at being thus defeated
-just when the chance of success seemed rosiest, the countess was
-brought back as a prisoner to Damascus. There she had the narrowest
-escape of being shot for supposed espionage, and it was only after
-months of surveillance and affronts that she finally was permitted to
-return to Europe.
-
-
-II--GUEST OF A BEDOUIN SULTAN
-
-Though she failed to get across the Arabian Desert, the countess,
-previous to her arrest, had some of the strangest and most picturesque
-experiences that ever have befallen a white woman. Probably no other
-European woman has traveled, as she did, for weeks on end as the
-honored guest of a Bedouin Sultan (who insisted on believing her to
-be a sister of the Czar of Russia), living the nomadic life of the
-tribe and riding on camel-back, nor lived, as did the countess, all by
-herself, in the heart of old-world Damascus, an experiment that does
-not commend itself even to the foreign consuls. What she saw of the
-brutalities of the Turkish mobilization alone makes as thrilling a tale
-as any that has been told since the war began.
-
-Meanwhile the countess has been the victim of an astonishing accident,
-as a result of which she is still chary about using her right arm.
-
-"One day here at Cartagena," she writes, "while swimming some distance
-out at sea, I was followed and attacked by a big dolphin. Luckily an
-officer at the fortress had seen it, and he fired on the dolphin. But
-before killing him, one bullet went through my right arm! I must say in
-fairness to the dolphin that it really was not he who first attacked
-me. I saw him following me, and I thought I could have a little ride
-on his back, knowing that dolphins are good-natured, as a rule. But he
-misunderstood my attentions and turned on me, and, had not the second
-shot been fired an instant later, I should have been lost."
-
-The countess made the journey to Beyrout via Port Said.
-
-From Beyrout she went by train to Damascus (a day's journey), where she
-had planned to live for a time and improve her knowledge of Arabic,
-which is one of the six languages which she speaks, before setting out
-for the desert. To begin with, she put up at the only European hotel in
-this famous city of the East, and found its proprietor to be a strange
-character, indeed. Untidy of person and appallingly rude in manner, "he
-reigned there," writes the countess, "with absolute despotism. This
-his monopoly of the European hotel business in Damascus enabled him to
-do, as the Arab hostelries are impossible for foreigners.
-
-"Here is a little example of his delightful ways. One day an English
-visitor asked for a bath and, as answer, was told to get his luggage
-ready and leave the hotel in two hours' time, as his hotel had no
-room for people who were dirty enough to need a bath! It seemed to be
-a special passion and sport of his to turn people out of his hotel,
-and any one to whom he took the smallest dislike was ejected without
-the slightest consideration. Those who won his favor, however, he
-entertained with jokes and stories worthy of an old pirate!"
-
-She met both the English and Russian consuls, who placed themselves at
-her service and introduced her to other Europeans likely to advise her
-wisely in the matter of engaging her caravan and getting acquainted
-with friendly Arab chiefs, who would be able to give her a certain
-amount of protection at the outset of her journey, and eventually she
-found an old Syrian woman willing to let her house and act as cook and
-general factotum.
-
-
-III--UNDER ESPIONAGE IN DAMASCUS
-
-And so she settled down, and from this time, the early days of May,
-until when in June she began her journey the countess, with no other
-protector than old Sitt Trusim, as her bent and shriveled landlady, who
-proved to be the most capable of spies, was called, lived the life of
-a Syrian woman of the upper class, wearing the native dress, smoking
-the nargileh, studying Arabic diligently and always dreaming of what
-would happen when she was alone with her camels and the Arabs under the
-desert stars.
-
-The pages of the journal she kept during those months are reminiscent
-of "Kismet" and the "Thousand and One Nights," for where the countess
-willed to go she went, regardless of whether it was precisely safe
-to do so or not. And adventures she had in plenty. For while keeping
-nominally in touch with her European acquaintances on the hill of
-Sahiye, outside Damascus, she found her chief delight in wandering
-through the bazaars and the quaint streets of this enchanted city of
-minarets and in riding on horseback through the surrounding country in
-the cool of the evening. Once while thus doing she was attacked, as she
-had been warned she would be, by a couple of robbers, who possessed
-themselves of all the money she had, but missed her small Browning
-pistol, which, Bedouin fashion, she carried in her riding boot, and
-with this she eventually cowed them and made her escape.
-
-It was soon made plain to the countess that all her movements were
-painstakingly reported to the Turkish authorities, though the Vali,
-or Governor, consistently posed as her friend. She had by no means
-agreeable experiences, too, owing to the jealousy of certain Syrian
-families, whose pressing invitations to various ceremonials she had
-been obliged to decline, while accepting those of others and immensely
-enjoying the impressive and occasionally screamingly funny rites which
-she witnessed as their guest. One of these hosts of hers, by the
-way, was the proud possessor of the only bath in Damascus. More than
-one attempt was made to lure Countess Molitor to places where it was
-undoubtedly intended to ill-treat if not actually to make away with
-her. I will let her tell of one of these plots.
-
-"To-day Sitt Trusim brought me a letter addressed in unknown
-handwriting. Before opening it I asked her who brought it. She tells
-me that a man delivered it, whom, after questioning him, she found out
-to be deaf and dumb. I read the letter, which was an invitation from
-a lady asking me to visit her and her daughters this afternoon. She
-complained that I had given preference to her friends by visiting them,
-and said that she would send her man-servant to bring me at 5 o'clock.
-I don't know why this letter aroused my suspicions. Perhaps on account
-of the mysterious deaf and dumb messenger.
-
-"I sent for Vadra Meshaak (a friend's dragoman) to come to me,
-and showed him the letter quite carelessly, without mentioning my
-suspicions. He at once declared that it was written by a man and not
-by a woman and became very serious and angry, feeling sure that there
-was some treason behind it. At 5 o'clock the man was to come and fetch
-me. Well, he (Vadra) would dress up in my Arab costume, which in its
-largeness covers the whole figure, and go with the man and find out who
-the writer of the letter was. If it really was a woman he could explain
-his disguise as a joke. But he absolutely feared foul play! So in the
-afternoon we sent Sitt Trusim on an errand to the farthest end of the
-town, and I arranged Vadra Meshaak to look like a Syrian lady.
-
-"Punctually at 5 o'clock the mysterious deaf-and-dumb man knocked at
-the door, and Vadra Meshaak opened it and went away with him. I had not
-been alone a quarter of an hour till he was back again, all fury and
-excitement. After he had calmed down a little I heard his story! He
-had followed the man to a house in the inner court where three Turks,
-very well known to Vadra Meshaak, were getting up to pounce upon him.
-He did not leave them any time to talk, but gave each of them a heavy
-blow in the face, and before they could realize what had happened he
-had disappeared again.
-
-"They must have thought me a very fine pugilist! What their intrigue
-against me had been we shall never know. Vadra thinks that they
-probably meant to keep me in their house by force over night and then
-afterward report that I was a woman of no character and thus get me
-expelled."
-
-At the outset of the arrangements for the journey she was fortunate
-in getting acquainted with an old Arab Sheik, Mahmoud Bassaam, who
-had previously traveled with the Arabian lady explorer, Miss Bell,
-and was known to be entirely trustworthy. He had spent virtually all
-his life with the Bedouin and, as a camel dealer, had accumulated
-what was regarded in the East as a large fortune; yet he consented to
-accompany the countess (whose personal charm generally prevails, not
-only with men, but with her own sex, too), and took charge of all the
-arrangements for her journey, including the buying of camels and outfit.
-
-"My idea," the countess writes in her diary, "is to join the Roalla
-tribe at Palmyra and make friends with their Sultan, as they are one of
-the greatest and richest tribes in all Arabia. Once friends with the
-Roalla I intend to travel with them, move with them through the inner
-deserts southward and, arrived south, I hope to be able to interest the
-Sultan and induce him to cross the Ruba-el-Khali with me. Because I
-think this is only possible for a great tribe, with all their herds of
-camels and sheep. On my journey with him I shall try my utmost to fire
-his imagination and to rouse his enthusiasm for the exploration of the
-great desert."
-
-As her dragoman, the countess had an American university graduate,
-one Doctor Kahl, a Syrian, "well educated, serious and clever," who
-also had spent many years with the tribes of Arabia, but who, when
-introduced to the countess by Sheik Mahmoud Bassaam, had a lucrative
-practice as a dentist in Damascus.
-
-
-IV--ACROSS DESERT ON CAMEL CARAVAN
-
-It was on the fifth of June that she set out, secretly, for fear that
-the Turkish authorities at Damascus would oppose her if they knew of
-her intentions. Allowing it to be supposed that she was merely going
-for a ride on horseback, she met her American-taught dragoman on the
-outskirts of Damascus, and rode with him to Adra, on the fringe of the
-desert, where Mahmoud Bassaam and her caravan (eight camels and camel
-men, an Arabian cook and a guide) were awaiting her.
-
-It was in September, after they had traveled for more than 900 miles
-through the desert in company with the Sultan Al Tayar and his
-followers that the first echoes of the European war reached these
-travelers.
-
-In the meanwhile the Countess who, from first to last, was treated
-as a guest of the highest distinction by the Sultan (to whom she had
-been presented by Mahmoud Bassaam) had been able to revel to the full
-in the dreamy "_dolce far niente_" existence which she had so often
-pictured to herself. She had become familiar with all the customs and
-observances of the Bedouins--she had even witnessed a pitched battle
-between her hosts and an enemy tribe--and had learned to eat with her
-fingers as they did without discomfort. By some means the impression
-that she was a sister of the Czar of Russia had become fixed in the
-minds of these tribesmen, and when the Countess wished to disabuse them
-of it, the Sultan dissuaded her, hinting that it was all to the good.
-
-It was while crossing the Dahma Desert and heading for the wells of
-Wadi-al-Mustarri that a small Arab tribe brought them the tidings that
-Turkish soldiers were scouting the country, and that at Hail great
-demonstrations and assemblies of Turks and Arabs had taken place. And,
-on arriving at Jilfi, a small trading town, a few days later they
-learned that a European war had broken out, though between whom nobody
-knew.
-
-At Jilfi the countess was arrested, a paralyzing blow for her,
-considering that she had covered more than half the distance to the
-Ruba-el-Khali, and that another two months would have found her on
-its borders, and that she had succeeded in winning the Sultan to the
-venture of attempting to cross it. He and his chiefs, who first wished
-to resist, parted from their guest with keen sorrow, and the Sultan
-presented her, as his parting gift, with a magnificent emerald, of
-which, however, she was robbed while being brought back as a prisoner
-and ill with fever to Damascus. There the Turkish authorities greeted
-her with soft words, declaring that they had acted only for her safety,
-but, though she was allowed to go free and to live in her own house,
-she was aware all the time that she was carefully watched.
-
-
-V--HELD PRISONER--ESCAPE TO EGYPT
-
-The account which she gives of the Turkish mobilization in the days
-that immediately followed is graphic enough: "Soldiers armed to the
-teeth pass," she writes, "driving before them villagers to be enlisted.
-The boys all look terrified. Patriotism means nothing to them; they
-loathe their Government and are frightened to death at the thought of
-becoming Turkish soldiers, who are treated like dogs. Those who can,
-fly and hide themselves in the mountains. At present the Lebanon is
-full of such fugitives, and, being very desperate and nearly mad with
-fright and hunger, they are quite dangerous to meet. I am told they
-hide like animals in the grass and bushes and live on wild cucumbers.
-Poor things."
-
-Then German officers arrived on the scene and things grew rapidly
-worse. "The commandeering in town," writes the countess, "is rapidly
-bringing about the utter financial ruin of many families. To-day
-every house was ordered to provide a hundred blankets or to pay a sum
-equivalent to their value. Those who cannot comply are thrown into
-prison. From the store at which I buy my provisions they have taken
-$2,500 worth of rice, sugar and coffee, the poor man's entire stock,
-without paying him a penny or even giving him a receipt. He is ruined.
-From another store they have taken carpets and rugs valued at $1,000
-which are, I am told, destined for the private households of the
-officers! The same is, no doubt, the destination of $1,500 worth of
-ladies' silk stockings, linen and dresses, which were also commandeered!
-
-"A commission visited the manager of a firm of automatic pistols and
-took away 800 without paying for them, leaving the rest. Two days later
-the manager was arrested, under the pretext that he had purposely
-hidden the arms which the commission had not taken. They put him into
-prison, and only after a week's incarceration, his family having paid
-L50 to the Government, was released. Meanwhile he has not had a receipt
-for his guns."
-
-Eventually the countess managed to escape from Damascus to Bayreuth,
-where she had hoped to find a friend in the Vali, or Governor, there,
-who had treated her with great consideration at the time of her arrival
-in Syria. Upon instructions from Damascus, however, he kept her a
-virtual prisoner, and when later her trunks were examined and the
-photographs and notes she had made while on her expedition discovered
-she was in imminent danger of being shot as a Russian secret agent. The
-Russian consul, who was himself in danger and had made one fruitless
-effort to escape, was unable to assist her.
-
-She found her best friends, then, in the officers of the American
-men-of-war _North Carolina_ and _Tennessee_, which were lying off the
-town. They gave her good counsel and helped to keep her spirits up.
-After some weeks of agonizing uncertainty it was decided that the
-countess should merely be expelled from the country, and she was given
-an hour to get aboard of a vessel which was sailing for Egypt.
-
-
-
-
-GERMAN STUDENTS TELL WHAT SHERMAN MEANT
-
-_Three Confessions from German Soldiers_
-
-_Told by Walther Harich, Wilhelm Spengler and Willie Treller_
-
- What the educated German soldier thinks about the war, how he is
- affected by the strain and the brutalities and the heroisms of life
- consequent of it, is described with a fresh, powerful vividness
- in a book of war letters from German students issued under the
- editorship of Professor Philipp Witkop, of Freiburg ("Kriegsbriefe
- Deutscher Studenten"). Translations of some of the impressions on
- the German youth are here presented.
-
-
-I--"DRIVEN TO DEATH BY ME"
-
-Of the worst of all I have not written.... It is not the slaying, not
-the mounds of dead, which we are always passing, and not the wounded
-(they have the morphine needle and they lie quiet and peaceful in the
-straw of the requisitioned peasant carts). To me the worst is the
-distress and suffering to which man and beast are constantly subjected
-by the terrible strain. We have just buried my first mount, a glorious
-animal, virtually driven to his death. Driven to death by me! Can you
-imagine that a person as peaceable as I could find it possible to drive
-a horse to death with whip and spurs?
-
-There is no help for it. The word is forward--always forward!
-
-Oh, this everlasting driving on!
-
-One stands beside a team that can go no further and compels the
-drivers, with kindness or threats, to force the impossible out of the
-horses. The poor animals are all in, but one grabs the whip himself and
-mercilessly beats away at the miserable beasts till they move again.
-That is the shocking thing--that one is constantly compelled to make
-demands upon the poor animals to which they are not equal. Everything
-here is beyond one's strength. The impossible is made possible. It must
-go--till something or other breaks.
-
-Or picture this to yourself: Shaken with fever and with burning eyes, a
-boy comes to me, whimpering--he can endure no more--and I ride into him
-and drive him back to the front. Can you picture that? But it must be!
-
-Everything here is beyond one's strength. My God! We ourselves must
-do impossible things. But can one demand that of the others? We know
-that the struggle is for the German idea in the world--that it is to
-defend German understanding, German perception against the onslaught
-of Asiatic barbarism and Romanic indifference. We know what is on the
-cards if we do not do our utmost.
-
-But the men? How often since we came to this God-forsaken region did
-we tell ourselves that it was impossible to go forward at night. It is
-really impossible. And then came an order--an order which could not be
-carried out during the day, so it went at night. It went because it
-must. Because "the order" is the great unavoidable--something that must
-be carried out--Fate, the all-determining. We know what "the order"
-means now! It is that which gives our people the ascendancy over the
-whole world.
-
- WALTHER HARICH.
-
-
-II--HORRORS OF "NO MAN'S LAND"
-
- Near Maricourt, December 17, 1914.
-
-Soon after 11 we were awakened by the retiring sentries. As tired as
-dogs though we were, we crawled out into the open. It was still raining
-wet strings--a cold, ugly December night; not a star to be seen. Every
-once in a while the sound of a shot came to us from the other side of
-the stream.
-
-"You," remarked Hias suddenly, "listen! Hear anything?"
-
-"What do you mean?"
-
-"Now."
-
-It was a long, wailing cry for help. I could hear it distinctly.
-
-"There is a poor devil out there, wounded," said Hias.
-
-Great heavens--in this weather! And he must have been lying there
-without help since early yesterday.
-
-He couldn't be in the wood anywhere, for we had gone through that
-thoroughly. Perhaps he had been caught by a shrapnel splinter during
-the retreat across the field. Well, what was it to us? Let his comrades
-get him. He must be just a few meters from the French trenches, anyhow.
-
-Released at 1, we went back to our tents to get some sleep, cursing the
-French who left their comrade to perish so miserably.
-
-At 3 the next afternoon, when I went on duty again, the poor devil
-was still calling for help, keeping it up all day. We could not help;
-we did not see him. And to expose ourselves to the French was a
-proceeding not to be lightly recommended. It was a horrible feeling to
-be condemned thus to inaction while a wounded soldier called for help.
-
-When the wind changed one could hear the poor devil whimper and weep
-and then suddenly rouse himself and send out a call for help, "Oh, la,
-la!"
-
-Why didn't the French take him away? There was no danger. We could not
-shoot, for we saw nothing. And we had no intention of doing that. I was
-glad when my hour was up.
-
-At 8 o'clock I was at my place again with Hias. The poor Frenchman was
-whining more pitiably than ever. For half an hour we listened; then
-Hias lost his patience.
-
-"What a tribe of pigs," he broke out, "to leave a comrade to die like
-a dog! He can't last much longer."
-
-"Well, Hias," I said, "what can we do? I am sorry for him myself, but
-there is no help. He must die."
-
-After a few minutes a terrible scream: "Oh, la, la, la, la!" pierced
-the night. Then there was quiet. God be praised! Now he is dead and at
-peace, I thought. And quietly I repeated a few prayers for his soul.
-But after a while we heard his cry again.
-
-"Well, it's enough now," exclaimed Hias. "I can't stand this any
-longer. I'm going to get him, with or without permission." He spoke and
-disappeared.
-
-In a minute his brother took his place at my side, while he himself
-ran up to the trenches. He was back in about ten minutes. He had the
-permission. The lieutenant also was going and asked if I would come
-along, as I knew something of first aid and could speak a little French.
-
-When we got to the lieutenant three more men, splendid fellows, on whom
-one could rely, had volunteered. In a twinkling we had gathered tent
-cloth, side arms and saws and were running singly across the meadow. Of
-course, the sentries were notified that we were out in front.
-
-We entered the wood. While two men worked with knives and saws to cut a
-way through, the others held themselves ready for anything that might
-develop. We stumbled over bodies, weapons and knapsacks. At last I
-found a little path which the French had made a few days previously.
-
-I rested a while and was just about to return to my comrades when a
-hand gripped my foot. Great God, I was frightened! For a second I was
-paralyzed; then, tearing out my sword--
-
-"Pitie! pitie!"
-
-Some one under my feet was whining for mercy. My teeth chattered. I
-could hardly move or answer.
-
-"Oh, m'sieur camarade; pitie! pitie!"
-
-Suddenly the lieutenant appeared and I found my control again. Getting
-down on my knees, I carefully groped for the body.
-
-"Look out now," whispered the lieutenant. "It may be a trap."
-
-"Give me your hand," I ordered the Frenchman. A cold, moist, trembling
-hand was put into mine.
-
-"Where is your weapon?" I asked. He had lost it as he pulled himself
-along till he was exhausted.
-
-Suddenly from somewhere near we heard the horribly familiar call, "Oh,
-la! la!"
-
-"Well, now," said the lieutenant, "we have one man, but not the right
-one."
-
-I asked the wounded one whether we would be seen if we tried to get the
-other man.
-
-"_Oui, mon brave camarade, Allemand._" The lieutenant hesitated, but
-resolved nevertheless to go on.
-
-One man remained behind with the Frenchman--a corporal, he said he
-was--with orders to stab him instantly if he called for help while we
-were working our way through the brush. We came to the edge of the wood
-at last and peered out.
-
-We could make out the forms of many black objects--dead men, killed so
-near their own trenches, too! Hias was beside me, and with his sharp
-peasant eyes soon espied the body of the poor fellow we were after.
-The lieutenant crawled out, and we followed. Coming up to him, I called
-softly, "_Camarade!_" I did not want to frighten him; besides, he might
-scream for help, then we would be in a nice fix.
-
-"Oh, oh, _Dieu! Dieu!_" he breathed and emitted sounds like the joyful
-whining of a puppy when he saw me.
-
-He grasped my hand and pressed it to his breast and cheek.
-
-I felt him over carefully. As I fumbled along his left leg I received
-a sudden shock. Just below the calf it ended. The foot was torn off
-above the angle and hung loosely on the leg. As his whole body was
-wet I could not tell whether he was still bleeding. I could only make
-out that a rag was tied about the wound. He had bandaged it with his
-handkerchief, as I learned later.
-
-We soon had him beside his comrade.
-
-The lieutenant went back to his command, leaving the rest to me. The
-others carried the corporal away to the nearest aid station, while I
-remained with his comrade, who, as he lay there, softly spoke to me
-about himself--his wife and his child--of the mobilization. This was
-his first day at the front. Fate had overtaken him swiftly. He was a
-handsome man, with big, black eyes, dark hair and mustache. His pale,
-bloodless face made him doubly interesting. His voice was so tender and
-soft that I was touched; I could not help it. I gently stroked him:
-"_Pauvre, pauvre camarade Francais!_"
-
-"Oh, monsieur, _c'est tout pour la patrie_."
-
-I lay down and nestled up close to him and threw my coat over him, for
-he was beginning to shiver with fever and frost. Then it began to rain
-very softly. So we lay one-half, three-quarters, a whole hour. At last,
-after one and a half hours, the comrades returned.
-
-My poor wounded one was crying softly to himself.
-
-He was soon in the hands of a physician and an attendant. His wounds
-were looked after and he was given some cold coffee.
-
-I had to go.
-
-A look of unutterable gratefulness, which I shall never forget, a nod:
-"_Bonne nuit, monsieur_," and I was outside in the cold, damp December
-night.
-
- WILHELM SPENGLER.
-
-
-III--A BELGIAN MOTHER AND HER BABE
-
- Ingelmuenster, November, 1914.
-
-In Fosses, near Namur, I happened to be the only physician in the
-place, as all the doctors had fled. So it came about that the first
-prescriptions that I have ever written were in the French language. It
-was rather odd, but it went. The sixty-five-year-old apothecary and I
-have opened many good bottles of Burgundy in his bachelor apartment
-while he told of his student days in Geneva and Brussels; I of Germany
-and its glories.
-
-One time I was called to a village an hour distant to the help of a
-young mother. And it may have presented a curious and unforgettable
-spectacle to the Belgian peasants when after two hours' hard work the
-"_jeune docteur Allemand_," shirt-sleeved, armed and girt with a woman's
-apron, presented the young mother with a tiny, howling Belgian, while
-outside the guns thundered in the distance, killing perhaps hundreds
-and hundreds of other Belgians.
-
- WILLY TRELLER.
-
-(Translations by Julian Bindley Freedman for the _New York Tribune_.)
-
-
-
-
-BAITING THE BOCHE--THE WIT OF THE BELGIANS
-
-_Told by W. F. Martindale_
-
- The people of Brussels have always been noted for a very pretty
- turn of wit. On the other hand, not even his best friends have
- ever accused the German of possessing a sense of humor. With the
- "Boches" in possession of Brussels, it is easy to forecast that the
- Bruxellois would find them fair game. This amusing story shows how
- the citizens have "got their own back" on the invaders, as related
- in the _Wide World_.
-
-
-I--STORY OF M. MAX--BURGOMASTER
-
-No one ever suspected the German mind of possessing a sense of humour.
-But that it should prove such easy--and fair--game as Teutonic
-behaviour in the course of the war has shown it to be is more than
-the most maliciously satirical could ever have hoped. In turn, and
-according to their several temperaments, the Allied nations have
-indulged their wit at the expense of the Boche. The British have guyed
-him with an almost affectionate contempt; the French have sacrificed
-him with a wholly contemptuous hatred, and the rest have all scored off
-him in turn.
-
-But it has been left to the Belgians, and more particularly the
-citizens of Brussels, to elevate the pleasing pastime of Boche-baiting
-into a fine art. The heaviest harness has its weak joints, and the
-comedies enacted during the German occupation of the Belgian capital
-have shown that even the mailed fist is not proof against the
-penetrating shafts of ridicule and wit.
-
-For a contest of wit _versus_ mere force the Bruxellois were well
-equipped. They have long enjoyed a reputation for a wit peculiarly
-their own, a blend of English levity and French irony, and they have
-had the advantage of a victim who positively, as the phrase goes, "asks
-for it." Moreover, a brilliant lead was set them. The exploits of M.
-Max, the dauntless Burgomaster of Brussels, will live long in the
-annals of war, for his courageous wit well matched the spirit of the
-troops which at Liege dared to confront and dispute the passage of the
-German legions.
-
-When the Germans marched into the undefended city, doing their utmost
-to make their entry as humiliating as possible to the inhabitants, M.
-Max went to meet their commander as calmly as though he were paying an
-ordinary official call. The Prussian general informed him that he would
-be held responsible for the good behaviour of the citizens and their
-instant obedience to every order of the conquerers. The Burgomaster
-knew very well what that meant--that he would be shot out of hand, as
-other mayors had been, if anyone dared to lift a finger against the
-Germans. But he received the news with a smiling face, and assured the
-commandant that all necessary steps had already been taken for the
-maintenance of public order. Then he went back to his office, showing
-a courage and calmness in a most difficult situation that delighted
-his fellow-countrymen, and even invoked the grudging admiration of the
-enemy.
-
-
-II--HOW HE OUTWITTED THE PRUSSIANS
-
-Some of the stories told concerning the worthy magistrate's prowess
-are probably fiction, but others rest upon good foundation. For
-instance, when M. Max was summoned to confer with the German commander,
-the latter ostentatiously laid his revolver on the table--just one
-of those characteristic little actions that have made the invaders
-so cordially hated everywhere. It said, as plainly as spoken words,
-"Remember that the powers of life and death are in my hands, and that
-I have got force at my back." Some men would have lost their nerve in
-such circumstances, but the Burgomaster was made of different stuff.
-Without a moment's hesitation, M. Max took his fountain pen from his
-pocket and, with a humorously emphatic gesture, banged it down upon the
-table opposite the revolver. Was it a sort of hint, one wonders, that
-"the pen is mightier than the sword"--that the soldier's reign would
-be a brief one? Anyway, it evidently impressed the Prussian, as did
-the Burgomaster's conduct throughout the conference, for at the close
-of the meeting the general patronizingly congratulated M. Max on his
-conduct at the discussion and graciously offered to shake hands with
-him. But the Burgomaster was no more susceptible to soft words than
-to threats. He remembered how German officers had deliberately ridden
-their horses through the city's flower-beds and roughly jostled women
-and children off the sidewalks. "Excuse me," he said, firmly, "but we
-are enemies."
-
-A little later there came another sharp passage of arms. The new
-governor of the city sent for M. Max and informed him curtly that, on
-account of the stubborn resistance Belgium had offered, the capital
-would have to pay the staggering fine of eight million pounds! How long
-would it take the Burgomaster to produce the money?
-
-M. Max looked at him with a smile.
-
-"You are a little too late, general," he said. "All the funds of the
-city were sent to Antwerp some time ago, and we have not a penny in our
-coffers."
-
-That was check number one to the governor, but another was to follow.
-The good folk of Brussels, the Germans noted, were showing altogether
-too much spirit. They were saying among themselves that the French
-would soon put the Germans in their places. So the governor placarded
-the town with a notice informing the inhabitants that France had left
-the Belgians to their fate; she had all she could do to look after
-herself, and would trouble no further about her little ally. This
-specious story might have had the designed effect but for M. Max.
-Paying no heed to the possible consequences to himself, he immediately
-had another notice, bearing his own signature, pasted underneath the
-governor's poster. It was short and very much to the point. It stated
-that the German statement was an out-and-out lie to which no attention
-should be paid. What the governor said when he heard of this swift
-counter-stroke may be left to the imagination. What he did was weak
-enough. He simply issued another notice saying that in future no
-proclamations were to be posted up without his sanction.
-
-For a few days M. Max was left in peace; then he had another little
-tussle with the enemy. Because a clerk at the town hall refused
-to accept a requisition order which was not properly filled up, a
-blustering German officer forced his way into the Burgomaster's room
-with a cigar in his mouth.
-
-M. Max looked at him coldly.
-
-"Sir," he said, "you are the first person to walk into my rooms without
-being properly announced."
-
-The Prussian began to bully and threaten, but without heeding him M.
-Max sent one of his staff to fetch the intruder's superior officer,
-General von Arnim. The general came, heard of his subordinate's
-rudeness, and sentenced him on the spot to eleven days' arrest. Then he
-turned to M. Max.
-
-"Now, sir," he said, "the conversation can continue."
-
-"Pardon, general," replied the Burgomaster, "it can now commence."
-
-
-III--HUMOR OF THE WITTY BRUXELLOIS
-
-Throughout their dealings with the people of Brussels the Germans
-have found themselves time and again outwitted. Scarce a prohibition
-has been framed which has not been countered on the instant by some
-brilliant evasion that has rendered it not merely null and void, but
-ridiculous as well. "_Verboten_," that fetish of the docile German
-mind, succeeds only in stimulating the inventiveness of the witty
-Bruxellois.
-
-Exception was taken, for example, to the wording of certain
-proclamations by the Burgomaster which had been put up on the walls
-in various parts of the city, and the German authorities ordered that
-sheets of white paper be pasted over them. The order was duly carried
-out. Ere nightfall blameless blank sheets marked the spots where the
-suppressed placards had previously figured. Next morning the sheets
-were still there, blank as before, but hardly blameless. An oily sponge
-had rendered them transparent during the night, and the censored
-proclamations underneath were plainly visible for all who chose--and
-there were many--to pause and ostentatiously read.
-
-Again, the wearing of the Belgian national colours is forbidden. So
-be it. Rosettes of red, black, and yellow ribbon are discarded; not a
-favour adorns the decorous civilian buttonhole. But soon a new fashion
-in attire appears upon the boulevards. A dandy is observed handsomely,
-indeed strikingly, apparelled in yellow trousers, red vest, and black
-coat. The mode quickly becomes popular, and soon it might almost be
-said that for the patriotic Bruxellois "motley's the only wear." That
-the motley in this case should comprise the Belgian national colours
-is a coincidence which any wearer of it, one may be sure, would be
-astonished to discover.
-
-When last year the anniversary of that fateful fourth of August came
-round, the Germans in Brussels, guilty of conscience, sought to
-anticipate by prohibition all public reminiscence of the date. Their
-feelings may be imagined when, on the morning of that significant
-anniversary, they were greeted by the sight of a careless torn
-"scrap of paper" thrust negligently through the buttonhole of every
-Bruxellois. To frame an edict that would render _verboten_ such subtle
-demonstrations as this would tax even the Teuton's encyclopaedic
-diligence.
-
-A scrap of paper is not the only strange but meaning device which has
-adorned the citizen's buttonhole in Brussels. On the day when Italy
-joined the Allies, the Germans, in anticipation of that long-expected
-event, had of their wisdom forbidden any display of the Italian colours
-or flag. None appeared, but from out of those resourceful buttonholes
-peeped neat rosettes and sprigs of macaroni.
-
-If presently we learn that by order of the All-Highest every buttonhole
-in Brussels is sewn up, it will hardly be matter for surprise. It would
-be a charactertistic step.
-
-Those ribbon favours have proved prickly thorns to the Germans. They
-seem to act upon the Prussian mind as a red rag upon the bull, and
-like the rag, when in the deft hands of a skilled _toriro_, they
-frequently lure the victim to his own undoing. It happened once, soon
-after the display of national colours had been prohibited, that a
-Prussian officer, entering a Brussels tramcar, found himself seated
-opposite a Belgian lady upon whose coat the forbidden red, black, and
-yellow ribbons were flauntingly displayed. It is the custom of many
-Belgian ladies, on finding themselves in a public vehicle with a German
-officer, to quit their seats and stand on the conductor's platform
-outside. Ruffled, perhaps, by the omission of this somewhat pointed
-tribute to his presence, the intruder leaned forward and requested the
-removal of the offending colours. The suggestion was greeted by a stony
-stare, the demand which followed it by an expressive and provocative
-shrug of the shoulders.
-
-"If you will not take off those colours, madam, I shall remove them
-myself."
-
-This menace eliciting no response, the Prussian officer stretched forth
-a Prussian fist and made a Prussian grab. The favour came away in his
-clutch, but that was not the end of it. Within his fair antagonist's
-dress ample lengths of ribbon were concealed, and the more the
-discomfited officer pulled the more streamers of red, black, and yellow
-reeled forth. It was a case literally of getting more than he bargained
-for, and the charming murmur of thanks which he received when, in sheer
-desperation, he dropped the tangle of ribbon on the floor and made
-hastily for the door must have gratified that Prussian exceedingly.
-
-
-IV--THE JOKERS OF BRUSSELS
-
-Practical joking has become popular in Brussels since the German
-occupation. "Everybody's doing it"--amongst the Bruxellois, that
-is. A prohibition was lately placed upon the use of motor-cars by
-the civil population, and orders were issued for the enforcement of
-dire penalties in cases of disobedience. One afternoon a couple of
-German officers were seated in a _cafe_ discussing mugs of beer with
-that portentous solemnity which the Teutonic mind finds proper to
-such an occasion, when a loud "Honk, honk!" the unmistakable blast
-of a motor-horn, was heard in the street outside. Forth dashed the
-officers, indignant at this flagrant transgression of orders, but when
-they reached the pavement no car was there. None was even in sight
-upon the whole length of the boulevard, though the sound of the horn
-had been close at hand. Crestfallen, the representatives of law and
-order--Prussian style--returned to their beer-mugs, but were hardly
-seated when again the loud "Honk, honk!" fell upon their ears, and
-again they dashed into the street, with the same result. Convinced that
-some impudent guttersnipe must be playing a trick, they questioned the
-nearest sentry. But the latter had seen neither car nor urchin; he
-had not even heard the mysterious sound, he averred, and the baffled
-officers began almost to doubt their ears. But the smile on the face of
-the Belgian proprietor of the _cafe_ was suspicious.
-
-Fresh mugs of beer were requisitioned, but the very first "Prosit" was
-interrupted by the malevolent "Honk, honk!" With froth-flecked lips
-that gave them an aspect admirably suited to their mood, the enraged
-officers set down the mugs with a bang and once more strode forth in
-quest of the miscreant. Once more a perfectly empty street met their
-gaze. But even as they scowled abroad, a mocking "Honk, honk!" sounded,
-this time just above their heads. The listeners started and looked up,
-to see a green parrot in a cage upon the window-sill above regarding
-them imperturably with a beady inscrutable eye. So flagrant a case
-of _lese majeste_ could not be overlooked, and the green parrot was
-executed.
-
-But even in his murders the Boche lacks a sense of proportion, which
-is, of course, merely another way of saying that he has no sense
-of humor. To the martyrdom of the parrot must be added that of two
-luckless pigeons whose sole crime against the Deutches Reich was that
-of being born after a certain date. It was decreed soon after the
-occupation of Brussels that all owners of pigeons must notify the
-authorities the number of birds which they possessed. Amongst those
-complying with the order was a certain shopkeeper who kept a pair
-of pigeons as pets. They were not of the carrier variety, and he was
-allowed to retain them. But pigeons are notoriously domesticated
-creatures, and presently an interesting event occurred in the
-establishment of this happy couple. A couple of squabs were hatched
-out. These duly assumed down, which in turn became feathers, and
-presently there were four pigeons where formerly had been but two. At
-this stage a German official, armed with a registration list, paid a
-visit of inspection. He noted the well-preened quartette, and referred
-to his papers. Then he frowned ominously.
-
-"On such and such a date you registered two pigeons."
-
-"That is so," was the answer. "Since then----"
-
-"But you have four there."
-
-"Quite true. You are----"
-
-"But you are only entitled to have two."
-
-"A thousand pardons, mein Herr. But one cannot interfere with Nature.
-My two pigeons, you see----"
-
-"If you registered two only, you cannot be allowed to have four. It is
-self-evident."
-
-It is needless to repeat the colloquy at length. Though that
-explanations were cut short, refused a hearing. No German official
-was ever known to "use his discretion"; that is a prerogative of the
-muddle-headed British. The list had _two_ pigeons; here were _four_.
-Obviously there was only one course to be taken. The abundant pigeons
-shared the fate of the indiscreet parrot.
-
-Next day there appeared suspended in the mourning owner's shop-window
-two feathered corpses adorned with this pathetic placard:--
-
- MORTS
- POUR LA PATRIE!
-
-
-V--THE SECRET NEWSPAPER--_LIBRE BELGIQUE_
-
-But the most brilliant and daring feat achieved in Brussels is
-unquestionably the publication of _Libre Belgique_, a mysterious weekly
-journal which makes its appearance with unfailing regularity, though
-how, where, and by whom produced the Germans have never been able to
-discover. This is the very apotheosis of Boche-baiting, for _Libre
-Belgique_ is a fiery sheet. It does not mince words, but flagellates
-the Germans with the most scornful virulence, holding them up to
-ridicule and contempt. Every week it pours the vials of bitter wrath
-and hatred upon the Boche's devoted head, and the Boche can do nothing
-but sit meekly under this scorching cataract. For though a reward,
-which has already risen from a thousand pounds to three times that
-figure, is offered for a denunciation of those responsible for this
-"scurrilous rag," the secret of _Libre Belgique_ remains inviolate.
-Exhaustive searches have been conducted, many arrests have been made
-upon suspicion, but except for two minor actors in the great comedy,
-whose function was merely the distribution of copies, no one has been
-caught. Yet _Libre Belgique_ has already celebrated one anniversary
-of its birth, and is well into its second year of existence. And
-every week, without fail, General von Bissing, the German governor of
-Brussels, receives a "complimentary" copy, which he doubtless peruses
-with absorbed interest.
-
-It is characteristic of Brussels wit that in conformity with law the
-paper announces in each issue the address of its office and printing
-works. These, it appears, are in "a cellar on wheels," and in view
-of the peripatetic habits thus suggested, correspondents are desired
-to address their communications to the _Kommandatur_, _i.e._, the
-headquarters of the German authorities!
-
-But _Libre Belgique_ has another function to discharge beyond that
-of a courageous jest, well calculated to keep the Bruxellois in good
-heart. Drastic in its satire upon the enemy, it is equally unsparing in
-its record of German crimes and its dissection of the often grotesque
-claims made by the German official communiques. Von Bissing and his
-staff may affect to make light of this gadfly among journals, but the
-rewards offered for its betrayal and the energetic measures taken to
-bring about its suppression tell another story. _Libre Belgique_,
-indeed, aptly illustrates the parable at which Burgomaster Max so
-subtly hinted when he laid his pen beside his interlocutor's pistol.
-The pen is far mightier--in the long run--than the sword, and the
-Germans, though they will not perhaps admit it even to themselves, have
-an uncomfortable inkling of that fact.
-
-That _Libre Belgique_, in spite of all proffered bribes, should never
-yet have been betrayed is a wonderful testimony to the high patriotic
-spirit of the Bruxellois. For though the operations of the paper's
-staff are doubtless closely guarded, the number of persons who are in
-the secret must inevitably be considerable, and leakage is difficult
-to prevent. But the Belgian spirit is a thing with which we are
-all familiar now, and when to that is added Brussels wit the whole
-phenomenon is explained.
-
-One fancies, indeed, that when the Belgian capital is at length
-evacuated by the Germans the populace will be half sorry to see them
-go. The Boche is not exactly a lovable fellow, but to people of a
-satirical turn of mind, _naivete_, which he possesses in unparalleled
-degree, is always engaging. As a butt the Boche is unique, and in that
-capacity, if in no other, he has positively endeared himself to the
-witty citizens of Brussels.
-
-
-
-
-HOW SERGEANT O'LEARY WON HIS VICTORIA CROSS
-
-_Story of the First Battalion of the Irish Guards_
-
- He shot eight Germans in eight seconds, captured a machine gun,
- took two barricades single handed, and saved his whole company from
- being exterminated. The story is told in the _New York American_ as
- dispatched from London.
-
-
-I--WHO IS THE BRAVEST MAN IN THE WAR?
-
-Who is the bravest man that the war has produced?
-
-It would probably be impossible to answer this question with any
-approach to accuracy and impartiality. But it is interesting to compare
-some of the incidents reported and see how modern courage compares with
-that of past history.
-
-It is generally admitted that all the nations engaged have fought with
-remarkable bravery and steadiness, so that a man must have done some
-extraordinarily daring action to make himself notable. Thousands and
-thousands of acts of bravery have been performed by many among the
-millions of soldiers engaged. Doubtless some of the most heroic have
-died without having their acts mentioned.
-
-Of the innumerable feats of bravery reported the one that has impressed
-the British public most is that of Sergeant Michael O'Leary, of the
-Irish Guards, who is a native of Ireland, as his name suggests.
-
-He has received the coveted Victoria Cross, been promoted Sergeant and
-a long description of his deeds has been given him on the official
-records--a very great honor. He has also been offered a commission,
-but will not take it at present because he does not want to leave the
-Irish Guards, and there is no place for him there as an officer.
-
-The cold official record says that O'Leary won his Victoria Cross "for
-conspicuous bravery at Cuinchy. When forming one of the storming party
-which advanced against the enemy's barricades he rushed to the front
-and himself killed five Germans who were behind the first barricade,
-after which he attacked a second barricade, about sixty yards further
-on, which he captured, after killing three of the enemy and making
-prisoners of two more. Lance Corporal O'Leary thus practically captured
-the enemy's position by himself and prevented the rest of the attacking
-party from being fired on."
-
-Further details of O'Leary's wonderful exploit were given by Company
-Quartermaster Sergeant J. G. Lowry, of the Irish Guards, who was
-engaged in the fight.
-
-"Our First Battalion," he said, "had been holding trenches near the La
-Bassee brickfield, and our losses were heavy. The Germans had excellent
-cover, both in trenches and behind stacks of bricks.
-
-"We were all delighted when the order came that the brickfield had to
-be taken by assault next day.
-
-"Lance Corporal O'Leary never looked to see if his mates were coming,
-and he must have done pretty near even time over that patch of ground.
-When he got near the end of one of the German trenches he dropped, and
-so did many others a long way behind him. The enemy had discovered what
-was up.
-
-"A machine-gun was O'Leary's mark. Before the Germans could manage to
-slew it around and meet the charging men O'Leary picked off the whole
-of the five of the machine crew, and leaving some of his mates to come
-up and capture the gun, he dashed forward to the second barricade,
-which the Germans were quitting in a hurry and shot three more.
-
-"O'Leary came back from his killing as cool as if he had been for a
-walk in the park and accompanied by two prisoners he had taken. He
-probably saved the lives of a whole company.
-
-"Had that machine gun got slewed round, No. 1 Company might have been
-nearly wiped out."
-
-
-II--STORY OF THE YOUNG IRISH GUARD
-
-What impresses people in O'Leary's deed is not only his bravery but
-the triumphant success with which he carried out the whole act. Other
-soldiers may have displayed more self-sacrifice and endurance, but not
-one of them appears to have done more for his side by one individual
-act of bravery than O'Leary.
-
-It is the dashing quality of his deed that wins admiration and this
-quality, it is to be noted, is peculiarly Irish. He is credited by his
-admirers with having shot eight men in eight seconds. His quickness
-must have been phenomenal, and here again he showed a peculiarly Irish
-trait.
-
-How one man could have shot eight soldiers, when all eight of them
-were armed and many of their comrades were only a few yards away, must
-appear a mystery to many. The Germans were perhaps retiring hastily
-from their positions, but they had magazine rifles in their hands and
-fired many shots at the British.
-
-Why did they not get O'Leary, who was running out alone ahead of his
-companions? He must have been amazingly lucky, as well as amazingly
-quick.
-
-Then it is almost equally astonishing that he could have shot eight men
-in a few moments while running. The best explanation of this is that
-the British soldier has a rifle carrying more bullets than that of any
-other army.
-
-The Lee Enfield rifle now used in the British army carries ten bullets
-in the magazine and one in the barrel. O'Leary, of course, fired all
-his eleven bullets, and he is credited with making eight of them kill a
-man apiece. That is an amazing shooting record, said to be unequalled
-for a soldier.
-
-Sergeant O'Leary is not a particularly fierce looking soldier, as might
-be expected, but a tall, slender, fair-haired young fellow. He is only
-twenty-five years old.
-
-"A quiet, easy-going young fellow O'Leary is," said his friend,
-Sergeant Daly, of the Second Battalion of the Irish Guards. "But he is
-remarkably quick on his feet."
-
-O'Leary was born in the little village of Inchigeelach, in the County
-Cork. His father and mother still live there. He has an older brother
-and four sisters, who are now in America.
-
-He served for several years in the Canadian Northwest Mounted Police,
-but went back and joined the British Army in order to be nearer home.
-
-After the fight in which he won his decoration he wrote home:
-
-"Dear Parents: I guess you will be glad to hear that I was promoted
-full sergeant on the field on account of distinguished conduct on
-February 1, when we charged the Huns and routed them in disorder.
-
-"You bet the Irish Guards are getting back now."
-
-Mrs. O'Leary, the old mother of the hero, has been interviewed at her
-home in Ireland. As might be expected her words were very simple.
-
-"It's proud I am of Mike," said Mrs. O'Leary, "but I wish he was home
-instead of being in that cruel war.
-
-"When that telegram came for me, I thought sure Mike was dead, but
-when I opened it I found that he had been promoted. Sure I was better
-pleased to know that he was alive than promoted.
-
-"Mike is a good boy. He never gave me a moment's uneasiness since he
-was in the cradle, except when he went away on his foreign adventures.
-I suppose he had to leave me. There's little enough chance for a boy
-here, with only the pigs to look after and his father and me."
-
-We have been inclined to think that the days were over when a mighty
-warrior could rush in among the foe and slay many with his own hands
-but O'Leary and many others in this war have proved that that is not
-the case.
-
-
-III--TALE OF A GORDON HIGHLANDER
-
-Many of the famous deeds of antiquity have been curiously paralleled in
-the war. For instance, one of the ancient feats that everybody mentions
-occasionally was how the brave Horatius held the bridge across the
-Tiber with two companions against the whole Etruscan army.
-
-Now we find again and again that a bridge has been the scene of deeds
-of conspicuous heroism in this war. The British were defending a
-river bank and bridge against a fierce German attack. The crew of a
-British Maxim gun had all been killed. Then Angus MacLeod, of the
-Gordon Highlanders, rose from cover, seized the Maxim gun and all alone
-carried it, under fire, to the far side of the bridge, where he played
-it on the advancing Germans.
-
-He is credited with having killed sixty Germans. Finally he fell dead
-and thirty bullets were counted in his body. The delay enabled the
-British to rally and repel their opponents.
-
-An extraordinary act of heroism was reported of an unnamed French
-soldier during the disastrous retreat of the French from the Belgian
-frontier and the Meuse River early in the war.
-
-This man had been taken prisoner with some companions. The Germans,
-according to the report, drove their prisoners before them when
-attempting to cross a strongly defended bridge, to make the French
-think it was a party of their own men returning. As the French
-prisoners stepped on the bridge, one of them, a big and strong-voiced
-man, yelled:
-
-"Fire, nom de Dieu, or you will be wiped out."
-
-His own act made his death certain. He fell riddled with bullets from
-both sides.
-
-Lieutenant Leach and Sergeant Hogan of the British Army each received
-the Victoria Cross for an extraordinarily daring and ingenious action.
-The two men killed two Germans, took sixteen unwounded prisoners and
-twenty wounded men. Leach and Hogan with ten men crawled unobserved to
-a section of trench that had been captured by the Germans earlier in
-the day. Leach and Hogan dropped into the trench unnoticed and the ten
-men lay in wait to shoot any Germans who showed themselves.
-
-A trench is built in zigzags so that there is only a straight section
-of about twenty yards along which an enemy could shoot. The Germans in
-the first section were taken by surprise and all killed or wounded.
-Then the two men hurried on to the next turning. As they walked Hogan
-put his cap on his rifle and held it above the trench to show their men
-outside where they were.
-
-Lieutenant Leach poked his automatic revolver round the corner of
-the trench and began shooting at the Germans from cover. The German
-soldiers with their big clumsy rifles could not hit the deadly hand
-that was the only object to aim at. While the Lieutenant was shooting,
-Hogan watched over the top of the trench to shoot any German who tried
-to get out or attack them in the rear. Thus all the men in each section
-were killed, wounded or captured.
-
-How do these and the many other brave men who have been reported in
-the present war compare with the heroes of antiquity? Achilles is the
-foremost of Greek warriors. He personified the Greek ideal of bravery,
-manly beauty and fiery enthusiasm. The "Iliad" contains pages and pages
-about his deeds, his speeches, how he sulked in his tent, and his
-quarrel with Agamemnon, but it does not seem after all that he did a
-vast amount of harm to the enemy. Of course, he killed Hector, but that
-was not amazing, and he acted with considerable brutality about it.
-
-Achilles was undoubtedly a fine orator, but in achievement he appeared
-to compare badly with modest Sergeant O'Leary.
-
-
-
-
-STORY OF A RUSSIAN IN AN AUSTRIAN PRISON
-
-_An Officer's Remarkable Experience_
-
- This very unusual narrative, with its light on Austrian prison
- conditions, appeared in the Russkoe Slovo, Moscow, June 30, 1916.
- It was written by a petty officer of the Russian Army at the
- request of the paper's Paris correspondent. The correspondent tells
- of a party of thirty Russians who had recently arrived in Paris
- from Italy, all war prisoners from Austria, who had managed at
- different times to slip through the lines on the Italian front. It
- was translated for _Current History_.
-
-
-I--"I WAS PRISONER OF THE MAGYARS"
-
-I was taken prisoner by the Magyars in the Carpathians. We were driven
-to the station of Kashitzi, where we found more Russians, I don't know
-how many, and were placed in dirty cars, from which cattle had just
-been removed. The stench was terrible, the crowd unthinkable. The doors
-were locked all the time.... We travelled two days; on the third we
-arrived in a camp called Lintz. What did I see in this camp? Filthy
-barracks, naked bunks on which our soldiers were scattered, pale,
-exhausted, hungry, nearly all barefoot or in wooden clogs. Many were
-suffering from inflamed feet and exhaustion. I don't know how they call
-it in medicine, but to my mind it was the fever of starvation. One gets
-yellow, trembles incessantly, longs for food....
-
-The prisoners were fed very poorly, mainly with turnips, beans, and
-peas.
-
-Once a soldier decided to complain to Francis Joseph or Wilhelm. He
-went up to an electric pole, formed his fingers so that it looked as if
-he were speaking into a telephone horn, and shouted, "Hello, Germans,
-give us some more bread!" He called and knocked with his fists for some
-time, but, of course, received no reply. Many soldiers made fun of
-him at first, but others began to look for a way to complain against
-such treatment of war prisoners. Meanwhile the bread became poorer and
-poorer in quality and less in quantity. The meals consisted of beans,
-and in addition there were bugs in the beans. We got meat three times
-a week, the other days we got herring.
-
-On the 24th of May, 1915, a company was recruited among us to be sent
-away to do some "agricultural" work. The soldiers would not believe
-it, claiming that peace was near. I was in the first contingent. Our
-train was passing between mountains covered with evergreen. Every now
-and then it would shoot through tunnels. This surprised me greatly. I
-understood that we were not going in the direction of Russia. And so
-it was. We finally arrived in a place, where the thousand of us were
-quartered in one building. We at once began to be treated differently,
-much more insolently and severely. On the 27th we were driven to the
-fields to work. We wondered what the agricultural labour we were to do
-could be. We were supplied with shovels and pick-axes, led to a wood on
-a hill some 1,600 metres high, mustered into rows, and ordered to dig a
-ditch--that is what the Germans called it--but we called it otherwise.
-It became clear that we were to dig trenches.
-
-The first day passed in idleness and grumbling. All unanimously refused
-to work, even if we had to pay with our lives for it.
-
-We waited for the following morning. The guards came to take us out to
-work, but we said that we would not dig trenches. Then the Colonel
-came and asked in Russian: "Why don't you want to work?" We all
-answered: "This work is against the law. You are violating the European
-laws and breaking all agreements by forcing us to construct defensive
-lines for you." The Colonel said: "Look out, don't resist, or we will
-shoot every one of you. We don't care now for the laws to which you
-point us. All Europe is at war now--this is no time for laws. If you
-don't go to work, I will have you shot."
-
-We all exclaimed: "We won't. Shoot us, but we will not do the work."
-
-
-II--STANDING BEFORE THE EXECUTIONER
-
-All of the 28th we were in our yard. No food was given us. Thus we were
-held for three days without food. On the fourth day a company of cadets
-arrived. Leading them was the executioner, with stripes on his sleeves.
-They loaded their rifles, holding them ready. Then the Colonel asked:
-"Who will go to work?" The crowd answered "No!" The Colonel said: "I
-am sorry for you, boys, you don't understand that you are resisting
-in vain." Suddenly the crowd was split into two. Those who agreed to
-work were given dinner and put to work. The other half, in which I was
-included, was led away to another yard. From among us ten were picked
-out and taken away--we knew not where. We were ordered to lie on the
-ground with our faces downward, and not to turn our heads.
-
-On June 2 there remained only fifty men who still refused to work,
-suffering hunger for the sixth day. The ten soldiers who were daily
-taken away from us were subjected to, besides hunger, suspense in the
-air from rings, with their hands tied to their backs. In about thirty
-minutes one would lose consciousness, and then he would be taken down
-to the ground. After he recovered his senses he would be asked if he
-agreed to work. What could one answer? To say "I refuse" meant another
-ordeal. He would begin to cry and agree to work.
-
-The following day our heroes were led out into the open, ten were
-selected from our midst, arranged in a line facing the rest of us,
-and told that they would be shot immediately. Of the remainder half
-were to be shot in the evening, the other half the following morning.
-Their graves had been dug by the ten heroes themselves. I have not the
-slightest hesitancy in calling them so.
-
-Then a space was cleared, and Ivan Tistchenko, Feodor Lupin, Ivan
-Katayev, and Philip Kulikov were ordered forward. The first was Ivan
-Tistchenko. An officer and four cadets approached him. The officer
-asked him if he would agree to work. He answered "No," and crossed
-himself. His eyes were bound with a white 'kerchief, and these pitiless
-and unjust cadets fired at the order of the officer. Two bullets
-pierced his head and two his breast, and the brave fellow fell to the
-wet ground noiselessly and peacefully.
-
-In the same manner the second, third, and fourth were treated. When the
-fifth was led forward he also refused to work, and they already had his
-eyes bound. But some one in the crowd exclaimed: "Halt--don't fire!"
-And the comrades asked for his life, all agreeing to go to work. And I
-never learned the identity of the chap who saved that fellow's life and
-many other lives.
-
-We remained in that camp for two and a half months. Then we were
-removed closer to the front, to a locality inhabited by Italians.
-Our soldiers there would inquire from the Italian labourers, to whom
-the guards paid no attention, where the boundary lay. We learned the
-direction and the distance to the boundary, which was about thirty
-miles. It was even nearer to the Italian front. And so on Sept. 29 a
-comrade and I decided to escape.
-
-(Some particulars of the escape have been deleted by the Russian
-censor.)
-
-Toward dawn we emerged from the thick of the pine trees and bushes, and
-descended to the base of the mountain. At our feet was a stream, about
-fifty feet wide, rapid, and full of rocks. Here we made good use of our
-training in gymnastics. My comrade, a tall fellow, was light on his
-feet. He jumped like a squirrel from rock to rock. To me it seemed that
-I would slip and be swept away by the current. My comrade was already
-on the opposite shore when I, making my last jump, failed to gain the
-beach. Fortunately he was quick to stretch out to me his long stick,
-and drew me out of the water as wet as a lobster.
-
-We walked along the stream all day without encountering anybody. At the
-end of the day we came in sight of a tiny village, but there were no
-people nor soldiers to be seen. Only near one house smoke was rising.
-We decided to approach stealthily and investigate. We saw an old woman
-at the fire, bending over a kettle of sweet corn. We surmised that
-the inhabitants of the village must have deserted it because of its
-proximity to the front, while the old woman refused to abandon her home.
-
-We approached her and confessed that we were Russian soldiers. She
-thought long. What "Russian" meant she did not know, but she understood
-the meaning of the word "soldiers." She presented us with some of her
-sweet corn and pointed out the way to the Italian front.
-
-
-III--"WE ESCAPED TO ITALIAN FRONTIER"
-
-It was six in the evening when we came upon an advanced Italian
-post. The sentinel stopped us with a "Halt!" He was pointing his
-rifle at us, showing that he would shoot if we advanced. He called
-for his superior. We were searched and taken into their quarters.
-An officer soon came in. Through an interpreter he asked us for our
-names, regiments, and army branches. He gave each of us a package of
-cigarettes.
-
-Only then I understood that we were received as guests. When the
-officer gave us the cigarettes, saying "Bravo, Russi!" the soldiers
-began showering us with cigarettes, chocolate, and confetti. One
-soldier guessed better than the rest; he brought us a dish of soup,
-meat, and a bottle of wine. After this there was a regular wedding
-feast. Each of the soldiers brought something to eat, cheese, butter,
-sardines. We, knowing our condition, abstained from eating too much.
-Thinking that on the following day we would have to suffer hunger
-again, we put all the presents into a bag presented us by one of the
-Italians. Thus we accumulated about fifteen pounds of bread, cheese,
-butter, chocolate, lard, and boiled beef. Then the Italians noticed
-that our clothes were wet, and began presenting us with underwear and
-clothing, so that we soon changed our appearance. We were anxious to
-converse with them. The interpreter, who spoke Russian imperfectly, had
-a great deal of work. Just the same, I will never in my life forget
-his first words in Russian, as he asked us, by order of the officer:
-"Who are you--brothers?" In tears we answered him that we were Russian
-officers escaped from captivity; he asked it so kindly, and we were
-infinitely gladdened by his sweet words.
-
-The following day we were taken to the corps headquarters. Officers
-would come in, shake hands--some even kissed us, which embarrassed us.
-Unwittingly tears would come to our eyes when we recalled our life in
-the prison camp and this sudden change for the better.
-
-The General also visited us. He pressed our hands, gave each of us a
-package of cigarettes, and presented us with 10 lire in gold. We wanted
-to decline the money, but the interpreter said, "Take," and we did.
-
-We lived for about a month in Italy. What a noble people!--soldiers,
-civilians, and officers. It is impossible to describe! At every station
-(on the way to France) the public would surround us, all anxious to do
-us some favours, all showing their deep affection for the Russians.
-Once a Sister of Mercy was distributing coffee to our party as the
-train began to move. She ran along till the train gained full speed,
-desiring not to leave some of us without coffee. Our soldiers would
-wonder at the affection of the entire Italian people for the Russians,
-and would shout incessantly: "Viva Italia! Viva Italia!"
-
-
-
-
-TWO WEEKS ON A SUBMARINE
-
-_Told by Carl List_
-
- This article, by a German-American sailor on a Norwegian ship
- bound for Queenstown with a cargo of wheat, was communicated to
- _L'Illustrazione Italiana_, from which it is here translated for
- _Current History_.
-
-
-I--"I WAS ON A NORWEGIAN SHIP"
-
-The Norwegian ship on which I was embarked was nearing the Irish
-Channel. The afternoon was misty, the sea rough. We were warned by an
-English steamer of the presence of German submarines in the vicinity.
-There was a certain depression among those on board.
-
-I asked the Captain if there were anything to do. "No," he answered.
-Boom! a cannon shot was heard at the very moment. General confusion.
-All the men ran up on deck and looked about, terrified. Boom! another
-cannon shot. Then one of the German sailors, pointing to a spot on the
-horizon, said: "A German submarine."
-
-It was true. The black spot grew rapidly larger, and then one could
-make out some human figures near the small cannon on the deck. It was
-the famous U-39. We hoisted our flag and awaited events. The Captain
-sent the mate with our ship's papers over to the submarine, which was
-now near. Soon those who were not German received orders to take to the
-boats. The Germans were taken on board the U-39, I among them. When
-this was done our ship was sunk.
-
-So there I was on board a submarine. The impression of it was strange
-enough. The first evening, quite exhausted, I threw myself down in a
-corner. I heard a few short orders, then the sound of the machinery....
-After that everything was in absolute silence. Some said we were
-navigating at such a depth that big ships could pass overhead of us....
-I fell asleep.
-
-Next day on waking I tried to get my bearings. We Germans were treated
-as friends. We were permitted to go about everywhere.
-
-The boat had the shape of a gigantic cigar, about 200 feet long,
-divided into numerous compartments. They were full of shining
-instruments. Now there was a buzzing sound, like the inside of a
-bee-hive, now absolute silence reigned. Every nerve was tense with
-the expectation of the orders on which our lives depended. Toward the
-prow was the room from which the torpedo was launched, a room full of
-tubes and valves. The officers' lodgings are very restricted, since the
-space on board a submarine proscribes any comfort. The commander was
-Lieut. Capt. Foerstner, a tall young man, thin and pale--which is not
-surprising, since he never had a moment's repose; neither he nor the
-men of the crew ever got their clothes off during the twelve days I was
-on board.
-
-The periscope, the eye of the submarine, made known to us everything
-that took place on the surface of the water, and it did so with such
-clearness that it was almost like looking through a telescope. There
-was always a man on watch there.
-
-
-II--"I WAS ABOARD THE U-39"
-
-Suddenly a ship comes in sight. Its smoke is like a black line drawn
-on the horizon. A bell rings. It is a signal for each man to be at his
-post. The U-39 slowly rises to the surface. A last look is given at
-the mirror of the periscope; no English coast guard is in sight. So
-everything is ready for action. We hear the command, "Empty the water
-cistern." Freed from her ballast, the submarine rises to the surface.
-"Both engines ahead at full speed!" The boat cleaves her way through
-the water that cascades her sides with foam. In a short time the ship
-is reached. The submarine hoists her flag and fires a cannon shot. No
-flag betrays the nationality of the captured ship, but we can read the
-name, _Gadsby_, on her side. She is English. We signal that her whole
-crew is to take to the lifeboats, and quickly! At any moment we may be
-surprised.
-
-Through the megaphone we indicate to the men the nearest way to land;
-then a cannon shot, then a second one. The captured ship, after
-pitching for a while, sinks.
-
-The time necessary for the sinking of a ship differs considerably in
-different cases. Some disappear in five minutes, others float for
-several hours. The finest spectacle I witnessed was the sinking of
-the _Fiery Cross_. The crew received orders to get off in the boats.
-Some of our men rowed up close to the abandoned ship and attached
-hand grenades to her sides. They were fired and the three-master was
-blown up with all her sails spread and set. The hull and the rigging
-went down to the depths, but the sails spread out on the surface of
-the water like so many little fields of polar ice. Eleven ships were
-destroyed during my stay on board. Quite a number of others were
-captured, besides these, but they were let go again.
-
-This trip, which I shall never forget, lasted twelve days. It was
-dangerous, but it was exciting and so fine that I would not have missed
-it for anything in the world.
-
-
-
-
-A GERMAN BATTALION THAT PERISHED IN THE SNOW
-
-_Told by a Russian Officer_
-
- This is a tragic story of a night fight in snow-buried barbed wire
- entanglements where a whole German battalion perished. It comes
- from Petrograd to Montgomery Schuyler in the form of a letter from
- a Russian officer.
-
-
-I--TRAGIC STORY OF A NIGHT FIGHT
-
-"We were creeping across the snow, when we hear a frightened '_Wer
-kommt da?_'
-
-"'Hold on, Germans! Where the devil do they come from?' ask our men in
-surprise. 'Are they numerous?'
-
-"'_Wer ist da?_' we hear again.
-
-"Our only reply is to fire by the squad, and then again. The Germans
-are a little surprised, but pull themselves together and return the
-fire. It is dark and neither side can see the other. In groping about,
-we finally meet, and it is give and take with the bayonet. We strike
-in silence, but bullets are falling about us like rain. Nobody knows
-who is firing and every one is crying in his own language, 'Don't fire!
-Stop!' From the side where the firing comes from, beyond and to the
-right, they are yelling at us, both in German and Russian, 'What's the
-matter? Where are you?'
-
-"Our men cry to the Germans, 'Surrender!'
-
-"They answer: 'Throw down your arms. We have surrounded you and you are
-all prisoners.'
-
-"Wild with rage, we throw ourselves forward with the bayonet, pushing
-the enemy back along the trenches. In their holes the Germans cry,
-peering into the impenetrable darkness, 'Help! Don't fire! Bayonet
-them!' Hundreds of shouts answer them, like a wave rolling in on us
-from every hand.
-
-"'Oh, little brothers, their force is numberless. We are surrounded on
-three sides. Would it not be better to surrender?' cries some one with
-a sob.
-
-"'Crack him over the head! Pull out his tongue! Drive him to the
-Germans with the bayonet!' are the growling comments this evokes.
-
-"A command rings out, vibrating like a cord: 'Rear ranks, wheel, fire,
-fire!'
-
-"The crowd before us yells, moves, and seems to stop. But behind them
-new ranks groan and approach. Anew the command is given, 'Fire, fire!'
-
-"Cries and groans answer the fusillade and a hand-to-hand struggle
-along the trenches ensues.
-
-"German shouts are heard: 'Help! Here, this way! Fall on their backs!'
-
-"But it is we who fall on their backs. We pry them out and clear the
-trenches.
-
-"In front of us all is quiet. On the right we hear the Germans
-struggling, growling, repeating the commands of the officers:
-'_Vorwaerts! Vorwaerts!_' But nobody fires and nobody attacks our
-trenches. We fire in the general direction of the German voices,
-infrequent shots far apart answer us. The commands of '_Vorwaerts_' have
-stopped. They are at the foot of the trenches, but they do not storm
-them. 'After them with the bayonet,' our men cry, 'Finish them as we
-finished the others.'
-
-"'Halt, boys,' calls the sharp, vibrating voice of our commander. 'This
-may be only another German trick. They don't come on; we are firing and
-they do not answer. Shoot further and lower. Fire!'"
-
-
-II--"SO PERISHED A WHOLE BATTALION"
-
-"New cries and groans come from the Germans, followed by some isolated
-shots, which fly high above us. After five or six rounds silence
-settles upon the trenches and continues unbroken. 'What can this mean?'
-wonder our men. 'Have we exterminated them all?'
-
-"'Excellency, permit me to go and feel around,' offers S., chief scout,
-already decorated with the Cross of St. George.
-
-"'Wait, I am going to look into it myself.'
-
-"The officer lights a little electric lamp, and prudently sticks his
-arm above the rampart. The light does not draw a single shot. We peer
-cautiously over and see, almost within reach of our hands, the Germans
-lying in ranks, piled on top of one another.
-
-"'Excellency,' the soldiers marvel, 'they are all dead. They don't
-move, or are they pretending?'
-
-"The officer raises himself and directs the rays from his lamp on the
-heaps. We see that they are buried in the snow up to the waist, or to
-the neck, but none of them moves. The officer throws the light right
-and left, and shows us hundreds of Germans extended, their fallen
-rifles sticking up in the snow like planted things.
-
-"'I don't understand,' he mutters.
-
-"'Excellency, I am going to see,' says the chief scout.
-
-"'Go on,' the officer consents, 'and you, boys, have your rifles ready
-and fire at anything suspicious without waiting for orders from me.'
-
-"S. gets out of the trench and immediately disappears, swallowed by
-the soft snow up to the neck. He tries to get one leg out, but without
-success. He tries to lean on one hand, pushes it down into the snow,
-then pulls hard and swears. His hands are frightfully scratched; the
-blood tinges the snow with dark blotches.
-
-"'It's the barbed wire defenses,' he cries. 'Help me, little brothers.
-Alone I can do nothing.'
-
-"We catch him by the collar of his tunic, and with difficulty pull him
-out. His coat, trousers, boots are in shreds.
-
-"'Thousand devils,' he swears. 'I have no legs left. They're scratched
-to pieces.'
-
-"The officer understands: the trenches are defended by intrenchments
-of barbed wire. The snow had covered and piled high above them. The
-whole battalion we had seen had rushed forward to the help of those
-who had called and had got mixed up in the wires. The first over had
-sunk into the snow and disappeared. Those coming after had stepped on
-them, passed on, become entangled wires, and had fallen in turn under
-our hail of lead. Rank on rank, ignorant of what had happened and
-rushing on like wild animals, had shared the fate of their comrades. So
-perished a whole battalion."
-
-
-
-
-THE FATAL WOOD--"NOT ONE SHALL BE SAVED"
-
-_A Story of Verdun_
-
-_Told by Bernard St. Lawrence_
-
- The following graphic account of one of the most dramatic episodes
- in the great Battle of Verdun was related to the writer by a
- Verdunois, who himself heard it from a young French officer, and
- recorded it in the _Wide World_.
-
-
-I--POILUS GOING TO SAVE VERDUN
-
-"Courage! We'll never allow the Boches to get through. Cheer up! They
-shall never get your town. _Vive Verdun et les Verdunois!_"
-
-Thus, in a hundred and one different ways, did the brave _poilus_,
-marching with admirable _entrain_ towards Verdun, instil hope into our
-downcast hearts.
-
-We were on our way, the civilians of Verdun, to Paris and elsewhere, in
-cattle-trucks and military wagons--a painful journey, in bitter cold
-and snow, which would have been almost unbearable but for the sight of
-those merry-hearted troops, swinging along in the daytime on the road
-bordering the railway, and at night sweeping past us in trainload after
-trainload in the direction of the town which, shattered by shot and
-shell though it was, we still pictured in our hearts as home. There
-were long waits in the darkness at wayside stations or on sidings,
-whilst the saviours of France went forth to battle, but wherever
-possible we found help and encouragement. At the larger _gares_ warmth
-and creature-comforts were in readiness to cheer us on our way. The
-waiting and refreshment rooms were crowded with railway officials,
-charitably-disposed ladies, and military officers, all of them eager to
-do something to ameliorate our lot, and at the same time to hear the
-latest news from the Front.
-
-I was fortunate in making the acquaintance at Chalons of a young
-officer, Lieutenant Marcel R----, who was able to tell me a good deal
-about the Battle of Verdun, or, more strictly speaking, a singular
-episode in it. Vague rumours of the "_Coup_ of the Caures Wood" had
-already reached my ears, but it was not until I met Lieutenant R----
-that I heard all the dramatic details, in the planning and execution of
-which he himself had played a part, though a minor one.
-
-"_Eh bien!_ How have you been getting on at Verdun lately?" he began
-by asking me. "I was quite sorry to have to leave the battlefield and
-go, _en mission_, to Paris. But I shall be back there to-morrow. Shall
-I find a soul left?"
-
-"Only Pere Francois, the _marchand de vin_ of the Rue Nationale," I
-replied. "He alone remains of the three thousand inhabitants. We left
-him standing at the door of his wine-shop, which he said he would not
-abandon for all the Boches in creation."
-
-"He plays his part, without a doubt," replied Lieutenant R----, with a
-laugh. "It was at Pere Francois's that we celebrated the _coup_ of the
-Caures Wood, and I shall never forget his enthusiasm when we told him
-the story."
-
-"I envy him the privilege," said I. "Might I hope to hear you repeat
-it, if there is time before the train starts?"
-
-"_Mais certainement!_ This is what happened. But I must begin at the
-very beginning. The setting for the episode I have to describe is
-indispensable."
-
-And Lieutenant R---- proceeded to tell his story as follows:--
-
-
-II--LIEUTENANT R---- TELLS HIS STORY
-
-We were in the early days of the battle, but sufficient had already
-happened to make it clear to every one of us that at last we were
-face to face with a big affair. The German High Command had decided
-on a step which we welcomed most joyfully--to stake its all on a vain
-endeavour to regain the confidence which the public in Germany has
-fast been losing, not only in the military party, but also in the
-Hohenzollerns themselves. The roar of the guns was so deafening that
-we had to stuff our ears with cotton-wool or any material we could
-find to deaden the dreadful sound. The ground shook under the shock of
-the exploding shells. But neither the sounds which came to us, nor the
-sights which met our eyes as we looked down upon the ever-advancing
-masses of men in grey-green uniforms, had the slightest ill-effect upon
-our nerves. Judging by my own feelings, we were all supremely uplifted.
-It seemed to me that we had been preparing all our lives for that one
-glorious day.
-
-"Come on, come on, grey-green battalions, and let us bite deep into
-your flesh! It matters not what cowardly means you adopt; poison gas
-or squirters of flaming liquid are all one to us, for you will never
-succeed in getting through. Come on, like animals to the slaughter!
-Those who succeed in escaping the _arrosage_ of the 'seventy-fives'
-will find that Rosalie--the bayonet--is waiting for them." Such was the
-savage hymn which my men were singing in their hearts as we defended
-the Bois de Caures.
-
-"Rosalie" did her work well, I can tell you, when the Boches came to
-close quarters. The snow-flecked ground in front of us, furrowed as
-though by a titanic plough, was covered with bodies. However, as they
-still came on in serried masses, it was decided that a retreat to the
-defences which had been prepared many weeks before was necessary. Full
-of confidence, and knowing that this slow retreat would enable us to
-kill more and still more Germans, we made our preparations.
-
-But first of all let me locate the Wood of Caures, though it may
-be superfluous to do so in the presence of an inhabitant--perhaps
-a native--of Verdun. It is situated to the north of your town, and
-is one of a number of woods and forests which are visible as dark
-masses of foliage to anyone standing on the heights in the immediate
-neighbourhood of Verdun, or, better still, if the observer be seated
-in an aeroplane. The eyes of our gallant airmen were constantly fixed
-on the Bois de Caures, which lies between the Bois d'Haumont and the
-Herbe Bois, on the Bois des Fosses, which is due south of where we
-were, and on the Forest of Spincourt, which was to our east. These
-precious collaborators kept us constantly informed as to the movements
-of the enemy. Every few hours they brought in their reports to the
-Headquarters Staff, whence came the order that, in conjunction with the
-remainder of the line, we were to fall back.
-
-"The move is to be made to-morrow--towards evening." Captain Peyron
-told me in the afternoon. "But I understand from Chief Engineer Moreau
-that we're to prepare a little surprise for the Kaiser's crack troops.
-We've got to hold the wood like grim death until everything is ready.
-Moreau and his staff of engineers have been out all day in the wood
-prospecting, and the sappers must be already at work."
-
-
-III--ON THE EVE OF THE _COUP_
-
-At nightfall I learnt a little more from one of Moreau's assistants,
-Lieutenant Chabert, a former brilliant pupil of the Ecole des Arts et
-Metiers, who, owing to his deep knowledge of electrical science, has
-on countless occasions rendered invaluable service. He is one of those
-men who can turn their hands to anything in the scientific line. He
-staggered into our dug-out, dead-beat, after ten hours of feverish and
-continuous work with the sappers, and before throwing himself down to
-sleep had just strength enough to mumble, "See that I'm called as early
-as possible, _mon ami_, will you? I've got hundreds of yards of wiring
-to see to yet. _Dieu merci_, we've still got a day before us!"
-
-I promised to wake him at five sharp, and, envying him his sleep,
-immediately went in search of Sergeant Fleury, to delegate him to carry
-out the duty entrusted to me in case--one never knows what the fortunes
-of war may bring about--I were prevented from doing it. By the time I
-had found the sergeant the moon had risen over the battlefield, and if
-I live to be a hundred I shall never forget the sight. Our machine-guns
-were still firing two hundred rounds a minute on the German formations.
-As the enemy approached through the ravines round Flasbas and Azannes
-they were enfiladed, and the deep clefts in the hills were positively
-filled up with dead. Then, towards the early hours of the morning,
-came a lull. The respite was doubly welcome; it gave us both time to
-breathe and behold the work we had done. A ghastly spectacle indeed was
-revealed as our searchlights swept over the battlefield.
-
-When the dawn came the lull continued--at least, till noon, when we
-had once more to face the hammer-blows of the Kaiser and the Crown
-Prince. I called Chabert at the appointed hour. After a great stretch
-and a yawn, he went off like a giant refreshed to his work among the
-human moles of the Caures Wood. About noon, Moreau came to hold a
-consultation with Captain Peyron, under whose immediate orders we were,
-but he was in such a hurry to get back to his sappers and electricians
-that he had not time to say more than:--
-
-"_Bonjour_, R----; see you later. All goes well!"
-
-The satisfied expression on his face told me that without words.
-
-
-IV--"COUP OF CAURES WOOD"
-
-I did not meet either him or Chabert until after the retreat; and,
-to tell you the truth, we were so busily engaged in keeping back the
-Germans until it suited our purpose to let them come on _en masse_ that
-I almost forgot about the "little surprise" which Moreau, Chabert, et
-Cie. had announced to me through my chief.
-
-When evening came the gradual move back to more advantageous positions
-began. I shall not go into the details of a strategic retreat with
-which you yourself must be almost as well acquainted as myself,
-but simply state that we evacuated the Caures Wood and got away to
-the high ground in the neighbourhood of the Bois des Fosses, where
-Peyron, Moreau, Chabert, Sergeant Fleury and myself calmly awaited the
-impending catastrophe which had been so skilfully and rapidly prepared
-for the oncoming enemy. The Bois de Caures, in the gathering darkness
-of night, stood out like a huge black mass against the sky.
-
-"What do you estimate the strength of the attacking force in our
-section to be?" I asked Captain Peyron.
-
-"Two thousand odd," he replied, "and they have all of them fallen
-into the trap. As our men ran away through the wood, they followed in
-masses, blindly and stupidly--_les imbeciles_! Not one of them will
-escape, Moreau?"
-
-"Not a soul," replied the chief engineer. Then, glancing at his
-luminous watch and turning to Chabert, he added, "One more minute, and
-we shall see what we shall see."
-
-We kept our eyes fixed intently on the dark Bois de Caures. Someone,
-somewhere, was pressing a button; for all at once huge tongues of
-flames, accompanied by a series of explosions which rent the cold night
-air, leapt into the sky. Simultaneously a mental vision must have
-occurred to every one of us, as it certainly did to me--a vision of
-hundreds upon hundreds of Germans, caught like rats in a trap, blown to
-pieces amidst the shattered trees of that fatal wood.
-
-So ended the story of the "_Coup_ of the Caures Wood" as related to
-me by Lieutenant R----. Hardly had he uttered the last words when the
-departure bell rang and we hurried away to the train which was to take
-us to Paris.
-
-
-
-
-HEROISM AND PATHOS OF THE FRONT
-
-_Told by Lauchlan MacLean Watt_
-
- This touching bit of genuine literature, penned by a poetic Scot
- "somewhere in France," deserves to rank as a classic among war
- letters.
-
-
-I--STORY OF A YOUNG SCOTTISH SOLDIER
-
-Out here in the land of war we sometimes feel very far from those we
-love; and then, as though we had walked somehow right through reality,
-our thoughts are lifted oversea, and the mirage of home floats like
-a dream before us. The magic stop is touched in many ways. Little do
-the brave lads speaking to us in camp or hospital know how often they
-brought us underneath its spell.
-
-Just a week ago, in a tent where the wounded lay, I was beside the
-bed of a fine young Scottish soldier, stricken down in the prime of
-his manhood, yet full of hope. The thought of the faces far away was
-always with him upholdingly. In fact, the whole tent seemed vibrant
-with the expectation of the journey across the narrow strip of blue
-which sunders us from home. This Scottish youth had been talking, and
-it was all about what to-morrow held for him. His mother, and the girl
-that was to share life with him--these were foremost in his thought.
-His face shone as he whispered, "I'm going home soon." Everything
-would be all right then. What a welcome would be his, what stories
-would be told by the fireside in the Summer evenings! But he made the
-greater journey that very night. We buried him two days later, where
-the crosses, with precious names upon them, are growing thick together.
-Surely that is a place most holy. There will be a rare parade there on
-Judgment Day of the finest youth and truest chivalry of Britain and of
-France. Soft be their sleep till that reveille!
-
-We got the Pipe Major of a famous Highland regiment to come over; and
-when the brave dust was lowered, while a little group of bronzed and
-kilted men stood around the grave, he played the old wail of sorrow of
-our people, "Lochaber No More." I heard it last when I stood in the
-rain beside my mother's grave; and there can be nothing more deeply
-moving for the Highland heart. The sigh of the waves along Hebridean
-shores called to me there, among the graves in France.
-
-The men who lie in this hospital are those who could not be carried
-further meanwhile, and they have been dropped here, in passing, to
-hover between life and death until they make a move on one side or
-other of the Great Divide. So it is a place where uncertainty takes
-her seat beside the bed of the sufferer, watching with ever unshut eye
-the fluctuating levels of the tide of destiny. It is a place where
-the meaning of war gets branded deep upon you. The merest glimpse
-solemnizes. Of course, the young may forget. The scars of youth heal
-easily. But the middle-aged of our generation will certainly carry to
-the grave the remembrance of this awful passion of a world.
-
-
-II--THE MIRACLE OF DEATH
-
-Here, of course, you meet all kinds of men, from everywhere. They were
-not forced to come, except by duty, in their country's need. They were
-willing in the day of sacrifice, and theirs is that glory deathless.
-
-One has been burned severely. How he escaped at all is a miracle. But
-they are all children of miracle. Death's pursuing hand seems just to
-have slipped off some as he clutched at them. This man looks through
-eye-holes in his bandages. He is an Irishman, and the Irish do take
-heavy hurts with a patient optimism wonderful to see.
-
-There is also a fine little Welshman, quite a lad, who has lost his
-leg. He has been suffering continually in the limb that is not there.
-To-day he was lying out in the sun, and he looked up cheerily at me.
-"Last night," he said, "for about half an hour I had no pain. I tell
-you I lay still and held my breath. It was so good I scarcely could
-believe it. I thought my heart would never beat again, at the wonder of
-it."
-
-The usual picture postcard of the family is always close at hand.
-One North of Ireland man, up out of bed for the first time, was very
-full-hearted about his "missis and the childer." Said he with pride,
-"She's doin' extra well. She's as brave as the best of them, and good
-as the red gold--that's what she is."
-
-Another poor fellow, in terrible pain, asked me to search in a little
-cotton bag which was beside him for the photograph of his wife and
-himself and the little baby. "It was took just when I joined," he
-whispered. "Baby's only two months old there."
-
-One day those who were able were outside, and a gramophone was
-throatily grinding the melody out of familiar tunes, with a peculiarly
-mesmeric effect. Suddenly the record was changed to "Mary of Argyle."
-The Scotsman by whose bed I was standing said: "Wheesht! D'ye hear
-thot? Man, is it no fine?" And the tears ran down his cheeks as he
-listened. It was a poor enough record. In ordinary times he would have
-shouted his condemnation of it. But he was now in a foreign land--a
-stricken, suffering man. And it made him think of some woman far away
-beside the Forth, where he came from. And his heart asked no further
-question.
-
-At the head of the bed of some of them you will see a blue paper.
-"You're looking grand to-day," said I to a young fellow. And he
-replied, "Is there anny wonder, Sir, wid that scrap o' paper there?"
-For it was the order for home on the first available opportunity.
-"Sure, won't the ould mother be glad to see me?" he continued. "The
-sunshine here is beautiful, but sunshine in the ould country is worth
-the world."
-
-"Good-bye, Sir!" they sometimes cry. "I'll be away when you come round
-again." But perhaps next time a sad face looks up at you, for the day
-so eagerly anticipated has been again postponed.
-
-It is always home, and what the dear ones there are like, and what
-they will be thinking yonder, that fills up the quiet hours toward
-restoration, as it strengthened the heart and arm of the brave in the
-hour of terrible conflict.
-
-The endurance, patience, and courage of the men are beyond praise--as
-marvelous as their sufferings. I can never forget one who lay moaning
-a kind of chant of pain--to prevent himself screaming, as he said.
-
-
-III--THE PIPER PLAYED "LOCHABER NO MORE"
-
-Last night we had a very beautiful experience. We were searching
-for a man on most important business, but as the wrong address had
-been given, that part of it ended in wild-goose chase. Nevertheless
-we were brought into contact with a real bit of wonder. It was an
-exquisite night. The moon, big, warm, and round as a harvest moon
-at home, hung low near the dreaming world. The trees stood still
-and ghost-like, and the river ran through a picture of breathless
-beauty. We had got away beyond houses, and were climbing up through
-a great far-stretching glade. The roar before us was a trellis of
-shadow and moonlight. Suddenly we had to stand and listen. It was the
-nightingale. How indescribably glorious! The note of inquiry, repeated
-and repeated, like a searching sadness; and then the liquid golden
-stream of other-world song. How wonderfully peaceful the night lay all
-around--the very moonlight seemed to soften in the listening. And yet
-again came the question with the sob in it; and then the cry of the
-heart running over.
-
-The valley lay lapped in luminous haze, a lake somewhere shining. But
-there was no other sound, no motion, no sign of life anywhere--only
-ourselves standing in that shadow glade, and that song of the
-beginnings of the world's sadness, yearning, and delight, somewhere in
-the thicket near.
-
-It was difficult to believe that we were in a land of war; that not far
-from us lay ruined towns of ancient story; that the same moonlight,
-so flooded with delight for us, was falling on the uninterred, the
-suffering, and the dying, and the graves where brave dust was buried.
-It was all very beautiful. And yet, somehow, it made me weary. For I
-could not help thinking of the boy we had laid down to rest, so far
-from home, and the piper playing "Lochaber No More" over his grave. And
-of the regiment we had seen that very day, marching in full equipment,
-with the pipers at the head of the column, so soon to be separated from
-the peat fires and the dear ones more widely than by sundering seas.
-And we hated the war. God recompenses the cruel ones who loosened that
-bloody curse from among the old-time sorrows which were sleeping, to
-afflict again the world!
-
-
-
-
-AN AVIATOR'S STORY OF BOMBARDING THE ENEMY
-
-_Told by a French Aviator_
-
- This is a tale of the risks, the courage, the fears, the luck, the
- compulsion of duty and the haunting memory of destruction that mark
- the fighting service of the airmen. It is a French aviator's plain
- tale of experience from _Illustration_, Paris.
-
-
-I--"OUR FLIGHT AT DAY BREAK"
-
-When our flight commander came in we knew by his smiling face that he
-had something interesting for us. "Make a careful inspection," he said.
-"The staff counts on you to destroy a station of great importance. Take
-oil and essence enough for four hours' flight. Each of you will carry
-five 90's and one 155. If you do not wholly destroy the place during
-the first attack, rest, go back to-morrow and finish your work. You
-will get explicit orders before you start."
-
-Our service is not confined to the defense of Paris. We are not the G.
-V. C. of the skies. We had no idea where we were going; but our chief
-was in such good spirits that we looked for a fine adventure. So full
-of ardor, we all, pilots and engineers, inspected our great flyers.
-Then, in view of resting for our work, we turned in for the night. When
-someone knocked violently on my door I sprang up broad awake.
-
-"Get up, sergeant!" cried a voice. "It is nearly three o'clock! You
-will be late!"
-
-The motors were turning on the ground. I dressed hastily and went
-out.... Brr! it was cold. The field lay like a shadow in the
-moonlight; the sky was of ideal clearness; a light fog was rising
-from the damp ground. Our whole assembly, pilots and observers, went
-into the little shack used as our flight bureau. Then came a great
-hand-clasping, farewells--silence.
-
-The commander pointed out our route and we traced it on our charts. Now
-we knew where we were going and what we had to do.
-
-There were our machines in the half-light, drawn up in line of battle.
-Every pilot cast a swift glance at his craft as he went aboard. They
-tested the motors. The grinding of the motors had slowed down; there
-was an instant of relative calm. An order passed from pilot to pilot:
-"Start from right to left, thirty seconds headway!"
-
-A long rattle broke the silence; an avion glided over the ground and
-went up: _Our Chief!_ I was second. I heard my friends wishing me luck.
-I rolled on at full speed, rose, and rushed out, into the darkness.
-
-When I had been flying ten minutes I realized that something was the
-matter. My motor was not "giving." The altimeter marked 1,800 meters.
-I saw the trenches stretching like cobwebs across the ground. I tried
-to rise--_Impossible!_ I was less than 2,000 meters above the earth; I
-was under orders; it was up to me to get to my destination and destroy
-the object I had been sent to destroy; and my motor would not raise me
-one foot. For one moment sickly doubt assailed me. I crossed the line
-and, instantly, my craft was a target. The explosion of the bombs was
-so violent and the bombs were so near, and there was so many of them,
-that the air was in a tumult. My machine oscillated. The noise was
-head-splitting; the muzzles of their 77's formed a bar of fire. I was
-taking heavy risks, but what else could I do? _I must get there and do
-my work._
-
-The 105 was going; so were the 77's, upward like a bit of fireworks,
-hurrying along towards the zenith until his lamps were like little
-stars. On the following day we set out again to do our work. _We had
-been sent to destroy._
-
-
-II--"WE DROPPED BOMBS ON THE ENEMY"
-
-We started at four o'clock in the afternoon and landed to reconnoiter
-at a camp near the lines. While the motormen examined our motors, and
-while the electricians put in the lights, we automobiled to a nearby
-town and ate our dinner. We were dressed for our trip. The time set for
-our ascension was nine o'clock.
-
-At dinner the chief had said to us: "When my lights go out you will
-know that I am flying as a bird flies _for their lines_!" As we stood
-there watching his flight his lights went out. That was his signal to
-us; _his farewell_. But we saw him once more when his swift black plane
-cut across the disk of the yellow moon.
-
-Then I went up. I rose to a height of 600 meters. I turned my last
-spiral and put out my lights and the lights fixed to the wings, leaving
-nothing but the little chart lamp.
-
-The earth lay away below us, vast, dark and still. We heard no sound,
-we saw no light save the pallid light of the moon. The wind was strong.
-I had no guiding points. I steered by the stars. As we approached the
-lines the broad fan of a searchlight fixed upon me. I made a rapid
-turn. Something was coming. We saw two light-bombs and three golden
-fusees shooting worms of fire.
-
-After a flight of fifty minutes we reached our objective point. I
-slowed down and we descended. When 500 meters above the earth we
-dropped incendiary cans and bombs. A shower of light bombs answered
-us; they showed us what we were doing and made it easier to do our
-work. Then the lights of powerful projectors fastened on us. But our
-work was done, and before long we were over our landing.
-
-The home run before the light wind was a pleasure. _But a man always
-remembers_, and the thought of the damage I had done haunted me! They
-fired their cannon. We were so close to them I wondered they did not
-hit us. On that occasion my big machine did well because my motors
-were normal. But, to sum it all up in a few words, everything was in
-my favor this last time. We escaped, and, what is more important, we
-contributed not a little to the success of the French in Champagne.
-
-
-
-
-A DAY IN A GERMAN WAR PRISON
-
-_Told by Wilhelm Hegeler, Popular German Novelist_
-
- The strange mixture of races on the western front is here depicted
- by a noted German author in the form of a prison guard's narrative
- of his daily life.
-
-
-I--THE ANIMALS IN THE "ZOO"
-
-There they lie in a gloomy room of the railroad station, the English
-prisoners, together with their allies from the Old and New Worlds. The
-room used to be the waiting room for non-smokers, and it is no darker
-or uglier than any of the other rooms, only it seems so because of its
-occupants.
-
-"Service at the Zoo." Every one of us knows what this means--duty with
-the prisoners. Our soldiers have invented good-natured nicknames for
-the Turcos, Indians, and Algerians that they meet here: "The men from
-the monkey theatre," "The Masqueraders," "The Hagenbeck Troop." But
-they walk past the Englishmen in silent hatred. A little sympathy is
-needed, even for banter.
-
-The prisoners' room is empty, except for a few inmates who for various
-reasons could not be sent away. I am on duty here to-day. Crumpled
-forms squat on mattresses along the wall like multi-colored bundles of
-clothing. Not much is to be seen of their faces. Only a black arm, a
-lank yellow hand, a gaudy blue sash, a pair of wide red trousers stand
-out. There they crouch in the same stoical calm as they did before
-their houses in the distant Orient, with the exception that they, with
-the instinct of wounded animals, hide their faces.
-
-An Englishman lies on a bed opposite them. He looks at me expectantly
-as if he wants to say something. But although I am not forbidden to
-talk with the prisoners, I feel no necessity for doing so.
-
-An hour goes by. From time to time I give a drink to the Orientals who
-ask me for it through gestures. At last the Englishman can keep silent
-no longer and asks:
-
-"Will they treat us very severely?"
-
-I shrug my shoulders. "People feel angry at the English. Our soldiers
-assert that they waved white flags and then threw hand grenades."
-
-"I don't know anything about that. That may have been the case earlier,
-but I have been in the war only eight days. A week ago I was in
-Newcastle with my wife."
-
-He takes a tin case from under his shirt, opens it, and looks at it
-for a long time. Then he shows me the case, which contains the picture
-of a woman, his wife. Then he takes a piece of paper from his trousers
-pocket and shows me that, too. A name and address are written on it.
-
-"That is the man who bound up my wound on the field of battle. He was
-very good to me. After the war I shall write to him."
-
-After a long period of silence he begins to talk again. But I do not
-think further conversation timely. I only pay attention once and that
-is when he explains to me his grade in the service and his rate of pay.
-He is something like a Sergeant and says, pointing to his insignia: "A
-common soldier gets only so much; with this insignia he gets so much
-more, and when he has both, as I have, he gets so much." He names the
-munificent sum with visible pride.
-
-
-II--"A BELGIAN IN GERMAN UNIFORM"
-
-Then the door opens and my comrade announces in a tone that implies
-something unusual: "A Belgian in a German uniform." I look at the man
-in astonishment. Why is he allowed to run around without any guard in
-particular? The expression of his face is rather stupid. He sits down
-near the stove and crosses his legs comfortably. I ask him how he got
-the uniform. He answers in Flemish. Before an explanation is possible
-the hospital corps men bring in six or seven Englishmen on stretchers.
-Now quick work is necessary. Mattresses must be spread out on the
-floor and the people changed from bed to bed. The room is filled with
-inquisitive hospital corps men and soldiers. I shove them all out. When
-the door is finally closed again I count my prisoners and find the
-Belgian is missing. I rush outside to look around the station platform.
-There stands my Belgian on the doorstep. I seize his arm in an almost
-friendly manner and invite him to come inside again. At last he tells
-me how he got the uniform. He insists he got it in the hospital in the
-place of his own tattered one. I shake my head increduously, but the
-chaffeur who brought the prisoner hurries up and verifies the story.
-
-Now the station commandant comes along and is also of the opinion that
-the prisoner must get some other kind of clothing. "But," he orders,
-"first ask the staff doctor if his uniform can be taken off without any
-danger to his wounds." I don't have to do this, because the wound is on
-his upper thigh. I hunt up an unclaimed English cloak and, with visible
-relief, the Belgian warrior crawls out of the German lion's skin.
-
-
-III--PRISON KEEPER TELLS HIS STORY
-
-New prisoners are brought in--Frenchmen, Scotchmen, and Canadians.
-Many of the first-named cough frightfully. When they are asked where
-they got that, they answer that they have had it the whole Winter long.
-There is a lank, powerful-looking non-commissioned officer among them.
-He makes a sign to me and confesses confidentially that he is very
-hungry. I tell him he must have patience, as there will soon be coffee
-and bread given out.
-
-"Bread? Black bread?" He curls up his nose. "May I not have a little
-pastry, perhaps?"
-
-"You just try our black bread," is my reply. "It is the same as we have
-ourselves. We are better than we are supposed to be in France."
-
-"Yes, that's true," he agrees. "They told us that the prisoners were
-badly treated in Germany. Now I see that such is not the case. Besides,
-they tell you the same thing about our prisoners in France. But they,
-too, do not have it so bad. On the contrary. I have seen some of them
-myself in Brittany. They get a quart of cider a day. There was an
-enormous crop of apples last Summer. And there is enough to eat. And
-besides that, they are allowed to stroll through the city a couple of
-hours every afternoon."
-
-I permit myself to make a mental reservation regarding the last
-assertion, but a Frenchman brought in a little later makes the same
-statement.
-
-A fairly educated and intelligent Canadian joins in the conversation
-and puts the question that occupies all of them the most: "What sort of
-fate awaits the prisoners?"
-
-"You will have to work a few hours a day. Still, you are paid extra for
-that."
-
-"It is tough to have to sit in close rooms all the time."
-
-"No," I answer, "the wooden houses are surrounded by broad, open
-places. I, myself, have seen Englishmen playing football in a prison
-camp."
-
-Then his eyes sparkle and he lets slip the remark: "That is certainly
-better than in Canada." Presumably he refers to the camp of the
-civilians interned there. I ask him why he enlisted. He colors up and
-answers, with a somewhat embarrassed smile: "Well, I knew that my
-country was in danger, so I wanted to aid it." And this smile seems
-to me to betray less the embarrassment of a man looking for a clever
-answer than that of an educated person not liking to use pathetic
-expressions. For the entire man has the appearance of frankness and
-decency.
-
-In these days when fresh batches of prisoners are coming along all the
-time I have answered many more questions. They are almost always the
-same questions and receive the same answers. I have also seen convoys
-of unwounded prisoners wending their way by day and by night along
-lonely roads not so very far back of the front. I have repeatedly asked
-prisoners how they were being treated. Many had requests to make;
-none had a complaint. On the other hand, I saw many acts of kindness
-performed by the doctors, by the sisters, and, not the fewest, by the
-soldiers.
-
-
-
-
-MURDER TRIAL OF CAPT. HERAIL OF FRENCH HUSSARS
-
-_Strangest Episode of the War_
-
-_Told by an Eye-Witness_
-
-
-I--KILLED HIS WIFE--TRIED BY COURT-MARTIAL
-
-Captain Edouard Anselme Jean Herail, of the Eleventh Regiment of
-French Hussars, but formerly of a cuirassier regiment, killed his wife
-at Compiegne, because she insisted on staying in a place where his
-regiment was encamped in defiance of military orders, which required
-that officers' wives must not visit them. Herail was threatened with
-disgrace for failure to obey orders.
-
-Captain Herail was tried for the murder before a court-martial in
-Paris. The courtroom was crowded by a fashionable attendance, largely
-consisting of women, for the case involved most delicate and unique
-domestic problems, and the persons concerned were of high social
-position. The Captain's father was a prominent judge. His wife had one
-brother who won the Nobel Prize, and another brother is a well-known
-lawyer.
-
-She was tall, slender, with a mass of Titian red hair and large blue
-eyes. She had an artistic temperament and a seductive personality, when
-not enraged.
-
-The Captain is a man of middle height, strongly built, his thick hair
-brushed back, his complexion ruddy, altogether a good type of the
-cavalry officer. A reddish mustache adds to the impression of physical
-vigor, but his manner is gentle.
-
-The address of the prosecuting attorney showed that on November 23
-last the regiment of cavalry to which the captain belonged had been
-withdrawn from the front and sent to camp at Campiegne for a period of
-rest, after extremely severe fighting in Lorraine and in the north,
-where the officers and soldiers of the regiment had lost heavily and
-performed their duty in a very gallant manner. Captain Herail, for his
-bravery, was recommended by his superiors for the cross of knight of
-the Legion of Honor.
-
-Mme. Herail, who had been at Narbonne with her three children, learned
-three days after the regiment came to Compiegne that it was there.
-She hurried immediately to meet and embrace her husband, who was
-embarrassed by her presence from the beginning.
-
-He felt obliged to take every means to hide the presence of his wife
-in the town, for a note from the commanding general of October 4 had
-absolutely forbidden the wives of officers to be with their husbands,
-and it was added that any infraction of the order would be severely
-punished. Much disorder and disregard of discipline had been caused
-in the army by the presence of wives and also of those who were not
-wives. In spite of this officers' wives had frequently broken the order
-and had settled down in the vicinity of the camp. Lieutenant-Colonel
-Meneville, commanding the Captain's regiment decided to call the
-attention of his officers a second time to the necessity of observing
-the rule.
-
-
-II--MME. HERAIL DEFIED MILITARY LAW
-
-It was in the midst of this already very delicate situation that Mme.
-Herail arrived to stay with her husband. He represented to her in
-the most affectionate manner that she was breaking the orders of his
-superiors, but she met his remonstrances with a storm of indignant
-reproaches.
-
-"Your superiors are not my superiors!" exclaimed Mme. Herail, "and I
-owe them no obedience. Did one ever hear of such tyranny? Their orders
-are an outrage on personal liberty and the rights of a wife. There
-is no power in France that can make me leave my husband or keep my
-children away from their father."
-
-Finally, Mme. Herail burst into tears and her husband, instead of
-pressing her to go, fell on her bosom and wept with her.
-
-The colonel of the regiment, who learned that his orders and warnings
-were being disregarded by Mme. Herail, called his officers together
-again. This was a third warning to them. He did not wish to appear
-to be striking especially at Captain Herail, for whom he had a high
-regard, and he told them all that very severe punishment would be
-inflicted on those who disobeyed the order. The disobedient, he said,
-would be sent back from the front, which, under the circumstances,
-would be a humiliating disgrace for a soldier.
-
-Then he turned to Captain Herail and asked him to speak out "like a
-soldier and without beating about the bush" and tell him why his wife
-did not go away. Captain Herail endeavored to make an explanation, but
-instead of saying that he had been struggling vainly to make her go
-away, he tried, out of affection for his wife, to excuse her conduct
-and to offer special reasons why she should remain.
-
-The colonel then lost his patience, and inflicted fifteen days close
-arrest on the captain, and made a report to the general of the brigade
-that the captain should be sent back to the depot at Narbonne. The
-general approved the recommendation and in addition said that the
-captain should not receive the Cross of the Legion of Honor for
-which he had been recommended. The colonel ordered Major Bouchez, the
-immediate superior to Captain Herail, to keep the latter under arrest
-in his rooms at 26, rue de la Sous-Prefecture, Compiegne, where he
-lodged with Mme. Masson.
-
-
-III--DRAMATIC SCENE BETWEEN HUSBAND AND WIFE
-
-It was here that the climax of this unique drama occurred at about
-8 o'clock in the evening. Major Bouchez came into Captain Herail's
-room. The latter's wife remained concealed in the next room. She heard
-everything that was said. Major Bouchez, who knew that she was there,
-raised his voice so that she could hear perfectly the reproofs which he
-addressed to his comrade. The interview lasted an hour and the major
-demonstrated fully to Captain Herail the terrible and disgraceful
-situation in which he would be placed, from a military point of view,
-at this supreme crisis of the French nation, if he did not obey orders
-by sending his wife away.
-
-"You will be sent before a court martial," said Major Bouchez, "for
-refusing to obey the orders of your superiors, you will be struck from
-the list of the Legion of Honor, and you will be sent back from the
-front to the depot with the cripples and the old women. You would be
-better off if you were dead."
-
-Captain Herail went into the next room and addressed his wife:
-
-"You have heard what he has said? I must insist that you go away
-immediately. Go!"
-
-"I will not go," said Mme. Herail, squaring her shoulders and settling
-down upon a divan.
-
-"I give you the order to go immediately," repeated her husband with
-anger.
-
-"As a matter of morality," said Mme. Herail, "you have no right to give
-me such an order."
-
-"We are not in the domain of abstract morality," replied the husband,
-"but in the domain of civil and military law and you owe me obedience."
-
-"If you give me that order, everything will be over between us for
-life, and anyhow, I will not obey the order," retorted Mme. Herail,
-with remarkable feminine logic.
-
-"I give you two minutes to reflect," said the unfortunate captain,
-whose emotions were getting terribly wrought up.
-
-He went back to the other room, where Major Bouchez was waiting for
-him, took up his service revolver, and then returned to his wife's room.
-
-"Have you reflected? Is it no?" he asked, evidently anticipating his
-wife's immovable obstinacy.
-
-"I will never leave you alive. I love you too much, Jean," said Madame
-Herail.
-
-"Then you will leave me dead," said Captain Herail.
-
-
-IV--"HE AIMED AT HIS WIFE--AND FIRED"
-
-Captain Herail then aimed point-blank at his wife with his revolver and
-fired three shots at her. She fell to the ground dead, all three of the
-bullets having passed through her head. Major Bouchez rushed in, saw
-the body, and, as he testified at the trial, found Captain Herail in
-tears and out of his mind with remorse.
-
-Witnesses said that the sorrow of Captain Herail was intense. He was
-continually weeping, calling on the dead woman, and asking for his
-three children. It was proved that during the eleven years they were
-married he had shown the deepest affection for his wife, and it was
-only the military disgrace she had brought upon him that could have
-caused him to commit the act.
-
-He was married to his wife in 1904 when he was a lieutenant in the
-First Regiment of Cuirassiers. She was then Mlle. Henriette Courel.
-They both belonged to wealthy families and their marriage was an event
-in fashionable society. They began life under the happiest auspices.
-They were apparently a well-matched couple. He was very good-tempered
-and easy-going, while she was a devoted wife and a model housekeeper,
-but very jealous and extremely exacting.
-
-She required that her husband should have no interest in life apart
-from her. At the annual military manoeuvres she insisted on following
-him around, and he, from fear of being made ridiculous, asked her to
-stay away, but she would not do so. His comrades called her his colonel.
-
-During the testimony relating to these facts Captain Herail's eyes were
-wet with tears, and finally, when it came to the description of the
-scene of the killing, he could not restrain himself at all and broke
-into heartrending sobs.
-
-Then the presiding officer ordered him to stand up and relate what he
-had to say in defence of his act. His tears continued to flow and at
-first he was unable to utter an intelligible sentence. He could be
-heard sobbing:
-
-"My poor wife! My poor wife!"
-
-After a time he was able to make a statement concerning his
-difficulties with his wife, of which these were the most striking
-passages:
-
-"If she had only let me fulfill my military duties we should have been
-the happiest family possible. She was very good and very clever, but
-she never would permit me to be away from her."
-
-The unfortunate captain, who had faced death from bullets, day after
-day for months, without a tremor, while his comrades were falling all
-around him, broke down as he spoke of his dead wife and buried his
-nails in his flesh, unable to continue. The spectacle was an intensely
-painful one and caused nearly everybody in the audience to weep,
-including some of the officers on the bench.
-
-"What could I do?" went on the poor captain when he had recovered some
-self-control. "I thought of handing in my resignation, and yet, I loved
-my calling, although my promotion had been slow. I remained thirteen
-years a simple lieutenant.
-
-"Naturally, I appeared a careless officer, without ardor, constantly
-trying to get away from my daily duties. The truth is that my wife,
-every time I went out, urged me to return home as soon as possible,
-complaining that I was leaving her alone.
-
-"I wished to give my resignation, although it was a hard prospect for
-me to leave the army a simple lieutenant without getting the Cross of
-the Legion of Honor. I did not tell my conjugal difficulties to any one.
-
-"Then I was forced to abandon the idea of resigning, because my wife
-would not agree to such a solution. She was proud of the service I was
-in.
-
-"Our third child had just been born when my squadron was ordered to
-start for the frontier of Morocco, where the war had just broken out.
-Suddenly my wife, though still in delicate health, announced that she
-would go with me, that she would make the campaign."
-
-
-V--THE VERDICT--"NOT GUILTY!"
-
-The captain continued the history of his curiously troubled married
-life up to the time of the outbreak of the present war. When he came to
-the recital of the tragedy at Compiegne he lost all control of himself.
-He said that the only thing with which he could reproach himself was
-having concealed from his military superiors the truth concerning his
-difficulties with his wife.
-
-Colonel Jacquillart, the president of the court martial, asked Captain
-Herail sharply:
-
-"Why did you not use some other method than shooting your wife to end
-the distressing situation?"
-
-"I tried every other means first," replied the captain, "and I must
-have been mad with fear of disgrace to kill the wife I loved so much."
-
-Many military officers testified and gave Captain Herail a splendid
-character. Colonel Meneville, who had recommended that the captain
-should not receive the Legion of Honor on account of his disobeying the
-order to send wives away, said that in every other respect Herail was
-an excellent officer, brave and competent.
-
-Henri Robert, the most noted member of the Paris Bar, defended Captain
-Herail eloquently.
-
-"A judge far more inexorable than any of you," said M. Robert, pointing
-to the bench, "his mother-in-law, has forgiven him. She writes me
-lauding him as an ideal man and officer and worthy of his country. His
-dead wife's sisters and brothers also forgive him freely."
-
-The members of the court martial only took fifteen minutes to reach a
-decision. They returned and rendered unanimously a simple verdict of
-"Not guilty!"
-
-The verdict was received with frantic applause mingled with tears by
-the audience. (Told in the _New York American_.)
-
-
-
-
-HOW THEY KILLED "THE MAN WHO COULD NOT DIE"
-
-_Told by a Soldier Under General Cantore_
-
-
-I--STORY OF THE ITALIAN ALPINI
-
-They said he could not die. The men who fought under him in Tripoli,
-the men who stood beside him in the bloody capture of Ala, looked on
-Antonio Cantore with almost superstitious awe. For he ought to have
-been killed a hundred times. A hundred times he came back, smiling
-quietly behind his spectacles, out of perils through which other men
-could not live. So the legend grew up among the Italian Alpini that
-their commander led a charmed life; they said he had the camicia della
-madonna and that bullets could not harm him. Death got him at last, but
-those boys of his--as he used to call his soldiers--will not believe
-it, even though they carved his tomb out of the rock and heaped the
-earth over his body.
-
-Gen. Cantore was not a bit like a hero, as one pictures heroes. One
-might have taken him for a schoolmaster, a clerk in the post office,
-a retired commercial traveller. He was not tall, nor was his bearing
-martial. His kind blue eyes looked mildly through his round spectacles.
-His mouth laughed under his white mustache. He wore a black mackintosh
-and walked with his head a little on one side and his hands in his
-pockets. But he was not afraid. Neither was he foolhardy. He neither
-feared nor courted death; he merely ignored it. He had the sublime
-courage of the man who knows the danger so well that he will let no
-one else face it, but will brave it all alone.
-
-The veterans of the Tripoli campaign talked in this wise to the young
-recruits of the Alpini:
-
-"Look at that old man, with his kind face and gentle soul. He is the
-father of the Alpini. He has seen them born and has brought them up,
-all of them. They are his sons, his boys. With a word he has moulded
-them according to his own heart of bronze; with a smile he has forged
-them a heart of steel. You don't know him? Then you were not in Libya!
-But go to him, say 'Good morning, General!' and tell him your name.
-Ten years from now he will remember the name. And some night when you
-are on outpost duty and the hail of bullets is most furious, and the
-miaowing of the shells is maddest, when the air seems a-quiver with
-death, and the darkness is shot through with arrows and flashes, and
-the silence is shattered with bangs and explosions and roars, if your
-heart trembles a moment as you think of your little ones at home and
-the bells of the far-away village church ringing the Angelus, you will
-see the old man, the General, Antonio Cantore, rise suddenly before
-you, place himself between you and the enemy, shield you with his body.
-
-"For, you see, Antonio Cantore is everywhere and always ahead of
-everybody. When you leap first into an enemy's trench, eyes aflame,
-hands clawing, bayonet between your teeth, look ahead from the trench
-in which you are battling, and between it and the second line of
-trenches from which the enemy is still bombarding you with rapid-fire
-guns you will see a kind old man, his eyes twinkling behind his
-spectacles, his mouth smiling under its white mustaches, his hands in
-his pockets, his head slightly bent and inclined to one side. It will
-be Antonio Cantore.
-
-"For that old man, you see, is always everywhere and ahead of
-everybody. And he cannot die. We have seen him return unscathed from
-places where hundreds and hundreds have been killed. We have seen him
-march without flinching right up to the cannon and the mitrailleuse.
-Shells and bullets fall before him; they are afraid of his smile!"
-
-
-II--"MY GOD! A GENERAL!"
-
-Thus the lengend grew and spread from the Adige to Leno, from the
-Altissimo to Coni Zugna, from Pasubio to the Col Santo, wherever the
-Alpini were engaged.
-
-And every hardy mountaineer who was called to the colors cheered his
-loved ones on parting with the words: "Never fear! I am going to join
-Antonio Cantore's brigade."
-
-One night on the slopes of Monte Campo, Gen. Cantore was on
-reconnoitring patrol. For he was his own scout. Most commanders ask
-for two or three volunteers for a night reconnaissance. This general,
-instead, would say: "Are there two men who would like to come with me
-to-night and inspect the enemy's barbed wire entanglements?" And all
-the men would want to go. He would pick out two, saying to the others:
-"No, no, boys; I need only two of you. Thank you, just the same.
-Your time will come." To the chosen ones it was like a promotion or
-receiving a medal of honor.
-
-And so, one night he was out scouting with only his sergeant as
-company. "His" sergeant was Sergt. Cillario, a veteran of Libya,
-who had stayed in the army just to be with Antonio Cantore, whom he
-called "my" general. They had climbed a difficult mule-path toward
-the Austrian trenches, the general leading, the sergeant following in
-silence.
-
-At last the general told the sergeant to stop, and he went on alone.
-When he would not permit a man to risk his life, that man did as he was
-told. Only on such occasions did Gen. Cantore make his rank felt. He no
-longer said: "Let us go, my boy," but "Sergeant, stay there." His boys
-were not saints, but they obeyed. They had to, for otherwise he--raised
-his voice and smiled no more!
-
-So that night, as on many others, he went on alone. And when his hands
-touched the first barbed wire the sentries of the Austrian trenches
-fired at him. This did not disconcert him. He went on with his hands
-in his pockets, his head on one side, stooping to examine through his
-spectacles the entanglements by the light of flashes from the enemy's
-guns. He was ten yards from the Austrian trench, a single dark shadow
-advancing like fate through the volleys, an invulnerable shadow seeking
-out the interstices of the barbed wire entanglements to find spaces
-through which men might pass, scrutinizing them with the calm interest
-of a botanist examining a garden.
-
-A Tryolean kaiserjaeger, who has been taking careful aim at him, saw
-the insignia of his rank.
-
-"My God! a General!" he exclaimed, and let his rifle fall.
-
-
-III--TALES OF GENERAL CANTORE
-
-When the town of Ala was carried by assault last June he was the first
-to enter it. He went through the hail of bullets with the same calmness
-as he would have gone through a rainstorm, and as unscathed.
-
-When the Austrians fled a group of about one hundred and fifty took
-refuge in the Cafe 25 Maggio in the piazza then called Moses, and in
-the Villa Brazil, almost opposite, determined to resist to the last
-in order to cover the retreat. Gen. Cantore said the lieutenant in
-command of the nearest platoon, "Come on." They went to the door of
-the cafe. "Make them open," he said, "but leave your pistol. They won't
-fire." But they did, sending a shower of bullets from the windows.
-Neither of the Italians was hit.
-
-"They won't open," said the lieutenant.
-
-"I'll make them," said Cantore. He approached the door, armed only with
-his riding whip. Another volley greeted him, and shots from the windows
-of the Villa Brazil. He was unwounded, but he lost his calm as he cried:
-
-"Charge, boys, charge! Burst the place open and take them all
-prisoners!"
-
-The fight lasted a quarter of an hour. The walls, windows and door of
-the cafe were shot full of holes; the Villa Brazil was turned into a
-ruin. The few Austrians left alive were made prisoners.
-
-That street is now the Piazza Antonio Cantore.
-
-When the fight was over Gen. Cantore and a few other officers sat down
-to dine in the Albergo di Ala. There were three girls from Roverto
-who had taken refuge there. They were so pretty that they were called
-the "three graces." They waited on the diners. Gen. Cantore chatted
-with them, joking one especially, whose name was Pina, calling her
-affectionately by pet names--Pinotta, Pinella, Pinina, Pignotta,
-Pignina--laughing like a big boy. When he rose from dinner he took her
-chin in his hand and said:
-
-"Poor little Pina, far away from thy home! But we shall soon be at
-Roverto, and thou wilt come to Roverto right after us. Then thou wilt
-be happy again, eh?"
-
-But Antonio Cantore was never to see Roverto. A man cannot snub Death
-indefinitely. Death had to get even with Cantore, or remain forever
-discredited. One day he had his revenge.
-
-It was on July 20. The Alpini, under Gen. Cantore, were in the
-Ampazzano valley, trying to dislodge the Austrians from the slopes of
-the three mountains called Tofana di Rozzes, Tofana di Mezzo and Tofana
-di Dentro, whence they were able to fire on Cortina and other towns.
-Between the Tofana di Rozzes and the Tofana di Mezzo was a refuge hut
-for chamois hunters from which Austrian sharpshooters picked off the
-Italian soldiers at their leisure. The refuge hut had been bombarded,
-but the effect was doubtful.
-
-At 12.30 o'clock Gen. Cantore and Capt. Argenteri started to explore
-the place. They reached the advanced trenches by 5.15 o'clock. The
-Austrians were still firing from the hidden hut. Cantore and the
-Captain tried to locate the precise spot, but could not.
-
-"Captain, we will go up higher and look," said the General. They
-climbed up the slope and hid behind some rocks. As they peeped over
-these the sun shone straight in Cantore's face.
-
-"I cannot see well," he called to the Captain. Then he stood up and
-was placing his field-glasses to his eyes when three shots rang out.
-Cantore fell, with two bullets in his forehead. He died instantly.
-
-"His" sergeant, veteran of many battles, grown callous by the sight and
-suffering, asked a month's leave of absence to go away and mourn for
-his general. In Verona he walked about like a spectre, his face ghastly
-and set. They asked, "How did the General die?" And Cillario answered,
-"Antonio Cantore is not dead. Antonio Cantore could not die." (Told in
-the _New York World_.)
-
-
-
-
-HOW MLLE. DUCLOS WON THE LEGION OF HONOR
-
-_Story of a Woman Who Drove Her Auto at Full Speed into a German Force_
-
-_Told by an Eye-Witness_
-
-
-I--DECORATED BY MARSHAL JOFFRE
-
- PARIS, Sept. 24.
-
-The two most romantic and brilliant features of the war, the two
-things that have relieved it from being a dull record of close-range
-slaughter, have been the use of flying machines and automobiles.
-
-Flying machines may appear more romantic and spectacular to the
-outsider, but those who have seen the war at close quarters are of the
-opinion that the most astonishing and brilliant feats of arms have been
-performed by motor cars.
-
-The experience of Mlle. Helene Duclos, who annihilated practically a
-whole German company with her automobile, is one of the many amazing
-instances of the use of this comparatively novel instrument of war.
-Other cases in the various warring countries have, perhaps, been
-equally remarkable, but hers necessarily gains added interest from the
-fact that she is a woman, and a very attractive one.
-
-It has been shown that a high-powered armored motor car, running at
-sixty miles an hour, can, under certain conditions, disorganize a whole
-army and slaughter scores of soldiers. If driven into a body of men
-in close formation and taken by surprise its powers of injury are
-unlimited.
-
-Armored cars have been used for the terribly difficult work of removing
-barbed wire entanglements. The car runs up to the entanglements, throws
-grapnel irons over them, and then backs away to uproot them. The
-armored car can do this work under a fire that exposed men could not
-live in.
-
-Armored cars are employed in cooperation with flying machines. The
-aviator brings information where a car can do most damage, and then
-hovers overhead, giving warning to the motormen when they must retire
-or, return for help if necessary. An armored car crew connected with
-the British Naval Flying Corps has received honorable mention for
-annihilating a whole party of Uhlans.
-
-Some armored cars carry two machine guns and others a gun of larger
-calibre.
-
-Mlle. Duclos's motor exploit has made her the great heroine of the
-moment. She has been decorated by General Joffre with the cross of the
-Legion of Honor for her brilliant and heroic act.
-
-
-II--MLLE. DUCLOS TELLS HER STORY
-
-"I was determined to do something for my country in the fighting field,
-something that the Germans would remember--something more than soothing
-the fevered brow," said Mlle. Duclos, describing her exploits. "My
-great-grandfather was a captain of grenadiers under Napoleon, and the
-blood of generations of soldiers runs in my veins.
-
-"My first ambition was to enlist in the fighting automobile service.
-I had been used to running all kinds of cars since my childhood, and
-was as fit for this work as any human being could be. But I found the
-authorities obdurate. They simply would not let a woman into the
-combatant services. I tried disguising myself as a man, but the rigid
-physical examination made this attempt useless.
-
-"Finally it seemed to me that the only way of reaching the front was
-to join a volunteer motor ambulance corps, as several other women had
-done. I transformed a 60-horsepower, eight-seated touring car into a
-motor ambulance for four badly wounded men or eight slightly wounded
-ones. I qualified for the service and was authorized to proceed to the
-front in Alsace, accompanied by a mechanician.
-
-"While performing my ambulance duties I had a good opportunity to watch
-the armored automobiles, and realized that their work was the most
-exciting and perhaps the most decisive of the war."
-
-One day Mlle. Duclos, having taken some wounded men to the field
-hospital, was returning once more to the fighting line. Eager for
-adventure she drove her car up a mountain road, which was not included
-in the trench zone, and entered a wild, mountainous country, from
-which the French were desperately trying to drive the Germans by flank
-attacks, surprises, air raids and other stratagems.
-
-Soon the rattle of rifle bullets and machine gun fire close at hand
-caught her attention. A turn in the road brought her in sight of a big
-armored French car that stood disabled in the middle of the road. The
-engine had been smashed by a shell. The Germans were firing at it from
-cover some distance away. The French soldiers were firing away from the
-protection of the armor with their machine guns and their rifles, but
-they were handicapped by the immobility of the car, and the Germans
-were gradually encircling them. Three of the eight Frenchmen forming
-the crew of the car lay dead in the road, killed while they had exposed
-themselves in an attempt to repair the engine.
-
-Mlle. Duclos saw three German soldiers rise from cover and advance in
-an effort to rush the car. They were shot down, but she saw that in a
-few more minutes the Frenchmen must be overwhelmed.
-
-Taking in the situation at a glance, the experienced motorist sped up
-to the injured car and backed up her machine before she stopped.
-
-"Get in," she cried to the French soldiers, "or you will be taken in
-another minute."
-
-The five Frenchmen jumped into Mlle. Duclos's car with their rifles.
-Under a rain of bullets she sped back by the way she had come. Luckily
-they all escaped, and a turn in the zigzag road soon put them out of
-danger.
-
-The Germans must have taken possession of the car in a leisurely manner
-after the escape of the French. It was precious booty to them. Probably
-they tried to repair it, and, finding that impossible, started to tow
-it back.
-
-The Frenchmen were not satisfied to escape with their lives and leave
-their car behind. Mlle. Duclos had noted carefully the direction of the
-surrounding roads. After running back a short distance she found a road
-that would lead them to the one that the Germans would follow on their
-way back.
-
-The French officer in charge of the party insisted on taking the
-steering wheel of the car, but Mlle. Duclos demonstrated that she was
-the only one who could get the best speed out of her car. Thus she
-forced them to let her stay in the place of danger.
-
-Behind a pile of rocks that marked the meeting of the roads they lay in
-wait for the returning Germans.
-
-Up the road came the Germans tugging at a rope that drew the great
-disabled French armored car. There were about forty of them,
-practically half a company, minus the men who had already fallen in the
-fight.
-
-It was impossible for the five Frenchmen to cope with them in any
-ordinary fight. Only surprise and stratagem could hope to meet the
-situation.
-
-
-III--SHE PLUNGES HER MOTOR INTO THE GERMANS
-
-Mlle. Duclos immediately suggested that she should drive the car
-straight down on the unsuspecting Germans. Her opportunity for a great
-action had come. She seized it.
-
-Down hill upon the toiling Germans flew the great 60-horsepower
-car. Straight as an arrow it went, with the weight of its two tons
-multiplied a hundred times by its speed and downward course.
-
-All the Germans in its full path went down like ripe corn before the
-scythe. Straight it flew on without being swerved in the slightest
-degree by the human obstacles in its way.
-
-Severed heads flew up in the air and arms and legs were chopped off by
-the flying car. Ghastly fragments of flesh and bone, a muddy mixture
-of blood and viscera, human remains that had nothing human about them,
-spattered the wheels and the body and all the occupants of the car.
-
-"I felt like the very incarnation of the spirit of destruction and
-revenge," says Mlle. Duclos describing this wild scene. "I was not
-human."
-
-The car flew on its path of death until it reached the captured French
-armored car. Mlle. Duclos missed this by an incalculable fraction of
-an inch and then slowly brought her racing car to a stop.
-
-The French soldiers looked back. Only a few German soldiers, who were
-out of the path of the auto, had escaped death or maiming. Perhaps
-there were six in all, and they were aghast at the demon of death that
-had swept through them.
-
-The French soldiers showered the Germans with hand grenades and would
-probably have overcome the rest of the party and recaptured their auto,
-when a party of Uhlans was seen riding up the road from the direction
-of the German lines.
-
-It appeared that scouting aviators of both sides had witnessed
-the fight over the armored car and had carried word back to their
-respective forces.
-
-Once more the gallant French motor fighters were in danger of being
-wiped out. Acting in co-operation with the officer, Mlle. Duclos ran
-her car back again, putting it between the survivors of the first
-German party and the new reinforcements. This move put the former at a
-great disadvantage, as they were standing about in a flat, open place,
-but, of course, it exposed the Frenchmen to the newly arriving German
-forces.
-
-The Frenchmen with rifles and pistols disposed of the remnant of the
-first German party, and then started to hitch their disabled car to
-Madame Durand's machine.
-
-A shower of bullets from the German side warned them that their gallant
-efforts would probably be in vain.
-
-"Whir-r-r! whir-r-r!" came the frightful scream of war cars from the
-direction of the French lines.
-
-Two powerful French armored cars sped down the road, with machine guns
-spouting death, and engaged the German reinforcements.
-
-At the conclusion of this new battle the five French motor fighters
-were able to secure their disabled car, and Mlle. Duclos at the wheel
-of her own car led the glorious wreck back in triumph.
-
-Thus it happened that she received the military cross of the Legion of
-Honor and is the heroine of the hour.--(_New York American._)
-
-
-
-
-THE RUSSIAN "JOAN OF ARC'S" OWN STORY
-
- _Told by Mme. Alexandra Kokotseva, the "Russian Joan of Arc,"
- Colonel Commanding the Sixth Ural Cossack Regiment--Translated from
- a Letter Forwarded from Petrograd to Friends in New York_
-
-
-I--"BELIEVE NONE OF THOSE GERMAN LIES"
-
-As Jessaul (Colonel) of my dashing Cossack regiment I must be discreet
-in my letter writing. Only last week one of my officers--in fact the
-Sotnik (Captain) himself--let himself in for a nice wigging from the
-department censor by heading a letter to his mother in Moscow with the
-name of the nearest village to our regimental headquarters and the
-exact date. All such details are "verboten," as the Austrian would say
-whose bullet has given me this nice little rest in the field hospital.
-
-Do not worry on my account. In a week I shall sit just as firmly in
-my saddle as ever. Never was a wounded soldier of either sex more
-petted and coddled than I am. Every day my little ones (Cossacks of her
-regiment) almost bury me under Spring flowers.
-
-"Listen, Batjuschka," I had to say just now to the grimmest and
-fiercest of them--a grizzled giant who only yesterday captured six
-Austrians single-handed--"do you wish to see your Jessual shedding
-tears like a mere woman? For shame! About face--march!"
-
-But the wretch had the audacity to try and kiss my hand--he left a tear
-on it, anyway. When I'm out I shall have to discipline him severely!
-
-My splendid Cossacks! Who would have thought that they would consent
-to be commanded by a woman? Often have I told you of their superior
-attitude toward women. They expect their women to work for them,
-to serve them and be always submissive. Evidently my fierce little
-ones consider me as a sort of Superwoman. Or, perhaps they do not
-consider me a woman at all--except now that I am wounded and in the
-hospital--and respect merely my colonel's uniform. Truly it has little
-in common with the Tartar shirt, half-coat and foot-gear and kerchief
-of their sisters and wives. At any rate they obey my slightest wish,
-perform the most reckless deeds, gayly court death, to win my approval.
-
-If you should be writing to Paul ----, or to Anna in America, be sure
-and tell them to believe none of those German lies. Not one of my
-fire-eating Cossacks has been guilty of offering indignities to a woman
-of the enemy. Maybe my little ones do some burning and looting--if my
-back is turned--but to act in a beastly way to women and children, no!
-
-
-II--"TO MY FRIENDS IN AMERICA"
-
-You have heard of us in the enemy's country. Ah, there was fat living!
-Eggs by the hundred thousand; egg pancakes to tighten the belts of a
-whole army, and mutton and beef without stint. We grew fat. Our ragged
-and gaunt Austrian prisoners looked upon us with envy. Soon they also
-were fat!
-
-You know that we of the Cossack regiments have little to do with
-the fighting in trenches. For us it is to make forays, to make
-whirlwind attacks upon detachments of the enemy guarding their line
-of communications, and capture positions badly defended by artillery.
-I may be permitted to instance our usefulness on the frontier of
-Galicia, between the Dniester and Pruth. It was my Cossacks who
-surprised the Austrians at Okna.
-
-The Austrians were intrenched. Our infantry attacked, but were
-repulsed. Ah, then you should have beheld my little ones! There were
-two Cossack regiments--two thousand dashing, fierce fellows--itching
-for a hand-to-hand encounter with the despised Teutons. As the infantry
-were retreating my little ones were given their chance.
-
-Yelling madly and firing their carbines, they galloped west and east,
-covering a long front to convince the Austrians that they were in large
-force. The ruse worked. The enemy started to retreat to the southwest.
-Before they were clear of their trenches the Cossacks were riding them
-down, plying the cold steel right and left and cutting off large bodies
-for prisoners--finally taking the position.
-
-That is the work at which my fine fire-eaters are famous. The Sotnik
-(Captain) of my regiment sent to me a bloodstained, grizzled victor in
-a hundred battles who begged the privilege of presenting to me seven
-caps belonging to the Austrian infantry service uniform, each pierced
-through its crown. Like so many grouse, they were skewered upon my
-brave Cossack's bayonet.
-
-"Thank you, Batjuschka, but I am not hungry," I said, for my little
-ones do not mind being teased. "Neither are they hungry who lately
-wore them," was the quick answer. "Where are those seven Austrians?"
-I asked, looking about in pretended stupidity. "With God," said my
-gallant Cossack, as he reverently crossed himself. "Ah," I said,
-"afterwards you went back and with your bayonet skewered each Austrian
-cap where it lay beside its dead owner." "No," he replied gravely,
-"with my bayonet I skewered each cap with the same thrust that sent its
-owner to God." And again he crossed himself.
-
-It was all true--there were witnesses of the encounter--seven to one,
-and all the seven now "with God."
-
-Do you shudder when I write to you of these things? Do you say to
-yourself that "this terrible war" has robbed me of all my estimable
-"woman's weaknesses?" Do you picture me brazenly calloused to scenes
-of human agony and violent deaths for thousands in a single engagement
-which probably has no effect upon the final outcome?
-
-You would be wrong. It is simply that if you are a soldier it is your
-duty to kill, and perhaps to be killed, in defense of your country. No
-matter how dreadful the things that happen, they are inseparable from
-war and you must get used to them. Gradually you do get used to them.
-If you did not your services to your country would be of no value.
-You would not be a true soldier, who must be able always to shrug his
-shoulders and say to himself, "Well, such things happen," and then go
-on faithfully with his soldier's work.
-
-But believe me, these duties performed as well as I am able to
-perform them, promotions, honors--afterward they will be as nothing
-compared with what is dear to me as a woman. Through all this violence
-and carnage and misery I know that I shall have gained in all that
-becomes a woman--in faithfulness, tenderness, pity for the poor and
-unfortunate, and in charity.
-
-
-
-
-AN ITALIAN SOLDIER'S LAST MESSAGE TO HIS MOTHER
-
-_Translated by Father Pasquale Maltese_
-
- This is an extraordinary revelation of the heart of an Italian
- soldier. It is the last letter to his mother written by a young
- poet who fell on the Isonzo leading a platoon in battle. Father
- Pasquale Maltese, pastor of the church of St. Anthony, New York,
- translates it for _The Parish Monthly_ as an "inspiration to the
- youth of every land."
-
-
-I--"TO DIE A BEAUTIFUL AND GLORIOUS DEATH"
-
-MOTHER:
-
-This letter, which you will receive only in case that I should fall
-in this battle, I am writing in an advanced trench, where I have been
-since last night, with my soldiers, in expectation of the order to
-cross the river and move to the attack.
-
-I am calm, perfectly serene, and firmly resolved to do my duty in full
-and to the last, like a brave and good soldier, confident to the utmost
-of our final unfailing victory; although I am not equally sure that I
-will live to see it. But this uncertainty does not trouble me in the
-least, nor has it any terror for me. I am happy in offering my life to
-my country; I am proud to spend it for so noble a purpose, and I know
-not how to thank Divine Providence for the opportunity--which I deem
-an honor--afforded me, on this fulgent autumnal day, in the midst of
-this enchanting valley of our Julian Venetia, while I am in the prime
-of life, in the fulness of my physical and mental powers, to fight in
-this holy war for liberty and justice. All is propitious to me, all
-is favorable to die a beautiful and glorious death; the weather, the
-place, the season, the opportunity, the age. A better end could not
-have crowned my life, and I feel the pleasure to have made a good and
-generous use of it. Do not grieve over my death, mother, or else you
-will offend my good fortune. Do not weep, mother, for it was written
-in Heaven that I should die. Do not mourn, mother, or else you would
-regret my happiness. I am not to be mourned but envied.
-
-You know the ineffable hopes that give me comfort because they are the
-very same hopes in which you also have placed all that is dear to you.
-When you read these words of mine, I will be free, unfettered and in a
-safe place, far from the miseries of this world. My struggle will be
-finished and I shall be peaceful; my daily death shall have come to an
-end, and I shall have reached the place on high, to the life without
-end. I shall be face to face with the Judge whom I have greatly feared,
-to the Lord whom I have greatly loved.
-
-Think of it, mother dear, when you read these words. I shall view you
-from heaven, side by side with our dear ones, with father, with my dear
-Laura, with Dino, our Guardian Angel. We shall be in the regions above,
-all united to celebrate your arrival, to watch over you and over Gino,
-to prepare for you, with our prayers, the place of your everlasting
-glory. Should not this thought alone be sufficient to dry your tears
-and to fill you with unspeakable joy?
-
-
-II--"WEEP NOT, MY DEAR MOTHER"
-
-No, no, weep not, my dear and saintly mother, and be brave, as you
-have always been. Should the pleasure of having offered to our adored
-Italy, this glorious land, this land predestined by God, should the
-pleasure of having offered the sacrifice of the life of one of your
-sons, be not sufficient for you, remember, nevertheless, that you must
-not rebel, not even for one instant, to the divinely wise and divinely
-loving decrees of our Lord. If He wanted to reserve me for other
-work, He could have permitted me to survive. Since He has called me
-to Himself, it is a sign that such was the best thing that could have
-happened and the best thing for me. He knows what He is doing, and it
-remains for us to bow and to adore, accepting with trustful joy His
-most Exalted Will.
-
-I do not bemoan life. I have tasted of all its insane infatuations and
-have withdrawn with an insurmountable weariness and disgust.
-
-Like a young prodigal son, after so many wanderings, having returned to
-the house of the father, I could have hoped now, and reasonably so, to
-taste of the good joys, the joys of duties well performed, of the good
-practised and preached, the joys born of art, of labor, of charity, of
-a fruitful mind.
-
-Side by side with the good, beautiful girl whom you know and esteem,
-and whom I have always loved, always so tenderly, timidly and
-faithfully loved, even in the midst of my errors and blameworthy
-blunders, I could have hoped to make a good husband and a good father.
-
-In the world there are so many battles to fight, for love, for
-justice, for liberty, for the faith, and for a time I must confess, I
-presumptuously believed myself predestined and assigned to the arduous
-and terrible task of winning one or another of these battles.
-
-All this was, I admit, beautiful, flattering, desirable, but it cannot
-compare with my present lot. This is the very truth, and indeed I
-cannot say whether I would really be satisfied if the writing of this
-letter would have been in vain. Life is sad; it is a painful and
-annoying duty, a long exile in the uncertainty of our own lot. In
-order that life might go quickly in accordance with my wishes, and
-without leaving me in a thousand disappointments, there would be need
-of many very rare and difficult occurrences. Besides, I am and I feel
-weak, I have not the least confidence in myself. The whole battle
-against the ingratitude and wickedness of the world would not have
-frightened me as much as the battle against myself. It is better,
-therefore, dear mother, as it has happened. The Lord, in His wise and
-infinite goodness, has reserved for me just the destiny that was fit
-for me; a destiny that is easy, sweet, honorable, rapid; to die in
-battle for one's country.
-
-With this beautiful and praiseworthy past, fulfilling the most desired
-of all duties as a good citizen towards the land that gave him birth,
-I depart, in the midst of the tears of all those that love me, from
-a life toward which I felt weary and disgusted. I leave the failings
-of life, I leave sin, I leave the sad and afflicted spectacle of the
-small and momentary triumphs of evil over good. I leave to my humble
-body the weight of all my chains and I fly away, free, free in the end,
-to the heavens above, where resides our Father, to the heavens above,
-where His holy will is always done. Just imagine, dear mother, with
-what joy I will receive from His hands even the chastisements that His
-justice will impose on account of my sins. He Himself has paid all
-these chastisements by His superabundant merits, a God of mercy and
-of love, redeeming me with His precious blood, living and dying here
-below for my sake. Only through His grace, only through Jesus Christ,
-could I have succeeded that my sins be not my eternal death. He has
-seen the tears of my sorrow, He has pardoned me through the mouth of
-His spotless spouse, the Church. I do sincerely hope that the Madonna,
-so loving and kind toward us, will assist me with her powerful help in
-the instant when my eternity will be decided.
-
-
-III--"GOOD-BYE, MOTHER--WE SHALL NOT DIE IN VAIN"
-
-And as I am about to speak of forgiveness, dear mother, I have only
-one thing to say with all simplicity: Forgive me! Forgive me all the
-sorrows that I have caused you; all the agonies that you have suffered
-on my account every time I have been ungrateful, stubborn, forgetful,
-disobedient toward you. Forgive me if, by neglect and inexperience, I
-have failed to render your life more comfortable and tranquil since the
-day when my father, by his premature death, entrusted you to my care.
-Now I understand well the many wrongs I have been guilty of toward you,
-and I feel all the remorse and cruel anguish now that dying I have to
-entrust you to the providence of the Lord. Forgive me lastly this final
-sorrow that I have inflicted upon you, perhaps not without stubborn
-and cruel inconsideration on my part, in giving up my life voluntarily
-for my country, fascinated by the attractions of this beautiful lot.
-Forgive me also if I have not sufficiently recognized and tried to
-compensate the incomparable nobility of your soul, of your heart, so
-immense and sublime. Mother, truly perfect and exemplary, to whom I owe
-all that I am and the least good I have done in this world.
-
-I have so many things to say to you that a book could hardly contain
-them. Nothing else, therefore, is left me but to recommend you to our
-Gino, on whose goodness, on whose integrity, and on whose strength
-of will, I put all trust. Tell him in my name to serve willingly
-our country as long as she will have need of him, to serve her with
-abnegation, with ardor, with enthusiasm, even unto death, should that
-be necessary. Should he be destined to live a long and struggling life,
-let him be equal to it with serenity, with firmness, with indomitable
-love for justice and honesty, trusting always in the triumph of good
-with God's grace. Let him be a good husband and a good father; let
-him raise up his children in the love of God, respect for the Church,
-fidelity toward our King, to the observance of the law, to scrupulous
-devotion to our beloved country. Think often of us here above; speak
-of us among yourselves; remember us and love us as when we were alive,
-because we shall always be with you.
-
-Pray often for me, for I am in need of it. Be courageous in the trials
-of life, as you have always been strong and energetic in the midst
-of the tempest of your earthly career; continue to be humble, pious,
-charitable, so that the peace of God may always be with you.
-
-Good-bye, mother; good-bye, Gino, my dear and my beloved! I embrace
-you with all the ardor of my immense love, which has increased a
-hundredfold during my absence in the midst of the dangers and hardships
-of the war. Here, far away from the world, always with the image of
-imminent death, I have felt how strong are the ties that bind us to
-this world; how mankind is in need of mutual love, of faith in each
-other, of discipline, of harmony, of unity, what necessary and sacred
-things are the fatherland, the home, the family; how blameworthy is the
-person who renounces these, who betrays and oppresses them.
-
-Love and freedom for all, this is the ideal for which it is a pleasure
-to offer one's life. May God cause our sacrifice to be fruitful; may
-He take pity upon mankind, forgive and forget their offenses, and give
-them peace. Then, oh! dear mother, we shall not have died in vain. Just
-one more tender kiss.
-
- GIOSUE BORSI.
-
-
-
-
- * * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber's Notes
-
-Obvious errors of punctuation and diacritical markings were corrected.
-
-Inconsistent hyphenation was made consistent.
-
-Both "dug-out" and "dugout" are used frequently and have not been
-changed.
-
-"of" added in "Permission of New York American" in table of contents
-entry for "HOW MLLE. DUCLOS...".
-
-P. 35: One the face of it -> On the face of it.
-
-P. 35: These stiplations -> These stipulations.
-
-P. 82: There were a group -> They were a group.
-
-P. 94: The Advance to Monse -> The Advance to Mons.
-
-P. 96: secure a birth -> secure a berth.
-
-P. 115: we could could procure -> we could procure.
-
-P. 133: Aerschat -> Aerschot.
-
-P. 134: The sequal to my one-hundredth flight -> The sequel to my
-one-hundredth flight.
-
-P. 143: Deisel -> Diesel.
-
-P. 158: But I've illusions -> But I've no illusions.
-
-P. 176: There it a pretty little comedy -> There is a pretty little
-comedy.
-
-P. 178: as had been been anticipated -> as had been anticipated.
-
-P. 180: Deutschland, Deutschland, ueber Allies -> Deutschland,
-Deutschland, ueber Alles.
-
-P. 182: It that mine exploded -> If that mine exploded.
-
-P. 186: undergoing the the process -> undergoing the process.
-
-P. 186: immediate requiremenst -> immediate requirements.
-
-P. 191: this his previous blunder -> that his previous blunder.
-
-P. 192: one well swoop -> one fell swoop.
-
-P. 195: back in in Petersburg -> back in Petersburg.
-
-P. 198: non-combatatants -> non-combatants.
-
-P. 204: barely distinguishable roads -> barely distinguishable road.
-
-P. 206: descended on her shoulder -> descend on her shoulder.
-
-P. 208: keepers of the the forest -> keepers of the forest.
-
-P. 214: the German had fired -> the Germans had fired.
-
-P. 220: as thought he meant -> as though he meant.
-
-P. 221: turned be back -> turned me back.
-
-P. 222: obession of my fear -> obsession of my fear.
-
-P. 231: Flemish titler -> Flemish title.
-
-P. 241: without specal orders -> without special orders.
-
-P. 266: Jilfla -> Jilfi.
-
-P. 273: leave a comrade die like a dog -> leave a comrade to die like
-a dog.
-
-P. 276: jeun docteur Allemand -> jeune docteur Allemand.
-
-P. 282: a public vehicles -> a public vehicle.
-
-P. 284: les majeste -> lese majeste.
-
-P. 309: Vive Verund -> Vive Verdun.
-
-P. 317: the old wail of sorow -> the old wail of sorrow.
-
-P. 325: Every one us -> Every one of us.
-
-P. 334: replied the hsuband -> replied the husband.
-
-P. 340: Thus the lengend grew -> Thus the legend grew.
-
-
-
-***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TRUE STORIES OF THE GREAT WAR,
-VOLUME VI (OF 6)***
-
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