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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #50807 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/50807)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, True Stories of the Great War, Volume V (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 V (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: December 31, 2015 [eBook #50807]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TRUE STORIES OF THE GREAT WAR,
-VOLUME V (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 50807-h.htm or 50807-h.zip:
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/50807/50807-h/50807-h.htm)
- or
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/50807/50807-h.zip)
-
-
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive/American Libraries. See
- https://archive.org/details/truestoriesofgre05mill
-
-
-
-
-
-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 V
-
-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
-
- This group of stories for VOLUME V has been selected by the Board
- of Editors according to the plan outlined in "Introductory" to
- Volume I. It includes episodes from thirty-one story-tellers--tales
- of Dragoons, Marines, Bishops, Foreign Legion, Fleet Surgeon,
- Scouts, Exiles, Soldiers, Spies and Eye-Witnesses. The selections
- have been made from the most authoritative sources in Europe and
- America. Full credit is given in every instance to the original
- source.
-
-
-VOLUME V--THIRTY-ONE STORY-TELLERS--142 EPISODES
-
- TALES OF THE DARING RIDES OF A FRENCH TROOPER 1
- WITH THE TWENTY-SECOND REGIMENT OF DRAGOONS
- Told by Lieut. Christian Mallet of the Dragoons
- (Permission of E. P. Dutton and Company)
-
- "TO RUHLEBEN--AND BACK" LIFE IN A GERMAN PRISON 18
- WHERE THE BRITISH CIVILIAN PRISONERS ARE HELD IN
- DETENTION CAMP
- Told by Geoffrey Pyke, an English Prisoner
- (Permission of Houghton, Mifflin and Company)
-
- AN AMERICAN AT BATTLE OF THE SOMME WITH FRENCH ARMY 36
- ARMY LIFE WITH THE SOLDIERS ALONG THE SOMME
- Told by Frederick Palmer
- (Permission of Dodd, Mead and Company)
-
- AN AMERICAN'S EXPERIENCES "INSIDE THE GERMAN EMPIRE" 53
- Told by Herbert Bayard Swope
- (Permission of The Century Company)
-
- "DIXMUDE"--AN EPIC OF THE FRENCH MARINES 64
- STORY OF THE MURDER OF COMMANDER JEANNIOT
- Told by Charles Le Goffic of the Fusiliers Marins
- (Permission of J. B. Lippincott Company)
-
- A BISHOP AT THE FRONT WITH THE BRITISH ARMY 75
- Told by Right Reverend H. Russell Wakefield,
- Bishop of Birmingham
- (Permission of Longmans, Green and Company)
-
- SHORT RATIONS--THE TRUTH ABOUT LIFE IN GERMANY 83
- AN AMERICAN WOMAN IN GERMANY
- Told by Madeline Zabriskie Doty
- (Permission of The Century Company)
-
- FIGHTING "WITH THE RUSSIAN ARMY"--ON THE AUSTRIAN FRONT 92
- THE COLOSSAL STRUGGLE OF THE SLAVS
- Told by Barnard Pares
- (Permission of Houghton, Mifflin and Company)
-
- THE ROMANCE OF THE FRENCH FOREIGN LEGION 107
- THE "GLORIOUS RASCALS"
- Told by E. S. and G. F. Lees
- (Permission of Wide World)
-
- ADVENTURES OF WOMEN WHO FACE DEATH ON BATTLEGROUNDS 121
- LITTLE STORIES OF WOMAN'S INDOMITABLE COURAGE
- Told by Hilda Wynne and Others
- (Permission of New York American and New York World)
-
- AN AMERICAN WOMAN'S STORY OF THE "ANCONA" TRAGEDY 142
- Told by Dr. Cecile Greil
- (Permission New York Times)
-
- THE STRATEGY OF SISTER MADELEINE 151
- THE STORY OF A FRENCH CAPTAIN'S ESCAPE FROM THE GERMANS
- Told by Himself and Translated by G. Frederic Lees
- (Permission of Wide World)
-
- TALES OF THE SPIES AND THEIR DANGEROUS MISSIONS 169
- REVELATIONS OF METHODS AND DARING ADVENTURES
- Told by Secret Service Men of Several Countries
- (Permission of New York American; New York World; New
- York Herald and New York Tribune)
-
- WHAT HAPPENED TO THE "GLENHOLME" 192
- ADVENTURES WITH SUBMARINES IN THE MEDITERRANEAN SEA
- Told by Captain Groome to a Friend
- (Permission Wide World)
-
- WHAT THE KAISER'S SON SAW ON THE BATTLEFIELD 203
- PERSONAL EXPERIENCES OF A GERMAN PRINCE
- Told by Prince Oscar of Prussia,
- Fifth Son of Emperor Wilhelm
- (Permission of New York American)
-
- A DAY'S WORK WITH A FRENCH SUBMARINE 222
- AN AMERICAN'S EXPERIENCE UNDER THE SEA
- Told by Fred B. Pitney
- (Permission of New York Tribune)
-
- TALE OF THE CHILD OF TERBEEKE 233
- HOW IT SAVED A BRITISH BATTALION
- Told by Oliver Madox Hueffer
- (Permission of Wide World)
-
- A HERO TALE OF THE RED CROSS 242
- Told by G. S. Petroff
- (Permission of Current History)
-
- LIFE STORY OF "GRANDMOTHER OF THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION" 246
- TRIUMPHANT RETURN FROM FORTY-FOUR YEARS IN
- SIBERIAN EXILE
- Told by Catherine Breshkovskaya,
- the Russian Revolutionist
- (Permission of New York Tribune)
-
- TALE OF AN AMAZING VOYAGE 262
- GERMAN OFFICERS ESCAPE FROM SPAIN IN A SAILING VESSEL
- Told by Frederic Lees
- (Permission of Wide World)
-
- THE POET'S DEATH IN BATTLE--HOW ALLEN SEEGER DIED 278
- A YOUNG AMERICAN IN THE FOREIGN LEGION
- Told by Bif Bear, a Young Egyptian in the Foreign Legion
-
- THE GUARDIAN OF THE LINE--HERO TALE OF LITHUANIA 286
- Told by G. Frederic Lees
- (Permission of Wide World)
-
- WITH A FLEET SURGEON ON A BRITISH WARSHIP DURING
- A BATTLE 295
- UNDER FIRE ON HIS MAJESTY'S SHIP, "THE FEARLESS"
- Told by Fleet Surgeon Walter K. Hopkins
- (Permission New York American)
-
- AIRMEN IN THE DESERTS OF EGYPT 304
- ADVENTURES OF THE ROYAL FLYING CORPS IN SINAI
- Told by F. W. Martindale
- (Permission of Wide World)
-
- HOW SWEENY, OF THE FOREIGN LEGION, GOT HIS "HOT DOGS" 312
- Told by Private John Joseph Casey
- (Permission of New York World)
-
- THE DOGS OF WAR ON THE BATTLEGROUNDS 316
- THE "FOUR-FOOTED SOLDIERS" OF FRANCE
- Told by the Soldiers
- (Permission of Wide World)
-
- TRUE STORY ABOUT KILLING THE WOUNDED 328
- Told by A. Pankratoff
- (Permission of Current History)
-
- HOW WE FOILED "U 39"--IN THE SUBMARINE ZONE 333
- ADVENTURES ABOARD A HORSE TRANSPORT
- Told by H. O. Read
- (Permission of Wide World)
-
- MY WORST EXPERIENCE IN MESOPOTAMIA 344
- Told by a Man Who Stopped a Bullet
- (Permission of Current History)
-
- SPIRIT OF YOUNG AMERICA--HOW WE WENT "OVER THE TOP" 349
- EXPERIENCES OF A NEW YORK BOY WITH THE CANADIANS
- Told by (name withheld), wounded in France
-
- THE SINKING OF "THE PROVENCE II" 358
- Told by N. Bokanowski,
- Deputy of the Department of the Seine
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: © International Film Service.
-THE BALLOON CORPS EXPERIENCE THE SENSATIONS OF THE POLAR EXPLORER]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: DROPPING A BOMB FROM A DIRIGIBLE
-_It is Pleasanter to See This in a Volume Than Overhead!_]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: A FEW MINUTES BEFORE THIS WAS A GERMAN BATTLE PLANE
-_But the Aircraft Guns Got His Range. The Insert Shows a Naval Plane_]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: © International Film Service.
-SOMEONE IS ALWAYS WATCHING IN THE FIRST LINE TRENCH
-_A British Trench at Orvillieres_]
-
-
-
-
-TALES OF THE DARING RIDES OF A FRENCH TROOPER
-
-_With the Twenty-second Regiment of Dragoons_
-
-_Told by Lieut. Christian Mallet, of the Dragoons_
-
- This famous 22nd regiment of Dragoons was raised in 1635 and
- took part in all the great wars in which the French were engaged
- before the Revolution. It fought under the Republic and then
- with Napoleon's armies--at Austerlitz (1805); Jena (1806); Eylau
- (1807); Oporto (1809). It saw service with the Army of the Sambre
- and Meuse, the Army of the Rhine, the Grande-Armee, in the War in
- Spain, the Campaign in Saxony, the Campaign in France (1814). The
- regiment was disbanded in 1815 at the close of the Napoleonic Wars
- and was not raised again until 1873. The first great charge of the
- 22nd Dragoons in the Great War occurred on the night of September
- 10-11, 1914. It has since been fighting heroically "For France and
- Civilization." Lieut. Mallet has fought his way up in the ranks
- with the Dragoons. He presents the unconquerable spirit of France
- in his book: "Impressions and Experiences of a French Trooper."
- It is dedicated: "To my Captain, Count J. de Tarragon, and to my
- two comrades, 2nd Lieut. Magrin and 2nd Lieut. Clère--who fell all
- three on the field of honour in defense of their country." One of
- his stories is recorded herewith by permission of his publishers,
- _E. P. Dutton and Company_: Copyright 1916.
-
-[1] I--STORY OF PEASANT GIRL ON THE YSER
-
-The battle finished (September 10, 1914) the pursuit of the conquered
-army commenced and kept the whole world in suspense, with eyes fixed on
-this headlong flight towards the north, which lasted till the end of
-the month, and which was to be the prelude of the great battles of the
-Yser.
-
-The region round Verberie was definitely cleared of Germans and was
-become once more French. The little town for some days presented an
-extraordinary spectacle.
-
-We entered the town after having received the formal assurance of the
-5th Chasseurs, who went farther on, that all the country was in our
-hands. Some divisional cyclists were seated at the roadside. We asked
-them for news of the 22nd, and their reply wrung our hearts. They knew
-nothing definite, but they had met a country cart full of our wounded
-comrades, who had told them that the regiment had been cut up.
-
-No one could tell us where the divisional area was to be found. The
-division itself appeared to have been dismembered, lost and in part
-destroyed. We thought that we were the only survivors of a disaster,
-and, once the horses were in shelter in an empty abandoned farm
-stuffing themselves with hay, we wandered sadly through the streets
-destroyed by bombardment and by fire in search of such civilians as
-might have remained behind during the invasion.
-
-A little outside the town we at last found a farm where two of the
-inhabitants had stayed on. The contrast between them was touching.
-One was a paralysed old man unable to leave his fields, the other was
-a young girl of fifteen, a frail little peasant, and rather ugly.
-Her strange green eyes contrasted with an admirable head of auburn
-hair, and she had heroically insisted on looking after her infirm
-grandfather, though all the rest of the family had emigrated towards
-the west. She had remained faithful to her duty in spite of the
-bombardment, the battle at their very door and the ill-treatment of
-the Bavarian soldiers who were billeted in the farm. Distressed, yet
-joyous, she prepared a hasty meal and busied herself in quest of food,
-for it was anything but easy to satiate eleven men dying of hunger when
-the Germans, who lay hands on everything, had only just left.
-
-She wrung the neck of an emaciated fowl which had escaped massacre,
-and, by adding thereto some potatoes from the garden, she served us
-a breakfast, washed down with white wine, which made us stammer with
-joy, like children. One needs to have fasted for five days to have
-felt the cutting pains of hunger and of thirst in all their horror, to
-appreciate the happiness that one can experience in eating the wing
-of a scraggy fowl and in drinking a glass of execrable wine tasting
-like vinegar. She bustled about, and her pitying and motherly gestures
-touched our hearts. While we ate she told us the most astonishing story
-that ever was, a story acted, illustrated by gestures, which made the
-scenes live with remarkable vividness.
-
-She told us how, faithful to her oath, she was alone when the Bavarians
-came knocking at her door, how she lived three days with them, a butt
-for their innumerable coarsenesses, sometimes brutally treated when the
-soldiers were sober, sometimes pursued by their gross assiduities when
-they were drunk; how one night she had to fly half naked through the
-rain, slipping out through the venthole of the cellar, to escape being
-violated by a group of madmen, not daring to go to bed again, sleeping
-fully dressed behind a small copse; how at last French chasseurs had
-put the Bavarians to flight and had in their turn installed themselves
-in the farm, and how among them she felt herself protected and
-respected.
-
-She attached herself to her new companions, whom she looked after like
-a mother for three days. Then they went away, promising to return, and
-she was left alone.
-
-But the next day at dawn, uneasy at the row that came from the town,
-she decided to go in search of news. She put on a shawl and slipped
-through the brushwood and thickets as far as the first houses. She was
-afraid of being seen, and made herself as small as possible, keeping
-close to the walls, crossing gardens and ruined houses. The terrible
-noise increased, and she went towards it. She wanted to see what was
-going on, and a fine virile courage sustained her. The shells fell near
-her; no matter, she had only a few more steps to go to turn the corner
-of a street. She arrived on the _place_ as the battle was finishing.
-
-Her fifteen chasseurs were there, fifteen corpses at the foot of the
-barricade. One of them, who still lived, raised himself on seeing her,
-and held out his arms towards her. Then, forgetting all danger, in a
-magnificent outburst of feminine pity, she braved the rain of fire and
-dashed to the centre of the _place_. She knelt by the young fellow,
-enveloped him in her shawl to warm him and rocked him in her arms till
-he closed his young eyes for ever, thankful for this feminine presence
-which had made his last sufferings less bitter.
-
-While she remained kneeling on the pavement wet with blood, a last big
-calibre shell knocked over, almost at her feet, a big corner house,
-which in its fall buried the German and French corpses in one horrible
-heap. She fell in a faint on the stones, knocked over by the windage of
-the shell, which had so nearly done for her.
-
-During the latter part of her discourse she straightened her thin
-figure to the full, her strange eyes sparkled, and she appeared to be
-possessed by some strong and mysterious spirit which made us tremble.
-She became big in her rustic simplicity--big, as the incarnation of
-grief and of pity, and of the peasant in her gave place to a living
-image of the war--an image singularly moving and singularly beautiful.
-
-
-II--WITH THE WARRIORS FROM THE MARNE
-
-From the next day Verberie became in some degree the rallying point
-for all soldiers who had lost touch with their units. Elements of all
-sorts of regiments, of all arms, of all races even, arrived on foot,
-on horseback, on bicycles, in country carts. There were dragoons,
-cuirassiers, chasseurs, artillerymen, Algerian Light Infantry and
-English. Bernous, khaki uniform, blue capes, rubbed shoulders with
-dolmans, black tunics and red trousers.
-
-In this extraordinary crowd there were men from Morocco mounted on
-Arab horses and wearing turbans; there were "Joyeux" who wore the
-tarboosh, and ruddy English faces surmounted by flat caps. All the
-uniforms were covered with dirt and slashed and torn. Many of the men
-had bare feet, and some carried arms and some were without. It was the
-hazard of the colossal battle of the Marne, where several millions of
-men had been at grips, which had thrown them on this point. All were
-animated by the same desire for information, and particularly of the
-whereabouts of their respective regiments. From every direction flowed
-in convoys, waggons, artillery ammunition waggons, stragglers from
-every division and from every army corps. The mix-up and the confusion
-were indescribable. One heard shouting, swearing, neighing of horses,
-the horns of motor-cars, and the rumble of heavy waggons, which shook
-the houses.
-
-Faces drawn with fatigue were black with dust and mud and framed in
-stubbly beards. Everyone was gesticulating, everyone was shouting and
-a bright autumn sun, following upon the storm, threw into prominence
-amongst the medley of clothing the luminous splashes of gaudy colours
-and imparted an Oriental effect to the crowd.
-
-
-III--STORY OF THE PRIEST--AND TWO CHASSEURS
-
-Having eaten, washed and rested, I walked the streets, drinking the
-morning air and taking deep breaths of the _joie de vivre_, of the
-strength and vitality mingled with the air. I looked on every side to
-see whether I could not find some acquaintance in the crowd, some stray
-trooper from my regiment.
-
-So it was that the hazard of my walk brought me to a scene which moved
-me to tears and which rests graven so deeply on my memory that I can
-see its smallest detail with my eyes shut. The Gothic porch of the
-church, with its fine sculptures of the best period, was open, making
-in the brightness of the morning a pit of shade, at the foot of which
-some candles shone like stars. On the threshold of the porch, gaily
-lighted by the morning sun, a priest, whose fine virile face I can
-still recall, held in his hand the enamel pyx, and his surplice of lace
-of a dazzling whiteness contrasted with the muddy boots and spurs. One
-could guess that after having traversed some field of battle, consoling
-the wounded and the dying, he had dismounted to officiate in the open
-air under the morning sun.
-
-Before him, on a humble country cart and lying on a bed of straw, were
-stretched the rigid bodies, fixed in death, of two chasseurs who had
-fallen nobly while defending the bridge over the river. All around,
-kneeling in the mud of the porch, a semicircle of bare-headed soldiers,
-overcome by gratitude and humility, were assembled to accomplish a
-last duty and pay their last respects to the two comrades who were
-lying before them and who were sleeping their last sleep in their
-bloodstained uniforms, and assisted at the supreme office. The priest
-finished the _De profundis_, and in a clear voice pronounced the sacred
-words "_Revertitur in terram suam unde erat et spiritus redit ad Deum
-qui dedit illum_." The officiant gave the holy-water sprinkler to the
-priest, who sprinkled the bodies and murmured "_Requiescat in pace_."
-"Amen," responded the kneeling crowd, and a great wave of religious
-feeling passed over the kneeling men, the greater part of whom gave way
-to overmastering emotion.
-
-I can still see a big devil of an artilleryman, with his head between
-his hands, shaken by convulsive sobs. Having given the absolution, the
-priest raised the host sparkling in the sunlight for the last time and
-pronounced the sacramental words. I moved off, deeply affected by the
-grandeur of the scene.
-
-
-IV--DEPRAVED SOLDIERS IN A DRAWING ROOM
-
-By the 12th a good number of 22nd Dragoons and some officers of the
-regiment had rejoined at Verberie. We formed from this débris an almost
-complete squadron under the command of Captain de Salverte, who had
-succeeded in getting through the lines by skirting the forest.
-
-I again found my officer, M. Chatelin, whom I had last seen in the
-little clearing near Gilocourt, surrounded by lurking enemies, and
-whom I had hardly dared hope to see again alive; also M. de Thézy, my
-comrade Clère and others.
-
-We were all sorry to hear that Lieutenant Roy had fallen on the field
-of battle with several others, and that Major Jouillié had been taken
-prisoner. As for Captain de Tarragon, it was stated that he might
-have escaped on foot with his orderly and that he might be somewhere
-in the neighbourhood with a contingent of escaped men, but any precise
-information was wanting.
-
-The night before I had slept in the drawing-room of the château
-belonging to M. de Maindreville, the mayor. Its appearance merits some
-brief description, so that those who are still in doubt as to the
-savagery of the Germans may learn to what degree of bestiality and
-ignominy they are capable of attaining.
-
-This fine drawing-room was a veritable dung heap. The curtains were
-torn, the small billiard-table lay upside down in the middle of the
-room, a litter of rotting food covered the floor, the furniture
-was in matchwood, the chairs were broken, the easy-chairs had had
-their stuffing torn out of them and the glass of the cabinets was
-smashed. One could see that all small objects had been carried off
-and all others methodically broken. On the first floor the sight
-was heart-breaking. Fine linen, trimmed with lace, was soiled with
-excrement; excrement was everywhere, in the bath, on the sheets, on
-the floor. They had vomited on the beds and urinated against the
-walls; broken bottles had shed seas of red wine on the costly carpets.
-An unnamable liquid was running down the staircase, obscene designs
-were traced in charcoal on the wall-papers and filthy inscriptions
-ornamented the walls.
-
-I have told enough to give an idea of the degrading traces left by a
-contemptible enemy. I have exaggerated nothing; if anything, I have
-understated the truth.
-
-And this is the people that wants to be the arbiter of culture and of
-civilisation! May it stand for ever shamed and reduced to its true
-level, which is below that of the brute beast.
-
-
-V--THE SEARCH FOR CAPTAIN DE TARRAGON
-
-On the morning of the 12th, under the command of Captain de Salverte
-we crossed the Oise by a bridge of boats, the stone bridge having
-been destroyed by dynamite some days before. We went north to billet
-at Estrée-Saint Denis, which was to be the definite rallying point of
-the 22nd Dragoons. We were followed by several country carts, full
-of dismounted troopers, saddles, lances, cloaks and odds and ends of
-equipment.
-
-Acting on very vague information, I set out on the 13th to look for
-Captain de Tarragon. I was mounted on a prehistoric motor bicycle,
-requisitioned from the village barber. I scoured the country seeking
-information from everyone I met. I received the most contradictory
-reports, made a thousand useless detours and was exasperated when
-overtaken by night without having found any trace of him.
-
-I followed the road leading to Baron and to Nanteuil-le-Haudoin, along
-which but a few days before the corps of Landwehr, asked for by von
-Kluck, had marched with the object of enveloping our army, and along
-which it had just been precipitately hustled back. The sky was overcast
-and the day was threatening. At each step dead horses with swelled
-bellies threatened heaven with their stiff legs. A score of soldiers
-were lying in convulsed attitudes, their eyes wide open, with grimacing
-mouths twisted into a terrifying smile, and with hands clasping their
-rifles. Involuntarily I trembled at finding myself alone at nightfall
-in this deserted country, where no living being was to be seen, where
-not a sound was to be heard except the cawing of thousands of crows and
-the purr of my motor, which panted on the hills like an asthmatic old
-man, causing me the liveliest anxiety.
-
-Fifteen hundred mètres from Baron, after a last gasp, my machine
-stopped for ever, and, as I was ignorant of its mechanics, I was
-compelled to leave it where it was and continue my journey on foot
-through the darkness.
-
-The proprietor of the château of Baron put me up for the night. As at
-Verberie, everything had been burnt, soiled and destroyed. Nothing
-remained of the elegant furniture beyond a heap of shapeless objects.
-Next morning with the aid of a captain on the staff who requisitioned
-a trap for me, I got back to Verberie and found Captain de Tarragon
-there. He had slept at the farm of La Bonne Aventure, quite near to
-where I lay.
-
-When he saw me, after the mortal anxieties through which he had lived,
-believing his squadron lost and cut up, he was overcome by such a
-feeling of gratitude and joy that I saw tears rise to his eyes while
-he shook me vigourously by the hand. He had already sent forward my
-name for mention in the order for the day with reference to the affair
-at Gilocourt and the death of poor Dangel. I was recommended for the
-military medal, and my heart swelled with pride and joy, while I was
-carried back to Estrée-Saint-Denis, stretched out in a country cart
-with a score of dismounted comrades.
-
-A few days afterwards I was promoted corporal and proudly sported the
-red flannel chevrons bought at a country grocer's shop.
-
-
-VI--TALES OF THE DRAGOONS
-
-Once the half-regiment was reconstituted after a fashion, though many
-were missing (a detachment of fifty men without horses having returned
-to the depot), we were attached to the 3rd Cavalry Division, which
-happened to be in our neighbourhood, ours having left the area for some
-unknown destination. Until the 1st of October our lot was bound up
-with that of the 4th Cuirassiers, who marched with us.
-
-On the 23rd of September, as supports for the artillery, we were
-present at violent infantry actions between Nesle and Billancourt. The
-4th Corps attacked, and the furious struggle extended over the whole
-country. My troop was detached as flank guard and, in the thick morning
-fog, we knocked up against a handful of German cavalry, whom, in the
-distance, we had taken for our own men.
-
-We charged them at a gallop, and we noticed that they were tiring and
-that we were gaining on them. One of them drew his sabre and cut his
-horse's flanks with it, whilst a non-commissioned officer turned and
-fired his revolver without hitting us; but, thanks to the fog, they got
-away. We did not tempt providence by following them too far for fear of
-bringing up in their lines.
-
-At night we were sent to reconnoitre some fires which were reddening
-the horizon and which, from a distance, seemed vast conflagrations. We
-came upon a bivouac of Algerian troops, who were squatting on their
-heels, warming themselves, singing strange African melodies and giving
-to this corner of French soil an appearance of Algeria.
-
-On hearing the sound of our horses they sprang to arms with guttural
-cries, but when they had recognised that we were French they insisted
-on embracing our officer and danced round us like children.
-
-We billeted at Parvillers in a half-destroyed farm, and there at
-daybreak a sight that suggested an hallucination met our eyes. Some ten
-German soldiers were there in the courtyard dead, mowed down by the
-"75," but in such natural attitudes that but for their waxen colour
-one could have believed them alive. One was standing holding on to a
-bush, his hand grasping the branches. His face bespoke his terror, his
-mute mouth seemed as if in the act of yelling and his eyes were dilated
-with fear. A fragment of shell had pierced his chest. Another was on
-his knees, propped against a wall, under cover of which he had sought
-shelter from the murderous fire. I approached to see where his wound
-was and it took me a moment to discover it, so intact was the corpse.
-I saw at last that he had had the whole of the inside of his cranium
-carried away and hollowed out, as if by some surgical instrument. His
-tongue and his eyes were kept in place by a filament of flesh, and his
-spiked helmet had rolled off by his side. An officer was seated on some
-hay, with his legs apart and his head thrown back, looking at the farm.
-
-All these eyes fixed us with a terrifying immobility, with a look of
-such acute terror that our men turned away, as if afraid of sharing it;
-and not one of them dared to touch the magnificent new equipment of
-the Germans, which would have tempted them in any other circumstances.
-There were aluminum water-bottles and mess tins, helmet plates of
-shining copper and sculptured regimental badges dear to the hearts of
-soldiers, and which they have the habit of collecting as trophies.
-
-
-VII--LAST CHARGE OF THE HORSEMEN
-
-The dawn of the 25th broke without a cloud over the village of Folies.
-A heat haze hid the early morning sun. The enemy were quite near, and
-the sentries on the barricades gave the alarm. The cuirassiers and
-dragoons, leaving their horses under cover, had been on watch in the
-surrounding country since the morning to protect the village and the
-batteries of "75's," which were firing from a little way back.
-
-A non-commissioned officer and I had remained mounted. M. de Thézy
-sent us to investigate some horsemen whose shadows had loomed through
-the mist and whom we had seen dismount in an apple orchard near the
-village of Chocques. We set off at a quiet trot, convinced that we had
-to deal with some French hussars whom I had seen go that way an hour
-before. We crossed a field of beetroot and made straight towards them.
-They seemed anchored to the spot, and when we were within one hundred
-mètres, and they showed no signs of moving, our confidence increased.
-The fog seemed to grow thicker and our horses, now at the walk, scented
-no danger. We were within fifty mètres of them when a voice spoke
-out and the word "carbine" reached us distinctly, carried by a light
-breeze. The non-commissioned officer turned to me, his suspicions
-completely stilled, and said, "We can go on, they are French, I heard
-the word carbine." At the same instant I saw the group come to the
-shoulder and a dozen jets of fire tore the mist with short red flashes.
-A hail of bullets fell all around us, and we had only just time enough
-to put between them and ourselves as much fog as would conceal us, for
-before turning tail we had seen the confused grey mass of a column
-coming out of the village. We had only to warn the artillery and then
-there would be some fun.
-
-The lieutenant of artillery was two kilomètres back perched on a
-ladder. Having listened to what we had to say, he turned towards his
-gun and cried through a megaphone, "2600, corrector 18." We were
-already far off, returning at the gallop to try to see the effect, and
-it was a fine sight.
-
-Leaving the horses in a farm, we slipped from tree to tree. There was
-the column, still advancing. A first shell, ten mètres in front of it,
-stopped it short; immediately a second fell on the left, wounding some
-men, and a horse reared and upset its rider. A third shell struck
-mercilessly into the centre of the column and caused an explosion
-which sent flying, right and left, dark shapes which we guessed to
-be fragments of bodies. It rained shell, which struck the road with
-mathematical precision, sowing death and panic. In the twinkling of an
-eye the road was swept clean. The survivors bolted in every direction
-like madmen, and the agonising groans of a dying horse echoed through
-the whole countryside.
-
- * * * * *
-
-On the 1st of October we rejoined our division and the first
-half-regiment at Tilloy-les-Mofflaines. Up to the 20th we passed
-through a period of great privation and fatigue owing to the early
-frosts. We were unable to sleep for as many as five days on end, and
-when at night we had a few hours in which to rest, we passed them lying
-on the pavement of the street, propped up against some heap of coal
-or of stones, holding our horses' reins, each huddled up against his
-neighbour to try and keep warm.
-
-
-VIII--DIARY OF A FRENCH TROOPER
-
-Here are extracts from my diary, starting from 8th of October:
-
-_8th October._--All night we guarded the bridge at Estaires, after
-having constructed a formidable barricade. Damp and chilly night,
-which I got through lying on the pavement before the bridge; drank a
-half-litre of spirits in little sips to sustain me. This is the most
-trying night we have passed, but the spirits of all are wonderful.
-
-_9th October_: _Twenty minutes to four, two kilomètres from Estaires,
-scouting amongst beetroot fields._--Has the supreme moment come?
-A little while ago I firmly believed it had; now I am out of my
-reckoning, so incomprehensible and widespread is the struggle which
-surrounds us.
-
-We have evacuated Estaires and the bridge over the Lys, which we were
-guarding, to rejoin our horses on foot. After some minutes on the road
-the first shells burst. My troop received orders to fight dismounted,
-and here we are, lying down as skirmishers amongst the beetroot, in
-the midst of a heavy artillery and musketry fire. I am on the extreme
-right, and a moment ago two shrapnel shells came over and burst six or
-eight mètres above my head, peppering the ground with bullets. Never,
-I imagine, have I come so near to being hit.
-
-For the moment it is impossible to understand what is going on; the
-whole of the cavalry which was on in front of us--chasseurs, dragoons
-and all the cyclists--have fallen back, passing along the road on our
-flank. We, however, have had no order to retire. The peasants with
-their wives and children are running about the country like mad people.
-It is a sorry sight. A moment ago I saw an old man and a little girl
-fall in their hurry to escape from their farm, which a shell had just
-knocked to pieces. They are like herds of animals maddened by a storm.
-
-At dusk the Germans are 500 mètres off. We have orders to take up our
-post in the cemetery of Estaires. I have hurt my foot and each step in
-the ploughed land is a torture. I have noted a way which will lead me
-to the bridge on the other side of the town.
-
-I brought up my patrol at the double. When I got back I saw the troop
-retiring.
-
-We passed through the town, which had a sinister look by night,
-reddened by the flames from many fires. The whole population is in
-flight, leaving houses open to the streets, and crowding up the roads.
-All the windowpanes are broken by the bombardment; somewhere, in the
-middle of the town, a building is burning and the flames mount to the
-sky. There are barricades in every street. We have reached the horses,
-which are two kilomètres from the town, and we grope for them in the
-dark. Mine is slightly wounded in the foreleg. Long retreat during the
-night (the second during which we have not slept--a storm wets us to
-the skin).
-
-Arrived at Chosques at five in the morning. We get to bed at 6.30 and
-we are off again at 8 o'clock. I ask myself for how many days men and
-horses can hold out.
-
-_10th October._--In the afternoon we again covered the twenty
-kilomètres which separated us from Estaires. Hardly had we settled down
-to guard the same bridge as yesterday when we were sent to La Gorgue.
-On the way stopped in the village, as shells commenced to fall. The 1st
-troop took refuge in a grocer's, where we were parked like sheep. A
-large calibre shell burst just opposite with a terrible row. I thought
-that the house was going to fall in. Lieutenant Niel, who had stayed
-outside, was knocked over into the ditch and wounded. We are falling
-back with the horses to La Gorgue, and we are passing a third night,
-without sleep, on the road, Magrin and I on a heap of coal. Horses and
-men have had nothing to eat, the latter are benumbed, exhausted, but
-gay as ever.
-
-_11th October._--We get to a neighbouring farm at Estrem to feed the
-horses. They have scarcely touched their hay and oats before an order
-comes telling us to rejoin at the very place from which we have come.
-The Germans are trying to take the village from the east, thanks to
-the bridge which they captured the day before yesterday, but we have
-been reinforced by cyclists, and the 4th Division is coming up. We are
-holding on; the position is good. The belfry of the town hall has just
-fallen. We are going back to Estrem.
-
-Three hours passed in a trench without greatcoats. Magrin and I are
-so cold that we huddle up one against the other and share a woollen
-handkerchief to cover our faces. We put up at Calonne-sur-la-Lys. And
-so it goes on up to the 17th, the date on which we re-enter Belgium,
-passing by Bailleul, Outersteene and Locre. It is not again a triumphal
-entry on a fine August morning, it is a march past ruins and over
-rubbish heaps.
-
-At Outersteene, however, we were received with touching manifestations
-of confidence and enthusiasm; an old tottering and broken-down teacher
-had drawn up before the school a score of young lads of seven to ten
-years old, who watched us passing and sang the _Marseillaise_ with all
-their lungs, while the old man beat the time.
-
-The village had been evacuated only three days ago, and it was from the
-thresholds of its houses, partly fallen in and still smoking, that this
-song rose, a sincere and spontaneous outburst.
-
-(Lieut. Mallet tells "How We Crossed the German Lines"; "The Charge of
-Gilocourt"; "The Escape in the Forest of Compiegne"; "The Two Glorious
-Days at Staden"; "The Funeral of Lord Roberts"; "The Attack at Loos.")
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[1] All numerals throughout this volume relate to the stories herein
-told--not to chapters in the original sources.
-
-
-
-
-"TO RUHLEBEN--AND BACK"--LIFE IN A GERMAN PRISON
-
-_Where the British Civilian Prisoners Are Held in Detention Camp_
-
-_Told by Geoffrey Pyke, an English Prisoner_
-
- This is a picturesque and thrilling story of a real adventure.
- The author, a young Englishman, entered Germany at the outbreak
- of the War, was discovered, imprisoned, and transferred to the
- great detention camp at Ruhleben. Here he made one of the most
- marvelous escapes on record, and after undreamed-of dangers and
- hardships arrived in safety at the Dutch front. Mr. Pyke in
- relating his experience says: "I was caught up in a vast mechanism
- ... that bounds the German Empire and tossed from one part to
- another, was beaten, crushed, and hammered ... the machine took
- me and threw me in jail, and then in another jail, and then in
- another, and then back into the first. Finally vomiting me, in a
- fit of either weariness, mercy or disgust, into a concentration
- camp for untrained civilians." Finally escaping from Ruhleben on
- July 9th, 1915. "Had only the 4,500 other inhabitants of Ruhleben
- escaped at the same time, in a species of general stampede, and
- one or two other people in Berlin or elsewhere died or been called
- off, matters might have arranged themselves very satisfactorily."
- The escaped prisoner has collected his experiences into a volume
- entitled: "To Ruhleben--And Back," from which we present a single
- chapter by permission of his publishers, _Houghton, Mifflin and
- Company_.
-
-[2] I--HERR DIREKTOR OF THE PRISON
-
-I forget now how many times I saw the Direktor of the prison, though
-at the time, the days on which I did were as distinct to me as wounds,
-which a man cannot see, but which he knows individually and intimately.
-In order to obtain audience of this gentleman, it was necessary, when
-the warder unlocked the door at 6.30 and the pitchers were put out,
-to ask to see the Herr Direktor. At half-past nine you were taken
-out of the cell, let through the door at the end down one flight and
-through to the floor which you could see over the railings of the
-balcony. Here again you were put into a cell, and the door was locked,
-and time passed by. Nothing else happened. In half an hour, or an
-hour, you were lined up in the passage with any others who also had
-requests. One by one you would go into that little office. You would
-bow at the entrance. "Ja?" would remark the bald-headed old gray-beard,
-with an Iron Cross of '70 hanging from his coat. "Ja?" And you would
-state your request. A vast ledger opposite him, the old bird, for he
-looked exactly like the Jackdaw of Rheims, would enter and sign and
-countersign in it. His decision was given in a curt "_Ja_" or "_Nein_,"
-or "_Das geht nicht_,"[3] and you would be standing in the line
-outside, among those whose chance had not yet come. You had succeeded;
-you had failed--who knows what luck would attend you on these
-expeditions. Every request to write a letter had to be made in this
-manner. The shiny-headed old bird, with the head jailer in attendance
-his hand stiffly at his sword, would enter your name, the name of the
-addressee, and the reason for writing it, in his vast ledger. "_Ja?
-Nein. Das geht nicht_," and it is all over. Time after time I craved
-permission to write to His Excellency the American Ambassador, to
-request him to tell my people at home that I was alive. It was granted
-at the third request. What agony were those mornings, pacing up and
-down in the cell downstairs, waiting to be put into line. What could I
-say to the old boy to persuade him? Hundreds of passionate words rose
-in my mind, as I paced up and down that cell, waiting for the moment.
-"_Bitte, Herr Direktor, kann ich ein brief schreiben?_"[4] was all that
-I could stammer out, almost before I had reached the threshold of his
-office. "_Ja? Nein. Das geht nicht_," and I, after staring at him with
-eyes like a rabbit's fastened on a snake, unable to find words to say
-more, aching with the dull misery of refusal, have passed away, giving
-place to someone else who, in his turn, also succeeds or fails.
-
-I used to try once a fortnight, and though I have since discovered that
-even the letters I wrote were never sent, yet nevertheless I always had
-a hope of their getting through. Regularly as clockwork every other
-Monday, after the Hell of Sunday, I would request to see the Direktor.
-For the first ten weeks, I persevered in this. Then suddenly I began to
-go to pieces. I missed one Monday, and put off asking the old bald-pate
-until Tuesday. When the moment came round on the Tuesday morning,
-I funked again. Wednesday came, and again I funked. On Thursday, I
-managed to push the words asking to see the Direktor from between my
-lips. Then with a rush, realising there was no going back, I felt all
-courage return to me. My head became as clear as a bell, and arguments
-to meet every objection of the Direktor's came to my mind. He had
-let me write several times previously, and I had not troubled him
-now for seventeen days. I was confident. Again I repeated my request
-gently to myself.... Suddenly I realised I was standing before him,
-and that I must speak. I must say something. I had come there to say
-something. Unless I asked him something, he would say I was not to be
-brought before him again. My eyes fixed on the large pimple on the
-top of his head. I could not take them away. The pimple was not quite
-in the centre of the cranium, but occupied, so to speak, the position
-halfway betwixt centre-forward and right outside. He wore it where a
-comedian wears a top hat the size of a five-shilling bit in attempts
-to be funny. My thoughts followed it. It was unique, and magnificent.
-"Have YOU any superfluous hair?" I thought. I should love to breathe
-very gently on the shiny surface, just to see if it becomes misty, or
-whether it still shines through everything. I wondered if it was very
-sensitive, so sensitive that he could feel what was reflected in it,
-or whether it was pachydermatous, and safe to dig pins into. He was
-going to move. He was just finishing off the entry he was making in the
-ledger. He was going to look up at me and say, "Ja wohl?"--Speak, say
-something--speak--speak....
-
-It was evening. I was in my cell. The light was fading fast. I was
-thinking how on the morrow I would try again, how it only needed
-careful preparation, and I should be as able as anybody to say what I
-wanted to,--to speak.
-
-
-II--SOLITARY CONFINEMENT AT THE POLIZEIGEFANGNIS
-
-After you have been in solitary for some time, it becomes increasing
-difficult to retain your judgment. I know that first I would make up my
-mind that I was going to be in prison for two years, and then a great
-and irresistible hope would arise within me, that I should be sent to
-a concentration camp called Ruhleben, that I had had a whisper of from
-my friends. I had hoped for some sort of a trial to know how long I was
-going to remain where I was. Every day that passed at ten o'clock,
-when I imagined that anyone, before whom I might be brought, had come
-down to his office, I would put on the one collar I had. Every day at
-six I would take it off again, preserving it for the next day. At times
-I became convinced that, because I was not yet of age, I was to be kept
-for a few months more, and that the day after my twenty-first birthday,
-I was to be sentenced to some ghastly sort of punishment, like solitary
-for two years, or for life. (There seemed absolutely no difference
-between these two, and I dreaded the one as much as the other. Both
-appeared interminable, and I had no hopes of coming out sane, even
-after the shorter period. I pictured myself moaning about the London
-Law Courts in a celluloid collar, picking up a little copying work
-here, and a little there, until I finally sank into a mumbling old age
-at twenty-five, and died in delirium tremens at thirty.)
-
-Another fact made me terribly despondent, and, fight how I would, was
-gradually making me utterly hopeless. About fourteen days after my
-companions of the British Relief Committee had gone, a new-comer had
-arrived. He spoke German absolutely perfectly, but with an Austrian
-accent. I had heard him say something to the warder. I will not tell
-his story, for he is at the present moment in another prison in Berlin,
-though not in solitary, and is, I know, writing his reminiscences
-in readiness for when the war shall come to an end. Let it suffice,
-however, to say that he had been discovered, soon after war broke out,
-writing articles for a London paper. He was arrested at the flat he
-happened to be living in, and, after a large amount of palaver, was
-given twenty-four hours to leave the country in. He was accompanied
-to the frontier. Within a fortnight he was back again. He had gone
-to London, had seen his paper, had come back to Holland, and at the
-frontier had pretended to be an Austrian waiter who had been expelled
-from England. He so exasperated his interrogators at the frontier
-by his eternal repetition of his ill treatment at the hands of his
-dastardly English employers, that they finally let him pass. However,
-in the end he was caught--as we all are--and recognised. He had been
-told that he was to be sent to this place Ruhleben, and, when one day
-he disappeared, I naturally surmised that he had been taken there.
-He was very good to me, for he had managed to get permission to buy
-fruit; I had been refused it. So he used to buy double the quantity,
-and daily, on going down the stairs, smuggle me an apple. "If he," I
-argued, "who has done this thing _twice_, and who is hoary with old
-age (he was about thirty-five), gets sent to this camp Ruhleben, after
-being here for three weeks, and I, who have only done it once, and am
-not yet of age, and have been here nine weeks, and have not been sent
-there, then there is no hope of my ever getting there. They would have
-sent me there by now, were they going to do so at all." Afterwards, I
-found, of course, that he had never been sent anywhere near Ruhleben,
-but simply to another prison. I heard the most wonderful stories about
-his doings there, from a friend who was sent to prison for a time. He
-would appear for exercise dressed in flamboyant pink running shorts, a
-vest and socks to match--and a top hat. What on earth for? Well, if the
-walls of prison don't supply you with humour or whimsicality, you must
-undertake the task yourself.
-
-The best of luck to him. He probably thinks I am still in that
-Polizeigefängnis.
-
-For some time I had been the oldest inhabitant of the prison. The usual
-denizen of the place came for a day or two, and then went on his way
-through that process called Law and Justice. My position gradually
-came to give me tiny privileges. For instance, they became quite
-convinced that I was going mad, for, apart from my habit of walking
-round and round the exercise yard at nearly five miles per hour, every
-night I would repeat the Jabberwocky. It had taken me a whole week
-with my broken-down memory to piece together the odd bits of lines and
-verses that I still carried in my head; and another week to evolve Mr.
-Kipling's "If." I would suddenly shout loudly into the solid blackness
-that "All mimsey were the borrow-groves and the moamwraths outgrabe,"
-I knew quite well that borrogoves was the correct litany, but I
-preferred borrow-groves; so borrow-groves it was. "One two, one two
-and through and through the vorpel blade went snicker snack. He left
-it dead and with its head he went galumphing back," and I would make
-that "snicker snack" all slow and creepy, like Captain Hook; and would
-rise to a triumphant roar as I announced the fact that he "galumphed"
-back, in preference to any other form of locomotion that might have
-been available, glorying at his ability to resist temptations such
-as taxi-cabbing, taking the tube, or walking, and, above all, the
-insidious run.
-
- "_If_ you can make one heap of all your winnings,
- And risk it on one turn of pitch and toss,
- And lose; and start again at your beginnings,
- And never breathe a word about your loss."
-
-_If_ (and I shouted as if I was praying for life itself)
-
- "_If_ you can force your heart, and nerve, and sinew
- To serve their turn, long after they are gone,
- And so hold on, when there is nothing in you,
- Except the will, which says to them, 'hold on.'"
-
-And I would repeat it softly to myself, until loudly again, pacing
-madly up and down the cell, I would argue, "Yes, that's all very well,
-you know, but your will is the very thing that suffers before your
-heart and nerve and sinew are anywhere near gone. Why, it's the very
-base, the very foundation of all things, that it attacked, and then
-what are you going to do, Mr. Rudyard?" Nevertheless, I found an odd
-sort of comfort, and they were nearly always my prayer to the setting
-sun as the darkness stole in.
-
-I also used to hum, whistle, and sing. This was strictly forbidden by
-one of the thirty-three regulations pasted on the back of the door. One
-night in December, when the darkness had been extra oppressive,--I was
-in darkness for eighteen out of the twenty-four hours--and I had been
-singing loud enough for the warders to hear, one came up and, rapping
-on the door, said that such behaviour was forbidden, nevertheless,
-he would ask the Herr Direktor as an especial favour, if I might be
-permitted to whistle occasionally. This is what comes of being the
-oldest inhabitant of a jail. The next day there was solemnly filled
-into the ledger by the chief warder, and countersigned by the Direktor,
-"Erlaubnis zu nummer acht und fünfzig zu singen und zu pfeifen."[5]
-
-
-III--IN A CELL AT THE STADT VOGTEI
-
-I shall never forget the day on which, after thirteen weeks, in
-January, 1915, I left prison--to go to another. Nothing, I was
-convinced, could be more of a living Hell than those thirteen weeks at
-the Polizeigefängnis. I was escorted out into the street. There was
-snow upon the pavements: it had been summer when I saw them last. Our
-route lay round the corner. Here, after passing through a low door in
-an immensely thick wall, once again I found myself in an atmosphere,
-not merely of red tape, but of the very essence from which tape,
-and redness, are made. Those innumerable bureaux: those ticketings,
-docketings, searching of clothes, etc., occupied a couple of hours,
-until I found myself in a bright and beautiful cell thirteen feet by
-six. This was the famous Stadt Vogtei prison. "Vogtei," literally
-translated, means a bailiff's office, but why a prison should be called
-"The City Bailiff's Office," or why the city bailiff's office should be
-a prison, I am at a loss to say.
-
-Notwithstanding the bailiff, it was quite a good prison. Large numbers
-of English people--five to six hundred in all--had been here before
-they were sent to Ruhleben "for purposes of quarantine" as the official
-report says. It was a gentleman's prison; it was intended for those who
-had sentences for minor offences to serve, e.g. two to three months.
-But this did not frighten me, as I knew of its character as a depot
-for Ruhleben. I was full of hope. We had two meals of skilly a day
-instead of one. I was allowed to talk to the others during the two
-hours' exercise they were good enough to allow, and I could buy almost
-anything I wanted--bar newspapers.
-
-I had another experience here that nearly killed me. There was the
-usual shelf for bowl, spoon, etc., and from the side hung a fat little
-book with one hundred and thirty-three rules. It contained all the
-punishments for all the various main crimes, worked out in permutations
-and combinations. Things such as "for not cleaning out of the cell
-for the first time the prisoner is to be punished by the three days'
-withdrawal of the midday hot meal, or instead one day withdrawal of the
-hot meal, and a second day withdrawal of the cold meal (breakfast), or,
-in lieu thereof.... In addition to which ... or as an alternative ...
-in substitute thereof.... But for the second offence, or dirtiness of
-a second degree, or unpunctuality of the third degree, or noise of the
-twentieth degree, the prisoner shall be punished by withdrawal of ...
-whereof ... in lieu of this can be subtituted ..." etc. etc.
-
-On the outside of this little fat book with its one hundred and
-thirty-three rules was a diagram of the shelf from which it hung,
-showing exactly in what order the washing bowl, the eating bowl, the
-spoon, the fork, the soap were to be placed. And not merely was there a
-front view, but also two side views were given: one showing the side of
-the shelf with one towel hanging somnolently from a nail, and the other
-side view showing the other end of the shelf with the booklet itself
-hanging even more somnolently from another nail. But yes, there was
-something more: for not merely was there a picture of the booklet, but
-the picture of the booklet had the picture of the booklet pasted on the
-booklet's cover, and, what is more, the side which bore this diagram
-faced outwards, and the right-hand top corner was against the wall.
-Thus was it according to the picture. But it so happened that this was
-impossible, for the two were incompatible. Either the picture had to
-face inwards, or the left-hand top corner must touch the wall. But both
-together was contrary to the nature of the book. Feeling rather jolly
-at my new environment, I pointed this out to the jailer, who wasn't a
-bad sort of fellow, when he came in. At first he didn't grasp it, but
-when he did, he took serious note of it with pen and ink. Next day,
-in came the prison governor, a military-looking fellow, and he went
-straight to the booklet at the side of the cupboard, and examining the
-diagram on the cover, studied the incompatibility carefully for a long
-time. He turned round, and after looking whimsically at me, and then at
-the warder for some time, as if trying to make up his mind as to who
-was the biggest fool, said, "H'm," very definitely, and went away.
-
-Alas, I only remained here five days. I had hardly finished breakfast
-when the warder came round with a list and said I was to "pack
-up," though, since I had nothing to pack, his orders were rather
-superfluous. Again weary hours of waiting in the bureau, and then, for
-the first time in my life, I saw the inside of Black Maria.
-
-I had imagined it to have cells all the way down the side, but
-there were only two. There were seven of us, including a woman and
-a policeman. Heaven knows what the woman was "in" for, and though I
-several times formulated the question mentally, I could never manage
-to get it out. The policeman was quite a nice fellow, and let us talk,
-and joined in himself with an air of a busy man sparing a moment to
-play with some children. It soon became plain that one of the men was
-the woman's husband, or ought to have been if he wasn't. The others
-were gentlemen, sentenced for petty offences, who were being taken to
-the town hall to be enlisted in the army. They did not seem to relish
-the prospect, but "at any rate," they said, "it would be a change." I
-looked through the grille to see what I could of Berlin streets. There
-were not many people on them, and the greater number were women and
-in black, but the quietness of the place was nothing to what I was
-to see later. There were a few luxury-selling shops, such as flower
-sellers, that were closed, but the majority seemed able to get along.
-That Teutonic spectacle, extraordinary but obviously sensible, of
-women going about without hats could be seen everywhere. And then we
-suddenly drove into the inevitable yard. Two gates unbarred and locked
-themselves automatically as one passed.
-
-
-IV--"MY THIRD PRISON--MOABIT: CELL 1603"
-
-It was the great prison--Moabit. A huge central hall surmounted by a
-dome, with wings going in all directions and the end of each wing
-connected by another great building, each with six storeys of cells,
-and each of these with its iron balcony with glass flooring. There
-was noise, and clanging of doors everywhere. I was told to stand at
-the commencement of one of the wings, just off the dome. There was a
-huge clock, and I noticed it had a bell attached to it. At any rate,
-I thought, I shall hear the hour strike. The number of my cell, I
-can remember it now, was 1603, "the year Queen Elizabeth died," I
-remarked to myself, as it was unlocked, and I went in. It was a larger
-cell than I had hitherto had--about fourteen feet by six. There was
-electric light and a table and seat that folded down from the wall.
-The window was, as usual, above my head, but this time it was made of
-frosted glass. There was a horrid suggestion of permanency about the
-place that made me feel rather bad. I asked the warder who gave me
-my prison underclothing--I was allowed to keep my own suit--whether
-one was always in solitary here, and for how long one came. "Immer
-im einzelhaft"--always in solitary,--and for three to four months
-and upward, he said. "Never less?" I asked. "No, never," he replied.
-"Come with me," he continued, and I was taken down into the very
-bowels of this terrible edifice, till, finally, I joined a vast squad
-of criminals. He left me. We then filed down devious passages once
-more, and finally were led into a vast room with about two hundred
-and seventy showers in it. When bathed, I was locked into a large,
-bare cellar just opposite, and here I was soon joined by two others,
-one an elderly middle-aged man of about fifty-six, and the other an
-evil-looking devil of about thirty-four. They sat down on the bench.
-I was walking up and down. They were an interesting couple. They
-were about to be examined by an Untersuchungsrichter, or examining
-magistrate, and the younger one was coaching the other in what to say.
-The elder seemed too numbed to agree or disagree, though he seemed to
-have a tendency towards the truth, which the other promptly suppressed,
-but just sat there, his hands on his knees, seemingly deaf. Once the
-younger strode up to him threateningly as if to hit him. He ground his
-teeth and swore that by God, if the old man were to say that he'd ----.
-Then he tried a different tack; he argued, he elucidated, he showed the
-simplicity of his ideas, and how, above all, it would help themselves.
-
-When the young one became bellicose I had felt no inclination to help
-the old man. Why, I knew not. I think I felt that nothing, least of all
-truth, should stand in the way of man's salvation from that place, and
-that if the old man hadn't got enough gumption to tell what seemed to
-be a few well-concocted lies, well, he ought to be made to, since it
-involved the fate of the younger man, who was not yet reduced to the
-state of an incapacitated jelly. It was the same old story: Fate had
-beaten the old man, but had not succeeded in persuading the young one
-that he also was beaten; the young one refused to acknowledge it. It
-was blind instinct that told him to lie, though he knew with clever
-lawyers against him, and, worst of all opponents, the law, the chances
-of his getting through to freedom were remote. I had noticed hitherto
-that it was always the young men who felt the strain most, seemed most
-conscious of the inhuman cruelty of prison, and I was to find out later
-that it was generally the young ones who recovered easiest. Sometimes
-the older ones don't recover. A man I was to meet later was afflicted
-with sudden decay of the optic nerve, and is now gradually going blind,
-purely as a result of solitary.
-
-The door opened suddenly, and they were taken out, and as they passed
-me I saw the younger and villainous one look at the old man, in a
-manner in which threats, prayers, and above all, the desire to instil
-the wish to live were all inexpressibly mixed. They passed. I never saw
-them again. I often wonder where they are. There are lots like them.
-
-I was taken back to my cell. I was now sinking fast. I saw little hopes
-of recovery. I was quickly becoming a broken-down creature, and though
-physically I should have lasted out for years, mentally I saw there was
-a crash not far ahead. I had seen it happen with other men before. As
-it was, mentally I was fast becoming a species of cow. I would stand
-for hours at a time, leaning my head into the corner, my hands in my
-pockets, staring at the floor. I would find that for hours I had been
-saying to myself "My dear sir"--I always called myself "my dear sir"
-when talking out loud,--"you really must make an effort to get out. I
-mean it's simply too stupid to spend the best years of your life in a
-box like this. Use your wits. Do something. Go on, you juggins, get
-out somewhere. Think!" and so on, from twelve till three. I became
-absolutely impersonal, and found it difficult to have likes and
-dislikes about anything. I absolutely forgot what flowers smelt like.
-Milk I could not imagine. Fruit, tobacco, fish, were mere names to me.
-I had forgotten what they were. I could not understand the meaning of
-the term "red."
-
-Though I longed to be free, I felt that human beings would be perfectly
-unbearable. I no longer considered myself as one. I felt perfectly
-decorporealised: I was merely a mind contemplative and a poor one at
-that. And yet I longed for their company. I still kept up my nightly
-habit of repeating a few verses from any poem I could remember, and
-after the light had gone out--for here there was electric light--I
-would rise solemnly in the dark, and make the most fiery speeches to
-the Cambridge Union--poor Cambridge Union. I would then proceed to
-oppose my own motion, pick holes in it, show up the proposer as an
-impostor and a charlatan. A seconder would then arise, who with all
-the sarcasm of a Voltaire would rend the immediate speaker adjective
-from substantive, verb from adverb, until quivering with the laceration
-received, the latter would be thrown, a bleeding proposition, into the
-waste deserts of verbosity.
-
-
-V--GHASTLY HOURS UNDER GERMAN BRUTALITY
-
-It was just about this time that I nearly got myself shot for attempted
-murder. I was so used to the darkness that I found electric light
-rather trying to the eyes, and therefore turned the racket upwards
-toward the ceiling in order to have but reflected light. A little
-later in came the warder. He saw the upturned bracket, and lifting
-the hilt of his sword, hit me sharply over the head. In a flash I was
-on him. I had raised my fists on each side for a smashing blow on his
-temples. He was unable to get away, for he was so short that my arms
-could have nailed him as he tried. He saw there was no escape, and the
-sight of my face blazing with fury and wretchedness made him drop his
-sword. I relished that moment, I gloated over it. I kept my fists going
-backwards and forwards nearly touching his temples, but never quite.
-I tried to imagine the agony in his rabbit-like mind, waiting for the
-crushing blow to fall upon him, and wondering what it would feel like.
-Suddenly he turned a sickly green. His hat was knocked all on one side.
-I saw beneath his uniform a fat little vulgar bourgeois, incapable of a
-thought outside the satisfying of his own senses. He turned from green
-to a pasty yellow. He glanced piteously up into my distorted face.
-I drove him back towards the door, growling and hissing at him, my
-fists going like a steam hammer on each side of his head. His agony
-became worse. His eyes flew from one side to the other, like a rabbit
-looking for escape. His little pointed flaxen beard wobbled and, such
-was his panic, so did his stomach. Suddenly my mind changed, and taking
-him by the shoulders, and putting my knee, as far as it was possible,
-into his belly, I pushed him backwards, and he sat down violently and
-disconsolately in the passage outside, his sword underneath him, and
-his hat rolling away into the darkness. I slammed the door, and after
-a time he got up and locked it. I knew nothing would happen to me, for
-he was not permitted to hit me, but had I hit him back, I gasp to think
-of the number of years I should now be doing.
-
-This, the third prison I had been in, was the worst. Physically it was
-slightly better: there was more space, light, two good meals a day, but
-the very last drop of individuality was taken away from you. It was not
-permitted even to arrange the bowls on the shelf as you liked. I never
-saw daylight, for our exercise took place at half-past six in the dark.
-It was now the 20th of January. I had been arrested in the early days
-of October. Since then I had been residing in a lavatory. I found it
-dull.
-
-Despite the warder's announcement that nobody ever came there for less
-than three or four months, I was suddenly taken away again after five
-days, and Black Maria drove me back once more to the Polizeigefängnis
-of the Alexanderplatz. I was too miserable by now to care where I was
-sent or what they did to me. I was beginning to lose the power of
-appreciating anything--whatever its nature. I found some new arrivals
-at Alexanderplatz. The place was full as usual with neutrals who were
-under suspicion: Dutch, Swedes and Danes. One Dutchman had been there
-for seven weeks in solitary. I was just reaching the final depths of
-despair when, one night, just as I had got my first foot into bed, the
-door was flung open, and into the gloom a voice shouted "'raus."[6] I
-"raused" timidly and in my nightshirt, and was told to dress quickly. I
-did so, surmising I was to go to another prison. I began to feel quite
-numb, and I no longer hoped for anything. Downstairs in the bureau a
-very pleasant policeman took charge of me, and after having signed the
-receipts for the acceptance of my carcase, he made the usual remark,
-"Kommen Sie mit," and off we went. I thought it odd that we should go
-alone: they usually fetch the criminals in batches. "Where are we going
-to?" I asked. "Ruhleben," he said.
-
-
-VI--ON THE ROAD TO RUHLEBEN PRISON
-
-For a moment I could hardly feel. I hardly dared feel. I just breathed
-quietly to myself, and thought how nice the air tasted. I was going to
-see human beings again. For a time the words were rather meaningless,
-and then I gradually began to revive under their warmth. We went out
-into the street to the Alexanderplatz station. I had a fine opportunity
-to run away here, though I should have been a fool to have done so,
-and to have invited prison again. In any case, I had no glasses with
-me, and I was very short-sighted. We had gone up on to the platform,
-and I was chuckling and giggling like a schoolgirl at seeing life once
-again, when the policeman discovered it was the wrong one. "Run," he
-said, "there's our train over there." I ran like a leopard. In ten
-bounds I had slipped through the crowd and had lost him. I ran on
-down the stairs, and into the street. How glorious it all seemed, and
-I roared aloud with laughter, at which a sallow-faced woman in black
-seemed offended and turned round to stare. I rushed on, up the other
-set of stairs and in time my captor appeared. The idea of bolting had
-just entered my head and flown, but "no," I said, "wait till we get to
-Ruhleben, and have got tired of that, then we'll see what can be done."
-
-Meanwhile, I stared out into the darkness from the brightly-lit
-carriage as we steamed through the suburbs of Berlin. I got a glimpse
-of a tiny room, in which numbers of steaming dishevelled women were
-crowded together bending over machines and needlework. They were being
-sweated. That was their daily life. They too, lived in what was really
-a prison, though no law stopped them roaming whence they would. I was
-in the world once more....
-
-(The prisoner relates numerous stories of his experiences, of which
-the above is but a single instance. He describes the prison; how it
-feels waiting to be shot; the impressions of a lunatic on release
-from solitary confinement and his daring escape with Mr. Edward Falk,
-District Commissioner in the Political Service of Nigeria.)
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[2] All numerals relate to stories herein told--not to chapters from
-original sources.
-
-[3] "That is impossible."
-
-[4] "Please, Herr Direktor, may I write a letter?"
-
-[5] "Permit to Number 58 to sing and to whistle."
-
-[6] "Out!"
-
-
-
-
-AN AMERICAN AT BATTLE OF THE SOMME WITH FRENCH ARMY
-
-_Army Life With the Soldiers Along the Somme_
-
-_Told by Frederick Palmer, American War Correspondent_
-
- Mr. Palmer was the only accredited correspondent who had freedom
- of the field in the Battles of the Somme. At the time of this
- writing he has been officially appointed as a member of the staff
- of General Pershing, with the American Armies in France. This
- American has become a world figure. His life has been spent on the
- battlefields of the modern wars: The Greek War, the Philippine
- War, the Macedonian Insurrection, the Central American Wars, the
- Russian-Japanese War, the Turkish Revolution, the Balkan Wars. At
- the beginning of the Great War, he was with the British army and
- fleet. His descriptions of the fighting are unsurpassed in the
- war's literature--it is "the epic touch of great events." He has
- made a notable historical record in his book entitled "My Second
- Year of the War," in which he presents graphic pictures of the
- grim fighting along the Somme, with admirable descriptions of the
- heroism of the Canadians, the Australians and the fighters from all
- parts of the Earth, who are giving their lives "to make the world
- safe for Democracy." A single chapter from Mr. Palmer's book is
- here reproduced by permission of his publishers, _Dodd, Mead and
- Company_: Copyright 1917.
-
-[7] I--STORY OF THE BATTLE RIDGE ON THE SOMME
-
-Sometimes it occurred to one to consider what history might say about
-the Ridge and also to wonder how much history, which pretends to know
-all, would really know. Thus, one sought perspective of the colossal
-significance of the uninterrupted battle whose processes numbed
-the mind and to distinguish the meaning of different stages of the
-struggle. Nothing had so well reflected the character of the war or
-of its protagonists, French, British and German, as this grinding of
-resources, of courage, and of will of three powerful races.
-
-... It is historically accepted, I think, that the first decisive
-phase was the battle of the Marne when Paris was saved. The second was
-Verdun, when the Germans again sought a decision on the Western front
-by an offensive of sledge-hammer blows against frontal positions; and,
-perhaps, the third came when on the Ridge the British and the French
-kept up their grim, insistent, piece-meal attacks, holding the enemy
-week in and week out on the defensive, aiming at mastery as the scales
-trembled in the new turn of the balance and initiative passed from one
-side to the other in the beginning of that new era.
-
-This scarred slope with its gentle ascent, this section of farming land
-with its woods growing more ragged every day from shell fire, with its
-daily and nightly thunders, its trickling procession of wounded and
-prisoners down the communication trenches speaking the last word in
-human bravery, industry, determination and endurance--this might one
-day be not only the monument to the positions of all the battalions
-that had fought, its copses, its villages, its knolls famous to future
-generations as in Little Round Top with us, but in its monstrous
-realism be an immortal expression, unrealized by those who fought, of a
-commander's iron will and foresight in gaining that supremacy in arms,
-men and material which was the genesis of the great decision.
-
-The German began drawing away divisions from the Verdun sector,
-bringing guns to answer the British and French fire and men whose
-prodigal use alone could enforce his determination to maintain _morale_
-and prevent any further bold strokes such as that of July (1916).
-
-His sausage balloons began to reappear in the sky as the summer
-wore on; he increased the number of his aeroplanes; more of his
-five-point-nine howitzers were sending their compliments; he stretched
-out his shell fire over communication trenches and strong points;
-mustered great quantities of lachrymatory shells and for the first
-time used gas shells with a generosity which spoke his faith in their
-efficacy. The lachrymatory shell makes your eyes smart, and the Germans
-apparently considered this a great auxiliary to high explosives and
-shrapnel. Was it because of the success of the first gas attack at
-Ypres that they now placed such reliance in gas shells? The shell when
-it lands seems a "dud," which is a shell that has failed to explode;
-then it blows out a volume of gas.
-
-"If one hit right under your nose," said a soldier, "and you hadn't
-your gas mask on, it might kill you. But when you see one fall
-you don't run to get a sniff in order to accommodate the Boche by
-asphyxiating yourself."
-
-Another soldier suggested that the Germans had a big supply on hand and
-were working off the stock for want of other kinds. The British who by
-this time were settled in the offensive joked about the deluge of gas
-shells with a gallant, amazing humor. Going up to the Ridge was going
-to their regular duty. They did not shirk it or hail it with delight.
-They simply went, that was all, when it was a battalion's turn to go.
-
-
-II--GUNNERS IN THE FURNACE OF WAR
-
-July heat became August heat as the grinding proceeded. The gunners
-worked in their shirts or stripped to the waist. Sweat streaks mapped
-the faces of the men who came out of the trenches. Stifling clouds of
-dust hung over the roads, with the trucks phantom-like as they emerged
-from the gritty mist and their drivers' eyes peered out of masks of
-gray which clung to their faces. A fall of rain comes as a blessing
-to Briton and German alike. German prisoners worn with exhaustion had
-complexions the tint of their uniforms. If the British seemed weary
-sometimes, one had only to see the prisoners to realize that the
-defensive was suffering more than the offensive. The fatigue of some of
-the men was of the kind that one week's sleep or a month's rest will
-not cure; something fixed in their beings.
-
-It was a new kind of fighting for the Germans. They smarted under it,
-they who had been used to the upper hand. In the early stages of the
-war their artillery had covered their well-ordered charges; they had
-been killing the enemy with gunfire. Now the Allies were returning the
-compliment; the shoe was on the other foot. A striking change, indeed,
-from "On to Paris!" the old battle-cry of leaders who had now come to
-urge these men to the utmost of endurance and sacrifice by telling them
-that if they did not hold against the relentless hammering of British
-and French guns what had been done to French villages would be done to
-their own.
-
-Prisoners spoke of peace as having been promised as close at hand by
-their officers. In July the date had been set as Sept. 1st. Later, it
-was set as Nov. 1st. The German was as a swimmer trying to reach shore,
-in this case peace, with the assurance of those who urged him on that a
-few more strokes would bring him there. Thus have armies been urged on
-for years.
-
-Those fighting did not have, as had the prisoners, their eyes opened
-to the vast preparations behind the British lines to carry on the
-offensive. Mostly the prisoners were amiable, peculiarly unlike the
-proud men taken in the early days of the war when confidence in their
-"system" as infallible was at its height. Yet there were exceptions. I
-saw an officer marching at the head of the survivors of his battalion
-along the road from Montauban one day with his head up, a cigar stuck
-in the corner of his mouth at an aggressive angle, his unshaven chin
-and dusty clothes heightening his attitude of "You go to ----, you
-English!"
-
-The hatred of the British was a strengthening factor in the defense.
-Should they, the Prussians, be beaten by New Army men? No! Die first!
-said Prussian officers. The German staff might be as good as ever, but
-among the mixed troops--the old and the young, the hollow-chested and
-the square-shouldered, mouth-breathers with spectacles and bent fathers
-of families, vigorous boys in their late 'teens with the down still
-on their cheeks and hardened veterans survivors of many battles east
-and west--they were reverting appreciably to natural human tendencies
-despite the iron discipline.
-
-It was Skobeloff, if I recollect rightly, who said that out of every
-hundred men twenty were natural fighters, sixty were average men who
-would fight under impulse or when well led, and twenty were timid;
-and armies were organized on the basis of the sixty average to make
-them into a whole of even efficiency in action. The German staff had
-supplied supreme finesse to this end. They had an army that was a
-machine; yet its units were flesh and blood and the pounding of shell
-fire and the dogged fighting on the Ridge must have an effect.
-
-It became apparent through those two months of piece-meal advance that
-the sixty average men were not as good as they had been. The twenty
-"funk-sticks," in army phrase, were given to yielding themselves if
-they were without an officer, but the twenty natural fighters--well,
-human psychology does not change. They were the type that made the
-professional armies of other days, the brigands, too, and also those of
-every class of society to whom patriotic duty had become an exaltation
-approaching fanaticism. More fighting made them fight harder.
-
-
-III--DEAD BODIES STRAPPED TO GUNS
-
-Such became members of the machine-gun corps, which took an oath
-never to surrender, and led bombing parties and posted themselves in
-shell-craters to face the charges while shells fell thick around them,
-or remained up in the trench taking their chances against curtains
-of fire that covered an infantry charge, in the hope of being able
-to turn on their own bullet spray for a moment before being killed.
-Sometimes their dead bodies were found strapped to their guns, more
-often probably by their own request, as an insurance against deserting
-their posts, than by command.
-
-Shell fire was the theatricalism of the struggle, the roar of guns its
-thunder; but night or day the sound of the staccato of that little arch
-devil of killing, the machine gun, coming from the Ridge seemed as true
-an expression of what was always going on there as a rattlesnake's
-rattle is of its character. Delville and High Woods and Guillemont
-and Longueval and the Switch Trench--these are symbolic names of that
-attrition, of the heroism of British persistence which would not take
-No for answer.
-
-You might think that you had seen ruins until you saw those of
-Guillemont after it was taken. They were the granulation of bricks and
-mortar and earth mixed by the blasts of shell fire which crushed solids
-into dust and splintered splinters. Guillemont lay beyond Trônes Wood
-across an open space where the German guns had full play. There was a
-stone quarry on the outskirts, and a quarry no less than a farm like
-Waterlot, which was to the northward, and Falfemont, to the southward
-and flanking the village, formed shelter. It was not much of a quarry,
-but it was a hole which would be refuge for reserves and machine guns.
-The two farms, clear targets for British guns, had their deep dugouts
-whose roofs were reinforced by the ruins that fell upon them against
-penetration even by shells of large caliber. How the Germans fought to
-keep Falfemont! Once they sent out a charge with the bayonet to meet a
-British charge between walls of shell fire and there through the mist
-the steel was seen flashing and vague figures wrestling.
-
-Guillemont and the farms won and Ginchy which lay beyond won and the
-British had their flank of high ground. Twice they were in Guillemont
-but could not remain, though as usual they kept some of their gains. It
-was a battle from dugout to dugout, from shelter to shelter of any kind
-burrowed in the débris or in fields, with the British never ceasing
-here or elsewhere to continue their pressure. And the débris of a
-village had particular appeal; it yielded to the spade; its piles gave
-natural cover.
-
-
-IV--THE ARTILLERYMEN IN THE WOODS
-
-A British soldier returning from one of the attacks as he hobbled
-through Trônes Wood expressed to me the essential generalship of the
-battle. He was outwardly as unemotional as if he were coming home from
-his day's work, respectful and good-humored, though he had a hole in
-both arms from machine-gun fire, a shrapnel wound in the heel, and
-seemed a trifle resentful of the added tribute of another shrapnel
-wound in his shoulder after he had left the firing-line and was on his
-way to the casualty clearing station. Insisting that he could lift the
-cigarette I offered him to his lips and light it, too, he said:
-
-"We've only to keep at them, sir. They'll go."
-
-So the British kept at them and so did the French at every point. Was
-Delville Wood worse than High Wood? This is too nice a distinction in
-torments to be drawn. Possess either of them completely and command
-of the Ridge in that section was won. The edge of a wood on the side
-away from your enemy was the easiest part to hold. It is difficult to
-range artillery on it because of restricted vision, and the enemy's
-shells aimed at it strike the trees and burst prematurely among his own
-men. Other easy, relatively easy, places to hold are the dead spaces
-of gullies and ravines. There you were out of fire and there you were
-not; there you could hold and there you could not. Machine-gun fire and
-shell fire were the arbiters of topography more dependable than maps.
-
-Why all the trees were not cut down by the continual bombardments of
-both sides was past understanding. There was one lone tree on the
-skyline near Longueval which I had watched for weeks. It still had a
-limb, yes, the luxury of a limb, the last time I saw it, pointing with
-a kind of defiance in its immunity. Of course it had been struck many
-times. Bits of steel were imbedded in its trunk; but only a direct hit
-on the trunk will bring down a tree. Trees may be slashed and whittled
-and nicked and gashed and still stand; and when villages have been
-pulverized except for the timbering of the houses, a scarred shade tree
-will remain.
-
-Thus, trees in Delville Wood survived, naked sticks among fallen
-and splintered trunks and upturned roots. How any man could have
-survived was the puzzling thing. None could if he had remained there
-continuously and exposed himself; but man is the most cunning of
-animals. With gas mask and eye-protectors ready, steel helmet on his
-head and his faithful spade to make himself a new hole whenever he
-moved, he managed the incredible in self-protection. Earth piled back
-of a tree-trunk would stop bullets and protect his body from shrapnel.
-There he lay and there a German lay opposite him, except when attacks
-were being made.
-
-Not getting the northern edge of the woods the British began sapping
-out in trenches to the east toward Ginchy, where the many contours
-showed the highest ground in that neighborhood. New lines of trenches
-kept appearing on the map, often with group names such as Coffee Alley,
-Tea Lane and Beer Street, perhaps. Out in the open along the irregular
-plateau the shells were no more kindly, the bombing and the sapping
-no less diligent all the way to the windmill, where the Australians
-were playing the same kind of a game. With the actual summit gained at
-certain points, these had to be held pending the taking of the whole,
-or of enough to permit a wave of men to move forward in a general
-attack without its line being broken by the resistance of strong
-points, which meant confusion.
-
-
-V--STALKING A MACHINE GUN IN ITS LAIR
-
-Before any charge the machine guns must be "killed." No initiative
-of pioneer or Indian scout surpassed that exhibited in conquering
-machine-gun positions. When a big game hunter tells you about having
-stalked tigers, ask him if he has ever stalked a machine gun to its
-lair.
-
-As for the nature of the lair, here is one where a Briton "dug himself
-in" to be ready to repulse any counter-attack to recover ground that
-the British had just won. Some layers of sandbags are sunk level
-with the earth with an excavation back of them large enough for a
-machine-gun standard and to give the barrel swing and for the gunner,
-who back of this had dug himself a well four or five feet deep of
-sufficient diameter to enable him to huddle at the bottom in "stormy
-weather." He was general and army, too, of this little establishment.
-In the midst of shells and trench mortars, with bullets whizzing around
-his head, he had to keep a cool aim and make every pellet which he
-poured out of his muzzle count against the wave of men coming toward
-him who were at his mercy if he could remain alive for a few minutes
-and keep his head.
-
-He must not reveal his position before his opportunity came. All around
-where this Briton had held the fort there were shell-craters like the
-dots of close shooting around a bull's-eye; no tell-tale blood spots
-this time, but a pile of two or three hundred cartridge cases lying
-where they had fallen as they were emptied of their cones of lead. Luck
-was with the occupant, but not with another man playing the same game
-not far away. Broken bits of gun and fragments of cloth mixed with
-earth explained the fate of a German machine gunner who had emplaced
-his piece in the same manner.
-
-Before a charge, crawl up at night from shell-crater to shell-crater
-and locate the enemy's machine guns. Then, if your own guns and the
-trench mortars do not get them, go stalking with supplies of bombs and
-remember to throw yours before the machine gunner, who also has a stock
-for such emergencies, throws his. When a machine gun begins rattling
-into a company front in a charge the men drop for cover, while officers
-consider how to draw the devil's tusks. Arnold von Winkelried, who
-gathered the spears to his breast to make a path for his comrades, won
-his glory because the fighting forces were small in his day. But with
-such enormous forces as are now engaged and with heroism so common, we
-make only an incident of the officer who went out to silence a machine
-gun and was found lying dead across the gun with the gunner dead beside
-him.
-
-
-VI--TALKS WITH THE MEN IN THE REAR
-
-The advance on the map at our quarters extended as the brief army
-reports were read into the squares every morning by the key of figures
-and numerals with a detail that included every little trench, every
-copse, every landmark, and then we chose where we would go that day.
-At corps headquarters there were maps with still more details and
-officers would explain the previous day's work to us. Every wood and
-village, every viewpoint, we knew, and every casualty clearing station
-and prisoners' inclosure. At battalion camps within sight of the Ridge
-and within range of the guns, where their blankets helped to make
-shelter from the sun, you might talk with the men out of the fight and
-lunch and chat with the officers who awaited the word to go in again or
-perhaps to hear that their tour was over and they could go to rest in
-Ypres sector, which had become relatively quiet.
-
-They had their letters and packages from home before they slept and
-had written letters in return after waking; and there was nothing to
-do now except to relax and breathe, to renew the vitality that had
-been expended in the fierce work where shells were still threshing the
-earth, which rose in clouds of dust to settle back again in enduring
-passive resistance.
-
-There was much talk early in the war about British cheerfulness; so
-much that officers and men began to resent it as expressing the idea
-that they took such a war as this as a kind of holiday, when it was
-the last thing outside of Hades that any sane man would choose. It
-was a question in my own mind at times if Hades would not have been a
-pleasant change. Yet the characterization is true, peculiarly true,
-even in the midst of the fighting on the Ridge. Cheerfulness takes
-the place of emotionalism as the armor against hardship and death;
-a good-humored balance between exhilaration and depression which
-meets smile with smile and creates an atmosphere superior to all
-vicissitudes. Why should we be downhearted? Why, indeed, when it does
-no good. Not "Merrie England!" War is not a merry business; but an
-Englishman may be cheerful for the sake of self and comrades.
-
-Of course, these battalions, officers and men, would talk about when
-the war would be over. Even the Esquimaux must have an opinion on the
-subject by this time. That of the men who make the war, whose lives are
-the lives risked, was worth more, perhaps, than that of people living
-thousands of miles away; for it is they who are doing the fighting,
-who will stop fighting. To them it would be over when it was won.
-The time this would require varied with different men--one year, two
-years; and again they would turn satirical and argue whether the sixth
-or the seventh year would be the worst. And they talked shop about
-the latest wrinkles in fighting; how best to avoid having men buried
-by shell-bursts; the value of gas and lachrymatory shells; the ratio
-of high explosives to shrapnel; methods of "cleaning out" dugouts or
-"doing in" machine guns, all in a routine that had become an accepted
-part of life like the details of the stock carried and methods of
-selling in a department store.
-
-Indelible the memories of these talks, which often brought out
-illustrations of racial temperament. One company was more horrified
-over having found a German tied to a trench _parados_ to be killed by
-British shell fire as a field punishment than by the horrors of other
-men equally mashed and torn, or at having crawled over the moist bodies
-of the dead, or slept among them, or been covered with spatters of
-blood and flesh--for that incident struck home with a sense of brutal
-militarism which was the thing in their minds against which they were
-fighting.
-
-
-VII--WITH STEEL HELMETS AND GAS MASKS
-
-With steel helmets on and gas masks over our shoulders, we would leave
-our car at the dead line and set off to "see something," when now the
-fighting was all hidden in the folds of the ground, or in the woods, or
-lost on the horizon where the front line of either of these two great
-armies, with their immense concentration of men and material and roads
-gorged with transport and thousands of belching guns, was held by a
-few men with machine guns in shell-craters, their positions sometimes
-interwoven. Old hands in the Somme battle become shell-wise. They are
-the ones whom the French call "varnished," which is a way of saying
-that projectiles glance off their anatomy. They keep away from points
-where the enemy will direct his fire as a matter of habit or scientific
-gunnery, and always recollect that the German has not enough shells to
-sow them broadcast over the whole battle area.
-
-It is not an uncommon thing for one to feel quite safe within a couple
-of hundred yards of an artillery concentration. That corner of a
-village, that edge of a shattered grove, that turn in the highway, that
-sunken road--keep away from them! Any kind of trench for shrapnel; lie
-down flat unless a satisfactory dugout is near for protection from
-high explosives which burst in the earth. If you are at the front and a
-curtain of fire is put behind you, wait until it is over or go around
-it. If there is one ahead, wait until another day--provided that you
-are a spectator. Always bear in mind how unimportant you are, how small
-a figure on the great field, and that if every shell fired had killed
-one soldier there would not be an able-bodied man in uniform left alive
-on the continent of Europe. By observing these simple rules you may see
-a surprising amount with a chance of surviving.
-
-One day I wanted to go into the old German dugouts under a formless
-pile of ruins which a British colonel had made his battalion
-headquarters; but I did not want to go enough to persist when I
-understood the situation. Formerly, my idea of a good dugout--and I
-always like to be within striking distance of one--was a cave twenty
-feet deep with a roof of four or five layers of granite, rubble and
-timber; but now I feel more safe if the fragments of a town hall are
-piled on top of this.
-
-The Germans were putting a shell every minute with clockwork regularity
-into the colonel's "happy home" and at intervals four shells in a
-salvo. You had to make a run for it between the shells, and if you did
-not know the exact location of the dugout you might have been hunting
-for it some time. Runners bearing messages took their chances both
-going and coming and two men were hit. The colonel was quite safe
-twenty feet underground with the matting of débris including that of
-a fallen chimney overhead, but he was a most unpopular host. The next
-day he moved his headquarters and not having been considerate enough to
-inform the Germans of the fact they kept on methodically pounding the
-roof of the untenanted premises.
-
-After every battle "promenade" I was glad to step into the car waiting
-at the "dead line," where the chauffeurs frequently had had harder luck
-in being shelled than we had farther forward. Yet I know of no worse
-place to be in than a car when you hear the first growing scream which
-indicates that yours is the neighborhood selected by a German battery
-or two for expending some of its ammunition. When you are in danger you
-like to be on your feet and to possess every one of your faculties. I
-used to put cotton in my ears when I walked through the area of the
-gun positions as some protection to the eardrums from the blasts, but
-always took it out once I was beyond the big calibers, as an acute
-hearing after some experience gave you instant warning of any "krump"
-or five-point-nine coming in your direction, advising you which way to
-dodge and also saving you from unnecessarily running for a dugout if
-the shell were passing well overhead or short.
-
-I was glad, too, when the car left the field quite behind and was
-over the hills in peaceful country. But one never knew. Fifteen miles
-from the front line was not always safe. Once when a sudden outburst
-of fifteen-inch naval shells sent the people of a town to cover and
-scattered fragments over the square, one cut open the back of the
-chauffeur's head just as we were getting into our car.
-
-"Are you going out to be strafed at?" became an inquiry in the mess on
-the order of "Are you going to take an afternoon off for golf to-day?"
-The only time I felt that I could claim any advantage in phlegm over
-my comrades was when I slept through two hours of aerial bombing with
-anti-aircraft guns busy in the neighborhood, which, as I explained, was
-no more remarkable than sleeping in a hotel at home with flat-wheeled
-surface cars and motor horns screeching under your window. A subway
-employee or a traffic policeman in New York ought never to suffer from
-shell-shock if he goes to war.
-
-The account of personal risk which in other wars might make a magazine
-article or a book chapter, once you sat down to write it, melted away
-as your ego was reduced to its proper place in the cosmos. Individuals
-had never been so obscurely atomic. With hundreds of thousands
-fighting, personal experience was valuable only as it expressed that of
-the whole. Each story brought back to the mess was much like others,
-thrilling for the narrator and repetition for the polite listener,
-except it was some officer fresh from the communication trench who
-brought news of what was going on in that day's work.
-
-Thus, the battle had become static; its incidents of a kind like the
-product of some mighty mill. The public, falsely expecting that the
-line would be broken, wanted symbols of victory in fronts changing on
-the map and began to weary of the accounts. It was the late Charles A.
-Dana who is credited with saying: "If a dog bites a man it is not news,
-but if a man bites a dog it is."
-
-Let the men attack with hatchets and in evening dress and this would
-win all the headlines in the land because people at their breakfast
-tables would say: "Here is something new in the war!" Men killing men
-was not news, but a battalion of trained bloodhounds sent out to bite
-the Germans would have been. I used to try to hunt down some of the
-"novelties" which received the favor of publication, but though they
-were well known abroad the man in the trenches had heard nothing about
-them.
-
-Bullets, shells, bayonets and bombs remained the tried and practical
-methods there on the Ridge with its overpowering drama, any act of
-which almost any day was greater than Spionkop or Magersfontein which
-thrilled a world that was not then war-stale; and ever its supreme
-feature was that determination which was like a kind fate in its
-progress of chipping, chipping at a stone foundation that must yield.
-
-
-VIII--VICTORY!--"THE RIDGE IS TAKEN"
-
-The Ridge seeped in one's very existence. You could see it as clearly
-in imagination as in reality, with its horizon under shell-bursts and
-the slope with its maze of burrows and its battered trenches. Into
-those calm army reports association could read many indications: the
-telling fact that the German losses in being pressed off the Ridge were
-as great if not greater than the British, their sufferings worse under
-a heavier deluge of shell fire, the increased skill of the offensive
-and the failure of German counter-attacks after each advance.
-
-No one doubted that the Ridge would be taken and taken it was, or
-all of it that was needed for the drive that was to clean up any
-outstanding points, with its sweep down into the valley. A victory
-this, not to be measured by territory; for in one day's rush more
-ground was gained than in two months of siege. A victory of position,
-of will, of _morale_! Sharpening its steel and wits on enemy steel and
-wits in every kind of fighting, the New Army had proved itself in the
-supreme test of all qualities.
-
-(This American correspondent relates thirty-one remarkable narratives
-of adventure, all of which equal in human interest and historical
-importance, the single narrative given above. He tells about his
-experiences "Forward with the Guns;" "The Brigade that Went Through;"
-"The Storming of Contalmaison;" "The Mastery of the Air;" "The Tanks in
-Action;" "The Harvest of Villages;" "Five Generals and Verdun"--all of
-which are notable historical records.)
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[7] All numerals throughout this volume relate to the stories herein
-told--not to chapters in the original sources.
-
-
-
-
-AN AMERICAN'S EXPERIENCES "INSIDE THE GERMAN EMPIRE"
-
-_Told by Herbert Bayard Swope, an American in Berlin_
-
-
- These experiences and observations inside the German Empire in the
- third year of the War form an invaluable narrative. They have been
- recognized by one of the leading American universities as the most
- important contribution of a journalist to the literature of the
- Great War. Hon. James W. Gerard, American Ambassador to the German
- Empire, says: "The facts and experiences ... (of Herbert Bayard
- Swope), gathered first-hand by the author, whose friendship I
- value and whose professional equipment I admire, form an important
- contribution to contemporaneous history." Mr. Swope says: "My
- volume is based upon a series of articles I wrote for the _New York
- World_, and I am grateful to Mr. Ralph Pulitzer of that paper, for
- permission to use the material in this form." This inspiring book
- is published by _The Century Company_: Copyright, 1917, with whose
- authority this chapter is given.
-
-[8] I--JOURNEYS IN THE SPY-BESIEGED LAND
-
-Germany to-day is a giant fortress completely ringed by besiegers.
-Every man, woman, and child, all the beasts of burden and food, are
-checked and located. The doors have been locked against travelers
-seeking to enter and those seeking to depart. Only in exceptional cases
-are visitors received, and in rarer instances are natives permitted to
-leave.
-
-The police are able at all times to account for every one of the
-population, passport issuance has been made extremely difficult, the
-ordeal of search and inquest at the frontier is severe and thorough,
-interior travel has been sharply restricted, every foot of the border
-is guarded against illegal entry, obstacles have been put in the way
-of mail and telegraph communications, the espionage system has been
-multiplied in efficiency and extent--all for the safety of the empire.
-And because this is the underlying reason for them, the Germans have
-submitted to the restrictions willingly, and, instead of rebelling, aid
-them.
-
-The spy mania that swept over war-ridden Europe two years ago has
-lessened in its visible intensity in Germany, but the precaution
-against spies has been increased. The people have confidence in the
-safeguards against espionage, and so suspicion has been quieted. How
-well this confidence is justified can be attested by any one who has
-been inside the empire in the second year of the war.
-
-A stranger is under observation from the time he enters until he has
-left. The watchfulness is not obtrusive, it is rarely evident; but it
-is always thorough. Within twelve hours of a visitor's arrival he must
-report in person at the nearest police station, and every time he makes
-a railroad journey this operation must be repeated.
-
-When an American undertakes a voyage to Germany, the wheels of the
-imperial Government begin to revolve immediately upon the first
-application for a visé to his passport being made in this country.
-The first question to be answered concerns the applicant's character,
-so that Germany may feel sure he does not purpose to aid or abet her
-enemies; and the second, the actual need of the business that causes
-him to make the trip. Obtaining a passport from the American Government
-is attended by many formalities, and these are renewed when the German
-consul-generals are asked to approve.
-
-Germany insists that a fortnight intervene between the application for
-a visé and the beginning of the trip. This is to enable her officials
-to make the necessary investigations, and then to communicate the facts
-to Berlin and to the traveler's port of arrival.
-
-All travel between America and Germany is through Copenhagen,
-Stockholm, or Rotterdam. From Copenhagen the traveler enters Germany
-through Warnemunde; from Stockholm he enters through Sassnitz; and
-from Rotterdam through Bentheim. Upon his arrival at one of the three
-neutral cities he must begin the proceedings afresh....
-
-Upon arrival at Warnemunde (the methods throughout the empire are
-standardized, and are the same at every other entrance point) the
-travelers are shunted into a long low wooden shed, carrying their hand
-baggage, having previously surrendered the checks for their heavier
-luggage. Upon entering the place they are given numbers, and in return
-surrender their passports to brisk, keen-eyed, non-commissioned
-officers, whose efficiency has been increased by long practice.
-
-
-II--"SEARCHED" BY THE SECRET POLICE
-
-Once in the room, the travelers are not permitted to leave except
-through one door, and that they pass only when their numbers are
-called. Barred windows and armed sentries prevent any trifling with
-this system. The numbers are called one by one except in the case of
-husbands and wives, who are permitted to go through together--and when
-this is reached, the traveler passes through into a second office,
-where he is questioned as to his identity and the photographs on the
-passports are verified.
-
-While he is undergoing this questioning he is being overheard and
-carefully watched by numbers of the _geheim-Polizei_ (secret police),
-some of whom are in uniform and others of whom masquerade in civilian
-attire as new arrivals. If there is any error in his papers it is
-developed at this point, and he is at once turned about and sent back
-to Copenhagen. But if it is a case of _alles in Ordnung_ (everything in
-order), it is so reported, and he is ushered into another room, where,
-having passed the first two inquisitorial chambers, he is submitted to
-the grand ordeal, that of search.
-
-And what a search it is! Unless one's credentials are exceptionally
-strong, one is stripped and one's mouth, ears, nose, and other parts
-of the body examined. One's fountain pen is emptied, every piece of
-paper taken away, including visiting cards, and even match-boxes are
-confiscated. Finger rings, umbrellas and canes are inspected. If
-bandages are worn, these must be stripped off, too. No distinction is
-drawn between men and women beyond the fact that women are of course
-examined before female inspectors.
-
-The bodily search having been completed, that of the clothing is begun.
-Every article of apparel is felt over carefully and exposed to a
-strong light for fear there may be writing on the lining. If there is
-the slightest reason for suspicion, the travelers are given a sponge
-bath of water with a large admixture of citric acid, which has the
-effect of making apparent any writing on the body that may have been
-done with invisible ink. The Germans say that these precautions have
-been necessitated by the ingenious ruses employed by spies, whose
-entrance into the country is considered a greater menace than is their
-departure, since in entering they bring with them instructions to their
-confederates already within the empire awaiting orders.
-
-The next step is the examination of the baggage, and this is done in
-a manner to make the American customs inspection seem childish. The
-interior and exterior measurements of the trunks are taken to guard
-against false sides, tops, and bottoms, and then one by one every
-article the trunks contain is put through a separate inspection....
-
-Every sort of liquid is confiscated. The perfumes of the women are
-poured into a big tub, and such liquors as the men may be carrying are
-treated in a similar manner. The contents of travelers' alcohol or
-spirit lamps are carefully emptied into air-tight containers for later
-use. The reason for the drastic regulation against taking any liquid,
-however small the quantity, into Germany was the danger of the fact
-that high explosives such as nitroglycerine can be carried in small
-vessels. On several occasions, the Germans say, railroads and bridges
-have been blown up by the enemy travelers who carried the means of
-destruction in this way. In this connection the additional precaution
-is taken by the authorities of prohibiting all travelers from putting
-their heads out the windows of the coupés while crossing bridges.
-
-All written or printed matter, such as books, newspapers, pamphlets,
-magazines, is taken away. Upon request the traveler may have these
-forwarded to his point of destination after they have been censored
-and deleted. As every point on the German border is carefully guarded,
-it is virtually impossible for any one to enter the country except at
-stated points. All the roads are closed, and the border fields are
-carefully patrolled.
-
-Upon his arrival in Berlin, or wherever he may be bound, the traveler
-must present himself in person at the nearest police station. There his
-passport is again viséd, and he is given official permission to remain
-for a given period. But every time he makes a trip he must report
-himself going and coming....
-
-
-III--THE COUNTRY THAT WENT "SPY MAD"
-
-In every hotel are to be met spies in the form of guests, waiters,
-chambermaids, telephone operators, and bartenders. In the early part of
-the war these last proved their worth often, for men otherwise cautious
-and reticent became outspoken under the influence of a few Scotches or
-cocktails, which are still in vogue in Germany despite their American
-origin.
-
-At one of the biggest of the Berlin hotels it is a noticeable fact that
-all the floor waiters are young, active, highly intelligent men. When
-they are asked why they are not serving at the front all have excuses
-on the score of health. The truth is that they are all governmental
-agents whose duty it is to familiarize themselves with the details of
-every visitor's business. That they do well. Every stranger's papers
-are thoroughly investigated, no matter how securely they may be locked
-up, before he has been in the city two days, assuming he leaves them in
-his room. Two members of the American diplomatic corps who made short
-stays in Berlin can tell singular stories on this point.
-
-The chief of the floor waiters at this hotel--and it is illustrative of
-all the others--is a polished-mannered young fellow of about thirty-two
-who speaks English, French, Italian, Spanish, and Danish with the same
-facility that he reads them, and he reads them as well as he does his
-native German. I noticed the chief of the telephone operators, who
-while discharging the duties of his lowly job wore livery, attending
-the races in an English sport-coat, with glasses strung over his
-shoulders, and he went to and from the course in a taxicab, the height
-of luxury in wartime Berlin. One would hardly credit his income solely
-to the measly wages he received from his work at the switch-board. He,
-too, as well as his assistants, was an accomplished linguist.
-
-It must not be thought that espionage is confined to the Americans.
-On the contrary, even the subjects of Germany's allies receive this
-attention. Austrian, Bulgarian, or Turkish, it makes no difference; all
-are put under the scrutiny of the secret eyes and ears of the Kaiser.
-Almost it is more difficult to obtain a passport permitting one to
-travel to Austria than it is to obtain one for a journey to America,
-and the examination at the Austrian border is just as severe as at the
-frontier between Germany and Denmark.
-
-German spies travel on all the transatlantic liners running from
-Denmark, Sweden, Norway, and Holland to America, and back again. They
-find out as much as they can about their fellow-travelers, so that
-the secret police may be forewarned as to whom and what they are to
-receive. These agents are rarely employed by the German Government for
-the secret transmission of mail; that is usually done by men of solid
-reputation, American or other neutrals who are persuaded to accept the
-task on the ground of a service to the empire. Obviously, they must be
-violently pro-German before they are asked to assume the undertaking.
-
-The difficulty of communication is one of the severe hardships that
-the German Government and people suffer. Mails to and from the empire
-are seized by the Allies, and if delivered at all, are so belated as
-to make them valueless. Only such cables as the Allies choose to pass
-are permitted transmission. Male Germans are not permitted to travel
-on the seas. So German communication is restricted to the wireless, to
-supposedly neutral couriers, and to submarines, both of the commercial
-type as the _Deutschland_, and of the war type, which have been
-secretly conveying important German mail to Spanish waters, where it
-is loaded upon friendly neutral vessels, which carry it into Spanish
-ports and thence forward it to America and other points. This last
-method has been a carefully guarded secret of the German Government.
-Mail sent out by Spain is not seized and censored by the Allies....
-
-
-IV--A VISIT TO GENERAL LORINGHOVEN
-
-To get the official view of the situation held by the officers of
-the general staff, I called on General von Freytag-Loringhoven at
-the general staff building in Berlin, where the great Moltke long
-presided. He received me in a room the distinguishing features of which
-were maps, not only showing the disposition of the German forces, but
-immense wall-sized ones on which were diagrammed the present locations
-of the Allies, showing their number, their commanders (designated
-by name and locations of headquarters), with their relative ranks
-indicated by little parti-coloured flags. I had just returned from
-the Somme, and as I saw how each of the French and British lines was
-clearly marked, I expressed my surprise.
-
-The general smiled.
-
-"Yes, our intelligence department is pretty thorough," he said, "but it
-is no better on the Somme than our enemy's is, for in France, where we
-stand on occupied soil, almost every civilian is an aid to the Allies.
-
-"But despite that, despite all the French and English can do at the
-Somme," he went on, "they will never break through."...
-
-I asked the general for his impressions of the French and British
-soldiers. He answered:
-
-"The French are better soldiers. They are better schooled and drilled.
-They have been at it longer and they are enormously brave and
-sacrificing. But the British are proving their worth, too. They are
-all of them warlike and like to fight, but they don't know how as yet.
-You can't make a soldier in a few weeks or months; it takes time and
-patience.
-
-"The French artillery is exceptional. The French artillery officers
-have always been of high repute. They are teaching much to the English
-and Russians, and these forces are showing a corresponding betterment.
-
-"Because of their greater experience, I should say the French are
-better officered than the English. The Russian officers are a poor lot.
-There is no sympathy between them and their men. The men are brave
-enough, but are sheep-like in their lack of intelligence...."
-
-In September, I stood in the general's field headquarters and watched
-the big guns drop shells all around the famous "windmill of Pozières"
-on the high ridge which had been taken by the British and was being
-used by their artillery observers, who gamely held on, although the
-position was anything but comfortable.
-
-While we watched the bombardment a squadron of English fliers passed
-overhead. I ducked and made for the bomb-proof.
-
-"Don't worry," said the general, "the fliers rarely bomb us. Our
-aviators generally leave their generals' headquarters alone, and they
-usually do the same by us. It is a sort of understood courtesy."...
-
-While I stood in his observation-point with Wenninger an iron-gray
-quartermaster sergeant passed. He had been in the east against the
-Russians as well as in the west. In reply to my question as to his
-opinion of the schools of fighting, he answered:
-
-"I'd rather face twenty infantry attacks from the Russians than bring
-up food to the first lines here (British). Their damned artillery makes
-it hell."
-
-
-V--"AT THE SOMME, I MET VON PAPEN"
-
-At the Somme I met Captain von Papen, the former German military
-attaché, who was sent home by America. After six weeks on the firing
-line he was made chief of staff to General Count Schweinitz, commanding
-the Fourth Guard Division and holding the Grevillers-Warlencourt-Ligny
-line. He has proved himself an efficient officer.
-
-Captain Boy-Ed, the naval attaché, who was sent back to Germany at
-the same time, is now chief intelligence officer at the admiralty
-in Berlin. He is very bitter toward America, while von Papen is
-friendly. Dr. Dernburg, the other propagandist who was returned to the
-fatherland, is philosophical as regards his work in America, and is
-without rancour over his treatment. He is living in Berlin, working
-on housing plans for the poor, but he has lost the confidence of his
-Government....
-
-All the world knows Hindenburg. Germany's Iron Man, the hero of the
-Masurian Swamps, a colossal wooden statue of whom stands opposite the
-Reichstag in the Sieges-allee, the Avenue of Victory, in Berlin's
-Tiergarten. But who is Ludendorff?
-
-Ludendorff is Germany's man of mystery, the grim, inscrutable,
-silent man whose picture is on sale in every shop, whose name is in
-every mouth, but whose real personality is hidden even from his own
-countrymen.
-
-Ludendorff is Hindenburg's indispensable right-hand man....
-
-There are those who say that Ludendorff is Hindenburg's brain,
-and that Hindenburg's greatest successes have been planned by his
-silent, retiring assistant. Hindenburg, when in the mood, becomes
-very talkative and chatty, and at such times he often attributes his
-success to his assistant. There is a perfect harmony between the two;
-Ludendorff plans and Hindenburg decides....
-
-On August 28 (1914) it was announced that the Russians were fleeing
-across the border. The news grew. Five army corps and three cavalry
-divisions had been annihilated. More than ninety thousand prisoners
-were taken. Tannenberg, one of the greatest victories of the war, had
-changed the whole face of affairs in the east.
-
-There have been bigger battles and longer battles, and there have been
-battles of more significance in the history of the war, but there has
-been no other battle in which the result has been so overwhelming and
-complete a victory for either side.
-
-Just what happened at Tannenberg and in the Masurian Swamps is still
-a secret. There have been stories that a hundred thousand men were
-drowned in the swamps. There have been tales of dikes released and men
-swept away in a swirl of rushing waters. All that is known certainly is
-that a Russian army disappeared.
-
-(This American war correspondent then gives his impressions of men
-and events within the German Armies, telling many interesting tales
-of Boelcke, the German "knight of the air" who shot down thirty-eight
-enemy aeroplanes before he was killed in collision with one of his own
-German machines.)
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[8] All numerals relate to stories herein told--not to chapters in the
-original sources.
-
-
-
-
-"DIXMUDE"-AN EPIC OF THE FRENCH MARINES
-
-_Story of the Murder of Commander Jeanniot_
-
-_Told by Charles Le Goffic of the Fusiliers Marins--Translated by
-Florence Simmonds_
-
- The story of the French Marines is one of the epics of the World's
- Wars. Such is the story of the Bretons. At Dixmude, under command
- of their own officers, retaining not only the costume, but the soul
- and language of their profession they were still sailors. Grouped
- with them were seamen from all the naval stations. The heroism of
- these sailors is told in the volume entitled "Dixmude," published
- by _J. B. Lippincott Company_. From these interesting stories, we
- here relate "The Murder of Captain Jeanniot."
-
-[9] I-GREAT HEARTS OF THE FRENCH MARINES
-
-I had opportunities of talking to several of these "Parigots," and I
-should not advise anyone to speak slightingly of their officers before
-them, though, indeed, so few of these have survived that nine times
-out of ten the quip could be aimed only at a ghost. The deepest and
-tenderest words I heard uttered concerning Naval Lieutenant Martin
-des Pallières were spoken by a Marine of the Rue des Martyrs, George
-Delaballe, who was one of his gunners in front of the cemetery the
-night when his machine-guns were jammed, and five hundred Germans, led
-by a major wearing the Red Cross armlet, threw themselves suddenly into
-our trenches.
-
-"But why did you love him so?" I asked.
-
-"I don't know.... We loved him because he was brave, and was always
-saying things that made us laugh, ... but above all because he loved
-us."
-
-Here we have the secret of this extraordinary empire of the officers
-over their men, the explanation of that miracle of a four weeks'
-resistance, one against six, under the most formidable tempest of
-shells of every caliber that ever fell upon a position, in a shattered
-town where all the buildings were ablaze, and where, to quote the words
-of a _Daily Telegraph_ correspondent, it was no longer light or dark,
-"but only red." When the Boches murdered Commander Jeanniot, his men
-were half crazy. They would not have felt the death of a father more
-deeply. I have recently had a letter sent me written by a Breton lad,
-Jules Cavan, who was wounded at Dixmude. While he was in hospital at
-Bordeaux he was visited by relatives of Second-Lieutenant Gautier, who
-was killed on October 27 in the cemetery trenches.
-
-"Dear Sir," he wrote to M. Dalché de Desplanels the following day,
-"you cannot imagine how your visit went to my heart.... On October 19,
-when my battalion took the offensive at Lannes, three kilometers from
-Dixmude, I was wounded by a bullet in the thigh. I dragged myself along
-as best I could on the battlefield, bullets falling thickly all around
-me. I got over about five hundred meters on the battlefield and reached
-the road. Just at that moment Lieutenant Gautier, who was coming
-towards me with a section, seeing me in the ditch, asked: 'Well, my
-lad, what is the matter with you?' 'Oh, Lieutenant, I am wounded in the
-leg, and I cannot drag myself further.' 'Here then, get on my back.'
-And he carried me to a house at Lannes, and said these words, which I
-shall never forget: 'Stay there, my lad, till they come and fetch you.
-I will let the motor ambulance men know.' Then he went off under the
-fire. Oh, the splendid fellow!"
-
-
-II--TALES OF THE BRAVE "PARIGOTS"
-
-"The splendid fellow!" Jules Cavan echoes Georges Delaballe, the
-Breton, the "Parigot." There is the same heartfelt ring in the words of
-each. And sometimes, as I muse over these heroic shades, I ask myself
-which were the more admirable, officers or men. When Second-Lieutenant
-Gautier received orders to take the place of Lieutenant de Pallières,
-buried by a shell in the trench of the cemetery where Lieutenant Eno
-had already fallen, he read his fate plainly; he said: "It's my turn."
-And he smiled at Death, who beckoned him. But I know of one case when,
-as Death seemed about to pass them by, the Marines provoked it; when,
-after they had used up all their cartridges and were surrounded in a
-barn, twelve survivors only remaining with their captain, the latter,
-filled with pity for them, and recognizing the futility of further
-resistance, said to his men: "My poor fellows, you have done your duty.
-There is nothing for it but to surrender." Then, disobedient to their
-captain for the first time, they answered: "No!" To my mind nothing
-could show more clearly the degree of sublime exaltation and complete
-self-forgetfulness to which our officers had raised the _moral_ of
-their men. Such were the pupils these masters in heroism had formed,
-that often their own pupils surpassed them. There was at the Trouville
-Hospital a young Breton sailor called Michel Folgoas. His wound was
-one of the most frightful imaginable: the whole of his side was shaved
-off by a shell which killed one of his comrades in the trenches, who
-was standing next to him, on November 2. "I," he remarks in a letter,
-"was completely stunned at first. When I came to myself I walked three
-hundred meters before I noticed that I was wounded, and this was
-only when my comrades called out: '_Mon Dieu_, they have carried away
-half your side.'" It was true. But does he groan and lament over it?
-He makes a joke of it: "The Boches were so hungry that they took a
-beef-steak out of my side, but this won't matter, as they have left me
-a little."
-
-Multiply this Michel Folgoas by 6,000, and you will have the brigade.
-This inferno of Dixmude was an inferno where everyone made the best
-of things. And the _battues_ of rabbits, the coursing of the red
-German hares which were running in front of the army of invasion,
-the bull-fights in which our Mokos impaled some pacific Flemish bull
-abandoned by its owners; more dubious escapades, sternly repressed, in
-the underground premises of the Dixmude drink-shops; a story of two
-Bretons who went off on a foraging expedition and were seen coming back
-along the canal in broad daylight towing a great cask of strong beer
-which they had unearthed Heaven knows where at a time when the whole
-brigade, officers as well as men, had nothing to drink but the brackish
-water of the Yser--these, and a hundred other tales of the same kind,
-which will some day delight village audiences gathered round festal
-evening fires, bear witness that Jean Gouin (or Le Gwenn, John the
-White, as the sailors call themselves familiarly[10]), did not lose his
-bearings even in his worst vicissitudes.
-
-Dixmude was an epic then, or, as M. Victor Giraud proposes, a French
-_geste_, but a _geste_ in which the heroism is entirely without
-solemnity or deliberation, where the nature of the seaman asserts
-itself at every turn, where there are thunder, lightning, rain, mud,
-cold, bullets, shrapnel, high explosive shells, and all the youthful
-gaiety of the French race.
-
-And this epic did not come to an end at Dixmude. The brigade did not
-ground arms after November 10. The gaps in its ranks being filled from
-the dépôts, it was kept up to the strength of two regiments, and reaped
-fresh laurels. At Ypres and Saint Georges it charged the troops of
-Prince Ruprecht of Bavaria and the Duke of Würtemberg in succession.
-Dixmude was but one panel of the triptych: on the broken apex of the
-black capital of the Communiers, on the livid backgrounds of the flat
-country about Nieuport, twice again did the brigade inscribe its stormy
-silhouette.
-
-But at Ypres and Saint Georges the sailors had the bulk of the
-Anglo-French forces behind them; at Dixmude up to November 4 they
-knew that their enterprise was a forlorn hope. And in their hands
-they held the fate of the two Flanders. One of the heroes of Dixmude,
-Naval Lieutenant Georges Hébert, said that the Fusiliers had gained
-more than a naval battle there. My only objection to this statement
-is its modesty. Dixmude was our Thermopylæ in the north, as the
-Grand-Couronné, near Nancy, was our Thermopylæ in the east; the
-Fusiliers were the first and the most solid element of the long
-triumphant defensive which will one day be known as the victory of the
-Yser, a victory less decisive and perhaps less brilliant than that of
-the Marne, but not less momentous in its consequences.
-
-The Generalissimo is credited with a dictum which he may himself have
-uttered with a certain astonishment:
-
-"You are my best infantrymen," said he to the Fusiliers.
-
-We will close with these simply, soldierly words, more eloquent than
-the most brilliant harangues. The brigade will reckon them among their
-proudest trophies to all time.
-
-
-III--STORY OF MURDER OF DR. DUGUET
-
-On October 25 (1914), we had not yet received any help from the
-inundation. Our troops were in dire need of rest, and the enemy was
-tightening his grip along the entire front. New reinforcements were
-coming up to fill the gaps in his ranks; our scouts warned us that
-fresh troops were marching upon Dixmude by the three roads of Essen,
-Beerst, and Woumen.[11] We had to expect a big affair the next day, if
-not that very night. It came off that night.
-
-About 7 o'clock the Gamas company went to relieve the men in the
-southern trenches. On their way, immediately outside the town, they
-fell in with a German force of about the same strength as themselves,
-which had crept up no one knew how. There was a fusillade and a general
-_mêlée_, in which our sailors opened a passage through the troop with
-bayonets and butt-ends, disposing of some forty Germans and putting the
-rest to flight.[12] Then there was a lull. The splash of rain was the
-only sound heard till 2 A.M., when suddenly a fresh outbreak
-of rifle-fire was heard near the Caeskerke station, right inside the
-defences. It was suggested that our men or our allies, exasperated by
-their life of continual alarms, had been carried away by some reckless
-impulse. The bravest soldiers admit that hallucinations are not
-uncommon at night in the trenches. All the pitfalls of darkness rise
-before the mind; the circulation of the blood makes a noise like the
-tramp of marching troops; if by chance a nervous sentry should fire his
-rifle, the whole section will follow suit.
-
-Convinced that some misunderstanding of this kind had taken place,
-the Staff, still quartered at the Caeskerke railway station, shouted
-to the sections to cease firing. As, however, the fusillade continued
-in the direction of the town, the Admiral sent one of his officers,
-Lieutenant Durand-Gasselin, to reconnoiter. He got as far as the Yser
-without finding the enemy; the fusillade had ceased; the roads were
-clear. He set out on his way back to Caeskerke. On the road he passed
-an ambulance belonging to the brigade going up towards Dixmude, which,
-on being challenged, replied: "Rouge Croix." Rather surprised at this
-inversion, he stopped the ambulance; it was full of Germans, who,
-however, surrendered without offering any resistance. But this capture
-suggested a new train of thought to the Staff: they were now certain
-that there had been an infantry raid upon the town; the Germans in
-the ambulance probably belonged to a troop of mysterious assailants
-who had made their way into Dixmude in the night and had vanished no
-less mysteriously after this extraordinary deed of daring. One of our
-covering trenches must have given way, but which? Our allies held the
-railway line by which the enemy had penetrated into the defences,
-sounding the charge.... The riddle was very disturbing, but under the
-veil of a thick, damp night, which favored the enemy, it was useless
-to seek a solution. It was found next morning at dawn, when one of
-our detachments on guard by the Yser suddenly noticed in a meadow a
-curious medley of Belgians, French Marines, and Germans. Had our men
-been made prisoners? This uncertainty was of brief duration. There was
-a sharp volley; the sailors fell; the Germans made off. This was what
-had happened!
-
-Various versions have been given of this incident, one of the most
-dramatic of the defence, in the course of which the heroic Commander
-Jeanniot and Dr. Duguet, chief officer of the medical staff, fell
-mortally wounded, with several others. The general opinion, however,
-seems to be that the German attack, which was delivered at 2:30 P.M.,
-was closely connected with the surprise movement attempted at 7 o'clock
-in the evening on the Essen road and so happily frustrated by the
-intervention of the Gamas company. It is not impossible that it was
-carried out by the fragments of the force we had scattered, reinforced
-by new elements and charging to the sound of the bugle. This would
-explain the interval of several hours between the two attacks, which
-were no doubt the outcome of a single inspiration.
-
-"The night," says an eye-witness, "was pursuing its normal course,
-and as there were no indications of disturbance, Dr. Duguet took the
-opportunity to go and get a little rest in the house where he was
-living, which was just across the street opposite his ambulance. The
-Abbé Le Helloco, chaplain of the 2nd Regiment, had joined him at about
-1:30 A.M. The latter admits that he was rather uneasy because
-of the earlier skirmish, in which, as was his habit, he had been
-unremitting in his ministrations to the wounded. After a few minutes'
-talk the two men separated to seek their straw pallets. The Abbé had
-been asleep for an hour or two, when he was awakened by shots close at
-hand. He roused himself and went to Dr. Duguet, who was already up.
-The two did not exchange a word. Simultaneously, without taking the
-precaution of extinguishing the lights behind them, they hurried to the
-street. Enframed by the lighted doorway, they at once became a target;
-a volley brought them down in a moment. Dr. Duguet had been struck by a
-bullet in the abdomen; the Abbé was hit in the head, the arm, and the
-right thigh. The two bodies were touching each other. 'Abbé,' said Dr.
-Duguet, 'we are done for. Give me absolution. I regret....' The Abbé
-found strength to lift his heavy arm and to make the sign of the cross
-upon his dying comrade. Then he fainted, and this saved him. Neither
-he nor Dr. Duguet had understood for the moment what was happening.
-Whence had the band of marauders who had struck them down come, and how
-had they managed to steal into our lines without being seen? It was a
-mystery. This fusillade breaking out behind them had caused a certain
-disorder in the sections nearest to it, who thought they were being
-taken in the rear, and who would have been, indeed, had the attack
-been maintained. The band arrived in front of the ambulance station at
-the moment when the staff (three Belgian doctors, a few naval hospital
-orderlies, and Quartermaster Bonnet) were attending to Dr. Duguet, who
-was still breathing. They made the whole lot prisoners and carried them
-along in their idiotic rush through the streets. Both officers and
-soldiers must have been drunk. This is the only reasonable explanation
-of their mad venture. We held all the approaches to Dixmude; the brief
-panic that took place in certain sections had been at once controlled."
-
-
-IV--STORY OF MURDER OF COMMANDER JEANNIOT
-
-"Commander Jeanniot, who had been in reserve that night, and who,
-roused by the firing like Dr. Duguet and Abbé Le Helloco, had gone
-into the street to call his sector to arms, had not even taken his
-revolver in his hand. Mistaking the identity and the intentions of
-the groups he saw advancing, he ran towards them to reassure them and
-bring them back to the trenches. This little stout, grizzled officer,
-rough and simple in manner, was adored by the sailors. He was known
-to be the bravest of the brave, and he himself was conscious of his
-power over his men. When he recognized his mistake it was too late.
-The Germans seized him, disarmed him, and carried him off with loud
-'_Hochs!_' of satisfaction. The band continued to push on towards the
-Yser, driving a few fugitives before them, and a part of them succeeded
-in crossing the river under cover of the general confusion. Happily
-this did not last long. Captain Marcotte de Sainte-Marie, who was in
-command of the guard on the bridge, identified the assailants with the
-help of a searchlight, and at once opened fire upon them. The majority
-of the Germans within range of our machine-guns were mown down; the
-rest scattered along the streets and ran to cellars and ruins to
-hide themselves. But the head of the column had got across with its
-prisoners, whom they drove before them with the butt-ends of their
-rifles.[13] For four hours they wandered about, seeking an issue which
-would enable them to rejoin their lines. It was raining the whole time.
-Weary of wading through the mud, the officers stopped behind a hedge to
-hold a council. A pale light began to pierce the mist; day was dawning,
-and they could no longer hope to regain the German lines in a body.
-Prudence dictated that they should disperse until nightfall. But what
-was to be done with the prisoners? The majority voted that they should
-be put to death. The Belgian doctors protested. Commander Jeanniot,
-who took no part in the debate, was talking calmly to Quartermaster
-Bonnet. At a sign from their leader the Boches knelt and opened fire
-upon the prisoners. The Commander fell, and as he was still breathing,
-they finished him off with their bayonets. The only survivors were the
-Belgian doctors, who had been spared, and Quartermaster Bonnet, who had
-only been hit in the shoulder. It was at this moment that the marauders
-were discovered. One section charged them forthwith; another fell back
-to cut off their retreat. What happened afterwards? Some accounts
-declare that the German officers learned what it costs to murder
-prisoners, and that our men despatched the dogs there and then; but
-the truth is, that, in spite of the general desire to avenge Commander
-Jeannoit, the whole band was taken prisoners and brought before the
-Admiral, who had only the three most prominent rascals of the gang
-executed."
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[9] All numerals relate to stories herein told--not to chapters in the
-original sources.
-
-[10] "When we passed through the streets of Ghent they were full of
-people shouting, 'Long live the French!' I heard one person in the
-crowd call out, 'Long live Jean Gouin!' He must have known them well."
-(Letter of Fusilier F., of the island of Sein.) Le Gwenn, which has
-been corrupted into Gouin, is a very common name in Brittany. [Compare
-the current English nickname "Jack Tar."--TR.]
-
-[11] "Germans of the regular army coming from the direction of Rheims.
-The Boches we had had to deal with so far had been volunteers or
-reservists." (Second-Lieutenant X.'s note-book.)
-
-[12] Not without losses on our side. "Saw Gamas, who has had
-fourteen of his men killed to-night, among them his boatswain Dodu."
-(Second-Lieutenant Gautier's note-book.)
-
-[13] Here there seems to have been some confusion in the eye-witness's
-account. He leads us to suppose that Dr. Duguet's ambulance was in
-the town, and that the Germans who killed him and wounded the Abbé
-Le Helloco went on afterwards to the bridge with their prisoners.
-"As a fact," we are now told, "the affair took place between
-the bridge--which the head of a column had crossed by surprise,
-driving before them a number of Belgians, sailors, and perhaps some
-marauders--and the level crossing near the station of Caeskerke where
-the column was finally stopped. It was in this part of the street
-that Dr. Duguet had his dressing-station; and it was there, too, that
-Commander Jeanniot, whose reserve post was at Caeskerke, came out to
-meet the assailants. And it was the fields near the south bank of the
-Yser to which the column betook itself, dragging its prisoners with it,
-when it found the road barred."
-
-
-
-
-A BISHOP AT THE FRONT WITH THE BRITISH ARMY
-
-_Told by the Right Reverend H. Russell Wakefield, Bishop of Birmingham_
-
- This is an account of how the Bishop, accompanied by the Lord
- Mayor of Birmingham, went to the fighting lines to visit the staff
- at headquarters. They were at times within thirty-five yards of
- the German trenches. His impressions have been recorded in a
- volume published by _Longmans, Green and Company_, from which the
- following incidents are taken.
-
-[14] I--THE HUMOUR OF BRITISH "TOMMIES"
-
-Whenever, in future, I am inclined towards a fit of pessimism, I
-shall shut my eyes in order to see once again, with the vision of the
-spirit, a stalwart Britisher of the Worcester Regiment, not very far
-from the German lines, on a certain afternoon, when a most appalling
-thunderstorm was raging and some German shells were falling. He was
-munching the thickest slice of bread and jam that I have ever seen,
-and looking with a mild contempt at the intruding figure of an unknown
-padre whom a considerable number of his comrades were greeting because
-they recognised in him their Bishop. He put down now and again his
-refreshment in order to do some bit of work, but he was just as calm
-and collected as if he had been in his Worcestershire village and not
-in the trenches.
-
-That which carries our men through so many difficulties is another
-thing which impressed me--namely, their unfailing sense of humour; a
-humour which is never really hurtful even when exercised upon some one
-deserving of satire. When he christens a road along which there are
-a couple of miles of Army Service carts "Lorry Park," when he finds
-every kind of strange anglicising for Flemish or French words, we know
-that he is not only having some fun for himself, but also providing
-amusement for those who come after him. The same humour shines out when
-he is in hard case. A chaplain told me that he had been addressing
-informally some wounded men who had just arrived from the trenches.
-He was expatiating upon the glories of the Victoria Cross because he
-noticed some of the men came from a regiment one of whose number had
-recently received that coveted distinction. Suddenly his eloquence was
-disturbed by a voice proceeding from a man, both of whose feet were
-swathed in bandages, who remarked, "Never mind the Victoria Cross, give
-me the Victoria 'Bus!" Obviously the soldier's sense of humour was
-conquering his pain, and his remark made the rest of the party forget
-their sufferings for a short time....
-
-
-II--FRANCE BLEEDS FOR CIVILIZATION
-
-As one who saw the French during the war of 1870, when--being a
-boy--I was very susceptible to impressions, I can hardly express the
-difference I notice between the nation then and now. In the former
-war there was excitement, impulsiveness, overconfidence, want of
-ballast; to-day there is quietude, earnestness, and withal, assurance
-of eventual victory. More than once I journeyed through a considerable
-part of the French lines, and I assert with confidence that the Army
-of France at the present time is incomparably superior to that which
-she placed in the field in 1870. As to her civilians, I only saw women,
-children, and old men; I did not, in all my thousand miles of travel,
-discover a single able-bodied person of military age out of uniform.
-
-The harvest, a very good one, was in full swing. Every family was out
-in the fields, all doing something towards the in-gathering. I have
-a picture now before my eyes of seven people, all undoubtedly coming
-from the same house, working away hard, whilst at the tail end of the
-procession appeared what might have been the great-grandpapa, no longer
-capable of bending down for harvesting, but who, nevertheless, had his
-piece of work in carrying about the baby, who, of course, could not be
-left behind alone in the house. The whole nation is doing its utmost.
-
-
-III--"HOW I WENT TO THE TRENCHES"
-
-On one occasion after motoring through towns that are a household word,
-both at home and with our Allies, towns which have seen the Germans
-in them and then driven out of them, places where the buildings are
-practically level with the ground, the limit for vehicular traffic is
-reached and one goes forward on foot. Soon you reach a cutting in the
-ground and you begin to walk along a trench. You turn now and again
-either to right or left, seeing sign-posts telling sometimes in comic
-language and sometimes only by number the name, as it were, of the
-underground street; you then rise a little and find yourself walking
-in the inside of houses so shattered that you cannot tell much about
-what they originally were until you are told that they formed a street
-in a little overgrown village of which nothing is left, and the last
-inhabitant of which was the station-master, who refused to leave though
-there was neither train, station nor house for himself left, because
-so long as he remained on the spot he could claim his pay. Forcible
-measures had at last to be used to secure his departure. Where you are
-walking you are yourself hidden from the enemy, but are within the
-range of their fire. You are taken up to an observation post, where one
-of your companions incautiously takes out a white pocket-handkerchief
-and is hurriedly told to put it back in his pocket.
-
-You come down again and proceed cautiously along trenches. Now and
-again shells pass over, and your careful guide looks to see in what
-direction they are falling, as, though he is quite unconcerned for
-himself, he knows that he is responsible for the safety of the
-troublesome visitor. You are told to keep your head down and not to
-show, for the moment at any rate, any desire to view the landscape.
-Soldiers are dotted about here and there, all of them ready to give a
-kindly greeting, and then at last you reach a point where you are told
-not to speak loudly because practically only a few yards away is the
-enemy, who, were he to hear conversation, might think it worth while
-to throw over a hand grenade. What looks like a tiny bit of glass at
-the end of a short stick is there before you, and you are asked to look
-into it; when you do the enemies' trenches are visible to you. Beyond
-an occasional ping against a sandbag, you have heard nothing to note
-the existence of rifle fire, except that the men you have passed have
-got these weapons to hand. You tell the men at the advanced posts how
-proud their country is of them, how thankful you are to have seen them,
-how you pray that God may bring them back safe to their homes; you get
-rid of all cigars or cigarettes you may have upon you, wishing that you
-had thousands more, and then you return home, varying perhaps the route
-through the communication trenches.
-
-On another occasion our way took us through a town which is absolutely
-razed to the ground and is still under shell fire. There I saw two
-soldiers busy with spades, and I asked what kind of fortification they
-were putting up, to which, with a broad grin, one replied that they
-were looking for souvenirs. He was kind enough to give me a complete
-German cartridge case, for which he refused to take any remuneration.
-Going on a little farther in this town, we went down some steps and
-found ourselves in an underground club full of soldiers, who were
-having a hot meal, were reading papers and playing games, everything
-being presided over by perhaps the most magnetic person I met on my
-travels, a young Chaplain to the Forces, who would not wish his name
-to be mentioned, though there is probably no one out at the Front who
-will not know to whom I refer. When we went from this place towards the
-more advanced trenches, I was taken along a road which looked perfectly
-harmless, when suddenly a stalwart Scotchman told my companion and
-myself that we must get off it at once as it was a favourite target
-for German Maxims. Never was a General more obediently submitted to than
-was this, I believe, private soldier. It was on this occasion that we
-had tea in the dugout of the Colonel, who bears a name distinguished
-in English naval, military and sporting life. A characteristic of the
-German trenches which I noticed on this and other occasions, was that
-their sandbags seemed to be generally white in colour, at any rate in
-those of the first line. Leaving the trench on this particular day, we
-had to go through an almost alarming thunderstorm, which in the course
-of half an hour made a sea of mud of the place which had been quite
-dry before. It was curious to notice how petty the sound of the guns
-appeared as compared with the artillery of heaven.
-
-Pathetic incidents occur and touching scenes are visible on these
-journeys to the Front. One looked in the trenches upon little mounds
-and crosses, marking the resting-places of men who had been hurriedly,
-but reverently, buried. There they are side by side with their living
-comrades, who are doing their work whilst their brothers sleep. Dotted
-all about the country are little cemeteries, which tell of devotion
-unto death, and which remind one of all the sorrow this war has
-caused. It is strange to see how religious emblems appear to have been
-strong against shell. Constantly you would see a church almost totally
-destroyed and yet the crucifix untouched, and who will ever forget that
-sight which can be seen for miles around, of the tower which has been
-almost shattered to pieces and yet the statue of the Virgin and Child,
-which was near the top of it, though bent over completely at right
-angles, still remains, as it were blessing and protecting the whole
-neighbourhood.
-
-
-IV--"SEE GOD THRO' CLOUD OF SMOKE"
-
-This leads to the consideration of the religious condition of our
-troops as affected, first, by the churches and worshippers of France,
-and, secondly, by their own experience in this war. More than one
-mentioned the pleasure felt at the sight of the little wayside shrines
-which they passed on their march. Others commented upon the large
-numbers of people they saw flocking to their early communion....
-
-What his experience of war is doing for the soldier in regard to
-religion is remarkable. It would have been possible that the sight of
-humanity striving to the death and inflicting horrible suffering might
-have made our young fellows despair of Christianity. They might have
-argued that it was of no avail to teach the religion of Jesus when no
-effect was produced upon international conduct; but they have been
-able to look more deeply into matters and to realise that not Divine
-intention was at fault, but human refusal to follow true teaching. They
-have been able to see God through the cloud of smoke raised by shot
-and shell, and the Presence of the Divine has not been obscured by
-the horrors of war. Conscious of the seriousness of the work in which
-they are engaged, feeling every moment the nearness of eternity, our
-soldiers have in no craven spirit, but with a due remembrance of their
-relationship to God and to eternity, turned to religion as a stay in
-the hour of conflict....
-
-Although I must refrain most reluctantly from saying anything about
-the great military personages whom I met in France, and with whom I
-was so greatly impressed, I may perhaps refer to two French persons of
-distinction, in no way connected with the war, whom I was privileged
-to meet. First there is that outstanding personality the Mayor of
-Hazebrouck, Abbé Lemire. He and I were brought together because he is a
-clerical municipal dignitary and I was the first clergyman who was ever
-a mayor in this country. He, however, does more than I have ever been
-able to do, because he is a member of the Chamber of Deputies, and here
-in England the doors of the House of Commons are still shut against the
-clergy....
-
-He is an extraordinarily winning personality, and as we walked through
-the streets of his city every woman and child and old man had something
-to say to him. With one he would discuss the imprisonment of a soldier
-son in Germany; with another the fact that a married daughter had had a
-bouncing boy who would be, so prophesied the Abbé, a soldier of France
-in years to come. To another in deep mourning he had a word of comfort
-to give; until at last I said to him that he appeared to be not only
-_le maire_ but also _le père_ of Hazebrouck....
-
-Another beautiful character is the present Archbishop of Rouen.
-Carrying well his seventy-six years, thanks in no small measure to the
-loving care of his secretary, the great dignitary has passed through
-the recent critical time for his Church, retaining throughout his
-breadth of view and his sweetness of nature. Turned out of his official
-residence, he has built himself another, beautifully situated, in the
-grounds of which may to-day be seen English doctors and nurses, and
-even wounded, resting and gaining health. The morning upon which I saw
-him I had been celebrating the Holy Communion in the chapel of what
-once was his palace. When I asked him whether he felt any objection to
-this being done by our English clergy, he answered, "Certainly not."
-And then, after a moment's thought, he went on: "After all, what does
-it matter whether one celebrates in one vestment and another in a
-different one, if at the root of things we are the same?"
-
-(The Bishop now relates his impressions of the various countries
-engaged in the War, all of which, with the exception of Japan, he has
-visited. He believes that the War is to result in a great spiritual
-awakening throughout the world.)
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[14] All numerals relate to stories herein told--not to chapters in the
-original sources.
-
-
-
-
-SHORT RATIONS--THE TRUTH ABOUT LIFE IN GERMANY
-
-_An American Woman in Germany_
-
-_Told by Madeline Zabriskie Doty_
-
- Miss Doty made two trips of exploration to Europe during the War.
- She is one of the few "foreigners" who were permitted to visit
- prison camps and industrial factories in Germany. It has remained
- for this American woman to bring out of Germany some of the most
- interesting sidelights. It is a graphic account of the tragedy
- which reveals the conditions within the German Empire. Miss Doty
- talked with the German women in the factories, the mothers with
- their babies, finding everywhere the tragedy of suffering almost
- beyond human endurance. The following reminiscences are from
- her book: "Short Rations," published by the _Century Company_:
- Copyright 1917.
-
-[15] I--STORY OF WOMAN WHO WANTED TO SELL HER CHILD
-
-I awoke to find myself in Germany.... Hamburg is a city of sleepers.
-Its big hotels, its many stores, its impressive buildings stretch
-out endlessly, but within all is still. All that modern industry
-and the ingenuity of man can achieve has here been flung upon the
-land, and then the force that created it has vanished, leaving these
-great monuments to rot, to rust, and to crumble. The tragedy of
-unused treasures is as horrible as rows of dead. A city seems visibly
-dying....
-
-A crowd of children is gathering just below. School is out, and they
-are surrounding an object of interest. One or two women join them.
-There is no passing populace to swell the throng. We approach and see
-in the centre of the crowd of children a woman crouched upon a bench.
-She is dirty, ragged, and dark in colouring.... On the ground at her
-feet is a baby just big enough to walk. It also is dirty, and possesses
-only one ragged garment. The mother sits listless, gazing at her
-child. It is evident she is soon to be a mother again. There is great
-chattering among the children. I turn to my companion for explanation.
-
-"The woman wants to sell her child. She says she hasn't anything to
-eat. She isn't a German mother. Of course, no German mother would do
-such a thing. You can see she isn't good. She is going to have another
-baby."
-
-A school-child gives the toddling baby some cherries. She eats them
-greedily. My hand goes to my pocketbook, but my companion pulls me
-away. If I bought the baby, what could I do with her on a trip through
-Germany?...
-
-
-II--THE SECRET GRIEF OF GERMANY
-
-But before I leave Germany the spies get on my nerves. What was at
-first amusing becomes a nuisance. I feel exactly as though I am in
-prison. I acquire the habit of looking out of the corner of my eye
-and over my shoulder. These spies are as annoying to their countrymen
-as to me. The people detest them. They grow restless under such
-suppression. Free conversation is impossible, except behind closed
-doors. Between German spies and the spies of other countries supposed
-to be at large, public conversation is at a standstill. Everywhere are
-signs--"_Soldaten_"--"_Vorsicht bei gespröchen Spionengefahr_."...
-
-In spite of the concealment of the wounded, the population begins to
-understand its loss. One night I went to the station (at Berlin) to
-see a big detachment leave for Wilmâ. They had all been in war before.
-Their uniforms were dirty and patched. They sat on benches clinging
-to a loved one's hand, or stood in listless groups. No one talked.
-They were like tired children. They needed food and bed. The scenes of
-farewell were harrowing.
-
-Here was a young boy saying good-by to a mother and three aunts. He
-was all they had--their whole life. Here a father saying farewell to a
-wife and three sons, all under seventeen. Or a mother in deep mourning
-taking leave of her last son, or a young wife with a baby in her arms
-giving a last embrace.
-
-As the train moved out of the station there were no shouts, no cheers,
-no words of encouragement. Instead there was a deadly silence. The men
-leaned out of windows, stretched despairing hands towards loved ones.
-As the train pulled away the little groups broke into strangling sobs.
-They were shaken as by a mighty tempest. Paroxysms of grief rent and
-tore them. They knew the end had come. A man may go once into battle
-and return, but not twice and thrice. Life held no hope. As I came away
-I stopped before the big building which conducts military affairs. It
-is known as the "House of Sorrow." On its rear wall is posted the list
-of dead and wounded....
-
-One evening at midnight as I cross the Thiergarten I pass a small
-procession of new recruits. Midnight, my friend tells me, is the
-favourite hour for seizing fresh food for cannon. There is something
-sinister in choosing dark hours, when the city sleeps, for this
-deed....
-
-
-III--A BEAUTIFUL STORY TOLD IN GENEVA
-
-While in Geneva I visited the Red Cross authorities. This is the
-Central Bureau for relief work. It gives aid to the wounded and
-prisoners of all the belligerent countries. Many horrible, tragic and
-beautiful stories pass through the committee's hands.
-
-After the war these stories will come to light. At present the rigid
-censorship prevents publication, for it is impossible to carry printed
-or written material across frontiers.
-
-But one story told me needed no notes. It became engraven in my memory.
-It is the story of an English boy and a German mother.
-
-I could not secure the letters that passed between these two but their
-contents, and the other facts given are here set forth accurately. This
-is a true story.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The sky was a soft, shining blue. The air was still. The warmth of
-summer brooded over the land. But no bird's song broke the stillness.
-No bees fluttered over flowers. The earth lay torn and bare. In deep
-brown furrows of the earth, hundreds of restless men lay or knelt or
-stood.
-
-The land was vibrant with living silence. But now and again a gigantic
-smashing roar broke the tense stillness. Then in some spots, the ground
-spit forth masses of dirt, a soldier's helmet, a tattered rag of
-uniform, and bits of a human body.
-
-It was after such a mighty blast that a great winged object came
-speeding from the north. It skimmed low over the trenches and dipped,
-and circled and paused above the English line. Like a great eagle it
-seemed about to rush to earth, snatch its prey, and then be off. But
-as it hung suspended, another whirring monster flew swiftly from
-the south. It winged its way above its rival, then turning, plunged
-downward. The great cannons grew silent. The eyes of the pigmies in
-the trenches gazed skyward. A breathless tenseness gripped the earth.
-Only sun and sky shone on with no whisper of the mad fight of these two
-winged things.
-
-For a few wild moments they rushed at one another. Then the whirring
-bird with wings of white rose high, turned back, and plunged again upon
-that other whose wings had huge, black crosses.
-
-It missed its prey, but there came a cracking sound. A puff of smoke,
-like a hot breath, burst from the creature of the iron crosses. It
-shuddered, dropped, turned, and fell head down. With sweeping curves
-the pursuer also came to earth. A lean, young Englishman sprang from
-the whirring engine. His body quivered with excitement. He sped with
-running feet to the broken object lying on the ground. He knelt by the
-twisted mass. Beneath the splintered wood and iron he saw a boyish
-figure. It was still and motionless. He gently pulled the body out. A
-fair young German lay before him. A deep gash in the head showed where
-a blow had brought instant death. The body was straight and supple,
-the features clear cut and clean. A boy's face with frank and fearless
-brow looked up at the young Englishman. The eyes held no malice. They
-were full of shocked surprise. The brown haired lad felt the lifeless
-heart. A piece of cardboard met his fingers. He pulled it from the coat
-pocket. It was a picture--a picture of a woman--a woman with gray hair
-and kindly eyes,--a mother whose face bore lines of patient suffering.
-Scrawled beneath the portrait in boyish hand were the words, "Meine
-Mutter."
-
-A sob choked the young Englishman. Tenderly he gathered the lifeless
-form in his strong arms. Then he rose and walked unheeding across the
-open field of battle. But no angry bullet pelted after those young
-figures. The men in the trenches saw and understood. Behind the lines
-the boy lay his burden down. Taking paper and pencil from his pocket
-and placing the little picture before him, he began to write.
-
-When he had finished he placed the letter and portrait in a carefully
-directed envelope. Then walking hurriedly to his machine he prepared
-for flight. Soon he was whirring low over the enemy trenches. Leaning
-out, he dropped his missile. The cannons roared, but no rifle was
-turned on that bright figure. Instinctively, men knew his deed was
-one of mercy. As the little paper fluttered downward it was picked up
-by eager soldier hands. A little cheer broke from a hundred throats.
-Willing messengers passed it to the rear. Speedily it went on its way.
-
-Twenty-four hours later a mother with pale face and trembling hands
-fingered the white scrap of paper. Her unseeing eyes gazed out on a
-smiling landscape. Between green meadows in the warm summer sunshine
-lay the glittering Rhine. But she saw nothing. Her baby boy was dead.
-Memories of him flooded her. She felt again the warmth of the baby body
-as it clung to hers and the pull of the tiny hands at her breast. She
-saw him as a boy, his eager restlessness. She heard his running steps
-at the door and his cry of "mother." It was over. That bright spirit
-was still. The third and last son had been exacted. Her fingers touched
-the letter in her lap. Her eyes fell on the penciled words. Slowly they
-took meaning. This boy who wrote: He'd seen the beauty of her son. He'd
-lifted the dear body in his arms. His heart was torn by anguish. What
-was it he said?
-
-
-IV--WHAT THE GERMAN MOTHER READ ON THE SCRAP OF PAPER
-
- "'It's your son. I know you can't forgive me for I killed him. But
- I want you to know he didn't suffer. The end came quickly. He was
- very brave. He must also have been very good. He had your picture
- in his pocket. I am sending it back, though I should like to keep
- it. I suppose I am his enemy, yet I don't feel so at all. I'd give
- my life to have him back. I didn't think of him or you when I shot
- at his machine. He was an enemy spying out our men. I couldn't let
- him get back to tell his news. It meant death to our men. It was a
- plucky deed. We were covered up with brush. He had to come quite
- low to see us and he came bravely. He nearly escaped me. He handled
- his machine magnificently. I thought how I should like to fly with
- him. But he was the enemy and had to be destroyed. I fired. It was
- over in a second. Just a blow on the head as the machine crashed to
- earth. His face shows no suffering, only excitement. His eyes are
- bright and fearless. I know you must have loved him. My mother died
- when I was quite a little boy. But I know what she would have felt
- if I had been killed. War isn't fair to women. God! how I wish it
- were over. It is a nightmare. I feel if I just touched your boy,
- he'd wake and we'd be friends. I know his body must be dear to you.
- I will take care of it and mark his grave with a little cross.
- After the war you may want to take him home.
-
- "'For the first time, I'm almost glad my mother isn't living. She
- could not have borne what I have done. My own heart is heavy. I
- felt it was my duty. Yet now when I see your son lifeless before me
- and hold your picture in my hand, it all seems wrong. The world is
- dark. O Mother, be my mother just a little too, and tell me what to
- do.--HUGH.'"
-
-Slowly great tears rolled down the woman's cheeks. What was this
-monster that was smashing men? Her boy and this other, they were the
-same. No hate was in their hearts. They suffered--the whole world
-suffered. Her country went in hunger. The babies in the nearby cottages
-grew weak for want of milk. She mustn't tell that to the English lad.
-His heart would break. Why must such suffering be? Was she to blame?
-There was the English lad without a mother. She had not thought of him
-and others like him. Her home, her sons, her Fatherland, these had been
-sufficient. But each life hangs on every other. Motherhood is universal.
-
-
-V--A GERMAN MOTHER TO THE ENGLISH BOY WHO KILLED HER SON
-
-Suddenly she knew what to write. What she must say to that
-grief-stricken English boy. Quickly her hand penned the words:
-
- "DEAR LAD: There is nothing to forgive. I see you as you
- are--your troubled goodness. I feel you coming to me like a little
- boy astounded at having done ill when you meant well. You seem my
- son. I am glad your hands cared for my other boy. I had rather
- you than any other touched his earthly body. He was my youngest.
- I think you saw his fineness. I know the torture of your heart
- since you have slain him. To women brotherhood is a reality. For
- all men are our sons. That makes war a monster that brother must
- slay brother. Yet perhaps women more than men have been to blame
- for this world war. We did not think of the world's children, our
- children. The baby hands that clutched our breast were so sweet, we
- forgot the hundred other baby hands stretched out to us. But the
- Earth does not forget, she mothers all. And now my heart aches with
- repentance. I long to take you in my arms and lay your head upon my
- breast to make you feel through me your kinship with all the earth.
- Help me, my son, I need you. Be your vision, my vision. Spread the
- dream of oneness and love throughout the land. When the war is over
- come to me. I am waiting for you.--DEINE MUTTER."
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[15] All numerals relate to stories herein told--not to chapters in the
-original sources.
-
-
-
-
-FIGHTING "WITH THE RUSSIAN ARMY"--ON AUSTRIAN FRONT
-
-_The Colossal Struggle of the Slavs_
-
-_Told by Bernard Pares, Official Observer with the Russian Army_
-
- This is one of the most important narratives in the records of
- the War; it is an invaluable witness of the colossal struggle
- waged on the Eastern battle front. The author was granted official
- privileges awarded to no other non-combatant. He passed through
- the first Warsaw Campaign, the crucial battle of Dunajec, and
- the Russian retreat. When Germany declared war on Russia, he
- volunteered for service and went to Petrograd and Moscow, where
- he was appointed official correspondent with the Russian Army,
- traveling with the general staff. He later joined the third army
- as an attaché. Here he was given written permit by General Radko
- Dmitriev to visit any part of the firing line. "We were the advance
- guard," he says, "of the liberation of the Slavs ... the retreat of
- the army to the San and to the Province of Lublin. We were driven
- out by sheer weight of metal ... it was a delight to be with such
- splendid men as the Staff of the Russian Army. I never saw anything
- base all the while I was with the Army. There was no drunkenness,
- everyone was at his best, and it was the simplest and noblest
- atmosphere in which I have ever lived." His experiences have been
- gathered into a volume entitled, "Day by Day With the Russian
- Army," from which the following incidents are retold by permission
- of his American publishers, Houghton, Mifflin and Company.
-
-[16] I--WAR STORIES FROM THE RUSSIANS
-
-It is wonderful how little effect the war seems to have made on the
-body of Russia. On the other hand, the atmosphere of nervous tension
-begins to disappear the moment one begins to get really near to the
-front. In the Red Cross offices at Kiev I found the same straining
-toward the front as elsewhere, only much calmer because these were
-people who had a big war work to do. Hospitals meet the eye in the
-streets at every turn.
-
-Once in the train for Galicia it was again the war atmosphere and
-simplicity itself. The talk was all of people engaged directly or
-indirectly in it. A graceful old lady with a very attentive son was on
-her way to get a sight of her husband, one of the generals. A young
-officer, whose wound has kept him out of it for three weeks, is on his
-way to the front before Cracow. A fresh-looking young man, at first
-unrecognisable to his friends with his close-cropped bullet head,
-tells how he went on a reconnaissance, how he came on the Austrians,
-how their first line held up their muskets and when the Russians had
-passed on fired on their rear, how nevertheless practically all came
-back safe and sound. It was told with a kind of schoolboy ingenuousness
-and without suggestion or comment of any kind on the conduct of those
-concerned. Then followed an account of a war marriage, at first put off
-and then carried out as quietly as possible. All the friends of every
-one seemed to be at the war.
-
-At the old frontier some of the buildings near the station were wrecked
-by artillery fire, and the railway was lined with a succession of solid
-hospital barracks, with the local commandant's flag flying over one of
-them. There was plenty to eat at the station; and though we moved on
-very quickly, every one from our crowded train managed to find a place
-in the Austrian carriages, chiefly because every one was ready to help
-his neighbour. The corridors jammed with passengers and kits, we moved
-on through the typical "strips" of Russian peasant culture, a pleasant
-wooded country, passing a draft detachment on the halt which waved
-greetings to us. My companion, Mr. Stakhovich, a phenomenally strong
-man and imbued by a fine spirit, was talking of the indifference of the
-Russian peasant to danger; he regarded it as an indifference to all
-sensations; anyhow they go forward, whatever the conditions, as a sheer
-matter of course. With the ordinary educated man the mind must be kept
-occupied with work if unpleasant possibilities of all kinds are to be
-kept out of it; but General Radko Dmitriev, to whom we are going, will
-jump up from a meal, however hungry, when there is a chance of getting
-under fire.
-
-
-II--IN THE CONQUERED CITY OF LVOV
-
-We draw up in the great station at Lvov. To the right of us stretch
-endless lines crowded with wagons, especially with sanitary trains. In
-the lofty passages and waiting-rooms are sleeping troops with piled
-muskets, some wounded on stretchers tended by the sisters of mercy who
-are constantly on duty here, and a crowd of men, all soldiers, coming
-and going. One passed many Austrian prisoners, of whom another enormous
-batch was just announced to arrive; and elsewhere a Russian private
-explained to me the excellent quality of the Hungarian knapsack, which
-he and his comrades had turned into busbies. One man was asleep inside
-the rail opposite the ticket office. He did not seem to mind how often
-he was awakened.
-
-In the town everything is quiet, and life goes so naturally that no
-one could take it for a conquered city. In the country this might have
-been expected because far the greater part of the population is Little
-Russian; but in Lvov the Russians are only about 17 per cent. and the
-predominant element is the Polish (60 per cent.), the rest being Jews
-(20 per cent.) or Germans (3 per cent.).
-
-Lvov is taking on more of the character of a Russian town. Many of the
-Jews have left. The Russian signs over new restaurants, stores, etc.,
-meet the eye everywhere. Of the Little Russian party which supported
-the Austrians, many have now returned and are making their peace with
-the new authorities. The Russian soldier is quite at home in Lvov, as
-one sees when the singing "drafts" swing past the Governor-General's
-palace; the Austrian prisoners in uniform, who are allowed liberty on
-parole, seem equally at their ease. Numbers of Russian priests are
-pouring into Galicia, but not fast enough for the Uniat villages which
-have embraced Orthodoxy; as soon as they arrive, peasants come with
-their carts and take them off to their parishes, without waiting for
-any formal distribution. The Uniat creed and ritual are practically
-identical with the Orthodox, so that the difference between the two
-was purely political. At the new People's Palace of Nicholas II, I
-saw a number of children, principally from families that had suffered
-severely at the hands of Austrian troops, receive Christmas presents
-on the day of St. Nicholas, who is the Russian Santa Claus. Archbishop
-Eulogius, in a very effective little address, told them that the
-biggest Christmas present which they were receiving was the liberty to
-speak their own language and worship in their own way in union with
-their Russian brothers.
-
-Starting for the army, I spent a night of strange happening in the
-great railway station, as our train was delayed till the morning. At
-one time I went, in the frosty night, to look for it at the goods
-station, where there were endless rails and wagons, and found it
-after a long search. In the big restaurant four little boys made
-great friends with me, one of fourteen in uniform and spurs who had
-been serving as mounted scout with a regiment at the front, and
-one of thirteen who had attached himself in the same capacity to a
-battery. Both were small creatures, and the first was a remarkable
-little person, with all the smartness and determination of a soldier,
-relieved by an amusing childlike grace and courtesy. He said to me in a
-confidential voice, "I see you are very fond of little children," and
-he ordered with pride lemonade and chocolates for us both. He said the
-men at the front could last a week to ten days, if necessary, without
-any food but _sukhari_ (army biscuit), so long as they had cigarettes.
-His imagination had been caught by the aeroplanes over Peremyshl,
-and also by the Carpathians, which he described with an up and down
-movement of the hand. He had a great disgust for anything mean and a
-warlike pride in the exploits of the soldiers of his regiment. His
-model was a boy, now a young man, who had been through the Japanese
-War. "If a general comes past," and he made a salute to show the
-extreme respect felt for his hero. Many a time in that long night,
-while the weary heads of doctors and sisters of mercy were bent in
-sheer tiredness against the tables, he would come and sit by me and
-ask me to read the war news to him, or to tell him about the English
-submarines. He left me with the smartest of salutes in the early hours
-of the morning.
-
-
-III--TALES TOLD ON AN ARMY TRAIN
-
-Our train is an enormous one with endless warm carriages (_teplushki_)
-for the wounded. The staff of sanitars and sisters, working for the
-Zemstvo Red Cross, live in a spotlessly clean carriage, and there are
-special carriages for drugs, stores, kitchen, etc. They are simple and
-interesting people, and, as I am now in the Red Cross and have many
-interests in common with them, they kindly made me up a bed in their
-carriage, where we discussed Russia in all its bearings.
-
-We carry a group of passengers who have all made friends after the
-Russian way. A colonel and his wife are going to fetch the body of
-a fallen comrade. Another colonel, a delightfully simple man with
-close-cropped hair, thin brown face and bright, clever eyes seems to
-know all the Slavonic languages and has much to say of the Austrians.
-He has seen twenty of them surrender to a priest and his clerk who
-came on them in a wood, made the sign of the cross and told them to
-come with them. In another place twenty-two Austrians were captured by
-two Russians. The Austrian officers put quick-firing guns behind their
-own rifle pits for the "encouragement" of their men, on whom he has
-seen them fire. They make their gunners fire every two hours in the
-night as a kind of exercise. He has seen them form their men in close
-column under fire and march them about up and down along the line of
-the Russian trenches. The Austrian artillery seldom takes cover; the
-Russian directs its fire on the enemy rather than on his batteries. In
-one place, heavy Russian artillery at a range of seven miles demolished
-an Austrian field train and two battalions who were lunching in the
-square of a small town. He is full of life and confidence, and all that
-he says breathes of fresh air and of work.
-
-Our train made its way through to the furthest point up. We had to stop
-several times to let through the ambulance trains already charged with
-wounded, which take precedence. We had to go very slowly over several
-repaired bridges; and this was no simple matter, as we had twenty-seven
-long and heavy coaches. Some of these repairs were complicated pieces
-of work, as the bridges were high above the level of the rivers. At
-point after point, and especially on the Austrian sides of the rivers,
-we passed lines of carefully prepared trenches, and in one place there
-was a masterpiece of artillery cover, with every arrangement for a long
-stay.
-
-The damage done by the artillery fire was sporadic--here a smashed
-station building, there a town where several houses had suffered. But
-there was nothing indiscriminate; and the Polish population, which
-showed no sign of any hostility to the Russians, seemed to find the war
-conditions livable.
-
-As in other parts, I was specially struck by the easy relations
-existing between the inhabitants, the Austrian soldiers and their
-Russian captors. There were exceptions. I had some talk with a few
-Austrian Germans from Vienna. They were simple folk and seemed to
-have no grudge against the Russians; and the circumstance in their
-position which they felt most--they were only taken the day before
-yesterday--was that this was Christmas Eve, the "_stille Nacht, heilige
-Nacht_" of the beautiful German hymn, and that they were far from home
-among strange people. They kept apart as far as possible not only from
-their captors but from their fellow prisoners from Bohemia and Moravia.
-These last seemed at least quite comfortable, smoking their long pipes
-and leisurely sweeping the platforms. They were quite a large company.
-They understood my Russian better than my German. When I asked them
-how they stood with the German troops, instead of the sturdy "Gut" of
-their Viennese fellows, they answered with a slang word and a gesture.
-When asked about the Russians, they replied in a quite matter-of-course
-way: "We are brothers and speak the same tongue; we are one people."
-For any difficulties, the Poles often prove good interpreters. It is
-very different for the Austrian captive officers, who often cannot
-understand their own men.
-
-These Czechs confidently assured me that any Russian troops that
-entered Bohemia would be welcomed as friends; and they claimed that
-not only the neighboring Moravians and Slovaks but also the Croats
-further south were to be taken as feeling as they did. The Bohemians
-and Moravians seem to be surrendering in the largest numbers of all;
-and though the Viennese claimed that large numbers of Russians had also
-been taken, I cannot regard as anything but exceptional the enormous
-batches of blue uniforms that I passed on the road here. I asked these
-men about their greatcoats and was not at all surprised when they said
-they felt cold in them. It is nothing like such a practical winter
-outfit, whether for head, body or legs, as that of the Russian soldier.
-
-We came very well over the last part of our journey. I was sorry to
-part with the friendly sanitars, who all seemed old acquaintances
-by the end of the journey and invited me to take up my quarters
-permanently with them. Theirs was more than ordinary kindness, as they
-had shared everything they had with me, including their little sleeping
-apartment. The bearer company under their orders is all composed of
-Mennonites, a German religious sect from South Russia which objects
-to war on principle and, being excused military service even in this
-tremendous struggle, seems to be serving wholesale as ambulance
-volunteers.
-
-As there were none but soldiers about, these men helped me out with
-my luggage; and through the window of the First Aid point in Tarnow
-station, I saw another acquaintance waving me a welcome. This is the
-last point that the railway can serve; and my friends will go back with
-a full burden, which will keep the medical staff busy day and night all
-the way. One of my new companions, who has been out to a village to
-get milk for the wounded, has seen the shrapnel bursting; and the guns
-are sounding loud and clear near the town as I write this. It is here
-that the most seriously wounded must be treated at once, as a railway
-journey would simply mean death for them. This is brought home to one,
-if one only looks at the faces of the workers. Yet with this huge line
-of operations, and the assaults which may be made at any point of it,
-at any moment the nearest field hospitals may need to send off any
-wounded who can be moved without delay. Though the work is being done
-with danger all round, less thought is being given to it than anywhere
-that I have been yet.
-
-
-IV--CHRISTMAS IN AN AUSTRIAN HOSPITAL
-
-Christmas Eve: peace on earth and good will toward men. And all through
-"the still night, the holy night," the sound that means killing goes
-on almost continuously. How can any one say prayers for a world which
-is at war, or for himself that is a part of it? May God, who knows
-everything, help each of us to bear our part and not disgrace Him, and
-make us instruments to the end that He wishes.
-
-Christmas day I spent in the hospitals. In one ward, at a local
-Austrian hospital, and full of wounded, I found that almost every one
-of the line of patients was of a different nationality. Going round
-the room, one found first a Pole of western Galicia, then a Russian
-from the Urals, next a Ruthenian (Little Russian) from eastern Galicia,
-next a Magyar from Hungary, and against the wall a young German from
-Westphalia. After him came an Austrian-German from Salzburg, a Serbian
-from southern Hungary, another Ruthenian, an Austrian-German from
-Moravia, an Austrian-German from Bohemia, and a Moravian from Moravia.
-
-I spent a couple of hours here, talking sometimes with each of the
-patients, sometimes with all. The Pole knew only Polish and the
-bearded Russian, who had a bad body wound, was too tired to talk much.
-Of the Ruthenians one was a frail, white-faced boy from close to the
-Russian frontier who seemed, like most of his people, subdued, and
-confused with the strangeness of his position in fighting against his
-own people; the other was a lumpish boy without much intelligence. The
-thin, bearded Hungarian, who knew no German but a little Russian, was
-mostly groaning or dozing. The Salzburg Austrian was dazed and drowsy,
-but at intervals talked quietly of his pleasant homeland.
-
-The German stood out from the rest. He was a bright, vigorous boy of
-twenty, had gone as a volunteer and was tremendously proud of the
-spirit of the German army. He had fought against the French during
-four days of pouring rain, mostly in standing water. The Bavarians,
-who seemed to have quarrelled with the other troops in that part, were
-making war atrociously, he said, knifing the inhabitants, insulting the
-women and destroying all that came in their way. He was later moved to
-the Carpathians, where one German division fought between two Austrian
-ones. They advanced in snow without field kitchens, and were not
-allowed to touch the pigs and poultry that they passed. However, they
-had enough to eat; and they were hoping to surprise their enemy, when
-the Russians fell upon them and left only the remnants of a regiment,
-many of the officers also falling. He himself was wounded in both legs,
-and was brought here in a cart.
-
-Every German soldier has a prayer-book and a song-book. They constantly
-sing on the march, and find it a great remedy against fatigue. Songs of
-Arndt and Körner are very popular, and there is a new version of an old
-song, which is perhaps the greatest favorite; it begins--
-
- "Oh Deutschland hoch an Ehren,
- Du heil'ges Land der Treu."
-
-and it goes on to speak of the new exploits in east and west. There are
-any number of volunteers in Germany; the women are all joining the Red
-Cross; and the population is busy with every kind of work for the army;
-but when I asked whether the people were keen for the war, he answered
-with astonishment, "The people? The people thought that the war was
-not to be avoided; but that was at the start; now it is different."
-He asked if there were many other Englishmen in Russia, and when I
-answered that there were some, he said, to my surprise, "The English
-are everywhere, they are a fine people--_nobel_." He also asked me on
-the quiet whether, when he was well, he would be sent to Siberia. He
-had been told that the Russians were terrible, but had written home to
-say that he had found them nothing of the sort.
-
-Much of our talk turned on the Austrian army. The German said that it
-didn't stand firm "unless it was properly led, by Germans." In Bohemia
-and Moravia the regiments were mixed, Slavs and Austrian-Germans, and
-according to the Moravian soldiers, were constantly quarrelling; all
-the officers were Austrian-Germans, and even some of the Hungarian
-regiments seemed to be commanded by Germans. The young Serbian spoke
-of frequent quarrels and even brawls between Serbian and Hungarian
-fellow-soldiers. The great wish of all was that the war should end.
-When I said that the end was not in sight, the German exclaimed,
-"More misery, more misery;" a second said, "Oh, Jammer, Jammer"
-(lamentation), and a third had tears in his eyes.
-
-In another ward I heard more of the Bohemians. There Prussia is the
-antipathy. There appear to be Czech officers only in the reserve.
-After the outbreak of war, the Austrians made wholesale arrests
-among the educated Czechs, quite apart from party politics, and
-were particularly severe on the gymnastic volunteer organizations
-(_sokols_), which are popular among all the Slav nationalities of
-Austria. The Bohemians had not had time to find their legs under the
-new possibilities created by the Russian successes, but the Russian
-troops would be sure of a cordial welcome there. The whole of my
-informant's regiment had surrendered _en masse_; and even in the
-mobilization of 1914, a Prague regiment had refused to march against
-Russia and several of the men had been shot. I was told that the
-Austrian army was much weaker in reserves than the Russian.
-
-
-V--HOW THE RUSSIAN SOLDIERS DIE
-
-I ended the day at the railway station, where the Russian wounded just
-brought in were being attended to while the cannon sounded from time
-to time not far off. Several lay on stretchers in the corridors and
-others on pallets in the ambulance room, all still in their greatcoats
-and with their kits lying beneath them. I had no conversations here;
-there was too much pain, one could only sit by the sufferers or perhaps
-help them to change their position. First aid had been given elsewhere,
-but this was the stage when the wounds seem to be felt most. There was
-wonderfully little complaining. Most were silent, except when a helping
-hand was needed. One man shot through the chest told me that "By the
-grace of God, it was nothing to matter." It was always a satisfaction
-to the men that they had been wounded while attacking. A general walked
-quickly round, distributing cigarettes, which he put in the men's
-mouths and himself lighted.
-
-In the night the cannonade sounded close to the town, but seemed
-farther off again next morning.
-
-To-day I also went round a hospital with the dressers. The work was
-quickly executed, but much of it was very complicated. One does not
-describe such scenes, not so much because of the ugly character of
-many of the wounds, nor because of the end impending over many of the
-patients. To this last the Russian soldier's attitude is simple--_gilt
-es dir, oder gilt es mir_. He will speak of it as "going to America,"
-the undiscovered country. But all these things come to be forgotten
-in the atmosphere of work. Here all the resources of life are
-going forward in their own slow way, for they can have no quicker,
-handicapped and outpaced in their struggle to keep up with the work of
-death.
-
-General Radko Dmitriev is a short and sturdily built man with quick
-brown eyes and a profile reminiscent of Napoleon. He talks quickly
-and shortly, sometimes drums on the table with his fingers, and now
-and then makes a rapid dash for the matches. The daily visit of the
-Chief of the Staff is short, because, as the General says on his
-return, simple business is done quickly. Every piece of his incisive
-conversation holds together as part of a single and clear view of the
-whole military position, of which the watchword is "Forward."
-
-It is only the heavy rains that have saved the retreating Austrians
-from further losses. The roads are so broken up and so deep with mud
-that any quick movement is impossible. This gives the occasion for a
-useful rest. The cold weather--and it is freezing now--will be welcomed
-on this side; and the Russian winter kits, which have already been
-served out, are immeasurably better than the thin blue greatcoats of
-the draggled and demoralized Austrians.
-
-Numbers of Austrian units are so reduced that they are only shadows
-of what they were, and some seem to have disappeared altogether. The
-ordinary drafts came in some time ago and are now exhausted--such is
-the testimony of Austrian officers. The new Russian recruits, on the
-contrary, will join the colors shortly.
-
- * * * * *
-
-From the beginning of the war, Bosnians, who are really Serbians,
-surrendered in large numbers. Then the Poles began to come in, and now
-the Bohemians. The Hungarians are sure to go on to the end; but the
-Roumanian and Italian soldiers of Austria have also come over very
-easily. In front of Cracow a Russian officer under fire came on a whole
-number of Bohemians who were singing the "Sokol" songs and shouted a
-greeting as they came into the Russian lines.
-
- * * * * *
-
-These wholesale surrenders have, I think, an extremely interesting
-political significance. When governments turned the whole people into
-an army, it was clear that the army was also being turned into the
-people; but it was not clear how the people could express itself when
-under army discipline. These surrenders, in their general character
-and in their differences of detail, are a picture of the feelings and
-aspirations of the various nationalities which are bundled together
-under the name of Austria.
-
- * * * * *
-
-At this Staff, as at the General Staff, life was very simple. We all
-met twice a day for a plain meal without any alcohol; there was plenty
-of conversation, but it was that of men engaged in responsible work;
-any news from outside was welcome, especially from the western allies,
-and there was full appreciation and sympathy for their hard task.
-
-There was plenty of news from other quarters of the Russian front,
-and one could have a much juster and fuller perspective of how things
-were going than anywhere behind the army; the two things which stood
-out even more here than elsewhere were, on the one hand, the immensity
-of the sacrifices which have been asked and are being cheerfully made
-by Russia, and, on the other, the sense of quiet confidence as to the
-ultimate result.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[16] All numerals relate to stories herein told--not to chapters from
-original sources.
-
-
-
-
-THE ROMANCE OF THE FRENCH FOREIGN LEGION
-
-_The "Glorious Rascals"_
-
-_Told by E. S. and G. F. Lees_
-
- The reinstatement by the King of Lieutenant-Colonel John Ford
- Elkington in the Royal Warwickshire Regiment, after he had served
- for twenty-two months with conspicuous bravery in the French
- Foreign Legion, has once more drawn attention to this unique
- military organization. As the writers of this story show, "La
- Légion Etrangère" of our Allies the French is literally steeped
- in romance, and it is therefore the romantic side of the heroic
- yet often maligned legionaries which they have set forth most
- prominently. Practically every man in the corps has a history, if
- he could only be induced to tell it, and in the present war the
- Legion has covered itself with glory, as shown in this story in the
- _Wide World Magazine_.
-
-
-I--STORY OF "THE GLORIOUS BLACKGUARDS"
-
-Budding novelists in search of ideas for tales of adventure, short
-story writers who have come to the end of their stock of episodes,
-and all who wield the pen either for amusement or instruction, may be
-recommended to turn over the pages that tell the story of the Foreign
-Legion. There is a whole literature at their disposal, covering
-a period of more than eighty years and written in almost as many
-languages as there are nationalities in this remarkable military body,
-and it teems from beginning to end with incidents which respond to the
-entire gamut of human emotions.
-
-The Foreign Legion, which in time of peace is composed of between eight
-and ten thousand men, but which now probably exceeds the strength of
-an army corps, since no fewer than thirty-two thousand odd foreigners
-enrolled themselves from August 21st, 1914, to April 1st, 1915, is,
-as it were, a microcosm of the world. According to official French
-returns, there were in its ranks at the beginning of the war nine
-thousand five hundred Alsatians and Lorrainers, fourteen hundred and
-sixty-two Belgians, three hundred and seventy-nine English, three
-thousand three hundred and ninety-three Russians, four thousand nine
-hundred and thirteen Italians, thirteen hundred and eighty Greeks,
-five hundred and ninety-one Luxembourgers, nine hundred and sixty-nine
-Spaniards, one thousand eight hundred and sixty-seven Swiss, thirteen
-hundred and sixty-nine Austro-Hungarians, one thousand and twenty-seven
-Germans, five hundred and ninety-two Turks, six hundred Americans, and
-four thousand two hundred and fifty-four of various other nationalties,
-including, in all probability, as at the time of the Empire, Poles,
-Albanians, Croatians, Illyrians, and negroes.
-
-In this world-in-little all classes of society are represented--the
-prince and the pauper, the scholar and the illiterate, the one-time
-brilliant officer, prominent financier, and ecclesiastic. All of them
-are brought to a common level with the lowest of the low through
-inherent human weakness, some foolish act committed in haste and
-repented of at leisure, or else through some misfortune or other over
-which the man who is "down on his luck" has no control whatever.
-
-The social outcast, the deserter, the gambler, the fugitive from
-justice, the man who has been crossed in love, the desperate man
-who, on second thoughts, prefers the ranks of the Legion to suicide,
-the man who has a pure love of soldiering or an inordinate taste for
-adventure, the out-and-out failure who has been told by his family to
-"make good" and clean off his debt to society--all of them are found
-here, living under the shadow of mystery, undergoing the most arduous
-life imaginable, and, for the most part, suffering in silence. So
-heterogenous are they that the legionaries, quite unjustly, have been
-called many ill names. Through the faults of a few, who necessarily
-find their way into such an organization, they have all been
-indiscriminately labelled with such epithets as "band of criminals,"
-"degenerates," "troop of dishonoured foreigners," "heartless
-mercenaries," and so on. But many sins can be forgiven the soldiers of
-the Legion when we read their history aright, and come to understand
-their Spartan characters in the hour of trial and danger. And it is for
-that reason that, despite their antecedents and shortcomings, they are
-now generally known in French military circles as "The Heroic Rascals,"
-or as "The Glorious Blackguards."
-
-The Foreign Legion can trace its origin to the days of the Scottish
-archers, employed by Charles VII. of France, and to those of the Swiss,
-Albanian, Flemish, Walloon, German, Italian, and other mercenaries in
-the service of his successors. At the time of the Convention, in 1793,
-an appeal was made to the nations of Europe for soldiers, with the
-result that several foreign regiments fought with the revolutionary
-armies. All these, however, were disbanded at the fall of Napoleon.
-When Louis XVIII. came to the throne he created the Royal Foreign
-Legion in their place, but they gradually merged into the regular army.
-However, after the 1830 Revolution the Foreign Legion was revived,
-and ever since they have taken part in nearly every foreign campaign
-in which France has been engaged--in the conquest of Algeria, in the
-Crimean War, in Mexico, Tongking, Formosa, Madagascar, and Morocco.
-
-
-II--ASYLUM OF BRAVE UNFORTUNATES
-
-Admission to the Legion is not the result of the efforts of the
-recruiting sergeant. All the men are volunteers, and although all
-classes and all nationalties are welcome to join they are not unduly
-encouraged to do so. There have been cases in which men who have come
-to enlist at the military headquarters in Paris have been told of the
-disadvantages they would have to encounter, and advised "to think the
-matter over seriously" before signing away their liberty for a period
-of five years. Yet, almost to a man, they have come back to undergo the
-extremely rigorous medical examination--the only examination, by the
-way, with which they are troubled. For, as regards their real name and
-nationality, no proofs are required. The authorities show no curiosity
-whatsoever about a man's past. They take it for granted that he has a
-very good reason for wishing to disappear for a while from the society
-of his relatives and friends and become merged with others of like mind
-in a semi-anonymous body, training, marching, and fighting without
-respite.
-
-The military authorities formerly used to pay the legionaries
-the princely salary of a half-penny a day (recently raised to
-twopence-halfpenny), and their kit does not even include socks, yet
-they are expected to possess sufficient physical vigour to march a
-distance of twenty to thirty-two miles, over rocky, slippery ground and
-through jungles, in less than eight hours, halting only ten minutes
-each hour, and with a load of seventy to eighty pounds. This is a
-terrible test of speed and endurance, yet one out of which these men
-come, through systematic training, with flying colours, and of which
-they are all of them justly proud. "No questions asked, but strict
-obedience and iron discipline"--this might be the motto of the corps,
-in which such famous soldiers as MacMahon, Canrobert, Chanzy, De
-Négrier, Servière, and Villebois-Mareuil have been officers. In spite
-of this display of delicacy, however, many a man's story leaks out. He
-may be as silent as the Sphinx for years, yet the time comes when his
-taciturnity is overcome through some little incident, and his secret,
-or part of it, as in a case related by Mr. Frederic Martyn, in his
-"Life in the Legion," is out.
-
-It was during the French campaign in Mexico, says Mr. Martyn, who
-himself served for five years in the Legion. A large city having been
-captured, the general in command wished to propitiate the inhabitants
-by celebrating a spectacular military High Mass in the cathedral. When
-all the troops had been assembled, it was found that the clergy had
-gone on strike. In the face of this dilemma, the general was just about
-to abandon the ceremony when a corporal of the Legion stepped forward
-and, saluting, said, "_Mon général_, I was a bishop before I became a
-corporal, and I will celebrate the Mass." Another eye-witness of this
-incident states that the ex-bishop also offered to preach a sermon, but
-the general considered that the Mass alone was sufficient.
-
-M. Maurer, a former officer in the Legion and now President of the
-Mutual Aid Society for former officers, N. C. O.'s, and soldiers of the
-foreign regiments in Paris, informed us that he remembered this bishop,
-whose fall was due to drink.
-
-This recalls another ecclesiastical anecdote. At the time of the
-Fashoda incident a legionary was drowned at Zarzis whilst attempting
-to save a fisherman. His comrades made a coffin out of the only wood
-available, some pieces of old packing-cases, on one of which--the
-portion, as it happened, which we used for the top--were the words,
-"Keep the contents dry." Again no priest was thought to be there to
-perform the last rites over the dead, until an Italian private stepped
-forward, revealed his priestly identity, and recited the Burial Service
-by heart.
-
-
-III--FROM PRINCE TO LEGIONAIRE--THE KAISER'S COUSIN
-
-The fall from bishopric to the rank and file of the Foreign Legion is
-not the biggest social drop on record in the Legion. In 1897 a young
-man of twenty-six, who gave his name as Albrecht Friedrich Nornemann,
-was accepted for service. After ten months in barracks at Géryville
-he broke down under the severe training, was sent into hospital, and
-in a few weeks died of phthisis. A day or two later the regiment was
-astonished to learn that a German war-vessel had entered the harbour,
-entrusted with the astounding mission of fetching the body of Albrecht
-Friedrich, cousin-german of Prince Henry of Prussia, and consequently
-cousin of the Kaiser, who, having ordered the remains to be brought
-back to Hamburg, probably alone knew the prince's secret.
-
-Six years before this remarkable incident, which is vouched for by
-more than one authority, another man of mysterious origin--who, if
-he was not actually a prince of the realm, was in all probability of
-royal blood on one side--was discovered in a Tongking battalion. A
-sergeant and the owner of an illustrious name, since his father was
-a general and Minister to a European monarch, it was noticed that he
-never received any letters from his father, but that every month the
-paymaster handed him a thousand francs which he never failed to share
-with his less well-to-do comrades. Why was he there, and what was the
-mystery surrounding his birth? was often the mental reflection of
-those who enjoyed his friendship and generosity. Only after his death
-did they get an inkling of the truth. His military book stated that
-his name was V. de S----, son of V. de S----, General of Division and
-Minister of War. "There was no mention of his mother's name," said
-a superior officer to M. de Pouvourville, who tells the story, "and
-there can be little doubt that she was of too illustrious a rank to
-acknowledge a son the circumstances of whose birth had placed him
-beyond the pale."
-
-Some excellent stories of life in the Legion were told to the authors
-of this article by the above named M. Maurer.
-
-One of his orderlies was Graf X----, the son of the then Governor of
-Brandenburg, but he could never learn in what circumstances this man
-had fallen from his high estate. It was different in the case of his
-particular chum, a young Englishman of distinguished manners, who spoke
-several languages and was an accomplished musician, though the secret
-of his life did not come out until several years after M. Maurer had
-retired and returned to Paris. One day, when passing the Madeleine,
-he saw a splendid equipage, drawn by a pair of magnificent greys,
-with silver harness, standing outside the church, and, lo and behold!
-sitting in the carriage was his old chum. Hailing him by the name by
-which he had always known him, M. Maurer was astonished to see his
-friend put his finger to his lips. The next moment he was invited to
-enter the carriage, and, with an invitation to dinner, off they drove
-to a fashionable restaurant in the Champs Elysees. Over dinner M.
-Maurer's former comrade told him his real name and story. A young man
-of good family, he had started his career with an excellent position in
-the Bank of England. One day, when ten thousand pounds had been slid
-into his hands, a sudden temptation came over him, a foolish desire
-to have a flutter at "Monte." So he took the earliest opportunity of
-leaving London. As was only to be expected, the inevitable happened;
-he lost at the tables every penny of the sum he had embezzled. Aware
-of the disgrace that awaited him when the theft was discovered, he
-enlisted in the Foreign Legion.
-
-"Now, it is a well-known fact," concluded M. Maurer, "that the sins
-of a man who has served his full time in the Legion are wiped off the
-slate, and I suppose that something like this must have happened in
-the case of my young friend. I have no doubt that his family restored
-the money. Anyway, he attained his rehabilitation. He is the bearer
-of a very well-known name, and to-day occupies an important--a _very_
-important--post in public affairs in England."
-
-
-IV--THE ROMANCE OF THE EURASIAN
-
-Another little romance revolving round the life of a legionary, whose
-birth was enveloped in mystery, was told some years ago by a British
-soldier who served in the Legion. After an engagement at Cao-Thuong,
-there was found on one of the dead, sewn in a belt, six British war
-medals and a letter addressed to the narrator. Judge of his surprise
-when he found that it was in perfect English, of which he had never
-for a moment suspected his comrade-in-arms had a knowledge, and
-that it contained the statement that the medals had been won by the
-writer's father and grandfather in India. His mother, the writer
-explained, was a native, and therefore he, as a Eurasian, although born
-in wedlock, was ineligible for the British Army. As his tastes were
-wholly military, and the greatest desire of his life was to add to his
-forebears' collection of medals, he had enlisted in the Legion.
-
-The mental attitude of the man who regards the Foreign Legion as a _pis
-aller_ is a common trait among its members; it is often, indeed, the
-last resource of those who have met with life's disappointments.
-
-There was once an officer of the German army who had invented a new
-type of cannon, and could not get its merits recognised, either by his
-own country or by France, as rapidly as he would have liked, or receive
-prompt remuneration for his work. Straightway, therefore, he went and
-joined the Légion Etrangère. Some little time later, in 1895, the
-French authorities, waking up to the possibility of the value of the
-work of so eminent an engineer, approached him on the subject, but by
-then he had become thoroughly soured. He declined to have anything to
-do with them, and with the air of one whose genius has been recognised
-too late hastily returned to his kitchen, where he had long carried out
-the duties of regimental cook.
-
-In the barracks at Sidi-bel-Abbes, where the most cordial and
-frequently rowdy _bonne camaraderie_ reigns, failures in art, science,
-literature, and every other walk in life may be found by hundreds.
-Special cases like that of the gallant Lieutenant-Colonel Elkington,
-who, after being cashiered by general court-martial, joined the Legion
-as a simple private at the beginning of the present war and won his
-way to distinction, are rare. He was in the thick of the fighting in
-the Champagne country, lay for ten months in hospital badly wounded,
-and before regaining the confidence of his King and country was
-personally decorated with the Médaille Militaire and the Croix de
-Guerre by an officer attached to General Joffre's staff. To find an
-exact parallel to this instance of reinstatement in the British Army
-would be difficult. Among the legionaires, however, there have been
-quite a number of men of the type of the American Daly, an artist and
-pupil of Gérôme, who lost at Monte Carlo everything his father had
-given him to pay for his art training in Europe; scores, too, of such
-enigmas as that fine young fellow who joined the Legion in 1893, served
-in Tongking, and left in 1898, at the end of his time, when by chance
-his superiors discovered that he had been first tenor at the Theâtre de
-la Monnaie at Brussels. Not a note had he sung, not a single reference
-to music had he made whilst in the regiment! Ah, what stories some of
-these ne'er-do-wells, drunkards, comedians, and gentlemen with fine
-manners could tell if only they would consent to open their lips!
-
-
-V--WHY GERMANS HATE THE FOREIGN LEGION
-
-Many of them, of course, have no tale worth telling, and among these
-are the deserters from other armies. If we include the Alsatians and
-Lorrainers who join to avoid service under the hated German flag, they
-form a very big class indeed. Nearly every year more than a thousand
-men of the annexed provinces and more than a thousand Germans flocked
-to the French standard, with the result that the Legion has always
-been disliked and slandered by Germans. We have before us seven
-closely-printed pages forming a list of books and pamphlets written
-by German writers, who, filled with Pan-Germanist hatred and inspired
-by the virulent libels of anonymous scribes, have endeavoured for the
-past twenty years to throw mud at a military organization into which so
-many of their countrymen escaped. This prompts new thought. If German
-soldiers are so glad to join a body in which life is "a veritable hell
-upon earth," where men "never taste meat, but only bread and rice,"
-where they "sleep on the bare ground," where "noses, ears, and fingers
-are cut off for the slightest fault," where they are "buried in the
-sand to the waist with an iron cage over them filled with hungry
-rats"--the last idea was stolen by the German slanderers from Octave
-Mirbeau's "Jardin des Supplices"--what must their life in their own
-army be like?
-
-As a matter of fact, many Germans who have served in the Legion have
-had, on their return home, nothing but good to say about it, and have
-become voluntary recruiting agents for France, hence an increased
-bitterness on the part of the Huns. A few years ago deserters from the
-German army became so numerous that a society was formed at Munich,
-bearing the name "The German Protection Society Against the Foreign
-Legion." Several times men were arrested for trying to persuade their
-comrades to join the Legion, but they had to be released, as it was
-found that they were pure-born Teutons.
-
-And now let us apply the supreme test and look into the fighting
-record of the legionaries. As military experts are agreed that they
-are among the finest fighters in the world. Innumerable instances of
-their stubbornness can be given, and it is the quality which has made
-them, time after time, invaluable as a "stiffening" whenever it has
-been considered necessary to draft a number of soldiers of the Legion
-into a regiment of less experienced troops. "The most pusillanimous of
-them," said an old French officer, who had seen much service in Africa,
-to us, "will hold out to the death when side by side with a legionary
-and inspired by his superb courage."
-
-One of the feats of the Foreign Legion was the taking of Son-Tay on
-December 16th, 1883, a square brick _citadelle_ protected by a hundred
-cannon, a moat five yards wide, and hedges of bamboo, and defended
-by twenty-five thousand men--ten thousand Chinese regulars, ten
-thousand Black Flags, and five thousand Annamites. As an example of
-pure bravery, look at the thirty-six days' siege of Tuyen-Quan, which
-in 1885 was held by six hundred legionaries against twenty thousand
-Chinese. Few celebrated sieges have attained and none surpassed in
-horror what took place there. On the occasion of the Camerone affair,
-in Mexico, sixty-five legionaries, without food or shelter, in an open
-court and under a tropical sun, held in check for more than ten hours
-two thousand enemies, three hundred of whom they killed. The word
-"Camerone" is embroidered on the flag of the Foreign Legion, and if
-you go to the Invalides you will see on one of the walls, in letters
-of gold, the names of the three officers who directed that handful of
-heroes, with the date of the fight: "Lieutenant Vilain, Sub-Lieutenant
-Mandet, and Captain Danjou; April 30th, 1863."
-
-
-VI--FRANCE'S TRIBUTE TO THE LEGION
-
-The bravery of the Foreign Legion has been so conspicuous that on
-February 16th, 1906, M. Eugène Etienne, then Minister of War, proposed
-that the flag of the 1st Foreign Regiment be decorated with the Legion
-of Honour, "in recognition of the acts of devotion, courage, and
-abnegation which a troop, ever on a war footing, renders to the country
-in the defence of its Colonial possessions." This was done, and at the
-Invalides, in a special case, can be seen an old flag of the regiment
-bearing the date September 24th, 1862, a flag which had been retaken
-from the enemy, and on the staff of which hangs the Cross of the Legion
-of Honour, the finest tribute which France can pay to the glorious
-deeds of the Foreign Legion.
-
-During the present war a further distinction has been granted the
-marching regiment of the Legion. Authority has just been given the men
-to wear the _fourragère_, or braid, over the left shoulder. The flag of
-this regiment had already been decorated with the Croix de Guerre.
-
-The latest recorded exploit of this gallant corps was the capture,
-at the point of the bayonet, of a fortified village strongly held by
-the enemy. The men of the Legion held out so vigorously that all the
-enemy's counter-attacks were beaten off, and seven hundred and fifty
-German prisoners were sent to the rear.
-
-The British residents in Paris and other parts of France who
-volunteered for service in the French army and trained at the Magic
-City in 1914 were drafted into the Foreign Legion, and the survivors
-have reason to be proud of their old corps.
-
-But the complete history of the doings of the Legion during this war
-can only be written some time hence. Suffice it to say, in addition
-to the above facts, that they have been mentioned in army orders no
-fewer than three times--a distinction not won by any other French
-regiment. At one time, during the Champagne campaign, they advanced
-eighteen kilomètres into the enemy's front, and if only there had been
-reinforcements to back them up there is no doubt a great victory would
-have been won. The many personal heroic deeds, too, necessitate names
-and details which will not yet pass the Censor's scrutiny. But one
-incident, in conclusion, perhaps we may mention, as recorded to us by
-M. Maurer.
-
-"One of my former men, an Alsatian peasant of the lowest type, speaking
-only of his own _patois_ and unable to read or write, came to Paris
-after serving fifteen years in the Foreign Legion. I was instrumental
-in getting him a place in a public wash-house, where he drew a handcart
-for the sum of four francs a day, which, by the by, he promptly spent
-in drink as soon as it was handed to him. As soon as war was declared
-he was off again to his _métier_. He returned on leave after ten months
-in the trenches, and came to see me. Judge of my surprise when I found
-he had become a sub-lieutenant, wearing the Croix de Guerre and Croix
-Militaire with the three palms! Still unable to speak more than a dozen
-words in French he explained in his dialect, when I inquired what he
-had done to acquire such distinctions, that he had killed fifty-two
-Boches in the most dramatic circumstances. Night after night he had
-slipped out of his trench, and like a snake in the grass crawled across
-'No Man's Land' to the enemy's listening-posts, which are invariably
-under the charge of experienced officers and picked men. He did his
-work silently and expeditiously--with a knife. A terrible but true
-anecdote of this relentless war!"
-
-
-
-
-ADVENTURES OF WOMEN WHO FACE DEATH ON BATTLEGROUNDS
-
-_Little Stories of Woman's Indomitable Courage_
-
- This is a group of little tales of brave women--direct from the
- battlefields. They are but typical of the noble deeds of the
- mothers and daughters of all nations throughout the war. It has
- been estimated that forty thousand women have fought in the
- armies--thousands of them in soldiers' uniforms. The first three
- stories told here are from the _New York American_, and the fourth
- is from the _New York World_.
-
-
-I--STORY OF ENGLISHWOMAN WHO RISKED LIFE ON RUSSIAN BATTLEFRONT
-
-Mrs. Hilda Wynne has youth, beauty, wealth and fascination--she cast
-them all into the great pool of the war in Europe, and added bravery to
-them--a limitless bravery. She wears the Croix de Guerre, the gift of
-France. King Albert of Belgium decorated her with the Order of Leopold,
-and Russia honored her with the Order of St. George. These rare
-distinctions she won by unique service. She drove her ambulance between
-the first trenches. Back and forth she went, driving her automobile
-at furious pace with the fire pouring upon her from the allies on one
-side and the Germans on the other, but a mile separating them. Her
-unit worked between the first trenches, the only workers permitted
-to operate on this danger line. Mrs. Wynne and her organization, the
-Bevan-Wynne Unit, have saved more than 25,000 lives of wounded that but
-for her speedy aid would have been lost. She then came to America for
-the specific purpose of interesting Americans in the needs of Russian
-soldiers.
-
-_Told by Hilda Wynne, herself_
-
-I have looked into the eyes of death and seen there many things.
-
-Looking upon the human carnage I have witnessed, from this distance and
-in the little breathing space I have taken from service to make you
-Americans know the Russians and their needs better, I testify that I
-have seen thousands of heroic acts, but the bravest act happened on the
-Russian front.
-
-I saw two aviators go up to certain death. They were a Russian and a
-Frenchman. Both were little men. They went up to meet twenty German
-aeroplanes. It was suicidal. But they had been ordered to go--and
-theirs was the spirit of the gallant six hundred. I stood near them as
-they made ready to go. They said nothing. That is one of the lessons
-you learn in war--not to waste time nor words.
-
-They got their machines ready as a rider tests his saddle straps and
-stirrups before starting for his morning gallop through the park.
-A little pothering and fixing of the machinery and they had gone.
-They went straight up and began blazing away at the German planes. I
-watched and the cords of my heart tightened, for the German planes,
-looking like great gray birds with wings wide spread, came closer
-and closer. They surrounded them. They formed a solid double circle
-about them. Then they began to fire. And I turned and covered my eyes
-with my hands, for out of that solid, ominous group two dots detached
-themselves and fell. A few seconds later what had been aeroplanes were
-splintered wood and what had been men a broken mass covered by smoking
-rags.
-
-While this was the bravest act I saw in two and a half years on the
-firing line, I readily recall the most pathetic. It was the second
-line of men in the Russian trenches. They were unarmed soldiers. There
-were no guns for them. They took their places there expecting that the
-man in front might drop, and the second line man could pick up his gun
-and take his place. The reports that some of the Russian soldiers have
-desperately fought with switches I have no doubt is true.
-
-I have seen many of the allies die. They all die bravely. At Dixmude
-when the fusiliers arrived 8,000 and went out 4,000 there was
-magnificent courage in death. The Frenchman dies calling upon his God.
-The Englishman says nothing or feebly jests; just turns his face to the
-wall and is still. The Russian is mystic and secretive. The Russian
-lives behind a veil of reserve. You never fully know him. In the last
-moments you know by his rapt look that his soul is in communion with
-his God.
-
-One of the deepest, unalterable truths of the war is the German power
-of hatred. It is past measuring. An example occurred at Dixmude. When
-we had been there three days we were driven out. I took my car filled
-with the wounded across a bridge just in time. A second after we had
-crossed there was a roar, then a crash. A shot had torn the bridge to
-pieces. Three weeks later to our hospital was brought a wounded German.
-
-"I know you," he said. "We nearly got you at the bridge at Dixmude."
-
-"I remember," I said.
-
-That man's eyes used to follow me in a strange way. Build no beautiful
-theories of his national animosity disappearing, or being swallowed
-up in his gratitude. There was no such thought in his mind. The eyes
-said: "I wish I had killed you. But since I didn't I wish I might have
-another chance."
-
-This after I had driven away a group of zouaves who had taken
-everything from him, including his iron cross, and who were debating
-whether to toss him into the canal then or that night.
-
-It is quite true that the Germans fire upon hospitals. Don't believe
-any disclaimers of such acts. There have been many of them. The
-aeroplanes were circling about and above a rough hospital we had
-constructed and we had to leave it in a hurry. We told the patients of
-their danger and hurried them into ambulances to take them to a safer
-spot. One of the patients was a German. Both his arms had been shot
-away. He was in great pain. I went to his cot and offered to help him.
-
-"Lean on me," I said. But he turned upon me a baleful look.
-
-"No," he said, staggering to his feet. His tormented body reeled as he
-made his way to the door. "No," he repeated. "I will take no help from
-the enemy."
-
-It is true that a shell has burst at my feet. It has happened dozens
-of times. That isn't alarming. If it burst a few feet away I should be
-killed. Shells glance down and under the ground. That saves one if he
-is near it. A shell bursting near one is a commonplace in war.
-
-The shells have a disturbing way about them, more disturbing to
-your plans than your equanimity. Shells prevented my having a nice
-comfortable illness. In southern Russia one can get little to eat.
-Coarse black bread is the chief food. It causes unpleasant disorders.
-I, afflicted with one of them, arranged a table in the corner of
-my tent. I placed remedies on the table, undressed and turned in,
-intending to have a cozy illness of a few days. But as I lay there came
-an angry buzzing. A shell hissed through, carrying away a corner of my
-tent. That ended my illness. I had no more time to think of it.
-
-The greatest peril I encountered was not from shells. I have said that
-one becomes used to them. One of the greatest dangers I faced was on
-a dark night drive along a precipice in the Caucasus. It was while
-the plan to bring troops through Persia to Russia was expected to be
-successful. I went ahead with some ambulances. It was necessary to
-take two Russian officers across the mountain. I offered my services.
-The road was an oddly twisting one. On one side was a high wall, on
-the other a precipice whose depth no one calculated. But as I allowed
-myself to look into it at twilight I could see no bottom to it. We
-started on the all night drive at dusk. The precipice remained with us,
-a foot away, most of the distance. Had my car skidded twelve inches the
-story would have been different.
-
-Then, too, I wandered once within the Turkish lines, mistaking them for
-our own. But amidst a courteous silence I was allowed to discover my
-mistake and escape without harm.
-
-I think I owe my opportunity to do my bit, in the way I have, to the
-fact that I arrived in Flanders a few hours before the fight and the
-officers were too busy to send me back. I had seven automobiles,
-and knew how to use them. I took them to Dixmude and offered the
-automobiles and my services to the cause. I established headquarters
-at Furnes, which is seven miles from Nieuport, eight from Dixmude and
-twenty from Ypres. I drove along the Yser Canal to the parts of the
-field that were under the heaviest fire, for there, I knew, my cars
-and I would be most needed. For a year I worked for the relief of the
-wounded of the French armies. Then I went to Russia, where I found the
-need of help and the sacrifice of life because of lack of that help,
-almost inconceivable. The French armies have 6,600 ambulances. The
-Germans have 6,200. Russia, with a firing line of 6,000 miles has but
-600 motor ambulances.
-
-I established dressing stations in the mountains. Some of these were
-10,000 feet above the sea level. There, on the canvas stretched between
-two horses, the wounded were brought, or so they started. For many of
-them died in the long journey, every step of which was torture to a
-wounded man.
-
-The most exciting experience I ever had was on the Galician border.
-We could approach the battle line only along the Tranapol road, which
-ran for fifteen miles directly under German guns. I was speeding along
-it with an ambulance full of wounded soldiers when a shell struck the
-roadside and exploded, tearing a great hole in the earth fifty feet
-away. The concussion stopped us. Then we went on. I travel on my luck.
-Some time, I suppose, I shall travel too far.
-
-I have given all my fortune to the work. That is what we should
-do--give not what we can afford, but all we have.
-
-
-II--STORY OF THE "SPY-TRAPPERS" OF ENGLAND WHO CAUGHT CARL LODY
-
-Everybody has heard of the tremendous ramifications of the German
-military spy system, which had every move of England's army and navy
-under observation, every gun emplacement mapped out and knew every
-order given to the army before it reached the subordinate officers.
-
-Englishmen were powerless to shake off this spy danger, which
-penetrated into every branch of national life, but English women took
-up the matter, brought the most dangerous spies to trial, put the
-others under armed guard and in various other ways made the lives of
-spies and suspected spies a burden to them.
-
-They have proved that women are the only efficient "spy trappers." The
-leaders of the undertaking are women of title, for they alone would
-have the authority, means and prestige to carry out such a difficult
-and far-reaching work.
-
-The organizer and "chairman" of the committee that has been rounding up
-the spies is Lady Glanusk, wife of a peer and officer, a woman of keen
-mind and very determined, yet tactful personality. Other members are
-the Duchess of Wellington, who is president; the Duchess of Beaufort,
-the Duchess of Sutherland, the Marchioness of Sligo, Countess Bathurst,
-the Countess of Lanesborough, Viscountess Massereene and Ferrard,
-Viscountess Combermere, Viscountess Cobham, Lady Vincent, Lady Leith of
-Fyvie, Mrs. Harold Baring and others.
-
-Among them are some of the most notably beautiful women in English
-society and others who are distinguished by their winning personality.
-Perhaps the most striking beauty is the Viscountess Massereene and
-Ferrard, whose husband is the chief of a celebrated Irish family.
-Equally attractive in her way is the young Duchess of Sutherland, whose
-husband is the largest landowner in Scotland and the United Kingdom.
-
-Another member of the committee noted for her beauty is Mrs. Harold
-Baring, who was formerly Miss Marie Churchill, of New York. Her husband
-belongs to the famous English banking family that possesses four
-peerages. Lady Leith of Fyvie, is another American born member. She was
-Miss Marie January, of St. Louis. Womanly intuition and womanly guile
-exercised by these attractive "spy trappers," on many social occasions,
-have led many Germans to make admissions they would never have made to
-a man.
-
-Before the war thousands of Germans were in positions of trust in
-England, ranging from heads of banks down to such positions as butlers
-in prominent English families and headwaiters in leading hotels. Many
-people believe that German butlers in the employ of British Cabinet
-ministers and British generals have been the most important agents
-for conveying military information to the enemy. Standing silent and
-discreet behind their employers and their guests at the table, they
-listened to many military secrets and they also had other opportunities
-for gathering information.
-
-One of the fair members of the committee dined one evening at the house
-of an English general with a small party of persons highly placed in
-military and official life. When the general joined the ladies in the
-drawing room after dinner the fascinating "spy trapper" drew him aside
-and said:
-
-"General, before I go, I want you to arrest your butler and search his
-belongings. He is a German spy," she said.
-
-"But Lady ----," said the general in amazement, "he has been with me
-for ten years. The man is an excellent butler."
-
-"No doubt," said the lady, "but he is also an excellent spy. Never
-speak to me again if I am wrong."
-
-The butler's room was searched and many notes of an incriminating
-character were found. The lack of positive evidence that he had sent
-information to the German Government saved his life, but he was sent to
-prison with a host of other German spies.
-
-It is generally understood that Carl Hans Lody, the German spy executed
-in the Tower of London, was brought to trial through the efforts of the
-women's committee, although the members disclaim the achievement.
-
-Lody was an officer of the German naval reserve who had resided some
-years in the United States, married and deserted his wife there. He
-was engaged for a time as an agent of an English tourist agency in
-America, work which gave him an excellent opportunity for watching
-military preparations.
-
-Last August he obtained an American passport from the American Embassy
-in Berlin, under the name of Charles A. Inglis, of New York, American
-citizen. He went to England with instructions to obtain information
-concerning the movements of the English fleet for the German Government.
-
-In the disguise of an American tourist, he visited the principal
-seaports of the United Kingdom. While he was viewing the romantic
-scenery in the vicinity of Edinburgh, an attractive member of the
-ladies' committee made his acquaintance. Under the influence of
-sympathetic society Lody became more communicative than discretion
-warranted.
-
-Behind the superficial American accent the natural German accent
-revealed itself in the warmth of confidence. A few days later, Lody
-was arrested and letters, which he had written to Germany, giving
-information concerning English naval movements and which had been
-seized in the mails, were produced.
-
-Lody admitted that he was acting as a spy. After a short trial he was
-condemned to be shot in the old Tower of London. He met his fate very
-bravely.
-
-The "ladies' committee" has hunted down all German headwaiters and
-waiters employed in the principal English hotels and restaurants and
-caused them to be removed to detention camps. These men, owing to the
-peculiar character of their work, enjoyed an excellent opportunity for
-meeting persons of all the important classes of society, and in the
-free expansion that ordinarily takes place at the table all kinds of
-confidences were exchanged within their hearing.
-
-Many Germans of high social position and great wealth, some of them
-naturalized British subjects, have been pursued by the relentless
-"ladies' committee." Professor Arthur Schuster, a born German, but a
-naturalized Englishman, was surprised at his luxurious country seat,
-when a band of detectives descended on him and seized his private
-wireless apparatus.
-
-Lady Glanusk explained to the correspondent of this newspaper some of
-the aims and labors of the committee.
-
-She has turned the drawing and reception rooms of her fine house, at
-No. 30 Bruton street, Mayfair, into offices for the committee.
-
-"Owing to the fact," said Lady Glanusk, "that no serious effort has
-been made by our menkind to round up the 73,000 alien enemies in our
-midst, I felt the call to start a protest by women, as it is women who
-are the greatest sufferers by war. My husband and two sons are fighting
-at the front and thousands of women can say very much the same.
-
-"Ten days after I issued my appeal to the women of England I had formed
-my committee with the definite object that all alien-born enemies,
-whether German, Austrian or Turk, of military age, be forthwith
-interned, whether naturalized or not. Other alien enemies above
-military age or under should be removed at least twenty miles from the
-coasts and kept under surveillance.
-
-"I consider that women as spies and decoy ducks are more dangerous than
-men.
-
-"To such an extent have the women of England been roused that in the
-first couple of weeks more than 200,000 signatures to the petition to
-be presented to Parliament were obtained.
-
-"Alien enemies, Germans and Austrians particularly, were spread all
-along the coast towns and it was impossible to know whether or not
-they were in constant communication with the enemy. For my part, I
-would like to see as many as possible of these 'useless non-combatants'
-dumped right onto German soil. It would be amusing to think of the
-embarrassment of the German authorities having to find food and shelter
-for something like 70,000 fresh mouths. Another trouble is the shameful
-favoritism shown to wealthy and highly placed Anglo-Germans while their
-humbler compatriots are interned without ado.
-
-"Out of the petition of protest has grown what we have named 'the
-anti-German League,' by which it is resolved that no member will employ
-or sanction the employment of any German or alien enemy. Members will
-further refuse to deal with any shops or establishments selling any
-German or alien enemy goods. As the members of our committee are highly
-influential people the movement should be effective and will continue
-for several years. Further, no pains will be spared to improve the
-usefulness of British hotel waiters and other hotel and restaurant
-employees.
-
-"If every British woman will realize that it is shameful and
-treacherous to give financial help to the Germans there will be no
-future need to protect the public from this alien peril, for the German
-Empire will never be in a position to menace us again, for war cannot
-be waged except by a commercially flourishing nation."
-
-Lady Glanusk is a typical Englishwoman, full of energy, go and spirit.
-She is tall and stately, with a beautiful complexion. She received the
-American correspondent cordially and with a friendly grasp of the hand.
-
-During the interview Mr. Joynson-Hicks, Member of Parliament, and just
-recently appointed Chairman of the Unionist Parliamentary Committee
-lately formed to inquire into this alien enemy question, was present,
-as was also Lord Euston, heir to the Dukedom of Grafton.
-
-
-III--STORY OF DAUGHTERS OF ENGLISH NOBILITY WHO WORK IN TRENCHES
-
-Many beautiful girls of the most delicate breeding have gone to the
-front to nurse the wounded--to see the worst horrors of this most
-horrible of wars.
-
-It must not be assumed that they have merely gone to the base hospitals
-to attend to the wounded soldiers brought to them from the front and
-carried to them through the dangerous area. Some at least have gone
-right to the trenches into the midst of the inferno of bullets and
-shells and poisonous gases, where the air is filled with the groans of
-the dying and the stench of the unburied dead and where the very soil
-trembles from the force of the new and devilish explosives that reduce
-humanity to a pulp.
-
-The sights that these delicately reared girls must witness can only be
-hinted at. Many strong men have turned sick at the same experience,
-and even veteran soldiers are only able to endure their surroundings
-by smoking the strongest kind of tobacco. How the spoiled darlings of
-society will come through their terrible experience must be one of the
-most interesting problems of the war.
-
-One of the most strikingly beautiful girls at the front is Miss Gladys
-Nelson, daughter of Sir William and Lady Nelson, who have a house noted
-for its art treasures in Hill Street, Mayfair, the most aristocratic
-quarter of London.
-
-Sir William Nelson is a great railroad magnate, having large
-enterprises of this character in the colonies and other parts of the
-world. He is probably one of the wealthiest men in the United Kingdom.
-He has two sons in the army, and four daughters married to army
-officers. His only unmarried daughter, Miss Gladys, determined that she
-would not do less for her country than any of her family.
-
-Miss Nelson is the purest and most refined type of English beauty.
-She is tall, lithe and athletic, with beautiful golden hair and a
-very delicate, fair complexion. This exquisite daughter of millions
-is actually running a motor ambulance from the trenches in the North
-of France to the base hospital. She helps to carry the poor wounded
-soldiers in her car back of the firing line and then drives them to
-the base hospital. She has been repeatedly under fire and runs the
-risk of being killed almost daily. She was within the firing zone when
-the Germans first began their use of poisonous gases, and it was only
-because she had a full load of wounded in her car that she moved to the
-rear before the deadly fumes reached her.
-
-All the risks of death and injury, however, would seem to be less of
-an ordeal to a woman of sensitive nerves than the sights she must
-constantly witness. The bodies of dead and wounded have been turned
-black, green and yellow, so that they become in many instances a
-caricature of humanity.
-
-Then so furious is the fighting and so difficult the work of attending
-to the wounded that the dead have often been left unburied for days.
-The wounded are often terribly mangled and sometimes left to lie in the
-dirt for hours or even days before the ambulances can find them. Before
-they can be relieved at all their clothes and boots may have to be cut
-from them, and in this process very often large masses of flesh come
-away with the garments. These and other services are rendered by the
-women ambulance workers.
-
-The exquisite Miss Gladys Nelson has been doing her share in this
-terrible work, and, according to last accounts, doing it very
-creditably. Will she come through the ordeal a stronger and nobler
-character or will she break down under it?
-
-One of the bravest English nurses is Miss Muriel Thompson, of the First
-Aid Yeomanry Corps. She belongs to a well-known English family. She is
-a pretty girl of robust physique. She has been right up to the trenches
-in one of the worst centres of carnage in the whole field of war. Many
-badly wounded Belgians, who had no hope of medical attention from
-their own forces, were carried by Miss Thompson from the firing line.
-King Albert of Belgium presented to her on the battlefield a medal for
-bravery.
-
-The beautiful Marchioness of Drogheda, a young matron of the highest
-aristocracy, is nursing the wounded in a houseboat on the Yser River,
-in Belgium, where some of the most terrible fighting of the whole
-war has occurred. This is the spot where the Germans put forth their
-greatest force in the West last October to break down the allied lines
-and reach the English Channel.
-
-The Germans in their advance either killed the Belgian inhabitants or
-at least drove them out and destroyed their homes. The allies in their
-anxiety to stop the Germans flooded the country and destroyed hundreds
-more Belgian homes. The world has never seen a more pitiful and
-death-strewn waste than this once very populous and prosperous region.
-
-The Marchioness of Drogheda and some other English women are laboring
-among the wounded and starving on the Yser, within sound of the guns to
-relieve some little part of the unspeakable misery.
-
-Two of the most noted beauties of the British aristocracy are in
-training to act as war nurses. One of them is Lady Diana Manners,
-daughter of the Duke of Rutland and sister of the former Lady Marjorie
-Manners, whose heart affairs have been of so much interest to the world.
-
-Lady Diana is one of the most charming, dainty and sprightly girls in
-the liveliest set of fashionable society. To think of such a girl amid
-the blood, dirt and horrors of trench warfare gives one the greatest
-shock of all. It has not yet been decided where Lady Diana will take up
-her duties in the war area, but her friends say that her spirit is so
-great that she will go to the most dangerous places that any woman has
-yet ventured to.
-
-Another beautiful girl of equal social prominence who has been training
-as a war nurse is Miss Monica Grenfell, daughter of Lord Desborough,
-one of the most noted sportsmen in England.
-
-In the earlier stages of the war considerable adverse comment was
-excited by the numbers of society women who forced themselves through
-their influence with high officials into the fighting area, where they
-were not fitted to be of help and were often a serious hindrance.
-
-This evil has now been nearly eliminated. With a growing sense of the
-awful seriousness of the war the most frivolous of society women have
-become subdued. Under the direction of such masterful men as General
-Kitchener and General Joffre the army officers and other officials have
-refused to allow any women, however highly connected, who were actuated
-merely by curiosity, to proceed to the front.
-
-Only women qualified to nurse and belonging to a recognized war nursing
-organization are now allowed to go near the fighting area.
-
-At one time criticism was excited by the sight of Lady Dorothy
-Fielding, the twenty-year-old daughter of the Earl of Denbigh, standing
-among a group of admiring French and Belgian officers at the front. It
-was assumed that a girl of such an age and such training could only be
-a hindrance among the fighting men, and it was even hinted that she was
-addicted to flirting.
-
-Whatever she may have been at first, the young Lady Dorothy has now
-changed all opinions of her and become a real heroine. With training
-and experience now lasting for months she has become a most valuable
-as well as courageous nurse in rescuing and caring for the wounded.
-Naturally a strong girl and accustomed to athletic sports, she has
-shown herself peculiarly fitted for this kind of work.
-
-Many ladies of rank interested in the wounded have lately shown their
-good sense by not trying to go to the fighting area. The handsome and
-skittish Duchess of Westminster, who excited some attention at first by
-bustling around among the soldiers in France has now gone to Serbia,
-where there is the greatest need of Good Samaritans. The hospital
-founded by her at Le Touquet, near Paris, has done good work.
-
-The condition of Serbia is such that any women who ventures there must
-see the extremes of human misery. The whole country has been turned
-into a charnel house by the invading Austrians, followed by the still
-more terrible typhus fever. Men, women and children are dying of
-disease without being able to find a bed to lie on or a roof to cover
-them.
-
-One report stated that young Lady Paget had died while nursing typhus
-patients in Serbia. Her mother is the well-known American Lady Paget,
-wife of General Sir Arthur Paget, and the daughter is married to a
-distant cousin, named Sir Richard Paget, British Minister to Serbia.
-Later news came that young Lady Paget had not died of the fever, but
-she is passing through scenes of horror that have not been known in
-Europe for three centuries.
-
-
-IV--STORY OF A NEW YORK MOTHER WHO SOUGHT HER SON IN THE TRENCHES
-
-Paul Planet was sailing away from New York and from the mother he
-adored to fight under the colors of France.
-
-Other women--mothers, wives, sisters, sweethearts--pressed forward.
-They also gazed tearfully after the slowly receding steamer.
-
-The girlish figure with the great brown eyes and firm, resolute mouth,
-stood motionless.
-
-"Paul," she murmured. "He is my only child--my boy!"
-
-Weeks passed--months.
-
-Paul Planet's regiment was at the front. He had learned what it
-means to look death in the face, to live in the trenches, to see the
-horrors and devastation of war. He had fought and fought bravely, and
-experienced no regrets save one--that he must be separated from his
-mother.
-
-"We have always been more like chums than mother and son," he confided
-to his comrades. "Since my earliest recollection until now we have
-never been separated."
-
-But when he drew forth a small picture from over his heart and said
-it was a likeness of the mother for whose loneliness he sighed, his
-friends ridiculed his statement.
-
-"Your sweetheart," they said, "or perhaps your sister. But never, never
-ask us to believe that the likeness is of your mother."
-
-"She is always young--always beautiful--to me she will never grow old,"
-declared the young soldier. But after that he did not show the picture
-again.
-
-In far away New York the fair young mother of so stalwart a son
-learned, as months rolled by, what it means to watch and wait, to
-tremble at the sound of the postman's ring lest it be the harbinger
-of ill news; to live, day by day, in a state of suspense and agony
-bordering upon despair, and to envy every mother she saw whose son
-walked by her side.
-
-Then she, too, sailed for France.
-
-"I must find my boy," she told those who sought to dissuade her from
-undertaking the trip.
-
-For nearly a year had passed and no word had been received from Paul
-Planet. His name had not appeared in the lists of dead and missing, yet
-of his whereabouts his mother could learn nothing.
-
-She applied to the officials at the Army Headquarters in Paris for
-information or assistance in locating her son. Her efforts were
-fruitless. Passports she received to certain sections of the country
-where the family name was known and where she had relatives or friends
-to visit or business to transact, but no permission was accorded her to
-leave the train at any intermediate point nor to visit a military camp.
-
-Day after day Mme. Planet planned and schemed how she might find her
-boy. She made journey after journey in the vain hope that chance might
-bring her near him. Her aged mother now accompanied her.
-
-"It will be a miracle if you ever find him," declared the elder woman
-as they looked forth upon miles of devastated country through which
-long lines of trenches intersected. Everywhere madame's inquiry met
-with the same discouraging reply. Paul Planet, the young soldier in the
-automobile service, might be in one of any number of places. Even if
-located it would be impossible for madame to visit him.
-
-The train in which madame was travelling drew up at a siding near the
-ruins of what had once been a small village. Several troop trains sped
-by. Slowly the sidetracked train pulled forward toward the main tracks
-again. Madame, restless and anxious, crossed the compartment and peered
-from the window. The next instant a startled exclamation escaped her
-lips.
-
-"What is it?" asked her mother.
-
-With frantic haste the younger woman turned and commenced to collect
-their travelling bags.
-
-"I have found Paul," she whispered. "We must leave the train at the
-next station."
-
-Now, all that day Paul Planet, for some strange psychological reason
-which he could not have explained, had felt conscious of his mother's
-nearness. Yet she was in New York, he reasoned and fear smote his heart
-lest sickness or accident had befallen her.
-
-"Rest--for two hours."
-
-Down along the marching line of soldiers the order was repeated. Planet
-heard it and fell out with alacrity. He heard himself detailed for
-temporary duty with a corporal's guard to unload automobile trucks. A
-troop train rushed by and a waiting passenger train pulled slowly out
-from a siding.
-
-Planet glanced up. From the window of the latter train a face looked
-forth--a hand waved. Was he dreaming? Surely that was his mother's
-face he had seen! He dashed forward. The face was very distinct now.
-Impulsively he laid his finger across his lips as his mother had been
-wont to do when, as a child, she had desired him to remain silent. If
-the face at the window was that of his mother they must be discreet or
-she would never be permitted to join him.
-
-"My mother was on that train," he confided to the soldier beside him.
-The man laughed.
-
-"Impossible," he exclaimed. "You have seen a vision."
-
-But Paul Planet had not seen a vision. Two miles further on, when the
-train had come to a halt at the little village station, Mme. Planet
-almost pulled her protesting mother of seventy down the steps. The
-guards also protested.
-
-"Your passports, madame? Where are your passports?" they asked.
-
-"My passports?" she repeated. "Oh, monsieur, I am so excited I do not
-know. There are passports there--papers--anything you want--in that
-bag."
-
-Madame was so charming--the name of Planet was so well known--that the
-bag remained at the station, unopened, and the clever French-American
-mother hurried off in search of her supposed friends.
-
-She found them down along the railroad. A little squad of uniformed men
-unloading automobile trucks.
-
-"Vive la France!" she cried. "Vive la France!" and all the while her
-brown eyes were gazing hungrily, eagerly into the equally brown orbs of
-her son. It would not do to single him out from the others. To do so
-might result in difficulties for him and for her.
-
-The two hours' rest was lengthened to six. Still the detachment waited
-by the roadside. Still madame and her mother waited.
-
-Again the former's ready wit came to their aid. Madame was so
-distressed! The friends she had expected to find in the village had
-gone away. There was no place for herself and her mother to dine. Would
-the soldiers be so kind--so generous----
-
-The soldiers would. They hospitably provided a tent for madame and her
-mother. It might be two days, the officers told them, before another
-passenger train stopped at that station. Madame, overjoyed, resigned
-herself to Providence and basked in the sunshine of her son's presence.
-The ban of secrecy had been lifted now. Their relationship was made
-known and pocket kodaks drafted into service as the troops were
-breaking camp.
-
-"I will have the pictures developed when I reach Paris," said madame
-as she once more clasped her boy in her arms. "I have seen you again
-and I am content. That two hours' respite by the roadside that resolved
-itself into a two days' encampment was a special dispensation of
-Providence."
-
-"It was a miracle, mother," declared the son. "There have been miracles
-all through this war. That you found me was one of them." Then he
-kissed her and marched away.
-
-
-
-
-AN AMERICAN WOMAN'S STORY OF THE "ANCONA" TRAGEDY
-
-_Told by Dr. Cecile Greil, an American Physician_
-
- Dr. Cecile Greil was the only native-born American on the liner
- _Ancona_, which was shelled and sunk by an Austrian submarine. She
- tells this intensely graphic account of the terrible event in the
- _New York Times_. She precedes it with a description of the crowd
- of passengers, mostly poor Italian women and children, that had
- passage on the ship--the most pathetic gathering, it seemed to her
- as they came aboard the ship, that she had ever seen.
-
-
-I--"WHEN THE TORPEDO STRUCK US"
-
-The bell for luncheon rang at 11:30. As we sat at the table, still
-without the Captain, we joked and laughed together, to hide our lack
-of ease. We spoke of trivial things. We were through with lunch now;
-the others were going out; I was rising from my seat, at the same time
-drinking the remainder of my coffee. Then the thing came upon us that
-we had all, strangely enough, felt coming, in our hearts.
-
-A terrific vibration shook the ship. I was thrown back into my seat. I
-knew that the ship must be stopping. I heard a running and scurrying
-about the deck outside. Looking out, I saw, through the dining saloon
-window, six or ten stewards in white whirling out of sight around an
-angle.
-
-"What could be wrong, Doctor?" I asked one of the ship's doctors in
-French.
-
-"Heaven only knows!" he answered, as he carefully adjusted his military
-cape, and hurried out. The dining saloon was emptied in an instant;
-everybody had bolted as if they were running to a fire.
-
-It was evident that something had gone wrong with the ship, though,
-by some queer process of mind, at that moment nobody thought of a
-submarine. But hearing the next moment a sharp, quick crash, as of
-lightning that had struck home close by, at the same instant I both
-thought of the possibility of a submarine--and saw one!
-
-The fog had lifted slightly. There, in full view framed in the window
-with a curious, picture-like effect, lay a submarine with its deck out
-of the water. It was long and flat, horribly longer and bigger than
-the mental conception I had formed of what such a thing would be like.
-There was a gun mounted in front, and another at back, and both had
-their muzzles leveled directly at the _Ancona_.
-
-The submarine stood out in clear, black outline against the white
-background of mist. The fog seemed only to make it more distinct, as it
-always does with objects near by. From a staff in the back broke a red
-and white drapeau. Afterward I learned that this was the combination of
-colors that made the Austrian flag. I was ignorant of it, then, though
-I remembered the exact colors.
-
-So far, I could find nothing tragic or terrible in the situation.
-Possibly we would be in danger of considerable exposure in open boats,
-before other ships, summoned by wireless, would pick us up. I did not
-rush out as the others had done. I stood quite still, in order to calm
-myself, to give myself time to think what would better be done. The
-_Ancona_ had come to a stop. Of that I was certain. I also knew that
-the ship was doomed.
-
-But now there came another terrible crash, and another, and another,
-in different parts of the ship, followed by explosions and the sound
-of débris falling into the water and on deck. Well, they were merely
-destroying the wireless. Still there was no fear of death.
-
-But now I was aware of a terrible shrieking. Everybody was in a
-frightened panic.
-
-
-II--"THE HORROR OF WHAT I SAW"
-
-Well, as for myself--to get excited wouldn't help. I went to my cabin
-as calmly as I could, determined to save what I could of my valuables.
-I put them in my lifebelt. I took a receipt for 20,000 lire, which
-I had left with the purser. I went toward the bow of the ship. I
-descended the staircase to the second cabin, on the way to the purser's
-office. A large part of the staircase had been shot away--and the
-horror of what I saw at the bottom of it made me instantly forget what
-I was going for. There lay three or four women, four or five children,
-and several men. Some of them were already dead, all, at least, badly
-wounded. I made sure two of the children were dead. The purser sprawled
-limply across his desk, inert, like a sack of meal that has been flung
-down and stays where it lies. He had been shot in the head. The blood
-was running bright like red paint, freshly spilt, down his back, and
-his hair was matted with it.
-
-The first series of shots had wrecked this part of the ship, breaking
-through and carrying away whole sections of the framework. I tried
-to get back up the stairs. But in the slight interval of time I had
-consumed, enough additional shells had been discharged to finish the
-wreck of the staircase.
-
-I saw that this was not what the nations call, ironically enough,
-"legitimate warfare," but wholesale and indiscriminate massacre.
-Seeing my exit that way cut off, I started through the second cabin
-to go up the central stairway. The sight that I ran into there was
-indescribable. All the passengers from the third cabin had rushed up
-into the second. They had altogether lost their wits. The only thing
-that was left them was the animal instinct for self-preservation in its
-most disastrous and most idiotic form. Men, women, and children were
-burrowing headforemost under chairs and benches and tables. I saw one
-man, his face pressed close against the floor sidewise, heaving a chair
-up in the air with his back, in an effort to efface himself.
-
-All the while the detonations, like continuous thunder and lightning,
-increased the panic. Women were on their knees in mental agony, each
-supplicating the particular saint of the part of the country from
-which she came to save her from death. I pushed and shoved them by the
-shoulders. I took them by the legs and arms and clothes, and urged
-them, in Italian, to get up, to put on lifebelts, to get off the ship.
-I told them that, at least, they would find no security from shells
-under chairs and tables.
-
-I found a poor old woman at the foot of the stairs, huddled in prayer.
-Her thin, gray hair straggled loose over her shoulder. I recognized her
-as a woman I had got acquainted with in my search for a fellow-citizen
-to join me in the first cabin. She was 65 years old, she had told me.
-She had seen two sons off to the war, and was now going to a third who
-had emigrated to America and lived in Pennsylvania. It was the first
-time she had ever crossed the ocean. She was sick of the thought of
-war. In the New World she would find peace and comfort for her old age,
-with her "Bambino," as she still called the grown-up man who was her
-son. So when I saw her lying there I was possessed of but one idea--to
-get her off alive. I told her to come with me, that I would protect
-her. She acquiesced, but her fright was so great that she hung limp as
-if she had no spine while I half dragged her to the first cabin deck.
-
-A boat was being lowered. It had been swung out on the davits. It
-already seethed full of people. And more men and women and children
-were fighting, in a promiscuous, shrieking mass, to get into it as it
-swung out and down. The men, with their superior strength, were, of
-course, getting the best of the struggle. Age or sex had no weight. It
-was brute strength that prevailed.
-
-At the sight before her the old woman grew frantic with unexpected
-strength. She suddenly jerked loose from me, and before I could prevent
-her, ran with all the agility of fear and jumped overboard. Others
-flung their bodies pell-mell on the heads of those already in it. Some,
-in their frenzy, missed the mark at which they aimed themselves and
-fell into the sea. To make the horror complete, the boat now stuck at
-one end, tilted downward, and spilled all its occupants into the sea,
-ninety or a hundred at once. They seized each other. Some swam. Others
-floundered and sank almost immediately, dragging each other down. Some
-drowned themselves even with lifebelts on, not knowing how to hold
-their heads out of the water.
-
-I tried to speak with the passengers still on deck. It was useless.
-Everybody was talking in his own particular dialect. Then I realized
-the predicament I myself was in--an utter foreigner, whom they would
-sacrifice in an instant for one of their own nationality. Perhaps if
-only I had some of my jewelry I might be able to bribe my way to safety
-in some such crisis.
-
-
-III--"THE DEAD WERE LYING ON DECK"
-
-I made my way back to my cabin again. There were people dead and dying
-on the deck. I saw one man who had started to run up the gangway to
-the officer's deck come plunging down again. He had been struck in the
-back of the head. Somehow or other, I just felt that my time had not
-yet come. This conviction enabled me to keep my wits about me.
-
-In my cabin I flung up the top of my steamer trunk. As I was searching
-for my valuables my chambermaid appeared in the doorway; half a dozen
-times I had met her rushing frantically and aimlessly up and down.
-
-"Oh, madame, madame--we shall all be killed, we're all going to get
-killed!"
-
-"Maria," I advised as quietly and soothingly as I could, still stooping
-over my trunk; "don't be so mad, get a lifebelt on, and get up out of
-here."
-
-Before she could speak again she was a dead woman. A shot carried away
-the port-hole and sheared off the top of her head. It finished its
-course by exploding at the other side of the ship. If I had not been
-stooping over at the time I would not have lived to write this story.
-
-I snatched up my little jewel-basket with a few favorite trinkets
-in it. I put on my cap and sweater. When I got up on deck I saw the
-submarine carefully circumnavigating its victims and deliberately
-shooting toward us at all angles. I ran along the deck. The sea was
-full of deck rails, parts of doors, and other wreckage, and dotted with
-human beings, some dead, others alive, and screaming for help. There
-was another boat in front that tilted and dumped out its frantic load
-into the sea. Peering over the side of the ship, I saw a boat that had
-already been lowered to the water's edge. In it I recognized the two
-ship's doctors, and two of the seamen. There was also an officer in the
-boat, Carlo Lamberti, the chief engineer. He sat at the helm. I called
-out to them to take me in.
-
-"Jump!" they shouted back.
-
-I threw my basket down. I had a good twenty-foot drop. I have always
-been a good swimmer. Furthermore, I saw that if I jumped into the boat,
-crowded with people, sails, water-barrels, and pails for bailing, I
-might cause it to capsize. So I told them to push the boat away and
-then they could pick me up out of the water.
-
-I escaped with a ducking.
-
-An immigrant girl who followed me flung herself down wildly and broke
-both her legs on the side of the ship.
-
-We were powerless to save any more. The ship might at any moment
-receive the final torpedo from the submarine. The sailors rowed madly
-to get out of danger.
-
-Then the torpedo was discharged. It whizzed across the ship, drawing
-a tail behind it like a comet. It plunged beneath the _Ancona_ as
-if guided by a diabolical intelligence of its own. There followed
-a terrific explosion. Huge jets of thick black smoke shot up, with
-showers of débris. Our boat rocked and swayed in the roughened
-water. The _Ancona_ lurched to the left, righted herself, shivered
-a moment--then her bow shot high in the air like a struggling,
-death-stricken animal. She went under, drawing a huge, funnel-like
-vortex after her.
-
-The Captain and some officers were the last to drop astern, in a small
-boat. Passengers were still to be seen, clinging forward, like ants on
-driftwood, as the ship was drawn down. There were many people wounded,
-so that they could not get off unaided. They were left to die.
-
-The sea now looked absolutely empty, swept smooth. The ship had drawn
-everything down with it. The fog undulating upward, the submarine was
-seen lying in full view, as if in quiet Teutonic contemplation of what
-it had done. Then it moved off, and was soon merged into the waste of
-sea and fog. We felt a great relief when it had departed.
-
-
-IV--SURVIVORS DRIFTING ON THE OCEAN
-
-All that afternoon our six surviving boats drifted within sight of each
-other. When darkness fell large yellow lanterns were lit, and from time
-to time Bengal lights flared and fell. It looked like a regatta held on
-the River Styx, in Hell. The sailors had exhausted themselves rowing,
-so the improvised sails were set. The boat-loads of survivors had run
-the gamut of every emotion. They were now mere stocks of insensibility,
-numb, dumb, and inert.
-
-At six in the afternoon a boat just behind us began sending us signals
-of distress. The men had taken off their shirts and were waving them
-to us on oars. Our sailors objected to turning back, saying that both
-boats would be sunk if we tried to relieve them. But Carlo Lamberti,
-the chief engineer, with a quiet look in his blue eyes, with a rather
-careless, engaging smile, which was habitual to him all the time,
-presented his revolver--and we went back to see what was wrong.
-
-We found that the boat had been struck by a shell and was leaking
-badly. True enough, most of the people in it tried to make an immediate
-stampede into our boat. But again Lamberti presented his eloquent
-pistol and his quiet smile, and with order and precision we took aboard
-the wounded, the women, and children. Then the leaky craft was tied
-to our stern and the men left were easily able to keep it afloat by
-bailing.
-
-"We'll save you, or go down with you!" Lamberti reassured them. This
-chief engineer was the only man who showed signal bravery.
-
-One of the first of the wounded rescued from the leaky boat was my
-former companion, the Marquis Serra Cassano. He did not wish to join
-in the incipient stampede. With four toes of his foot shot away, he
-rose limpingly to assist the other wounded into our boat first, before
-he himself came in. Then with an air of pathetic aristocracy he seated
-himself by me, and wanted to know if any one had a cigaret to spare. We
-had four cigarets on the boat. The men took turns puffing them.
-
-A frantic mother had dropped her baby in the water. I jumped out and
-rescued it. Later on, she got separated from it, and I had it in my
-charge for several days--but that is not in the present story.
-
-We kept close watch on each other's boats till nightfall. As the other
-five would appear and disappear, we would be alternately cheered and
-frightened.
-
-It must have been nearly midnight when one of our sailors cried out
-that he saw a ship's light. But for a long while nothing appeared
-but thin threads of light that filtered through the fog. After some
-discussion as to whether it might not be an enemy craft, we approached
-the direction of the light, till it burst on us in a powerful,
-searching blaze. And we discerned the other boats converging toward it,
-mere moving yellow splurges in the gloom.
-
-The ship that was rescuing us was a French mine layer, the _Pluton_. It
-was hellish-looking, as it beetled over us, but none the less it looked
-like heaven, too!
-
-And now our boat-loads of survivors were close together, and suddenly
-everybody grew voluble and chatty. We shouted across the water to each
-other. I even heard a voice singing. We were saved! We were saved!
-
-
-
-
-THE STRATEGY OF SISTER MADELEINE
-
-_The Story of a French Captain's Escape from the Germans_
-
-_Told by himself, and translated by G. Frederic Lees_
-
- Few men who have succeeded in slipping through the clutching
- fingers of the Mailed Fist have such a moving record of adventure
- to their credit as Captain X----, who here relates his remarkable
- experiences. There is the true Stevensonian flavor in some of
- the episodes narrated; and at the same time the story has real
- historical value, since it opens with a graphic account of the
- Battle of Charleroi, which has not yet been described by the French
- Staff, or by any of the unofficial historians of the war. The
- officer's name is suppressed in deference to his own request when
- he related his experiences in the _Wide World Magazine_.
-
-
-I--MY EXPERIENCES AT THE BATTLE OF CHARLEROI
-
-In relating my adventures, extending over more than fifteen months,
-I cannot do better than begin with the starting-point of the whole
-affair--the Battle of Charleroi. To describe the events which grouped
-themselves around August 22nd, 23rd, 24th, and 25th, 1914, seems like
-telling old news, but, as a matter of fact, the gigantic struggle named
-after the Belgian town of ironworks and mines has yet to be recorded.
-The French Staff has published nothing, unofficial historians--eager
-to be the first to place their researches before the public--have only
-given general and often erroneous descriptions of the advance of Von
-Kluck, Von Buelow, and Von Hausen against Sir John French's forces on
-the Condé-Mons-Binche line and the Fifth French Army holding the line
-of the Sambre, and the newspaper accounts are sometimes contradictory.
-
-I am not going to weary you with military technicalities; we will leave
-questions of strategy and tactics alone and direct our attention to the
-battlefield as seen from two points of view: that of myself, an officer
-in the French Army, and that of an inhabitant of Charleroi, with whom
-I was later thrown into contact, and by whose observations, made from
-the roof of his house, I was fortunate in benefiting.
-
-Picture to yourself the sinuous Sambre, flowing in its deep bed
-through the densely-populated suburbs of Charleroi and the southern
-end of this formerly fortified town. The town itself, imprisoned by
-its walls, is but a small place of some thirty thousand inhabitants,
-but the population is swelled to five hundred thousand by the
-contiguous suburbs of Montigny, Couillet, Marcinelle, Gilly, Châtelet,
-Marchiennes, Roux, Jumet, Gosselies, and others which cluster around
-the ancient nucleus and stretch principally northwards. To fight
-a battle on such a ground as this was impossible, so the German
-forces, descending from the north and the east in unknown hundreds of
-thousands, determined to make for the open-wooded country which lies
-beyond the southern suburbs of the town. Two tremendous obstacles
-stood in their way--the closely-packed houses of the suburbs and the
-strongly-held river. The inhabitants soon learnt to their cost how
-the first of these was to be overcome. Suddenly, shortly after the
-appearance of the advance-guard of the German army, violent explosions
-were heard, accompanied by the pop! pop! pop! of machine-guns and the
-discharge of musketry. The Huns were blasting a broad way through the
-suburbs, setting fire to the houses, and--under pretense that they
-were being fired upon by civilians--shooting the people down in their
-houses and in the streets. Right through the quarters of Gosselies and
-Jumet they penetrated; then branched off to the right and left, one
-band of incendiaries reaching the river through Marchiennes, the other
-cutting its way through the town and reaching the bridge which connects
-Montigny and Couillet. These two points were where the enemy first
-succeeded in crossing the Sambre. Later, when we had begun our retreat
-southwards, owing to pressure from Von Hausen's army massed in the
-Northern Ardennes, they crossed at two other places, east of Charleroi.
-Thus, on Sunday, August 23rd, the preliminaries of the great battle
-were carried out.
-
-South of the river the ground rises gently until it reaches the wooded
-heights in the neighbourhood of Beaumont, Thuillies, Nalinnes, and
-Somzée. I was stationed at the first of these places--a little village
-on high ground, with a commanding view of the green countryside. Who
-would have thought, but for the deafening roar of cannon, the incessant
-rattle of the machine-guns, the occasional whir of an aeroplane
-overhead, and the puffs and rings of white smoke high in air, that we
-were looking on a battlefield? How empty it was! We could see from the
-flashes of the carefully-hidden guns whence death was springing; but in
-the early stages of the struggle only small bodies of the enemy, whose
-greenish-grey uniforms mingled well with the verdure, were from time
-to time visible. At night, however, it was different. The red glare of
-burning villages and farms, set on fire by shells, lit up the sky and
-provided a terrifying spectacle, night after night, for the anxious
-watchers of Charleroi.
-
-
-II--"WE MOWED THEM DOWN WITH MACHINE GUNS"
-
-As the Germans advanced and the battle raged from morning to night,
-it became more and more evident that we were hopelessly outnumbered.
-Possessing an advantage, however, in being on high ground, it was clear
-that we could hold out for a considerable length of time and make the
-enemy pay dearly for every yard of ground we had to give away. When
-once the greenish-grey uniforms began to appear in any considerable
-number, they came on in solid masses, which we mowed down, time after
-time, by rifle and machine-gun fire and by showers of shrapnel from our
-"75's." But others quickly filled their places, and thus the human tide
-advanced, until at last the order had to be given for the retreat. This
-was on August 25th, by which date, after the enemy had been obliged to
-suspend operations for twenty-four hours to collect the wounded, they
-had lost over forty thousand men.
-
-_Ah! les gredins!_ how well they deserved their fate for the shooting
-down of peaceful citizens in Charleroi and the unspeakable crimes
-committed in the communes on the wooded heights of Loverval, Acoz,
-Montigny-le-Tilleul, and Somzée! With what satisfaction our small
-detachments, hidden in the woods, let the German scouts pass on in
-order to open fire at close quarters on the masses of troops which
-followed! They paid, then, for the outrages perpetrated by the Uhlans.
-You ask for an instance. Here is one which was related to me by my
-friend of Charleroi--he who viewed the battle from his house-top, and
-afterwards explored the battlefield to come face to face with this
-grim picture. A typical instance of Teutonic cruelty, I give it in his
-own words: "A little way out of the village of Somzée was a small farm
-inhabited by a young household, including three small children. Honest,
-courageous, and economical folk, they had toiled season after season
-to pay by annual instalments for their property, which they had agreed
-to purchase some eight years ago. The last payment had just been made;
-the children were growing up; the little family was happy. But the
-German monsters came. In a few minutes this hardly-earned happiness was
-shattered. The Boches seized everything--the few cows, the dearly-loved
-horse. They set fire to the farm, shot the farmer, and drove before
-them, into the distance, the poor widow with her four weeping and
-terrified children. What a sinister picture it makes! It was at the
-close of a splendid August day. The little isolated farm is burning.
-A few yards from the door the dead man is lying on his back. On the
-side of the hill which descends to the main road are the silhouettes of
-the Uhlans disappearing in the gathering darkness of night. Tongues of
-flame on the horizon mark places where similar dramas had been enacted."
-
-"Now, then, boys, let them have it hot. Pick off the gunners one by
-one. Marcel, Gustave, François, do you keep an eye on the officers.
-_Ah, les gredins!_ we'll teach them!"
-
-It was the day after the battle of Charleroi, and whilst our troops
-were retiring in good order, my men and I, after the fashion of many
-other small detachments, were holding a German battery in check. So
-near were we to the enemy that we could hear the harsh, guttural
-commands of the artillery officers--so different from the tone of
-_camaraderie_ we adopt towards our men in the truly democratic army of
-France--and could see them, though indistinctly, urging on their men
-to the attack. From our trenches on a wooded knoll on the outskirts
-of Beaumont, we kept up a steady fire on those who were serving the
-guns, around which the Boches, falling like flies, quickly began to
-accumulate in heaps. Fresh men incessantly replaced those who had
-fallen, who at last lay in such numbers that the officers, in order
-to make room for the gunners, had the dead dragged away to the rear
-by the feet. Company after company of men fell in this way until the
-German officers, who had either been shot or had decided to withdraw,
-could be heard no more. A lull occurred. Bringing my glasses to bear on
-the battery, I could see no sign of life save the convulsive movements
-of a few of the prostrate men around the guns.
-
-"It looks as though they had had enough," said I, to my friend Marcel,
-a private who comes from the same place as myself--Loctudy, in
-Brittany. "I wonder if we could capture those guns?"
-
-Before he had time to answer a hurricane of bullets came from a hidden
-machine-gun, and one of them found its billet. My poor friend, shot
-through the head, fell into my arms. We laid him gently down, thinking
-of the sad news that would have to be broken to a sorrowing mother at
-home, and then, anger mingling with regret in our hearts, once more
-directed our attention to the invisible enemy, in whose direction we
-hastened to send our compliments in the form of a stream of _prunes_.
-Overhead we could hear the humming of one of our aeroplanes, and
-through an opening in the tree-tops momentarily caught sight of it as
-it moved over the German lines, reconnoitering. Rings of smoke from
-bursting shrapnel broke far beneath it. Its mission over, it moved
-swiftly back to our lines, and within ten minutes Marcel and many
-other brave fellows were avenged. Our "75's" got the range of the
-battery in front of us with marvellous exactitude, and for five minutes
-poured upon it such a rain of shells as to make it seem impossible
-that anything could live within a distance of a hundred yards. The
-dead around the guns were scattered like chaff in a high wind. A great
-silence followed that series of violent explosions. For five minutes,
-in accordance with orders, the men were busy cutting steps with their
-entrenching tools in our trench, so as to spring out of it quickly and
-proceed to capture the guns. Caution prompted another five minutes'
-wait, during which there was not a sign of life before us.
-
-"Now, then, _mes gars!_ time's up," I cried, as loud as prudence would
-allow. "Fix bayonets! Out of the trench as nimbly as you can. Take
-cover, when in the open, as much as possible. Are you ready? Forward,
-for the sake of France!"
-
-
-III--"DEAD ON THE FIELD OF HONOUR"
-
-We advanced towards the guns at the _pas de gymnastique_ and reached
-them without mishap. Some were too shattered by the recent bombardment
-to be of any further use, but others were still intact, and these, as
-it was difficult if not impossible for us to get them away in a retreat
-over a hilly wooded country, we determined to destroy. Ordering some
-of my men to do what was necessary, and as rapidly as possible, the
-others and I kept a sharp look-out. The enemy gave not a sign of life.
-The fuses having been attached to the breeches of the guns and lit,
-we began to retire whither we had come, but had hardly gone more than
-fifty yards, and heard the successive explosions of the guns blowing
-up, when, on looking over my shoulder, I saw a body of Germans emerge
-at a run from a coppice about two hundred yards to our right, and heard
-them open fire upon us. At the same time I felt a sharp, burning pain
-in my side; a curious sensation of intense weakness filled my being;
-and, with a vision of men falling to the ground with extended arms, I,
-too, bowed down, unconscious, to Mother Earth.
-
-That night, as I afterwards learnt, I was posted as "dead on the field
-of honour." After eleven hours of oblivion, I came to myself in a
-German ambulance. My first impression on recovering consciousness was
-that of hearing the gruff, peremptory voice of a German Herr Doktor at
-my bedside; my second, when he had passed on to another sufferer, that
-of seeing a sweet French face bending over me.
-
-"Where am I?" I asked.
-
-"Hush! the doctor says you must speak as little as possible," replied
-the nurse, in a French which I at once detected to be that of an
-educated person. "I will tell you all that you need know for the
-present. You are in our little ambulance at Erquelinnes, on the
-frontier between Belgium and France--a German ambulance. But fear
-not"--this in a lower voice--"my country is France, and I am not
-without influence, or I should not be here. Your wound, though serious,
-will get well in time. Only you must be _sage_, and obey me. There,
-now! _Cela suffit!_ Try to get a little more sleep; the more rest you
-have the better."
-
-It needed but the invitation, the sound of her soothing voice, like
-that of a tender mother speaking to her child, and especially those
-singularly calming words: "Fear not--my country is France," which
-seemed to wrap me within the protective folds of the tricolour, to
-send me back once more into that state of semi-unconsciousness which
-appears to transport one to the borderline between life and death. Loss
-of blood during those many hours while I had lain forgotten on the
-battlefield had, indeed, brought me to so weak a condition that, as
-my benefactress told me later, the doctor had hardly expected to pull
-me through. My wound was one of those which have been encountered so
-often in this war; it exhibited the curious vagaries of which bullets
-are capable. The projectile entered my right side, travelled along a
-downward, curved path, and, avoiding any of the vital organs, came out
-at the other side. A millimetre to right or left, and it might have
-either killed or paralyzed me. As it was, the injury and loss of blood
-were serious, and could only be repaired by many weeks of immobility,
-coupled with skilled medical aid (and I must do the Herr Doktor the
-justice of recognizing that he was highly capable) and the devoted
-attention of my nurse. Ah! kindly benefactress of the ambulance of
-Erquelinnes, know, should you ever read my words, that I can never
-thank you enough for all you did for me. To have shown my gratitude
-too openly amidst the surroundings where your lot was cast--under what
-circumstances I have often tried to imagine--would have betrayed you.
-But, knowing how one French heart can understand another without the
-passing of words, I doubt not that you have long since comprehended the
-gratitude of the soldier of the Republic whom you befriended and saved.
-
-
-IV--ON THE ARM OF SISTER MADELEINE
-
-A month in bed brought me the period when I was declared out of danger,
-and was allowed to sit up in a chair near a window overlooking a
-little garden bright with hollyhocks and sunflowers. Then came the day
-when, leaning on the arm of Sister Madeleine--the name under which,
-she said, I was to know her--I took my first walk and descended into
-that garden, to lie there for the best hours of the day on a _chaise
-longue_, conversing with her, or, when she was occupied with other
-wounded, reading and reflecting. It was Sister Madeleine who told
-me of passing events. But, oh! how discreetly she broke the news of
-the triumphant march of the German armies southward to Dinant and
-westward to Maubeuge! It required no great psychological insight on
-my part to detect where her sympathies lay. Her looks when, the wind
-being favourable, the faint sound of cannon reached us, the tone of
-her voice when France was named, her significant reticence on certain
-occasions, told me much more than actual words. One of these occasions
-stands out in my mind with particular prominence, owing to my having
-read in her words a warning, and conceived for the first time the idea
-of escape.
-
-"The Herr Doktor is immensely pleased with the progress you are making,
-Captain X----," said Sister Madeleine, rising from my side to pluck
-some Michaelmas daisies from an adjoining border. "He says you may be
-allowed soon to take a little gentle exercise in the garden, and do a
-little gardening, too, if you are a flower-lover, as I doubt not. Are
-you inclined that way?"
-
-"I shall be delighted to turn my hand to weeding and planting," I
-replied. "The garden indeed needs attention!"
-
-"_N'est ce pas?_ Poor Jean, our gardener, now with the French colours,
-would be heartbroken if only he could see the wilderness his little
-earthly paradise has become. How grateful he will be to you when he
-returns--if he ever should return after this dreadful war--and finds
-that someone has been tending his beloved chrysanthemums and dahlias.
-When the mobilization order reached him he was in the midst of potting
-slips of geranium in the tool and potting shed yonder"--motioning to a
-little wooden construction at the end of the garden--"and everything
-there is just as he left it. A heap of withered slips lies side by
-side with rows of empty flower-pots, whilst in a corner I saw his
-working-clothes, which he hastily changed before he came to the house
-to wish us good-bye and passed into the unknown."
-
-"I must try to prove myself to be a worthy successor to the brave
-fellow," I said. "Don't you think, Sister Madeleine, that in one
-respect--my unkempt appearance--I shall not make a bad substitute?"
-
-Walking back to me with her bouquet, she gave me a critical look and
-laughed. Certainly, no one at home would have recognized me as I now
-was, with my long beard and moustache and uncut hair. All at once her
-face became serious, and, without replying to my question, she said:--
-
-"There is no reason why you should not start to-morrow. But don't do
-too much to begin with. Though I should like to have you here much
-longer, it would grieve me if that were the result of a relapse.
-You must get back your strength by degrees. And I fear you will
-need every ounce of it in the future. No; do rather too little than
-too much. I have no wish to hear that the Kommandatur at Charleroi,
-who, I understand, is showing great severity just now towards French
-prisoners, should decide that you have recovered sufficiently to be
-included in the next batch to be sent into Germany."
-
-And with these significant words Sister Madeleine left me, to carry her
-flowers to the bedsides of her other patients, and, possibly, to allow
-me to reflect.
-
-Was it not clear that, indirectly, she had indicated a means of escape?
-A feeling of quasi-loyalty towards those who had enabled her to nurse
-one of her countrymen back to health and strength prevented her from
-bluntly saying: "There is a tool-shed, in which you will find a suit of
-old clothes; disguise yourself in them and flee." But her meaning was
-plain. The key to freedom had been placed in my hands, and it was for
-me to use it.
-
-
-V--"I PLAN TO ESCAPE DISGUISED AS THE GARDENER"
-
-I began pottering about the hollyhocks and sunflowers and dahlias the
-very next morning, taking care to alternate my spells of gardening with
-fairly lengthy rests, on the principle laid down by Sister Madeleine.
-Not that they were altogether unnecessary in my still weak state.
-However, my strength returned with remarkable rapidity, after the first
-week of this light work, and every additional day found me more fit
-to carry out my plan, the details of which I had ample opportunity of
-working out. The garden was surrounded by a high wall of irregular
-construction, thus affording a foothold to a skilful climber, whose
-task could be made still easier if he chose--as I had determined to
-do--that portion of the enclosure which was masked by the tool-shed,
-between the back of which and the wall was a space of about a foot and
-a half, providing an additional support for one's body. My resemblance
-to Jean, the gardener, had, by the by, become more and more perfect,
-thanks to work with spade and hoe, and perhaps, at times, owing to
-rather too close contact with the soil. That it would be perfection
-itself when I had donned his garb, at the close of an afternoon's work
-just before turning-in time, I felt convinced.
-
-There was another thing of which I was certain: that Sister Madeleine
-instinctively knew the day and hour I had fixed for my flight. For she
-was so unusually silent on that day in the last week of October, when,
-according to my calculations, there would be no moon until late in
-the night, she was so serious in her mien, and she left me with such
-suddenness after advising me to come in, "now that the sun had set and
-the evenings were getting chilly," that I felt sure she comprehended.
-
-"Thank you, Sister Madeleine," I replied; and I could not refrain from
-adding, in the hope that she would grasp my double meaning: "You have
-_always_ given me such good advice. I shall never forget your kindness.
-But before coming in I must put away my tools."
-
-Without daring to look her in the face, I turned down the path in the
-direction of the tool-shed. Five minutes later I left it, dressed in
-the gardener's earth-stained clothes, passed like a shadow to the rear
-of the building, and was over the wall in a trice.
-
-I found myself in a field, and having not the slightest idea regarding
-the geography of Erquelinnes, went straight ahead at full speed. A
-quarter of an hour's steeplechasing across ditches and other natural
-obstacles brought me to a high road, and confronted me with the dilemma
-as to which way to turn. Without losing a moment's time, for I pictured
-the hue and cry my disappearance would soon be causing, I made off to
-the left. _Fausse route!_ In five minutes I came within sight of the
-lights of the first house of a village, undoubtedly Erquelinnes itself.
-With a vague idea at the back of my head of gaining the Franco-Belgian
-frontier, and--avoiding all small places, where curiosity is most
-rife--reaching Maubeuge, where I might find an asylum among my own
-people until an opportunity presented itself of getting back to the
-French lines, I struck off to the right, once more across open country.
-The dark cloak of night had now fallen, making my progress necessarily
-slow. On and on I crept in the darkness. How long I continued I
-cannot say, but it must have been for several hours, for a great
-weariness suddenly came over me and impelled me to seek sleep. What was
-apparently a small wood lay in my path at that moment. Groping my way
-from bole to bole, I divined, rather than saw, a dry and sheltered spot
-under the trees, and, throwing myself down, quickly fell asleep, amidst
-the calling of the night-jars.
-
-
-VII--"HANDS UP--OR I SHOOT"
-
-I cannot tell you how long I slumbered--probably until two or three
-o'clock in the morning. But I was awakened by the sound of the snapping
-of dry twigs and muffled voices. I sprang to my feet and listened.
-Nearer and nearer came the stealthy footsteps. I retired as cautiously
-as I could; but though I trod ever so lightly, it was impossible to
-avoid the crackling of dead wood, which seemed to my hypersensitive
-ears like so many pistol-shots. Even the thumping of my heart appeared
-audible. One curious thing, however, I noticed: whenever, after a noisy
-retreat, I stopped to listen, there was a corresponding stoppage and a
-long silence on the part of my pursuers. But, thought I, was it at all
-certain they _were_ in pursuit? Would they not, in that case, have come
-on with a rush? "Suppose I crouch down and run the risk of them passing
-without seeing me?" I thought. Whilst I was reflecting; with my back
-to what was apparently a fairly large tree, those who were advancing,
-emboldened by the silence which had intervened, came on with hastened
-steps, and got so near that I could hear their heavy breathing. I
-stepped quickly behind my tree, but too late to serve my purpose, for
-the next moment a stern voice rapped out an oath almost in my ear and
-a flash of light from an electric torch struck me full in the face.
-
-"Hands up, or I shoot!" said the voice. "Who are you?"
-
-"A Frenchman," I replied, obeying the command and deciding, on the
-spur of the moment, that one who spoke to me in my native tongue could
-hardly be an enemy. "And in need of help."
-
-"Good thing you're not a _Pruscot_, mate, or you'd have been a goner.
-In need of help, are you? So are we. Aren't we, _mes vieuz_?"
-
-This last remark was addressed to the speaker's two companions, whose
-indistinct forms I could now make out.
-
-"Very well," continued the speaker, slipping the revolver with which
-he had covered me into his pocket, "I take it to be a bargain. One good
-service deserves another. You help us with some of these parcels, and
-we'll help _you_. I'm not going to ask you too many questions, and we
-don't expect you to be over inquisitive about _our_ business. _C'est
-compris?_ But if we're to get there and back before light we must be
-off. Come on!"
-
-Taking two of the heavy packages which they were transporting, I
-followed them. In a flash, I saw that I had fallen in with a party
-of smugglers, who still continued to ply their calling in the
-neighbourhood of Erquelinnes and other villages on the frontier between
-Belgium and France. Men of nondescript nationality, though hating the
-Teuton with all the ardour of a Frenchman or a Belgian, and ready, if
-a favourable opportunity offered, to rid the world of every Boche who
-fell into their power, they made it their business to be on friendly
-terms with the Prussian officers who were in authority on the frontier.
-Many favours, in the early months of the war, could they obtain from
-them, in return for a discreetly-offered gift, such as a box of cigars,
-or a pound or two of tobacco. When taking any important consignment
-of goods to and fro between their dépôts on the road from Maubeuge to
-Charleroi, they had, of course, to resort to the traditional methods of
-their calling; and it was whilst on one of these nocturnal expeditions
-that I had encountered them.
-
-
-VIII--THE FORGED PAPERS--TO SAFETY
-
-They were rough individuals, but loyal to their word. Feeling that
-I could not be in safer company, I threw in my lot with theirs for
-nearly a fortnight, hiding by day in the cottage of their leader, on
-the outskirts of a village "somewhere in France," but not far from
-Erquelinnes, and assisting them at night in carrying their goods along
-the little-known paths which intersect the Franco-Belgian frontier.
-Bit by bit I told mine host my tale. He was touched as much as you
-could expect a hardened smuggler to be, swore eternal friendship over
-an excellent bottle of wine, and promised that on the very next day he
-would bring me a surprise.
-
-He was as good as his word. Out of his pocket he drew a paper--a
-duly-signed and stamped pass, obtained from the Prussian officer at the
-frontier village of ----, authorizing the bearer to cross into Belgium
-without let or hindrance. He did more than this: he gave me the name
-and address of a confederate at Charleroi, who would furnish me with
-the means of effecting my escape _viâ_ Holland.
-
-I crossed the frontier, wheeling a barrow belonging to a friendly
-peasant, who went daily to a bit of land he possessed on Belgian
-territory.
-
-My twenty-mile walk to Charleroi, and a stay of a week in that city,
-were uneventful. On leaving, my smuggler's friend gave me a useful
-introduction to a person in Brussels, whence, with a little borrowed
-money in my pocket, I set off, towards the end of November. The train
-was still running the four miles between Charleroi and Gosselies.
-The thirteen miles to Nivelles I covered on foot; the eighteen miles
-past Waterloo and over ground every yard of which recalled memories
-of Napoleon and the closing scenes of the Hundred Days I traversed by
-train again.
-
-The long sojourn which I was destined to make in Brussels was
-uneventful compared to my late experiences. There I obtained papers
-certifying that I was a Belgian commercial traveller, but discretion,
-you will readily understand, forbids me going into details. Oh, no; I
-did not put those forged papers to too severe a test by use. As much
-as possible, I sought to remain hidden in the terrorized city, and to
-slip out of it for Malines and the villages near the Dutch frontier,
-without showing my _papiers_ any more than was absolutely necessary.
-
-The frontier between Belgium and Holland is of so serrated a nature
-that at the time of which I am speaking it was comparatively easy for
-a hunted man like myself to cross into neutral territory. To do so now
-would be almost impossible, so well do the Germans guard the irregular
-line, the configuration of which is such that it is difficult, in
-places, to tell whether you are in Holland or in Belgium. Fortunately,
-I had come into contact with a person who was expert in getting young
-Belgians across the frontier into Holland, and he agreed to help me.
-
-Here, again, I cannot--on account of those who risked their lives in
-befriending me--go into too many details. Suffice it to say, that on
-the evening of my escape from the frontier village of A---- I was
-instructed to walk to a certain milestone, where I should find a man
-with a red muffler, sitting on a heap of stones.
-
-There, sure enough, I found him--an elderly man with his hands folded
-over the top of his stick, his chin resting on his hands, and his eyes
-gazing innocently into the gathering dusk.
-
-As I passed him I uttered the word "Belgica," which I had been told to
-pronounce, and keep on, without once turning my head.
-
-Very soon I heard his footsteps and the tap, tap of his stick. He
-overtook me with alert step, and on reaching me, said: "Follow me."
-
-We shot off from the main road into a small winding pathway, which we
-followed for some fifty yards. Then, suddenly stopping, the man in the
-red muffler exclaimed: "Holland!"
-
-No word ever before sounded to me so sweet as that. Overcome by the
-thought that once more I was standing on free ground--that I had but to
-follow the pathway on which I stood to reach a Dutch village--and that
-the journey thence to a port and my beloved France _viâ_ England, was
-but a question of time, I remained for a few seconds lost in reverie.
-At last, mastering my emotion, I prepared to set off before darkness
-completely enveloped the wild landscape which surrounded me. Before
-putting my best foot foremost, however, I was seized with a desire to
-thank the man who had guided me there, so I turned half-round to press
-his hand. To my surprise, however, I found that he had disappeared, and
-that only the gleam of his red muffler marked his progress down the
-path.
-
-
-
-
-TALES OF THE SPIES AND THEIR DANGEROUS MISSIONS
-
-_Revelations of Methods and Daring Adventures_
-
-_Told by Secret Service Men of Several Countries_
-
- It is estimated that more than a hundred thousand spies and agents
- have been in the service of the various countries during the War.
- Several thousand have been captured and several hundred have been
- executed. The German spy system in the United States alone was a
- powerful organization at the beginning of the war. But the American
- Secret Service, one of the greatest organizations of its kind in
- existence, thwarted their plots, interned them in large numbers,
- and drove such men as Boy-Ed and von Papen from our shores. The
- interception of the Zimmerman note to Mexico, the revelations of
- the Swedish duplicity in Argentine, the discovery of Bolo, the
- French financier, the plots in India--and hundreds of others have
- been exposed by the genius of the United Secret Service. Most of
- these stories cannot be told until long after the War, but a few of
- them, gathered from American and European sources, are told here.
-
-
-I--HOW THE SPIES WORK IN EUROPE
-
-The extraordinary ingenuity shown by spies in securing the plans of
-other countries' fortifications has been amply illustrated in the war,
-although, of course, we know but a little part of what the spies have
-accomplished.
-
-A woman was caught at the French frontier seeking to enter Switzerland
-and presumably intending to return to Germany or Austria. She was
-thoroughly searched by a matron, as is customary in such cases, but
-nothing was found.
-
-Certain actions of hers, however, had given rise to serious suspicions,
-and one of the cleverest officers of the French Secret Service was
-detailed to examine her. He applied several tests to her. He finally
-obtained what he wanted by seating her, in an undraped condition, tied
-to a chair, before a warm fire.
-
-"Brutes, you are going to burn me alive!" she shrieked as she was
-forced into a chair.
-
-"Be calm, madame," said the officer. "We only want to admire your
-beautiful back."
-
-There appeared on the ample back of this fair-haired lady an elaborate
-design. To the experienced eye of the officer it represented a plan of
-one of the most important French fortresses. The number of guns, their
-sizes and positions were shown. The angles, sallies and extent of the
-fortifications were clearly indicated. The weak spots in the defense
-were made clear. This fortress had been entirely made over since the
-outbreak of the war, and it was of vital importance to the Germans to
-know its present arrangements.
-
-A German spy in France, evidently a man with military knowledge, had
-obtained access to the fortress, but there was but slight chance of
-his getting home with his knowledge. He had, therefore, used the young
-woman as an innocent looking agent.
-
-The master spy had traced the plans on her back with sulphate of
-copper. This liquid leaves no mark on the skin under normal conditions,
-but when exposed to considerable heat it shows up dark blue. For
-further secrecy, it is stated, the plan of the fortress was concealed
-within another design in the manner described by General Sir Robert
-Baden-Powell. He carried with him an illustrated book on butterflies
-and from this he made what would appear to be specimens of butterflies
-seen in the surrounding country. Then when he had obtained the details
-of a fortress he drew them in among the complicated markings on the
-wings of the butterfly. There they would escape notice by any but the
-most expert "spy trappers."
-
-Miss Sari Petrass, the beautiful Hungarian dancer, who was for some
-time a great favorite in London, is reported to have been shot in
-Budapest as a spy. She is supposed to have been engaged in gathering
-military information in her native country for the benefit of England,
-where she made her greatest artistic success.
-
-When war began, the actress was starring in "The Marriage Market,"
-a Hungarian operetta, at Daly's Theatre in London. She immediately
-returned to Budapest, but instead of continuing on the stage began a
-round of social activities.
-
-She wrote letters to the British army authorities, it is charged, which
-were sent by way of Switzerland in the in the care of young Austrian
-officers, who had been beguiled by her charms. It is said she was
-betrayed by one of her dupes in a fit of jealousy. Although an actress,
-she had a high social position and was a niece of the Countess Ilka
-Kinsky, one of the most prominent members of the Austro-Hungarian
-nobility.
-
-Miss Petrass, according to the report which reached her friends in
-Cleveland, Ohio, was put to death immediately her acts were discovered.
-When taken to the place of execution she fainted and was unconscious
-when shot. The announcement of her execution was the first news her
-family had of the charges against her.
-
-The method of concealing plans of fortifications on the skin of a spy,
-already referred to, has been employed with many variations. In time
-of war or when suspicion of spies is very keen, it is likely to be
-very useful. Then, again, women are usually called upon to carry this
-kind of information, because they are less subject to suspicion and
-watchfulness.
-
-Tattooing plans on a woman's skin has often been resorted to in past
-wars, but the anti-spy officers are now so keen that this way is no
-longer reliable. Various forms of writing on the skin, which only
-become visible under certain conditions, have, therefore, been tried.
-One form of this has already been mentioned. Plans and messages are
-also written in nitrate of silver, which becomes visible and black on
-exposure to sunlight. The writing is also done with phosphorus, so that
-it is only visible in the dark, but that lasts a few hours only.
-
-Women have shown extraordinary ingenuity in carrying information during
-the present war. One wore a large pair of pearl earrings, which, when
-examined, proved to be stuffed with long messages. Another had a little
-woolly pet dog, whose tail was found to be artificial and filled with
-military plans. Another carried a message scratched on the plate of her
-false teeth.
-
-When it has been found impossible for a human spy to reach a fortress,
-birds have been employed. Carrier pigeons are fitted with miniature
-cameras fastened across their breasts by exceedingly fine wires. These
-are fitted with a time lock which ensures their exposure at a certain
-time.
-
-The pigeons are released by spies at a place from which they will be
-sure to fly over the fortress on their way home. A pigeon flies in
-circles on its journey, and it is certain that during part of its
-flight over the fortress the camera shutter will be released. A series
-of pictures taken in this way will give a very complete plan of the
-defenses to the enemy.
-
-Although immediate execution follows the discovery of a spy or perhaps
-even the suspicion of espionage, thousands of persons are found
-willing to undertake the work during this war. It has been truly said
-that the highest form of heroism is to undertake spy duty for one's
-country. Nothing can be more awful than the fate of the spy caught and
-executed amid the hate and fear of the thousands who surround him. Many
-photographs sent from the seat of war show how the European armies make
-the death of the spy terrible.
-
-The Germans are universally admitted to be more skilful spies than
-the British, and yet Gen. Baden-Powell performed some remarkable
-spying tricks. He tells how he got into a new German dockyard and made
-observations under the nose of several policemen:
-
-"Inside a great, high wall lay a dockyard, in which, it was rumored,
-a new power house was being erected, and possibly a dry dock was in
-course of preparation.
-
-"The scaffolding of the new house towered above me, and a ladder led
-upward on to it. Up this I went like a lamplighter, keeping one eye on
-the corner of the building lest I should be followed.
-
-"Presently I found a short ladder leading from my platform to the
-stage below, but it did not go to the ground. Peering quietly over the
-scaffolding, I saw my friend the policeman below, still at fault. I
-blessed my stars that he was no tracker, and therefore had not seen my
-footmarks leading to the foot of the ladder.
-
-"Then I proceeded to take note of my surroundings and to gather
-information. Judging from the design of the building, its great
-chimneys, etc., I was actually on the new power-house. From my post I
-had an excellent view over the dockyard, and within one hundred feet of
-me were the excavation works of the new dock, whose dimensions I could
-easily estimate.
-
-"All these duties (of espionage) are subdivided among agents of
-every grade, from Ambassadors and their attachés downward. Naval and
-military officers are sent to carry out special investigations by
-all countries, and paid detectives are stationed in likely centres to
-gather information."
-
-The General further says that the military information that a country
-voluntarily gives to a foreign attaché is usually of little value, and
-therefore he must take secret means to inform himself.--(Told in _New
-York American_.)
-
-
-II--STORY OF MLLE. MATA HARI, DUTCH-JAVANESE DANCER
-
-The story of Mata Hari, the beautiful dancing girl, who as a German
-spy discovered the information about the British "tanks" before they
-arrived at the Battle of the Somme, is one of the most romantic of the
-War. She was found guilty of espionage and condemned to death by a
-military court martial presided over by Col. Sempron.
-
-"Accused did wilfully and maliciously, and against the interest of
-la Patrie, communicate information of military value to the enemy
-concerning our offensive of the summer of 1916," read the verdict that
-sent her to a cell in Saint Lazare Prison awaiting the dawn which means
-her death.
-
-"Eye-of-the-Morning" is English for the Javanese pet name
-"Mata-Hari"--the stage name of Mme. Marguerite Gertrude Zelle Macleod,
-first known in Paris, and latterly all over Europe, as a dancer whose
-specialty was the representing of Far-Eastern legends and fables
-according to the terpsichorean art....
-
-One of the most important and spectacular events of the only Allied
-offensive of 1916 was the appearance in action of the newest engine
-of war--the so-called tank. As with any innovation, the success of
-the tank depended largely on the element of surprise attaching to
-its debut. Therefore, the strictest secrecy marked the planning, the
-construction, and the shipment of tanks to the Somme, where they first
-went into action. But of course a certain number of people in England
-and in France knew about the tanks--or "creme-de-menthes" as they were
-first called in Paris because each one is named like a ship and one
-called after the famous green liqueur. It took a good many months to
-construct the first fleet, and a good many weeks to train the first
-crews to stand the jerky, rolling, pitching, lumbering gait of the
-mobile forts. During that period the circle of people "in the know"
-increased, and Mata-Hari was one of those who heard about the curious
-landships.
-
-Where Mata-Hari obtained her first tip on the tanks has not yet been
-disclosed. And that is one reason why the "memoirs" which she is
-writing in her cell at Saint Lazare prison are being awaited with fear
-and anxiety by at least one person, and with the liveliest interest by
-the world at large.
-
-It is rumored that a Deputy inadvertently gave her the first
-information about tanks. And the rumor is strengthened by the fact that
-Mata-Hari had plenty of coal for her apartment during the fuel famine
-in winter. That in itself is proof enough to everybody of her intimacy
-with some high official, as few people short of Deputies had influence
-enough to obtain a hundredweight of coal during the bitter months of
-January, February and March.
-
-In any event, Mara-Hari learned vaguely of tanks early in 1916, when
-the Krupp guns of the Crown Prince were daily booming nearer and nearer
-to Verdun in that terrific struggle which was to mark the turning
-point of the war. Mata-Hari also learned that the tanks were being
-constructed in England and would be shipped to France _viâ_ certain
-ports--and she got the names of the ports.
-
-Then Mata-Hari decided she must return to her native country, Holland.
-For, with all her Javanese appellation, she was born near Rotterdam,
-although it is true she went to the Dutch East Indies when a tiny
-child. She gave as reason for going to Holland the fact that she had
-married a Dutch army officer with a Scotch name--Capt. Macleod, that
-they had divorced, and she wished to arrange a settlement of their
-common property.
-
-Her passports were made out, and safe conducts granted for a trip to
-Holland, _viâ_ England, of course, as that is the only way to get into
-the Low Countries from the Allied side.
-
-Mata-Hari went to England. But before she proceeded to Holland,
-as Secret Service agents of the British and French Governments
-ascertained, she visited a certain English manufacturing city, where,
-it so happened, the tanks were being constructed.
-
-Evidently Mata-Hari did not find out much about the tanks there, as
-not a man connected with their construction ever passed through the
-gates of the high brick wall which surrounded the factory during the
-six months that the first "fleet" was building. The men were boarded,
-entertained and employed here continually. Every letter they sent out
-or received was subjected to the most rigorous censorship.
-
-The dancer proceeded to Rotterdam. Investigation there has since proved
-that she had no "communal rights property" to settle with any one, and
-further that Capt. Macleod of the Dutch Army was known among his fellow
-officers as pronouncedly pro-German.
-
-Soon Mata-Hari returned to Paris. She was seen at the Café de Paris and
-at Maxim's, and at Armenonville in the Bois with an English officer
-who wore on the lapel of his collar, an insignia denoting his branch
-of service, a little twisted brass dragon. Months later, when more of
-these badges were seen on British officers passing through Paris, it
-became known that the dragon was of the official insignia denoting
-service with the tanks.
-
-Mata-Hari sported a new bauble soon after taking up with the
-Englishman--a jewelled replica of his gold insignia--her dragon had
-real emeralds for eyes, and a carrot-shaped ruby for a tongue darting
-from its opened fangs.
-
-In May, 1916, a little more than a month before the Somme offensive
-opened and tanks were first used, Mata-Hari appeared before the police
-magistrate of her district and requested a safe conduct to visit a
-certain port in France. The reason she gave was that her fiance, an
-English officer, was seriously wounded and in hospital there. He had
-sent for her to come to see him. Perhaps they would be married at his
-deathbed if he could not recover, she volunteered, dabbing at her eyes
-with a lace handkerchief.
-
-The safe conduct was made out, and Mata-Hari arrived at a certain
-French port almost simultaneously with the first consignment of tanks
-shipped over from England.
-
-Now a tank of the early type was 35 feet long, 12 feet wide and 9 feet
-high, and the caterpillar tractors rumbling under it and over it and
-around it made a terrible din, attracting the attention of people for
-great distances around. And because of the weight of the tanks they
-could not be moved by rail, but had to travel under their own power. It
-was impossible, therefore, to wholly hide the monsters from inhabitants
-of that particular French port, and from the townspeople in the French
-villages through which they passed on the way to the Somme front. Of
-course most of the travelling was done by night, and tarpaulins were
-always draped over the armed and armored behemoths.
-
-But there did not seem to be much necessity for precautions, as nearly
-all of the inhabitants of the districts through which the tanks passed
-remained stolidly right there where they were. Few indeed were as lucky
-as Mata-Hari and able to get safe conducts to travel about. But then
-few were as beautiful and alluring as the dancer.
-
-Mata-Hari remained in the French port for a week. She strolled about
-the town at night and explained to the hotel clerks that she could not
-sleep without taking a certain amount of exercise before retiring, and
-that after being accustomed to gay life in Paris, she was not tired
-until after midnight.
-
-It was on June 1, exactly a month before Gens. Haig and Foch began
-their drive astride the Somme, that Mata-Hari returned to Paris.
-And the first thing she did was to apply for a visé on her passport
-permitting her to go to Spain. San Sebastian was the place she
-mentioned, as she explained she wished to attend the horse races there.
-Her papers were stamped and sealed and she left almost immediately for
-the fashionable winter resort in the south.
-
-Madrid, Spain, and Nauen, Germany, are in constant wireless
-communication. There are other radio stations, privately owned in
-Spain, which can flash messages to Germany, according to Allied
-intelligence officers who have investigated. And of course there are
-innumerable German agents, spies and propaganda disseminators infesting
-the land of the Dons.
-
-Secret Service reports disclose the fact that Mata-Hari was seen much
-in company at San Sebastian race track with a man long looked upon with
-suspicion by the French Government. He was a frequent caller upon her
-at the hotel where she stopped, and it was reported that he made good
-many of the big bets she placed on horses that did not materialize as
-winners.
-
-Soon Mata-Hari came back to Paris and the apartment near the Bois de
-Bologne. And once more the limousine owned by the individual whom rumor
-has branded a Deputy, began rolling up to her door twice a week and
-sometimes oftener.
-
-Then came the simultaneous Franco-British offensive at the Somme. Tanks
-went into action for the first time, and according to Gen. Haig's
-official communique his "land ships achieved satisfactory results."
-
-The tanks did achieve satisfactory results. More than that, they
-revolutionized offensive tactics on favorable terrain by advancing
-immune against rifle and machine gun bullets, or even against light
-trench mortars whose shells exploded at a touch. They smashed by sheer
-weight strong points and machine gun emplacements. They straddled
-trenches, enfilading the occupants and crushed in entrances to dugouts.
-
-But several of the tanks were put out of action--and not by stray
-shells hurtling forward from far behind the German lines. They were
-knocked out by small calibre _PENETRATION_ shells, fired from 37
-millimetre trench cannons--the largest guns that can be handled from
-advanced positions. Guns specially built and rifled, and fired at high
-velocity and flat trajectory, so that, unlike any shell ever coughed
-up by a mortar, they penetrated the object struck--even though it were
-steel--before exploding.
-
-Instantly it became evident that the enemy had become aware of what
-was in store for him and had constructed an "anti-tank" gun. And when
-the booty in the captured German positions was examined, the British
-found they had several good specimens of Krupp's newest weapon. Several
-German officers of higher rank taken prisoners confirmed suspicions,
-by explaining they had received description of the tanks several weeks
-before, and had been instructed how to combat them.
-
-Now Mata-Hari is awaiting death and writing as she waits. She is
-penning her memoirs rapidly, filling scores of pages a day in a
-polyglot of French, German, Dutch, Javanese, Japanese and even English,
-according to the mood she is in, says the prison warder.
-
-And because she fears her history will not be finished before that
-unannounced daybreak when she will be placed blindfolded before the
-high stone wall facing a firing squad of French soldiers, she has
-ordered her lawyer, M. Edouard Clunet, to plead for a stay of execution.
-
-So Mata-Hari writes feverishly, and all Paris waits eagerly--except the
-one who waits apprehensively--to see if she will name the "ami" who
-gave her the first inkling of the tanks.
-
-Pinned to the corsage of the Empire-cut black silk dress which
-Mata-Hari wears in her narrow cell in Saint Lazare Prison is a curious
-gold brooch. It is shaped like a twisted dragon, and its eyes are
-emeralds and its darting tongue a carrot-shaped ruby.
-
-"It will be there--right over my heart--when I go away--when I stand
-before those men with guns aimed to kill me," says Mata-Hari. (Told in
-the _New York World_.)
-
-(Since these stories were written Mata-Hari has gone to her death
-blindfolded before the firing squad. She met her execution stoically.)
-
-
-III--ADVENTUROUS LIFE OF MATA-HARI
-
-This is told by a man who for obvious reasons will not allow his name
-to be used:
-
-"I knew Mata-Hari in Paris. I called on her at her home at
-Nieully-sur-Seine. The sinister character in Dumas' great romance was
-not more cunning or adventurous nor played for higher stakes than did
-Mlle. Mata-Hari. In many respects their histories should be printed in
-parallel columns. But I believe that for adventure, for cunning, for
-her great influence over the destiny of those with whom she came in
-contact, Mlle. Mata-Hari was more dreadful than 'Miladi.'
-
-"Her father was a subject of the Netherlands and her mother was a
-Javanese. He died when she was an infant, and in order to protect
-her from the dangers which beset a young girl of mixed blood in the
-East her mother fled from Java with her when she was three years old
-and entered Burma. There, to further protect her, she pledged her to
-celibacy and placed her in a Buddhist temple to learn dancing. Then
-it appeared that her destiny would be not unlike that of thousands of
-other young girls in that country and similar in many respects to that
-of the old vestals of ancient Greece. In Burma these dancers are called
-bayadère.
-
-"She told me that when she was twelve years old she was disgusted with
-life and was determined to change it or end it. After a dance at a
-great Buddhist festival in Burma, when she was about fourteen years
-old, she saw a British officer and fell in love with him. It was her
-first love affair. She managed to escape from the temple and joined
-him. This man was a baronet and loved her. Finally they married. Two
-children, a boy and a girl, were born of their union.
-
-"I do not believe that she ever loved any man. It is certain that
-she did not love her husband. At any event, the monotonous life of
-a British official's wife was more than she could stand. The climax
-came when a maid whom she had beaten and discharged caused one of her
-gardeners to poison her infant son.
-
-"The tragic sequence and scandal which followed the death of her
-son still is remembered by old timers in India. She started an
-investigation of the killing independent of the British authorities,
-and finally, in her own mind, fixed the guilt on one of her gardeners.
-She took a revolver, and, walking into the garden where the man was
-working, shot him dead.
-
-"She was arrested, but owing to the high position occupied by her
-husband everything possible was done to suppress the scandal. Finally
-she was told that she would have to leave British India. It was just
-what she wanted to do. She left her home in the night, stealing her
-daughter from her husband. She made her way to Marseilles and thence
-to Holland, where she placed her daughter in a convent. Then she went
-straight to Paris, where she learned that she was penniless, the
-small fortune which her father had left her having, under the Dutch
-law, passed to her child. Then she set about to captivate Paris. Not
-satisfied with her conquest, she went to Berlin, to Petrograd, to
-Vienna--she travelled over all Europe--and became one of the most
-talked of women on the Continent.
-
-"She met many men. One of them was a wealthy German, who was a high
-official of the Berlin government. He bought a home for her at
-Nieully-sur-Seine and furnished it in a style that was representative
-of what was most truly Oriental splendor. There the two of them lived.
-It was there that I first saw her.
-
-"Soon she tired of this German. He was extremely jealous of her. Always
-her art--her dancing--called to her. He would not let her dance. There
-were many 'scenes' at home. Her life was not happy, despite the wealth
-at her disposal.
-
-"Then she met a one-time Minister of Finance, of France, and, through
-him, his brother-in-law. He fell in love with her and she with him.
-
-"This man was at that time the managing director of a great Paris bank.
-He deserted his wife and bought a magnificent château in Touraine. For
-two years they lived there. Then, one day, the police entered the bank
-and arrested the managing director. He was charged with embezzling the
-funds of the institution. He was tried and convicted and sentenced
-to two years at hard labor. The woman then went back to the German
-official at Neuilly-sur-Seine. They were living there when I left
-France four years ago." (Told in the _New York Herald_.)
-
-
-IV--STORY OF EXECUTION OF SUSANNA RAYNAL
-
-This is the story of a French young woman who was executed by the
-French military authorities in Bellegarde, the little Franco-Swiss
-frontier village.... Women have figured prominently as spies in every
-war. In this war their rôle has also been conspicuous. Some have
-betrayed their country for money, others have betrayed it for the
-love of adventure, and still others have betrayed it for the sake
-of love--following blindly the men who lead them astray along the
-fascinating and dangerous path of crime. This young woman was a victim
-of love.
-
-Not a word has been written about her death. Not a sigh, not a tear,
-not a prayer from her friends and relatives. For they did not know what
-had become of her. The French newspapers did not record the end of this
-woman, who paid with her life for her daring, mad desire to help her
-Austrian lover, who sought to secure French military secrets.
-
-Her name was Susanna Raynal. She was the wife of Louis Raynal, a
-lieutenant in the artillery of the French army. She was twenty-eight
-years old when she was put to death. The husband, twelve years her
-senior, was at the front when she was shot. Her lover was shot with
-her. He broke down, quivering and crying hysterically while she kept
-bracing him up, repeating: "Have no fear! Have no fear!"
-
-She begged the officers to have them shot together, not separately.
-She declined to be blindfolded, held her lover by the hand and kept
-murmuring "Have no fear! Have no fear!"...
-
-Several weeks ago I met in Paris a distinguished French diplomatist
-with whom I discussed many incidents of the war. Our conversation
-turned to the many varieties of spies and provocateurs and to the
-motives that prompted them to betray their country.
-
-Then he told me the story of this young woman who met her end so
-bravely at the French-Swiss frontier. There were tears in his voice as
-he related the details. For he knew the woman and he knew her husband.
-
-"I was returning from London to Paris a few weeks ago," he said. "Just
-as we were reaching Boulogne, on the boat crossing the Channel, while
-I was in line in the dining room of the boat where the passports were
-being examined by the military officers, I heard behind me a familiar
-voice, whispering in German, 'Furchte doch nicht!' (Don't be afraid!)
-
-"I turned and saw the wife of my friend, a French lieutenant who was
-at the front. She felt somewhat embarrassed when she noticed me, but
-immediately advanced toward me and introduced to me a tall young man of
-rather anti-pathetic appearance.
-
-"'This is my husband's friend,' she said to me. 'He was kind enough
-to help me arrange my business affairs in London. Louis is at the
-front....'
-
-"Upon our arrival in Paris she asked me to visit her soon. She said
-she wanted me to advise her in a certain important matter, that she
-was alone now, that I could help her with letters of introduction,
-for which she would be most grateful. She urged me to visit her the
-following evening. I promised to call on her and bade her farewell.
-
-"On the following evening, when I came to her house, her maid met me
-at the door and said that madam was expecting me for dinner an hour
-later. I asked her to tell Mme. Raynal that I had another engagement
-for dinner.
-
-"A few minutes later Mme. Raynal came out. As I mentioned before,
-she was a beautiful young woman of about twenty-eight. She was most
-charmingly dressed. She greeted me warmly and begged me to stay for
-dinner. I told her I had another important engagement. She implored me
-to stay. She said she was alone, and that she wished to talk with me
-about a matter of great importance, in which she desired to enlist my
-aid. I said that I would call on her some other evening.
-
-"Then she told me that she wished to visit friends in Switzerland, that
-she had some manuscripts of a literary character she wanted to take to
-them, and that she wished me to give her letters of introduction to
-several people, among them the Minister of War. I promised to call on
-her the following evening.
-
-"As I bade her good night, she kissed me and begged me to break my
-other engagement and take dinner with her. I repeated that it was
-impossible. Then I left her. As I walked down the stairs, I noticed the
-tall young man I had met with her at Boulogne, going up in the elevator
-to her apartment. That seemed more than strange to me.
-
-"The next morning I chanced to be lunching in a café where I
-occasionally met my friend, the head of the secret police department.
-In the course of my conversation I told the peculiar story of the
-woman and the young man, without mentioning her name. The police chief
-listened intently and then said:
-
-"'I think I know the woman. We are watching her. We are also watching
-the man closely. He is an Austrian. They seem to be engaged in a
-serious political conspiracy.'
-
-"About two weeks later I met the head of the secret police department
-in the same café. He said to me:
-
-"'Do you know what has happened to that woman--Susanna Raynal?'
-
-"'I haven't seen her since then,' I replied.
-
-"'You will never see her again,' he said. 'She has been shot.'
-
-"And then he told me how the police had shadowed her and her lover, how
-some one who had made her acquaintance recently gave her a letter of
-introduction to the Ministry of War. She wanted to help the Austrian
-carry certain documents out of France and wished to get a special
-letter from the Minister of War permitting her to take what she called
-'manuscripts' to her friends in Switzerland.
-
-"She came to the Ministry of War with her lover. They were taken to a
-room, where they met an officer who told her that he would be glad to
-arrange the matter for her. Then the police did what is usually done
-in such cases. The officer walked out of the room for a short time,
-leaving on the table near them a number of important-looking documents.
-The man took some of these documents, and after the officer had
-returned and had given them the letter they asked for they went away.
-
-"On the following day they reached Bellegarde, the Franco-Swiss
-frontier. They were searched, and the papers taken from the War
-Department were found on the woman. Within one hour both were shot.
-She met her death bravely. She held the man by the hand and tried to
-brace him up. He was crying helplessly and hysterically....
-
-"A few days ago I received information that Lieutenant Louis Raynal,
-the husband of the woman who was executed in Bellegarde, fell on the
-battlefield recently. He passed away without learning of the tragedy
-that had befallen his home.
-
-"He died in defense of his fatherland, which his wife, through her
-blind love for a spy, had endeavored to betray. Perhaps as he was dying
-of his wounds, his last thoughts and prayers were for his home and for
-his wife." (Told by Herman Bernstein in the _New York American_.)
-
-
-V--STORIES OF THE MILITARY SECRETS
-
-The Paris papers contained a brief paragraph telling of a young girl, a
-milliner, in the neighborhood of Grenoble, who had been caught playing
-the spy for the Germans and sentenced to a long term of imprisonment.
-
-"We don't shoot women spies any more," said a soldier from the Somme
-front to whom I spoke of the story. "There have been no women shot for
-a long time. They generally get about twelve years at hard labor."
-
-"Are you as much troubled as ever by spies?" I asked.
-
-He laughed. "As long as there is war there will be spies," he replied.
-"You can't stamp them out. The only thing you can do is to try to catch
-them. It was only a few weeks ago that we caught a woman spy on the
-Somme.
-
-"You remember when we took Bouchavesnes? Well, there was not much left
-of the village when we got it. Our artillery had knocked it pretty
-well to pieces, but we found an old woman there. She had remained all
-through the German occupation, and had even managed to hide and stay
-behind when all the rest of the civil population had evacuated. She was
-in a cellar during our bombardment, and when we went into the town she
-came out to welcome us, the only one of the original French inhabitants
-of the village remaining. As it was French again, she insisted on
-remaining. It was her home and she had succeeded in clinging on all the
-time the Germans were there. She saw no reason why she should go when
-the French came back into occupation.
-
-"She stayed and did our washing for us. She was busy all the time, and
-every morning she would take the wet clothes out and spread them on the
-ground to dry. You could see soldiers' shirts and underwear all around
-the cellar where she lived, and hanging on all the posts and pieces of
-wall.
-
-"The old woman pottered around and worked most industriously at her
-tubs. She always came out when there were troops going through the
-village and she would talk to the men, find out where they were going,
-where they came from and how long they expected to be there. And
-whenever she came out from her tubs she would go to her wash, lying out
-to dry, examine it, turn it over, rearrange it. She was a wonderful
-washwoman. It was a mania with her, having everything just right for
-the French soldiers, who had won back her home for her in France.
-
-"But the Germans seemed to know every concentration of troops we made
-in that region. Their shells received us every time. We could not
-make a move that they did not know all about. We set three men to the
-special duty of finding out how the Germans got their information. The
-first thing they found out was that there were more air fights over
-Bouchavesnes than at any other part of the line. There seemed to be
-always a Boche aeroplane hovering over the ruins. They decided that
-there must be something about Bouchavesnes which made it a particularly
-good observation point. As the old woman was the only thing that
-distinguished the place from any other ruined village, they arrested
-her.
-
-"At first she denied everything, but the German accuracy in bombarding
-our concentrations ceased with her arrest. It does not take a long
-argument to convince a drumhead court-martial, and the old woman saw
-that the game was up. She then claimed to be French, and said that
-she had consented to spy for the Germans partly under threats, partly
-because her life had been spared by them, and partly because they had
-paid her well, and she had no other way of getting any money to live.
-Finally, she acknowledged that she was German and had been purposely
-left behind to spy when the Germans got out. She got twelve years at
-hard labor."
-
- * * * * *
-
-"Spies work all kinds of tricks. There was the old fellow who came back
-to his farm just behind the lines and started to do his fall ploughing
-with three horses, a red, a white and a black. He did his signalling by
-changing the position of the white horse in the team. He was easy to
-catch, as a team, especially a plough team, always works in the same
-order. Some of our men who were farmers noticed how he was constantly
-changing his horses about. They talked about it among themselves a bit
-and at last one of them spoke of it to an officer. The alleged farmer
-was investigated and shot.
-
-"Spies are almost sure to get a certain length of time to do their work
-before they are caught. We ran across a blacksmith who was one of the
-most congenial fellows you ever met. He had his shop right beside one
-of the main roads used by the troops in going back and forth to the
-trenches and he always had a stock of wine and something to eat. His
-shop did not keep him very busy and he was nearly always at his door.
-He would talk to the soldiers, give them a drink, ask where they were
-going and want to know how long they would be gone, so that he would
-be waiting to give them another glass of wine when they came back. He
-was very popular with the soldiers, because he was such a good fellow,
-always ready with a joke and a glass of wine.
-
-"But our concentrations were known to the Boches. Our men were being
-shot down. We never could prepare anything in advance and bring it off
-successfully, because the Boches knew just where we were getting ready
-to do something. Some of our spy catchers got to work to find the leak.
-They hunted through the sector for the best place to pick up news about
-troop movements and they found, of course, that all the soldiers were
-friendly with the blacksmith. His shop was raided one day. He had been
-left behind by the Germans. He had a three months' store of wine and
-food in his cellar. Of course, he could give our men wine. But he had,
-also, direct telephonic communication from his cellar with the German
-lines. He was shot.
-
-"The worst case that I ever knew of--but it was not the only one of the
-kind--was an officer in the French army who was a German spy. You can
-see from that how thorough the Boches are. That man had been sent from
-Germany to France when he was a boy. He had been educated in France and
-had gone to the French military schools. He was an artillery officer
-and one of the best. He was a lieutenant at the beginning of the war,
-but when the Somme offensive began he was a captain in command of a
-battery. For all that time he had done his work without being suspected.
-
-"On the Somme he was in charge of his battery, which was firing ahead
-of our men during an advance. The battery got a signal that their range
-was too short and they were firing into our own men. The sergeant told
-the captain, but he said they were firing according to orders and not
-to change the range. The battery fired another round and got another
-signal from the infantry that they were firing short. The sergeant
-spoke to the captain again and the captain lost his temper and swore
-at the sergeant. He ordered another round at the same range and the
-sergeant refused. The captain tried to fire one of the guns himself.
-
-"It was very important for the Germans to stop our advance at that
-point. It might have saved Combles. But the sergeant knew as much
-about the situation as the captain. He knew what it meant to have our
-troops stopped there. We might have lost a brigade. We might have
-lost a division. He threatened the captain with a rifle and arrested
-him. It is something to arrest your own captain, but the sergeant did
-it, and there was a drumhead court-martial and the captain was shot.
-He confessed, when he saw it was all up with him, and bragged of the
-two years he had escaped being caught and of what he had done. He was
-brave enough, but--Well, think of it! Educated in France, an officer
-in the French Army, living at the expense of France, living a lie for
-ten years, waiting for 'the day' to betray those who trusted him. It
-takes a German to do that." (Told by Fred B. Pitney in the _New York
-Tribune_.)
-
-
-
-
-WHAT HAPPENED TO THE "GLENHOLME"
-
-_Adventures with Submarines in the Mediterranean Sea_
-
- The merchant seamen whose voyages take him through the war-zone
- lives a hazardous life nowadays, but he treats it as "all in the
- day's work." The 'Glenholme' was sunk by a German submarine in the
- Mediterranean, and her crew underwent quite a lot of adventures
- before they were finally rescued. This tale was first told in the
- _Wide World Magazine_.
-
-
-I--SUBMARINED OFF COAST OF MALTA
-
-These are chancy times for sailormen, both those who man our fighting
-ships and the crews of merchant vessels, but they must all take the sea
-as they find it and do their best while their country is at war. Many
-of them have faced death cheerfully in the execution of their duty.
-Some have gone under, while others have endured wounds and privation,
-as did the men of the British steamer _Glenholme_.
-
-This staunch ship, steering wide of the land, cleared the southern
-shores of Malta and stuck her blunt nose into the long smooth swell
-that rolled up from the eastward. A ten-knot cargo-boat, deep-laden
-with steel rails for Alexandria, she forged steadily onward through
-the murky night. From stem to stern her hull lay shrouded in darkness;
-not a single light gleamed from any of her portholes, and even the
-lamp in her steering compass was veiled, for those on board knew right
-well that hostile submarines were operating in various parts of the
-Mediterranean.
-
-Captain John Groome leaned his elbows on the bridge-rail and gazed into
-the gloom ahead.
-
-"We're all right so far," he said; "and from what I can hear of things
-it seems that these beastly submarines are operating quite a bit to the
-northward of our track. All the same, a sharp look-out must be kept or
-we may fall foul of some other craft running, like ourselves, without
-lights. I don't want to bump any of them."
-
-"The ocean is a wide place, sir," cheerfully remarked the chief
-officer. "We'll keep clear of collision easy enough."
-
-"I hope so," replied the skipper. "And now, Mr. Bolt, I'm going to lie
-down in the chart-room for a couple of hours, and I want you to call me
-at daybreak. That's the time when submarines poke up their periscopes
-for a morning look around."
-
-The mists of dawn hung like grey curtains over the northern horizon
-when Captain Groome, in answer to a call from the chief officer, again
-ascended the bridge ladder.
-
-"Anything in sight?" he queried.
-
-"Nothing at all," replied Mr. Bolt. "It's a bit hazy to the northward,"
-he added, "but the skyline is quite clear ahead."
-
-Hardly had the chief officer finished speaking when a shot--apparently
-coming from nowhere--shrieked overhead between the _Glenholme's_ masts.
-A moment later the report of a gun came rolling down the wind. Groome
-hurriedly snatched up his binocular glasses and peered into the haze
-out abeam.
-
-"Great Scot!" he exclaimed. "A submarine! Hard-a-port, my son. Let her
-go off to south."
-
-The helmsman ground his wheel over, and not a moment too soon, for
-a white line, like the trail of a shooting star, streaked athwart
-the surface of the waters. A torpedo had been discharged at the
-_Glenholme_, but as she swerved and swung from her course the deadly
-missile passed harmlessly ahead.
-
-"Murderous devils!" ejaculated Mr. Bolt. "Attacking an unarmed ship
-with both gunfire and torpedoes."
-
-"Pass the word to the engineer to give her every pound of steam,"
-shouted Groome.
-
-As the morning haze lifted the submarine came into clear view--a dark,
-sinister shape. She gave chase while the _Glenholme_ made off at her
-topmost speed. Engineers and stokers did their best, and steam hissed
-from her safety-valve as, on a zigzag course, she fled. Meanwhile the
-pursuing craft hung doggedly in her track. The submarine, however,
-discharged no more torpedoes; probably the German commander did not
-wish to deplete his stock of these expensive weapons.
-
-Gradually the pursuer closed with her quarry, until she was not more
-than a mile distant, and then her twelve-pounder gun began to bark
-viciously. Having found the range, the Germans fairly pounded the
-_Glenholme_ with bursting shell, battering her deck-houses and funnel
-into masses of twisted steel.
-
-Groome and his crew did their duty well. They were game, quite game, to
-the finish. The captain, alert and watchful, stood beside the helmsman
-and directed the steering in such a manner as to keep the hostile craft
-dead astern. Presently a flying splinter of shell gashed his leg below
-the knee, and blood trickled into his boot as he bound up the wound.
-Nevertheless, he kept his vessel going at top speed, for he knew that
-British warships were patrolling the Mediterranean, and while the chase
-lasted there still remained the chance that a swift destroyer might
-suddenly loom up on the skyline and rush to the assistance of his
-stricken and harrassed vessel.
-
-No help came, however, and it was not long ere a shell struck the
-rudder-head. With steering gear completely wrecked, the steamer became
-unmanageable, and swung round at right angles to her course. Then,
-seeing escape was impossible, Captain Groome reluctantly rang his
-engines astern and signalled to the enemy that he was bringing his
-vessel to a standstill.
-
-
-II--"THE PIRATES LOOTED OUR SHIP"
-
-It must not be supposed that the Germans thereupon ceased fire. By
-no means. An unarmed and unmanageable British steamer wallowing
-helplessly in the swell presented a fine opportunity for a display of
-"frightfulness"; therefore, on general principles, they let drive a
-couple of shots at close range. These shells hulled the _Glenholme_
-forward on the waterline, and she commenced to sink slowly by the head.
-
-Having accomplished her work, the submarine came close alongside and
-stopped, with her gun trained point-blank on the stricken vessel. The
-German commander, a stout-built man with bristly hair, emerged from his
-conning-tower. He was evidently very angry.
-
-"Vy didn't you stop before?" he yelled. "I haf used plenty of petrol to
-catch you."
-
-"I'm sorry about your petrol," suavely replied Groome.
-
-"Vell now, hurry up and get your boats lowered!" shouted the Teuton. "I
-gif you ten minutes to leave--no more."
-
-The crew of the submarine, armed with rifles, stood on their foredeck
-and watched the _Glenholme's_ men abandon ship. Some ten minutes later
-three boats containing all hands--thirty-four all told--had shoved
-clear of the sinking craft.
-
-"Now," said the submarine commander to Mr. Bolt, who was in charge of
-Number Three lifeboat, "I vant to make use of your boat for a little
-time. So crowd your men into the other two boats, and shove Number
-Three alongside my craft. Hurry up, now, or I gif the order to fire."
-
-There being no help for it, Mr. Bolt and his men had perforce to do as
-they were told. When the empty boat was pushed alongside the submarine
-half-a-dozen Germans sprang into her and boarded the _Glenholme_, which
-vessel was now deep down by the head, but still sinking slowly.
-
-The Germans looted from their prize whatever took their fancy, while
-that vessel's crew sat in the other two lifeboats and watched the
-piratical proceedings with considerable displeasure. One man in
-particular, a stoker who hailed from Limehouse, became extremely
-indignant. Like the rest of the _Glenholme's_ men, he had hurried
-to the boats with little beside the clothes he stood in. His other
-belongings had been left in the forecastle, and he had to some extent
-resigned himself to their loss; but when he saw some of his property in
-the hands of the Huns he could not restrain his anger.
-
-"The dirty thieves!" he yelled. "They've got me brand-new bowler 'at
-and me gramophone." Then, outspoken and fluent, the Londoner stood
-upright in the boat and gave the enemy his kind wishes.
-
-"I don't wish yer no harm, blow yer!" said he. "I don't want yer to
-get sunk, nor even captured by a British cruiser. Oh, no. I only wants
-yer blighted ole submarine to fall foul of a steamer's bow some dark
-night and get capsized. Then I hopes she'll float around for a month
-bottom up, with the whole crowd of yer standin' on yer bloomin' heads
-and yellin' 'Gott strafe England' until you choke."
-
-Undoubtedly there were several Germans on board the submarine who
-understood English well enough to gather the gist of the irate
-stoker's remarks. They looked very ugly as they fingered their rifles
-and glanced towards their officer for instructions; most probably the
-Londoner ran a grave risk of paying for his temerity with his life.
-It happened, however, that at this moment smoke was descried in the
-distance. The German commander levelled his binocular glasses and took
-a long look at it. Apparently this column of grey smoke caused him
-some uneasiness. Full well he knew the rapidity with which, during the
-hazy weather, a destroyer could appear on the scene and open fire. He
-was evidently a cautious Teuton, for he gave a short, guttural order,
-he and his men descended into the submarine, and she dived below the
-surface, and so out of this story. How and when the piratical career of
-this particular U-boat came to a sudden end cannot now be chronicled.
-
-
-III--THEY WATCHED THE VESSEL SINK
-
-Meanwhile the _Glenholme's_ crew sat in their boats and watched
-their vessel sink. Her bows were by this time below the surface; she
-was going fast. Her stern rose high in air, and for about a minute
-the stricken and abandoned craft hung poised in this position--her
-fore part submerged, her rudder and propeller a hundred feet in air.
-Then, with a slow, slanting dive, she vanished from sight. Down
-she sank, like many a good ship before her, to rust and rot on the
-sandy-tide-swept floor of the Mediterranean.
-
-The smoke which had been sighted previously was no longer visible.
-Captain Groome and his crew in their three open boats had now to face
-the chances of a wide and lonely sea. Each boat was well equipped,
-and stocked with ten days' provisions; nevertheless, the weather
-indications were not encouraging. Wind and sea were gradually
-increasing, while a heavy bank of clouds in the north-west foretold a
-coming storm. The captain shouted a few words of advice and instruction
-to the officers in charge of the two other boats.
-
-"It's no use trying for Malta against this northerly gale that's
-coming. We'll just have to 'up stick' and run for Tripoli. You're quite
-right, Mr. Bolt; the boats may get separated. If the sea becomes very
-heavy we must lie to our sea-anchors until it moderates, or until we
-get picked up."
-
-The storm came. Black, rain-laden squalls drove across the restless
-waters, which a strong and rising wind soon lashed into white-crested
-ridges and dark green hollows. It was not safe to carry sail and run
-before the gale; so, tethered by their painters to the canvas drags, or
-sea-anchors, the boats rode head-on, lifting bravely to the charging
-seas. Before nightfall they had drifted far apart and were lost to one
-another's sight in the shrouding rain-squalls.
-
-It must be mentioned that next day two of the boats were picked up by a
-French steamer and their crews safely landed. This narrative will now
-deal, therefore, with what befell Captain Groome and the twelve men who
-were with him.
-
-For the next three days these poor castaways suffered considerably from
-cold and exposure; moreover, the captain had to endure great pain, his
-wounded leg being stiff and swollen. However, on the third morning
-after they had abandoned the sinking _Glenholme_ the wind and sea
-abated, and the sun rose in a cloudless sky that gave promise of a long
-spell of fine weather. Captain Groome gave orders to hoist the sail;
-and, impelled by a westerly breeze, they steered for the northern coast
-of Africa.
-
-Soon after sunrise land was sighted right ahead--a sandy beach with low
-and slightly undulating country in the background. Groome ran the boat
-close inshore and then consulted a torn and sea-stained chart.
-
-"Now, men," said he; "what with the gale and strong currents I figure
-out that we've been driven a long way east of Tripoli. The breeze is
-dying away, so we'll just have to get out the oars and pull to the
-westward."
-
-"How far is it to the nearest port, captain?" inquired one of the
-sailors.
-
-"Oh, about seventy to eighty miles."
-
-"That's a long pull on short allowance of water," remarked the sailor,
-with a rueful glance at their water-keg, which by this time was
-three-parts empty. "Is there any fresh water around these parts, sir?"
-
-The skipper gazed attentively along the shore before making answer.
-"Well," said he at length, "it's a barren-looking coast, and no
-mistake, but I see a clump of trees just beyond that point. Perhaps we
-can find water there, and refill our keg. Anyhow, we'll go and see."
-
-
-IV--THE CASTAWAYS AND THE ARAB HORSEMEN
-
-They beached their boat in a little curving bay that lay between two
-rocky points. Here, not more than a couple of hundred yards inland,
-stood the clump of trees that Groome had noted. They found, to their
-great satisfaction, that these trees grew around the brink of a
-cup-shaped hollow, at the bottom of which bubbled a spring of clear
-fresh water.
-
-The overjoyed castaways drank their fill; then, with tin cups, they
-baled up the water and refilled their ten-gallon keg. While this job
-was in progress Captain Groome, accompanied by the bo'sun, clambered
-up the sides of the waterhole to take a look around before returning
-to the boat. On reaching level ground, to their astonishing and
-dismay, they found themselves confronted by a band of about fifty
-Arab horsemen. These men were Bedouins of the Senussi tribe--swarthy
-ruffians of the desert, fierce and ruthless, who lived chiefly by
-murder and pillage.
-
-They were all armed, some with old-fashioned long-barrelled guns, and a
-few with modern rifles, while each man had long knives stuck around his
-girdle. These fierce nomads saw plainly that the white men were unarmed
-and helpless. Nevertheless, their chief--a tall Arab who was mounted
-on a white horse--pointed at the two castaways and shouted aloud to
-his followers. Evidently he gave the order to kill, for several of
-the swarthy miscreants levelled their rifles and fired point-blank.
-The bo'sun dropped, stone dead, with a bullet in his brain, while
-Captain Groome, shot through the shoulder, fell to earth and lay
-there unconscious and apparently lifeless. For more than an hour the
-unfortunate ship-captain remained senseless and inert. The wonder is
-that he did not bleed to death; however, he lay so still that, luckily
-for him, the blood congealed and caked over his wounds. When at length
-his consciousness returned he found that in the meantime events had
-been happening with startling rapidity.
-
-It might be supposed that, after shooting Groome and the bo'sun, the
-Arabs would have murdered the remainder of the castaways out of hand,
-yet it transpired that they did not do so. Most probably it occurred
-to these desert nomads that it would be more profitable to carry the
-white men inland and hold them for ransom, therefore they took them as
-prisoners. Next, the Bedouins looted the boat that lay drawn up on the
-beach, taking all her portable equipment, such as provisions, rope, and
-canvas. Then, apparently quite satisfied with their day's work, they
-watered their horses and camped, to rest awhile beside the spring.
-
-Half-a-dozen armed Bedouins kept guard on the prisoners, who sat in a
-dejected group. Things were looking very black indeed for these poor
-seamen when suddenly--almost by magic it seemed--deliverance came in
-the form of a patrol steamer flying the British flag.
-
-Steaming quite close inshore, she glided into view from behind an
-adjacent point. So close was the vessel when she rounded the headland
-that those on board could hear the shout of delight raised by the
-surviving castaways.
-
-The lieutenant in charge of the patrol boat--a keen and alert young
-officer--was not long in grasping the situation. He saw the boat drawn
-up on the beach, and heard the prisoners shouting for aid. Therefore,
-when the startled Bedouins hastily mounted and made off, this capable
-young naval officer knew just what to do--and he did it.
-
-A band of badly-scared Arab horsemen started off inland, using whip
-and spur in desperate efforts to escape, but at that moment the patrol
-steamer's machine-gun took a glad hand in the game. The gun rattled
-briskly, streams of lead whistled shoreward, and the tall Arab chief
-who rode the white horse pitched headlong from his mount to the earth;
-then he lay quite still. He was as dead as salted herring; to use
-colloquial English, he had got "all that was coming to him."
-
-The remaining miscreants rode hard for safety, but the machine-gun did
-good work, and during the following few minutes at least a dozen desert
-marauders finished altogether with the joys and sorrows of this world.
-Those who managed to escape disappeared, together with a number of
-riderless horses, behind a distant sand-hill.
-
-Captain Groome and his men were promptly taken on board the patrol
-vessel. The bo'sun, poor fellow, was buried where he lay. The skipper's
-wounds were dressed by the ship's surgeon, and under kind and skillful
-treatment he soon began to mend.
-
-The writer saw Groome about six weeks later. He moved stiffly, like
-a man whose wounds have but recently healed; nevertheless, he looked
-well, and was certainly very cheerful.
-
-"How do I feel?" said he, in answer to my query. "Oh, my shoulder is
-still a bit sore, but otherwise I'm feeling first class. Another week
-or so, and I'll be fit and ready to join another ship."
-
-
-
-
-WHAT THE KAISER'S SON SAW ON THE BATTLEFIELD
-
-_Personal Experiences of a German Prince_
-
-_Told by Prince Oscar of Prussia, Fifth Son of Emperor William_
-
- His Royal Highness Prince Oscar of Prussia, fifth of Kaiser
- Wilhelm's six sons, has written a little book called "The Winter
- Battle," a translation of which is printed herewith. In this he
- describes the terrific fighting of the Third German Army, which
- formed an important part of the battle front in Champagne and
- had to meet a particularly desperate attack by the French. The
- Prince was an officer on the staff of the commanding General. As a
- result of his experiences he was laid up with an attack of heart
- failure. It is interesting to note that "Hill 196," which is one
- of the places particularly mentioned in the Prince's narrative as
- being defended by the Germans last Winter, was captured by the
- French on October 25, 1915, and became once more the centre of
- prolonged fighting. The Prince is twenty-seven years old, and was
- married morganatically on the day war was declared to Countess Ina
- von Bassewitz Levetzow, a young noblewoman not of royal birth.
- The proceeds of the sale of his book are given to the widows and
- orphans of German soldiers who fell in the Champagne. Translation
- for the _New York American_.
-
-
-I--PRINCE OSCAR TELLS ABOUT BATTLE OF CHAMPAGNE
-
-The great Winter battle in the Champagne in 1915 resulted in a
-brilliant victory, which I witnessed with my own eyes.
-
-The past has already begun busily to weave her heavy veil, and side
-by side with the past walks her sister--oblivion! But we--we must
-not, we dare not forget. Not only because the war in the Champagne
-was the greatest and longest defensive battle in the history of the
-world and resulted in a magnificent victory for ourselves; not only
-out of gratitude for our heroic leaders and soldiers who accomplished
-the superhuman, endured the unspeakable, and yet, undaunted, fought
-on to victory; there is another deeper, more salient reason why we
-must not forget. I refer to our hero dead, who, with incomparable
-self-abnegation, gave their lives for king and country, for Emperor and
-empire, for home and nation.
-
-As a child which one of us has not stood at the grave of some unknown
-hero of forgotten days, thrilling with rapturous, fearsome awe? On the
-heights north of le Mesnil in the Champagne there is now a grave of
-this sort which should be dear to every German heart, but it is not
-the grave of an unknown hero of bygone days. Many brave men of our
-own glorious army, much noble blood of our beloved German nation have
-found their last resting place there on French soil. Our own brothers,
-sons and husbands are interred there. Many thousands of heroes, who
-have entered the last long silence, slumbering there under the very
-sod which they themselves, dauntless, fearless, reckless of danger,
-defended to the last breath, cry to us from beyond the grave, "Do not
-forget the cause for which we died, for which we gladly and willingly
-gave our lives."
-
-We, the living, who know what these dead heroes accomplished and how
-they furthered our cause, lower the sword in memory of them, and, in
-spirit, lay a laurel wreath upon that hill, vowing that we will go and
-do likewise.
-
-In order to comprehend thoroughly the significance of the war in the
-Champagne and to appreciate the magnitude of the achievements of our
-troops we must briefly summarize the circumstances which made the
-campaign imperative, the end which it was intended the titanic struggle
-should compass, and the conditions which made this victory such an
-important one to us. A few sentences will suffice to make all this
-clear. It was necessary to crush the first large aggressive movement on
-the part of the French, who, by hurling their finest army corps and an
-enormous artillery force against us in the Champagne, tried for weeks
-and months, at whatever cost, to force a wedge into our lines in order
-to break one link in the steel chain with which the German army had
-encircled their land.
-
-If, as intended, they had succeeded in breaking through our lines with
-a strong contingent, it can readily be seen how disastrous this would
-have been for us. As regards consequences, our success in the Champagne
-was at least of as great importance as the victories of Tannenberg, the
-Masurian Lakes, near Augustow and on the San; but when we take into
-consideration the demands which were made upon individual endurance and
-courage in the face of the most harrowing conditions imaginable, it is
-doubtful whether the work done in the Champagne by our troops has ever
-been equalled.
-
-
-II--THE PRINCE PRAISES HIS TROOPS
-
-In order thoroughly to appreciate the heroic steadfastness and the
-patient endurance shown by our troops, which transcended all praise,
-and to appraise properly the difficulties which beset leaders and men
-alike during the long, bitter weeks of the battle, we must remember
-certain facts.
-
-When the French offensive was begun on a large scale on February 16,
-our troops had already seen months of the hardest sort of service in
-repulsing the French First and Seventeenth Army Corps, with only a few
-very short intervals of rest--our Eighth Army Corps having been engaged
-in this region since December 8, and the Eighth Reserve Corps since
-December 19, 1914.
-
-Our regiments, therefore, were far from unfatigued at a moment when
-they were called upon to enter the severest phase of a struggle into
-which our foes hurled the flower of their troops. Moreover, the French
-had at their command an almost inexhaustible supply of ammunition, and
-were able, therefore, in a steadily ascending scale, gradually to reach
-the full amplitude of their fighting capacity in their efforts to break
-through our lines. If we fully visualize this fact then we must realize
-that an almost incredible glory accrues to the work done by our troops.
-Only an iron will, a discipline which had become second nature and
-utter forgetfulness of self could lead to victory in the face of such
-odds. That these qualities did ultimately assure us the victory will
-redound to the undying glory of all the troops which did active service
-in this great engagement.
-
-The prodigious masses of iron and humanity which our foes hurled
-against us day and night, their marvellous ingenuity in making attacks,
-their doggedness in defense, all this was admirably calculated to crush
-larger numbers than those of our Third Army. It was a struggle between
-iron and steel. It is true that a heavy mass of iron can through sheer
-weight bend and indent a narrow band of steel, but it cannot break
-the steel. Thus, through continually renewing their attacks and by
-training upon us an artillery fire the violence of which beggars all
-description, the French succeeded in bending back our lines here and
-there. Sometimes at one part, sometimes at another they took several
-hundred mètres of intrenchments; but they paid a horrible, a ghastly
-price in blood for these minor and valueless successes, which profited
-them nothing save that they taught them the bitter lesson that German
-will power and German discipline can be broken by nothing. The French
-had scornfully proclaimed that they had broken the backbone of our
-resistance, but we broke their attack and imposed upon them our own.
-In the end the French attempt to break through our lines was utterly
-foiled, and the Third Army was victorious.
-
-During this time the French attacks were directed principally against
-the left, i. e., the eastern half of the Third Army, so that the Eighth
-Army Corps and the Eighth Reserve Corps bore the brunt of the attacks,
-most of which took place along the line between the position of Perthes
-and Beausejour.
-
-This is a rolling, open country, in which narrow fields alternate with
-small patches of woodland, covered with pine trees. The country is not
-dissimilar in character to the country near Jueterberg and Doeberitz,
-in Germany, and instead of soil or sand the surface of the earth is
-covered with white chalk. It is a desolate, barren country. The French
-themselves call it the "louse Champagne" country, and never was a name
-more aptly given. It boasted of only a few settlements, and these have
-now been destroyed by the artillery fire.
-
-During the entire time that the battle lasted the weather was vile.
-For weeks it rained day and night, so that the chalky soil was
-transformed into a grayish, soapy, slimy mire. In consequence the
-by-roads became almost impassable for vehicles and the main roads,
-connecting our trenches and camps, owing to the continuous use to which
-they were put by marching troops and rolling provision wagons, were
-soon in a condition which was almost as bad. The work of our munition
-and commissary columns, upon which this battle, which lasted for
-months, entailed particularly difficult service, was thereby rendered
-exasperatingly hard. The horses also suffered severely through the
-long enforced marches, the dreadful roads, the general wetness and the
-insufficient food.
-
-
-III--"HOW WE FOUGHT THE BATTLE--A LIVING HELL"
-
-It is, however, the duty of the good soldier to derive some advantage
-from even the most unpromising conditions, and we were able to turn
-the frightful condition of the roads to good account in the following
-way. The roads which the French commanded were less numerous and in
-even worse condition than our own. As they expended a tremendous amount
-of ammunition every day in "drum-fire," as continuous systematic
-artillery fire is called in the army, they were forced to bring up
-large supplies every night, which was not the case with us. As has been
-said before, only the main roads could be traversed by the ammunition
-wagons, because the other roads had turned into a sort of morass, and
-we therefore trained our long-range guns upon their main roads at
-night, knowing that we must be doing damage to them. This circumstance
-probably accounted for the unusually long pauses which they allowed to
-occur in their "drum-fire" on the ensuing days.
-
-In this way we gained brief periods of respite for our infantry, which
-was thus enabled to patch up the badly damaged intrenchments, so that
-the French, when they had been supplied with new ammunition, had to
-begin all over again.
-
-The continuous rainfall created cruel conditions for the housing of our
-troops. As has been said, the few sparse settlements had been literally
-shot to pieces, and our troops were therefore forced to construct
-their own huts and cave shelters. That such poor quarters, during an
-incessant downpour of rain, were bound to have an injurious effect upon
-the strength of the troops, is abundantly plain. Nevertheless, our
-men never complained. With admirable patience, even good humour, they
-endured the greatest privations and hardships which were the result
-of the inclement weather and the inadequate quarters, and how great
-these privations and hardships were can only be understood by some one
-who himself has lived through a rainy Winter in the "louse Champagne"
-country. Nevertheless, miraculously, the health of the troops remained
-remarkably good.
-
-Originally only the First and the Seventeenth French Army Corps had
-been intrenched opposite to our Eighth Army Corps and our Eighth
-Reserve Corps. Both of the French army corps had suffered severely
-during their continuous attacks around Christmas, in January and the
-beginning of February. But they had been reinforced continually.
-Before beginning their great drive against our lines the French had
-gathered together materially larger forces. To cope with our two army
-corps gradually, in addition to the First and the Seventeenth Corps,
-two colonial divisions and half a territorial division--all in all
-almost seven and a half army corps were massed in a comparatively small
-territory.
-
-Furthermore, they had greatly strengthened their artillery. On the
-other hand, our two army corps had been strengthened solely by the
-addition of individual battalions of the Fifth and Seventh Armies, as
-well as by the Sixth Army Corps and the Twelfth Reserve Corps (which at
-this time belonged to the Third Army). The Eighth Army Corps comprised
-the Bavarian "Landwehr" Brigade and the Hessian "Landwehr" as well.
-Then, finally, there was the First Guard Infantry Division, destined to
-play a prominent part in this battle.
-
-In this terrific battle sons from every principality and kingdom of the
-Fatherland fought shoulder to shoulder, and vied with each other in the
-display of courage and endurance. Prussians and Bavarians, Saxons and
-Hessians, men from the North and the South, from East and West, stood
-side by side, cheek by jowl, forming an impregnable wall against which
-the furious, despairing, fanatic attacks of the French were doomed to
-futilely spend themselves.
-
-The French fought with marvellous valour, with reckless courage and
-nerve, climbing up and on over the bodies of their fallen comrades.
-They were excellent fighters, were these Frenchmen. But our men were
-better fighters, as the outcome of the battle taught us.
-
-It was, however, not the attacks of their infantry which made this
-battle so hideous for us, nor was it the hand-to-hand struggle in
-the trenches, man against man, where the German, possessing greater
-physical strength, was easily the match of the individual Frenchman.
-What made the battle a living hell was the work of the French
-artillery, enormous in strength, with huge supplies of ammunition which
-was spent lavishly. Life in the trenches became a perpetual nightmare
-and stamped as unforgettable heroes the men who went through with it
-without flinching.
-
-
-IV--"IT SEEMED IMPOSSIBLE ANY LIVING CREATURE COULD SURVIVE"
-
-Onto a comparatively small area the French on one day threw a hundred
-thousand shells! We found a French document in which the commanding
-officer calculated that eighteen bombs must be the allowance per
-metre of German trench, these eighteen bombs to be used not in a day,
-but within one or two hours! The rapidity of the artillery fire was
-therefore as great as that of an ordinary machine gun, but the shells
-hurled against us were not infantry shells, but grenades of every
-calibre. "Drum-fire" is the name for this sort of artillery fire, and
-its effects were simply dreadful--unspeakable. The barbed wire was
-completely annihilated, was clean wiped out of existence; the trenches
-were flattened into mounds, their foundations crumbled away. No known
-sort of earthworks were able to withstand such fire for even a short
-time. But German discipline, loyalty and heroism held out.
-
-When such "drum-fire" began, a huge wall of smoke and chalk particles
-rose over our trenches, cutting off the men from the rest of the world.
-The horror of the scene was augmented by the ceaseless rumbling,
-thundering and crashing which filled the air, and which, even miles
-away, sounded like a heavy thunderstorm. It seemed impossible that
-any living creature should survive such a hellish turmoil. When the
-firing ceased abruptly, or when its direction was changed to give
-the French infantry a chance to attack us, then our brave fusiliers,
-musketeers, grenadiers crawled out of the funnels and pockets into
-which the enemy's grenades had ploughed the earth, made their way from
-among broken foundations, crumbling cement, trickling sand bags, and,
-grabbing their guns and wiping the dirt from their eyes, they repulsed
-the French attack.
-
-And this was done not once, but dozens of times.
-
-Occasionally our men were ordered to abandon a trench which was
-suffering particularly from "drum-fire" in order to avoid unnecessary
-loss of life, and the crew from such an abandoned trench was then
-placed in our second line of intrenchments. It sometimes happened that
-French infantrymen, under protection of their artillery fire, reached
-and took such an empty trench, succeeding the more readily because
-they encountered no obstacles. Our soldiers then sprang forth from
-their cover and attacked the French with hand grenades and bayonets.
-Invariably we were successful in repulsing the enemy, causing them
-heavy loss of life.
-
-If for some reason or other this counter-attack was not made at once,
-but was postponed for an hour or two, we were not so sure of success,
-and it was then never secured by us without heavy casualties, for
-the few hours that had elapsed had amply sufficed the French, who
-are exceedingly clever at every sort of intrenchment work, to change
-and remodel the trench for their purposes, to install machine guns,
-to place sandbag barriers along both sides and to make sundry other
-changes. This done, the "Frenchmen's nest" was complete.
-
-The difficult task of ousting the French from their "nest" then
-devolved upon our regiments, and in some instances many weeks of hard,
-cruel fighting were required to accomplish this end. For this work we
-employed underground mines, artillery, bombs and hand grenades. When
-the time was ripe for attack, columns of volunteers were formed, which
-were led by officers, who, in turn, were preceded by groups of pioneers
-with hand grenades and intrenchment tools, to be used in demolishing
-the sandbag barriers. The assault was begun simultaneously from both
-sides. These attacks were usually conducted at night, and it will
-readily be seen what cool, unshakable courage was required for work of
-this kind. Immediately after the hand grenades were exploded our men
-advanced and a furious hand-to-hand fight ensued, in which not only
-bayonet and pick-axe, but shovel and booted foot were used to expel the
-enemy, to kill him or force him to surrender.
-
-
-V--BRAVERY OF THE GRENADIERS
-
-As an example of the tremendous fury with which such a hand-to-hand
-fight raged I will cite one instance. A grenadier of one of our Rhenish
-regiments, who carried a pick-axe, had the thumb of his right hand,
-which carried the weapon, bitten right off by a Frenchman. The German
-soldier, writhing with pain, contrived to change the pick-axe to his
-left hand, killed both the Frenchman who had maimed him and his comrade.
-
-In another regiment three men had discovered that in making these
-nocturnal attacks they could work together to splendid advantage. The
-strongest man of the three took the centre. In his left hand he carried
-two steel shields from machine guns lashed together. In his right hand
-he held his weapon, bayonet or pick-axe. His two companions kept to
-either side of him, as closely as possible. One carried as many hand
-grenades as he could manage, the other was equipped with a bayonet.
-Thus accoutred, this strange trio proceeded, striking, thrusting and
-throwing grenades, and literally hacking its way through the ranks of
-the enemy and striking terror to the hearts of the foe.
-
-Excellent service these three men rendered. Evening after evening the
-man who carried the steel shields volunteered for the difficult and
-hazardous task. He was asked if he did not feel the necessity for
-resting up, or if he did not prefer to serve the hand grenades or to
-wield the bayonet for a change. He replied that less powerful men than
-he could not as easily carry the steel shields and the pick-axe as
-well, while the bayonet work and the throwing of hand grenades could be
-done readily by the others.
-
-The sharpshooters of the Imperial Guard had formed an entire company
-of volunteers, who, led by officers, were always sent to perform
-particularly dangerous and difficult tasks. They performed deeds of
-incredible valour, and the "Tschakos," as Germans call this picked
-corps, will not soon be forgotten by the French.
-
-The men of the Saxon Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 107 were adepts in
-taking French prisoners. They had a system of their own and found it
-infallible.
-
-Thus, at night, our brave fellows had to engage in hand-to-hand
-encounters, at day had to endure the frightful fire of the French
-artillery, and when the firing ceased there was still not a moment's
-rest for them, for they then had to repulse the onslaughts of the
-French infantrymen.
-
-Nor was that all. The positions which had been shot to pieces by the
-enemy by day in the field, had to be rebuilt, as far as was possible,
-at night. The reserves were requisitioned to assist in this work,
-although they had really been sent back of the firing line to rest up.
-The Reserves were also frequently called upon at night to help defend
-with the bayonet any menaced point. Thus their supposed "resting-up"
-in the protected zone was somewhat problematical in nature, not alone
-because they were frequently called upon to help out, but because the
-French had a pretty trick of training their heavy artillery fire, night
-and day, upon these outlying points, positions and roads. Unbelievable
-as it seems, the men in the trenches actually suffered less from the
-artillery fire at night than did the men in the rear.
-
-Alternately fighting and working by day and by night, our brave men
-performed the work of supermen. Each man was actuated by one thought
-only--to defend his position to the last, to overcome the enemy, to
-endure through it all, no matter what happened. Each leader, each
-division, conceived it to be a task of honour to hold the position, or,
-if it had been lost, to regain it.
-
-
-VI--THE PRINCE GIVES HIS OPINION OF HIS ADVERSARY
-
-Let us now consider the method which our foe employed in preparing the
-attacks.
-
-The French attacks must be classified as partial attacks and as attacks
-en masse. The former invariably preceded the latter. The numerical
-strength of the troops thus employed varied from a company to a
-division. They were never an end in themselves, but a mere link in the
-chain of a general, comprehensive plan. A destructive "drum-fire" was
-followed up by an attack upon a particular trench. Having secured the
-trench, they did one of two things. Either they used every effort to
-secure a second trench, several hundred meters further along the line,
-so that, working and fighting toward each other, they might reasonably
-expect to unite the two trenches; or, using the captured trench as a
-base for an attack en masse, they sought to indent our line and to
-break it, a thing which was never attempted when a partial attack was
-made.
-
-In conducting these attacks en masse, the French always adhered to
-their well-known scheme. A compact line of sharpshooters at the front
-was followed at a distance of one hundred meters by densely packed
-masses of company and battalion columns.
-
-This method, of attack, from which they never swerved, occasioned them
-a shocking loss of life. The losses sustained by a French regiment in
-storming a position may be estimated conservatively at forty to fifty
-per cent. French prisoners confirmed this estimate. To this wholesale
-slaughter to which they condemn their men the fact is probably due that
-the French rarely use the same regiment twice for purposes of attack.
-Surely they must reckon with the demoralizing effect sustained by men
-who have been forced to climb over hillocks of their own dead in order
-to reach the enemy!
-
-A French officer, whom we took prisoner, told us that the havoc wrought
-by the German artillery fire upon the closed columns of the French had
-been frightful. He added:
-
-"These attacks constitute an insane slaughter; strictly speaking,
-they are not attacks, but a mad dancing in shambles, through a
-charnel-house, upon a cemetery. And yet we will be forced to continue
-this way until the French Government sees fit to recognize the futility
-of our method, or until we contrive to break through."
-
-Not enough can be said in praise of our artillery. Heavy and light
-artillery as well performed wonders. Their co-operation with our
-infantry was wonderful--could not have been improved upon. Often,
-our well-directed artillery fire nipped in the bud French efforts at
-attack. Truly, the artillery which took part in the battle of the
-Champagne has every reason to be proud of its record.
-
-At the beginning of the period of which I am writing, the French
-attacks were directed principally against our positions near Perthes
-(the centre and left wing of the Eighth Army Corps). Then the French
-concentrated their attacks upon the outer left wing of the Eighth
-Army Corps and the right wing of the Eighth Reserve Corps (16th
-Reserve-Division). Finally the French offensive degenerated into
-a desperate, mad, wild struggle for the now famous Hill 196 (two
-kilometers north of le Mesnil-les-Hurlus). At first they were probably
-obsessed by the idea that the hill was valuable because of the outlook
-which it afforded. Later, the government, or the War Ministry, seems to
-have issued an order that the hill must be taken at whatever cost. They
-paid the cost--paid horribly, suffered overwhelming losses, offered
-hecatombs of victims, and still did not gain the Hill--thanks to the
-heroism of the defending regiments.
-
-This--Hill 196--was the most seriously menaced point, and accordingly
-the Guard was installed there, which, together with the Rhenish,
-Silesian and Saxon regiments, performed deeds of great valour. True to
-the traditions of their race, they withstood the terrific onslaughts
-made by the French hordes, onslaughts for the making of which the
-French continually sent out fresh regiments. Attack after attack
-failed. Those who escaped the fire of the artillery and the machine
-guns fell under the butts and blades of the German bayonets.
-
-Just as the interest and action of a drama continues to ascend until
-the end of the last act, so the Battle of Champagne reached its
-culmination and conclusion in the mad struggle that raged around Hill
-196.
-
-
-VII--"MAD STRUGGLE AT HILL 196"
-
-In the last days of the frantic struggle, we had perceived that the
-French were gathering in largely increased numbers in their trenches.
-Then to our surprise the attack which we expected to follow did not
-occur. We therefore deemed it reasonable to conclude from this that
-the enemy no longer considered it expedient to push on, and that the
-fire of our artillery was holding them to their trenches. Therefore,
-on March 18, we were not expecting that any serious attack would be
-attempted. But the French apparently were not willing to admit defeat
-without one final, desperate effort.
-
-Suddenly, on the afternoon of March 18, the attack was begun by densely
-massed troops, their objective being Hill 196 and the position directly
-east of the hill. The position of the Guards Reserve Infantry Regiment
-No. 133 and other troops, who received the main shock of the impact,
-was not to be shaken, however. The Fourth Turcos Regiment and others of
-the French army attacked in five lines, advancing one by one, with some
-of their officers on horseback. We received them with a shower of hand
-grenades, which tore hundreds of them limb from limb and blew to atoms
-the first two lines.
-
-Succeeding lines fared no better. Those who miraculously escaped the
-hand grenades were felled by our furious men with blows of pick-axe and
-bayonet. In spite of their dauntless courage, their reckless contempt
-of death, their marvellous persistence, the French were forced back.
-Front and flank of this writhing maelstrom of densely packed humanity
-rolling along in a disorderly retreat was swept by our heavy artillery
-fire from 21-centimetre mortars, heavy field howitzers, 10-centimetre
-cannon. The losses which the French sustained were inhuman and
-sickening.
-
-With this last valiant attempt to take the Hill 196 ended the Winter
-battle of the Champagne. After months of frantic fighting, after paying
-a frightful toll in blood, the French were forced to abandon their
-effort to break through our lines. Their finest troops, the very flower
-of their army, who had fought persistently with all the dare-devil
-gallantry for which the French are famous, had, in the end, not only
-failed to win a victory, but had sustained a crushing defeat. For the
-fact must not be overlooked that their failure to force their way
-through our lines was tantamount to a very serious defeat.
-
-
-VIII--WHAT THE GERMAN PRINCE CLAIMS FOR HIS ARMY
-
-The battle of the Champagne is over. The unexampled heroism, the
-superhuman endurance of our troops have already become things of the
-past. But we, the great German nation, will do well to heed the warning
-that was sounded in the bitter days when the frenzied battle raged in
-the Champagne.
-
-What lesson shall we extract from this titanic struggle? What moral is
-pointed by Hill 196, whose every inch of ground was ploughed by bullets
-and soaked with our dearest blood? What were the underlying causes that
-contributed to our victory? What was it that made every beardless boy
-a hero, made the oldest man in the "Landwehr" forget his age and the
-privations he was enduring?
-
-Let us briefly review the principal factors that made for success.
-
-The value of iron discipline was overwhelmingly demonstrated. It is
-safe to assert that the most highly disciplined regiment will be the
-most successful in action. Youthful enthusiasm may be undermined,
-patriotism may be forced into temporary abeyance by hours of continual,
-cruel shelling; worse than that, the very power to think becomes
-inhibited in the witches' cauldron of "drum-fire." It is then that
-discipline asserts itself. Nothing else gives the same moral stamina,
-and in difficult positions discipline is bound to be the determining
-factor.
-
-Before the war began the voices of many people were raised who, from
-false sentimentality, from undue softness, from ill-will or from
-sheer stupidity, were eager to have an end put for all time to the
-unconditional obedience and rigid drill of our army; in brief, to our
-entire military training, the value of which has been tested and proven
-throughout centuries. Many of our so-called comic papers made it their
-chief business to ridicule military training and discipline, to spatter
-with mud the very foundation and bulwark of our military efficiency. I
-think the battle of the Champagne must have taught them to amend their
-way of thinking.
-
-"The iron rock upon which Germany rests more securely than the earth
-upon the shoulders of Atlas is our glorious army." That this army
-has reached this glorious summit is due primarily to its splendid
-training, and the fundamentals of this training are to be found in the
-latterly much-laughed-at and sneered-at detail work done in years of
-peace. The standing-at-attention, the the clock-like precision, the
-manual of arms, the goose-step--to all of these we owe the efficiency
-displayed by our troops in resisting French "drum-fire," in repulsing
-French drives, in withstanding with iron might French alertness, in
-circumventing French enthusiasm and gallantry.
-
-For instance, our Guard went through the attacks at Ypres. During
-the bitter month of February this same First Guard Infantry Brigade
-rendered futile and vain all the science and gallantry manifested
-by the French troops at Perthes, and won new laurels in the frantic
-struggle for Hill 196. Yet this crack regiment did not disdain, when
-ordered to the rear for a brief, much-needed rest, to continue its
-exercises and drills from the very first day of its holiday. In battle,
-even, when under cover, this regiment went through the manual of arms,
-practised positions and stood at attention.
-
-One thing more. Let us educate our young men to be strong and hard. Let
-us guard against influences that tend to soften or make for effeminacy,
-so that, when future need arises, the coming generation may be able
-successfully to cope with conditions similar to those which confronted
-our troops in the Champagne. Let us weed out the poison which is eating
-into the marrow of our national life--the cry for pleasure or youthful
-liberties.
-
-Then, too, let us instil in the youth of our nation simple faith,
-a firm belief in the Lord God, whose will directs the destinies of
-mankind. Those who went through the battle of the Champagne agree in
-saying that without a firm belief in God they never would have been
-able to live through those harrowing days, and to the handful, who
-lacked faith, faith came amid shower of shells, during attacks of
-bayonets.
-
-
-
-
-A DAY'S WORK WITH A FRENCH SUBMARINE
-
-_An American s Experience under the Sea_
-
-_Told by Fred B. Pitney, by Authority of the French Minister of Marine_
-
- This story is told from "a certain formidable naval base on the
- coast of France." The American who relates it went out on scout
- duty on a submarine--for a single day. He tells how it feels to
- dive, the sensation of being shot at--not "unpleasant or trying on
- the nerves." Mr. Pitney is one of the war correspondents for the
- _New York Tribune_.
-
-
-I--"WE FIRED NINE SHOTS AND SUNK BENEATH THE SEA"
-
-To appear on the surface, fire nine shots at an enemy vessel and
-disappear in safety, untouched, below the surface, all in the space of
-forty-five seconds--this, I believe, constitutes a submarine record.
-Yet, this feat I witnessed as an observer on board a French submarine
-in active service.
-
-Before this I was a passenger on a vessel that was attacked by a
-submarine. A torpedo was launched at us from below the surface, while
-we were anxiously trying to pick up the periscope of the submerged
-vessel, for we were in dangerous waters. We had just discovered the
-periscope when the torpedo was sent at us. Five minutes later the
-submarine came to the surface and fired a round at us from the gun
-abaft the turret we lay to and the passengers were transferred in a
-small boat from the passenger vessel to the submarine. It was then
-that I was on board the submarine while it attacked another vessel.
-
-Thus, on the afternoon in question I participated in all the phases
-of submarine warfare, including entering a harbor protected with net
-and floating mines, filled with warships and surrounded with land
-batteries. Possibly the most exciting moment of all in an afternoon
-filled with thrills was when one land battery, uncertain of our
-identity, fired three shots across our bows and we had to lie to and
-prove who we were with a string of signal flags before we could proceed
-on our tortuous path among the mines.
-
-Our little vessel, put at our disposal by the French Ministry of Marine
-to view the defences of a certain formidable naval base on the coast of
-France, was calmly traversing the waters near the mouth of the harbor,
-when a young officer, standing beside me on the bridge said: "We must
-look out for submarines near here."
-
-"Germans?" I asked.
-
-"Oh, yes," he replied, "Germans, of course."
-
-We had already passed through the net that protects the mouth of the
-harbor and had been warned that we were going through a mine field,
-and that sometimes, especially in bad weather, the mines got loose and
-drifted about casually, getting in most anybody's way. Now we had the
-added pleasure of a possible encounter with a German submarine.
-
-"How many German submarines are there in the Mediterranean?" I asked.
-
-"About thirty-five," he said.
-
-Recalling my geography, it seemed we had a pretty good chance of being
-seen.
-
-"Are you a submarine officer?" I asked.
-
-He told me that he was, and added that he would not change his work
-for any other branch of the service. I told him that I had always
-understood submarine service was particularly unpleasant and trying on
-the nerves.
-
-"Oh, no. On the contrary, it is very restful," he said, "and extremely
-interesting and great sport."
-
-"How old are you?" I asked.
-
-He was thirty-two and unmarried.
-
-"Perhaps that accounts for it," I said.
-
-"Perhaps," he agreed. "I don't know. But it is the sporting interest
-that makes the submarine service so fine."
-
-He told of cruising in the North Sea, watching for German torpedo
-boats, of weeks on guard duty in the Channel, assuring the service
-between France and England, and of other weeks submerged in the
-Adriatic, blockading the Austrian ports.
-
-"We had to pick our way through the mine fields submerged," he said,
-"and then lie forty hours submerged on blockade duty. When our turn
-ended, we would pick our way back through the mines for a rest."
-
-"But surely that was trying on the nerves," I said.
-
-"Oh, no," he declared. "Not at all. We had a good rest there. There was
-nothing to do but sleep and watch."
-
-"What was the worst part of that service?" I asked.
-
-"The hydroplanes," he answered readily. "They were always flying over
-the harbor looking for us, and there was always the possibility that
-one of them would discover us and drop a bomb."
-
-"In that event what would happen to you?" I asked.
-
-"No one would ever know," he replied, "unless we sank in shallow enough
-water to be raised."
-
-He said it in the most casual manner.
-
-"Has there ever been a fight between two submarines?" was my next
-question.
-
-He had been in two in the North Sea, he told me. "If you are on the
-surface, you fight with your guns," he said, "but, if you are under the
-surface, you go at it with torpedoes; there is not much chance with
-torpedoes, because you can only see the periscope and you have no idea
-which way the other fellow is going. Nothing happened in either fight
-I had. We both got off safely."
-
-During this conversation both of us and four of the ship's officers
-had our glasses on the sea, watching for submarines. One of the ship's
-officers now announced a suspicious looking white wave on the port bow.
-It was suspicious because it moved, but it was a very tiny little wave,
-only about three feet long and the breadth of a carpenter's hand. No
-one would ever have suspected it without expert advice.
-
-
-II--ON A SUBMARINE IN A ROUGH SEA
-
-That, as I learned, is one of the greatest dangers of the submarine. Of
-course, we have all been told it many times, but when the thing is once
-experienced it is truly appreciated, and not until then. The approach
-of the submarine is more insidious than the taste for absinthe.
-
-There is merely that little white wave only occasionally to be
-seen--the white water curling around the periscope--and with the
-sea running at all high there would be no white wave that could be
-distinguished from the white tops of the other waves. Then, if the
-submarine chooses to remain near the surface one can after a long time
-of very close study make out the periscope as a very small stick, like
-a piece of lath, poking up out of the water. But it only sticks up a
-little more than a foot when it is the most willing to be seen, while
-if, as in our case, it is not willing to be seen, the submarine, having
-located its prey, dives deeper and all trace of it is lost, the next
-thing being a torpedo coming from an entirely different point on the
-horizon.
-
-Our officers were experts at watching for submarines, and though the
-little white wave made by the periscope disappeared, they caught the
-white wake of the torpedo coming toward the port quarter and sheered
-off to escape it. The torpedo passed harmlessly by our stern, but the
-adventure was not ended, for hardly a minute later we heard a shot from
-off the starboard quarter and, turning in that direction, saw that the
-submarine had come to the surface and was busily firing at us to bring
-us to.
-
-We stopped without any foolish waste of time in argument. I asked if a
-boat would be sent to us, or if we would have to get our boat.
-
-"They carry a small folding boat," said the officer to whom I had been
-talking, "but we will have to send our boat."
-
-While we were getting our boat over the side, the submarine moved
-closer in, keeping her gun bearing on us all the time, most
-uncomfortably. The gun stood uncovered on the deck, just abaft the
-turret. It was thickly coated with grease to protect it when the vessel
-submerged. It is only the very latest type of submarines that have
-disappearing guns which go under cover when the vessel submerges and
-are fired from within the ship, which makes all the more surprising the
-speed with which a submarine can come to the surface, the men get out
-on deck, fire the gun, get in again and the vessel once more submerge.
-
-
-III--IN THE SECRET CHAMBERS OF A SUBMARINE
-
-I was in the first boatload that went over to the submarine. From
-a distance it looked like nothing so much as a rather long piece
-of 4 x 8 floating on the water, with another block set on top of
-it and a length of lath nailed on the block. It lost none of these
-characteristics as we neared it. It only gained a couple of ropes along
-the sides of the 4 x 8, while men kept coming mysteriously out of
-the block until a round dozen were waiting to receive us. The really
-surprising thing was that the men turned out to be perfectly good
-French sailors, with a most exceedingly polite French lieutenant to
-help us aboard the little craft.
-
-It was a little surprise the admiral of the port had prepared for us,
-and nothing could have been better prepared to give us the true flavor
-of submarine warfare. We had had all the sensation of being chased,
-fired on and captured--everything except being sunk in mid-ocean. Now
-we were to have the other experience of chasing and capturing the enemy.
-
-The vessel we were in was a 500-ton cruising submarine. It had just
-come from eight months' guarding the Channel, and showed all the
-battering of eight months of a very rough and stormy career with no
-time for a lie-up for repairs. It was interesting to see the commander
-hand the depth gauge a wallop to start it working and find out if the
-centre of the boat was really nine feet higher than either end. We were
-fifty-four feet under water and diving when the commander performed
-that little experiment and we continued to dive while the gauge spun
-around and finally stopped at a place which indicated approximately
-that our back was not broken. I suppose that was one of the things my
-friend the lieutenant referred to when he said life on a submarine was
-such a sporting proposition.
-
-We boarded the submarine over the tail end and balanced our way up the
-long narrow block, like walking a tight rope, to the turret, where we
-descended through a hole like the opening into a gas main into a small
-round compartment about six feet in diameter exactly in the midship
-section, which was the largest compartment in the ship. Running each
-way from it the length of the vessel were long corridors, some two feet
-wide. On each side of the corridors were rows of tiny compartments,
-which were the living and working rooms of the ship. Naturally, most of
-the space was given up to the working rooms.
-
-The officers' quarters consisted of four tiny compartments, two on
-each side of the after corridor. The first two were the mess room and
-chart room, and the second pair were the cabins of the commander--a
-lieutenant--and his second in command, an ensign. Behind them was an
-electric kitchen, and next came the engines, first two sets of Diesel
-engines, one on each side of the corridor, each of 400 horsepower.
-These were for running on the surface. Then came four bunks for the
-quartermasters and last the electric motors for running under the
-surface. The motors were run from storage batteries and were half the
-power of the Diesel engines. The quarters of the crew were along the
-sides of the forward corridor. The floors of the corridor were an
-unbroken series of trap doors, covering the storage tanks for drinking
-water, food and the ship's supplies. The torpedo tubes were forward
-of the men's quarters. Ten torpedoes were carried. The ammunition for
-the deck gun was stored immediately beneath the gun, which was mounted
-between the turret and the first batch, abaft the turret. Besides the
-turret there were three hatches in the deck, one forward and two aft.
-
-There were thirty-four men in the crew. Each quartermaster was directly
-responsible for six men, while the commander and his second were
-responsible for five each. The men are counted every two hours, as
-there is great danger of men being lost overboard when running on the
-surface, and in bad weather they are sometimes counted as often as
-every half hour.
-
-The turret was divided in two sections. In the after part was the main
-hatch and behind it a stationary periscope, standing about thirty
-inches above the surface of the water when the deck was submerged and
-only the periscope showing. There was no opening in the forward section
-of the turret, but the fighting periscope, which could be drawn down
-into the interior or pushed up to ten feet above the surface when the
-vessel was completely submerged, extended through the top.
-
-It is with this periscope that the vessel is navigated. The submarine
-sails at a depth at which the fighting periscope shows about eighteen
-inches above the surface, while the commander, standing on two iron
-grips, with his head, shoulders and body in the turret and his legs
-sticking down into the cabin, keeps his eyes glued to the sights of the
-periscope, which he constantly turns from side to side to take in all
-points of the limited horizon. The part of the fighting periscope that
-extends above the water is a brass rod about two and one-half inches in
-diameter, while its eye is only three-quarters of an inch in diameter.
-It is on this tiny opening that both the safety and fighting ability of
-the vessel depend.
-
-For two hours, turn and turn about, the commander and his second stand
-watch on the iron grips in the turret, one eye on the periscope, the
-other on the compass. And this goes on for weeks on end. It is only
-when they lie for a few hours fifty to seventy-five feet below the
-surface that they can get some rest. And even then there is no real
-rest, for one or the other of them must be constantly on duty, testing
-pipes and gauges, air pressure, water pressure and a thousand other
-things.
-
-I met the next day another officer whose mustache and eyebrows were
-black as jet, but whose hair was silver white. He was thirty-eight
-years old. For six years and a half he had been a submarine officer, he
-told me.
-
-"Why did you quit it?" I asked him.
-
-"Too old," he said.
-
-"Is there an age limit?" I asked.
-
-"No," he replied, "but a man knows when he is too old for the work."
-
-Yet nothing would induce those who have not yet found themselves too
-old to leave it. One would think the sailors, at any rate, would find
-the life tiresome or too dangerous. I talked to several of them about
-it, but they all agreed that they would not change.
-
-"Is this life better than on a battleship?" I asked one sailor.
-
-"Oh, yes," he replied. "I would not go back to a battleship."
-
-"What makes it better?" I asked.
-
-"It is more tranquil," he answered.
-
-Tranquil, sixty feet under water and your life hanging on a gauge that
-needs a good heavy wallop to make it work.
-
-When we dropped through the hatch into the interior of the submarine
-and the cover was clamped down over our heads the commander at once
-ordered me back into the turret.
-
-
-IV--"WE RAN SUBMERGED THROUGH A MINE FIELD"
-
-"Hurry, if you want to see her dive," he said.
-
-I climbed into the after section of the turret and fastened my eye to
-the periscope. Around the top of the turret was a circle of bulls'
-eyes and I was conscious of the water dashing against them while
-the spray washed over the glass of the periscope. The little vessel
-rolled very slightly on the surface, though there was quite a bit of
-sea running. I watched the horizon through the periscope and watched
-for the dive, expecting a distinct sensation, but the first thing I
-noticed was that even the slight roll had ceased and I was surprised to
-see that the bulls' eyes were completely under water. The next thing
-there was no more horizon. The periscope also was covered and we were
-completely beneath the surface.
-
-"Did it make you sick?" the commander asked, when I climbed down from
-the turret, and when I told him no he was surprised, for he said most
-men were made sick by their first dive.
-
-The thing most astonishing to me about that experience was how a
-submerged submarine can thread its way through a mine field. For though
-the water is luminous and translucent one can hardly make out the black
-hull of the boat under the turret and a mine would have to be on top
-of you before you could see it. The men who watch for mines must have
-a sense for them as well as particularly powerful sight.
-
-We continued to dive until we were sixty-eight feet below the surface,
-too deep to strike any mine, and there we ran tranquilly on our
-electric engines, while the commander navigated the vessel and the
-second in command opened champagne in the two by four mess room. After
-half an hour of under-water work we came near enough the surface for
-our fighting periscope to stick twenty inches out of the water and
-searched the lonely horizon for a ship to attack.
-
-It was not long before we sighted a mine trawler, steaming for the
-harbor, and speeded up to overtake her.
-
-"Pikers!" said our commander, as we circled twice around the mine
-trawler; "they can't find us."
-
-Five men on the trawler were scanning the sea with glasses, looking
-for submarines. We could follow all their motions, could tell when
-they thought they had found us and see their disappointment at their
-mistakes, but though we were never more than five hundred yards from
-them I did not think they were pikers because they did not find us. I
-had tried that hunt for the tiny wave of a periscope.
-
-"No use wasting a torpedo on those fellows," said our commander. "We
-will use the gun on them."
-
-"How far away can you use a torpedo?" I asked.
-
-"Two hundred yards is the best distance," he said. "Never more than
-five hundred. A torpedo is pure guesswork at more than five hundred
-yards."
-
-We crossed the bow of the trawler, circled around to her starboard
-quarter and came to the surface, fired nine shots and submerged again
-in forty-five seconds.
-
-The prey secured, we ran submerged through the mine field and past the
-net barrier to come to the surface well within the harbor and proceed
-peacefully to our mooring under the shelter of the guns of the land
-forts.
-
-
-
-
-TALE OF THE CHILD OF TERBEEKE
-
-_How It Saved a British Battalion_
-
-_By Oliver Madox Hueffer_
-
- In this little story the author sets down the facts of a very
- remarkable affair--how a child saved a British battalion from
- annihilation, thereby giving rise to yet more legends of the
- "Angels of Mons" description. A true story from the _Wide World
- Magazine_.
-
-
-I--THE STORY OF HIPPOLYTE
-
-In the days to come the historian will find fruitful scope for a work
-on faith, as shown in the Great War. And among the "Angels of Mons" and
-other celestial visitants I hope he will find a niche for the "Child of
-Terbeeke."
-
-I came across the story--and the child himself, for that matter--when
-I was billeted with my battalion at Durdegem. Durdegem is as ugly a
-little Walloon village as you need look for, but, internationally
-speaking, it is as interesting as ugly. It stands on French soil; you
-could almost throw a tin of bully-beef, if you were so unpatriotically
-wasteful, into Belgium; what is, for all practical purposes,
-temporarily Germany is not more than three miles away; yet English
-is almost the only language you will hear in the streets. Even the
-children, those who are left of them, speak English; they say "Na
-poo" or "No bon," and sometimes, it is to be feared, a swearword, as
-patly as a bombardier. This is really less surprising than that there
-should be any children at all, with the German lines so close; but
-things have been comparatively quiet thereabouts for months past,
-and though some of the houses are still ruinous and others have had
-their windows blocked with sandbags so long that already the grass is
-beginning to grow upon them, the inhabitants have settled down to the
-not unprofitable task of selling comforts to the British soldiers who
-are always passing and repassing.
-
-I was billeted upon Madame Tavernier, who owned the Blanchisserie du
-Cygne and was rapidly making her fortune out of the laundry bills she
-rendered to British officers, who are notoriously millionaires and well
-able to pay for the privilege of defending Northern France. With Madame
-Tavernier there was also staying--while other arrangements were being
-made for him--Hippolyte, otherwise famous as the Child of Terbeeke.
-
-Hippolyte was not yet six, but already he could say "Slee-o-pums" and
-"Stunt-ease" and "Fum-fers" so plainly that any drill-sergeant would
-have wept with pride to hear him. Also he wore the full uniform of a
-British sergeant-major, with puttees and a walking-stick and the badge
-of a famous Line regiment, all specially made and presented to him
-for his very own. Also, although he was temporarily the paying-guest
-of Madame Tavernier and allowed himself to be petted by a whole
-serial-story of British officers, he had a service-battalion to act
-as his father and to fight for him any battles he might wish fought.
-It is to be feared that a precocious understanding of these facts had
-made him rather conceited, and I do not think I should have liked him
-very much had I remained with Madame Tavernier longer than three days.
-Anyhow, this was his story, as related to me by that excellent lady and
-vouched for by a cloud of witnesses.
-
-Hippolyte came from Terbeeke, which is in the south of flat Flanders.
-Madame declared that he was the son of a professor at Louvain
-University, and added that the professor quarrelled with his wife soon
-after the birth of Hippolyte, and that the wife thereupon returned to
-her native village.
-
-Hippolyte, therefore, at a very early age indeed, went to live at
-Terbeeke. Terbeeke, I understand--for I was never there--lies just at
-the southward edge of the Flemish flats. Northwards the country is as
-flat as a drawing-board, criss-crossed with dykes and little canals;
-to the east is a wide State forest, and to the south a range of low
-hills. Between the little town and the hills lies what in pre-war days
-was Terbeeke's one claim to fame--the Terbeeke mere or marsh, forming
-a crescent to the south and west. I do not know how broad or wide it
-is, but it has been famous for centuries as bottomless, and a whole
-cycle of legend has grown up round it, dealing with the notabilities of
-one kind or another who have been drowned in its brown, oozy depths.
-Perhaps because of this evil fame it has never been drained, and is
-to-day as darkly ominous as in the times of fairies and lubber-fiends.
-
-The mother of Hippolyte lived in a small and lonely house at the other
-side of the marsh from the town of Terbeeke. She must have possessed
-some private means, for she seems to have carried on no business of any
-kind, but to have devoted most of her time to religion, crossing the
-marsh-arm several times daily to the parish church, which stood in the
-centre of the town. Otherwise her days were passed in solitude, for she
-lived quite alone with the child, their only companion being a large
-dog. She passed the time not taken up by religion in wandering about
-the marsh, for she had few friends, and the people of Terbeeke often
-saw the three moving about the surface of the quagmire in places where
-there was no known track.
-
-
-II--IN PATH OF PRUSSIAN INVADERS
-
-Time passed, and the war broke out. Terbeeke was not in the direct path
-of the invaders, and, sheltered behind the forest, it almost seemed
-to the townspeople as though they might escape the fate of the rest
-of Belgium. But the respite was not for long. The low muttering of
-distant guns grew every day louder; the stream of fugitives hurrying
-through the forest and past the town towards the French frontier grew
-always denser; at last the climax came. A British officer dashed into
-the town at three o'clock in the morning and hurried into the Mairie.
-The civilian population, it was announced, must evacuate their houses
-instantly.
-
-There followed the usual scenes of frantic terror and chaotic haste
-that happened so often during the opening chapters of the Great War.
-The one road out of the town was blocked with every kind of conveyance,
-from bicycle to dog-carts; there were blocks at every corner; precious
-minutes were wasted in useless recriminations; and long before the last
-civilian had left, the turmoil of desperate fighting was heard coming
-always nearer through the dim mystery of the forest.
-
-It was one of the incidents of the Great Retreat. A flank battalion of
-British infantry, by some mishap, lost direction. Cut off from the main
-body, and fighting desperately, it was driven always further from the
-path along which safety lay, until at last, flinging itself into the
-forest of Terbeeke, for a whole day and night it held off the furious
-attacks of a brigade of Prussians.
-
-But the odds were too great. Slowly but surely the battalion was
-forced back through the forest to the very outskirts. Back from there,
-after another frantic assault, it reeled, reduced now to two sparse
-companies--some three hundred men in all---across the little edging of
-cornfields into the stricken streets of Terbeeke.
-
-There, at last, it found some respite. The Prussians, having learnt
-by bitter experience the fighting value of the "contemptible" little
-force arrayed against them, jibbed at the open frontal attack across
-bare plough-land, and remained hidden within the forest, awaiting
-reinforcements.
-
-Meanwhile the British remnant fought desperately to establish
-themselves within the village and turn every house into a citadel;
-while their commander, a lieutenant of something under twenty-one,
-racked his brain for some way of escape. At one time it might have
-been possible to skirt the northern edge of the marsh, but already
-the attacking Prussians had pushed forward, and the British were now
-enclosed within a triangle, formed as to its sides by the overwhelming
-Prussian force, and as to its base by the impassable fastnesses of the
-mere.
-
-"Unless something happens pretty quick," said the C.O. to his
-second-in-command, a boy of nineteen, "things are pretty considerably
-all U-P." (He said something to that effect, I mean. Madame Tavernier's
-narrative did not, of course, fill in such details.)
-
-They were standing in the porch of the old church, gazing
-disconsolately over the flat stretches of marshland. The Boche fire had
-temporarily ceased, and they devoted the respite to seeking some way by
-which the marsh might be crossed even at the eleventh hour. But there
-was none, or none which they could discern.
-
-"Wonder what they are waiting for?" said the boy, lighting a cigarette.
-
-"Bringing up the guns, of course. It will be dark in an hour." The
-young C.O. gazed hopelessly to where the sun was already dropping to
-the cloud-capped western horizon, straining with ominous red the reedy
-pools before them.
-
-"Moon will be up, though."
-
-"All the better for them. I should give the village another two hours.
-And then----"
-
-"You aren't going to surrender, surely?" There was the quiver of horror
-in the young voice.
-
-They were interrupted by the C.S.M. of B Company.
-
-"Not more than ten rounds a man, sir," he reported. "Machine-gun out of
-order." He made his report with the tranquil woodenness of his kind,
-without a quiver of voice or muscle. (If you say that it is impossible
-for me to know what these men said, or how they behaved, I can only
-reply that I have been through the same sort of thing myself.)
-
-"Thanks, major. Men come in that were sounding the marsh?"
-
-"Report there is no way across, sir."
-
-"They certainly won't find one now it's getting dark. Better get back
-to your posts. They will begin again soon."
-
-Even as he spoke there came the complaining whine of a four-inch shell
-high overhead.
-
-
-III--THE BABE ON THE BATTLEFIELD WITH HIS DOG
-
-Possibly it was the new sound that woke Hippolyte, or perhaps Casper,
-the mongrel wolf-hound, took it for the challenge of some ancestral
-enemy. At least, some half-hour later No. 21687 Private John Smith, of
-C Company, had a vision. He was not naturally an imaginative man, but
-he hastened to report it to the C.S.M.
-
-"Lummy, sir," he said, "if there ain't a bloomin' angel comin' across
-the bloomin' marsh!"
-
-And, sure enough, across the very centre of the shivering quag came a
-small figure, clothed in a long white robe very like those attributed
-to mediæval angels, and with a golden aureole about its head, cast by
-the last rays of the dying sun. Actually it was no angel, but little
-Hippolyte, looking for his mother. She had left him, very early in the
-morning, to go to Mass, trusting him, as often before, to the care of
-Casper. Usually she was not gone for more than half an hour or so. On
-that day, however, she had not returned in one hour or in three. She
-never _would_ return, for before the third hour she was lying dead in
-the little square before the church-door--one of a group of six, men
-and women, who had been caught leaving the building when the Germans,
-in their first assault, enfiladed the main street with machine-gun
-fire. They lay side by side, very peacefully, just as they fell, for
-the hard-pressed defenders of the village had found no leisure to
-remove them.
-
-Hippolyte waited very patiently--as was his wont. He cried a little
-from loneliness at first, but his mother, before she left him, had set
-out the little portion of milk and bread that was to be his breakfast.
-Growing hungry, he sought for it in its accustomed place, ate it, and
-fell asleep again. It was the dog at last that disturbed him, later in
-the afternoon, by whimpering and scratching at the door, and gave him
-the great idea of starting out to find the mother who was so long in
-returning.
-
-Child and dog set out together along the imperceptible track of safety
-that crept and twisted across the marsh. Alone Hippolyte would almost
-certainly have strayed from it, but the dog's surer instinct guarded
-him until, just at the moment when hope was at an end, he came as a
-vision of hope to the spent company of Englishmen.
-
-That is practically the end of the story, for you can imagine the rest,
-except, perhaps, that the child, when he had almost reached the hard
-ground, grew afraid of the sound of firing, the noise overhead, and
-the gaunt, stark men staring at him in wondering silence. So he turned
-homeward again, Casper stalking beside him, sacrificing his lust for
-battle to his duty as foster-father. But they went slowly, the child
-often turning back to stare with wondering eyes at the increasing chaos
-behind him and, as the more impressionable among the soldiers would
-have it, beckoning them to follow him towards safety.
-
-Follow they did, but as unbeaten soldiers should, in good order and
-with due precautions--and so escaped. The Germans lost time before
-they entered the deserted village, for they feared an ambush. When
-they _did_ enter, it was long past sunset and the night was too dark
-to do anything before dawn. Even then they had no guide to show them
-the track across the marsh, and they were forced to skirt it, losing so
-much time that the British battalion--if you can call less than three
-hundred men a battalion--got clear away, and in due course picked up
-the main body, taking with them Hippolyte and Casper.
-
-You would say, if you did not know human nature, that there was no room
-for a legend of celestial intervention. But you would be wrong. Even in
-the rescued battalion--long since brought up to strength and upholding
-its laurels elsewhere in the line--the story holds good that somewhere
-unspecified on the Belgian frontier an angel, mediæval in every detail
-down to aureole, wings, and celestial robes, did actually intervene
-and rescue it from under the very noses of the baffled Boches. And
-this although Hippolyte, adopted child of the regiment, sports his
-sergeant-major's uniform for everyone to see, and Casper, brilliantly
-caparisoned, stalks as a mascot should behind the drums. Elsewhere the
-legend has assumed new details, as I realized when a very excellent
-clergyman assured me that it was ... George himself, mounted upon a
-white horse (so transmogrified, I take it, was black Casper), who rode
-up and down the line before the 2nd Battalion of the West Loamshires,
-shaking his sword at the advancing Prussian Guard, who not unnaturally
-fled in disorder. Perhaps, in Terbeeke, he has by this time become
-Ste. Gudule, or some other patron saint of the Belgians, with a fiery
-dragon or whatever be her saintly attributes. I don't know, because, as
-I say, I was never in Terbeeke, but here at least you have what really
-happened, as Madame Tavernier told it to me in the front room of her
-Blanchisserie du Cygne, in the village of Durdegem, and in the presence
-of Hippolyte himself, who afterwards begged shamelessly for _sous_.
-
-
-
-
-A HERO TALE OF THE RED CROSS
-
-_Told by G. S. Petroff, War Correspondent of the "Russkoye Slovo,"
-Moscow_
-
- The following incident is narrated in M. Petroff's account of a
- battle on the eastern front. Translated for _Current History_.
-
-
-I--STORY OF THE WOUNDED GERMAN
-
-One of our soldiers brought with him a German officer, who could hardly
-stand on his feet. His leg had been pierced by a bayonet, his shoulder
-was bleeding from a bullet, and his arm had been bruised by the butt
-end of a rifle. He was losing consciousness from pain and loss of
-blood. As soon as the soldier led him to our place he dropped with his
-whole weight to the ground. The doctor bandaged him, exclaiming: "What
-luck! Three wounds, and in spite of all of them he will be well soon.
-The wound in the leg is only a flesh wound, his arm is badly bruised
-but not broken, and only his collarbone at his shoulder is broken. In
-a month he will be all right again. Just look! what a handsome fellow,
-and what expensive underwear!"
-
-The bandaged officer came to himself, looked around the yard, and,
-seeing the farmhouse in the background on fire, he sharply seated
-himself.
-
-"Now be quiet, calm yourself," said the doctor, speaking in German and
-taking the man gently by the shoulders.
-
-"My wife, my wife!" cried the German, tearing himself forward.
-
-"Where is the wife?"
-
-"There, in the house, in the fire!" He made an effort to get off the
-stretcher from under the doctor's hands.
-
-"Is he delirious or what?" muttered the doctor in Russian. "There is no
-one in the house," he added soothingly in German. "Your German wounded
-were there, but they were saved in time."
-
-"But my wife? My wife!" cried the captive in terror.
-
-"What wife? How did she come here?"
-
-"She is a nurse. She was here with the wounded. We loved each other,
-we married only a year ago. She became a nurse. Our regiment happened
-to be near their hospital. Your offensive was unexpected. There was no
-time to remove the hospital. The other nurses left, but she would not
-leave when I was so near. Where is she? My wife!"
-
-"Did any one see a German nurse in the house or yard?" asked the
-doctor, turning to the Russian soldiers and telling them briefly what
-the prisoner had said:
-
-"There was no woman," came the response. "The house was empty. Look at
-the fire within. Even mice would have run out by now."
-
-At this moment something metallic shrilled through the air. A heavy
-German shell flew over us.
-
-"Scoundrels!" cursed the doctor. "They are firing on us--and their own
-wounded! We must get out of this. Two or three more shells and they
-will begin dropping in the yard. Carry our wounded first, then theirs.
-Hurry, or we shall remain here for eternity!"
-
-
-II--A WOMAN'S FIGURE AT WINDOW OF BURNING HOUSE
-
-The captive officer, apparently powerless, could not rise from the
-stretcher, where he was lying with one of his soldiers who had been
-wounded before him. He gazed devouringly at the blazing house. Suddenly
-he shouted savagely: "There, at the window, under the roof! Look, she
-is breaking the window--where the smoke is pouring out!"
-
-We looked at the roof of the blazing house, and, in truth, there was
-a woman's figure in white, with a red cross on her breast. The doctor
-shouted: "Eh, fellows, it is true! A woman was left in the house--a
-nurse--his wife!"
-
-"What can be done?" asked the stunned soldiers. "The whole house is on
-fire, and she is not strong enough to break through the window frame.
-She must be weak from fright. But why did she go up? Why not down?"
-
-"There's no use guessing!" shouted a bearded fellow, evidently from the
-reserves, throwing off his overcoat.
-
-"Where are you going?" cried the soldiers.
-
-But he was already out of reach of their voices. He rushed into the
-house. All were stupefied, fearing to breathe. A minute passed,
-another, a third. Then at the window appeared the bearded face of the
-Russian soldier. There came the sound of broken glass and wood. Above
-our heads something was shrilling, but no one paid attention to the
-German shells. The soldier broke the window, dragged the woman into the
-open air. She was unconscious.
-
-"Catch!" rang from above, and a big white parcel came down. The
-soldiers caught it successfully on the hero's outspread overcoat. Only
-one of them was hurt in the eye by the heel of her shoe.
-
-"How will our chap get back to us now?" asked the soldiers of one
-another. "It is hell inside."
-
-"Oh, he will get out, all right," said some one. "It is easier to get
-out than to get in. He knows the way. And if he burns some of his
-beard, no harm; he has a large one."
-
-"Carry her to her husband!" ordered the doctor, "and get out from
-here immediately. The Germans are shelling us. Take away the rest, and
-don't forget the couple," remarked jokingly the doctor, happy over the
-incident. "I will wait for our hero. He may be burned."
-
-The soldiers caught the remaining stretchers, and nearly ran out of the
-yard. At that moment a big German shell struck the burning house. A
-deafening explosion shook the air. The walls trembled, shook, and fell.
-The heroic soldier had not had time to get out. He remained buried
-under the ruins.
-
-When the woman recovered consciousness near her wounded husband she
-did not understand where she was. She murmured in perplexity: "Dream,
-death? Otto, is that you? Are we together in heaven?"
-
-"On earth and both alive," calmed the doctor.
-
-"How did you get to the upper story?" asked the husband.
-
-"I saw Russian soldiers run into the house. I feared violence, so I ran
-upstairs. I thought I would run down later, but then came the fire....
-A soldier appeared behind me and I was terrified to death."
-
-"But that soldier saved you!" sighed the doctor.
-
-"How? Where is he?"
-
-"In heaven, if there is such a place for heroes." The doctor then told
-them all. The German officer and his wife both cried.
-
-"But how was it that your guns were firing at a farm which you were
-occupying?" asked the prisoner.
-
-"Our guns?" exclaimed the doctor, who was already bandaging a new
-victim. "It was your guns that were shelling a house over which flew
-a German Red Cross flag. Our soldiers were saving the lives of your
-wounded, and your guns were firing at both ours and yours. They killed
-the man who saved you. That's the way the Kaiser makes war."
-
-
-
-
-LIFE STORY OF "GRANDMOTHER OF THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION"
-
-_Triumphant Return from Forty-four Years in Siberian Exile_
-
-_Told by Catherine Breshkovskaya, the Russian Revolutionist_
-
- This life story of the "Grandmother of the Revolution," Catherine
- Breshkovskaya, is the living symbol of the Russian people's
- long and hard struggle for freedom. Of her seventy-three years
- forty-four have been spent in prison and Siberian exile. But
- neither the wilderness of Siberia nor the severity of convict labor
- has broken the spirit of this little woman. Entering the struggle
- against Czarism while still in its infancy, she lived to see its
- complete overthrow, and the Russian people remembered their loving
- "Babushka." They made her journey from Siberia to Petrograd after
- the revolution a continuous triumphal procession, such as no Czar
- or King has ever been accorded. Mme. Breshkovskaya, upon her
- arrival home, began touring Russia in the interests of Kerensky's
- policies. Her love for the common people, her influence on the
- peasantry, her faith in the stability of the New Russia, made her
- a great power. She has told the story of her life in the Petrograd
- weekly, "_Niva_," which has been translated by Isaac Don Levine
- for the _New York Tribune_. Here she tells for the first time how
- she journeyed afoot over Russia to preach "freedom from ignorance
- and political tyranny" to the peasants; how she was sentenced to
- Siberia; how she escaped, was captured, reimprisoned and flogged;
- and how on the news of the Czar's downfall she began her journey
- home on a sledge over the snow and ice to join her people in the
- establishment of the republic.
-
-
-I--"I ALWAYS PITIED THE SERFS"
-
-I was born in 1844. I passed my childhood and youth in the province of
-Tchernigoff, and all my life I remained grateful to my parents for the
-good and wise training and schooling which they gave me. They pitied
-the serfs and never oppressed them. Nevertheless there was a sharp
-difference between our life, the life of landlords, and that of the
-peasants in their cabins, such a shocking difference that my childish
-soul suffered greatly from the contradiction between the reality and
-the teaching of Christ. My mother would often read to us the New
-Testament and biographies of the great apostles of truth and love for
-humanity.
-
-All my life I thought so much and ceaselessly about the needs of the
-people, the suffering of the people, that all my sorrows and joys are
-bound up with the people. And I always made it my duty to serve the
-people and do all that is necessary to open the people's eyes to its
-own life and wants.
-
-My own life was entirely composed of love and devotion to my country
-and people and of a passionate desire to serve them with all the powers
-in my possession up to the very hour of my death.
-
-I am asked: "How did I arrive at the firm resolution to live only for
-the people?" I think that this resolution was always present in me,
-from my youngest years, from the very beginning of my conscious life.
-
-When I turn back in my mind to review my past life, I see myself,
-first of all, a little five-year-old lassie, who suffered at heart for
-somebody: for the coachman, or the chambermaid, or the day laborer, or
-the oppressed peasants (at that time serfdom still existed in Russia).
-
-The impressions of the people's suffering sank so deeply into my
-childish soul that they never deserted me afterward in all my life.
-
-I was seventeen when, in 1861, the peasants were freed of the violence
-of the landlords, but were so badly supplied with land that the
-laboring masses were again forced to go into slavery to the wealthy.
-The agitations among the peasants provoked terrible executions.
-Their torture was taking place before my very eyes, strengthening my
-aspiration to serve the people with all my might, so as to lighten
-their bitter lot.
-
-No revolutionary circles and organizations were known to exist at
-that time in the provinces, but there soon came the activity of the
-Zemstvos, and I applied to it all my efforts. Ten years I labored
-in the peasant school and the village, organizing credit-savings
-banks, mutual aid, co-operative shops and campaigns on the eve of the
-elections of judges and rural boards. My work was progressing, the
-confidence of the peasants in me was helping it along, but against me
-and my assistants the nobility arose, reporting us to the ministers,
-and the labor of many years was swept away as if with a broom.
-
-The schools and banks were closed, all the honest people of our
-county and the whole province of Tchernigoff were placed under police
-surveillance, many were exiled to the northern provinces and me they
-began to persecute.
-
-
-II--"I DECIDED TO START A REVOLUTION"
-
-I clearly perceived then that the government of Alexander II introduced
-reforms only on paper, only seeking to create the impression that it
-desired to better the life of the population. Actually, however, the
-government wickedly persecuted every attempt to help the laboring
-people to emerge from the darkness into light, to approach knowledge,
-to proclaim its own rights.
-
-It was clearly evident, not only in our locality but throughout the
-whole of Russia, that the government feared knowledge in the people and
-endeavored to keep it in a state of rightless slavery. This compelled
-me to seek another path, another way of working in the interest of
-my beloved people, and toward the end of the '60s I decided to go to
-Russia in search of men with whom to start an illegal struggle, i.e.,
-a movement forbidden under the Czar's laws.
-
-For more than two years I wandered about Russia, ever looking for
-some revolutionary centre, which could exist only as an underground
-organization. Gradually, by changing one kind of work for another,
-I penetrated into a rather large organization, which had decided to
-get personally in contact with the people, not through books and
-proclamations.
-
-At that time the difference between the sea of peasants and the little
-lake of intellectuals was so great that they were, entirely ignorant of
-one another. Besides, the moujik's suspicion of any person bearing the
-appearance of a "gentleman" was so deeply rooted that it was impossible
-to carry to the peasant and labor midst any message and retain the
-dress of the gentry. It was necessary to change the appearance from
-foot to head, to look a perfect plebeian.
-
-I put on a peasant dress, threw a bag across my shoulder, obtained a
-stick and set out to tramp. Although I did not tramp the country long,
-only one summer, yet I succeeded in visiting many villages, and nowhere
-did I meet with distrust. The peasants eagerly listened to my talks and
-those of my comrades. We told them that the land ought not belong to
-the few; that it should be placed in possession of all the people, of
-all those who wish to toil on it; that there ought not be such a system
-which permits the selling, mortgaging, buying and renting of thousands
-of acres by a few hands, while people were starving nearby because they
-lacked the land from which to obtain bread. The peasants would agree
-with us and also say that the land ought to belong to those who labor
-on it, who till it.
-
-We would also tell them that the landlords were oppressing the people;
-that they had seized all the government in their hands; that the
-bureaucracy was fraternizing with the landlords, hindering the people
-from living a free life. In this the peasants would also agree with us.
-
-We had difficulty only talking about one subject, the Czar. We tried to
-explain to the peasants that the Czar was acting concertedly with the
-nobility and bureaucracy, that he it was who was the chief oppressor of
-the people. But the peasants would not want to believe it. They were so
-distant in those days from understanding state affairs, being unable to
-read, because of general illiteracy, and lacking fundamental knowledge,
-that they had no idea how much evil the Czarist form of government had
-done to the nation.
-
-The peasants trusted the Czar; they were convinced that the Czar was
-a kind master of Russia who had to maintain an army to defend her
-from enemies, and that the peasants had to till the land, pay taxes,
-for the maintenance of the army. They thought that the Czar loved his
-people and took care of them, and, if officials did oppress the people
-sometimes, it was due to the fact that they deceived the Czar. And if
-the Czar were only to learn the whole truth he would drive out the
-officials and again become a loving father to his people.
-
-
-III--"I TOLD THE PEASANTS THE TRUTH ABOUT THE CZAR"
-
-Such were the beliefs of the peasants about the Czar. In spite of it
-all, I continued to tell them the real truth about the Czar, explaining
-to them that the Czar knows of all the oppressions and is in charge
-of every one of the oppressors. The peasants would say that I was
-mistaken, but, nevertheless, listened to my arguments, and not one of
-them insulted me with vulgar language.
-
-I was not alone in the tramp from village to village. Three thousand
-youths went to the people at that time, spreading all over the
-thirty-six provinces of Russia, and we all talked to the people on the
-same subject; we all endeavored to arouse the people to a good, free
-life. However, the government soon discovered our activities and began
-to arrest many, imprisoning, exiling to hard-labor settlements and to
-Siberia.
-
-I was arrested entirely by accident in 1874. I was "covering" the
-provinces of Kieff, Podolia, Tchernigoff and Kherson, and had in my bag
-detailed maps of these localities, in order to know my way and avoid
-arousing suspicion by questions. Whenever I stopped in the village
-cabins no peasant would ever look into my bag, and thus no one could
-ever find out who I was.
-
-But once, while stopping in Tulchin, the Province of Podolia, the
-woman-laborer of the peasant who gave shelter to me looked into my bag
-and discovered the maps there. To an illiterate person every printed
-word was a rarity, especially in those days. It will be understood, of
-course, that the laborer was shocked by her discovery. The same day she
-went to do some gardening for the sheriff and told him everything. The
-sheriff became alarmed and hurried off to look for me.
-
-And I, without suspecting anything, was at the time returning from the
-market, where I purchased a couple of apples, some pork and bread.
-
-Suddenly I saw the sheriff racing toward me in a carriage, shouting:
-"Get into the carriage!"
-
-Well, I understood immediately what the trouble was. I got into the
-carriage and kept still.
-
-We arrived at the cabin. "Where is the luggage of this woman?" The
-peasant replied: "She has no luggage, but she has a bag."
-
-The bag was examined and what could they find in it but maps and
-proclamations? Clearly, my case was closed.
-
-The sheriff was rather inexperienced, simple-minded, so he unfolded the
-proclamations and started to read them aloud, before the whole crowd.
-The peasants, after listening to them, said:
-
-"These are the real words. The whole truth is written there. This is
-the very truth which the nobles have hidden from us."
-
-In the meantime the examining officer arrived, and there both of
-them began to read the proclamation aloud. Meanwhile a multitude of
-peasants gathered, listening even under the windows. They learned
-my proclamation by heart. The county police chief was notified. He
-arrived, immediately perceived the meaning of it all, and ordered me to
-prison.
-
-
-IV--"I WAS HANDCUFFED AND LOCKED IN A DARK CELL"
-
-In those days a woman propagandist was something unheard of and unseen.
-In fear of this new phenomenon the warden of the Bratzlau jail thought
-it necessary to incarcerate me immediately in a dark cell and handcuff
-me. A month passed in wandering about country prisons, till gendarmes
-came, took me away from the police and dragged me first to a Kieff
-jail, then to Moscow, and finally to Petrograd, where I was tried with
-other offenders after being kept in prison for four years in solitary
-confinement. The condition of the imprisonment was serious. Of the
-300 prisoners held for total only 193 survived, among whom there were
-37 women. During all of my imprisonment I made no explanation to the
-judicial authorities, and I was condemned to five years of convict
-labor. But it was not dreadful. Nothing was dreadful when one had faith
-in one's righteousness.
-
-My healthy organism and ripe age helped me endure the many years'
-torments at a time when the young, tender lives fell sick quickly and
-were carried off one after another by death, leaving a feeling of
-atrocious pain and indelible bitterness.
-
-But we all retained our eagerness for activity, so early interrupted by
-an evil hand. The thought of returning to the party, to revolutionary
-work, lived in our minds in the form of a red-hot nail, and aroused all
-our abilities, all our power to seek a means to escape. There, to the
-fighters, to the bright populists, our spiritual vision was directed.
-
-I was already in on the rights of a settler, beyond the Baikal, in
-Barguzin, when, together with three men comrades, I moved into the
-hilly taiga, with its thousands of impediments and dangers. Our daring
-escape, which ended in our capture while wandering about unfathomed
-abysses and rocks, has been described by Tiutchev. I, as a former
-hard-labor criminal, was condemned to four years more of penal
-servitude and forty whips, which, however, the authorities did not dare
-to apply, "in order to arouse against the administration the political
-exiles," as the Military Governor of the Outer Baikal said in his
-report.
-
-I was thus forced to go, in 1882, after another year of imprisonment,
-to the same old Kara mines, at that time full of prisons for convicts
-and politicals. Both the first and the second perished there of
-scurvy, typhus, endless tuberculosis, but mostly the convicts, as the
-officials disregarded them entirely and kept them in the most shameful
-conditions.
-
-My second arrival at Kara was for me rather a joyous occasion. When
-I first came there I was the only woman doing hard labor; it was not
-fashionable yet to send women to mines. But now I found already sixteen
-or eighteen feminine comrades, and all of my second term I passed
-in the best society in the world. The annual term of convict labor
-consisted of eight months and my term flew past me unnoticed. Only one
-thing was aggravating, and that was to see how the frailer among us in
-health gradually sank and surely neared their graves, in the blossom of
-their lives.
-
-
-V--"I LANGUISHED FOR EIGHT YEARS IN A DEAD CITY"
-
-In 1885 I was again sent on the rights of a settler beyond the Baikal,
-in the dead city of Selenginsk, where I spent eight of the most sad
-years of my life. The naked steppe, the nailed-up cabins and the
-tireless trailing of the police became my lot. I was given neither
-the rights of a peasant nor a passport for travel in Siberia. And the
-heart burned with a passionate desire to escape, to renew the struggle
-with the enraged foe and take revenge for the innocently destroyed
-powers for good--the daughters and sons of our motherland. I sought,
-attempted, fought against obstacles, but all in vain. The steppe beyond
-the Baikal, the moundless Mongolian steppe, and, on the north, the
-inaccessible Baikal were the severe allies of the guard with which the
-authorities had surrounded me. There was no railroad nor steamship
-connection with the outside world. Right there then, in lifeless
-Selenginsk, I languished for eight whole years, languished like a hawk
-in a cage. All alone, ever yearning, I would go out into the steppe and
-in a loud voice pour my tempestuous heart, longing for freedom, into
-space.
-
-There was not a day on which I did not think of escaping, and I
-was always ready for any risk and peril, clinging to the littlest
-possibility to get away, but all in vain. No one, absolutely no one,
-promised any help. All those in whom it was possible to confide
-considered any attempt to escape foredoomed. My soul ached. And only
-the thought of my comrades--convicts who were sent to the Yakutsk huts,
-only the thought of their suffering made me forget my own. The eight
-empty years of my life in Selenginsk have remained all through my life
-a gray void, eating up the warm feelings of a warm heart. I filled
-my time with work, so as to be able to send my earnings to the dark
-prisons, snowbound wastes, to the hungry, forgotten comrades. I read,
-studied, in order to know how mankind lived, and how far or near was
-the possibility of transforming it into that "intelligent being" with
-whom it would be joyful to live. "Have patience," I would tell myself
-in the moments of keen grief; "be patient, endure to the end; you will
-get what you are waiting for."
-
-In 1890, after living for four years on the rights of a peasant, I
-finally received a passport to travel all over Siberia, and on the
-same day I departed from the suffocating place so as to gradually
-approach the boundary of European Russia as my term was nearing its
-end. My health was much undermined by the severe trials I had undergone
-in solitariness. Anæmia and strong neuralgia had tormented me in
-Selenginsk. But the inherited vigor of the organism soon returned to
-me, and the last four years of my life in Siberia, spent in journeying
-from town to town, I succeeded in having many conversations with young
-and mature people--succeeded in making allies of some of the leading
-citizens of Siberia. And when in September, 1896, I returned to Russia
-I found there many students of both sexes whom I taught in Siberia the
-theories and the urgency of regenerating the old watchwords. They soon
-tackled the work of liberation, and many of them remain loyal to this
-date to our principles.
-
-
-VI--"WHEN I CAME BACK FROM SIBERIA"
-
-Again I arrived in Russia in September. But upon my arrival I
-encountered a new movement, which was rapidly conquering a place for
-itself. Marxism was taking hold of, capturing, the minds of the youth,
-and the old fighters were regarded as dead forces. But faith in the
-force of personality, faith in the healthy strength of the people, a
-knowledge of their aims and needs lent so much firm confidence to my
-energy that, without hesitating a moment, I began to do some practical
-work, which had ripened in my mind as long before as the celebrated
-trial, in 1878, when I declared to my judges that "I have the honor
-of belonging to the Russian socialistic and revolutionary party, and
-consequently do not recognize the authority of the Czar's courts over
-me."
-
-Eighteen years passed after that, and my adherence to the party of
-socialism and revolutionism lived in me as freshly and ardently as in
-the days of my arrest and trial. Confidence that the peasant masses,
-these pillars of the state government, will obey the voice of their
-friends and will not be slow to follow their leaders--this confidence
-urged me to hasten the consolidation of the various forces likely to
-join the Social Revolutionary party, as it has been christened from its
-very beginning.
-
-It is necessary to bear in mind that from Siberia I came back to
-Russia all alone. I did not even have the addresses of the old comrades
-who remained in safety in the gloomy folds of Alexander III's reign.
-And it took considerable time, care and patience before my tireless
-but modest little journeys about Russia netted definite results as
-to acquaintance with people and opportunities. The readiness of the
-peasants to join the party became ever clearer, and on the fourth year
-of endeavor the party loudly proclaimed its existence, and in the
-fifth year all the separate committees recognized one centre. Both the
-increase in membership and growth in activity attracted the savage
-attention of the Czar's government.
-
-In 1903 the party suffered an enormous wreck. Wholesale arrests and
-searches robbed it of many of its leading workers, of its best printing
-shops and stores of literature. It was necessary to replace all that.
-By this time the work of the party had developed and grown strong
-abroad, thanks to our talented and zealous emigrants, who bent all
-their energies for the publication of party organs and popular books
-and pamphlets.
-
-In order to recall this youth to immediate activities at home,
-in Russia, I went abroad for the first time. In May, 1903, I
-boarded a steamer in Odessa and accompanied by an experienced
-contrabandist-intellectual, went, by way of Rumania, Hungary and Vienna
-to Geneva, Switzerland, where there centred the group of the party
-workers who were scattered in Paris, London and Switzerland. At this
-conference we were fully joined by the old fighters of the past '70s,
-Shishko, Volkhovskoy, Lazaroff, Tchaikovsky.
-
-The youth, which frequented all our lectures and debates, listened
-attentively to the voices of our speakers. Victor Tchernoff, the
-editor-in-chief of our central organs (and Minister of Agriculture
-in Kerensky's first Cabinet), victoriously defended the position of
-the party against the attacks of our opponents. At the same time
-I persistently spoke of the necessity to tackle the real task, to
-propagate our ideas among the peasants and workmen, to organize all the
-forces capable of and ready to enter into a battle with the old régime,
-ready to sacrifice their lives for a free Russia. And thus it was that
-a stream of young people of both sexes began to flow back to Russia,
-carrying with them Social Revolutionary literature, and the booklets
-"In Battle Shalt Thou Obtain Thy Rights" were lavishly spread on all
-the roads of the Fatherland.
-
-
-VII--"I VISITED AMERICA--MY FRIENDS OF FREEDOM"
-
-This task, the labor, of directing the forces of young Russia occupied
-two whole years of my life. It is true I succeeded in the meantime
-in visiting America, where I was urgently called by the friends of
-freedom. I sent out from there considerable sums of money to cover the
-expenses of the organization, mainly for literature, the import of
-which into Russia was very expensive. In the United States I acquired
-many genuine friends, who have remained faithful to me ever since. They
-proved it by profuse attention to all my needs during the last years of
-my exile and imprisonment, and from 1907 to 1917 they never ceased even
-for a week to take care of me.
-
-When the blows of the open struggle of 1905 had reached me I again
-crossed the boundary into my country, but this time I passed it on
-foot, running across in the company of two "contrabandists" and a
-comrade who carried with him a supply of dynamite.
-
-That was the Russian revolution marching, challenging all Russia to an
-unequal combat.
-
-Everybody knows the events of 1905, 1906 and 1907. The efforts of the
-revolutionists of all parties were unable to withstand the physical
-force of the evil government, but they have not only shaken up the
-paralyzed mind of the great people, but enticed them into demonstrating
-their power and seeing themselves as a victor, though temporarily. The
-combat was already nearing its end; the banners were already lowered
-and hidden for the next spiritual and physical upheaval; already the
-executioners were hanging and slaughtering, shooting and torturing the
-best champions of freedom; but my spirit was yet far from submission,
-my heart was still heaving with hope, and with head forward I threw
-myself into the thick of events. After the wreck of the second Duma I
-anticipated a new outburst of indignation on the part of the people.
-But apparently the cup of doubts had not yet been exhausted, and the
-people ponderingly looked into the future, not risking to sacrifice
-their remaining feeble forces.
-
-
-VIII--"THE HANGMAN'S ROPE WAS AT MY THROAT"
-
-It was in the days of such oppression on one side and vain strainings
-of all energies, on the other that I was arrested in Samara in 1907,
-again in the month of September.
-
-It seemed to me that this time I would be unable to escape alive
-from the hands of the hangmen. This was what I thought. But I felt
-otherwise. Two years and nine months I was kept in the fortress of
-Peter and Paul, thinking not of that, but of the time when Russia,
-after the inevitable victorious and triumphant second revolution, would
-take up the work of construction and transform our powerless country,
-our almost illiterate people, into an exemplary state, which could
-serve as a model to other peoples in culture as well as in social
-reform.
-
-Faith in the possibility of seeing my country free, my people
-developing in material and spiritual plenty, gave me strength, exalted
-my powers. I found myself still able to work with the people and for
-the people and was grieved to waste time in exile, in the listlessness
-of the Siberian taiga. I again made preparations for an escape, aiming
-to join my party comrades, who called me, in revolutionary activity.
-And again my escape failed. Only two or three hours separated me from
-my goal from a sure shelter and it was painful to fall again into the
-hands of the enemy after a thousand miles' journey in the winter.
-
-The thought occurred to me again that they would not pardon me my
-attempts to escape, my efforts to identify myself again with the
-revolutionary movement. At the same time there pulsed so much life in
-my heart that I could not imagine the end of my activities. Neither the
-long terms passed in jail nor my exile in Yakutsk had dimmed my spirit.
-"I will live through all this," said an inner voice to me; "I will live
-through everything and live to see the bright days of freedom." From
-Yakutsk I was brought to Irkutsk, and my life here was filled with the
-same persecutions as my exile in Kirensk. I fell very ill and observed
-how the physicians carefully concealed from me the danger of my malady.
-It seemed so strange to me that people could think of my fatal end when
-my soul was full of complete faith that time was bringing me nearer
-daily to a different kind of end, the triumph of the revolution.
-
-The longer the war continued the more horrible its consequences grew,
-the clearer the rascality of the government manifested itself, the more
-patent appeared the inevitableness of the rise of democracy all over
-the world, the nearer advanced also our revolution.
-
-I waited for the sound of the bell announcing freedom, and wondered
-why this sound was tardy in making itself heard. When in November of
-last year explosions of indignation followed one another, when irate
-calls were exchanged among the several groups of the population, I was
-already planted with one foot in the Siberian sleigh, feeling sorry
-only that the snow road was beginning to melt.
-
-The 17th of March a telegram reached me in Minusinsk announcing
-freedom. The same day I was on my way to Atchinsk, the nearest
-railroad station. From Atchinsk on began my uninterrupted communion
-with soldiers, peasants, workmen, railroad employees, students and
-multitudes of beloved women, who to-day all bear the burdens of the
-normal and now also abnormal life of a great state.
-
-
-
-
-TALE OF AN AMAZING VOYAGE
-
-_German Officers Escape from Spain in a Sailing Vessel_
-
-_Told by Frederic Lees_
-
- The Spanish Premier, Count Romanones, recently stated that the
- sensational story of the escape from Spain in a sailing vessel of
- a number of interned German officers, as briefly reported in _El
- Liberal_, of Madrid, is officially confirmed. With extraordinary
- assurance, the fugitives set out to sail right round the coast of
- Great Britain and reach a Belgian port, but the elements and the
- British Navy intervened, and the audacious scheme miscarried. The
- author's private sources of information have enabled him to throw
- light on a number of episodes which, in the Spanish and German
- newspapers, were intentionally left obscure. Related in the _Wide
- World Magazine_.
-
-
-I--AT OFFICE OF GERMAN VICE-CONSUL IN SPANISH PORT
-
-One sunny morning in July, 1916, the German Vice-consul of Vigo was
-sitting in his office opposite the wharves of the little Spanish
-port. The voluminous contents of his mail-bag lay before him, and
-at the moment in question his eyes were intently fixed on a long,
-official-looking document--a type-written folio sheet bearing a list of
-names, preceded by a memorandum. As he read on, his expression became
-more and more serious. Twice he read the document through, pondering
-awhile over one of the names. Then he hastily pressed the electric-bell
-button on his desk.
-
-The Vice-Consul's clerk, Hermann Fischer, appeared instantly, note-book
-and pencil in hand.
-
-"It's too soon yet for the correspondence, Fischer," said the
-Vice-Consul, "but I've got here a list of those eleven officers who
-were arrested the other day, and who are interned at Pampeluna. I want
-you to fetch the Navy List and look up one of the names--Lieutenant
-Karl Koch. It looks familiar to me."
-
-Fischer was back in a trice with the desired volume, and, having hunted
-out the right man from a multitude of Kochs, proceeded to read forth
-the biographical information to the attentive Vice-Consul: "Karl Koch,
-born 1873, at Düsseldorf; educated Frankfort and Heidelberg; joined the
-Imperial Navy 1890; U-boat lieutenant 1914."
-
-"That'll do!" interjected the official. "I thought it must be the same
-man. He and I were at Heidelberg together. Dear old Karl! To think
-it has fallen to my lot to do him a good turn! As a matter of fact,
-Fischer, we've got to see that Koch and certain others are made as
-comfortable as possible during their captivity amongst these blessed
-Spaniards. And if there's a chance of doing something more than
-that--well, all the better. On that point I've got an answer to this
-official communication to dictate to you. Perhaps, as you're here,
-you'd better take it down at once; then you can code it and get it on
-the wires for the Embassy at Madrid without delay."
-
-Whereupon the Vice-Consul of Vigo proceeded to dictate his secret
-message, which showed how very wide his consular duties had become in
-wartime--duties such as only Teutonic diplomatic agents are expected to
-carry out.
-
-Some people, in relating the part the Vice-Consul played in the
-adventure in which Lieutenant Karl Koch and his companions became
-involved, contend that it was this officer who was the prime mover;
-that it was he who got into touch with the Vice-Consul, who promised
-all possible support. But I have reason to believe it was the other
-way about, and that the _deus ex machina_ of the whole affair--from
-the very moment that the German Vice-Consulate received official
-information anent Koch's arrest and internment to the purchase of the
-_Virgen del Socorro_ and her departure on her perilous Odyssey--was the
-Vice-Consul, whose fortuitous acquaintanceship with the lieutenant of
-the submarine (captured and interned in circumstances which need not
-here be dwelt upon) redoubled his official zeal. If that is not so,
-what of the indiscretions of his clerk Hermann Fischer? What of those
-of the intermediaries through whom the Vice-Consul got possession of
-the _Virgen del Socorro_? What of the convincing evidence of the hotel
-and lodging-house keepers of Vigo who, all unknowingly, harbored the
-fugitives? What of the incriminating documents in the Vice-Consul's own
-handwriting, or that of his clerk, which I am assured came into the
-possession of the Spanish authorities?
-
-
-II--SECRET MESSAGE TO GERMAN EMBASSY IN MADRID
-
-But I will not anticipate events any further. Enough has been said
-to enable me to take up the thread of my narrative from the time the
-Vice-Consul dispatched his coded message regarding Lieutenant Karl Koch
-to the German Embassy in Madrid.
-
-Having signed his despatch and given Fischer sufficient work to keep
-him busy until noon, the Vice-Consul sallied forth with a satisfied
-mien and walked leisurely, almost aimlessly, towards the quays, gazing
-out occasionally over the bay. In the distance could be seen two
-German vessels, interned since the beginning of the war, one of which
-was the steamship _Wehrt_. At last, on reaching the deserted end of
-one of the quays, the Vice-Consul, glancing quickly over his shoulder,
-stopped and gave a low whistle, which was answered almost immediately
-by a similar signal and the sound of a boat grating against the side of
-the quay.
-
-"_Ach so!_ There you are, José," said the official, as the boatman
-became visible. "I was afraid you would be late. You can row me this
-morning to the _Wehrt_."
-
-And with a final precautionary look to right and left, the German
-Vice-Consul disappeared over the side and clambered down the iron rungs
-of a ladder into the boat.
-
-The captain of the steamship _Wehrt_, condemned to a captivity which
-eternally rankled in his breast, was always ready to extend a hearty
-welcome to the Vice-Consul of Vigo. Their periodic meetings, arranged
-as far as possible in secret, constituted a safety valve. The captain
-could fulminate to his heart's content against the tyrant of the
-seas--Great Britain; the Vice-Consul could give full rein to his taste
-for intrigue.
-
-Behold these two, then, _tête-à-tête_ in the captain's private room,
-and exchanging confidences over the luncheon table. The captain,
-deprived of official information for the past three or four days,
-was thirsting for news regarding fresh developments in the war, and
-his lean, bronzed face lit up with eagerness when he inquired if the
-Vice-Consul had anything new and special to report.
-
-"_Ya wohl!_ Something of the greatest importance," replied the
-official. "A matter for consultation, and in which your advice will be
-valuable."
-
-And the Vice-Consul proceeded to put the skipper _au courant_ with the
-bare facts concerning the predicament in which Lieutenant Koch and his
-companions found themselves at Pampeluna, the official request for
-whatever assistance he could render them, the strange coincidence of
-Koch and himself being old college chums, and so on.
-
-
-III--THE CONSPIRACY IN THE CAPTAIN'S CABIN
-
-"It's very evident, captain, that we must do something for them,"
-continued the Vice-Consul. "Pampeluna is a long way from Vigo, but I
-think something can be done if we put our heads together. I can't read
-all that's in the official mind which inspired that memorandum, but
-it's quite clear the authorities regard Vigo as the most convenient
-open door for Koch and his ten brother-officers. An open door, provided
-it is _held_ open for them. The question is, how are we going to do
-that? I can see a way of solving part of the difficulty. You can leave
-the Pampeluna portion to me. There are plenty of ways of opening prison
-doors in a country like this. As a landsman, I am convinced I can open
-the land door without much trouble, but it requires a sailor like you
-to attend to the sea door. That's way I've come to you."
-
-"And you couldn't have come to a more willing man," replied the
-captain, emphatically. "Try and realize what I've had to suffer on
-this infernal ship during the last twenty-three months, with the eyes
-of the authorities continually on me and the _Wehrt_, and every little
-jack-in-office sniffing around at unexpected moments, and you'll
-understand how I feel for your friend and his companions. Yes, we've
-got to do what we can for them. The submarine is the only effectual
-weapon left to Germany, so if we succeed in returning to her eleven
-of her brave U-boat men we shall truly have done good patriotic work.
-Now, at the back of my brain I've got a plan. You're welcome to it.
-You know, I suppose, that the _Virgen del Socorro_ is for sale? She's
-as tight a little schooner as ever left the port of Vigo. I've often
-admired her lines and speed as she sailed past the _Wehrt_. Now, when
-this war is over and we've reduced everybody's tonnage, save our
-own, to a minimum, the _Virgen del Socorro_ will be worth her weight
-in gold. At the price she is going at to-day the boat is a splendid
-speculation. Why don't you buy her? You'd find it worth your while, I
-think, to be the sleeping partner."
-
-"Not at all a bad idea, captain. But are you certain the _Virgen del
-Socorro_ is in the market? I thought it was owned by the brothers
-Z----, who have always looked upon the schooner as a sort of child of
-theirs."
-
-"That is so. But ties of the closest affection have to be broken in
-these troubled times, and the brothers Z---- have decided to dissolve
-partnership. I dare say your boatman José, who ought to be well up in
-harbor gossip, will be able to tell you all about that. There's no
-doubt my information is correct. I can even tell you the exact figure
-at which the owners are willing to sell--eleven thousand five hundred
-pesetas."
-
-"Dirt cheap, considering the times," said the Vice-Consul,
-thoughtfully. He took an extra long pull at his beer tankard, and then,
-bringing the blue earthenware vessel down on the table with a bang,
-exclaimed, "By Jove, captain, you've put me on the right track! I'm
-beginning to see the way to do it. Listen!"
-
-The plan unfolded was as follows. Using his boatman as an
-intermediary--José was generally believed to be fairly well-to-do--he
-would enter into negotiations with the brothers Z---- for the purchase
-of the _Virgen del Socorro_. One of the conditions of the agreement
-would be particularly tempting to the owners. On the understanding that
-the purchase was kept secret--the rumor might indeed be set afloat
-that the brothers had decided not to part with their dearly-beloved
-boat--they should be allowed to retain possession until the very last
-moment before the schooner was required by the new proprietors. There
-was evidently a double advantage in this: it would allay any suspicions
-which inquisitive harbor authorities or other officials might have
-whilst preparations were being made on board the _Virgen del Socorro_
-for the reception of the fugitives from Pampeluna, and it would enable
-the Vice-Consul, the captain, and other helpers to carry out those
-preparations at their leisure. No one could say how long it would
-take them to prepare the road to the "open door" of Vigo. Though the
-Vice-Consul's secret service fund was still well supplied, it was no
-good to minimize the difficulties, which were greater than the captain
-of the _Wehrt_ could possibly comprehend until he had explained the
-full extent of his plan.
-
-The _Virgen del Socorro_ was to be sent right round the British Isles,
-in order to descend the North Sea unobserved, and, flying the Dutch
-flag, reach a Belgian port. It was a risky plan, but, the British Navy
-notwithstanding, the conspirators thought it had possibilities of
-success. The Vice-Consul, in assisting the scheme, proposed to make the
-Fatherland a present of more than the eleven officers at Pampeluna.
-
-It was advisable to get as many able-bodied German subjects on board as
-possible, and so he planned to include in the party of fugitives nine
-others, including four officers from the _Goeben_, a naval doctor, a
-law student, and two sailors, none of whom was interned, in addition to
-a sergeant interned at Alcala de Henares, seventeen miles north-east of
-Madrid. Twenty was certainly a large crew for a schooner of the _Virgen
-del Socorro's_ size, but the voyage was to be undertaken during the
-summer--and an exceptionally fine summer, too--so the risk of a mishap,
-provided there was good seamanship, was slight. As this question of
-weather was important, the Vice-Consul proposed to see to the purchase
-of the vessel without delay, and to communicate at once with Lieutenant
-Koch.
-
-
-IV--SECRET PURCHASE OF SHIP--TO ESCAPE
-
-Within the next few days the secret purchase by the Vice-Consul of
-Vigo of the _Virgen del Socorro_ was an accomplished fact, and he had
-had his first interview at Pampeluna with his old friend, Lieutenant
-Koch. Other meetings followed, at intervals of a week or so, and
-before the end of the month, thanks to a lavish "greasing" of palms,
-the arrangements for the escape of the eleven officers and their
-concentration with other fugitives at Vigo were all made. The captain
-of the _Wehrt_, as surreptitiously as possible, bought inordinate
-quantities of provisions and stores during July, in order that José and
-the others might, at the opportune moment, tranship a part of them to
-the _Virgen del Socorro_.
-
-At last everything was ready. Nothing remained to be done but for
-someone to send a signal from Pampeluna to the Vice-Consul at Vigo, who
-was to pass it on to other quarters. But the signal, so eagerly awaited
-on the appointed day, August 4th, never came!
-
-Instead, two days later came a letter of explanation, stating that
-Lieutenant Karl Koch had fallen ill at the critical moment. The plan
-of escape, therefore, had to be indefinitely postponed. It was a
-bitter disappointment to the Vice-Consul, who pictured himself being
-reproached by his superiors for building castles in the air, if not
-being saddled with the whole of the expenses. But he consoled himself,
-in the presence of the captain of the _Wehrt_, with the argument that
-it was "just as well, since it would allow the authorities time to go
-to sleep." The astute seaman could not, however, quite agree with this.
-He knew the advantage of fine weather for such a perilous voyage as the
-one projected, and feared that if the escape were not effected soon it
-might be too late or too full of risk to be worth undertaking.
-
-Lieutenant Koch's illness dragged on for week after week. August went
-by, September came, and the hopes of the Vice-Consul of Vigo fell lower
-and lower. In the first three weeks in September the officer entered
-the convalescent stage. One result of his breakdown was, indeed, in
-his favor; he was allowed greater and greater liberty, and, on the
-plea of taking the air, got out several times in a motor-car, with the
-authorization of the governor and doctor of the prison and under the
-discreet eye of an official. Soon even this supervision was relaxed,
-and then, when October came in, the U-boat lieutenant saw the chance
-for which he and his companions had been waiting. It was about this
-time that the Vice-Consul of Vigo (now almost on the verge of despair)
-unexpectedly received the long-awaited warning.
-
-
-V--PLOT LAID FOR THE FLIGHT
-
-On the morning of October 5th, Lieutenant Koch and his companions,
-having obtained a pass for an unofficial "joy ride" in two motor-cars,
-set out for a little country village some twenty miles from Pampeluna.
-As they were all on parole and the chauffeurs of the hired cars were
-connected with the police, permission was given to the party to remain
-at their destination for luncheon. It was understood, however, that
-as soon as the meal was over the return journey should be made, so as
-to be back well before the day was declining. Koch and his friends,
-through intermediaries introduced to him by the Vice-Consul of Vigo,
-laid their plans very cleverly. Just outside the village is a rustic
-inn where excellent luncheons are served. The dining-room looks out, at
-the back of the house, on to a garden with a bowling-alley and arbor,
-and this garden adjoins meadows, bordered by the railway line. Not far
-away is the little country railway station. What happened can easily be
-imagined.
-
-The eleven officers had their luncheon served in the restaurant proper;
-the chauffeurs were served in a smaller room adjoining, looking out on
-to the front and the road. The landlord had been instructed (and had
-been well paid in advance for this and other little services) to ply
-these two worthy fellows with as much liquor as they could hold, with
-the result that they were deep in their cups long before the boisterous
-officers had got through their coffee and liqueurs. They were in such
-an advanced state of intoxication, indeed, that they took no heed when
-a singular silence followed the noise of voices and laughter in the
-adjoining room; and it was not until the appointed hour for departure
-had long since passed that they recovered their senses sufficiently to
-learn the truth. Their erstwhile "joy riders" had flown! They might
-have been seen, fully three-quarters of an hour before, strolling
-down the garden and making their way, as unobstrusively as possible,
-across the fields to the countryside railway station, where, provided
-beforehand with tickets for different stations on the line to Vigo,
-they boarded the train, once more in as nonchalant a manner as possible
-in groups of twos and threes, in different carriages. By the time the
-chauffeurs came to their senses and realized they had been fooled, the
-fugitives were well out of danger and, having got together again at
-the first big stopping-place, had put themselves _en règle_ as regards
-through tickets for their common destination, to which they continued
-to travel, however, separately, in order to minimize the risks of
-capture. The outwitted chauffeurs had another unpleasant surprise on
-rushing to their cars, with the object of dashing back to Pampeluna and
-recounting to the authorities their sorry tale of misadventure. Though
-they cranked their machines like madmen, the motors stubbornly refused
-to work. The reason soon became evident: the sparking-plugs had been
-removed by the far-seeing Koch.
-
-Meanwhile, on October 2nd, the interned Sergeant Dietrich Gratschuss
-had slipped away from Alcala. His escape, facilitated by the four
-uninterned officers from the _Goeben_, who provided him with a suit
-of civilian clothes, thrown over a wall into the prison-garden where
-he worked daily, was made doubly sure by certain judicious bribes to
-a sentry, who kept his back turned and eyes averted at the critical
-moment. Gratschuss slipped into his disguise in a tool-shed, and calmly
-walked out of the prison-yard--saluted by the unsuspecting man on
-guard--as though he had been a visitor. His friends were waiting round
-the corner for him with a hundred horsepower motor-car, in which, with
-the other uninterned Germans (the naval doctor, the law student, and
-the two sailors), he was whirled away at sixty miles an hour. The whole
-of the journey to Vigo was made in this powerful car, which the owners
-had been able to provide with an amply supply of petrol and food for a
-long and rapid flight, lasting well into the night.
-
-The whole of the machinery of the Vice-Consul of Vigo was now in
-motion. All the fugitives reached that port in safety and scattered
-themselves over hotels and lodging-houses.
-
-A hue and cry was, of course, set up from Pampeluna and Alcala de
-Henares; but the Spanish police went off on various wrong tracks before
-they thought of ordering a watch to be set at all the ports. Even
-when this tardy step was taken, no one ever suspected--so well had the
-Vice-Consul and his accomplices laid their plans--that Vigo was the
-port from which the escape was to be effected.
-
-
-VI--MIDNIGHT--THE FUGITIVES BOARD THE SHIP
-
-On October 6th the _Virgen del Socorro_, to allay any suspicion, made a
-voyage to sea, and, on returning, moored alongside the _Wehrt_. Then,
-one pitch-black night, the fugitives left their hiding-places. One by
-one they slipped out into the darkness and, following the narrowest
-and most deserted streets leading to the harbor, reached the quays
-unobserved. At such an hour of the night--it was getting on for eleven
-o'clock--they could be fairly certain of meeting no one, save, perhaps,
-a drunken sailor or two. These revellers took no more notice of Koch
-and his companions than they did of their own dim shadows. One by one,
-under cover of the darkness, the fugitives disappeared down the same
-iron ladder the Vice-Consul had used so often, into José's boat.
-
-By midnight all the fugitives were on board the _Wehrt_, from whose
-well-replenished store-rooms they immediately began transhipping the
-provisions to the _Virgen del Socorro_. All through the night and until
-2 A.M. this work continued. The _Virgen del Socorro_ was then
-towed out a little farther into the bay, and on the first signs of
-daylight appearing her bow was turned north-east. Soon afterwards a
-fresh early morning wind sprang up from the land, her sails filled, and
-she set off on her long voyage.
-
-What happened to the _Virgen del Socorro_ I will now relate, in
-accordance with details furnished by various members of her crew.
-
-The little vessel had no sooner left Vigo and got out into the open
-than the land wind suddenly increased in strength and drove her into
-exceedingly rough and treacherous water. Some of the crew were for
-turning back, despite the risks that step would have entailed, and the
-matter was discussed at some length by Lieutenant Koch and the other
-leaders. They came to the conclusion, however, that they were "between
-the devil and the deep sea," and must keep on. It seems doubtful,
-indeed, whether, had they decided to make an attempt to get back to
-Vigo, they could have accomplished it.
-
-That first day, and for many days afterwards, the _Virgen del Socorro_
-became a veritable plaything of the waves, which soon began to rise
-mountain-high. The sufferings of the crowded fugitives in this terrible
-weather were intense. All were drenched to the skin, and for more than
-three days and nights they had to remain in this miserable condition.
-To these tortures were added the craving for sleep and adequate
-nourishment, for, amidst the continual buffeting of the waves and
-wind, they could neither sleep nor get anything cooked. Under these
-conditions, it was not surprising that the twenty occupants of the
-_Virgen del Socorro_ were finally reduced to the state of not caring
-what happened. One of the two sailors on board, on whose shoulders
-devolved much of the work of navigation, said that, "old seaman though
-he was, he had never before experienced such weather." He felt at times
-that "all his strength and hope were sapped," and hourly, during those
-terrible first six days, when the little schooner was tossed about like
-a cork, "expected death would relieve him of his tortures."
-
-The storm then calmed down a little and gave the fugitives a respite.
-They were able to dry their drenched clothes and attend to the needs of
-the inner man. At the same time they could pay more attention to the
-question of their course. On this score they were soon to receive a
-shock, for there hove in sight a vessel that was undoubtedly a British
-patrol. For a couple of hours there were many anxious searchings of
-heart on board the _Virgen del Socorro_. Would she, thanks to her
-insignificance and the Dutch flag flying from her mast, be taken for an
-inoffensive fishing smack, and be allowed to go unchallenged? That had
-been part of their plan all through.
-
-At one moment it looked as though the patrol was bearing down upon
-them at full speed; but when the dreaded vessel got no bigger, but
-instead gradually receded into the distance, the crew of the _Virgen
-del Socorro_ realized that for the time being they were safe.
-
-
-VII--FOILED BY A STORM--THE CAPTURE
-
-Safe from the clutches of their human enemies, perhaps, but by no means
-safe from the angry sea. Had some of the crew been able to foresee what
-was in store for them, they would perhaps have welcomed the arrival of
-that British patrol with outspread arms and expressions of joy. Once
-more they were caught up in the embrace of a furious storm, and driven
-helplessly westward, expecting every moment to be their last.
-
-On October 24th another brief calm set in, enabling the navigator to
-ascertain his position. The little vessel was found to be some distance
-west of Bantry, on the south coast of Ireland. Here the storm again
-increased in violence, and once more the ill-fated _Virgen del Socorro_
-seemed likely to founder. A consultation was held by Koch and the
-other leaders. They came to the conclusion that it would be madness
-to attempt to continue with the original plan. In such seas as were
-running, they would run the risk of being shipwrecked a hundred times
-before they got halfway round the British Isles. The only thing to
-be done, if they were to prevent the _Virgen del Socorro_ from being
-smashed to matchwood on the British coast, was to keep as much as
-possible in the open sea and steer for the English channel, in hope of
-making the Belgian or Dutch coast unobserved.
-
-Six more terrible days followed. By this time more than half the crew
-of the _Virgen del Socorro_ were in a parlous condition. Their store of
-provisions had shrunk to such an extent that everybody had to be placed
-on rations, and the fresh water had dwindled so alarmingly that it was
-reserved for those who were actually on the point of collapse. Several
-of the crew, through the cold and constant seasickness, were utterly
-helpless.
-
-It was about this time that the coast of Cornwall came into view, and
-on November 4th the crew found themselves in sight of Lundy Island,
-at the entrance of the Bristol Channel. From there, proceeding with a
-slowness which must often have driven them to the verge of despair,
-they circled the Scilly Islands, and it took them two more dreadful
-days before they had rounded the Lizard.
-
-The Odyssey of the _Virgen del Socorro_ had now stretched over no less
-a period than a month. Three of the crew had by now become delirious;
-all were reduced to half their ordinary weight, and with the exception
-of the hardened seamen were on the point of collapse. Although they had
-experienced several alarms, they had so far succeeded--no doubt owing
-to the awful weather--in avoiding the vigilant eyes of the British
-patrols. But now they no longer cared one way or the other; all the
-fight had been knocked out of them by their sufferings.
-
-On November 8th the little vessel approached the Goodwins. Shortly
-after dawn a British destroyer was sighted and reported by the man
-at the helm. Hardly a man on board, unless it was Lieutenant Koch,
-took the trouble to raise his glassy eyes when he heard the danger
-announced. Nor did they manifest any concern when it further became
-evident that there was no avoiding the vigilant war vessel. Nothing
-expressed so eloquently the fact that they regarded themselves
-as beaten as their attitude of utter indifference when they were
-challenged by the British destroyer. One and all were evidently
-heartily glad to confess their nationality, the circumstances in which
-they came to be there, and the extraordinary dangers through which they
-had passed.
-
-The _Virgen del Socorro_ was taken into Ramsgate, says _El Liberal_,
-the Madrid newspaper which published the first brief account of the
-adventures related above, and there we may well leave Lieutenant Koch
-and his companions. They are henceforth in safe keeping, for, with all
-their ingenuity and daring, the only thing they succeeded in doing was
-to exchange one prison for another, and at the same time drag eight
-free German citizens with them into durance vile.
-
-
-
-
-THE POET'S DEATH IN BATTLE--HOW ALLEN SEEGER DIED
-
-_A Young American in the Foreign Legion_
-
-_Told by Bif Bear, a Young Egyptian in the Foreign Legion_
-
- The artists of Europe--the painters, poets, singers--the æsthetes
- of France and Italy, of Britain and Russian, and of Germany, the
- Hungarian musicians--all answered the "call of war" and threw
- their souls into the "rendezvous with death." Thousands of them
- died on the battlefields. Among them is the young English poet,
- Rupert Brooke, and the American poet, Allan Seeger, who "loved
- France and gave his life to her." This young American enlisted
- early in the war in the Foreign Legion. He was fighting in the
- battles in Champagne in July, 1916, when he fell. A young Egyptian,
- who was with the poet in the trenches, tells of his end. After
- the battle, he wrote this letter to Mrs. Caroline L. Weeks, of
- Boston, who has acted in the rôle of "marraine" (godmother) to many
- American volunteers. The following is a translation from the French
- forwarded from Paris.
-
-
-I--STORY OF THE AMERICAN POET
-
-It was in the Thiescourt Woods, I remember, that I saw Alan on his
-return from convalescent leave. My section was in first line trenches
-and his, in reserve, in the second line. I was on soup fatigue and was
-going to the Chauffour Quarry when I saw him in front of me, walking
-along alone. Throwing down the marmites (tin receptacles) with which
-I was loaded, I rushed to shake him by the hand. He had, it seemed to
-me, grown slightly thinner, his pale face seemed slightly paler, and
-his eyes, his fine eyes with their far-away look, ever lost in distant
-contemplation, were still as dreamy as ever.
-
-He told me how sorry he was not to be still with me as he had been
-transferred to the first section and I belonged to the third. But we
-saw each other every day. He would recount the joys of his two months'
-convalescent leave, and I shall never forget how one phrase was often
-on his lips, "Life is only beautiful if divided between war and love.
-They are the only two things truly great, fine and perfect, everything
-else is but petty and mean. I have known love for the last few weeks
-in all its beauty and now I want to make war, ... but fine war, a war
-of bayonet charges, the desperate pursuit of an enemy in flight, the
-entry as conqueror, with trumpets sounding, into a town that we have
-delivered! Those are the delights of war! Where in civil life can be
-found any emotion so fine and strong as those?"
-
-And we would exalt our spirits with hopes of making an assault with the
-bayonet, hopes that were not doomed to disappointment, for a few weeks
-later we were to attack.
-
-
-II--AN ODE TO AMERICAN PATRIOTISM
-
-One day while we were in reserve at the Martin Quarries Alan came to
-look for me. He was full of joy and showed me a telegram that he had
-received from Paris, asking him to compose a poem which he himself
-was to read in public at a Franco-American manifestation, for which
-he was to receive forty-eight hours' leave. Alan was overjoyed at
-the opportunity of obtaining leave, but was too retiring to think of
-reading his poem himself; he would try, he told me, to have it read by
-some one else.
-
-The eve of the ceremony arrived--I cannot recall the date--but no
-leave came. We were in the trenches and chance had placed me near
-Seeger in "petit poste" (the small outlook post, some yards in advance
-of the first line trench). He confessed that he had lost all hope of
-going, and I tried to find all sorts of arguments to encourage him,
-that his leave might come at dawn, and that by taking the train at
-Ressons at 7 A.M. he could still reach Paris by noon and would
-have plenty of time, as the ceremony was at 2.
-
-The morning came, and instead of bringing the much desired permission
-to leave it brought a terrible downpour of rain, and the day passed
-sadly. He found consolation in the thought that July 4 would soon
-arrive, when the Americans with the Foreign Legion might hope for
-forty-eight hours' leave, as last year. Alas! He little thought that on
-that date....
-
-[The ceremony referred to was held on May 30, in connection with
-Decoration Day celebrations. Wreaths to the Americans killed for France
-were placed around the statue of Washington and Lafayette, in the Place
-des Etats-Unis, Paris. By an unfortunate mistake the forty-eight hours'
-leave granted for the event was made for June 30 instead of May 30. The
-ode which Alan Seeger composed for the occasion was printed in _The
-Sun_ a few days after the author had fallen in battle.]
-
-On June 21 we left the sector of the Thiescourt Woods for an unknown
-destination, which proved to be the Somme. We took the train at Estrees
-St. Denis and on June 22 about 10 A.M. reached Boves. Under a
-blazing sun, in heat that seemed to have escaped from the furnace of
-hell, we started for Bayonviller. We had undergone no such march since
-the war began.
-
-Weighed down by their sacks, prostrated by the heat, men fell by
-hundreds along the road. Hardly twenty of the 200 forming the company
-arrived without having left the column. Seeger was one of these few.
-He told me afterward of the terrible effort he had had to make not to
-give up. At every halt he drank a drop of "tafia" (rum and coffee) to
-"give himself heart," and when he reached the end of the march he was
-worn out, but proud--he had not left the ranks.
-
-We passed the eight days of repose at Bayonviller, almost always
-together, seeking the greatest possible enjoyment in our life at
-the moment and making dreams for the future after the war. Alan
-confided to me that "after the war" caused him fear--that he could
-not tell what destiny reserved for him, but that if the fates smiled
-on him it was toward the Orient that he would make. He loved the
-Orient--Constantinople, Cairo, Damascus, Beirut had a powerful
-fascination for him; their names would plunge him into profound reverie.
-
-"It is in the mysterious frame of the Orient," he used to say, "in its
-dazzling light, in its blue, blue nights, among the perfumes of incense
-and hashish, that I would live, love and die."
-
-And then the talk would turn again on the war and he would say: "My
-only wish now is to make a bayonet charge. After that I shall see.
-Death may surprise me, but it shall not frighten me. It is my destiny.
-'Mektoub' (it is written)." He was a real fatalist and drew courage and
-resignation from his fatalism.
-
-During the night of June 30-July 1 (1916) we left Bayonviller to move
-nearer the firing line. We went to Proyart as reserves.
-
-At 8 o'clock on the morning of July 1 there was roll call for the day's
-orders and we were told that the general offensive would begin at 9
-without us, as we were in reserve, and that we would be notified of the
-day and hour that we were to go into action.
-
-When this report was finished we were ordered to shell fatigue,
-unloading 8 inch shells from automobile trucks which brought them up to
-our position.
-
-All was hustle and bustle. The Colonial regiments had carried the first
-German lines and thousands and thousands of prisoners kept arriving and
-leaving. Ambulances filed along the roads continuously. As news began
-to arrive we left our work to seek more details, everything we could
-learn seemed to augur well.
-
-About 4 P.M. we left Proyart for Fontaine-les-Capy and in the
-first line. Alan was beaming with joy and full of impatience for the
-order to join in the action. Everywhere delirious joy reigned at having
-driven the enemy back without loss for us. We believed that no further
-resistance would be met and that our shock attack would finish the
-Germans. After passing the night at Fontaine-les-Capy we moved in the
-morning toward what had been the German first lines. I passed almost
-all the day with Alan. He was perfectly happy.
-
-"My dream is coming true," he said to me, "and perhaps this evening or
-to-morrow we shall attack. I am more than satisfied, but it's too bad
-about our July 4 leave. I cannot hope to see Paris again now before the
-6th or 7th, but if this leave is not granted me 'Mektoub! Mektoub'!" he
-finished with a smile.
-
-The field of battle was relatively calm, a few shells fell, fired by
-the enemy in retreat, and our troops were advancing on all sides. The
-Colonials had taken Assevillers and the next day we were to take their
-place in first line.
-
-On July 3 (1916) about noon we moved toward Assevillers to relieve the
-Colonials at nightfall. Alan and I visited Assevillers, picking up
-souvenirs, postcards, letters, soldiers' notebooks and chattering all
-the time, when suddenly a voice called out, "The company will fall in
-to go to the first line."
-
-
-III--LAST PARTINGS OF COMRADES
-
-Before leaving one another we made each other the same promise as we
-had made before the Champagne battle (September 25, 1915), that if
-one of us fell so severely wounded that there was no hope of escape
-the other would finish him off with a bullet in the heart rather than
-let him await death in lingering torture. He showed me his revolver,
-saying, "I have more luck than you. If I can still use one arm I shall
-have no need of any one," and then we rejoined our different sections.
-
-About 4 o'clock the order came to get ready for the attack. None could
-help thinking of what the next few hours would bring. One minute's
-anguish and then, once in the ranks, faces become calm and serene, a
-kind of gravity falling upon them, while on each could be read the
-determination and expectation of victory.
-
-Two battalions were to attack Belloy-en-Santerre, our company being
-the reserve of battalion. The companies forming the first wave were
-deployed on the plain. Bayonets glittered in the air above the corn,
-already quite tall. Scarcely had the movement begun when the enemy
-perceived them and started a barrier fire (artillery fire to bar any
-advance), the quick firers started their rapid, regular crackerlike
-rat-tat. Bullets whizzed and shells exploded almost as they left the
-gun, making a din infernal. And the wave went forward, always forward,
-leaving behind the wounded and the dead.
-
-The losses were heavy and the enemy made a desperate resistance. The
-company of reserve was ordered to advance with the second wave of
-assault. "Forward!" cried the Captain, and the company deployed "in
-files of squadron," advancing slowly but surely under the enemy's
-intense and murderous fire.
-
-The first section (Alan's section) formed the right and vanguard of
-the company, and mine formed the left wing. After the first bound
-forward, we lay flat on the ground, and I saw the first section
-advancing beyond us and making toward the extreme right of the village
-of Belloy-en-Santerre. I caught sight of Seeger and called to him,
-making a sign with my hand.
-
-He answered with a smile. How pale he was! His tall silhouette stood
-out on the green of the cornfield. He was the tallest man in his
-section. His head erect and pride in his eyes, I saw him running
-forward, with bayonet fixed. Soon he disappeared and that was the last
-time I saw my friend.
-
-"Forward!" And we made a second bound, right to the wave of assault,
-which we left behind a little, and down we threw ourselves again.
-The fusillade became more and more intense, reaching a paroxysm. The
-mitrailleuses mow men down and the cannons thunder in desperation.
-Bodies are crushed and torn to fragments by the shells, and the wounded
-groan as they await death, for all hope of escaping alive from such a
-hell has fled.
-
-The air is saturated with the smell of powder and blood, everywhere
-the din is deafening; men are torn with impatience at having to remain
-without moving under such a fire. We struggle even for breath and
-cries resound from every side. Suddenly a word of command, an order of
-deliverance, passes from mouth to mouth. "Forward! With bayonets!"--the
-command that Seeger had awaited so long.
-
-
-IV--THE POET'S DEATH ON THE BATTLEFIELD
-
-In an irresistible, sublime dash we hurl ourselves to the assault,
-offering our bodies as a target. It was at this moment that Alan Seeger
-fell heavily wounded in the stomach. His comrades saw him fall and
-crawl into the shelter of a shell hole. Since that minute nobody saw
-him alive.
-
-I will spare you an account of the rest of the battle. As soon as the
-enemy was driven back and Belloy-en-Santerre won I searched for news of
-Seeger. I was told of his wound and was glad of it, for I thought he
-had been carried away and henceforth would be far from the dangers of
-bullets and shells.
-
-Thus ended this Fourth of July that Seeger had hoped to celebrate in
-Paris. On the next day we were relieved from the first lines and went
-into reserve lines. A fatigue party was left to identify the dead.
-
-Seeger was found dead. His body was naked, his shirt and tunic being
-beside him and his rifle planted in the ground with the butt in the
-air. He had tied a handkerchief to the butt to attract the attention of
-the stretcher bearers. He was lying on his side with his legs bent.
-
-It was at night by the light of a pocket electric lamp that he was
-hastily recognized. Stretcher bearers took the body and buried it
-next day in the one big grave made for the regiment, where lie a
-hundred bodies. This tomb is situated at the hill 76 to the south of
-Belloy-en-Santerre.
-
-As I think of the circumstances of his death I am convinced that after
-undressing to bandage himself he must have risen and been struck by a
-second bullet. I asked permission on the night of July 6 (1916) when I
-heard of his being wounded, to go and see him, but I was refused.
-
-
-
-
-THE GUARDIAN OF THE LINE--HERO TALE OF LITHUANIA
-
-_Told by Frederic Lees_
-
- One of the most remarkable facts connected with the war on the
- Russian front is the large number of women who have distinguished
- themselves by conspicuous bravery, sometimes in the actual
- fighting-line, but more often in a civilian capacity. This story
- deals with the ordeal undergone by a humble railway-crossing
- keeper's wife in Lithuania, as told in the _Wide World Magazine_.
-
-
-I--"THE LONELIEST WOMAN IN THE WORLD"
-
-One morning in April, 1915, Stephania Ychas, the wife of the keeper of
-a railway-crossing to the north of the Lithuanian town of Shavli, felt
-the saddest and loneliest woman in the world. Do what she could, she
-found it impossible to rid herself of the feeling that a catastrophe
-was imminent--that the terrible war into which her country had been
-plunged meant the end of all things. Poor Lithuania! Once so fair a
-place, now so desolate a wilderness!
-
-Stephania's duties, in these troubled times, kept her continually on
-the _qui vive_. At all hours of the day--and latterly during many of
-the night--she had to be in and out of her little house, in order to
-see that the rails were clear, or to note the numbers of the troop
-trains as they swept past towards the north. Backwards and forwards,
-from her door to the telephone, fixed against the wall on the
-right-hand side of a little window through which she could overlook a
-big sweep of the line in the direction of Shavli, she went, welcoming
-the never-ending succession of trainloads of soldiers, wounded, or mere
-war material passing on to the new line of defence, and reporting their
-progress to the railway and military authorities.
-
-Day after day, night after night, the great retreat of the Russian
-forces continued, until, single-handed as she was, Stephania Ychas was
-almost dropping with fatigue. A hundred times she told herself that
-human flesh and blood could never stand such a strain. It was not the
-fatigue alone which was crushing her. Added to her physical tortures
-were mental ones, the feeling of being alone, so horribly alone, and
-the knowledge that the enemy, as announced by the retreat and the
-nerve-racking booming of the guns, was rapidly advancing on Shavli,
-and that until Russia had had time to recover, the hated Teutons would
-inevitably overrun Lithuania as far as Vilna. At night her brain
-was filled with pictures of burning farms, ravaged orchards, and
-indescribable scenes of brutality such as she knew the German soldiers
-had been guilty of in Belgium and Poland.
-
-A dozen times a day, dizzy and sick at heart, she had been on the
-point of staggering to the telephone to inform the commander of a
-neighbouring station that she could continue no longer. But a sense of
-duty had held her back. When it came to a point of renunciation, her
-stout Lithuanian heart said "Nay," and she recalled the parting from
-her husband and his final adjurations.
-
-Buried in thought, while waiting for a train which has just been
-signalled from Shavli, she recalled the morning when Michael Ychas,
-suddenly called to the Colours, had left her. It seemed like an
-eternity since those days of the mobilization.
-
-
-II--"GOOD-BYE, STEPHANIA--GUARD THE LINE WELL!"
-
-"Good-bye, Stephania," he had said. "Be of good cheer whilst I am
-away, and guard the line well. It is sad to leave you here all alone.
-Sad to be obliged to leave one's native country and abandon it to
-unknown dangers. How much better I should have liked to have defended
-Lithuania, I, a Lithuanian bred and born, than to have been drafted
-into a regiment bound for the Caucasus. As if the Government could not
-trust us in our own country! However, Stephania, you are left, and you
-are doing a man's duty. It makes me happy, in the midst of my misery,
-to think that you are there to look after the home and the crossing and
-the rails. Guard them well, Stephania, and rest assured that, in my
-absence, I shall constantly pray to the Virgin to watch over you."
-
-Her reflections were interrupted by a shriek from the locomotive of
-the expected train, which was made up partly of compartments packed
-with soldiers, partly of wagons filled with the most heterogeneous
-collection of things she had ever seen in her life--pieces of machinery
-piled one on the top of the other, heaps of metal articles of every
-imaginable description, and every scrap of copper or lead, apparently,
-which Shavli contained. A waving of hands from the soldiers, a friendly
-yell from a hundred throats, and the train had sped on its way.
-
-Stephania Ychas had no time now to waste over daydreaming. Hurrying
-into her cottage, she went straight to the telephone and rang up the
-commander of the station farther up the line. After ringing in vain for
-fully a minute, she got the connection and made her report.
-
-"Train number three hundred and forty-six passed North Shavli crossing
-a minute ago," she said. "A mixed train, men and materials. Any news?"
-
-"Shavli reports that things are getting warm," replied a voice. "I
-should not be surprised to hear that we have to leave before the day's
-out. You'd better 'phone to headquarters."
-
-She lost not a moment in carrying out the suggestion.
-
-"Halloa, halloa! Is that Shavli?"
-
-"Yes," came a quick answer. "You're the North Shavli crossing-keeper,
-aren't you? Good! Well, we were just about to call you up. Matters are
-coming to a climax here. There are only two more trains to go through
-now. One with men will be with you in a couple of minutes at the
-latest; the other, with goods, should follow ten minutes afterwards. We
-are telling the driver to pick you up."
-
-At this point the speaker was called away from the telephone, and an
-indistinct buzz as of a whole office in conversation, mingled with the
-trampling of feet and the slamming of doors followed. But finally the
-speaker returned.
-
-"Halloa, halloa! Are you still there, North Shavli? Telephone forward
-all I have said, and prepare them for the worst."
-
-Stephania Ychas, now tingling with excitement, did as she was bid. Once
-more she stood on duty to see the reported train pass, and again she
-went to the telephone to send her report forward. Having finished, she
-was about to hang up the receiver when, on looking through the window
-on her left, her eyes caught sight of something unusual far down the
-line, almost at the point where the metals curved out of view. To run
-and fetch a pair of glasses which, ever since the beginning of the
-war, she had kept hanging in their leather case by the side of the
-fireplace, to bring them to bear on the point in question, and at the
-same time to ring up Shavli, was the work of a minute. What she saw,
-though her calm voice in no way revealed her inner emotion, made the
-blood run cold through her veins.
-
-"Halloa, halloa! Are you there, Shavli?"
-
-A reply came in the affirmative.
-
-"For Heaven's sake remain at the 'phone. There's foul work going on
-near the great curve. You must give orders at once to keep back the
-train."
-
-"One moment, and I will return," replied the railway official.
-
-
-III--A WOMAN'S MESSAGE: "THEY ARE DYNAMITING THE RAILROAD!"
-
-A pause, which seemed to the woman with the glasses fixed to her eyes
-an eternity, followed.
-
-"You were just in time," continued the voice to her infinite relief.
-"Courage! Fear not. Orders have been given to pick you up, with the
-others along the line, when we evacuate the town by car. But tell us
-what is happening."
-
-"I can see a number of men tampering with the metals," telephoned
-Stephania Ychas. "They have dismounted from their horses. One of them,
-an officer, is giving orders. Yes, I can see now. They are Uhlans,
-and are going to dynamite the line. There are at least twenty of
-them, evidently a portion of an advance guard that has made a turning
-movement round Shavli by way of the woods. Halloa, halloa! In the name
-of Our Lady of Vilna, do not leave the instrument. It is a blessing
-they did not begin by cutting the wire. Now they are scattering to
-await the explosion. There!"--as the speaker beheld the explosion,
-followed by a cloud of smoke and dust, which rose high in the air--"it
-is done. Holy Virgin! They are making off now. No, the officer is
-pointing here. They are coming towards me. Telephone to the nearest
-military station to send me help immediately. And for the love of the
-saints, come back to the instrument!"
-
-Stephania Ychas left the receiver dangling by its cords, and made her
-little home ready to withstand a siege. She locked and doubly bolted
-the door, and with the object of giving the Uhlans the idea that the
-place was uninhabited prepared to block up the windows with the boards
-which, as in most Lithuanian country cottages, served as shutters,
-fastened from the inside.
-
-"Perhaps," she thought, "if they see the house shuttered, they will
-conclude it is uninhabited and will ride away."
-
-Unfortunately, the Uhlans rode quickly, and Stephania had more than
-she could do with just one shutter, that which protected the little
-window on the left of the telephone, and which, when up, plunged the
-room into semi-darkness. Whilst she was fixing this barrier, the
-Uhlans surrounded the house and the officer momentarily caught sight
-of her. Simultaneously there came a violent knocking at the door with
-the butt-end of a rifle, a command to open, and the sharp crack of a
-revolver. A bullet crashed through one of the panes, traversed the
-centre of the shutter-board, and buried itself in the opposite wall.
-
-The brave woman was now back at the telephone, but not before she had
-managed to make the entrance to her home doubly sure by dragging a
-heavy dresser against it.
-
-"Halloa, Shavli! You have sent for help? Thank you. They have
-surrounded the house, and are trying to force an entrance. They have
-discovered that I am here. But they will have a difficulty in forcing
-open the door, unless----"
-
-She paused and listened. There was a long and ominous silence, which
-made her think at first that the enemy must have decided it was not
-worth while to waste further time over a woman. But the hope was
-short-lived. She heard a sharp command in German, the sound of muffled
-voices, a burst of laughter, and the clatter of horses' hoofs around
-the house. What was happening? Were they really riding off?
-
-Again her hopes were shattered. The scampering backwards and forwards
-continued, one of the horses neighed, and she imagined she could almost
-hear the Uhlans' heavy breathing, sounds which brought back to her the
-danger which she had hesitated to frame in words. Very soon her fears
-were confirmed. A vision flashed to her brain and made her sick with
-fear. A faint cracking sound broke upon her ears from several points
-simultaneously, spreading until it seemed to envelope her on all sides,
-and especially over her head. By slow degrees the crackling grew to a
-roar, and then she fully realized what the barbarians had done.
-
-
-IV--"HELP! HELP!"--A VOICE FROM THE BURNING THATCH
-
-"Help, help!" called Stephania into the telephone. "They have fired
-the thatch. For Heaven's sake, send me help. But a few minutes and the
-rafters, I fear, will catch fire. Are you still there, Shavli? Oh,
-speak--speak!"
-
-An exclamation, mingled sorrow and anger, came from the telephonist at
-Shavli.
-
-"Oh, the ruffians, the abominable assassins!" he cried. "I beseech you
-to have courage. Help is surely on the way."
-
-"I will try to be brave and do my duty to the end, as Michael told me,"
-replied Stephania, as though to herself. "But unless they come soon,
-it will be too late. The thatch has burnt like tinder. I can hear the
-flames roaring like a furnace underneath the rafters. There! One of
-them has given way and fallen on to the joists of my room. Already the
-heat is suffocating, the smoke almost unbearable. Holy Virgin! What a
-death."
-
-"Alas, what more can we do than beg you to bear up?" returned the voice
-at Shavli, in an agonized tone. "We have just been informed that a
-party of Cossacks left twenty minutes ago to rescue you. Once more,
-courage! And may Our Lady of Vilna indeed protect you."
-
-When Stephania Ychas next spoke through the telephone the roof fell in
-with a crash and pierced a hole, through which the burning embers fell,
-in the ceiling of her room. At the same time communication with Shavli
-was suddenly interrupted, either through the Uhlans having discovered
-and cut the wire, or, as is more probable, owing to the fire having
-fused the terminals. She could not, however, have sustained her appeals
-for help much longer. Indeed, it was not many minutes afterwards that,
-stupefied and blinded by the smoke, as she groped her way to the door
-in an instinctive movement towards the open air, she sank to the floor
-unconscious.
-
-It is a characteristic of the Cossacks, many times admitted even
-by German military critics, and those who have been describing the
-operations in Lithuania for the enemy Press, that they rarely if ever
-waste a shot. Unlike the French cavalry, they do not fire from a
-distance, but fearlessly swoop down upon their adversaries and seek to
-bring them down, one by one, at a range of but a few yards. And that
-was the fate of the Uhlans, who, hungering to feast their eyes and ears
-on the suffering of a defenceless woman, lingered a little too long
-around the burning cottage of Stephania Ychas. Not one escaped.
-
-Stephania Ychas did not lose her life after all. The brave Cossacks
-broke in the already half-consumed window and dragged her forth. She
-was badly burnt, but lived to tell this tale to a nurse in a Russian
-hospital, whither the railway officials of Shavli transported her,
-almost immediately after her rescue, in one of their motor-cars.
-
-
-
-
-WITH A FLEET SURGEON ON A BRITISH WARSHIP DURING A BATTLE
-
-_Under Fire on His Majesty's Ship, the "Fearless"_
-
-_Told by Fleet Surgeon Walter K. Hopkins, of the Royal Navy_
-
-
-I--ON A HOSPITAL SHIP IN BATTLE
-
-On August 27 (1914) we were hoping to meet the enemy early on the
-following morning.
-
-On August 28, at 3:45 A.M., "Action" was sounded off. Two
-cruisers (supposed enemy's ships) having been suddenly observed,
-had caused us to take up "stations" somewhat earlier than had been
-anticipated. It was quickly discovered, however, that the cruisers were
-our own. Shortly after, therefore, breakfast was piped to each watch
-in turn, and at about 7 A.M. the enemy's ships were actually
-sighted. From this time on to close upon 2 P.M., successive
-actions were fought between various opposing forces of the two fleets.
-
-The day was fine and calm, while the sun gleamed through a very hazy
-atmosphere, in which patches of fog shortened up the visual distance
-from time to time.
-
-I remained on the upper deck during the earlier part of the affair, and
-found it a most interesting and inspiring sight to watch our destroyers
-and the _Arethusa_ and her divisions dashing at full speed after the
-enemy, while soon the frequent spurts of flame from their sides, the
-following reports, and the columns of water and spray thrown up by the
-enemy's shells pitching short or over, began to create in most of us
-a suppressed excitement which we had not hitherto experienced, telling
-us that the "real thing" had begun, that an action was actually in
-progress.
-
-Shortly our interest was to multiply fourfold, when the order to fire
-our own guns was given. After a time shells began to drop ominously
-near. I retired to my station, a selected spot just below waterline in
-the after bread room, one of the few available places in a ship of this
-class where some of my party of first-aid men could be accommodated;
-the other half of the party in charge of the sick-berth steward being
-situated at a similar station forward. This period one found trying.
-For knowledge as to how matters were progressing we had to rely upon
-fragments of information shouted down the nearest hatchway from someone
-in communication with those on the upper deck.
-
-The rat-tat-tat! rat, tat, tat, tat! on our side from time to time,
-as we got into the thick of it, told us plainly of shells pitching
-short and bursting, whose fragments struck but did not penetrate the
-ship's skin; it was a weird sound, occasionally varied by a tremendous
-"woomp," which once at least made the paymaster, who was reclining
-near me on a flour sack, and myself, look hard at the side close by
-us, where we fully expected, for the moment, to see water coming in.
-As a matter of fact, this shell entered some forty feet away, bursting
-on entry into the Lieutenant Commander's cabin, while its solid nose
-finally fetched up in the wardroom, where later on it was christened
-"our honorary member." For this trophy I believe we have the _Mainz_ or
-_Koeln_ to thank. The wardroom steward found a similar piece of shell
-in his hammock that night. It had penetrated the ship's side and a
-bulkhead before finally choosing its highly suitable place of rest.
-
-The shells that missed us burst upon the surface of the ocean near by
-and, strange as it may seem to those not familiar with such things, the
-fragments flew from the water with sufficient force to dent the sides
-of the ship and to kill men when they dropped on the deck.
-
-When a shell actually struck our ship and penetrated the structure
-there was a reverberating crash that roared from end to end and nearly
-drove our eardrums in and made work of any delicacy impossible. It was
-bad enough with us, but what must have been happening on some of the
-German ships that were now sinking and were being pierced by great
-shells from three sides at once I leave to some one with imagination.
-
-
-II--"I WATCHED THE BURNING CRUISER SINK"
-
-It would surely require the pen of a Dante to depict all the horrors
-that were happening on the German cruiser _Mainz_, as she went down.
-We knew that she was burning. The men stayed at their guns until the
-flames actually began to burn up their legs. The wounded lay in heaps
-on the deck and the flames destroyed them without help. The blood ran
-on the decks so that the men who were still trying to work the light
-deck guns slipped in it and fell.
-
-Our shells passed through their hospital ward and killed the wounded
-and the surgeons as they were working over them. That any men could
-have passed through such an ordeal and retained their senses is a
-tribute to the wonderful effect of naval training and discipline.
-
-The _Fearless_ appears to have borne a somewhat charmed life--a large
-number of shells pitched just short and just over her--she was hit
-fair and square by seven, one of which played a lot of havoc with the
-middle deck forward and the mess gear there. Her sides showed some
-twenty-three holes of varying size, and yet her list of casualties was
-only eight wounded, none dangerously. She also had two narrow escapes
-from being torpedoed, one torpedo passing just forward from an unknown
-source, and another aft from a submarine.
-
-During comparative lulls I went onto the upper deck once or twice,
-to visit the forward station and to see that all was correct. For
-suppressed excitement and vivid interest I should say the seeker after
-sensation could scarcely ask for more than a modern naval action.
-
-The shells were falling all about us, and why we were not sunk I can
-never understand. The captain kept the ship zigzagging on her course
-to upset the enemy's aim. At one time we came within 2,000 yards of
-the Mainz, which had already been partly wrecked by the long-distance
-fire from our big battle cruisers, the _Lion_, _Invincible_, and _Queen
-Mary_. It was our duty to help finish her without sinking our big ships.
-
-She made two attempts to torpedo us. I watched one torpedo skimming
-through the water like a shark about ten yards from the bow, as it
-seemed to me. We just escaped it by a turn of the wheel in the nick of
-time. Then another skimmed by our stern, running over the spot we had
-left only a minute before.
-
-"She's a goner," I heard one of our men say. The German cruiser was
-a burning wreck, but she kept the two small guns, one at each end,
-firing away to the last. Then one of our destroyers rushed in to close
-quarters and gave her the finishing blow with a torpedo.
-
-
-III--THE WOUNDED ON THE BLOODY DECK
-
-It was not until the latter part of the affair that I was called upon
-to deal with any wounded, and then a rapid succession of cases were
-either carried or managed to walk to the main deck after, where,
-assisted by the first-aid party, I cleansed and dressed their wounds.
-Two or three returned to duty the same afternoon, the others being
-placed in the wardroom temporarily after dressings had been applied, a
-reliable first-aid man being placed in charge. In addition, one case
-was treated at the forward station, and later on in the day a man who
-had received a somewhat severe contusion and abrasion of the thigh from
-a spent fragment of shell reported himself. Seven of the eight cases
-were wounds due to fragments of shell and splinters of steel or wood
-from the ship. The exception was a scald of the forearm, sustained by
-a stoker while investigating a steam pipe burst by an exploding shell.
-
-While I was occupied with the cases mentioned above, we had taken
-the destroyer _Laertes_ in tow, she being temporarily disabled by
-gunfire; and the order coming to retire, we proceeded from the scene
-of action for some considerable distance, when I was ordered to go to
-the _Laertes_ to attend to some seriously wounded, and tranship them.
-The _Laertes_ was cast off, and lay some two cables away. Arriving on
-board I found the worst case was that of a young stoker in a serious
-condition from shock and loss of blood. He had sustained several shell
-wounds, one of which involved the left tibia and fibula, some two
-inches of the tibia being torn away from its middle third.
-
-Around this patient the deck was covered with blood, and so slippery
-that I had to send for cloths to be put down to enable me to keep a
-footing. The condition of the deck enabled one to form an idea of how
-decks were on the _Mainz_, where 200 men were killed. Near by were two
-others, somewhat less severely wounded, lying on the deck, while just
-behind me lay two figures covered with the Union Jack. The wounded
-had all received first aid, the wounds being neatly dressed, but
-considerable hemorrhage was going on. Returning with these cases to
-the _Fearless_ I found several other wounded had already been brought
-on board from other destroyers. The sick bay, which had been prepared
-to receive the most serious cases, was soon filled, and others were
-sitting or lying on the mess deck near by.
-
-Owing to the probable proximity of the enemy I had to bear in mind the
-necessity for all possible speed, which was awkward, as they required
-very careful handling. However, I hurried up as much as I was able.
-Sudden manoeuvring or the shock of shells hitting us might make our
-work impossible. Firstly, iodine was applied to the majority of wounds
-and their immediate area, and a fresh temporary dressing applied. Then
-ably assisted by the sick-berth steward and two first-aid men, I spent
-the next few hours in endeavoring to get these, for the most part, very
-dirty patients, as clean as possible. It should be added that, at this
-stage, morphia was administered by hypodermic injection to three or
-four cases, and again once or twice during the night. It was found to
-be very beneficial.
-
-Many of the men had lost an arm and a leg, and in some cases both arms
-and legs. Several poor fellows had their faces almost entirely blown
-away.
-
-I had prepared masks of lint for the faces, specially medicated, to
-relieve the terrible burns caused by the picric acid used in shells.
-
-A German seaman, a brawny young fellow, suffered much pain and
-considerable loss of blood from a wound in his left foot. Examination
-showed the presence of a piece of metal, embedded in the lower part of
-the instep, from underneath which steady oozing of blood was occurring.
-I put the patient under chloroform, and he was kept lightly under,
-most excellently, by the Paymaster, while I removed the fragment of
-shell and many pieces of loose bone. The removal proved more difficult
-than I had anticipated, owing to the numerous "talons" the piece of
-shell possessed. These pointed in all directions, and were embedded in
-the bones of the foot so firmly that it was rather like the extraction
-of a huge molar with a dozen or more distorted fangs. The fragment
-weighed some six ounces, and its removal gave the patient great relief.
-
-A German seaman had compound comminuated fracture of right radius,
-ulna, and humerus, due to a huge wound in the neighborhood of the
-elbow. Multiple wounds of face and body and a scalp wound. This man
-appeared to be suffering from severe shock, was at times wandering in
-his mind, but at others quite clear. The wound in the scalp was found
-later to penetrate the skull in the left frontal region. He died after
-several days in hospital.
-
-
-IV--"IT WAS VERY FINE SPORT"
-
-A sub-lieutenant I discovered sitting in the wardroom with his legs
-upon a chair. He had sustained a "lozenge-shaped" clean cut shell wound
-in the middle of right thigh, about 5 inches by 2 inches, and passing
-deeply through the anterior muscles. He was very cheery and was only
-anxious to get back to his work, which he did after two or three weeks.
-
-A captain-lieutenant of the sunken German destroyer V187 had been
-struck in the right side by a piece of shell, the force of the blow
-throwing him overboard just before his ship sank. He was taken out of
-the water about half an hour later. The wound was situated over the
-lower right rib, was oval in shape and about one and a half inches
-in diameter. He was passing blood and had a good deal of pain in the
-abdomen. It was suspected that a piece of shell had penetrated the
-abdomen, but X-rays showed nothing.
-
-He was a good type of officer. On asking him what he thought of the
-affair, he replied, "Ah, it was very fine sport."
-
-The courage and endurance of the patients were admirable. In only
-one case did I hear any "grousing," as our sailors call any kind of
-complaining, and this was in one of the less severely injured. A
-suggestion that many around him were in an infinitely worse plight than
-he, and were enduring their troubles cheerfully, made a difference, and
-after a little refreshment he was as good as the rest of them. Some
-of the Germans were at first rather sullen, but their confidence was
-soon gained when they found that I could speak to them in their own
-language, and that we were intent upon doing our best for them.
-
-I found beef tea, brandy, ship's cocoa made with milk, most useful and
-acceptable for those who could not take solid food. At first one or
-two of the Germans hesitated about drinking what was offered them, but
-they soon thawed and took their portion gratefully, and, in fact, their
-gratitude a little later for what had been done for them was remarkable.
-
-I was able to report to the captain on the bridge, at about 4
-A.M., that all cases had been dealt with, had been washed,
-dressed, fed and made as comfortable as circumstances would allow.
-
-On arrival in harbor about midday on August 29, the more serious cases
-were transferred to Shotley Sick Quarters, the others to the hospital
-ship _Liberty_. I accompanied the former cases, and soon after seeing
-them safely disposed of returned to the ship, had some food and turned
-in about 5:30 P.M., having been up some thirty-seven hours.
-Curiously enough, though tired, I could not sleep well owing to a bad
-cramp in both my calves, but I had passed a very interesting day and a
-half. (Told in the _New York American_.)
-
-
-
-
-AIRMEN IN THE DESERTS OF EGYPT
-
-_Adventures of the Royal Flying Corps in Sinai_
-
-_Told by F. W. Martindale_
-
- The land has its perils for the aviator, and so has the sea; but
- our "fliers" in Egypt have learnt to dread the treacherous desert
- more than anything else. Here are two little stories from the
- annals of the R. F. C.--one near tragedy, the other real tragedy,
- lightened only by the amazing self-sacrifice of a young officer and
- the dogged pluck of his mechanic, who posted up his diary while
- awaiting death. Recorded in the _Wide World Magazine_.
-
-
-I--FLYING OVER THE ANCIENT HOLY LANDS
-
-Whatever the professional distinction may be between the two branches
-of the aviation service, the broad difference in the public mind
-between the Royal Flying Corps and the Royal Naval Air Service is that
-the former fly over land and the latter over sea. And whatever the
-relative advantages, and the reverse, of these opposite conditions
-may be, a certain amount of sympathy inevitably goes out to the naval
-airman in the supposedly more difficult element from which he starts
-and on which he has to make his "landing" on return. The mystery and
-the menace of the sea, which has always made sailors a race apart,
-is so real and apprehensible a thing, even to the landsman, that
-instinctively the sea is felt to be a source of greater peril to the
-airman than the land.
-
-Be this as it may, it has fallen to the lot of the Royal Flying
-Corps in this war to face an "element"--if one may call it such--as
-mysterious as the ocean, and not a whit less menacing. This is the
-desert--a thing which casts a spell upon those who have to dare it as
-potent and as fearful as any with which the sea holds the mariner in
-thrall.
-
-Mutable to the eye as the face of the waters, sudden and fickle in mood
-as the sea itself, there lurks in the desert an even grimmer menace
-than that which gives the sailor his wary, vigilant eye. The cruelty of
-the sea is nothing to the cruelty of the desert. Ask the airman who has
-made trial of both, and he will tell you that better a hundred times
-the risk of falling into the clutches of the uncertain sea than the
-chance of finding himself at the mercy of the pitiless desert.
-
-Here is a case in point--a little excerpt from the doings of the Royal
-Flying Corps, which it would be hard to match even in the records of
-that adventurous service. Pilot and observer set off in an aeroplane
-upon a single-handed reconnaissance towards the enemy's lines in Sinai.
-A long flight was made over the desert, and the machine was a long way
-from its base when that terrible bugbear known as "engine-trouble"
-developed. All attempts to right it in the air proved abortive, and a
-forced descent was made. The aeroplane alighted on the desert waste,
-and the two occupants worked feverishly to adjust the faulty mechanism.
-Their dismay can be imagined when they found repair impossible, and
-realized that between themselves and the Canal lay a stretch of some
-twenty miles of desert, over which no means of progress was possible to
-them save their own legs.
-
-It says much for the loyalty to the duty of these two airmen that they
-carefully dismantled the gun which was mounted on the machine before
-setting fire to the latter, and that they actually set off on their
-long tramp across the burning desert carrying the gun between them.
-
-It soon became evident that any idea of saving the gun by taking it all
-the way with them was hopeless. The weight, not inconsiderable under
-any condition, was insupportable, and before long there was no course
-possible but to bury the weapon in the sand, obliterating as best they
-could all tell-tale traces which might reveal its hidden presence to a
-chance enemy patrol.
-
-
-II--OVER THE BURNING DESERT WITH A GUN
-
-Progress was easier when the cumbersome weapon had been disposed of.
-But it was not long before clothing had to be jettisoned also. The
-relatively thick and heavy garments of an aviator were intolerable
-under the savage rays of the sun, and one by one they had to be
-discarded. Even so, the going was terribly difficult and the journey
-most exacting. By means of a compass a direction due west was
-maintained, the one hope of the castaways being to keep on until some
-point on the Canal should be reached.
-
-The hours went slowly by as mile after mile was laboriously covered.
-The strength of both men was steadily declining, but it was not until
-something more than half the estimated distance from their goal had
-been accomplished that either gave way. Then one collapsed; he could
-go no farther, he declared. His companion, well aware how fatally
-seductive a "rest" would inevitably be, bade him keep going, but
-without effect. The weary man's legs gave way beneath him; he sank down
-on the sand, and declared that he _preferred_ to stay there rather
-than attempt to struggle on any longer. Advice, persuasion, cajolery,
-threats, and even force were of no avail, and nothing remained but for
-the second man to continue the journey, with waning hope, alone. To
-stay with his comrade meant that both must inevitably perish miserably;
-by pressing on there was, at all events, a faint chance, not only of
-reaching the Canal himself, but of summoning aid to return in time to
-rescue the other.
-
-For some miles the wretched survivor, now tortured by an awful thirst
-and so weakened that he seemed scarcely able to move his legs,
-staggered blindly on across the desert. He had consciousness enough
-to maintain his westerly direction, but as to how long he continued
-stumbling forward in this almost aimless fashion, or what distance he
-covered, he can hazard only the wildest guess. His progress became
-largely automatic. Force of will kept him moving, his reluctant limbs
-relapsing into semi-mechanical action.
-
-At the moment of his direst extremity, as it seemed, when from sheer
-lack of power his body threatened to collapse altogether, the hapless
-wanderer espied a horse before him in the desert!
-
-Now, if this were fiction, no writer, however cynical, would ever dare
-to introduce a horse at such a point of the narrative. The thing would
-be too absurd; the long arm of coincidence never reached so far as
-that! Nobody could be expected to believe it.
-
-Yet the fact is as stated. At the psychological moment, when
-every new step taken might have proved his last, the wanderer saw
-before him in the desert the miraculous apparition of a horse.
-It can be easily supposed that at first he did not believe his
-eyes. In his half-demented state he feared the creature must be an
-hallucination--some trick of mirage, or the mere figment of his
-disordered brain. Only when he came nearer, and could hear as well as
-see the animal move, did a full realization of his good fortune begin
-to dawn upon him.
-
-
-III--TALE OF MODERN ARABIAN NIGHTS
-
-A sail in unfrequented latitudes never seemed more truly a godsend to
-castaways at sea than this marvellous horse to the exhausted airman. It
-was but a stray animal belonging to some mounted unit which had drawn
-the peg of its head-rope and escaped from the horse-lines into the
-open desert, but to the incredulous eyes which suddenly perceived its
-presence it might well have been the famous magic steed of the Arabian
-Nights.
-
-To catch the animal was the immediate thing to be done, and anyone who
-has tried to catch a shy horse in a paddock can imagine the hideous
-anxiety on the part of an exhausted man in approaching an animal which
-has the illimitable desert to manoeuvre in, and has but to kick up its
-heels to vanish in a trice over the horizon. Fortunately, the creature
-evinced but little shyness, and suffered itself to be taken without
-difficulty. It is probable, indeed, that this desert encounter was not
-less welcome on the one side than on the other.
-
-One wonders how the would-be rider ever managed to get astride his
-lucky steed. His legs had little enough capacity for a spring left
-in them. But necessity and hope in combination provide a wonderful
-incentive and spur, and somehow or other he scrambled up. He himself
-has hazy recollections only of this stage of his adventures, and beyond
-the fact that he _did_ mount that horse, and manage to set it going in
-a westerly direction, his recollections are vague.
-
-The next phase of the story is contained in the narrative of the
-officer commanding a patrol vessel on the Suez Canal, who relates
-that while on duty his attention was directed to a strange figure
-riding on horseback along the eastern bank of the Canal. At first
-sight he supposed it to be some mounted Arab or other nomad of the
-desert, but on closer inspection the horse did not seem to be of
-native type, and the rider's garb appeared unusual. On nearer approach
-the strange apparition resolved itself into a white man, of wild and
-haggard demeanor, dressed in a torn shirt and very little else, who
-bestrode barebacked a troop-horse in distressed condition. Hailed by
-the patrol boat, the white horseman replied in English, and explained
-intelligibly, if a trifle incoherently, that he had come out of the
-desert, that his chum was lying some miles back in dire distress, if
-not already dead, and would somebody please hurry up and do something.
-
-The conclusion of the story can be told in a sentence. A relief party
-was sent at once into the desert, the second airman was picked up
-exhausted but still alive, and at the date when the present writer last
-heard of them both parties of this strange adventure of the desert were
-little, if any, the worse for their experiences. As to the gallant
-troop-horse which played the part of a kind of _equus ex machina_, no
-peg in all the lines is now more firmly and securely driven in than his!
-
-The story just related ends happily for all concerned; let me deal now
-with the reverse side of the shield!
-
-
-IV--SHOT HIMSELF IN SELF-SACRIFICE
-
-About the middle of June last year Second-Lieutenant Stewart Gordon
-Ridley, of the R.F.C., went out alone in his machine as escort to
-another pilot, who had with him a pilot named J. A. Garside. "Engine
-trouble" developed when Lieutenant Ridley had been flying for an hour
-and a half, and, as they could not put the matter right immediately on
-alighting, they decided to camp where they were for the night. Next
-morning, as Ridley's engine still proved obdurate, the second pilot
-decided to fly back alone to the base, and return on the following day
-to the assistance of the two men. This programme was duly carried out,
-but when he got back the pilot found that Ridley and Garside, with the
-machine, had disappeared.
-
-A search party was immediately organized to scour the desert, and
-on the Sunday tracks were discovered. It was not until the Tuesday,
-however, that the missing 'plane was discovered. Beside it lay the
-dead bodies of Lieutenant Ridley and Garside. A diary was found on
-the mechanic, and the brief entries therein tell the tragic story of
-those last hours better than pages of description. The diary reads as
-follows:--
-
- Friday.--Mr. Gardiner left for Meheriq, and said he would come and
- pick one of us up. After he went we tried to get the machine going,
- and succeeded in flying for about twenty-five minutes. Engine then
- gave out. We tinkered engine up again, succeeded in flying about
- five miles next day (Saturday), but engine ran short of petrol.
-
- Sunday.--After trying to get engine started, but could not
- manage it owing to weakness--water running short, only half
- a bottle--Mr. Ridley suggested walking up to the hills. Six
- P.M. (Sunday): Found it was farther than we thought; got
- there eventually; very done up. No luck. Walked back; hardly any
- water--about a spoonful. Mr. Ridley shot himself at ten-thirty on
- Sunday whilst my back was turned. No water all day; don't know how
- to go on; got one Verey light; dozed all day, feeling very weak;
- wish someone would come; cannot last much longer.
-
- Monday.--Thought of water in compass, got half bottle; seems to be
- some kind of spirit. Can last another day. Fired Lewis gun, about
- four rounds; shall fire my Verey light to-night; last hope without
- machine comes. Could last days if I had water.
-
-The captain of the Imperial Camel Corps, with which the aviators were
-co-operating, formed the opinion that Lieutenant Ridley shot himself in
-the hope of saving the mechanic, the water they had being insufficient
-to last the two of them till help arrived. The Commanding Officer of
-the R. F. C. states: "There is no doubt in my mind that he performed
-this act of self-sacrifice in the hope of saving the other man."
-
-The history of the R. F. C. is a short one, but it is already full of
-glorious deeds.
-
-
-
-
-HOW SWEENY, OF THE FOREIGN LEGION, GOT HIS "HOT DOGS"
-
-_Told by Private John Joseph Casey of the Foreign Legion_
-
-
-I--STORY OF AN AMERICAN "WEST-POINTER"
-
- Lieut. Charles Sweeny, of the French Foreign Legion, returned
- to New York to recover from a wound received during the French
- offensive in Champagne. Sweeny is an American, a graduate of West
- Point, and the son of a former president of the Federal Smelting
- and Refining Co., of Spokane, Wash. The following story, of a most
- unusual "Dutch treat," was told by Lieut. Sweeny to Private Casey,
- a New York artist, also fighting in the Foreign Legion, to the _New
- York World_.
-
-You have read of the cordial exchanges of tobacco and tidbits between
-the men of the North and the South, who were facing each other as
-deadly foes in the rifle pits during the Civil War. These exchanges
-(the amicable ones, of course) were quaint and peculiar enough between
-those avowed enemies, even though both were of the same blood and spoke
-the same tongue. But the one which now interests us took place during
-the present war, between Lieut. Charlie Sweeny of the French Foreign
-Legion, and the Germans in the adjacent trenches; by which exchange the
-Germans got nothing, and Sweeny got a feast of "hot dogs!"
-
-Sweeny, as you may infer from his name, is not a Frenchmen, even though
-he happens to be in the army service of France. I am also in the same
-service and my name is Casey. We are both Americans. Sweeny is a West
-Point graduate, and a native of Spokane, Wash. After his graduation
-from West Point he married a Belgian girl and settled down in Paris.
-His wife and two small children are living in that vicinity at the
-present time.
-
-When the war broke out Sweeny enlisted in the French Foreign Legion.
-He was promoted for gallantry in action; and last September, after
-leading us into the Boche lines during the Champagne offensive, he was
-decorated with the Legion of Honor. Lieut. Sweeny is the first American
-in fifty years who has held a commission in the French army.
-
-But how Sweeny won his "hot dogs" is a different story.
-
-One day when we were in the front trenches Sweeny handed me a
-cigarette. It looked like a Turkish cigarette and I duly remarked it.
-
-"No," said he, and he indicated a large tin box filled with the same
-sort, which he had with him, "these are a present from our friends, the
-enemy. They were given to me by the Germans."
-
-"Must have been sent over to you inside a 'Jack Johnson' shell," said
-I.
-
-"I can see you don't believe me," Sweeny replied, "but it's a fact.
-They came in a hamper, together with two bottles of real Munich beer,
-an assortment of Westphalian ham, cheese, honey, sandwiches of roast
-veal and white bread, a few slabs of K bread, some pipe tobacco, and
-some--what do you think?--hot dogs! As sure as you're born, Casey, and
-if you'll believe me, I went for those frankfurters first! Oh, how many
-nights I have sat out here and thought how good one of those hot dogs,
-with a big gob of mustard on it, would be! But I never thought I'd ever
-taste any in the trenches. Yet only just now I have demolished four of
-them."
-
-
-II--"LET SWEENY TELL IT"
-
-Here was the way of it, as Sweeny told it to me:
-
-"I started out about midnight with a patrol to have a look at a new
-German bayou between two fortlets beyond our lines. I strung my men out
-so as to give warning of any German patrol, and then led them past our
-sentries and the barbed wire. I was some distance ahead of my men, and
-had got well within the German lines without seeing or hearing anything
-of the Germans.
-
-"Now this was not the first time that I had ever penetrated that far
-into the German lines, but it was the first time on such a mission
-that I had not had to dodge a German patrol; and very often their
-bullets. These things ran in my head continually and made me think
-that I had fallen into a very neat trap which the Germans had laid for
-me. I expected to see them rise from anywhere any minute, and hear the
-banging of their guns and the whistling of their bullets (if I was
-lucky enough to hear them, that is), and I began to wish myself well
-out of my predicament and back again in the comparative safety of our
-trench.
-
-"This made me more cautious than ever, and presently I began to
-retreat. As I did so a round German helmet bobbed up out of a ravine
-not a dozen yards away. An instant later, at the other end of the
-ravine, another appeared. I squirmed away like a snake and got behind
-the only shelter in sight, a little scrubby tree, about three yards
-away.
-
-"As I lay there quaking, wondering why the Germans did not shoot--for
-they must have seen me--I happened to look up, and there, hanging to a
-branch of the tree, was a fat, clean-looking basket. I reached up, the
-limb on which it hung being only a few feet from the ground, and lifted
-the basket down.
-
-"Then in a flash the explanation of the puzzle was clear to me. The
-Germans had left that basket there and meant me to have it.
-
-"With the basket on my arm I got up, bowed low to the round hats, and
-walked back to our trench without ever being fired on.
-
-"Inside the basket was the assortment I have described to you. There
-was also a note something after this wise:
-
-"'We have been in front of you for over a year, and it is not against
-our comrades, the French, that we are fighting, but against our enemy,
-the English. Let us join forces against our common enemy. We are not
-starving, as you may well see from the little present we send you
-herewith.'
-
-"Here was something that set me thinking pretty hard. I had escaped
-death or capture by a miracle so far as I could see, and all in order
-that I might enjoy a hearty meal at the expense of the Germans.
-
-"I set the basket down in the trench, and fell to with a will; and I
-give you my word, Casey, of all the good things I have eaten, I never
-enjoyed anything more than I did that Dutch treat--especially the
-frankfurters.
-
-"They took me back to the States immediately--hot dogs, the brightness
-of the sea, the yawping of barkers, crowds passing, the noise of
-thousands of shuffling feet--not the sort of shuffling we hear now,
-Casey, when a bugle call or the heavy sound of guns seems the chief
-attraction. It was a great shame I couldn't save you one.
-
-"The meaning of all this was a puzzle to me until I found out that our
-boys had left a bundle of American and English newspapers in the spot
-where I had found the basket, with the paragraphs plainly marked in
-which it was said the Germans were starving. And the basket was the
-Germans' reply.
-
-"Now you know how I came to get my hot dogs."
-
-
-
-
-THE DOGS OF WAR ON THE BATTLEGROUNDS
-
-_The "Four-Footed Soldiers" of France_
-
- The "friend of man" has always served his master faithfully and
- well in various humble capacities, but the Great War has seen his
- sphere of usefulness enlarged to an almost incredible extent. Our
- Gallant French allies have mobilized thousands of dogs for war
- service, and as scouts, sentries, messengers, ambulance workers,
- and beasts of burden these wonderfully-trained animals have
- rendered most valuable assistance to the armies in the field. Here
- is a soldier's story in the _Wide World Magazine_.
-
-
-I--TALES OF THE DOGS
-
-My friend, who had just come home on leave from the trenches, placed
-on the table in front of me a suspicious-looking parcel which left no
-manner of doubt that, for its size, it was extremely heavy.
-
-"I'm going to leave this with you for a day or two, if you don't mind,"
-he said. "I can't carry it about with me."
-
-"What is it--bombs?" I asked, laughing, and my friend, without a smile,
-answered:--
-
-"Yes, two bombs--for my dog."
-
-Wondering what murderous intention had suddenly taken possession of
-the man, I looked my surprise, and then he explained. He was about to
-buy a dog to take back with him to the trenches, he told me, and to
-make sure that the animal was absolutely and thoroughly trained he had
-brought the bombs in order to test him. If, when the bombs exploded in
-the dog's presence, the latter stood the shock without fear or panic,
-he would know the animal was trained and would be useful to him. If,
-on the other hand, he manifested the symptoms of unrest which I, for
-instance, would show if a bomb exploded just behind my coat-tails, then
-the animal was not properly trained and would be of no use to a soldier
-in the trenches.
-
-The use of dogs in warfare is to-day a common matter. The number of
-dogs with the French army alone can be guessed when it is stated that
-one society, the Société Nationale du Chien Sanitaire, of 21, Rue de
-Choiseul, Paris, has trained over fifteen hundred war-dogs.
-
-The training of dogs for warfare showed from the first of the most
-satisfactory results, and numbers of regiments would now find their
-operations very difficult indeed if they were suddenly deprived of
-their sagacious four-footed companions.
-
-The Société du Chien Sanitaire, like most new movements, did not
-receive much official encouragement at the beginning of the campaign,
-but nevertheless, thanks to its efforts, under its energetic president,
-M. A. Lepel-Cointet, aided by private enterprise, suitable animals were
-soon forthcoming, at any rate for ambulance purposes, and many officers
-took "mobilized" dogs with them to act as scouts and watchers at night.
-
-Dogs particularly suitable to warlike purposes are to be found in great
-numbers in the Lower Pyrenees and other mountainous regions of France,
-and to-day there are societies in different parts of the country--not
-enough, it is true, but still they have made a good beginning--who are
-collecting and training the animals and sending them to the Front.
-Recently a contingent of one hundred dogs was sent to the army by the
-Department of the Indre, which is a hunting country where dogs are
-particularly well trained to explore and to act as guardians. People
-who have given or lent dogs to the army can, by keeping the number
-given to them on receipt of the animal, have news of their pets and
-their exploits, and some continue to keep in touch with their humble
-friends by sending them dainties from time to time.
-
-
-II--DOGS AS SENTINELS AT THE FRONT
-
-M. Mégnin, an authority on the use of dogs in warfare, says that German
-attacks by night on small outposts have almost completely failed since
-dogs have been employed to watch. The animals have a remarkably acute
-sense of hearing, and are able to detect the enemy at a great distance
-and prepare the men to receive him. Thousands of sentinels, especially
-in the Argonne and the Vosges, where it is difficult to see far ahead
-owing to the nature of the ground, have owed it to their dogs that they
-have not been surprised and killed or taken prisoners. In many cases
-they have even turned the tables on the enemy.
-
-Captain Tolet, who is in command of the kennels of the Tenth French
-Army, has narrated some of the brave deeds--the word is not too
-strong--of dogs under his care, especially during the fighting on
-the Somme. On August 28th a dog called Médor, although wounded by a
-shrapnel shell, ran a mile and a half to carry a message from a brigade
-to a colonel, was again wounded in the last two hundred yards, but
-dragged himself to the commander's post, where he died a quarter of an
-hour later. Another dog, Follette, in the same month, ran nearly two
-miles and was wounded, but nevertheless persisted in his mission, dying
-five days later. In a part of the Vosges a battalion of Chasseurs which
-utilized a particularly intelligent animal as a sentinel did not lose a
-single man, while a battalion which had preceded it, and which had no
-dog, lost seven sentries in three days.
-
-Another case of a dog's usefulness is recorded in the taking of a farm
-in the Bois Brûlé (Burnt Wood). Everyone thought Germans were hiding
-in the farm, and no patrol had ventured to approach it. At last a man
-went towards it at night with a dog on a leash twenty yards ahead of
-him. The animal showed no signs of uneasiness, and the farm was found
-to be empty. Telegraphists and others were thereupon able to instal
-themselves, and before morning the Germans' position was satisfactorily
-examined and an enemy redoubt smashed up.
-
-Some of these gallant four-footed soldiers have received decorations
-just like men--and an extra bone or two as well, one hopes. Why not?
-The intelligence shown by these animals sometimes approaches very near
-to that of human beings, and one feels sure they are gratified at the
-attention drawn to their doings. Recently there was a special public
-parade at the Trocadéro in Paris, when the Société Protectrice des
-Animaux presented prizes to soldiers who had distinguished themselves
-in the training of animals. Collars of honour were also awarded to a
-large number of dogs exhibited by the soldiers who had trained them.
-Three of these animals were specially fêted on account of what they had
-done--Fend l'Air, belonging to Sergeant Jacqemin, whose life he had
-saved at Roclincourt; Loustic, specially noticed for his intelligence
-at the Front; and Pyrame, who saved an entire French battalion by
-detecting the presence of an enemy column. In other cases the War
-Cross has been awarded to dogs that have performed conspicuous deeds,
-especially in the saving of life.
-
-It was mainly owing to a number of British dogs that the French army
-was able to drive the Germans out of Boesinghe Woods in one of the
-engagements round Ypres. Prusco, a bull-terrier, serving with French
-motor scouts, who carried him in a side-car, was of great value in
-carrying messages back to headquarters; while Lutz, a dog that
-distinguished himself in one of the Verdun engagements, was employed
-as an advance sentinel last February, and first gave warning of a
-German attack by repeated growls. The Red Cross Dog League, which began
-activities early in the war with eight dogs, now has two thousand five
-hundred animals in the field, and it claims that the lives of at least
-eight thousand wounded men have been saved by them.
-
-
-III--HOW DOGS BECOME GOOD SOLDIERS
-
-The training of intelligent animals like these is carried on in five
-different ways, for various uses.
-
-1.--_As Ambulance Dogs._ The animal seeks for wounded men lost on
-the battlefield; he searches in holes, ruins, and excavations, and
-hunts over wooded places or coverts, where the wounded man might
-lie unnoticed by his comrades or the stretcher-bearer. The dog is
-especially useful at this work in the night-time, when he can often by
-his scent discover fallen men who would otherwise be passed over, for
-at night-time ambulance-men often have to work in the dark, as lights
-would attract the enemy's fire. Having found a wounded man still alive,
-the dog brings his master (or the ambulance-man to whom he is attached)
-some article belonging to the sufferer. This object tells the master,
-"I have found someone--search!" Usually the object brought is the
-fallen man's _képi_ (or nowadays his helmet), and the trainers teach
-the dog to find the man's headgear, but if this is missing some other
-object must be brought. It is a fatiguing operation for the animal, as
-he has to return with closed mouth. The ambulance-man who receives the
-article at once puts the animal on a leash, and is immediately led to
-his wounded comrade. The leash is about two yards long, so that the
-movements of the animal shall be hindered as little as possible.
-
-If dogs were utilized in this service long during wartime, their value
-would be incalculable; and their use is all the greater when fighting
-takes place over an extended area. The situation of the wounded man
-overlooked or abandoned on the battlefield is a truly horrible one; he
-has to wait in the forlorn hope that he will be found, for the army
-has gone on, and the more victorious it is the farther it will push
-ahead. In the Franco-Prussian War of 1870-1 more than twelve thousand
-men were thus lost to the French alone, while in the Russo-Japanese
-War the Japanese lost over five thousand in this manner, showing that
-the methods then used for the exploration of the battlefields were
-inadequate. In that war three dogs sent by a military dog society found
-twenty-three wounded men who had been abandoned after the battle of
-Cha-ho. In the Boer War the collie dogs taken out by the men, it is
-said, saved hundreds of wounded men who would never have been found by
-the ambulance-workers in the difficult country where fighting mostly
-took place.
-
-2.--_As Trench Dogs or Sentinels._ The sentry or trench dog is trained
-to stay in the trench itself or in a small "listening-post" made for
-him, either on the edge of the trench, outside it, or at a little
-distance away. There he remains on the _qui vive_, ready to signal the
-least suspicion of a noise or the presence of the enemy. In this work
-both his eyes and his scent help him. He is kept on the leash, and he
-gives the signal of danger by a slight growl, without barking, which
-would give the alarm. The greatest difficulty in the training of dogs
-for this work has been to rid them of the habit of barking, but this
-has been overcome with care and patience. The training of dogs for this
-class of work can be--and has been--carried to great lengths. A man
-crawling on patrol work can take a dog with him, also in a crouching
-position, on a leash. A little tug at the leash causes the dog to rise,
-to retire, or to change its direction, and a properly-trained animal
-will answer to the leash as satisfactorily as a horse does to the
-reins. Such a dog is of immense help at night, when he can be taken
-quite close to the enemy.
-
-3.--_As Patrols or Scouts._ The dog accompanies the human scout in his
-reconnaissance, and helps in finding advance posts or sentinels, and
-locating small groups of the enemy.
-
-4.--_As Couriers or Messengers._ The animal acts as a messenger,
-carrying written orders or information, and is used according to
-circumstances. He can carry messages between groups in the rear and
-fighting formations in the front--for example, between the artillery
-and the infantry, and _vice versa_; between two fighting forces,
-such as battalions, companies, or sections; between the headquarters
-and the various positions of the army; or between the main body and
-detached posts, such as patrols, scouts, etc. Taken along by a patrol
-or scouting party, he can be sent back to the main body with a message
-fixed to his collar. The note having been removed and read, a reply can
-be attached to his collar, and the dog sent back to the original body
-of men, even if they have changed their position, since he finds them
-again by his scent. A dog is not only much quicker in carrying these
-messages than a man, and can cover ground where no cycle could go, but
-he also has an advantage in being almost invisible to the enemy. If on
-a leash, he can conduct a man in charge of reinforcements or ammunition
-to the new position of the patrolling party--sometimes over a distance
-of several miles.
-
-5.--_As Dogs of Communication._ This is the most difficult task to
-which military dogs are put, and requires very special qualities, so
-that only a very few animals have been found capable of the work. It
-consists in sending him after a patrol _en route_ with a message, or
-even in finding a lost patrol or scouting party and bringing it back to
-its base. It will readily be understood that an exceptional scent is
-required in a dog to do work of this sort.
-
-In the two last-named classes of work dogs can pass swiftly backwards
-and forwards through brisk firing and run much less risk than a man.
-
-
-IV--DOGS ARE HEROES UNDER FIRE
-
-There are several societies in Paris which choose suitable dogs
-in order to make soldiers of them. The "Central Society for the
-Development of the Breeds of Dogs" gave three thousand dogs to the
-French army last August. After they have been tested, an operation
-which takes about three weeks, they are sent to special stations in
-the rear of the armies to be trained, and five or six days are all
-that are necessary for the training of animals for the simpler kinds
-of work. For more difficult tasks the training is naturally a longer
-business. When dogs are to be trained as communication agents the
-instruction may take several weeks. They are taught to go from one
-master to another, first by a call, then by a whistle, then simply
-at a mere gesture. Distances are gradually increased, obstacles are
-placed in the way, the animal's goal becomes invisible, and so on. Much
-patience is required in this kind of work; and it is found that the
-best results are obtained by kindness and giving rewards for good work
-accomplished. The animals are taught to recognize only two masters, and
-to obey them alone. Outsiders are not allowed to pet or feed them. When
-they understand that they have to obey only one or two men, they have
-to learn to follow one or both of them when marching in a column of
-infantry, to recognize them when in a group, and so on. They are taught
-to endure the sound of gun-firing or explosions quite close to them.
-Above all, they are strictly trained never to pick up articles on their
-journey and to refuse delicacies offered them by strangers.
-
-Specially-trained dogs only are chosen for this work, and they are
-mostly sheep-dogs or collies or animals whose business it was in civil
-life to be guardians or watchers, and always on the alert. These are
-all the easier to train for the special work--somewhat of the same
-order--which they are set to do in war.
-
-... When the question of transport through the mountain snow had
-become a matter of urgent importance, the French authorities conceived
-the idea of using dog-drawn sleighs for carrying supplies. Some
-hundred "huskies"--a cross between the Eskimo dog and the wolf--and
-other trained dogs from Alaska, North-Western Canada, and Labrador
-were brought over by Lieutenant René Haas, a Frenchman who had spent
-fourteen years in Alaska. Mr. Warner Allen, the representative of
-the British Press with the French armies, describing the work of
-these dogs, says the snow in the neighbourhood of the Schlucht Pass
-was deep enough until almost the end of April for the dogs to render
-yeoman service. "They were able," he says, "to draw heavy loads over
-almost inaccessible country, and to supplement to a valuable extent
-the wheeled transport. But their utility has not ceased with the
-disappearance of the snow. They are now being harnessed to trucks
-on small two-foot-gauge light railways, which run everywhere behind
-the Front, and they are capable of drawing the heaviest load up the
-steepest gradient. Eleven dogs, with a couple of men, can haul a ton
-up some of the most precipitous slopes in the mountains, and I was
-assured that two teams of seven dogs each could do the work of five
-horses in this difficult country, with a very great economy of men."
-
-This correspondent adds that the best of these imported breeds of dogs
-is the Alaskan, as "his courage never fails, and he will work until he
-drops, though he is perhaps the weakest of them. They are all shaggy
-dogs, with prick ears and bushy tails, their colour ranging from
-black to white, between greys and browns. Their chest development, so
-necessary for hauling, is remarkable. They are mainly fed on rice,
-horse-flesh, and waste military biscuits, and this fare appears to suit
-them admirably, as they are always in splendid condition, and disease
-is practically unknown. The experiment of transporting these dogs
-to France has shown that they can be of real service in mountainous
-country, and represent a real economy."
-
-Dogs that are specially adapted or have been trained for hunting or
-sporting purposes are of little use in war, as they have acquired
-habits incompatible with the work now demanded of them. Certain breeds,
-such as the Great Dane, and others of limited intelligence, are of no
-value at all. Some of these have the habit of rushing forward at the
-slightest alarm, which is of more danger than advantage to the soldiers
-to whom they might belong.
-
-
-V--DOGS AS LOYAL COMRADES--FELLOW-WORKERS
-
-The "dog soldier," like his master on special missions, has to see
-and hear without being seen or heard. It is amusing, but nevertheless
-true, that the dogs of smugglers and poachers, as well as those of
-coastguardsmen, have been found to be most useful animals in the army.
-A well-trained dog, acting with a sentinel or scouting party may be the
-means of preserving numbers of lives by saving them from unpleasant
-surprises.
-
-The use of dogs in warfare was, of course, not invented in the
-present war, though their utility had been systematized and given
-more scientific scope than was ever the case before. In no previous
-campaign have men understood the full use that could be made of these
-highly-intelligent creatures.
-
-It was the Belgians who first turned their attention to the subject
-of employing dogs more extensively. Everybody who has visited Belgium
-knows the use that is made of dogs for traction purposes all over
-the country. Nearly all the peasants who bring agricultural or dairy
-produce to market employ dogs to draw their small carts, sometimes
-harnessing whole teams to heavy loads. The dog is also greatly used
-in Belgium for sport, and from the sporting dog to the police dog is
-but a step. The dog in war--as sentinel, courier, scout, or ambulance
-worker--followed, and was the idea of Professor Reul, of the Veterinary
-School of Cureghem, and two journalists named Van der Snick and
-Sodenkampf. In 1885-6 the first dogs trained to some of these purposes
-were shown at a dog show at Ostend, and shortly afterwards societies
-were started at Brussels, Liège, Lierre, Ghent and other places, not
-merely for the training of dogs, but to improve the breeds. Lieutenant
-van der Putte, of the Belgian army, started the Société du Chien
-Sanitaire for the express purpose of training dogs for ambulance work
-and soon afterwards similar societies were organized in Paris and
-Berlin.
-
-It was quite natural that the Belgians should also think of using these
-draught-dogs for small machine-guns, thus providing an inexpensive but
-efficient light artillery. The Germans wished to imitate them, but it
-is related that when they tried to buy dogs from the Belgians, as they
-had no indigenous animals suited to the purpose, the Belgians refused
-to sell. In other ways, however, the Germans were at the beginning of
-the war well provided with dogs for various purposes, including the
-ambulance service.
-
-Since then the use of dogs in the German army has assumed considerable
-proportions. The animals used are mostly of the German sheep-dog
-variety, and a register of these, numbering several thousands, is
-kept for mobilization purposes by the German Sheep-Dog Club. Other
-breeds used by the enemy are terriers, red-haired griffons, Doberman
-_pinchers_, Airedale terries, and a sort of bull-terrier known as a
-"Boxer." Dogs, it appears, have been used by the German army chiefly on
-the Eastern Front, where the fighting was of a more open description
-than on the Western Front.... The German papers published appeals from
-the authorities asking dog owners to offer their pets for war purposes,
-and many thousands were obtained as a result.
-
-
-
-
-TRUE STORY ABOUT KILLING THE WOUNDED
-
-_Told by A. Pankratoff_
-
- Translated from the Russian for _Current History_
-
-
-I--GERMANS HANGED COSSACKS ON TREES
-
-The other day, quite unexpectedly, I ran into Lieutenant X., better
-known as the Junior Subaltern.
-
-This was the fourth time I had run across him since the beginning of
-the war--at Insterburg, where the Junior Subaltern was leading his
-company toward Königsberg; then in the trenches beyond Tarnovo; then in
-the vicinity of Lublin, during the great retreat; and now, the fourth
-time.
-
-"I am stationed twelve versts from Czernowitz," he went on to explain.
-The Junior Subaltern is really so young that you can't help envying
-him. His face shines with health. His eyes are always laughing. His
-speech is very simple, but impressive; but he does not like to talk; he
-would rather listen, and laugh responsively with his eyes.
-
-Fortune had brought us together; several men sitting down to a common
-meal. We talked freely about everything. The conversation turned to the
-German habit of finishing all the wounded enemies they find after a
-successful battle. During the forest fighting last August one of us had
-come across sixty Cossacks who had been but slightly wounded, and whom
-the Germans had hanged on the trees.
-
-"We avenged them, however; the Germans got something to remember!" said
-the narrator.
-
-Lieutenant X.'s eyes sparkled with animation.
-
-"Well," he said, "of course they deserved it! Of course it is a crime
-to kill the wounded. But, gentlemen, there are cases when it is
-impossible not to kill the wounded!"
-
-"What on earth do you mean?"
-
-"Just what I said! There is such a thing as rightful killing of the
-wounded!"
-
-We insisted, and the Junior Subaltern narrated a recent experience of
-his, "somewhere in Bukowina." He had been in command of a party of
-scouts. His regiment had just arrived to take the place of another
-infantry regiment. And the first thing to do was to become acquainted
-with the locality and to learn the dispositions and intentions of the
-enemy. The Junior Subaltern was sent out with his company. At one
-place the opposing armies were separated by a ravine, which forked out
-toward our trenches. Lieutenant X. knew that the men of the regiment
-his was replacing had become acquainted with the Austrians, and that
-the enemies by day came together at the bottom of the ravine by night,
-entertained one another, and gossiped.
-
-"War is burdensome, gentlemen!" explained the Junior Subaltern, "and we
-all longed for even the semblance of human intercourse with the other
-chaps. * * * And there happened to be a prolonged and tiresome spell of
-calm between battles, and so the men of the regiment we were replacing
-and the Austrians had long smokes together, exchanging pipes. But every
-one remembered--and nobody held it against any one--that the course of
-cigarettes must be closely interwoven with the course of bullets on
-the morrow. * * * Yet, yet--oh, if we were only chivalrous knights,
-conducting a picturesque tournament, instead of common Russian cannon
-fodder fighting common Austrian cannon fodder. * * *"
-
-Of course our young friend wanted to do the magnanimous thing by the
-enemy, sending round word to them, "Here we come! Get ready!" But
-what he did do was to take advantage of the quiet exchange of the two
-Russian regiments and the total ignorance in which the Austrian members
-of the nightly smoking club in the ravine still remained, and to creep
-noiselessly forward to the spot where the friends of the night before
-were on guard. The Austrian sentinels--three of them--dozed, wrapped in
-their blankets. The Russians crept stealthily forward. * * *
-
-"What else could we do?" asked the Junior Subaltern. "Humanitarian
-ideas are in blank contradiction to the present war. Civilians at home
-may try to judge everything in accordance with these ideas. Well, we
-know they are mistaken. Oh, they are simply ridiculous!" ended the
-Junior Subaltern, his good-natured, broad face blushing at making such
-a bold statement in company.
-
-
-II--"WHEN WE LEAVE NO WOUNDED ALIVE"
-
-"Such nonsense!" he went on. "Of course, at the back of our minds the
-horror of it is always present. But what else can you do? Standing in
-blood up to your throat, and knowing that you have to protect your men,
-to protect yourself. * * * And what difference does it make to them
-whether you shoot them or throttle them? * * * About a hundred paces
-from those three sentinels there were at least a hundred others, and
-two hundred yards off were the Austrian trenches. The least noise,
-a groan, the stifled cry of a wounded Austrian would be the end of
-everything for my scouts; and there were only thirty of us. That was
-when I gave the order not to leave any wounded alive. * * *"
-
-It was an evident relief to him to be interrupted.
-
-"Oh, yes, I remember!" said one of us. "I was in camp when the
-Austrian officer, routed out in his sleep, was brought in on the run in
-his nightshirt. The whole thing went rapidly and well, and you took a
-machine gun from the Austrians!"
-
-Another of us said:
-
-"I don't see what you are driving at! There's no analogy at all! What
-you did was no hitting of those who were down already. All sorts of
-conventions and international law would justify you!"
-
-"Well," answered the Junior Subaltern, "did I not say that there was
-such a thing as justifiable killing of the wounded, for us as for the
-Germans? Besides, I got decorated for the job! Ouch! It is going to
-thaw! I know, because my wounded leg aches!"
-
-His smile was so frank and his face so full of the bloom of youth
-as he thus changed the subject that it was quite evident that he
-did not change it from any false modesty, but simply because the
-subject--including his own distinguished part in it--had no further
-interest for him.
-
-"You have been wounded?"
-
-"Yes. Two bullets in my leg, one in my arm, one in the abdomen."
-
-"And you are still alive?"
-
-"As you see! It was that devilish machine gun! The bullet that entered
-my abdomen cut through the intestines, touched my stomach, and came out
-by my back. When I regained consciousness I heard the doctor saying:
-'Put this one aside; he will die in a minute or two!' And some of my
-men dug a nice grave for me and wrote my name and the date on a board,
-and sat down patiently to wait for my funeral. But I didn't die. So the
-surgeon had to send me to hospital. But when the ambulance was starting
-I heard him say: 'It's not a bit of use! He'll die on the way there!'
-But I cheated the doctors. I'm quite a rare specimen!"
-
-"You are indeed!" And we all laughed, so contagious was Lieutenant X.'s
-laughter.
-
-"The Medical Council," he went on, "explained it by the fact that, for
-two whole days previously, I had had nothing to eat. * * * hadn't had
-time! It was on the Stripa. The moment our regiment arrived at ---- we
-had to fight."
-
-
-
-
-HOW WE FOILED "U 39" IN THE SUBMARINE ZONE
-
-_Adventures Aboard a Horse Transport_
-
-_Told by H. O. Read, Late First Officer S.S. "Anglo-Californian"_
-
- This story relates what happened when the horse transport
- "Anglo-Californian" met the "U 39." The captain and twenty men lost
- their lives, and eight more were wounded; but the heroism of the
- commander and his officers saved the ship and her valuable cargo.
- Personal experiences recorded in the _Wide World Magazine_.
-
-
-I--"WE CROSS THE ATLANTIC ON THE _ANGLO-CALIFORNIAN_"
-
-Ever since the 18th of February, 1915, when a blockade of the seas
-round the British Isles was declared by Germany, seamen navigating in
-the waters of the war-zone have had a most anxious time in consequence
-of the activity of the German submarine and their callous methods in
-dealing with defenceless merchant vessels.
-
-Our ship, the _Anglo-Californian_, had made a number of voyages across
-the Atlantic, and had so far been fortunate enough to get through the
-war-zone each time without encountering any of the enemy's submarines.
-We had always congratulated ourselves on our good fortune, but on the
-voyage I am about to describe our luck seemed to have deserted us.
-
-It was the morning of the 4th of July, about eight o'clock. I had
-almost completed my watch and was on the point of being relieved by
-the third officer when, taking a final look round the horizon before
-leaving the bridge, I noticed the small cloud of blue smoke on the
-surface of the water about a mile away on our port beam.
-
-For the moment I was rather puzzled as to what it could be, there being
-no craft of any description in sight from which it could come. I was
-not long kept in doubt, however, for as the cloud of smoke gradually
-lifted I caught sight of the conning-tower and long, low hull of a
-submarine, which I knew at once must be a German, as our under-sea
-craft were not operating in this vicinity.
-
-She had apparently just come to the surface after locating us with her
-periscope, and, seeing everything clear, immediately gave chase.
-
-Ordering the man at the wheel to put the helm over, thus bringing the
-submarine directly astern of us, I informed the captain of the presence
-of the enemy. He immediately came on the bridge and proceeded to take
-all necessary steps to try and outrace the submarine. We were quite
-unarmed, so flight was our only chance.
-
-The chief engineer was summoned and told to raise all the steam he
-possibly could and drive the ship for all she was worth, and the extra
-speed that was very quickly attained was convincing proof of the way in
-which he and his staff carried out these orders.
-
-Almost immediately after sighting the submarine the captain ordered
-the wireless operator to send out the "S.O.S." call for help. This was
-promptly answered, and we were informed that assistance was being sent
-us with all possible speed.
-
-The captain, myself, the second officer (who was the captain's son),
-and the third officer were now on the upper bridge, anxiously watching
-our pursuer through the glasses. To our dismay we noticed that she was
-slowly but surely gaining on us.
-
-It was not until a quarter of nine that she first opened fire, this
-presumably being a warning shot, as it fell wide on our port side. The
-captain took heed of the summons, however; he merely smiled and gave
-orders to telephone down to the engineers to "keep her going" as hard
-as they could.
-
-A second warning shot was fired, falling clear of the ship on the
-starboard bow, but this also was unheeded.
-
-Those on the submarine, observing that our speed was increasing
-and that no notice was taken of their shots, evidently came to the
-conclusion that we were going to make a run for it, and forthwith they
-commenced to fire shell after shell at us. At first they tried to bring
-down the wireless apparatus, so as to prevent us from getting into
-communication with the patrol vessels, but this, as I have previously
-stated, we had already done, and were now in continuous communication
-with them, giving them our now rapidly-changing positions.
-Unfortunately for us, however, the patrols were some distance away, and
-there was not much chance of their being able to reach us for two to
-three hours. What would happen meanwhile was hard to say; certainly our
-chances of getting away from our pursuer looked very small indeed.
-
-
-II--"SHELLS WERE BURSTING AROUND OUR VESSEL"
-
-The fire from the submarine now became more rapid, but was not always
-effective, as Captain Parslow, heedless of the shells which were
-dropping and bursting all round the vessel, kept the quartermaster
-at the wheel constantly working his helm so as to keep the submarine
-almost directly astern of us, thereby making the ship as small a target
-as possible. Momentarily, however, the submarine drew nearer and the
-shell-fire more and more deadly. Almost every shot now found its mark,
-striking the vessel at various points on the quarters and round the
-stern. Forsaking the wireless, their aim was now evidently the rudder
-or propeller, so as to totally disable us and thus have the vessel at
-their mercy.
-
-When the firing first commenced our crew, including the horse
-attendants, and numbering about a hundred and fifty all told, had been
-warned to be ready to go to their boat-stations at a moment's notice in
-case of emergency, and consequently everybody, with the exception of
-the engineers and firemen working below, was now on deck.
-
-No signs of panic were shown until a shell, bursting amidships, killed
-three of the horsemen. Then a rush was made for the starboard after
-lifeboats, and men began scrambling into and overloading them. The
-result would have been disastrous if the captain, drawing my attention
-to it, had not ordered me to go and threaten to shoot anyone who did
-not immediately come out and wait until orders were given for the boats
-to be lowered.
-
-This had the desired effect, quelling the panic for the time being.
-
-The submarine--she was the "U 39," we noticed--was now only about five
-or six hundred yards astern, and our case began to look hopeless.
-Not once, however, did the captain waver from his intention never to
-surrender. His coolness and courage were remarkable, and went a long
-way to inspire confidence in those under him.
-
-The shells were now bursting all over the vessel and playing havoc with
-the deck structures. They tore through the horse-fittings, killing
-numbers of the unfortunate horses, and also wounded several of the men,
-who were now clustered in groups near the boats.
-
-Just at this moment a signal to us to "abandon ship" was observed
-flying from the submarine, and the firing suddenly ceased, the
-intention apparently being to give us time to get into the boats and
-leave the vessel. This, however, our captain had no intention of
-doing, and after hastily consulting the chief engineer and myself he
-decided to get as many of the crew away from the ship as possible, as
-they were in imminent danger of being killed by the bursting shells.
-The remainder of us were to stand by him and keep the ship going until
-the very last.
-
-The man at the wheel was sent to take his place in the boats, and the
-majority of the crew were ordered to do the same.
-
-The firemen--who had up to this moment been working below--now came on
-deck, and made a rush for the boats before the order was given. Driving
-them out at the muzzles of our revolvers, we persuaded them to keep
-cool and wait until they were told to take their places.
-
-These firemen, who were Arabs, were now thoroughly frightened, and
-would on no account return to the stokehold, though the captain offered
-£20 to any man who would do so.
-
-During the time the firing ceased--which was not more than five
-minutes--we got the port after lifeboat away, full of men, and were
-preparing to lower the others when we received a wireless message from
-the patrol steamer, saying that they could see the smoke from our
-funnel. They told us to keep going, and to hold the submarine at bay
-as long as possible, as they were coming towards us with all possible
-speed.
-
-It was at this moment that the captain shouted to the firemen to return
-to the stokehold, offering, as already stated, £20 to any man who would
-do so, but this they refused to do.
-
-The chief and second engineers, with the donkeyman, nobly responded to
-the captain's request, and immediately rushed down to the stokehold and
-engine-room, where they worked like Trojans to get as much steam as
-possible to keep the vessel going.
-
-As soon as it became apparent to those on the submarine that we were
-not going to give in they commenced firing again, and with deadly
-effect, for the boat was now only about a hundred yards behind us.
-
-One of the shells, bursting directly behind the funnel, struck the
-davit of the after lifeboat, which was now full of men and in the very
-act of being lowered. It severed the tackle, causing the boat to drop
-into the water, where it capsized, throwing all its occupants into the
-sea.
-
-Another shell, fired almost directly afterwards, struck the davit of
-the port forward boat, cutting it completely in half. The boat, which
-was hanging in the tackle with seven men in it, was blown almost to
-fragments and nearly all its occupants killed.
-
-There now only remained one boat fit for use, the other two remaining
-ones being too badly damaged to put into the water. This boat was now
-manned and rapidly lowered over the side, with the chief steward in
-charge; and it was chiefly due to his skilful handling that she finally
-got away clear of the ship, as she was in danger of being smashed to
-pieces by the now rapidly-revolving propeller as she floated astern.
-
-
-III--STOOD AT THEIR POSTS LIKE HEROES
-
-There were now only thirty-two of the one hundred and fifty members of
-the ship's company left on board, including the captain, officers, and
-engineers, and our chances of getting out of our present predicament
-certainly looked small.
-
-The second, who had now taken the wheel, was skilfully steering the
-ship under the captain's orders. He kept the submarine--which was now
-close upon us--almost directly astern, and the position of both father
-and son was one of extreme danger, for fragments of the bursting
-shells were constantly striking the navigating bridge, and the couple
-had frequently to lie prone on the deck to avoid being struck. Their
-coolness and courage, however, never forsook them, and they remained at
-their posts like heroes, without the slightest sign of fear.
-
-We now noticed--greatly to our relief--the smoke of a steamer on our
-starboard side, and this we rightly judged to be the patrol ship
-hurrying to our help.
-
-As she gradually came into sight, in response to a request by our
-captain over the wireless, she fired at the submarine, but the distance
-was too great, and the shot fell short.
-
-We made sure that our pursuer would now give up the chase and submerge
-to get out of danger, but instead she crowded on extra speed and drew
-up alongside our steamer. She kept carefully under our lee, thus
-sheltering herself for the time being from any further shots from the
-patrol steamer. From this position she fired shell after shell into us.
-
-It was now an impossibility to keep the submarine any longer astern, as
-her superior speed enabled her to keep abreast of us.
-
-We counted thirteen men on her deck, some of them manipulating the gun,
-and others armed with rifles, with which they kept up a constant fire,
-endeavouring to pick off anyone they could see on our decks.
-
-Those on the approaching patrol steamer, comprehending our position and
-expecting every moment to see the ship torpedoed, sent us a wireless
-message to throw lines and ropes over the side and try to foul the
-submarine's propeller, and thus stop her. If possible we might also
-try and ram her. Ramming was out of the question, on account of the
-German's superior speed, but, acting on the first suggestion, under
-the captain's orders I went along and threw some of our mooring-ropes
-overboard, but the scheme was apparently ineffective, as the submarine
-still kept her place on our port side.
-
-It was just at this moment, as I was returning from carrying out these
-orders, that a shell fired from the submarine, and aimed directly at
-the bridge, struck our gallant captain and literally blew him to pieces.
-
-The second officer at the wheel was stunned and almost blinded by the
-report, and his escape from death was a miracle, as the captain was
-only a few feet away when killed. Fragments of the shell actually tore
-away some of the spokes of the wheel which he held at the time.
-
-As I gained the lower bridge he came down smothered in blood, dazed and
-stunned by the shock of the explosion, and horrified at witnessing the
-death of his brave father.
-
-To remain on either of the bridges now was out of the question, as the
-submarine was only fifty yards from us, running abreast. The Hun crew
-had clamped a Maxim on the top of their quick-firing gun and, using
-this, together with their rifles, they kept up a constant fire fore and
-aft.
-
-The patrol steamer was still about two miles away, but coming towards
-us at top speed, with smoke pouring from her funnel. But would she
-reach us in time before the pirates sent us to the bottom? We were
-now in imminent danger of being torpedoed, the submarine being in a
-splendid position to launch her deadly missile.
-
-Seeing this, I called the wireless operators away from their posts,
-to which they had gamely stuck through the whole of the firing, and
-shouted down to the two engineers to come on deck. Gathering together
-the remainder of my men, we made our way along the bullet-swept decks,
-taking shelter where and when we could. We cut everything floatable
-adrift in case the ship went under so as to give us a better chance of
-being picked up by our rescuers.
-
-
-IV--"WE SAW THE SUBMARINE SUBMERGE"
-
-The deck of our vessel was a sickening sight. Dead, dying, and wounded
-men lay in all directions, and blood seemed to be everywhere.
-
-We gathered the wounded together and got them under cover, and with the
-able help of our veterinary surgeon attended to them as best we could.
-
-Nothing more could now be done. We were momentarily expecting the
-torpedo to strike the vessel and finish her, and stood ready to jump
-clear of the ship when she went under.
-
-But the torpedo did not arrive. Instead, we saw the crew of the
-submarine hurrying to get their gun below and preparing to submerge.
-The cause of this manoeuvre was the sudden appearance of two
-destroyers, racing towards us at full speed.
-
-The submarine rapidly disappeared under the water, and in a few moments
-more the two destroyers and the patrol steamer were alongside and
-darting all round us in hopes of getting a shot at her.
-
-We sent up a rousing cheer when we saw our rescuers approach; we could
-scarcely realize that we were saved.
-
-I at once got in communication with the commander of one of the
-destroyers and asked him to search for our boats and any of our crew
-who happened to be in the water and pick them up.
-
-This they at once started to do, and in a very short time informed
-me that they had rescued ninety-seven of them and would proceed to
-Queenstown and land them.
-
-On making an examination of our steamer, we found, in addition to
-considerable damage round the decks, that she had been badly holed
-below the waterline, and was taking water rapidly.
-
-We at once set to work and plugged the holes up with bales of hay and
-bags of fodder, at the same time giving the vessel a list so as to
-bring the damaged plates out of the water as much as possible.
-
-When this had been done I informed the commander of the remaining
-destroyer, and told him that we were ready to proceed, but that it
-would be necessary to go into Queenstown, the nearest port, to land our
-dead and wounded.
-
-He replied that this would be the best course to adopt, and that he
-would convoy us into port.
-
-We accordingly headed for Queenstown, and duly arrived there late that
-night, where we were treated with the greatest courtesy and kindness by
-the Admiralty officials.
-
-The dead were removed and the wounded taken to the naval hospital,
-where their injuries were attended to.
-
-Meanwhile the Admiralty took the vessel in hand, and immediately
-commenced temporary repairs on her, and in less than twenty-four hours
-I was able to leave the port and proceed with her to Avonmouth, our
-destination, under the escort of two destroyers.
-
-The remains of our brave captain and of those who fell with him were
-buried in Queenstown the following day, being accorded full naval
-honours. The Admiral of the port himself attended, and the respect and
-regard shown by the townspeople, as the remains of these heroes were
-laid to rest, was very marked.
-
-No tribute is too great to pay to the memory of the late Captain
-Parslow, who died like the gallant seaman he was, giving his life in an
-endeavour to save his ship and the lives of those under his command.
-
-His son, the second officer, for the pluck and courage he displayed
-in remaining at the wheel during the firing, has been awarded the
-Distinguished Service Cross. The chief engineer received the same
-decoration, and I myself was the recipient of a handsome gold watch,
-suitably inscribed, "From the Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty," as
-was likewise the second engineer and the senior Marconi operator.
-
-The conduct of both the third officer and the junior Marconi operator
-deserves great praise, for they displayed splendid courage and coolness
-in carrying out their duties during the attack.
-
-Lloyd's showed their appreciation of our efforts by presenting a
-substantial cheque, expressing at the same time their sincere regret
-for the loss of the heroic Captain Parslow.
-
-The crew of the submarine, presumably, duly received Iron Crosses for
-their glorious day's work.
-
-
-
-
-MY WORST EXPERIENCE IN MESOPOTAMIA
-
-_Told by a Man Who Stopped a Bullet_
-
- The writer of this vivid narrative, a British soldier, was
- wounded in Mesopotamia during an unsuccessful attempt to relieve
- Kut-el-Amara, shortly before its fall. Recorded in _Current
- History_.
-
-
-I slipped my left hand into my tunic and was surprised to feel the hot
-blood pouring out. Then it dawned on me that I had been hit, and pretty
-badly, too. My equipment was hurting me, so I took it off.
-
-I felt very dizzy, and decided to try and get back as far as I could. I
-stood up, a very unwise thing to do, considering that I was about 150
-yards from the Turkish trench and must have made an easy mark, but I
-was not hit again immediately. My legs gave way and I collapsed and lay
-flat for a time. I thought if I was not to bleed to death I must make
-an effort to put my field bandage in place. So with difficulty I pulled
-it from my tunic pocket. The outer covering came off easily, and I took
-out one of the packets, but could see no way to slit it open. Finally
-I gripped the edge of the packet in my teeth and tore at it with both
-hands till it opened. I put the pad on the wound, as near as I could,
-but had no means of keeping it there, so I staggered to my feet and ran
-on, keeping the pad in place with my left hand. I believe I covered
-another fifty yards when I dropped again and lay in a kind of stupor.
-
-I was aroused by the almost continuous "krock" of bursting shrapnel.
-Shells were dropping right and left, and the air was full of moaning
-and screaming as the bullets flew by. I managed to get on my feet
-again, although the effort made the blood spurt out anew. The sodden
-pad had slipped down and a burning pain in the pit of my stomach caused
-me to double up in agony and slide onto my knees. I started crawling
-painfully along until I came to a small mound which would at least
-afford "head over." I crept behind it and lay in the only position I
-could, on my left side.
-
-I passed my hand over myself to feel for a wound, but could not find
-one. The bullet had entered the small of my back and lodged under my
-breast bone. Gradually the more intense pain passed away, leaving a not
-unpleasant sense of numbness over all my body.
-
-The persistent calling of a man in pain brought me back to
-consciousness. The pitiless sun was blazing high in the heavens, and I
-felt hot and dry. Somebody was shouting "Fetch the stretcher-bearers,
-you fools: are you going to leave me here?" At first I felt very sorry
-for him, but soon wished he would stop, for I had a shocking headache.
-I judged it to be about midday, and thought that in another six hours
-I had a good chance of being brought in.
-
-I was horrified to see that the water of the Suwaicha Marsh, which
-was on our right flank, had risen considerably, and I feared for any
-of our wounded who were further out on the right and unable to crawl
-away from the menace. The man who was shouting stopped, and everything
-was strangely calm and peaceful. I felt very happy and contented then,
-for as long as I kept quite still the pain was very dull, so I began
-singing and mumbling away in a quiet voice:
-
- "Where my caravan has rested
- Flowers I'll strew there on the grass."
-
-I sang again and again, accompanied by a strange roaring in my chest.
-My caravan, I thought, had rested in some very unusual places, but none
-so unusual as this. And what was the use of talking about the grass in
-the desert of Mesopotamia, where there is nothing but the yellow earth,
-the blue sky, the hot sun, and dirty water?
-
-There was a water bottle, equipment, and rifle lying close to my head,
-and I have a vague remembrance of a Sikh lying beside me for a time
-and then jumping up and running back. I slowly put my right arm up,
-caught the sling, and dragged the bottle nearer. I pulled the cork out
-somehow, and propped the bottle against my face, with the neck to my
-lips, but was much upset to find I had not the strength to lift it up.
-Tears rolled down my cheeks after I had made two or three attempts, for
-I was very thirsty. I sang no more, as my throat was harsh and lumpy.
-So I lay staring at the yellow and blue till I lost consciousness once
-more.
-
-This time I was roused by our own guns, and the sound was most
-comforting. "Giving 'em hell," I thought gleefully. They bombarded for
-about an hour, and then I slipped back into unconsciousness. It was
-getting dark when I came to again. A man was standing close to me,
-staring round the field. Somebody had put my sun helmet on my head. He
-came over to me. "Are the stretcher-bearers coming?" I asked, and he
-told me I was the next to be moved. It was not long before the bearers
-came, and they put the stretcher behind me. It was painful work getting
-on the stretcher, as I could not bear to have my body touched anywhere.
-However, it was managed at last, and I lay on my left side.
-
-I suppose they went as gently as they could, but every step racked my
-body so much that I was nearly mad with pain. I cannot remember how
-far it was to the dressing station, but I remember passing through
-the artillery lines, where the guns had started again. I was put on a
-table, still on the stretcher, and was pleased to see our battalion
-doctor. "Well, laddie," he said, "how are you?" I replied that I was
-all right, but thought it "a bit thick" having to lie out there all
-day. Then he started cutting my clothes up, jersey and shirt as well.
-The dressing was by no means painful, but they left my hand untouched.
-I asked for something to drink, but the doctor said they would give me
-all I wanted at the field hospital.
-
-Then began the worst experience I have ever been through. I was taken
-to a native springless mule cart, with a few sacks and blankets thrown
-in the bottom, and helped off the stretcher. The slightest movement
-caused great pain, but when the cart started bumping off I was in a
-positive inferno. I will not dwell on that four-mile journey from the
-marsh to the riverside; suffice it to say that what little breath I
-could summon was used in praying the driver to stop and leave me on the
-ground.
-
-We came to the field hospital at last. The natives pushed a stretcher
-into the cart beside me, and one intelligent fellow nimbly jumped up
-and stood on my smashed hand. That was the last straw. I cursed him.
-When I stopped for want of breath they attempted to lift me on to the
-stretcher, but I begged them to stop. I tried to get on by myself, but
-could only manage to get my knees on and could not lift my body. The
-natives were chattering round the cart, so I started shouting "English,
-English. Fetch English," and at last a "Jock" came up to see what was
-wrong. I begged him to put his hand under my shoulder and help me on
-the stretcher, and in a moment I was lying on my stomach--not very
-comfortable on account of my laboured breathing, but it was a rest for
-my left side. When my hand had been cleaned and dressed I was put on
-a mattress in a bell tent, where I tossed about in a high fever.
-
-In the morning I was put in a paddle-boat, and I slept till it started
-in the afternoon. We were taken ashore at Orah that night, and there
-received better attention. I was placed on the operating table and the
-bullet located and removed.
-
-I will not describe my stay at Orah or the trip down the Tigris in the
-paddle-boat to Bussorah. My hand was a fearful size and very painful.
-When the ship was moored in front of Bussorah Hospital I was very weak.
-Two orderlies helped me on to the stretcher, and I was carried down
-the gangway to the entrance of the hospital. A Major took particulars
-and consigned me to a veranda ward on the second floor. And so I was
-placed in one of the whitest, cleanest, and most comfortable beds in
-the world.
-
-
-
-
-SPIRIT OF YOUNG AMERICA--HOW WE WENT "OVER THE TOP"
-
-_Experiences of a New York Boy with the Canadians_
-
-_Told by (name withheld), Wounded in France_
-
- This is a letter from an American boy at the front. It symbolizes
- the spirit of young America. In his frank, simple, human way, he
- tells with outbursts of quaint humor how he went "over the top,"
- faced death, was wounded, and longs to get back into the fight. It
- is but one of the tens of thousands of private letters that are
- reaching friends in America every time a ship comes in from Europe.
-
-
-I--"IN WAY OF FRITZ'S SHELLS"
-
- 1st Canadian Hospital, France,
- August 27, 1917.
-
-Well, at last old man, I am writing to you. I am sorry I have not
-answered your last letter sooner. I have no good excuse to offer, so
-I guess I'll still cling to the old thread-bare one of "too busy." I
-guess my dear Mary will have told you that I am in hospital recovering
-from a little wound, the penalty of getting in the way of one of
-Fritz's shells. I am glad to say that I am going along nicely and hope
-to be about again very soon. I got hit just back of the knee, over the
-hamstring tendon, "whatever that is." I guess I ought to be thankful
-it was no worse. In a week or so I shall be none the worse for the
-experience. Believe me, it was some experience. You know--one of those
-times when you hear invisible bands playing "Home Sweet Home" and
-"He's Gone Where They Don't Play Billiards."
-
-I guess, dear George, you would like a little of the news of how I am
-passing the weary months away. Well, at times it's not so bad. We have
-our little bit of fun, for you know I'm one of those guys that makes
-the best of it. We get many a laugh. We have got the knack of being
-easily amused. We often get a smile out of things at which if it wasn't
-for the surroundings we should feel like shuddering.
-
-I cannot tell you much on account of the censor. But I can tell you
-a little of the experience I had last Wednesday week, the 15th, the
-time we had the pleasure (?) of going "over the top" and getting in
-close touch with Fritz. We had been expecting it to come off for a
-long time and I think the period of waiting was the worst part of the
-whole affair. We had only been out of the line a couple of days and
-such awful days they were; the time we had been in, it was up to our
-knees in mud. Well, anyway, the order came along for us to go back and
-make an attempt to pull the job off. The day before they tried to make
-things as pleasant as possible. We had a band concert almost all day
-long, and then as soon as it got dark we started forward to take up our
-position to wait for the big show at daybreak.
-
-Our first trouble was gas. We had our masks on in about two seconds. I
-guess you have seen pictures of these masks. But believe me, when you
-get a bunch of men moving cautiously across country they're enough to
-scare a fellow out of a month's growth. Eventually we got there. But
-the position we were to take up was being peppered with Fritz's iron
-rations. So we were told to move to another place and dig ourselves in.
-Again he located us and made it unhealthy, so we had to move again. We
-were in a great mood then, for we had worked like niggers and had just
-got comfortable when the order came to move. We contented ourselves
-that we would square matters in the morning.
-
-At a quarter of four (daybreak) we settled down to wait for the signal
-for the big show to start. There certainly was some excitement in the
-air. Almost as much as when in a game of pool the fifteen ball's over
-the hole and it's your shot next. Through some cause or other matters
-we were delayed twenty-five minutes--the longest minutes I have ever
-lived. Each minute seemed like an hour. Long after the war is all over
-and forgotten, I think I shall remember that long, weary wait.
-
-
-II--"WHAT I SAW WHEN I WENT 'OVER'"
-
-At last, we got the signal and the barrage and bombardment started.
-I have read of bombardments and I have seen them described pretty
-vividly, but no description or imagination could make anyone realize
-what they are really like. Every thing we had, opened up at the same
-second--silent batteries that had been there for weeks without firing
-a shot, just waiting for this event to be pulled off. It seemed as if
-the very earth was swaying. But don't think we had it all our own way.
-For Fritz had quite a number of iron foundries he wanted to get rid of,
-and he started up almost as soon as we did.
-
-We found out afterwards, that they knew we were "going over." In
-fact, their officers had been officially warned to be prepared for an
-attack at 4 A.M. So I guess they had their anxious wait as
-well as we. Fritz's fireworks' display was simply wonderful. Rockets
-and flare-lights of every color and description went up, but I didn't
-stop to admire it. I was too busy and scarcely in the mood to admire
-anything. Everything had to be done by signals. The noise was so
-deafening that even if you shouted at the top of your voice you
-couldn't be heard.
-
-The first wave went over at 4:25 A.M. Everything possible in
-what they call modern warfare was used--liquid fire, oil, tanks and a
-dozen different things to get Fritz's wind up. And believe me, we did
-get it up! For thirty minutes after we went "over" we had them on the
-run. All I am sorry about is that we could not keep them going _until
-they reached Berlin_.
-
-Believe me, old man, it was some fight! Some of the things I saw
-myself, I would not have believed if I hadn't seen them with my own
-eyes. Some of the fellows just went crazy. One fellow was fighting
-away with only half a rifle in his hand, and yet there was dozens of
-good ones lying around if he had only taken a moment to pick one up.
-Others were throwing bombs just like bricks. You know the bombs we
-use out here mostly are the kind we saw at that New York Red Cross
-bazaar--perhaps you remember them. Before they explode you have to pull
-the safety pin out, and then they burst four seconds later. Well, some
-of the guys didn't pull the pins out; they just used them like bricks.
-Gee, it put me in mind of a good old Summer Lane scrap, but anyhow it
-was enough to get them on the hustle.
-
-There were many other little incidents, some that I saw myself, and
-others that I heard coming down on the hospital train. One of our
-fellows took two prisoners only armed with a lighted candle. This
-happened after we had been occupying Fritz's front line several hours.
-Leaving his rifle at the top, he went down into one of Fritz's saps
-"looking for souvenirs, I guess." Well, he lit his candle and there
-in the corner were two great hulking fellows. I guess they were more
-scared than he was. Up went their hands with the same old cry: "Not
-me, Mister, Mercy, Kamerad." We had a laugh afterwards for the guy
-who brought them up, looked as if he had been scared stiff. I'll bet
-he never goes down a strange sap again unarmed. Later on they caught
-another five in one of the other saps.
-
-There were dozens of little incidents like this. So far so good--but
-the worst had yet to come. We had captured three villages and the
-famous hill. When I say there had been five previous attempts to get
-the hill alone, for he had occupied it for two and a half years,
-you will see that it was some accomplishment. They put over ten
-counter-attacks. I didn't count them. I was too interested and busy
-with other things to bother about counting anything. They came over in
-the old massed formation style. It seems a crazy style to me, for their
-losses must have been enormous. Every time they came over they got
-smashed, and were glad to beat it back, or at least as many of them as
-were able to. That continued practically all day.
-
-
-III--ON AN ADVANCE POST
-
-As soon as it was dark, I was detailed along with a bunch of other
-fellows to go out as reinforcements to our left flank. My friend Jones,
-another fellow and I, were put on an advanced bombing post. Every once
-in a while they would attempt to come over on us. It kept us pretty
-busy, and also kept us from getting sleepy.
-
-In the early morning one of Fritz's planes came flying over us. One
-of our fellows couldn't resist the temptation of drawing a bead on
-him, although it's against all orders for us to fire on aircraft. The
-chances of hitting him are about a thousand to one. Well, the "son of
-a gun" made a dive and swooped over us with his machine gun. I don't
-think he got anybody, but he came so low that some of our guns got him.
-He dropped like a stone. I was almost sorry to see it, for I am still
-a sport and that guy certainly had got grit.
-
-Well, these little events kept happening all day long. Then at four
-o'clock in the afternoon my friend Jones got hit. It was during one of
-his attacks--he got inquisitive, took a peek over the parapet, and got
-it in the cheek. Two hours later I got hit--this was the second time I
-had been hit. The first was so slight I didn't leave the line, but this
-time I had just had about as much as I cared for. So I got first aid
-and waited until things had quieted down a little, and then made my way
-to a dugout to wait until it got dark.
-
-About nine o'clock, I started to beat it for the dressing station. But
-believe me, old man, it was easier said than done, for we had advanced
-over a mile over No Man's Land and I had to go all over that way again.
-There were three of us that started. The other two were just slightly
-wounded--one in the shoulder and the other in the wrist. But poor me,
-having it in the knee, was worst of the bunch. I couldn't move fast, it
-had stiffened me so.
-
-Well, we had our little adventures going across. Once I got entangled
-in the barbed wire. And then when we saw several fellows ahead of
-us--we just dropped in a shell hole, and waited for them to move off.
-After a wait of about fifteen minutes, they didn't move. The fellow
-with the hit in the shoulder crawled forward to find out who they were.
-He was gone so long we were just making up our minds to make a wide
-circuit of them, "for none of us were armed"--we had thrown everything
-away so we could move quicker. Just as we had given him up he came back
-with the news it was one of our own working parties fixing wires. The
-reason he had been so long was because he had been waiting to catch
-some of the conversation to see whether it was English or not.
-
-Away we started again. We were nearing our old front line when Fritz
-caught us with one of his flare-lights. Of course the next minute it
-was Whiss-siss-siss-pop-pop-pop! They had turned a machine gun on
-us. Then came another wait in a shell hole. Eventually I reached the
-dressing station. I had my leg dressed and a few bits of sticking
-plaster put on various parts of my body. I was put on a motor ambulance
-and the next morning woke up in a hospital clearing station to find my
-old friend Jones sitting up in a bed opposite me.
-
-Well, we had a good laugh for we are like the Siamese twins. Wherever
-one is the other is not far off--at least it has been that way since
-coming to France. And the objects we looked, he with a face as big
-as two, and me with my clothing all muddy and torn and various other
-changes. We'd have made a good picture entitled, "After the Fight."
-Later on we were taken on a hospital train to this place, but I shall
-be glad when I can get about again. I feel more lonesome here than I
-ever have in all my life. It's the weariness of lying here with nothing
-to do that gets my "goat." Nevertheless it's great to be human again
-and among civilization again. The first few days I appreciated it all
-right, for I did not have a wink of sleep from the Monday night and
-scarcely anything to eat or drink.
-
-Now don't forget, old man, to drop me a line and let me know how
-everything is in dear old New York. So now good-bye for the present,
-hoping you WILL remember me to all old friends.
-
- Your old friend,
-
- LABAN.
-
-P. S. I am enclosing a little souvenir, one of Fritz's field cards. I
-was amusing myself on the back of it with a few verses.
-
-
-[Illustration: THIS IS THE SIDE OF THE POSTCARD TAKEN BY MR. HILL THAT
-WAS INTENDED FOR THE ADDRESS]
-
-
-[Illustration: THE IMPRESSIONS OF AN AMERICAN BOY WHO DID NOT WAIT
-Laban Hill, No. 1,054,147, Fourteenth Canadian Battery, on "Going Over
-the Top" in August, 1917. Written to a Friend on a Postcard Taken From
-a Dead German Soldier]
-
-[Transcribed text from the postcard:]
-
-Over The Top
-
-1
-"Did you ever go over the top?" he said,
-"Did you ever go over the top?
-Did you sweep along an unbroken line,
-With bayonets gleaming, and eyes ashine
-And a feeling that went to your head like wine,
-The time you went over the top?"
-
-2
-"Did you ever go over the top?" he said,
-"Did you ever go over the top?
-Did the flarelights shine on a glorious sight
-As they pierced the dawn in the changing light;
-Did you thrill with a feeling of savage delight,
-The time you went over the top?"
-
-3
-"Did you ever go over the top?" he said,
-"Did you ever go over the top?
-Oh, tell me" he said "how you held up your head
-Of the things that you thought and the things that you said,
-Of your glorious pride as with the men you sped
-Far away over the top."
-
-4
-"Oh yes, I've been over the top," I said,
-"You bet I've been over the top.
-But I felt alone in the flare-lights glare.
-And Mauser bullets were singeing my hair,
-And my knees were knocking together for fair,
-The night I went over the top."
-
-5
-"Oh yes, I've been over the top," I said,
-"You bet I've been over the top.
-But it's lonesome out there in no man's land
-And you miss the crowd and you miss the band
-And your feet take root in the place you stand,
-The night you go over the top."
-
-6
-"Oh yes, I've been over the top
-There was yards of wire got attached to my clothes
-And how I got out of it God only knows
-A secret I fear he will never disclose
-Till I'm finally "over the top."
-
-7
-"Oh yes, I've been over the top," I said,
-"You bet I've been over the top.
-The artillery raised a continuous roar--
-They'd been at it, it seemed for a week or more--
-And old man I was sweating at every pore
-The night I went over the top."
-
-8
-"Oh yes, I've been over the top," I said,
-"You bet I've been over the top.
-The noise and confusion, the shouts and the groans
-Had paralysed action and frozen my bones
-When a fellow went past me,--I think it was Jones,
-He was headed back over the top."
-
-9
-"Oh yes, I've been over the top," I said,
-You bet I've been over the top
-And since Jones has a blighty and wasn't napoo,
-If they're handing them out
-"I thought" me for one too.
-And blest if I didn't--in fact I got two,
-The night I went over the top.
-
-New York isn't the only place people hustle
-
-
-
-
-THE SINKING OF THE "PROVENCE II"
-
-_Told by M. Bokanowski, Deputy of the Department of the Seine_
-
- The French auxiliary cruiser _La Provence II_, formerly a
- passenger liner, was sunk by a submarine in the eastern end of the
- Mediterranean while serving as a troop transport. Nearly 4,000 men
- are said to have been on board, of whom only 870 were saved. One of
- the survivors, M. Bokanowski, wrote this thrilling description to
- President Poincaré of France:
-
-
-MONSIEUR LE PRESIDENT: You are doubtless familiar, in all
-its details, with the fate of the _Provence II_. I should like to
-describe to you--to assuage in a measure the grief of France--the noble
-behaviour of those who made ready at that moment, between sea and sky,
-to die for their country.
-
-We had on board a battalion and some detachments of the Third Colonial
-Regiment of Infantry. At the moment of the explosion I was on the
-bridge, with the commander of the ship, his second in command, and
-several of the higher officers. We directed the steps to be taken,
-distributing lifebelts, superintending the launching of boats and
-liferafts. Not an outcry, not a complaint, not the slightest sign
-of panic--only the dignified tranquillity of men who long ago had
-consecrated their lives to the sublime cause that had put arms in their
-hands.
-
-Everybody would have been saved had it depended only on officers and
-crew. Unfortunately the ship sank rapidly. The water soon found its way
-into the boilers. When they began to explode, about ten minutes past
-5, I jumped into the sea and swam as fast as I could in order to get
-beyond the radius of suction. A few moments later there were several
-deafening explosions. I turned and saw the end. The ship was going down
-stern foremost. Captain Vesco, still standing on the bridge, cried in a
-voice above the uproar: "Vive la France!" The survivors, swimming about
-the ship, or safe on boats and rafts, saw the _Provence_ make a sudden
-plunge, her forward deck standing perpendicular in the air. They, in
-their turn, saluted with a cry of "Vive la France!" It was a quarter
-past 5.
-
-After swimming for half an hour I succeeded in reaching an overloaded
-raft, the occupants of which pulled me aboard. Night was falling,
-the wind was chill and nipped the flesh of the men, who were almost
-entirely naked. Throughout the endless night, not a whimper! My
-companions in misfortune had no words except to lament the fate of
-those who were drowned and to curse the Boche, who, neither before nor
-after his treacherous shot, had dared to appear and show his flag. In
-water up to the waist, with teeth chattering from the cold, but upheld
-by the desire to survive and be able to punish the villains, we were
-picked up eighteen hours later by a trawler. Several men had died from
-the cold on the rafts, and several others had lost their reason.
-
-An English patrol and a French torpedo boat divided the survivors
-between them, some heading for Milo, others for Malta. I was among the
-latter, and we arrived here about 1 o'clock yesterday. Captain Vesco,
-who was in command of the _Provence II._; Lieutenant Besson, second
-in command; Colonel Duhalde, commanding the Third Colonial Regiment
-of Infantry, remained on the bridge until the very last second of
-the ship's life in the most noble spirit of self-sacrifice, giving
-with perfect calmness precise and effective orders for saving the
-passengers.
-
-The gunners of the _Provence's_ stern gun, having loaded it when the
-torpedo struck, remained at their posts, trying to discover the hidden
-foe in order to repay him in his own coin.
-
-Surgeon Navarre of the Third Colonial Regiment, being taken aboard a
-trawler nearly exhausted by his eighteen hours on a raft, refused to
-change his drenched clothing or to take any food until he had dressed
-the hurts of the wounded and looked after the sick. He was prostrated
-a long while after such superhuman labours.
-
-And I must mention this other incident, which brings tears to my eyes:
-
-Gauthier, Assistant Quartermaster of the _Provence_, having been taken
-on board a greatly overloaded raft, was hailed by a soldier asking
-for help; he jumped into the water to give him his place, saying: "A
-sailor's duty is to save the soldiers first of all."
-
-He was picked up, twenty-one hours after the wreck, clinging to a plank.
-
-I call attention also to the devotion and zeal--meriting our profound
-gratitude--of Lieutenant Sinclair Thompson, commanding the English
-patrol _Marguerite_, and of his officers and crew, by whose labours
-about 300 survivors were taken from the place of the wreck to Malta.
-
-Pray pardon the form of this story, Monsieur le Président. I have
-written it hurriedly, with a bruised hand, and with a head still in a
-sad muddle. I wished, before my impending departure for Saloniki, to
-say to you with all my heart: "That is what these noble fellows did!"
-
- BOKANOWSKI.
-
-
-
-
- * * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber's note:
-
-Obvious errors of punctuation and diacritics were corrected.
-
-Inconsistent hyphenation was made consisent.
-
-Times normalized to A.M. and P.M.
-
-P. 27: in lieu of this can be subtituted -> in lieu of this can be
-substituted.
-
-P. 28: woman's hubsand -> woman's husband.
-
-P. 51: in cosmos -> in the cosmos.
-
-P. 79: Never was General -> Never was a General.
-
-P. 81: municipal dgnitary -> municipal dignitary.
-
-P. 103: mobilization of 1909 -> mobilization of 1914.
-
-P. 114: THE ROMANCE OF THE EURASION -> THE ROMANCE OF THE EURASIAN.
-
-P. 119: held out so vigourously -> held out so vigorously.
-
-P. 120: klled fifty-two Boches -> killed fifty-two Boches.
-
-P. 129: German Embassy in Berlin -> American Embassy in Berlin.
-
-P. 151: BATTLE OF CHARLEROI -> THE BATTLE OF CHARLEROI.
-
-P. 153: Sonzèe -> Somzée.
-
-P. 196: left in the forcastle -> left in the forecastle.
-
-P. 198: steered for the nothern coast -> steered for the northern coast.
-
-P. 215: followed at a disstance -> followed at a distance.
-
-P. 226: made by the priscope -> made by the periscope.
-
-P. 255: pour my temptuous heart -> pour my tempestuous heart.
-
-P. 263: U-boat lieutenand -> U-boat lieutenant.
-
-P. 265: Jusé -> José.
-
-P. 277: regarded themslves as beaten -> regarded themselves as beaten.
-
-P. 278: Chalffour Quarry -> Chauffour Quarry.
-
-P. 307: distince he covered -> distance he covered.
-
-P. 314: ran in my head continualy -> ran in my head continually.
-
-P. 319: animals were specialy fêted -> animals were specially fêted.
-
-P. 338: any longed astern -> any longer astern.
-
-P. 349: hamstring tendron -> hamstring tendon.
-
-P. 358: N. Bokanowski -> M. Bokanowski.
-
-
-
-***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TRUE STORIES OF THE GREAT WAR,
-VOLUME V (OF 6)***
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-<h1 class="pg">The Project Gutenberg eBook, True Stories of the Great War, Volume V (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 V (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: December 31, 2015 [eBook #50807]</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 V (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/truestoriesofgre05mill">
- https://archive.org/details/truestoriesofgre05mill</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="" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
-<br /><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<br />
-OF THE<br />
-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 />
-<small>
-<i>Collected in Six Volumes</i><br />
-<i>From Official and Authoritative Sources</i><br />
-(<i>See Introductory to Volume I</i>)<br />
-</small>
-<br />
-VOLUME V<br />
-<br />
-Editor-in-Chief<br />
-FRANCIS TREVELYAN MILLER (Litt. D., LL.D.)<br />
-Editor of The Search-Light Library<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>This group of stories for VOLUME V has been selected by the Board of
-Editors according to the plan outlined in "Introductory" to Volume
-I. It includes episodes from thirty-one story-tellers&mdash;tales of
-Dragoons, Marines, Bishops, Foreign Legion, Fleet Surgeon, Scouts,
-Exiles, Soldiers, Spies and Eye-Witnesses. The selections have
-been made from the most authoritative sources in Europe and
-America. Full credit is given in every instance to the original
-source.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<div class="center">VOLUME V&mdash;THIRTY-ONE STORY-TELLERS&mdash;142 EPISODES<br /><br /></div>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" summary="">
-<tr><td align="left">TALES OF THE DARING RIDES OF A FRENCH TROOPER</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">WITH THE TWENTY-SECOND REGIMENT OF DRAGOONS</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by Lieut. Christian Mallet of the Dragoons</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of E. P. Dutton and Company)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">"TO RUHLEBEN&mdash;AND BACK" LIFE IN A GERMAN PRISON</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_18">18</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">WHERE THE BRITISH CIVILIAN PRISONERS ARE HELD IN</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;DETENTION CAMP</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by Geoffrey Pyke, an English Prisoner</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of Houghton, Mifflin and Company)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">AN AMERICAN AT BATTLE OF THE SOMME WITH FRENCH ARMY</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_36">36</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">ARMY LIFE WITH THE SOLDIERS ALONG THE SOMME</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by Frederick Palmer</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of Dodd, Mead and Company)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">AN AMERICAN'S EXPERIENCES "INSIDE THE GERMAN EMPIRE"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_53">53</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by Herbert Bayard Swope</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of The Century Company)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">"DIXMUDE"&mdash;AN EPIC OF THE FRENCH MARINES</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_64">64</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">STORY OF THE MURDER OF COMMANDER JEANNIOT</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by Charles Le Goffic of the Fusiliers Marins</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of J. B. Lippincott Company)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">A BISHOP AT THE FRONT WITH THE BRITISH ARMY</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_75">75</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by Right Reverend H. Russell Wakefield, Bishop of Birmingham</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of Longmans, Green and Company)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">SHORT RATIONS&mdash;THE TRUTH ABOUT LIFE IN GERMANY</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_83">83</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">AN AMERICAN WOMAN IN GERMANY</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by Madeline Zabriskie Doty</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of The Century Company)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">FIGHTING "WITH THE RUSSIAN ARMY"&mdash;ON THE AUSTRIAN FRONT</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_92">92</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">THE COLOSSAL STRUGGLE OF THE SLAVS</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by Barnard Pares</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of Houghton, Mifflin and Company)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">THE ROMANCE OF THE FRENCH FOREIGN LEGION</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_107">107</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">THE "GLORIOUS RASCALS"</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by E. S. and G. F. Lees</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of Wide World)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">ADVENTURES OF WOMEN WHO FACE DEATH ON BATTLEGROUNDS</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_121">121</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">LITTLE STORIES OF WOMAN'S INDOMITABLE COURAGE</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by Hilda Wynne and Others</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of New York American and New York World)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">AN AMERICAN WOMAN'S STORY OF THE "ANCONA" TRAGEDY</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_142">142</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by Dr. Cecile Greil</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission New York Times)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">THE STRATEGY OF SISTER MADELEINE</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_151">151</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">THE STORY OF A FRENCH CAPTAIN'S ESCAPE FROM THE GERMANS&nbsp;&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by Himself and Translated by G. Frederic Lees</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of Wide World)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">TALES OF THE SPIES AND THEIR DANGEROUS MISSIONS</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_169">169</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">REVELATIONS OF METHODS AND DARING ADVENTURES</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by Secret Service Men of Several Countries</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of New York American; New York World; New</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">York Herald and New York Tribune)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">WHAT HAPPENED TO THE "GLENHOLME"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_192">192</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">ADVENTURES WITH SUBMARINES IN THE MEDITERRANEAN SEA</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by Captain Groome to a Friend</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission Wide World)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">WHAT THE KAISER'S SON SAW ON THE BATTLEFIELD</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_203">203</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">PERSONAL EXPERIENCES OF A GERMAN PRINCE</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by Prince Oscar of Prussia, Fifth Son of Emperor Wilhelm</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of New York American)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">A DAY'S WORK WITH A FRENCH SUBMARINE</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_222">222</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">AN AMERICAN'S EXPERIENCE UNDER THE SEA</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">TALE OF THE CHILD OF TERBEEKE</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_233">233</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">HOW IT SAVED A BRITISH BATTALION</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by Oliver Madox Hueffer</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of Wide World)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">A HERO TALE OF THE RED CROSS</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_242">242</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by G. S. Petroff</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of Current History)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">LIFE STORY OF "GRANDMOTHER OF THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_246">246</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">TRIUMPHANT RETURN FROM FORTY-FOUR YEARS IN</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;SIBERIAN EXILE</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by Catherine Breshkovskaya, the Russian Revolutionist</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of New York Tribune)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">TALE OF AN AMAZING VOYAGE</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_262">262</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">GERMAN OFFICERS ESCAPE FROM SPAIN IN A SAILING VESSEL</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by Frederic Lees</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of Wide World)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">THE POET'S DEATH IN BATTLE&mdash;HOW ALLEN SEEGER DIED</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_278">278</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">A YOUNG AMERICAN IN THE FOREIGN LEGION</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by Bif Bear, a Young Egyptian in the Foreign Legion</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">THE GUARDIAN OF THE LINE&mdash;HERO TALE OF LITHUANIA</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_286">286</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by G. Frederic Lees</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of Wide World)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">WITH A FLEET SURGEON ON A BRITISH WARSHIP DURING A BATTLE&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_295">295</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">UNDER FIRE ON HIS MAJESTY'S SHIP, "THE FEARLESS"</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by Fleet Surgeon Walter K. Hopkins</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission New York American)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">AIRMEN IN THE DESERTS OF EGYPT</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_304">304</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">ADVENTURES OF THE ROYAL FLYING CORPS IN SINAI</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by F. W. Martindale</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of Wide World)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">HOW SWEENY, OF THE FOREIGN LEGION, GOT HIS "HOT DOGS"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_312">312</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by Private John Joseph Casey</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of New York World)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">THE DOGS OF WAR ON THE BATTLEGROUNDS</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_316">316</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">THE "FOUR-FOOTED SOLDIERS" OF FRANCE</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by the Soldiers</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of Wide World)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">TRUE STORY ABOUT KILLING THE WOUNDED</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_328">328</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by A. Pankratoff</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of Current History)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">HOW WE FOILED "U 39"&mdash;IN THE SUBMARINE ZONE</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_333">333</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">ADVENTURES ABOARD A HORSE TRANSPORT</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by H. O. Read</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of Wide World)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">MY WORST EXPERIENCE IN MESOPOTAMIA</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_344">344</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by a Man Who Stopped a Bullet</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(Permission of Current History)</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">SPIRIT OF YOUNG AMERICA&mdash;HOW WE WENT "OVER THE TOP"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_349">349</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">EXPERIENCES OF A NEW YORK BOY WITH THE CANADIANS</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by (name withheld), wounded in France</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">THE SINKING OF "THE PROVENCE II"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_358">358</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Told by N. Bokanowski, Deputy of the Department of the Seine</td></tr>
-</table></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 626px;">
-<img src="images/fp1.jpg" width="626" height="900" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>© International Film Service.</p>
-<p>THE BALLOON CORPS EXPERIENCE THE SENSATIONS
-OF THE POLAR EXPLORER</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 900px;">
-<img src="images/fp2.jpg" width="900" height="536" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>DROPPING A BOMB FROM A DIRIGIBLE</p>
-<p><i>It is Pleasanter to See This in a Volume Than Overhead!</i></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 900px;">
-<img src="images/fp3.jpg" width="900" height="534" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>A FEW MINUTES BEFORE THIS WAS A GERMAN BATTLE PLANE</p>
-<p><i>But the Aircraft Guns Got His Range. The Insert Shows a Naval Plane</i></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 900px;">
-<img src="images/fp4.jpg" width="900" height="534" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>© International Film Service.</p>
-<p>SOMEONE IS ALWAYS WATCHING IN THE FIRST LINE TRENCH</p>
-<p><i>A British Trench at Orvillieres</i></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>TALES OF THE DARING RIDES
-OF A FRENCH TROOPER</h2>
-
-<p><i>With the Twenty-second Regiment of Dragoons</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Told by Lieut. Christian Mallet, of the Dragoons</i></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>This famous 22nd regiment of Dragoons was raised in 1635 and
-took part in all the great wars in which the French were engaged
-before the Revolution. It fought under the Republic and
-then with Napoleon's armies&mdash;at Austerlitz (1805); Jena (1806);
-Eylau (1807); Oporto (1809). It saw service with the Army
-of the Sambre and Meuse, the Army of the Rhine, the Grande-Armee,
-in the War in Spain, the Campaign in Saxony, the Campaign
-in France (1814). The regiment was disbanded in 1815 at
-the close of the Napoleonic Wars and was not raised again
-until 1873. The first great charge of the 22nd Dragoons in the
-Great War occurred on the night of September 10-11, 1914. It
-has since been fighting heroically "For France and Civilization."
-Lieut. Mallet has fought his way up in the ranks with the
-Dragoons. He presents the unconquerable spirit of France in
-his book: "Impressions and Experiences of a French Trooper."
-It is dedicated: "To my Captain, Count J. de Tarragon, and to
-my two comrades, 2nd Lieut. Magrin and 2nd Lieut. Clère&mdash;who
-fell all three on the field of honour in defense of their country."
-One of his stories is recorded herewith by permission of
-his publishers, <i>E. P. Dutton and Company</i>: Copyright 1916.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p><a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a>
-I&mdash;STORY OF PEASANT GIRL ON THE YSER</p>
-
-<p>The battle finished (September 10, 1914) the pursuit
-of the conquered army commenced and kept the whole
-world in suspense, with eyes fixed on this headlong flight
-towards the north, which lasted till the end of the month,
-and which was to be the prelude of the great battles of
-the Yser.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span></p>
-<p>The region round Verberie was definitely cleared of
-Germans and was become once more French. The little
-town for some days presented an extraordinary spectacle.</p>
-
-<p>We entered the town after having received the formal
-assurance of the 5th Chasseurs, who went farther on,
-that all the country was in our hands. Some divisional
-cyclists were seated at the roadside. We asked them
-for news of the 22nd, and their reply wrung our hearts.
-They knew nothing definite, but they had met a country
-cart full of our wounded comrades, who had told them
-that the regiment had been cut up.</p>
-
-<p>No one could tell us where the divisional area was
-to be found. The division itself appeared to have been
-dismembered, lost and in part destroyed. We thought
-that we were the only survivors of a disaster, and, once
-the horses were in shelter in an empty abandoned farm
-stuffing themselves with hay, we wandered sadly through
-the streets destroyed by bombardment and by fire in
-search of such civilians as might have remained behind
-during the invasion.</p>
-
-<p>A little outside the town we at last found a farm where
-two of the inhabitants had stayed on. The contrast between
-them was touching. One was a paralysed old man
-unable to leave his fields, the other was a young girl of
-fifteen, a frail little peasant, and rather ugly. Her
-strange green eyes contrasted with an admirable head
-of auburn hair, and she had heroically insisted on looking
-after her infirm grandfather, though all the rest of the
-family had emigrated towards the west. She had remained
-faithful to her duty in spite of the bombardment,
-the battle at their very door and the ill-treatment of the
-Bavarian soldiers who were billeted in the farm. Distressed,
-yet joyous, she prepared a hasty meal and busied<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span>
-herself in quest of food, for it was anything but easy
-to satiate eleven men dying of hunger when the Germans,
-who lay hands on everything, had only just left.</p>
-
-<p>She wrung the neck of an emaciated fowl which had
-escaped massacre, and, by adding thereto some potatoes
-from the garden, she served us a breakfast, washed down
-with white wine, which made us stammer with joy, like
-children. One needs to have fasted for five days to have
-felt the cutting pains of hunger and of thirst in all their
-horror, to appreciate the happiness that one can experience
-in eating the wing of a scraggy fowl and in drinking
-a glass of execrable wine tasting like vinegar. She
-bustled about, and her pitying and motherly gestures
-touched our hearts. While we ate she told us the most
-astonishing story that ever was, a story acted, illustrated
-by gestures, which made the scenes live with remarkable
-vividness.</p>
-
-<p>She told us how, faithful to her oath, she was alone
-when the Bavarians came knocking at her door, how she
-lived three days with them, a butt for their innumerable
-coarsenesses, sometimes brutally treated when the soldiers
-were sober, sometimes pursued by their gross assiduities
-when they were drunk; how one night she had to fly half
-naked through the rain, slipping out through the venthole
-of the cellar, to escape being violated by a group
-of madmen, not daring to go to bed again, sleeping fully
-dressed behind a small copse; how at last French chasseurs
-had put the Bavarians to flight and had in their turn
-installed themselves in the farm, and how among them
-she felt herself protected and respected.</p>
-
-<p>She attached herself to her new companions, whom
-she looked after like a mother for three days. Then
-they went away, promising to return, and she was left
-alone.</p>
-
-<p>But the next day at dawn, uneasy at the row that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span>
-came from the town, she decided to go in search of news.
-She put on a shawl and slipped through the brushwood
-and thickets as far as the first houses. She was afraid
-of being seen, and made herself as small as possible,
-keeping close to the walls, crossing gardens and ruined
-houses. The terrible noise increased, and she went
-towards it. She wanted to see what was going on, and
-a fine virile courage sustained her. The shells fell near
-her; no matter, she had only a few more steps to go to
-turn the corner of a street. She arrived on the <i>place</i>
-as the battle was finishing.</p>
-
-<p>Her fifteen chasseurs were there, fifteen corpses at the
-foot of the barricade. One of them, who still lived,
-raised himself on seeing her, and held out his arms
-towards her. Then, forgetting all danger, in a magnificent
-outburst of feminine pity, she braved the rain of fire
-and dashed to the centre of the <i>place</i>. She knelt by the
-young fellow, enveloped him in her shawl to warm him
-and rocked him in her arms till he closed his young eyes
-for ever, thankful for this feminine presence which had
-made his last sufferings less bitter.</p>
-
-<p>While she remained kneeling on the pavement wet with
-blood, a last big calibre shell knocked over, almost at her
-feet, a big corner house, which in its fall buried the
-German and French corpses in one horrible heap. She
-fell in a faint on the stones, knocked over by the windage
-of the shell, which had so nearly done for her.</p>
-
-<p>During the latter part of her discourse she straightened
-her thin figure to the full, her strange eyes sparkled, and
-she appeared to be possessed by some strong and mysterious
-spirit which made us tremble. She became big
-in her rustic simplicity&mdash;big, as the incarnation of grief
-and of pity, and of the peasant in her gave place to a
-living image of the war&mdash;an image singularly moving and
-singularly beautiful.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;WITH THE WARRIORS FROM THE MARNE</p>
-
-<p>From the next day Verberie became in some degree
-the rallying point for all soldiers who had lost touch
-with their units. Elements of all sorts of regiments, of
-all arms, of all races even, arrived on foot, on horseback,
-on bicycles, in country carts. There were dragoons,
-cuirassiers, chasseurs, artillerymen, Algerian Light
-Infantry and English. Bernous, khaki uniform, blue
-capes, rubbed shoulders with dolmans, black tunics and
-red trousers.</p>
-
-<p>In this extraordinary crowd there were men from
-Morocco mounted on Arab horses and wearing turbans;
-there were "Joyeux" who wore the tarboosh, and ruddy
-English faces surmounted by flat caps. All the uniforms
-were covered with dirt and slashed and torn. Many of
-the men had bare feet, and some carried arms and some
-were without. It was the hazard of the colossal battle
-of the Marne, where several millions of men had been
-at grips, which had thrown them on this point. All were
-animated by the same desire for information, and particularly
-of the whereabouts of their respective regiments.
-From every direction flowed in convoys, waggons,
-artillery ammunition waggons, stragglers from
-every division and from every army corps. The mix-up
-and the confusion were indescribable. One heard shouting,
-swearing, neighing of horses, the horns of motor-cars,
-and the rumble of heavy waggons, which shook the
-houses.</p>
-
-<p>Faces drawn with fatigue were black with dust and
-mud and framed in stubbly beards. Everyone was gesticulating,
-everyone was shouting and a bright autumn
-sun, following upon the storm, threw into prominence
-amongst the medley of clothing the luminous splashes of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span>
-gaudy colours and imparted an Oriental effect to the
-crowd.</p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;STORY OF THE PRIEST&mdash;AND TWO
-CHASSEURS</p>
-
-<p>Having eaten, washed and rested, I walked the streets,
-drinking the morning air and taking deep breaths of the
-<i>joie de vivre</i>, of the strength and vitality mingled with
-the air. I looked on every side to see whether I could
-not find some acquaintance in the crowd, some stray
-trooper from my regiment.</p>
-
-<p>So it was that the hazard of my walk brought me
-to a scene which moved me to tears and which rests
-graven so deeply on my memory that I can see its smallest
-detail with my eyes shut. The Gothic porch of the
-church, with its fine sculptures of the best period, was
-open, making in the brightness of the morning a pit of
-shade, at the foot of which some candles shone like stars.
-On the threshold of the porch, gaily lighted by the morning
-sun, a priest, whose fine virile face I can still recall,
-held in his hand the enamel pyx, and his surplice of lace
-of a dazzling whiteness contrasted with the muddy boots
-and spurs. One could guess that after having traversed
-some field of battle, consoling the wounded and the dying,
-he had dismounted to officiate in the open air under the
-morning sun.</p>
-
-<p>Before him, on a humble country cart and lying on a
-bed of straw, were stretched the rigid bodies, fixed in
-death, of two chasseurs who had fallen nobly while defending
-the bridge over the river. All around, kneeling
-in the mud of the porch, a semicircle of bare-headed
-soldiers, overcome by gratitude and humility, were assembled
-to accomplish a last duty and pay their last
-respects to the two comrades who were lying before them<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span>
-and who were sleeping their last sleep in their bloodstained
-uniforms, and assisted at the supreme office.
-The priest finished the <i>De profundis</i>, and in a clear voice
-pronounced the sacred words "<i>Revertitur in terram suam
-unde erat et spiritus redit ad Deum qui dedit illum</i>."
-The officiant gave the holy-water sprinkler to the priest,
-who sprinkled the bodies and murmured "<i>Requiescat in
-pace</i>." "Amen," responded the kneeling crowd, and a
-great wave of religious feeling passed over the kneeling
-men, the greater part of whom gave way to overmastering
-emotion.</p>
-
-<p>I can still see a big devil of an artilleryman, with his
-head between his hands, shaken by convulsive sobs. Having
-given the absolution, the priest raised the host sparkling
-in the sunlight for the last time and pronounced
-the sacramental words. I moved off, deeply affected by
-the grandeur of the scene.</p>
-
-
-<p>IV&mdash;DEPRAVED SOLDIERS IN A DRAWING
-ROOM</p>
-
-<p>By the 12th a good number of 22nd Dragoons and
-some officers of the regiment had rejoined at Verberie.
-We formed from this débris an almost complete squadron
-under the command of Captain de Salverte, who had
-succeeded in getting through the lines by skirting the
-forest.</p>
-
-<p>I again found my officer, M. Chatelin, whom I had
-last seen in the little clearing near Gilocourt, surrounded
-by lurking enemies, and whom I had hardly dared hope
-to see again alive; also M. de Thézy, my comrade Clère
-and others.</p>
-
-<p>We were all sorry to hear that Lieutenant Roy had
-fallen on the field of battle with several others, and that
-Major Jouillié had been taken prisoner. As for Captain<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span>
-de Tarragon, it was stated that he might have escaped
-on foot with his orderly and that he might be somewhere
-in the neighbourhood with a contingent of escaped
-men, but any precise information was wanting.</p>
-
-<p>The night before I had slept in the drawing-room of
-the château belonging to M. de Maindreville, the mayor.
-Its appearance merits some brief description, so that
-those who are still in doubt as to the savagery of the
-Germans may learn to what degree of bestiality and
-ignominy they are capable of attaining.</p>
-
-<p>This fine drawing-room was a veritable dung heap.
-The curtains were torn, the small billiard-table lay upside
-down in the middle of the room, a litter of rotting food
-covered the floor, the furniture was in matchwood, the
-chairs were broken, the easy-chairs had had their stuffing
-torn out of them and the glass of the cabinets was
-smashed. One could see that all small objects had been
-carried off and all others methodically broken. On the
-first floor the sight was heart-breaking. Fine linen,
-trimmed with lace, was soiled with excrement; excrement
-was everywhere, in the bath, on the sheets, on the floor.
-They had vomited on the beds and urinated against the
-walls; broken bottles had shed seas of red wine on the
-costly carpets. An unnamable liquid was running down
-the staircase, obscene designs were traced in charcoal on
-the wall-papers and filthy inscriptions ornamented the
-walls.</p>
-
-<p>I have told enough to give an idea of the degrading
-traces left by a contemptible enemy. I have exaggerated
-nothing; if anything, I have understated the truth.</p>
-
-<p>And this is the people that wants to be the arbiter of
-culture and of civilisation! May it stand for ever
-shamed and reduced to its true level, which is below that
-of the brute beast.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p>V&mdash;THE SEARCH FOR CAPTAIN DE TARRAGON</p>
-
-<p>On the morning of the 12th, under the command of
-Captain de Salverte we crossed the Oise by a bridge of
-boats, the stone bridge having been destroyed by dynamite
-some days before. We went north to billet at
-Estrée-Saint Denis, which was to be the definite rallying
-point of the 22nd Dragoons. We were followed by
-several country carts, full of dismounted troopers, saddles,
-lances, cloaks and odds and ends of equipment.</p>
-
-<p>Acting on very vague information, I set out on the
-13th to look for Captain de Tarragon. I was mounted
-on a prehistoric motor bicycle, requisitioned from the
-village barber. I scoured the country seeking information
-from everyone I met. I received the most contradictory
-reports, made a thousand useless detours and
-was exasperated when overtaken by night without having
-found any trace of him.</p>
-
-<p>I followed the road leading to Baron and to Nanteuil-le-Haudoin,
-along which but a few days before the corps
-of Landwehr, asked for by von Kluck, had marched with
-the object of enveloping our army, and along which it
-had just been precipitately hustled back. The sky was
-overcast and the day was threatening. At each step dead
-horses with swelled bellies threatened heaven with their
-stiff legs. A score of soldiers were lying in convulsed
-attitudes, their eyes wide open, with grimacing mouths
-twisted into a terrifying smile, and with hands clasping
-their rifles. Involuntarily I trembled at finding myself
-alone at nightfall in this deserted country, where no
-living being was to be seen, where not a sound was to be
-heard except the cawing of thousands of crows and the
-purr of my motor, which panted on the hills like an
-asthmatic old man, causing me the liveliest anxiety.</p>
-
-<p>Fifteen hundred mètres from Baron, after a last gasp,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span>
-my machine stopped for ever, and, as I was ignorant of
-its mechanics, I was compelled to leave it where it was
-and continue my journey on foot through the darkness.</p>
-
-<p>The proprietor of the château of Baron put me up for
-the night. As at Verberie, everything had been burnt,
-soiled and destroyed. Nothing remained of the elegant
-furniture beyond a heap of shapeless objects. Next
-morning with the aid of a captain on the staff who
-requisitioned a trap for me, I got back to Verberie and
-found Captain de Tarragon there. He had slept at the
-farm of La Bonne Aventure, quite near to where I lay.</p>
-
-<p>When he saw me, after the mortal anxieties through
-which he had lived, believing his squadron lost and cut
-up, he was overcome by such a feeling of gratitude and
-joy that I saw tears rise to his eyes while he shook me
-vigourously by the hand. He had already sent forward
-my name for mention in the order for the day with reference
-to the affair at Gilocourt and the death of poor
-Dangel. I was recommended for the military medal, and
-my heart swelled with pride and joy, while I was carried
-back to Estrée-Saint-Denis, stretched out in a country
-cart with a score of dismounted comrades.</p>
-
-<p>A few days afterwards I was promoted corporal and
-proudly sported the red flannel chevrons bought at a
-country grocer's shop.</p>
-
-
-<p>VI&mdash;TALES OF THE DRAGOONS</p>
-
-<p>Once the half-regiment was reconstituted after a
-fashion, though many were missing (a detachment of
-fifty men without horses having returned to the depot),
-we were attached to the 3rd Cavalry Division, which
-happened to be in our neighbourhood, ours having left
-the area for some unknown destination. Until the 1st of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span>
-October our lot was bound up with that of the 4th
-Cuirassiers, who marched with us.</p>
-
-<p>On the 23rd of September, as supports for the artillery,
-we were present at violent infantry actions between
-Nesle and Billancourt. The 4th Corps attacked, and the
-furious struggle extended over the whole country. My
-troop was detached as flank guard and, in the thick
-morning fog, we knocked up against a handful of German
-cavalry, whom, in the distance, we had taken for
-our own men.</p>
-
-<p>We charged them at a gallop, and we noticed that they
-were tiring and that we were gaining on them. One
-of them drew his sabre and cut his horse's flanks with
-it, whilst a non-commissioned officer turned and fired his
-revolver without hitting us; but, thanks to the fog, they
-got away. We did not tempt providence by following
-them too far for fear of bringing up in their lines.</p>
-
-<p>At night we were sent to reconnoitre some fires which
-were reddening the horizon and which, from a distance,
-seemed vast conflagrations. We came upon a bivouac of
-Algerian troops, who were squatting on their heels, warming
-themselves, singing strange African melodies and
-giving to this corner of French soil an appearance of
-Algeria.</p>
-
-<p>On hearing the sound of our horses they sprang to
-arms with guttural cries, but when they had recognised
-that we were French they insisted on embracing our
-officer and danced round us like children.</p>
-
-<p>We billeted at Parvillers in a half-destroyed farm, and
-there at daybreak a sight that suggested an hallucination
-met our eyes. Some ten German soldiers were there in
-the courtyard dead, mowed down by the "75," but in
-such natural attitudes that but for their waxen colour
-one could have believed them alive. One was standing
-holding on to a bush, his hand grasping the branches.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>
-His face bespoke his terror, his mute mouth seemed as if
-in the act of yelling and his eyes were dilated with fear.
-A fragment of shell had pierced his chest. Another was
-on his knees, propped against a wall, under cover of
-which he had sought shelter from the murderous fire.
-I approached to see where his wound was and it took
-me a moment to discover it, so intact was the corpse. I
-saw at last that he had had the whole of the inside of his
-cranium carried away and hollowed out, as if by some
-surgical instrument. His tongue and his eyes were kept
-in place by a filament of flesh, and his spiked helmet had
-rolled off by his side. An officer was seated on some
-hay, with his legs apart and his head thrown back, looking
-at the farm.</p>
-
-<p>All these eyes fixed us with a terrifying immobility,
-with a look of such acute terror that our men turned
-away, as if afraid of sharing it; and not one of them
-dared to touch the magnificent new equipment of the
-Germans, which would have tempted them in any other
-circumstances. There were aluminum water-bottles and
-mess tins, helmet plates of shining copper and sculptured
-regimental badges dear to the hearts of soldiers, and
-which they have the habit of collecting as trophies.</p>
-
-
-<p>VII&mdash;LAST CHARGE OF THE HORSEMEN</p>
-
-<p>The dawn of the 25th broke without a cloud over the
-village of Folies. A heat haze hid the early morning
-sun. The enemy were quite near, and the sentries on
-the barricades gave the alarm. The cuirassiers and dragoons,
-leaving their horses under cover, had been on
-watch in the surrounding country since the morning to
-protect the village and the batteries of "75's," which were
-firing from a little way back.</p>
-
-<p>A non-commissioned officer and I had remained<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span>
-mounted. M. de Thézy sent us to investigate some horsemen
-whose shadows had loomed through the mist and
-whom we had seen dismount in an apple orchard near
-the village of Chocques. We set off at a quiet trot, convinced
-that we had to deal with some French hussars
-whom I had seen go that way an hour before. We
-crossed a field of beetroot and made straight towards
-them. They seemed anchored to the spot, and when we
-were within one hundred mètres, and they showed no
-signs of moving, our confidence increased. The fog
-seemed to grow thicker and our horses, now at the walk,
-scented no danger. We were within fifty mètres of
-them when a voice spoke out and the word "carbine"
-reached us distinctly, carried by a light breeze. The
-non-commissioned officer turned to me, his suspicions
-completely stilled, and said, "We can go on, they are
-French, I heard the word carbine." At the same instant
-I saw the group come to the shoulder and a dozen jets
-of fire tore the mist with short red flashes. A hail of
-bullets fell all around us, and we had only just time
-enough to put between them and ourselves as much fog
-as would conceal us, for before turning tail we had seen
-the confused grey mass of a column coming out of the
-village. We had only to warn the artillery and then there
-would be some fun.</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant of artillery was two kilomètres back
-perched on a ladder. Having listened to what we had
-to say, he turned towards his gun and cried through a
-megaphone, "2600, corrector 18." We were already far
-off, returning at the gallop to try to see the effect, and
-it was a fine sight.</p>
-
-<p>Leaving the horses in a farm, we slipped from tree
-to tree. There was the column, still advancing. A first
-shell, ten mètres in front of it, stopped it short; immediately
-a second fell on the left, wounding some men, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span>
-a horse reared and upset its rider. A third shell struck
-mercilessly into the centre of the column and caused an
-explosion which sent flying, right and left, dark shapes
-which we guessed to be fragments of bodies. It rained
-shell, which struck the road with mathematical precision,
-sowing death and panic. In the twinkling of an eye the
-road was swept clean. The survivors bolted in every
-direction like madmen, and the agonising groans of a
-dying horse echoed through the whole countryside.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>On the 1st of October we rejoined our division and
-the first half-regiment at Tilloy-les-Mofflaines. Up to
-the 20th we passed through a period of great privation
-and fatigue owing to the early frosts. We were unable
-to sleep for as many as five days on end, and when at
-night we had a few hours in which to rest, we passed
-them lying on the pavement of the street, propped up
-against some heap of coal or of stones, holding our
-horses' reins, each huddled up against his neighbour to
-try and keep warm.</p>
-
-
-<p>VIII&mdash;DIARY OF A FRENCH TROOPER</p>
-
-<p>Here are extracts from my diary, starting from 8th
-of October:</p>
-
-<p><i>8th October.</i>&mdash;All night we guarded the bridge at
-Estaires, after having constructed a formidable barricade.
-Damp and chilly night, which I got through lying
-on the pavement before the bridge; drank a half-litre of
-spirits in little sips to sustain me. This is the most
-trying night we have passed, but the spirits of all are
-wonderful.</p>
-
-<p><i>9th October</i>: <i>Twenty minutes to four, two kilomètres
-from Estaires, scouting amongst beetroot fields.</i>&mdash;Has the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span>
-supreme moment come? A little while ago I firmly believed
-it had; now I am out of my reckoning, so incomprehensible
-and widespread is the struggle which surrounds
-us.</p>
-
-<p>We have evacuated Estaires and the bridge over the
-Lys, which we were guarding, to rejoin our horses on
-foot. After some minutes on the road the first shells
-burst. My troop received orders to fight dismounted, and
-here we are, lying down as skirmishers amongst the
-beetroot, in the midst of a heavy artillery and musketry
-fire. I am on the extreme right, and a moment ago
-two shrapnel shells came over and burst six or eight
-mètres above my head, peppering the ground with bullets.
-Never, I imagine, have I come so near to being hit.</p>
-
-<p>For the moment it is impossible to understand what is
-going on; the whole of the cavalry which was on in front
-of us&mdash;chasseurs, dragoons and all the cyclists&mdash;have
-fallen back, passing along the road on our flank. We,
-however, have had no order to retire. The peasants with
-their wives and children are running about the country
-like mad people. It is a sorry sight. A moment ago I
-saw an old man and a little girl fall in their hurry to
-escape from their farm, which a shell had just knocked
-to pieces. They are like herds of animals maddened by
-a storm.</p>
-
-<p>At dusk the Germans are 500 mètres off. We have
-orders to take up our post in the cemetery of Estaires.
-I have hurt my foot and each step in the ploughed land
-is a torture. I have noted a way which will lead me to
-the bridge on the other side of the town.</p>
-
-<p>I brought up my patrol at the double. When I got
-back I saw the troop retiring.</p>
-
-<p>We passed through the town, which had a sinister look
-by night, reddened by the flames from many fires. The
-whole population is in flight, leaving houses open to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span>
-streets, and crowding up the roads. All the windowpanes
-are broken by the bombardment; somewhere, in
-the middle of the town, a building is burning and the
-flames mount to the sky. There are barricades in every
-street. We have reached the horses, which are two kilomètres
-from the town, and we grope for them in the
-dark. Mine is slightly wounded in the foreleg. Long
-retreat during the night (the second during which we
-have not slept&mdash;a storm wets us to the skin).</p>
-
-<p>Arrived at Chosques at five in the morning. We get
-to bed at 6.30 and we are off again at 8 o'clock. I ask
-myself for how many days men and horses can hold out.</p>
-
-<p><i>10th October.</i>&mdash;In the afternoon we again covered the
-twenty kilomètres which separated us from Estaires.
-Hardly had we settled down to guard the same bridge as
-yesterday when we were sent to La Gorgue. On the
-way stopped in the village, as shells commenced to fall.
-The 1st troop took refuge in a grocer's, where we were
-parked like sheep. A large calibre shell burst just opposite
-with a terrible row. I thought that the house was
-going to fall in. Lieutenant Niel, who had stayed outside,
-was knocked over into the ditch and wounded. We
-are falling back with the horses to La Gorgue, and we are
-passing a third night, without sleep, on the road, Magrin
-and I on a heap of coal. Horses and men have had
-nothing to eat, the latter are benumbed, exhausted, but
-gay as ever.</p>
-
-<p><i>11th October.</i>&mdash;We get to a neighbouring farm at
-Estrem to feed the horses. They have scarcely touched
-their hay and oats before an order comes telling us to
-rejoin at the very place from which we have come. The
-Germans are trying to take the village from the east,
-thanks to the bridge which they captured the day before
-yesterday, but we have been reinforced by cyclists, and
-the 4th Division is coming up. We are holding on;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span>
-the position is good. The belfry of the town hall has
-just fallen. We are going back to Estrem.</p>
-
-<p>Three hours passed in a trench without greatcoats.
-Magrin and I are so cold that we huddle up one against
-the other and share a woollen handkerchief to cover our
-faces. We put up at Calonne-sur-la-Lys. And so it
-goes on up to the 17th, the date on which we re-enter
-Belgium, passing by Bailleul, Outersteene and Locre. It
-is not again a triumphal entry on a fine August morning,
-it is a march past ruins and over rubbish heaps.</p>
-
-<p>At Outersteene, however, we were received with
-touching manifestations of confidence and enthusiasm;
-an old tottering and broken-down teacher had drawn up
-before the school a score of young lads of seven to ten
-years old, who watched us passing and sang the <i>Marseillaise</i>
-with all their lungs, while the old man beat the
-time.</p>
-
-<p>The village had been evacuated only three days ago,
-and it was from the thresholds of its houses, partly fallen
-in and still smoking, that this song rose, a sincere and
-spontaneous outburst.</p>
-
-<p>(Lieut. Mallet tells "How We Crossed the German
-Lines"; "The Charge of Gilocourt"; "The Escape in the
-Forest of Compiegne"; "The Two Glorious Days at
-Staden"; "The Funeral of Lord Roberts"; "The Attack
-at Loos.")</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_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h2>"TO RUHLEBEN&mdash;AND BACK"&mdash;LIFE
-IN A GERMAN PRISON</h2>
-
-<p><i>Where the British Civilian Prisoners Are Held
-in Detention Camp</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Told by Geoffrey Pyke, an English Prisoner</i></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>This is a picturesque and thrilling story of a real adventure.
-The author, a young Englishman, entered Germany at the outbreak
-of the War, was discovered, imprisoned, and transferred
-to the great detention camp at Ruhleben. Here he made one
-of the most marvelous escapes on record, and after undreamed-of
-dangers and hardships arrived in safety at the Dutch front.
-Mr. Pyke in relating his experience says: "I was caught up in
-a vast mechanism ... that bounds the German Empire and
-tossed from one part to another, was beaten, crushed, and
-hammered ... the machine took me and threw me in jail, and
-then in another jail, and then in another, and then back into
-the first. Finally vomiting me, in a fit of either weariness,
-mercy or disgust, into a concentration camp for untrained civilians."
-Finally escaping from Ruhleben on July 9th, 1915. "Had
-only the 4,500 other inhabitants of Ruhleben escaped at the
-same time, in a species of general stampede, and one or two
-other people in Berlin or elsewhere died or been called off,
-matters might have arranged themselves very satisfactorily."
-The escaped prisoner has collected his experiences into a volume
-entitled: "To Ruhleben&mdash;And Back," from which we present a
-single chapter by permission of his publishers, <i>Houghton, Mifflin
-and Company</i>.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p><a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a>
-I&mdash;HERR DIREKTOR OF THE PRISON</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span></p>
-<p>I forget now how many times I saw the Direktor of
-the prison, though at the time, the days on which I did
-were as distinct to me as wounds, which a man cannot
-see, but which he knows individually and intimately. In
-order to obtain audience of this gentleman, it was necessary,
-when the warder unlocked the door at 6.30 and the
-pitchers were put out, to ask to see the Herr Direktor.
-At half-past nine you were taken out of the cell, let
-through the door at the end down one flight and through
-to the floor which you could see over the railings of the
-balcony. Here again you were put into a cell, and the
-door was locked, and time passed by. Nothing else happened.
-In half an hour, or an hour, you were lined up
-in the passage with any others who also had requests.
-One by one you would go into that little office. You
-would bow at the entrance. "Ja?" would remark the
-bald-headed old gray-beard, with an Iron Cross of '70
-hanging from his coat. "Ja?" And you would state
-your request. A vast ledger opposite him, the old bird,
-for he looked exactly like the Jackdaw of Rheims, would
-enter and sign and countersign in it. His decision was
-given in a curt "<i>Ja</i>" or "<i>Nein</i>," or "<i>Das geht nicht</i>,"<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a>
-and you would be standing in the line outside, among
-those whose chance had not yet come. You had succeeded;
-you had failed&mdash;who knows what luck would attend
-you on these expeditions. Every request to write
-a letter had to be made in this manner. The shiny-headed
-old bird, with the head jailer in attendance his hand stiffly
-at his sword, would enter your name, the name of the
-addressee, and the reason for writing it, in his vast ledger.
-"<i>Ja? Nein. Das geht nicht</i>," and it is all over. Time
-after time I craved permission to write to His Excellency
-the American Ambassador, to request him to tell my
-people at home that I was alive. It was granted at the
-third request. What agony were those mornings, pacing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span>
-up and down in the cell downstairs, waiting to be put into
-line. What could I say to the old boy to persuade him?
-Hundreds of passionate words rose in my mind, as I
-paced up and down that cell, waiting for the moment.
-"<i>Bitte, Herr Direktor, kann ich ein brief schreiben?</i>"<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a>
-was all that I could stammer out, almost before I had
-reached the threshold of his office. "<i>Ja? Nein. Das
-geht nicht</i>," and I, after staring at him with eyes like a
-rabbit's fastened on a snake, unable to find words to say
-more, aching with the dull misery of refusal, have passed
-away, giving place to someone else who, in his turn, also
-succeeds or fails.</p>
-
-<p>I used to try once a fortnight, and though I have
-since discovered that even the letters I wrote were never
-sent, yet nevertheless I always had a hope of their getting
-through. Regularly as clockwork every other Monday,
-after the Hell of Sunday, I would request to see the
-Direktor. For the first ten weeks, I persevered in this.
-Then suddenly I began to go to pieces. I missed one
-Monday, and put off asking the old bald-pate until Tuesday.
-When the moment came round on the Tuesday
-morning, I funked again. Wednesday came, and again
-I funked. On Thursday, I managed to push the words
-asking to see the Direktor from between my lips. Then
-with a rush, realising there was no going back, I felt
-all courage return to me. My head became as clear
-as a bell, and arguments to meet every objection of the
-Direktor's came to my mind. He had let me write several
-times previously, and I had not troubled him now
-for seventeen days. I was confident. Again I repeated
-my request gently to myself.... Suddenly I realised I
-was standing before him, and that I must speak. I must
-say something. I had come there to say something.
-Unless I asked him something, he would say I was not
-to be brought before him again. My eyes fixed on the
-large pimple on the top of his head. I could not take
-them away. The pimple was not quite in the centre of
-the cranium, but occupied, so to speak, the position halfway
-betwixt centre-forward and right outside. He wore
-it where a comedian wears a top hat the size of a five-shilling
-bit in attempts to be funny. My thoughts followed
-it. It was unique, and magnificent. "Have YOU
-any superfluous hair?" I thought. I should love to
-breathe very gently on the shiny surface, just to see if it
-becomes misty, or whether it still shines through everything.
-I wondered if it was very sensitive, so sensitive
-that he could feel what was reflected in it, or whether
-it was pachydermatous, and safe to dig pins into. He
-was going to move. He was just finishing off the entry
-he was making in the ledger. He was going to look up
-at me and say, "Ja wohl?"&mdash;Speak, say something&mdash;speak&mdash;speak....</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It was evening. I was in my cell. The light was fading
-fast. I was thinking how on the morrow I would try
-again, how it only needed careful preparation, and I
-should be as able as anybody to say what I wanted to,&mdash;to
-speak.</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;SOLITARY CONFINEMENT AT THE
-POLIZEIGEFANGNIS</p>
-
-<p>After you have been in solitary for some time, it becomes
-increasing difficult to retain your judgment. I
-know that first I would make up my mind that I was
-going to be in prison for two years, and then a great
-and irresistible hope would arise within me, that I should
-be sent to a concentration camp called Ruhleben, that
-I had had a whisper of from my friends. I had hoped
-for some sort of a trial to know how long I was going
-to remain where I was. Every day that passed at ten<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>
-o'clock, when I imagined that anyone, before whom I
-might be brought, had come down to his office, I would
-put on the one collar I had. Every day at six I would
-take it off again, preserving it for the next day. At
-times I became convinced that, because I was not yet of
-age, I was to be kept for a few months more, and that
-the day after my twenty-first birthday, I was to be sentenced
-to some ghastly sort of punishment, like solitary
-for two years, or for life. (There seemed absolutely no
-difference between these two, and I dreaded the one as
-much as the other. Both appeared interminable, and I
-had no hopes of coming out sane, even after the shorter
-period. I pictured myself moaning about the London
-Law Courts in a celluloid collar, picking up a little copying
-work here, and a little there, until I finally sank
-into a mumbling old age at twenty-five, and died in
-delirium tremens at thirty.)</p>
-
-<p>Another fact made me terribly despondent, and, fight
-how I would, was gradually making me utterly hopeless.
-About fourteen days after my companions of the British
-Relief Committee had gone, a new-comer had arrived.
-He spoke German absolutely perfectly, but with an Austrian
-accent. I had heard him say something to the
-warder. I will not tell his story, for he is at the present
-moment in another prison in Berlin, though not in solitary,
-and is, I know, writing his reminiscences in readiness
-for when the war shall come to an end. Let it
-suffice, however, to say that he had been discovered, soon
-after war broke out, writing articles for a London paper.
-He was arrested at the flat he happened to be living in,
-and, after a large amount of palaver, was given twenty-four
-hours to leave the country in. He was accompanied
-to the frontier. Within a fortnight he was back
-again. He had gone to London, had seen his paper,
-had come back to Holland, and at the frontier had pretended<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span>
-to be an Austrian waiter who had been expelled
-from England. He so exasperated his interrogators at
-the frontier by his eternal repetition of his ill treatment
-at the hands of his dastardly English employers, that they
-finally let him pass. However, in the end he was caught&mdash;as
-we all are&mdash;and recognised. He had been told that
-he was to be sent to this place Ruhleben, and, when
-one day he disappeared, I naturally surmised that he had
-been taken there. He was very good to me, for he had
-managed to get permission to buy fruit; I had been
-refused it. So he used to buy double the quantity, and
-daily, on going down the stairs, smuggle me an apple.
-"If he," I argued, "who has done this thing <i>twice</i>, and
-who is hoary with old age (he was about thirty-five),
-gets sent to this camp Ruhleben, after being here for
-three weeks, and I, who have only done it once, and am
-not yet of age, and have been here nine weeks, and have
-not been sent there, then there is no hope of my ever
-getting there. They would have sent me there by now,
-were they going to do so at all." Afterwards, I found,
-of course, that he had never been sent anywhere near
-Ruhleben, but simply to another prison. I heard the
-most wonderful stories about his doings there, from a
-friend who was sent to prison for a time. He would
-appear for exercise dressed in flamboyant pink running
-shorts, a vest and socks to match&mdash;and a top hat. What
-on earth for? Well, if the walls of prison don't supply
-you with humour or whimsicality, you must undertake
-the task yourself.</p>
-
-<p>The best of luck to him. He probably thinks I am
-still in that Polizeigefängnis.</p>
-
-<p>For some time I had been the oldest inhabitant of the
-prison. The usual denizen of the place came for a day
-or two, and then went on his way through that process
-called Law and Justice. My position gradually came to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span>
-give me tiny privileges. For instance, they became quite
-convinced that I was going mad, for, apart from my
-habit of walking round and round the exercise yard at
-nearly five miles per hour, every night I would repeat the
-Jabberwocky. It had taken me a whole week with my
-broken-down memory to piece together the odd bits of
-lines and verses that I still carried in my head; and
-another week to evolve Mr. Kipling's "If." I would
-suddenly shout loudly into the solid blackness that "All
-mimsey were the borrow-groves and the moamwraths
-outgrabe," I knew quite well that borrogoves was the correct
-litany, but I preferred borrow-groves; so borrow-groves
-it was. "One two, one two and through and
-through the vorpel blade went snicker snack. He left it
-dead and with its head he went galumphing back," and I
-would make that "snicker snack" all slow and creepy,
-like Captain Hook; and would rise to a triumphant roar
-as I announced the fact that he "galumphed" back, in
-preference to any other form of locomotion that might
-have been available, glorying at his ability to resist temptations
-such as taxi-cabbing, taking the tube, or walking,
-and, above all, the insidious run.</p>
-
-<div class="poem">
-"<i>If</i> you can make one heap of all your winnings,<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And risk it on one turn of pitch and toss,</span><br />
-And lose; and start again at your beginnings,<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And never breathe a word about your loss."</span><br />
-<br />
-<i>If</i> (and I shouted as if I was praying for life itself)<br />
-<br />
-"<i>If</i> you can force your heart, and nerve, and sinew<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">To serve their turn, long after they are gone,</span><br />
-And so hold on, when there is nothing in you,<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Except the will, which says to them, 'hold on.'"</span><br />
-</div>
-
-<p>And I would repeat it softly to myself, until loudly again,
-pacing madly up and down the cell, I would argue, "Yes,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>
-that's all very well, you know, but your will is the very
-thing that suffers before your heart and nerve and sinew
-are anywhere near gone. Why, it's the very base, the
-very foundation of all things, that it attacked, and then
-what are you going to do, Mr. Rudyard?" Nevertheless,
-I found an odd sort of comfort, and they were nearly
-always my prayer to the setting sun as the darkness
-stole in.</p>
-
-<p>I also used to hum, whistle, and sing. This was strictly
-forbidden by one of the thirty-three regulations pasted
-on the back of the door. One night in December, when
-the darkness had been extra oppressive,&mdash;I was in darkness
-for eighteen out of the twenty-four hours&mdash;and I
-had been singing loud enough for the warders to hear,
-one came up and, rapping on the door, said that such
-behaviour was forbidden, nevertheless, he would ask the
-Herr Direktor as an especial favour, if I might be permitted
-to whistle occasionally. This is what comes of
-being the oldest inhabitant of a jail. The next day there
-was solemnly filled into the ledger by the chief warder,
-and countersigned by the Direktor, "Erlaubnis zu nummer
-acht und fünfzig zu singen und zu pfeifen."<a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a></p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;IN A CELL AT THE STADT VOGTEI</p>
-
-<p>I shall never forget the day on which, after thirteen
-weeks, in January, 1915, I left prison&mdash;to go to another.
-Nothing, I was convinced, could be more of a living
-Hell than those thirteen weeks at the Polizeigefängnis.
-I was escorted out into the street. There was snow upon
-the pavements: it had been summer when I saw them
-last. Our route lay round the corner. Here, after passing
-through a low door in an immensely thick wall, once
-again I found myself in an atmosphere, not merely of
-red tape, but of the very essence from which tape, and
-redness, are made. Those innumerable bureaux: those
-ticketings, docketings, searching of clothes, etc., occupied
-a couple of hours, until I found myself in a bright and
-beautiful cell thirteen feet by six. This was the famous
-Stadt Vogtei prison. "Vogtei," literally translated, means
-a bailiff's office, but why a prison should be called "The
-City Bailiff's Office," or why the city bailiff's office should
-be a prison, I am at a loss to say.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span></p>
-<p>Notwithstanding the bailiff, it was quite a good prison.
-Large numbers of English people&mdash;five to six hundred
-in all&mdash;had been here before they were sent to Ruhleben
-"for purposes of quarantine" as the official report says.
-It was a gentleman's prison; it was intended for those
-who had sentences for minor offences to serve, e.g. two
-to three months. But this did not frighten me, as I knew
-of its character as a depot for Ruhleben. I was full of
-hope. We had two meals of skilly a day instead of one.
-I was allowed to talk to the others during the two hours'
-exercise they were good enough to allow, and I could
-buy almost anything I wanted&mdash;bar newspapers.</p>
-
-<p>I had another experience here that nearly killed me.
-There was the usual shelf for bowl, spoon, etc., and from
-the side hung a fat little book with one hundred and
-thirty-three rules. It contained all the punishments for
-all the various main crimes, worked out in permutations
-and combinations. Things such as "for not cleaning out
-of the cell for the first time the prisoner is to be punished
-by the three days' withdrawal of the midday hot meal, or
-instead one day withdrawal of the hot meal, and a second
-day withdrawal of the cold meal (breakfast), or, in lieu
-thereof.... In addition to which ... or as an alternative
-... in substitute thereof.... But for the second
-offence, or dirtiness of a second degree, or unpunctuality
-of the third degree, or noise of the twentieth degree, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span>
-prisoner shall be punished by withdrawal of ... whereof
-... in lieu of this can be subtituted ..." etc. etc.</p>
-
-<p>On the outside of this little fat book with its one
-hundred and thirty-three rules was a diagram of the shelf
-from which it hung, showing exactly in what order the
-washing bowl, the eating bowl, the spoon, the fork, the
-soap were to be placed. And not merely was there a front
-view, but also two side views were given: one showing
-the side of the shelf with one towel hanging somnolently
-from a nail, and the other side view showing the other
-end of the shelf with the booklet itself hanging even more
-somnolently from another nail. But yes, there was something
-more: for not merely was there a picture of the
-booklet, but the picture of the booklet had the picture
-of the booklet pasted on the booklet's cover, and, what is
-more, the side which bore this diagram faced outwards,
-and the right-hand top corner was against the wall. Thus
-was it according to the picture. But it so happened that
-this was impossible, for the two were incompatible.
-Either the picture had to face inwards, or the left-hand
-top corner must touch the wall. But both together was
-contrary to the nature of the book. Feeling rather jolly
-at my new environment, I pointed this out to the jailer,
-who wasn't a bad sort of fellow, when he came in. At
-first he didn't grasp it, but when he did, he took serious
-note of it with pen and ink. Next day, in came the
-prison governor, a military-looking fellow, and he went
-straight to the booklet at the side of the cupboard, and
-examining the diagram on the cover, studied the incompatibility
-carefully for a long time. He turned round,
-and after looking whimsically at me, and then at the
-warder for some time, as if trying to make up his mind
-as to who was the biggest fool, said, "H'm," very definitely,
-and went away.</p>
-
-<p>Alas, I only remained here five days. I had hardly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span>
-finished breakfast when the warder came round with a
-list and said I was to "pack up," though, since I had
-nothing to pack, his orders were rather superfluous.
-Again weary hours of waiting in the bureau, and then,
-for the first time in my life, I saw the inside of Black
-Maria.</p>
-
-<p>I had imagined it to have cells all the way down the
-side, but there were only two. There were seven of us,
-including a woman and a policeman. Heaven knows
-what the woman was "in" for, and though I several times
-formulated the question mentally, I could never manage
-to get it out. The policeman was quite a nice fellow,
-and let us talk, and joined in himself with an air of a
-busy man sparing a moment to play with some children.
-It soon became plain that one of the men was the woman's
-husband, or ought to have been if he wasn't. The
-others were gentlemen, sentenced for petty offences, who
-were being taken to the town hall to be enlisted in the
-army. They did not seem to relish the prospect, but
-"at any rate," they said, "it would be a change." I looked
-through the grille to see what I could of Berlin streets.
-There were not many people on them, and the greater
-number were women and in black, but the quietness of
-the place was nothing to what I was to see later. There
-were a few luxury-selling shops, such as flower sellers,
-that were closed, but the majority seemed able to get
-along. That Teutonic spectacle, extraordinary but obviously
-sensible, of women going about without hats could
-be seen everywhere. And then we suddenly drove into
-the inevitable yard. Two gates unbarred and locked
-themselves automatically as one passed.</p>
-
-
-<p>IV&mdash;"MY THIRD PRISON&mdash;MOABIT: CELL 1603"</p>
-
-<p>It was the great prison&mdash;Moabit. A huge central hall
-surmounted by a dome, with wings going in all directions<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span>
-and the end of each wing connected by another great
-building, each with six storeys of cells, and each of these
-with its iron balcony with glass flooring. There was
-noise, and clanging of doors everywhere. I was told to
-stand at the commencement of one of the wings, just
-off the dome. There was a huge clock, and I noticed it
-had a bell attached to it. At any rate, I thought, I shall
-hear the hour strike. The number of my cell, I can
-remember it now, was 1603, "the year Queen Elizabeth
-died," I remarked to myself, as it was unlocked, and
-I went in. It was a larger cell than I had hitherto had&mdash;about
-fourteen feet by six. There was electric light and
-a table and seat that folded down from the wall. The
-window was, as usual, above my head, but this time it
-was made of frosted glass. There was a horrid suggestion
-of permanency about the place that made me feel
-rather bad. I asked the warder who gave me my prison
-underclothing&mdash;I was allowed to keep my own suit&mdash;whether
-one was always in solitary here, and for how
-long one came. "Immer im einzelhaft"&mdash;always in solitary,&mdash;and
-for three to four months and upward, he said.
-"Never less?" I asked. "No, never," he replied. "Come
-with me," he continued, and I was taken down into the
-very bowels of this terrible edifice, till, finally, I joined
-a vast squad of criminals. He left me. We then filed
-down devious passages once more, and finally were led
-into a vast room with about two hundred and seventy
-showers in it. When bathed, I was locked into a large,
-bare cellar just opposite, and here I was soon joined by
-two others, one an elderly middle-aged man of about
-fifty-six, and the other an evil-looking devil of about
-thirty-four. They sat down on the bench. I was walking
-up and down. They were an interesting couple.
-They were about to be examined by an Untersuchungsrichter,
-or examining magistrate, and the younger one<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span>
-was coaching the other in what to say. The elder seemed
-too numbed to agree or disagree, though he seemed to
-have a tendency towards the truth, which the other
-promptly suppressed, but just sat there, his hands on his
-knees, seemingly deaf. Once the younger strode up to
-him threateningly as if to hit him. He ground his teeth
-and swore that by God, if the old man were to say that
-he'd &mdash;&mdash;. Then he tried a different tack; he argued, he
-elucidated, he showed the simplicity of his ideas, and
-how, above all, it would help themselves.</p>
-
-<p>When the young one became bellicose I had felt no
-inclination to help the old man. Why, I knew not. I
-think I felt that nothing, least of all truth, should stand
-in the way of man's salvation from that place, and that
-if the old man hadn't got enough gumption to tell what
-seemed to be a few well-concocted lies, well, he ought
-to be made to, since it involved the fate of the younger
-man, who was not yet reduced to the state of an incapacitated
-jelly. It was the same old story: Fate had beaten
-the old man, but had not succeeded in persuading the
-young one that he also was beaten; the young one refused
-to acknowledge it. It was blind instinct that told him
-to lie, though he knew with clever lawyers against him,
-and, worst of all opponents, the law, the chances of his
-getting through to freedom were remote. I had noticed
-hitherto that it was always the young men who felt the
-strain most, seemed most conscious of the inhuman
-cruelty of prison, and I was to find out later that it was
-generally the young ones who recovered easiest. Sometimes
-the older ones don't recover. A man I was to meet
-later was afflicted with sudden decay of the optic nerve,
-and is now gradually going blind, purely as a result of
-solitary.</p>
-
-<p>The door opened suddenly, and they were taken out,
-and as they passed me I saw the younger and villainous<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span>
-one look at the old man, in a manner in which threats,
-prayers, and above all, the desire to instil the wish to live
-were all inexpressibly mixed. They passed. I never saw
-them again. I often wonder where they are. There are
-lots like them.</p>
-
-<p>I was taken back to my cell. I was now sinking fast.
-I saw little hopes of recovery. I was quickly becoming
-a broken-down creature, and though physically I should
-have lasted out for years, mentally I saw there was a
-crash not far ahead. I had seen it happen with other
-men before. As it was, mentally I was fast becoming a
-species of cow. I would stand for hours at a time, leaning
-my head into the corner, my hands in my pockets,
-staring at the floor. I would find that for hours I had
-been saying to myself "My dear sir"&mdash;I always called
-myself "my dear sir" when talking out loud,&mdash;"you really
-must make an effort to get out. I mean it's simply too
-stupid to spend the best years of your life in a box like
-this. Use your wits. Do something. Go on, you juggins,
-get out somewhere. Think!" and so on, from
-twelve till three. I became absolutely impersonal, and
-found it difficult to have likes and dislikes about anything.
-I absolutely forgot what flowers smelt like. Milk
-I could not imagine. Fruit, tobacco, fish, were mere
-names to me. I had forgotten what they were. I could
-not understand the meaning of the term "red."</p>
-
-<p>Though I longed to be free, I felt that human beings
-would be perfectly unbearable. I no longer considered
-myself as one. I felt perfectly decorporealised: I was
-merely a mind contemplative and a poor one at that. And
-yet I longed for their company. I still kept up my nightly
-habit of repeating a few verses from any poem I could
-remember, and after the light had gone out&mdash;for here
-there was electric light&mdash;I would rise solemnly in the
-dark, and make the most fiery speeches to the Cambridge<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span>
-Union&mdash;poor Cambridge Union. I would then proceed
-to oppose my own motion, pick holes in it, show up the
-proposer as an impostor and a charlatan. A seconder
-would then arise, who with all the sarcasm of a Voltaire
-would rend the immediate speaker adjective from substantive,
-verb from adverb, until quivering with the
-laceration received, the latter would be thrown, a bleeding
-proposition, into the waste deserts of verbosity.</p>
-
-
-<p>V&mdash;GHASTLY HOURS UNDER GERMAN
-BRUTALITY</p>
-
-<p>It was just about this time that I nearly got myself
-shot for attempted murder. I was so used to the darkness
-that I found electric light rather trying to the eyes,
-and therefore turned the racket upwards toward the ceiling
-in order to have but reflected light. A little later in
-came the warder. He saw the upturned bracket, and
-lifting the hilt of his sword, hit me sharply over the head.
-In a flash I was on him. I had raised my fists on each
-side for a smashing blow on his temples. He was unable
-to get away, for he was so short that my arms could
-have nailed him as he tried. He saw there was no escape,
-and the sight of my face blazing with fury and wretchedness
-made him drop his sword. I relished that moment,
-I gloated over it. I kept my fists going backwards and
-forwards nearly touching his temples, but never quite. I
-tried to imagine the agony in his rabbit-like mind, waiting
-for the crushing blow to fall upon him, and wondering
-what it would feel like. Suddenly he turned a sickly
-green. His hat was knocked all on one side. I saw
-beneath his uniform a fat little vulgar bourgeois, incapable
-of a thought outside the satisfying of his own
-senses. He turned from green to a pasty yellow. He
-glanced piteously up into my distorted face. I drove him
-back towards the door, growling and hissing at him, my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span>
-fists going like a steam hammer on each side of his head.
-His agony became worse. His eyes flew from one side to
-the other, like a rabbit looking for escape. His little
-pointed flaxen beard wobbled and, such was his panic,
-so did his stomach. Suddenly my mind changed, and
-taking him by the shoulders, and putting my knee, as
-far as it was possible, into his belly, I pushed him backwards,
-and he sat down violently and disconsolately in
-the passage outside, his sword underneath him, and his
-hat rolling away into the darkness. I slammed the door,
-and after a time he got up and locked it. I knew nothing
-would happen to me, for he was not permitted to hit me,
-but had I hit him back, I gasp to think of the number
-of years I should now be doing.</p>
-
-<p>This, the third prison I had been in, was the worst.
-Physically it was slightly better: there was more space,
-light, two good meals a day, but the very last drop of
-individuality was taken away from you. It was not
-permitted even to arrange the bowls on the shelf as you
-liked. I never saw daylight, for our exercise took place
-at half-past six in the dark. It was now the 20th of
-January. I had been arrested in the early days of October.
-Since then I had been residing in a lavatory. I
-found it dull.</p>
-
-<p>Despite the warder's announcement that nobody ever
-came there for less than three or four months, I was
-suddenly taken away again after five days, and Black
-Maria drove me back once more to the Polizeigefängnis
-of the Alexanderplatz. I was too miserable by now to
-care where I was sent or what they did to me. I was
-beginning to lose the power of appreciating anything&mdash;whatever
-its nature. I found some new arrivals at
-Alexanderplatz. The place was full as usual with neutrals
-who were under suspicion: Dutch, Swedes and
-Danes. One Dutchman had been there for seven weeks<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span>
-in solitary. I was just reaching the final depths of
-despair when, one night, just as I had got my first foot
-into bed, the door was flung open, and into the gloom a
-voice shouted "'raus."<a name="FNanchor_6_6" id="FNanchor_6_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a> I "raused" timidly and in my
-nightshirt, and was told to dress quickly. I did so, surmising
-I was to go to another prison. I began to feel
-quite numb, and I no longer hoped for anything. Downstairs
-in the bureau a very pleasant policeman took charge
-of me, and after having signed the receipts for the acceptance
-of my carcase, he made the usual remark,
-"Kommen Sie mit," and off we went. I thought it odd
-that we should go alone: they usually fetch the criminals
-in batches. "Where are we going to?" I asked. "Ruhleben,"
-he said.</p>
-
-
-<p>VI&mdash;ON THE ROAD TO RUHLEBEN PRISON</p>
-
-<p>For a moment I could hardly feel. I hardly dared feel.
-I just breathed quietly to myself, and thought how nice
-the air tasted. I was going to see human beings again.
-For a time the words were rather meaningless, and then
-I gradually began to revive under their warmth. We
-went out into the street to the Alexanderplatz station.
-I had a fine opportunity to run away here, though I
-should have been a fool to have done so, and to have
-invited prison again. In any case, I had no glasses with
-me, and I was very short-sighted. We had gone up on
-to the platform, and I was chuckling and giggling like a
-schoolgirl at seeing life once again, when the policeman
-discovered it was the wrong one. "Run," he said,
-"there's our train over there." I ran like a leopard. In
-ten bounds I had slipped through the crowd and had
-lost him. I ran on down the stairs, and into the street.
-How glorious it all seemed, and I roared aloud with
-laughter, at which a sallow-faced woman in black seemed
-offended and turned round to stare. I rushed on, up the
-other set of stairs and in time my captor appeared. The
-idea of bolting had just entered my head and flown, but
-"no," I said, "wait till we get to Ruhleben, and have got
-tired of that, then we'll see what can be done."</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span></p>
-<p>Meanwhile, I stared out into the darkness from the
-brightly-lit carriage as we steamed through the suburbs
-of Berlin. I got a glimpse of a tiny room, in which
-numbers of steaming dishevelled women were crowded
-together bending over machines and needlework. They
-were being sweated. That was their daily life. They
-too, lived in what was really a prison, though no law
-stopped them roaming whence they would. I was in the
-world once more....</p>
-
-<p>(The prisoner relates numerous stories of his experiences,
-of which the above is but a single instance.
-He describes the prison; how it feels waiting to be shot;
-the impressions of a lunatic on release from solitary
-confinement and his daring escape with Mr. Edward
-Falk, District Commissioner in the Political Service of
-Nigeria.)</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES</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 class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> "That is impossible."</p></div>
-
-<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> "Please, Herr Direktor, may I write a letter?"</p></div>
-
-<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> "Permit to Number 58 to sing and to whistle."</p></div>
-
-<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> "Out!"</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>AN AMERICAN AT BATTLE OF THE
-SOMME WITH FRENCH ARMY</h2>
-
-<p><i>Army Life With the Soldiers Along the Somme</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Told by Frederick Palmer, American War
-Correspondent</i></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>Mr. Palmer was the only accredited correspondent who had
-freedom of the field in the Battles of the Somme. At the time
-of this writing he has been officially appointed as a member of
-the staff of General Pershing, with the American Armies in
-France. This American has become a world figure. His life
-has been spent on the battlefields of the modern wars: The
-Greek War, the Philippine War, the Macedonian Insurrection,
-the Central American Wars, the Russian-Japanese War, the
-Turkish Revolution, the Balkan Wars. At the beginning of the
-Great War, he was with the British army and fleet. His
-descriptions of the fighting are unsurpassed in the war's literature&mdash;it
-is "the epic touch of great events." He has made a
-notable historical record in his book entitled "My Second Year
-of the War," in which he presents graphic pictures of the grim
-fighting along the Somme, with admirable descriptions of the
-heroism of the Canadians, the Australians and the fighters from
-all parts of the Earth, who are giving their lives "to make the
-world safe for Democracy." A single chapter from Mr. Palmer's
-book is here reproduced by permission of his publishers, <i>Dodd,
-Mead 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 THE BATTLE RIDGE ON THE
-SOMME</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes it occurred to one to consider what history
-might say about the Ridge and also to wonder how much
-history, which pretends to know all, would really know.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>
-Thus, one sought perspective of the colossal significance
-of the uninterrupted battle whose processes numbed the
-mind and to distinguish the meaning of different stages
-of the struggle. Nothing had so well reflected the character
-of the war or of its protagonists, French, British
-and German, as this grinding of resources, of courage,
-and of will of three powerful races.</p>
-
-<p>... It is historically accepted, I think, that the
-first decisive phase was the battle of the Marne when
-Paris was saved. The second was Verdun, when the
-Germans again sought a decision on the Western front
-by an offensive of sledge-hammer blows against frontal
-positions; and, perhaps, the third came when on the Ridge
-the British and the French kept up their grim, insistent,
-piece-meal attacks, holding the enemy week in and week
-out on the defensive, aiming at mastery as the scales
-trembled in the new turn of the balance and initiative
-passed from one side to the other in the beginning of that
-new era.</p>
-
-<p>This scarred slope with its gentle ascent, this section
-of farming land with its woods growing more ragged
-every day from shell fire, with its daily and nightly thunders,
-its trickling procession of wounded and prisoners
-down the communication trenches speaking the last word
-in human bravery, industry, determination and endurance&mdash;this
-might one day be not only the monument to
-the positions of all the battalions that had fought, its
-copses, its villages, its knolls famous to future generations
-as in Little Round Top with us, but in its monstrous
-realism be an immortal expression, unrealized by
-those who fought, of a commander's iron will and foresight
-in gaining that supremacy in arms, men and material
-which was the genesis of the great decision.</p>
-
-<p>The German began drawing away divisions from the
-Verdun sector, bringing guns to answer the British and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>
-French fire and men whose prodigal use alone could
-enforce his determination to maintain <i>morale</i> and prevent
-any further bold strokes such as that of July (1916).</p>
-
-<p>His sausage balloons began to reappear in the sky as
-the summer wore on; he increased the number of his aeroplanes;
-more of his five-point-nine howitzers were sending
-their compliments; he stretched out his shell fire
-over communication trenches and strong points; mustered
-great quantities of lachrymatory shells and for
-the first time used gas shells with a generosity which
-spoke his faith in their efficacy. The lachrymatory shell
-makes your eyes smart, and the Germans apparently
-considered this a great auxiliary to high explosives and
-shrapnel. Was it because of the success of the first gas
-attack at Ypres that they now placed such reliance in
-gas shells? The shell when it lands seems a "dud,"
-which is a shell that has failed to explode; then it blows
-out a volume of gas.</p>
-
-<p>"If one hit right under your nose," said a soldier, "and
-you hadn't your gas mask on, it might kill you. But
-when you see one fall you don't run to get a sniff in order
-to accommodate the Boche by asphyxiating yourself."</p>
-
-<p>Another soldier suggested that the Germans had a big
-supply on hand and were working off the stock for want
-of other kinds. The British who by this time were settled
-in the offensive joked about the deluge of gas shells
-with a gallant, amazing humor. Going up to the Ridge
-was going to their regular duty. They did not shirk
-it or hail it with delight. They simply went, that was
-all, when it was a battalion's turn to go.</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;GUNNERS IN THE FURNACE OF WAR</p>
-
-<p>July heat became August heat as the grinding proceeded.
-The gunners worked in their shirts or stripped<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span>
-to the waist. Sweat streaks mapped the faces of the
-men who came out of the trenches. Stifling clouds of
-dust hung over the roads, with the trucks phantom-like
-as they emerged from the gritty mist and their drivers'
-eyes peered out of masks of gray which clung to their
-faces. A fall of rain comes as a blessing to Briton and
-German alike. German prisoners worn with exhaustion
-had complexions the tint of their uniforms. If the
-British seemed weary sometimes, one had only to see the
-prisoners to realize that the defensive was suffering more
-than the offensive. The fatigue of some of the men was
-of the kind that one week's sleep or a month's rest will
-not cure; something fixed in their beings.</p>
-
-<p>It was a new kind of fighting for the Germans. They
-smarted under it, they who had been used to the upper
-hand. In the early stages of the war their artillery had
-covered their well-ordered charges; they had been killing
-the enemy with gunfire. Now the Allies were returning
-the compliment; the shoe was on the other foot.
-A striking change, indeed, from "On to Paris!" the old
-battle-cry of leaders who had now come to urge these
-men to the utmost of endurance and sacrifice by telling
-them that if they did not hold against the relentless hammering
-of British and French guns what had been done
-to French villages would be done to their own.</p>
-
-<p>Prisoners spoke of peace as having been promised as
-close at hand by their officers. In July the date had been
-set as Sept. 1st. Later, it was set as Nov. 1st. The German
-was as a swimmer trying to reach shore, in this
-case peace, with the assurance of those who urged him
-on that a few more strokes would bring him there. Thus
-have armies been urged on for years.</p>
-
-<p>Those fighting did not have, as had the prisoners, their
-eyes opened to the vast preparations behind the British<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span>
-lines to carry on the offensive. Mostly the prisoners
-were amiable, peculiarly unlike the proud men taken in
-the early days of the war when confidence in their "system"
-as infallible was at its height. Yet there were exceptions.
-I saw an officer marching at the head of the
-survivors of his battalion along the road from Montauban
-one day with his head up, a cigar stuck in the corner
-of his mouth at an aggressive angle, his unshaven chin
-and dusty clothes heightening his attitude of "You go
-to &mdash;&mdash;, you English!"</p>
-
-<p>The hatred of the British was a strengthening factor in
-the defense. Should they, the Prussians, be beaten by
-New Army men? No! Die first! said Prussian officers.
-The German staff might be as good as ever, but among
-the mixed troops&mdash;the old and the young, the hollow-chested
-and the square-shouldered, mouth-breathers with
-spectacles and bent fathers of families, vigorous boys in
-their late 'teens with the down still on their cheeks and
-hardened veterans survivors of many battles east and
-west&mdash;they were reverting appreciably to natural human
-tendencies despite the iron discipline.</p>
-
-<p>It was Skobeloff, if I recollect rightly, who said that
-out of every hundred men twenty were natural fighters,
-sixty were average men who would fight under impulse
-or when well led, and twenty were timid; and armies
-were organized on the basis of the sixty average to
-make them into a whole of even efficiency in action. The
-German staff had supplied supreme finesse to this end.
-They had an army that was a machine; yet its units were
-flesh and blood and the pounding of shell fire and the
-dogged fighting on the Ridge must have an effect.</p>
-
-<p>It became apparent through those two months of piece-meal
-advance that the sixty average men were not as
-good as they had been. The twenty "funk-sticks," in
-army phrase, were given to yielding themselves if they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span>
-were without an officer, but the twenty natural fighters&mdash;well,
-human psychology does not change. They were
-the type that made the professional armies of other days,
-the brigands, too, and also those of every class of society
-to whom patriotic duty had become an exaltation
-approaching fanaticism. More fighting made them fight
-harder.</p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;DEAD BODIES STRAPPED TO GUNS</p>
-
-<p>Such became members of the machine-gun corps, which
-took an oath never to surrender, and led bombing parties
-and posted themselves in shell-craters to face the charges
-while shells fell thick around them, or remained up in
-the trench taking their chances against curtains of fire
-that covered an infantry charge, in the hope of being
-able to turn on their own bullet spray for a moment
-before being killed. Sometimes their dead bodies were
-found strapped to their guns, more often probably by
-their own request, as an insurance against deserting their
-posts, than by command.</p>
-
-<p>Shell fire was the theatricalism of the struggle, the
-roar of guns its thunder; but night or day the sound
-of the staccato of that little arch devil of killing, the
-machine gun, coming from the Ridge seemed as true
-an expression of what was always going on there as a
-rattlesnake's rattle is of its character. Delville and High
-Woods and Guillemont and Longueval and the Switch
-Trench&mdash;these are symbolic names of that attrition, of
-the heroism of British persistence which would not take
-No for answer.</p>
-
-<p>You might think that you had seen ruins until you
-saw those of Guillemont after it was taken. They were
-the granulation of bricks and mortar and earth mixed
-by the blasts of shell fire which crushed solids into dust<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span>
-and splintered splinters. Guillemont lay beyond Trônes
-Wood across an open space where the German guns had
-full play. There was a stone quarry on the outskirts,
-and a quarry no less than a farm like Waterlot, which
-was to the northward, and Falfemont, to the southward
-and flanking the village, formed shelter. It was
-not much of a quarry, but it was a hole which would be
-refuge for reserves and machine guns. The two farms,
-clear targets for British guns, had their deep dugouts
-whose roofs were reinforced by the ruins that fell upon
-them against penetration even by shells of large caliber.
-How the Germans fought to keep Falfemont! Once they
-sent out a charge with the bayonet to meet a British
-charge between walls of shell fire and there through the
-mist the steel was seen flashing and vague figures wrestling.</p>
-
-<p>Guillemont and the farms won and Ginchy which lay
-beyond won and the British had their flank of high
-ground. Twice they were in Guillemont but could not
-remain, though as usual they kept some of their gains.
-It was a battle from dugout to dugout, from shelter to
-shelter of any kind burrowed in the débris or in fields,
-with the British never ceasing here or elsewhere to continue
-their pressure. And the débris of a village had particular
-appeal; it yielded to the spade; its piles gave natural
-cover.</p>
-
-
-<p>IV&mdash;THE ARTILLERYMEN IN THE WOODS</p>
-
-<p>A British soldier returning from one of the attacks
-as he hobbled through Trônes Wood expressed to me the
-essential generalship of the battle. He was outwardly
-as unemotional as if he were coming home from his day's
-work, respectful and good-humored, though he had a hole
-in both arms from machine-gun fire, a shrapnel wound<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span>
-in the heel, and seemed a trifle resentful of the added
-tribute of another shrapnel wound in his shoulder after
-he had left the firing-line and was on his way to the
-casualty clearing station. Insisting that he could lift
-the cigarette I offered him to his lips and light it, too, he
-said:</p>
-
-<p>"We've only to keep at them, sir. They'll go."</p>
-
-<p>So the British kept at them and so did the French at
-every point. Was Delville Wood worse than High
-Wood? This is too nice a distinction in torments to be
-drawn. Possess either of them completely and command
-of the Ridge in that section was won. The edge
-of a wood on the side away from your enemy was the
-easiest part to hold. It is difficult to range artillery on
-it because of restricted vision, and the enemy's shells
-aimed at it strike the trees and burst prematurely among
-his own men. Other easy, relatively easy, places to hold
-are the dead spaces of gullies and ravines. There you
-were out of fire and there you were not; there you
-could hold and there you could not. Machine-gun fire
-and shell fire were the arbiters of topography more dependable
-than maps.</p>
-
-<p>Why all the trees were not cut down by the continual
-bombardments of both sides was past understanding.
-There was one lone tree on the skyline near Longueval
-which I had watched for weeks. It still had a limb, yes,
-the luxury of a limb, the last time I saw it, pointing with
-a kind of defiance in its immunity. Of course it had
-been struck many times. Bits of steel were imbedded in
-its trunk; but only a direct hit on the trunk will bring
-down a tree. Trees may be slashed and whittled and
-nicked and gashed and still stand; and when villages
-have been pulverized except for the timbering of the
-houses, a scarred shade tree will remain.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, trees in Delville Wood survived, naked sticks<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>
-among fallen and splintered trunks and upturned roots.
-How any man could have survived was the puzzling thing.
-None could if he had remained there continuously and
-exposed himself; but man is the most cunning of animals.
-With gas mask and eye-protectors ready, steel helmet
-on his head and his faithful spade to make himself
-a new hole whenever he moved, he managed the incredible
-in self-protection. Earth piled back of a tree-trunk
-would stop bullets and protect his body from shrapnel.
-There he lay and there a German lay opposite him, except
-when attacks were being made.</p>
-
-<p>Not getting the northern edge of the woods the British
-began sapping out in trenches to the east toward
-Ginchy, where the many contours showed the highest
-ground in that neighborhood. New lines of trenches
-kept appearing on the map, often with group names such
-as Coffee Alley, Tea Lane and Beer Street, perhaps.
-Out in the open along the irregular plateau the shells
-were no more kindly, the bombing and the sapping no less
-diligent all the way to the windmill, where the Australians
-were playing the same kind of a game. With the actual
-summit gained at certain points, these had to be
-held pending the taking of the whole, or of enough to
-permit a wave of men to move forward in a general attack
-without its line being broken by the resistance of
-strong points, which meant confusion.</p>
-
-
-<p>V&mdash;STALKING A MACHINE GUN IN ITS LAIR</p>
-
-<p>Before any charge the machine guns must be "killed."
-No initiative of pioneer or Indian scout surpassed that
-exhibited in conquering machine-gun positions. When a
-big game hunter tells you about having stalked tigers,
-ask him if he has ever stalked a machine gun to its lair.</p>
-
-<p>As for the nature of the lair, here is one where a Briton<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>
-"dug himself in" to be ready to repulse any counter-attack
-to recover ground that the British had just won.
-Some layers of sandbags are sunk level with the earth
-with an excavation back of them large enough for a machine-gun
-standard and to give the barrel swing and for
-the gunner, who back of this had dug himself a well four
-or five feet deep of sufficient diameter to enable him to
-huddle at the bottom in "stormy weather." He was general
-and army, too, of this little establishment. In the
-midst of shells and trench mortars, with bullets whizzing
-around his head, he had to keep a cool aim and make
-every pellet which he poured out of his muzzle count
-against the wave of men coming toward him who were
-at his mercy if he could remain alive for a few minutes
-and keep his head.</p>
-
-<p>He must not reveal his position before his opportunity
-came. All around where this Briton had held the fort
-there were shell-craters like the dots of close shooting
-around a bull's-eye; no tell-tale blood spots this time,
-but a pile of two or three hundred cartridge cases lying
-where they had fallen as they were emptied of their
-cones of lead. Luck was with the occupant, but not with
-another man playing the same game not far away.
-Broken bits of gun and fragments of cloth mixed with
-earth explained the fate of a German machine gunner
-who had emplaced his piece in the same manner.</p>
-
-<p>Before a charge, crawl up at night from shell-crater
-to shell-crater and locate the enemy's machine guns.
-Then, if your own guns and the trench mortars do not get
-them, go stalking with supplies of bombs and remember
-to throw yours before the machine gunner, who also has
-a stock for such emergencies, throws his. When a machine
-gun begins rattling into a company front in a charge
-the men drop for cover, while officers consider how to
-draw the devil's tusks. Arnold von Winkelried, who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span>
-gathered the spears to his breast to make a path for his
-comrades, won his glory because the fighting forces were
-small in his day. But with such enormous forces as are
-now engaged and with heroism so common, we make only
-an incident of the officer who went out to silence a machine
-gun and was found lying dead across the gun with
-the gunner dead beside him.</p>
-
-
-<p>VI&mdash;TALKS WITH THE MEN IN THE REAR</p>
-
-<p>The advance on the map at our quarters extended as
-the brief army reports were read into the squares every
-morning by the key of figures and numerals with a detail
-that included every little trench, every copse, every
-landmark, and then we chose where we would go that
-day. At corps headquarters there were maps with still
-more details and officers would explain the previous day's
-work to us. Every wood and village, every viewpoint,
-we knew, and every casualty clearing station and prisoners'
-inclosure. At battalion camps within sight of the
-Ridge and within range of the guns, where their blankets
-helped to make shelter from the sun, you might talk with
-the men out of the fight and lunch and chat with the officers
-who awaited the word to go in again or perhaps
-to hear that their tour was over and they could go to
-rest in Ypres sector, which had become relatively quiet.</p>
-
-<p>They had their letters and packages from home before
-they slept and had written letters in return after waking;
-and there was nothing to do now except to relax and
-breathe, to renew the vitality that had been expended in
-the fierce work where shells were still threshing the earth,
-which rose in clouds of dust to settle back again in enduring
-passive resistance.</p>
-
-<p>There was much talk early in the war about British
-cheerfulness; so much that officers and men began to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>
-resent it as expressing the idea that they took such a war
-as this as a kind of holiday, when it was the last thing
-outside of Hades that any sane man would choose. It
-was a question in my own mind at times if Hades would
-not have been a pleasant change. Yet the characterization
-is true, peculiarly true, even in the midst of the
-fighting on the Ridge. Cheerfulness takes the place of
-emotionalism as the armor against hardship and death;
-a good-humored balance between exhilaration and depression
-which meets smile with smile and creates an atmosphere
-superior to all vicissitudes. Why should we be
-downhearted? Why, indeed, when it does no good. Not
-"Merrie England!" War is not a merry business; but
-an Englishman may be cheerful for the sake of self and
-comrades.</p>
-
-<p>Of course, these battalions, officers and men, would talk
-about when the war would be over. Even the Esquimaux
-must have an opinion on the subject by this time.
-That of the men who make the war, whose lives are the
-lives risked, was worth more, perhaps, than that of people
-living thousands of miles away; for it is they who
-are doing the fighting, who will stop fighting. To them
-it would be over when it was won. The time this would
-require varied with different men&mdash;one year, two years;
-and again they would turn satirical and argue whether
-the sixth or the seventh year would be the worst. And
-they talked shop about the latest wrinkles in fighting; how
-best to avoid having men buried by shell-bursts; the value
-of gas and lachrymatory shells; the ratio of high explosives
-to shrapnel; methods of "cleaning out" dugouts
-or "doing in" machine guns, all in a routine that had
-become an accepted part of life like the details of the
-stock carried and methods of selling in a department
-store.</p>
-
-<p>Indelible the memories of these talks, which often<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span>
-brought out illustrations of racial temperament. One
-company was more horrified over having found a German
-tied to a trench <i>parados</i> to be killed by British shell
-fire as a field punishment than by the horrors of other
-men equally mashed and torn, or at having crawled over
-the moist bodies of the dead, or slept among them, or
-been covered with spatters of blood and flesh&mdash;for that
-incident struck home with a sense of brutal militarism
-which was the thing in their minds against which they
-were fighting.</p>
-
-
-<p>VII&mdash;WITH STEEL HELMETS AND GAS MASKS</p>
-
-<p>With steel helmets on and gas masks over our shoulders,
-we would leave our car at the dead line and set off
-to "see something," when now the fighting was all hidden
-in the folds of the ground, or in the woods, or lost
-on the horizon where the front line of either of these two
-great armies, with their immense concentration of men
-and material and roads gorged with transport and thousands
-of belching guns, was held by a few men with
-machine guns in shell-craters, their positions sometimes
-interwoven. Old hands in the Somme battle become shell-wise.
-They are the ones whom the French call "varnished,"
-which is a way of saying that projectiles glance
-off their anatomy. They keep away from points where
-the enemy will direct his fire as a matter of habit or
-scientific gunnery, and always recollect that the German
-has not enough shells to sow them broadcast over the
-whole battle area.</p>
-
-<p>It is not an uncommon thing for one to feel quite safe
-within a couple of hundred yards of an artillery concentration.
-That corner of a village, that edge of a shattered
-grove, that turn in the highway, that sunken road&mdash;keep
-away from them! Any kind of trench for shrapnel;
-lie down flat unless a satisfactory dugout is near for protection<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span>
-from high explosives which burst in the earth.
-If you are at the front and a curtain of fire is put behind
-you, wait until it is over or go around it. If there is
-one ahead, wait until another day&mdash;provided that you
-are a spectator. Always bear in mind how unimportant
-you are, how small a figure on the great field, and that
-if every shell fired had killed one soldier there would
-not be an able-bodied man in uniform left alive on the
-continent of Europe. By observing these simple rules
-you may see a surprising amount with a chance of surviving.</p>
-
-<p>One day I wanted to go into the old German dugouts
-under a formless pile of ruins which a British colonel had
-made his battalion headquarters; but I did not want
-to go enough to persist when I understood the situation.
-Formerly, my idea of a good dugout&mdash;and I always like
-to be within striking distance of one&mdash;was a cave twenty
-feet deep with a roof of four or five layers of granite,
-rubble and timber; but now I feel more safe if the fragments
-of a town hall are piled on top of this.</p>
-
-<p>The Germans were putting a shell every minute with
-clockwork regularity into the colonel's "happy home"
-and at intervals four shells in a salvo. You had to make
-a run for it between the shells, and if you did not know
-the exact location of the dugout you might have been
-hunting for it some time. Runners bearing messages took
-their chances both going and coming and two men were
-hit. The colonel was quite safe twenty feet underground
-with the matting of débris including that of a fallen chimney
-overhead, but he was a most unpopular host. The
-next day he moved his headquarters and not having been
-considerate enough to inform the Germans of the fact
-they kept on methodically pounding the roof of the untenanted
-premises.</p>
-
-<p>After every battle "promenade" I was glad to step into<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span>
-the car waiting at the "dead line," where the chauffeurs
-frequently had had harder luck in being shelled than we
-had farther forward. Yet I know of no worse place
-to be in than a car when you hear the first growing scream
-which indicates that yours is the neighborhood selected
-by a German battery or two for expending some of its
-ammunition. When you are in danger you like to be on
-your feet and to possess every one of your faculties. I
-used to put cotton in my ears when I walked through
-the area of the gun positions as some protection to the
-eardrums from the blasts, but always took it out once I
-was beyond the big calibers, as an acute hearing after
-some experience gave you instant warning of any
-"krump" or five-point-nine coming in your direction, advising
-you which way to dodge and also saving you from
-unnecessarily running for a dugout if the shell were passing
-well overhead or short.</p>
-
-<p>I was glad, too, when the car left the field quite behind
-and was over the hills in peaceful country. But one never
-knew. Fifteen miles from the front line was not always
-safe. Once when a sudden outburst of fifteen-inch
-naval shells sent the people of a town to cover and
-scattered fragments over the square, one cut open the
-back of the chauffeur's head just as we were getting into
-our car.</p>
-
-<p>"Are you going out to be strafed at?" became an inquiry
-in the mess on the order of "Are you going to take
-an afternoon off for golf to-day?" The only time I
-felt that I could claim any advantage in phlegm over
-my comrades was when I slept through two hours of
-aerial bombing with anti-aircraft guns busy in the neighborhood,
-which, as I explained, was no more remarkable
-than sleeping in a hotel at home with flat-wheeled surface
-cars and motor horns screeching under your window.
-A subway employee or a traffic policeman in New<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span>
-York ought never to suffer from shell-shock if he goes
-to war.</p>
-
-<p>The account of personal risk which in other wars might
-make a magazine article or a book chapter, once you sat
-down to write it, melted away as your ego was reduced to
-its proper place in the cosmos. Individuals had never been
-so obscurely atomic. With hundreds of thousands fighting,
-personal experience was valuable only as it expressed
-that of the whole. Each story brought back to the mess
-was much like others, thrilling for the narrator and
-repetition for the polite listener, except it was some officer
-fresh from the communication trench who brought news
-of what was going on in that day's work.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, the battle had become static; its incidents of
-a kind like the product of some mighty mill. The public,
-falsely expecting that the line would be broken, wanted
-symbols of victory in fronts changing on the map and
-began to weary of the accounts. It was the late Charles
-A. Dana who is credited with saying: "If a dog bites
-a man it is not news, but if a man bites a dog it is."</p>
-
-<p>Let the men attack with hatchets and in evening dress
-and this would win all the headlines in the land because
-people at their breakfast tables would say: "Here is
-something new in the war!" Men killing men was not
-news, but a battalion of trained bloodhounds sent out to
-bite the Germans would have been. I used to try to hunt
-down some of the "novelties" which received the favor
-of publication, but though they were well known abroad
-the man in the trenches had heard nothing about them.</p>
-
-<p>Bullets, shells, bayonets and bombs remained the tried
-and practical methods there on the Ridge with its overpowering
-drama, any act of which almost any day was
-greater than Spionkop or Magersfontein which thrilled
-a world that was not then war-stale; and ever its supreme
-feature was that determination which was like a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span>
-kind fate in its progress of chipping, chipping at a stone
-foundation that must yield.</p>
-
-
-<p>VIII&mdash;VICTORY!&mdash;"THE RIDGE IS TAKEN"</p>
-
-<p>The Ridge seeped in one's very existence. You could
-see it as clearly in imagination as in reality, with its
-horizon under shell-bursts and the slope with its maze of
-burrows and its battered trenches. Into those calm army
-reports association could read many indications: the telling
-fact that the German losses in being pressed off the
-Ridge were as great if not greater than the British, their
-sufferings worse under a heavier deluge of shell fire, the
-increased skill of the offensive and the failure of German
-counter-attacks after each advance.</p>
-
-<p>No one doubted that the Ridge would be taken and
-taken it was, or all of it that was needed for the drive that
-was to clean up any outstanding points, with its sweep
-down into the valley. A victory this, not to be measured
-by territory; for in one day's rush more ground was
-gained than in two months of siege. A victory of position,
-of will, of <i>morale</i>! Sharpening its steel and wits
-on enemy steel and wits in every kind of fighting, the
-New Army had proved itself in the supreme test of all
-qualities.</p>
-
-<p>(This American correspondent relates thirty-one remarkable
-narratives of adventure, all of which equal in
-human interest and historical importance, the single narrative
-given above. He tells about his experiences "Forward
-with the Guns;" "The Brigade that Went
-Through;" "The Storming of Contalmaison;" "The
-Mastery of the Air;" "The Tanks in Action;" "The
-Harvest of Villages;" "Five Generals and Verdun"&mdash;all
-of which are notable historical records.)</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 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_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>AN AMERICAN'S EXPERIENCES "INSIDE
-THE GERMAN EMPIRE"</h2>
-
-<p><i>Told by Herbert Bayard Swope, an American in Berlin</i></p>
-
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>These experiences and observations inside the German Empire
-in the third year of the War form an invaluable narrative.
-They have been recognized by one of the leading American
-universities as the most important contribution of a journalist
-to the literature of the Great War. Hon. James W. Gerard,
-American Ambassador to the German Empire, says: "The
-facts and experiences ... (of Herbert Bayard Swope), gathered
-first-hand by the author, whose friendship I value and
-whose professional equipment I admire, form an important contribution
-to contemporaneous history." Mr. Swope says: "My
-volume is based upon a series of articles I wrote for the <i>New
-York World</i>, and I am grateful to Mr. Ralph Pulitzer of that
-paper, for permission to use the material in this form." This
-inspiring book is published by <i>The Century Company</i>: Copyright,
-1917, with whose authority this chapter is given.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p><a name="FNanchor_8_8" id="FNanchor_8_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a>
-I&mdash;JOURNEYS IN THE SPY-BESIEGED LAND</p>
-
-<p>Germany to-day is a giant fortress completely ringed
-by besiegers. Every man, woman, and child, all the
-beasts of burden and food, are checked and located.
-The doors have been locked against travelers seeking to
-enter and those seeking to depart. Only in exceptional
-cases are visitors received, and in rarer instances are
-natives permitted to leave.</p>
-
-<p>The police are able at all times to account for every
-one of the population, passport issuance has been made
-extremely difficult, the ordeal of search and inquest at
-the frontier is severe and thorough, interior travel has
-been sharply restricted, every foot of the border is
-guarded against illegal entry, obstacles have been put in
-the way of mail and telegraph communications, the
-espionage system has been multiplied in efficiency and
-extent&mdash;all for the safety of the empire. And because
-this is the underlying reason for them, the Germans have
-submitted to the restrictions willingly, and, instead of
-rebelling, aid them.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span></p>
-<p>The spy mania that swept over war-ridden Europe two
-years ago has lessened in its visible intensity in Germany,
-but the precaution against spies has been increased.
-The people have confidence in the safeguards against
-espionage, and so suspicion has been quieted. How well
-this confidence is justified can be attested by any one
-who has been inside the empire in the second year of
-the war.</p>
-
-<p>A stranger is under observation from the time he
-enters until he has left. The watchfulness is not obtrusive,
-it is rarely evident; but it is always thorough.
-Within twelve hours of a visitor's arrival he must report
-in person at the nearest police station, and every time
-he makes a railroad journey this operation must be
-repeated.</p>
-
-<p>When an American undertakes a voyage to Germany,
-the wheels of the imperial Government begin to revolve
-immediately upon the first application for a visé to his
-passport being made in this country. The first question
-to be answered concerns the applicant's character, so
-that Germany may feel sure he does not purpose to aid
-or abet her enemies; and the second, the actual need of
-the business that causes him to make the trip. Obtaining
-a passport from the American Government is attended
-by many formalities, and these are renewed when the
-German consul-generals are asked to approve.</p>
-
-<p>Germany insists that a fortnight intervene between<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span>
-the application for a visé and the beginning of the trip.
-This is to enable her officials to make the necessary investigations,
-and then to communicate the facts to Berlin
-and to the traveler's port of arrival.</p>
-
-<p>All travel between America and Germany is through
-Copenhagen, Stockholm, or Rotterdam. From Copenhagen
-the traveler enters Germany through Warnemunde;
-from Stockholm he enters through Sassnitz;
-and from Rotterdam through Bentheim. Upon his arrival
-at one of the three neutral cities he must begin the
-proceedings afresh....</p>
-
-<p>Upon arrival at Warnemunde (the methods throughout
-the empire are standardized, and are the same at
-every other entrance point) the travelers are shunted into
-a long low wooden shed, carrying their hand baggage,
-having previously surrendered the checks for their
-heavier luggage. Upon entering the place they are given
-numbers, and in return surrender their passports to brisk,
-keen-eyed, non-commissioned officers, whose efficiency
-has been increased by long practice.</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;"SEARCHED" BY THE SECRET POLICE</p>
-
-<p>Once in the room, the travelers are not permitted to
-leave except through one door, and that they pass only
-when their numbers are called. Barred windows and
-armed sentries prevent any trifling with this system. The
-numbers are called one by one except in the case of husbands
-and wives, who are permitted to go through together&mdash;and
-when this is reached, the traveler passes
-through into a second office, where he is questioned as
-to his identity and the photographs on the passports are
-verified.</p>
-
-<p>While he is undergoing this questioning he is being
-overheard and carefully watched by numbers of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span>
-<i>geheim-Polizei</i> (secret police), some of whom are in
-uniform and others of whom masquerade in civilian
-attire as new arrivals. If there is any error in his papers
-it is developed at this point, and he is at once turned
-about and sent back to Copenhagen. But if it is a case
-of <i>alles in Ordnung</i> (everything in order), it is so reported,
-and he is ushered into another room, where, having
-passed the first two inquisitorial chambers, he is
-submitted to the grand ordeal, that of search.</p>
-
-<p>And what a search it is! Unless one's credentials are
-exceptionally strong, one is stripped and one's mouth,
-ears, nose, and other parts of the body examined. One's
-fountain pen is emptied, every piece of paper taken away,
-including visiting cards, and even match-boxes are confiscated.
-Finger rings, umbrellas and canes are inspected.
-If bandages are worn, these must be stripped
-off, too. No distinction is drawn between men and
-women beyond the fact that women are of course examined
-before female inspectors.</p>
-
-<p>The bodily search having been completed, that of the
-clothing is begun. Every article of apparel is felt over
-carefully and exposed to a strong light for fear there
-may be writing on the lining. If there is the slightest
-reason for suspicion, the travelers are given a sponge
-bath of water with a large admixture of citric acid, which
-has the effect of making apparent any writing on the body
-that may have been done with invisible ink. The Germans
-say that these precautions have been necessitated by
-the ingenious ruses employed by spies, whose entrance
-into the country is considered a greater menace than is
-their departure, since in entering they bring with them
-instructions to their confederates already within the
-empire awaiting orders.</p>
-
-<p>The next step is the examination of the baggage, and
-this is done in a manner to make the American customs<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>
-inspection seem childish. The interior and exterior
-measurements of the trunks are taken to guard against
-false sides, tops, and bottoms, and then one by one every
-article the trunks contain is put through a separate
-inspection....</p>
-
-<p>Every sort of liquid is confiscated. The perfumes of
-the women are poured into a big tub, and such liquors
-as the men may be carrying are treated in a similar
-manner. The contents of travelers' alcohol or spirit
-lamps are carefully emptied into air-tight containers for
-later use. The reason for the drastic regulation against
-taking any liquid, however small the quantity, into Germany
-was the danger of the fact that high explosives
-such as nitroglycerine can be carried in small vessels.
-On several occasions, the Germans say, railroads and
-bridges have been blown up by the enemy travelers who
-carried the means of destruction in this way. In this
-connection the additional precaution is taken by the
-authorities of prohibiting all travelers from putting their
-heads out the windows of the coupés while crossing
-bridges.</p>
-
-<p>All written or printed matter, such as books, newspapers,
-pamphlets, magazines, is taken away. Upon request
-the traveler may have these forwarded to his point
-of destination after they have been censored and deleted.
-As every point on the German border is carefully
-guarded, it is virtually impossible for any one to enter
-the country except at stated points. All the roads are
-closed, and the border fields are carefully patrolled.</p>
-
-<p>Upon his arrival in Berlin, or wherever he may be
-bound, the traveler must present himself in person at the
-nearest police station. There his passport is again viséd,
-and he is given official permission to remain for a given
-period. But every time he makes a trip he must report
-himself going and coming....</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;THE COUNTRY THAT WENT "SPY MAD"</p>
-
-<p>In every hotel are to be met spies in the form of
-guests, waiters, chambermaids, telephone operators, and
-bartenders. In the early part of the war these last proved
-their worth often, for men otherwise cautious and reticent
-became outspoken under the influence of a few
-Scotches or cocktails, which are still in vogue in Germany
-despite their American origin.</p>
-
-<p>At one of the biggest of the Berlin hotels it is a noticeable
-fact that all the floor waiters are young, active,
-highly intelligent men. When they are asked why they
-are not serving at the front all have excuses on the score
-of health. The truth is that they are all governmental
-agents whose duty it is to familiarize themselves with
-the details of every visitor's business. That they do well.
-Every stranger's papers are thoroughly investigated, no
-matter how securely they may be locked up, before he
-has been in the city two days, assuming he leaves them in
-his room. Two members of the American diplomatic
-corps who made short stays in Berlin can tell singular
-stories on this point.</p>
-
-<p>The chief of the floor waiters at this hotel&mdash;and it is
-illustrative of all the others&mdash;is a polished-mannered
-young fellow of about thirty-two who speaks English,
-French, Italian, Spanish, and Danish with the same facility
-that he reads them, and he reads them as well as he
-does his native German. I noticed the chief of the telephone
-operators, who while discharging the duties of his
-lowly job wore livery, attending the races in an English
-sport-coat, with glasses strung over his shoulders, and
-he went to and from the course in a taxicab, the height
-of luxury in wartime Berlin. One would hardly credit
-his income solely to the measly wages he received from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span>
-his work at the switch-board. He, too, as well as his
-assistants, was an accomplished linguist.</p>
-
-<p>It must not be thought that espionage is confined to the
-Americans. On the contrary, even the subjects of Germany's
-allies receive this attention. Austrian, Bulgarian,
-or Turkish, it makes no difference; all are put under
-the scrutiny of the secret eyes and ears of the Kaiser.
-Almost it is more difficult to obtain a passport permitting
-one to travel to Austria than it is to obtain one for a
-journey to America, and the examination at the Austrian
-border is just as severe as at the frontier between Germany
-and Denmark.</p>
-
-<p>German spies travel on all the transatlantic liners running
-from Denmark, Sweden, Norway, and Holland to
-America, and back again. They find out as much as they
-can about their fellow-travelers, so that the secret police
-may be forewarned as to whom and what they are to receive.
-These agents are rarely employed by the German
-Government for the secret transmission of mail; that is
-usually done by men of solid reputation, American or
-other neutrals who are persuaded to accept the task on
-the ground of a service to the empire. Obviously, they
-must be violently pro-German before they are asked to
-assume the undertaking.</p>
-
-<p>The difficulty of communication is one of the severe
-hardships that the German Government and people suffer.
-Mails to and from the empire are seized by the
-Allies, and if delivered at all, are so belated as to make
-them valueless. Only such cables as the Allies choose
-to pass are permitted transmission. Male Germans are
-not permitted to travel on the seas. So German communication
-is restricted to the wireless, to supposedly
-neutral couriers, and to submarines, both of the commercial
-type as the <i>Deutschland</i>, and of the war type,
-which have been secretly conveying important German<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span>
-mail to Spanish waters, where it is loaded upon friendly
-neutral vessels, which carry it into Spanish ports and
-thence forward it to America and other points. This
-last method has been a carefully guarded secret of the
-German Government. Mail sent out by Spain is not
-seized and censored by the Allies....</p>
-
-
-<p>IV&mdash;A VISIT TO GENERAL LORINGHOVEN</p>
-
-<p>To get the official view of the situation held by the
-officers of the general staff, I called on General von Freytag-Loringhoven
-at the general staff building in Berlin,
-where the great Moltke long presided. He received me
-in a room the distinguishing features of which were
-maps, not only showing the disposition of the German
-forces, but immense wall-sized ones on which were diagrammed
-the present locations of the Allies, showing
-their number, their commanders (designated by name
-and locations of headquarters), with their relative ranks
-indicated by little parti-coloured flags. I had just returned
-from the Somme, and as I saw how each of the
-French and British lines was clearly marked, I expressed
-my surprise.</p>
-
-<p>The general smiled.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, our intelligence department is pretty thorough,"
-he said, "but it is no better on the Somme than our
-enemy's is, for in France, where we stand on occupied
-soil, almost every civilian is an aid to the Allies.</p>
-
-<p>"But despite that, despite all the French and English
-can do at the Somme," he went on, "they will never break
-through."...</p>
-
-<p>I asked the general for his impressions of the French
-and British soldiers. He answered:</p>
-
-<p>"The French are better soldiers. They are better
-schooled and drilled. They have been at it longer and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span>
-they are enormously brave and sacrificing. But the
-British are proving their worth, too. They are all of
-them warlike and like to fight, but they don't know how
-as yet. You can't make a soldier in a few weeks or
-months; it takes time and patience.</p>
-
-<p>"The French artillery is exceptional. The French
-artillery officers have always been of high repute. They
-are teaching much to the English and Russians, and
-these forces are showing a corresponding betterment.</p>
-
-<p>"Because of their greater experience, I should say the
-French are better officered than the English. The Russian
-officers are a poor lot. There is no sympathy between
-them and their men. The men are brave enough,
-but are sheep-like in their lack of intelligence...."</p>
-
-<p>In September, I stood in the general's field headquarters
-and watched the big guns drop shells all around
-the famous "windmill of Pozières" on the high ridge
-which had been taken by the British and was being used
-by their artillery observers, who gamely held on, although
-the position was anything but comfortable.</p>
-
-<p>While we watched the bombardment a squadron of
-English fliers passed overhead. I ducked and made for
-the bomb-proof.</p>
-
-<p>"Don't worry," said the general, "the fliers rarely bomb
-us. Our aviators generally leave their generals' headquarters
-alone, and they usually do the same by us. It is
-a sort of understood courtesy."...</p>
-
-<p>While I stood in his observation-point with Wenninger
-an iron-gray quartermaster sergeant passed. He
-had been in the east against the Russians as well as in
-the west. In reply to my question as to his opinion of
-the schools of fighting, he answered:</p>
-
-<p>"I'd rather face twenty infantry attacks from the Russians
-than bring up food to the first lines here (British).
-Their damned artillery makes it hell."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p>V&mdash;"AT THE SOMME, I MET VON PAPEN"</p>
-
-<p>At the Somme I met Captain von Papen, the former
-German military attaché, who was sent home by America.
-After six weeks on the firing line he was made chief of
-staff to General Count Schweinitz, commanding the
-Fourth Guard Division and holding the Grevillers-Warlencourt-Ligny
-line. He has proved himself an efficient
-officer.</p>
-
-<p>Captain Boy-Ed, the naval attaché, who was sent
-back to Germany at the same time, is now chief intelligence
-officer at the admiralty in Berlin. He is very bitter
-toward America, while von Papen is friendly. Dr.
-Dernburg, the other propagandist who was returned to
-the fatherland, is philosophical as regards his work in
-America, and is without rancour over his treatment. He
-is living in Berlin, working on housing plans for the
-poor, but he has lost the confidence of his Government....</p>
-
-<p>All the world knows Hindenburg. Germany's Iron
-Man, the hero of the Masurian Swamps, a colossal
-wooden statue of whom stands opposite the Reichstag in
-the Sieges-allee, the Avenue of Victory, in Berlin's Tiergarten.
-But who is Ludendorff?</p>
-
-<p>Ludendorff is Germany's man of mystery, the grim,
-inscrutable, silent man whose picture is on sale in every
-shop, whose name is in every mouth, but whose real personality
-is hidden even from his own countrymen.</p>
-
-<p>Ludendorff is Hindenburg's indispensable right-hand
-man....</p>
-
-<p>There are those who say that Ludendorff is Hindenburg's
-brain, and that Hindenburg's greatest successes
-have been planned by his silent, retiring assistant. Hindenburg,
-when in the mood, becomes very talkative and
-chatty, and at such times he often attributes his success<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span>
-to his assistant. There is a perfect harmony between
-the two; Ludendorff plans and Hindenburg decides....</p>
-
-<p>On August 28 (1914) it was announced that the Russians
-were fleeing across the border. The news grew.
-Five army corps and three cavalry divisions had been
-annihilated. More than ninety thousand prisoners were
-taken. Tannenberg, one of the greatest victories of the
-war, had changed the whole face of affairs in the east.</p>
-
-<p>There have been bigger battles and longer battles, and
-there have been battles of more significance in the history
-of the war, but there has been no other battle in which
-the result has been so overwhelming and complete a victory
-for either side.</p>
-
-<p>Just what happened at Tannenberg and in the Masurian
-Swamps is still a secret. There have been stories
-that a hundred thousand men were drowned in the
-swamps. There have been tales of dikes released and
-men swept away in a swirl of rushing waters. All that
-is known certainly is that a Russian army disappeared.</p>
-
-<p>(This American war correspondent then gives his impressions
-of men and events within the German Armies,
-telling many interesting tales of Boelcke, the German
-"knight of the air" who shot down thirty-eight enemy
-aeroplanes before he was killed in collision with one of
-his own German machines.)</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
-in the original sources.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>"DIXMUDE"-AN EPIC OF THE
-FRENCH MARINES</h2>
-
-<p><i>Story of the Murder of Commander Jeanniot</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Told by Charles Le Goffic of the Fusiliers Marins&mdash;Translated
-by Florence Simmonds</i></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>The story of the French Marines is one of the epics of the
-World's Wars. Such is the story of the Bretons. At Dixmude,
-under command of their own officers, retaining not only the
-costume, but the soul and language of their profession they
-were still sailors. Grouped with them were seamen from all
-the naval stations. The heroism of these sailors is told in the
-volume entitled "Dixmude," published by <i>J. B. Lippincott Company</i>.
-From these interesting stories, we here relate "The
-Murder of Captain Jeanniot."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p><a name="FNanchor_9_9" id="FNanchor_9_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a>
-I-GREAT HEARTS OF THE FRENCH
-MARINES</p>
-
-<p>I had opportunities of talking to several of these
-"Parigots," and I should not advise anyone to speak
-slightingly of their officers before them, though, indeed,
-so few of these have survived that nine times out of ten
-the quip could be aimed only at a ghost. The deepest
-and tenderest words I heard uttered concerning Naval
-Lieutenant Martin des Pallières were spoken by a Marine
-of the Rue des Martyrs, George Delaballe, who was
-one of his gunners in front of the cemetery the night
-when his machine-guns were jammed, and five hundred
-Germans, led by a major wearing the Red Cross armlet,
-threw themselves suddenly into our trenches.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span></p>
-<p>"But why did you love him so?" I asked.</p>
-
-<p>"I don't know.... We loved him because he was
-brave, and was always saying things that made us
-laugh, ... but above all because he loved us."</p>
-
-<p>Here we have the secret of this extraordinary empire
-of the officers over their men, the explanation of that
-miracle of a four weeks' resistance, one against six, under
-the most formidable tempest of shells of every caliber
-that ever fell upon a position, in a shattered town where
-all the buildings were ablaze, and where, to quote the
-words of a <i>Daily Telegraph</i> correspondent, it was no
-longer light or dark, "but only red." When the Boches
-murdered Commander Jeanniot, his men were half crazy.
-They would not have felt the death of a father more
-deeply. I have recently had a letter sent me written by
-a Breton lad, Jules Cavan, who was wounded at Dixmude.
-While he was in hospital at Bordeaux he was
-visited by relatives of Second-Lieutenant Gautier, who
-was killed on October 27 in the cemetery trenches.</p>
-
-<p>"Dear Sir," he wrote to M. Dalché de Desplanels the
-following day, "you cannot imagine how your visit went
-to my heart.... On October 19, when my battalion
-took the offensive at Lannes, three kilometers from Dixmude,
-I was wounded by a bullet in the thigh. I dragged
-myself along as best I could on the battlefield, bullets
-falling thickly all around me. I got over about five
-hundred meters on the battlefield and reached the road.
-Just at that moment Lieutenant Gautier, who was coming
-towards me with a section, seeing me in the ditch, asked:
-'Well, my lad, what is the matter with you?' 'Oh, Lieutenant,
-I am wounded in the leg, and I cannot drag myself
-further.' 'Here then, get on my back.' And he carried
-me to a house at Lannes, and said these words,
-which I shall never forget: 'Stay there, my lad, till they
-come and fetch you. I will let the motor ambulance men<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span>
-know.' Then he went off under the fire. Oh, the splendid
-fellow!"</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;TALES OF THE BRAVE "PARIGOTS"</p>
-
-<p>"The splendid fellow!" Jules Cavan echoes Georges
-Delaballe, the Breton, the "Parigot." There is the same
-heartfelt ring in the words of each. And sometimes,
-as I muse over these heroic shades, I ask myself which
-were the more admirable, officers or men. When Second-Lieutenant
-Gautier received orders to take the place of
-Lieutenant de Pallières, buried by a shell in the trench
-of the cemetery where Lieutenant Eno had already fallen,
-he read his fate plainly; he said: "It's my turn." And
-he smiled at Death, who beckoned him. But I know of
-one case when, as Death seemed about to pass them by,
-the Marines provoked it; when, after they had used up all
-their cartridges and were surrounded in a barn, twelve
-survivors only remaining with their captain, the latter,
-filled with pity for them, and recognizing the futility of
-further resistance, said to his men: "My poor fellows,
-you have done your duty. There is nothing for it but to
-surrender." Then, disobedient to their captain for the
-first time, they answered: "No!" To my mind nothing
-could show more clearly the degree of sublime exaltation
-and complete self-forgetfulness to which our officers had
-raised the <i>moral</i> of their men. Such were the pupils these
-masters in heroism had formed, that often their own
-pupils surpassed them. There was at the Trouville Hospital
-a young Breton sailor called Michel Folgoas. His
-wound was one of the most frightful imaginable: the
-whole of his side was shaved off by a shell which killed
-one of his comrades in the trenches, who was standing
-next to him, on November 2. "I," he remarks in a letter,
-"was completely stunned at first. When I came to
-myself I walked three hundred meters before I noticed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span>
-that I was wounded, and this was only when my comrades
-called out: '<i>Mon Dieu</i>, they have carried away half your
-side.'" It was true. But does he groan and lament over
-it? He makes a joke of it: "The Boches were so hungry
-that they took a beef-steak out of my side, but this won't
-matter, as they have left me a little."</p>
-
-<p>Multiply this Michel Folgoas by 6,000, and you will
-have the brigade. This inferno of Dixmude was an inferno
-where everyone made the best of things. And the
-<i>battues</i> of rabbits, the coursing of the red German hares
-which were running in front of the army of invasion, the
-bull-fights in which our Mokos impaled some pacific Flemish
-bull abandoned by its owners; more dubious escapades,
-sternly repressed, in the underground premises of
-the Dixmude drink-shops; a story of two Bretons who
-went off on a foraging expedition and were seen coming
-back along the canal in broad daylight towing a great cask
-of strong beer which they had unearthed Heaven knows
-where at a time when the whole brigade, officers as well
-as men, had nothing to drink but the brackish water of
-the Yser&mdash;these, and a hundred other tales of the same
-kind, which will some day delight village audiences gathered
-round festal evening fires, bear witness that Jean
-Gouin (or Le Gwenn, John the White, as the sailors call
-themselves familiarly<a name="FNanchor_10_10" id="FNanchor_10_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_10_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a>), did not lose his bearings even
-in his worst vicissitudes.</p>
-
-<p>Dixmude was an epic then, or, as M. Victor Giraud
-proposes, a French <i>geste</i>, but a <i>geste</i> in which the heroism
-is entirely without solemnity or deliberation, where the
-nature of the seaman asserts itself at every turn, where
-there are thunder, lightning, rain, mud, cold, bullets,
-shrapnel, high explosive shells, and all the youthful gaiety
-of the French race.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span></p>
-<p>And this epic did not come to an end at Dixmude.
-The brigade did not ground arms after November 10.
-The gaps in its ranks being filled from the dépôts, it was
-kept up to the strength of two regiments, and reaped
-fresh laurels. At Ypres and Saint Georges it charged
-the troops of Prince Ruprecht of Bavaria and the Duke
-of Würtemberg in succession. Dixmude was but one
-panel of the triptych: on the broken apex of the black
-capital of the Communiers, on the livid backgrounds of
-the flat country about Nieuport, twice again did the brigade
-inscribe its stormy silhouette.</p>
-
-<p>But at Ypres and Saint Georges the sailors had the
-bulk of the Anglo-French forces behind them; at Dixmude
-up to November 4 they knew that their enterprise
-was a forlorn hope. And in their hands they held the
-fate of the two Flanders. One of the heroes of Dixmude,
-Naval Lieutenant Georges Hébert, said that the Fusiliers
-had gained more than a naval battle there. My only
-objection to this statement is its modesty. Dixmude was
-our Thermopylæ in the north, as the Grand-Couronné,
-near Nancy, was our Thermopylæ in the east; the Fusiliers
-were the first and the most solid element of the long
-triumphant defensive which will one day be known as
-the victory of the Yser, a victory less decisive and perhaps
-less brilliant than that of the Marne, but not less
-momentous in its consequences.</p>
-
-<p>The Generalissimo is credited with a dictum which he
-may himself have uttered with a certain astonishment:</p>
-
-<p>"You are my best infantrymen," said he to the Fusiliers.</p>
-
-<p>We will close with these simply, soldierly words, more<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span>
-eloquent than the most brilliant harangues. The brigade
-will reckon them among their proudest trophies to all
-time.</p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;STORY OF MURDER OF DR. DUGUET</p>
-
-<p>On October 25 (1914), we had not yet received any
-help from the inundation. Our troops were in dire need
-of rest, and the enemy was tightening his grip along the
-entire front. New reinforcements were coming up to
-fill the gaps in his ranks; our scouts warned us that fresh
-troops were marching upon Dixmude by the three roads
-of Essen, Beerst, and Woumen.<a name="FNanchor_11_11" id="FNanchor_11_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_11_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a> We had to expect a
-big affair the next day, if not that very night. It came
-off that night.</p>
-
-<p>About 7 o'clock the Gamas company went to relieve
-the men in the southern trenches. On their way, immediately
-outside the town, they fell in with a German
-force of about the same strength as themselves, which
-had crept up no one knew how. There was a fusillade
-and a general <i>mêlée</i>, in which our sailors opened a passage
-through the troop with bayonets and butt-ends, disposing
-of some forty Germans and putting the rest to
-flight.<a name="FNanchor_12_12" id="FNanchor_12_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a> Then there was a lull. The splash of rain was
-the only sound heard till 2 <span class="smcap">A.M.</span>, when suddenly a fresh
-outbreak of rifle-fire was heard near the Caeskerke station,
-right inside the defences. It was suggested that
-our men or our allies, exasperated by their life of continual
-alarms, had been carried away by some reckless
-impulse. The bravest soldiers admit that hallucinations
-are not uncommon at night in the trenches. All the pitfalls
-of darkness rise before the mind; the circulation of
-the blood makes a noise like the tramp of marching
-troops; if by chance a nervous sentry should fire his
-rifle, the whole section will follow suit.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Convinced that some misunderstanding of this kind had
-taken place, the Staff, still quartered at the Caeskerke
-railway station, shouted to the sections to cease firing.
-As, however, the fusillade continued in the direction of
-the town, the Admiral sent one of his officers, Lieutenant
-Durand-Gasselin, to reconnoiter. He got as far as the
-Yser without finding the enemy; the fusillade had ceased;
-the roads were clear. He set out on his way back to
-Caeskerke. On the road he passed an ambulance belonging
-to the brigade going up towards Dixmude, which,
-on being challenged, replied: "Rouge Croix." Rather
-surprised at this inversion, he stopped the ambulance;
-it was full of Germans, who, however, surrendered without
-offering any resistance. But this capture suggested
-a new train of thought to the Staff: they were now certain
-that there had been an infantry raid upon the town;
-the Germans in the ambulance probably belonged to a
-troop of mysterious assailants who had made their way
-into Dixmude in the night and had vanished no less mysteriously
-after this extraordinary deed of daring. One
-of our covering trenches must have given way, but which?
-Our allies held the railway line by which the enemy had
-penetrated into the defences, sounding the charge....
-The riddle was very disturbing, but under the veil of a
-thick, damp night, which favored the enemy, it was useless
-to seek a solution. It was found next morning at
-dawn, when one of our detachments on guard by the Yser
-suddenly noticed in a meadow a curious medley of Belgians,
-French Marines, and Germans. Had our men<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span>
-been made prisoners? This uncertainty was of brief
-duration. There was a sharp volley; the sailors fell;
-the Germans made off. This was what had happened!</p>
-
-<p>Various versions have been given of this incident, one
-of the most dramatic of the defence, in the course of
-which the heroic Commander Jeanniot and Dr. Duguet,
-chief officer of the medical staff, fell mortally wounded,
-with several others. The general opinion, however, seems
-to be that the German attack, which was delivered at
-2:30 <span class="smcap">P.M.</span>, was closely connected with the surprise movement
-attempted at 7 o'clock in the evening on the Essen
-road and so happily frustrated by the intervention of
-the Gamas company. It is not impossible that it was
-carried out by the fragments of the force we had scattered,
-reinforced by new elements and charging to the
-sound of the bugle. This would explain the interval of
-several hours between the two attacks, which were no
-doubt the outcome of a single inspiration.</p>
-
-<p>"The night," says an eye-witness, "was pursuing its
-normal course, and as there were no indications of disturbance,
-Dr. Duguet took the opportunity to go and get
-a little rest in the house where he was living, which was
-just across the street opposite his ambulance. The Abbé
-Le Helloco, chaplain of the 2nd Regiment, had joined
-him at about 1:30 <span class="smcap">A.M.</span> The latter admits that he was
-rather uneasy because of the earlier skirmish, in which,
-as was his habit, he had been unremitting in his ministrations
-to the wounded. After a few minutes' talk the
-two men separated to seek their straw pallets. The
-Abbé had been asleep for an hour or two, when he was
-awakened by shots close at hand. He roused himself
-and went to Dr. Duguet, who was already up. The two
-did not exchange a word. Simultaneously, without taking
-the precaution of extinguishing the lights behind them,
-they hurried to the street. Enframed by the lighted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span>
-doorway, they at once became a target; a volley brought
-them down in a moment. Dr. Duguet had been struck by
-a bullet in the abdomen; the Abbé was hit in the head,
-the arm, and the right thigh. The two bodies were touching
-each other. 'Abbé,' said Dr. Duguet, 'we are done
-for. Give me absolution. I regret....' The Abbé
-found strength to lift his heavy arm and to make the sign
-of the cross upon his dying comrade. Then he fainted,
-and this saved him. Neither he nor Dr. Duguet had
-understood for the moment what was happening.
-Whence had the band of marauders who had struck
-them down come, and how had they managed to steal
-into our lines without being seen? It was a mystery.
-This fusillade breaking out behind them had caused a
-certain disorder in the sections nearest to it, who thought
-they were being taken in the rear, and who would have
-been, indeed, had the attack been maintained. The band
-arrived in front of the ambulance station at the moment
-when the staff (three Belgian doctors, a few naval hospital
-orderlies, and Quartermaster Bonnet) were attending
-to Dr. Duguet, who was still breathing. They made
-the whole lot prisoners and carried them along in their
-idiotic rush through the streets. Both officers and soldiers
-must have been drunk. This is the only reasonable
-explanation of their mad venture. We held all the
-approaches to Dixmude; the brief panic that took place
-in certain sections had been at once controlled."</p>
-
-
-<p>IV&mdash;STORY OF MURDER OF COMMANDER
-JEANNIOT</p>
-
-<p>"Commander Jeanniot, who had been in reserve
-that night, and who, roused by the firing like Dr. Duguet
-and Abbé Le Helloco, had gone into the street to
-call his sector to arms, had not even taken his revolver
-in his hand. Mistaking the identity and the intentions<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span>
-of the groups he saw advancing, he ran towards them
-to reassure them and bring them back to the trenches.
-This little stout, grizzled officer, rough and simple in
-manner, was adored by the sailors. He was known to
-be the bravest of the brave, and he himself was conscious
-of his power over his men. When he recognized
-his mistake it was too late. The Germans seized him,
-disarmed him, and carried him off with loud '<i>Hochs!</i>'
-of satisfaction. The band continued to push on towards
-the Yser, driving a few fugitives before them, and a
-part of them succeeded in crossing the river under cover
-of the general confusion. Happily this did not last long.
-Captain Marcotte de Sainte-Marie, who was in command
-of the guard on the bridge, identified the assailants with
-the help of a searchlight, and at once opened fire upon
-them. The majority of the Germans within range of
-our machine-guns were mown down; the rest scattered
-along the streets and ran to cellars and ruins to hide themselves.
-But the head of the column had got across with
-its prisoners, whom they drove before them with the
-butt-ends of their rifles.<a name="FNanchor_13_13" id="FNanchor_13_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_13_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a>
-For four hours they wandered<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span>
-about, seeking an issue which would enable them
-to rejoin their lines. It was raining the whole time.
-Weary of wading through the mud, the officers stopped
-behind a hedge to hold a council. A pale light began
-to pierce the mist; day was dawning, and they could
-no longer hope to regain the German lines in a body.
-Prudence dictated that they should disperse until nightfall.
-But what was to be done with the prisoners? The
-majority voted that they should be put to death. The
-Belgian doctors protested. Commander Jeanniot, who
-took no part in the debate, was talking calmly to Quartermaster
-Bonnet. At a sign from their leader the
-Boches knelt and opened fire upon the prisoners. The
-Commander fell, and as he was still breathing, they
-finished him off with their bayonets. The only survivors
-were the Belgian doctors, who had been spared,
-and Quartermaster Bonnet, who had only been hit in the
-shoulder. It was at this moment that the marauders
-were discovered. One section charged them forthwith;
-another fell back to cut off their retreat. What happened
-afterwards? Some accounts declare that the German
-officers learned what it costs to murder prisoners,
-and that our men despatched the dogs there and then;
-but the truth is, that, in spite of the general desire to
-avenge Commander Jeannoit, the whole band was taken
-prisoners and brought before the Admiral, who had only
-the three most prominent rascals of the gang executed."</p>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<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
-in the original sources.</p></div>
-
-<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> "When we passed through the streets of Ghent they were
-full of people shouting, 'Long live the French!' I heard one
-person in the crowd call out, 'Long live Jean Gouin!' He must
-have known them well." (Letter of Fusilier F., of the island
-of Sein.) Le Gwenn, which has been corrupted into Gouin, is a
-very common name in Brittany. [Compare the current English
-nickname "Jack Tar."&mdash;<span class="smcap">Tr.</span>]</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_11_11" id="Footnote_11_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11_11"><span class="label">[11]</span></a> "Germans of the regular army coming from the direction of
-Rheims. The Boches we had had to deal with so far had been
-volunteers or reservists." (Second-Lieutenant X.'s note-book.)</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_12_12" id="Footnote_12_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12_12"><span class="label">[12]</span></a> Not without losses on our side. "Saw Gamas, who has had
-fourteen of his men killed to-night, among them his boatswain
-Dodu." (Second-Lieutenant Gautier's note-book.)</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_13_13" id="Footnote_13_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13_13"><span class="label">[13]</span></a> Here there seems to have been some confusion in the eye-witness's
-account. He leads us to suppose that Dr. Duguet's
-ambulance was in the town, and that the Germans who killed him
-and wounded the Abbé Le Helloco went on afterwards to the
-bridge with their prisoners. "As a fact," we are now told, "the
-affair took place between the bridge&mdash;which the head of a column
-had crossed by surprise, driving before them a number of
-Belgians, sailors, and perhaps some marauders&mdash;and the level
-crossing near the station of Caeskerke where the column was
-finally stopped. It was in this part of the street that Dr. Duguet
-had his dressing-station; and it was there, too, that Commander
-Jeanniot, whose reserve post was at Caeskerke, came out to meet
-the assailants. And it was the fields near the south bank of
-the Yser to which the column betook itself, dragging its prisoners
-with it, when it found the road barred."</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h2>A BISHOP AT THE FRONT WITH THE
-BRITISH ARMY</h2>
-
-<p><i>Told by the Right Reverend H. Russell Wakefield,
-Bishop of Birmingham</i></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>This is an account of how the Bishop, accompanied by the
-Lord Mayor of Birmingham, went to the fighting lines to visit
-the staff at headquarters. They were at times within thirty-five
-yards of the German trenches. His impressions have been
-recorded in a volume published by <i>Longmans, Green and Company</i>,
-from which the following incidents are taken.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p><a name="FNanchor_14_14" id="FNanchor_14_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_14_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a>
-I&mdash;THE HUMOUR OF BRITISH "TOMMIES"</p>
-
-<p>Whenever, in future, I am inclined towards a fit of
-pessimism, I shall shut my eyes in order to see once
-again, with the vision of the spirit, a stalwart Britisher
-of the Worcester Regiment, not very far from the German
-lines, on a certain afternoon, when a most appalling
-thunderstorm was raging and some German shells were
-falling. He was munching the thickest slice of bread
-and jam that I have ever seen, and looking with a mild
-contempt at the intruding figure of an unknown padre
-whom a considerable number of his comrades were greeting
-because they recognised in him their Bishop. He
-put down now and again his refreshment in order to do
-some bit of work, but he was just as calm and collected
-as if he had been in his Worcestershire village and not
-in the trenches.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span></p>
-<p>That which carries our men through so many difficulties
-is another thing which impressed me&mdash;namely, their
-unfailing sense of humour; a humour which is never
-really hurtful even when exercised upon some one deserving
-of satire. When he christens a road along which
-there are a couple of miles of Army Service carts "Lorry
-Park," when he finds every kind of strange anglicising
-for Flemish or French words, we know that he is not
-only having some fun for himself, but also providing
-amusement for those who come after him. The same
-humour shines out when he is in hard case. A chaplain
-told me that he had been addressing informally some
-wounded men who had just arrived from the trenches.
-He was expatiating upon the glories of the Victoria Cross
-because he noticed some of the men came from a regiment
-one of whose number had recently received that
-coveted distinction. Suddenly his eloquence was disturbed
-by a voice proceeding from a man, both of whose
-feet were swathed in bandages, who remarked, "Never
-mind the Victoria Cross, give me the Victoria 'Bus!"
-Obviously the soldier's sense of humour was conquering
-his pain, and his remark made the rest of the party forget
-their sufferings for a short time....</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;FRANCE BLEEDS FOR CIVILIZATION</p>
-
-<p>As one who saw the French during the war of 1870,
-when&mdash;being a boy&mdash;I was very susceptible to impressions,
-I can hardly express the difference I notice between
-the nation then and now. In the former war there
-was excitement, impulsiveness, overconfidence, want of
-ballast; to-day there is quietude, earnestness, and
-withal, assurance of eventual victory. More than once I
-journeyed through a considerable part of the French
-lines, and I assert with confidence that the Army of
-France at the present time is incomparably superior to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span>
-that which she placed in the field in 1870. As to her
-civilians, I only saw women, children, and old men; I
-did not, in all my thousand miles of travel, discover a
-single able-bodied person of military age out of uniform.</p>
-
-<p>The harvest, a very good one, was in full swing.
-Every family was out in the fields, all doing something
-towards the in-gathering. I have a picture now before
-my eyes of seven people, all undoubtedly coming from
-the same house, working away hard, whilst at the tail
-end of the procession appeared what might have been
-the great-grandpapa, no longer capable of bending down
-for harvesting, but who, nevertheless, had his piece of
-work in carrying about the baby, who, of course, could
-not be left behind alone in the house. The whole nation
-is doing its utmost.</p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;"HOW I WENT TO THE TRENCHES"</p>
-
-<p>On one occasion after motoring through towns that
-are a household word, both at home and with our Allies,
-towns which have seen the Germans in them and then
-driven out of them, places where the buildings are practically
-level with the ground, the limit for vehicular traffic
-is reached and one goes forward on foot. Soon you
-reach a cutting in the ground and you begin to walk
-along a trench. You turn now and again either to
-right or left, seeing sign-posts telling sometimes in comic
-language and sometimes only by number the name, as it
-were, of the underground street; you then rise a little
-and find yourself walking in the inside of houses so shattered
-that you cannot tell much about what they originally
-were until you are told that they formed a street
-in a little overgrown village of which nothing is left,
-and the last inhabitant of which was the station-master,
-who refused to leave though there was neither train,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>
-station nor house for himself left, because so long as he
-remained on the spot he could claim his pay. Forcible
-measures had at last to be used to secure his departure.
-Where you are walking you are yourself hidden from
-the enemy, but are within the range of their fire. You
-are taken up to an observation post, where one of your
-companions incautiously takes out a white pocket-handkerchief
-and is hurriedly told to put it back in his pocket.</p>
-
-<p>You come down again and proceed cautiously along
-trenches. Now and again shells pass over, and your
-careful guide looks to see in what direction they are falling,
-as, though he is quite unconcerned for himself, he
-knows that he is responsible for the safety of the troublesome
-visitor. You are told to keep your head down and
-not to show, for the moment at any rate, any desire to
-view the landscape. Soldiers are dotted about here and
-there, all of them ready to give a kindly greeting, and
-then at last you reach a point where you are told not to
-speak loudly because practically only a few yards away
-is the enemy, who, were he to hear conversation, might
-think it worth while to throw over a hand grenade. What
-looks like a tiny bit of glass at the end of a short stick
-is there before you, and you are asked to look into it;
-when you do the enemies' trenches are visible to you.
-Beyond an occasional ping against a sandbag, you have
-heard nothing to note the existence of rifle fire, except
-that the men you have passed have got these weapons to
-hand. You tell the men at the advanced posts how proud
-their country is of them, how thankful you are to have
-seen them, how you pray that God may bring them back
-safe to their homes; you get rid of all cigars or cigarettes
-you may have upon you, wishing that you had thousands
-more, and then you return home, varying perhaps the
-route through the communication trenches.</p>
-
-<p>On another occasion our way took us through a town<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span>
-which is absolutely razed to the ground and is still under
-shell fire. There I saw two soldiers busy with spades,
-and I asked what kind of fortification they were putting
-up, to which, with a broad grin, one replied that they
-were looking for souvenirs. He was kind enough to give
-me a complete German cartridge case, for which he refused
-to take any remuneration. Going on a little farther
-in this town, we went down some steps and found ourselves
-in an underground club full of soldiers, who were
-having a hot meal, were reading papers and playing
-games, everything being presided over by perhaps the
-most magnetic person I met on my travels, a young Chaplain
-to the Forces, who would not wish his name to be
-mentioned, though there is probably no one out at the
-Front who will not know to whom I refer. When we
-went from this place towards the more advanced trenches,
-I was taken along a road which looked perfectly harmless,
-when suddenly a stalwart Scotchman told my companion
-and myself that we must get off it at once as it
-was a favourite target for German Maxims. Never was a
-General more obediently submitted to than was this, I
-believe, private soldier. It was on this occasion that we
-had tea in the dugout of the Colonel, who bears a name
-distinguished in English naval, military and sporting life.
-A characteristic of the German trenches which I noticed
-on this and other occasions, was that their sandbags
-seemed to be generally white in colour, at any rate in
-those of the first line. Leaving the trench on this particular
-day, we had to go through an almost alarming
-thunderstorm, which in the course of half an hour made
-a sea of mud of the place which had been quite dry before.
-It was curious to notice how petty the sound of
-the guns appeared as compared with the artillery of
-heaven.</p>
-
-<p>Pathetic incidents occur and touching scenes are visible<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span>
-on these journeys to the Front. One looked in the
-trenches upon little mounds and crosses, marking the
-resting-places of men who had been hurriedly, but reverently,
-buried. There they are side by side with their
-living comrades, who are doing their work whilst their
-brothers sleep. Dotted all about the country are little
-cemeteries, which tell of devotion unto death, and which
-remind one of all the sorrow this war has caused. It is
-strange to see how religious emblems appear to have
-been strong against shell. Constantly you would see a
-church almost totally destroyed and yet the crucifix untouched,
-and who will ever forget that sight which can
-be seen for miles around, of the tower which has been
-almost shattered to pieces and yet the statue of the Virgin
-and Child, which was near the top of it, though bent
-over completely at right angles, still remains, as it were
-blessing and protecting the whole neighbourhood.</p>
-
-
-<p>IV&mdash;"SEE GOD THRO' CLOUD OF SMOKE"</p>
-
-<p>This leads to the consideration of the religious condition
-of our troops as affected, first, by the churches and
-worshippers of France, and, secondly, by their own experience
-in this war. More than one mentioned the
-pleasure felt at the sight of the little wayside shrines
-which they passed on their march. Others commented
-upon the large numbers of people they saw flocking to
-their early communion....</p>
-
-<p>What his experience of war is doing for the soldier
-in regard to religion is remarkable. It would have been
-possible that the sight of humanity striving to the death
-and inflicting horrible suffering might have made our
-young fellows despair of Christianity. They might have
-argued that it was of no avail to teach the religion of
-Jesus when no effect was produced upon international<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span>
-conduct; but they have been able to look more deeply
-into matters and to realise that not Divine intention was
-at fault, but human refusal to follow true teaching.
-They have been able to see God through the cloud of
-smoke raised by shot and shell, and the Presence of the
-Divine has not been obscured by the horrors of war.
-Conscious of the seriousness of the work in which they
-are engaged, feeling every moment the nearness of eternity,
-our soldiers have in no craven spirit, but with a
-due remembrance of their relationship to God and to
-eternity, turned to religion as a stay in the hour of conflict....</p>
-
-<p>Although I must refrain most reluctantly from saying
-anything about the great military personages whom
-I met in France, and with whom I was so greatly impressed,
-I may perhaps refer to two French persons of
-distinction, in no way connected with the war, whom I
-was privileged to meet. First there is that outstanding
-personality the Mayor of Hazebrouck, Abbé Lemire. He
-and I were brought together because he is a clerical
-municipal dignitary and I was the first clergyman who
-was ever a mayor in this country. He, however, does
-more than I have ever been able to do, because he is a
-member of the Chamber of Deputies, and here in England
-the doors of the House of Commons are still shut against
-the clergy....</p>
-
-<p>He is an extraordinarily winning personality, and as
-we walked through the streets of his city every woman
-and child and old man had something to say to him.
-With one he would discuss the imprisonment of a soldier
-son in Germany; with another the fact that a married
-daughter had had a bouncing boy who would be, so
-prophesied the Abbé, a soldier of France in years to
-come. To another in deep mourning he had a word of
-comfort to give; until at last I said to him that he appeared<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>
-to be not only <i>le maire</i> but also <i>le père</i> of Hazebrouck....</p>
-
-<p>Another beautiful character is the present Archbishop
-of Rouen. Carrying well his seventy-six years, thanks in
-no small measure to the loving care of his secretary, the
-great dignitary has passed through the recent critical time
-for his Church, retaining throughout his breadth of view
-and his sweetness of nature. Turned out of his official
-residence, he has built himself another, beautifully situated,
-in the grounds of which may to-day be seen English
-doctors and nurses, and even wounded, resting and gaining
-health. The morning upon which I saw him I had
-been celebrating the Holy Communion in the chapel of
-what once was his palace. When I asked him whether
-he felt any objection to this being done by our English
-clergy, he answered, "Certainly not." And then, after a
-moment's thought, he went on: "After all, what does
-it matter whether one celebrates in one vestment and
-another in a different one, if at the root of things we are
-the same?"</p>
-
-<p>(The Bishop now relates his impressions of the various
-countries engaged in the War, all of which, with the
-exception of Japan, he has visited. He believes that the
-War is to result in a great spiritual awakening throughout
-the world.)</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-<h3>FOOTNOTE</h3>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_14_14" id="Footnote_14_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14_14"><span class="label">[14]</span></a> All numerals relate to stories herein told&mdash;not to chapters
-in the original sources.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>SHORT RATIONS&mdash;THE TRUTH
-ABOUT LIFE IN GERMANY</h2>
-
-<p><i>An American Woman in Germany</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Told by Madeline Zabriskie Doty</i></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>Miss Doty made two trips of exploration to Europe during the
-War. She is one of the few "foreigners" who were permitted to
-visit prison camps and industrial factories in Germany. It has
-remained for this American woman to bring out of Germany
-some of the most interesting sidelights. It is a graphic account
-of the tragedy which reveals the conditions within the German
-Empire. Miss Doty talked with the German women in the
-factories, the mothers with their babies, finding everywhere the
-tragedy of suffering almost beyond human endurance. The
-following reminiscences are from her book: "Short Rations,"
-published by the <i>Century Company</i>: Copyright 1917.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p><a name="FNanchor_15_15" id="FNanchor_15_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_15_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a>
-I&mdash;STORY OF WOMAN WHO WANTED TO
-SELL HER CHILD</p>
-
-<p>I awoke to find myself in Germany.... Hamburg is
-a city of sleepers. Its big hotels, its many stores, its
-impressive buildings stretch out endlessly, but within all
-is still. All that modern industry and the ingenuity of
-man can achieve has here been flung upon the land,
-and then the force that created it has vanished, leaving
-these great monuments to rot, to rust, and to crumble.
-The tragedy of unused treasures is as horrible as rows of
-dead. A city seems visibly dying....</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span></p>
-<p>A crowd of children is gathering just below. School
-is out, and they are surrounding an object of interest.
-One or two women join them. There is no passing
-populace to swell the throng. We approach and see in
-the centre of the crowd of children a woman crouched
-upon a bench. She is dirty, ragged, and dark in colouring....
-On the ground at her feet is a baby just big
-enough to walk. It also is dirty, and possesses only one
-ragged garment. The mother sits listless, gazing at her
-child. It is evident she is soon to be a mother again.
-There is great chattering among the children. I turn to
-my companion for explanation.</p>
-
-<p>"The woman wants to sell her child. She says she
-hasn't anything to eat. She isn't a German mother. Of
-course, no German mother would do such a thing. You
-can see she isn't good. She is going to have another
-baby."</p>
-
-<p>A school-child gives the toddling baby some cherries.
-She eats them greedily. My hand goes to my pocketbook,
-but my companion pulls me away. If I bought the
-baby, what could I do with her on a trip through Germany?...</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;THE SECRET GRIEF OF GERMANY</p>
-
-<p>But before I leave Germany the spies get on my
-nerves. What was at first amusing becomes a nuisance.
-I feel exactly as though I am in prison. I acquire the
-habit of looking out of the corner of my eye and over my
-shoulder. These spies are as annoying to their countrymen
-as to me. The people detest them. They grow restless
-under such suppression. Free conversation is impossible,
-except behind closed doors. Between German spies
-and the spies of other countries supposed to be at large,
-public conversation is at a standstill. Everywhere are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span>
-signs&mdash;"<i>Soldaten</i>"&mdash;"<i>Vorsicht bei gespröchen Spionengefahr</i>."...</p>
-
-<p>In spite of the concealment of the wounded, the population
-begins to understand its loss. One night I went to
-the station (at Berlin) to see a big detachment leave for
-Wilmâ. They had all been in war before. Their uniforms
-were dirty and patched. They sat on benches
-clinging to a loved one's hand, or stood in listless groups.
-No one talked. They were like tired children. They
-needed food and bed. The scenes of farewell were
-harrowing.</p>
-
-<p>Here was a young boy saying good-by to a mother and
-three aunts. He was all they had&mdash;their whole life.
-Here a father saying farewell to a wife and three sons,
-all under seventeen. Or a mother in deep mourning
-taking leave of her last son, or a young wife with a
-baby in her arms giving a last embrace.</p>
-
-<p>As the train moved out of the station there were no
-shouts, no cheers, no words of encouragement. Instead
-there was a deadly silence. The men leaned out of windows,
-stretched despairing hands towards loved ones.
-As the train pulled away the little groups broke into
-strangling sobs. They were shaken as by a mighty tempest.
-Paroxysms of grief rent and tore them. They
-knew the end had come. A man may go once into battle
-and return, but not twice and thrice. Life held no hope.
-As I came away I stopped before the big building which
-conducts military affairs. It is known as the "House of
-Sorrow." On its rear wall is posted the list of dead and
-wounded....</p>
-
-<p>One evening at midnight as I cross the Thiergarten I
-pass a small procession of new recruits. Midnight, my
-friend tells me, is the favourite hour for seizing fresh
-food for cannon. There is something sinister in choosing
-dark hours, when the city sleeps, for this deed....</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;A BEAUTIFUL STORY TOLD IN GENEVA</p>
-
-<p>While in Geneva I visited the Red Cross authorities.
-This is the Central Bureau for relief work. It gives aid
-to the wounded and prisoners of all the belligerent countries.
-Many horrible, tragic and beautiful stories pass
-through the committee's hands.</p>
-
-<p>After the war these stories will come to light. At
-present the rigid censorship prevents publication, for it
-is impossible to carry printed or written material across
-frontiers.</p>
-
-<p>But one story told me needed no notes. It became
-engraven in my memory. It is the story of an English
-boy and a German mother.</p>
-
-<p>I could not secure the letters that passed between
-these two but their contents, and the other facts given
-are here set forth accurately. This is a true story.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The sky was a soft, shining blue. The air was still.
-The warmth of summer brooded over the land. But no
-bird's song broke the stillness. No bees fluttered over
-flowers. The earth lay torn and bare. In deep brown
-furrows of the earth, hundreds of restless men lay or
-knelt or stood.</p>
-
-<p>The land was vibrant with living silence. But now
-and again a gigantic smashing roar broke the tense stillness.
-Then in some spots, the ground spit forth masses
-of dirt, a soldier's helmet, a tattered rag of uniform, and
-bits of a human body.</p>
-
-<p>It was after such a mighty blast that a great winged
-object came speeding from the north. It skimmed low
-over the trenches and dipped, and circled and paused
-above the English line. Like a great eagle it seemed
-about to rush to earth, snatch its prey, and then be off.
-But as it hung suspended, another whirring monster<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span>
-flew swiftly from the south. It winged its way above
-its rival, then turning, plunged downward. The great
-cannons grew silent. The eyes of the pigmies in the
-trenches gazed skyward. A breathless tenseness gripped
-the earth. Only sun and sky shone on with no whisper
-of the mad fight of these two winged things.</p>
-
-<p>For a few wild moments they rushed at one another.
-Then the whirring bird with wings of white rose high,
-turned back, and plunged again upon that other whose
-wings had huge, black crosses.</p>
-
-<p>It missed its prey, but there came a cracking sound.
-A puff of smoke, like a hot breath, burst from the creature
-of the iron crosses. It shuddered, dropped, turned,
-and fell head down. With sweeping curves the pursuer
-also came to earth. A lean, young Englishman sprang
-from the whirring engine. His body quivered with excitement.
-He sped with running feet to the broken
-object lying on the ground. He knelt by the twisted
-mass. Beneath the splintered wood and iron he saw a
-boyish figure. It was still and motionless. He gently
-pulled the body out. A fair young German lay before
-him. A deep gash in the head showed where a blow
-had brought instant death. The body was straight and
-supple, the features clear cut and clean. A boy's face
-with frank and fearless brow looked up at the young
-Englishman. The eyes held no malice. They were full
-of shocked surprise. The brown haired lad felt the
-lifeless heart. A piece of cardboard met his fingers. He
-pulled it from the coat pocket. It was a picture&mdash;a
-picture of a woman&mdash;a woman with gray hair and kindly
-eyes,&mdash;a mother whose face bore lines of patient suffering.
-Scrawled beneath the portrait in boyish hand were
-the words, "Meine Mutter."</p>
-
-<p>A sob choked the young Englishman. Tenderly he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span>
-gathered the lifeless form in his strong arms. Then he
-rose and walked unheeding across the open field of
-battle. But no angry bullet pelted after those young figures.
-The men in the trenches saw and understood.
-Behind the lines the boy lay his burden down. Taking
-paper and pencil from his pocket and placing the little
-picture before him, he began to write.</p>
-
-<p>When he had finished he placed the letter and portrait
-in a carefully directed envelope. Then walking hurriedly
-to his machine he prepared for flight. Soon he was
-whirring low over the enemy trenches. Leaning out, he
-dropped his missile. The cannons roared, but no rifle
-was turned on that bright figure. Instinctively, men
-knew his deed was one of mercy. As the little paper
-fluttered downward it was picked up by eager soldier
-hands. A little cheer broke from a hundred throats.
-Willing messengers passed it to the rear. Speedily it
-went on its way.</p>
-
-<p>Twenty-four hours later a mother with pale face and
-trembling hands fingered the white scrap of paper. Her
-unseeing eyes gazed out on a smiling landscape. Between
-green meadows in the warm summer sunshine lay
-the glittering Rhine. But she saw nothing. Her baby
-boy was dead. Memories of him flooded her. She felt
-again the warmth of the baby body as it clung to hers
-and the pull of the tiny hands at her breast. She saw
-him as a boy, his eager restlessness. She heard his
-running steps at the door and his cry of "mother." It
-was over. That bright spirit was still. The third and
-last son had been exacted. Her fingers touched the letter
-in her lap. Her eyes fell on the penciled words.
-Slowly they took meaning. This boy who wrote: He'd
-seen the beauty of her son. He'd lifted the dear body
-in his arms. His heart was torn by anguish. What
-was it he said?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p>IV&mdash;WHAT THE GERMAN MOTHER READ ON
-THE SCRAP OF PAPER</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"'It's your son. I know you can't forgive me for I
-killed him. But I want you to know he didn't suffer.
-The end came quickly. He was very brave. He must
-also have been very good. He had your picture in his
-pocket. I am sending it back, though I should like to
-keep it. I suppose I am his enemy, yet I don't feel so
-at all. I'd give my life to have him back. I didn't think
-of him or you when I shot at his machine. He was an
-enemy spying out our men. I couldn't let him get back
-to tell his news. It meant death to our men. It was a
-plucky deed. We were covered up with brush. He
-had to come quite low to see us and he came bravely.
-He nearly escaped me. He handled his machine magnificently.
-I thought how I should like to fly with him.
-But he was the enemy and had to be destroyed. I fired.
-It was over in a second. Just a blow on the head as
-the machine crashed to earth. His face shows no suffering,
-only excitement. His eyes are bright and fearless.
-I know you must have loved him. My mother died
-when I was quite a little boy. But I know what she
-would have felt if I had been killed. War isn't fair to
-women. God! how I wish it were over. It is a nightmare.
-I feel if I just touched your boy, he'd wake and
-we'd be friends. I know his body must be dear to you.
-I will take care of it and mark his grave with a little
-cross. After the war you may want to take him home.</p>
-
-<p>"'For the first time, I'm almost glad my mother isn't
-living. She could not have borne what I have done.
-My own heart is heavy. I felt it was my duty. Yet
-now when I see your son lifeless before me and hold
-your picture in my hand, it all seems wrong. The world
-is dark. O Mother, be my mother just a little too, and
-tell me what to do.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Hugh.</span>'"</p></blockquote>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Slowly great tears rolled down the woman's cheeks.
-What was this monster that was smashing men? Her
-boy and this other, they were the same. No hate was
-in their hearts. They suffered&mdash;the whole world suffered.
-Her country went in hunger. The babies in the
-nearby cottages grew weak for want of milk. She
-mustn't tell that to the English lad. His heart would
-break. Why must such suffering be? Was she to
-blame? There was the English lad without a mother.
-She had not thought of him and others like him. Her
-home, her sons, her Fatherland, these had been sufficient.
-But each life hangs on every other. Motherhood
-is universal.</p>
-
-
-<p>V&mdash;A GERMAN MOTHER TO THE ENGLISH
-BOY WHO KILLED HER SON</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly she knew what to write. What she must
-say to that grief-stricken English boy. Quickly her hand
-penned the words:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"<span class="smcap">Dear Lad</span>: There is nothing to forgive. I see you
-as you are&mdash;your troubled goodness. I feel you coming
-to me like a little boy astounded at having done ill when
-you meant well. You seem my son. I am glad your
-hands cared for my other boy. I had rather you than
-any other touched his earthly body. He was my youngest.
-I think you saw his fineness. I know the torture
-of your heart since you have slain him. To women
-brotherhood is a reality. For all men are our sons. That
-makes war a monster that brother must slay brother.
-Yet perhaps women more than men have been to blame
-for this world war. We did not think of the world's
-children, our children. The baby hands that clutched our
-breast were so sweet, we forgot the hundred other baby<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span>
-hands stretched out to us. But the Earth does not forget,
-she mothers all. And now my heart aches with
-repentance. I long to take you in my arms and lay your
-head upon my breast to make you feel through me your
-kinship with all the earth. Help me, my son, I need
-you. Be your vision, my vision. Spread the dream of
-oneness and love throughout the land. When the war
-is over come to me. I am waiting for you.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Deine
-Mutter.</span>"</p></blockquote>
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-<h3>FOOTNOTE</h3>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_15_15" id="Footnote_15_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_15_15"><span class="label">[15]</span></a> All numerals relate to stories herein told&mdash;not to chapters
-in the original sources.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>FIGHTING "WITH THE RUSSIAN
-ARMY"&mdash;ON AUSTRIAN FRONT</h2>
-
-<p><i>The Colossal Struggle of the Slavs</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Told by Bernard Pares, Official Observer with the
-Russian Army</i></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>This is one of the most important narratives in the records of
-the War; it is an invaluable witness of the colossal struggle
-waged on the Eastern battle front. The author was granted
-official privileges awarded to no other non-combatant. He
-passed through the first Warsaw Campaign, the crucial battle
-of Dunajec, and the Russian retreat. When Germany declared
-war on Russia, he volunteered for service and went to Petrograd
-and Moscow, where he was appointed official correspondent
-with the Russian Army, traveling with the general staff. He
-later joined the third army as an attaché. Here he was given
-written permit by General Radko Dmitriev to visit any part of
-the firing line. "We were the advance guard," he says, "of
-the liberation of the Slavs ... the retreat of the army to the
-San and to the Province of Lublin. We were driven out by
-sheer weight of metal ... it was a delight to be with such
-splendid men as the Staff of the Russian Army. I never saw
-anything base all the while I was with the Army. There was
-no drunkenness, everyone was at his best, and it was the
-simplest and noblest atmosphere in which I have ever lived."
-His experiences have been gathered into a volume entitled, "Day
-by Day With the Russian Army," from which the following
-incidents are retold by permission of his American publishers,
-Houghton, Mifflin and Company.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p><a name="FNanchor_16_16" id="FNanchor_16_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_16_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a>
-I&mdash;WAR STORIES FROM THE RUSSIANS</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span></p>
-<p>It is wonderful how little effect the war seems to
-have made on the body of Russia. On the other hand,
-the atmosphere of nervous tension begins to disappear
-the moment one begins to get really near to the front.
-In the Red Cross offices at Kiev I found the same straining
-toward the front as elsewhere, only much calmer
-because these were people who had a big war work to do.
-Hospitals meet the eye in the streets at every turn.</p>
-
-<p>Once in the train for Galicia it was again the war
-atmosphere and simplicity itself. The talk was all of
-people engaged directly or indirectly in it. A graceful
-old lady with a very attentive son was on her way to get
-a sight of her husband, one of the generals. A young
-officer, whose wound has kept him out of it for three
-weeks, is on his way to the front before Cracow. A
-fresh-looking young man, at first unrecognisable to his
-friends with his close-cropped bullet head, tells how he
-went on a reconnaissance, how he came on the Austrians,
-how their first line held up their muskets and when the
-Russians had passed on fired on their rear, how nevertheless
-practically all came back safe and sound. It was
-told with a kind of schoolboy ingenuousness and without
-suggestion or comment of any kind on the conduct of
-those concerned. Then followed an account of a war
-marriage, at first put off and then carried out as quietly
-as possible. All the friends of every one seemed to be
-at the war.</p>
-
-<p>At the old frontier some of the buildings near the
-station were wrecked by artillery fire, and the railway
-was lined with a succession of solid hospital barracks,
-with the local commandant's flag flying over one of them.
-There was plenty to eat at the station; and though we
-moved on very quickly, every one from our crowded train
-managed to find a place in the Austrian carriages, chiefly
-because every one was ready to help his neighbour. The
-corridors jammed with passengers and kits, we moved on
-through the typical "strips" of Russian peasant culture,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span>
-a pleasant wooded country, passing a draft detachment
-on the halt which waved greetings to us. My companion,
-Mr. Stakhovich, a phenomenally strong man and
-imbued by a fine spirit, was talking of the indifference of
-the Russian peasant to danger; he regarded it as an
-indifference to all sensations; anyhow they go forward,
-whatever the conditions, as a sheer matter of course.
-With the ordinary educated man the mind must be kept
-occupied with work if unpleasant possibilities of all kinds
-are to be kept out of it; but General Radko Dmitriev,
-to whom we are going, will jump up from a meal, however
-hungry, when there is a chance of getting under fire.</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;IN THE CONQUERED CITY OF LVOV</p>
-
-<p>We draw up in the great station at Lvov. To the
-right of us stretch endless lines crowded with wagons,
-especially with sanitary trains. In the lofty passages and
-waiting-rooms are sleeping troops with piled muskets,
-some wounded on stretchers tended by the sisters of
-mercy who are constantly on duty here, and a crowd of
-men, all soldiers, coming and going. One passed many
-Austrian prisoners, of whom another enormous batch
-was just announced to arrive; and elsewhere a Russian
-private explained to me the excellent quality of the Hungarian
-knapsack, which he and his comrades had turned
-into busbies. One man was asleep inside the rail opposite
-the ticket office. He did not seem to mind how often
-he was awakened.</p>
-
-<p>In the town everything is quiet, and life goes so naturally
-that no one could take it for a conquered city. In
-the country this might have been expected because far
-the greater part of the population is Little Russian; but
-in Lvov the Russians are only about 17 per cent. and
-the predominant element is the Polish (60 per cent.), the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span>
-rest being Jews (20 per cent.) or Germans (3 per cent.).</p>
-
-<p>Lvov is taking on more of the character of a Russian
-town. Many of the Jews have left. The Russian signs
-over new restaurants, stores, etc., meet the eye everywhere.
-Of the Little Russian party which supported the
-Austrians, many have now returned and are making their
-peace with the new authorities. The Russian soldier is
-quite at home in Lvov, as one sees when the singing
-"drafts" swing past the Governor-General's palace; the
-Austrian prisoners in uniform, who are allowed liberty on
-parole, seem equally at their ease. Numbers of Russian
-priests are pouring into Galicia, but not fast enough for
-the Uniat villages which have embraced Orthodoxy; as
-soon as they arrive, peasants come with their carts and
-take them off to their parishes, without waiting for any
-formal distribution. The Uniat creed and ritual are
-practically identical with the Orthodox, so that the difference
-between the two was purely political. At the
-new People's Palace of Nicholas II, I saw a number of
-children, principally from families that had suffered severely
-at the hands of Austrian troops, receive Christmas
-presents on the day of St. Nicholas, who is the Russian
-Santa Claus. Archbishop Eulogius, in a very effective
-little address, told them that the biggest Christmas present
-which they were receiving was the liberty to speak
-their own language and worship in their own way in
-union with their Russian brothers.</p>
-
-<p>Starting for the army, I spent a night of strange happening
-in the great railway station, as our train was
-delayed till the morning. At one time I went, in the
-frosty night, to look for it at the goods station, where
-there were endless rails and wagons, and found it after
-a long search. In the big restaurant four little boys
-made great friends with me, one of fourteen in uniform
-and spurs who had been serving as mounted scout with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span>
-a regiment at the front, and one of thirteen who had
-attached himself in the same capacity to a battery. Both
-were small creatures, and the first was a remarkable little
-person, with all the smartness and determination of a
-soldier, relieved by an amusing childlike grace and courtesy.
-He said to me in a confidential voice, "I see you
-are very fond of little children," and he ordered with
-pride lemonade and chocolates for us both. He said the
-men at the front could last a week to ten days, if necessary,
-without any food but <i>sukhari</i> (army biscuit), so
-long as they had cigarettes. His imagination had been
-caught by the aeroplanes over Peremyshl, and also by the
-Carpathians, which he described with an up and down
-movement of the hand. He had a great disgust for anything
-mean and a warlike pride in the exploits of the
-soldiers of his regiment. His model was a boy, now a
-young man, who had been through the Japanese War.
-"If a general comes past," and he made a salute to show
-the extreme respect felt for his hero. Many a time in
-that long night, while the weary heads of doctors and
-sisters of mercy were bent in sheer tiredness against the
-tables, he would come and sit by me and ask me to read
-the war news to him, or to tell him about the English
-submarines. He left me with the smartest of salutes in
-the early hours of the morning.</p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;TALES TOLD ON AN ARMY TRAIN</p>
-
-<p>Our train is an enormous one with endless warm carriages
-(<i>teplushki</i>) for the wounded. The staff of sanitars
-and sisters, working for the Zemstvo Red Cross, live
-in a spotlessly clean carriage, and there are special carriages
-for drugs, stores, kitchen, etc. They are simple
-and interesting people, and, as I am now in the Red Cross
-and have many interests in common with them, they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span>
-kindly made me up a bed in their carriage, where we discussed
-Russia in all its bearings.</p>
-
-<p>We carry a group of passengers who have all made
-friends after the Russian way. A colonel and his wife
-are going to fetch the body of a fallen comrade. Another
-colonel, a delightfully simple man with close-cropped
-hair, thin brown face and bright, clever eyes seems to
-know all the Slavonic languages and has much to say
-of the Austrians. He has seen twenty of them surrender
-to a priest and his clerk who came on them in a wood,
-made the sign of the cross and told them to come with
-them. In another place twenty-two Austrians were captured
-by two Russians. The Austrian officers put quick-firing
-guns behind their own rifle pits for the "encouragement"
-of their men, on whom he has seen them fire.
-They make their gunners fire every two hours in the
-night as a kind of exercise. He has seen them form
-their men in close column under fire and march them
-about up and down along the line of the Russian trenches.
-The Austrian artillery seldom takes cover; the Russian
-directs its fire on the enemy rather than on his batteries.
-In one place, heavy Russian artillery at a range of seven
-miles demolished an Austrian field train and two battalions
-who were lunching in the square of a small town.
-He is full of life and confidence, and all that he says
-breathes of fresh air and of work.</p>
-
-<p>Our train made its way through to the furthest point
-up. We had to stop several times to let through the
-ambulance trains already charged with wounded, which
-take precedence. We had to go very slowly over several
-repaired bridges; and this was no simple matter, as we
-had twenty-seven long and heavy coaches. Some of these
-repairs were complicated pieces of work, as the bridges
-were high above the level of the rivers. At point after
-point, and especially on the Austrian sides of the rivers,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span>
-we passed lines of carefully prepared trenches, and in one
-place there was a masterpiece of artillery cover, with
-every arrangement for a long stay.</p>
-
-<p>The damage done by the artillery fire was sporadic&mdash;here
-a smashed station building, there a town where
-several houses had suffered. But there was nothing indiscriminate;
-and the Polish population, which showed
-no sign of any hostility to the Russians, seemed to find
-the war conditions livable.</p>
-
-<p>As in other parts, I was specially struck by the easy
-relations existing between the inhabitants, the Austrian
-soldiers and their Russian captors. There were exceptions.
-I had some talk with a few Austrian Germans
-from Vienna. They were simple folk and seemed to
-have no grudge against the Russians; and the circumstance
-in their position which they felt most&mdash;they were
-only taken the day before yesterday&mdash;was that this was
-Christmas Eve, the "<i>stille Nacht, heilige Nacht</i>" of the
-beautiful German hymn, and that they were far from
-home among strange people. They kept apart as far as
-possible not only from their captors but from their fellow
-prisoners from Bohemia and Moravia. These last seemed
-at least quite comfortable, smoking their long pipes and
-leisurely sweeping the platforms. They were quite a
-large company. They understood my Russian better
-than my German. When I asked them how they stood
-with the German troops, instead of the sturdy "Gut"
-of their Viennese fellows, they answered with a slang
-word and a gesture. When asked about the Russians,
-they replied in a quite matter-of-course way: "We are
-brothers and speak the same tongue; we are one people."
-For any difficulties, the Poles often prove good interpreters.
-It is very different for the Austrian captive officers,
-who often cannot understand their own men.</p>
-
-<p>These Czechs confidently assured me that any Russian<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span>
-troops that entered Bohemia would be welcomed as
-friends; and they claimed that not only the neighboring
-Moravians and Slovaks but also the Croats further south
-were to be taken as feeling as they did. The Bohemians
-and Moravians seem to be surrendering in the largest
-numbers of all; and though the Viennese claimed that
-large numbers of Russians had also been taken, I cannot
-regard as anything but exceptional the enormous batches
-of blue uniforms that I passed on the road here. I asked
-these men about their greatcoats and was not at all surprised
-when they said they felt cold in them. It is nothing
-like such a practical winter outfit, whether for head,
-body or legs, as that of the Russian soldier.</p>
-
-<p>We came very well over the last part of our journey.
-I was sorry to part with the friendly sanitars, who all
-seemed old acquaintances by the end of the journey and
-invited me to take up my quarters permanently with
-them. Theirs was more than ordinary kindness, as they
-had shared everything they had with me, including their
-little sleeping apartment. The bearer company under
-their orders is all composed of Mennonites, a German
-religious sect from South Russia which objects to war on
-principle and, being excused military service even in this
-tremendous struggle, seems to be serving wholesale as
-ambulance volunteers.</p>
-
-<p>As there were none but soldiers about, these men
-helped me out with my luggage; and through the window
-of the First Aid point in Tarnow station, I saw another
-acquaintance waving me a welcome. This is the last
-point that the railway can serve; and my friends will
-go back with a full burden, which will keep the medical
-staff busy day and night all the way. One of my new
-companions, who has been out to a village to get milk for
-the wounded, has seen the shrapnel bursting; and the
-guns are sounding loud and clear near the town as I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span>
-write this. It is here that the most seriously wounded
-must be treated at once, as a railway journey would
-simply mean death for them. This is brought home to
-one, if one only looks at the faces of the workers. Yet
-with this huge line of operations, and the assaults which
-may be made at any point of it, at any moment the nearest
-field hospitals may need to send off any wounded who
-can be moved without delay. Though the work is being
-done with danger all round, less thought is being given to
-it than anywhere that I have been yet.</p>
-
-
-<p>IV&mdash;CHRISTMAS IN AN AUSTRIAN HOSPITAL</p>
-
-<p>Christmas Eve: peace on earth and good will toward
-men. And all through "the still night, the holy night,"
-the sound that means killing goes on almost continuously.
-How can any one say prayers for a world which is at war,
-or for himself that is a part of it? May God, who knows
-everything, help each of us to bear our part and not
-disgrace Him, and make us instruments to the end that
-He wishes.</p>
-
-<p>Christmas day I spent in the hospitals. In one ward,
-at a local Austrian hospital, and full of wounded, I found
-that almost every one of the line of patients was of a different
-nationality. Going round the room, one found
-first a Pole of western Galicia, then a Russian from the
-Urals, next a Ruthenian (Little Russian) from eastern
-Galicia, next a Magyar from Hungary, and against the
-wall a young German from Westphalia. After him came
-an Austrian-German from Salzburg, a Serbian from
-southern Hungary, another Ruthenian, an Austrian-German
-from Moravia, an Austrian-German from Bohemia,
-and a Moravian from Moravia.</p>
-
-<p>I spent a couple of hours here, talking sometimes with
-each of the patients, sometimes with all. The Pole knew<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>
-only Polish and the bearded Russian, who had a bad
-body wound, was too tired to talk much. Of the Ruthenians
-one was a frail, white-faced boy from close to the
-Russian frontier who seemed, like most of his people,
-subdued, and confused with the strangeness of his position
-in fighting against his own people; the other was a
-lumpish boy without much intelligence. The thin,
-bearded Hungarian, who knew no German but a little
-Russian, was mostly groaning or dozing. The Salzburg
-Austrian was dazed and drowsy, but at intervals talked
-quietly of his pleasant homeland.</p>
-
-<p>The German stood out from the rest. He was a bright,
-vigorous boy of twenty, had gone as a volunteer and was
-tremendously proud of the spirit of the German army.
-He had fought against the French during four days of
-pouring rain, mostly in standing water. The Bavarians,
-who seemed to have quarrelled with the other troops in
-that part, were making war atrociously, he said, knifing
-the inhabitants, insulting the women and destroying all
-that came in their way. He was later moved to the
-Carpathians, where one German division fought between
-two Austrian ones. They advanced in snow without field
-kitchens, and were not allowed to touch the pigs and
-poultry that they passed. However, they had enough to
-eat; and they were hoping to surprise their enemy, when
-the Russians fell upon them and left only the remnants
-of a regiment, many of the officers also falling. He himself
-was wounded in both legs, and was brought here
-in a cart.</p>
-
-<p>Every German soldier has a prayer-book and a song-book.
-They constantly sing on the march, and find it
-a great remedy against fatigue. Songs of Arndt and
-Körner are very popular, and there is a new version of
-an old song, which is perhaps the greatest favorite; it
-begins&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="poem">
-"Oh Deutschland hoch an Ehren,<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Du heil'ges Land der Treu."</span><br />
-</div>
-
-<p>and it goes on to speak of the new exploits in east and
-west. There are any number of volunteers in Germany;
-the women are all joining the Red Cross; and the population
-is busy with every kind of work for the army;
-but when I asked whether the people were keen for the
-war, he answered with astonishment, "The people? The
-people thought that the war was not to be avoided; but
-that was at the start; now it is different." He asked if
-there were many other Englishmen in Russia, and when
-I answered that there were some, he said, to my surprise,
-"The English are everywhere, they are a fine people&mdash;<i>nobel</i>."
-He also asked me on the quiet whether,
-when he was well, he would be sent to Siberia. He had
-been told that the Russians were terrible, but had written
-home to say that he had found them nothing of the
-sort.</p>
-
-<p>Much of our talk turned on the Austrian army. The
-German said that it didn't stand firm "unless it was properly
-led, by Germans." In Bohemia and Moravia the
-regiments were mixed, Slavs and Austrian-Germans, and
-according to the Moravian soldiers, were constantly quarrelling;
-all the officers were Austrian-Germans, and even
-some of the Hungarian regiments seemed to be commanded
-by Germans. The young Serbian spoke of frequent
-quarrels and even brawls between Serbian and
-Hungarian fellow-soldiers. The great wish of all was
-that the war should end. When I said that the end was
-not in sight, the German exclaimed, "More misery, more
-misery;" a second said, "Oh, Jammer, Jammer" (lamentation),
-and a third had tears in his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>In another ward I heard more of the Bohemians.
-There Prussia is the antipathy. There appear to be Czech<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span>
-officers only in the reserve. After the outbreak of war,
-the Austrians made wholesale arrests among the educated
-Czechs, quite apart from party politics, and were
-particularly severe on the gymnastic volunteer organizations
-(<i>sokols</i>), which are popular among all the Slav
-nationalities of Austria. The Bohemians had not had
-time to find their legs under the new possibilities created
-by the Russian successes, but the Russian troops would
-be sure of a cordial welcome there. The whole of my informant's
-regiment had surrendered <i>en masse</i>; and even
-in the mobilization of 1914, a Prague regiment had refused
-to march against Russia and several of the men
-had been shot. I was told that the Austrian army was
-much weaker in reserves than the Russian.</p>
-
-
-<p>V&mdash;HOW THE RUSSIAN SOLDIERS DIE</p>
-
-<p>I ended the day at the railway station, where the Russian
-wounded just brought in were being attended to
-while the cannon sounded from time to time not far
-off. Several lay on stretchers in the corridors and others
-on pallets in the ambulance room, all still in their greatcoats
-and with their kits lying beneath them. I had no
-conversations here; there was too much pain, one could
-only sit by the sufferers or perhaps help them to change
-their position. First aid had been given elsewhere, but
-this was the stage when the wounds seem to be felt most.
-There was wonderfully little complaining. Most were
-silent, except when a helping hand was needed. One
-man shot through the chest told me that "By the grace
-of God, it was nothing to matter." It was always a
-satisfaction to the men that they had been wounded while
-attacking. A general walked quickly round, distributing
-cigarettes, which he put in the men's mouths and himself
-lighted.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In the night the cannonade sounded close to the town,
-but seemed farther off again next morning.</p>
-
-<p>To-day I also went round a hospital with the dressers.
-The work was quickly executed, but much of it was very
-complicated. One does not describe such scenes, not
-so much because of the ugly character of many of the
-wounds, nor because of the end impending over many of
-the patients. To this last the Russian soldier's attitude
-is simple&mdash;<i>gilt es dir, oder gilt es mir</i>. He will speak of
-it as "going to America," the undiscovered country. But
-all these things come to be forgotten in the atmosphere of
-work. Here all the resources of life are going forward
-in their own slow way, for they can have no quicker,
-handicapped and outpaced in their struggle to keep up
-with the work of death.</p>
-
-<p>General Radko Dmitriev is a short and sturdily built
-man with quick brown eyes and a profile reminiscent of
-Napoleon. He talks quickly and shortly, sometimes
-drums on the table with his fingers, and now and then
-makes a rapid dash for the matches. The daily visit of
-the Chief of the Staff is short, because, as the General
-says on his return, simple business is done quickly.
-Every piece of his incisive conversation holds together as
-part of a single and clear view of the whole military position,
-of which the watchword is "Forward."</p>
-
-<p>It is only the heavy rains that have saved the retreating
-Austrians from further losses. The roads are so
-broken up and so deep with mud that any quick movement
-is impossible. This gives the occasion for a useful rest.
-The cold weather&mdash;and it is freezing now&mdash;will be welcomed
-on this side; and the Russian winter kits, which
-have already been served out, are immeasurably better
-than the thin blue greatcoats of the draggled and demoralized
-Austrians.</p>
-
-<p>Numbers of Austrian units are so reduced that they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span>
-are only shadows of what they were, and some seem to
-have disappeared altogether. The ordinary drafts came
-in some time ago and are now exhausted&mdash;such is the
-testimony of Austrian officers. The new Russian recruits,
-on the contrary, will join the colors shortly.</p>
-
-<p>From the beginning of the war, Bosnians, who are
-really Serbians, surrendered in large numbers. Then the
-Poles began to come in, and now the Bohemians. The
-Hungarians are sure to go on to the end; but the Roumanian
-and Italian soldiers of Austria have also come over
-very easily. In front of Cracow a Russian officer under
-fire came on a whole number of Bohemians who were
-singing the "Sokol" songs and shouted a greeting as they
-came into the Russian lines.</p>
-
-<p>These wholesale surrenders have, I think, an extremely
-interesting political significance. When governments
-turned the whole people into an army, it was clear that
-the army was also being turned into the people; but it
-was not clear how the people could express itself when
-under army discipline. These surrenders, in their general
-character and in their differences of detail, are a picture
-of the feelings and aspirations of the various nationalities
-which are bundled together under the name of Austria.</p>
-
-<p>At this Staff, as at the General Staff, life was very
-simple. We all met twice a day for a plain meal without
-any alcohol; there was plenty of conversation, but it
-was that of men engaged in responsible work; any news
-from outside was welcome, especially from the western
-allies, and there was full appreciation and sympathy for
-their hard task.</p>
-
-<p>There was plenty of news from other quarters of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span>
-Russian front, and one could have a much juster and
-fuller perspective of how things were going than anywhere
-behind the army; the two things which stood out
-even more here than elsewhere were, on the one hand,
-the immensity of the sacrifices which have been asked
-and are being cheerfully made by Russia, and, on the
-other, the sense of quiet confidence as to the ultimate
-result.</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-<h3>FOOTNOTE</h3>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_16_16" id="Footnote_16_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_16_16"><span class="label">[16]</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_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>THE ROMANCE OF THE FRENCH
-FOREIGN LEGION</h2>
-
-<p><i>The "Glorious Rascals"</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Told by E. S. and G. F. Lees</i></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>The reinstatement by the King of Lieutenant-Colonel John
-Ford Elkington in the Royal Warwickshire Regiment, after
-he had served for twenty-two months with conspicuous bravery
-in the French Foreign Legion, has once more drawn attention
-to this unique military organization. As the writers of this
-story show, "La Légion Etrangère" of our Allies the French
-is literally steeped in romance, and it is therefore the romantic
-side of the heroic yet often maligned legionaries which they
-have set forth most prominently. Practically every man in the
-corps has a history, if he could only be induced to tell it, and in
-the present war the Legion has covered itself with glory, as
-shown in this story in the <i>Wide World Magazine</i>.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;STORY OF "THE GLORIOUS BLACKGUARDS"</p>
-
-<p>Budding novelists in search of ideas for tales of adventure,
-short story writers who have come to the end
-of their stock of episodes, and all who wield the pen
-either for amusement or instruction, may be recommended
-to turn over the pages that tell the story of the Foreign
-Legion. There is a whole literature at their disposal,
-covering a period of more than eighty years and
-written in almost as many languages as there are nationalities
-in this remarkable military body, and it teems
-from beginning to end with incidents which respond to
-the entire gamut of human emotions.</p>
-
-<p>The Foreign Legion, which in time of peace is composed
-of between eight and ten thousand men, but which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span>
-now probably exceeds the strength of an army corps,
-since no fewer than thirty-two thousand odd foreigners
-enrolled themselves from August 21st, 1914, to April
-1st, 1915, is, as it were, a microcosm of the world. According
-to official French returns, there were in its ranks
-at the beginning of the war nine thousand five hundred
-Alsatians and Lorrainers, fourteen hundred and sixty-two
-Belgians, three hundred and seventy-nine English,
-three thousand three hundred and ninety-three Russians,
-four thousand nine hundred and thirteen Italians, thirteen
-hundred and eighty Greeks, five hundred and ninety-one
-Luxembourgers, nine hundred and sixty-nine Spaniards,
-one thousand eight hundred and sixty-seven Swiss,
-thirteen hundred and sixty-nine Austro-Hungarians, one
-thousand and twenty-seven Germans, five hundred and
-ninety-two Turks, six hundred Americans, and four
-thousand two hundred and fifty-four of various other
-nationalties, including, in all probability, as at the time
-of the Empire, Poles, Albanians, Croatians, Illyrians, and
-negroes.</p>
-
-<p>In this world-in-little all classes of society are represented&mdash;the
-prince and the pauper, the scholar and the
-illiterate, the one-time brilliant officer, prominent financier,
-and ecclesiastic. All of them are brought to a common
-level with the lowest of the low through inherent
-human weakness, some foolish act committed in haste
-and repented of at leisure, or else through some misfortune
-or other over which the man who is "down on his
-luck" has no control whatever.</p>
-
-<p>The social outcast, the deserter, the gambler, the fugitive
-from justice, the man who has been crossed in love,
-the desperate man who, on second thoughts, prefers the
-ranks of the Legion to suicide, the man who has a pure
-love of soldiering or an inordinate taste for adventure,
-the out-and-out failure who has been told by his family<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>
-to "make good" and clean off his debt to society&mdash;all of
-them are found here, living under the shadow of mystery,
-undergoing the most arduous life imaginable, and, for the
-most part, suffering in silence. So heterogenous are they
-that the legionaries, quite unjustly, have been called many
-ill names. Through the faults of a few, who necessarily
-find their way into such an organization, they have all
-been indiscriminately labelled with such epithets as "band
-of criminals," "degenerates," "troop of dishonoured foreigners,"
-"heartless mercenaries," and so on. But many
-sins can be forgiven the soldiers of the Legion when we
-read their history aright, and come to understand their
-Spartan characters in the hour of trial and danger. And
-it is for that reason that, despite their antecedents and
-shortcomings, they are now generally known in French
-military circles as "The Heroic Rascals," or as "The Glorious
-Blackguards."</p>
-
-<p>The Foreign Legion can trace its origin to the days of
-the Scottish archers, employed by Charles VII. of France,
-and to those of the Swiss, Albanian, Flemish, Walloon,
-German, Italian, and other mercenaries in the service of
-his successors. At the time of the Convention, in 1793,
-an appeal was made to the nations of Europe for soldiers,
-with the result that several foreign regiments fought with
-the revolutionary armies. All these, however, were disbanded
-at the fall of Napoleon. When Louis XVIII.
-came to the throne he created the Royal Foreign Legion
-in their place, but they gradually merged into the regular
-army. However, after the 1830 Revolution the Foreign
-Legion was revived, and ever since they have taken part
-in nearly every foreign campaign in which France has
-been engaged&mdash;in the conquest of Algeria, in the Crimean
-War, in Mexico, Tongking, Formosa, Madagascar, and
-Morocco.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;ASYLUM OF BRAVE UNFORTUNATES</p>
-
-<p>Admission to the Legion is not the result of the efforts
-of the recruiting sergeant. All the men are volunteers,
-and although all classes and all nationalties are welcome
-to join they are not unduly encouraged to do so. There
-have been cases in which men who have come to enlist
-at the military headquarters in Paris have been told of
-the disadvantages they would have to encounter, and advised
-"to think the matter over seriously" before signing
-away their liberty for a period of five years. Yet, almost
-to a man, they have come back to undergo the extremely
-rigorous medical examination&mdash;the only examination, by
-the way, with which they are troubled. For, as regards
-their real name and nationality, no proofs are required.
-The authorities show no curiosity whatsoever about a
-man's past. They take it for granted that he has a very
-good reason for wishing to disappear for a while from
-the society of his relatives and friends and become merged
-with others of like mind in a semi-anonymous body,
-training, marching, and fighting without respite.</p>
-
-<p>The military authorities formerly used to pay the
-legionaries the princely salary of a half-penny a day (recently
-raised to twopence-halfpenny), and their kit does
-not even include socks, yet they are expected to possess
-sufficient physical vigour to march a distance of twenty
-to thirty-two miles, over rocky, slippery ground and
-through jungles, in less than eight hours, halting only ten
-minutes each hour, and with a load of seventy to eighty
-pounds. This is a terrible test of speed and endurance,
-yet one out of which these men come, through systematic
-training, with flying colours, and of which they are all
-of them justly proud. "No questions asked, but strict
-obedience and iron discipline"&mdash;this might be the motto of
-the corps, in which such famous soldiers as MacMahon,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span>
-Canrobert, Chanzy, De Négrier, Servière, and Villebois-Mareuil
-have been officers. In spite of this display of
-delicacy, however, many a man's story leaks out. He
-may be as silent as the Sphinx for years, yet the time
-comes when his taciturnity is overcome through some little
-incident, and his secret, or part of it, as in a case related
-by Mr. Frederic Martyn, in his "Life in the Legion,"
-is out.</p>
-
-<p>It was during the French campaign in Mexico, says
-Mr. Martyn, who himself served for five years in the
-Legion. A large city having been captured, the general
-in command wished to propitiate the inhabitants by celebrating
-a spectacular military High Mass in the cathedral.
-When all the troops had been assembled, it was
-found that the clergy had gone on strike. In the face
-of this dilemma, the general was just about to abandon
-the ceremony when a corporal of the Legion stepped forward
-and, saluting, said, "<i>Mon général</i>, I was a bishop
-before I became a corporal, and I will celebrate the Mass."
-Another eye-witness of this incident states that the ex-bishop
-also offered to preach a sermon, but the general
-considered that the Mass alone was sufficient.</p>
-
-<p>M. Maurer, a former officer in the Legion and now
-President of the Mutual Aid Society for former officers,
-N. C. O.'s, and soldiers of the foreign regiments in Paris,
-informed us that he remembered this bishop, whose fall
-was due to drink.</p>
-
-<p>This recalls another ecclesiastical anecdote. At the
-time of the Fashoda incident a legionary was drowned at
-Zarzis whilst attempting to save a fisherman. His comrades
-made a coffin out of the only wood available, some
-pieces of old packing-cases, on one of which&mdash;the portion,
-as it happened, which we used for the top&mdash;were
-the words, "Keep the contents dry." Again no priest was
-thought to be there to perform the last rites over the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span>
-dead, until an Italian private stepped forward, revealed
-his priestly identity, and recited the Burial Service by
-heart.</p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;FROM PRINCE TO LEGIONAIRE&mdash;THE
-KAISER'S COUSIN</p>
-
-<p>The fall from bishopric to the rank and file of the
-Foreign Legion is not the biggest social drop on record
-in the Legion. In 1897 a young man of twenty-six, who
-gave his name as Albrecht Friedrich Nornemann, was
-accepted for service. After ten months in barracks at
-Géryville he broke down under the severe training, was
-sent into hospital, and in a few weeks died of phthisis. A
-day or two later the regiment was astonished to learn
-that a German war-vessel had entered the harbour, entrusted
-with the astounding mission of fetching the body
-of Albrecht Friedrich, cousin-german of Prince Henry of
-Prussia, and consequently cousin of the Kaiser, who,
-having ordered the remains to be brought back to Hamburg,
-probably alone knew the prince's secret.</p>
-
-<p>Six years before this remarkable incident, which is
-vouched for by more than one authority, another man of
-mysterious origin&mdash;who, if he was not actually a prince
-of the realm, was in all probability of royal blood on
-one side&mdash;was discovered in a Tongking battalion. A
-sergeant and the owner of an illustrious name, since his
-father was a general and Minister to a European
-monarch, it was noticed that he never received any letters
-from his father, but that every month the paymaster
-handed him a thousand francs which he never failed to
-share with his less well-to-do comrades. Why was he
-there, and what was the mystery surrounding his birth?
-was often the mental reflection of those who enjoyed
-his friendship and generosity. Only after his death did<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span>
-they get an inkling of the truth. His military book stated
-that his name was V. de S&mdash;&mdash;, son of V. de S&mdash;&mdash;,
-General of Division and Minister of War. "There was
-no mention of his mother's name," said a superior officer
-to M. de Pouvourville, who tells the story, "and there
-can be little doubt that she was of too illustrious a rank
-to acknowledge a son the circumstances of whose birth
-had placed him beyond the pale."</p>
-
-<p>Some excellent stories of life in the Legion were told
-to the authors of this article by the above named M.
-Maurer.</p>
-
-<p>One of his orderlies was Graf X&mdash;&mdash;, the son of the
-then Governor of Brandenburg, but he could never learn
-in what circumstances this man had fallen from his high
-estate. It was different in the case of his particular chum,
-a young Englishman of distinguished manners, who spoke
-several languages and was an accomplished musician,
-though the secret of his life did not come out until several
-years after M. Maurer had retired and returned to
-Paris. One day, when passing the Madeleine, he saw a
-splendid equipage, drawn by a pair of magnificent greys,
-with silver harness, standing outside the church, and, lo
-and behold! sitting in the carriage was his old chum.
-Hailing him by the name by which he had always known
-him, M. Maurer was astonished to see his friend put his
-finger to his lips. The next moment he was invited to
-enter the carriage, and, with an invitation to dinner, off
-they drove to a fashionable restaurant in the Champs
-Elysees. Over dinner M. Maurer's former comrade told
-him his real name and story. A young man of good family,
-he had started his career with an excellent position in
-the Bank of England. One day, when ten thousand pounds
-had been slid into his hands, a sudden temptation came
-over him, a foolish desire to have a flutter at "Monte."
-So he took the earliest opportunity of leaving London.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span>
-As was only to be expected, the inevitable happened; he
-lost at the tables every penny of the sum he had embezzled.
-Aware of the disgrace that awaited him when the
-theft was discovered, he enlisted in the Foreign Legion.</p>
-
-<p>"Now, it is a well-known fact," concluded M. Maurer,
-"that the sins of a man who has served his full time in
-the Legion are wiped off the slate, and I suppose that
-something like this must have happened in the case of
-my young friend. I have no doubt that his family restored
-the money. Anyway, he attained his rehabilitation.
-He is the bearer of a very well-known name, and
-to-day occupies an important&mdash;a <i>very</i> important&mdash;post in
-public affairs in England."</p>
-
-
-<p>IV&mdash;THE ROMANCE OF THE EURASIAN</p>
-
-<p>Another little romance revolving round the life of a
-legionary, whose birth was enveloped in mystery, was
-told some years ago by a British soldier who served in
-the Legion. After an engagement at Cao-Thuong, there
-was found on one of the dead, sewn in a belt, six British
-war medals and a letter addressed to the narrator. Judge
-of his surprise when he found that it was in perfect
-English, of which he had never for a moment suspected
-his comrade-in-arms had a knowledge, and that it contained
-the statement that the medals had been won by
-the writer's father and grandfather in India. His mother,
-the writer explained, was a native, and therefore he, as
-a Eurasian, although born in wedlock, was ineligible for
-the British Army. As his tastes were wholly military,
-and the greatest desire of his life was to add to his forebears'
-collection of medals, he had enlisted in the Legion.</p>
-
-<p>The mental attitude of the man who regards the Foreign
-Legion as a <i>pis aller</i> is a common trait among its
-members; it is often, indeed, the last resource of those
-who have met with life's disappointments.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>There was once an officer of the German army who
-had invented a new type of cannon, and could not get
-its merits recognised, either by his own country or by
-France, as rapidly as he would have liked, or receive
-prompt remuneration for his work. Straightway, therefore,
-he went and joined the Légion Etrangère. Some
-little time later, in 1895, the French authorities, waking
-up to the possibility of the value of the work of so eminent
-an engineer, approached him on the subject, but by
-then he had become thoroughly soured. He declined to
-have anything to do with them, and with the air of one
-whose genius has been recognised too late hastily returned
-to his kitchen, where he had long carried out the duties
-of regimental cook.</p>
-
-<p>In the barracks at Sidi-bel-Abbes, where the most cordial
-and frequently rowdy <i>bonne camaraderie</i> reigns, failures
-in art, science, literature, and every other walk in
-life may be found by hundreds. Special cases like that
-of the gallant Lieutenant-Colonel Elkington, who, after
-being cashiered by general court-martial, joined the
-Legion as a simple private at the beginning of the present
-war and won his way to distinction, are rare. He was
-in the thick of the fighting in the Champagne country,
-lay for ten months in hospital badly wounded, and before
-regaining the confidence of his King and country was personally
-decorated with the Médaille Militaire and the
-Croix de Guerre by an officer attached to General Joffre's
-staff. To find an exact parallel to this instance of reinstatement
-in the British Army would be difficult. Among
-the legionaires, however, there have been quite a number
-of men of the type of the American Daly, an artist and
-pupil of Gérôme, who lost at Monte Carlo everything
-his father had given him to pay for his art training in
-Europe; scores, too, of such enigmas as that fine young
-fellow who joined the Legion in 1893, served in Tongking,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span>
-and left in 1898, at the end of his time, when by
-chance his superiors discovered that he had been first
-tenor at the Theâtre de la Monnaie at Brussels. Not a
-note had he sung, not a single reference to music had he
-made whilst in the regiment! Ah, what stories some of
-these ne'er-do-wells, drunkards, comedians, and gentlemen
-with fine manners could tell if only they would consent
-to open their lips!</p>
-
-
-<p>V&mdash;WHY GERMANS HATE THE FOREIGN
-LEGION</p>
-
-<p>Many of them, of course, have no tale worth telling,
-and among these are the deserters from other armies. If
-we include the Alsatians and Lorrainers who join to avoid
-service under the hated German flag, they form a very
-big class indeed. Nearly every year more than a thousand
-men of the annexed provinces and more than a
-thousand Germans flocked to the French standard, with
-the result that the Legion has always been disliked and
-slandered by Germans. We have before us seven closely-printed
-pages forming a list of books and pamphlets
-written by German writers, who, filled with Pan-Germanist
-hatred and inspired by the virulent libels of anonymous
-scribes, have endeavoured for the past twenty years
-to throw mud at a military organization into which so
-many of their countrymen escaped. This prompts new
-thought. If German soldiers are so glad to join a body
-in which life is "a veritable hell upon earth," where men
-"never taste meat, but only bread and rice," where they
-"sleep on the bare ground," where "noses, ears, and fingers
-are cut off for the slightest fault," where they are
-"buried in the sand to the waist with an iron cage over
-them filled with hungry rats"&mdash;the last idea was stolen by
-the German slanderers from Octave Mirbeau's "Jardin<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span>
-des Supplices"&mdash;what must their life in their own army
-be like?</p>
-
-<p>As a matter of fact, many Germans who have served
-in the Legion have had, on their return home, nothing
-but good to say about it, and have become voluntary recruiting
-agents for France, hence an increased bitterness
-on the part of the Huns. A few years ago deserters
-from the German army became so numerous that a society
-was formed at Munich, bearing the name "The German
-Protection Society Against the Foreign Legion." Several
-times men were arrested for trying to persuade their
-comrades to join the Legion, but they had to be released,
-as it was found that they were pure-born Teutons.</p>
-
-<p>And now let us apply the supreme test and look into
-the fighting record of the legionaries. As military experts
-are agreed that they are among the finest fighters
-in the world. Innumerable instances of their stubbornness
-can be given, and it is the quality which has made
-them, time after time, invaluable as a "stiffening" whenever
-it has been considered necessary to draft a number
-of soldiers of the Legion into a regiment of less experienced
-troops. "The most pusillanimous of them," said
-an old French officer, who had seen much service in
-Africa, to us, "will hold out to the death when side by
-side with a legionary and inspired by his superb courage."</p>
-
-<p>One of the feats of the Foreign Legion was the taking
-of Son-Tay on December 16th, 1883, a square brick
-<i>citadelle</i> protected by a hundred cannon, a moat five
-yards wide, and hedges of bamboo, and defended by
-twenty-five thousand men&mdash;ten thousand Chinese regulars,
-ten thousand Black Flags, and five thousand Annamites.
-As an example of pure bravery, look at the thirty-six
-days' siege of Tuyen-Quan, which in 1885 was held by
-six hundred legionaries against twenty thousand Chinese.
-Few celebrated sieges have attained and none surpassed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span>
-in horror what took place there. On the occasion of the
-Camerone affair, in Mexico, sixty-five legionaries, without
-food or shelter, in an open court and under a tropical
-sun, held in check for more than ten hours two thousand
-enemies, three hundred of whom they killed. The word
-"Camerone" is embroidered on the flag of the Foreign
-Legion, and if you go to the Invalides you will see on
-one of the walls, in letters of gold, the names of the three
-officers who directed that handful of heroes, with the
-date of the fight: "Lieutenant Vilain, Sub-Lieutenant
-Mandet, and Captain Danjou; April 30th, 1863."</p>
-
-
-<p>VI&mdash;FRANCE'S TRIBUTE TO THE LEGION</p>
-
-<p>The bravery of the Foreign Legion has been so conspicuous
-that on February 16th, 1906, M. Eugène Etienne,
-then Minister of War, proposed that the flag of the 1st
-Foreign Regiment be decorated with the Legion of Honour,
-"in recognition of the acts of devotion, courage, and
-abnegation which a troop, ever on a war footing, renders
-to the country in the defence of its Colonial possessions."
-This was done, and at the Invalides, in a special case, can
-be seen an old flag of the regiment bearing the date
-September 24th, 1862, a flag which had been retaken from
-the enemy, and on the staff of which hangs the Cross
-of the Legion of Honour, the finest tribute which France
-can pay to the glorious deeds of the Foreign Legion.</p>
-
-<p>During the present war a further distinction has been
-granted the marching regiment of the Legion. Authority
-has just been given the men to wear the <i>fourragère</i>, or
-braid, over the left shoulder. The flag of this regiment
-had already been decorated with the Croix de Guerre.</p>
-
-<p>The latest recorded exploit of this gallant corps was
-the capture, at the point of the bayonet, of a fortified
-village strongly held by the enemy. The men of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span>
-Legion held out so vigorously that all the enemy's counter-attacks
-were beaten off, and seven hundred and fifty
-German prisoners were sent to the rear.</p>
-
-<p>The British residents in Paris and other parts of France
-who volunteered for service in the French army and
-trained at the Magic City in 1914 were drafted into the
-Foreign Legion, and the survivors have reason to be
-proud of their old corps.</p>
-
-<p>But the complete history of the doings of the Legion
-during this war can only be written some time hence.
-Suffice it to say, in addition to the above facts, that they
-have been mentioned in army orders no fewer than three
-times&mdash;a distinction not won by any other French regiment.
-At one time, during the Champagne campaign,
-they advanced eighteen kilomètres into the enemy's front,
-and if only there had been reinforcements to back them
-up there is no doubt a great victory would have been
-won. The many personal heroic deeds, too, necessitate
-names and details which will not yet pass the Censor's
-scrutiny. But one incident, in conclusion, perhaps we
-may mention, as recorded to us by M. Maurer.</p>
-
-<p>"One of my former men, an Alsatian peasant of the
-lowest type, speaking only of his own <i>patois</i> and unable to
-read or write, came to Paris after serving fifteen years
-in the Foreign Legion. I was instrumental in getting
-him a place in a public wash-house, where he drew a
-handcart for the sum of four francs a day, which, by
-the by, he promptly spent in drink as soon as it was
-handed to him. As soon as war was declared he was off
-again to his <i>métier</i>. He returned on leave after ten
-months in the trenches, and came to see me. Judge of
-my surprise when I found he had become a sub-lieutenant,
-wearing the Croix de Guerre and Croix Militaire
-with the three palms! Still unable to speak more than
-a dozen words in French he explained in his dialect,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span>
-when I inquired what he had done to acquire such distinctions,
-that he had killed fifty-two Boches in the most
-dramatic circumstances. Night after night he had slipped
-out of his trench, and like a snake in the grass crawled
-across 'No Man's Land' to the enemy's listening-posts,
-which are invariably under the charge of experienced
-officers and picked men. He did his work silently and expeditiously&mdash;with
-a knife. A terrible but true anecdote
-of this relentless war!"</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>ADVENTURES OF WOMEN WHO
-FACE DEATH ON BATTLEGROUNDS</h2>
-
-<p><i>Little Stories of Woman's Indomitable Courage</i></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>This is a group of little tales of brave women&mdash;direct from the
-battlefields. They are but typical of the noble deeds of the
-mothers and daughters of all nations throughout the war. It
-has been estimated that forty thousand women have fought in
-the armies&mdash;thousands of them in soldiers' uniforms. The first
-three stories told here are from the <i>New York American</i>, and
-the fourth is from the <i>New York World</i>.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;STORY OF ENGLISHWOMAN WHO RISKED
-LIFE ON RUSSIAN BATTLEFRONT</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Hilda Wynne has youth, beauty, wealth and
-fascination&mdash;she cast them all into the great pool of the
-war in Europe, and added bravery to them&mdash;a limitless
-bravery. She wears the Croix de Guerre, the gift of
-France. King Albert of Belgium decorated her with the
-Order of Leopold, and Russia honored her with the Order
-of St. George. These rare distinctions she won by unique
-service. She drove her ambulance between the first
-trenches. Back and forth she went, driving her automobile
-at furious pace with the fire pouring upon her
-from the allies on one side and the Germans on the other,
-but a mile separating them. Her unit worked between
-the first trenches, the only workers permitted to operate
-on this danger line. Mrs. Wynne and her organization,
-the Bevan-Wynne Unit, have saved more than 25,000
-lives of wounded that but for her speedy aid would have
-been lost. She then came to America for the specific
-purpose of interesting Americans in the needs of Russian
-soldiers.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p><i>Told by Hilda Wynne, herself</i></p>
-
-<p>I have looked into the eyes of death and seen there
-many things.</p>
-
-<p>Looking upon the human carnage I have witnessed,
-from this distance and in the little breathing space I have
-taken from service to make you Americans know the
-Russians and their needs better, I testify that I have seen
-thousands of heroic acts, but the bravest act happened
-on the Russian front.</p>
-
-<p>I saw two aviators go up to certain death. They were
-a Russian and a Frenchman. Both were little men.
-They went up to meet twenty German aeroplanes. It
-was suicidal. But they had been ordered to go&mdash;and
-theirs was the spirit of the gallant six hundred. I stood
-near them as they made ready to go. They said nothing.
-That is one of the lessons you learn in war&mdash;not to waste
-time nor words.</p>
-
-<p>They got their machines ready as a rider tests his saddle
-straps and stirrups before starting for his morning
-gallop through the park. A little pothering and fixing of
-the machinery and they had gone. They went straight
-up and began blazing away at the German planes. I
-watched and the cords of my heart tightened, for the
-German planes, looking like great gray birds with wings
-wide spread, came closer and closer. They surrounded
-them. They formed a solid double circle about them.
-Then they began to fire. And I turned and covered my
-eyes with my hands, for out of that solid, ominous group
-two dots detached themselves and fell. A few seconds
-later what had been aeroplanes were splintered wood
-and what had been men a broken mass covered by smoking
-rags.</p>
-
-<p>While this was the bravest act I saw in two and a half
-years on the firing line, I readily recall the most pathetic.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span>
-It was the second line of men in the Russian trenches.
-They were unarmed soldiers. There were no guns for
-them. They took their places there expecting that the
-man in front might drop, and the second line man could
-pick up his gun and take his place. The reports that
-some of the Russian soldiers have desperately fought
-with switches I have no doubt is true.</p>
-
-<p>I have seen many of the allies die. They all die
-bravely. At Dixmude when the fusiliers arrived 8,000
-and went out 4,000 there was magnificent courage in
-death. The Frenchman dies calling upon his God. The
-Englishman says nothing or feebly jests; just turns his
-face to the wall and is still. The Russian is mystic and
-secretive. The Russian lives behind a veil of reserve.
-You never fully know him. In the last moments you
-know by his rapt look that his soul is in communion with
-his God.</p>
-
-<p>One of the deepest, unalterable truths of the war is the
-German power of hatred. It is past measuring. An example
-occurred at Dixmude. When we had been there
-three days we were driven out. I took my car filled with
-the wounded across a bridge just in time. A second after
-we had crossed there was a roar, then a crash. A shot
-had torn the bridge to pieces. Three weeks later to our
-hospital was brought a wounded German.</p>
-
-<p>"I know you," he said. "We nearly got you at the
-bridge at Dixmude."</p>
-
-<p>"I remember," I said.</p>
-
-<p>That man's eyes used to follow me in a strange way.
-Build no beautiful theories of his national animosity disappearing,
-or being swallowed up in his gratitude. There
-was no such thought in his mind. The eyes said: "I
-wish I had killed you. But since I didn't I wish I might
-have another chance."</p>
-
-<p>This after I had driven away a group of zouaves who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span>
-had taken everything from him, including his iron cross,
-and who were debating whether to toss him into the canal
-then or that night.</p>
-
-<p>It is quite true that the Germans fire upon hospitals.
-Don't believe any disclaimers of such acts. There have
-been many of them. The aeroplanes were circling about
-and above a rough hospital we had constructed and we
-had to leave it in a hurry. We told the patients of their
-danger and hurried them into ambulances to take them
-to a safer spot. One of the patients was a German.
-Both his arms had been shot away. He was in great
-pain. I went to his cot and offered to help him.</p>
-
-<p>"Lean on me," I said. But he turned upon me a baleful
-look.</p>
-
-<p>"No," he said, staggering to his feet. His tormented
-body reeled as he made his way to the door. "No," he
-repeated. "I will take no help from the enemy."</p>
-
-<p>It is true that a shell has burst at my feet. It has
-happened dozens of times. That isn't alarming. If it
-burst a few feet away I should be killed. Shells glance
-down and under the ground. That saves one if he is
-near it. A shell bursting near one is a commonplace in
-war.</p>
-
-<p>The shells have a disturbing way about them, more disturbing
-to your plans than your equanimity. Shells prevented
-my having a nice comfortable illness. In southern
-Russia one can get little to eat. Coarse black bread
-is the chief food. It causes unpleasant disorders. I,
-afflicted with one of them, arranged a table in the corner
-of my tent. I placed remedies on the table, undressed
-and turned in, intending to have a cozy illness of a few
-days. But as I lay there came an angry buzzing. A shell
-hissed through, carrying away a corner of my tent.
-That ended my illness. I had no more time to think
-of it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The greatest peril I encountered was not from shells.
-I have said that one becomes used to them. One of the
-greatest dangers I faced was on a dark night drive along
-a precipice in the Caucasus. It was while the plan to
-bring troops through Persia to Russia was expected to be
-successful. I went ahead with some ambulances. It
-was necessary to take two Russian officers across the
-mountain. I offered my services. The road was an
-oddly twisting one. On one side was a high wall, on the
-other a precipice whose depth no one calculated. But
-as I allowed myself to look into it at twilight I could see
-no bottom to it. We started on the all night drive at
-dusk. The precipice remained with us, a foot away,
-most of the distance. Had my car skidded twelve inches
-the story would have been different.</p>
-
-<p>Then, too, I wandered once within the Turkish lines,
-mistaking them for our own. But amidst a courteous
-silence I was allowed to discover my mistake and escape
-without harm.</p>
-
-<p>I think I owe my opportunity to do my bit, in the way
-I have, to the fact that I arrived in Flanders a few hours
-before the fight and the officers were too busy to send
-me back. I had seven automobiles, and knew how to
-use them. I took them to Dixmude and offered the automobiles
-and my services to the cause. I established headquarters
-at Furnes, which is seven miles from Nieuport,
-eight from Dixmude and twenty from Ypres. I drove
-along the Yser Canal to the parts of the field that were
-under the heaviest fire, for there, I knew, my cars and
-I would be most needed. For a year I worked for the
-relief of the wounded of the French armies. Then I
-went to Russia, where I found the need of help and the
-sacrifice of life because of lack of that help, almost inconceivable.
-The French armies have 6,600 ambulances.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span>
-The Germans have 6,200. Russia, with a firing line of
-6,000 miles has but 600 motor ambulances.</p>
-
-<p>I established dressing stations in the mountains. Some
-of these were 10,000 feet above the sea level. There, on
-the canvas stretched between two horses, the wounded
-were brought, or so they started. For many of them died
-in the long journey, every step of which was torture to
-a wounded man.</p>
-
-<p>The most exciting experience I ever had was on the
-Galician border. We could approach the battle line only
-along the Tranapol road, which ran for fifteen miles
-directly under German guns. I was speeding along it
-with an ambulance full of wounded soldiers when a
-shell struck the roadside and exploded, tearing a great
-hole in the earth fifty feet away. The concussion stopped
-us. Then we went on. I travel on my luck. Some time,
-I suppose, I shall travel too far.</p>
-
-<p>I have given all my fortune to the work. That is what
-we should do&mdash;give not what we can afford, but all we
-have.</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;STORY OF THE "SPY-TRAPPERS" OF
-ENGLAND WHO CAUGHT CARL LODY</p>
-
-<p>Everybody has heard of the tremendous ramifications
-of the German military spy system, which had every
-move of England's army and navy under observation,
-every gun emplacement mapped out and knew every
-order given to the army before it reached the subordinate
-officers.</p>
-
-<p>Englishmen were powerless to shake off this spy danger,
-which penetrated into every branch of national life,
-but English women took up the matter, brought the most
-dangerous spies to trial, put the others under armed
-guard and in various other ways made the lives of spies
-and suspected spies a burden to them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>They have proved that women are the only efficient
-"spy trappers." The leaders of the undertaking are
-women of title, for they alone would have the authority,
-means and prestige to carry out such a difficult and far-reaching
-work.</p>
-
-<p>The organizer and "chairman" of the committee that
-has been rounding up the spies is Lady Glanusk, wife of
-a peer and officer, a woman of keen mind and very determined,
-yet tactful personality. Other members are the
-Duchess of Wellington, who is president; the Duchess of
-Beaufort, the Duchess of Sutherland, the Marchioness of
-Sligo, Countess Bathurst, the Countess of Lanesborough,
-Viscountess Massereene and Ferrard, Viscountess Combermere,
-Viscountess Cobham, Lady Vincent, Lady
-Leith of Fyvie, Mrs. Harold Baring and others.</p>
-
-<p>Among them are some of the most notably beautiful
-women in English society and others who are distinguished
-by their winning personality. Perhaps the most
-striking beauty is the Viscountess Massereene and Ferrard,
-whose husband is the chief of a celebrated Irish
-family. Equally attractive in her way is the young
-Duchess of Sutherland, whose husband is the largest
-landowner in Scotland and the United Kingdom.</p>
-
-<p>Another member of the committee noted for her
-beauty is Mrs. Harold Baring, who was formerly Miss
-Marie Churchill, of New York. Her husband belongs
-to the famous English banking family that possesses
-four peerages. Lady Leith of Fyvie, is another American
-born member. She was Miss Marie January, of St.
-Louis. Womanly intuition and womanly guile exercised
-by these attractive "spy trappers," on many social occasions,
-have led many Germans to make admissions they
-would never have made to a man.</p>
-
-<p>Before the war thousands of Germans were in positions
-of trust in England, ranging from heads of banks<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span>
-down to such positions as butlers in prominent English
-families and headwaiters in leading hotels. Many people
-believe that German butlers in the employ of British
-Cabinet ministers and British generals have been the most
-important agents for conveying military information to
-the enemy. Standing silent and discreet behind their employers
-and their guests at the table, they listened to many
-military secrets and they also had other opportunities for
-gathering information.</p>
-
-<p>One of the fair members of the committee dined one
-evening at the house of an English general with a small
-party of persons highly placed in military and official
-life. When the general joined the ladies in the drawing
-room after dinner the fascinating "spy trapper" drew
-him aside and said:</p>
-
-<p>"General, before I go, I want you to arrest your butler
-and search his belongings. He is a German spy," she
-said.</p>
-
-<p>"But Lady &mdash;&mdash;," said the general in amazement, "he
-has been with me for ten years. The man is an excellent
-butler."</p>
-
-<p>"No doubt," said the lady, "but he is also an excellent
-spy. Never speak to me again if I am wrong."</p>
-
-<p>The butler's room was searched and many notes of an
-incriminating character were found. The lack of positive
-evidence that he had sent information to the German
-Government saved his life, but he was sent to prison
-with a host of other German spies.</p>
-
-<p>It is generally understood that Carl Hans Lody, the
-German spy executed in the Tower of London, was
-brought to trial through the efforts of the women's committee,
-although the members disclaim the achievement.</p>
-
-<p>Lody was an officer of the German naval reserve who
-had resided some years in the United States, married and
-deserted his wife there. He was engaged for a time as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span>
-an agent of an English tourist agency in America, work
-which gave him an excellent opportunity for watching
-military preparations.</p>
-
-<p>Last August he obtained an American passport from
-the American Embassy in Berlin, under the name of
-Charles A. Inglis, of New York, American citizen. He
-went to England with instructions to obtain information
-concerning the movements of the English fleet for
-the German Government.</p>
-
-<p>In the disguise of an American tourist, he visited the
-principal seaports of the United Kingdom. While he was
-viewing the romantic scenery in the vicinity of Edinburgh,
-an attractive member of the ladies' committee
-made his acquaintance. Under the influence of sympathetic
-society Lody became more communicative than
-discretion warranted.</p>
-
-<p>Behind the superficial American accent the natural
-German accent revealed itself in the warmth of confidence.
-A few days later, Lody was arrested and letters,
-which he had written to Germany, giving information
-concerning English naval movements and which had
-been seized in the mails, were produced.</p>
-
-<p>Lody admitted that he was acting as a spy. After a
-short trial he was condemned to be shot in the old Tower
-of London. He met his fate very bravely.</p>
-
-<p>The "ladies' committee" has hunted down all German
-headwaiters and waiters employed in the principal English
-hotels and restaurants and caused them to be removed
-to detention camps. These men, owing to the
-peculiar character of their work, enjoyed an excellent opportunity
-for meeting persons of all the important classes
-of society, and in the free expansion that ordinarily
-takes place at the table all kinds of confidences were exchanged
-within their hearing.</p>
-
-<p>Many Germans of high social position and great<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span>
-wealth, some of them naturalized British subjects, have
-been pursued by the relentless "ladies' committee." Professor
-Arthur Schuster, a born German, but a naturalized
-Englishman, was surprised at his luxurious country seat,
-when a band of detectives descended on him and seized
-his private wireless apparatus.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Glanusk explained to the correspondent of this
-newspaper some of the aims and labors of the committee.</p>
-
-<p>She has turned the drawing and reception rooms of
-her fine house, at No. 30 Bruton street, Mayfair, into
-offices for the committee.</p>
-
-<p>"Owing to the fact," said Lady Glanusk, "that no
-serious effort has been made by our menkind to round
-up the 73,000 alien enemies in our midst, I felt the call
-to start a protest by women, as it is women who are the
-greatest sufferers by war. My husband and two sons
-are fighting at the front and thousands of women can
-say very much the same.</p>
-
-<p>"Ten days after I issued my appeal to the women
-of England I had formed my committee with the definite
-object that all alien-born enemies, whether German, Austrian
-or Turk, of military age, be forthwith interned,
-whether naturalized or not. Other alien enemies above
-military age or under should be removed at least twenty
-miles from the coasts and kept under surveillance.</p>
-
-<p>"I consider that women as spies and decoy ducks are
-more dangerous than men.</p>
-
-<p>"To such an extent have the women of England been
-roused that in the first couple of weeks more than 200,000
-signatures to the petition to be presented to Parliament
-were obtained.</p>
-
-<p>"Alien enemies, Germans and Austrians particularly,
-were spread all along the coast towns and it was impossible
-to know whether or not they were in constant communication<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span>
-with the enemy. For my part, I would like
-to see as many as possible of these 'useless non-combatants'
-dumped right onto German soil. It would be
-amusing to think of the embarrassment of the German
-authorities having to find food and shelter for something
-like 70,000 fresh mouths. Another trouble is the
-shameful favoritism shown to wealthy and highly placed
-Anglo-Germans while their humbler compatriots are interned
-without ado.</p>
-
-<p>"Out of the petition of protest has grown what we
-have named 'the anti-German League,' by which it is
-resolved that no member will employ or sanction the
-employment of any German or alien enemy. Members
-will further refuse to deal with any shops or establishments
-selling any German or alien enemy goods. As
-the members of our committee are highly influential people
-the movement should be effective and will continue
-for several years. Further, no pains will be spared to
-improve the usefulness of British hotel waiters and other
-hotel and restaurant employees.</p>
-
-<p>"If every British woman will realize that it is shameful
-and treacherous to give financial help to the Germans
-there will be no future need to protect the public from
-this alien peril, for the German Empire will never be in
-a position to menace us again, for war cannot be waged
-except by a commercially flourishing nation."</p>
-
-<p>Lady Glanusk is a typical Englishwoman, full of
-energy, go and spirit. She is tall and stately, with a
-beautiful complexion. She received the American correspondent
-cordially and with a friendly grasp of the
-hand.</p>
-
-<p>During the interview Mr. Joynson-Hicks, Member of
-Parliament, and just recently appointed Chairman of the
-Unionist Parliamentary Committee lately formed to inquire<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span>
-into this alien enemy question, was present, as was
-also Lord Euston, heir to the Dukedom of Grafton.</p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;STORY OF DAUGHTERS OF ENGLISH
-NOBILITY WHO WORK IN TRENCHES</p>
-
-<p>Many beautiful girls of the most delicate breeding have
-gone to the front to nurse the wounded&mdash;to see the worst
-horrors of this most horrible of wars.</p>
-
-<p>It must not be assumed that they have merely gone
-to the base hospitals to attend to the wounded soldiers
-brought to them from the front and carried to them
-through the dangerous area. Some at least have gone
-right to the trenches into the midst of the inferno of
-bullets and shells and poisonous gases, where the air is
-filled with the groans of the dying and the stench of the
-unburied dead and where the very soil trembles from the
-force of the new and devilish explosives that reduce
-humanity to a pulp.</p>
-
-<p>The sights that these delicately reared girls must witness
-can only be hinted at. Many strong men have turned
-sick at the same experience, and even veteran soldiers
-are only able to endure their surroundings by smoking
-the strongest kind of tobacco. How the spoiled darlings
-of society will come through their terrible experience
-must be one of the most interesting problems of the war.</p>
-
-<p>One of the most strikingly beautiful girls at the front
-is Miss Gladys Nelson, daughter of Sir William and
-Lady Nelson, who have a house noted for its art treasures
-in Hill Street, Mayfair, the most aristocratic quarter
-of London.</p>
-
-<p>Sir William Nelson is a great railroad magnate, having
-large enterprises of this character in the colonies and
-other parts of the world. He is probably one of the
-wealthiest men in the United Kingdom. He has two<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span>
-sons in the army, and four daughters married to army
-officers. His only unmarried daughter, Miss Gladys, determined
-that she would not do less for her country than
-any of her family.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Nelson is the purest and most refined type of
-English beauty. She is tall, lithe and athletic, with beautiful
-golden hair and a very delicate, fair complexion.
-This exquisite daughter of millions is actually running a
-motor ambulance from the trenches in the North of
-France to the base hospital. She helps to carry the poor
-wounded soldiers in her car back of the firing line and
-then drives them to the base hospital. She has been repeatedly
-under fire and runs the risk of being killed
-almost daily. She was within the firing zone when the
-Germans first began their use of poisonous gases, and it
-was only because she had a full load of wounded in her
-car that she moved to the rear before the deadly fumes
-reached her.</p>
-
-<p>All the risks of death and injury, however, would seem
-to be less of an ordeal to a woman of sensitive nerves
-than the sights she must constantly witness. The bodies
-of dead and wounded have been turned black, green and
-yellow, so that they become in many instances a caricature
-of humanity.</p>
-
-<p>Then so furious is the fighting and so difficult the
-work of attending to the wounded that the dead have
-often been left unburied for days. The wounded are
-often terribly mangled and sometimes left to lie in the dirt
-for hours or even days before the ambulances can find
-them. Before they can be relieved at all their clothes and
-boots may have to be cut from them, and in this process
-very often large masses of flesh come away with the
-garments. These and other services are rendered by the
-women ambulance workers.</p>
-
-<p>The exquisite Miss Gladys Nelson has been doing her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span>
-share in this terrible work, and, according to last accounts,
-doing it very creditably. Will she come through
-the ordeal a stronger and nobler character or will she
-break down under it?</p>
-
-<p>One of the bravest English nurses is Miss Muriel
-Thompson, of the First Aid Yeomanry Corps. She belongs
-to a well-known English family. She is a pretty
-girl of robust physique. She has been right up to the
-trenches in one of the worst centres of carnage in the
-whole field of war. Many badly wounded Belgians, who
-had no hope of medical attention from their own forces,
-were carried by Miss Thompson from the firing line.
-King Albert of Belgium presented to her on the battlefield
-a medal for bravery.</p>
-
-<p>The beautiful Marchioness of Drogheda, a young
-matron of the highest aristocracy, is nursing the wounded
-in a houseboat on the Yser River, in Belgium, where
-some of the most terrible fighting of the whole war has
-occurred. This is the spot where the Germans put forth
-their greatest force in the West last October to break
-down the allied lines and reach the English Channel.</p>
-
-<p>The Germans in their advance either killed the Belgian
-inhabitants or at least drove them out and destroyed their
-homes. The allies in their anxiety to stop the Germans
-flooded the country and destroyed hundreds more Belgian
-homes. The world has never seen a more pitiful and
-death-strewn waste than this once very populous and
-prosperous region.</p>
-
-<p>The Marchioness of Drogheda and some other English
-women are laboring among the wounded and starving
-on the Yser, within sound of the guns to relieve some
-little part of the unspeakable misery.</p>
-
-<p>Two of the most noted beauties of the British aristocracy
-are in training to act as war nurses. One of them
-is Lady Diana Manners, daughter of the Duke of Rutland<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span>
-and sister of the former Lady Marjorie Manners,
-whose heart affairs have been of so much interest to the
-world.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Diana is one of the most charming, dainty and
-sprightly girls in the liveliest set of fashionable society.
-To think of such a girl amid the blood, dirt and horrors
-of trench warfare gives one the greatest shock of all.
-It has not yet been decided where Lady Diana will take
-up her duties in the war area, but her friends say that
-her spirit is so great that she will go to the most dangerous
-places that any woman has yet ventured to.</p>
-
-<p>Another beautiful girl of equal social prominence who
-has been training as a war nurse is Miss Monica Grenfell,
-daughter of Lord Desborough, one of the most
-noted sportsmen in England.</p>
-
-<p>In the earlier stages of the war considerable adverse
-comment was excited by the numbers of society women
-who forced themselves through their influence with high
-officials into the fighting area, where they were not fitted
-to be of help and were often a serious hindrance.</p>
-
-<p>This evil has now been nearly eliminated. With a
-growing sense of the awful seriousness of the war the
-most frivolous of society women have become subdued.
-Under the direction of such masterful men as General
-Kitchener and General Joffre the army officers and other
-officials have refused to allow any women, however
-highly connected, who were actuated merely by curiosity,
-to proceed to the front.</p>
-
-<p>Only women qualified to nurse and belonging to a
-recognized war nursing organization are now allowed
-to go near the fighting area.</p>
-
-<p>At one time criticism was excited by the sight of Lady
-Dorothy Fielding, the twenty-year-old daughter of the
-Earl of Denbigh, standing among a group of admiring
-French and Belgian officers at the front. It was assumed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span>
-that a girl of such an age and such training could only
-be a hindrance among the fighting men, and it was even
-hinted that she was addicted to flirting.</p>
-
-<p>Whatever she may have been at first, the young Lady
-Dorothy has now changed all opinions of her and become
-a real heroine. With training and experience now
-lasting for months she has become a most valuable as
-well as courageous nurse in rescuing and caring for the
-wounded. Naturally a strong girl and accustomed to
-athletic sports, she has shown herself peculiarly fitted for
-this kind of work.</p>
-
-<p>Many ladies of rank interested in the wounded have
-lately shown their good sense by not trying to go to the
-fighting area. The handsome and skittish Duchess of
-Westminster, who excited some attention at first by bustling
-around among the soldiers in France has now gone
-to Serbia, where there is the greatest need of Good
-Samaritans. The hospital founded by her at Le Touquet,
-near Paris, has done good work.</p>
-
-<p>The condition of Serbia is such that any women who
-ventures there must see the extremes of human misery.
-The whole country has been turned into a charnel house
-by the invading Austrians, followed by the still more
-terrible typhus fever. Men, women and children are
-dying of disease without being able to find a bed to lie
-on or a roof to cover them.</p>
-
-<p>One report stated that young Lady Paget had died
-while nursing typhus patients in Serbia. Her mother is
-the well-known American Lady Paget, wife of General
-Sir Arthur Paget, and the daughter is married to a distant
-cousin, named Sir Richard Paget, British Minister
-to Serbia. Later news came that young Lady Paget had
-not died of the fever, but she is passing through scenes
-of horror that have not been known in Europe for three
-centuries.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p>IV&mdash;STORY OF A NEW YORK MOTHER WHO
-SOUGHT HER SON IN THE TRENCHES</p>
-
-<p>Paul Planet was sailing away from New York and
-from the mother he adored to fight under the colors of
-France.</p>
-
-<p>Other women&mdash;mothers, wives, sisters, sweethearts&mdash;pressed
-forward. They also gazed tearfully after the
-slowly receding steamer.</p>
-
-<p>The girlish figure with the great brown eyes and firm,
-resolute mouth, stood motionless.</p>
-
-<p>"Paul," she murmured. "He is my only child&mdash;my
-boy!"</p>
-
-<p>Weeks passed&mdash;months.</p>
-
-<p>Paul Planet's regiment was at the front. He had
-learned what it means to look death in the face, to live
-in the trenches, to see the horrors and devastation of
-war. He had fought and fought bravely, and experienced
-no regrets save one&mdash;that he must be separated
-from his mother.</p>
-
-<p>"We have always been more like chums than mother
-and son," he confided to his comrades. "Since my earliest
-recollection until now we have never been separated."</p>
-
-<p>But when he drew forth a small picture from over his
-heart and said it was a likeness of the mother for whose
-loneliness he sighed, his friends ridiculed his statement.</p>
-
-<p>"Your sweetheart," they said, "or perhaps your sister.
-But never, never ask us to believe that the likeness is of
-your mother."</p>
-
-<p>"She is always young&mdash;always beautiful&mdash;to me she
-will never grow old," declared the young soldier. But
-after that he did not show the picture again.</p>
-
-<p>In far away New York the fair young mother of so
-stalwart a son learned, as months rolled by, what it
-means to watch and wait, to tremble at the sound of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span>
-postman's ring lest it be the harbinger of ill news; to live,
-day by day, in a state of suspense and agony bordering
-upon despair, and to envy every mother she saw whose
-son walked by her side.</p>
-
-<p>Then she, too, sailed for France.</p>
-
-<p>"I must find my boy," she told those who sought to
-dissuade her from undertaking the trip.</p>
-
-<p>For nearly a year had passed and no word had been
-received from Paul Planet. His name had not appeared
-in the lists of dead and missing, yet of his whereabouts
-his mother could learn nothing.</p>
-
-<p>She applied to the officials at the Army Headquarters
-in Paris for information or assistance in locating her son.
-Her efforts were fruitless. Passports she received to
-certain sections of the country where the family name
-was known and where she had relatives or friends to
-visit or business to transact, but no permission was accorded
-her to leave the train at any intermediate point
-nor to visit a military camp.</p>
-
-<p>Day after day Mme. Planet planned and schemed how
-she might find her boy. She made journey after journey
-in the vain hope that chance might bring her near him.
-Her aged mother now accompanied her.</p>
-
-<p>"It will be a miracle if you ever find him," declared the
-elder woman as they looked forth upon miles of devastated
-country through which long lines of trenches intersected.
-Everywhere madame's inquiry met with the same
-discouraging reply. Paul Planet, the young soldier in the
-automobile service, might be in one of any number of
-places. Even if located it would be impossible for
-madame to visit him.</p>
-
-<p>The train in which madame was travelling drew up at
-a siding near the ruins of what had once been a small
-village. Several troop trains sped by. Slowly the sidetracked
-train pulled forward toward the main tracks<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span>
-again. Madame, restless and anxious, crossed the compartment
-and peered from the window. The next instant
-a startled exclamation escaped her lips.</p>
-
-<p>"What is it?" asked her mother.</p>
-
-<p>With frantic haste the younger woman turned and
-commenced to collect their travelling bags.</p>
-
-<p>"I have found Paul," she whispered. "We must leave
-the train at the next station."</p>
-
-<p>Now, all that day Paul Planet, for some strange psychological
-reason which he could not have explained, had
-felt conscious of his mother's nearness. Yet she was in
-New York, he reasoned and fear smote his heart lest
-sickness or accident had befallen her.</p>
-
-<p>"Rest&mdash;for two hours."</p>
-
-<p>Down along the marching line of soldiers the order
-was repeated. Planet heard it and fell out with alacrity.
-He heard himself detailed for temporary duty with a corporal's
-guard to unload automobile trucks. A troop
-train rushed by and a waiting passenger train pulled
-slowly out from a siding.</p>
-
-<p>Planet glanced up. From the window of the latter
-train a face looked forth&mdash;a hand waved. Was he
-dreaming? Surely that was his mother's face he had
-seen! He dashed forward. The face was very distinct
-now. Impulsively he laid his finger across his lips as his
-mother had been wont to do when, as a child, she had
-desired him to remain silent. If the face at the window
-was that of his mother they must be discreet or she would
-never be permitted to join him.</p>
-
-<p>"My mother was on that train," he confided to the
-soldier beside him. The man laughed.</p>
-
-<p>"Impossible," he exclaimed. "You have seen a vision."</p>
-
-<p>But Paul Planet had not seen a vision. Two miles
-further on, when the train had come to a halt at the
-little village station, Mme. Planet almost pulled her protesting<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>
-mother of seventy down the steps. The guards
-also protested.</p>
-
-<p>"Your passports, madame? Where are your passports?"
-they asked.</p>
-
-<p>"My passports?" she repeated. "Oh, monsieur, I am
-so excited I do not know. There are passports there&mdash;papers&mdash;anything
-you want&mdash;in that bag."</p>
-
-<p>Madame was so charming&mdash;the name of Planet was
-so well known&mdash;that the bag remained at the station,
-unopened, and the clever French-American mother
-hurried off in search of her supposed friends.</p>
-
-<p>She found them down along the railroad. A little
-squad of uniformed men unloading automobile trucks.</p>
-
-<p>"Vive la France!" she cried. "Vive la France!" and
-all the while her brown eyes were gazing hungrily, eagerly
-into the equally brown orbs of her son. It would not do
-to single him out from the others. To do so might result
-in difficulties for him and for her.</p>
-
-<p>The two hours' rest was lengthened to six. Still the
-detachment waited by the roadside. Still madame and her
-mother waited.</p>
-
-<p>Again the former's ready wit came to their aid.
-Madame was so distressed! The friends she had expected
-to find in the village had gone away. There was
-no place for herself and her mother to dine. Would the
-soldiers be so kind&mdash;so generous&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>The soldiers would. They hospitably provided a tent
-for madame and her mother. It might be two days, the
-officers told them, before another passenger train stopped
-at that station. Madame, overjoyed, resigned herself to
-Providence and basked in the sunshine of her son's presence.
-The ban of secrecy had been lifted now. Their
-relationship was made known and pocket kodaks drafted
-into service as the troops were breaking camp.</p>
-
-<p>"I will have the pictures developed when I reach<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span>
-Paris," said madame as she once more clasped her boy
-in her arms. "I have seen you again and I am content.
-That two hours' respite by the roadside that resolved
-itself into a two days' encampment was a special dispensation
-of Providence."</p>
-
-<p>"It was a miracle, mother," declared the son. "There
-have been miracles all through this war. That you found
-me was one of them." Then he kissed her and marched
-away.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>AN AMERICAN WOMAN'S STORY OF
-THE "ANCONA" TRAGEDY</h2>
-
-<p><i>Told by Dr. Cecile Greil, an American Physician</i></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>Dr. Cecile Greil was the only native-born American on the liner
-<i>Ancona</i>, which was shelled and sunk by an Austrian submarine.
-She tells this intensely graphic account of the terrible event in
-the <i>New York Times</i>. She precedes it with a description of the
-crowd of passengers, mostly poor Italian women and children,
-that had passage on the ship&mdash;the most pathetic gathering, it
-seemed to her as they came aboard the ship, that she had ever
-seen.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;"WHEN THE TORPEDO STRUCK US"</p>
-
-<p>The bell for luncheon rang at 11:30. As we sat at the
-table, still without the Captain, we joked and laughed together,
-to hide our lack of ease. We spoke of trivial
-things. We were through with lunch now; the others
-were going out; I was rising from my seat, at the same
-time drinking the remainder of my coffee. Then the
-thing came upon us that we had all, strangely enough,
-felt coming, in our hearts.</p>
-
-<p>A terrific vibration shook the ship. I was thrown back
-into my seat. I knew that the ship must be stopping. I
-heard a running and scurrying about the deck outside.
-Looking out, I saw, through the dining saloon window,
-six or ten stewards in white whirling out of sight around
-an angle.</p>
-
-<p>"What could be wrong, Doctor?" I asked one of the
-ship's doctors in French.</p>
-
-<p>"Heaven only knows!" he answered, as he carefully
-adjusted his military cape, and hurried out. The dining<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span>
-saloon was emptied in an instant; everybody had bolted
-as if they were running to a fire.</p>
-
-<p>It was evident that something had gone wrong with
-the ship, though, by some queer process of mind, at that
-moment nobody thought of a submarine. But hearing
-the next moment a sharp, quick crash, as of lightning
-that had struck home close by, at the same instant I
-both thought of the possibility of a submarine&mdash;and
-saw one!</p>
-
-<p>The fog had lifted slightly. There, in full view framed
-in the window with a curious, picture-like effect, lay a
-submarine with its deck out of the water. It was long
-and flat, horribly longer and bigger than the mental
-conception I had formed of what such a thing would be
-like. There was a gun mounted in front, and another at
-back, and both had their muzzles leveled directly at the
-<i>Ancona</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The submarine stood out in clear, black outline against
-the white background of mist. The fog seemed only to
-make it more distinct, as it always does with objects near
-by. From a staff in the back broke a red and white
-drapeau. Afterward I learned that this was the combination
-of colors that made the Austrian flag. I was
-ignorant of it, then, though I remembered the exact
-colors.</p>
-
-<p>So far, I could find nothing tragic or terrible in the
-situation. Possibly we would be in danger of considerable
-exposure in open boats, before other ships, summoned
-by wireless, would pick us up. I did not rush
-out as the others had done. I stood quite still, in order
-to calm myself, to give myself time to think what would
-better be done. The <i>Ancona</i> had come to a stop. Of that
-I was certain. I also knew that the ship was doomed.</p>
-
-<p>But now there came another terrible crash, and another,
-and another, in different parts of the ship, followed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span>
-by explosions and the sound of débris falling into
-the water and on deck. Well, they were merely destroying
-the wireless. Still there was no fear of death.</p>
-
-<p>But now I was aware of a terrible shrieking. Everybody
-was in a frightened panic.</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;"THE HORROR OF WHAT I SAW"</p>
-
-<p>Well, as for myself&mdash;to get excited wouldn't help. I
-went to my cabin as calmly as I could, determined to
-save what I could of my valuables. I put them in my
-lifebelt. I took a receipt for 20,000 lire, which I had
-left with the purser. I went toward the bow of the ship.
-I descended the staircase to the second cabin, on the way
-to the purser's office. A large part of the staircase had
-been shot away&mdash;and the horror of what I saw at the
-bottom of it made me instantly forget what I was going
-for. There lay three or four women, four or five children,
-and several men. Some of them were already dead,
-all, at least, badly wounded. I made sure two of the
-children were dead. The purser sprawled limply across
-his desk, inert, like a sack of meal that has been flung
-down and stays where it lies. He had been shot in the
-head. The blood was running bright like red paint,
-freshly spilt, down his back, and his hair was matted
-with it.</p>
-
-<p>The first series of shots had wrecked this part of the
-ship, breaking through and carrying away whole sections
-of the framework. I tried to get back up the stairs. But
-in the slight interval of time I had consumed, enough
-additional shells had been discharged to finish the wreck
-of the staircase.</p>
-
-<p>I saw that this was not what the nations call, ironically
-enough, "legitimate warfare," but wholesale and indiscriminate
-massacre. Seeing my exit that way cut off,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span>
-I started through the second cabin to go up the central
-stairway. The sight that I ran into there was indescribable.
-All the passengers from the third cabin had rushed
-up into the second. They had altogether lost their wits.
-The only thing that was left them was the animal instinct
-for self-preservation in its most disastrous and most
-idiotic form. Men, women, and children were burrowing
-headforemost under chairs and benches and tables.
-I saw one man, his face pressed close against the floor
-sidewise, heaving a chair up in the air with his back, in
-an effort to efface himself.</p>
-
-<p>All the while the detonations, like continuous thunder
-and lightning, increased the panic. Women were on their
-knees in mental agony, each supplicating the particular
-saint of the part of the country from which she came to
-save her from death. I pushed and shoved them by the
-shoulders. I took them by the legs and arms and clothes,
-and urged them, in Italian, to get up, to put on lifebelts,
-to get off the ship. I told them that, at least, they would
-find no security from shells under chairs and tables.</p>
-
-<p>I found a poor old woman at the foot of the stairs,
-huddled in prayer. Her thin, gray hair straggled loose
-over her shoulder. I recognized her as a woman I had
-got acquainted with in my search for a fellow-citizen
-to join me in the first cabin. She was 65 years old, she
-had told me. She had seen two sons off to the war, and
-was now going to a third who had emigrated to America
-and lived in Pennsylvania. It was the first time she had
-ever crossed the ocean. She was sick of the thought
-of war. In the New World she would find peace and
-comfort for her old age, with her "Bambino," as she still
-called the grown-up man who was her son. So when
-I saw her lying there I was possessed of but one idea&mdash;to
-get her off alive. I told her to come with me, that I
-would protect her. She acquiesced, but her fright was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span>
-so great that she hung limp as if she had no spine while
-I half dragged her to the first cabin deck.</p>
-
-<p>A boat was being lowered. It had been swung out
-on the davits. It already seethed full of people. And
-more men and women and children were fighting, in a
-promiscuous, shrieking mass, to get into it as it swung out
-and down. The men, with their superior strength, were,
-of course, getting the best of the struggle. Age or sex
-had no weight. It was brute strength that prevailed.</p>
-
-<p>At the sight before her the old woman grew frantic
-with unexpected strength. She suddenly jerked loose
-from me, and before I could prevent her, ran with all the
-agility of fear and jumped overboard. Others flung their
-bodies pell-mell on the heads of those already in it. Some,
-in their frenzy, missed the mark at which they aimed
-themselves and fell into the sea. To make the horror
-complete, the boat now stuck at one end, tilted downward,
-and spilled all its occupants into the sea, ninety
-or a hundred at once. They seized each other. Some
-swam. Others floundered and sank almost immediately,
-dragging each other down. Some drowned themselves
-even with lifebelts on, not knowing how to hold their
-heads out of the water.</p>
-
-<p>I tried to speak with the passengers still on deck. It
-was useless. Everybody was talking in his own particular
-dialect. Then I realized the predicament I myself
-was in&mdash;an utter foreigner, whom they would sacrifice in
-an instant for one of their own nationality. Perhaps if
-only I had some of my jewelry I might be able to bribe
-my way to safety in some such crisis.</p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;"THE DEAD WERE LYING ON DECK"</p>
-
-<p>I made my way back to my cabin again. There were
-people dead and dying on the deck. I saw one man who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span>
-had started to run up the gangway to the officer's deck
-come plunging down again. He had been struck in the
-back of the head. Somehow or other, I just felt that
-my time had not yet come. This conviction enabled me
-to keep my wits about me.</p>
-
-<p>In my cabin I flung up the top of my steamer trunk. As
-I was searching for my valuables my chambermaid appeared
-in the doorway; half a dozen times I had met her
-rushing frantically and aimlessly up and down.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, madame, madame&mdash;we shall all be killed, we're
-all going to get killed!"</p>
-
-<p>"Maria," I advised as quietly and soothingly as I could,
-still stooping over my trunk; "don't be so mad, get a
-lifebelt on, and get up out of here."</p>
-
-<p>Before she could speak again she was a dead woman.
-A shot carried away the port-hole and sheared off the
-top of her head. It finished its course by exploding at
-the other side of the ship. If I had not been stooping
-over at the time I would not have lived to write this
-story.</p>
-
-<p>I snatched up my little jewel-basket with a few favorite
-trinkets in it. I put on my cap and sweater. When
-I got up on deck I saw the submarine carefully circumnavigating
-its victims and deliberately shooting toward us
-at all angles. I ran along the deck. The sea was full of
-deck rails, parts of doors, and other wreckage, and
-dotted with human beings, some dead, others alive, and
-screaming for help. There was another boat in front
-that tilted and dumped out its frantic load into the sea.
-Peering over the side of the ship, I saw a boat that had
-already been lowered to the water's edge. In it I recognized
-the two ship's doctors, and two of the seamen.
-There was also an officer in the boat, Carlo Lamberti, the
-chief engineer. He sat at the helm. I called out to them
-to take me in.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"Jump!" they shouted back.</p>
-
-<p>I threw my basket down. I had a good twenty-foot
-drop. I have always been a good swimmer. Furthermore,
-I saw that if I jumped into the boat, crowded
-with people, sails, water-barrels, and pails for bailing, I
-might cause it to capsize. So I told them to push the
-boat away and then they could pick me up out of the
-water.</p>
-
-<p>I escaped with a ducking.</p>
-
-<p>An immigrant girl who followed me flung herself down
-wildly and broke both her legs on the side of the ship.</p>
-
-<p>We were powerless to save any more. The ship might
-at any moment receive the final torpedo from the submarine.
-The sailors rowed madly to get out of danger.</p>
-
-<p>Then the torpedo was discharged. It whizzed across
-the ship, drawing a tail behind it like a comet. It
-plunged beneath the <i>Ancona</i> as if guided by a diabolical
-intelligence of its own. There followed a terrific explosion.
-Huge jets of thick black smoke shot up, with
-showers of débris. Our boat rocked and swayed in the
-roughened water. The <i>Ancona</i> lurched to the left,
-righted herself, shivered a moment&mdash;then her bow shot
-high in the air like a struggling, death-stricken animal.
-She went under, drawing a huge, funnel-like vortex
-after her.</p>
-
-<p>The Captain and some officers were the last to drop
-astern, in a small boat. Passengers were still to be seen,
-clinging forward, like ants on driftwood, as the ship was
-drawn down. There were many people wounded, so that
-they could not get off unaided. They were left to die.</p>
-
-<p>The sea now looked absolutely empty, swept smooth.
-The ship had drawn everything down with it. The fog
-undulating upward, the submarine was seen lying in full
-view, as if in quiet Teutonic contemplation of what it
-had done. Then it moved off, and was soon merged into<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span>
-the waste of sea and fog. We felt a great relief when
-it had departed.</p>
-
-
-<p>IV&mdash;SURVIVORS DRIFTING ON THE OCEAN</p>
-
-<p>All that afternoon our six surviving boats drifted
-within sight of each other. When darkness fell large
-yellow lanterns were lit, and from time to time Bengal
-lights flared and fell. It looked like a regatta held on the
-River Styx, in Hell. The sailors had exhausted themselves
-rowing, so the improvised sails were set. The boat-loads
-of survivors had run the gamut of every emotion.
-They were now mere stocks of insensibility, numb, dumb,
-and inert.</p>
-
-<p>At six in the afternoon a boat just behind us began
-sending us signals of distress. The men had taken off
-their shirts and were waving them to us on oars. Our
-sailors objected to turning back, saying that both boats
-would be sunk if we tried to relieve them. But Carlo
-Lamberti, the chief engineer, with a quiet look in his
-blue eyes, with a rather careless, engaging smile, which
-was habitual to him all the time, presented his revolver&mdash;and
-we went back to see what was wrong.</p>
-
-<p>We found that the boat had been struck by a shell and
-was leaking badly. True enough, most of the people in
-it tried to make an immediate stampede into our boat.
-But again Lamberti presented his eloquent pistol and his
-quiet smile, and with order and precision we took aboard
-the wounded, the women, and children. Then the leaky
-craft was tied to our stern and the men left were easily
-able to keep it afloat by bailing.</p>
-
-<p>"We'll save you, or go down with you!" Lamberti reassured
-them. This chief engineer was the only man who
-showed signal bravery.</p>
-
-<p>One of the first of the wounded rescued from the leaky<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span>
-boat was my former companion, the Marquis Serra Cassano.
-He did not wish to join in the incipient stampede.
-With four toes of his foot shot away, he rose limpingly
-to assist the other wounded into our boat first, before he
-himself came in. Then with an air of pathetic aristocracy
-he seated himself by me, and wanted to know if any one
-had a cigaret to spare. We had four cigarets on the
-boat. The men took turns puffing them.</p>
-
-<p>A frantic mother had dropped her baby in the water.
-I jumped out and rescued it. Later on, she got separated
-from it, and I had it in my charge for several days&mdash;but
-that is not in the present story.</p>
-
-<p>We kept close watch on each other's boats till nightfall.
-As the other five would appear and disappear, we would
-be alternately cheered and frightened.</p>
-
-<p>It must have been nearly midnight when one of our
-sailors cried out that he saw a ship's light. But for a
-long while nothing appeared but thin threads of light that
-filtered through the fog. After some discussion as to
-whether it might not be an enemy craft, we approached
-the direction of the light, till it burst on us in a powerful,
-searching blaze. And we discerned the other boats converging
-toward it, mere moving yellow splurges in the
-gloom.</p>
-
-<p>The ship that was rescuing us was a French mine layer,
-the <i>Pluton</i>. It was hellish-looking, as it beetled over us,
-but none the less it looked like heaven, too!</p>
-
-<p>And now our boat-loads of survivors were close together,
-and suddenly everybody grew voluble and chatty.
-We shouted across the water to each other. I even heard
-a voice singing. We were saved! We were saved!</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>THE STRATEGY OF SISTER
-MADELEINE</h2>
-
-<p><i>The Story of a French Captain's Escape from
-the Germans</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Told by himself, and translated by G. Frederic Lees</i></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>Few men who have succeeded in slipping through the clutching
-fingers of the Mailed Fist have such a moving record of adventure
-to their credit as Captain X&mdash;&mdash;, who here relates his remarkable
-experiences. There is the true Stevensonian flavor in
-some of the episodes narrated; and at the same time the story
-has real historical value, since it opens with a graphic account of
-the Battle of Charleroi, which has not yet been described by
-the French Staff, or by any of the unofficial historians of the
-war. The officer's name is suppressed in deference to his own
-request when he related his experiences in the <i>Wide World
-Magazine</i>.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;MY EXPERIENCES AT THE BATTLE OF
-CHARLEROI</p>
-
-<p>In relating my adventures, extending over more than
-fifteen months, I cannot do better than begin with the
-starting-point of the whole affair&mdash;the Battle of Charleroi.
-To describe the events which grouped themselves around
-August 22nd, 23rd, 24th, and 25th, 1914, seems like telling
-old news, but, as a matter of fact, the gigantic struggle
-named after the Belgian town of ironworks and mines
-has yet to be recorded. The French Staff has published
-nothing, unofficial historians&mdash;eager to be the first to place
-their researches before the public&mdash;have only given general
-and often erroneous descriptions of the advance of
-Von Kluck, Von Buelow, and Von Hausen against Sir
-John French's forces on the Condé-Mons-Binche line and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span>
-the Fifth French Army holding the line of the Sambre,
-and the newspaper accounts are sometimes contradictory.</p>
-
-<p>I am not going to weary you with military technicalities;
-we will leave questions of strategy and tactics alone
-and direct our attention to the battlefield as seen from
-two points of view: that of myself, an officer in the
-French Army, and that of an inhabitant of Charleroi,
-with whom I was later thrown into contact, and by whose
-observations, made from the roof of his house, I was
-fortunate in benefiting.</p>
-
-<p>Picture to yourself the sinuous Sambre, flowing in its
-deep bed through the densely-populated suburbs of
-Charleroi and the southern end of this formerly fortified
-town. The town itself, imprisoned by its walls, is but a
-small place of some thirty thousand inhabitants, but the
-population is swelled to five hundred thousand by the
-contiguous suburbs of Montigny, Couillet, Marcinelle,
-Gilly, Châtelet, Marchiennes, Roux, Jumet, Gosselies, and
-others which cluster around the ancient nucleus and
-stretch principally northwards. To fight a battle on such
-a ground as this was impossible, so the German forces,
-descending from the north and the east in unknown hundreds
-of thousands, determined to make for the open-wooded
-country which lies beyond the southern suburbs
-of the town. Two tremendous obstacles stood in
-their way&mdash;the closely-packed houses of the suburbs
-and the strongly-held river. The inhabitants soon learnt
-to their cost how the first of these was to be overcome.
-Suddenly, shortly after the appearance of the advance-guard
-of the German army, violent explosions were
-heard, accompanied by the pop! pop! pop! of machine-guns
-and the discharge of musketry. The Huns were
-blasting a broad way through the suburbs, setting fire
-to the houses, and&mdash;under pretense that they were being
-fired upon by civilians&mdash;shooting the people down in their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span>
-houses and in the streets. Right through the quarters
-of Gosselies and Jumet they penetrated; then branched
-off to the right and left, one band of incendiaries reaching
-the river through Marchiennes, the other cutting its
-way through the town and reaching the bridge which connects
-Montigny and Couillet. These two points were
-where the enemy first succeeded in crossing the Sambre.
-Later, when we had begun our retreat southwards, owing
-to pressure from Von Hausen's army massed in the
-Northern Ardennes, they crossed at two other places,
-east of Charleroi. Thus, on Sunday, August 23rd, the
-preliminaries of the great battle were carried out.</p>
-
-<p>South of the river the ground rises gently until it
-reaches the wooded heights in the neighbourhood of
-Beaumont, Thuillies, Nalinnes, and Somzée. I was stationed
-at the first of these places&mdash;a little village on high
-ground, with a commanding view of the green countryside.
-Who would have thought, but for the deafening
-roar of cannon, the incessant rattle of the machine-guns,
-the occasional whir of an aeroplane overhead, and the
-puffs and rings of white smoke high in air, that we were
-looking on a battlefield? How empty it was! We could
-see from the flashes of the carefully-hidden guns whence
-death was springing; but in the early stages of the struggle
-only small bodies of the enemy, whose greenish-grey
-uniforms mingled well with the verdure, were from time
-to time visible. At night, however, it was different. The
-red glare of burning villages and farms, set on fire by
-shells, lit up the sky and provided a terrifying spectacle,
-night after night, for the anxious watchers of Charleroi.</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;"WE MOWED THEM DOWN WITH
-MACHINE GUNS"</p>
-
-<p>As the Germans advanced and the battle raged from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span>
-morning to night, it became more and more evident that
-we were hopelessly outnumbered. Possessing an advantage,
-however, in being on high ground, it was clear that
-we could hold out for a considerable length of time and
-make the enemy pay dearly for every yard of ground we
-had to give away. When once the greenish-grey uniforms
-began to appear in any considerable number, they
-came on in solid masses, which we mowed down, time
-after time, by rifle and machine-gun fire and by showers
-of shrapnel from our "75's." But others quickly filled
-their places, and thus the human tide advanced, until at
-last the order had to be given for the retreat. This was
-on August 25th, by which date, after the enemy had been
-obliged to suspend operations for twenty-four hours to
-collect the wounded, they had lost over forty thousand
-men.</p>
-
-<p><i>Ah! les gredins!</i> how well they deserved their fate for
-the shooting down of peaceful citizens in Charleroi and
-the unspeakable crimes committed in the communes on
-the wooded heights of Loverval, Acoz, Montigny-le-Tilleul,
-and Somzée! With what satisfaction our small
-detachments, hidden in the woods, let the German scouts
-pass on in order to open fire at close quarters on the
-masses of troops which followed! They paid, then, for
-the outrages perpetrated by the Uhlans. You ask for an
-instance. Here is one which was related to me by my
-friend of Charleroi&mdash;he who viewed the battle from his
-house-top, and afterwards explored the battlefield to
-come face to face with this grim picture. A typical instance
-of Teutonic cruelty, I give it in his own words:
-"A little way out of the village of Somzée was a small
-farm inhabited by a young household, including three
-small children. Honest, courageous, and economical folk,
-they had toiled season after season to pay by annual instalments
-for their property, which they had agreed to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span>
-purchase some eight years ago. The last payment had
-just been made; the children were growing up; the little
-family was happy. But the German monsters came. In
-a few minutes this hardly-earned happiness was shattered.
-The Boches seized everything&mdash;the few cows, the dearly-loved
-horse. They set fire to the farm, shot the farmer,
-and drove before them, into the distance, the poor widow
-with her four weeping and terrified children. What a
-sinister picture it makes! It was at the close of a splendid
-August day. The little isolated farm is burning. A few
-yards from the door the dead man is lying on his back.
-On the side of the hill which descends to the main road
-are the silhouettes of the Uhlans disappearing in the gathering
-darkness of night. Tongues of flame on the horizon
-mark places where similar dramas had been enacted."</p>
-
-<p>"Now, then, boys, let them have it hot. Pick off the
-gunners one by one. Marcel, Gustave, François, do you
-keep an eye on the officers. <i>Ah, les gredins!</i> we'll teach
-them!"</p>
-
-<p>It was the day after the battle of Charleroi, and whilst
-our troops were retiring in good order, my men and I,
-after the fashion of many other small detachments, were
-holding a German battery in check. So near were we to
-the enemy that we could hear the harsh, guttural commands
-of the artillery officers&mdash;so different from the tone
-of <i>camaraderie</i> we adopt towards our men in the truly
-democratic army of France&mdash;and could see them, though
-indistinctly, urging on their men to the attack. From
-our trenches on a wooded knoll on the outskirts of Beaumont,
-we kept up a steady fire on those who were serving
-the guns, around which the Boches, falling like flies,
-quickly began to accumulate in heaps. Fresh men incessantly
-replaced those who had fallen, who at last lay in
-such numbers that the officers, in order to make room
-for the gunners, had the dead dragged away to the rear<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span>
-by the feet. Company after company of men fell in this
-way until the German officers, who had either been shot
-or had decided to withdraw, could be heard no more. A
-lull occurred. Bringing my glasses to bear on the battery,
-I could see no sign of life save the convulsive movements
-of a few of the prostrate men around the guns.</p>
-
-<p>"It looks as though they had had enough," said I, to
-my friend Marcel, a private who comes from the same
-place as myself&mdash;Loctudy, in Brittany. "I wonder if we
-could capture those guns?"</p>
-
-<p>Before he had time to answer a hurricane of bullets
-came from a hidden machine-gun, and one of them found
-its billet. My poor friend, shot through the head, fell
-into my arms. We laid him gently down, thinking of the
-sad news that would have to be broken to a sorrowing
-mother at home, and then, anger mingling with regret
-in our hearts, once more directed our attention to the
-invisible enemy, in whose direction we hastened to send
-our compliments in the form of a stream of <i>prunes</i>.
-Overhead we could hear the humming of one of our
-aeroplanes, and through an opening in the tree-tops momentarily
-caught sight of it as it moved over the German
-lines, reconnoitering. Rings of smoke from bursting
-shrapnel broke far beneath it. Its mission over, it moved
-swiftly back to our lines, and within ten minutes Marcel
-and many other brave fellows were avenged. Our "75's"
-got the range of the battery in front of us with marvellous
-exactitude, and for five minutes poured upon it such
-a rain of shells as to make it seem impossible that anything
-could live within a distance of a hundred yards.
-The dead around the guns were scattered like chaff in a
-high wind. A great silence followed that series of violent
-explosions. For five minutes, in accordance with orders,
-the men were busy cutting steps with their entrenching
-tools in our trench, so as to spring out of it quickly and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span>
-proceed to capture the guns. Caution prompted another
-five minutes' wait, during which there was not a sign of
-life before us.</p>
-
-<p>"Now, then, <i>mes gars!</i> time's up," I cried, as loud as
-prudence would allow. "Fix bayonets! Out of the
-trench as nimbly as you can. Take cover, when in the
-open, as much as possible. Are you ready? Forward,
-for the sake of France!"</p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;"DEAD ON THE FIELD OF HONOUR"</p>
-
-<p>We advanced towards the guns at the <i>pas de gymnastique</i>
-and reached them without mishap. Some were too
-shattered by the recent bombardment to be of any further
-use, but others were still intact, and these, as it was difficult
-if not impossible for us to get them away in a
-retreat over a hilly wooded country, we determined to
-destroy. Ordering some of my men to do what was
-necessary, and as rapidly as possible, the others and I
-kept a sharp look-out. The enemy gave not a sign of
-life. The fuses having been attached to the breeches of
-the guns and lit, we began to retire whither we had come,
-but had hardly gone more than fifty yards, and heard the
-successive explosions of the guns blowing up, when, on
-looking over my shoulder, I saw a body of Germans
-emerge at a run from a coppice about two hundred yards
-to our right, and heard them open fire upon us. At the
-same time I felt a sharp, burning pain in my side; a
-curious sensation of intense weakness filled my being;
-and, with a vision of men falling to the ground with extended
-arms, I, too, bowed down, unconscious, to Mother
-Earth.</p>
-
-<p>That night, as I afterwards learnt, I was posted as
-"dead on the field of honour." After eleven hours of
-oblivion, I came to myself in a German ambulance. My<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span>
-first impression on recovering consciousness was that of
-hearing the gruff, peremptory voice of a German Herr
-Doktor at my bedside; my second, when he had passed
-on to another sufferer, that of seeing a sweet French
-face bending over me.</p>
-
-<p>"Where am I?" I asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Hush! the doctor says you must speak as little as possible,"
-replied the nurse, in a French which I at once
-detected to be that of an educated person. "I will tell
-you all that you need know for the present. You are in
-our little ambulance at Erquelinnes, on the frontier between
-Belgium and France&mdash;a German ambulance. But
-fear not"&mdash;this in a lower voice&mdash;"my country is France,
-and I am not without influence, or I should not be here.
-Your wound, though serious, will get well in time. Only
-you must be <i>sage</i>, and obey me. There, now! <i>Cela suffit!</i>
-Try to get a little more sleep; the more rest you have the
-better."</p>
-
-<p>It needed but the invitation, the sound of her soothing
-voice, like that of a tender mother speaking to her child,
-and especially those singularly calming words: "Fear
-not&mdash;my country is France," which seemed to wrap me
-within the protective folds of the tricolour, to send me
-back once more into that state of semi-unconsciousness
-which appears to transport one to the borderline between
-life and death. Loss of blood during those many hours
-while I had lain forgotten on the battlefield had, indeed,
-brought me to so weak a condition that, as my benefactress
-told me later, the doctor had hardly expected to
-pull me through. My wound was one of those which
-have been encountered so often in this war; it exhibited
-the curious vagaries of which bullets are capable. The
-projectile entered my right side, travelled along a downward,
-curved path, and, avoiding any of the vital organs,
-came out at the other side. A millimetre to right or left,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span>
-and it might have either killed or paralyzed me. As it
-was, the injury and loss of blood were serious, and could
-only be repaired by many weeks of immobility, coupled
-with skilled medical aid (and I must do the Herr Doktor
-the justice of recognizing that he was highly capable)
-and the devoted attention of my nurse. Ah! kindly benefactress
-of the ambulance of Erquelinnes, know, should
-you ever read my words, that I can never thank you
-enough for all you did for me. To have shown my gratitude
-too openly amidst the surroundings where your lot
-was cast&mdash;under what circumstances I have often tried to
-imagine&mdash;would have betrayed you. But, knowing how
-one French heart can understand another without the
-passing of words, I doubt not that you have long since
-comprehended the gratitude of the soldier of the Republic
-whom you befriended and saved.</p>
-
-
-<p>IV&mdash;ON THE ARM OF SISTER MADELEINE</p>
-
-<p>A month in bed brought me the period when I was
-declared out of danger, and was allowed to sit up in a
-chair near a window overlooking a little garden bright
-with hollyhocks and sunflowers. Then came the day
-when, leaning on the arm of Sister Madeleine&mdash;the name
-under which, she said, I was to know her&mdash;I took my
-first walk and descended into that garden, to lie there
-for the best hours of the day on a <i>chaise longue</i>, conversing
-with her, or, when she was occupied with other
-wounded, reading and reflecting. It was Sister Madeleine
-who told me of passing events. But, oh! how discreetly
-she broke the news of the triumphant march of the German
-armies southward to Dinant and westward to Maubeuge!
-It required no great psychological insight on my
-part to detect where her sympathies lay. Her looks when,
-the wind being favourable, the faint sound of cannon<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span>
-reached us, the tone of her voice when France was
-named, her significant reticence on certain occasions, told
-me much more than actual words. One of these occasions
-stands out in my mind with particular prominence, owing
-to my having read in her words a warning, and conceived
-for the first time the idea of escape.</p>
-
-<p>"The Herr Doktor is immensely pleased with the progress
-you are making, Captain X&mdash;&mdash;," said Sister Madeleine,
-rising from my side to pluck some Michaelmas
-daisies from an adjoining border. "He says you may
-be allowed soon to take a little gentle exercise in the garden,
-and do a little gardening, too, if you are a flower-lover,
-as I doubt not. Are you inclined that way?"</p>
-
-<p>"I shall be delighted to turn my hand to weeding and
-planting," I replied. "The garden indeed needs attention!"</p>
-
-<p>"<i>N'est ce pas?</i> Poor Jean, our gardener, now with the
-French colours, would be heartbroken if only he could
-see the wilderness his little earthly paradise has become.
-How grateful he will be to you when he returns&mdash;if he
-ever should return after this dreadful war&mdash;and finds
-that someone has been tending his beloved chrysanthemums
-and dahlias. When the mobilization order reached
-him he was in the midst of potting slips of geranium in
-the tool and potting shed yonder"&mdash;motioning to a little
-wooden construction at the end of the garden&mdash;"and
-everything there is just as he left it. A heap of withered
-slips lies side by side with rows of empty flower-pots,
-whilst in a corner I saw his working-clothes, which he
-hastily changed before he came to the house to wish us
-good-bye and passed into the unknown."</p>
-
-<p>"I must try to prove myself to be a worthy successor
-to the brave fellow," I said. "Don't you think, Sister
-Madeleine, that in one respect&mdash;my unkempt appearance&mdash;I
-shall not make a bad substitute?"</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Walking back to me with her bouquet, she gave me a
-critical look and laughed. Certainly, no one at home
-would have recognized me as I now was, with my long
-beard and moustache and uncut hair. All at once her face
-became serious, and, without replying to my question,
-she said:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"There is no reason why you should not start to-morrow.
-But don't do too much to begin with. Though I
-should like to have you here much longer, it would grieve
-me if that were the result of a relapse. You must get
-back your strength by degrees. And I fear you will need
-every ounce of it in the future. No; do rather too little
-than too much. I have no wish to hear that the Kommandatur
-at Charleroi, who, I understand, is showing
-great severity just now towards French prisoners, should
-decide that you have recovered sufficiently to be included
-in the next batch to be sent into Germany."</p>
-
-<p>And with these significant words Sister Madeleine left
-me, to carry her flowers to the bedsides of her other
-patients, and, possibly, to allow me to reflect.</p>
-
-<p>Was it not clear that, indirectly, she had indicated a
-means of escape? A feeling of quasi-loyalty towards
-those who had enabled her to nurse one of her countrymen
-back to health and strength prevented her from
-bluntly saying: "There is a tool-shed, in which you will
-find a suit of old clothes; disguise yourself in them and
-flee." But her meaning was plain. The key to freedom
-had been placed in my hands, and it was for me to use
-it.</p>
-
-
-<p>V&mdash;"I PLAN TO ESCAPE DISGUISED AS THE
-GARDENER"</p>
-
-<p>I began pottering about the hollyhocks and sunflowers
-and dahlias the very next morning, taking care to alternate
-my spells of gardening with fairly lengthy rests, on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span>
-the principle laid down by Sister Madeleine. Not that
-they were altogether unnecessary in my still weak state.
-However, my strength returned with remarkable rapidity,
-after the first week of this light work, and every additional
-day found me more fit to carry out my plan, the
-details of which I had ample opportunity of working out.
-The garden was surrounded by a high wall of irregular
-construction, thus affording a foothold to a skilful climber,
-whose task could be made still easier if he chose&mdash;as
-I had determined to do&mdash;that portion of the enclosure
-which was masked by the tool-shed, between the back
-of which and the wall was a space of about a foot and a
-half, providing an additional support for one's body. My
-resemblance to Jean, the gardener, had, by the by, become
-more and more perfect, thanks to work with spade and
-hoe, and perhaps, at times, owing to rather too close contact
-with the soil. That it would be perfection itself when
-I had donned his garb, at the close of an afternoon's
-work just before turning-in time, I felt convinced.</p>
-
-<p>There was another thing of which I was certain: that
-Sister Madeleine instinctively knew the day and hour I
-had fixed for my flight. For she was so unusually silent
-on that day in the last week of October, when, according
-to my calculations, there would be no moon until late
-in the night, she was so serious in her mien, and she left
-me with such suddenness after advising me to come in,
-"now that the sun had set and the evenings were getting
-chilly," that I felt sure she comprehended.</p>
-
-<p>"Thank you, Sister Madeleine," I replied; and I could
-not refrain from adding, in the hope that she would grasp
-my double meaning: "You have <i>always</i> given me such
-good advice. I shall never forget your kindness. But
-before coming in I must put away my tools."</p>
-
-<p>Without daring to look her in the face, I turned down
-the path in the direction of the tool-shed. Five minutes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span>
-later I left it, dressed in the gardener's earth-stained
-clothes, passed like a shadow to the rear of the building,
-and was over the wall in a trice.</p>
-
-<p>I found myself in a field, and having not the slightest
-idea regarding the geography of Erquelinnes, went
-straight ahead at full speed. A quarter of an hour's
-steeplechasing across ditches and other natural obstacles
-brought me to a high road, and confronted me with the
-dilemma as to which way to turn. Without losing a
-moment's time, for I pictured the hue and cry my disappearance
-would soon be causing, I made off to the left.
-<i>Fausse route!</i> In five minutes I came within sight of
-the lights of the first house of a village, undoubtedly
-Erquelinnes itself. With a vague idea at the back of my
-head of gaining the Franco-Belgian frontier, and&mdash;avoiding
-all small places, where curiosity is most rife&mdash;reaching
-Maubeuge, where I might find an asylum among my
-own people until an opportunity presented itself of getting
-back to the French lines, I struck off to the right,
-once more across open country. The dark cloak of night
-had now fallen, making my progress necessarily slow. On
-and on I crept in the darkness. How long I continued I
-cannot say, but it must have been for several hours, for a
-great weariness suddenly came over me and impelled me
-to seek sleep. What was apparently a small wood lay
-in my path at that moment. Groping my way from bole
-to bole, I divined, rather than saw, a dry and sheltered
-spot under the trees, and, throwing myself down, quickly
-fell asleep, amidst the calling of the night-jars.</p>
-
-
-<p>VII&mdash;"HANDS UP&mdash;OR I SHOOT"</p>
-
-<p>I cannot tell you how long I slumbered&mdash;probably until
-two or three o'clock in the morning. But I was awakened
-by the sound of the snapping of dry twigs and muffled<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span>
-voices. I sprang to my feet and listened. Nearer and
-nearer came the stealthy footsteps. I retired as cautiously
-as I could; but though I trod ever so lightly, it
-was impossible to avoid the crackling of dead wood,
-which seemed to my hypersensitive ears like so many
-pistol-shots. Even the thumping of my heart appeared
-audible. One curious thing, however, I noticed: whenever,
-after a noisy retreat, I stopped to listen, there was
-a corresponding stoppage and a long silence on the part
-of my pursuers. But, thought I, was it at all certain they
-<i>were</i> in pursuit? Would they not, in that case, have
-come on with a rush? "Suppose I crouch down and run
-the risk of them passing without seeing me?" I thought.
-Whilst I was reflecting; with my back to what was apparently
-a fairly large tree, those who were advancing,
-emboldened by the silence which had intervened, came on
-with hastened steps, and got so near that I could hear
-their heavy breathing. I stepped quickly behind my tree,
-but too late to serve my purpose, for the next moment a
-stern voice rapped out an oath almost in my ear and a
-flash of light from an electric torch struck me full in
-the face.</p>
-
-<p>"Hands up, or I shoot!" said the voice. "Who are
-you?"</p>
-
-<p>"A Frenchman," I replied, obeying the command and
-deciding, on the spur of the moment, that one who spoke
-to me in my native tongue could hardly be an enemy.
-"And in need of help."</p>
-
-<p>"Good thing you're not a <i>Pruscot</i>, mate, or you'd have
-been a goner. In need of help, are you? So are we.
-Aren't we, <i>mes vieuz</i>?"</p>
-
-<p>This last remark was addressed to the speaker's two
-companions, whose indistinct forms I could now make
-out.</p>
-
-<p>"Very well," continued the speaker, slipping the revolver<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span>
-with which he had covered me into his pocket, "I
-take it to be a bargain. One good service deserves another.
-You help us with some of these parcels, and we'll
-help <i>you</i>. I'm not going to ask you too many questions,
-and we don't expect you to be over inquisitive about <i>our</i>
-business. <i>C'est compris?</i> But if we're to get there and
-back before light we must be off. Come on!"</p>
-
-<p>Taking two of the heavy packages which they were
-transporting, I followed them. In a flash, I saw that I
-had fallen in with a party of smugglers, who still continued
-to ply their calling in the neighbourhood of Erquelinnes
-and other villages on the frontier between Belgium
-and France. Men of nondescript nationality, though
-hating the Teuton with all the ardour of a Frenchman or
-a Belgian, and ready, if a favourable opportunity offered,
-to rid the world of every Boche who fell into their power,
-they made it their business to be on friendly terms with
-the Prussian officers who were in authority on the frontier.
-Many favours, in the early months of the war,
-could they obtain from them, in return for a discreetly-offered
-gift, such as a box of cigars, or a pound or two
-of tobacco. When taking any important consignment of
-goods to and fro between their dépôts on the road from
-Maubeuge to Charleroi, they had, of course, to resort to
-the traditional methods of their calling; and it was whilst
-on one of these nocturnal expeditions that I had encountered
-them.</p>
-
-
-<p>VIII&mdash;THE FORGED PAPERS&mdash;TO SAFETY</p>
-
-<p>They were rough individuals, but loyal to their word.
-Feeling that I could not be in safer company, I threw in
-my lot with theirs for nearly a fortnight, hiding by day
-in the cottage of their leader, on the outskirts of a village
-"somewhere in France," but not far from Erquelinnes,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span>
-and assisting them at night in carrying their goods along
-the little-known paths which intersect the Franco-Belgian
-frontier. Bit by bit I told mine host my tale. He was
-touched as much as you could expect a hardened smuggler
-to be, swore eternal friendship over an excellent
-bottle of wine, and promised that on the very next day
-he would bring me a surprise.</p>
-
-<p>He was as good as his word. Out of his pocket he
-drew a paper&mdash;a duly-signed and stamped pass, obtained
-from the Prussian officer at the frontier village of &mdash;&mdash;,
-authorizing the bearer to cross into Belgium without let
-or hindrance. He did more than this: he gave me the
-name and address of a confederate at Charleroi, who
-would furnish me with the means of effecting my escape
-<i>viâ</i> Holland.</p>
-
-<p>I crossed the frontier, wheeling a barrow belonging to
-a friendly peasant, who went daily to a bit of land he
-possessed on Belgian territory.</p>
-
-<p>My twenty-mile walk to Charleroi, and a stay of a
-week in that city, were uneventful. On leaving, my
-smuggler's friend gave me a useful introduction to a person
-in Brussels, whence, with a little borrowed money in
-my pocket, I set off, towards the end of November. The
-train was still running the four miles between Charleroi
-and Gosselies. The thirteen miles to Nivelles I covered
-on foot; the eighteen miles past Waterloo and over
-ground every yard of which recalled memories of Napoleon
-and the closing scenes of the Hundred Days I traversed
-by train again.</p>
-
-<p>The long sojourn which I was destined to make in
-Brussels was uneventful compared to my late experiences.
-There I obtained papers certifying that I was a Belgian
-commercial traveller, but discretion, you will readily understand,
-forbids me going into details. Oh, no; I did
-not put those forged papers to too severe a test by use.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span>
-As much as possible, I sought to remain hidden in the terrorized
-city, and to slip out of it for Malines and the
-villages near the Dutch frontier, without showing my
-<i>papiers</i> any more than was absolutely necessary.</p>
-
-<p>The frontier between Belgium and Holland is of so
-serrated a nature that at the time of which I am speaking
-it was comparatively easy for a hunted man like myself
-to cross into neutral territory. To do so now would be
-almost impossible, so well do the Germans guard the irregular
-line, the configuration of which is such that it is
-difficult, in places, to tell whether you are in Holland or
-in Belgium. Fortunately, I had come into contact with a
-person who was expert in getting young Belgians across
-the frontier into Holland, and he agreed to help me.</p>
-
-<p>Here, again, I cannot&mdash;on account of those who risked
-their lives in befriending me&mdash;go into too many details.
-Suffice it to say, that on the evening of my escape from
-the frontier village of A&mdash;&mdash; I was instructed to walk to
-a certain milestone, where I should find a man with a
-red muffler, sitting on a heap of stones.</p>
-
-<p>There, sure enough, I found him&mdash;an elderly man with
-his hands folded over the top of his stick, his chin resting
-on his hands, and his eyes gazing innocently into the
-gathering dusk.</p>
-
-<p>As I passed him I uttered the word "Belgica," which I
-had been told to pronounce, and keep on, without once
-turning my head.</p>
-
-<p>Very soon I heard his footsteps and the tap, tap of his
-stick. He overtook me with alert step, and on reaching
-me, said: "Follow me."</p>
-
-<p>We shot off from the main road into a small winding
-pathway, which we followed for some fifty yards. Then,
-suddenly stopping, the man in the red muffler exclaimed:
-"Holland!"</p>
-
-<p>No word ever before sounded to me so sweet as that.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span>
-Overcome by the thought that once more I was standing
-on free ground&mdash;that I had but to follow the pathway on
-which I stood to reach a Dutch village&mdash;and that the
-journey thence to a port and my beloved France <i>viâ</i>
-England, was but a question of time, I remained for a
-few seconds lost in reverie. At last, mastering my emotion,
-I prepared to set off before darkness completely
-enveloped the wild landscape which surrounded me. Before
-putting my best foot foremost, however, I was seized
-with a desire to thank the man who had guided me there,
-so I turned half-round to press his hand. To my surprise,
-however, I found that he had disappeared, and that only
-the gleam of his red muffler marked his progress down
-the path.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>TALES OF THE SPIES AND THEIR
-DANGEROUS MISSIONS</h2>
-
-<p><i>Revelations of Methods and Daring Adventures</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Told by Secret Service Men of Several Countries</i></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>It is estimated that more than a hundred thousand spies and
-agents have been in the service of the various countries during
-the War. Several thousand have been captured and several
-hundred have been executed. The German spy system in the
-United States alone was a powerful organization at the beginning
-of the war. But the American Secret Service, one of the
-greatest organizations of its kind in existence, thwarted their
-plots, interned them in large numbers, and drove such men as
-Boy-Ed and von Papen from our shores. The interception of
-the Zimmerman note to Mexico, the revelations of the Swedish
-duplicity in Argentine, the discovery of Bolo, the French financier,
-the plots in India&mdash;and hundreds of others have been exposed
-by the genius of the United Secret Service. Most of
-these stories cannot be told until long after the War, but a few
-of them, gathered from American and European sources, are
-told here.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;HOW THE SPIES WORK IN EUROPE</p>
-
-<p>The extraordinary ingenuity shown by spies in securing
-the plans of other countries' fortifications has been
-amply illustrated in the war, although, of course, we
-know but a little part of what the spies have accomplished.</p>
-
-<p>A woman was caught at the French frontier seeking
-to enter Switzerland and presumably intending to return
-to Germany or Austria. She was thoroughly searched
-by a matron, as is customary in such cases, but nothing
-was found.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Certain actions of hers, however, had given rise to serious
-suspicions, and one of the cleverest officers of the
-French Secret Service was detailed to examine her. He
-applied several tests to her. He finally obtained what he
-wanted by seating her, in an undraped condition, tied to
-a chair, before a warm fire.</p>
-
-<p>"Brutes, you are going to burn me alive!" she shrieked
-as she was forced into a chair.</p>
-
-<p>"Be calm, madame," said the officer. "We only want
-to admire your beautiful back."</p>
-
-<p>There appeared on the ample back of this fair-haired
-lady an elaborate design. To the experienced eye of the
-officer it represented a plan of one of the most important
-French fortresses. The number of guns, their sizes and
-positions were shown. The angles, sallies and extent of
-the fortifications were clearly indicated. The weak spots
-in the defense were made clear. This fortress had been
-entirely made over since the outbreak of the war, and it
-was of vital importance to the Germans to know its present
-arrangements.</p>
-
-<p>A German spy in France, evidently a man with military
-knowledge, had obtained access to the fortress, but
-there was but slight chance of his getting home with his
-knowledge. He had, therefore, used the young woman
-as an innocent looking agent.</p>
-
-<p>The master spy had traced the plans on her back with
-sulphate of copper. This liquid leaves no mark on the
-skin under normal conditions, but when exposed to considerable
-heat it shows up dark blue. For further secrecy,
-it is stated, the plan of the fortress was concealed within
-another design in the manner described by General Sir
-Robert Baden-Powell. He carried with him an illustrated
-book on butterflies and from this he made what
-would appear to be specimens of butterflies seen in the
-surrounding country. Then when he had obtained the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span>
-details of a fortress he drew them in among the complicated
-markings on the wings of the butterfly. There
-they would escape notice by any but the most expert
-"spy trappers."</p>
-
-<p>Miss Sari Petrass, the beautiful Hungarian dancer,
-who was for some time a great favorite in London, is
-reported to have been shot in Budapest as a spy. She
-is supposed to have been engaged in gathering military
-information in her native country for the benefit of England,
-where she made her greatest artistic success.</p>
-
-<p>When war began, the actress was starring in "The
-Marriage Market," a Hungarian operetta, at Daly's
-Theatre in London. She immediately returned to Budapest,
-but instead of continuing on the stage began a round
-of social activities.</p>
-
-<p>She wrote letters to the British army authorities, it is
-charged, which were sent by way of Switzerland in the
-in the care of young Austrian officers, who had been
-beguiled by her charms. It is said she was betrayed by
-one of her dupes in a fit of jealousy. Although an
-actress, she had a high social position and was a niece
-of the Countess Ilka Kinsky, one of the most prominent
-members of the Austro-Hungarian nobility.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Petrass, according to the report which reached her
-friends in Cleveland, Ohio, was put to death immediately
-her acts were discovered. When taken to the place of
-execution she fainted and was unconscious when shot.
-The announcement of her execution was the first news
-her family had of the charges against her.</p>
-
-<p>The method of concealing plans of fortifications on the
-skin of a spy, already referred to, has been employed
-with many variations. In time of war or when suspicion
-of spies is very keen, it is likely to be very useful. Then,
-again, women are usually called upon to carry this kind<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span>
-of information, because they are less subject to suspicion
-and watchfulness.</p>
-
-<p>Tattooing plans on a woman's skin has often been resorted
-to in past wars, but the anti-spy officers are now
-so keen that this way is no longer reliable. Various
-forms of writing on the skin, which only become visible
-under certain conditions, have, therefore, been tried. One
-form of this has already been mentioned. Plans and
-messages are also written in nitrate of silver, which
-becomes visible and black on exposure to sunlight. The
-writing is also done with phosphorus, so that it is only
-visible in the dark, but that lasts a few hours only.</p>
-
-<p>Women have shown extraordinary ingenuity in carrying
-information during the present war. One wore a
-large pair of pearl earrings, which, when examined,
-proved to be stuffed with long messages. Another had
-a little woolly pet dog, whose tail was found to be artificial
-and filled with military plans. Another carried a
-message scratched on the plate of her false teeth.</p>
-
-<p>When it has been found impossible for a human spy to
-reach a fortress, birds have been employed. Carrier
-pigeons are fitted with miniature cameras fastened across
-their breasts by exceedingly fine wires. These are fitted
-with a time lock which ensures their exposure at a
-certain time.</p>
-
-<p>The pigeons are released by spies at a place from
-which they will be sure to fly over the fortress on their
-way home. A pigeon flies in circles on its journey, and
-it is certain that during part of its flight over the fortress
-the camera shutter will be released. A series of pictures
-taken in this way will give a very complete plan of the
-defenses to the enemy.</p>
-
-<p>Although immediate execution follows the discovery of
-a spy or perhaps even the suspicion of espionage, thousands
-of persons are found willing to undertake the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span>
-work during this war. It has been truly said that the
-highest form of heroism is to undertake spy duty for
-one's country. Nothing can be more awful than the fate
-of the spy caught and executed amid the hate and fear
-of the thousands who surround him. Many photographs
-sent from the seat of war show how the European armies
-make the death of the spy terrible.</p>
-
-<p>The Germans are universally admitted to be more skilful
-spies than the British, and yet Gen. Baden-Powell
-performed some remarkable spying tricks. He tells how
-he got into a new German dockyard and made observations
-under the nose of several policemen:</p>
-
-<p>"Inside a great, high wall lay a dockyard, in which, it
-was rumored, a new power house was being erected, and
-possibly a dry dock was in course of preparation.</p>
-
-<p>"The scaffolding of the new house towered above me,
-and a ladder led upward on to it. Up this I went like a
-lamplighter, keeping one eye on the corner of the building
-lest I should be followed.</p>
-
-<p>"Presently I found a short ladder leading from my
-platform to the stage below, but it did not go to the
-ground. Peering quietly over the scaffolding, I saw my
-friend the policeman below, still at fault. I blessed my
-stars that he was no tracker, and therefore had not seen
-my footmarks leading to the foot of the ladder.</p>
-
-<p>"Then I proceeded to take note of my surroundings
-and to gather information. Judging from the design of
-the building, its great chimneys, etc., I was actually on
-the new power-house. From my post I had an excellent
-view over the dockyard, and within one hundred feet
-of me were the excavation works of the new dock, whose
-dimensions I could easily estimate.</p>
-
-<p>"All these duties (of espionage) are subdivided among
-agents of every grade, from Ambassadors and their
-attachés downward. Naval and military officers are sent<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span>
-to carry out special investigations by all countries, and
-paid detectives are stationed in likely centres to gather
-information."</p>
-
-<p>The General further says that the military information
-that a country voluntarily gives to a foreign attaché
-is usually of little value, and therefore he must take
-secret means to inform himself.&mdash;(Told in <i>New York
-American</i>.)</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;STORY OF MLLE. MATA HARI, DUTCH-JAVANESE
-DANCER</p>
-
-<p>The story of Mata Hari, the beautiful dancing girl,
-who as a German spy discovered the information about
-the British "tanks" before they arrived at the Battle of
-the Somme, is one of the most romantic of the War.
-She was found guilty of espionage and condemned to
-death by a military court martial presided over by Col.
-Sempron.</p>
-
-<p>"Accused did wilfully and maliciously, and against the
-interest of la Patrie, communicate information of military
-value to the enemy concerning our offensive of the summer
-of 1916," read the verdict that sent her to a cell in
-Saint Lazare Prison awaiting the dawn which means her
-death.</p>
-
-<p>"Eye-of-the-Morning" is English for the Javanese pet
-name "Mata-Hari"&mdash;the stage name of Mme. Marguerite
-Gertrude Zelle Macleod, first known in Paris, and latterly
-all over Europe, as a dancer whose specialty was
-the representing of Far-Eastern legends and fables according
-to the terpsichorean art....</p>
-
-<p>One of the most important and spectacular events of
-the only Allied offensive of 1916 was the appearance in
-action of the newest engine of war&mdash;the so-called tank.
-As with any innovation, the success of the tank depended<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span>
-largely on the element of surprise attaching to its debut.
-Therefore, the strictest secrecy marked the planning, the
-construction, and the shipment of tanks to the Somme,
-where they first went into action. But of course a certain
-number of people in England and in France knew about
-the tanks&mdash;or "creme-de-menthes" as they were first
-called in Paris because each one is named like a ship and
-one called after the famous green liqueur. It took a
-good many months to construct the first fleet, and a good
-many weeks to train the first crews to stand the jerky,
-rolling, pitching, lumbering gait of the mobile forts.
-During that period the circle of people "in the know"
-increased, and Mata-Hari was one of those who heard
-about the curious landships.</p>
-
-<p>Where Mata-Hari obtained her first tip on the tanks
-has not yet been disclosed. And that is one reason why
-the "memoirs" which she is writing in her cell at Saint
-Lazare prison are being awaited with fear and anxiety
-by at least one person, and with the liveliest interest by
-the world at large.</p>
-
-<p>It is rumored that a Deputy inadvertently gave her the
-first information about tanks. And the rumor is
-strengthened by the fact that Mata-Hari had plenty of
-coal for her apartment during the fuel famine in winter.
-That in itself is proof enough to everybody of her intimacy
-with some high official, as few people short of
-Deputies had influence enough to obtain a hundredweight
-of coal during the bitter months of January,
-February and March.</p>
-
-<p>In any event, Mara-Hari learned vaguely of tanks
-early in 1916, when the Krupp guns of the Crown Prince
-were daily booming nearer and nearer to Verdun in that
-terrific struggle which was to mark the turning point of
-the war. Mata-Hari also learned that the tanks were
-being constructed in England and would be shipped to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span>
-France <i>viâ</i> certain ports&mdash;and she got the names of the
-ports.</p>
-
-<p>Then Mata-Hari decided she must return to her native
-country, Holland. For, with all her Javanese appellation,
-she was born near Rotterdam, although it is true she went
-to the Dutch East Indies when a tiny child. She gave as
-reason for going to Holland the fact that she had married
-a Dutch army officer with a Scotch name&mdash;Capt.
-Macleod, that they had divorced, and she wished to
-arrange a settlement of their common property.</p>
-
-<p>Her passports were made out, and safe conducts granted
-for a trip to Holland, <i>viâ</i> England, of course, as that is
-the only way to get into the Low Countries from the
-Allied side.</p>
-
-<p>Mata-Hari went to England. But before she proceeded
-to Holland, as Secret Service agents of the British and
-French Governments ascertained, she visited a certain
-English manufacturing city, where, it so happened, the
-tanks were being constructed.</p>
-
-<p>Evidently Mata-Hari did not find out much about the
-tanks there, as not a man connected with their construction
-ever passed through the gates of the high brick
-wall which surrounded the factory during the six months
-that the first "fleet" was building. The men were boarded,
-entertained and employed here continually. Every letter
-they sent out or received was subjected to the most
-rigorous censorship.</p>
-
-<p>The dancer proceeded to Rotterdam. Investigation
-there has since proved that she had no "communal rights
-property" to settle with any one, and further that Capt.
-Macleod of the Dutch Army was known among his
-fellow officers as pronouncedly pro-German.</p>
-
-<p>Soon Mata-Hari returned to Paris. She was seen at
-the Café de Paris and at Maxim's, and at Armenonville
-in the Bois with an English officer who wore on the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span>
-lapel of his collar, an insignia denoting his branch of
-service, a little twisted brass dragon. Months later, when
-more of these badges were seen on British officers passing
-through Paris, it became known that the dragon was
-of the official insignia denoting service with the tanks.</p>
-
-<p>Mata-Hari sported a new bauble soon after taking up
-with the Englishman&mdash;a jewelled replica of his gold insignia&mdash;her
-dragon had real emeralds for eyes, and a
-carrot-shaped ruby for a tongue darting from its opened
-fangs.</p>
-
-<p>In May, 1916, a little more than a month before the
-Somme offensive opened and tanks were first used, Mata-Hari
-appeared before the police magistrate of her district
-and requested a safe conduct to visit a certain port
-in France. The reason she gave was that her fiance, an
-English officer, was seriously wounded and in hospital
-there. He had sent for her to come to see him. Perhaps
-they would be married at his deathbed if he could not
-recover, she volunteered, dabbing at her eyes with a lace
-handkerchief.</p>
-
-<p>The safe conduct was made out, and Mata-Hari arrived
-at a certain French port almost simultaneously with
-the first consignment of tanks shipped over from England.</p>
-
-<p>Now a tank of the early type was 35 feet long, 12 feet
-wide and 9 feet high, and the caterpillar tractors rumbling
-under it and over it and around it made a terrible
-din, attracting the attention of people for great distances
-around. And because of the weight of the tanks they
-could not be moved by rail, but had to travel under their
-own power. It was impossible, therefore, to wholly hide
-the monsters from inhabitants of that particular French
-port, and from the townspeople in the French villages
-through which they passed on the way to the Somme
-front. Of course most of the travelling was done by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span>
-night, and tarpaulins were always draped over the armed
-and armored behemoths.</p>
-
-<p>But there did not seem to be much necessity for precautions,
-as nearly all of the inhabitants of the districts
-through which the tanks passed remained stolidly right
-there where they were. Few indeed were as lucky as
-Mata-Hari and able to get safe conducts to travel about.
-But then few were as beautiful and alluring as the dancer.</p>
-
-<p>Mata-Hari remained in the French port for a week.
-She strolled about the town at night and explained to the
-hotel clerks that she could not sleep without taking a
-certain amount of exercise before retiring, and that after
-being accustomed to gay life in Paris, she was not tired
-until after midnight.</p>
-
-<p>It was on June 1, exactly a month before Gens. Haig
-and Foch began their drive astride the Somme, that
-Mata-Hari returned to Paris. And the first thing she did
-was to apply for a visé on her passport permitting her
-to go to Spain. San Sebastian was the place she mentioned,
-as she explained she wished to attend the horse
-races there. Her papers were stamped and sealed and
-she left almost immediately for the fashionable winter
-resort in the south.</p>
-
-<p>Madrid, Spain, and Nauen, Germany, are in constant
-wireless communication. There are other radio stations,
-privately owned in Spain, which can flash messages to
-Germany, according to Allied intelligence officers who
-have investigated. And of course there are innumerable
-German agents, spies and propaganda disseminators infesting
-the land of the Dons.</p>
-
-<p>Secret Service reports disclose the fact that Mata-Hari
-was seen much in company at San Sebastian race track
-with a man long looked upon with suspicion by the French
-Government. He was a frequent caller upon her at the
-hotel where she stopped, and it was reported that he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span>
-made good many of the big bets she placed on horses that
-did not materialize as winners.</p>
-
-<p>Soon Mata-Hari came back to Paris and the apartment
-near the Bois de Bologne. And once more the limousine
-owned by the individual whom rumor has branded a
-Deputy, began rolling up to her door twice a week and
-sometimes oftener.</p>
-
-<p>Then came the simultaneous Franco-British offensive
-at the Somme. Tanks went into action for the first time,
-and according to Gen. Haig's official communique his
-"land ships achieved satisfactory results."</p>
-
-<p>The tanks did achieve satisfactory results. More than
-that, they revolutionized offensive tactics on favorable
-terrain by advancing immune against rifle and machine
-gun bullets, or even against light trench mortars whose
-shells exploded at a touch. They smashed by sheer
-weight strong points and machine gun emplacements.
-They straddled trenches, enfilading the occupants and
-crushed in entrances to dugouts.</p>
-
-<p>But several of the tanks were put out of action&mdash;and
-not by stray shells hurtling forward from far behind the
-German lines. They were knocked out by small calibre
-<i>PENETRATION</i> shells, fired from 37 millimetre trench
-cannons&mdash;the largest guns that can be handled from
-advanced positions. Guns specially built and rifled, and
-fired at high velocity and flat trajectory, so that, unlike
-any shell ever coughed up by a mortar, they penetrated
-the object struck&mdash;even though it were steel&mdash;before exploding.</p>
-
-<p>Instantly it became evident that the enemy had become
-aware of what was in store for him and had constructed
-an "anti-tank" gun. And when the booty in the captured
-German positions was examined, the British found they
-had several good specimens of Krupp's newest weapon.
-Several German officers of higher rank taken prisoners<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span>
-confirmed suspicions, by explaining they had received
-description of the tanks several weeks before, and had
-been instructed how to combat them.</p>
-
-<p>Now Mata-Hari is awaiting death and writing as she
-waits. She is penning her memoirs rapidly, filling scores
-of pages a day in a polyglot of French, German, Dutch,
-Javanese, Japanese and even English, according to the
-mood she is in, says the prison warder.</p>
-
-<p>And because she fears her history will not be finished
-before that unannounced daybreak when she will be
-placed blindfolded before the high stone wall facing a
-firing squad of French soldiers, she has ordered her
-lawyer, M. Edouard Clunet, to plead for a stay of execution.</p>
-
-<p>So Mata-Hari writes feverishly, and all Paris waits
-eagerly&mdash;except the one who waits apprehensively&mdash;to
-see if she will name the "ami" who gave her the first
-inkling of the tanks.</p>
-
-<p>Pinned to the corsage of the Empire-cut black silk dress
-which Mata-Hari wears in her narrow cell in Saint Lazare
-Prison is a curious gold brooch. It is shaped like a
-twisted dragon, and its eyes are emeralds and its darting
-tongue a carrot-shaped ruby.</p>
-
-<p>"It will be there&mdash;right over my heart&mdash;when I go
-away&mdash;when I stand before those men with guns aimed to
-kill me," says Mata-Hari. (Told in the <i>New York
-World</i>.)</p>
-
-<p>(Since these stories were written Mata-Hari has gone
-to her death blindfolded before the firing squad. She met
-her execution stoically.)</p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;ADVENTUROUS LIFE OF MATA-HARI</p>
-
-<p>This is told by a man who for obvious reasons will not
-allow his name to be used:</p>
-
-<p>"I knew Mata-Hari in Paris. I called on her at her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span>
-home at Nieully-sur-Seine. The sinister character in
-Dumas' great romance was not more cunning or adventurous
-nor played for higher stakes than did Mlle. Mata-Hari.
-In many respects their histories should be printed
-in parallel columns. But I believe that for adventure,
-for cunning, for her great influence over the destiny of
-those with whom she came in contact, Mlle. Mata-Hari
-was more dreadful than 'Miladi.'</p>
-
-<p>"Her father was a subject of the Netherlands and her
-mother was a Javanese. He died when she was an infant,
-and in order to protect her from the dangers which
-beset a young girl of mixed blood in the East her mother
-fled from Java with her when she was three years old
-and entered Burma. There, to further protect her, she
-pledged her to celibacy and placed her in a Buddhist
-temple to learn dancing. Then it appeared that her destiny
-would be not unlike that of thousands of other young
-girls in that country and similar in many respects to that
-of the old vestals of ancient Greece. In Burma these
-dancers are called bayadère.</p>
-
-<p>"She told me that when she was twelve years old she
-was disgusted with life and was determined to change
-it or end it. After a dance at a great Buddhist festival
-in Burma, when she was about fourteen years old, she
-saw a British officer and fell in love with him. It was
-her first love affair. She managed to escape from the
-temple and joined him. This man was a baronet and
-loved her. Finally they married. Two children, a boy
-and a girl, were born of their union.</p>
-
-<p>"I do not believe that she ever loved any man. It is
-certain that she did not love her husband. At any event,
-the monotonous life of a British official's wife was more
-than she could stand. The climax came when a maid
-whom she had beaten and discharged caused one of her
-gardeners to poison her infant son.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"The tragic sequence and scandal which followed the
-death of her son still is remembered by old timers in
-India. She started an investigation of the killing independent
-of the British authorities, and finally, in her own
-mind, fixed the guilt on one of her gardeners. She
-took a revolver, and, walking into the garden where the
-man was working, shot him dead.</p>
-
-<p>"She was arrested, but owing to the high position occupied
-by her husband everything possible was done to
-suppress the scandal. Finally she was told that she would
-have to leave British India. It was just what she wanted
-to do. She left her home in the night, stealing her
-daughter from her husband. She made her way to Marseilles
-and thence to Holland, where she placed her
-daughter in a convent. Then she went straight to Paris,
-where she learned that she was penniless, the small fortune
-which her father had left her having, under the
-Dutch law, passed to her child. Then she set about to
-captivate Paris. Not satisfied with her conquest, she
-went to Berlin, to Petrograd, to Vienna&mdash;she travelled
-over all Europe&mdash;and became one of the most talked of
-women on the Continent.</p>
-
-<p>"She met many men. One of them was a wealthy
-German, who was a high official of the Berlin government.
-He bought a home for her at Nieully-sur-Seine
-and furnished it in a style that was representative of
-what was most truly Oriental splendor. There the two
-of them lived. It was there that I first saw her.</p>
-
-<p>"Soon she tired of this German. He was extremely
-jealous of her. Always her art&mdash;her dancing&mdash;called to
-her. He would not let her dance. There were many
-'scenes' at home. Her life was not happy, despite the
-wealth at her disposal.</p>
-
-<p>"Then she met a one-time Minister of Finance, of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span>
-France, and, through him, his brother-in-law. He fell
-in love with her and she with him.</p>
-
-<p>"This man was at that time the managing director of
-a great Paris bank. He deserted his wife and bought a
-magnificent château in Touraine. For two years they
-lived there. Then, one day, the police entered the bank
-and arrested the managing director. He was charged with
-embezzling the funds of the institution. He was tried
-and convicted and sentenced to two years at hard labor.
-The woman then went back to the German official at
-Neuilly-sur-Seine. They were living there when I left
-France four years ago." (Told in the <i>New York Herald</i>.)</p>
-
-
-<p>IV&mdash;STORY OF EXECUTION OF SUSANNA
-RAYNAL</p>
-
-<p>This is the story of a French young woman who was
-executed by the French military authorities in Bellegarde,
-the little Franco-Swiss frontier village.... Women
-have figured prominently as spies in every war. In this
-war their rôle has also been conspicuous. Some have
-betrayed their country for money, others have betrayed
-it for the love of adventure, and still others have betrayed
-it for the sake of love&mdash;following blindly the men who
-lead them astray along the fascinating and dangerous
-path of crime. This young woman was a victim of love.</p>
-
-<p>Not a word has been written about her death. Not a
-sigh, not a tear, not a prayer from her friends and relatives.
-For they did not know what had become of her.
-The French newspapers did not record the end of this
-woman, who paid with her life for her daring, mad
-desire to help her Austrian lover, who sought to secure
-French military secrets.</p>
-
-<p>Her name was Susanna Raynal. She was the wife of
-Louis Raynal, a lieutenant in the artillery of the French<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span>
-army. She was twenty-eight years old when she was
-put to death. The husband, twelve years her senior, was
-at the front when she was shot. Her lover was shot with
-her. He broke down, quivering and crying hysterically
-while she kept bracing him up, repeating: "Have no
-fear! Have no fear!"</p>
-
-<p>She begged the officers to have them shot together, not
-separately. She declined to be blindfolded, held her lover
-by the hand and kept murmuring "Have no fear! Have
-no fear!"...</p>
-
-<p>Several weeks ago I met in Paris a distinguished French
-diplomatist with whom I discussed many incidents of the
-war. Our conversation turned to the many varieties of
-spies and provocateurs and to the motives that prompted
-them to betray their country.</p>
-
-<p>Then he told me the story of this young woman who
-met her end so bravely at the French-Swiss frontier.
-There were tears in his voice as he related the details.
-For he knew the woman and he knew her husband.</p>
-
-<p>"I was returning from London to Paris a few weeks
-ago," he said. "Just as we were reaching Boulogne, on
-the boat crossing the Channel, while I was in line in the
-dining room of the boat where the passports were being
-examined by the military officers, I heard behind me a
-familiar voice, whispering in German, 'Furchte doch
-nicht!' (Don't be afraid!)</p>
-
-<p>"I turned and saw the wife of my friend, a French
-lieutenant who was at the front. She felt somewhat embarrassed
-when she noticed me, but immediately advanced
-toward me and introduced to me a tall young man of
-rather anti-pathetic appearance.</p>
-
-<p>"'This is my husband's friend,' she said to me. 'He
-was kind enough to help me arrange my business affairs
-in London. Louis is at the front....'</p>
-
-<p>"Upon our arrival in Paris she asked me to visit her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span>
-soon. She said she wanted me to advise her in a certain
-important matter, that she was alone now, that I could
-help her with letters of introduction, for which she would
-be most grateful. She urged me to visit her the following
-evening. I promised to call on her and bade her
-farewell.</p>
-
-<p>"On the following evening, when I came to her house,
-her maid met me at the door and said that madam was
-expecting me for dinner an hour later. I asked her to
-tell Mme. Raynal that I had another engagement for
-dinner.</p>
-
-<p>"A few minutes later Mme. Raynal came out. As I
-mentioned before, she was a beautiful young woman of
-about twenty-eight. She was most charmingly dressed.
-She greeted me warmly and begged me to stay for dinner.
-I told her I had another important engagement. She
-implored me to stay. She said she was alone, and that
-she wished to talk with me about a matter of great importance,
-in which she desired to enlist my aid. I said
-that I would call on her some other evening.</p>
-
-<p>"Then she told me that she wished to visit friends in
-Switzerland, that she had some manuscripts of a literary
-character she wanted to take to them, and that she wished
-me to give her letters of introduction to several people,
-among them the Minister of War. I promised to call
-on her the following evening.</p>
-
-<p>"As I bade her good night, she kissed me and begged
-me to break my other engagement and take dinner with
-her. I repeated that it was impossible. Then I left her.
-As I walked down the stairs, I noticed the tall young
-man I had met with her at Boulogne, going up in the
-elevator to her apartment. That seemed more than
-strange to me.</p>
-
-<p>"The next morning I chanced to be lunching in a café
-where I occasionally met my friend, the head of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span>
-secret police department. In the course of my conversation
-I told the peculiar story of the woman and the
-young man, without mentioning her name. The police
-chief listened intently and then said:</p>
-
-<p>"'I think I know the woman. We are watching her.
-We are also watching the man closely. He is an Austrian.
-They seem to be engaged in a serious political
-conspiracy.'</p>
-
-<p>"About two weeks later I met the head of the secret
-police department in the same café. He said to me:</p>
-
-<p>"'Do you know what has happened to that woman&mdash;Susanna
-Raynal?'</p>
-
-<p>"'I haven't seen her since then,' I replied.</p>
-
-<p>"'You will never see her again,' he said. 'She has
-been shot.'</p>
-
-<p>"And then he told me how the police had shadowed
-her and her lover, how some one who had made her
-acquaintance recently gave her a letter of introduction
-to the Ministry of War. She wanted to help the Austrian
-carry certain documents out of France and wished to get
-a special letter from the Minister of War permitting her
-to take what she called 'manuscripts' to her friends in
-Switzerland.</p>
-
-<p>"She came to the Ministry of War with her lover.
-They were taken to a room, where they met an officer
-who told her that he would be glad to arrange the matter
-for her. Then the police did what is usually done in
-such cases. The officer walked out of the room for a
-short time, leaving on the table near them a number of
-important-looking documents. The man took some of
-these documents, and after the officer had returned and
-had given them the letter they asked for they went away.</p>
-
-<p>"On the following day they reached Bellegarde, the
-Franco-Swiss frontier. They were searched, and the
-papers taken from the War Department were found on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span>
-the woman. Within one hour both were shot. She met
-her death bravely. She held the man by the hand and
-tried to brace him up. He was crying helplessly and
-hysterically....</p>
-
-<p>"A few days ago I received information that Lieutenant
-Louis Raynal, the husband of the woman who was
-executed in Bellegarde, fell on the battlefield recently.
-He passed away without learning of the tragedy that
-had befallen his home.</p>
-
-<p>"He died in defense of his fatherland, which his wife,
-through her blind love for a spy, had endeavored to
-betray. Perhaps as he was dying of his wounds, his last
-thoughts and prayers were for his home and for his
-wife." (Told by Herman Bernstein in the <i>New York
-American</i>.)</p>
-
-
-<p>V&mdash;STORIES OF THE MILITARY SECRETS</p>
-
-<p>The Paris papers contained a brief paragraph telling
-of a young girl, a milliner, in the neighborhood of Grenoble,
-who had been caught playing the spy for the Germans
-and sentenced to a long term of imprisonment.</p>
-
-<p>"We don't shoot women spies any more," said a soldier
-from the Somme front to whom I spoke of the story.
-"There have been no women shot for a long time. They
-generally get about twelve years at hard labor."</p>
-
-<p>"Are you as much troubled as ever by spies?" I asked.</p>
-
-<p>He laughed. "As long as there is war there will be
-spies," he replied. "You can't stamp them out. The
-only thing you can do is to try to catch them. It was
-only a few weeks ago that we caught a woman spy on
-the Somme.</p>
-
-<p>"You remember when we took Bouchavesnes? Well,
-there was not much left of the village when we got it.
-Our artillery had knocked it pretty well to pieces, but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span>
-we found an old woman there. She had remained all
-through the German occupation, and had even managed
-to hide and stay behind when all the rest of the civil
-population had evacuated. She was in a cellar during
-our bombardment, and when we went into the town she
-came out to welcome us, the only one of the original
-French inhabitants of the village remaining. As it was
-French again, she insisted on remaining. It was her
-home and she had succeeded in clinging on all the time
-the Germans were there. She saw no reason why she
-should go when the French came back into occupation.</p>
-
-<p>"She stayed and did our washing for us. She was
-busy all the time, and every morning she would take the
-wet clothes out and spread them on the ground to dry.
-You could see soldiers' shirts and underwear all around
-the cellar where she lived, and hanging on all the posts
-and pieces of wall.</p>
-
-<p>"The old woman pottered around and worked most
-industriously at her tubs. She always came out when
-there were troops going through the village and she would
-talk to the men, find out where they were going, where
-they came from and how long they expected to be there.
-And whenever she came out from her tubs she would
-go to her wash, lying out to dry, examine it, turn it over,
-rearrange it. She was a wonderful washwoman. It was
-a mania with her, having everything just right for the
-French soldiers, who had won back her home for her
-in France.</p>
-
-<p>"But the Germans seemed to know every concentration
-of troops we made in that region. Their shells received
-us every time. We could not make a move that
-they did not know all about. We set three men to the
-special duty of finding out how the Germans got their
-information. The first thing they found out was that
-there were more air fights over Bouchavesnes than at any<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span>
-other part of the line. There seemed to be always a
-Boche aeroplane hovering over the ruins. They decided
-that there must be something about Bouchavesnes which
-made it a particularly good observation point. As the
-old woman was the only thing that distinguished the
-place from any other ruined village, they arrested her.</p>
-
-<p>"At first she denied everything, but the German accuracy
-in bombarding our concentrations ceased with her
-arrest. It does not take a long argument to convince a
-drumhead court-martial, and the old woman saw that
-the game was up. She then claimed to be French, and
-said that she had consented to spy for the Germans partly
-under threats, partly because her life had been spared by
-them, and partly because they had paid her well, and she
-had no other way of getting any money to live. Finally,
-she acknowledged that she was German and had been purposely
-left behind to spy when the Germans got out.
-She got twelve years at hard labor."</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>"Spies work all kinds of tricks. There was the old
-fellow who came back to his farm just behind the lines
-and started to do his fall ploughing with three horses,
-a red, a white and a black. He did his signalling by
-changing the position of the white horse in the team.
-He was easy to catch, as a team, especially a plough team,
-always works in the same order. Some of our men who
-were farmers noticed how he was constantly changing his
-horses about. They talked about it among themselves a
-bit and at last one of them spoke of it to an officer. The
-alleged farmer was investigated and shot.</p>
-
-<p>"Spies are almost sure to get a certain length of time
-to do their work before they are caught. We ran across
-a blacksmith who was one of the most congenial fellows
-you ever met. He had his shop right beside one of
-the main roads used by the troops in going back and forth<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span>
-to the trenches and he always had a stock of wine and
-something to eat. His shop did not keep him very busy
-and he was nearly always at his door. He would talk
-to the soldiers, give them a drink, ask where they were
-going and want to know how long they would be gone,
-so that he would be waiting to give them another glass
-of wine when they came back. He was very popular
-with the soldiers, because he was such a good fellow,
-always ready with a joke and a glass of wine.</p>
-
-<p>"But our concentrations were known to the Boches.
-Our men were being shot down. We never could prepare
-anything in advance and bring it off successfully, because
-the Boches knew just where we were getting ready to do
-something. Some of our spy catchers got to work to find
-the leak. They hunted through the sector for the best
-place to pick up news about troop movements and they
-found, of course, that all the soldiers were friendly with
-the blacksmith. His shop was raided one day. He had
-been left behind by the Germans. He had a three months'
-store of wine and food in his cellar. Of course, he could
-give our men wine. But he had, also, direct telephonic
-communication from his cellar with the German lines.
-He was shot.</p>
-
-<p>"The worst case that I ever knew of&mdash;but it was not
-the only one of the kind&mdash;was an officer in the French
-army who was a German spy. You can see from that
-how thorough the Boches are. That man had been sent
-from Germany to France when he was a boy. He had
-been educated in France and had gone to the French
-military schools. He was an artillery officer and one of
-the best. He was a lieutenant at the beginning of the
-war, but when the Somme offensive began he was a captain
-in command of a battery. For all that time he had
-done his work without being suspected.</p>
-
-<p>"On the Somme he was in charge of his battery, which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span>
-was firing ahead of our men during an advance. The
-battery got a signal that their range was too short and
-they were firing into our own men. The sergeant told
-the captain, but he said they were firing according to
-orders and not to change the range. The battery fired
-another round and got another signal from the infantry
-that they were firing short. The sergeant spoke to the
-captain again and the captain lost his temper and swore
-at the sergeant. He ordered another round at the same
-range and the sergeant refused. The captain tried to fire
-one of the guns himself.</p>
-
-<p>"It was very important for the Germans to stop our
-advance at that point. It might have saved Combles.
-But the sergeant knew as much about the situation as the
-captain. He knew what it meant to have our troops
-stopped there. We might have lost a brigade. We might
-have lost a division. He threatened the captain with a
-rifle and arrested him. It is something to arrest your
-own captain, but the sergeant did it, and there was a
-drumhead court-martial and the captain was shot. He
-confessed, when he saw it was all up with him, and
-bragged of the two years he had escaped being caught
-and of what he had done. He was brave enough, but&mdash;Well,
-think of it! Educated in France, an officer in the
-French Army, living at the expense of France, living a lie
-for ten years, waiting for 'the day' to betray those who
-trusted him. It takes a German to do that." (Told by
-Fred B. Pitney in the <i>New York Tribune</i>.)</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>WHAT HAPPENED TO THE
-"GLENHOLME"</h2>
-
-<p><i>Adventures with Submarines in the Mediterranean
-Sea</i></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>The merchant seamen whose voyages take him through the
-war-zone lives a hazardous life nowadays, but he treats it as
-"all in the day's work." The 'Glenholme' was sunk by a
-German submarine in the Mediterranean, and her crew underwent
-quite a lot of adventures before they were finally rescued.
-This tale was first told in the <i>Wide World Magazine</i>.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;SUBMARINED OFF COAST OF MALTA</p>
-
-<p>These are chancy times for sailormen, both those who
-man our fighting ships and the crews of merchant vessels,
-but they must all take the sea as they find it and do their
-best while their country is at war. Many of them have
-faced death cheerfully in the execution of their duty.
-Some have gone under, while others have endured wounds
-and privation, as did the men of the British steamer
-<i>Glenholme</i>.</p>
-
-<p>This staunch ship, steering wide of the land, cleared
-the southern shores of Malta and stuck her blunt nose
-into the long smooth swell that rolled up from the eastward.
-A ten-knot cargo-boat, deep-laden with steel rails
-for Alexandria, she forged steadily onward through the
-murky night. From stem to stern her hull lay shrouded
-in darkness; not a single light gleamed from any of her
-portholes, and even the lamp in her steering compass was
-veiled, for those on board knew right well that hostile
-submarines were operating in various parts of the Mediterranean.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Captain John Groome leaned his elbows on the bridge-rail
-and gazed into the gloom ahead.</p>
-
-<p>"We're all right so far," he said; "and from what I
-can hear of things it seems that these beastly submarines
-are operating quite a bit to the northward of our track.
-All the same, a sharp look-out must be kept or we may
-fall foul of some other craft running, like ourselves,
-without lights. I don't want to bump any of them."</p>
-
-<p>"The ocean is a wide place, sir," cheerfully remarked
-the chief officer. "We'll keep clear of collision easy
-enough."</p>
-
-<p>"I hope so," replied the skipper. "And now, Mr. Bolt,
-I'm going to lie down in the chart-room for a couple of
-hours, and I want you to call me at daybreak. That's
-the time when submarines poke up their periscopes for a
-morning look around."</p>
-
-<p>The mists of dawn hung like grey curtains over the
-northern horizon when Captain Groome, in answer to a
-call from the chief officer, again ascended the bridge
-ladder.</p>
-
-<p>"Anything in sight?" he queried.</p>
-
-<p>"Nothing at all," replied Mr. Bolt. "It's a bit hazy
-to the northward," he added, "but the skyline is quite
-clear ahead."</p>
-
-<p>Hardly had the chief officer finished speaking when a
-shot&mdash;apparently coming from nowhere&mdash;shrieked overhead
-between the <i>Glenholme's</i> masts. A moment later
-the report of a gun came rolling down the wind. Groome
-hurriedly snatched up his binocular glasses and peered
-into the haze out abeam.</p>
-
-<p>"Great Scot!" he exclaimed. "A submarine! Hard-a-port,
-my son. Let her go off to south."</p>
-
-<p>The helmsman ground his wheel over, and not a moment
-too soon, for a white line, like the trail of a shooting
-star, streaked athwart the surface of the waters. A<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span>
-torpedo had been discharged at the <i>Glenholme</i>, but as
-she swerved and swung from her course the deadly missile
-passed harmlessly ahead.</p>
-
-<p>"Murderous devils!" ejaculated Mr. Bolt. "Attacking
-an unarmed ship with both gunfire and torpedoes."</p>
-
-<p>"Pass the word to the engineer to give her every pound
-of steam," shouted Groome.</p>
-
-<p>As the morning haze lifted the submarine came into
-clear view&mdash;a dark, sinister shape. She gave chase while
-the <i>Glenholme</i> made off at her topmost speed. Engineers
-and stokers did their best, and steam hissed from her
-safety-valve as, on a zigzag course, she fled. Meanwhile
-the pursuing craft hung doggedly in her track. The submarine,
-however, discharged no more torpedoes; probably
-the German commander did not wish to deplete his stock
-of these expensive weapons.</p>
-
-<p>Gradually the pursuer closed with her quarry, until
-she was not more than a mile distant, and then her twelve-pounder
-gun began to bark viciously. Having found the
-range, the Germans fairly pounded the <i>Glenholme</i> with
-bursting shell, battering her deck-houses and funnel into
-masses of twisted steel.</p>
-
-<p>Groome and his crew did their duty well. They were
-game, quite game, to the finish. The captain, alert and
-watchful, stood beside the helmsman and directed the
-steering in such a manner as to keep the hostile craft
-dead astern. Presently a flying splinter of shell gashed
-his leg below the knee, and blood trickled into his boot as
-he bound up the wound. Nevertheless, he kept his vessel
-going at top speed, for he knew that British warships
-were patrolling the Mediterranean, and while the chase
-lasted there still remained the chance that a swift destroyer
-might suddenly loom up on the skyline and rush
-to the assistance of his stricken and harrassed vessel.</p>
-
-<p>No help came, however, and it was not long ere a shell<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span>
-struck the rudder-head. With steering gear completely
-wrecked, the steamer became unmanageable, and swung
-round at right angles to her course. Then, seeing escape
-was impossible, Captain Groome reluctantly rang his engines
-astern and signalled to the enemy that he was
-bringing his vessel to a standstill.</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;"THE PIRATES LOOTED OUR SHIP"</p>
-
-<p>It must not be supposed that the Germans thereupon
-ceased fire. By no means. An unarmed and unmanageable
-British steamer wallowing helplessly in the swell
-presented a fine opportunity for a display of "frightfulness";
-therefore, on general principles, they let drive a
-couple of shots at close range. These shells hulled the
-<i>Glenholme</i> forward on the waterline, and she commenced
-to sink slowly by the head.</p>
-
-<p>Having accomplished her work, the submarine came
-close alongside and stopped, with her gun trained point-blank
-on the stricken vessel. The German commander,
-a stout-built man with bristly hair, emerged from his
-conning-tower. He was evidently very angry.</p>
-
-<p>"Vy didn't you stop before?" he yelled. "I haf used
-plenty of petrol to catch you."</p>
-
-<p>"I'm sorry about your petrol," suavely replied Groome.</p>
-
-<p>"Vell now, hurry up and get your boats lowered!"
-shouted the Teuton. "I gif you ten minutes to leave&mdash;no
-more."</p>
-
-<p>The crew of the submarine, armed with rifles, stood on
-their foredeck and watched the <i>Glenholme's</i> men abandon
-ship. Some ten minutes later three boats containing all
-hands&mdash;thirty-four all told&mdash;had shoved clear of the sinking
-craft.</p>
-
-<p>"Now," said the submarine commander to Mr. Bolt,
-who was in charge of Number Three lifeboat, "I vant<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span>
-to make use of your boat for a little time. So crowd your
-men into the other two boats, and shove Number Three
-alongside my craft. Hurry up, now, or I gif the order
-to fire."</p>
-
-<p>There being no help for it, Mr. Bolt and his men had
-perforce to do as they were told. When the empty boat
-was pushed alongside the submarine half-a-dozen Germans
-sprang into her and boarded the <i>Glenholme</i>, which
-vessel was now deep down by the head, but still sinking
-slowly.</p>
-
-<p>The Germans looted from their prize whatever took
-their fancy, while that vessel's crew sat in the other two
-lifeboats and watched the piratical proceedings with considerable
-displeasure. One man in particular, a stoker
-who hailed from Limehouse, became extremely indignant.
-Like the rest of the <i>Glenholme's</i> men, he had hurried
-to the boats with little beside the clothes he stood
-in. His other belongings had been left in the forecastle,
-and he had to some extent resigned himself to their
-loss; but when he saw some of his property in the hands
-of the Huns he could not restrain his anger.</p>
-
-<p>"The dirty thieves!" he yelled. "They've got me brand-new
-bowler 'at and me gramophone." Then, outspoken
-and fluent, the Londoner stood upright in the boat and
-gave the enemy his kind wishes.</p>
-
-<p>"I don't wish yer no harm, blow yer!" said he. "I
-don't want yer to get sunk, nor even captured by a British
-cruiser. Oh, no. I only wants yer blighted ole submarine
-to fall foul of a steamer's bow some dark night
-and get capsized. Then I hopes she'll float around for
-a month bottom up, with the whole crowd of yer standin'
-on yer bloomin' heads and yellin' 'Gott strafe England'
-until you choke."</p>
-
-<p>Undoubtedly there were several Germans on board the
-submarine who understood English well enough to gather<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span>
-the gist of the irate stoker's remarks. They looked very
-ugly as they fingered their rifles and glanced towards
-their officer for instructions; most probably the Londoner
-ran a grave risk of paying for his temerity with his
-life. It happened, however, that at this moment smoke
-was descried in the distance. The German commander
-levelled his binocular glasses and took a long look at it.
-Apparently this column of grey smoke caused him some
-uneasiness. Full well he knew the rapidity with which,
-during the hazy weather, a destroyer could appear on the
-scene and open fire. He was evidently a cautious Teuton,
-for he gave a short, guttural order, he and his men descended
-into the submarine, and she dived below the
-surface, and so out of this story. How and when the
-piratical career of this particular U-boat came to a sudden
-end cannot now be chronicled.</p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;THEY WATCHED THE VESSEL SINK</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the <i>Glenholme's</i> crew sat in their boats and
-watched their vessel sink. Her bows were by this time
-below the surface; she was going fast. Her stern rose
-high in air, and for about a minute the stricken and
-abandoned craft hung poised in this position&mdash;her fore
-part submerged, her rudder and propeller a hundred feet
-in air. Then, with a slow, slanting dive, she vanished
-from sight. Down she sank, like many a good ship before
-her, to rust and rot on the sandy-tide-swept floor of the
-Mediterranean.</p>
-
-<p>The smoke which had been sighted previously was no
-longer visible. Captain Groome and his crew in their
-three open boats had now to face the chances of a wide
-and lonely sea. Each boat was well equipped, and stocked
-with ten days' provisions; nevertheless, the weather indications
-were not encouraging. Wind and sea were gradually<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span>
-increasing, while a heavy bank of clouds in the
-north-west foretold a coming storm. The captain shouted
-a few words of advice and instruction to the officers in
-charge of the two other boats.</p>
-
-<p>"It's no use trying for Malta against this northerly
-gale that's coming. We'll just have to 'up stick' and run
-for Tripoli. You're quite right, Mr. Bolt; the boats may
-get separated. If the sea becomes very heavy we must
-lie to our sea-anchors until it moderates, or until we get
-picked up."</p>
-
-<p>The storm came. Black, rain-laden squalls drove
-across the restless waters, which a strong and rising wind
-soon lashed into white-crested ridges and dark green
-hollows. It was not safe to carry sail and run before
-the gale; so, tethered by their painters to the canvas drags,
-or sea-anchors, the boats rode head-on, lifting bravely
-to the charging seas. Before nightfall they had drifted
-far apart and were lost to one another's sight in the
-shrouding rain-squalls.</p>
-
-<p>It must be mentioned that next day two of the boats
-were picked up by a French steamer and their crews
-safely landed. This narrative will now deal, therefore,
-with what befell Captain Groome and the twelve men
-who were with him.</p>
-
-<p>For the next three days these poor castaways suffered
-considerably from cold and exposure; moreover, the captain
-had to endure great pain, his wounded leg being stiff
-and swollen. However, on the third morning after they
-had abandoned the sinking <i>Glenholme</i> the wind and sea
-abated, and the sun rose in a cloudless sky that gave
-promise of a long spell of fine weather. Captain Groome
-gave orders to hoist the sail; and, impelled by a westerly
-breeze, they steered for the northern coast of Africa.</p>
-
-<p>Soon after sunrise land was sighted right ahead&mdash;a
-sandy beach with low and slightly undulating country<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span>
-in the background. Groome ran the boat close inshore
-and then consulted a torn and sea-stained chart.</p>
-
-<p>"Now, men," said he; "what with the gale and strong
-currents I figure out that we've been driven a long way
-east of Tripoli. The breeze is dying away, so we'll just
-have to get out the oars and pull to the westward."</p>
-
-<p>"How far is it to the nearest port, captain?" inquired
-one of the sailors.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, about seventy to eighty miles."</p>
-
-<p>"That's a long pull on short allowance of water," remarked
-the sailor, with a rueful glance at their water-keg,
-which by this time was three-parts empty. "Is there
-any fresh water around these parts, sir?"</p>
-
-<p>The skipper gazed attentively along the shore before
-making answer. "Well," said he at length, "it's a barren-looking
-coast, and no mistake, but I see a clump of trees
-just beyond that point. Perhaps we can find water there,
-and refill our keg. Anyhow, we'll go and see."</p>
-
-
-<p>IV&mdash;THE CASTAWAYS AND THE ARAB HORSEMEN</p>
-
-<p>They beached their boat in a little curving bay that lay
-between two rocky points. Here, not more than a couple
-of hundred yards inland, stood the clump of trees that
-Groome had noted. They found, to their great satisfaction,
-that these trees grew around the brink of a cup-shaped
-hollow, at the bottom of which bubbled a spring
-of clear fresh water.</p>
-
-<p>The overjoyed castaways drank their fill; then, with
-tin cups, they baled up the water and refilled their ten-gallon
-keg. While this job was in progress Captain
-Groome, accompanied by the bo'sun, clambered up the
-sides of the waterhole to take a look around before returning
-to the boat. On reaching level ground, to their
-astonishing and dismay, they found themselves confronted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span>
-by a band of about fifty Arab horsemen. These men
-were Bedouins of the Senussi tribe&mdash;swarthy ruffians of
-the desert, fierce and ruthless, who lived chiefly by murder
-and pillage.</p>
-
-<p>They were all armed, some with old-fashioned long-barrelled
-guns, and a few with modern rifles, while each
-man had long knives stuck around his girdle. These
-fierce nomads saw plainly that the white men were unarmed
-and helpless. Nevertheless, their chief&mdash;a tall
-Arab who was mounted on a white horse&mdash;pointed at the
-two castaways and shouted aloud to his followers. Evidently
-he gave the order to kill, for several of the swarthy
-miscreants levelled their rifles and fired point-blank. The
-bo'sun dropped, stone dead, with a bullet in his brain,
-while Captain Groome, shot through the shoulder, fell to
-earth and lay there unconscious and apparently lifeless.
-For more than an hour the unfortunate ship-captain remained
-senseless and inert. The wonder is that he did
-not bleed to death; however, he lay so still that, luckily
-for him, the blood congealed and caked over his wounds.
-When at length his consciousness returned he found that
-in the meantime events had been happening with startling
-rapidity.</p>
-
-<p>It might be supposed that, after shooting Groome and
-the bo'sun, the Arabs would have murdered the remainder
-of the castaways out of hand, yet it transpired that
-they did not do so. Most probably it occurred to these
-desert nomads that it would be more profitable to carry
-the white men inland and hold them for ransom, therefore
-they took them as prisoners. Next, the Bedouins
-looted the boat that lay drawn up on the beach, taking all
-her portable equipment, such as provisions, rope, and
-canvas. Then, apparently quite satisfied with their day's
-work, they watered their horses and camped, to rest
-awhile beside the spring.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Half-a-dozen armed Bedouins kept guard on the prisoners,
-who sat in a dejected group. Things were looking
-very black indeed for these poor seamen when suddenly&mdash;almost
-by magic it seemed&mdash;deliverance came in the
-form of a patrol steamer flying the British flag.</p>
-
-<p>Steaming quite close inshore, she glided into view
-from behind an adjacent point. So close was the vessel
-when she rounded the headland that those on board could
-hear the shout of delight raised by the surviving castaways.</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant in charge of the patrol boat&mdash;a keen
-and alert young officer&mdash;was not long in grasping the situation.
-He saw the boat drawn up on the beach, and
-heard the prisoners shouting for aid. Therefore, when
-the startled Bedouins hastily mounted and made off, this
-capable young naval officer knew just what to do&mdash;and
-he did it.</p>
-
-<p>A band of badly-scared Arab horsemen started off
-inland, using whip and spur in desperate efforts to escape,
-but at that moment the patrol steamer's machine-gun
-took a glad hand in the game. The gun rattled briskly,
-streams of lead whistled shoreward, and the tall Arab
-chief who rode the white horse pitched headlong from his
-mount to the earth; then he lay quite still. He was as
-dead as salted herring; to use colloquial English, he had
-got "all that was coming to him."</p>
-
-<p>The remaining miscreants rode hard for safety, but the
-machine-gun did good work, and during the following
-few minutes at least a dozen desert marauders finished
-altogether with the joys and sorrows of this world. Those
-who managed to escape disappeared, together with a
-number of riderless horses, behind a distant sand-hill.</p>
-
-<p>Captain Groome and his men were promptly taken on
-board the patrol vessel. The bo'sun, poor fellow, was
-buried where he lay. The skipper's wounds were dressed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span>
-by the ship's surgeon, and under kind and skillful treatment
-he soon began to mend.</p>
-
-<p>The writer saw Groome about six weeks later. He
-moved stiffly, like a man whose wounds have but recently
-healed; nevertheless, he looked well, and was certainly
-very cheerful.</p>
-
-<p>"How do I feel?" said he, in answer to my query.
-"Oh, my shoulder is still a bit sore, but otherwise I'm
-feeling first class. Another week or so, and I'll be fit
-and ready to join another ship."</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>WHAT THE KAISER'S SON SAW ON
-THE BATTLEFIELD</h2>
-
-<p><i>Personal Experiences of a German Prince</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Told by Prince Oscar of Prussia, Fifth Son of
-Emperor William</i></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>His Royal Highness Prince Oscar of Prussia, fifth of Kaiser
-Wilhelm's six sons, has written a little book called "The Winter
-Battle," a translation of which is printed herewith. In this he
-describes the terrific fighting of the Third German Army, which
-formed an important part of the battle front in Champagne and
-had to meet a particularly desperate attack by the French. The
-Prince was an officer on the staff of the commanding General.
-As a result of his experiences he was laid up with an attack of
-heart failure. It is interesting to note that "Hill 196," which is
-one of the places particularly mentioned in the Prince's narrative
-as being defended by the Germans last Winter, was captured
-by the French on October 25, 1915, and became once more
-the centre of prolonged fighting. The Prince is twenty-seven
-years old, and was married morganatically on the day war was
-declared to Countess Ina von Bassewitz Levetzow, a young
-noblewoman not of royal birth. The proceeds of the sale of
-his book are given to the widows and orphans of German
-soldiers who fell in the Champagne. Translation for the
-<i>New York American</i>.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;PRINCE OSCAR TELLS ABOUT BATTLE OF
-CHAMPAGNE</p>
-
-<p>The great Winter battle in the Champagne in 1915
-resulted in a brilliant victory, which I witnessed with my
-own eyes.</p>
-
-<p>The past has already begun busily to weave her heavy
-veil, and side by side with the past walks her sister&mdash;oblivion!<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span>
-But we&mdash;we must not, we dare not forget.
-Not only because the war in the Champagne was the
-greatest and longest defensive battle in the history of
-the world and resulted in a magnificent victory for ourselves;
-not only out of gratitude for our heroic leaders
-and soldiers who accomplished the superhuman, endured
-the unspeakable, and yet, undaunted, fought on to victory;
-there is another deeper, more salient reason why
-we must not forget. I refer to our hero dead, who, with
-incomparable self-abnegation, gave their lives for king
-and country, for Emperor and empire, for home and
-nation.</p>
-
-<p>As a child which one of us has not stood at the grave
-of some unknown hero of forgotten days, thrilling with
-rapturous, fearsome awe? On the heights north of le
-Mesnil in the Champagne there is now a grave of this
-sort which should be dear to every German heart, but
-it is not the grave of an unknown hero of bygone days.
-Many brave men of our own glorious army, much noble
-blood of our beloved German nation have found their
-last resting place there on French soil. Our own brothers,
-sons and husbands are interred there. Many thousands
-of heroes, who have entered the last long silence,
-slumbering there under the very sod which they themselves,
-dauntless, fearless, reckless of danger, defended
-to the last breath, cry to us from beyond the grave, "Do
-not forget the cause for which we died, for which we
-gladly and willingly gave our lives."</p>
-
-<p>We, the living, who know what these dead heroes accomplished
-and how they furthered our cause, lower
-the sword in memory of them, and, in spirit, lay a laurel
-wreath upon that hill, vowing that we will go and do
-likewise.</p>
-
-<p>In order to comprehend thoroughly the significance of
-the war in the Champagne and to appreciate the magnitude<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span>
-of the achievements of our troops we must briefly
-summarize the circumstances which made the campaign
-imperative, the end which it was intended the titanic
-struggle should compass, and the conditions which made
-this victory such an important one to us. A few sentences
-will suffice to make all this clear. It was necessary
-to crush the first large aggressive movement on the
-part of the French, who, by hurling their finest army
-corps and an enormous artillery force against us in the
-Champagne, tried for weeks and months, at whatever
-cost, to force a wedge into our lines in order to break one
-link in the steel chain with which the German army had
-encircled their land.</p>
-
-<p>If, as intended, they had succeeded in breaking through
-our lines with a strong contingent, it can readily be seen
-how disastrous this would have been for us. As regards
-consequences, our success in the Champagne was at least
-of as great importance as the victories of Tannenberg,
-the Masurian Lakes, near Augustow and on the San; but
-when we take into consideration the demands which were
-made upon individual endurance and courage in the face
-of the most harrowing conditions imaginable, it is doubtful
-whether the work done in the Champagne by our
-troops has ever been equalled.</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;THE PRINCE PRAISES HIS TROOPS</p>
-
-<p>In order thoroughly to appreciate the heroic steadfastness
-and the patient endurance shown by our troops,
-which transcended all praise, and to appraise properly
-the difficulties which beset leaders and men alike during
-the long, bitter weeks of the battle, we must remember
-certain facts.</p>
-
-<p>When the French offensive was begun on a large scale
-on February 16, our troops had already seen months of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span>
-the hardest sort of service in repulsing the French First
-and Seventeenth Army Corps, with only a few very short
-intervals of rest&mdash;our Eighth Army Corps having been
-engaged in this region since December 8, and the Eighth
-Reserve Corps since December 19, 1914.</p>
-
-<p>Our regiments, therefore, were far from unfatigued at
-a moment when they were called upon to enter the severest
-phase of a struggle into which our foes hurled the
-flower of their troops. Moreover, the French had at
-their command an almost inexhaustible supply of ammunition,
-and were able, therefore, in a steadily ascending
-scale, gradually to reach the full amplitude of their fighting
-capacity in their efforts to break through our lines.
-If we fully visualize this fact then we must realize that
-an almost incredible glory accrues to the work done by
-our troops. Only an iron will, a discipline which had
-become second nature and utter forgetfulness of self
-could lead to victory in the face of such odds. That
-these qualities did ultimately assure us the victory will
-redound to the undying glory of all the troops which did
-active service in this great engagement.</p>
-
-<p>The prodigious masses of iron and humanity which
-our foes hurled against us day and night, their marvellous
-ingenuity in making attacks, their doggedness in
-defense, all this was admirably calculated to crush larger
-numbers than those of our Third Army. It was a struggle
-between iron and steel. It is true that a heavy
-mass of iron can through sheer weight bend and indent
-a narrow band of steel, but it cannot break the steel.
-Thus, through continually renewing their attacks and by
-training upon us an artillery fire the violence of which
-beggars all description, the French succeeded in bending
-back our lines here and there. Sometimes at one part,
-sometimes at another they took several hundred mètres
-of intrenchments; but they paid a horrible, a ghastly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span>
-price in blood for these minor and valueless successes,
-which profited them nothing save that they taught them
-the bitter lesson that German will power and German
-discipline can be broken by nothing. The French had
-scornfully proclaimed that they had broken the backbone
-of our resistance, but we broke their attack and
-imposed upon them our own. In the end the French
-attempt to break through our lines was utterly foiled, and
-the Third Army was victorious.</p>
-
-<p>During this time the French attacks were directed principally
-against the left, i. e., the eastern half of the
-Third Army, so that the Eighth Army Corps and the
-Eighth Reserve Corps bore the brunt of the attacks, most
-of which took place along the line between the position of
-Perthes and Beausejour.</p>
-
-<p>This is a rolling, open country, in which narrow fields
-alternate with small patches of woodland, covered with
-pine trees. The country is not dissimilar in character
-to the country near Jueterberg and Doeberitz, in Germany,
-and instead of soil or sand the surface of the
-earth is covered with white chalk. It is a desolate,
-barren country. The French themselves call it the "louse
-Champagne" country, and never was a name more aptly
-given. It boasted of only a few settlements, and these
-have now been destroyed by the artillery fire.</p>
-
-<p>During the entire time that the battle lasted the
-weather was vile. For weeks it rained day and night,
-so that the chalky soil was transformed into a grayish,
-soapy, slimy mire. In consequence the by-roads became
-almost impassable for vehicles and the main roads, connecting
-our trenches and camps, owing to the continuous
-use to which they were put by marching troops and rolling
-provision wagons, were soon in a condition which
-was almost as bad. The work of our munition and commissary
-columns, upon which this battle, which lasted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span>
-for months, entailed particularly difficult service, was
-thereby rendered exasperatingly hard. The horses also
-suffered severely through the long enforced marches, the
-dreadful roads, the general wetness and the insufficient
-food.</p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;"HOW WE FOUGHT THE BATTLE&mdash;A
-LIVING HELL"</p>
-
-<p>It is, however, the duty of the good soldier to derive
-some advantage from even the most unpromising conditions,
-and we were able to turn the frightful condition of
-the roads to good account in the following way. The
-roads which the French commanded were less numerous
-and in even worse condition than our own. As they
-expended a tremendous amount of ammunition every
-day in "drum-fire," as continuous systematic artillery fire
-is called in the army, they were forced to bring up large
-supplies every night, which was not the case with us. As
-has been said before, only the main roads could be traversed
-by the ammunition wagons, because the other
-roads had turned into a sort of morass, and we therefore
-trained our long-range guns upon their main roads at
-night, knowing that we must be doing damage to them.
-This circumstance probably accounted for the unusually
-long pauses which they allowed to occur in their "drum-fire"
-on the ensuing days.</p>
-
-<p>In this way we gained brief periods of respite for our
-infantry, which was thus enabled to patch up the badly
-damaged intrenchments, so that the French, when they
-had been supplied with new ammunition, had to begin
-all over again.</p>
-
-<p>The continuous rainfall created cruel conditions for
-the housing of our troops. As has been said, the few
-sparse settlements had been literally shot to pieces, and
-our troops were therefore forced to construct their own<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span>
-huts and cave shelters. That such poor quarters, during
-an incessant downpour of rain, were bound to have an
-injurious effect upon the strength of the troops, is abundantly
-plain. Nevertheless, our men never complained.
-With admirable patience, even good humour, they endured
-the greatest privations and hardships which were
-the result of the inclement weather and the inadequate
-quarters, and how great these privations and hardships
-were can only be understood by some one who himself
-has lived through a rainy Winter in the "louse Champagne"
-country. Nevertheless, miraculously, the health
-of the troops remained remarkably good.</p>
-
-<p>Originally only the First and the Seventeenth French
-Army Corps had been intrenched opposite to our Eighth
-Army Corps and our Eighth Reserve Corps. Both of
-the French army corps had suffered severely during their
-continuous attacks around Christmas, in January and
-the beginning of February. But they had been reinforced
-continually. Before beginning their great drive
-against our lines the French had gathered together materially
-larger forces. To cope with our two army corps
-gradually, in addition to the First and the Seventeenth
-Corps, two colonial divisions and half a territorial
-division&mdash;all in all almost seven and a half army corps
-were massed in a comparatively small territory.</p>
-
-<p>Furthermore, they had greatly strengthened their artillery.
-On the other hand, our two army corps had been
-strengthened solely by the addition of individual battalions
-of the Fifth and Seventh Armies, as well as by
-the Sixth Army Corps and the Twelfth Reserve Corps
-(which at this time belonged to the Third Army). The
-Eighth Army Corps comprised the Bavarian "Landwehr"
-Brigade and the Hessian "Landwehr" as well.
-Then, finally, there was the First Guard Infantry Division,
-destined to play a prominent part in this battle.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In this terrific battle sons from every principality and
-kingdom of the Fatherland fought shoulder to shoulder,
-and vied with each other in the display of courage and
-endurance. Prussians and Bavarians, Saxons and Hessians,
-men from the North and the South, from East and
-West, stood side by side, cheek by jowl, forming an impregnable
-wall against which the furious, despairing,
-fanatic attacks of the French were doomed to futilely
-spend themselves.</p>
-
-<p>The French fought with marvellous valour, with reckless
-courage and nerve, climbing up and on over the
-bodies of their fallen comrades. They were excellent
-fighters, were these Frenchmen. But our men were
-better fighters, as the outcome of the battle taught us.</p>
-
-<p>It was, however, not the attacks of their infantry
-which made this battle so hideous for us, nor was it the
-hand-to-hand struggle in the trenches, man against man,
-where the German, possessing greater physical strength,
-was easily the match of the individual Frenchman.
-What made the battle a living hell was the work of the
-French artillery, enormous in strength, with huge supplies
-of ammunition which was spent lavishly. Life in
-the trenches became a perpetual nightmare and stamped
-as unforgettable heroes the men who went through with
-it without flinching.</p>
-
-
-<p>IV&mdash;"IT SEEMED IMPOSSIBLE ANY LIVING
-CREATURE COULD SURVIVE"</p>
-
-<p>Onto a comparatively small area the French on one
-day threw a hundred thousand shells! We found a
-French document in which the commanding officer calculated
-that eighteen bombs must be the allowance per
-metre of German trench, these eighteen bombs to be used
-not in a day, but within one or two hours! The rapidity<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span>
-of the artillery fire was therefore as great as that of an
-ordinary machine gun, but the shells hurled against us
-were not infantry shells, but grenades of every calibre.
-"Drum-fire" is the name for this sort of artillery fire, and
-its effects were simply dreadful&mdash;unspeakable. The
-barbed wire was completely annihilated, was clean wiped
-out of existence; the trenches were flattened into
-mounds, their foundations crumbled away. No known
-sort of earthworks were able to withstand such fire for
-even a short time. But German discipline, loyalty and
-heroism held out.</p>
-
-<p>When such "drum-fire" began, a huge wall of smoke
-and chalk particles rose over our trenches, cutting off
-the men from the rest of the world. The horror of the
-scene was augmented by the ceaseless rumbling, thundering
-and crashing which filled the air, and which, even
-miles away, sounded like a heavy thunderstorm. It
-seemed impossible that any living creature should survive
-such a hellish turmoil. When the firing ceased
-abruptly, or when its direction was changed to give the
-French infantry a chance to attack us, then our brave
-fusiliers, musketeers, grenadiers crawled out of the funnels
-and pockets into which the enemy's grenades had
-ploughed the earth, made their way from among broken
-foundations, crumbling cement, trickling sand bags, and,
-grabbing their guns and wiping the dirt from their eyes,
-they repulsed the French attack.</p>
-
-<p>And this was done not once, but dozens of times.</p>
-
-<p>Occasionally our men were ordered to abandon a
-trench which was suffering particularly from "drum-fire"
-in order to avoid unnecessary loss of life, and the
-crew from such an abandoned trench was then placed in
-our second line of intrenchments. It sometimes happened
-that French infantrymen, under protection of their
-artillery fire, reached and took such an empty trench,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span>
-succeeding the more readily because they encountered no
-obstacles. Our soldiers then sprang forth from their
-cover and attacked the French with hand grenades and
-bayonets. Invariably we were successful in repulsing the
-enemy, causing them heavy loss of life.</p>
-
-<p>If for some reason or other this counter-attack was
-not made at once, but was postponed for an hour or two,
-we were not so sure of success, and it was then never
-secured by us without heavy casualties, for the few hours
-that had elapsed had amply sufficed the French, who are
-exceedingly clever at every sort of intrenchment work,
-to change and remodel the trench for their purposes, to
-install machine guns, to place sandbag barriers along
-both sides and to make sundry other changes. This
-done, the "Frenchmen's nest" was complete.</p>
-
-<p>The difficult task of ousting the French from their
-"nest" then devolved upon our regiments, and in some
-instances many weeks of hard, cruel fighting were required
-to accomplish this end. For this work we employed
-underground mines, artillery, bombs and hand
-grenades. When the time was ripe for attack, columns
-of volunteers were formed, which were led by officers,
-who, in turn, were preceded by groups of pioneers with
-hand grenades and intrenchment tools, to be used in demolishing
-the sandbag barriers. The assault was begun
-simultaneously from both sides. These attacks were
-usually conducted at night, and it will readily be seen
-what cool, unshakable courage was required for work
-of this kind. Immediately after the hand grenades were
-exploded our men advanced and a furious hand-to-hand
-fight ensued, in which not only bayonet and pick-axe,
-but shovel and booted foot were used to expel the enemy,
-to kill him or force him to surrender.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p>V&mdash;BRAVERY OF THE GRENADIERS</p>
-
-<p>As an example of the tremendous fury with which
-such a hand-to-hand fight raged I will cite one instance.
-A grenadier of one of our Rhenish regiments, who carried
-a pick-axe, had the thumb of his right hand, which
-carried the weapon, bitten right off by a Frenchman.
-The German soldier, writhing with pain, contrived to
-change the pick-axe to his left hand, killed both the
-Frenchman who had maimed him and his comrade.</p>
-
-<p>In another regiment three men had discovered that
-in making these nocturnal attacks they could work together
-to splendid advantage. The strongest man of the
-three took the centre. In his left hand he carried two
-steel shields from machine guns lashed together. In his
-right hand he held his weapon, bayonet or pick-axe. His
-two companions kept to either side of him, as closely as
-possible. One carried as many hand grenades as he
-could manage, the other was equipped with a bayonet.
-Thus accoutred, this strange trio proceeded, striking,
-thrusting and throwing grenades, and literally hacking
-its way through the ranks of the enemy and striking terror
-to the hearts of the foe.</p>
-
-<p>Excellent service these three men rendered. Evening
-after evening the man who carried the steel shields volunteered
-for the difficult and hazardous task. He was asked
-if he did not feel the necessity for resting up, or if he
-did not prefer to serve the hand grenades or to wield
-the bayonet for a change. He replied that less powerful
-men than he could not as easily carry the steel shields
-and the pick-axe as well, while the bayonet work and the
-throwing of hand grenades could be done readily by
-the others.</p>
-
-<p>The sharpshooters of the Imperial Guard had formed
-an entire company of volunteers, who, led by officers,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span>
-were always sent to perform particularly dangerous and
-difficult tasks. They performed deeds of incredible
-valour, and the "Tschakos," as Germans call this picked
-corps, will not soon be forgotten by the French.</p>
-
-<p>The men of the Saxon Reserve Infantry Regiment No.
-107 were adepts in taking French prisoners. They had
-a system of their own and found it infallible.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, at night, our brave fellows had to engage in
-hand-to-hand encounters, at day had to endure the
-frightful fire of the French artillery, and when the firing
-ceased there was still not a moment's rest for them, for
-they then had to repulse the onslaughts of the French
-infantrymen.</p>
-
-<p>Nor was that all. The positions which had been shot
-to pieces by the enemy by day in the field, had to be
-rebuilt, as far as was possible, at night. The reserves
-were requisitioned to assist in this work, although they
-had really been sent back of the firing line to rest up.
-The Reserves were also frequently called upon at night
-to help defend with the bayonet any menaced point.
-Thus their supposed "resting-up" in the protected zone
-was somewhat problematical in nature, not alone because
-they were frequently called upon to help out, but
-because the French had a pretty trick of training their
-heavy artillery fire, night and day, upon these outlying
-points, positions and roads. Unbelievable as it seems,
-the men in the trenches actually suffered less from the
-artillery fire at night than did the men in the rear.</p>
-
-<p>Alternately fighting and working by day and by night,
-our brave men performed the work of supermen. Each
-man was actuated by one thought only&mdash;to defend his
-position to the last, to overcome the enemy, to endure
-through it all, no matter what happened. Each leader,
-each division, conceived it to be a task of honour to
-hold the position, or, if it had been lost, to regain it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p>VI&mdash;THE PRINCE GIVES HIS OPINION OF HIS
-ADVERSARY</p>
-
-<p>Let us now consider the method which our foe employed
-in preparing the attacks.</p>
-
-<p>The French attacks must be classified as partial
-attacks and as attacks en masse. The former invariably
-preceded the latter. The numerical strength of the
-troops thus employed varied from a company to a division.
-They were never an end in themselves, but a mere
-link in the chain of a general, comprehensive plan. A
-destructive "drum-fire" was followed up by an attack
-upon a particular trench. Having secured the trench,
-they did one of two things. Either they used every
-effort to secure a second trench, several hundred meters
-further along the line, so that, working and fighting
-toward each other, they might reasonably expect to unite
-the two trenches; or, using the captured trench as a
-base for an attack en masse, they sought to indent our
-line and to break it, a thing which was never attempted
-when a partial attack was made.</p>
-
-<p>In conducting these attacks en masse, the French always
-adhered to their well-known scheme. A compact
-line of sharpshooters at the front was followed at a distance
-of one hundred meters by densely packed masses
-of company and battalion columns.</p>
-
-<p>This method, of attack, from which they never
-swerved, occasioned them a shocking loss of life. The
-losses sustained by a French regiment in storming a
-position may be estimated conservatively at forty to fifty
-per cent. French prisoners confirmed this estimate. To
-this wholesale slaughter to which they condemn their
-men the fact is probably due that the French rarely use
-the same regiment twice for purposes of attack. Surely
-they must reckon with the demoralizing effect sustained<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span>
-by men who have been forced to climb over hillocks of
-their own dead in order to reach the enemy!</p>
-
-<p>A French officer, whom we took prisoner, told us that
-the havoc wrought by the German artillery fire upon the
-closed columns of the French had been frightful. He
-added:</p>
-
-<p>"These attacks constitute an insane slaughter; strictly
-speaking, they are not attacks, but a mad dancing in
-shambles, through a charnel-house, upon a cemetery.
-And yet we will be forced to continue this way until the
-French Government sees fit to recognize the futility of
-our method, or until we contrive to break through."</p>
-
-<p>Not enough can be said in praise of our artillery.
-Heavy and light artillery as well performed wonders.
-Their co-operation with our infantry was wonderful&mdash;could
-not have been improved upon. Often, our well-directed
-artillery fire nipped in the bud French efforts at
-attack. Truly, the artillery which took part in the battle
-of the Champagne has every reason to be proud of its
-record.</p>
-
-<p>At the beginning of the period of which I am writing,
-the French attacks were directed principally against our
-positions near Perthes (the centre and left wing of the
-Eighth Army Corps). Then the French concentrated
-their attacks upon the outer left wing of the Eighth
-Army Corps and the right wing of the Eighth Reserve
-Corps (16th Reserve-Division). Finally the French
-offensive degenerated into a desperate, mad, wild struggle
-for the now famous Hill 196 (two kilometers north
-of le Mesnil-les-Hurlus). At first they were probably
-obsessed by the idea that the hill was valuable because
-of the outlook which it afforded. Later, the government,
-or the War Ministry, seems to have issued an order that
-the hill must be taken at whatever cost. They paid the
-cost&mdash;paid horribly, suffered overwhelming losses, offered<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span>
-hecatombs of victims, and still did not gain the Hill&mdash;thanks
-to the heroism of the defending regiments.</p>
-
-<p>This&mdash;Hill 196&mdash;was the most seriously menaced
-point, and accordingly the Guard was installed there,
-which, together with the Rhenish, Silesian and Saxon
-regiments, performed deeds of great valour. True to the
-traditions of their race, they withstood the terrific onslaughts
-made by the French hordes, onslaughts for the
-making of which the French continually sent out fresh
-regiments. Attack after attack failed. Those who escaped
-the fire of the artillery and the machine guns fell
-under the butts and blades of the German bayonets.</p>
-
-<p>Just as the interest and action of a drama continues
-to ascend until the end of the last act, so the Battle of
-Champagne reached its culmination and conclusion in the
-mad struggle that raged around Hill 196.</p>
-
-
-<p>VII&mdash;"MAD STRUGGLE AT HILL 196"</p>
-
-<p>In the last days of the frantic struggle, we had perceived
-that the French were gathering in largely increased
-numbers in their trenches. Then to our surprise
-the attack which we expected to follow did not
-occur. We therefore deemed it reasonable to conclude
-from this that the enemy no longer considered it expedient
-to push on, and that the fire of our artillery was
-holding them to their trenches. Therefore, on March 18,
-we were not expecting that any serious attack would be
-attempted. But the French apparently were not willing
-to admit defeat without one final, desperate effort.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly, on the afternoon of March 18, the attack
-was begun by densely massed troops, their objective
-being Hill 196 and the position directly east of the hill.
-The position of the Guards Reserve Infantry Regiment
-No. 133 and other troops, who received the main shock<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span>
-of the impact, was not to be shaken, however. The
-Fourth Turcos Regiment and others of the French army
-attacked in five lines, advancing one by one, with some of
-their officers on horseback. We received them with a
-shower of hand grenades, which tore hundreds of them
-limb from limb and blew to atoms the first two lines.</p>
-
-<p>Succeeding lines fared no better. Those who miraculously
-escaped the hand grenades were felled by our
-furious men with blows of pick-axe and bayonet. In
-spite of their dauntless courage, their reckless contempt
-of death, their marvellous persistence, the French were
-forced back. Front and flank of this writhing maelstrom
-of densely packed humanity rolling along in a disorderly
-retreat was swept by our heavy artillery fire from 21-centimetre
-mortars, heavy field howitzers, 10-centimetre
-cannon. The losses which the French sustained were
-inhuman and sickening.</p>
-
-<p>With this last valiant attempt to take the Hill 196
-ended the Winter battle of the Champagne. After
-months of frantic fighting, after paying a frightful toll
-in blood, the French were forced to abandon their effort
-to break through our lines. Their finest troops, the very
-flower of their army, who had fought persistently with
-all the dare-devil gallantry for which the French are
-famous, had, in the end, not only failed to win a victory,
-but had sustained a crushing defeat. For the fact must
-not be overlooked that their failure to force their way
-through our lines was tantamount to a very serious
-defeat.</p>
-
-
-<p>VIII&mdash;WHAT THE GERMAN PRINCE CLAIMS
-FOR HIS ARMY</p>
-
-<p>The battle of the Champagne is over. The unexampled
-heroism, the superhuman endurance of our troops<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span>
-have already become things of the past. But we, the
-great German nation, will do well to heed the warning
-that was sounded in the bitter days when the frenzied
-battle raged in the Champagne.</p>
-
-<p>What lesson shall we extract from this titanic struggle?
-What moral is pointed by Hill 196, whose every
-inch of ground was ploughed by bullets and soaked with
-our dearest blood? What were the underlying causes
-that contributed to our victory? What was it that made
-every beardless boy a hero, made the oldest man in the
-"Landwehr" forget his age and the privations he was
-enduring?</p>
-
-<p>Let us briefly review the principal factors that made
-for success.</p>
-
-<p>The value of iron discipline was overwhelmingly
-demonstrated. It is safe to assert that the most highly
-disciplined regiment will be the most successful in action.
-Youthful enthusiasm may be undermined, patriotism
-may be forced into temporary abeyance by hours of continual,
-cruel shelling; worse than that, the very power to
-think becomes inhibited in the witches' cauldron of
-"drum-fire." It is then that discipline asserts itself.
-Nothing else gives the same moral stamina, and in difficult
-positions discipline is bound to be the determining
-factor.</p>
-
-<p>Before the war began the voices of many people were
-raised who, from false sentimentality, from undue softness,
-from ill-will or from sheer stupidity, were eager
-to have an end put for all time to the unconditional
-obedience and rigid drill of our army; in brief, to our
-entire military training, the value of which has been
-tested and proven throughout centuries. Many of our
-so-called comic papers made it their chief business to
-ridicule military training and discipline, to spatter with
-mud the very foundation and bulwark of our military<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span>
-efficiency. I think the battle of the Champagne must
-have taught them to amend their way of thinking.</p>
-
-<p>"The iron rock upon which Germany rests more securely
-than the earth upon the shoulders of Atlas is our
-glorious army." That this army has reached this glorious
-summit is due primarily to its splendid training,
-and the fundamentals of this training are to be found in
-the latterly much-laughed-at and sneered-at detail work
-done in years of peace. The standing-at-attention, the
-the clock-like precision, the manual of arms, the goose-step&mdash;to
-all of these we owe the efficiency displayed by
-our troops in resisting French "drum-fire," in repulsing
-French drives, in withstanding with iron might French
-alertness, in circumventing French enthusiasm and gallantry.</p>
-
-<p>For instance, our Guard went through the attacks at
-Ypres. During the bitter month of February this same
-First Guard Infantry Brigade rendered futile and vain
-all the science and gallantry manifested by the French
-troops at Perthes, and won new laurels in the frantic
-struggle for Hill 196. Yet this crack regiment did not
-disdain, when ordered to the rear for a brief, much-needed
-rest, to continue its exercises and drills from the
-very first day of its holiday. In battle, even, when under
-cover, this regiment went through the manual of arms,
-practised positions and stood at attention.</p>
-
-<p>One thing more. Let us educate our young men to be
-strong and hard. Let us guard against influences that
-tend to soften or make for effeminacy, so that, when future
-need arises, the coming generation may be able successfully
-to cope with conditions similar to those which
-confronted our troops in the Champagne. Let us weed
-out the poison which is eating into the marrow of our
-national life&mdash;the cry for pleasure or youthful liberties.</p>
-
-<p>Then, too, let us instil in the youth of our nation simple<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</a></span>
-faith, a firm belief in the Lord God, whose will
-directs the destinies of mankind. Those who went
-through the battle of the Champagne agree in saying that
-without a firm belief in God they never would have been
-able to live through those harrowing days, and to the
-handful, who lacked faith, faith came amid shower of
-shells, during attacks of bayonets.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>A DAY'S WORK WITH A FRENCH
-SUBMARINE</h2>
-
-<p><i>An American s Experience under the Sea</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Told by Fred B. Pitney, by Authority of the French
-Minister of Marine</i></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>This story is told from "a certain formidable naval base on the
-coast of France." The American who relates it went out on
-scout duty on a submarine&mdash;for a single day. He tells how it
-feels to dive, the sensation of being shot at&mdash;not "unpleasant or
-trying on the nerves." Mr. Pitney is one of the war correspondents
-for the <i>New York Tribune</i>.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;"WE FIRED NINE SHOTS AND SUNK BENEATH
-THE SEA"</p>
-
-<p>To appear on the surface, fire nine shots at an enemy
-vessel and disappear in safety, untouched, below the
-surface, all in the space of forty-five seconds&mdash;this, I
-believe, constitutes a submarine record. Yet, this feat
-I witnessed as an observer on board a French submarine
-in active service.</p>
-
-<p>Before this I was a passenger on a vessel that was
-attacked by a submarine. A torpedo was launched at us
-from below the surface, while we were anxiously trying
-to pick up the periscope of the submerged vessel, for we
-were in dangerous waters. We had just discovered the
-periscope when the torpedo was sent at us. Five minutes
-later the submarine came to the surface and fired
-a round at us from the gun abaft the turret we lay to
-and the passengers were transferred in a small boat from
-the passenger vessel to the submarine. It was then that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span>
-I was on board the submarine while it attacked another
-vessel.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, on the afternoon in question I participated in all
-the phases of submarine warfare, including entering a
-harbor protected with net and floating mines, filled with
-warships and surrounded with land batteries. Possibly
-the most exciting moment of all in an afternoon filled
-with thrills was when one land battery, uncertain of our
-identity, fired three shots across our bows and we had to
-lie to and prove who we were with a string of signal
-flags before we could proceed on our tortuous path among
-the mines.</p>
-
-<p>Our little vessel, put at our disposal by the French
-Ministry of Marine to view the defences of a certain
-formidable naval base on the coast of France, was calmly
-traversing the waters near the mouth of the harbor, when
-a young officer, standing beside me on the bridge said:
-"We must look out for submarines near here."</p>
-
-<p>"Germans?" I asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, yes," he replied, "Germans, of course."</p>
-
-<p>We had already passed through the net that protects
-the mouth of the harbor and had been warned that we
-were going through a mine field, and that sometimes,
-especially in bad weather, the mines got loose and drifted
-about casually, getting in most anybody's way. Now we
-had the added pleasure of a possible encounter with a
-German submarine.</p>
-
-<p>"How many German submarines are there in the Mediterranean?"
-I asked.</p>
-
-<p>"About thirty-five," he said.</p>
-
-<p>Recalling my geography, it seemed we had a pretty
-good chance of being seen.</p>
-
-<p>"Are you a submarine officer?" I asked.</p>
-
-<p>He told me that he was, and added that he would not
-change his work for any other branch of the service. I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</a></span>
-told him that I had always understood submarine service
-was particularly unpleasant and trying on the nerves.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, no. On the contrary, it is very restful," he said,
-"and extremely interesting and great sport."</p>
-
-<p>"How old are you?" I asked.</p>
-
-<p>He was thirty-two and unmarried.</p>
-
-<p>"Perhaps that accounts for it," I said.</p>
-
-<p>"Perhaps," he agreed. "I don't know. But it is the
-sporting interest that makes the submarine service so
-fine."</p>
-
-<p>He told of cruising in the North Sea, watching for
-German torpedo boats, of weeks on guard duty in the
-Channel, assuring the service between France and England,
-and of other weeks submerged in the Adriatic,
-blockading the Austrian ports.</p>
-
-<p>"We had to pick our way through the mine fields submerged,"
-he said, "and then lie forty hours submerged on
-blockade duty. When our turn ended, we would pick
-our way back through the mines for a rest."</p>
-
-<p>"But surely that was trying on the nerves," I said.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, no," he declared. "Not at all. We had a good
-rest there. There was nothing to do but sleep and
-watch."</p>
-
-<p>"What was the worst part of that service?" I asked.</p>
-
-<p>"The hydroplanes," he answered readily. "They were
-always flying over the harbor looking for us, and there
-was always the possibility that one of them would discover
-us and drop a bomb."</p>
-
-<p>"In that event what would happen to you?" I asked.</p>
-
-<p>"No one would ever know," he replied, "unless we
-sank in shallow enough water to be raised."</p>
-
-<p>He said it in the most casual manner.</p>
-
-<p>"Has there ever been a fight between two submarines?"
-was my next question.</p>
-
-<p>He had been in two in the North Sea, he told me. "If<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span>
-you are on the surface, you fight with your guns," he
-said, "but, if you are under the surface, you go at it with
-torpedoes; there is not much chance with torpedoes,
-because you can only see the periscope and you have no
-idea which way the other fellow is going. Nothing happened
-in either fight I had. We both got off safely."</p>
-
-<p>During this conversation both of us and four of the
-ship's officers had our glasses on the sea, watching for
-submarines. One of the ship's officers now announced a
-suspicious looking white wave on the port bow. It was
-suspicious because it moved, but it was a very tiny little
-wave, only about three feet long and the breadth of a
-carpenter's hand. No one would ever have suspected
-it without expert advice.</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;ON A SUBMARINE IN A ROUGH SEA</p>
-
-<p>That, as I learned, is one of the greatest dangers of
-the submarine. Of course, we have all been told it many
-times, but when the thing is once experienced it is truly
-appreciated, and not until then. The approach of the
-submarine is more insidious than the taste for absinthe.</p>
-
-<p>There is merely that little white wave only occasionally
-to be seen&mdash;the white water curling around the periscope&mdash;and
-with the sea running at all high there would be no
-white wave that could be distinguished from the white
-tops of the other waves. Then, if the submarine chooses
-to remain near the surface one can after a long time of
-very close study make out the periscope as a very small
-stick, like a piece of lath, poking up out of the water.
-But it only sticks up a little more than a foot when it is
-the most willing to be seen, while if, as in our case, it is
-not willing to be seen, the submarine, having located its
-prey, dives deeper and all trace of it is lost, the next thing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span>
-being a torpedo coming from an entirely different point
-on the horizon.</p>
-
-<p>Our officers were experts at watching for submarines,
-and though the little white wave made by the periscope
-disappeared, they caught the white wake of the torpedo
-coming toward the port quarter and sheered off to escape
-it. The torpedo passed harmlessly by our stern, but the
-adventure was not ended, for hardly a minute later we
-heard a shot from off the starboard quarter and, turning
-in that direction, saw that the submarine had come to the
-surface and was busily firing at us to bring us to.</p>
-
-<p>We stopped without any foolish waste of time in argument.
-I asked if a boat would be sent to us, or if we
-would have to get our boat.</p>
-
-<p>"They carry a small folding boat," said the officer to
-whom I had been talking, "but we will have to send our
-boat."</p>
-
-<p>While we were getting our boat over the side, the
-submarine moved closer in, keeping her gun bearing on
-us all the time, most uncomfortably. The gun stood
-uncovered on the deck, just abaft the turret. It was
-thickly coated with grease to protect it when the vessel
-submerged. It is only the very latest type of submarines
-that have disappearing guns which go under cover when
-the vessel submerges and are fired from within the ship,
-which makes all the more surprising the speed with which
-a submarine can come to the surface, the men get out on
-deck, fire the gun, get in again and the vessel once more
-submerge.</p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;IN THE SECRET CHAMBERS OF A
-SUBMARINE</p>
-
-<p>I was in the first boatload that went over to the submarine.
-From a distance it looked like nothing so much<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span>
-as a rather long piece of 4 x 8 floating on the water,
-with another block set on top of it and a length of lath
-nailed on the block. It lost none of these characteristics
-as we neared it. It only gained a couple of ropes along
-the sides of the 4 x 8, while men kept coming mysteriously
-out of the block until a round dozen were waiting
-to receive us. The really surprising thing was that the
-men turned out to be perfectly good French sailors, with
-a most exceedingly polite French lieutenant to help us
-aboard the little craft.</p>
-
-<p>It was a little surprise the admiral of the port had
-prepared for us, and nothing could have been better prepared
-to give us the true flavor of submarine warfare.
-We had had all the sensation of being chased, fired on and
-captured&mdash;everything except being sunk in mid-ocean.
-Now we were to have the other experience of chasing
-and capturing the enemy.</p>
-
-<p>The vessel we were in was a 500-ton cruising submarine.
-It had just come from eight months' guarding
-the Channel, and showed all the battering of eight
-months of a very rough and stormy career with no time
-for a lie-up for repairs. It was interesting to see the
-commander hand the depth gauge a wallop to start it
-working and find out if the centre of the boat was really
-nine feet higher than either end. We were fifty-four feet
-under water and diving when the commander performed
-that little experiment and we continued to dive while the
-gauge spun around and finally stopped at a place which
-indicated approximately that our back was not broken.
-I suppose that was one of the things my friend the lieutenant
-referred to when he said life on a submarine was
-such a sporting proposition.</p>
-
-<p>We boarded the submarine over the tail end and balanced
-our way up the long narrow block, like walking
-a tight rope, to the turret, where we descended through<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</a></span>
-a hole like the opening into a gas main into a small round
-compartment about six feet in diameter exactly in the
-midship section, which was the largest compartment in
-the ship. Running each way from it the length of the
-vessel were long corridors, some two feet wide. On each
-side of the corridors were rows of tiny compartments,
-which were the living and working rooms of the ship.
-Naturally, most of the space was given up to the working
-rooms.</p>
-
-<p>The officers' quarters consisted of four tiny compartments,
-two on each side of the after corridor. The first
-two were the mess room and chart room, and the second
-pair were the cabins of the commander&mdash;a lieutenant&mdash;and
-his second in command, an ensign. Behind them was
-an electric kitchen, and next came the engines, first two
-sets of Diesel engines, one on each side of the corridor,
-each of 400 horsepower. These were for running on
-the surface. Then came four bunks for the quartermasters
-and last the electric motors for running under
-the surface. The motors were run from storage batteries
-and were half the power of the Diesel engines.
-The quarters of the crew were along the sides of the
-forward corridor. The floors of the corridor were an
-unbroken series of trap doors, covering the storage tanks
-for drinking water, food and the ship's supplies. The
-torpedo tubes were forward of the men's quarters. Ten
-torpedoes were carried. The ammunition for the deck
-gun was stored immediately beneath the gun, which was
-mounted between the turret and the first batch, abaft the
-turret. Besides the turret there were three hatches in
-the deck, one forward and two aft.</p>
-
-<p>There were thirty-four men in the crew. Each quartermaster
-was directly responsible for six men, while
-the commander and his second were responsible for five
-each. The men are counted every two hours, as there is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span>
-great danger of men being lost overboard when running
-on the surface, and in bad weather they are sometimes
-counted as often as every half hour.</p>
-
-<p>The turret was divided in two sections. In the after
-part was the main hatch and behind it a stationary periscope,
-standing about thirty inches above the surface of
-the water when the deck was submerged and only the
-periscope showing. There was no opening in the forward
-section of the turret, but the fighting periscope, which
-could be drawn down into the interior or pushed up to
-ten feet above the surface when the vessel was completely
-submerged, extended through the top.</p>
-
-<p>It is with this periscope that the vessel is navigated.
-The submarine sails at a depth at which the fighting periscope
-shows about eighteen inches above the surface,
-while the commander, standing on two iron grips, with
-his head, shoulders and body in the turret and his legs
-sticking down into the cabin, keeps his eyes glued to the
-sights of the periscope, which he constantly turns from
-side to side to take in all points of the limited horizon.
-The part of the fighting periscope that extends above
-the water is a brass rod about two and one-half inches in
-diameter, while its eye is only three-quarters of an inch
-in diameter. It is on this tiny opening that both the
-safety and fighting ability of the vessel depend.</p>
-
-<p>For two hours, turn and turn about, the commander
-and his second stand watch on the iron grips in the
-turret, one eye on the periscope, the other on the compass.
-And this goes on for weeks on end. It is only
-when they lie for a few hours fifty to seventy-five feet
-below the surface that they can get some rest. And
-even then there is no real rest, for one or the other of
-them must be constantly on duty, testing pipes and
-gauges, air pressure, water pressure and a thousand
-other things.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>I met the next day another officer whose mustache
-and eyebrows were black as jet, but whose hair was
-silver white. He was thirty-eight years old. For six
-years and a half he had been a submarine officer, he
-told me.</p>
-
-<p>"Why did you quit it?" I asked him.</p>
-
-<p>"Too old," he said.</p>
-
-<p>"Is there an age limit?" I asked.</p>
-
-<p>"No," he replied, "but a man knows when he is too old
-for the work."</p>
-
-<p>Yet nothing would induce those who have not yet
-found themselves too old to leave it. One would think
-the sailors, at any rate, would find the life tiresome or
-too dangerous. I talked to several of them about it, but
-they all agreed that they would not change.</p>
-
-<p>"Is this life better than on a battleship?" I asked one
-sailor.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, yes," he replied. "I would not go back to a battleship."</p>
-
-<p>"What makes it better?" I asked.</p>
-
-<p>"It is more tranquil," he answered.</p>
-
-<p>Tranquil, sixty feet under water and your life hanging
-on a gauge that needs a good heavy wallop to make it
-work.</p>
-
-<p>When we dropped through the hatch into the interior
-of the submarine and the cover was clamped down over
-our heads the commander at once ordered me back into
-the turret.</p>
-
-
-<p>IV&mdash;"WE RAN SUBMERGED THROUGH A
-MINE FIELD"</p>
-
-<p>"Hurry, if you want to see her dive," he said.</p>
-
-<p>I climbed into the after section of the turret and fastened
-my eye to the periscope. Around the top of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</a></span>
-turret was a circle of bulls' eyes and I was conscious of
-the water dashing against them while the spray washed
-over the glass of the periscope. The little vessel rolled
-very slightly on the surface, though there was quite a
-bit of sea running. I watched the horizon through the
-periscope and watched for the dive, expecting a distinct
-sensation, but the first thing I noticed was that even the
-slight roll had ceased and I was surprised to see that
-the bulls' eyes were completely under water. The next
-thing there was no more horizon. The periscope also
-was covered and we were completely beneath the surface.</p>
-
-<p>"Did it make you sick?" the commander asked, when
-I climbed down from the turret, and when I told him no
-he was surprised, for he said most men were made sick
-by their first dive.</p>
-
-<p>The thing most astonishing to me about that experience
-was how a submerged submarine can thread its way
-through a mine field. For though the water is luminous
-and translucent one can hardly make out the black hull
-of the boat under the turret and a mine would have
-to be on top of you before you could see it. The men
-who watch for mines must have a sense for them as
-well as particularly powerful sight.</p>
-
-<p>We continued to dive until we were sixty-eight feet
-below the surface, too deep to strike any mine, and there
-we ran tranquilly on our electric engines, while the
-commander navigated the vessel and the second in command
-opened champagne in the two by four mess room.
-After half an hour of under-water work we came near
-enough the surface for our fighting periscope to stick
-twenty inches out of the water and searched the lonely
-horizon for a ship to attack.</p>
-
-<p>It was not long before we sighted a mine trawler,
-steaming for the harbor, and speeded up to overtake her.</p>
-
-<p>"Pikers!" said our commander, as we circled twice<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</a></span>
-around the mine trawler; "they can't find us."</p>
-
-<p>Five men on the trawler were scanning the sea with
-glasses, looking for submarines. We could follow all
-their motions, could tell when they thought they had
-found us and see their disappointment at their mistakes,
-but though we were never more than five hundred yards
-from them I did not think they were pikers because they
-did not find us. I had tried that hunt for the tiny wave
-of a periscope.</p>
-
-<p>"No use wasting a torpedo on those fellows," said our
-commander. "We will use the gun on them."</p>
-
-<p>"How far away can you use a torpedo?" I asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Two hundred yards is the best distance," he said.
-"Never more than five hundred. A torpedo is pure
-guesswork at more than five hundred yards."</p>
-
-<p>We crossed the bow of the trawler, circled around to
-her starboard quarter and came to the surface, fired nine
-shots and submerged again in forty-five seconds.</p>
-
-<p>The prey secured, we ran submerged through the mine
-field and past the net barrier to come to the surface well
-within the harbor and proceed peacefully to our mooring
-under the shelter of the guns of the land forts.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>TALE OF THE CHILD OF TERBEEKE</h2>
-
-<p><i>How It Saved a British Battalion</i></p>
-
-<p><i>By Oliver Madox Hueffer</i></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>In this little story the author sets down the facts of a very
-remarkable affair&mdash;how a child saved a British battalion from
-annihilation, thereby giving rise to yet more legends of the
-"Angels of Mons" description. A true story from the <i>Wide
-World Magazine</i>.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;THE STORY OF HIPPOLYTE</p>
-
-<p>In the days to come the historian will find fruitful scope
-for a work on faith, as shown in the Great War. And
-among the "Angels of Mons" and other celestial visitants
-I hope he will find a niche for the "Child of Terbeeke."</p>
-
-<p>I came across the story&mdash;and the child himself, for that
-matter&mdash;when I was billeted with my battalion at Durdegem.
-Durdegem is as ugly a little Walloon village as you
-need look for, but, internationally speaking, it is as interesting
-as ugly. It stands on French soil; you could
-almost throw a tin of bully-beef, if you were so unpatriotically
-wasteful, into Belgium; what is, for all practical
-purposes, temporarily Germany is not more than
-three miles away; yet English is almost the only language
-you will hear in the streets. Even the children, those who
-are left of them, speak English; they say "Na poo" or
-"No bon," and sometimes, it is to be feared, a swearword,
-as patly as a bombardier. This is really less surprising
-than that there should be any children at all,
-with the German lines so close; but things have been
-comparatively quiet thereabouts for months past, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</a></span>
-though some of the houses are still ruinous and others
-have had their windows blocked with sandbags so long
-that already the grass is beginning to grow upon them,
-the inhabitants have settled down to the not unprofitable
-task of selling comforts to the British soldiers who are
-always passing and repassing.</p>
-
-<p>I was billeted upon Madame Tavernier, who owned the
-Blanchisserie du Cygne and was rapidly making her fortune
-out of the laundry bills she rendered to British officers,
-who are notoriously millionaires and well able to
-pay for the privilege of defending Northern France. With
-Madame Tavernier there was also staying&mdash;while other
-arrangements were being made for him&mdash;Hippolyte, otherwise
-famous as the Child of Terbeeke.</p>
-
-<p>Hippolyte was not yet six, but already he could say
-"Slee-o-pums" and "Stunt-ease" and "Fum-fers" so
-plainly that any drill-sergeant would have wept with
-pride to hear him. Also he wore the full uniform of a
-British sergeant-major, with puttees and a walking-stick
-and the badge of a famous Line regiment, all specially
-made and presented to him for his very own. Also,
-although he was temporarily the paying-guest of Madame
-Tavernier and allowed himself to be petted by a whole
-serial-story of British officers, he had a service-battalion
-to act as his father and to fight for him any battles he
-might wish fought. It is to be feared that a precocious
-understanding of these facts had made him rather conceited,
-and I do not think I should have liked him very
-much had I remained with Madame Tavernier longer
-than three days. Anyhow, this was his story, as related
-to me by that excellent lady and vouched for by a cloud
-of witnesses.</p>
-
-<p>Hippolyte came from Terbeeke, which is in the south
-of flat Flanders. Madame declared that he was the son
-of a professor at Louvain University, and added that the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</a></span>
-professor quarrelled with his wife soon after the birth of
-Hippolyte, and that the wife thereupon returned to her
-native village.</p>
-
-<p>Hippolyte, therefore, at a very early age indeed, went
-to live at Terbeeke. Terbeeke, I understand&mdash;for I was
-never there&mdash;lies just at the southward edge of the Flemish
-flats. Northwards the country is as flat as a drawing-board,
-criss-crossed with dykes and little canals; to the
-east is a wide State forest, and to the south a range of
-low hills. Between the little town and the hills lies what
-in pre-war days was Terbeeke's one claim to fame&mdash;the
-Terbeeke mere or marsh, forming a crescent to the south
-and west. I do not know how broad or wide it is, but it
-has been famous for centuries as bottomless, and a whole
-cycle of legend has grown up round it, dealing with the
-notabilities of one kind or another who have been drowned
-in its brown, oozy depths. Perhaps because of this
-evil fame it has never been drained, and is to-day as
-darkly ominous as in the times of fairies and lubber-fiends.</p>
-
-<p>The mother of Hippolyte lived in a small and lonely
-house at the other side of the marsh from the town of
-Terbeeke. She must have possessed some private means,
-for she seems to have carried on no business of any
-kind, but to have devoted most of her time to religion,
-crossing the marsh-arm several times daily to the
-parish church, which stood in the centre of the town.
-Otherwise her days were passed in solitude, for she lived
-quite alone with the child, their only companion being a
-large dog. She passed the time not taken up by religion
-in wandering about the marsh, for she had few friends,
-and the people of Terbeeke often saw the three moving
-about the surface of the quagmire in places where there
-was no known track.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;IN PATH OF PRUSSIAN INVADERS</p>
-
-<p>Time passed, and the war broke out. Terbeeke was
-not in the direct path of the invaders, and, sheltered behind
-the forest, it almost seemed to the townspeople as
-though they might escape the fate of the rest of Belgium.
-But the respite was not for long. The low muttering of
-distant guns grew every day louder; the stream of fugitives
-hurrying through the forest and past the town towards
-the French frontier grew always denser; at last
-the climax came. A British officer dashed into the town
-at three o'clock in the morning and hurried into the
-Mairie. The civilian population, it was announced, must
-evacuate their houses instantly.</p>
-
-<p>There followed the usual scenes of frantic terror and
-chaotic haste that happened so often during the opening
-chapters of the Great War. The one road out of the town
-was blocked with every kind of conveyance, from bicycle
-to dog-carts; there were blocks at every corner; precious
-minutes were wasted in useless recriminations; and long
-before the last civilian had left, the turmoil of desperate
-fighting was heard coming always nearer through the dim
-mystery of the forest.</p>
-
-<p>It was one of the incidents of the Great Retreat. A
-flank battalion of British infantry, by some mishap, lost
-direction. Cut off from the main body, and fighting desperately,
-it was driven always further from the path
-along which safety lay, until at last, flinging itself into
-the forest of Terbeeke, for a whole day and night it held
-off the furious attacks of a brigade of Prussians.</p>
-
-<p>But the odds were too great. Slowly but surely the
-battalion was forced back through the forest to the very
-outskirts. Back from there, after another frantic assault,
-it reeled, reduced now to two sparse companies&mdash;some<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</a></span>
-three hundred men in all&mdash;-across the little edging of
-cornfields into the stricken streets of Terbeeke.</p>
-
-<p>There, at last, it found some respite. The Prussians,
-having learnt by bitter experience the fighting value of
-the "contemptible" little force arrayed against them,
-jibbed at the open frontal attack across bare plough-land,
-and remained hidden within the forest, awaiting reinforcements.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the British remnant fought desperately to
-establish themselves within the village and turn every
-house into a citadel; while their commander, a lieutenant
-of something under twenty-one, racked his brain for
-some way of escape. At one time it might have been
-possible to skirt the northern edge of the marsh, but
-already the attacking Prussians had pushed forward, and
-the British were now enclosed within a triangle, formed
-as to its sides by the overwhelming Prussian force, and
-as to its base by the impassable fastnesses of the mere.</p>
-
-<p>"Unless something happens pretty quick," said the
-C.O. to his second-in-command, a boy of nineteen, "things
-are pretty considerably all U-P." (He said something to
-that effect, I mean. Madame Tavernier's narrative did
-not, of course, fill in such details.)</p>
-
-<p>They were standing in the porch of the old church,
-gazing disconsolately over the flat stretches of marshland.
-The Boche fire had temporarily ceased, and they
-devoted the respite to seeking some way by which the
-marsh might be crossed even at the eleventh hour. But
-there was none, or none which they could discern.</p>
-
-<p>"Wonder what they are waiting for?" said the boy,
-lighting a cigarette.</p>
-
-<p>"Bringing up the guns, of course. It will be dark in
-an hour." The young C.O. gazed hopelessly to where
-the sun was already dropping to the cloud-capped western<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</a></span>
-horizon, straining with ominous red the reedy pools
-before them.</p>
-
-<p>"Moon will be up, though."</p>
-
-<p>"All the better for them. I should give the village another
-two hours. And then&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"You aren't going to surrender, surely?" There was
-the quiver of horror in the young voice.</p>
-
-<p>They were interrupted by the C.S.M. of B Company.</p>
-
-<p>"Not more than ten rounds a man, sir," he reported.
-"Machine-gun out of order." He made his report with
-the tranquil woodenness of his kind, without a quiver of
-voice or muscle. (If you say that it is impossible for me
-to know what these men said, or how they behaved, I
-can only reply that I have been through the same sort of
-thing myself.)</p>
-
-<p>"Thanks, major. Men come in that were sounding the
-marsh?"</p>
-
-<p>"Report there is no way across, sir."</p>
-
-<p>"They certainly won't find one now it's getting dark.
-Better get back to your posts. They will begin again
-soon."</p>
-
-<p>Even as he spoke there came the complaining whine of
-a four-inch shell high overhead.</p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;THE BABE ON THE BATTLEFIELD WITH
-HIS DOG</p>
-
-<p>Possibly it was the new sound that woke Hippolyte,
-or perhaps Casper, the mongrel wolf-hound, took it for
-the challenge of some ancestral enemy. At least, some
-half-hour later No. 21687 Private John Smith, of C
-Company, had a vision. He was not naturally an imaginative
-man, but he hastened to report it to the C.S.M.</p>
-
-<p>"Lummy, sir," he said, "if there ain't a bloomin' angel
-comin' across the bloomin' marsh!"</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>And, sure enough, across the very centre of the shivering
-quag came a small figure, clothed in a long white
-robe very like those attributed to mediæval angels, and
-with a golden aureole about its head, cast by the last rays
-of the dying sun. Actually it was no angel, but little
-Hippolyte, looking for his mother. She had left him,
-very early in the morning, to go to Mass, trusting him,
-as often before, to the care of Casper. Usually she was
-not gone for more than half an hour or so. On that day,
-however, she had not returned in one hour or in three.
-She never <i>would</i> return, for before the third hour she
-was lying dead in the little square before the church-door&mdash;one
-of a group of six, men and women, who had
-been caught leaving the building when the Germans, in
-their first assault, enfiladed the main street with machine-gun
-fire. They lay side by side, very peacefully, just as
-they fell, for the hard-pressed defenders of the village
-had found no leisure to remove them.</p>
-
-<p>Hippolyte waited very patiently&mdash;as was his wont. He
-cried a little from loneliness at first, but his mother,
-before she left him, had set out the little portion of milk
-and bread that was to be his breakfast. Growing hungry,
-he sought for it in its accustomed place, ate it, and fell
-asleep again. It was the dog at last that disturbed him,
-later in the afternoon, by whimpering and scratching at
-the door, and gave him the great idea of starting out to
-find the mother who was so long in returning.</p>
-
-<p>Child and dog set out together along the imperceptible
-track of safety that crept and twisted across the marsh.
-Alone Hippolyte would almost certainly have strayed
-from it, but the dog's surer instinct guarded him until,
-just at the moment when hope was at an end, he came as
-a vision of hope to the spent company of Englishmen.</p>
-
-<p>That is practically the end of the story, for you can
-imagine the rest, except, perhaps, that the child, when he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</a></span>
-had almost reached the hard ground, grew afraid of the
-sound of firing, the noise overhead, and the gaunt, stark
-men staring at him in wondering silence. So he turned
-homeward again, Casper stalking beside him, sacrificing
-his lust for battle to his duty as foster-father. But they
-went slowly, the child often turning back to stare with
-wondering eyes at the increasing chaos behind him and,
-as the more impressionable among the soldiers would
-have it, beckoning them to follow him towards safety.</p>
-
-<p>Follow they did, but as unbeaten soldiers should, in
-good order and with due precautions&mdash;and so escaped.
-The Germans lost time before they entered the deserted
-village, for they feared an ambush. When they <i>did</i> enter,
-it was long past sunset and the night was too dark to do
-anything before dawn. Even then they had no guide to
-show them the track across the marsh, and they were
-forced to skirt it, losing so much time that the British
-battalion&mdash;if you can call less than three hundred men a
-battalion&mdash;got clear away, and in due course picked up the
-main body, taking with them Hippolyte and Casper.</p>
-
-<p>You would say, if you did not know human nature,
-that there was no room for a legend of celestial intervention.
-But you would be wrong. Even in the rescued
-battalion&mdash;long since brought up to strength and upholding
-its laurels elsewhere in the line&mdash;the story holds good
-that somewhere unspecified on the Belgian frontier an
-angel, mediæval in every detail down to aureole, wings,
-and celestial robes, did actually intervene and rescue it
-from under the very noses of the baffled Boches. And
-this although Hippolyte, adopted child of the regiment,
-sports his sergeant-major's uniform for everyone to see,
-and Casper, brilliantly caparisoned, stalks as a mascot
-should behind the drums. Elsewhere the legend has assumed
-new details, as I realized when a very excellent
-clergyman assured me that it was ... George himself,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</a></span>
-mounted upon a white horse (so transmogrified, I take it,
-was black Casper), who rode up and down the line before
-the 2nd Battalion of the West Loamshires, shaking his
-sword at the advancing Prussian Guard, who not unnaturally
-fled in disorder. Perhaps, in Terbeeke, he has by
-this time become Ste. Gudule, or some other patron saint
-of the Belgians, with a fiery dragon or whatever be her
-saintly attributes. I don't know, because, as I say, I was
-never in Terbeeke, but here at least you have what really
-happened, as Madame Tavernier told it to me in the front
-room of her Blanchisserie du Cygne, in the village of
-Durdegem, and in the presence of Hippolyte himself,
-who afterwards begged shamelessly for <i>sous</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>A HERO TALE OF THE RED CROSS</h2>
-
-<p><i>Told by G. S. Petroff, War Correspondent of the
-"Russkoye Slovo," Moscow</i></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>The following incident is narrated in M. Petroff's account of a
-battle on the eastern front. Translated for <i>Current History</i>.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;STORY OF THE WOUNDED GERMAN</p>
-
-<p>One of our soldiers brought with him a German
-officer, who could hardly stand on his feet. His leg had
-been pierced by a bayonet, his shoulder was bleeding
-from a bullet, and his arm had been bruised by the butt
-end of a rifle. He was losing consciousness from pain
-and loss of blood. As soon as the soldier led him to our
-place he dropped with his whole weight to the ground.
-The doctor bandaged him, exclaiming: "What luck!
-Three wounds, and in spite of all of them he will be
-well soon. The wound in the leg is only a flesh wound,
-his arm is badly bruised but not broken, and only his
-collarbone at his shoulder is broken. In a month he will
-be all right again. Just look! what a handsome fellow,
-and what expensive underwear!"</p>
-
-<p>The bandaged officer came to himself, looked around
-the yard, and, seeing the farmhouse in the background on
-fire, he sharply seated himself.</p>
-
-<p>"Now be quiet, calm yourself," said the doctor, speaking
-in German and taking the man gently by the
-shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>"My wife, my wife!" cried the German, tearing himself
-forward.</p>
-
-<p>"Where is the wife?"</p>
-
-<p>"There, in the house, in the fire!" He made an effort<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</a></span>
-to get off the stretcher from under the doctor's hands.</p>
-
-<p>"Is he delirious or what?" muttered the doctor in
-Russian. "There is no one in the house," he added soothingly
-in German. "Your German wounded were there,
-but they were saved in time."</p>
-
-<p>"But my wife? My wife!" cried the captive in terror.</p>
-
-<p>"What wife? How did she come here?"</p>
-
-<p>"She is a nurse. She was here with the wounded.
-We loved each other, we married only a year ago. She
-became a nurse. Our regiment happened to be near
-their hospital. Your offensive was unexpected. There
-was no time to remove the hospital. The other nurses
-left, but she would not leave when I was so near. Where
-is she? My wife!"</p>
-
-<p>"Did any one see a German nurse in the house or
-yard?" asked the doctor, turning to the Russian soldiers
-and telling them briefly what the prisoner had said:</p>
-
-<p>"There was no woman," came the response. "The
-house was empty. Look at the fire within. Even mice
-would have run out by now."</p>
-
-<p>At this moment something metallic shrilled through
-the air. A heavy German shell flew over us.</p>
-
-<p>"Scoundrels!" cursed the doctor. "They are firing on
-us&mdash;and their own wounded! We must get out of this.
-Two or three more shells and they will begin dropping
-in the yard. Carry our wounded first, then theirs.
-Hurry, or we shall remain here for eternity!"</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;A WOMAN'S FIGURE AT WINDOW OF
-BURNING HOUSE</p>
-
-<p>The captive officer, apparently powerless, could not rise
-from the stretcher, where he was lying with one of his
-soldiers who had been wounded before him. He gazed
-devouringly at the blazing house. Suddenly he shouted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</a></span>
-savagely: "There, at the window, under the roof!
-Look, she is breaking the window&mdash;where the smoke is
-pouring out!"</p>
-
-<p>We looked at the roof of the blazing house, and, in
-truth, there was a woman's figure in white, with a red
-cross on her breast. The doctor shouted: "Eh, fellows,
-it is true! A woman was left in the house&mdash;a nurse&mdash;his
-wife!"</p>
-
-<p>"What can be done?" asked the stunned soldiers.
-"The whole house is on fire, and she is not strong enough
-to break through the window frame. She must be weak
-from fright. But why did she go up? Why not down?"</p>
-
-<p>"There's no use guessing!" shouted a bearded fellow,
-evidently from the reserves, throwing off his overcoat.</p>
-
-<p>"Where are you going?" cried the soldiers.</p>
-
-<p>But he was already out of reach of their voices. He
-rushed into the house. All were stupefied, fearing to
-breathe. A minute passed, another, a third. Then at
-the window appeared the bearded face of the Russian
-soldier. There came the sound of broken glass and
-wood. Above our heads something was shrilling, but
-no one paid attention to the German shells. The soldier
-broke the window, dragged the woman into the open air.
-She was unconscious.</p>
-
-<p>"Catch!" rang from above, and a big white parcel
-came down. The soldiers caught it successfully on the
-hero's outspread overcoat. Only one of them was hurt
-in the eye by the heel of her shoe.</p>
-
-<p>"How will our chap get back to us now?" asked the
-soldiers of one another. "It is hell inside."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, he will get out, all right," said some one. "It
-is easier to get out than to get in. He knows the way.
-And if he burns some of his beard, no harm; he has a
-large one."</p>
-
-<p>"Carry her to her husband!" ordered the doctor, "and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</a></span>
-get out from here immediately. The Germans are shelling
-us. Take away the rest, and don't forget the couple,"
-remarked jokingly the doctor, happy over the incident.
-"I will wait for our hero. He may be burned."</p>
-
-<p>The soldiers caught the remaining stretchers, and
-nearly ran out of the yard. At that moment a big German
-shell struck the burning house. A deafening explosion
-shook the air. The walls trembled, shook, and
-fell. The heroic soldier had not had time to get out.
-He remained buried under the ruins.</p>
-
-<p>When the woman recovered consciousness near her
-wounded husband she did not understand where she was.
-She murmured in perplexity: "Dream, death? Otto, is
-that you? Are we together in heaven?"</p>
-
-<p>"On earth and both alive," calmed the doctor.</p>
-
-<p>"How did you get to the upper story?" asked the
-husband.</p>
-
-<p>"I saw Russian soldiers run into the house. I feared
-violence, so I ran upstairs. I thought I would run down
-later, but then came the fire.... A soldier appeared behind
-me and I was terrified to death."</p>
-
-<p>"But that soldier saved you!" sighed the doctor.</p>
-
-<p>"How? Where is he?"</p>
-
-<p>"In heaven, if there is such a place for heroes." The
-doctor then told them all. The German officer and his
-wife both cried.</p>
-
-<p>"But how was it that your guns were firing at a farm
-which you were occupying?" asked the prisoner.</p>
-
-<p>"Our guns?" exclaimed the doctor, who was already
-bandaging a new victim. "It was your guns that were
-shelling a house over which flew a German Red Cross
-flag. Our soldiers were saving the lives of your
-wounded, and your guns were firing at both ours and
-yours. They killed the man who saved you. That's the
-way the Kaiser makes war."</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>LIFE STORY OF "GRANDMOTHER
-OF THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION"</h2>
-
-<p><i>Triumphant Return from Forty-four Years in
-Siberian Exile</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Told by Catherine Breshkovskaya, the Russian
-Revolutionist</i></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>This life story of the "Grandmother of the Revolution," Catherine
-Breshkovskaya, is the living symbol of the Russian people's
-long and hard struggle for freedom. Of her seventy-three years
-forty-four have been spent in prison and Siberian exile. But
-neither the wilderness of Siberia nor the severity of convict
-labor has broken the spirit of this little woman. Entering the
-struggle against Czarism while still in its infancy, she lived to
-see its complete overthrow, and the Russian people remembered
-their loving "Babushka." They made her journey from Siberia
-to Petrograd after the revolution a continuous triumphal procession,
-such as no Czar or King has ever been accorded. Mme.
-Breshkovskaya, upon her arrival home, began touring Russia in
-the interests of Kerensky's policies. Her love for the common
-people, her influence on the peasantry, her faith in the stability
-of the New Russia, made her a great power. She has told the
-story of her life in the Petrograd weekly, "<i>Niva</i>," which has
-been translated by Isaac Don Levine for the <i>New York Tribune</i>.
-Here she tells for the first time how she journeyed afoot over
-Russia to preach "freedom from ignorance and political tyranny"
-to the peasants; how she was sentenced to Siberia; how she
-escaped, was captured, reimprisoned and flogged; and how on
-the news of the Czar's downfall she began her journey home on
-a sledge over the snow and ice to join her people in the establishment
-of the republic.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;"I ALWAYS PITIED THE SERFS"</p>
-
-<p>I was born in 1844. I passed my childhood and youth
-in the province of Tchernigoff, and all my life I remained
-grateful to my parents for the good and wise training and
-schooling which they gave me. They pitied the serfs
-and never oppressed them. Nevertheless there was a
-sharp difference between our life, the life of landlords,
-and that of the peasants in their cabins, such a shocking
-difference that my childish soul suffered greatly from the
-contradiction between the reality and the teaching of
-Christ. My mother would often read to us the New
-Testament and biographies of the great apostles of truth
-and love for humanity.</p>
-
-<p>All my life I thought so much and ceaselessly about
-the needs of the people, the suffering of the people, that
-all my sorrows and joys are bound up with the people.
-And I always made it my duty to serve the people and
-do all that is necessary to open the people's eyes to its
-own life and wants.</p>
-
-<p>My own life was entirely composed of love and devotion
-to my country and people and of a passionate desire
-to serve them with all the powers in my possession up to
-the very hour of my death.</p>
-
-<p>I am asked: "How did I arrive at the firm resolution
-to live only for the people?" I think that this resolution
-was always present in me, from my youngest years, from
-the very beginning of my conscious life.</p>
-
-<p>When I turn back in my mind to review my past life,
-I see myself, first of all, a little five-year-old lassie, who
-suffered at heart for somebody: for the coachman, or
-the chambermaid, or the day laborer, or the oppressed
-peasants (at that time serfdom still existed in Russia).</p>
-
-<p>The impressions of the people's suffering sank so deeply<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</a></span>
-into my childish soul that they never deserted me afterward
-in all my life.</p>
-
-<p>I was seventeen when, in 1861, the peasants were
-freed of the violence of the landlords, but were so badly
-supplied with land that the laboring masses were again
-forced to go into slavery to the wealthy. The agitations
-among the peasants provoked terrible executions. Their
-torture was taking place before my very eyes, strengthening
-my aspiration to serve the people with all my might,
-so as to lighten their bitter lot.</p>
-
-<p>No revolutionary circles and organizations were known
-to exist at that time in the provinces, but there soon came
-the activity of the Zemstvos, and I applied to it all my
-efforts. Ten years I labored in the peasant school and
-the village, organizing credit-savings banks, mutual aid,
-co-operative shops and campaigns on the eve of the elections
-of judges and rural boards. My work was progressing,
-the confidence of the peasants in me was helping
-it along, but against me and my assistants the nobility
-arose, reporting us to the ministers, and the labor of
-many years was swept away as if with a broom.</p>
-
-<p>The schools and banks were closed, all the honest people
-of our county and the whole province of Tchernigoff
-were placed under police surveillance, many were exiled
-to the northern provinces and me they began to persecute.</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;"I DECIDED TO START A REVOLUTION"</p>
-
-<p>I clearly perceived then that the government of Alexander
-II introduced reforms only on paper, only seeking
-to create the impression that it desired to better the life
-of the population. Actually, however, the government
-wickedly persecuted every attempt to help the laboring
-people to emerge from the darkness into light, to approach
-knowledge, to proclaim its own rights.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It was clearly evident, not only in our locality but
-throughout the whole of Russia, that the government
-feared knowledge in the people and endeavored to keep
-it in a state of rightless slavery. This compelled me to
-seek another path, another way of working in the interest
-of my beloved people, and toward the end of the '60s
-I decided to go to Russia in search of men with whom
-to start an illegal struggle, i.e., a movement forbidden
-under the Czar's laws.</p>
-
-<p>For more than two years I wandered about Russia,
-ever looking for some revolutionary centre, which could
-exist only as an underground organization. Gradually,
-by changing one kind of work for another, I penetrated
-into a rather large organization, which had decided to get
-personally in contact with the people, not through books
-and proclamations.</p>
-
-<p>At that time the difference between the sea of peasants
-and the little lake of intellectuals was so great that
-they were, entirely ignorant of one another. Besides, the
-moujik's suspicion of any person bearing the appearance
-of a "gentleman" was so deeply rooted that it was impossible
-to carry to the peasant and labor midst any message
-and retain the dress of the gentry. It was necessary to
-change the appearance from foot to head, to look a perfect
-plebeian.</p>
-
-<p>I put on a peasant dress, threw a bag across my shoulder,
-obtained a stick and set out to tramp. Although
-I did not tramp the country long, only one summer, yet
-I succeeded in visiting many villages, and nowhere did I
-meet with distrust. The peasants eagerly listened to my
-talks and those of my comrades. We told them that the
-land ought not belong to the few; that it should be placed
-in possession of all the people, of all those who wish to
-toil on it; that there ought not be such a system which
-permits the selling, mortgaging, buying and renting of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</a></span>
-thousands of acres by a few hands, while people were
-starving nearby because they lacked the land from which
-to obtain bread. The peasants would agree with us and
-also say that the land ought to belong to those who labor
-on it, who till it.</p>
-
-<p>We would also tell them that the landlords were oppressing
-the people; that they had seized all the government
-in their hands; that the bureaucracy was fraternizing
-with the landlords, hindering the people from living
-a free life. In this the peasants would also agree with us.</p>
-
-<p>We had difficulty only talking about one subject, the
-Czar. We tried to explain to the peasants that the Czar
-was acting concertedly with the nobility and bureaucracy,
-that he it was who was the chief oppressor of the people.
-But the peasants would not want to believe it. They
-were so distant in those days from understanding state
-affairs, being unable to read, because of general illiteracy,
-and lacking fundamental knowledge, that they had no
-idea how much evil the Czarist form of government had
-done to the nation.</p>
-
-<p>The peasants trusted the Czar; they were convinced
-that the Czar was a kind master of Russia who had to
-maintain an army to defend her from enemies, and that
-the peasants had to till the land, pay taxes, for the maintenance
-of the army. They thought that the Czar loved
-his people and took care of them, and, if officials did
-oppress the people sometimes, it was due to the fact that
-they deceived the Czar. And if the Czar were only to
-learn the whole truth he would drive out the officials and
-again become a loving father to his people.</p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;"I TOLD THE PEASANTS THE TRUTH
-ABOUT THE CZAR"</p>
-
-<p>Such were the beliefs of the peasants about the Czar.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</a></span>
-In spite of it all, I continued to tell them the real truth
-about the Czar, explaining to them that the Czar knows
-of all the oppressions and is in charge of every one of
-the oppressors. The peasants would say that I was mistaken,
-but, nevertheless, listened to my arguments, and
-not one of them insulted me with vulgar language.</p>
-
-<p>I was not alone in the tramp from village to village.
-Three thousand youths went to the people at that time,
-spreading all over the thirty-six provinces of Russia, and
-we all talked to the people on the same subject; we all
-endeavored to arouse the people to a good, free life.
-However, the government soon discovered our activities
-and began to arrest many, imprisoning, exiling to hard-labor
-settlements and to Siberia.</p>
-
-<p>I was arrested entirely by accident in 1874. I was
-"covering" the provinces of Kieff, Podolia, Tchernigoff
-and Kherson, and had in my bag detailed maps of these
-localities, in order to know my way and avoid arousing
-suspicion by questions. Whenever I stopped in the village
-cabins no peasant would ever look into my bag, and
-thus no one could ever find out who I was.</p>
-
-<p>But once, while stopping in Tulchin, the Province of
-Podolia, the woman-laborer of the peasant who gave
-shelter to me looked into my bag and discovered the maps
-there. To an illiterate person every printed word was
-a rarity, especially in those days. It will be understood,
-of course, that the laborer was shocked by her discovery.
-The same day she went to do some gardening for the
-sheriff and told him everything. The sheriff became
-alarmed and hurried off to look for me.</p>
-
-<p>And I, without suspecting anything, was at the time
-returning from the market, where I purchased a couple
-of apples, some pork and bread.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly I saw the sheriff racing toward me in a
-carriage, shouting: "Get into the carriage!"</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Well, I understood immediately what the trouble was.
-I got into the carriage and kept still.</p>
-
-<p>We arrived at the cabin. "Where is the luggage of this
-woman?" The peasant replied: "She has no luggage,
-but she has a bag."</p>
-
-<p>The bag was examined and what could they find in it
-but maps and proclamations? Clearly, my case was
-closed.</p>
-
-<p>The sheriff was rather inexperienced, simple-minded,
-so he unfolded the proclamations and started to read
-them aloud, before the whole crowd. The peasants, after
-listening to them, said:</p>
-
-<p>"These are the real words. The whole truth is written
-there. This is the very truth which the nobles have
-hidden from us."</p>
-
-<p>In the meantime the examining officer arrived, and
-there both of them began to read the proclamation aloud.
-Meanwhile a multitude of peasants gathered, listening
-even under the windows. They learned my proclamation
-by heart. The county police chief was notified. He
-arrived, immediately perceived the meaning of it all, and
-ordered me to prison.</p>
-
-
-<p>IV&mdash;"I WAS HANDCUFFED AND LOCKED IN A
-DARK CELL"</p>
-
-<p>In those days a woman propagandist was something
-unheard of and unseen. In fear of this new phenomenon
-the warden of the Bratzlau jail thought it necessary to
-incarcerate me immediately in a dark cell and handcuff
-me. A month passed in wandering about country prisons,
-till gendarmes came, took me away from the police and
-dragged me first to a Kieff jail, then to Moscow, and
-finally to Petrograd, where I was tried with other offenders
-after being kept in prison for four years in solitary<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</a></span>
-confinement. The condition of the imprisonment was
-serious. Of the 300 prisoners held for total only 193 survived,
-among whom there were 37 women. During all
-of my imprisonment I made no explanation to the judicial
-authorities, and I was condemned to five years of convict
-labor. But it was not dreadful. Nothing was dreadful
-when one had faith in one's righteousness.</p>
-
-<p>My healthy organism and ripe age helped me endure
-the many years' torments at a time when the young,
-tender lives fell sick quickly and were carried off one
-after another by death, leaving a feeling of atrocious pain
-and indelible bitterness.</p>
-
-<p>But we all retained our eagerness for activity, so early
-interrupted by an evil hand. The thought of returning
-to the party, to revolutionary work, lived in our minds
-in the form of a red-hot nail, and aroused all our abilities,
-all our power to seek a means to escape. There, to
-the fighters, to the bright populists, our spiritual vision
-was directed.</p>
-
-<p>I was already in on the rights of a settler, beyond the
-Baikal, in Barguzin, when, together with three men comrades,
-I moved into the hilly taiga, with its thousands of
-impediments and dangers. Our daring escape, which
-ended in our capture while wandering about unfathomed
-abysses and rocks, has been described by Tiutchev. I, as
-a former hard-labor criminal, was condemned to four
-years more of penal servitude and forty whips, which,
-however, the authorities did not dare to apply, "in order
-to arouse against the administration the political exiles,"
-as the Military Governor of the Outer Baikal said in his
-report.</p>
-
-<p>I was thus forced to go, in 1882, after another year
-of imprisonment, to the same old Kara mines, at that
-time full of prisons for convicts and politicals. Both
-the first and the second perished there of scurvy, typhus,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</a></span>
-endless tuberculosis, but mostly the convicts, as the officials
-disregarded them entirely and kept them in the most
-shameful conditions.</p>
-
-<p>My second arrival at Kara was for me rather a joyous
-occasion. When I first came there I was the only woman
-doing hard labor; it was not fashionable yet to send
-women to mines. But now I found already sixteen or
-eighteen feminine comrades, and all of my second term
-I passed in the best society in the world. The annual
-term of convict labor consisted of eight months and my
-term flew past me unnoticed. Only one thing was aggravating,
-and that was to see how the frailer among us in
-health gradually sank and surely neared their graves, in
-the blossom of their lives.</p>
-
-
-<p>V&mdash;"I LANGUISHED FOR EIGHT YEARS IN A
-DEAD CITY"</p>
-
-<p>In 1885 I was again sent on the rights of a settler
-beyond the Baikal, in the dead city of Selenginsk, where
-I spent eight of the most sad years of my life. The
-naked steppe, the nailed-up cabins and the tireless trailing
-of the police became my lot. I was given neither the
-rights of a peasant nor a passport for travel in Siberia.
-And the heart burned with a passionate desire to escape,
-to renew the struggle with the enraged foe and take revenge
-for the innocently destroyed powers for good&mdash;the
-daughters and sons of our motherland. I sought,
-attempted, fought against obstacles, but all in vain. The
-steppe beyond the Baikal, the moundless Mongolian
-steppe, and, on the north, the inaccessible Baikal were the
-severe allies of the guard with which the authorities had
-surrounded me. There was no railroad nor steamship
-connection with the outside world. Right there then, in
-lifeless Selenginsk, I languished for eight whole years,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[255]</a></span>
-languished like a hawk in a cage. All alone, ever yearning,
-I would go out into the steppe and in a loud voice
-pour my tempestuous heart, longing for freedom, into space.</p>
-
-<p>There was not a day on which I did not think of escaping,
-and I was always ready for any risk and peril, clinging
-to the littlest possibility to get away, but all in vain.
-No one, absolutely no one, promised any help. All those
-in whom it was possible to confide considered any attempt
-to escape foredoomed. My soul ached. And only the
-thought of my comrades&mdash;convicts who were sent to the
-Yakutsk huts, only the thought of their suffering made
-me forget my own. The eight empty years of my life in
-Selenginsk have remained all through my life a gray void,
-eating up the warm feelings of a warm heart. I filled my
-time with work, so as to be able to send my earnings to
-the dark prisons, snowbound wastes, to the hungry, forgotten
-comrades. I read, studied, in order to know how
-mankind lived, and how far or near was the possibility
-of transforming it into that "intelligent being" with whom
-it would be joyful to live. "Have patience," I would
-tell myself in the moments of keen grief; "be patient,
-endure to the end; you will get what you are waiting
-for."</p>
-
-<p>In 1890, after living for four years on the rights of a
-peasant, I finally received a passport to travel all over
-Siberia, and on the same day I departed from the suffocating
-place so as to gradually approach the boundary
-of European Russia as my term was nearing its end.
-My health was much undermined by the severe trials I
-had undergone in solitariness. Anæmia and strong neuralgia
-had tormented me in Selenginsk. But the inherited
-vigor of the organism soon returned to me, and the
-last four years of my life in Siberia, spent in journeying
-from town to town, I succeeded in having many conversations<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</a></span>
-with young and mature people&mdash;succeeded in making
-allies of some of the leading citizens of Siberia. And
-when in September, 1896, I returned to Russia I found
-there many students of both sexes whom I taught in
-Siberia the theories and the urgency of regenerating the
-old watchwords. They soon tackled the work of liberation,
-and many of them remain loyal to this date to our
-principles.</p>
-
-
-<p>VI&mdash;"WHEN I CAME BACK FROM SIBERIA"</p>
-
-<p>Again I arrived in Russia in September. But upon
-my arrival I encountered a new movement, which was
-rapidly conquering a place for itself. Marxism was taking
-hold of, capturing, the minds of the youth, and the
-old fighters were regarded as dead forces. But faith in
-the force of personality, faith in the healthy strength of
-the people, a knowledge of their aims and needs lent so
-much firm confidence to my energy that, without hesitating
-a moment, I began to do some practical work, which
-had ripened in my mind as long before as the celebrated
-trial, in 1878, when I declared to my judges that "I have
-the honor of belonging to the Russian socialistic and
-revolutionary party, and consequently do not recognize
-the authority of the Czar's courts over me."</p>
-
-<p>Eighteen years passed after that, and my adherence to
-the party of socialism and revolutionism lived in me as
-freshly and ardently as in the days of my arrest and trial.
-Confidence that the peasant masses, these pillars of the
-state government, will obey the voice of their friends
-and will not be slow to follow their leaders&mdash;this confidence
-urged me to hasten the consolidation of the various
-forces likely to join the Social Revolutionary party,
-as it has been christened from its very beginning.</p>
-
-<p>It is necessary to bear in mind that from Siberia I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</a></span>
-came back to Russia all alone. I did not even have the
-addresses of the old comrades who remained in safety
-in the gloomy folds of Alexander III's reign. And it took
-considerable time, care and patience before my tireless but
-modest little journeys about Russia netted definite results
-as to acquaintance with people and opportunities. The
-readiness of the peasants to join the party became ever
-clearer, and on the fourth year of endeavor the party
-loudly proclaimed its existence, and in the fifth year all
-the separate committees recognized one centre. Both the
-increase in membership and growth in activity attracted
-the savage attention of the Czar's government.</p>
-
-<p>In 1903 the party suffered an enormous wreck. Wholesale
-arrests and searches robbed it of many of its leading
-workers, of its best printing shops and stores of literature.
-It was necessary to replace all that. By this time
-the work of the party had developed and grown strong
-abroad, thanks to our talented and zealous emigrants,
-who bent all their energies for the publication of party
-organs and popular books and pamphlets.</p>
-
-<p>In order to recall this youth to immediate activities at
-home, in Russia, I went abroad for the first time. In
-May, 1903, I boarded a steamer in Odessa and accompanied
-by an experienced contrabandist-intellectual,
-went, by way of Rumania, Hungary and Vienna to
-Geneva, Switzerland, where there centred the group of
-the party workers who were scattered in Paris, London
-and Switzerland. At this conference we were fully
-joined by the old fighters of the past '70s, Shishko, Volkhovskoy,
-Lazaroff, Tchaikovsky.</p>
-
-<p>The youth, which frequented all our lectures and debates,
-listened attentively to the voices of our speakers.
-Victor Tchernoff, the editor-in-chief of our central organs
-(and Minister of Agriculture in Kerensky's first Cabinet),
-victoriously defended the position of the party<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</a></span>
-against the attacks of our opponents. At the same time
-I persistently spoke of the necessity to tackle the real
-task, to propagate our ideas among the peasants and workmen,
-to organize all the forces capable of and ready to
-enter into a battle with the old régime, ready to sacrifice
-their lives for a free Russia. And thus it was that a
-stream of young people of both sexes began to flow back
-to Russia, carrying with them Social Revolutionary literature,
-and the booklets "In Battle Shalt Thou Obtain Thy
-Rights" were lavishly spread on all the roads of the
-Fatherland.</p>
-
-
-<p>VII&mdash;"I VISITED AMERICA&mdash;MY FRIENDS OF
-FREEDOM"</p>
-
-<p>This task, the labor, of directing the forces of young
-Russia occupied two whole years of my life. It is true I
-succeeded in the meantime in visiting America, where I
-was urgently called by the friends of freedom. I sent
-out from there considerable sums of money to cover the
-expenses of the organization, mainly for literature, the
-import of which into Russia was very expensive. In the
-United States I acquired many genuine friends, who have
-remained faithful to me ever since. They proved it by
-profuse attention to all my needs during the last years of
-my exile and imprisonment, and from 1907 to 1917 they
-never ceased even for a week to take care of me.</p>
-
-<p>When the blows of the open struggle of 1905 had
-reached me I again crossed the boundary into my country,
-but this time I passed it on foot, running across in the
-company of two "contrabandists" and a comrade who
-carried with him a supply of dynamite.</p>
-
-<p>That was the Russian revolution marching, challenging
-all Russia to an unequal combat.</p>
-
-<p>Everybody knows the events of 1905, 1906 and 1907.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</a></span>
-The efforts of the revolutionists of all parties were unable
-to withstand the physical force of the evil government,
-but they have not only shaken up the paralyzed mind of
-the great people, but enticed them into demonstrating
-their power and seeing themselves as a victor, though
-temporarily. The combat was already nearing its end;
-the banners were already lowered and hidden for the
-next spiritual and physical upheaval; already the executioners
-were hanging and slaughtering, shooting and torturing
-the best champions of freedom; but my spirit was
-yet far from submission, my heart was still heaving with
-hope, and with head forward I threw myself into the
-thick of events. After the wreck of the second Duma I
-anticipated a new outburst of indignation on the part of
-the people. But apparently the cup of doubts had not
-yet been exhausted, and the people ponderingly looked
-into the future, not risking to sacrifice their remaining
-feeble forces.</p>
-
-
-<p>VIII&mdash;"THE HANGMAN'S ROPE WAS AT MY
-THROAT"</p>
-
-<p>It was in the days of such oppression on one side and
-vain strainings of all energies, on the other that I was
-arrested in Samara in 1907, again in the month of September.</p>
-
-<p>It seemed to me that this time I would be unable to
-escape alive from the hands of the hangmen. This was
-what I thought. But I felt otherwise. Two years and
-nine months I was kept in the fortress of Peter and
-Paul, thinking not of that, but of the time when Russia,
-after the inevitable victorious and triumphant second
-revolution, would take up the work of construction and
-transform our powerless country, our almost illiterate
-people, into an exemplary state, which could serve as a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</a></span>
-model to other peoples in culture as well as in social
-reform.</p>
-
-<p>Faith in the possibility of seeing my country free, my
-people developing in material and spiritual plenty, gave
-me strength, exalted my powers. I found myself still
-able to work with the people and for the people and
-was grieved to waste time in exile, in the listlessness of
-the Siberian taiga. I again made preparations for an
-escape, aiming to join my party comrades, who called
-me, in revolutionary activity. And again my escape
-failed. Only two or three hours separated me from my
-goal from a sure shelter and it was painful to fall again
-into the hands of the enemy after a thousand miles' journey
-in the winter.</p>
-
-<p>The thought occurred to me again that they would not
-pardon me my attempts to escape, my efforts to identify
-myself again with the revolutionary movement. At the
-same time there pulsed so much life in my heart that I
-could not imagine the end of my activities. Neither the
-long terms passed in jail nor my exile in Yakutsk had
-dimmed my spirit. "I will live through all this," said an
-inner voice to me; "I will live through everything and
-live to see the bright days of freedom." From Yakutsk
-I was brought to Irkutsk, and my life here was filled
-with the same persecutions as my exile in Kirensk. I
-fell very ill and observed how the physicians carefully
-concealed from me the danger of my malady. It seemed
-so strange to me that people could think of my fatal end
-when my soul was full of complete faith that time was
-bringing me nearer daily to a different kind of end, the
-triumph of the revolution.</p>
-
-<p>The longer the war continued the more horrible its
-consequences grew, the clearer the rascality of the government
-manifested itself, the more patent appeared the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</a></span>
-inevitableness of the rise of democracy all over the world,
-the nearer advanced also our revolution.</p>
-
-<p>I waited for the sound of the bell announcing freedom,
-and wondered why this sound was tardy in making
-itself heard. When in November of last year explosions
-of indignation followed one another, when irate calls were
-exchanged among the several groups of the population, I
-was already planted with one foot in the Siberian sleigh,
-feeling sorry only that the snow road was beginning to
-melt.</p>
-
-<p>The 17th of March a telegram reached me in Minusinsk
-announcing freedom. The same day I was on my
-way to Atchinsk, the nearest railroad station. From
-Atchinsk on began my uninterrupted communion with
-soldiers, peasants, workmen, railroad employees, students
-and multitudes of beloved women, who to-day all bear
-the burdens of the normal and now also abnormal life of
-a great state.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>TALE OF AN AMAZING VOYAGE</h2>
-
-<p><i>German Officers Escape from Spain in a
-Sailing Vessel</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Told by Frederic Lees</i></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>The Spanish Premier, Count Romanones, recently stated that the
-sensational story of the escape from Spain in a sailing vessel
-of a number of interned German officers, as briefly reported in
-<i>El Liberal</i>, of Madrid, is officially confirmed. With extraordinary
-assurance, the fugitives set out to sail right round the
-coast of Great Britain and reach a Belgian port, but the elements
-and the British Navy intervened, and the audacious scheme miscarried.
-The author's private sources of information have
-enabled him to throw light on a number of episodes which,
-in the Spanish and German newspapers, were intentionally
-left obscure. Related in the <i>Wide World Magazine</i>.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;AT OFFICE OF GERMAN VICE-CONSUL IN
-SPANISH PORT</p>
-
-<p>One sunny morning in July, 1916, the German Vice-consul
-of Vigo was sitting in his office opposite the
-wharves of the little Spanish port. The voluminous
-contents of his mail-bag lay before him, and at the moment
-in question his eyes were intently fixed on a long,
-official-looking document&mdash;a type-written folio sheet bearing
-a list of names, preceded by a memorandum. As
-he read on, his expression became more and more serious.
-Twice he read the document through, pondering awhile
-over one of the names. Then he hastily pressed the
-electric-bell button on his desk.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[263]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The Vice-Consul's clerk, Hermann Fischer, appeared
-instantly, note-book and pencil in hand.</p>
-
-<p>"It's too soon yet for the correspondence, Fischer,"
-said the Vice-Consul, "but I've got here a list of those
-eleven officers who were arrested the other day, and
-who are interned at Pampeluna. I want you to fetch
-the Navy List and look up one of the names&mdash;Lieutenant
-Karl Koch. It looks familiar to me."</p>
-
-<p>Fischer was back in a trice with the desired volume,
-and, having hunted out the right man from a multitude
-of Kochs, proceeded to read forth the biographical information
-to the attentive Vice-Consul: "Karl Koch,
-born 1873, at Düsseldorf; educated Frankfort and Heidelberg;
-joined the Imperial Navy 1890; U-boat lieutenant
-1914."</p>
-
-<p>"That'll do!" interjected the official. "I thought it
-must be the same man. He and I were at Heidelberg
-together. Dear old Karl! To think it has fallen to my lot
-to do him a good turn! As a matter of fact, Fischer,
-we've got to see that Koch and certain others are made as
-comfortable as possible during their captivity amongst
-these blessed Spaniards. And if there's a chance of
-doing something more than that&mdash;well, all the better. On
-that point I've got an answer to this official communication
-to dictate to you. Perhaps, as you're here, you'd
-better take it down at once; then you can code it and get
-it on the wires for the Embassy at Madrid without delay."</p>
-
-<p>Whereupon the Vice-Consul of Vigo proceeded to dictate
-his secret message, which showed how very wide his
-consular duties had become in wartime&mdash;duties such as
-only Teutonic diplomatic agents are expected to carry
-out.</p>
-
-<p>Some people, in relating the part the Vice-Consul
-played in the adventure in which Lieutenant Karl Koch
-and his companions became involved, contend that it was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</a></span>
-this officer who was the prime mover; that it was he who
-got into touch with the Vice-Consul, who promised all
-possible support. But I have reason to believe it was the
-other way about, and that the <i>deus ex machina</i> of the
-whole affair&mdash;from the very moment that the German
-Vice-Consulate received official information anent Koch's
-arrest and internment to the purchase of the <i>Virgen del
-Socorro</i> and her departure on her perilous Odyssey&mdash;was
-the Vice-Consul, whose fortuitous acquaintanceship
-with the lieutenant of the submarine (captured and interned
-in circumstances which need not here be dwelt
-upon) redoubled his official zeal. If that is not so, what
-of the indiscretions of his clerk Hermann Fischer? What
-of those of the intermediaries through whom the Vice-Consul
-got possession of the <i>Virgen del Socorro</i>? What
-of the convincing evidence of the hotel and lodging-house
-keepers of Vigo who, all unknowingly, harbored the fugitives?
-What of the incriminating documents in the Vice-Consul's
-own handwriting, or that of his clerk, which I
-am assured came into the possession of the Spanish
-authorities?</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;SECRET MESSAGE TO GERMAN EMBASSY
-IN MADRID</p>
-
-<p>But I will not anticipate events any further. Enough
-has been said to enable me to take up the thread of my
-narrative from the time the Vice-Consul dispatched his
-coded message regarding Lieutenant Karl Koch to the
-German Embassy in Madrid.</p>
-
-<p>Having signed his despatch and given Fischer sufficient
-work to keep him busy until noon, the Vice-Consul
-sallied forth with a satisfied mien and walked leisurely,
-almost aimlessly, towards the quays, gazing out occasionally
-over the bay. In the distance could be seen two<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</a></span>
-German vessels, interned since the beginning of the war,
-one of which was the steamship <i>Wehrt</i>. At last, on
-reaching the deserted end of one of the quays, the Vice-Consul,
-glancing quickly over his shoulder, stopped and
-gave a low whistle, which was answered almost immediately
-by a similar signal and the sound of a boat grating
-against the side of the quay.</p>
-
-<p>"<i>Ach so!</i> There you are, José," said the official, as
-the boatman became visible. "I was afraid you would
-be late. You can row me this morning to the <i>Wehrt</i>."</p>
-
-<p>And with a final precautionary look to right and left,
-the German Vice-Consul disappeared over the side and
-clambered down the iron rungs of a ladder into the boat.</p>
-
-<p>The captain of the steamship <i>Wehrt</i>, condemned to a
-captivity which eternally rankled in his breast, was always
-ready to extend a hearty welcome to the Vice-Consul
-of Vigo. Their periodic meetings, arranged as far
-as possible in secret, constituted a safety valve. The
-captain could fulminate to his heart's content against
-the tyrant of the seas&mdash;Great Britain; the Vice-Consul
-could give full rein to his taste for intrigue.</p>
-
-<p>Behold these two, then, <i>tête-à-tête</i> in the captain's private
-room, and exchanging confidences over the luncheon
-table. The captain, deprived of official information for
-the past three or four days, was thirsting for news regarding
-fresh developments in the war, and his lean,
-bronzed face lit up with eagerness when he inquired if
-the Vice-Consul had anything new and special to report.</p>
-
-<p>"<i>Ya wohl!</i> Something of the greatest importance,"
-replied the official. "A matter for consultation, and
-in which your advice will be valuable."</p>
-
-<p>And the Vice-Consul proceeded to put the skipper <i>au
-courant</i> with the bare facts concerning the predicament
-in which Lieutenant Koch and his companions found
-themselves at Pampeluna, the official request for whatever<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</a></span>
-assistance he could render them, the strange coincidence
-of Koch and himself being old college chums, and
-so on.</p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;THE CONSPIRACY IN THE CAPTAIN'S
-CABIN</p>
-
-<p>"It's very evident, captain, that we must do something
-for them," continued the Vice-Consul. "Pampeluna is
-a long way from Vigo, but I think something can be done
-if we put our heads together. I can't read all that's in
-the official mind which inspired that memorandum, but
-it's quite clear the authorities regard Vigo as the most
-convenient open door for Koch and his ten brother-officers.
-An open door, provided it is <i>held</i> open for them.
-The question is, how are we going to do that? I can
-see a way of solving part of the difficulty. You can
-leave the Pampeluna portion to me. There are plenty
-of ways of opening prison doors in a country like this.
-As a landsman, I am convinced I can open the land
-door without much trouble, but it requires a sailor like
-you to attend to the sea door. That's way I've come
-to you."</p>
-
-<p>"And you couldn't have come to a more willing man,"
-replied the captain, emphatically. "Try and realize what
-I've had to suffer on this infernal ship during the last
-twenty-three months, with the eyes of the authorities
-continually on me and the <i>Wehrt</i>, and every little jack-in-office
-sniffing around at unexpected moments, and
-you'll understand how I feel for your friend and his
-companions. Yes, we've got to do what we can for
-them. The submarine is the only effectual weapon left
-to Germany, so if we succeed in returning to her eleven
-of her brave U-boat men we shall truly have done good
-patriotic work. Now, at the back of my brain I've got<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</a></span>
-a plan. You're welcome to it. You know, I suppose,
-that the <i>Virgen del Socorro</i> is for sale? She's as tight
-a little schooner as ever left the port of Vigo. I've often
-admired her lines and speed as she sailed past the <i>Wehrt</i>.
-Now, when this war is over and we've reduced everybody's
-tonnage, save our own, to a minimum, the <i>Virgen
-del Socorro</i> will be worth her weight in gold. At the
-price she is going at to-day the boat is a splendid speculation.
-Why don't you buy her? You'd find it worth
-your while, I think, to be the sleeping partner."</p>
-
-<p>"Not at all a bad idea, captain. But are you certain
-the <i>Virgen del Socorro</i> is in the market? I thought it
-was owned by the brothers Z&mdash;&mdash;, who have always
-looked upon the schooner as a sort of child of theirs."</p>
-
-<p>"That is so. But ties of the closest affection have to
-be broken in these troubled times, and the brothers Z&mdash;&mdash; have
-decided to dissolve partnership. I dare say your
-boatman José, who ought to be well up in harbor gossip,
-will be able to tell you all about that. There's no doubt
-my information is correct. I can even tell you the exact
-figure at which the owners are willing to sell&mdash;eleven
-thousand five hundred pesetas."</p>
-
-<p>"Dirt cheap, considering the times," said the Vice-Consul,
-thoughtfully. He took an extra long pull at his
-beer tankard, and then, bringing the blue earthenware
-vessel down on the table with a bang, exclaimed, "By
-Jove, captain, you've put me on the right track! I'm
-beginning to see the way to do it. Listen!"</p>
-
-<p>The plan unfolded was as follows. Using his boatman
-as an intermediary&mdash;José was generally believed to
-be fairly well-to-do&mdash;he would enter into negotiations
-with the brothers Z&mdash;&mdash; for the purchase of the <i>Virgen
-del Socorro</i>. One of the conditions of the agreement
-would be particularly tempting to the owners. On the
-understanding that the purchase was kept secret&mdash;the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</a></span>
-rumor might indeed be set afloat that the brothers had
-decided not to part with their dearly-beloved boat&mdash;they
-should be allowed to retain possession until the very
-last moment before the schooner was required by the
-new proprietors. There was evidently a double advantage
-in this: it would allay any suspicions which inquisitive
-harbor authorities or other officials might have
-whilst preparations were being made on board the <i>Virgen
-del Socorro</i> for the reception of the fugitives from Pampeluna,
-and it would enable the Vice-Consul, the captain,
-and other helpers to carry out those preparations at their
-leisure. No one could say how long it would take them
-to prepare the road to the "open door" of Vigo. Though
-the Vice-Consul's secret service fund was still well supplied,
-it was no good to minimize the difficulties, which
-were greater than the captain of the <i>Wehrt</i> could possibly
-comprehend until he had explained the full extent
-of his plan.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Virgen del Socorro</i> was to be sent right round the
-British Isles, in order to descend the North Sea unobserved,
-and, flying the Dutch flag, reach a Belgian port.
-It was a risky plan, but, the British Navy notwithstanding,
-the conspirators thought it had possibilities of success.
-The Vice-Consul, in assisting the scheme, proposed
-to make the Fatherland a present of more than
-the eleven officers at Pampeluna.</p>
-
-<p>It was advisable to get as many able-bodied German
-subjects on board as possible, and so he planned to include
-in the party of fugitives nine others, including four
-officers from the <i>Goeben</i>, a naval doctor, a law student,
-and two sailors, none of whom was interned, in addition
-to a sergeant interned at Alcala de Henares, seventeen
-miles north-east of Madrid. Twenty was certainly a
-large crew for a schooner of the <i>Virgen del Socorro's</i>
-size, but the voyage was to be undertaken during the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[269]</a></span>
-summer&mdash;and an exceptionally fine summer, too&mdash;so the
-risk of a mishap, provided there was good seamanship,
-was slight. As this question of weather was important,
-the Vice-Consul proposed to see to the purchase of the
-vessel without delay, and to communicate at once with
-Lieutenant Koch.</p>
-
-
-<p>IV&mdash;SECRET PURCHASE OF SHIP&mdash;TO ESCAPE</p>
-
-<p>Within the next few days the secret purchase by the
-Vice-Consul of Vigo of the <i>Virgen del Socorro</i> was an
-accomplished fact, and he had had his first interview at
-Pampeluna with his old friend, Lieutenant Koch. Other
-meetings followed, at intervals of a week or so, and before
-the end of the month, thanks to a lavish "greasing"
-of palms, the arrangements for the escape of the eleven
-officers and their concentration with other fugitives at
-Vigo were all made. The captain of the <i>Wehrt</i>, as surreptitiously
-as possible, bought inordinate quantities of
-provisions and stores during July, in order that José and
-the others might, at the opportune moment, tranship
-a part of them to the <i>Virgen del Socorro</i>.</p>
-
-<p>At last everything was ready. Nothing remained to
-be done but for someone to send a signal from Pampeluna
-to the Vice-Consul at Vigo, who was to pass it on
-to other quarters. But the signal, so eagerly awaited on
-the appointed day, August 4th, never came!</p>
-
-<p>Instead, two days later came a letter of explanation,
-stating that Lieutenant Karl Koch had fallen ill at the
-critical moment. The plan of escape, therefore, had to
-be indefinitely postponed. It was a bitter disappointment
-to the Vice-Consul, who pictured himself being reproached
-by his superiors for building castles in the air,
-if not being saddled with the whole of the expenses.
-But he consoled himself, in the presence of the captain<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[270]</a></span>
-of the <i>Wehrt</i>, with the argument that it was "just as
-well, since it would allow the authorities time to go to
-sleep." The astute seaman could not, however, quite
-agree with this. He knew the advantage of fine weather
-for such a perilous voyage as the one projected, and
-feared that if the escape were not effected soon it might
-be too late or too full of risk to be worth undertaking.</p>
-
-<p>Lieutenant Koch's illness dragged on for week after
-week. August went by, September came, and the hopes
-of the Vice-Consul of Vigo fell lower and lower. In
-the first three weeks in September the officer entered the
-convalescent stage. One result of his breakdown was,
-indeed, in his favor; he was allowed greater and greater
-liberty, and, on the plea of taking the air, got out several
-times in a motor-car, with the authorization of the governor
-and doctor of the prison and under the discreet
-eye of an official. Soon even this supervision was relaxed,
-and then, when October came in, the U-boat lieutenant
-saw the chance for which he and his companions
-had been waiting. It was about this time that the Vice-Consul
-of Vigo (now almost on the verge of despair)
-unexpectedly received the long-awaited warning.</p>
-
-
-<p>V&mdash;PLOT LAID FOR THE FLIGHT</p>
-
-<p>On the morning of October 5th, Lieutenant Koch and
-his companions, having obtained a pass for an unofficial
-"joy ride" in two motor-cars, set out for a little country
-village some twenty miles from Pampeluna. As they
-were all on parole and the chauffeurs of the hired cars
-were connected with the police, permission was given to
-the party to remain at their destination for luncheon.
-It was understood, however, that as soon as the meal was
-over the return journey should be made, so as to be back
-well before the day was declining. Koch and his friends,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[271]</a></span>
-through intermediaries introduced to him by the Vice-Consul
-of Vigo, laid their plans very cleverly. Just
-outside the village is a rustic inn where excellent luncheons
-are served. The dining-room looks out, at the back
-of the house, on to a garden with a bowling-alley and
-arbor, and this garden adjoins meadows, bordered by the
-railway line. Not far away is the little country railway
-station. What happened can easily be imagined.</p>
-
-<p>The eleven officers had their luncheon served in the
-restaurant proper; the chauffeurs were served in a
-smaller room adjoining, looking out on to the front and
-the road. The landlord had been instructed (and had
-been well paid in advance for this and other little services)
-to ply these two worthy fellows with as much liquor
-as they could hold, with the result that they were deep
-in their cups long before the boisterous officers had got
-through their coffee and liqueurs. They were in such
-an advanced state of intoxication, indeed, that they took
-no heed when a singular silence followed the noise of
-voices and laughter in the adjoining room; and it was not
-until the appointed hour for departure had long since
-passed that they recovered their senses sufficiently to
-learn the truth. Their erstwhile "joy riders" had flown!
-They might have been seen, fully three-quarters of an
-hour before, strolling down the garden and making their
-way, as unobstrusively as possible, across the fields to the
-countryside railway station, where, provided beforehand
-with tickets for different stations on the line to Vigo, they
-boarded the train, once more in as nonchalant a manner
-as possible in groups of twos and threes, in different carriages.
-By the time the chauffeurs came to their senses
-and realized they had been fooled, the fugitives were well
-out of danger and, having got together again at the first
-big stopping-place, had put themselves <i>en règle</i> as regards
-through tickets for their common destination, to which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[272]</a></span>
-they continued to travel, however, separately, in order
-to minimize the risks of capture. The outwitted chauffeurs
-had another unpleasant surprise on rushing to their cars,
-with the object of dashing back to Pampeluna and recounting
-to the authorities their sorry tale of misadventure.
-Though they cranked their machines like madmen,
-the motors stubbornly refused to work. The reason soon
-became evident: the sparking-plugs had been removed
-by the far-seeing Koch.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, on October 2nd, the interned Sergeant
-Dietrich Gratschuss had slipped away from Alcala. His
-escape, facilitated by the four uninterned officers from the
-<i>Goeben</i>, who provided him with a suit of civilian clothes,
-thrown over a wall into the prison-garden where he
-worked daily, was made doubly sure by certain judicious
-bribes to a sentry, who kept his back turned and eyes
-averted at the critical moment. Gratschuss slipped into
-his disguise in a tool-shed, and calmly walked out of the
-prison-yard&mdash;saluted by the unsuspecting man on guard&mdash;as
-though he had been a visitor. His friends were waiting
-round the corner for him with a hundred horsepower
-motor-car, in which, with the other uninterned
-Germans (the naval doctor, the law student, and the
-two sailors), he was whirled away at sixty miles an
-hour. The whole of the journey to Vigo was made in
-this powerful car, which the owners had been able to
-provide with an amply supply of petrol and food for a
-long and rapid flight, lasting well into the night.</p>
-
-<p>The whole of the machinery of the Vice-Consul of
-Vigo was now in motion. All the fugitives reached that
-port in safety and scattered themselves over hotels and
-lodging-houses.</p>
-
-<p>A hue and cry was, of course, set up from Pampeluna
-and Alcala de Henares; but the Spanish police went off
-on various wrong tracks before they thought of ordering<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[273]</a></span>
-a watch to be set at all the ports. Even when this tardy
-step was taken, no one ever suspected&mdash;so well had the
-Vice-Consul and his accomplices laid their plans&mdash;that
-Vigo was the port from which the escape was to be effected.</p>
-
-
-<p>VI&mdash;MIDNIGHT&mdash;THE FUGITIVES BOARD THE
-SHIP</p>
-
-<p>On October 6th the <i>Virgen del Socorro</i>, to allay any
-suspicion, made a voyage to sea, and, on returning,
-moored alongside the <i>Wehrt</i>. Then, one pitch-black
-night, the fugitives left their hiding-places. One by one
-they slipped out into the darkness and, following the
-narrowest and most deserted streets leading to the harbor,
-reached the quays unobserved. At such an hour of
-the night&mdash;it was getting on for eleven o'clock&mdash;they
-could be fairly certain of meeting no one, save, perhaps,
-a drunken sailor or two. These revellers took no more
-notice of Koch and his companions than they did of their
-own dim shadows. One by one, under cover of the
-darkness, the fugitives disappeared down the same iron
-ladder the Vice-Consul had used so often, into José's
-boat.</p>
-
-<p>By midnight all the fugitives were on board the <i>Wehrt</i>,
-from whose well-replenished store-rooms they immediately
-began transhipping the provisions to the <i>Virgen del
-Socorro</i>. All through the night and until 2 <span class="smcap">A.M.</span> this
-work continued. The <i>Virgen del Socorro</i> was then
-towed out a little farther into the bay, and on the first
-signs of daylight appearing her bow was turned north-east.
-Soon afterwards a fresh early morning wind
-sprang up from the land, her sails filled, and she set off
-on her long voyage.</p>
-
-<p>What happened to the <i>Virgen del Socorro</i> I will now<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[274]</a></span>
-relate, in accordance with details furnished by various
-members of her crew.</p>
-
-<p>The little vessel had no sooner left Vigo and got out
-into the open than the land wind suddenly increased in
-strength and drove her into exceedingly rough and
-treacherous water. Some of the crew were for turning
-back, despite the risks that step would have entailed,
-and the matter was discussed at some length by Lieutenant
-Koch and the other leaders. They came to the
-conclusion, however, that they were "between the devil
-and the deep sea," and must keep on. It seems doubtful,
-indeed, whether, had they decided to make an attempt
-to get back to Vigo, they could have accomplished it.</p>
-
-<p>That first day, and for many days afterwards, the <i>Virgen
-del Socorro</i> became a veritable plaything of the
-waves, which soon began to rise mountain-high. The
-sufferings of the crowded fugitives in this terrible
-weather were intense. All were drenched to the skin,
-and for more than three days and nights they had to remain
-in this miserable condition. To these tortures were
-added the craving for sleep and adequate nourishment,
-for, amidst the continual buffeting of the waves and
-wind, they could neither sleep nor get anything cooked.
-Under these conditions, it was not surprising that the
-twenty occupants of the <i>Virgen del Socorro</i> were finally
-reduced to the state of not caring what happened. One
-of the two sailors on board, on whose shoulders devolved
-much of the work of navigation, said that, "old seaman
-though he was, he had never before experienced such
-weather." He felt at times that "all his strength and
-hope were sapped," and hourly, during those terrible
-first six days, when the little schooner was tossed about
-like a cork, "expected death would relieve him of his
-tortures."</p>
-
-<p>The storm then calmed down a little and gave the fugitives<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[275]</a></span>
-a respite. They were able to dry their drenched
-clothes and attend to the needs of the inner man. At the
-same time they could pay more attention to the question
-of their course. On this score they were soon to receive
-a shock, for there hove in sight a vessel that was undoubtedly
-a British patrol. For a couple of hours there
-were many anxious searchings of heart on board the
-<i>Virgen del Socorro</i>. Would she, thanks to her insignificance
-and the Dutch flag flying from her mast, be taken
-for an inoffensive fishing smack, and be allowed to go
-unchallenged? That had been part of their plan all
-through.</p>
-
-<p>At one moment it looked as though the patrol was
-bearing down upon them at full speed; but when the
-dreaded vessel got no bigger, but instead gradually receded
-into the distance, the crew of the <i>Virgen del Socorro</i>
-realized that for the time being they were safe.</p>
-
-
-<p>VII&mdash;FOILED BY A STORM&mdash;THE CAPTURE</p>
-
-<p>Safe from the clutches of their human enemies, perhaps,
-but by no means safe from the angry sea. Had
-some of the crew been able to foresee what was in store
-for them, they would perhaps have welcomed the arrival
-of that British patrol with outspread arms and expressions
-of joy. Once more they were caught up in the
-embrace of a furious storm, and driven helplessly westward,
-expecting every moment to be their last.</p>
-
-<p>On October 24th another brief calm set in, enabling
-the navigator to ascertain his position. The little vessel
-was found to be some distance west of Bantry, on the
-south coast of Ireland. Here the storm again increased
-in violence, and once more the ill-fated <i>Virgen del Socorro</i>
-seemed likely to founder. A consultation was held
-by Koch and the other leaders. They came to the conclusion<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[276]</a></span>
-that it would be madness to attempt to continue
-with the original plan. In such seas as were running,
-they would run the risk of being shipwrecked a hundred
-times before they got halfway round the British Isles.
-The only thing to be done, if they were to prevent the
-<i>Virgen del Socorro</i> from being smashed to matchwood
-on the British coast, was to keep as much as possible
-in the open sea and steer for the English channel, in
-hope of making the Belgian or Dutch coast unobserved.</p>
-
-<p>Six more terrible days followed. By this time more
-than half the crew of the <i>Virgen del Socorro</i> were in a
-parlous condition. Their store of provisions had shrunk
-to such an extent that everybody had to be placed on rations,
-and the fresh water had dwindled so alarmingly
-that it was reserved for those who were actually on
-the point of collapse. Several of the crew, through the
-cold and constant seasickness, were utterly helpless.</p>
-
-<p>It was about this time that the coast of Cornwall came
-into view, and on November 4th the crew found themselves
-in sight of Lundy Island, at the entrance of the
-Bristol Channel. From there, proceeding with a slowness
-which must often have driven them to the verge
-of despair, they circled the Scilly Islands, and it took
-them two more dreadful days before they had rounded
-the Lizard.</p>
-
-<p>The Odyssey of the <i>Virgen del Socorro</i> had now
-stretched over no less a period than a month. Three of
-the crew had by now become delirious; all were reduced
-to half their ordinary weight, and with the exception of
-the hardened seamen were on the point of collapse. Although
-they had experienced several alarms, they had so
-far succeeded&mdash;no doubt owing to the awful weather&mdash;in
-avoiding the vigilant eyes of the British patrols. But
-now they no longer cared one way or the other; all the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[277]</a></span>
-fight had been knocked out of them by their sufferings.</p>
-
-<p>On November 8th the little vessel approached the Goodwins.
-Shortly after dawn a British destroyer was sighted
-and reported by the man at the helm. Hardly a man
-on board, unless it was Lieutenant Koch, took the trouble
-to raise his glassy eyes when he heard the danger announced.
-Nor did they manifest any concern when it
-further became evident that there was no avoiding the
-vigilant war vessel. Nothing expressed so eloquently
-the fact that they regarded themselves as beaten as their
-attitude of utter indifference when they were challenged
-by the British destroyer. One and all were evidently
-heartily glad to confess their nationality, the circumstances
-in which they came to be there, and the extraordinary
-dangers through which they had passed.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Virgen del Socorro</i> was taken into Ramsgate, says
-<i>El Liberal</i>, the Madrid newspaper which published the
-first brief account of the adventures related above, and
-there we may well leave Lieutenant Koch and his companions.
-They are henceforth in safe keeping, for, with
-all their ingenuity and daring, the only thing they succeeded
-in doing was to exchange one prison for another,
-and at the same time drag eight free German citizens with
-them into durance vile.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[278]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>THE POET'S DEATH IN BATTLE&mdash;HOW
-ALLEN SEEGER DIED</h2>
-
-<p><i>A Young American in the Foreign Legion</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Told by Bif Bear, a Young Egyptian in the
-Foreign Legion</i></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>The artists of Europe&mdash;the painters, poets, singers&mdash;the æsthetes
-of France and Italy, of Britain and Russian, and of Germany,
-the Hungarian musicians&mdash;all answered the "call of war" and
-threw their souls into the "rendezvous with death." Thousands
-of them died on the battlefields. Among them is the young
-English poet, Rupert Brooke, and the American poet, Allan
-Seeger, who "loved France and gave his life to her." This
-young American enlisted early in the war in the Foreign Legion.
-He was fighting in the battles in Champagne in July, 1916, when
-he fell. A young Egyptian, who was with the poet in the
-trenches, tells of his end. After the battle, he wrote this letter
-to Mrs. Caroline L. Weeks, of Boston, who has acted in the
-rôle of "marraine" (godmother) to many American volunteers.
-The following is a translation from the French forwarded from
-Paris.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;STORY OF THE AMERICAN POET</p>
-
-<p>It was in the Thiescourt Woods, I remember, that I
-saw Alan on his return from convalescent leave. My
-section was in first line trenches and his, in reserve, in
-the second line. I was on soup fatigue and was going to
-the Chauffour Quarry when I saw him in front of me,
-walking along alone. Throwing down the marmites (tin
-receptacles) with which I was loaded, I rushed to shake
-him by the hand. He had, it seemed to me, grown slightly
-thinner, his pale face seemed slightly paler, and his eyes,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[279]</a></span>
-his fine eyes with their far-away look, ever lost in distant
-contemplation, were still as dreamy as ever.</p>
-
-<p>He told me how sorry he was not to be still with me
-as he had been transferred to the first section and I belonged
-to the third. But we saw each other every day.
-He would recount the joys of his two months' convalescent
-leave, and I shall never forget how one phrase was
-often on his lips, "Life is only beautiful if divided between
-war and love. They are the only two things truly
-great, fine and perfect, everything else is but petty and
-mean. I have known love for the last few weeks in all
-its beauty and now I want to make war, ... but fine
-war, a war of bayonet charges, the desperate pursuit of
-an enemy in flight, the entry as conqueror, with trumpets
-sounding, into a town that we have delivered! Those
-are the delights of war! Where in civil life can be found
-any emotion so fine and strong as those?"</p>
-
-<p>And we would exalt our spirits with hopes of making
-an assault with the bayonet, hopes that were not doomed
-to disappointment, for a few weeks later we were to
-attack.</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;AN ODE TO AMERICAN PATRIOTISM</p>
-
-<p>One day while we were in reserve at the Martin Quarries
-Alan came to look for me. He was full of joy and
-showed me a telegram that he had received from Paris,
-asking him to compose a poem which he himself was to
-read in public at a Franco-American manifestation, for
-which he was to receive forty-eight hours' leave. Alan
-was overjoyed at the opportunity of obtaining leave, but
-was too retiring to think of reading his poem himself;
-he would try, he told me, to have it read by some one
-else.</p>
-
-<p>The eve of the ceremony arrived&mdash;I cannot recall the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[280]</a></span>
-date&mdash;but no leave came. We were in the trenches and
-chance had placed me near Seeger in "petit poste" (the
-small outlook post, some yards in advance of the first
-line trench). He confessed that he had lost all hope of
-going, and I tried to find all sorts of arguments to encourage
-him, that his leave might come at dawn, and
-that by taking the train at Ressons at 7 <span class="smcap">A.M.</span> he could still
-reach Paris by noon and would have plenty of time, as
-the ceremony was at 2.</p>
-
-<p>The morning came, and instead of bringing the much
-desired permission to leave it brought a terrible downpour
-of rain, and the day passed sadly. He found consolation
-in the thought that July 4 would soon arrive,
-when the Americans with the Foreign Legion might hope
-for forty-eight hours' leave, as last year. Alas! He little
-thought that on that date....</p>
-
-<p>[The ceremony referred to was held on May 30, in
-connection with Decoration Day celebrations. Wreaths
-to the Americans killed for France were placed around
-the statue of Washington and Lafayette, in the Place des
-Etats-Unis, Paris. By an unfortunate mistake the forty-eight
-hours' leave granted for the event was made for
-June 30 instead of May 30. The ode which Alan Seeger
-composed for the occasion was printed in <i>The Sun</i> a few
-days after the author had fallen in battle.]</p>
-
-<p>On June 21 we left the sector of the Thiescourt Woods
-for an unknown destination, which proved to be the
-Somme. We took the train at Estrees St. Denis and on
-June 22 about 10 <span class="smcap">A.M.</span> reached Boves. Under a blazing
-sun, in heat that seemed to have escaped from the furnace
-of hell, we started for Bayonviller. We had undergone
-no such march since the war began.</p>
-
-<p>Weighed down by their sacks, prostrated by the heat,
-men fell by hundreds along the road. Hardly twenty of
-the 200 forming the company arrived without having<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[281]</a></span>
-left the column. Seeger was one of these few. He told
-me afterward of the terrible effort he had had to make
-not to give up. At every halt he drank a drop of "tafia"
-(rum and coffee) to "give himself heart," and when he
-reached the end of the march he was worn out, but proud&mdash;he
-had not left the ranks.</p>
-
-<p>We passed the eight days of repose at Bayonviller, almost
-always together, seeking the greatest possible enjoyment
-in our life at the moment and making dreams for
-the future after the war. Alan confided to me that "after
-the war" caused him fear&mdash;that he could not tell what
-destiny reserved for him, but that if the fates smiled on
-him it was toward the Orient that he would make. He
-loved the Orient&mdash;Constantinople, Cairo, Damascus,
-Beirut had a powerful fascination for him; their names
-would plunge him into profound reverie.</p>
-
-<p>"It is in the mysterious frame of the Orient," he used
-to say, "in its dazzling light, in its blue, blue nights, among
-the perfumes of incense and hashish, that I would live,
-love and die."</p>
-
-<p>And then the talk would turn again on the war and
-he would say: "My only wish now is to make a bayonet
-charge. After that I shall see. Death may surprise me,
-but it shall not frighten me. It is my destiny. 'Mektoub'
-(it is written)." He was a real fatalist and drew courage
-and resignation from his fatalism.</p>
-
-<p>During the night of June 30-July 1 (1916) we left
-Bayonviller to move nearer the firing line. We went to
-Proyart as reserves.</p>
-
-<p>At 8 o'clock on the morning of July 1 there was roll
-call for the day's orders and we were told that the general
-offensive would begin at 9 without us, as we were in
-reserve, and that we would be notified of the day and
-hour that we were to go into action.</p>
-
-<p>When this report was finished we were ordered to shell<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[282]</a></span>
-fatigue, unloading 8 inch shells from automobile trucks
-which brought them up to our position.</p>
-
-<p>All was hustle and bustle. The Colonial regiments had
-carried the first German lines and thousands and thousands
-of prisoners kept arriving and leaving. Ambulances
-filed along the roads continuously. As news began
-to arrive we left our work to seek more details, everything
-we could learn seemed to augur well.</p>
-
-<p>About 4 <span class="smcap">P.M.</span> we left Proyart for Fontaine-les-Capy
-and in the first line. Alan was beaming with joy and
-full of impatience for the order to join in the action.
-Everywhere delirious joy reigned at having driven the
-enemy back without loss for us. We believed that no
-further resistance would be met and that our shock attack
-would finish the Germans. After passing the night at
-Fontaine-les-Capy we moved in the morning toward what
-had been the German first lines. I passed almost all the
-day with Alan. He was perfectly happy.</p>
-
-<p>"My dream is coming true," he said to me, "and perhaps
-this evening or to-morrow we shall attack. I am
-more than satisfied, but it's too bad about our July 4
-leave. I cannot hope to see Paris again now before the
-6th or 7th, but if this leave is not granted me 'Mektoub!
-Mektoub'!" he finished with a smile.</p>
-
-<p>The field of battle was relatively calm, a few shells fell,
-fired by the enemy in retreat, and our troops were advancing
-on all sides. The Colonials had taken Assevillers
-and the next day we were to take their place in first line.</p>
-
-<p>On July 3 (1916) about noon we moved toward Assevillers
-to relieve the Colonials at nightfall. Alan and I
-visited Assevillers, picking up souvenirs, postcards, letters,
-soldiers' notebooks and chattering all the time, when
-suddenly a voice called out, "The company will fall in to
-go to the first line."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[283]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;LAST PARTINGS OF COMRADES</p>
-
-<p>Before leaving one another we made each other the
-same promise as we had made before the Champagne
-battle (September 25, 1915), that if one of us fell so
-severely wounded that there was no hope of escape the
-other would finish him off with a bullet in the heart
-rather than let him await death in lingering torture. He
-showed me his revolver, saying, "I have more luck than
-you. If I can still use one arm I shall have no need of
-any one," and then we rejoined our different sections.</p>
-
-<p>About 4 o'clock the order came to get ready for the
-attack. None could help thinking of what the next few
-hours would bring. One minute's anguish and then, once
-in the ranks, faces become calm and serene, a kind of
-gravity falling upon them, while on each could be read
-the determination and expectation of victory.</p>
-
-<p>Two battalions were to attack Belloy-en-Santerre, our
-company being the reserve of battalion. The companies
-forming the first wave were deployed on the plain. Bayonets
-glittered in the air above the corn, already quite
-tall. Scarcely had the movement begun when the enemy
-perceived them and started a barrier fire (artillery fire
-to bar any advance), the quick firers started their rapid,
-regular crackerlike rat-tat. Bullets whizzed and shells
-exploded almost as they left the gun, making a din infernal.
-And the wave went forward, always forward,
-leaving behind the wounded and the dead.</p>
-
-<p>The losses were heavy and the enemy made a desperate
-resistance. The company of reserve was ordered to advance
-with the second wave of assault. "Forward!"
-cried the Captain, and the company deployed "in files of
-squadron," advancing slowly but surely under the enemy's
-intense and murderous fire.</p>
-
-<p>The first section (Alan's section) formed the right<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[284]</a></span>
-and vanguard of the company, and mine formed the left
-wing. After the first bound forward, we lay flat on the
-ground, and I saw the first section advancing beyond us
-and making toward the extreme right of the village of
-Belloy-en-Santerre. I caught sight of Seeger and called
-to him, making a sign with my hand.</p>
-
-<p>He answered with a smile. How pale he was! His
-tall silhouette stood out on the green of the cornfield.
-He was the tallest man in his section. His head erect and
-pride in his eyes, I saw him running forward, with bayonet
-fixed. Soon he disappeared and that was the last
-time I saw my friend.</p>
-
-<p>"Forward!" And we made a second bound, right to
-the wave of assault, which we left behind a little, and
-down we threw ourselves again. The fusillade became
-more and more intense, reaching a paroxysm. The
-mitrailleuses mow men down and the cannons thunder in
-desperation. Bodies are crushed and torn to fragments
-by the shells, and the wounded groan as they await death,
-for all hope of escaping alive from such a hell has fled.</p>
-
-<p>The air is saturated with the smell of powder and
-blood, everywhere the din is deafening; men are torn with
-impatience at having to remain without moving under
-such a fire. We struggle even for breath and cries resound
-from every side. Suddenly a word of command,
-an order of deliverance, passes from mouth to mouth.
-"Forward! With bayonets!"&mdash;the command that Seeger
-had awaited so long.</p>
-
-
-<p>IV&mdash;THE POET'S DEATH ON THE BATTLEFIELD</p>
-
-<p>In an irresistible, sublime dash we hurl ourselves to
-the assault, offering our bodies as a target. It was at
-this moment that Alan Seeger fell heavily wounded in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[285]</a></span>
-the stomach. His comrades saw him fall and crawl into
-the shelter of a shell hole. Since that minute nobody saw
-him alive.</p>
-
-<p>I will spare you an account of the rest of the battle.
-As soon as the enemy was driven back and Belloy-en-Santerre
-won I searched for news of Seeger. I was
-told of his wound and was glad of it, for I thought he
-had been carried away and henceforth would be far
-from the dangers of bullets and shells.</p>
-
-<p>Thus ended this Fourth of July that Seeger had hoped
-to celebrate in Paris. On the next day we were relieved
-from the first lines and went into reserve lines. A fatigue
-party was left to identify the dead.</p>
-
-<p>Seeger was found dead. His body was naked, his shirt
-and tunic being beside him and his rifle planted in the
-ground with the butt in the air. He had tied a handkerchief
-to the butt to attract the attention of the stretcher
-bearers. He was lying on his side with his legs bent.</p>
-
-<p>It was at night by the light of a pocket electric lamp
-that he was hastily recognized. Stretcher bearers took
-the body and buried it next day in the one big grave
-made for the regiment, where lie a hundred bodies. This
-tomb is situated at the hill 76 to the south of Belloy-en-Santerre.</p>
-
-<p>As I think of the circumstances of his death I am convinced
-that after undressing to bandage himself he must
-have risen and been struck by a second bullet. I asked
-permission on the night of July 6 (1916) when I heard
-of his being wounded, to go and see him, but I was
-refused.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[286]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>THE GUARDIAN OF THE LINE&mdash;HERO
-TALE OF LITHUANIA</h2>
-
-<p><i>Told by Frederic Lees</i></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>One of the most remarkable facts connected with the war on
-the Russian front is the large number of women who have distinguished
-themselves by conspicuous bravery, sometimes in the
-actual fighting-line, but more often in a civilian capacity. This
-story deals with the ordeal undergone by a humble railway-crossing
-keeper's wife in Lithuania, as told in the <i>Wide World
-Magazine</i>.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;"THE LONELIEST WOMAN IN THE WORLD"</p>
-
-<p>One morning in April, 1915, Stephania Ychas, the
-wife of the keeper of a railway-crossing to the north of
-the Lithuanian town of Shavli, felt the saddest and loneliest
-woman in the world. Do what she could, she found
-it impossible to rid herself of the feeling that a catastrophe
-was imminent&mdash;that the terrible war into which her
-country had been plunged meant the end of all things.
-Poor Lithuania! Once so fair a place, now so desolate a
-wilderness!</p>
-
-<p>Stephania's duties, in these troubled times, kept her
-continually on the <i>qui vive</i>. At all hours of the day&mdash;and
-latterly during many of the night&mdash;she had to be in
-and out of her little house, in order to see that the rails
-were clear, or to note the numbers of the troop trains as
-they swept past towards the north. Backwards and
-forwards, from her door to the telephone, fixed against
-the wall on the right-hand side of a little window through<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[287]</a></span>
-which she could overlook a big sweep of the line in the
-direction of Shavli, she went, welcoming the never-ending
-succession of trainloads of soldiers, wounded, or mere
-war material passing on to the new line of defence, and
-reporting their progress to the railway and military authorities.</p>
-
-<p>Day after day, night after night, the great retreat of
-the Russian forces continued, until, single-handed as she
-was, Stephania Ychas was almost dropping with fatigue.
-A hundred times she told herself that human flesh and
-blood could never stand such a strain. It was not the
-fatigue alone which was crushing her. Added to her
-physical tortures were mental ones, the feeling of being
-alone, so horribly alone, and the knowledge that the enemy,
-as announced by the retreat and the nerve-racking
-booming of the guns, was rapidly advancing on Shavli,
-and that until Russia had had time to recover, the hated
-Teutons would inevitably overrun Lithuania as far as
-Vilna. At night her brain was filled with pictures of
-burning farms, ravaged orchards, and indescribable scenes
-of brutality such as she knew the German soldiers had
-been guilty of in Belgium and Poland.</p>
-
-<p>A dozen times a day, dizzy and sick at heart, she had
-been on the point of staggering to the telephone to inform
-the commander of a neighbouring station that she could
-continue no longer. But a sense of duty had held her
-back. When it came to a point of renunciation, her
-stout Lithuanian heart said "Nay," and she recalled the
-parting from her husband and his final adjurations.</p>
-
-<p>Buried in thought, while waiting for a train which has
-just been signalled from Shavli, she recalled the morning
-when Michael Ychas, suddenly called to the Colours, had
-left her. It seemed like an eternity since those days of
-the mobilization.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[288]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;"GOOD-BYE, STEPHANIA&mdash;GUARD THE
-LINE WELL!"</p>
-
-<p>"Good-bye, Stephania," he had said. "Be of good
-cheer whilst I am away, and guard the line well. It is
-sad to leave you here all alone. Sad to be obliged to leave
-one's native country and abandon it to unknown dangers.
-How much better I should have liked to have defended
-Lithuania, I, a Lithuanian bred and born, than to have
-been drafted into a regiment bound for the Caucasus.
-As if the Government could not trust us in our own country!
-However, Stephania, you are left, and you are doing
-a man's duty. It makes me happy, in the midst of
-my misery, to think that you are there to look after the
-home and the crossing and the rails. Guard them well,
-Stephania, and rest assured that, in my absence, I shall
-constantly pray to the Virgin to watch over you."</p>
-
-<p>Her reflections were interrupted by a shriek from the
-locomotive of the expected train, which was made up
-partly of compartments packed with soldiers, partly of
-wagons filled with the most heterogeneous collection of
-things she had ever seen in her life&mdash;pieces of machinery
-piled one on the top of the other, heaps of metal articles
-of every imaginable description, and every scrap of copper
-or lead, apparently, which Shavli contained. A waving
-of hands from the soldiers, a friendly yell from a hundred
-throats, and the train had sped on its way.</p>
-
-<p>Stephania Ychas had no time now to waste over daydreaming.
-Hurrying into her cottage, she went straight
-to the telephone and rang up the commander of the station
-farther up the line. After ringing in vain for fully
-a minute, she got the connection and made her report.</p>
-
-<p>"Train number three hundred and forty-six passed
-North Shavli crossing a minute ago," she said. "A mixed
-train, men and materials. Any news?"</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[289]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"Shavli reports that things are getting warm," replied
-a voice. "I should not be surprised to hear that we have
-to leave before the day's out. You'd better 'phone to
-headquarters."</p>
-
-<p>She lost not a moment in carrying out the suggestion.</p>
-
-<p>"Halloa, halloa! Is that Shavli?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes," came a quick answer. "You're the North Shavli
-crossing-keeper, aren't you? Good! Well, we were just
-about to call you up. Matters are coming to a climax
-here. There are only two more trains to go through
-now. One with men will be with you in a couple of minutes
-at the latest; the other, with goods, should follow ten
-minutes afterwards. We are telling the driver to pick
-you up."</p>
-
-<p>At this point the speaker was called away from the
-telephone, and an indistinct buzz as of a whole office in
-conversation, mingled with the trampling of feet and the
-slamming of doors followed. But finally the speaker returned.</p>
-
-<p>"Halloa, halloa! Are you still there, North Shavli?
-Telephone forward all I have said, and prepare them for
-the worst."</p>
-
-<p>Stephania Ychas, now tingling with excitement, did as
-she was bid. Once more she stood on duty to see the reported
-train pass, and again she went to the telephone to
-send her report forward. Having finished, she was about
-to hang up the receiver when, on looking through the
-window on her left, her eyes caught sight of something
-unusual far down the line, almost at the point where the
-metals curved out of view. To run and fetch a pair of
-glasses which, ever since the beginning of the war, she
-had kept hanging in their leather case by the side of the
-fireplace, to bring them to bear on the point in question,
-and at the same time to ring up Shavli, was the work of a
-minute. What she saw, though her calm voice in no way<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[290]</a></span>
-revealed her inner emotion, made the blood run cold
-through her veins.</p>
-
-<p>"Halloa, halloa! Are you there, Shavli?"</p>
-
-<p>A reply came in the affirmative.</p>
-
-<p>"For Heaven's sake remain at the 'phone. There's foul
-work going on near the great curve. You must give orders
-at once to keep back the train."</p>
-
-<p>"One moment, and I will return," replied the railway
-official.</p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;A WOMAN'S MESSAGE: "THEY ARE
-DYNAMITING THE RAILROAD!"</p>
-
-<p>A pause, which seemed to the woman with the glasses
-fixed to her eyes an eternity, followed.</p>
-
-<p>"You were just in time," continued the voice to her
-infinite relief. "Courage! Fear not. Orders have been
-given to pick you up, with the others along the line, when
-we evacuate the town by car. But tell us what is happening."</p>
-
-<p>"I can see a number of men tampering with the metals,"
-telephoned Stephania Ychas. "They have dismounted
-from their horses. One of them, an officer, is giving orders.
-Yes, I can see now. They are Uhlans, and are
-going to dynamite the line. There are at least twenty of
-them, evidently a portion of an advance guard that has
-made a turning movement round Shavli by way of the
-woods. Halloa, halloa! In the name of Our Lady of
-Vilna, do not leave the instrument. It is a blessing they
-did not begin by cutting the wire. Now they are scattering
-to await the explosion. There!"&mdash;as the speaker
-beheld the explosion, followed by a cloud of smoke and
-dust, which rose high in the air&mdash;"it is done. Holy Virgin!
-They are making off now. No, the officer is pointing
-here. They are coming towards me. Telephone to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[291]</a></span>
-the nearest military station to send me help immediately.
-And for the love of the saints, come back to the instrument!"</p>
-
-<p>Stephania Ychas left the receiver dangling by its cords,
-and made her little home ready to withstand a siege. She
-locked and doubly bolted the door, and with the object
-of giving the Uhlans the idea that the place was uninhabited
-prepared to block up the windows with the boards
-which, as in most Lithuanian country cottages, served
-as shutters, fastened from the inside.</p>
-
-<p>"Perhaps," she thought, "if they see the house shuttered,
-they will conclude it is uninhabited and will ride
-away."</p>
-
-<p>Unfortunately, the Uhlans rode quickly, and Stephania
-had more than she could do with just one shutter, that
-which protected the little window on the left of the telephone,
-and which, when up, plunged the room into semi-darkness.
-Whilst she was fixing this barrier, the Uhlans
-surrounded the house and the officer momentarily
-caught sight of her. Simultaneously there came a violent
-knocking at the door with the butt-end of a rifle, a command
-to open, and the sharp crack of a revolver. A bullet
-crashed through one of the panes, traversed the centre
-of the shutter-board, and buried itself in the opposite
-wall.</p>
-
-<p>The brave woman was now back at the telephone, but
-not before she had managed to make the entrance to her
-home doubly sure by dragging a heavy dresser against
-it.</p>
-
-<p>"Halloa, Shavli! You have sent for help? Thank you.
-They have surrounded the house, and are trying to force
-an entrance. They have discovered that I am here. But
-they will have a difficulty in forcing open the door, unless&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>She paused and listened. There was a long and ominous<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[292]</a></span>
-silence, which made her think at first that the enemy
-must have decided it was not worth while to waste further
-time over a woman. But the hope was short-lived.
-She heard a sharp command in German, the sound of
-muffled voices, a burst of laughter, and the clatter of
-horses' hoofs around the house. What was happening?
-Were they really riding off?</p>
-
-<p>Again her hopes were shattered. The scampering backwards
-and forwards continued, one of the horses neighed,
-and she imagined she could almost hear the Uhlans' heavy
-breathing, sounds which brought back to her the danger
-which she had hesitated to frame in words. Very
-soon her fears were confirmed. A vision flashed to her
-brain and made her sick with fear. A faint cracking
-sound broke upon her ears from several points simultaneously,
-spreading until it seemed to envelope her on all
-sides, and especially over her head. By slow degrees the
-crackling grew to a roar, and then she fully realized what
-the barbarians had done.</p>
-
-
-<p>IV&mdash;"HELP! HELP!"&mdash;A VOICE FROM THE
-BURNING THATCH</p>
-
-<p>"Help, help!" called Stephania into the telephone.
-"They have fired the thatch. For Heaven's sake, send
-me help. But a few minutes and the rafters, I fear, will
-catch fire. Are you still there, Shavli? Oh, speak&mdash;speak!"</p>
-
-<p>An exclamation, mingled sorrow and anger, came from
-the telephonist at Shavli.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, the ruffians, the abominable assassins!" he cried.
-"I beseech you to have courage. Help is surely on the
-way."</p>
-
-<p>"I will try to be brave and do my duty to the end,
-as Michael told me," replied Stephania, as though to herself.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[293]</a></span>
-"But unless they come soon, it will be too late. The
-thatch has burnt like tinder. I can hear the flames roaring
-like a furnace underneath the rafters. There! One
-of them has given way and fallen on to the joists of my
-room. Already the heat is suffocating, the smoke almost
-unbearable. Holy Virgin! What a death."</p>
-
-<p>"Alas, what more can we do than beg you to bear up?"
-returned the voice at Shavli, in an agonized tone. "We
-have just been informed that a party of Cossacks left
-twenty minutes ago to rescue you. Once more, courage!
-And may Our Lady of Vilna indeed protect you."</p>
-
-<p>When Stephania Ychas next spoke through the telephone
-the roof fell in with a crash and pierced a hole,
-through which the burning embers fell, in the ceiling
-of her room. At the same time communication with
-Shavli was suddenly interrupted, either through the Uhlans
-having discovered and cut the wire, or, as is more
-probable, owing to the fire having fused the terminals.
-She could not, however, have sustained her appeals for
-help much longer. Indeed, it was not many minutes afterwards
-that, stupefied and blinded by the smoke, as
-she groped her way to the door in an instinctive movement
-towards the open air, she sank to the floor unconscious.</p>
-
-<p>It is a characteristic of the Cossacks, many times admitted
-even by German military critics, and those who have
-been describing the operations in Lithuania for the enemy
-Press, that they rarely if ever waste a shot. Unlike the
-French cavalry, they do not fire from a distance, but fearlessly
-swoop down upon their adversaries and seek to
-bring them down, one by one, at a range of but a few
-yards. And that was the fate of the Uhlans, who, hungering
-to feast their eyes and ears on the suffering of a
-defenceless woman, lingered a little too long around the
-burning cottage of Stephania Ychas. Not one escaped.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[294]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Stephania Ychas did not lose her life after all. The
-brave Cossacks broke in the already half-consumed window
-and dragged her forth. She was badly burnt, but
-lived to tell this tale to a nurse in a Russian hospital,
-whither the railway officials of Shavli transported her, almost
-immediately after her rescue, in one of their motor-cars.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[295]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>WITH A FLEET SURGEON ON A
-BRITISH WARSHIP DURING
-A BATTLE</h2>
-
-<p><i>Under Fire on His Majesty's Ship, the
-"Fearless"</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Told by Fleet Surgeon Walter K. Hopkins, of the
-Royal Navy</i></p>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;ON A HOSPITAL SHIP IN BATTLE</p>
-
-<p>On August 27 (1914) we were hoping to meet the
-enemy early on the following morning.</p>
-
-<p>On August 28, at 3:45 <span class="smcap">A.M.</span>, "Action" was sounded
-off. Two cruisers (supposed enemy's ships) having been
-suddenly observed, had caused us to take up "stations"
-somewhat earlier than had been anticipated. It was
-quickly discovered, however, that the cruisers were our
-own. Shortly after, therefore, breakfast was piped to
-each watch in turn, and at about 7 <span class="smcap">A.M.</span> the enemy's
-ships were actually sighted. From this time on to close
-upon 2 <span class="smcap">P.M.</span>, successive actions were fought between
-various opposing forces of the two fleets.</p>
-
-<p>The day was fine and calm, while the sun gleamed
-through a very hazy atmosphere, in which patches of fog
-shortened up the visual distance from time to time.</p>
-
-<p>I remained on the upper deck during the earlier part
-of the affair, and found it a most interesting and inspiring
-sight to watch our destroyers and the <i>Arethusa</i> and
-her divisions dashing at full speed after the enemy, while
-soon the frequent spurts of flame from their sides, the
-following reports, and the columns of water and spray
-thrown up by the enemy's shells pitching short or over,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[296]</a></span>
-began to create in most of us a suppressed excitement
-which we had not hitherto experienced, telling us that the
-"real thing" had begun, that an action was actually in
-progress.</p>
-
-<p>Shortly our interest was to multiply fourfold, when
-the order to fire our own guns was given. After a time
-shells began to drop ominously near. I retired to my
-station, a selected spot just below waterline in the after
-bread room, one of the few available places in a ship of
-this class where some of my party of first-aid men could
-be accommodated; the other half of the party in charge
-of the sick-berth steward being situated at a similar station
-forward. This period one found trying. For
-knowledge as to how matters were progressing we had to
-rely upon fragments of information shouted down the
-nearest hatchway from someone in communication with
-those on the upper deck.</p>
-
-<p>The rat-tat-tat! rat, tat, tat, tat! on our side from
-time to time, as we got into the thick of it, told us plainly
-of shells pitching short and bursting, whose fragments
-struck but did not penetrate the ship's skin; it was a
-weird sound, occasionally varied by a tremendous
-"woomp," which once at least made the paymaster, who
-was reclining near me on a flour sack, and myself, look
-hard at the side close by us, where we fully expected,
-for the moment, to see water coming in. As a matter of
-fact, this shell entered some forty feet away, bursting on
-entry into the Lieutenant Commander's cabin, while its
-solid nose finally fetched up in the wardroom, where
-later on it was christened "our honorary member." For
-this trophy I believe we have the <i>Mainz</i> or <i>Koeln</i> to
-thank. The wardroom steward found a similar piece of
-shell in his hammock that night. It had penetrated the
-ship's side and a bulkhead before finally choosing its
-highly suitable place of rest.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[297]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The shells that missed us burst upon the surface of the
-ocean near by and, strange as it may seem to those not
-familiar with such things, the fragments flew from the
-water with sufficient force to dent the sides of the ship
-and to kill men when they dropped on the deck.</p>
-
-<p>When a shell actually struck our ship and penetrated
-the structure there was a reverberating crash that roared
-from end to end and nearly drove our eardrums in and
-made work of any delicacy impossible. It was bad enough
-with us, but what must have been happening on some of
-the German ships that were now sinking and were being
-pierced by great shells from three sides at once I leave to
-some one with imagination.</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;"I WATCHED THE BURNING CRUISER
-SINK"</p>
-
-<p>It would surely require the pen of a Dante to depict all
-the horrors that were happening on the German cruiser
-<i>Mainz</i>, as she went down. We knew that she was burning.
-The men stayed at their guns until the flames actually
-began to burn up their legs. The wounded lay in
-heaps on the deck and the flames destroyed them without
-help. The blood ran on the decks so that the men who
-were still trying to work the light deck guns slipped in it
-and fell.</p>
-
-<p>Our shells passed through their hospital ward and
-killed the wounded and the surgeons as they were working
-over them. That any men could have passed through
-such an ordeal and retained their senses is a tribute to the
-wonderful effect of naval training and discipline.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Fearless</i> appears to have borne a somewhat
-charmed life&mdash;a large number of shells pitched just short
-and just over her&mdash;she was hit fair and square by seven,
-one of which played a lot of havoc with the middle deck<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[298]</a></span>
-forward and the mess gear there. Her sides showed
-some twenty-three holes of varying size, and yet her list
-of casualties was only eight wounded, none dangerously.
-She also had two narrow escapes from being torpedoed,
-one torpedo passing just forward from an unknown
-source, and another aft from a submarine.</p>
-
-<p>During comparative lulls I went onto the upper deck
-once or twice, to visit the forward station and to see
-that all was correct. For suppressed excitement and vivid
-interest I should say the seeker after sensation could
-scarcely ask for more than a modern naval action.</p>
-
-<p>The shells were falling all about us, and why we were
-not sunk I can never understand. The captain kept the
-ship zigzagging on her course to upset the enemy's aim.
-At one time we came within 2,000 yards of the Mainz,
-which had already been partly wrecked by the long-distance
-fire from our big battle cruisers, the <i>Lion</i>, <i>Invincible</i>,
-and <i>Queen Mary</i>. It was our duty to help finish
-her without sinking our big ships.</p>
-
-<p>She made two attempts to torpedo us. I watched one
-torpedo skimming through the water like a shark about
-ten yards from the bow, as it seemed to me. We just
-escaped it by a turn of the wheel in the nick of time.
-Then another skimmed by our stern, running over the
-spot we had left only a minute before.</p>
-
-<p>"She's a goner," I heard one of our men say. The
-German cruiser was a burning wreck, but she kept the
-two small guns, one at each end, firing away to the last.
-Then one of our destroyers rushed in to close quarters
-and gave her the finishing blow with a torpedo.</p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;THE WOUNDED ON THE BLOODY DECK</p>
-
-<p>It was not until the latter part of the affair that I was
-called upon to deal with any wounded, and then a rapid<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[299]</a></span>
-succession of cases were either carried or managed to
-walk to the main deck after, where, assisted by the first-aid
-party, I cleansed and dressed their wounds. Two or
-three returned to duty the same afternoon, the others
-being placed in the wardroom temporarily after dressings
-had been applied, a reliable first-aid man being placed
-in charge. In addition, one case was treated at the
-forward station, and later on in the day a man who had
-received a somewhat severe contusion and abrasion of the
-thigh from a spent fragment of shell reported himself.
-Seven of the eight cases were wounds due to fragments
-of shell and splinters of steel or wood from the ship. The
-exception was a scald of the forearm, sustained by a
-stoker while investigating a steam pipe burst by an exploding
-shell.</p>
-
-<p>While I was occupied with the cases mentioned above,
-we had taken the destroyer <i>Laertes</i> in tow, she being temporarily
-disabled by gunfire; and the order coming to
-retire, we proceeded from the scene of action for some
-considerable distance, when I was ordered to go to the
-<i>Laertes</i> to attend to some seriously wounded, and tranship
-them. The <i>Laertes</i> was cast off, and lay some two cables
-away. Arriving on board I found the worst case was
-that of a young stoker in a serious condition from shock
-and loss of blood. He had sustained several shell
-wounds, one of which involved the left tibia and fibula,
-some two inches of the tibia being torn away from its
-middle third.</p>
-
-<p>Around this patient the deck was covered with blood,
-and so slippery that I had to send for cloths to be put
-down to enable me to keep a footing. The condition of
-the deck enabled one to form an idea of how decks were
-on the <i>Mainz</i>, where 200 men were killed. Near by were
-two others, somewhat less severely wounded, lying on
-the deck, while just behind me lay two figures covered<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[300]</a></span>
-with the Union Jack. The wounded had all received
-first aid, the wounds being neatly dressed, but considerable
-hemorrhage was going on. Returning with these
-cases to the <i>Fearless</i> I found several other wounded had
-already been brought on board from other destroyers.
-The sick bay, which had been prepared to receive the
-most serious cases, was soon filled, and others were sitting
-or lying on the mess deck near by.</p>
-
-<p>Owing to the probable proximity of the enemy I had to
-bear in mind the necessity for all possible speed, which
-was awkward, as they required very careful handling.
-However, I hurried up as much as I was able. Sudden
-manoeuvring or the shock of shells hitting us might make
-our work impossible. Firstly, iodine was applied to the
-majority of wounds and their immediate area, and a fresh
-temporary dressing applied. Then ably assisted by the
-sick-berth steward and two first-aid men, I spent the
-next few hours in endeavoring to get these, for the most
-part, very dirty patients, as clean as possible. It should
-be added that, at this stage, morphia was administered
-by hypodermic injection to three or four cases, and again
-once or twice during the night. It was found to be very
-beneficial.</p>
-
-<p>Many of the men had lost an arm and a leg, and in
-some cases both arms and legs. Several poor fellows had
-their faces almost entirely blown away.</p>
-
-<p>I had prepared masks of lint for the faces, specially
-medicated, to relieve the terrible burns caused by the
-picric acid used in shells.</p>
-
-<p>A German seaman, a brawny young fellow, suffered
-much pain and considerable loss of blood from a wound
-in his left foot. Examination showed the presence of a
-piece of metal, embedded in the lower part of the instep,
-from underneath which steady oozing of blood was occurring.
-I put the patient under chloroform, and he was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[301]</a></span>
-kept lightly under, most excellently, by the Paymaster,
-while I removed the fragment of shell and many pieces
-of loose bone. The removal proved more difficult than
-I had anticipated, owing to the numerous "talons" the
-piece of shell possessed. These pointed in all directions,
-and were embedded in the bones of the foot so firmly that
-it was rather like the extraction of a huge molar with a
-dozen or more distorted fangs. The fragment weighed
-some six ounces, and its removal gave the patient great
-relief.</p>
-
-<p>A German seaman had compound comminuated fracture
-of right radius, ulna, and humerus, due to a huge
-wound in the neighborhood of the elbow. Multiple
-wounds of face and body and a scalp wound. This man
-appeared to be suffering from severe shock, was at times
-wandering in his mind, but at others quite clear. The
-wound in the scalp was found later to penetrate the skull
-in the left frontal region. He died after several days in
-hospital.</p>
-
-
-<p>IV&mdash;"IT WAS VERY FINE SPORT"</p>
-
-<p>A sub-lieutenant I discovered sitting in the wardroom
-with his legs upon a chair. He had sustained a "lozenge-shaped"
-clean cut shell wound in the middle of right
-thigh, about 5 inches by 2 inches, and passing deeply
-through the anterior muscles. He was very cheery and
-was only anxious to get back to his work, which he did
-after two or three weeks.</p>
-
-<p>A captain-lieutenant of the sunken German destroyer
-V187 had been struck in the right side by a piece of shell,
-the force of the blow throwing him overboard just before
-his ship sank. He was taken out of the water about half
-an hour later. The wound was situated over the lower
-right rib, was oval in shape and about one and a half<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[302]</a></span>
-inches in diameter. He was passing blood and had a good
-deal of pain in the abdomen. It was suspected that a
-piece of shell had penetrated the abdomen, but X-rays
-showed nothing.</p>
-
-<p>He was a good type of officer. On asking him what he
-thought of the affair, he replied, "Ah, it was very fine
-sport."</p>
-
-<p>The courage and endurance of the patients were admirable.
-In only one case did I hear any "grousing,"
-as our sailors call any kind of complaining, and this was
-in one of the less severely injured. A suggestion that
-many around him were in an infinitely worse plight than
-he, and were enduring their troubles cheerfully, made a
-difference, and after a little refreshment he was as good
-as the rest of them. Some of the Germans were at first
-rather sullen, but their confidence was soon gained when
-they found that I could speak to them in their own language,
-and that we were intent upon doing our best for
-them.</p>
-
-<p>I found beef tea, brandy, ship's cocoa made with milk,
-most useful and acceptable for those who could not take
-solid food. At first one or two of the Germans hesitated
-about drinking what was offered them, but they soon
-thawed and took their portion gratefully, and, in fact,
-their gratitude a little later for what had been done for
-them was remarkable.</p>
-
-<p>I was able to report to the captain on the bridge, at
-about 4 <span class="smcap">A.M.</span>, that all cases had been dealt with, had been
-washed, dressed, fed and made as comfortable as circumstances
-would allow.</p>
-
-<p>On arrival in harbor about midday on August 29, the
-more serious cases were transferred to Shotley Sick
-Quarters, the others to the hospital ship <i>Liberty</i>. I accompanied
-the former cases, and soon after seeing them
-safely disposed of returned to the ship, had some food<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[303]</a></span>
-and turned in about 5:30 <span class="smcap">P.M.</span>, having been up some
-thirty-seven hours. Curiously enough, though tired, I
-could not sleep well owing to a bad cramp in both my
-calves, but I had passed a very interesting day and a
-half. (Told in the <i>New York American</i>.)</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[304]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>AIRMEN IN THE DESERTS OF EGYPT</h2>
-
-<p><i>Adventures of the Royal Flying Corps in
-Sinai</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Told by F. W. Martindale</i></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>The land has its perils for the aviator, and so has the sea; but
-our "fliers" in Egypt have learnt to dread the treacherous
-desert more than anything else. Here are two little stories
-from the annals of the R. F. C.&mdash;one near tragedy, the other
-real tragedy, lightened only by the amazing self-sacrifice of a
-young officer and the dogged pluck of his mechanic, who posted
-up his diary while awaiting death. Recorded in the <i>Wide World
-Magazine</i>.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;FLYING OVER THE ANCIENT HOLY LANDS</p>
-
-<p>Whatever the professional distinction may be between
-the two branches of the aviation service, the broad difference
-in the public mind between the Royal Flying
-Corps and the Royal Naval Air Service is that the former
-fly over land and the latter over sea. And whatever the
-relative advantages, and the reverse, of these opposite
-conditions may be, a certain amount of sympathy inevitably
-goes out to the naval airman in the supposedly more
-difficult element from which he starts and on which he
-has to make his "landing" on return. The mystery and
-the menace of the sea, which has always made sailors a
-race apart, is so real and apprehensible a thing, even to
-the landsman, that instinctively the sea is felt to be a
-source of greater peril to the airman than the land.</p>
-
-<p>Be this as it may, it has fallen to the lot of the Royal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[305]</a></span>
-Flying Corps in this war to face an "element"&mdash;if one
-may call it such&mdash;as mysterious as the ocean, and not a
-whit less menacing. This is the desert&mdash;a thing which
-casts a spell upon those who have to dare it as potent and
-as fearful as any with which the sea holds the mariner
-in thrall.</p>
-
-<p>Mutable to the eye as the face of the waters, sudden
-and fickle in mood as the sea itself, there lurks in the
-desert an even grimmer menace than that which gives
-the sailor his wary, vigilant eye. The cruelty of the sea
-is nothing to the cruelty of the desert. Ask the airman
-who has made trial of both, and he will tell you that
-better a hundred times the risk of falling into the clutches
-of the uncertain sea than the chance of finding himself
-at the mercy of the pitiless desert.</p>
-
-<p>Here is a case in point&mdash;a little excerpt from the doings
-of the Royal Flying Corps, which it would be hard
-to match even in the records of that adventurous service.
-Pilot and observer set off in an aeroplane upon a single-handed
-reconnaissance towards the enemy's lines in
-Sinai. A long flight was made over the desert, and the
-machine was a long way from its base when that terrible
-bugbear known as "engine-trouble" developed. All attempts
-to right it in the air proved abortive, and a forced
-descent was made. The aeroplane alighted on the desert
-waste, and the two occupants worked feverishly to adjust
-the faulty mechanism. Their dismay can be imagined
-when they found repair impossible, and realized that between
-themselves and the Canal lay a stretch of some
-twenty miles of desert, over which no means of progress
-was possible to them save their own legs.</p>
-
-<p>It says much for the loyalty to the duty of these two airmen
-that they carefully dismantled the gun which was
-mounted on the machine before setting fire to the latter,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[306]</a></span>
-and that they actually set off on their long tramp across
-the burning desert carrying the gun between them.</p>
-
-<p>It soon became evident that any idea of saving the
-gun by taking it all the way with them was hopeless.
-The weight, not inconsiderable under any condition, was
-insupportable, and before long there was no course possible
-but to bury the weapon in the sand, obliterating as
-best they could all tell-tale traces which might reveal its
-hidden presence to a chance enemy patrol.</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;OVER THE BURNING DESERT WITH A
-GUN</p>
-
-<p>Progress was easier when the cumbersome weapon had
-been disposed of. But it was not long before clothing
-had to be jettisoned also. The relatively thick and heavy
-garments of an aviator were intolerable under the savage
-rays of the sun, and one by one they had to be discarded.
-Even so, the going was terribly difficult and the journey
-most exacting. By means of a compass a direction due
-west was maintained, the one hope of the castaways being
-to keep on until some point on the Canal should be
-reached.</p>
-
-<p>The hours went slowly by as mile after mile was laboriously
-covered. The strength of both men was steadily
-declining, but it was not until something more than half
-the estimated distance from their goal had been accomplished
-that either gave way. Then one collapsed; he
-could go no farther, he declared. His companion, well
-aware how fatally seductive a "rest" would inevitably be,
-bade him keep going, but without effect. The weary
-man's legs gave way beneath him; he sank down on the
-sand, and declared that he <i>preferred</i> to stay there rather
-than attempt to struggle on any longer. Advice, persuasion,
-cajolery, threats, and even force were of no<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[307]</a></span>
-avail, and nothing remained but for the second man to
-continue the journey, with waning hope, alone. To stay
-with his comrade meant that both must inevitably perish
-miserably; by pressing on there was, at all events, a faint
-chance, not only of reaching the Canal himself, but of
-summoning aid to return in time to rescue the other.</p>
-
-<p>For some miles the wretched survivor, now tortured
-by an awful thirst and so weakened that he seemed
-scarcely able to move his legs, staggered blindly on across
-the desert. He had consciousness enough to maintain
-his westerly direction, but as to how long he continued
-stumbling forward in this almost aimless fashion, or
-what distance he covered, he can hazard only the wildest
-guess. His progress became largely automatic. Force
-of will kept him moving, his reluctant limbs relapsing
-into semi-mechanical action.</p>
-
-<p>At the moment of his direst extremity, as it seemed,
-when from sheer lack of power his body threatened to
-collapse altogether, the hapless wanderer espied a horse
-before him in the desert!</p>
-
-<p>Now, if this were fiction, no writer, however cynical,
-would ever dare to introduce a horse at such a point of
-the narrative. The thing would be too absurd; the long
-arm of coincidence never reached so far as that! Nobody
-could be expected to believe it.</p>
-
-<p>Yet the fact is as stated. At the psychological moment,
-when every new step taken might have proved his
-last, the wanderer saw before him in the desert the miraculous
-apparition of a horse. It can be easily supposed
-that at first he did not believe his eyes. In his half-demented
-state he feared the creature must be an hallucination&mdash;some
-trick of mirage, or the mere figment of his
-disordered brain. Only when he came nearer, and could
-hear as well as see the animal move, did a full realization
-of his good fortune begin to dawn upon him.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[308]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;TALE OF MODERN ARABIAN NIGHTS</p>
-
-<p>A sail in unfrequented latitudes never seemed more
-truly a godsend to castaways at sea than this marvellous
-horse to the exhausted airman. It was but a stray animal
-belonging to some mounted unit which had drawn
-the peg of its head-rope and escaped from the horse-lines
-into the open desert, but to the incredulous eyes which
-suddenly perceived its presence it might well have been
-the famous magic steed of the Arabian Nights.</p>
-
-<p>To catch the animal was the immediate thing to be
-done, and anyone who has tried to catch a shy horse in
-a paddock can imagine the hideous anxiety on the part
-of an exhausted man in approaching an animal which has
-the illimitable desert to man&oelig;uvre in, and has but to kick
-up its heels to vanish in a trice over the horizon. Fortunately,
-the creature evinced but little shyness, and suffered
-itself to be taken without difficulty. It is probable,
-indeed, that this desert encounter was not less welcome
-on the one side than on the other.</p>
-
-<p>One wonders how the would-be rider ever managed
-to get astride his lucky steed. His legs had little enough
-capacity for a spring left in them. But necessity and
-hope in combination provide a wonderful incentive and
-spur, and somehow or other he scrambled up. He himself
-has hazy recollections only of this stage of his adventures,
-and beyond the fact that he <i>did</i> mount that
-horse, and manage to set it going in a westerly direction,
-his recollections are vague.</p>
-
-<p>The next phase of the story is contained in the narrative
-of the officer commanding a patrol vessel on the Suez
-Canal, who relates that while on duty his attention was
-directed to a strange figure riding on horseback along the
-eastern bank of the Canal. At first sight he supposed it
-to be some mounted Arab or other nomad of the desert,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[309]</a></span>
-but on closer inspection the horse did not seem to be of
-native type, and the rider's garb appeared unusual. On
-nearer approach the strange apparition resolved itself into
-a white man, of wild and haggard demeanor, dressed in
-a torn shirt and very little else, who bestrode barebacked
-a troop-horse in distressed condition. Hailed by the
-patrol boat, the white horseman replied in English, and
-explained intelligibly, if a trifle incoherently, that he had
-come out of the desert, that his chum was lying some
-miles back in dire distress, if not already dead, and would
-somebody please hurry up and do something.</p>
-
-<p>The conclusion of the story can be told in a sentence.
-A relief party was sent at once into the desert, the second
-airman was picked up exhausted but still alive, and at the
-date when the present writer last heard of them both
-parties of this strange adventure of the desert were little,
-if any, the worse for their experiences. As to the gallant
-troop-horse which played the part of a kind of <i>equus ex
-machina</i>, no peg in all the lines is now more firmly and
-securely driven in than his!</p>
-
-<p>The story just related ends happily for all concerned;
-let me deal now with the reverse side of the shield!</p>
-
-
-<p>IV&mdash;SHOT HIMSELF IN SELF-SACRIFICE</p>
-
-<p>About the middle of June last year Second-Lieutenant
-Stewart Gordon Ridley, of the R.F.C., went out alone in
-his machine as escort to another pilot, who had with him
-a pilot named J. A. Garside. "Engine trouble" developed
-when Lieutenant Ridley had been flying for an hour and
-a half, and, as they could not put the matter right immediately
-on alighting, they decided to camp where they
-were for the night. Next morning, as Ridley's engine
-still proved obdurate, the second pilot decided to fly back
-alone to the base, and return on the following day to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[310]</a></span>
-assistance of the two men. This programme was duly
-carried out, but when he got back the pilot found that
-Ridley and Garside, with the machine, had disappeared.</p>
-
-<p>A search party was immediately organized to scour the
-desert, and on the Sunday tracks were discovered. It
-was not until the Tuesday, however, that the missing
-'plane was discovered. Beside it lay the dead bodies of
-Lieutenant Ridley and Garside. A diary was found on
-the mechanic, and the brief entries therein tell the tragic
-story of those last hours better than pages of description.
-The diary reads as follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>Friday.&mdash;Mr. Gardiner left for Meheriq, and said he would
-come and pick one of us up. After he went we tried to get
-the machine going, and succeeded in flying for about twenty-five
-minutes. Engine then gave out. We tinkered engine up
-again, succeeded in flying about five miles next day (Saturday),
-but engine ran short of petrol.</p>
-
-<p>Sunday.&mdash;After trying to get engine started, but could not
-manage it owing to weakness&mdash;water running short, only half
-a bottle&mdash;Mr. Ridley suggested walking up to the hills. Six
-<span class="smcap">P.M.</span> (Sunday): Found it was farther than we thought; got
-there eventually; very done up. No luck. Walked back; hardly
-any water&mdash;about a spoonful. Mr. Ridley shot himself at ten-thirty
-on Sunday whilst my back was turned. No water all
-day; don't know how to go on; got one Verey light; dozed all
-day, feeling very weak; wish someone would come; cannot
-last much longer.</p>
-
-<p>Monday.&mdash;Thought of water in compass, got half bottle;
-seems to be some kind of spirit. Can last another day. Fired
-Lewis gun, about four rounds; shall fire my Verey light to-night;
-last hope without machine comes. Could last days if
-I had water.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>The captain of the Imperial Camel Corps, with which
-the aviators were co-operating, formed the opinion that
-Lieutenant Ridley shot himself in the hope of saving the
-mechanic, the water they had being insufficient to last
-the two of them till help arrived. The Commanding<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[311]</a></span>
-Officer of the R. F. C. states: "There is no doubt in my
-mind that he performed this act of self-sacrifice in the
-hope of saving the other man."</p>
-
-<p>The history of the R. F. C. is a short one, but it is
-already full of glorious deeds.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[312]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>HOW SWEENY, OF THE FOREIGN
-LEGION, GOT HIS "HOT DOGS"</h2>
-
-<p><i>Told by Private John Joseph Casey of the Foreign
-Legion</i></p>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;STORY OF AN AMERICAN "WEST-POINTER"</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>Lieut. Charles Sweeny, of the French Foreign Legion, returned
-to New York to recover from a wound received during the
-French offensive in Champagne. Sweeny is an American, a
-graduate of West Point, and the son of a former president of
-the Federal Smelting and Refining Co., of Spokane, Wash. The
-following story, of a most unusual "Dutch treat," was told by
-Lieut. Sweeny to Private Casey, a New York artist, also fighting
-in the Foreign Legion, to the <i>New York World</i>.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>You have read of the cordial exchanges of tobacco and
-tidbits between the men of the North and the South,
-who were facing each other as deadly foes in the rifle
-pits during the Civil War. These exchanges (the amicable
-ones, of course) were quaint and peculiar enough
-between those avowed enemies, even though both were
-of the same blood and spoke the same tongue. But the
-one which now interests us took place during the present
-war, between Lieut. Charlie Sweeny of the French Foreign
-Legion, and the Germans in the adjacent trenches;
-by which exchange the Germans got nothing, and Sweeny
-got a feast of "hot dogs!"</p>
-
-<p>Sweeny, as you may infer from his name, is not a
-Frenchmen, even though he happens to be in the army
-service of France. I am also in the same service and my
-name is Casey. We are both Americans. Sweeny is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[313]</a></span>
-a West Point graduate, and a native of Spokane, Wash.
-After his graduation from West Point he married a
-Belgian girl and settled down in Paris. His wife and
-two small children are living in that vicinity at the present
-time.</p>
-
-<p>When the war broke out Sweeny enlisted in the French
-Foreign Legion. He was promoted for gallantry in action;
-and last September, after leading us into the Boche
-lines during the Champagne offensive, he was decorated
-with the Legion of Honor. Lieut. Sweeny is the first
-American in fifty years who has held a commission in the
-French army.</p>
-
-<p>But how Sweeny won his "hot dogs" is a different
-story.</p>
-
-<p>One day when we were in the front trenches Sweeny
-handed me a cigarette. It looked like a Turkish cigarette
-and I duly remarked it.</p>
-
-<p>"No," said he, and he indicated a large tin box filled
-with the same sort, which he had with him, "these are a
-present from our friends, the enemy. They were given
-to me by the Germans."</p>
-
-<p>"Must have been sent over to you inside a 'Jack
-Johnson' shell," said I.</p>
-
-<p>"I can see you don't believe me," Sweeny replied, "but
-it's a fact. They came in a hamper, together with two
-bottles of real Munich beer, an assortment of Westphalian
-ham, cheese, honey, sandwiches of roast veal and
-white bread, a few slabs of K bread, some pipe tobacco,
-and some&mdash;what do you think?&mdash;hot dogs! As sure as
-you're born, Casey, and if you'll believe me, I went for
-those frankfurters first! Oh, how many nights I have
-sat out here and thought how good one of those hot
-dogs, with a big gob of mustard on it, would be! But I
-never thought I'd ever taste any in the trenches. Yet
-only just now I have demolished four of them."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[314]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;"LET SWEENY TELL IT"</p>
-
-<p>Here was the way of it, as Sweeny told it to me:</p>
-
-<p>"I started out about midnight with a patrol to have
-a look at a new German bayou between two fortlets beyond
-our lines. I strung my men out so as to give warning
-of any German patrol, and then led them past our
-sentries and the barbed wire. I was some distance ahead
-of my men, and had got well within the German lines
-without seeing or hearing anything of the Germans.</p>
-
-<p>"Now this was not the first time that I had ever penetrated
-that far into the German lines, but it was the first
-time on such a mission that I had not had to dodge a
-German patrol; and very often their bullets. These
-things ran in my head continually and made me think
-that I had fallen into a very neat trap which the Germans
-had laid for me. I expected to see them rise from
-anywhere any minute, and hear the banging of their guns
-and the whistling of their bullets (if I was lucky enough
-to hear them, that is), and I began to wish myself well
-out of my predicament and back again in the comparative
-safety of our trench.</p>
-
-<p>"This made me more cautious than ever, and presently
-I began to retreat. As I did so a round German
-helmet bobbed up out of a ravine not a dozen yards
-away. An instant later, at the other end of the ravine,
-another appeared. I squirmed away like a snake and
-got behind the only shelter in sight, a little scrubby tree,
-about three yards away.</p>
-
-<p>"As I lay there quaking, wondering why the Germans
-did not shoot&mdash;for they must have seen me&mdash;I happened
-to look up, and there, hanging to a branch of the tree,
-was a fat, clean-looking basket. I reached up, the limb
-on which it hung being only a few feet from the ground,
-and lifted the basket down.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[315]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"Then in a flash the explanation of the puzzle was
-clear to me. The Germans had left that basket there and
-meant me to have it.</p>
-
-<p>"With the basket on my arm I got up, bowed low to
-the round hats, and walked back to our trench without
-ever being fired on.</p>
-
-<p>"Inside the basket was the assortment I have described
-to you. There was also a note something after this wise:</p>
-
-<p>"'We have been in front of you for over a year, and
-it is not against our comrades, the French, that we are
-fighting, but against our enemy, the English. Let us
-join forces against our common enemy. We are not
-starving, as you may well see from the little present
-we send you herewith.'</p>
-
-<p>"Here was something that set me thinking pretty hard.
-I had escaped death or capture by a miracle so far as I
-could see, and all in order that I might enjoy a hearty
-meal at the expense of the Germans.</p>
-
-<p>"I set the basket down in the trench, and fell to with
-a will; and I give you my word, Casey, of all the good
-things I have eaten, I never enjoyed anything more than
-I did that Dutch treat&mdash;especially the frankfurters.</p>
-
-<p>"They took me back to the States immediately&mdash;hot
-dogs, the brightness of the sea, the yawping of barkers,
-crowds passing, the noise of thousands of shuffling feet&mdash;not
-the sort of shuffling we hear now, Casey, when a
-bugle call or the heavy sound of guns seems the chief
-attraction. It was a great shame I couldn't save you one.</p>
-
-<p>"The meaning of all this was a puzzle to me until I
-found out that our boys had left a bundle of American
-and English newspapers in the spot where I had found the
-basket, with the paragraphs plainly marked in which it
-was said the Germans were starving. And the basket
-was the Germans' reply.</p>
-
-<p>"Now you know how I came to get my hot dogs."</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[316]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>THE DOGS OF WAR ON THE
-BATTLEGROUNDS</h2>
-
-<p><i>The "Four-Footed Soldiers" of France</i></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>The "friend of man" has always served his master faithfully and
-well in various humble capacities, but the Great War has seen
-his sphere of usefulness enlarged to an almost incredible extent.
-Our Gallant French allies have mobilized thousands of dogs for
-war service, and as scouts, sentries, messengers, ambulance
-workers, and beasts of burden these wonderfully-trained animals
-have rendered most valuable assistance to the armies in the field.
-Here is a soldier's story in the <i>Wide World Magazine</i>.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;TALES OF THE DOGS</p>
-
-<p>My friend, who had just come home on leave from the
-trenches, placed on the table in front of me a suspicious-looking
-parcel which left no manner of doubt that, for
-its size, it was extremely heavy.</p>
-
-<p>"I'm going to leave this with you for a day or two, if
-you don't mind," he said. "I can't carry it about with
-me."</p>
-
-<p>"What is it&mdash;bombs?" I asked, laughing, and my
-friend, without a smile, answered:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, two bombs&mdash;for my dog."</p>
-
-<p>Wondering what murderous intention had suddenly
-taken possession of the man, I looked my surprise, and
-then he explained. He was about to buy a dog to take
-back with him to the trenches, he told me, and to make
-sure that the animal was absolutely and thoroughly
-trained he had brought the bombs in order to test him.
-If, when the bombs exploded in the dog's presence, the
-latter stood the shock without fear or panic, he would
-know the animal was trained and would be useful to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[317]</a></span>
-him. If, on the other hand, he manifested the symptoms
-of unrest which I, for instance, would show if a bomb
-exploded just behind my coat-tails, then the animal was
-not properly trained and would be of no use to a soldier
-in the trenches.</p>
-
-<p>The use of dogs in warfare is to-day a common matter.
-The number of dogs with the French army alone can be
-guessed when it is stated that one society, the Société
-Nationale du Chien Sanitaire, of 21, Rue de Choiseul,
-Paris, has trained over fifteen hundred war-dogs.</p>
-
-<p>The training of dogs for warfare showed from the
-first of the most satisfactory results, and numbers of
-regiments would now find their operations very difficult
-indeed if they were suddenly deprived of their sagacious
-four-footed companions.</p>
-
-<p>The Société du Chien Sanitaire, like most new movements,
-did not receive much official encouragement at the
-beginning of the campaign, but nevertheless, thanks to
-its efforts, under its energetic president, M. A. Lepel-Cointet,
-aided by private enterprise, suitable animals were
-soon forthcoming, at any rate for ambulance purposes,
-and many officers took "mobilized" dogs with them to act
-as scouts and watchers at night.</p>
-
-<p>Dogs particularly suitable to warlike purposes are to
-be found in great numbers in the Lower Pyrenees and
-other mountainous regions of France, and to-day there
-are societies in different parts of the country&mdash;not enough,
-it is true, but still they have made a good beginning&mdash;who
-are collecting and training the animals and sending them
-to the Front. Recently a contingent of one hundred dogs
-was sent to the army by the Department of the Indre,
-which is a hunting country where dogs are particularly
-well trained to explore and to act as guardians. People
-who have given or lent dogs to the army can, by keeping
-the number given to them on receipt of the animal, have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[318]</a></span>
-news of their pets and their exploits, and some continue
-to keep in touch with their humble friends by sending
-them dainties from time to time.</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;DOGS AS SENTINELS AT THE FRONT</p>
-
-<p>M. Mégnin, an authority on the use of dogs in warfare,
-says that German attacks by night on small outposts have
-almost completely failed since dogs have been employed
-to watch. The animals have a remarkably acute sense of
-hearing, and are able to detect the enemy at a great distance
-and prepare the men to receive him. Thousands of
-sentinels, especially in the Argonne and the Vosges,
-where it is difficult to see far ahead owing to the nature
-of the ground, have owed it to their dogs that they have
-not been surprised and killed or taken prisoners. In many
-cases they have even turned the tables on the enemy.</p>
-
-<p>Captain Tolet, who is in command of the kennels of the
-Tenth French Army, has narrated some of the brave
-deeds&mdash;the word is not too strong&mdash;of dogs under his
-care, especially during the fighting on the Somme. On
-August 28th a dog called Médor, although wounded by
-a shrapnel shell, ran a mile and a half to carry a message
-from a brigade to a colonel, was again wounded in the
-last two hundred yards, but dragged himself to the commander's
-post, where he died a quarter of an hour later.
-Another dog, Follette, in the same month, ran nearly two
-miles and was wounded, but nevertheless persisted in his
-mission, dying five days later. In a part of the Vosges a
-battalion of Chasseurs which utilized a particularly intelligent
-animal as a sentinel did not lose a single man,
-while a battalion which had preceded it, and which had no
-dog, lost seven sentries in three days.</p>
-
-<p>Another case of a dog's usefulness is recorded in the
-taking of a farm in the Bois Brûlé (Burnt Wood).<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[319]</a></span>
-Everyone thought Germans were hiding in the farm, and
-no patrol had ventured to approach it. At last a man
-went towards it at night with a dog on a leash twenty
-yards ahead of him. The animal showed no signs of uneasiness,
-and the farm was found to be empty. Telegraphists
-and others were thereupon able to instal themselves,
-and before morning the Germans' position was
-satisfactorily examined and an enemy redoubt smashed
-up.</p>
-
-<p>Some of these gallant four-footed soldiers have received
-decorations just like men&mdash;and an extra bone or
-two as well, one hopes. Why not? The intelligence
-shown by these animals sometimes approaches very near
-to that of human beings, and one feels sure they are
-gratified at the attention drawn to their doings. Recently
-there was a special public parade at the Trocadéro in
-Paris, when the Société Protectrice des Animaux presented
-prizes to soldiers who had distinguished themselves
-in the training of animals. Collars of honour
-were also awarded to a large number of dogs exhibited
-by the soldiers who had trained them. Three
-of these animals were specially fêted on account of what
-they had done&mdash;Fend l'Air, belonging to Sergeant Jacqemin,
-whose life he had saved at Roclincourt; Loustic,
-specially noticed for his intelligence at the Front; and
-Pyrame, who saved an entire French battalion by detecting
-the presence of an enemy column. In other cases
-the War Cross has been awarded to dogs that have performed
-conspicuous deeds, especially in the saving of
-life.</p>
-
-<p>It was mainly owing to a number of British dogs that
-the French army was able to drive the Germans out of
-Boesinghe Woods in one of the engagements round Ypres.
-Prusco, a bull-terrier, serving with French motor scouts,
-who carried him in a side-car, was of great value in carrying<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[320]</a></span>
-messages back to headquarters; while Lutz, a dog that
-distinguished himself in one of the Verdun engagements,
-was employed as an advance sentinel last February, and
-first gave warning of a German attack by repeated growls.
-The Red Cross Dog League, which began activities early
-in the war with eight dogs, now has two thousand five
-hundred animals in the field, and it claims that the lives
-of at least eight thousand wounded men have been saved
-by them.</p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;HOW DOGS BECOME GOOD SOLDIERS</p>
-
-<p>The training of intelligent animals like these is carried
-on in five different ways, for various uses.</p>
-
-<p>1.&mdash;<i>As Ambulance Dogs.</i> The animal seeks for
-wounded men lost on the battlefield; he searches in holes,
-ruins, and excavations, and hunts over wooded places or
-coverts, where the wounded man might lie unnoticed by
-his comrades or the stretcher-bearer. The dog is especially
-useful at this work in the night-time, when he can
-often by his scent discover fallen men who would otherwise
-be passed over, for at night-time ambulance-men
-often have to work in the dark, as lights would attract the
-enemy's fire. Having found a wounded man still alive,
-the dog brings his master (or the ambulance-man to whom
-he is attached) some article belonging to the sufferer.
-This object tells the master, "I have found someone&mdash;search!"
-Usually the object brought is the fallen man's
-<i>képi</i> (or nowadays his helmet), and the trainers teach
-the dog to find the man's headgear, but if this is missing
-some other object must be brought. It is a fatiguing
-operation for the animal, as he has to return with closed
-mouth. The ambulance-man who receives the article at
-once puts the animal on a leash, and is immediately led
-to his wounded comrade. The leash is about two yards<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[321]</a></span>
-long, so that the movements of the animal shall be hindered
-as little as possible.</p>
-
-<p>If dogs were utilized in this service long during wartime,
-their value would be incalculable; and their use is
-all the greater when fighting takes place over an extended
-area. The situation of the wounded man overlooked or
-abandoned on the battlefield is a truly horrible one;
-he has to wait in the forlorn hope that he will be found,
-for the army has gone on, and the more victorious it is
-the farther it will push ahead. In the Franco-Prussian
-War of 1870-1 more than twelve thousand men were
-thus lost to the French alone, while in the Russo-Japanese
-War the Japanese lost over five thousand in this manner,
-showing that the methods then used for the exploration
-of the battlefields were inadequate. In that war three
-dogs sent by a military dog society found twenty-three
-wounded men who had been abandoned after the battle
-of Cha-ho. In the Boer War the collie dogs taken out by
-the men, it is said, saved hundreds of wounded men who
-would never have been found by the ambulance-workers
-in the difficult country where fighting mostly took place.</p>
-
-<p>2.&mdash;<i>As Trench Dogs or Sentinels.</i> The sentry or
-trench dog is trained to stay in the trench itself or in a
-small "listening-post" made for him, either on the edge
-of the trench, outside it, or at a little distance away.
-There he remains on the <i>qui vive</i>, ready to signal the least
-suspicion of a noise or the presence of the enemy. In
-this work both his eyes and his scent help him. He is
-kept on the leash, and he gives the signal of danger by
-a slight growl, without barking, which would give the
-alarm. The greatest difficulty in the training of dogs for
-this work has been to rid them of the habit of barking,
-but this has been overcome with care and patience. The
-training of dogs for this class of work can be&mdash;and has
-been&mdash;carried to great lengths. A man crawling on patrol<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[322]</a></span>
-work can take a dog with him, also in a crouching position,
-on a leash. A little tug at the leash causes the dog
-to rise, to retire, or to change its direction, and a properly-trained
-animal will answer to the leash as satisfactorily
-as a horse does to the reins. Such a dog is of immense
-help at night, when he can be taken quite close to the
-enemy.</p>
-
-<p>3.&mdash;<i>As Patrols or Scouts.</i> The dog accompanies the
-human scout in his reconnaissance, and helps in finding
-advance posts or sentinels, and locating small groups of
-the enemy.</p>
-
-<p>4.&mdash;<i>As Couriers or Messengers.</i> The animal acts as
-a messenger, carrying written orders or information, and
-is used according to circumstances. He can carry messages
-between groups in the rear and fighting formations
-in the front&mdash;for example, between the artillery and the
-infantry, and <i>vice versa</i>; between two fighting forces,
-such as battalions, companies, or sections; between the
-headquarters and the various positions of the army; or
-between the main body and detached posts, such as patrols,
-scouts, etc. Taken along by a patrol or scouting
-party, he can be sent back to the main body with a message
-fixed to his collar. The note having been removed
-and read, a reply can be attached to his collar, and the dog
-sent back to the original body of men, even if they have
-changed their position, since he finds them again by his
-scent. A dog is not only much quicker in carrying these
-messages than a man, and can cover ground where no
-cycle could go, but he also has an advantage in being almost
-invisible to the enemy. If on a leash, he can conduct
-a man in charge of reinforcements or ammunition
-to the new position of the patrolling party&mdash;sometimes
-over a distance of several miles.</p>
-
-<p>5.&mdash;<i>As Dogs of Communication.</i> This is the most difficult
-task to which military dogs are put, and requires<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[323]</a></span>
-very special qualities, so that only a very few animals
-have been found capable of the work. It consists in
-sending him after a patrol <i>en route</i> with a message, or
-even in finding a lost patrol or scouting party and bringing
-it back to its base. It will readily be understood that
-an exceptional scent is required in a dog to do work of
-this sort.</p>
-
-<p>In the two last-named classes of work dogs can pass
-swiftly backwards and forwards through brisk firing
-and run much less risk than a man.</p>
-
-
-<p>IV&mdash;DOGS ARE HEROES UNDER FIRE</p>
-
-<p>There are several societies in Paris which choose suitable
-dogs in order to make soldiers of them. The "Central
-Society for the Development of the Breeds of Dogs"
-gave three thousand dogs to the French army last August.
-After they have been tested, an operation which
-takes about three weeks, they are sent to special stations
-in the rear of the armies to be trained, and five or six
-days are all that are necessary for the training of animals
-for the simpler kinds of work. For more difficult
-tasks the training is naturally a longer business. When
-dogs are to be trained as communication agents the instruction
-may take several weeks. They are taught to go
-from one master to another, first by a call, then by a
-whistle, then simply at a mere gesture. Distances are
-gradually increased, obstacles are placed in the way, the
-animal's goal becomes invisible, and so on. Much patience
-is required in this kind of work; and it is found
-that the best results are obtained by kindness and giving
-rewards for good work accomplished. The animals are
-taught to recognize only two masters, and to obey them
-alone. Outsiders are not allowed to pet or feed them.
-When they understand that they have to obey only one<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[324]</a></span>
-or two men, they have to learn to follow one or both of
-them when marching in a column of infantry, to recognize
-them when in a group, and so on. They are taught to
-endure the sound of gun-firing or explosions quite close
-to them. Above all, they are strictly trained never to
-pick up articles on their journey and to refuse delicacies
-offered them by strangers.</p>
-
-<p>Specially-trained dogs only are chosen for this work,
-and they are mostly sheep-dogs or collies or animals
-whose business it was in civil life to be guardians or
-watchers, and always on the alert. These are all the
-easier to train for the special work&mdash;somewhat of the
-same order&mdash;which they are set to do in war.</p>
-
-<p>... When the question of transport through the
-mountain snow had become a matter of urgent importance,
-the French authorities conceived the idea of using
-dog-drawn sleighs for carrying supplies. Some hundred
-"huskies"&mdash;a cross between the Eskimo dog and the wolf&mdash;and
-other trained dogs from Alaska, North-Western
-Canada, and Labrador were brought over by Lieutenant
-René Haas, a Frenchman who had spent fourteen years
-in Alaska. Mr. Warner Allen, the representative of the
-British Press with the French armies, describing the work
-of these dogs, says the snow in the neighbourhood of the
-Schlucht Pass was deep enough until almost the end of
-April for the dogs to render yeoman service. "They
-were able," he says, "to draw heavy loads over almost
-inaccessible country, and to supplement to a valuable extent
-the wheeled transport. But their utility has not
-ceased with the disappearance of the snow. They are
-now being harnessed to trucks on small two-foot-gauge
-light railways, which run everywhere behind the Front,
-and they are capable of drawing the heaviest load up the
-steepest gradient. Eleven dogs, with a couple of men, can
-haul a ton up some of the most precipitous slopes in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[325]</a></span>
-mountains, and I was assured that two teams of seven
-dogs each could do the work of five horses in this difficult
-country, with a very great economy of men."</p>
-
-<p>This correspondent adds that the best of these imported
-breeds of dogs is the Alaskan, as "his courage never fails,
-and he will work until he drops, though he is perhaps the
-weakest of them. They are all shaggy dogs, with prick
-ears and bushy tails, their colour ranging from black to
-white, between greys and browns. Their chest development,
-so necessary for hauling, is remarkable. They are
-mainly fed on rice, horse-flesh, and waste military biscuits,
-and this fare appears to suit them admirably, as
-they are always in splendid condition, and disease is practically
-unknown. The experiment of transporting these
-dogs to France has shown that they can be of real service
-in mountainous country, and represent a real economy."</p>
-
-<p>Dogs that are specially adapted or have been trained
-for hunting or sporting purposes are of little use in war,
-as they have acquired habits incompatible with the work
-now demanded of them. Certain breeds, such as the
-Great Dane, and others of limited intelligence, are of no
-value at all. Some of these have the habit of rushing
-forward at the slightest alarm, which is of more danger
-than advantage to the soldiers to whom they might belong.</p>
-
-
-<p>V&mdash;DOGS AS LOYAL COMRADES&mdash;FELLOW-WORKERS</p>
-
-<p>The "dog soldier," like his master on special missions,
-has to see and hear without being seen or heard. It is
-amusing, but nevertheless true, that the dogs of smugglers
-and poachers, as well as those of coastguardsmen,
-have been found to be most useful animals in the army.
-A well-trained dog, acting with a sentinel or scouting
-party may be the means of preserving numbers of lives
-by saving them from unpleasant surprises.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[326]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The use of dogs in warfare was, of course, not invented
-in the present war, though their utility had been systematized
-and given more scientific scope than was ever the
-case before. In no previous campaign have men understood
-the full use that could be made of these highly-intelligent
-creatures.</p>
-
-<p>It was the Belgians who first turned their attention to
-the subject of employing dogs more extensively. Everybody
-who has visited Belgium knows the use that is made
-of dogs for traction purposes all over the country. Nearly
-all the peasants who bring agricultural or dairy produce
-to market employ dogs to draw their small carts, sometimes
-harnessing whole teams to heavy loads. The dog is
-also greatly used in Belgium for sport, and from the
-sporting dog to the police dog is but a step. The dog in
-war&mdash;as sentinel, courier, scout, or ambulance worker&mdash;followed,
-and was the idea of Professor Reul, of the
-Veterinary School of Cureghem, and two journalists
-named Van der Snick and Sodenkampf. In 1885-6 the
-first dogs trained to some of these purposes were shown
-at a dog show at Ostend, and shortly afterwards societies
-were started at Brussels, Liège, Lierre, Ghent and other
-places, not merely for the training of dogs, but to improve
-the breeds. Lieutenant van der Putte, of the Belgian
-army, started the Société du Chien Sanitaire for the express
-purpose of training dogs for ambulance work and
-soon afterwards similar societies were organized in Paris
-and Berlin.</p>
-
-<p>It was quite natural that the Belgians should also think
-of using these draught-dogs for small machine-guns, thus
-providing an inexpensive but efficient light artillery. The
-Germans wished to imitate them, but it is related that
-when they tried to buy dogs from the Belgians, as they
-had no indigenous animals suited to the purpose, the Belgians
-refused to sell. In other ways, however, the Germans<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[327]</a></span>
-were at the beginning of the war well provided with
-dogs for various purposes, including the ambulance service.</p>
-
-<p>Since then the use of dogs in the German army has
-assumed considerable proportions. The animals used are
-mostly of the German sheep-dog variety, and a register
-of these, numbering several thousands, is kept for mobilization
-purposes by the German Sheep-Dog Club.
-Other breeds used by the enemy are terriers, red-haired
-griffons, Doberman <i>pinchers</i>, Airedale terries, and a sort
-of bull-terrier known as a "Boxer." Dogs, it appears,
-have been used by the German army chiefly on the Eastern
-Front, where the fighting was of a more open description
-than on the Western Front.... The German
-papers published appeals from the authorities asking
-dog owners to offer their pets for war purposes, and
-many thousands were obtained as a result.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[328]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>TRUE STORY ABOUT KILLING THE
-WOUNDED</h2>
-
-<p><i>Told by A. Pankratoff</i></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>Translated from the Russian for <i>Current History</i></p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;GERMANS HANGED COSSACKS ON TREES</p>
-
-<p>The other day, quite unexpectedly, I ran into Lieutenant
-X., better known as the Junior Subaltern.</p>
-
-<p>This was the fourth time I had run across him since
-the beginning of the war&mdash;at Insterburg, where the Junior
-Subaltern was leading his company toward Königsberg;
-then in the trenches beyond Tarnovo; then in the vicinity
-of Lublin, during the great retreat; and now, the
-fourth time.</p>
-
-<p>"I am stationed twelve versts from Czernowitz," he
-went on to explain. The Junior Subaltern is really so
-young that you can't help envying him. His face shines
-with health. His eyes are always laughing. His speech
-is very simple, but impressive; but he does not like to
-talk; he would rather listen, and laugh responsively with
-his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Fortune had brought us together; several men sitting
-down to a common meal. We talked freely about everything.
-The conversation turned to the German habit of
-finishing all the wounded enemies they find after a successful
-battle. During the forest fighting last August
-one of us had come across sixty Cossacks who had been
-but slightly wounded, and whom the Germans had hanged
-on the trees.</p>
-
-<p>"We avenged them, however; the Germans got something
-to remember!" said the narrator.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[329]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Lieutenant X.'s eyes sparkled with animation.</p>
-
-<p>"Well," he said, "of course they deserved it! Of course
-it is a crime to kill the wounded. But, gentlemen, there
-are cases when it is impossible not to kill the wounded!"</p>
-
-<p>"What on earth do you mean?"</p>
-
-<p>"Just what I said! There is such a thing as rightful
-killing of the wounded!"</p>
-
-<p>We insisted, and the Junior Subaltern narrated a recent
-experience of his, "somewhere in Bukowina." He
-had been in command of a party of scouts. His regiment
-had just arrived to take the place of another infantry
-regiment. And the first thing to do was to become acquainted
-with the locality and to learn the dispositions
-and intentions of the enemy. The Junior Subaltern was
-sent out with his company. At one place the opposing
-armies were separated by a ravine, which forked out toward
-our trenches. Lieutenant X. knew that the men of
-the regiment his was replacing had become acquainted
-with the Austrians, and that the enemies by day came
-together at the bottom of the ravine by night, entertained
-one another, and gossiped.</p>
-
-<p>"War is burdensome, gentlemen!" explained the Junior
-Subaltern, "and we all longed for even the semblance
-of human intercourse with the other chaps. * * *
-And there happened to be a prolonged and tiresome spell
-of calm between battles, and so the men of the regiment
-we were replacing and the Austrians had long smokes
-together, exchanging pipes. But every one remembered&mdash;and
-nobody held it against any one&mdash;that the course
-of cigarettes must be closely interwoven with the course
-of bullets on the morrow. * * * Yet, yet&mdash;oh, if we
-were only chivalrous knights, conducting a picturesque
-tournament, instead of common Russian cannon fodder
-fighting common Austrian cannon fodder. * * *"</p>
-
-<p>Of course our young friend wanted to do the magnanimous<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">[330]</a></span>
-thing by the enemy, sending round word to
-them, "Here we come! Get ready!" But what he did do
-was to take advantage of the quiet exchange of the two
-Russian regiments and the total ignorance in which the
-Austrian members of the nightly smoking club in the
-ravine still remained, and to creep noiselessly forward
-to the spot where the friends of the night before were on
-guard. The Austrian sentinels&mdash;three of them&mdash;dozed,
-wrapped in their blankets. The Russians crept stealthily
-forward. * * *</p>
-
-<p>"What else could we do?" asked the Junior Subaltern.
-"Humanitarian ideas are in blank contradiction to the
-present war. Civilians at home may try to judge everything
-in accordance with these ideas. Well, we know
-they are mistaken. Oh, they are simply ridiculous!"
-ended the Junior Subaltern, his good-natured, broad face
-blushing at making such a bold statement in company.</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;"WHEN WE LEAVE NO WOUNDED
-ALIVE"</p>
-
-<p>"Such nonsense!" he went on. "Of course, at the
-back of our minds the horror of it is always present.
-But what else can you do? Standing in blood up to
-your throat, and knowing that you have to protect your
-men, to protect yourself. * * * And what difference
-does it make to them whether you shoot them or throttle
-them? * * * About a hundred paces from those three
-sentinels there were at least a hundred others, and two
-hundred yards off were the Austrian trenches. The least
-noise, a groan, the stifled cry of a wounded Austrian
-would be the end of everything for my scouts; and there
-were only thirty of us. That was when I gave the order
-not to leave any wounded alive. * * *"</p>
-
-<p>It was an evident relief to him to be interrupted.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, yes, I remember!" said one of us. "I was in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[331]</a></span>
-camp when the Austrian officer, routed out in his sleep,
-was brought in on the run in his nightshirt. The whole
-thing went rapidly and well, and you took a machine gun
-from the Austrians!"</p>
-
-<p>Another of us said:</p>
-
-<p>"I don't see what you are driving at! There's no
-analogy at all! What you did was no hitting of those
-who were down already. All sorts of conventions and
-international law would justify you!"</p>
-
-<p>"Well," answered the Junior Subaltern, "did I not say
-that there was such a thing as justifiable killing of the
-wounded, for us as for the Germans? Besides, I got
-decorated for the job! Ouch! It is going to thaw! I
-know, because my wounded leg aches!"</p>
-
-<p>His smile was so frank and his face so full of the
-bloom of youth as he thus changed the subject that it was
-quite evident that he did not change it from any false
-modesty, but simply because the subject&mdash;including his
-own distinguished part in it&mdash;had no further interest for
-him.</p>
-
-<p>"You have been wounded?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes. Two bullets in my leg, one in my arm, one in
-the abdomen."</p>
-
-<p>"And you are still alive?"</p>
-
-<p>"As you see! It was that devilish machine gun! The
-bullet that entered my abdomen cut through the intestines,
-touched my stomach, and came out by my back.
-When I regained consciousness I heard the doctor saying:
-'Put this one aside; he will die in a minute or two!' And
-some of my men dug a nice grave for me and wrote my
-name and the date on a board, and sat down patiently to
-wait for my funeral. But I didn't die. So the surgeon
-had to send me to hospital. But when the ambulance was
-starting I heard him say: 'It's not a bit of use! He'll<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[332]</a></span>
-die on the way there!' But I cheated the doctors. I'm
-quite a rare specimen!"</p>
-
-<p>"You are indeed!" And we all laughed, so contagious
-was Lieutenant X.'s laughter.</p>
-
-<p>"The Medical Council," he went on, "explained it by
-the fact that, for two whole days previously, I had had
-nothing to eat. * * * hadn't had time! It was on
-the Stripa. The moment our regiment arrived at &mdash;&mdash;
-we had to fight."</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[333]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>HOW WE FOILED "U 39" IN THE
-SUBMARINE ZONE</h2>
-
-<p><i>Adventures Aboard a Horse Transport</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Told by H. O. Read, Late First Officer S.S. "Anglo-Californian"</i></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>This story relates what happened when the horse transport
-"Anglo-Californian" met the "U 39." The captain and twenty
-men lost their lives, and eight more were wounded; but the
-heroism of the commander and his officers saved the ship and
-her valuable cargo. Personal experiences recorded in the <i>Wide
-World Magazine</i>.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;"WE CROSS THE ATLANTIC ON THE
-<i>ANGLO-CALIFORNIAN</i>"</p>
-
-<p>Ever since the 18th of February, 1915, when a blockade
-of the seas round the British Isles was declared by
-Germany, seamen navigating in the waters of the war-zone
-have had a most anxious time in consequence of the
-activity of the German submarine and their callous methods
-in dealing with defenceless merchant vessels.</p>
-
-<p>Our ship, the <i>Anglo-Californian</i>, had made a number of
-voyages across the Atlantic, and had so far been fortunate
-enough to get through the war-zone each time without encountering
-any of the enemy's submarines. We had always
-congratulated ourselves on our good fortune, but
-on the voyage I am about to describe our luck seemed to
-have deserted us.</p>
-
-<p>It was the morning of the 4th of July, about eight
-o'clock. I had almost completed my watch and was on
-the point of being relieved by the third officer when, taking<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">[334]</a></span>
-a final look round the horizon before leaving the
-bridge, I noticed the small cloud of blue smoke on the
-surface of the water about a mile away on our port beam.</p>
-
-<p>For the moment I was rather puzzled as to what it
-could be, there being no craft of any description in sight
-from which it could come. I was not long kept in doubt,
-however, for as the cloud of smoke gradually lifted I
-caught sight of the conning-tower and long, low hull of a
-submarine, which I knew at once must be a German, as
-our under-sea craft were not operating in this vicinity.</p>
-
-<p>She had apparently just come to the surface after locating
-us with her periscope, and, seeing everything clear,
-immediately gave chase.</p>
-
-<p>Ordering the man at the wheel to put the helm over,
-thus bringing the submarine directly astern of us, I informed
-the captain of the presence of the enemy. He immediately
-came on the bridge and proceeded to take all
-necessary steps to try and outrace the submarine. We
-were quite unarmed, so flight was our only chance.</p>
-
-<p>The chief engineer was summoned and told to raise all
-the steam he possibly could and drive the ship for all she
-was worth, and the extra speed that was very quickly attained
-was convincing proof of the way in which he and
-his staff carried out these orders.</p>
-
-<p>Almost immediately after sighting the submarine the
-captain ordered the wireless operator to send out the
-"S.O.S." call for help. This was promptly answered, and
-we were informed that assistance was being sent us with
-all possible speed.</p>
-
-<p>The captain, myself, the second officer (who was the
-captain's son), and the third officer were now on the upper
-bridge, anxiously watching our pursuer through the
-glasses. To our dismay we noticed that she was slowly
-but surely gaining on us.</p>
-
-<p>It was not until a quarter of nine that she first opened<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[335]</a></span>
-fire, this presumably being a warning shot, as it fell wide
-on our port side. The captain took heed of the summons,
-however; he merely smiled and gave orders to telephone
-down to the engineers to "keep her going" as hard as
-they could.</p>
-
-<p>A second warning shot was fired, falling clear of the
-ship on the starboard bow, but this also was unheeded.</p>
-
-<p>Those on the submarine, observing that our speed was
-increasing and that no notice was taken of their shots,
-evidently came to the conclusion that we were going to
-make a run for it, and forthwith they commenced to fire
-shell after shell at us. At first they tried to bring
-down the wireless apparatus, so as to prevent us from getting
-into communication with the patrol vessels, but this,
-as I have previously stated, we had already done, and
-were now in continuous communication with them, giving
-them our now rapidly-changing positions. Unfortunately
-for us, however, the patrols were some distance away,
-and there was not much chance of their being able to
-reach us for two to three hours. What would happen
-meanwhile was hard to say; certainly our chances of getting
-away from our pursuer looked very small indeed.</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;"SHELLS WERE BURSTING AROUND OUR
-VESSEL"</p>
-
-<p>The fire from the submarine now became more rapid,
-but was not always effective, as Captain Parslow, heedless
-of the shells which were dropping and bursting all round
-the vessel, kept the quartermaster at the wheel constantly
-working his helm so as to keep the submarine almost directly
-astern of us, thereby making the ship as small a target
-as possible. Momentarily, however, the submarine
-drew nearer and the shell-fire more and more deadly.
-Almost every shot now found its mark, striking the vessel
-at various points on the quarters and round the stern.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">[336]</a></span>
-Forsaking the wireless, their aim was now evidently the
-rudder or propeller, so as to totally disable us and thus
-have the vessel at their mercy.</p>
-
-<p>When the firing first commenced our crew, including
-the horse attendants, and numbering about a hundred
-and fifty all told, had been warned to be ready to go to
-their boat-stations at a moment's notice in case of emergency,
-and consequently everybody, with the exception
-of the engineers and firemen working below, was now on
-deck.</p>
-
-<p>No signs of panic were shown until a shell, bursting
-amidships, killed three of the horsemen. Then a rush
-was made for the starboard after lifeboats, and men began
-scrambling into and overloading them. The result would
-have been disastrous if the captain, drawing my attention
-to it, had not ordered me to go and threaten to shoot
-anyone who did not immediately come out and wait until
-orders were given for the boats to be lowered.</p>
-
-<p>This had the desired effect, quelling the panic for the
-time being.</p>
-
-<p>The submarine&mdash;she was the "U 39," we noticed&mdash;was
-now only about five or six hundred yards astern, and our
-case began to look hopeless. Not once, however, did the
-captain waver from his intention never to surrender.
-His coolness and courage were remarkable, and went a
-long way to inspire confidence in those under him.</p>
-
-<p>The shells were now bursting all over the vessel and
-playing havoc with the deck structures. They tore
-through the horse-fittings, killing numbers of the unfortunate
-horses, and also wounded several of the men,
-who were now clustered in groups near the boats.</p>
-
-<p>Just at this moment a signal to us to "abandon ship"
-was observed flying from the submarine, and the firing
-suddenly ceased, the intention apparently being to give us
-time to get into the boats and leave the vessel. This,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">[337]</a></span>
-however, our captain had no intention of doing, and after
-hastily consulting the chief engineer and myself he decided
-to get as many of the crew away from the ship as
-possible, as they were in imminent danger of being killed
-by the bursting shells. The remainder of us were to stand
-by him and keep the ship going until the very last.</p>
-
-<p>The man at the wheel was sent to take his place in
-the boats, and the majority of the crew were ordered to
-do the same.</p>
-
-<p>The firemen&mdash;who had up to this moment been working
-below&mdash;now came on deck, and made a rush for the
-boats before the order was given. Driving them out at
-the muzzles of our revolvers, we persuaded them to keep
-cool and wait until they were told to take their places.</p>
-
-<p>These firemen, who were Arabs, were now thoroughly
-frightened, and would on no account return to the stokehold,
-though the captain offered £20 to any man who
-would do so.</p>
-
-<p>During the time the firing ceased&mdash;which was not more
-than five minutes&mdash;we got the port after lifeboat away,
-full of men, and were preparing to lower the others when
-we received a wireless message from the patrol steamer,
-saying that they could see the smoke from our funnel.
-They told us to keep going, and to hold the submarine at
-bay as long as possible, as they were coming towards us
-with all possible speed.</p>
-
-<p>It was at this moment that the captain shouted to the
-firemen to return to the stokehold, offering, as already
-stated, £20 to any man who would do so, but this they
-refused to do.</p>
-
-<p>The chief and second engineers, with the donkeyman,
-nobly responded to the captain's request, and immediately
-rushed down to the stokehold and engine-room, where
-they worked like Trojans to get as much steam as possible
-to keep the vessel going.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">[338]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>As soon as it became apparent to those on the submarine
-that we were not going to give in they commenced
-firing again, and with deadly effect, for the boat was now
-only about a hundred yards behind us.</p>
-
-<p>One of the shells, bursting directly behind the funnel,
-struck the davit of the after lifeboat, which was now full
-of men and in the very act of being lowered. It severed
-the tackle, causing the boat to drop into the water, where
-it capsized, throwing all its occupants into the sea.</p>
-
-<p>Another shell, fired almost directly afterwards, struck
-the davit of the port forward boat, cutting it completely
-in half. The boat, which was hanging in the tackle with
-seven men in it, was blown almost to fragments and
-nearly all its occupants killed.</p>
-
-<p>There now only remained one boat fit for use, the other
-two remaining ones being too badly damaged to put into
-the water. This boat was now manned and rapidly lowered
-over the side, with the chief steward in charge; and
-it was chiefly due to his skilful handling that she finally
-got away clear of the ship, as she was in danger of being
-smashed to pieces by the now rapidly-revolving propeller
-as she floated astern.</p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;STOOD AT THEIR POSTS LIKE HEROES</p>
-
-<p>There were now only thirty-two of the one hundred
-and fifty members of the ship's company left on board,
-including the captain, officers, and engineers, and our
-chances of getting out of our present predicament certainly
-looked small.</p>
-
-<p>The second, who had now taken the wheel, was skilfully
-steering the ship under the captain's orders. He
-kept the submarine&mdash;which was now close upon us&mdash;almost
-directly astern, and the position of both father and
-son was one of extreme danger, for fragments of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">[339]</a></span>
-bursting shells were constantly striking the navigating
-bridge, and the couple had frequently to lie prone on the
-deck to avoid being struck. Their coolness and courage,
-however, never forsook them, and they remained at their
-posts like heroes, without the slightest sign of fear.</p>
-
-<p>We now noticed&mdash;greatly to our relief&mdash;the smoke of a
-steamer on our starboard side, and this we rightly judged
-to be the patrol ship hurrying to our help.</p>
-
-<p>As she gradually came into sight, in response to a request
-by our captain over the wireless, she fired at the
-submarine, but the distance was too great, and the shot
-fell short.</p>
-
-<p>We made sure that our pursuer would now give up the
-chase and submerge to get out of danger, but instead
-she crowded on extra speed and drew up alongside our
-steamer. She kept carefully under our lee, thus sheltering
-herself for the time being from any further shots
-from the patrol steamer. From this position she fired
-shell after shell into us.</p>
-
-<p>It was now an impossibility to keep the submarine any
-longer astern, as her superior speed enabled her to keep
-abreast of us.</p>
-
-<p>We counted thirteen men on her deck, some of them
-manipulating the gun, and others armed with rifles, with
-which they kept up a constant fire, endeavouring to pick
-off anyone they could see on our decks.</p>
-
-<p>Those on the approaching patrol steamer, comprehending
-our position and expecting every moment to see the
-ship torpedoed, sent us a wireless message to throw lines
-and ropes over the side and try to foul the submarine's
-propeller, and thus stop her. If possible we might also try
-and ram her. Ramming was out of the question, on account
-of the German's superior speed, but, acting on the
-first suggestion, under the captain's orders I went along
-and threw some of our mooring-ropes overboard, but the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">[340]</a></span>
-scheme was apparently ineffective, as the submarine still
-kept her place on our port side.</p>
-
-<p>It was just at this moment, as I was returning from
-carrying out these orders, that a shell fired from the submarine,
-and aimed directly at the bridge, struck our gallant
-captain and literally blew him to pieces.</p>
-
-<p>The second officer at the wheel was stunned and almost
-blinded by the report, and his escape from death
-was a miracle, as the captain was only a few feet away
-when killed. Fragments of the shell actually tore away
-some of the spokes of the wheel which he held at the time.</p>
-
-<p>As I gained the lower bridge he came down smothered
-in blood, dazed and stunned by the shock of the explosion,
-and horrified at witnessing the death of his brave
-father.</p>
-
-<p>To remain on either of the bridges now was out of the
-question, as the submarine was only fifty yards from us,
-running abreast. The Hun crew had clamped a Maxim
-on the top of their quick-firing gun and, using this, together
-with their rifles, they kept up a constant fire fore
-and aft.</p>
-
-<p>The patrol steamer was still about two miles away, but
-coming towards us at top speed, with smoke pouring from
-her funnel. But would she reach us in time before the
-pirates sent us to the bottom? We were now in imminent
-danger of being torpedoed, the submarine being in
-a splendid position to launch her deadly missile.</p>
-
-<p>Seeing this, I called the wireless operators away from
-their posts, to which they had gamely stuck through the
-whole of the firing, and shouted down to the two engineers
-to come on deck. Gathering together the remainder
-of my men, we made our way along the bullet-swept
-decks, taking shelter where and when we could. We cut
-everything floatable adrift in case the ship went under so
-as to give us a better chance of being picked up by our
-rescuers.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">[341]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p>IV&mdash;"WE SAW THE SUBMARINE SUBMERGE"</p>
-
-<p>The deck of our vessel was a sickening sight. Dead,
-dying, and wounded men lay in all directions, and blood
-seemed to be everywhere.</p>
-
-<p>We gathered the wounded together and got them under
-cover, and with the able help of our veterinary surgeon
-attended to them as best we could.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing more could now be done. We were momentarily
-expecting the torpedo to strike the vessel and finish
-her, and stood ready to jump clear of the ship when she
-went under.</p>
-
-<p>But the torpedo did not arrive. Instead, we saw the
-crew of the submarine hurrying to get their gun below
-and preparing to submerge. The cause of this man&oelig;uvre
-was the sudden appearance of two destroyers, racing towards
-us at full speed.</p>
-
-<p>The submarine rapidly disappeared under the water,
-and in a few moments more the two destroyers and the
-patrol steamer were alongside and darting all round us
-in hopes of getting a shot at her.</p>
-
-<p>We sent up a rousing cheer when we saw our rescuers
-approach; we could scarcely realize that we were saved.</p>
-
-<p>I at once got in communication with the commander of
-one of the destroyers and asked him to search for our
-boats and any of our crew who happened to be in the
-water and pick them up.</p>
-
-<p>This they at once started to do, and in a very short
-time informed me that they had rescued ninety-seven of
-them and would proceed to Queenstown and land them.</p>
-
-<p>On making an examination of our steamer, we found,
-in addition to considerable damage round the decks, that
-she had been badly holed below the waterline, and was
-taking water rapidly.</p>
-
-<p>We at once set to work and plugged the holes up with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342">[342]</a></span>
-bales of hay and bags of fodder, at the same time giving
-the vessel a list so as to bring the damaged plates out of
-the water as much as possible.</p>
-
-<p>When this had been done I informed the commander of
-the remaining destroyer, and told him that we were ready
-to proceed, but that it would be necessary to go into
-Queenstown, the nearest port, to land our dead and
-wounded.</p>
-
-<p>He replied that this would be the best course to adopt,
-and that he would convoy us into port.</p>
-
-<p>We accordingly headed for Queenstown, and duly arrived
-there late that night, where we were treated with
-the greatest courtesy and kindness by the Admiralty
-officials.</p>
-
-<p>The dead were removed and the wounded taken to the
-naval hospital, where their injuries were attended to.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the Admiralty took the vessel in hand, and
-immediately commenced temporary repairs on her, and in
-less than twenty-four hours I was able to leave the port
-and proceed with her to Avonmouth, our destination, under
-the escort of two destroyers.</p>
-
-<p>The remains of our brave captain and of those who
-fell with him were buried in Queenstown the following
-day, being accorded full naval honours. The Admiral
-of the port himself attended, and the respect and regard
-shown by the townspeople, as the remains of these heroes
-were laid to rest, was very marked.</p>
-
-<p>No tribute is too great to pay to the memory of the late
-Captain Parslow, who died like the gallant seaman he was,
-giving his life in an endeavour to save his ship and the
-lives of those under his command.</p>
-
-<p>His son, the second officer, for the pluck and courage
-he displayed in remaining at the wheel during the firing,
-has been awarded the Distinguished Service Cross. The
-chief engineer received the same decoration, and I myself<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">[343]</a></span>
-was the recipient of a handsome gold watch, suitably
-inscribed, "From the Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty,"
-as was likewise the second engineer and the
-senior Marconi operator.</p>
-
-<p>The conduct of both the third officer and the junior
-Marconi operator deserves great praise, for they displayed
-splendid courage and coolness in carrying out their duties
-during the attack.</p>
-
-<p>Lloyd's showed their appreciation of our efforts by presenting
-a substantial cheque, expressing at the same time
-their sincere regret for the loss of the heroic Captain
-Parslow.</p>
-
-<p>The crew of the submarine, presumably, duly received
-Iron Crosses for their glorious day's work.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">[344]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>MY WORST EXPERIENCE IN
-MESOPOTAMIA</h2>
-
-<p><i>Told by a Man Who Stopped a Bullet</i></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>The writer of this vivid narrative, a British soldier, was wounded
-in Mesopotamia during an unsuccessful attempt to relieve
-Kut-el-Amara, shortly before its fall. Recorded in <i>Current
-History</i>.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>I slipped my left hand into my tunic and was surprised
-to feel the hot blood pouring out. Then it dawned
-on me that I had been hit, and pretty badly, too. My
-equipment was hurting me, so I took it off.</p>
-
-<p>I felt very dizzy, and decided to try and get back as
-far as I could. I stood up, a very unwise thing to do,
-considering that I was about 150 yards from the Turkish
-trench and must have made an easy mark, but I was not
-hit again immediately. My legs gave way and I collapsed
-and lay flat for a time. I thought if I was not to
-bleed to death I must make an effort to put my field
-bandage in place. So with difficulty I pulled it from
-my tunic pocket. The outer covering came off easily,
-and I took out one of the packets, but could see no way
-to slit it open. Finally I gripped the edge of the packet
-in my teeth and tore at it with both hands till it opened.
-I put the pad on the wound, as near as I could, but had
-no means of keeping it there, so I staggered to my feet
-and ran on, keeping the pad in place with my left hand.
-I believe I covered another fifty yards when I dropped
-again and lay in a kind of stupor.</p>
-
-<p>I was aroused by the almost continuous "krock" of
-bursting shrapnel. Shells were dropping right and left,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">[345]</a></span>
-and the air was full of moaning and screaming as the
-bullets flew by. I managed to get on my feet again, although
-the effort made the blood spurt out anew. The
-sodden pad had slipped down and a burning pain in the
-pit of my stomach caused me to double up in agony and
-slide onto my knees. I started crawling painfully along
-until I came to a small mound which would at least
-afford "head over." I crept behind it and lay in the only
-position I could, on my left side.</p>
-
-<p>I passed my hand over myself to feel for a wound,
-but could not find one. The bullet had entered the small
-of my back and lodged under my breast bone. Gradually
-the more intense pain passed away, leaving a not
-unpleasant sense of numbness over all my body.</p>
-
-<p>The persistent calling of a man in pain brought me
-back to consciousness. The pitiless sun was blazing high
-in the heavens, and I felt hot and dry. Somebody was
-shouting "Fetch the stretcher-bearers, you fools: are you
-going to leave me here?" At first I felt very sorry for
-him, but soon wished he would stop, for I had a shocking
-headache. I judged it to be about midday, and
-thought that in another six hours I had a good chance of
-being brought in.</p>
-
-<p>I was horrified to see that the water of the Suwaicha
-Marsh, which was on our right flank, had risen considerably,
-and I feared for any of our wounded who were
-further out on the right and unable to crawl away from
-the menace. The man who was shouting stopped, and
-everything was strangely calm and peaceful. I felt very
-happy and contented then, for as long as I kept quite still
-the pain was very dull, so I began singing and mumbling
-away in a quiet voice:</p>
-
-<p>
-"Where my caravan has rested<br />
-Flowers I'll strew there on the grass."<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">[346]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>I sang again and again, accompanied by a strange roaring
-in my chest. My caravan, I thought, had rested
-in some very unusual places, but none so unusual as this.
-And what was the use of talking about the grass in the
-desert of Mesopotamia, where there is nothing but the
-yellow earth, the blue sky, the hot sun, and dirty water?</p>
-
-<p>There was a water bottle, equipment, and rifle lying
-close to my head, and I have a vague remembrance of a
-Sikh lying beside me for a time and then jumping up
-and running back. I slowly put my right arm up, caught
-the sling, and dragged the bottle nearer. I pulled the
-cork out somehow, and propped the bottle against my
-face, with the neck to my lips, but was much upset to find
-I had not the strength to lift it up. Tears rolled down
-my cheeks after I had made two or three attempts, for
-I was very thirsty. I sang no more, as my throat was
-harsh and lumpy. So I lay staring at the yellow and
-blue till I lost consciousness once more.</p>
-
-<p>This time I was roused by our own guns, and the
-sound was most comforting. "Giving 'em hell," I
-thought gleefully. They bombarded for about an hour,
-and then I slipped back into unconsciousness. It was
-getting dark when I came to again. A man was standing
-close to me, staring round the field. Somebody had
-put my sun helmet on my head. He came over to me.
-"Are the stretcher-bearers coming?" I asked, and he
-told me I was the next to be moved. It was not long
-before the bearers came, and they put the stretcher behind
-me. It was painful work getting on the stretcher,
-as I could not bear to have my body touched anywhere.
-However, it was managed at last, and I lay on my left
-side.</p>
-
-<p>I suppose they went as gently as they could, but every
-step racked my body so much that I was nearly mad with
-pain. I cannot remember how far it was to the dressing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">[347]</a></span>
-station, but I remember passing through the artillery
-lines, where the guns had started again. I was put on a
-table, still on the stretcher, and was pleased to see our
-battalion doctor. "Well, laddie," he said, "how are
-you?" I replied that I was all right, but thought it "a bit
-thick" having to lie out there all day. Then he started
-cutting my clothes up, jersey and shirt as well. The
-dressing was by no means painful, but they left my hand
-untouched. I asked for something to drink, but the
-doctor said they would give me all I wanted at the field
-hospital.</p>
-
-<p>Then began the worst experience I have ever been
-through. I was taken to a native springless mule cart,
-with a few sacks and blankets thrown in the bottom,
-and helped off the stretcher. The slightest movement
-caused great pain, but when the cart started bumping off
-I was in a positive inferno. I will not dwell on that four-mile
-journey from the marsh to the riverside; suffice it
-to say that what little breath I could summon was used in
-praying the driver to stop and leave me on the ground.</p>
-
-<p>We came to the field hospital at last. The natives
-pushed a stretcher into the cart beside me, and one intelligent
-fellow nimbly jumped up and stood on my
-smashed hand. That was the last straw. I cursed him.
-When I stopped for want of breath they attempted to
-lift me on to the stretcher, but I begged them to stop.
-I tried to get on by myself, but could only manage to
-get my knees on and could not lift my body. The natives
-were chattering round the cart, so I started shouting
-"English, English. Fetch English," and at last a
-"Jock" came up to see what was wrong. I begged him
-to put his hand under my shoulder and help me on the
-stretcher, and in a moment I was lying on my stomach&mdash;not
-very comfortable on account of my laboured breathing,
-but it was a rest for my left side. When my hand<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348">[348]</a></span>
-had been cleaned and dressed I was put on a mattress
-in a bell tent, where I tossed about in a high fever.</p>
-
-<p>In the morning I was put in a paddle-boat, and I
-slept till it started in the afternoon. We were taken
-ashore at Orah that night, and there received better
-attention. I was placed on the operating table and the
-bullet located and removed.</p>
-
-<p>I will not describe my stay at Orah or the trip down
-the Tigris in the paddle-boat to Bussorah. My hand
-was a fearful size and very painful. When the ship
-was moored in front of Bussorah Hospital I was very
-weak. Two orderlies helped me on to the stretcher, and
-I was carried down the gangway to the entrance of the
-hospital. A Major took particulars and consigned me
-to a veranda ward on the second floor. And so I was
-placed in one of the whitest, cleanest, and most comfortable
-beds in the world.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_349" id="Page_349">[349]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>SPIRIT OF YOUNG AMERICA&mdash;HOW
-WE WENT "OVER THE TOP"</h2>
-
-<p><i>Experiences of a New York Boy with the
-Canadians</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Told by (name withheld), Wounded in France</i></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>This is a letter from an American boy at the front. It symbolizes
-the spirit of young America. In his frank, simple,
-human way, he tells with outbursts of quaint humor how he
-went "over the top," faced death, was wounded, and longs to
-get back into the fight. It is but one of the tens of thousands
-of private letters that are reaching friends in America every
-time a ship comes in from Europe.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>I&mdash;"IN WAY OF FRITZ'S SHELLS"</p>
-
-<div class="right">
-1st Canadian Hospital, France,<br />
-August 27, 1917.<br />
-</div>
-
-<p>Well, at last old man, I am writing to you. I am
-sorry I have not answered your last letter sooner. I
-have no good excuse to offer, so I guess I'll still cling
-to the old thread-bare one of "too busy." I guess my
-dear Mary will have told you that I am in hospital recovering
-from a little wound, the penalty of getting in the
-way of one of Fritz's shells. I am glad to say that I
-am going along nicely and hope to be about again very
-soon. I got hit just back of the knee, over the hamstring
-tendon, "whatever that is." I guess I ought to
-be thankful it was no worse. In a week or so I shall
-be none the worse for the experience. Believe me, it was
-some experience. You know&mdash;one of those times when<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_350" id="Page_350">[350]</a></span>
-you hear invisible bands playing "Home Sweet Home"
-and "He's Gone Where They Don't Play Billiards."</p>
-
-<p>I guess, dear George, you would like a little of the
-news of how I am passing the weary months away. Well,
-at times it's not so bad. We have our little bit of fun,
-for you know I'm one of those guys that makes the best
-of it. We get many a laugh. We have got the knack
-of being easily amused. We often get a smile out of
-things at which if it wasn't for the surroundings we should
-feel like shuddering.</p>
-
-<p>I cannot tell you much on account of the censor. But
-I can tell you a little of the experience I had last Wednesday
-week, the 15th, the time we had the pleasure (?)
-of going "over the top" and getting in close touch with
-Fritz. We had been expecting it to come off for a long
-time and I think the period of waiting was the worst part
-of the whole affair. We had only been out of the line
-a couple of days and such awful days they were; the
-time we had been in, it was up to our knees in mud.
-Well, anyway, the order came along for us to go back
-and make an attempt to pull the job off. The day before
-they tried to make things as pleasant as possible.
-We had a band concert almost all day long, and then as
-soon as it got dark we started forward to take up our
-position to wait for the big show at daybreak.</p>
-
-<p>Our first trouble was gas. We had our masks on in
-about two seconds. I guess you have seen pictures of
-these masks. But believe me, when you get a bunch of
-men moving cautiously across country they're enough to
-scare a fellow out of a month's growth. Eventually we
-got there. But the position we were to take up was being
-peppered with Fritz's iron rations. So we were told
-to move to another place and dig ourselves in. Again he
-located us and made it unhealthy, so we had to move
-again. We were in a great mood then, for we had worked<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_351" id="Page_351">[351]</a></span>
-like niggers and had just got comfortable when the order
-came to move. We contented ourselves that we would
-square matters in the morning.</p>
-
-<p>At a quarter of four (daybreak) we settled down to
-wait for the signal for the big show to start. There certainly
-was some excitement in the air. Almost as much
-as when in a game of pool the fifteen ball's over the hole
-and it's your shot next. Through some cause or other
-matters we were delayed twenty-five minutes&mdash;the longest
-minutes I have ever lived. Each minute seemed like
-an hour. Long after the war is all over and forgotten, I
-think I shall remember that long, weary wait.</p>
-
-
-<p>II&mdash;"WHAT I SAW WHEN I WENT 'OVER'"</p>
-
-<p>At last, we got the signal and the barrage and bombardment
-started. I have read of bombardments and
-I have seen them described pretty vividly, but no description
-or imagination could make anyone realize what
-they are really like. Every thing we had, opened up at
-the same second&mdash;silent batteries that had been there for
-weeks without firing a shot, just waiting for this event
-to be pulled off. It seemed as if the very earth was swaying.
-But don't think we had it all our own way. For
-Fritz had quite a number of iron foundries he wanted
-to get rid of, and he started up almost as soon as we did.</p>
-
-<p>We found out afterwards, that they knew we were
-"going over." In fact, their officers had been officially
-warned to be prepared for an attack at 4 <span class="smcap">A.M.</span> So I guess
-they had their anxious wait as well as we. Fritz's fireworks'
-display was simply wonderful. Rockets and flare-lights
-of every color and description went up, but I didn't
-stop to admire it. I was too busy and scarcely in the
-mood to admire anything. Everything had to be done
-by signals. The noise was so deafening that even if you<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_352" id="Page_352">[352]</a></span>
-shouted at the top of your voice you couldn't be heard.</p>
-
-<p>The first wave went over at 4:25 <span class="smcap">A.M.</span> Everything possible
-in what they call modern warfare was used&mdash;liquid
-fire, oil, tanks and a dozen different things to get Fritz's
-wind up. And believe me, we did get it up! For thirty
-minutes after we went "over" we had them on the run.
-All I am sorry about is that we could not keep them going
-<i>until they reached Berlin</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Believe me, old man, it was some fight! Some of the
-things I saw myself, I would not have believed if I hadn't
-seen them with my own eyes. Some of the fellows just
-went crazy. One fellow was fighting away with only
-half a rifle in his hand, and yet there was dozens of good
-ones lying around if he had only taken a moment to pick
-one up. Others were throwing bombs just like bricks.
-You know the bombs we use out here mostly are the kind
-we saw at that New York Red Cross bazaar&mdash;perhaps
-you remember them. Before they explode you have to
-pull the safety pin out, and then they burst four seconds
-later. Well, some of the guys didn't pull the pins out;
-they just used them like bricks. Gee, it put me in mind
-of a good old Summer Lane scrap, but anyhow it was
-enough to get them on the hustle.</p>
-
-<p>There were many other little incidents, some that I
-saw myself, and others that I heard coming down on the
-hospital train. One of our fellows took two prisoners
-only armed with a lighted candle. This happened after
-we had been occupying Fritz's front line several hours.
-Leaving his rifle at the top, he went down into one of
-Fritz's saps "looking for souvenirs, I guess." Well, he
-lit his candle and there in the corner were two great hulking
-fellows. I guess they were more scared than he was.
-Up went their hands with the same old cry: "Not me,
-Mister, Mercy, Kamerad." We had a laugh afterwards
-for the guy who brought them up, looked as if he had been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_353" id="Page_353">[353]</a></span>
-scared stiff. I'll bet he never goes down a strange sap
-again unarmed. Later on they caught another five in one
-of the other saps.</p>
-
-<p>There were dozens of little incidents like this. So far
-so good&mdash;but the worst had yet to come. We had captured
-three villages and the famous hill. When I say
-there had been five previous attempts to get the hill alone,
-for he had occupied it for two and a half years, you will
-see that it was some accomplishment. They put over ten
-counter-attacks. I didn't count them. I was too interested
-and busy with other things to bother about counting
-anything. They came over in the old massed formation
-style. It seems a crazy style to me, for their losses
-must have been enormous. Every time they came over
-they got smashed, and were glad to beat it back, or at
-least as many of them as were able to. That continued
-practically all day.</p>
-
-
-<p>III&mdash;ON AN ADVANCE POST</p>
-
-<p>As soon as it was dark, I was detailed along with a
-bunch of other fellows to go out as reinforcements to
-our left flank. My friend Jones, another fellow and I,
-were put on an advanced bombing post. Every once in
-a while they would attempt to come over on us. It kept
-us pretty busy, and also kept us from getting sleepy.</p>
-
-<p>In the early morning one of Fritz's planes came flying
-over us. One of our fellows couldn't resist the temptation
-of drawing a bead on him, although it's against all
-orders for us to fire on aircraft. The chances of hitting
-him are about a thousand to one. Well, the "son of a
-gun" made a dive and swooped over us with his machine
-gun. I don't think he got anybody, but he came so low
-that some of our guns got him. He dropped like a stone.
-I was almost sorry to see it, for I am still a sport and
-that guy certainly had got grit.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_354" id="Page_354">[354]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Well, these little events kept happening all day long.
-Then at four o'clock in the afternoon my friend Jones
-got hit. It was during one of his attacks&mdash;he got inquisitive,
-took a peek over the parapet, and got it in the
-cheek. Two hours later I got hit&mdash;this was the second
-time I had been hit. The first was so slight I didn't leave
-the line, but this time I had just had about as much as I
-cared for. So I got first aid and waited until things had
-quieted down a little, and then made my way to a dugout
-to wait until it got dark.</p>
-
-<p>About nine o'clock, I started to beat it for the dressing
-station. But believe me, old man, it was easier said than
-done, for we had advanced over a mile over No Man's
-Land and I had to go all over that way again. There
-were three of us that started. The other two were just
-slightly wounded&mdash;one in the shoulder and the other in
-the wrist. But poor me, having it in the knee, was worst
-of the bunch. I couldn't move fast, it had stiffened me
-so.</p>
-
-<p>Well, we had our little adventures going across. Once
-I got entangled in the barbed wire. And then when we
-saw several fellows ahead of us&mdash;we just dropped in a
-shell hole, and waited for them to move off. After a
-wait of about fifteen minutes, they didn't move. The
-fellow with the hit in the shoulder crawled forward to
-find out who they were. He was gone so long we were
-just making up our minds to make a wide circuit of them,
-"for none of us were armed"&mdash;we had thrown everything
-away so we could move quicker. Just as we had
-given him up he came back with the news it was one
-of our own working parties fixing wires. The reason
-he had been so long was because he had been waiting
-to catch some of the conversation to see whether it was
-English or not.</p>
-
-<p>Away we started again. We were nearing our old<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_355" id="Page_355">[355]</a></span>
-front line when Fritz caught us with one of his flare-lights.
-Of course the next minute it was Whiss-siss-siss-pop-pop-pop!
-They had turned a machine gun on us.
-Then came another wait in a shell hole. Eventually I
-reached the dressing station. I had my leg dressed and
-a few bits of sticking plaster put on various parts of my
-body. I was put on a motor ambulance and the next
-morning woke up in a hospital clearing station to find
-my old friend Jones sitting up in a bed opposite me.</p>
-
-<p>Well, we had a good laugh for we are like the Siamese
-twins. Wherever one is the other is not far off&mdash;at least
-it has been that way since coming to France. And the
-objects we looked, he with a face as big as two, and me
-with my clothing all muddy and torn and various other
-changes. We'd have made a good picture entitled, "After
-the Fight." Later on we were taken on a hospital train
-to this place, but I shall be glad when I can get about
-again. I feel more lonesome here than I ever have in all
-my life. It's the weariness of lying here with nothing to
-do that gets my "goat." Nevertheless it's great to be
-human again and among civilization again. The first few
-days I appreciated it all right, for I did not have a wink of
-sleep from the Monday night and scarcely anything to eat
-or drink.</p>
-
-<p>Now don't forget, old man, to drop me a line and let
-me know how everything is in dear old New York. So
-now good-bye for the present, hoping you WILL remember
-me to all old friends.</p>
-
-<div class="right">
-Your old friend,<br />
-<span class="smcap">Laban</span>.<br />
-</div>
-
-<p>P. S. I am enclosing a little souvenir, one of Fritz's
-field cards. I was amusing myself on the back of it with
-a few verses.<br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_356" id="Page_356">[356]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 595px;">
-<img src="images/i356.jpg" width="595" height="900" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>THIS IS THE SIDE OF THE POSTCARD TAKEN BY MR. HILL THAT
-WAS INTENDED FOR THE ADDRESS<br /><br /></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_357" id="Page_357">[357]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 604px;">
-<img src="images/i357.jpg" width="604" height="900" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>THE IMPRESSIONS OF AN AMERICAN BOY WHO DID NOT WAIT</p>
-<p>Laban Hill, No. 1,054,147, Fourteenth Canadian Battery, on "Going Over the
-Top" in August, 1917. Written to a Friend on a Postcard Taken
-From a Dead German Soldier</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="poem">
-<div class="center"><br /><br />Over The Top</div>
-<br />
-<div class="center">1</div><br />
-"Did you ever go over the top?" he said,<br />
-"Did you ever go over the top?<br />
-Did you sweep along an unbroken line,<br />
-With bayonets gleaming, and eyes ashine<br />
-And a feeling that went to your head like wine,<br />
-The time you went over the top?"<br />
-<br />
-<div class="center">2</div><br />
-"Did you ever go over the top?" he said,<br />
-"Did you ever go over the top?<br />
-Did the flarelights shine on a glorious sight<br />
-As they pierced the dawn in the changing light;<br />
-Did you thrill with a feeling of savage delight,<br />
-The time you went over the top?"<br />
-<br />
-<div class="center">3</div><br />
-"Did you ever go over the top?" he said,<br />
-"Did you ever go over the top?<br />
-Oh, tell me" he said "how you held up your head<br />
-Of the things that you thought and the things that you said,<br />
-Of your glorious pride as with the men you sped<br />
-Far away over the top."<br />
-<br />
-<div class="center">4</div><br />
-"Oh yes, I've been over the top," I said,<br />
-"You bet I've been over the top.<br />
-But I felt alone in the flare-lights glare.<br />
-And Mauser bullets were singeing my hair,<br />
-And my knees were knocking together for fair,<br />
-The night I went over the top."<br />
-<br />
-<div class="center">5</div><br />
-"Oh yes, I've been over the top," I said,<br />
-"You bet I've been over the top.<br />
-But it's lonesome out there in no man's land<br />
-And you miss the crowd and you miss the band<br />
-And your feet take root in the place you stand,<br />
-The night you go over the top."<br />
-<br />
-<div class="center">6</div><br />
-"Oh yes, I've been over the top<br />
-There was yards of wire got attached to my clothes<br />
-And how I got out of it God only knows<br />
-A secret I fear he will never disclose<br />
-Till I'm finally "over the top."<br />
-<br />
-<div class="center">7</div><br />
-"Oh yes, I've been over the top," I said,<br />
-"You bet I've been over the top.<br />
-The artillery raised a continuous roar--<br />
-They'd been at it, it seemed for a week or more--<br />
-And old man I was sweating at every pore<br />
-The night I went over the top."<br />
-<br />
-<div class="center">8</div><br />
-"Oh yes, I've been over the top," I said,<br />
-"You bet I've been over the top.<br />
-The noise and confusion, the shouts and the groans<br />
-Had paralysed action and frozen my bones<br />
-When a fellow went past me,--I think it was Jones,<br />
-He was headed back over the top."<br />
-<br />
-<div class="center">9</div><br />
-"Oh yes, I've been over the top," I said,<br />
-You bet I've been over the top<br />
-And since Jones has a blighty and wasn't napoo,<br />
-If they're handing them out<br />
-"I thought" me for one too.<br />
-And blest if I didn't--in fact I got two,<br />
-The night I went over the top.<br />
-<br />
-<div class="center">New York isn't the only place people hustle</div><br />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_358" id="Page_358">[358]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>THE SINKING OF THE
-"PROVENCE II"</h2>
-
-<p><i>Told by M. Bokanowski, Deputy of the Department
-of the Seine</i></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>The French auxiliary cruiser <i>La Provence II</i>, formerly a passenger
-liner, was sunk by a submarine in the eastern end of
-the Mediterranean while serving as a troop transport. Nearly
-4,000 men are said to have been on board, of whom only 870
-were saved. One of the survivors, M. Bokanowski, wrote this
-thrilling description to President Poincaré of France:</p></blockquote>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Monsieur Le President</span>: You are doubtless familiar,
-in all its details, with the fate of the <i>Provence II</i>.
-I should like to describe to you&mdash;to assuage in a measure
-the grief of France&mdash;the noble behaviour of those who
-made ready at that moment, between sea and sky, to die
-for their country.</p>
-
-<p>We had on board a battalion and some detachments
-of the Third Colonial Regiment of Infantry. At the
-moment of the explosion I was on the bridge, with the
-commander of the ship, his second in command, and
-several of the higher officers. We directed the steps to
-be taken, distributing lifebelts, superintending the launching
-of boats and liferafts. Not an outcry, not a complaint,
-not the slightest sign of panic&mdash;only the dignified
-tranquillity of men who long ago had consecrated their
-lives to the sublime cause that had put arms in their
-hands.</p>
-
-<p>Everybody would have been saved had it depended
-only on officers and crew. Unfortunately the ship sank
-rapidly. The water soon found its way into the boilers.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_359" id="Page_359">[359]</a></span>
-When they began to explode, about ten minutes past 5,
-I jumped into the sea and swam as fast as I could in
-order to get beyond the radius of suction. A few moments
-later there were several deafening explosions. I
-turned and saw the end. The ship was going down
-stern foremost. Captain Vesco, still standing on the
-bridge, cried in a voice above the uproar: "Vive la
-France!" The survivors, swimming about the ship, or
-safe on boats and rafts, saw the <i>Provence</i> make a sudden
-plunge, her forward deck standing perpendicular in the
-air. They, in their turn, saluted with a cry of "Vive la
-France!" It was a quarter past 5.</p>
-
-<p>After swimming for half an hour I succeeded in
-reaching an overloaded raft, the occupants of which
-pulled me aboard. Night was falling, the wind was chill
-and nipped the flesh of the men, who were almost entirely
-naked. Throughout the endless night, not a whimper!
-My companions in misfortune had no words except
-to lament the fate of those who were drowned and to
-curse the Boche, who, neither before nor after his treacherous
-shot, had dared to appear and show his flag. In
-water up to the waist, with teeth chattering from the
-cold, but upheld by the desire to survive and be able to
-punish the villains, we were picked up eighteen hours
-later by a trawler. Several men had died from the cold
-on the rafts, and several others had lost their reason.</p>
-
-<p>An English patrol and a French torpedo boat divided
-the survivors between them, some heading for Milo, others
-for Malta. I was among the latter, and we arrived
-here about 1 o'clock yesterday. Captain Vesco, who was
-in command of the <i>Provence II.</i>; Lieutenant Besson, second
-in command; Colonel Duhalde, commanding the
-Third Colonial Regiment of Infantry, remained on the
-bridge until the very last second of the ship's life in the
-most noble spirit of self-sacrifice, giving with perfect<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_360" id="Page_360">[360]</a></span>
-calmness precise and effective orders for saving the passengers.</p>
-
-<p>The gunners of the <i>Provence's</i> stern gun, having
-loaded it when the torpedo struck, remained at their
-posts, trying to discover the hidden foe in order to
-repay him in his own coin.</p>
-
-<p>Surgeon Navarre of the Third Colonial Regiment, being
-taken aboard a trawler nearly exhausted by his
-eighteen hours on a raft, refused to change his drenched
-clothing or to take any food until he had dressed the
-hurts of the wounded and looked after the sick. He was
-prostrated a long while after such superhuman labours.</p>
-
-<p>And I must mention this other incident, which brings
-tears to my eyes:</p>
-
-<p>Gauthier, Assistant Quartermaster of the <i>Provence</i>,
-having been taken on board a greatly overloaded raft,
-was hailed by a soldier asking for help; he jumped into
-the water to give him his place, saying: "A sailor's duty
-is to save the soldiers first of all."</p>
-
-<p>He was picked up, twenty-one hours after the wreck,
-clinging to a plank.</p>
-
-<p>I call attention also to the devotion and zeal&mdash;meriting
-our profound gratitude&mdash;of Lieutenant Sinclair Thompson,
-commanding the English patrol <i>Marguerite</i>, and of
-his officers and crew, by whose labours about 300 survivors
-were taken from the place of the wreck to Malta.</p>
-
-<p>Pray pardon the form of this story, Monsieur le
-Président. I have written it hurriedly, with a bruised
-hand, and with a head still in a sad muddle. I wished,
-before my impending departure for Saloniki, to say to
-you with all my heart: "That is what these noble fellows
-did!"</p>
-
-<div class="right">
-<span class="smcap">Bokanowski.</span><br />
-</div>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="chap" />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class="transnote">
-<h2>Transcriber's Note</h2>
-
-<p>Obvious errors of punctuation and diacritics were corrected.</p>
-
-<p>Inconsistent hyphenation was made consisent.</p>
-
-<p>Times normalized to <span class="smcap">A.M.</span> and <span class="smcap">P.M.</span></p>
-
-<p>P. 27: in lieu of this can be subtituted -> in lieu of this can be substituted.</p>
-
-<p>P. 28: woman's hubsand -> woman's husband.</p>
-
-<p>P. 51: in cosmos -> in the cosmos.</p>
-
-<p>P. 79: Never was General -> Never was a General.</p>
-
-<p>P. 81: municipal dgnitary -> municipal dignitary.</p>
-
-<p>P. 103: mobilization of 1909 -> mobilization of 1914.</p>
-
-<p>P. 114: THE ROMANCE OF THE EURASION -> THE ROMANCE OF THE EURASIAN.</p>
-
-<p>P. 119: held out so vigourously -> held out so vigorously.</p>
-
-<p>P. 120: klled fifty-two Boches -> killed fifty-two Boches.</p>
-
-<p>P. 129: German Embassy in Berlin -> American Embassy in Berlin.</p>
-
-<p>P. 151: BATTLE OF CHARLEROI -> THE BATTLE OF CHARLEROI.</p>
-
-<p>P. 153: Sonzèe -> Somzée.</p>
-
-<p>P. 196: left in the forcastle -> left in the forecastle.</p>
-
-<p>P. 198: steered for the nothern coast -> steered for the northern coast.</p>
-
-<p>P. 215: followed at a disstance -> followed at a distance.</p>
-
-<p>P. 226: made by the priscope -> made by the periscope.</p>
-
-<p>P. 255: pour my temptuous heart -> pour my tempestuous heart.</p>
-
-<p>P. 263: U-boat lieutenand -> U-boat lieutenant.</p>
-
-<p>P. 265: Jusé -> José.</p>
-
-<p>P. 277: regarded themslves as beaten -> regarded themselves as beaten.</p>
-
-<p>P. 278: Chalffour Quarry -> Chauffour Quarry.</p>
-
-<p>P. 307: distince he covered -> distance he covered.</p>
-
-<p>P. 314: ran in my head continualy -> ran in my head continually.</p>
-
-<p>P. 319: animals were specialy fêted -> animals were specially fêted.</p>
-
-<p>P. 338: any longed astern -> any longer astern.</p>
-
-<p>P. 349: hamstring tendron -> hamstring tendon.</p>
-
-<p>P. 358: N. Bokanowski -> M. Bokanowski.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="full" />
-<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TRUE STORIES OF THE GREAT WAR, VOLUME V (OF 6)***</p>
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@@ -1,11964 +0,0 @@
-The Project Gutenberg eBook, True Stories of the Great War, Volume V (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 V (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: December 31, 2015 [eBook #50807]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TRUE STORIES OF THE GREAT WAR,
-VOLUME V (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 50807-h.htm or 50807-h.zip:
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/50807/50807-h/50807-h.htm)
- or
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/50807/50807-h.zip)
-
-
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive/American Libraries. See
- https://archive.org/details/truestoriesofgre05mill
-
-
-
-
-
-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 V
-
-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
-
- This group of stories for VOLUME V has been selected by the Board
- of Editors according to the plan outlined in "Introductory" to
- Volume I. It includes episodes from thirty-one story-tellers--tales
- of Dragoons, Marines, Bishops, Foreign Legion, Fleet Surgeon,
- Scouts, Exiles, Soldiers, Spies and Eye-Witnesses. The selections
- have been made from the most authoritative sources in Europe and
- America. Full credit is given in every instance to the original
- source.
-
-
-VOLUME V--THIRTY-ONE STORY-TELLERS--142 EPISODES
-
- TALES OF THE DARING RIDES OF A FRENCH TROOPER 1
- WITH THE TWENTY-SECOND REGIMENT OF DRAGOONS
- Told by Lieut. Christian Mallet of the Dragoons
- (Permission of E. P. Dutton and Company)
-
- "TO RUHLEBEN--AND BACK" LIFE IN A GERMAN PRISON 18
- WHERE THE BRITISH CIVILIAN PRISONERS ARE HELD IN
- DETENTION CAMP
- Told by Geoffrey Pyke, an English Prisoner
- (Permission of Houghton, Mifflin and Company)
-
- AN AMERICAN AT BATTLE OF THE SOMME WITH FRENCH ARMY 36
- ARMY LIFE WITH THE SOLDIERS ALONG THE SOMME
- Told by Frederick Palmer
- (Permission of Dodd, Mead and Company)
-
- AN AMERICAN'S EXPERIENCES "INSIDE THE GERMAN EMPIRE" 53
- Told by Herbert Bayard Swope
- (Permission of The Century Company)
-
- "DIXMUDE"--AN EPIC OF THE FRENCH MARINES 64
- STORY OF THE MURDER OF COMMANDER JEANNIOT
- Told by Charles Le Goffic of the Fusiliers Marins
- (Permission of J. B. Lippincott Company)
-
- A BISHOP AT THE FRONT WITH THE BRITISH ARMY 75
- Told by Right Reverend H. Russell Wakefield,
- Bishop of Birmingham
- (Permission of Longmans, Green and Company)
-
- SHORT RATIONS--THE TRUTH ABOUT LIFE IN GERMANY 83
- AN AMERICAN WOMAN IN GERMANY
- Told by Madeline Zabriskie Doty
- (Permission of The Century Company)
-
- FIGHTING "WITH THE RUSSIAN ARMY"--ON THE AUSTRIAN FRONT 92
- THE COLOSSAL STRUGGLE OF THE SLAVS
- Told by Barnard Pares
- (Permission of Houghton, Mifflin and Company)
-
- THE ROMANCE OF THE FRENCH FOREIGN LEGION 107
- THE "GLORIOUS RASCALS"
- Told by E. S. and G. F. Lees
- (Permission of Wide World)
-
- ADVENTURES OF WOMEN WHO FACE DEATH ON BATTLEGROUNDS 121
- LITTLE STORIES OF WOMAN'S INDOMITABLE COURAGE
- Told by Hilda Wynne and Others
- (Permission of New York American and New York World)
-
- AN AMERICAN WOMAN'S STORY OF THE "ANCONA" TRAGEDY 142
- Told by Dr. Cecile Greil
- (Permission New York Times)
-
- THE STRATEGY OF SISTER MADELEINE 151
- THE STORY OF A FRENCH CAPTAIN'S ESCAPE FROM THE GERMANS
- Told by Himself and Translated by G. Frederic Lees
- (Permission of Wide World)
-
- TALES OF THE SPIES AND THEIR DANGEROUS MISSIONS 169
- REVELATIONS OF METHODS AND DARING ADVENTURES
- Told by Secret Service Men of Several Countries
- (Permission of New York American; New York World; New
- York Herald and New York Tribune)
-
- WHAT HAPPENED TO THE "GLENHOLME" 192
- ADVENTURES WITH SUBMARINES IN THE MEDITERRANEAN SEA
- Told by Captain Groome to a Friend
- (Permission Wide World)
-
- WHAT THE KAISER'S SON SAW ON THE BATTLEFIELD 203
- PERSONAL EXPERIENCES OF A GERMAN PRINCE
- Told by Prince Oscar of Prussia,
- Fifth Son of Emperor Wilhelm
- (Permission of New York American)
-
- A DAY'S WORK WITH A FRENCH SUBMARINE 222
- AN AMERICAN'S EXPERIENCE UNDER THE SEA
- Told by Fred B. Pitney
- (Permission of New York Tribune)
-
- TALE OF THE CHILD OF TERBEEKE 233
- HOW IT SAVED A BRITISH BATTALION
- Told by Oliver Madox Hueffer
- (Permission of Wide World)
-
- A HERO TALE OF THE RED CROSS 242
- Told by G. S. Petroff
- (Permission of Current History)
-
- LIFE STORY OF "GRANDMOTHER OF THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION" 246
- TRIUMPHANT RETURN FROM FORTY-FOUR YEARS IN
- SIBERIAN EXILE
- Told by Catherine Breshkovskaya,
- the Russian Revolutionist
- (Permission of New York Tribune)
-
- TALE OF AN AMAZING VOYAGE 262
- GERMAN OFFICERS ESCAPE FROM SPAIN IN A SAILING VESSEL
- Told by Frederic Lees
- (Permission of Wide World)
-
- THE POET'S DEATH IN BATTLE--HOW ALLEN SEEGER DIED 278
- A YOUNG AMERICAN IN THE FOREIGN LEGION
- Told by Bif Bear, a Young Egyptian in the Foreign Legion
-
- THE GUARDIAN OF THE LINE--HERO TALE OF LITHUANIA 286
- Told by G. Frederic Lees
- (Permission of Wide World)
-
- WITH A FLEET SURGEON ON A BRITISH WARSHIP DURING
- A BATTLE 295
- UNDER FIRE ON HIS MAJESTY'S SHIP, "THE FEARLESS"
- Told by Fleet Surgeon Walter K. Hopkins
- (Permission New York American)
-
- AIRMEN IN THE DESERTS OF EGYPT 304
- ADVENTURES OF THE ROYAL FLYING CORPS IN SINAI
- Told by F. W. Martindale
- (Permission of Wide World)
-
- HOW SWEENY, OF THE FOREIGN LEGION, GOT HIS "HOT DOGS" 312
- Told by Private John Joseph Casey
- (Permission of New York World)
-
- THE DOGS OF WAR ON THE BATTLEGROUNDS 316
- THE "FOUR-FOOTED SOLDIERS" OF FRANCE
- Told by the Soldiers
- (Permission of Wide World)
-
- TRUE STORY ABOUT KILLING THE WOUNDED 328
- Told by A. Pankratoff
- (Permission of Current History)
-
- HOW WE FOILED "U 39"--IN THE SUBMARINE ZONE 333
- ADVENTURES ABOARD A HORSE TRANSPORT
- Told by H. O. Read
- (Permission of Wide World)
-
- MY WORST EXPERIENCE IN MESOPOTAMIA 344
- Told by a Man Who Stopped a Bullet
- (Permission of Current History)
-
- SPIRIT OF YOUNG AMERICA--HOW WE WENT "OVER THE TOP" 349
- EXPERIENCES OF A NEW YORK BOY WITH THE CANADIANS
- Told by (name withheld), wounded in France
-
- THE SINKING OF "THE PROVENCE II" 358
- Told by N. Bokanowski,
- Deputy of the Department of the Seine
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: (C) International Film Service.
-THE BALLOON CORPS EXPERIENCE THE SENSATIONS OF THE POLAR EXPLORER]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: DROPPING A BOMB FROM A DIRIGIBLE
-_It is Pleasanter to See This in a Volume Than Overhead!_]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: A FEW MINUTES BEFORE THIS WAS A GERMAN BATTLE PLANE
-_But the Aircraft Guns Got His Range. The Insert Shows a Naval Plane_]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: (C) International Film Service.
-SOMEONE IS ALWAYS WATCHING IN THE FIRST LINE TRENCH
-_A British Trench at Orvillieres_]
-
-
-
-
-TALES OF THE DARING RIDES OF A FRENCH TROOPER
-
-_With the Twenty-second Regiment of Dragoons_
-
-_Told by Lieut. Christian Mallet, of the Dragoons_
-
- This famous 22nd regiment of Dragoons was raised in 1635 and
- took part in all the great wars in which the French were engaged
- before the Revolution. It fought under the Republic and then
- with Napoleon's armies--at Austerlitz (1805); Jena (1806); Eylau
- (1807); Oporto (1809). It saw service with the Army of the Sambre
- and Meuse, the Army of the Rhine, the Grande-Armee, in the War in
- Spain, the Campaign in Saxony, the Campaign in France (1814). The
- regiment was disbanded in 1815 at the close of the Napoleonic Wars
- and was not raised again until 1873. The first great charge of the
- 22nd Dragoons in the Great War occurred on the night of September
- 10-11, 1914. It has since been fighting heroically "For France and
- Civilization." Lieut. Mallet has fought his way up in the ranks
- with the Dragoons. He presents the unconquerable spirit of France
- in his book: "Impressions and Experiences of a French Trooper."
- It is dedicated: "To my Captain, Count J. de Tarragon, and to my
- two comrades, 2nd Lieut. Magrin and 2nd Lieut. Clere--who fell all
- three on the field of honour in defense of their country." One of
- his stories is recorded herewith by permission of his publishers,
- _E. P. Dutton and Company_: Copyright 1916.
-
-[1] I--STORY OF PEASANT GIRL ON THE YSER
-
-The battle finished (September 10, 1914) the pursuit of the conquered
-army commenced and kept the whole world in suspense, with eyes fixed on
-this headlong flight towards the north, which lasted till the end of
-the month, and which was to be the prelude of the great battles of the
-Yser.
-
-The region round Verberie was definitely cleared of Germans and was
-become once more French. The little town for some days presented an
-extraordinary spectacle.
-
-We entered the town after having received the formal assurance of the
-5th Chasseurs, who went farther on, that all the country was in our
-hands. Some divisional cyclists were seated at the roadside. We asked
-them for news of the 22nd, and their reply wrung our hearts. They knew
-nothing definite, but they had met a country cart full of our wounded
-comrades, who had told them that the regiment had been cut up.
-
-No one could tell us where the divisional area was to be found. The
-division itself appeared to have been dismembered, lost and in part
-destroyed. We thought that we were the only survivors of a disaster,
-and, once the horses were in shelter in an empty abandoned farm
-stuffing themselves with hay, we wandered sadly through the streets
-destroyed by bombardment and by fire in search of such civilians as
-might have remained behind during the invasion.
-
-A little outside the town we at last found a farm where two of the
-inhabitants had stayed on. The contrast between them was touching.
-One was a paralysed old man unable to leave his fields, the other was
-a young girl of fifteen, a frail little peasant, and rather ugly.
-Her strange green eyes contrasted with an admirable head of auburn
-hair, and she had heroically insisted on looking after her infirm
-grandfather, though all the rest of the family had emigrated towards
-the west. She had remained faithful to her duty in spite of the
-bombardment, the battle at their very door and the ill-treatment of
-the Bavarian soldiers who were billeted in the farm. Distressed, yet
-joyous, she prepared a hasty meal and busied herself in quest of food,
-for it was anything but easy to satiate eleven men dying of hunger when
-the Germans, who lay hands on everything, had only just left.
-
-She wrung the neck of an emaciated fowl which had escaped massacre,
-and, by adding thereto some potatoes from the garden, she served us
-a breakfast, washed down with white wine, which made us stammer with
-joy, like children. One needs to have fasted for five days to have
-felt the cutting pains of hunger and of thirst in all their horror, to
-appreciate the happiness that one can experience in eating the wing
-of a scraggy fowl and in drinking a glass of execrable wine tasting
-like vinegar. She bustled about, and her pitying and motherly gestures
-touched our hearts. While we ate she told us the most astonishing story
-that ever was, a story acted, illustrated by gestures, which made the
-scenes live with remarkable vividness.
-
-She told us how, faithful to her oath, she was alone when the Bavarians
-came knocking at her door, how she lived three days with them, a butt
-for their innumerable coarsenesses, sometimes brutally treated when the
-soldiers were sober, sometimes pursued by their gross assiduities when
-they were drunk; how one night she had to fly half naked through the
-rain, slipping out through the venthole of the cellar, to escape being
-violated by a group of madmen, not daring to go to bed again, sleeping
-fully dressed behind a small copse; how at last French chasseurs had
-put the Bavarians to flight and had in their turn installed themselves
-in the farm, and how among them she felt herself protected and
-respected.
-
-She attached herself to her new companions, whom she looked after like
-a mother for three days. Then they went away, promising to return, and
-she was left alone.
-
-But the next day at dawn, uneasy at the row that came from the town,
-she decided to go in search of news. She put on a shawl and slipped
-through the brushwood and thickets as far as the first houses. She was
-afraid of being seen, and made herself as small as possible, keeping
-close to the walls, crossing gardens and ruined houses. The terrible
-noise increased, and she went towards it. She wanted to see what was
-going on, and a fine virile courage sustained her. The shells fell near
-her; no matter, she had only a few more steps to go to turn the corner
-of a street. She arrived on the _place_ as the battle was finishing.
-
-Her fifteen chasseurs were there, fifteen corpses at the foot of the
-barricade. One of them, who still lived, raised himself on seeing her,
-and held out his arms towards her. Then, forgetting all danger, in a
-magnificent outburst of feminine pity, she braved the rain of fire and
-dashed to the centre of the _place_. She knelt by the young fellow,
-enveloped him in her shawl to warm him and rocked him in her arms till
-he closed his young eyes for ever, thankful for this feminine presence
-which had made his last sufferings less bitter.
-
-While she remained kneeling on the pavement wet with blood, a last big
-calibre shell knocked over, almost at her feet, a big corner house,
-which in its fall buried the German and French corpses in one horrible
-heap. She fell in a faint on the stones, knocked over by the windage of
-the shell, which had so nearly done for her.
-
-During the latter part of her discourse she straightened her thin
-figure to the full, her strange eyes sparkled, and she appeared to be
-possessed by some strong and mysterious spirit which made us tremble.
-She became big in her rustic simplicity--big, as the incarnation of
-grief and of pity, and of the peasant in her gave place to a living
-image of the war--an image singularly moving and singularly beautiful.
-
-
-II--WITH THE WARRIORS FROM THE MARNE
-
-From the next day Verberie became in some degree the rallying point
-for all soldiers who had lost touch with their units. Elements of all
-sorts of regiments, of all arms, of all races even, arrived on foot,
-on horseback, on bicycles, in country carts. There were dragoons,
-cuirassiers, chasseurs, artillerymen, Algerian Light Infantry and
-English. Bernous, khaki uniform, blue capes, rubbed shoulders with
-dolmans, black tunics and red trousers.
-
-In this extraordinary crowd there were men from Morocco mounted on
-Arab horses and wearing turbans; there were "Joyeux" who wore the
-tarboosh, and ruddy English faces surmounted by flat caps. All the
-uniforms were covered with dirt and slashed and torn. Many of the men
-had bare feet, and some carried arms and some were without. It was the
-hazard of the colossal battle of the Marne, where several millions of
-men had been at grips, which had thrown them on this point. All were
-animated by the same desire for information, and particularly of the
-whereabouts of their respective regiments. From every direction flowed
-in convoys, waggons, artillery ammunition waggons, stragglers from
-every division and from every army corps. The mix-up and the confusion
-were indescribable. One heard shouting, swearing, neighing of horses,
-the horns of motor-cars, and the rumble of heavy waggons, which shook
-the houses.
-
-Faces drawn with fatigue were black with dust and mud and framed in
-stubbly beards. Everyone was gesticulating, everyone was shouting and
-a bright autumn sun, following upon the storm, threw into prominence
-amongst the medley of clothing the luminous splashes of gaudy colours
-and imparted an Oriental effect to the crowd.
-
-
-III--STORY OF THE PRIEST--AND TWO CHASSEURS
-
-Having eaten, washed and rested, I walked the streets, drinking the
-morning air and taking deep breaths of the _joie de vivre_, of the
-strength and vitality mingled with the air. I looked on every side to
-see whether I could not find some acquaintance in the crowd, some stray
-trooper from my regiment.
-
-So it was that the hazard of my walk brought me to a scene which moved
-me to tears and which rests graven so deeply on my memory that I can
-see its smallest detail with my eyes shut. The Gothic porch of the
-church, with its fine sculptures of the best period, was open, making
-in the brightness of the morning a pit of shade, at the foot of which
-some candles shone like stars. On the threshold of the porch, gaily
-lighted by the morning sun, a priest, whose fine virile face I can
-still recall, held in his hand the enamel pyx, and his surplice of lace
-of a dazzling whiteness contrasted with the muddy boots and spurs. One
-could guess that after having traversed some field of battle, consoling
-the wounded and the dying, he had dismounted to officiate in the open
-air under the morning sun.
-
-Before him, on a humble country cart and lying on a bed of straw, were
-stretched the rigid bodies, fixed in death, of two chasseurs who had
-fallen nobly while defending the bridge over the river. All around,
-kneeling in the mud of the porch, a semicircle of bare-headed soldiers,
-overcome by gratitude and humility, were assembled to accomplish a
-last duty and pay their last respects to the two comrades who were
-lying before them and who were sleeping their last sleep in their
-bloodstained uniforms, and assisted at the supreme office. The priest
-finished the _De profundis_, and in a clear voice pronounced the sacred
-words "_Revertitur in terram suam unde erat et spiritus redit ad Deum
-qui dedit illum_." The officiant gave the holy-water sprinkler to the
-priest, who sprinkled the bodies and murmured "_Requiescat in pace_."
-"Amen," responded the kneeling crowd, and a great wave of religious
-feeling passed over the kneeling men, the greater part of whom gave way
-to overmastering emotion.
-
-I can still see a big devil of an artilleryman, with his head between
-his hands, shaken by convulsive sobs. Having given the absolution, the
-priest raised the host sparkling in the sunlight for the last time and
-pronounced the sacramental words. I moved off, deeply affected by the
-grandeur of the scene.
-
-
-IV--DEPRAVED SOLDIERS IN A DRAWING ROOM
-
-By the 12th a good number of 22nd Dragoons and some officers of the
-regiment had rejoined at Verberie. We formed from this debris an almost
-complete squadron under the command of Captain de Salverte, who had
-succeeded in getting through the lines by skirting the forest.
-
-I again found my officer, M. Chatelin, whom I had last seen in the
-little clearing near Gilocourt, surrounded by lurking enemies, and
-whom I had hardly dared hope to see again alive; also M. de Thezy, my
-comrade Clere and others.
-
-We were all sorry to hear that Lieutenant Roy had fallen on the field
-of battle with several others, and that Major Jouillie had been taken
-prisoner. As for Captain de Tarragon, it was stated that he might
-have escaped on foot with his orderly and that he might be somewhere
-in the neighbourhood with a contingent of escaped men, but any precise
-information was wanting.
-
-The night before I had slept in the drawing-room of the chateau
-belonging to M. de Maindreville, the mayor. Its appearance merits some
-brief description, so that those who are still in doubt as to the
-savagery of the Germans may learn to what degree of bestiality and
-ignominy they are capable of attaining.
-
-This fine drawing-room was a veritable dung heap. The curtains were
-torn, the small billiard-table lay upside down in the middle of the
-room, a litter of rotting food covered the floor, the furniture
-was in matchwood, the chairs were broken, the easy-chairs had had
-their stuffing torn out of them and the glass of the cabinets was
-smashed. One could see that all small objects had been carried off
-and all others methodically broken. On the first floor the sight
-was heart-breaking. Fine linen, trimmed with lace, was soiled with
-excrement; excrement was everywhere, in the bath, on the sheets, on
-the floor. They had vomited on the beds and urinated against the
-walls; broken bottles had shed seas of red wine on the costly carpets.
-An unnamable liquid was running down the staircase, obscene designs
-were traced in charcoal on the wall-papers and filthy inscriptions
-ornamented the walls.
-
-I have told enough to give an idea of the degrading traces left by a
-contemptible enemy. I have exaggerated nothing; if anything, I have
-understated the truth.
-
-And this is the people that wants to be the arbiter of culture and of
-civilisation! May it stand for ever shamed and reduced to its true
-level, which is below that of the brute beast.
-
-
-V--THE SEARCH FOR CAPTAIN DE TARRAGON
-
-On the morning of the 12th, under the command of Captain de Salverte
-we crossed the Oise by a bridge of boats, the stone bridge having
-been destroyed by dynamite some days before. We went north to billet
-at Estree-Saint Denis, which was to be the definite rallying point of
-the 22nd Dragoons. We were followed by several country carts, full
-of dismounted troopers, saddles, lances, cloaks and odds and ends of
-equipment.
-
-Acting on very vague information, I set out on the 13th to look for
-Captain de Tarragon. I was mounted on a prehistoric motor bicycle,
-requisitioned from the village barber. I scoured the country seeking
-information from everyone I met. I received the most contradictory
-reports, made a thousand useless detours and was exasperated when
-overtaken by night without having found any trace of him.
-
-I followed the road leading to Baron and to Nanteuil-le-Haudoin, along
-which but a few days before the corps of Landwehr, asked for by von
-Kluck, had marched with the object of enveloping our army, and along
-which it had just been precipitately hustled back. The sky was overcast
-and the day was threatening. At each step dead horses with swelled
-bellies threatened heaven with their stiff legs. A score of soldiers
-were lying in convulsed attitudes, their eyes wide open, with grimacing
-mouths twisted into a terrifying smile, and with hands clasping their
-rifles. Involuntarily I trembled at finding myself alone at nightfall
-in this deserted country, where no living being was to be seen, where
-not a sound was to be heard except the cawing of thousands of crows and
-the purr of my motor, which panted on the hills like an asthmatic old
-man, causing me the liveliest anxiety.
-
-Fifteen hundred metres from Baron, after a last gasp, my machine
-stopped for ever, and, as I was ignorant of its mechanics, I was
-compelled to leave it where it was and continue my journey on foot
-through the darkness.
-
-The proprietor of the chateau of Baron put me up for the night. As at
-Verberie, everything had been burnt, soiled and destroyed. Nothing
-remained of the elegant furniture beyond a heap of shapeless objects.
-Next morning with the aid of a captain on the staff who requisitioned
-a trap for me, I got back to Verberie and found Captain de Tarragon
-there. He had slept at the farm of La Bonne Aventure, quite near to
-where I lay.
-
-When he saw me, after the mortal anxieties through which he had lived,
-believing his squadron lost and cut up, he was overcome by such a
-feeling of gratitude and joy that I saw tears rise to his eyes while
-he shook me vigourously by the hand. He had already sent forward my
-name for mention in the order for the day with reference to the affair
-at Gilocourt and the death of poor Dangel. I was recommended for the
-military medal, and my heart swelled with pride and joy, while I was
-carried back to Estree-Saint-Denis, stretched out in a country cart
-with a score of dismounted comrades.
-
-A few days afterwards I was promoted corporal and proudly sported the
-red flannel chevrons bought at a country grocer's shop.
-
-
-VI--TALES OF THE DRAGOONS
-
-Once the half-regiment was reconstituted after a fashion, though many
-were missing (a detachment of fifty men without horses having returned
-to the depot), we were attached to the 3rd Cavalry Division, which
-happened to be in our neighbourhood, ours having left the area for some
-unknown destination. Until the 1st of October our lot was bound up
-with that of the 4th Cuirassiers, who marched with us.
-
-On the 23rd of September, as supports for the artillery, we were
-present at violent infantry actions between Nesle and Billancourt. The
-4th Corps attacked, and the furious struggle extended over the whole
-country. My troop was detached as flank guard and, in the thick morning
-fog, we knocked up against a handful of German cavalry, whom, in the
-distance, we had taken for our own men.
-
-We charged them at a gallop, and we noticed that they were tiring and
-that we were gaining on them. One of them drew his sabre and cut his
-horse's flanks with it, whilst a non-commissioned officer turned and
-fired his revolver without hitting us; but, thanks to the fog, they got
-away. We did not tempt providence by following them too far for fear of
-bringing up in their lines.
-
-At night we were sent to reconnoitre some fires which were reddening
-the horizon and which, from a distance, seemed vast conflagrations. We
-came upon a bivouac of Algerian troops, who were squatting on their
-heels, warming themselves, singing strange African melodies and giving
-to this corner of French soil an appearance of Algeria.
-
-On hearing the sound of our horses they sprang to arms with guttural
-cries, but when they had recognised that we were French they insisted
-on embracing our officer and danced round us like children.
-
-We billeted at Parvillers in a half-destroyed farm, and there at
-daybreak a sight that suggested an hallucination met our eyes. Some ten
-German soldiers were there in the courtyard dead, mowed down by the
-"75," but in such natural attitudes that but for their waxen colour
-one could have believed them alive. One was standing holding on to a
-bush, his hand grasping the branches. His face bespoke his terror, his
-mute mouth seemed as if in the act of yelling and his eyes were dilated
-with fear. A fragment of shell had pierced his chest. Another was on
-his knees, propped against a wall, under cover of which he had sought
-shelter from the murderous fire. I approached to see where his wound
-was and it took me a moment to discover it, so intact was the corpse.
-I saw at last that he had had the whole of the inside of his cranium
-carried away and hollowed out, as if by some surgical instrument. His
-tongue and his eyes were kept in place by a filament of flesh, and his
-spiked helmet had rolled off by his side. An officer was seated on some
-hay, with his legs apart and his head thrown back, looking at the farm.
-
-All these eyes fixed us with a terrifying immobility, with a look of
-such acute terror that our men turned away, as if afraid of sharing it;
-and not one of them dared to touch the magnificent new equipment of
-the Germans, which would have tempted them in any other circumstances.
-There were aluminum water-bottles and mess tins, helmet plates of
-shining copper and sculptured regimental badges dear to the hearts of
-soldiers, and which they have the habit of collecting as trophies.
-
-
-VII--LAST CHARGE OF THE HORSEMEN
-
-The dawn of the 25th broke without a cloud over the village of Folies.
-A heat haze hid the early morning sun. The enemy were quite near, and
-the sentries on the barricades gave the alarm. The cuirassiers and
-dragoons, leaving their horses under cover, had been on watch in the
-surrounding country since the morning to protect the village and the
-batteries of "75's," which were firing from a little way back.
-
-A non-commissioned officer and I had remained mounted. M. de Thezy
-sent us to investigate some horsemen whose shadows had loomed through
-the mist and whom we had seen dismount in an apple orchard near the
-village of Chocques. We set off at a quiet trot, convinced that we had
-to deal with some French hussars whom I had seen go that way an hour
-before. We crossed a field of beetroot and made straight towards them.
-They seemed anchored to the spot, and when we were within one hundred
-metres, and they showed no signs of moving, our confidence increased.
-The fog seemed to grow thicker and our horses, now at the walk, scented
-no danger. We were within fifty metres of them when a voice spoke
-out and the word "carbine" reached us distinctly, carried by a light
-breeze. The non-commissioned officer turned to me, his suspicions
-completely stilled, and said, "We can go on, they are French, I heard
-the word carbine." At the same instant I saw the group come to the
-shoulder and a dozen jets of fire tore the mist with short red flashes.
-A hail of bullets fell all around us, and we had only just time enough
-to put between them and ourselves as much fog as would conceal us, for
-before turning tail we had seen the confused grey mass of a column
-coming out of the village. We had only to warn the artillery and then
-there would be some fun.
-
-The lieutenant of artillery was two kilometres back perched on a
-ladder. Having listened to what we had to say, he turned towards his
-gun and cried through a megaphone, "2600, corrector 18." We were
-already far off, returning at the gallop to try to see the effect, and
-it was a fine sight.
-
-Leaving the horses in a farm, we slipped from tree to tree. There was
-the column, still advancing. A first shell, ten metres in front of it,
-stopped it short; immediately a second fell on the left, wounding some
-men, and a horse reared and upset its rider. A third shell struck
-mercilessly into the centre of the column and caused an explosion
-which sent flying, right and left, dark shapes which we guessed to
-be fragments of bodies. It rained shell, which struck the road with
-mathematical precision, sowing death and panic. In the twinkling of an
-eye the road was swept clean. The survivors bolted in every direction
-like madmen, and the agonising groans of a dying horse echoed through
-the whole countryside.
-
- * * * * *
-
-On the 1st of October we rejoined our division and the first
-half-regiment at Tilloy-les-Mofflaines. Up to the 20th we passed
-through a period of great privation and fatigue owing to the early
-frosts. We were unable to sleep for as many as five days on end, and
-when at night we had a few hours in which to rest, we passed them lying
-on the pavement of the street, propped up against some heap of coal
-or of stones, holding our horses' reins, each huddled up against his
-neighbour to try and keep warm.
-
-
-VIII--DIARY OF A FRENCH TROOPER
-
-Here are extracts from my diary, starting from 8th of October:
-
-_8th October._--All night we guarded the bridge at Estaires, after
-having constructed a formidable barricade. Damp and chilly night,
-which I got through lying on the pavement before the bridge; drank a
-half-litre of spirits in little sips to sustain me. This is the most
-trying night we have passed, but the spirits of all are wonderful.
-
-_9th October_: _Twenty minutes to four, two kilometres from Estaires,
-scouting amongst beetroot fields._--Has the supreme moment come?
-A little while ago I firmly believed it had; now I am out of my
-reckoning, so incomprehensible and widespread is the struggle which
-surrounds us.
-
-We have evacuated Estaires and the bridge over the Lys, which we were
-guarding, to rejoin our horses on foot. After some minutes on the road
-the first shells burst. My troop received orders to fight dismounted,
-and here we are, lying down as skirmishers amongst the beetroot, in
-the midst of a heavy artillery and musketry fire. I am on the extreme
-right, and a moment ago two shrapnel shells came over and burst six or
-eight metres above my head, peppering the ground with bullets. Never,
-I imagine, have I come so near to being hit.
-
-For the moment it is impossible to understand what is going on; the
-whole of the cavalry which was on in front of us--chasseurs, dragoons
-and all the cyclists--have fallen back, passing along the road on our
-flank. We, however, have had no order to retire. The peasants with
-their wives and children are running about the country like mad people.
-It is a sorry sight. A moment ago I saw an old man and a little girl
-fall in their hurry to escape from their farm, which a shell had just
-knocked to pieces. They are like herds of animals maddened by a storm.
-
-At dusk the Germans are 500 metres off. We have orders to take up our
-post in the cemetery of Estaires. I have hurt my foot and each step in
-the ploughed land is a torture. I have noted a way which will lead me
-to the bridge on the other side of the town.
-
-I brought up my patrol at the double. When I got back I saw the troop
-retiring.
-
-We passed through the town, which had a sinister look by night,
-reddened by the flames from many fires. The whole population is in
-flight, leaving houses open to the streets, and crowding up the roads.
-All the windowpanes are broken by the bombardment; somewhere, in the
-middle of the town, a building is burning and the flames mount to the
-sky. There are barricades in every street. We have reached the horses,
-which are two kilometres from the town, and we grope for them in the
-dark. Mine is slightly wounded in the foreleg. Long retreat during the
-night (the second during which we have not slept--a storm wets us to
-the skin).
-
-Arrived at Chosques at five in the morning. We get to bed at 6.30 and
-we are off again at 8 o'clock. I ask myself for how many days men and
-horses can hold out.
-
-_10th October._--In the afternoon we again covered the twenty
-kilometres which separated us from Estaires. Hardly had we settled down
-to guard the same bridge as yesterday when we were sent to La Gorgue.
-On the way stopped in the village, as shells commenced to fall. The 1st
-troop took refuge in a grocer's, where we were parked like sheep. A
-large calibre shell burst just opposite with a terrible row. I thought
-that the house was going to fall in. Lieutenant Niel, who had stayed
-outside, was knocked over into the ditch and wounded. We are falling
-back with the horses to La Gorgue, and we are passing a third night,
-without sleep, on the road, Magrin and I on a heap of coal. Horses and
-men have had nothing to eat, the latter are benumbed, exhausted, but
-gay as ever.
-
-_11th October._--We get to a neighbouring farm at Estrem to feed the
-horses. They have scarcely touched their hay and oats before an order
-comes telling us to rejoin at the very place from which we have come.
-The Germans are trying to take the village from the east, thanks to
-the bridge which they captured the day before yesterday, but we have
-been reinforced by cyclists, and the 4th Division is coming up. We are
-holding on; the position is good. The belfry of the town hall has just
-fallen. We are going back to Estrem.
-
-Three hours passed in a trench without greatcoats. Magrin and I are
-so cold that we huddle up one against the other and share a woollen
-handkerchief to cover our faces. We put up at Calonne-sur-la-Lys. And
-so it goes on up to the 17th, the date on which we re-enter Belgium,
-passing by Bailleul, Outersteene and Locre. It is not again a triumphal
-entry on a fine August morning, it is a march past ruins and over
-rubbish heaps.
-
-At Outersteene, however, we were received with touching manifestations
-of confidence and enthusiasm; an old tottering and broken-down teacher
-had drawn up before the school a score of young lads of seven to ten
-years old, who watched us passing and sang the _Marseillaise_ with all
-their lungs, while the old man beat the time.
-
-The village had been evacuated only three days ago, and it was from the
-thresholds of its houses, partly fallen in and still smoking, that this
-song rose, a sincere and spontaneous outburst.
-
-(Lieut. Mallet tells "How We Crossed the German Lines"; "The Charge of
-Gilocourt"; "The Escape in the Forest of Compiegne"; "The Two Glorious
-Days at Staden"; "The Funeral of Lord Roberts"; "The Attack at Loos.")
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[1] All numerals throughout this volume relate to the stories herein
-told--not to chapters in the original sources.
-
-
-
-
-"TO RUHLEBEN--AND BACK"--LIFE IN A GERMAN PRISON
-
-_Where the British Civilian Prisoners Are Held in Detention Camp_
-
-_Told by Geoffrey Pyke, an English Prisoner_
-
- This is a picturesque and thrilling story of a real adventure.
- The author, a young Englishman, entered Germany at the outbreak
- of the War, was discovered, imprisoned, and transferred to the
- great detention camp at Ruhleben. Here he made one of the most
- marvelous escapes on record, and after undreamed-of dangers and
- hardships arrived in safety at the Dutch front. Mr. Pyke in
- relating his experience says: "I was caught up in a vast mechanism
- ... that bounds the German Empire and tossed from one part to
- another, was beaten, crushed, and hammered ... the machine took
- me and threw me in jail, and then in another jail, and then in
- another, and then back into the first. Finally vomiting me, in a
- fit of either weariness, mercy or disgust, into a concentration
- camp for untrained civilians." Finally escaping from Ruhleben on
- July 9th, 1915. "Had only the 4,500 other inhabitants of Ruhleben
- escaped at the same time, in a species of general stampede, and
- one or two other people in Berlin or elsewhere died or been called
- off, matters might have arranged themselves very satisfactorily."
- The escaped prisoner has collected his experiences into a volume
- entitled: "To Ruhleben--And Back," from which we present a single
- chapter by permission of his publishers, _Houghton, Mifflin and
- Company_.
-
-[2] I--HERR DIREKTOR OF THE PRISON
-
-I forget now how many times I saw the Direktor of the prison, though
-at the time, the days on which I did were as distinct to me as wounds,
-which a man cannot see, but which he knows individually and intimately.
-In order to obtain audience of this gentleman, it was necessary, when
-the warder unlocked the door at 6.30 and the pitchers were put out,
-to ask to see the Herr Direktor. At half-past nine you were taken
-out of the cell, let through the door at the end down one flight and
-through to the floor which you could see over the railings of the
-balcony. Here again you were put into a cell, and the door was locked,
-and time passed by. Nothing else happened. In half an hour, or an
-hour, you were lined up in the passage with any others who also had
-requests. One by one you would go into that little office. You would
-bow at the entrance. "Ja?" would remark the bald-headed old gray-beard,
-with an Iron Cross of '70 hanging from his coat. "Ja?" And you would
-state your request. A vast ledger opposite him, the old bird, for he
-looked exactly like the Jackdaw of Rheims, would enter and sign and
-countersign in it. His decision was given in a curt "_Ja_" or "_Nein_,"
-or "_Das geht nicht_,"[3] and you would be standing in the line
-outside, among those whose chance had not yet come. You had succeeded;
-you had failed--who knows what luck would attend you on these
-expeditions. Every request to write a letter had to be made in this
-manner. The shiny-headed old bird, with the head jailer in attendance
-his hand stiffly at his sword, would enter your name, the name of the
-addressee, and the reason for writing it, in his vast ledger. "_Ja?
-Nein. Das geht nicht_," and it is all over. Time after time I craved
-permission to write to His Excellency the American Ambassador, to
-request him to tell my people at home that I was alive. It was granted
-at the third request. What agony were those mornings, pacing up and
-down in the cell downstairs, waiting to be put into line. What could I
-say to the old boy to persuade him? Hundreds of passionate words rose
-in my mind, as I paced up and down that cell, waiting for the moment.
-"_Bitte, Herr Direktor, kann ich ein brief schreiben?_"[4] was all that
-I could stammer out, almost before I had reached the threshold of his
-office. "_Ja? Nein. Das geht nicht_," and I, after staring at him with
-eyes like a rabbit's fastened on a snake, unable to find words to say
-more, aching with the dull misery of refusal, have passed away, giving
-place to someone else who, in his turn, also succeeds or fails.
-
-I used to try once a fortnight, and though I have since discovered that
-even the letters I wrote were never sent, yet nevertheless I always had
-a hope of their getting through. Regularly as clockwork every other
-Monday, after the Hell of Sunday, I would request to see the Direktor.
-For the first ten weeks, I persevered in this. Then suddenly I began to
-go to pieces. I missed one Monday, and put off asking the old bald-pate
-until Tuesday. When the moment came round on the Tuesday morning,
-I funked again. Wednesday came, and again I funked. On Thursday, I
-managed to push the words asking to see the Direktor from between my
-lips. Then with a rush, realising there was no going back, I felt all
-courage return to me. My head became as clear as a bell, and arguments
-to meet every objection of the Direktor's came to my mind. He had
-let me write several times previously, and I had not troubled him
-now for seventeen days. I was confident. Again I repeated my request
-gently to myself.... Suddenly I realised I was standing before him,
-and that I must speak. I must say something. I had come there to say
-something. Unless I asked him something, he would say I was not to be
-brought before him again. My eyes fixed on the large pimple on the
-top of his head. I could not take them away. The pimple was not quite
-in the centre of the cranium, but occupied, so to speak, the position
-halfway betwixt centre-forward and right outside. He wore it where a
-comedian wears a top hat the size of a five-shilling bit in attempts
-to be funny. My thoughts followed it. It was unique, and magnificent.
-"Have YOU any superfluous hair?" I thought. I should love to breathe
-very gently on the shiny surface, just to see if it becomes misty, or
-whether it still shines through everything. I wondered if it was very
-sensitive, so sensitive that he could feel what was reflected in it,
-or whether it was pachydermatous, and safe to dig pins into. He was
-going to move. He was just finishing off the entry he was making in the
-ledger. He was going to look up at me and say, "Ja wohl?"--Speak, say
-something--speak--speak....
-
-It was evening. I was in my cell. The light was fading fast. I was
-thinking how on the morrow I would try again, how it only needed
-careful preparation, and I should be as able as anybody to say what I
-wanted to,--to speak.
-
-
-II--SOLITARY CONFINEMENT AT THE POLIZEIGEFANGNIS
-
-After you have been in solitary for some time, it becomes increasing
-difficult to retain your judgment. I know that first I would make up my
-mind that I was going to be in prison for two years, and then a great
-and irresistible hope would arise within me, that I should be sent to
-a concentration camp called Ruhleben, that I had had a whisper of from
-my friends. I had hoped for some sort of a trial to know how long I was
-going to remain where I was. Every day that passed at ten o'clock,
-when I imagined that anyone, before whom I might be brought, had come
-down to his office, I would put on the one collar I had. Every day at
-six I would take it off again, preserving it for the next day. At times
-I became convinced that, because I was not yet of age, I was to be kept
-for a few months more, and that the day after my twenty-first birthday,
-I was to be sentenced to some ghastly sort of punishment, like solitary
-for two years, or for life. (There seemed absolutely no difference
-between these two, and I dreaded the one as much as the other. Both
-appeared interminable, and I had no hopes of coming out sane, even
-after the shorter period. I pictured myself moaning about the London
-Law Courts in a celluloid collar, picking up a little copying work
-here, and a little there, until I finally sank into a mumbling old age
-at twenty-five, and died in delirium tremens at thirty.)
-
-Another fact made me terribly despondent, and, fight how I would, was
-gradually making me utterly hopeless. About fourteen days after my
-companions of the British Relief Committee had gone, a new-comer had
-arrived. He spoke German absolutely perfectly, but with an Austrian
-accent. I had heard him say something to the warder. I will not tell
-his story, for he is at the present moment in another prison in Berlin,
-though not in solitary, and is, I know, writing his reminiscences
-in readiness for when the war shall come to an end. Let it suffice,
-however, to say that he had been discovered, soon after war broke out,
-writing articles for a London paper. He was arrested at the flat he
-happened to be living in, and, after a large amount of palaver, was
-given twenty-four hours to leave the country in. He was accompanied
-to the frontier. Within a fortnight he was back again. He had gone
-to London, had seen his paper, had come back to Holland, and at the
-frontier had pretended to be an Austrian waiter who had been expelled
-from England. He so exasperated his interrogators at the frontier
-by his eternal repetition of his ill treatment at the hands of his
-dastardly English employers, that they finally let him pass. However,
-in the end he was caught--as we all are--and recognised. He had been
-told that he was to be sent to this place Ruhleben, and, when one day
-he disappeared, I naturally surmised that he had been taken there.
-He was very good to me, for he had managed to get permission to buy
-fruit; I had been refused it. So he used to buy double the quantity,
-and daily, on going down the stairs, smuggle me an apple. "If he," I
-argued, "who has done this thing _twice_, and who is hoary with old
-age (he was about thirty-five), gets sent to this camp Ruhleben, after
-being here for three weeks, and I, who have only done it once, and am
-not yet of age, and have been here nine weeks, and have not been sent
-there, then there is no hope of my ever getting there. They would have
-sent me there by now, were they going to do so at all." Afterwards, I
-found, of course, that he had never been sent anywhere near Ruhleben,
-but simply to another prison. I heard the most wonderful stories about
-his doings there, from a friend who was sent to prison for a time. He
-would appear for exercise dressed in flamboyant pink running shorts, a
-vest and socks to match--and a top hat. What on earth for? Well, if the
-walls of prison don't supply you with humour or whimsicality, you must
-undertake the task yourself.
-
-The best of luck to him. He probably thinks I am still in that
-Polizeigefaengnis.
-
-For some time I had been the oldest inhabitant of the prison. The usual
-denizen of the place came for a day or two, and then went on his way
-through that process called Law and Justice. My position gradually
-came to give me tiny privileges. For instance, they became quite
-convinced that I was going mad, for, apart from my habit of walking
-round and round the exercise yard at nearly five miles per hour, every
-night I would repeat the Jabberwocky. It had taken me a whole week
-with my broken-down memory to piece together the odd bits of lines and
-verses that I still carried in my head; and another week to evolve Mr.
-Kipling's "If." I would suddenly shout loudly into the solid blackness
-that "All mimsey were the borrow-groves and the moamwraths outgrabe,"
-I knew quite well that borrogoves was the correct litany, but I
-preferred borrow-groves; so borrow-groves it was. "One two, one two
-and through and through the vorpel blade went snicker snack. He left
-it dead and with its head he went galumphing back," and I would make
-that "snicker snack" all slow and creepy, like Captain Hook; and would
-rise to a triumphant roar as I announced the fact that he "galumphed"
-back, in preference to any other form of locomotion that might have
-been available, glorying at his ability to resist temptations such
-as taxi-cabbing, taking the tube, or walking, and, above all, the
-insidious run.
-
- "_If_ you can make one heap of all your winnings,
- And risk it on one turn of pitch and toss,
- And lose; and start again at your beginnings,
- And never breathe a word about your loss."
-
-_If_ (and I shouted as if I was praying for life itself)
-
- "_If_ you can force your heart, and nerve, and sinew
- To serve their turn, long after they are gone,
- And so hold on, when there is nothing in you,
- Except the will, which says to them, 'hold on.'"
-
-And I would repeat it softly to myself, until loudly again, pacing
-madly up and down the cell, I would argue, "Yes, that's all very well,
-you know, but your will is the very thing that suffers before your
-heart and nerve and sinew are anywhere near gone. Why, it's the very
-base, the very foundation of all things, that it attacked, and then
-what are you going to do, Mr. Rudyard?" Nevertheless, I found an odd
-sort of comfort, and they were nearly always my prayer to the setting
-sun as the darkness stole in.
-
-I also used to hum, whistle, and sing. This was strictly forbidden by
-one of the thirty-three regulations pasted on the back of the door. One
-night in December, when the darkness had been extra oppressive,--I was
-in darkness for eighteen out of the twenty-four hours--and I had been
-singing loud enough for the warders to hear, one came up and, rapping
-on the door, said that such behaviour was forbidden, nevertheless,
-he would ask the Herr Direktor as an especial favour, if I might be
-permitted to whistle occasionally. This is what comes of being the
-oldest inhabitant of a jail. The next day there was solemnly filled
-into the ledger by the chief warder, and countersigned by the Direktor,
-"Erlaubnis zu nummer acht und fuenfzig zu singen und zu pfeifen."[5]
-
-
-III--IN A CELL AT THE STADT VOGTEI
-
-I shall never forget the day on which, after thirteen weeks, in
-January, 1915, I left prison--to go to another. Nothing, I was
-convinced, could be more of a living Hell than those thirteen weeks at
-the Polizeigefaengnis. I was escorted out into the street. There was
-snow upon the pavements: it had been summer when I saw them last. Our
-route lay round the corner. Here, after passing through a low door in
-an immensely thick wall, once again I found myself in an atmosphere,
-not merely of red tape, but of the very essence from which tape,
-and redness, are made. Those innumerable bureaux: those ticketings,
-docketings, searching of clothes, etc., occupied a couple of hours,
-until I found myself in a bright and beautiful cell thirteen feet by
-six. This was the famous Stadt Vogtei prison. "Vogtei," literally
-translated, means a bailiff's office, but why a prison should be called
-"The City Bailiff's Office," or why the city bailiff's office should be
-a prison, I am at a loss to say.
-
-Notwithstanding the bailiff, it was quite a good prison. Large numbers
-of English people--five to six hundred in all--had been here before
-they were sent to Ruhleben "for purposes of quarantine" as the official
-report says. It was a gentleman's prison; it was intended for those who
-had sentences for minor offences to serve, e.g. two to three months.
-But this did not frighten me, as I knew of its character as a depot
-for Ruhleben. I was full of hope. We had two meals of skilly a day
-instead of one. I was allowed to talk to the others during the two
-hours' exercise they were good enough to allow, and I could buy almost
-anything I wanted--bar newspapers.
-
-I had another experience here that nearly killed me. There was the
-usual shelf for bowl, spoon, etc., and from the side hung a fat little
-book with one hundred and thirty-three rules. It contained all the
-punishments for all the various main crimes, worked out in permutations
-and combinations. Things such as "for not cleaning out of the cell
-for the first time the prisoner is to be punished by the three days'
-withdrawal of the midday hot meal, or instead one day withdrawal of the
-hot meal, and a second day withdrawal of the cold meal (breakfast), or,
-in lieu thereof.... In addition to which ... or as an alternative ...
-in substitute thereof.... But for the second offence, or dirtiness of
-a second degree, or unpunctuality of the third degree, or noise of the
-twentieth degree, the prisoner shall be punished by withdrawal of ...
-whereof ... in lieu of this can be subtituted ..." etc. etc.
-
-On the outside of this little fat book with its one hundred and
-thirty-three rules was a diagram of the shelf from which it hung,
-showing exactly in what order the washing bowl, the eating bowl, the
-spoon, the fork, the soap were to be placed. And not merely was there a
-front view, but also two side views were given: one showing the side of
-the shelf with one towel hanging somnolently from a nail, and the other
-side view showing the other end of the shelf with the booklet itself
-hanging even more somnolently from another nail. But yes, there was
-something more: for not merely was there a picture of the booklet, but
-the picture of the booklet had the picture of the booklet pasted on the
-booklet's cover, and, what is more, the side which bore this diagram
-faced outwards, and the right-hand top corner was against the wall.
-Thus was it according to the picture. But it so happened that this was
-impossible, for the two were incompatible. Either the picture had to
-face inwards, or the left-hand top corner must touch the wall. But both
-together was contrary to the nature of the book. Feeling rather jolly
-at my new environment, I pointed this out to the jailer, who wasn't a
-bad sort of fellow, when he came in. At first he didn't grasp it, but
-when he did, he took serious note of it with pen and ink. Next day,
-in came the prison governor, a military-looking fellow, and he went
-straight to the booklet at the side of the cupboard, and examining the
-diagram on the cover, studied the incompatibility carefully for a long
-time. He turned round, and after looking whimsically at me, and then at
-the warder for some time, as if trying to make up his mind as to who
-was the biggest fool, said, "H'm," very definitely, and went away.
-
-Alas, I only remained here five days. I had hardly finished breakfast
-when the warder came round with a list and said I was to "pack
-up," though, since I had nothing to pack, his orders were rather
-superfluous. Again weary hours of waiting in the bureau, and then, for
-the first time in my life, I saw the inside of Black Maria.
-
-I had imagined it to have cells all the way down the side, but
-there were only two. There were seven of us, including a woman and
-a policeman. Heaven knows what the woman was "in" for, and though I
-several times formulated the question mentally, I could never manage
-to get it out. The policeman was quite a nice fellow, and let us talk,
-and joined in himself with an air of a busy man sparing a moment to
-play with some children. It soon became plain that one of the men was
-the woman's husband, or ought to have been if he wasn't. The others
-were gentlemen, sentenced for petty offences, who were being taken to
-the town hall to be enlisted in the army. They did not seem to relish
-the prospect, but "at any rate," they said, "it would be a change." I
-looked through the grille to see what I could of Berlin streets. There
-were not many people on them, and the greater number were women and
-in black, but the quietness of the place was nothing to what I was
-to see later. There were a few luxury-selling shops, such as flower
-sellers, that were closed, but the majority seemed able to get along.
-That Teutonic spectacle, extraordinary but obviously sensible, of
-women going about without hats could be seen everywhere. And then we
-suddenly drove into the inevitable yard. Two gates unbarred and locked
-themselves automatically as one passed.
-
-
-IV--"MY THIRD PRISON--MOABIT: CELL 1603"
-
-It was the great prison--Moabit. A huge central hall surmounted by a
-dome, with wings going in all directions and the end of each wing
-connected by another great building, each with six storeys of cells,
-and each of these with its iron balcony with glass flooring. There
-was noise, and clanging of doors everywhere. I was told to stand at
-the commencement of one of the wings, just off the dome. There was a
-huge clock, and I noticed it had a bell attached to it. At any rate,
-I thought, I shall hear the hour strike. The number of my cell, I
-can remember it now, was 1603, "the year Queen Elizabeth died," I
-remarked to myself, as it was unlocked, and I went in. It was a larger
-cell than I had hitherto had--about fourteen feet by six. There was
-electric light and a table and seat that folded down from the wall.
-The window was, as usual, above my head, but this time it was made of
-frosted glass. There was a horrid suggestion of permanency about the
-place that made me feel rather bad. I asked the warder who gave me
-my prison underclothing--I was allowed to keep my own suit--whether
-one was always in solitary here, and for how long one came. "Immer
-im einzelhaft"--always in solitary,--and for three to four months
-and upward, he said. "Never less?" I asked. "No, never," he replied.
-"Come with me," he continued, and I was taken down into the very
-bowels of this terrible edifice, till, finally, I joined a vast squad
-of criminals. He left me. We then filed down devious passages once
-more, and finally were led into a vast room with about two hundred
-and seventy showers in it. When bathed, I was locked into a large,
-bare cellar just opposite, and here I was soon joined by two others,
-one an elderly middle-aged man of about fifty-six, and the other an
-evil-looking devil of about thirty-four. They sat down on the bench.
-I was walking up and down. They were an interesting couple. They
-were about to be examined by an Untersuchungsrichter, or examining
-magistrate, and the younger one was coaching the other in what to say.
-The elder seemed too numbed to agree or disagree, though he seemed to
-have a tendency towards the truth, which the other promptly suppressed,
-but just sat there, his hands on his knees, seemingly deaf. Once the
-younger strode up to him threateningly as if to hit him. He ground his
-teeth and swore that by God, if the old man were to say that he'd ----.
-Then he tried a different tack; he argued, he elucidated, he showed the
-simplicity of his ideas, and how, above all, it would help themselves.
-
-When the young one became bellicose I had felt no inclination to help
-the old man. Why, I knew not. I think I felt that nothing, least of all
-truth, should stand in the way of man's salvation from that place, and
-that if the old man hadn't got enough gumption to tell what seemed to
-be a few well-concocted lies, well, he ought to be made to, since it
-involved the fate of the younger man, who was not yet reduced to the
-state of an incapacitated jelly. It was the same old story: Fate had
-beaten the old man, but had not succeeded in persuading the young one
-that he also was beaten; the young one refused to acknowledge it. It
-was blind instinct that told him to lie, though he knew with clever
-lawyers against him, and, worst of all opponents, the law, the chances
-of his getting through to freedom were remote. I had noticed hitherto
-that it was always the young men who felt the strain most, seemed most
-conscious of the inhuman cruelty of prison, and I was to find out later
-that it was generally the young ones who recovered easiest. Sometimes
-the older ones don't recover. A man I was to meet later was afflicted
-with sudden decay of the optic nerve, and is now gradually going blind,
-purely as a result of solitary.
-
-The door opened suddenly, and they were taken out, and as they passed
-me I saw the younger and villainous one look at the old man, in a
-manner in which threats, prayers, and above all, the desire to instil
-the wish to live were all inexpressibly mixed. They passed. I never saw
-them again. I often wonder where they are. There are lots like them.
-
-I was taken back to my cell. I was now sinking fast. I saw little hopes
-of recovery. I was quickly becoming a broken-down creature, and though
-physically I should have lasted out for years, mentally I saw there was
-a crash not far ahead. I had seen it happen with other men before. As
-it was, mentally I was fast becoming a species of cow. I would stand
-for hours at a time, leaning my head into the corner, my hands in my
-pockets, staring at the floor. I would find that for hours I had been
-saying to myself "My dear sir"--I always called myself "my dear sir"
-when talking out loud,--"you really must make an effort to get out. I
-mean it's simply too stupid to spend the best years of your life in a
-box like this. Use your wits. Do something. Go on, you juggins, get
-out somewhere. Think!" and so on, from twelve till three. I became
-absolutely impersonal, and found it difficult to have likes and
-dislikes about anything. I absolutely forgot what flowers smelt like.
-Milk I could not imagine. Fruit, tobacco, fish, were mere names to me.
-I had forgotten what they were. I could not understand the meaning of
-the term "red."
-
-Though I longed to be free, I felt that human beings would be perfectly
-unbearable. I no longer considered myself as one. I felt perfectly
-decorporealised: I was merely a mind contemplative and a poor one at
-that. And yet I longed for their company. I still kept up my nightly
-habit of repeating a few verses from any poem I could remember, and
-after the light had gone out--for here there was electric light--I
-would rise solemnly in the dark, and make the most fiery speeches to
-the Cambridge Union--poor Cambridge Union. I would then proceed to
-oppose my own motion, pick holes in it, show up the proposer as an
-impostor and a charlatan. A seconder would then arise, who with all
-the sarcasm of a Voltaire would rend the immediate speaker adjective
-from substantive, verb from adverb, until quivering with the laceration
-received, the latter would be thrown, a bleeding proposition, into the
-waste deserts of verbosity.
-
-
-V--GHASTLY HOURS UNDER GERMAN BRUTALITY
-
-It was just about this time that I nearly got myself shot for attempted
-murder. I was so used to the darkness that I found electric light
-rather trying to the eyes, and therefore turned the racket upwards
-toward the ceiling in order to have but reflected light. A little
-later in came the warder. He saw the upturned bracket, and lifting
-the hilt of his sword, hit me sharply over the head. In a flash I was
-on him. I had raised my fists on each side for a smashing blow on his
-temples. He was unable to get away, for he was so short that my arms
-could have nailed him as he tried. He saw there was no escape, and the
-sight of my face blazing with fury and wretchedness made him drop his
-sword. I relished that moment, I gloated over it. I kept my fists going
-backwards and forwards nearly touching his temples, but never quite.
-I tried to imagine the agony in his rabbit-like mind, waiting for the
-crushing blow to fall upon him, and wondering what it would feel like.
-Suddenly he turned a sickly green. His hat was knocked all on one side.
-I saw beneath his uniform a fat little vulgar bourgeois, incapable of a
-thought outside the satisfying of his own senses. He turned from green
-to a pasty yellow. He glanced piteously up into my distorted face.
-I drove him back towards the door, growling and hissing at him, my
-fists going like a steam hammer on each side of his head. His agony
-became worse. His eyes flew from one side to the other, like a rabbit
-looking for escape. His little pointed flaxen beard wobbled and, such
-was his panic, so did his stomach. Suddenly my mind changed, and taking
-him by the shoulders, and putting my knee, as far as it was possible,
-into his belly, I pushed him backwards, and he sat down violently and
-disconsolately in the passage outside, his sword underneath him, and
-his hat rolling away into the darkness. I slammed the door, and after
-a time he got up and locked it. I knew nothing would happen to me, for
-he was not permitted to hit me, but had I hit him back, I gasp to think
-of the number of years I should now be doing.
-
-This, the third prison I had been in, was the worst. Physically it was
-slightly better: there was more space, light, two good meals a day, but
-the very last drop of individuality was taken away from you. It was not
-permitted even to arrange the bowls on the shelf as you liked. I never
-saw daylight, for our exercise took place at half-past six in the dark.
-It was now the 20th of January. I had been arrested in the early days
-of October. Since then I had been residing in a lavatory. I found it
-dull.
-
-Despite the warder's announcement that nobody ever came there for less
-than three or four months, I was suddenly taken away again after five
-days, and Black Maria drove me back once more to the Polizeigefaengnis
-of the Alexanderplatz. I was too miserable by now to care where I was
-sent or what they did to me. I was beginning to lose the power of
-appreciating anything--whatever its nature. I found some new arrivals
-at Alexanderplatz. The place was full as usual with neutrals who were
-under suspicion: Dutch, Swedes and Danes. One Dutchman had been there
-for seven weeks in solitary. I was just reaching the final depths of
-despair when, one night, just as I had got my first foot into bed, the
-door was flung open, and into the gloom a voice shouted "'raus."[6] I
-"raused" timidly and in my nightshirt, and was told to dress quickly. I
-did so, surmising I was to go to another prison. I began to feel quite
-numb, and I no longer hoped for anything. Downstairs in the bureau a
-very pleasant policeman took charge of me, and after having signed the
-receipts for the acceptance of my carcase, he made the usual remark,
-"Kommen Sie mit," and off we went. I thought it odd that we should go
-alone: they usually fetch the criminals in batches. "Where are we going
-to?" I asked. "Ruhleben," he said.
-
-
-VI--ON THE ROAD TO RUHLEBEN PRISON
-
-For a moment I could hardly feel. I hardly dared feel. I just breathed
-quietly to myself, and thought how nice the air tasted. I was going to
-see human beings again. For a time the words were rather meaningless,
-and then I gradually began to revive under their warmth. We went out
-into the street to the Alexanderplatz station. I had a fine opportunity
-to run away here, though I should have been a fool to have done so,
-and to have invited prison again. In any case, I had no glasses with
-me, and I was very short-sighted. We had gone up on to the platform,
-and I was chuckling and giggling like a schoolgirl at seeing life once
-again, when the policeman discovered it was the wrong one. "Run," he
-said, "there's our train over there." I ran like a leopard. In ten
-bounds I had slipped through the crowd and had lost him. I ran on
-down the stairs, and into the street. How glorious it all seemed, and
-I roared aloud with laughter, at which a sallow-faced woman in black
-seemed offended and turned round to stare. I rushed on, up the other
-set of stairs and in time my captor appeared. The idea of bolting had
-just entered my head and flown, but "no," I said, "wait till we get to
-Ruhleben, and have got tired of that, then we'll see what can be done."
-
-Meanwhile, I stared out into the darkness from the brightly-lit
-carriage as we steamed through the suburbs of Berlin. I got a glimpse
-of a tiny room, in which numbers of steaming dishevelled women were
-crowded together bending over machines and needlework. They were being
-sweated. That was their daily life. They too, lived in what was really
-a prison, though no law stopped them roaming whence they would. I was
-in the world once more....
-
-(The prisoner relates numerous stories of his experiences, of which
-the above is but a single instance. He describes the prison; how it
-feels waiting to be shot; the impressions of a lunatic on release
-from solitary confinement and his daring escape with Mr. Edward Falk,
-District Commissioner in the Political Service of Nigeria.)
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[2] All numerals relate to stories herein told--not to chapters from
-original sources.
-
-[3] "That is impossible."
-
-[4] "Please, Herr Direktor, may I write a letter?"
-
-[5] "Permit to Number 58 to sing and to whistle."
-
-[6] "Out!"
-
-
-
-
-AN AMERICAN AT BATTLE OF THE SOMME WITH FRENCH ARMY
-
-_Army Life With the Soldiers Along the Somme_
-
-_Told by Frederick Palmer, American War Correspondent_
-
- Mr. Palmer was the only accredited correspondent who had freedom
- of the field in the Battles of the Somme. At the time of this
- writing he has been officially appointed as a member of the staff
- of General Pershing, with the American Armies in France. This
- American has become a world figure. His life has been spent on the
- battlefields of the modern wars: The Greek War, the Philippine
- War, the Macedonian Insurrection, the Central American Wars, the
- Russian-Japanese War, the Turkish Revolution, the Balkan Wars. At
- the beginning of the Great War, he was with the British army and
- fleet. His descriptions of the fighting are unsurpassed in the
- war's literature--it is "the epic touch of great events." He has
- made a notable historical record in his book entitled "My Second
- Year of the War," in which he presents graphic pictures of the
- grim fighting along the Somme, with admirable descriptions of the
- heroism of the Canadians, the Australians and the fighters from all
- parts of the Earth, who are giving their lives "to make the world
- safe for Democracy." A single chapter from Mr. Palmer's book is
- here reproduced by permission of his publishers, _Dodd, Mead and
- Company_: Copyright 1917.
-
-[7] I--STORY OF THE BATTLE RIDGE ON THE SOMME
-
-Sometimes it occurred to one to consider what history might say about
-the Ridge and also to wonder how much history, which pretends to know
-all, would really know. Thus, one sought perspective of the colossal
-significance of the uninterrupted battle whose processes numbed
-the mind and to distinguish the meaning of different stages of the
-struggle. Nothing had so well reflected the character of the war or
-of its protagonists, French, British and German, as this grinding of
-resources, of courage, and of will of three powerful races.
-
-... It is historically accepted, I think, that the first decisive
-phase was the battle of the Marne when Paris was saved. The second was
-Verdun, when the Germans again sought a decision on the Western front
-by an offensive of sledge-hammer blows against frontal positions; and,
-perhaps, the third came when on the Ridge the British and the French
-kept up their grim, insistent, piece-meal attacks, holding the enemy
-week in and week out on the defensive, aiming at mastery as the scales
-trembled in the new turn of the balance and initiative passed from one
-side to the other in the beginning of that new era.
-
-This scarred slope with its gentle ascent, this section of farming land
-with its woods growing more ragged every day from shell fire, with its
-daily and nightly thunders, its trickling procession of wounded and
-prisoners down the communication trenches speaking the last word in
-human bravery, industry, determination and endurance--this might one
-day be not only the monument to the positions of all the battalions
-that had fought, its copses, its villages, its knolls famous to future
-generations as in Little Round Top with us, but in its monstrous
-realism be an immortal expression, unrealized by those who fought, of a
-commander's iron will and foresight in gaining that supremacy in arms,
-men and material which was the genesis of the great decision.
-
-The German began drawing away divisions from the Verdun sector,
-bringing guns to answer the British and French fire and men whose
-prodigal use alone could enforce his determination to maintain _morale_
-and prevent any further bold strokes such as that of July (1916).
-
-His sausage balloons began to reappear in the sky as the summer
-wore on; he increased the number of his aeroplanes; more of his
-five-point-nine howitzers were sending their compliments; he stretched
-out his shell fire over communication trenches and strong points;
-mustered great quantities of lachrymatory shells and for the first
-time used gas shells with a generosity which spoke his faith in their
-efficacy. The lachrymatory shell makes your eyes smart, and the Germans
-apparently considered this a great auxiliary to high explosives and
-shrapnel. Was it because of the success of the first gas attack at
-Ypres that they now placed such reliance in gas shells? The shell when
-it lands seems a "dud," which is a shell that has failed to explode;
-then it blows out a volume of gas.
-
-"If one hit right under your nose," said a soldier, "and you hadn't
-your gas mask on, it might kill you. But when you see one fall
-you don't run to get a sniff in order to accommodate the Boche by
-asphyxiating yourself."
-
-Another soldier suggested that the Germans had a big supply on hand and
-were working off the stock for want of other kinds. The British who by
-this time were settled in the offensive joked about the deluge of gas
-shells with a gallant, amazing humor. Going up to the Ridge was going
-to their regular duty. They did not shirk it or hail it with delight.
-They simply went, that was all, when it was a battalion's turn to go.
-
-
-II--GUNNERS IN THE FURNACE OF WAR
-
-July heat became August heat as the grinding proceeded. The gunners
-worked in their shirts or stripped to the waist. Sweat streaks mapped
-the faces of the men who came out of the trenches. Stifling clouds of
-dust hung over the roads, with the trucks phantom-like as they emerged
-from the gritty mist and their drivers' eyes peered out of masks of
-gray which clung to their faces. A fall of rain comes as a blessing
-to Briton and German alike. German prisoners worn with exhaustion had
-complexions the tint of their uniforms. If the British seemed weary
-sometimes, one had only to see the prisoners to realize that the
-defensive was suffering more than the offensive. The fatigue of some of
-the men was of the kind that one week's sleep or a month's rest will
-not cure; something fixed in their beings.
-
-It was a new kind of fighting for the Germans. They smarted under it,
-they who had been used to the upper hand. In the early stages of the
-war their artillery had covered their well-ordered charges; they had
-been killing the enemy with gunfire. Now the Allies were returning the
-compliment; the shoe was on the other foot. A striking change, indeed,
-from "On to Paris!" the old battle-cry of leaders who had now come to
-urge these men to the utmost of endurance and sacrifice by telling them
-that if they did not hold against the relentless hammering of British
-and French guns what had been done to French villages would be done to
-their own.
-
-Prisoners spoke of peace as having been promised as close at hand by
-their officers. In July the date had been set as Sept. 1st. Later, it
-was set as Nov. 1st. The German was as a swimmer trying to reach shore,
-in this case peace, with the assurance of those who urged him on that a
-few more strokes would bring him there. Thus have armies been urged on
-for years.
-
-Those fighting did not have, as had the prisoners, their eyes opened
-to the vast preparations behind the British lines to carry on the
-offensive. Mostly the prisoners were amiable, peculiarly unlike the
-proud men taken in the early days of the war when confidence in their
-"system" as infallible was at its height. Yet there were exceptions. I
-saw an officer marching at the head of the survivors of his battalion
-along the road from Montauban one day with his head up, a cigar stuck
-in the corner of his mouth at an aggressive angle, his unshaven chin
-and dusty clothes heightening his attitude of "You go to ----, you
-English!"
-
-The hatred of the British was a strengthening factor in the defense.
-Should they, the Prussians, be beaten by New Army men? No! Die first!
-said Prussian officers. The German staff might be as good as ever, but
-among the mixed troops--the old and the young, the hollow-chested and
-the square-shouldered, mouth-breathers with spectacles and bent fathers
-of families, vigorous boys in their late 'teens with the down still
-on their cheeks and hardened veterans survivors of many battles east
-and west--they were reverting appreciably to natural human tendencies
-despite the iron discipline.
-
-It was Skobeloff, if I recollect rightly, who said that out of every
-hundred men twenty were natural fighters, sixty were average men who
-would fight under impulse or when well led, and twenty were timid;
-and armies were organized on the basis of the sixty average to make
-them into a whole of even efficiency in action. The German staff had
-supplied supreme finesse to this end. They had an army that was a
-machine; yet its units were flesh and blood and the pounding of shell
-fire and the dogged fighting on the Ridge must have an effect.
-
-It became apparent through those two months of piece-meal advance that
-the sixty average men were not as good as they had been. The twenty
-"funk-sticks," in army phrase, were given to yielding themselves if
-they were without an officer, but the twenty natural fighters--well,
-human psychology does not change. They were the type that made the
-professional armies of other days, the brigands, too, and also those of
-every class of society to whom patriotic duty had become an exaltation
-approaching fanaticism. More fighting made them fight harder.
-
-
-III--DEAD BODIES STRAPPED TO GUNS
-
-Such became members of the machine-gun corps, which took an oath
-never to surrender, and led bombing parties and posted themselves in
-shell-craters to face the charges while shells fell thick around them,
-or remained up in the trench taking their chances against curtains
-of fire that covered an infantry charge, in the hope of being able
-to turn on their own bullet spray for a moment before being killed.
-Sometimes their dead bodies were found strapped to their guns, more
-often probably by their own request, as an insurance against deserting
-their posts, than by command.
-
-Shell fire was the theatricalism of the struggle, the roar of guns its
-thunder; but night or day the sound of the staccato of that little arch
-devil of killing, the machine gun, coming from the Ridge seemed as true
-an expression of what was always going on there as a rattlesnake's
-rattle is of its character. Delville and High Woods and Guillemont
-and Longueval and the Switch Trench--these are symbolic names of that
-attrition, of the heroism of British persistence which would not take
-No for answer.
-
-You might think that you had seen ruins until you saw those of
-Guillemont after it was taken. They were the granulation of bricks and
-mortar and earth mixed by the blasts of shell fire which crushed solids
-into dust and splintered splinters. Guillemont lay beyond Trones Wood
-across an open space where the German guns had full play. There was a
-stone quarry on the outskirts, and a quarry no less than a farm like
-Waterlot, which was to the northward, and Falfemont, to the southward
-and flanking the village, formed shelter. It was not much of a quarry,
-but it was a hole which would be refuge for reserves and machine guns.
-The two farms, clear targets for British guns, had their deep dugouts
-whose roofs were reinforced by the ruins that fell upon them against
-penetration even by shells of large caliber. How the Germans fought to
-keep Falfemont! Once they sent out a charge with the bayonet to meet a
-British charge between walls of shell fire and there through the mist
-the steel was seen flashing and vague figures wrestling.
-
-Guillemont and the farms won and Ginchy which lay beyond won and the
-British had their flank of high ground. Twice they were in Guillemont
-but could not remain, though as usual they kept some of their gains. It
-was a battle from dugout to dugout, from shelter to shelter of any kind
-burrowed in the debris or in fields, with the British never ceasing
-here or elsewhere to continue their pressure. And the debris of a
-village had particular appeal; it yielded to the spade; its piles gave
-natural cover.
-
-
-IV--THE ARTILLERYMEN IN THE WOODS
-
-A British soldier returning from one of the attacks as he hobbled
-through Trones Wood expressed to me the essential generalship of the
-battle. He was outwardly as unemotional as if he were coming home from
-his day's work, respectful and good-humored, though he had a hole in
-both arms from machine-gun fire, a shrapnel wound in the heel, and
-seemed a trifle resentful of the added tribute of another shrapnel
-wound in his shoulder after he had left the firing-line and was on his
-way to the casualty clearing station. Insisting that he could lift the
-cigarette I offered him to his lips and light it, too, he said:
-
-"We've only to keep at them, sir. They'll go."
-
-So the British kept at them and so did the French at every point. Was
-Delville Wood worse than High Wood? This is too nice a distinction in
-torments to be drawn. Possess either of them completely and command
-of the Ridge in that section was won. The edge of a wood on the side
-away from your enemy was the easiest part to hold. It is difficult to
-range artillery on it because of restricted vision, and the enemy's
-shells aimed at it strike the trees and burst prematurely among his own
-men. Other easy, relatively easy, places to hold are the dead spaces
-of gullies and ravines. There you were out of fire and there you were
-not; there you could hold and there you could not. Machine-gun fire and
-shell fire were the arbiters of topography more dependable than maps.
-
-Why all the trees were not cut down by the continual bombardments of
-both sides was past understanding. There was one lone tree on the
-skyline near Longueval which I had watched for weeks. It still had a
-limb, yes, the luxury of a limb, the last time I saw it, pointing with
-a kind of defiance in its immunity. Of course it had been struck many
-times. Bits of steel were imbedded in its trunk; but only a direct hit
-on the trunk will bring down a tree. Trees may be slashed and whittled
-and nicked and gashed and still stand; and when villages have been
-pulverized except for the timbering of the houses, a scarred shade tree
-will remain.
-
-Thus, trees in Delville Wood survived, naked sticks among fallen
-and splintered trunks and upturned roots. How any man could have
-survived was the puzzling thing. None could if he had remained there
-continuously and exposed himself; but man is the most cunning of
-animals. With gas mask and eye-protectors ready, steel helmet on his
-head and his faithful spade to make himself a new hole whenever he
-moved, he managed the incredible in self-protection. Earth piled back
-of a tree-trunk would stop bullets and protect his body from shrapnel.
-There he lay and there a German lay opposite him, except when attacks
-were being made.
-
-Not getting the northern edge of the woods the British began sapping
-out in trenches to the east toward Ginchy, where the many contours
-showed the highest ground in that neighborhood. New lines of trenches
-kept appearing on the map, often with group names such as Coffee Alley,
-Tea Lane and Beer Street, perhaps. Out in the open along the irregular
-plateau the shells were no more kindly, the bombing and the sapping
-no less diligent all the way to the windmill, where the Australians
-were playing the same kind of a game. With the actual summit gained at
-certain points, these had to be held pending the taking of the whole,
-or of enough to permit a wave of men to move forward in a general
-attack without its line being broken by the resistance of strong
-points, which meant confusion.
-
-
-V--STALKING A MACHINE GUN IN ITS LAIR
-
-Before any charge the machine guns must be "killed." No initiative
-of pioneer or Indian scout surpassed that exhibited in conquering
-machine-gun positions. When a big game hunter tells you about having
-stalked tigers, ask him if he has ever stalked a machine gun to its
-lair.
-
-As for the nature of the lair, here is one where a Briton "dug himself
-in" to be ready to repulse any counter-attack to recover ground that
-the British had just won. Some layers of sandbags are sunk level
-with the earth with an excavation back of them large enough for a
-machine-gun standard and to give the barrel swing and for the gunner,
-who back of this had dug himself a well four or five feet deep of
-sufficient diameter to enable him to huddle at the bottom in "stormy
-weather." He was general and army, too, of this little establishment.
-In the midst of shells and trench mortars, with bullets whizzing around
-his head, he had to keep a cool aim and make every pellet which he
-poured out of his muzzle count against the wave of men coming toward
-him who were at his mercy if he could remain alive for a few minutes
-and keep his head.
-
-He must not reveal his position before his opportunity came. All around
-where this Briton had held the fort there were shell-craters like the
-dots of close shooting around a bull's-eye; no tell-tale blood spots
-this time, but a pile of two or three hundred cartridge cases lying
-where they had fallen as they were emptied of their cones of lead. Luck
-was with the occupant, but not with another man playing the same game
-not far away. Broken bits of gun and fragments of cloth mixed with
-earth explained the fate of a German machine gunner who had emplaced
-his piece in the same manner.
-
-Before a charge, crawl up at night from shell-crater to shell-crater
-and locate the enemy's machine guns. Then, if your own guns and the
-trench mortars do not get them, go stalking with supplies of bombs and
-remember to throw yours before the machine gunner, who also has a stock
-for such emergencies, throws his. When a machine gun begins rattling
-into a company front in a charge the men drop for cover, while officers
-consider how to draw the devil's tusks. Arnold von Winkelried, who
-gathered the spears to his breast to make a path for his comrades, won
-his glory because the fighting forces were small in his day. But with
-such enormous forces as are now engaged and with heroism so common, we
-make only an incident of the officer who went out to silence a machine
-gun and was found lying dead across the gun with the gunner dead beside
-him.
-
-
-VI--TALKS WITH THE MEN IN THE REAR
-
-The advance on the map at our quarters extended as the brief army
-reports were read into the squares every morning by the key of figures
-and numerals with a detail that included every little trench, every
-copse, every landmark, and then we chose where we would go that day.
-At corps headquarters there were maps with still more details and
-officers would explain the previous day's work to us. Every wood and
-village, every viewpoint, we knew, and every casualty clearing station
-and prisoners' inclosure. At battalion camps within sight of the Ridge
-and within range of the guns, where their blankets helped to make
-shelter from the sun, you might talk with the men out of the fight and
-lunch and chat with the officers who awaited the word to go in again or
-perhaps to hear that their tour was over and they could go to rest in
-Ypres sector, which had become relatively quiet.
-
-They had their letters and packages from home before they slept and
-had written letters in return after waking; and there was nothing to
-do now except to relax and breathe, to renew the vitality that had
-been expended in the fierce work where shells were still threshing the
-earth, which rose in clouds of dust to settle back again in enduring
-passive resistance.
-
-There was much talk early in the war about British cheerfulness; so
-much that officers and men began to resent it as expressing the idea
-that they took such a war as this as a kind of holiday, when it was
-the last thing outside of Hades that any sane man would choose. It
-was a question in my own mind at times if Hades would not have been a
-pleasant change. Yet the characterization is true, peculiarly true,
-even in the midst of the fighting on the Ridge. Cheerfulness takes
-the place of emotionalism as the armor against hardship and death;
-a good-humored balance between exhilaration and depression which
-meets smile with smile and creates an atmosphere superior to all
-vicissitudes. Why should we be downhearted? Why, indeed, when it does
-no good. Not "Merrie England!" War is not a merry business; but an
-Englishman may be cheerful for the sake of self and comrades.
-
-Of course, these battalions, officers and men, would talk about when
-the war would be over. Even the Esquimaux must have an opinion on the
-subject by this time. That of the men who make the war, whose lives are
-the lives risked, was worth more, perhaps, than that of people living
-thousands of miles away; for it is they who are doing the fighting,
-who will stop fighting. To them it would be over when it was won.
-The time this would require varied with different men--one year, two
-years; and again they would turn satirical and argue whether the sixth
-or the seventh year would be the worst. And they talked shop about
-the latest wrinkles in fighting; how best to avoid having men buried
-by shell-bursts; the value of gas and lachrymatory shells; the ratio
-of high explosives to shrapnel; methods of "cleaning out" dugouts or
-"doing in" machine guns, all in a routine that had become an accepted
-part of life like the details of the stock carried and methods of
-selling in a department store.
-
-Indelible the memories of these talks, which often brought out
-illustrations of racial temperament. One company was more horrified
-over having found a German tied to a trench _parados_ to be killed by
-British shell fire as a field punishment than by the horrors of other
-men equally mashed and torn, or at having crawled over the moist bodies
-of the dead, or slept among them, or been covered with spatters of
-blood and flesh--for that incident struck home with a sense of brutal
-militarism which was the thing in their minds against which they were
-fighting.
-
-
-VII--WITH STEEL HELMETS AND GAS MASKS
-
-With steel helmets on and gas masks over our shoulders, we would leave
-our car at the dead line and set off to "see something," when now the
-fighting was all hidden in the folds of the ground, or in the woods, or
-lost on the horizon where the front line of either of these two great
-armies, with their immense concentration of men and material and roads
-gorged with transport and thousands of belching guns, was held by a
-few men with machine guns in shell-craters, their positions sometimes
-interwoven. Old hands in the Somme battle become shell-wise. They are
-the ones whom the French call "varnished," which is a way of saying
-that projectiles glance off their anatomy. They keep away from points
-where the enemy will direct his fire as a matter of habit or scientific
-gunnery, and always recollect that the German has not enough shells to
-sow them broadcast over the whole battle area.
-
-It is not an uncommon thing for one to feel quite safe within a couple
-of hundred yards of an artillery concentration. That corner of a
-village, that edge of a shattered grove, that turn in the highway, that
-sunken road--keep away from them! Any kind of trench for shrapnel; lie
-down flat unless a satisfactory dugout is near for protection from
-high explosives which burst in the earth. If you are at the front and a
-curtain of fire is put behind you, wait until it is over or go around
-it. If there is one ahead, wait until another day--provided that you
-are a spectator. Always bear in mind how unimportant you are, how small
-a figure on the great field, and that if every shell fired had killed
-one soldier there would not be an able-bodied man in uniform left alive
-on the continent of Europe. By observing these simple rules you may see
-a surprising amount with a chance of surviving.
-
-One day I wanted to go into the old German dugouts under a formless
-pile of ruins which a British colonel had made his battalion
-headquarters; but I did not want to go enough to persist when I
-understood the situation. Formerly, my idea of a good dugout--and I
-always like to be within striking distance of one--was a cave twenty
-feet deep with a roof of four or five layers of granite, rubble and
-timber; but now I feel more safe if the fragments of a town hall are
-piled on top of this.
-
-The Germans were putting a shell every minute with clockwork regularity
-into the colonel's "happy home" and at intervals four shells in a
-salvo. You had to make a run for it between the shells, and if you did
-not know the exact location of the dugout you might have been hunting
-for it some time. Runners bearing messages took their chances both
-going and coming and two men were hit. The colonel was quite safe
-twenty feet underground with the matting of debris including that of
-a fallen chimney overhead, but he was a most unpopular host. The next
-day he moved his headquarters and not having been considerate enough to
-inform the Germans of the fact they kept on methodically pounding the
-roof of the untenanted premises.
-
-After every battle "promenade" I was glad to step into the car waiting
-at the "dead line," where the chauffeurs frequently had had harder luck
-in being shelled than we had farther forward. Yet I know of no worse
-place to be in than a car when you hear the first growing scream which
-indicates that yours is the neighborhood selected by a German battery
-or two for expending some of its ammunition. When you are in danger you
-like to be on your feet and to possess every one of your faculties. I
-used to put cotton in my ears when I walked through the area of the
-gun positions as some protection to the eardrums from the blasts, but
-always took it out once I was beyond the big calibers, as an acute
-hearing after some experience gave you instant warning of any "krump"
-or five-point-nine coming in your direction, advising you which way to
-dodge and also saving you from unnecessarily running for a dugout if
-the shell were passing well overhead or short.
-
-I was glad, too, when the car left the field quite behind and was
-over the hills in peaceful country. But one never knew. Fifteen miles
-from the front line was not always safe. Once when a sudden outburst
-of fifteen-inch naval shells sent the people of a town to cover and
-scattered fragments over the square, one cut open the back of the
-chauffeur's head just as we were getting into our car.
-
-"Are you going out to be strafed at?" became an inquiry in the mess on
-the order of "Are you going to take an afternoon off for golf to-day?"
-The only time I felt that I could claim any advantage in phlegm over
-my comrades was when I slept through two hours of aerial bombing with
-anti-aircraft guns busy in the neighborhood, which, as I explained, was
-no more remarkable than sleeping in a hotel at home with flat-wheeled
-surface cars and motor horns screeching under your window. A subway
-employee or a traffic policeman in New York ought never to suffer from
-shell-shock if he goes to war.
-
-The account of personal risk which in other wars might make a magazine
-article or a book chapter, once you sat down to write it, melted away
-as your ego was reduced to its proper place in the cosmos. Individuals
-had never been so obscurely atomic. With hundreds of thousands
-fighting, personal experience was valuable only as it expressed that of
-the whole. Each story brought back to the mess was much like others,
-thrilling for the narrator and repetition for the polite listener,
-except it was some officer fresh from the communication trench who
-brought news of what was going on in that day's work.
-
-Thus, the battle had become static; its incidents of a kind like the
-product of some mighty mill. The public, falsely expecting that the
-line would be broken, wanted symbols of victory in fronts changing on
-the map and began to weary of the accounts. It was the late Charles A.
-Dana who is credited with saying: "If a dog bites a man it is not news,
-but if a man bites a dog it is."
-
-Let the men attack with hatchets and in evening dress and this would
-win all the headlines in the land because people at their breakfast
-tables would say: "Here is something new in the war!" Men killing men
-was not news, but a battalion of trained bloodhounds sent out to bite
-the Germans would have been. I used to try to hunt down some of the
-"novelties" which received the favor of publication, but though they
-were well known abroad the man in the trenches had heard nothing about
-them.
-
-Bullets, shells, bayonets and bombs remained the tried and practical
-methods there on the Ridge with its overpowering drama, any act of
-which almost any day was greater than Spionkop or Magersfontein which
-thrilled a world that was not then war-stale; and ever its supreme
-feature was that determination which was like a kind fate in its
-progress of chipping, chipping at a stone foundation that must yield.
-
-
-VIII--VICTORY!--"THE RIDGE IS TAKEN"
-
-The Ridge seeped in one's very existence. You could see it as clearly
-in imagination as in reality, with its horizon under shell-bursts and
-the slope with its maze of burrows and its battered trenches. Into
-those calm army reports association could read many indications: the
-telling fact that the German losses in being pressed off the Ridge were
-as great if not greater than the British, their sufferings worse under
-a heavier deluge of shell fire, the increased skill of the offensive
-and the failure of German counter-attacks after each advance.
-
-No one doubted that the Ridge would be taken and taken it was, or
-all of it that was needed for the drive that was to clean up any
-outstanding points, with its sweep down into the valley. A victory
-this, not to be measured by territory; for in one day's rush more
-ground was gained than in two months of siege. A victory of position,
-of will, of _morale_! Sharpening its steel and wits on enemy steel and
-wits in every kind of fighting, the New Army had proved itself in the
-supreme test of all qualities.
-
-(This American correspondent relates thirty-one remarkable narratives
-of adventure, all of which equal in human interest and historical
-importance, the single narrative given above. He tells about his
-experiences "Forward with the Guns;" "The Brigade that Went Through;"
-"The Storming of Contalmaison;" "The Mastery of the Air;" "The Tanks in
-Action;" "The Harvest of Villages;" "Five Generals and Verdun"--all of
-which are notable historical records.)
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[7] All numerals throughout this volume relate to the stories herein
-told--not to chapters in the original sources.
-
-
-
-
-AN AMERICAN'S EXPERIENCES "INSIDE THE GERMAN EMPIRE"
-
-_Told by Herbert Bayard Swope, an American in Berlin_
-
-
- These experiences and observations inside the German Empire in the
- third year of the War form an invaluable narrative. They have been
- recognized by one of the leading American universities as the most
- important contribution of a journalist to the literature of the
- Great War. Hon. James W. Gerard, American Ambassador to the German
- Empire, says: "The facts and experiences ... (of Herbert Bayard
- Swope), gathered first-hand by the author, whose friendship I
- value and whose professional equipment I admire, form an important
- contribution to contemporaneous history." Mr. Swope says: "My
- volume is based upon a series of articles I wrote for the _New York
- World_, and I am grateful to Mr. Ralph Pulitzer of that paper, for
- permission to use the material in this form." This inspiring book
- is published by _The Century Company_: Copyright, 1917, with whose
- authority this chapter is given.
-
-[8] I--JOURNEYS IN THE SPY-BESIEGED LAND
-
-Germany to-day is a giant fortress completely ringed by besiegers.
-Every man, woman, and child, all the beasts of burden and food, are
-checked and located. The doors have been locked against travelers
-seeking to enter and those seeking to depart. Only in exceptional cases
-are visitors received, and in rarer instances are natives permitted to
-leave.
-
-The police are able at all times to account for every one of the
-population, passport issuance has been made extremely difficult, the
-ordeal of search and inquest at the frontier is severe and thorough,
-interior travel has been sharply restricted, every foot of the border
-is guarded against illegal entry, obstacles have been put in the way
-of mail and telegraph communications, the espionage system has been
-multiplied in efficiency and extent--all for the safety of the empire.
-And because this is the underlying reason for them, the Germans have
-submitted to the restrictions willingly, and, instead of rebelling, aid
-them.
-
-The spy mania that swept over war-ridden Europe two years ago has
-lessened in its visible intensity in Germany, but the precaution
-against spies has been increased. The people have confidence in the
-safeguards against espionage, and so suspicion has been quieted. How
-well this confidence is justified can be attested by any one who has
-been inside the empire in the second year of the war.
-
-A stranger is under observation from the time he enters until he has
-left. The watchfulness is not obtrusive, it is rarely evident; but it
-is always thorough. Within twelve hours of a visitor's arrival he must
-report in person at the nearest police station, and every time he makes
-a railroad journey this operation must be repeated.
-
-When an American undertakes a voyage to Germany, the wheels of the
-imperial Government begin to revolve immediately upon the first
-application for a vise to his passport being made in this country.
-The first question to be answered concerns the applicant's character,
-so that Germany may feel sure he does not purpose to aid or abet her
-enemies; and the second, the actual need of the business that causes
-him to make the trip. Obtaining a passport from the American Government
-is attended by many formalities, and these are renewed when the German
-consul-generals are asked to approve.
-
-Germany insists that a fortnight intervene between the application for
-a vise and the beginning of the trip. This is to enable her officials
-to make the necessary investigations, and then to communicate the facts
-to Berlin and to the traveler's port of arrival.
-
-All travel between America and Germany is through Copenhagen,
-Stockholm, or Rotterdam. From Copenhagen the traveler enters Germany
-through Warnemunde; from Stockholm he enters through Sassnitz; and
-from Rotterdam through Bentheim. Upon his arrival at one of the three
-neutral cities he must begin the proceedings afresh....
-
-Upon arrival at Warnemunde (the methods throughout the empire are
-standardized, and are the same at every other entrance point) the
-travelers are shunted into a long low wooden shed, carrying their hand
-baggage, having previously surrendered the checks for their heavier
-luggage. Upon entering the place they are given numbers, and in return
-surrender their passports to brisk, keen-eyed, non-commissioned
-officers, whose efficiency has been increased by long practice.
-
-
-II--"SEARCHED" BY THE SECRET POLICE
-
-Once in the room, the travelers are not permitted to leave except
-through one door, and that they pass only when their numbers are
-called. Barred windows and armed sentries prevent any trifling with
-this system. The numbers are called one by one except in the case of
-husbands and wives, who are permitted to go through together--and when
-this is reached, the traveler passes through into a second office,
-where he is questioned as to his identity and the photographs on the
-passports are verified.
-
-While he is undergoing this questioning he is being overheard and
-carefully watched by numbers of the _geheim-Polizei_ (secret police),
-some of whom are in uniform and others of whom masquerade in civilian
-attire as new arrivals. If there is any error in his papers it is
-developed at this point, and he is at once turned about and sent back
-to Copenhagen. But if it is a case of _alles in Ordnung_ (everything in
-order), it is so reported, and he is ushered into another room, where,
-having passed the first two inquisitorial chambers, he is submitted to
-the grand ordeal, that of search.
-
-And what a search it is! Unless one's credentials are exceptionally
-strong, one is stripped and one's mouth, ears, nose, and other parts
-of the body examined. One's fountain pen is emptied, every piece of
-paper taken away, including visiting cards, and even match-boxes are
-confiscated. Finger rings, umbrellas and canes are inspected. If
-bandages are worn, these must be stripped off, too. No distinction is
-drawn between men and women beyond the fact that women are of course
-examined before female inspectors.
-
-The bodily search having been completed, that of the clothing is begun.
-Every article of apparel is felt over carefully and exposed to a
-strong light for fear there may be writing on the lining. If there is
-the slightest reason for suspicion, the travelers are given a sponge
-bath of water with a large admixture of citric acid, which has the
-effect of making apparent any writing on the body that may have been
-done with invisible ink. The Germans say that these precautions have
-been necessitated by the ingenious ruses employed by spies, whose
-entrance into the country is considered a greater menace than is their
-departure, since in entering they bring with them instructions to their
-confederates already within the empire awaiting orders.
-
-The next step is the examination of the baggage, and this is done in
-a manner to make the American customs inspection seem childish. The
-interior and exterior measurements of the trunks are taken to guard
-against false sides, tops, and bottoms, and then one by one every
-article the trunks contain is put through a separate inspection....
-
-Every sort of liquid is confiscated. The perfumes of the women are
-poured into a big tub, and such liquors as the men may be carrying are
-treated in a similar manner. The contents of travelers' alcohol or
-spirit lamps are carefully emptied into air-tight containers for later
-use. The reason for the drastic regulation against taking any liquid,
-however small the quantity, into Germany was the danger of the fact
-that high explosives such as nitroglycerine can be carried in small
-vessels. On several occasions, the Germans say, railroads and bridges
-have been blown up by the enemy travelers who carried the means of
-destruction in this way. In this connection the additional precaution
-is taken by the authorities of prohibiting all travelers from putting
-their heads out the windows of the coupes while crossing bridges.
-
-All written or printed matter, such as books, newspapers, pamphlets,
-magazines, is taken away. Upon request the traveler may have these
-forwarded to his point of destination after they have been censored
-and deleted. As every point on the German border is carefully guarded,
-it is virtually impossible for any one to enter the country except at
-stated points. All the roads are closed, and the border fields are
-carefully patrolled.
-
-Upon his arrival in Berlin, or wherever he may be bound, the traveler
-must present himself in person at the nearest police station. There his
-passport is again vised, and he is given official permission to remain
-for a given period. But every time he makes a trip he must report
-himself going and coming....
-
-
-III--THE COUNTRY THAT WENT "SPY MAD"
-
-In every hotel are to be met spies in the form of guests, waiters,
-chambermaids, telephone operators, and bartenders. In the early part of
-the war these last proved their worth often, for men otherwise cautious
-and reticent became outspoken under the influence of a few Scotches or
-cocktails, which are still in vogue in Germany despite their American
-origin.
-
-At one of the biggest of the Berlin hotels it is a noticeable fact that
-all the floor waiters are young, active, highly intelligent men. When
-they are asked why they are not serving at the front all have excuses
-on the score of health. The truth is that they are all governmental
-agents whose duty it is to familiarize themselves with the details of
-every visitor's business. That they do well. Every stranger's papers
-are thoroughly investigated, no matter how securely they may be locked
-up, before he has been in the city two days, assuming he leaves them in
-his room. Two members of the American diplomatic corps who made short
-stays in Berlin can tell singular stories on this point.
-
-The chief of the floor waiters at this hotel--and it is illustrative of
-all the others--is a polished-mannered young fellow of about thirty-two
-who speaks English, French, Italian, Spanish, and Danish with the same
-facility that he reads them, and he reads them as well as he does his
-native German. I noticed the chief of the telephone operators, who
-while discharging the duties of his lowly job wore livery, attending
-the races in an English sport-coat, with glasses strung over his
-shoulders, and he went to and from the course in a taxicab, the height
-of luxury in wartime Berlin. One would hardly credit his income solely
-to the measly wages he received from his work at the switch-board. He,
-too, as well as his assistants, was an accomplished linguist.
-
-It must not be thought that espionage is confined to the Americans.
-On the contrary, even the subjects of Germany's allies receive this
-attention. Austrian, Bulgarian, or Turkish, it makes no difference; all
-are put under the scrutiny of the secret eyes and ears of the Kaiser.
-Almost it is more difficult to obtain a passport permitting one to
-travel to Austria than it is to obtain one for a journey to America,
-and the examination at the Austrian border is just as severe as at the
-frontier between Germany and Denmark.
-
-German spies travel on all the transatlantic liners running from
-Denmark, Sweden, Norway, and Holland to America, and back again. They
-find out as much as they can about their fellow-travelers, so that
-the secret police may be forewarned as to whom and what they are to
-receive. These agents are rarely employed by the German Government for
-the secret transmission of mail; that is usually done by men of solid
-reputation, American or other neutrals who are persuaded to accept the
-task on the ground of a service to the empire. Obviously, they must be
-violently pro-German before they are asked to assume the undertaking.
-
-The difficulty of communication is one of the severe hardships that
-the German Government and people suffer. Mails to and from the empire
-are seized by the Allies, and if delivered at all, are so belated as
-to make them valueless. Only such cables as the Allies choose to pass
-are permitted transmission. Male Germans are not permitted to travel
-on the seas. So German communication is restricted to the wireless, to
-supposedly neutral couriers, and to submarines, both of the commercial
-type as the _Deutschland_, and of the war type, which have been
-secretly conveying important German mail to Spanish waters, where it
-is loaded upon friendly neutral vessels, which carry it into Spanish
-ports and thence forward it to America and other points. This last
-method has been a carefully guarded secret of the German Government.
-Mail sent out by Spain is not seized and censored by the Allies....
-
-
-IV--A VISIT TO GENERAL LORINGHOVEN
-
-To get the official view of the situation held by the officers of
-the general staff, I called on General von Freytag-Loringhoven at
-the general staff building in Berlin, where the great Moltke long
-presided. He received me in a room the distinguishing features of which
-were maps, not only showing the disposition of the German forces, but
-immense wall-sized ones on which were diagrammed the present locations
-of the Allies, showing their number, their commanders (designated
-by name and locations of headquarters), with their relative ranks
-indicated by little parti-coloured flags. I had just returned from
-the Somme, and as I saw how each of the French and British lines was
-clearly marked, I expressed my surprise.
-
-The general smiled.
-
-"Yes, our intelligence department is pretty thorough," he said, "but it
-is no better on the Somme than our enemy's is, for in France, where we
-stand on occupied soil, almost every civilian is an aid to the Allies.
-
-"But despite that, despite all the French and English can do at the
-Somme," he went on, "they will never break through."...
-
-I asked the general for his impressions of the French and British
-soldiers. He answered:
-
-"The French are better soldiers. They are better schooled and drilled.
-They have been at it longer and they are enormously brave and
-sacrificing. But the British are proving their worth, too. They are
-all of them warlike and like to fight, but they don't know how as yet.
-You can't make a soldier in a few weeks or months; it takes time and
-patience.
-
-"The French artillery is exceptional. The French artillery officers
-have always been of high repute. They are teaching much to the English
-and Russians, and these forces are showing a corresponding betterment.
-
-"Because of their greater experience, I should say the French are
-better officered than the English. The Russian officers are a poor lot.
-There is no sympathy between them and their men. The men are brave
-enough, but are sheep-like in their lack of intelligence...."
-
-In September, I stood in the general's field headquarters and watched
-the big guns drop shells all around the famous "windmill of Pozieres"
-on the high ridge which had been taken by the British and was being
-used by their artillery observers, who gamely held on, although the
-position was anything but comfortable.
-
-While we watched the bombardment a squadron of English fliers passed
-overhead. I ducked and made for the bomb-proof.
-
-"Don't worry," said the general, "the fliers rarely bomb us. Our
-aviators generally leave their generals' headquarters alone, and they
-usually do the same by us. It is a sort of understood courtesy."...
-
-While I stood in his observation-point with Wenninger an iron-gray
-quartermaster sergeant passed. He had been in the east against the
-Russians as well as in the west. In reply to my question as to his
-opinion of the schools of fighting, he answered:
-
-"I'd rather face twenty infantry attacks from the Russians than bring
-up food to the first lines here (British). Their damned artillery makes
-it hell."
-
-
-V--"AT THE SOMME, I MET VON PAPEN"
-
-At the Somme I met Captain von Papen, the former German military
-attache, who was sent home by America. After six weeks on the firing
-line he was made chief of staff to General Count Schweinitz, commanding
-the Fourth Guard Division and holding the Grevillers-Warlencourt-Ligny
-line. He has proved himself an efficient officer.
-
-Captain Boy-Ed, the naval attache, who was sent back to Germany at
-the same time, is now chief intelligence officer at the admiralty
-in Berlin. He is very bitter toward America, while von Papen is
-friendly. Dr. Dernburg, the other propagandist who was returned to the
-fatherland, is philosophical as regards his work in America, and is
-without rancour over his treatment. He is living in Berlin, working
-on housing plans for the poor, but he has lost the confidence of his
-Government....
-
-All the world knows Hindenburg. Germany's Iron Man, the hero of the
-Masurian Swamps, a colossal wooden statue of whom stands opposite the
-Reichstag in the Sieges-allee, the Avenue of Victory, in Berlin's
-Tiergarten. But who is Ludendorff?
-
-Ludendorff is Germany's man of mystery, the grim, inscrutable,
-silent man whose picture is on sale in every shop, whose name is in
-every mouth, but whose real personality is hidden even from his own
-countrymen.
-
-Ludendorff is Hindenburg's indispensable right-hand man....
-
-There are those who say that Ludendorff is Hindenburg's brain,
-and that Hindenburg's greatest successes have been planned by his
-silent, retiring assistant. Hindenburg, when in the mood, becomes
-very talkative and chatty, and at such times he often attributes his
-success to his assistant. There is a perfect harmony between the two;
-Ludendorff plans and Hindenburg decides....
-
-On August 28 (1914) it was announced that the Russians were fleeing
-across the border. The news grew. Five army corps and three cavalry
-divisions had been annihilated. More than ninety thousand prisoners
-were taken. Tannenberg, one of the greatest victories of the war, had
-changed the whole face of affairs in the east.
-
-There have been bigger battles and longer battles, and there have been
-battles of more significance in the history of the war, but there has
-been no other battle in which the result has been so overwhelming and
-complete a victory for either side.
-
-Just what happened at Tannenberg and in the Masurian Swamps is still
-a secret. There have been stories that a hundred thousand men were
-drowned in the swamps. There have been tales of dikes released and men
-swept away in a swirl of rushing waters. All that is known certainly is
-that a Russian army disappeared.
-
-(This American war correspondent then gives his impressions of men
-and events within the German Armies, telling many interesting tales
-of Boelcke, the German "knight of the air" who shot down thirty-eight
-enemy aeroplanes before he was killed in collision with one of his own
-German machines.)
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[8] All numerals relate to stories herein told--not to chapters in the
-original sources.
-
-
-
-
-"DIXMUDE"-AN EPIC OF THE FRENCH MARINES
-
-_Story of the Murder of Commander Jeanniot_
-
-_Told by Charles Le Goffic of the Fusiliers Marins--Translated by
-Florence Simmonds_
-
- The story of the French Marines is one of the epics of the World's
- Wars. Such is the story of the Bretons. At Dixmude, under command
- of their own officers, retaining not only the costume, but the soul
- and language of their profession they were still sailors. Grouped
- with them were seamen from all the naval stations. The heroism of
- these sailors is told in the volume entitled "Dixmude," published
- by _J. B. Lippincott Company_. From these interesting stories, we
- here relate "The Murder of Captain Jeanniot."
-
-[9] I-GREAT HEARTS OF THE FRENCH MARINES
-
-I had opportunities of talking to several of these "Parigots," and I
-should not advise anyone to speak slightingly of their officers before
-them, though, indeed, so few of these have survived that nine times
-out of ten the quip could be aimed only at a ghost. The deepest and
-tenderest words I heard uttered concerning Naval Lieutenant Martin
-des Pallieres were spoken by a Marine of the Rue des Martyrs, George
-Delaballe, who was one of his gunners in front of the cemetery the
-night when his machine-guns were jammed, and five hundred Germans, led
-by a major wearing the Red Cross armlet, threw themselves suddenly into
-our trenches.
-
-"But why did you love him so?" I asked.
-
-"I don't know.... We loved him because he was brave, and was always
-saying things that made us laugh, ... but above all because he loved
-us."
-
-Here we have the secret of this extraordinary empire of the officers
-over their men, the explanation of that miracle of a four weeks'
-resistance, one against six, under the most formidable tempest of
-shells of every caliber that ever fell upon a position, in a shattered
-town where all the buildings were ablaze, and where, to quote the words
-of a _Daily Telegraph_ correspondent, it was no longer light or dark,
-"but only red." When the Boches murdered Commander Jeanniot, his men
-were half crazy. They would not have felt the death of a father more
-deeply. I have recently had a letter sent me written by a Breton lad,
-Jules Cavan, who was wounded at Dixmude. While he was in hospital at
-Bordeaux he was visited by relatives of Second-Lieutenant Gautier, who
-was killed on October 27 in the cemetery trenches.
-
-"Dear Sir," he wrote to M. Dalche de Desplanels the following day,
-"you cannot imagine how your visit went to my heart.... On October 19,
-when my battalion took the offensive at Lannes, three kilometers from
-Dixmude, I was wounded by a bullet in the thigh. I dragged myself along
-as best I could on the battlefield, bullets falling thickly all around
-me. I got over about five hundred meters on the battlefield and reached
-the road. Just at that moment Lieutenant Gautier, who was coming
-towards me with a section, seeing me in the ditch, asked: 'Well, my
-lad, what is the matter with you?' 'Oh, Lieutenant, I am wounded in the
-leg, and I cannot drag myself further.' 'Here then, get on my back.'
-And he carried me to a house at Lannes, and said these words, which I
-shall never forget: 'Stay there, my lad, till they come and fetch you.
-I will let the motor ambulance men know.' Then he went off under the
-fire. Oh, the splendid fellow!"
-
-
-II--TALES OF THE BRAVE "PARIGOTS"
-
-"The splendid fellow!" Jules Cavan echoes Georges Delaballe, the
-Breton, the "Parigot." There is the same heartfelt ring in the words of
-each. And sometimes, as I muse over these heroic shades, I ask myself
-which were the more admirable, officers or men. When Second-Lieutenant
-Gautier received orders to take the place of Lieutenant de Pallieres,
-buried by a shell in the trench of the cemetery where Lieutenant Eno
-had already fallen, he read his fate plainly; he said: "It's my turn."
-And he smiled at Death, who beckoned him. But I know of one case when,
-as Death seemed about to pass them by, the Marines provoked it; when,
-after they had used up all their cartridges and were surrounded in a
-barn, twelve survivors only remaining with their captain, the latter,
-filled with pity for them, and recognizing the futility of further
-resistance, said to his men: "My poor fellows, you have done your duty.
-There is nothing for it but to surrender." Then, disobedient to their
-captain for the first time, they answered: "No!" To my mind nothing
-could show more clearly the degree of sublime exaltation and complete
-self-forgetfulness to which our officers had raised the _moral_ of
-their men. Such were the pupils these masters in heroism had formed,
-that often their own pupils surpassed them. There was at the Trouville
-Hospital a young Breton sailor called Michel Folgoas. His wound was
-one of the most frightful imaginable: the whole of his side was shaved
-off by a shell which killed one of his comrades in the trenches, who
-was standing next to him, on November 2. "I," he remarks in a letter,
-"was completely stunned at first. When I came to myself I walked three
-hundred meters before I noticed that I was wounded, and this was
-only when my comrades called out: '_Mon Dieu_, they have carried away
-half your side.'" It was true. But does he groan and lament over it?
-He makes a joke of it: "The Boches were so hungry that they took a
-beef-steak out of my side, but this won't matter, as they have left me
-a little."
-
-Multiply this Michel Folgoas by 6,000, and you will have the brigade.
-This inferno of Dixmude was an inferno where everyone made the best
-of things. And the _battues_ of rabbits, the coursing of the red
-German hares which were running in front of the army of invasion,
-the bull-fights in which our Mokos impaled some pacific Flemish bull
-abandoned by its owners; more dubious escapades, sternly repressed, in
-the underground premises of the Dixmude drink-shops; a story of two
-Bretons who went off on a foraging expedition and were seen coming back
-along the canal in broad daylight towing a great cask of strong beer
-which they had unearthed Heaven knows where at a time when the whole
-brigade, officers as well as men, had nothing to drink but the brackish
-water of the Yser--these, and a hundred other tales of the same kind,
-which will some day delight village audiences gathered round festal
-evening fires, bear witness that Jean Gouin (or Le Gwenn, John the
-White, as the sailors call themselves familiarly[10]), did not lose his
-bearings even in his worst vicissitudes.
-
-Dixmude was an epic then, or, as M. Victor Giraud proposes, a French
-_geste_, but a _geste_ in which the heroism is entirely without
-solemnity or deliberation, where the nature of the seaman asserts
-itself at every turn, where there are thunder, lightning, rain, mud,
-cold, bullets, shrapnel, high explosive shells, and all the youthful
-gaiety of the French race.
-
-And this epic did not come to an end at Dixmude. The brigade did not
-ground arms after November 10. The gaps in its ranks being filled from
-the depots, it was kept up to the strength of two regiments, and reaped
-fresh laurels. At Ypres and Saint Georges it charged the troops of
-Prince Ruprecht of Bavaria and the Duke of Wuertemberg in succession.
-Dixmude was but one panel of the triptych: on the broken apex of the
-black capital of the Communiers, on the livid backgrounds of the flat
-country about Nieuport, twice again did the brigade inscribe its stormy
-silhouette.
-
-But at Ypres and Saint Georges the sailors had the bulk of the
-Anglo-French forces behind them; at Dixmude up to November 4 they
-knew that their enterprise was a forlorn hope. And in their hands
-they held the fate of the two Flanders. One of the heroes of Dixmude,
-Naval Lieutenant Georges Hebert, said that the Fusiliers had gained
-more than a naval battle there. My only objection to this statement
-is its modesty. Dixmude was our Thermopylae in the north, as the
-Grand-Couronne, near Nancy, was our Thermopylae in the east; the
-Fusiliers were the first and the most solid element of the long
-triumphant defensive which will one day be known as the victory of the
-Yser, a victory less decisive and perhaps less brilliant than that of
-the Marne, but not less momentous in its consequences.
-
-The Generalissimo is credited with a dictum which he may himself have
-uttered with a certain astonishment:
-
-"You are my best infantrymen," said he to the Fusiliers.
-
-We will close with these simply, soldierly words, more eloquent than
-the most brilliant harangues. The brigade will reckon them among their
-proudest trophies to all time.
-
-
-III--STORY OF MURDER OF DR. DUGUET
-
-On October 25 (1914), we had not yet received any help from the
-inundation. Our troops were in dire need of rest, and the enemy was
-tightening his grip along the entire front. New reinforcements were
-coming up to fill the gaps in his ranks; our scouts warned us that
-fresh troops were marching upon Dixmude by the three roads of Essen,
-Beerst, and Woumen.[11] We had to expect a big affair the next day, if
-not that very night. It came off that night.
-
-About 7 o'clock the Gamas company went to relieve the men in the
-southern trenches. On their way, immediately outside the town, they
-fell in with a German force of about the same strength as themselves,
-which had crept up no one knew how. There was a fusillade and a general
-_melee_, in which our sailors opened a passage through the troop with
-bayonets and butt-ends, disposing of some forty Germans and putting the
-rest to flight.[12] Then there was a lull. The splash of rain was the
-only sound heard till 2 A.M., when suddenly a fresh outbreak
-of rifle-fire was heard near the Caeskerke station, right inside the
-defences. It was suggested that our men or our allies, exasperated by
-their life of continual alarms, had been carried away by some reckless
-impulse. The bravest soldiers admit that hallucinations are not
-uncommon at night in the trenches. All the pitfalls of darkness rise
-before the mind; the circulation of the blood makes a noise like the
-tramp of marching troops; if by chance a nervous sentry should fire his
-rifle, the whole section will follow suit.
-
-Convinced that some misunderstanding of this kind had taken place,
-the Staff, still quartered at the Caeskerke railway station, shouted
-to the sections to cease firing. As, however, the fusillade continued
-in the direction of the town, the Admiral sent one of his officers,
-Lieutenant Durand-Gasselin, to reconnoiter. He got as far as the Yser
-without finding the enemy; the fusillade had ceased; the roads were
-clear. He set out on his way back to Caeskerke. On the road he passed
-an ambulance belonging to the brigade going up towards Dixmude, which,
-on being challenged, replied: "Rouge Croix." Rather surprised at this
-inversion, he stopped the ambulance; it was full of Germans, who,
-however, surrendered without offering any resistance. But this capture
-suggested a new train of thought to the Staff: they were now certain
-that there had been an infantry raid upon the town; the Germans in
-the ambulance probably belonged to a troop of mysterious assailants
-who had made their way into Dixmude in the night and had vanished no
-less mysteriously after this extraordinary deed of daring. One of our
-covering trenches must have given way, but which? Our allies held the
-railway line by which the enemy had penetrated into the defences,
-sounding the charge.... The riddle was very disturbing, but under the
-veil of a thick, damp night, which favored the enemy, it was useless
-to seek a solution. It was found next morning at dawn, when one of
-our detachments on guard by the Yser suddenly noticed in a meadow a
-curious medley of Belgians, French Marines, and Germans. Had our men
-been made prisoners? This uncertainty was of brief duration. There was
-a sharp volley; the sailors fell; the Germans made off. This was what
-had happened!
-
-Various versions have been given of this incident, one of the most
-dramatic of the defence, in the course of which the heroic Commander
-Jeanniot and Dr. Duguet, chief officer of the medical staff, fell
-mortally wounded, with several others. The general opinion, however,
-seems to be that the German attack, which was delivered at 2:30 P.M.,
-was closely connected with the surprise movement attempted at 7 o'clock
-in the evening on the Essen road and so happily frustrated by the
-intervention of the Gamas company. It is not impossible that it was
-carried out by the fragments of the force we had scattered, reinforced
-by new elements and charging to the sound of the bugle. This would
-explain the interval of several hours between the two attacks, which
-were no doubt the outcome of a single inspiration.
-
-"The night," says an eye-witness, "was pursuing its normal course,
-and as there were no indications of disturbance, Dr. Duguet took the
-opportunity to go and get a little rest in the house where he was
-living, which was just across the street opposite his ambulance. The
-Abbe Le Helloco, chaplain of the 2nd Regiment, had joined him at about
-1:30 A.M. The latter admits that he was rather uneasy because
-of the earlier skirmish, in which, as was his habit, he had been
-unremitting in his ministrations to the wounded. After a few minutes'
-talk the two men separated to seek their straw pallets. The Abbe had
-been asleep for an hour or two, when he was awakened by shots close at
-hand. He roused himself and went to Dr. Duguet, who was already up.
-The two did not exchange a word. Simultaneously, without taking the
-precaution of extinguishing the lights behind them, they hurried to the
-street. Enframed by the lighted doorway, they at once became a target;
-a volley brought them down in a moment. Dr. Duguet had been struck by a
-bullet in the abdomen; the Abbe was hit in the head, the arm, and the
-right thigh. The two bodies were touching each other. 'Abbe,' said Dr.
-Duguet, 'we are done for. Give me absolution. I regret....' The Abbe
-found strength to lift his heavy arm and to make the sign of the cross
-upon his dying comrade. Then he fainted, and this saved him. Neither
-he nor Dr. Duguet had understood for the moment what was happening.
-Whence had the band of marauders who had struck them down come, and how
-had they managed to steal into our lines without being seen? It was a
-mystery. This fusillade breaking out behind them had caused a certain
-disorder in the sections nearest to it, who thought they were being
-taken in the rear, and who would have been, indeed, had the attack
-been maintained. The band arrived in front of the ambulance station at
-the moment when the staff (three Belgian doctors, a few naval hospital
-orderlies, and Quartermaster Bonnet) were attending to Dr. Duguet, who
-was still breathing. They made the whole lot prisoners and carried them
-along in their idiotic rush through the streets. Both officers and
-soldiers must have been drunk. This is the only reasonable explanation
-of their mad venture. We held all the approaches to Dixmude; the brief
-panic that took place in certain sections had been at once controlled."
-
-
-IV--STORY OF MURDER OF COMMANDER JEANNIOT
-
-"Commander Jeanniot, who had been in reserve that night, and who,
-roused by the firing like Dr. Duguet and Abbe Le Helloco, had gone
-into the street to call his sector to arms, had not even taken his
-revolver in his hand. Mistaking the identity and the intentions of
-the groups he saw advancing, he ran towards them to reassure them and
-bring them back to the trenches. This little stout, grizzled officer,
-rough and simple in manner, was adored by the sailors. He was known
-to be the bravest of the brave, and he himself was conscious of his
-power over his men. When he recognized his mistake it was too late.
-The Germans seized him, disarmed him, and carried him off with loud
-'_Hochs!_' of satisfaction. The band continued to push on towards the
-Yser, driving a few fugitives before them, and a part of them succeeded
-in crossing the river under cover of the general confusion. Happily
-this did not last long. Captain Marcotte de Sainte-Marie, who was in
-command of the guard on the bridge, identified the assailants with the
-help of a searchlight, and at once opened fire upon them. The majority
-of the Germans within range of our machine-guns were mown down; the
-rest scattered along the streets and ran to cellars and ruins to
-hide themselves. But the head of the column had got across with its
-prisoners, whom they drove before them with the butt-ends of their
-rifles.[13] For four hours they wandered about, seeking an issue which
-would enable them to rejoin their lines. It was raining the whole time.
-Weary of wading through the mud, the officers stopped behind a hedge to
-hold a council. A pale light began to pierce the mist; day was dawning,
-and they could no longer hope to regain the German lines in a body.
-Prudence dictated that they should disperse until nightfall. But what
-was to be done with the prisoners? The majority voted that they should
-be put to death. The Belgian doctors protested. Commander Jeanniot,
-who took no part in the debate, was talking calmly to Quartermaster
-Bonnet. At a sign from their leader the Boches knelt and opened fire
-upon the prisoners. The Commander fell, and as he was still breathing,
-they finished him off with their bayonets. The only survivors were the
-Belgian doctors, who had been spared, and Quartermaster Bonnet, who had
-only been hit in the shoulder. It was at this moment that the marauders
-were discovered. One section charged them forthwith; another fell back
-to cut off their retreat. What happened afterwards? Some accounts
-declare that the German officers learned what it costs to murder
-prisoners, and that our men despatched the dogs there and then; but
-the truth is, that, in spite of the general desire to avenge Commander
-Jeannoit, the whole band was taken prisoners and brought before the
-Admiral, who had only the three most prominent rascals of the gang
-executed."
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[9] All numerals relate to stories herein told--not to chapters in the
-original sources.
-
-[10] "When we passed through the streets of Ghent they were full of
-people shouting, 'Long live the French!' I heard one person in the
-crowd call out, 'Long live Jean Gouin!' He must have known them well."
-(Letter of Fusilier F., of the island of Sein.) Le Gwenn, which has
-been corrupted into Gouin, is a very common name in Brittany. [Compare
-the current English nickname "Jack Tar."--TR.]
-
-[11] "Germans of the regular army coming from the direction of Rheims.
-The Boches we had had to deal with so far had been volunteers or
-reservists." (Second-Lieutenant X.'s note-book.)
-
-[12] Not without losses on our side. "Saw Gamas, who has had
-fourteen of his men killed to-night, among them his boatswain Dodu."
-(Second-Lieutenant Gautier's note-book.)
-
-[13] Here there seems to have been some confusion in the eye-witness's
-account. He leads us to suppose that Dr. Duguet's ambulance was in
-the town, and that the Germans who killed him and wounded the Abbe
-Le Helloco went on afterwards to the bridge with their prisoners.
-"As a fact," we are now told, "the affair took place between
-the bridge--which the head of a column had crossed by surprise,
-driving before them a number of Belgians, sailors, and perhaps some
-marauders--and the level crossing near the station of Caeskerke where
-the column was finally stopped. It was in this part of the street
-that Dr. Duguet had his dressing-station; and it was there, too, that
-Commander Jeanniot, whose reserve post was at Caeskerke, came out to
-meet the assailants. And it was the fields near the south bank of the
-Yser to which the column betook itself, dragging its prisoners with it,
-when it found the road barred."
-
-
-
-
-A BISHOP AT THE FRONT WITH THE BRITISH ARMY
-
-_Told by the Right Reverend H. Russell Wakefield, Bishop of Birmingham_
-
- This is an account of how the Bishop, accompanied by the Lord
- Mayor of Birmingham, went to the fighting lines to visit the staff
- at headquarters. They were at times within thirty-five yards of
- the German trenches. His impressions have been recorded in a
- volume published by _Longmans, Green and Company_, from which the
- following incidents are taken.
-
-[14] I--THE HUMOUR OF BRITISH "TOMMIES"
-
-Whenever, in future, I am inclined towards a fit of pessimism, I
-shall shut my eyes in order to see once again, with the vision of the
-spirit, a stalwart Britisher of the Worcester Regiment, not very far
-from the German lines, on a certain afternoon, when a most appalling
-thunderstorm was raging and some German shells were falling. He was
-munching the thickest slice of bread and jam that I have ever seen,
-and looking with a mild contempt at the intruding figure of an unknown
-padre whom a considerable number of his comrades were greeting because
-they recognised in him their Bishop. He put down now and again his
-refreshment in order to do some bit of work, but he was just as calm
-and collected as if he had been in his Worcestershire village and not
-in the trenches.
-
-That which carries our men through so many difficulties is another
-thing which impressed me--namely, their unfailing sense of humour; a
-humour which is never really hurtful even when exercised upon some one
-deserving of satire. When he christens a road along which there are
-a couple of miles of Army Service carts "Lorry Park," when he finds
-every kind of strange anglicising for Flemish or French words, we know
-that he is not only having some fun for himself, but also providing
-amusement for those who come after him. The same humour shines out when
-he is in hard case. A chaplain told me that he had been addressing
-informally some wounded men who had just arrived from the trenches.
-He was expatiating upon the glories of the Victoria Cross because he
-noticed some of the men came from a regiment one of whose number had
-recently received that coveted distinction. Suddenly his eloquence was
-disturbed by a voice proceeding from a man, both of whose feet were
-swathed in bandages, who remarked, "Never mind the Victoria Cross, give
-me the Victoria 'Bus!" Obviously the soldier's sense of humour was
-conquering his pain, and his remark made the rest of the party forget
-their sufferings for a short time....
-
-
-II--FRANCE BLEEDS FOR CIVILIZATION
-
-As one who saw the French during the war of 1870, when--being a
-boy--I was very susceptible to impressions, I can hardly express the
-difference I notice between the nation then and now. In the former
-war there was excitement, impulsiveness, overconfidence, want of
-ballast; to-day there is quietude, earnestness, and withal, assurance
-of eventual victory. More than once I journeyed through a considerable
-part of the French lines, and I assert with confidence that the Army
-of France at the present time is incomparably superior to that which
-she placed in the field in 1870. As to her civilians, I only saw women,
-children, and old men; I did not, in all my thousand miles of travel,
-discover a single able-bodied person of military age out of uniform.
-
-The harvest, a very good one, was in full swing. Every family was out
-in the fields, all doing something towards the in-gathering. I have
-a picture now before my eyes of seven people, all undoubtedly coming
-from the same house, working away hard, whilst at the tail end of the
-procession appeared what might have been the great-grandpapa, no longer
-capable of bending down for harvesting, but who, nevertheless, had his
-piece of work in carrying about the baby, who, of course, could not be
-left behind alone in the house. The whole nation is doing its utmost.
-
-
-III--"HOW I WENT TO THE TRENCHES"
-
-On one occasion after motoring through towns that are a household word,
-both at home and with our Allies, towns which have seen the Germans
-in them and then driven out of them, places where the buildings are
-practically level with the ground, the limit for vehicular traffic is
-reached and one goes forward on foot. Soon you reach a cutting in the
-ground and you begin to walk along a trench. You turn now and again
-either to right or left, seeing sign-posts telling sometimes in comic
-language and sometimes only by number the name, as it were, of the
-underground street; you then rise a little and find yourself walking
-in the inside of houses so shattered that you cannot tell much about
-what they originally were until you are told that they formed a street
-in a little overgrown village of which nothing is left, and the last
-inhabitant of which was the station-master, who refused to leave though
-there was neither train, station nor house for himself left, because
-so long as he remained on the spot he could claim his pay. Forcible
-measures had at last to be used to secure his departure. Where you are
-walking you are yourself hidden from the enemy, but are within the
-range of their fire. You are taken up to an observation post, where one
-of your companions incautiously takes out a white pocket-handkerchief
-and is hurriedly told to put it back in his pocket.
-
-You come down again and proceed cautiously along trenches. Now and
-again shells pass over, and your careful guide looks to see in what
-direction they are falling, as, though he is quite unconcerned for
-himself, he knows that he is responsible for the safety of the
-troublesome visitor. You are told to keep your head down and not to
-show, for the moment at any rate, any desire to view the landscape.
-Soldiers are dotted about here and there, all of them ready to give a
-kindly greeting, and then at last you reach a point where you are told
-not to speak loudly because practically only a few yards away is the
-enemy, who, were he to hear conversation, might think it worth while
-to throw over a hand grenade. What looks like a tiny bit of glass at
-the end of a short stick is there before you, and you are asked to look
-into it; when you do the enemies' trenches are visible to you. Beyond
-an occasional ping against a sandbag, you have heard nothing to note
-the existence of rifle fire, except that the men you have passed have
-got these weapons to hand. You tell the men at the advanced posts how
-proud their country is of them, how thankful you are to have seen them,
-how you pray that God may bring them back safe to their homes; you get
-rid of all cigars or cigarettes you may have upon you, wishing that you
-had thousands more, and then you return home, varying perhaps the route
-through the communication trenches.
-
-On another occasion our way took us through a town which is absolutely
-razed to the ground and is still under shell fire. There I saw two
-soldiers busy with spades, and I asked what kind of fortification they
-were putting up, to which, with a broad grin, one replied that they
-were looking for souvenirs. He was kind enough to give me a complete
-German cartridge case, for which he refused to take any remuneration.
-Going on a little farther in this town, we went down some steps and
-found ourselves in an underground club full of soldiers, who were
-having a hot meal, were reading papers and playing games, everything
-being presided over by perhaps the most magnetic person I met on my
-travels, a young Chaplain to the Forces, who would not wish his name
-to be mentioned, though there is probably no one out at the Front who
-will not know to whom I refer. When we went from this place towards the
-more advanced trenches, I was taken along a road which looked perfectly
-harmless, when suddenly a stalwart Scotchman told my companion and
-myself that we must get off it at once as it was a favourite target
-for German Maxims. Never was a General more obediently submitted to than
-was this, I believe, private soldier. It was on this occasion that we
-had tea in the dugout of the Colonel, who bears a name distinguished
-in English naval, military and sporting life. A characteristic of the
-German trenches which I noticed on this and other occasions, was that
-their sandbags seemed to be generally white in colour, at any rate in
-those of the first line. Leaving the trench on this particular day, we
-had to go through an almost alarming thunderstorm, which in the course
-of half an hour made a sea of mud of the place which had been quite
-dry before. It was curious to notice how petty the sound of the guns
-appeared as compared with the artillery of heaven.
-
-Pathetic incidents occur and touching scenes are visible on these
-journeys to the Front. One looked in the trenches upon little mounds
-and crosses, marking the resting-places of men who had been hurriedly,
-but reverently, buried. There they are side by side with their living
-comrades, who are doing their work whilst their brothers sleep. Dotted
-all about the country are little cemeteries, which tell of devotion
-unto death, and which remind one of all the sorrow this war has
-caused. It is strange to see how religious emblems appear to have been
-strong against shell. Constantly you would see a church almost totally
-destroyed and yet the crucifix untouched, and who will ever forget that
-sight which can be seen for miles around, of the tower which has been
-almost shattered to pieces and yet the statue of the Virgin and Child,
-which was near the top of it, though bent over completely at right
-angles, still remains, as it were blessing and protecting the whole
-neighbourhood.
-
-
-IV--"SEE GOD THRO' CLOUD OF SMOKE"
-
-This leads to the consideration of the religious condition of our
-troops as affected, first, by the churches and worshippers of France,
-and, secondly, by their own experience in this war. More than one
-mentioned the pleasure felt at the sight of the little wayside shrines
-which they passed on their march. Others commented upon the large
-numbers of people they saw flocking to their early communion....
-
-What his experience of war is doing for the soldier in regard to
-religion is remarkable. It would have been possible that the sight of
-humanity striving to the death and inflicting horrible suffering might
-have made our young fellows despair of Christianity. They might have
-argued that it was of no avail to teach the religion of Jesus when no
-effect was produced upon international conduct; but they have been
-able to look more deeply into matters and to realise that not Divine
-intention was at fault, but human refusal to follow true teaching. They
-have been able to see God through the cloud of smoke raised by shot
-and shell, and the Presence of the Divine has not been obscured by
-the horrors of war. Conscious of the seriousness of the work in which
-they are engaged, feeling every moment the nearness of eternity, our
-soldiers have in no craven spirit, but with a due remembrance of their
-relationship to God and to eternity, turned to religion as a stay in
-the hour of conflict....
-
-Although I must refrain most reluctantly from saying anything about
-the great military personages whom I met in France, and with whom I
-was so greatly impressed, I may perhaps refer to two French persons of
-distinction, in no way connected with the war, whom I was privileged
-to meet. First there is that outstanding personality the Mayor of
-Hazebrouck, Abbe Lemire. He and I were brought together because he is a
-clerical municipal dignitary and I was the first clergyman who was ever
-a mayor in this country. He, however, does more than I have ever been
-able to do, because he is a member of the Chamber of Deputies, and here
-in England the doors of the House of Commons are still shut against the
-clergy....
-
-He is an extraordinarily winning personality, and as we walked through
-the streets of his city every woman and child and old man had something
-to say to him. With one he would discuss the imprisonment of a soldier
-son in Germany; with another the fact that a married daughter had had a
-bouncing boy who would be, so prophesied the Abbe, a soldier of France
-in years to come. To another in deep mourning he had a word of comfort
-to give; until at last I said to him that he appeared to be not only
-_le maire_ but also _le pere_ of Hazebrouck....
-
-Another beautiful character is the present Archbishop of Rouen.
-Carrying well his seventy-six years, thanks in no small measure to the
-loving care of his secretary, the great dignitary has passed through
-the recent critical time for his Church, retaining throughout his
-breadth of view and his sweetness of nature. Turned out of his official
-residence, he has built himself another, beautifully situated, in the
-grounds of which may to-day be seen English doctors and nurses, and
-even wounded, resting and gaining health. The morning upon which I saw
-him I had been celebrating the Holy Communion in the chapel of what
-once was his palace. When I asked him whether he felt any objection to
-this being done by our English clergy, he answered, "Certainly not."
-And then, after a moment's thought, he went on: "After all, what does
-it matter whether one celebrates in one vestment and another in a
-different one, if at the root of things we are the same?"
-
-(The Bishop now relates his impressions of the various countries
-engaged in the War, all of which, with the exception of Japan, he has
-visited. He believes that the War is to result in a great spiritual
-awakening throughout the world.)
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[14] All numerals relate to stories herein told--not to chapters in the
-original sources.
-
-
-
-
-SHORT RATIONS--THE TRUTH ABOUT LIFE IN GERMANY
-
-_An American Woman in Germany_
-
-_Told by Madeline Zabriskie Doty_
-
- Miss Doty made two trips of exploration to Europe during the War.
- She is one of the few "foreigners" who were permitted to visit
- prison camps and industrial factories in Germany. It has remained
- for this American woman to bring out of Germany some of the most
- interesting sidelights. It is a graphic account of the tragedy
- which reveals the conditions within the German Empire. Miss Doty
- talked with the German women in the factories, the mothers with
- their babies, finding everywhere the tragedy of suffering almost
- beyond human endurance. The following reminiscences are from
- her book: "Short Rations," published by the _Century Company_:
- Copyright 1917.
-
-[15] I--STORY OF WOMAN WHO WANTED TO SELL HER CHILD
-
-I awoke to find myself in Germany.... Hamburg is a city of sleepers.
-Its big hotels, its many stores, its impressive buildings stretch
-out endlessly, but within all is still. All that modern industry
-and the ingenuity of man can achieve has here been flung upon the
-land, and then the force that created it has vanished, leaving these
-great monuments to rot, to rust, and to crumble. The tragedy of
-unused treasures is as horrible as rows of dead. A city seems visibly
-dying....
-
-A crowd of children is gathering just below. School is out, and they
-are surrounding an object of interest. One or two women join them.
-There is no passing populace to swell the throng. We approach and see
-in the centre of the crowd of children a woman crouched upon a bench.
-She is dirty, ragged, and dark in colouring.... On the ground at her
-feet is a baby just big enough to walk. It also is dirty, and possesses
-only one ragged garment. The mother sits listless, gazing at her
-child. It is evident she is soon to be a mother again. There is great
-chattering among the children. I turn to my companion for explanation.
-
-"The woman wants to sell her child. She says she hasn't anything to
-eat. She isn't a German mother. Of course, no German mother would do
-such a thing. You can see she isn't good. She is going to have another
-baby."
-
-A school-child gives the toddling baby some cherries. She eats them
-greedily. My hand goes to my pocketbook, but my companion pulls me
-away. If I bought the baby, what could I do with her on a trip through
-Germany?...
-
-
-II--THE SECRET GRIEF OF GERMANY
-
-But before I leave Germany the spies get on my nerves. What was at
-first amusing becomes a nuisance. I feel exactly as though I am in
-prison. I acquire the habit of looking out of the corner of my eye
-and over my shoulder. These spies are as annoying to their countrymen
-as to me. The people detest them. They grow restless under such
-suppression. Free conversation is impossible, except behind closed
-doors. Between German spies and the spies of other countries supposed
-to be at large, public conversation is at a standstill. Everywhere are
-signs--"_Soldaten_"--"_Vorsicht bei gesproechen Spionengefahr_."...
-
-In spite of the concealment of the wounded, the population begins to
-understand its loss. One night I went to the station (at Berlin) to
-see a big detachment leave for Wilma. They had all been in war before.
-Their uniforms were dirty and patched. They sat on benches clinging
-to a loved one's hand, or stood in listless groups. No one talked.
-They were like tired children. They needed food and bed. The scenes of
-farewell were harrowing.
-
-Here was a young boy saying good-by to a mother and three aunts. He
-was all they had--their whole life. Here a father saying farewell to a
-wife and three sons, all under seventeen. Or a mother in deep mourning
-taking leave of her last son, or a young wife with a baby in her arms
-giving a last embrace.
-
-As the train moved out of the station there were no shouts, no cheers,
-no words of encouragement. Instead there was a deadly silence. The men
-leaned out of windows, stretched despairing hands towards loved ones.
-As the train pulled away the little groups broke into strangling sobs.
-They were shaken as by a mighty tempest. Paroxysms of grief rent and
-tore them. They knew the end had come. A man may go once into battle
-and return, but not twice and thrice. Life held no hope. As I came away
-I stopped before the big building which conducts military affairs. It
-is known as the "House of Sorrow." On its rear wall is posted the list
-of dead and wounded....
-
-One evening at midnight as I cross the Thiergarten I pass a small
-procession of new recruits. Midnight, my friend tells me, is the
-favourite hour for seizing fresh food for cannon. There is something
-sinister in choosing dark hours, when the city sleeps, for this
-deed....
-
-
-III--A BEAUTIFUL STORY TOLD IN GENEVA
-
-While in Geneva I visited the Red Cross authorities. This is the
-Central Bureau for relief work. It gives aid to the wounded and
-prisoners of all the belligerent countries. Many horrible, tragic and
-beautiful stories pass through the committee's hands.
-
-After the war these stories will come to light. At present the rigid
-censorship prevents publication, for it is impossible to carry printed
-or written material across frontiers.
-
-But one story told me needed no notes. It became engraven in my memory.
-It is the story of an English boy and a German mother.
-
-I could not secure the letters that passed between these two but their
-contents, and the other facts given are here set forth accurately. This
-is a true story.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The sky was a soft, shining blue. The air was still. The warmth of
-summer brooded over the land. But no bird's song broke the stillness.
-No bees fluttered over flowers. The earth lay torn and bare. In deep
-brown furrows of the earth, hundreds of restless men lay or knelt or
-stood.
-
-The land was vibrant with living silence. But now and again a gigantic
-smashing roar broke the tense stillness. Then in some spots, the ground
-spit forth masses of dirt, a soldier's helmet, a tattered rag of
-uniform, and bits of a human body.
-
-It was after such a mighty blast that a great winged object came
-speeding from the north. It skimmed low over the trenches and dipped,
-and circled and paused above the English line. Like a great eagle it
-seemed about to rush to earth, snatch its prey, and then be off. But
-as it hung suspended, another whirring monster flew swiftly from
-the south. It winged its way above its rival, then turning, plunged
-downward. The great cannons grew silent. The eyes of the pigmies in
-the trenches gazed skyward. A breathless tenseness gripped the earth.
-Only sun and sky shone on with no whisper of the mad fight of these two
-winged things.
-
-For a few wild moments they rushed at one another. Then the whirring
-bird with wings of white rose high, turned back, and plunged again upon
-that other whose wings had huge, black crosses.
-
-It missed its prey, but there came a cracking sound. A puff of smoke,
-like a hot breath, burst from the creature of the iron crosses. It
-shuddered, dropped, turned, and fell head down. With sweeping curves
-the pursuer also came to earth. A lean, young Englishman sprang from
-the whirring engine. His body quivered with excitement. He sped with
-running feet to the broken object lying on the ground. He knelt by the
-twisted mass. Beneath the splintered wood and iron he saw a boyish
-figure. It was still and motionless. He gently pulled the body out. A
-fair young German lay before him. A deep gash in the head showed where
-a blow had brought instant death. The body was straight and supple,
-the features clear cut and clean. A boy's face with frank and fearless
-brow looked up at the young Englishman. The eyes held no malice. They
-were full of shocked surprise. The brown haired lad felt the lifeless
-heart. A piece of cardboard met his fingers. He pulled it from the coat
-pocket. It was a picture--a picture of a woman--a woman with gray hair
-and kindly eyes,--a mother whose face bore lines of patient suffering.
-Scrawled beneath the portrait in boyish hand were the words, "Meine
-Mutter."
-
-A sob choked the young Englishman. Tenderly he gathered the lifeless
-form in his strong arms. Then he rose and walked unheeding across the
-open field of battle. But no angry bullet pelted after those young
-figures. The men in the trenches saw and understood. Behind the lines
-the boy lay his burden down. Taking paper and pencil from his pocket
-and placing the little picture before him, he began to write.
-
-When he had finished he placed the letter and portrait in a carefully
-directed envelope. Then walking hurriedly to his machine he prepared
-for flight. Soon he was whirring low over the enemy trenches. Leaning
-out, he dropped his missile. The cannons roared, but no rifle was
-turned on that bright figure. Instinctively, men knew his deed was
-one of mercy. As the little paper fluttered downward it was picked up
-by eager soldier hands. A little cheer broke from a hundred throats.
-Willing messengers passed it to the rear. Speedily it went on its way.
-
-Twenty-four hours later a mother with pale face and trembling hands
-fingered the white scrap of paper. Her unseeing eyes gazed out on a
-smiling landscape. Between green meadows in the warm summer sunshine
-lay the glittering Rhine. But she saw nothing. Her baby boy was dead.
-Memories of him flooded her. She felt again the warmth of the baby body
-as it clung to hers and the pull of the tiny hands at her breast. She
-saw him as a boy, his eager restlessness. She heard his running steps
-at the door and his cry of "mother." It was over. That bright spirit
-was still. The third and last son had been exacted. Her fingers touched
-the letter in her lap. Her eyes fell on the penciled words. Slowly they
-took meaning. This boy who wrote: He'd seen the beauty of her son. He'd
-lifted the dear body in his arms. His heart was torn by anguish. What
-was it he said?
-
-
-IV--WHAT THE GERMAN MOTHER READ ON THE SCRAP OF PAPER
-
- "'It's your son. I know you can't forgive me for I killed him. But
- I want you to know he didn't suffer. The end came quickly. He was
- very brave. He must also have been very good. He had your picture
- in his pocket. I am sending it back, though I should like to keep
- it. I suppose I am his enemy, yet I don't feel so at all. I'd give
- my life to have him back. I didn't think of him or you when I shot
- at his machine. He was an enemy spying out our men. I couldn't let
- him get back to tell his news. It meant death to our men. It was a
- plucky deed. We were covered up with brush. He had to come quite
- low to see us and he came bravely. He nearly escaped me. He handled
- his machine magnificently. I thought how I should like to fly with
- him. But he was the enemy and had to be destroyed. I fired. It was
- over in a second. Just a blow on the head as the machine crashed to
- earth. His face shows no suffering, only excitement. His eyes are
- bright and fearless. I know you must have loved him. My mother died
- when I was quite a little boy. But I know what she would have felt
- if I had been killed. War isn't fair to women. God! how I wish it
- were over. It is a nightmare. I feel if I just touched your boy,
- he'd wake and we'd be friends. I know his body must be dear to you.
- I will take care of it and mark his grave with a little cross.
- After the war you may want to take him home.
-
- "'For the first time, I'm almost glad my mother isn't living. She
- could not have borne what I have done. My own heart is heavy. I
- felt it was my duty. Yet now when I see your son lifeless before me
- and hold your picture in my hand, it all seems wrong. The world is
- dark. O Mother, be my mother just a little too, and tell me what to
- do.--HUGH.'"
-
-Slowly great tears rolled down the woman's cheeks. What was this
-monster that was smashing men? Her boy and this other, they were the
-same. No hate was in their hearts. They suffered--the whole world
-suffered. Her country went in hunger. The babies in the nearby cottages
-grew weak for want of milk. She mustn't tell that to the English lad.
-His heart would break. Why must such suffering be? Was she to blame?
-There was the English lad without a mother. She had not thought of him
-and others like him. Her home, her sons, her Fatherland, these had been
-sufficient. But each life hangs on every other. Motherhood is universal.
-
-
-V--A GERMAN MOTHER TO THE ENGLISH BOY WHO KILLED HER SON
-
-Suddenly she knew what to write. What she must say to that
-grief-stricken English boy. Quickly her hand penned the words:
-
- "DEAR LAD: There is nothing to forgive. I see you as you
- are--your troubled goodness. I feel you coming to me like a little
- boy astounded at having done ill when you meant well. You seem my
- son. I am glad your hands cared for my other boy. I had rather
- you than any other touched his earthly body. He was my youngest.
- I think you saw his fineness. I know the torture of your heart
- since you have slain him. To women brotherhood is a reality. For
- all men are our sons. That makes war a monster that brother must
- slay brother. Yet perhaps women more than men have been to blame
- for this world war. We did not think of the world's children, our
- children. The baby hands that clutched our breast were so sweet, we
- forgot the hundred other baby hands stretched out to us. But the
- Earth does not forget, she mothers all. And now my heart aches with
- repentance. I long to take you in my arms and lay your head upon my
- breast to make you feel through me your kinship with all the earth.
- Help me, my son, I need you. Be your vision, my vision. Spread the
- dream of oneness and love throughout the land. When the war is over
- come to me. I am waiting for you.--DEINE MUTTER."
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[15] All numerals relate to stories herein told--not to chapters in the
-original sources.
-
-
-
-
-FIGHTING "WITH THE RUSSIAN ARMY"--ON AUSTRIAN FRONT
-
-_The Colossal Struggle of the Slavs_
-
-_Told by Bernard Pares, Official Observer with the Russian Army_
-
- This is one of the most important narratives in the records of
- the War; it is an invaluable witness of the colossal struggle
- waged on the Eastern battle front. The author was granted official
- privileges awarded to no other non-combatant. He passed through
- the first Warsaw Campaign, the crucial battle of Dunajec, and
- the Russian retreat. When Germany declared war on Russia, he
- volunteered for service and went to Petrograd and Moscow, where
- he was appointed official correspondent with the Russian Army,
- traveling with the general staff. He later joined the third army
- as an attache. Here he was given written permit by General Radko
- Dmitriev to visit any part of the firing line. "We were the advance
- guard," he says, "of the liberation of the Slavs ... the retreat of
- the army to the San and to the Province of Lublin. We were driven
- out by sheer weight of metal ... it was a delight to be with such
- splendid men as the Staff of the Russian Army. I never saw anything
- base all the while I was with the Army. There was no drunkenness,
- everyone was at his best, and it was the simplest and noblest
- atmosphere in which I have ever lived." His experiences have been
- gathered into a volume entitled, "Day by Day With the Russian
- Army," from which the following incidents are retold by permission
- of his American publishers, Houghton, Mifflin and Company.
-
-[16] I--WAR STORIES FROM THE RUSSIANS
-
-It is wonderful how little effect the war seems to have made on the
-body of Russia. On the other hand, the atmosphere of nervous tension
-begins to disappear the moment one begins to get really near to the
-front. In the Red Cross offices at Kiev I found the same straining
-toward the front as elsewhere, only much calmer because these were
-people who had a big war work to do. Hospitals meet the eye in the
-streets at every turn.
-
-Once in the train for Galicia it was again the war atmosphere and
-simplicity itself. The talk was all of people engaged directly or
-indirectly in it. A graceful old lady with a very attentive son was on
-her way to get a sight of her husband, one of the generals. A young
-officer, whose wound has kept him out of it for three weeks, is on his
-way to the front before Cracow. A fresh-looking young man, at first
-unrecognisable to his friends with his close-cropped bullet head,
-tells how he went on a reconnaissance, how he came on the Austrians,
-how their first line held up their muskets and when the Russians had
-passed on fired on their rear, how nevertheless practically all came
-back safe and sound. It was told with a kind of schoolboy ingenuousness
-and without suggestion or comment of any kind on the conduct of those
-concerned. Then followed an account of a war marriage, at first put off
-and then carried out as quietly as possible. All the friends of every
-one seemed to be at the war.
-
-At the old frontier some of the buildings near the station were wrecked
-by artillery fire, and the railway was lined with a succession of solid
-hospital barracks, with the local commandant's flag flying over one of
-them. There was plenty to eat at the station; and though we moved on
-very quickly, every one from our crowded train managed to find a place
-in the Austrian carriages, chiefly because every one was ready to help
-his neighbour. The corridors jammed with passengers and kits, we moved
-on through the typical "strips" of Russian peasant culture, a pleasant
-wooded country, passing a draft detachment on the halt which waved
-greetings to us. My companion, Mr. Stakhovich, a phenomenally strong
-man and imbued by a fine spirit, was talking of the indifference of the
-Russian peasant to danger; he regarded it as an indifference to all
-sensations; anyhow they go forward, whatever the conditions, as a sheer
-matter of course. With the ordinary educated man the mind must be kept
-occupied with work if unpleasant possibilities of all kinds are to be
-kept out of it; but General Radko Dmitriev, to whom we are going, will
-jump up from a meal, however hungry, when there is a chance of getting
-under fire.
-
-
-II--IN THE CONQUERED CITY OF LVOV
-
-We draw up in the great station at Lvov. To the right of us stretch
-endless lines crowded with wagons, especially with sanitary trains. In
-the lofty passages and waiting-rooms are sleeping troops with piled
-muskets, some wounded on stretchers tended by the sisters of mercy who
-are constantly on duty here, and a crowd of men, all soldiers, coming
-and going. One passed many Austrian prisoners, of whom another enormous
-batch was just announced to arrive; and elsewhere a Russian private
-explained to me the excellent quality of the Hungarian knapsack, which
-he and his comrades had turned into busbies. One man was asleep inside
-the rail opposite the ticket office. He did not seem to mind how often
-he was awakened.
-
-In the town everything is quiet, and life goes so naturally that no
-one could take it for a conquered city. In the country this might have
-been expected because far the greater part of the population is Little
-Russian; but in Lvov the Russians are only about 17 per cent. and the
-predominant element is the Polish (60 per cent.), the rest being Jews
-(20 per cent.) or Germans (3 per cent.).
-
-Lvov is taking on more of the character of a Russian town. Many of the
-Jews have left. The Russian signs over new restaurants, stores, etc.,
-meet the eye everywhere. Of the Little Russian party which supported
-the Austrians, many have now returned and are making their peace with
-the new authorities. The Russian soldier is quite at home in Lvov, as
-one sees when the singing "drafts" swing past the Governor-General's
-palace; the Austrian prisoners in uniform, who are allowed liberty on
-parole, seem equally at their ease. Numbers of Russian priests are
-pouring into Galicia, but not fast enough for the Uniat villages which
-have embraced Orthodoxy; as soon as they arrive, peasants come with
-their carts and take them off to their parishes, without waiting for
-any formal distribution. The Uniat creed and ritual are practically
-identical with the Orthodox, so that the difference between the two
-was purely political. At the new People's Palace of Nicholas II, I
-saw a number of children, principally from families that had suffered
-severely at the hands of Austrian troops, receive Christmas presents
-on the day of St. Nicholas, who is the Russian Santa Claus. Archbishop
-Eulogius, in a very effective little address, told them that the
-biggest Christmas present which they were receiving was the liberty to
-speak their own language and worship in their own way in union with
-their Russian brothers.
-
-Starting for the army, I spent a night of strange happening in the
-great railway station, as our train was delayed till the morning. At
-one time I went, in the frosty night, to look for it at the goods
-station, where there were endless rails and wagons, and found it
-after a long search. In the big restaurant four little boys made
-great friends with me, one of fourteen in uniform and spurs who had
-been serving as mounted scout with a regiment at the front, and
-one of thirteen who had attached himself in the same capacity to a
-battery. Both were small creatures, and the first was a remarkable
-little person, with all the smartness and determination of a soldier,
-relieved by an amusing childlike grace and courtesy. He said to me in a
-confidential voice, "I see you are very fond of little children," and
-he ordered with pride lemonade and chocolates for us both. He said the
-men at the front could last a week to ten days, if necessary, without
-any food but _sukhari_ (army biscuit), so long as they had cigarettes.
-His imagination had been caught by the aeroplanes over Peremyshl,
-and also by the Carpathians, which he described with an up and down
-movement of the hand. He had a great disgust for anything mean and a
-warlike pride in the exploits of the soldiers of his regiment. His
-model was a boy, now a young man, who had been through the Japanese
-War. "If a general comes past," and he made a salute to show the
-extreme respect felt for his hero. Many a time in that long night,
-while the weary heads of doctors and sisters of mercy were bent in
-sheer tiredness against the tables, he would come and sit by me and
-ask me to read the war news to him, or to tell him about the English
-submarines. He left me with the smartest of salutes in the early hours
-of the morning.
-
-
-III--TALES TOLD ON AN ARMY TRAIN
-
-Our train is an enormous one with endless warm carriages (_teplushki_)
-for the wounded. The staff of sanitars and sisters, working for the
-Zemstvo Red Cross, live in a spotlessly clean carriage, and there are
-special carriages for drugs, stores, kitchen, etc. They are simple and
-interesting people, and, as I am now in the Red Cross and have many
-interests in common with them, they kindly made me up a bed in their
-carriage, where we discussed Russia in all its bearings.
-
-We carry a group of passengers who have all made friends after the
-Russian way. A colonel and his wife are going to fetch the body of
-a fallen comrade. Another colonel, a delightfully simple man with
-close-cropped hair, thin brown face and bright, clever eyes seems to
-know all the Slavonic languages and has much to say of the Austrians.
-He has seen twenty of them surrender to a priest and his clerk who
-came on them in a wood, made the sign of the cross and told them to
-come with them. In another place twenty-two Austrians were captured by
-two Russians. The Austrian officers put quick-firing guns behind their
-own rifle pits for the "encouragement" of their men, on whom he has
-seen them fire. They make their gunners fire every two hours in the
-night as a kind of exercise. He has seen them form their men in close
-column under fire and march them about up and down along the line of
-the Russian trenches. The Austrian artillery seldom takes cover; the
-Russian directs its fire on the enemy rather than on his batteries. In
-one place, heavy Russian artillery at a range of seven miles demolished
-an Austrian field train and two battalions who were lunching in the
-square of a small town. He is full of life and confidence, and all that
-he says breathes of fresh air and of work.
-
-Our train made its way through to the furthest point up. We had to stop
-several times to let through the ambulance trains already charged with
-wounded, which take precedence. We had to go very slowly over several
-repaired bridges; and this was no simple matter, as we had twenty-seven
-long and heavy coaches. Some of these repairs were complicated pieces
-of work, as the bridges were high above the level of the rivers. At
-point after point, and especially on the Austrian sides of the rivers,
-we passed lines of carefully prepared trenches, and in one place there
-was a masterpiece of artillery cover, with every arrangement for a long
-stay.
-
-The damage done by the artillery fire was sporadic--here a smashed
-station building, there a town where several houses had suffered. But
-there was nothing indiscriminate; and the Polish population, which
-showed no sign of any hostility to the Russians, seemed to find the war
-conditions livable.
-
-As in other parts, I was specially struck by the easy relations
-existing between the inhabitants, the Austrian soldiers and their
-Russian captors. There were exceptions. I had some talk with a few
-Austrian Germans from Vienna. They were simple folk and seemed to
-have no grudge against the Russians; and the circumstance in their
-position which they felt most--they were only taken the day before
-yesterday--was that this was Christmas Eve, the "_stille Nacht, heilige
-Nacht_" of the beautiful German hymn, and that they were far from home
-among strange people. They kept apart as far as possible not only from
-their captors but from their fellow prisoners from Bohemia and Moravia.
-These last seemed at least quite comfortable, smoking their long pipes
-and leisurely sweeping the platforms. They were quite a large company.
-They understood my Russian better than my German. When I asked them
-how they stood with the German troops, instead of the sturdy "Gut" of
-their Viennese fellows, they answered with a slang word and a gesture.
-When asked about the Russians, they replied in a quite matter-of-course
-way: "We are brothers and speak the same tongue; we are one people."
-For any difficulties, the Poles often prove good interpreters. It is
-very different for the Austrian captive officers, who often cannot
-understand their own men.
-
-These Czechs confidently assured me that any Russian troops that
-entered Bohemia would be welcomed as friends; and they claimed that
-not only the neighboring Moravians and Slovaks but also the Croats
-further south were to be taken as feeling as they did. The Bohemians
-and Moravians seem to be surrendering in the largest numbers of all;
-and though the Viennese claimed that large numbers of Russians had also
-been taken, I cannot regard as anything but exceptional the enormous
-batches of blue uniforms that I passed on the road here. I asked these
-men about their greatcoats and was not at all surprised when they said
-they felt cold in them. It is nothing like such a practical winter
-outfit, whether for head, body or legs, as that of the Russian soldier.
-
-We came very well over the last part of our journey. I was sorry to
-part with the friendly sanitars, who all seemed old acquaintances
-by the end of the journey and invited me to take up my quarters
-permanently with them. Theirs was more than ordinary kindness, as they
-had shared everything they had with me, including their little sleeping
-apartment. The bearer company under their orders is all composed of
-Mennonites, a German religious sect from South Russia which objects
-to war on principle and, being excused military service even in this
-tremendous struggle, seems to be serving wholesale as ambulance
-volunteers.
-
-As there were none but soldiers about, these men helped me out with
-my luggage; and through the window of the First Aid point in Tarnow
-station, I saw another acquaintance waving me a welcome. This is the
-last point that the railway can serve; and my friends will go back with
-a full burden, which will keep the medical staff busy day and night all
-the way. One of my new companions, who has been out to a village to
-get milk for the wounded, has seen the shrapnel bursting; and the guns
-are sounding loud and clear near the town as I write this. It is here
-that the most seriously wounded must be treated at once, as a railway
-journey would simply mean death for them. This is brought home to one,
-if one only looks at the faces of the workers. Yet with this huge line
-of operations, and the assaults which may be made at any point of it,
-at any moment the nearest field hospitals may need to send off any
-wounded who can be moved without delay. Though the work is being done
-with danger all round, less thought is being given to it than anywhere
-that I have been yet.
-
-
-IV--CHRISTMAS IN AN AUSTRIAN HOSPITAL
-
-Christmas Eve: peace on earth and good will toward men. And all through
-"the still night, the holy night," the sound that means killing goes
-on almost continuously. How can any one say prayers for a world which
-is at war, or for himself that is a part of it? May God, who knows
-everything, help each of us to bear our part and not disgrace Him, and
-make us instruments to the end that He wishes.
-
-Christmas day I spent in the hospitals. In one ward, at a local
-Austrian hospital, and full of wounded, I found that almost every one
-of the line of patients was of a different nationality. Going round
-the room, one found first a Pole of western Galicia, then a Russian
-from the Urals, next a Ruthenian (Little Russian) from eastern Galicia,
-next a Magyar from Hungary, and against the wall a young German from
-Westphalia. After him came an Austrian-German from Salzburg, a Serbian
-from southern Hungary, another Ruthenian, an Austrian-German from
-Moravia, an Austrian-German from Bohemia, and a Moravian from Moravia.
-
-I spent a couple of hours here, talking sometimes with each of the
-patients, sometimes with all. The Pole knew only Polish and the
-bearded Russian, who had a bad body wound, was too tired to talk much.
-Of the Ruthenians one was a frail, white-faced boy from close to the
-Russian frontier who seemed, like most of his people, subdued, and
-confused with the strangeness of his position in fighting against his
-own people; the other was a lumpish boy without much intelligence. The
-thin, bearded Hungarian, who knew no German but a little Russian, was
-mostly groaning or dozing. The Salzburg Austrian was dazed and drowsy,
-but at intervals talked quietly of his pleasant homeland.
-
-The German stood out from the rest. He was a bright, vigorous boy of
-twenty, had gone as a volunteer and was tremendously proud of the
-spirit of the German army. He had fought against the French during
-four days of pouring rain, mostly in standing water. The Bavarians,
-who seemed to have quarrelled with the other troops in that part, were
-making war atrociously, he said, knifing the inhabitants, insulting the
-women and destroying all that came in their way. He was later moved to
-the Carpathians, where one German division fought between two Austrian
-ones. They advanced in snow without field kitchens, and were not
-allowed to touch the pigs and poultry that they passed. However, they
-had enough to eat; and they were hoping to surprise their enemy, when
-the Russians fell upon them and left only the remnants of a regiment,
-many of the officers also falling. He himself was wounded in both legs,
-and was brought here in a cart.
-
-Every German soldier has a prayer-book and a song-book. They constantly
-sing on the march, and find it a great remedy against fatigue. Songs of
-Arndt and Koerner are very popular, and there is a new version of an old
-song, which is perhaps the greatest favorite; it begins--
-
- "Oh Deutschland hoch an Ehren,
- Du heil'ges Land der Treu."
-
-and it goes on to speak of the new exploits in east and west. There are
-any number of volunteers in Germany; the women are all joining the Red
-Cross; and the population is busy with every kind of work for the army;
-but when I asked whether the people were keen for the war, he answered
-with astonishment, "The people? The people thought that the war was
-not to be avoided; but that was at the start; now it is different."
-He asked if there were many other Englishmen in Russia, and when I
-answered that there were some, he said, to my surprise, "The English
-are everywhere, they are a fine people--_nobel_." He also asked me on
-the quiet whether, when he was well, he would be sent to Siberia. He
-had been told that the Russians were terrible, but had written home to
-say that he had found them nothing of the sort.
-
-Much of our talk turned on the Austrian army. The German said that it
-didn't stand firm "unless it was properly led, by Germans." In Bohemia
-and Moravia the regiments were mixed, Slavs and Austrian-Germans, and
-according to the Moravian soldiers, were constantly quarrelling; all
-the officers were Austrian-Germans, and even some of the Hungarian
-regiments seemed to be commanded by Germans. The young Serbian spoke
-of frequent quarrels and even brawls between Serbian and Hungarian
-fellow-soldiers. The great wish of all was that the war should end.
-When I said that the end was not in sight, the German exclaimed,
-"More misery, more misery;" a second said, "Oh, Jammer, Jammer"
-(lamentation), and a third had tears in his eyes.
-
-In another ward I heard more of the Bohemians. There Prussia is the
-antipathy. There appear to be Czech officers only in the reserve.
-After the outbreak of war, the Austrians made wholesale arrests
-among the educated Czechs, quite apart from party politics, and
-were particularly severe on the gymnastic volunteer organizations
-(_sokols_), which are popular among all the Slav nationalities of
-Austria. The Bohemians had not had time to find their legs under the
-new possibilities created by the Russian successes, but the Russian
-troops would be sure of a cordial welcome there. The whole of my
-informant's regiment had surrendered _en masse_; and even in the
-mobilization of 1914, a Prague regiment had refused to march against
-Russia and several of the men had been shot. I was told that the
-Austrian army was much weaker in reserves than the Russian.
-
-
-V--HOW THE RUSSIAN SOLDIERS DIE
-
-I ended the day at the railway station, where the Russian wounded just
-brought in were being attended to while the cannon sounded from time
-to time not far off. Several lay on stretchers in the corridors and
-others on pallets in the ambulance room, all still in their greatcoats
-and with their kits lying beneath them. I had no conversations here;
-there was too much pain, one could only sit by the sufferers or perhaps
-help them to change their position. First aid had been given elsewhere,
-but this was the stage when the wounds seem to be felt most. There was
-wonderfully little complaining. Most were silent, except when a helping
-hand was needed. One man shot through the chest told me that "By the
-grace of God, it was nothing to matter." It was always a satisfaction
-to the men that they had been wounded while attacking. A general walked
-quickly round, distributing cigarettes, which he put in the men's
-mouths and himself lighted.
-
-In the night the cannonade sounded close to the town, but seemed
-farther off again next morning.
-
-To-day I also went round a hospital with the dressers. The work was
-quickly executed, but much of it was very complicated. One does not
-describe such scenes, not so much because of the ugly character of
-many of the wounds, nor because of the end impending over many of the
-patients. To this last the Russian soldier's attitude is simple--_gilt
-es dir, oder gilt es mir_. He will speak of it as "going to America,"
-the undiscovered country. But all these things come to be forgotten
-in the atmosphere of work. Here all the resources of life are
-going forward in their own slow way, for they can have no quicker,
-handicapped and outpaced in their struggle to keep up with the work of
-death.
-
-General Radko Dmitriev is a short and sturdily built man with quick
-brown eyes and a profile reminiscent of Napoleon. He talks quickly
-and shortly, sometimes drums on the table with his fingers, and now
-and then makes a rapid dash for the matches. The daily visit of the
-Chief of the Staff is short, because, as the General says on his
-return, simple business is done quickly. Every piece of his incisive
-conversation holds together as part of a single and clear view of the
-whole military position, of which the watchword is "Forward."
-
-It is only the heavy rains that have saved the retreating Austrians
-from further losses. The roads are so broken up and so deep with mud
-that any quick movement is impossible. This gives the occasion for a
-useful rest. The cold weather--and it is freezing now--will be welcomed
-on this side; and the Russian winter kits, which have already been
-served out, are immeasurably better than the thin blue greatcoats of
-the draggled and demoralized Austrians.
-
-Numbers of Austrian units are so reduced that they are only shadows
-of what they were, and some seem to have disappeared altogether. The
-ordinary drafts came in some time ago and are now exhausted--such is
-the testimony of Austrian officers. The new Russian recruits, on the
-contrary, will join the colors shortly.
-
- * * * * *
-
-From the beginning of the war, Bosnians, who are really Serbians,
-surrendered in large numbers. Then the Poles began to come in, and now
-the Bohemians. The Hungarians are sure to go on to the end; but the
-Roumanian and Italian soldiers of Austria have also come over very
-easily. In front of Cracow a Russian officer under fire came on a whole
-number of Bohemians who were singing the "Sokol" songs and shouted a
-greeting as they came into the Russian lines.
-
- * * * * *
-
-These wholesale surrenders have, I think, an extremely interesting
-political significance. When governments turned the whole people into
-an army, it was clear that the army was also being turned into the
-people; but it was not clear how the people could express itself when
-under army discipline. These surrenders, in their general character
-and in their differences of detail, are a picture of the feelings and
-aspirations of the various nationalities which are bundled together
-under the name of Austria.
-
- * * * * *
-
-At this Staff, as at the General Staff, life was very simple. We all
-met twice a day for a plain meal without any alcohol; there was plenty
-of conversation, but it was that of men engaged in responsible work;
-any news from outside was welcome, especially from the western allies,
-and there was full appreciation and sympathy for their hard task.
-
-There was plenty of news from other quarters of the Russian front,
-and one could have a much juster and fuller perspective of how things
-were going than anywhere behind the army; the two things which stood
-out even more here than elsewhere were, on the one hand, the immensity
-of the sacrifices which have been asked and are being cheerfully made
-by Russia, and, on the other, the sense of quiet confidence as to the
-ultimate result.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[16] All numerals relate to stories herein told--not to chapters from
-original sources.
-
-
-
-
-THE ROMANCE OF THE FRENCH FOREIGN LEGION
-
-_The "Glorious Rascals"_
-
-_Told by E. S. and G. F. Lees_
-
- The reinstatement by the King of Lieutenant-Colonel John Ford
- Elkington in the Royal Warwickshire Regiment, after he had served
- for twenty-two months with conspicuous bravery in the French
- Foreign Legion, has once more drawn attention to this unique
- military organization. As the writers of this story show, "La
- Legion Etrangere" of our Allies the French is literally steeped
- in romance, and it is therefore the romantic side of the heroic
- yet often maligned legionaries which they have set forth most
- prominently. Practically every man in the corps has a history, if
- he could only be induced to tell it, and in the present war the
- Legion has covered itself with glory, as shown in this story in the
- _Wide World Magazine_.
-
-
-I--STORY OF "THE GLORIOUS BLACKGUARDS"
-
-Budding novelists in search of ideas for tales of adventure, short
-story writers who have come to the end of their stock of episodes,
-and all who wield the pen either for amusement or instruction, may be
-recommended to turn over the pages that tell the story of the Foreign
-Legion. There is a whole literature at their disposal, covering
-a period of more than eighty years and written in almost as many
-languages as there are nationalities in this remarkable military body,
-and it teems from beginning to end with incidents which respond to the
-entire gamut of human emotions.
-
-The Foreign Legion, which in time of peace is composed of between eight
-and ten thousand men, but which now probably exceeds the strength of
-an army corps, since no fewer than thirty-two thousand odd foreigners
-enrolled themselves from August 21st, 1914, to April 1st, 1915, is,
-as it were, a microcosm of the world. According to official French
-returns, there were in its ranks at the beginning of the war nine
-thousand five hundred Alsatians and Lorrainers, fourteen hundred and
-sixty-two Belgians, three hundred and seventy-nine English, three
-thousand three hundred and ninety-three Russians, four thousand nine
-hundred and thirteen Italians, thirteen hundred and eighty Greeks,
-five hundred and ninety-one Luxembourgers, nine hundred and sixty-nine
-Spaniards, one thousand eight hundred and sixty-seven Swiss, thirteen
-hundred and sixty-nine Austro-Hungarians, one thousand and twenty-seven
-Germans, five hundred and ninety-two Turks, six hundred Americans, and
-four thousand two hundred and fifty-four of various other nationalties,
-including, in all probability, as at the time of the Empire, Poles,
-Albanians, Croatians, Illyrians, and negroes.
-
-In this world-in-little all classes of society are represented--the
-prince and the pauper, the scholar and the illiterate, the one-time
-brilliant officer, prominent financier, and ecclesiastic. All of them
-are brought to a common level with the lowest of the low through
-inherent human weakness, some foolish act committed in haste and
-repented of at leisure, or else through some misfortune or other over
-which the man who is "down on his luck" has no control whatever.
-
-The social outcast, the deserter, the gambler, the fugitive from
-justice, the man who has been crossed in love, the desperate man
-who, on second thoughts, prefers the ranks of the Legion to suicide,
-the man who has a pure love of soldiering or an inordinate taste for
-adventure, the out-and-out failure who has been told by his family to
-"make good" and clean off his debt to society--all of them are found
-here, living under the shadow of mystery, undergoing the most arduous
-life imaginable, and, for the most part, suffering in silence. So
-heterogenous are they that the legionaries, quite unjustly, have been
-called many ill names. Through the faults of a few, who necessarily
-find their way into such an organization, they have all been
-indiscriminately labelled with such epithets as "band of criminals,"
-"degenerates," "troop of dishonoured foreigners," "heartless
-mercenaries," and so on. But many sins can be forgiven the soldiers of
-the Legion when we read their history aright, and come to understand
-their Spartan characters in the hour of trial and danger. And it is for
-that reason that, despite their antecedents and shortcomings, they are
-now generally known in French military circles as "The Heroic Rascals,"
-or as "The Glorious Blackguards."
-
-The Foreign Legion can trace its origin to the days of the Scottish
-archers, employed by Charles VII. of France, and to those of the Swiss,
-Albanian, Flemish, Walloon, German, Italian, and other mercenaries in
-the service of his successors. At the time of the Convention, in 1793,
-an appeal was made to the nations of Europe for soldiers, with the
-result that several foreign regiments fought with the revolutionary
-armies. All these, however, were disbanded at the fall of Napoleon.
-When Louis XVIII. came to the throne he created the Royal Foreign
-Legion in their place, but they gradually merged into the regular army.
-However, after the 1830 Revolution the Foreign Legion was revived,
-and ever since they have taken part in nearly every foreign campaign
-in which France has been engaged--in the conquest of Algeria, in the
-Crimean War, in Mexico, Tongking, Formosa, Madagascar, and Morocco.
-
-
-II--ASYLUM OF BRAVE UNFORTUNATES
-
-Admission to the Legion is not the result of the efforts of the
-recruiting sergeant. All the men are volunteers, and although all
-classes and all nationalties are welcome to join they are not unduly
-encouraged to do so. There have been cases in which men who have come
-to enlist at the military headquarters in Paris have been told of the
-disadvantages they would have to encounter, and advised "to think the
-matter over seriously" before signing away their liberty for a period
-of five years. Yet, almost to a man, they have come back to undergo the
-extremely rigorous medical examination--the only examination, by the
-way, with which they are troubled. For, as regards their real name and
-nationality, no proofs are required. The authorities show no curiosity
-whatsoever about a man's past. They take it for granted that he has a
-very good reason for wishing to disappear for a while from the society
-of his relatives and friends and become merged with others of like mind
-in a semi-anonymous body, training, marching, and fighting without
-respite.
-
-The military authorities formerly used to pay the legionaries
-the princely salary of a half-penny a day (recently raised to
-twopence-halfpenny), and their kit does not even include socks, yet
-they are expected to possess sufficient physical vigour to march a
-distance of twenty to thirty-two miles, over rocky, slippery ground and
-through jungles, in less than eight hours, halting only ten minutes
-each hour, and with a load of seventy to eighty pounds. This is a
-terrible test of speed and endurance, yet one out of which these men
-come, through systematic training, with flying colours, and of which
-they are all of them justly proud. "No questions asked, but strict
-obedience and iron discipline"--this might be the motto of the corps,
-in which such famous soldiers as MacMahon, Canrobert, Chanzy, De
-Negrier, Serviere, and Villebois-Mareuil have been officers. In spite
-of this display of delicacy, however, many a man's story leaks out. He
-may be as silent as the Sphinx for years, yet the time comes when his
-taciturnity is overcome through some little incident, and his secret,
-or part of it, as in a case related by Mr. Frederic Martyn, in his
-"Life in the Legion," is out.
-
-It was during the French campaign in Mexico, says Mr. Martyn, who
-himself served for five years in the Legion. A large city having been
-captured, the general in command wished to propitiate the inhabitants
-by celebrating a spectacular military High Mass in the cathedral. When
-all the troops had been assembled, it was found that the clergy had
-gone on strike. In the face of this dilemma, the general was just about
-to abandon the ceremony when a corporal of the Legion stepped forward
-and, saluting, said, "_Mon general_, I was a bishop before I became a
-corporal, and I will celebrate the Mass." Another eye-witness of this
-incident states that the ex-bishop also offered to preach a sermon, but
-the general considered that the Mass alone was sufficient.
-
-M. Maurer, a former officer in the Legion and now President of the
-Mutual Aid Society for former officers, N. C. O.'s, and soldiers of the
-foreign regiments in Paris, informed us that he remembered this bishop,
-whose fall was due to drink.
-
-This recalls another ecclesiastical anecdote. At the time of the
-Fashoda incident a legionary was drowned at Zarzis whilst attempting
-to save a fisherman. His comrades made a coffin out of the only wood
-available, some pieces of old packing-cases, on one of which--the
-portion, as it happened, which we used for the top--were the words,
-"Keep the contents dry." Again no priest was thought to be there to
-perform the last rites over the dead, until an Italian private stepped
-forward, revealed his priestly identity, and recited the Burial Service
-by heart.
-
-
-III--FROM PRINCE TO LEGIONAIRE--THE KAISER'S COUSIN
-
-The fall from bishopric to the rank and file of the Foreign Legion is
-not the biggest social drop on record in the Legion. In 1897 a young
-man of twenty-six, who gave his name as Albrecht Friedrich Nornemann,
-was accepted for service. After ten months in barracks at Geryville
-he broke down under the severe training, was sent into hospital, and
-in a few weeks died of phthisis. A day or two later the regiment was
-astonished to learn that a German war-vessel had entered the harbour,
-entrusted with the astounding mission of fetching the body of Albrecht
-Friedrich, cousin-german of Prince Henry of Prussia, and consequently
-cousin of the Kaiser, who, having ordered the remains to be brought
-back to Hamburg, probably alone knew the prince's secret.
-
-Six years before this remarkable incident, which is vouched for by
-more than one authority, another man of mysterious origin--who, if
-he was not actually a prince of the realm, was in all probability of
-royal blood on one side--was discovered in a Tongking battalion. A
-sergeant and the owner of an illustrious name, since his father was
-a general and Minister to a European monarch, it was noticed that he
-never received any letters from his father, but that every month the
-paymaster handed him a thousand francs which he never failed to share
-with his less well-to-do comrades. Why was he there, and what was the
-mystery surrounding his birth? was often the mental reflection of
-those who enjoyed his friendship and generosity. Only after his death
-did they get an inkling of the truth. His military book stated that
-his name was V. de S----, son of V. de S----, General of Division and
-Minister of War. "There was no mention of his mother's name," said
-a superior officer to M. de Pouvourville, who tells the story, "and
-there can be little doubt that she was of too illustrious a rank to
-acknowledge a son the circumstances of whose birth had placed him
-beyond the pale."
-
-Some excellent stories of life in the Legion were told to the authors
-of this article by the above named M. Maurer.
-
-One of his orderlies was Graf X----, the son of the then Governor of
-Brandenburg, but he could never learn in what circumstances this man
-had fallen from his high estate. It was different in the case of his
-particular chum, a young Englishman of distinguished manners, who spoke
-several languages and was an accomplished musician, though the secret
-of his life did not come out until several years after M. Maurer had
-retired and returned to Paris. One day, when passing the Madeleine,
-he saw a splendid equipage, drawn by a pair of magnificent greys,
-with silver harness, standing outside the church, and, lo and behold!
-sitting in the carriage was his old chum. Hailing him by the name by
-which he had always known him, M. Maurer was astonished to see his
-friend put his finger to his lips. The next moment he was invited to
-enter the carriage, and, with an invitation to dinner, off they drove
-to a fashionable restaurant in the Champs Elysees. Over dinner M.
-Maurer's former comrade told him his real name and story. A young man
-of good family, he had started his career with an excellent position in
-the Bank of England. One day, when ten thousand pounds had been slid
-into his hands, a sudden temptation came over him, a foolish desire
-to have a flutter at "Monte." So he took the earliest opportunity of
-leaving London. As was only to be expected, the inevitable happened;
-he lost at the tables every penny of the sum he had embezzled. Aware
-of the disgrace that awaited him when the theft was discovered, he
-enlisted in the Foreign Legion.
-
-"Now, it is a well-known fact," concluded M. Maurer, "that the sins
-of a man who has served his full time in the Legion are wiped off the
-slate, and I suppose that something like this must have happened in
-the case of my young friend. I have no doubt that his family restored
-the money. Anyway, he attained his rehabilitation. He is the bearer
-of a very well-known name, and to-day occupies an important--a _very_
-important--post in public affairs in England."
-
-
-IV--THE ROMANCE OF THE EURASIAN
-
-Another little romance revolving round the life of a legionary, whose
-birth was enveloped in mystery, was told some years ago by a British
-soldier who served in the Legion. After an engagement at Cao-Thuong,
-there was found on one of the dead, sewn in a belt, six British war
-medals and a letter addressed to the narrator. Judge of his surprise
-when he found that it was in perfect English, of which he had never
-for a moment suspected his comrade-in-arms had a knowledge, and
-that it contained the statement that the medals had been won by the
-writer's father and grandfather in India. His mother, the writer
-explained, was a native, and therefore he, as a Eurasian, although born
-in wedlock, was ineligible for the British Army. As his tastes were
-wholly military, and the greatest desire of his life was to add to his
-forebears' collection of medals, he had enlisted in the Legion.
-
-The mental attitude of the man who regards the Foreign Legion as a _pis
-aller_ is a common trait among its members; it is often, indeed, the
-last resource of those who have met with life's disappointments.
-
-There was once an officer of the German army who had invented a new
-type of cannon, and could not get its merits recognised, either by his
-own country or by France, as rapidly as he would have liked, or receive
-prompt remuneration for his work. Straightway, therefore, he went and
-joined the Legion Etrangere. Some little time later, in 1895, the
-French authorities, waking up to the possibility of the value of the
-work of so eminent an engineer, approached him on the subject, but by
-then he had become thoroughly soured. He declined to have anything to
-do with them, and with the air of one whose genius has been recognised
-too late hastily returned to his kitchen, where he had long carried out
-the duties of regimental cook.
-
-In the barracks at Sidi-bel-Abbes, where the most cordial and
-frequently rowdy _bonne camaraderie_ reigns, failures in art, science,
-literature, and every other walk in life may be found by hundreds.
-Special cases like that of the gallant Lieutenant-Colonel Elkington,
-who, after being cashiered by general court-martial, joined the Legion
-as a simple private at the beginning of the present war and won his
-way to distinction, are rare. He was in the thick of the fighting in
-the Champagne country, lay for ten months in hospital badly wounded,
-and before regaining the confidence of his King and country was
-personally decorated with the Medaille Militaire and the Croix de
-Guerre by an officer attached to General Joffre's staff. To find an
-exact parallel to this instance of reinstatement in the British Army
-would be difficult. Among the legionaires, however, there have been
-quite a number of men of the type of the American Daly, an artist and
-pupil of Gerome, who lost at Monte Carlo everything his father had
-given him to pay for his art training in Europe; scores, too, of such
-enigmas as that fine young fellow who joined the Legion in 1893, served
-in Tongking, and left in 1898, at the end of his time, when by chance
-his superiors discovered that he had been first tenor at the Theatre de
-la Monnaie at Brussels. Not a note had he sung, not a single reference
-to music had he made whilst in the regiment! Ah, what stories some of
-these ne'er-do-wells, drunkards, comedians, and gentlemen with fine
-manners could tell if only they would consent to open their lips!
-
-
-V--WHY GERMANS HATE THE FOREIGN LEGION
-
-Many of them, of course, have no tale worth telling, and among these
-are the deserters from other armies. If we include the Alsatians and
-Lorrainers who join to avoid service under the hated German flag, they
-form a very big class indeed. Nearly every year more than a thousand
-men of the annexed provinces and more than a thousand Germans flocked
-to the French standard, with the result that the Legion has always
-been disliked and slandered by Germans. We have before us seven
-closely-printed pages forming a list of books and pamphlets written
-by German writers, who, filled with Pan-Germanist hatred and inspired
-by the virulent libels of anonymous scribes, have endeavoured for the
-past twenty years to throw mud at a military organization into which so
-many of their countrymen escaped. This prompts new thought. If German
-soldiers are so glad to join a body in which life is "a veritable hell
-upon earth," where men "never taste meat, but only bread and rice,"
-where they "sleep on the bare ground," where "noses, ears, and fingers
-are cut off for the slightest fault," where they are "buried in the
-sand to the waist with an iron cage over them filled with hungry
-rats"--the last idea was stolen by the German slanderers from Octave
-Mirbeau's "Jardin des Supplices"--what must their life in their own
-army be like?
-
-As a matter of fact, many Germans who have served in the Legion have
-had, on their return home, nothing but good to say about it, and have
-become voluntary recruiting agents for France, hence an increased
-bitterness on the part of the Huns. A few years ago deserters from the
-German army became so numerous that a society was formed at Munich,
-bearing the name "The German Protection Society Against the Foreign
-Legion." Several times men were arrested for trying to persuade their
-comrades to join the Legion, but they had to be released, as it was
-found that they were pure-born Teutons.
-
-And now let us apply the supreme test and look into the fighting
-record of the legionaries. As military experts are agreed that they
-are among the finest fighters in the world. Innumerable instances of
-their stubbornness can be given, and it is the quality which has made
-them, time after time, invaluable as a "stiffening" whenever it has
-been considered necessary to draft a number of soldiers of the Legion
-into a regiment of less experienced troops. "The most pusillanimous of
-them," said an old French officer, who had seen much service in Africa,
-to us, "will hold out to the death when side by side with a legionary
-and inspired by his superb courage."
-
-One of the feats of the Foreign Legion was the taking of Son-Tay on
-December 16th, 1883, a square brick _citadelle_ protected by a hundred
-cannon, a moat five yards wide, and hedges of bamboo, and defended
-by twenty-five thousand men--ten thousand Chinese regulars, ten
-thousand Black Flags, and five thousand Annamites. As an example of
-pure bravery, look at the thirty-six days' siege of Tuyen-Quan, which
-in 1885 was held by six hundred legionaries against twenty thousand
-Chinese. Few celebrated sieges have attained and none surpassed in
-horror what took place there. On the occasion of the Camerone affair,
-in Mexico, sixty-five legionaries, without food or shelter, in an open
-court and under a tropical sun, held in check for more than ten hours
-two thousand enemies, three hundred of whom they killed. The word
-"Camerone" is embroidered on the flag of the Foreign Legion, and if
-you go to the Invalides you will see on one of the walls, in letters
-of gold, the names of the three officers who directed that handful of
-heroes, with the date of the fight: "Lieutenant Vilain, Sub-Lieutenant
-Mandet, and Captain Danjou; April 30th, 1863."
-
-
-VI--FRANCE'S TRIBUTE TO THE LEGION
-
-The bravery of the Foreign Legion has been so conspicuous that on
-February 16th, 1906, M. Eugene Etienne, then Minister of War, proposed
-that the flag of the 1st Foreign Regiment be decorated with the Legion
-of Honour, "in recognition of the acts of devotion, courage, and
-abnegation which a troop, ever on a war footing, renders to the country
-in the defence of its Colonial possessions." This was done, and at the
-Invalides, in a special case, can be seen an old flag of the regiment
-bearing the date September 24th, 1862, a flag which had been retaken
-from the enemy, and on the staff of which hangs the Cross of the Legion
-of Honour, the finest tribute which France can pay to the glorious
-deeds of the Foreign Legion.
-
-During the present war a further distinction has been granted the
-marching regiment of the Legion. Authority has just been given the men
-to wear the _fourragere_, or braid, over the left shoulder. The flag of
-this regiment had already been decorated with the Croix de Guerre.
-
-The latest recorded exploit of this gallant corps was the capture,
-at the point of the bayonet, of a fortified village strongly held by
-the enemy. The men of the Legion held out so vigorously that all the
-enemy's counter-attacks were beaten off, and seven hundred and fifty
-German prisoners were sent to the rear.
-
-The British residents in Paris and other parts of France who
-volunteered for service in the French army and trained at the Magic
-City in 1914 were drafted into the Foreign Legion, and the survivors
-have reason to be proud of their old corps.
-
-But the complete history of the doings of the Legion during this war
-can only be written some time hence. Suffice it to say, in addition
-to the above facts, that they have been mentioned in army orders no
-fewer than three times--a distinction not won by any other French
-regiment. At one time, during the Champagne campaign, they advanced
-eighteen kilometres into the enemy's front, and if only there had been
-reinforcements to back them up there is no doubt a great victory would
-have been won. The many personal heroic deeds, too, necessitate names
-and details which will not yet pass the Censor's scrutiny. But one
-incident, in conclusion, perhaps we may mention, as recorded to us by
-M. Maurer.
-
-"One of my former men, an Alsatian peasant of the lowest type, speaking
-only of his own _patois_ and unable to read or write, came to Paris
-after serving fifteen years in the Foreign Legion. I was instrumental
-in getting him a place in a public wash-house, where he drew a handcart
-for the sum of four francs a day, which, by the by, he promptly spent
-in drink as soon as it was handed to him. As soon as war was declared
-he was off again to his _metier_. He returned on leave after ten months
-in the trenches, and came to see me. Judge of my surprise when I found
-he had become a sub-lieutenant, wearing the Croix de Guerre and Croix
-Militaire with the three palms! Still unable to speak more than a dozen
-words in French he explained in his dialect, when I inquired what he
-had done to acquire such distinctions, that he had killed fifty-two
-Boches in the most dramatic circumstances. Night after night he had
-slipped out of his trench, and like a snake in the grass crawled across
-'No Man's Land' to the enemy's listening-posts, which are invariably
-under the charge of experienced officers and picked men. He did his
-work silently and expeditiously--with a knife. A terrible but true
-anecdote of this relentless war!"
-
-
-
-
-ADVENTURES OF WOMEN WHO FACE DEATH ON BATTLEGROUNDS
-
-_Little Stories of Woman's Indomitable Courage_
-
- This is a group of little tales of brave women--direct from the
- battlefields. They are but typical of the noble deeds of the
- mothers and daughters of all nations throughout the war. It has
- been estimated that forty thousand women have fought in the
- armies--thousands of them in soldiers' uniforms. The first three
- stories told here are from the _New York American_, and the fourth
- is from the _New York World_.
-
-
-I--STORY OF ENGLISHWOMAN WHO RISKED LIFE ON RUSSIAN BATTLEFRONT
-
-Mrs. Hilda Wynne has youth, beauty, wealth and fascination--she cast
-them all into the great pool of the war in Europe, and added bravery to
-them--a limitless bravery. She wears the Croix de Guerre, the gift of
-France. King Albert of Belgium decorated her with the Order of Leopold,
-and Russia honored her with the Order of St. George. These rare
-distinctions she won by unique service. She drove her ambulance between
-the first trenches. Back and forth she went, driving her automobile
-at furious pace with the fire pouring upon her from the allies on one
-side and the Germans on the other, but a mile separating them. Her
-unit worked between the first trenches, the only workers permitted
-to operate on this danger line. Mrs. Wynne and her organization, the
-Bevan-Wynne Unit, have saved more than 25,000 lives of wounded that but
-for her speedy aid would have been lost. She then came to America for
-the specific purpose of interesting Americans in the needs of Russian
-soldiers.
-
-_Told by Hilda Wynne, herself_
-
-I have looked into the eyes of death and seen there many things.
-
-Looking upon the human carnage I have witnessed, from this distance and
-in the little breathing space I have taken from service to make you
-Americans know the Russians and their needs better, I testify that I
-have seen thousands of heroic acts, but the bravest act happened on the
-Russian front.
-
-I saw two aviators go up to certain death. They were a Russian and a
-Frenchman. Both were little men. They went up to meet twenty German
-aeroplanes. It was suicidal. But they had been ordered to go--and
-theirs was the spirit of the gallant six hundred. I stood near them as
-they made ready to go. They said nothing. That is one of the lessons
-you learn in war--not to waste time nor words.
-
-They got their machines ready as a rider tests his saddle straps and
-stirrups before starting for his morning gallop through the park.
-A little pothering and fixing of the machinery and they had gone.
-They went straight up and began blazing away at the German planes. I
-watched and the cords of my heart tightened, for the German planes,
-looking like great gray birds with wings wide spread, came closer
-and closer. They surrounded them. They formed a solid double circle
-about them. Then they began to fire. And I turned and covered my eyes
-with my hands, for out of that solid, ominous group two dots detached
-themselves and fell. A few seconds later what had been aeroplanes were
-splintered wood and what had been men a broken mass covered by smoking
-rags.
-
-While this was the bravest act I saw in two and a half years on the
-firing line, I readily recall the most pathetic. It was the second
-line of men in the Russian trenches. They were unarmed soldiers. There
-were no guns for them. They took their places there expecting that the
-man in front might drop, and the second line man could pick up his gun
-and take his place. The reports that some of the Russian soldiers have
-desperately fought with switches I have no doubt is true.
-
-I have seen many of the allies die. They all die bravely. At Dixmude
-when the fusiliers arrived 8,000 and went out 4,000 there was
-magnificent courage in death. The Frenchman dies calling upon his God.
-The Englishman says nothing or feebly jests; just turns his face to the
-wall and is still. The Russian is mystic and secretive. The Russian
-lives behind a veil of reserve. You never fully know him. In the last
-moments you know by his rapt look that his soul is in communion with
-his God.
-
-One of the deepest, unalterable truths of the war is the German power
-of hatred. It is past measuring. An example occurred at Dixmude. When
-we had been there three days we were driven out. I took my car filled
-with the wounded across a bridge just in time. A second after we had
-crossed there was a roar, then a crash. A shot had torn the bridge to
-pieces. Three weeks later to our hospital was brought a wounded German.
-
-"I know you," he said. "We nearly got you at the bridge at Dixmude."
-
-"I remember," I said.
-
-That man's eyes used to follow me in a strange way. Build no beautiful
-theories of his national animosity disappearing, or being swallowed
-up in his gratitude. There was no such thought in his mind. The eyes
-said: "I wish I had killed you. But since I didn't I wish I might have
-another chance."
-
-This after I had driven away a group of zouaves who had taken
-everything from him, including his iron cross, and who were debating
-whether to toss him into the canal then or that night.
-
-It is quite true that the Germans fire upon hospitals. Don't believe
-any disclaimers of such acts. There have been many of them. The
-aeroplanes were circling about and above a rough hospital we had
-constructed and we had to leave it in a hurry. We told the patients of
-their danger and hurried them into ambulances to take them to a safer
-spot. One of the patients was a German. Both his arms had been shot
-away. He was in great pain. I went to his cot and offered to help him.
-
-"Lean on me," I said. But he turned upon me a baleful look.
-
-"No," he said, staggering to his feet. His tormented body reeled as he
-made his way to the door. "No," he repeated. "I will take no help from
-the enemy."
-
-It is true that a shell has burst at my feet. It has happened dozens
-of times. That isn't alarming. If it burst a few feet away I should be
-killed. Shells glance down and under the ground. That saves one if he
-is near it. A shell bursting near one is a commonplace in war.
-
-The shells have a disturbing way about them, more disturbing to
-your plans than your equanimity. Shells prevented my having a nice
-comfortable illness. In southern Russia one can get little to eat.
-Coarse black bread is the chief food. It causes unpleasant disorders.
-I, afflicted with one of them, arranged a table in the corner of
-my tent. I placed remedies on the table, undressed and turned in,
-intending to have a cozy illness of a few days. But as I lay there came
-an angry buzzing. A shell hissed through, carrying away a corner of my
-tent. That ended my illness. I had no more time to think of it.
-
-The greatest peril I encountered was not from shells. I have said that
-one becomes used to them. One of the greatest dangers I faced was on
-a dark night drive along a precipice in the Caucasus. It was while
-the plan to bring troops through Persia to Russia was expected to be
-successful. I went ahead with some ambulances. It was necessary to
-take two Russian officers across the mountain. I offered my services.
-The road was an oddly twisting one. On one side was a high wall, on
-the other a precipice whose depth no one calculated. But as I allowed
-myself to look into it at twilight I could see no bottom to it. We
-started on the all night drive at dusk. The precipice remained with us,
-a foot away, most of the distance. Had my car skidded twelve inches the
-story would have been different.
-
-Then, too, I wandered once within the Turkish lines, mistaking them for
-our own. But amidst a courteous silence I was allowed to discover my
-mistake and escape without harm.
-
-I think I owe my opportunity to do my bit, in the way I have, to the
-fact that I arrived in Flanders a few hours before the fight and the
-officers were too busy to send me back. I had seven automobiles,
-and knew how to use them. I took them to Dixmude and offered the
-automobiles and my services to the cause. I established headquarters
-at Furnes, which is seven miles from Nieuport, eight from Dixmude and
-twenty from Ypres. I drove along the Yser Canal to the parts of the
-field that were under the heaviest fire, for there, I knew, my cars
-and I would be most needed. For a year I worked for the relief of the
-wounded of the French armies. Then I went to Russia, where I found the
-need of help and the sacrifice of life because of lack of that help,
-almost inconceivable. The French armies have 6,600 ambulances. The
-Germans have 6,200. Russia, with a firing line of 6,000 miles has but
-600 motor ambulances.
-
-I established dressing stations in the mountains. Some of these were
-10,000 feet above the sea level. There, on the canvas stretched between
-two horses, the wounded were brought, or so they started. For many of
-them died in the long journey, every step of which was torture to a
-wounded man.
-
-The most exciting experience I ever had was on the Galician border.
-We could approach the battle line only along the Tranapol road, which
-ran for fifteen miles directly under German guns. I was speeding along
-it with an ambulance full of wounded soldiers when a shell struck the
-roadside and exploded, tearing a great hole in the earth fifty feet
-away. The concussion stopped us. Then we went on. I travel on my luck.
-Some time, I suppose, I shall travel too far.
-
-I have given all my fortune to the work. That is what we should
-do--give not what we can afford, but all we have.
-
-
-II--STORY OF THE "SPY-TRAPPERS" OF ENGLAND WHO CAUGHT CARL LODY
-
-Everybody has heard of the tremendous ramifications of the German
-military spy system, which had every move of England's army and navy
-under observation, every gun emplacement mapped out and knew every
-order given to the army before it reached the subordinate officers.
-
-Englishmen were powerless to shake off this spy danger, which
-penetrated into every branch of national life, but English women took
-up the matter, brought the most dangerous spies to trial, put the
-others under armed guard and in various other ways made the lives of
-spies and suspected spies a burden to them.
-
-They have proved that women are the only efficient "spy trappers." The
-leaders of the undertaking are women of title, for they alone would
-have the authority, means and prestige to carry out such a difficult
-and far-reaching work.
-
-The organizer and "chairman" of the committee that has been rounding up
-the spies is Lady Glanusk, wife of a peer and officer, a woman of keen
-mind and very determined, yet tactful personality. Other members are
-the Duchess of Wellington, who is president; the Duchess of Beaufort,
-the Duchess of Sutherland, the Marchioness of Sligo, Countess Bathurst,
-the Countess of Lanesborough, Viscountess Massereene and Ferrard,
-Viscountess Combermere, Viscountess Cobham, Lady Vincent, Lady Leith of
-Fyvie, Mrs. Harold Baring and others.
-
-Among them are some of the most notably beautiful women in English
-society and others who are distinguished by their winning personality.
-Perhaps the most striking beauty is the Viscountess Massereene and
-Ferrard, whose husband is the chief of a celebrated Irish family.
-Equally attractive in her way is the young Duchess of Sutherland, whose
-husband is the largest landowner in Scotland and the United Kingdom.
-
-Another member of the committee noted for her beauty is Mrs. Harold
-Baring, who was formerly Miss Marie Churchill, of New York. Her husband
-belongs to the famous English banking family that possesses four
-peerages. Lady Leith of Fyvie, is another American born member. She was
-Miss Marie January, of St. Louis. Womanly intuition and womanly guile
-exercised by these attractive "spy trappers," on many social occasions,
-have led many Germans to make admissions they would never have made to
-a man.
-
-Before the war thousands of Germans were in positions of trust in
-England, ranging from heads of banks down to such positions as butlers
-in prominent English families and headwaiters in leading hotels. Many
-people believe that German butlers in the employ of British Cabinet
-ministers and British generals have been the most important agents
-for conveying military information to the enemy. Standing silent and
-discreet behind their employers and their guests at the table, they
-listened to many military secrets and they also had other opportunities
-for gathering information.
-
-One of the fair members of the committee dined one evening at the house
-of an English general with a small party of persons highly placed in
-military and official life. When the general joined the ladies in the
-drawing room after dinner the fascinating "spy trapper" drew him aside
-and said:
-
-"General, before I go, I want you to arrest your butler and search his
-belongings. He is a German spy," she said.
-
-"But Lady ----," said the general in amazement, "he has been with me
-for ten years. The man is an excellent butler."
-
-"No doubt," said the lady, "but he is also an excellent spy. Never
-speak to me again if I am wrong."
-
-The butler's room was searched and many notes of an incriminating
-character were found. The lack of positive evidence that he had sent
-information to the German Government saved his life, but he was sent to
-prison with a host of other German spies.
-
-It is generally understood that Carl Hans Lody, the German spy executed
-in the Tower of London, was brought to trial through the efforts of the
-women's committee, although the members disclaim the achievement.
-
-Lody was an officer of the German naval reserve who had resided some
-years in the United States, married and deserted his wife there. He
-was engaged for a time as an agent of an English tourist agency in
-America, work which gave him an excellent opportunity for watching
-military preparations.
-
-Last August he obtained an American passport from the American Embassy
-in Berlin, under the name of Charles A. Inglis, of New York, American
-citizen. He went to England with instructions to obtain information
-concerning the movements of the English fleet for the German Government.
-
-In the disguise of an American tourist, he visited the principal
-seaports of the United Kingdom. While he was viewing the romantic
-scenery in the vicinity of Edinburgh, an attractive member of the
-ladies' committee made his acquaintance. Under the influence of
-sympathetic society Lody became more communicative than discretion
-warranted.
-
-Behind the superficial American accent the natural German accent
-revealed itself in the warmth of confidence. A few days later, Lody
-was arrested and letters, which he had written to Germany, giving
-information concerning English naval movements and which had been
-seized in the mails, were produced.
-
-Lody admitted that he was acting as a spy. After a short trial he was
-condemned to be shot in the old Tower of London. He met his fate very
-bravely.
-
-The "ladies' committee" has hunted down all German headwaiters and
-waiters employed in the principal English hotels and restaurants and
-caused them to be removed to detention camps. These men, owing to the
-peculiar character of their work, enjoyed an excellent opportunity for
-meeting persons of all the important classes of society, and in the
-free expansion that ordinarily takes place at the table all kinds of
-confidences were exchanged within their hearing.
-
-Many Germans of high social position and great wealth, some of them
-naturalized British subjects, have been pursued by the relentless
-"ladies' committee." Professor Arthur Schuster, a born German, but a
-naturalized Englishman, was surprised at his luxurious country seat,
-when a band of detectives descended on him and seized his private
-wireless apparatus.
-
-Lady Glanusk explained to the correspondent of this newspaper some of
-the aims and labors of the committee.
-
-She has turned the drawing and reception rooms of her fine house, at
-No. 30 Bruton street, Mayfair, into offices for the committee.
-
-"Owing to the fact," said Lady Glanusk, "that no serious effort has
-been made by our menkind to round up the 73,000 alien enemies in our
-midst, I felt the call to start a protest by women, as it is women who
-are the greatest sufferers by war. My husband and two sons are fighting
-at the front and thousands of women can say very much the same.
-
-"Ten days after I issued my appeal to the women of England I had formed
-my committee with the definite object that all alien-born enemies,
-whether German, Austrian or Turk, of military age, be forthwith
-interned, whether naturalized or not. Other alien enemies above
-military age or under should be removed at least twenty miles from the
-coasts and kept under surveillance.
-
-"I consider that women as spies and decoy ducks are more dangerous than
-men.
-
-"To such an extent have the women of England been roused that in the
-first couple of weeks more than 200,000 signatures to the petition to
-be presented to Parliament were obtained.
-
-"Alien enemies, Germans and Austrians particularly, were spread all
-along the coast towns and it was impossible to know whether or not
-they were in constant communication with the enemy. For my part, I
-would like to see as many as possible of these 'useless non-combatants'
-dumped right onto German soil. It would be amusing to think of the
-embarrassment of the German authorities having to find food and shelter
-for something like 70,000 fresh mouths. Another trouble is the shameful
-favoritism shown to wealthy and highly placed Anglo-Germans while their
-humbler compatriots are interned without ado.
-
-"Out of the petition of protest has grown what we have named 'the
-anti-German League,' by which it is resolved that no member will employ
-or sanction the employment of any German or alien enemy. Members will
-further refuse to deal with any shops or establishments selling any
-German or alien enemy goods. As the members of our committee are highly
-influential people the movement should be effective and will continue
-for several years. Further, no pains will be spared to improve the
-usefulness of British hotel waiters and other hotel and restaurant
-employees.
-
-"If every British woman will realize that it is shameful and
-treacherous to give financial help to the Germans there will be no
-future need to protect the public from this alien peril, for the German
-Empire will never be in a position to menace us again, for war cannot
-be waged except by a commercially flourishing nation."
-
-Lady Glanusk is a typical Englishwoman, full of energy, go and spirit.
-She is tall and stately, with a beautiful complexion. She received the
-American correspondent cordially and with a friendly grasp of the hand.
-
-During the interview Mr. Joynson-Hicks, Member of Parliament, and just
-recently appointed Chairman of the Unionist Parliamentary Committee
-lately formed to inquire into this alien enemy question, was present,
-as was also Lord Euston, heir to the Dukedom of Grafton.
-
-
-III--STORY OF DAUGHTERS OF ENGLISH NOBILITY WHO WORK IN TRENCHES
-
-Many beautiful girls of the most delicate breeding have gone to the
-front to nurse the wounded--to see the worst horrors of this most
-horrible of wars.
-
-It must not be assumed that they have merely gone to the base hospitals
-to attend to the wounded soldiers brought to them from the front and
-carried to them through the dangerous area. Some at least have gone
-right to the trenches into the midst of the inferno of bullets and
-shells and poisonous gases, where the air is filled with the groans of
-the dying and the stench of the unburied dead and where the very soil
-trembles from the force of the new and devilish explosives that reduce
-humanity to a pulp.
-
-The sights that these delicately reared girls must witness can only be
-hinted at. Many strong men have turned sick at the same experience,
-and even veteran soldiers are only able to endure their surroundings
-by smoking the strongest kind of tobacco. How the spoiled darlings of
-society will come through their terrible experience must be one of the
-most interesting problems of the war.
-
-One of the most strikingly beautiful girls at the front is Miss Gladys
-Nelson, daughter of Sir William and Lady Nelson, who have a house noted
-for its art treasures in Hill Street, Mayfair, the most aristocratic
-quarter of London.
-
-Sir William Nelson is a great railroad magnate, having large
-enterprises of this character in the colonies and other parts of the
-world. He is probably one of the wealthiest men in the United Kingdom.
-He has two sons in the army, and four daughters married to army
-officers. His only unmarried daughter, Miss Gladys, determined that she
-would not do less for her country than any of her family.
-
-Miss Nelson is the purest and most refined type of English beauty.
-She is tall, lithe and athletic, with beautiful golden hair and a
-very delicate, fair complexion. This exquisite daughter of millions
-is actually running a motor ambulance from the trenches in the North
-of France to the base hospital. She helps to carry the poor wounded
-soldiers in her car back of the firing line and then drives them to
-the base hospital. She has been repeatedly under fire and runs the
-risk of being killed almost daily. She was within the firing zone when
-the Germans first began their use of poisonous gases, and it was only
-because she had a full load of wounded in her car that she moved to the
-rear before the deadly fumes reached her.
-
-All the risks of death and injury, however, would seem to be less of
-an ordeal to a woman of sensitive nerves than the sights she must
-constantly witness. The bodies of dead and wounded have been turned
-black, green and yellow, so that they become in many instances a
-caricature of humanity.
-
-Then so furious is the fighting and so difficult the work of attending
-to the wounded that the dead have often been left unburied for days.
-The wounded are often terribly mangled and sometimes left to lie in the
-dirt for hours or even days before the ambulances can find them. Before
-they can be relieved at all their clothes and boots may have to be cut
-from them, and in this process very often large masses of flesh come
-away with the garments. These and other services are rendered by the
-women ambulance workers.
-
-The exquisite Miss Gladys Nelson has been doing her share in this
-terrible work, and, according to last accounts, doing it very
-creditably. Will she come through the ordeal a stronger and nobler
-character or will she break down under it?
-
-One of the bravest English nurses is Miss Muriel Thompson, of the First
-Aid Yeomanry Corps. She belongs to a well-known English family. She is
-a pretty girl of robust physique. She has been right up to the trenches
-in one of the worst centres of carnage in the whole field of war. Many
-badly wounded Belgians, who had no hope of medical attention from
-their own forces, were carried by Miss Thompson from the firing line.
-King Albert of Belgium presented to her on the battlefield a medal for
-bravery.
-
-The beautiful Marchioness of Drogheda, a young matron of the highest
-aristocracy, is nursing the wounded in a houseboat on the Yser River,
-in Belgium, where some of the most terrible fighting of the whole
-war has occurred. This is the spot where the Germans put forth their
-greatest force in the West last October to break down the allied lines
-and reach the English Channel.
-
-The Germans in their advance either killed the Belgian inhabitants or
-at least drove them out and destroyed their homes. The allies in their
-anxiety to stop the Germans flooded the country and destroyed hundreds
-more Belgian homes. The world has never seen a more pitiful and
-death-strewn waste than this once very populous and prosperous region.
-
-The Marchioness of Drogheda and some other English women are laboring
-among the wounded and starving on the Yser, within sound of the guns to
-relieve some little part of the unspeakable misery.
-
-Two of the most noted beauties of the British aristocracy are in
-training to act as war nurses. One of them is Lady Diana Manners,
-daughter of the Duke of Rutland and sister of the former Lady Marjorie
-Manners, whose heart affairs have been of so much interest to the world.
-
-Lady Diana is one of the most charming, dainty and sprightly girls in
-the liveliest set of fashionable society. To think of such a girl amid
-the blood, dirt and horrors of trench warfare gives one the greatest
-shock of all. It has not yet been decided where Lady Diana will take up
-her duties in the war area, but her friends say that her spirit is so
-great that she will go to the most dangerous places that any woman has
-yet ventured to.
-
-Another beautiful girl of equal social prominence who has been training
-as a war nurse is Miss Monica Grenfell, daughter of Lord Desborough,
-one of the most noted sportsmen in England.
-
-In the earlier stages of the war considerable adverse comment was
-excited by the numbers of society women who forced themselves through
-their influence with high officials into the fighting area, where they
-were not fitted to be of help and were often a serious hindrance.
-
-This evil has now been nearly eliminated. With a growing sense of the
-awful seriousness of the war the most frivolous of society women have
-become subdued. Under the direction of such masterful men as General
-Kitchener and General Joffre the army officers and other officials have
-refused to allow any women, however highly connected, who were actuated
-merely by curiosity, to proceed to the front.
-
-Only women qualified to nurse and belonging to a recognized war nursing
-organization are now allowed to go near the fighting area.
-
-At one time criticism was excited by the sight of Lady Dorothy
-Fielding, the twenty-year-old daughter of the Earl of Denbigh, standing
-among a group of admiring French and Belgian officers at the front. It
-was assumed that a girl of such an age and such training could only be
-a hindrance among the fighting men, and it was even hinted that she was
-addicted to flirting.
-
-Whatever she may have been at first, the young Lady Dorothy has now
-changed all opinions of her and become a real heroine. With training
-and experience now lasting for months she has become a most valuable
-as well as courageous nurse in rescuing and caring for the wounded.
-Naturally a strong girl and accustomed to athletic sports, she has
-shown herself peculiarly fitted for this kind of work.
-
-Many ladies of rank interested in the wounded have lately shown their
-good sense by not trying to go to the fighting area. The handsome and
-skittish Duchess of Westminster, who excited some attention at first by
-bustling around among the soldiers in France has now gone to Serbia,
-where there is the greatest need of Good Samaritans. The hospital
-founded by her at Le Touquet, near Paris, has done good work.
-
-The condition of Serbia is such that any women who ventures there must
-see the extremes of human misery. The whole country has been turned
-into a charnel house by the invading Austrians, followed by the still
-more terrible typhus fever. Men, women and children are dying of
-disease without being able to find a bed to lie on or a roof to cover
-them.
-
-One report stated that young Lady Paget had died while nursing typhus
-patients in Serbia. Her mother is the well-known American Lady Paget,
-wife of General Sir Arthur Paget, and the daughter is married to a
-distant cousin, named Sir Richard Paget, British Minister to Serbia.
-Later news came that young Lady Paget had not died of the fever, but
-she is passing through scenes of horror that have not been known in
-Europe for three centuries.
-
-
-IV--STORY OF A NEW YORK MOTHER WHO SOUGHT HER SON IN THE TRENCHES
-
-Paul Planet was sailing away from New York and from the mother he
-adored to fight under the colors of France.
-
-Other women--mothers, wives, sisters, sweethearts--pressed forward.
-They also gazed tearfully after the slowly receding steamer.
-
-The girlish figure with the great brown eyes and firm, resolute mouth,
-stood motionless.
-
-"Paul," she murmured. "He is my only child--my boy!"
-
-Weeks passed--months.
-
-Paul Planet's regiment was at the front. He had learned what it
-means to look death in the face, to live in the trenches, to see the
-horrors and devastation of war. He had fought and fought bravely, and
-experienced no regrets save one--that he must be separated from his
-mother.
-
-"We have always been more like chums than mother and son," he confided
-to his comrades. "Since my earliest recollection until now we have
-never been separated."
-
-But when he drew forth a small picture from over his heart and said
-it was a likeness of the mother for whose loneliness he sighed, his
-friends ridiculed his statement.
-
-"Your sweetheart," they said, "or perhaps your sister. But never, never
-ask us to believe that the likeness is of your mother."
-
-"She is always young--always beautiful--to me she will never grow old,"
-declared the young soldier. But after that he did not show the picture
-again.
-
-In far away New York the fair young mother of so stalwart a son
-learned, as months rolled by, what it means to watch and wait, to
-tremble at the sound of the postman's ring lest it be the harbinger
-of ill news; to live, day by day, in a state of suspense and agony
-bordering upon despair, and to envy every mother she saw whose son
-walked by her side.
-
-Then she, too, sailed for France.
-
-"I must find my boy," she told those who sought to dissuade her from
-undertaking the trip.
-
-For nearly a year had passed and no word had been received from Paul
-Planet. His name had not appeared in the lists of dead and missing, yet
-of his whereabouts his mother could learn nothing.
-
-She applied to the officials at the Army Headquarters in Paris for
-information or assistance in locating her son. Her efforts were
-fruitless. Passports she received to certain sections of the country
-where the family name was known and where she had relatives or friends
-to visit or business to transact, but no permission was accorded her to
-leave the train at any intermediate point nor to visit a military camp.
-
-Day after day Mme. Planet planned and schemed how she might find her
-boy. She made journey after journey in the vain hope that chance might
-bring her near him. Her aged mother now accompanied her.
-
-"It will be a miracle if you ever find him," declared the elder woman
-as they looked forth upon miles of devastated country through which
-long lines of trenches intersected. Everywhere madame's inquiry met
-with the same discouraging reply. Paul Planet, the young soldier in the
-automobile service, might be in one of any number of places. Even if
-located it would be impossible for madame to visit him.
-
-The train in which madame was travelling drew up at a siding near the
-ruins of what had once been a small village. Several troop trains sped
-by. Slowly the sidetracked train pulled forward toward the main tracks
-again. Madame, restless and anxious, crossed the compartment and peered
-from the window. The next instant a startled exclamation escaped her
-lips.
-
-"What is it?" asked her mother.
-
-With frantic haste the younger woman turned and commenced to collect
-their travelling bags.
-
-"I have found Paul," she whispered. "We must leave the train at the
-next station."
-
-Now, all that day Paul Planet, for some strange psychological reason
-which he could not have explained, had felt conscious of his mother's
-nearness. Yet she was in New York, he reasoned and fear smote his heart
-lest sickness or accident had befallen her.
-
-"Rest--for two hours."
-
-Down along the marching line of soldiers the order was repeated. Planet
-heard it and fell out with alacrity. He heard himself detailed for
-temporary duty with a corporal's guard to unload automobile trucks. A
-troop train rushed by and a waiting passenger train pulled slowly out
-from a siding.
-
-Planet glanced up. From the window of the latter train a face looked
-forth--a hand waved. Was he dreaming? Surely that was his mother's
-face he had seen! He dashed forward. The face was very distinct now.
-Impulsively he laid his finger across his lips as his mother had been
-wont to do when, as a child, she had desired him to remain silent. If
-the face at the window was that of his mother they must be discreet or
-she would never be permitted to join him.
-
-"My mother was on that train," he confided to the soldier beside him.
-The man laughed.
-
-"Impossible," he exclaimed. "You have seen a vision."
-
-But Paul Planet had not seen a vision. Two miles further on, when the
-train had come to a halt at the little village station, Mme. Planet
-almost pulled her protesting mother of seventy down the steps. The
-guards also protested.
-
-"Your passports, madame? Where are your passports?" they asked.
-
-"My passports?" she repeated. "Oh, monsieur, I am so excited I do not
-know. There are passports there--papers--anything you want--in that
-bag."
-
-Madame was so charming--the name of Planet was so well known--that the
-bag remained at the station, unopened, and the clever French-American
-mother hurried off in search of her supposed friends.
-
-She found them down along the railroad. A little squad of uniformed men
-unloading automobile trucks.
-
-"Vive la France!" she cried. "Vive la France!" and all the while her
-brown eyes were gazing hungrily, eagerly into the equally brown orbs of
-her son. It would not do to single him out from the others. To do so
-might result in difficulties for him and for her.
-
-The two hours' rest was lengthened to six. Still the detachment waited
-by the roadside. Still madame and her mother waited.
-
-Again the former's ready wit came to their aid. Madame was so
-distressed! The friends she had expected to find in the village had
-gone away. There was no place for herself and her mother to dine. Would
-the soldiers be so kind--so generous----
-
-The soldiers would. They hospitably provided a tent for madame and her
-mother. It might be two days, the officers told them, before another
-passenger train stopped at that station. Madame, overjoyed, resigned
-herself to Providence and basked in the sunshine of her son's presence.
-The ban of secrecy had been lifted now. Their relationship was made
-known and pocket kodaks drafted into service as the troops were
-breaking camp.
-
-"I will have the pictures developed when I reach Paris," said madame
-as she once more clasped her boy in her arms. "I have seen you again
-and I am content. That two hours' respite by the roadside that resolved
-itself into a two days' encampment was a special dispensation of
-Providence."
-
-"It was a miracle, mother," declared the son. "There have been miracles
-all through this war. That you found me was one of them." Then he
-kissed her and marched away.
-
-
-
-
-AN AMERICAN WOMAN'S STORY OF THE "ANCONA" TRAGEDY
-
-_Told by Dr. Cecile Greil, an American Physician_
-
- Dr. Cecile Greil was the only native-born American on the liner
- _Ancona_, which was shelled and sunk by an Austrian submarine. She
- tells this intensely graphic account of the terrible event in the
- _New York Times_. She precedes it with a description of the crowd
- of passengers, mostly poor Italian women and children, that had
- passage on the ship--the most pathetic gathering, it seemed to her
- as they came aboard the ship, that she had ever seen.
-
-
-I--"WHEN THE TORPEDO STRUCK US"
-
-The bell for luncheon rang at 11:30. As we sat at the table, still
-without the Captain, we joked and laughed together, to hide our lack
-of ease. We spoke of trivial things. We were through with lunch now;
-the others were going out; I was rising from my seat, at the same time
-drinking the remainder of my coffee. Then the thing came upon us that
-we had all, strangely enough, felt coming, in our hearts.
-
-A terrific vibration shook the ship. I was thrown back into my seat. I
-knew that the ship must be stopping. I heard a running and scurrying
-about the deck outside. Looking out, I saw, through the dining saloon
-window, six or ten stewards in white whirling out of sight around an
-angle.
-
-"What could be wrong, Doctor?" I asked one of the ship's doctors in
-French.
-
-"Heaven only knows!" he answered, as he carefully adjusted his military
-cape, and hurried out. The dining saloon was emptied in an instant;
-everybody had bolted as if they were running to a fire.
-
-It was evident that something had gone wrong with the ship, though,
-by some queer process of mind, at that moment nobody thought of a
-submarine. But hearing the next moment a sharp, quick crash, as of
-lightning that had struck home close by, at the same instant I both
-thought of the possibility of a submarine--and saw one!
-
-The fog had lifted slightly. There, in full view framed in the window
-with a curious, picture-like effect, lay a submarine with its deck out
-of the water. It was long and flat, horribly longer and bigger than
-the mental conception I had formed of what such a thing would be like.
-There was a gun mounted in front, and another at back, and both had
-their muzzles leveled directly at the _Ancona_.
-
-The submarine stood out in clear, black outline against the white
-background of mist. The fog seemed only to make it more distinct, as it
-always does with objects near by. From a staff in the back broke a red
-and white drapeau. Afterward I learned that this was the combination of
-colors that made the Austrian flag. I was ignorant of it, then, though
-I remembered the exact colors.
-
-So far, I could find nothing tragic or terrible in the situation.
-Possibly we would be in danger of considerable exposure in open boats,
-before other ships, summoned by wireless, would pick us up. I did not
-rush out as the others had done. I stood quite still, in order to calm
-myself, to give myself time to think what would better be done. The
-_Ancona_ had come to a stop. Of that I was certain. I also knew that
-the ship was doomed.
-
-But now there came another terrible crash, and another, and another,
-in different parts of the ship, followed by explosions and the sound
-of debris falling into the water and on deck. Well, they were merely
-destroying the wireless. Still there was no fear of death.
-
-But now I was aware of a terrible shrieking. Everybody was in a
-frightened panic.
-
-
-II--"THE HORROR OF WHAT I SAW"
-
-Well, as for myself--to get excited wouldn't help. I went to my cabin
-as calmly as I could, determined to save what I could of my valuables.
-I put them in my lifebelt. I took a receipt for 20,000 lire, which
-I had left with the purser. I went toward the bow of the ship. I
-descended the staircase to the second cabin, on the way to the purser's
-office. A large part of the staircase had been shot away--and the
-horror of what I saw at the bottom of it made me instantly forget what
-I was going for. There lay three or four women, four or five children,
-and several men. Some of them were already dead, all, at least, badly
-wounded. I made sure two of the children were dead. The purser sprawled
-limply across his desk, inert, like a sack of meal that has been flung
-down and stays where it lies. He had been shot in the head. The blood
-was running bright like red paint, freshly spilt, down his back, and
-his hair was matted with it.
-
-The first series of shots had wrecked this part of the ship, breaking
-through and carrying away whole sections of the framework. I tried
-to get back up the stairs. But in the slight interval of time I had
-consumed, enough additional shells had been discharged to finish the
-wreck of the staircase.
-
-I saw that this was not what the nations call, ironically enough,
-"legitimate warfare," but wholesale and indiscriminate massacre.
-Seeing my exit that way cut off, I started through the second cabin
-to go up the central stairway. The sight that I ran into there was
-indescribable. All the passengers from the third cabin had rushed up
-into the second. They had altogether lost their wits. The only thing
-that was left them was the animal instinct for self-preservation in its
-most disastrous and most idiotic form. Men, women, and children were
-burrowing headforemost under chairs and benches and tables. I saw one
-man, his face pressed close against the floor sidewise, heaving a chair
-up in the air with his back, in an effort to efface himself.
-
-All the while the detonations, like continuous thunder and lightning,
-increased the panic. Women were on their knees in mental agony, each
-supplicating the particular saint of the part of the country from
-which she came to save her from death. I pushed and shoved them by the
-shoulders. I took them by the legs and arms and clothes, and urged
-them, in Italian, to get up, to put on lifebelts, to get off the ship.
-I told them that, at least, they would find no security from shells
-under chairs and tables.
-
-I found a poor old woman at the foot of the stairs, huddled in prayer.
-Her thin, gray hair straggled loose over her shoulder. I recognized her
-as a woman I had got acquainted with in my search for a fellow-citizen
-to join me in the first cabin. She was 65 years old, she had told me.
-She had seen two sons off to the war, and was now going to a third who
-had emigrated to America and lived in Pennsylvania. It was the first
-time she had ever crossed the ocean. She was sick of the thought of
-war. In the New World she would find peace and comfort for her old age,
-with her "Bambino," as she still called the grown-up man who was her
-son. So when I saw her lying there I was possessed of but one idea--to
-get her off alive. I told her to come with me, that I would protect
-her. She acquiesced, but her fright was so great that she hung limp as
-if she had no spine while I half dragged her to the first cabin deck.
-
-A boat was being lowered. It had been swung out on the davits. It
-already seethed full of people. And more men and women and children
-were fighting, in a promiscuous, shrieking mass, to get into it as it
-swung out and down. The men, with their superior strength, were, of
-course, getting the best of the struggle. Age or sex had no weight. It
-was brute strength that prevailed.
-
-At the sight before her the old woman grew frantic with unexpected
-strength. She suddenly jerked loose from me, and before I could prevent
-her, ran with all the agility of fear and jumped overboard. Others
-flung their bodies pell-mell on the heads of those already in it. Some,
-in their frenzy, missed the mark at which they aimed themselves and
-fell into the sea. To make the horror complete, the boat now stuck at
-one end, tilted downward, and spilled all its occupants into the sea,
-ninety or a hundred at once. They seized each other. Some swam. Others
-floundered and sank almost immediately, dragging each other down. Some
-drowned themselves even with lifebelts on, not knowing how to hold
-their heads out of the water.
-
-I tried to speak with the passengers still on deck. It was useless.
-Everybody was talking in his own particular dialect. Then I realized
-the predicament I myself was in--an utter foreigner, whom they would
-sacrifice in an instant for one of their own nationality. Perhaps if
-only I had some of my jewelry I might be able to bribe my way to safety
-in some such crisis.
-
-
-III--"THE DEAD WERE LYING ON DECK"
-
-I made my way back to my cabin again. There were people dead and dying
-on the deck. I saw one man who had started to run up the gangway to
-the officer's deck come plunging down again. He had been struck in the
-back of the head. Somehow or other, I just felt that my time had not
-yet come. This conviction enabled me to keep my wits about me.
-
-In my cabin I flung up the top of my steamer trunk. As I was searching
-for my valuables my chambermaid appeared in the doorway; half a dozen
-times I had met her rushing frantically and aimlessly up and down.
-
-"Oh, madame, madame--we shall all be killed, we're all going to get
-killed!"
-
-"Maria," I advised as quietly and soothingly as I could, still stooping
-over my trunk; "don't be so mad, get a lifebelt on, and get up out of
-here."
-
-Before she could speak again she was a dead woman. A shot carried away
-the port-hole and sheared off the top of her head. It finished its
-course by exploding at the other side of the ship. If I had not been
-stooping over at the time I would not have lived to write this story.
-
-I snatched up my little jewel-basket with a few favorite trinkets
-in it. I put on my cap and sweater. When I got up on deck I saw the
-submarine carefully circumnavigating its victims and deliberately
-shooting toward us at all angles. I ran along the deck. The sea was
-full of deck rails, parts of doors, and other wreckage, and dotted with
-human beings, some dead, others alive, and screaming for help. There
-was another boat in front that tilted and dumped out its frantic load
-into the sea. Peering over the side of the ship, I saw a boat that had
-already been lowered to the water's edge. In it I recognized the two
-ship's doctors, and two of the seamen. There was also an officer in the
-boat, Carlo Lamberti, the chief engineer. He sat at the helm. I called
-out to them to take me in.
-
-"Jump!" they shouted back.
-
-I threw my basket down. I had a good twenty-foot drop. I have always
-been a good swimmer. Furthermore, I saw that if I jumped into the boat,
-crowded with people, sails, water-barrels, and pails for bailing, I
-might cause it to capsize. So I told them to push the boat away and
-then they could pick me up out of the water.
-
-I escaped with a ducking.
-
-An immigrant girl who followed me flung herself down wildly and broke
-both her legs on the side of the ship.
-
-We were powerless to save any more. The ship might at any moment
-receive the final torpedo from the submarine. The sailors rowed madly
-to get out of danger.
-
-Then the torpedo was discharged. It whizzed across the ship, drawing
-a tail behind it like a comet. It plunged beneath the _Ancona_ as
-if guided by a diabolical intelligence of its own. There followed
-a terrific explosion. Huge jets of thick black smoke shot up, with
-showers of debris. Our boat rocked and swayed in the roughened
-water. The _Ancona_ lurched to the left, righted herself, shivered
-a moment--then her bow shot high in the air like a struggling,
-death-stricken animal. She went under, drawing a huge, funnel-like
-vortex after her.
-
-The Captain and some officers were the last to drop astern, in a small
-boat. Passengers were still to be seen, clinging forward, like ants on
-driftwood, as the ship was drawn down. There were many people wounded,
-so that they could not get off unaided. They were left to die.
-
-The sea now looked absolutely empty, swept smooth. The ship had drawn
-everything down with it. The fog undulating upward, the submarine was
-seen lying in full view, as if in quiet Teutonic contemplation of what
-it had done. Then it moved off, and was soon merged into the waste of
-sea and fog. We felt a great relief when it had departed.
-
-
-IV--SURVIVORS DRIFTING ON THE OCEAN
-
-All that afternoon our six surviving boats drifted within sight of each
-other. When darkness fell large yellow lanterns were lit, and from time
-to time Bengal lights flared and fell. It looked like a regatta held on
-the River Styx, in Hell. The sailors had exhausted themselves rowing,
-so the improvised sails were set. The boat-loads of survivors had run
-the gamut of every emotion. They were now mere stocks of insensibility,
-numb, dumb, and inert.
-
-At six in the afternoon a boat just behind us began sending us signals
-of distress. The men had taken off their shirts and were waving them
-to us on oars. Our sailors objected to turning back, saying that both
-boats would be sunk if we tried to relieve them. But Carlo Lamberti,
-the chief engineer, with a quiet look in his blue eyes, with a rather
-careless, engaging smile, which was habitual to him all the time,
-presented his revolver--and we went back to see what was wrong.
-
-We found that the boat had been struck by a shell and was leaking
-badly. True enough, most of the people in it tried to make an immediate
-stampede into our boat. But again Lamberti presented his eloquent
-pistol and his quiet smile, and with order and precision we took aboard
-the wounded, the women, and children. Then the leaky craft was tied
-to our stern and the men left were easily able to keep it afloat by
-bailing.
-
-"We'll save you, or go down with you!" Lamberti reassured them. This
-chief engineer was the only man who showed signal bravery.
-
-One of the first of the wounded rescued from the leaky boat was my
-former companion, the Marquis Serra Cassano. He did not wish to join
-in the incipient stampede. With four toes of his foot shot away, he
-rose limpingly to assist the other wounded into our boat first, before
-he himself came in. Then with an air of pathetic aristocracy he seated
-himself by me, and wanted to know if any one had a cigaret to spare. We
-had four cigarets on the boat. The men took turns puffing them.
-
-A frantic mother had dropped her baby in the water. I jumped out and
-rescued it. Later on, she got separated from it, and I had it in my
-charge for several days--but that is not in the present story.
-
-We kept close watch on each other's boats till nightfall. As the other
-five would appear and disappear, we would be alternately cheered and
-frightened.
-
-It must have been nearly midnight when one of our sailors cried out
-that he saw a ship's light. But for a long while nothing appeared
-but thin threads of light that filtered through the fog. After some
-discussion as to whether it might not be an enemy craft, we approached
-the direction of the light, till it burst on us in a powerful,
-searching blaze. And we discerned the other boats converging toward it,
-mere moving yellow splurges in the gloom.
-
-The ship that was rescuing us was a French mine layer, the _Pluton_. It
-was hellish-looking, as it beetled over us, but none the less it looked
-like heaven, too!
-
-And now our boat-loads of survivors were close together, and suddenly
-everybody grew voluble and chatty. We shouted across the water to each
-other. I even heard a voice singing. We were saved! We were saved!
-
-
-
-
-THE STRATEGY OF SISTER MADELEINE
-
-_The Story of a French Captain's Escape from the Germans_
-
-_Told by himself, and translated by G. Frederic Lees_
-
- Few men who have succeeded in slipping through the clutching
- fingers of the Mailed Fist have such a moving record of adventure
- to their credit as Captain X----, who here relates his remarkable
- experiences. There is the true Stevensonian flavor in some of
- the episodes narrated; and at the same time the story has real
- historical value, since it opens with a graphic account of the
- Battle of Charleroi, which has not yet been described by the French
- Staff, or by any of the unofficial historians of the war. The
- officer's name is suppressed in deference to his own request when
- he related his experiences in the _Wide World Magazine_.
-
-
-I--MY EXPERIENCES AT THE BATTLE OF CHARLEROI
-
-In relating my adventures, extending over more than fifteen months,
-I cannot do better than begin with the starting-point of the whole
-affair--the Battle of Charleroi. To describe the events which grouped
-themselves around August 22nd, 23rd, 24th, and 25th, 1914, seems like
-telling old news, but, as a matter of fact, the gigantic struggle named
-after the Belgian town of ironworks and mines has yet to be recorded.
-The French Staff has published nothing, unofficial historians--eager
-to be the first to place their researches before the public--have only
-given general and often erroneous descriptions of the advance of Von
-Kluck, Von Buelow, and Von Hausen against Sir John French's forces on
-the Conde-Mons-Binche line and the Fifth French Army holding the line
-of the Sambre, and the newspaper accounts are sometimes contradictory.
-
-I am not going to weary you with military technicalities; we will leave
-questions of strategy and tactics alone and direct our attention to the
-battlefield as seen from two points of view: that of myself, an officer
-in the French Army, and that of an inhabitant of Charleroi, with whom
-I was later thrown into contact, and by whose observations, made from
-the roof of his house, I was fortunate in benefiting.
-
-Picture to yourself the sinuous Sambre, flowing in its deep bed
-through the densely-populated suburbs of Charleroi and the southern
-end of this formerly fortified town. The town itself, imprisoned by
-its walls, is but a small place of some thirty thousand inhabitants,
-but the population is swelled to five hundred thousand by the
-contiguous suburbs of Montigny, Couillet, Marcinelle, Gilly, Chatelet,
-Marchiennes, Roux, Jumet, Gosselies, and others which cluster around
-the ancient nucleus and stretch principally northwards. To fight
-a battle on such a ground as this was impossible, so the German
-forces, descending from the north and the east in unknown hundreds of
-thousands, determined to make for the open-wooded country which lies
-beyond the southern suburbs of the town. Two tremendous obstacles
-stood in their way--the closely-packed houses of the suburbs and the
-strongly-held river. The inhabitants soon learnt to their cost how
-the first of these was to be overcome. Suddenly, shortly after the
-appearance of the advance-guard of the German army, violent explosions
-were heard, accompanied by the pop! pop! pop! of machine-guns and the
-discharge of musketry. The Huns were blasting a broad way through the
-suburbs, setting fire to the houses, and--under pretense that they
-were being fired upon by civilians--shooting the people down in their
-houses and in the streets. Right through the quarters of Gosselies and
-Jumet they penetrated; then branched off to the right and left, one
-band of incendiaries reaching the river through Marchiennes, the other
-cutting its way through the town and reaching the bridge which connects
-Montigny and Couillet. These two points were where the enemy first
-succeeded in crossing the Sambre. Later, when we had begun our retreat
-southwards, owing to pressure from Von Hausen's army massed in the
-Northern Ardennes, they crossed at two other places, east of Charleroi.
-Thus, on Sunday, August 23rd, the preliminaries of the great battle
-were carried out.
-
-South of the river the ground rises gently until it reaches the wooded
-heights in the neighbourhood of Beaumont, Thuillies, Nalinnes, and
-Somzee. I was stationed at the first of these places--a little village
-on high ground, with a commanding view of the green countryside. Who
-would have thought, but for the deafening roar of cannon, the incessant
-rattle of the machine-guns, the occasional whir of an aeroplane
-overhead, and the puffs and rings of white smoke high in air, that we
-were looking on a battlefield? How empty it was! We could see from the
-flashes of the carefully-hidden guns whence death was springing; but in
-the early stages of the struggle only small bodies of the enemy, whose
-greenish-grey uniforms mingled well with the verdure, were from time
-to time visible. At night, however, it was different. The red glare of
-burning villages and farms, set on fire by shells, lit up the sky and
-provided a terrifying spectacle, night after night, for the anxious
-watchers of Charleroi.
-
-
-II--"WE MOWED THEM DOWN WITH MACHINE GUNS"
-
-As the Germans advanced and the battle raged from morning to night,
-it became more and more evident that we were hopelessly outnumbered.
-Possessing an advantage, however, in being on high ground, it was clear
-that we could hold out for a considerable length of time and make the
-enemy pay dearly for every yard of ground we had to give away. When
-once the greenish-grey uniforms began to appear in any considerable
-number, they came on in solid masses, which we mowed down, time after
-time, by rifle and machine-gun fire and by showers of shrapnel from our
-"75's." But others quickly filled their places, and thus the human tide
-advanced, until at last the order had to be given for the retreat. This
-was on August 25th, by which date, after the enemy had been obliged to
-suspend operations for twenty-four hours to collect the wounded, they
-had lost over forty thousand men.
-
-_Ah! les gredins!_ how well they deserved their fate for the shooting
-down of peaceful citizens in Charleroi and the unspeakable crimes
-committed in the communes on the wooded heights of Loverval, Acoz,
-Montigny-le-Tilleul, and Somzee! With what satisfaction our small
-detachments, hidden in the woods, let the German scouts pass on in
-order to open fire at close quarters on the masses of troops which
-followed! They paid, then, for the outrages perpetrated by the Uhlans.
-You ask for an instance. Here is one which was related to me by my
-friend of Charleroi--he who viewed the battle from his house-top, and
-afterwards explored the battlefield to come face to face with this
-grim picture. A typical instance of Teutonic cruelty, I give it in his
-own words: "A little way out of the village of Somzee was a small farm
-inhabited by a young household, including three small children. Honest,
-courageous, and economical folk, they had toiled season after season
-to pay by annual instalments for their property, which they had agreed
-to purchase some eight years ago. The last payment had just been made;
-the children were growing up; the little family was happy. But the
-German monsters came. In a few minutes this hardly-earned happiness was
-shattered. The Boches seized everything--the few cows, the dearly-loved
-horse. They set fire to the farm, shot the farmer, and drove before
-them, into the distance, the poor widow with her four weeping and
-terrified children. What a sinister picture it makes! It was at the
-close of a splendid August day. The little isolated farm is burning.
-A few yards from the door the dead man is lying on his back. On the
-side of the hill which descends to the main road are the silhouettes of
-the Uhlans disappearing in the gathering darkness of night. Tongues of
-flame on the horizon mark places where similar dramas had been enacted."
-
-"Now, then, boys, let them have it hot. Pick off the gunners one by
-one. Marcel, Gustave, Francois, do you keep an eye on the officers.
-_Ah, les gredins!_ we'll teach them!"
-
-It was the day after the battle of Charleroi, and whilst our troops
-were retiring in good order, my men and I, after the fashion of many
-other small detachments, were holding a German battery in check. So
-near were we to the enemy that we could hear the harsh, guttural
-commands of the artillery officers--so different from the tone of
-_camaraderie_ we adopt towards our men in the truly democratic army of
-France--and could see them, though indistinctly, urging on their men
-to the attack. From our trenches on a wooded knoll on the outskirts
-of Beaumont, we kept up a steady fire on those who were serving the
-guns, around which the Boches, falling like flies, quickly began to
-accumulate in heaps. Fresh men incessantly replaced those who had
-fallen, who at last lay in such numbers that the officers, in order
-to make room for the gunners, had the dead dragged away to the rear
-by the feet. Company after company of men fell in this way until the
-German officers, who had either been shot or had decided to withdraw,
-could be heard no more. A lull occurred. Bringing my glasses to bear on
-the battery, I could see no sign of life save the convulsive movements
-of a few of the prostrate men around the guns.
-
-"It looks as though they had had enough," said I, to my friend Marcel,
-a private who comes from the same place as myself--Loctudy, in
-Brittany. "I wonder if we could capture those guns?"
-
-Before he had time to answer a hurricane of bullets came from a hidden
-machine-gun, and one of them found its billet. My poor friend, shot
-through the head, fell into my arms. We laid him gently down, thinking
-of the sad news that would have to be broken to a sorrowing mother at
-home, and then, anger mingling with regret in our hearts, once more
-directed our attention to the invisible enemy, in whose direction we
-hastened to send our compliments in the form of a stream of _prunes_.
-Overhead we could hear the humming of one of our aeroplanes, and
-through an opening in the tree-tops momentarily caught sight of it as
-it moved over the German lines, reconnoitering. Rings of smoke from
-bursting shrapnel broke far beneath it. Its mission over, it moved
-swiftly back to our lines, and within ten minutes Marcel and many
-other brave fellows were avenged. Our "75's" got the range of the
-battery in front of us with marvellous exactitude, and for five minutes
-poured upon it such a rain of shells as to make it seem impossible
-that anything could live within a distance of a hundred yards. The
-dead around the guns were scattered like chaff in a high wind. A great
-silence followed that series of violent explosions. For five minutes,
-in accordance with orders, the men were busy cutting steps with their
-entrenching tools in our trench, so as to spring out of it quickly and
-proceed to capture the guns. Caution prompted another five minutes'
-wait, during which there was not a sign of life before us.
-
-"Now, then, _mes gars!_ time's up," I cried, as loud as prudence would
-allow. "Fix bayonets! Out of the trench as nimbly as you can. Take
-cover, when in the open, as much as possible. Are you ready? Forward,
-for the sake of France!"
-
-
-III--"DEAD ON THE FIELD OF HONOUR"
-
-We advanced towards the guns at the _pas de gymnastique_ and reached
-them without mishap. Some were too shattered by the recent bombardment
-to be of any further use, but others were still intact, and these, as
-it was difficult if not impossible for us to get them away in a retreat
-over a hilly wooded country, we determined to destroy. Ordering some
-of my men to do what was necessary, and as rapidly as possible, the
-others and I kept a sharp look-out. The enemy gave not a sign of life.
-The fuses having been attached to the breeches of the guns and lit,
-we began to retire whither we had come, but had hardly gone more than
-fifty yards, and heard the successive explosions of the guns blowing
-up, when, on looking over my shoulder, I saw a body of Germans emerge
-at a run from a coppice about two hundred yards to our right, and heard
-them open fire upon us. At the same time I felt a sharp, burning pain
-in my side; a curious sensation of intense weakness filled my being;
-and, with a vision of men falling to the ground with extended arms, I,
-too, bowed down, unconscious, to Mother Earth.
-
-That night, as I afterwards learnt, I was posted as "dead on the field
-of honour." After eleven hours of oblivion, I came to myself in a
-German ambulance. My first impression on recovering consciousness was
-that of hearing the gruff, peremptory voice of a German Herr Doktor at
-my bedside; my second, when he had passed on to another sufferer, that
-of seeing a sweet French face bending over me.
-
-"Where am I?" I asked.
-
-"Hush! the doctor says you must speak as little as possible," replied
-the nurse, in a French which I at once detected to be that of an
-educated person. "I will tell you all that you need know for the
-present. You are in our little ambulance at Erquelinnes, on the
-frontier between Belgium and France--a German ambulance. But fear
-not"--this in a lower voice--"my country is France, and I am not
-without influence, or I should not be here. Your wound, though serious,
-will get well in time. Only you must be _sage_, and obey me. There,
-now! _Cela suffit!_ Try to get a little more sleep; the more rest you
-have the better."
-
-It needed but the invitation, the sound of her soothing voice, like
-that of a tender mother speaking to her child, and especially those
-singularly calming words: "Fear not--my country is France," which
-seemed to wrap me within the protective folds of the tricolour, to
-send me back once more into that state of semi-unconsciousness which
-appears to transport one to the borderline between life and death. Loss
-of blood during those many hours while I had lain forgotten on the
-battlefield had, indeed, brought me to so weak a condition that, as
-my benefactress told me later, the doctor had hardly expected to pull
-me through. My wound was one of those which have been encountered so
-often in this war; it exhibited the curious vagaries of which bullets
-are capable. The projectile entered my right side, travelled along a
-downward, curved path, and, avoiding any of the vital organs, came out
-at the other side. A millimetre to right or left, and it might have
-either killed or paralyzed me. As it was, the injury and loss of blood
-were serious, and could only be repaired by many weeks of immobility,
-coupled with skilled medical aid (and I must do the Herr Doktor the
-justice of recognizing that he was highly capable) and the devoted
-attention of my nurse. Ah! kindly benefactress of the ambulance of
-Erquelinnes, know, should you ever read my words, that I can never
-thank you enough for all you did for me. To have shown my gratitude
-too openly amidst the surroundings where your lot was cast--under what
-circumstances I have often tried to imagine--would have betrayed you.
-But, knowing how one French heart can understand another without the
-passing of words, I doubt not that you have long since comprehended the
-gratitude of the soldier of the Republic whom you befriended and saved.
-
-
-IV--ON THE ARM OF SISTER MADELEINE
-
-A month in bed brought me the period when I was declared out of danger,
-and was allowed to sit up in a chair near a window overlooking a
-little garden bright with hollyhocks and sunflowers. Then came the day
-when, leaning on the arm of Sister Madeleine--the name under which,
-she said, I was to know her--I took my first walk and descended into
-that garden, to lie there for the best hours of the day on a _chaise
-longue_, conversing with her, or, when she was occupied with other
-wounded, reading and reflecting. It was Sister Madeleine who told
-me of passing events. But, oh! how discreetly she broke the news of
-the triumphant march of the German armies southward to Dinant and
-westward to Maubeuge! It required no great psychological insight on
-my part to detect where her sympathies lay. Her looks when, the wind
-being favourable, the faint sound of cannon reached us, the tone of
-her voice when France was named, her significant reticence on certain
-occasions, told me much more than actual words. One of these occasions
-stands out in my mind with particular prominence, owing to my having
-read in her words a warning, and conceived for the first time the idea
-of escape.
-
-"The Herr Doktor is immensely pleased with the progress you are making,
-Captain X----," said Sister Madeleine, rising from my side to pluck
-some Michaelmas daisies from an adjoining border. "He says you may be
-allowed soon to take a little gentle exercise in the garden, and do a
-little gardening, too, if you are a flower-lover, as I doubt not. Are
-you inclined that way?"
-
-"I shall be delighted to turn my hand to weeding and planting," I
-replied. "The garden indeed needs attention!"
-
-"_N'est ce pas?_ Poor Jean, our gardener, now with the French colours,
-would be heartbroken if only he could see the wilderness his little
-earthly paradise has become. How grateful he will be to you when he
-returns--if he ever should return after this dreadful war--and finds
-that someone has been tending his beloved chrysanthemums and dahlias.
-When the mobilization order reached him he was in the midst of potting
-slips of geranium in the tool and potting shed yonder"--motioning to a
-little wooden construction at the end of the garden--"and everything
-there is just as he left it. A heap of withered slips lies side by
-side with rows of empty flower-pots, whilst in a corner I saw his
-working-clothes, which he hastily changed before he came to the house
-to wish us good-bye and passed into the unknown."
-
-"I must try to prove myself to be a worthy successor to the brave
-fellow," I said. "Don't you think, Sister Madeleine, that in one
-respect--my unkempt appearance--I shall not make a bad substitute?"
-
-Walking back to me with her bouquet, she gave me a critical look and
-laughed. Certainly, no one at home would have recognized me as I now
-was, with my long beard and moustache and uncut hair. All at once her
-face became serious, and, without replying to my question, she said:--
-
-"There is no reason why you should not start to-morrow. But don't do
-too much to begin with. Though I should like to have you here much
-longer, it would grieve me if that were the result of a relapse.
-You must get back your strength by degrees. And I fear you will
-need every ounce of it in the future. No; do rather too little than
-too much. I have no wish to hear that the Kommandatur at Charleroi,
-who, I understand, is showing great severity just now towards French
-prisoners, should decide that you have recovered sufficiently to be
-included in the next batch to be sent into Germany."
-
-And with these significant words Sister Madeleine left me, to carry her
-flowers to the bedsides of her other patients, and, possibly, to allow
-me to reflect.
-
-Was it not clear that, indirectly, she had indicated a means of escape?
-A feeling of quasi-loyalty towards those who had enabled her to nurse
-one of her countrymen back to health and strength prevented her from
-bluntly saying: "There is a tool-shed, in which you will find a suit of
-old clothes; disguise yourself in them and flee." But her meaning was
-plain. The key to freedom had been placed in my hands, and it was for
-me to use it.
-
-
-V--"I PLAN TO ESCAPE DISGUISED AS THE GARDENER"
-
-I began pottering about the hollyhocks and sunflowers and dahlias the
-very next morning, taking care to alternate my spells of gardening with
-fairly lengthy rests, on the principle laid down by Sister Madeleine.
-Not that they were altogether unnecessary in my still weak state.
-However, my strength returned with remarkable rapidity, after the first
-week of this light work, and every additional day found me more fit
-to carry out my plan, the details of which I had ample opportunity of
-working out. The garden was surrounded by a high wall of irregular
-construction, thus affording a foothold to a skilful climber, whose
-task could be made still easier if he chose--as I had determined to
-do--that portion of the enclosure which was masked by the tool-shed,
-between the back of which and the wall was a space of about a foot and
-a half, providing an additional support for one's body. My resemblance
-to Jean, the gardener, had, by the by, become more and more perfect,
-thanks to work with spade and hoe, and perhaps, at times, owing to
-rather too close contact with the soil. That it would be perfection
-itself when I had donned his garb, at the close of an afternoon's work
-just before turning-in time, I felt convinced.
-
-There was another thing of which I was certain: that Sister Madeleine
-instinctively knew the day and hour I had fixed for my flight. For she
-was so unusually silent on that day in the last week of October, when,
-according to my calculations, there would be no moon until late in
-the night, she was so serious in her mien, and she left me with such
-suddenness after advising me to come in, "now that the sun had set and
-the evenings were getting chilly," that I felt sure she comprehended.
-
-"Thank you, Sister Madeleine," I replied; and I could not refrain from
-adding, in the hope that she would grasp my double meaning: "You have
-_always_ given me such good advice. I shall never forget your kindness.
-But before coming in I must put away my tools."
-
-Without daring to look her in the face, I turned down the path in the
-direction of the tool-shed. Five minutes later I left it, dressed in
-the gardener's earth-stained clothes, passed like a shadow to the rear
-of the building, and was over the wall in a trice.
-
-I found myself in a field, and having not the slightest idea regarding
-the geography of Erquelinnes, went straight ahead at full speed. A
-quarter of an hour's steeplechasing across ditches and other natural
-obstacles brought me to a high road, and confronted me with the dilemma
-as to which way to turn. Without losing a moment's time, for I pictured
-the hue and cry my disappearance would soon be causing, I made off to
-the left. _Fausse route!_ In five minutes I came within sight of the
-lights of the first house of a village, undoubtedly Erquelinnes itself.
-With a vague idea at the back of my head of gaining the Franco-Belgian
-frontier, and--avoiding all small places, where curiosity is most
-rife--reaching Maubeuge, where I might find an asylum among my own
-people until an opportunity presented itself of getting back to the
-French lines, I struck off to the right, once more across open country.
-The dark cloak of night had now fallen, making my progress necessarily
-slow. On and on I crept in the darkness. How long I continued I
-cannot say, but it must have been for several hours, for a great
-weariness suddenly came over me and impelled me to seek sleep. What was
-apparently a small wood lay in my path at that moment. Groping my way
-from bole to bole, I divined, rather than saw, a dry and sheltered spot
-under the trees, and, throwing myself down, quickly fell asleep, amidst
-the calling of the night-jars.
-
-
-VII--"HANDS UP--OR I SHOOT"
-
-I cannot tell you how long I slumbered--probably until two or three
-o'clock in the morning. But I was awakened by the sound of the snapping
-of dry twigs and muffled voices. I sprang to my feet and listened.
-Nearer and nearer came the stealthy footsteps. I retired as cautiously
-as I could; but though I trod ever so lightly, it was impossible to
-avoid the crackling of dead wood, which seemed to my hypersensitive
-ears like so many pistol-shots. Even the thumping of my heart appeared
-audible. One curious thing, however, I noticed: whenever, after a noisy
-retreat, I stopped to listen, there was a corresponding stoppage and a
-long silence on the part of my pursuers. But, thought I, was it at all
-certain they _were_ in pursuit? Would they not, in that case, have come
-on with a rush? "Suppose I crouch down and run the risk of them passing
-without seeing me?" I thought. Whilst I was reflecting; with my back
-to what was apparently a fairly large tree, those who were advancing,
-emboldened by the silence which had intervened, came on with hastened
-steps, and got so near that I could hear their heavy breathing. I
-stepped quickly behind my tree, but too late to serve my purpose, for
-the next moment a stern voice rapped out an oath almost in my ear and
-a flash of light from an electric torch struck me full in the face.
-
-"Hands up, or I shoot!" said the voice. "Who are you?"
-
-"A Frenchman," I replied, obeying the command and deciding, on the
-spur of the moment, that one who spoke to me in my native tongue could
-hardly be an enemy. "And in need of help."
-
-"Good thing you're not a _Pruscot_, mate, or you'd have been a goner.
-In need of help, are you? So are we. Aren't we, _mes vieuz_?"
-
-This last remark was addressed to the speaker's two companions, whose
-indistinct forms I could now make out.
-
-"Very well," continued the speaker, slipping the revolver with which
-he had covered me into his pocket, "I take it to be a bargain. One good
-service deserves another. You help us with some of these parcels, and
-we'll help _you_. I'm not going to ask you too many questions, and we
-don't expect you to be over inquisitive about _our_ business. _C'est
-compris?_ But if we're to get there and back before light we must be
-off. Come on!"
-
-Taking two of the heavy packages which they were transporting, I
-followed them. In a flash, I saw that I had fallen in with a party
-of smugglers, who still continued to ply their calling in the
-neighbourhood of Erquelinnes and other villages on the frontier between
-Belgium and France. Men of nondescript nationality, though hating the
-Teuton with all the ardour of a Frenchman or a Belgian, and ready, if
-a favourable opportunity offered, to rid the world of every Boche who
-fell into their power, they made it their business to be on friendly
-terms with the Prussian officers who were in authority on the frontier.
-Many favours, in the early months of the war, could they obtain from
-them, in return for a discreetly-offered gift, such as a box of cigars,
-or a pound or two of tobacco. When taking any important consignment
-of goods to and fro between their depots on the road from Maubeuge to
-Charleroi, they had, of course, to resort to the traditional methods of
-their calling; and it was whilst on one of these nocturnal expeditions
-that I had encountered them.
-
-
-VIII--THE FORGED PAPERS--TO SAFETY
-
-They were rough individuals, but loyal to their word. Feeling that
-I could not be in safer company, I threw in my lot with theirs for
-nearly a fortnight, hiding by day in the cottage of their leader, on
-the outskirts of a village "somewhere in France," but not far from
-Erquelinnes, and assisting them at night in carrying their goods along
-the little-known paths which intersect the Franco-Belgian frontier.
-Bit by bit I told mine host my tale. He was touched as much as you
-could expect a hardened smuggler to be, swore eternal friendship over
-an excellent bottle of wine, and promised that on the very next day he
-would bring me a surprise.
-
-He was as good as his word. Out of his pocket he drew a paper--a
-duly-signed and stamped pass, obtained from the Prussian officer at the
-frontier village of ----, authorizing the bearer to cross into Belgium
-without let or hindrance. He did more than this: he gave me the name
-and address of a confederate at Charleroi, who would furnish me with
-the means of effecting my escape _via_ Holland.
-
-I crossed the frontier, wheeling a barrow belonging to a friendly
-peasant, who went daily to a bit of land he possessed on Belgian
-territory.
-
-My twenty-mile walk to Charleroi, and a stay of a week in that city,
-were uneventful. On leaving, my smuggler's friend gave me a useful
-introduction to a person in Brussels, whence, with a little borrowed
-money in my pocket, I set off, towards the end of November. The train
-was still running the four miles between Charleroi and Gosselies.
-The thirteen miles to Nivelles I covered on foot; the eighteen miles
-past Waterloo and over ground every yard of which recalled memories
-of Napoleon and the closing scenes of the Hundred Days I traversed by
-train again.
-
-The long sojourn which I was destined to make in Brussels was
-uneventful compared to my late experiences. There I obtained papers
-certifying that I was a Belgian commercial traveller, but discretion,
-you will readily understand, forbids me going into details. Oh, no; I
-did not put those forged papers to too severe a test by use. As much
-as possible, I sought to remain hidden in the terrorized city, and to
-slip out of it for Malines and the villages near the Dutch frontier,
-without showing my _papiers_ any more than was absolutely necessary.
-
-The frontier between Belgium and Holland is of so serrated a nature
-that at the time of which I am speaking it was comparatively easy for
-a hunted man like myself to cross into neutral territory. To do so now
-would be almost impossible, so well do the Germans guard the irregular
-line, the configuration of which is such that it is difficult, in
-places, to tell whether you are in Holland or in Belgium. Fortunately,
-I had come into contact with a person who was expert in getting young
-Belgians across the frontier into Holland, and he agreed to help me.
-
-Here, again, I cannot--on account of those who risked their lives in
-befriending me--go into too many details. Suffice it to say, that on
-the evening of my escape from the frontier village of A---- I was
-instructed to walk to a certain milestone, where I should find a man
-with a red muffler, sitting on a heap of stones.
-
-There, sure enough, I found him--an elderly man with his hands folded
-over the top of his stick, his chin resting on his hands, and his eyes
-gazing innocently into the gathering dusk.
-
-As I passed him I uttered the word "Belgica," which I had been told to
-pronounce, and keep on, without once turning my head.
-
-Very soon I heard his footsteps and the tap, tap of his stick. He
-overtook me with alert step, and on reaching me, said: "Follow me."
-
-We shot off from the main road into a small winding pathway, which we
-followed for some fifty yards. Then, suddenly stopping, the man in the
-red muffler exclaimed: "Holland!"
-
-No word ever before sounded to me so sweet as that. Overcome by the
-thought that once more I was standing on free ground--that I had but to
-follow the pathway on which I stood to reach a Dutch village--and that
-the journey thence to a port and my beloved France _via_ England, was
-but a question of time, I remained for a few seconds lost in reverie.
-At last, mastering my emotion, I prepared to set off before darkness
-completely enveloped the wild landscape which surrounded me. Before
-putting my best foot foremost, however, I was seized with a desire to
-thank the man who had guided me there, so I turned half-round to press
-his hand. To my surprise, however, I found that he had disappeared, and
-that only the gleam of his red muffler marked his progress down the
-path.
-
-
-
-
-TALES OF THE SPIES AND THEIR DANGEROUS MISSIONS
-
-_Revelations of Methods and Daring Adventures_
-
-_Told by Secret Service Men of Several Countries_
-
- It is estimated that more than a hundred thousand spies and agents
- have been in the service of the various countries during the War.
- Several thousand have been captured and several hundred have been
- executed. The German spy system in the United States alone was a
- powerful organization at the beginning of the war. But the American
- Secret Service, one of the greatest organizations of its kind in
- existence, thwarted their plots, interned them in large numbers,
- and drove such men as Boy-Ed and von Papen from our shores. The
- interception of the Zimmerman note to Mexico, the revelations of
- the Swedish duplicity in Argentine, the discovery of Bolo, the
- French financier, the plots in India--and hundreds of others have
- been exposed by the genius of the United Secret Service. Most of
- these stories cannot be told until long after the War, but a few of
- them, gathered from American and European sources, are told here.
-
-
-I--HOW THE SPIES WORK IN EUROPE
-
-The extraordinary ingenuity shown by spies in securing the plans of
-other countries' fortifications has been amply illustrated in the war,
-although, of course, we know but a little part of what the spies have
-accomplished.
-
-A woman was caught at the French frontier seeking to enter Switzerland
-and presumably intending to return to Germany or Austria. She was
-thoroughly searched by a matron, as is customary in such cases, but
-nothing was found.
-
-Certain actions of hers, however, had given rise to serious suspicions,
-and one of the cleverest officers of the French Secret Service was
-detailed to examine her. He applied several tests to her. He finally
-obtained what he wanted by seating her, in an undraped condition, tied
-to a chair, before a warm fire.
-
-"Brutes, you are going to burn me alive!" she shrieked as she was
-forced into a chair.
-
-"Be calm, madame," said the officer. "We only want to admire your
-beautiful back."
-
-There appeared on the ample back of this fair-haired lady an elaborate
-design. To the experienced eye of the officer it represented a plan of
-one of the most important French fortresses. The number of guns, their
-sizes and positions were shown. The angles, sallies and extent of the
-fortifications were clearly indicated. The weak spots in the defense
-were made clear. This fortress had been entirely made over since the
-outbreak of the war, and it was of vital importance to the Germans to
-know its present arrangements.
-
-A German spy in France, evidently a man with military knowledge, had
-obtained access to the fortress, but there was but slight chance of
-his getting home with his knowledge. He had, therefore, used the young
-woman as an innocent looking agent.
-
-The master spy had traced the plans on her back with sulphate of
-copper. This liquid leaves no mark on the skin under normal conditions,
-but when exposed to considerable heat it shows up dark blue. For
-further secrecy, it is stated, the plan of the fortress was concealed
-within another design in the manner described by General Sir Robert
-Baden-Powell. He carried with him an illustrated book on butterflies
-and from this he made what would appear to be specimens of butterflies
-seen in the surrounding country. Then when he had obtained the details
-of a fortress he drew them in among the complicated markings on the
-wings of the butterfly. There they would escape notice by any but the
-most expert "spy trappers."
-
-Miss Sari Petrass, the beautiful Hungarian dancer, who was for some
-time a great favorite in London, is reported to have been shot in
-Budapest as a spy. She is supposed to have been engaged in gathering
-military information in her native country for the benefit of England,
-where she made her greatest artistic success.
-
-When war began, the actress was starring in "The Marriage Market,"
-a Hungarian operetta, at Daly's Theatre in London. She immediately
-returned to Budapest, but instead of continuing on the stage began a
-round of social activities.
-
-She wrote letters to the British army authorities, it is charged, which
-were sent by way of Switzerland in the in the care of young Austrian
-officers, who had been beguiled by her charms. It is said she was
-betrayed by one of her dupes in a fit of jealousy. Although an actress,
-she had a high social position and was a niece of the Countess Ilka
-Kinsky, one of the most prominent members of the Austro-Hungarian
-nobility.
-
-Miss Petrass, according to the report which reached her friends in
-Cleveland, Ohio, was put to death immediately her acts were discovered.
-When taken to the place of execution she fainted and was unconscious
-when shot. The announcement of her execution was the first news her
-family had of the charges against her.
-
-The method of concealing plans of fortifications on the skin of a spy,
-already referred to, has been employed with many variations. In time
-of war or when suspicion of spies is very keen, it is likely to be
-very useful. Then, again, women are usually called upon to carry this
-kind of information, because they are less subject to suspicion and
-watchfulness.
-
-Tattooing plans on a woman's skin has often been resorted to in past
-wars, but the anti-spy officers are now so keen that this way is no
-longer reliable. Various forms of writing on the skin, which only
-become visible under certain conditions, have, therefore, been tried.
-One form of this has already been mentioned. Plans and messages are
-also written in nitrate of silver, which becomes visible and black on
-exposure to sunlight. The writing is also done with phosphorus, so that
-it is only visible in the dark, but that lasts a few hours only.
-
-Women have shown extraordinary ingenuity in carrying information during
-the present war. One wore a large pair of pearl earrings, which, when
-examined, proved to be stuffed with long messages. Another had a little
-woolly pet dog, whose tail was found to be artificial and filled with
-military plans. Another carried a message scratched on the plate of her
-false teeth.
-
-When it has been found impossible for a human spy to reach a fortress,
-birds have been employed. Carrier pigeons are fitted with miniature
-cameras fastened across their breasts by exceedingly fine wires. These
-are fitted with a time lock which ensures their exposure at a certain
-time.
-
-The pigeons are released by spies at a place from which they will be
-sure to fly over the fortress on their way home. A pigeon flies in
-circles on its journey, and it is certain that during part of its
-flight over the fortress the camera shutter will be released. A series
-of pictures taken in this way will give a very complete plan of the
-defenses to the enemy.
-
-Although immediate execution follows the discovery of a spy or perhaps
-even the suspicion of espionage, thousands of persons are found
-willing to undertake the work during this war. It has been truly said
-that the highest form of heroism is to undertake spy duty for one's
-country. Nothing can be more awful than the fate of the spy caught and
-executed amid the hate and fear of the thousands who surround him. Many
-photographs sent from the seat of war show how the European armies make
-the death of the spy terrible.
-
-The Germans are universally admitted to be more skilful spies than
-the British, and yet Gen. Baden-Powell performed some remarkable
-spying tricks. He tells how he got into a new German dockyard and made
-observations under the nose of several policemen:
-
-"Inside a great, high wall lay a dockyard, in which, it was rumored,
-a new power house was being erected, and possibly a dry dock was in
-course of preparation.
-
-"The scaffolding of the new house towered above me, and a ladder led
-upward on to it. Up this I went like a lamplighter, keeping one eye on
-the corner of the building lest I should be followed.
-
-"Presently I found a short ladder leading from my platform to the
-stage below, but it did not go to the ground. Peering quietly over the
-scaffolding, I saw my friend the policeman below, still at fault. I
-blessed my stars that he was no tracker, and therefore had not seen my
-footmarks leading to the foot of the ladder.
-
-"Then I proceeded to take note of my surroundings and to gather
-information. Judging from the design of the building, its great
-chimneys, etc., I was actually on the new power-house. From my post I
-had an excellent view over the dockyard, and within one hundred feet of
-me were the excavation works of the new dock, whose dimensions I could
-easily estimate.
-
-"All these duties (of espionage) are subdivided among agents of
-every grade, from Ambassadors and their attaches downward. Naval and
-military officers are sent to carry out special investigations by
-all countries, and paid detectives are stationed in likely centres to
-gather information."
-
-The General further says that the military information that a country
-voluntarily gives to a foreign attache is usually of little value, and
-therefore he must take secret means to inform himself.--(Told in _New
-York American_.)
-
-
-II--STORY OF MLLE. MATA HARI, DUTCH-JAVANESE DANCER
-
-The story of Mata Hari, the beautiful dancing girl, who as a German
-spy discovered the information about the British "tanks" before they
-arrived at the Battle of the Somme, is one of the most romantic of the
-War. She was found guilty of espionage and condemned to death by a
-military court martial presided over by Col. Sempron.
-
-"Accused did wilfully and maliciously, and against the interest of
-la Patrie, communicate information of military value to the enemy
-concerning our offensive of the summer of 1916," read the verdict that
-sent her to a cell in Saint Lazare Prison awaiting the dawn which means
-her death.
-
-"Eye-of-the-Morning" is English for the Javanese pet name
-"Mata-Hari"--the stage name of Mme. Marguerite Gertrude Zelle Macleod,
-first known in Paris, and latterly all over Europe, as a dancer whose
-specialty was the representing of Far-Eastern legends and fables
-according to the terpsichorean art....
-
-One of the most important and spectacular events of the only Allied
-offensive of 1916 was the appearance in action of the newest engine
-of war--the so-called tank. As with any innovation, the success of
-the tank depended largely on the element of surprise attaching to
-its debut. Therefore, the strictest secrecy marked the planning, the
-construction, and the shipment of tanks to the Somme, where they first
-went into action. But of course a certain number of people in England
-and in France knew about the tanks--or "creme-de-menthes" as they were
-first called in Paris because each one is named like a ship and one
-called after the famous green liqueur. It took a good many months to
-construct the first fleet, and a good many weeks to train the first
-crews to stand the jerky, rolling, pitching, lumbering gait of the
-mobile forts. During that period the circle of people "in the know"
-increased, and Mata-Hari was one of those who heard about the curious
-landships.
-
-Where Mata-Hari obtained her first tip on the tanks has not yet been
-disclosed. And that is one reason why the "memoirs" which she is
-writing in her cell at Saint Lazare prison are being awaited with fear
-and anxiety by at least one person, and with the liveliest interest by
-the world at large.
-
-It is rumored that a Deputy inadvertently gave her the first
-information about tanks. And the rumor is strengthened by the fact that
-Mata-Hari had plenty of coal for her apartment during the fuel famine
-in winter. That in itself is proof enough to everybody of her intimacy
-with some high official, as few people short of Deputies had influence
-enough to obtain a hundredweight of coal during the bitter months of
-January, February and March.
-
-In any event, Mara-Hari learned vaguely of tanks early in 1916, when
-the Krupp guns of the Crown Prince were daily booming nearer and nearer
-to Verdun in that terrific struggle which was to mark the turning
-point of the war. Mata-Hari also learned that the tanks were being
-constructed in England and would be shipped to France _via_ certain
-ports--and she got the names of the ports.
-
-Then Mata-Hari decided she must return to her native country, Holland.
-For, with all her Javanese appellation, she was born near Rotterdam,
-although it is true she went to the Dutch East Indies when a tiny
-child. She gave as reason for going to Holland the fact that she had
-married a Dutch army officer with a Scotch name--Capt. Macleod, that
-they had divorced, and she wished to arrange a settlement of their
-common property.
-
-Her passports were made out, and safe conducts granted for a trip to
-Holland, _via_ England, of course, as that is the only way to get into
-the Low Countries from the Allied side.
-
-Mata-Hari went to England. But before she proceeded to Holland,
-as Secret Service agents of the British and French Governments
-ascertained, she visited a certain English manufacturing city, where,
-it so happened, the tanks were being constructed.
-
-Evidently Mata-Hari did not find out much about the tanks there, as
-not a man connected with their construction ever passed through the
-gates of the high brick wall which surrounded the factory during the
-six months that the first "fleet" was building. The men were boarded,
-entertained and employed here continually. Every letter they sent out
-or received was subjected to the most rigorous censorship.
-
-The dancer proceeded to Rotterdam. Investigation there has since proved
-that she had no "communal rights property" to settle with any one, and
-further that Capt. Macleod of the Dutch Army was known among his fellow
-officers as pronouncedly pro-German.
-
-Soon Mata-Hari returned to Paris. She was seen at the Cafe de Paris and
-at Maxim's, and at Armenonville in the Bois with an English officer
-who wore on the lapel of his collar, an insignia denoting his branch
-of service, a little twisted brass dragon. Months later, when more of
-these badges were seen on British officers passing through Paris, it
-became known that the dragon was of the official insignia denoting
-service with the tanks.
-
-Mata-Hari sported a new bauble soon after taking up with the
-Englishman--a jewelled replica of his gold insignia--her dragon had
-real emeralds for eyes, and a carrot-shaped ruby for a tongue darting
-from its opened fangs.
-
-In May, 1916, a little more than a month before the Somme offensive
-opened and tanks were first used, Mata-Hari appeared before the police
-magistrate of her district and requested a safe conduct to visit a
-certain port in France. The reason she gave was that her fiance, an
-English officer, was seriously wounded and in hospital there. He had
-sent for her to come to see him. Perhaps they would be married at his
-deathbed if he could not recover, she volunteered, dabbing at her eyes
-with a lace handkerchief.
-
-The safe conduct was made out, and Mata-Hari arrived at a certain
-French port almost simultaneously with the first consignment of tanks
-shipped over from England.
-
-Now a tank of the early type was 35 feet long, 12 feet wide and 9 feet
-high, and the caterpillar tractors rumbling under it and over it and
-around it made a terrible din, attracting the attention of people for
-great distances around. And because of the weight of the tanks they
-could not be moved by rail, but had to travel under their own power. It
-was impossible, therefore, to wholly hide the monsters from inhabitants
-of that particular French port, and from the townspeople in the French
-villages through which they passed on the way to the Somme front. Of
-course most of the travelling was done by night, and tarpaulins were
-always draped over the armed and armored behemoths.
-
-But there did not seem to be much necessity for precautions, as nearly
-all of the inhabitants of the districts through which the tanks passed
-remained stolidly right there where they were. Few indeed were as lucky
-as Mata-Hari and able to get safe conducts to travel about. But then
-few were as beautiful and alluring as the dancer.
-
-Mata-Hari remained in the French port for a week. She strolled about
-the town at night and explained to the hotel clerks that she could not
-sleep without taking a certain amount of exercise before retiring, and
-that after being accustomed to gay life in Paris, she was not tired
-until after midnight.
-
-It was on June 1, exactly a month before Gens. Haig and Foch began
-their drive astride the Somme, that Mata-Hari returned to Paris.
-And the first thing she did was to apply for a vise on her passport
-permitting her to go to Spain. San Sebastian was the place she
-mentioned, as she explained she wished to attend the horse races there.
-Her papers were stamped and sealed and she left almost immediately for
-the fashionable winter resort in the south.
-
-Madrid, Spain, and Nauen, Germany, are in constant wireless
-communication. There are other radio stations, privately owned in
-Spain, which can flash messages to Germany, according to Allied
-intelligence officers who have investigated. And of course there are
-innumerable German agents, spies and propaganda disseminators infesting
-the land of the Dons.
-
-Secret Service reports disclose the fact that Mata-Hari was seen much
-in company at San Sebastian race track with a man long looked upon with
-suspicion by the French Government. He was a frequent caller upon her
-at the hotel where she stopped, and it was reported that he made good
-many of the big bets she placed on horses that did not materialize as
-winners.
-
-Soon Mata-Hari came back to Paris and the apartment near the Bois de
-Bologne. And once more the limousine owned by the individual whom rumor
-has branded a Deputy, began rolling up to her door twice a week and
-sometimes oftener.
-
-Then came the simultaneous Franco-British offensive at the Somme. Tanks
-went into action for the first time, and according to Gen. Haig's
-official communique his "land ships achieved satisfactory results."
-
-The tanks did achieve satisfactory results. More than that, they
-revolutionized offensive tactics on favorable terrain by advancing
-immune against rifle and machine gun bullets, or even against light
-trench mortars whose shells exploded at a touch. They smashed by sheer
-weight strong points and machine gun emplacements. They straddled
-trenches, enfilading the occupants and crushed in entrances to dugouts.
-
-But several of the tanks were put out of action--and not by stray
-shells hurtling forward from far behind the German lines. They were
-knocked out by small calibre _PENETRATION_ shells, fired from 37
-millimetre trench cannons--the largest guns that can be handled from
-advanced positions. Guns specially built and rifled, and fired at high
-velocity and flat trajectory, so that, unlike any shell ever coughed
-up by a mortar, they penetrated the object struck--even though it were
-steel--before exploding.
-
-Instantly it became evident that the enemy had become aware of what
-was in store for him and had constructed an "anti-tank" gun. And when
-the booty in the captured German positions was examined, the British
-found they had several good specimens of Krupp's newest weapon. Several
-German officers of higher rank taken prisoners confirmed suspicions,
-by explaining they had received description of the tanks several weeks
-before, and had been instructed how to combat them.
-
-Now Mata-Hari is awaiting death and writing as she waits. She is
-penning her memoirs rapidly, filling scores of pages a day in a
-polyglot of French, German, Dutch, Javanese, Japanese and even English,
-according to the mood she is in, says the prison warder.
-
-And because she fears her history will not be finished before that
-unannounced daybreak when she will be placed blindfolded before the
-high stone wall facing a firing squad of French soldiers, she has
-ordered her lawyer, M. Edouard Clunet, to plead for a stay of execution.
-
-So Mata-Hari writes feverishly, and all Paris waits eagerly--except the
-one who waits apprehensively--to see if she will name the "ami" who
-gave her the first inkling of the tanks.
-
-Pinned to the corsage of the Empire-cut black silk dress which
-Mata-Hari wears in her narrow cell in Saint Lazare Prison is a curious
-gold brooch. It is shaped like a twisted dragon, and its eyes are
-emeralds and its darting tongue a carrot-shaped ruby.
-
-"It will be there--right over my heart--when I go away--when I stand
-before those men with guns aimed to kill me," says Mata-Hari. (Told in
-the _New York World_.)
-
-(Since these stories were written Mata-Hari has gone to her death
-blindfolded before the firing squad. She met her execution stoically.)
-
-
-III--ADVENTUROUS LIFE OF MATA-HARI
-
-This is told by a man who for obvious reasons will not allow his name
-to be used:
-
-"I knew Mata-Hari in Paris. I called on her at her home at
-Nieully-sur-Seine. The sinister character in Dumas' great romance was
-not more cunning or adventurous nor played for higher stakes than did
-Mlle. Mata-Hari. In many respects their histories should be printed in
-parallel columns. But I believe that for adventure, for cunning, for
-her great influence over the destiny of those with whom she came in
-contact, Mlle. Mata-Hari was more dreadful than 'Miladi.'
-
-"Her father was a subject of the Netherlands and her mother was a
-Javanese. He died when she was an infant, and in order to protect
-her from the dangers which beset a young girl of mixed blood in the
-East her mother fled from Java with her when she was three years old
-and entered Burma. There, to further protect her, she pledged her to
-celibacy and placed her in a Buddhist temple to learn dancing. Then
-it appeared that her destiny would be not unlike that of thousands of
-other young girls in that country and similar in many respects to that
-of the old vestals of ancient Greece. In Burma these dancers are called
-bayadere.
-
-"She told me that when she was twelve years old she was disgusted with
-life and was determined to change it or end it. After a dance at a
-great Buddhist festival in Burma, when she was about fourteen years
-old, she saw a British officer and fell in love with him. It was her
-first love affair. She managed to escape from the temple and joined
-him. This man was a baronet and loved her. Finally they married. Two
-children, a boy and a girl, were born of their union.
-
-"I do not believe that she ever loved any man. It is certain that
-she did not love her husband. At any event, the monotonous life of
-a British official's wife was more than she could stand. The climax
-came when a maid whom she had beaten and discharged caused one of her
-gardeners to poison her infant son.
-
-"The tragic sequence and scandal which followed the death of her
-son still is remembered by old timers in India. She started an
-investigation of the killing independent of the British authorities,
-and finally, in her own mind, fixed the guilt on one of her gardeners.
-She took a revolver, and, walking into the garden where the man was
-working, shot him dead.
-
-"She was arrested, but owing to the high position occupied by her
-husband everything possible was done to suppress the scandal. Finally
-she was told that she would have to leave British India. It was just
-what she wanted to do. She left her home in the night, stealing her
-daughter from her husband. She made her way to Marseilles and thence
-to Holland, where she placed her daughter in a convent. Then she went
-straight to Paris, where she learned that she was penniless, the
-small fortune which her father had left her having, under the Dutch
-law, passed to her child. Then she set about to captivate Paris. Not
-satisfied with her conquest, she went to Berlin, to Petrograd, to
-Vienna--she travelled over all Europe--and became one of the most
-talked of women on the Continent.
-
-"She met many men. One of them was a wealthy German, who was a high
-official of the Berlin government. He bought a home for her at
-Nieully-sur-Seine and furnished it in a style that was representative
-of what was most truly Oriental splendor. There the two of them lived.
-It was there that I first saw her.
-
-"Soon she tired of this German. He was extremely jealous of her. Always
-her art--her dancing--called to her. He would not let her dance. There
-were many 'scenes' at home. Her life was not happy, despite the wealth
-at her disposal.
-
-"Then she met a one-time Minister of Finance, of France, and, through
-him, his brother-in-law. He fell in love with her and she with him.
-
-"This man was at that time the managing director of a great Paris bank.
-He deserted his wife and bought a magnificent chateau in Touraine. For
-two years they lived there. Then, one day, the police entered the bank
-and arrested the managing director. He was charged with embezzling the
-funds of the institution. He was tried and convicted and sentenced
-to two years at hard labor. The woman then went back to the German
-official at Neuilly-sur-Seine. They were living there when I left
-France four years ago." (Told in the _New York Herald_.)
-
-
-IV--STORY OF EXECUTION OF SUSANNA RAYNAL
-
-This is the story of a French young woman who was executed by the
-French military authorities in Bellegarde, the little Franco-Swiss
-frontier village.... Women have figured prominently as spies in every
-war. In this war their role has also been conspicuous. Some have
-betrayed their country for money, others have betrayed it for the
-love of adventure, and still others have betrayed it for the sake
-of love--following blindly the men who lead them astray along the
-fascinating and dangerous path of crime. This young woman was a victim
-of love.
-
-Not a word has been written about her death. Not a sigh, not a tear,
-not a prayer from her friends and relatives. For they did not know what
-had become of her. The French newspapers did not record the end of this
-woman, who paid with her life for her daring, mad desire to help her
-Austrian lover, who sought to secure French military secrets.
-
-Her name was Susanna Raynal. She was the wife of Louis Raynal, a
-lieutenant in the artillery of the French army. She was twenty-eight
-years old when she was put to death. The husband, twelve years her
-senior, was at the front when she was shot. Her lover was shot with
-her. He broke down, quivering and crying hysterically while she kept
-bracing him up, repeating: "Have no fear! Have no fear!"
-
-She begged the officers to have them shot together, not separately.
-She declined to be blindfolded, held her lover by the hand and kept
-murmuring "Have no fear! Have no fear!"...
-
-Several weeks ago I met in Paris a distinguished French diplomatist
-with whom I discussed many incidents of the war. Our conversation
-turned to the many varieties of spies and provocateurs and to the
-motives that prompted them to betray their country.
-
-Then he told me the story of this young woman who met her end so
-bravely at the French-Swiss frontier. There were tears in his voice as
-he related the details. For he knew the woman and he knew her husband.
-
-"I was returning from London to Paris a few weeks ago," he said. "Just
-as we were reaching Boulogne, on the boat crossing the Channel, while
-I was in line in the dining room of the boat where the passports were
-being examined by the military officers, I heard behind me a familiar
-voice, whispering in German, 'Furchte doch nicht!' (Don't be afraid!)
-
-"I turned and saw the wife of my friend, a French lieutenant who was
-at the front. She felt somewhat embarrassed when she noticed me, but
-immediately advanced toward me and introduced to me a tall young man of
-rather anti-pathetic appearance.
-
-"'This is my husband's friend,' she said to me. 'He was kind enough
-to help me arrange my business affairs in London. Louis is at the
-front....'
-
-"Upon our arrival in Paris she asked me to visit her soon. She said
-she wanted me to advise her in a certain important matter, that she
-was alone now, that I could help her with letters of introduction,
-for which she would be most grateful. She urged me to visit her the
-following evening. I promised to call on her and bade her farewell.
-
-"On the following evening, when I came to her house, her maid met me
-at the door and said that madam was expecting me for dinner an hour
-later. I asked her to tell Mme. Raynal that I had another engagement
-for dinner.
-
-"A few minutes later Mme. Raynal came out. As I mentioned before,
-she was a beautiful young woman of about twenty-eight. She was most
-charmingly dressed. She greeted me warmly and begged me to stay for
-dinner. I told her I had another important engagement. She implored me
-to stay. She said she was alone, and that she wished to talk with me
-about a matter of great importance, in which she desired to enlist my
-aid. I said that I would call on her some other evening.
-
-"Then she told me that she wished to visit friends in Switzerland, that
-she had some manuscripts of a literary character she wanted to take to
-them, and that she wished me to give her letters of introduction to
-several people, among them the Minister of War. I promised to call on
-her the following evening.
-
-"As I bade her good night, she kissed me and begged me to break my
-other engagement and take dinner with her. I repeated that it was
-impossible. Then I left her. As I walked down the stairs, I noticed the
-tall young man I had met with her at Boulogne, going up in the elevator
-to her apartment. That seemed more than strange to me.
-
-"The next morning I chanced to be lunching in a cafe where I
-occasionally met my friend, the head of the secret police department.
-In the course of my conversation I told the peculiar story of the
-woman and the young man, without mentioning her name. The police chief
-listened intently and then said:
-
-"'I think I know the woman. We are watching her. We are also watching
-the man closely. He is an Austrian. They seem to be engaged in a
-serious political conspiracy.'
-
-"About two weeks later I met the head of the secret police department
-in the same cafe. He said to me:
-
-"'Do you know what has happened to that woman--Susanna Raynal?'
-
-"'I haven't seen her since then,' I replied.
-
-"'You will never see her again,' he said. 'She has been shot.'
-
-"And then he told me how the police had shadowed her and her lover, how
-some one who had made her acquaintance recently gave her a letter of
-introduction to the Ministry of War. She wanted to help the Austrian
-carry certain documents out of France and wished to get a special
-letter from the Minister of War permitting her to take what she called
-'manuscripts' to her friends in Switzerland.
-
-"She came to the Ministry of War with her lover. They were taken to a
-room, where they met an officer who told her that he would be glad to
-arrange the matter for her. Then the police did what is usually done
-in such cases. The officer walked out of the room for a short time,
-leaving on the table near them a number of important-looking documents.
-The man took some of these documents, and after the officer had
-returned and had given them the letter they asked for they went away.
-
-"On the following day they reached Bellegarde, the Franco-Swiss
-frontier. They were searched, and the papers taken from the War
-Department were found on the woman. Within one hour both were shot.
-She met her death bravely. She held the man by the hand and tried to
-brace him up. He was crying helplessly and hysterically....
-
-"A few days ago I received information that Lieutenant Louis Raynal,
-the husband of the woman who was executed in Bellegarde, fell on the
-battlefield recently. He passed away without learning of the tragedy
-that had befallen his home.
-
-"He died in defense of his fatherland, which his wife, through her
-blind love for a spy, had endeavored to betray. Perhaps as he was dying
-of his wounds, his last thoughts and prayers were for his home and for
-his wife." (Told by Herman Bernstein in the _New York American_.)
-
-
-V--STORIES OF THE MILITARY SECRETS
-
-The Paris papers contained a brief paragraph telling of a young girl, a
-milliner, in the neighborhood of Grenoble, who had been caught playing
-the spy for the Germans and sentenced to a long term of imprisonment.
-
-"We don't shoot women spies any more," said a soldier from the Somme
-front to whom I spoke of the story. "There have been no women shot for
-a long time. They generally get about twelve years at hard labor."
-
-"Are you as much troubled as ever by spies?" I asked.
-
-He laughed. "As long as there is war there will be spies," he replied.
-"You can't stamp them out. The only thing you can do is to try to catch
-them. It was only a few weeks ago that we caught a woman spy on the
-Somme.
-
-"You remember when we took Bouchavesnes? Well, there was not much left
-of the village when we got it. Our artillery had knocked it pretty
-well to pieces, but we found an old woman there. She had remained all
-through the German occupation, and had even managed to hide and stay
-behind when all the rest of the civil population had evacuated. She was
-in a cellar during our bombardment, and when we went into the town she
-came out to welcome us, the only one of the original French inhabitants
-of the village remaining. As it was French again, she insisted on
-remaining. It was her home and she had succeeded in clinging on all the
-time the Germans were there. She saw no reason why she should go when
-the French came back into occupation.
-
-"She stayed and did our washing for us. She was busy all the time, and
-every morning she would take the wet clothes out and spread them on the
-ground to dry. You could see soldiers' shirts and underwear all around
-the cellar where she lived, and hanging on all the posts and pieces of
-wall.
-
-"The old woman pottered around and worked most industriously at her
-tubs. She always came out when there were troops going through the
-village and she would talk to the men, find out where they were going,
-where they came from and how long they expected to be there. And
-whenever she came out from her tubs she would go to her wash, lying out
-to dry, examine it, turn it over, rearrange it. She was a wonderful
-washwoman. It was a mania with her, having everything just right for
-the French soldiers, who had won back her home for her in France.
-
-"But the Germans seemed to know every concentration of troops we made
-in that region. Their shells received us every time. We could not
-make a move that they did not know all about. We set three men to the
-special duty of finding out how the Germans got their information. The
-first thing they found out was that there were more air fights over
-Bouchavesnes than at any other part of the line. There seemed to be
-always a Boche aeroplane hovering over the ruins. They decided that
-there must be something about Bouchavesnes which made it a particularly
-good observation point. As the old woman was the only thing that
-distinguished the place from any other ruined village, they arrested
-her.
-
-"At first she denied everything, but the German accuracy in bombarding
-our concentrations ceased with her arrest. It does not take a long
-argument to convince a drumhead court-martial, and the old woman saw
-that the game was up. She then claimed to be French, and said that
-she had consented to spy for the Germans partly under threats, partly
-because her life had been spared by them, and partly because they had
-paid her well, and she had no other way of getting any money to live.
-Finally, she acknowledged that she was German and had been purposely
-left behind to spy when the Germans got out. She got twelve years at
-hard labor."
-
- * * * * *
-
-"Spies work all kinds of tricks. There was the old fellow who came back
-to his farm just behind the lines and started to do his fall ploughing
-with three horses, a red, a white and a black. He did his signalling by
-changing the position of the white horse in the team. He was easy to
-catch, as a team, especially a plough team, always works in the same
-order. Some of our men who were farmers noticed how he was constantly
-changing his horses about. They talked about it among themselves a bit
-and at last one of them spoke of it to an officer. The alleged farmer
-was investigated and shot.
-
-"Spies are almost sure to get a certain length of time to do their work
-before they are caught. We ran across a blacksmith who was one of the
-most congenial fellows you ever met. He had his shop right beside one
-of the main roads used by the troops in going back and forth to the
-trenches and he always had a stock of wine and something to eat. His
-shop did not keep him very busy and he was nearly always at his door.
-He would talk to the soldiers, give them a drink, ask where they were
-going and want to know how long they would be gone, so that he would
-be waiting to give them another glass of wine when they came back. He
-was very popular with the soldiers, because he was such a good fellow,
-always ready with a joke and a glass of wine.
-
-"But our concentrations were known to the Boches. Our men were being
-shot down. We never could prepare anything in advance and bring it off
-successfully, because the Boches knew just where we were getting ready
-to do something. Some of our spy catchers got to work to find the leak.
-They hunted through the sector for the best place to pick up news about
-troop movements and they found, of course, that all the soldiers were
-friendly with the blacksmith. His shop was raided one day. He had been
-left behind by the Germans. He had a three months' store of wine and
-food in his cellar. Of course, he could give our men wine. But he had,
-also, direct telephonic communication from his cellar with the German
-lines. He was shot.
-
-"The worst case that I ever knew of--but it was not the only one of the
-kind--was an officer in the French army who was a German spy. You can
-see from that how thorough the Boches are. That man had been sent from
-Germany to France when he was a boy. He had been educated in France and
-had gone to the French military schools. He was an artillery officer
-and one of the best. He was a lieutenant at the beginning of the war,
-but when the Somme offensive began he was a captain in command of a
-battery. For all that time he had done his work without being suspected.
-
-"On the Somme he was in charge of his battery, which was firing ahead
-of our men during an advance. The battery got a signal that their range
-was too short and they were firing into our own men. The sergeant told
-the captain, but he said they were firing according to orders and not
-to change the range. The battery fired another round and got another
-signal from the infantry that they were firing short. The sergeant
-spoke to the captain again and the captain lost his temper and swore
-at the sergeant. He ordered another round at the same range and the
-sergeant refused. The captain tried to fire one of the guns himself.
-
-"It was very important for the Germans to stop our advance at that
-point. It might have saved Combles. But the sergeant knew as much
-about the situation as the captain. He knew what it meant to have our
-troops stopped there. We might have lost a brigade. We might have
-lost a division. He threatened the captain with a rifle and arrested
-him. It is something to arrest your own captain, but the sergeant did
-it, and there was a drumhead court-martial and the captain was shot.
-He confessed, when he saw it was all up with him, and bragged of the
-two years he had escaped being caught and of what he had done. He was
-brave enough, but--Well, think of it! Educated in France, an officer
-in the French Army, living at the expense of France, living a lie for
-ten years, waiting for 'the day' to betray those who trusted him. It
-takes a German to do that." (Told by Fred B. Pitney in the _New York
-Tribune_.)
-
-
-
-
-WHAT HAPPENED TO THE "GLENHOLME"
-
-_Adventures with Submarines in the Mediterranean Sea_
-
- The merchant seamen whose voyages take him through the war-zone
- lives a hazardous life nowadays, but he treats it as "all in the
- day's work." The 'Glenholme' was sunk by a German submarine in the
- Mediterranean, and her crew underwent quite a lot of adventures
- before they were finally rescued. This tale was first told in the
- _Wide World Magazine_.
-
-
-I--SUBMARINED OFF COAST OF MALTA
-
-These are chancy times for sailormen, both those who man our fighting
-ships and the crews of merchant vessels, but they must all take the sea
-as they find it and do their best while their country is at war. Many
-of them have faced death cheerfully in the execution of their duty.
-Some have gone under, while others have endured wounds and privation,
-as did the men of the British steamer _Glenholme_.
-
-This staunch ship, steering wide of the land, cleared the southern
-shores of Malta and stuck her blunt nose into the long smooth swell
-that rolled up from the eastward. A ten-knot cargo-boat, deep-laden
-with steel rails for Alexandria, she forged steadily onward through
-the murky night. From stem to stern her hull lay shrouded in darkness;
-not a single light gleamed from any of her portholes, and even the
-lamp in her steering compass was veiled, for those on board knew right
-well that hostile submarines were operating in various parts of the
-Mediterranean.
-
-Captain John Groome leaned his elbows on the bridge-rail and gazed into
-the gloom ahead.
-
-"We're all right so far," he said; "and from what I can hear of things
-it seems that these beastly submarines are operating quite a bit to the
-northward of our track. All the same, a sharp look-out must be kept or
-we may fall foul of some other craft running, like ourselves, without
-lights. I don't want to bump any of them."
-
-"The ocean is a wide place, sir," cheerfully remarked the chief
-officer. "We'll keep clear of collision easy enough."
-
-"I hope so," replied the skipper. "And now, Mr. Bolt, I'm going to lie
-down in the chart-room for a couple of hours, and I want you to call me
-at daybreak. That's the time when submarines poke up their periscopes
-for a morning look around."
-
-The mists of dawn hung like grey curtains over the northern horizon
-when Captain Groome, in answer to a call from the chief officer, again
-ascended the bridge ladder.
-
-"Anything in sight?" he queried.
-
-"Nothing at all," replied Mr. Bolt. "It's a bit hazy to the northward,"
-he added, "but the skyline is quite clear ahead."
-
-Hardly had the chief officer finished speaking when a shot--apparently
-coming from nowhere--shrieked overhead between the _Glenholme's_ masts.
-A moment later the report of a gun came rolling down the wind. Groome
-hurriedly snatched up his binocular glasses and peered into the haze
-out abeam.
-
-"Great Scot!" he exclaimed. "A submarine! Hard-a-port, my son. Let her
-go off to south."
-
-The helmsman ground his wheel over, and not a moment too soon, for
-a white line, like the trail of a shooting star, streaked athwart
-the surface of the waters. A torpedo had been discharged at the
-_Glenholme_, but as she swerved and swung from her course the deadly
-missile passed harmlessly ahead.
-
-"Murderous devils!" ejaculated Mr. Bolt. "Attacking an unarmed ship
-with both gunfire and torpedoes."
-
-"Pass the word to the engineer to give her every pound of steam,"
-shouted Groome.
-
-As the morning haze lifted the submarine came into clear view--a dark,
-sinister shape. She gave chase while the _Glenholme_ made off at her
-topmost speed. Engineers and stokers did their best, and steam hissed
-from her safety-valve as, on a zigzag course, she fled. Meanwhile the
-pursuing craft hung doggedly in her track. The submarine, however,
-discharged no more torpedoes; probably the German commander did not
-wish to deplete his stock of these expensive weapons.
-
-Gradually the pursuer closed with her quarry, until she was not more
-than a mile distant, and then her twelve-pounder gun began to bark
-viciously. Having found the range, the Germans fairly pounded the
-_Glenholme_ with bursting shell, battering her deck-houses and funnel
-into masses of twisted steel.
-
-Groome and his crew did their duty well. They were game, quite game, to
-the finish. The captain, alert and watchful, stood beside the helmsman
-and directed the steering in such a manner as to keep the hostile craft
-dead astern. Presently a flying splinter of shell gashed his leg below
-the knee, and blood trickled into his boot as he bound up the wound.
-Nevertheless, he kept his vessel going at top speed, for he knew that
-British warships were patrolling the Mediterranean, and while the chase
-lasted there still remained the chance that a swift destroyer might
-suddenly loom up on the skyline and rush to the assistance of his
-stricken and harrassed vessel.
-
-No help came, however, and it was not long ere a shell struck the
-rudder-head. With steering gear completely wrecked, the steamer became
-unmanageable, and swung round at right angles to her course. Then,
-seeing escape was impossible, Captain Groome reluctantly rang his
-engines astern and signalled to the enemy that he was bringing his
-vessel to a standstill.
-
-
-II--"THE PIRATES LOOTED OUR SHIP"
-
-It must not be supposed that the Germans thereupon ceased fire. By
-no means. An unarmed and unmanageable British steamer wallowing
-helplessly in the swell presented a fine opportunity for a display of
-"frightfulness"; therefore, on general principles, they let drive a
-couple of shots at close range. These shells hulled the _Glenholme_
-forward on the waterline, and she commenced to sink slowly by the head.
-
-Having accomplished her work, the submarine came close alongside and
-stopped, with her gun trained point-blank on the stricken vessel. The
-German commander, a stout-built man with bristly hair, emerged from his
-conning-tower. He was evidently very angry.
-
-"Vy didn't you stop before?" he yelled. "I haf used plenty of petrol to
-catch you."
-
-"I'm sorry about your petrol," suavely replied Groome.
-
-"Vell now, hurry up and get your boats lowered!" shouted the Teuton. "I
-gif you ten minutes to leave--no more."
-
-The crew of the submarine, armed with rifles, stood on their foredeck
-and watched the _Glenholme's_ men abandon ship. Some ten minutes later
-three boats containing all hands--thirty-four all told--had shoved
-clear of the sinking craft.
-
-"Now," said the submarine commander to Mr. Bolt, who was in charge of
-Number Three lifeboat, "I vant to make use of your boat for a little
-time. So crowd your men into the other two boats, and shove Number
-Three alongside my craft. Hurry up, now, or I gif the order to fire."
-
-There being no help for it, Mr. Bolt and his men had perforce to do as
-they were told. When the empty boat was pushed alongside the submarine
-half-a-dozen Germans sprang into her and boarded the _Glenholme_, which
-vessel was now deep down by the head, but still sinking slowly.
-
-The Germans looted from their prize whatever took their fancy, while
-that vessel's crew sat in the other two lifeboats and watched the
-piratical proceedings with considerable displeasure. One man in
-particular, a stoker who hailed from Limehouse, became extremely
-indignant. Like the rest of the _Glenholme's_ men, he had hurried
-to the boats with little beside the clothes he stood in. His other
-belongings had been left in the forecastle, and he had to some extent
-resigned himself to their loss; but when he saw some of his property in
-the hands of the Huns he could not restrain his anger.
-
-"The dirty thieves!" he yelled. "They've got me brand-new bowler 'at
-and me gramophone." Then, outspoken and fluent, the Londoner stood
-upright in the boat and gave the enemy his kind wishes.
-
-"I don't wish yer no harm, blow yer!" said he. "I don't want yer to
-get sunk, nor even captured by a British cruiser. Oh, no. I only wants
-yer blighted ole submarine to fall foul of a steamer's bow some dark
-night and get capsized. Then I hopes she'll float around for a month
-bottom up, with the whole crowd of yer standin' on yer bloomin' heads
-and yellin' 'Gott strafe England' until you choke."
-
-Undoubtedly there were several Germans on board the submarine who
-understood English well enough to gather the gist of the irate
-stoker's remarks. They looked very ugly as they fingered their rifles
-and glanced towards their officer for instructions; most probably the
-Londoner ran a grave risk of paying for his temerity with his life.
-It happened, however, that at this moment smoke was descried in the
-distance. The German commander levelled his binocular glasses and took
-a long look at it. Apparently this column of grey smoke caused him
-some uneasiness. Full well he knew the rapidity with which, during the
-hazy weather, a destroyer could appear on the scene and open fire. He
-was evidently a cautious Teuton, for he gave a short, guttural order,
-he and his men descended into the submarine, and she dived below the
-surface, and so out of this story. How and when the piratical career of
-this particular U-boat came to a sudden end cannot now be chronicled.
-
-
-III--THEY WATCHED THE VESSEL SINK
-
-Meanwhile the _Glenholme's_ crew sat in their boats and watched
-their vessel sink. Her bows were by this time below the surface; she
-was going fast. Her stern rose high in air, and for about a minute
-the stricken and abandoned craft hung poised in this position--her
-fore part submerged, her rudder and propeller a hundred feet in air.
-Then, with a slow, slanting dive, she vanished from sight. Down
-she sank, like many a good ship before her, to rust and rot on the
-sandy-tide-swept floor of the Mediterranean.
-
-The smoke which had been sighted previously was no longer visible.
-Captain Groome and his crew in their three open boats had now to face
-the chances of a wide and lonely sea. Each boat was well equipped,
-and stocked with ten days' provisions; nevertheless, the weather
-indications were not encouraging. Wind and sea were gradually
-increasing, while a heavy bank of clouds in the north-west foretold a
-coming storm. The captain shouted a few words of advice and instruction
-to the officers in charge of the two other boats.
-
-"It's no use trying for Malta against this northerly gale that's
-coming. We'll just have to 'up stick' and run for Tripoli. You're quite
-right, Mr. Bolt; the boats may get separated. If the sea becomes very
-heavy we must lie to our sea-anchors until it moderates, or until we
-get picked up."
-
-The storm came. Black, rain-laden squalls drove across the restless
-waters, which a strong and rising wind soon lashed into white-crested
-ridges and dark green hollows. It was not safe to carry sail and run
-before the gale; so, tethered by their painters to the canvas drags, or
-sea-anchors, the boats rode head-on, lifting bravely to the charging
-seas. Before nightfall they had drifted far apart and were lost to one
-another's sight in the shrouding rain-squalls.
-
-It must be mentioned that next day two of the boats were picked up by a
-French steamer and their crews safely landed. This narrative will now
-deal, therefore, with what befell Captain Groome and the twelve men who
-were with him.
-
-For the next three days these poor castaways suffered considerably from
-cold and exposure; moreover, the captain had to endure great pain, his
-wounded leg being stiff and swollen. However, on the third morning
-after they had abandoned the sinking _Glenholme_ the wind and sea
-abated, and the sun rose in a cloudless sky that gave promise of a long
-spell of fine weather. Captain Groome gave orders to hoist the sail;
-and, impelled by a westerly breeze, they steered for the northern coast
-of Africa.
-
-Soon after sunrise land was sighted right ahead--a sandy beach with low
-and slightly undulating country in the background. Groome ran the boat
-close inshore and then consulted a torn and sea-stained chart.
-
-"Now, men," said he; "what with the gale and strong currents I figure
-out that we've been driven a long way east of Tripoli. The breeze is
-dying away, so we'll just have to get out the oars and pull to the
-westward."
-
-"How far is it to the nearest port, captain?" inquired one of the
-sailors.
-
-"Oh, about seventy to eighty miles."
-
-"That's a long pull on short allowance of water," remarked the sailor,
-with a rueful glance at their water-keg, which by this time was
-three-parts empty. "Is there any fresh water around these parts, sir?"
-
-The skipper gazed attentively along the shore before making answer.
-"Well," said he at length, "it's a barren-looking coast, and no
-mistake, but I see a clump of trees just beyond that point. Perhaps we
-can find water there, and refill our keg. Anyhow, we'll go and see."
-
-
-IV--THE CASTAWAYS AND THE ARAB HORSEMEN
-
-They beached their boat in a little curving bay that lay between two
-rocky points. Here, not more than a couple of hundred yards inland,
-stood the clump of trees that Groome had noted. They found, to their
-great satisfaction, that these trees grew around the brink of a
-cup-shaped hollow, at the bottom of which bubbled a spring of clear
-fresh water.
-
-The overjoyed castaways drank their fill; then, with tin cups, they
-baled up the water and refilled their ten-gallon keg. While this job
-was in progress Captain Groome, accompanied by the bo'sun, clambered
-up the sides of the waterhole to take a look around before returning
-to the boat. On reaching level ground, to their astonishing and
-dismay, they found themselves confronted by a band of about fifty
-Arab horsemen. These men were Bedouins of the Senussi tribe--swarthy
-ruffians of the desert, fierce and ruthless, who lived chiefly by
-murder and pillage.
-
-They were all armed, some with old-fashioned long-barrelled guns, and a
-few with modern rifles, while each man had long knives stuck around his
-girdle. These fierce nomads saw plainly that the white men were unarmed
-and helpless. Nevertheless, their chief--a tall Arab who was mounted
-on a white horse--pointed at the two castaways and shouted aloud to
-his followers. Evidently he gave the order to kill, for several of
-the swarthy miscreants levelled their rifles and fired point-blank.
-The bo'sun dropped, stone dead, with a bullet in his brain, while
-Captain Groome, shot through the shoulder, fell to earth and lay
-there unconscious and apparently lifeless. For more than an hour the
-unfortunate ship-captain remained senseless and inert. The wonder is
-that he did not bleed to death; however, he lay so still that, luckily
-for him, the blood congealed and caked over his wounds. When at length
-his consciousness returned he found that in the meantime events had
-been happening with startling rapidity.
-
-It might be supposed that, after shooting Groome and the bo'sun, the
-Arabs would have murdered the remainder of the castaways out of hand,
-yet it transpired that they did not do so. Most probably it occurred
-to these desert nomads that it would be more profitable to carry the
-white men inland and hold them for ransom, therefore they took them as
-prisoners. Next, the Bedouins looted the boat that lay drawn up on the
-beach, taking all her portable equipment, such as provisions, rope, and
-canvas. Then, apparently quite satisfied with their day's work, they
-watered their horses and camped, to rest awhile beside the spring.
-
-Half-a-dozen armed Bedouins kept guard on the prisoners, who sat in a
-dejected group. Things were looking very black indeed for these poor
-seamen when suddenly--almost by magic it seemed--deliverance came in
-the form of a patrol steamer flying the British flag.
-
-Steaming quite close inshore, she glided into view from behind an
-adjacent point. So close was the vessel when she rounded the headland
-that those on board could hear the shout of delight raised by the
-surviving castaways.
-
-The lieutenant in charge of the patrol boat--a keen and alert young
-officer--was not long in grasping the situation. He saw the boat drawn
-up on the beach, and heard the prisoners shouting for aid. Therefore,
-when the startled Bedouins hastily mounted and made off, this capable
-young naval officer knew just what to do--and he did it.
-
-A band of badly-scared Arab horsemen started off inland, using whip
-and spur in desperate efforts to escape, but at that moment the patrol
-steamer's machine-gun took a glad hand in the game. The gun rattled
-briskly, streams of lead whistled shoreward, and the tall Arab chief
-who rode the white horse pitched headlong from his mount to the earth;
-then he lay quite still. He was as dead as salted herring; to use
-colloquial English, he had got "all that was coming to him."
-
-The remaining miscreants rode hard for safety, but the machine-gun did
-good work, and during the following few minutes at least a dozen desert
-marauders finished altogether with the joys and sorrows of this world.
-Those who managed to escape disappeared, together with a number of
-riderless horses, behind a distant sand-hill.
-
-Captain Groome and his men were promptly taken on board the patrol
-vessel. The bo'sun, poor fellow, was buried where he lay. The skipper's
-wounds were dressed by the ship's surgeon, and under kind and skillful
-treatment he soon began to mend.
-
-The writer saw Groome about six weeks later. He moved stiffly, like
-a man whose wounds have but recently healed; nevertheless, he looked
-well, and was certainly very cheerful.
-
-"How do I feel?" said he, in answer to my query. "Oh, my shoulder is
-still a bit sore, but otherwise I'm feeling first class. Another week
-or so, and I'll be fit and ready to join another ship."
-
-
-
-
-WHAT THE KAISER'S SON SAW ON THE BATTLEFIELD
-
-_Personal Experiences of a German Prince_
-
-_Told by Prince Oscar of Prussia, Fifth Son of Emperor William_
-
- His Royal Highness Prince Oscar of Prussia, fifth of Kaiser
- Wilhelm's six sons, has written a little book called "The Winter
- Battle," a translation of which is printed herewith. In this he
- describes the terrific fighting of the Third German Army, which
- formed an important part of the battle front in Champagne and
- had to meet a particularly desperate attack by the French. The
- Prince was an officer on the staff of the commanding General. As a
- result of his experiences he was laid up with an attack of heart
- failure. It is interesting to note that "Hill 196," which is one
- of the places particularly mentioned in the Prince's narrative as
- being defended by the Germans last Winter, was captured by the
- French on October 25, 1915, and became once more the centre of
- prolonged fighting. The Prince is twenty-seven years old, and was
- married morganatically on the day war was declared to Countess Ina
- von Bassewitz Levetzow, a young noblewoman not of royal birth.
- The proceeds of the sale of his book are given to the widows and
- orphans of German soldiers who fell in the Champagne. Translation
- for the _New York American_.
-
-
-I--PRINCE OSCAR TELLS ABOUT BATTLE OF CHAMPAGNE
-
-The great Winter battle in the Champagne in 1915 resulted in a
-brilliant victory, which I witnessed with my own eyes.
-
-The past has already begun busily to weave her heavy veil, and side
-by side with the past walks her sister--oblivion! But we--we must
-not, we dare not forget. Not only because the war in the Champagne
-was the greatest and longest defensive battle in the history of the
-world and resulted in a magnificent victory for ourselves; not only
-out of gratitude for our heroic leaders and soldiers who accomplished
-the superhuman, endured the unspeakable, and yet, undaunted, fought
-on to victory; there is another deeper, more salient reason why we
-must not forget. I refer to our hero dead, who, with incomparable
-self-abnegation, gave their lives for king and country, for Emperor and
-empire, for home and nation.
-
-As a child which one of us has not stood at the grave of some unknown
-hero of forgotten days, thrilling with rapturous, fearsome awe? On the
-heights north of le Mesnil in the Champagne there is now a grave of
-this sort which should be dear to every German heart, but it is not
-the grave of an unknown hero of bygone days. Many brave men of our
-own glorious army, much noble blood of our beloved German nation have
-found their last resting place there on French soil. Our own brothers,
-sons and husbands are interred there. Many thousands of heroes, who
-have entered the last long silence, slumbering there under the very
-sod which they themselves, dauntless, fearless, reckless of danger,
-defended to the last breath, cry to us from beyond the grave, "Do not
-forget the cause for which we died, for which we gladly and willingly
-gave our lives."
-
-We, the living, who know what these dead heroes accomplished and how
-they furthered our cause, lower the sword in memory of them, and, in
-spirit, lay a laurel wreath upon that hill, vowing that we will go and
-do likewise.
-
-In order to comprehend thoroughly the significance of the war in the
-Champagne and to appreciate the magnitude of the achievements of our
-troops we must briefly summarize the circumstances which made the
-campaign imperative, the end which it was intended the titanic struggle
-should compass, and the conditions which made this victory such an
-important one to us. A few sentences will suffice to make all this
-clear. It was necessary to crush the first large aggressive movement on
-the part of the French, who, by hurling their finest army corps and an
-enormous artillery force against us in the Champagne, tried for weeks
-and months, at whatever cost, to force a wedge into our lines in order
-to break one link in the steel chain with which the German army had
-encircled their land.
-
-If, as intended, they had succeeded in breaking through our lines with
-a strong contingent, it can readily be seen how disastrous this would
-have been for us. As regards consequences, our success in the Champagne
-was at least of as great importance as the victories of Tannenberg, the
-Masurian Lakes, near Augustow and on the San; but when we take into
-consideration the demands which were made upon individual endurance and
-courage in the face of the most harrowing conditions imaginable, it is
-doubtful whether the work done in the Champagne by our troops has ever
-been equalled.
-
-
-II--THE PRINCE PRAISES HIS TROOPS
-
-In order thoroughly to appreciate the heroic steadfastness and the
-patient endurance shown by our troops, which transcended all praise,
-and to appraise properly the difficulties which beset leaders and men
-alike during the long, bitter weeks of the battle, we must remember
-certain facts.
-
-When the French offensive was begun on a large scale on February 16,
-our troops had already seen months of the hardest sort of service in
-repulsing the French First and Seventeenth Army Corps, with only a few
-very short intervals of rest--our Eighth Army Corps having been engaged
-in this region since December 8, and the Eighth Reserve Corps since
-December 19, 1914.
-
-Our regiments, therefore, were far from unfatigued at a moment when
-they were called upon to enter the severest phase of a struggle into
-which our foes hurled the flower of their troops. Moreover, the French
-had at their command an almost inexhaustible supply of ammunition, and
-were able, therefore, in a steadily ascending scale, gradually to reach
-the full amplitude of their fighting capacity in their efforts to break
-through our lines. If we fully visualize this fact then we must realize
-that an almost incredible glory accrues to the work done by our troops.
-Only an iron will, a discipline which had become second nature and
-utter forgetfulness of self could lead to victory in the face of such
-odds. That these qualities did ultimately assure us the victory will
-redound to the undying glory of all the troops which did active service
-in this great engagement.
-
-The prodigious masses of iron and humanity which our foes hurled
-against us day and night, their marvellous ingenuity in making attacks,
-their doggedness in defense, all this was admirably calculated to crush
-larger numbers than those of our Third Army. It was a struggle between
-iron and steel. It is true that a heavy mass of iron can through sheer
-weight bend and indent a narrow band of steel, but it cannot break
-the steel. Thus, through continually renewing their attacks and by
-training upon us an artillery fire the violence of which beggars all
-description, the French succeeded in bending back our lines here and
-there. Sometimes at one part, sometimes at another they took several
-hundred metres of intrenchments; but they paid a horrible, a ghastly
-price in blood for these minor and valueless successes, which profited
-them nothing save that they taught them the bitter lesson that German
-will power and German discipline can be broken by nothing. The French
-had scornfully proclaimed that they had broken the backbone of our
-resistance, but we broke their attack and imposed upon them our own.
-In the end the French attempt to break through our lines was utterly
-foiled, and the Third Army was victorious.
-
-During this time the French attacks were directed principally against
-the left, i. e., the eastern half of the Third Army, so that the Eighth
-Army Corps and the Eighth Reserve Corps bore the brunt of the attacks,
-most of which took place along the line between the position of Perthes
-and Beausejour.
-
-This is a rolling, open country, in which narrow fields alternate with
-small patches of woodland, covered with pine trees. The country is not
-dissimilar in character to the country near Jueterberg and Doeberitz,
-in Germany, and instead of soil or sand the surface of the earth is
-covered with white chalk. It is a desolate, barren country. The French
-themselves call it the "louse Champagne" country, and never was a name
-more aptly given. It boasted of only a few settlements, and these have
-now been destroyed by the artillery fire.
-
-During the entire time that the battle lasted the weather was vile.
-For weeks it rained day and night, so that the chalky soil was
-transformed into a grayish, soapy, slimy mire. In consequence the
-by-roads became almost impassable for vehicles and the main roads,
-connecting our trenches and camps, owing to the continuous use to which
-they were put by marching troops and rolling provision wagons, were
-soon in a condition which was almost as bad. The work of our munition
-and commissary columns, upon which this battle, which lasted for
-months, entailed particularly difficult service, was thereby rendered
-exasperatingly hard. The horses also suffered severely through the
-long enforced marches, the dreadful roads, the general wetness and the
-insufficient food.
-
-
-III--"HOW WE FOUGHT THE BATTLE--A LIVING HELL"
-
-It is, however, the duty of the good soldier to derive some advantage
-from even the most unpromising conditions, and we were able to turn
-the frightful condition of the roads to good account in the following
-way. The roads which the French commanded were less numerous and in
-even worse condition than our own. As they expended a tremendous amount
-of ammunition every day in "drum-fire," as continuous systematic
-artillery fire is called in the army, they were forced to bring up
-large supplies every night, which was not the case with us. As has been
-said before, only the main roads could be traversed by the ammunition
-wagons, because the other roads had turned into a sort of morass, and
-we therefore trained our long-range guns upon their main roads at
-night, knowing that we must be doing damage to them. This circumstance
-probably accounted for the unusually long pauses which they allowed to
-occur in their "drum-fire" on the ensuing days.
-
-In this way we gained brief periods of respite for our infantry, which
-was thus enabled to patch up the badly damaged intrenchments, so that
-the French, when they had been supplied with new ammunition, had to
-begin all over again.
-
-The continuous rainfall created cruel conditions for the housing of our
-troops. As has been said, the few sparse settlements had been literally
-shot to pieces, and our troops were therefore forced to construct
-their own huts and cave shelters. That such poor quarters, during an
-incessant downpour of rain, were bound to have an injurious effect upon
-the strength of the troops, is abundantly plain. Nevertheless, our
-men never complained. With admirable patience, even good humour, they
-endured the greatest privations and hardships which were the result
-of the inclement weather and the inadequate quarters, and how great
-these privations and hardships were can only be understood by some one
-who himself has lived through a rainy Winter in the "louse Champagne"
-country. Nevertheless, miraculously, the health of the troops remained
-remarkably good.
-
-Originally only the First and the Seventeenth French Army Corps had
-been intrenched opposite to our Eighth Army Corps and our Eighth
-Reserve Corps. Both of the French army corps had suffered severely
-during their continuous attacks around Christmas, in January and the
-beginning of February. But they had been reinforced continually.
-Before beginning their great drive against our lines the French had
-gathered together materially larger forces. To cope with our two army
-corps gradually, in addition to the First and the Seventeenth Corps,
-two colonial divisions and half a territorial division--all in all
-almost seven and a half army corps were massed in a comparatively small
-territory.
-
-Furthermore, they had greatly strengthened their artillery. On the
-other hand, our two army corps had been strengthened solely by the
-addition of individual battalions of the Fifth and Seventh Armies, as
-well as by the Sixth Army Corps and the Twelfth Reserve Corps (which at
-this time belonged to the Third Army). The Eighth Army Corps comprised
-the Bavarian "Landwehr" Brigade and the Hessian "Landwehr" as well.
-Then, finally, there was the First Guard Infantry Division, destined to
-play a prominent part in this battle.
-
-In this terrific battle sons from every principality and kingdom of the
-Fatherland fought shoulder to shoulder, and vied with each other in the
-display of courage and endurance. Prussians and Bavarians, Saxons and
-Hessians, men from the North and the South, from East and West, stood
-side by side, cheek by jowl, forming an impregnable wall against which
-the furious, despairing, fanatic attacks of the French were doomed to
-futilely spend themselves.
-
-The French fought with marvellous valour, with reckless courage and
-nerve, climbing up and on over the bodies of their fallen comrades.
-They were excellent fighters, were these Frenchmen. But our men were
-better fighters, as the outcome of the battle taught us.
-
-It was, however, not the attacks of their infantry which made this
-battle so hideous for us, nor was it the hand-to-hand struggle in
-the trenches, man against man, where the German, possessing greater
-physical strength, was easily the match of the individual Frenchman.
-What made the battle a living hell was the work of the French
-artillery, enormous in strength, with huge supplies of ammunition which
-was spent lavishly. Life in the trenches became a perpetual nightmare
-and stamped as unforgettable heroes the men who went through with it
-without flinching.
-
-
-IV--"IT SEEMED IMPOSSIBLE ANY LIVING CREATURE COULD SURVIVE"
-
-Onto a comparatively small area the French on one day threw a hundred
-thousand shells! We found a French document in which the commanding
-officer calculated that eighteen bombs must be the allowance per
-metre of German trench, these eighteen bombs to be used not in a day,
-but within one or two hours! The rapidity of the artillery fire was
-therefore as great as that of an ordinary machine gun, but the shells
-hurled against us were not infantry shells, but grenades of every
-calibre. "Drum-fire" is the name for this sort of artillery fire, and
-its effects were simply dreadful--unspeakable. The barbed wire was
-completely annihilated, was clean wiped out of existence; the trenches
-were flattened into mounds, their foundations crumbled away. No known
-sort of earthworks were able to withstand such fire for even a short
-time. But German discipline, loyalty and heroism held out.
-
-When such "drum-fire" began, a huge wall of smoke and chalk particles
-rose over our trenches, cutting off the men from the rest of the world.
-The horror of the scene was augmented by the ceaseless rumbling,
-thundering and crashing which filled the air, and which, even miles
-away, sounded like a heavy thunderstorm. It seemed impossible that
-any living creature should survive such a hellish turmoil. When the
-firing ceased abruptly, or when its direction was changed to give
-the French infantry a chance to attack us, then our brave fusiliers,
-musketeers, grenadiers crawled out of the funnels and pockets into
-which the enemy's grenades had ploughed the earth, made their way from
-among broken foundations, crumbling cement, trickling sand bags, and,
-grabbing their guns and wiping the dirt from their eyes, they repulsed
-the French attack.
-
-And this was done not once, but dozens of times.
-
-Occasionally our men were ordered to abandon a trench which was
-suffering particularly from "drum-fire" in order to avoid unnecessary
-loss of life, and the crew from such an abandoned trench was then
-placed in our second line of intrenchments. It sometimes happened that
-French infantrymen, under protection of their artillery fire, reached
-and took such an empty trench, succeeding the more readily because
-they encountered no obstacles. Our soldiers then sprang forth from
-their cover and attacked the French with hand grenades and bayonets.
-Invariably we were successful in repulsing the enemy, causing them
-heavy loss of life.
-
-If for some reason or other this counter-attack was not made at once,
-but was postponed for an hour or two, we were not so sure of success,
-and it was then never secured by us without heavy casualties, for
-the few hours that had elapsed had amply sufficed the French, who
-are exceedingly clever at every sort of intrenchment work, to change
-and remodel the trench for their purposes, to install machine guns,
-to place sandbag barriers along both sides and to make sundry other
-changes. This done, the "Frenchmen's nest" was complete.
-
-The difficult task of ousting the French from their "nest" then
-devolved upon our regiments, and in some instances many weeks of hard,
-cruel fighting were required to accomplish this end. For this work we
-employed underground mines, artillery, bombs and hand grenades. When
-the time was ripe for attack, columns of volunteers were formed, which
-were led by officers, who, in turn, were preceded by groups of pioneers
-with hand grenades and intrenchment tools, to be used in demolishing
-the sandbag barriers. The assault was begun simultaneously from both
-sides. These attacks were usually conducted at night, and it will
-readily be seen what cool, unshakable courage was required for work of
-this kind. Immediately after the hand grenades were exploded our men
-advanced and a furious hand-to-hand fight ensued, in which not only
-bayonet and pick-axe, but shovel and booted foot were used to expel the
-enemy, to kill him or force him to surrender.
-
-
-V--BRAVERY OF THE GRENADIERS
-
-As an example of the tremendous fury with which such a hand-to-hand
-fight raged I will cite one instance. A grenadier of one of our Rhenish
-regiments, who carried a pick-axe, had the thumb of his right hand,
-which carried the weapon, bitten right off by a Frenchman. The German
-soldier, writhing with pain, contrived to change the pick-axe to his
-left hand, killed both the Frenchman who had maimed him and his comrade.
-
-In another regiment three men had discovered that in making these
-nocturnal attacks they could work together to splendid advantage. The
-strongest man of the three took the centre. In his left hand he carried
-two steel shields from machine guns lashed together. In his right hand
-he held his weapon, bayonet or pick-axe. His two companions kept to
-either side of him, as closely as possible. One carried as many hand
-grenades as he could manage, the other was equipped with a bayonet.
-Thus accoutred, this strange trio proceeded, striking, thrusting and
-throwing grenades, and literally hacking its way through the ranks of
-the enemy and striking terror to the hearts of the foe.
-
-Excellent service these three men rendered. Evening after evening the
-man who carried the steel shields volunteered for the difficult and
-hazardous task. He was asked if he did not feel the necessity for
-resting up, or if he did not prefer to serve the hand grenades or to
-wield the bayonet for a change. He replied that less powerful men than
-he could not as easily carry the steel shields and the pick-axe as
-well, while the bayonet work and the throwing of hand grenades could be
-done readily by the others.
-
-The sharpshooters of the Imperial Guard had formed an entire company
-of volunteers, who, led by officers, were always sent to perform
-particularly dangerous and difficult tasks. They performed deeds of
-incredible valour, and the "Tschakos," as Germans call this picked
-corps, will not soon be forgotten by the French.
-
-The men of the Saxon Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 107 were adepts in
-taking French prisoners. They had a system of their own and found it
-infallible.
-
-Thus, at night, our brave fellows had to engage in hand-to-hand
-encounters, at day had to endure the frightful fire of the French
-artillery, and when the firing ceased there was still not a moment's
-rest for them, for they then had to repulse the onslaughts of the
-French infantrymen.
-
-Nor was that all. The positions which had been shot to pieces by the
-enemy by day in the field, had to be rebuilt, as far as was possible,
-at night. The reserves were requisitioned to assist in this work,
-although they had really been sent back of the firing line to rest up.
-The Reserves were also frequently called upon at night to help defend
-with the bayonet any menaced point. Thus their supposed "resting-up"
-in the protected zone was somewhat problematical in nature, not alone
-because they were frequently called upon to help out, but because the
-French had a pretty trick of training their heavy artillery fire, night
-and day, upon these outlying points, positions and roads. Unbelievable
-as it seems, the men in the trenches actually suffered less from the
-artillery fire at night than did the men in the rear.
-
-Alternately fighting and working by day and by night, our brave men
-performed the work of supermen. Each man was actuated by one thought
-only--to defend his position to the last, to overcome the enemy, to
-endure through it all, no matter what happened. Each leader, each
-division, conceived it to be a task of honour to hold the position, or,
-if it had been lost, to regain it.
-
-
-VI--THE PRINCE GIVES HIS OPINION OF HIS ADVERSARY
-
-Let us now consider the method which our foe employed in preparing the
-attacks.
-
-The French attacks must be classified as partial attacks and as attacks
-en masse. The former invariably preceded the latter. The numerical
-strength of the troops thus employed varied from a company to a
-division. They were never an end in themselves, but a mere link in the
-chain of a general, comprehensive plan. A destructive "drum-fire" was
-followed up by an attack upon a particular trench. Having secured the
-trench, they did one of two things. Either they used every effort to
-secure a second trench, several hundred meters further along the line,
-so that, working and fighting toward each other, they might reasonably
-expect to unite the two trenches; or, using the captured trench as a
-base for an attack en masse, they sought to indent our line and to
-break it, a thing which was never attempted when a partial attack was
-made.
-
-In conducting these attacks en masse, the French always adhered to
-their well-known scheme. A compact line of sharpshooters at the front
-was followed at a distance of one hundred meters by densely packed
-masses of company and battalion columns.
-
-This method, of attack, from which they never swerved, occasioned them
-a shocking loss of life. The losses sustained by a French regiment in
-storming a position may be estimated conservatively at forty to fifty
-per cent. French prisoners confirmed this estimate. To this wholesale
-slaughter to which they condemn their men the fact is probably due that
-the French rarely use the same regiment twice for purposes of attack.
-Surely they must reckon with the demoralizing effect sustained by men
-who have been forced to climb over hillocks of their own dead in order
-to reach the enemy!
-
-A French officer, whom we took prisoner, told us that the havoc wrought
-by the German artillery fire upon the closed columns of the French had
-been frightful. He added:
-
-"These attacks constitute an insane slaughter; strictly speaking,
-they are not attacks, but a mad dancing in shambles, through a
-charnel-house, upon a cemetery. And yet we will be forced to continue
-this way until the French Government sees fit to recognize the futility
-of our method, or until we contrive to break through."
-
-Not enough can be said in praise of our artillery. Heavy and light
-artillery as well performed wonders. Their co-operation with our
-infantry was wonderful--could not have been improved upon. Often,
-our well-directed artillery fire nipped in the bud French efforts at
-attack. Truly, the artillery which took part in the battle of the
-Champagne has every reason to be proud of its record.
-
-At the beginning of the period of which I am writing, the French
-attacks were directed principally against our positions near Perthes
-(the centre and left wing of the Eighth Army Corps). Then the French
-concentrated their attacks upon the outer left wing of the Eighth
-Army Corps and the right wing of the Eighth Reserve Corps (16th
-Reserve-Division). Finally the French offensive degenerated into
-a desperate, mad, wild struggle for the now famous Hill 196 (two
-kilometers north of le Mesnil-les-Hurlus). At first they were probably
-obsessed by the idea that the hill was valuable because of the outlook
-which it afforded. Later, the government, or the War Ministry, seems to
-have issued an order that the hill must be taken at whatever cost. They
-paid the cost--paid horribly, suffered overwhelming losses, offered
-hecatombs of victims, and still did not gain the Hill--thanks to the
-heroism of the defending regiments.
-
-This--Hill 196--was the most seriously menaced point, and accordingly
-the Guard was installed there, which, together with the Rhenish,
-Silesian and Saxon regiments, performed deeds of great valour. True to
-the traditions of their race, they withstood the terrific onslaughts
-made by the French hordes, onslaughts for the making of which the
-French continually sent out fresh regiments. Attack after attack
-failed. Those who escaped the fire of the artillery and the machine
-guns fell under the butts and blades of the German bayonets.
-
-Just as the interest and action of a drama continues to ascend until
-the end of the last act, so the Battle of Champagne reached its
-culmination and conclusion in the mad struggle that raged around Hill
-196.
-
-
-VII--"MAD STRUGGLE AT HILL 196"
-
-In the last days of the frantic struggle, we had perceived that the
-French were gathering in largely increased numbers in their trenches.
-Then to our surprise the attack which we expected to follow did not
-occur. We therefore deemed it reasonable to conclude from this that
-the enemy no longer considered it expedient to push on, and that the
-fire of our artillery was holding them to their trenches. Therefore,
-on March 18, we were not expecting that any serious attack would be
-attempted. But the French apparently were not willing to admit defeat
-without one final, desperate effort.
-
-Suddenly, on the afternoon of March 18, the attack was begun by densely
-massed troops, their objective being Hill 196 and the position directly
-east of the hill. The position of the Guards Reserve Infantry Regiment
-No. 133 and other troops, who received the main shock of the impact,
-was not to be shaken, however. The Fourth Turcos Regiment and others of
-the French army attacked in five lines, advancing one by one, with some
-of their officers on horseback. We received them with a shower of hand
-grenades, which tore hundreds of them limb from limb and blew to atoms
-the first two lines.
-
-Succeeding lines fared no better. Those who miraculously escaped the
-hand grenades were felled by our furious men with blows of pick-axe and
-bayonet. In spite of their dauntless courage, their reckless contempt
-of death, their marvellous persistence, the French were forced back.
-Front and flank of this writhing maelstrom of densely packed humanity
-rolling along in a disorderly retreat was swept by our heavy artillery
-fire from 21-centimetre mortars, heavy field howitzers, 10-centimetre
-cannon. The losses which the French sustained were inhuman and
-sickening.
-
-With this last valiant attempt to take the Hill 196 ended the Winter
-battle of the Champagne. After months of frantic fighting, after paying
-a frightful toll in blood, the French were forced to abandon their
-effort to break through our lines. Their finest troops, the very flower
-of their army, who had fought persistently with all the dare-devil
-gallantry for which the French are famous, had, in the end, not only
-failed to win a victory, but had sustained a crushing defeat. For the
-fact must not be overlooked that their failure to force their way
-through our lines was tantamount to a very serious defeat.
-
-
-VIII--WHAT THE GERMAN PRINCE CLAIMS FOR HIS ARMY
-
-The battle of the Champagne is over. The unexampled heroism, the
-superhuman endurance of our troops have already become things of the
-past. But we, the great German nation, will do well to heed the warning
-that was sounded in the bitter days when the frenzied battle raged in
-the Champagne.
-
-What lesson shall we extract from this titanic struggle? What moral is
-pointed by Hill 196, whose every inch of ground was ploughed by bullets
-and soaked with our dearest blood? What were the underlying causes that
-contributed to our victory? What was it that made every beardless boy
-a hero, made the oldest man in the "Landwehr" forget his age and the
-privations he was enduring?
-
-Let us briefly review the principal factors that made for success.
-
-The value of iron discipline was overwhelmingly demonstrated. It is
-safe to assert that the most highly disciplined regiment will be the
-most successful in action. Youthful enthusiasm may be undermined,
-patriotism may be forced into temporary abeyance by hours of continual,
-cruel shelling; worse than that, the very power to think becomes
-inhibited in the witches' cauldron of "drum-fire." It is then that
-discipline asserts itself. Nothing else gives the same moral stamina,
-and in difficult positions discipline is bound to be the determining
-factor.
-
-Before the war began the voices of many people were raised who, from
-false sentimentality, from undue softness, from ill-will or from
-sheer stupidity, were eager to have an end put for all time to the
-unconditional obedience and rigid drill of our army; in brief, to our
-entire military training, the value of which has been tested and proven
-throughout centuries. Many of our so-called comic papers made it their
-chief business to ridicule military training and discipline, to spatter
-with mud the very foundation and bulwark of our military efficiency. I
-think the battle of the Champagne must have taught them to amend their
-way of thinking.
-
-"The iron rock upon which Germany rests more securely than the earth
-upon the shoulders of Atlas is our glorious army." That this army
-has reached this glorious summit is due primarily to its splendid
-training, and the fundamentals of this training are to be found in the
-latterly much-laughed-at and sneered-at detail work done in years of
-peace. The standing-at-attention, the the clock-like precision, the
-manual of arms, the goose-step--to all of these we owe the efficiency
-displayed by our troops in resisting French "drum-fire," in repulsing
-French drives, in withstanding with iron might French alertness, in
-circumventing French enthusiasm and gallantry.
-
-For instance, our Guard went through the attacks at Ypres. During
-the bitter month of February this same First Guard Infantry Brigade
-rendered futile and vain all the science and gallantry manifested
-by the French troops at Perthes, and won new laurels in the frantic
-struggle for Hill 196. Yet this crack regiment did not disdain, when
-ordered to the rear for a brief, much-needed rest, to continue its
-exercises and drills from the very first day of its holiday. In battle,
-even, when under cover, this regiment went through the manual of arms,
-practised positions and stood at attention.
-
-One thing more. Let us educate our young men to be strong and hard. Let
-us guard against influences that tend to soften or make for effeminacy,
-so that, when future need arises, the coming generation may be able
-successfully to cope with conditions similar to those which confronted
-our troops in the Champagne. Let us weed out the poison which is eating
-into the marrow of our national life--the cry for pleasure or youthful
-liberties.
-
-Then, too, let us instil in the youth of our nation simple faith,
-a firm belief in the Lord God, whose will directs the destinies of
-mankind. Those who went through the battle of the Champagne agree in
-saying that without a firm belief in God they never would have been
-able to live through those harrowing days, and to the handful, who
-lacked faith, faith came amid shower of shells, during attacks of
-bayonets.
-
-
-
-
-A DAY'S WORK WITH A FRENCH SUBMARINE
-
-_An American s Experience under the Sea_
-
-_Told by Fred B. Pitney, by Authority of the French Minister of Marine_
-
- This story is told from "a certain formidable naval base on the
- coast of France." The American who relates it went out on scout
- duty on a submarine--for a single day. He tells how it feels to
- dive, the sensation of being shot at--not "unpleasant or trying on
- the nerves." Mr. Pitney is one of the war correspondents for the
- _New York Tribune_.
-
-
-I--"WE FIRED NINE SHOTS AND SUNK BENEATH THE SEA"
-
-To appear on the surface, fire nine shots at an enemy vessel and
-disappear in safety, untouched, below the surface, all in the space of
-forty-five seconds--this, I believe, constitutes a submarine record.
-Yet, this feat I witnessed as an observer on board a French submarine
-in active service.
-
-Before this I was a passenger on a vessel that was attacked by a
-submarine. A torpedo was launched at us from below the surface, while
-we were anxiously trying to pick up the periscope of the submerged
-vessel, for we were in dangerous waters. We had just discovered the
-periscope when the torpedo was sent at us. Five minutes later the
-submarine came to the surface and fired a round at us from the gun
-abaft the turret we lay to and the passengers were transferred in a
-small boat from the passenger vessel to the submarine. It was then
-that I was on board the submarine while it attacked another vessel.
-
-Thus, on the afternoon in question I participated in all the phases
-of submarine warfare, including entering a harbor protected with net
-and floating mines, filled with warships and surrounded with land
-batteries. Possibly the most exciting moment of all in an afternoon
-filled with thrills was when one land battery, uncertain of our
-identity, fired three shots across our bows and we had to lie to and
-prove who we were with a string of signal flags before we could proceed
-on our tortuous path among the mines.
-
-Our little vessel, put at our disposal by the French Ministry of Marine
-to view the defences of a certain formidable naval base on the coast of
-France, was calmly traversing the waters near the mouth of the harbor,
-when a young officer, standing beside me on the bridge said: "We must
-look out for submarines near here."
-
-"Germans?" I asked.
-
-"Oh, yes," he replied, "Germans, of course."
-
-We had already passed through the net that protects the mouth of the
-harbor and had been warned that we were going through a mine field,
-and that sometimes, especially in bad weather, the mines got loose and
-drifted about casually, getting in most anybody's way. Now we had the
-added pleasure of a possible encounter with a German submarine.
-
-"How many German submarines are there in the Mediterranean?" I asked.
-
-"About thirty-five," he said.
-
-Recalling my geography, it seemed we had a pretty good chance of being
-seen.
-
-"Are you a submarine officer?" I asked.
-
-He told me that he was, and added that he would not change his work
-for any other branch of the service. I told him that I had always
-understood submarine service was particularly unpleasant and trying on
-the nerves.
-
-"Oh, no. On the contrary, it is very restful," he said, "and extremely
-interesting and great sport."
-
-"How old are you?" I asked.
-
-He was thirty-two and unmarried.
-
-"Perhaps that accounts for it," I said.
-
-"Perhaps," he agreed. "I don't know. But it is the sporting interest
-that makes the submarine service so fine."
-
-He told of cruising in the North Sea, watching for German torpedo
-boats, of weeks on guard duty in the Channel, assuring the service
-between France and England, and of other weeks submerged in the
-Adriatic, blockading the Austrian ports.
-
-"We had to pick our way through the mine fields submerged," he said,
-"and then lie forty hours submerged on blockade duty. When our turn
-ended, we would pick our way back through the mines for a rest."
-
-"But surely that was trying on the nerves," I said.
-
-"Oh, no," he declared. "Not at all. We had a good rest there. There was
-nothing to do but sleep and watch."
-
-"What was the worst part of that service?" I asked.
-
-"The hydroplanes," he answered readily. "They were always flying over
-the harbor looking for us, and there was always the possibility that
-one of them would discover us and drop a bomb."
-
-"In that event what would happen to you?" I asked.
-
-"No one would ever know," he replied, "unless we sank in shallow enough
-water to be raised."
-
-He said it in the most casual manner.
-
-"Has there ever been a fight between two submarines?" was my next
-question.
-
-He had been in two in the North Sea, he told me. "If you are on the
-surface, you fight with your guns," he said, "but, if you are under the
-surface, you go at it with torpedoes; there is not much chance with
-torpedoes, because you can only see the periscope and you have no idea
-which way the other fellow is going. Nothing happened in either fight
-I had. We both got off safely."
-
-During this conversation both of us and four of the ship's officers
-had our glasses on the sea, watching for submarines. One of the ship's
-officers now announced a suspicious looking white wave on the port bow.
-It was suspicious because it moved, but it was a very tiny little wave,
-only about three feet long and the breadth of a carpenter's hand. No
-one would ever have suspected it without expert advice.
-
-
-II--ON A SUBMARINE IN A ROUGH SEA
-
-That, as I learned, is one of the greatest dangers of the submarine. Of
-course, we have all been told it many times, but when the thing is once
-experienced it is truly appreciated, and not until then. The approach
-of the submarine is more insidious than the taste for absinthe.
-
-There is merely that little white wave only occasionally to be
-seen--the white water curling around the periscope--and with the
-sea running at all high there would be no white wave that could be
-distinguished from the white tops of the other waves. Then, if the
-submarine chooses to remain near the surface one can after a long time
-of very close study make out the periscope as a very small stick, like
-a piece of lath, poking up out of the water. But it only sticks up a
-little more than a foot when it is the most willing to be seen, while
-if, as in our case, it is not willing to be seen, the submarine, having
-located its prey, dives deeper and all trace of it is lost, the next
-thing being a torpedo coming from an entirely different point on the
-horizon.
-
-Our officers were experts at watching for submarines, and though the
-little white wave made by the periscope disappeared, they caught the
-white wake of the torpedo coming toward the port quarter and sheered
-off to escape it. The torpedo passed harmlessly by our stern, but the
-adventure was not ended, for hardly a minute later we heard a shot from
-off the starboard quarter and, turning in that direction, saw that the
-submarine had come to the surface and was busily firing at us to bring
-us to.
-
-We stopped without any foolish waste of time in argument. I asked if a
-boat would be sent to us, or if we would have to get our boat.
-
-"They carry a small folding boat," said the officer to whom I had been
-talking, "but we will have to send our boat."
-
-While we were getting our boat over the side, the submarine moved
-closer in, keeping her gun bearing on us all the time, most
-uncomfortably. The gun stood uncovered on the deck, just abaft the
-turret. It was thickly coated with grease to protect it when the vessel
-submerged. It is only the very latest type of submarines that have
-disappearing guns which go under cover when the vessel submerges and
-are fired from within the ship, which makes all the more surprising the
-speed with which a submarine can come to the surface, the men get out
-on deck, fire the gun, get in again and the vessel once more submerge.
-
-
-III--IN THE SECRET CHAMBERS OF A SUBMARINE
-
-I was in the first boatload that went over to the submarine. From
-a distance it looked like nothing so much as a rather long piece
-of 4 x 8 floating on the water, with another block set on top of
-it and a length of lath nailed on the block. It lost none of these
-characteristics as we neared it. It only gained a couple of ropes along
-the sides of the 4 x 8, while men kept coming mysteriously out of
-the block until a round dozen were waiting to receive us. The really
-surprising thing was that the men turned out to be perfectly good
-French sailors, with a most exceedingly polite French lieutenant to
-help us aboard the little craft.
-
-It was a little surprise the admiral of the port had prepared for us,
-and nothing could have been better prepared to give us the true flavor
-of submarine warfare. We had had all the sensation of being chased,
-fired on and captured--everything except being sunk in mid-ocean. Now
-we were to have the other experience of chasing and capturing the enemy.
-
-The vessel we were in was a 500-ton cruising submarine. It had just
-come from eight months' guarding the Channel, and showed all the
-battering of eight months of a very rough and stormy career with no
-time for a lie-up for repairs. It was interesting to see the commander
-hand the depth gauge a wallop to start it working and find out if the
-centre of the boat was really nine feet higher than either end. We were
-fifty-four feet under water and diving when the commander performed
-that little experiment and we continued to dive while the gauge spun
-around and finally stopped at a place which indicated approximately
-that our back was not broken. I suppose that was one of the things my
-friend the lieutenant referred to when he said life on a submarine was
-such a sporting proposition.
-
-We boarded the submarine over the tail end and balanced our way up the
-long narrow block, like walking a tight rope, to the turret, where we
-descended through a hole like the opening into a gas main into a small
-round compartment about six feet in diameter exactly in the midship
-section, which was the largest compartment in the ship. Running each
-way from it the length of the vessel were long corridors, some two feet
-wide. On each side of the corridors were rows of tiny compartments,
-which were the living and working rooms of the ship. Naturally, most of
-the space was given up to the working rooms.
-
-The officers' quarters consisted of four tiny compartments, two on
-each side of the after corridor. The first two were the mess room and
-chart room, and the second pair were the cabins of the commander--a
-lieutenant--and his second in command, an ensign. Behind them was an
-electric kitchen, and next came the engines, first two sets of Diesel
-engines, one on each side of the corridor, each of 400 horsepower.
-These were for running on the surface. Then came four bunks for the
-quartermasters and last the electric motors for running under the
-surface. The motors were run from storage batteries and were half the
-power of the Diesel engines. The quarters of the crew were along the
-sides of the forward corridor. The floors of the corridor were an
-unbroken series of trap doors, covering the storage tanks for drinking
-water, food and the ship's supplies. The torpedo tubes were forward
-of the men's quarters. Ten torpedoes were carried. The ammunition for
-the deck gun was stored immediately beneath the gun, which was mounted
-between the turret and the first batch, abaft the turret. Besides the
-turret there were three hatches in the deck, one forward and two aft.
-
-There were thirty-four men in the crew. Each quartermaster was directly
-responsible for six men, while the commander and his second were
-responsible for five each. The men are counted every two hours, as
-there is great danger of men being lost overboard when running on the
-surface, and in bad weather they are sometimes counted as often as
-every half hour.
-
-The turret was divided in two sections. In the after part was the main
-hatch and behind it a stationary periscope, standing about thirty
-inches above the surface of the water when the deck was submerged and
-only the periscope showing. There was no opening in the forward section
-of the turret, but the fighting periscope, which could be drawn down
-into the interior or pushed up to ten feet above the surface when the
-vessel was completely submerged, extended through the top.
-
-It is with this periscope that the vessel is navigated. The submarine
-sails at a depth at which the fighting periscope shows about eighteen
-inches above the surface, while the commander, standing on two iron
-grips, with his head, shoulders and body in the turret and his legs
-sticking down into the cabin, keeps his eyes glued to the sights of the
-periscope, which he constantly turns from side to side to take in all
-points of the limited horizon. The part of the fighting periscope that
-extends above the water is a brass rod about two and one-half inches in
-diameter, while its eye is only three-quarters of an inch in diameter.
-It is on this tiny opening that both the safety and fighting ability of
-the vessel depend.
-
-For two hours, turn and turn about, the commander and his second stand
-watch on the iron grips in the turret, one eye on the periscope, the
-other on the compass. And this goes on for weeks on end. It is only
-when they lie for a few hours fifty to seventy-five feet below the
-surface that they can get some rest. And even then there is no real
-rest, for one or the other of them must be constantly on duty, testing
-pipes and gauges, air pressure, water pressure and a thousand other
-things.
-
-I met the next day another officer whose mustache and eyebrows were
-black as jet, but whose hair was silver white. He was thirty-eight
-years old. For six years and a half he had been a submarine officer, he
-told me.
-
-"Why did you quit it?" I asked him.
-
-"Too old," he said.
-
-"Is there an age limit?" I asked.
-
-"No," he replied, "but a man knows when he is too old for the work."
-
-Yet nothing would induce those who have not yet found themselves too
-old to leave it. One would think the sailors, at any rate, would find
-the life tiresome or too dangerous. I talked to several of them about
-it, but they all agreed that they would not change.
-
-"Is this life better than on a battleship?" I asked one sailor.
-
-"Oh, yes," he replied. "I would not go back to a battleship."
-
-"What makes it better?" I asked.
-
-"It is more tranquil," he answered.
-
-Tranquil, sixty feet under water and your life hanging on a gauge that
-needs a good heavy wallop to make it work.
-
-When we dropped through the hatch into the interior of the submarine
-and the cover was clamped down over our heads the commander at once
-ordered me back into the turret.
-
-
-IV--"WE RAN SUBMERGED THROUGH A MINE FIELD"
-
-"Hurry, if you want to see her dive," he said.
-
-I climbed into the after section of the turret and fastened my eye to
-the periscope. Around the top of the turret was a circle of bulls'
-eyes and I was conscious of the water dashing against them while
-the spray washed over the glass of the periscope. The little vessel
-rolled very slightly on the surface, though there was quite a bit of
-sea running. I watched the horizon through the periscope and watched
-for the dive, expecting a distinct sensation, but the first thing I
-noticed was that even the slight roll had ceased and I was surprised to
-see that the bulls' eyes were completely under water. The next thing
-there was no more horizon. The periscope also was covered and we were
-completely beneath the surface.
-
-"Did it make you sick?" the commander asked, when I climbed down from
-the turret, and when I told him no he was surprised, for he said most
-men were made sick by their first dive.
-
-The thing most astonishing to me about that experience was how a
-submerged submarine can thread its way through a mine field. For though
-the water is luminous and translucent one can hardly make out the black
-hull of the boat under the turret and a mine would have to be on top
-of you before you could see it. The men who watch for mines must have
-a sense for them as well as particularly powerful sight.
-
-We continued to dive until we were sixty-eight feet below the surface,
-too deep to strike any mine, and there we ran tranquilly on our
-electric engines, while the commander navigated the vessel and the
-second in command opened champagne in the two by four mess room. After
-half an hour of under-water work we came near enough the surface for
-our fighting periscope to stick twenty inches out of the water and
-searched the lonely horizon for a ship to attack.
-
-It was not long before we sighted a mine trawler, steaming for the
-harbor, and speeded up to overtake her.
-
-"Pikers!" said our commander, as we circled twice around the mine
-trawler; "they can't find us."
-
-Five men on the trawler were scanning the sea with glasses, looking
-for submarines. We could follow all their motions, could tell when
-they thought they had found us and see their disappointment at their
-mistakes, but though we were never more than five hundred yards from
-them I did not think they were pikers because they did not find us. I
-had tried that hunt for the tiny wave of a periscope.
-
-"No use wasting a torpedo on those fellows," said our commander. "We
-will use the gun on them."
-
-"How far away can you use a torpedo?" I asked.
-
-"Two hundred yards is the best distance," he said. "Never more than
-five hundred. A torpedo is pure guesswork at more than five hundred
-yards."
-
-We crossed the bow of the trawler, circled around to her starboard
-quarter and came to the surface, fired nine shots and submerged again
-in forty-five seconds.
-
-The prey secured, we ran submerged through the mine field and past the
-net barrier to come to the surface well within the harbor and proceed
-peacefully to our mooring under the shelter of the guns of the land
-forts.
-
-
-
-
-TALE OF THE CHILD OF TERBEEKE
-
-_How It Saved a British Battalion_
-
-_By Oliver Madox Hueffer_
-
- In this little story the author sets down the facts of a very
- remarkable affair--how a child saved a British battalion from
- annihilation, thereby giving rise to yet more legends of the
- "Angels of Mons" description. A true story from the _Wide World
- Magazine_.
-
-
-I--THE STORY OF HIPPOLYTE
-
-In the days to come the historian will find fruitful scope for a work
-on faith, as shown in the Great War. And among the "Angels of Mons" and
-other celestial visitants I hope he will find a niche for the "Child of
-Terbeeke."
-
-I came across the story--and the child himself, for that matter--when
-I was billeted with my battalion at Durdegem. Durdegem is as ugly a
-little Walloon village as you need look for, but, internationally
-speaking, it is as interesting as ugly. It stands on French soil; you
-could almost throw a tin of bully-beef, if you were so unpatriotically
-wasteful, into Belgium; what is, for all practical purposes,
-temporarily Germany is not more than three miles away; yet English
-is almost the only language you will hear in the streets. Even the
-children, those who are left of them, speak English; they say "Na
-poo" or "No bon," and sometimes, it is to be feared, a swearword, as
-patly as a bombardier. This is really less surprising than that there
-should be any children at all, with the German lines so close; but
-things have been comparatively quiet thereabouts for months past,
-and though some of the houses are still ruinous and others have had
-their windows blocked with sandbags so long that already the grass is
-beginning to grow upon them, the inhabitants have settled down to the
-not unprofitable task of selling comforts to the British soldiers who
-are always passing and repassing.
-
-I was billeted upon Madame Tavernier, who owned the Blanchisserie du
-Cygne and was rapidly making her fortune out of the laundry bills she
-rendered to British officers, who are notoriously millionaires and well
-able to pay for the privilege of defending Northern France. With Madame
-Tavernier there was also staying--while other arrangements were being
-made for him--Hippolyte, otherwise famous as the Child of Terbeeke.
-
-Hippolyte was not yet six, but already he could say "Slee-o-pums" and
-"Stunt-ease" and "Fum-fers" so plainly that any drill-sergeant would
-have wept with pride to hear him. Also he wore the full uniform of a
-British sergeant-major, with puttees and a walking-stick and the badge
-of a famous Line regiment, all specially made and presented to him
-for his very own. Also, although he was temporarily the paying-guest
-of Madame Tavernier and allowed himself to be petted by a whole
-serial-story of British officers, he had a service-battalion to act
-as his father and to fight for him any battles he might wish fought.
-It is to be feared that a precocious understanding of these facts had
-made him rather conceited, and I do not think I should have liked him
-very much had I remained with Madame Tavernier longer than three days.
-Anyhow, this was his story, as related to me by that excellent lady and
-vouched for by a cloud of witnesses.
-
-Hippolyte came from Terbeeke, which is in the south of flat Flanders.
-Madame declared that he was the son of a professor at Louvain
-University, and added that the professor quarrelled with his wife soon
-after the birth of Hippolyte, and that the wife thereupon returned to
-her native village.
-
-Hippolyte, therefore, at a very early age indeed, went to live at
-Terbeeke. Terbeeke, I understand--for I was never there--lies just at
-the southward edge of the Flemish flats. Northwards the country is as
-flat as a drawing-board, criss-crossed with dykes and little canals;
-to the east is a wide State forest, and to the south a range of low
-hills. Between the little town and the hills lies what in pre-war days
-was Terbeeke's one claim to fame--the Terbeeke mere or marsh, forming
-a crescent to the south and west. I do not know how broad or wide it
-is, but it has been famous for centuries as bottomless, and a whole
-cycle of legend has grown up round it, dealing with the notabilities of
-one kind or another who have been drowned in its brown, oozy depths.
-Perhaps because of this evil fame it has never been drained, and is
-to-day as darkly ominous as in the times of fairies and lubber-fiends.
-
-The mother of Hippolyte lived in a small and lonely house at the other
-side of the marsh from the town of Terbeeke. She must have possessed
-some private means, for she seems to have carried on no business of any
-kind, but to have devoted most of her time to religion, crossing the
-marsh-arm several times daily to the parish church, which stood in the
-centre of the town. Otherwise her days were passed in solitude, for she
-lived quite alone with the child, their only companion being a large
-dog. She passed the time not taken up by religion in wandering about
-the marsh, for she had few friends, and the people of Terbeeke often
-saw the three moving about the surface of the quagmire in places where
-there was no known track.
-
-
-II--IN PATH OF PRUSSIAN INVADERS
-
-Time passed, and the war broke out. Terbeeke was not in the direct path
-of the invaders, and, sheltered behind the forest, it almost seemed
-to the townspeople as though they might escape the fate of the rest
-of Belgium. But the respite was not for long. The low muttering of
-distant guns grew every day louder; the stream of fugitives hurrying
-through the forest and past the town towards the French frontier grew
-always denser; at last the climax came. A British officer dashed into
-the town at three o'clock in the morning and hurried into the Mairie.
-The civilian population, it was announced, must evacuate their houses
-instantly.
-
-There followed the usual scenes of frantic terror and chaotic haste
-that happened so often during the opening chapters of the Great War.
-The one road out of the town was blocked with every kind of conveyance,
-from bicycle to dog-carts; there were blocks at every corner; precious
-minutes were wasted in useless recriminations; and long before the last
-civilian had left, the turmoil of desperate fighting was heard coming
-always nearer through the dim mystery of the forest.
-
-It was one of the incidents of the Great Retreat. A flank battalion of
-British infantry, by some mishap, lost direction. Cut off from the main
-body, and fighting desperately, it was driven always further from the
-path along which safety lay, until at last, flinging itself into the
-forest of Terbeeke, for a whole day and night it held off the furious
-attacks of a brigade of Prussians.
-
-But the odds were too great. Slowly but surely the battalion was
-forced back through the forest to the very outskirts. Back from there,
-after another frantic assault, it reeled, reduced now to two sparse
-companies--some three hundred men in all---across the little edging of
-cornfields into the stricken streets of Terbeeke.
-
-There, at last, it found some respite. The Prussians, having learnt
-by bitter experience the fighting value of the "contemptible" little
-force arrayed against them, jibbed at the open frontal attack across
-bare plough-land, and remained hidden within the forest, awaiting
-reinforcements.
-
-Meanwhile the British remnant fought desperately to establish
-themselves within the village and turn every house into a citadel;
-while their commander, a lieutenant of something under twenty-one,
-racked his brain for some way of escape. At one time it might have
-been possible to skirt the northern edge of the marsh, but already
-the attacking Prussians had pushed forward, and the British were now
-enclosed within a triangle, formed as to its sides by the overwhelming
-Prussian force, and as to its base by the impassable fastnesses of the
-mere.
-
-"Unless something happens pretty quick," said the C.O. to his
-second-in-command, a boy of nineteen, "things are pretty considerably
-all U-P." (He said something to that effect, I mean. Madame Tavernier's
-narrative did not, of course, fill in such details.)
-
-They were standing in the porch of the old church, gazing
-disconsolately over the flat stretches of marshland. The Boche fire had
-temporarily ceased, and they devoted the respite to seeking some way by
-which the marsh might be crossed even at the eleventh hour. But there
-was none, or none which they could discern.
-
-"Wonder what they are waiting for?" said the boy, lighting a cigarette.
-
-"Bringing up the guns, of course. It will be dark in an hour." The
-young C.O. gazed hopelessly to where the sun was already dropping to
-the cloud-capped western horizon, straining with ominous red the reedy
-pools before them.
-
-"Moon will be up, though."
-
-"All the better for them. I should give the village another two hours.
-And then----"
-
-"You aren't going to surrender, surely?" There was the quiver of horror
-in the young voice.
-
-They were interrupted by the C.S.M. of B Company.
-
-"Not more than ten rounds a man, sir," he reported. "Machine-gun out of
-order." He made his report with the tranquil woodenness of his kind,
-without a quiver of voice or muscle. (If you say that it is impossible
-for me to know what these men said, or how they behaved, I can only
-reply that I have been through the same sort of thing myself.)
-
-"Thanks, major. Men come in that were sounding the marsh?"
-
-"Report there is no way across, sir."
-
-"They certainly won't find one now it's getting dark. Better get back
-to your posts. They will begin again soon."
-
-Even as he spoke there came the complaining whine of a four-inch shell
-high overhead.
-
-
-III--THE BABE ON THE BATTLEFIELD WITH HIS DOG
-
-Possibly it was the new sound that woke Hippolyte, or perhaps Casper,
-the mongrel wolf-hound, took it for the challenge of some ancestral
-enemy. At least, some half-hour later No. 21687 Private John Smith, of
-C Company, had a vision. He was not naturally an imaginative man, but
-he hastened to report it to the C.S.M.
-
-"Lummy, sir," he said, "if there ain't a bloomin' angel comin' across
-the bloomin' marsh!"
-
-And, sure enough, across the very centre of the shivering quag came a
-small figure, clothed in a long white robe very like those attributed
-to mediaeval angels, and with a golden aureole about its head, cast by
-the last rays of the dying sun. Actually it was no angel, but little
-Hippolyte, looking for his mother. She had left him, very early in the
-morning, to go to Mass, trusting him, as often before, to the care of
-Casper. Usually she was not gone for more than half an hour or so. On
-that day, however, she had not returned in one hour or in three. She
-never _would_ return, for before the third hour she was lying dead in
-the little square before the church-door--one of a group of six, men
-and women, who had been caught leaving the building when the Germans,
-in their first assault, enfiladed the main street with machine-gun
-fire. They lay side by side, very peacefully, just as they fell, for
-the hard-pressed defenders of the village had found no leisure to
-remove them.
-
-Hippolyte waited very patiently--as was his wont. He cried a little
-from loneliness at first, but his mother, before she left him, had set
-out the little portion of milk and bread that was to be his breakfast.
-Growing hungry, he sought for it in its accustomed place, ate it, and
-fell asleep again. It was the dog at last that disturbed him, later in
-the afternoon, by whimpering and scratching at the door, and gave him
-the great idea of starting out to find the mother who was so long in
-returning.
-
-Child and dog set out together along the imperceptible track of safety
-that crept and twisted across the marsh. Alone Hippolyte would almost
-certainly have strayed from it, but the dog's surer instinct guarded
-him until, just at the moment when hope was at an end, he came as a
-vision of hope to the spent company of Englishmen.
-
-That is practically the end of the story, for you can imagine the rest,
-except, perhaps, that the child, when he had almost reached the hard
-ground, grew afraid of the sound of firing, the noise overhead, and
-the gaunt, stark men staring at him in wondering silence. So he turned
-homeward again, Casper stalking beside him, sacrificing his lust for
-battle to his duty as foster-father. But they went slowly, the child
-often turning back to stare with wondering eyes at the increasing chaos
-behind him and, as the more impressionable among the soldiers would
-have it, beckoning them to follow him towards safety.
-
-Follow they did, but as unbeaten soldiers should, in good order and
-with due precautions--and so escaped. The Germans lost time before
-they entered the deserted village, for they feared an ambush. When
-they _did_ enter, it was long past sunset and the night was too dark
-to do anything before dawn. Even then they had no guide to show them
-the track across the marsh, and they were forced to skirt it, losing so
-much time that the British battalion--if you can call less than three
-hundred men a battalion--got clear away, and in due course picked up
-the main body, taking with them Hippolyte and Casper.
-
-You would say, if you did not know human nature, that there was no room
-for a legend of celestial intervention. But you would be wrong. Even in
-the rescued battalion--long since brought up to strength and upholding
-its laurels elsewhere in the line--the story holds good that somewhere
-unspecified on the Belgian frontier an angel, mediaeval in every detail
-down to aureole, wings, and celestial robes, did actually intervene
-and rescue it from under the very noses of the baffled Boches. And
-this although Hippolyte, adopted child of the regiment, sports his
-sergeant-major's uniform for everyone to see, and Casper, brilliantly
-caparisoned, stalks as a mascot should behind the drums. Elsewhere the
-legend has assumed new details, as I realized when a very excellent
-clergyman assured me that it was ... George himself, mounted upon a
-white horse (so transmogrified, I take it, was black Casper), who rode
-up and down the line before the 2nd Battalion of the West Loamshires,
-shaking his sword at the advancing Prussian Guard, who not unnaturally
-fled in disorder. Perhaps, in Terbeeke, he has by this time become
-Ste. Gudule, or some other patron saint of the Belgians, with a fiery
-dragon or whatever be her saintly attributes. I don't know, because, as
-I say, I was never in Terbeeke, but here at least you have what really
-happened, as Madame Tavernier told it to me in the front room of her
-Blanchisserie du Cygne, in the village of Durdegem, and in the presence
-of Hippolyte himself, who afterwards begged shamelessly for _sous_.
-
-
-
-
-A HERO TALE OF THE RED CROSS
-
-_Told by G. S. Petroff, War Correspondent of the "Russkoye Slovo,"
-Moscow_
-
- The following incident is narrated in M. Petroff's account of a
- battle on the eastern front. Translated for _Current History_.
-
-
-I--STORY OF THE WOUNDED GERMAN
-
-One of our soldiers brought with him a German officer, who could hardly
-stand on his feet. His leg had been pierced by a bayonet, his shoulder
-was bleeding from a bullet, and his arm had been bruised by the butt
-end of a rifle. He was losing consciousness from pain and loss of
-blood. As soon as the soldier led him to our place he dropped with his
-whole weight to the ground. The doctor bandaged him, exclaiming: "What
-luck! Three wounds, and in spite of all of them he will be well soon.
-The wound in the leg is only a flesh wound, his arm is badly bruised
-but not broken, and only his collarbone at his shoulder is broken. In
-a month he will be all right again. Just look! what a handsome fellow,
-and what expensive underwear!"
-
-The bandaged officer came to himself, looked around the yard, and,
-seeing the farmhouse in the background on fire, he sharply seated
-himself.
-
-"Now be quiet, calm yourself," said the doctor, speaking in German and
-taking the man gently by the shoulders.
-
-"My wife, my wife!" cried the German, tearing himself forward.
-
-"Where is the wife?"
-
-"There, in the house, in the fire!" He made an effort to get off the
-stretcher from under the doctor's hands.
-
-"Is he delirious or what?" muttered the doctor in Russian. "There is no
-one in the house," he added soothingly in German. "Your German wounded
-were there, but they were saved in time."
-
-"But my wife? My wife!" cried the captive in terror.
-
-"What wife? How did she come here?"
-
-"She is a nurse. She was here with the wounded. We loved each other,
-we married only a year ago. She became a nurse. Our regiment happened
-to be near their hospital. Your offensive was unexpected. There was no
-time to remove the hospital. The other nurses left, but she would not
-leave when I was so near. Where is she? My wife!"
-
-"Did any one see a German nurse in the house or yard?" asked the
-doctor, turning to the Russian soldiers and telling them briefly what
-the prisoner had said:
-
-"There was no woman," came the response. "The house was empty. Look at
-the fire within. Even mice would have run out by now."
-
-At this moment something metallic shrilled through the air. A heavy
-German shell flew over us.
-
-"Scoundrels!" cursed the doctor. "They are firing on us--and their own
-wounded! We must get out of this. Two or three more shells and they
-will begin dropping in the yard. Carry our wounded first, then theirs.
-Hurry, or we shall remain here for eternity!"
-
-
-II--A WOMAN'S FIGURE AT WINDOW OF BURNING HOUSE
-
-The captive officer, apparently powerless, could not rise from the
-stretcher, where he was lying with one of his soldiers who had been
-wounded before him. He gazed devouringly at the blazing house. Suddenly
-he shouted savagely: "There, at the window, under the roof! Look, she
-is breaking the window--where the smoke is pouring out!"
-
-We looked at the roof of the blazing house, and, in truth, there was
-a woman's figure in white, with a red cross on her breast. The doctor
-shouted: "Eh, fellows, it is true! A woman was left in the house--a
-nurse--his wife!"
-
-"What can be done?" asked the stunned soldiers. "The whole house is on
-fire, and she is not strong enough to break through the window frame.
-She must be weak from fright. But why did she go up? Why not down?"
-
-"There's no use guessing!" shouted a bearded fellow, evidently from the
-reserves, throwing off his overcoat.
-
-"Where are you going?" cried the soldiers.
-
-But he was already out of reach of their voices. He rushed into the
-house. All were stupefied, fearing to breathe. A minute passed,
-another, a third. Then at the window appeared the bearded face of the
-Russian soldier. There came the sound of broken glass and wood. Above
-our heads something was shrilling, but no one paid attention to the
-German shells. The soldier broke the window, dragged the woman into the
-open air. She was unconscious.
-
-"Catch!" rang from above, and a big white parcel came down. The
-soldiers caught it successfully on the hero's outspread overcoat. Only
-one of them was hurt in the eye by the heel of her shoe.
-
-"How will our chap get back to us now?" asked the soldiers of one
-another. "It is hell inside."
-
-"Oh, he will get out, all right," said some one. "It is easier to get
-out than to get in. He knows the way. And if he burns some of his
-beard, no harm; he has a large one."
-
-"Carry her to her husband!" ordered the doctor, "and get out from
-here immediately. The Germans are shelling us. Take away the rest, and
-don't forget the couple," remarked jokingly the doctor, happy over the
-incident. "I will wait for our hero. He may be burned."
-
-The soldiers caught the remaining stretchers, and nearly ran out of the
-yard. At that moment a big German shell struck the burning house. A
-deafening explosion shook the air. The walls trembled, shook, and fell.
-The heroic soldier had not had time to get out. He remained buried
-under the ruins.
-
-When the woman recovered consciousness near her wounded husband she
-did not understand where she was. She murmured in perplexity: "Dream,
-death? Otto, is that you? Are we together in heaven?"
-
-"On earth and both alive," calmed the doctor.
-
-"How did you get to the upper story?" asked the husband.
-
-"I saw Russian soldiers run into the house. I feared violence, so I ran
-upstairs. I thought I would run down later, but then came the fire....
-A soldier appeared behind me and I was terrified to death."
-
-"But that soldier saved you!" sighed the doctor.
-
-"How? Where is he?"
-
-"In heaven, if there is such a place for heroes." The doctor then told
-them all. The German officer and his wife both cried.
-
-"But how was it that your guns were firing at a farm which you were
-occupying?" asked the prisoner.
-
-"Our guns?" exclaimed the doctor, who was already bandaging a new
-victim. "It was your guns that were shelling a house over which flew
-a German Red Cross flag. Our soldiers were saving the lives of your
-wounded, and your guns were firing at both ours and yours. They killed
-the man who saved you. That's the way the Kaiser makes war."
-
-
-
-
-LIFE STORY OF "GRANDMOTHER OF THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION"
-
-_Triumphant Return from Forty-four Years in Siberian Exile_
-
-_Told by Catherine Breshkovskaya, the Russian Revolutionist_
-
- This life story of the "Grandmother of the Revolution," Catherine
- Breshkovskaya, is the living symbol of the Russian people's
- long and hard struggle for freedom. Of her seventy-three years
- forty-four have been spent in prison and Siberian exile. But
- neither the wilderness of Siberia nor the severity of convict labor
- has broken the spirit of this little woman. Entering the struggle
- against Czarism while still in its infancy, she lived to see its
- complete overthrow, and the Russian people remembered their loving
- "Babushka." They made her journey from Siberia to Petrograd after
- the revolution a continuous triumphal procession, such as no Czar
- or King has ever been accorded. Mme. Breshkovskaya, upon her
- arrival home, began touring Russia in the interests of Kerensky's
- policies. Her love for the common people, her influence on the
- peasantry, her faith in the stability of the New Russia, made her
- a great power. She has told the story of her life in the Petrograd
- weekly, "_Niva_," which has been translated by Isaac Don Levine
- for the _New York Tribune_. Here she tells for the first time how
- she journeyed afoot over Russia to preach "freedom from ignorance
- and political tyranny" to the peasants; how she was sentenced to
- Siberia; how she escaped, was captured, reimprisoned and flogged;
- and how on the news of the Czar's downfall she began her journey
- home on a sledge over the snow and ice to join her people in the
- establishment of the republic.
-
-
-I--"I ALWAYS PITIED THE SERFS"
-
-I was born in 1844. I passed my childhood and youth in the province of
-Tchernigoff, and all my life I remained grateful to my parents for the
-good and wise training and schooling which they gave me. They pitied
-the serfs and never oppressed them. Nevertheless there was a sharp
-difference between our life, the life of landlords, and that of the
-peasants in their cabins, such a shocking difference that my childish
-soul suffered greatly from the contradiction between the reality and
-the teaching of Christ. My mother would often read to us the New
-Testament and biographies of the great apostles of truth and love for
-humanity.
-
-All my life I thought so much and ceaselessly about the needs of the
-people, the suffering of the people, that all my sorrows and joys are
-bound up with the people. And I always made it my duty to serve the
-people and do all that is necessary to open the people's eyes to its
-own life and wants.
-
-My own life was entirely composed of love and devotion to my country
-and people and of a passionate desire to serve them with all the powers
-in my possession up to the very hour of my death.
-
-I am asked: "How did I arrive at the firm resolution to live only for
-the people?" I think that this resolution was always present in me,
-from my youngest years, from the very beginning of my conscious life.
-
-When I turn back in my mind to review my past life, I see myself,
-first of all, a little five-year-old lassie, who suffered at heart for
-somebody: for the coachman, or the chambermaid, or the day laborer, or
-the oppressed peasants (at that time serfdom still existed in Russia).
-
-The impressions of the people's suffering sank so deeply into my
-childish soul that they never deserted me afterward in all my life.
-
-I was seventeen when, in 1861, the peasants were freed of the violence
-of the landlords, but were so badly supplied with land that the
-laboring masses were again forced to go into slavery to the wealthy.
-The agitations among the peasants provoked terrible executions.
-Their torture was taking place before my very eyes, strengthening my
-aspiration to serve the people with all my might, so as to lighten
-their bitter lot.
-
-No revolutionary circles and organizations were known to exist at
-that time in the provinces, but there soon came the activity of the
-Zemstvos, and I applied to it all my efforts. Ten years I labored
-in the peasant school and the village, organizing credit-savings
-banks, mutual aid, co-operative shops and campaigns on the eve of the
-elections of judges and rural boards. My work was progressing, the
-confidence of the peasants in me was helping it along, but against me
-and my assistants the nobility arose, reporting us to the ministers,
-and the labor of many years was swept away as if with a broom.
-
-The schools and banks were closed, all the honest people of our
-county and the whole province of Tchernigoff were placed under police
-surveillance, many were exiled to the northern provinces and me they
-began to persecute.
-
-
-II--"I DECIDED TO START A REVOLUTION"
-
-I clearly perceived then that the government of Alexander II introduced
-reforms only on paper, only seeking to create the impression that it
-desired to better the life of the population. Actually, however, the
-government wickedly persecuted every attempt to help the laboring
-people to emerge from the darkness into light, to approach knowledge,
-to proclaim its own rights.
-
-It was clearly evident, not only in our locality but throughout the
-whole of Russia, that the government feared knowledge in the people and
-endeavored to keep it in a state of rightless slavery. This compelled
-me to seek another path, another way of working in the interest of
-my beloved people, and toward the end of the '60s I decided to go to
-Russia in search of men with whom to start an illegal struggle, i.e.,
-a movement forbidden under the Czar's laws.
-
-For more than two years I wandered about Russia, ever looking for
-some revolutionary centre, which could exist only as an underground
-organization. Gradually, by changing one kind of work for another,
-I penetrated into a rather large organization, which had decided to
-get personally in contact with the people, not through books and
-proclamations.
-
-At that time the difference between the sea of peasants and the little
-lake of intellectuals was so great that they were, entirely ignorant of
-one another. Besides, the moujik's suspicion of any person bearing the
-appearance of a "gentleman" was so deeply rooted that it was impossible
-to carry to the peasant and labor midst any message and retain the
-dress of the gentry. It was necessary to change the appearance from
-foot to head, to look a perfect plebeian.
-
-I put on a peasant dress, threw a bag across my shoulder, obtained a
-stick and set out to tramp. Although I did not tramp the country long,
-only one summer, yet I succeeded in visiting many villages, and nowhere
-did I meet with distrust. The peasants eagerly listened to my talks and
-those of my comrades. We told them that the land ought not belong to
-the few; that it should be placed in possession of all the people, of
-all those who wish to toil on it; that there ought not be such a system
-which permits the selling, mortgaging, buying and renting of thousands
-of acres by a few hands, while people were starving nearby because they
-lacked the land from which to obtain bread. The peasants would agree
-with us and also say that the land ought to belong to those who labor
-on it, who till it.
-
-We would also tell them that the landlords were oppressing the people;
-that they had seized all the government in their hands; that the
-bureaucracy was fraternizing with the landlords, hindering the people
-from living a free life. In this the peasants would also agree with us.
-
-We had difficulty only talking about one subject, the Czar. We tried to
-explain to the peasants that the Czar was acting concertedly with the
-nobility and bureaucracy, that he it was who was the chief oppressor of
-the people. But the peasants would not want to believe it. They were so
-distant in those days from understanding state affairs, being unable to
-read, because of general illiteracy, and lacking fundamental knowledge,
-that they had no idea how much evil the Czarist form of government had
-done to the nation.
-
-The peasants trusted the Czar; they were convinced that the Czar was
-a kind master of Russia who had to maintain an army to defend her
-from enemies, and that the peasants had to till the land, pay taxes,
-for the maintenance of the army. They thought that the Czar loved his
-people and took care of them, and, if officials did oppress the people
-sometimes, it was due to the fact that they deceived the Czar. And if
-the Czar were only to learn the whole truth he would drive out the
-officials and again become a loving father to his people.
-
-
-III--"I TOLD THE PEASANTS THE TRUTH ABOUT THE CZAR"
-
-Such were the beliefs of the peasants about the Czar. In spite of it
-all, I continued to tell them the real truth about the Czar, explaining
-to them that the Czar knows of all the oppressions and is in charge
-of every one of the oppressors. The peasants would say that I was
-mistaken, but, nevertheless, listened to my arguments, and not one of
-them insulted me with vulgar language.
-
-I was not alone in the tramp from village to village. Three thousand
-youths went to the people at that time, spreading all over the
-thirty-six provinces of Russia, and we all talked to the people on the
-same subject; we all endeavored to arouse the people to a good, free
-life. However, the government soon discovered our activities and began
-to arrest many, imprisoning, exiling to hard-labor settlements and to
-Siberia.
-
-I was arrested entirely by accident in 1874. I was "covering" the
-provinces of Kieff, Podolia, Tchernigoff and Kherson, and had in my bag
-detailed maps of these localities, in order to know my way and avoid
-arousing suspicion by questions. Whenever I stopped in the village
-cabins no peasant would ever look into my bag, and thus no one could
-ever find out who I was.
-
-But once, while stopping in Tulchin, the Province of Podolia, the
-woman-laborer of the peasant who gave shelter to me looked into my bag
-and discovered the maps there. To an illiterate person every printed
-word was a rarity, especially in those days. It will be understood, of
-course, that the laborer was shocked by her discovery. The same day she
-went to do some gardening for the sheriff and told him everything. The
-sheriff became alarmed and hurried off to look for me.
-
-And I, without suspecting anything, was at the time returning from the
-market, where I purchased a couple of apples, some pork and bread.
-
-Suddenly I saw the sheriff racing toward me in a carriage, shouting:
-"Get into the carriage!"
-
-Well, I understood immediately what the trouble was. I got into the
-carriage and kept still.
-
-We arrived at the cabin. "Where is the luggage of this woman?" The
-peasant replied: "She has no luggage, but she has a bag."
-
-The bag was examined and what could they find in it but maps and
-proclamations? Clearly, my case was closed.
-
-The sheriff was rather inexperienced, simple-minded, so he unfolded the
-proclamations and started to read them aloud, before the whole crowd.
-The peasants, after listening to them, said:
-
-"These are the real words. The whole truth is written there. This is
-the very truth which the nobles have hidden from us."
-
-In the meantime the examining officer arrived, and there both of
-them began to read the proclamation aloud. Meanwhile a multitude of
-peasants gathered, listening even under the windows. They learned
-my proclamation by heart. The county police chief was notified. He
-arrived, immediately perceived the meaning of it all, and ordered me to
-prison.
-
-
-IV--"I WAS HANDCUFFED AND LOCKED IN A DARK CELL"
-
-In those days a woman propagandist was something unheard of and unseen.
-In fear of this new phenomenon the warden of the Bratzlau jail thought
-it necessary to incarcerate me immediately in a dark cell and handcuff
-me. A month passed in wandering about country prisons, till gendarmes
-came, took me away from the police and dragged me first to a Kieff
-jail, then to Moscow, and finally to Petrograd, where I was tried with
-other offenders after being kept in prison for four years in solitary
-confinement. The condition of the imprisonment was serious. Of the
-300 prisoners held for total only 193 survived, among whom there were
-37 women. During all of my imprisonment I made no explanation to the
-judicial authorities, and I was condemned to five years of convict
-labor. But it was not dreadful. Nothing was dreadful when one had faith
-in one's righteousness.
-
-My healthy organism and ripe age helped me endure the many years'
-torments at a time when the young, tender lives fell sick quickly and
-were carried off one after another by death, leaving a feeling of
-atrocious pain and indelible bitterness.
-
-But we all retained our eagerness for activity, so early interrupted by
-an evil hand. The thought of returning to the party, to revolutionary
-work, lived in our minds in the form of a red-hot nail, and aroused all
-our abilities, all our power to seek a means to escape. There, to the
-fighters, to the bright populists, our spiritual vision was directed.
-
-I was already in on the rights of a settler, beyond the Baikal, in
-Barguzin, when, together with three men comrades, I moved into the
-hilly taiga, with its thousands of impediments and dangers. Our daring
-escape, which ended in our capture while wandering about unfathomed
-abysses and rocks, has been described by Tiutchev. I, as a former
-hard-labor criminal, was condemned to four years more of penal
-servitude and forty whips, which, however, the authorities did not dare
-to apply, "in order to arouse against the administration the political
-exiles," as the Military Governor of the Outer Baikal said in his
-report.
-
-I was thus forced to go, in 1882, after another year of imprisonment,
-to the same old Kara mines, at that time full of prisons for convicts
-and politicals. Both the first and the second perished there of
-scurvy, typhus, endless tuberculosis, but mostly the convicts, as the
-officials disregarded them entirely and kept them in the most shameful
-conditions.
-
-My second arrival at Kara was for me rather a joyous occasion. When
-I first came there I was the only woman doing hard labor; it was not
-fashionable yet to send women to mines. But now I found already sixteen
-or eighteen feminine comrades, and all of my second term I passed
-in the best society in the world. The annual term of convict labor
-consisted of eight months and my term flew past me unnoticed. Only one
-thing was aggravating, and that was to see how the frailer among us in
-health gradually sank and surely neared their graves, in the blossom of
-their lives.
-
-
-V--"I LANGUISHED FOR EIGHT YEARS IN A DEAD CITY"
-
-In 1885 I was again sent on the rights of a settler beyond the Baikal,
-in the dead city of Selenginsk, where I spent eight of the most sad
-years of my life. The naked steppe, the nailed-up cabins and the
-tireless trailing of the police became my lot. I was given neither
-the rights of a peasant nor a passport for travel in Siberia. And the
-heart burned with a passionate desire to escape, to renew the struggle
-with the enraged foe and take revenge for the innocently destroyed
-powers for good--the daughters and sons of our motherland. I sought,
-attempted, fought against obstacles, but all in vain. The steppe beyond
-the Baikal, the moundless Mongolian steppe, and, on the north, the
-inaccessible Baikal were the severe allies of the guard with which the
-authorities had surrounded me. There was no railroad nor steamship
-connection with the outside world. Right there then, in lifeless
-Selenginsk, I languished for eight whole years, languished like a hawk
-in a cage. All alone, ever yearning, I would go out into the steppe and
-in a loud voice pour my tempestuous heart, longing for freedom, into
-space.
-
-There was not a day on which I did not think of escaping, and I
-was always ready for any risk and peril, clinging to the littlest
-possibility to get away, but all in vain. No one, absolutely no one,
-promised any help. All those in whom it was possible to confide
-considered any attempt to escape foredoomed. My soul ached. And only
-the thought of my comrades--convicts who were sent to the Yakutsk huts,
-only the thought of their suffering made me forget my own. The eight
-empty years of my life in Selenginsk have remained all through my life
-a gray void, eating up the warm feelings of a warm heart. I filled
-my time with work, so as to be able to send my earnings to the dark
-prisons, snowbound wastes, to the hungry, forgotten comrades. I read,
-studied, in order to know how mankind lived, and how far or near was
-the possibility of transforming it into that "intelligent being" with
-whom it would be joyful to live. "Have patience," I would tell myself
-in the moments of keen grief; "be patient, endure to the end; you will
-get what you are waiting for."
-
-In 1890, after living for four years on the rights of a peasant, I
-finally received a passport to travel all over Siberia, and on the
-same day I departed from the suffocating place so as to gradually
-approach the boundary of European Russia as my term was nearing its
-end. My health was much undermined by the severe trials I had undergone
-in solitariness. Anaemia and strong neuralgia had tormented me in
-Selenginsk. But the inherited vigor of the organism soon returned to
-me, and the last four years of my life in Siberia, spent in journeying
-from town to town, I succeeded in having many conversations with young
-and mature people--succeeded in making allies of some of the leading
-citizens of Siberia. And when in September, 1896, I returned to Russia
-I found there many students of both sexes whom I taught in Siberia the
-theories and the urgency of regenerating the old watchwords. They soon
-tackled the work of liberation, and many of them remain loyal to this
-date to our principles.
-
-
-VI--"WHEN I CAME BACK FROM SIBERIA"
-
-Again I arrived in Russia in September. But upon my arrival I
-encountered a new movement, which was rapidly conquering a place for
-itself. Marxism was taking hold of, capturing, the minds of the youth,
-and the old fighters were regarded as dead forces. But faith in the
-force of personality, faith in the healthy strength of the people, a
-knowledge of their aims and needs lent so much firm confidence to my
-energy that, without hesitating a moment, I began to do some practical
-work, which had ripened in my mind as long before as the celebrated
-trial, in 1878, when I declared to my judges that "I have the honor
-of belonging to the Russian socialistic and revolutionary party, and
-consequently do not recognize the authority of the Czar's courts over
-me."
-
-Eighteen years passed after that, and my adherence to the party of
-socialism and revolutionism lived in me as freshly and ardently as in
-the days of my arrest and trial. Confidence that the peasant masses,
-these pillars of the state government, will obey the voice of their
-friends and will not be slow to follow their leaders--this confidence
-urged me to hasten the consolidation of the various forces likely to
-join the Social Revolutionary party, as it has been christened from its
-very beginning.
-
-It is necessary to bear in mind that from Siberia I came back to
-Russia all alone. I did not even have the addresses of the old comrades
-who remained in safety in the gloomy folds of Alexander III's reign.
-And it took considerable time, care and patience before my tireless
-but modest little journeys about Russia netted definite results as
-to acquaintance with people and opportunities. The readiness of the
-peasants to join the party became ever clearer, and on the fourth year
-of endeavor the party loudly proclaimed its existence, and in the
-fifth year all the separate committees recognized one centre. Both the
-increase in membership and growth in activity attracted the savage
-attention of the Czar's government.
-
-In 1903 the party suffered an enormous wreck. Wholesale arrests and
-searches robbed it of many of its leading workers, of its best printing
-shops and stores of literature. It was necessary to replace all that.
-By this time the work of the party had developed and grown strong
-abroad, thanks to our talented and zealous emigrants, who bent all
-their energies for the publication of party organs and popular books
-and pamphlets.
-
-In order to recall this youth to immediate activities at home,
-in Russia, I went abroad for the first time. In May, 1903, I
-boarded a steamer in Odessa and accompanied by an experienced
-contrabandist-intellectual, went, by way of Rumania, Hungary and Vienna
-to Geneva, Switzerland, where there centred the group of the party
-workers who were scattered in Paris, London and Switzerland. At this
-conference we were fully joined by the old fighters of the past '70s,
-Shishko, Volkhovskoy, Lazaroff, Tchaikovsky.
-
-The youth, which frequented all our lectures and debates, listened
-attentively to the voices of our speakers. Victor Tchernoff, the
-editor-in-chief of our central organs (and Minister of Agriculture
-in Kerensky's first Cabinet), victoriously defended the position of
-the party against the attacks of our opponents. At the same time
-I persistently spoke of the necessity to tackle the real task, to
-propagate our ideas among the peasants and workmen, to organize all the
-forces capable of and ready to enter into a battle with the old regime,
-ready to sacrifice their lives for a free Russia. And thus it was that
-a stream of young people of both sexes began to flow back to Russia,
-carrying with them Social Revolutionary literature, and the booklets
-"In Battle Shalt Thou Obtain Thy Rights" were lavishly spread on all
-the roads of the Fatherland.
-
-
-VII--"I VISITED AMERICA--MY FRIENDS OF FREEDOM"
-
-This task, the labor, of directing the forces of young Russia occupied
-two whole years of my life. It is true I succeeded in the meantime
-in visiting America, where I was urgently called by the friends of
-freedom. I sent out from there considerable sums of money to cover the
-expenses of the organization, mainly for literature, the import of
-which into Russia was very expensive. In the United States I acquired
-many genuine friends, who have remained faithful to me ever since. They
-proved it by profuse attention to all my needs during the last years of
-my exile and imprisonment, and from 1907 to 1917 they never ceased even
-for a week to take care of me.
-
-When the blows of the open struggle of 1905 had reached me I again
-crossed the boundary into my country, but this time I passed it on
-foot, running across in the company of two "contrabandists" and a
-comrade who carried with him a supply of dynamite.
-
-That was the Russian revolution marching, challenging all Russia to an
-unequal combat.
-
-Everybody knows the events of 1905, 1906 and 1907. The efforts of the
-revolutionists of all parties were unable to withstand the physical
-force of the evil government, but they have not only shaken up the
-paralyzed mind of the great people, but enticed them into demonstrating
-their power and seeing themselves as a victor, though temporarily. The
-combat was already nearing its end; the banners were already lowered
-and hidden for the next spiritual and physical upheaval; already the
-executioners were hanging and slaughtering, shooting and torturing the
-best champions of freedom; but my spirit was yet far from submission,
-my heart was still heaving with hope, and with head forward I threw
-myself into the thick of events. After the wreck of the second Duma I
-anticipated a new outburst of indignation on the part of the people.
-But apparently the cup of doubts had not yet been exhausted, and the
-people ponderingly looked into the future, not risking to sacrifice
-their remaining feeble forces.
-
-
-VIII--"THE HANGMAN'S ROPE WAS AT MY THROAT"
-
-It was in the days of such oppression on one side and vain strainings
-of all energies, on the other that I was arrested in Samara in 1907,
-again in the month of September.
-
-It seemed to me that this time I would be unable to escape alive
-from the hands of the hangmen. This was what I thought. But I felt
-otherwise. Two years and nine months I was kept in the fortress of
-Peter and Paul, thinking not of that, but of the time when Russia,
-after the inevitable victorious and triumphant second revolution, would
-take up the work of construction and transform our powerless country,
-our almost illiterate people, into an exemplary state, which could
-serve as a model to other peoples in culture as well as in social
-reform.
-
-Faith in the possibility of seeing my country free, my people
-developing in material and spiritual plenty, gave me strength, exalted
-my powers. I found myself still able to work with the people and for
-the people and was grieved to waste time in exile, in the listlessness
-of the Siberian taiga. I again made preparations for an escape, aiming
-to join my party comrades, who called me, in revolutionary activity.
-And again my escape failed. Only two or three hours separated me from
-my goal from a sure shelter and it was painful to fall again into the
-hands of the enemy after a thousand miles' journey in the winter.
-
-The thought occurred to me again that they would not pardon me my
-attempts to escape, my efforts to identify myself again with the
-revolutionary movement. At the same time there pulsed so much life in
-my heart that I could not imagine the end of my activities. Neither the
-long terms passed in jail nor my exile in Yakutsk had dimmed my spirit.
-"I will live through all this," said an inner voice to me; "I will live
-through everything and live to see the bright days of freedom." From
-Yakutsk I was brought to Irkutsk, and my life here was filled with the
-same persecutions as my exile in Kirensk. I fell very ill and observed
-how the physicians carefully concealed from me the danger of my malady.
-It seemed so strange to me that people could think of my fatal end when
-my soul was full of complete faith that time was bringing me nearer
-daily to a different kind of end, the triumph of the revolution.
-
-The longer the war continued the more horrible its consequences grew,
-the clearer the rascality of the government manifested itself, the more
-patent appeared the inevitableness of the rise of democracy all over
-the world, the nearer advanced also our revolution.
-
-I waited for the sound of the bell announcing freedom, and wondered
-why this sound was tardy in making itself heard. When in November of
-last year explosions of indignation followed one another, when irate
-calls were exchanged among the several groups of the population, I was
-already planted with one foot in the Siberian sleigh, feeling sorry
-only that the snow road was beginning to melt.
-
-The 17th of March a telegram reached me in Minusinsk announcing
-freedom. The same day I was on my way to Atchinsk, the nearest
-railroad station. From Atchinsk on began my uninterrupted communion
-with soldiers, peasants, workmen, railroad employees, students and
-multitudes of beloved women, who to-day all bear the burdens of the
-normal and now also abnormal life of a great state.
-
-
-
-
-TALE OF AN AMAZING VOYAGE
-
-_German Officers Escape from Spain in a Sailing Vessel_
-
-_Told by Frederic Lees_
-
- The Spanish Premier, Count Romanones, recently stated that the
- sensational story of the escape from Spain in a sailing vessel of
- a number of interned German officers, as briefly reported in _El
- Liberal_, of Madrid, is officially confirmed. With extraordinary
- assurance, the fugitives set out to sail right round the coast of
- Great Britain and reach a Belgian port, but the elements and the
- British Navy intervened, and the audacious scheme miscarried. The
- author's private sources of information have enabled him to throw
- light on a number of episodes which, in the Spanish and German
- newspapers, were intentionally left obscure. Related in the _Wide
- World Magazine_.
-
-
-I--AT OFFICE OF GERMAN VICE-CONSUL IN SPANISH PORT
-
-One sunny morning in July, 1916, the German Vice-consul of Vigo was
-sitting in his office opposite the wharves of the little Spanish
-port. The voluminous contents of his mail-bag lay before him, and
-at the moment in question his eyes were intently fixed on a long,
-official-looking document--a type-written folio sheet bearing a list of
-names, preceded by a memorandum. As he read on, his expression became
-more and more serious. Twice he read the document through, pondering
-awhile over one of the names. Then he hastily pressed the electric-bell
-button on his desk.
-
-The Vice-Consul's clerk, Hermann Fischer, appeared instantly, note-book
-and pencil in hand.
-
-"It's too soon yet for the correspondence, Fischer," said the
-Vice-Consul, "but I've got here a list of those eleven officers who
-were arrested the other day, and who are interned at Pampeluna. I want
-you to fetch the Navy List and look up one of the names--Lieutenant
-Karl Koch. It looks familiar to me."
-
-Fischer was back in a trice with the desired volume, and, having hunted
-out the right man from a multitude of Kochs, proceeded to read forth
-the biographical information to the attentive Vice-Consul: "Karl Koch,
-born 1873, at Duesseldorf; educated Frankfort and Heidelberg; joined the
-Imperial Navy 1890; U-boat lieutenant 1914."
-
-"That'll do!" interjected the official. "I thought it must be the same
-man. He and I were at Heidelberg together. Dear old Karl! To think
-it has fallen to my lot to do him a good turn! As a matter of fact,
-Fischer, we've got to see that Koch and certain others are made as
-comfortable as possible during their captivity amongst these blessed
-Spaniards. And if there's a chance of doing something more than
-that--well, all the better. On that point I've got an answer to this
-official communication to dictate to you. Perhaps, as you're here,
-you'd better take it down at once; then you can code it and get it on
-the wires for the Embassy at Madrid without delay."
-
-Whereupon the Vice-Consul of Vigo proceeded to dictate his secret
-message, which showed how very wide his consular duties had become in
-wartime--duties such as only Teutonic diplomatic agents are expected to
-carry out.
-
-Some people, in relating the part the Vice-Consul played in the
-adventure in which Lieutenant Karl Koch and his companions became
-involved, contend that it was this officer who was the prime mover;
-that it was he who got into touch with the Vice-Consul, who promised
-all possible support. But I have reason to believe it was the other
-way about, and that the _deus ex machina_ of the whole affair--from
-the very moment that the German Vice-Consulate received official
-information anent Koch's arrest and internment to the purchase of the
-_Virgen del Socorro_ and her departure on her perilous Odyssey--was the
-Vice-Consul, whose fortuitous acquaintanceship with the lieutenant of
-the submarine (captured and interned in circumstances which need not
-here be dwelt upon) redoubled his official zeal. If that is not so,
-what of the indiscretions of his clerk Hermann Fischer? What of those
-of the intermediaries through whom the Vice-Consul got possession of
-the _Virgen del Socorro_? What of the convincing evidence of the hotel
-and lodging-house keepers of Vigo who, all unknowingly, harbored the
-fugitives? What of the incriminating documents in the Vice-Consul's own
-handwriting, or that of his clerk, which I am assured came into the
-possession of the Spanish authorities?
-
-
-II--SECRET MESSAGE TO GERMAN EMBASSY IN MADRID
-
-But I will not anticipate events any further. Enough has been said
-to enable me to take up the thread of my narrative from the time the
-Vice-Consul dispatched his coded message regarding Lieutenant Karl Koch
-to the German Embassy in Madrid.
-
-Having signed his despatch and given Fischer sufficient work to keep
-him busy until noon, the Vice-Consul sallied forth with a satisfied
-mien and walked leisurely, almost aimlessly, towards the quays, gazing
-out occasionally over the bay. In the distance could be seen two
-German vessels, interned since the beginning of the war, one of which
-was the steamship _Wehrt_. At last, on reaching the deserted end of
-one of the quays, the Vice-Consul, glancing quickly over his shoulder,
-stopped and gave a low whistle, which was answered almost immediately
-by a similar signal and the sound of a boat grating against the side of
-the quay.
-
-"_Ach so!_ There you are, Jose," said the official, as the boatman
-became visible. "I was afraid you would be late. You can row me this
-morning to the _Wehrt_."
-
-And with a final precautionary look to right and left, the German
-Vice-Consul disappeared over the side and clambered down the iron rungs
-of a ladder into the boat.
-
-The captain of the steamship _Wehrt_, condemned to a captivity which
-eternally rankled in his breast, was always ready to extend a hearty
-welcome to the Vice-Consul of Vigo. Their periodic meetings, arranged
-as far as possible in secret, constituted a safety valve. The captain
-could fulminate to his heart's content against the tyrant of the
-seas--Great Britain; the Vice-Consul could give full rein to his taste
-for intrigue.
-
-Behold these two, then, _tete-a-tete_ in the captain's private room,
-and exchanging confidences over the luncheon table. The captain,
-deprived of official information for the past three or four days,
-was thirsting for news regarding fresh developments in the war, and
-his lean, bronzed face lit up with eagerness when he inquired if the
-Vice-Consul had anything new and special to report.
-
-"_Ya wohl!_ Something of the greatest importance," replied the
-official. "A matter for consultation, and in which your advice will be
-valuable."
-
-And the Vice-Consul proceeded to put the skipper _au courant_ with the
-bare facts concerning the predicament in which Lieutenant Koch and his
-companions found themselves at Pampeluna, the official request for
-whatever assistance he could render them, the strange coincidence of
-Koch and himself being old college chums, and so on.
-
-
-III--THE CONSPIRACY IN THE CAPTAIN'S CABIN
-
-"It's very evident, captain, that we must do something for them,"
-continued the Vice-Consul. "Pampeluna is a long way from Vigo, but I
-think something can be done if we put our heads together. I can't read
-all that's in the official mind which inspired that memorandum, but
-it's quite clear the authorities regard Vigo as the most convenient
-open door for Koch and his ten brother-officers. An open door, provided
-it is _held_ open for them. The question is, how are we going to do
-that? I can see a way of solving part of the difficulty. You can leave
-the Pampeluna portion to me. There are plenty of ways of opening prison
-doors in a country like this. As a landsman, I am convinced I can open
-the land door without much trouble, but it requires a sailor like you
-to attend to the sea door. That's way I've come to you."
-
-"And you couldn't have come to a more willing man," replied the
-captain, emphatically. "Try and realize what I've had to suffer on
-this infernal ship during the last twenty-three months, with the eyes
-of the authorities continually on me and the _Wehrt_, and every little
-jack-in-office sniffing around at unexpected moments, and you'll
-understand how I feel for your friend and his companions. Yes, we've
-got to do what we can for them. The submarine is the only effectual
-weapon left to Germany, so if we succeed in returning to her eleven
-of her brave U-boat men we shall truly have done good patriotic work.
-Now, at the back of my brain I've got a plan. You're welcome to it.
-You know, I suppose, that the _Virgen del Socorro_ is for sale? She's
-as tight a little schooner as ever left the port of Vigo. I've often
-admired her lines and speed as she sailed past the _Wehrt_. Now, when
-this war is over and we've reduced everybody's tonnage, save our
-own, to a minimum, the _Virgen del Socorro_ will be worth her weight
-in gold. At the price she is going at to-day the boat is a splendid
-speculation. Why don't you buy her? You'd find it worth your while, I
-think, to be the sleeping partner."
-
-"Not at all a bad idea, captain. But are you certain the _Virgen del
-Socorro_ is in the market? I thought it was owned by the brothers
-Z----, who have always looked upon the schooner as a sort of child of
-theirs."
-
-"That is so. But ties of the closest affection have to be broken in
-these troubled times, and the brothers Z---- have decided to dissolve
-partnership. I dare say your boatman Jose, who ought to be well up in
-harbor gossip, will be able to tell you all about that. There's no
-doubt my information is correct. I can even tell you the exact figure
-at which the owners are willing to sell--eleven thousand five hundred
-pesetas."
-
-"Dirt cheap, considering the times," said the Vice-Consul,
-thoughtfully. He took an extra long pull at his beer tankard, and then,
-bringing the blue earthenware vessel down on the table with a bang,
-exclaimed, "By Jove, captain, you've put me on the right track! I'm
-beginning to see the way to do it. Listen!"
-
-The plan unfolded was as follows. Using his boatman as an
-intermediary--Jose was generally believed to be fairly well-to-do--he
-would enter into negotiations with the brothers Z---- for the purchase
-of the _Virgen del Socorro_. One of the conditions of the agreement
-would be particularly tempting to the owners. On the understanding that
-the purchase was kept secret--the rumor might indeed be set afloat
-that the brothers had decided not to part with their dearly-beloved
-boat--they should be allowed to retain possession until the very last
-moment before the schooner was required by the new proprietors. There
-was evidently a double advantage in this: it would allay any suspicions
-which inquisitive harbor authorities or other officials might have
-whilst preparations were being made on board the _Virgen del Socorro_
-for the reception of the fugitives from Pampeluna, and it would enable
-the Vice-Consul, the captain, and other helpers to carry out those
-preparations at their leisure. No one could say how long it would
-take them to prepare the road to the "open door" of Vigo. Though the
-Vice-Consul's secret service fund was still well supplied, it was no
-good to minimize the difficulties, which were greater than the captain
-of the _Wehrt_ could possibly comprehend until he had explained the
-full extent of his plan.
-
-The _Virgen del Socorro_ was to be sent right round the British Isles,
-in order to descend the North Sea unobserved, and, flying the Dutch
-flag, reach a Belgian port. It was a risky plan, but, the British Navy
-notwithstanding, the conspirators thought it had possibilities of
-success. The Vice-Consul, in assisting the scheme, proposed to make the
-Fatherland a present of more than the eleven officers at Pampeluna.
-
-It was advisable to get as many able-bodied German subjects on board as
-possible, and so he planned to include in the party of fugitives nine
-others, including four officers from the _Goeben_, a naval doctor, a
-law student, and two sailors, none of whom was interned, in addition to
-a sergeant interned at Alcala de Henares, seventeen miles north-east of
-Madrid. Twenty was certainly a large crew for a schooner of the _Virgen
-del Socorro's_ size, but the voyage was to be undertaken during the
-summer--and an exceptionally fine summer, too--so the risk of a mishap,
-provided there was good seamanship, was slight. As this question of
-weather was important, the Vice-Consul proposed to see to the purchase
-of the vessel without delay, and to communicate at once with Lieutenant
-Koch.
-
-
-IV--SECRET PURCHASE OF SHIP--TO ESCAPE
-
-Within the next few days the secret purchase by the Vice-Consul of
-Vigo of the _Virgen del Socorro_ was an accomplished fact, and he had
-had his first interview at Pampeluna with his old friend, Lieutenant
-Koch. Other meetings followed, at intervals of a week or so, and
-before the end of the month, thanks to a lavish "greasing" of palms,
-the arrangements for the escape of the eleven officers and their
-concentration with other fugitives at Vigo were all made. The captain
-of the _Wehrt_, as surreptitiously as possible, bought inordinate
-quantities of provisions and stores during July, in order that Jose and
-the others might, at the opportune moment, tranship a part of them to
-the _Virgen del Socorro_.
-
-At last everything was ready. Nothing remained to be done but for
-someone to send a signal from Pampeluna to the Vice-Consul at Vigo, who
-was to pass it on to other quarters. But the signal, so eagerly awaited
-on the appointed day, August 4th, never came!
-
-Instead, two days later came a letter of explanation, stating that
-Lieutenant Karl Koch had fallen ill at the critical moment. The plan
-of escape, therefore, had to be indefinitely postponed. It was a
-bitter disappointment to the Vice-Consul, who pictured himself being
-reproached by his superiors for building castles in the air, if not
-being saddled with the whole of the expenses. But he consoled himself,
-in the presence of the captain of the _Wehrt_, with the argument that
-it was "just as well, since it would allow the authorities time to go
-to sleep." The astute seaman could not, however, quite agree with this.
-He knew the advantage of fine weather for such a perilous voyage as the
-one projected, and feared that if the escape were not effected soon it
-might be too late or too full of risk to be worth undertaking.
-
-Lieutenant Koch's illness dragged on for week after week. August went
-by, September came, and the hopes of the Vice-Consul of Vigo fell lower
-and lower. In the first three weeks in September the officer entered
-the convalescent stage. One result of his breakdown was, indeed, in
-his favor; he was allowed greater and greater liberty, and, on the
-plea of taking the air, got out several times in a motor-car, with the
-authorization of the governor and doctor of the prison and under the
-discreet eye of an official. Soon even this supervision was relaxed,
-and then, when October came in, the U-boat lieutenant saw the chance
-for which he and his companions had been waiting. It was about this
-time that the Vice-Consul of Vigo (now almost on the verge of despair)
-unexpectedly received the long-awaited warning.
-
-
-V--PLOT LAID FOR THE FLIGHT
-
-On the morning of October 5th, Lieutenant Koch and his companions,
-having obtained a pass for an unofficial "joy ride" in two motor-cars,
-set out for a little country village some twenty miles from Pampeluna.
-As they were all on parole and the chauffeurs of the hired cars were
-connected with the police, permission was given to the party to remain
-at their destination for luncheon. It was understood, however, that
-as soon as the meal was over the return journey should be made, so as
-to be back well before the day was declining. Koch and his friends,
-through intermediaries introduced to him by the Vice-Consul of Vigo,
-laid their plans very cleverly. Just outside the village is a rustic
-inn where excellent luncheons are served. The dining-room looks out, at
-the back of the house, on to a garden with a bowling-alley and arbor,
-and this garden adjoins meadows, bordered by the railway line. Not far
-away is the little country railway station. What happened can easily be
-imagined.
-
-The eleven officers had their luncheon served in the restaurant proper;
-the chauffeurs were served in a smaller room adjoining, looking out on
-to the front and the road. The landlord had been instructed (and had
-been well paid in advance for this and other little services) to ply
-these two worthy fellows with as much liquor as they could hold, with
-the result that they were deep in their cups long before the boisterous
-officers had got through their coffee and liqueurs. They were in such
-an advanced state of intoxication, indeed, that they took no heed when
-a singular silence followed the noise of voices and laughter in the
-adjoining room; and it was not until the appointed hour for departure
-had long since passed that they recovered their senses sufficiently to
-learn the truth. Their erstwhile "joy riders" had flown! They might
-have been seen, fully three-quarters of an hour before, strolling
-down the garden and making their way, as unobstrusively as possible,
-across the fields to the countryside railway station, where, provided
-beforehand with tickets for different stations on the line to Vigo,
-they boarded the train, once more in as nonchalant a manner as possible
-in groups of twos and threes, in different carriages. By the time the
-chauffeurs came to their senses and realized they had been fooled, the
-fugitives were well out of danger and, having got together again at
-the first big stopping-place, had put themselves _en regle_ as regards
-through tickets for their common destination, to which they continued
-to travel, however, separately, in order to minimize the risks of
-capture. The outwitted chauffeurs had another unpleasant surprise on
-rushing to their cars, with the object of dashing back to Pampeluna and
-recounting to the authorities their sorry tale of misadventure. Though
-they cranked their machines like madmen, the motors stubbornly refused
-to work. The reason soon became evident: the sparking-plugs had been
-removed by the far-seeing Koch.
-
-Meanwhile, on October 2nd, the interned Sergeant Dietrich Gratschuss
-had slipped away from Alcala. His escape, facilitated by the four
-uninterned officers from the _Goeben_, who provided him with a suit
-of civilian clothes, thrown over a wall into the prison-garden where
-he worked daily, was made doubly sure by certain judicious bribes to
-a sentry, who kept his back turned and eyes averted at the critical
-moment. Gratschuss slipped into his disguise in a tool-shed, and calmly
-walked out of the prison-yard--saluted by the unsuspecting man on
-guard--as though he had been a visitor. His friends were waiting round
-the corner for him with a hundred horsepower motor-car, in which, with
-the other uninterned Germans (the naval doctor, the law student, and
-the two sailors), he was whirled away at sixty miles an hour. The whole
-of the journey to Vigo was made in this powerful car, which the owners
-had been able to provide with an amply supply of petrol and food for a
-long and rapid flight, lasting well into the night.
-
-The whole of the machinery of the Vice-Consul of Vigo was now in
-motion. All the fugitives reached that port in safety and scattered
-themselves over hotels and lodging-houses.
-
-A hue and cry was, of course, set up from Pampeluna and Alcala de
-Henares; but the Spanish police went off on various wrong tracks before
-they thought of ordering a watch to be set at all the ports. Even
-when this tardy step was taken, no one ever suspected--so well had the
-Vice-Consul and his accomplices laid their plans--that Vigo was the
-port from which the escape was to be effected.
-
-
-VI--MIDNIGHT--THE FUGITIVES BOARD THE SHIP
-
-On October 6th the _Virgen del Socorro_, to allay any suspicion, made a
-voyage to sea, and, on returning, moored alongside the _Wehrt_. Then,
-one pitch-black night, the fugitives left their hiding-places. One by
-one they slipped out into the darkness and, following the narrowest
-and most deserted streets leading to the harbor, reached the quays
-unobserved. At such an hour of the night--it was getting on for eleven
-o'clock--they could be fairly certain of meeting no one, save, perhaps,
-a drunken sailor or two. These revellers took no more notice of Koch
-and his companions than they did of their own dim shadows. One by one,
-under cover of the darkness, the fugitives disappeared down the same
-iron ladder the Vice-Consul had used so often, into Jose's boat.
-
-By midnight all the fugitives were on board the _Wehrt_, from whose
-well-replenished store-rooms they immediately began transhipping the
-provisions to the _Virgen del Socorro_. All through the night and until
-2 A.M. this work continued. The _Virgen del Socorro_ was then
-towed out a little farther into the bay, and on the first signs of
-daylight appearing her bow was turned north-east. Soon afterwards a
-fresh early morning wind sprang up from the land, her sails filled, and
-she set off on her long voyage.
-
-What happened to the _Virgen del Socorro_ I will now relate, in
-accordance with details furnished by various members of her crew.
-
-The little vessel had no sooner left Vigo and got out into the open
-than the land wind suddenly increased in strength and drove her into
-exceedingly rough and treacherous water. Some of the crew were for
-turning back, despite the risks that step would have entailed, and the
-matter was discussed at some length by Lieutenant Koch and the other
-leaders. They came to the conclusion, however, that they were "between
-the devil and the deep sea," and must keep on. It seems doubtful,
-indeed, whether, had they decided to make an attempt to get back to
-Vigo, they could have accomplished it.
-
-That first day, and for many days afterwards, the _Virgen del Socorro_
-became a veritable plaything of the waves, which soon began to rise
-mountain-high. The sufferings of the crowded fugitives in this terrible
-weather were intense. All were drenched to the skin, and for more than
-three days and nights they had to remain in this miserable condition.
-To these tortures were added the craving for sleep and adequate
-nourishment, for, amidst the continual buffeting of the waves and
-wind, they could neither sleep nor get anything cooked. Under these
-conditions, it was not surprising that the twenty occupants of the
-_Virgen del Socorro_ were finally reduced to the state of not caring
-what happened. One of the two sailors on board, on whose shoulders
-devolved much of the work of navigation, said that, "old seaman though
-he was, he had never before experienced such weather." He felt at times
-that "all his strength and hope were sapped," and hourly, during those
-terrible first six days, when the little schooner was tossed about like
-a cork, "expected death would relieve him of his tortures."
-
-The storm then calmed down a little and gave the fugitives a respite.
-They were able to dry their drenched clothes and attend to the needs of
-the inner man. At the same time they could pay more attention to the
-question of their course. On this score they were soon to receive a
-shock, for there hove in sight a vessel that was undoubtedly a British
-patrol. For a couple of hours there were many anxious searchings of
-heart on board the _Virgen del Socorro_. Would she, thanks to her
-insignificance and the Dutch flag flying from her mast, be taken for an
-inoffensive fishing smack, and be allowed to go unchallenged? That had
-been part of their plan all through.
-
-At one moment it looked as though the patrol was bearing down upon
-them at full speed; but when the dreaded vessel got no bigger, but
-instead gradually receded into the distance, the crew of the _Virgen
-del Socorro_ realized that for the time being they were safe.
-
-
-VII--FOILED BY A STORM--THE CAPTURE
-
-Safe from the clutches of their human enemies, perhaps, but by no means
-safe from the angry sea. Had some of the crew been able to foresee what
-was in store for them, they would perhaps have welcomed the arrival of
-that British patrol with outspread arms and expressions of joy. Once
-more they were caught up in the embrace of a furious storm, and driven
-helplessly westward, expecting every moment to be their last.
-
-On October 24th another brief calm set in, enabling the navigator to
-ascertain his position. The little vessel was found to be some distance
-west of Bantry, on the south coast of Ireland. Here the storm again
-increased in violence, and once more the ill-fated _Virgen del Socorro_
-seemed likely to founder. A consultation was held by Koch and the
-other leaders. They came to the conclusion that it would be madness
-to attempt to continue with the original plan. In such seas as were
-running, they would run the risk of being shipwrecked a hundred times
-before they got halfway round the British Isles. The only thing to
-be done, if they were to prevent the _Virgen del Socorro_ from being
-smashed to matchwood on the British coast, was to keep as much as
-possible in the open sea and steer for the English channel, in hope of
-making the Belgian or Dutch coast unobserved.
-
-Six more terrible days followed. By this time more than half the crew
-of the _Virgen del Socorro_ were in a parlous condition. Their store of
-provisions had shrunk to such an extent that everybody had to be placed
-on rations, and the fresh water had dwindled so alarmingly that it was
-reserved for those who were actually on the point of collapse. Several
-of the crew, through the cold and constant seasickness, were utterly
-helpless.
-
-It was about this time that the coast of Cornwall came into view, and
-on November 4th the crew found themselves in sight of Lundy Island,
-at the entrance of the Bristol Channel. From there, proceeding with a
-slowness which must often have driven them to the verge of despair,
-they circled the Scilly Islands, and it took them two more dreadful
-days before they had rounded the Lizard.
-
-The Odyssey of the _Virgen del Socorro_ had now stretched over no less
-a period than a month. Three of the crew had by now become delirious;
-all were reduced to half their ordinary weight, and with the exception
-of the hardened seamen were on the point of collapse. Although they had
-experienced several alarms, they had so far succeeded--no doubt owing
-to the awful weather--in avoiding the vigilant eyes of the British
-patrols. But now they no longer cared one way or the other; all the
-fight had been knocked out of them by their sufferings.
-
-On November 8th the little vessel approached the Goodwins. Shortly
-after dawn a British destroyer was sighted and reported by the man
-at the helm. Hardly a man on board, unless it was Lieutenant Koch,
-took the trouble to raise his glassy eyes when he heard the danger
-announced. Nor did they manifest any concern when it further became
-evident that there was no avoiding the vigilant war vessel. Nothing
-expressed so eloquently the fact that they regarded themselves
-as beaten as their attitude of utter indifference when they were
-challenged by the British destroyer. One and all were evidently
-heartily glad to confess their nationality, the circumstances in which
-they came to be there, and the extraordinary dangers through which they
-had passed.
-
-The _Virgen del Socorro_ was taken into Ramsgate, says _El Liberal_,
-the Madrid newspaper which published the first brief account of the
-adventures related above, and there we may well leave Lieutenant Koch
-and his companions. They are henceforth in safe keeping, for, with all
-their ingenuity and daring, the only thing they succeeded in doing was
-to exchange one prison for another, and at the same time drag eight
-free German citizens with them into durance vile.
-
-
-
-
-THE POET'S DEATH IN BATTLE--HOW ALLEN SEEGER DIED
-
-_A Young American in the Foreign Legion_
-
-_Told by Bif Bear, a Young Egyptian in the Foreign Legion_
-
- The artists of Europe--the painters, poets, singers--the aesthetes
- of France and Italy, of Britain and Russian, and of Germany, the
- Hungarian musicians--all answered the "call of war" and threw
- their souls into the "rendezvous with death." Thousands of them
- died on the battlefields. Among them is the young English poet,
- Rupert Brooke, and the American poet, Allan Seeger, who "loved
- France and gave his life to her." This young American enlisted
- early in the war in the Foreign Legion. He was fighting in the
- battles in Champagne in July, 1916, when he fell. A young Egyptian,
- who was with the poet in the trenches, tells of his end. After
- the battle, he wrote this letter to Mrs. Caroline L. Weeks, of
- Boston, who has acted in the role of "marraine" (godmother) to many
- American volunteers. The following is a translation from the French
- forwarded from Paris.
-
-
-I--STORY OF THE AMERICAN POET
-
-It was in the Thiescourt Woods, I remember, that I saw Alan on his
-return from convalescent leave. My section was in first line trenches
-and his, in reserve, in the second line. I was on soup fatigue and was
-going to the Chauffour Quarry when I saw him in front of me, walking
-along alone. Throwing down the marmites (tin receptacles) with which
-I was loaded, I rushed to shake him by the hand. He had, it seemed to
-me, grown slightly thinner, his pale face seemed slightly paler, and
-his eyes, his fine eyes with their far-away look, ever lost in distant
-contemplation, were still as dreamy as ever.
-
-He told me how sorry he was not to be still with me as he had been
-transferred to the first section and I belonged to the third. But we
-saw each other every day. He would recount the joys of his two months'
-convalescent leave, and I shall never forget how one phrase was often
-on his lips, "Life is only beautiful if divided between war and love.
-They are the only two things truly great, fine and perfect, everything
-else is but petty and mean. I have known love for the last few weeks
-in all its beauty and now I want to make war, ... but fine war, a war
-of bayonet charges, the desperate pursuit of an enemy in flight, the
-entry as conqueror, with trumpets sounding, into a town that we have
-delivered! Those are the delights of war! Where in civil life can be
-found any emotion so fine and strong as those?"
-
-And we would exalt our spirits with hopes of making an assault with the
-bayonet, hopes that were not doomed to disappointment, for a few weeks
-later we were to attack.
-
-
-II--AN ODE TO AMERICAN PATRIOTISM
-
-One day while we were in reserve at the Martin Quarries Alan came to
-look for me. He was full of joy and showed me a telegram that he had
-received from Paris, asking him to compose a poem which he himself
-was to read in public at a Franco-American manifestation, for which
-he was to receive forty-eight hours' leave. Alan was overjoyed at
-the opportunity of obtaining leave, but was too retiring to think of
-reading his poem himself; he would try, he told me, to have it read by
-some one else.
-
-The eve of the ceremony arrived--I cannot recall the date--but no
-leave came. We were in the trenches and chance had placed me near
-Seeger in "petit poste" (the small outlook post, some yards in advance
-of the first line trench). He confessed that he had lost all hope of
-going, and I tried to find all sorts of arguments to encourage him,
-that his leave might come at dawn, and that by taking the train at
-Ressons at 7 A.M. he could still reach Paris by noon and would
-have plenty of time, as the ceremony was at 2.
-
-The morning came, and instead of bringing the much desired permission
-to leave it brought a terrible downpour of rain, and the day passed
-sadly. He found consolation in the thought that July 4 would soon
-arrive, when the Americans with the Foreign Legion might hope for
-forty-eight hours' leave, as last year. Alas! He little thought that on
-that date....
-
-[The ceremony referred to was held on May 30, in connection with
-Decoration Day celebrations. Wreaths to the Americans killed for France
-were placed around the statue of Washington and Lafayette, in the Place
-des Etats-Unis, Paris. By an unfortunate mistake the forty-eight hours'
-leave granted for the event was made for June 30 instead of May 30. The
-ode which Alan Seeger composed for the occasion was printed in _The
-Sun_ a few days after the author had fallen in battle.]
-
-On June 21 we left the sector of the Thiescourt Woods for an unknown
-destination, which proved to be the Somme. We took the train at Estrees
-St. Denis and on June 22 about 10 A.M. reached Boves. Under a
-blazing sun, in heat that seemed to have escaped from the furnace of
-hell, we started for Bayonviller. We had undergone no such march since
-the war began.
-
-Weighed down by their sacks, prostrated by the heat, men fell by
-hundreds along the road. Hardly twenty of the 200 forming the company
-arrived without having left the column. Seeger was one of these few.
-He told me afterward of the terrible effort he had had to make not to
-give up. At every halt he drank a drop of "tafia" (rum and coffee) to
-"give himself heart," and when he reached the end of the march he was
-worn out, but proud--he had not left the ranks.
-
-We passed the eight days of repose at Bayonviller, almost always
-together, seeking the greatest possible enjoyment in our life at
-the moment and making dreams for the future after the war. Alan
-confided to me that "after the war" caused him fear--that he could
-not tell what destiny reserved for him, but that if the fates smiled
-on him it was toward the Orient that he would make. He loved the
-Orient--Constantinople, Cairo, Damascus, Beirut had a powerful
-fascination for him; their names would plunge him into profound reverie.
-
-"It is in the mysterious frame of the Orient," he used to say, "in its
-dazzling light, in its blue, blue nights, among the perfumes of incense
-and hashish, that I would live, love and die."
-
-And then the talk would turn again on the war and he would say: "My
-only wish now is to make a bayonet charge. After that I shall see.
-Death may surprise me, but it shall not frighten me. It is my destiny.
-'Mektoub' (it is written)." He was a real fatalist and drew courage and
-resignation from his fatalism.
-
-During the night of June 30-July 1 (1916) we left Bayonviller to move
-nearer the firing line. We went to Proyart as reserves.
-
-At 8 o'clock on the morning of July 1 there was roll call for the day's
-orders and we were told that the general offensive would begin at 9
-without us, as we were in reserve, and that we would be notified of the
-day and hour that we were to go into action.
-
-When this report was finished we were ordered to shell fatigue,
-unloading 8 inch shells from automobile trucks which brought them up to
-our position.
-
-All was hustle and bustle. The Colonial regiments had carried the first
-German lines and thousands and thousands of prisoners kept arriving and
-leaving. Ambulances filed along the roads continuously. As news began
-to arrive we left our work to seek more details, everything we could
-learn seemed to augur well.
-
-About 4 P.M. we left Proyart for Fontaine-les-Capy and in the
-first line. Alan was beaming with joy and full of impatience for the
-order to join in the action. Everywhere delirious joy reigned at having
-driven the enemy back without loss for us. We believed that no further
-resistance would be met and that our shock attack would finish the
-Germans. After passing the night at Fontaine-les-Capy we moved in the
-morning toward what had been the German first lines. I passed almost
-all the day with Alan. He was perfectly happy.
-
-"My dream is coming true," he said to me, "and perhaps this evening or
-to-morrow we shall attack. I am more than satisfied, but it's too bad
-about our July 4 leave. I cannot hope to see Paris again now before the
-6th or 7th, but if this leave is not granted me 'Mektoub! Mektoub'!" he
-finished with a smile.
-
-The field of battle was relatively calm, a few shells fell, fired by
-the enemy in retreat, and our troops were advancing on all sides. The
-Colonials had taken Assevillers and the next day we were to take their
-place in first line.
-
-On July 3 (1916) about noon we moved toward Assevillers to relieve the
-Colonials at nightfall. Alan and I visited Assevillers, picking up
-souvenirs, postcards, letters, soldiers' notebooks and chattering all
-the time, when suddenly a voice called out, "The company will fall in
-to go to the first line."
-
-
-III--LAST PARTINGS OF COMRADES
-
-Before leaving one another we made each other the same promise as we
-had made before the Champagne battle (September 25, 1915), that if
-one of us fell so severely wounded that there was no hope of escape
-the other would finish him off with a bullet in the heart rather than
-let him await death in lingering torture. He showed me his revolver,
-saying, "I have more luck than you. If I can still use one arm I shall
-have no need of any one," and then we rejoined our different sections.
-
-About 4 o'clock the order came to get ready for the attack. None could
-help thinking of what the next few hours would bring. One minute's
-anguish and then, once in the ranks, faces become calm and serene, a
-kind of gravity falling upon them, while on each could be read the
-determination and expectation of victory.
-
-Two battalions were to attack Belloy-en-Santerre, our company being
-the reserve of battalion. The companies forming the first wave were
-deployed on the plain. Bayonets glittered in the air above the corn,
-already quite tall. Scarcely had the movement begun when the enemy
-perceived them and started a barrier fire (artillery fire to bar any
-advance), the quick firers started their rapid, regular crackerlike
-rat-tat. Bullets whizzed and shells exploded almost as they left the
-gun, making a din infernal. And the wave went forward, always forward,
-leaving behind the wounded and the dead.
-
-The losses were heavy and the enemy made a desperate resistance. The
-company of reserve was ordered to advance with the second wave of
-assault. "Forward!" cried the Captain, and the company deployed "in
-files of squadron," advancing slowly but surely under the enemy's
-intense and murderous fire.
-
-The first section (Alan's section) formed the right and vanguard of
-the company, and mine formed the left wing. After the first bound
-forward, we lay flat on the ground, and I saw the first section
-advancing beyond us and making toward the extreme right of the village
-of Belloy-en-Santerre. I caught sight of Seeger and called to him,
-making a sign with my hand.
-
-He answered with a smile. How pale he was! His tall silhouette stood
-out on the green of the cornfield. He was the tallest man in his
-section. His head erect and pride in his eyes, I saw him running
-forward, with bayonet fixed. Soon he disappeared and that was the last
-time I saw my friend.
-
-"Forward!" And we made a second bound, right to the wave of assault,
-which we left behind a little, and down we threw ourselves again.
-The fusillade became more and more intense, reaching a paroxysm. The
-mitrailleuses mow men down and the cannons thunder in desperation.
-Bodies are crushed and torn to fragments by the shells, and the wounded
-groan as they await death, for all hope of escaping alive from such a
-hell has fled.
-
-The air is saturated with the smell of powder and blood, everywhere
-the din is deafening; men are torn with impatience at having to remain
-without moving under such a fire. We struggle even for breath and
-cries resound from every side. Suddenly a word of command, an order of
-deliverance, passes from mouth to mouth. "Forward! With bayonets!"--the
-command that Seeger had awaited so long.
-
-
-IV--THE POET'S DEATH ON THE BATTLEFIELD
-
-In an irresistible, sublime dash we hurl ourselves to the assault,
-offering our bodies as a target. It was at this moment that Alan Seeger
-fell heavily wounded in the stomach. His comrades saw him fall and
-crawl into the shelter of a shell hole. Since that minute nobody saw
-him alive.
-
-I will spare you an account of the rest of the battle. As soon as the
-enemy was driven back and Belloy-en-Santerre won I searched for news of
-Seeger. I was told of his wound and was glad of it, for I thought he
-had been carried away and henceforth would be far from the dangers of
-bullets and shells.
-
-Thus ended this Fourth of July that Seeger had hoped to celebrate in
-Paris. On the next day we were relieved from the first lines and went
-into reserve lines. A fatigue party was left to identify the dead.
-
-Seeger was found dead. His body was naked, his shirt and tunic being
-beside him and his rifle planted in the ground with the butt in the
-air. He had tied a handkerchief to the butt to attract the attention of
-the stretcher bearers. He was lying on his side with his legs bent.
-
-It was at night by the light of a pocket electric lamp that he was
-hastily recognized. Stretcher bearers took the body and buried it
-next day in the one big grave made for the regiment, where lie a
-hundred bodies. This tomb is situated at the hill 76 to the south of
-Belloy-en-Santerre.
-
-As I think of the circumstances of his death I am convinced that after
-undressing to bandage himself he must have risen and been struck by a
-second bullet. I asked permission on the night of July 6 (1916) when I
-heard of his being wounded, to go and see him, but I was refused.
-
-
-
-
-THE GUARDIAN OF THE LINE--HERO TALE OF LITHUANIA
-
-_Told by Frederic Lees_
-
- One of the most remarkable facts connected with the war on the
- Russian front is the large number of women who have distinguished
- themselves by conspicuous bravery, sometimes in the actual
- fighting-line, but more often in a civilian capacity. This story
- deals with the ordeal undergone by a humble railway-crossing
- keeper's wife in Lithuania, as told in the _Wide World Magazine_.
-
-
-I--"THE LONELIEST WOMAN IN THE WORLD"
-
-One morning in April, 1915, Stephania Ychas, the wife of the keeper of
-a railway-crossing to the north of the Lithuanian town of Shavli, felt
-the saddest and loneliest woman in the world. Do what she could, she
-found it impossible to rid herself of the feeling that a catastrophe
-was imminent--that the terrible war into which her country had been
-plunged meant the end of all things. Poor Lithuania! Once so fair a
-place, now so desolate a wilderness!
-
-Stephania's duties, in these troubled times, kept her continually on
-the _qui vive_. At all hours of the day--and latterly during many of
-the night--she had to be in and out of her little house, in order to
-see that the rails were clear, or to note the numbers of the troop
-trains as they swept past towards the north. Backwards and forwards,
-from her door to the telephone, fixed against the wall on the
-right-hand side of a little window through which she could overlook a
-big sweep of the line in the direction of Shavli, she went, welcoming
-the never-ending succession of trainloads of soldiers, wounded, or mere
-war material passing on to the new line of defence, and reporting their
-progress to the railway and military authorities.
-
-Day after day, night after night, the great retreat of the Russian
-forces continued, until, single-handed as she was, Stephania Ychas was
-almost dropping with fatigue. A hundred times she told herself that
-human flesh and blood could never stand such a strain. It was not the
-fatigue alone which was crushing her. Added to her physical tortures
-were mental ones, the feeling of being alone, so horribly alone, and
-the knowledge that the enemy, as announced by the retreat and the
-nerve-racking booming of the guns, was rapidly advancing on Shavli,
-and that until Russia had had time to recover, the hated Teutons would
-inevitably overrun Lithuania as far as Vilna. At night her brain
-was filled with pictures of burning farms, ravaged orchards, and
-indescribable scenes of brutality such as she knew the German soldiers
-had been guilty of in Belgium and Poland.
-
-A dozen times a day, dizzy and sick at heart, she had been on the
-point of staggering to the telephone to inform the commander of a
-neighbouring station that she could continue no longer. But a sense of
-duty had held her back. When it came to a point of renunciation, her
-stout Lithuanian heart said "Nay," and she recalled the parting from
-her husband and his final adjurations.
-
-Buried in thought, while waiting for a train which has just been
-signalled from Shavli, she recalled the morning when Michael Ychas,
-suddenly called to the Colours, had left her. It seemed like an
-eternity since those days of the mobilization.
-
-
-II--"GOOD-BYE, STEPHANIA--GUARD THE LINE WELL!"
-
-"Good-bye, Stephania," he had said. "Be of good cheer whilst I am
-away, and guard the line well. It is sad to leave you here all alone.
-Sad to be obliged to leave one's native country and abandon it to
-unknown dangers. How much better I should have liked to have defended
-Lithuania, I, a Lithuanian bred and born, than to have been drafted
-into a regiment bound for the Caucasus. As if the Government could not
-trust us in our own country! However, Stephania, you are left, and you
-are doing a man's duty. It makes me happy, in the midst of my misery,
-to think that you are there to look after the home and the crossing and
-the rails. Guard them well, Stephania, and rest assured that, in my
-absence, I shall constantly pray to the Virgin to watch over you."
-
-Her reflections were interrupted by a shriek from the locomotive of
-the expected train, which was made up partly of compartments packed
-with soldiers, partly of wagons filled with the most heterogeneous
-collection of things she had ever seen in her life--pieces of machinery
-piled one on the top of the other, heaps of metal articles of every
-imaginable description, and every scrap of copper or lead, apparently,
-which Shavli contained. A waving of hands from the soldiers, a friendly
-yell from a hundred throats, and the train had sped on its way.
-
-Stephania Ychas had no time now to waste over daydreaming. Hurrying
-into her cottage, she went straight to the telephone and rang up the
-commander of the station farther up the line. After ringing in vain for
-fully a minute, she got the connection and made her report.
-
-"Train number three hundred and forty-six passed North Shavli crossing
-a minute ago," she said. "A mixed train, men and materials. Any news?"
-
-"Shavli reports that things are getting warm," replied a voice. "I
-should not be surprised to hear that we have to leave before the day's
-out. You'd better 'phone to headquarters."
-
-She lost not a moment in carrying out the suggestion.
-
-"Halloa, halloa! Is that Shavli?"
-
-"Yes," came a quick answer. "You're the North Shavli crossing-keeper,
-aren't you? Good! Well, we were just about to call you up. Matters are
-coming to a climax here. There are only two more trains to go through
-now. One with men will be with you in a couple of minutes at the
-latest; the other, with goods, should follow ten minutes afterwards. We
-are telling the driver to pick you up."
-
-At this point the speaker was called away from the telephone, and an
-indistinct buzz as of a whole office in conversation, mingled with the
-trampling of feet and the slamming of doors followed. But finally the
-speaker returned.
-
-"Halloa, halloa! Are you still there, North Shavli? Telephone forward
-all I have said, and prepare them for the worst."
-
-Stephania Ychas, now tingling with excitement, did as she was bid. Once
-more she stood on duty to see the reported train pass, and again she
-went to the telephone to send her report forward. Having finished, she
-was about to hang up the receiver when, on looking through the window
-on her left, her eyes caught sight of something unusual far down the
-line, almost at the point where the metals curved out of view. To run
-and fetch a pair of glasses which, ever since the beginning of the
-war, she had kept hanging in their leather case by the side of the
-fireplace, to bring them to bear on the point in question, and at the
-same time to ring up Shavli, was the work of a minute. What she saw,
-though her calm voice in no way revealed her inner emotion, made the
-blood run cold through her veins.
-
-"Halloa, halloa! Are you there, Shavli?"
-
-A reply came in the affirmative.
-
-"For Heaven's sake remain at the 'phone. There's foul work going on
-near the great curve. You must give orders at once to keep back the
-train."
-
-"One moment, and I will return," replied the railway official.
-
-
-III--A WOMAN'S MESSAGE: "THEY ARE DYNAMITING THE RAILROAD!"
-
-A pause, which seemed to the woman with the glasses fixed to her eyes
-an eternity, followed.
-
-"You were just in time," continued the voice to her infinite relief.
-"Courage! Fear not. Orders have been given to pick you up, with the
-others along the line, when we evacuate the town by car. But tell us
-what is happening."
-
-"I can see a number of men tampering with the metals," telephoned
-Stephania Ychas. "They have dismounted from their horses. One of them,
-an officer, is giving orders. Yes, I can see now. They are Uhlans,
-and are going to dynamite the line. There are at least twenty of
-them, evidently a portion of an advance guard that has made a turning
-movement round Shavli by way of the woods. Halloa, halloa! In the name
-of Our Lady of Vilna, do not leave the instrument. It is a blessing
-they did not begin by cutting the wire. Now they are scattering to
-await the explosion. There!"--as the speaker beheld the explosion,
-followed by a cloud of smoke and dust, which rose high in the air--"it
-is done. Holy Virgin! They are making off now. No, the officer is
-pointing here. They are coming towards me. Telephone to the nearest
-military station to send me help immediately. And for the love of the
-saints, come back to the instrument!"
-
-Stephania Ychas left the receiver dangling by its cords, and made her
-little home ready to withstand a siege. She locked and doubly bolted
-the door, and with the object of giving the Uhlans the idea that the
-place was uninhabited prepared to block up the windows with the boards
-which, as in most Lithuanian country cottages, served as shutters,
-fastened from the inside.
-
-"Perhaps," she thought, "if they see the house shuttered, they will
-conclude it is uninhabited and will ride away."
-
-Unfortunately, the Uhlans rode quickly, and Stephania had more than
-she could do with just one shutter, that which protected the little
-window on the left of the telephone, and which, when up, plunged the
-room into semi-darkness. Whilst she was fixing this barrier, the
-Uhlans surrounded the house and the officer momentarily caught sight
-of her. Simultaneously there came a violent knocking at the door with
-the butt-end of a rifle, a command to open, and the sharp crack of a
-revolver. A bullet crashed through one of the panes, traversed the
-centre of the shutter-board, and buried itself in the opposite wall.
-
-The brave woman was now back at the telephone, but not before she had
-managed to make the entrance to her home doubly sure by dragging a
-heavy dresser against it.
-
-"Halloa, Shavli! You have sent for help? Thank you. They have
-surrounded the house, and are trying to force an entrance. They have
-discovered that I am here. But they will have a difficulty in forcing
-open the door, unless----"
-
-She paused and listened. There was a long and ominous silence, which
-made her think at first that the enemy must have decided it was not
-worth while to waste further time over a woman. But the hope was
-short-lived. She heard a sharp command in German, the sound of muffled
-voices, a burst of laughter, and the clatter of horses' hoofs around
-the house. What was happening? Were they really riding off?
-
-Again her hopes were shattered. The scampering backwards and forwards
-continued, one of the horses neighed, and she imagined she could almost
-hear the Uhlans' heavy breathing, sounds which brought back to her the
-danger which she had hesitated to frame in words. Very soon her fears
-were confirmed. A vision flashed to her brain and made her sick with
-fear. A faint cracking sound broke upon her ears from several points
-simultaneously, spreading until it seemed to envelope her on all sides,
-and especially over her head. By slow degrees the crackling grew to a
-roar, and then she fully realized what the barbarians had done.
-
-
-IV--"HELP! HELP!"--A VOICE FROM THE BURNING THATCH
-
-"Help, help!" called Stephania into the telephone. "They have fired
-the thatch. For Heaven's sake, send me help. But a few minutes and the
-rafters, I fear, will catch fire. Are you still there, Shavli? Oh,
-speak--speak!"
-
-An exclamation, mingled sorrow and anger, came from the telephonist at
-Shavli.
-
-"Oh, the ruffians, the abominable assassins!" he cried. "I beseech you
-to have courage. Help is surely on the way."
-
-"I will try to be brave and do my duty to the end, as Michael told me,"
-replied Stephania, as though to herself. "But unless they come soon,
-it will be too late. The thatch has burnt like tinder. I can hear the
-flames roaring like a furnace underneath the rafters. There! One of
-them has given way and fallen on to the joists of my room. Already the
-heat is suffocating, the smoke almost unbearable. Holy Virgin! What a
-death."
-
-"Alas, what more can we do than beg you to bear up?" returned the voice
-at Shavli, in an agonized tone. "We have just been informed that a
-party of Cossacks left twenty minutes ago to rescue you. Once more,
-courage! And may Our Lady of Vilna indeed protect you."
-
-When Stephania Ychas next spoke through the telephone the roof fell in
-with a crash and pierced a hole, through which the burning embers fell,
-in the ceiling of her room. At the same time communication with Shavli
-was suddenly interrupted, either through the Uhlans having discovered
-and cut the wire, or, as is more probable, owing to the fire having
-fused the terminals. She could not, however, have sustained her appeals
-for help much longer. Indeed, it was not many minutes afterwards that,
-stupefied and blinded by the smoke, as she groped her way to the door
-in an instinctive movement towards the open air, she sank to the floor
-unconscious.
-
-It is a characteristic of the Cossacks, many times admitted even
-by German military critics, and those who have been describing the
-operations in Lithuania for the enemy Press, that they rarely if ever
-waste a shot. Unlike the French cavalry, they do not fire from a
-distance, but fearlessly swoop down upon their adversaries and seek to
-bring them down, one by one, at a range of but a few yards. And that
-was the fate of the Uhlans, who, hungering to feast their eyes and ears
-on the suffering of a defenceless woman, lingered a little too long
-around the burning cottage of Stephania Ychas. Not one escaped.
-
-Stephania Ychas did not lose her life after all. The brave Cossacks
-broke in the already half-consumed window and dragged her forth. She
-was badly burnt, but lived to tell this tale to a nurse in a Russian
-hospital, whither the railway officials of Shavli transported her,
-almost immediately after her rescue, in one of their motor-cars.
-
-
-
-
-WITH A FLEET SURGEON ON A BRITISH WARSHIP DURING A BATTLE
-
-_Under Fire on His Majesty's Ship, the "Fearless"_
-
-_Told by Fleet Surgeon Walter K. Hopkins, of the Royal Navy_
-
-
-I--ON A HOSPITAL SHIP IN BATTLE
-
-On August 27 (1914) we were hoping to meet the enemy early on the
-following morning.
-
-On August 28, at 3:45 A.M., "Action" was sounded off. Two
-cruisers (supposed enemy's ships) having been suddenly observed,
-had caused us to take up "stations" somewhat earlier than had been
-anticipated. It was quickly discovered, however, that the cruisers were
-our own. Shortly after, therefore, breakfast was piped to each watch
-in turn, and at about 7 A.M. the enemy's ships were actually
-sighted. From this time on to close upon 2 P.M., successive
-actions were fought between various opposing forces of the two fleets.
-
-The day was fine and calm, while the sun gleamed through a very hazy
-atmosphere, in which patches of fog shortened up the visual distance
-from time to time.
-
-I remained on the upper deck during the earlier part of the affair, and
-found it a most interesting and inspiring sight to watch our destroyers
-and the _Arethusa_ and her divisions dashing at full speed after the
-enemy, while soon the frequent spurts of flame from their sides, the
-following reports, and the columns of water and spray thrown up by the
-enemy's shells pitching short or over, began to create in most of us
-a suppressed excitement which we had not hitherto experienced, telling
-us that the "real thing" had begun, that an action was actually in
-progress.
-
-Shortly our interest was to multiply fourfold, when the order to fire
-our own guns was given. After a time shells began to drop ominously
-near. I retired to my station, a selected spot just below waterline in
-the after bread room, one of the few available places in a ship of this
-class where some of my party of first-aid men could be accommodated;
-the other half of the party in charge of the sick-berth steward being
-situated at a similar station forward. This period one found trying.
-For knowledge as to how matters were progressing we had to rely upon
-fragments of information shouted down the nearest hatchway from someone
-in communication with those on the upper deck.
-
-The rat-tat-tat! rat, tat, tat, tat! on our side from time to time,
-as we got into the thick of it, told us plainly of shells pitching
-short and bursting, whose fragments struck but did not penetrate the
-ship's skin; it was a weird sound, occasionally varied by a tremendous
-"woomp," which once at least made the paymaster, who was reclining
-near me on a flour sack, and myself, look hard at the side close by
-us, where we fully expected, for the moment, to see water coming in.
-As a matter of fact, this shell entered some forty feet away, bursting
-on entry into the Lieutenant Commander's cabin, while its solid nose
-finally fetched up in the wardroom, where later on it was christened
-"our honorary member." For this trophy I believe we have the _Mainz_ or
-_Koeln_ to thank. The wardroom steward found a similar piece of shell
-in his hammock that night. It had penetrated the ship's side and a
-bulkhead before finally choosing its highly suitable place of rest.
-
-The shells that missed us burst upon the surface of the ocean near by
-and, strange as it may seem to those not familiar with such things, the
-fragments flew from the water with sufficient force to dent the sides
-of the ship and to kill men when they dropped on the deck.
-
-When a shell actually struck our ship and penetrated the structure
-there was a reverberating crash that roared from end to end and nearly
-drove our eardrums in and made work of any delicacy impossible. It was
-bad enough with us, but what must have been happening on some of the
-German ships that were now sinking and were being pierced by great
-shells from three sides at once I leave to some one with imagination.
-
-
-II--"I WATCHED THE BURNING CRUISER SINK"
-
-It would surely require the pen of a Dante to depict all the horrors
-that were happening on the German cruiser _Mainz_, as she went down.
-We knew that she was burning. The men stayed at their guns until the
-flames actually began to burn up their legs. The wounded lay in heaps
-on the deck and the flames destroyed them without help. The blood ran
-on the decks so that the men who were still trying to work the light
-deck guns slipped in it and fell.
-
-Our shells passed through their hospital ward and killed the wounded
-and the surgeons as they were working over them. That any men could
-have passed through such an ordeal and retained their senses is a
-tribute to the wonderful effect of naval training and discipline.
-
-The _Fearless_ appears to have borne a somewhat charmed life--a large
-number of shells pitched just short and just over her--she was hit
-fair and square by seven, one of which played a lot of havoc with the
-middle deck forward and the mess gear there. Her sides showed some
-twenty-three holes of varying size, and yet her list of casualties was
-only eight wounded, none dangerously. She also had two narrow escapes
-from being torpedoed, one torpedo passing just forward from an unknown
-source, and another aft from a submarine.
-
-During comparative lulls I went onto the upper deck once or twice,
-to visit the forward station and to see that all was correct. For
-suppressed excitement and vivid interest I should say the seeker after
-sensation could scarcely ask for more than a modern naval action.
-
-The shells were falling all about us, and why we were not sunk I can
-never understand. The captain kept the ship zigzagging on her course
-to upset the enemy's aim. At one time we came within 2,000 yards of
-the Mainz, which had already been partly wrecked by the long-distance
-fire from our big battle cruisers, the _Lion_, _Invincible_, and _Queen
-Mary_. It was our duty to help finish her without sinking our big ships.
-
-She made two attempts to torpedo us. I watched one torpedo skimming
-through the water like a shark about ten yards from the bow, as it
-seemed to me. We just escaped it by a turn of the wheel in the nick of
-time. Then another skimmed by our stern, running over the spot we had
-left only a minute before.
-
-"She's a goner," I heard one of our men say. The German cruiser was
-a burning wreck, but she kept the two small guns, one at each end,
-firing away to the last. Then one of our destroyers rushed in to close
-quarters and gave her the finishing blow with a torpedo.
-
-
-III--THE WOUNDED ON THE BLOODY DECK
-
-It was not until the latter part of the affair that I was called upon
-to deal with any wounded, and then a rapid succession of cases were
-either carried or managed to walk to the main deck after, where,
-assisted by the first-aid party, I cleansed and dressed their wounds.
-Two or three returned to duty the same afternoon, the others being
-placed in the wardroom temporarily after dressings had been applied, a
-reliable first-aid man being placed in charge. In addition, one case
-was treated at the forward station, and later on in the day a man who
-had received a somewhat severe contusion and abrasion of the thigh from
-a spent fragment of shell reported himself. Seven of the eight cases
-were wounds due to fragments of shell and splinters of steel or wood
-from the ship. The exception was a scald of the forearm, sustained by
-a stoker while investigating a steam pipe burst by an exploding shell.
-
-While I was occupied with the cases mentioned above, we had taken
-the destroyer _Laertes_ in tow, she being temporarily disabled by
-gunfire; and the order coming to retire, we proceeded from the scene
-of action for some considerable distance, when I was ordered to go to
-the _Laertes_ to attend to some seriously wounded, and tranship them.
-The _Laertes_ was cast off, and lay some two cables away. Arriving on
-board I found the worst case was that of a young stoker in a serious
-condition from shock and loss of blood. He had sustained several shell
-wounds, one of which involved the left tibia and fibula, some two
-inches of the tibia being torn away from its middle third.
-
-Around this patient the deck was covered with blood, and so slippery
-that I had to send for cloths to be put down to enable me to keep a
-footing. The condition of the deck enabled one to form an idea of how
-decks were on the _Mainz_, where 200 men were killed. Near by were two
-others, somewhat less severely wounded, lying on the deck, while just
-behind me lay two figures covered with the Union Jack. The wounded
-had all received first aid, the wounds being neatly dressed, but
-considerable hemorrhage was going on. Returning with these cases to
-the _Fearless_ I found several other wounded had already been brought
-on board from other destroyers. The sick bay, which had been prepared
-to receive the most serious cases, was soon filled, and others were
-sitting or lying on the mess deck near by.
-
-Owing to the probable proximity of the enemy I had to bear in mind the
-necessity for all possible speed, which was awkward, as they required
-very careful handling. However, I hurried up as much as I was able.
-Sudden manoeuvring or the shock of shells hitting us might make our
-work impossible. Firstly, iodine was applied to the majority of wounds
-and their immediate area, and a fresh temporary dressing applied. Then
-ably assisted by the sick-berth steward and two first-aid men, I spent
-the next few hours in endeavoring to get these, for the most part, very
-dirty patients, as clean as possible. It should be added that, at this
-stage, morphia was administered by hypodermic injection to three or
-four cases, and again once or twice during the night. It was found to
-be very beneficial.
-
-Many of the men had lost an arm and a leg, and in some cases both arms
-and legs. Several poor fellows had their faces almost entirely blown
-away.
-
-I had prepared masks of lint for the faces, specially medicated, to
-relieve the terrible burns caused by the picric acid used in shells.
-
-A German seaman, a brawny young fellow, suffered much pain and
-considerable loss of blood from a wound in his left foot. Examination
-showed the presence of a piece of metal, embedded in the lower part of
-the instep, from underneath which steady oozing of blood was occurring.
-I put the patient under chloroform, and he was kept lightly under,
-most excellently, by the Paymaster, while I removed the fragment of
-shell and many pieces of loose bone. The removal proved more difficult
-than I had anticipated, owing to the numerous "talons" the piece of
-shell possessed. These pointed in all directions, and were embedded in
-the bones of the foot so firmly that it was rather like the extraction
-of a huge molar with a dozen or more distorted fangs. The fragment
-weighed some six ounces, and its removal gave the patient great relief.
-
-A German seaman had compound comminuated fracture of right radius,
-ulna, and humerus, due to a huge wound in the neighborhood of the
-elbow. Multiple wounds of face and body and a scalp wound. This man
-appeared to be suffering from severe shock, was at times wandering in
-his mind, but at others quite clear. The wound in the scalp was found
-later to penetrate the skull in the left frontal region. He died after
-several days in hospital.
-
-
-IV--"IT WAS VERY FINE SPORT"
-
-A sub-lieutenant I discovered sitting in the wardroom with his legs
-upon a chair. He had sustained a "lozenge-shaped" clean cut shell wound
-in the middle of right thigh, about 5 inches by 2 inches, and passing
-deeply through the anterior muscles. He was very cheery and was only
-anxious to get back to his work, which he did after two or three weeks.
-
-A captain-lieutenant of the sunken German destroyer V187 had been
-struck in the right side by a piece of shell, the force of the blow
-throwing him overboard just before his ship sank. He was taken out of
-the water about half an hour later. The wound was situated over the
-lower right rib, was oval in shape and about one and a half inches
-in diameter. He was passing blood and had a good deal of pain in the
-abdomen. It was suspected that a piece of shell had penetrated the
-abdomen, but X-rays showed nothing.
-
-He was a good type of officer. On asking him what he thought of the
-affair, he replied, "Ah, it was very fine sport."
-
-The courage and endurance of the patients were admirable. In only
-one case did I hear any "grousing," as our sailors call any kind of
-complaining, and this was in one of the less severely injured. A
-suggestion that many around him were in an infinitely worse plight than
-he, and were enduring their troubles cheerfully, made a difference, and
-after a little refreshment he was as good as the rest of them. Some
-of the Germans were at first rather sullen, but their confidence was
-soon gained when they found that I could speak to them in their own
-language, and that we were intent upon doing our best for them.
-
-I found beef tea, brandy, ship's cocoa made with milk, most useful and
-acceptable for those who could not take solid food. At first one or
-two of the Germans hesitated about drinking what was offered them, but
-they soon thawed and took their portion gratefully, and, in fact, their
-gratitude a little later for what had been done for them was remarkable.
-
-I was able to report to the captain on the bridge, at about 4
-A.M., that all cases had been dealt with, had been washed,
-dressed, fed and made as comfortable as circumstances would allow.
-
-On arrival in harbor about midday on August 29, the more serious cases
-were transferred to Shotley Sick Quarters, the others to the hospital
-ship _Liberty_. I accompanied the former cases, and soon after seeing
-them safely disposed of returned to the ship, had some food and turned
-in about 5:30 P.M., having been up some thirty-seven hours.
-Curiously enough, though tired, I could not sleep well owing to a bad
-cramp in both my calves, but I had passed a very interesting day and a
-half. (Told in the _New York American_.)
-
-
-
-
-AIRMEN IN THE DESERTS OF EGYPT
-
-_Adventures of the Royal Flying Corps in Sinai_
-
-_Told by F. W. Martindale_
-
- The land has its perils for the aviator, and so has the sea; but
- our "fliers" in Egypt have learnt to dread the treacherous desert
- more than anything else. Here are two little stories from the
- annals of the R. F. C.--one near tragedy, the other real tragedy,
- lightened only by the amazing self-sacrifice of a young officer and
- the dogged pluck of his mechanic, who posted up his diary while
- awaiting death. Recorded in the _Wide World Magazine_.
-
-
-I--FLYING OVER THE ANCIENT HOLY LANDS
-
-Whatever the professional distinction may be between the two branches
-of the aviation service, the broad difference in the public mind
-between the Royal Flying Corps and the Royal Naval Air Service is that
-the former fly over land and the latter over sea. And whatever the
-relative advantages, and the reverse, of these opposite conditions
-may be, a certain amount of sympathy inevitably goes out to the naval
-airman in the supposedly more difficult element from which he starts
-and on which he has to make his "landing" on return. The mystery and
-the menace of the sea, which has always made sailors a race apart,
-is so real and apprehensible a thing, even to the landsman, that
-instinctively the sea is felt to be a source of greater peril to the
-airman than the land.
-
-Be this as it may, it has fallen to the lot of the Royal Flying
-Corps in this war to face an "element"--if one may call it such--as
-mysterious as the ocean, and not a whit less menacing. This is the
-desert--a thing which casts a spell upon those who have to dare it as
-potent and as fearful as any with which the sea holds the mariner in
-thrall.
-
-Mutable to the eye as the face of the waters, sudden and fickle in mood
-as the sea itself, there lurks in the desert an even grimmer menace
-than that which gives the sailor his wary, vigilant eye. The cruelty of
-the sea is nothing to the cruelty of the desert. Ask the airman who has
-made trial of both, and he will tell you that better a hundred times
-the risk of falling into the clutches of the uncertain sea than the
-chance of finding himself at the mercy of the pitiless desert.
-
-Here is a case in point--a little excerpt from the doings of the Royal
-Flying Corps, which it would be hard to match even in the records of
-that adventurous service. Pilot and observer set off in an aeroplane
-upon a single-handed reconnaissance towards the enemy's lines in Sinai.
-A long flight was made over the desert, and the machine was a long way
-from its base when that terrible bugbear known as "engine-trouble"
-developed. All attempts to right it in the air proved abortive, and a
-forced descent was made. The aeroplane alighted on the desert waste,
-and the two occupants worked feverishly to adjust the faulty mechanism.
-Their dismay can be imagined when they found repair impossible, and
-realized that between themselves and the Canal lay a stretch of some
-twenty miles of desert, over which no means of progress was possible to
-them save their own legs.
-
-It says much for the loyalty to the duty of these two airmen that they
-carefully dismantled the gun which was mounted on the machine before
-setting fire to the latter, and that they actually set off on their
-long tramp across the burning desert carrying the gun between them.
-
-It soon became evident that any idea of saving the gun by taking it all
-the way with them was hopeless. The weight, not inconsiderable under
-any condition, was insupportable, and before long there was no course
-possible but to bury the weapon in the sand, obliterating as best they
-could all tell-tale traces which might reveal its hidden presence to a
-chance enemy patrol.
-
-
-II--OVER THE BURNING DESERT WITH A GUN
-
-Progress was easier when the cumbersome weapon had been disposed of.
-But it was not long before clothing had to be jettisoned also. The
-relatively thick and heavy garments of an aviator were intolerable
-under the savage rays of the sun, and one by one they had to be
-discarded. Even so, the going was terribly difficult and the journey
-most exacting. By means of a compass a direction due west was
-maintained, the one hope of the castaways being to keep on until some
-point on the Canal should be reached.
-
-The hours went slowly by as mile after mile was laboriously covered.
-The strength of both men was steadily declining, but it was not until
-something more than half the estimated distance from their goal had
-been accomplished that either gave way. Then one collapsed; he could
-go no farther, he declared. His companion, well aware how fatally
-seductive a "rest" would inevitably be, bade him keep going, but
-without effect. The weary man's legs gave way beneath him; he sank down
-on the sand, and declared that he _preferred_ to stay there rather
-than attempt to struggle on any longer. Advice, persuasion, cajolery,
-threats, and even force were of no avail, and nothing remained but for
-the second man to continue the journey, with waning hope, alone. To
-stay with his comrade meant that both must inevitably perish miserably;
-by pressing on there was, at all events, a faint chance, not only of
-reaching the Canal himself, but of summoning aid to return in time to
-rescue the other.
-
-For some miles the wretched survivor, now tortured by an awful thirst
-and so weakened that he seemed scarcely able to move his legs,
-staggered blindly on across the desert. He had consciousness enough
-to maintain his westerly direction, but as to how long he continued
-stumbling forward in this almost aimless fashion, or what distance he
-covered, he can hazard only the wildest guess. His progress became
-largely automatic. Force of will kept him moving, his reluctant limbs
-relapsing into semi-mechanical action.
-
-At the moment of his direst extremity, as it seemed, when from sheer
-lack of power his body threatened to collapse altogether, the hapless
-wanderer espied a horse before him in the desert!
-
-Now, if this were fiction, no writer, however cynical, would ever dare
-to introduce a horse at such a point of the narrative. The thing would
-be too absurd; the long arm of coincidence never reached so far as
-that! Nobody could be expected to believe it.
-
-Yet the fact is as stated. At the psychological moment, when
-every new step taken might have proved his last, the wanderer saw
-before him in the desert the miraculous apparition of a horse.
-It can be easily supposed that at first he did not believe his
-eyes. In his half-demented state he feared the creature must be an
-hallucination--some trick of mirage, or the mere figment of his
-disordered brain. Only when he came nearer, and could hear as well as
-see the animal move, did a full realization of his good fortune begin
-to dawn upon him.
-
-
-III--TALE OF MODERN ARABIAN NIGHTS
-
-A sail in unfrequented latitudes never seemed more truly a godsend to
-castaways at sea than this marvellous horse to the exhausted airman. It
-was but a stray animal belonging to some mounted unit which had drawn
-the peg of its head-rope and escaped from the horse-lines into the
-open desert, but to the incredulous eyes which suddenly perceived its
-presence it might well have been the famous magic steed of the Arabian
-Nights.
-
-To catch the animal was the immediate thing to be done, and anyone who
-has tried to catch a shy horse in a paddock can imagine the hideous
-anxiety on the part of an exhausted man in approaching an animal which
-has the illimitable desert to manoeuvre in, and has but to kick up its
-heels to vanish in a trice over the horizon. Fortunately, the creature
-evinced but little shyness, and suffered itself to be taken without
-difficulty. It is probable, indeed, that this desert encounter was not
-less welcome on the one side than on the other.
-
-One wonders how the would-be rider ever managed to get astride his
-lucky steed. His legs had little enough capacity for a spring left
-in them. But necessity and hope in combination provide a wonderful
-incentive and spur, and somehow or other he scrambled up. He himself
-has hazy recollections only of this stage of his adventures, and beyond
-the fact that he _did_ mount that horse, and manage to set it going in
-a westerly direction, his recollections are vague.
-
-The next phase of the story is contained in the narrative of the
-officer commanding a patrol vessel on the Suez Canal, who relates
-that while on duty his attention was directed to a strange figure
-riding on horseback along the eastern bank of the Canal. At first
-sight he supposed it to be some mounted Arab or other nomad of the
-desert, but on closer inspection the horse did not seem to be of
-native type, and the rider's garb appeared unusual. On nearer approach
-the strange apparition resolved itself into a white man, of wild and
-haggard demeanor, dressed in a torn shirt and very little else, who
-bestrode barebacked a troop-horse in distressed condition. Hailed by
-the patrol boat, the white horseman replied in English, and explained
-intelligibly, if a trifle incoherently, that he had come out of the
-desert, that his chum was lying some miles back in dire distress, if
-not already dead, and would somebody please hurry up and do something.
-
-The conclusion of the story can be told in a sentence. A relief party
-was sent at once into the desert, the second airman was picked up
-exhausted but still alive, and at the date when the present writer last
-heard of them both parties of this strange adventure of the desert were
-little, if any, the worse for their experiences. As to the gallant
-troop-horse which played the part of a kind of _equus ex machina_, no
-peg in all the lines is now more firmly and securely driven in than his!
-
-The story just related ends happily for all concerned; let me deal now
-with the reverse side of the shield!
-
-
-IV--SHOT HIMSELF IN SELF-SACRIFICE
-
-About the middle of June last year Second-Lieutenant Stewart Gordon
-Ridley, of the R.F.C., went out alone in his machine as escort to
-another pilot, who had with him a pilot named J. A. Garside. "Engine
-trouble" developed when Lieutenant Ridley had been flying for an hour
-and a half, and, as they could not put the matter right immediately on
-alighting, they decided to camp where they were for the night. Next
-morning, as Ridley's engine still proved obdurate, the second pilot
-decided to fly back alone to the base, and return on the following day
-to the assistance of the two men. This programme was duly carried out,
-but when he got back the pilot found that Ridley and Garside, with the
-machine, had disappeared.
-
-A search party was immediately organized to scour the desert, and
-on the Sunday tracks were discovered. It was not until the Tuesday,
-however, that the missing 'plane was discovered. Beside it lay the
-dead bodies of Lieutenant Ridley and Garside. A diary was found on
-the mechanic, and the brief entries therein tell the tragic story of
-those last hours better than pages of description. The diary reads as
-follows:--
-
- Friday.--Mr. Gardiner left for Meheriq, and said he would come and
- pick one of us up. After he went we tried to get the machine going,
- and succeeded in flying for about twenty-five minutes. Engine then
- gave out. We tinkered engine up again, succeeded in flying about
- five miles next day (Saturday), but engine ran short of petrol.
-
- Sunday.--After trying to get engine started, but could not
- manage it owing to weakness--water running short, only half
- a bottle--Mr. Ridley suggested walking up to the hills. Six
- P.M. (Sunday): Found it was farther than we thought; got
- there eventually; very done up. No luck. Walked back; hardly any
- water--about a spoonful. Mr. Ridley shot himself at ten-thirty on
- Sunday whilst my back was turned. No water all day; don't know how
- to go on; got one Verey light; dozed all day, feeling very weak;
- wish someone would come; cannot last much longer.
-
- Monday.--Thought of water in compass, got half bottle; seems to be
- some kind of spirit. Can last another day. Fired Lewis gun, about
- four rounds; shall fire my Verey light to-night; last hope without
- machine comes. Could last days if I had water.
-
-The captain of the Imperial Camel Corps, with which the aviators were
-co-operating, formed the opinion that Lieutenant Ridley shot himself in
-the hope of saving the mechanic, the water they had being insufficient
-to last the two of them till help arrived. The Commanding Officer of
-the R. F. C. states: "There is no doubt in my mind that he performed
-this act of self-sacrifice in the hope of saving the other man."
-
-The history of the R. F. C. is a short one, but it is already full of
-glorious deeds.
-
-
-
-
-HOW SWEENY, OF THE FOREIGN LEGION, GOT HIS "HOT DOGS"
-
-_Told by Private John Joseph Casey of the Foreign Legion_
-
-
-I--STORY OF AN AMERICAN "WEST-POINTER"
-
- Lieut. Charles Sweeny, of the French Foreign Legion, returned
- to New York to recover from a wound received during the French
- offensive in Champagne. Sweeny is an American, a graduate of West
- Point, and the son of a former president of the Federal Smelting
- and Refining Co., of Spokane, Wash. The following story, of a most
- unusual "Dutch treat," was told by Lieut. Sweeny to Private Casey,
- a New York artist, also fighting in the Foreign Legion, to the _New
- York World_.
-
-You have read of the cordial exchanges of tobacco and tidbits between
-the men of the North and the South, who were facing each other as
-deadly foes in the rifle pits during the Civil War. These exchanges
-(the amicable ones, of course) were quaint and peculiar enough between
-those avowed enemies, even though both were of the same blood and spoke
-the same tongue. But the one which now interests us took place during
-the present war, between Lieut. Charlie Sweeny of the French Foreign
-Legion, and the Germans in the adjacent trenches; by which exchange the
-Germans got nothing, and Sweeny got a feast of "hot dogs!"
-
-Sweeny, as you may infer from his name, is not a Frenchmen, even though
-he happens to be in the army service of France. I am also in the same
-service and my name is Casey. We are both Americans. Sweeny is a West
-Point graduate, and a native of Spokane, Wash. After his graduation
-from West Point he married a Belgian girl and settled down in Paris.
-His wife and two small children are living in that vicinity at the
-present time.
-
-When the war broke out Sweeny enlisted in the French Foreign Legion.
-He was promoted for gallantry in action; and last September, after
-leading us into the Boche lines during the Champagne offensive, he was
-decorated with the Legion of Honor. Lieut. Sweeny is the first American
-in fifty years who has held a commission in the French army.
-
-But how Sweeny won his "hot dogs" is a different story.
-
-One day when we were in the front trenches Sweeny handed me a
-cigarette. It looked like a Turkish cigarette and I duly remarked it.
-
-"No," said he, and he indicated a large tin box filled with the same
-sort, which he had with him, "these are a present from our friends, the
-enemy. They were given to me by the Germans."
-
-"Must have been sent over to you inside a 'Jack Johnson' shell," said
-I.
-
-"I can see you don't believe me," Sweeny replied, "but it's a fact.
-They came in a hamper, together with two bottles of real Munich beer,
-an assortment of Westphalian ham, cheese, honey, sandwiches of roast
-veal and white bread, a few slabs of K bread, some pipe tobacco, and
-some--what do you think?--hot dogs! As sure as you're born, Casey, and
-if you'll believe me, I went for those frankfurters first! Oh, how many
-nights I have sat out here and thought how good one of those hot dogs,
-with a big gob of mustard on it, would be! But I never thought I'd ever
-taste any in the trenches. Yet only just now I have demolished four of
-them."
-
-
-II--"LET SWEENY TELL IT"
-
-Here was the way of it, as Sweeny told it to me:
-
-"I started out about midnight with a patrol to have a look at a new
-German bayou between two fortlets beyond our lines. I strung my men out
-so as to give warning of any German patrol, and then led them past our
-sentries and the barbed wire. I was some distance ahead of my men, and
-had got well within the German lines without seeing or hearing anything
-of the Germans.
-
-"Now this was not the first time that I had ever penetrated that far
-into the German lines, but it was the first time on such a mission
-that I had not had to dodge a German patrol; and very often their
-bullets. These things ran in my head continually and made me think
-that I had fallen into a very neat trap which the Germans had laid for
-me. I expected to see them rise from anywhere any minute, and hear the
-banging of their guns and the whistling of their bullets (if I was
-lucky enough to hear them, that is), and I began to wish myself well
-out of my predicament and back again in the comparative safety of our
-trench.
-
-"This made me more cautious than ever, and presently I began to
-retreat. As I did so a round German helmet bobbed up out of a ravine
-not a dozen yards away. An instant later, at the other end of the
-ravine, another appeared. I squirmed away like a snake and got behind
-the only shelter in sight, a little scrubby tree, about three yards
-away.
-
-"As I lay there quaking, wondering why the Germans did not shoot--for
-they must have seen me--I happened to look up, and there, hanging to a
-branch of the tree, was a fat, clean-looking basket. I reached up, the
-limb on which it hung being only a few feet from the ground, and lifted
-the basket down.
-
-"Then in a flash the explanation of the puzzle was clear to me. The
-Germans had left that basket there and meant me to have it.
-
-"With the basket on my arm I got up, bowed low to the round hats, and
-walked back to our trench without ever being fired on.
-
-"Inside the basket was the assortment I have described to you. There
-was also a note something after this wise:
-
-"'We have been in front of you for over a year, and it is not against
-our comrades, the French, that we are fighting, but against our enemy,
-the English. Let us join forces against our common enemy. We are not
-starving, as you may well see from the little present we send you
-herewith.'
-
-"Here was something that set me thinking pretty hard. I had escaped
-death or capture by a miracle so far as I could see, and all in order
-that I might enjoy a hearty meal at the expense of the Germans.
-
-"I set the basket down in the trench, and fell to with a will; and I
-give you my word, Casey, of all the good things I have eaten, I never
-enjoyed anything more than I did that Dutch treat--especially the
-frankfurters.
-
-"They took me back to the States immediately--hot dogs, the brightness
-of the sea, the yawping of barkers, crowds passing, the noise of
-thousands of shuffling feet--not the sort of shuffling we hear now,
-Casey, when a bugle call or the heavy sound of guns seems the chief
-attraction. It was a great shame I couldn't save you one.
-
-"The meaning of all this was a puzzle to me until I found out that our
-boys had left a bundle of American and English newspapers in the spot
-where I had found the basket, with the paragraphs plainly marked in
-which it was said the Germans were starving. And the basket was the
-Germans' reply.
-
-"Now you know how I came to get my hot dogs."
-
-
-
-
-THE DOGS OF WAR ON THE BATTLEGROUNDS
-
-_The "Four-Footed Soldiers" of France_
-
- The "friend of man" has always served his master faithfully and
- well in various humble capacities, but the Great War has seen his
- sphere of usefulness enlarged to an almost incredible extent. Our
- Gallant French allies have mobilized thousands of dogs for war
- service, and as scouts, sentries, messengers, ambulance workers,
- and beasts of burden these wonderfully-trained animals have
- rendered most valuable assistance to the armies in the field. Here
- is a soldier's story in the _Wide World Magazine_.
-
-
-I--TALES OF THE DOGS
-
-My friend, who had just come home on leave from the trenches, placed
-on the table in front of me a suspicious-looking parcel which left no
-manner of doubt that, for its size, it was extremely heavy.
-
-"I'm going to leave this with you for a day or two, if you don't mind,"
-he said. "I can't carry it about with me."
-
-"What is it--bombs?" I asked, laughing, and my friend, without a smile,
-answered:--
-
-"Yes, two bombs--for my dog."
-
-Wondering what murderous intention had suddenly taken possession of
-the man, I looked my surprise, and then he explained. He was about to
-buy a dog to take back with him to the trenches, he told me, and to
-make sure that the animal was absolutely and thoroughly trained he had
-brought the bombs in order to test him. If, when the bombs exploded in
-the dog's presence, the latter stood the shock without fear or panic,
-he would know the animal was trained and would be useful to him. If,
-on the other hand, he manifested the symptoms of unrest which I, for
-instance, would show if a bomb exploded just behind my coat-tails, then
-the animal was not properly trained and would be of no use to a soldier
-in the trenches.
-
-The use of dogs in warfare is to-day a common matter. The number of
-dogs with the French army alone can be guessed when it is stated that
-one society, the Societe Nationale du Chien Sanitaire, of 21, Rue de
-Choiseul, Paris, has trained over fifteen hundred war-dogs.
-
-The training of dogs for warfare showed from the first of the most
-satisfactory results, and numbers of regiments would now find their
-operations very difficult indeed if they were suddenly deprived of
-their sagacious four-footed companions.
-
-The Societe du Chien Sanitaire, like most new movements, did not
-receive much official encouragement at the beginning of the campaign,
-but nevertheless, thanks to its efforts, under its energetic president,
-M. A. Lepel-Cointet, aided by private enterprise, suitable animals were
-soon forthcoming, at any rate for ambulance purposes, and many officers
-took "mobilized" dogs with them to act as scouts and watchers at night.
-
-Dogs particularly suitable to warlike purposes are to be found in great
-numbers in the Lower Pyrenees and other mountainous regions of France,
-and to-day there are societies in different parts of the country--not
-enough, it is true, but still they have made a good beginning--who are
-collecting and training the animals and sending them to the Front.
-Recently a contingent of one hundred dogs was sent to the army by the
-Department of the Indre, which is a hunting country where dogs are
-particularly well trained to explore and to act as guardians. People
-who have given or lent dogs to the army can, by keeping the number
-given to them on receipt of the animal, have news of their pets and
-their exploits, and some continue to keep in touch with their humble
-friends by sending them dainties from time to time.
-
-
-II--DOGS AS SENTINELS AT THE FRONT
-
-M. Megnin, an authority on the use of dogs in warfare, says that German
-attacks by night on small outposts have almost completely failed since
-dogs have been employed to watch. The animals have a remarkably acute
-sense of hearing, and are able to detect the enemy at a great distance
-and prepare the men to receive him. Thousands of sentinels, especially
-in the Argonne and the Vosges, where it is difficult to see far ahead
-owing to the nature of the ground, have owed it to their dogs that they
-have not been surprised and killed or taken prisoners. In many cases
-they have even turned the tables on the enemy.
-
-Captain Tolet, who is in command of the kennels of the Tenth French
-Army, has narrated some of the brave deeds--the word is not too
-strong--of dogs under his care, especially during the fighting on
-the Somme. On August 28th a dog called Medor, although wounded by a
-shrapnel shell, ran a mile and a half to carry a message from a brigade
-to a colonel, was again wounded in the last two hundred yards, but
-dragged himself to the commander's post, where he died a quarter of an
-hour later. Another dog, Follette, in the same month, ran nearly two
-miles and was wounded, but nevertheless persisted in his mission, dying
-five days later. In a part of the Vosges a battalion of Chasseurs which
-utilized a particularly intelligent animal as a sentinel did not lose a
-single man, while a battalion which had preceded it, and which had no
-dog, lost seven sentries in three days.
-
-Another case of a dog's usefulness is recorded in the taking of a farm
-in the Bois Brule (Burnt Wood). Everyone thought Germans were hiding
-in the farm, and no patrol had ventured to approach it. At last a man
-went towards it at night with a dog on a leash twenty yards ahead of
-him. The animal showed no signs of uneasiness, and the farm was found
-to be empty. Telegraphists and others were thereupon able to instal
-themselves, and before morning the Germans' position was satisfactorily
-examined and an enemy redoubt smashed up.
-
-Some of these gallant four-footed soldiers have received decorations
-just like men--and an extra bone or two as well, one hopes. Why not?
-The intelligence shown by these animals sometimes approaches very near
-to that of human beings, and one feels sure they are gratified at the
-attention drawn to their doings. Recently there was a special public
-parade at the Trocadero in Paris, when the Societe Protectrice des
-Animaux presented prizes to soldiers who had distinguished themselves
-in the training of animals. Collars of honour were also awarded to a
-large number of dogs exhibited by the soldiers who had trained them.
-Three of these animals were specially feted on account of what they had
-done--Fend l'Air, belonging to Sergeant Jacqemin, whose life he had
-saved at Roclincourt; Loustic, specially noticed for his intelligence
-at the Front; and Pyrame, who saved an entire French battalion by
-detecting the presence of an enemy column. In other cases the War
-Cross has been awarded to dogs that have performed conspicuous deeds,
-especially in the saving of life.
-
-It was mainly owing to a number of British dogs that the French army
-was able to drive the Germans out of Boesinghe Woods in one of the
-engagements round Ypres. Prusco, a bull-terrier, serving with French
-motor scouts, who carried him in a side-car, was of great value in
-carrying messages back to headquarters; while Lutz, a dog that
-distinguished himself in one of the Verdun engagements, was employed
-as an advance sentinel last February, and first gave warning of a
-German attack by repeated growls. The Red Cross Dog League, which began
-activities early in the war with eight dogs, now has two thousand five
-hundred animals in the field, and it claims that the lives of at least
-eight thousand wounded men have been saved by them.
-
-
-III--HOW DOGS BECOME GOOD SOLDIERS
-
-The training of intelligent animals like these is carried on in five
-different ways, for various uses.
-
-1.--_As Ambulance Dogs._ The animal seeks for wounded men lost on
-the battlefield; he searches in holes, ruins, and excavations, and
-hunts over wooded places or coverts, where the wounded man might
-lie unnoticed by his comrades or the stretcher-bearer. The dog is
-especially useful at this work in the night-time, when he can often by
-his scent discover fallen men who would otherwise be passed over, for
-at night-time ambulance-men often have to work in the dark, as lights
-would attract the enemy's fire. Having found a wounded man still alive,
-the dog brings his master (or the ambulance-man to whom he is attached)
-some article belonging to the sufferer. This object tells the master,
-"I have found someone--search!" Usually the object brought is the
-fallen man's _kepi_ (or nowadays his helmet), and the trainers teach
-the dog to find the man's headgear, but if this is missing some other
-object must be brought. It is a fatiguing operation for the animal, as
-he has to return with closed mouth. The ambulance-man who receives the
-article at once puts the animal on a leash, and is immediately led to
-his wounded comrade. The leash is about two yards long, so that the
-movements of the animal shall be hindered as little as possible.
-
-If dogs were utilized in this service long during wartime, their value
-would be incalculable; and their use is all the greater when fighting
-takes place over an extended area. The situation of the wounded man
-overlooked or abandoned on the battlefield is a truly horrible one; he
-has to wait in the forlorn hope that he will be found, for the army
-has gone on, and the more victorious it is the farther it will push
-ahead. In the Franco-Prussian War of 1870-1 more than twelve thousand
-men were thus lost to the French alone, while in the Russo-Japanese
-War the Japanese lost over five thousand in this manner, showing that
-the methods then used for the exploration of the battlefields were
-inadequate. In that war three dogs sent by a military dog society found
-twenty-three wounded men who had been abandoned after the battle of
-Cha-ho. In the Boer War the collie dogs taken out by the men, it is
-said, saved hundreds of wounded men who would never have been found by
-the ambulance-workers in the difficult country where fighting mostly
-took place.
-
-2.--_As Trench Dogs or Sentinels._ The sentry or trench dog is trained
-to stay in the trench itself or in a small "listening-post" made for
-him, either on the edge of the trench, outside it, or at a little
-distance away. There he remains on the _qui vive_, ready to signal the
-least suspicion of a noise or the presence of the enemy. In this work
-both his eyes and his scent help him. He is kept on the leash, and he
-gives the signal of danger by a slight growl, without barking, which
-would give the alarm. The greatest difficulty in the training of dogs
-for this work has been to rid them of the habit of barking, but this
-has been overcome with care and patience. The training of dogs for this
-class of work can be--and has been--carried to great lengths. A man
-crawling on patrol work can take a dog with him, also in a crouching
-position, on a leash. A little tug at the leash causes the dog to rise,
-to retire, or to change its direction, and a properly-trained animal
-will answer to the leash as satisfactorily as a horse does to the
-reins. Such a dog is of immense help at night, when he can be taken
-quite close to the enemy.
-
-3.--_As Patrols or Scouts._ The dog accompanies the human scout in his
-reconnaissance, and helps in finding advance posts or sentinels, and
-locating small groups of the enemy.
-
-4.--_As Couriers or Messengers._ The animal acts as a messenger,
-carrying written orders or information, and is used according to
-circumstances. He can carry messages between groups in the rear and
-fighting formations in the front--for example, between the artillery
-and the infantry, and _vice versa_; between two fighting forces,
-such as battalions, companies, or sections; between the headquarters
-and the various positions of the army; or between the main body and
-detached posts, such as patrols, scouts, etc. Taken along by a patrol
-or scouting party, he can be sent back to the main body with a message
-fixed to his collar. The note having been removed and read, a reply can
-be attached to his collar, and the dog sent back to the original body
-of men, even if they have changed their position, since he finds them
-again by his scent. A dog is not only much quicker in carrying these
-messages than a man, and can cover ground where no cycle could go, but
-he also has an advantage in being almost invisible to the enemy. If on
-a leash, he can conduct a man in charge of reinforcements or ammunition
-to the new position of the patrolling party--sometimes over a distance
-of several miles.
-
-5.--_As Dogs of Communication._ This is the most difficult task to
-which military dogs are put, and requires very special qualities, so
-that only a very few animals have been found capable of the work. It
-consists in sending him after a patrol _en route_ with a message, or
-even in finding a lost patrol or scouting party and bringing it back to
-its base. It will readily be understood that an exceptional scent is
-required in a dog to do work of this sort.
-
-In the two last-named classes of work dogs can pass swiftly backwards
-and forwards through brisk firing and run much less risk than a man.
-
-
-IV--DOGS ARE HEROES UNDER FIRE
-
-There are several societies in Paris which choose suitable dogs
-in order to make soldiers of them. The "Central Society for the
-Development of the Breeds of Dogs" gave three thousand dogs to the
-French army last August. After they have been tested, an operation
-which takes about three weeks, they are sent to special stations in
-the rear of the armies to be trained, and five or six days are all
-that are necessary for the training of animals for the simpler kinds
-of work. For more difficult tasks the training is naturally a longer
-business. When dogs are to be trained as communication agents the
-instruction may take several weeks. They are taught to go from one
-master to another, first by a call, then by a whistle, then simply
-at a mere gesture. Distances are gradually increased, obstacles are
-placed in the way, the animal's goal becomes invisible, and so on. Much
-patience is required in this kind of work; and it is found that the
-best results are obtained by kindness and giving rewards for good work
-accomplished. The animals are taught to recognize only two masters, and
-to obey them alone. Outsiders are not allowed to pet or feed them. When
-they understand that they have to obey only one or two men, they have
-to learn to follow one or both of them when marching in a column of
-infantry, to recognize them when in a group, and so on. They are taught
-to endure the sound of gun-firing or explosions quite close to them.
-Above all, they are strictly trained never to pick up articles on their
-journey and to refuse delicacies offered them by strangers.
-
-Specially-trained dogs only are chosen for this work, and they are
-mostly sheep-dogs or collies or animals whose business it was in civil
-life to be guardians or watchers, and always on the alert. These are
-all the easier to train for the special work--somewhat of the same
-order--which they are set to do in war.
-
-... When the question of transport through the mountain snow had
-become a matter of urgent importance, the French authorities conceived
-the idea of using dog-drawn sleighs for carrying supplies. Some
-hundred "huskies"--a cross between the Eskimo dog and the wolf--and
-other trained dogs from Alaska, North-Western Canada, and Labrador
-were brought over by Lieutenant Rene Haas, a Frenchman who had spent
-fourteen years in Alaska. Mr. Warner Allen, the representative of
-the British Press with the French armies, describing the work of
-these dogs, says the snow in the neighbourhood of the Schlucht Pass
-was deep enough until almost the end of April for the dogs to render
-yeoman service. "They were able," he says, "to draw heavy loads over
-almost inaccessible country, and to supplement to a valuable extent
-the wheeled transport. But their utility has not ceased with the
-disappearance of the snow. They are now being harnessed to trucks
-on small two-foot-gauge light railways, which run everywhere behind
-the Front, and they are capable of drawing the heaviest load up the
-steepest gradient. Eleven dogs, with a couple of men, can haul a ton
-up some of the most precipitous slopes in the mountains, and I was
-assured that two teams of seven dogs each could do the work of five
-horses in this difficult country, with a very great economy of men."
-
-This correspondent adds that the best of these imported breeds of dogs
-is the Alaskan, as "his courage never fails, and he will work until he
-drops, though he is perhaps the weakest of them. They are all shaggy
-dogs, with prick ears and bushy tails, their colour ranging from
-black to white, between greys and browns. Their chest development, so
-necessary for hauling, is remarkable. They are mainly fed on rice,
-horse-flesh, and waste military biscuits, and this fare appears to suit
-them admirably, as they are always in splendid condition, and disease
-is practically unknown. The experiment of transporting these dogs
-to France has shown that they can be of real service in mountainous
-country, and represent a real economy."
-
-Dogs that are specially adapted or have been trained for hunting or
-sporting purposes are of little use in war, as they have acquired
-habits incompatible with the work now demanded of them. Certain breeds,
-such as the Great Dane, and others of limited intelligence, are of no
-value at all. Some of these have the habit of rushing forward at the
-slightest alarm, which is of more danger than advantage to the soldiers
-to whom they might belong.
-
-
-V--DOGS AS LOYAL COMRADES--FELLOW-WORKERS
-
-The "dog soldier," like his master on special missions, has to see
-and hear without being seen or heard. It is amusing, but nevertheless
-true, that the dogs of smugglers and poachers, as well as those of
-coastguardsmen, have been found to be most useful animals in the army.
-A well-trained dog, acting with a sentinel or scouting party may be the
-means of preserving numbers of lives by saving them from unpleasant
-surprises.
-
-The use of dogs in warfare was, of course, not invented in the
-present war, though their utility had been systematized and given
-more scientific scope than was ever the case before. In no previous
-campaign have men understood the full use that could be made of these
-highly-intelligent creatures.
-
-It was the Belgians who first turned their attention to the subject
-of employing dogs more extensively. Everybody who has visited Belgium
-knows the use that is made of dogs for traction purposes all over
-the country. Nearly all the peasants who bring agricultural or dairy
-produce to market employ dogs to draw their small carts, sometimes
-harnessing whole teams to heavy loads. The dog is also greatly used
-in Belgium for sport, and from the sporting dog to the police dog is
-but a step. The dog in war--as sentinel, courier, scout, or ambulance
-worker--followed, and was the idea of Professor Reul, of the Veterinary
-School of Cureghem, and two journalists named Van der Snick and
-Sodenkampf. In 1885-6 the first dogs trained to some of these purposes
-were shown at a dog show at Ostend, and shortly afterwards societies
-were started at Brussels, Liege, Lierre, Ghent and other places, not
-merely for the training of dogs, but to improve the breeds. Lieutenant
-van der Putte, of the Belgian army, started the Societe du Chien
-Sanitaire for the express purpose of training dogs for ambulance work
-and soon afterwards similar societies were organized in Paris and
-Berlin.
-
-It was quite natural that the Belgians should also think of using these
-draught-dogs for small machine-guns, thus providing an inexpensive but
-efficient light artillery. The Germans wished to imitate them, but it
-is related that when they tried to buy dogs from the Belgians, as they
-had no indigenous animals suited to the purpose, the Belgians refused
-to sell. In other ways, however, the Germans were at the beginning of
-the war well provided with dogs for various purposes, including the
-ambulance service.
-
-Since then the use of dogs in the German army has assumed considerable
-proportions. The animals used are mostly of the German sheep-dog
-variety, and a register of these, numbering several thousands, is
-kept for mobilization purposes by the German Sheep-Dog Club. Other
-breeds used by the enemy are terriers, red-haired griffons, Doberman
-_pinchers_, Airedale terries, and a sort of bull-terrier known as a
-"Boxer." Dogs, it appears, have been used by the German army chiefly on
-the Eastern Front, where the fighting was of a more open description
-than on the Western Front.... The German papers published appeals from
-the authorities asking dog owners to offer their pets for war purposes,
-and many thousands were obtained as a result.
-
-
-
-
-TRUE STORY ABOUT KILLING THE WOUNDED
-
-_Told by A. Pankratoff_
-
- Translated from the Russian for _Current History_
-
-
-I--GERMANS HANGED COSSACKS ON TREES
-
-The other day, quite unexpectedly, I ran into Lieutenant X., better
-known as the Junior Subaltern.
-
-This was the fourth time I had run across him since the beginning of
-the war--at Insterburg, where the Junior Subaltern was leading his
-company toward Koenigsberg; then in the trenches beyond Tarnovo; then in
-the vicinity of Lublin, during the great retreat; and now, the fourth
-time.
-
-"I am stationed twelve versts from Czernowitz," he went on to explain.
-The Junior Subaltern is really so young that you can't help envying
-him. His face shines with health. His eyes are always laughing. His
-speech is very simple, but impressive; but he does not like to talk; he
-would rather listen, and laugh responsively with his eyes.
-
-Fortune had brought us together; several men sitting down to a common
-meal. We talked freely about everything. The conversation turned to the
-German habit of finishing all the wounded enemies they find after a
-successful battle. During the forest fighting last August one of us had
-come across sixty Cossacks who had been but slightly wounded, and whom
-the Germans had hanged on the trees.
-
-"We avenged them, however; the Germans got something to remember!" said
-the narrator.
-
-Lieutenant X.'s eyes sparkled with animation.
-
-"Well," he said, "of course they deserved it! Of course it is a crime
-to kill the wounded. But, gentlemen, there are cases when it is
-impossible not to kill the wounded!"
-
-"What on earth do you mean?"
-
-"Just what I said! There is such a thing as rightful killing of the
-wounded!"
-
-We insisted, and the Junior Subaltern narrated a recent experience of
-his, "somewhere in Bukowina." He had been in command of a party of
-scouts. His regiment had just arrived to take the place of another
-infantry regiment. And the first thing to do was to become acquainted
-with the locality and to learn the dispositions and intentions of the
-enemy. The Junior Subaltern was sent out with his company. At one
-place the opposing armies were separated by a ravine, which forked out
-toward our trenches. Lieutenant X. knew that the men of the regiment
-his was replacing had become acquainted with the Austrians, and that
-the enemies by day came together at the bottom of the ravine by night,
-entertained one another, and gossiped.
-
-"War is burdensome, gentlemen!" explained the Junior Subaltern, "and we
-all longed for even the semblance of human intercourse with the other
-chaps. * * * And there happened to be a prolonged and tiresome spell of
-calm between battles, and so the men of the regiment we were replacing
-and the Austrians had long smokes together, exchanging pipes. But every
-one remembered--and nobody held it against any one--that the course of
-cigarettes must be closely interwoven with the course of bullets on
-the morrow. * * * Yet, yet--oh, if we were only chivalrous knights,
-conducting a picturesque tournament, instead of common Russian cannon
-fodder fighting common Austrian cannon fodder. * * *"
-
-Of course our young friend wanted to do the magnanimous thing by the
-enemy, sending round word to them, "Here we come! Get ready!" But
-what he did do was to take advantage of the quiet exchange of the two
-Russian regiments and the total ignorance in which the Austrian members
-of the nightly smoking club in the ravine still remained, and to creep
-noiselessly forward to the spot where the friends of the night before
-were on guard. The Austrian sentinels--three of them--dozed, wrapped in
-their blankets. The Russians crept stealthily forward. * * *
-
-"What else could we do?" asked the Junior Subaltern. "Humanitarian
-ideas are in blank contradiction to the present war. Civilians at home
-may try to judge everything in accordance with these ideas. Well, we
-know they are mistaken. Oh, they are simply ridiculous!" ended the
-Junior Subaltern, his good-natured, broad face blushing at making such
-a bold statement in company.
-
-
-II--"WHEN WE LEAVE NO WOUNDED ALIVE"
-
-"Such nonsense!" he went on. "Of course, at the back of our minds the
-horror of it is always present. But what else can you do? Standing in
-blood up to your throat, and knowing that you have to protect your men,
-to protect yourself. * * * And what difference does it make to them
-whether you shoot them or throttle them? * * * About a hundred paces
-from those three sentinels there were at least a hundred others, and
-two hundred yards off were the Austrian trenches. The least noise,
-a groan, the stifled cry of a wounded Austrian would be the end of
-everything for my scouts; and there were only thirty of us. That was
-when I gave the order not to leave any wounded alive. * * *"
-
-It was an evident relief to him to be interrupted.
-
-"Oh, yes, I remember!" said one of us. "I was in camp when the
-Austrian officer, routed out in his sleep, was brought in on the run in
-his nightshirt. The whole thing went rapidly and well, and you took a
-machine gun from the Austrians!"
-
-Another of us said:
-
-"I don't see what you are driving at! There's no analogy at all! What
-you did was no hitting of those who were down already. All sorts of
-conventions and international law would justify you!"
-
-"Well," answered the Junior Subaltern, "did I not say that there was
-such a thing as justifiable killing of the wounded, for us as for the
-Germans? Besides, I got decorated for the job! Ouch! It is going to
-thaw! I know, because my wounded leg aches!"
-
-His smile was so frank and his face so full of the bloom of youth
-as he thus changed the subject that it was quite evident that he
-did not change it from any false modesty, but simply because the
-subject--including his own distinguished part in it--had no further
-interest for him.
-
-"You have been wounded?"
-
-"Yes. Two bullets in my leg, one in my arm, one in the abdomen."
-
-"And you are still alive?"
-
-"As you see! It was that devilish machine gun! The bullet that entered
-my abdomen cut through the intestines, touched my stomach, and came out
-by my back. When I regained consciousness I heard the doctor saying:
-'Put this one aside; he will die in a minute or two!' And some of my
-men dug a nice grave for me and wrote my name and the date on a board,
-and sat down patiently to wait for my funeral. But I didn't die. So the
-surgeon had to send me to hospital. But when the ambulance was starting
-I heard him say: 'It's not a bit of use! He'll die on the way there!'
-But I cheated the doctors. I'm quite a rare specimen!"
-
-"You are indeed!" And we all laughed, so contagious was Lieutenant X.'s
-laughter.
-
-"The Medical Council," he went on, "explained it by the fact that, for
-two whole days previously, I had had nothing to eat. * * * hadn't had
-time! It was on the Stripa. The moment our regiment arrived at ---- we
-had to fight."
-
-
-
-
-HOW WE FOILED "U 39" IN THE SUBMARINE ZONE
-
-_Adventures Aboard a Horse Transport_
-
-_Told by H. O. Read, Late First Officer S.S. "Anglo-Californian"_
-
- This story relates what happened when the horse transport
- "Anglo-Californian" met the "U 39." The captain and twenty men lost
- their lives, and eight more were wounded; but the heroism of the
- commander and his officers saved the ship and her valuable cargo.
- Personal experiences recorded in the _Wide World Magazine_.
-
-
-I--"WE CROSS THE ATLANTIC ON THE _ANGLO-CALIFORNIAN_"
-
-Ever since the 18th of February, 1915, when a blockade of the seas
-round the British Isles was declared by Germany, seamen navigating in
-the waters of the war-zone have had a most anxious time in consequence
-of the activity of the German submarine and their callous methods in
-dealing with defenceless merchant vessels.
-
-Our ship, the _Anglo-Californian_, had made a number of voyages across
-the Atlantic, and had so far been fortunate enough to get through the
-war-zone each time without encountering any of the enemy's submarines.
-We had always congratulated ourselves on our good fortune, but on the
-voyage I am about to describe our luck seemed to have deserted us.
-
-It was the morning of the 4th of July, about eight o'clock. I had
-almost completed my watch and was on the point of being relieved by
-the third officer when, taking a final look round the horizon before
-leaving the bridge, I noticed the small cloud of blue smoke on the
-surface of the water about a mile away on our port beam.
-
-For the moment I was rather puzzled as to what it could be, there being
-no craft of any description in sight from which it could come. I was
-not long kept in doubt, however, for as the cloud of smoke gradually
-lifted I caught sight of the conning-tower and long, low hull of a
-submarine, which I knew at once must be a German, as our under-sea
-craft were not operating in this vicinity.
-
-She had apparently just come to the surface after locating us with her
-periscope, and, seeing everything clear, immediately gave chase.
-
-Ordering the man at the wheel to put the helm over, thus bringing the
-submarine directly astern of us, I informed the captain of the presence
-of the enemy. He immediately came on the bridge and proceeded to take
-all necessary steps to try and outrace the submarine. We were quite
-unarmed, so flight was our only chance.
-
-The chief engineer was summoned and told to raise all the steam he
-possibly could and drive the ship for all she was worth, and the extra
-speed that was very quickly attained was convincing proof of the way in
-which he and his staff carried out these orders.
-
-Almost immediately after sighting the submarine the captain ordered
-the wireless operator to send out the "S.O.S." call for help. This was
-promptly answered, and we were informed that assistance was being sent
-us with all possible speed.
-
-The captain, myself, the second officer (who was the captain's son),
-and the third officer were now on the upper bridge, anxiously watching
-our pursuer through the glasses. To our dismay we noticed that she was
-slowly but surely gaining on us.
-
-It was not until a quarter of nine that she first opened fire, this
-presumably being a warning shot, as it fell wide on our port side. The
-captain took heed of the summons, however; he merely smiled and gave
-orders to telephone down to the engineers to "keep her going" as hard
-as they could.
-
-A second warning shot was fired, falling clear of the ship on the
-starboard bow, but this also was unheeded.
-
-Those on the submarine, observing that our speed was increasing
-and that no notice was taken of their shots, evidently came to the
-conclusion that we were going to make a run for it, and forthwith they
-commenced to fire shell after shell at us. At first they tried to bring
-down the wireless apparatus, so as to prevent us from getting into
-communication with the patrol vessels, but this, as I have previously
-stated, we had already done, and were now in continuous communication
-with them, giving them our now rapidly-changing positions.
-Unfortunately for us, however, the patrols were some distance away, and
-there was not much chance of their being able to reach us for two to
-three hours. What would happen meanwhile was hard to say; certainly our
-chances of getting away from our pursuer looked very small indeed.
-
-
-II--"SHELLS WERE BURSTING AROUND OUR VESSEL"
-
-The fire from the submarine now became more rapid, but was not always
-effective, as Captain Parslow, heedless of the shells which were
-dropping and bursting all round the vessel, kept the quartermaster
-at the wheel constantly working his helm so as to keep the submarine
-almost directly astern of us, thereby making the ship as small a target
-as possible. Momentarily, however, the submarine drew nearer and the
-shell-fire more and more deadly. Almost every shot now found its mark,
-striking the vessel at various points on the quarters and round the
-stern. Forsaking the wireless, their aim was now evidently the rudder
-or propeller, so as to totally disable us and thus have the vessel at
-their mercy.
-
-When the firing first commenced our crew, including the horse
-attendants, and numbering about a hundred and fifty all told, had been
-warned to be ready to go to their boat-stations at a moment's notice in
-case of emergency, and consequently everybody, with the exception of
-the engineers and firemen working below, was now on deck.
-
-No signs of panic were shown until a shell, bursting amidships, killed
-three of the horsemen. Then a rush was made for the starboard after
-lifeboats, and men began scrambling into and overloading them. The
-result would have been disastrous if the captain, drawing my attention
-to it, had not ordered me to go and threaten to shoot anyone who did
-not immediately come out and wait until orders were given for the boats
-to be lowered.
-
-This had the desired effect, quelling the panic for the time being.
-
-The submarine--she was the "U 39," we noticed--was now only about five
-or six hundred yards astern, and our case began to look hopeless.
-Not once, however, did the captain waver from his intention never to
-surrender. His coolness and courage were remarkable, and went a long
-way to inspire confidence in those under him.
-
-The shells were now bursting all over the vessel and playing havoc with
-the deck structures. They tore through the horse-fittings, killing
-numbers of the unfortunate horses, and also wounded several of the men,
-who were now clustered in groups near the boats.
-
-Just at this moment a signal to us to "abandon ship" was observed
-flying from the submarine, and the firing suddenly ceased, the
-intention apparently being to give us time to get into the boats and
-leave the vessel. This, however, our captain had no intention of
-doing, and after hastily consulting the chief engineer and myself he
-decided to get as many of the crew away from the ship as possible, as
-they were in imminent danger of being killed by the bursting shells.
-The remainder of us were to stand by him and keep the ship going until
-the very last.
-
-The man at the wheel was sent to take his place in the boats, and the
-majority of the crew were ordered to do the same.
-
-The firemen--who had up to this moment been working below--now came on
-deck, and made a rush for the boats before the order was given. Driving
-them out at the muzzles of our revolvers, we persuaded them to keep
-cool and wait until they were told to take their places.
-
-These firemen, who were Arabs, were now thoroughly frightened, and
-would on no account return to the stokehold, though the captain offered
-L20 to any man who would do so.
-
-During the time the firing ceased--which was not more than five
-minutes--we got the port after lifeboat away, full of men, and were
-preparing to lower the others when we received a wireless message from
-the patrol steamer, saying that they could see the smoke from our
-funnel. They told us to keep going, and to hold the submarine at bay
-as long as possible, as they were coming towards us with all possible
-speed.
-
-It was at this moment that the captain shouted to the firemen to return
-to the stokehold, offering, as already stated, L20 to any man who would
-do so, but this they refused to do.
-
-The chief and second engineers, with the donkeyman, nobly responded to
-the captain's request, and immediately rushed down to the stokehold and
-engine-room, where they worked like Trojans to get as much steam as
-possible to keep the vessel going.
-
-As soon as it became apparent to those on the submarine that we were
-not going to give in they commenced firing again, and with deadly
-effect, for the boat was now only about a hundred yards behind us.
-
-One of the shells, bursting directly behind the funnel, struck the
-davit of the after lifeboat, which was now full of men and in the very
-act of being lowered. It severed the tackle, causing the boat to drop
-into the water, where it capsized, throwing all its occupants into the
-sea.
-
-Another shell, fired almost directly afterwards, struck the davit of
-the port forward boat, cutting it completely in half. The boat, which
-was hanging in the tackle with seven men in it, was blown almost to
-fragments and nearly all its occupants killed.
-
-There now only remained one boat fit for use, the other two remaining
-ones being too badly damaged to put into the water. This boat was now
-manned and rapidly lowered over the side, with the chief steward in
-charge; and it was chiefly due to his skilful handling that she finally
-got away clear of the ship, as she was in danger of being smashed to
-pieces by the now rapidly-revolving propeller as she floated astern.
-
-
-III--STOOD AT THEIR POSTS LIKE HEROES
-
-There were now only thirty-two of the one hundred and fifty members of
-the ship's company left on board, including the captain, officers, and
-engineers, and our chances of getting out of our present predicament
-certainly looked small.
-
-The second, who had now taken the wheel, was skilfully steering the
-ship under the captain's orders. He kept the submarine--which was now
-close upon us--almost directly astern, and the position of both father
-and son was one of extreme danger, for fragments of the bursting
-shells were constantly striking the navigating bridge, and the couple
-had frequently to lie prone on the deck to avoid being struck. Their
-coolness and courage, however, never forsook them, and they remained at
-their posts like heroes, without the slightest sign of fear.
-
-We now noticed--greatly to our relief--the smoke of a steamer on our
-starboard side, and this we rightly judged to be the patrol ship
-hurrying to our help.
-
-As she gradually came into sight, in response to a request by our
-captain over the wireless, she fired at the submarine, but the distance
-was too great, and the shot fell short.
-
-We made sure that our pursuer would now give up the chase and submerge
-to get out of danger, but instead she crowded on extra speed and drew
-up alongside our steamer. She kept carefully under our lee, thus
-sheltering herself for the time being from any further shots from the
-patrol steamer. From this position she fired shell after shell into us.
-
-It was now an impossibility to keep the submarine any longer astern, as
-her superior speed enabled her to keep abreast of us.
-
-We counted thirteen men on her deck, some of them manipulating the gun,
-and others armed with rifles, with which they kept up a constant fire,
-endeavouring to pick off anyone they could see on our decks.
-
-Those on the approaching patrol steamer, comprehending our position and
-expecting every moment to see the ship torpedoed, sent us a wireless
-message to throw lines and ropes over the side and try to foul the
-submarine's propeller, and thus stop her. If possible we might also
-try and ram her. Ramming was out of the question, on account of the
-German's superior speed, but, acting on the first suggestion, under
-the captain's orders I went along and threw some of our mooring-ropes
-overboard, but the scheme was apparently ineffective, as the submarine
-still kept her place on our port side.
-
-It was just at this moment, as I was returning from carrying out these
-orders, that a shell fired from the submarine, and aimed directly at
-the bridge, struck our gallant captain and literally blew him to pieces.
-
-The second officer at the wheel was stunned and almost blinded by the
-report, and his escape from death was a miracle, as the captain was
-only a few feet away when killed. Fragments of the shell actually tore
-away some of the spokes of the wheel which he held at the time.
-
-As I gained the lower bridge he came down smothered in blood, dazed and
-stunned by the shock of the explosion, and horrified at witnessing the
-death of his brave father.
-
-To remain on either of the bridges now was out of the question, as the
-submarine was only fifty yards from us, running abreast. The Hun crew
-had clamped a Maxim on the top of their quick-firing gun and, using
-this, together with their rifles, they kept up a constant fire fore and
-aft.
-
-The patrol steamer was still about two miles away, but coming towards
-us at top speed, with smoke pouring from her funnel. But would she
-reach us in time before the pirates sent us to the bottom? We were
-now in imminent danger of being torpedoed, the submarine being in a
-splendid position to launch her deadly missile.
-
-Seeing this, I called the wireless operators away from their posts,
-to which they had gamely stuck through the whole of the firing, and
-shouted down to the two engineers to come on deck. Gathering together
-the remainder of my men, we made our way along the bullet-swept decks,
-taking shelter where and when we could. We cut everything floatable
-adrift in case the ship went under so as to give us a better chance of
-being picked up by our rescuers.
-
-
-IV--"WE SAW THE SUBMARINE SUBMERGE"
-
-The deck of our vessel was a sickening sight. Dead, dying, and wounded
-men lay in all directions, and blood seemed to be everywhere.
-
-We gathered the wounded together and got them under cover, and with the
-able help of our veterinary surgeon attended to them as best we could.
-
-Nothing more could now be done. We were momentarily expecting the
-torpedo to strike the vessel and finish her, and stood ready to jump
-clear of the ship when she went under.
-
-But the torpedo did not arrive. Instead, we saw the crew of the
-submarine hurrying to get their gun below and preparing to submerge.
-The cause of this manoeuvre was the sudden appearance of two
-destroyers, racing towards us at full speed.
-
-The submarine rapidly disappeared under the water, and in a few moments
-more the two destroyers and the patrol steamer were alongside and
-darting all round us in hopes of getting a shot at her.
-
-We sent up a rousing cheer when we saw our rescuers approach; we could
-scarcely realize that we were saved.
-
-I at once got in communication with the commander of one of the
-destroyers and asked him to search for our boats and any of our crew
-who happened to be in the water and pick them up.
-
-This they at once started to do, and in a very short time informed
-me that they had rescued ninety-seven of them and would proceed to
-Queenstown and land them.
-
-On making an examination of our steamer, we found, in addition to
-considerable damage round the decks, that she had been badly holed
-below the waterline, and was taking water rapidly.
-
-We at once set to work and plugged the holes up with bales of hay and
-bags of fodder, at the same time giving the vessel a list so as to
-bring the damaged plates out of the water as much as possible.
-
-When this had been done I informed the commander of the remaining
-destroyer, and told him that we were ready to proceed, but that it
-would be necessary to go into Queenstown, the nearest port, to land our
-dead and wounded.
-
-He replied that this would be the best course to adopt, and that he
-would convoy us into port.
-
-We accordingly headed for Queenstown, and duly arrived there late that
-night, where we were treated with the greatest courtesy and kindness by
-the Admiralty officials.
-
-The dead were removed and the wounded taken to the naval hospital,
-where their injuries were attended to.
-
-Meanwhile the Admiralty took the vessel in hand, and immediately
-commenced temporary repairs on her, and in less than twenty-four hours
-I was able to leave the port and proceed with her to Avonmouth, our
-destination, under the escort of two destroyers.
-
-The remains of our brave captain and of those who fell with him were
-buried in Queenstown the following day, being accorded full naval
-honours. The Admiral of the port himself attended, and the respect and
-regard shown by the townspeople, as the remains of these heroes were
-laid to rest, was very marked.
-
-No tribute is too great to pay to the memory of the late Captain
-Parslow, who died like the gallant seaman he was, giving his life in an
-endeavour to save his ship and the lives of those under his command.
-
-His son, the second officer, for the pluck and courage he displayed
-in remaining at the wheel during the firing, has been awarded the
-Distinguished Service Cross. The chief engineer received the same
-decoration, and I myself was the recipient of a handsome gold watch,
-suitably inscribed, "From the Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty," as
-was likewise the second engineer and the senior Marconi operator.
-
-The conduct of both the third officer and the junior Marconi operator
-deserves great praise, for they displayed splendid courage and coolness
-in carrying out their duties during the attack.
-
-Lloyd's showed their appreciation of our efforts by presenting a
-substantial cheque, expressing at the same time their sincere regret
-for the loss of the heroic Captain Parslow.
-
-The crew of the submarine, presumably, duly received Iron Crosses for
-their glorious day's work.
-
-
-
-
-MY WORST EXPERIENCE IN MESOPOTAMIA
-
-_Told by a Man Who Stopped a Bullet_
-
- The writer of this vivid narrative, a British soldier, was
- wounded in Mesopotamia during an unsuccessful attempt to relieve
- Kut-el-Amara, shortly before its fall. Recorded in _Current
- History_.
-
-
-I slipped my left hand into my tunic and was surprised to feel the hot
-blood pouring out. Then it dawned on me that I had been hit, and pretty
-badly, too. My equipment was hurting me, so I took it off.
-
-I felt very dizzy, and decided to try and get back as far as I could. I
-stood up, a very unwise thing to do, considering that I was about 150
-yards from the Turkish trench and must have made an easy mark, but I
-was not hit again immediately. My legs gave way and I collapsed and lay
-flat for a time. I thought if I was not to bleed to death I must make
-an effort to put my field bandage in place. So with difficulty I pulled
-it from my tunic pocket. The outer covering came off easily, and I took
-out one of the packets, but could see no way to slit it open. Finally
-I gripped the edge of the packet in my teeth and tore at it with both
-hands till it opened. I put the pad on the wound, as near as I could,
-but had no means of keeping it there, so I staggered to my feet and ran
-on, keeping the pad in place with my left hand. I believe I covered
-another fifty yards when I dropped again and lay in a kind of stupor.
-
-I was aroused by the almost continuous "krock" of bursting shrapnel.
-Shells were dropping right and left, and the air was full of moaning
-and screaming as the bullets flew by. I managed to get on my feet
-again, although the effort made the blood spurt out anew. The sodden
-pad had slipped down and a burning pain in the pit of my stomach caused
-me to double up in agony and slide onto my knees. I started crawling
-painfully along until I came to a small mound which would at least
-afford "head over." I crept behind it and lay in the only position I
-could, on my left side.
-
-I passed my hand over myself to feel for a wound, but could not find
-one. The bullet had entered the small of my back and lodged under my
-breast bone. Gradually the more intense pain passed away, leaving a not
-unpleasant sense of numbness over all my body.
-
-The persistent calling of a man in pain brought me back to
-consciousness. The pitiless sun was blazing high in the heavens, and I
-felt hot and dry. Somebody was shouting "Fetch the stretcher-bearers,
-you fools: are you going to leave me here?" At first I felt very sorry
-for him, but soon wished he would stop, for I had a shocking headache.
-I judged it to be about midday, and thought that in another six hours
-I had a good chance of being brought in.
-
-I was horrified to see that the water of the Suwaicha Marsh, which
-was on our right flank, had risen considerably, and I feared for any
-of our wounded who were further out on the right and unable to crawl
-away from the menace. The man who was shouting stopped, and everything
-was strangely calm and peaceful. I felt very happy and contented then,
-for as long as I kept quite still the pain was very dull, so I began
-singing and mumbling away in a quiet voice:
-
- "Where my caravan has rested
- Flowers I'll strew there on the grass."
-
-I sang again and again, accompanied by a strange roaring in my chest.
-My caravan, I thought, had rested in some very unusual places, but none
-so unusual as this. And what was the use of talking about the grass in
-the desert of Mesopotamia, where there is nothing but the yellow earth,
-the blue sky, the hot sun, and dirty water?
-
-There was a water bottle, equipment, and rifle lying close to my head,
-and I have a vague remembrance of a Sikh lying beside me for a time
-and then jumping up and running back. I slowly put my right arm up,
-caught the sling, and dragged the bottle nearer. I pulled the cork out
-somehow, and propped the bottle against my face, with the neck to my
-lips, but was much upset to find I had not the strength to lift it up.
-Tears rolled down my cheeks after I had made two or three attempts, for
-I was very thirsty. I sang no more, as my throat was harsh and lumpy.
-So I lay staring at the yellow and blue till I lost consciousness once
-more.
-
-This time I was roused by our own guns, and the sound was most
-comforting. "Giving 'em hell," I thought gleefully. They bombarded for
-about an hour, and then I slipped back into unconsciousness. It was
-getting dark when I came to again. A man was standing close to me,
-staring round the field. Somebody had put my sun helmet on my head. He
-came over to me. "Are the stretcher-bearers coming?" I asked, and he
-told me I was the next to be moved. It was not long before the bearers
-came, and they put the stretcher behind me. It was painful work getting
-on the stretcher, as I could not bear to have my body touched anywhere.
-However, it was managed at last, and I lay on my left side.
-
-I suppose they went as gently as they could, but every step racked my
-body so much that I was nearly mad with pain. I cannot remember how
-far it was to the dressing station, but I remember passing through
-the artillery lines, where the guns had started again. I was put on a
-table, still on the stretcher, and was pleased to see our battalion
-doctor. "Well, laddie," he said, "how are you?" I replied that I was
-all right, but thought it "a bit thick" having to lie out there all
-day. Then he started cutting my clothes up, jersey and shirt as well.
-The dressing was by no means painful, but they left my hand untouched.
-I asked for something to drink, but the doctor said they would give me
-all I wanted at the field hospital.
-
-Then began the worst experience I have ever been through. I was taken
-to a native springless mule cart, with a few sacks and blankets thrown
-in the bottom, and helped off the stretcher. The slightest movement
-caused great pain, but when the cart started bumping off I was in a
-positive inferno. I will not dwell on that four-mile journey from the
-marsh to the riverside; suffice it to say that what little breath I
-could summon was used in praying the driver to stop and leave me on the
-ground.
-
-We came to the field hospital at last. The natives pushed a stretcher
-into the cart beside me, and one intelligent fellow nimbly jumped up
-and stood on my smashed hand. That was the last straw. I cursed him.
-When I stopped for want of breath they attempted to lift me on to the
-stretcher, but I begged them to stop. I tried to get on by myself, but
-could only manage to get my knees on and could not lift my body. The
-natives were chattering round the cart, so I started shouting "English,
-English. Fetch English," and at last a "Jock" came up to see what was
-wrong. I begged him to put his hand under my shoulder and help me on
-the stretcher, and in a moment I was lying on my stomach--not very
-comfortable on account of my laboured breathing, but it was a rest for
-my left side. When my hand had been cleaned and dressed I was put on
-a mattress in a bell tent, where I tossed about in a high fever.
-
-In the morning I was put in a paddle-boat, and I slept till it started
-in the afternoon. We were taken ashore at Orah that night, and there
-received better attention. I was placed on the operating table and the
-bullet located and removed.
-
-I will not describe my stay at Orah or the trip down the Tigris in the
-paddle-boat to Bussorah. My hand was a fearful size and very painful.
-When the ship was moored in front of Bussorah Hospital I was very weak.
-Two orderlies helped me on to the stretcher, and I was carried down
-the gangway to the entrance of the hospital. A Major took particulars
-and consigned me to a veranda ward on the second floor. And so I was
-placed in one of the whitest, cleanest, and most comfortable beds in
-the world.
-
-
-
-
-SPIRIT OF YOUNG AMERICA--HOW WE WENT "OVER THE TOP"
-
-_Experiences of a New York Boy with the Canadians_
-
-_Told by (name withheld), Wounded in France_
-
- This is a letter from an American boy at the front. It symbolizes
- the spirit of young America. In his frank, simple, human way, he
- tells with outbursts of quaint humor how he went "over the top,"
- faced death, was wounded, and longs to get back into the fight. It
- is but one of the tens of thousands of private letters that are
- reaching friends in America every time a ship comes in from Europe.
-
-
-I--"IN WAY OF FRITZ'S SHELLS"
-
- 1st Canadian Hospital, France,
- August 27, 1917.
-
-Well, at last old man, I am writing to you. I am sorry I have not
-answered your last letter sooner. I have no good excuse to offer, so
-I guess I'll still cling to the old thread-bare one of "too busy." I
-guess my dear Mary will have told you that I am in hospital recovering
-from a little wound, the penalty of getting in the way of one of
-Fritz's shells. I am glad to say that I am going along nicely and hope
-to be about again very soon. I got hit just back of the knee, over the
-hamstring tendon, "whatever that is." I guess I ought to be thankful
-it was no worse. In a week or so I shall be none the worse for the
-experience. Believe me, it was some experience. You know--one of those
-times when you hear invisible bands playing "Home Sweet Home" and
-"He's Gone Where They Don't Play Billiards."
-
-I guess, dear George, you would like a little of the news of how I am
-passing the weary months away. Well, at times it's not so bad. We have
-our little bit of fun, for you know I'm one of those guys that makes
-the best of it. We get many a laugh. We have got the knack of being
-easily amused. We often get a smile out of things at which if it wasn't
-for the surroundings we should feel like shuddering.
-
-I cannot tell you much on account of the censor. But I can tell you
-a little of the experience I had last Wednesday week, the 15th, the
-time we had the pleasure (?) of going "over the top" and getting in
-close touch with Fritz. We had been expecting it to come off for a
-long time and I think the period of waiting was the worst part of the
-whole affair. We had only been out of the line a couple of days and
-such awful days they were; the time we had been in, it was up to our
-knees in mud. Well, anyway, the order came along for us to go back and
-make an attempt to pull the job off. The day before they tried to make
-things as pleasant as possible. We had a band concert almost all day
-long, and then as soon as it got dark we started forward to take up our
-position to wait for the big show at daybreak.
-
-Our first trouble was gas. We had our masks on in about two seconds. I
-guess you have seen pictures of these masks. But believe me, when you
-get a bunch of men moving cautiously across country they're enough to
-scare a fellow out of a month's growth. Eventually we got there. But
-the position we were to take up was being peppered with Fritz's iron
-rations. So we were told to move to another place and dig ourselves in.
-Again he located us and made it unhealthy, so we had to move again. We
-were in a great mood then, for we had worked like niggers and had just
-got comfortable when the order came to move. We contented ourselves
-that we would square matters in the morning.
-
-At a quarter of four (daybreak) we settled down to wait for the signal
-for the big show to start. There certainly was some excitement in the
-air. Almost as much as when in a game of pool the fifteen ball's over
-the hole and it's your shot next. Through some cause or other matters
-we were delayed twenty-five minutes--the longest minutes I have ever
-lived. Each minute seemed like an hour. Long after the war is all over
-and forgotten, I think I shall remember that long, weary wait.
-
-
-II--"WHAT I SAW WHEN I WENT 'OVER'"
-
-At last, we got the signal and the barrage and bombardment started.
-I have read of bombardments and I have seen them described pretty
-vividly, but no description or imagination could make anyone realize
-what they are really like. Every thing we had, opened up at the same
-second--silent batteries that had been there for weeks without firing
-a shot, just waiting for this event to be pulled off. It seemed as if
-the very earth was swaying. But don't think we had it all our own way.
-For Fritz had quite a number of iron foundries he wanted to get rid of,
-and he started up almost as soon as we did.
-
-We found out afterwards, that they knew we were "going over." In
-fact, their officers had been officially warned to be prepared for an
-attack at 4 A.M. So I guess they had their anxious wait as
-well as we. Fritz's fireworks' display was simply wonderful. Rockets
-and flare-lights of every color and description went up, but I didn't
-stop to admire it. I was too busy and scarcely in the mood to admire
-anything. Everything had to be done by signals. The noise was so
-deafening that even if you shouted at the top of your voice you
-couldn't be heard.
-
-The first wave went over at 4:25 A.M. Everything possible in
-what they call modern warfare was used--liquid fire, oil, tanks and a
-dozen different things to get Fritz's wind up. And believe me, we did
-get it up! For thirty minutes after we went "over" we had them on the
-run. All I am sorry about is that we could not keep them going _until
-they reached Berlin_.
-
-Believe me, old man, it was some fight! Some of the things I saw
-myself, I would not have believed if I hadn't seen them with my own
-eyes. Some of the fellows just went crazy. One fellow was fighting
-away with only half a rifle in his hand, and yet there was dozens of
-good ones lying around if he had only taken a moment to pick one up.
-Others were throwing bombs just like bricks. You know the bombs we
-use out here mostly are the kind we saw at that New York Red Cross
-bazaar--perhaps you remember them. Before they explode you have to pull
-the safety pin out, and then they burst four seconds later. Well, some
-of the guys didn't pull the pins out; they just used them like bricks.
-Gee, it put me in mind of a good old Summer Lane scrap, but anyhow it
-was enough to get them on the hustle.
-
-There were many other little incidents, some that I saw myself, and
-others that I heard coming down on the hospital train. One of our
-fellows took two prisoners only armed with a lighted candle. This
-happened after we had been occupying Fritz's front line several hours.
-Leaving his rifle at the top, he went down into one of Fritz's saps
-"looking for souvenirs, I guess." Well, he lit his candle and there
-in the corner were two great hulking fellows. I guess they were more
-scared than he was. Up went their hands with the same old cry: "Not
-me, Mister, Mercy, Kamerad." We had a laugh afterwards for the guy
-who brought them up, looked as if he had been scared stiff. I'll bet
-he never goes down a strange sap again unarmed. Later on they caught
-another five in one of the other saps.
-
-There were dozens of little incidents like this. So far so good--but
-the worst had yet to come. We had captured three villages and the
-famous hill. When I say there had been five previous attempts to get
-the hill alone, for he had occupied it for two and a half years,
-you will see that it was some accomplishment. They put over ten
-counter-attacks. I didn't count them. I was too interested and busy
-with other things to bother about counting anything. They came over in
-the old massed formation style. It seems a crazy style to me, for their
-losses must have been enormous. Every time they came over they got
-smashed, and were glad to beat it back, or at least as many of them as
-were able to. That continued practically all day.
-
-
-III--ON AN ADVANCE POST
-
-As soon as it was dark, I was detailed along with a bunch of other
-fellows to go out as reinforcements to our left flank. My friend Jones,
-another fellow and I, were put on an advanced bombing post. Every once
-in a while they would attempt to come over on us. It kept us pretty
-busy, and also kept us from getting sleepy.
-
-In the early morning one of Fritz's planes came flying over us. One
-of our fellows couldn't resist the temptation of drawing a bead on
-him, although it's against all orders for us to fire on aircraft. The
-chances of hitting him are about a thousand to one. Well, the "son of
-a gun" made a dive and swooped over us with his machine gun. I don't
-think he got anybody, but he came so low that some of our guns got him.
-He dropped like a stone. I was almost sorry to see it, for I am still
-a sport and that guy certainly had got grit.
-
-Well, these little events kept happening all day long. Then at four
-o'clock in the afternoon my friend Jones got hit. It was during one of
-his attacks--he got inquisitive, took a peek over the parapet, and got
-it in the cheek. Two hours later I got hit--this was the second time I
-had been hit. The first was so slight I didn't leave the line, but this
-time I had just had about as much as I cared for. So I got first aid
-and waited until things had quieted down a little, and then made my way
-to a dugout to wait until it got dark.
-
-About nine o'clock, I started to beat it for the dressing station. But
-believe me, old man, it was easier said than done, for we had advanced
-over a mile over No Man's Land and I had to go all over that way again.
-There were three of us that started. The other two were just slightly
-wounded--one in the shoulder and the other in the wrist. But poor me,
-having it in the knee, was worst of the bunch. I couldn't move fast, it
-had stiffened me so.
-
-Well, we had our little adventures going across. Once I got entangled
-in the barbed wire. And then when we saw several fellows ahead of
-us--we just dropped in a shell hole, and waited for them to move off.
-After a wait of about fifteen minutes, they didn't move. The fellow
-with the hit in the shoulder crawled forward to find out who they were.
-He was gone so long we were just making up our minds to make a wide
-circuit of them, "for none of us were armed"--we had thrown everything
-away so we could move quicker. Just as we had given him up he came back
-with the news it was one of our own working parties fixing wires. The
-reason he had been so long was because he had been waiting to catch
-some of the conversation to see whether it was English or not.
-
-Away we started again. We were nearing our old front line when Fritz
-caught us with one of his flare-lights. Of course the next minute it
-was Whiss-siss-siss-pop-pop-pop! They had turned a machine gun on
-us. Then came another wait in a shell hole. Eventually I reached the
-dressing station. I had my leg dressed and a few bits of sticking
-plaster put on various parts of my body. I was put on a motor ambulance
-and the next morning woke up in a hospital clearing station to find my
-old friend Jones sitting up in a bed opposite me.
-
-Well, we had a good laugh for we are like the Siamese twins. Wherever
-one is the other is not far off--at least it has been that way since
-coming to France. And the objects we looked, he with a face as big
-as two, and me with my clothing all muddy and torn and various other
-changes. We'd have made a good picture entitled, "After the Fight."
-Later on we were taken on a hospital train to this place, but I shall
-be glad when I can get about again. I feel more lonesome here than I
-ever have in all my life. It's the weariness of lying here with nothing
-to do that gets my "goat." Nevertheless it's great to be human again
-and among civilization again. The first few days I appreciated it all
-right, for I did not have a wink of sleep from the Monday night and
-scarcely anything to eat or drink.
-
-Now don't forget, old man, to drop me a line and let me know how
-everything is in dear old New York. So now good-bye for the present,
-hoping you WILL remember me to all old friends.
-
- Your old friend,
-
- LABAN.
-
-P. S. I am enclosing a little souvenir, one of Fritz's field cards. I
-was amusing myself on the back of it with a few verses.
-
-
-[Illustration: THIS IS THE SIDE OF THE POSTCARD TAKEN BY MR. HILL THAT
-WAS INTENDED FOR THE ADDRESS]
-
-
-[Illustration: THE IMPRESSIONS OF AN AMERICAN BOY WHO DID NOT WAIT
-Laban Hill, No. 1,054,147, Fourteenth Canadian Battery, on "Going Over
-the Top" in August, 1917. Written to a Friend on a Postcard Taken From
-a Dead German Soldier]
-
-[Transcribed text from the postcard:]
-
-Over The Top
-
-1
-"Did you ever go over the top?" he said,
-"Did you ever go over the top?
-Did you sweep along an unbroken line,
-With bayonets gleaming, and eyes ashine
-And a feeling that went to your head like wine,
-The time you went over the top?"
-
-2
-"Did you ever go over the top?" he said,
-"Did you ever go over the top?
-Did the flarelights shine on a glorious sight
-As they pierced the dawn in the changing light;
-Did you thrill with a feeling of savage delight,
-The time you went over the top?"
-
-3
-"Did you ever go over the top?" he said,
-"Did you ever go over the top?
-Oh, tell me" he said "how you held up your head
-Of the things that you thought and the things that you said,
-Of your glorious pride as with the men you sped
-Far away over the top."
-
-4
-"Oh yes, I've been over the top," I said,
-"You bet I've been over the top.
-But I felt alone in the flare-lights glare.
-And Mauser bullets were singeing my hair,
-And my knees were knocking together for fair,
-The night I went over the top."
-
-5
-"Oh yes, I've been over the top," I said,
-"You bet I've been over the top.
-But it's lonesome out there in no man's land
-And you miss the crowd and you miss the band
-And your feet take root in the place you stand,
-The night you go over the top."
-
-6
-"Oh yes, I've been over the top
-There was yards of wire got attached to my clothes
-And how I got out of it God only knows
-A secret I fear he will never disclose
-Till I'm finally "over the top."
-
-7
-"Oh yes, I've been over the top," I said,
-"You bet I've been over the top.
-The artillery raised a continuous roar--
-They'd been at it, it seemed for a week or more--
-And old man I was sweating at every pore
-The night I went over the top."
-
-8
-"Oh yes, I've been over the top," I said,
-"You bet I've been over the top.
-The noise and confusion, the shouts and the groans
-Had paralysed action and frozen my bones
-When a fellow went past me,--I think it was Jones,
-He was headed back over the top."
-
-9
-"Oh yes, I've been over the top," I said,
-You bet I've been over the top
-And since Jones has a blighty and wasn't napoo,
-If they're handing them out
-"I thought" me for one too.
-And blest if I didn't--in fact I got two,
-The night I went over the top.
-
-New York isn't the only place people hustle
-
-
-
-
-THE SINKING OF THE "PROVENCE II"
-
-_Told by M. Bokanowski, Deputy of the Department of the Seine_
-
- The French auxiliary cruiser _La Provence II_, formerly a
- passenger liner, was sunk by a submarine in the eastern end of the
- Mediterranean while serving as a troop transport. Nearly 4,000 men
- are said to have been on board, of whom only 870 were saved. One of
- the survivors, M. Bokanowski, wrote this thrilling description to
- President Poincare of France:
-
-
-MONSIEUR LE PRESIDENT: You are doubtless familiar, in all
-its details, with the fate of the _Provence II_. I should like to
-describe to you--to assuage in a measure the grief of France--the noble
-behaviour of those who made ready at that moment, between sea and sky,
-to die for their country.
-
-We had on board a battalion and some detachments of the Third Colonial
-Regiment of Infantry. At the moment of the explosion I was on the
-bridge, with the commander of the ship, his second in command, and
-several of the higher officers. We directed the steps to be taken,
-distributing lifebelts, superintending the launching of boats and
-liferafts. Not an outcry, not a complaint, not the slightest sign
-of panic--only the dignified tranquillity of men who long ago had
-consecrated their lives to the sublime cause that had put arms in their
-hands.
-
-Everybody would have been saved had it depended only on officers and
-crew. Unfortunately the ship sank rapidly. The water soon found its way
-into the boilers. When they began to explode, about ten minutes past
-5, I jumped into the sea and swam as fast as I could in order to get
-beyond the radius of suction. A few moments later there were several
-deafening explosions. I turned and saw the end. The ship was going down
-stern foremost. Captain Vesco, still standing on the bridge, cried in a
-voice above the uproar: "Vive la France!" The survivors, swimming about
-the ship, or safe on boats and rafts, saw the _Provence_ make a sudden
-plunge, her forward deck standing perpendicular in the air. They, in
-their turn, saluted with a cry of "Vive la France!" It was a quarter
-past 5.
-
-After swimming for half an hour I succeeded in reaching an overloaded
-raft, the occupants of which pulled me aboard. Night was falling,
-the wind was chill and nipped the flesh of the men, who were almost
-entirely naked. Throughout the endless night, not a whimper! My
-companions in misfortune had no words except to lament the fate of
-those who were drowned and to curse the Boche, who, neither before nor
-after his treacherous shot, had dared to appear and show his flag. In
-water up to the waist, with teeth chattering from the cold, but upheld
-by the desire to survive and be able to punish the villains, we were
-picked up eighteen hours later by a trawler. Several men had died from
-the cold on the rafts, and several others had lost their reason.
-
-An English patrol and a French torpedo boat divided the survivors
-between them, some heading for Milo, others for Malta. I was among the
-latter, and we arrived here about 1 o'clock yesterday. Captain Vesco,
-who was in command of the _Provence II._; Lieutenant Besson, second
-in command; Colonel Duhalde, commanding the Third Colonial Regiment
-of Infantry, remained on the bridge until the very last second of
-the ship's life in the most noble spirit of self-sacrifice, giving
-with perfect calmness precise and effective orders for saving the
-passengers.
-
-The gunners of the _Provence's_ stern gun, having loaded it when the
-torpedo struck, remained at their posts, trying to discover the hidden
-foe in order to repay him in his own coin.
-
-Surgeon Navarre of the Third Colonial Regiment, being taken aboard a
-trawler nearly exhausted by his eighteen hours on a raft, refused to
-change his drenched clothing or to take any food until he had dressed
-the hurts of the wounded and looked after the sick. He was prostrated
-a long while after such superhuman labours.
-
-And I must mention this other incident, which brings tears to my eyes:
-
-Gauthier, Assistant Quartermaster of the _Provence_, having been taken
-on board a greatly overloaded raft, was hailed by a soldier asking
-for help; he jumped into the water to give him his place, saying: "A
-sailor's duty is to save the soldiers first of all."
-
-He was picked up, twenty-one hours after the wreck, clinging to a plank.
-
-I call attention also to the devotion and zeal--meriting our profound
-gratitude--of Lieutenant Sinclair Thompson, commanding the English
-patrol _Marguerite_, and of his officers and crew, by whose labours
-about 300 survivors were taken from the place of the wreck to Malta.
-
-Pray pardon the form of this story, Monsieur le President. I have
-written it hurriedly, with a bruised hand, and with a head still in a
-sad muddle. I wished, before my impending departure for Saloniki, to
-say to you with all my heart: "That is what these noble fellows did!"
-
- BOKANOWSKI.
-
-
-
-
- * * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber's note:
-
-Obvious errors of punctuation and diacritics were corrected.
-
-Inconsistent hyphenation was made consisent.
-
-Times normalized to A.M. and P.M.
-
-P. 27: in lieu of this can be subtituted -> in lieu of this can be
-substituted.
-
-P. 28: woman's hubsand -> woman's husband.
-
-P. 51: in cosmos -> in the cosmos.
-
-P. 79: Never was General -> Never was a General.
-
-P. 81: municipal dgnitary -> municipal dignitary.
-
-P. 103: mobilization of 1909 -> mobilization of 1914.
-
-P. 114: THE ROMANCE OF THE EURASION -> THE ROMANCE OF THE EURASIAN.
-
-P. 119: held out so vigourously -> held out so vigorously.
-
-P. 120: klled fifty-two Boches -> killed fifty-two Boches.
-
-P. 129: German Embassy in Berlin -> American Embassy in Berlin.
-
-P. 151: BATTLE OF CHARLEROI -> THE BATTLE OF CHARLEROI.
-
-P. 153: Sonzee -> Somzee.
-
-P. 196: left in the forcastle -> left in the forecastle.
-
-P. 198: steered for the nothern coast -> steered for the northern coast.
-
-P. 215: followed at a disstance -> followed at a distance.
-
-P. 226: made by the priscope -> made by the periscope.
-
-P. 255: pour my temptuous heart -> pour my tempestuous heart.
-
-P. 263: U-boat lieutenand -> U-boat lieutenant.
-
-P. 265: Juse -> Jose.
-
-P. 277: regarded themslves as beaten -> regarded themselves as beaten.
-
-P. 278: Chalffour Quarry -> Chauffour Quarry.
-
-P. 307: distince he covered -> distance he covered.
-
-P. 314: ran in my head continualy -> ran in my head continually.
-
-P. 319: animals were specialy feted -> animals were specially feted.
-
-P. 338: any longed astern -> any longer astern.
-
-P. 349: hamstring tendron -> hamstring tendon.
-
-P. 358: N. Bokanowski -> M. Bokanowski.
-
-
-
-***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TRUE STORIES OF THE GREAT WAR,
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