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+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #52679 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/52679)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of German Atrocities, by John Hartman Morgan
-
-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: German Atrocities
- An Official Investigation
-
-Author: John Hartman Morgan
-
-Release Date: August 1, 2016 [EBook #52679]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK GERMAN ATROCITIES ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Brian Coe, Wayne Hammond and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-GERMAN ATROCITIES
-
-
-
-
- GERMAN ATROCITIES
- AN OFFICIAL INVESTIGATION
-
- BY
-
- J. H. MORGAN, M.A.,
-
- OF THE INNER TEMPLE, BARRISTER-AT-LAW,
- PROFESSOR OF CONSTITUTIONAL LAW IN THE UNIVERSITY OF LONDON;
- LATE HOME OFFICE COMMISSIONER WITH THE BRITISH
- EXPEDITIONARY FORCE
-
- _Mentem mortalia tangunt_
-
- [Illustration]
-
- NEW YORK
- E. P. DUTTON & COMPANY
- 681 FIFTH AVENUE
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1916,
- BY
- E. P. DUTTON & COMPANY
-
-
- Printed in the U.S.A.
-
-
-
-
- TO
-
- M. ARMAND MOLLARD
-
- MINISTRE PLENIPOTENTIAIRE,
-
- MEMBER OF “LA COMMISSION INSTITUÉE
- EN VUE DE CONSTATER LES ACTES COMMIS
- PAR L’ENNEMI EN VIOLATION DU DROIT DES GENS,”
- THIS WORK IS DEDICATED
- IN RECOGNITION OF HIS COURTESY AND COLLABORATION
- IN THE PURSUIT OF A COMMON TASK.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- PAGE
-
-
- DEDICATION v
-
- PREFATORY NOTE ix
-
- CHAPTER
-
- I.--INTRODUCTORY:
- (1) The British Enquiry 1
- (2) The German Case--a critical Analysis of
- the German White Book 6
- (3) German Credibility--a Review of the Evidence 30
- (4) The Future of International Law and the
- Question of Retribution 44
-
- II.--THE BRITISH ENQUIRY IN FRANCE:
- (1) Methods of Enquiry 60
- (2) Outrages upon Combatants in the Field 64
- (3) Treatment of Civil Population 76
- (4) Outrages upon Women--the German Occupation
- of Bailleul 81
- (5) Private Property 84
- (6) Observations on a Tour of the Marne and
- the Aisne 85
- (7) Bestiality of German Officers and Men 87
- (8) Conclusion 90
-
- III.--DOCUMENTARY (NEW EVIDENCE):
- (1) Depositions and Statements (Fifty-six in
- number) illustrating breaches of the Laws
- of War by German Troops, mainly Outrages
- on British Soldiers 93
-
- (2) Documents relative to the German Occupation
- of Bailleul 122
-
- (3) Evidence relating to the Murder of Eleven
- Civilians at Doulieu 134
-
- (4) Deposition of a Survivor of the Massacre of
- Tamines 137
-
- (5) Five German Diaries 139
-
- (6) Documents forwarded by the Russian Government 146
-
- (7) The German White Book: The Introductory
- Memorandum 158
-
- (8) Depositions relating to the Massacre of
- Wounded and Captive Highlanders by a
- German Bombing Party on September
- 25th, 1915, at Haisnes 169
-
- (9) Depositions as to the use of Incendiary Bullets
- by the German Troops 174
-
- (10) Depositions as to the Employment by German
- Troops of Russian Prisoners upon
- Military Works on the Western Front 177
-
-
-
-
-PREFATORY NOTE
-
-
-Professor Morgan desires to express his obligations to the Russian
-Embassy, the Foreign Office, the Home Office, the French Ministry of
-War, and the General Headquarters Staff of the British Expeditionary
-Force for the assistance which they have given him. For the opinions
-expressed in Part IV. of the Introductory Chapter Professor Morgan is
-alone responsible. The whole of the documents given in the “Documentary
-Chapter” of this book (except the Memorandum from the German White Book
-which has been published in German, though not, of course, in English)
-are now published for the first time.
-
-
-
-
-GERMAN ATROCITIES
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-INTRODUCTORY
-
-
-I
-
-THE BRITISH ENQUIRY
-
-The second chapter of this book has already appeared in the pages of
-the June issue of the _Nineteenth Century and After_. At the time of
-its appearance numerous suggestions were made--notably by the _Morning
-Post_ and the _Daily Chronicle_--that it should be republished in a
-cheaper and more accessible form. A similar suggestion has come to us
-from the Ministry of War in Paris, reinforced by the intimation that
-the review containing the article was not obtainable owing to its
-having immediately gone out of print. Since then an official reprint
-has been largely circulated in neutral countries by the British
-Government, and an abbreviated reprint of it has been published by
-the Parliamentary Recruiting Committee in the form of a pamphlet. The
-Secretary to the Committee informs me that considerably over a million
-and a half copies of this pamphlet have been circulated.
-
-At the suggestion of Mr. Fisher Unwin, and by the courtesy of the
-editor of the _Nineteenth Century_, the article is now republished as
-a whole, but with it is published for the first time a documentary
-chapter containing a selection of illustrative documents, none of which
-have hitherto appeared in print. For permission to publish them I am
-chiefly indebted to the Home Office and the Foreign Office. Needless
-to say, the original article also was submitted to the Home Office
-authorities, by whom it was duly read and approved before publication.
-These documents by no means exhaust the unpublished evidence in my
-possession, but my object has been not to multiply proofs but to
-exemplify them, and, in particular, as is explained in the following
-chapter, to supplement the Bryce Report on matters which, owing to the
-exigencies of space and the pre-occupation with the case of Belgium,
-occupy a comparatively subordinate place in that document. This volume
-may, in fact, be regarded as a postscript to the Bryce Report--it does
-not pretend to be anything more.[1]
-
-There is, however, an extremely important aspect of the question which
-has not yet been the subject of an official report in this country,
-and that is the German White Book.[2] It has never been published
-in England, and is very difficult to obtain. There is some reason
-to believe that the German Government now entertain considerable
-misgivings about the expediency of its original publication, and
-are none too anxious to circulate it. The reason will, I think, be
-tolerably obvious to anyone who will do me the honour to read the
-critical analysis which follows.
-
-I will not attempt to prejudice that analysis at this stage. I shall
-have something to say later in this chapter as to the credibility of
-the German Government in these matters. It is a rule of law that, when
-a defendant puts his character in issue, or makes imputations on the
-prosecutor or his witnesses, as the Germans have done, his character
-may legitimately be the subject of animadversion. To impeach it at this
-stage might appear, however, to beg the question of the value of the
-White Book, which is best examined as a matter of internal evidence
-without the importation of any reflections on the character of its
-authors.
-
-As regards the value of the evidence on the other side--the English,
-Belgian, and French Reports--I doubt if any careful reader requires
-persuasion as to their authenticity. In the case of the Bryce Report,
-the studied sobriety of its tone--to say nothing of the known integrity
-and judiciousness of its authors--carried instant conviction to
-the minds of all honest and thoughtful men, and that conviction was
-assuredly not disturbed by the vituperative description of it by the
-_Kölnische Zeitung_ as a “mean collection of official lies.” No attempt
-has ever been made to answer it. As regards the French Reports, which
-are not as fully known in this country as they might be,[3] I had
-the honour of working in collaboration with M. Mollard, a member of
-the French Commission of Inquiry, and I was greatly impressed with
-their scrupulous regard for truth, and their inflexible insistence on
-corroboration. My own methods of inquiry are sufficiently indicated in
-the chapter which follows, but I may add two illustrations of what,
-I think, may fairly be described as the scrupulousness with which
-the inquiries at General Headquarters were conducted. The reader may
-remember that in May of last year a report as to the crucifixion
-of two Canadian soldiers obtained wide currency in this country. A
-Staff officer and myself immediately instituted inquiries by means
-of a visit to the Canadian Headquarters, at that time situated in
-the neighbourhood of Ypres, and by the cross-examination of wounded
-Canadians on the way to the base. We found that this atrocity was a
-matter of common belief among the Canadian soldiers, and at times we
-seemed to be on a hot scent, but eventually we failed to discover any
-one who had been an actual eye-witness of the atrocity in question.
-It may or may not have occurred--we have had irrefragable proof that
-such things have occurred--and it is conceivable that those who saw it
-had perished and their testimony with them. But it was felt that mere
-hearsay evidence, however strong, was not admissible, and, as a result,
-no report was ever issued.
-
-In the other case a man in a Highland regiment, on discovering himself
-in hospital in the company of a wounded Prussian, attempted to assault
-the latter, swearing that he had seen him bayoneting a wounded British
-soldier as he lay helpless upon the field. He was positive as to the
-identification and there could be no doubt as to the sincerity of his
-statements. But as one Prussian Guardsman is very like another--the
-facial and cranial uniformity is remarkable--and there was no
-corroboration as to identity, no action was taken. As to the fact of
-the atrocity having occurred there could, however, be no doubt.
-
-I may add that the numerous British officers whom I interrogated in
-the earlier stages of the war showed a marked disinclination--innate,
-I think, in the British character--to believe stories reflecting upon
-the honour of the foe to whom they were opposed in the field. But
-at a later stage I found that this indulgent scepticism had wholly
-disappeared. Facts had been too intractable, experience too harsh,
-disillusion too bitter. The lesson has been dearly learnt--many a
-brave and chivalrous officer has owed his death to the treachery of a
-mean and unscrupulous foe. But it has been learnt once and for all.
-And, indeed, judging by the information which reaches me from various
-sources, the enemy affords our men no chance of forgetting it.
-
-
-II
-
-THE GERMAN CASE--A CRITICAL ANALYSIS OF THE GERMAN WHITE BOOK
-
-On May 10th--some five days before the publication of the Bryce
-Report--the German Government drew up a voluminous White Book
-purporting to be a Report on Offences against International Law in
-the conduct of the war by the Belgians. It may be described as a kind
-of intelligent anticipation of the case they might have to meet;
-the actual case, as presented in the Bryce Report, they have never
-attempted to meet, and to this day that report has never been answered.
-The German White Book--of which no translation is accessible to the
-public in this country--has attracted very little attention over here,
-and I propose to make a close and reasoned analysis of it, for no more
-damning and incriminating defence has ever been put forth by a nation
-arraigned at the bar of public opinion. In doing so I shall rely on the
-German Report itself and shall make no attempt to refute it by drawing
-upon the evidence of the English and Belgian Reports, convincing though
-that is, because to do so might seem to beg the question at issue,
-which is the relative credibility of the parties.
-
-
-German Invocation of The Hague Conventions.
-
-The case which the German Government had avowedly to meet was the
-wholesale slaughter of Belgian civilians, and the fact of such
-slaughter having taken place they make no attempt to deny. They enter
-a plea of justification and, in a word, they attempt to argue that
-the _levée en masse_ or “People’s War” of the Belgian nation was
-not conducted in accordance with the terms of the Hague regulations
-relating to improvised resistance in cases of this kind. I will not
-here go over the well-trodden ground of Belgian neutrality; it is
-enough that in a now notorious utterance the Imperial Chancellor has
-admitted that the German invasion was a breach of international law.[4]
-
-The substance of the Hague Convention[5] is that the civil population
-of a country at war are entitled to recognition as lawful belligerents
-if they conform to four conditions. They must have a responsible
-commander; they must wear a distinctive and recognisable badge; they
-must carry their arms openly; and they must conduct their operations
-in accordance with the laws and customs of war. In the case, however,
-of an invasion, where there has been no time to organise in conformity
-with this article, the first and second conditions are expressly
-dispensed with, provided there is compliance with the third and
-fourth. Now, not only have these rules been subscribed by the German
-representatives and, according to Baron Marschall von Bieberstein,
-their principal spokesman at the Hague Conference, such subscription
-was absolute and unconditional;[6] but the principle which they embody
-has been accepted by all the leading German jurists. “There exists no
-ground for denying to the masses of a country the natural right to
-defend their Fatherland ...; it is only by such levies that the smaller
-and less powerful States can defend themselves.”[7] The same authority
-argues that no State is bound to limit itself to its regular army; it
-could, he adds, call up civil guards or even women and children, who in
-such case would be entitled to the rights of lawful belligerents.[8]
-
-What then is the German justification for the massacre of the Belgian
-civilians? Its main contention is that the Belgian Government “had
-_sufficient time_ for an _organisation_ of the People’s War as
-required by international law”;[9] in other words that a spontaneous
-and unorganised resistance in Belgium could not claim the immunities of
-Article 2 of the Hague Regulations. The effrontery of this contention
-is truly amazing. The Belgian Government had, at the most, two
-days--two days in which to organise a whole nation for defence. The
-German ultimatum to Belgium was issued on August 2nd; the violation
-of Belgian territory took place on August 4th. How could a little
-nation with a small standing army organise its whole population on a
-military basis within two days against the most powerful and mobile
-army in Europe, equipped with all the modern engines of war? The
-German Government do, indeed, attempt to support their contention by
-urging further that “the preparation of mobilisation began, as can be
-proved, at least a week before the invasion of the German Army.”[10]
-Now, granting--and it is granting a great deal--that a week would
-be sufficient to organise untrained civilians for defence, it would
-still remain to be proved that the Belgian Government _did_ begin to
-mobilise a week beforehand. The German White Book does not prove it;
-the Belgian Grey Book disproves it. The Belgian Government, relying on
-the plighted faith of Germany, had not even begun to mobilise on July
-29th--six days before the invasion.[11] Indeed, it was only on July
-24th that they were sufficiently alarmed to address interrogatories to
-the Great Powers, Germany among them, for assurances as to the immunity
-of Belgium from attack.[12] As late as July 31st the German Government
-effectually concealed its intentions.[13] It is, in fact, a matter of
-common notoriety that the German move against Belgium was as sudden in
-execution as it was premeditated in design. She entered like a thief in
-the night.
-
-
-Charges against the Belgian Government.
-
-The main contention of the German Government therefore falls to the
-ground. What remains? It is here that the German answer betrays itself
-by its disingenuousness. There is an old rule of pleading, familiar
-to lawyers, which says a traverse must be neither too large nor too
-narrow. This is just the error into which the German contention falls.
-The apologies are too anxious to prove everything in turn as the
-occasion suits, forgetting that one of their contentions often refutes
-the other. In the introductory memorandum they argue that Belgium
-had time to organise and did not. In their excuse for the massacre
-at Dinant, and their zeal to prove that the military exigencies
-were overwhelming, they say that “the organisation”--of civilian
-resistance--“was remarkable for its careful preparation and wide
-extent”; “that the guns were only partly sporting guns and revolvers
-but partly also machine guns and Belgian military weapons proves that
-the organisation had the support of the Belgian Government.”[14]
-In other words, in one part of the White Book they insist that the
-resistance was ruthlessly punished because it was not organised;
-in another that because it was organised it had to be ruthlessly
-repressed. In another place,[15] having to justify their peculiar
-principle of vicarious responsibility by which the innocent have to
-answer for the guilty, they say that the Belgian Government and the
-municipal hostages whom the Germans executed ought to have stopped
-“this guerilla warfare,” and did not do so. Now it is well known, and
-the German Government admits it, that the public authorities issued
-proclamations ordering the people to abstain from hostilities and to
-surrender their arms. How does the German Government meet this? The
-only evidence they can produce in the whole of their pompous dossier
-is (1) the deposition of a German Jew, resident in Brussels, to the
-effect that, seeing the proclamation, he sent his servant to the
-Belgian authorities to deliver up a revolver, and that the servant
-came back and said that the Commissioner of Police had told him not to
-trouble as “one need not believe everything that is in the papers”;[16]
-(2) the deposition of a German lieutenant that an officer (not named)
-once showed him a document (not produced), which, “according to his
-own account” he had found in the town hall of a neighbouring village
-(not indicated), containing an invitation on the part of the Belgian
-Government, addressed to the population, to render armed resistance in
-return for payment.[17] On such flimsy hearsay evidence, tendered by
-two Germans, rests the whole of the German case against the Belgian
-Government.
-
-
-Belgian “Atrocities.”
-
-Like a defendant who has no case, the German Government attempt to
-plead generally in default of being able to plead specifically. They
-therefore put forward a sweeping generalisation to the effect that,
-quite apart from the question whether the Belgians did or did not
-comply with the formal requirements of the Hague Convention, they
-violated all the usages of war by “unheard of” atrocities. “Finally
-it is proved beyond all doubt that German wounded were robbed and
-killed by the Belgian population, and indeed were subjected to horrible
-mutilation, and that even women and young girls took part in these
-shameful actions. In this way the eyes of German wounded were torn out,
-their ears, nose, fingers and sexual organs cut off, or their body cut
-open.”[18] Let us consider the depositions with which this accusation
-is supported.
-
-(1) Hugo Lagershausen, of the 1st Ersatz Company of the Reserve, his
-attention having been drawn to the significance of the oath, declares:
-
- “I lost the other men of the patrol. About noon on August
- 6th, I came to a dressing station, which was set up on a
- farm near the village of Chenée. In the house I found about
- fifteen severely wounded German soldiers, of whom four or five
- had been horribly mutilated; both their eyes had been gouged
- out, and some had had several fingers cut off. Their wounds
- were relatively fresh although the blood was already somewhat
- coagulated. The men were still living and were groaning. It was
- not possible for me to help them, as I had already ascertained
- by questioning other wounded men lying in that house, there was
- no doctor in the place. I also found in the house six or seven
- Belgian civilians, four of whom were women; these gave drinks
- to the wounded; the men were entirely passive. I saw no weapons
- on them, and I cannot say whether they had blood on their
- hands, because they put them in their pockets.”[19]
-
-It is highly probably, is it not? Musketeer Lagershausen falls among
-ghouls who hastily put their incriminating hands in their pockets and
-allow him who was “entirely alone” and powerless to walk off and inform
-against them. Truly they must have been some of the mildest-mannered
-men who ever cut a throat.
-
-(2) Musketeer Paul Blankenberg, of Infantry Regiment No. 165, declares:
-
- “We were on the march in closed column and passing through
- a Belgian village west of Herve. In the village some German
- wounded were lying and I recognised some Jäger of the Jäger
- Battalion, No. 4. Suddenly the column marching through was
- fired upon from the houses, and accordingly the order was
- given that all civilians should be removed from the houses and
- driven together to one point. _While this was being done_ I
- noticed that girls of eight to ten years old, armed with sharp
- instruments, busied themselves with the German wounded. Later,
- I ascertained that the ear lobes and upper parts of the ears of
- the most seriously injured of the wounded had been cut off.”[20]
-
-That is to say, a whole column of German troops is on the march in
-close formation, they round up the civilians and _while they are doing
-this_ some little girls continue, in presence of this overwhelming
-force, to “busy themselves” by cutting up their comrades with the
-contents of their mothers’ work-box.
-
-(3) Landwehrman Alwin Chaton, of the 5th Company of the Reserve
-Infantry Regiment No. 78, declared:
-
- “In the course of the street fighting in Charleroi, as we
- fought our way through the High Street and had reached a side
- street leading off the High Street, I saw, when I had reached
- the crossing and shot into the side street, a German dragoon
- lying in the street about fifty or sixty paces in front of
- me. Three civilians were near him, of whom one was bending
- over the soldier, who still kicked with his legs. I shot among
- them and hit the last of the civilians; the others fled. When
- I approached I saw that the shot civilian had a long knife,
- covered with blood, in his hand. The right eye of the German
- dragoon was gouged out.”[21]
-
-The witness adds that “much smoke was rising from the body of the
-dragoon,” This is to say that a general engagement, one of the hardest
-fought during the war, is going on in the middle of a town and three
-civilians are discovered within fifty or sixty paces, leisurely carving
-up a German dragoon! Is it credible?
-
-(4) My fourth example is too long to quote, but in substance it is
-this. Reservist G. Gustav Voigt deposes that on August 6th he and seven
-comrades suddenly saw five Belgian soldiers, fully armed, holding up
-their arms to surrender. When they went up to them they discovered that
-the Belgians had a German hussar strung up and freshly mutilated, and
-that they had two other hussars upon whom they were about to perform
-similar operations.[22] Without firing a shot, these men, caught
-red-handed under circumstances which made their own death inevitable,
-surrender immediately.
-
-Now I ask any unbiased reader whether these depositions, in each case
-uncorroborated, are such as to carry conviction to any reasonable man?
-Yet the whole of the “proofs” adduced as to Belgian atrocities are of
-this character.
-
-
-The Massacres--Andenne.
-
-When we come to the justification alleged for the wholesale massacres
-of communities the evidence is even more suspicious. In order to prove
-the Belgians unspeakable knaves the German Government have to present
-them as incredible fools. At Andenne, “a small town of a population of
-about 8,000 people,” there were affrays in which “about 200 inhabitants
-lost their lives.”[23] According to the German document, “two infantry
-regiments and a Jäger battalion” were marching through this place when
-they were set upon by the inhabitants. Two regiments and a battalion
-would constitute the greater part of a brigade; they must have amounted
-to at least 7,000 men.[24] We are asked to believe that this small
-unprotected community (one of the German witnesses expressly says, “I
-did not see one single French or Belgian soldier in the entire town
-or the environs”)[25] made an unprovoked attack on this overwhelming
-force, and that the women assisted with pots of scalding water. Two
-hundred of the civilians were, by the German admission, shot. The
-German losses were, it is added, “singularly small.” So singularly
-small were they that the German Report omits even to enumerate them.
-
-
-Jamoigne and Tintigny.
-
-In another case--the village of Jamoigne--an ammunition column halted
-for water. The attitude of the population “was friendly; water, coffee,
-and tobacco were offered to some non-commissioned officers and men.”
-Suddenly, while part of the population are standing outside their
-doors fully exposed, “a general shooting” is opened upon the crowd
-in the streets from the roofs and windows of the houses.[26] Is it
-intrinsically probable that Belgian civilians would be so careless of
-the lives of their fellow-citizens? Or take the case of Tintigny. An
-artillery ammunition column is welcomed, “apparently with the best
-goodwill,” assisted to water its horses, and then (but not before)
-“when the horses had been again harnessed” and the opportunity for a
-surprise attack had passed, the inhabitants opened fire on the whole
-column.[27] Statements like these carry their own refutation with them.
-
-
-The Tragedy of Dinant.
-
-I turn to the case of Dinant, one of the most appalling massacres
-that have ever been perpetrated,[28] even by the hordes of Kultur. No
-attempt is made to deny the wholesale slaughter; it is freely admitted,
-and with sanguinary iteration we are told again and again “a fairly
-large number of persons were shot, “all the male hostages assembled
-against the garden wall were shot.” Such _battues_ occur on page
-after page.[29] What is the German excuse? It is that the civilian
-population offered a desperate resistance. To prove how desperate it
-was, and consequently to establish the “military necessity,” it has to
-be conceded that they were organised. But this is proving too much,
-for “organised” civilian combatants are entitled to the privileges of
-lawful belligerents. Therefore it is argued that they were “without
-military badges”: this phrase occurs with a curious lack of variation
-in the words of each witness. It is added that women and “children
-(including girls) of ten or twelve years” were armed with revolvers!
-“Elderly women,” “a white-haired old man,” fired with insensate fury.
-None the less--says one ingenuous German witness--“the people had
-all got a very high opinion of Germany.” At intervals during the
-engagement not only were groups of civilians, alleged to have arms in
-their hands, shot in groups, but unarmed civilians were shot--“all the
-male hostages.” In other words the whole of the German defence that
-the German troops were punishing illicit _francs-tireurs_ is suddenly
-abandoned. Tiring apparently of these laboured inventions, the German
-staff, in a grim and sombre sentence, suddenly throws off the mask:
-
- “In judging the attitude which the troops of the 12th Corps
- took against such a population, our starting point must be that
- the _tactical object_ of the 12th Corps was to cross the Meuse
- _with speed_, and to drive the enemy from the left bank of the
- Meuse; speedily to overcome the opposition of the inhabitants
- who were working in direct opposition to this _was to be
- striven for in every way_.... Hostages were shot at various
- places and this procedure is amply justified.”[30]
-
-It has been estimated that about eight hundred civilians perished in
-this massacre. The German White Book freely concedes that the number
-was large; indeed by a simple process of induction from the German
-evidence it is clear that it was very large. It appears that a whole
-Army Corps (the 1st Royal Saxon) was engaged and that the armed troops
-of the Allies were encountered in force. The German troops received
-a check and it seems fairly obvious that they simply wreaked their
-vengeance, as they have so often done, on an unoffending population,
-presumably in order to intimidate the enemy in the field. Not for the
-first time they attempted to do by terror what they could not do by
-force of arms.
-
-
-“We gave them coffee.”
-
-It is characteristic of the whole _apologia_ that having admitted to
-an indiscriminate butchery the Germans attempt to gain credit for
-preserving throughout its course the most tender sentiments. In fact
-they are surprised at their own sensibility. “I have subsequently
-often wondered,” says a Major Schlick, “that our men should have
-remained so calm in the face of such beasts.”[31] Major Bauer says,
-that he and his “manifested a most notable kindness to women, old
-men and children”; so notable that he suggests that “it is worthy of
-recognition in the special circumstances.” Major Bauer evidently thinks
-it a case for the Iron Cross. And in proof of this humanity he points
-out that the widows and orphans of the murdered husbands and fathers
-“all received coffee”[32] from the field kitchen the next morning.
-Perhaps Major Bauer bethinks himself of a certain cup of cold water.
-
-
-The Children were “quite happy.”
-
-More than this, the children seem rather to have enjoyed the novel
-experience. A German staff-surgeon whose gruesome task it was to search
-a heap of forty corpses, “women and young lads,” who had been put up
-against a garden wall for execution, says:[33]
-
- “Under the heap I discovered a girl of about five years of age,
- and without any injuries. I took her out and brought her down
- to the house where the women were. _She took chocolate, was
- quite happy, and was clearly unaware of the seriousness of the
- situation._”
-
-And with that amazing statement we may fitly leave this amazing
-narrative.
-
-
-Aerschot.
-
-The case of Dinant may be taken as typical. The evidence as to
-Louvain and Aerschot is not less incredible. We are asked to
-believe that at Aerschot[34] the population of a small town suddenly
-rose in arms against a whole brigade, although the population was
-quite unprotected--“we ascertained that there was no enemy in the
-neighbourhood.”[35] To explain this surprising and suicidal impulse the
-Germans produce--it is their only evidence--the statement of a Captain
-Karge, that he had “heard rumours from various German officers” that
-the Belgian Government, “in particular the King of the Belgians,” had
-decreed that every male Belgian was to do the German Army “as much harm
-as possible.” “It _is said_ that such an order was found on a captured
-Belgian soldier.” Strangely enough, the order is not produced--not a
-word of it. Also, “an officer _told_ me that he himself had _read_
-on a church door of a place near Aerschot that the Belgians were not
-allowed to hold captured German officers on parole, but were bound to
-shoot them.” He adds that he “cannot repeat the words of this officer
-exactly.”[36]
-
-
-Louvain.
-
-Let us now turn to Louvain. “The _insurrection_ of the town of
-Louvain,” say the authors of the White Book with some naïveté, “against
-the German garrison and the punishment which was meted out to the town
-have found a long-drawn-out echo in the whole world.” Some twenty-eight
-thousand words are therefore devoted to establishing the thesis that
-the German troops in occupation of the town were the victims of a
-carefully organised, long premeditated, and diabolically executed
-attack on the part of the inhabitants assisted by the _Garde Civique_.
-Thus:
-
- “We are evidently dealing with a carefully planned assault
- which was carried on for several days with the greatest
- obstinacy. The long duration of the insurrection against the
- German military power in itself disposes of any planless action
- committed by individuals in excitement. The leadership of the
- treacherous revolt must have lain in the hands of a higher
- authority.”--Summarising Report.
-
-Great emphasis is laid on the formidable nature of the attack and the
-heavy odds against which the Germans had to contend. The fire of the
-Belgians was “murderous” (D 11, D 13), “fearful” (D 9), “violent” (D
-36), “furious” (D 41); it was supported by machine-guns (D 28, 29,
-37, 38, 40) and hand-grenades (D 46), and was materially assisted by
-Belgian soldiers in disguise (Appendix D 1, 19, 38), and by the _Garde
-Civique_ (D 45, 46), who occupied houses with the most “elaborate
-preparations.” In spite of this careful preparation the German troops,
-who had been in the town six days and had there established the
-Head-quarters of a whole Army Corps (the 9th Reserve Corps), were so
-impressed by the “extraordinarily good” behaviour of the inhabitants
-that on the evening of August 25th, about 7.30 or 8 p.m., they were
-taken completely by surprise. “It was impossible to foresee,” says
-Lieutenant von Sandt (D 8), “that the inhabitants were planning an
-assault.” Other witnesses say, however, that “a remarkable number
-of young men” were observed congregating in the streets some hours
-beforehand. None the less the German authorities exhibited an ingenuous
-trustfulness and, what is even more remarkable, a complete disregard
-of the most ordinary police precautions, which will come as a surprise
-to anyone who has studied the German Proclamations and the drastic
-measures usually taken by them immediately upon their occupation of a
-town.
-
-
-A “murderous” attack; German casualties--five.
-
-Such was the situation when at seven o’clock on a summer evening
-(August 25th) of notorious memory, the deep-laid plans of the Belgian
-authorities suddenly and murderously revealed themselves. A German
-company of Landsturm[37] was marching through the town; the main
-body of the German troops quartered there were engaged several miles
-away, and only a few details remained in the city. This small body of
-unsuspecting soldiers--a company numbers not more than two or three
-hundred men--were suddenly set upon, at a signal given by rockets, by
-trained marksmen of the Belgian Army and the _Garde Civique_, disguised
-as civilians, acting with the aid of machine-guns and hand-grenades and
-actively assisted by the greater part of a large civilian population.
-The fire, as various soldiers of the Landsturm testify, was not only
-carefully controlled and directed, but was “murderous” in the extreme.
-Yet, after carefully searching through their depositions, we find that
-only “_five men of the company were wounded_” (D 8)! Lieutenant Sandt
-and Dr. Berghausen feel constrained to explain these remarkably light
-casualties. They can only account for them by saying that in spite of
-the “carefully planned” and disciplined attack the Belgians, shooting
-from carefully chosen positions, shot “too high” (D 8), “at night” (D
-8, D 9) although the light at eight o’clock on an August evening is
-usually remarkably good, and one of the witnesses (D 26) says that at
-8 p.m. it was “fairly light.” The company appear to have disarmed the
-infuriated Belgians with remarkable ease, going into the houses two or
-three at a time (D 9), and finding the occupants apparently as docile
-as sheep, so that although found with arms in their hands they allowed
-themselves to be led out in “a crowd” and “immediately shot” (D 44).
-In one case, on entering an inn, the Germans found “behind the bar, a
-waiter,” who had apparently taken up this strong strategical position
-alone with “a case for shot placed by his side with the corresponding
-ammunition.” He also allowed himself to be led forth like a lamb to the
-slaughter (D 37).
-
-
-Contradictory witnesses.
-
-It is extraordinary also that although this murderous and carefully
-planned attack began at 7.30 “I had just finished my soup,” says Major
-von Manteuffel, who sat down to dinner at 7.30--(Appendix D 3), or at
-8 p.m. (D 6), yet at 9 p.m., says Corporal Hohne, who entered the town
-with his regiment at that hour (D 36), “the conduct of the civilians
-was quiet and not unfriendly,” and his regiment was allowed to march
-right into the town--“up till then nothing noteworthy had occurred.”
-A N.C.O. of the same battalion says that “between 9 and 10 p.m.” the
-Belgians were standing about the streets; all was “quiet,” and they
-were “not unfriendly” (D 36). Another witness heard nothing till “9 or
-9.30” (D 25). Another says (D 45) the signal was given at “9 o’clock.”
-To the same effect another soldier (D 18). What is even more remarkable
-is the statement of Major von Klewitz that at 4 a.m. the next morning,
-after the Landsturm had cleared the houses, the infatuated inhabitants
-opened fire on an Army Corps which appears to have arrived in the
-interval and was then “moving out to battle” (D 2); and the presence
-of a whole brigade of Landwehr (D 1) does not seem to have exercised
-any restraining influence on these insane civilians. Like flies to
-wanton boys was a whole Army Corps to the burgesses of Louvain, who
-killed it for their sport. The German authorities contend that, with
-intermittent executions, they tolerated this kind of thing for two
-whole days. They appear, however, to have borne a charmed life--the
-chief casualties among them were horses. Battalion Surgeon Georg
-Berghausen, in particular, who records as a remarkable fact that he
-once paid a hotelkeeper (“to please him and his employees”) for meals
-he had ordered, was “repeatedly shot at” the whole length of a street
-but never so much as hit. He thinks this was due to its being so dark,
-though whenever the witnesses are concerned to testify that the firing
-was undoubtedly by civilians, or by soldiers disguised as such, they
-can see “quite plainly.”
-
-
-The Priests.
-
-Never since the Day of Pentecost was there such a confusion of tongues.
-One witness labours to prove that no executions took place without a
-most decorous court-martial in the station square, the same soldier
-combining apparently the office of prosecutor and judge (D 38); another
-says that of “a crowd” of persons taken out of a house, the males were
-“immediately shot” (D 44); yet a third says that a body of hostages
-were placed in front of a machine-gun with an intimation that they
-would be shot as a matter of course if there were any more disturbance
-(D 37). It is admitted that a hundred civilians were shot, “including
-ten or fifteen priests” (D 38). One German witness says it is all the
-fault of the priests (D 38); another says it’s the fault of the _Garde
-Civique_ (D 45)--both being apparently at some pains to exculpate the
-unhappy civilians. The quality of the evidence against the priests (and
-the civil population) may be gathered from the following deposition (D
-42) of Captain Hermansen. He interviewed a priest who, he says, had
-behaved well on one occasion:
-
- “I rejoined that if his clerical brethren had acted in that
- [the same] manner, the Belgians and we would have been spared
- many unpleasant experiences. _He did not contradict me._”--(D
- 42.)
-
-In witness whereof Captain von Vethacke comes forward and says:
-
- “In so far as priests were shot they too had been found guilty
- by the court. I came to know the priest mentioned by Captain
- Hermansen at the end of his declaration. He made an excellent
- impression on me also; and _he did not contradict me either_,
- when I expressed to him my opinion that certain of the clergy
- had stirred up the people and taken part in the attack.”--(D
- 43.)
-
-Truly, a remarkable example of the _argumentum ab silentio_! Perhaps
-the unfortunate priest remembered what happened to Faithful when he
-contradicted Chief Justice Hategood.
-
-All the evidence adduced, where it is not that of the German soldiers,
-is of this character. It is all hearsay, the Belgian witnesses quoted
-are invariably anonymous, and there are only five of them at that (D
-30, 34, 37, 38, 42). At Bueken “the clergymen” are accused of having
-incited the population to attack the German troops. The proof adduced
-is that the priest “left the church” when the firing began!
-
-
-What is the true explanation?
-
-One thing emerges quite clearly from these disorderly depositions
-and that is a great confusion of mind. The evidence from Belgian
-sources, very carefully sifted by a Committee[38] (presided over by
-Sir Mackenzie Chalmers) of the Belgian Commission and, independently,
-by the Bryce Committee,[39] is to the effect that two detachments
-of German troops fired on one another and then threw the blame on
-the innocent inhabitants. This explanation certainly receives some
-countenance from the German depositions, which, as I have said,
-exhibit a kind of turbulent confusion. The N.C.O.‘s of two battalions
-which entered the town at 9 p.m. say “the noise and confusion was
-very great,” and “to what extent our fire was returned I cannot say”;
-“we shot the street lamps to pieces”; “our opponents were not to be
-seen since it was already dark,” and “we only saw the flash of the
-discharges and _supposed_ that they came from the houses” (D 36, 37);
-and here again, as in the case of the company of Landsturm previously
-referred to, only “five men” were known to be hit. During the greater
-part of the day (August 25th) there was only[40] one company of
-Landsturm and sixty men of a railway detachment in the town (D 8).
-It is surely rather remarkable that “a well-prepared and elaborately
-designed attack on the part of the civil population” (D 41) should
-have halted all day and then begun either at or a short time before
-(the German evidence is, as we have seen, very conflicting) German
-reinforcements were entering the town, and then tarried again until
-the whole or the greater part of a German Army Corps had arrived: the
-only thing that the German evidence proves is the sinister fact that
-the arrival of each detachment of German forces coincided with renewed
-massacres of the civilian population. Such is the ugly story that
-emerges from these ill-nourished and contradictory testimonies.
-
-Such is the German White Book. I think it is not too much to say that
-it bears the stamp of the forger’s hand upon it, the same hand that
-forged the Ems telegram and garbled the Belgian documents captured in
-Brussels. It was conceived in iniquity and brought forth in falsehood.
-It confesses, but does not avoid.
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-GERMAN CREDIBILITY--A REVIEW OF THE EVIDENCE
-
-
-The German Diaries.
-
-I have allowed the German White Book to speak for itself. It is a
-well-known rule of law that a party is “estopped” from denying his own
-admissions, and the incriminating character of these admissions is, as
-we have seen, conclusive against the German Government. Had I desired,
-I could have reinforced it by other evidence, also emanating from
-German sources, in the shape of Proclamations and diaries (of which I
-have seen some hundreds at the Ministry of War in Paris), which amply
-corroborate the conclusions already arrived at. The German pretence
-of a judicial inquiry into the guilt or innocence of the victims of
-their sanguinary fury is refuted by the simple fact that their own
-Proclamations frankly intimate that the principle of decimation and
-of vicarious punishment will be adopted, in the case of infractions,
-whether real or assumed, of what they choose to call their commands.
-A hostage may fail to turn up as a substitute, an inhabitant may be
-found with a litre of benzol unaccounted for, another may dig potatoes
-in the field, yet another may fail to salute or to hold his hands up
-with sufficient promptitude--and the penalty decreed is invariably the
-same: he, or a substitute, will be shot--“the innocent will suffer
-with the guilty.”[41] Not only so, but as a rule no attempt was
-made to discover whether any offence had been committed or not. In
-the diary of a German officer which came into my possession an entry
-recording the undiscriminating butchery of some two hundred civilians
-concluded with the otiose remark: “In future there ought to be an
-inquiry into their guilt instead of shooting them.” An unpublished
-Proclamation in my possession, which was handed to me by the _maire_ of
-a town now in our occupation, declared that the civils, “ou peutêtre
-les militaires en civil,” had fired on the troops; the parenthesis
-damns its authors beyond redemption. And when all other tests fail,
-when every international convention has been repudiated, there still
-remains the elementary rule, which not only jurists but soldiers have
-always emphasized, that in reprisals and retribution there should
-always be some _proportion_ between the offence and its punishment.
-What then is to be thought of the admission of a German soldier that
-sixty villagers, including women in travail, were shot “because,” he
-adds laconically, “they had telephoned to the enemy”? The critic who
-carefully collates the diaries, published and unpublished, will find
-overwhelming evidence of indiscriminate and lawless butchery--“Befehl
-ergangen sämtliche männliche Personen zu erschiessen.... Ein
-schrecklicher Sonntag” (Order passed to shoot all the male
-inhabitants.... A frightful Sunday); “Ein schreckliches Blutbad” (A
-frightful blood-bath); “Sämtliche Rechtsnormen sind aufgelöst” (All the
-rules of law are cast to the winds). And nothing is more instructive
-than to observe how each lays the blame for the worst outrages upon
-the other, while incidentally admitting those of his own unit. One
-says, “It’s the infantry who are to blame”; another says, “The pioneers
-are the worst and those brigands of artillerymen”; a third writes,
-“It’s all the fault of the transport.” The cumulative effect of these
-recriminations is to inculpate the whole.[42]
-
-
-German Credibility.
-
-Quite apart from this inductive evidence there is the fact that the
-German Government is so tainted with the infamy of indisputable
-mendacity that no sober and impartial man can credit a single word
-of what it says. It has deliberately forged Belgian documents which
-have come into its possession in order to make out a case against the
-Belgian Government;[43] it has repeatedly broken faith with the British
-Government and the Vatican;[44] it has abused the Geneva Convention
-in order to make use of a hospital ship as an instrument of war.[45]
-Berlin itself is one great factory of lies, and its official Press
-service, to quote the words of our Ambassador, “a vast system of
-international blackmail.”[46] As is the Government, so are the people.
-Its merchants forge manifests and falsify bills of lading in order
-to secure the immunity of their property from capture at sea.[47] A
-journal under German control[48] has admitted that the stories of
-mutilation so industriously circulated by the German Government and
-its agents are entirely the product of hysterical “suggestion.” Often
-its pretexts are a shameless afterthought. In co-operation with the
-French authorities I was instrumental in tracking down a now notorious
-order issued by a German Brigadier-General to butcher all the wounded
-who fell into German hands. At first its authenticity was denied by
-the German Government, but, when it was established beyond doubt, they
-published a statement that a similar order had been issued by one of
-our own Generals some twelve months ago. The excuse was as belated as
-it was mendacious, and to this day not the slightest proof has been
-adduced in support of it.
-
-The German authorities seem to suffer from a malady which can only
-be described as moral perversion. It is a kind of moral insanity. In
-defending the sinking of the _Lusitania_ with its freight of innocent
-women and children the German Government wrote:
-
- “The case of the _Lusitania_ shows _with horrible clearness_ to
- what jeopardising of human lives the manner of war conducted by
- our adversaries leads.”[49]
-
-This affectation of horror at the consequences of its own crimes and
-the imputation of the guilt of them to others is surely one of the
-most remarkable revelations of the moral obliquity of the German mind.
-Yet it by no means stands alone. The Proclamations, issued in Belgium,
-threaten the inhabitants with fire and sword, the scaffold and the
-firing-party, for the least infraction of the most trivial regulations,
-and then conclude with the aspersion that by such infraction they will
-commit “the horrible crime” of compromising the existence of a whole
-community and placing it “outside the pale of international law.”[50]
-The man who omits to put his hands up with acrobatic promptitude will
-“make himself guilty” of the penalty of death. All through the German
-utterances there runs an infatuated obsession that the Germans enjoy
-a kind of moral prerogative in virtue of which they are entitled to
-violate all the laws which they rigidly prescribe for others.[51] We
-have lately had an example of this which is of supreme horror. The
-Power which has broken all laws, human and divine, sought to dignify
-its condemnation of Edith Cavell with all the pomp and circumstance
-of a tribunal of justice. While thousands of ravishers and spoilers
-go free, one woman, who had spent her life in ministries to such as
-were sick and afflicted, was handed over to the executioner. Truly,
-there has been no such trial in history since Barabbas was released and
-Christ led forth to the hill of Calvary.
-
-
-The Guilt of the German People.
-
-It is the fondest of delusions to imagine that all this
-blood-guiltiness is confined to the German Government and the General
-Staff. The whole people is stained with it. The innumerable diaries
-of common soldiers in the ranks which I have read betray a common
-sentiment of hate, rapine, and ferocious credulity.[52] Again and again
-English soldiers have told me how their German captors delighted to
-offer them food in their famished state and then to snatch it away
-again. The progress of French, British, and Russian prisoners, civil
-as well as military, through Germany has been a veritable Calvary.[53]
-The helplessness which in others would excite forbearance if not pity
-has in the German populace provoked only derision and insult.[54] The
-“old gentleman with a grey beard and gold spectacles” who broke his
-umbrella over the back of a Russian lady (the wife of a diplomatist),
-the loafers who boarded a train and under the eyes of the indulgent
-sentries poked their fingers in the blind eye of a wounded Irishman
-who had had half his face shot away, the men and women who spat upon
-helpless prisoners and threatened them with death, the guards who
-prodded them with bayonets, worried them with dogs, and dispatched
-those who could not keep up--these were not a Prussian caste, but the
-German people. What is to be thought of a people, one of whose leading
-journals publishes[55] with approval the letter of a German officer
-describing “the brilliant idea” (ein guter Gedanke) which inspired him
-to place civilians on chairs in the middle of the street of a town
-attacked by the French and use them as a screen for his men, in spite
-of their “prayers of anguish.”
-
-
-New Russian Evidence.
-
-This question of the culpability of the German people, civilians and
-soldiers in the ranks, as distinct from the German Government, is one
-of supreme importance, and I would like to draw the reader’s attention
-to the mass of unpublished evidence (from which some selections are
-given in Part VI. of the Documentary Chapter of this book) placed at my
-disposal by the Russian Embassy. In addition to the documents I have
-printed in that chapter--I refer the reader to No. 7 in particular--I
-will here quote the following unpublished deposition as to the conduct
-of the German guards in a prison camp. These barbarities, it should
-be remembered, were not done in the heat of action, but represent
-the leisurely amusement of guards whose only provocation was the
-helplessness of the famished men in their charge.
-
- “In their leisure moments the German soldiers amused themselves
- with practical joking at the expense of the prisoners. They
- announced that an extra portion of food would be given out,
- and when the Russians hurried to the kitchen, a whole pack of
- dogs were let loose on them. The animals flew at the prisoners
- and dispersed them in all directions, while the Germans looked
- on and roared with laughter. Sometimes the prisoners were
- offered an extra ladle of soup, or piece of bread if they would
- expose their backs to a certain number of blows with a whip.
- Our hungry and tormented soldiers often bought an extra piece
- of bread at this price, and it was thrown to them as if they
- had been dogs.”
-
-The Germans appear in the case of the Russian, as in that of the
-British, Belgian, and French prisoners, to have taken a malignant and
-bestial delight in outraging their feelings of self-respect, and men
-were herded together day and night in cattle-trucks deep in manure,
-and forced to perform their natural functions where they stood, packed
-together so close that they could not sit and dared not lie down. At
-each station they were exhibited like a travelling menagerie to the
-curiosity and insult of the populace. The quality of mercy was not
-shown even where one might most expect to find it, namely, at the hands
-of the German surgeons and nurses who wore the Red Cross. Here is the
-deposition of Vasili Tretiakov:
-
- “Having received no food for two days, the Russian prisoners,
- who fully expected to get some bread at this station, were
- gazing with hungry and longing looks into the distance, when
- they saw women dressed as Sisters of Mercy distributing bread
- and sausages to the German soldiers. One of these Sisters went
- up to the truck in which I was standing, and a Russian soldier
- at the door stretched out his hand for something to eat, but
- the woman simply struck it and smeared the soldier’s face with
- a piece of sausage. She then called all the prisoners ‘Russian
- swine’ and went away from the side of the train.”
-
-Well may the Russian Government say in their covering communication
-that “the forms of punishment”--if we can speak of punishment when no
-offence had been committed--“remind one of the tortures of the Middle
-Ages.” Other documents in my possession recite how the prisoners were
-harnessed to ploughs and carts, like cattle, and lashed with long
-leather whips; how a man who fainted from exhaustion was immediately
-bayoneted, while another who fell out of the ranks to pick up a rotten
-turnip shared a like fate; how wounded men were forced to stand naked
-for hours in the frost until gangrene set in, tied up for hours to
-posts with their toes just touching the ground until, the blood rising
-to the head, copious hæmorrhage took place from the nose, mouth, and
-ears; how yet others who, exhausted with hunger and fatigue, could not
-keep up on the march were bayoneted or clubbed where they lay. As for
-the conduct of the German populace let the following speak for itself:
-
- “The peaceful inhabitants along the routes traversed in
- Germany showed the greatest hostility towards the prisoners,
- whom they reviled as ‘Russian swine and dogs.’ Women and even
- children threw stones and sand at them, and spat right in
- their faces.... Even the wounded men were not spared by these
- demented Germans who struck them, pulled their moustaches, and
- spat in their faces.”
-
-
-The German Ideal--Europe in Chains.
-
-The conception of the educated classes of Germany as to the future
-of Europe we have on record: it is to be a tributary Europe, vast
-satrapies of subject populations more rightless than the mediæval
-villein, their language proscribed, their liberties disfranchised,
-their commerce prohibited, their lands expropriated, hewers of wood and
-drawers of water for the conqueror. The ill-disguised slavery under
-which Belgium[56] and the occupied French Departments[57] groan to-day
-is to be perpetuated. The small nations of Europe are to exchange
-the protection of Europe for the suzerainty of Germany and to live
-under the German “shield.” Their territories are to be to Germany
-what the provinces were to Rome at her worst--great praedial estates,
-the peasantry of which are either to be “cleared” or to remain as the
-menials of the conqueror. The German dream is the dream of the Latin
-historian who sighed for more provinces to conquer in order that
-liberty might be “banished from the sight”[58] of those already under
-his heel. What Germany cannot annex she will ruin, so that borne down
-by heavy indemnities France shall never be able to lift her head again.
-Such are the “terms of peace” proclaimed by the German Professors, a
-body of men who, it should be remembered, in Germany hold their chairs
-at the pleasure of the State and are, in fact, a branch of the Civil
-Service. They therefore speak as men having authority.[59]
-
-
-A Moral Distemper.
-
-I have been told that there are still some individuals in England who
-cherish the idea that this vast orgy of blood, lust, rapine, hate,
-and pride is in some peculiar way merely the _Bacchanalia_ of troops
-unused to the heady bouquet of the wines of Champagne or, stranger
-still, that it is the mental aberration of a people seduced by idle
-tales into these courses by its rulers. It is no part of my task to
-find explanations. But if the reader is astonished, as well he may be,
-at the disgusting repetition of stories of rape and sodomy let him
-study the statistics of crime in Germany during the first decade of
-this century, issued by the Imperial Government; he will find in them
-much to confirm the impression that the whole people is infected with
-some kind of moral distemper.[60] The seduction of a people by its
-rulers is impossible; such hypnotic susceptibility to the influences
-of “suggestion” would, of itself, be a symptom of mental degeneration
-in the people itself. It is impossible to believe that the most highly
-educated nation in Europe is either so ignorant or so credulous as
-such an explanation would suggest. It is not in their ignorance
-but in their turpitude that the clue to these barbarities is to be
-found. This is a sombre fact which has to be faced or these appalling
-records will have been sifted and published in vain. The problem of
-explanation is ultimately one for the anthropologist rather than the
-lawyer, and there may be force in the contention of those who believe
-that the Prussian is not a member of the Teutonic family at all, but
-a “throw-back” to some Tartar stock. Certain it is that he exhibits
-an insensibility to the feelings of others which is only equalled by
-his extreme sensitiveness as to his own.[61] This morbid insensibility
-is, of course, the secret of German “Terrorism,” and of the immense
-influence which it has exerted on the theory and practice of war among
-the German nation. It explains their singular ingenuity in finding
-means to an end, and between the German trooper who dips a baby’s head
-into scalding water in order to get more coffee from its mother[62]
-to the commandant who at the point of the bayonet thrusts a living
-screen of priests, old men, and women with babes at the breast[63]
-between his own troops and those of the enemy there is a difference of
-degree rather than of kind. Similarly the dark passage in the German
-War Book which hints that there may be occasions on which it will be
-profitable to massacre prisoners of war reveals the same quality of
-mind as the order to shoot helpless sailors who are struggling for
-their lives in the sea.[64] All things are lawful which are expedient,
-and if your enemy has ties of affection, the better he lends himself to
-your belligerent exploitation. _Mentem mortalia tangunt_--human things
-touch the heart--acquires for the German Staff a new and sinister
-significance. Every tender feeling that their enemy has becomes a
-hostage for his tractability, because it can be violated if he is
-contumacious. His churches can be profaned, his priests murdered, his
-boys driven into exile, his women-folk handed over to the lust of a
-licentious soldiery, and his home destroyed. If his troops defeat one
-in the field, the civilian population can be made to pay for it with
-their lives,[65] so that eventually he may be disarmed not by defeat
-but by horror. His own humanity will be his undoing. Not fear but
-anguish will bring him to his knees.
-
-This is the German doctrine, secreted in the pages of many a German
-manual,[66] and now published to the world in the German Proclamations
-and the evil deeds which they both excuse and provoke. This it is which
-has made the German nation, in the words of Lord Rosebery, “the enemy
-of the human race,” and has caused the very name of this bestial and
-servile people to stink in the nostrils of mankind.
-
-
-IV
-
-THE FUTURE OF INTERNATIONAL LAW AND THE QUESTION OF RETRIBUTION
-
-
-The Dissolution of Europe.
-
-Many years ago the most distinguished of the modern school of French
-historians wrote a remarkable essay on the subject of “Diplomacy and
-Progress.”[67] He knew Europe as few had known it; he had spent his
-life in its chancelleries and its archives, and his wisdom was only
-equalled by his knowledge, for he had studied not only books but men.
-In that essay he speculated as to the effect of the progress of
-mechanical invention in the arts of war upon the prospects of European
-peace, and he confessed to a mournful depression. But the source of
-his apprehension was not Europe but Asia. He foresaw the possibility
-of some potent Oriental nation awaking from its secular meditations
-and applying itself in a single generation to an apprenticeship in
-those mechanical arts which are no longer the peculiar mystery and
-the prerogative of the Western world. A nation thus acquiring the
-destructive resources of the West, while retaining the peculiar
-morality of the East--its ruthlessness, its contempt for human
-life, its sombre fatalism, its indifference to personal liberty,
-its chicanery, its love of espionage--might, he apprehended, fall
-upon Europe in a catastrophic assault as unforeseen as it would be
-unprovoked, and threaten her with destruction.
-
-The catastrophe has fallen, but the foes of Europe have been those of
-her own household, and we have discovered with a shock of dismay that
-the comity of European nations has harboured a Power which is European
-in nothing but in name, and is more completely alien to Western ideals
-than the tribes of Afghanistan. A hybrid nation of this type which is
-intellectual without being refined, which can discipline its mind but
-cannot control its appetites, which can acquire the idiom of Europe and
-yet retain the instincts of Asia or rather of some pre-Asiatic horde,
-presents the greatest problem that has ever perplexed the civilisation
-of man. It is like an intellectual savage who has learnt the language
-and studied the dress and deportment of polite society, but all the
-while nurtures dark atavisms and murderous impulses in the centres of
-his brain. The subtle danger of the presence of such a nation in the
-European comity is that it uses the language of that international
-society, and yet all the while means something different, and that with
-every appearance of solemn subscription to its forms and treaties it
-is making mental reservations and “economies” which strike at the very
-root of them.
-
-
-The Casuistry of the Intellectual Savage.
-
-In the hands of such a nation an international convention is not merely
-idle and impotent; the convention itself becomes positively dangerous,
-simply because it can be perverted. It can be used to invest the most
-barbarous acts with a specious plausibility, and can be turned against
-the very people whom it was designed to protect. Any one who takes the
-trouble to study the official proclamations of the German military
-authorities, or the introductory memorandum to the German White Book,
-cannot fail to be struck by this. A civilian who fires on the enemy
-forfeits under international law the privileges of a non-combatant.
-The rule means as much as it says, and no more; it does not impose on
-a civil community the obligation to prove that it is a non-combatant.
-But in nine out of ten German proclamations the rule is invoked as
-an excuse for involving a whole community in responsibility with
-their lives for the acts or omissions, real or alleged, of single
-individuals--“the innocent will suffer with the guilty”[68]--and the
-“law of nations” is invoked to put a whole population “outside the
-pale” of it.[69] At one stroke we are carried back to the days of
-the blood-feud and of vicarious punishment, and the law of nations
-is perverted from an instrument of progress to an organon of bloody
-sophistries. So, too, the Hague Convention which requires that
-requisitions of supplies should not be made without giving receipts
-is observed in the letter and violated in the spirit; receipts are
-given, but they are forged. The obligation of a treaty guaranteeing the
-neutrality of Belgium is admitted, but a false charge and a falsified
-document is advanced to justify its breach. A brigade order to kill
-all prisoners is first denied, and then when denial becomes futile,
-a fictitious order of a prior date is alleged against us in order to
-dignify the real order with the sanction of “reprisals.” Defenceless
-merchantmen are attacked and sunk at first sight, and then when they
-carry guns for their protection their precautions for defence are used
-as a retrospective pretext for attack. The same curious casuistry is
-invoked to excuse the attacks on Scarborough and London, and the Hague
-Convention is interpreted, in defiance of its authors, to support the
-plea that whatever barbarity is not expressly prohibited is thereby
-condoned.
-
-
-Germany as a Moral Pervert.
-
-It is this terrible perversion, this prostitution of words until,
-to quote a classical expression of Thucydides, they have lost their
-meaning in relation to things, that seems to me the most intractable
-problem that we have to face. To my mind it is this pathological aspect
-of the German temperament which presents a far more serious obstacle
-to a restoration of the European comity based on the readmission of
-Germany to membership than the German dogma of war. You may, perhaps,
-extirpate a dogma but you cannot alter a temperament. To regard Germany
-as the misguided pupil of a military caste which alone stands in the
-way of her reformation seems to me to ignore the volume of evidence as
-to the complicity of officers and men in those orgies of outrage. I
-cannot avoid the conclusion that the whole people is infected with a
-kind of moral distemper.
-
- “Look, Madame,” said a German soldier to a French woman who
- witnessed the execution of three poor travellers who with their
- hands tied behind their backs with napkins were led into a
- field close to her house and shot by six soldiers under the
- command of a German officer, “Look! isn’t it fine! See them
- shoot some French civilians. A fine feat that! All the others
- ought to be killed in the same way.”[70]
-
-The sentiment is typical; German diaries are full of such things.
-Nor is it reasonable to suppose that the kind of teaching which has
-made Clausewitz and Treitschke and Bernhardi the gospel of the German
-people, and has found authoritative expression in the German War Book,
-could have commanded the prestige which it does command in Germany if
-it had not found a people apt and eager by temperament to receive it.
-Germany stands alone among modern nations in extending its official
-conception, and even its academic analysis[71] of war, to include the
-deliberate “terrorization” of non-combatants. She alone has taught,
-both by precept and example, that there are no limitations to what
-is justifiable by the exigencies of war. “_C’est la guerre_” is the
-common answer of German officers when implored by the victims to
-stop the lust and rapine of their men.[72] It follows from all this
-that war as taught and practised by the Germans exceeds in savagery
-even the practices of the ancient world, in which it was thought
-the mark of barbarism to poison wells, desecrate temples and murder
-priests--practices which the Germans have not hesitated to pursue.
-Incitement to assassination, which was thought a mean and dishonourable
-thing by the Roman mind,[73] is specifically recommended in the German
-War Book.
-
-In the ancient world the vanquished were regarded as rightless, and
-whole populations were sold into slavery after they had been decimated
-by the slaughter of their leading citizens. The German practice is
-not intrinsically different; municipal magistrates, parish priests,
-and one in three of the civil population have been butchered, many
-civilians carried off to Germany to work in the fields, and those who
-are left behind forced to dig trenches for their captors while their
-wives and daughters are handed over to the lust of the soldiery, and
-their movable property transported. It is difficult to see how this
-differs in anything but name from the tragic fate of those unhappy
-communities who in the laconic phrase of the ancient world passed _sub
-corona_ and were sold by auction. All this differs from the practices
-of the ancient world in nothing except a certain affectation, the one
-concession to modern sentiment being a studious defamation by the
-Germans of the people whom they ravish and despoil. It seems to me that
-bad as the German crimes are the German justification for them is even
-worse. For it betrays a real corruption of mind. The ancients were
-often brutal but they were never hypocritical.
-
-
-The Bankruptcy of The Hague Conventions.
-
-What hope then can there be of a restoration of the comity of European
-nations, and the re-establishment of the Hague Conventions? I confess I
-can see none. The German Empire was conceived in duplicity and brought
-forth in war, and three times within living memory, as Sir Edward Grey
-has reminded us, she has wantonly provoked war in Europe in pursuance
-of her predatory designs. I can see no way out of the present travail
-except an armed peace, with the elimination as its basis for a long
-time to come of Germany from the councils of Europe. What hope of
-understanding can there be with a nation which does not observe the
-ordinary rules of diplomatic intercourse, that _jus fetiale_ which
-even the ancient world regarded as sacred? The world has seen with
-stupefaction--there has, I think, been no such case for hundreds of
-years--the Ambassador of the Austrian Government taking advantage of
-his immunities and sovereign character to suborn seditious conspiracy
-in the State to which he was accredited?[74] It is difficult to believe
-that this case now stands alone. Conventions with such a Power are
-both a delusion and a snare. They delude us with an appearance of
-agreement where none exists. In unscrupulous hands, the more precise
-and technical they are, the more do they lend themselves to casuistry,
-adding, as some one has said, the terrors of law to the horrors of war.
-I am afraid that such conventions are now hopelessly discredited. I
-doubt if we shall hear very much in future of the distinction between
-combatants and non-combatants, or of the sanctity of the _levée en
-masse_ as a medium of lawful transition from the one to the other;
-he who studies the German White Book on hostilities in Belgium will
-see how easily a belligerent, if he be so minded, can dispose with a
-quibble of the obligations to respect an improvised force which has
-“no time” to organise. A belligerent contemplating a sudden attack
-and a belligerent having to meet it will entertain very different
-conceptions as to what is meant by “no time.” War has, indeed, come to
-be, as von der Goltz prophesied it would be, a war not between armies
-but between peoples, and we are further than ever from the oft-quoted
-maxim of Rousseau that “War is not a relation of Man to Man but of
-States to States,” in which particular individuals are enemies only by
-the accident of a uniform. That was the voice of Individualism; but
-States grow more and more collectivist, and never so collectivist as in
-war. If, as an eminent writer has remarked, “out of the inner life of a
-nation comes its foreign policy,” so, we may add, out of its municipal
-law, its military usages, and its economic necessities will come its
-construction of international law.
-
-
-The Effect on International Law.
-
-It surely cannot be too clearly recognised that Germany’s successive
-violations of the laws of war have brought the whole fabric down like a
-house of cards. When the Germans began to sink neutral merchantmen by
-way of vindicating what they were pleased to call the freedom of the
-seas, England was forced to jettison much of that famous Declaration
-of London, which seemed at one time to be as complete an expression
-of a consensus of international opinion as the world of jurists had
-yet attained. We have gone further, as we were bound to do, and have
-so extended the theory of blockade as to qualify very considerably the
-Declaration of Paris. The Foreign Office has supported these departures
-by the logic of reprisals--in my humble opinion very properly--but
-“reprisals” are, juridically speaking, a kind of counsel of despair.
-In books on international law they receive a kind of shame-faced
-recognition; their place is always at the end and the chapter devoted
-to them is often brief and generally apologetic. For the jurist knows
-that they partake of the character of law about as much as trial by
-battle. The voice of America is a voice crying in the wilderness; both
-groups of belligerents deny the American contention that peace, and
-with it the commerce of neutrals, should govern the construction of the
-rules of war. How can it be otherwise in a struggle for existence? I
-very much doubt whether, for a long time to come, international lawyers
-can afford to assume, as they have been in the habit of doing, that
-peace, not war, is the normal conditions of nations. A nation which
-like Germany will not admit your major premises will certainly reject
-your conclusions when it suits her convenience. The dilemma therefore
-is inexorable: we can readmit Germany to international society and
-lower our standard of International Law to her level, or we can exclude
-her and raise it. There is no third course.
-
-These are the hard facts to which any one who attempts to take stock
-of the present situation and immediate prospects of International
-Law must address himself. International Law rests on a reciprocity of
-obligation; if one belligerent fails to observe it the other is, as a
-mere matter of self-preservation, released from its observance towards
-him, and is bound not by law but by morality, by his own conception
-of what he owes to his own self-respect. It is well that our own
-conception has been rather in advance of International Law than behind
-it, and long may it so remain. But in proportion as our conception is
-high and the German conception is low, it seems to me incumbent on us
-to place our hopes for the future in the strength of our right arm and
-in that alone. And if, in Burke’s noble phrase, we are to consider
-ourselves for the future “embodied with Europe” so that, sympathetic
-with the adversity or the happiness of mankind, we feel that nothing
-human is alien to us, then we must be prepared to support our treaty
-guarantees of the independence of the small nations with an adequate
-armed force; otherwise they will regard our friendship as an equivocal
-and compromising thing. If we are to offer them the protection of
-Europe in place of the suzerainty of Germany, we must be in a position
-to honour our promissory notes or they will indeed be but a scrap of
-paper--a cruel and otiose encouragement to the weak to defy the strong.
-
-
-The German as Outlaw.
-
-As for Germany, I can see little hope except in a sentence of
-outlawry. Mere black-listing of the names of responsible German
-commanders, although worth doing (and I have reason to believe that at
-the French War Office it is being done) with a view to retribution,
-is not going to change the German character. We shall have to revise
-our notions of both municipal and international law as regards her.
-The tendency of English law has long been, as an acute jurist has
-pointed out,[75] to lay more emphasis on domicile than on nationality,
-the disabilities of the alien have been diminished almost to
-vanishing-point, and British citizenship itself could be had almost for
-the asking. Not of it need the alien knocking at our hospitable doors
-say, in the words of the chief captain, “With a great sum obtained I
-this freedom.” It has been made disastrously cheap. All that is likely
-to be changed. It is not a little significant that already the courts
-have begun to take judicial notice of the peculiar morality of the
-German and have expressly made it the basis of a decision extending the
-conception of what constitutes a prisoner of war.[76] And alone among
-the emergency legislation the drastic Aliens Act is not limited in its
-preamble, as are the other Acts, to the duration of the war. These
-things are portents. It is impossible to believe that a revolution
-more catastrophic than anything through which Europe has passed, a
-revolution beside which the French Revolution assumes the proportions
-of a storm in a tea-cup, can leave our conceptions of law, whether
-municipal or international, unchanged.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-Conclusion.
-
-I make no apology, and I trust that none is needed, for these
-speculations. Reports of atrocities can serve no useful purpose unless
-they move men to reflect no less resolutely than deeply upon what is to
-be done to deliver Europe from the scourge of their repetition. It may
-well be that my own reflections will seem cynical to one, depressing
-to another, arbitrary to a third. They are not the idols of the
-theatre, and in academic circles they may not be fashionable. But the
-catastrophe that has disturbed the dreams of the idealogues must teach
-jurists and statesmen to beware of the opiate of words and sacramental
-phrases. That, however, is a task which belongs to the future. The
-immediate enterprise is not for lawyers but for our gallant men in the
-field. They, and they alone, can lay the foundations of an enduring
-peace by an unremitting and inexorable war. They are the true ministers
-of justice.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-THE BRITISH ENQUIRY IN FRANCE
-
-
-In November of last year I was commissioned by the Secretary of State
-for Home Affairs to undertake the investigation in France into the
-alleged breaches of the laws of war by the German troops, the inquiries
-in England being separately conducted by others. The results of my
-investigation were communicated to the Home Office, in the form of
-confidential reports and of depositions, diaries, proclamations, and
-other _pièces justificatives_, and were in turn submitted to the
-Committee appointed by the Prime Minister and presided over by Lord
-Bryce. The Committee made liberal use of this material, but, owing to
-the exigencies of space and the necessity of selection, some of it
-remains unpublished, and I now propose to place it and the conclusions
-I draw from it before the public. Some part of it, and that part the
-most important--namely, that which establishes proofs of a deliberate
-policy of atrocity by responsible German officers--came into my hands
-too late for use by the Committee. Moreover, the Committee felt that
-their first duty was to Belgium, and consequently the portion of the
-inquiry which related to France, and in particular to outrages upon
-British soldiers in France, occupies a comparatively small place in
-their publications. In this article I therefore confine myself to the
-latter branch of the inquiry, and the reader will understand that,
-except where otherwise stated, the documents here set out are now
-published for the first time.[77]
-
-My investigations extended over a period of four or five months.
-The first six weeks were spent in visiting the base hospitals and
-convalescent camps at Boulogne and Rouen, and the hospitals at Paris;
-during the remaining three months I was attached to the General
-Headquarters Staff of the British Expeditionary Force. In the course
-of my inquiries in the hospitals and camps I orally interrogated some
-two or three thousand officers and soldiers,[78] representing almost
-every regiment in the British armies and all of whom had recently been
-engaged on active service in the field. The whole of these inquiries
-were conducted by me personally, but my inquiries at headquarters were
-of a much more systematic character. There, owing to the courtesy
-of Lieutenant-General Sir Archibald Murray, the late Chief of the
-General Staff, I had the assistance of the various services--in
-particular the Adjutant-General, the Provost-Marshal, the Director of
-Military Intelligence, the Director of Medical Services and their
-respective staffs--and also of the civil authorities, within the area
-at present occupied by the British armies, such as the sous-prefets,
-the procureurs de la République, the commissaries de police, and the
-maires of the communes. In this way I was enabled not only to obtain
-corroboration of the statements taken down in the base hospitals in the
-earlier stages of my inquiry, but also to make a close local study of
-the behaviour of the German troops towards the civil population during
-their occupation of the districts recently evacuated by them.[79] In
-pursuance of this latter inquiry I visited every town and commune
-of any importance now in our occupation and lately occupied by the
-Germans, including places within a few hundred yards of the German
-lines. As regards the conduct of the German troops in the earlier
-stages of the campaign and in other parts of France, I confined my
-inquiries to incidents which actually came under the observation of
-our own troops during or after the battles of Mons, the Marne, and
-the Aisne, and did not extend them to include the testimony of the
-French civil authorities, as I did not consider it part of my duty to
-attempt to do what was already being done by the Commission of Inquiry
-instituted by the President of the Council. But I freely availed
-myself of opportunities of corroboration of English evidence from
-French sources where such sources were readily accessible, and, by the
-courtesy of the French Ministry of War, who placed a Staff officer and
-a military car at my disposal, I was enabled to go over the ground to
-the north-east of Paris covered by our troops in their advance to the
-Aisne and to obtain confirmation of many incidents already related
-to me by British officers and soldiers. It was also my privilege
-frequently to meet M. Mollard, of the French Commission, and to examine
-for myself the depositions on oath and _pièces justificatives_ on which
-the first Reports of the Commission are based, and which are as yet
-unpublished. In these different ways I have been enabled to obtain an
-extensive view of the whole field of inquiry and to arrive at certain
-general conclusions which may be of some value.
-
-
-Methods of Inquiry.
-
-My method of inquiry was twofold--I availed myself of both oral
-evidence and written evidence. As regards the former, the evidence
-taken at the base hospitals was wholly of this character. The method
-which I adopted in taking it was as follows:
-
-I made it a rule to explain to the soldier or officer at the outset
-that the inquiry was an official one, and that he must be prepared to
-put his name to any testimony he might elect to give.
-
-I allowed the soldier to tell his story in his own way and in his
-own words, but after, or in the course of, the recital, I always
-cross-examined him as to details, inquiring in particular (1) whether
-he directly witnessed the event himself; (2) what was the date and
-place of the occurrence--to establish these I have frequently gone over
-the operations with the witness with the aid of a military map and a
-diary of the campaign; (3) whether, in the case of hearsay evidence,
-he heard the story direct from the subject of it, and, in particular,
-whether he was versed in the language employed; (4) whether he could
-give me the name of any person or persons with him, particularly
-officers, who also witnessed the event or heard the story.
-
-After such cross-examination I then took down the narrative, if
-satisfied that it possessed any value, read it over to the soldier, and
-then obtained his signature. This, however, was often only the first
-stage, as I have not infrequently been able to obtain confirmation
-of the evidence so obtained by subsequent inquiries at General or
-Divisional Headquarters, either among members of the staff or from
-company officers or from the civil authorities. For example, hearsay
-evidence of rape (and I always regarded such evidence as inconclusive
-of itself) tendered to me by soldiers at the base hospitals received
-very striking confirmation in the depositions of the victims on oath
-which had been taken by the civil authorities at Bailleul, Metteren,
-and elsewhere, and which were subsequently placed at my disposal.
-Personal inquiries made by me among the maires and curés of the
-communes where particular incidents were alleged to have occurred
-resulted in similar confirmation. So, too, the Indian witnesses whom
-I examined at the base hospital were at my request subsequently
-re-examined, when they had rejoined their units, by the Intelligence
-Officers attached to the Indian Corps, and with much the same results.
-Corroborative evidence as to a policy of discrimination practised by
-the German officers in favour of Indians was also obtained from the
-record of statements volunteered by a German prisoner of the 112th
-Regiment and placed at my disposal by our Intelligence Officers.
-
-The general impression left in my mind by these subsequent inquiries
-at head-quarters as to the value of the statements made to me earlier
-by soldiers in hospital is that those statements were true. There is
-a tendency in some quarters to depreciate the value of the testimony
-of the British soldier, but the degree of its value depends a good
-deal on the capacity in which, and the person to whom, the soldier is
-addressing himself. In writing letters home or in talking to solicitous
-visitors the soldier is one person; in giving evidence in an official
-inquiry he is quite another. I have had opportunities when attending
-field courts-martial of seeing something of the way in which soldiers
-give evidence, and I see no reason to suppose that the soldier is any
-less reliable than the average civilian witness in a court of common
-law. Indeed, the moment I made it clear to the soldiers that my inquiry
-was an official one they became very cautious and deliberate in their
-statements, often correcting themselves or referring to their diaries
-(of which they usually take great care), or qualifying the narration
-with the statement “I did not see it myself.” It need hardly be said
-that these observations as to the credibility of the soldiers apply
-no less to that of the officers. And it is worthy of remark that,
-apart from individual cases of corroboration of a soldier’s evidence
-by that of an officer, the burden of the evidence in the case of each
-class is the same. Where officers do not testify to the same thing as
-the soldiers, they testify to similar things. The cumulative effect
-produced on my mind is that of uniform experience.
-
-I have often found the statements so made subsequently corroborated; I
-have rarely, if ever, found them contradicted. I ascribe this result
-to my having applied rigid rules as to the reception of evidence in
-the first instance. I have always taken into account the peculiar
-receptivity of minds fatigued and overwrought by the strain of battle
-to the influences of “suggestion,” whether in the form of newspapers or
-of oral gossip. It sometimes, but not often, happened that one could
-recognise the same story in a different investiture, although appearing
-at first sight to be a different occurrence. Or, again, it may happen
-that a story undergoes elaboration in the process of transmission until
-it looks worse than it originally was. So, too, a case of apparent
-outrage may admit of several explanations; it may happen, for example,
-in the case of a suspicious use of the white flag that the act of
-one party of Germans in raising it and of another party in taking
-advantage of it were conceivably independent of one another. Cases of
-the shelling of “undefended” places, of churches, and of hospitals, I
-have always disregarded if our men or guns were or lately had been
-in the vicinity; and it may easily happen that a case of firing on
-stretcher-bearers or ambulance waggons is due to the impossibility of
-discrimination in the midst of a general engagement. Wherever any of
-these features appeared to be present I rejected the evidence--not
-always nor necessarily because I doubted its veracity, but because I
-had misgivings as to its value.
-
-
-Outrages upon Combatants in the Field.
-
-Lord Bryce’s Committee, with that scrupulous fairness which so
-honourably distinguishes their Report, have stated that:
-
-“We have no evidence to show whether and in what cases orders proceeded
-from the officer in command to give no quarter, but there are some
-instances in which persons obviously desiring to surrender were
-nevertheless killed.”
-
-This is putting the case with extreme moderation, as the evidence
-at the disposal of the Committee, showing, as it did, that such
-barbarities were frequently committed when the German troops were
-present in force, raised a considerable presumption that they were
-authorised by company and platoon commanders at least, if not in
-pursuance of brigade orders. But after the Committee had concluded
-its labours, and, unfortunately, too late for its consideration, I
-succeeded, as the result of a long and patient investigation, in
-obtaining evidence which establishes beyond reasonable doubt that the
-outrages upon combatants in the field were committed by the express
-orders of responsible officers such as brigade and company commanders.
-The nature of that evidence (which is here published for the first
-time) I will disclose in a moment. But before doing so I will present
-the conclusions I had previously arrived at by a process of induction
-from individual cases. It will then be seen how the deductive method
-of proof from the evidence of general orders confirms the presumption
-raised by the evidence of particular instances.
-
-A German military writer of great authority[80] predicted some years
-ago that the next war would be one of inconceivable violence. The
-prophecy appears only too true as regards the conduct of German troops
-in the field; it has rarely been distinguished by that chivalry which
-is supposed to characterise the freemasonry of arms. One of our most
-distinguished Staff officers remarked to me that the Germans have no
-sense of honour in the field, and the almost uniform testimony of our
-officers and men induces me to believe that the remark is only too
-true. Abuse of the white flag has been very frequent, especially in
-the earlier stages of the campaign on the Aisne, when our officers,
-not having been disillusioned by bitter experience, acted on the
-assumption that they had to deal with an honourable opponent. Again and
-again the white flag was put up, and when a company of ours advanced
-unsuspectingly and without supports to take prisoners, the Germans
-who had exhibited the token of surrender parted their ranks to make
-room for a murderous fire from machine-guns concealed behind them.
-Or, again, the flag was exhibited in order to give time for supports
-to come up. It not infrequently happened that our company officers,
-advancing unarmed to confer with the German company commander in such
-cases, were shot down as they approached. The Camerons, the West Yorks,
-the Coldstreams, the East Lancs, the Wiltshires, the South Wales
-Borderers, in particular, suffered heavily in these ways. In all these
-cases they were the victims of organised German units, _i.e._ companies
-or battalions, acting under the orders of responsible officers.
-
-There can, moreover, be no doubt that the respect of the German
-troops for the Geneva Convention is but intermittent.[81] Cases of
-deliberate firing on stretcher-bearers are, according to the universal
-testimony of our officers and men, of frequent occurrence. It is almost
-certain death to attempt to convey wounded men from the trenches
-over open ground except under cover of night. A much more serious
-offence, however, is the deliberate killing of the wounded as they
-lie helpless and defenceless on the field of battle. This is so grave
-a charge that were it not substantiated by the considered statements
-of officers, non-commissioned officers, and men, one would hesitate
-to believe it. But even after rejecting, as one is bound to do, cases
-which may be explained by accident, mistake, or the excitement of
-action, there remains a large residuum of cases which can only be
-explained by deliberate malice. No other explanation is possible when,
-as has not infrequently happened, men who have been wounded by rifle
-fire in an advance, and have had to be left during a retirement for
-reinforcements, are discovered, in our subsequent advance, with nine
-or ten bayonet wounds or with their heads beaten in by the butt-ends
-of rifles. Such cases could not have occurred, the enemy being
-present in force, without the knowledge of superior officers. Indeed,
-I have before me evidence which goes to show that German officers
-have themselves acted in similar fashion. Some of the cases reveal a
-leisurely barbarity which proves great deliberation; cases such as the
-discovery of bodies of despatch-riders burnt with petrol or “pegged
-out” with lances, or of soldiers with their faces stamped upon by the
-heel of a boot, or of a guardsman found with numerous bayonet wounds
-evidently inflicted as he was in the act of applying a field dressing
-to a bullet wound. There also seems no reason to doubt the independent
-statements of men of the Loyal North Lancs, whom I interrogated on
-different occasions, that the men of one of their companies were
-killed on December 20th after they had surrendered and laid down their
-arms.[82] To what extent prisoners have been treated in this manner it
-is impossible to say; dead men tell no tales, but an exceptionally able
-Intelligence Officer at the head-quarters of the Cavalry Corps informed
-me that it is believed that when British prisoners are taken in small
-parties they are put to death in cold blood. Certain it is that our
-men when captured are kicked, robbed of all they possess, threatened
-with death if they will not give information, and in some cases forced
-to dig trenches. The evidence I have taken from soldiers at the base
-hospitals on these points is borne out by evidence taken at the Front
-immediately after such occurrences by the Deputy Judge-Advocate
-General, an Assistant Provost-Marshal, and a captain in the Sherwood
-Foresters, and in the opinion of these officers the evidence which
-they took, and which they subsequently placed at my disposal, is
-reliable.[83]
-
-
-The Proofs of Policy.
-
-The question as to how far these outrages are attributable to policy
-and superior orders becomes imperative. It was at first difficult to
-answer. For a long time I did not find, nor did I expect to find, any
-documentary orders to that effect. Such orders, if given at all, were
-much more likely to be verbal, for it is extremely improbable that the
-German authorities would be so unwise as to commit them to writing.
-But the outrages upon combatants were so numerous and so collective in
-character that I began to suspect policy at a very early stage in my
-investigations. My suspicions were heightened by the significant fact
-that exhaustive inquiries which I made among Indian native officers
-and men in the hospital ships in port at Boulogne, and at the base
-hospitals, seemed to indicate that experiences of outrage were as
-rare among the Indian troops as they were common among the British.
-The explanation was fairly obvious, inasmuch as many of these Indian
-witnesses who had fallen into German hands testified to me that the
-German officers[84] seized the occasion to assure them that Germany was
-animated by the most friendly feelings towards them, and more than once
-dismissed them with an injunction not to fight against German troops
-and to bring over their comrades to the German side. For example, a
-sepoy in the 9th Bhopals testified to me as follows:
-
- “I and three others were found wounded by the Germans. They
- bound up our wounds and invited us to join them, offering us
- money and land. I answered, ‘I, who have eaten the King’s salt,
- cannot do this thing and thus bring sorrow and shame upon my
- people.’ The Germans took our chupattis, and offered us of
- their bread in return. I said, ‘I am a Brahmin and cannot touch
- it.’ They then left us, saying that if we were captured again
- they would kill us.”
-
-There was other evidence to the same effect. Eventually I obtained
-proofs confirming my suspicions, and I will now proceed to set them out.
-
-On May 3rd I visited the Ministry of War in Paris at the invitation of
-the French military authorities, and was received by M. le Capitaine
-René Petit, Chef de Service du Contentieux, who conducted me to the
-department where the diaries of German prisoners were kept. I made a
-brief preliminary examination of them, and discovered the following
-passage (which I had photographed) in the diary of a German N.C.O.,
-Göttsche, of the 85th Infantry Regiment (the IXth Corps), fourth
-company detached for service, under date “Okt. 6, 1914, bei Antwerpen”:
-
- “Der Herr Hauptmann rief uns um sich und sagte: ‘In dem
- Fort, das zu nehmen ist, sind aller Wahrscheinlichkeit nach
- Engländer. Ich wünsche aber keinen gefangenen Engländer bei der
- Komp. zu sehen.’ Ein allgemeiner Bravo der Zustimmung war die
- Antwort.”
-
- (“The Captain called us to him and said: ‘In the fortress
- [_i.e._, Antwerp] which we have to take there are in all
- probability Englishmen. But I do not want to see any Englishmen
- prisoners in the hands of this company.’ A general ‘Bravo’ of
- assent was the answer.”)
-
-This malignant frenzy against British troops, so carefully instilled,
-is borne out by a passage in another diary, now in the possession of
-the French Ministry of War, which was found on April 22nd on the body
-of Richard Gerhold, of the 71st Regiment of Infantry of the Reserve,
-Fourth Army Corps, who was killed in September at Nouvron:
-
- “Auch hier kommen ja Sachen vor, was auch nicht sein darf,
- kommt aber doch vor. Grosse Greultaten kommen natürlich an
- Engländern und Belgiern vor. Nun da wird eben jeder ohne Gnaden
- niedergeknallt, aber wehe dem armen Deutschen der in ihre Hände
- kommt....”
-
- (“Here also things occur which should not be. Great atrocities
- are of course committed upon Englishmen and Belgians; every one
- of them is now knocked on the head without mercy. But woe to
- the poor German who falls into their hands.”)
-
-As regards the last sentence in this diary, which is one long chapter
-of horrors and betrays a ferocious credulity, it is worthy of remark
-that I have seen at the French Ministry of War the diary[85] of a
-German N.C.O., named Schulze, who, judging by internal evidence, was a
-man of exceptional intelligence, in which the writer refers to tales of
-French and Belgian atrocities circulated among the men by his superior
-officers. He shrewdly adds that he believes the officers invented these
-stories in order to prevent him and his comrades from surrendering.
-
-A less conclusive passage, but a none the less suspicious one, is
-to be found in a diary now in my possession. It is the diary of an
-Unter-offizier, named Ragge, of the 158th Regiment, and contains (under
-date October 21st) the following:
-
- “Wir verfolgten den Gegner soweit wir ihn sahen. Da haben wir
- machen Engländer abgeknallt. Die Engländer lagen wie gesäht am
- Boden. Die noch lebenden Engländer im Schützengraben wurden
- erstochen oder erschossen. Unsere Komp. machte 61 Gefangene.”
-
-Which may be translated:
-
- “We pursued the enemy as far as we saw him. We ‘knocked out’
- many English. The English lay on the ground as if sown there.
- Those of the Englishmen who were still alive in the trenches
- were stuck or shot. Our company made 61 prisoners.”[86]
-
-So far I have only dealt with the acts of small German units--_i.e._
-companies of infantry. I now come to the most damning proofs of a
-policy of coldblooded murder of wounded and prisoners, initiated and
-carried out by a whole brigade under the orders of a Brigadier-General.
-This particular investigation took me a long time, but the results
-are, I think conclusive. It may be remembered that some months ago
-the French military authorities published in the French newspapers
-what purported to be the text of an order issued by a German
-Brigadier-General, named Stenger, commanding the 58th Brigade, in
-which he ordered his troops to take no prisoners and to put to death
-without mercy every one who fell into their hands, whether wounded
-and defenceless or not. The German Government immediately denounced
-the alleged order as a forgery. I determined to see whether I could
-establish its authenticity, and in February last I obtained a copy of
-the original from M. Mollard, of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, who
-is a member of the Commission appointed by the French Government to
-inquire into the alleged German atrocities. The text of that order was
-as follows:
-
- “Befehl (Armee-befehl) vom 26. Aug. 1914, gegen 4 Uhr
- nachm. wie er von Führer der 7 Komp. Reg. 112 (Infant.) bei
- Thionville, am Eingang des Waldes von Saint-Barbe, seinen
- Truppen als Brigade-oder Armee-befehl gegeben wurde:
-
- “Von heute ab werden keine Gefangene mehr gemacht Sämtliche
- Gefangene werden niedergemacht. Verwundete ob mit Waffen
- oder wehrlos niedergemacht. Gefangene auch in grösseren
- geschlossenen Formationen werden niedergemacht. Es bleibt kein
- Mann lebend hinter uns.”
-
- (“Army Order of 26 Aug., 1914, about 4 p.m., such as was given
- to his troops as a Brigade or Army Order by the leader of the
- 7th Company of the 112th Regiment of Infantry at Thionville, at
- the entrance of the wood of Saint Barbe.
-
- “To date from this day no prisoners will be made any longer.
- All the prisoners will be executed. The wounded, whether armed
- or defenceless, will be executed. Prisoners, even in large and
- compact formations, will be executed. Not a man will be left
- alive behind us.”)
-
-Taking this alleged order as my starting-point, I began to make
-inquiries at British Head-quarters as to the existence of any
-information about the doings of the 112th Regiment. I soon found that
-there was good reason to suspect it. Our Intelligence Department placed
-in my hands the records of the examination of two men of this regiment
-who had been captured by us. One of them volunteered a statement to
-one of our Intelligence Officers on November 23rd to the effect that
-his regiment had orders to treat Indians well, but were allowed to
-treat British prisoners as they pleased. This man’s testimony appeared
-to be reliable, as statements he made on other points, _i.e._, as to
-the German formations, were subsequently found to be true, and his
-information as to discrimination in the treatment of Indians entirely
-bore out the conclusions I had already arrived at on that particular
-point. The German witness in question further stated that 65 out of 150
-British prisoners were killed in cold blood by their escort on or about
-October 23rd on the road to Lille, and that the escort were praised
-for their conduct. Other German prisoners have, I may add, also made
-statements that they had orders to kill all the English who fell into
-their hands.
-
-The evidence of this man of the 112th Regiment was as explicit and
-assured as it could be. But the matter did not stop there. At a
-later date an officer of the same regiment fell into our hands, in
-whose field note-book we found the memorandum “Keine Gefangene” (“No
-prisoners”). He was immediately cross-examined as to the meaning of
-this passage, but he had a plausible explanation ready. It was to the
-effect that his men were not to make the capture of prisoners a pretext
-for retiring with them to the rear; but, having disarmed them, were to
-leave them to be taken back by the supports.
-
-But at the end of April--too late, unfortunately, for use by Lord
-Bryce’s Committee--one of our Intelligence Officers placed before
-me the following entry in the field note-book of a German prisoner,
-Reinhart Brenneisen,[87] reservist, belonging to the 4th Company, 112th
-Regiment, and dated in August (the same month as appears on the face of
-the order in question):
-
- “Auch kam Brigadebefehl sämtliche Franzosen ob verwundet oder
- nicht, die uns in die Hände fielen, sollten erschossen werden.
- Es dürfte keine Gefangenen gemacht werden.”
-
- (“Then came a brigade order that all French, whether wounded
- or not, who fell into our hands, were to be shot. No prisoners
- were to be made.”)
-
-This, I think, may be said to put the reality of the brigade order in
-question beyond doubt.
-
-The cumulative effect of this evidence, coupled with the statements of
-so many of our men who claim to have been eye-witnesses of wholesale
-bayoneting of the wounded, certainly confirms suspicions of the
-gravest kind as to such acts having been done by authority. Neither
-the temperament of the German soldier nor the character of German
-discipline (_furchtbar streng_--“frightfully strict”--as a German
-prisoner put it to me) makes it probable that the German soldiers acted
-on their own initiative. It would, in any case, be incredible that so
-many cases of outrage could be sufficiently explained by any law of
-averages, or by the idiosyncrasies of the “bad characters” present in
-every large congregation of men.
-
-
-Treatment of Civil Population.
-
-The subject-matter of the inquiry may be classified according as
-it relates to: (1) ill-treatment of the civil population, and (2)
-breaches of the laws of war in the field. As regards the first it
-is not too much to say that the Germans pay little respect to life
-and none to property. I say nothing of the monstrous policy of
-vicarious responsibility laid down by them in the Proclamations as
-to the treatment of hostages which I forwarded to the Committee and
-which I left to the Committee to examine; I confine myself to the
-practices which have come under my observation.[88] Here it is clear
-that the treatment of civilians is regulated by no more rational or
-humane policy than that of intimidation or, even worse, of sullen
-vindictiveness. As the German troops passed through the communes and
-towns of the arrondissements of Ypres, Hazebrouck, Bethune, and Lille,
-they shot indiscriminately at the innocent spectators of their march;
-the peasant tilling his fields, the refugee tramping the roads, and
-the workman returning to his home. To be seen was often dangerous, to
-attempt to escape being seen was invariably fatal. Old men and boys
-and even women and young girls were shot like rabbits. The slightest
-failure to comply with the peremptory demands of the invader has been
-punished with instant death. The curé of Pradelle, having failed to
-find the key of the church tower, was put against the wall and shot; a
-shepherd at a lonely farmhouse near Rebais who failed to produce bread
-for the German troops had his head blown off by a rifle; a baker at
-Moorslede who attempted to escape was suffocated by German soldiers
-with his own scarf; a young mother at Bailleul who was unable to
-produce sufficient coffee to satisfy the demands of twenty-three German
-soldiers had her baby seized by one of the latter and its head dipped
-in scalding water; an old man of seventy-seven years of age at La Ferté
-Gaucher who attempted to protect two women in his house from outrage
-was killed with a rifle shot.
-
-I select these instances from my notes at random--they could be
-multiplied many times--as indications of the temper of the German
-troops. They might, perhaps, be dismissed as the unauthorised acts of
-small patrols were it not that there is only too much evidence to show
-that the soldiers are taught by their superiors to set no value upon
-human life, and things have been done which could not have been done
-without superior orders. For example, at Bailleul,[89] La Gorgue, and
-Doulieu, where no resistance of any kind was offered to the German
-troops, and where the latter were present in force under the command
-of commissioned officers, civilians were taken in groups, and after
-being forced to dig their own graves were shot by firing parties in
-the presence of an officer. At Doulieu,[90] which is a small village,
-eleven civilians were shot in this way; they were strangers to the
-place, and it was only by subsequent examination of the papers found
-on their bodies that some of them were identified as inhabitants of
-neighbouring villages. If these men had been guilty of any act of
-hostility it is not clear why they were not shot at once in their
-own villages, and inquiries at some of the villages from which they
-were taken have revealed no knowledge of any act of the kind. It is,
-however, a common practice for the German troops to seize the male
-inhabitants (especially those of military age) of the places they
-occupy and take them away on their retreat. Twenty-five were so taken
-from Bailleul and nothing has been heard of them since. There is only
-too much reason to suppose that the same fate has overtaken them as
-that which befell the unhappy men executed at Doulieu. I believe the
-explanation of these sinister proceedings to be that the men were
-compelled to dig trenches for the enemy, to give information as to
-the movement of their own troops, and to act as guides (all clearly
-practices which are a breach of the laws of war and of the Hague
-Regulations), and then, their presence being inconvenient and their
-knowledge of the enemy’s positions and movements compromising, they
-were put to death. This is not a mere surmise. The male inhabitants of
-Warneton were forced to dig trenches for the enemy, and an inhabitant
-of Merris was compelled to go with the German troops and act as
-a guide; it is notorious that the official manual of the German
-General Staff, _Kriegsbrauch in Landskriege_, condones, and indeed
-indoctrinates, such breaches of the laws of war. British soldiers who
-were taken prisoners by the Germans and subsequently escaped were
-compelled by their captors to dig trenches, and in a field note-book
-found on a soldier of the 100th Saxon Body Grenadiers (XIIth Corps)
-occurs the following significant passage:
-
- “My two prisoners worked hard at digging trenches. At midday
- I got the order to rejoin at village with my prisoners. I was
- very glad, as I had been ordered to shoot them both as the
- French attacked. Thank God it was not necessary.”
-
-In this connexion it is important to observe that the German policy of
-holding a whole town or village responsible for the acts of isolated
-individuals, whether by the killing of hostages or by decimation or by
-a wholesale _battue_ of the inhabitants, has undoubtedly resulted in
-the grossest and most irrelevant cruelties. A single shot fired in or
-near a place occupied by the Germans--it may be a shot from a French
-patrol or a German rifle let off by accident or mistake or in a drunken
-affray--at once places the whole community in peril, and it seems to be
-at once assumed that the civil inhabitants are guilty unless they can
-prove themselves innocent. This was clearly the case at Armentières.
-Frequently, as the field note-book of a Saxon officer testifies, they
-are not allowed the opportunity. Indeed there seems some reason to
-suppose that the German troops hold the civil inhabitants responsible
-even for the acts of lawful belligerents, and, as my inquiries at
-Merris and Messines go to show, a French patrol cannot operate in
-the vicinity of a French or Belgian village without exposing the
-inhabitants to sanguinary punishment or predatory fines. There is not
-the slightest evidence to show that French civilians have fired upon
-German troops, and in spite of the difficulty of proving a negative
-there is a good deal of reason to reject such a supposition. Throughout
-the communes of the region of Northern France which I have investigated
-notices were posted up at the mairie requiring all the inhabitants
-to deposit any arms in their possession with the civil authorities,
-and the orders appear to have been complied with, as they were very
-strictly enforced.
-
-In this matter of holding the civil population responsible with their
-lives for anything that may prove “inconvenient” (_gênant_), to quote
-a German Proclamation, to the German troops, the German commanders
-seem to have no sense of cause and effect. At Coulommiers, so the
-Mayor informed me, they threatened to shoot him because the gas supply
-gave out. In a town which I visited close to the German lines (and the
-name of which I suppress by request of the civil authorities for fear
-of a vindictive bombardment), the Mayor, who was under arrest in the
-guardroom, was threatened with death because a signal-bell rang at the
-railway station, and was in imminent peril until it was proved that
-the act was due to the clumsiness of a German soldier; and an exchange
-of shots between two drunken soldiers, resulting in the death of one
-of them, was made the ground of an accusation that the inhabitants
-had fired on the troops, the Mayor’s life being again in peril. Where
-the life of the civilian is held so cheap, it is not surprising that
-the German soldier, himself the subject of a fearful discipline, is
-under a strong temptation to escape punishment for the consequences of
-his own careless or riotous or drunken behaviour by attributing those
-consequences to the civil population, for the latter is invariably
-suspected.
-
-
-Outrages upon Women--The German Occupation of Bailleul.
-
-When life is held so cheap, it is not surprising that honour and
-property are not held more dear. Outrages upon the honour of women by
-German soldiers have been so frequent that it is impossible to escape
-the conviction that they have been condoned and indeed encouraged by
-German officers. As regards this matter I have made a most minute
-study of the German occupation of Bailleul. This place was occupied
-by a regiment of German Hussars in October for a period of eight
-days. During the whole of that period the town was delivered over
-to the excesses of a licentious soldiery and was left in a state of
-indescribable filth. There were at least thirty cases of outrages
-on girls and young married women, authenticated by sworn statements
-of witnesses and generally by medical certificates of injury. It is
-extremely probable that, owing to the natural reluctance of women to
-give evidence in cases of this kind, the actual number of outrages
-largely exceeds this. Indeed, the leading physician of the town, Dr.
-Bels, puts the number as high as sixty. At least five officers were
-guilty of such offences, and where the officers set the example the
-men followed. The circumstances were often of a peculiarly revolting
-character; daughters were outraged in the presence of their mothers,
-and mothers in the presence or the hearing of their little children. In
-one case, the facts of which are proved by evidence which would satisfy
-any court of law, a young girl of nineteen was violated by one officer
-while the other held her mother by the throat and pointed a revolver,
-after which the two officers exchanged their respective rôles.[91] The
-officers and soldiers usually hunted in couples, either entering the
-houses under pretence of seeking billets, or forcing the doors by open
-violence. Frequently the victims were beaten and kicked, and invariably
-threatened with a loaded revolver if they resisted. The husband or
-father of the women and girls was usually absent on military service;
-if one was present he was first ordered away under some pretext; and
-disobedience of civilians to German orders, however improper, is always
-punished with instant death. In several cases little children heard the
-cries and struggles of their mother in the adjoining room to which she
-had been carried by a brutal exercise of force. No attempt was made to
-keep discipline, and the officers, when appealed to for protection,
-simply shrugged their shoulders. Horses were stabled in saloons; shops
-and private houses were looted (there are nine hundred authenticated
-cases of pillage). Some civilians were shot and many others carried off
-into captivity. Of the fate of the latter nothing is known, but the
-worst may be suspected.
-
-The German troops were often drunk and always insolent. But
-significantly enough, the bonds of discipline thus relaxed were
-tightened at will and hardly a single straggler was left behind.
-
-Inquiries in other places, in the villages of Meteren, Oultersteen,
-and Nieppe, for example, establish the occurrence of similar outrages
-upon defenceless women, accompanied by every circumstance of disgusting
-barbarity. No civilian dare attempt to protect his wife or daughter
-from outrage. To be in possession of weapons of defence is to be
-condemned to instant execution, and even a village constable found in
-possession of a revolver (which he was required to carry in virtue
-of his office) was instantly shot at Westoutre. Roving patrols burnt
-farm-houses and turned the women and children out into the wintry
-and sodden fields with capricious cruelty and in pursuance of no
-intelligible military purpose.
-
-
-Private Property.
-
-As regards private property, respect for it among the German troops
-simply does not exist. By the universal testimony of every British
-officer and soldier whom I have interrogated the progress of German
-troops is like a plague of locusts over the land. What they cannot
-carry off they destroy. Furniture is thrown into the street, pictures
-are riddled with bullets or pierced by sword cuts, municipal registers
-burnt, the contents of shops scattered over the floor, drawers rifled,
-live stock slaughtered and the carcases left to rot in the fields.
-This was the spectacle which frequently confronted our troops on the
-advance to the Aisne and on their clearance of the German troops out of
-Northern France. Cases of petty larceny by German soldiers appear to
-be innumerable; they take whatever seizes their fancy, and leave the
-towns they evacuate laden like pedlars. Empty ammunition waggons were
-drawn up in front of private houses and filled with their contents for
-despatch to Germany.
-
-I have had the reports of the local commissaires of police placed
-before me, and they show that in smaller villages like those of Caestre
-and Merris, with a population of about 1,500 souls or less, pillaging
-to the extent of £4,000 and £6,000 was committed by the German troops.
-I speak here of robbery which does not affect to be anything else.
-But it is no uncommon thing to find extortion officially practised by
-the commanding officers under various more or less flimsy pretexts.
-One of these consists of holding a town or village up to ransom under
-pretence that shots have been fired at the German troops. Thus at
-the village of Merris a sum of £2,000 was exacted as a fine from the
-Mayor at the point of a revolver under this pretence, this village of
-1,159 inhabitants having already been pillaged to the extent of some
-£6,000 worth of goods. At La Gorgue, another small village, £2,000 was
-extorted under a threat that if it were not forthcoming the village
-would be burnt. At Warneton, a small village, a fine of £400 was
-levied. These fines were, it must be remembered, quite independent
-of the requisitions of supplies. As regards the latter, one of our
-Intelligence officers, whose duty it has been to examine the forms of
-receipt given by German officers and men for such requisitions, informs
-me that, while the receipts for small sums of 100 francs or less bore
-a genuine signature, those for large sums were invariably signed “Herr
-Hauptmann von Koepenick,” the simple peasants upon whom this fraud
-was practised being quite unaware that the signature has a classical
-fictitiousness in Germany.
-
-
-Observations on a Tour of the Marne and the Aisne.
-
-My investigations, in the company of a French Staff Officer, in the
-towns and villages of our line of march in that part of France which
-lies north-east of Paris revealed a similar spirit of pillage and
-wantonness. Coulommiers, a small town, was so thoroughly pillaged
-that the damage, so I was informed by the Maire, has been assessed at
-400,000 francs, a statement which bore out the evidence previously
-given me by our own men as to the spectacle of wholesale looting
-which they encountered when they entered that town. At Barcy, an
-insignificant village of no military importance, I was informed by
-the Maire that a German officer, accompanied by a soldier, entered
-the communal archives and deliberately burnt the municipal registers
-of births and deaths--obviously an exercise of pure spite. At
-Choisy-au-Bac, a little village pleasantly situated on the banks of the
-Aisne, which I visited in company with a French Staff Officer, I found
-that almost every house had been burnt out. This was one of the worst
-examples of deliberate incendiarism that I have come across. There
-had been no engagement, and there was not a trace of shell-fire or of
-bullet-marks upon the walls. Inquiries among the local gendarmerie,
-and such few of the homeless inhabitants as were left, pointed to the
-place having been set on fire by German soldiers in a spirit of pure
-wantonness. The German troops arrived one day in the late afternoon,
-and an officer, after inquiring of an inhabitant, who told me the
-story, the name of the village, noted it down, with the remark “Bien,
-nous le rôtirons ce soir.” At nine o’clock of the same evening they
-proceeded to “roast” it by breaking the windows of the houses and
-throwing into the interiors burning “pastilles,” apparently carried
-for the purpose, which immediately set everything alight. The local
-gendarme informed us that they also sprayed (_arrosé_) some of the
-houses with petrol to make them burn better. The humbler houses shared
-the fate of the more opulent, and cottage and mansion were involved in
-a common ruin. It seems quite clear that there was not the slightest
-pretext for this wanton behaviour, nor did the Germans allege one. They
-did not accuse the inhabitants of any hostile behaviour; the best proof
-of this is that they did not shoot any of them, except one who appears
-to have been shot by accident.
-
-A visit to Senlis in the course of the same tour fully confirmed
-all that the French Commission has already reported as to the cruel
-devastation wrought by the Germans in that unhappy town. The main
-street was one silent quarry of ruined houses burnt by the hands of the
-German soldiers, and hardly a soul was to be seen. Even cottages and
-concierges’ lodges had been set on fire. I have seen few sights more
-pitiful and none more desolate. Towns further east, such as Sermaizes,
-Nomeny, Gerbevillers, were razed to the ground with fire and sword and
-are as the Cities of the Plain.
-
-
-Bestiality of German Officers and Men.
-
-Before I leave the subject of the treatment of private property by
-the German troops, I should like to draw the attention of the reader
-to some unpleasant facts which throw a baneful light on the temper
-of German officers and men. If one thing is more clearly established
-than another by my inquiries among the officers of our Staff and
-divisional commands, it is that châteaux or private houses used as
-the head-quarters of German officers were frequently found to have
-been left in a state of bestial pollution, which can only be explained
-by gross drunkenness or filthy malice. Whichever be the explanation,
-the fact remains that, while to use the beds and the upholstery of
-private houses as a latrine is not an atrocity, it indicates a state
-of mind sufficiently depraved to commit one. Many of these incidents,
-related to me by our own officers from their own observations, are
-so disgusting that they are unfit for publication. They point to
-deliberate defilement.
-
-The public has been shocked by the evidence, accepted by the Committee
-as genuine, which tells of such mutilations of women and children as
-only the Kurds of Asia Minor had been thought capable of perpetrating.
-But the Committee were fully justified in accepting it--they could
-not do otherwise--and they have by no means published the whole.
-Pathologists can best supply the explanation of these crimes. I have
-been told by such that it is not at all uncommon in cases of rape
-or sexual excess to find that the criminal, when satiated by lust,
-attempts to murder or mutilate his victim. This is presumably the
-explanation--if one can talk of explanation--of outrages which would
-otherwise be incredible. The Committee hint darkly at perverted sexual
-instinct. Cases of sodomy and of the rape of little children did
-undoubtedly occur on a very large scale. Some of the worst things have
-never been published. This is not the time for mincing one’s words, but
-for plain speech. Disgusting though it is, I therefore do not hesitate
-to place on record an incident at Rebais related to me by the Mayor
-of Coulommiers in the presence of several of his fellow-townsmen with
-corroborative detail. A respectable woman in that town was seized by
-some Uhlans who intended to ravish her, but her condition made rape
-impossible. What followed is better described in French:
-
- “Mme. H----, cafetière à Rebais, mise nue par une patrouille
- allemande, obligée de parcourir ainsi toute sa maison, chassée
- dans la rue et obligée de regarder les cadavres de soldats
- anglais. Les allemands lui barbouillent la figure avec le sang
- de ses regles.”
-
-It is almost needless to say that the woman went mad. There is very
-strong reason to suspect that young girls were carried off to the
-trenches by licentious German soldiery, and there abused by hordes of
-savages and licentious men. People in hiding in the cellars of houses
-have heard the voices of women in the hands of German soldiers crying
-all night long until death or stupor ended their agonies. One of our
-officers, a subaltern in the sappers, heard a woman’s shrieks in the
-night coming from behind the German trenches near Richebourg l’Avoué;
-when we advanced in the morning and drove the Germans out, a girl was
-found lying naked on the ground “pegged out” in the form of a crucifix.
-I need not go on with this chapter of horrors. To the end of time it
-will be remembered, and from one generation to another, in the plains
-of Flanders, in the valleys of the Vosges, and on the rolling fields
-of the Marne, the oral tradition of men will perpetuate this story of
-infamy and wrong.
-
-
-Conclusion.
-
-I should say that in the above summary I have confined myself to the
-result of the inquiries I made at General Head-quarters and in the area
-of our occupation, and have not attempted to summarise the evidence
-I had previously taken from the British officers and soldiers at the
-base, as the latter may be left to speak for itself in the depositions
-already published by the Committee. The object of the summary is to
-show how far independent inquiries on the spot go to confirm it.
-The testimony of our soldiers as to the reign of terror which they
-found prevailing on their arrival in all the places from which they
-drove the enemy out was amply confirmed by these subsequent and local
-investigations.
-
-It will, of course, be understood that these inquiries of mine were
-limited in scope and can by no means claim to be exhaustive. For one
-thing, I was the only representative of the Home Office sent to France
-for this purpose; for another, I did not become attached to General
-Head-quarters until the beginning of February, and before that time
-little or nothing had been done in the way of systematic inquiry
-by the Staff, whose officers had other and more pressing duties to
-perform. By that time the testimony to many grave incidents, especially
-in the field, had perished with those who witnessed them and they
-remained but a sombre memory. The hearsay evidence of these things
-which was sometimes all that was left made an impression on my mind as
-deep as it was painful, but it would have been contrary to the rules of
-evidence, to which I have striven to conform, for me to take notice of
-it.
-
-Two things clearly emerge from this observation. One is that had there
-been from the beginning of the campaign a regular system of inquiry
-at General Head-quarters into these things, _pari passu_ with their
-occurrence, the volume of evidence, great though it is, would have been
-infinitely greater; the other, that, as there is only too much reason
-to suppose that with the growing vindictiveness of the enemy things
-will be worse before they are better, the case for the establishment of
-such a system throughout the continuance of the War is one that calls
-for serious consideration.
-
-Although I have some claims to write as a jurist I have here made
-no attempt to pray in aid the Hague Regulations in order to frame
-the counts of an indictment. The Germans have broken all laws, human
-and divine, and not even the ancient freemasonry of arms, whose
-honourable traditions are almost as old as war itself, has restrained
-them in their brutal and licentious fury. It is useless to attempt to
-discriminate between the people and their rulers; an abundance of
-diaries of soldiers in the ranks shows that all are infected with a
-common spirit. That spirit is pride, not the pride of high and pure
-endeavour, but that pride for which the Greeks found a name in the word
-ὕβρις, the insolence which knows no pity and feels no love. Long ago
-Renan warned Strauss of this canker which was eating into the German
-character. Pedants indoctrinated it, Generals instilled it, the Emperor
-preached it. The whole people were taught that war was a normal state
-of civilisation, that the lust of conquest and the arrogance of race
-were the most precious of the virtues. On this Dead Sea fruit the
-German people have been fed for a generation until they are rotten to
-the core.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-DOCUMENTARY
-
-
-
-
-I
-
- DEPOSITIONS AND STATEMENTS (FIFTY-SIX IN NUMBER) ILLUSTRATING
- BREACHES OF THE LAWS OF WAR BY THE GERMAN TROOPS, MAINLY
- OUTRAGES ON BRITISH SOLDIERS
-
- _Note._--These documents are here made public for the first
- time. They have not been published either in the Bryce Report
- or in the _Nineteenth Century and After_. I have selected the
- cases of Bailleul and Doulieu as typical of all the rest.
- Many other communes, _e.g._, Meteren, Steenwerck, La Gorgue,
- Vieux-Berquin, suffered a similar fate. As regards Bailleul
- itself I have given only one out of some twenty documents
- in my possession relating to the rapes committed there; the
- others are in no way inferior in authenticity, nor are they
- any less horrible. My object is not to multiply proofs, but
- to exemplify them. It will be observed that the evidence of
- British soldiers here given is that of eye-witnesses, except,
- of course, in cases of rape. As regards the latter, the hearsay
- evidence is fully corroborated by the French depositions of the
- victims.--J. H. M.
-
-
-(1)
-
-Private R. R----, 1st Royal Scots:--At Ypres, on November 11th (the day
-I was wounded), the Germans had made an attack on the trenches in front
-of us--we were back in the dug-outs. We went up to support and drove
-them back. In the trench were about a dozen Germans, our men having
-retired towards us. The Germans were kneeling with one hand up to let
-us see that they had surrendered; so we thought it was all right, and
-we turned our attention to firing at those who were retiring. One of
-the officers of our regiment, but not of my company, was at the side
-of the trench and had picked up a rifle to fire at the retreating
-Germans. I saw one of the Germans who had surrendered--I think he was
-an officer--raise his revolver (we had had no time to disarm them) and
-shoot at our officer, who dropped. Another man and I then shot the
-German.
-
-
-(2)
-
-Private W. M----, 1st Wilts, -- Company:--(1) On the Aisne, between
-September 14th and 22nd, I was in B Company and going to A Company for
-a wounded man. I am a bandsman and have acted as stretcher-bearer. The
-Germans came out of a wood with a white flag. The captain (Captain
-R----) of -- Company gave the order to cease fire--the Company was in
-the trenches. Captain R---- went forward alone towards the Germans, and
-the German officer then shot Captain R---- with his revolver and the
-rest of the Germans opened a heavy fire. Number -- Company replied and
-drove the Germans back.
-
-(2) At La Bassée, between October 12th and 27th, the Germans had
-shelled our trenches and driven us out, their infantry advancing in
-close formation. By that time only eleven out of B Company, including
-myself, were left. The Germans were within fifty yards of us and so we
-retired through a brewery down to a farm-house. We went upstairs--a
-mixed lot from various regiments (West Kents, Royal Irish Rifles,
-etc.), and began firing from the windows. From the upstairs we saw
-the Germans bayoneting those of our wounded who had been left in the
-trenches or placed under cover by us eleven, behind them, or had
-crawled along.
-
-(3) At La Coutérie,[92] about 3 kilometres from La Bassée, it must have
-been before October 12th, because that was the day we got to La Bassée,
-we took possession of a farm-house for a dressing station. The farmer’s
-wife frequently took food and clothes down to the cellar, she said it
-was for her daughter; the daughter would not come up. The mother, who
-was crying as she told us, made out to us that the “Allemands” had
-outraged her daughter--she held up five fingers.
-
-
-(3)
-
-Private J. S----, Rifle Brigade, 1st Battalion:--On a Sunday at end
-of October or beginning of November, just outside Bailleul, near
-Nieppe, we rested for three hours, having just come out of billets. The
-Germans had only just left--the chalk-marks of the different regiments
-were still on the doors. There were a lot of refugees outside an
-_estaminet_, among them a mother and two daughters. One daughter looked
-scared to death, her eyes staring out of her head. She was a girl of
-about twenty-three, who looked rather delicate. The girl said nothing,
-stood there and stared like a lunatic. The mother told a group of us
-in broken English and partly in French--I know some French. She said,
-“Les Allemands couchent avec ma fille”--that the Germans--she made it
-appear about eight--had outraged her daughter. We did not go into the
-_estaminet_--it was forbidden.
-
-
-(4)
-
-Captain C---- W----, Bedfords, 2nd Battalion:--At Bailleul, I saw
-a great deal of evidence of wanton destruction--mirrors broken and
-furniture smashed. A German cavalry regiment had done it. I was in
-three different billets there, and in all three the same thing had
-happened.
-
-
-(5)
-
-Private S----, K. O. Scottish Borderers:--At Ypres, about a month ago,
-I was in the trenches and one of our men went out of the trenches to
-get a drink of water (from a spring about seven yards away). He was
-wounded in the leg, and an officer (Lieutenant S----, of B Company)
-sent over for the stretcher-bearers, who were at head-quarters about
-300 yards from the support trenches. They were carrying this fellow
-away when one of the stretcher-bearers was “sniped” from about 300
-yards. There was no firing at the time. Another man came of B Company,
-named G----, volunteered and took the wounded stretcher-bearer’s place,
-and then he was wounded too. G---- was put on a stretcher and was again
-wounded by a sniper. Cases of this kind were very common.
-
-
-(6)
-
-Private J. C----, Scottish Fusiliers, 1st Battalion:--At Locre, near
-Bailleul, I was billeted in the church there at the beginning of
-December. The church had not been shelled, but had been looted and the
-crucifixes had been smashed, and all the images and things of value
-appeared to have been torn away.
-
-
-(7)
-
-Corporal J. D. B---- (at that time Bombardier in the 49th Battery
-R.F.A.) now of the 40th Brigade Ammunition Column R.F.A.:--On August
-23rd at Mons, we got the order to advance up a hill with our battery.
-We got a section of guns in action in a ploughed field, and then we had
-a sergeant hit with a gunshot wound in the back (it was Sergeant T----,
-of the 49th Battery R.F.A.). Sergeant R----, of the 49th, asked me to
-take Sergeant T---- to an ambulance. I took him through a wood, and on
-the outside of the wood I saw a girl quite naked, running for all she
-was worth. She appeared to me to be about nineteen years of age. Her
-body was covered with blood and there was blood all over her breasts.
-She ran into some trenches on my right. I do not know what regiment
-occupied them, but I heard afterwards that an officer of the Gordons
-got hold of her. I went straight on with the sergeant down into Mons,
-and took him to the field hospital.
-
-
-(8)
-
-Private S----, C Company, 1st King’s R.R.:--It was on September 11th, I
-can never forget that date, it was after we left the Marne, and a day
-or two before the Aisne, we were engaged with the enemy at a distance
-of about 1,200 yards. They put up a white flag in their centre and
-waved it from side to side. We stopped firing, whereupon they fired
-heavily from their right flank. A second time they put up the white
-flag, this time on the right flank; but we took no notice of this and
-kept on firing.
-
-
-(9)
-
-R. McK----, 2nd Royal Irish, -- Co.:--About the end of November,
-near Neuve Chapelle, there was a heavy attack, and we retired to get
-reinforcements, and left Sergeant G---- wounded in the leg in the
-trenches; when I last saw him he was binding up his wound. About 300
-yards back we got reinforcements, and as we were advancing we saw three
-Germans bayoneting Sergeant G----.
-
-
-(10)
-
-R. McK----, 2nd Royal Irish, at Mt. Kemmel:--On Monday I was sent to
-get water from a pump in the yard of a house about 50 yards behind the
-line, a farm-house, and in the kitchen I saw seven men and three women,
-a poor class of people, lying on the ground bayoneted. The house had
-been looted and everything smashed.
-
-
-(11)
-
-W. F----, Sapper, 17th R.E.:--About September 7th, near Lagny, we
-arrived at the village; stopped there for four hours while our
-artillery were in action. We had a house pointed out to us by the
-villagers; there was a broken motor bicycle outside, and in the room
-against the wall we found one of our despatch riders with an officer’s
-sword sticking through him. Our sergeant and our section officer
-told us that the villagers said that he came one night, having lost
-his way, and knocked at the door of the house, which was occupied by
-German officers; they let him in and then killed him. The house was
-in a terrible state, everything pulled to pieces. Sapper W---- of our
-company was the first to find the house.
-
-
-(12)
-
-Private M----, 1st Gordons, -- Co.:--On October 24th, at La Bassée, the
-Germans broke through our lines, and as we retreated I was hit in the
-hip with a shell. The Germans crossed over our trenches and charged
-till they met our reserves and were driven back. I saw Private E----
-(of Portsmouth) of my Company lying wounded in the hip. As they passed,
-some stepped on top of me, some jumped over me, while others as they
-passed E---- kicked him and stamped on his face. When he was brought
-into the dressing-station his face was absolutely black. I never heard
-anything more of him.
-
-
-(13)
-
-J. G----, Lance-Corporal, King’s Own, 1st Batt.:--At the end of
-November, the second day after we arrived at Nieppe, two of us entered
-an estaminet and found the landlady crying; she told us that about
-thirteen Germans violated her daughter and shot her husband against a
-wall in front of her eyes. She said there were a lot of other cases in
-Nieppe.
-
-
-(14)
-
-J. A----, Private, 1st Camerons:--It was about October 23rd, at St.
-Jean (Ypres). We retired, owing to shortage of ammunition, and left two
-wounded in the trench. When we came back one of them was lying about 20
-yards behind the trenches stripped stark naked. We had left him behind
-covered with a waterproof cloak.
-
-When darkness set in, on retiring, I waited behind to carry in one of
-the wounded. I lost the road and walked into the German lines with
-my comrade on my back. I was seized and my hands tied in front; I
-was then kicked by several German soldiers and thrown into a cellar.
-They kept pointing a bayonet at my heart. They took away all my food,
-tobacco, private letters, everything, and ate my food in front of me.
-After about twenty hours the East Surreys came up and released us.
-
-
-(15)
-
-J. W. D----, Private, 1st Batt. Cheshires:--On November 14th, at Ypres,
-the Germans broke in our trenches and as we tried to get out most of
-us were shot. As they retreated, after being driven back from the
-communication trenches, at about 4.45 on the Saturday (November 14th),
-I was lying wounded in the leg at the bottom of the trench unable to
-rise and a German officer stooped down and shot me in the thigh. I saw
-the same thing done by other Germans to other men of my company.
-
-
-(16)
-
-C. R. A----, Private, 10th King’s Liverpool Scottish:--At Kemmel
-(I think), a place between Ypres and Armentières, not far from
-Locre--Kemmel is just close to the trenches, and about the size of
-Appleby--I, with two or three others, was out looking for vegetables
-for the officers (I was sent for because I speak French), and we were
-looking to see if any one remained in the house. While doing this I
-came across the R.F.A., who took us to their head-quarters and supplied
-us with vegetables, etc. Further up the valley we came upon a man in
-civilian clothes who was standing in a doorway. The house had not been
-damaged by shell fire, as practically all the rest were. We began to
-talk. He told me in French that he was too old for the army, but had a
-son-in-law in the Belgian Army. When the Germans came they ransacked
-all the houses. Of those who came to his house some held him off with
-arms pointed at him, whilst others outraged his daughter-in-law who was
-about to give birth to a child. When I was there this poor woman had
-been sent away.
-
-
-(17)
-
-Private C----, York L. I., 2nd Batt.:--
-
-(1) About November 17th or 20th, near Ypres, I was with the machine
-gun which was put out of action; I then went into my own company’s
-trenches. As it was getting dark, the advance was made and we were up
-to the wire entanglements; we were driven back by superior numbers.
-Having gained our own trench, the roll was called and about seventeen
-were missing out of our Co., Corpl. R---- being amongst them. Under
-cover of darkness our reinforcements came up and we advanced again.
-We could only find seven wounded of the men missing and no German
-wounded at all. At the back of their trenches was a wood where we lost
-the Germans. So we dropped back to their trench. About three days
-afterwards they attacked in large numbers, but were repulsed and were
-driven back further than they had advanced. In our advance we came to
-a farm and a barn half full of potatoes where we found three of our
-wounded and two dead. Some of our men carried them out, and while we
-carried them one of the others died. Corporal R---- (who was among the
-five) was the worst wounded--he had been shot through the shoulder, and
-was insensible with both his eyes gouged out and his right arm hacked
-off. Our O.C. told us on a parade that it was done with a bayonet. He
-was sent home I heard to a hospital.
-
-(2) At a village about 3 miles S.E. of Ypres, about three weeks next
-Monday, forty-five of us advanced to rush a house; only seven of us
-returned. As we were advancing they opened fire on us with a machine
-gun. We were only about fifteen strong when we got there. We had to
-break an entrance through the window. We heard shouts and a disturbance
-inside; it was the Germans making for the cellars. Captain A---- went
-upstairs after leaving some men on the cellar steps; I followed him. In
-the back room upstairs was a maxim gun. In one of the other rooms was
-a girl about fifteen--she had nothing on except a man’s overcoat. When
-we broke into the room we thought she was absolutely mad. She cried
-out something, but we could not understand what it was. She rushed out
-of the room into the front bedroom which was locked. We smashed it in
-with our rifle butts and there found a woman, her mother, with her
-right breast all bleeding, and her clothes torn--her breast had been
-cut as if with a sword, not a bayonet. We used our field bandages
-and made her as comfortable as we could and sent a volunteer back for
-stretcher-bearers.
-
-[This soldier was at times in great pain when he spoke, but his mind
-was clear. I am convinced he spoke the truth.--J. H. M.]
-
-
-(18)
-
-Corporal D----, Loyal North Lancs., 1st Batt.:--At Ypres, end of
-November, I was in the trenches, and I saw two of our men, who had been
-sent out as snipers, hit, and the Germans motioned to them to come into
-their trenches (which were about 80 yards from ours); they began to
-crawl in, and as they got on the parapet of the trench the Germans shot
-them.
-
-
-(19)
-
-J. A----, Private, Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders, 2nd Batt.:--About
-the beginning of December we were billeted in the outskirts of
-Armentières, and were allowed out between twelve and three. We passed a
-man standing at his door, and he asked us if we had any bully beef--we
-said no, but we offered him a packet of cigarettes. We stood at the
-door talking and his wife and children came to the door. The woman
-looked bad--very delicate looking. He then told us that nine Germans
-had stopped in the house, and some of them had outraged his wife while
-he was in the house. He spoke very fair English. Private McM---- and
-S---- were with me.
-
-
-(20)
-
-Private K----, 1st Loyal North Lancs.:--On Monday night we attacked
-them and took two trenches. Everything was quiet till the next morning
-except for sniping. At about 8.30 they advanced upon us, and the
-officer of ---- Company, seeing the men were overpowered, put up the
-white flag, and the men put their hands up to surrender. The Germans
-advanced, and when they got up to the trenches, they shot them each in
-their trenches as they stood. _I saw this. I was on the left flank._
-
-
-(21)
-
-Sergeant C----, 1st Glosters:--Last Wednesday morning, near La Bassée,
-I was in the trench, and I saw a wounded man of No. A Co. (who had
-had to retire from their trenches on our right, having been enfiladed
-during the night) crawling on all fours to get back. When the Germans
-saw him they turned a machine gun on him and killed him.
-
-About end of November, near Ypres, a Belgian farmer (a kind of
-peasant), who spoke a little English (I can speak some French; I have
-a French conversation book with me), told me that a German officer
-threatened him with a revolver because he tried to protect his
-daughter, and the officer forced the girl to sleep with him for four
-nights.
-
-
-(22)
-
-Sergeant G----, 2nd Devons:--
-
-(1) At Estaires, about five weeks ago (latter part of November), we
-were billeted there, and I and another sergeant went into a café. The
-proprietor, who spoke quite good English, said that his daughter had
-been outraged by a party of Germans while they were occupying. They
-forced the daughter out into a linhey (an outhouse) at the back and
-there outraged her.
-
-(2) At Laventie, about a week later, we halted; and I was speaking to a
-Frenchwoman who spoke English. She told me that the Germans had looted
-everything, and showed me a jeweller’s shop which had been stripped of
-nearly everything. She pointed out two girls (I think about seventeen
-or eighteen) who, she said, had been outraged.
-
-
-(23)
-
-Private C----, A.S.C., 7th Div., Supply Column:--At Westoutre, near
-Poperinghe, we were billeted about two months ago at a priest’s house.
-He spoke English, and told me that his father was shot by the Germans
-against the church-yard railings because he refused to give up the
-stores of which he had charge for the Belgian refugees. He told us that
-the Germans had practised a lot of outrages on the women.
-
-
-(24)
-
-Lance-Corporal L----, R.E., 55th Co.:--Near Ypres, about October 22nd
-or 23rd, our section was ordered to assist the Highland Light Infantry,
-Queen’s and Worcesters in a drive through a wood. We passed a cottage
-on our right where fighting was going on. As we returned I saw two
-of our soldiers in a doorway carrying a wounded man. When they got
-out of the doorway one of the two soldiers was shot in the back by a
-German at a distance of about 80 yards. All firing had ceased--it was
-a deliberate aim. On the same day I saw two stretcher-bearers, who
-were tending a man on the ground, fired at at a distance of about 40
-yards--a regular fusillade. There was no fighting going on--our other
-troops were about 300 or 400 yards ahead, and these snipers had been
-left behind by the Germans for the express purpose of picking off our
-wounded.
-
-
-(25)
-
-Private S----, 1st Northampton:--On the day after General F---- was
-killed (he was an artillery general), on the Monday, we advanced 14
-miles, about, and bivouacked in a field. From our bivouac, about one
-mile distant, there was a little farm. We went to the farm to fill our
-water bottles, and a woman told us that her two daughters (whom we
-also saw) had been outraged the previous night by twelve or fourteen
-Germans. The woman spoke English quite well--at least, well enough for
-me to understand--very distinctly. The woman was not excited, but
-greatly distressed, and the two girls (one child sixteen, the other
-about nineteen--in fact, I think the woman said that the one was not
-sixteen) were still more distressed; they were in a pitiful plight.
-Listening to the story with me were Company Sergeant-Major M---- of D.
-Co., also Sergeant S----, also D. Co., and Corporal C----, likewise of
-D. Co.
-
-
-(26)
-
-Captain F----, 2nd Batt. Coldstreams:--
-
-(1) On the Rentel ridge, near Ypres, and south of Sonnen, I have seen
-repeated cases of deliberate firing on stretcher-bearers which admitted
-of no doubt.
-
-(2) On the Aisne, on a Monday (either September 13th or 14th) at
-Soupir, there was a bad case of trickery with the white flag. The
-Germans advanced from a farm-house with white flags at the end of their
-rifles, and on our men rushing forward, despite the warning of their
-officers, to take prisoners, they were shot down. We lost a whole
-company of the 3rd Batt. Coldstreams in this way.
-
-
-(27)
-
-Private L----, in the 1st Cornwall L.I.:--On September 9th (Wednesday)
-at Montreuil, I was wounded and being carried by two of ours, when
-about a quarter-mile from the firing-line I and other wounded were
-being brought down an exposed slope; the moment we appeared a
-machine-gun about 400 yards distant opened fire on us--several wounded
-hit.
-
-
-(28)
-
-Private W----, in the 1st Camerons:--On the Aisne, September 14th,
-I was told by Sergeant Major C---- of Camerons that Captain H----
-(commanding our Company) was lying in a field having his wounds dressed
-by one of our own bandsmen acting as stretcher-bearer. Captain H----
-and stretcher-bearer were shot by a German officer. The Sergeant-Major
-(who had been taken prisoner by the Germans) saw this happen.
-
- [NOTE.--This story was fully corroborated, without variation,
- by several other Camerons whom I met in other wards, and also
- by the Colonel of the Camerons, with whom I discussed the
- matter at General Hospital No. 4 (Paris) at Versailles.--J. H.
- M.]
-
-
-(29)
-
-Private W---- (the same):--We were advancing, Black Watch on our right,
-Scots Guards on our left. Germans put up white flag and we advanced
-to take prisoners. At thirty yards they opened their ranks, and
-machine-guns concealed behind fired upon us, the Germans in front also
-firing their rifles.
-
-
-(30)
-
-Private S----, 1st Batt. Glosters:--On August 26th, first day of
-retreat from Fevrel, we were leaving the trenches, B. Co. covering us
-on the left. It was just where Captain S---- was shot. Private L----,
-who had been shot twice, was bayoneted when lying on the ground by two
-Germans. I and the whole Company saw it.
-
-
-(31)
-
-Private B----, West Yorks:--On September 20th, 300 Germans ran up
-with a German officer and white flag, surrendering. About a thousand
-Germans followed and captured our Company of about 220. They bayoneted
-Sergeant-Major A---- after surrender of the Company, and shot majority
-of the Company. I was only three yards from Sergeant-Major when it
-happened. I fell over a hedge into a stone quarry and escaped. Here it
-was that Major I---- was killed. Later the Durhams came up and we got
-off.
-
-
-(32)
-
-Private (Lance-Corporal) C----, 1st East Lancs:--About September
-6th, Château de Perense, near Jouasse, Seine et Marne, about 700
-Germans, coming out of a wood, dropped their rifles and held up their
-hands; whistle sounded “cease fire.” Two Companies sent up to accept
-surrender, and when within about ten yards the Germans ran back to the
-wood and their troops in wood opened fire on the two companies (_i.e._
-on about 450 men).
-
-
-(33)
-
-Private C---- (the same):--Passed through a village recently occupied
-by drunken Germans. Women raving. Saw two women with bruised faces and
-black eyes. Lieut. M---- said they had attempted to resist outrage by
-Germans.
-
-
-(34)
-
-Private M----, Notts and Derby:--On September 20th (Sunday) in trenches
-on Aisne, seventy Germans came up with white flag; we let them come up
-and then went out to take them. They then opened fire just as their
-reinforcements came up, and killed many men of the West Yorks, Notts
-and Derby, and Durhams.
-
-
-(35)
-
-The same:--On the Monday morning we went out to find our wounded
-and discovered an English soldier with ten or fourteen bayonet
-wounds--there had been no bayonet fighting with the Germans.
-
-
-(36)
-
-Private H----, 2nd Batt. Duke of Wellington’s:--On September 8th and
-9th, at Nogent-sur-le-Marne, advancing through the Forest of Crecy,
-heard on all sides stories of women outraged. I was told by Mme. S----
-(Veuve) an elderly lady, who was the widow of an Englishman and spoke
-English, that an officer had outraged her servant in the house. The
-servant stood by crying as Mme. S---- told the story. Mme. S---- gave
-me her address--here it is in my pocket-book:--4 rue de Lafaulette,
-Nogent-sur-le-Marne.
-
-
-(37)
-
-J. B----, Despatch Rider, Signal Co. 1st Div. R.E.:--About September
-16th, near Paissy. At a distance of about 300 yards we saw through our
-glasses one of our despatch-riders (A---- of Signal Co., R.E.), shot
-while riding his motor-cycle; he fell off, and while lying on ground
-was speared by three Uhlans, one after the other. Uhlans attempted to
-burn him with his own petrol, but made off when they saw us coming. We
-found his body half-burned when we reached it.
-
-
-(38)
-
-Sergeant D----, 1st Cornwalls:--About September 9th, near 6 p.m.,
-Battle of the Aisne, I was with a platoon with orders to remain behind
-and delay German advance. We couldn’t see any Germans, and we therefore
-had done no firing for quite an hour. Our ambulance was out picking
-up wounded. My platoon was marching back to rejoin our Company; we
-were carrying our rifles. R.A.M.C. were picking up Lieut. E---- when
-they were fired on from the woods at a distance of about 300 yards, a
-regular fusillade. Lieut. E---- badly hit. Ambulance had to gallop off
-out of range, and we made off. Ambulance was broadside on to the enemy,
-and must therefore have been unmistakable.
-
-
-(39, 40 and 41)
-
-Statements taken down, after cross-examination by a Staff Officer at
-General Headquarters, as to incidents in the neighbourhood at Ypres:
-
-(1) Private B. S----, 1st Black Watch, says that he saw Germans bayonet
-our wounded as they lay on the ground. He was wounded in the leg
-himself, but, seeing this, he managed to get away.
-
-Afterwards he was with German wounded, who told him that they had been
-ordered to kill all English prisoners.
-
-(2) Private W. W----, 1st Black Watch, says that he was in a reserve
-trench and saw the Germans bayoneting our wounded 40 or 50 yards in
-front of him. He was wounded in the arm and taken prisoner, but was
-sent for water for wounded Germans and escaped.
-
-Says the wounded Germans in our charge told him that they had been told
-to kill all English and take no prisoners.
-
-(3) Statement of Private M----, Cameron Highlanders attached.
-
-I saw this man, and consider him thoroughly reliable as to the facts of
-the case.
-
-He says that he saw one German place the butt of his rifle on the
-wounded man’s chest and hold him while the other one shot him. Our
-reinforcements were heard coming up immediately afterwards, and the
-Germans ran away. The men were Prussian Guard.
-
-“I was shot while retiring, and took shelter behind a hedge which I
-had fallen through. A wounded man of the Black Watch was lying close
-beside me groaning. The Germans came up behind the hedge and fired
-through it. Two came through and I saw one deliberately place his rifle
-to the wounded Highlander’s head and shoot him. The features of the
-wounded German who came into hospital with me in the same convoy are
-identically those of the man I saw commit the action.”
-
-
-(42 and 43)
-
-Summary of Statements taken by a Captain in the Sherwood Foresters:
-
-(1) The undermentioned privates state that on October 20th, 1914, they
-saw German soldiers killing our wounded, and can swear to the same.
-[There follow three names of privates in the 2nd Sherwood Foresters.]
-
-(2) The men mentioned below make the following statement: that on
-November 1st, 1914, two German soldiers were seen both delivering blows
-on our wounded with rifle-butts, and shooting them. [There follow names
-of four privates in the Lincolnshire Regiment, and one in the Argyll
-and Sutherland Highlanders.]
-
-
-(44)
-
-Statement made by a private in the Loyal North Lancs.:
-
-On or about December 21st, I think near Neuve Chapelle, we were
-ordered up to the trenches occupied by the Gurkhas. We got over them
-and lined a ditch--some of ours wounded there. We charged, and they
-started with hand bombs. On our right was Captain Smart, shot in the
-head. We had to retire; an hour and a half later we advanced again, and
-here I found one of our wounded with his throat cut (he had been shot
-previously). I heard of others with their throats cut. I lay down close
-to him. Dawn was just breaking. We had to retire again, and the bodies
-were left there.
-
-
-(45)
-
-A Brigadier-General of the British Cavalry Corps:
-
-On September 6th, the day before we got to Rebais, we passed a lonely
-farm where we found a shepherd with the top of his head blown off by a
-rifle-shot. He had been asked by the Germans for bread, and, on failing
-to produce any, had been shot.
-
-
-(46)
-
-Statement by Major ----, O.C. of a Cavalry Field Ambulance:--On October
-17th, at Moorslede, north-east of Ypres, the Germans were reported as
-having strangled a young baker in this place. The inhabitants stated
-that he had been taken by the Germans to bake for them, and that
-he attempted to escape. The enemy caught him and stuffed a woollen
-scarf he was wearing down his throat, causing suffocation. One of my
-officers, Lieut. P----, viewed the body in the convent next day, and
-found the scarf stuffed in the man’s throat.
-
-
-(47)
-
-Private R. McK----, 2nd Royal Irish:--On the advance from the Marne
-to the Aisne in September, we passed through a village and saw a baby
-propped up at the window like a doll. About six of us went into the
-house, with a sergeant, and found the child dead--bayoneted. We found
-a tottering kind of old man, a middle-aged woman, and a youth, all
-bayoneted. In another village our interpreter pointed out to us two
-girls who were crying; he told us they had been ravished.
-
-
-(48)
-
-Driver B----, R.F.A.:--Somewhere between Chantilly and
-Villers-Cotterets, about the end of August, just after we started
-advancing, we were marching through a village, and the villagers called
-us into a house and showed us the body of a middle-aged man, with both
-arms cut off by a sword, pointed to him and said “Allemands.” They
-told our R.A.M.C. men in French that he had been killed when trying to
-protect his daughter.
-
-In the next village, before we got to the Aisne, the villagers showed
-us the dead body of a woman, naked, on the ground, badly mutilated, her
-breasts cut off, and her body ripped up. They said “Allemands.”
-
-
-(49)
-
-Private F. W. M----, Leicesters:--I think it was in October, after we
-had left the Aisne and were on the march. About a week before we got
-to Armentières, we went through a small village, halted, and I and a
-man named C----, of my company, were searching a hedge for wood, and
-came across a baby with a single vest on it, as if it had been taken
-straight from bed, and nearly cut in half, as if by a sabre.
-
-
-(50)
-
-Private G. R----, Bedfords:--Somewhere between October 14th and 17th,
-at a village about fifteen miles from Ypres, a boy was brought in from
-a farm-house, the people having sent in for surgical assistance for
-a boy who was wounded. I saw him brought in by some of our men to an
-estaminet--he had five sabre-cuts. His sister told us that the Uhlans
-had chased him round the farm because he had cried out something to
-them. He looked as if he would not live. One of our R.A.M.C. bound up
-his wounds.
-
-
-(51)
-
-Private W. D----, Hampshires:--About seven weeks ago, when the Germans
-tried hard to break through, we were about two hours from a place
-which we call the Château, where the Germans pitched shells every day,
-especially at a big tower place which is there. Our platoons were in
-the trenches in the order left to right of 5, 6, 7, 8, and then came
-C Company in their trenches. The wounded left with the dead in the
-C trench were half buried by its having been blown in. The Germans
-enfiladed the wounded, shot them, bayoneted them, jumped on them.
-
-
-(52)
-
-Private B----, Royal West Kents:--Early in September, in the advance
-from Coulommiers, I saw two British cavalrymen lying dead on the
-ground, their arms stretched out like a cross and their hands pinned by
-Uhlan lances.
-
-
-(53)
-
-Private J. C----, Scots Guards:--Last Monday night, the other side the
-canal bank at a place I think they call “Karuchi,” the Manchesters
-were surrounded. We were in support and advanced to their help.... We
-re-took the trenches. In the second trench, when we got there, we found
-many Manchesters who had been shot first and then bayoneted, as they
-lay wounded, by the Germans when capturing the trench.
-
-
-(54)
-
-Private P----, Cornwalls:--In the early part of September in our
-advance, in all the villages the Germans had smashed everything for
-mere sport--the place stank with the dead bodies of pigs and chickens
-which they had killed and left in the road. We found scent-bottles
-thrown all over the road--mirrors smashed and furniture--lovely
-furniture--thrown into the street, and pictures cut.
-
-
-(55)
-
-Private W. T----, Welsh Regiment:--On the retreat from Mons in August
-we came upon a woman tied to a tree. She was quite dead. Her throat was
-cut. I believe she had been outraged.... The time was about 5 p.m. It
-was quite light. I should say the woman’s age was between eighteen and
-twenty-two. The men cut her down. I saw them do it. I do not know what
-became of the body as we had to go on. I expect it was Uhlans who had
-done this.
-
-
-(56)
-
-Corps Expéditionnaire anglais, 5ᵉ Division d’Infanterie, 7ᵉ Groupe
-de Gendarmerie. Objet: Actes repréhensibles commis par des soldats
-allemands.
-
-
- RAPPORT DU CAPITAINE PIGEANNE, COMMANDANT LE DÉTACHEMENT DE
- GENDARMERIE ATTACHÉ À LA 5ᵉ DIVISION D’INFANTERIE ANGLAISE,
- SUR DES ACTES REPRÉHENSIBLES COMMIS PAR DES SOLDATS DE L’ARMÉE
- ALLEMANDE.
-
- Serches, le 14 septembre, 1914.
-
-Le 10 septembre courant, en parcourant avec quelques gendarmes de mon
-détachement, en exécution de l’Art. 109 du Service de la Gendarmerie
-en campagne (31 juillet, 1911), un terrain sur lequel avait eu lieu
-la veille, un engagement, j’ai fait, au lieu dit “Laroche,” commune de
-Montreuil-aux-Lions (Seine-et-Marne) les constatations suivantes:
-
-Un soldat d’infanterie anglaise avait été tué sur la lisière d’un
-petit-bois bordant la route de Mery à Montreuil-aux-Lions.
-
-Il avait été atteint par des balles de fusil, au cou et à la poitrine.
-
-Il était tombé et était resté étendu sur le dos.
-
-Son cadavre fut mutilé la face avait été complètement aplatie et
-écraseé, très probablement par des coups donnés avec la crosse d’un
-fusil ou même avec le talon de la chaussure.
-
-Cet acte fut certainement commis par des soldats allemands du 48
-regiment d’Infanterie, car six cadavres d’Allemands de ce même régiment
-furent trouvés à 100 mètres au plus de cet endroit.
-
-Une femme se trouvait sur la route tout près de là. Des qu’elle me vit
-elle s’approcha de moi et encore sous le coup d’une vive indignation
-elle me fit le récit suivant:
-
-“Hier, 9 septembre, dans l’après-midi, pendant le combat un soldat
-fut blessé. Il avait été atteint à une jambe. Malgré sa blessure, il
-parvint à se traîner jusque chez moi, à la maison que vous voyez sur la
-colline, au lieu dit Pisseloup.
-
-“Il me parla, je ne le compris pas.
-
-“Je lui fis un premier pansement dès qu’il en eût montré sa blessure et
-le fis étendre sur mon lit.
-
-“Quelques instants après plusieurs soldats allemands traversèrent la
-route et vinrent également jusqu’à ma demeure.
-
-“Dès qu’ils virent le soldat anglais qui était blessé, ils le
-frappèrent, le jetèrent dehors de la maison, où ils le battirent encore
-avec leurs fusils.
-
-“Je ne sais ce qu’est devenu ce malheureux anglais, mais je pense qu’il
-a dû être recueilli ou enterré, s’il est mort, par ses compatriotes
-qui sont passés ici ce matin, out soigne des blessés et enterré
-quelques-uns des leurs tirés dans le combat de hier.”
-
-Enfin, j’ajoute le fait suivant:
-
-A Vanfleurs, le 8 septembre près de Poccunente, j’ai encore vu sur la
-colline au N.O. de Poccunente, et à 1 Kilo, environ, le cadavre d’un
-Anglais dont le crâne avait été mutilé à un tel point que la matière
-cervicale apparaissait en plusieurs points.
-
-Ce soldat anglais était un simple éclaireur, tué d’un coup de fusil à
-la lisière d’un bois.
-
-Les Allemands s’étaient acharnés après lui, peut-être même après sa
-mort.
-
-Ces actes constituent peut-être une exception et sont l’œuvre de
-brutes, mais ils sont tellement odieux que j’estime de mon devoir d’en
-rendre compte à l’autorité militaire supérieure.
-
- (Signed) C. N. PIGEANNE.
-
-
-II
-
-DOCUMENTS RELATIVE TO THE GERMAN OCCUPATION OF BAILLEUL[93]
-
-RÉPUBLIQUE FRANÇAISE
-
-VILLE DE BAILLEUL, COMMISSARIAT DE POLICE
-
-
-(1)
-
-_Procès-Verbal No. 2. Meurtre de trois civils non combattants par des
-soldats allemands_
-
-L’an 1914, le 16 octobre à 16 heures Nous Thévenin.... Informé par
-les agents de notre service que les soldats allemands auraient tué
-trois individus non combattants au lieu dit Nouveau Monde, commune de
-Bailleul, nous avons ouvert une enquête et entendons:
-
-Marie H----, 37 ans, épouse C----, demeurant à V---- Rue, Commune de
-Bailleul, entendue, déclare:--Le jeudi matin, 8 courant, vers 7 heures
-je me trouvais au passage à niveau du Nouveau Monde, quand j’ai vu
-passer trois civils accompagnés par six soldats allemands, baïonnette
-au canon et qui leur avaient attaché les mains avec des serviettes. Je
-les ai suivi du regard et quelques minutes après j’ai vu les mêmes
-soldats accompagnant les mêmes hommes parler à un officier allemand qui
-leur a fait signe d’aller plus loin dans une pâture. Les soldats s’y
-sont dirigés conduisant toujours les civils prisonniers; ils leur ont
-fait sauter un fossé, puis ils les ont mis debout sur une même ligne
-dans la prairie. À ce moment un soldat allemand me fit rentrer dans une
-maison. Environ une demi heure après, j’ai su que les Allemands avaient
-tué les civils que j’avais vu passer avec eux et qu’ils les avaient
-enterrés dans le jardin de Monsieur Pierre Béhaghel.
-
-Lecture faite.
-
-
-V----, Gabrielle, épouse D----, âgée de 26 ans, ménagère, demeurant au
-N---- M----, commune de Bailleul, interpellée, déclare:--J’ai vu le
-jeudi, 8 courant, vers 7 heures et demie du matin six soldats allemands
-amenant avec eux, les mains liées, trois civils portant de petits
-paquets et paraissant avoir de 18 à 25 ans. Ils les ont mis dans la
-prairie en face de chez moi sur l’ordre que venait de leur donner un de
-leurs officiers auxquels ils venaient de s’adresser. J’avais chez moi
-un soldat allemand qui faisait la cuisine et cet homme voyant venir les
-prisonniers m’a dit, en français: “_Regardez, Madame, comme c’est beau:
-voir fusilier des civils français, regardez c’est du beau travail, on
-devrait tous les tuer comme cela!_” J’ai répondu que je ne pouvais pas
-le voir car c’était un crime. Malgré ma réponse j’ai regardé lorsque
-j’ai entendu tirer le coup de feu et j’ai vu que ces pauvres civils
-tombaient. J’ai également vu les soldats allemands creuser trois trous
-dans lesquels ils les ont ensevelis. Je ne sais rien d’autre sur cette
-affaire.
-
-Lecture faite.
-
-
-3º. H----, Hélène, femme B----, 44 ans, ménagère, demeurant à Bailleul
-au lieu dit “N---- M----,” nous fait la déclaration suivante: J’ai
-vu le 8 courant six soldats allemands présenter à leur officier qui
-logeait chez moi trois jeunes gens civils qui portaient des paquets.
-L’officier a dit en français aux soldats “Allez vite dans la prairie
-les fusiller”; les soldats sont partis aussitôt. Je n’ai plus rien vu
-ni entendu concernant cette affaire, mais j’ai su que l’ordre avait été
-mis à exécution.
-
-Lecture faite.
-
-
-4º. S----, Désiré, 74 ans, tisserant, demeurant à Bailleul, N----
-M----, déclare:--J’ai vu, comme les femmes H----, V---- et B----,
-passer les trois civils encadrés par les soldats allemands. Je sais
-que ceux-ci, sur l’ordre d’un de leurs officiers, les ont fusillés. Je
-les ai vus enterrer à cinquante mètres de chez moi dans le jardin de
-Monsieur Béhaghel Pierre. Les soldats allemands sont venus chez moi
-prendre des pioches et des pelles pour creuser leurs tombes. Je ne sais
-rien de plus.
-
-Lecture faite.
-
-
-La femme H---- nous remet sur notre demande un laisser-passer délivré
-par la Commune de Zonnebèke à un sieur Herreman qui est un de ceux qui
-ont été fusillés par les Allemands. Nous le joignons au présent ainsi
-que la photographie y annexée.
-
-Nous y joignons également une adresse trouvée écrite au crayon près de
-l’endroit où ont été enterrés les trois corps des civils fusillés. Nous
-donnons l’ordre au garde champêtre du quartier Deicke de se transporter
-au N---- M---- et de constater la présence des trois cadavres enterrés,
-cela accompagné de deux témoins.
-
-De retour de sa mission l’agent nous fait le rapport suivant:
-
-Je me nomme Deicke Juste, garde champêtre à Bailleul. Conformément à
-vos instructions je me suis mis en rapport avec les nommés Coulier
-Achille, 30 ans, maréchal ferrant; Sonneville Désire, 74 ans,
-tisserand; Lassus Henri, 51 ans, journalier; Behaghel Julien, 19 ans,
-cordonnier, que j’ai priés de m’accompagner pour constater que trois
-corps de civils avaient bien été enterrés dans le jardin du sieur
-Behaghel. Là nous avons vu, les trois corps de jeunes gens vêtus
-d’habits civils et recouverts d’une couche de terre d’environ 30
-centimètres.
-
-Dans les effets nous avons trouvé un extrait du registre
-d’immatriculation de la commune de Beuvry (Pas-de-Calais) au nom de
-Békaert (Cyrille Jérome), né à Zonnebèke, le 29 août, 1891. Je vous ai
-apporté cet extrait.
-
-
-(2)
-
-_Procès-Verbal No. 1. Meurtre du jeune B----, Albert, par soldats
-allemands_
-
-L’an mille neuf cent quatorze, le 15 octobre à 2 heures du soir. Nous
-Thévenin, Pierre, Commissaire de la Ville de Bailleul, auxiliaire de
-Monsieur le Procureur de la République. Informé par les agents de notre
-service qu’un meurtre aurait été commis, il y a plusieurs jours, par
-un soldat de l’armée allemande au hameau de Stient de notre commune,
-ouvrons une enquête et entendons:
-
-1º. B----, Victor, 48 ans, cultivateur, demeurant à Bailleul, Rue ----
----- ----, lequel nous dit:
-
-Le jeudi, 8 octobre courant, vers midi, mon fils Albert, 19 ans,
-venait d’apprendre que des patrouilles allemandes circulaient dans
-le voisinage de notre ferme. Il m’en fit part et me dit qu’il allait
-aussitôt se cacher dans un fosse. Il est parti de suite suivi de son
-frère Maurice, âgé de 17 ans. Le même jour, vers 8 heures du soir,
-celui-ci revint à la maison, il me dit que son frère l’avait quitté
-pour aller à la ferme occupée par les époux Charlet, nos voisins. Je
-suis allé aussitôt voir mon voisin, C---- D----, que je savais avoir
-passé la journée chez Charlet et celui-ci me dit que mon fils avait été
-tué dans la ferme Charlet à coup de lance par un soldat allemand. Je
-ne sais pas autre chose sinon que j’ai vu le cadavre de mon fils dans
-la cour de cette ferme à moitié carbonisé par l’incendie que venait
-de détruire les immeubles et qui avait été allumé par les soldats
-allemands.
-
-Lecture faite.
-
-
- B----, VICTOR. THÉVENIN, Cre. de Police.
-
-2º. C---- D----, 57 ans, cultivateur, demeurant à Bailleul, Rue de
-Lille, entendu, déclare:
-
-Le 8 octobre, vers 3 heures du soir, je me trouvais à la ferme Charlet
-avec différentes personnes dont le nommé B----, Albert. Les Allemands
-au nombre d’une dizaine, sont entrés dans la maison absolument furieux
-et se sont rués sur nous hommes et femmes sans distinction, nous ont
-appréhendés au corps pour nous jeter dans la cour de la ferme, où
-ils allaient nous fusilier, disaient-ils. Le jeune B---- fut jeté le
-premier. Un soldat qui était à l’entrée le perça d’un coup de lance qui
-le tua. B---- tomba raide mort à terre. Dans la cour, j’ai vu que les
-bâtiments de la ferme flambaient. Les Allemands nous ont dit qu’ils
-venaient d’allumer cet incendie, car ils croyaient qu’un coup de feu
-avait été tiré de là sur eux. Tous, nous avons supplié les Allemands
-de ne pas nous faire du mal. Un d’entr’eux qui causait français a fait
-part aux autres de ce que nous voulions. Alors, on nous a jeté la tête
-après les murs, on nous a bousculés tant qu’ils ont pu et on nous a mis
-dehors de la ferme. Je ne sais pas autre chose sur cette affaire.
-
-Lecture faite.
-
-
- D----, CLOVIS. THÉVENIN.
-
-3º. Joseph D----, 14 ans, ouvrier agricole, demeurant à Bailleul, rue
--- ----, entendu, nous fait une déclaration corroborant de tous points
-à celle de son frère qui procède et signe avec nous, ajoutant qu’aucun
-coup de feu n’avait été tiré de cette ferme sur les Allemands ou sur
-aucune autre personne et qu’à sa connaissance il n’y avait dans cette
-ferme aucune arme à feu.
-
-
- D----, JOSEPH. THÉVENIN.
-
-4º. C----, Eugénie, née B----, 55 ans, fermière, demeurant à Bailleul,
-Rue -- ----, nous dit:--J’ai reçu à ma ferme le jeudi, 8 courant, vers
-midi et demi plusieurs voisins, parmi lesquels le nommé B----, Albert.
-Je l’ai vu tué vers trois heures par un soldat allemand d’un coup de
-lance dans la poitrine alors qu’il venait d’être jeté dehors de ma
-maison par d’autres soldats allemands. Les soldats allemands nous ont
-tous maltraités en nous flanquant la tête contre les murs. Ils nous ont
-en outre menacés de mort. Ils ont dit que l’incendie qui a détruit ma
-ferme avait été allumé par eux, car ils avaient cru entendre un coup
-de feu parti de là. J’affirme que chez moi il n’y a aucune arme à feu
-et qu’aucun coup n’a été tiré. Je ne sais pas autre chose sur cette
-affaire.
-
-Lecture.
-
-
- C---- B----. THÉVENIN.
-
-5º. B----, Juliette, 36 ans, servante à Estaires, P---- P----,
-interpellée, déclare:--J’ai vu comme ma tante, époux C---- et les
-autres témoins, tuer le jeune B----, Albert. J’ai été comme eux tous,
-maltraitée et menacée de mort par les mêmes militaires. Je ne puis pas
-en dire davantage, mais je confirme en tous points les déclarations qui
-précèdent.
-
-Lecture.
-
-
- JULIETTE B----. THÉVENIN.
-
-_Procès-Verbal, No. 3.--Meurtre des nommés Itsweire Donat, et Torrez
-Edouard, par une patrouille allemande_
-
-L’an 1914, le 16 octobre, à 5 heures et demi du soir nous Thévenin....
-Informé par les agents de notre service que deux hommes habitant
-le village d’Oultersteen, commune de Bailleul, avaient été tués
-volontairement par des soldats allemands quoiqu’étant en civils et non
-combattants, ouvrons une enquête et entendons:--
-
-F----, Charles, 55 ans, journalier, demeurant à Merris, lequel nous
-dit:--Le mercredi, 7 courant, vers 4 heures et demie du soir, j’ai
-vu arriver près du passage à niveau d’Oultersteen une patrouille de
-dragons allemands appartenant au 5º régiment et commandée par un
-sous-officier. La patrouille a tiré des coups de carabine sur les
-civils qui se trouvaient dans la rue. Quelques soldats sont allés tuer
-un homme, le nommé Isteweire Donat, 75 ans environ, qui s’était réfugié
-sous un pont. Je l’ai vu tirer sur cet homme et celui-ci ayant cessé de
-vivre. J’ai appris depuis qu’ils avaient tué un sieur Torrez Edouard,
-40 ans, cabaretier, demeurant à Oultersteen et cela de la même manière.
-J’ai su aussi qu’un autre homme avait été par eux blessé à la joue.
-
-Lecture faite.
-
-
-2º. B----, Alfred, 37 ans, employé au chemin de fer, A---- ----, à
-Lille, entendu, déclare:--Le mercredi, 7 courant, vers 4 heures et
-demie du soir, je revenais de voyage en passant par Oultersteen. A la
-barrière du passage à niveau de la route allant à Vieux-Berquin j’ai
-vu devant moi des dragons allemands, 5º régiment, qui nous ont ajustés
-de leur carabines et ont tiré trentaine de coups de feu. Pour ma part
-j’ai reçu une balle à la joue gauche. Une autre a percé ma casquette,
-qui a été lancée à plusieurs mètres. A ce moment les nommés Torrez
-Edouard, et Isteweire Donat, étaient à côté de moi. Nous avons fui
-chacun de notre côté, seul j’ai pu échapper. Itsweire a été tué sous un
-pont, Torrez à côté d’une haie de chemin de halage. J’ai vu que cette
-patrouille de dragons a tiré une vingtaine de coups de révolver dans la
-maison de la garde barrière du passage à niveau de Vieux-Berquin, où se
-trouvaient trois femmes et trois enfants. L’arrivée d’une patrouille
-du 13º régiment de Chasseurs à cheval, qui a chargé la patrouille
-allemande, a sauvé la vie à ces six personnes qui n’auraient manqué
-d’être tués par ces bandits. Je ne sais pas autre chose.
-
-Lecture faite.
-
-
-3º. L----, Jules, 13 ans, sans profession, demeurant à Oultersteen,
-interpellé, dit:--Je n’ai vu Itsweire et Torrez que lorsqu’ils étaient
-droits, tués par la patrouille allemande à coups de fusils. J’ai vu
-cette même patrouille tirer des coups de révolver chez moi. Les trois
-femmes et les deux autres enfants qui se trouvaient dans la maison
-auraient certainement été tués par eux ainsi que moi-même, si une
-patrouille française ne lui avait donné la chasse. Je ne sais pas autre
-chose concernant ces deux meurtres.
-
-
-_Procès-Verbal No. 4. Viol de la demoiselle D----, Marie Thérèse, par
-deux officiers allemands_
-
-
-(4)
-
-L’an 1914, le 17 octobre, à 9 heures, 1/4, nous Thévenin, informé par
-notre service qu’un viol aurait été commis par des soldats ou des
-officiers allemands, Rue des Coulons, au domicile des époux D----, nous
-ouvrons une enquête et en entendons.
-
-1º. R---- C----, épouse D----, âgée de 48 ans, boulangère, demeurant
-à Bailleul, Rue ----, laquelle dit:--Dans la nuit du 9 au 10 courant
-vers 2 heures du matin je me trouvais chez moi avec ma fille Marie
-Thérèse et la femme M----, quand j’ai entendu frapper à la porte de la
-rue. Je suis allée ouvrir, une lampe à la main, et aussitôt deux hommes
-sont entrés, m’ont poussé du bras violemment, ont éteint ma lampe et
-sont allés directement vers l’endroit où se trouvait ma fille. Dans
-ces deux hommes j’ai reconnu deux officiers de l’armée allemande. Ils
-m’ont saisie à la gorge pour m’empêcher de crier et se sont opposés
-violemment à ce que j’allume ma lampe. Ils avaient à la main une lampe
-électrique dont ils se sont servis pour voir ma fille. J’ai vu que
-l’un d’eux, le blond, a pris ma fille en premier lieu et l’a jetée par
-terre dans la cuisine, puis il s’est couché dessus, lui a relevé les
-jupons et l’a violée. Ma fille se débattait autant qu’elle pouvait,
-criait de toutes ses forces, mais ce bandit lui appuyant son visage sur
-le sein, il cherchait à étouffer ses cris. Il est bien resté sur ma
-fille pendant un quart d’heure environ tandis que l’autre me tenait à
-la gorge et avait son révolver a côté de sa lampe. Quand celui-ci eut
-fini l’autre reprit ma fille à son tour et la renversa par terre dans
-le corridor, où il lui fit subir les mêmes outrages pendant un quart
-d’heure environ, en même temps, le blond était venu près de moi, son
-révolver en main, et me maintenant brutalement dans l’impossibilité de
-protéger mon enfant. Quand ils eurent fini ils ont pris ma fille par un
-bras chacun, l’ont traînée dehors et je ne sais plus ce qu’ils lui ont
-fait là. J’ai mené ma fille chez Monsieur Bells, docteur en médecine,
-qui l’a examinée et qui a constaté que le viol avait été consommé et
-que la défloration était complète.
-
-Lecture faite.
-
-
-2º. D---- (Marie Thérèse) 19 ans, sans profession, demeurant chez
-parents, boulangers, à Bailleul, Rue ----, nous fait la déclaration
-suivante:--Ainsi que vient de le dire maman, deux officiers allemands
-sont entrés chez nous dans la nuit du 9 au 10 courant vers 2 heures du
-matin. J’étais seule avec ma mère Madame M----. De suite l’un d’eux, un
-grand blond, a couru sur moi, m’a renversée par terre.... Il m’a fait
-bien mal; j’ai souffert beaucoup et j’ai dû l’endurer sur moi pendant
-un quart d’heure environ. Quand il a eu assouvi sa passion, il me fait
-relever et me traîna vers son camarade, un grand brun, qui, à son tour,
-me renversa dans le corridor et me fit subir les mêmes outrages pendant
-un quart d’heure environ. Je dois dire qu’après que chacun d’eux,
-j’étais toute ... et que chacun m’a fait énormément souffrir.
-
-Je ressens à l’heure actuelle de très violents maux de rein et mon bas
-ventre me fait excessivement mal. Quand le deuxième eut fini, tous deux
-me saisirent par un bras et me traînèrent sur la rue en me demandant
-mon âge. J’ai répondu que j’avais dix-neuf ans. Alors tous deux ont
-dit, en français le plus pur, “_Vous devez connaître d’autres jeunes
-filles dans le voisinage; il faut nous dire où elles sont pour que nous
-puissions en faire autant qu’à vous-même._” J’ai répondu que je n’en
-connaissais pas, que je n’avais pas de camarades dans le voisinage. Ils
-m’ont alors embrassée tous les deux et serrée très fortement, puis ils
-m’ont laissé partir. Je suis rentrée chez moi. J’oubliais de vous dire
-qu’avant de me lâcher, tous les deux m’ont dit, “Si vous dites ce que
-l’on vous a fait et que nous revenions chez vous, on vous tuera.”
-
-En rentrant chez moi je n’ai plus revu maman? Je l’ai appelée de tous
-côtés et finalement je l’ai retrouvée dans le jardin. Avec elle et la
-femme M---- nous rentrions chez nous, quand nous avons entendu les
-mêmes officiers qui frappaient à la porte pour rentrer de nouveau. Nous
-avons eu peur et nous sommes parties dans le jardin.
-
-Lecture faite.
-
-
-3º. D----, Gabrielle, femme Maerten, 72 ans, ménagère, demeurant à
-Bailleul, Rue----, entendue, nous fait une déclaration corroborant de
-tous points celles qui précèdent et signe avec nous.
-
-Personne n’a été témoin de cette scène mais j’ai souffert beaucoup tant
-au physique qu’au moral de l’exploit de ces deux bandits.
-
-Lecture faite.
-
-
-III
-
-EVIDENCE RELATING TO THE MURDER OF ELEVEN CIVILIANS AT DOULIEU
-
-_Gendarmerie Nationale_
-
- Cejourd’hui, 29 Novembre 1914.
-
-Déclarations de Monsieur Rohart Jules, âgé de 65 ans, Maire de la
-commune de Doulieu qui a déclaré:--Lors de l’invasion de la commune
-de Doulieu par l’ennemi, je suis toujours resté sur les lieux. J’ai
-connaissance et j’ai constaté tout ce qui a été commis sur mon
-territoire par les Allemands. J’ai d’abord appris que 11 individus
-civils français avaient été fusillés dans un champ à proximité de la
-rue du Calvaire au lieu dit “l’Espérance.” Ces hommes, qui n’avaient
-pas été enterrés assez profondément, ont été déterrés le samedi, 17
-octobre, pour les transporter au cimetière, où j’avais fait préparer
-une fosse commune et à la profondeur réglementaire. Je ne connais
-aucun de ces hommes, mais d’aprés les diverses pièces que j’ai pu
-retrouver sur eux, j’ai pu établir l’identité de sept. Les quatre
-derniers n’avaient aucun papier ni quoi que ce soit pouvant établir
-leur identité.
-
-J’ai fait prévenir les maires des différentes localités où résidaient
-ces hommes dont les noms suivent:
-
-1º. Léger Alfred Désiré Louis, né le 1ᵉʳ décembre 1885 à Amiens, fils
-de Alfred et de Clarisse Lourdel.
-
-2º. Dequeker Henri Léon Joseph, né le 25 avril 1875 à Sailly sur la
-Lys, fils de Charles Auguste Joseph et de Hortense Adéline Hay.
-
-3º. Vienne Louis Amand, né le 10 avril 1875 à Tourcoing, fils de Louis
-Eugène et de Elisa Marie Vienne.
-
-4º. Hallewaere Cyrille, né le 4 décembre 1889, à Vlamertinghe
-(Belgique), fils de Alphonse et de Gouwy Clémence.
-
-5º. Dequesnes Jules, né 1ᵉʳ septembre 1884 à Roubaix, fils de Henri
-Joseph et de Charlotte Desmettre.
-
-6º. Ermnoult, ----, né à ----, demeurant à Steenwerck, hameau de la
-Croix du Bac, reconnu par son beau-frère nommé, demeurant à la Croix du
-Bac.
-
-7º. Les quatre autres n’ont pu être identifiés. Ils paraissaient âgés
-approximativement de 30 à 40 ans.
-
-J’ai appris également la mort de Bail Désiré retrouvé à proximité de la
-ferme de Monsieur Leroy au lieu dit “La Bleu tour.” Je ne connais pas
-la cause de cette mort....
-
-Madame Masquelier Mathilde, femme Decherf Henri, âgé de 62 ans,
-ménagère demeurant à Doulieu, Rue du Calvaire, qui a déclaré:--Le
-Dimanche, 11 octobre, 1914, vers 16 heures, deux soldats allemands sont
-venus me demander deux bêches que je leur ai remises. Peu après, j’ai
-remarqué dans un champ situé à 40 mètres environ de mon habitation,
-onze individus civils occupés à creuser une tranchée. Un peu plus loin
-se trouvait un groupe de soldats ennemis. J’ai regardé ces hommes
-travailler, puis au bout d’un quart d’heure ils se sont décoiffés,
-puis se sont mis à genoux. Comme ils se relevaient, j’ai entendu une
-fusillade et au même moment, ils tombaient tous dans le trou qu’ils
-venaient de creuser. Deux soldats français prisonniers, appartenant
-l’un à l’infanterie, l’autre aux chasseurs à pied, sont alors venus et
-ont recouvert les corps de ces hommes.
-
-Fievet Charles, âge de 60 ans, boulanger épicier, demeurant au Doulieu,
-hameau de la Bleu Tour, déclare:--Le mardi, 13 octobre, 1914, vers 5
-heures 30 du matin, les Allemands qui occupaient notre pays déjà depuis
-plusieurs jours sont venus chez moi. Ils ont cassé les persiennes,
-puis les carreaux de vitres des deux fenêtres qui se trouvent sur la
-rue. M’étant alors levé, ils m’ont dit que je devais partir et qu’ils
-allaient brûler ma maison. Les rideaux de ces deux fenêtres ont en
-effet été brûlés. En sortant de mon habitation, j’ai reçu un coup de
-poing sur la figure, puis aussitôt un coup de crosse sur le côté de
-l’œil, puis un droit sur la tête. Devant ces brutalités, je me suis
-sauvé à la ferme de mon voisin Ridez, située à environ 30 mètres en
-face de ma demeure. Au moment où j’entrais dans la cour de cette
-ferme, j’ai entendu une détonation et immédiatement j’ai remarqué que
-mon bras droit tombait naturellement. Je ne ressentais aucun mal. Ce
-n’est qu’à mon entrée dans cette ferme que j’ai constaté que j’avais le
-bras droit cassé. J’ignore quel était le but de ces violences, puisque
-je n’avais rien fait ni rien dit. C’est Monsieur le Docteur Potié de
-Vieux-Berquin qui me donne des soins. En ce qui concerne le vol et le
-pillage tant chez moi que chez mes voisins, je certifie que ce sont les
-Allemands qui ont tout pris. Une liste détaillée a été addressée à M.
-le Maire du Doulieu.
-
-
-IV
-
-DEPOSITION OF A SURVIVOR OF THE MASSACRE OF TAMINES
-
-_Traduction de la déclaration faite en flamand par V---- A---- F----,
-mineur à Tamines_
-
-_Parquet du Tribunal de 1re Instance d’Ypres_
-
-PRO JUSTICIA
-
-L’an 1914, le 1 octobre, devant nous, Alphonse Verschaeve, procureur
-du Roi à Ypres, a comparu, dans notre cabinet, sur invitation de notre
-part, le nommé V---- A---- F----, 28 ans, mineur domicilié à Tamines,
-actuellement réfugié à Reninghe, lequel nous a fait sous la foi du
-serment en langue flamande la déclaration suivante:
-
-Le samedi, 22 août, dans le courant de l’après-midi, les Allemands, au
-nombre de 200, me semble-t-il, sont entrés dans la commune de Tamines.
-Immédiatement ils obligèrent tous les habitants (les femmes et les
-enfants aussi bien que les hommes) à sortir de leurs maisons et à se
-rendre à l’église. Pendant que nous sortions par la porte de devant,
-les Allemands pénétraient dans nos demeures par la porte de derrière
-et y mettaient le feu. Aussi en très peu de temps toute la commune
-ne formait plus qu’un vaste brasier. Lorsque toute la population
-se trouvait réunie dans l’église, les femmes et les enfants furent
-expediés vers le couvent des religieuses, tandis que les hommes (au
-nombre de 400), furent obligés de se diriger par rangs de quatre vers
-la plaine, et entre une double haie de soldats allemands. Pendant cette
-marche les soldats allemands ne cessèrent de tirer sur nous et de
-cette façon massacrèrent impitoyablement un nombre considérable de mes
-concitoyens.
-
-Voyant que nombre de mes camarades tombaient, abattus par les coups de
-feu, je me suis laissé tomber à terre, quoique je n’étais pas blessé,
-et je suis resté là, immobile, couché sous les cadavres jusque vers
-le milieu de la nuit suivante; c’est ainsi que j’ai sauvé ma vie. Le
-lendemain matin, lorsque je me suis relevé, j’ai constaté que nous
-étions à peine trente habitants qui avions échappé au massacre, mais la
-plupart des autres échappés étaient blessés; cinq seulement d’entre
-nous en étaient sortis complètement indemnes. Plus tard dans la journée
-nous avons été forcés d’inhumer les cadavres de nos 350 concitoyens,
-puis amenés à une distance de 5 kilomètres; là on nous remit en liberté
-mais avec défense formelle de remettre encore le pied dans notre
-commune.
-
-Après lecture il persiste dans sa déclaration et signe avec nous.
-
- (Signed) ALPHONSE VERCHAEVE.
- (Signed) V---- A---- F----.
- Pour traduction conforme,
- le Procureur du Roi,
- (Signed) A. VERCHAEVE.
-
-
-V
-
-FIVE GERMAN DIARIES
-
- (_a_) Extract from the Diary of a German Soldier forwarded
- by the Extraordinary Commission of Enquiry instituted by the
- Russian Government.
-
-“When the offensive becomes difficult we gather together the Russian
-prisoners and hunt them before us towards their compatriots, while we
-attack the latter at the same time. In this way our losses are sensibly
-diminished.
-
-“We cannot but make prisoners. Each Russian soldier when made prisoner
-will now be sent in front of our lines in order to be shot by his
-fellows.”
-
-
- (_b_) Extract from a Diary of a German Soldier of the 13th
- Regiment, 13th Division, VIIth Corps captured by the Fifth
- (French) Army and reproduced in the First (British) Army
- Summary No. 95.
-
-_December 19th, 1914._--“The sight of the trenches and the fury, not
-to say bestiality, of our men in beating to death the wounded English
-affected me so much that, for the rest of the day, I was fit for
-nothing.”
-
-
- (_c_) Contents of a Letter found on a Prisoner of the 86th
- Regiment, but written by Johann Wenger (10th Company Body
- Regiment, 1st Brigade, 1st Division I.A.C. Bav.) dated 16th
- March, 1915, Peronne, and addressed to a German Girl.
-
-(After promising to send a ring made out of a shell.) “It will be
-a nice souvenir for you from a German warrior who has been through
-everything from the start and has shot and bayoneted so many Frenchmen,
-and I have bayoneted many women. During the fight at Batonville
-[?Badonviller] I bayoneted seven (7) women and four (4) young girls in
-five (5) minutes. We fought from house to house and these women fired
-on us with revolvers; they also fired on the captain too, then he told
-me to shoot them all--but I bayoneted them and did not shoot them,
-this herd of sows, they are worse than the men.”
-
-
- (_d_) Extracts from the Diary of Musketeer Rehbein, II., 55th
- Reserve Infantry Regiment (2nd Company), 26th Reserve Infantry
- Brigade, 2nd Guard Reserve Division, X. Reserve Corps.
-
-(_This diary was captured during the recent operations at Loos, and
-forwarded to Professor Morgan by the Head-quarters Staff._[94])
-
-_August 16th_ (1914). On the march towards Louvain.--“Several
-citizens and the curé have been shot under martial law, some not yet
-buried--still lying where they were executed, for every one to see.
-Pervading stench of dead bodies. The curé is said to have incited the
-inhabitants to ambush and kill the Germans.”
-
-1914. 16/8. Marsch nach Louveigne.--“Mehrere Bürger u. der Pfarrer
-standrechtlich erschossen, zum Teil noch nicht beerdigt. Am
-Vollziehungsplatz noch für jedermann sichtbar. Leichengeruch Uberall.
-Pfarrer soll die Bewohner Angefeuert haben die Deutschen aus dem
-Hinterhalt zu töten.”
-
-
- (_e_) Extracts from the Diary of a German Soldier, Richard
- Gerhold (Official Translation by French Head-quarters Staff).
-
-
-EXTRAIT DU BULLETIN DE RENSEIGNEMENTS DE LA VIº ARMÉE DU 30 AVRIL, 1915
-
- _Extraits du carnet de route trouvé le 22 avril sur le cadavre
- du réserviste Richard Gerhold, du 71º R.R. (IVº C.R.) tué en
- Septembre à Nouvron_
-
-... Le 19 août, nous avançons et peu à peu on apprend à connaître les
-horreurs de la guerre: du bétail crevé, des automobiles détruites,
-villages et hameaux consumés; c’est tout d’abord un spectacle à faire
-frissonner, mais ici on cesse être un homme, on devient flegmatique et
-on n’a plus que l’idée de sa sécurité personnelle. Plus nous avançons,
-plus le spectacle est désolé: partout des décombres, fumants et des
-hommes fusillés et carbonisés. Et cela continue ainsi....
-
-... Nous franchissons la frontière le 17 août; je me souviens, et je
-vois sans cesse ce moment là: tout le village en flammes, portes et
-fenêtres brisées, tout gît épars dans la rue; seule une maisonnette
-subsiste et à la porte de cette maison une pauvre femme, les mains
-hautes, avec six enfants implore pour qu’on l’épargne elle et ses
-petits; il en va ainsi tous les jours.
-
-Dans le village voisin la compagnie se fait remettre les armes
-naturellement avec la plus grande prudence. A peine nous sommes-nous
-mis en marche que des maisons on tire sur nos troupes; on fait
-demi-tour et en quelques instants tout est en flammes; il n’y a pas de
-place pour la pitié, il arrive fréquemment que cette sale engeance de
-curés prenne part à la fusillade; _c’est pour moi une folle joie quand
-on peut se venger de cette canaille de curés_;[95] ici naturellement
-tout est foncièrement catholique. Quelle vie agréable la population
-pourrait avoir ici si elle ne se laissait pas conduire sur une mauvaise
-voie par cette hypocrite canaille de pretres; ... la population ne
-serait pas inquiétée le moins du monde de la part des Allemands; mais
-puisqu’il en est ainsi par ici, il n’y a pas de notre côté à garder le
-moindre ménagement....
-
-... Le 18, nous atteignons Tongres: ici aussi c’est un tableau de
-destruction complète, c’est quelque chose d’unique en son genre pour
-notre profession (c’est un verrier qui parle)....
-
-... Le 25 août, nous prenons un cantonnement d’alerte à Grinde
-(Sucrerie); ici aussi tout est brûlé et détruit. De Grinde nous
-continuous notre route sur Louvain; ici c’est partout un tableau
-d’horreur; des cadavres de nos gens de nos chevaux; des autos tout en
-flammes, l’eau empoisonnée; à peine avons-nous atteint l’extrémité
-de la ville que la fusillade reprend de plus belle; naturellement on
-fait demi-tour et on nettoie; puis la ville est mitraillée par nous
-complètement.
-
-Chemin faisant passent devant nous des cortèges de prisonniers, homines
-femmes et enfants poussant des cris....
-
-... Le 1º septembre, nous sommes embarqués dans Bruxelles-Paris; sur
-cette ligne le même tableau se renouvelle: villages consumés, fossées
-énormes, etc....
-
-... Aujourd’hui, 7 septembre, c’est le jour le plus pénible que jusqu’à
-présent nous ayons vécu; l’endroit s’appelle Attichy; nous atteignons
-cet endroit en faisant de longs détours, car on a fait sauter beaucoup
-de ponts. A 5 h. du matin, on repart, et cela au pas accéléré parce que
-beaucoup de cochonneries y ont été commises....
-
-... Le 9 septembre, après un bon cantonnement, mais qui dure trop peu,
-nous partons la nuit à 1 h. 1/2 après avoir mis des chemises fraîches
-et nous avançons vers l’ennemi vers 6 h. du matin et livrons un combat
-après lequel nous sommes complètement désorganisés. Notre régiment
-actuellement se compose d’un bataillon du 71º, d’une compagnie du 2º
-bataillon, de compagnies cyclistes des 14º, 46º et 27º et de nombreux
-autres éléments encore. Vers 11 h. du matin nous tombons sous une grêle
-de shrapnells, nous n’avons pas d’artillerie, ni d’autre couverture;
-l’après-midi nous sommes engagés dans une chaude lutte.... Ici c’est
-Ormoy. Nous nous joignons au 9º Corps et nous portons vers la position
-occupée hier par l’ennemi.... Nous faisons au feu d’artillerie très
-vif, mais nous ne pouvons rien faire jusqu’à ce que notre artillerie
-ait nettoyé la place. Nous bivouaquons en forêt après que l’ennemi
-s’est retiré et nous nous avançons pour chercher de l’eau; la nuit
-vers 3 h. nous rentrons à la compagnie. A 4 h. nous repartons: ainsi
-en 3 jours 8 heures de sommeil et avec cela, nourris comme cela
-arrive parfois à la guerre et la marche continue de plus belle avec
-des efforts physiques les plus grands pour envelopper l’ennemi vers
-Compiegne. Nous nous heurtons au 94º qui a été repoussé avec de fortes
-pertes; plusieurs compagnies de ce régiment sont fondues et réduites
-à 40 hommes; nous cantonnons ici; mais quelque chose de bien! Dieu!
-quelles délices!... Nous faisons un brin de toilette, mangeons et
-buvons à cœur joie et songeons en rêve à vous là-bas!
-
-Le 11 septembre, mouvement tournant vers Chaulny.... Nous arrivons
-en cantonnement d’alerte à Chaulny vieux repaire de brigands. Après
-quelques heures de sommeil, nouveau départ à 3 h. du matin. Le 12
-septembre nous nous fortifions à 10 Klm de Chaulny dans des tranchées:
-il ne s’y passe pas longtemps que nous y sommes vivement bombardés par
-l’artillerie; à ce moment s’engage un violent combat d’artillerie. Vers
-5 h. du soir, nous entrons dans l’action, mais nous ne pouvons avancer
-que jusqu’à une pente abrupte où nous restons couchés sous des torrents
-d’eau jusque dans la nuit....
-
-... Malheureusement nous sommes encore trop faibles dans cette
-position; le rapport vient à l’instant que notre 2º Corps arrivera ou
-doit arriver dans l’après-midi: de ces sortes de promesses, on nous en
-fait toujours, mais? Celui qui va croire ou se laisser conter que les
-Français fuient devant quelques fusils ou canons allemands se trompe
-joliment et ne sait rien. Jusqu’à présent nous sommes obligés de dire
-que les Français sont un adversaire honorable que nous ne devons pas
-juger au-dessous de sa valeur. _Ici, aussi, il se passe des choses qui
-ne devraient pas être; oui, des atrocités sont commises ici aussi, mais
-naturellement sur les Anglais et les Belges, tous sont abattus sans
-pardon à coups de fusil...._
-
-
-VI
-
- DOCUMENTS SELECTED FROM THE REPORTS OF THE EXTRAORDINARY
- COMMISSION OF INQUIRY APPOINTED BY HIS MAJESTY THE EMPEROR OF
- RUSSIA
-
-
-I. Violation of a Sister of Mercy.
-
-A Sister of Mercy, wearing the sign of the Red Cross, was seized by
-German and Austrian troops on April 20th, 1915, at the station of
-Radzivilishki and shut up in a cart-shed.
-
-“On the fourth day several officers visited her in the cart-shed
-and demanded information from her as to the positions of the Russian
-troops. They then beat her with swords and pricked her body with
-needles. On the same day she was taken to the third line of German
-entrenchments and lodged in a ‘dug-out’ occupied by German officers.
-Here she was violated, and during a week and a half several German
-officers frequently committed violent acts of copulation with her, and
-kept her in the ‘dug-out’ without clothes under a special guard. At
-last she succeeded in escaping from the trenches. With the help of a
-Lithuanian peasant she made her way to the Russian positions, where
-she arrived in an almost unconscious state. First medical aid was at
-once administered, as it was found she was suffering from inflammation
-of the peritoneum and cellular membrane surrounding the matrix. On
-examining her for marks of violence, bruises were visible in the region
-of the shoulder and on the thighs and legs.”
-
-
-II. Violation of a Girl.
-
-At the beginning of the war, when the Germans entered the town of
-Kalish, a girl named X---- was arrested and led out to the public
-place, or square, for execution. Here the Germans tied her to a tree
-and told her that she would be shot. Others of the inhabitants, also
-condemned to be shot, were drawn up on the same open space. Among
-these victims was an acquaintance of the girl X----, a student named
-N. Davuidov. The German soldiers proceeded to stab this Davuidov with
-their bayonets before the very eyes of the girl X----, and then they
-tore out hair from his head and finally shot him dead. This scene of
-murder gave the girl such a shock that she fainted. On coming to her
-senses she found herself in an apartment occupied by German officers.
-No sooner did she revive, than one of these officers committed a rape
-upon her and destroyed her virginity. During the following days she
-remained a captive in the same apartment, where she was forced to yield
-to the brutal lust of the officer who first violated her, and to the
-solicitations of two of his comrades, who threatened to cut her to
-pieces with their swords if she offered any resistance. These officers
-then told her “that the Germans had invented a new method of making war
-on the Russians, which would exterminate them by means of poisonous gas
-without the waste of any more bullets.”
-
-The girl was subsequently rescued by the Russian troops.
-
-A combined judicial and medical examination of the girl X---- on June
-4th, established the fact that she had been deprived of her maidenhood
-and an inflammatory condition of the sexual organs was still plainly
-visible.
-
-
-III. Murder of Wounded Soldiers.
-
-On April 25th, 1915, when an infantry regiment retreated from the
-station of Krosno in Galicia, the unarmed wounded soldiers, who were
-unable to follow, and many of whom were crawling away on their hands
-and knees, were overtaken and stabbed to death, or despatched by blows
-with the butt end of rifles by the Austro-Hungarian troops.
-
-The foregoing facts have been confirmed by the evidence of junior
-subaltern B---- of the regiment, Serge Yakovlev Sudarikov, aged thirty,
-who was interrogated as a witness by the Examining Magistrate of the
-1st ward of Kharkov.
-
-
-IV. Murder of Wounded Soldiers.
-
-On May 12th, 1915, near the village of Bobrovka, forty versts from
-Yaroslav in Galicia, after the withdrawal of the “platoon sotnias” of
-dismounted cossacks from their trenches, the latter were occupied by
-German guardsmen, who drove out the Russian wounded at the point of the
-bayonet.
-
-Private Nikita Davidenko, who was one hundred paces from the trenches
-taken by the Germans, saw how they used their bayonets to thrust out
-four or five of his wounded comrades, whose groans were distinctly
-audible.
-
-When the Russian troops advanced on May 15th, Davidenko saw the bodies
-of many cossacks, who had been bayoneted or sabred to death in the
-trenches abandoned on May 12th.
-
-The above facts have been confirmed by the evidence of Davidenko, who
-was interrogated as a witness by the Examining Magistrate of the second
-ward of Kharkov.
-
-
-V. Murder of Wounded Soldiers.
-
-On the retirement of the Russians, after the battle near Gumbinnen, in
-Eastern Prussia, August 7th, 1914, a junior subaltern, named Alexander
-Lappo, aged twenty-six, who had been wounded in the back by a piece of
-an exploded shrapnel, was left behind, lying on the field.
-
-He soon perceived a group of about fifteen Germans, headed by an
-officer and a colour sergeant, following up their detachments, and
-shooting all the wounded Russians within reach as they marched along.
-There was no consideration for the fact that these Russians had been
-struck down at a considerable distance from the actual fighting,
-without having fired a shot. One of the Germans in this squad caught
-sight of Lappo and fired at him with his rifle. Lappo received the
-bullet in his left elbow. A second shot, fired by the same German
-soldier, hit a wounded Russian private Tartar, lying next to Lappo.
-The Tartar made one or two convulsive movements and expired. The pain
-from the wound in his elbow made Lappo moan rather loudly, and this
-attracted the attention of the German officer, who at once levelled his
-revolver and shot him in the neck. This second wound rendered Lappo
-unconscious and he only recovered his senses towards evening, when he
-was picked up by Russian Red Cross men. Lappo then noticed that his
-leather wrist band with a black watch, worth ten roubles, had been
-stolen, evidently by the Germans.
-
-It is not certain to what troops of the enemy’s forces this German
-officer and the men under his command belonged, but the German soldiers
-killed in the battle near Stalupenen, on August 4th, 1914, in which
-Lappo took part, had the figures “41” on their shoulder straps.
-
-The above described facts have been verified and established by a
-combined judicial and medical examination, and by the evidence of
-Lappo, given under oath before the Examining Magistrate of the Circuit
-Court of Vitebsk, district of Gorodok.
-
-
-VI. Burning the Russian Wounded.
-
-_Evidence of the Private Nicholas Semenov Dorozhka_
-
-In the latter half of June the regiment in which this witness was one
-of the rank and file took part in a battle near Ivangorod. When the
-fighting was over, the regiment settled down to rest. Some of the
-men, however, went to help the sanitary attendants to bring in the
-wounded and place them in a wooden cart-house or shed, roofed with
-straw, at one end of the village. According to statements made by
-the Red Cross bearers, from sixty-six to sixty-eight men were lodged
-in this building. At eleven o’clock at night there was a sudden and
-violent rattle of rifle fire. The village had been surrounded by the
-Germans. The witness seized his rifle and started to leave with three
-comrades, but in the darkness they stumbled into a German trench, and
-were taken prisoners. Their weapons were taken from them, and all four
-Russians were led to the same cart-shed, to which the witness Dorozhka
-had assisted to carry the Russian wounded. A German officer on the
-spot gave an order to his German soldiers and then he gathered up an
-armful of the straw, littered over the floor of the shed, placed it
-against one of the corners of the building, and set fire to it with a
-match. The witness declares, that he almost fainted when he saw this
-officer setting fire to the shed. The straw blazed up at once, the
-flames began to envelop the wooden walls, and when it reached the roof,
-piercing shrieks came from the wounded inmates, calling for help. At
-this moment the officer who fired the shed approached the prisoners,
-who were standing near, and without uttering a word, he discharged
-his revolver point blank at one of the comrades of the witness, who
-instantly fell to the ground dead. Then this officer struck witness’s
-other comrade with something in the lower part of the body, and by the
-light of the conflagration witness noticed that the man’s intestines
-were protruding. Dorozhka rushed to one side and managed to break away
-from a group of German soldiers and escaped unhurt, although three
-shots were fired after him. The witness, after tramping all night, fell
-in with one of the Russian pickets.
-
-The foregoing was deposed to by the witness Dorozhka on examination by
-the Examining Magistrate of the 1st Dnieprovsky District.
-
-
-VII. Ill-Treatment of Prisoners of War.
-
-In June, 1915, three Russian officers, Captain Kosmachevsky, Lieutenant
-Griaznov, and Sub-lieutenant Yarotsky, escaped from German captivity
-and reached Russia in safety.
-
-They were made prisoners in East Prussia in August, 1914. Together
-with other captured officers, they were driven on foot to the town of
-Neidenburg, and at one place on the way were made to serve as cover for
-a German battery, which was in danger of attack from Russian artillery
-fire.
-
-For this purpose the prisoners were put into two-wheeled carts and
-ordered to wave white flags and flags with the Red Cross, and these
-carts were placed in front of the battery. At the same time the
-prisoners were warned, that if only a single projectile fell into this
-German battery, they would all be shot for it.
-
-Four days these prisoners were on the march. At night they were
-compelled to sleep in the open in roadside ditches, although there were
-villages near by, and all that time they received no food, but only
-coffee, without sugar, milk or bread, served up in pails. Along the
-road the inhabitants and troops whom they met cursed and insulted them,
-tore off their shoulder straps, threatened them with their fists, spat
-at them and shouted “To Berlin!”
-
-Before the prisoners were put into the train they were searched,
-and in this way many of them lost their gold watches and money. The
-Cossack officers especially were subjected to very strict search, in
-the course of which they were stripped naked. These Cossack officers
-were separated from the others and sent off with the private soldier
-prisoners.
-
-In the first instance the officer prisoners were interned in the
-fortress of Neisse in Silesia, and were subsequently removed to
-Kreisfeld, beyond the Rhine.
-
-The prisoners, according to their own account, were kept in horrible
-conditions. They were lodged in dirty barracks where the windows were
-shut fast and the glass of the panes covered with oil paint. It was
-forbidden to approach these windows under pain of being fired at by
-the sentries. This threat was once carried out, when an officer wished
-to make a drawing at one of the windows. Fortunately nobody was hurt.
-The imprisoned officers had to sleep in dirty beds full of bugs, lice,
-and other vermin. Their meagre fare was served up on dirty tables,
-littered with straw, whilst alongside were other tables, covered with
-clean tablecloths and decently furnished even to the extent of glasses
-for beer, and on these tables dinner was served for the sentries,
-German subalterns, who looked on at the prisoners and their wretched
-accommodation in the most insolent manner.
-
-All the imprisoned officers were formed into companies, commanded by
-rough and rude sergeant-majors, who treated them like common soldiers.
-
-In November, 1914, two of the officer prisoners attempted to escape
-by bribing the shopman at the stores of the officers’ canteen. This
-shopman, however, turned out to be a German officer in disguise, and
-the attempt failed, but it cost the officers concerned very dear. They
-were put in irons and kept in prison six months in a far worse state
-than in the barracks.
-
-The above is attested by the evidence of Captain Kosmachevsky,
-Lieutenant Griaznov, and Sub-lieutenant Yarotsky, given to
-Major-General Semashko, a member of the Extraordinary Commission of
-Inquiry, and the deponents were admonished that they would be required
-to swear to the truth of their statements.
-
-
-VIII.
-
-Peter Shimchak, a peasant from the province of Warsaw, who fled from
-German captivity, being examined on oath, deposed to the following:--In
-August I was made prisoner while serving as a sailor on board a vessel
-under the British flag, going from Denmark to England.
-
-As a Russian subject I was not set free, but was placed in solitary
-confinement for seven days in a prison at Hamburg, and then sent to a
-camp for prisoners of war near Berlin, at Zel, where there were already
-many English, French, and Belgian prisoners. In that camp there was a
-small yard where offending prisoners were generally punished. On one
-occasion four Cossacks were brought into the camp. I recognised them
-by the yellow stripes down the sides of their trousers. They were
-taken out into the yard and placed about ten feet from the wall of the
-barrack, and through the crevices I was able to watch the proceedings.
-They took the first Cossack and placed his left hand on a small wooden
-post or block, and with a sword bayonet one of the German soldiers
-chopped off successively half of the Cossack’s thumb, half of his
-middle finger and half of his little finger. I could plainly see how
-these finger pieces flew off at each stroke of the sword-bayonet and
-fell to the ground. The Germans picked them up and put them into the
-pocket of the Cossack’s overcoat and then took him into a barrack,
-where there was a reservoir of running water. The second Cossack
-was brought up and had holes drilled through his ears, the point of
-the sword-bayonet being turned in the cut several times in order,
-evidently, to make the hole as large as possible. This Cossack was then
-led away to the barrack where the first one had been taken. When the
-third Cossack was brought to the place of torture his nose was chopped
-off by a downward stroke of a sword bayonet, but as the severed piece
-of nose was still hanging by a bit of skin, the Cossack made signs that
-they should cut it off completely. The Germans then gave him a pocket
-knife, and with this the Cossack cut off the hanging piece of his nose.
-Finally, the fourth Cossack was brought forward. What they intended to
-do with him it was impossible to say, but this Cossack with a rapid
-movement drew out the bayonet of the nearest soldier and dealt a blow
-with it at one of the Germans. There were about fifteen German soldiers
-present, and they all set upon this Cossack and bayoneted him to death,
-after which they dragged the body outside the camp. What was the fate
-of the remaining three Cossacks I do not know, but I think, says the
-witness Shimchak, in concluding his account of the case, they must have
-been also killed, for I never saw them again.
-
-
-IX.
-
-Evidence of the senior surgeon of the 73rd Artillery Brigade, Gregory
-Dimitrovich Onisimov, who was captured by the enemy on August 30th,
-1914, near “Malvishek” in East Prussia, but has since been released.
-The most striking and characteristic part of this ex-prisoner’s
-testimony is a description of the insulting treatment received by
-Russian prisoners from the soldiers of their German escort on the road
-to Insterburg. “The peaceful temper of our German convoy did not last
-long. We soon began to meet detachments of German troops, who swore
-and shook their fists and levelled their rifles and revolvers at us,
-shouting, ‘Why lead these men about when they can be settled here on
-the spot?’ This kind of remark was shouted at us in German, Polish,
-and broken Russian. The peaceful inhabitants also reviled us, and
-called upon the soldiers to despatch us there and then. They shouted
-‘nach Berlin--to Berlin with them! ... to Welhau! ... Russischer
-schweinhund--Russian swine,’ and so forth. The soldiers of the escort
-were taken into houses on the road and made drunk, so that they also
-began to amuse themselves at our expense. The German soldier walking on
-my right took his rifle from his shoulder, as if tired, and held it in
-such a way that the muzzle touched my right temple, and then he played
-carelessly with the lock of it, as though unaware of what he was doing.
-When I moved out of the way, he said: ‘Ah! you’re afraid of losing your
-head, there’s no danger.’ As soon as the guard on one side had had
-his little joke, his comrade on the other side began. Another soldier
-on a cart came along purposely handling his rifle so as to stick the
-muzzle into my chest, and when I warded it off he roared with laughter
-and seemed highly delighted. When going down a steep part of the road
-the driver of a cart behind intentionally drove into us and struck me
-on the legs with the shafts. I shouted to him to stop and not break my
-legs. He simply replied: ‘Bad to have no legs.’ This kind of thing went
-on throughout the march. Sometimes we were driven forward like horses,
-and the wounded men in the carts were so shaken about that they groaned
-with pain. The guards did not allow us to turn round to speak with
-them, and no attention was paid to our entreaties to drive them slowly.”
-
- ALEXIS KRIVTSOV, Senator,
- President of the Extraordinary
- Commission of Inquiry.
-
-
-VII
-
-THE GERMAN WHITE BOOK
-
-
-The Introductory Memorandum.
-
-Immediately after the outbreak of the present war there arose in
-Belgium a violent struggle by the people against the German troops
-which forms a flagrant violation of international law and has had the
-most serious consequences to the Belgian country and people.
-
-This struggle of a population which was under the dominion of the
-wildest passions continued to rage throughout the whole of the advance
-of the German army through Belgium. As the Belgian army fell back
-before the German troops after obstinately contested engagements, the
-Belgian civil population attempted by every means to impede the German
-advance in those parts of the country which were not yet occupied; but
-they did not scruple to injure and weaken the German forces by cowardly
-and treacherous attacks, also in places which had long been occupied
-by the German troops. The extent of this armed popular resistance
-can be seen from the attached general plan (Appendix 1) on which
-were marked the lines of the German advance, and the Belgian places
-in which the popular struggle chiefly raged. We have an overwhelming
-amount of material resting on official sources, especially on evidence
-given under oath and official reports, that on these routes and in
-these places the Belgian civil population of every rank, age, and sex
-took part in the struggle against the German troops with the greatest
-bitterness and fury. In the Appendices is given a selection from this
-material which, however, embraces only the more important events and
-can at any time be increased by further documents.
-
-According to the attached material the Belgian civil population fought
-against the German troops in numerous places in the provinces of Liège
-(Appendices 2-10), Luxembourg (Appendices 11-30), Namur (Appendices
-12, 17, 31-42), Henegau (Appendices 3, 7, 10, 40, 43-46, 49), Brabant
-(Appendices 47-49), East and West Flanders (Appendices 49, 50). The
-conflicts in Aerschot, Andenne, Dinant, Louvain assumed a particularly
-frightful character, and special reports have been provided on them
-by the Bureau which has been appointed in the Ministry of War for
-investigation of offences against the laws of war (Appendices A, B,
-C, D). Men of the most different positions, workmen, manufacturers,
-doctors, teachers, even clergy, and even women and children were seized
-with weapons in their hands (Appendices 18, 20, 25, 27, 43, 47; A 5; C
-18, 26, 29, 31, 41, 42-44, 56, 62; D 1, 19, 34, 37, 38, 41, 45, 48).
-In districts from which the Belgian regular troops had long retired,
-the German troops were fired on from houses and gardens, from roofs
-and cellars, from fields and woods. Methods were used in the struggle
-which certainly would not have been employed by regular troops, and
-large numbers of sporting weapons and sporting ammunition and some
-old-fashioned revolvers and pistols were discovered (Appendices 6,
-11, 13, 26, 36, 37, 44, 48, 49; A 2, C 52, 81; D 1, 2, 6, 20, 37).
-Corresponding with this were numerous cases of wounds by shot and also
-by burns from hot tar and boiling water (Appendices 3, 10; B 2; C 5,
-11, 28, 57; D 25, 29). According to all this evidence there can be
-no doubt that in Belgium the People’s War (_Volkskrieg_) was carried
-on not only by individual civilians, but by great masses of the
-population.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The conduct of the war by the Belgian civil population was completely
-irreconcilable with the generally recognised rules of international
-law as they have found expression in Articles 1 and 2 of The Hague
-Convention: The Laws and Customs of War on Land, which had been
-accepted by Belgium. These regulations distinguished between organised
-and unorganised People’s War. In an organised People’s War (Article 1),
-in order that they may be recognised as belligerents, the militia and
-volunteer corps must satisfy each of the following conditions: They
-must have responsible leaders at their head; they must bear a definite
-badge which is recognisable at a distance; they must bear their weapons
-openly; and they must obey the laws and usages of war. The unorganised
-People’s War (Article 2) can dispense with the first two conditions,
-that is, responsible leaders and military badges. It is, however, bound
-instead by two other conditions; it can only be carried on in that part
-of the territory which has not yet been occupied by the enemy, and
-there must have been no time for the organisation of the People’s War.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The two special conditions required for the organised People’s War were
-certainly not present in the case of the Belgian _francs-tireurs_. For,
-according to the reports of the German military commands, which agree
-with one another, the civil persons who were found taking part in the
-struggle had no responsible leaders at their head, and also wore no
-kind of military badge (Appendices 6, 49; C 4-7, 14, 15, 22, 24, 25,
-31; D). The Belgian _francs-tireurs_ can therefore not be regarded as
-organised militia or volunteers according to the laws of war. It makes
-no difference in this, that apparently Belgian military and members of
-the Belgian “Garde Civique” also took part in their enterprises; for
-as these individuals also did not wear any military badge but mingled
-among the fighting citizens in civilian dress (Appendices 6; A 3; C
-25; D 1, 30, 45, 46), the rights of belligerents can just as little be
-conceded to them.
-
-The whole of the Belgian People’s War must therefore be judged
-from the point of view of an unorganised armed resistance of the
-civil population. As such resistance is only allowed in unoccupied
-territory, it was for this reason alone, without any doubt, contrary
-to international law in all those places which were already in
-occupation of German troops, and particularly at Aerschot, Andenne,
-and Louvain. But the unorganised People’s War was also impermissible
-in those places which had not yet been occupied by German troops, and
-particularly in Dinant and the neighbourhood, as the Belgian Government
-had sufficient time for an organisation of the People’s War as required
-by international law. For years the Belgian Government has had under
-consideration that at the outbreak of a Franco-German war it would be
-involved in the operations; the preparation of mobilisation began, as
-can be proved, at least a week before the invasion of the German army.
-The Government was therefore completely in a position to provide the
-civil population with military badges and appoint responsible leaders,
-so far as they wished to use their services in any fighting which might
-take place. If the Belgian Government in a communication which has been
-communicated to the German Government through a neutral Power, maintain
-that they took suitable measures, this only proves that they could
-have satisfied the conditions which had been laid down; in any case,
-however, such steps were not taken in those districts through which the
-German troops passed.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The requirements of international law for an unorganised People’s War
-were then not complied with in Belgium; moreover, this war was carried
-on in a manner which alone would have been sufficient to have put
-those who took part in it outside the laws of war. For the Belgian
-_francs-tireurs_ regularly carried their weapons not openly, and
-throughout failed to observe the laws and usages of war.
-
-It has been shown by unanswerable evidence that in a whole series of
-cases the German troops were on their arrival received by the Belgian
-civil population in an apparently friendly manner, and then, when
-darkness came on or some other opportunity presented itself, were
-attacked with arms; such cases occurred especially in Blegny, Esneux,
-Grand Rosère, Bièvre, Gouvy, Villers devant Orval, Sainte Marie, Les
-Bulles, Yschippe, Acoz, Aerschot, Andenne, and Louvain (Appendices 3,
-8, 11-13, 18, 22, 28, 31, 43; A, B, D). All these attacks obviously
-offended against the precept of international law that arms should be
-borne openly.
-
-What, however, is the chief accusation against the Belgian population
-is the unheard-of violation of the usages of war. In different places,
-for instance, at Liége, Herve, Brussels, at Aerschot, Dinant, and
-Louvain, German soldiers were treacherously murdered (Appendices 18,
-55, 61, 65, 66; A 1; C 56, 59, 61, 67, 73-78), which is contrary to
-the prohibition “to kill or treacherously wound individuals belonging
-to the hostile nation or army.” (Article 23, Section 1 (_b_) of The
-Hague Convention: The Laws and Customs of War on Land.) Further, the
-Belgian population did not respect the sign of the Red Cross, and
-thereby violated Article 9 of the Convention of Geneva of July 6th,
-1906. In particular, they did not scruple to fire on German troops
-under the cover of this sign, and also to attack hospitals in which
-there were wounded, as well as members of the Ambulance Corps, while
-they were occupied in carrying out their duties (Appendices 3, 4, 12,
-19, 23, 28, 29, 41, 49; C 9, 16-18, 32, 56, 66-70; D 9, 21, 25-29, 38,
-47). Finally, it is proved beyond all doubt that German wounded were
-robbed and killed by the Belgian population, and indeed were subjected
-to horrible mutilation, and that even women and young girls took part
-in these shameful actions. In this way the eyes of German wounded
-were torn out, their ears, nose, fingers, and sexual organs were cut
-off, or their body cut open (Appendices 54-66; C 73, 78; D 35, 37).
-In other cases German soldiers were poisoned, hung on trees, deluged
-with burning liquid, or burnt in other ways, so that they suffered
-a specially painful death (Appendices 50, 55, 63; C 56, 59, 61, 67,
-74-78). This bestial behaviour of the population is not only in open
-contravention of the express obligation for “respecting and taking care
-of” the sick and wounded of the hostile army (Article 1, Section 1, of
-the Convention of Geneva), but also of the first principles of the laws
-of war and humanity.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Under these circumstances, the Belgian civil population who took
-part in the struggle could of course make no claim to the treatment
-to which belligerents have a right. On the contrary, it was
-absolutely necessary, in the interests of the self-preservation of
-the German Army, to have recourse to the sharpest measures against
-these _francs-tireurs_. Individuals who opposed the German troops
-by fighting had, therefore, to be cut down; prisoners could not
-be treated as prisoners of war according to the laws of war, but
-according to the usage of war as murderers. All the same, the forms
-of judicial procedure were maintained so far as the necessities of
-war did not stand in the way; the prisoners were, so far as the
-circumstances permitted, not shot till after a hearing in accordance
-with regulations, or after sentence by a military court. (Appendices
-48, D 19, 20, 37, 40, 41, 43, 44, 48.) Old men, women and children
-were spared to the widest extent, even when there were urgent grounds
-of suspicion (Appendices 49; C 5, 6, 25, 26, 28, 31, 35, 41, 47, 79);
-indeed, the German soldiers often looked after such persons so far as
-was in any way possible in the most self-sacrificing manner by taking
-helpless people who were in danger under their protection, sharing
-their bread with them and taking charge of the weak and sick, although
-their patience had been subjected to an extraordinary difficult test by
-the treacherous attacks (Appendices C 45, 47, 51-53, 55, 58, 80-86).
-
- * * * * *
-
-There can be no doubt that the Belgian Government was essentially
-to blame for the illegal attitude of their population towards the
-German Army. For apart from the fact that a Government has, under all
-circumstances, to bear the responsibility for deeds of this kind which
-give a general expression of the popular will, the serious charge must
-at least be made against them that they did not stop this guerilla
-war, although they could have done so (Appendices 33, 51-53; D 42,
-43, 48). It would certainly have been easy for them to provide their
-officials, such as the Burgomasters, the soldiers, members of the
-“Guarde Civique,” with the necessary instructions to check the violent
-excitement of the people which had been artificially aroused. Full
-responsibility, therefore, for the terrible blood-guiltiness which
-rests upon Belgian attachés to the Belgian Government.
-
-The Belgian Government has made an attempt to free itself from this
-responsibility by attributing the blame for the events to the rage
-of destruction of the German troops, who are said to have taken to
-deeds of violence without any reason. They have appointed a Commission
-for investigating the outrages attributed to the German troops, and
-have made the findings of this Commission the subject of Diplomatic
-complaint. This attempt to pervert the facts into their opposite has
-completely failed. The German Army is accustomed to make war only
-against hostile armies, and not against peaceful inhabitants. The
-incontrovertible fact that from the beginning a defensive struggle in
-the interests of self-protection was forced upon the German troops in
-Belgium by the population of the country cannot be done away with by
-the inquiry of any commission.
-
-The narratives of fugitives which have been put together by the Belgian
-Commission, and which are characterised as the result of careful and
-impartial investigation, bear the stamp of untrustworthiness, if not
-of malicious invention. In consequence of the conditions of things,
-the Commission was not in a position to test the reports which were
-conveyed to it as to their correctness or to grasp the connection of
-events. Their accusations against the German Army are, therefore,
-nothing but low calumniations, which are simply deprived of all their
-weight by the documentary evidence which is before us.
-
-The struggle of the German troops with the Belgian civil population at
-Aerschot did not, as is suggested on the Belgian side, arise through
-the German officers violating the honour of the Burgomaster’s family,
-but because the population ventured on a well-considered attack on the
-Commanding Officer, and murdered him treacherously (Appendix A). At
-Dinant it was not harmless, peaceful citizens who fell as a sacrifice
-to the German arms, but murderers who treacherously attacked German
-soldiers, and thereby involved the troops in a struggle which destroyed
-the city (Appendix C). In Louvain the struggle of the civil population
-did not arise through fleeing German troops being by mistake involved
-in a hand-to-hand contest with their comrades who were entering the
-town, but because the population, blinded as they were and unable to
-understand what was going on, thought they could destroy the returning
-German troops without danger (Appendix D). Moreover, in Louvain, as
-in other towns, the conflagration was only started by the German
-troops when bitter necessity required it. The plan of the destruction
-of Louvain (Appendix D 50) shows clearly how the troops confined
-themselves to destroying only those parts of the city in which the
-inhabitants opposed them in a treacherous and murderous manner. It was
-indeed German troops who, so far as was possible, tried to save the
-artistic treasures, not only of Louvain, but also of other towns. On
-the German side, a Special Commission has shown to what a high degree
-works of art in Belgium were protected by the German troops.
-
-The Imperial German Government believes that by the publication of the
-material contained in this work, they have shown that the action of the
-German troops against the Belgian civil population was provoked by the
-illegal guerilla war, and was required by the necessity of war. For
-their part, they expressly and solemnly protest against a population
-which has, with the most despicable means, waged a dishonourable war
-against the German soldiers, and still more against the Government
-which, in complete perversion of their duties, has given rein to the
-senseless passions of the population, and even now does not scruple to
-free itself from its own heavy guilt by mendacious libels against the
-German Army.
-
-Berlin, _May 10th, 1915_.
-
-
-VIII
-
-MASSACRE OF BRITISH PRISONERS BY GERMAN SOLDIERS AT HAISNES ON
-SEPTEMBER 25TH, 1915
-
-I, Captain J. E. A----, 8th Batt. ---- Highlanders, make oath and say
-as follows:--
-
-(1) I command C Co. of the 8th Batt. ---- Highlanders. My company
-took part in the attack on September 25th, 1915. Between 5 and 6 p.m.
-on that day we were attacked and compelled to retire from an advanced
-position about Haisnes. We moved into Pekin Trench, and later to Fosse
-Alley. The battalion commenced to reorganise there.
-
-(2) Just before 8 p.m. 2nd Lieut. G. T. G----, of my battalion,
-reported to me that Sergeant D. M----, who had been attached to my
-company for the day, had just returned in an exhausted condition,
-and that he reported that the Germans had collected our wounded and
-prisoners and bombed them.
-
-Instructed Lieut. G---- to bring Sergeant M---- to me at once. This was
-done. 2nd Lieut. G. T. G---- has since died of wounds.
-
-(3) Sergeant M---- reported to me that he and a party of men had been
-collected in a traverse by the Germans and bombed from both sides, that
-he and a Highlander had jumped out of the traverse, and that he had
-escaped into a shell hole, whilst the Highlander had been shot.
-
-The Sergeant, D. M----, was very exhausted and covered with mud and
-water up to the neck. He was not in an excited condition.
-
-He carried on with his duties reorganising the company.
-
-(4) The story as told to me by Sergeant M---- at that time has been
-adhered to by him ever since without any material alteration.
-
-This Sergeant is a most reliable man in every way.
-
- (Signature of Deponent) J. E. A----,
- Captain.
-
- Sworn at Poperinghe in Belgium on active service this first day
- of October, 1915.
-
- Before me,
- A. M. H. S----, Captain,
- D.A.A.G., 1st Army,
- Commissioner for Oaths.
-
-I, No. 6546, Sergeant D. M----, of D Co., 8th ---- Highlanders, make
-oath and say as follows:
-
-(1) On September 25th, 1915, I was attached to C Co., 8th ----
-Highlanders. I took part in the attack on Haisnes on that day.
-
-About 5 p.m. the part of this company commanded by Lieut. A---- with
-which I was in trenches just west of Haisnes, and was going to retire.
-
-Lieut. A---- ordered me to collect stragglers from Pekin Trench.
-
-(2) I went 400-500 yards along Pekin Trench and found about twenty
-wounded men of various regiments, all Scottish, whose names I did not
-know.
-
-I left these men sitting down and went about 100 yards further on and
-found about twenty men of the ---- Highlanders, about ten of whom were
-wounded.
-
-(3) It was now 5.15 p.m., and I could see that the Germans had cut me
-and all these men off from our own troops. I took the men of the ----
-Highlanders back to where the others were. I now had about forty men
-with me. For the sake of the wounded men we decided to surrender.
-
-(4) We all took off our rifles and equipment and put them on top of the
-parapet.
-
-I stood on top of the parapet and held up my hands.
-
-A large party of Germans then advanced both in the open and by the
-trenches towards us.
-
-When they drew near I said, “We surrender.” One German, speaking
-English, said, “All right. Come along this way, every one.” We all
-followed him up Pekin Trench towards the north, helping the wounded
-along, and leaving our rifles and equipment behind. It now began to
-pour in torrents of rain.
-
-(5) The German who spoke English was dressed in dark khaki and wearing
-a cape down to his thighs. He had khaki trousers with a thin red stripe
-and long black boots. He wore a helmet with a dark khaki cover on it.
-He had no badges showing. His cape blew open and I saw a figure 6 in
-red on his shoulder and, I think but am not sure, a figure 2 in part of
-it, making 26.
-
-All these Germans were big men and were dressed alike, quite clean and
-fresh as though they had only just come into the trenches. I did not
-notice anyone in command of them.
-
-Their manner was not threatening.
-
-(6) About thirty of these Germans led us into a circular traverse in
-Pekin Trench, and the English-speaking German said, “Pack in there and
-stay.” All the Germans then went out of sight. The wounded men sat on
-the fire-step and the unwounded remained standing. It was now about
-5.30 p.m.
-
-(7) After we had been there about two minutes a bomb was thrown into
-the traverse where we were, one bomb from one side and one from the
-other.
-
-I shouted to the men to clear out if possible. Only one man and myself
-jumped over the parapet. I seized an English rifle lying on the parapet
-and fired down the trench. I then jumped into a shell hole about 15
-yards from the traverse. It was almost full of water, in which I stood
-up to my neck. The other man was shot.
-
-I heard the Germans bombing this circular traverse continuously for
-about fifteen minutes. At first the men I left were crying out, but
-after about ten minutes this ceased.
-
-(8) I was over an hour in the shell hole, and left it after dark.
-
-2nd Lieut. G. T. G----, of D Co., 8th ---- Highlanders, was the first
-person to whom I told my experiences. This was at about 7.45 p.m.
-
-(9) The second person to whom I told them was Capt. J. E. A----, also
-of the 8th ----, whom I saw at about 8 p.m. the same evening.
-
- (Signature of deponent) D. M----, Sergeant.
-
- Sworn at Poperinghe in Belgium on active service this first day
- of October, 1915.
-
- Before me,
- G. M. H. S----, Captain,
- D.A.A.G., 1st Army,
- Commissioner for Oaths.
-
-
-IX
-
-REPORTS RELATIVE TO THE USE OF INCENDIARY BULLETS BY GERMAN TROOPS[96]
-
- To:
-
- The Commanding Officer,
- 2nd Batt. The ---- Regiment.
-
- From:
-
- 2nd Lieut. L. E. S----,
- B Co., 2nd ---- Regiment.
-
- 18/6/1915.
-
-USE OF INCENDIARY BULLETS BY THE ENEMY
-
-SIR,--I have the honour to report as follows:
-
-During the action on 15th to 16th instant my platoon occupied the
-right of the old German trench running from ---- to ---- between 7.30
-p.m. and 10.30 p.m., 15th instant. Seventy-five yards to my front I
-saw six or seven men lying down in the grass. One of them attracted
-my attention immediately as he appeared to be smoking or to have lit
-a small fire. I observed him carefully and saw that his clothes were
-smouldering. Later on they were entirely charred black: he did not
-move and was apparently dead. The enemy were sniping at these men,
-unquestionably using incendiary bullets, as I saw three or four of
-these strike the ground and set the grass around on fire. The flames
-could be seen distinctly.
-
-About 9 p.m. one of these bullets struck the bottom of the parapet of
-the trench, and burned with a brilliant white flare for about fifteen
-seconds, at the same time giving off heavy phosphorus fumes and burning
-the sand-bags which it had struck.
-
- I have the honour to be,
- Sir,
- Your obedient servant,
- (Signed) L. E. S----,
- 2nd Lieut.
-
-The following statements were made by N.C.O.’s of the 2nd Batt. ----
-Regiment and 2nd Batt. ---- Regiment (7th Division), relative to the
-alleged use by the enemy on June 15th, 1915, of incendiary bullets:
-
-C.S.M. G. M----, C Co., 2nd Batt. ---- Regiment, states:
-
-On the night of the 15th and 16th I saw German rifle bullets cause a
-flash as they struck the ground. The flash seemed to rise about 2 feet
-from the ground. My attention was called to this by an Officer of the
-3rd Co. (?) Grenadier Guards. The Guards were on my left and I was near
-----. It was some time between 11 p.m. and 12 midnight.
-
- (Signed) G. M----,
- C.S.M.,
- C Co., 2nd ----.
-
-Sergeant N----, B Co., 2nd ---- Regiment, states:
-
-Just before dusk on the evening of the 15th I was in the disused German
-trench ----, and saw a man fall in front of the trench hit by a bullet.
-As he lay on the ground he seemed to be on fire in the right shoulder
-and breast, and was clawing the ground in agony. (The grass, which was
-green, was set on fire round him.) He was not more than 100 yards from
-me--hardly that. I could not do anything for him as the Germans had
-been following me and were almost on top of me, and I was nearly alone
-at the time.
-
-Very shortly afterwards I saw another man (a Lance-Corpl. in the ----
-I think), run out apparently to fetch in the first man. He slewed off,
-and must have seen the Germans, who were then crawling through the
-grass. He fell, seemingly hit in the stomach, and whilst rolling about
-on his back, his right knee and his puttees down to his boot caught
-fire. I think he must have been hit in the knee. He too seemed to be in
-agony, and the grass caught fire round him also. I could not swear that
-his second wound was not caused by a bomb, though I did not see any
-bomb burst there.
-
- (Signed) E. H. M. N----,
- Sergeant.
-
-Corporal D----, B Co., 2nd Batt. ---- Regiment, states:
-
-Shortly after the bombardment on the evening of the 15th instant, I was
-just on the left of the crater (near ----)--about 30 yards from the
-crater--and saw a man on fire in the grass in front of and below me.
-Another man ran out of a disused trench towards the first man, when he
-appeared to be hit in the chest. He fell forward on his chest, and as
-he did so flames spurted out of his chest. As he lay on the ground he
-was burning all over, and the cartridges in his bandolier went off.
-He burned for about an hour and the grass was set on fire. Both men
-were rather less than 100 yards from me. I called the attention of my
-Officer Mr. L. J---- (subsequently wounded) to the second man. I am
-quite sure the second man was hit by a bullet, not a bomb.
-
- (Signed) J. W. D----,
- Corporal.
-
-
-X
-
- DEPOSITIONS RELATIVE TO THE EMPLOYMENT BY THE GERMAN TROOPS OF
- RUSSIAN PRISONERS ON THE WESTERN FRONT[97]
-
-
- (_a_) Statement of a German Prisoner (Translation) Captured in
- Northern France.
-
-I, the undersigned Stephan Grzegoroski, a recruit in the 6th Co. (5th
-Section) 2nd Batt. No. 143 Infantry Regiment, XV. German Army Corps,
-hereby declare on oath that in the course of the month of October,
-I have frequently seen Russian prisoners of war in Russian uniform
-employed upon the construction of the third line trenches of my
-regiment.
-
-There were some 150 to 200 Russians altogether so employed. During the
-course of their work they occasionally came under fire. Two were killed
-and four wounded. Seven Russians tried to escape--two succeeded: one
-was shot dead, and four were retaken.
-
-The men were guarded by soldiers of my regiment.
-
-I spoke personally with some of the Russian prisoners, and they
-complained that they had much work to do, but only very little to eat.
-
-
- (_b_) Statement of Two Russian Soldiers (Translation) taken
- down in November, 1915, at British Headquarters in France.
-
-Michael Klokoff, Russian soldier, private in the Novo Skolsky Regiment;
-taken prisoner by the Germans on the Bzura on December 26th, 1914 /
-January 8th, 1915; and Andrei Slizkin, Russian soldier, private in the
-41st Siberian Regiment, taken prisoner by the Germans near Prasnysz on
-January 29th/February 11th, 1915, _declare that_: we were interned
-as prisoners of war at Strzalkowo until October 7th/20th, 1915. We
-then came with 2,000 other Russian prisoners to Belgium. Some of the
-prisoners were taken to build railways; others, among them ourselves,
-were employed to dig trenches. During our work we came under shell fire
-and sustained casualties.
-
-We escaped on October 31st, and reached the British lines on November
-2nd. We were promised pay, but did not receive any.
-
-
- (_c_) Statement of Two Russian Soldiers (Translation) taken
- down in December 1915, at British Headquarters in Northern
- France.
-
-Anastasius Nietzvetznie, 231 Dragoon (Infantry) Regiment, and Nicholas
-Nevaskov, 210 Infantry Regiment, _declare_: When we were prisoners
-with the Germans we worked at digging trenches. Each day we were under
-English artillery fire. We received 30 pfennigs per day, and we worked
-against our will. When we refused to work, we got twenty-five strokes
-with an iron rod, and were tied up with our hands behind our backs in a
-cold room with windows open and nothing to eat.
-
- (Signed) ANASTASIUS NIETZVETZNIE,[98]
- 231 Dragoon Regiment.
-
- (Signed) NICHOLAS MIKHAILOVITCH NEVASKOV,[98]
- 210 Infantry Regiment.
-
-
-
-
-A REVIEW OF
-
-GERMAN ATROCITIES
-
-BY
-
-THE RT. HON. VISCOUNT BRYCE
-
-Published in _The Westminster Gazette_, London, March 20, 1916
-
-
-A FRESH EXAMINATION OF GERMAN WAR METHODS[99]
-
-Professor Morgan, whose bright little book, called “Sketches From the
-Front,” has given to us some of the most fresh and vivid pictures of
-the actualities of warfare in France, presents in the present volume
-the evidence he has been busy in collecting regarding the behaviour
-of the German troops in the western theatre of war. Some of this
-has already been made known to the public by what he published in
-the _Nineteenth Century and After_ in June, 1915, and also by the
-depositions which he obtained under the instructions of the Home Office
-and submitted to the British Committee on Alleged German Outrages.
-(Many of these were published in the Appendix to their Report last
-May.) Since that time he has spent four or five months in collecting
-further important data and still more months in collating the results
-of the facts he has collected, having been granted by the British
-Headquarters Staff in France those facilities for moving to and fro
-along the front and getting into touch with eye-witnesses which
-were essential for arriving directly at the facts. The evidence thus
-obtained is supplemented by several diaries of German soldiers never
-before published in England, and by some extracts from documents
-issued by the Russian Government describing cruelties committed by the
-Germans in the fighting on the Eastern front. As respects the data he
-has himself collected, Professor Morgan explains, in his introduction,
-the methods he has followed in taking evidence and testing its value,
-showing himself sensible, as a lawyer ought to be, of the need for care
-and caution in such a matter. The large experience which his months
-of work at the front have given him adds weight to his assurance that
-what he submits is worthy of all credence as well as to the conclusions
-at which he has arrived. But before adverting to these conclusions a
-preliminary question deserves to be considered.
-
-It has been asked--and it is natural that it should he asked--“What
-is the use of multiplying tales of horror?” “Why do anything that can
-aggravate the bitterness of feeling, already lamentably acute, between
-the belligerent nations? All war is horrible; why add fresh items to
-the list of offences which are making us think worse of human nature
-than we supposed two years ago we ever could think?”
-
-These questions need an answer. Such a painful record as the present
-book contains, such a record as can be found in the reports already
-officially published by the Belgian, French, and British Governments,
-might, perhaps, have been better left unpublished if it did not serve
-some definite tangible aim, looking to some permanent good for mankind.
-
-Now such a definite, tangible, practical aim does exist, and seems
-to justify, and, indeed, to require, the publication of the facts
-contained in this book and also in the reports which have been
-published by the Belgian, French, and British Governments. It is an
-aim which can be stated quite shortly; and the need for pursuing it is
-shown by what has happened during the last twenty months.
-
-In most parts of the ancient world, and among the semi-civilised
-peoples of Asia till very recent times, wars were waged against
-combatants and non-combatants alike. Even in the European Middle
-Ages indiscriminate slaughter of combatants and non-combatants alike
-sometimes occurred, especially where, as in the case of the Albigenses,
-religious passion intensified hatred. As late as the sixteenth and
-seventeenth centuries there were campaigns in which frightful license
-was allowed to soldiery, private property was pillaged or ruthlessly
-destroyed, and women were habitually outraged.
-
-A reaction of sentiment caused by the horror of the Thirty Years’
-War, coupled with a general softening of manners, brought about a
-change. During the last two centuries, though every war was marked by
-shocking incidents, there was a growing feeling that non-combatants
-should be protected, and a serious purpose to restrain the excesses of
-troops invading a hostile country. The wars of the eighteenth century
-were less cruel and destructive than those of the seventeenth, and
-the wars of the nineteenth showed some improvement on those of the
-eighteenth. The war of 1870-71, if those of us in Britain who remember
-it can trust our recollection, seemed better in both the above-named
-respects than had been the Revolutionary and Napoleonic wars between
-1793 and 1814. Till the outbreak of the present conflict men who
-sought for signs of the progress of mankind were cheered by the hope
-that war would hereafter be waged only between regular disciplined
-forces on each side; that these forces would abstain from needless
-cruelty, that women would be protected from lust, and that the lives of
-non-combatants would not be endangered. There was even a prospect that
-private property would not be destroyed except in so far as a definite
-military aim made its destruction unavoidable, as when a hostile force
-had to be shelled out of its shelter in a village. The Hague Convention
-had passed rules which ameliorated the practices of war as regards the
-combatant forces and had solemnly proclaimed the duty of respecting the
-lives and property of non-combatant civilians.
-
-The present war has, however, brought a rude awakening. The proofs
-are now overwhelming that in Belgium and Northern France--as to other
-regions the evidence is not fully before us--non-combatants have
-been slaughtered without mercy by the orders of the German military
-authorities, while the mitigations of war usages as regards combatants
-have been openly and constantly disregarded. Private property has been
-constantly destroyed where no specific military reason existed, but
-only for the sake of terrorising the civil population, or perhaps out
-of sheer malice. A license has been practised by, and in many cases
-obviously permitted to, the soldiers which has led to acts of wanton
-cruelty. Outrages upon women have been far more numerous than in any
-war between civilised nations during the last hundred years. One crime
-deserves special condemnation, because it is done deliberately and
-is justified by its perpetrators. This is the practice of seizing
-innocent non-combatants, usually the leading inhabitants of a town or
-village, calling them hostages and executing them in cold blood if the
-population of the town or village whom “the hostages” cannot control,
-fail to obey the commands of the invaders. Civilians who fire upon
-invading troops without observing the requirements which the Hague
-Convention prescribes may, no doubt, be shot according to the customs
-of war; but there must be some proof that these particular civilians
-have done so. To put to death a quarter or more of the adult male
-inhabitants of a village because some shots have been fired, or are
-supposed by an excited soldiery to have been fired, out of its houses,
-is mere murder. All the paragraphs in the Manual of War issued by the
-German Staff cannot make it anything else.
-
-Though we may hope, and indeed must hope, that the horror caused by
-this war may lead to measures which will diminish the risks of war in
-the future, he must be indeed a sanguine man who can think that war,
-the oldest of the curses that have afflicted mankind, is likely to
-be eradicated within this century. It is therefore an urgent duty to
-do all that can be done for a regulation of the methods of war and a
-mitigation of the sufferings that it causes.
-
-Now the cruelties that have been perpetrated on land, no less than the
-ruthless murder of innocent passengers on unarmed vessels at sea, are
-an aggravation of those sufferings. They are a reversion to the ancient
-methods of savagery, a challenge to civilised mankind, to neutral
-nations as well as to the now belligerent States. Neutral nations
-ought to be fully informed of the facts of these methods, for they are
-themselves concerned. The same methods may be used against them if they
-are attacked by Germany or by some other nation which sees that Germany
-has used them with impunity. If the public opinion of the world does
-not condemn these methods, war will become an even greater curse than
-it has been heretofore. Unless an effort is made as soon as ever the
-present conflict ends to regulate the conduct of hostilities between
-combatant forces, and, which is of even greater importance, to provide
-more effective safeguards for non-combatants, there may be a terrible
-relapse towards barbarism everywhere.
-
-The Allied belligerent nations who are now fighting in the cause of
-humanity are called upon to take up this matter and deal with it
-effectively. So are neutral nations. It is a pity that they did not
-protest long ago. But a word may be said regarding the German people
-also. Professor Morgan thinks that they share in all the guilt of
-their Government, but the reasons he gives for this belief do not
-warrant so melancholy a conclusion. The behaviour of the mobs that
-were wont to insult and ill-treat the prisoners of war led through the
-streets of German towns, and the ferocious language of creatures like
-Von Reventlow and some other writers in the German Press, shocking as
-they are, cannot be taken as evidence of the sentiments of a whole
-people. Neither can we suppose that the declarations of professors,
-victims of a doctrine and a practice which compels them to approve
-every act of the State are more to be accepted as expressing what may
-be felt by the less vocal Germans. We must remember how severe is the
-German censorship, how accustomed the Germans are to believe what
-their Government tells them, how habitually mendacious the military
-authorities have been in the accounts they supply of the conduct of
-the Allied Powers and their troops. The German mind has had little
-but falsehood to feed upon ever since the outbreak of the war, and it
-now believes, absurd as the belief is, that it is the innocent victim
-of an unprovoked aggression. When any voice is raised in Germany to
-proclaim even a part of the truth and to plead for humanity and good
-feeling, that voice is instantly silenced. Silence will doubtless be
-enforced as long as the war lasts. But we may well venture to hope
-that when, after the war, the facts hitherto concealed from the people
-have become known and can be reflected on with calmness, there will be
-a condemnation of the practices I have described, and that in Germany
-and Austria, as well as in all neutral countries, there will be a wish
-to join in the efforts which both the Allies and the leading neutral
-Powers are sure to make to regulate and mitigate the conduct of war. In
-order to call forth these efforts by showing how great is the need for
-strengthening the existing rules of war, and providing more effective
-means of securing their observance, it is essential that the facts
-should be made known and studied, and that the world should see how the
-present rules, imperfect as they are, have been trampled under foot
-by the German authorities. This is what makes it right and necessary
-to publish the data contained in the Reports already referred to, and
-those data also which have been gathered by Professor Morgan with such
-earnest labour.
-
-So much for the justification--an ample justification--which exists
-for publishing the horrible record which this book contains. I need
-not here analyse it or quote from it or comment upon it. The facts
-speak for themselves. Professor Morgan’s general conclusions as to the
-behaviour of the German troops in France seem to be borne out by the
-facts which he adduces. They are further supported by the facts set
-forth in the Belgian, French, and British Reports. This accumulation of
-testimony is convincing, and it becomes even abundantly more convincing
-when one remembers that the German Government has scarcely attempted to
-deny the contents of those reports. To the French report, strengthened
-as it is by numerous extracts from the diaries of German soldiers
-(translated by M. Joseph Bédier), in which they describe, sometimes
-with shame, sometimes with satisfaction, the conduct of their comrades,
-no answer seems to have been made, although a few trivial objections
-were raised to the translations. Neither has the German Government
-ventured to meet the British report, except by a vaguely worded general
-contradiction in a semi-official newspaper. As regards the Belgian
-reports, no more to them than to the others has any examination and
-specific contradiction been vouchsafed. But a White Book has been
-published which tries to turn the tables by accusing Belgian civilians
-generally of firing on German troops and committing outrages upon
-them. Professor Morgan, in one of the most illuminative parts of his
-book, subjects this White Book to a critical analysis, exposes its
-hollowness, and shows conclusively that while it does not prove the
-German case against the civilian population and the Government of
-Belgium, it virtually admits, in its attempts to justify, the shocking
-cruelties perpetrated by the German Army upon that population. As the
-lawyers say, _habemus confitentem reum_.
-
-Let me add that he who wishes to understand German military ideas and
-military methods, ought to read along with this book (and the reports
-already referred to) another book, the German “Manual of the Usages of
-War on Land,” of which Professor Morgan has published a translation,
-under the title of “The German War Book.” Each of these is a complement
-to the other. The “War Book” sets forth the principles: this book
-and the Reports display the practices. The practice shocks us more,
-because concrete cases of cruelty rouse a livelier indignation; but the
-principles are a more melancholy proof of the extent to which minds of
-able men may be so perverted by false ideals and national vanity as to
-lose the common human sense of right and wrong.
-
-
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[1] The writer’s chief contributions to the Bryce Report will be found
-on pages 190, etc., of the Committee’s Appendix [_cd._ 7895.]
-
-[2] Published by the German Foreign Office under the title of
-“Die völkerrechtswidrige Führung des belgischen Volkskriegs.” The
-abbreviation “G. W. B.” will be used in the notes to this chapter.
-
-[3] The Reports have been translated, but not the evidence. I am
-indebted to M. Mollard for providing me with copies of the latter, to
-which reference is made below.
-
-[4] Speech in the Reichstag, August 4th, 1914. But, so far as I know,
-no one in this country has noticed that the absolute inviolability
-of Belgium, under all circumstances and without exception, has been
-laid down in the leading German text-book on International Law, which
-declares that such treaties are the great “landmarks of progress”
-in the formation of a European polity, and that the guarantors must
-step in, whether invited or uninvited, to vindicate them. “Nothing,”
-it is added, “could make the situation of Europe more insecure than
-an egotistical repudiation by the great States of these duties of
-international fellowship.”--Holtzendorff _Handbuch des Völkerrechts_
-III. (Part 16), pp. 93, 108, 109.
-
-[5] Regulations, Arts. 1 and 2.
-
-[6] _cf._ Von Bieberstein at the Hague Conference of 1907, “The
-international law which we wish to create should contain only those
-clauses the execution of which is possible from a military point of
-view.” (_Actes et Documents I._, page 282.)
-
-[7] Holtzendorff, IV., 385.
-
-[8] _Ibid._, IV., 374. This is an important admission in view of what
-the Germans allege to have happened in Belgium.
-
-[9] German White Book: Introductory Memorandum.
-
-[10] German White Book: Introductory Memorandum.
-
-[11] Belgian Grey Book (Correspondance Diplomatique relative à la
-Guerre de 1914), No. 8 (dated July 29th, 1914).
-
-[12] _Ibid._, No. 2 (July 24th, 1914).
-
-[13] British Blue Book (Great Britain and the European Crisis), Nos. 85
-and 122.
-
-[14] G. W. B. (Appendix C), General Report on Dinant.
-
-[15] _Ibid._, Introductory Memorandum.
-
-[16] G. W. B., Appendix 51.
-
-[17] _Ibid._, Appendix 53.
-
-[18] G. W. B., Memorandum.
-
-[19] _Ibid._, Appendix 59.
-
-[20] G. W. B., Appendix 56.
-
-[21] _Ibid._, Appendix 63.
-
-[22] _Ibid._, Appendix 56.
-
-[23] G. W. B., Appendix B.
-
-[24] This is the normal figure of such German units according to the
-basis of calculation arrived at, after careful inquiry, by our own
-Headquarters Staff.
-
-[25] G. W. B., Appendix B 1.
-
-[26] G. W. B., Appendix 29.
-
-[27] _Ibid._, No. 22.
-
-[28] _See_ the Appendix to the Bryce Report, pages 25-29. Any one
-who reads the depositions of the Belgian witnesses there set out,
-and compares them with the depositions of the German soldiers in the
-White Book cannot fail to be struck by certain notable differences
-in quality. The Belgian witnesses never generalise, they betray no
-malice, and they mention instances of German forbearance. The exact
-converse is true of the German evidence. Lord Bryce’s Committee came to
-the conclusion that they “have no reason to believe that the civilian
-population of Dinant gave any provocation.” (Report, page 20.) _See
-also_ the Eleventh Belgian Report (_Rapports officiels_, page 137).
-
-[29] G. W. B., Appendix C. Summary and also C 5, 7, 10, 31, 35, 40, 44
-for references in the text.
-
-[30] G. W. B., Appendix C.
-
-[31] C 44.
-
-[32] C (Summary Report).
-
-[33] C 51.
-
-[34] The story of Aerschot is peculiarly horrible. It was here that the
-priest was placed against the wall with his arms raised above his head;
-when he let them fall through weariness, the German soldiers brought
-the butt-ends of their rifles down upon his feet. He was kept there for
-hours, and as German soldiers passed they used him as a lavatory and
-a latrine until he was covered with filth. Eventually they shot him.
-This is but one of many such horrors (_see_ the Bryce Report, Appendix,
-pages 29, 46. _See also_ the fourth and fifth Belgian Reports). The
-German White Book admits (Appendix A 2) that “every third man was shot.”
-
-[35] Appendix A 5.
-
-[36] Appendix A 3.
-
-[37] The 1st Company of the 2nd Infantry Battalion of the Neuss Mobile
-Landsturm.
-
-[38] Belgian Collected Reports, Tenth Report, page 127.
-
-[39] Bryce Report (popular edition), pages 29-36. And see the diary,
-No. 14 of Appendix to Bryce Report recording the shooting of German
-troops by other German troops; to the same effect another diary quoted
-on page 41 of Bryce Report.
-
-[40] “No other troops were stationed at Louvain on that day.”--(D 8.)
-
-[41] _See_ the Sixth Belgian Report and, in particular, the
-Proclamations issued at Hasselt, Namur, Wavre, Grivegnée, and Brussels.
-
-[42] _See_, in particular, _Les Violations des lois de la Guerre par
-l’Allemagne_, issued by the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs, pages
-77, 92, 99, 100, 101, 119.
-
-[43] Press Bureau (Belgian communiqué), March 18th. The German
-authorities substituted the word “convention” for “conversation,” in
-order to convict Belgium of a secret treaty with England.
-
-[44] Foreign Office communiqués of May 20th and July 5th.
-
-[45] The case of the _Ophelia_.
-
-[46] P. P. Cd. 7595.
-
-[47] The case of the _Iberia_ (_Times_ Law Report, November 11th,
-1915). It is not the only one.
-
-[48] _The International Review_, published in Zurich, and controlled by
-a Committee consisting almost entirely of German Professors. Its title
-is obviously fraudulent. The June issue (page 14) contains an article
-of ingratiating impudence by a German psychologist discrediting all
-reports of atrocities, and, in order to prove their unreliability and
-justify the policy of the _Review_ in excluding them when they emanate
-from British, French, or Belgian sources, it attempts to disprove them
-all. On page 32 the writer refutes circumstantially the stories that
-German soldiers had had their eyes gouged out.
-
-[49] Note transmitted on July 8th to the American Minister by Herr von
-Jagow.
-
-[50] Proclamations issued at Namur and Wavre.--(Sixth Belgian Report.)
-
-[51] _Ibid_ Proclamation issued at Grivegnée. _See also Les Avis,
-Proclamations, et Nouvelles de la Guerre allemandes affichés a
-Bruxelles_, for a copy of which I am indebted to my friend Colonel E.
-D. Swinton, D.S.O. (“Eye-witness.”)
-
-[52] The reader should also study the diaries given in the Bryce
-Appendix, in the French official volume _Les Violations_, and in
-Professor Bedier’s _Les Crimes Allemands_: expressions of pity are as
-rare as exultations that “We live like God” are frequent.
-
-[53] The full story will never be known, but the Russian Report, the
-Second French Report, the Belgian Reports (especially the Tenth), and
-the narrative of Major Vandeleur, published by the Foreign Office
-as a White Paper, together with the Report of the American Minister
-published on November 20th, 1915, may be referred to.
-
-[54] The instances which follow are taken from official reports. I may
-add another illustration here published for the first time. A German
-soldier, recording the story of how the _maire_ of a French town was
-torn from his home and carried off by the troops, writes: “In spite of
-his protests we put him into our company and made him march with us.
-He called us names and shouted and protested, _and kept us all in good
-spirits_.”
-
-[55] The _Munchner Neueste Nachrichten_, October 7th, 1914.
-
-[56] Press Bureau (Belgian communiqués), August 5th.
-
-[57] French official communiqués, October 12th, August 1st.
-
-[58] _Velut e conspectu libertas tolleretur_ (Tacitus, _Agricola_,
-Chapter 24).
-
-[59] What I have here written is, without exaggeration, the substance
-of the Manifesto issued by the German Professors in August last. For
-the text, _see_ the _Morning Post_, August 13th and 14th. And to the
-same effect is the speech of the Imperial Chancellor in the Reichstag a
-few days later (for report, _see The Times_, August 21st).
-
-[60] Long ago--in 1870--Fustel de Coulanges pointed out that the
-crime which, to use the words of our law, “is not to be named among
-Christians,” flourished in Berlin as it flourished nowhere else, and
-the immorality of latter-day Germany was the subject of a mournful
-lamentation by Treitschke in his old age. An acute student of modern
-Germany, Dr. Arthur Shadwell, also remarks on the low commercial
-morality of German merchants (_see_ the _Nineteenth Century and After_
-for August, 1915).
-
-[61] It is a curious fact, attested by the evidence of a large number
-of British and French soldiers who have been in action, that the
-German soldier often exhibits the most abject fear when confronted
-individually with the bayonet, going down on his knees, and whining
-“Kamerad,” “Mercy,” and such like lachrymose appeals.
-
-[62] Bryce Appendix, “Depositions taken by Professor Morgan,” page 195.
-
-[63] Belgian Reports (Tenth Report), page 119. To the same effect the
-British and French Reports, _passim_.
-
-[64] Admiralty Memorandum, August 21st. Commander’s report on the
-stranding of _E_13.
-
-[65] _See_ Belgian Reports and Bryce Report.
-
-[66] The writer has brought together a number of such passages in his
-preface to the _German War Book_. For others _see Les Usages de la
-Guerre et la doctrine de l’Etat-Major Allemand_, by Professor Charles
-Andler (Paris, 1915). _Also_ Chapter I. of “_Les Cruautés Allemandes,
-Requisitoire d’un neutre_,” by Léon Maccas (Paris, 1915). And more
-especially the extremely valuable book published, at the moment of
-going to press, by an eminent French scholar, the Marquis de Dampierre,
-_L’Allemagne et le Droit des Gens_, a copy of which has just reached me.
-
-[67] Sorel, _Essais d’histoire et de critique_, p. 271.
-
-[68] German Proclamation of August 27th, 1914, at Wavre (Belgian
-Reports, No. 6, page 82). In the Proclamation at Namur of August 25th,
-1914, the German commandant, von Bulow, warns the inhabitants against
-“the horrible crime” of compromising by their conduct the existence of
-the town and its inhabitants!
-
-[69] _Ibid._, page 81.
-
-[70] _See_ p. 123.
-
-[71] Holtzendorff, IV., 378.
-
-[72] French Reports, _Rapports et Proces-verbaux_, p. 40.
-
-[73] _cf._ the reply of the Roman Senate to the offer of a German chief
-to poison Arminius, “Responsum esse non fraude neque occultis, sed
-palam et armatum populum Romanum hostes suos ulcisci.” Tacit., _Ann._,
-II., p. 88.
-
-[74] _See_ the British White Paper of September 21st, 1915; “Austrian
-and German papers found in possession of James F. J. Archibald,
-Falmouth, August 30th, 1915.”
-
-[75] Professor Salmond in the _Law Quarterly Review_.
-
-[76] Mr. Justice Bailhache in the _King_ v. _the Superintendent of
-Vine Street Police Station_. “The courts are entitled to take judicial
-notice of certain notorious facts. Spying has become the hall-mark of
-German Kultur.” September 7th, 1915.
-
-[77] It is, however, impossible to include within the limits of this
-book the whole of the unpublished material at my disposal.
-
-[78] The term “soldier” is used throughout this article in the sense
-adopted in the Army Annual Act, _i.e._, as meaning N.C.O.s and privates.
-
-[79] The outrages committed in the districts now in the occupation
-of the British armies have not been reported upon by the French
-Commission, and the ground so traversed in this article is therefore
-new.
-
-[80] Von der Goltz.
-
-[81] One might go further and say that the Geneva Convention, which has
-hitherto been universally regarded as a law of perfect obligation and
-which even the German Staff in the German War Book affects to treat
-as sacred, is perverted to an instrument of treachery. The emblem of
-the Red Cross was used to protect waggons in which machine-guns were
-concealed. And since this article was written a German hospital ship,
-the _Ophelia_, has been condemned, on irrefutable evidence, by our
-Prize Court as having been used for belligerent purposes. Such things
-throw a very lurid light on the German conception of honour.
-
-[82] Similar evidence has been supplied to me by a French officer
-attached to the Fifth Division of the British Expeditionary Force.
-_See_ Chap. III., Part I., No. 56.
-
-[83] See Chapter III., Part I., and, in particular, Nos. 39 to 43.
-
-[84] The German officers spoke Hindustani. Doubtless they knew, as
-I have found they often know, the identity of the British regiments
-opposite their positions and were attached there for the express
-purpose of dealing with Indians. But in no case, so far as I know, were
-their attempts to seduce our Indian troops successful.
-
-[85] This diary is now in the possession of my friend the Marquis de
-Dampierre, who is about to publish it and numerous others, together
-with fac-similes of the originals.
-
-[86] The passage suggests that our wounded were killed, but it is not
-conclusive. “Noch lebenden,” _i.e._, “still living,” would appear to
-mean the wounded found in our trenches and unable to escape with the
-others. The fact of some prisoners being taken does not dispose of the
-suspiciousness of the passage.
-
-[87] Brenneisen is now a prisoner in England. The diary was a most
-carefully kept one. Since I first published it, it has been republished
-by the French authorities.
-
-[88] What follows refers principally to the portion of Northern France
-now occupied by the British troops. The case of Belgium has been
-sufficiently dealt with by the Committee.
-
-[89] _See_ Chap. III., Section 2.
-
-[90] _Ibid._, Section 3.
-
-[91] After the outrage they dragged the girl outside and asked if she
-knew of any other young girls (“jeunes filles”) in the neighbourhood,
-adding that they wanted to do to them what they had done to her. _See_
-Chap. III. (2) No. 4.
-
-[92] Presumably La Couture.--J. H. M.
-
-[93] I have suppressed the names of the witnesses for fear of their
-relatives, if any, in German hands being subjected to vindictive
-measures. Also in the case (selected from some twenty similar cases
-equally authenticated) of rape I have omitted certain details which
-seem to me too disgusting for publication.--J. H. M.
-
-[94] NOTE.--This diary is a laconic example of a hundred such village
-tragedies. According to the Eleventh Belgian Report (page 133),
-twenty-six priests and monks were shot in Namur alone. And see the
-pastoral letter of Cardinal Mercier (_ibid._, page 165) on what he
-calls “this sinister necrology.” In his own diocese alone (that of
-Malines) he records thirteen priests as having been killed. According
-to a German soldier the guilt of priests was established by the fact
-that church-bells often rang!--(Bryce Appendix, page 163).
-
-[95] This savage credulity found its sequel in the murder of many
-unoffending priests not only in Belgium but in France. I quote one case
-from the depositions in my possession:
-
-“Marie B----, sœur du curé de Pradelles, a déclaré ‘Les Allemands
-rodant dans le village out enlevé la personne de mon frère M. l’Abbé
-Héléodore Bogaert, curé de cette paroisse, et l’ont fusillé au
-cimetière de Strazeele sans aucun motif le 9 octobre vers 1 heure et
-demie du matin.’”
-
-[96] These documents have been placed in my hands by the General
-Headquarters Staff. In accordance with the procedure adopted in the
-Bryce Report, and for military reasons, I have suppressed the names of
-the British regiments referred to and of their officers and men.--J. H.
-M.
-
-[97] This and the two following depositions are selected from a number
-of statements, mostly by Russian prisoners in German hands, who
-succeeded in escaping to the British lines. The statements (_b_) and
-(_c_) by these Russian soldiers are confirmed by the statement (_a_)
-which was volunteered by a German soldier, Stephan Grzegoroski, taken
-prisoner by the British troops. It is hardly necessary to point out
-that the employment of prisoners of war upon military works and their
-exposure to fire constitute a flagrant breach, not only of the Hague
-Regulations, but of the unwritten laws and usages of war.--J. H. M.
-
-[98] These two men escaped on December 8th, 1915, and reached the
-British Lines.--J. H. M.
-
-[99] “German Atrocities: An Official Investigation.” By J. H. Morgan,
-M.A., late Home Office Commissioner, with the British Expeditionary
-Force, Barrister-at-Law of the Inner Temple, and Professor of
-Constitutional Law in the University of London. (T. Fisher Unwin.)
-
-
-[Transcriber’s Note:
-
-Corrected the first two entries in the TOC to reflect the actual page
-numbers.
-
-Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation are as in the original.]
-
-
-
-
-
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of German Atrocities, by John Hartman Morgan
-
-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
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-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: German Atrocities
- An Official Investigation
-
-Author: John Hartman Morgan
-
-Release Date: August 1, 2016 [EBook #52679]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK GERMAN ATROCITIES ***
-
-
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-Produced by Brian Coe, Wayne Hammond and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
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-<div id="coverpage">
-<img src="images/cover.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_i">i</span></p>
-
-<p class="ph1">GERMAN ATROCITIES</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_ii">ii</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_iii">iii</span></p>
-
-<h1>GERMAN ATROCITIES<br />
-<span class="x-large">AN OFFICIAL INVESTIGATION</span><br />
-
-<span class="medium">BY</span><br />
-
-<span class="large">J. H. MORGAN, M.A.,</span><br />
-<br />
-<span class="small table">OF THE INNER TEMPLE, BARRISTER-AT-LAW,<br />
-PROFESSOR OF CONSTITUTIONAL LAW IN THE UNIVERSITY OF LONDON;<br />
-LATE HOME OFFICE COMMISSIONER WITH THE BRITISH<br />
-EXPEDITIONARY FORCE</span><br />
-
-<span class="medium"><em lang="la" xml:lang="la">Mentem mortalia tangunt</em></span><br />
-<br />
-<img src="images/title_page.jpg" alt="" />
-<br />
-<span class="large">NEW YORK</span><br />
-<span class="x-large">E. P. DUTTON &amp; COMPANY</span><br />
-<span class="large">681 FIFTH AVENUE</span></h1>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_iv">iv</span></p>
-
-<p class="copyright">
-<span class="smcap">Copyright</span>, 1916,<br />
-BY<br />
-E. P. DUTTON &amp; COMPANY<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Printed in the U.S.A.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_v">v</span></p>
-
-<p id="DEDICATION" class="center">
-TO<br />
-<span class="large">M. ARMAND MOLLARD</span><br />
-MINISTRE PLENIPOTENTIAIRE,<br />
-MEMBER OF “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">LA COMMISSION INSTITU&Eacute;E<br />
-EN VUE DE CONSTATER LES ACTES COMMIS<br />
-PAR L’ENNEMI EN VIOLATION DU DROIT DES GENS,</span>”<br />
-THIS WORK IS DEDICATED<br />
-IN RECOGNITION OF HIS COURTESY AND COLLABORATION<br />
-IN THE PURSUIT OF A COMMON TASK.<br />
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_vi">vi</span></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_vii">vii</span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CONTENTS">CONTENTS</h2>
-
-<table>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdr">PAGE</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="i2"><a href="#DEDICATION"><span class="smcap">Dedication</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdr">v</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="i2"><a href="#PREFATORY_NOTE"><span class="smcap">Prefatory Note</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdr">ix</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2">CHAPTER</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#INTRODUCTORY">I.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Introductory</span></a>:</td>
- <td></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="i4"><a href="#THE_BRITISH_ENQUIRY">(1) The British Enquiry</a></td>
- <td class="tdr">1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="i4"><a href="#THE_GERMAN_CASE_A_CRITICAL_ANALYSIS_OF_THE_GERMAN_WHITE_BOOK">(2) The German Case&mdash;a critical Analysis of the German White Book</a></td>
- <td class="tdr">6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="i4"><a href="#GERMAN_CREDIBILITY_A_REVIEW_OF_THE_EVIDENCE">(3) German Credibility&mdash;a Review of the Evidence</a></td>
- <td class="tdr">30</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="i4"><a href="#THE_FUTURE_OF_INTERNATIONAL_LAW_AND_THE_QUESTION_OF_RETRIBUTION">(4) The Future of International Law and the Question of Retribution</a></td>
- <td class="tdr">44</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2"><a href="#THE_BRITISH_ENQUIRY_IN_FRANCE">II.&mdash;<span class="smcap">The British Enquiry in France</span>:</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="i4"><a href="#METHODS_OF_ENQUIRY">(1) Methods of Enquiry</a></td>
- <td class="tdr">60</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="i4"><a href="#OUTRAGES_UPON_COMBATANTS_IN_THE_FIELD">(2) Outrages upon Combatants in the Field</a></td>
- <td class="tdr">64</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="i4"><a href="#TREATMENT_OF_CIVIL_POPULATION">(3) Treatment of Civil Population</a></td>
- <td class="tdr">76</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="i4"><a href="#OUTRAGES_UPON_WOMEN_THE_GERMAN_OCCUPATION_OF_BAILLEUL">(4) Outrages upon Women&mdash;the German Occupation of Bailleul</a></td>
- <td class="tdr">81</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="i4"><a href="#PRIVATE_PROPERTY">(5) Private Property</a></td>
- <td class="tdr">84</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="i4"><a href="#OBSERVATIONS_ON_A_TOUR_OF_THE_MARNE_AND_THE_AISNE">(6) Observations on a Tour of the Marne and the Aisne</a></td>
- <td class="tdr">85</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="i4"><a href="#BESTIALITY_OF_GERMAN_OFFICERS_AND_MEN">(7) Bestiality of German Officers and Men</a></td>
- <td class="tdr">87</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="i4"><a href="#CONCLUSION">(8) Conclusion</a></td>
- <td class="tdr">90</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2"><a href="#DOCUMENTARY_NEW_EVIDENCE">III.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Documentary (New Evidence)</span></a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="i4"><a href="#DEPOSITIONS_AND_STATEMENTS_FIFTY_SIX_IN_NUMBER">(1) Depositions and Statements (Fifty-six in number) illustrating breaches of the Laws of War by German Troops, mainly Outrages on British Soldiers</a></td>
- <td class="tdr">93
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_viii">viii</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="i4"><a href="#DOCUMENTS_RELATIVE_TO_THE_GERMAN_OCCUPATION_OF_BAILLEUL">(2) Documents relative to the German Occupation of Bailleul</a></td>
- <td class="tdr">122</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="i4"><a href="#EVIDENCE_RELATING_TO_THE_MURDER_OF_ELEVEN_CIVILIANS">(3) Evidence relating to the Murder of Eleven Civilians at Doulieu</a></td>
- <td class="tdr">134</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="i4"><a href="#DEPOSITION_OF_A_SURVIVOR_OF_THE_MASSACRE_OF_TAMINES">(4) Deposition of a Survivor of the Massacre of Tamines</a></td>
- <td class="tdr">137</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="i4"><a href="#FIVE_GERMAN_DIARIES">(5) Five German Diaries</a></td>
- <td class="tdr">139</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="i4"><a href="#DOCUMENTS_FORWARDED_BY_THE_RUSSIAN_GOVERNMENT">(6) Documents forwarded by the Russian Government</a></td>
- <td class="tdr">146</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="i4"><a href="#THE_GERMAN_WHITE_BOOK">(7) The German White Book: The Introductory Memorandum</a></td>
- <td class="tdr">158</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="i4"><a href="#DEPOSITIONS_RELATING_TO_THE_MASSACRE_OF_WOUNDED_AND_CAPTIVE">(8) Depositions relating to the Massacre of Wounded and Captive Highlanders by a German Bombing Party on September 25th, 1915, at Haisnes</a></td>
- <td class="tdr">169</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="i4"><a href="#DEPOSITIONS_AS_TO_THE_USE_OF_INCENDIARY_BULLETS">(9) Depositions as to the use of Incendiary Bullets by the German Troops</a></td>
- <td class="tdr">174</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="i4"><a href="#DEPOSITIONS_AS_TO_THE_EMPLOYMENT_BY_GERMAN_TROOPS">(10) Depositions as to the Employment by German Troops of Russian Prisoners upon Military Works on the Western Front</a></td>
- <td class="tdr">177</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_ix">ix</span></p>
-
-<h2 id="PREFATORY_NOTE">PREFATORY NOTE</h2>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Professor Morgan</span> desires to express his obligations
-to the Russian Embassy, the Foreign Office, the Home
-Office, the French Ministry of War, and the General
-Headquarters Staff of the British Expeditionary
-Force for the assistance which they have given him.
-For the opinions expressed in Part IV. of the Introductory
-Chapter Professor Morgan is alone responsible.
-The whole of the documents given in the
-“Documentary Chapter” of this book (except the
-Memorandum from the German White Book which
-has been published in German, though not, of course,
-in English) are now published for the first time.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_x">x</span>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">1</span></p>
-
-<p class="ph1">GERMAN ATROCITIES</p>
-
-<h2 id="Chapter_I"><span class="smcap">Chapter I</span><br />
-
-<span id="INTRODUCTORY">INTRODUCTORY</span></h2>
-
-<h3 id="THE_BRITISH_ENQUIRY">I<br />
-
-THE BRITISH ENQUIRY</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> second chapter of this book has already appeared
-in the pages of the June issue of the <cite>Nineteenth Century
-and After</cite>. At the time of its appearance numerous
-suggestions were made&mdash;notably by the
-<cite>Morning Post</cite> and the <cite>Daily Chronicle</cite>&mdash;that it should
-be republished in a cheaper and more accessible
-form. A similar suggestion has come to us from the
-Ministry of War in Paris, reinforced by the intimation
-that the review containing the article was not
-obtainable owing to its having immediately gone out
-of print. Since then an official reprint has been
-largely circulated in neutral countries by the British
-Government, and an abbreviated reprint of it has
-been published by the Parliamentary Recruiting Committee
-in the form of a pamphlet. The Secretary to
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">2</span>
-the Committee informs me that considerably over a
-million and a half copies of this pamphlet have been
-circulated.</p>
-
-<p>At the suggestion of Mr. Fisher Unwin, and by the
-courtesy of the editor of the <cite>Nineteenth Century</cite>, the
-article is now republished as a whole, but with it is
-published for the first time a documentary chapter
-containing a selection of illustrative documents, none
-of which have hitherto appeared in print. For permission
-to publish them I am chiefly indebted to the
-Home Office and the Foreign Office. Needless to say,
-the original article also was submitted to the Home
-Office authorities, by whom it was duly read and approved
-before publication. These documents by no
-means exhaust the unpublished evidence in my possession,
-but my object has been not to multiply proofs
-but to exemplify them, and, in particular, as is explained
-in the following chapter, to supplement the
-Bryce Report on matters which, owing to the exigencies
-of space and the pre-occupation with the case
-of Belgium, occupy a comparatively subordinate
-place in that document. This volume may, in fact,
-be regarded as a postscript to the Bryce Report&mdash;it
-does not pretend to be anything more.<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">1</a></p>
-
-<p>There is, however, an extremely important aspect
-of the question which has not yet been the subject
-of an official report in this country, and that is the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">3</span>
-German White Book.<a id="FNanchor_2" href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">2</a> It has never been published
-in England, and is very difficult to obtain. There
-is some reason to believe that the German Government
-now entertain considerable misgivings about the
-expediency of its original publication, and are none
-too anxious to circulate it. The reason will, I think,
-be tolerably obvious to anyone who will do me the
-honour to read the critical analysis which follows.</p>
-
-<p>I will not attempt to prejudice that analysis at
-this stage. I shall have something to say later in
-this chapter as to the credibility of the German Government
-in these matters. It is a rule of law that,
-when a defendant puts his character in issue, or
-makes imputations on the prosecutor or his witnesses,
-as the Germans have done, his character may legitimately
-be the subject of animadversion. To impeach
-it at this stage might appear, however, to beg the
-question of the value of the White Book, which is
-best examined as a matter of internal evidence without
-the importation of any reflections on the character
-of its authors.</p>
-
-<p>As regards the value of the evidence on the other
-side&mdash;the English, Belgian, and French Reports&mdash;I
-doubt if any careful reader requires persuasion as
-to their authenticity. In the case of the Bryce Report,
-the studied sobriety of its tone&mdash;to say nothing
-of the known integrity and judiciousness of its authors&mdash;carried
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">4</span>
-instant conviction to the minds of all
-honest and thoughtful men, and that conviction was
-assuredly not disturbed by the vituperative description
-of it by the <cite>K&ouml;lnische Zeitung</cite> as a “mean collection
-of official lies.” No attempt has ever been
-made to answer it. As regards the French Reports,
-which are not as fully known in this country as they
-might be,<a id="FNanchor_3" href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">3</a> I had the honour of working in collaboration
-with M. Mollard, a member of the French Commission
-of Inquiry, and I was greatly impressed with
-their scrupulous regard for truth, and their inflexible
-insistence on corroboration. My own methods of
-inquiry are sufficiently indicated in the chapter which
-follows, but I may add two illustrations of what, I
-think, may fairly be described as the scrupulousness
-with which the inquiries at General Headquarters
-were conducted. The reader may remember that in
-May of last year a report as to the crucifixion of two
-Canadian soldiers obtained wide currency in this
-country. A Staff officer and myself immediately instituted
-inquiries by means of a visit to the Canadian
-Headquarters, at that time situated in the neighbourhood
-of Ypres, and by the cross-examination of
-wounded Canadians on the way to the base. We
-found that this atrocity was a matter of common belief
-among the Canadian soldiers, and at times we
-seemed to be on a hot scent, but eventually we failed
-to discover any one who had been an actual eye-witness
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">5</span>
-of the atrocity in question. It may or may
-not have occurred&mdash;we have had irrefragable proof
-that such things have occurred&mdash;and it is conceivable
-that those who saw it had perished and their testimony
-with them. But it was felt that mere hearsay
-evidence, however strong, was not admissible, and,
-as a result, no report was ever issued.</p>
-
-<p>In the other case a man in a Highland regiment,
-on discovering himself in hospital in the company of
-a wounded Prussian, attempted to assault the latter,
-swearing that he had seen him bayoneting a wounded
-British soldier as he lay helpless upon the field. He
-was positive as to the identification and there could
-be no doubt as to the sincerity of his statements. But
-as one Prussian Guardsman is very like another&mdash;the
-facial and cranial uniformity is remarkable&mdash;and
-there was no corroboration as to identity, no action
-was taken. As to the fact of the atrocity having
-occurred there could, however, be no doubt.</p>
-
-<p>I may add that the numerous British officers whom
-I interrogated in the earlier stages of the war showed
-a marked disinclination&mdash;innate, I think, in the British
-character&mdash;to believe stories reflecting upon the
-honour of the foe to whom they were opposed in the
-field. But at a later stage I found that this indulgent
-scepticism had wholly disappeared. Facts had been
-too intractable, experience too harsh, disillusion too
-bitter. The lesson has been dearly learnt&mdash;many a
-brave and chivalrous officer has owed his death to the
-treachery of a mean and unscrupulous foe. But it
-has been learnt once and for all. And, indeed, judging
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">6</span>
-by the information which reaches me from various
-sources, the enemy affords our men no chance of
-forgetting it.</p>
-
-<h3 id="THE_GERMAN_CASE_A_CRITICAL_ANALYSIS_OF_THE_GERMAN_WHITE_BOOK">II<br />
-
-THE GERMAN CASE&mdash;A CRITICAL ANALYSIS OF THE GERMAN
-WHITE BOOK</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">On</span> May 10th&mdash;some five days before the publication
-of the Bryce Report&mdash;the German Government drew
-up a voluminous White Book purporting to be a
-Report on Offences against International Law in the
-conduct of the war by the Belgians. It may be described
-as a kind of intelligent anticipation of the
-case they might have to meet; the actual case, as presented
-in the Bryce Report, they have never attempted
-to meet, and to this day that report has
-never been answered. The German White Book&mdash;of
-which no translation is accessible to the public in
-this country&mdash;has attracted very little attention over
-here, and I propose to make a close and reasoned analysis
-of it, for no more damning and incriminating
-defence has ever been put forth by a nation arraigned
-at the bar of public opinion. In doing so I shall rely
-on the German Report itself and shall make no attempt
-to refute it by drawing upon the evidence of
-the English and Belgian Reports, convincing though
-that is, because to do so might seem to beg the question
-at issue, which is the relative credibility of the
-parties.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">7</span></p>
-
-<h4>German Invocation of The Hague Conventions.</h4>
-
-<p>The case which the German Government had avowedly
-to meet was the wholesale slaughter of Belgian
-civilians, and the fact of such slaughter having taken
-place they make no attempt to deny. They enter a
-plea of justification and, in a word, they attempt to
-argue that the <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">lev&eacute;e en masse</em> or “People’s War” of
-the Belgian nation was not conducted in accordance
-with the terms of the Hague regulations relating to
-improvised resistance in cases of this kind. I will not
-here go over the well-trodden ground of Belgian neutrality;
-it is enough that in a now notorious utterance
-the Imperial Chancellor has admitted that the German
-invasion was a breach of international law.<a id="FNanchor_4" href="#Footnote_4" class="fnanchor">4</a></p>
-
-<p>The substance of the Hague Convention<a id="FNanchor_5" href="#Footnote_5" class="fnanchor">5</a> is that
-the civil population of a country at war are entitled
-to recognition as lawful belligerents if they conform
-to four conditions. They must have a responsible
-commander; they must wear a distinctive and recognisable
-badge; they must carry their arms openly;
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">8</span>
-and they must conduct their operations in accordance
-with the laws and customs of war. In the case, however,
-of an invasion, where there has been no time
-to organise in conformity with this article, the first
-and second conditions are expressly dispensed with,
-provided there is compliance with the third and
-fourth. Now, not only have these rules been subscribed
-by the German representatives and, according
-to Baron Marschall von Bieberstein, their principal
-spokesman at the Hague Conference, such subscription
-was absolute and unconditional;<a id="FNanchor_6" href="#Footnote_6" class="fnanchor">6</a> but the principle
-which they embody has been accepted by all
-the leading German jurists. “There exists no ground
-for denying to the masses of a country the natural
-right to defend their Fatherland ...; it is only
-by such levies that the smaller and less powerful
-States can defend themselves.”<a id="FNanchor_7" href="#Footnote_7" class="fnanchor">7</a> The same authority
-argues that no State is bound to limit itself to
-its regular army; it could, he adds, call up civil
-guards or even women and children, who in such case
-would be entitled to the rights of lawful belligerents.<a id="FNanchor_8" href="#Footnote_8" class="fnanchor">8</a></p>
-
-<p>What then is the German justification for the massacre
-of the Belgian civilians? Its main contention
-is that the Belgian Government “had <em>sufficient time</em>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">9</span>
-for an <em>organisation</em> of the People’s War as required
-by international law”;<a id="FNanchor_9" href="#Footnote_9" class="fnanchor">9</a> in other words that a spontaneous
-and unorganised resistance in Belgium could
-not claim the immunities of Article 2 of the Hague
-Regulations. The effrontery of this contention is truly
-amazing. The Belgian Government had, at the most,
-two days&mdash;two days in which to organise a whole nation
-for defence. The German ultimatum to Belgium
-was issued on August 2nd; the violation of Belgian
-territory took place on August 4th. How could a
-little nation with a small standing army organise its
-whole population on a military basis within two days
-against the most powerful and mobile army in Europe,
-equipped with all the modern engines of war?
-The German Government do, indeed, attempt to support
-their contention by urging further that “the
-preparation of mobilisation began, as can be proved,
-at least a week before the invasion of the German
-Army.”<a id="FNanchor_10" href="#Footnote_10" class="fnanchor">10</a> Now, granting&mdash;and it is granting a great
-deal&mdash;that a week would be sufficient to organise untrained
-civilians for defence, it would still remain to
-be proved that the Belgian Government <em>did</em> begin
-to mobilise a week beforehand. The German White
-Book does not prove it; the Belgian Grey Book disproves
-it. The Belgian Government, relying on the
-plighted faith of Germany, had not even begun to
-mobilise on July 29th&mdash;six days before the invasion.<a id="FNanchor_11" href="#Footnote_11" class="fnanchor">11</a>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">10</span>
-Indeed, it was only on July 24th that they were sufficiently
-alarmed to address interrogatories to the
-Great Powers, Germany among them, for assurances
-as to the immunity of Belgium from attack.<a id="FNanchor_12" href="#Footnote_12" class="fnanchor">12</a> As late
-as July 31st the German Government effectually concealed
-its intentions.<a id="FNanchor_13" href="#Footnote_13" class="fnanchor">13</a> It is, in fact, a matter of common
-notoriety that the German move against Belgium
-was as sudden in execution as it was premeditated
-in design. She entered like a thief in the night.</p>
-
-<h4>Charges against the Belgian Government.</h4>
-
-<p>The main contention of the German Government
-therefore falls to the ground. What remains? It is
-here that the German answer betrays itself by its
-disingenuousness. There is an old rule of pleading,
-familiar to lawyers, which says a traverse must be
-neither too large nor too narrow. This is just the
-error into which the German contention falls. The
-apologies are too anxious to prove everything in turn
-as the occasion suits, forgetting that one of their contentions
-often refutes the other. In the introductory
-memorandum they argue that Belgium had time to
-organise and did not. In their excuse for the massacre
-at Dinant, and their zeal to prove that the military
-exigencies were overwhelming, they say that
-“the organisation”&mdash;of civilian resistance&mdash;“was
-remarkable for its careful preparation and wide extent”;
-“that the guns were only partly sporting
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">11</span>
-guns and revolvers but partly also machine guns and
-Belgian military weapons proves that the organisation
-had the support of the Belgian Government.”<a id="FNanchor_14" href="#Footnote_14" class="fnanchor">14</a>
-In other words, in one part of the White Book they
-insist that the resistance was ruthlessly punished
-because it was not organised; in another that because
-it was organised it had to be ruthlessly repressed. In
-another place,<a id="FNanchor_15" href="#Footnote_15" class="fnanchor">15</a> having to justify their peculiar principle
-of vicarious responsibility by which the innocent
-have to answer for the guilty, they say that the
-Belgian Government and the municipal hostages
-whom the Germans executed ought to have stopped
-“this guerilla warfare,” and did not do so. Now it
-is well known, and the German Government admits
-it, that the public authorities issued proclamations ordering
-the people to abstain from hostilities and to
-surrender their arms. How does the German Government
-meet this? The only evidence they can produce
-in the whole of their pompous dossier is (1)
-the deposition of a German Jew, resident in Brussels,
-to the effect that, seeing the proclamation, he sent
-his servant to the Belgian authorities to deliver up a
-revolver, and that the servant came back and said
-that the Commissioner of Police had told him not to
-trouble as “one need not believe everything that is
-in the papers”;<a id="FNanchor_16" href="#Footnote_16" class="fnanchor">16</a> (2) the deposition of a German
-lieutenant that an officer (not named) once showed
-him a document (not produced), which, “according
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">12</span>
-to his own account” he had found in the town hall
-of a neighbouring village (not indicated), containing
-an invitation on the part of the Belgian Government,
-addressed to the population, to render armed resistance
-in return for payment.<a id="FNanchor_17" href="#Footnote_17" class="fnanchor">17</a> On such flimsy hearsay
-evidence, tendered by two Germans, rests the
-whole of the German case against the Belgian Government.</p>
-
-<h4>Belgian “Atrocities.”</h4>
-
-<p>Like a defendant who has no case, the German
-Government attempt to plead generally in default
-of being able to plead specifically. They therefore
-put forward a sweeping generalisation to the effect
-that, quite apart from the question whether the Belgians
-did or did not comply with the formal requirements
-of the Hague Convention, they violated all the
-usages of war by “unheard of” atrocities. “Finally
-it is proved beyond all doubt that German
-wounded were robbed and killed by the Belgian population,
-and indeed were subjected to horrible mutilation,
-and that even women and young girls took
-part in these shameful actions. In this way the eyes
-of German wounded were torn out, their ears, nose,
-fingers and sexual organs cut off, or their body cut
-open.”<a id="FNanchor_18" href="#Footnote_18" class="fnanchor">18</a> Let us consider the depositions with which
-this accusation is supported.</p>
-
-<p>(1) Hugo Lagershausen, of the 1st Ersatz Company
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">13</span>
-of the Reserve, his attention having been drawn
-to the significance of the oath, declares:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>“I lost the other men of the patrol. About noon on August
-6th, I came to a dressing station, which was set up on a farm
-near the village of Chen&eacute;e. In the house I found about fifteen
-severely wounded German soldiers, of whom four or five had
-been horribly mutilated; both their eyes had been gouged out,
-and some had had several fingers cut off. Their wounds were
-relatively fresh although the blood was already somewhat coagulated.
-The men were still living and were groaning. It
-was not possible for me to help them, as I had already ascertained
-by questioning other wounded men lying in that house,
-there was no doctor in the place. I also found in the house
-six or seven Belgian civilians, four of whom were women;
-these gave drinks to the wounded; the men were entirely passive.
-I saw no weapons on them, and I cannot say whether
-they had blood on their hands, because they put them in their
-pockets.”<a id="FNanchor_19" href="#Footnote_19" class="fnanchor">19</a></p></blockquote>
-
-<p>It is highly probably, is it not? Musketeer Lagershausen
-falls among ghouls who hastily put their incriminating
-hands in their pockets and allow him
-who was “entirely alone” and powerless to walk
-off and inform against them. Truly they must have
-been some of the mildest-mannered men who ever
-cut a throat.</p>
-
-<p>(2) Musketeer Paul Blankenberg, of Infantry
-Regiment No. 165, declares:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>“We were on the march in closed column and passing
-through a Belgian village west of Herve. In the village some
-German wounded were lying and I recognised some J&auml;ger of
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">14</span>
-the J&auml;ger Battalion, No. 4. Suddenly the column marching
-through was fired upon from the houses, and accordingly the
-order was given that all civilians should be removed from the
-houses and driven together to one point. <em>While this was being
-done</em> I noticed that girls of eight to ten years old, armed with
-sharp instruments, busied themselves with the German wounded.
-Later, I ascertained that the ear lobes and upper parts of the
-ears of the most seriously injured of the wounded had been
-cut off.”<a id="FNanchor_20" href="#Footnote_20" class="fnanchor">20</a></p></blockquote>
-
-<p>That is to say, a whole column of German troops
-is on the march in close formation, they round up the
-civilians and <em>while they are doing this</em> some little
-girls continue, in presence of this overwhelming force,
-to “busy themselves” by cutting up their comrades
-with the contents of their mothers’ work-box.</p>
-
-<p>(3) Landwehrman Alwin Chaton, of the 5th Company
-of the Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 78, declared:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>“In the course of the street fighting in Charleroi, as we
-fought our way through the High Street and had reached a side
-street leading off the High Street, I saw, when I had reached
-the crossing and shot into the side street, a German dragoon
-lying in the street about fifty or sixty paces in front of me.
-Three civilians were near him, of whom one was bending over
-the soldier, who still kicked with his legs. I shot among them
-and hit the last of the civilians; the others fled. When I approached
-I saw that the shot civilian had a long knife, covered
-with blood, in his hand. The right eye of the German dragoon
-was gouged out.”<a id="FNanchor_21" href="#Footnote_21" class="fnanchor">21</a></p></blockquote>
-
-<p>The witness adds that “much smoke was rising
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">15</span>
-from the body of the dragoon,” This is to say that a
-general engagement, one of the hardest fought during
-the war, is going on in the middle of a town and
-three civilians are discovered within fifty or sixty
-paces, leisurely carving up a German dragoon! Is
-it credible?</p>
-
-<p>(4) My fourth example is too long to quote, but in
-substance it is this. Reservist G. Gustav Voigt deposes
-that on August 6th he and seven comrades suddenly
-saw five Belgian soldiers, fully armed, holding
-up their arms to surrender. When they went up to
-them they discovered that the Belgians had a German
-hussar strung up and freshly mutilated, and that
-they had two other hussars upon whom they were
-about to perform similar operations.<a id="FNanchor_22" href="#Footnote_22" class="fnanchor">22</a> Without firing
-a shot, these men, caught red-handed under circumstances
-which made their own death inevitable, surrender
-immediately.</p>
-
-<p>Now I ask any unbiased reader whether these depositions,
-in each case uncorroborated, are such as to
-carry conviction to any reasonable man? Yet the
-whole of the “proofs” adduced as to Belgian atrocities
-are of this character.</p>
-
-<h4>The Massacres&mdash;Andenne.</h4>
-
-<p>When we come to the justification alleged for the
-wholesale massacres of communities the evidence is
-even more suspicious. In order to prove the Belgians
-unspeakable knaves the German Government have to
-present them as incredible fools. At Andenne, “a
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">16</span>
-small town of a population of about 8,000 people,”
-there were affrays in which “about 200 inhabitants
-lost their lives.”<a id="FNanchor_23" href="#Footnote_23" class="fnanchor">23</a> According to the German document,
-“two infantry regiments and a J&auml;ger battalion”
-were marching through this place when they
-were set upon by the inhabitants. Two regiments
-and a battalion would constitute the greater part of
-a brigade; they must have amounted to at least 7,000
-men.<a id="FNanchor_24" href="#Footnote_24" class="fnanchor">24</a> We are asked to believe that this small unprotected
-community (one of the German witnesses
-expressly says, “I did not see one single French or
-Belgian soldier in the entire town or the environs”)<a id="FNanchor_25" href="#Footnote_25" class="fnanchor">25</a>
-made an unprovoked attack on this overwhelming
-force, and that the women assisted with
-pots of scalding water. Two hundred of the civilians
-were, by the German admission, shot. The German
-losses were, it is added, “singularly small.” So singularly
-small were they that the German Report omits
-even to enumerate them.</p>
-
-<h4>Jamoigne and Tintigny.</h4>
-
-<p>In another case&mdash;the village of Jamoigne&mdash;an ammunition
-column halted for water. The attitude of
-the population “was friendly; water, coffee, and tobacco
-were offered to some non-commissioned officers
-and men.” Suddenly, while part of the population
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">17</span>
-are standing outside their doors fully exposed, “a
-general shooting” is opened upon the crowd in the
-streets from the roofs and windows of the houses.<a id="FNanchor_26" href="#Footnote_26" class="fnanchor">26</a>
-Is it intrinsically probable that Belgian civilians
-would be so careless of the lives of their fellow-citizens?
-Or take the case of Tintigny. An artillery
-ammunition column is welcomed, “apparently with
-the best goodwill,” assisted to water its horses, and
-then (but not before) “when the horses had been
-again harnessed” and the opportunity for a surprise
-attack had passed, the inhabitants opened fire on the
-whole column.<a id="FNanchor_27" href="#Footnote_27" class="fnanchor">27</a> Statements like these carry their
-own refutation with them.</p>
-
-<h4>The Tragedy of Dinant.</h4>
-
-<p>I turn to the case of Dinant, one of the most appalling
-massacres that have ever been perpetrated,<a id="FNanchor_28" href="#Footnote_28" class="fnanchor">28</a>
-even by the hordes of Kultur. No attempt is made
-to deny the wholesale slaughter; it is freely admitted,
-and with sanguinary iteration we are told again and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">18</span>
-again “a fairly large number of persons were shot,
-“all the male hostages assembled against the garden
-wall were shot.” Such <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">battues</em> occur on page after
-page.<a id="FNanchor_29" href="#Footnote_29" class="fnanchor">29</a> What is the German excuse? It is that the
-civilian population offered a desperate resistance. To
-prove how desperate it was, and consequently to establish
-the “military necessity,” it has to be conceded
-that they were organised. But this is proving
-too much, for “organised” civilian combatants are
-entitled to the privileges of lawful belligerents.
-Therefore it is argued that they were “without military
-badges”: this phrase occurs with a curious lack
-of variation in the words of each witness. It is added
-that women and “children (including girls) of ten
-or twelve years” were armed with revolvers! “Elderly
-women,” “a white-haired old man,” fired with
-insensate fury. None the less&mdash;says one ingenuous
-German witness&mdash;“the people had all got a very high
-opinion of Germany.” At intervals during the engagement
-not only were groups of civilians, alleged
-to have arms in their hands, shot in groups, but
-unarmed civilians were shot&mdash;“all the male hostages.”
-In other words the whole of the German
-defence that the German troops were punishing illicit
-<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">francs-tireurs</em> is suddenly abandoned. Tiring apparently
-of these laboured inventions, the German staff,
-in a grim and sombre sentence, suddenly throws off
-the mask:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>“In judging the attitude which the troops of the 12th Corps
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">19</span>
-took against such a population, our starting point must be that
-the <em>tactical object</em> of the 12th Corps was to cross the Meuse
-<em>with speed</em>, and to drive the enemy from the left bank of the
-Meuse; speedily to overcome the opposition of the inhabitants
-who were working in direct opposition to this <em>was to be striven
-for in every way</em>.... Hostages were shot at various places
-and this procedure is amply justified.”<a id="FNanchor_30" href="#Footnote_30" class="fnanchor">30</a></p></blockquote>
-
-<p>It has been estimated that about eight hundred
-civilians perished in this massacre. The German
-White Book freely concedes that the number was
-large; indeed by a simple process of induction from
-the German evidence it is clear that it was very large.
-It appears that a whole Army Corps (the 1st Royal
-Saxon) was engaged and that the armed troops of
-the Allies were encountered in force. The German
-troops received a check and it seems fairly obvious
-that they simply wreaked their vengeance, as they
-have so often done, on an unoffending population,
-presumably in order to intimidate the enemy in the
-field. Not for the first time they attempted to do
-by terror what they could not do by force of arms.</p>
-
-<h4>“We gave them coffee.”</h4>
-
-<p>It is characteristic of the whole <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">apologia</em> that having
-admitted to an indiscriminate butchery the Germans
-attempt to gain credit for preserving throughout
-its course the most tender sentiments. In fact
-they are surprised at their own sensibility. “I
-have subsequently often wondered,” says a Major
-Schlick, “that our men should have remained so
-calm in the face of such beasts.”<a id="FNanchor_31" href="#Footnote_31" class="fnanchor">31</a> Major Bauer
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">20</span>
-says, that he and his “manifested a most notable
-kindness to women, old men and children”; so notable
-that he suggests that “it is worthy of recognition
-in the special circumstances.” Major Bauer evidently
-thinks it a case for the Iron Cross. And in
-proof of this humanity he points out that the widows
-and orphans of the murdered husbands and fathers
-“all received coffee”<a id="FNanchor_32" href="#Footnote_32" class="fnanchor">32</a> from the field kitchen the
-next morning. Perhaps Major Bauer bethinks himself
-of a certain cup of cold water.</p>
-
-<h4>The Children were “quite happy.”</h4>
-
-<p>More than this, the children seem rather to have
-enjoyed the novel experience. A German staff-surgeon
-whose gruesome task it was to search a heap of
-forty corpses, “women and young lads,” who had
-been put up against a garden wall for execution,
-says:<a id="FNanchor_33" href="#Footnote_33" class="fnanchor">33</a></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>“Under the heap I discovered a girl of about five years of
-age, and without any injuries. I took her out and brought her
-down to the house where the women were. <em>She took chocolate,
-was quite happy, and was clearly unaware of the seriousness of
-the situation.</em>”</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>And with that amazing statement we may fitly
-leave this amazing narrative.</p>
-
-<h4>Aerschot.</h4>
-
-<p>The case of Dinant may be taken as typical. The
-evidence as to Louvain and Aerschot is not less incredible.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">21</span>
-We are asked to believe that at Aerschot<a id="FNanchor_34" href="#Footnote_34" class="fnanchor">34</a>
-the population of a small town suddenly rose in arms
-against a whole brigade, although the population was
-quite unprotected&mdash;“we ascertained that there was
-no enemy in the neighbourhood.”<a id="FNanchor_35" href="#Footnote_35" class="fnanchor">35</a> To explain this
-surprising and suicidal impulse the Germans produce&mdash;it
-is their only evidence&mdash;the statement of a Captain
-Karge, that he had “heard rumours from various
-German officers” that the Belgian Government,
-“in particular the King of the Belgians,” had decreed
-that every male Belgian was to do the German Army
-“as much harm as possible.” “It <em>is said</em> that such
-an order was found on a captured Belgian soldier.”
-Strangely enough, the order is not produced&mdash;not a
-word of it. Also, “an officer <em>told</em> me that he himself
-had <em>read</em> on a church door of a place near Aerschot
-that the Belgians were not allowed to hold captured
-German officers on parole, but were bound to shoot
-them.” He adds that he “cannot repeat the words
-of this officer exactly.”<a id="FNanchor_36" href="#Footnote_36" class="fnanchor">36</a>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">22</span></p>
-
-<h4>Louvain.</h4>
-
-<p>Let us now turn to Louvain. “The <em>insurrection</em>
-of the town of Louvain,” say the authors of the
-White Book with some na&iuml;vet&eacute;, “against the German
-garrison and the punishment which was meted out
-to the town have found a long-drawn-out echo in the
-whole world.” Some twenty-eight thousand words
-are therefore devoted to establishing the thesis that
-the German troops in occupation of the town were
-the victims of a carefully organised, long premeditated,
-and diabolically executed attack on the part of
-the inhabitants assisted by the <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Garde Civique</em>. Thus:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>“We are evidently dealing with a carefully planned assault
-which was carried on for several days with the greatest obstinacy.
-The long duration of the insurrection against the German
-military power in itself disposes of any planless action
-committed by individuals in excitement. The leadership of the
-treacherous revolt must have lain in the hands of a higher
-authority.”&mdash;Summarising Report.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Great emphasis is laid on the formidable nature
-of the attack and the heavy odds against which the
-Germans had to contend. The fire of the Belgians
-was “murderous” (D 11, D 13), “fearful”
-(D 9), “violent” (D 36), “furious” (D 41); it
-was supported by machine-guns (D 28, 29, 37, 38,
-40) and hand-grenades (D 46), and was materially
-assisted by Belgian soldiers in disguise (Appendix
-D 1, 19, 38), and by the <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Garde Civique</em> (D 45, 46),
-who occupied houses with the most “elaborate preparations.”
-In spite of this careful preparation the
-German troops, who had been in the town six days
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">23</span>
-and had there established the Head-quarters of a
-whole Army Corps (the 9th Reserve Corps), were
-so impressed by the “extraordinarily good” behaviour
-of the inhabitants that on the evening of August
-25th, about 7.30 or 8 p.m., they were taken completely
-by surprise. “It was impossible to foresee,” says
-Lieutenant von Sandt (D 8), “that the inhabitants
-were planning an assault.” Other witnesses say,
-however, that “a remarkable number of young
-men” were observed congregating in the streets some
-hours beforehand. None the less the German authorities
-exhibited an ingenuous trustfulness and,
-what is even more remarkable, a complete disregard
-of the most ordinary police precautions, which will
-come as a surprise to anyone who has studied the
-German Proclamations and the drastic measures usually
-taken by them immediately upon their occupation
-of a town.</p>
-
-<h4>A “murderous” attack; German casualties&mdash;five.</h4>
-
-<p>Such was the situation when at seven o’clock on
-a summer evening (August 25th) of notorious memory,
-the deep-laid plans of the Belgian authorities
-suddenly and murderously revealed themselves. A
-German company of Landsturm<a id="FNanchor_37" href="#Footnote_37" class="fnanchor">37</a> was marching
-through the town; the main body of the German
-troops quartered there were engaged several miles
-away, and only a few details remained in the city.
-This small body of unsuspecting soldiers&mdash;a company
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">24</span>
-numbers not more than two or three hundred men&mdash;were
-suddenly set upon, at a signal given by rockets,
-by trained marksmen of the Belgian Army and the
-<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Garde Civique</em>, disguised as civilians, acting with the
-aid of machine-guns and hand-grenades and actively
-assisted by the greater part of a large civilian population.
-The fire, as various soldiers of the Landsturm
-testify, was not only carefully controlled and directed,
-but was “murderous” in the extreme. Yet,
-after carefully searching through their depositions,
-we find that only “<em>five men of the company were
-wounded</em>” (D 8)! Lieutenant Sandt and Dr. Berghausen
-feel constrained to explain these remarkably
-light casualties. They can only account for them by
-saying that in spite of the “carefully planned” and
-disciplined attack the Belgians, shooting from carefully
-chosen positions, shot “too high” (D 8), “at
-night” (D 8, D 9) although the light at eight o’clock
-on an August evening is usually remarkably good,
-and one of the witnesses (D 26) says that at 8 p.m.
-it was “fairly light.” The company appear to have
-disarmed the infuriated Belgians with remarkable
-ease, going into the houses two or three at a time
-(D 9), and finding the occupants apparently as docile
-as sheep, so that although found with arms in their
-hands they allowed themselves to be led out in “a
-crowd” and “immediately shot” (D 44). In one
-case, on entering an inn, the Germans found “behind
-the bar, a waiter,” who had apparently taken up
-this strong strategical position alone with “a case
-for shot placed by his side with the corresponding
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">25</span>
-ammunition.” He also allowed himself to be led
-forth like a lamb to the slaughter (D 37).</p>
-
-<h4>Contradictory witnesses.</h4>
-
-<p>It is extraordinary also that although this murderous
-and carefully planned attack began at 7.30
-“I had just finished my soup,” says Major von
-Manteuffel, who sat down to dinner at 7.30&mdash;(Appendix
-D 3), or at 8 p.m. (D 6), yet at 9 p.m., says
-Corporal Hohne, who entered the town with his regiment
-at that hour (D 36), “the conduct of the civilians
-was quiet and not unfriendly,” and his regiment
-was allowed to march right into the town&mdash;“up
-till then nothing noteworthy had occurred.” A
-N.C.O. of the same battalion says that “between 9
-and 10 p.m.” the Belgians were standing about the
-streets; all was “quiet,” and they were “not unfriendly”
-(D 36). Another witness heard nothing
-till “9 or 9.30” (D 25). Another says (D 45) the
-signal was given at “9 o’clock.” To the same effect
-another soldier (D 18). What is even more remarkable
-is the statement of Major von Klewitz that at
-4 a.m. the next morning, after the Landsturm had
-cleared the houses, the infatuated inhabitants opened
-fire on an Army Corps which appears to have arrived
-in the interval and was then “moving out to battle”
-(D 2); and the presence of a whole brigade of Landwehr
-(D 1) does not seem to have exercised any restraining
-influence on these insane civilians. Like
-flies to wanton boys was a whole Army Corps to the
-burgesses of Louvain, who killed it for their sport.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">26</span>
-The German authorities contend that, with intermittent
-executions, they tolerated this kind of thing for
-two whole days. They appear, however, to have
-borne a charmed life&mdash;the chief casualties among
-them were horses. Battalion Surgeon Georg Berghausen,
-in particular, who records as a remarkable
-fact that he once paid a hotelkeeper (“to please him
-and his employees”) for meals he had ordered, was
-“repeatedly shot at” the whole length of a street
-but never so much as hit. He thinks this was due
-to its being so dark, though whenever the witnesses
-are concerned to testify that the firing was undoubtedly
-by civilians, or by soldiers disguised as such,
-they can see “quite plainly.”</p>
-
-<h4>The Priests.</h4>
-
-<p>Never since the Day of Pentecost was there such a
-confusion of tongues. One witness labours to prove
-that no executions took place without a most decorous
-court-martial in the station square, the same soldier
-combining apparently the office of prosecutor and
-judge (D 38); another says that of “a crowd” of
-persons taken out of a house, the males were “immediately
-shot” (D 44); yet a third says that a body
-of hostages were placed in front of a machine-gun
-with an intimation that they would be shot as a matter
-of course if there were any more disturbance
-(D 37). It is admitted that a hundred civilians were
-shot, “including ten or fifteen priests” (D 38).
-One German witness says it is all the fault of the
-priests (D 38); another says it’s the fault of the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">27</span>
-<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Garde Civique</em> (D 45)&mdash;both being apparently at
-some pains to exculpate the unhappy civilians. The
-quality of the evidence against the priests (and the
-civil population) may be gathered from the following
-deposition (D 42) of Captain Hermansen. He interviewed
-a priest who, he says, had behaved well on
-one occasion:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>“I rejoined that if his clerical brethren had acted in that
-[the same] manner, the Belgians and we would have been
-spared many unpleasant experiences. <em>He did not contradict
-me.</em>”&mdash;(D 42.)</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>In witness whereof Captain von Vethacke comes
-forward and says:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>“In so far as priests were shot they too had been found
-guilty by the court. I came to know the priest mentioned by
-Captain Hermansen at the end of his declaration. He made
-an excellent impression on me also; and <em>he did not contradict
-me either</em>, when I expressed to him my opinion that certain of
-the clergy had stirred up the people and taken part in the attack.”&mdash;(D
-43.)</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Truly, a remarkable example of the <em lang="la" xml:lang="la">argumentum
-ab silentio</em>! Perhaps the unfortunate priest remembered
-what happened to Faithful when he contradicted
-Chief Justice Hategood.</p>
-
-<p>All the evidence adduced, where it is not that of
-the German soldiers, is of this character. It is all
-hearsay, the Belgian witnesses quoted are invariably
-anonymous, and there are only five of them at that
-(D 30, 34, 37, 38, 42). At Bueken “the clergymen”
-are accused of having incited the population to attack
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">28</span>
-the German troops. The proof adduced is that the
-priest “left the church” when the firing began!</p>
-
-<h4>What is the true explanation?</h4>
-
-<p>One thing emerges quite clearly from these disorderly
-depositions and that is a great confusion of
-mind. The evidence from Belgian sources, very carefully
-sifted by a Committee<a id="FNanchor_38" href="#Footnote_38" class="fnanchor">38</a> (presided over by Sir
-Mackenzie Chalmers) of the Belgian Commission
-and, independently, by the Bryce Committee,<a id="FNanchor_39" href="#Footnote_39" class="fnanchor">39</a> is to
-the effect that two detachments of German troops
-fired on one another and then threw the blame on the
-innocent inhabitants. This explanation certainly
-receives some countenance from the German depositions,
-which, as I have said, exhibit a kind of turbulent
-confusion. The N.C.O.‘s of two battalions which
-entered the town at 9 p.m. say “the noise and confusion
-was very great,” and “to what extent our fire
-was returned I cannot say”; “we shot the street
-lamps to pieces”; “our opponents were not to be
-seen since it was already dark,” and “we only saw
-the flash of the discharges and <em>supposed</em> that they
-came from the houses” (D 36, 37); and here again,
-as in the case of the company of Landsturm previously
-referred to, only “five men” were known
-to be hit. During the greater part of the day (August
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">29</span>
-25th) there was only<a id="FNanchor_40" href="#Footnote_40" class="fnanchor">40</a> one company of Landsturm
-and sixty men of a railway detachment in the
-town (D 8). It is surely rather remarkable that
-“a well-prepared and elaborately designed attack
-on the part of the civil population” (D 41) should
-have halted all day and then begun either at or a
-short time before (the German evidence is, as we
-have seen, very conflicting) German reinforcements
-were entering the town, and then tarried again until
-the whole or the greater part of a German Army
-Corps had arrived: the only thing that the German
-evidence proves is the sinister fact that the arrival of
-each detachment of German forces coincided with
-renewed massacres of the civilian population. Such
-is the ugly story that emerges from these ill-nourished
-and contradictory testimonies.</p>
-
-<p>Such is the German White Book. I think it is
-not too much to say that it bears the stamp of the
-forger’s hand upon it, the same hand that forged the
-Ems telegram and garbled the Belgian documents
-captured in Brussels. It was conceived in iniquity
-and brought forth in falsehood. It confesses, but
-does not avoid.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">30</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="GERMAN_CREDIBILITY_A_REVIEW_OF_THE_EVIDENCE">III<br />
-
-GERMAN CREDIBILITY&mdash;A REVIEW OF THE EVIDENCE</h3>
-
-<h4>The German Diaries.</h4>
-
-<p>I have allowed the German White Book to speak
-for itself. It is a well-known rule of law that a
-party is “estopped” from denying his own admissions,
-and the incriminating character of these admissions
-is, as we have seen, conclusive against the
-German Government. Had I desired, I could have
-reinforced it by other evidence, also emanating from
-German sources, in the shape of Proclamations and
-diaries (of which I have seen some hundreds at the
-Ministry of War in Paris), which amply corroborate
-the conclusions already arrived at. The German
-pretence of a judicial inquiry into the guilt or innocence
-of the victims of their sanguinary fury is
-refuted by the simple fact that their own Proclamations
-frankly intimate that the principle of decimation
-and of vicarious punishment will be adopted,
-in the case of infractions, whether real or assumed,
-of what they choose to call their commands. A
-hostage may fail to turn up as a substitute, an inhabitant
-may be found with a litre of benzol unaccounted
-for, another may dig potatoes in the field,
-yet another may fail to salute or to hold his hands
-up with sufficient promptitude&mdash;and the penalty
-decreed is invariably the same: he, or a substitute,
-will be shot&mdash;“the innocent will suffer with the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">31</span>
-guilty.”<a id="FNanchor_41" href="#Footnote_41" class="fnanchor">41</a> Not only so, but as a rule no attempt
-was made to discover whether any offence had been
-committed or not. In the diary of a German officer
-which came into my possession an entry recording
-the undiscriminating butchery of some two hundred
-civilians concluded with the otiose remark: “In
-future there ought to be an inquiry into their guilt
-instead of shooting them.” An unpublished Proclamation
-in my possession, which was handed to me
-by the <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">maire</em> of a town now in our occupation, declared
-that the civils, “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">ou peut&ecirc;tre les militaires en
-civil,</span>” had fired on the troops; the parenthesis
-damns its authors beyond redemption. And when
-all other tests fail, when every international convention
-has been repudiated, there still remains the
-elementary rule, which not only jurists but soldiers
-have always emphasized, that in reprisals and retribution
-there should always be some <em>proportion</em> between
-the offence and its punishment. What then
-is to be thought of the admission of a German soldier
-that sixty villagers, including women in travail,
-were shot “because,” he adds laconically, “they had
-telephoned to the enemy”? The critic who carefully
-collates the diaries, published and unpublished, will
-find overwhelming evidence of indiscriminate and
-lawless butchery&mdash;“<span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Befehl ergangen s&auml;mtliche m&auml;nnliche
-Personen zu erschiessen.... Ein schrecklicher
-Sonntag</span>” (Order passed to shoot all the male inhabitants....
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">32</span>
-A frightful Sunday); “<span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Ein schreckliches
-Blutbad</span>” (A frightful blood-bath); “<span lang="de" xml:lang="de">S&auml;mtliche
-Rechtsnormen sind aufgel&ouml;st</span>” (All the rules
-of law are cast to the winds). And nothing is more
-instructive than to observe how each lays the blame
-for the worst outrages upon the other, while incidentally
-admitting those of his own unit. One says,
-“It’s the infantry who are to blame”; another says,
-“The pioneers are the worst and those brigands of
-artillerymen”; a third writes, “It’s all the fault of
-the transport.” The cumulative effect of these recriminations
-is to inculpate the whole.<a id="FNanchor_42" href="#Footnote_42" class="fnanchor">42</a></p>
-
-<h4>German Credibility.</h4>
-
-<p>Quite apart from this inductive evidence there is
-the fact that the German Government is so tainted
-with the infamy of indisputable mendacity that no
-sober and impartial man can credit a single word of
-what it says. It has deliberately forged Belgian
-documents which have come into its possession in
-order to make out a case against the Belgian Government;<a id="FNanchor_43" href="#Footnote_43" class="fnanchor">43</a>
-it has repeatedly broken faith with the
-British Government and the Vatican;<a id="FNanchor_44" href="#Footnote_44" class="fnanchor">44</a> it has abused
-the Geneva Convention in order to make use of a
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">33</span>
-hospital ship as an instrument of war.<a id="FNanchor_45" href="#Footnote_45" class="fnanchor">45</a> Berlin itself
-is one great factory of lies, and its official Press service,
-to quote the words of our Ambassador, “a vast
-system of international blackmail.”<a id="FNanchor_46" href="#Footnote_46" class="fnanchor">46</a> As is the
-Government, so are the people. Its merchants forge
-manifests and falsify bills of lading in order to
-secure the immunity of their property from capture
-at sea.<a id="FNanchor_47" href="#Footnote_47" class="fnanchor">47</a> A journal under German control<a id="FNanchor_48" href="#Footnote_48" class="fnanchor">48</a> has
-admitted that the stories of mutilation so industriously
-circulated by the German Government and its agents
-are entirely the product of hysterical “suggestion.”
-Often its pretexts are a shameless afterthought. In
-co-operation with the French authorities I was instrumental
-in tracking down a now notorious order
-issued by a German Brigadier-General to butcher
-all the wounded who fell into German hands. At
-first its authenticity was denied by the German Government,
-but, when it was established beyond doubt,
-they published a statement that a similar order had
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">34</span>
-been issued by one of our own Generals some twelve
-months ago. The excuse was as belated as it was
-mendacious, and to this day not the slightest proof
-has been adduced in support of it.</p>
-
-<p>The German authorities seem to suffer from a malady
-which can only be described as moral perversion.
-It is a kind of moral insanity. In defending
-the sinking of the <em>Lusitania</em> with its freight of innocent
-women and children the German Government
-wrote:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>“The case of the <em>Lusitania</em> shows <em>with horrible clearness</em> to
-what jeopardising of human lives the manner of war conducted
-by our adversaries leads.”<a id="FNanchor_49" href="#Footnote_49" class="fnanchor">49</a></p></blockquote>
-
-<p>This affectation of horror at the consequences of
-its own crimes and the imputation of the guilt of
-them to others is surely one of the most remarkable
-revelations of the moral obliquity of the German
-mind. Yet it by no means stands alone. The Proclamations,
-issued in Belgium, threaten the inhabitants
-with fire and sword, the scaffold and the firing-party,
-for the least infraction of the most trivial
-regulations, and then conclude with the aspersion
-that by such infraction they will commit “the horrible
-crime” of compromising the existence of a
-whole community and placing it “outside the pale
-of international law.”<a id="FNanchor_50" href="#Footnote_50" class="fnanchor">50</a> The man who omits to put
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">35</span>
-his hands up with acrobatic promptitude will “make
-himself guilty” of the penalty of death. All through
-the German utterances there runs an infatuated obsession
-that the Germans enjoy a kind of moral prerogative
-in virtue of which they are entitled to violate
-all the laws which they rigidly prescribe for
-others.<a id="FNanchor_51" href="#Footnote_51" class="fnanchor">51</a> We have lately had an example of this
-which is of supreme horror. The Power which has
-broken all laws, human and divine, sought to dignify
-its condemnation of Edith Cavell with all the pomp
-and circumstance of a tribunal of justice. While
-thousands of ravishers and spoilers go free, one
-woman, who had spent her life in ministries to such
-as were sick and afflicted, was handed over to the
-executioner. Truly, there has been no such trial in
-history since Barabbas was released and Christ led
-forth to the hill of Calvary.</p>
-
-<h4>The Guilt of the German People.</h4>
-
-<p>It is the fondest of delusions to imagine that all
-this blood-guiltiness is confined to the German Government
-and the General Staff. The whole people
-is stained with it. The innumerable diaries of common
-soldiers in the ranks which I have read betray
-a common sentiment of hate, rapine, and ferocious
-credulity.<a id="FNanchor_52" href="#Footnote_52" class="fnanchor">52</a> Again and again English soldiers have
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">36</span>
-told me how their German captors delighted to offer
-them food in their famished state and then to snatch
-it away again. The progress of French, British, and
-Russian prisoners, civil as well as military, through
-Germany has been a veritable Calvary.<a id="FNanchor_53" href="#Footnote_53" class="fnanchor">53</a> The helplessness
-which in others would excite forbearance if
-not pity has in the German populace provoked only
-derision and insult.<a id="FNanchor_54" href="#Footnote_54" class="fnanchor">54</a> The “old gentleman with a
-grey beard and gold spectacles” who broke his umbrella
-over the back of a Russian lady (the wife of
-a diplomatist), the loafers who boarded a train and
-under the eyes of the indulgent sentries poked their
-fingers in the blind eye of a wounded Irishman who
-had had half his face shot away, the men and women
-who spat upon helpless prisoners and threatened
-them with death, the guards who prodded them with
-bayonets, worried them with dogs, and dispatched
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">37</span>
-those who could not keep up&mdash;these were not a Prussian
-caste, but the German people. What is to be
-thought of a people, one of whose leading journals
-publishes<a id="FNanchor_55" href="#Footnote_55" class="fnanchor">55</a> with approval the letter of a German
-officer describing “the brilliant idea” (ein guter
-Gedanke) which inspired him to place civilians on
-chairs in the middle of the street of a town attacked
-by the French and use them as a screen for his men,
-in spite of their “prayers of anguish.”</p>
-
-<h4>New Russian Evidence.</h4>
-
-<p>This question of the culpability of the German
-people, civilians and soldiers in the ranks, as distinct
-from the German Government, is one of supreme
-importance, and I would like to draw the reader’s
-attention to the mass of unpublished evidence (from
-which some selections are given in Part VI. of the
-Documentary Chapter of this book) placed at my disposal
-by the Russian Embassy. In addition to the
-documents I have printed in that chapter&mdash;I refer
-the reader to No. 7 in particular&mdash;I will here quote
-the following unpublished deposition as to the conduct
-of the German guards in a prison camp. These
-barbarities, it should be remembered, were not done
-in the heat of action, but represent the leisurely
-amusement of guards whose only provocation was the
-helplessness of the famished men in their charge.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>“In their leisure moments the German soldiers amused themselves
-with practical joking at the expense of the prisoners.
-They announced that an extra portion of food would be given
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">38</span>
-out, and when the Russians hurried to the kitchen, a whole pack
-of dogs were let loose on them. The animals flew at the prisoners
-and dispersed them in all directions, while the Germans
-looked on and roared with laughter. Sometimes the prisoners
-were offered an extra ladle of soup, or piece of bread if they
-would expose their backs to a certain number of blows with a
-whip. Our hungry and tormented soldiers often bought an
-extra piece of bread at this price, and it was thrown to them
-as if they had been dogs.”</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>The Germans appear in the case of the Russian, as
-in that of the British, Belgian, and French prisoners,
-to have taken a malignant and bestial delight in outraging
-their feelings of self-respect, and men were
-herded together day and night in cattle-trucks deep
-in manure, and forced to perform their natural functions
-where they stood, packed together so close that
-they could not sit and dared not lie down. At each
-station they were exhibited like a travelling menagerie
-to the curiosity and insult of the populace. The
-quality of mercy was not shown even where one might
-most expect to find it, namely, at the hands of the
-German surgeons and nurses who wore the Red Cross.
-Here is the deposition of Vasili Tretiakov:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>“Having received no food for two days, the Russian prisoners,
-who fully expected to get some bread at this station, were
-gazing with hungry and longing looks into the distance, when
-they saw women dressed as Sisters of Mercy distributing bread
-and sausages to the German soldiers. One of these Sisters went
-up to the truck in which I was standing, and a Russian soldier
-at the door stretched out his hand for something to eat, but the
-woman simply struck it and smeared the soldier’s face with
-a piece of sausage. She then called all the prisoners ‘Russian
-swine’ and went away from the side of the train.”</p></blockquote>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">39</span></p>
-
-<p>Well may the Russian Government say in their
-covering communication that “the forms of punishment”&mdash;if
-we can speak of punishment when no offence
-had been committed&mdash;“remind one of the tortures
-of the Middle Ages.” Other documents in my
-possession recite how the prisoners were harnessed to
-ploughs and carts, like cattle, and lashed with long
-leather whips; how a man who fainted from exhaustion
-was immediately bayoneted, while another who
-fell out of the ranks to pick up a rotten turnip shared
-a like fate; how wounded men were forced to stand
-naked for hours in the frost until gangrene set in,
-tied up for hours to posts with their toes just touching
-the ground until, the blood rising to the head,
-copious h&aelig;morrhage took place from the nose, mouth,
-and ears; how yet others who, exhausted with hunger
-and fatigue, could not keep up on the march were
-bayoneted or clubbed where they lay. As for the
-conduct of the German populace let the following
-speak for itself:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>“The peaceful inhabitants along the routes traversed in
-Germany showed the greatest hostility towards the prisoners,
-whom they reviled as ‘Russian swine and dogs.’ Women and
-even children threw stones and sand at them, and spat right
-in their faces.... Even the wounded men were not spared by
-these demented Germans who struck them, pulled their moustaches,
-and spat in their faces.”</p></blockquote>
-
-<h4>The German Ideal&mdash;Europe in Chains.</h4>
-
-<p>The conception of the educated classes of Germany
-as to the future of Europe we have on record: it is to
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">40</span>
-be a tributary Europe, vast satrapies of subject populations
-more rightless than the medi&aelig;val villein, their
-language proscribed, their liberties disfranchised,
-their commerce prohibited, their lands expropriated,
-hewers of wood and drawers of water for the conqueror.
-The ill-disguised slavery under which Belgium<a id="FNanchor_56" href="#Footnote_56" class="fnanchor">56</a>
-and the occupied French Departments<a id="FNanchor_57" href="#Footnote_57" class="fnanchor">57</a>
-groan to-day is to be perpetuated. The small nations
-of Europe are to exchange the protection of Europe
-for the suzerainty of Germany and to live under the
-German “shield.” Their territories are to be to
-Germany what the provinces were to Rome at her
-worst&mdash;great praedial estates, the peasantry of which
-are either to be “cleared” or to remain as the menials
-of the conqueror. The German dream is the dream
-of the Latin historian who sighed for more provinces
-to conquer in order that liberty might be “banished
-from the sight”<a id="FNanchor_58" href="#Footnote_58" class="fnanchor">58</a> of those already under his heel.
-What Germany cannot annex she will ruin, so that
-borne down by heavy indemnities France shall never
-be able to lift her head again. Such are the “terms
-of peace” proclaimed by the German Professors, a
-body of men who, it should be remembered, in Germany
-hold their chairs at the pleasure of the State
-and are, in fact, a branch of the Civil Service. They
-therefore speak as men having authority.<a id="FNanchor_59" href="#Footnote_59" class="fnanchor">59</a>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">41</span></p>
-
-<h4>A Moral Distemper.</h4>
-
-<p>I have been told that there are still some individuals
-in England who cherish the idea that this vast
-orgy of blood, lust, rapine, hate, and pride is in some
-peculiar way merely the <em>Bacchanalia</em> of troops unused
-to the heady bouquet of the wines of Champagne
-or, stranger still, that it is the mental aberration
-of a people seduced by idle tales into these
-courses by its rulers. It is no part of my task to
-find explanations. But if the reader is astonished,
-as well he may be, at the disgusting repetition of
-stories of rape and sodomy let him study the statistics
-of crime in Germany during the first decade of
-this century, issued by the Imperial Government; he
-will find in them much to confirm the impression that
-the whole people is infected with some kind of moral
-distemper.<a id="FNanchor_60" href="#Footnote_60" class="fnanchor">60</a> The seduction of a people by its rulers
-is impossible; such hypnotic susceptibility to the influences
-of “suggestion” would, of itself, be a symptom
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">42</span>
-of mental degeneration in the people itself. It
-is impossible to believe that the most highly educated
-nation in Europe is either so ignorant or so credulous
-as such an explanation would suggest. It is not in
-their ignorance but in their turpitude that the clue
-to these barbarities is to be found. This is a sombre
-fact which has to be faced or these appalling records
-will have been sifted and published in vain. The
-problem of explanation is ultimately one for the anthropologist
-rather than the lawyer, and there may be
-force in the contention of those who believe that the
-Prussian is not a member of the Teutonic family at
-all, but a “throw-back” to some Tartar stock. Certain
-it is that he exhibits an insensibility to the feelings
-of others which is only equalled by his extreme
-sensitiveness as to his own.<a id="FNanchor_61" href="#Footnote_61" class="fnanchor">61</a> This morbid insensibility
-is, of course, the secret of German “Terrorism,”
-and of the immense influence which it has exerted
-on the theory and practice of war among the German
-nation. It explains their singular ingenuity in finding
-means to an end, and between the German trooper
-who dips a baby’s head into scalding water in order
-to get more coffee from its mother<a id="FNanchor_62" href="#Footnote_62" class="fnanchor">62</a> to the commandant
-who at the point of the bayonet thrusts a
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">43</span>
-living screen of priests, old men, and women with
-babes at the breast<a id="FNanchor_63" href="#Footnote_63" class="fnanchor">63</a> between his own troops and
-those of the enemy there is a difference of degree
-rather than of kind. Similarly the dark passage in
-the German War Book which hints that there may be
-occasions on which it will be profitable to massacre
-prisoners of war reveals the same quality of mind as
-the order to shoot helpless sailors who are struggling
-for their lives in the sea.<a id="FNanchor_64" href="#Footnote_64" class="fnanchor">64</a> All things are lawful
-which are expedient, and if your enemy has ties of
-affection, the better he lends himself to your belligerent
-exploitation. <em lang="la" xml:lang="la">Mentem mortalia tangunt</em>&mdash;human
-things touch the heart&mdash;acquires for the German Staff
-a new and sinister significance. Every tender feeling
-that their enemy has becomes a hostage for his tractability,
-because it can be violated if he is contumacious.
-His churches can be profaned, his priests murdered,
-his boys driven into exile, his women-folk
-handed over to the lust of a licentious soldiery, and
-his home destroyed. If his troops defeat one in the
-field, the civilian population can be made to pay for
-it with their lives,<a id="FNanchor_65" href="#Footnote_65" class="fnanchor">65</a> so that eventually he may be disarmed
-not by defeat but by horror. His own humanity
-will be his undoing. Not fear but anguish will
-bring him to his knees.</p>
-
-<p>This is the German doctrine, secreted in the pages
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">44</span>
-of many a German manual,<a id="FNanchor_66" href="#Footnote_66" class="fnanchor">66</a> and now published to
-the world in the German Proclamations and the evil
-deeds which they both excuse and provoke. This it
-is which has made the German nation, in the words
-of Lord Rosebery, “the enemy of the human race,”
-and has caused the very name of this bestial and
-servile people to stink in the nostrils of mankind.</p>
-
-<h3 id="THE_FUTURE_OF_INTERNATIONAL_LAW_AND_THE_QUESTION_OF_RETRIBUTION">IV<br />
-
-THE FUTURE OF INTERNATIONAL LAW AND THE QUESTION
-OF RETRIBUTION</h3>
-
-<h4>The Dissolution of Europe.</h4>
-
-<p>Many years ago the most distinguished of the modern
-school of French historians wrote a remarkable
-essay on the subject of “Diplomacy and Progress.”<a id="FNanchor_67" href="#Footnote_67" class="fnanchor">67</a>
-He knew Europe as few had known it; he had spent
-his life in its chancelleries and its archives, and his
-wisdom was only equalled by his knowledge, for he
-had studied not only books but men. In that essay
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">45</span>
-he speculated as to the effect of the progress of mechanical
-invention in the arts of war upon the prospects
-of European peace, and he confessed to a
-mournful depression. But the source of his apprehension
-was not Europe but Asia. He foresaw the
-possibility of some potent Oriental nation awaking
-from its secular meditations and applying itself in a
-single generation to an apprenticeship in those mechanical
-arts which are no longer the peculiar mystery
-and the prerogative of the Western world. A
-nation thus acquiring the destructive resources of
-the West, while retaining the peculiar morality of the
-East&mdash;its ruthlessness, its contempt for human life,
-its sombre fatalism, its indifference to personal liberty,
-its chicanery, its love of espionage&mdash;might, he
-apprehended, fall upon Europe in a catastrophic
-assault as unforeseen as it would be unprovoked, and
-threaten her with destruction.</p>
-
-<p>The catastrophe has fallen, but the foes of Europe
-have been those of her own household, and we have
-discovered with a shock of dismay that the comity of
-European nations has harboured a Power which is
-European in nothing but in name, and is more completely
-alien to Western ideals than the tribes of Afghanistan.
-A hybrid nation of this type which is intellectual
-without being refined, which can discipline
-its mind but cannot control its appetites, which can
-acquire the idiom of Europe and yet retain the instincts
-of Asia or rather of some pre-Asiatic horde,
-presents the greatest problem that has ever perplexed
-the civilisation of man. It is like an intellectual
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">46</span>
-savage who has learnt the language and studied the
-dress and deportment of polite society, but all the
-while nurtures dark atavisms and murderous impulses
-in the centres of his brain. The subtle danger
-of the presence of such a nation in the European
-comity is that it uses the language of that international
-society, and yet all the while means something
-different, and that with every appearance of solemn
-subscription to its forms and treaties it is making
-mental reservations and “economies” which strike
-at the very root of them.</p>
-
-<h4>The Casuistry of the Intellectual Savage.</h4>
-
-<p>In the hands of such a nation an international convention
-is not merely idle and impotent; the convention
-itself becomes positively dangerous, simply because
-it can be perverted. It can be used to invest
-the most barbarous acts with a specious plausibility,
-and can be turned against the very people whom it
-was designed to protect. Any one who takes the
-trouble to study the official proclamations of the
-German military authorities, or the introductory
-memorandum to the German White Book, cannot fail
-to be struck by this. A civilian who fires on the enemy
-forfeits under international law the privileges
-of a non-combatant. The rule means as much as it
-says, and no more; it does not impose on a civil community
-the obligation to prove that it is a non-combatant.
-But in nine out of ten German proclamations
-the rule is invoked as an excuse for involving
-a whole community in responsibility with their lives
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">47</span>
-for the acts or omissions, real or alleged, of single individuals&mdash;“the
-innocent will suffer with the
-guilty”<a id="FNanchor_68" href="#Footnote_68" class="fnanchor">68</a>&mdash;and the “law of nations” is invoked to
-put a whole population “outside the pale” of it.<a id="FNanchor_69" href="#Footnote_69" class="fnanchor">69</a>
-At one stroke we are carried back to the days of the
-blood-feud and of vicarious punishment, and the law
-of nations is perverted from an instrument of progress
-to an organon of bloody sophistries. So, too,
-the Hague Convention which requires that requisitions
-of supplies should not be made without giving
-receipts is observed in the letter and violated in the
-spirit; receipts are given, but they are forged. The
-obligation of a treaty guaranteeing the neutrality of
-Belgium is admitted, but a false charge and a falsified
-document is advanced to justify its breach. A brigade
-order to kill all prisoners is first denied, and
-then when denial becomes futile, a fictitious order of
-a prior date is alleged against us in order to dignify
-the real order with the sanction of “reprisals.” Defenceless
-merchantmen are attacked and sunk at
-first sight, and then when they carry guns for their
-protection their precautions for defence are used as
-a retrospective pretext for attack. The same curious
-casuistry is invoked to excuse the attacks on Scarborough
-and London, and the Hague Convention is
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">48</span>
-interpreted, in defiance of its authors, to support the
-plea that whatever barbarity is not expressly prohibited
-is thereby condoned.</p>
-
-<h4>Germany as a Moral Pervert.</h4>
-
-<p>It is this terrible perversion, this prostitution of
-words until, to quote a classical expression of Thucydides,
-they have lost their meaning in relation to
-things, that seems to me the most intractable problem
-that we have to face. To my mind it is this pathological
-aspect of the German temperament which presents
-a far more serious obstacle to a restoration of
-the European comity based on the readmission of
-Germany to membership than the German dogma of
-war. You may, perhaps, extirpate a dogma but you
-cannot alter a temperament. To regard Germany
-as the misguided pupil of a military caste which alone
-stands in the way of her reformation seems to me to
-ignore the volume of evidence as to the complicity of
-officers and men in those orgies of outrage. I cannot
-avoid the conclusion that the whole people is infected
-with a kind of moral distemper.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>“Look, Madame,” said a German soldier to a French woman
-who witnessed the execution of three poor travellers who with
-their hands tied behind their backs with napkins were led into
-a field close to her house and shot by six soldiers under the command
-of a German officer, “Look! isn’t it fine! See them
-shoot some French civilians. A fine feat that! All the others
-ought to be killed in the same way.”<a id="FNanchor_70" href="#Footnote_70" class="fnanchor">70</a></p></blockquote>
-
-<p>The sentiment is typical; German diaries are full
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">49</span>
-of such things. Nor is it reasonable to suppose that
-the kind of teaching which has made Clausewitz and
-Treitschke and Bernhardi the gospel of the German
-people, and has found authoritative expression in the
-German War Book, could have commanded the prestige
-which it does command in Germany if it had not
-found a people apt and eager by temperament to receive
-it. Germany stands alone among modern nations
-in extending its official conception, and even its
-academic analysis<a id="FNanchor_71" href="#Footnote_71" class="fnanchor">71</a> of war, to include the deliberate
-“terrorization” of non-combatants. She alone has
-taught, both by precept and example, that there are
-no limitations to what is justifiable by the exigencies
-of war. “<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">C’est la guerre</em>” is the common answer of
-German officers when implored by the victims to stop
-the lust and rapine of their men.<a id="FNanchor_72" href="#Footnote_72" class="fnanchor">72</a> It follows from
-all this that war as taught and practised by the Germans
-exceeds in savagery even the practices of the
-ancient world, in which it was thought the mark of
-barbarism to poison wells, desecrate temples and murder
-priests&mdash;practices which the Germans have not
-hesitated to pursue. Incitement to assassination,
-which was thought a mean and dishonourable thing
-by the Roman mind,<a id="FNanchor_73" href="#Footnote_73" class="fnanchor">73</a> is specifically recommended in
-the German War Book.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">50</span></p>
-
-<p>In the ancient world the vanquished were regarded
-as rightless, and whole populations were sold into
-slavery after they had been decimated by the slaughter
-of their leading citizens. The German practice
-is not intrinsically different; municipal magistrates,
-parish priests, and one in three of the civil population
-have been butchered, many civilians carried off to
-Germany to work in the fields, and those who are left
-behind forced to dig trenches for their captors while
-their wives and daughters are handed over to the lust
-of the soldiery, and their movable property transported.
-It is difficult to see how this differs in anything
-but name from the tragic fate of those unhappy
-communities who in the laconic phrase of the ancient
-world passed <em lang="es" xml:lang="es">sub corona</em> and were sold by auction.
-All this differs from the practices of the ancient
-world in nothing except a certain affectation, the one
-concession to modern sentiment being a studious defamation
-by the Germans of the people whom they
-ravish and despoil. It seems to me that bad as the
-German crimes are the German justification for them
-is even worse. For it betrays a real corruption of
-mind. The ancients were often brutal but they were
-never hypocritical.</p>
-
-<h4>The Bankruptcy of The Hague Conventions.</h4>
-
-<p>What hope then can there be of a restoration of the
-comity of European nations, and the re-establishment
-of the Hague Conventions? I confess I can see none.
-The German Empire was conceived in duplicity and
-brought forth in war, and three times within living
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">51</span>
-memory, as Sir Edward Grey has reminded us, she
-has wantonly provoked war in Europe in pursuance
-of her predatory designs. I can see no way out of
-the present travail except an armed peace, with the
-elimination as its basis for a long time to come of
-Germany from the councils of Europe. What hope
-of understanding can there be with a nation which
-does not observe the ordinary rules of diplomatic
-intercourse, that <em lang="la" xml:lang="la">jus fetiale</em> which even the ancient
-world regarded as sacred? The world has seen with
-stupefaction&mdash;there has, I think, been no such case
-for hundreds of years&mdash;the Ambassador of the Austrian
-Government taking advantage of his immunities
-and sovereign character to suborn seditious conspiracy
-in the State to which he was accredited?<a id="FNanchor_74" href="#Footnote_74" class="fnanchor">74</a> It
-is difficult to believe that this case now stands alone.
-Conventions with such a Power are both a delusion
-and a snare. They delude us with an appearance of
-agreement where none exists. In unscrupulous
-hands, the more precise and technical they are, the
-more do they lend themselves to casuistry, adding,
-as some one has said, the terrors of law to the horrors
-of war. I am afraid that such conventions are now
-hopelessly discredited. I doubt if we shall hear very
-much in future of the distinction between combatants
-and non-combatants, or of the sanctity of the
-<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">lev&eacute;e en masse</em> as a medium of lawful transition
-from the one to the other; he who studies the German
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">52</span>
-White Book on hostilities in Belgium will see how
-easily a belligerent, if he be so minded, can dispose
-with a quibble of the obligations to respect an improvised
-force which has “no time” to organise. A
-belligerent contemplating a sudden attack and a belligerent
-having to meet it will entertain very different
-conceptions as to what is meant by “no time.” War
-has, indeed, come to be, as von der Goltz prophesied
-it would be, a war not between armies but between
-peoples, and we are further than ever from the oft-quoted
-maxim of Rousseau that “War is not a relation
-of Man to Man but of States to States,” in which
-particular individuals are enemies only by the accident
-of a uniform. That was the voice of Individualism;
-but States grow more and more collectivist,
-and never so collectivist as in war. If, as an eminent
-writer has remarked, “out of the inner life of a nation
-comes its foreign policy,” so, we may add, out
-of its municipal law, its military usages, and its economic
-necessities will come its construction of international
-law.</p>
-
-<h4>The Effect on International Law.</h4>
-
-<p>It surely cannot be too clearly recognised that
-Germany’s successive violations of the laws of war
-have brought the whole fabric down like a house of
-cards. When the Germans began to sink neutral
-merchantmen by way of vindicating what they were
-pleased to call the freedom of the seas, England was
-forced to jettison much of that famous Declaration
-of London, which seemed at one time to be as complete
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">53</span>
-an expression of a consensus of international
-opinion as the world of jurists had yet attained. We
-have gone further, as we were bound to do, and have
-so extended the theory of blockade as to qualify very
-considerably the Declaration of Paris. The Foreign
-Office has supported these departures by the logic of
-reprisals&mdash;in my humble opinion very properly&mdash;but
-“reprisals” are, juridically speaking, a kind of counsel
-of despair. In books on international law they
-receive a kind of shame-faced recognition; their place
-is always at the end and the chapter devoted to them
-is often brief and generally apologetic. For the jurist
-knows that they partake of the character of law about
-as much as trial by battle. The voice of America is a
-voice crying in the wilderness; both groups of belligerents
-deny the American contention that peace,
-and with it the commerce of neutrals, should govern
-the construction of the rules of war. How can it be
-otherwise in a struggle for existence? I very much
-doubt whether, for a long time to come, international
-lawyers can afford to assume, as they have been in the
-habit of doing, that peace, not war, is the normal conditions
-of nations. A nation which like Germany will
-not admit your major premises will certainly reject
-your conclusions when it suits her convenience. The
-dilemma therefore is inexorable: we can readmit Germany
-to international society and lower our standard
-of International Law to her level, or we can exclude
-her and raise it. There is no third course.</p>
-
-<p>These are the hard facts to which any one who attempts
-to take stock of the present situation and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">54</span>
-immediate prospects of International Law must
-address himself. International Law rests on a reciprocity
-of obligation; if one belligerent fails to
-observe it the other is, as a mere matter of self-preservation,
-released from its observance towards
-him, and is bound not by law but by morality, by his
-own conception of what he owes to his own self-respect.
-It is well that our own conception has
-been rather in advance of International Law
-than behind it, and long may it so remain.
-But in proportion as our conception is high
-and the German conception is low, it seems to me
-incumbent on us to place our hopes for the future
-in the strength of our right arm and in that alone.
-And if, in Burke’s noble phrase, we are to consider
-ourselves for the future “embodied with Europe” so
-that, sympathetic with the adversity or the happiness
-of mankind, we feel that nothing human is alien to
-us, then we must be prepared to support our treaty
-guarantees of the independence of the small nations
-with an adequate armed force; otherwise they will regard
-our friendship as an equivocal and compromising
-thing. If we are to offer them the protection of
-Europe in place of the suzerainty of Germany, we
-must be in a position to honour our promissory notes
-or they will indeed be but a scrap of paper&mdash;a cruel
-and otiose encouragement to the weak to defy the
-strong.</p>
-
-<h4>The German as Outlaw.</h4>
-
-<p>As for Germany, I can see little hope except in a
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">55</span>
-sentence of outlawry. Mere black-listing of the
-names of responsible German commanders, although
-worth doing (and I have reason to believe that at the
-French War Office it is being done) with a view to
-retribution, is not going to change the German character.
-We shall have to revise our notions of both
-municipal and international law as regards her. The
-tendency of English law has long been, as an acute
-jurist has pointed out,<a id="FNanchor_75" href="#Footnote_75" class="fnanchor">75</a> to lay more emphasis on
-domicile than on nationality, the disabilities of the
-alien have been diminished almost to vanishing-point,
-and British citizenship itself could be had almost for
-the asking. Not of it need the alien knocking at our
-hospitable doors say, in the words of the chief captain,
-“With a great sum obtained I this freedom.”
-It has been made disastrously cheap. All that is
-likely to be changed. It is not a little significant that
-already the courts have begun to take judicial notice
-of the peculiar morality of the German and have
-expressly made it the basis of a decision extending the
-conception of what constitutes a prisoner of war.<a id="FNanchor_76" href="#Footnote_76" class="fnanchor">76</a>
-And alone among the emergency legislation the drastic
-Aliens Act is not limited in its preamble, as are
-the other Acts, to the duration of the war. These
-things are portents. It is impossible to believe that
-a revolution more catastrophic than anything through
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">56</span>
-which Europe has passed, a revolution beside which
-the French Revolution assumes the proportions of a
-storm in a tea-cup, can leave our conceptions of law,
-whether municipal or international, unchanged.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<h4>Conclusion.</h4>
-
-<p>I make no apology, and I trust that none is needed,
-for these speculations. Reports of atrocities can
-serve no useful purpose unless they move men to reflect
-no less resolutely than deeply upon what is to
-be done to deliver Europe from the scourge of their
-repetition. It may well be that my own reflections
-will seem cynical to one, depressing to another, arbitrary
-to a third. They are not the idols of the theatre,
-and in academic circles they may not be fashionable.
-But the catastrophe that has disturbed the
-dreams of the idealogues must teach jurists and statesmen
-to beware of the opiate of words and sacramental
-phrases. That, however, is a task which belongs to
-the future. The immediate enterprise is not for lawyers
-but for our gallant men in the field. They, and
-they alone, can lay the foundations of an enduring
-peace by an unremitting and inexorable war. They
-are the true ministers of justice.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">57</span></p>
-
-<h2 id="THE_BRITISH_ENQUIRY_IN_FRANCE"><span class="smcap">Chapter II</span><br />
-
-THE BRITISH ENQUIRY IN FRANCE</h2>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">In</span> November of last year I was commissioned by the
-Secretary of State for Home Affairs to undertake the
-investigation in France into the alleged breaches of
-the laws of war by the German troops, the inquiries
-in England being separately conducted by others.
-The results of my investigation were communicated
-to the Home Office, in the form of confidential reports
-and of depositions, diaries, proclamations, and other
-<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">pi&egrave;ces justificatives</em>, and were in turn submitted to
-the Committee appointed by the Prime Minister and
-presided over by Lord Bryce. The Committee made
-liberal use of this material, but, owing to the exigencies
-of space and the necessity of selection, some
-of it remains unpublished, and I now propose to place
-it and the conclusions I draw from it before the public.
-Some part of it, and that part the most important&mdash;namely,
-that which establishes proofs of a deliberate
-policy of atrocity by responsible German officers&mdash;came
-into my hands too late for use by the Committee.
-Moreover, the Committee felt that their first
-duty was to Belgium, and consequently the portion
-of the inquiry which related to France, and in particular
-to outrages upon British soldiers in France,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">58</span>
-occupies a comparatively small place in their publications.
-In this article I therefore confine myself to
-the latter branch of the inquiry, and the reader will
-understand that, except where otherwise stated, the
-documents here set out are now published for the
-first time.<a id="FNanchor_77" href="#Footnote_77" class="fnanchor">77</a></p>
-
-<p>My investigations extended over a period of four
-or five months. The first six weeks were spent in
-visiting the base hospitals and convalescent camps
-at Boulogne and Rouen, and the hospitals at Paris;
-during the remaining three months I was attached to
-the General Headquarters Staff of the British Expeditionary
-Force. In the course of my inquiries in the
-hospitals and camps I orally interrogated some two
-or three thousand officers and soldiers,<a id="FNanchor_78" href="#Footnote_78" class="fnanchor">78</a> representing
-almost every regiment in the British armies and all
-of whom had recently been engaged on active service
-in the field. The whole of these inquiries were conducted
-by me personally, but my inquiries at headquarters
-were of a much more systematic character.
-There, owing to the courtesy of Lieutenant-General
-Sir Archibald Murray, the late Chief of the General
-Staff, I had the assistance of the various services&mdash;in
-particular the Adjutant-General, the Provost-Marshal,
-the Director of Military Intelligence, the Director
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">59</span>
-of Medical Services and their respective staffs&mdash;and
-also of the civil authorities, within the area at
-present occupied by the British armies, such as the
-sous-prefets, the procureurs de la R&eacute;publique, the
-commissaries de police, and the maires of the communes.
-In this way I was enabled not only to obtain
-corroboration of the statements taken down in the
-base hospitals in the earlier stages of my inquiry, but
-also to make a close local study of the behaviour of
-the German troops towards the civil population during
-their occupation of the districts recently evacuated
-by them.<a id="FNanchor_79" href="#Footnote_79" class="fnanchor">79</a> In pursuance of this latter inquiry
-I visited every town and commune of any importance
-now in our occupation and lately occupied by the
-Germans, including places within a few hundred
-yards of the German lines. As regards the conduct
-of the German troops in the earlier stages of the campaign
-and in other parts of France, I confined my
-inquiries to incidents which actually came under the
-observation of our own troops during or after the
-battles of Mons, the Marne, and the Aisne, and did
-not extend them to include the testimony of the
-French civil authorities, as I did not consider it part
-of my duty to attempt to do what was already being
-done by the Commission of Inquiry instituted by the
-President of the Council. But I freely availed myself
-of opportunities of corroboration of English evidence
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">60</span>
-from French sources where such sources were
-readily accessible, and, by the courtesy of the French
-Ministry of War, who placed a Staff officer and a military
-car at my disposal, I was enabled to go over the
-ground to the north-east of Paris covered by our troops
-in their advance to the Aisne and to obtain confirmation
-of many incidents already related to me by
-British officers and soldiers. It was also my privilege
-frequently to meet M. Mollard, of the French Commission,
-and to examine for myself the depositions
-on oath and <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">pi&egrave;ces justificatives</em> on which the first
-Reports of the Commission are based, and which are
-as yet unpublished. In these different ways I have
-been enabled to obtain an extensive view of the whole
-field of inquiry and to arrive at certain general conclusions
-which may be of some value.</p>
-
-<h3 id="METHODS_OF_ENQUIRY">Methods of Enquiry.</h3>
-
-<p>My method of inquiry was twofold&mdash;I availed myself
-of both oral evidence and written evidence. As
-regards the former, the evidence taken at the base
-hospitals was wholly of this character. The method
-which I adopted in taking it was as follows:</p>
-
-<p>I made it a rule to explain to the soldier or officer
-at the outset that the inquiry was an official one, and
-that he must be prepared to put his name to any testimony
-he might elect to give.</p>
-
-<p>I allowed the soldier to tell his story in his own
-way and in his own words, but after, or in the course
-of, the recital, I always cross-examined him as to
-details, inquiring in particular (1) whether he directly
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">61</span>
-witnessed the event himself; (2) what was the
-date and place of the occurrence&mdash;to establish these
-I have frequently gone over the operations with the
-witness with the aid of a military map and a diary
-of the campaign; (3) whether, in the case of hearsay
-evidence, he heard the story direct from the subject
-of it, and, in particular, whether he was versed in
-the language employed; (4) whether he could give
-me the name of any person or persons with him, particularly
-officers, who also witnessed the event or
-heard the story.</p>
-
-<p>After such cross-examination I then took down the
-narrative, if satisfied that it possessed any value, read
-it over to the soldier, and then obtained his signature.
-This, however, was often only the first stage, as I
-have not infrequently been able to obtain confirmation
-of the evidence so obtained by subsequent inquiries
-at General or Divisional Headquarters, either
-among members of the staff or from company officers
-or from the civil authorities. For example, hearsay
-evidence of rape (and I always regarded such evidence
-as inconclusive of itself) tendered to me by
-soldiers at the base hospitals received very striking
-confirmation in the depositions of the victims on oath
-which had been taken by the civil authorities at Bailleul,
-Metteren, and elsewhere, and which were subsequently
-placed at my disposal. Personal inquiries
-made by me among the maires and cur&eacute;s of the communes
-where particular incidents were alleged to
-have occurred resulted in similar confirmation. So,
-too, the Indian witnesses whom I examined at the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">62</span>
-base hospital were at my request subsequently re-examined,
-when they had rejoined their units, by the
-Intelligence Officers attached to the Indian Corps,
-and with much the same results. Corroborative evidence
-as to a policy of discrimination practised by
-the German officers in favour of Indians was also obtained
-from the record of statements volunteered by
-a German prisoner of the 112th Regiment and placed
-at my disposal by our Intelligence Officers.</p>
-
-<p>The general impression left in my mind by these
-subsequent inquiries at head-quarters as to the value
-of the statements made to me earlier by soldiers in
-hospital is that those statements were true. There
-is a tendency in some quarters to depreciate the value
-of the testimony of the British soldier, but the degree
-of its value depends a good deal on the capacity in
-which, and the person to whom, the soldier is addressing
-himself. In writing letters home or in talking to
-solicitous visitors the soldier is one person; in giving
-evidence in an official inquiry he is quite another. I
-have had opportunities when attending field courts-martial
-of seeing something of the way in which soldiers
-give evidence, and I see no reason to suppose
-that the soldier is any less reliable than the average
-civilian witness in a court of common law. Indeed,
-the moment I made it clear to the soldiers that my inquiry
-was an official one they became very cautious
-and deliberate in their statements, often correcting
-themselves or referring to their diaries (of which they
-usually take great care), or qualifying the narration
-with the statement “I did not see it myself.” It
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">63</span>
-need hardly be said that these observations as to the
-credibility of the soldiers apply no less to that of the
-officers. And it is worthy of remark that, apart from
-individual cases of corroboration of a soldier’s evidence
-by that of an officer, the burden of the evidence
-in the case of each class is the same. Where
-officers do not testify to the same thing as the soldiers,
-they testify to similar things. The cumulative effect
-produced on my mind is that of uniform experience.</p>
-
-<p>I have often found the statements so made subsequently
-corroborated; I have rarely, if ever, found
-them contradicted. I ascribe this result to my having
-applied rigid rules as to the reception of evidence in
-the first instance. I have always taken into account
-the peculiar receptivity of minds fatigued and overwrought
-by the strain of battle to the influences of
-“suggestion,” whether in the form of newspapers or
-of oral gossip. It sometimes, but not often, happened
-that one could recognise the same story in a different
-investiture, although appearing at first sight to be a
-different occurrence. Or, again, it may happen that
-a story undergoes elaboration in the process of transmission
-until it looks worse than it originally was.
-So, too, a case of apparent outrage may admit of
-several explanations; it may happen, for example, in
-the case of a suspicious use of the white flag that the
-act of one party of Germans in raising it and of another
-party in taking advantage of it were conceivably
-independent of one another. Cases of the shelling
-of “undefended” places, of churches, and of hospitals,
-I have always disregarded if our men or guns
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">64</span>
-were or lately had been in the vicinity; and it may
-easily happen that a case of firing on stretcher-bearers
-or ambulance waggons is due to the impossibility of
-discrimination in the midst of a general engagement.
-Wherever any of these features appeared to be present
-I rejected the evidence&mdash;not always nor necessarily
-because I doubted its veracity, but because I
-had misgivings as to its value.</p>
-
-<h3 id="OUTRAGES_UPON_COMBATANTS_IN_THE_FIELD">Outrages upon Combatants in the Field.</h3>
-
-<p>Lord Bryce’s Committee, with that scrupulous fairness
-which so honourably distinguishes their Report,
-have stated that:</p>
-
-<p>“We have no evidence to show whether and in
-what cases orders proceeded from the officer in command
-to give no quarter, but there are some instances
-in which persons obviously desiring to surrender were
-nevertheless killed.”</p>
-
-<p>This is putting the case with extreme moderation,
-as the evidence at the disposal of the Committee,
-showing, as it did, that such barbarities were frequently
-committed when the German troops were
-present in force, raised a considerable presumption
-that they were authorised by company and platoon
-commanders at least, if not in pursuance of brigade
-orders. But after the Committee had concluded its
-labours, and, unfortunately, too late for its consideration,
-I succeeded, as the result of a long and patient
-investigation, in obtaining evidence which establishes
-beyond reasonable doubt that the outrages upon combatants
-in the field were committed by the express
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">65</span>
-orders of responsible officers such as brigade and company
-commanders. The nature of that evidence
-(which is here published for the first time) I will
-disclose in a moment. But before doing so I will present
-the conclusions I had previously arrived at by a
-process of induction from individual cases. It will
-then be seen how the deductive method of proof from
-the evidence of general orders confirms the presumption
-raised by the evidence of particular instances.</p>
-
-<p>A German military writer of great authority<a id="FNanchor_80" href="#Footnote_80" class="fnanchor">80</a> predicted
-some years ago that the next war would be
-one of inconceivable violence. The prophecy appears
-only too true as regards the conduct of German
-troops in the field; it has rarely been distinguished
-by that chivalry which is supposed to characterise
-the freemasonry of arms. One of our most distinguished
-Staff officers remarked to me that the Germans
-have no sense of honour in the field, and the
-almost uniform testimony of our officers and men induces
-me to believe that the remark is only too true.
-Abuse of the white flag has been very frequent, especially
-in the earlier stages of the campaign on the
-Aisne, when our officers, not having been disillusioned
-by bitter experience, acted on the assumption that
-they had to deal with an honourable opponent.
-Again and again the white flag was put up, and when
-a company of ours advanced unsuspectingly and without
-supports to take prisoners, the Germans who had
-exhibited the token of surrender parted their ranks
-to make room for a murderous fire from machine-guns
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">66</span>
-concealed behind them. Or, again, the flag was
-exhibited in order to give time for supports to come
-up. It not infrequently happened that our company
-officers, advancing unarmed to confer with the German
-company commander in such cases, were shot
-down as they approached. The Camerons, the West
-Yorks, the Coldstreams, the East Lancs, the Wiltshires,
-the South Wales Borderers, in particular, suffered
-heavily in these ways. In all these cases they
-were the victims of organised German units, <em>i.e.</em> companies
-or battalions, acting under the orders of responsible
-officers.</p>
-
-<p>There can, moreover, be no doubt that the respect
-of the German troops for the Geneva Convention is
-but intermittent.<a id="FNanchor_81" href="#Footnote_81" class="fnanchor">81</a> Cases of deliberate firing on
-stretcher-bearers are, according to the universal testimony
-of our officers and men, of frequent occurrence.
-It is almost certain death to attempt to convey
-wounded men from the trenches over open ground
-except under cover of night. A much more serious
-offence, however, is the deliberate killing of the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">67</span>
-wounded as they lie helpless and defenceless on the
-field of battle. This is so grave a charge that were it
-not substantiated by the considered statements of
-officers, non-commissioned officers, and men, one
-would hesitate to believe it. But even after rejecting,
-as one is bound to do, cases which may be explained
-by accident, mistake, or the excitement of action,
-there remains a large residuum of cases which can
-only be explained by deliberate malice. No other
-explanation is possible when, as has not infrequently
-happened, men who have been wounded by rifle fire
-in an advance, and have had to be left during a retirement
-for reinforcements, are discovered, in our
-subsequent advance, with nine or ten bayonet wounds
-or with their heads beaten in by the butt-ends of
-rifles. Such cases could not have occurred, the enemy
-being present in force, without the knowledge of superior
-officers. Indeed, I have before me evidence
-which goes to show that German officers have themselves
-acted in similar fashion. Some of the cases
-reveal a leisurely barbarity which proves great deliberation;
-cases such as the discovery of bodies of
-despatch-riders burnt with petrol or “pegged out”
-with lances, or of soldiers with their faces stamped
-upon by the heel of a boot, or of a guardsman found
-with numerous bayonet wounds evidently inflicted as
-he was in the act of applying a field dressing to a
-bullet wound. There also seems no reason to doubt
-the independent statements of men of the Loyal
-North Lancs, whom I interrogated on different occasions,
-that the men of one of their companies were
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">68</span>
-killed on December 20th after they had surrendered
-and laid down their arms.<a id="FNanchor_82" href="#Footnote_82" class="fnanchor">82</a> To what extent prisoners
-have been treated in this manner it is impossible to
-say; dead men tell no tales, but an exceptionally able
-Intelligence Officer at the head-quarters of the Cavalry
-Corps informed me that it is believed that when
-British prisoners are taken in small parties they are
-put to death in cold blood. Certain it is that our men
-when captured are kicked, robbed of all they possess,
-threatened with death if they will not give information,
-and in some cases forced to dig trenches. The
-evidence I have taken from soldiers at the base hospitals
-on these points is borne out by evidence taken
-at the Front immediately after such occurrences by
-the Deputy Judge-Advocate General, an Assistant
-Provost-Marshal, and a captain in the Sherwood Foresters,
-and in the opinion of these officers the evidence
-which they took, and which they subsequently placed
-at my disposal, is reliable.<a id="FNanchor_83" href="#Footnote_83" class="fnanchor">83</a></p>
-
-<h4>The Proofs of Policy.</h4>
-
-<p>The question as to how far these outrages are attributable
-to policy and superior orders becomes imperative.
-It was at first difficult to answer. For a
-long time I did not find, nor did I expect to find,
-any documentary orders to that effect. Such orders,
-if given at all, were much more likely to be verbal,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">69</span>
-for it is extremely improbable that the German authorities
-would be so unwise as to commit them to
-writing. But the outrages upon combatants were so
-numerous and so collective in character that I began
-to suspect policy at a very early stage in my investigations.
-My suspicions were heightened by the
-significant fact that exhaustive inquiries which I
-made among Indian native officers and men in the
-hospital ships in port at Boulogne, and at the base
-hospitals, seemed to indicate that experiences of outrage
-were as rare among the Indian troops as they
-were common among the British. The explanation
-was fairly obvious, inasmuch as many of these Indian
-witnesses who had fallen into German hands testified
-to me that the German officers<a id="FNanchor_84" href="#Footnote_84" class="fnanchor">84</a> seized the occasion
-to assure them that Germany was animated by the
-most friendly feelings towards them, and more than
-once dismissed them with an injunction not to fight
-against German troops and to bring over their comrades
-to the German side. For example, a sepoy in
-the 9th Bhopals testified to me as follows:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>“I and three others were found wounded by the Germans.
-They bound up our wounds and invited us to join them, offering
-us money and land. I answered, ‘I, who have eaten the King’s
-salt, cannot do this thing and thus bring sorrow and shame
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">70</span>
-upon my people.’ The Germans took our chupattis, and offered
-us of their bread in return. I said, ‘I am a Brahmin and cannot
-touch it.’ They then left us, saying that if we were captured
-again they would kill us.”</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>There was other evidence to the same effect.
-Eventually I obtained proofs confirming my suspicions,
-and I will now proceed to set them out.</p>
-
-<p>On May 3rd I visited the Ministry of War in
-Paris at the invitation of the French military authorities,
-and was received by M. le Capitaine Ren&eacute; Petit,
-Chef de Service du Contentieux, who conducted me
-to the department where the diaries of German prisoners
-were kept. I made a brief preliminary examination
-of them, and discovered the following passage
-(which I had photographed) in the diary of a German
-N.C.O., G&ouml;ttsche, of the 85th Infantry Regiment
-(the IXth Corps), fourth company detached for
-service, under date “Okt. 6, 1914, bei Antwerpen”:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p lang="de" xml:lang="de">“Der Herr Hauptmann rief uns um sich und sagte: ‘In dem
-Fort, das zu nehmen ist, sind aller Wahrscheinlichkeit nach
-Engl&auml;nder. Ich w&uuml;nsche aber keinen gefangenen Engl&auml;nder bei
-der Komp. zu sehen.’ Ein allgemeiner Bravo der Zustimmung
-war die Antwort.”</p>
-
-<p>(“The Captain called us to him and said: ‘In the fortress
-[<em>i.e.</em>, Antwerp] which we have to take there are in all probability
-Englishmen. But I do not want to see any Englishmen
-prisoners in the hands of this company.’ A general ‘Bravo’ of
-assent was the answer.”)</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>This malignant frenzy against British troops, so
-carefully instilled, is borne out by a passage in another
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">71</span>
-diary, now in the possession of the French
-Ministry of War, which was found on April 22nd on
-the body of Richard Gerhold, of the 71st Regiment
-of Infantry of the Reserve, Fourth Army Corps, who
-was killed in September at Nouvron:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p lang="de" xml:lang="de">“Auch hier kommen ja Sachen vor, was auch nicht sein darf,
-kommt aber doch vor. Grosse Greultaten kommen nat&uuml;rlich an
-Engl&auml;ndern und Belgiern vor. Nun da wird eben jeder ohne
-Gnaden niedergeknallt, aber wehe dem armen Deutschen der
-in ihre H&auml;nde kommt....”</p>
-
-<p>(“Here also things occur which should not be. Great atrocities
-are of course committed upon Englishmen and Belgians;
-every one of them is now knocked on the head without mercy.
-But woe to the poor German who falls into their hands.”)</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>As regards the last sentence in this diary, which is
-one long chapter of horrors and betrays a ferocious
-credulity, it is worthy of remark that I have seen at
-the French Ministry of War the diary<a id="FNanchor_85" href="#Footnote_85" class="fnanchor">85</a> of a German
-N.C.O., named Schulze, who, judging by internal evidence,
-was a man of exceptional intelligence, in which
-the writer refers to tales of French and Belgian
-atrocities circulated among the men by his superior
-officers. He shrewdly adds that he believes the officers
-invented these stories in order to prevent him
-and his comrades from surrendering.</p>
-
-<p>A less conclusive passage, but a none the less suspicious
-one, is to be found in a diary now in my possession.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">72</span>
-It is the diary of an Unter-offizier, named
-Ragge, of the 158th Regiment, and contains (under
-date October 21st) the following:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p lang="de" xml:lang="de">“Wir verfolgten den Gegner soweit wir ihn sahen. Da haben
-wir machen Engl&auml;nder abgeknallt. Die Engl&auml;nder lagen wie
-ges&auml;ht am Boden. Die noch lebenden Engl&auml;nder im Sch&uuml;tzengraben
-wurden erstochen oder erschossen. Unsere Komp.
-machte 61 Gefangene.”</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Which may be translated:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>“We pursued the enemy as far as we saw him. We ‘knocked
-out’ many English. The English lay on the ground as if sown
-there. Those of the Englishmen who were still alive in the
-trenches were stuck or shot. Our company made 61 prisoners.”<a id="FNanchor_86" href="#Footnote_86" class="fnanchor">86</a></p></blockquote>
-
-<p>So far I have only dealt with the acts of small
-German units&mdash;<em>i.e.</em> companies of infantry. I now
-come to the most damning proofs of a policy of coldblooded
-murder of wounded and prisoners, initiated
-and carried out by a whole brigade under the orders
-of a Brigadier-General. This particular investigation
-took me a long time, but the results are, I think conclusive.
-It may be remembered that some months
-ago the French military authorities published in the
-French newspapers what purported to be the text
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">73</span>
-of an order issued by a German Brigadier-General,
-named Stenger, commanding the 58th Brigade, in
-which he ordered his troops to take no prisoners and
-to put to death without mercy every one who fell into
-their hands, whether wounded and defenceless or not.
-The German Government immediately denounced the
-alleged order as a forgery. I determined to see
-whether I could establish its authenticity, and in February
-last I obtained a copy of the original from M.
-Mollard, of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, who is
-a member of the Commission appointed by the French
-Government to inquire into the alleged German
-atrocities. The text of that order was as follows:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p lang="de" xml:lang="de">“Befehl (Armee-befehl) vom 26. Aug. 1914, gegen 4 Uhr
-nachm. wie er von F&uuml;hrer der 7 Komp. Reg. 112 (Infant.) bei
-Thionville, am Eingang des Waldes von Saint-Barbe, seinen
-Truppen als Brigade-oder Armee-befehl gegeben wurde:</p>
-
-<p lang="de" xml:lang="de">“Von heute ab werden keine Gefangene mehr gemacht S&auml;mtliche
-Gefangene werden niedergemacht. Verwundete ob mit
-Waffen oder wehrlos niedergemacht. Gefangene auch in gr&ouml;sseren
-geschlossenen Formationen werden niedergemacht. Es
-bleibt kein Mann lebend hinter uns.”</p>
-
-<p>(“Army Order of 26 Aug., 1914, about 4 p.m., such as was
-given to his troops as a Brigade or Army Order by the leader
-of the 7th Company of the 112th Regiment of Infantry at
-Thionville, at the entrance of the wood of Saint Barbe.</p>
-
-<p>“To date from this day no prisoners will be made any longer.
-All the prisoners will be executed. The wounded, whether
-armed or defenceless, will be executed. Prisoners, even in large
-and compact formations, will be executed. Not a man will be
-left alive behind us.”)</p></blockquote>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">74</span></p>
-
-<p>Taking this alleged order as my starting-point, I
-began to make inquiries at British Head-quarters as
-to the existence of any information about the doings
-of the 112th Regiment. I soon found that there was
-good reason to suspect it. Our Intelligence Department
-placed in my hands the records of the examination
-of two men of this regiment who had been captured
-by us. One of them volunteered a statement to
-one of our Intelligence Officers on November 23rd to
-the effect that his regiment had orders to treat Indians
-well, but were allowed to treat British prisoners
-as they pleased. This man’s testimony appeared
-to be reliable, as statements he made on other points,
-<em>i.e.</em>, as to the German formations, were subsequently
-found to be true, and his information as to discrimination
-in the treatment of Indians entirely bore out
-the conclusions I had already arrived at on that particular
-point. The German witness in question further
-stated that 65 out of 150 British prisoners were
-killed in cold blood by their escort on or about October
-23rd on the road to Lille, and that the escort
-were praised for their conduct. Other German prisoners
-have, I may add, also made statements that they
-had orders to kill all the English who fell into their
-hands.</p>
-
-<p>The evidence of this man of the 112th Regiment
-was as explicit and assured as it could be. But the
-matter did not stop there. At a later date an officer
-of the same regiment fell into our hands, in whose
-field note-book we found the memorandum “<span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Keine
-Gefangene</span>” (“No prisoners”). He was immediately
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">75</span>
-cross-examined as to the meaning of this passage, but
-he had a plausible explanation ready. It was to the
-effect that his men were not to make the capture of
-prisoners a pretext for retiring with them to the
-rear; but, having disarmed them, were to leave them
-to be taken back by the supports.</p>
-
-<p>But at the end of April&mdash;too late, unfortunately,
-for use by Lord Bryce’s Committee&mdash;one of our Intelligence
-Officers placed before me the following
-entry in the field note-book of a German prisoner,
-Reinhart Brenneisen,<a id="FNanchor_87" href="#Footnote_87" class="fnanchor">87</a> reservist, belonging to the 4th
-Company, 112th Regiment, and dated in August (the
-same month as appears on the face of the order in
-question):</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p lang="de" xml:lang="de">“Auch kam Brigadebefehl s&auml;mtliche Franzosen ob verwundet
-oder nicht, die uns in die H&auml;nde fielen, sollten erschossen
-werden. Es d&uuml;rfte keine Gefangenen gemacht werden.”</p>
-
-<p>(“Then came a brigade order that all French, whether
-wounded or not, who fell into our hands, were to be shot. No
-prisoners were to be made.”)</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>This, I think, may be said to put the reality of the
-brigade order in question beyond doubt.</p>
-
-<p>The cumulative effect of this evidence, coupled with
-the statements of so many of our men who claim to
-have been eye-witnesses of wholesale bayoneting of
-the wounded, certainly confirms suspicions of the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">76</span>
-gravest kind as to such acts having been done by
-authority. Neither the temperament of the German
-soldier nor the character of German discipline
-(<em lang="de" xml:lang="de">furchtbar streng</em>&mdash;“frightfully strict”&mdash;as a German
-prisoner put it to me) makes it probable that
-the German soldiers acted on their own initiative.
-It would, in any case, be incredible that so many cases
-of outrage could be sufficiently explained by any law
-of averages, or by the idiosyncrasies of the “bad
-characters” present in every large congregation of
-men.</p>
-
-<h3 id="TREATMENT_OF_CIVIL_POPULATION">Treatment of Civil Population.</h3>
-
-<p>The subject-matter of the inquiry may be classified
-according as it relates to: (1) ill-treatment of the
-civil population, and (2) breaches of the laws of war
-in the field. As regards the first it is not too much
-to say that the Germans pay little respect to life and
-none to property. I say nothing of the monstrous
-policy of vicarious responsibility laid down by them
-in the Proclamations as to the treatment of hostages
-which I forwarded to the Committee and which I left
-to the Committee to examine; I confine myself to the
-practices which have come under my observation.<a id="FNanchor_88" href="#Footnote_88" class="fnanchor">88</a>
-Here it is clear that the treatment of civilians is regulated
-by no more rational or humane policy than
-that of intimidation or, even worse, of sullen vindictiveness.
-As the German troops passed through the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">77</span>
-communes and towns of the arrondissements of
-Ypres, Hazebrouck, Bethune, and Lille, they shot indiscriminately
-at the innocent spectators of their
-march; the peasant tilling his fields, the refugee
-tramping the roads, and the workman returning to
-his home. To be seen was often dangerous, to attempt
-to escape being seen was invariably fatal. Old men
-and boys and even women and young girls were shot
-like rabbits. The slightest failure to comply with the
-peremptory demands of the invader has been punished
-with instant death. The cur&eacute; of Pradelle, having
-failed to find the key of the church tower, was
-put against the wall and shot; a shepherd at a lonely
-farmhouse near Rebais who failed to produce bread
-for the German troops had his head blown off by
-a rifle; a baker at Moorslede who attempted to escape
-was suffocated by German soldiers with his own scarf;
-a young mother at Bailleul who was unable to produce
-sufficient coffee to satisfy the demands of
-twenty-three German soldiers had her baby seized
-by one of the latter and its head dipped in scalding
-water; an old man of seventy-seven years of age at
-La Fert&eacute; Gaucher who attempted to protect two
-women in his house from outrage was killed with a
-rifle shot.</p>
-
-<p>I select these instances from my notes at random&mdash;they
-could be multiplied many times&mdash;as indications
-of the temper of the German troops. They might,
-perhaps, be dismissed as the unauthorised acts of
-small patrols were it not that there is only too much
-evidence to show that the soldiers are taught by their
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">78</span>
-superiors to set no value upon human life, and things
-have been done which could not have been done without
-superior orders. For example, at Bailleul,<a id="FNanchor_89" href="#Footnote_89" class="fnanchor">89</a> La
-Gorgue, and Doulieu, where no resistance of any kind
-was offered to the German troops, and where the latter
-were present in force under the command of commissioned
-officers, civilians were taken in groups, and
-after being forced to dig their own graves were shot
-by firing parties in the presence of an officer. At
-Doulieu,<a id="FNanchor_90" href="#Footnote_90" class="fnanchor">90</a> which is a small village, eleven civilians
-were shot in this way; they were strangers to the
-place, and it was only by subsequent examination of
-the papers found on their bodies that some of them
-were identified as inhabitants of neighbouring villages.
-If these men had been guilty of any
-act of hostility it is not clear why they were
-not shot at once in their own villages, and
-inquiries at some of the villages from which
-they were taken have revealed no knowledge
-of any act of the kind. It is, however, a common
-practice for the German troops to seize the male inhabitants
-(especially those of military age) of the
-places they occupy and take them away on their
-retreat. Twenty-five were so taken from Bailleul and
-nothing has been heard of them since. There is only
-too much reason to suppose that the same fate has
-overtaken them as that which befell the unhappy men
-executed at Doulieu. I believe the explanation of
-these sinister proceedings to be that the men were
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">79</span>
-compelled to dig trenches for the enemy, to give information
-as to the movement of their own troops,
-and to act as guides (all clearly practices which are a
-breach of the laws of war and of the Hague Regulations),
-and then, their presence being inconvenient
-and their knowledge of the enemy’s positions and
-movements compromising, they were put to death.
-This is not a mere surmise. The male inhabitants of
-Warneton were forced to dig trenches for the enemy,
-and an inhabitant of Merris was compelled to go with
-the German troops and act as a guide; it is notorious
-that the official manual of the German General Staff,
-<cite>Kriegsbrauch in Landskriege</cite>, condones, and indeed
-indoctrinates, such breaches of the laws of war. British
-soldiers who were taken prisoners by the Germans
-and subsequently escaped were compelled by their
-captors to dig trenches, and in a field note-book found
-on a soldier of the 100th Saxon Body Grenadiers
-(XIIth Corps) occurs the following significant passage:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>“My two prisoners worked hard at digging trenches. At midday
-I got the order to rejoin at village with my prisoners. I
-was very glad, as I had been ordered to shoot them both as
-the French attacked. Thank God it was not necessary.”</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>In this connexion it is important to observe that
-the German policy of holding a whole town or village
-responsible for the acts of isolated individuals,
-whether by the killing of hostages or by decimation
-or by a wholesale <em>battue</em> of the inhabitants, has undoubtedly
-resulted in the grossest and most irrelevant
-cruelties. A single shot fired in or near a place occupied
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">80</span>
-by the Germans&mdash;it may be a shot from a French
-patrol or a German rifle let off by accident or mistake
-or in a drunken affray&mdash;at once places the whole
-community in peril, and it seems to be at once assumed
-that the civil inhabitants are guilty unless they
-can prove themselves innocent. This was clearly the
-case at Armenti&egrave;res. Frequently, as the field note-book
-of a Saxon officer testifies, they are not allowed
-the opportunity. Indeed there seems some reason to
-suppose that the German troops hold the civil inhabitants
-responsible even for the acts of lawful belligerents,
-and, as my inquiries at Merris and Messines go
-to show, a French patrol cannot operate in the vicinity
-of a French or Belgian village without exposing
-the inhabitants to sanguinary punishment or predatory
-fines. There is not the slightest evidence to show
-that French civilians have fired upon German troops,
-and in spite of the difficulty of proving a negative
-there is a good deal of reason to reject such a supposition.
-Throughout the communes of the region of
-Northern France which I have investigated notices
-were posted up at the mairie requiring all the inhabitants
-to deposit any arms in their possession with
-the civil authorities, and the orders appear to have
-been complied with, as they were very strictly enforced.</p>
-
-<p>In this matter of holding the civil population responsible
-with their lives for anything that may
-prove “inconvenient” (<em lang="de" xml:lang="de">g&ecirc;nant</em>), to quote a German
-Proclamation, to the German troops, the German commanders
-seem to have no sense of cause and effect.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">81</span>
-At Coulommiers, so the Mayor informed me, they
-threatened to shoot him because the gas supply gave
-out. In a town which I visited close to the German
-lines (and the name of which I suppress by request
-of the civil authorities for fear of a vindictive bombardment),
-the Mayor, who was under arrest in the
-guardroom, was threatened with death because a signal-bell
-rang at the railway station, and was in imminent
-peril until it was proved that the act was due
-to the clumsiness of a German soldier; and an exchange
-of shots between two drunken soldiers, resulting
-in the death of one of them, was made the ground
-of an accusation that the inhabitants had fired on the
-troops, the Mayor’s life being again in peril. Where
-the life of the civilian is held so cheap, it is not surprising
-that the German soldier, himself the subject of
-a fearful discipline, is under a strong temptation to
-escape punishment for the consequences of his own
-careless or riotous or drunken behaviour by attributing
-those consequences to the civil population, for the
-latter is invariably suspected.</p>
-
-<h3 id="OUTRAGES_UPON_WOMEN_THE_GERMAN_OCCUPATION_OF_BAILLEUL">Outrages upon Women&mdash;The German Occupation
-of Bailleul.</h3>
-
-<p>When life is held so cheap, it is not surprising that
-honour and property are not held more dear. Outrages
-upon the honour of women by German soldiers
-have been so frequent that it is impossible to escape
-the conviction that they have been condoned and indeed
-encouraged by German officers. As regards this
-matter I have made a most minute study of the German
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">82</span>
-occupation of Bailleul. This place was occupied
-by a regiment of German Hussars in October for a
-period of eight days. During the whole of that period
-the town was delivered over to the excesses of a
-licentious soldiery and was left in a state of indescribable
-filth. There were at least thirty cases of outrages
-on girls and young married women, authenticated
-by sworn statements of witnesses and generally
-by medical certificates of injury. It is extremely
-probable that, owing to the natural reluctance of
-women to give evidence in cases of this kind, the
-actual number of outrages largely exceeds this. Indeed,
-the leading physician of the town, Dr. Bels,
-puts the number as high as sixty. At least five officers
-were guilty of such offences, and where the officers
-set the example the men followed. The circumstances
-were often of a peculiarly revolting character;
-daughters were outraged in the presence of their
-mothers, and mothers in the presence or the hearing
-of their little children. In one case, the facts of
-which are proved by evidence which would satisfy
-any court of law, a young girl of nineteen was violated
-by one officer while the other held her mother
-by the throat and pointed a revolver, after which the
-two officers exchanged their respective r&ocirc;les.<a id="FNanchor_91" href="#Footnote_91" class="fnanchor">91</a> The
-officers and soldiers usually hunted in couples, either
-entering the houses under pretence of seeking billets,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">83</span>
-or forcing the doors by open violence. Frequently
-the victims were beaten and kicked, and invariably
-threatened with a loaded revolver if they resisted.
-The husband or father of the women and girls was
-usually absent on military service; if one was present
-he was first ordered away under some pretext; and
-disobedience of civilians to German orders, however
-improper, is always punished with instant death. In
-several cases little children heard the cries and struggles
-of their mother in the adjoining room to which
-she had been carried by a brutal exercise of force.
-No attempt was made to keep discipline, and the officers,
-when appealed to for protection, simply
-shrugged their shoulders. Horses were stabled in
-saloons; shops and private houses were looted (there
-are nine hundred authenticated cases of pillage).
-Some civilians were shot and many others carried off
-into captivity. Of the fate of the latter nothing is
-known, but the worst may be suspected.</p>
-
-<p>The German troops were often drunk and always
-insolent. But significantly enough, the bonds of
-discipline thus relaxed were tightened at will and
-hardly a single straggler was left behind.</p>
-
-<p>Inquiries in other places, in the villages of Meteren,
-Oultersteen, and Nieppe, for example, establish the occurrence
-of similar outrages upon defenceless women,
-accompanied by every circumstance of disgusting barbarity.
-No civilian dare attempt to protect his wife
-or daughter from outrage. To be in possession of
-weapons of defence is to be condemned to instant
-execution, and even a village constable found in possession
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">84</span>
-of a revolver (which he was required to carry
-in virtue of his office) was instantly shot at Westoutre.
-Roving patrols burnt farm-houses and turned the
-women and children out into the wintry and sodden
-fields with capricious cruelty and in pursuance of
-no intelligible military purpose.</p>
-
-<h3 id="PRIVATE_PROPERTY">Private Property.</h3>
-
-<p>As regards private property, respect for it among
-the German troops simply does not exist. By the universal
-testimony of every British officer and soldier
-whom I have interrogated the progress of German
-troops is like a plague of locusts over the land. What
-they cannot carry off they destroy. Furniture is
-thrown into the street, pictures are riddled with bullets
-or pierced by sword cuts, municipal registers
-burnt, the contents of shops scattered over the floor,
-drawers rifled, live stock slaughtered and the carcases
-left to rot in the fields. This was the spectacle which
-frequently confronted our troops on the advance to
-the Aisne and on their clearance of the German
-troops out of Northern France. Cases of petty
-larceny by German soldiers appear to be innumerable;
-they take whatever seizes their fancy, and leave
-the towns they evacuate laden like pedlars. Empty
-ammunition waggons were drawn up in front of
-private houses and filled with their contents for
-despatch to Germany.</p>
-
-<p>I have had the reports of the local commissaires
-of police placed before me, and they show that in
-smaller villages like those of Caestre and Merris, with
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">85</span>
-a population of about 1,500 souls or less, pillaging to
-the extent of &pound;4,000 and &pound;6,000 was committed by the
-German troops. I speak here of robbery which does
-not affect to be anything else. But it is no uncommon
-thing to find extortion officially practised by the commanding
-officers under various more or less flimsy
-pretexts. One of these consists of holding a town
-or village up to ransom under pretence that shots
-have been fired at the German troops. Thus at the
-village of Merris a sum of &pound;2,000 was exacted as a
-fine from the Mayor at the point of a revolver under
-this pretence, this village of 1,159 inhabitants having
-already been pillaged to the extent of some
-&pound;6,000 worth of goods. At La Gorgue, another small
-village, &pound;2,000 was extorted under a threat that if it
-were not forthcoming the village would be burnt. At
-Warneton, a small village, a fine of &pound;400 was levied.
-These fines were, it must be remembered, quite independent
-of the requisitions of supplies. As regards
-the latter, one of our Intelligence officers, whose duty
-it has been to examine the forms of receipt given by
-German officers and men for such requisitions, informs
-me that, while the receipts for small sums of
-100 francs or less bore a genuine signature, those for
-large sums were invariably signed “<span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Herr Hauptmann
-von Koepenick,</span>” the simple peasants upon whom this
-fraud was practised being quite unaware that the
-signature has a classical fictitiousness in Germany.</p>
-
-<h3 id="OBSERVATIONS_ON_A_TOUR_OF_THE_MARNE_AND_THE_AISNE">Observations on a Tour of the Marne and the Aisne.</h3>
-
-<p>My investigations, in the company of a French
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">86</span>
-Staff Officer, in the towns and villages of our line
-of march in that part of France which lies north-east
-of Paris revealed a similar spirit of pillage and
-wantonness. Coulommiers, a small town, was so
-thoroughly pillaged that the damage, so I was informed
-by the Maire, has been assessed at 400,000
-francs, a statement which bore out the evidence
-previously given me by our own men as to the
-spectacle of wholesale looting which they encountered
-when they entered that town. At Barcy, an insignificant
-village of no military importance, I was
-informed by the Maire that a German officer, accompanied
-by a soldier, entered the communal archives
-and deliberately burnt the municipal registers of
-births and deaths&mdash;obviously an exercise of pure
-spite. At Choisy-au-Bac, a little village pleasantly
-situated on the banks of the Aisne, which I visited
-in company with a French Staff Officer, I found that
-almost every house had been burnt out. This was
-one of the worst examples of deliberate incendiarism
-that I have come across. There had been no engagement,
-and there was not a trace of shell-fire or of
-bullet-marks upon the walls. Inquiries among the
-local gendarmerie, and such few of the homeless inhabitants
-as were left, pointed to the place having
-been set on fire by German soldiers in a spirit of pure
-wantonness. The German troops arrived one day in
-the late afternoon, and an officer, after inquiring of
-an inhabitant, who told me the story, the name of
-the village, noted it down, with the remark “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Bien,
-nous le r&ocirc;tirons ce soir.</span>” At nine o’clock of the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">87</span>
-same evening they proceeded to “roast” it by breaking
-the windows of the houses and throwing into the
-interiors burning “pastilles,” apparently carried for
-the purpose, which immediately set everything alight.
-The local gendarme informed us that they also
-sprayed (<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">arros&eacute;</em>) some of the houses with petrol to
-make them burn better. The humbler houses shared
-the fate of the more opulent, and cottage and mansion
-were involved in a common ruin. It seems quite
-clear that there was not the slightest pretext for
-this wanton behaviour, nor did the Germans allege
-one. They did not accuse the inhabitants of any
-hostile behaviour; the best proof of this is that they
-did not shoot any of them, except one who appears
-to have been shot by accident.</p>
-
-<p>A visit to Senlis in the course of the same tour
-fully confirmed all that the French Commission has
-already reported as to the cruel devastation wrought
-by the Germans in that unhappy town. The main
-street was one silent quarry of ruined houses burnt
-by the hands of the German soldiers, and hardly a
-soul was to be seen. Even cottages and concierges’
-lodges had been set on fire. I have seen few sights
-more pitiful and none more desolate. Towns further
-east, such as Sermaizes, Nomeny, Gerbevillers, were
-razed to the ground with fire and sword and are as
-the Cities of the Plain.</p>
-
-<h3 id="BESTIALITY_OF_GERMAN_OFFICERS_AND_MEN">Bestiality of German Officers and Men.</h3>
-
-<p>Before I leave the subject of the treatment of private
-property by the German troops, I should like
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">88</span>
-to draw the attention of the reader to some unpleasant
-facts which throw a baneful light on the temper of
-German officers and men. If one thing is more clearly
-established than another by my inquiries among the
-officers of our Staff and divisional commands, it is
-that ch&acirc;teaux or private houses used as the head-quarters
-of German officers were frequently found to
-have been left in a state of bestial pollution, which
-can only be explained by gross drunkenness or filthy
-malice. Whichever be the explanation, the fact remains
-that, while to use the beds and the upholstery
-of private houses as a latrine is not an atrocity, it
-indicates a state of mind sufficiently depraved to commit
-one. Many of these incidents, related to me by
-our own officers from their own observations, are so
-disgusting that they are unfit for publication. They
-point to deliberate defilement.</p>
-
-<p>The public has been shocked by the evidence, accepted
-by the Committee as genuine, which tells of
-such mutilations of women and children as only the
-Kurds of Asia Minor had been thought capable of
-perpetrating. But the Committee were fully justified
-in accepting it&mdash;they could not do otherwise&mdash;and
-they have by no means published the whole.
-Pathologists can best supply the explanation of these
-crimes. I have been told by such that it is not at
-all uncommon in cases of rape or sexual excess to find
-that the criminal, when satiated by lust, attempts to
-murder or mutilate his victim. This is presumably
-the explanation&mdash;if one can talk of explanation&mdash;of
-outrages which would otherwise be incredible. The
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">89</span>
-Committee hint darkly at perverted sexual instinct.
-Cases of sodomy and of the rape of little children did
-undoubtedly occur on a very large scale. Some of
-the worst things have never been published. This
-is not the time for mincing one’s words, but for plain
-speech. Disgusting though it is, I therefore do not
-hesitate to place on record an incident at Rebais related
-to me by the Mayor of Coulommiers in the presence
-of several of his fellow-townsmen with corroborative
-detail. A respectable woman in that town was
-seized by some Uhlans who intended to ravish her,
-but her condition made rape impossible. What followed
-is better described in French:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“Mme. H&mdash;&mdash;, cafeti&egrave;re &agrave; Rebais, mise nue par une patrouille
-allemande, oblig&eacute;e de parcourir ainsi toute sa maison, chass&eacute;e
-dans la rue et oblig&eacute;e de regarder les cadavres de soldats
-anglais. Les allemands lui barbouillent la figure avec le sang
-de ses regles.”</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>It is almost needless to say that the woman went
-mad. There is very strong reason to suspect that
-young girls were carried off to the trenches by licentious
-German soldiery, and there abused by hordes of
-savages and licentious men. People in hiding in the
-cellars of houses have heard the voices of women in
-the hands of German soldiers crying all night long
-until death or stupor ended their agonies. One of our
-officers, a subaltern in the sappers, heard a woman’s
-shrieks in the night coming from behind the German
-trenches near Richebourg l’Avou&eacute;; when we advanced
-in the morning and drove the Germans out, a girl was
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">90</span>
-found lying naked on the ground “pegged out” in
-the form of a crucifix. I need not go on with this
-chapter of horrors. To the end of time it will be
-remembered, and from one generation to another, in
-the plains of Flanders, in the valleys of the Vosges,
-and on the rolling fields of the Marne, the oral tradition
-of men will perpetuate this story of infamy and
-wrong.</p>
-
-<h3 id="CONCLUSION">Conclusion.</h3>
-
-<p>I should say that in the above summary I have confined
-myself to the result of the inquiries I made at
-General Head-quarters and in the area of our occupation,
-and have not attempted to summarise the evidence
-I had previously taken from the British officers
-and soldiers at the base, as the latter may be left to
-speak for itself in the depositions already published
-by the Committee. The object of the summary is to
-show how far independent inquiries on the spot go
-to confirm it. The testimony of our soldiers as to the
-reign of terror which they found prevailing on their
-arrival in all the places from which they drove the
-enemy out was amply confirmed by these subsequent
-and local investigations.</p>
-
-<p>It will, of course, be understood that these inquiries
-of mine were limited in scope and can by no means
-claim to be exhaustive. For one thing, I was the only
-representative of the Home Office sent to France for
-this purpose; for another, I did not become attached
-to General Head-quarters until the beginning of February,
-and before that time little or nothing had been
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">91</span>
-done in the way of systematic inquiry by the Staff,
-whose officers had other and more pressing duties to
-perform. By that time the testimony to many grave
-incidents, especially in the field, had perished with
-those who witnessed them and they remained but a
-sombre memory. The hearsay evidence of these
-things which was sometimes all that was left made
-an impression on my mind as deep as it was painful,
-but it would have been contrary to the rules of evidence,
-to which I have striven to conform, for me to
-take notice of it.</p>
-
-<p>Two things clearly emerge from this observation.
-One is that had there been from the beginning of the
-campaign a regular system of inquiry at General
-Head-quarters into these things, <em lang="la" xml:lang="la">pari passu</em> with their
-occurrence, the volume of evidence, great though it
-is, would have been infinitely greater; the other, that,
-as there is only too much reason to suppose that with
-the growing vindictiveness of the enemy things will
-be worse before they are better, the case for the establishment
-of such a system throughout the continuance
-of the War is one that calls for serious consideration.</p>
-
-<p>Although I have some claims to write as a jurist
-I have here made no attempt to pray in aid the Hague
-Regulations in order to frame the counts of an indictment.
-The Germans have broken all laws, human
-and divine, and not even the ancient freemasonry of
-arms, whose honourable traditions are almost as old
-as war itself, has restrained them in their brutal and
-licentious fury. It is useless to attempt to discriminate
-between the people and their rulers; an abundance
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">92</span>
-of diaries of soldiers in the ranks shows that
-all are infected with a common spirit. That spirit
-is pride, not the pride of high and pure endeavour,
-but that pride for which the Greeks found a name
-in the word ὕβρις, the insolence which knows no
-pity and feels no love. Long ago Renan warned
-Strauss of this canker which was eating into the German
-character. Pedants indoctrinated it, Generals
-instilled it, the Emperor preached it. The whole people
-were taught that war was a normal state of
-civilisation, that the lust of conquest and the arrogance
-of race were the most precious of the virtues.
-On this Dead Sea fruit the German people have
-been fed for a generation until they are rotten to
-the core.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">93</span></p>
-
-<h2 id="DOCUMENTARY_NEW_EVIDENCE"><span class="smcap">Chapter III</span><br />
-
-DOCUMENTARY<br />
-
-<span id="DEPOSITIONS_AND_STATEMENTS_FIFTY_SIX_IN_NUMBER">I</span></h2>
-
-<p class="hang">DEPOSITIONS AND STATEMENTS (FIFTY-SIX IN NUMBER)
-ILLUSTRATING BREACHES OF THE LAWS OF WAR BY
-THE GERMAN TROOPS, MAINLY OUTRAGES ON BRITISH
-SOLDIERS</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p><em>Note.</em>&mdash;These documents are here made public for the first
-time. They have not been published either in the Bryce Report
-or in the <cite>Nineteenth Century and After</cite>. I have selected the
-cases of Bailleul and Doulieu as typical of all the rest. Many
-other communes, <em>e.g.</em>, Meteren, Steenwerck, La Gorgue, Vieux-Berquin,
-suffered a similar fate. As regards Bailleul itself I
-have given only one out of some twenty documents in my possession
-relating to the rapes committed there; the others are
-in no way inferior in authenticity, nor are they any less horrible.
-My object is not to multiply proofs, but to exemplify
-them. It will be observed that the evidence of British soldiers
-here given is that of eye-witnesses, except, of course, in cases
-of rape. As regards the latter, the hearsay evidence is fully
-corroborated by the French depositions of the victims.&mdash;J. H. M.</p></blockquote>
-
-<h4>(1)</h4>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Private</span> R. R&mdash;&mdash;, 1st Royal Scots:&mdash;At Ypres, on
-November 11th (the day I was wounded), the Germans
-had made an attack on the trenches in front of
-us&mdash;we were back in the dug-outs. We went up to
-support and drove them back. In the trench were
-about a dozen Germans, our men having retired towards
-us. The Germans were kneeling with one hand
-up to let us see that they had surrendered; so we
-thought it was all right, and we turned our attention
-to firing at those who were retiring. One of the
-officers of our regiment, but not of my company, was
-at the side of the trench and had picked up a rifle
-to fire at the retreating Germans. I saw one of the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">94</span>
-Germans who had surrendered&mdash;I think he was an
-officer&mdash;raise his revolver (we had had no time to disarm
-them) and shoot at our officer, who dropped. Another
-man and I then shot the German.</p>
-
-<h4>(2)</h4>
-
-<p>Private W. M&mdash;&mdash;, 1st Wilts, &mdash; Company:&mdash;(1)
-On the Aisne, between September 14th and 22nd, I
-was in B Company and going to A Company for a
-wounded man. I am a bandsman and have acted as
-stretcher-bearer. The Germans came out of a wood
-with a white flag. The captain (Captain R&mdash;&mdash;) of
-&mdash; Company gave the order to cease fire&mdash;the Company
-was in the trenches. Captain R&mdash;&mdash; went forward
-alone towards the Germans, and the German
-officer then shot Captain R&mdash;&mdash; with his revolver
-and the rest of the Germans opened a heavy fire.
-Number &mdash; Company replied and drove the Germans
-back.</p>
-
-<p>(2) At La Bass&eacute;e, between October 12th and 27th,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">95</span>
-the Germans had shelled our trenches and driven us
-out, their infantry advancing in close formation. By
-that time only eleven out of B Company, including
-myself, were left. The Germans were within fifty
-yards of us and so we retired through a brewery
-down to a farm-house. We went upstairs&mdash;a mixed
-lot from various regiments (West Kents, Royal Irish
-Rifles, etc.), and began firing from the windows.
-From the upstairs we saw the Germans bayoneting
-those of our wounded who had been left in the
-trenches or placed under cover by us eleven, behind
-them, or had crawled along.</p>
-
-<p>(3) At La Cout&eacute;rie,<a id="FNanchor_92" href="#Footnote_92" class="fnanchor">92</a> about 3 kilometres from La
-Bass&eacute;e, it must have been before October 12th, because
-that was the day we got to La Bass&eacute;e, we took
-possession of a farm-house for a dressing station.
-The farmer’s wife frequently took food and clothes
-down to the cellar, she said it was for her daughter;
-the daughter would not come up. The mother, who
-was crying as she told us, made out to us that the
-“Allemands” had outraged her daughter&mdash;she held
-up five fingers.</p>
-
-<h4>(3)</h4>
-
-<p>Private J. S&mdash;&mdash;, Rifle Brigade, 1st Battalion:&mdash;On
-a Sunday at end of October or beginning of November,
-just outside Bailleul, near Nieppe, we rested
-for three hours, having just come out of billets. The
-Germans had only just left&mdash;the chalk-marks of the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">96</span>
-different regiments were still on the doors. There
-were a lot of refugees outside an <em>estaminet</em>, among
-them a mother and two daughters. One daughter
-looked scared to death, her eyes staring out of her
-head. She was a girl of about twenty-three, who
-looked rather delicate. The girl said nothing, stood
-there and stared like a lunatic. The mother told a
-group of us in broken English and partly in French&mdash;I
-know some French. She said, “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Les Allemands
-couchent avec ma fille</span>”&mdash;that the Germans&mdash;she made
-it appear about eight&mdash;had outraged her daughter.
-We did not go into the <em>estaminet</em>&mdash;it was forbidden.</p>
-
-<h4>(4)</h4>
-
-<p>Captain C&mdash;&mdash; W&mdash;&mdash;, Bedfords, 2nd Battalion:&mdash;At
-Bailleul, I saw a great deal of evidence of wanton
-destruction&mdash;mirrors broken and furniture
-smashed. A German cavalry regiment had done it.
-I was in three different billets there, and in all three
-the same thing had happened.</p>
-
-<h4>(5)</h4>
-
-<p>Private S&mdash;&mdash;, K. O. Scottish Borderers:&mdash;At
-Ypres, about a month ago, I was in the trenches and
-one of our men went out of the trenches to get a
-drink of water (from a spring about seven yards
-away). He was wounded in the leg, and an officer
-(Lieutenant S&mdash;&mdash;, of B Company) sent over for
-the stretcher-bearers, who were at head-quarters
-about 300 yards from the support trenches. They
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">97</span>
-were carrying this fellow away when one of the
-stretcher-bearers was “sniped” from about 300
-yards. There was no firing at the time. Another
-man came of B Company, named G&mdash;&mdash;, volunteered
-and took the wounded stretcher-bearer’s place, and
-then he was wounded too. G&mdash;&mdash; was put on a
-stretcher and was again wounded by a sniper. Cases
-of this kind were very common.</p>
-
-<h4>(6)</h4>
-
-<p>Private J. C&mdash;&mdash;, Scottish Fusiliers, 1st Battalion:&mdash;At
-Locre, near Bailleul, I was billeted in the
-church there at the beginning of December. The
-church had not been shelled, but had been looted
-and the crucifixes had been smashed, and all the
-images and things of value appeared to have been
-torn away.</p>
-
-<h4>(7)</h4>
-
-<p>Corporal J. D. B&mdash;&mdash; (at that time Bombardier in
-the 49th Battery R.F.A.) now of the 40th Brigade
-Ammunition Column R.F.A.:&mdash;On August 23rd at
-Mons, we got the order to advance up a hill with
-our battery. We got a section of guns in action
-in a ploughed field, and then we had a sergeant
-hit with a gunshot wound in the back (it was Sergeant
-T&mdash;&mdash;, of the 49th Battery R.F.A.). Sergeant
-R&mdash;&mdash;, of the 49th, asked me to take Sergeant
-T&mdash;&mdash; to an ambulance. I took him through a wood,
-and on the outside of the wood I saw a girl quite
-naked, running for all she was worth. She appeared
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">98</span>
-to me to be about nineteen years of age.
-Her body was covered with blood and there was
-blood all over her breasts. She ran into some
-trenches on my right. I do not know what regiment
-occupied them, but I heard afterwards that
-an officer of the Gordons got hold of her. I went
-straight on with the sergeant down into Mons, and
-took him to the field hospital.</p>
-
-<h4>(8)</h4>
-
-<p>Private S&mdash;&mdash;, C Company, 1st King’s R.R.:&mdash;It
-was on September 11th, I can never forget that
-date, it was after we left the Marne, and a day or
-two before the Aisne, we were engaged with the
-enemy at a distance of about 1,200 yards. They
-put up a white flag in their centre and waved it
-from side to side. We stopped firing, whereupon
-they fired heavily from their right flank. A second
-time they put up the white flag, this time on the
-right flank; but we took no notice of this and kept
-on firing.</p>
-
-<h4>(9)</h4>
-
-<p>R. McK&mdash;&mdash;, 2nd Royal Irish, &mdash; Co.:&mdash;About the
-end of November, near Neuve Chapelle, there was a
-heavy attack, and we retired to get reinforcements,
-and left Sergeant G&mdash;&mdash; wounded in the leg in the
-trenches; when I last saw him he was binding up
-his wound. About 300 yards back we got reinforcements,
-and as we were advancing we saw three Germans
-bayoneting Sergeant G&mdash;&mdash;.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">99</span></p>
-
-<h4>(10)</h4>
-
-<p>R. McK&mdash;&mdash;, 2nd Royal Irish, at Mt. Kemmel:&mdash;On
-Monday I was sent to get water from a pump
-in the yard of a house about 50 yards behind the
-line, a farm-house, and in the kitchen I saw seven
-men and three women, a poor class of people, lying
-on the ground bayoneted. The house had been
-looted and everything smashed.</p>
-
-<h4>(11)</h4>
-
-<p>W. F&mdash;&mdash;, Sapper, 17th R.E.:&mdash;About September
-7th, near Lagny, we arrived at the village; stopped
-there for four hours while our artillery were in action.
-We had a house pointed out to us by the villagers;
-there was a broken motor bicycle outside,
-and in the room against the wall we found one of
-our despatch riders with an officer’s sword sticking
-through him. Our sergeant and our section officer
-told us that the villagers said that he came one night,
-having lost his way, and knocked at the door of
-the house, which was occupied by German officers;
-they let him in and then killed him. The house was
-in a terrible state, everything pulled to pieces. Sapper
-W&mdash;&mdash; of our company was the first to find the
-house.</p>
-
-<h4>(12)</h4>
-
-<p>Private M&mdash;&mdash;, 1st Gordons, &mdash; Co.:&mdash;On October
-24th, at La Bass&eacute;e, the Germans broke through our
-lines, and as we retreated I was hit in the hip with
-a shell. The Germans crossed over our trenches and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">100</span>
-charged till they met our reserves and were driven
-back. I saw Private E&mdash;&mdash; (of Portsmouth) of my
-Company lying wounded in the hip. As they passed,
-some stepped on top of me, some jumped over me,
-while others as they passed E&mdash;&mdash; kicked him and
-stamped on his face. When he was brought into
-the dressing-station his face was absolutely black. I
-never heard anything more of him.</p>
-
-<h4>(13)</h4>
-
-<p>J. G&mdash;&mdash;, Lance-Corporal, King’s Own, 1st Batt.:&mdash;At
-the end of November, the second day after we
-arrived at Nieppe, two of us entered an estaminet
-and found the landlady crying; she told us that about
-thirteen Germans violated her daughter and shot her
-husband against a wall in front of her eyes. She
-said there were a lot of other cases in Nieppe.</p>
-
-<h4>(14)</h4>
-
-<p>J. A&mdash;&mdash;, Private, 1st Camerons:&mdash;It was about
-October 23rd, at St. Jean (Ypres). We retired, owing
-to shortage of ammunition, and left two wounded
-in the trench. When we came back one of them
-was lying about 20 yards behind the trenches stripped
-stark naked. We had left him behind covered with
-a waterproof cloak.</p>
-
-<p>When darkness set in, on retiring, I waited behind
-to carry in one of the wounded. I lost the
-road and walked into the German lines with my comrade
-on my back. I was seized and my hands tied
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">101</span>
-in front; I was then kicked by several German soldiers
-and thrown into a cellar. They kept pointing
-a bayonet at my heart. They took away all my food,
-tobacco, private letters, everything, and ate my food
-in front of me. After about twenty hours the East
-Surreys came up and released us.</p>
-
-<h4>(15)</h4>
-
-<p>J. W. D&mdash;&mdash;, Private, 1st Batt. Cheshires:&mdash;On
-November 14th, at Ypres, the Germans broke in our
-trenches and as we tried to get out most of us were
-shot. As they retreated, after being driven back
-from the communication trenches, at about 4.45 on
-the Saturday (November 14th), I was lying
-wounded in the leg at the bottom of the trench
-unable to rise and a German officer stooped down
-and shot me in the thigh. I saw the same thing
-done by other Germans to other men of my company.</p>
-
-<h4>(16)</h4>
-
-<p>C. R. A&mdash;&mdash;, Private, 10th King’s Liverpool Scottish:&mdash;At
-Kemmel (I think), a place between Ypres
-and Armenti&egrave;res, not far from Locre&mdash;Kemmel is
-just close to the trenches, and about the size of Appleby&mdash;I,
-with two or three others, was out looking
-for vegetables for the officers (I was sent for because
-I speak French), and we were looking to see
-if any one remained in the house. While doing this
-I came across the R.F.A., who took us to their head-quarters
-and supplied us with vegetables, etc.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">102</span>
-Further up the valley we came upon a man in
-civilian clothes who was standing in a doorway. The
-house had not been damaged by shell fire, as practically
-all the rest were. We began to talk. He
-told me in French that he was too old for the army,
-but had a son-in-law in the Belgian Army. When
-the Germans came they ransacked all the houses. Of
-those who came to his house some held him off with
-arms pointed at him, whilst others outraged his
-daughter-in-law who was about to give birth to a
-child. When I was there this poor woman had been
-sent away.</p>
-
-<h4>(17)</h4>
-
-<p>Private C&mdash;&mdash;, York L. I., 2nd Batt.:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>(1) About November 17th or 20th, near Ypres, I
-was with the machine gun which was put out of action;
-I then went into my own company’s trenches.
-As it was getting dark, the advance was made and
-we were up to the wire entanglements; we were
-driven back by superior numbers. Having gained
-our own trench, the roll was called and about seventeen
-were missing out of our Co., Corpl. R&mdash;&mdash; being
-amongst them. Under cover of darkness our
-reinforcements came up and we advanced again. We
-could only find seven wounded of the men missing
-and no German wounded at all. At the back of
-their trenches was a wood where we lost the Germans.
-So we dropped back to their trench. About
-three days afterwards they attacked in large numbers,
-but were repulsed and were driven back further
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">103</span>
-than they had advanced. In our advance we came
-to a farm and a barn half full of potatoes where
-we found three of our wounded and two dead. Some
-of our men carried them out, and while we carried
-them one of the others died. Corporal R&mdash;&mdash; (who
-was among the five) was the worst wounded&mdash;he had
-been shot through the shoulder, and was insensible
-with both his eyes gouged out and his right arm
-hacked off. Our O.C. told us on a parade that it was
-done with a bayonet. He was sent home I heard to
-a hospital.</p>
-
-<p>(2) At a village about 3 miles S.E. of Ypres, about
-three weeks next Monday, forty-five of us advanced
-to rush a house; only seven of us returned. As we
-were advancing they opened fire on us with a machine
-gun. We were only about fifteen strong when
-we got there. We had to break an entrance through
-the window. We heard shouts and a disturbance
-inside; it was the Germans making for the cellars.
-Captain A&mdash;&mdash; went upstairs after leaving some men
-on the cellar steps; I followed him. In the back
-room upstairs was a maxim gun. In one of the other
-rooms was a girl about fifteen&mdash;she had nothing on
-except a man’s overcoat. When we broke into the
-room we thought she was absolutely mad. She cried
-out something, but we could not understand what
-it was. She rushed out of the room into the front
-bedroom which was locked. We smashed it in with
-our rifle butts and there found a woman, her mother,
-with her right breast all bleeding, and her clothes
-torn&mdash;her breast had been cut as if with a sword,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">104</span>
-not a bayonet. We used our field bandages and
-made her as comfortable as we could and sent a volunteer
-back for stretcher-bearers.</p>
-
-<p>[This soldier was at times in great pain when he
-spoke, but his mind was clear. I am convinced he
-spoke the truth.&mdash;J. H. M.]</p>
-
-<h4>(18)</h4>
-
-<p>Corporal D&mdash;&mdash;, Loyal North Lancs., 1st Batt.:&mdash;At
-Ypres, end of November, I was in the trenches,
-and I saw two of our men, who had been sent out
-as snipers, hit, and the Germans motioned to them
-to come into their trenches (which were about 80
-yards from ours); they began to crawl in, and as
-they got on the parapet of the trench the Germans
-shot them.</p>
-
-<h4>(19)</h4>
-
-<p>J. A&mdash;&mdash;, Private, Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders,
-2nd Batt.:&mdash;About the beginning of December
-we were billeted in the outskirts of Armenti&egrave;res,
-and were allowed out between twelve and three. We
-passed a man standing at his door, and he asked us
-if we had any bully beef&mdash;we said no, but we offered
-him a packet of cigarettes. We stood at the door
-talking and his wife and children came to the door.
-The woman looked bad&mdash;very delicate looking. He
-then told us that nine Germans had stopped in the
-house, and some of them had outraged his wife while
-he was in the house. He spoke very fair English.
-Private McM&mdash;&mdash; and S&mdash;&mdash; were with me.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">105</span></p>
-
-<h4>(20)</h4>
-
-<p>Private K&mdash;&mdash;, 1st Loyal North Lancs.:&mdash;On Monday
-night we attacked them and took two trenches.
-Everything was quiet till the next morning except
-for sniping. At about 8.30 they advanced upon us,
-and the officer of &mdash;&mdash; Company, seeing the men were
-overpowered, put up the white flag, and the men put
-their hands up to surrender. The Germans advanced,
-and when they got up to the trenches, they shot them
-each in their trenches as they stood. <em>I saw this. I
-was on the left flank.</em></p>
-
-<h4>(21)</h4>
-
-<p>Sergeant C&mdash;&mdash;, 1st Glosters:&mdash;Last Wednesday
-morning, near La Bass&eacute;e, I was in the trench, and
-I saw a wounded man of No. A Co. (who had had
-to retire from their trenches on our right, having
-been enfiladed during the night) crawling on all fours
-to get back. When the Germans saw him they turned
-a machine gun on him and killed him.</p>
-
-<p>About end of November, near Ypres, a Belgian
-farmer (a kind of peasant), who spoke a little English
-(I can speak some French; I have a French conversation
-book with me), told me that a German
-officer threatened him with a revolver because he
-tried to protect his daughter, and the officer forced
-the girl to sleep with him for four nights.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">106</span></p>
-
-<h4>(22)</h4>
-
-<p>Sergeant G&mdash;&mdash;, 2nd Devons:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>(1) At Estaires, about five weeks ago (latter part
-of November), we were billeted there, and I and
-another sergeant went into a caf&eacute;. The proprietor,
-who spoke quite good English, said that his daughter
-had been outraged by a party of Germans while
-they were occupying. They forced the daughter out
-into a linhey (an outhouse) at the back and there
-outraged her.</p>
-
-<p>(2) At Laventie, about a week later, we halted;
-and I was speaking to a Frenchwoman who spoke
-English. She told me that the Germans had looted
-everything, and showed me a jeweller’s shop which
-had been stripped of nearly everything. She pointed
-out two girls (I think about seventeen or eighteen)
-who, she said, had been outraged.</p>
-
-<h4>(23)</h4>
-
-<p>Private C&mdash;&mdash;, A.S.C., 7th Div., Supply Column:&mdash;At
-Westoutre, near Poperinghe, we were billeted
-about two months ago at a priest’s house. He spoke
-English, and told me that his father was shot by
-the Germans against the church-yard railings because
-he refused to give up the stores of which he
-had charge for the Belgian refugees. He told us
-that the Germans had practised a lot of outrages on
-the women.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">107</span></p>
-
-<h4>(24)</h4>
-
-<p>Lance-Corporal L&mdash;&mdash;, R.E., 55th Co.:&mdash;Near
-Ypres, about October 22nd or 23rd, our section was
-ordered to assist the Highland Light Infantry,
-Queen’s and Worcesters in a drive through a wood.
-We passed a cottage on our right where fighting was
-going on. As we returned I saw two of our soldiers
-in a doorway carrying a wounded man. When they
-got out of the doorway one of the two soldiers was
-shot in the back by a German at a distance of about
-80 yards. All firing had ceased&mdash;it was a deliberate
-aim. On the same day I saw two stretcher-bearers,
-who were tending a man on the ground, fired at at
-a distance of about 40 yards&mdash;a regular fusillade.
-There was no fighting going on&mdash;our other troops
-were about 300 or 400 yards ahead, and these snipers
-had been left behind by the Germans for the express
-purpose of picking off our wounded.</p>
-
-<h4>(25)</h4>
-
-<p>Private S&mdash;&mdash;, 1st Northampton:&mdash;On the day
-after General F&mdash;&mdash; was killed (he was an artillery
-general), on the Monday, we advanced 14 miles,
-about, and bivouacked in a field. From our bivouac,
-about one mile distant, there was a little farm. We
-went to the farm to fill our water bottles, and a
-woman told us that her two daughters (whom we
-also saw) had been outraged the previous night by
-twelve or fourteen Germans. The woman spoke English
-quite well&mdash;at least, well enough for me to understand&mdash;very
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">108</span>
-distinctly. The woman was not excited,
-but greatly distressed, and the two girls (one
-child sixteen, the other about nineteen&mdash;in fact, I
-think the woman said that the one was not sixteen)
-were still more distressed; they were in a pitiful
-plight. Listening to the story with me were Company
-Sergeant-Major M&mdash;&mdash; of D. Co., also Sergeant
-S&mdash;&mdash;, also D. Co., and Corporal C&mdash;&mdash;, likewise of
-D. Co.</p>
-
-<h4>(26)</h4>
-
-<p>Captain F&mdash;&mdash;, 2nd Batt. Coldstreams:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>(1) On the Rentel ridge, near Ypres, and south of
-Sonnen, I have seen repeated cases of deliberate firing
-on stretcher-bearers which admitted of no doubt.</p>
-
-<p>(2) On the Aisne, on a Monday (either September
-13th or 14th) at Soupir, there was a bad case of
-trickery with the white flag. The Germans advanced
-from a farm-house with white flags at the end of their
-rifles, and on our men rushing forward, despite the
-warning of their officers, to take prisoners, they were
-shot down. We lost a whole company of the 3rd
-Batt. Coldstreams in this way.</p>
-
-<h4>(27)</h4>
-
-<p>Private L&mdash;&mdash;, in the 1st Cornwall L.I.:&mdash;On September
-9th (Wednesday) at Montreuil, I was
-wounded and being carried by two of ours, when
-about a quarter-mile from the firing-line I and other
-wounded were being brought down an exposed slope;
-the moment we appeared a machine-gun about 400
-yards distant opened fire on us&mdash;several wounded hit.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">109</span></p>
-
-<h4>(28)</h4>
-
-<p>Private W&mdash;&mdash;, in the 1st Camerons:&mdash;On the
-Aisne, September 14th, I was told by Sergeant Major
-C&mdash;&mdash; of Camerons that Captain H&mdash;&mdash; (commanding
-our Company) was lying in a field having his
-wounds dressed by one of our own bandsmen acting
-as stretcher-bearer. Captain H&mdash;&mdash; and stretcher-bearer
-were shot by a German officer. The Sergeant-Major
-(who had been taken prisoner by the Germans)
-saw this happen.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>[<span class="smcap">Note.</span>&mdash;This story was fully corroborated,
-without variation, by several other Camerons
-whom I met in other wards, and also by the
-Colonel of the Camerons, with whom I discussed
-the matter at General Hospital No. 4 (Paris) at
-Versailles.&mdash;J. H. M.]</p></blockquote>
-
-<h4>(29)</h4>
-
-<p>Private W&mdash;&mdash; (the same):&mdash;We were advancing,
-Black Watch on our right, Scots Guards on our left.
-Germans put up white flag and we advanced to take
-prisoners. At thirty yards they opened their ranks,
-and machine-guns concealed behind fired upon us,
-the Germans in front also firing their rifles.</p>
-
-<h4>(30)</h4>
-
-<p>Private S&mdash;&mdash;, 1st Batt. Glosters:&mdash;On August
-26th, first day of retreat from Fevrel, we were leaving
-the trenches, B. Co. covering us on the left. It
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">110</span>
-was just where Captain S&mdash;&mdash; was shot. Private
-L&mdash;&mdash;, who had been shot twice, was bayoneted when
-lying on the ground by two Germans. I and the
-whole Company saw it.</p>
-
-<h4>(31)</h4>
-
-<p>Private B&mdash;&mdash;, West Yorks:&mdash;On September 20th,
-300 Germans ran up with a German officer and white
-flag, surrendering. About a thousand Germans followed
-and captured our Company of about 220. They
-bayoneted Sergeant-Major A&mdash;&mdash; after surrender of
-the Company, and shot majority of the Company.
-I was only three yards from Sergeant-Major when
-it happened. I fell over a hedge into a stone quarry
-and escaped. Here it was that Major I&mdash;&mdash; was
-killed. Later the Durhams came up and we got off.</p>
-
-<h4>(32)</h4>
-
-<p>Private (Lance-Corporal) C&mdash;&mdash;, 1st East Lancs:&mdash;About
-September 6th, Ch&acirc;teau de Perense, near
-Jouasse, Seine et Marne, about 700 Germans, coming
-out of a wood, dropped their rifles and held up
-their hands; whistle sounded “cease fire.” Two Companies
-sent up to accept surrender, and when within
-about ten yards the Germans ran back to the wood
-and their troops in wood opened fire on the two companies
-(<em>i.e.</em> on about 450 men).</p>
-
-<h4>(33)</h4>
-
-<p>Private C&mdash;&mdash; (the same):&mdash;Passed through a village
-recently occupied by drunken Germans. Women
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">111</span>
-raving. Saw two women with bruised faces and black
-eyes. Lieut. M&mdash;&mdash; said they had attempted to resist
-outrage by Germans.</p>
-
-<h4>(34)</h4>
-
-<p>Private M&mdash;&mdash;, Notts and Derby:&mdash;On September
-20th (Sunday) in trenches on Aisne, seventy Germans
-came up with white flag; we let them come up
-and then went out to take them. They then opened
-fire just as their reinforcements came up, and killed
-many men of the West Yorks, Notts and Derby, and
-Durhams.</p>
-
-<h4>(35)</h4>
-
-<p>The same:&mdash;On the Monday morning we went out
-to find our wounded and discovered an English soldier
-with ten or fourteen bayonet wounds&mdash;there had been
-no bayonet fighting with the Germans.</p>
-
-<h4>(36)</h4>
-
-<p>Private H&mdash;&mdash;, 2nd Batt. Duke of Wellington’s:&mdash;On
-September 8th and 9th, at Nogent-sur-le-Marne,
-advancing through the Forest of Crecy, heard on all
-sides stories of women outraged. I was told by Mme.
-S&mdash;&mdash; (Veuve) an elderly lady, who was the widow
-of an Englishman and spoke English, that an officer
-had outraged her servant in the house. The
-servant stood by crying as Mme. S&mdash;&mdash; told the story.
-Mme. S&mdash;&mdash; gave me her address&mdash;here it is in my
-pocket-book:&mdash;4 rue de Lafaulette, Nogent-sur-le-Marne.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">112</span></p>
-
-<h4>(37)</h4>
-
-<p>J. B&mdash;&mdash;, Despatch Rider, Signal Co. 1st Div.
-R.E.:&mdash;About September 16th, near Paissy. At a
-distance of about 300 yards we saw through our
-glasses one of our despatch-riders (A&mdash;&mdash; of Signal
-Co., R.E.), shot while riding his motor-cycle; he fell
-off, and while lying on ground was speared by three
-Uhlans, one after the other. Uhlans attempted to
-burn him with his own petrol, but made off when
-they saw us coming. We found his body half-burned
-when we reached it.</p>
-
-<h4>(38)</h4>
-
-<p>Sergeant D&mdash;&mdash;, 1st Cornwalls:&mdash;About September
-9th, near 6 p.m., Battle of the Aisne, I was with
-a platoon with orders to remain behind and delay
-German advance. We couldn’t see any Germans, and
-we therefore had done no firing for quite an hour.
-Our ambulance was out picking up wounded. My
-platoon was marching back to rejoin our Company;
-we were carrying our rifles. R.A.M.C. were picking
-up Lieut. E&mdash;&mdash; when they were fired on from the
-woods at a distance of about 300 yards, a regular
-fusillade. Lieut. E&mdash;&mdash; badly hit. Ambulance had
-to gallop off out of range, and we made off. Ambulance
-was broadside on to the enemy, and must
-therefore have been unmistakable.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">113</span></p>
-
-<h4>(39, 40 and 41)</h4>
-
-<p>Statements taken down, after cross-examination by
-a Staff Officer at General Headquarters, as to incidents
-in the neighbourhood at Ypres:</p>
-
-<p>(1) Private B. S&mdash;&mdash;, 1st Black Watch, says that
-he saw Germans bayonet our wounded as they lay
-on the ground. He was wounded in the leg himself,
-but, seeing this, he managed to get away.</p>
-
-<p>Afterwards he was with German wounded, who
-told him that they had been ordered to kill all English
-prisoners.</p>
-
-<p>(2) Private W. W&mdash;&mdash;, 1st Black Watch, says that
-he was in a reserve trench and saw the Germans
-bayoneting our wounded 40 or 50 yards in front of
-him. He was wounded in the arm and taken prisoner,
-but was sent for water for wounded Germans
-and escaped.</p>
-
-<p>Says the wounded Germans in our charge told him
-that they had been told to kill all English and take
-no prisoners.</p>
-
-<p>(3) Statement of Private M&mdash;&mdash;, Cameron Highlanders
-attached.</p>
-
-<p>I saw this man, and consider him thoroughly reliable
-as to the facts of the case.</p>
-
-<p>He says that he saw one German place the butt
-of his rifle on the wounded man’s chest and hold him
-while the other one shot him. Our reinforcements
-were heard coming up immediately afterwards, and
-the Germans ran away. The men were Prussian
-Guard.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">114</span></p>
-
-<p>“I was shot while retiring, and took shelter behind
-a hedge which I had fallen through. A
-wounded man of the Black Watch was lying close
-beside me groaning. The Germans came up behind
-the hedge and fired through it. Two came through
-and I saw one deliberately place his rifle to the
-wounded Highlander’s head and shoot him. The
-features of the wounded German who came into
-hospital with me in the same convoy are identically
-those of the man I saw commit the action.”</p>
-
-<h4>(42 and 43)</h4>
-
-<p>Summary of Statements taken by a Captain in the
-Sherwood Foresters:</p>
-
-<p>(1) The undermentioned privates state that on October
-20th, 1914, they saw German soldiers killing
-our wounded, and can swear to the same. [There
-follow three names of privates in the 2nd Sherwood
-Foresters.]</p>
-
-<p>(2) The men mentioned below make the following
-statement: that on November 1st, 1914, two German
-soldiers were seen both delivering blows on our
-wounded with rifle-butts, and shooting them. [There
-follow names of four privates in the Lincolnshire
-Regiment, and one in the Argyll and Sutherland
-Highlanders.]</p>
-
-<h4>(44)</h4>
-
-<p>Statement made by a private in the Loyal North
-Lancs.:</p>
-
-<p>On or about December 21st, I think near Neuve
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">115</span>
-Chapelle, we were ordered up to the trenches occupied
-by the Gurkhas. We got over them and lined
-a ditch&mdash;some of ours wounded there. We charged,
-and they started with hand bombs. On our right
-was Captain Smart, shot in the head. We had to
-retire; an hour and a half later we advanced again,
-and here I found one of our wounded with his throat
-cut (he had been shot previously). I heard of others
-with their throats cut. I lay down close to him.
-Dawn was just breaking. We had to retire again,
-and the bodies were left there.</p>
-
-<h4>(45)</h4>
-
-<p>A Brigadier-General of the British Cavalry Corps:</p>
-
-<p>On September 6th, the day before we got to Rebais,
-we passed a lonely farm where we found a shepherd
-with the top of his head blown off by a rifle-shot.
-He had been asked by the Germans for bread, and,
-on failing to produce any, had been shot.</p>
-
-<h4>(46)</h4>
-
-<p>Statement by Major &mdash;&mdash;, O.C. of a Cavalry Field
-Ambulance:&mdash;On October 17th, at Moorslede, north-east
-of Ypres, the Germans were reported as having
-strangled a young baker in this place. The inhabitants
-stated that he had been taken by the Germans
-to bake for them, and that he attempted to escape.
-The enemy caught him and stuffed a woollen scarf
-he was wearing down his throat, causing suffocation.
-One of my officers, Lieut. P&mdash;&mdash;, viewed the body in
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">116</span>
-the convent next day, and found the scarf stuffed
-in the man’s throat.</p>
-
-<h4>(47)</h4>
-
-<p>Private R. McK&mdash;&mdash;, 2nd Royal Irish:&mdash;On the advance
-from the Marne to the Aisne in September,
-we passed through a village and saw a baby propped
-up at the window like a doll. About six of us went
-into the house, with a sergeant, and found the child
-dead&mdash;bayoneted. We found a tottering kind of old
-man, a middle-aged woman, and a youth, all bayoneted.
-In another village our interpreter pointed
-out to us two girls who were crying; he told us they
-had been ravished.</p>
-
-<h4>(48)</h4>
-
-<p>Driver B&mdash;&mdash;, R.F.A.:&mdash;Somewhere between Chantilly
-and Villers-Cotterets, about the end of August,
-just after we started advancing, we were marching
-through a village, and the villagers called us into
-a house and showed us the body of a middle-aged
-man, with both arms cut off by a sword, pointed to
-him and said “Allemands.” They told our R.A.M.C.
-men in French that he had been killed when trying
-to protect his daughter.</p>
-
-<p>In the next village, before we got to the Aisne,
-the villagers showed us the dead body of a woman,
-naked, on the ground, badly mutilated, her breasts
-cut off, and her body ripped up. They said
-“Allemands.”
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">117</span></p>
-
-<h4>(49)</h4>
-
-<p>Private F. W. M&mdash;&mdash;, Leicesters:&mdash;I think it was
-in October, after we had left the Aisne and were
-on the march. About a week before we got to Armenti&egrave;res,
-we went through a small village, halted,
-and I and a man named C&mdash;&mdash;, of my company, were
-searching a hedge for wood, and came across a baby
-with a single vest on it, as if it had been taken
-straight from bed, and nearly cut in half, as if by a
-sabre.</p>
-
-<h4>(50)</h4>
-
-<p>Private G. R&mdash;&mdash;, Bedfords:&mdash;Somewhere between
-October 14th and 17th, at a village about fifteen
-miles from Ypres, a boy was brought in from a
-farm-house, the people having sent in for surgical
-assistance for a boy who was wounded. I saw him
-brought in by some of our men to an estaminet&mdash;he
-had five sabre-cuts. His sister told us that the
-Uhlans had chased him round the farm because he
-had cried out something to them. He looked as if
-he would not live. One of our R.A.M.C. bound up
-his wounds.</p>
-
-<h4>(51)</h4>
-
-<p>Private W. D&mdash;&mdash;, Hampshires:&mdash;About seven
-weeks ago, when the Germans tried hard to break
-through, we were about two hours from a place
-which we call the Ch&acirc;teau, where the Germans
-pitched shells every day, especially at a big tower
-place which is there. Our platoons were in the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">118</span>
-trenches in the order left to right of 5, 6, 7, 8, and
-then came C Company in their trenches. The
-wounded left with the dead in the C trench were
-half buried by its having been blown in. The Germans
-enfiladed the wounded, shot them, bayoneted
-them, jumped on them.</p>
-
-<h4>(52)</h4>
-
-<p>Private B&mdash;&mdash;, Royal West Kents:&mdash;Early in September,
-in the advance from Coulommiers, I saw two
-British cavalrymen lying dead on the ground, their
-arms stretched out like a cross and their hands
-pinned by Uhlan lances.</p>
-
-<h4>(53)</h4>
-
-<p>Private J. C&mdash;&mdash;, Scots Guards:&mdash;Last Monday
-night, the other side the canal bank at a place I
-think they call “Karuchi,” the Manchesters were
-surrounded. We were in support and advanced to
-their help.... We re-took the trenches. In the second
-trench, when we got there, we found many Manchesters
-who had been shot first and then bayoneted,
-as they lay wounded, by the Germans when capturing
-the trench.</p>
-
-<h4>(54)</h4>
-
-<p>Private P&mdash;&mdash;, Cornwalls:&mdash;In the early part of
-September in our advance, in all the villages the Germans
-had smashed everything for mere sport&mdash;the
-place stank with the dead bodies of pigs and chickens
-which they had killed and left in the road. We found
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">119</span>
-scent-bottles thrown all over the road&mdash;mirrors
-smashed and furniture&mdash;lovely furniture&mdash;thrown
-into the street, and pictures cut.</p>
-
-<h4>(55)</h4>
-
-<p>Private W. T&mdash;&mdash;, Welsh Regiment:&mdash;On the retreat
-from Mons in August we came upon a woman
-tied to a tree. She was quite dead. Her throat was
-cut. I believe she had been outraged.... The time
-was about 5 p.m. It was quite light. I should say
-the woman’s age was between eighteen and twenty-two.
-The men cut her down. I saw them do it. I
-do not know what became of the body as we had to
-go on. I expect it was Uhlans who had done this.</p>
-
-<h4>(56)</h4>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Corps Exp&eacute;ditionnaire anglais, 5ᵉ Division d’Infanterie,
-7ᵉ Groupe de Gendarmerie. Objet: Actes
-repr&eacute;hensibles commis par des soldats allemands.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr" class="hang"><span class="smcap">Rapport du Capitaine Pigeanne, Commandant le
-d&eacute;tachement de Gendarmerie attach&eacute; &agrave; la 5ᵉ
-Division d’Infanterie anglaise, sur des actes
-repr&eacute;hensibles commis par des soldats de
-l’arm&eacute;e allemande.</span></p>
-
-<p class="author">
-Serches, le 14 septembre, 1914.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Le 10 septembre courant, en parcourant avec quelques
-gendarmes de mon d&eacute;tachement, en ex&eacute;cution
-de l’Art. 109 du Service de la Gendarmerie en campagne
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">120</span>
-(31 juillet, 1911), un terrain sur lequel avait
-eu lieu la veille, un engagement, j’ai fait, au lieu
-dit “Laroche,” commune de Montreuil-aux-Lions
-(Seine-et-Marne) les constatations suivantes:</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Un soldat d’infanterie anglaise avait &eacute;t&eacute; tu&eacute; sur
-la lisi&egrave;re d’un petit-bois bordant la route de Mery &agrave;
-Montreuil-aux-Lions.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Il avait &eacute;t&eacute; atteint par des balles de fusil, au cou
-et &agrave; la poitrine.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Il &eacute;tait tomb&eacute; et &eacute;tait rest&eacute; &eacute;tendu sur le dos.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Son cadavre fut mutil&eacute; la face avait &eacute;t&eacute; compl&egrave;tement
-aplatie et &eacute;crase&eacute;, tr&egrave;s probablement par des
-coups donn&eacute;s avec la crosse d’un fusil ou m&ecirc;me avec
-le talon de la chaussure.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Cet acte fut certainement commis par des soldats
-allemands du 48 regiment d’Infanterie, car six cadavres
-d’Allemands de ce m&ecirc;me r&eacute;giment furent trouv&eacute;s
-&agrave; 100 m&egrave;tres au plus de cet endroit.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Une femme se trouvait sur la route tout pr&egrave;s de
-l&agrave;. Des qu’elle me vit elle s’approcha de moi et
-encore sous le coup d’une vive indignation elle me fit
-le r&eacute;cit suivant:</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“Hier, 9 septembre, dans l’apr&egrave;s-midi, pendant
-le combat un soldat fut bless&eacute;. Il avait &eacute;t&eacute; atteint
-&agrave; une jambe. Malgr&eacute; sa blessure, il parvint &agrave; se
-tra&icirc;ner jusque chez moi, &agrave; la maison que vous voyez
-sur la colline, au lieu dit Pisseloup.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“Il me parla, je ne le compris pas.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“Je lui fis un premier pansement d&egrave;s qu’il en e&ucirc;t
-montr&eacute; sa blessure et le fis &eacute;tendre sur mon lit.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“Quelques instants apr&egrave;s plusieurs soldats allemands
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">121</span>
-travers&egrave;rent la route et vinrent &eacute;galement
-jusqu’&agrave; ma demeure.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“D&egrave;s qu’ils virent le soldat anglais qui &eacute;tait bless&eacute;,
-ils le frapp&egrave;rent, le jet&egrave;rent dehors de la maison, o&ugrave;
-ils le battirent encore avec leurs fusils.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“Je ne sais ce qu’est devenu ce malheureux anglais,
-mais je pense qu’il a d&ucirc; &ecirc;tre recueilli ou enterr&eacute;, s’il
-est mort, par ses compatriotes qui sont pass&eacute;s ici ce
-matin, out soigne des bless&eacute;s et enterr&eacute; quelques-uns
-des leurs tir&eacute;s dans le combat de hier.”</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Enfin, j’ajoute le fait suivant:</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">A Vanfleurs, le 8 septembre pr&egrave;s de Poccunente,
-j’ai encore vu sur la colline au N.O. de Poccunente,
-et &agrave; 1 Kilo, environ, le cadavre d’un Anglais dont
-le cr&acirc;ne avait &eacute;t&eacute; mutil&eacute; &agrave; un tel point que la mati&egrave;re
-cervicale apparaissait en plusieurs points.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Ce soldat anglais &eacute;tait un simple &eacute;claireur, tu&eacute; d’un
-coup de fusil &agrave; la lisi&egrave;re d’un bois.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Les Allemands s’&eacute;taient acharn&eacute;s apr&egrave;s lui, peut-&ecirc;tre
-m&ecirc;me apr&egrave;s sa mort.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Ces actes constituent peut-&ecirc;tre une exception et
-sont l’œuvre de brutes, mais ils sont tellement odieux
-que j’estime de mon devoir d’en rendre compte &agrave;
-l’autorit&eacute; militaire sup&eacute;rieure.</p>
-
-<p class="author">
-(Signed) <span class="smcap">C. N. Pigeanne.</span>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">122</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="DOCUMENTS_RELATIVE_TO_THE_GERMAN_OCCUPATION_OF_BAILLEUL">II<br />
-
-DOCUMENTS RELATIVE TO THE GERMAN OCCUPATION OF
-BAILLEUL<a id="FNanchor_93" href="#Footnote_93" class="fnanchor">93</a><br />
-
-<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr" class="smcap">R&eacute;publique Fran&ccedil;aise</span><br />
-
-<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">VILLE DE BAILLEUL, COMMISSARIAT DE POLICE</span></h3>
-
-<h4>(1)<br />
-
-<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Proc&egrave;s-Verbal No. 2. Meurtre de trois civils non
-combattants par des soldats allemands</em></h4>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">L’an 1914, le 16 octobre &agrave; 16 heures Nous Th&eacute;venin....
-Inform&eacute; par les agents de notre service
-que les soldats allemands auraient tu&eacute; trois individus
-non combattants au lieu dit Nouveau Monde, commune
-de Bailleul, nous avons ouvert une enqu&ecirc;te et
-entendons:</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Marie H&mdash;&mdash;, 37 ans, &eacute;pouse C&mdash;&mdash;, demeurant &agrave;
-V&mdash;&mdash; Rue, Commune de Bailleul, entendue, d&eacute;clare:&mdash;Le
-jeudi matin, 8 courant, vers 7 heures je me
-trouvais au passage &agrave; niveau du Nouveau Monde,
-quand j’ai vu passer trois civils accompagn&eacute;s par six
-soldats allemands, ba&iuml;onnette au canon et qui leur
-avaient attach&eacute; les mains avec des serviettes. Je les
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">123</span>
-ai suivi du regard et quelques minutes apr&egrave;s j’ai vu
-les m&ecirc;mes soldats accompagnant les m&ecirc;mes hommes
-parler &agrave; un officier allemand qui leur a fait signe
-d’aller plus loin dans une p&acirc;ture. Les soldats s’y
-sont dirig&eacute;s conduisant toujours les civils prisonniers;
-ils leur ont fait sauter un foss&eacute;, puis ils les
-ont mis debout sur une m&ecirc;me ligne dans la prairie.
-&Agrave; ce moment un soldat allemand me fit rentrer dans
-une maison. Environ une demi heure apr&egrave;s, j’ai su
-que les Allemands avaient tu&eacute; les civils que j’avais
-vu passer avec eux et qu’ils les avaient enterr&eacute;s dans
-le jardin de Monsieur Pierre B&eacute;haghel.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lecture faite.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">V&mdash;&mdash;, Gabrielle, &eacute;pouse D&mdash;&mdash;, &acirc;g&eacute;e de 26 ans,
-m&eacute;nag&egrave;re, demeurant au N&mdash;&mdash; M&mdash;&mdash;, commune
-de Bailleul, interpell&eacute;e, d&eacute;clare:&mdash;J’ai vu le jeudi, 8
-courant, vers 7 heures et demie du matin six soldats
-allemands amenant avec eux, les mains li&eacute;es, trois
-civils portant de petits paquets et paraissant avoir
-de 18 &agrave; 25 ans. Ils les ont mis dans la prairie en
-face de chez moi sur l’ordre que venait de leur donner
-un de leurs officiers auxquels ils venaient de
-s’adresser. J’avais chez moi un soldat allemand qui
-faisait la cuisine et cet homme voyant venir les
-prisonniers m’a dit, en fran&ccedil;ais: “<em>Regardez,
-Madame, comme c’est beau: voir fusilier des civils
-fran&ccedil;ais, regardez c’est du beau travail, on devrait
-tous les tuer comme cela!</em>” J’ai r&eacute;pondu que je ne
-pouvais pas le voir car c’&eacute;tait un crime. Malgr&eacute; ma
-r&eacute;ponse j’ai regard&eacute; lorsque j’ai entendu tirer le coup
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">124</span>
-de feu et j’ai vu que ces pauvres civils tombaient.
-J’ai &eacute;galement vu les soldats allemands creuser trois
-trous dans lesquels ils les ont ensevelis. Je ne sais
-rien d’autre sur cette affaire.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lecture faite.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">3&ordm;. H&mdash;&mdash;, H&eacute;l&egrave;ne, femme B&mdash;&mdash;, 44 ans, m&eacute;nag&egrave;re,
-demeurant &agrave; Bailleul au lieu dit “N&mdash;&mdash;
-M&mdash;&mdash;,” nous fait la d&eacute;claration suivante: J’ai vu le
-8 courant six soldats allemands pr&eacute;senter &agrave; leur officier
-qui logeait chez moi trois jeunes gens civils qui
-portaient des paquets. L’officier a dit en fran&ccedil;ais
-aux soldats “Allez vite dans la prairie les fusiller”;
-les soldats sont partis aussit&ocirc;t. Je n’ai plus rien vu
-ni entendu concernant cette affaire, mais j’ai su que
-l’ordre avait &eacute;t&eacute; mis &agrave; ex&eacute;cution.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lecture faite.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">4&ordm;. S&mdash;&mdash;, D&eacute;sir&eacute;, 74 ans, tisserant, demeurant &agrave;
-Bailleul, N&mdash;&mdash; M&mdash;&mdash;, d&eacute;clare:&mdash;J’ai vu, comme
-les femmes H&mdash;&mdash;, V&mdash;&mdash; et B&mdash;&mdash;, passer les trois
-civils encadr&eacute;s par les soldats allemands. Je sais
-que ceux-ci, sur l’ordre d’un de leurs officiers, les ont
-fusill&eacute;s. Je les ai vus enterrer &agrave; cinquante m&egrave;tres
-de chez moi dans le jardin de Monsieur B&eacute;haghel
-Pierre. Les soldats allemands sont venus chez moi
-prendre des pioches et des pelles pour creuser leurs
-tombes. Je ne sais rien de plus.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lecture faite.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">La femme H&mdash;&mdash; nous remet sur notre demande
-un laisser-passer d&eacute;livr&eacute; par la Commune de Zonneb&egrave;ke
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">125</span>
-&agrave; un sieur Herreman qui est un de ceux qui ont
-&eacute;t&eacute; fusill&eacute;s par les Allemands. Nous le joignons au
-pr&eacute;sent ainsi que la photographie y annex&eacute;e.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Nous y joignons &eacute;galement une adresse trouv&eacute;e
-&eacute;crite au crayon pr&egrave;s de l’endroit o&ugrave; ont &eacute;t&eacute; enterr&eacute;s
-les trois corps des civils fusill&eacute;s. Nous donnons
-l’ordre au garde champ&ecirc;tre du quartier Deicke de se
-transporter au N&mdash;&mdash; M&mdash;&mdash; et de constater la
-pr&eacute;sence des trois cadavres enterr&eacute;s, cela accompagn&eacute;
-de deux t&eacute;moins.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">De retour de sa mission l’agent nous fait le rapport
-suivant:</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Je me nomme Deicke Juste, garde champ&ecirc;tre &agrave;
-Bailleul. Conform&eacute;ment &agrave; vos instructions je me suis
-mis en rapport avec les nomm&eacute;s Coulier Achille, 30
-ans, mar&eacute;chal ferrant; Sonneville D&eacute;sire, 74 ans, tisserand;
-Lassus Henri, 51 ans, journalier; Behaghel
-Julien, 19 ans, cordonnier, que j’ai pri&eacute;s de m’accompagner
-pour constater que trois corps de civils
-avaient bien &eacute;t&eacute; enterr&eacute;s dans le jardin du sieur Behaghel.
-L&agrave; nous avons vu, les trois corps de jeunes
-gens v&ecirc;tus d’habits civils et recouverts d’une couche
-de terre d’environ 30 centim&egrave;tres.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Dans les effets nous avons trouv&eacute; un extrait du
-registre d’immatriculation de la commune de Beuvry
-(Pas-de-Calais) au nom de B&eacute;kaert (Cyrille J&eacute;rome),
-n&eacute; &agrave; Zonneb&egrave;ke, le 29 ao&ucirc;t, 1891. Je vous ai apport&eacute;
-cet extrait.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">126</span></p>
-
-<h4>(2)<br />
-
-<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Proc&egrave;s-Verbal No. 1. Meurtre du jeune B&mdash;&mdash;,
-Albert, par soldats allemands</em></h4>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">L’an mille neuf cent quatorze, le 15 octobre &agrave; 2
-heures du soir. Nous Th&eacute;venin, Pierre, Commissaire
-de la Ville de Bailleul, auxiliaire de Monsieur le Procureur
-de la R&eacute;publique. Inform&eacute; par les agents de
-notre service qu’un meurtre aurait &eacute;t&eacute; commis, il y
-a plusieurs jours, par un soldat de l’arm&eacute;e allemande
-au hameau de Stient de notre commune, ouvrons une
-enqu&ecirc;te et entendons:</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">1&ordm;. B&mdash;&mdash;, Victor, 48 ans, cultivateur, demeurant
-&agrave; Bailleul, Rue &mdash;&mdash; &mdash;&mdash; &mdash;&mdash;, lequel nous dit:</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Le jeudi, 8 octobre courant, vers midi, mon fils
-Albert, 19 ans, venait d’apprendre que des patrouilles
-allemandes circulaient dans le voisinage de notre
-ferme. Il m’en fit part et me dit qu’il allait aussit&ocirc;t
-se cacher dans un fosse. Il est parti de suite suivi
-de son fr&egrave;re Maurice, &acirc;g&eacute; de 17 ans. Le m&ecirc;me jour,
-vers 8 heures du soir, celui-ci revint &agrave; la maison, il
-me dit que son fr&egrave;re l’avait quitt&eacute; pour aller &agrave; la
-ferme occup&eacute;e par les &eacute;poux Charlet, nos voisins.
-Je suis all&eacute; aussit&ocirc;t voir mon voisin, C&mdash;&mdash; D&mdash;&mdash;,
-que je savais avoir pass&eacute; la journ&eacute;e chez Charlet et
-celui-ci me dit que mon fils avait &eacute;t&eacute; tu&eacute; dans la
-ferme Charlet &agrave; coup de lance par un soldat allemand.
-Je ne sais pas autre chose sinon que j’ai vu
-le cadavre de mon fils dans la cour de cette ferme &agrave;
-moiti&eacute; carbonis&eacute; par l’incendie que venait de d&eacute;truire
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">127</span>
-les immeubles et qui avait &eacute;t&eacute; allum&eacute; par les soldats
-allemands.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lecture faite.</p>
-
-<p class="author">
-<span class="smcap">B&mdash;&mdash;, Victor.</span> <span class="smcap">Th&eacute;venin</span>, Cre. de Police.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">2&ordm;. C&mdash;&mdash; D&mdash;&mdash;, 57 ans, cultivateur, demeurant
-&agrave; Bailleul, Rue de Lille, entendu, d&eacute;clare:</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Le 8 octobre, vers 3 heures du soir, je me trouvais
-&agrave; la ferme Charlet avec diff&eacute;rentes personnes dont le
-nomm&eacute; B&mdash;&mdash;, Albert. Les Allemands au nombre
-d’une dizaine, sont entr&eacute;s dans la maison absolument
-furieux et se sont ru&eacute;s sur nous hommes et femmes
-sans distinction, nous ont appr&eacute;hend&eacute;s au corps pour
-nous jeter dans la cour de la ferme, o&ugrave; ils allaient
-nous fusilier, disaient-ils. Le jeune B&mdash;&mdash; fut jet&eacute;
-le premier. Un soldat qui &eacute;tait &agrave; l’entr&eacute;e le per&ccedil;a
-d’un coup de lance qui le tua. B&mdash;&mdash; tomba raide
-mort &agrave; terre. Dans la cour, j’ai vu que les b&acirc;timents
-de la ferme flambaient. Les Allemands nous ont dit
-qu’ils venaient d’allumer cet incendie, car ils croyaient
-qu’un coup de feu avait &eacute;t&eacute; tir&eacute; de l&agrave; sur eux.
-Tous, nous avons suppli&eacute; les Allemands de ne pas
-nous faire du mal. Un d’entr’eux qui causait fran&ccedil;ais
-a fait part aux autres de ce que nous voulions.
-Alors, on nous a jet&eacute; la t&ecirc;te apr&egrave;s les murs, on nous a
-bouscul&eacute;s tant qu’ils ont pu et on nous a mis dehors de
-la ferme. Je ne sais pas autre chose sur cette affaire.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lecture faite.</p>
-
-<p class="author">
-<span class="smcap">D&mdash;&mdash;, Clovis.</span> <span class="smcap">Th&eacute;venin.</span><br />
-</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">3&ordm;. Joseph D&mdash;&mdash;, 14 ans, ouvrier agricole, demeurant
-&agrave; Bailleul, rue &mdash; &mdash;&mdash;, entendu, nous fait une
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">128</span>
-d&eacute;claration corroborant de tous points &agrave; celle de son
-fr&egrave;re qui proc&egrave;de et signe avec nous, ajoutant qu’aucun
-coup de feu n’avait &eacute;t&eacute; tir&eacute; de cette ferme sur
-les Allemands ou sur aucune autre personne et qu’&agrave;
-sa connaissance il n’y avait dans cette ferme aucune
-arme &agrave; feu.</p>
-
-<p class="author">
-<span class="smcap">D&mdash;&mdash;, Joseph.</span> <span class="smcap">Th&eacute;venin.</span><br />
-</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">4&ordm;. C&mdash;&mdash;, Eug&eacute;nie, n&eacute;e B&mdash;&mdash;, 55 ans, fermi&egrave;re,
-demeurant &agrave; Bailleul, Rue &mdash; &mdash;&mdash;, nous dit:&mdash;J’ai
-re&ccedil;u &agrave; ma ferme le jeudi, 8 courant, vers midi et demi
-plusieurs voisins, parmi lesquels le nomm&eacute; B&mdash;&mdash;,
-Albert. Je l’ai vu tu&eacute; vers trois heures par un soldat
-allemand d’un coup de lance dans la poitrine alors
-qu’il venait d’&ecirc;tre jet&eacute; dehors de ma maison par
-d’autres soldats allemands. Les soldats allemands
-nous ont tous maltrait&eacute;s en nous flanquant la t&ecirc;te
-contre les murs. Ils nous ont en outre menac&eacute;s de
-mort. Ils ont dit que l’incendie qui a d&eacute;truit ma
-ferme avait &eacute;t&eacute; allum&eacute; par eux, car ils avaient cru
-entendre un coup de feu parti de l&agrave;. J’affirme que
-chez moi il n’y a aucune arme &agrave; feu et qu’aucun coup
-n’a &eacute;t&eacute; tir&eacute;. Je ne sais pas autre chose sur cette
-affaire.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lecture.</p>
-
-<p class="author">
-C&mdash;&mdash; B&mdash;&mdash;. <span class="smcap">Th&eacute;venin.</span><br />
-</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">5&ordm;. B&mdash;&mdash;, Juliette, 36 ans, servante &agrave; Estaires,
-P&mdash;&mdash; P&mdash;&mdash;, interpell&eacute;e, d&eacute;clare:&mdash;J’ai vu comme
-ma tante, &eacute;poux C&mdash;&mdash; et les autres t&eacute;moins, tuer le
-jeune B&mdash;&mdash;, Albert. J’ai &eacute;t&eacute; comme eux tous, maltrait&eacute;e
-et menac&eacute;e de mort par les m&ecirc;mes militaires.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">129</span>
-Je ne puis pas en dire davantage, mais je confirme
-en tous points les d&eacute;clarations qui pr&eacute;c&egrave;dent.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lecture.</p>
-
-<p class="author">
-<span class="smcap">Juliette B&mdash;&mdash;.</span> <span class="smcap">Th&eacute;venin.</span><br />
-</p>
-
-<h4><em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Proc&egrave;s-Verbal, No. 3.&mdash;Meurtre des nomm&eacute;s Itsweire
-Donat, et Torrez Edouard, par une
-patrouille allemande</em></h4>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">L’an 1914, le 16 octobre, &agrave; 5 heures et demi du
-soir nous Th&eacute;venin.... Inform&eacute; par les agents de
-notre service que deux hommes habitant le village
-d’Oultersteen, commune de Bailleul, avaient &eacute;t&eacute; tu&eacute;s
-volontairement par des soldats allemands quoiqu’&eacute;tant
-en civils et non combattants, ouvrons une enqu&ecirc;te
-et entendons:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">F&mdash;&mdash;, Charles, 55 ans, journalier, demeurant &agrave;
-Merris, lequel nous dit:&mdash;Le mercredi, 7 courant, vers
-4 heures et demie du soir, j’ai vu arriver pr&egrave;s du
-passage &agrave; niveau d’Oultersteen une patrouille de dragons
-allemands appartenant au 5&ordm; r&eacute;giment et command&eacute;e
-par un sous-officier. La patrouille a tir&eacute; des
-coups de carabine sur les civils qui se trouvaient dans
-la rue. Quelques soldats sont all&eacute;s tuer un homme, le
-nomm&eacute; Isteweire Donat, 75 ans environ, qui s’&eacute;tait
-r&eacute;fugi&eacute; sous un pont. Je l’ai vu tirer sur cet homme
-et celui-ci ayant cess&eacute; de vivre. J’ai appris depuis
-qu’ils avaient tu&eacute; un sieur Torrez Edouard, 40 ans,
-cabaretier, demeurant &agrave; Oultersteen et cela de la
-m&ecirc;me mani&egrave;re. J’ai su aussi qu’un autre homme
-avait &eacute;t&eacute; par eux bless&eacute; &agrave; la joue.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lecture faite.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">130</span></p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">2&ordm;. B&mdash;&mdash;, Alfred, 37 ans, employ&eacute; au chemin de
-fer, A&mdash;&mdash; &mdash;&mdash;, &agrave; Lille, entendu, d&eacute;clare:&mdash;Le
-mercredi, 7 courant, vers 4 heures et demie du soir,
-je revenais de voyage en passant par Oultersteen.
-A la barri&egrave;re du passage &agrave; niveau de la route allant
-&agrave; Vieux-Berquin j’ai vu devant moi des dragons allemands,
-5&ordm; r&eacute;giment, qui nous ont ajust&eacute;s de leur
-carabines et ont tir&eacute; trentaine de coups de feu. Pour
-ma part j’ai re&ccedil;u une balle &agrave; la joue gauche. Une
-autre a perc&eacute; ma casquette, qui a &eacute;t&eacute; lanc&eacute;e &agrave; plusieurs
-m&egrave;tres. A ce moment les nomm&eacute;s Torrez
-Edouard, et Isteweire Donat, &eacute;taient &agrave; c&ocirc;t&eacute; de moi.
-Nous avons fui chacun de notre c&ocirc;t&eacute;, seul j’ai pu
-&eacute;chapper. Itsweire a &eacute;t&eacute; tu&eacute; sous un pont, Torrez
-&agrave; c&ocirc;t&eacute; d’une haie de chemin de halage. J’ai vu que
-cette patrouille de dragons a tir&eacute; une vingtaine de
-coups de r&eacute;volver dans la maison de la garde barri&egrave;re
-du passage &agrave; niveau de Vieux-Berquin, o&ugrave; se trouvaient
-trois femmes et trois enfants. L’arriv&eacute;e d’une
-patrouille du 13&ordm; r&eacute;giment de Chasseurs &agrave; cheval,
-qui a charg&eacute; la patrouille allemande, a sauv&eacute; la vie
-&agrave; ces six personnes qui n’auraient manqu&eacute; d’&ecirc;tre tu&eacute;s
-par ces bandits. Je ne sais pas autre chose.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lecture faite.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">3&ordm;. L&mdash;&mdash;, Jules, 13 ans, sans profession, demeurant
-&agrave; Oultersteen, interpell&eacute;, dit:&mdash;Je n’ai vu Itsweire
-et Torrez que lorsqu’ils &eacute;taient droits, tu&eacute;s par
-la patrouille allemande &agrave; coups de fusils. J’ai vu
-cette m&ecirc;me patrouille tirer des coups de r&eacute;volver chez
-moi. Les trois femmes et les deux autres enfants qui
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">131</span>
-se trouvaient dans la maison auraient certainement
-&eacute;t&eacute; tu&eacute;s par eux ainsi que moi-m&ecirc;me, si une patrouille
-fran&ccedil;aise ne lui avait donn&eacute; la chasse. Je ne sais pas
-autre chose concernant ces deux meurtres.</p>
-
-<h4><em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Proc&egrave;s-Verbal No. 4. Viol de la demoiselle D&mdash;&mdash;,
-Marie Th&eacute;r&egrave;se, par deux officiers allemands</em><br />
-
-(4)</h4>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">L’an 1914, le 17 octobre, &agrave; 9 heures, 1/4, nous
-Th&eacute;venin, inform&eacute; par notre service qu’un viol aurait
-&eacute;t&eacute; commis par des soldats ou des officiers allemands,
-Rue des Coulons, au domicile des &eacute;poux D&mdash;&mdash;, nous
-ouvrons une enqu&ecirc;te et en entendons.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">1&ordm;. R&mdash;&mdash; C&mdash;&mdash;, &eacute;pouse D&mdash;&mdash;, &acirc;g&eacute;e de 48 ans,
-boulang&egrave;re, demeurant &agrave; Bailleul, Rue &mdash;&mdash;, laquelle
-dit:&mdash;Dans la nuit du 9 au 10 courant vers 2 heures
-du matin je me trouvais chez moi avec ma fille Marie
-Th&eacute;r&egrave;se et la femme M&mdash;&mdash;, quand j’ai entendu frapper
-&agrave; la porte de la rue. Je suis all&eacute;e ouvrir, une
-lampe &agrave; la main, et aussit&ocirc;t deux hommes sont entr&eacute;s,
-m’ont pouss&eacute; du bras violemment, ont &eacute;teint ma
-lampe et sont all&eacute;s directement vers l’endroit o&ugrave; se
-trouvait ma fille. Dans ces deux hommes j’ai reconnu
-deux officiers de l’arm&eacute;e allemande. Ils m’ont saisie
-&agrave; la gorge pour m’emp&ecirc;cher de crier et se sont oppos&eacute;s
-violemment &agrave; ce que j’allume ma lampe. Ils avaient
-&agrave; la main une lampe &eacute;lectrique dont ils se sont servis
-pour voir ma fille. J’ai vu que l’un d’eux, le blond,
-a pris ma fille en premier lieu et l’a jet&eacute;e par terre
-dans la cuisine, puis il s’est couch&eacute; dessus, lui a
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">132</span>
-relev&eacute; les jupons et l’a viol&eacute;e. Ma fille se d&eacute;battait
-autant qu’elle pouvait, criait de toutes ses forces,
-mais ce bandit lui appuyant son visage sur le sein,
-il cherchait &agrave; &eacute;touffer ses cris. Il est bien rest&eacute; sur
-ma fille pendant un quart d’heure environ tandis que
-l’autre me tenait &agrave; la gorge et avait son r&eacute;volver a
-c&ocirc;t&eacute; de sa lampe. Quand celui-ci eut fini l’autre
-reprit ma fille &agrave; son tour et la renversa par terre
-dans le corridor, o&ugrave; il lui fit subir les m&ecirc;mes outrages
-pendant un quart d’heure environ, en m&ecirc;me temps,
-le blond &eacute;tait venu pr&egrave;s de moi, son r&eacute;volver en main,
-et me maintenant brutalement dans l’impossibilit&eacute;
-de prot&eacute;ger mon enfant. Quand ils eurent fini ils
-ont pris ma fille par un bras chacun, l’ont tra&icirc;n&eacute;e
-dehors et je ne sais plus ce qu’ils lui ont fait l&agrave;. J’ai
-men&eacute; ma fille chez Monsieur Bells, docteur en m&eacute;decine,
-qui l’a examin&eacute;e et qui a constat&eacute; que le viol
-avait &eacute;t&eacute; consomm&eacute; et que la d&eacute;floration &eacute;tait compl&egrave;te.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lecture faite.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">2&ordm;. D&mdash;&mdash; (Marie Th&eacute;r&egrave;se) 19 ans, sans profession,
-demeurant chez parents, boulangers, &agrave; Bailleul, Rue
-----, nous fait la d&eacute;claration suivante:&mdash;Ainsi
-que vient de le dire maman, deux officiers allemands
-sont entr&eacute;s chez nous dans la nuit du 9 au 10 courant
-vers 2 heures du matin. J’&eacute;tais seule avec ma m&egrave;re
-Madame M&mdash;&mdash;. De suite l’un d’eux, un grand
-blond, a couru sur moi, m’a renvers&eacute;e par terre....
-Il m’a fait bien mal; j’ai souffert beaucoup et j’ai
-d&ucirc; l’endurer sur moi pendant un quart d’heure environ.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">133</span>
-Quand il a eu assouvi sa passion, il me fait
-relever et me tra&icirc;na vers son camarade, un grand
-brun, qui, &agrave; son tour, me renversa dans le corridor et
-me fit subir les m&ecirc;mes outrages pendant un quart
-d’heure environ. Je dois dire qu’apr&egrave;s que chacun
-d’eux, j’&eacute;tais toute ... et que chacun m’a fait &eacute;norm&eacute;ment
-souffrir.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Je ressens &agrave; l’heure actuelle de tr&egrave;s violents maux
-de rein et mon bas ventre me fait excessivement mal.
-Quand le deuxi&egrave;me eut fini, tous deux me saisirent
-par un bras et me tra&icirc;n&egrave;rent sur la rue en me demandant
-mon &acirc;ge. J’ai r&eacute;pondu que j’avais dix-neuf
-ans. Alors tous deux ont dit, en fran&ccedil;ais le
-plus pur, “<em>Vous devez conna&icirc;tre d’autres jeunes filles
-dans le voisinage; il faut nous dire o&ugrave; elles sont pour
-que nous puissions en faire autant qu’&agrave; vous-m&ecirc;me.</em>”
-J’ai r&eacute;pondu que je n’en connaissais pas, que je
-n’avais pas de camarades dans le voisinage. Ils
-m’ont alors embrass&eacute;e tous les deux et serr&eacute;e tr&egrave;s
-fortement, puis ils m’ont laiss&eacute; partir. Je suis rentr&eacute;e
-chez moi. J’oubliais de vous dire qu’avant de
-me l&acirc;cher, tous les deux m’ont dit, “Si vous dites ce
-que l’on vous a fait et que nous revenions chez vous,
-on vous tuera.”</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">En rentrant chez moi je n’ai plus revu maman?
-Je l’ai appel&eacute;e de tous c&ocirc;t&eacute;s et finalement je l’ai
-retrouv&eacute;e dans le jardin. Avec elle et la femme
-M&mdash;&mdash; nous rentrions chez nous, quand nous avons
-entendu les m&ecirc;mes officiers qui frappaient &agrave; la porte
-pour rentrer de nouveau. Nous avons eu peur et
-nous sommes parties dans le jardin.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">134</span></p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lecture faite.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">3&ordm;. D&mdash;&mdash;, Gabrielle, femme Maerten, 72 ans, m&eacute;nag&egrave;re,
-demeurant &agrave; Bailleul, Rue&mdash;&mdash;, entendue,
-nous fait une d&eacute;claration corroborant de tous points
-celles qui pr&eacute;c&egrave;dent et signe avec nous.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Personne n’a &eacute;t&eacute; t&eacute;moin de cette sc&egrave;ne mais j’ai
-souffert beaucoup tant au physique qu’au moral de
-l’exploit de ces deux bandits.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lecture faite.</p>
-
-<h3 id="EVIDENCE_RELATING_TO_THE_MURDER_OF_ELEVEN_CIVILIANS">III<br />
-
-EVIDENCE RELATING TO THE MURDER OF ELEVEN
-CIVILIANS AT DOULIEU<br />
-
-<cite lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Gendarmerie Nationale</cite></h3>
-
-<p class="author">
-Cejourd’hui, 29 Novembre 1914.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">D&eacute;clarations de Monsieur Rohart Jules, &acirc;g&eacute; de 65
-ans, Maire de la commune de Doulieu qui a d&eacute;clar&eacute;:&mdash;Lors
-de l’invasion de la commune de Doulieu par
-l’ennemi, je suis toujours rest&eacute; sur les lieux. J’ai
-connaissance et j’ai constat&eacute; tout ce qui a &eacute;t&eacute; commis
-sur mon territoire par les Allemands. J’ai d’abord
-appris que 11 individus civils fran&ccedil;ais avaient &eacute;t&eacute;
-fusill&eacute;s dans un champ &agrave; proximit&eacute; de la rue du
-Calvaire au lieu dit “l’Esp&eacute;rance.” Ces hommes,
-qui n’avaient pas &eacute;t&eacute; enterr&eacute;s assez profond&eacute;ment,
-ont &eacute;t&eacute; d&eacute;terr&eacute;s le samedi, 17 octobre, pour les transporter
-au cimeti&egrave;re, o&ugrave; j’avais fait pr&eacute;parer une
-fosse commune et &agrave; la profondeur r&eacute;glementaire. Je
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">135</span>
-ne connais aucun de ces hommes, mais d’apr&eacute;s les
-diverses pi&egrave;ces que j’ai pu retrouver sur eux, j’ai pu
-&eacute;tablir l’identit&eacute; de sept. Les quatre derniers
-n’avaient aucun papier ni quoi que ce soit pouvant
-&eacute;tablir leur identit&eacute;.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">J’ai fait pr&eacute;venir les maires des diff&eacute;rentes localit&eacute;s
-o&ugrave; r&eacute;sidaient ces hommes dont les noms suivent:</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">1&ordm;. L&eacute;ger Alfred D&eacute;sir&eacute; Louis, n&eacute; le 1ᵉʳ d&eacute;cembre
-1885 &agrave; Amiens, fils de Alfred et de Clarisse Lourdel.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">2&ordm;. Dequeker Henri L&eacute;on Joseph, n&eacute; le 25 avril
-1875 &agrave; Sailly sur la Lys, fils de Charles Auguste
-Joseph et de Hortense Ad&eacute;line Hay.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">3&ordm;. Vienne Louis Amand, n&eacute; le 10 avril 1875 &agrave;
-Tourcoing, fils de Louis Eug&egrave;ne et de Elisa Marie
-Vienne.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">4&ordm;. Hallewaere Cyrille, n&eacute; le 4 d&eacute;cembre 1889, &agrave;
-Vlamertinghe (Belgique), fils de Alphonse et de
-Gouwy Cl&eacute;mence.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">5&ordm;. Dequesnes Jules, n&eacute; 1ᵉʳ septembre 1884 &agrave;
-Roubaix, fils de Henri Joseph et de Charlotte
-Desmettre.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">6&ordm;. Ermnoult, &mdash;&mdash;, n&eacute; &agrave; &mdash;&mdash;, demeurant &agrave;
-Steenwerck, hameau de la Croix du Bac, reconnu par
-son beau-fr&egrave;re nomm&eacute;, demeurant &agrave; la Croix du Bac.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">7&ordm;. Les quatre autres n’ont pu &ecirc;tre identifi&eacute;s. Ils
-paraissaient &acirc;g&eacute;s approximativement de 30 &agrave; 40 ans.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">J’ai appris &eacute;galement la mort de Bail D&eacute;sir&eacute;
-retrouv&eacute; &agrave; proximit&eacute; de la ferme de Monsieur Leroy
-au lieu dit “La Bleu tour.” Je ne connais pas la
-cause de cette mort....</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Madame Masquelier Mathilde, femme Decherf
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">136</span>
-Henri, &acirc;g&eacute; de 62 ans, m&eacute;nag&egrave;re demeurant &agrave; Doulieu,
-Rue du Calvaire, qui a d&eacute;clar&eacute;:&mdash;Le Dimanche, 11
-octobre, 1914, vers 16 heures, deux soldats allemands
-sont venus me demander deux b&ecirc;ches que je leur ai
-remises. Peu apr&egrave;s, j’ai remarqu&eacute; dans un champ
-situ&eacute; &agrave; 40 m&egrave;tres environ de mon habitation, onze
-individus civils occup&eacute;s &agrave; creuser une tranch&eacute;e. Un
-peu plus loin se trouvait un groupe de soldats
-ennemis. J’ai regard&eacute; ces hommes travailler, puis
-au bout d’un quart d’heure ils se sont d&eacute;coiff&eacute;s, puis
-se sont mis &agrave; genoux. Comme ils se relevaient, j’ai
-entendu une fusillade et au m&ecirc;me moment, ils
-tombaient tous dans le trou qu’ils venaient de creuser.
-Deux soldats fran&ccedil;ais prisonniers, appartenant l’un
-&agrave; l’infanterie, l’autre aux chasseurs &agrave; pied, sont alors
-venus et ont recouvert les corps de ces hommes.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Fievet Charles, &acirc;ge de 60 ans, boulanger &eacute;picier,
-demeurant au Doulieu, hameau de la Bleu Tour,
-d&eacute;clare:&mdash;Le mardi, 13 octobre, 1914, vers 5 heures
-30 du matin, les Allemands qui occupaient notre pays
-d&eacute;j&agrave; depuis plusieurs jours sont venus chez moi. Ils
-ont cass&eacute; les persiennes, puis les carreaux de vitres
-des deux fen&ecirc;tres qui se trouvent sur la rue. M’&eacute;tant
-alors lev&eacute;, ils m’ont dit que je devais partir et qu’ils
-allaient br&ucirc;ler ma maison. Les rideaux de ces deux
-fen&ecirc;tres ont en effet &eacute;t&eacute; br&ucirc;l&eacute;s. En sortant de mon
-habitation, j’ai re&ccedil;u un coup de poing sur la figure,
-puis aussit&ocirc;t un coup de crosse sur le c&ocirc;t&eacute; de l’œil,
-puis un droit sur la t&ecirc;te. Devant ces brutalit&eacute;s, je
-me suis sauv&eacute; &agrave; la ferme de mon voisin Ridez, situ&eacute;e
-&agrave; environ 30 m&egrave;tres en face de ma demeure. Au
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">137</span>
-moment o&ugrave; j’entrais dans la cour de cette ferme,
-j’ai entendu une d&eacute;tonation et imm&eacute;diatement j’ai
-remarqu&eacute; que mon bras droit tombait naturellement.
-Je ne ressentais aucun mal. Ce n’est qu’&agrave; mon
-entr&eacute;e dans cette ferme que j’ai constat&eacute; que j’avais
-le bras droit cass&eacute;. J’ignore quel &eacute;tait le but de ces
-violences, puisque je n’avais rien fait ni rien dit.
-C’est Monsieur le Docteur Poti&eacute; de Vieux-Berquin
-qui me donne des soins. En ce qui concerne le vol
-et le pillage tant chez moi que chez mes voisins, je
-certifie que ce sont les Allemands qui ont tout pris.
-Une liste d&eacute;taill&eacute;e a &eacute;t&eacute; address&eacute;e &agrave; M. le Maire du
-Doulieu.</p>
-
-<h3 id="DEPOSITION_OF_A_SURVIVOR_OF_THE_MASSACRE_OF_TAMINES">IV<br />
-
-DEPOSITION OF A SURVIVOR OF THE MASSACRE OF TAMINES<br />
-
-<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Traduction de la d&eacute;claration faite en flamand par
-V&mdash;&mdash; A&mdash;&mdash; F&mdash;&mdash;, mineur &agrave; Tamines</em><br />
-
-<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Parquet du Tribunal de 1re Instance d’Ypres</em><br />
-
-<span lang="la" xml:lang="la" class="smcap">Pro Justicia</span></h3>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">L’an 1914, le 1 octobre, devant nous, Alphonse
-Verschaeve, procureur du Roi &agrave; Ypres, a comparu,
-dans notre cabinet, sur invitation de notre part, le
-nomm&eacute; V&mdash;&mdash; A&mdash;&mdash; F&mdash;&mdash;, 28 ans, mineur domicili&eacute;
-&agrave; Tamines, actuellement r&eacute;fugi&eacute; &agrave; Reninghe, lequel
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">138</span>
-nous a fait sous la foi du serment en langue flamande
-la d&eacute;claration suivante:</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Le samedi, 22 ao&ucirc;t, dans le courant de l’apr&egrave;s-midi,
-les Allemands, au nombre de 200, me semble-t-il,
-sont entr&eacute;s dans la commune de Tamines. Imm&eacute;diatement
-ils oblig&egrave;rent tous les habitants (les femmes
-et les enfants aussi bien que les hommes) &agrave; sortir
-de leurs maisons et &agrave; se rendre &agrave; l’&eacute;glise. Pendant
-que nous sortions par la porte de devant, les Allemands
-p&eacute;n&eacute;traient dans nos demeures par la porte
-de derri&egrave;re et y mettaient le feu. Aussi en tr&egrave;s peu
-de temps toute la commune ne formait plus qu’un
-vaste brasier. Lorsque toute la population se
-trouvait r&eacute;unie dans l’&eacute;glise, les femmes et les enfants
-furent expedi&eacute;s vers le couvent des religieuses,
-tandis que les hommes (au nombre de 400), furent
-oblig&eacute;s de se diriger par rangs de quatre vers la
-plaine, et entre une double haie de soldats allemands.
-Pendant cette marche les soldats allemands ne cess&egrave;rent
-de tirer sur nous et de cette fa&ccedil;on massacr&egrave;rent
-impitoyablement un nombre consid&eacute;rable de mes
-concitoyens.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Voyant que nombre de mes camarades tombaient,
-abattus par les coups de feu, je me suis laiss&eacute; tomber
-&agrave; terre, quoique je n’&eacute;tais pas bless&eacute;, et je suis rest&eacute;
-l&agrave;, immobile, couch&eacute; sous les cadavres jusque vers
-le milieu de la nuit suivante; c’est ainsi que j’ai
-sauv&eacute; ma vie. Le lendemain matin, lorsque je me
-suis relev&eacute;, j’ai constat&eacute; que nous &eacute;tions &agrave; peine trente
-habitants qui avions &eacute;chapp&eacute; au massacre, mais la
-plupart des autres &eacute;chapp&eacute;s &eacute;taient bless&eacute;s; cinq
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">139</span>
-seulement d’entre nous en &eacute;taient sortis compl&egrave;tement
-indemnes. Plus tard dans la journ&eacute;e nous
-avons &eacute;t&eacute; forc&eacute;s d’inhumer les cadavres de nos 350
-concitoyens, puis amen&eacute;s &agrave; une distance de 5 kilom&egrave;tres;
-l&agrave; on nous remit en libert&eacute; mais avec d&eacute;fense
-formelle de remettre encore le pied dans notre
-commune.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Apr&egrave;s lecture il persiste dans sa d&eacute;claration et
-signe avec nous.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr" class="author">
-(Signed) <span class="smcap">Alphonse Verchaeve.</span></p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">(Signed) V&mdash;&mdash; A&mdash;&mdash; F&mdash;&mdash;.<br />
-<span class="i2">Pour traduction conforme,</span><br />
-<span class="i4">le Procureur du Roi,</span><br />
-<span class="i6">(Signed) <span class="smcap">A. Verchaeve.</span></span></p>
-
-<h3 id="FIVE_GERMAN_DIARIES">V<br />
-
-FIVE GERMAN DIARIES</h3>
-
-<p class="hang large">(<em>a</em>) Extract from the Diary of a German Soldier
-forwarded by the Extraordinary Commission
-of Enquiry instituted by the Russian Government.</p>
-
-<p>“When the offensive becomes difficult we gather
-together the Russian prisoners and hunt them before
-us towards their compatriots, while we attack
-the latter at the same time. In this way our losses
-are sensibly diminished.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">140</span></p>
-
-<p>“We cannot but make prisoners. Each Russian
-
-soldier when made prisoner will now be sent in front
-of our lines in order to be shot by his fellows.”</p>
-
-<p class="hang large">(<em>b</em>) Extract from a Diary of a German Soldier of
-the 13th Regiment, 13th Division, VIIth
-Corps captured by the Fifth (French) Army
-and reproduced in the First (British) Army
-Summary No. 95.</p>
-
-<p><em>December 19th, 1914.</em>&mdash;“The sight of the trenches
-and the fury, not to say bestiality, of our men in
-beating to death the wounded English affected me so
-much that, for the rest of the day, I was fit for
-nothing.”</p>
-
-<p class="hang large">(<em>c</em>) Contents of a Letter found on a Prisoner of
-the 86th Regiment, but written by Johann
-Wenger (10th Company Body Regiment, 1st
-Brigade, 1st Division I.A.C. Bav.) dated 16th
-March, 1915, Peronne, and addressed to a
-German Girl.</p>
-
-<p>(After promising to send a ring made out of a
-shell.) “It will be a nice souvenir for you from a
-German warrior who has been through everything
-from the start and has shot and bayoneted so many
-Frenchmen, and I have bayoneted many women.
-During the fight at Batonville [?Badonviller] I bayoneted
-seven (7) women and four (4) young girls in
-five (5) minutes. We fought from house to house
-and these women fired on us with revolvers; they
-also fired on the captain too, then he told me to shoot
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">141</span>
-them all&mdash;but I bayoneted them and did not shoot
-them, this herd of sows, they are worse than the
-men.”</p>
-
-<p class="hang large">(<em>d</em>) Extracts from the Diary of Musketeer Rehbein,
-II., 55th Reserve Infantry Regiment (2nd
-Company), 26th Reserve Infantry Brigade,
-2nd Guard Reserve Division, X. Reserve
-Corps.</p>
-
-<p>(<em>This diary was captured during the recent operations
-at Loos, and forwarded to Professor Morgan
-by the Head-quarters Staff.</em><a id="FNanchor_94" href="#Footnote_94" class="fnanchor">94</a>)</p>
-
-<p><em>August 16th</em> (1914). On the march towards Louvain.&mdash;“Several
-citizens and the cur&eacute; have been shot
-under martial law, some not yet buried&mdash;still lying
-where they were executed, for every one to see. Pervading
-stench of dead bodies. The cur&eacute; is said to
-have incited the inhabitants to ambush and kill the
-Germans.”</p>
-
-<p lang="de" xml:lang="de">1914. 16/8. Marsch nach Louveigne.&mdash;Mehrere
-B&uuml;rger u. der Pfarrer standrechtlich erschossen, zum
-Teil noch nicht beerdigt. Am Vollziehungsplatz noch
-f&uuml;r jedermann sichtbar. Leichengeruch Uberall.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">142</span>“
-Pfarrer soll die Bewohner Angefeuert haben die
-Deutschen aus dem Hinterhalt zu t&ouml;ten.”</p>
-
-<p class="hang large">(<em>e</em>) Extracts from the Diary of a German Soldier,
-Richard Gerhold (Official Translation by
-French Head-quarters Staff).</p>
-
-<h4 lang="fr" xml:lang="fr" class="smcap">Extrait du Bulletin de Renseignements de la
-VI&ordm; Arm&eacute;e du 30 avril, 1915</h4>
-
-<p class="hang large"><em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Extraits du carnet de route trouv&eacute; le 22 avril sur le
-cadavre du r&eacute;serviste Richard Gerhold, du 71&ordm;
-R.R. (IV&ordm; C.R.) tu&eacute; en Septembre &agrave; Nouvron</em></p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">... Le 19 ao&ucirc;t, nous avan&ccedil;ons et peu &agrave; peu on
-apprend &agrave; conna&icirc;tre les horreurs de la guerre: du
-b&eacute;tail crev&eacute;, des automobiles d&eacute;truites, villages et
-hameaux consum&eacute;s; c’est tout d’abord un spectacle
-&agrave; faire frissonner, mais ici on cesse &ecirc;tre un homme,
-on devient flegmatique et on n’a plus que l’id&eacute;e de
-sa s&eacute;curit&eacute; personnelle. Plus nous avan&ccedil;ons, plus
-le spectacle est d&eacute;sol&eacute;: partout des d&eacute;combres, fumants
-et des hommes fusill&eacute;s et carbonis&eacute;s. Et cela
-continue ainsi....</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">... Nous franchissons la fronti&egrave;re le 17 ao&ucirc;t; je
-me souviens, et je vois sans cesse ce moment l&agrave;: tout
-le village en flammes, portes et fen&ecirc;tres bris&eacute;es, tout
-g&icirc;t &eacute;pars dans la rue; seule une maisonnette subsiste
-et &agrave; la porte de cette maison une pauvre femme, les
-mains hautes, avec six enfants implore pour qu’on
-l’&eacute;pargne elle et ses petits; il en va ainsi tous les
-jours.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">143</span></p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Dans le village voisin la compagnie se fait remettre
-les armes naturellement avec la plus grande prudence.
-A peine nous sommes-nous mis en marche que des
-maisons on tire sur nos troupes; on fait demi-tour
-et en quelques instants tout est en flammes; il n’y
-a pas de place pour la piti&eacute;, il arrive fr&eacute;quemment
-que cette sale engeance de cur&eacute;s prenne part &agrave; la
-fusillade; <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">c’est pour moi une folle joie quand on
-peut se venger de cette canaille de cur&eacute;s</em>;<a id="FNanchor_95" href="#Footnote_95" class="fnanchor">95</a> ici
-naturellement tout est fonci&egrave;rement catholique.
-Quelle vie agr&eacute;able la population pourrait avoir ici
-si elle ne se laissait pas conduire sur une mauvaise
-voie par cette hypocrite canaille de pretres; ... la
-population ne serait pas inqui&eacute;t&eacute;e le moins du monde
-de la part des Allemands; mais puisqu’il en est ainsi
-par ici, il n’y a pas de notre c&ocirc;t&eacute; &agrave; garder le moindre
-m&eacute;nagement....</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">... Le 18, nous atteignons Tongres: ici aussi c’est
-un tableau de destruction compl&egrave;te, c’est quelque
-chose d’unique en son genre pour notre profession
-(c’est un verrier qui parle)....</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">... Le 25 ao&ucirc;t, nous prenons un cantonnement
-d’alerte &agrave; Grinde (Sucrerie); ici aussi tout est br&ucirc;l&eacute;
-et d&eacute;truit. De Grinde nous continuous notre route
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">144</span>
-sur Louvain; ici c’est partout un tableau d’horreur;
-des cadavres de nos gens de nos chevaux; des autos
-tout en flammes, l’eau empoisonn&eacute;e; &agrave; peine avons-nous
-atteint l’extr&eacute;mit&eacute; de la ville que la fusillade
-reprend de plus belle; naturellement on fait demi-tour
-et on nettoie; puis la ville est mitraill&eacute;e par
-nous compl&egrave;tement.</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Chemin faisant passent devant nous des cort&egrave;ges
-de prisonniers, homines femmes et enfants poussant
-des cris....</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">... Le 1&ordm; septembre, nous sommes embarqu&eacute;s
-dans Bruxelles-Paris; sur cette ligne le m&ecirc;me tableau
-se renouvelle: villages consum&eacute;s, foss&eacute;es &eacute;normes,
-etc....</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">... Aujourd’hui, 7 septembre, c’est le jour le
-plus p&eacute;nible que jusqu’&agrave; pr&eacute;sent nous ayons v&eacute;cu;
-l’endroit s’appelle Attichy; nous atteignons cet endroit
-en faisant de longs d&eacute;tours, car on a fait sauter
-beaucoup de ponts. A 5 h. du matin, on repart, et
-cela au pas acc&eacute;l&eacute;r&eacute; parce que beaucoup de cochonneries
-y ont &eacute;t&eacute; commises....</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">... Le 9 septembre, apr&egrave;s un bon cantonnement,
-mais qui dure trop peu, nous partons la nuit &agrave; 1 h.
-1/2 apr&egrave;s avoir mis des chemises fra&icirc;ches et nous
-avan&ccedil;ons vers l’ennemi vers 6 h. du matin et livrons
-un combat apr&egrave;s lequel nous sommes compl&egrave;tement
-d&eacute;sorganis&eacute;s. Notre r&eacute;giment actuellement se compose
-d’un bataillon du 71&ordm;, d’une compagnie du 2&ordm;
-bataillon, de compagnies cyclistes des 14&ordm;, 46&ordm; et
-27&ordm; et de nombreux autres &eacute;l&eacute;ments encore. Vers
-11 h. du matin nous tombons sous une gr&ecirc;le de shrapnells,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">145</span>
-nous n’avons pas d’artillerie, ni d’autre couverture;
-l’apr&egrave;s-midi nous sommes engag&eacute;s dans une
-chaude lutte.... Ici c’est Ormoy. Nous nous
-joignons au 9&ordm; Corps et nous portons vers la position
-occup&eacute;e hier par l’ennemi.... Nous faisons
-au feu d’artillerie tr&egrave;s vif, mais nous ne pouvons
-rien faire jusqu’&agrave; ce que notre artillerie ait nettoy&eacute;
-la place. Nous bivouaquons en for&ecirc;t apr&egrave;s que l’ennemi
-s’est retir&eacute; et nous nous avan&ccedil;ons pour chercher
-de l’eau; la nuit vers 3 h. nous rentrons &agrave; la compagnie.
-A 4 h. nous repartons: ainsi en 3 jours
-8 heures de sommeil et avec cela, nourris comme cela
-arrive parfois &agrave; la guerre et la marche continue de
-plus belle avec des efforts physiques les plus grands
-pour envelopper l’ennemi vers Compiegne. Nous
-nous heurtons au 94&ordm; qui a &eacute;t&eacute; repouss&eacute; avec de
-fortes pertes; plusieurs compagnies de ce r&eacute;giment
-sont fondues et r&eacute;duites &agrave; 40 hommes; nous cantonnons
-ici; mais quelque chose de bien! Dieu!
-quelles d&eacute;lices!... Nous faisons un brin de toilette,
-mangeons et buvons &agrave; cœur joie et songeons en r&ecirc;ve
-&agrave; vous l&agrave;-bas!</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Le 11 septembre, mouvement tournant vers Chaulny....
-Nous arrivons en cantonnement d’alerte &agrave;
-Chaulny vieux repaire de brigands. Apr&egrave;s quelques
-heures de sommeil, nouveau d&eacute;part &agrave; 3 h. du matin.
-Le 12 septembre nous nous fortifions &agrave; 10 Klm de
-Chaulny dans des tranch&eacute;es: il ne s’y passe pas
-longtemps que nous y sommes vivement bombard&eacute;s
-par l’artillerie; &agrave; ce moment s’engage un violent
-combat d’artillerie. Vers 5 h. du soir, nous entrons
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">146</span>
-dans l’action, mais nous ne pouvons avancer que
-jusqu’&agrave; une pente abrupte o&ugrave; nous restons couch&eacute;s
-sous des torrents d’eau jusque dans la nuit....</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">... Malheureusement nous sommes encore trop
-faibles dans cette position; le rapport vient &agrave; l’instant
-que notre 2&ordm; Corps arrivera ou doit arriver dans
-l’apr&egrave;s-midi: de ces sortes de promesses, on nous en
-fait toujours, mais? Celui qui va croire ou se laisser
-conter que les Fran&ccedil;ais fuient devant quelques fusils
-ou canons allemands se trompe joliment et ne sait
-rien. Jusqu’&agrave; pr&eacute;sent nous sommes oblig&eacute;s de dire
-que les Fran&ccedil;ais sont un adversaire honorable que
-nous ne devons pas juger au-dessous de sa valeur.
-<em>Ici, aussi, il se passe des choses qui ne devraient pas
-&ecirc;tre; oui, des atrocit&eacute;s sont commises ici aussi, mais
-naturellement sur les Anglais et les Belges, tous sont
-abattus sans pardon &agrave; coups de fusil....</em></p>
-
-<h3 id="DOCUMENTS_FORWARDED_BY_THE_RUSSIAN_GOVERNMENT">VI</h3>
-
-<p class="hang">DOCUMENTS SELECTED FROM THE REPORTS OF THE EXTRAORDINARY
-COMMISSION OF INQUIRY APPOINTED
-BY HIS MAJESTY THE EMPEROR OF RUSSIA</p>
-
-<h4>I. Violation of a Sister of Mercy.</h4>
-
-<p>A Sister of Mercy, wearing the sign of the Red
-Cross, was seized by German and Austrian troops
-on April 20th, 1915, at the station of Radzivilishki
-and shut up in a cart-shed.</p>
-
-<p>“On the fourth day several officers visited her in
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">147</span>
-the cart-shed and demanded information from her
-as to the positions of the Russian troops. They then
-beat her with swords and pricked her body with
-needles. On the same day she was taken to the third
-line of German entrenchments and lodged in a ‘dug-out’
-occupied by German officers. Here she was
-violated, and during a week and a half several German
-officers frequently committed violent acts of
-copulation with her, and kept her in the ‘dug-out’
-without clothes under a special guard. At last she
-succeeded in escaping from the trenches. With the
-help of a Lithuanian peasant she made her way to
-the Russian positions, where she arrived in an almost
-unconscious state. First medical aid was at
-once administered, as it was found she was suffering
-from inflammation of the peritoneum and cellular
-membrane surrounding the matrix. On examining
-her for marks of violence, bruises were visible in the
-region of the shoulder and on the thighs and legs.”</p>
-
-<h4>II. Violation of a Girl.</h4>
-
-<p>At the beginning of the war, when the Germans
-entered the town of Kalish, a girl named X&mdash;&mdash; was
-arrested and led out to the public place, or square,
-for execution. Here the Germans tied her to a tree
-and told her that she would be shot. Others of the
-inhabitants, also condemned to be shot, were drawn
-up on the same open space. Among these victims
-was an acquaintance of the girl X&mdash;&mdash;, a student
-named N. Davuidov. The German soldiers proceeded
-to stab this Davuidov with their bayonets before the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">148</span>
-very eyes of the girl X&mdash;&mdash;, and then they tore out
-hair from his head and finally shot him dead. This
-scene of murder gave the girl such a shock that she
-fainted. On coming to her senses she found herself
-in an apartment occupied by German officers. No
-sooner did she revive, than one of these officers committed
-a rape upon her and destroyed her virginity.
-During the following days she remained a captive
-in the same apartment, where she was forced to yield
-to the brutal lust of the officer who first violated her,
-and to the solicitations of two of his comrades, who
-threatened to cut her to pieces with their swords if
-she offered any resistance. These officers then told
-her “that the Germans had invented a new method
-of making war on the Russians, which would exterminate
-them by means of poisonous gas without the
-waste of any more bullets.”</p>
-
-<p>The girl was subsequently rescued by the Russian
-troops.</p>
-
-<p>A combined judicial and medical examination of
-the girl X&mdash;&mdash; on June 4th, established the fact that
-she had been deprived of her maidenhood and an
-inflammatory condition of the sexual organs was still
-plainly visible.</p>
-
-<h4>III. Murder of Wounded Soldiers.</h4>
-
-<p>On April 25th, 1915, when an infantry regiment
-retreated from the station of Krosno in Galicia, the
-unarmed wounded soldiers, who were unable to follow,
-and many of whom were crawling away on their
-hands and knees, were overtaken and stabbed to
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">149</span>
-death, or despatched by blows with the butt end
-of rifles by the Austro-Hungarian troops.</p>
-
-<p>The foregoing facts have been confirmed by the
-evidence of junior subaltern B&mdash;&mdash; of the regiment,
-Serge Yakovlev Sudarikov, aged thirty, who was
-interrogated as a witness by the Examining Magistrate
-of the 1st ward of Kharkov.</p>
-
-<h4>IV. Murder of Wounded Soldiers.</h4>
-
-<p>On May 12th, 1915, near the village of Bobrovka,
-forty versts from Yaroslav in Galicia, after the withdrawal
-of the “platoon sotnias” of dismounted cossacks
-from their trenches, the latter were occupied
-by German guardsmen, who drove out the Russian
-wounded at the point of the bayonet.</p>
-
-<p>Private Nikita Davidenko, who was one hundred
-paces from the trenches taken by the Germans, saw
-how they used their bayonets to thrust out four or
-five of his wounded comrades, whose groans were
-distinctly audible.</p>
-
-<p>When the Russian troops advanced on May 15th,
-Davidenko saw the bodies of many cossacks, who had
-been bayoneted or sabred to death in the trenches
-abandoned on May 12th.</p>
-
-<p>The above facts have been confirmed by the evidence
-of Davidenko, who was interrogated as a witness
-by the Examining Magistrate of the second ward
-of Kharkov.</p>
-
-<h4>V. Murder of Wounded Soldiers.</h4>
-
-<p>On the retirement of the Russians, after the battle
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">150</span>
-near Gumbinnen, in Eastern Prussia, August 7th,
-1914, a junior subaltern, named Alexander Lappo,
-aged twenty-six, who had been wounded in the back
-by a piece of an exploded shrapnel, was left behind,
-lying on the field.</p>
-
-<p>He soon perceived a group of about fifteen Germans,
-headed by an officer and a colour sergeant,
-following up their detachments, and shooting all the
-wounded Russians within reach as they marched
-along. There was no consideration for the fact that
-these Russians had been struck down at a considerable
-distance from the actual fighting, without having
-fired a shot. One of the Germans in this squad
-caught sight of Lappo and fired at him with his rifle.
-Lappo received the bullet in his left elbow. A second
-shot, fired by the same German soldier, hit a
-wounded Russian private Tartar, lying next to Lappo.
-The Tartar made one or two convulsive movements
-and expired. The pain from the wound in his elbow
-made Lappo moan rather loudly, and this attracted
-the attention of the German officer, who at once
-levelled his revolver and shot him in the neck. This
-second wound rendered Lappo unconscious and he
-only recovered his senses towards evening, when he
-was picked up by Russian Red Cross men. Lappo
-then noticed that his leather wrist band with a black
-watch, worth ten roubles, had been stolen, evidently
-by the Germans.</p>
-
-<p>It is not certain to what troops of the enemy’s
-forces this German officer and the men under his
-command belonged, but the German soldiers killed
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">151</span>
-in the battle near Stalupenen, on August 4th, 1914,
-in which Lappo took part, had the figures “41” on
-their shoulder straps.</p>
-
-<p>The above described facts have been verified and
-established by a combined judicial and medical examination,
-and by the evidence of Lappo, given under
-oath before the Examining Magistrate of the
-Circuit Court of Vitebsk, district of Gorodok.</p>
-
-<h4>VI. Burning the Russian Wounded.</h4>
-
-<h5><em>Evidence of the Private Nicholas Semenov Dorozhka</em></h5>
-
-<p>In the latter half of June the regiment in which
-this witness was one of the rank and file took part
-in a battle near Ivangorod. When the fighting was
-over, the regiment settled down to rest. Some of
-the men, however, went to help the sanitary attendants
-to bring in the wounded and place them in a
-wooden cart-house or shed, roofed with straw, at
-one end of the village. According to statements made
-by the Red Cross bearers, from sixty-six to sixty-eight
-men were lodged in this building. At eleven
-o’clock at night there was a sudden and violent rattle
-of rifle fire. The village had been surrounded
-by the Germans. The witness seized his rifle and
-started to leave with three comrades, but in the darkness
-they stumbled into a German trench, and were
-taken prisoners. Their weapons were taken from
-them, and all four Russians were led to the same
-cart-shed, to which the witness Dorozhka had assisted
-to carry the Russian wounded. A German officer
-on the spot gave an order to his German soldiers
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">152</span>
-and then he gathered up an armful of the straw,
-littered over the floor of the shed, placed it against
-one of the corners of the building, and set fire to it
-with a match. The witness declares, that he almost
-fainted when he saw this officer setting fire to the
-shed. The straw blazed up at once, the flames began
-to envelop the wooden walls, and when it reached
-the roof, piercing shrieks came from the wounded inmates,
-calling for help. At this moment the officer
-who fired the shed approached the prisoners, who
-were standing near, and without uttering a word,
-he discharged his revolver point blank at one of the
-comrades of the witness, who instantly fell to the
-ground dead. Then this officer struck witness’s other
-comrade with something in the lower part of the
-body, and by the light of the conflagration witness
-noticed that the man’s intestines were protruding.
-Dorozhka rushed to one side and managed to break
-away from a group of German soldiers and escaped
-unhurt, although three shots were fired after him.
-The witness, after tramping all night, fell in with
-one of the Russian pickets.</p>
-
-<p>The foregoing was deposed to by the witness
-Dorozhka on examination by the Examining Magistrate
-of the 1st Dnieprovsky District.</p>
-
-<h4>VII. Ill-Treatment of Prisoners of War.</h4>
-
-<p>In June, 1915, three Russian officers, Captain
-Kosmachevsky, Lieutenant Griaznov, and Sub-lieutenant
-Yarotsky, escaped from German captivity and
-reached Russia in safety.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">153</span></p>
-
-<p>They were made prisoners in East Prussia in August,
-1914. Together with other captured officers,
-they were driven on foot to the town of Neidenburg,
-and at one place on the way were made to serve
-as cover for a German battery, which was in danger
-of attack from Russian artillery fire.</p>
-
-<p>For this purpose the prisoners were put into two-wheeled
-carts and ordered to wave white flags and
-flags with the Red Cross, and these carts were placed
-in front of the battery. At the same time the prisoners
-were warned, that if only a single projectile
-fell into this German battery, they would all be shot
-for it.</p>
-
-<p>Four days these prisoners were on the march. At
-night they were compelled to sleep in the open in
-roadside ditches, although there were villages near
-by, and all that time they received no food, but only
-coffee, without sugar, milk or bread, served up in
-pails. Along the road the inhabitants and troops
-whom they met cursed and insulted them, tore off
-their shoulder straps, threatened them with their fists,
-spat at them and shouted “To Berlin!”</p>
-
-<p>Before the prisoners were put into the train they
-were searched, and in this way many of them lost
-their gold watches and money. The Cossack officers
-especially were subjected to very strict search, in
-the course of which they were stripped naked. These
-Cossack officers were separated from the others and
-sent off with the private soldier prisoners.</p>
-
-<p>In the first instance the officer prisoners were interned
-in the fortress of Neisse in Silesia, and were
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">154</span>
-subsequently removed to Kreisfeld, beyond the Rhine.</p>
-
-<p>The prisoners, according to their own account, were
-kept in horrible conditions. They were lodged in
-dirty barracks where the windows were shut fast
-and the glass of the panes covered with oil paint.
-It was forbidden to approach these windows under
-pain of being fired at by the sentries. This threat
-was once carried out, when an officer wished to make
-a drawing at one of the windows. Fortunately nobody
-was hurt. The imprisoned officers had to sleep
-in dirty beds full of bugs, lice, and other vermin.
-Their meagre fare was served up on dirty tables,
-littered with straw, whilst alongside were other tables,
-covered with clean tablecloths and decently furnished
-even to the extent of glasses for beer, and on
-these tables dinner was served for the sentries, German
-subalterns, who looked on at the prisoners and
-their wretched accommodation in the most insolent
-manner.</p>
-
-<p>All the imprisoned officers were formed into companies,
-commanded by rough and rude sergeant-majors,
-who treated them like common soldiers.</p>
-
-<p>In November, 1914, two of the officer prisoners attempted
-to escape by bribing the shopman at the
-stores of the officers’ canteen. This shopman, however,
-turned out to be a German officer in disguise,
-and the attempt failed, but it cost the officers concerned
-very dear. They were put in irons and kept
-in prison six months in a far worse state than in the
-barracks.</p>
-
-<p>The above is attested by the evidence of Captain
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">155</span>
-Kosmachevsky, Lieutenant Griaznov, and Sub-lieutenant
-Yarotsky, given to Major-General Semashko,
-a member of the Extraordinary Commission of Inquiry,
-and the deponents were admonished that they
-would be required to swear to the truth of their
-statements.</p>
-
-<h4>VIII.</h4>
-
-<p>Peter Shimchak, a peasant from the province of
-Warsaw, who fled from German captivity, being examined
-on oath, deposed to the following:&mdash;In August
-I was made prisoner while serving as a sailor
-on board a vessel under the British flag, going from
-Denmark to England.</p>
-
-<p>As a Russian subject I was not set free, but was
-placed in solitary confinement for seven days in
-a prison at Hamburg, and then sent to a camp for
-prisoners of war near Berlin, at Zel, where there
-were already many English, French, and Belgian
-prisoners. In that camp there was a small yard
-where offending prisoners were generally punished.
-On one occasion four Cossacks were brought into
-the camp. I recognised them by the yellow stripes
-down the sides of their trousers. They were taken
-out into the yard and placed about ten feet from
-the wall of the barrack, and through the crevices
-I was able to watch the proceedings. They took the
-first Cossack and placed his left hand on a small
-wooden post or block, and with a sword bayonet one
-of the German soldiers chopped off successively half
-of the Cossack’s thumb, half of his middle finger and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">156</span>
-half of his little finger. I could plainly see how
-these finger pieces flew off at each stroke of the
-sword-bayonet and fell to the ground. The Germans
-picked them up and put them into the pocket of the
-Cossack’s overcoat and then took him into a barrack,
-where there was a reservoir of running water.
-The second Cossack was brought up and had holes
-drilled through his ears, the point of the sword-bayonet
-being turned in the cut several times in
-order, evidently, to make the hole as large as possible.
-This Cossack was then led away to the barrack
-where the first one had been taken. When
-the third Cossack was brought to the place of torture
-his nose was chopped off by a downward stroke
-of a sword bayonet, but as the severed piece of nose
-was still hanging by a bit of skin, the Cossack made
-signs that they should cut it off completely. The Germans
-then gave him a pocket knife, and with this
-the Cossack cut off the hanging piece of his nose.
-Finally, the fourth Cossack was brought forward.
-What they intended to do with him it was impossible
-to say, but this Cossack with a rapid movement
-drew out the bayonet of the nearest soldier and
-dealt a blow with it at one of the Germans. There
-were about fifteen German soldiers present, and they
-all set upon this Cossack and bayoneted him to death,
-after which they dragged the body outside the camp.
-What was the fate of the remaining three Cossacks
-I do not know, but I think, says the witness Shimchak,
-in concluding his account of the case, they must have
-been also killed, for I never saw them again.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">157</span></p>
-
-<h4>IX.</h4>
-
-<p>Evidence of the senior surgeon of the 73rd Artillery
-Brigade, Gregory Dimitrovich Onisimov, who
-was captured by the enemy on August 30th, 1914,
-near “Malvishek” in East Prussia, but has since been
-released. The most striking and characteristic part
-of this ex-prisoner’s testimony is a description of the
-insulting treatment received by Russian prisoners
-from the soldiers of their German escort on the road
-to Insterburg. “The peaceful temper of our German
-convoy did not last long. We soon began to
-meet detachments of German troops, who swore and
-shook their fists and levelled their rifles and revolvers
-at us, shouting, ‘Why lead these men about when
-they can be settled here on the spot?’ This kind
-of remark was shouted at us in German, Polish, and
-broken Russian. The peaceful inhabitants also reviled
-us, and called upon the soldiers to despatch
-us there and then. They shouted ‘nach Berlin&mdash;to
-Berlin with them! ... to Welhau! ... Russischer
-schweinhund&mdash;Russian swine,’ and so forth. The
-soldiers of the escort were taken into houses on the
-road and made drunk, so that they also began to
-amuse themselves at our expense. The German soldier
-walking on my right took his rifle from his shoulder,
-as if tired, and held it in such a way that the
-muzzle touched my right temple, and then he played
-carelessly with the lock of it, as though unaware of
-what he was doing. When I moved out of the way,
-he said: ‘Ah! you’re afraid of losing your head,
-there’s no danger.’ As soon as the guard on one
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">158</span>
-side had had his little joke, his comrade on the other
-side began. Another soldier on a cart came along
-purposely handling his rifle so as to stick the muzzle
-into my chest, and when I warded it off he roared
-with laughter and seemed highly delighted. When
-going down a steep part of the road the driver of
-a cart behind intentionally drove into us and struck
-me on the legs with the shafts. I shouted to him
-to stop and not break my legs. He simply replied:
-‘Bad to have no legs.’ This kind of thing went on
-throughout the march. Sometimes we were driven
-forward like horses, and the wounded men in the
-carts were so shaken about that they groaned with
-pain. The guards did not allow us to turn round
-to speak with them, and no attention was paid to
-our entreaties to drive them slowly.”</p>
-
-<p class="author">
-<span class="smcap">Alexis Krivtsov</span>, Senator,<br />
-President of the Extraordinary<br />
-Commission of Inquiry.</p>
-
-<h3 id="THE_GERMAN_WHITE_BOOK">VII<br />
-
-THE GERMAN WHITE BOOK</h3>
-
-<h4>The Introductory Memorandum.</h4>
-
-<p>Immediately after the outbreak of the present war
-there arose in Belgium a violent struggle by the people
-against the German troops which forms a flagrant
-violation of international law and has had the most
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">159</span>
-serious consequences to the Belgian country and
-people.</p>
-
-<p>This struggle of a population which was under
-the dominion of the wildest passions continued to
-rage throughout the whole of the advance of the
-German army through Belgium. As the Belgian
-army fell back before the German troops after obstinately
-contested engagements, the Belgian civil
-population attempted by every means to impede the
-German advance in those parts of the country which
-were not yet occupied; but they did not scruple to
-injure and weaken the German forces by cowardly
-and treacherous attacks, also in places which had
-long been occupied by the German troops. The extent
-of this armed popular resistance can be seen
-from the attached general plan (Appendix 1) on
-which were marked the lines of the German advance,
-and the Belgian places in which the popular struggle
-chiefly raged. We have an overwhelming amount
-of material resting on official sources, especially on
-evidence given under oath and official reports, that
-on these routes and in these places the Belgian civil
-population of every rank, age, and sex took part
-in the struggle against the German troops with the
-greatest bitterness and fury. In the Appendices is
-given a selection from this material which, however,
-embraces only the more important events and
-can at any time be increased by further documents.</p>
-
-<p>According to the attached material the Belgian
-civil population fought against the German troops
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">160</span>
-in numerous places in the provinces of Li&egrave;ge (Appendices
-2-10), Luxembourg (Appendices 11-30),
-Namur (Appendices 12, 17, 31-42), Henegau (Appendices
-3, 7, 10, 40, 43-46, 49), Brabant (Appendices
-47-49), East and West Flanders (Appendices
-49, 50). The conflicts in Aerschot, Andenne, Dinant,
-Louvain assumed a particularly frightful character,
-and special reports have been provided on them by
-the Bureau which has been appointed in the Ministry
-of War for investigation of offences against
-the laws of war (Appendices A, B, C, D). Men of
-the most different positions, workmen, manufacturers,
-doctors, teachers, even clergy, and even women
-and children were seized with weapons in their hands
-(Appendices 18, 20, 25, 27, 43, 47; A 5; C 18, 26, 29,
-31, 41, 42-44, 56, 62; D 1, 19, 34, 37, 38, 41, 45, 48).
-In districts from which the Belgian regular troops
-had long retired, the German troops were fired on
-from houses and gardens, from roofs and cellars,
-from fields and woods. Methods were used in the
-struggle which certainly would not have been employed
-by regular troops, and large numbers of sporting
-weapons and sporting ammunition and some old-fashioned
-revolvers and pistols were discovered (Appendices
-6, 11, 13, 26, 36, 37, 44, 48, 49; A 2, C 52,
-81; D 1, 2, 6, 20, 37). Corresponding with this were
-numerous cases of wounds by shot and also by burns
-from hot tar and boiling water (Appendices 3, 10;
-B 2; C 5, 11, 28, 57; D 25, 29). According to all this
-evidence there can be no doubt that in Belgium the
-People’s War (<em lang="de" xml:lang="de">Volkskrieg</em>) was carried on not only
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">161</span>
-by individual civilians, but by great masses of the
-population.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The conduct of the war by the Belgian civil population
-was completely irreconcilable with the generally
-recognised rules of international law as they
-have found expression in Articles 1 and 2 of The
-Hague Convention: The Laws and Customs of War
-on Land, which had been accepted by Belgium.
-These regulations distinguished between organised
-and unorganised People’s War. In an organised
-People’s War (Article 1), in order that they may
-be recognised as belligerents, the militia and volunteer
-corps must satisfy each of the following conditions:
-They must have responsible leaders at their
-head; they must bear a definite badge which is recognisable
-at a distance; they must bear their weapons
-openly; and they must obey the laws and usages
-of war. The unorganised People’s War (Article 2)
-can dispense with the first two conditions, that is,
-responsible leaders and military badges. It is, however,
-bound instead by two other conditions; it can
-only be carried on in that part of the territory which
-has not yet been occupied by the enemy, and there
-must have been no time for the organisation of the
-People’s War.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The two special conditions required for the organised
-People’s War were certainly not present in
-the case of the Belgian <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">francs-tireurs</em>. For, according
-to the reports of the German military commands,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">162</span>
-which agree with one another, the civil persons who
-were found taking part in the struggle had no responsible
-leaders at their head, and also wore no
-kind of military badge (Appendices 6, 49; C 4-7, 14,
-15, 22, 24, 25, 31; D). The Belgian <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">francs-tireurs</em>
-can therefore not be regarded as organised militia
-or volunteers according to the laws of war. It makes
-no difference in this, that apparently Belgian military
-and members of the Belgian “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Garde Civique</span>”
-also took part in their enterprises; for as these individuals
-also did not wear any military badge but
-mingled among the fighting citizens in civilian dress
-(Appendices 6; A 3; C 25; D 1, 30, 45, 46), the
-rights of belligerents can just as little be conceded
-to them.</p>
-
-<p>The whole of the Belgian People’s War must
-therefore be judged from the point of view of an
-unorganised armed resistance of the civil population.
-As such resistance is only allowed in unoccupied
-territory, it was for this reason alone, without
-any doubt, contrary to international law in all
-those places which were already in occupation of
-German troops, and particularly at Aerschot, Andenne,
-and Louvain. But the unorganised People’s
-War was also impermissible in those places which
-had not yet been occupied by German troops, and
-particularly in Dinant and the neighbourhood, as
-the Belgian Government had sufficient time for an
-organisation of the People’s War as required by international
-law. For years the Belgian Government
-has had under consideration that at the outbreak
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">163</span>
-of a Franco-German war it would be involved in the
-operations; the preparation of mobilisation began, as
-can be proved, at least a week before the invasion of
-the German army. The Government was therefore
-completely in a position to provide the civil population
-with military badges and appoint responsible
-leaders, so far as they wished to use their services
-in any fighting which might take place. If the Belgian
-Government in a communication which has been
-communicated to the German Government through
-a neutral Power, maintain that they took suitable
-measures, this only proves that they could have satisfied
-the conditions which had been laid down; in
-any case, however, such steps were not taken in those
-districts through which the German troops passed.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The requirements of international law for an unorganised
-People’s War were then not complied with
-in Belgium; moreover, this war was carried on in
-a manner which alone would have been sufficient to
-have put those who took part in it outside the laws
-of war. For the Belgian <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">francs-tireurs</em> regularly carried
-their weapons not openly, and throughout failed
-to observe the laws and usages of war.</p>
-
-<p>It has been shown by unanswerable evidence that
-in a whole series of cases the German troops were
-on their arrival received by the Belgian civil population
-in an apparently friendly manner, and then,
-when darkness came on or some other opportunity
-presented itself, were attacked with arms; such cases
-occurred especially in Blegny, Esneux, Grand Ros&egrave;re,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">164</span>
-Bi&egrave;vre, Gouvy, Villers devant Orval, Sainte Marie,
-Les Bulles, Yschippe, Acoz, Aerschot, Andenne, and
-Louvain (Appendices 3, 8, 11-13, 18, 22, 28, 31, 43;
-A, B, D). All these attacks obviously offended
-against the precept of international law that arms
-should be borne openly.</p>
-
-<p>What, however, is the chief accusation against the
-Belgian population is the unheard-of violation of the
-usages of war. In different places, for instance, at
-Li&eacute;ge, Herve, Brussels, at Aerschot, Dinant, and
-Louvain, German soldiers were treacherously murdered
-(Appendices 18, 55, 61, 65, 66; A 1; C 56, 59,
-61, 67, 73-78), which is contrary to the prohibition
-“to kill or treacherously wound individuals belonging
-to the hostile nation or army.” (Article 23,
-Section 1 (<em>b</em>) of The Hague Convention: The Laws
-and Customs of War on Land.) Further, the Belgian
-population did not respect the sign of the Red
-Cross, and thereby violated Article 9 of the Convention
-of Geneva of July 6th, 1906. In particular, they
-did not scruple to fire on German troops under the
-cover of this sign, and also to attack hospitals in
-which there were wounded, as well as members of
-the Ambulance Corps, while they were occupied in
-carrying out their duties (Appendices 3, 4, 12, 19,
-23, 28, 29, 41, 49; C 9, 16-18, 32, 56, 66-70; D 9, 21,
-25-29, 38, 47). Finally, it is proved beyond all doubt
-that German wounded were robbed and killed by the
-Belgian population, and indeed were subjected to
-horrible mutilation, and that even women and young
-girls took part in these shameful actions. In this
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">165</span>
-way the eyes of German wounded were torn out,
-their ears, nose, fingers, and sexual organs were cut
-off, or their body cut open (Appendices 54-66; C 73,
-78; D 35, 37). In other cases German soldiers were
-poisoned, hung on trees, deluged with burning liquid,
-or burnt in other ways, so that they suffered a specially
-painful death (Appendices 50, 55, 63; C 56,
-59, 61, 67, 74-78). This bestial behaviour of the population
-is not only in open contravention of the express
-obligation for “respecting and taking care of”
-the sick and wounded of the hostile army (Article
-1, Section 1, of the Convention of Geneva), but also
-of the first principles of the laws of war and humanity.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Under these circumstances, the Belgian civil population
-who took part in the struggle could of course
-make no claim to the treatment to which belligerents
-have a right. On the contrary, it was absolutely
-necessary, in the interests of the self-preservation of
-the German Army, to have recourse to the sharpest
-measures against these <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">francs-tireurs</em>. Individuals
-who opposed the German troops by fighting had,
-therefore, to be cut down; prisoners could not be
-treated as prisoners of war according to the laws
-of war, but according to the usage of war as murderers.
-All the same, the forms of judicial procedure
-were maintained so far as the necessities of
-war did not stand in the way; the prisoners were,
-so far as the circumstances permitted, not shot till
-after a hearing in accordance with regulations, or
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">166</span>
-after sentence by a military court. (Appendices
-48, D 19, 20, 37, 40, 41, 43, 44, 48.) Old men, women
-and children were spared to the widest extent, even
-when there were urgent grounds of suspicion (Appendices
-49; C 5, 6, 25, 26, 28, 31, 35, 41, 47, 79);
-indeed, the German soldiers often looked after such
-persons so far as was in any way possible in the most
-self-sacrificing manner by taking helpless people who
-were in danger under their protection, sharing their
-bread with them and taking charge of the weak and
-sick, although their patience had been subjected
-to an extraordinary difficult test by the treacherous
-attacks (Appendices C 45, 47, 51-53, 55, 58,
-80-86).</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>There can be no doubt that the Belgian Government
-was essentially to blame for the illegal attitude
-of their population towards the German Army.
-For apart from the fact that a Government has,
-under all circumstances, to bear the responsibility
-for deeds of this kind which give a general expression
-of the popular will, the serious charge must at
-least be made against them that they did not stop
-this guerilla war, although they could have done
-so (Appendices 33, 51-53; D 42, 43, 48). It would
-certainly have been easy for them to provide their
-officials, such as the Burgomasters, the soldiers, members
-of the “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Guarde Civique,</span>” with the necessary
-instructions to check the violent excitement of the
-people which had been artificially aroused. Full responsibility,
-therefore, for the terrible blood-guiltiness
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">167</span>
-which rests upon Belgian attach&eacute;s to the Belgian
-Government.</p>
-
-<p>The Belgian Government has made an attempt to
-free itself from this responsibility by attributing the
-blame for the events to the rage of destruction of
-the German troops, who are said to have taken to
-deeds of violence without any reason. They have
-appointed a Commission for investigating the outrages
-attributed to the German troops, and have
-made the findings of this Commission the subject of
-Diplomatic complaint. This attempt to pervert the
-facts into their opposite has completely failed. The
-German Army is accustomed to make war only
-against hostile armies, and not against peaceful inhabitants.
-The incontrovertible fact that from the
-beginning a defensive struggle in the interests of
-self-protection was forced upon the German troops
-in Belgium by the population of the country cannot
-be done away with by the inquiry of any commission.</p>
-
-<p>The narratives of fugitives which have been put
-together by the Belgian Commission, and which are
-characterised as the result of careful and impartial
-investigation, bear the stamp of untrustworthiness,
-if not of malicious invention. In consequence of the
-conditions of things, the Commission was not in a
-position to test the reports which were conveyed to
-it as to their correctness or to grasp the connection
-of events. Their accusations against the German
-Army are, therefore, nothing but low calumniations,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">168</span>
-which are simply deprived of all their weight by
-the documentary evidence which is before us.</p>
-
-<p>The struggle of the German troops with the Belgian
-civil population at Aerschot did not, as is suggested
-on the Belgian side, arise through the German
-officers violating the honour of the Burgomaster’s
-family, but because the population ventured
-on a well-considered attack on the Commanding Officer,
-and murdered him treacherously (Appendix A).
-At Dinant it was not harmless, peaceful citizens who
-fell as a sacrifice to the German arms, but murderers
-who treacherously attacked German soldiers,
-and thereby involved the troops in a struggle which
-destroyed the city (Appendix C). In Louvain the
-struggle of the civil population did not arise through
-fleeing German troops being by mistake involved in
-a hand-to-hand contest with their comrades who were
-entering the town, but because the population, blinded
-as they were and unable to understand what was
-going on, thought they could destroy the returning
-German troops without danger (Appendix D).
-Moreover, in Louvain, as in other towns, the conflagration
-was only started by the German troops
-when bitter necessity required it. The plan of the
-destruction of Louvain (Appendix D 50) shows
-clearly how the troops confined themselves to destroying
-only those parts of the city in which the
-inhabitants opposed them in a treacherous and murderous
-manner. It was indeed German troops who,
-so far as was possible, tried to save the artistic treasures,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">169</span>
-not only of Louvain, but also of other towns.
-On the German side, a Special Commission has shown
-to what a high degree works of art in Belgium were
-protected by the German troops.</p>
-
-<p>The Imperial German Government believes that
-by the publication of the material contained in this
-work, they have shown that the action of the German
-troops against the Belgian civil population was
-provoked by the illegal guerilla war, and was required
-by the necessity of war. For their part,
-they expressly and solemnly protest against a population
-which has, with the most despicable means,
-waged a dishonourable war against the German soldiers,
-and still more against the Government which,
-in complete perversion of their duties, has given rein
-to the senseless passions of the population, and even
-now does not scruple to free itself from its own
-heavy guilt by mendacious libels against the German
-Army.</p>
-
-<p>Berlin, <em>May 10th, 1915</em>.</p>
-
-<h3 id="DEPOSITIONS_RELATING_TO_THE_MASSACRE_OF_WOUNDED_AND_CAPTIVE">VIII<br />
-
-MASSACRE OF BRITISH PRISONERS BY GERMAN SOLDIERS
-AT HAISNES ON SEPTEMBER 25TH, 1915</h3>
-
-<p>I, Captain J. E. A&mdash;&mdash;, 8th Batt. &mdash;&mdash; Highlanders,
-make oath and say as follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>(1) I command C Co. of the 8th Batt. &mdash;&mdash; Highlanders.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">170</span>
-My company took part in the attack on
-September 25th, 1915. Between 5 and 6 p.m. on that
-day we were attacked and compelled to retire from
-an advanced position about Haisnes. We moved into
-Pekin Trench, and later to Fosse Alley. The battalion
-commenced to reorganise there.</p>
-
-<p>(2) Just before 8 p.m. 2nd Lieut. G. T. G&mdash;&mdash;,
-of my battalion, reported to me that Sergeant D.
-M&mdash;&mdash;, who had been attached to my company for
-the day, had just returned in an exhausted condition,
-and that he reported that the Germans had
-collected our wounded and prisoners and bombed
-them.</p>
-
-<p>Instructed Lieut. G&mdash;&mdash; to bring Sergeant M&mdash;&mdash;
-to me at once. This was done. 2nd Lieut. G. T.
-G&mdash;&mdash; has since died of wounds.</p>
-
-<p>(3) Sergeant M&mdash;&mdash; reported to me that he and
-a party of men had been collected in a traverse by
-the Germans and bombed from both sides, that he
-and a Highlander had jumped out of the traverse,
-and that he had escaped into a shell hole, whilst the
-Highlander had been shot.</p>
-
-<p>The Sergeant, D. M&mdash;&mdash;, was very exhausted and
-covered with mud and water up to the neck. He
-was not in an excited condition.</p>
-
-<p>He carried on with his duties reorganising the
-company.</p>
-
-<p>(4) The story as told to me by Sergeant M&mdash;&mdash;
-at that time has been adhered to by him ever since
-without any material alteration.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">171</span></p>
-
-<p>This Sergeant is a most reliable man in every way.</p>
-
-<p class="author">
-(Signature of Deponent) J. E. A&mdash;&mdash;,<br />
-Captain.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Sworn at Poperinghe in Belgium on active service
-this first day of October, 1915.</p>
-
-<p class="i2">
-<span class="i2">Before me,</span><br />
-<span class="i4">A. M. H. S&mdash;&mdash;, Captain,</span><br />
-<span class="i6">D.A.A.G., 1st Army,</span><br />
-<span class="i8">Commissioner for Oaths.</span></p>
-
-<p>I, No. 6546, Sergeant D. M&mdash;&mdash;, of D Co., 8th
----- Highlanders, make oath and say as follows:</p>
-
-<p>(1) On September 25th, 1915, I was attached to
-C Co., 8th &mdash;&mdash; Highanders. I took part in the
-attack on Haisnes on that day.</p>
-
-<p>About 5 p.m. the part of this company commanded
-by Lieut. A&mdash;&mdash; with which I was in trenches just
-west of Haisnes, and was going to retire.</p>
-
-<p>Lieut. A&mdash;&mdash; ordered me to collect stragglers from
-Pekin Trench.</p>
-
-<p>(2) I went 400-500 yards along Pekin Trench and
-found about twenty wounded men of various regiments,
-all Scottish, whose names I did not know.</p>
-
-<p>I left these men sitting down and went about 100
-yards further on and found about twenty men of
-the &mdash;&mdash; Highlanders, about ten of whom were
-wounded.</p>
-
-<p>(3) It was now 5.15 p.m., and I could see that
-the Germans had cut me and all these men off from
-our own troops. I took the men of the &mdash;&mdash; Highlanders
-back to where the others were. I now had
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">172</span>
-about forty men with me. For the sake of the
-wounded men we decided to surrender.</p>
-
-<p>(4) We all took off our rifles and equipment and
-put them on top of the parapet.</p>
-
-<p>I stood on top of the parapet and held up my
-hands.</p>
-
-<p>A large party of Germans then advanced both in
-the open and by the trenches towards us.</p>
-
-<p>When they drew near I said, “We surrender.”
-One German, speaking English, said, “All right.
-Come along this way, every one.” We all followed
-him up Pekin Trench towards the north, helping the
-wounded along, and leaving our rifles and equipment
-behind. It now began to pour in torrents of rain.</p>
-
-<p>(5) The German who spoke English was dressed
-in dark khaki and wearing a cape down to his thighs.
-He had khaki trousers with a thin red stripe and
-long black boots. He wore a helmet with a dark
-khaki cover on it. He had no badges showing. His
-cape blew open and I saw a figure 6 in red on his
-shoulder and, I think but am not sure, a figure 2 in
-part of it, making 26.</p>
-
-<p>All these Germans were big men and were dressed
-alike, quite clean and fresh as though they had only
-just come into the trenches. I did not notice anyone
-in command of them.</p>
-
-<p>Their manner was not threatening.</p>
-
-<p>(6) About thirty of these Germans led us into a
-circular traverse in Pekin Trench, and the English-speaking
-German said, “Pack in there and stay.”
-All the Germans then went out of sight. The
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">173</span>
-wounded men sat on the fire-step and the unwounded
-remained standing. It was now about 5.30 p.m.</p>
-
-<p>(7) After we had been there about two minutes a
-bomb was thrown into the traverse where we were,
-one bomb from one side and one from the other.</p>
-
-<p>I shouted to the men to clear out if possible. Only
-one man and myself jumped over the parapet. I
-seized an English rifle lying on the parapet and fired
-down the trench. I then jumped into a shell hole
-about 15 yards from the traverse. It was almost full
-of water, in which I stood up to my neck. The other
-man was shot.</p>
-
-<p>I heard the Germans bombing this circular traverse
-continuously for about fifteen minutes. At first the
-men I left were crying out, but after about ten minutes
-this ceased.</p>
-
-<p>(8) I was over an hour in the shell hole, and left
-it after dark.</p>
-
-<p>2nd Lieut. G. T. G&mdash;&mdash;, of D Co., 8th &mdash;&mdash; Highlanders,
-was the first person to whom I told my experiences.
-This was at about 7.45 p.m.</p>
-
-<p>(9) The second person to whom I told them was
-Capt. J. E. A&mdash;&mdash;, also of the 8th &mdash;&mdash;, whom I saw
-at about 8 p.m. the same evening.</p>
-
-<p class="author">
-(Signature of deponent) D. M&mdash;&mdash;, Sergeant.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Sworn at Poperinghe in Belgium on active service
-this first day of October, 1915.</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="i2">Before me,</span><br />
-<span class="i4">G. M. H. S&mdash;&mdash;, Captain,</span><br />
-<span class="i6">D.A.A.G., 1st Army,</span><br />
-<span class="i8">Commissioner for Oaths.</span><br />
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">174</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="DEPOSITIONS_AS_TO_THE_USE_OF_INCENDIARY_BULLETS">IX<br />
-
-REPORTS RELATIVE TO THE USE OF INCENDIARY BULLETS
-BY GERMAN TROOPS<a id="FNanchor_96" href="#Footnote_96" class="fnanchor">96</a></h3>
-
-<p>
-To:<br />
-<span class="i2">The Commanding Officer,</span><br />
-<span class="i4">2nd Batt. The &mdash;&mdash; Regiment.</span><br />
-From:<br />
-<span class="i2">2nd Lieut. L. E. S&mdash;&mdash;,</span><br />
-<span class="i4">B Co., 2nd &mdash;&mdash; Regiment.</span></p>
-
-<p class="author">18/6/1915.</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smcap">Use of Incendiary Bullets by the Enemy</span></h4>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Sir</span>,&mdash;I have the honour to report as follows:</p>
-
-<p>During the action on 15th to 16th instant my platoon
-occupied the right of the old German trench
-running from &mdash;&mdash; to &mdash;&mdash; between 7.30 p.m. and
-10.30 p.m., 15th instant. Seventy-five yards to my
-front I saw six or seven men lying down in the grass.
-One of them attracted my attention immediately as
-he appeared to be smoking or to have lit a small
-fire. I observed him carefully and saw that his
-clothes were smouldering. Later on they were entirely
-charred black: he did not move and was apparently
-dead. The enemy were sniping at these
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">175</span>
-men, unquestionably using incendiary bullets, as I
-saw three or four of these strike the ground and set
-the grass around on fire. The flames could be seen
-distinctly.</p>
-
-<p>About 9 p.m. one of these bullets struck the bottom
-of the parapet of the trench, and burned with
-a brilliant white flare for about fifteen seconds, at
-the same time giving off heavy phosphorus fumes and
-burning the sand-bags which it had struck.</p>
-
-<p class="author">
-I have the honour to be,<br />
-Sir,<br />
-Your obedient servant,<br />
-(Signed) L. E. S&mdash;&mdash;,<br />
-2nd Lieut.</p>
-
-<p>The following statements were made by N.C.O.’s
-of the 2nd Batt. &mdash;&mdash; Regiment and 2nd Batt. &mdash;&mdash;
-Regiment (7th Division), relative to the alleged use
-by the enemy on June 15th, 1915, of incendiary
-bullets:</p>
-
-<p>C.S.M. G. M&mdash;&mdash;, C Co., 2nd Batt. &mdash;&mdash; Regiment,
-states:</p>
-
-<p>On the night of the 15th and 16th I saw German
-rifle bullets cause a flash as they struck the ground.
-The flash seemed to rise about 2 feet from the ground.
-My attention was called to this by an Officer of the
-3rd Co. (?) Grenadier Guards. The Guards were
-on my left and I was near &mdash;&mdash;. It was some time
-between 11 p.m. and 12 midnight.</p>
-
-<p class="author">
-(Signed) G. M&mdash;&mdash;,<br />
-C.S.M.,<br />
-C Co., 2nd &mdash;&mdash;.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">176</span></p>
-
-<p>Sergeant N&mdash;&mdash;, B Co., 2nd &mdash;&mdash; Regiment, states:</p>
-
-<p>Just before dusk on the evening of the 15th I was
-in the disused German trench &mdash;&mdash;, and saw a man
-fall in front of the trench hit by a bullet. As he
-lay on the ground he seemed to be on fire in the
-right shoulder and breast, and was clawing the
-ground in agony. (The grass, which was green, was
-set on fire round him.) He was not more than 100
-yards from me&mdash;hardly that. I could not do anything
-for him as the Germans had been following me
-and were almost on top of me, and I was nearly alone
-at the time.</p>
-
-<p>Very shortly afterwards I saw another man (a
-Lance-Corpl. in the &mdash;&mdash; I think), run out apparently
-to fetch in the first man. He slewed off, and
-must have seen the Germans, who were then crawling
-through the grass. He fell, seemingly hit in
-the stomach, and whilst rolling about on his back, his
-right knee and his puttees down to his boot caught
-fire. I think he must have been hit in the knee. He
-too seemed to be in agony, and the grass caught
-fire round him also. I could not swear that his second
-wound was not caused by a bomb, though I
-did not see any bomb burst there.</p>
-
-<p class="author">
-(Signed) E. H. M. N&mdash;&mdash;,<br />
-Sergeant.</p>
-
-<p>Corporal D&mdash;&mdash;, B Co., 2nd Batt. &mdash;&mdash; Regiment,
-states:</p>
-
-<p>Shortly after the bombardment on the evening of
-the 15th instant, I was just on the left of the crater
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">177</span>
-(near &mdash;&mdash;)&mdash;about 30 yards from the crater&mdash;and
-saw a man on fire in the grass in front of and below
-me. Another man ran out of a disused trench
-towards the first man, when he appeared to be hit
-in the chest. He fell forward on his chest, and
-as he did so flames spurted out of his chest. As he
-lay on the ground he was burning all over, and the
-cartridges in his bandolier went off. He burned
-for about an hour and the grass was set on fire.
-Both men were rather less than 100 yards from me.
-I called the attention of my Officer Mr. L. J&mdash;&mdash;
-(subsequently wounded) to the second man. I am
-quite sure the second man was hit by a bullet, not
-a bomb.</p>
-
-<p class="author">
-(Signed) J. W. D&mdash;&mdash;,<br />
-Corporal.</p>
-
-<h3 id="DEPOSITIONS_AS_TO_THE_EMPLOYMENT_BY_GERMAN_TROOPS">X</h3>
-
-<p class="hang">DEPOSITIONS RELATIVE TO THE EMPLOYMENT BY THE
-GERMAN TROOPS OF RUSSIAN PRISONERS ON THE
-WESTERN FRONT<a id="FNanchor_97" href="#Footnote_97" class="fnanchor">97</a></p>
-
-<p class="hang large">(<em>a</em>) Statement of a German Prisoner (Translation)
-Captured in Northern France.</p>
-
-<p>I, the undersigned Stephan Grzegoroski, a recruit
-in the 6th Co. (5th Section) 2nd Batt. No. 143 Infantry
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">178</span>
-Regiment, XV. German Army Corps, hereby
-declare on oath that in the course of the month of
-October, I have frequently seen Russian prisoners
-of war in Russian uniform employed upon the construction
-of the third line trenches of my regiment.</p>
-
-<p>There were some 150 to 200 Russians altogether
-so employed. During the course of their work they
-occasionally came under fire. Two were killed and
-four wounded. Seven Russians tried to escape&mdash;two
-succeeded: one was shot dead, and four were retaken.</p>
-
-<p>The men were guarded by soldiers of my regiment.</p>
-
-<p>I spoke personally with some of the Russian prisoners,
-and they complained that they had much work
-to do, but only very little to eat.</p>
-
-<p class="hang large">(<em>b</em>) Statement of Two Russian Soldiers (Translation)
-taken down in November, 1915, at British
-Headquarters in France.</p>
-
-<p>Michael Klokoff, Russian soldier, private in the
-Novo Skolsky Regiment; taken prisoner by the Germans
-on the Bzura on December 26th, 1914 / January
-8th, 1915; and Andrei Slizkin, Russian soldier, private
-in the 41st Siberian Regiment, taken prisoner
-by the Germans near Prasnysz on January 29th/February
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">179</span>
-11th, 1915, <em>declare that</em>: we were interned as
-prisoners of war at Strzalkowo until October
-7th/20th, 1915. We then came with 2,000 other
-Russian prisoners to Belgium. Some of the prisoners
-were taken to build railways; others, among them
-ourselves, were employed to dig trenches. During
-our work we came under shell fire and sustained
-casualties.</p>
-
-<p>We escaped on October 31st, and reached the British
-lines on November 2nd. We were promised pay,
-but did not receive any.</p>
-
-<p class="hang large">(<em>c</em>) Statement of Two Russian Soldiers (Translation)
-taken down in December 1915, at British
-Headquarters in Northern France.</p>
-
-<p>Anastasius Nietzvetznie, 231 Dragoon (Infantry)
-Regiment, and Nicholas Nevaskov, 210 Infantry Regiment,
-<em>declare</em>: When we were prisoners with the Germans
-we worked at digging trenches. Each day we
-were under English artillery fire. We received 30
-pfennigs per day, and we worked against our will.
-When we refused to work, we got twenty-five strokes
-with an iron rod, and were tied up with our hands
-behind our backs in a cold room with windows open
-and nothing to eat.</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="i2">(Signed) <span class="smcap">Anastasius Nietzvetznie</span>,<a href="#Footnote_98" class="fnanchor">98</a></span><br />
-<span class="i8">231 Dragoon Regiment.</span><br />
-<span class="i2">(Signed) <span class="smcap">Nicholas Mikhailovitch Nevaskov</span>,<a id="FNanchor_98" href="#Footnote_98" class="fnanchor">98</a></span><br />
-<span class="i8">210 Infantry Regiment.</span><br />
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">180</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">181</span></p>
-
-<p class="ph1" id="A_REVIEW_OF"><span class="x-large">A REVIEW OF</span><br />
-
-GERMAN ATROCITIES<br />
-
-<span class="medium">BY</span><br />
-
-<span class="large">THE RT. HON. VISCOUNT BRYCE</span><br />
-
-<span class="copyright">Published in <cite>The Westminster Gazette</cite>, London,<br />
-March 20, 1916</span>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">182</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">183</span></p>
-
-<h3>A FRESH EXAMINATION OF GERMAN WAR
-METHODS<a id="FNanchor_99" href="#Footnote_99" class="fnanchor">99</a></h3>
-
-<p>Professor Morgan, whose bright little book, called
-“Sketches From the Front,” has given to us some
-of the most fresh and vivid pictures of the actualities
-of warfare in France, presents in the present volume
-the evidence he has been busy in collecting regarding
-the behaviour of the German troops in the
-western theatre of war. Some of this has already been
-made known to the public by what he published in the
-<cite>Nineteenth Century and After</cite> in June, 1915, and also
-by the depositions which he obtained under the instructions
-of the Home Office and submitted to the
-British Committee on Alleged German Outrages.
-(Many of these were published in the Appendix to
-their Report last May.) Since that time he has spent
-four or five months in collecting further important
-data and still more months in collating the results of
-the facts he has collected, having been granted by the
-British Headquarters Staff in France those facilities
-for moving to and fro along the front and getting
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">184</span>
-into touch with eye-witnesses which were essential for
-arriving directly at the facts. The evidence thus obtained
-is supplemented by several diaries of German
-soldiers never before published in England, and by
-some extracts from documents issued by the Russian
-Government describing cruelties committed by the
-Germans in the fighting on the Eastern front. As
-respects the data he has himself collected, Professor
-Morgan explains, in his introduction, the methods he
-has followed in taking evidence and testing its value,
-showing himself sensible, as a lawyer ought to be, of
-the need for care and caution in such a matter. The
-large experience which his months of work at the front
-have given him adds weight to his assurance that
-what he submits is worthy of all credence as well as
-to the conclusions at which he has arrived. But before
-adverting to these conclusions a preliminary question
-deserves to be considered.</p>
-
-<p>It has been asked&mdash;and it is natural that it should
-he asked&mdash;“What is the use of multiplying tales of
-horror?” “Why do anything that can aggravate the
-bitterness of feeling, already lamentably acute, between
-the belligerent nations? All war is horrible;
-why add fresh items to the list of offences which are
-making us think worse of human nature than we
-supposed two years ago we ever could think?”</p>
-
-<p>These questions need an answer. Such a painful
-record as the present book contains, such a record as
-can be found in the reports already officially published
-by the Belgian, French, and British Governments,
-might, perhaps, have been better left unpublished
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">185</span>
-if it did not serve some definite tangible aim,
-looking to some permanent good for mankind.</p>
-
-<p>Now such a definite, tangible, practical aim does
-exist, and seems to justify, and, indeed, to require, the
-publication of the facts contained in this book and
-also in the reports which have been published by the
-Belgian, French, and British Governments. It is an
-aim which can be stated quite shortly; and the need
-for pursuing it is shown by what has happened during
-the last twenty months.</p>
-
-<p>In most parts of the ancient world, and among the
-semi-civilised peoples of Asia till very recent times,
-wars were waged against combatants and non-combatants
-alike. Even in the European Middle Ages
-indiscriminate slaughter of combatants and non-combatants
-alike sometimes occurred, especially where, as
-in the case of the Albigenses, religious passion intensified
-hatred. As late as the sixteenth and seventeenth
-centuries there were campaigns in which frightful
-license was allowed to soldiery, private property was
-pillaged or ruthlessly destroyed, and women were
-habitually outraged.</p>
-
-<p>A reaction of sentiment caused by the horror of the
-Thirty Years’ War, coupled with a general softening
-of manners, brought about a change. During the last
-two centuries, though every war was marked by shocking
-incidents, there was a growing feeling that non-combatants
-should be protected, and a serious purpose
-to restrain the excesses of troops invading a hostile
-country. The wars of the eighteenth century were
-less cruel and destructive than those of the seventeenth,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">186</span>
-and the wars of the nineteenth showed some
-improvement on those of the eighteenth. The war of
-1870-71, if those of us in Britain who remember it
-can trust our recollection, seemed better in both the
-above-named respects than had been the Revolutionary
-and Napoleonic wars between 1793 and 1814.
-Till the outbreak of the present conflict men who
-sought for signs of the progress of mankind were
-cheered by the hope that war would hereafter be
-waged only between regular disciplined forces on
-each side; that these forces would abstain from needless
-cruelty, that women would be protected from
-lust, and that the lives of non-combatants would not
-be endangered. There was even a prospect that private
-property would not be destroyed except in so far
-as a definite military aim made its destruction unavoidable,
-as when a hostile force had to be shelled
-out of its shelter in a village. The Hague Convention
-had passed rules which ameliorated the practices
-of war as regards the combatant forces and had
-solemnly proclaimed the duty of respecting the lives
-and property of non-combatant civilians.</p>
-
-<p>The present war has, however, brought a rude awakening.
-The proofs are now overwhelming that in Belgium
-and Northern France&mdash;as to other regions the
-evidence is not fully before us&mdash;non-combatants have
-been slaughtered without mercy by the orders of the
-German military authorities, while the mitigations of
-war usages as regards combatants have been openly
-and constantly disregarded. Private property has
-been constantly destroyed where no specific military
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">187</span>
-reason existed, but only for the sake of terrorising the
-civil population, or perhaps out of sheer malice. A
-license has been practised by, and in many cases obviously
-permitted to, the soldiers which has led to acts
-of wanton cruelty. Outrages upon women have been
-far more numerous than in any war between civilised
-nations during the last hundred years. One crime
-deserves special condemnation, because it is done deliberately
-and is justified by its perpetrators. This
-is the practice of seizing innocent non-combatants,
-usually the leading inhabitants of a town or village,
-calling them hostages and executing them in cold
-blood if the population of the town or village whom
-“the hostages” cannot control, fail to obey the commands
-of the invaders. Civilians who fire upon invading
-troops without observing the requirements
-which the Hague Convention prescribes may, no doubt,
-be shot according to the customs of war; but there
-must be some proof that these particular civilians
-have done so. To put to death a quarter or more of
-the adult male inhabitants of a village because some
-shots have been fired, or are supposed by an excited
-soldiery to have been fired, out of its houses, is mere
-murder. All the paragraphs in the Manual of War
-issued by the German Staff cannot make it anything
-else.</p>
-
-<p>Though we may hope, and indeed must hope, that
-the horror caused by this war may lead to measures
-which will diminish the risks of war in the future,
-he must be indeed a sanguine man who can think
-that war, the oldest of the curses that have afflicted
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">188</span>
-mankind, is likely to be eradicated within this century.
-It is therefore an urgent duty to do all that
-can be done for a regulation of the methods of war
-and a mitigation of the sufferings that it causes.</p>
-
-<p>Now the cruelties that have been perpetrated on
-land, no less than the ruthless murder of innocent
-passengers on unarmed vessels at sea, are an aggravation
-of those sufferings. They are a reversion to the
-ancient methods of savagery, a challenge to civilised
-mankind, to neutral nations as well as to the now
-belligerent States. Neutral nations ought to be fully
-informed of the facts of these methods, for they are
-themselves concerned. The same methods may be
-used against them if they are attacked by Germany
-or by some other nation which sees that Germany
-has used them with impunity. If the public opinion
-of the world does not condemn these methods, war will
-become an even greater curse than it has been heretofore.
-Unless an effort is made as soon as ever the
-present conflict ends to regulate the conduct of hostilities
-between combatant forces, and, which is of
-even greater importance, to provide more effective
-safeguards for non-combatants, there may be a terrible
-relapse towards barbarism everywhere.</p>
-
-<p>The Allied belligerent nations who are now fighting
-in the cause of humanity are called upon to take
-up this matter and deal with it effectively. So are
-neutral nations. It is a pity that they did not protest
-long ago. But a word may be said regarding the German
-people also. Professor Morgan thinks that they
-share in all the guilt of their Government, but the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">189</span>
-reasons he gives for this belief do not warrant so
-melancholy a conclusion. The behaviour of the mobs
-that were wont to insult and ill-treat the prisoners of
-war led through the streets of German towns, and
-the ferocious language of creatures like Von Reventlow
-and some other writers in the German Press,
-shocking as they are, cannot be taken as evidence of
-the sentiments of a whole people. Neither can we
-suppose that the declarations of professors, victims
-of a doctrine and a practice which compels them to
-approve every act of the State are more to be accepted
-as expressing what may be felt by the less vocal Germans.
-We must remember how severe is the German
-censorship, how accustomed the Germans are to
-believe what their Government tells them, how habitually
-mendacious the military authorities have been in
-the accounts they supply of the conduct of the Allied
-Powers and their troops. The German mind has had
-little but falsehood to feed upon ever since the outbreak
-of the war, and it now believes, absurd as the
-belief is, that it is the innocent victim of an unprovoked
-aggression. When any voice is raised in Germany
-to proclaim even a part of the truth and to
-plead for humanity and good feeling, that voice is
-instantly silenced. Silence will doubtless be enforced
-as long as the war lasts. But we may well venture
-to hope that when, after the war, the facts hitherto
-concealed from the people have become known and
-can be reflected on with calmness, there will be a
-condemnation of the practices I have described, and
-that in Germany and Austria, as well as in all neutral
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">190</span>
-countries, there will be a wish to join in the efforts
-which both the Allies and the leading neutral Powers
-are sure to make to regulate and mitigate the conduct
-of war. In order to call forth these efforts by
-showing how great is the need for strengthening the
-existing rules of war, and providing more effective
-means of securing their observance, it is essential that
-the facts should be made known and studied, and
-that the world should see how the present rules, imperfect
-as they are, have been trampled under foot
-by the German authorities. This is what makes it
-right and necessary to publish the data contained in
-the Reports already referred to, and those data also
-which have been gathered by Professor Morgan with
-such earnest labour.</p>
-
-<p>So much for the justification&mdash;an ample justification&mdash;which
-exists for publishing the horrible record
-which this book contains. I need not here analyse
-it or quote from it or comment upon it. The facts
-speak for themselves. Professor Morgan’s general
-conclusions as to the behaviour of the German troops
-in France seem to be borne out by the facts which he
-adduces. They are further supported by the facts
-set forth in the Belgian, French, and British Reports.
-This accumulation of testimony is convincing, and it
-becomes even abundantly more convincing when one
-remembers that the German Government has scarcely
-attempted to deny the contents of those reports. To
-the French report, strengthened as it is by numerous
-extracts from the diaries of German soldiers (translated
-by M. Joseph B&eacute;dier), in which they describe,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">191</span>
-sometimes with shame, sometimes with satisfaction,
-the conduct of their comrades, no answer seems to
-have been made, although a few trivial objections were
-raised to the translations. Neither has the German
-Government ventured to meet the British report, except
-by a vaguely worded general contradiction in a
-semi-official newspaper. As regards the Belgian reports,
-no more to them than to the others has any
-examination and specific contradiction been vouchsafed.
-But a White Book has been published which
-tries to turn the tables by accusing Belgian civilians
-generally of firing on German troops and committing
-outrages upon them. Professor Morgan, in one of
-the most illuminative parts of his book, subjects
-this White Book to a critical analysis, exposes its
-hollowness, and shows conclusively that while it does
-not prove the German case against the civilian population
-and the Government of Belgium, it virtually
-admits, in its attempts to justify, the shocking cruelties
-perpetrated by the German Army upon that population.
-As the lawyers say, <em lang="la" xml:lang="la">habemus confitentem
-reum</em>.</p>
-
-<p>Let me add that he who wishes to understand German
-military ideas and military methods, ought to
-read along with this book (and the reports already
-referred to) another book, the German “Manual of
-the Usages of War on Land,” of which Professor
-Morgan has published a translation, under the title of
-“The German War Book.” Each of these is a complement
-to the other. The “War Book” sets forth
-the principles: this book and the Reports display the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">192</span>
-practices. The practice shocks us more, because concrete
-cases of cruelty rouse a livelier indignation; but
-the principles are a more melancholy proof of the extent
-to which minds of able men may be so perverted
-by false ideals and national vanity as to lose the common
-human sense of right and wrong.</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-
-<h2 id="FOOTNOTES">FOOTNOTES:</h2>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">1</a>
-The writer’s chief contributions to the Bryce Report will
-be found on pages 190, etc., of the Committee’s Appendix [<em>cd.</em>
-7895.]</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_2" href="#FNanchor_2" class="label">2</a>
-Published by the German Foreign Office under the title of
-“<span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Die v&ouml;lkerrechtswidrige F&uuml;hrung des belgischen Volkskriegs.</span>”
-The abbreviation “G. W. B.” will be used in the notes to
-this chapter.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_3" href="#FNanchor_3" class="label">3</a>
-The Reports have been translated, but not the evidence. I
-am indebted to M. Mollard for providing me with copies of the
-latter, to which reference is made below.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_4" href="#FNanchor_4" class="label">4</a>
-Speech in the Reichstag, August 4th, 1914. But, so far as
-I know, no one in this country has noticed that the absolute
-inviolability of Belgium, under all circumstances and without
-exception, has been laid down in the leading German text-book
-on International Law, which declares that such treaties are
-the great “landmarks of progress” in the formation of a
-European polity, and that the guarantors must step in, whether
-invited or uninvited, to vindicate them. “Nothing,” it is
-added, “could make the situation of Europe more insecure than
-an egotistical repudiation by the great States of these duties
-of international fellowship.”&mdash;Holtzendorff <cite lang="de" xml:lang="de">Handbuch des
-V&ouml;lkerrechts</cite> III. (Part 16), pp. 93, 108, 109.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_5" href="#FNanchor_5" class="label">5</a>
-Regulations, Arts. 1 and 2.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_6" href="#FNanchor_6" class="label">6</a>
-<em>cf.</em> Von Bieberstein at the Hague Conference of 1907, “The
-international law which we wish to create should contain only
-those clauses the execution of which is possible from a military
-point of view.” (<cite lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Actes et Documents I.</cite>, page 282.)</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_7" href="#FNanchor_7" class="label">7</a>
-Holtzendorff, IV., 385.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_8" href="#FNanchor_8" class="label">8</a>
-<em>Ibid.</em>, IV., 374. This is an important admission in view of
-what the Germans allege to have happened in Belgium.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_9" href="#FNanchor_9" class="label">9</a>
-German White Book: Introductory Memorandum.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_10" href="#FNanchor_10" class="label">10</a>
-German White Book: Introductory Memorandum.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_11" href="#FNanchor_11" class="label">11</a>
-Belgian Grey Book (<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Correspondance Diplomatique relative &agrave;
-la Guerre de 1914</span>), No. 8 (dated July 29th, 1914).</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_12" href="#FNanchor_12" class="label">12</a>
-<em>Ibid.</em>, No. 2 (July 24th, 1914).</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_13" href="#FNanchor_13" class="label">13</a>
-British Blue Book (Great Britain and the European Crisis),
-Nos. 85 and 122.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_14" href="#FNanchor_14" class="label">14</a>
-G. W. B. (Appendix C), General Report on Dinant.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_15" href="#FNanchor_15" class="label">15</a>
-<em>Ibid.</em>, Introductory Memorandum.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_16" href="#FNanchor_16" class="label">16</a>
-G. W. B., Appendix 51.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_17" href="#FNanchor_17" class="label">17</a>
-<em>Ibid.</em>, Appendix 53.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_18" href="#FNanchor_18" class="label">18</a>
-G. W. B., Memorandum.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_19" href="#FNanchor_19" class="label">19</a>
-<em>Ibid.</em>, Appendix 59.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_20" href="#FNanchor_20" class="label">20</a>
-G. W. B., Appendix 56.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_21" href="#FNanchor_21" class="label">21</a>
-<em>Ibid.</em>, Appendix 63.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_22" href="#FNanchor_22" class="label">22</a>
-<em>Ibid.</em>, Appendix 56.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_23" href="#FNanchor_23" class="label">23</a>
-G. W. B., Appendix B.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_24" href="#FNanchor_24" class="label">24</a>
-This is the normal figure of such German units according
-to the basis of calculation arrived at, after careful inquiry, by
-our own Headquarters Staff.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_25" href="#FNanchor_25" class="label">25</a>
-G. W. B., Appendix B 1.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_26" href="#FNanchor_26" class="label">26</a>
-G. W. B., Appendix 29.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_27" href="#FNanchor_27" class="label">27</a>
-<em>Ibid.</em>, No. 22.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_28" href="#FNanchor_28" class="label">28</a>
-<em>See</em> the Appendix to the Bryce Report, pages 25-29. Any
-one who reads the depositions of the Belgian witnesses there set
-out, and compares them with the depositions of the German
-soldiers in the White Book cannot fail to be struck by certain
-notable differences in quality. The Belgian witnesses never
-generalise, they betray no malice, and they mention instances of
-German forbearance. The exact converse is true of the German
-evidence. Lord Bryce’s Committee came to the conclusion that
-they “have no reason to believe that the civilian population of
-Dinant gave any provocation.” (Report, page 20.) <em>See also</em>
-the Eleventh Belgian Report (<cite lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Rapports officiels</cite>, page 137).</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_29" href="#FNanchor_29" class="label">29</a>
-G. W. B., Appendix C. Summary and also C 5, 7, 10, 31,
-35, 40, 44 for references in the text.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_30" href="#FNanchor_30" class="label">30</a>
-G. W. B., Appendix C.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_31" href="#FNanchor_31" class="label">31</a>
-C 44.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_32" href="#FNanchor_32" class="label">32</a>
-C (Summary Report).</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_33" href="#FNanchor_33" class="label">33</a>
-C 51.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_34" href="#FNanchor_34" class="label">34</a>
-The story of Aerschot is peculiarly horrible. It was here
-that the priest was placed against the wall with his arms
-raised above his head; when he let them fall through weariness,
-the German soldiers brought the butt-ends of their rifles
-down upon his feet. He was kept there for hours, and as
-German soldiers passed they used him as a lavatory and a
-latrine until he was covered with filth. Eventually they shot
-him. This is but one of many such horrors (<em>see</em> the Bryce
-Report, Appendix, pages 29, 46. <em>See also</em> the fourth and fifth
-Belgian Reports). The German White Book admits (Appendix
-A 2) that “every third man was shot.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_35" href="#FNanchor_35" class="label">35</a>
-Appendix A 5.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_36" href="#FNanchor_36" class="label">36</a>
-Appendix A 3.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_37" href="#FNanchor_37" class="label">37</a>
-The 1st Company of the 2nd Infantry Battalion of the
-Neuss Mobile Landsturm.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_38" href="#FNanchor_38" class="label">38</a>
-Belgian Collected Reports, Tenth Report, page 127.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_39" href="#FNanchor_39" class="label">39</a>
-Bryce Report (popular edition), pages 29-36. And see
-the diary, No. 14 of Appendix to Bryce Report recording the
-shooting of German troops by other German troops; to the
-same effect another diary quoted on page 41 of Bryce Report.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_40" href="#FNanchor_40" class="label">40</a>
-“No other troops were stationed at Louvain on that day.”&mdash;(D
-8.)</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_41" href="#FNanchor_41" class="label">41</a>
-<em>See</em> the Sixth Belgian Report and, in particular, the Proclamations
-issued at Hasselt, Namur, Wavre, Grivegn&eacute;e, and
-Brussels.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_42" href="#FNanchor_42" class="label">42</a>
-<em>See</em>, in particular, <cite lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Les Violations des lois de la Guerre par
-l’Allemagne</cite>, issued by the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs,
-pages 77, 92, 99, 100, 101, 119.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_43" href="#FNanchor_43" class="label">43</a>
-Press Bureau (<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Belgian communiqu&eacute;</span>), March 18th. The
-German authorities substituted the word “convention” for
-“conversation,” in order to convict Belgium of a secret treaty
-with England.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_44" href="#FNanchor_44" class="label">44</a>
-Foreign Office communiqu&eacute;s of May 20th and July 5th.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_45" href="#FNanchor_45" class="label">45</a>
-The case of the <em>Ophelia</em>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_46" href="#FNanchor_46" class="label">46</a>
-P. P. Cd. 7595.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_47" href="#FNanchor_47" class="label">47</a>
-The case of the <em>Iberia</em> (<cite>Times</cite> Law Report, November 11th,
-1915). It is not the only one.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_48" href="#FNanchor_48" class="label">48</a>
-<cite>The International Review</cite>, published in Zurich, and controlled
-by a Committee consisting almost entirely of German
-Professors. Its title is obviously fraudulent. The June issue
-(page 14) contains an article of ingratiating impudence by a
-German psychologist discrediting all reports of atrocities, and,
-in order to prove their unreliability and justify the policy of
-the <cite>Review</cite> in excluding them when they emanate from British,
-French, or Belgian sources, it attempts to disprove them all.
-On page 32 the writer refutes circumstantially the stories that
-German soldiers had had their eyes gouged out.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_49" href="#FNanchor_49" class="label">49</a>
-Note transmitted on July 8th to the American Minister by
-Herr von Jagow.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_50" href="#FNanchor_50" class="label">50</a>
-Proclamations issued at Namur and Wavre.&mdash;(Sixth Belgian
-Report.)</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_51" href="#FNanchor_51" class="label">51</a>
-<em>Ibid</em> Proclamation issued at Grivegn&eacute;e. <em>See also</em> <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Les Avis,
-Proclamations, et Nouvelles de la Guerre allemandes affich&eacute;s a
-Bruxelles</em>, for a copy of which I am indebted to my friend
-Colonel E. D. Swinton, D.S.O. (“Eye-witness.”)</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_52" href="#FNanchor_52" class="label">52</a>
-The reader should also study the diaries given in the Bryce
-Appendix, in the French official volume <cite lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Les Violations</cite>, and in
-Professor Bedier’s <cite lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Les Crimes Allemands</cite>: expressions of pity
-are as rare as exultations that “We live like God” are frequent.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_53" href="#FNanchor_53" class="label">53</a>
-The full story will never be known, but the Russian Report,
-the Second French Report, the Belgian Reports (especially the
-Tenth), and the narrative of Major Vandeleur, published by
-the Foreign Office as a White Paper, together with the Report
-of the American Minister published on November 20th, 1915,
-may be referred to.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_54" href="#FNanchor_54" class="label">54</a>
-The instances which follow are taken from official reports.
-I may add another illustration here published for the first time.
-A German soldier, recording the story of how the <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">maire</em> of a
-French town was torn from his home and carried off by the
-troops, writes: “In spite of his protests we put him into our
-company and made him march with us. He called us names
-and shouted and protested, <em>and kept us all in good spirits</em>.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_55" href="#FNanchor_55" class="label">55</a>
-The <em lang="de" xml:lang="de">Munchner Neueste Nachrichten</em>, October 7th, 1914.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_56" href="#FNanchor_56" class="label">56</a>
-Press Bureau (Belgian communiqu&eacute;s), August 5th.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_57" href="#FNanchor_57" class="label">57</a>
-French official communiqu&eacute;s, October 12th, August 1st.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_58" href="#FNanchor_58" class="label">58</a>
-<em lang="la" xml:lang="la">Velut e conspectu libertas tolleretur</em> (Tacitus, <cite>Agricola</cite>,
-Chapter 24).</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_59" href="#FNanchor_59" class="label">59</a>
-What I have here written is, without exaggeration, the
-substance of the Manifesto issued by the German Professors in
-August last. For the text, <em>see</em> the <cite>Morning Post</cite>, August 13th
-and 14th. And to the same effect is the speech of the Imperial
-Chancellor in the Reichstag a few days later (for report, <em>see</em>
-<cite>The Times</cite>, August 21st).</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_60" href="#FNanchor_60" class="label">60</a>
-Long ago&mdash;in 1870&mdash;Fustel de Coulanges pointed out that
-the crime which, to use the words of our law, “is not to be
-named among Christians,” flourished in Berlin as it flourished
-nowhere else, and the immorality of latter-day Germany was the
-subject of a mournful lamentation by Treitschke in his old age.
-An acute student of modern Germany, Dr. Arthur Shadwell,
-also remarks on the low commercial morality of German merchants
-(<em>see</em> the <cite>Nineteenth Century and After</cite> for August,
-1915).</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_61" href="#FNanchor_61" class="label">61</a>
-It is a curious fact, attested by the evidence of a large
-number of British and French soldiers who have been in action,
-that the German soldier often exhibits the most abject fear
-when confronted individually with the bayonet, going down on
-his knees, and whining “<span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Kamerad,</span>” “Mercy,” and such like
-lachrymose appeals.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_62" href="#FNanchor_62" class="label">62</a>
-Bryce Appendix, “Depositions taken by Professor Morgan,”
-page 195.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_63" href="#FNanchor_63" class="label">63</a>
-Belgian Reports (Tenth Report), page 119. To the same
-effect the British and French Reports, <em lang="la" xml:lang="la">passim</em>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_64" href="#FNanchor_64" class="label">64</a>
-Admiralty Memorandum, August 21st. Commander’s report
-on the stranding of <em>E</em>13.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_65" href="#FNanchor_65" class="label">65</a>
-<em>See</em> Belgian Reports and Bryce Report.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_66" href="#FNanchor_66" class="label">66</a>
-The writer has brought together a number of such passages
-in his preface to the <cite>German War Book</cite>. For others <em>see</em>
-<cite lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Les Usages de la Guerre et la doctrine de l’Etat-Major Allemand</cite>,
-by Professor Charles Andler (Paris, 1915). <em>Also</em> Chapter
-I. of “<cite lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Les Cruaut&eacute;s Allemandes, Requisitoire d’un neutre</cite>,”
-by L&eacute;on Maccas (Paris, 1915). And more especially the extremely
-valuable book published, at the moment of going to
-press, by an eminent French scholar, the Marquis de Dampierre,
-<cite lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">L’Allemagne et le Droit des Gens</cite>, a copy of which has just
-reached me.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_67" href="#FNanchor_67" class="label">67</a>
-Sorel, <cite lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Essais d’histoire et de critique</cite>, p. 271.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_68" href="#FNanchor_68" class="label">68</a>
-German Proclamation of August 27th, 1914, at Wavre (Belgian
-Reports, No. 6, page 82). In the Proclamation at Namur
-of August 25th, 1914, the German commandant, von Bulow,
-warns the inhabitants against “the horrible crime” of compromising
-by their conduct the existence of the town and its
-inhabitants!</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_69" href="#FNanchor_69" class="label">69</a>
-<em>Ibid.</em>, page 81.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_70" href="#FNanchor_70" class="label">70</a>
-<em>See</em> p. 123.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_71" href="#FNanchor_71" class="label">71</a>
-Holtzendorff, IV., 378.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_72" href="#FNanchor_72" class="label">72</a>
-French Reports, <cite lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Rapports et Proces-verbaux</cite>, p. 40.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_73" href="#FNanchor_73" class="label">73</a>
-<em>cf.</em> the reply of the Roman Senate to the offer of a German
-chief to poison Arminius, “<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Responsum esse non fraude
-neque occultis, sed palam et armatum populum Romanum hostes
-suos ulcisci.</span>” Tacit., <em>Ann.</em>, II., p. 88.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_74" href="#FNanchor_74" class="label">74</a>
-<em>See</em> the British White Paper of September 21st, 1915;
-“Austrian and German papers found in possession of James
-F. J. Archibald, Falmouth, August 30th, 1915.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_75" href="#FNanchor_75" class="label">75</a>
-Professor Salmond in the <cite>Law Quarterly Review</cite>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_76" href="#FNanchor_76" class="label">76</a>
-Mr. Justice Bailhache in the <cite>King</cite> v. <cite>the Superintendent of
-Vine Street Police Station</cite>. “The courts are entitled to take
-judicial notice of certain notorious facts. Spying has become
-the hall-mark of German Kultur.” September 7th, 1915.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_77" href="#FNanchor_77" class="label">77</a>
-It is, however, impossible to include within the limits of
-this book the whole of the unpublished material at my disposal.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_78" href="#FNanchor_78" class="label">78</a>
-The term “soldier” is used throughout this article in the
-sense adopted in the Army Annual Act, <em>i.e.</em>, as meaning
-N.C.O.s and privates.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_79" href="#FNanchor_79" class="label">79</a>
-The outrages committed in the districts now in the occupation
-of the British armies have not been reported upon by
-the French Commission, and the ground so traversed in this
-article is therefore new.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_80" href="#FNanchor_80" class="label">80</a>
-Von der Goltz.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_81" href="#FNanchor_81" class="label">81</a>
-One might go further and say that the Geneva Convention,
-which has hitherto been universally regarded as a law of perfect
-obligation and which even the German Staff in the German
-War Book affects to treat as sacred, is perverted to an
-instrument of treachery. The emblem of the Red Cross was
-used to protect waggons in which machine-guns were concealed.
-And since this article was written a German hospital ship, the
-<em>Ophelia</em>, has been condemned, on irrefutable evidence, by our
-Prize Court as having been used for belligerent purposes. Such
-things throw a very lurid light on the German conception of
-honour.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_82" href="#FNanchor_82" class="label">82</a>
-Similar evidence has been supplied to me by a French officer
-attached to the Fifth Division of the British Expeditionary
-Force. <em>See</em> Chap. III., Part I., No. 56.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_83" href="#FNanchor_83" class="label">83</a>
-See Chapter III., Part I., and, in particular, Nos. 39 to 43.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_84" href="#FNanchor_84" class="label">84</a>
-The German officers spoke Hindustani. Doubtless they knew,
-as I have found they often know, the identity of the British
-regiments opposite their positions and were attached there for
-the express purpose of dealing with Indians. But in no case,
-so far as I know, were their attempts to seduce our Indian
-troops successful.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_85" href="#FNanchor_85" class="label">85</a>
-This diary is now in the possession of my friend the Marquis
-de Dampierre, who is about to publish it and numerous
-others, together with fac-similes of the originals.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_86" href="#FNanchor_86" class="label">86</a>
-The passage suggests that our wounded were killed, but it
-is not conclusive. “<span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Noch lebenden</span>,” <em>i.e.</em>, “still living,” would
-appear to mean the wounded found in our trenches and unable
-to escape with the others. The fact of some prisoners being
-taken does not dispose of the suspiciousness of the passage.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_87" href="#FNanchor_87" class="label">87</a>
-Brenneisen is now a prisoner in England. The diary was a
-most carefully kept one. Since I first published it, it has been
-republished by the French authorities.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_88" href="#FNanchor_88" class="label">88</a>
-What follows refers principally to the portion of Northern
-France now occupied by the British troops. The case of Belgium
-has been sufficiently dealt with by the Committee.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_89" href="#FNanchor_89" class="label">89</a>
-<em>See</em> Chap. III., Section 2.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_90" href="#FNanchor_90" class="label">90</a>
-<em>Ibid.</em>, Section 3.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_91" href="#FNanchor_91" class="label">91</a>
-After the outrage they dragged the girl outside and asked
-if she knew of any other young girls (“<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">jeunes filles</span>”) in the
-neighbourhood, adding that they wanted to do to them what
-they had done to her. <em>See</em> Chap. III. (2) No. 4.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_92" href="#FNanchor_92" class="label">92</a>
-Presumably La Couture.&mdash;J. H. M.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_93" href="#FNanchor_93" class="label">93</a>
-I have suppressed the names of the witnesses for fear of
-their relatives, if any, in German hands being subjected to vindictive
-measures. Also in the case (selected from some twenty
-similar cases equally authenticated) of rape I have omitted
-certain details which seem to me too disgusting for publication.&mdash;J.
-H. M.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_94" href="#FNanchor_94" class="label">94</a>
-<span class="smcap">Note.</span>&mdash;This diary is a laconic example of a hundred such
-village tragedies. According to the Eleventh Belgian Report
-(page 133), twenty-six priests and monks were shot in Namur
-alone. And see the pastoral letter of Cardinal Mercier (<em>ibid.</em>,
-page 165) on what he calls “this sinister necrology.” In his
-own diocese alone (that of Malines) he records thirteen priests
-as having been killed. According to a German soldier the guilt
-of priests was established by the fact that church-bells often
-rang!&mdash;(Bryce Appendix, page 163).</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_95" href="#FNanchor_95" class="label">95</a>
-This savage credulity found its sequel in the murder of
-many unoffending priests not only in Belgium but in France.
-I quote one case from the depositions in my possession:</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“Marie B&mdash;&mdash;, sœur du cur&eacute; de Pradelles, a d&eacute;clar&eacute; ‘Les
-Allemands rodant dans le village out enlev&eacute; la personne de mon
-fr&egrave;re M. l’Abb&eacute; H&eacute;l&eacute;odore Bogaert, cur&eacute; de cette paroisse, et
-l’ont fusill&eacute; au cimeti&egrave;re de Strazeele sans aucun motif le 9
-octobre vers 1 heure et demie du matin.’”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_96" href="#FNanchor_96" class="label">96</a>
-These documents have been placed in my hands by the
-General Headquarters Staff. In accordance with the procedure
-adopted in the Bryce Report, and for military reasons, I have
-suppressed the names of the British regiments referred to and
-of their officers and men.&mdash;J. H. M.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_97" href="#FNanchor_97" class="label">97</a>
-This and the two following depositions are selected from a
-number of statements, mostly by Russian prisoners in German
-hands, who succeeded in escaping to the British lines. The
-statements (<em>b</em>) and (<em>c</em>) by these Russian soldiers are confirmed
-by the statement (<em>a</em>) which was volunteered by a German soldier,
-Stephan Grzegoroski, taken prisoner by the British troops.
-It is hardly necessary to point out that the employment of
-prisoners of war upon military works and their exposure to
-fire constitute a flagrant breach, not only of the Hague Regulations,
-but of the unwritten laws and usages of war.&mdash;J. H. M.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_98" href="#FNanchor_98" class="label">98</a>
-These two men escaped on December 8th, 1915, and reached
-the British Lines.&mdash;J. H. M.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_99" href="#FNanchor_99" class="label">99</a>
-“German Atrocities: An Official Investigation.” By J.
-H. Morgan, M.A., late Home Office Commissioner, with the
-British Expeditionary Force, Barrister-at-Law of the Inner
-Temple, and Professor of Constitutional Law in the University
-of London. (T. Fisher Unwin.)</p></div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="transnote">
-
-<h4>Transcriber’s Note:</h4>
-
-<p>Corrected the first two entries in the TOC to reflect the actual page
-numbers.</p>
-
-<p>Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation are as in the original.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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