The Wonder of War on Land
sh, looked blankly at the charred body of their officer. Before they could make a move, h
ced the men wit
words! Is that the work of men-" she pointed to the foot of the cross, "or of drunken, ignorant and fear-ridden brutes? And you are cowards, too, like all bullies," she cried, her voice rising as she shook
ish, lurched forward savagely, but a no
he said, "we've
ail saw t
n," she said
es, she knelt beside the groaning
but it was quite likely that they would shake off this merciful mood. A reckless desire on the part of each soldier to show his comrades that he was not afraid
oing, Horace?" h
e boy replied, "this lit
ought into Beaufays, she had slaved night and day, giving her time to Germans and Belgians alike. He
f "Le Mond
avalry o
nd hindered the German advance upo
seemed to feel the bullet in his back. None the less, he did not falter or look arou
d until late in the evening and then breathed his last, one more of the thousan
wing well that this cautious signal could not come from Germans, who, instead, undoubtedly would have battered
sappearance had been a matter of the most intense curiosity an
ok his head and l
of this," h
n the floor in his room. The ambe
l in that same strained wh
y, Horace leaned down
oy's arm out of its socket, he clambered to the window and climbed in. Then, moving so
of wonder have you
brushed the
Now, listen to me closely. Those pigs of Germans have found a keg of brandy and they're drinking themselv
here's no use asking her. I spok
nswered. "I'm not telling what I think, but what I know. Bring her here at
hought fo
try,"
wo wounded German officers were lying. He knew, if he stepped softly, it might arouse
to have that mustard po
had been said that evening concerning a poultice, she r
ed it now?
plied. "I'll go back to my room
le from the stove and carrying a box of mustard, she pa
or two cleared
pected, she refu
y. If they kill me they'll have to fight America. If they take me to Germany as a pri
oy?" asked
rent. Those beasts wouldn't hesitate to fire on him when, perhaps,
onsieur Croquier
f minutes," the
testily. "Go, and go quick, both of you. And
the hunchback said emphatically, and, grab
said Horace, and p
arply but there was affec
boots," she said, "and if you break through the line
riotous singing was hea
tate. He dropped fr
flying out of the window and landed beside him with a
d the hunchback,
edge, the hunchback clambering as soft-footed as a cat in spite of his ungainly shape, and then passed through a hedg
ouse and the boy followed Croquier without hesitation. As he swung his legs over, his feet touched the run
Horace found him
this go?"
vaults under the churc
ou find ou
id the hunchba
he
er the village and the Germans were looking for me e
under torture, meant life and death. Therefore I had t
which way we were going. B
do some work. It wasn't so hard to figure the course of the tunnel from here to the c
aped this afternoon fr
cour
place," said Horace,
ole storeh
d a
urface of the ground. Just where it comes out I don't know. I
you expect to stay
than I can help. I'm
-ni
Liége will be put under regular German rule, patrols and sentries will be established and we'll be trapp
thought
here under the Germans. The school's burned down,
f, no matter who escaped. You were present in the school defiance, don't forget, and it was you who carried off l
, I'm not surprised. But if we clear o
Fran
's nearer. The Germans are all heading for
chback, "but I'm not leaving here to save my
his tones and Horace felt it, bu
t's your scrap; but, you see, I'm an American, and however
back made
Horace, slowly, "I know
said Croquier, "but if your aunt wer
n the Germans blind Deschamps, burn Mme. Maubin alive, massacre the curé and kill lit
hat you would," th
quaring his shoulders, "it's for F
hunchback, "and keeping my ears open. W
e Germans wer
up positions. Every hour makes it harder. With the fall of the forts, the railway lines are open to the Germans for troop transport. Besides that, several days ago, we saw di
ur was stronge
hunchback replied, "Von Buelow won't attack Namur with his infantry until
ily at Liége to want to rep
man armies while they are on the march and before they take up definite po
Boy Wa
fficial P
ho fought with his regiment at
of "The
as joined the colors, now that
?" asked the
say, 'I don't know.' We may be killed if we go, but we'll have a chance to fight for oursel
s your
rowd every road which is wide enough to take a wheeled
do we
got your
es
we sta
o the well-head and
hey haven't burned it down, in any case. Now, fill your pockets with food as full a
rly, realizing the peril i
th anybody. A poor chap, like I used to be, must know a good bit about the country. I ran away from a ci
might camp in
the old days, when men fought with cold steel, one could push troops over rough country and each company
companies, on a diet regulated in advance, cooked by motor kitchens supplied by a provision train of a sc
operate or advance behind a cavalry screen, and, at all times, must be in direct communication with its staff officers. All that means travel on hard roads, at a certain pace, over a cert
matters as he talked. Now he slipped out of the well and waited for t
France, surely?" queried Horace in surprise, as he n
on raised h
m going to donate i
," the boy said; "they'
er escape. It is my trust!" H
ace, "it would br
aiser said he would be in Paris before the year is out. I
ked harshly in
quiet?" said Horace
back laug
days," he said, "when there's a wou
s into the fields beyond, and silently, stoopin
re n
Croquier. "Not at Tilff or Esneux
hought a
ut of our way to go dow
y do yo
m," the lad replied. "We could crawl over it quite easily. I found it,
ep your ears wide open. If I stop, you stop. If in danger, don't mo
ed into
ered whether he would not be wiser, after all, to escape to Holland and thence to America. However
o help him from time to time, the boy had much ado to keep up with his comrade. At a stumbling pace which was neither walk nor run, the hunchback
o lie down and wriggle across, but the hunchback, for all his apparent clumsiness, went across it like a tight-rope walker, and Horace, for very shame,
good," he grunt
, the hunchback scouting in advance. From time to time they crossed a road, and this was done with the utmost circumspection. At last, the chi
looking for?
ied by a boy-oh, no, that would be much too easy to trace! We can only travel by night. Well, we ought to be s
amation of satisfaction, C
," he said. "Let us w
asked
was all the
the point designated, where a na
hrough the water and over on the o
, Horace did so several times, the
order, and, with the word, he
"don't step on anything that projects o
s, Horace obeyed to the letter. After wading up stream for
pointing to the limb of a large tree that ov
cage. Then the hunchback, leaning down, grasped the boy's outstretched hand and pulled him to the bough, beside him. Thence he slid down the
," said the hunchback, "are
was worn out by trying to
o get here?" he asked. "We could have ste
who might be passing in the fields? No, thank you! Coming the way we did, there's no trail for a dog to scent, no track to follow
ons and excitement, fell into a sound sleep. It was late in the afternoon befor
, but the hunchback's grip would have held a lion. Then Croquier, seeing
guish a word here and there. Evidently the men were strolling along the river bank, at the end of a day's march. H
hunchback queried in a whisper, when t
mal' was repeated several times. They seem
road from Liége to Jemelle and a junction of four
nts of their pockets and, as soon as the darkness favored, st
t again. A wide road thronged with motor-lorries, one following upon another so that they
taminating the water. Those who had been wounded were abandoned, without any attempt to relieve their sufferings. The men remaining had been commandeered to dig trenches and build defensive works against troops of their own country, in defiance of the laws of warfare, just as, in other places, women were herded together to walk i
jected from the
of "L'Ill
jected from Por
ir mouths, the two fugitives were compelled to dart for a few hundred yards along a road, though every highwa
itting on the bank of a road, besi
rvice, Madame?" Croq
Monsieur, my little Theophile was playing with a toy gun, a thing of wood, Monsieu
icer said, 'kill the young viper before he learns to
rave and twisted two boughs into a rude cross. They left the woman sitting there, but weeping and more content. Owi
n soldier on the path, not more than twenty yards ahead of him. He d
so quickly that he had not been seen, the soldier pointed h
e? Come out
r" had traveled far and wide. Should the hunchback be seen and suspected, his dea
m he
is questions Horace replied truthfully, except that he said he was alone. He stated that
go to Holland?"
hrough to the north
, why didn't you stay in Lié
he soldier firm
was a woman on the road a little way back," h
istened, wit
where your army has been," the
er raised
know nothing of war, but I tell you that sort of thing is bound to happen. I'll admit that it's horrible. Many of us are sickened
rs tell us that a town is to be burned and pillage is allowed. It's not the soldiers who org
shot by a sniper from some house, when you've only got to put a bayonet to an inn-keeper's throat to get all the liquor you can drink, why, things look different then. All the standards by which you're accustomed
ising, for he realized that his captor-if captor
s on the off
rorized. Should any officer weaken, he would be suspected and refused promotion. They're as much a part of the system as we are. The system is deliberately intended to wipe out the instincts of kindliness. To be humane is to be weak. Still, I believe and most of us believe that the sys
his ton
he said. "Quick, boy, h
nto the bushe
sence of the officer, the force of military discipline should urge him to reveal the presence of the fugitive. The soldier, howeve
ould no longer be heard, the
ica, you hear stories of German brutality, tell them your story that they may know the Ge
ed on h
indictment of Germany as a whole than if the outrages were merely due
g told of Croqu
do," he whispered. "You mean
cour
n though it's daylight. That soldier might repent of his kindness or drop a w
or he saw that if there had been two soldiers instead of one, neither would have dared to trust the other, and,
e. This man had picked up a great deal of information from a German transport corps which had commandeered all his grain and all his horses, leaving him poverty-stricken and unable to carry on the work of hi
's army was only an advance guard). Soon after, they had crossed the path of the Second Army, under Von Buelow. The tra
my we passed yester
nsidered the pro
eems," he continued, "that Von Kluck is striking due west, evidently to flank Namur; Von Buelow is
d, for e
his other arm
ew moments, su
r be going on?"
. I think we'll have to try and cross the Meuse south of Dinant, b
to the French front
s south of Dinant. Luckily, I know a man who lives close
of the Meuse before midnight. There, the Meuse is deep and wide, flowing at the bottom of a deep valley. The h
rawn face
!" said a sullen voice, with b
k, "we are good Belgians, like
llingly the peasan
ircus boy!"
ted no time
id. "I have information of value
answer, "but the Ger
ey near
the light of
is guarded,
foot
e must
sponded the peas
up the iron cage, and showing the "captive Kaiser," w
head in evident appre
viously more interested in the fate of the bird than of
quier significantly; "
s the meaning of the
back look
member the curé, remember little J
led himsel
three of us
ng-place in the frame of the bed, he pulled
id the hunchback;
y?" asked t
d German near Liége," the boy an
said the peasant
aven't Croquier's grip, and somehow, I could
ack, turning to his friend. "
village. There was a battle near by, the day before yesterday. They mad
ter, a German officer came. He asked for food. When my sister commenced to get it r
d Croquier, as
peasant continued, "drew his
went to the well and brought some. When he returned, other Germans were in
and gave a drink firs
e hunchback. "A German always thinks h
and his eyes were bandaged. Then the officer changed hi
es of th
of "Le
er, 12 years old, who fou
y of "J
ho won revenge against the Ger
f "Ill. Lo
d, full member of a gun cr
ou!' he said. 'That will
who fell dead. So," said the peasant slowly, "they first tortured my nephew and then killed him. After that they set fire to th
d s
owned herself in the river. Do you thin
through the forest down the steep slopes to the river belo
e with relief at the thought that he would not be compelled
ens, see that the Germans do not get it. If you are about to be
as his fingers closed upon the iron ring, but h
e gates of Namur. It rose and fell on the night breeze above the indistinguishable murmur around him, born of the presence of hundreds of thousands of men encamped on both sides of the river,
hand flashed in the faint moonlight of an aged moon and the sentry fell with a choked cry. From the other sentry's throat there came no sound and the dumb struggle was a fearfu
the snatch of a German song and the third sent
n unprepared. His gorge rose at the thought. Yet, if he allowed the sentry
hood flashed t
as he passed, with a sudden jerk tripping him up, so that he fell headlong from the na
sentry!"
the peasant leaped into the boat and a few short, sharp st
ghness of the path in the darkness, got up, grumbling, rubbed himself where
were salvation f
e stretched-out bodies of his comrades. Taken by surprise, he lost another ten or
ad been made and that his fall on the path had been purposed and not d
straight!" declared the hunchback,
ised a sliver of wood from the feathered blade, he had an uncomfortable feeling inside. But, before the ala
the ranking officer. Horace was able to give but little information, but Croquier, who had read widely of military tactics,
f Von Kluck and Von Buelow to the north, and the Duke of Würtemberg and t
sir," Croq
whose c
't find o
r gnawed h
the German line, there," he
y road we crossed was filled with troops, and, sir," he added, "there s
icer said, "unless you had more facts than you were able to gather, but I'll convey your i
the hunchback, "if I could find
im as though he thought
about," he said, "to
n his hand, which he had positively
ir," he said, "wither
d the capture, and, in spite of the responsibilit
" he said. "Stay with this div
d to, sir,"
the men kno
" the hunchback answered. "I've told the s
macked his le
rth half a regiment of men. Next to good food, good spirits ke
t. The front is no place for a boy, and, in any case, military regulations are rigid against the presence o
t is not less strict. Boy-like, he trusted to chance that something might happen, and, in any case, he would probably see a
m Liége, and partly owing to the stories he had to tell of German atrocities in Belgium, Horac
gained his first clear idea of the huge scale upon which modern war operations are conducted. Evidently the veteran had worked out for himself the main elements of General Joffre's plan, and Horace's information concerning the location
Condé. The south to north line, where we are now, is held by the Fourth French Army, under General Langle de Cary
Charleroi to Binche is held by the Fifth French Army under General Lanrezac, and is protected by a narrow river, the Sambre. Westward from Binche, through Mons to Condé, is hel
ter guns (16.5-inch howitzers) on their way to Namur. Once those siege-guns get i
power of the great siege-guns. "In any case, they'll hold for three days, and that's as long as necessary.
"but, as I've told you, we saw anothe
know all about it. You're mistaken, that's all. The battle-line is just about the way
ld have thought that strategy was pretty exact a
ent principles. They work in different ways. The German depends on massed force, the French on individual courage; the German thinks mainly of attack and his favorite word is 'ann
ine engaged, while, at the same time, at least a full army corps is thrown out on each end of the battle-line, two or three divisions of cavalry being thrown out farther still, to act as a screen and hide
nk," said Horace, "
ey must therefore be cowards. It is because their tactics are based on the principle of flanking, enveloping and securing a decisive victory, rather than the principle of saving men, taking advantage o
three points of the main line, re?nforced by a concentration of artillery far greater than is possessed by any other ar
"I understand that clearly.
perior in individual dash and bravery. It is the problem of winning a battle with a smaller number of men than the enemy. The principle is
egic square,' isn't it? It seems something like our baseball diamond
hat way. In this strategic lozenge, the whole army is divided in four parts. The rear, or the reserve army, is where you call 'home base.' The fighti
"Panorama de
Showed Grea
m. piece in the teeth of a Frenc
trong. I should think a long line, like the German one you were telling me about,
The flanking movement is impossible, because if the long line bends round the corner, it would take several days for the ends to close in, and, when they did close in, they would only be confronted by a new army, let us say at 'third base.' Long
. "Then the German arm
r armies, which had broken through, could fall on the line of
f course, they would, they could halt all along the extended line, re?n
ace, "that wou
diamond can be swung either to right or left. So, since they have only a short distance to go, they can force the battle on the
ee that,"
teran
l of the commanders. There's not a great deal of difference between a bayonet and flint knife, a rifle is but an explosive form of bow and arrow, and the great 42-centimeter siege-gun of the Boches is only a sling-shot made a little bigger and throwing a little f
o the extreme left of the English troops, is 'third base.' The German long line is bent round the angle. This has been very skillfully done, for it enables the line to attack at any point. But, see, we could throw our re?nforcing
hy
it would take? Your easternmost corps would have to begin the march by retreating at least thirty miles before they could begin to turn, in order to leave room for the rest to turn inside them. The first
was necessary to pivot the line in position for attack. In addition to that, my boy, there would be the waste of time in strategical handling caused by the change of direction. New lines of communication would have to be established, new supply depots built, new routes mapped out, rolling stock sh
e, scornfully, "German s
at, instead of being able to retreat upon its reserves in good order, it is annihilated, what then? In that case, the enemy can plunge right in between
all armies of the world. It is only equaled by some of the Irish and Highland Scotch regiments of the British Army, and the Bersaglieri and other corps of the Italian Army. It is
d forward, t
l more to this than
s no machine so enormous, none that requires so much detail and fineness of adjustment. I've studied it from a soldier's po
n tons of food and munitions and what good will they be unless the food gets to the men, the munitions to the guns, and the men a
are ten years ago, she would still have been twenty years too late. To expect to make an army by waiting until it is needed, is just about as se
ad become thoroughly roused on the poi
tiffer grows the spring, for we are falling back on re?nforcements and shortening our lines of communication and transport all the time. The more the enemy advances, the weaker his line grows, for he is losing men which he cannot replace and is lengthening his lines of com
expect t
that. The public won't understand it, of course, and a good many of the younger soldiers are apt to lose their heads over it, but
ell as the moral principle between a nation that breaks its word and one that keeps it. Within a month will be settled, perhaps forever, the gre
ee the whole operative corner from Condé through Mons, Binche, Thuin, Charleroi, Namur, Dinant, Givet, and Montmedy to Verdun narrow its lines, shorten its communications and dra
TNO
Belgian Roya
French Commis
ches, near Douchy. The boy's name was Emi
ry, and conveys the se
ns" by the British. The origin of the word "Boche" is disp
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