ilil! Iplfiililifc'i HQQBQ LIBRARY OF CONGRESS DDOOTHfiBbSE '^siHji'^' -^ s^- ■^. o I -t: ^ ^.v-.^^o -^ ^ ^ ax^ .^Mm^'- V ,\ «• ^-^w^,^ , <^ o A x^ ,0o '^O ..^ ^:^ ^*. -V C ^0^ <^,.r. \'^ .^ M ^ X'^ V- \' ^5 '^c^ \' \>. ^^ * .0 N \ \V .0^-. ^ Y ^ O ■- ^ i-^N. x^ ?:^ ^^^ / ■ :^^'' ^^^ ^4^^ a; ^ .^' . BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY Captain Tzschirner of Hindcnburg's staff and Edward Lyell Fox in Eydtkuhnen after the battle. BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY BY EDWARD LYELL FOX Special Correspondent with the Kaiser's Armies and in Berlin NEW YORK McBRIDE, NAST & COMPANY 1915 Copyright, 1915, by Illustrated Sunday Magazines Niw York American WiLDMAN Magazine AND News Service Copyright, 1915, by McBride, Nast & Co. J53\ ft Published May, 1915 4i^ m 26 1^15 ©aA406034 ' T-t 5 / To E. W. F. CONTENTS CHAPTER PAGE I The Threshold of War 1 II "The Beloved King'' 26 III To the West Front .39 IV On the Back op the Bird op War . . ..55 V Behind the Battleline 73 VI A Night Before Ypres 100 VII In the Trenches 126 VIII Captured Belgium and Its Governor General 160 IX Prisoners of War 170 X On the Heels op the Russian Retreat . . 194 XI The Battle of Augustowo Wald .... 222 XII The War on the Russian Frontier . . . 254 XIII The Hero op All Germany 274 XIV With the American Red Cross on the Rus- SLiN Frontier 290 XV The Secret Books op England's General Staff 312 XVI The Future — Peace or War 324 THE ILLUSTEATIONS Capt. Tzschirner and the author . . . Frontispiece VAOIKQ PAQB Notifications from the German Foreign Office ... 28 Court filled with drilling soldiers .80 Ober-lieutenant Herrmann 80 With French prisoners at Zossen 182 Burying Russians on East Prussian frontier . . . 196 ■Reenforcements following our motor car into Russia . 196 Photographs of alleged British staff books .... 312 Aviator's guide book 316 Aviator's key map 320 BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY THE THRESHOLD OF WAR 1 *N the lingering twilight, the Baltic's choppy swells turned dark and over the bow I saw a vague gray strip of land — Germany! I was at the gateway of war. For two hours the railway ferry had plowed be- tween the mines that strew the way to Denmark with potential death, and as slowly the houses of Warnemunde appeared in shadow against the dark- ening day, some one touched my arm. " Safe now.'' He was the courier. He had traveled with me from New York to Copenhagen, a bland, reserved young man, with a caution beyond his years. I had come to know he was making the trip as a German courier, and he was an American with no Teutonic blood in his veins ! Knowing the ropes, he had suggested that he see me through to Berlin. " It's good we came over the Baltic,'' he remarked, 1 BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY " instead of making that long trip through Jutland. We save eight hours. *^ " Yes/^ I agreed, " nothing like slipping in the back door." And being new to it then, and being very conscious of certain letters I carried, and of the power implied in the documents which I knew he carried, I wondered what the frontier guard would do. During the two hours we ferried from the Danish shore the passen- gers talked in a troubled way of the military search given every one at Warnemunde and I smiled to my- self in a reassuring way. Yes, they would be searched, poor devils! . . . But the courier and I? I wondered if the German Lieutenant at Warnemunde would ask us to take coffee with him. I even took out my watch. No, it could hardly be done, for by the time the soldiers had finished searching all these passengers the train would be leaving. Too bad! Coffee and a chat with some other lieutenant, then. " Yes," the courier was saying as the ferry docked and we caught, under the glint of the sentries' rifles, a glimpse of the Landwehr red and blue, "it will be so easy here — just a formality, whereas if we had taken the other route it no doubt would have been harder. You see," he explained, " when a train crosses the Kiel canal a soldier is posted in every com- partment, the window shades are pulled down and the passengers are warned not to look out on penalty of instant death. Of course that is necessary for mili- tary reasons. Naturally the whole inspection at that frontier is more severe because of the Kiel canal." 2 THE THRESHOLD OF WAR By this time the big boat had been made fast to a long railroad pier and as we crossed the gang plank we made out in the bluish haze of an arc lamp, a line of soldiers who seemed to be herding the pas- sengers into what appeared to be a long wooden shed newly built Crowds are the same the world over, so no one held back, all pushing, luggage and pass- ports in hand, into the frame structure built, I real- ized, for purposes of military inspection. Sluggishly the mass moved forward. Presently I saw it divide halfway down the room, to pause before two openings at which six soldiers waited, like ticket takers in a circus. I was near enough now to ob- serve the lantern light dimly shining upon two crude desk tops, slanting down from the wall which gave entrance through a doorway to a larger room beyond ; and everywhere gleamed the glint of gun barrels, the red and blue or gray of military hats, while an increas- ing flow of German, punctuated with ^^ Donnerwet- ter!'^ and ^' Dds ist genug/' was heard above the shuffle of feet and the thumping of trunks and bags on the counters in the room beyond. I wondered what two men in civilian clothes were doing among the sol- diers; I saw them dart about, notebooks in hand. Later I learned more of these men who seemed to have it in their power to make the passengers they challenged either comfortable or uncomfortable. And then it was my turn. Having seen the pas- senger in front throw both hands over his head, un- consciously inviting the kind of search given a crim- inal, I decided such submissiveness a blunder. As I 3 BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY expected, the soldier was a perfectly sane human be- ing who did not begin punching a revolver against me — which certain printed words I had read in New York implied was the usual prelude to a German searching party- — rather this soldier most courte- ously asked to see my wallet. I gave it to him. I would have given him anything. Our cooperation was perfect. There was no need for me to bring my exhaustive knowledge of the German language into play. Talking fluently with my hands, now and then uttering ^' danke,^' I tried to assist his search, mean- while hopelessly looking about for the courier. I was depending not only upon his fluent German but also upon his superior knowledge of the situation to help me to pass serenely through this ordeal. Alas, the crowd hid him. Suddenly my soldier grunted something. Until now we had been getting along splendidly and I could not conceal my surprise when he took from my wallet a handful of letters and stared at them in bewilder- ment. The more he stared the more his regard for me seemed to vanish. Although he could not understand English he could recognize a proper name, for the let- ters bore the addresses of decidedly influential men in Germany. They challenged his suspicion. Thoroughly puzzled he opened the letters and tried to read them. When he compared my passport with a letter I saw his face light up. I realized that he had recognized my name in the contents. Where- upon, greatly relieved, assured now that everything was all right, I held out my hand for both letters and 4 THE THRESHOLD OF WAR wallet. Not yet. A rumble of words and the soldier called one of those busy civilians with the notebooks. This person spoke a little English. The letters interested him. Where had I found them? . . . My spine began to feel cold. I replied that they had been given me in New York and remembering that I had the courier to rely on, I suggested that they have a word with him. It was then that I heard an excited deluge of words and, glancing over my shoulder, I observed that the courier was thoroughly flanked and surrounded by five Landwehr who apparently were much in earnest about something. Concluding that some cog had slipped I racked my wits to make the best of what was rapidly becoming a difficult situa- tion. The soldier having turned me over to the civilian I noticed several suspicious glances in my direction, and blessed the luck that had impelled me to go to the American Legation and the German Consulate in Copenhagen for vises. That the civilian who was taking such an interest in me belonged to the secret service, I was certain. I appealed to his sense of discretion. " Your passport seems all right,'' he thoughtfully observed, and opened a little book. " Where are you going?" I told him to Hamburg but could not tell him where I would stay, for the excellent reason that not the name of a single Hamburg hotel was known to me. " Only for a few days, though," I said, adding hope- fully ; " after that I go to Berlin to Hotel Adlon." 5 BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY As fast as his pencil could move he wrote the ad- dress in his book. ^* These letters," he said reluctantly, tapping them on his hand, " I must take now. If everything is all right, they will be sent to you in Berlin." " But it is important that I have them," I protested, " they are my introductions. You cannot tell me how long I may have to wait for them? You can see from them that I am a responsible person known to your people." " I know," he replied, " but they are written in Eng- lish, and to bring letters written in English into Ger- many is forbidden. I am sorry." He was thus politely relieving me of all my creden- tials when I happened to think that in my inner waist- coat pocket lay a letter I had yet to show them — a communication so important to me that I had kept it separate from the others. Moreover I remembered it was sealed and that properly used it might save the day. It was worth a trial. Realizing that the thing had to be staged I im- pressively drew the police spy aside and employing the familiar " stage business " of side glances and ex- aggerated caution I slowly took the note — it was a mere letter of introduction to the Foreign Office — from my waistcoat. If the soldier's eyes had opened wide at the other addresses, the police agent's now fairly bulged. Handing him the envelope I pointed to what was typed in the upper left hand corner — Kaiserliche Deutsche Botschaft, Washington, D. C. — and simply said ^^ Verstehen sief '' 6 THE THRESHOLI]! OF WAR He verstehened. Being an underling he under- stood so well that after a few moments he returned all the letters he had appropriated and instantly changing his manner, he facilitated the rest of the inspection. After my baggage was examined by more soldiers (and those soldiers did their duty, even going through the pockets of clothes in my trunks) I was told I might go. ^^ Gute reise/^ the police agent called— " Good jour- ney." Although treated with all courtesy I was afraid somebody might change his mind, so hurrying out of the last room of the long wooden shed I proceeded down the platform to the train at a pace that must have shown signs of breaking into a run. There in my compartment the thoughts that came to me were in this order: There must be reason for such a rigid inspection; no doubt spies must have been caught recently trying to enter Germany at Warnemunde. If I badn't lost the courier in the crowd there would have been plain sailing. The minutes passed. It was nearly time for the train to start. Where was the courier? Presently, rather pale, nervous in speech, but as reserved and cool as ever he limply entered the compartment and threw himself on the cushions. " They took everything," he announced. "All they left me was a pair of pajamas." " What ! You mean they have your papers? " " All of them," he smiled. " Likewise a trunk full BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY of letters and a valise. Oh, well, they'll send them on. They took my address. Gad, they stripped me through!" I began laughing. The courier could see no mirth in the situation. "You," I gasped, "you, who by all rights should have paraded through, from you they take everything while they let me pass.'' " Do you mean to say," he exclaimed, " that they didn't take your letters." " Not one," I grinned. " Well, I'll be damned !" he said. Locked in the compartment we nervously watched the door, half expecting that the police spy would come back for us. We could not have been delayed more than a few minutes, but it seemed hours, before, with German regard for comfort, the train glided out of the shed. It must have been trying on my com- panion's good humor, but the absurdity of stripping a courier of everything he carried, was irresistible. Perhaps it was our continued laughter that brought the knock on the door. Pushing aside the curtains we saw outside — for it was one of the new German wagons with a passage- way running the entire length of one side of the car — a tall, broad-shouldered, lean man with features and expression both typical and unmistakable. " An Englishman ! " We saw him smile and shake his head. I hesitat- ingly let fall the curtain and looked at the courier. " Let him in," he said. " He's got the brand of an 8 THE THRESHOLD OF WAR English university boy all over him. We'll have a chat with him. You don't mind, do you ? " " Mind ! " In my eagerness I banged back the com- partment doors with a crash that brought down the conductor. I saw my companion hastily corrupt that ofl&cial whose murmured ^^ Bitteschon ^^ implied an un- Teutonic disregard for the fact that he had done something verhoten by admitting a second class pas- senger into a first class coup6; and the stranger en- tered. We were gazing upon a strikingly handsome fair- haired man not yet thirty. His eyes twinkled when he said that he supposed we were Americans. His man- ner and intonation made me stare at him. " And you? " we finally asked. " I'm going first to Berlin, then to Petrograd," he said, perhaps avoiding our question. " Business trip." We chatted on, the obvious thought obsessing me. Of course the man was an English spy. But how ab- surd! If his face did not give him away to any one who knew — and my word for it, those police spies do know ! — he would be betrayed by his mannerisms. His accent would instantly cry out the English in him. Of what could Downing Street be thinking? It was sending this man to certain death. One be- gan to feel sorry for him. Feeling the intimacy brought by the common ex- perience at Warnemunde, I presently said: " You certainly have your nerve with you, traveling in Germany with your accent." 9 BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY " Why? '' he laughed. " A neutral is safe/' Expecting he would follow this up by saying be was an American I looked inquiring and when he sought to turn the subject I asked : "Neutral? What country?'' " Denmark," he smiled. " But your accent? " I persisted. " I do talk a bit English, do I not? I had quite a go at it, though; lived in London a few years, you know." Nerve? I marveled at it. Stark foolhardy cour- age, or did a secret commission from Downing Street make this the merest commonplace of duty? Charm- ing company, he hurried along the time with well told anecdotes of the Kussian capital and Paris, in both of which places he said he had been since the war be- gan. As we drew near Ltibeek, where a thirty-five minute stop was allowed for dinner in the station, and the stranger showed no signs of going back to his own compartment, I could see that the courier was becoming annoyed. Relapsing into silence he only broke it to reply to the " Dane " in monosyllables ; finally, to my surprise, the courier became dovmright rude. As the stranger, from the start, had been ex- tremely courteous, this rudeness surprised me, more so, as it seemed deliberate. Bludgeoned by obvious hints the stranger excused himself, and as soon as he was gone my companion leaned towards me. " You were surprised at my rudeness," he said, and then in an undertone; "it was deliberate." "I saw that. But why?" 10 THE THRESHOLD OF WAR " Because/' he explained, "seeing we are Americans that fellow wanted to travel with us all the way through. He must have known that American com- pany is the best to be seen in over here these days. He might have made trouble for us.'' " Then you also think he's English? " "Think! Why they must have let him through at Warnemunde for a reason. He has a Danish pass- port right enough. I saw it in the inspection room. But I'll bet you anything there's a police spy in this train, undoubtedly in the same compartment with him." One felt uncomfortable. One thought that those police spies must dislike one even more now. "That means we may be suspected as being con- federates," I gloomily suggested. Whether he was getting back for my having guyed him about losing his papers I do not know, but the courier said we probably were suspected. Where- upon the book I tried to read became a senseless jum- ble of words and our compartment door became vastly more interesting. When would it open to admit the police spy? . . . Confound the luck! Everything breaking wrong. But at Ltibeck nothing happened — nothing to us. A train load of wounded had just come in and our hearts jumped at the sight of the men in the gray- green coats of the firing line, slowly climbing the long iron steps from the train platforms. Hurrying, we saw them go clumping down a long airy waiting room and as they approached the street their hobbling 11 BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY steps suddenly quickened to the sharper staccato of the canes upon which they leaned. Hurrying too, we saw there a vague mass of pallid faces in a dense crowd; some one waved a flag; — it stuck up con- spicuously above that throng ; — some one darted forth ; — ^^ Vater! " — '^ Liehes Miltterchen! ^' Past the burly handsturm, who was trying his ut- most to frown his jolly face into threatening lines that would keep back the crowd, a woman was scurrying. One of the big gray-green wounded men caught her in his arm — the other arm hung in a black sling — and she clung to him as though some one might take him away, and because she was a woman, she wept in her moment of happiness. Her Mann had come home. ... Forgetting the dinner we were to have eaten in the Liibeck station, we finally heeded a trainman's warn- ing and turned back to our car. There remained etched in my mind the line of pallid, apprehensive faces, the tiny waving flags, the little woman and the big man. It was my first sight of war. From Liibeck to Hamburg the ride was uneventful. The hour was not late and beyond remarking that the towns through which we passed were not as bril- liantly lighted as usual, the courier could from the car window observe no difference between the Germany of peace and of war. Here and there we noticed bridges and trestles patroled by Landtcehr and outside our compartment we read the handbill requesting every passenger to aid the government in preventing spies throwing explosives from the car windows. From the 12 THE THRESHOLD OF WAR conductor we learned that there had been such at tempts to delay the passage of troop trains. Where- upon we congratulated ourselves upon buying the conductor, as we had the compartment to ourselves. One thought of what would have happened had there been an excitable German in with us and while the train was crossing a bridge, we had innocently opened a window for air ! It was almost ten when the close, clustered lights of Hamburg closed in against the trackside and we caught our first glimpse of the swarming Bahnhof. Soldiers everywhere. The blue of the Keservists, the gray -green of the Regulars — a shifting tide of color swept the length of the long platforms, rising against the black slopes of countless staircases, overrunning the vast halls above, increasing, as car after car emptied its load. And then, as at Ltibeck, we saw white bandages coming down under cloth-covered helmets and caps, or arms slung in black slings; the slightly wounded were coming in from the western front. All this time we had forgotten the Englishman, and it was with a start that we recalled him. " If he spots us,'' advised my companion, " we've got to hand him the cold shoulder. Mark my words, he'll try to trail along to the same hotel and stick like a leech." Again he was right. At the baggage room the Eng- lishman overtook us, suggesting that we make a party of it — he knew a gay cafe — first going to the hotel. He suggested the Atlantic. Bluntly he was informed 13 ^ BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY we were visiting friends, but nothing would do then but we must agree to meet him in, say, an hour. Not until he found it an impossibility did he give us up and finally, with marvelous good nature, he said good night. The last I saw of him was his broad back disappearing through a door into a street. The courier nudged me. " Quick," he whispered, " look, — the man goiiig out the next door." Before I could turn I knew whom he meant. I saw only the man's profile before he too disappeared into the street; but it was a face difficult to forget, for it had been close to me at Warneniunde; it was the face of the police spy. " I told you they purposely let him get through," continued my friend. "That police fellow must have come down on the train from Warnemunde. I tell you it's best not to pick Up with any one these days. Suppose we had fallen for that Englishman and gone to a cafe with him to-night — a nice mess ! " It was in a restaurant a few hours later that I saw my first Iron Cross, black against a gray-green coat and dangling from a button. In Bieher^s, a typical better class caf6 of the new German type, luxurious with its marble walls and floors, and with little soft rugs underfoot and colored wicker tables and chairs, one felt the new spirit of this miracle of nations. On the broad landing of a wide marble staircase an or- chestra played soldier songs and above the musicians, looking down on his people, loomed a bust of Wilhelm II, Yon Gottes Gnecden, Kaiser von Deutschland, THE THRESHOLD OF WAR About him, between the flags of Austria-Hungary and Turkey, blazed the black, white and red, and there where all might read, hung the proclamation of Au- gust to the German people. We had read it through to the last line : " Forwa/rd with God who will he with us ds he was with our Fathers !^^--^ when we heard an excited inflection in the murmurings from the many tables — '^ Das Eiserne Kreuz! ^' And we saw the officer from whose coat dangled the black maltese cross, outlined in silver. His cheeks flushed, proud of a limping, shot-riddled leg, proud of his Emperor's decoration, but prouder still that he was a German; he must have forgotten all of battle and suffering during that brief walk between the tables. Cheers rang out, then a song, and when finally the place quieted everybody stared at that little cross of black as though held by some hypnotic power. So ! We were Americans, he said when we finally were presented. That was good. We — that is — I had come to write of the war as seen from the German side. Good, sehr gut! He had heard the Allies, es- pecially the English, — Verfluehte Englanderschwein! — were telling many lies in the American newspa- pers. How could any intelligent man believe them? In his zeal for the German cause his Iron Cross, his one shattered leg, the consciousness that he was a hero, all were forgotten. Of course I wanted to hear his story — the story of that little piece of metal hanging from the black and white ribbon on his coat — but tenaciously he refused. That sur- prised me until I knew Prussian officers. 15 BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY So we left the man with the Iron Cross, marveling not at his modesty but that it embodied the spirit of the German army; whereas I thought I knew that spirit. But not until the next night, when I left Ham- burg behind, where every one was pretending to be busy and the nursemaids and visitors were still toss- ing tiny fish to the wintering gulls in the upper lake; not until the train was bringing me to Berlin did I understand what it meant. At the stations I went out and walked with the passengers and watched the crowds; I talked with a big business man of Ham- burg — bound for Berlin because he had nothing to do in Hamburg ; then it was I faintly began to grasp the tremendous emotional upheaval rumbling in every Germanic soul. My first impression of Berlin was the long cement platform gliding by, a dazzling brilliance of great arc lamps and a rumbling chorus of song. Pulling down the compartment window I caught the words ^^ Wir hdmpfen Mann fiir Mann, fur Kaiser und Reich! '' And leaning out I could see down at the other end of the Friederichstrasse Station a regiment going to the front. Flowers bloomed from the long black tubes from which lead was soon to pour; wreaths and garlands hung from cloth covered helmets ; cartridge belts and knapsacks were festooned with ferns. The soldiers were all smoking; cigars and cigarettes had been showered upon them with prodigal hand. Most of them held their guns in one hand and packages of delicacies in the other; and they were climbing into 16 THE THRESHOLD OF WAR the compartments or hanging out of the windows singing, always singing, in the terrific German way. Later I was to learn that they went into battle with the " Wacht am Rhein " on their lips and a wonder- ful trust in God in their hearts. I felt that trust now. I saw it in the confident face of the young private who hung far out of the compartment in order to hold his wife's hand. It was not the way a conscript looks. This soldier's blue eyes sparkled as wdth a holy cause, and as I watched this man and wife I marveled at their sunny cheer. I saw that each was wonderfully proud of the other and that this farewell was but an incident in the sudden complexity of their lives. The Father- land had been attacked : her man must be a hero. It was all so easy, so brimming with confidence. Of course he would come back to her. . . . You believed in the Infinite ordering of things that he would. Walking on down the platform I saw another young man. They were all young, strapping fellows in their new uniforms of field gray. He was standing beside the train ; he seemed to want to put off entering the car until the last minute. He was holding a bundle of something white in his arms, something that he hugged to his face and kissed, while the woman in the cheap furs wept, and I wondered if it was because of the baby she cried, while that other childless young wife had smiled. Back in the crowd I saw a little woman with white hair; she was too feeble to push her way near the train. She was dabbing her eyes and waving to a 17 BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY big, mustached man wlio filled a compartment door and who shouted jokes to her. And almost before they all eould realize it, the train was slipping down the tracks; the car windows filled with singing men, the long gray platform suddenly shuffling to the pat- ter of men's feet, as though they would all run after the train as far as they could go. But the last car slipped away and the last waving hand fell weakly against a woman's side. They seemed suddenly old, even the young wife, as they slowly walked away. Theirs was not the easiest part to play in the days of awful waiting while the young blood of the nation poured out to turn a hostile country red. I thought I had caught the German spirit at Lti- beck and at the caf^ in Hamburg when the hero of the Iron Cross had declined to tell me his tale; but this sensation that had come with my setting foot on the Berlin station — this was something different. Fifteen hundred men going off to what? — God only knows ! — fifteen hundred virile types of this nation of virility; and they had laughed and they had sung, and they had kissed their wives and brothers and babies as though these helpless ones should only be proud that their little household was helping their Fatherland and their Emperor. Self? It was ut- terly submerged. On that station platform I realized that there is but one self in all Germany to-day and that is the soul of the nation. Nothing else matters ; a sacrifice is commonplace. Wonderful? Yes. But then we Americans fought that way at Lexington; any nation can fight that way when it is a thing of 18 THE THRESHOLD OF WAR the heart; and this war is all of the heart in Ger^ many. As we walked through the station gates I understood why three million Socialists who had fought their Emperor in and out of the Reichstag, suddenly rallied to his side, agreeing " I know no par- ties, only Germans." I felt as I thought of the young faces of the soldiers, cheerfully starting down into the unknown hell of war, that undoubtedly among their number were Socialists. In this national crisis partizan allegiance counted for nothing, they had ceased dealing with the Fatherland in terms of the mind and gave to it only the heart. Even in Berlin I realized that war stalks down strange by-paths. It forever makes one feel the in- congruous. It disorders life in a monstrous way. I have seen it in an instant make pictures that the greatest artist would have given his life to have done. It likes to deal in contrasts; it is jolting. ... With General von Loebell I walked across the Doeberitz camp, which is near Berlin. At Doeberitz new troops were being drilled for the front. We walked towards a dense grove of pines above which loomed the sky, threateningly gray. Between the trees I saw the flash of yellow flags; a signal squad was drilling. Skirting the edge of the woods we came to a huge, cleared indentation where twenty dejected English prisoners were leveling the field for a parade ground. On the left I saw an opening in the trees; a wagon trail wound away between the pines. And then above the rattling of the prisoners' rakes I heard the distant strains of a marching song that brought 19 BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY a lump to my throat. Back there in the woods some- where, some one had started a song; and countless voices took up the chorus; and through the trees I saw a moving line of gray-green and down the road tramped a company of soldiers. They were all sing- ing and their boyish voices blended with forceful beauty. " In the Heimat ! In the Heimat ! '' It was the favorite medley of the German army. The prisoners stopped work ; unconsciously some of those dispirited figures in British khaki stiffened. And issuing from the woods in squads of fours, all singing, tramped the young German reserves, swing- ing along not fifteen feet from the prison gang in olive drab — " In the Heimat ! " And out across the Doeberitz plains they swung, big and snappy. " They're ready," remarked General von Loebell. " They've just received their field uniforms.'' And then there tramped out of the woods another company, and another, two whole regiments, the last thundering " Die Wacht am Rhein," and we went near enough to see the pride in their faces, the excite- ment in their eyes; near enough to see the English- men, young lads, too, who gazed after the swinging column with a soldier's understanding, but being pris- oners and not allowed to talk, they gave no expres- sion to their emotions and began to scrape their rakes over the hard ground. ... I stood on the Dorotheenstrasse looking up at the old red brick building which before the second of August in this year of the world war was the War Academy. I had heard that when tourists come to 20 THE THRESHOLD OF WAR Berlin they like to watch the gay uniformed offi- cers ascending and descending the long flights of gray steps; for there the cleverest of German military youths are schooled for the General Staff. Like the tourists, I stood across the street to-day and watched the old building and the people ascending or descend- ing the long flights of gray steps. Only I saw civil- ians, men alone and in groups, women with shawls wrapped around their heads, women with yellow topped boots, whose motors waited beside the curb, and children, clinging to the hands of women, all entering or leaving by the gray gate ; some of the faces were happy and others were wet with tears, and still others stumbled along with heavy steps. For this old building on Dorotheenstrasse is no longer the War Academy ; it is a place where day after day hundreds assemble to learn the fate of husband, kin or lover. For inside the gray gate sits the Information Bureau of the War Ministry, ready to tell the truth about every soldier in the German army! I, too, went to learn the truth. I climbed a creaking staircase and went down a creaking hall. I met the Count von Schwerin, who is in charge. I found myself in a big, high-ceilinged room the walls of which were hung with heroic por- traits of military dignitaries. My first impression was of a wide arc of desks that circling from wall to wall seemed to be a barrier between a number of gen- tle spoken elderly gentlemen and a vague mass of people that pressed forward. The anxious faces of all these people reminded me of another crowd that 21 BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY I had seen — -the crowd outside the White Star of- fices in New York when the Titamo went down. And I became conscious that the decorations of this room which, the Count was explaining, was the Assembly Hall of the War Academy, were singularly appro- priate—the pillars and walls of gray marble, op- pressively conveying a sense of coldness, insistent cold, like a tomb, and all around you the subtle pres- ence of death, the death of hopes. It was the Hall of Awful Doubt. And as I walked behind the circle of desks I learned that these men of tact and sympathy, too old for ac- tive service, were doing their part in the war by help- ing to soften with kindly offices the blow of fate. I stood behind them for some few moments and watched, although I felt like one trespassing upon the privacy of grief. I saw in a segment of the line a fat, plain-looking woman, with a greasy child clinging to her dress, a white haired man with a black muffler wrapped around his neck, a veiled woman, who from time to time begged one of the elderly clerks to hurry the news of her husband, and then a wisp of a girl in a cheap, rose-'colored coat, on whose cheeks two dabs of rouge burned like coals. Soldiers from the Berlin garrison were used there as runners. At the bidding of the gentle old men they hastened off with the inquiry to one of the many filing rooms and returned with the news. This day there was a new soldier on duty ; he was new to the Hall of Awful Doubt. ^* I cannot imagine what is keeping him so long," THE THRESHOLD OF WAR I heard an elderly clerk tell the woman with the veil. " He'll come any minute. . . . There he is now. Ex- cuse me, please.'' And the elderly clerk hurried to meet the soldier, wanting to intercept the news, if it were bad, and break it gently. But as he caught sight of the clerk I saw the soldier click his heels and, as if he were delivering a message to an officer, his voice boomed out: ''Tot!'' . . . Dead! And the woman with the veil gave a little gasp, a long, low moan, and they carried her to another room ; and as I left the gray room, with the drawn, anxious faces pushing forward for their turns at the black- covered desks, I realized the heartrending sacrifice of the w^omen of France, Belgium, Russia, England, Ser- via, and Austria, who, like these German mothers, wives, and sweethearts, had been stricken down in the moment of hope. That night I went to the Jagerstrasse, to Maxim's. The place is everything the name suggests; one of those Berlin cafes that open when the theaters are coming out and close when the last girl has smiled and gone off with the last man. I sat in a white and gold room with a cynical German surgeon, listening to his comments. " It is the best in town now," he explained. " All the Palais de Danse girls come here. Don't be in a hurry. I know what you want for your articles. You'll see it soon." Maxim's, like most places of the sort, was method- ically banal. But one by one officers strolled in and 23 BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY soon a piano struck up the notes of a patriotic song. When the music began the girls left the little tables where they had been waiting for some man to smile, and swarmed around the piano, singing one martial song upon another, while officers applauded, drank their healths, and asked them to sing again. Time passed and the girls sang on, flushed and sav- age as the music crashed to the cadenzas of war. What were the real emotions of these subjects of Germany; had the war genuine thrills for them? I had talked with decent women of all classes about the war; what of the women whose hectic lives had de- stroyed real values? " Get one of those girls over here," I told the sur- geon, " and ask her what she thinks of the war.'' " Do you really mean it? " he said with a cynical smile. " Surely. This singing interests me. I wonder what's back of it? " He called one of them. ^^ Why not sing? " Hilda said with a shrug. " What else? There are few men here now and there are fewer every night. What do I think of this war? My officer's gone to the front without leaving me enough to keep up the apartment. Kriegf Krieg istschrecMich! War is terrible ! " My German friend was laughing. " War? " he smiled. " And you thought it was going to change that kind." But I was thinking of the woman with the veil whom I had seen in the Hall of Awful Doubt; and outside the night air felt cool and clean. . . . 24 THE THRESHOLD OF WAR But my symbol of Berlin is not these things — not bustling streets filled with motors, swarming with able-bodied men whom apparently the army did not yet need. Its summation is best expressed by the varied sights and emotions of an afternoon in mid- December. Lodz has fallen ; again Hindenburg has swept back the Kussian hordes. Black-shawled women call the extras. Berlin rises out of its calmness and goes mad. Magically the cafes fill. ... I am walking down a side street. I see people swarming toward a faded yellow brick church. They seem fired with a zealot's praise. I go in after them and see them fall on their knees. . . . They are thanking Him for the Russian rout. . . . Wondering I go out. I come to another church. Its aisles are black with bowed backs; the murmur of prayer drones like bees ; a robed minister is intoning: " Oh, Almighty Father, we thank Thee that Thou art with us in our fight for the right ; we thank Thee that — " It is very quiet in there. War seems a thing in- credibly far away. The sincerity of these people grips your heart. I feel as I never felt in church before. Something mysteriously big and reverent stirs all around. . . . Then outside in the street drums rat- tle, feet thump. A regiment is going to the front! I hurry to see it go by, but back in the church the bowed forms pray on. 25 II "THE BELOVED KING" Being impressions gained during my talk with His Majesty King Ludwig of Bavaria Iv NO WING what was in the wind when the sum- mons came that night, I hurried down Unter den Linden and through Wilhelmstrasse to the Foreign Office. Several days before, Excellence Freiherr von Mumm had discussed the possibilities with me and as the old-fashioned portal of the Foreign Office swung back to admit me, I wondered if the news would be good or bad. Without delay I was ushered into the office of Dr. Roediger. He was just laying the tele- phone aside. " It has been arranged," he said. " I was just talk- ing with Mtinchen. You are to leave Berlin to-night on the 10.40 train. Upon your arrival in Mtinchen in the morning, you will go to the Hotel Vierjahrzeiten. At ten in the morning present yourself to Excellence Baron von Schon at the Prussian Embassy in Mtin- chen. He will inform you as to the details. At twelve o'clock His Majesty, the King of Bayern, will be pleased to receive you. . . . Adieu and good luck." Thanking Dr. Roediger for the arrangement — with true German thoroughness they had laid out a perfect 26 " THE BELOVED KING " schedule for me, even to the hotel at which I was to stop in Mtinchen — I had a race of it to get packed and catch the train. But once in the compartment, with the train whirling away from Berlin, I had a chance to collect my thoughts. So, His Majesty would no doubt talk with me upon some subject of interest to Americans. I ran over half a dozen of these in my mind, but King Ludwig's personality kept obtruding. What sort of a man was he? I had seen an excellent colored photograph of him in a gallery in Unter den Linden. It was one of those pictures which make you wonder at the reality and in this case made me anticipate the meeting with unrestrained keenness. I remembered that he had waited long for the throne, that it had not descended to him until September of 1913, that he had been crowned King of his beloved Bayern at the regal age of sixty-eight. I recalled that his house, the house of Wittelsbacher, was the oldest in Germany, the line going back to the year 907. King Ludwig, ruler of that southern Ger- man land where so many Americans like to go, his home in Munich, which every American sooner or later comes to admire for its famous galleries and golden brown Mtinchener beer; King Ludwig, what would be his message to the United States? Ten o'clock the following morning found me shak- ing hands with Baron von Schon, the Prussian Am- bassador to Bavaria. It was the Baron who was Ger- many's Ambassador to France at the outbreak of war, and how I regretted that obligations of his diplo- matic position forbade a discussion of those frantic 27 BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY nights and days in Paris before the war. We could talk of other things, however, and as there were two hours before the appointed time of my presentation to King Ludwig, Baron von Schon helped me to get my bearings. To my consternation I learned that the King spoke only a little English. I informed the Baron that I spoke only a little German. Whereupon immediately the Geheimrat's office in the Embassy began to ring with one telephone call after another, for an interpreter had to be secured, a man w^hom His Majesty would be pleased to receive with me. And finally such a man was found in Counselor of Lega- tion von Stockhammern. After motoring down a long avenue, lined with pretty residences, the car turned in, approaching a rather old, unpretentious but severely dignified build- ing of faded yellow brick, suggesting Windsor. This was the Wittelsbacher Palast, the home of King Lud- wig. I remembered having seen that morning on my way to the Embassy, a far more imposing looking palace, the Kesidence, and contrasting its ornateness with the simplicity of the building which w^e were approaching, I wondered at royalty living there. It was typical of the democratic King I came to know. As our motor rolled up, I saw two blue and white striped sentry boxes marking the entrance and through an arched driveway I had a glimpse of an in- ner court paved with stones, where an official auto- mobile waited. Then I was escorted through the en- trance to the right wing of the palace. Here Staats- rat (Secretary of the Eoyal Cabinet) von Dandl, a 28 O c be o c u o o c o c .2 -4->