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->
10N THE HEELS OF THE RUSSIAN RETREAT
seeing what the Russians had done to East Prussian
villages, could refrain from taking vengeance on the
first Russian village they entered."
I think the Rittmeister was a little offended.
" We are soldiers," he said with dignity ; " not crim-
inals." He paused and perhaps guessing that Bel-
gium was in my mind, ^' We only make war on non-
combatants when they make war on us."
Near Jemieliste we overtook the army. Visible at
the extremity of our long, yellowish light, there grew
out of the darkness, the grayish tops of transports,
rolling as on a sea ; and as we came up with them we
distinguished in their muffled clamor, the clanking
of chains, the cries of the drivers and the cracking
of whips on the horses' backs. Throttling down until
we barely crept along, our soldier chauffeur dexter-
ously guided the car between the maze of wagon
wheels and balking horses, so on, until after I had
counted twenty wagons struggling hub deep through
the frozen snow, we came to the head of the column,
where the serene officer, utterly oblivious to the con-
fusion behind him, leisurely rode the lead. And I
thought of that other great general who dared the
Russian snows without railroads and all that modern
science has given war, penetrating the land to Moscow
and across such frightful roads through the heart of
the Russian winter ; in that night one was awed with
the name Napoleon.
The yelling of the transport men died away. The
gloom thickened; rain fell. Milanowizizna passed, a
ghostly village. Torn, by heavy wagons, furrowed
217
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
and frozen into icy ridges, the road became almost
impassable. It was like going over a huge wash-
board, with the corrugations running in crisscrosses.
Jumping insanely from ridge to hole, our motor stood
up wonderfully, until we came to an abrupt hill where
nubbles of frozen snow impeded the way. Three
times did Gelbricke, the chauffeur, try to make it ; and
three times the wheels spun helplessly. Finally with
reluctance the Kittmeister said it would be better if
we all got out. And then in the pitch darkness and
cold rain, we put our shoulders to the car, but with
futile effort.
" Let's find some wood for treads," I suggested.
The Rittmeister would have none of it. He seemed
to be mortified that we should be put to this incon-
venience while guests of the German army. " Sey-
ring ! " he called the mechanician by name.
Of course, out on a Russian plain, in pitch dark-
ness, it was quite easy to find wood ; but one thought
that Seyring's " Jawohl " would have been equally as
cheery had the Rittmeister ordered him to find a bot-
tle of wine.
I too went to find wood. Only my foot stumbled
against something in the ditch and I almost fell upon
it. And when I flashed on my electric torch I saw
that it was a Russian soldier. His face was buried
in the snow, his stiff, extended arms pawing the
frozen ground. On the shoulders of his long brown
coat I read the number of his regiment, 256, and on
his feet, from which the boots had been stripped, were
218
ON THE HEELS OF THE RUSSIAN RETREAT
wound with strips of knitted wool. His black, bare
head, intensified by the contrasting snow, seemed the
blackness of a raven. . . . The others found the wood.
The car climbed the hill. Near Mlinisko we passed
a clanking transport, near Turowka, a mired limou-
sine of the Flying Corps. The rain froze to hail and
as we crossed the great open plain to Suwalki, snow
came, a slow, steady fall, unnaturally white in the
headlight's glow. Progress became even slower.
Ahead the road seemed choked with wagons, but al-
ways there opened up a lane through which drove
this soldier shaving the hub of transports with the
nicety of a race driver.
And then we came up with the artillery, two bat-
teries to pound away at the crumbling Russian front.
We saw the drivers, each with a carbine slung over
his shoulders, astride the straining horses, while the
heavy caissons and guns rumbled behind. Our head-
light shone upon a gray and red cloaked soldier, sit-
ting on the gun carriage, his spurred boots dangling,
his body jumping and jouncing, while quite com-
placently he munched on a bar of chocolate. The
battery blocked the road; Seyring blew his horn;
Rittmeister was shouting, ^' Los! Los! Away!
Away ! '' But the soldier with the chocolate simply
ignored us and went on munching that sweet of which
the German army is so fond.
'^ Ahspannen! '^ the command gutturaled from
driver to driver. It was the order to unhitch the
horses. It being impossible now to drive ahead, we
watched the tired carabineers slide down from the sad-
219
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
dies and loosen the horses from the spans, while the
gun crews poured out oats from big gray bags and
gave the horses their meal. And, two by two, the
drivers led them clanking off into the night, with the
gun crews following on foot, with the caissons and can-
non let standing in the snow. They were going to
sleep. Where? On either side the rolling snow cov-
ered plains seemed to spread inimitably, before gray-
ing into the black Russian night.
The horses gone, a gap opened in the road.
''Los! Gelbricke! Los!''
To the Rittmeister's urgings, the car sped forward,
and we rushed past the battery, so silent now, in
the snowy night, but on the morrow to roar forth
death. Through the gray white curtain of snow, the
lights of Suwalki came twinkling to meet us, and as
we drove down a shaded street, even there I could see
the debris of war — discarded uniforms, guns and
shells. And when finally we stopped before an old
stone building and followed the Rittmeister through
a damp archway into a dirty looking caf6, where we
had ham and tea; after I had seen two German offi-
cers pay for their meal and then bow courteously to
the sullen proprietor of this Europiski Hotel, after
I had stretched my sleeping bag on three chairs and
said good night, I heard a swift succession of heavy
reports.
" The Russian artillery," said Rittmeister Tzschir-
ner.
" How do you know? " I asked.
220
ON THE HEELS OF THE RUSSIAN RETREAT
" Because the Kussians fire like this — one-two-
three-four, then — one-two-three-four. Listen."
I caught then the quick but measured beat of their
guns, but having just ridden down the road of their
retreat, I could not think of their artillery as firing
so methodically; rather, to me, those quick salvos
seemed to be the firing of desperation, the frantic
gunnery of men who knew the enemy was closing in
— an enemy who upon their heels had followed the
red Russian trail through East Prussia, across the
snow swept plains to the pine forests of Augustowo,
where even now the guns bellowed that a hell on earth
was there.
221
XI
THE BATTLE OF AUGUSTOWO WALD
This is the first complete account of a great battle
that has been told in this war
1 HE battles in the East are so vast and the move-
ments of the troops are so swift and secret that up
to the middle of February the war against Kussia
was, to all correspondents, only a thing to be seen in
unimportant fragments. Through sheer good fortune
I saw the Battle of Augustowo Wald, which historians
may or may not write of as being a decisive conflict,
but in which a Eussian army of 240,000 men was an-
nihilated; only one intact division escaping to
Grodno, there to be swallowed up by a new Russian
army, which became the new Tenth. And because of
these huge reinforcements the Germans did not break
the line of the Niemen, flinging it back on Warsaw.
Russia has denied this annihilation. With another
American, Herbert Corey, I saw it.
The story I shall tell is a story of this battle, of
its strategy, as told to me by Rittmeister Tzschirner
of Field Marshal von Hindenburg's staff, of its actual
fighting, which I saw, and of its celebration. For
on the night of victory I was the guest of Excellence
222
THE BATTLE OF AUGUSTOWO WALD
von Eichorn, commander-in-cliief of one of Von Hin-
denburg's victorious armies, and with his staff I sat
around a strange banquet — a little room in a Rus-
sian inn, with candle-light flickering on the wall, and
for music, the rolling of the guns, while the victors
celebrated the battle in a way that I could not under-
stand.
The Road to Augustowo
We awoke to hear the guns, great drums beating a
sinister roll.
" To-day," said Rittmeister Tzschirner, " I take you
to the front. Do you wish? "
I was for a quick breakfast.
" Oh, no, Mr. Fox. There is much time. The battle
will endure all day.''
Nevertheless I hurried the Rittmeister to break-
fast downstairs in the Europiski Hotel. Quantities
of black coffee, served in long glasses, platters of
white buns coated with some tasteless powder, suspi-
ciously Russian, and Ober-Lieutenant Lieckfeld of the
Eighth Battery of the First Guards, joined us — a
handsome, healthy skinned, smiling man, who spoke a
fair English. He told us what an officer had seen on
the road back from Augustowo this morning.
" Just this side of Augustowo,'' explained Lieck-
feld, " the Captain saw a Russian gun that had been
hit by one of our shells. The horses and men were
all killed and the carriages smashed. The Captain
said they looked very bloody and all sort of mixed."
This was the kind of war I had seen for years in
223
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
pictures — the war of de Neuville and Verestchagin.
I wonder if the officers noticed my impatience to be on
the road to Augustowo. And then the Rittmeister
did a significant thing. Drawing his Browning, he
drew the clip from the magazine to see that it was
full.
" And now/' he said, " we go to Augustowo/' add-
ing with a tantalizing smile, " Do you wish? ''
" Don't kill any Russians," Lieckfeld called after
us and chuckled.
Following the Petersburg Prospeckt, a wide un-
paved highway, obviously the Main Street of gray,
squat housed Suwalki, our motor bumped out on the
road to Augustowo — a road of frozen brown snow in
the middle of a dreary snow covered plain and tun-
neling ahead into a green forest of pine. We passed
a huddle of miserable huts and a great Russian church
with bulb shaped cupolas, slender minarets and a
dome gleaming with gold. We passed the deserted
garrison barracks, places of filth, in which the Ger-
mans would not live. We ran along a line of pretty
pale blue fence palings; and then we saw the boys.
They seemed to be playing a game. A little fellow,
whose round fur hat and brown pea jacket was typi-
cal of his chums, was poking at something with a
stick. Greatly excited, he called the boys, who
seemed to be looking for something across the road in
the snow. Stridently he called to them.
" That boy is saying," explained Tzschirner who
understands Russian, " that he has found another
one."
224
THE BATTLE OF AUGUSTOWO WALD
And we saw that the youngster was poking the
snow away from a big bearded man in a sheepskin
coat. The game the boys of Suwalki were playing
was hunting the dead. . . .
The woods opened up; a funeral stillness closed in.
A Uhlan on patrol passed at a center. Tzschirner
gave a command and the motor stopped. ^^ Laden,"
he said, and while the red haired mechanician was
loading the two carbines strapped to the car, Tzschir-
ner said, " The battle is continuing. Russians cut
off from their regiments are in the woods. They are
fugitives. They are hungry and if they see us, they'll
shoot. I must say you this.''
We began to take an interest in the woods. We
saw that the slender trunks of the pines gave poor
concealment to a man but in the snow we discerned
many tracks. Somewhere in their depths a rifle
cracked. Tzschirner stopped the car. We listened;
everything was still. We drove on. We came upon
an abandoned howitzer and in the snow a magnum
of unexploded shells, a great stain that had turned
black, and a yellow mound of fresh clay.
" A gun position," said Tzschirner briefly. " Our
soldiers made advance too rapidly for the Russians
to retreat."
There are thirty kilometers on the road from Su-
walki to Augustowo and the thirty kilometers were
strewn with the tangle and debris of war. I found
myself counting caps — round Russian caps of goat-
skin and fur, and the black peaked caps of muster
day. I counted these caps until I counted thirty-
225
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
three in an unbelievably short time and I found my-
self thinking of them as thirty-three dead. For a
soldier will discard his coat before his cap.
Near Szszepki which is where the forest opens into
a brief snow gray plain, ringed with a dreariness of
sky, we met the woman, a young peasant woman, her
loose hair wreathing her sullen eyes with thick black
curls. As she saw us, she made the sign of the
cross.
" Stop the car," I called to Tzschirner.
He got out with me, the woman gave a scream and
fled down the road. We ran after her.
" Please, Madame,'^ the Rittmeister asked her,
" why did you make the sign of the cross when you
saw us?''
She began mumbling a prayer; her shaking finger
traced the sign in the air.
" Why,'' said Tzschirner gently, " do you fear us? "
When she spoke it was without looking up. " Our
soldiers," she said, losing her fear, " told me you were
devils, so I thought if I made the cross you could not
pass it. They told me you would burn my house and
kill me."
" Has your house been burned? "
" No-o."
"And you will not be killed, Madame," said
Tzschirner, touching his hat. " I promise you."
We left her looking after us in a bewildered way
and when we climbed into the motor she fled up the
road.
" They have bad minds, the Russians," remarked
226
THE BATTLE OF AUGUSTOWO WALD
Tzschirner. " They know what they have made in
East Prussia."
And then near Szczobra we overtook the " clean up
squad.'' We saw them advancing, as in extended or-
der, the teeth of a great comb, cleaning woods, fields
and ponds, of the dead. We saw segments of the
line abruptly stop, and come together and begin dig-
ging in the snow.
" How," I asked Tzschirner, " did they miss the
d^ad we saw along the road? "
" They have not been there," he explained. " They
first work where considerable actions have occurred;
then they take up the more isolated points of the
line."
All this time the grumble of the guns had grown
more distinct. We were nearing Augustowo. A
horde of prisoners stolidly shuffled and I saw that
their hands and faces were black with the battle.
The German light wounded commenced to straggle
along, holding a white bound hand, or unconcernedly
handling a cheap cigar while the other arm hung
cradled in a sling. I thought they all looked tired
but their step was alert. And always the roll of the
guns grew louder, monstrous drums insanely beating
their Miserere from somewhere beyond the tops of
the pines.
Finding at Szczobra a field bakery, we ate. Seated
around an empty box with two officers of the commis-
sary, we ate from deep tin dishes filled with a stew
of white beans and beef ; there were chunks of a brown
bread made from Kussian meal. And the floor al-
227
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
most in the long shed that the engineers had built
in a night, was covered with loaves of the brown
bread baked fresh in the twelve oven transports out-
side ; while at the other end of the shed, white aproned
bakers were mixing their dough.
" They are all volunteers," the commissary officer
was saying. " By trade they are bakers and when
war broke out they at once put themselves at the dis-
posal of the government. I am sorry," he went on,
'^that I cannot give you better bread, but here in
Kussia," and he shrugged.
" I like the Kussian meal," I told him. " What did
you do, commandeer quantities of it? "
" We bought it," he replied a little indignant, " and
paid cash for it. As soon as we occupied Suwalki,
all the Jews took their meal out of their hiding places
and brought it to us. Here," and opening a wallet
he handed me a receipt that showed how Herr Fried-
mann, of Suwalki, had received 10,000 marks cash for
meal delivered to the German army.
We continued in the motor. I saw a trooper's
grave — his lance upright in the snow, the black and
white Prussian pennon snapping in the wind. We
passed a frozen pond where Russian prisoners were
breaking the ice to fill their canteens. We stooped at
a great wooden cross, on which an officer's Rosary
hung ; and then I saw the birds.
They were gray bellied birds with black wings and
heads. They were waddling birds that grotesquely
marched across the snow, pecking as they went. They
were fluttering winged birds that you thought of as
228
THE BATTLE OF AUGUSTOWO WALD
being too heavy to fly strong. And as I noticed one
near the road, I saw that his gray breast bulged
plumply ; he seemed to have eaten well.
Further on in the field, — in the same field where
waddled the birds, — I saw a shapeless heap of men ;
and then another heap, and another, until I had
counted six. I saw a bristle of barbed entanglements
trampled in the snow and just behind them a trench,
a deep long grave that days before the living had dug
for themselves — a pit filled with clay and snow and
men. I had never seen such men before. They were
men postured like jumping jacks only their legs and
arms were still. They were men who seemed stand-
ing on their heads, their feet over the trench top,
turned soles up to the sky. Somehow, they gave you
the impression of being all legs and arms, — stiff
grotesque legs, stiff grotesque arms. They all seemed
lumpy, all but one, and he was standing up, his gray-
ish face turned in the direction the clean up squad
would come; and he was standing because the piled
dead braced him so that he could not fall. . . .
The Road Through the Forest
"Eighty thousand prisoners by to-night — I
think," added Rittmeister Tzschirner. He had just
left the office of the Kommandant in Augustowo, a
little gray building, the walls chipped with shrapnel.
From the East rolled the steady boom of the guns ; the
battle was two miles away.
" I have just looked at his map," continued Tzschir-
229
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
ner, and he glanced at his watch. " One o^cIock. . . .
I think by to-night we make eighty thousand prison-
ers — perhaps not so many, naturlich. But from the
position of the lines, I think yes. . . . And now I
think I can take you to the battle. You wish? "
Above the bluish walls of Augustowo the tops of
the green pines laid against a leaden sky. Over there
was the battle, the dense forest an impenetrable cur-
tain, through which reverberated the pang of shrap-
nel and the roar of grenaten.
" I must tell you," hesitated Tzschirner, as our mo-
tor, lurching through the mud of Augustowo, turned
toward the woods. " It is very dangerous. The for-
est is filled with Russians and they will shoot. It
may not be agreeable."
" Let's have a try at it," I suggested.
The Rittmeister smiled.
^^ Seyring I " he called to the red haired mechani-
cian. ^^ Fertig zu feuer! Be ready to fire. Gel-
bricke ! " and he tapped the chauffeur. " If I say turn
back, turn instantly and drive fast ! " With a smile
he turned to me. " Mr. Fox," he said, " you know
how to use German rifle, do you not? "
Then making a turn to the left, we entered a better
road that tunneled away through the trees.
" This is the road to Grodno," said Tzschirner, " the
Russian fortress. Our soldiers make their advance
here."
We rattled across a wooden bridge that the Ger-
man pioneers had thrown on top of a dynamited ruin
across the Augustowo Canal. The road dipped to a
230
THE BATTLE OF AUGUSTOWO WALD
lower level, that pointed toward Grodno, a straight
brown band finally seeming to terminate where rows
of distant pines, meeting like converging railway
tracks, closed across the last thin slit of sky. At a
slower pace, as though sensing danger, the car passed
into the woods.
There came a German soldier. He was on foot.
He had no rifle and his right hand squeezed the left as
though it were asleep and he would waken it. But
as we drew near, he dropped the left hand as though
it were of no importance — and I saw the blood spread
all over it — and the right hand flashed to his cap.
" Where," asked the Kittmeister, returning the sa-
lute, " are the Eussians? ''
" In the woods," said the soldier, and walked on ;
he was holding his hand again.
Watching the woods, we drove slowly on, past the
few huts, which are Bealobrzegi, until we heard a
noise like a bunch of Japanese firecrackers confusedly
exploding in the woods.
" The Russians ! " I exclaimed.
" And our soldiers," added Tzschimer. " Our men
are going through the forest hunting them down."
And I began to understand the fresh tracks in the
snow that crisscrossed in among the slender trunks
of the pines, until they darkened with the forest
gloom. And I began to think of this battle of Au-
gustowo Wald as another Battle of the Wilderness,
although here the ground was free of underbrush;
and I realized that on both sides of us a grim game
was being played, that we could hear but could not
231
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
see; a long pursuit in which Germans and Russians
stalked each other from tree to tree, to find the quarry
and kill.
A battery clanked by at a canter, and the gunners,
swinging their legs, seemed stolid and tired. I be-
gan to see traces of death in the snow — discarded
clothing, broken rifles, clips of cartridges, a profusion
of shaggy Russian hats — all the frightful debris of
war. We met a Huzzar and he too seemed tired and
lethargic.
^^ Aus wo fahren sie ? '\csilled Tzschirner.
^^ Von Promiska/^ shouted the Huzzar.
'' 1st der Weg freif ''
^^ Jawohl! Nach J amine.''
" The road is clear of Russians as far as the village
of Jamine," explained Tzschirner.
And then I saw the dead Russians. There was one
who had fallen in a heap and you thought that his
face, buried in the cold snow, had found solace there.
I saw another who lay in a ditch, his waxy bearded
face staring at the cheerless sky, his arms wide
stretched as if impaled on a cross; and I noticed
that his boots had been stripped from him, and that
one foot was wound with a white stained cloth, as
though bruised with the rush of retreating miles over
the frozen roads . . . and now he could rest.
And out of the gray drizzle down the road there
emerged an old woman and a child. The old woman
was a grotesque figure as she hobbled along in a vain
attempt to run. The little girl at her heels looked
incredibly old. She was carrying a schoolbag, bulg-
232
THE BATTLE OF AUGUSTOWO WALD
ing with hastily packed belongings. In the old
woman's arms there was something covered with a
red cloth. She had a way of staring at this bundle
and breaking into sobs. And as I watched them flee-
ing down the road, a swarm of bullets sung overhead
with a sucking sound and spattered among the trees.
" They will see the dead men/' I thought.
A grimy trooper was galloping down the road.
" Halt ! " ordered the Kittmeister.
" Where are the Eussians? "
" In the woods, everywhere, in front and behind
you," called the trooper, and galloped away. I heard
Tzschirner ask the chauffeur how quickly he could
turn round the car if we were attacked. The chauf-
feur stopped and tried. The result was painfully
slow. " I must warn you," said Tzschirner, " it is
very dangerous. Entire companies of Eussians that
have been cut off from their regiments are in the
woods. They might easily surround us before help
could come."
" Let's try it a little further," I suggested, for as
yet we had seen no living Eussian.
^^ Langsam Gelbricke," called Tzschirner to the
chauffeur, and then the Eittmeister drew his pistol
and sat with his hand on the trigger, a precaution
which until now I had never seen a German officer
take in the tensest situations of the Eastern or West-
ern front. From Jamine, the roar of the guns broke
through the cold rain in a monotone of clamor, but
more distinct became the rattle of rifles among the
pines. A bullet kicked up the dirty snow.
233
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
At that moment I glanced toward the edge of the
trees at the left, where I saw a Russian lying on his
back in the snow. He wore a brown army coat with
red shoulder straps, sewed with the yellow numerals
of his regiments. His gun was leaning against a tree
and I thought that it had been torn from his hands
or placed there. For with upraised arms, rigid in
the struggle with death, his clawing hands seemed to
have been turned to stone. At the same time, with
odd irrelevance, there flashed into my mind the re-
membrance of the lead soldiers that I had played
with as a boy — a soldier whose gun I had broken
off and whose arms I had bent, to signify his death.
And I thought of the lead soldier until we passed a
yellow haired Finn, whose hands were folded on his
great chest, as though a comrade had fixed him for
burial before fleeing among the firs. Now the crack
of the rifles came closer and with more frequency,
and we began to see blood upon the snow, and then
a big red hole around which fragments of clothing
and fragments of stiff things were strewn. " A shell
burst there," remarked Tzschirner.
A few paces on we came upon a dead horse from
whose flanks a square chunk had been cut, presuma-
bly by a fugitive who, with this first food of days,
had crept into the woods. All around we could never
see the men who were shooting or the dim outlines of
their human targets. And then, from out of the trees,
a German soldier came stumbling, and fell limply into
the snow. Jumping out while the car was in mo-
tion, our red haired mechanician ran toward him.
234
THE BATTLE OF AUGUSTOWO WALD
" Dead/' called Seyring, throwing up his hands.
Tzschirner seemed to come to a decision.
" I think/' he said, " that this is as far as we had
better go. You have seen it. It is the same.''
" But, Captain," I urged, " isn't there some place
from which we could see an artillery position? "
" You would go into the woods," bantered Tzschir-
ner. " I will take you, but it is very dangerous."
" No, Captain," I said. " We would like to see the
battlefield from the position of one of your batteries
in action."
" That is possible," said Tzschirner. " But we
must return to Augustowo and journey by another
road."
The rifles were cracking not two hundred meters
away — so the Rittmeister said — as the car turned
and raced down the road to Augustowo. We passed
a rumbling ammunition train ; and the soldier sitting
beside the driver of the first car was munching on
a huge chunk of black bread. We noticed more of
the fresh dead as we came to a lonely shack set in a
little clearing among the pines. I saw outside the
door a fallen man who, like a wild animal, had
crawled to some hidden place to die. Always guns
were booming in the direction of Jamine, their song
rolling over the sky an immeasurable travail.
Here among the pines, to the right and to the left,
the ruthless game of tracking and shooting went on
with a cracking sound, and the snow became more
cluttered with coats, and I counted furry, shaggy
Russian hats until I could count no more. If a bird
235
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
still lived in that forest, it did not sing; only the
black winged birds with the gray bellies of carrion
were there, hovering cautiously above the trees with
weird instinct that a grewsome feast was near. As
we left the great green forest, and rushed the grade to-
ward the bridge over the canal made by the German
engineers, we suddenly stopped and our red haired
boy of a mechanician got out and lifted a dark ob-
ject which barred the way and which had not been
there when we crossed the bridge before. I saw him
dragging at a German soldier whose feet grotesquely
bobbed against the boards, and he was careful, the
red haired boy, to lay the soldier at the extreme edge
of the bridge, as if to make certain that no wagon
would pass over him; he was very careful of that,
was the red haired boy. But when he was through
I saw that the soldier's head dangled over the bridge
as though needing but a push to flop into the muddy
canal below. . . .
The Battle
We had left the forest, where the rifles croaked and
chugged again between the pale blue houses of Au-
gustowo.
^^ Chausee nach Raygrodf " cried the Rittmeister
to the sentry by the Kommandant office.
'^ Links gehen! ^^ was the reply.
" We must go toward Raygrod if you would visit
with the battery/' explained Tzschirner. "Perhaps
the road will not be good, all the way. I hope, yes."
236
THE BATTLE OF AUGUSTOWO WALD
From east and south rolled the thunder of the
guns and across the street from a muddy yard that
was strewn with Eussian dead, I saw five German
soldiers, picking the caked dirt from their boots and
singing a song. And as we left behind the last
squalid house of Augustowo I saw a squad of smiling
soldiers crowding around a captured Kussian field
kitchen. But the odor that assailed my nostrils was
not of steaming food ; in the road nearby lay the car-
cass of a horse.
There opened a great grayish plain, serried with
hastily thrown up trenches, filled with melting snow
and the lying, the kneeling and the sitting dead; a
wilderness of sky closed in, grayish like the earth,
and across it an aeroplane came, the black crosses
painted beneath its wings, crosses of death — for
would not the bombs fall? — and it cackled away, the
bird of destruction toward the eastern sky. Through
Naddamki and Koszielny, into a brief dense forest,
and we drove toward Bauszcke to the growing clamor
of the guns.
"It is better,^' said Tzschirner, " that we leave our
auto in Bauszcke and proceed on foot. To Tayno we
must journey five kilometers. It grows dangerous
and the auto might be observed by the Russians."
Leaving the car on the highway to Raygrod — Sey-
ring, the red haired mechanician begging in vain to
be allowed to come — we tramped through the snow
and mud of a narrow Russian road toward Tayno.
" I must tell you," was Tzschirner's note of warn-
ing, "this is very dangerous. The Russians no
237
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
longer have any orders. They are everywhere, little
bodies cut off from their commands and trying to es-
cape. You must remember there exists no line like
the West here. Everything is movement."
Still the only Kussians we had seen were dead or
prisoners, so we went on. Two Uhlans passed at a
trot, turning from right to left with alert eyes.
^' 1st der weg freif ^^ called Tzschirner.
^^ Jawohl. Alles ruhig!'^
Satisfied, the Eittmeister thought we could go on.
The grumble of the guns became clearer; a grenat
burst not half a mile away, emitting its terrifying
grinding yelp, and staining the air with an ugly
spume of brownish smoke. The road turned, skirt-
ing a pond, the Drengstwo See, beyond it a grove
of pines above which shrapnel was breaking in beauti-
ful billowing clouds. And then just ahead, reverber-
ating in a bowl in the rolling ground, I heard four
crashing reports, first two, then two more ; and wisps
of grayish smoke rose in the air and as quickly
thinned away. Hurrying up the road and into the
hollow, we joined the battery. Four 10.5 field pieces,
set in pairs with thirty feet between, the battery was
shelling a Russian position on the Bobr. Moving
with a feverish ordered haste, the black striped gun-
ners drew the empty copper jackets of the shrapnel,
returned each to its oiled cloth case, and glancing
toward an officer who was kneeling beside a tree,
seemed waiting for something. I saw that the officer
had a telephone clamped over his ear, and then two
slender wires, which led from this to another tree,
238
THE BATTLE OF AUGUSTOWO WALD
festooned from one to the other like the tendrils of
a vine. He was furiously scribbling in a despatch
book that rested on his knee and once he looked up
to fling some words to the orderly standing by. What-
ever they were, these words seemed to fire the orderly
with a purpose, for, leaping toward the battery, he
called: ^^ Bischen rechts. Yierzig metres tie-
fer! ''
For this information the impatient gunners seemed
to be waiting. At once they broke into the same
feverish motions at the guns, setting the hand on the
shrapnel clock, so the burst would come ^^ Verzig
metres tiefer^^ — or forty meters further on — then
the breeches snapped shut, and I saw them clap their
hands to their ears — just as I had seen the boyish
gunners of the 7.7s do in the West — while in salvos
the guns roared and a multitude of specks filled the
air, and there came back to us the loose rattling
sounds of four shells, getting under way on their trip
to the enemy's lines. In the unreal stillness that fol-
lowed, I heard the telephone buzz and drone.
^^ Schon! ^^ called the officer to his battery. ^' Viele
Russlanders tot! ''
" Do they get back the results so quickly? " I asked
Tzschirner. " How is it possible? "
" You would wish to see? " he asked. " I shall
try.''
He said something to the officer, who immediately
telephoned something to whoever was at the end of
the line. After a brief conference Tzschirner saluted
the officer and came to us with a smile.
239
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WAJIRING GERMANY
" We shall go now. We can see the battle — if you
should like/'
What a wonderful little officer he was ! — a Miracle
Man, who now was granting the one great desire.
"What luck ! '' I was saying, " a battle I "
With his pistol drawn — for, "were we to meet
Eussians, they would not know who you were and I
should have to protect you,^^ — Kittmeister Tzschirner
followed the telephone wires, along the edge of the
woods until skirting a frozen reed grown pond, he
moved cautiously into the forest, pausing every few
strides to listen, while the feeling came upon me that
I was utterly hollow and my throat was dry as a
board. Once we saw tracks in the snow, a wet red
stain and a sleeve of a Kussian army coat, which
seemed to have been slashed off; once we heard a
shrapnel pang behind us on the tops of the trees;
and then there came no sound to break the crunch
of our boots in the snow. As we proceeded I began
to experience a curious sense of security in contrast
to the passage through the forest that croaked with
rifles. By the time we came out on a ledge that
overhung a yellowish frozen swamp, I forgot myself
in the interest of the drama before me. As we gazed
across the kilometers of the Netta swamp toward
where the Bobr lay among the weeds, a monstrous
smoking serpent, the shrapnel puffed like the clouds
of June, drifting with serene white beauty, while
those who had stood near, lay stricken below. . . .
I heard Tzschirner call to some one. From the
240
THE BATTLE OF AUGUSTOWO WALD
great pine at our back there came an answer in Ger-
man.
" You may go into the observing post," said Tzschir-
ner. " Do you wish? ''
And I climbed up a ladder that had been nailed
on the pine and squeezed my way up through the floor
of a little house, hidden amid the boughs of the tree;
and there I found the captain of the battery, crouch-
ing, for the pine thatched house was tiny, and staring
with his glasses through a hole in the wall.
'' Come in,'' he said pleasantly, without looking
around. " You will not find it comfortable, I fear.
Will you excuse me, please, a moment? It is impor-
tant. I must see."
While he made his observation, I noticed that a
field telephone was strapped to his head and that a
writing tablet covered with figures dangled from his
belt. I watched him lower the glasses and speak
quickly into the phone. " Pardon me," he said when
he had finished talking, "it was very necessary."
And then he went on to explain that his battery
was doing great damage to the Eussians now ; that the
shrapnel was breaking over their trenches.
" You would like to see? " he said, unstrapping his
binoculars.
And now I was looking upon the battle. I saw on
the edges of the great swamp two villages in flames.
I located the German columns issuing from the south
Augustowo woods and breaking into extended order,
spread across the snow toward Mogilnice, a multitude
241
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
of creeping specks of brown; and toward the south,
out of Grezedy, they seemed suddenly to spring up
from the earth, as if a Cadmus had sown them, and
roll in a cloud toward a point beyond the yellow
weeds, where now all the shrapnel seemed bursting,
as if by fantastic intent, making beautiful the sky
with the fleecy clouds that brought death. And in
the din of it all, I heard now the harsh pecking of
machine guns, and that which had been a rolling gray-
green mass of men became jagged and wavering; and
then as suddenly the earth gave up another armed
harvest, and the wavering mass of men was caught
up in this and hurled forward. Suddenly for the
first time that day the sun streaked through the
greasy clouds, and the bayonets flashed it back. Was
that roar a cheer? As the gray -green mass rolled
on, and there came a mad clamor as if all the machine
guns were pecking away at once. Then it was as if
the mass, swept over like a mighty inundation, for
you could hear their volleys no more — only the shrap-
nel, which seemed suddenly to have lengthened its
range, panged ever more faintly away, wreathing a
covert where fugitives might flee in a halo of pure
smoke.
I felt my arms growing tired. The officer looked
patient. I thanked him and climbed to the ground.
Tzschirner, too, looked patient.
" I thought you would remain there for the night,"
he smiled.
" Was I long? '^ I asked, surprised.
" Half an hour," he said.
242
THE BATTLE OF AUGUSTOWO WALD
But it is not the battery of 10.5's, not the vil-
lage in flames, not the death stalking amid the pines,
not the storm of the Germans near Grezedy, that will
be my memory of the battle of Augustowo Wald.
Rather it will be of an old woman — ^^an old woman
who lives in a little hut on the big farm, to the right
of the road as you enter Augustowo. As we started
for the battle I saw this wizened little figure with her
red shawl wrapped around her head peering from the
shelter of the door, like a hen thrusting its head from
a coop. Two hours later, while returning, I looked
toward the hut again and saw the little woman who
wore the red shawl. She stood as before, her head
cautiously peering through the crack of the door, as
if she feared that her body might present too big a
mark for the battle fire. As I looked again when our
motor snorted past, I realized that she stood there
frozen in terror. At the noise of our coming she
turned her face to the road and I saw that her mouth
was open wide — as wide as my hand.
The Feast of Victory
As we drove into Suwalki, the muffled rolling of
the guns followed us through the damp twilight.
Stopping at the Europiski Hotel, a faded building
of painted stones, we passed to the clicking of sen-
tries' heels under a dripping archway, opening into
a filthy, watery court. One saw bare-legged women,
yoked with double pails, picking their way between
the shiny automobiles of the staff, to a typhus menac-
243
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
ing well beyond. On the right of the archway a
flight of heavy stone steps ran up to a dingy drinking
room; a tea room now, since the days of the vodka
ukase. A greasy proletarian smirked a welcome from
behind a counter, laden with platters of food, as
sour as his smile. Excusing himself, Kittmeister
Tzschirner opened the door to a larger room on the
right, which we had seen open during the day, but
always closed after six at night. Taking seats at
one of the little round topped tables, I watched the
German officers filing in, taking plates from a high
stack, and helping themselves from the large platters
on the counter, always paying the price without com-
ment and in money, while the greasy proprietor rang
a merry tune on his cash register, and contemptuous,
no doubt, that the conquering Germans paid his out-
rageous prices without protest. I knew the man with
the smirk was thinking that had the Russians been
the conquerors they would not have bothered about
the score. No, not the Russians. They would have
had his daughters dance for them, and they would
have eaten their fill in the name of the Czar. To
give him full measure, they might have beaten him
with the flats of their swords. Bah, these Germans,
they were fools !
" Excellence von Eichorn," said Tzschirner, return-
ing, " begs that you be his guest at dinner."
I could scarcely credit my good fortune. Dinner
with the Commanding General of the 10th German
army on the night of his triumph.
244
THE BATTLE OF AUGUSTOWO WALD
" We shall eat with Excellence and his staff — in
celebration of the victory,'' added the Eittmeister.
This latter was a bit of gentle irony that for the
moment I missed. I later learned that the room
which always closed at six, was the dining hall of
General von Eichorn and his staff. As we passed in
with Tzschimer, the officers showed a polite curiosity
and then bent over their food. ^^ Amerikaner ! ^^ I
heard some one say. Soon I was shaking hands with
the hero of the battle of Augustowo Wald. A tall
white haired man, who must have been over sixty^
whose face betokened more of the scholar than the
soldier. The clear twinkling eyes and the fine
thoughtful forehead, were those of a serene doctor
of laws who was living out his life among the flowers
of some pretty university town; and yet his jaw was
a buttress of steel and his mouth had a way of thin-
ning in a straight grim line — a strange combination
of the humanitarian and militant elements.
" I congratulate your Excellency " (what a feeble
attempt it was ! ) " upon your wonderful victory."
Telling me I was very kind, he then by some trick of
his marvelous personality almost succeeded in mak-
ing us feel that we, not he, were the heroes of the
evening. While we were meeting different members
of his staff, we learned what the Kussian rout was.
The entire Tenth Army under General Russky had
been smashed. One hundred thousand men had been
made prisoners ; eighty thousand wounded, forty thou-
sand dead, ten thousand fugitives. About three hun-
245
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
dred and fifty cannons liad been captured, with muni-
tion and with machine guns, so vast in numbers that
there had not yet been time to count them. An entire
army annihilated! The white haired man, who, sit-
ting at the table at the end of the room, from which
radiated other tables like those at a banquet, and he
who was now raising a cup of tea, and smiling about
him with gentle eyes, he had directed it all^ — the
smashing of almost a quarter million men — making
ninety thousand of them captive and killing or wound-
ing or starving the rest.
And this was the feast in celebration of victory.
In English and American newspapers I had read of
the drunken revels with which the Barbarians made
the nights of their triumphs more terrible. I had read
that the first great drive into France fell short of
Paris, because entire staffs had gone drunk ; and then
I recalled Rittmeister Tzschirner in extending Von
Eichorn's invitation had added with genial irony —
^' in celebration of the victory."
And this was the feast, stewed hare and fried meat
cakes, mashed potatoes and rice, all covered with a
brown gravy and served all in the same big platters,
a slice of black bread, tea, the sweetened whipped
white of an eggy and one glass of a cheap Bordeaux
for each man — that was the menu with which the
battle of Augustowo Wald was celebrated.
I was busy at the hare when the Rittmeister said
to us :
" Excellence von Eichorn would drink wine with
you.''
246
THE BATTLE OF AUGUSTOWO WALD
Tzschirner told us afterwards that it was a great
honor.
" I know I made a mess of it," I lamented to him.
"What should I have done?"
" Oh, no," said the Rittmeister. " You are Amer-
ican and we do not expect you to understand our mili-
tary customs," which made me feel a little easier.
On my left. Captain Kluth, who early in the morn-
ing would leave for Augustowo to bring back four
captured Russian generals, spoke English, like an
American. Kluth, a merry eyed, dark skinned Rhein-
lander, smiled when he said he was sorry that they
had no grape juice — and then he did not smile when
he said :
" In America, you want peace. You could bring
about peace if you would stop selling ammunition.
To-day we captured so much ammunition that Rus-
sia would be in a bad way for more, were it not for
America."
" Did you capture any American ammunition? " I
asked him.
" Quantities," he replied, " and the trouble with it
is that your ammunition is good. It kills more men."
And then came the champagne, not in honor of Von
Eichom or the victory, but in honor of the American
guest.
" I have," smiled Captain Kluth, " two pints of
champagne in my room. We shall drink together."
Knowing that in the Russia of to-day, that next to
cleanliness wine is the rarest commodity, I begged
Captain Kluth to keep his treasure hidden; but he
247
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
would have none of it, and when he returned with the
bottles he told me their story.
" When we occupied Suwalki," he said, " I asked
an old Jew if he knew where there was any cham-
pagne. He said, no. I gave him two marks and he
said, yes. From somewhere he produced these two
pint bottles and wanted twenty marks for them. I
gave him ten. It's enough for two pints of bad cham-
pagne, isn't it? "
In response to a query of mine, a captain of the
telegraph corps gave me his story of the battle.
^' This morning," he began, " one of our corps tele-
graphed here that they were without food. They got
an answer that the Eussians were in the woods with
plenty of food. Two hours later they telegraphed
again. ' We are enjoying our dinner,' was the mes-
sage."
" Yes," added Captain Kluth, " and that corps was
made up of volunteers. The Emperor sent word to
them that they had battled as well as first line troops."
Then we talked of many things concerning the
war, while one by one the officers of the staff, leaving
the table, bowed and went to the rooms. During this
unique feast there was frequent laughter at witty
sallies, but no boisterousness ; and we began to mar-
vel at the cool, confident, almost commonplace way
with which the staff was taking the victory. It
lacked a few minutes of ten when General von
Eichorn said good night to us and went to his room ;
and after he had gone we heard something about him,
that his home was in Frankfort, that his record in
248
THE BATTLE OF AUGUSTOWO WALD
maneuvers was one of unbroken success, that the
outbreak of war had found him ill, and that this was
his first campaign. And then at a hint from Kitt-
meister Tzschirner, I begged to be excused.
" These officers," he whispered, " have had much
to tire them to-day and must be up very early."
I nodded. As we rose the officers did also, and the
soldier cook came in to smile a good-by, and the sol-
dier waiters passed platters in which each officer
dropped a few coins.
" How much? " I asked Tzschirner.
" One mark eighty pfennigs. But you are not to
pay."
And so was celebrated the battle of Augustowo
Wald, one of the greatest victories of modern his-
tory, with a dinner that cost one mark eighty pfen-
nigs a cover, or about forty cents.
The Strategy of the Battle
The battle of Augustowo Wald, which resulted in
the annihilation of an entire Russian army on Feb-
ruary 21, actually began on February 7, when Field
Marshal Hindenburg secretly transported troops from
Poland to East Prussia and new troops, young sol-
diers who were to get their baptism of fire were
brought up from inner garrisons. The total rein-
forcements were five corps. Concentrating around
Gumbinnen, the Tenth German army, under the com-
mand of Excellence von Eichorn, awaited the com-
mand to advance simultaneously with General von
249
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
Buelow's army, which was making its preparations be-
hind Lyck. Like a country fence, the Russian line zig-
zagged across East Prussia, south of the Memel, east'
of Ragnit, to Gumbinnen, wedging forward along the
line of the Angerapp and back through the Masuren
lakes to Lyck. Since mid-November the Russians
had held this line, a third of the rich East Prussian
farmland behind their crooked fence. And the fence
must be smashed.
It was on the ninth of February that General von
Lowenstein's troops of General von Eichorn's army
began the battle by making forced marches in the
snow from Gumbinnen toward Pillkallen and Stallu-
ponen. All that night snow fell and confident the
Germans would not attack because they could not
bring up their artillery, the Russians fell back on
Eydtkuhnen (East Prussia) and Kibarty and Wir-
ballen, just across the frontier. Here they ate from
their field kitchens — something they had been un-
able to do in twenty-four hours, turned in for a good
sleep and left the road without outposts. Why bother
with outposts? The snow was sufficient; the Ger-
mans could never bring up their cannon on those
roads. Apparently since the days of Napoleon, Rus-
sia had believed too foolishly that winter is always
on its side.
Not being able to advance with their cannon, the
Germans came up without it. Unsupported by a sin-
gle gun, forcing their way through the downpour of
snow, the German infantry, young soldiers in their
first battle, swept down on Eydtkuhnen. On the road
250
THE BATTLE OF AUGUSTOWO WALD
stood two batteries, totaling twelve howitzers and a
large number of ammunition wagons. Up to within
fifty meters of the Eussian batteries the Germans
were able to advance before being discovered. In a
panic the Kussians tried with carbine fire to cover
the retreat of their guns, but storming the position
the Germans shot down the horses in the traces and
piling the dead and the living, blocked the road of
escape. Supported now by the captured cannon, the
Germans rushed on and there followed a night battle
in the streets of Eydtkuhnen, back across the fron-
tier to Russian Kibarty, where ten thousand pris-
oners were made. By midnight another division of
Von Eichorn's army, which broke through at Pillkal-
len, had driven the Russians down into Wirballen,
where the Russians, again surprised by similar
forced marches through the snowstorm, fought des-
perately in the streets and surrendered.
Three hospital trains, one the Czarina's, another
Prince Lievin's, were captured in Kibarty, and in
them General von Lowenstein's staff found unexpect-
edly comfortable quarters for the night, and stores of
delicacies like preserves and chocolate. Captured
cars filled with boots and fur lined vests made the
soldiers more comfortable, and when they found one
hundred and ten Russian field kitchens filled with
warm food, the joy of the young German regiments
was complete. For two days they had been living on
knapsack rations.
Now while this movement was turning the Rus-
sian flank backward on Wilkowiszky, and at the same
251
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
time General Lieutenant Boulgakew's 20th Army
Corps — its communications with the 10th corps cut
— was retreating pell mell from Goldap to Suwalki,
two other German movements were developing.
From north of Ragnit as far as the Baltic and east
of the line of the Memel, the Russians were being
driven back across the frontier. This important op-
eration protected Von Eichorn's flank and allowed
him to sweep down from the north, enfielding the
Russians on Suwalki. And with this General von
Buelow's Sth army had rolled up the Russians at
Lyck, driving them back on a terrific frontal attack
to the strongly entrenched line of the Bobr. So they
battled from February 10th to the 21st, the crum-
bling Russian right, composed of the entire Army of
East Prussia, under Russky's command, was hurled
down from the north against the victorious troops of
Von Buelow on the south. The flying Russians pour-
ing out of East Prussia, plunged headlong across the
snowy open plains, into Suwalki, where they at-
tempted to make a stand at Suwalki. Fighting as
they ran down the road to Augustowo, they were met
by Von Eichorn's army, which had marched from
Augustowo 120 kilometers through snow in two days.
Then Von Buelow, coming across from Lyck, made a
junction with Von Eichorn, and pursued them into
the forests and frozen swamps — an army of 240,000
men utterly annihilated, its few remaining corps still
bravely fighting for seven days in the Augustowo
Wald until on the day we saw them, the day the rout
252
THE BATTLE OF AUGUSTOWO WALD
was completed, their scattered, hungry remnants laid
down their arms — sixty thousand men.
The most important engagement of the war since
Tannenberg, — the battle of Augustowo Wald will be
written in history beside the charnel fields of other
wars. A terrific blow for Russia, for while she can
lose thousands of those sullen conscripts, she cannot
stand the loss of 350 cannon and countless machine
guns, rifles and stores. One hundred and twenty
thousand Russians dead and wounded lay in the
snows, while a hundred thousand of their comrades
shuffled back to Germany under armed guard.
Whether one looks at it with the cold eyes of the
strategist or appalled at its horror, one can only think
of Augustowo in terms of Waterloo, Gettysburg or
Sedan.
253
XII
THE WAR ON THE RUSSIAN FRONTIER
IN the East, the war is different. With Hinden-
burg's army against the Russians, I saw a kind of
warfare utterly different from the solid lines of the
West. To portray to the most minute detail what is
daily transpiring there, I wrote down all the impres-
sions gained in a single day and night. It was near
Tauroggen, a stricken village across the Russian fron-
tier that I saw this war of the East; it was at
Tauroggen that Prince Joachim, the youngest of the
Emperor's sons, led the Germans in the storm.
The diary follows:
11 :50 A. M., Tilsit — We have slept late, for we
came to Tilsit in the small hours, a weary ride across
the snow swept plains from Suwalki. Back there in
the pine woods of Augustowo, Von Eichorn's young
troops are hammering away at the new army that
the Grand Duke has rushed to brace the crumbling
front. But we have seen the fighting there, and this
morning Rittmeister Tzschirner has promised to show
me the war in the north, where the Memel line is pro-
tecting Von Eichorn's northern flank.
" We shall journey to one of our outposts in Rus-
254
THE WAR ON THE RUSSIAN FRONTIER
sia," proposes Tzschirner, and his eyes light hopefully.
" There may be fighting there."
Our motor goes barking through the pretty streets
of Tilsit, which, by two hours' fighting in the fall, the
German soldiers saved from the Eussian torch. We
cross the winding Memel, where a century ago Na-
poleon and the Czar met on a canopied pontoon to
sign the Peace of Tilsit, while the hills behind us
at Engelsberg bristled with the cannon of France;
we cross vast river-plains shimmering with snow and
mount to the pine fringed hills beyond, where now
are strewn the soldiers of another Czar, who thought
to march the road to Berlin; and chugging along a
wayside strewn with their smashed entanglements,
we come to Piculponen. Across the silent stretches
of snow there comes the clear scattering cracks of car-
bines.
" A Russian patrol ! " remarks Tzschirner, and he
unbuttons his holster, while our red haired mechani-
cian removes the caps from the rifles. " One can
never tell," continues Tzschirner, " down which road
their patrols may ride."
This puzzles me. " But how can they get through
the German lines? " I asked him.
" There is no line, as in the West. We have driven
the Russians from East Prussia, but there are many
roads down which their patrols can sneak from a
frontier village and run back to the troops."
" Could they come down this road? " I asked.
" We hold it to Tauroggen, where we must go, but
we have no trenches from Tauroggen to Woynuta, and
255
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
between these points are cross roads by which they
could raid this highway. But if those shots we heard
were Cossacks, I do not think they will come here.
They are not brave, the Cossacks.''
We see that beyond, to the left, an old brick church
hides among the pines.
*^ We shall go there," suggests the Eittmeister.
" Do you wish? ''
I am wondering why we should waste time on a
church when Eussian patrols are shooting up the
countryside, when Tzschirner says:
" This church is where Queen Louise of Prussia
took refuge from Napoleon in 1807."
With the dutiful air that one assumes upon exam-
ining an historical landmark, we scramble up the
bank toward the church.
" Walk slowly," the Eittmeister said, as we picked
our way through a snow covered graveyard, " or you
may not see and kick a grenat. They explode very
easily."
At once we cease thinking of the church of Picul-
ponen as Queen Louise's retreat. We are walking
amid a charnel patch of opened graves and tombs
that are the gaping craters of shells.
" The Eussians tried to hold a position here," re-
marks Tzschirner.
We turn the corner of the church and see the Eus-
sian trenches dug between the graves. We see the
great windowed walls shattered with shrapnel and
shell. We gaze down into an awful hole where a
grenat has plunged into a grave. The fragments of
256
THE WAR ON THE RUSSIAN FRONTIER
the casket are blown into the black mud, and there are
other fragments too, fragments a chalky white, for
the grave is old; and fragments of brown Russian
coats. Nearby stands a white marble cross. "^ Ruhig
sanft/^ it says, " Rest in Peace." The plains of the
Memel, as we leave the churchyard, brooding in the
white peace of the snow and under the Engelsberg lies
Tilsit, vaguely as in a mirage, its slender steepleH
churches, the spires of a dream.
1 :08 P. M. We are climbing a long brown slope of
road that has been dug from out of the drifting snow.
A kilometer from Piculponen we turn out to pass a
clanking column of gray transports, plodding on to-
ward the front. Noticing a wagon loaded with barbed
wire, I said to Tzschirner : " What will you do, make
this position at Tauroggen permanent? The entan-
glements are going up.''
" Ah, yes, for a time. It is best always to be pre-
pared," and he smiles.
In this clear, cold air our exhaust is barking in loud
exaggeration, but as we crest the hill near the hud-
dled houses of Kamstpauriken, we hear a foreign
sound. Somewhere across the snows rifles are fir-
ing.
" The Russian patrols are very active this morn-
ing," Tzschirner is saying.
'^ How far off is that shooting? " I ask.
" About a mile. On a road which is parallel to
this."
" How many in a patrol? " I was thinking that
257
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
we were five — Gelbricke, who must drive the car;
Seyring, the red-haired mechanician, who could use a
carbine; Tzschirner, with his Browning automatic;
Corey, with a fountain pen, and I with a camera.
" They are very many, the Eussians," Tzschirner
was saying. '^ They never ride a patrol under twenty
men. It is dangerous," continues Tzschirner with
the air of one doing his duty by saying that, although
I knew he was spoiling for a scrap.
"We may be surrounded; but I do not think.
Naturlichy there is the chance. You wish? "
" Eittmeister, these Eussians would have to use the
road and we could see them coming in time."
" Oh, no," Tzschirner says quickly. " They often
ride over the fields; it is very good for patrol, the
country here."
" What grand little comforter," I murmur.
Tzschirner looks around and grins. " I will pro-
tect you."
I feel he has been quietly laughing at me, until
from behind a distant snow capped ridge I see a black
belch of smoke.
" They have burned a village," exclaims Tzschirner.
Together we run through the snow in the direction
of the smoke, until a hillock gives us a vantage point
of the surrounding country. We can see the flames
now, streaking through the smoke and above the
snowy hills, black clouds stain the cold blue sky.
*^ Eemain here," calls Tzschirner, who is fumbling
with his map. " It is little more than a kilometer
258
THE WAR ON THE RUSSIAN FRONTIER
from here to the village/' And while he studies his
map I watch the flames through my binoculars.
" That is the village of Robkojen," he presently an-
nounces. " See," and he points to it on the Staff map,
where even the little summit upon which we stand is
marked.
The glasses bring to me a huddle of cottages in
flames. It reminds me of a moving picture I have
seen — a Western picture with tiny horsemen on a
distant ribbon of road. I can see the Russians ; their
uniforms are different from the brown coated droves
I have seen. They are dark uniforms and the horse-
men wear tall dark hats. Tzschirner has put his
glasses on them. " Cossacks," he mutters. " Soon
our men will be there."
Taking the hint, I swing the glasses down the road,
that twists like a black swing through the snow to
Robkojen. And even then I can discern a tiny move-
ment. It grows to a rush of horses. " They are
coming I "
The finish of a Derby has not this thrill. Can the
Germans come up fast enough? Through the smoke
I can see a sudden panic. Between two flaming cot-
tages a horse is pivoting; one seems to be rearing.
The Germans are drawing nearer. " They are
Uhlans ! " And then as in a stampede there breaks
from behind the smoking village a line of horses that
go galloping in black silhouette across the snow. The
Uhlans are taking up the pursuit.
Tzschirner's air is one of intense disgust.
259
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
" I say, you the Cossacks would not fight. They
ended their fighting when they burned the village.
They always sneak across the frontier, burn the homes
of a few poor people, terrify old men, women and their
children by killing a few, and then running like
dogs."
" Do they always run, Rittmeister? "
^^ ImmeVy unless they are greater than our cavalry
by six to one," with a sneer, he adds. " I think Rus-
sia needs them best for murdering the Jews."
Behind us the dried cottages are flaming like tinder
and across the fields from Robkojen a woman, her
arms filled with bundles, and leading a child, sinks
almost to her knees in the snow. It seems as if she
has fled a hell of fire to gain an empty world.
1 :45 P. M. " Only a few days ago the Russians ran
down this road, taking their dead with them."
We have caught up with the awful refuse of battle.
Near Szillutten we see that which no longer horrifies
— the slain dead; and then the bloody road of re-
treat, where German shells split the Russian ranks,
and lumped the road with things in brown that only
the wheels of the heavy guns can flatten down ; a fur-
rowing of frozen ruts, shining with the pounding of
transports, the packed snow broken, here and there,
to reveal stiff objects, bits of brown cloth matted with
flesh.
Burned Laugszargen shows its black walls, and as
we cross the frontier we see the red and black striped
white posts lying shattered in a ditch beside. And
260
THE WAR ON THE RUSSIAN FRONTIER
it seems a symbol of these days when frontiers seem
but things to be smashed. We are passing through
Posheruni, the silent houses echoing back our motor
in a hollow, dismal sound.
We enter a woods, the tall pines crowding close to
the road ; and it seems as though the road has been the
path of a storm, as if lightning has struck one upon
another of the trees here, for torn white they seem to
have fallen into each other's branches, leaning like
stricken things, while finding those whom they sought,
the shells have daubed them red and flung up bits
of torn cloth into their shattered boughs, there to
hang, perhaps, as a signal that the black winged birds
might see. And passing through the forest of death,
we come upon a German battery, hidden behind
mounds of clay that are covered with evergreen. The
soldiers are fussing about the long, gray barrels. And
we have not gone half a kilometer further, when we
smile at the guile of this German army; for there in
a field to the right of the road is a dummy battery.
We count four black logs lying between four sets of
farm cartwheels, and each with its little circular
shield of earth — a shield deliberately built low,
though, so that from afar the Eussian observer would
not fail to see what seemed to be a gun ; and signaling
his batteries waste thereafter the ammunition. The
road slopes down toward the sunken stream of the
Eserina. The burned bridge lifts its skeleton posts
in a warning. We get out and see that the German
engineers have bent the road to the right, leading it
down over a bed of wire-lashed saplings, across a
261
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
string of planks, and thence up over more dirt-cov-
ered saplings to the main road again.
" It is better/' suggests Tzschirner, " that we leave
the auto.'' And as the motor bounces over the lashed
saplings and takes the bridge, a company hurrying
to Tauroggen comes swinging on its heels ; for we are
getting into Kussia now, and near the line of battle,
and there can be no delay. We hurry after the car.
" Please, that bridge," and Tzschirner indicates the
charred piles ; *' it saved the Eussians. By burning
it, they delayed our advance an hour."
" Your engineers changed the course of the road,
bending it around that burning bridge, in one hour? "
" Oh, yes," and Tzschirner is almost apologetic ;
" our pioneers would have finished the work in much
less than an hour, but the Russians fired on them with
shrapnel," and then as if remarking the weather, he
added, " Fifteen were killed."
The car chugs on. A great blue bulbed cupola
shows above the trees and we rattle across the Jura.
" The Russians tried to destroy this bridge, too,"
Tzschirner is explaining, " but we came too fast for
them and drove them up into Tauroggen, where they
endeavored to stand." . . . Our motor is panting up
the hill past the Russian church and turns into the
village of Tauroggen.
" We put the artillery on them," continues Tzschir-
ner, and we pass rows of narrow, squalid houses,
chipped with shrapnel, " and they took Tauroggen by
storm. There was street fighting and then, picking
up their dead, they ran with them through the village,
262
THE WAR ON THE RUSSIAN FRONTIER
across the field to the woods,'' and Tzschirner waves
his hand down the road toward a patch of pines,
" and they're in the woods now."
We turn into a muddy street where the fighting
must have been hot, for the way is littered with car-
tridge belts and guns and on a pale blue picket fence
Eussian accouterments dangle like unclean things
hung out in the sun.
" If you will excuse me," says the Rittmeister, ^' I
shall speak with Ober-Lieutenant Hoffman."
We find Ober-Lieutenant Hoffman quartered in a
clean looking hut, distinguished by a shingle, hand-
lettered with that official looking KOMMANDO.
After he has conversed with the Ober-Lieutenant,
Tzschirner brings him into the motor and we drive
through Tauroggen in the direction the Russians have
fled. We have put the last outlying house behind us
and at a suggestion from Ober-Lieutenant Hoffman
the motor is stopped. " It is better," explains
Tzschirner, " that the auto remain here. It gives too
large a target."
With a strange feeling, almost of superiority, for
not thirty feet ahead, what appears to be a first line
trench is filled with soldiers, we walk towards them
down the road. Over there, a quarter of a mile,
across the barren field where the Russians dragged
their dead, are the woods, and skulking there are the
Russians — the soldiers maintain a nervous vigil.
Not a sound breaks the strain, only the clatter of axes,
as far to the right the soldiers are clearing a zone for
the enfilading fire of the machine guns. And as we
263
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
walk past the trench and approach the last outpost
this tension is communicated to us. We walk through
the barricade — a ladder tangled with wire, that
slides between two broken carts on either side of the
road. We scarcely notice the two sentries who walk
twenty paces from the barricade toward the woods,
wheel and return. We are watching the woods —
that great green semicircle across the field where the
Kussians are hiding.
Apparently that thought never occurs to Tzschir-
ner. Being a good soldier, he does not indulge his
imagination when he is in uniform. He and Ober-
Lieutenant Hoffman are walking along, chatting
easily as they might on some fine February day along
the Linden. As the sentries stride by I catch the
words, ^^ Wagner ist mehr wichtig/^ and a little ex-
cited, the sentry with the beard cries: ^^ Quatch!
Strauss ist wunderhar!'' Apparently to decide the
merits of Wagner and Strauss is more absorbing than
the Russians.
A little bewildered, I walk on. Down where the
road divides the woods into a limitless vista of green,
I think I see something move. It is about 600 meters
away and I focus my glass. Four Russian soldiers
sitting on a log, a little fire, and in the middle of the
road something that, while indistinguishable, sug-
gests a menace. And even as I watch I see a tree
sway and I can hear it fall as it crashes across the
road, falling like a barricade.
" Look ! Look ! The Russians ! "
264
THE WAR ON THE RUSSIAN FRONTIER
And the Rittmeister turns with an amused smile.
How commonplace are the Russians, anyway ! How
incidental to those officers who have seen so many
dead that even the living are not to be feared.
" In the middle of the road," I announced, " there
is a machine gun. It is pointed this way."
Tzschirner and Ober-Lieutenant Hoffman are dis-
cussing some military problem. Tzschirner begins to
trace in the road with his sword some formation that
is beyond my pen.
" Those Russians," I am saying without putting
down the glasses, " appear to be leaving their seats
on the log. I think they are showing sudden interest
in the gun."
Demonstrating his problem in the mud, Tzschirner
turns to me,
" This is the road to Riga. Follow it and we reach
that fortress. As we are now midway between the
German and Russian lines, I do not think it wise that
we go further. Of course, if you would care to storm
the Russians in the woods, we shall go on. Do you
wish?"
I do not wish. Nervy little Tzschirner, one of the
gamest men to straddle a horse in this war, has taken
us quite far enough. We begin our walk back to the
German lines, turning our backs with difficulty upon
those silent woods.
" If the Russians should fire," Tzschirner says seri-
ously, "throw yourself at once on the road. The
balls will pass over you."
265
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
A simple remedy, indeed !
" Strauss/' the passing sentry is objecting, " is all
chaos."
" Why not? '' his bearded comrade defends. " Sa-
lome is the music of destruction.''
Glancing back toward the woods, I see a flock of
black birds fly leisurely across the field, and alight-
ing, wait. Wait for what? Had the Ober-Lieutenant
told them that darkness would bring the Kussian at-
tack?
"And now, if you like, we shall go to my quar-
ters," says the Ober-Lieutenant, to whom Tzschirner
has deliyered me. " I am sorry you will not find
them very comfortable."
It is as ever, the diffidence of these Prussian offi-
cers, putting you a little ill at ease. Self-consciously
assuring the Ober-Lieutenant that to be comfortable is
my last desire, we walk down a lane of the bluish
walled cottages, turning in at the frame structure
which is denoted headquarters. As we enter a rather
barren room, three orderlies, who appear to be tran-
scribing reports, briefly stiffen in their chairs and go
on writing. The gray, iron-bound officers' chest by
the window makes a good seat and the Ober-Lieuten-
ant in telling me that having had conscience, many of
the natives of Tauroggen fled with the coming of the
Germans, leaving their loot behind.
" Loot ! " I interrupted. " I do not understand."
" Pardon me, but I forgot," and the Ober-Lieutenant
called an orderly. " Here in Tauroggen," he said
after consulting the report, " we recovered household
266
THE WAR ON THE RUSSIAN FRONTIER
belonging to the German frontier villages of Laugs-
zargen, Meddiglauken and Augswilken.'-
" No matter how fast his flight/' I observe, " the
Kussian soldier still has time to transport his loot."
The Ober-Lieutenant smiles. " But in this time it
was not the soldiers. We have learned that the civil-
ians of Tauroggen followed the Russian soldiers
across the frontier, stealing from houses, and then
sneaking back with their booty to Tauroggen."
Clicking his heels in a salute a young lieutenant
comes in. He and the Ober-Lieutenant begin speak-
ing; such hurried German is too much for me. I
note the monocle the young lieutenant is wearing.
What affectation on the firing line! Clicking his
heels to the Lieutenant, bowing to me, the young lieu-
tenant hurries out. The Ober-Lieutenant is drum-
ming his fingers on the table top.
" Ober-Lieutenant," I remark with a smile, " will
that young lieutenant wear his monocle if there's a
battle?"
The Ober-Lieutenant's gravity dispels a jest. " I
imagine he will always wear that monocle," he says.
" The Lieutenant had his eye shot out in Belgium."
He reaches for a map. " Please pardon me," he
smiles. Quite distinctly now I can hear the shots.
" I had hoped," says the Ober-Lieutenant, studying
the greenish black dotted patch that means on his
map, the woods, " that there would be no engagement
here until to-morrow. I wanted to finish our en-
tanglements to-day."
I wonder if our going past the outposts has brought
267
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERIS NY
forth the Russians' nervous fire. That seems also to
have occurred to the Ober-Lieutenant.
" They might have thought that we were recon-
noitering for a night attack/' and then abruptly,
" Let us go out."
As we pass between the houses a bullet goes snag-
gering off a roof. It would seem to be a last wild
shot for as we turn up the road to the outpost^ every-
thing is still. In the little cemetery to the left of
the barricade, I see soldiers, squatting behind the
tombstones; the great wooden cross suggests an in-
congruous peace. Calling the sentries who but a time
ago, we heard discussing Wagner and Strauss, the
Ober-Lieutenant taxes them with questions. They
salute aind hurry behind the cart, which they have
turned blocking the road. " Any wounded? '' calls
the Ober-lieutenant down the trench.
'^ 'Nwr RussloMders! '' The soldiers laugh and slip
fresh clips into their guns.
^^ Alles ruMg/' the Ober-Lieutenant is saying as we
walk along the line, apparently scornful of the Rus-
sians that the pines will not let him see. " Only
nervousness, that shooting."
" You do not believe there will be an attack? "
He shakes his head. " I think not."
But across the belt to the woods, I see the black
winged birds, slowly flying and waddling over the
ground.
7 :30 p. M. During dinner the Ober-Lieutenant has
avoided all shop talk. No such food as in the West,
268
, THE WAR ON THE RUSSIAN FRONTIER
here — just a stew of white beans and beef and thick
bread, carved off a big black loaf. The thoughtful
looking Colonel produces a flask of cognac, and we
are finishing with cigarettes, when an under officer
reports.
" Both lights are in position,'' I heard the Colonel
say and dismissing the under officer, he seems ab-
sorbed in the end of his cigarette. In this barren
room, where the candles are scattering strange
shadows on the unpainted walls you become conscious
of an unspoken army. The Ober-Lieutenant who is
talking Nietzsche with me; seems not to have his
mind upon it; when appealed to, the Colonel joins in
with monosyllables. The orderlies who this after-
noon were making reports, are gone but in the corner
by the window, a soldier sits with a field telephone in
his lap ; slowly he writes upon a pad.
" In America,'' the Ober-Lieutenant is saying, " you
have taken too seriously our academic thinkers.
Will you believe it, that until we heard about the book
from England, not a thousand of my countrymen
had read Bernhardi. Suppose we were to judge
America by some of the things published there? "
I can see his point. A mad buzz from the tele-
phone jerks us up with a start. With the air, of
something expected, fulfilled, the Colonel rubs the
fire off his cigarettes.
" What is it? " he calls.
The soldier's manner is decisive. " Patrols report
men massing from the woods in the road."
Gulping down the cognac, the Colonel gives a de-
269
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
tailed order ; the soldier telephones it to some one at
the outpost. The Ober-Lieutenant looks inquiring.
" You would like to see? " he asks. As we hurry out
of the room, a soldier with a rifle, runs down the
street. It is dark. The low roofed houses are
smothered in a thickening loom of woods and sky.
In a window a candle burns but to the end of the
street it is dark. The door of the last house is open
and I hear a mumbling monotone of prayer. The
flash of a pocket torch shows an ancient Hebrew
kneeling in the open door. From his shoulders hang
a brown vestment of prayer and caught full, his patri-
archal, wrinkled face seems almost divine in the halo
of the torch. On the heavy air a rifle cracks.
We are running forward. From the woods come
a scattered sound, as of monstrous frogs croaking in
the night; a bullet sucks in a whistle as it passes by.
To the left of the road, behind the little cemetery, is
a hut where we will be reasonably safe. Leaving the
road and running along the edge of the trees, so as to
keep the hut between us and the direct fire we press
on. I never knew the sound of bullets could so aid
one's speed. ...
The firing has become general now and as we peer
around the edges of the hut ahead and to our right,
I can hear the soldiers moving in the trench. It is
too dark to see much. Nearby I can discern crouched
shadows running through the night and above the
place of graves, the great brown cross makes its stiff
gesture of peace.
Where are the Russians? Way down among the
270
THE WAR ON THE RUSSIAN FRONTIER
trees, I see the occasional flashes of their fire. But
this is only an exchange of shots. The Germans are
not bothering to reply, only with spasmodic shots, I
think of the black winged birds ; has the noise fright-
ened them away?
Still there is a tension that seems to be tightening.
Down in the trench I see the flash of an officer's
lamp; it is like a firefly. Other fireflies, glimmer to-
ward the right of the line, flashing and going out.
Somewhere in the darkness a young voice laughs
nervously.
Where are the Eussians? They may be crossing
the open field for from the woods the shots no longer
come. Everything is silent, everything but the or-
ders that are being given in hushed but distinct tones
— almost you think, as though the damp wind might
pick up some secret and bear it to the Kussian hordes.
Where are they? This silence seems interminable.
And then one hears the faint scuffling of their feet ;
and out of the silence of the night comes a roar as of
animals let loose, and across the fields we can see a
vague moving mass. They are firing now but they
are making as much noise with their voices as with
their guns. To hoarse throaty yells they storm up
the road. It occurs to me that they are like the
Chinese whose idea of war is making a noise. Their
bullets are raining through the pines and falling like
hail on the houses beyond.
" Why don't your men open fire? "
" It is too soon," whispers the Ober-Lieutenant.
Why did he have to whisper?
271
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
And then I see the Eussians. I see them in the
great blinding flash of dusty light. I see them re-
vealed as pausing, blinking things, to whom the
searchlights point with fingers of pitiless white. I
see them — while all about me becomes the clamor of
guns — stumble and fall; they stagger and crawl as
if the long dusty flashes were lightning, striking them
down; and wherever the white fingers point, there
death comes; and their hoarse throaty shouts, be-
come the wails of death; and that open belt between
the pines becomes lumpy with men, while the night
grows horrid with the rattle of rifles and the quick
croaking beat of the guns.
They are being slaughtered out there; they are as
bewildered as animals, blinking, then dying, in the
glare of the lights that they knew not could come.
And now the lights are throwing their dusty glimmer
on the distant trees.
" They are retreating ! " The Ober-Lieutenant still
talks in a whisper.
And, as sweeping this way and that, making their
monstrous gestures over the moaning field, the search-
lights hold up as targets the scattering Russian re-
treat; as one after another shadowy form I see cross
a beam of light only to fall, and the crash of the
rifles seems to have become an unceasing din and in
the sweeping flashes of white I see the piles upon the
field.
The Ober-Lieutenant gives his opinion of it. " Very
fine,'' he says. " There are many dead." And then,
as if after all, this were the important thing, he adds :
272
THE WAR ON THE RUSSIAN FRONTIER
" To-morrow, I think we can build our entangle-
ments."
7 :00 A. M. I have slept little. All night I
thought I heard groans from afar. Toward dawn I
imagine I hear a screech, but of course it cannot be
that. . . . When we take coffee in the candlelight,
the Colonel seems to have lost the distraction he
showed at dinner. He laughs and jokes. ... It is
rapidly growing light when I climb up on the trans-
port that is to take me to Tilsit. . . . Down over the
pines, the black winged birds are flying — a screech?
One wonders.
273
XIII
THE HEEO OF ALL GEKMANY
Field Mdrshal von Hindenhurg
1 O the accompaniment of heels clicking in salute
we passed the Saxonian sentries and hurrying
through the darkened gateway were met by an or-
derly. Field Marshal von Hindenburg was expecting
us. Down the corridors of the castle into a great
hall into which opened many doors ever opening and
closing to the passage of hurrying soldier clerks;
here a telegraph was chattering, there a telephone
buzzing, messengers coming and going, staff officers
gliding from one room to another, the warm stuffy
air vitalized with magic import — this was my first
impression of the headquarters of the commander in
chief of the German armies of the East.
I was looking at a placard written with a pen and
fastened to one of the unpretentious doors, opening
into little ante rooms from the great hall, which read
— " Commander in Chief.'' On the other side of that
door was the sixty-eight-year-old warrior who has
become the national hero of Germany. To name the
town where this took place would be a breach of mili-
tary etiquette. I am, however, permitted to say that
the Field Marshal has had his headquarters at Posen,
274
THE HERO OF ALL GERMANY
Allenstein, Insterburg, and another place south of
Insterburg about one hundred and fifty kilometers
which the officers of General von Eichorn's Tenth
Army spoke of as " a place unnamed." The reason
for this secrecy was reflected in " the town."
Plunged in total darkness, save for a few lanterns,
it was impossible to locate from the sky. Kussian
aviators could not steal over it by night and drop
bombs to kill the man who is so utterly a master of
the armies that the Czar sends against Germany.
There came Captain Cammerer, first adjutant of
Hindenburg, a Prussian officer of artillery, who said
that the Field Marshal would soon receive us. One
gleaned that although the Captain appreciated the
distinction, he longed for the battlefield; one heard
him talk eagerly of Tannenberg where he had made
some Russian prisoners. ^^ But now my fingers are
covered with corns," and Cammerer smiled in a melan-
choly way. " I have to write much." And then the
door that bore the sign, " Commander in Chief,"
opened, and the officer bowed us in. Field Marshal
von Hindenburg had risen to meet us.
My first impression was that Von Hindenburg's
pictures have done him an injustice. There is no
denying that his photographs create the impression
of a tremendously strong face ruthless almost to the
point of cruelty. But the camera fails utterly to
catch the real Hindenburg. His, is a face tremen-
dously strong, with a chin that is like a buttress and
a forehead of the width that means power and there
is a firmness to his little blue eyes; all these things
275
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
the camera shows. It does not show the twinkle in
these eyes; nor does it show the kindness that lurks
in the wrinkles of his warty weather-beaten skin. It
fails utterly to depict the pleasant smile that his
small sharply cut mouth can show. Sixty-eight
years you are thinking in amazement. This man
does not look more than fifty. All his faculties seem
at their zenith. His nose is the nose of the eagle and
it impresses you with wonderful alertness. There is
much color in his mustache, a tawny shade, a large
curving but rather peaceful looking mustache that
has not the aggressive angle of the Emperor's. So
massive are his shoulders that I thought at first that
his close cropped gray head was perhaps a little small.
But it is a typically round German head of the strong
mold that you see in the pictures of Durer and Hol-
bein.
Von Hindenburg impressed me as being a big man,
physically and mentally big, the embodiment of what
the conqueror of the Kussian armies should be,
though I had heard of his suffering with the gout and
every known ill ; that he was a decrepid invalid who
was called from a sick bed to save East Prussia. But
simply dressed in field gray, wearing only the order
Pour le Merite bestowed upon him by the Emperor for
his marvelous skill in the Eussian drive, Paul von
Beneokendorff und Von Hindenburg has the direct-
ness and simplicity of men of real greatness. He is
wholly without ostentation, and easier to engage in
conversation than many a younger officer who only
sports the second class of the Iron Cross.
276
THE HERO OF ALL GERMANY
He eats simply and he works hard. Dinner at
Von Hindenburg's headquarters consists of soup and
one course around an undecorated table with ten
officers. He likes a good wine; when he is drinking
a toast he takes his glass of champagne at one gulp
to the despair of some of his younger officers. The
dinner hour showed him to be very lively. He likes
stories where the wit is keen ; also he is not a Puritan.
He avoids talking military matters and seems at
dinner to have thrown off all responsibilities. This
light inconsequential converse sounds almost incon-
gruous when you can hear the ta ta of the horns of
military automobiles outside. Indeed it is with diffi-
culty that Von Hindenburg can be induced to say
anything about the war. His very able assistants,
the silent Ludendorff, Chief of Generality, and the
lively gesturing brilliant Hoffman, also avoid talking
shop. After he has agreed with you that the French
are fighting bravely, better than one expected them
to, and that everybody in Germany is sorry for
them ; after he has urged with exaggerated seriousness
that the Austrian officers are efficient; after he has
uttered his contempt of Belgium and echoed the curse
of the German nation for England, he will discuss
the Russians.
" The Russians are good soldiers," he says. " They
are well disciplined. But there is a difference be-
tween their discipline and ours. The discipline of
the German army is the result of education and
moral. In the Russian army it is the dumb obedience
of an animal. The Russian soldier stands because
277
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
he is told to; but lie stands like one transfixed. Na-
poleon was right when he said *it does not do to
kill a Russian ; he must also be thrown down/ The
Russians have learned a good deal since the Japanese
war. They are very strong in fortifying their posi-
tions on the battlefield and understand excellently
how to dig trenches and holes. As soon as they have
chosen their position they disappear under the ground
like moles. Our soldiers had to learn how to do that
too. Our soldiers did not like it. They like to fight
in the open, to storm and have it over with. But I
had to make them wait in position until I was ready.
We are not afraid of the Russian superiority of
numbers. Russia is vast, but not as dangerous as it
looks. The modern war is not decided by numbers.
In East Prussia we have broken two Russian inva-
sions. Each time they are outnumbered as three to
one. An army is not a horde of uniformed men. An
army must have good guns, ammunition, and brains."
The lively Hoffman, a wonderful strategist, adds,
"We have absolute confidence in our superiority to
the Russians. We have to win and therefore we will
win. It is very simple."
And the silent Lieutenant General LudendorfP, a
hero of Li^ge, says shortly, " We will manage it."
When the dinner is over and it is drawing near to
eleven o'clock, you get ready to go, for you have heard
that around midnight Von Hindenburg generally has
"something to do." It is said that he works hard-
est at that hour. And as you leave the quiet house,
it dawns upon you that the little threads of wires
278
THE HERO OF ALL GERMANY
leading out from the windows connect with different
army corps headquarters and that somewhere to the
east under the Russian night gigantic armies are ad-
vancing and that the officers with whom you have
been talking so peacefully, are the leaders of these
armies and that the thing they are making is called
The History of the World.
I have seen the likeness of Hindenburg a thousand
times. In Houthem, which is a little shell torn village
where the Bavarians come to from the firing line in
front of Ypres and get a few days' rest, I saw Von
Hindenburg's photograph pasted on the window of the
canteen. I have seen it in every big city in Ger-
many ; I dare say, it is in most houses. I was in the
Winter Garden one night when a Berlin crowd went
mad over an impersonation of the Field Marshal by
one of the actors. The crowd thumped its beer steins
on the backs of chairs and got up and cheered.
An American " movie man " finally induced Von
Hindenburg to stand before a camera. He did it in
a way that made you think of the old J. P. Morgan
who wanted to smash every camera he saw. For
only a few seconds did Hindenburg walk in front of
the movie machine but when that picture was
shown in a Berlin theater the audience broke into
wild applause. Von Hindenburg is the big man in
Germany to-day. As a popular idol he rivals the
Kaiser. The Germans have a new war poem that you
hear recited in the music halls. It tells of different
German generals, heroes of the war, and it ends " but
there is only one Hindenburg."
279
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
Idol of the people, colossus of the battlefield, Von
Hindenburg goes quietly about his work, unconcerned
with any of the popular clamor. It is said that one
of his staff officers was in great indignation because
a high order of war had been conferred upon a gen-
eral who had not done any actual fighting or big
battle-direction in the West. The loyal officer men-
tioned this to Hindenburg and the old warrior said,
" I don't care how many orders they give out, so long
as they let me alone out here."
His task is to keep Russia from invading Germany.
It is obviously a huge undertaking. It is a bigger
job than is held by the head of the great corporation
in the world. As with all popular figures, writers
have romanced about Hindenburg. When the corre-
spondents in Berlin couldn't get out to the front in
the early part of this war, they made copy out of
the first idea in sight. So they made a Cincinnatus
out of Hindenburg. It pleased them to imagine him
ill at his home, with the gout, when there came a
special telegram from the Emperor ordering him to
take charge of the army of East Prussia. They pic-
tured him getting up from a sick bed, limping on a cane
to an automobile and saving Germany. When you
mention this to Hindenburg, he gets so red in the
face that you think the blood vessels are going to
burst and when he can speak, he roars, " Do I look
like a sick man? "
Graduated from a military academy at sixteen, ap-
pointed to the infantry as a lieutenant before 1866,
he fought in the war against Austria. He first came
280
THE HERO OF ALL GERMANY
to the attention of the eyes of the German army at
the Battle of K5niggratz when with fifty of his men
he charged an Austrian battery. A grape shot grazed
his skull and he fell stunned. Lifting himself up,
he saw that his men had gone on and had captured
two of the Austrian guns. The other three field
pieces were being dragged away by the Austrians.
Staggering to his feet, young Von Hindenburg, his
face streaming with blood, rallied his men and with a
wave of his sword charged after the fleeing Aus-
trians. On their heels for more than a mile, he
finally attacked them, although outnumbered three
to one, and captured them. For this he was decorated
with the Red Eagle Order.
There came the Franco Prussian war. Von Hin-
denburg was now an Ober-Lieutenant. He came
through the battles of Gravelotte and Sedan ; he was
in the siege of Paris and when LeBourget was
stormed, the young officer led a charge — and they
gave him the Iron Cross. From that time on his rise
was rapid. A captain on the General Staff, then
Major, so up through the grades of the Chief of Staff
of the Eighth Army Corps to the Commander of
the Fourth Army Corps to a General of Infantry,
which high office he held until 1911.
During the period of his retirement which came in
1911, he began to study the farm lands of East
Prussia socketed with the lakes and swamps. This
was to be the battleground of an inevitable war with
Russia. He began to study the region until he knew
every square mile by heart from Konigsberg on the
281
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
Baltic down through the network of lakes south of
Tannenberg. On paper he fought there a thousand
different campaigns. It is said that he became al-
most fanatical on the subject. In his classes at the
War Academy where he was an instructor he became
known as The Old Man of the Swamps. He used to
go round Berlin with a folder of maps, and any officer
whom he could buttonhole, he drew him aside and
talked of the Masurian lakes. He became so ob-
sessed with this subject that officers fled at his ap-
proach. They began to call him Swampy Hinden-
burg. But as he rose in rank and as he commanded
troops during the maneuvers in East Prussia, the
General Staff realized that Hindenburg knew the
country.
There came a day when Von Hindenburg was ap-
pointed umpire of a big maneuver in East Prussia.
The Army of the Red — so the story runs — was com-
manded by the German Emperor, opposing him was
the Army of the Blue. The sham battle ended rather
undecisively. The Emperor and all the lesser gen-
erals met in the center of the field at the Grosse Kritic
to hear the criticisms of umpire Von Hindenburg.
Hindenburg was unmerciful. He tore the reputation
of the General of the Blues to tatters. He demon-
strated that this officer had made the grossest
blunders. For half an hour in unsparing language
Hindenburg, who had his own ideas about how every
battle in East Prussia should be fought, criticized
the General. It occurred to the Emperor that Von
Hindenburg was concentrating his criticism upon the
282
THE HERO OF ALL GERMANY
Army of the Blue and that he had said nothing what-
ever about the Army of the Eed, which the Kaiser
himself commanded. The Kaiser asked Von Hinden-
burg about this, remarking that it was noticeable
that nothing had been said about his army and add-
ing that for the benefit of all the officers the Army
of the Red should also be criticized. Von Hinden-
burg continued to say nothing about it. Again the
Emperor asked him.
" Your Majesty/' Von Hindenburg said bluntly,
" I deliberately refrained from criticizing your army.
That is why I took the leader of the Blues so severely
to task. For if I had been he, with his opportunities,
I would have driven Your Majesty's troops into the
Baltic Sea.''
The Emperor concealed his displeasure. Presently
Von Hindenburg was retired. Though retired. Von
Hindenburg managed to obtain a detachment of
grumbling troops from Konigsberg and led them
down into the Masurian swamp region to work out his
problems. He would insist upon the cannon being
pulled through the muddiest parts of the lake district
and when they became mired fast it always seemed to
please him. After several days he would bring the
exhausted soldiers and horses and muddy guns back
to Konigsberg where the officers would tell each other
that the " old man " was quite mad.
In those few years Von Hindenburg got the reputa-
tion for being a bore. All he would talk about was
the swamps. They even say in Berlin that he would
pour the blackest of beer on a table top to indicate
283
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
swamp water, and then would work out a military
problem during his dinner. Absurd exaggerations
obviously, but still there must have been some basis
for it. One day one of those members of the Reichs-
tag who believe that all a country has to do is to
make money, proposed that the Masurian lakes be
filled in, and that the ground be given over to in-
tensive farming. Von Hindenburg read the news
that night in Posen and caught a train for Berlin.
He was in a rage. Fill in his pet lakes and swamps !
Unglaublich! Not to be thought of! They say he
went to see the Emperor about it, that he brought
with him all his maps and battlelines.
They say that he told the Emperor that if Masuren-
land was filled in it would be the greatest military
crime in the history of the German nation. He did
not go away until the Emperor promised that the
swamps should remain.
Then came the war. The Russians were mobilized.
They were on the frontier. The Old Man of the
Swamps offered his services to the Emperor. He was
a retired general, though. The Emperor had his
regular generals to the army of East Prussia. There
was General von Prittwitz, for instance. The Rus-
sians got into East Prussia. General von Prittwitz
was soon deposed. Everybody in military Germany
knows that through the blunders of certain high
officers the small army that the Germans had in the
field against Russia early in August was very nearly
annihilated. I personally know of one atrocious blun-
284
THE HERO OF ALL GERMANY
der when a single unsupported cavalry division was
gent from Insterburg to rescue a Landwehr division
that was outnumbered eight to one by the Russians.
The cavalry knew that there was so few that they
could do nothing. Still the orders were to go and
they had to go. Such was the campaign of East
Prussia.
The Emperor went to Moltke, then his Chief of
Staff. The Emperor said that the German troops in
East Prussia were not being handled properly. He
demanded another general. Moltke named one man
after another and the Emperor shook his head.
Moltke was at the end of his list. " Is there no one
else you can recommend? " asked the Emperor.
" There is one man, Your Majesty, but, knowing
your feelings in the matter, I have purposely re-
frained from mentioning his name."
" Who is he? " asked the Emperor quickly.
"Von Hindenburg,'' replied Moltke.
" It is not to be thought of," declared the Emperor.
But the Emperor went away to think it over. Like
a vast tidal wave the Russians were breaking over his
beloved East Prussia. The Emperor turned it over
in his mind. There could be no delay. He sent a
laconic message to Moltke. "Appoint Von Hinden-
burg."
So they took Cincinnatus away from the plow.
" I was not sick in bed," says Von Hindenburg in
telling about the summons. " I was just sitting at
the table having coffee when this important telegram
285
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
came. Ludendorff my Chief of Generality had been
summoned from Belgium and he came by special
train/'
And then began the ride to the East Prussian front
traveling all the night in one of the high powered
army automobiles discussing as he went the position
of the troops. Von Hindenburg and Ludendorff ar-
rived at the place that had been chosen as headquar-
ters and he took command of the Army of the East.
You know what happened, you know how the Kussian
invasion poured in across East Prussia, past the
Masurian lakes in a semi-circle from Tilsit south-
wards.
You know that Hindenburg elected to give battle
on a field that was four times as large as Sedan.
Back of the German line Hindenburg and his staff
were watching the big maps. Like a great pair of
tongs his soldiers were closing in from north and
south. When they had surrounded the Russians, Von
Hindenburg would order the battle begun, not before.
Field telephones buzzed, the telegraph clicked, the
staff officers were ever changing the positions on the
big maps, the black lines, signifying the German sol-
diers were ever drawing closer together. Soon the
Russians would be surrounded. And then an aero-
plane with black iron crosses painted under its wings
dropped down out of the clouds and landed in front
of Hindenburg's headquarters. And its observer
dashed up to report, " The enemy is surrounded ! ''
" Begin the battle,^' ordered Hindenburg.
And over the field telephones went the commands
286
THE HERO OF ALL GERMANY
and the awful slaughter of Tannenberg began — that
battle of which historians will write as one of the
great conflicts of the world. Back into the lakes and
swamps that he knew so well, that he had fought so
hard to save from the Reichstag, Von Hindenburg
drove the Russians. Whole regiments slowly sank
in the ooze and disappeared from sight. By regi-
ments the soldiers of the Czar were driven into the
soft bottomed lakes and shifting sands of Masuren-
land. And behind the line, Hindenburg, who knew
every square mile of that country and knowing the
topography almost to every tree, could tell the German
troops exactly what to do. And from his headquar-
ters the command would go by telephone to the Gen-
eral in the field.
I think it will not be until after this war is over
that the world will know in detail what happened
at Tannenberg. Von Hindenburg's strategy has
jealously been hidden by the German General Staff.
Not a single military attache of a neutral country has
been able to learn it. All one knows is that the Old
Man of the Swamps drove the Russians into the
swamps and that they perished by the thousands.
All I know of the battle of Tannenberg is this. I
learned it while at dinner with an officer of Von
Eichorn's staff.
" Oh, yes,'' he said quickly, " I was in the battle of
Tannenberg. Some of our officers went insane. You
see we drove the Russians back into the swamps and
as they felt themselves sinking they threw away
their guns and put up their hands, clutching at the
287
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
air in their death throes. We were coming up to
make them prisoners when some of them fired on us.
So we turned the machine guns on them," he paused.
" I guess it is better that we did. For they were in
the swamps and slowly sinking to their death. All
night you could hear their cries and the horses made
worse screams than the men. It was terrible.
Four of my brother ofi&cers went out of their minds
simply from hearing the shrieks.''
An intolerant old warrior who cares not what the
newspapers say in his praise, who is bored with the
thousands of letters and presents that are being sent
him from all parts of Germany, who when this war is
over has not the slightest desire to become Minister
of War — Field Marshal von Hindenburg is a mili-
tary genius with a kind German heart in spite of his
grim exterior, fond of a glass of good wine and a
good story, but accomplishing both work and play in
the fascination of strategical study.
But what amazed me more than anything else about
Von Hindenburg is the way he is regarded by of-
ficial military circles in Germany. I knew that to
the mass of people and soldiers he is a hero; they
think him a military genius of almost divine inspira-
tion. I mentioned this fact one night to a captain in
the Great General Staff.
" Oh, yes," he said, " Von Hindenburg is a great
general. He has had his opportunity. If he were
killed to-morrow there is another general ready to
step in and carry on the same work. And if that
general were to be killed there is still another. I
288
THE HERO OF ALL GERMANY
could mention five or six. You see Von Hindenburg,
great man that he is, is simply a cog in a machine.
A very great cog, to be sure, but then, don't you see,
it is not a single individual that counts but the whole
machine. If we lose a part of the machine it is re-
placed. It is very simple. I know General von Hin-
denburg and I know that all this talk about him, all
this fuss, this idea of asking him, a super man, is very
distasteful to him."
Von Hindenburg, only the part of a system! The
real hero of Germany then must be the composite of
a myriad of remarkably efficient units of which Von
Hindenburg is a single element in the war machine
of such consummate ability that he seems to stand
alone.
289
XIV
WITH THE AMERICAN EED CROSS ON THE
RUSSIAN FRONTIER
i\ GRAY morning crept up somewhere beyond the
Russian plains and in the half light, the church tower
and housetops of Gleiwitz loomed forbiddingly
against the dreary sky. A butcher was opening his
store as our droschky clattered down the cobbled
streets of the old Silesian town. The horses' hoofs
echoed loudly; only a few stragglers were on the
streets. Coming to a square, massive building of yel-
lowish brick — you instantly had the impression that
Gleiwitz had grown up around it. We saw a blue
coated soldier standing on the steps.
" Where is the American Hospital? '' we asked him.
He stared at us in a puzzled way and, using that
German expression which seems to fit any situation :
^^ Ein AugenblicTc '' (in a minute), he proceeded to
give our driver elaborate instructions. Off we rat-
tled, down another vista of gray cobbles and squat
gray houses, and presently we stopped before a clean-
looking house of stucco, before which paced a soldier
in the long dark gray coat of the Landsturm.
" Where is the American Hospital? " we asked.
It was too much for the soldier ; he called for help.
Help came in the person of a stout, florid-faced officer
290
AMERICAN RED CROSS ON RUSSIAN FRONTIER
with flowing gray mustaclie. To him we put the same
question, and his face lighted.
" You want Doctor Sanders, Gut, Gut! ^'
And climbing into our droschky, his sword hanging
over the side, close to the wheel, he told us all about
the part Gleiwitz was playing in this war, while the
cobbled streets rang to the beat of the horses' hoofs.
We learned that we were way down in the southeast-
ern corner of Germany, not far from that frontier
point where three empires touch; we learned that
every night if the wind was good they could hear in
Gleiwitz the distant rumble of cannon.
And he was telling us those things when we saw
coming down the sidewalk, a familiar color. It was
the olive drab of the United States army, and under
a brown, broad-brimmed campaign hat, we saw a
round, serious face.
" That looks like our man," Poole said to me. A
few nights ago Dr. Sanders had been described to
Poole and me, and we had come here to see what he
and his American outfit were doing down close to the
Russian frontier. It was indeed our man, and when
he saw us, the serious face broke into a broad grin.
" They telegraphed me you were coming — mighty
glad to see you." And Charles Haddon Sanders,
whom, if you went to Georgetown University, you
knew as " Sandy," climbed into the droschky.
" Gosh, it's good to see an American. What news
have you got? " And Dr. Sanders' merry eyes twin-
kled. " How about it — come on, loosen up ! You
must have left the States a month after I did." A
291
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
look of concern clouded his chubby face, and I won-
dered what worrisome thing was on his mind.
" Say," he said, '^you're a baseball fan, aren't you? ''
When I told him I was, he seemed relieved. " Tell
me," he begged then, " Walter Johnson didn't sign up
with the Feds, did he? I have a hospital in Washing-
ton, you know, and whenever Griff's boys are home,
I am out there at the park, pulling hard,"
And this was the first thing one heard in a city of
war ! The puffy, mustached sanitation officer bid us
good day ; the droschky moved on. All the way down
the old cobbled streets of dreary Gleiwitz, Dr. San-
ders kept talking baseball; not once did the subject
of the war come up. I wondered if he were avoiding
it as long as possible; later when you learned what
he had seen, you could not blame him. Presently our
droschky drew up in front of a rather shady -looking
cafe. It had all the appearance of being the Maxim's
of Gleiwitz, a sordid place, reflecting all the sordid
dreariness of the town. Wondering why the doctor
was getting out here — he had not seemed that sort
— he said that this was as far as we went. I looked
again at the place. It was a gray-stoned building, on
the corner of a caf6, then a hotel entrance, then a
gateway. I followed him through this gateway and
we came into a cobbled inner court facing a wing of
the building that appeared to be a theater; at least
the sign over the door read, " Victoria Theater." By
now I had begun to guess it, and when a blue-coated
German Landwehr opened the theater door, I was
quite sure.
292
AMERICAN RED CROSS ON RUSSIAN FRONTIER
"Doctor, I suppose you have your office here/' I
remarked.
He laughed outright. "Office," he said, "this is
my hospital."
And I thought of the place, the cafe, the hotel, the
entire building of which this was a part. He must
have known what was passing through my mind.
" I know," he remarked, " I felt the same way when
I first saw it. It seemed funny, putting a hospital
next to a rough house like that. But it was the only
place they had left. By the time we got here, every
school and public building in the town was filled with
the wounded."
As we entered the lobby of the theater I saw that
it had been transformed into a corridor for conva-
lescents. The stench of iodoform assailed you.
Four German soldiers, their arms or legs bandaged,
were sitting at a rough board table drinking beer,
which you perceived, as a waiter appeared with a tray
full of steins, came by way of a connecting passage-
way from the cafe next door.
" Better that they drink the beer here than water,"
remarked the doctor. " We've had some typhoid and
cholera cases in Gleiwitz." Now the utterance of
that word cholera has a magical effect. In the war
zone it can completely spoil your day; no doubt Dr.
Sanders must have noticed my uneasiness, for he
hastened to add : " There's no danger ; we've got all
those patients isolated outside this building, and if
you haven't had an injection of cholera toxin, I'll give
you one."
293
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
KeassTired, I ventured further into the building,
and pushing back a swinging door, I saw opened up
before me a strange picture. Imagine a theater, its
walls washed white, its orchestra stripped of chairs
and in their places row after row of hospital cots; a
curtain of fireproofed steel, hid the stage, from it
hanging the white flag with the red cross, and beside
it the stars and stripes and the red, white and black ;
imagine the boxes filled with rough, hastily made
wooden tables where nurses sat making out their re-
ports, a theater where instead of an overture, you
heard groans and sometimes a shriek from one of the
white cots.
" The soldier is only having a nightmare," Dr. San-
ders explained. " They come in here sometimes not
having slept for three days and they go off asleep for
hours and hours — you wonder how long you can put
off dressing their wounds to let them sleep — getting
these nightmares every once in a while, and yelling
out that the Eussians are after them. Nearly every
soldier who has a nightmare yells that same thing,
queer, because none of them fear the Russians at
all."
Suggesting that we would come back to see the
ward more thoroughly. Dr. Sanders led us through
the lobby and into what appeared to be a cloakroom.
Only now the coat racks were half concealed by huge
packing cases marked "American Red Cross," and
leaning against the wall you saw two brown stretch-
ers of the United States army ; and on the floor army
sterilizer chests, while all around shelves had been
294
AMERICAN RED CROSS ON RUSSIAN FRONTIER
built holding supplies and medical books. You no-
ticed an operating table in the center of the room and
in a corner a little stand for anesthetics.
" This is our operating room,'' smiled the doctor ;
" you never saw one like it before, did you? Neither
did I. But for our purposes it fills the bill."
In the lobby we met two boyish surgeons, one,
Spearmin, tall, angular and competent-looking; the
other. Stem, a University of Maryland man who was
preparing for a surgeonship in the United States
army when he got the chance to go to the war zone,
and, boy-like, went. Spearmin and Stem handle the
wounded. Sanders does the executive work.
" We get plenty of work to do,'' Doctor Spearmin
told me, " and you want to do everything for those fel-
lows that you can. They are the pluckiest lot of men
I ever saw. They stand pain better than most of the
average hospital cases that I had in Baltimore."
Later we were to learn more of those men stretched
their length on the white cots, and the way they stood
pain, but Dr. Sanders had a dressing to make upstairs,
in a cloakroom once used for the patrons of the bal-
cony. Now it was Antechamber of Death. As we
climbed the stairs, the doctor explained : *^ We keep
our most serious cases up here. Whenever we feel we
have to put a man in this room, he generally dies.
We've only lost six men, though, and we've had five
hundred cases, some of them shockingly wounded."
You caught the undemote of pride in the doctor's
voice, a sensing of which you had felt at the hospital's
very door. Pride seemed to be in the air ; you read it
295
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
in the faces of the nurses ; the younger doctors, Stem
and Spearmin, showed it, pride because they had
turned the one notorious resort of Gleiwitz into an
American hospital. And, it is significant — and it
was a German officer who told me this — into a hos-
pital of such efficiency that the German Sanitary Au-
thorities always ordered that the worst cases be sent
to Dr. Sanders and his assistants; this with thirteen
other military hospitals in Gleiwitz.
But I was wondering if the other patients, the men
in the orchestra, had come to know what the little
room upstairs meant, and if they had heard the cry
from that Austrian's bed, and if so, what their
thoughts were, if they had all thanked the Almighty
for their lesser plights. You felt they had.
" Come on, now," suggested the doctor, ^^ we'll go
and talk to some of the patients. Sister Anna can
speak German.''
Sister Anna you discovered to be a resourceful-
looking woman of middle age, dressed in Red Cross
gray. She was sitting at a table reading "AJice in
Wonderland," and she said that she had spent the last
ten years in New York at the Lying-in-hospital. Her
capable manner impressed you, and when Dr. Sanders
whispered : " She was the best supervisor on the Red
Cross boat that brought us all over, and I was mighty
lucky to get her," you agreed with him. She was
walking on ahead between the rows of blue gingham-
covered cots and presently she stopped before one at
the end of the line. It is a part of the German hos-
pital system to have a metal sign-board on a post
296
AMERICAN RED CROSS ON RUSSIAN FRONTIER
behind each hospital bed, and upon this we saw
printed the soldier's name, a private. Kaiser, of the
148th Infantry, His wife was sitting beside his bed,
a rosy-cheeked woman who recalled one of our middle
Western farm girls. Quiet and calm, satisfied that
her husband was in the best of hands, she smiled
thankfully at Sister Anna and the doctor. Her hus-
band was wounded in both the arm and leg and oddly
enough by the same bullet, which, with a little smile,
he picked up from a bed table to show us.
" It entered his arm above the elbow,'' explained
the doctor, " went clean through, hit an electric torch
in his pocket, glanced off that and went into his thigh.
It was an interesting case. On the other side of his
thigh, I found the wound of exit. Imagine my sur-
prise when in a few days I discovered that the bullet
was still in his leg, and that the exit wound had been
made by a piece of bone breaking through."
It seemed that Private Kaiser could understand a
little English, and he nodded eagerly. We asked him
some questions, and it developed he had been a school
teacher in Hamburg.
" I was wounded near Brounsberg in East Prus-
sia," he told us. " It was towards evening, almost
dark, and not thinking the Russians could see us, we
got up to dig a trench. I was alone, way off at the
end of the line when I was shot. It did not hurt me
much when the bullet hit me. It took me off my feet,
though I spun around twice before I fell. No one
saw me and I lay on the ground for ten minutes.
Then I was able to get up, and I walked away to the
297
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
hospital. How I did it I can't tell you, but all at
once my strength seemed to come back."
" Probably nervous shock made Mm helpless," ex-
plained the doctor in an undertone, " and when that
passed he was able to help himself a bit."
We were going down the line of beds, talking to
another patient, when the doctor said it was time for
lunch, and that we might visit the patients again in
the afternoon. Two of the nurses — there are four-
teen American girls at Gleiwitz - — walked back with
us. I asked one of them, a young Boston girl, why
she had come to the war.
" I don't know," she said. " I had made my appli-
cation for a Red Cross nurse, and I was ready to go
to Mexico. Then I got word that they wanted nurses
in Europe, so I packed up and came along on twenty-
four hours' notice.
" What I've seen of the war here, though," she said,
" is not half so terrible as it was in the English Chan-
nel. We were on the coast of France one morning
when I happened to see a big round thing in the
water. I thought it was a mine, and I guess I
screamed. Then I thought it was a dummy, but it
wasn't that, it was a body, and there were six other
bodies, all sailors from those English ships that the
submarine blew up. Isn't there some way I could go
back home without going through the English Chan-
nel? I can't bear thinking of seeing anything like
that again."
I told her she could probably take a steamer at
Naples or Copenhagen, and she seemed greatly re-
298
AMERICAN RED CROSS ON RUSSIAN FRONTIER
lieved — she who had seen mangled men without a
flicker of her nerves. Presently she left us to cross
what was evidently the aristocratic street of the town.
" They are going over to a little club — the city
club/' explained the doctor; "that's where we take
our meals. We'll go to my room first, though, if you
like, before dinner."
Modestly the doctor spoke of his room, but to our
surprise he stopped in front of one of the few impos-
ing-looking houses in Gleiwitz. It was one of those
venerable places which makes you think that the man
who lives there must about own the other inhabitants
body and soul. Occupying about four hundred feet,
corner frontage, towering amid symmetrical lawns
and flower beds, guarded by a ten-foot iron fence, the
old-fashioned house stood back like a castle.
" Nothing like it," said the doctor with a smile.
" It belongs to one of the richest men in Silesia. He's
at the front, in France. He's a captain, by the way,
just won the Iron Cross. His wife is in Berlin for
the winter, so we're here, Spearmin, Stem and
myself, with ten servants to wait on us, and the best
of everything for the asking. Not bad, eh? "
While we were listening to a baseball story of the
doctor's, we took in the luxurious appointments of his
room. Then you thought of the makeshift hospital
and how topsy-turvy war turns everything. From
his valise, the doctor produced a Russian bayonet, hat
and cartridge belt.
" They cost me two marks," he said, " for the whole
outfit. I bought them from the driver of an Austrian
299
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
ammunition wagon. Have a cartridge? " and he
passed the belt as one might pass a box of candy.
They were ugly-looking bullets, not as pointed as the
Germans^ The bayonet also was uglier, curved like
an old-fashioned saber.
"It's no good alongside the German bayonet,
though," explained Dr. Sanders ; " that's longer and
straighter. You ought to hear how some of the
wounded over at the hospital talk about their bayo-
nets. One fellow was telling me the other day that
he had ripped it through the stomachs of three Rus-
sians." And even the doctor, hardened to such
things, made a grimace.
After a luncheon, where, like the father of a large
family, the doctor sat at the head of a long table with
his nurses and assistants around him, everybody ask-
ing if the Christmas mail from the States had come,
we returned to the hospital. We found great excite-
ment. Two officers had been there, the orderly ex-
plaining that one was the sanitation commander of
all hospitals at Gleiwitz, and that the other was Cap-
tain Hoffman of the garrison. What did they want?
The orderly didn't know, but it must have been some-
thing very important, for they had told him to say to
Dr. Sanders that they would return in half an hour,
and for him please to be there, whereupon the orderly,
to my amazement, looked at me a little suspiciously;
indeed, his eyes followed me into the lobby.
" What's the matter with that chap? " I asked the
doctor.
"Oh, he's spy crazy," replied Dr. Sanders; "you
300
AMERICAN RED CROSS ON RUSSIAN FRONTIER
see, they caught two Kussians here the other day, and
the captain he speaks of presided at the trial. They
put the spies up against the wall of that old barn
over there. We could hear the shooting.'^
The doctor's tone was so casual that you concluded
spy -killing to be commonplace at Gleiwitz.
'^ Come down here a second," continued the doctor.
" I want you to take a look at a couple of patients."
As you walked between the cots you were conscious
of the gaze of the wounded turned hopefully on this
business-like American. Of the peasant class nearly
all the soldiers seemed to regain hope at the sight of
him. So it was with the two boys off in a comer by
themselves. They were rather slender fellows, amaz-
ingly young, with mischievous faces. " They live
next door to each other," said the doctor, " in a little
village in Schleswig-Holstein. The one on the left
had a bullet in his brain, the other had his arm frac-
tured by a piece of shrapnel."
" How old are they? "
" The boy who had the bullet in his brain," said the
doctor, "is not yet seventeen; the other is a few
months older."
They met you with a bold smile, fun darting from
their mischievous eyes, like American boys might
smile at a foreigner. You saw that they wore the
clean, light blue jackets that mark every patient of
the American Ked Cross, but you thought of the dirty,
gray -green uniforms and how long these boys had lain
before they were picked up. Ajid then, like many
youngsters you see in the first classes of a high school,
301
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
they became self-conscious, giggling like girls at a
first party, and you thought of them at war; and a
shuddery sensation came over you.
" You think it's terrible, don't you? " he said.
" Wait a minute."
He beckoned Sister Anna, and she joined us.
" Sister Anna,'' he said, " ask that boy with the
brain wound to tell the story that he told me the other
day."
Sister Anna's manner was reluctant, and you doubt
that she wanted to hear that story again. But she
put the request in German, and instantly the eyes of
the little fellow grew bright.
" We were near Iwangorod," he began. " Max and
I were on outpost duty and got cut off from our regi-
ment. Night came and we started back to find them.
We were passing through a little village, just five or
six houses, when somebody shot at us." He paused,
turning, as if for confirmation, to the other bed, where
Max, half sitting up, nodded eagerly. " We'll ^x
them, Max," I said, " and we ran behind a house, so
they couldn't shoot again. Then all lights in the win-
dows went out — every light in the village. I was
glad there was no moon. We got some wood, a lot
of it. We fixed it in piles beside every house. We
broke into a cellar and stole some oil. We emptied
the oil on the wood, then we lit it, and ran to the next
house, and lit it there." His eyes were burning fever-
ishly. " Pretty soon we had the whole village on
fire, didn't we. Max? "
" Ja ! Ja ! " cried Max, from the other bed.
302
AMERICAN RED CROSS ON RUSSIAN FRONTIER
And you realized that they were suddenly boys no
longer, that their faces had reddened in a hectic way,
and that into their young minds had come the fright-
ful insanity of war. With a sickening feeling you
turned from them, and going away, thought that only
last July, back in that Holstein village, they doubt-
less had been playing the games that German boys
play ; then you heard Max cry out :
" And when we get better. Doctor, we're going back
and each kill a hundred Kussians ! " And with his
white hands you saw the boy lunge as though already
he could hear the ripping steel. . . . What if you
were his father?
" There are many like that — eager to get out of
bed and back to the front,'' said the doctor. " Not so
young, of course, but they all want another chance
at the game; that is, all but the older men. You
ought to have been here the other day. Count Talley-
rand-Perigord was here. He's the nephew of the
great diplomat, French descent of course. The
Count has an estate near here. He's a young chap.
He's been simply splendid to us. I guess he never
did very much work before; you can imagine how a
young man of his position spends his time. When
the war broke out he volunteered for the Red Cross,
and they made him a sort of a personal escort for me,
to see that everything goes right over here. He
spends his entire time with us. He watches all the
operations, is intensely interested, asks all sorts of
questions about them, and goes with me from bed to
bed, asking the men what they want, doing everything
303
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
he can for them. I tell you it quite surprised me, a
young man of his position, in the French nobility,
bucking right down to things. Count Szechenyi, you
know, who married Gladys Vanderbilt ; he's stationed
over just across the Austrian border. He came up
the other day to see Count Talleyrand and they
dropped in here in the afternoon to visit the patients.
I had expected something different from Count Szech-
enyi. You know what that Austrian count is. But
he was just as democratic as if he had been a private
in the ranks."
While talking, the doctor had been crossing the
theater until he came to a side wall exit door that
opened out on what appeared to be a promenade. It
was glassed in, like a sun parlor and looked out on
what had been a cheap beer-garden. Along one wall
we saw a row of muddy brown and black boots. On
the floor were piles of uniforms, German, Russian and
Austrian, and knapsacks, drilled and nicked with bul-
lets. Kicking over a filthy bundle of field gray, I saw
that it was slashed.
"We had to cut most of the uniforms off the
wounded,'' explained the doctor. " Most of them we
have thrown out — we had to. If you could only
have seen what those men looked like when they were
brought in! We get them from the field hospital.
This is the first hospital behind the lines, and when
they are well enough to be moved, they are sent on to
better quarters, further into Germany, but the way
those fellows looked. Think of it, some of them had
not had their uniforms off for three months. When
304
AMERICAN RED CROSS ON RUSSIAN FRONTIER
we took off one man's boot, we found a blood clot two
inches thick on the sole of his foot. It had run down
from a wound on his leg. Why, some of those men
were five days on the battlefield before they were
found. One or two were out of their minds. You
cannot conceive the horror of it! Later, I'm going
to get one of those fellows to tell you his story."
The time had swiftly passed and as we came back
into the theater, we saw two gray-cloaked German
officers, and at their heels the orderly. They seemed
very much excited, and I was sure now that they were
going to ask the doctor if he was positive that I was
not an English spy. It was something more exciting,
though. They conversed in German, and I caught
the words, ^^ Eisener Kreuz/'
'' What a piece of luck ! " the doctor exclaimed ;
" one of my patients has been awarded the Iron Cross,
and Captain Hoffman of the Gleiwitz garrison has
come to make the presentation."
We walked then to the bedside of a mild-looking
man, who, you learned, was Landwehr, private Grabbe
of the second Stralsund. A bulkiness to his leg
under the covers showed where he had been wounded,
and when he saw the gray-coated officers, a question
leaped in his quiet eyes. You wondered if he knew
and how many days he had lain there doubting and
dreaming if ever they would come. The Captain
strode towards him, held out his hand, and said, " I
congratulate you." You followed the soldier's eyes
as they watched the Captain's hands reach into his
coat pocket and draw from it the band of black and
305
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
white ribbon from which dangled the coveted cross.
Without a word the Captain fastened it to the second
button of the man's hospital jacket and stepping back,
saluted him. You saw the soldier pick up the cross
in both hands, stare at it a moment, while his eyes
filled a little, and then his mild face turning wonder-
fully happy, he awkwardly expressed his thanks. As
the last stammered word was spoken there burst from
all the wounded a huzza. The nurses applauded and,
overwrought, the soldier tried to sit upright in bed
and bow his thanks. He had half succeeded when we
saw him wince, and Dr. Sanders made him lie down.
The congratulations over, we left him calling for
pencil and paper, for at once he must write home
about it. And you wondered how much you would
have given could that one minute of this soldier's life
be included in your own.
" Wait till I tell you what the fellow did," said the
doctor, after the officers had bowed themselves away.
" It is one of the duties of the Landwehr, you know,
to guard the railroads. Late in October, when the
Germans were retreating from their lines outside
Warsaw, they had to hold the railroads to the last.
This man's commander was ordered to hold back the
Kussians from a little railroad depot. Private
Grabbe was given ten men and a machine gun and
posted by a little house near the station. He had to
keep back an overwhelming number of Russians until
an entire battalion was on the train, and then with
the little detail make a run for it. Well, as the Rus-
306
AMERICAN RED CROSS ON RUSSIAN FRONTIER
sians came in great force, his comrades retreated and
left him there alone.
" As I told you, men get crazy in battle. Grabbe
did not know that he was alone. He stuck by that
machine gun, wounded and alone, mowing down the
Russians until the whole German battalion — twelve
hundred men — had withdrawn. Still he stuck to
that machine gun, slaughtering them so, that by
George! the Russians retreated. Grabbe's com-
mander came up presently and asked him where the
other men were. Grabbe said he didn't know and
then the Commander saw that he was wounded."
Outside a violin began to play, and Dr. Sanders
explained that often the local talent dropped in to
entertain the wounded. The music continued and we
went from bed to bed hearing the different stories;
then the music stopped, and in a clear, though child-
ishly quavering voice, a girl began a recitation in the
lobby outside. Before he came to Gleiwitz, Dr. San-
ders didn't know two German words. Now, as he
told me, he knows three. Consequently, as the girl
spoke on and the faces of all the wounded suddenly
became grim, the doctor wondered why. Then here
and there a man began repeating the girl's words,
others, too weak to speak, following her words with
moving lips. Higher and higher quavered her voice;
and suddenly I recognized what she was saying. Be-
fore I could tell the doctor, though, she swept into a
climax, to fierce ^^ JawohW from the lips of the
wounded.
307
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
" I don't know what you're saying/' shouted Dr.
Sanders, rushing into the lobby, " but stop it. It ex-
cites these patients."
He saw that I was grinning, and asked what the
joke was. " It's on me, what was that girl speak-
ing? "
" A new poem," I told him. " The name is : * Mur-
derous England.' "
" So that's it, eh? " And he went up to the girl,
whose hair was braided down her back and whose
cheap, bright pattern dress came barely below her
knees.
" Now, little girl," he said, " when you want to
come round to the hospital to entertain the prisoners,
you learn how to speak ' Mary Had a Little Lamb '
or something. Get Sister Anna to teach it to you ! "
And patting the child on the head. Dr. Sanders gave
her a ten-pfennig piece, and asked her who had taught
her the poem.
^^ Meine Mutter/^ replied the child.
We then sat in the lobby for two hours, buying beer
for the convalescents and listening to their stories.
One man told us how, with two hundred soldiers, he
had hid in a Russian barn, and that a shrapnel shell
flying through the window had exploded, killing and
wounding nearly every one in his company. Another
told how he had been on outpost duty with seven other
men, and that the Russians had begun machine gun
fire at night. All his comrades were either killed or
wounded, and he said that although he was only
wounded in the arm, he did not dare to get up because
308
AMERICAN RED CROSS ON RUSSIAN FRONTIER
the Russians maintained a steady fire for four hours,
and that all he could do was to hug the ground with
the bullets whizzing over him, knowing that he was
growing weaker and weaker every moment. Another
had a most interesting experience. While in a shal-
low trench, he had been hit in the arm and in the leg.
The hospital corps got him. The stretcher bearers
were taking him back, when suddenly it got too hot
for them, and they had to drop him and run for cover.
The firing ceased, and, seeing he was alone, the soldier
crawled over to a dead German and picked up his
rifle. He was half sitting with this in his lap, when
he saw some Russians coming. He raised the gun
and they ran, and then he discovered they were hos-
pital men. He was cursing his luck, when one of his
comrades, a little fellow, who had come back to find
him, discovered him. They traveled back to the Ger-
man lines at intervals of ten minutes, the little fellow
having to put him down to rest every so often. Then
the doctor began to tell me something about the
wounds he had seen as the result of this war.
" What I marvel at is," said Dr. Sanders, " that a
man can go into the battleline and come out alive.
The amount of lead and steel that is sent flying
through the air is appalling. Of course we will not
have any statistics on it until after the war is over,
but everything I can learn from the wounded, and
from the nature of their wounds — and I have men
here hit five times — they must be using far, far more
ammunition, proportionately of course, than in any
war in the world's history. By the way, judging
309
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
from my patients, the Russians cannot be using dum-
dums. I have yet to find one in a man. For every
three rifle ball wounds, we get two caused by shrapnel
and about one quarter by fragments of bursting
shells. We had a man who was hit by a piece of
shell — and those fragments are terribly hot. It cut
his throat to his ear, but it just stopped at the sheath
of the artery. His life was saved by the minute dis-
tance. The Germans have the greatest confidence in
us here. We have one man here who might have been
sent on to another hospital five weeks ago. We didn't
send him, though. It was almost a form of paranoia
and honestly I dreaded sending that man away. I
feared the nervous shock. Doctors who come from
the front tell me that they have actually seen cases of
men being killed, who only had a bullet wound in
their hand. It was the nervous shock that killed
them.
" You see those two Russians," and the doctor
pointed towards two heavy-faced patients. " Well,
they were in mortal terror that we were making them
well so as to have more fun by killing them later. It
took two weeks to convince them that they would not
be put to death. They are pets here now."
The doctor was called away a moment, and as I
watched him stride off, his sturdy figure carrying well
the olive-drab of the United States army, I noticed
again that the heads of the wounded turned, following
him with thankful eyes, and it was not difficult longer
to understand how these few Americans were able to
come into the midst of strange Silesia, and transform
310
AMERICAN RED CROSS ON RUSSIAN FRONTIER
that theater, where at night if they forget to shut the
door, they can hear the ribald clamor from the cheap
cabaret next door; it was not difficult to understand
how they, all of them having their first experience
with war, had developed an efficiency which the Ger-
mans had complimented by sending them the worst
cases from the firing line. That sturdy, wide-shoul-
dered man in army olive-drab personified something
that made you thrill at the thought that you were an
American.
But Dr. Sanders was not the last impression that
I had of Gleiwitz, although he waved good-by to me
at the train.
As I look back at Gleiwitz now, I can see the flat-
floored theater with the gray nurses lighting lamps.
The early twilight is coming through the windows.
It is all quiet. In two hours the wounded will have
supper, and here and there you can hear the deep
breathing of sleep. In the lingering light the steel
curtain has turned a vague gray and of the three flags,
only our own is sharply defined. I see Sister Anna
walking softly between the rows of gingham-spread
cots, her kind, almost saintly face hallowed by the
lamp in her hands. She is beckoning. She raises
the lamp so that its pale reflection falls upon a bed.
And there I see the boy from the Schleswig-Holstein
village, who, with his chum, burned a Russian village,
and whose ambition is to kill a hundred men; and the
boy's face is buried in the pillow, his arm circling
round it, like a baby asleep.
311
XV
THE SECRET BOOKS OF ENGLAND^S GEN-
ERAL STAFF
WF course Germany was prepared. Russia and
France were prepared, not so sufficiently, of course,
as Germany; yet with their reorganized armies both
were judged powerful on land. England though was
unprepared. Everybody knew that. The newspa-
pers said so. Statesmen said so. Parliament admitted
it. To be sure the British Navy for years was pre-
pared. Winston Churchill announced that. But the
empire was not ready for its army was not ready. It
was a small army, a quarter of a million men, twice as
large as the United States army. It was useful in
the colonies. Everybody knew Tommy Atkins. Kip-
ling did that. But for fighting on the continent of
Europe was like venturing into a strange land for
these soldiers of England's colonial domain. They
were not ready. Any Englishman will tell you that.
But the most amazing part of it all is that the Brit-
ish army was wonderfully prepared.
This will be merely a document of military won-
ders ; diplomatic considerations will have no part in
it. I promise you to abstain from the use of that tire-
some word — neutrality.
312
M-l
o
^ € - ;
3f ?" •'
s,|-* Oil >;
0)
ti
'O
lo
o
bfl
03
THE SECRET BOOKS OF ENGLAND
The English army was ready to go to war. It was
ready to go to war in Belgium. Its officers knew
everything there was to be known about Belgium.
They knew every square mile of Belgium's terrain.
They knew what districts were best suited to strategi-
cal purposes. They knew what roads best to use for
their artillery, what roads best could stand the heavy
guns, what roads best could not. They knew every
body of water in Belgium. They knew what water
was fit to drink and what was not. They knew the
current of every stream and the number of boats on
it. They knew the number of houses in every Belgian
village and the number of soldiers that could be bil-
leted in those houses. They knew the location of
every church steeple in Belgium, and whether or not
to recommend it as an observation post. They knew
what roads their troops could march on without being
seen by the aviators of the enemy — what roads were
hidden from the sky by the interlacing branches of
the big trees. They even knew the best places for
their own aviators to land. Every conceivable thing
that a modern army should know about a future bat-
tleground the British army knew. . . . How do I
know this?
At the battle of Mons in northern France where
something happened — the English say it was the
French supports ; the French blame it on the English
— those wonderful soldiers of Great Britain, the pro-
fessional soldiers, were cut to pieces. The Germans
made many prisoners. In the kits of the captured
British officers they found some interesting docu-
313
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
ments. They were books of a size that would fit in a
coat pocket. They were about a quarter of an inch to
an inch thick. They were printed on white paper and
the covers were a light brown. They were finger-
marked and muddy. They contained the most amaz-
ing collection of military information that any na-
tion ever possessed for its army. Some books were
marked Confidential; others bore the designation
property of His Britannic Majesty's Government; all
were prepared by the General Staff, of the English
War Office.
All the books were dated 1914, brought right up to
the minute. At the Great General Staff in Berlin I
saw these books. I sat in Major von Herwarth's
room one night and copied their contents until I was
overwhelmed with their wonderful detail. I had
wanted to take the books to my hotel. It was impos-
sible. They were regarded by the Germans as being
so valuable that they could not be taken from this
officer's room. I induced the Staff to let me make
photographs of the books, of their covers, pages and
maps. And when I was finished the officer said to
me, " We were very glad to get these books. We were
very thankful. Because they are so much better than
any information that our General Staff had about
Belgium. In fact they are so good, these English
books, that we at once had whole pages copied for the
use of our officers in Belgium."
The Germans admitting English superiority on a
military point! Germany, whom everybody thought
was the best prepared nation in Europe, beaten at its
314
THE SECRET BOOKS OF ENGLAND
own game. So valuable are these books regarded by
the General Staff that they are locked in a safe.
As I digested the contents of these English books,
I decided that if I had military power behind me, and
these books in my pocket, that I could walk, ride, even
fly in Belgium — without ever having been there be-
fore. I could always know precisely where I was at,
where I could best be housed. I saw that each book
begins with " roads,'' and reports the widths, surfac-
ing and nature of the ground on either side of these
roads. Every conceivable bit of information about
the railroads in Belgium is between the covers, even
down to the station masters at small places and the
language each one speaks. Rivers, canals, bridges,
dikes, have all been tested by the unprepared English-
men. I thought now English cavalrymen were inter-
ested in learning that, /^ in the village of Eppeghen
there are three forges.'' On another page I learned
that " a kindly feeling exists for England because of
a school for English children." In Tamines, " a large
number of Germans are employed in the electrical
work." On page 17 of Volume Two, I read " the farms
. . . are large solidly built structures, the barns
usually being lofty with high eaves. The two storied
dwelling houses enclose a barnyard. The Howitzer
is the weapon of attack against them and the folds in
the ground facilitates its use." Under " Monetary
Contributions " ; I read, " It may be necessary under
certain conditions in an enemy's country to replace
supply requisitions in kind by contributions in
money."
315
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
And the English blame the Germans for their levies
in captured cities In the upper right hand corner of
Volume Three, I saw what seemed to be a serial num-
ber — 349. The other volumes also bore this number.
Volume III declares itself to be a report on road, river
and billeting conditions in Belgium ; it gives informa-
tion for the country between the river Meuse and the
German frontier, going as far south as certain desig-
nated military lines. Glancing over this book, I saw
on page 20 that the district near the German frontier
was particularly suitable for billeting soldiers, that
three or four men could be housed with every inhabi-
tant except in Seraing and Li^ge where only two
soldiers could be put up. On page 232 I learned that
the billeting report had been reconnoitered every year
from 1907 to 1913. This means that in the district
covered by this book every dwelling place with a roof
over it had been checked up every year for seven years.
Thus were proper living accommodations for English
soldiers in Belgium verified by the skilled War Oflace
of London.
In Volume IV whi^h gave all military routes for
Belgium north and east of the line Brussels, Nivels,
Namur, Li^ge, Vise, I read on page 13 that the refer-
ence maps dealing with the section " Brussels-Lou-
vain " were those of the Belgian General Staff of a
scale %o,ooo but that sheets 31 and 31 of the English
War Office were also available. Those English sheets
were based on a reconnoiter of the entire district made
in 1913 by the English. But more significant is it
that English officers were referred to the %o,ooo scale
316
o
6
u
O
o
J3
O
Q en
^ m
4i C-
013
III
W ^ •-;
1 w
« z
►J e
J o
►- 5_
< .-/}
> ;d
<
I
»■ j; at? "
J If
o
H-.
i>
-M
O
tt,
^
!^
^
rCl
<-M
^
"Ti
Cs
dn
THE SECRET BOOKS OF ENGLAND
maps of the Belgian staff, which England obviously
must at that time have had — as an asset of prepared-
ness.
In the German General Staff I had a number of
these English maps photographed. They were drawn
by the British War Office and photo-etched by the
Ordnance Survey office at Southampton 1912. As you
may see from the accompanying illustration their de-
tail is marvelous. Even orchards, ruins and wind
mills are designated.
A Staff Officer in possession of one of these books
would not have to reconnoiter Belgium. Referring to
Volume IV, which devotes a good deal of space to
the movement of troops, he would learn that delays in
marching might be caused by " a steep ascent for half
a mile out of Brussels on the road to Louvain.'^ He
would be comforted to know, though, that " there is a
good field of fire and fine view from the roadway ex-
cept between Cortenberg and Louvain where the view
is reduced to one half mile. Troops could operate
easily anywhere except in the hilly wooded country
about Cortenberg to the south." If he wanted an ob-
servation post he would learn that at Cortenberg there
was a good church steeple. A footnote reassures
him that the roadway has been lined with trees
which would afford in summer cover from aerial
scouts.
These books throw an interesting light upon the
question of shelled churches. The Allies have accused
the Germans and the Germans have accused the Allies
of using church steeples for observation posts. Both
317
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
armies have used them, both have shelled them. I
make this statement because I saw the cathedral of
Malines gaping with a hole that could only have come
from a German gun — so did the lines run — and be-
cause at Houtem, I climbed the steeple of the church
of the Annunciation of Mary the Virgin to a German
post, and I make this statement because on page 176
of Volume III of these English books on Belgium, I
read under '' observation points '' the names of no less
than five churches for a single small district. I photo-
graphed this page ; you may read the church for your-
self.
Page 70 of Volume III assures an English officer
that " a few infantry with sandbags could from the
parapet of the barrage near the Belgium line hold the
approach to Jalhay up to the valley." On page 91,
reconnoitered in 1913, he learns that " the best way to
attack Terwagne appears to be from the southwest
where there is a good deal of dead ground and artil-
lery co-operation could be obtained from Liveliet."
On page 122 he learns that " an advance up the Liffe-
Thynes valley supported by guns on the Sorraine ridge
appears to be the best way of dealing with ( two tacti-
cal situations which are called) A and B."
Perhaps some of the most interesting bits of mili-
tary information are contained in the 1914 issue of
secret Field Notes which is numbered A 1775. Using
this book an English cavalry commander upon turn-
ing to page 32 and looking at (a) reads :
" Classes of persons in Belgium who might be use-
ful as guides.'^
318
THE SECRET BOOKS OF ENGLAND
He sees that Gardes champetres are credited with
knowing the rural districts well. They should be
able to give the English army information about con-
ditions of water, forage horses, live stock and vehicles.
The gardes forestiers know in detail the woods in
their own districts. " Rural postmen, many who own
bicycles and cycle repairers, especially the official re-
pairers to the touring club of Belgium would be in-
valuable as guides." The English officers are advised
to get hold of the drivers of tradesmen carts as they
supply most of the villages from the towns, and would
therefore know local roads well.
But to me the climax was reached when T read in
this book of English field notes a description of the
code in use by the Belgium army for writing orders.
I shall quote in part exactly what was written. " The
names of units are generally replaced by their initials ;
the numbers of regiments are written in large arable
figures; those of battalions, squadrons or artillery
groups in Roman figures; those of company troops
(pelotons) of cavalry and batteries in small arable
figures."
EM %TT
They give an example. ^^— They explain
that this means in code, regimental headquarters and
the second company of the third battalion of the
Tenth Belgian Infantry of the line. Thus in code
EM = Infantry headquarters; 2 = 2nd company;
III = 3rd battalion; 10 = 10th infantry.
They give ' 1^\ ' They explain that this means
5 D.A.
319
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
the second mechanical motor artillery ammunition
column of the Fifth Division. Thus, in code, 2
C.M.S.S. = headquarters 2nd mechanical ammunition
column ; 5 D. A. = 5th Division, artillery.
And these are code orders of the Belgium army and
the English General Staff knew about them before
war was declared! And England was unprepared!
These books tell me that England was beating the Ger-
mans at their own game.
Opening one book I saw a table that ran across two
entire pages. This table was filled in the most in-
timate details regarding a single village.
In one of the road and river reports I read these
words, " Data given by the Belgium government rail-
road cabinet on January 1st, 1912." Thus was the
English officer assured of its accuracy. These are the
figures that were given for the use of British troops in
Belgium.
Locomotives 4,233
Coaches 8,001
Baggage cars 2,714
Goods wagons 86,562
Special wagons,
(for oil, etc.) 2,418
I think I have quoted enough material from these
wonderful books to show the thoroughness with which
the British soldiers were ready to fight in Belgium.
Now the Germans have shot down many British avia-
tors and on one of these men they found a book. It
320
I'M r I
o
CJ
^
o
u
^
03
^
o
(—■
V
Q
s
Tc
^
C
§
w
^
>.
c^
^
i5j
^
'S
>
^
OJ
s
^
f^.^
^CO
^
o
"u,
f^
O
03
^'
^
*>
<
Qs
THE SECRET BOOKS OF ENGLAND
had the same brown paper cover as the road and river
reports. It was of the same convenient pocket size.
It had the same serial letter A for army, and it was
numbered 1775. I saw this book in the General Staff.
It is " A report on Belgium south of the line Charle-
roi, Namur, Li^ge and Brussels for aviators." I pho-
tographed pages 3, 6 and 20 of this book. Page 3
which began the information gave some interesting
generalizations on the whole district. On page 6,
dealing with Namur, I read that English aviators were
told that the glaces of Fort d'Emine provided unlim-
ited open cultivated ground suitable for landing pur-
poses. In other words they were advised by the Eng-
lish War OflSce that it would be safe to land under the
very guns of this Belgian fort. If they were flying in
the Liege district they would read on page 20 that five
miles out on the east of the Aywaille road they could
prepare a very good landing place on grass by the
simple removal of some wire fences. They were as-
sured that from the south they would be completely
covered by the Belgian guns of Fort d'Emibourg. In
other words the British War Office was so well pre-
pared, knew so exactly what it was doing that in July
of 1914 it issued a book advising its aviators how to
land in places where they would be covered by Bel-
gian forts.
A map accompanied this aviation book. Let us see
how this map was used. Examine this map around
Liege. You will see numbers running from 89 to 94.
An aviator flying over Li^ge consulting his map knows
321
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
that each of these numbers has to do with a landing
place. Let us suppose he selects 92.
Opening his book, until he finds the index number
92 he reads that " To the southwest towards Neuville
and Rotheux the country is very broken and wooded.
There is a good level cultivated landing place, how-
ever, about 1500 yards south of the Fort de Boucelles.
. . . Where communication with Liege exists.'' To
use this map a British aviator flying over the section
south of the line Charleroi, Namur, Liege and Brus-
sels, would see what point he was over and would then
look it up by the index number on the map and in the
book he would read whether it was wise to make a
landing there and just what conditions he would meet.
Here are some bits verbatim from the book.
" In many cases the woods are so stunted and strag-
gling that during winter, aerial observation of troops
actually in them would probably be possible. . . .
Somewhat soft after rain. Difficult for a landing.
. . . The spa race course on the Francorchamps road
is useless."
In this and other ways were the British aviators
cautioned about using their aeroplanes in Belgium.
For the last few years we have all been hearing
about the wonderful maps and information that Ger-
many had of all the countries in Europe. No one,
however, has ever seen any of these books ; and no
one has ever publicly quoted any of their contents. I
believe they exist. I think, however, that the photo-
graphs printed here are the first permanent public
records of the most confidential books in use by the
322
THE SECRET BOOKS OF ENGLAND
army of a world power. I think they have a certain
historical significance. At any rate, that England
should possess them is amazing — England whom
everybody but Germany thought was the least pre-
pared of all.
323
XVI
THE FUTUKE — PEACE OR WAR
Impressions gained during my talk with the 1914
choice for the Nobel Peace Prize — Pro-
fessor Ludwig Stein
IN The Hague the Temple of Peace is empty; all
over the world ordnance factories are full. Since the
day of that first convention in Geneva educated men
have organized and pushed the international move-
ment, which is called world peace. Is it a success or
a failure?
At his home in Berlin, early in February, I talked
with one of the leading men of this movement concern-
ing these things. I asked Professor Ludwig Stein, —
whose activities for world peace are well known in
America, he having been chosen for the Nobel Peace
prize of 1914 which was never awarded, he being
formerly one of the three permanent members of the
Bern Bureau for International Peace, he having been
selected to present the famous declaration of peace to
the late Edward the Seventh, whom the peace people
called Edward the Peacemaker, he having worked side
by side with Andrew Carnegie for the " ideal " — I
asked him, could peace soon be made in this war?
324
THE FUTURE — PEACE OR WAR
A deliberate man is Professor Stein, and he thought
so long without replying that his personality im-
pressed itself upon you before he had uttered a word
— a strange combination of the dreamer and the man
of to-day, a contrast of gentle eyes and grim jaw.
" At this time,'^ he said, tapping his finger on the
copper-topped smoking table in his study, " peace is
impossible. President Wilson's endeavors are futile.
Before a decisive result has been reached, peace can-
not be thought of. Once Warsaw is captured, it is
likely that Russia will make peace ; or if not Warsaw,
if a large really decisive battle is fought."
It seemed significant that such an apostle of peace
as Profesosr Stein should have so completely given
up all faith in the immediate efficacy of his move-
ment. I asked him therefore if he considered it a fail-
ure.
" The peace movement," he said, " is like a fire de-
partment. If a few houses burn, or the conflagration
spreads even over a number of blocks, the fire fighters
are effective, but if a whole city burns, like the big
Chicago fire, the fire department can do nothing.
And if the whole world burns, what can the workers
for peace do? Our movement is not strong enough;
it is not big enough. For the Balkan war, the fire-
men were effective, they could confine the burning
within that limited area, but when all Europe sprang
up in flames, we failed." I mentioned to the Professor
that this was a new conception to the peace movement
in America, the first admission from a peace-man that
the power of the movement was to-day limited. I
325
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
asked Professor Stein then if we were to think of the
movement as being a limited success or was there any
chance of it ever attaining something bigger?
" The task of the nineteenth century," he replied,
" was to let national feeling grow subconsciously. In
Prussia, Fichte, the first rector of the new Berlin
University, made his famous ' Speeches for the Ger-
man Nation.' Jahn preached ' German Unity.'
Achim von Arnim collected German songs and war
songs of German warriors. Even Schiller wrote in
his later years of Germany as the heart and center
of Europe, and began to feel more national than
Goethe ever did. The idea grew and produced
united Italy and united Germany. But this process
of attaining national consciousness is not yet
achieved. In America it is not nearly finished. It
is a sociological, unconsciously pedagogical process.
The time will come when nationalism will be
thoroughly saturated in each country. When it does
and not until then, states will see that it is impossible
to produce and consume everything. That will be the
beginning of international consciousness. Then the
national spirit will become secondary to conscious in-
ternationalism. When that time comes, world peace
will be possible."
I was going to ask Professor Stein how far off
that day was but thought it best first to take up his
point, the thorough establishment of the national
idea being the beginning of world peace.
" As the national feeling grows,'' I asked him, " will
not the goal for peace become always more remote?
326
THE FUTURE — PEACE OR WAR
It seems to me that international consciousness is de-
pendent upon the people of one country knowing the
people of another. How can, for instance, the Rus-
sian peasant ever understand the customs and per-
sonality of say, the poor man in England? Because
of geographical reasons they can never get into touch
with one another; how then are the masses of the
states of the world ever going to understand each
other, and how without this understanding can there
ever be world peace? "
Professor Stein believes that this barrier can be
overcome.
" Modern science and fast steamers," he replied,
" the wireless, and better international trade under-
standing are constantly bringing together all states.
Through journalists, merchants, diplomats and ex-
tensive traveling on the part of the people of all coun-
tries, the inhabitants of all different parts of the
world begin to know each other. A hundred years
ago the Roumanian peasant did not know possibly
that there was an Argentine. To-day, though, the
Roumanian knows that the price he gets for his wheat
depends upon what the Argentine farmers get for
theirs. I believe that as science progresses and cul-
ture spreads over the world, that the geographical
barrier to peace can be broken down. Consider
Switzerland, it is the ideal. Three races, French,
German and Italian, live within its walls, but they
are held together by culture."
I pointed out that Switzerland was so small that
the French, Germans and Italians had a chance to
327
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
know and understand their different customs and
personalities, and asked Professor Stein if culture
was also holding together Austria-Hungary?
"Austria," he said, "is an exception. Politically
it is necessary to have the monarchial symbol there,
because only in a military state would it be possible
for so many different races to live at peace with them-
selves. Austria is different from Switzerland be-
cause it is a crazy quilt of many different, uncultured,
mostly illiterate, to some extent nomadic races."
The Professor, who is a great admirer of Herbert
Spencer and whom Spencer said understood him bet-
ter than any Continental thinker, thereupon men-
tioned the point that the famous Englishman had
made.
" Spencer," he said, " wrote that instead of war, a
competition in traffic and industry would take place
between nations."
" But, Professor," I asked, " does not traffic and in-
dustry breed war; what caused this war? Was not
commercial jealousy between England and Germany
one of the vital causes of the war? "
He admitted that it was, and went on to say :
" After this war, the Englishman will look at his
books, he will take his pencil in his hand and he will
begin figuring. He will get up a balance sheet, and he
will find that war does not pay. England is rational
to excess. For years she has been the political clear-
ing house of the world. She could in this way rule five
hundred million people as long as these people were
not striving for nationalism. But Germany attains
328
THE FUTURE — PEACE OR WAR
its conscious nationalism, and asks herself, Why
should I allow the thirty-eight million people of Great
Britain, through their political clearing house, to have
such a dominate influence on the affairs of the world?
W^herefore in the last analysis, this war was caused
by the thorough gaining of national consciousness
that English diplomacy has no longer been able to
retard. And under the industrial system of to-day,
things are not done with papers passing through a
clearing house, but with blood.
" I regard this war as an expression of the soli-
darity of the world on the minus side. It is an un-
derground solidarity, but is having, for the moment,
a negative influence because commerce is stopped.
The United States is feeling it, it is holding up your
country. It is holding up China which cannot get
money for necessary improvements. But all this is
working towards the conscious solidarity of the fu-
ture, which will be expressed in a positive war ; when
fighting will be done not with cannons but with con-
tracts; when not blood but ink will be wasted."
" You believe then, Professor,'^ I asked, " that the
day will come when there will be no war, when fight-
ing actually will be done with ink? Suppose that day
comes, will it be a good thing? Do you consider in-
ternational peace a friend or an enemy to robust
normal manhood? Do you think that war cleans
out degenerate tendencies of peaceful civilization?"
Deciding that this was a metaphysical question.
Professor Stein preferred not to answer it. He did
though say this:
329
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
" In the Bible it says that the holy fire must be kept
burning on the altar. It is a good thing for the world
that there are idealists to keep the fire going. Men
like Carnegie, Kockefeller, and the puritan and
quaker elements, they do their service to the world in
this way. The world must have ideals. Interna-
tional peace is an ideal. It is like the point of a
compass, the north star that the mariner sees, or the
star of the desert. It points the way for those who
want to go toward a certain goal. I say, that as an
ideal, it is impossible of achievement, because the
very way to it shows the people where they really
want to go."
" But, Professor,'' I suggested, " if a nation has only
ideals, it is going to get into trouble. I have heard
it expressed that the peace movement has done the
United States more harm than good. Will you, as
one of its hardest workers, give some message to the
people of America, on the status of international
peace to-day and in the future? '^
" Your country," he said, " has not yet attained its
nationalism, but it is most wonderful, because it is
not formed like Austria, of half civilized, uncultured
races held together by the monarchical system, but
because it is welding itself together from material,
a large part of which was composed of the scum of
Europe. I wonder that it has been able to make the
strides towards nationalism, that it already has.
No state in the world has progressed so far by com-
parison towards national consciousness as has Amer-
ica in so short a time. Up to now, America has been
330
THE FUTURE — PEACE OR WAR
the student of Europe, but from now on, America will
be the teacher. To-day doubly so; with the Panama
Canal you are the forepost of the white race against
the yellow. The geographical and moral position
that your country holds, imposes upon it a great duty.
It is to hold back the East. Your country cannot
step aside from the yellow races. You must be pre-
pared to cope with them."
" What, Professor ! You are suggesting armament
for the United States. Why! that is against every
teaching of the peace propagandist in our country.''
'' If the people of the United States," stated Pro-
fessor Stein deliberately, " believe that the peace
movement is bound to save them from war, they have
either totally misconstrued it, or they have been
grossly misinformed. A nation must be prepared for
war. If the rulers of a nation leave their country
unprepared, they are guilty of criminal neglect. In
China its four hundred millions of people are un-
prepared, and are therefore at the mercy of a few
million Japanese who are prepared. That is because
in this generation might is right, and all that we work-
ers for peace can do, without injuring our states, is to
face the facts of this generation, be prepared for
war, if war there is to be, and keep on working for
our ideal. Anything else is a dream."
'^ But, Professor," I remarked, " that is not the
peace idea as it has been spread broadcast in America.
Those who believe in the movement, think that the
peace societies of our country can keep us ouf of war.
What you have just said disagrees with Andrew Car-
331
BEHIND THE SCENES IN WARRING GERMANY
negie's peace utterances in the United States. Would
you mind telling me the difference between your view-
point and Mr. Carnegie's? "
" I shall be glad to do so," replied Professor Stein.
" Mr. Carnegie looks at the peace movement from a
puritanical viewpoint. He has interpreted the bibli-
cal text of turning the sword into a plow-share liter-
ally as applying to the present day. I believe that
swords will be turned into plow shares, but not in
our generation. That will come to pass, not because
it is in the Bible, but because the imminent logic of
history will bring it about. Eventually the imminent
logic of history will create international peace. The
puritanical workers for peace believe that because
it is written in the Bible that all men are born equal,
they should try to equalize mankind to-day. It will
take about a hundred years to educate and solidify
the white race alone. It will take about ten thou-
sand years, let us say, to educate all the races of the
world and achieve a world brotherhood. The great
mistake that is made is in thinking that the ideals of
the Bible are possible to-day. They are utterly im-
possible."
I then asked Professor Stein to summarize his
opinions for me. '* I have read your paper," I said,
" written before the war, on Cosmopolitism, National,
State and International Compromise. There is one
point I want to ask you about. You wrote — -these
are not your exact words. Professor — *What poets
and philosophers have dreamed of, and what the
Catholic Church has in some respects already real-
332
THE FUTURE — PEACE OR WAR
ized: One shepherd and one herd! that will be the
state of Europe in times coming^ — What did
you mean, Professor, by that phrase ' One shepherd
and one herd ' ? Did you mean to convey that one
state powerfully armed would be a sort of inter-
national policeman, strong enough to keep the peace
among other nations? Did you have in mind a Ger-
many whose mission would be to shepherd the people
of the world? ''
" Absolutely not," replied Professor Stein ; " by one
shepherd I meant the imperialism of the white race.
White imperialism will divide the world between the
white states. The Western European and American
cultural systems will rule. My idea is not the United
States of Europe, but the united cultural system of
the white race."
" And when will that be possible, Professor? "
" As soon as nationalism has been thoroughly sat-
urated, and conscious internationalism has been
achieved, and that will probably be within a hundred
years."
" And meanwhile? " I asked.
"Alas! The world of to-day cannot be ruled
WITH OIL OF roses, BUT ONLY WITH BLOOD."
THE END
333
u<.
'^. '.
^^ V"
^00
.\
/Vk >>'^'''" -^
'<>- >^^'
Deacidified using the Bookkeeper process.
Neutralizing agent: Magnesium Oxide
Treatment Date: u av 'pftni
PreservatlonTechnologies
A WORLD LEADER IN PAPER PRESERVATIOM
111 Thomson Park Drive
Cranberry Township, PA 16066
(724) 779-2111
^ *
:^ ° ^'
oo.
.0
N C
'^
■0-'
A'^
V
o
'f 8 :
.^^ ^*.
\ S * ^ 7
^^■^.
15
A ■ -^ ,