In the Claws of the German Eagle eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 177 pages of information about In the Claws of the German Eagle.

In the Claws of the German Eagle eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 177 pages of information about In the Claws of the German Eagle.
failure of it.  We were a hard crowd to smile to, and growing tired of her attempts to appear light-hearted, she at last gave herself up to her own grievances, and soon was looking quite as doleful as the rest of us.  Our gloom was thrown into sharp relief by a number of soldiers grouped around a table in the corner laughing and shouting over a game of cards which they were playing for small stakes.  We dragged out the long afternoon staring doggedly at the bayonets of our guards.

Only once did the guards show any awareness of our existence.  That was when suddenly the arrival of “Herr Major” was announced.  As the door was opened to let him pass through our hall to the stairway, with a hoarse shout we were ordered to our feet.  As his exalted personage paraded by we stood, hats in hand, with bared heads, with such humble and respectful expression as may be outwardly assumed towards a fellow-being whom all secretly despised or desired to kill.  Was there really a murderous gleam in the averted eyes of those Belgians arrayed in salute before the Herr Major, or was it my imagination that put it there?  Perhaps you can tell.

Picture your country devastated, your towns burned, your flag prohibited, your farmers shot, your women and children terrified, your papers and public meetings suppressed, your streets patrolled by aliens with drawn swords as your enemies’ bands triumphantly play their national airs.  Picture, then, yourself lied about by hireling spies, thrown into prison, compelled to breathe foul air and sleep upon a floor, fed on black bread, and held day after day for sentence in nerve-racking suspense.  Picture to yourself now the abject humiliation of being compelled to stand bare-headed in salute before these wreckers and spoilers of your land.  Do you think you might keep back from your eyes sparks from that blazing rebellion in your soul?  Then it was not imagination that made me see the murderous gleam in the eyes of those high-spirited Belgians.  “Salute the Major!” the Germans shouted.  What seeds of hate those words planted in those Belgian souls the future will show, when they who sow the wind shall reap the whirlwind.

That is the unseen horror of war; pictures can reveal the damage wrought by shot and shell, fire and flood in the blasted cities and in the fields of the dead.  But nothing can ever show the irreparable spiritual damage wrought to the human soul by hates, humiliations, fears and undying animosities.

Chapter II

Sweating Under The German Third Degree

By this time my lark-like spirit of the morning had folded its wings.  My musings took on a decidedly somber tinge.  “Were the Germans going to make a summary example of me to warn outsiders to cease prowling around the war zone?” “Was I going to be railroaded off to jail, or even worse?” It was no time to be wool gathering!  It was high time for doing.  “But what pretexts could they find for such action?” At any rate I resolved to furnish as few pretexts as possible.

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In the Claws of the German Eagle from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.