Bullets & Billets
CONTENTS CHAPTER I Landing at Havre--Tortoni's--Follow the tram lines--Orders for the Front. CHAPTER II Tortuous travelling--Clippers and tablets--Dumped at a siding--I join my Battalion. CHAPTER III Those Plugstreet trenches--Mud and rain--Flooded out--A hopeless dawn. CHAPTER IV More mud--Rain and bullets--A bit of cake--"Wind up"--Night rounds. CHAPTER V My man Friday--"Chuck us the biscuits"--Relieved--Billets.
Hamburg-American line alone, among our many foreign rivals, aggregates
515,628 gross tons.
However, we must bear in mind that this seemingly insignificant place held
by the United States merchant marine represents only the part it holds in
the international carrying trade of the world. Such a country as Germany
must expend all its maritime energies on international trade. It has
little or no river and coastwise traffic. But the United States is a
little world in itself; not so very small, and of late years growing
greater. Our wide extended coasts on Atlantic, Pacific, and the Mexican
Gulf, are bordered by rich States crowded with a people who produce and
consume more per capita than any other race. From the oceans great
navigable rivers, deep bays, and placid sounds, extend into the very heart
of the country. The Great Lakes are bordered by States more populous and
cities more busy and enterprising than those, which in the proudest days
of Rome, and Carthage and Venice skirted the Mediterranean and the
Adriatic. The traffic of all these trade highways is by legislation
reserved for American ships alone. On the Great Lakes has sprung up a
merchant marine rivaling that of some of the foremost maritime peoples,
and conducting a traffic that puts to shame the busiest maritime highways
of Europe. Long Island Sound bears on its placid bosom steamships that are
the marvel of the traveling public the world over. The Hudson, the Ohio,
the Mississippi, are all great arteries through which the life current of
trade is ceaselessly flowing. A book might be written on the one subject
of the part that river navigation has played in developing the interior
States of this Union. Another could well be devoted to the history of lake
CONTENTS CHAPTER I Landing at Havre--Tortoni's--Follow the tram lines--Orders for the Front. CHAPTER II Tortuous travelling--Clippers and tablets--Dumped at a siding--I join my Battalion. CHAPTER III Those Plugstreet trenches--Mud and rain--Flooded out--A hopeless dawn. CHAPTER IV More mud--Rain and bullets--A bit of cake--"Wind up"--Night rounds. CHAPTER V My man Friday--"Chuck us the biscuits"--Relieved--Billets.