More English Fairy Tales
Contents THE PIED PIPER OF FRANCHVILLE HEREAFTERTHIS THE GOLDEN BALL MY OWN SELF THE BLACK BULL OF NORROWAY YALLERY BROWN THREE FEATHERS SIR GAMMER VANS TOM HICKATHRIFT
twenty to four hundred yards wide, straggling across France and Belgium
from the sea to the Swiss border. I suppose that French and English men
have sanctified every part of that narrow ribbon by dying there. But the
grass of those old paddocks grows unkempt like a shock head of hair. And
it has covered with a kindly mantle most of the terrible relics of the
past. A tuft, perhaps thicker than the rest, is all that marks where
last year lay a British soldier whose death represented the latest
effort of the world to cross the line the Germans laid.
You cannot even know what is going on in the country beyond that line.
You have to build up a science for deducing it from little signs, as a
naturalist might study the habits of a nest of ants. The Germans are
probably much more successful at that than we are.
It is strange to us that there are towns and cities over there only a
few miles away from us, and for a hundred miles back from that, of whose
life we know nothing except that they have been ravished and ruined by
the heavy hand of Prussian militarism. But, for the people who live
around us here, it is a tragedy of which I had not the least conception
until I actually saw it.
We had a cup of coffee the other day in the house of an old lady whose
husband had been called out two years ago, a few days after the war
began.
"All my own people are over there, monsieur," she said, nodding her head
Contents THE PIED PIPER OF FRANCHVILLE HEREAFTERTHIS THE GOLDEN BALL MY OWN SELF THE BLACK BULL OF NORROWAY YALLERY BROWN THREE FEATHERS SIR GAMMER VANS TOM HICKATHRIFT