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<h1> OVER THERE </h1>
<h3> War Scenes on the Western Front </h3>
<h2> By Arnold Bennett </h2>
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<p><b>CONTENTS</b></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0001"> I The Zone Of Paris </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0002"> II On The French Front </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0003"> III Ruins </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0004"> IV At Grips </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0005"> V The British Lines </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0006"> VI The Unique City </SPAN></p>
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<h2> I The Zone Of Paris </h2>
<p>From the balcony you look down upon massed and variegated tree- tops as
though you were looking down upon a valley forest from a mountain height.
Those trees, whose hidden trunks make alleys and squares, are rooted in
the history of France. On the dusty gravel of the promenade which runs
between the garden and the street a very young man and a girl, tiny
figures, are playing with rackets at one of those second-rate ball games
beloved by the French petite bourgeoisie. Their jackets and hats are hung
on the corner of the fancy wooden case in which an orange-tree is planted.
They are certainly perspiring in the heavy heat of the early morning. They
are also certainly in love. This lively dalliance is the preliminary to a
day’s desk-work. It seems ill-chosen, silly, futile. The couple have
forgotten, if they ever knew, that they are playing at a terrific and
long-drawn moment of crisis in a spot sacred to the finest civilisation.</p>
<p>From the balcony you can see, close by, the Louvre, with its sculptures
extending from Jean Goujon to Carpeaux; the Church of St. Clotilde, where
Cesar Franck for forty years hid his genius away from popularity; the
railway station of the Quai d’Orsay, which first proved that a terminus
may excite sensations as fine as those excited by a palace or a temple;
the dome of the Invalides; the unique facades, equal to any architecture
of modern times, to the north of the Place de la Concorde, where the
Ministry of Marine has its home. Nobody who knows Paris, and understands
what Paris has meant and still means to humanity, can regard the scene
without the most exquisite sentiments of humility, affection, and
gratitude. It is impossible to look at the plinths, the mouldings, the
carving of the Ministry of Marine and not be thrilled by that supreme
expression of national art.</p>
<p>And all this escaped! That is the feeling which one has. All this beauty
was menaced with disaster at the hands of beings who comprehended it even
less than the simple couple playing ball, beings who have scarcely reached
the beginnings of comprehension, and who joined a barbaric ingenuousness
to a savage cruelty. It was menaced, but it escaped. Perhaps no city was
ever in acuter peril; it escaped by a miracle, but it did escape. It
escaped because tens of thousands of soldiers in thousands of taxi- cabs
advanced more rapidly than any soldiers could be expected to advance. “The
population of Paris has revolted and is hurrying to ask mercy from us!”
thought the reconnoitring simpletons in Taubes, when they noted beneath
them the incredible processions of taxi- cabs going north. But what they
saw was the Sixth Army, whose movement changed the campaign, and perhaps
the whole course of history.</p>
<p>“A great misfortune has overtaken us,” said a German officer the next day.
It was true. Greater than he suspected.</p>
<p>The horror of what might have happened, the splendour of what did happen,
mingle in the awed mind as you look over the city from the balcony. The
city escaped. And the event seems vaster and more sublime than the mind
can bear.</p>
<p>The streets of Paris have now a perpetual aspect of Sunday morning; only
the sound of church-bells is lacking. A few of the taxi- cabs have come
back; but all the auto-buses without exception are away behind the front.
So that the traffic is forced underground, where the railways are manned
by women. A horse-bus, dug up out of the past, jogs along the most famous
boulevard in the world like a country diligence, with a fat, laughing
peasant-woman clinging to its back-step and collecting fare-moneys into
the immense pocket of her black apron. Many of the most expensive and
unnecessary shops are shut; the others wait with strange meekness for
custom. But the provision shops and all the sturdy cheap shops of the poor
go on naturally, without any self-consciousness, just as usual. The
pavements show chiefly soldiers in a wild, new variety of uniforms, from
pale blue to black, imitated and adapted from all sources, and especially
from England—and widows and orphans. The number of young girls and
women in mourning, in the heavy mourning affected by the Latin race, is
enormous. This crape is the sole casualty list permitted by the French War
Office. It suffices. Supreme grief is omnipresent; but it is calm,
cheerful, smiling. Widows glance at each other with understanding, like
initiates of a secret and powerful society.</p>
<p>Never was Paris so disconcertingly odd. And yet never was it more
profoundly itself. Between the slow realisation of a monstrous peril
escaped and the equally slow realisation of its power to punish, the
French spirit, angered and cold, knows at last what the French spirit is.
And to watch and share its mood is positively ennobling to the stranger.
Paris is revealed under an enchantment, On the surface of the enchantment
the pettinesses of daily existence persist queerly.</p>
<p>Two small rooms and a kitchen on a sixth floor. You could put the kitchen,
of which the cooking apparatus consists of two gas-rings, in the roots of
the orange-tree in the Tuileries gardens. Everything is plain, and
stringently tidy; everything is a special item, separately acquired,
treasured. I see again a water-colour that I did years ago and had
forgotten; it lives, protected by a glazed frame and by the pride of
possession. The solitary mistress of this immaculate home is a spinster
sempstress in the thirties. She earns three francs a day, and is rich
because she does not spend it all, and has never spent it all.
Inexpressibly neat, smiling, philosophic, helpful, she has within her a
contentious and formidable tiger which two contingencies, and two only,
will arouse. The first contingency springs from any threat of marriage.
You must not seek a husband for her; she is alone in the world, and she
wants to be. The second springs from any attempt to alter her habits,
which in her sight are as sacredly immutable as the ritual of an Asiatic
pagoda.</p>
<p>Last summer she went to a small town, to which is attached a very large
military camp, to help her sister-in-law in the running of a cafe. The
excursion was to be partly in the nature of a holiday; but, indefatigable
on a chair with a needle, she could not stand for hours on her feet,
ministering to a sex of which she knew almost nothing. She had the
nostalgia of the Parisian garret. She must go home to her neglected
habits. The war was waging. She delayed, from a sense of duty. But at last
her habits were irresistible. Officers had said lightly that there was no
danger, that the Germans could not possibly reach that small town.
Nevertheless, the train that the spinster-sempstress took was the last
train to leave. And as the spinster-sempstress departed by the train, so
the sister-in-law departed in a pony-cart, with a son and a grandmother in
the pony- cart, together with such goods as the cart would hold; and,
through staggering adventures, reached safety at Troyes.</p>
<p>“And how did you yourself get on?” I asked the spinster-sempstress.</p>
<p>She answered:</p>
<p>“It was terrible. Ordinarily it is a journey of three or four hours. But
that time it lasted three days and two nights. The train was crammed with
refugees and with wounded. One was obliged to stand up. One could not
move.”</p>
<p>“But where did you sleep?”</p>
<p>“I did not sleep. Do I not tell you one was obliged to stand up? I stood
up all the first night. The floor was thirty centimetres deep in filth.
The second night one had settled down somewhat. I could sit.”</p>
<p>“But about eating?”</p>
<p>“I had a little food that I brought with me.”</p>
<p>“And drinking?”</p>
<p>“Nothing, till the second day. One could not move. But in the end we
arrived. I was broken with fatigue. I was very ill. But I was home. The
Boches drank everything in the cafe, everything; but the building was
spared—it stood away from the firing. How long do you think the war
will last?”</p>
<p>“I’m beginning to think it will last a long time.”</p>
<p>“So they say,” she murmured, glancing through the window at the prospect
of roofs and chimney-cowls. “Provided that it finishes well...”</p>
<p>Except by the look in her eyes, and by the destruction of her once good
complexion, it was impossible to divine that this woman’s habits had ever
been disturbed in the slightest detail. But the gaze and the complexion
told the tale.</p>
<p>Next: the Boulevard St. Germain. A majestic flat, heavily and sombrely
furnished. The great drawing-room is shut and sheeted with holland. It has
been shut for twenty years. The mistress of this home is an aged widow of
inflexible will and astounding activity. She gets up at five a.m., and no
cook has ever yet satisfied her. The master is her son, a bachelor of
fifty. He is paralysed, and always perfectly dressed in the English taste,
he passes his life in a wheeled chair. The home is centred in his study,
full of books, engravings, a large safe, telephone, theatrophone,
newspapers, cigarettes, easy-chairs. When I go in, an old friend, a
stockbroker, is there, and “thees” and “thous” abound in the conversation,
which runs on investments, the new English loan, banking accounts in
London, the rent moratorium in Paris, and the war. It is said that every
German is a critic of war. But so is every Frenchman a critic of war. The
criticism I now hear is the best spoken criticism, utterly impartial, that
I have heard.</p>
<p>“In sum,” says the grey-headed stockbroker, “there disengages itself from
the totality of the facts an impression, tolerably clear, that all goes
very well on the West front.”</p>
<p>Which is reassuring. But the old lady, invincible after seven-and-a- half
decades spent in the hard acquirement of wisdom, will not be reassured.
She is not alarmed, but she will not be reassured. She treats the two men
with affectionate malice as children. She knows that “those birds”—that
is to say, the Germans—will never be beaten, because they are for
ever capable of inventing some new trick.</p>
<p>She will not sit still. A bit of talk, and she runs off with the agility
of a girl to survey her household; then returns and cuts into the
discussion.</p>
<p>“If you are coming to lunch, Bennett,” she says, “come before Monday,
because on Monday my cook takes herself away, and as for the new one, I
should dare to say nothing. . . . You don’t know, Bennett, you don’t know,
that at a given moment it was impossible to buy salt. I mean, they sold it
to you unwillingly, in little screws of paper. It was impossible to get
enough. Figure that to yourself, you from London! As for chicory for the
morning cafe-au-lait, it existed not. Gold could not buy it.”</p>
<p>And again she said, speaking of the fearful days in September 1914:</p>
<p>“What would you? We waited. My little coco is nailed there. He cannot move
without a furniture-van filled with things essential to his existence. I
did not wish to move. We waited, quite simply. We waited for them to come.
They did not come. So much the better That is all.”</p>
<p>I have never encountered anything more radically French than the
temperament of this aged woman.</p>
<p>Next: the luxury quarter—the establishment of one of those
fashionable dressmakers whom you patronise, and whose bills startle all
save the most hardened. She is a very handsome woman. She has a husband
and two little boys. They are all there. The husband is a retired
professional soldier. He has a small and easy post in a civil
administration, but his real work is to keep his wife’s books. In August
he was re-engaged, and ready to lead soldiers under fire in the fortified
camp which Gallieni has evolved out of the environs of Paris; but the need
passed, and the uniform was laid aside. The two little boys are combed and
dressed as only French and American children are combed and dressed, and
with a more economical ingenuity than American children. Each has a
beautiful purple silk necktie and a beautiful silk handkerchief to match.
You may notice that the purple silk is exactly the same purple silk as the
lining of their mother’s rich mantle hanging over a chair back.</p>
<p>“I had to dismiss my last few work-girls on Saturday,” said the
dressmaker. It was no longer possible to keep them. “I had seventy, you
know. Now—not one. For a time we made considerably less than the
rent. Now we make nothing. Nevertheless, some American clients have been
very kind.”</p>
<p>Her glance went round the empty white salons with their mirrors in
sculptured frames. Naught of her stock was left except one or two fragile
blouses and a few original drawings.</p>
<p>Said the husband:</p>
<p>“We are eating our resources. I will tell you what this war means to us.
It means that we shall have to work seven or eight years longer than we
had the intention to work. What would you?”</p>
<p>He lifted his arms and lowered the corners of his mouth. Then he turned
again to the military aspect of things, elaborating it.</p>
<p>The soldier in him finished:</p>
<p>“It is necessary, all the same, to admire these cursed Germans.”</p>
<p>“Admire them!” said his wife sharply. “I do not appreciate the necessity.
When I think of that day and that night we spent at home!” They live in
the eastern suburbs of the city. “When I think of that day and that night!
The cannon thundering at a distance of ten kilometres!”</p>
<p>“Thirty kilometres, almost thirty, my friend,” the husband corrected.</p>
<p>“Ten kilometres. I am sure it was not more than ten kilometres, my
friend.”</p>
<p>“But see, my little one. It was at Meaux. Forty kilometres to Meaux. We
are at thirteen. That makes twenty-seven, at least.”</p>
<p>“It sounded like ten.”</p>
<p>“That is true.”</p>
<p>“It sounded like ten, my dear Arnold. All day, and all night. We could not
go to bed. Had one any desire to go to bed? It was anguish. The mere
souvenir is anguish.”</p>
<p>She kissed her youngest boy, who had long hair.</p>
<p>“Come, come!” the soldier calmed her.</p>
<p>Lastly: an interior dans le monde; a home illustrious in Paris for the
richness of its collections—bric-a-brac, fans, porcelain, furniture,
modern pictures; the walls frescoed by Pierre Bonnard and his compeers; a
black marble balcony with an incomparable view in the very middle of the
city. Here several worlds encountered each other: authors, painters,
musicians, dilettanti, administrators. The hostess had good-naturedly
invited a high official of the Foreign Office, whom I had not seen for
many years; she did not say so, but her aim therein was to expedite the
arrangements for my pilgrimages in the war-zone. Sundry of my old friends
were present. It was wonderful how many had escaped active service, either
because they were necessary to central administration, or because they
were neutrals, or because they were too old, or because they had been
declined on account of physical unfitness, reformes. One or two who might
have come failed to do so because they had perished.</p>
<p>Amid the abounding, dazzling confusion of objects which it was a duty to
admire, people talked cautiously of the war. With tranquillity and
exactness and finality the high official, clad in pale alpaca and yellow
boots, explained the secret significance of Yellow Books, White Books,
Orange Books, Blue Books. The ultimate issues were never touched. New, yet
unprinted, music was played; Schumann, though German enough, was played.
Then literature came to the top. A novelist wanted to know what I thought
of a book called “The Way of All Flesh,” which he had just read. It is
singular how that ruthless book makes its way across all frontiers. He
also wanted to know about Gissing, a name new to him. And then a voice
from the obscurity of the balcony came startlingly to me in the
music-room:</p>
<p>“Tell me! Sincerely—do they hate the Germans in England? Do they
hate them, veritably? Tell me. I doubt it. I doubt strongly.”</p>
<p>I laughed, rather awkwardly, as any Englishman would.</p>
<p>The transient episode was very detrimental to literary talk.</p>
<p>Negotiations for a private visit to the front languished. The thing was
arranged right enough, but it seemed impossible to fix a day actually
starting. So I went to Meaux. Meaux had stuck in my ears. Meaux was in
history and in romances; it is in Dumas. It was burnt by the Normans in
the tenth century, and terrific massacres occurred outside its walls in
the fourteenth century, massacres in which the English aristocracy took
their full share of the killing. Also, in the seventeenth century, Bossuet
was Bishop of Meaux. Finally, in the twentieth century, the Germans just
got to Meaux, and they got no further. It was, so far as I can make out,
the nearest point to Paris which they soiled.</p>
<p>I could not go even to Meaux without formalities, but the formalities were
simple. The dilatory train took seventy minutes, dawdling along the banks
of the notorious Marne. In an automobile one could have done the journey
in half the time. An automobile, however, would have seriously complicated
the formalities. Meaux contains about fourteen thousand inhabitants. Yet
it seems, when you are in it, to’ consist chiefly of cathedral. When you
are at a little distance away from it, it seems to consist of nothing but
cathedral. In this it resembles Chartres, and many another city in France.</p>
<p>We obtained a respectable carriage, with a melancholy, resigned old
driver, who said:</p>
<p>“For fifteen francs, plus always the pourboire, I will take you to Barcy,
which was bombarded and burnt. I will show you all the battlefield.”</p>
<p>With those few words he thrilled me.</p>
<p>The road rose slowly from the canal of the Ourcq; it was lined with the
most beautiful acacia trees, and through the screen of the acacias one had
glimpses of the town, diminishing, and of the cathedral, growing larger
and larger. The driver talked to us in faint murmurs over his shoulder,
indicating the positions of various villages such as Penchard, Poincy,
Crecy, Monthyon, Chambry, Varreddes, all of which will be found, in the
future detailed histories of the great locust-advance.</p>
<p>“Did you yourself see any Germans?”</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“Where?”</p>
<p>“At Meaux.”</p>
<p>“How many?”</p>
<p>He smiled. “About a dozen.” He underestimated the number, and the length
of the stay, but no matter. “They were scouts. They came into the town for
a few hours—and left it. The Germans were deceived. They might have
got to Paris if they had liked. But they were deceived.”</p>
<p>“How were they deceived?”</p>
<p>“They thought there were more English in front of them than actually there
were. The head-quarters of the English were over there, at La
Ferte-sous-Jouarre. The English blew up our bridge, as a measure of
precaution.”</p>
<p>We drove on.</p>
<p>“The first tomb,” said the driver, nonchalantly, in his weak voice,
lifting an elbow.</p>
<p>There it was, close by the roadside, and a little higher than ourselves.
The grave was marked by four short, rough posts on which was strung barbed
wire; a white flag; a white cross of painted wood, very simply but neatly
made; a faded wreath. We could distinguish a few words of an inscription.
“Comrades, 66th Territorials...” Soldiers were buried where they fell, and
this was the tomb of him who fell nearest to Paris. It marked the last
homicidal effort of the Germans before their advance in this region curved
eastwards into a retreat. This tomb was a very impressive thing. The
driver had thrilled me again.</p>
<p>We drove on. We were now in a large rolling plain that sloped gradually
behind us southwards towards the Marne. It had many little woods and
spinneys, and no watercourses. To the civilian it ap- peared an ideal
theatre for a glorious sanguinary battle in which thousands of fathers,
sons, and brothers should die violently because some hierarchy in a
distant capital was suffering from an acute attack of swelled head. A few
trenches here and there could still be descried, but the whole land was in
an advanced state of cultivation. Wheat and oats and flaming poppies had
now conquered the land, had overrun and possessed it as no Germans could
ever do. The raw earth of the trenches struggled vainly against the tide
of germination. The harvest was going to be good. This plain, with its
little woods and little villages, glittered with a careless and vast
satisfaction in the sheets of sunshine that fell out of a blue too intense
for the gaze.</p>
<p>We saw a few more tombs, and a great general monument or cenotaph to the
dead, constructed at cross-roads by military engineers. The driver pointed
to the village of Penchard, which had been pillaged and burnt by the
enemy. It was only about a mile off, but in the strong, dazzling light we
could distinguish not the least sign of damage. Then we came to a
farm-house by the roadside. It was empty; it was a shell, and its roof was
damaged. The Germans had gutted it. They had taken away its furniture as
booty. (What they intended to do with furniture out of a perfectly
mediocre farm-house, hundreds of miles from home, it is difficult to
imagine.) Articles which it did not suit them to carry off they destroyed.
Wine-casks of which they could not drink the wine, they stove in. ... And
then they retreated.</p>
<p>This farm-house was somebody’s house, just as your home is yours, and mine
mine. To some woman or other every object in it was familiar. She glanced
at the canister on the mantelpiece and said to herself: “I really must
clean that canister to-morrow.” There the house stood, with holes in its
roof, empty. And if there are half a million similarly tragic houses in
Europe to-day, as probably there are, such frequency does not in the
slightest degree diminish the forlorn tragedy of that particular house
which I have beheld.</p>
<p>At last Barcy came into view—the pierced remains of its church tower
over the brow of a rise in the plain. Barcy is our driver’s show- place.
Barcy was in the middle of things. The fighting round Barcy lasted a night
and a day, and Barcy was taken and retaken twice.</p>
<p>“You see the new red roofs,” said the driver as we approached. “By those
new red roofs you are in a state to judge a little what the damage was.”</p>
<p>Some of the newly made roofs, however, were of tarred paper.</p>
<p>The street by which we entered had a small-pox of shrapnel and
bullet-marks. The post office had particularly suffered: its bones were
laid bare. It had not been restored, but it was ready to do any business
that fell to be done, though closed on that afternoon. We turned a corner,
and came upon the church. The work on the church was well up to the
reported Teutonic average. Of its roof only the rafters were left. The
windows were all smashed, and their lead fantastically twisted. The west
door was entirely gone; a rough grille of strips of wood served in its
stead. Through this grille one could see the nave and altar, in a
miraculous and horrible confusion. It was as if house-breakers had spent
days in doing their best to produce a professional effect. The oak pews
were almost unharmed. Immediately behind the grille lay a great bronze
bell, about three feet high, covered with beautifully incised
inscriptions; it was unhurt.</p>
<p>Apparently nothing had been accomplished, in ten months, towards the
restoration of the church. But something was contemplated, perhaps already
started. A polished steel saw lay on one of the pews, but there was no
workman attached to it.</p>
<p>While I was writing some notes in the porch three little boys came up and
diligently stared at me.</p>
<p>“What dost thou want?” I said sharply to the tallest.</p>
<p>“Nothing,” he replied.</p>
<p>Then three widows came up, one young, one young and beautiful, one
middle-aged.</p>
<p>We got back into the carriage.</p>
<p>“The village seems very deserted,” I said to the driver.</p>
<p>“What would you?” he answered. “Many went. They had no home. Few have
returned.”</p>
<p>All around were houses of which nothing remained but the stone walls.</p>
<p>The Germans had shown great prowess here, and the French still greater. It
was a village upon which rival commanders could gaze with pride. It will
remember the fourth and the fifth of September 1914.</p>
<p>We made towards Chambry. Chambry is a village which, like Meaux, lies
below the plain. Chambry escaped glory; but between it and Barcy, on the
intervening slope through which a good road runs, a battle was fought. You
know what kind of a battle it was by the tombs. These tombs were very like
the others—an oblong of barbed wire, a white flag, a white cross,
sometimes a name, more often only a number, rarely a wreath. You see first
one, then another, then two, then a sprinkling; and gradually you perceive
that the whole plain is dotted with gleams of white flags and white
crosses, so that graves seem to extend right away to the horizon marked by
lines of trees. Then you see a huge general grave. Much glory about that
spot!</p>
<p>And then a tomb with a black cross. Very disconcerting, that black cross!
It is different not only in colour, but in shape, from the other crosses.
Sinister! You need not to be told that the body of a German lies beneath
it. The whole devilishness of the Prussian ideal is expressed in that
black cross. Then, as the road curves, you see more black crosses, many
black crosses, very many. No flags, no names, no wreaths on these tombs.
Just a white stencilled number in the centre of each cross. Women in
Germany are still lying awake at nights and wondering what those tombs
look like.</p>
<p>Watching over all the tombs, white and black without distinction, are
notices: “Respect the Tombs.” But the wheat and the oats are not
respecting the tombs. Everywhere the crops have encroached on them,
half-hiding them, smothering them, climbing right over them. In one place
wheat is ripening out of the very body of a German soldier.</p>
<p>Such is the nearest battlefield to Paris. Corporate excursions to it are
forbidden, and wisely. For the attraction of the place, were it given
play, would completely demoralise Meaux and the entire district.</p>
<p>In half an hour we were back at an utterly matter-of-fact railway station,
in whose cafe an utterly matter-of-fact and capable Frenchwoman gave us
tea. And when we reached Paris we had the news that a Staff Captain of the
French Army had been detailed to escort us to the front and to show us all
that could safely be seen. Nevertheless, whatever I may experience, I
shall not experience again the thrill which I had when the weak and
melancholy old driver pointed out the first tomb. That which we had just
seen was the front once.</p>
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