After the Germans occupied Brussels
they closed the road to Aix-la-Chapelle. A week
later, to carry their wounded and prisoners, they
reopened it. But for eight days Brussels was isolated.
The mail-trains and the telegraph office were in the
hands of the invaders. They accepted our cables,
censored them, and three days later told us, if we
still wished, we could forward them. But only
from Holland. By this they accomplished three
things: they learned what we were writing about
them, for three days prevented any news from leaving
the city, and offered us an inducement to visit Holland,
so getting rid of us.
The despatches of those diplomats
who still remained in Brussels were treated in the
same manner. With the most cheerful complacency
the military authorities blue-pencilled their despatches
to their governments. When the diplomats learned
of this, with their code cables they sent open cables
stating that their confidential despatches were being
censored and delayed. They still were delayed.
To get any message out of Brussels it was necessary
to use an automobile, and nearly every automobile
had taken itself off to Antwerp. If a motor-car
appeared it was at once commandeered. This was
true also of horses and bicycles. All over Brussels
you saw delivery wagons, private carriages, market
carts with the shafts empty and the horse and harness
gone. After three days a German soldier who did
not own a bicycle was poor indeed.
Requisitions were given for these
machines, stating they would be returned after the
war, by which time they will be ready for the scrap-heap.
Any one on a bicycle outside the city was arrested,
so the only way to get messages through was by going
on foot to Ostend or Holland, or by an automobile
for which the German authorities had given a special
pass. As no one knew when one of these automobiles
might start, we carried always with us our cables and
letters, and intrusted them to any stranger who was
trying to run the lines.
No one wished to carry our despatches,
as he feared they might contain something unfavorable
to the Germans, which, if he were arrested and the
cables read, might bring him into greater trouble.
Money for himself was no inducement. But I found
if I gave money for the Red Cross no one would refuse
it, or to carry the messages.
Three out of four times the stranger
would be arrested and ordered back to Brussels, and
our despatches, with their news value departed, would
be returned.
An account of the Germans entering
Brussels I sent by an English boy named Dalton, who,
after being turned back three times, got through by
night, and when he arrived in England his adventures
were published in all the London papers. They
were so thrilling that they made my story, for which
he had taken the trip, extremely tame reading.
Hugh Gibson, secretary of the American
legation, was the first person in an official position
to visit Antwerp after the Belgian Government moved
to that city, and, even with his passes and flag flying
from his automobile, he reached Antwerp and returned
to Brussels only after many delays and adventures.
Not knowing the Belgians were advancing from the north,
Gibson and his American flag were several times under
fire, and on the days he chose for his excursion his
route led him past burning towns and dead and wounded
and between the lines of both forces actively engaged.
He was carrying despatches from Brand
Whitlock to Secretary Bryan. During the night
he rested at Antwerp the first Zeppelin air-ship to
visit that city passed over it, dropping one bomb
at the end of the block in which Gibson was sleeping.
He was awakened by the explosion and heard all of
those that followed.
The next morning he was requested
to accompany a committee appointed by the Belgian
Government to report upon the outrage, and he visited
a house that had been wrecked, and saw what was left
of the bodies of those killed. People who were
in the streets when the air-ship passed said it moved
without any sound, as though the motor had been shut
off and it was being propelled by momentum.
One bomb fell so near the palace where
the Belgian Queen was sleeping as to destroy the glass
in the windows and scar the walls. The bombs
were large, containing smaller bombs of the size of
shrapnel. Like shrapnel, on impact they scattered
bullets over a radius of forty yards. One man,
who from a window in the eighth story of a hotel watched
the air-ship pass, stated that before each bomb fell
he saw electric torches signal from the roofs, as though
giving directions as to where the bombs should strike.
After my arrest by the Germans, I
found my usefulness in Brussels as a correspondent
was gone, and I returned to London, and from there
rejoined the Allies in Paris.
I left Brussels on August 27th with
Gerald Morgan and Will Irwin, of Collier’s,
on a train carrying English prisoners and German wounded.
In times of peace the trip to the German border lasts
three hours, but in making it we were twenty-six hours,
and by order of the authorities we were forbidden
to leave the train.
Carriages with cushions naturally
were reserved for the wounded, so we slept on wooden
benches and on the floor. It was not possible
to obtain food, and water was as scarce. At Graesbeek,
ten miles from Brussels, we first saw houses on fire.
They continued with us to Liege.
Village after village had been completely
wrecked. In his march to the sea Sherman lived
on the country. He did not destroy it, and as
against the burning of Columbia must be placed to the
discredit of the Germans the wiping out of an entire
countryside.
For many miles we saw procession after
procession of peasants fleeing from one burning village,
which had been their home, to other villages, to find
only blackened walls and smouldering ashes. In
no part of northern Europe is there a countryside
fairer than that between Aix-la-Chapelle and Brussels,
but the Germans had made of it a graveyard. It
looked as though a cyclone had uprooted its houses,
gardens, and orchards and a prairie fire had followed.
At seven o’clock in the evening
we arrived at what for six hundred years had been
the city of Louvain. The Germans were burning
it, and to hide their work kept us locked in the railroad
carriages. But the story was written against
the sky, was told to us by German soldiers incoherent
with excesses; and we could read it in the faces of
women and children being led to concentration camps
and of citizens on their way to be shot.
The day before the Germans had sentenced
Louvain to become a wilderness, and with German system
and love of thoroughness they left Louvain an empty,
blackened shell. The reason for this appeal to
the torch and the execution of non-combatants, as given
to Mr. Whitlock and myself on the morning I left Brussels
by General von Lutwitz, the military governor, was
this: The day before, while the German military
commander of the troops in Louvain was at the Hotel
de Ville talking to the burgomaster, a son of the burgomaster,
with an automatic pistol, shot the chief of staff
and German staff surgeons.
Lutwitz claimed this was the signal
for the civil guard, in civilian clothes on the roofs,
to fire upon the German soldiers in the open square
below. He said also the Belgians had quick-firing
guns, brought from Antwerp. As for a week the
Germans had occupied Louvain and closely guarded all
approaches, the story that there was any gun-running
is absurd.
“Fifty Germans were killed and
wounded,” said Lutwitz, “and for that
Louvain must be wiped out so!” In
pantomime with his fist he swept the papers across
his table.
“The Hotel de Ville,”
he added, “was a beautiful building; it is a
pity it must be destroyed.”
Were he telling us his soldiers had
destroyed a kitchen-garden, his tone could not have
expressed less regret.
Ten days before I had been in Louvain,
when it was occupied by Belgian troops and King Albert
and his staff. The city dates from the eleventh
century, and the population was forty-two thousand.
The citizens were brewers, lace-makers, and manufacturers
of ornaments for churches. The university once
was the most celebrated in European cities and was
the headquarters of the Jesuits.
In the Louvain College many priests
now in America have been educated, and ten days before,
over the great yellow walls of the college, I had
seen hanging two American flags. I had found the
city clean, sleepy, and pretty, with narrow, twisting
streets and smart shops and cafes. Set in flower
gardens were the houses, with red roofs, green shutters,
and white walls.
Over those that faced south had been
trained pear-trees, their branches, heavy with fruit,
spread out against the walls like branches of candelabra.
The town hall was an example of Gothic architecture,
in detail and design more celebrated even than the
town hall of Bruges or Brussels. It was five
hundred years old, and lately had been repaired with
taste and at great cost.
Opposite was the Church of St. Pierre,
dating from the fifteenth century, a very noble building,
with many chapels filled with carvings of the time
of the Renaissance in wood, stone, and iron. In
the university were one hundred and fifty thousand
volumes.
Near it was the bronze statue of Father
Damien, priest of the leper colony in the South Pacific,
of whom Robert Louis Stevenson wrote.
On the night of the 27th these buildings
were empty, exploded cartridges. Statues, pictures,
carvings, parchments, archives all these
were gone.
No one defends the sniper. But
because ignorant Mexicans, when their city was invaded,
fired upon our sailors, we did not destroy Vera Cruz.
Even had we bombarded Vera Cruz, money could have
restored that city. Money can never restore Louvain.
Great architects and artists, dead these six hundred
years, made it beautiful, and their handiwork belonged
to the world. With torch and dynamite the Germans
turned those masterpieces into ashes, and all the Kaiser’s
horses and all his men cannot bring them back again.
When our troop train reached Louvain,
the entire heart of the city was destroyed, and the
fire had reached the Boulevard Tirlemont, which faces
the railroad station. The night was windless,
and the sparks rose in steady, leisurely pillars,
falling back into the furnace from which they sprang.
In their work the soldiers were moving from the heart
of the city to the outskirts, street by street, from
house to house.
In each building they began at the
first floor and, when that was burning steadily, passed
to the one next. There were no exceptions
whether it was a store, chapel, or private residence,
it was destroyed. The occupants had been warned
to go, and in each deserted shop or house the furniture
was piled, the torch was stuck under it, and into
the air went the savings of years, souvenirs of children,
of parents, heirlooms that had passed from generation
to generation.
The people had time only to fill a
pillowcase and fly. Some were not so fortunate,
and by thousands, like flocks of sheep, they were
rounded up and marched through the night to concentration
camps. We were not allowed to speak to any citizen
of Louvain, but the Germans crowded the windows of
the train, boastful, gloating, eager to interpret.
In the two hours during which the
train circled the burning city war was before us in
its most hateful aspect.
In other wars I have watched men on
one hilltop, without haste, without heat, fire at
men on another hill, and in consequence on both sides
good men were wasted. But in those fights there
were no women or children, and the shells struck only
vacant stretches of veldt or uninhabited mountain
sides.
At Louvain it was war upon the defenceless,
war upon churches, colleges, shops of milliners and
lace-makers; war brought to the bedside and the fireside;
against women harvesting in the fields, against children
in wooden shoes at play in the streets.
At Louvain that night the Germans
were like men after an orgy.
There were fifty English prisoners,
erect and soldierly. In the ocean of gray the
little patch of khaki looked pitifully lonely, but
they regarded the men who had outnumbered but not
defeated them with calm, uncurious eyes. In one
way I was glad to see them there. Later they
will bear witness. They will tell how the enemy
makes a wilderness and calls it war. It was a
most weird picture. On the high ground rose the
broken spires of the Church of St. Pierre and the Hotel
de Ville, and descending like steps were row beneath
row of houses, roofless, with windows like blind eyes.
The fire had reached the last row of houses, those
on the Boulevard de Jodigne. Some of these were
already cold, but others sent up steady, straight columns
of flame. In others at the third and fourth stories
the window curtains still hung, flowers still filled
the window-boxes, while on the first floor the torch
had just passed and the flames were leaping. Fire
had destroyed the electric plant, but at times the
flames made the station so light that you could see
the second-hand of your watch, and again all was darkness,
lit only by candles.
You could tell when an officer passed
by the electric torch he carried strapped to his chest.
In the darkness the gray uniforms filled the station
with an army of ghosts. You distinguished men
only when pipes hanging from their teeth glowed red
or their bayonets flashed.
Outside the station in the public
square the people of Louvain passed in an unending
procession, women bareheaded, weeping, men carrying
the children asleep on their shoulders, all hemmed
in by the shadowy army of gray wolves. Once they
were halted, and among them were marched a line of
men. These were on their way to be shot.
And, better to point the moral, an officer halted both
processions and, climbing to a cart, explained why
the men were to die. He warned others not to
bring down upon themselves a like vengeance.
As those being led to spend the night
in the fields looked across to those marked for death
they saw old friends, neighbors of long standing,
men of their own household. The officer bellowing
at them from the cart was illuminated by the headlights
of an automobile. He looked like an actor held
in a spotlight on a darkened stage.
It was all like a scene upon the stage,
unreal, inhuman. You felt it could not be true.
You felt that the curtain of fire, purring and crackling
and sending up hot sparks to meet the kind, calm stars,
was only a painted backdrop; that the reports of rifles
from the dark ruins came from blank cartridges, and
that these trembling shopkeepers and peasants ringed
in bayonets would not in a few minutes really die,
but that they themselves and their homes would be
restored to their wives and children.
You felt it was only a nightmare,
cruel and uncivilized. And then you remembered
that the German Emperor has told us what it is.
It is his Holy War.