With a strange knocking of his heart,
high up toward his throat, Kurt Dorn stood stock-still,
watching the moving cloud of dust until it disappeared
over the hill.
No doubt entered his mind. The
truth, the fact, was a year old a long-familiar
and dreamy state but its meaning had not
been revealed to him until just a moment past.
Everything had changed when she looked out with that
sweet, steady gaze through the parted veil and then
slowly closed it. She had changed. There
was something intangible about her that last moment,
baffling, haunting. He leaned against a crooked
old gate-post that as a boy he had climbed, and the
thought came to him that this spot would all his life
be vivid and poignant in his memory. The first
sight of a blue-eyed, sunny-haired girl, a year and
more before, had struck deep into his unconscious
heart; a second sight had made her an unforgettable
reality: and a third had been the realization
of love.
It was sad, regrettable, incomprehensible,
and yet somehow his inner being swelled and throbbed.
Her name was Lenore Anderson. Her father was
one of the richest men in the state of Washington.
She had one brother, Jim, who would not wait for the
army draft. Kurt trembled and a hot rush of tears
dimmed his eyes. All at once his lot seemed unbearable.
An immeasurable barrier had arisen between him and
his old father a hideous thing of blood,
of years, of ineradicable difference; the broad acres
of wheatland so dear to him were to be taken from him;
love had overcome him with headlong rush, a love that
could never be returned; and cruelest of all, there
was the war calling him to give up his home, his father,
his future, and to go out to kill and to be killed.
It came to him while he leaned there,
that, remembering the light of Lenore Anderson’s
eyes, he could not give up to bitterness and hatred,
whatever his misfortunes and his fate. She would
never be anything to him, but he and her brother Jim
and many other young Americans must be incalculable
all to her. That thought saved Kurt Dorn.
There were other things besides his own career, his
happiness; and the way he was placed, however unfortunate
from a selfish point of view, must not breed a morbid
self-pity.
The moment of his resolution brought
a flash, a revelation of what he owed himself.
The work and the thought and the feeling of his last
few weeks there at home must be intensified.
He must do much and live greatly in little time.
This was the moment of his renunciation, and he imagined
that many a young man who had decided to go to war
had experienced a strange spiritual division of self.
He wondered also if that moment was not for many of
them a let-down, a throwing up of ideals, a helpless
retrograding and surrender to the brutalizing spirit
of war. But it could never be so for him.
It might have been had not that girl come into his
life.
The bell for the midday meal roused
Kurt from his profound reverie, and he plodded back
to the house. Down through the barnyard gate he
saw the hired men coming, and a second glance discovered
to him that two unknown men were with them. Watching
for a moment, Kurt recognized the two strangers that
had been talking to Mr. Anderson’s driver.
They seemed to be talking earnestly now. Kurt
saw Jerry, a trusty and long-tried employee, rather
unceremoniously break away from these strangers.
But they followed him, headed him off, and with vehement
nods and gesticulations appeared to be arguing with
him. The other hired men pushed closer, evidently
listening. Finally Jerry impatiently broke away
and tramped toward the house. These strangers
sent sharp words after him words that Kurt
could not distinguish, though he caught the tone of
scorn. Then the two individuals addressed themselves
to the other men; and in close contact the whole party
passed out of sight behind the barn.
Thoughtfully Kurt went into the house.
He meant to speak to Jerry about the strangers, but
he wanted to consider the matter first. He had
misgivings. His father was not in the sitting-room,
nor in the kitchen. Dinner was ready on the table,
and the one servant, an old woman who had served the
Dorns for years, appeared impatient at the lack
of promptness in the men. Both father and son,
except on Sundays, always ate with the hired help.
Kurt stepped outside to find Jerry washing at the bench.
“Jerry, what’s keeping the men?”
queried Kurt.
“Wal, they’re palaverin’
out there with two I.W.W. fellers,” replied
Jerry.
Kurt reached for the rope of the farm-bell,
and rang it rather sharply. Then he went in to
take his place at the table, and Jerry soon followed.
Old man Dorn did not appear, which fact was not unusual.
The other hired men did not enter until Jerry and
Kurt were half done with the meal. They seemed
excited and somewhat boisterous, Kurt thought, but
once they settled down to eating, after the manner
of hungry laborers, they had little to say. Kurt,
soon finishing his dinner, went outdoors to wait for
Jerry. That individual appeared to be long in
coming, and loud voices in the kitchen attested to
further argument. At last, however, he lounged
out and began to fill a pipe.
“Jerry, I want to talk to you,”
said Kurt. “Let’s get away from the
house.”
The hired man was a big, lumbering
fellow, gnarled like an old oak-tree. He had
a good-natured face and honest eyes.
“I reckon you want to hear about
them I.W.W. fellers?” he asked, as they walked
away.
“Yes,” replied Kurt.
“There’s been a regular
procession of them fellers, the last week or so, walkin’
through the country,” replied Jerry. “To-day’s
the first time any of them got to me. But I’ve
heerd talk. Sunday when I was in Palmer the air
was full of rumors.”
“Rumors of what?” queried Kurt.
“All kinds,” answered
Jerry, nonchalantly scratching his stubby beard.
“There’s an army of I.W.W.’s comin’
in from eastward. Idaho an’ Montana are
gittin’ a dose now. Short hours; double
wages; join the union; sabotage, whatever thet is;
capital an’ labor fight; threats if you don’t
fall in line; an’ Lord knows what all.”
“What did those two fellows want of you?”
“Wanted us to join the I.W.W.,” replied
the laborer.
“Did they want a job?”
“Not as I heerd. Why, one
of them had a wad of bills thet would choke a cow.
He did most of the talkin’. The little feller
with the beady eyes an’ the pock-marks, he didn’t
say much. He’s Austrian an’ not long
in this country. The big stiff Glidden,
he called himself must be some shucks in
thet I.W.W. He looked an’ talked oily at
first very persuadin’; but when I
says I wasn’t goin’ to join no union he
got sassy an’ bossy. They made me sore,
so I told him to go to hell. Then he said the
I.W.W. would run the whole Northwest this summer wheat-fields,
lumberin’, fruit-harvestin’, railroadin’ the
whole kaboodle, an’ thet any workman who wouldn’t
join would git his, all right.”
“Well, Jerry, what do you think
about this organization?” queried Kurt, anxiously.
“Not much. It ain’t
a square deal. I ain’t got no belief in
them. What I heerd of their threatenin’
methods is like the way this Glidden talks. If
I owned a farm I’d drive such fellers off with
a whip. There’s goin’ to be bad doin’s
if they come driftin’ strong into the Bend.”
“Jerry, are you satisfied with your job?”
“Sure. I won’t join
the I.W.W. An’ I’ll talk ag’in’
it. I reckon a few of us will hev to do all the
harvestin’. An’, considerin’
thet, I’ll take a dollar a day more on my wages.”
“If father does not agree to
that, I will,” said Kurt. “Now how
about the other men?”
“Wal, they all air leanin’
toward promises of little work an’ lots of pay,”
answered Jerry, with a laugh. “Morgan’s
on the fence about joinin’. But Andrew
agreed. He’s Dutch an’ pig-headed.
Jansen’s only too glad to make trouble
fer his boss. They’re goin’ to
lay off the rest of to-day an’ talk with Glidden.
They all agreed to meet down by the culvert.
An’ thet’s what they was arguin’
with me fer wanted me to come.”
“Where’s this man Glidden?”
demanded Kurt. “I’ll give him a piece
of my mind.”
“I reckon he’s hangin’
round the farm out of sight somewhere.”
“All right, Jerry. Now
you go back to work. You’ll never lose anything
by sticking to us, I promise you that. Keep your
eyes and ears open.”
Kurt strode back to the house, and
his entrance to the kitchen evidently interrupted
a colloquy of some kind. The hired men were still
at table. They looked down at their plates and
said nothing. Kurt left the sitting-room door
open, and, turning, he asked Martha if his father had
been to dinner.
“No, an’ what’s
more, when I called he takes to roarin’ like
a mad bull,” replied the woman.
Kurt crossed the sitting-room to knock
upon his father’s door. The reply forthcoming
did justify the old woman’s comparison.
It certainly caused the hired men to evacuate the
kitchen with alacrity. Old Chris Dorn’s
roar at his son was a German roar, which did not soothe
the young man’s rising temper. Of late
the father had taken altogether to speaking German.
He had never spoken English well. And Kurt was
rapidly approaching the point where he would not speak
German. A deadlock was in sight, and Kurt grimly
prepared to meet it. He pounded on the locked
door.
“The men are going to lay off,” he called.
“Who runs this farm?” was the thundered
reply.
“The I.W.W. is going to run
it if you sulk indoors as you have done lately,”
yelled Kurt. He thought that would fetch his father
stamping out, but he had reckoned falsely. There
was no further sound. Leaving the room in high
dudgeon, Kurt hurried out to catch the hired men near
at hand and to order them back to work. They trudged
off surlily toward the barn.
Then Kurt went on to search for the
I.W.W. men, and after looking up and down the road,
and all around, he at length found them behind an old
strawstack. They were comfortably sitting down,
backs to the straw, eating a substantial lunch.
Kurt was angry and did not care. His appearance,
however, did not faze the strangers. One of them,
an American, was a man of about thirty years, clean-shaven,
square-jawed, with light, steely, secretive gray eyes,
and a look of intelligence and assurance that did
not harmonize with his motley garb. His companion
was a foreigner, small of stature, with eyes like
a ferret and deep pits in his sallow face.
“Do you know you’re trespassing?”
demanded Kurt.
“You grudge us a little shade,
eh, even to eat a bite?” said the American.
He wrapped a paper round his lunch and leisurely rose,
to fasten penetrating eyes upon the young man.
“That’s what I heard about you rich farmers
of the Bend.”
“What business have you coming
here?” queried Kurt, with sharp heat. “You
sneak out of sight of the farmers. You trespass
to get at our men and with a lot of lies and guff
you make them discontented with their jobs. I’ll
fire these men just for listening to you.”
“Mister Dorn, we want you to
fire them. That’s my business out here,”
replied the American.
“Who are you, anyway?”
“That’s my business, too.”
Kurt passed from hot to cold.
He could not miss the antagonism of this man, a bold
and menacing attitude.
“My foreman says your name’s
Glidden,” went on Kurt, cooler this time, “and
that you’re talking I.W.W. as if you were one
of its leaders; that you don’t want a job; that
you’ve got a wad of money; that you coax, then
threaten; that you’ve intimidated three of our
hands.”
“Your Jerry’s a marked man,” said
Glidden, shortly.
“You impudent scoundrel!”
exclaimed Kurt. “Now you listen to this.
You’re the first I.W.W. man I’ve met.
You look and talk like an American. But if you
are American you’re a traitor. We’ve
a war to fight! War with a powerful country!
Germany! And you come spreading discontent in
the wheat-fields,... when wheat means life!...
Get out of here before I ”
“We’ll mark you, too,
Mister Dorn, and your wheat-fields,” snapped
Glidden.
With one swift lunge Kurt knocked
the man flat and then leaped to stand over him, watching
for a move to draw a weapon. The little foreigner
slunk back out of reach.
“I’ll start a little marking
myself,” grimly said Kurt. “Get up!”
Slowly Glidden moved from elbow to
knees, and then to his feet. His cheek was puffing
out and his nose was bleeding. The light-gray
eyes were lurid.
“That’s for your I.W.W.!”
declared Kurt. “The first rule of your I.W.W.
is to abolish capital, hey?”
Kurt had not intended to say that.
It slipped out in his fury. But the effect was
striking. Glidden gave a violent start and his
face turned white. Abruptly he hurried away.
His companion shuffled after him. Kurt stared
at them, thinking the while that if he had needed any
proof of the crookedness of the I.W.W. he had seen
it in Glidden’s guilty face. The man had
been suddenly frightened, and surprise, too, had been
prominent in his countenance. Then Kurt remembered
how Anderson had intimated that the secrets of the
I.W.W. had been long hidden. Kurt, keen and quick
in his sensibilities, divined that there was something
powerful back of this Glidden’s cunning and assurance.
Could it be only the power of a new labor organization?
That might well be great, but the idea did not convince
Kurt. During a hurried and tremendous preparation
by the government for war, any disorder such as menaced
the country would be little short of a calamity.
It might turn out a fatality. This so-called
labor union intended to take advantage of a crisis
to further its own ends. Yet even so, that fact
did not wholly explain Glidden and his subtlety.
Some nameless force loomed dark and sinister back of
Glidden’s meaning, and it was not peril to the
wheatlands of the Northwest alone.
Like a huge dog Kurt shook himself
and launched into action. There were sense and
pleasure in muscular activity, and it lessened the
habit of worry. Soon he ascertained that only
Morgan had returned to work in the fields. Andrew
and Jansen were nowhere to be seen. Jansen had
left four horses hitched to a harrow. Kurt went
out to take up the work thus abandoned.
It was a long field, and if he had
earned a dollar for every time he had traversed its
length, during the last ten years, he would have been
a rich man. He could have walked it blindfolded.
It was fallow ground, already plowed, disked, rolled,
and now the last stage was to harrow it, loosening
the soil, conserving the moisture.
Morgan, far to the other side of this
section, had the better of the job, for his harrow
was a new machine and he could ride while driving
the horses. But Kurt, using an old harrow, had
to walk. The four big horses plodded at a gait
that made Kurt step out to keep up with them.
To keep up, to drive a straight line, to hold back
on the reins, was labor for a man. It spoke well
for Kurt that he had followed that old harrow hundreds
of miles, that he could stand the strain, that he loved
both the physical sense and the spiritual meaning of
the toil.
Driving west, he faced a wind laden
with dust as dry as powder. At every sheeted
cloud, whipping back from the hoofs of the horses and
the steel spikes of the harrow, he had to bat his
eyes to keep from being blinded. The smell of
dust clogged his nostrils. As soon as he began
to sweat under the hot sun the dust caked on his face,
itching, stinging, burning. There was dust between
his teeth.
Driving back east was a relief.
The wind whipped the dust away from him. And
he could catch the fragrance of the newly turned soil.
How brown and clean and earthy it looked! Where
the harrow had cut and ridged, the soil did not look
thirsty and parched. But that which was unharrowed
cried out for rain. No cloud in the hot sky, except
the yellow clouds of dust!
On that trip east across the field,
which faced the road, Dorn saw pedestrians in twos
and threes passing by. Once he was hailed, but
made no answer. He would not have been surprised
to see a crowd, yet travelers were scarce in that
region. The sight of these men, some of them
carrying bags and satchels, was disturbing to the young
farmer. Where were they going? All appeared
outward bound toward the river. They came, of
course, from the little towns, the railroads, the cities.
At this season, with harvest-time near at hand, it
had been in former years no unusual sight to see strings
of laborers passing by. But this year they came
earlier, and in greater numbers.
With the wind in his face, however,
Dorn saw nothing but the horses and the brown line
ahead, and half the time they were wholly obscured
in yellow dust. He began thinking about Lenore
Anderson, just pondering that strange, steady look
of a girl’s eyes; and then he did not mind the
dust or heat or distance. Never could he be cheated
of his thoughts. And those of her, even the painful
ones, gave birth to a comfort that he knew must abide
with him henceforth on lonely labors such as this,
perhaps in the lonelier watches of a soldier’s
duty. She had been curious, aloof, then sympathetic;
she had studied his face; she had been an eloquent-eyed
listener to his discourse on wheat. But she had
not guessed his secret. Not until her last look strange,
deep, potent had he guessed that secret
himself.
So, with mind both busy and absent,
Kurt Dorn harrowed the fallow ground abandoned by
his men; and when the day was done, with the sun setting
hot and coppery beyond the dim, dark ranges, he guided
the tired horses homeward and plodded back of them,
weary and spent.
He was to learn from Morgan, at the
stables, that the old man had discharged both Andrew
and Jansen. And Jansen, liberating some newly
assimilated poison, had threatened revenge. He
would see that any hired men would learn a thing or
two, so that they would not sign up with Chris Dorn.
In a fury the old man had driven Jansen out into the
road.
Sober and moody, Kurt put the horses
away, and, washing the dust grime from sunburnt face
and hands, he went to his little attic room, where
he changed his damp and sweaty clothes. Then
he went down to supper with mind made up to be lenient
and silent with his old and sorely tried father.
Chris Dorn sat in the light of the
kitchen lamps. He was a huge man with a great,
round, bullet-shaped head and a shock of gray hair
and bristling, grizzled beard. His face was broad,
heavy, and seemed sodden with dark, brooding thought.
His eyes, under bushy brows, were pale gleams of fire.
He looked immovable as to both bulk and will.
Never before had Kurt Dorn so acutely
felt the fixed, contrary, ruthless nature of his parent.
Never had the distance between them seemed so great.
Kurt shivered and sighed at once. Then, being
hungry, he fell to eating in silence. Presently
the old man shoved his plate back, and, wiping his
face, he growled, in German:
“I discharged Andrew and Jansen.”
“Yes, I know,” replied
Kurt. “It wasn’t good judgment.
What’ll we do for hands?”
“I’ll hire more. Men are coming for
the harvest.”
“But they all belong to the I.W.W.,” protested
Kurt.
“And what’s that?”
In scarcely subdued wrath Kurt described
in detail, and to the best of his knowledge, what
the I.W.W. was, and he ended by declaring the organization
treacherous to the United States.
“How’s that?” asked old Dorn, gruffly.
Kurt was actually afraid to tell his
father, who never read newspapers, who knew little
of what was going on, that if the Allies were to win
the war it was wheat that would be the greatest factor.
Instead of that he said if the I.W.W. inaugurated
strikes and disorder in the Northwest it would embarrass
the government.
“Then I’ll hire I.W.W. men,” said
old Dorn.
Kurt battled against a rising temper. This blind
old man was his father.
“But I’ll not have I.W.W.
men on the farm,” retorted Kurt. “I
just punched one I.W.W. solicitor.”
“I’ll run this farm.
If you don’t like my way you can leave,”
darkly asserted the father.
Kurt fell back in his chair and stared
at the turgid, bulging forehead and hard eyes before
him. What could be behind them? Had the war
brought out a twist in his father’s brain?
Why were Germans so impossible?
“My Heavens! father, would you
turn me out of my home because we disagree?”
he asked, desperately.
“In my country sons obey their
fathers or they go out for themselves.”
“I’ve not been a disobedient
son,” declared Kurt. “And here in
America sons have more freedom more say.”
“America has no sense of family
life no honest government. I hate the
country.”
A ball of fire seemed to burst in Kurt.
“That kind of talk infuriates
me,” he blazed. “I don’t care
if you are my father. Why in the hell did you
come to America? Why did you stay? Why did
you marry my mother an American woman?...
That’s rot just spiteful rot!
I’ve heard you tell what life was in Europe when
you were a boy. You ran off. You stayed
in this country because it was a better country than
yours.... Fifty years you’ve been in America many
years on this farm. And you love this land....
My God! father, can’t you and men like you see
the truth?”
“Aye, I can,” gloomily
replied the old man. “The truth is we’ll
lose the land. That greedy Anderson will drive
me off.”
“He will not. He’s
fine generous,” asserted Kurt, earnestly.
“All he wanted was to see the prospects of the
harvest and perhaps to help you. Anderson has
not had interest on his money for three years.
I’ll bet he’s paid interest demanded by
the other stockholders in that bank you borrowed from.
Why, he’s our friend!”
“Aye, and I see more,”
boomed the father. “He fetched his lass
up here to make eyes at my son. I saw her the
sly wench!... Boy, you’ll not marry her!”
Kurt choked back his mounting rage.
“Certainly I never will,”
he said, bitterly. “But I would if she’d
have me.”
“What!” thundered Dorn,
his white locks standing up and shaking like the mane
of a lion. “That wheat banker’s daughter!
Never! I forbid it. You shall not marry
any American girl.”
“Father, this is idle, foolish
rant,” cried Kurt, with a high warning note
in his voice. “I’ve no idea of marrying....
But if I had one whom else could I marry
except an American girl?”
“I’ll sell the wheat the
land. We’ll go back to Germany!”
That was maddening to Kurt. He
sprang up, sending dishes to the floor with a crash.
He bent over to pound the table with a fist. Violent
speech choked him and he felt a cold, tight blanching
of his face.
“Listen!” he rang out.
“If I go to Germany it’ll be as a soldier to
kill Germans!... I’m done I’m
through with the very name.... Listen to the
last words I’ll ever speak to you in German the
last! To hell with Germany!”
Then Kurt plunged, blind in his passion,
out of the door into the night. And as he went
he heard his father cry out, brokenly:
“My son! Oh, my son!”
The night was dark and cool.
A faint wind blew across the hills, and it was dry,
redolent, sweet. The sky seemed an endless curving
canopy of dark blue blazing with myriads of stars.
Kurt staggered out of the yard, down
along the edge of a wheat-field, to one of the straw-stacks,
and there he flung himself down in an agony.
“Oh, I’m ruined ruined!”
he moaned. “The break has come!...
Poor old dad!”
He leaned there against the straw,
shaking and throbbing, with a cold perspiration bathing
face and body. Even the palms of his hands were
wet. A terrible fit of anger was beginning to
loose its hold upon him. His breathing was labored
in gasps and sobs. Unutterable stupidity of his
father horrible cruelty of his position!
What had he ever done in all his life to suffer under
such a curse? Yet almost he clung to his wrath,
for it had been righteous. That thing, that infernal
twist in the brain, that was what was wrong with his
father. His father who had been fifty years in
the United States! How simple, then, to understand
what was wrong with Germany.
“By God! I am American!”
he panted, and it was as if he called to the grave
of his mother, over there on the dark, windy hill.
That tremendous uprising of his passion
had been a vortex, an end, a decision. And he
realized that even to that hour there had been a drag
in his blood. It was over now. The hell was
done with. His soul was free. This weak,
quaking body of his housed his tainted blood and the
emotions of his heart, but it could not control his
mind, his will. Beat by beat the helpless fury
in him subsided, and then he fell back and lay still
for a long time, eyes shut, relaxed and still.
A hound bayed mournfully; the insects
chirped low, incessantly; the night wind rustled the
silken heads of wheat.
After a while the young man sat up
and looked at the heavens, at the twinkling white
stars, and then away across the shadows of round hills
in the dusk. How lonely, sad, intelligible, and
yet mystic the night and the scene!
What came to him then was revealing,
uplifting a source of strength to go on.
He was not to blame for what had happened; he could
not change the future. He had a choice between
playing the part of a man or that of a coward, and
he had to choose the former. There seemed to be
a spirit beside him the spirit of his mother
or of some one who loved him and who would have him
be true to an ideal, and, if needful, die for it.
No night in all his life before had been like this
one. The dreaming hills with their precious rustling
wheat meant more than even a spirit could tell.
Where had the wheat come from that had seeded these
fields? Whence the first and original seeds,
and where were the sowers? Back in the ages!
The stars, the night, the dark blue of heaven hid the
secret in their impenetrableness. Beyond them
surely was the answer, and perhaps peace.
Material things life, success such
as had inspired Kurt Dorn, on this calm night lost
their significance and were seen clearly. They
could not last. But the wheat there, the hills,
the stars they would go on with their task.
Passion was the dominant side of a man declaring itself,
and that was a matter of inheritance. But self-sacrifice,
with its mercy, its succor, its seed like the wheat,
was as infinite as the stars. He had long made
up his mind, yet that had not given him absolute restraint.
The world was full of little men, but he refused to
stay little. This war that had come between him
and his father had been bred of the fumes of self-centered
minds, turned with an infantile fatality to greedy
desires. His poor old blinded father could be
excused and forgiven. There were other old men,
sick, crippled, idle, who must suffer pain, but whose
pain could be lightened. There were babies, children,
women, who must suffer for the sins of men, but that
suffering need no longer be, if men became honest
and true.
His sudden up-flashing love had a
few hours back seemed a calamity. But out there
beside the whispering wheat, under the passionless
stars, in the dreaming night, it had turned into a
blessing. He asked nothing but to serve.
To serve her, his country, his future! All at
once he who had always yearned for something unattainable
had greatness thrust upon him. His tragical situation
had evoked a spirit from the gods.
To kiss that blue-eyed girl’s
sweet lips would be a sum of joy, earthly, all-satisfying,
precious. The man in him trembled all over at
the daring thought. He might revel in such dreams,
and surrender to them, since she would never know,
but the divinity he sensed there in the presence of
those stars did not dwell on a woman’s lips.
Kisses were for the present, the all too fleeting
present; and he had to concern himself with what he
might do for one girl’s future. It was exquisitely
sad and sweet to put it that way, though Kurt knew
that if he had never seen Lenore Anderson he would
have gone to war just the same. He was not making
an abstract sacrifice.
The wheat-fields rolling before him,
every clod of which had been pressed by his bare feet
as a boy; the father whose changeless blood had sickened
at the son of his loins; the life of hope, freedom,
of action, of achievement, of wonderful possibility these
seemed lost to Kurt Dorn, a necessary renunciation
when he yielded to the call of war.
But no loss, no sting of bullet or
bayonet, no torturing victory of approaching death,
could balance in the scale against the thought of a
picture of one American girl blue-eyed,
red-lipped, golden-haired as she stepped
somewhere in the future, down a summer lane or through
a blossoming orchard, on soil that was free.