In the Claws of the German Eagle

Albert Rhys Williams
In the Claws of the German
Eagle

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Albert Rhys Williams
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Title: In the Claws of the German Eagle
Author: Albert Rhys Williams
Release Date: March 2, 2004 [eBook #11414]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IN THE
CLAWS OF THE GERMAN EAGLE***
E-text prepared by A. Langley

IN THE CLAWS OF THE GERMAN EAGLE
ALBERT RHYS WILLIAMS

ACKNOWLEDGMENT
My thanks go to the Editors of The Outlook for permission to
reproduce the articles which first appeared in that magazine.
Also to many friends all the way from Maverick to Pasadena. Above all
to Frank Purchase, my comrade in the first weeks of the war and
always.

Contents
Instead of a Preface


Part I The Spy-Hunters Of Belgium


Chapter I
. A Little German Surprise Party II. Sweating Under The German Third
Degree III. A Night On A Prison Floor IV. Roulette And Liberty


Part II On Foot With The German Army
V. The Gray Hordes Out Of The North VI. In The Black Wake Of The
War VII. A Duelist From Marburg VIII. Thirty-Seven Miles In A Day


Part III With The War Photographers In
Belgium
IX. How I Was Shot As A German Spy X. The Little Belgian Who
Said, "You Betcha" XI. Atrocities And The Socialist

Part IV Love Among The Ruins


Chapter
XII. The Beating Of "The General" XIII. America In The Arms Of
France XIV. No-Man's-Land
Afterword

Instead Of A Preface
The horrible and incomprehensible hates and brutalities of the
European War! Unspeakable atrocities! Men blood-lusting like a lot of
tigers!
Horrible they are indeed. But my experiences in the war zone render
them no longer incomprehensible. For, while over there, in my own
blood I felt the same raging beasts. Over there, in my own soul I knew
the shattering of my most cherished principles.
It is not an unique experience. Whoever has been drawn into the center
of the conflict has found himself swept by passions of whose presence
and power he had never dreamed.
For example: I was a pacifist bred in the bone. Yet, caught in Paris at
the outbreak of the war, my convictions underwent a rapid crumbling
before the rising tide of French national feeling. The American Legion
exercised a growing fascination over me. A little longer, and I might
have been marching out to the music of the Marseillaise, dedicated to
the killing of the Germans. Two weeks later I fell under the spell of the
self-same Germans. That long gray column swinging on through Liege
so mesmerized me that my natural revulsion against slaughter was
changed to actual admiration.
Had an officer right then thrust a musket into my hand, I could have
mechanically fallen into step and fared forth to the killing of the French.
Such an experience makes one chary about dispensing counsels of

perfection to those fighting in the vortex of the world-storm. Whenever
I begin to get shocked at the black crimes of the belligerents, my own
collapse lies there to accuse me.
It is in the spirit of a non-partisan, then, that this chronicle of adventure
in those crucial days of the early war is written. It is a welter of
experiences and reactions which the future may use as another
first-hand document in casting up its own conclusions. There is no
careful culling out of just those episodes which support a particular
theory, such as the total and complete depravity of the German race.
Despite my British ancestry, the record tries to be impartial-- without
pro- or anti-German squint. If the reader had been in my skin,
zigzagging his way through five different armies, the things which I
saw are precisely the ones which he would have seen. So I am not to
blame whether these episodes damn the Germans or bless them. Some
do, and some don't. What one ran into was largely a matter of luck.
For example: In Brussels on September 27, 1914, I fell in with a
lieutenant of the British army. With an American passport he had made
his way into the city through the German lines. We both desired to see
Louvain, but all passage thereto was for the moment forbidden. Starting
out on the main road, however, sentry after sentry passed us along until
we were halted near staff headquarters, a few miles out of the city, and
taken before the
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