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<div class="figcenter"><SPAN href="images/map.jpg"> <ANTIMG src="images/map.jpg" width-obs="2000" height-obs="1540" alt="COCO'S ITINERARY" /></SPAN> <br/><br/></div>
<p class="center f15"><b>——————————</b><br/>
WAR THE CREATOR<br/><b>——————————</b></p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_007.jpg" width-obs="500" height-obs="727" alt="Portrait" /></div>
<div class="bbox">
<h1> WAR~THE<br/> CREATOR</h1>
<p class="center f3">BY  ~  GELETT<br/>
BURGESS ~ ~ ~</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_title.png" width-obs="100" height-obs="139" alt="" /></div>
<p class="center"><br/><br/>New York B. W. HUEBSCH 1916<br/><br/></p>
</div>
<hr />
<p class="center"><span class="smcap"><small>Copyright, 1915, By P. F. Collier & Son, Inc.</small></span><br/>
<span class="smcap"><small>Copyright, 1916, by B. W. Huebsch</small></span><br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<span class="smcap">War the Creator</span> was first printed in<br/>
<cite>Collier’s</cite>. Acknowledgment is made to that<br/>
weekly for permission to publish the story<br/>
in volume form.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<small>PRINTED IN U. S. A.</small><br/></p>
<hr />
<p class="center f2">WAR THE CREATOR</p>
<h2>I</h2>
<p><span class="dropcap">B</span>ECAUSE he was my friend, because he
was so lovable, because he suffered
much, I want to try to tell the story of a boy
who, in two months, became a man. My
hero is Georges Cucurou, the son of a shoe-maker
of Toulouse. I happened to see him
first just before the war began, and not again
until after he had been wounded; and the
change in him was then so great that I could
not rest until I had learned how it had been
brought about. Georges is but one of the
thousands who have gone into that furnace
of patriotism; in France such experiences as
his are commonplace now, but when I heard<span class="pagenum">6</span>
his story I got a glimpse of war in a new
aspect. Before, I had thought of it only as
stupid, destructive, dire; now, in his illumined
face, I saw the work of War the Creator.</p>
<p>His narrative is concerned with only the
first six weeks of the fighting, and mostly with
that terrible retreat from Belgium, so bitter
in its disappointments, so trying to the flamboyant
courage of the French. Hardly
had they rallied along the Marne and
begun to pursue the enemy when Georges
was wounded and invalided home. It was
there in the hospital that I got his history;
and from those talks, and his notebook, and
his letters to his aunt, I have reconstructed
the trials and emotions of this lad of twenty.</p>
<hr />
<h2>II</h2>
<p>Georges, having commenced his regular
three years’ military service in October, 1913,<span class="pagenum">7</span>
got leave to visit his aunt who was keeping
a <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">pension</em> in Paris.</p>
<p>How shy and confused he was when I
came down to the dining-room that day and
surprised him while he was examining his too-faint
mustache with great seriousness before
the mirror! Charming, I thought him, instantly;
a clean, jolly sort of boy, quite too
young for that ridiculous soldier’s uniform.</p>
<p>His aunt introduced him (with her arm
about his shoulder and a tweak of his ear) by
his nickname, “Coco”; and, after he got
used to my being a foreigner, he began to
talk, using his big brown eyes and his free,
expressive hands quite as much as his tongue.
Knowing a little of the Midi, I attempted an
imitation of the <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">patois</em>. Coco threw back
his head and laughed with abandon. That
broke the ice, and we became great friends.</p>
<p>He was so curious about everything
American that I took him up to my salon to<span class="pagenum">8</span>
see my typewriter; also my neckties and fancy
socks.</p>
<p>“But what’s this?” asked Coco, reading
with his funny French pronunciation, “A-mer-i-cain
Pencil Compagnie.” It was a
novelty, a “perpetual” pencil of the self-sharpening
sort, with a magazine filled with
little points like cartridges. When I gave it
to him, it pleased Coco immensely.</p>
<p>“Just like a rifle!” he exclaimed, as he
amused himself by pressing the end and ejecting
the bits of lead. He went through the
manual of arms with it, laughing; he did a
mock bayonet thrust or two, and then aimed
it at me in fun, like a child. “<em>Pan!</em>” he
cried; “<em>that’s</em> the way we shoot Germans!”
The contrast of his red pantaloons and blue
coat with the round, innocent face and lips
parted like a girl’s was absurd. Why, he
was more like those doll soldiers you see at
toyshops with curly hair! With his fresh<span class="pagenum">9</span>
pink cheeks and big brown eyes he seemed no
more than sixteen years old.</p>
<p>In the evening we all went out on the
crowded Boulevard, where, it being a fête
day, they were dancing in front of the open-air
band stands. It was a long time before
I ceased to think of Coco as jolly, flushed,
exuberant, dancing the Tango on the corner
by the Sorbonne with his pretty young aunt,
as excited and happy as only a lad can be
who has come up from a provincial town to
see the metropolis for the first time on a holiday.</p>
<p>That was on the 14th of July of 1914.
Next day he went back to his caserne at Montauban.</p>
<p>In two weeks war was declared!</p>
<p>Coco, our own blithe Coco, would have
to go to the front—oh, his aunt’s white face
that day!—and Coco would be in the first
line! It seemed like some hideous mistake.<span class="pagenum">10</span>
But already Coco, pink-cheeked, laughing,
shy, his mother’s only boy, was well on his
way toward the German shells and machine
guns!</p>
<hr />
<h2>III</h2>
<p>The French do nothing without a flavoring
of sentiment. Rhetoric flowers in the
official proclamations; it makes one laugh
even to read the textbooks for soldiers,
they are so strewn with fine, resounding
phrases; and so, of course, it was quite impossible
for Coco’s regiment to get away
without one of those stirring, gesticulative
speeches by the colonel.</p>
<p>It was at the Toulouse railway station—parents
in tears. The girls gazed admiringly.
Gossipy veterans of ’70, seeing themselves
reincarnated in these fresh young soldiers,
patronized them egregiously with advice.
Coco and the other lads listened, but<span class="pagenum">11</span>
did not hear; they were smiling at the girls
sticking bouquets in their rifle barrels.</p>
<p>“Look back for the last time at your
homes and your loved ones,” cried the colonel,
with all his badges on his breast, “and
shed the tear without which our high sacrifice
would not have its price. Lift up your
hearts, and so forth, and so forth, my children—<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">en
avant!</em>”</p>
<p>Children indeed they were, overflowing
with the emotion of the south, these soldiers,
and our Coco, with a gulp in his throat,
seemed even more young than most. The
war! How often had he heard it predicted
for that year, or the next, or the next—the
inevitable war that was to give France her
long-hoped-for revenge. Now, it was actually
here! No more blank cartridges, no
more sham battles—<em>War!</em></p>
<p>But Coco’s tears soon dried. They were
a merry lot, those twenty-year-old “<em>pioupious</em>,”<span class="pagenum">12</span>
even on that tiresome trip to the
front. The youngsters had the worst of it
during the mobilization. They sat all that
journey on rough-board temporary benches
in the luggage vans. Starting and stopping,
side-tracking and backing—munching the
emergency rations (hard tack and canned
beef), for mother’s cheese and chocolate
didn’t last long—waving and yelling to
the patriotic spectators along the line, it
took them almost three days to reach Châlons.</p>
<p>At the military camp two more days were
spent in concentration, exercises, and inspection.
The last orders were received.
Then, at five o’clock in the morning of the
sixth of August, the column started for the
frontier.</p>
<p>Coco was a private in the Tenth Company
of the Twentieth Regiment of Infantry.
His army corps, the Seventeenth, formed the<span class="pagenum">13</span>
left wing of the Fourth Army. On their
left, paralleling their march, was, first, General
Ruffey’s cavalry division, and beyond
that the Fifth Army, under General Lanrezac.
On the extreme left wing of the advance
were the British. Meanwhile, marching
on Lorraine and Alsace, were the Sixth
and Seventh Armies. With all these columns
hurrying to the front, filling all the roads,
railway transportation was impossible. It
was a march of some seventy miles to the
frontier.</p>
<p>So, through the lovely forest of Argonne,
the boys set out, singing and joking as they
strode along. It was pleasant enough at
first, a romantic adventure; but with his
heavy rifle, his heavy cartridge belt and bayonet,
and his musette full of food slung over
his shoulder, it was not long before poor Coco
began to get weary. On his back, with his
knapsack, and his rolled overcoat and his tin<span class="pagenum">14</span>
<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">bidon</em> and tin <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">gamelle</em>, with the intrenching
tool and his share of the company’s baggage,
he carried fully sixty pounds. They marched
on one side of the road. Along the other
side automobiles whirled incessantly back and
forth, motor busses filled with provisions
rumbled along, dispatch bearers on motorcycles,
officers on horseback—raising dust
a-plenty.</p>
<p>Coco’s chum—his “<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">copain</em>”—was
François Foulot, the son of a cabinetmaker
in Toulouse, a big, athletic, kind-hearted
chap with a bushy black pompadour. Coco
had told me about him in Paris. The two
boys were members of a little musical and
dramatic club in Toulouse, and had been
friends from childhood. You should hear
Coco tell how, on that long march, François
took care of him, carrying his rifle when
Coco was tired, carrying even Coco’s knapsack
for him, helping him grease his boots at<span class="pagenum">15</span>
night when Coco’s feet began to blister.
François was like a big brother.</p>
<p>At the nightly bivouacs along the road the
two boys always slept side by side; that is,
when they slept at all. The excitement (and
the hard ground) for the first few nights kept
them wide awake, in spite of their fatigue.</p>
<p>“<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Mon Dieu</em>, how will this all end?” they
asked each other. Coco didn’t know, François
didn’t know; but neither thought the war
could possibly last more than a few months.</p>
<hr />
<h2>IV</h2>
<p>Yet there was a terrible earnestness about
it all that sobered them. There was something
still more terribly earnest ahead!
Every automobile that whizzed past them,
coming in hot haste from the front, announced
it. Every galloping supply wagon,
every crouching motorcyclist in uniform<span class="pagenum">16</span>
flashing by told the same frantic story:
“Hurry! Hurry! <em>Hurry!</em> The Germans
are almost here! France is in danger!”</p>
<p>On those first nights, when Coco’s turn
came to stand on sentry duty by the lonely
corner of a wood, his eyes strained into the
darkness, listening for every sound, the sight
of a bush waving in the wind often brought
his gun to his shoulder with a quick, excited
“<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Halte-là!</em>”</p>
<p>For Coco, sensitive, earnest, and not a little
fearful, was in a high nervous tension.
Already the Germans were fighting in Belgium—the
killing had commenced. From
one of the villages they passed the boy wrote
a brave little letter to his mother on a post
card: “If anything should happen ...
well, one knows one’s duty, and God will do
the rest. Lovingly, Coco.”</p>
<p>On, on, through the hilly forests of <span class="pagenum">17</span>Argonne
they marched, making about twenty-five
miles a day. And on that dusty march
food was scarce. Poor Coco’s feet, despite
the tallow in his socks, were too sore for him
to chase chickens, but François succeeded in
capturing seven. Not much, however, when
their necks were wrung, for a company of
250 men. Even the bread began to run out.
But on they went, singing by day and shivering
by night—on, on toward Belgium.
Coco says that their chief worry was lest they
shouldn’t find enough straw to sleep on, or at
least enough to tie up their feet in bundles to
keep them warm.</p>
<p>At Mouzon they crossed the Meuse, and
here Coco slept more comfortably than he
had for a week, on a sack full of straw at a
farm. After a day’s wait for orders—and
no meat even here—they set out again,
passed through Carignan, and soon reached
the last village in France—Florenville.<span class="pagenum">18</span>
“Don’t send me any more French money,”
Coco here wrote to his mother. “It won’t
be any use to me now!” Poor Coco! How
little did he know how soon he was to return!</p>
<hr />
<h2>V</h2>
<p>On the morning of August 21 they crossed
the boundary. Hurrahs from the men—they
were going forward to conquer! They
were going to deliver this brave little country
from the barbaric invader who had laid it
waste. Coco was thrilled with the nobility
of their mission. “<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Vive la France!</em>” he
shouted with all the rest; but alas, the approaching
thunderstorm soon damped his
spirits. The rain poured down in torrents,
down the back of his neck and into his shoes.
Coming to a halt, they bivouacked in a
wide field. It thundered and it lightened.
Soaked and cheerless, the regiment tried<span class="pagenum">19</span>
to sleep. The fires wouldn’t burn. One
couldn’t even smoke a cigarette. As Coco
turned on his side the water oozed under him
sloshily.</p>
<p>He dozed off, however, after a while, only
to be awakened by a punch in the ribs.
“Listen!” François was saying. “What’s
<em>that</em>?”</p>
<p>“Thunder, of course!” Coco, irritated,
rolled over again, opened his eyes after a
while, and saw François still sitting up, alert.</p>
<p>“That’s not thunder!” he exclaimed.
“Listen! it’s cannonading!”</p>
<p>Coco sat up now quickly enough. Others
woke up to swear at them—and then they
listened, too.</p>
<p>“Look!” cried François. Galloping
down the road came a dispatch rider. He
halted, was challenged by the sentry, and
turned in at the colonel’s headquarters.
Then he was off again, splattering, clattering<span class="pagenum">20</span>
through the mud. Then a bugle call:
“<em>Fall in!</em>” All over the field the wet men
jumped up, slung on their belts, grabbed their
rifles and formed dismally in the rain. As
they stood waiting, word ran down the
column—François passed it to Coco—“<em>The
enemy!</em>” An ammunition wagon
drove up—boxes of cartridges were distributed.
“Load!” ordered the captains.
The ranks were fairly buzzing now, everyone
asking questions, nobody answering. A
whistle blew. “<em>Forward, march!</em>” Coco
had no thought of the rain now! The guns
grew louder, but still no enemy was visible.
The cannonading slackened, grew faint, thundered
off in another direction, died, began
again far away. But the rumbling was always
ahead—the regiment was marching
nearer and nearer the fighting. And so on
to Bertrix, fifteen miles from the frontier.
Coco rather liked Bertrix. Bertrix rather<span class="pagenum">21</span>
more than liked Coco. The pretty little
Luxemburg town welcomed him and all the
other young “<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">piou-pious</em>” as its saviors.
Nothing was too good for the French soldier
boys who had come to deliver them from the
Huns. What do you want—cigarettes?
beer? bacon? It was quite a jolly affair,
with the streets full of smiling women and
young girls smiling too, bringing fruit and
eggs and preserves, and good, fresh butter.</p>
<p>Coco was already a hero—and, after
eight days without meat, that bacon was certainly
good! How they all laughed and
chattered! But the old men stood apart and
listened anxiously; for, through all that rejoicing
there came steadily the distant sound
of guns. Surely the Germans were coming
nearer! If they ever got to Bertrix—The
old men shook their heads with foreboding.</p>
<p>Again the whistle blew—<em>Forward!</em> The<span class="pagenum">22</span>
enemy was only a few miles away now; it
was getting exciting. The boys, proud,
patriotic, confident, started “<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">La Marseillaise</em>”
and the song was taken up by the
whole column—“<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Marchons! Marchons!</em>”
they sang—but Coco was singing, he admits,
to keep up his courage, as he tramped on
through the mud to be shot at. He tried to
keep in mind that he was marching on gloriously
to fight for his country; but he couldn’t
help thinking of what he had heard of those
terrible machine guns at Liége and Namur.</p>
<p><em>Halt!</em> The captain whipped out his field
glasses—everybody gazed eagerly ahead.
There it was, <em>there!</em> coming steadily nearer,
flying low—a German aeroplane—a
“<em lang="de" xml:lang="de">Taube</em>” reconnoitering. There was a
quick order. As the whir of the motor grew
nearer the lieutenant of Coco’s platoon
pointed. “<em>Aim!</em>” Fifteen rifles were
thrown up, covering the monoplane.<span class="pagenum">23</span>
“Steady, now, men—wait till she comes
near enough—now, <em>Fire!</em>”</p>
<p>Coco fired, jammed down the lever of his
gun, shot again, again. Almost over their
heads the flyer seemed to stop, turned, volplaned
swiftly down—it was too good to be
true—swept lower in a wide curve. Then
men, shouting, ran for it as it swooped into
the field beside the road. Coco ran for his
first sight of a German.</p>
<p>Two officers in khaki, limp and pale, were
strapped to the seats. One was unconscious,
with a red hole in his neck. The other painfully
unfastened his strap, and came forward,
staggering. He saluted the captain stiffly, a
queer smile on his blond German face. Coco
heard him say in perfect French:</p>
<p>“I am badly wounded, monsieur. This
is my last trip, I’m afraid. Ah, well; you
are going to beat us in the end, no doubt.
With all your allies there’s little hope for us.<span class="pagenum">24</span>
But you’ll have to shed a good deal of blood
before you win!” Then he suddenly collapsed.
Coco saw him fall on the ground in
a faint.</p>
<p>“It gave me a mighty queer feeling,”
Coco told me, “to look at that dark spot of
blood gradually growing bigger and bigger
over that officer’s breast. I remember that
I wondered if it had been my rifle ball that
had wounded him. And that other German,
too—I wondered if I had already killed a
man. If I had, why wasn’t it murder?
What was the difference between war and
murder, anyway? Of course these barbarians
were invading my country, but—yes, it
was my duty to protect France, but—well, I
had to give it up. You know there are
priests fighting in the ranks, too, in this war,
m’sieur! <em>They</em> must know. It’s all right,
I suppose—and yet there is always that
‘<em>but</em>’ when you see a thing like that. Well,<span class="pagenum">25</span>
it was too exciting then for much philosophy.
You see, the cannons were getting louder all
the time, and the whistle blew and we
marched on again. But somehow we didn’t
feel much like singing any more!”</p>
<p>Near rising ground they halted. The officers
hurried forward, and with field glasses
inspected the country ahead; then called the
column on. Now they were actually in the
danger zone—a wide expanse of fields,
dotted with farms here and there, and across,
a mile away, were woods, dark, sinister. It
was a sunny afternoon; the odor of the damp,
warm earth was clean and pungent. There
were wide stretches of yellow stubble fields,
where the wheat had been lately cut. Some
sheaves were still standing, as if the war had
interrupted the harvest, half done.</p>
<p>As they advanced cautiously the cannonading
ceased. Somehow to Coco the silence
was more dreadful even than that incessant<span class="pagenum">26</span>
muffled reverberation. But those woods yonder—what
dangers were <em>they</em> hiding?
Every eye was strained in that direction.</p>
<p>Deploying to the left of the road, Coco’s
company made for a whitewashed farmhouse
half a mile away, across the fields. The
other companies fanned out to either side.</p>
<p>No one seemed to know just what was going
to happen. Coco’s lieutenant, a jolly,
talkative young fellow who had always used
to keep his platoon roaring at his jokes, was
now unwontedly serious and silent. Coco
watched him. He marched on with his field
glasses held constantly to his eyes, tripping
over roots and bushes and stones and swearing
as he went.</p>
<p>On and on toward that dark, mysterious
wood through beet fields, across ditches, over
hedges they went, till they came to a cross-road
leading into the farm. Here they
halted.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum">27</span></p>
<p>Coco, nervous, apprehensive, jumped at
hearing his name called out. “<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Cucurou!</em>
<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Bracques!</em> <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lemaitre!</em> Go forward and
reconnoiter! Careful, now, men!”</p>
<hr />
<h2>VI</h2>
<p>Coco wondered why they had to call on
<em>him</em>; but, well, it had to be done, his duty,
and he did it. With a man on either side of
him he walked forward gingerly through a
field where cows were grazing, nearer and
nearer that horrible wood. He didn’t dare
look at the ground; as he stumbled on his eyes
never left that wood, so deathly still and mysterious.
<em>Were</em> there Germans hidden in
those trees? It was his duty to find out.
Bracques and Lemaitre didn’t falter; so Coco
didn’t falter. He kept right on, nearer and
nearer. His one idea was the importance of
first seeing the enemy.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum">28</span></p>
<p>Then, suddenly, he heard a high, sharp
whistling through the air, and the bullet spattered
the earth viciously in front of him. A
report cracked lazily out from the trees.
Another whistle, another, and the pattering
grew nearer. Coco dropped flat on the
ground, and crawled cautiously up to a big
rock and looked over the top, watching.
Still nothing was visible. The balls came
faster now; but he crawled warily forward,
dragging himself along the ground a little
further.</p>
<p>Lemaitre yelled, “Come on back! we’ve
drawn their fire—that’s enough,” and Coco,
with his heart thumping, was glad enough to
return, running for all he was worth till he
had reached his company. The men were
fretful and restless with excitement, nervous,
exclamatory. With a high, snoring drone, a
German shell came driving through the air—a
boom from the woods—then a sudden,<span class="pagenum">29</span>
terrifying crash as of thunder let loose as it
burst in the rear. Coco turned to see a volcano
of black smoke and earth behind him.
“<em>Lie down!</em>” shouted the officers, and the
men only too willingly dropped flat in the
road. “At first,” said Coco, “the men lay
looking up into the air trying to see the shells—imagining
that they really could! But
when the things dropped closer, they began
to dodge—as if one could escape them <em>that</em>
way!” More shells came, and more, buzzing
through the air in a screeching crescendo,
bursting with appalling smashes nearer and
nearer the line. Then a whistle blew. <em>Forward!</em>
All along the front men jumped up,
ran ahead, dropped, then rose and ran further
in a long, irregular skirmish line, toward
that vicious wood. As they advanced, the
cannonading burst into a double, triple fury,
and the harsh barking of machine guns began—and
never once stopped. A hundred<span class="pagenum">30</span>
yards from the trees the whistle blew again to
halt, and then the din grew unbearable, a
crashing thunder with shells bursting here,
there, in front, behind, in continual explosion.
Swept by that murderous tornado, they had
to lie down and wait. And wait. And wait.
And wait....</p>
<p>A scream of agony! Coco saw on his
left a geyser of débris—clods of earth,
stones, dust, and smoke, and two men thrown
bodily upward. Another crash—<em>nearer</em>—he
saw men’s heads and torn-off limbs flying
past him. Coco himself, when he rose on one
knee to fire (for he was emptying his rifle
madly into the wood now), was thrown down
again and again by the concussion of the air.
He saw sudden upheavals appear—dirt,
maimed bodies, rocks, knapsacks, rifles,
thrown every way—and a hole would be
left big enough for half a dozen men to take
refuge in. Once he himself was buried up to<span class="pagenum">31</span>
his waist with flying dirt, his eyes were filled
with dust and he could hardly breathe—the
noxious fumes of the lyddite choked him.
And always in his ears the incessant crash,
bang, crash of the devastating, bursting shells
till he couldn’t think. “<em>Lie down! Lie
down!</em>” the officers shouted continually, but
the men were now frenzied with the slaughter;
they were on their knees, on their feet,
shooting insanely into that secret, hellish
wood, screaming curses.</p>
<p>And, all the time, where was the enemy?
Nobody knew. Oh, if it had only come to a
reckless charge against no matter what force,
it would at least have been a chance for revenge;
they would have gone forward like
mad dogs. But instead, they had to wait—wait—wait
to be killed! Coco saw his
friends wounded one by one. Coco said:
“Each man when he was hit would throw his
arms up over his head—always, it was that<span class="pagenum">32</span>
same gesture—and then he would fall,
bleeding.”</p>
<hr />
<h2>VII</h2>
<p>The nerve-racking, deafening din went on
and on without a respite. Bracques was hit
in the head—he was a living, breathing
horror, his whole jaw gone—one hand
plucking at his coat. He lay grotesquely uncomfortable
on his back, rolling this way and
rolling that way on his knapsack and his tin
gamelle and the dozen other accouterments he
couldn’t get rid of. A dozen lads he had
gone to school with in Toulouse were screaming.
One called for his mother again and
again, “<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Maman! Maman! Maman!</em>”
Most of the wounded lay still in their blood,
or moaned and writhed in their agony. On
Coco’s left, he said, was a body without a
head. Coco, he confessed, thought more
than once of running. What was the use of<span class="pagenum">33</span>
staying only to be butchered? They could
do no good that way. But still the regiment
held its place; yes, but the regiment was
getting strangely thin. It could not last
long.</p>
<p>Coco looked round for François, who
should have been beside him. There he was,
close by, grinning. He called out something
to keep up Coco’s courage, but in that inferno
Coco couldn’t hear a word. Then, instantly,
there was a gigantic explosion; and when
Coco rose again, he looked—he grew numb.
There was François on his back—with both
legs queerly bent in an impossible position.
With a sickening wave of nausea Coco saw
that both the boy’s legs were shockingly
crushed, all but torn off, and his red pantaloons
were soaking in blood. François’s face
was horrible now; his eyes were shining
wildly. Coco, shrinking with horror, managed
to crawl toward him....</p>
<p><span class="pagenum">34</span></p>
<p>In the hospital at Toulouse, when Coco
told me this, lying in his cot, he shrank convulsively
into himself with horror, just as he
must have recoiled, I fancy, that day. He
wouldn’t look at me. His eyes were fixed on
the window. Coco told me then that François’s
legs were torn “quite off”—he was
sure of it; but I imagine that, in his agony of
horror, Coco must have been mistaken, or
François would have bled to death very
quickly. Coco says he lived for nearly three-quarters
of an hour. At any rate, his chum
was done for, and suffering torments unspeakable.</p>
<p>“He just looked at me and begged me to
kill him,” said Coco, his eyes still on the window.
“He said”—Coco could hardly
speak now—“he said if—I was his friend—I’d
finish him—so he wouldn’t suffer.
There was such a terrible noise of the shells
bursting that I couldn’t quite hear at first<span class="pagenum">35</span>—
I had to hold my head close to get what he
said.... He said—if he had helped me,
ever—now was my chance to be his friend ...
and put him out of his misery....”</p>
<p>We were silent for a while. I was looking
at him, getting up my courage to ask a
question. Finally I dared. I simply <em>had</em> to
ask it:</p>
<p>“<em>Did</em> you do it, Coco?”</p>
<p>The tears poured into Coco’s eyes now.
He shook his head slowly, without a word.</p>
<p>“Do you regret not having—done what
he wanted, Coco?”</p>
<p>Coco said simply, “I don’t know. <em>I</em>
would have wanted to die quickly. Perhaps
as his friend I ought to have done it. But I
am a good Catholic, you know, m’sieur; and
I was taught that it is a sin to take human
life.” Quite naturally he added: “And
yet I suppose I have killed a lot of Germans.”
He shook his head wearily. “I can’t under<span class="pagenum">36</span>stand
it. I must leave it for the church to
decide. I did the best I could....”</p>
<hr />
<h2>VIII</h2>
<p>At last he turned and looked at me with an
expression that made me feel guilty enough
at having asked. “But that isn’t all, m’sieur;
I haven’t told you the worst part yet. Last
week his father—François’s father—came
here to see me. He asked me if I knew anything
about François—how he died. What
could I say? Of course I couldn’t tell him.
I saw him fall—that’s all I said. And I
was glad, then, that I hadn’t done it....
No, I can’t talk about it any more, m’sieur.
Don’t ask me to, please!”</p>
<hr />
<h2>IX</h2>
<p>For two hours the Twentieth Regiment endured
the storm of shell. To advance a<span class="pagenum">37</span>
regiment of infantry like that without artillery
support was surely an incredible piece of
criminal stupidity. Some one had blundered.
But there were many blunders in those early
days of the campaign, and the truth hasn’t
all come out even yet.</p>
<p>One interesting fact, however, did come
out; although Coco didn’t hear of it for several
days. It was a piece of sublime sentimentality
impossible in any other than a
French army; quite consistent with the character
of the romantic, high-spirited colonel
who had orated so grandiloquently at the
Toulouse railway station. The night before
the battle of Bertrix, the colonel had done a
strange thing; he had, in the presence of his
staff, burned the regimental colors. The
enemy was in countless force against him.
His Gallic sense of honor, when he was ordered
to attack an impregnable position, told
him that there was only one thing to do. He<span class="pagenum">38</span>
must go forward with his men, and die—but
the flag must not be captured.</p>
<p>And so, go forward and die he did, that
gallant old man. As Coco lay, under that
August sun, in the rain of bursting shells, he
heard a bugle ring out on the left flank.
Four companies rose to their feet and charged
that murderous wood. At their head the
colonel ran, waving his sword—yes, just like
the battle pictures, Coco swears—ran for a
few hundred yards toward his inevitable
death, and dropped—with his honor unsullied.
Behind him his men dropped, too, in
appalling numbers—dropped singly and in
bunches till they faltered, stopped, then fell
back.</p>
<p>At this, the whistles blew at last for the
general retreat.</p>
<p>It was high time; for, at the sight of this
destruction all over the field, men had already
begun to jump up and run toward the<span class="pagenum">39</span>
rear. Now they all ran—everybody ran—with
the shells and shrapnel chasing them.
They threw away their knapsacks, they threw
away their guns, they ran screaming and crying
like children.</p>
<p>Coco threw away his knapsack and
musette, too, but kept his rifle as he ran, making
for a shelter in the woods on the other
side of the road. “You’ve no idea how
much worse they were, those shells; when I
had turned my back I expected to be hit every
moment. My spine fairly cringed.” The
remnants of the colonels four companies
were pulled together and attempted to cover
the retreat. But the regiment had stampeded.
The officers shouted and swore, they
struck men with their swords, some were even
shot, but nothing could stop the rout.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum">40</span></p>
<h2>X</h2>
<p>It was more than a rout, it was a panic.
Into the wood the shells followed them—there
seemed to be no escape. Every moment
they expected to see the uhlans charging
them down. Dodging this way, that way,
deafened, shouting over here—over there—the
shells dropping to right, to left, as if
from the clouds, the men, breathless, exhausted,
poured out upon a road, to stagger
back almost run over by a clattering battery
of guns galloping, too late, galloping toward
the firing line. They stopped to pant, and
rest; and then ran on.</p>
<p>In half an hour they were out of the range
of the German artillery, and they halted exhausted,
shamefaced, sick with terror and
despair. The officers, too heartbroken even
to swear at them, reformed their men with
difficulty, and, herding them like frightened<span class="pagenum">41</span>
sheep, fell back in something like order till
they came upon a line of trenches that had
been occupied by the Germans.</p>
<p>The pits were filled instantly, and the men
were beginning to regain their calmness and
courage, when from a near-by hill the terrifying
cannonade recommenced. The butchery
recommenced—the explosions, and the
screams.</p>
<p>Out of the trenches came all that were left
alive, and there was no stopping the army
now, till, hurrying all night long without food
and rest, demoralized, it found its way back
to Mouzon. Here the Seventeenth Corps
was pulled together for a hasty review. The
roll call showed that in Coco’s regiment there
were 1,443 dead, wounded, or missing—fully
one-third of its strength gone.</p>
<p>The men were in a fury of disappointment
and rage against the generals who had been
responsible for the massacre. Where was<span class="pagenum">42</span>
the artillery? Where were the stretcher
bearers? Where were the ambulances and
surgeons? Not one did Coco see during the
battle, after the battle—nor even during
that whole terrible retreat.</p>
<p>And it wasn’t at Mouzon alone that there
was wondering, complaining, raging at the
failure of the campaign. On the left wing
the British expeditionary force, hot with rage
at not being supported by General Percin,
was falling back from defeat at Mons to pursuit
at Bavay—and it was not yet out of
danger. On the right, the Fifteenth Corps
(fat cowards of the Midi) had turned tail
and run in Lorraine. Oh, there was something
rotten somewhere. Paris was wild.
The Government was shuffled, and the President
dealt out a new hand—his high trump
was Millerand, new Minister of War, but his
right bower was Joffre, commander in chief,
of whom all the world was soon to hear. To<span class="pagenum">43</span>
Coco at Mouzon, the news came that the
Fourth Army was to be commanded by General
de Langle de Carry. Little did Coco
care who commanded it. Much more important
than that was that he would get one
night’s good sleep on a sack of straw.</p>
<p>By this time the boy had begun to realize
what war meant. That night he wrote to his
aunt: “I have received my baptism of fire,
but I am unhurt. It was terrible. Don’t be
frightened, and be sure and write to my
mother that you have had good news from
me.” He signed the post card for the first
time “Georges.” Coco had begun to be a
man.</p>
<p>If it has ever been your lot to go without
having your clothes off for two weeks—to
march through dust and mud in them, sleep in
them, fight in them, run in them—then you’ll
understand how Georges Cucurou longed for
a swim in the river Meuse—to bathe his<span class="pagenum">44</span>
poor, aching blistered feet. But no—up
and out again at six o’clock next morning!
Off on the road toward Belgium again. A
counter-attack. All day and all night they
marched.</p>
<hr />
<h2>XI</h2>
<p>There was no singing, this time. The
Twentieth was smarting with the shame of its
defeat; it was savage for revenge; but, held
in reserve behind the battle line, it had to wait
listening to the booming cannon and the
crackle of machine guns for an impatient
hour—then they were ordered back to
Mouzon.</p>
<p>At Mouzon, news of a fresh defeat awaited
them. The town was now distraught,
terror-stricken by the ever-nearing, ever-increasing
thunder of the German cannonade.
When Georges arrived at midnight, almost
every house was lighted. The frenzied in<span class="pagenum">45</span>habitants
were packing up or hiding their belongings,
ready to fly. The “Bosches” were
coming!</p>
<p>At dawn, Georges, sleeping by the road-side,
was awakened to see a pathetic procession
of refugees hurrying away to safety.
Pathetic? It was tragic, comic, grotesque,
sublime! Everyone was dressed in his best
clothes; everyone carried bundles, carried
hens, carried trunks, carried the Lord knows
what—and the memories of 1870 to boot!
Wagon after wagon passed, piled high with
furniture, bags, boxes, baskets, and provisions,
with women and children atop, and
cows tied on behind. Whole families—three
generations—trudged on foot, men
and women and children, children, children,
children, and weeping old grandmothers
trundled along in wheelbarrows.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum">46</span></p>
<h2>XII</h2>
<p>It was a bitter sight for Georges, burning
to defend his country. What was the French
army good for, anyway, if it couldn’t protect
this pretty, innocent little town, so charmingly
scattered over the wooded heights of
the Meuse? But Mouzon was doomed.
Already the sappers with wires and sticks of
melinite were blowing up the picturesque old
stone bridge.</p>
<p>All next day Georges’s regiment, hidden in
the woods, watched the shelling of the town;
all next night, hungry, soaked with rain, enraged,
they saw it burn, house by house, till
at last the flames licked up the belfry of the
church. That was the way they defended
Mouzon.</p>
<p>Another day; another night of drenching
rain in those wretched sopping woods, while
the German guns boomed all about them.<span class="pagenum">47</span>
Georges and two other boys succeeded in
building a dirty little shelter of branches
covered with wet straw, and they crawled underneath.
Water-soaked, the clumsy thing
collapsed on top of them in the middle of the
night; but, heavy with soldiers’ sleep, it took
more than that to wake them. In the morning,
however, a shell bursting only a few
yards away did succeed in bringing them
stumbling out from under the soggy mass—to
find to their amazement that their regiment
had already departed!</p>
<hr />
<h2>XIII</h2>
<p>The shells began to fall thicker and faster;
the Germans were indubitably near at hand.
But where the devil was the regiment?
There was no knowing, except that it was
pretty sure to be getting away from those
harrying shells. Chilled, the boys ran<span class="pagenum">48</span>
through the dripping woods till they came to
a clearing. Here, looking down, they saw
the Germans fording the Meuse! But not
without trouble; a French battery had got
their range, and was playing red havoc with
them, slinging shell after shell of well-aimed
shrapnel. By dozens they melted away under
the fire, and the water was full of bobbing
corpses drifting downstream.</p>
<p>“We just burst out laughing,” said
Georges. “We couldn’t help it. Not that
it was so funny to see men killed like that by
the hundreds, but, after all <em>we</em> had gone
through—after the ghastly way we had
been butchered at Bertrix, it really did me
good to see those ‘Bosches’ suffering themselves
at last!”</p>
<p>He didn’t laugh long. With the German
reckless sacrifice of life, column after column
was thrown into the river, until more and
more got across. It was time for the boys<span class="pagenum">49</span>
to be moving now, and they set out toward
the westward, tramped all day, eating nothing
but the raw beets they dug up in the fields,
and finally found the Seventeenth Corps at
Raucourt.</p>
<p>They were just in time to join their regiment
as it was ordered forward seven more
miles for a new engagement. There, protected
by the French batteries, they
bivouacked. Glad enough was Georges of a
chance to sleep. No fear of the coming battle
could keep him awake by this time.</p>
<p>At dawn, while the vigilant searchlights
were still playing across the opposite hillside,
the French guns started firing, and,
without breakfast, Georges’s battalion was
ordered forward. In half an hour the enemy
was discovered half a mile away. In the
valley between opposite hills the shells were
screeching now over their heads—from the
French “75’s” the sound of the whizzing<span class="pagenum">50</span>
projectiles came high and dry like buzz saws—they
burst with the awful battering of
near-by thunder. The German “<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">marmites</em>”
snorted through the air, and exploded with
a deeper, more terrible crash. The regiment
halted, and was deployed in four ranks—the
first two lying on the ground, the third
and fourth kneeling.</p>
<p>The men were mostly quite cool, but
Georges confessed that he himself had hard
work controlling his nerves while he waited
for that attack. In ten minutes the enemy
appeared from behind rising ground and
came on—a long, gray-black line of thousands
and thousands of men, a <em>thick</em> line,
swarming, multitudinous, nearer and nearer.</p>
<p>“Load!” coolly commanded the captains;
“500 meters. Ready, now—<em>fire!</em>”
Their salvo rang out. The heavy rows of
Germans seemed to hesitate for a moment;
but no, they were only stopping to fire.<span class="pagenum">51</span>
There came a sudden whistling in the air all
about and the bullets flew—“for a terribly
long minute,” as Georges described it—then
the enemy came on again, and kept on coming,
in a broad, thick wave, company after
company. And only a battalion of four
companies to resist them! Georges fired
without aiming. What was the use of aiming
at that horde of men? The boys jumped
to their feet, fired again and again, and then,
as their comrades dropped about them everywhere,
they began to retreat, some picking
up the wounded as they went. At first they
withdrew in order, turning back to fire another
volley; but when the Germans fixed
their bayonets and came at them on the
double-quick, the French broke, and ran for
it, helter-skelter, this way and that, in a second
rout, even worse than the first.</p>
<p>Georges ran with the rest, and the shrapnel
followed him, killing men on either hand,<span class="pagenum">52</span>
in front, behind. Then, over the rise, came
the uhlans, yelling, galloping in to cut them
up. Looking back, Georges saw the cavalry
sabering and lancing, and he ran like a deer
for his life, ran up the hillside, ran into the
woods. He ran for at least a mile with the
thunder of the cannon still in his ears.
When, finally, he stopped to take breath, it
was only a fragment of his company that he
found near him—some ten or eleven men,
among them a sergeant. Where were the
others? Nobody knew. The regiment, demoralized,
had split up into numberless terrified
detachments, and wandered all over the
countryside. Such was the inglorious battle
of Raucourt. Of the week following
Georges could give no consecutive account.
He remembers only that he and the others
tramped and tramped for miles inquiring of
peasants, gendarmes, of the stragglers,
everyone, everywhere, the whereabouts of<span class="pagenum">53</span>
the Twentieth Regiment. They climbed
over hills, they rested in little deserted villages
where every house was gutted of furniture,
doors open, rooms littered, and here
and there a starved cat or two, lean and wild.
The roads were alive with refugees, French
and Belgian, all plodding mournfully toward
the south, dreary processions of wagons and
cattle and weeping women, children, and
stony-eyed, sulky men. No, nobody had seen
the Twentieth Regiment.</p>
<p>They tramped from Villers to Malmy,
and, apparently (Georges isn’t quite sure
where they <em>did</em> go), from Malmy to Maire.
At Le Vivier, or perhaps it was Mont Dieu,
they found an infantry regiment, but it was
not their own. The Twentieth should be
down Vouziers way, said the officers. So
they trudged on.</p>
<p>More and more stray men had joined
Georges’s party. Few of them had knap<span class="pagenum">54</span>sacks,
some didn’t even have guns. Hats of
all kinds; costumes—promiscuous but all
disheveled. They were, by this time, a
villainously whiskered lot—ragged, dirty,
weary, famished, sullen, desperate—without
discipline, without leaders. Occasionally,
in some ransacked village they found stale
bread or vegetables that they cooked in the
woods; whatever else they ate was begged
from the few frightened peasants that still
remained on their farms.</p>
<p>There was one village, however, that
Georges did remember, and that was Les
Alleux. There he slept in an actual bed.
How Les Alleux happened to be abandoned
with all its houses undisturbed—with the
clocks still going and the furniture in place,
even the beds made up—Georges doesn’t
know. Some sudden alarm had evidently
caused the inhabitants to fly at a moment’s
notice. What mainly interested him was<span class="pagenum">55</span>
that they had left their barnyards full of
poultry.</p>
<p>Les Alleux was almost gay. There were
some hundred soldiers collected there, now;
all tatterdemalion stragglers from the rout,
making the most of their unexpected good
luck. There was almost everything to eat
except bread. Georges fairly gorged himself
on hot roast chicken and cheese, made
merry with the rabble of soldiery, sang,
smoked, and then slept for twelve solid
hours, with his boots off on a delectable
feather bed <em>and sheets</em>. And, for once,
without the din of cannon in his ears.</p>
<p>This, however, was hardly the way to save
his country. Georges’s conscience and the
booming of German guns awoke him to his
duty next morning. The mob scattered, fleeing
south in a hurry. Georges’s party, he
found when they started, had grown smaller.
“I don’t know whether or not I ought to<span class="pagenum">56</span>
mention this detail,” he told me, “but at
least it will show that I wasn’t quite so bad as
the rest. But I think some of the boys found
citizens clothes in the houses there at Les
Alleux, and got away in them. At any rate,
they didn’t come along with us.”</p>
<p>His Odyssey ended at a village called
Pauvres on the highroad between Rethel and
Vouziers. Here they found what was left
of the Twentieth Regiment, and Georges was
welcomed like one from the dead. All received
new rifles and accoutrements, and the
regiment was reorganized. Of its three battalions
there remained hardly enough to form
two—a third was made up of waifs and
strays from other divisions.</p>
<hr />
<h2>XIV</h2>
<p>The Twentieth Regiment now contained a
sad and sorry lot of men, weary, discouraged,<span class="pagenum">57</span>
shamefaced, and sullen at their double defeat.
But when they heard that the army
was to retreat still further, and abandon all
this rich, flourishing northern country to the
invaders without a blow—why, it was incredible!
What was the matter? Where
were their reënforcements? Only fifteen
days ago they had been marching enthusiastically
up through the lovely forest of Argonne.
Now they were going to retreat into
Champagne. But they were too busy with
preparations to spend much time sulking.
The officers declared that they would lead
their men to victory yet. So the retreat commenced
to the booming accompaniment of
the threatening German artillery.</p>
<p>Little did Georges know of cool old General
Joffre and his desperate plans. Little
did he imagine that the endless falling back,
falling back, falling back through Champagne
was to go down into history as a masterpiece<span class="pagenum">58</span>
of Fabian strategy. All he understood of
that campaign was—day after day of retreating
along the hard white roads, then into
the fields and digging trenches; night after
night standing ready in those clayey shoulder-deep
holes, waiting for an attack, while the
first line of the rear guard fought constantly
with the enemy. So they did their best to
hold back the flood of invaders. So they
struggled with the booming cannon ever following
them. It was hard, sour work!
The men, exhausted with the digging and the
marching and the watching, with their few
hours’ sleep constantly interrupted by alarms,
trudged hopelessly southward, too glum to
talk. Constantly the officers encouraged
them—“Just to that hill there, men! Come
on!” but it took more than their optimism
to restore the courage of the troops. Man
after man stopped, absolutely incapable of
going further, and slumped down by the side<span class="pagenum">59</span>
of the road only to be forced on, kicked on
again by the corps of gendarmes which followed
the march. If the column halted for
a minute, half the men fell instantly asleep as
they stood.</p>
<p>The minute the trenches were dug they had
to prepare to receive the enemy. Mighty
little food these days, and no fresh meat.
Even water was scarce, as the men were forbidden
to drink of springs till they had been
inspected. Georges’s regiment was, for the
most part of the retreat, held in the second
line of the rear guard, and he was, therefore,
in but one actual engagement. In the
general campaign it was called, probably,
only “a sharp skirmish.” But, to Georges,
it was one of those crises when life says:
“Come! Move up a notch!”</p>
<p>“I was on sentry duty at the end of the
trench where the company was sleeping,”
said Georges. “On Tuesday, the 2nd of<span class="pagenum">60</span>
September it was, near Souain. I knew
everyone’s life depended on me, and it was
a terrible strain. You know the enemy was
always right on our heels, night and day.
M’sieu, I was just all eyes, searching everywhere
through the dark. It must have been
about two in the morning, when I thought I
saw something moving on the opposite hillside.
At first I wasn’t quite sure. I had to
pull my eyes away deliberately, and rest
them on something else—you know how
your eyes get when you stare too hard and
too long; but then, when I looked again
quickly, I was sure. Yes, the ‘Bosches’
were coming! It was horrible. I saw them
creeping from one bush to another like
snakes.</p>
<p>“I kicked the sergeant who was snoring
at my feet and pointed. Instantly all our
men were quietly awakened. My lieutenant
told me to stay where I was and pretend not<span class="pagenum">61</span>
to see anything; but to choose my man and
be ready to fire. Yes, monsieur; it was a
ticklish job; I felt rather queer, I confess. I
knew that I would be the very first one to be
shot at. That was about the longest fifteen
minutes I ever spent.</p>
<p>“Well, we let them crawl up, crawl up, to
within a hundred meters and then just as
they all jumped to their feet, the lieutenant
shouted: ‘Fire at will!’ I was ready for
the foremost man, and I let him have it right
through the forehead. Here is his helmet,
monsieur; see that hole?”</p>
<p>In the hospital at Toulouse, while I listened
to his story, he held up a black helmet,
trimmed with brass—with a spiked top. It
had never left him since that day.</p>
<p>Yes, I saw that hole—the hole where he
had killed his man. But, when I saw him
look at that German helmet, there was an expression
on his face that baffled me. I<span class="pagenum">62</span>
didn’t know what it meant, but I knew that
Coco wasn’t there—Coco, with the lead
pencil! No, this was a new person now on
that bed in front of me. It was Georges
Cucurou—and he would never be a boy
again!</p>
<hr />
<h2>XV</h2>
<p>During that terrible retreat, Georges, had
been a part of a working, fighting machine,
tried to his utmost in mind and body. He
had been hammered, hammered into shape.
Hunger and fatigue had hardened him.
Every day his nerves had been getting more
tough and strong. If his duty consisted of
retreating, digging, sleeping three or four
hours a day, going without meat and often
Without water or wine, he could do it.</p>
<p>On a post card, scrawled in haste from
somewhere (no postmark, no date, no indica<span class="pagenum">63</span>tion
of any locality being permitted), he
wrote to his aunt:<br/><br/></p>
<p><span class="smcap">Dear Aunt</span>: <cite>If we keep on retreating
like this, we may perhaps get to Paris. I
should be very glad to see you, of course, but
I hope not. There must soon be an end of
all this digging and digging, and victory will
be ours. I am afraid you wouldn’t recognize
your Georges.</cite><br/><br/></p>
<p>Indeed, she wouldn’t have recognized him,
but, not only because for weeks he had the
dirt caked in his hands and hair and ears, and
his uniform hung on him in rags, but partly
too because already in his face there was beginning
to show something more unlike the
old Coco we had known than all that change
in his outward self could make him. He
had learned patience, perseverance, caution,
confidence in his officers, and faith in the ulti<span class="pagenum">64</span>mate
victory. He was uplifted by that great
wave of high idealism that was transforming
France.</p>
<p>Why that steady retreat, further and further
south? Georges and Georges’s company,
now that they were tempered by experience,
now that they were raging to attack,
couldn’t understand. But still they retreated
and retreated. Back to Suippes they came.</p>
<p>It was a queer entrance that regiment made
into Suippes. On the road, they had overtaken
a troop of refugees who, utterly exhausted,
could travel no further. The peasants
had a panic of alarm at sight of the column,
thinking that the Germans were already
upon them. It was hard work reassuring
them; and it ended in a comedy, the
soldiers taking a hand at the migration. Old
women were mounted in the handcarts they
had been trying to pull and were given a ride
into town. Soldiers unharnessed the don<span class="pagenum">65</span>keys
and put the children on their backs.
They pushed at the wagons, they helped along
the graybeards, they carried babies in their
arms. Georges, I think, must have begun to
realize that he had grown up when he, a veteran
now, marched into Suippes, carrying a
big basket for a lad of fifteen who looked up
to his soldier protector admiringly, and called
him “M’sieu.”</p>
<p>No Frenchman will ever forget that dreadful
first week of September, 1914. Every
day the Germans grew nearer Paris, every
day their cowardly aeroplanes sailed over the
capital and dropped their futile threats.
What was the French army doing? We
hoped they were merely luring the enemy toward
the forts of Paris where the big guns
could smash them. But could the army hold
the enemy back, even with that assistance?
Paris was all nervous apprehension. Then
that astounding news—the German army,<span class="pagenum">66</span>
almost within striking distance, was swerving
to the southeast! What did it mean?</p>
<p>To Georges Cucurou, retreating before
those hammering, hammering guns, that quick
change in direction was quite as mysterious.
From Suippes his regiment, without stopping
to entrench now, marching day and night, instead
of keeping on toward Paris, swung
sharply to the east, along the road to Ste.
Menehould. Then, as suddenly, they turned
back again into Châlons.</p>
<p>Heavy cannonading was coming now from
almost every direction except the south.
Every man was tense with excitement—battle
was in the air—surely <em>something</em> was
going to happen, <em>must</em> happen! But further
and further south they marched; and along
the roads, now, the automobiles were flying
like mad, night and day, some with officers,
some flying the Red Cross flag. Over their
heads there were French aeroplanes, every<span class="pagenum">67</span>
day the sky was never quite free of them.
Georges caught his first sight of a British
soldier—a khaki-clad dispatch rider on a
motorcycle flying past, and another. They
passed hundreds of Paris autobusses at the
Division Headquarters, a long, long line that
filled the village street at Sompuis, and ambulances,
and cycle companies, and farriers’
wagons, the portable forges glowing red in
the evening darkness. Georges recognized
the Senegalese spahis in red flowing robes, he
saw the Turcos from Morocco—big children
they were, grinning black faces with
shiny white teeth. A wagon flew past, with
men inside feeding out telephone wire, hooking
it with long poles into the ditch, or over
bushes, out of the way, as they galloped on.
Best of all, he began to get fresh meat for
dinner, from the portable kitchens that hurried
from company to company along the
road. But always, never stopping, night or<span class="pagenum">68</span>
day, more exciting than all the rest, never
forgotten, no matter what happened, in the
north, growing ever nearer—the steady
rumbling thunder of the German guns.</p>
<hr />
<h2>XVI</h2>
<p>The camp of Mailly was a busy place.
At the aeroplane sheds the biplanes and
Blériots were constantly going and coming,
circling in the air, or making ready in long
rows upon the level field. The vast plain
was filled with troops of all sorts in seemingly
inextricable confusion: chasseurs, on horseback,
in pale blue tunics, the Alpine chasseurs,
with drooping blue <em>berets</em> on their heads, and
leggings; cuirassiers with their breastplates
and long horsehair plumes, and zouaves with
embroidered jackets and baggy red trousers.
The Twentieth Regiment, tattered and tired,
with many heads bandaged and many with<span class="pagenum">69</span>
feet through their shoes, dusty, hollow-eyed,
marched past, not yet too despairing, as
fresh troops greeted them, to cry in answer
“<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Vive la France!</em>” They were not boys
now, they were soldiers tempered in the
crucible of war. And among them marched
Georges Cucurou, with a Prussian helmet tied
to his knapsack with a shoestring—a Prussian
helmet with a hole through its brass
front!</p>
<p>Already rumors were flying fast from
column to column. Why this concentration
of troops? Why this wide circle swung
around the camp of Mailly? <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Mon Dieu!</em>
could it be that they were to retreat no
longer? That, at last, they were to make a
stand? A hope like a gaining fire sprang
up and swept from man to man.</p>
<p>It was early in the morning of Sunday,
September 6, that on the heights south of
Mailly the regiment was assembled for re<span class="pagenum">70</span>view.
To the accompaniment of an incessant,
raging bombardment from the German
cannon, the colonel read aloud this message
from General Joffre, Commander in Chief
of the Allied Forces:<br/><br/></p>
<p><cite>Children of France, the hour of the great
battle has arrived! Lift up your hearts!
If you wish your Country everlasting honor,
let every man die at his post, if necessary,
rather than surrender another inch of ground,
and the victory will be ours.</cite><br/><br/></p>
<p>It was not Gallic sentimentality now. It
was the voice of a leader who wasted no
words.</p>
<p>There was a shout of rejoicing—“<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Vive
la France!</em>” Emotion swept the ranks and
men wept without shame. The tremendous
suggestion put into those thousands of minds
had a terrible potency. Georges said that<span class="pagenum">71</span>
morning he felt as if he were intoxicated; he
grew suddenly like a giant. It seemed as if
nothing on earth could possibly resist them,
now.</p>
<p>Bread and biscuits were handed out and
the Twentieth Regiment was hurried to a
wood two miles away. Already they had begun
to move northward. But again it was
their fate to be held in reserve, while the
brunt of the attack was given to other
troops. The Twentieth was held in the
woods all day, all night, while the shells
rained in from every direction. Most fell
in front or behind, but occasionally a “<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">marmite</em>”
would hit the column with devastating
fury, and send its mutilated victims flying.
There was nothing for it, however, but to
stay and stay on, till the last man was killed
if need were. Whatever happened, the Germans
must <em>not</em> get by!</p>
<p>At dawn, they advanced to the edge of the<span class="pagenum">72</span>
woods; but, the instant they emerged into the
fields, shells and shrapnel poured on them in
a torrent. So they held their post. Monday
passed without their stirring from those
woods. No commissary wagons came with
food—nothing could live in the open.
They munched their emergency rations, dry
biscuits. Monday night, Tuesday, Tuesday
night, and still they stayed. A dispatch
rider, wounded in the arm, brought orders
for them to hold hard and never flinch.</p>
<p>Nothing to eat now but grains of coffee.
The water was gone from their canteens, long
ago; but the men stretched out their overcoats
in the rain, and drank the pools of
water as fast as they collected. And, always,
night and day, the thunder of the German
guns about them. The din was so terrific
that the men had fairly to shout to each
other—they were almost deaf.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum">73</span></p>
<h2>XVII</h2>
<p>On Wednesday morning another messenger
got through with orders to advance.
From that corpse-strewn wood there emerged
a band of men that might have been taken
for theatrical desperadoes. Uniforms in
shreds, coats gone, shoes gone, knees sticking
through trousers legs, and elbows through
sleeves, all plastered with mud to a uniform
gray, like khaki; wild-eyed with hunger and
reckless now, everyone’s nerves on edge,
cursing, weeping, mad, ready for anything
except more inaction!</p>
<p><em>Forward!</em> The men, famished as they
were, yelled at the sound of that welcome
word. Anywhere, out of that infernal wood—anywhere,
through any hell, to get at the
enemy! Forward they went on the run like
hounds after hare, and the run warmed them
up. The sun came out and they raced on,<span class="pagenum">74</span>
steaming. “We didn’t mind the shells at
all, then,” said Coco. “Lying on the ground
waiting for them at Bertrix we had nothing
to do but be afraid—but now we had no
time. All we thought of was to get at those
cursed ‘Bosches’ as fast as we could.” And
so through the bursting shells, across the wide
field to rising ground.</p>
<p>It was there, on that hillside, they got a
sight of what had happened during those
deadly days along the Marne. First, rows
and rows of twisted, limp-lying Frenchmen,
dead for long, thrown by the shells into horribly
fantastic groups; and sickening heads
and limbs lying scattered alone. Bodies
everywhere, mostly resting face up to the sky,
eyes open, staring. In places they were
stretched regularly in long straight lines; on
other fields the corpses were dotted all about
singly. “One had to jump over them every
minute,” said Georges. Further on, the<span class="pagenum">75</span>
French dead were mingled with Germans,
piled sometimes four high like a football
scrimmage.</p>
<p>Then, in a sparsely wooded tract they
passed the relics of a bayonet fight—fearful!
Apparently, the French African troops
had chased a battalion of retreating Germans
up against a wall, and the bodies were, well—the
“Turcos” do not stab merely in the
breast—they do not stab merely to kill—they
stab anywhere, they stab joyfully, like
demons.</p>
<p>More and more German dead were
passed, leaped over, even trod on where the
way was narrow, and still the thundering of
cannon came from every side. It seemed as
if the whole world were fighting—as if all
the old quiet ways of life had ceased to exist,
even in memory. Still they pushed forward,
marched to the west of Vitry-le-François,
crossed the Marne on a pontoon bridge at<span class="pagenum">76</span>
Blacy under a rain of rifle fire, and hurried
through a beet field for a crest above the
long, white, poplar-lined national road at
Couvrol.</p>
<p>The “Bosches” were in retreat! A
motorcyclist, racing from Vitry to Châlons
with dispatches, had stopped to yell out the
news.</p>
<p>As Georges struggled desperately up
through the soft loam, his view was extended
over the country about the Marne. Here,
on those same wide rolling plains, Attila and
all his Huns had fought his ancestors when
France was but a nucleus of scattered Roman
settlements; and here that horde had been defeated
and driven back to their wildernesses.
Now, no matter in which direction he gazed,
he could see the modern barbarians strewing
destruction. Puffs of smoke were in the air
everywhere, but thickest about Vitry-le-François.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum">77</span></p>
<p>The shells from the French “75’s” burst
beautifully with a cloud of jet black and
white. The fleecy snowy-white puffs, gray
red in the center, showed where the shrapnel
sent its shower of leaden balls. But, oftener
than all the rest, came the droning “<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">marmites</em>”
of the German big guns, bursting with
heavy thunder in a sudden reddish flash,
changing into a spume of drab smoke, edged
with white.</p>
<p>To the westward, village after village was
smoking. Machine guns were spitting,
crackling along the roads, volleys of rifle
fire snapped from every wood. Up and up
went the Twentieth Regiment, till it came to
the top of the little hill.</p>
<p>Smack-bang in their faces, a salvo of bullets
greeted the men. Another volley, another!
Georges, staggering back, taken by
surprise with the others, as men dropped all
about him, caught sight on a low hillside beyond<span class="pagenum">78</span>
of a deep gray mass of men extended
in battle front only a hundred meters away.
There, waiting to hold back the advance, was
at least a full regiment of infantry—one of
those hundreds of little rear guards that were
left absolutely unsupported, to cover the German
retreat, and to fight to the death without
hope of success.</p>
<p>The Twentieth, rallying instantly, shouted
a defiant answer to the German “Hurrahs,”
and sent its volley into the enemy. Beside
Georges, a man named Charles Griffe, one of
the few of his friends left from Toulouse,
suddenly fell, clasping his hands over his head
as he crumpled down. The sudden excitement
seemed to hypnotize Georges. “The
blood seemed to boil in my head,” he expressed
it. He didn’t hear the command to
fix bayonets at all; the first thing he knew he
was running like a machine, yelling with the
others, down into the ravine and up the other<span class="pagenum">79</span>
side, and always with the horror of those
points of gleaming steel ahead, climbing
zig-zag up the slope toward—what? It
seemed impossible to go against that row of
sharp bayonets and live.</p>
<hr />
<h2>XVIII</h2>
<p>So much Georges told me; more he would
not tell, at first, except that he thought the
Germans stopped firing at about thirty
meters distance, and began to sing the
“<em lang="de" xml:lang="de">Wacht am Rhein</em>.”</p>
<p>Now I have always wanted to know the
details of a typical bayonet fight—just how
the issue is decided, why a Frenchman might
not win here, and a German there, and so
keep the victory uncertain. That, in fact,
was one of the things I went to Toulouse to
find out. But, to get any vivid picture of
that bloody encounter was impossible.<span class="pagenum">80</span>
Georges simply shook his head. “It was
too horrible,” he said.</p>
<p>At last he confessed reluctantly that when
he saw the men ahead of him bayoneting the
Germans, jabbing like madmen, he too gave
a jump, and shut his eyes and stabbed at
something he had seen in front of him, advancing
with a long steel point—something
that suddenly stopped singing, and squealed
“like a wounded horse,” he said.</p>
<p>“I remember only that I pulled out my
bayonet, and felt a jet of warm blood strike
my face,” Georges went on, when I forced
him. “Then, I must have almost fainted, I
think; I don’t know what happened till I
found myself wiping my face, and something
was holding me. It was the bayonet of that
German’s that was caught in the wing of my
overcoat, somehow—and he was lying on
the ground with the blood still coming out of
his stomach. There were lots of our men<span class="pagenum">81</span>
on the ground, but lots more of Germans.
The rest of them were running; they were
two hundred meters away by this time, and
our men were after them, sticking them like
pigs.... The sight of it made me sick....
When they came back, I was standing
there, just leaning on my gun, swaying ...
and it was raining ... I didn’t know it was
raining at all till then ... but the blood
was almost entirely washed off my coat....
Isn’t that enough, m’sieur? I cant <em>bear</em> to
think about it.”</p>
<hr />
<h2>XIX</h2>
<p>When the Twentieth was gathered together
for roll call, it was found that there
were 150 dead or wounded. Some 300 Germans
were stretched upon the ground. But
the enemy must be pursued. So forward,
with great precautions, to a farm, their headquarters—but
it was found to be empty; so<span class="pagenum">82</span>
here they halted for a rest, the young men
still panting with the exertion and excitement
of the fight. “I tried to smoke my pipe,”
said Georges, “but I had to give it up.”</p>
<p>With the artillery still hammering all
about—but mostly the French batteries of
“75’s” now, pounding away in fours—the
Twentieth stayed till night, and sent its
wounded to the rear—for the stretcher
bearers and ambulances were right up behind
these days, with plenty to do. Here the regiment
received with yells and tears the news
of the victory of this five days’ battle of the
Marne. It was too good to be true.</p>
<p>The captain of Georges’s company, with
his arm in a sling, was a Frenchman, and now
it was time for more rhetoric. He had an
appreciative audience, this time. “You are
men!” he announced, “you have done your
duty, and France is proud of you.” But
France, it appeared from his talk, was not<span class="pagenum">83</span>
yet free; and the moral of his discourse was
that there was still considerable work to do,
and he ended with the word “<em>Forward!</em>”</p>
<p>So, forward they went, next morning,
gloriously in pursuit of the enemy, now
some ten miles away. Forward, with their
bayonets stained by German blood at last.
Forward, all the forenoon, past villages
wrecked and plundered by the barbarians;
past houses gutted and outraged and burned;
past trembling, fear-struck peasants offering
what was left of their bread and wine. Forward
all the afternoon, along the roads
strewn with helmets, knapsacks, and empty
wine bottles; past German camps in the open,
littered with armchairs and clocks and silver
plate, mattresses and broken pianos, and
bottles, bottles, bottles—with sheep and
cattle cut open, rotting; past dead horses
everywhere, disemboweled, legs up. Forward
at sunset, past wrecked automobiles,<span class="pagenum">84</span>
burned to masses of curly iron; past caissons
smashed by shells, and bicycles without number
abandoned along the road. Forward, in
the moonlight across battle fields where the
dead lay in windrows in shocking confusion,
mutilated abominably, dead in the long fresh
trenches, filling every gallery and compartment,
dead in the woods, dead on green
meadows where in the cool night air wisps
of trailing mist hovered near the ground and
the stench was in their nostrils till they sickened
and hurried on, rinsing their mouths
with water!</p>
<p>Forward across the swath, leagues wide,
of death and hate and ruin, forward, forward
all that night!</p>
<hr />
<h2>XX</h2>
<p>Three hours’ rest, and then <em>again</em> forward!
At noon, a farm. <em>Halt!</em> Georges<span class="pagenum">85</span>
was one of the three who went forward,
dodging from wall to wall, to reconnoiter.
There seemed to be some secret hidden there—the
roof was blown off, the windows
smashed, devastation everywhere about—but
it might still conceal some desperate foe.
As he approached the closed door, he saw a
stain on the stone step, where a little dark
stream of something had dried. He pushed
open the door—butchery! More than two
hundred Germans who had taken refuge
there had found appalling death when two
howitzer shells had converted them into an
incredible mass of mere bleeding flesh. No
fear now need any Frenchman have of those
grim Germans—save only the fear of infection.
Georges flung back the door and fled.</p>
<p>Could he find worse horrors? Let him
tell.</p>
<p>“On Friday, after we had been relieved,
we were held in reserve in the rear, and de<span class="pagenum">86</span>tailed
to pick up the German deserters and
waifs that were hiding in the woods all over
the country. They were a sorry enough lot,
frightened to death at first, when they threw
up their hands at sight of us, but glad enough
to be made prisoners and not have to work,
when they found they were not going to be
killed. After the wanton destruction of innocent
villages we had seen—they had even
destroyed the fire engines—it was pretty
hard to refrain from knocking these brutes
down with the butts of our rifles. We
heard many stories of the atrocities they had
committed in their baffled rage, but the one
thing I saw was enough for me.</p>
<p>“We were marching through a little wood
in the Department of the Marne—somewhere
between Posesse and Givry, it was, I
think. The company ahead suddenly began
to slow up and halt—they were pointing at
something, but the officers cried: ‘Go on!<span class="pagenum">87</span>
<em>Go on!</em>’ Of course we were curious to
know what it was they were looking at, and
we halted, too. Well, our officers couldn’t
hold us—or they didn’t try to. Some of us
ran up through the trees on the right-hand
side of the road to look closer.</p>
<p>“Eight French soldiers, m’sieur, with
ropes round their necks, hanging to the limbs
of the trees! I was right close to them. I
saw them plainly. I know. They were
riddled with bullet holes. And in among
them, m’sieur, was hanging the body of a little
girl. About twelve years old, I should
say. <em>She</em> was shot, too. She was so pretty....
The officers called us back. There was
no time to cut them down, even; we were
hurrying along to keep in touch with the advance.</p>
<p>“Yes, m’sieur, we all saw it. Why, there
is a man in this very hospital now who saw it,
too. Last week there came a commissioner<span class="pagenum">88</span>
down here on purpose to get our affidavit
about it, for some report of the Government.”</p>
<hr />
<h2>XXI</h2>
<p>Georges’s story is almost told, now; there
remains only the end of his soldiering, which
was to be eventful to the last. After following
the fighting body for three days, the
Twentieth Regiment was ordered into the
first line.</p>
<p>The Germans, having now retreated to
the Aisne, and eastward to the strategic positions
long since prepared and mapped by German
spies, had made a stand. So on toward
Ville-sur-Tourbes Georges marched,
the firing every moment getting hotter.
They were evidently advancing against a very
strong position, so that when they swung
westward to the little village of Le Mesnil
they began to be subjected to continuous shell<span class="pagenum">89</span>ing
and to rifle fire that grew worse and
worse. But still no enemy was in sight.</p>
<p>Again the Twentieth had to wait for the
French artillery to arrive in front of a black
wood that poured out destruction. Lying in
the brush, Georges wondered whether it
would all end as before. As before, each
man waited for his time to come; but now,
seasoned, hopeful, he could joke at death.</p>
<p>“There’s a <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">marmite</em> for you!” a corporal
would sing out, as a German shell came
screaming to the right; and, as the shrapnel
exploded, “Look out for the prunes!” a
man would yell, “they’re coming your
way!” Georges was taking it all coolly
enough, thinking, he told me, how much
those hurtling shells sounded like a subway
train rolling into a station—rather more like
an express traveling past without stopping.
And so, when a sergeant near him yelled,
“Look out—here comes our portion!” he<span class="pagenum">90</span>
only laughed and ducked under the little
shelter of brush and earth he had been building.</p>
<hr />
<h2>XXII</h2>
<p>But Georges laughed too soon, he ducked
just too late! There was a terrific explosion,
and suddenly he felt paralyzed all over—as
if by an electric shock. No pain anywhere
at first; only a fearful feeling that
something dire had happened to him. He
was stunned; “sort of upside-down, all
over,” he said. Dragging himself out of the
shower of dirt, dazed and frightened, he saw
that his left foot was covered with blood.
Then, a sudden leap of pain! He had a savage
burst of anger that he should have been
so treated. The pain every moment grew
more excruciating....</p>
<p>Just how he got to the rear he didn’t know,
but after crawling and limping somehow,<span class="pagenum">91</span>
with his rifle as a crutch, he found himself at
last by the wall of a house outside the village,
and there he lay down to rest.</p>
<p>But there was to be little rest for Georges
Cucurou. From that moment, for a whole
week, he lived in a sort of waking nightmare.
One foot bare, hopping along, hugging
the walls of the village, savagely bombarded
by German batteries—lying under
big trees, watching his retreating regiment
leaving him to almost certain capture—limping
away on the arm of a stray wounded soldier
in desperate haste before the “Bosches”
came that ride in a galloping ammunition
wagon, bounced and jolted, bouncing into
ditches, bumping over stones—and then,
after a hurried first-aid dressing, that fearful
journey to Ville-sur-Tourbes!</p>
<p>That journey—more than three miles—Georges
made along the hard macadam
road, crawling on his hands and knees. He<span class="pagenum">92</span>
had thrown away his knapsack, he had
thrown away his rifle. “But,” said
Georges, “there was one thing I’d have died
before I’d have thrown away—and that
was that Prussian helmet!” The last half
mile he was carried on horseback, half fainting,
behind a friendly chasseur.</p>
<p>That was but an incident, however—the
rest of his ordeal became a confused horror
of days and days in a ruined farm, with a
hundred others suffering like him, without
any food, except unsugared tea, with their
wounds undressed—at a farm where threatening
German shells dropped intermittently,
keeping up the constant fear of death. Then—after
endless hours, torturing hours when
he thought of nothing but his ankle and his
stomach, the flying automobiles of the Red
Cross! Georges was wafted to a semi-heaven
of beds and bandages and women’s
<span class="pagenum">93</span>kindly hands and faces—warm food—cleanliness;
rest—at Châlons!</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_099.jpg" width-obs="500" height-obs="735" alt="family" /></div>
<p>Georges’s soldiering was over—over, that
is, if you except his trip to Toulouse. To
some, perhaps, a three days’ railway trip in
a crowded compartment with a crushed ankle
might be considered an ordeal. But to
Georges it was a holiday. He was going
home! Home.</p>
<hr />
<h2>XXIII</h2>
<p>At the beautiful Renaissance hospital at
Toulouse on the Boulevard de Strasbourg, I
found Georges Cucurou lying in the corner
of a huge hall—a splendid hall it was of
carvings and arches and coffer-vaulted ceiling,
all hung with flags.</p>
<p>How small his cot looked, there in the
corner of that hall, amid paintings and gild<span class="pagenum">94</span>ings
and magnificent cornices! How strange
those nurses looked too—white-swathed
matrons in flowing draperies, and nuns with
flapping wide white headdresses gliding
silently along the parqueted floor! How
strange and quiet those weak, pale soldiers in
the cots, and the patient soldiers sitting about
in blue uniforms, and white, and red! But,
most of all, how strange <em>he</em> seemed!</p>
<p>No, it was not Coco, any more—not Coco
of the free, airy gestures, Coco of the big,
innocent eyes; but some one who was content
to let his straight-forward words speak for
themselves. Not the boy with mobile,
parted lips; but some one whose mouth closed
firmly, now, when he paused, reflecting seriously
before he answered. And, as he spoke
of things beyond my ken, he made me, somehow,
feel ashamed. Why, it seemed, now,
that, having known Death so near, he knew
Life itself—he was the wiser, the elder;<span class="pagenum">95</span>
and I the boy, without experience save of the
little arts and playthings of the world....</p>
<p>Well, it was time to go. I took out my
notebook to jot down an address, and as I
did so I saw his eyes fastened upon my pencil.
His face had changed.</p>
<p>Without a word, he reached out his hand
for it. I understood—and there came up
to me suddenly, a picture of the laughing boy
who had pretended to shoot with such a
pencil—and ... even to give a bayonet
thrust!</p>
<p>He looked at it curiously with a faint
smile. “A-mer-i-cain Pencil Compagnie”
he read with his queer French accent. Then
he pressed in the end, and a little point of lead
popped out. He laughed—he sighed. He
handed it back. There were tears in his
eyes.</p>
<p>“Ah, m’sieur,” he said, “do you remember
that day in Paris, last July?” There
<span class="pagenum">96</span>
was a silence. Then—“Why, it seems like
ten years since then!”</p>
<p>So, in those two months, War the Creator
had done its work. Coco was a man.<br/><br/></p>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN href="images/map.jpg"> <ANTIMG src="images/map.jpg" width-obs="2000" height-obs="1540" alt="COCO'S ITINERARY" /></SPAN> <br/><br/></div>
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