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the guns, he jokes as well
 * As any Judge upon the Bench

Between the crash of shell and shell
 * His laughter rings along the trench;

He seems immensely tickled by a Projectile which he calls a "Black Maria."

At intervals, when work is slack,
 * He kicks a leather ball about;

Recalls old tales of wing and back,
 * The Villa's rush, the Rovers' rout;

Or lays a tanner to a pup On Albion (not "perfidious") for the Cup.

Ho whistles down the day-long road,
 * And, when the chilly shadows fall

And heavier hangs the weary load,
 * Is he down-hearted? Not at all.

'Tis then he takes a light and airy View of the tedious route to Tipperary.

His songs are not exactly hymns;
 * He never learned them in the choir;

And yet they brace his dragging limbs
 * Although they miss the sacred fire;

Although his choice and cherished gems Do not include "The Watch upon the Thames."

He takes to fighting as a game;
 * He does no talking, through his hat,

Of holy missions; all the same
 * He has his faith—be sure of that;

He'll not disgrace his sporting breed, Nor play what isn't cricket. There's his creed. O. S.

 



"'Prince Joachim, the Kaiser's youngest son... was met at the railway station by his mother, who pointed proudly to the second-class altar cross on her son's breast.'—Eastern Daily Press."

"'Great steel plates have been fixed about the ceilings and walls of a room which now shelters the famous Venus D. Milo.'"



—I've been hearing no end during the last month or two about German efforts to capture American opinion. It seems you think us a poor sort of creatures unable to find out for ourselves the right way of things. You've been measuring our people up and you've got a kind of fancy that we're running about our continent with our eyes staring and our mouths gaping and our poor silly tongues wagging, and that we're busy collecting thoughts from one another about this war in Europe so we shan't look ignorant when we read what other countries are doing. "See here," I'm supposed to be saying as I go around,—"see here! What's this Belgium, anyway, and how in thunder does she come to stand out agin the great German army? And why are the Germans knocking Belgium to flinders and shooting her citizens? Ain't the Germans Christians? Ain't their soldiers generous and their officers merciful? Well then, it kinder puzzles me to see the way they're getting to work. It's no wonder the Belgian is set agin them. They're a little lot, them Belgians are, and it's a queer thing, ain't it, that they should make all this trouble? But I dunno. Maybe there's something to be said for 'em if we only knew. Then there's the English. They say they're fighting for freedom this time, and maybe they're right to stick to their word and back up their treaties. But it don't seem very clear as far as I can size it up. Won't some kind gentleman conic along and give me the true story?"

That's what I'm supposed to he saying, and you thought you heard me all the way from Potsdam, and you took a good deep think, and "Bless me," you said, "it's ten thousand pities to let old man Friedlicher go along with his mind empty when there's a heap of good German opinions lying around just asking to be put into it. I'll cable Johann Heinrich von Bernstorff to fill him up." So there's poor turning himself inside out to please you and educate me. Don't he prove a lot? From 9 to 10 he lectures about Germany's love for America and the beautiful statue of at Annapolis; from 10 to 11 he socks it into England—says she's a robber power and blacker'n any of the niggers she hires to do her fighting for her; from 11 to 12 he settles Russia by calling her a barbarian Empire; and from 12 to 1 he tells me how Germany's burning Belgium for Belgium's good; and then he dismisses me and says, if I'll come back to-morrow morning, he'll pitch me a story about the French peril, and how Germany can help America to escape it.

, it's no good. My father was a German, and he knew your lot, and he used to tell me all he know. He had to quit Prussia pretty quick after 1848—that's the year your great-uncle had to take off his hat to the citizens of Berlin, and your venerable grandfather had to pay a visit to England, German air not being good for his health. I know all that there is to be known about you. I don t want any, no, nor yet any , to tell me why this fight's fighting and to explain the Belgian wickedness to me. You and your blamed professors and soldiers, you've all been spoiling for war these ten years past, and now that you've got it you're out to tell the Americans that the other fellows drove you into it. All I've got to say is, I don't believe it—and what's more, no sensible American believes it either. That's all there is to it.

Yours sincerely,

.

 Motto for the (reported as having been last seen at Cologne): "East, West, hame's best."