FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39   40   41   42   >>  
he next day; caught them at night completely unawares, and, after a very stiff fight, routed them, and they left 150 dead on the ground. There was a pond in the Convent grounds, and while getting water for our transport teams we came across some tin cases hidden away by the enemy--a great find, for on getting them out we found they contained many thousands of rounds of the enemy's ammunition. It was perfectly dry, as the cases were watertight; so we made a big haul of most useful supplies. CHAPTER X. ANOTHER SCENE OF BOCHE BRUTALITY. The accompanying sketch is of the Market Square of Armentieres, the building shown in the centre being the Town Hall. The cobble stones of the roadway and the lattice-shuttered windows are of the style which has lasted for generations. This quaint and picturesque town was devastated and almost totally destroyed; in fact, the bit of it I show was the only portion the enemy left uninjured. We captured the place, taking four machine guns, several horses, a quantity of equipment and ammunition. Two of the machine guns were mounted in the clock tower, a position commanding the range of the street. It is revolting to recall the stories we were told here, and carefully verified, of the shameless atrocities of the Huns. The populace were still in occupation of the buildings when we were driving the Germans back from the barricades. Of course they were greatly terrified, and we did our best to pacify them and soothe their nerves as we came in contact with them. How different was the treatment they received from the enemy. Take the house on the left of the picture. Here Germans walked their horses through the door shown, along the passage into the yard in the rear, as a mere piece of bravado--an incident scarcely worth mentioning in view of the crimes they proceeded to commit. The householder, with his wife and two daughters, was sitting eating his dinner when the party arrived. The cowardly brutes shot this man on sight--in full view of his family--carried his body out and later on buried it in the chicken run. Meanwhile, they came back and ate the dinner. The various members of the family were tied up to beds and subjected to the grossest of infamies and greatest of cruelties. [Illustration: WHERE GERMANS RAPED AND MURDERED.] I repeat that we verified the stories of these horrors, as we had verified elsewhere other such stories before, and as we verified elsewhere other such s
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39   40   41   42   >>  



Top keywords:

verified

 
stories
 
family
 

dinner

 
ammunition
 
horses
 
Germans
 

machine

 

passage

 

picture


walked
 
completely
 

mentioning

 
crimes
 
proceeded
 

commit

 
scarcely
 

bravado

 

incident

 

treatment


barricades

 

driving

 

occupation

 

buildings

 

routed

 

greatly

 

terrified

 
unawares
 
contact
 

householder


nerves

 

pacify

 
soothe
 

received

 

greatest

 

infamies

 

cruelties

 

Illustration

 

grossest

 
subjected

members

 

GERMANS

 

horrors

 

MURDERED

 
repeat
 

arrived

 

cowardly

 

brutes

 

eating

 

populace